We left the logs, and walked to Cornwall,
and took a sloop down the river. It was an American
boat, bound for Quebec with pipe-staves. It
had put in at Cornwall when the storm began.
The captain said that the other sections of our raft
had passed safely. In the dusk of the early evening
a British schooner brought us to.
“Wonder what that means?”
said the skipper, straining his eyes in the dusk,
A small boat, with three officers,
came along-side. They climbed aboard, one of
them carrying a lantern. They were armed with
swords and pistols. We sat in silence around
the cockpit. They scanned each of us carefully
in the light of the lantern. It struck me as
odd they should look so closely at our hands.
“Wha’ d’ ye want?”
the skipper demanded. “This man,”
said one of them, pointing to D’ri. “He’s
a British sailor. We arrest him-”
He got no farther. D’ri’s
hand had gone out like the paw of a painter and sent
him across the cockpit. Before I knew what was
up, I saw the lank body of D’ri leaping backward
into the river. I heard a splash and a stroke
of his long arms, and then all was still. I
knew he was swimming under water to get away.
The officers made for their boat. My blood
was up, and I sprang at the last of them, giving him
a hard shove as he was climbing over, so that he fell
on the boat, upsetting it. They had business
enough then for a little, and began hailing for help.
I knew I had done a foolish thing, and ran forward,
climbing out upon the bowsprit, and off with my coat
and vest, and dived into the dark water. I swam
under as long as I could hold my breath, and then came
up quietly, turning on my back in the quick current,
and floating so my face only was above water.
It had grown dark, and I could see nothing but the
glimmer of the stars above me. My boots were
heavy and dragged hard. I was going fast with
the swift water, for at first I had heard a great
hubbub on the schooner; but now its voices had grown
faint. Other sounds were filling my ear.
After dark it is weird business to
be swimming in strange water-the throne
of mystery, of a thousand terrors. It is as if
one’s grave, full of the blackness of the undiscovered
country, were pursuing him and ever yawning beneath
his body. And that big river is the very tiger
of waters, now stealing on pussy-footed, now rushing
with cat-like swiftness, hissing and striking with
currents that have in them mighty sinews. I was
now companion of those cold-mouthed monsters of the
river bottom, many of which I had seen. What
if one should lay hold on me and drag me under?
Then I thought of rapids that might smother me with
their spray or dash me to hidden rocks. Often
I lifted my ears, marvelling at the many voices of
the river. Sometimes I thought I heard a roaring
like that of the Sault, but it was only a ripple growing
into fleecy waves that rocked me as in a cradle.
The many sounds were above, below, and beside me,
some weird and hollow and unearthly. I could
hear rocks rolling over in their sleep on the bottom,
and, when the water was still, a sound like the cropping
of lily-pads away off on the river-margin. The
bellowing of a cow terrified me as it boomed over
the sounding sheet of water. The river rang like
a mighty drum when a peal of far thunder beat upon
it. I put out my hands to take a stroke or two
as I lay on my back, and felt something floating under
water. The feel of it filled me with horror.
I swam faster; it was at my heels. I knew full
well what my hand had touched-a human head
floating face downward: I could feel the hair
in my fingers. I turned and swam hard, but still
it followed me. My knees hit upon it, and then
my feet. Again and again I could feel it as
I kicked. Its hand seemed to be clutching my
trousers. I thought I should never get clear
of the ghastly thing. I remember wondering if
it were the body of poor D’ri. I turned
aside, swimming another way, and then I felt it no
more.
In the dead of the night I heard suddenly
a kind of throbbing in the breast of the river.
It grew to a noisy heart-beat as I listened.
Again and again I heard it, striking, plashing, like
a footfall, and coming nearer. Somehow I got
the notion of a giant, like those of whom my mother
had told me long ago, striding in the deep river.
I could hear his boots dripping as he lifted them.
I got an odd fear that he would step on me.
Then I heard music and lifted my ears above water.
It was a voice singing in the distance,-it
must have been a mile off,-and what I had
taken for a near footfall shrank away. I knew
now it was the beat of oars in some far bay.
A long time after I had ceased to
hear it, something touched my shoulder and put me
in a panic. Turning over, I got a big mouthful
of water. Then I saw it was a gang of logs passing
me, and quickly caught one. Now, to me the top
side of a log was as easy and familiar as a rocking-chair.
In a moment I was sitting comfortably on my captive.
A bit of rubbish, like that the wind had sown, trailed
after the gang of logs, I felt it over, finding a straw
hat and a piece of board some three feet long, with
which latter I paddled vigorously.
It must have been long past midnight
when I came to an island looming in the dark ahead.
I sculled for it, stranding on a rocky beach, and
alighted, hauling the log ashore. The moon came
out as I stood wringing my trouser legs. I saw
the island rose high and narrow and was thickly wooded.
I remember saying something to myself, when I heard
a quick stir in the bushes near me. Looking
up, I saw a tall figure. Then came a familiar
voice:-
“Thet you, Ray? Judas Priest!”
I was filled with joy at the sight
of D’ri, and put my arms about him and lifted
him off his feet, and, faith! I know my eyes
were wet as my trousers. Then, as we sat down,
I told him how I had taken to the river.
“Lucky ye done it!” said
he. “Jerushy Jane! It is terrible
lucky! They ’d ‘a’ tuk ye sartin.
Somebody see thet jack on the back o’ my hand,
there ’n Cornwall, ‘n’ put ’em
efter me. But I was bound ‘n’ detarmined
they ’d never tek me alive, never!
Ef I ever dew any fightin’, ‘t ain’t
a-goin’ t’ be fer England, nut by
a side o’ sole-leather. I med up my mind
I ‘d begin the war right then an’ there.”
“That fellow never knew what
hit him,” I remarked. “He did n’t
get up for half a minute.”
“Must ‘a’ swatted
’im powerful,” said D’ri, as he felt
his knuckles. “Gol-dum ther
picturs! Go ‘n’ try t’ yank
a man right off a boat like thet air when they hain’
no right t’ tech ’im. Ef I ’d
‘a’ hed Öl’ Beeswax, some on
’em ’d ‘a’ got hurt.”
“How did you get here?” I inquired.
“Swum,” said he.
“Could n’t go nowheres else. Current
fetched me here. Splits et the head o’
the island-boun’ ter land ye right
here. Got t’ be movin’. They
’ll be efter us, mebbe-’s the
fust place they ’d look.”
A few logs were stranded on the stony
point of the island. We withed three others
to mine, setting sail with two bits of driftwood for
paddles. We pulled for the south shore, but the
current carried us rapidly down-river. In a bay
some two miles below we found, to our joy, the two
sections of the big raft undergoing repairs.
At daybreak D’ri put off in the woods for home.
“Don’t like the idée
o’ goin’ int’ the British navy,”
said he. “’D ruther chop wood ‘n’
ketch bears over ’n St. Lawrence County.
Good-by, Ray! Tek care o’ yerself.”
Those were the last words he said
to me, and soon I was on the raft again, floating
toward the great city of my dreams. I had a mighty
fear the schooner would overhaul us, but saw nothing
more of her. I got new clothes in Montreal, presenting
myself in good repair. They gave me hearty welcome,
those good friends of my mother, and I spent a full
year in the college, although, to be frank, I was near
being sent home more than once for fighting and other
deviltry.
It was midsummer when I came back
again. I travelled up the river road, past our
island refuge of that dark night; past the sweeping,
low-voiced currents that bore me up; past the scene
of our wreck in the whirlwind; past the great gap
in the woods, to stand open God knows how long.
I was glad to turn my face to the south shore, for
in Canada there was now a cold welcome for most Yankees,
and my fists were sore with resenting the bitter taunt.
I crossed in a boat from Iroquois, and D’ri
had been waiting for me half a day at the landing.
I was never so glad to see a man-never
but once. Walking home I saw corn growing where
the forest had been-acres of it.
“D’ri,” said I,
in amazement, “how did you ever do it?
There ’s ten years’ work here.”
“God helped us,” said
he, soberly. “The trees went over ’n
the windfall,-slammed ’em down luk
tenpins fer a mild er more,-an’
we jes’ burnt up the rubbish.”