We made a prosperous voyage up that
fine river of the Hudson, the weather grateful, the
hills singularly beautified with the colours of the
autumn. At Albany we had our residence at an inn,
where I was not so blind and my lord not so cunning
but what I could see he had some design to hold me
prisoner. The work he found for me to do was not
so pressing that we should transact it apart from
necessary papers in the chamber of an inn; nor was
it of such importance that I should be set upon as
many as four or five scrolls of the same document.
I submitted in appearance; but I took private measures
on my own side, and had the news of the town communicated
to me daily by the politeness of our host. In
this way I received at last a piece of intelligence
for which, I may say, I had been waiting. Captain
Harris (I was told) with “Mr. Mountain, the
trader,” had gone by up the river in a boat.
I would have feared the landlord’s eye, so strong
the sense of some complicity upon my master’s
part oppressed me. But I made out to say I had
some knowledge of the captain, although none of Mr.
Mountain, and to inquire who else was of the party.
My informant knew not; Mr. Mountain had come ashore
upon some needful purchases; had gone round the town
buying, drinking, and prating; and it seemed the party
went upon some likely venture, for he had spoken much
of great things he would do when he returned.
No more was known, for none of the rest had come ashore,
and it seemed they were pressed for time to reach
a certain spot before the snow should fall.
And sure enough, the next day there
fell a sprinkle even in Albany; but it passed as it
came, and was but a reminder of what lay before us.
I thought of it lightly then, knowing so little as
I did of that inclement province: the retrospect
is different; and I wonder at times if some of the
horror of these events which I must now rehearse flowed
not from the foul skies and savage winds to which
we were exposed, and the agony of cold that we must
suffer.
The boat having passed by, I thought
at first we should have left the town. But no
such matter. My lord continued his stay in Albany,
where he had no ostensible affairs, and kept me by
him, far from my due employment, and making a pretence
of occupation. It is upon this passage I expect,
and perhaps deserve, censure. I was not so dull
but what I had my own thoughts. I could not see
the Master entrust himself into the hands of Harris,
and not suspect some underhand contrivance. Harris
bore a villainous reputation, and he had been tampered
with in private by my lord; Mountain, the trader,
proved, upon inquiry, to be another of the same kidney;
the errand they were all gone upon being the recovery
of ill-gotten treasures, offered in itself a very
strong incentive to foul play; and the character of
the country where they journeyed promised impunity
to deeds of blood. Well: it is true I had
all these thoughts and fears, and guesses of the Master’s
fate. But you are to consider I was the same
man that sought to dash him from the bulwarks of a
ship in the mid-sea; the same that, a little before,
very impiously but sincerely offered God a bargain,
seeking to hire God to be my bravo. It is true
again that I had a good deal melted towards our enemy.
But this I always thought of as a weakness of the
flesh, and even culpable; my mind remaining steady
and quite bent against him. True, yet again, that
it was one thing to assume on my own shoulders the
guilt and danger of a criminal attempt, and another
to stand by and see my lord imperil and besmirch himself.
But this was the very ground of my inaction. For
(should I anyway stir in the business) I might fail
indeed to save the Master, but I could not miss to
make a byword of my lord.
Thus it was that I did nothing; and
upon the same reasons, I am still strong to justify
my course. My lord had carried with him several
introductions to chief people of the town and neighbourhood;
others he had before encountered in New York:
with this consequence, that he went much abroad, and
I am sorry to say was altogether too convivial in his
habits. I was often in bed, but never asleep,
when he returned; and there was scarce a night when
he did not betray the influence of liquor. By
day he would still lay upon me endless tasks, which
he showed considerable ingenuity to fish up and renew,
in the manner of Penelope’s web. I never
refused, as I say, for I was hired to do his bidding;
but I took no pains to keep my penetration under a
bushel, and would sometimes smile in his face.
“I think I must be the devil
and you Michael Scott,” I said to him one day.
“I have bridged Tweed and split the Eildons;
and now you set me to the rope of sand.”
He looked at me with shining eyes,
and looked away again, his jaw chewing, but without
words.
“Well, well, my lord,”
said I, “your will is my pleasure. I will
do this thing for the fourth time; but I would beg
of you to invent another task against to-morrow, for
by my troth, I am weary of this one.”
“You do not know what you are
saying,” returned my lord, putting on his hat
and turning his back to me. “It is a strange
thing you should take a pleasure to annoy me.
A friend but that is a different affair.
It is a strange thing. I am a man that has had
ill-fortune all my life through. I am still surrounded
by contrivances. I am always treading in plots,”
he burst out. “The whole world is banded
against me.”
“I would not talk wicked nonsense
if I were you,” said I; “but I will tell
you what I would do I would put my
head in cold water, for you had more last night than
you could carry.”
“Do ye think that?” said
he, with a manner of interest highly awakened.
“Would that be good for me? It’s a
thing I never tried.”
“I mind the days when you had
no call to try, and I wish, my lord, that they were
back again,” said I. “But the plain
truth is, if you continue to exceed, you will do yourself
a mischief.”
“I don’t appear to carry
drink the way I used to,” said my lord.
“I get overtaken, Mackellar. But I will
be more upon my guard.”
“That is what I would ask of
you,” I replied. “You are to bear
in mind that you are Mr. Alexander’s father:
give the bairn a chance to carry his name with some
responsibility.”
“Ay, ay,” said he.
“Ye’re a very sensible man, Mackellar,
and have been long in my employ. But I think,
if you have nothing more to say to me I will be stepping.
If you have nothing more to say?” he added, with
that burning, childish eagerness that was now so common
with the man.
“No, my lord, I have nothing more,” said
I, drily enough.
“Then I think I will be stepping,”
says my lord, and stood and looked at me, fidgeting
with his hat, which he had taken off again. “I
suppose you will have no errands? No? I
am to meet Sir William Johnson, but I will be more
upon my guard.” He was silent for a time,
and then, smiling: “Do you call to mind
a place, Mackellar it’s a little below
Eagles where the burn runs very deep under
a wood of rowans? I mind being there when I was
a lad dear, it comes over me like an old
song! I was after the fishing, and I made
a bonny cast. Eh, but I was happy. I wonder,
Mackellar, why I am never happy now?”
“My lord,” said I, “if
you would drink with more moderation you would have
the better chance. It is an old byword that the
bottle is a false consoler.”
“No doubt,” said he, “no
doubt. Well, I think I will be going.”
“Good-morning, my lord,” said I.
“Good-morning, good-morning,”
said he, and so got himself at last from the apartment.
I give that for a fair specimen of
my lord in the morning and I must have described my
patron very ill if the reader does not perceive a
notable falling off. To behold the man thus fallen:
to know him accepted among his companions for a poor,
muddled toper, welcome (if he were welcome at all)
for the bare consideration of his title; and to recall
the virtues he had once displayed against such odds
of fortune; was not this a thing at once to rage and
to be humbled at?
In his cups, he was more excessive.
I will give but the one scene, close upon the end,
which is strongly marked upon my memory to this day,
and at the time affected me almost with horror.
I was in bed, lying there awake, when
I heard him stumbling on the stair and singing.
My lord had no gift of music, his brother had all the
graces of the family, so that when I say singing, you
are to understand a manner of high, carolling utterance,
which was truly neither speech nor song. Something
not unlike is to be heard upon the lips of children,
ere they learn shame; from those of a man grown elderly
it had a strange effect. He opened the door with
noisy precaution; peered in, shading his candle; conceived
me to slumber; entered, set his light upon the table,
and took off his hat. I saw him very plain; a
high, feverish exultation appeared to boil in his
veins, and he stood and smiled and smirked upon the
candle. Presently he lifted up his arm, snapped
his fingers, and fell to undress. As he did so,
having once more forgot my presence, he took back
to his singing; and now I could hear the words, which
were these from the old song of the “Twa Corbies”
endlessly repeated:
“And over his banes when they are
bare
The wind sall blaw for evermair!”
I have said there was no music in
the man. His strains had no logical succession
except in so far as they inclined a little to the minor
mode; but they exercised a rude potency upon the feelings,
and followed the words, and signified the feelings
of the singer with barbaric fitness. He took
it first in the time and manner of a rant; presently
this ill-favoured gleefulness abated, he began to
dwell upon the notes more feelingly, and sank at last
into a degree of maudlin pathos that was to me scarce
bearable. By equal steps, the original briskness
of his acts declined; and when he was stripped to
his breeches, he sat on the bedside and fell to whimpering.
I know nothing less respectable than the tears of
drunkenness, and turned my back impatiently on this
poor sight.
But he had started himself (I am to
suppose) on that slippery descent of self-pity; on
the which, to a man unstrung by old sorrows and recent
potations, there is no arrest except exhaustion.
His tears continued to flow, and the man to sit there,
three parts naked, in the cold air of the chamber.
I twitted myself alternately with inhumanity and sentimental
weakness, now half rising in my bed to interfere, now
reading myself lessons of indifference and courting
slumber, until, upon a sudden, the quantum mutatus
ab illo shot into my mind; and calling to remembrance
his old wisdom, constancy, and patience, I was overborne
with a pity almost approaching the passionate, not
for my master alone, but for the sons of man.
At this I leaped from my place, went
over to his side and laid a hand on his bare shoulder,
which was cold as stone. He uncovered his face
and showed it me all swollen and begrutten like
a child’s; and at the sight my impatience partially
revived.
“Think shame to yourself,”
said I. “This is bairnly conduct. I
might have been snivelling myself, if I had cared
to swill my belly with wine. But I went to my
bed sober like a man. Come: get into yours,
and have done with this pitiable exhibition.”
“O, Mackellar,” said he, “my heart
is wae!”
“Wae?” cried I. “For
a good cause, I think. What words were these you
sang as you came in? Show pity to others, we then
can talk of pity to yourself. You can be the
one thing or the other, but I will be no party to
half-way houses. If you’re a striker, strike,
and if you’re a bleater, bleat!”
“Ay!” cries he, with a
burst, “that’s it strike! that’s
talking! Man, I’ve stood it all too long.
But when they laid a hand upon the child, when the
child’s threatened” his momentary
vigour whimpering off “my child,
my Alexander!” and he was at his tears
again.
I took him by the shoulders and shook
him. “Alexander!” said I. “Do
you even think of him? Not you! Look yourself
in the face like a brave man, and you’ll find
you’re but a self-deceiver. The wife, the
friend, the child, they’re all equally forgot,
and you sunk in a mere bog of selfishness.”
“Mackellar,” said he,
with a wonderful return to his old manner and appearance,
“you may say what you will of me, but one thing
I never was I was never selfish.”
“I will open your eyes in your
despite,” said I. “How long have we
been here? and how often have you written to your
family? I think this is the first time you were
ever separate: have you written at all? Do
they know if you are dead or living?”
I had caught him here too openly;
it braced his better nature; there was no more weeping,
he thanked me very penitently, got to bed, and was
soon fast asleep; and the first thing he did the next
morning was to sit down and begin a letter to my lady:
a very tender letter it was too, though it was never
finished. Indeed, all communication with New York
was transacted by myself; and it will be judged I had
a thankless task of it. What to tell my lady,
and in what words, and how far to be false and how
far cruel, was a thing that kept me often from my slumber.
All this while, no doubt, my lord
waited with growing impatiency for news of his accomplices.
Harris, it is to be thought, had promised a high degree
of expedition; the time was already overpast when word
was to be looked for; and suspense was a very evil
counsellor to a man of an impaired intelligence.
My lord’s mind throughout this interval dwelled
almost wholly in the Wilderness, following that party
with whose deeds he had so much concern. He continually
conjured up their camps and progresses, the fashion
of the country, the perpetration in a thousand different
manners of the same horrid fact, and that consequent
spectacle of the Master’s bones lying scattered
in the wind. These private, guilty considerations
I would continually observe to peep forth in the man’s
talk, like rabbits from a hill. And it is the
less wonder if the scene of his meditations began
to draw him bodily.
It is well known what pretext he took.
Sir William Johnson had a diplomatic errand in these
parts; and my lord and I (from curiosity, as was given
out) went in his company. Sir William was well
attended and liberally supplied. Hunters brought
us venison, fish was taken for us daily in the streams,
and brandy ran like water. We proceeded by day
and encamped by night in the military style; sentinels
were set and changed; every man had his named duty;
and Sir William was the spring of all. There
was much in this that might at times have entertained
me; but, for our misfortune, the weather was extremely
harsh, the days were in the beginning open, but the
nights frosty from the first. A painful keen
wind blew most of the time, so that we sat in the boat
with blue fingers, and at night, as we scorched our
faces at the fire, the clothes upon our back appeared
to be of paper. A dreadful solitude surrounded
our steps; the land was quite dispeopled, there was
no smoke of fires; and save for a single boat of merchants
on the second day, we met no travellers. The
season was indeed late, but this desertion of the
waterways impressed Sir William himself; and I have
heard him more than once express a sense of intimidation.
“I have come too late, I fear; they must have
dug up the hatchet,” he said; and the future
proved how justly he had reasoned.
I could never depict the blackness
of my soul upon this journey. I have none of
those minds that are in love with the unusual:
to see the winter coming and to lie in the field so
far from any house, oppressed me like a nightmare;
it seemed, indeed, a kind of awful braving of God’s
power; and this thought, which I daresay only writes
me down a coward, was greatly exaggerated by my private
knowledge of the errand we were come upon. I
was besides encumbered by my duties to Sir William,
whom it fell upon me to entertain; for my lord was
quite sunk into a state bordering on pervigilium,
watching the woods with a rapt eye, sleeping scarce
at all, and speaking sometimes not twenty words in
a whole day. That which he said was still coherent;
but it turned almost invariably upon the party for
whom he kept his crazy look-out. He would tell
Sir William often, and always as if it were a new
communication, that he had “a brother somewhere
in the woods,” and beg that the sentinels should
be directed “to inquire for him.”
“I am anxious for news of my brother,”
he would say. And sometimes, when we were under
way, he would fancy he spied a canoe far off upon
the water or a camp on the shore, and exhibit painful
agitation. It was impossible but Sir William should
be struck with these singularities; and at last he
led me aside, and hinted his uneasiness. I touched
my head and shook it; quite rejoiced to prepare a
little testimony against possible disclosures.
“But in that case,” cries
Sir William, “is it wise to let him go at large?”
“Those that know him best,”
said I, “are persuaded that he should be humoured.”
“Well, well,” replied
Sir William, “it is none of my affairs.
But if I had understood, you would never have been
here.”
Our advance into this savage country
had thus uneventfully proceeded for about a week,
when we encamped for a night at a place where the river
ran among considerable mountains clothed in wood.
The fires were lighted on a level space at the water’s
edge; and we supped and lay down to sleep in the customary
fashion. It chanced the night fell murderously
cold; the stringency of the frost seized and bit me
through my coverings, so that pain kept me wakeful;
and I was afoot again before the peep of day, crouching
by the fires or trotting to and fro at the stream’s
edge, to combat the aching of my limbs. At last
dawn began to break upon hoar woods and mountains,
the sleepers rolled in their robes, and the boisterous
river dashing among spears of ice. I stood looking
about me, swaddled in my stiff coat of a bull’s
fur, and the breath smoking from my scorched nostrils,
when, upon a sudden, a singular, eager cry rang from
the borders of the wood. The sentries answered
it, the sleepers sprang to their feet; one pointed,
the rest followed his direction with their eyes, and
there, upon the edge of the forest, and betwixt two
trees, we beheld the figure of a man reaching forth
his hands like one in ecstasy. The next moment
he ran forward, fell on his knees at the side of the
camp, and burst in tears.
This was John Mountain, the trader,
escaped from the most horrid perils; and his first
word, when he got speech, was to ask if we had seen
Secundra Dass.
“Seen what?” cries Sir William.
“No,” said I, “we have seen nothing
of him. Why?”
“Nothing?” says Mountain.
“Then I was right after all.” With
that he struck his palm upon his brow. “But
what takes him back?” he cried. “What
takes the man back among dead bodies? There is
some damned mystery here.”
This was a word which highly aroused
our curiosity, but I shall be more perspicacious if
I narrate these incidents in their true order.
Here follows a narrative which I have compiled out
of three sources, not very consistent in all points:
First, a written statement
by Mountain, in which everything criminal is cleverly
smuggled out of view;
Second, two conversations with Secundra Dass;
and
Third, many conversations with
Mountain himself, in which he was pleased to be entirely
plain; for the truth is he regarded me as an accomplice.
NARRATIVE OF THE TRADER, MOUNTAIN
The crew that went up the river under
the joint command of Captain Harris and the Master
numbered in all nine persons, of whom (if I except
Secundra Dass) there was not one that had not merited
the gallows. From Harris downward the voyagers
were notorious in that colony for desperate, bloody-minded
miscreants; some were reputed pirates, the most hawkers
of rum; all ranters and drinkers; all fit associates,
embarking together without remorse, upon this treacherous
and murderous design. I could not hear there
was much discipline or any set captain in the gang;
but Harris and four others, Mountain himself, two Scotsmen Pinkerton
and Hastie and a man of the name of Hicks,
a drunken shoemaker, put their heads together and
agreed upon the course. In a material sense,
they were well provided; and the Master in particular
brought with him a tent where he might enjoy some
privacy and shelter.
Even this small indulgence told against
him in the minds of his companions. But indeed
he was in a position so entirely false (and even ridiculous)
that all his habit of command and arts of pleasing
were here thrown away. In the eyes of all, except
Secundra Dass, he figured as a common gull and designated
victim; going unconsciously to death; yet he could
not but suppose himself the contriver and the leader
of the expedition; he could scarce help but so conduct
himself; and at the least hint of authority or condescension,
his deceivers would be laughing in their sleeves.
I was so used to see and to conceive him in a high,
authoritative attitude, that when I had conceived his
position on this journey, I was pained and could have
blushed. How soon he may have entertained a first
surmise, we cannot know; but it was long, and the
party had advanced into the Wilderness beyond the reach
of any help, ere he was fully awakened to the truth.
It fell thus. Harris and some
others had drawn apart into the woods for consultation,
when they were startled by a rustling in the brush.
They were all accustomed to the arts of Indian warfare,
and Mountain had not only lived and hunted, but fought
and earned some reputation, with the savages.
He could move in the woods without noise, and follow
a trail like a hound; and upon the emergence of this
alert, he was deputed by the rest to plunge into the
thicket for intelligence. He was soon convinced
there was a man in his close neighbourhood, moving
with precaution but without art among the leaves and
branches; and coming shortly to a place of advantage,
he was able to observe Secundra Dass crawling briskly
off with many backward glances. At this he knew
not whether to laugh or cry; and his accomplices,
when he had returned and reported, were in much the
same dubiety. There was now no danger of an Indian
onslaught; but on the other hand, since Secundra Dass
was at the pains to spy upon them, it was highly probable
he knew English, and if he knew English it was certain
the whole of their design was in the Master’s
knowledge. There was one singularity in the position.
If Secundra Dass knew and concealed his knowledge
of English, Harris was a proficient in several of
the tongues of India, and as his career in that part
of the world had been a great deal worse than profligate,
he had not thought proper to remark upon the circumstance.
Each side had thus a spy-hole on the counsels of the
other. The plotters, so soon as this advantage
was explained, returned to camp; Harris, hearing the
Hindustani was once more closeted with his master,
crept to the side of the tent; and the rest, sitting
about the fire with their tobacco, awaited his report
with impatience. When he came at last, his face
was very black. He had overheard enough to confirm
the worst of his suspicions. Secundra Dass was
a good English scholar; he had been some days creeping
and listening, the Master was now fully informed of
the conspiracy, and the pair proposed on the morrow
to fall out of line at a carrying place and plunge
at a venture in the woods: preferring the full
risk of famine, savage beasts, and savage men to their
position in the midst of traitors.
What, then, was to be done? Some
were for killing the Master on the spot; but Harris
assured them that would be a crime without profit,
since the secret of the treasure must die along with
him that buried it. Others were for desisting
at once from the whole enterprise and making for New
York; but the appetising name of treasure, and the
thought of the long way they had already travelled,
dissuaded the majority. I imagine they were dull
fellows for the most part. Harris, indeed, had
some acquirements, Mountain was no fool, Hastie was
an educated man; but even these had manifestly failed
in life, and the rest were the dregs of colonial rascality.
The conclusion they reached, at least, was more the
offspring of greed and hope than reason. It was
to temporise, to be wary and watch the Master, to
be silent and supply no further aliment to his suspicions,
and to depend entirely (as well as I make out) on the
chance that their victim was as greedy, hopeful, and
irrational as themselves, and might, after all, betray
his life and treasure.
Twice in the course of the next day
Secundra and the Master must have appeared to themselves
to have escaped; and twice they were circumvented.
The Master, save that the second time he grew a little
pale, displayed no sign of disappointment, apologised
for the stupidity with which he had fallen aside,
thanked his recapturers as for a service, and rejoined
the caravan with all his usual gallantry and cheerfulness
of mien and bearing. But it is certain he had
smelled a rat; for from thenceforth he and Secundra
spoke only in each other’s ear, and Harris listened
and shivered by the tent in vain. The same night
it was announced they were to leave the boats and proceed
by foot, a circumstance which (as it put an end to
the confusion of the portages) greatly lessened
the chances of escape.
And now there began between the two
sides a silent contest, for life on the one hand,
for riches on the other. They were now near that
quarter of the desert in which the Master himself
must begin to play the part of guide; and using this
for a pretext of persecution, Harris and his men sat
with him every night about the fire, and laboured to
entrap him into some admission. If he let slip
his secret, he knew well it was the warrant for his
death; on the other hand, he durst not refuse their
questions, and must appear to help them to the best
of his capacity, or he practically published his mistrust.
And yet Mountain assures me the man’s brow was
never ruffled. He sat in the midst of these jackals,
his life depending by a thread, like some easy, witty
householder at home by his own fire; an answer he
had for everything as often as not, a jesting
answer; avoided threats, evaded insults; talked, laughed,
and listened with an open countenance; and, in short,
conducted himself in such a manner as must have disarmed
suspicion, and went near to stagger knowledge.
Indeed, Mountain confessed to me they would soon have
disbelieved the captain’s story, and supposed
their designated victim still quite innocent of their
designs; but for the fact that he continued (however
ingeniously) to give the slip to questions, and the
yet stronger confirmation of his repeated efforts to
escape. The last of these, which brought things
to a head, I am now to relate. And first I should
say that by this time the temper of Harris’s
companions was utterly worn out; civility was scarce
pretended; and, for one very significant circumstance,
the Master and Secundra had been (on some pretext)
deprived of weapons. On their side, however, the
threatened pair kept up the parade of friendship handsomely;
Secundra was all bows, the Master all smiles; and
on the last night of the truce he had even gone so
far as to sing for the diversion of the company.
It was observed that he had also eaten with unusual
heartiness, and drank deep, doubtless from design.
At least, about three in the morning,
he came out of the tent into the open air, audibly
mourning and complaining, with all the manner of a
sufferer from surfeit. For some while, Secundra
publicly attended on his patron, who at last became
more easy, and fell asleep on the frosty ground behind
the tent, the Indian returning within. Some time
after, the sentry was changed; had the Master pointed
out to him, where he lay in what is called a robe
of buffalo: and thenceforth kept an eye upon
him (he declared) without remission. With the
first of the dawn, a draught of wind came suddenly
and blew open one side the corner of the robe; and
with the same puff, the Master’s hat whirled
in the air and fell some yards away. The sentry
thinking it remarkable the sleeper should not awaken,
thereupon drew near; and the next moment, with a great
shout, informed the camp their prisoner was escaped.
He had left behind his Indian, who (in the first vivacity
of the surprise) came near to pay the forfeit of his
life, and was, in fact, inhumanly mishandled; but
Secundra, in the midst of threats and cruelties, stuck
to it with extraordinary loyalty, that he was quite
ignorant of his master’s plans, which might
indeed be true, and of the manner of his escape, which
was demonstrably false. Nothing was therefore
left to the conspirators but to rely entirely on the
skill of Mountain. The night had been frosty,
the ground quite hard; and the sun was no sooner up
than a strong thaw set in. It was Mountain’s
boast that few men could have followed that trail,
and still fewer (even of the native Indians) found
it. The Master had thus a long start before his
pursuers had the scent, and he must have travelled
with surprising energy for a pedestrian so unused,
since it was near noon before Mountain had a view
of him. At this conjuncture the trader was alone,
all his companions following, at his own request,
several hundred yards in the rear; he knew the Master
was unarmed; his heart was besides heated with the
exercise and lust of hunting; and seeing the quarry
so close, so defenceless, and seeming so fatigued,
he vaingloriously determined to effect the capture
with his single hand. A step or two farther brought
him to one margin of a little clearing; on the other,
with his arms folded and his back to a huge stone,
the Master sat. It is possible Mountain may have
made a rustle, it is certain, at least, the Master
raised his head and gazed directly at that quarter
of the thicket where his hunter lay; “I could
not be sure he saw me,” Mountain said; “he
just looked my way like a man with his mind made up,
and all the courage ran out of me like rum out of a
bottle.” And presently, when the Master
looked away again, and appeared to resume those meditations
in which he had sat immersed before the trader’s
coming, Mountain slunk stealthily back and returned
to seek the help of his companions.
And now began the chapter of surprises,
for the scout had scarce informed the others of his
discovery, and they were yet preparing their weapons
for a rush upon the fugitive, when the man himself
appeared in their midst, walking openly and quietly,
with his hands behind his back.
“Ah, men!” says he, on
his beholding them. “Here is a fortunate
encounter. Let us get back to camp.”
Mountain had not mentioned his own
weakness or the Master’s disconcerting gaze
upon the thicket, so that (with all the rest) his
return appeared spontaneous. For all that, a hubbub
arose; oaths flew, fists were shaken, and guns pointed.
“Let us get back to camp,”
said the Master. “I have an explanation
to make, but it must be laid before you all.
And in the meanwhile I would put up these weapons,
one of which might very easily go off and blow away
your hopes of treasure. I would not kill,”
says he, smiling, “the goose with the golden
eggs.”
The charm of his superiority once
more triumphed; and the party, in no particular order,
set off on their return. By the way, he found
occasion to get a word or two apart with Mountain.
“You are a clever fellow and
a bold,” says he, “but I am not so sure
that you are doing yourself justice. I would have
you to consider whether you would not do better, ay,
and safer, to serve me instead of serving so commonplace
a rascal as Mr. Harris. Consider of it,”
he concluded, dealing the man a gentle tap upon the
shoulder, “and don’t be in haste.
Dead or alive, you will find me an ill man to quarrel
with.”
When they were come back to the camp,
where Harris and Pinkerton stood guard over Secundra,
these two ran upon the Master like viragoes, and were
amazed out of measure when they were bidden by their
comrades to “stand back and hear what the gentleman
had to say.” The Master had not flinched
before their onslaught; nor, at this proof of the ground
he had gained, did he betray the least sufficiency.
“Do not let us be in haste,”
says he. “Meat first and public speaking
after.”
With that they made a hasty meal:
and as soon as it was done, the Master, leaning on
one elbow, began his speech. He spoke long, addressing
himself to each except Harris, finding for each (with
the same exception) some particular flattery.
He called them “bold, honest blades,”
declared he had never seen a more jovial company, work
better done, or pains more merrily supported.
“Well, then,” says he, “some one
asks me, Why the devil I ran away? But that is
scarce worth answer, for I think you all know pretty
well. But you know only pretty well: that
is a point I shall arrive at presently, and be you
ready to remark it when it comes. There is a
traitor here: a double traitor: I will give
you his name before I am done; and let that suffice
for now. But here comes some other gentleman
and asks me, ‘Why, in the devil, I came back?’
Well, before I answer that question, I have one to
put to you. It was this cur here, this Harris,
that speaks Hindustani?” cries he, rising on
one knee and pointing fair at the man’s face,
with a gesture indescribably menacing; and when he
had been answered in the affirmative, “Ah!”
says he, “then are all my suspicions verified,
and I did rightly to come back. Now, men, hear
the truth for the first time.” Thereupon
he launched forth in a long story, told with extraordinary
skill, how he had all along suspected Harris, how
he had found the confirmation of his fears, and how
Harris must have misrepresented what passed between
Secundra and himself. At this point he made a
bold stroke with excellent effect. “I suppose,”
says he, “you think you are going shares with
Harris, I suppose you think you will see to that yourselves;
you would naturally not think so flat a rogue could
cozen you. But have a care! These half-idiots
have a sort of cunning, as the skunk has its stench;
and it may be news to you that Harris has taken care
of himself already. Yes, for him the treasure
is all money in the bargain. You must find it
or go starve. But he has been paid beforehand;
my brother paid him to destroy me; look at him if
you doubt look at him, grinning and gulping,
a detected thief!” Thence, having made this happy
impression, he explained how he had escaped, and thought
better of it, and at last concluded to come back,
lay the truth before the company, and take his chance
with them once more: persuaded as he was, they
would instantly depose Harris and elect some other
leader. “There is the whole truth,”
said he: “and, with one exception, I put
myself entirely in your hands. What is the exception?
There he sits,” he cried, pointing once more
to Harris; “a man that has to die! Weapons
and conditions are all one to me; put me face to face
with him, and if you give me nothing but a stick,
in five minutes I will show you a sop of broken carrion,
fit for dogs to roll in.”
It was dark night when he made an
end; they had listened in almost perfect silence;
but the firelight scarce permitted any one to judge,
from the look of his neighbours, with what result of
persuasion or conviction. Indeed, the Master
had set himself in the brightest place, and kept his
face there, to be the centre of men’s eyes:
doubtless on a profound calculation. Silence
followed for a while, and presently the whole party
became involved in disputation: the Master lying
on his back, with his hands knit under his head and
one knee flung across the other, like a person unconcerned
in the result. And here, I daresay, his bravado
carried him too far and prejudiced his case. At
least, after a cast or two back and forward, opinion
settled finally against him. It’s possible
he hoped to repeat the business of the pirate ship,
and be himself, perhaps, on hard enough conditions,
elected leader; and things went so far that way that
Mountain actually threw out the proposition.
But the rock he split upon was Hastie. This fellow
was not well liked, being sour and slow, with an ugly,
glowering disposition, but he had studied some time
for the Church at Edinburgh College, before ill-conduct
had destroyed his prospects, and he now remembered
and applied what he had learned. Indeed, he had
not proceeded very far, when the Master rolled carelessly
upon one side, which was done (in Mountain’s
opinion) to conceal the beginnings of despair upon
his countenance. Hastie dismissed the most of
what they had heard as nothing to the matter:
what they wanted was the treasure. All that was
said of Harris might be true, and they would have
to see to that in time. But what had that to
do with the treasure? They had heard a vast of
words; but the truth was just this, that Mr. Durie
was damnably frightened and had several times run
off. Here he was whether caught or
come back was all one to Hastie: the point was
to make an end of the business. As for the talk
of deposing and electing captains, he hoped they were
all free men and could attend their own affairs.
That was dust flung in their eyes, and so was the
proposal to fight Harris. “He shall fight
no one in this camp, I can tell him that,” said
Hastie. “We had trouble enough to get his
arms away from him, and we should look pretty fools
to give them back again. But if it’s excitement
the gentleman is after, I can supply him with more
than perhaps he cares about. For I have no intention
to spend the remainder of my life in these mountains;
already I have been too long; and I propose that he
should immediately tell us where that treasure is,
or else immediately be shot. And there,”
says he, producing his weapon, “there is the
pistol that I mean to use.”
“Come, I call you a man,”
cries the Master, sitting up and looking at the speaker
with an air of admiration.
“I didn’t ask you to call
me anything,” returned Hastie; “which is
it to be?”
“That’s an idle question,”
said the Master. “Needs must when the devil
drives. The truth is we are within easy walk of
the place, and I will show it you to-morrow.”
With that, as if all were quite settled,
and settled exactly to his mind, he walked off to
his tent, whither Secundra had preceded him.
I cannot think of these last turns
and wriggles of my old enemy, except with admiration;
scarce even pity is mingled with the sentiment, so
strongly the man supported, so boldly resisted his
misfortunes. Even at that hour, when he perceived
himself quite lost, when he saw he had but effected
an exchange of enemies, and overthrown Harris to set
Hastie up, no sign of weakness appeared in his behaviour,
and he withdrew to his tent, already determined (I
must suppose) upon affronting the incredible hazard
of his last expedient, with the same easy, assured,
genteel expression and demeanour as he might have left
a theatre withal to join a supper of the wits.
But doubtless within, if we could see there, his soul
trembled.
Early in the night word went about
the camp that he was sick; and the first thing the
next morning he called Hastie to his side, and inquired
most anxiously if he had any skill in medicine.
As a matter of fact, this was a vanity of that fallen
divinity student’s, to which he had cunningly
addressed himself. Hastie examined him; and being
flattered, ignorant, and highly suspicious, knew not
in the least whether the man was sick or malingering.
In this state he went forth again to his companions;
and (as the thing which would give himself most consequence
either way) announced that the patient was in a fair
way to die.
“For all that,” he added,
with an oath, “and if he bursts by the wayside,
he must bring us this morning to the treasure.”
But there were several in the camp
(Mountain among the number) whom this brutality revolted.
They would have seen the Master pistolled, or pistolled
him themselves, without the smallest sentiment of pity;
but they seemed to have been touched by his gallant
fight and unequivocal defeat the night before; perhaps,
too, they were even already beginning to oppose themselves
to their new leader: at least, they now declared
that (if the man was sick) he should have a day’s
rest in spite of Hastie’s teeth.
The next morning he was manifestly
worse, and Hastie himself began to display something
of humane concern, so easily does even the pretence
of doctoring awaken sympathy. The third the Master
called Mountain and Hastie to the tent, announced
himself to be dying, gave them full particulars as
to the position of the cache, and begged them to set
out incontinently on the quest, so that they might
see if he deceived them, and (if they were at first
unsuccessful) he should be able to correct their error.
But here arose a difficulty on which
he doubtless counted. None of these men would
trust another, none would consent to stay behind.
On the other hand, although the Master seemed extremely
low, spoke scarce above a whisper, and lay much of
the time insensible, it was still possible it was
a fraudulent sickness; and if all went treasure-hunting,
it might prove they had gone upon a wild-goose chase,
and return to find their prisoner flown. They
concluded, therefore, to hang idling round the camp,
alleging sympathy to their reason; and, certainly,
so mingled are our dispositions, several were sincerely
(if not very deeply) affected by the natural peril
of the man whom they callously designed to murder.
In the afternoon, Hastie was called to the bedside
to pray: the which (incredible as it must appear)
he did with unction; about eight at night the wailing
of Secundra announced that all was over; and before
ten, the Indian, with a link stuck in the ground,
was toiling at the grave. Sunrise of next day
beheld the Master’s burial, all hands attending
with great decency of demeanour; and the body was
laid in the earth, wrapped in a fur robe, with only
the face uncovered; which last was of a waxy whiteness,
and had the nostrils plugged according to some Oriental
habit of Secundra’s. No sooner was the
grave filled than the lamentations of the Indian once
more struck concern to every heart; and it appears
this gang of murderers, so far from resenting his
outcries, although both distressful and (in such a
country) perilous to their own safety, roughly but
kindly endeavoured to console him.
But if human nature is even in the
worst of men occasionally kind, it is still, and before
all things, greedy; and they soon turned from the
mourner to their own concerns. The cache of the
treasure being hard by, although yet unidentified,
it was concluded not to break camp; and the day passed,
on the part of the voyagers, in unavailing exploration
of the woods, Secundra the while lying on his master’s
grave. That night they placed no sentinel, but
lay altogether about the fire, in the customary woodman
fashion, the heads outward, like the spokes of a wheel.
Morning found them in the same disposition; only Pinkerton,
who lay on Mountain’s right, between him and
Hastie, had (in the hours of darkness) been secretly
butchered, and there lay, still wrapped as to his
body in his mantle, but offering above that ungodly
and horrific spectacle of the scalped head. The
gang were that morning as pale as a company of phantoms,
for the pertinacity of Indian war (or, to speak more
correctly, Indian murder) was well known to all.
But they laid the chief blame on their unsentinelled
posture; and, fired with the neighbourhood of the
treasure, determined to continue where they were.
Pinkerton was buried hard by the Master; the survivors
again passed the day in exploration, and returned
in a mingled humour of anxiety and hope, being partly
certain they were now close on the discovery of what
they sought, and on the other hand (with the return
of darkness) infected with the fear of Indians.
Mountain was the first sentry; he declares he neither
slept nor yet sat down, but kept his watch with a
perpetual and straining vigilance, and it was even
with unconcern that (when he saw by the stars his
time was up) he drew near the fire to awaken his successor.
This man (it was Hicks the shoemaker) slept on the
lee side of the circle, something farther off in consequence
than those to windward, and in a place darkened by
the blowing smoke. Mountain stooped and took
him by the shoulder; his hand was at once smeared by
some adhesive wetness; and (the wind at the moment
veering) the firelight shone upon the sleeper, and
showed him, like Pinkerton, dead and scalped.
It was clear they had fallen in the
hands of one of those matchless Indian bravos, that
will sometimes follow a party for days, and in spite
of indefatigable travel, and unsleeping watch, continue
to keep up with their advance, and steal a scalp at
every resting-place. Upon this discovery, the
treasure-seekers, already reduced to a poor half-dozen,
fell into mere dismay, seized a few necessaries, and,
deserting the remainder of their goods, fled outright
into the forest. Their fire they left still burning,
and their dead comrade unburied. All day they
ceased not to flee, eating by the way, from hand to
mouth; and since they feared to sleep, continued to
advance at random even in the hours of darkness.
But the limit of man’s endurance is soon reached;
when they rested at last it was to sleep profoundly;
and when they woke, it was to find that the enemy
was still upon their heels, and death and mutilation
had once more lessened and deformed their company.
By this they had become light-headed,
they had quite missed their path in the Wilderness,
their stores were already running low. With the
further horrors it is superfluous that I should swell
this narrative, already too prolonged. Suffice
it to say that when at length a night passed by innocuous,
and they might breathe again in the hope that the
murderer had at last desisted from pursuit, Mountain
and Secundra were alone. The trader is firmly
persuaded their unseen enemy was some warrior of his
own acquaintance, and that he himself was spared by
favour. The mercy extended to Secundra he explains
on the ground that the East Indian was thought to
be insane; partly from the fact that, through all
the horrors of the flight, and while others were casting
away their very food and weapons, Secundra continued
to stagger forward with a mattock on his shoulder,
and partly because, in the last days, and with a great
degree of heat and fluency, he perpetually spoke with
himself in his own language. But he was sane enough
when it came to English.
“You think he will be gone quite
away?” he asked, upon their blest awakening
in safety.
“I pray God so, I believe so,
I dare to believe so,” Mountain had replied
almost with incoherence, as he described the scene
to me.
And indeed he was so much distempered
that until he met us, the next morning, he could scarce
be certain whether he had dreamed, or whether it was
a fact, that Secundra had thereupon turned directly
about and returned without a word upon their footprints,
setting his face for these wintry and hungry solitudes
along a path whose every stage was mile-stoned with
a mutilated corpse.