The military council, presided over
by Timmendiquas, sat long in the Council House, and
about the moment it had concluded its labors, which
was some time after midnight, Henry and Shif’less
Sol skipped away from the village. Wyandot warriors
had passed them several times in the darkness, but
they had escaped close notice. Nevertheless, they
were glad when they were once more among the trees.
The forest had many dangers, but it also offered much
shelter.
They rejoined their comrades, slept
heavily until daylight, and when they scouted again
near the Wyandot village they found that Timmendiquas
and his force were gone, probably having started at
the dawn and marching swiftly. But they knew
that they would have no trouble in finding so large
a trail, and as long as they were in proximity of the
village they traveled with great care. It was
nearly night when they found the broad trail through
the woods, leading north slightly by east. All
five were now of the belief that the destination of
the savages was Detroit, the British post, which,
as a depot of supplies and a rallying point for the
Indians, served the same purpose as Niagara and Oswego
in the East. To Detroit, Wyandots, Shawnees,
Miamis, and all the others turned for weapons and
ammunition. There went the renegades and there
many Kentuckians, who had escaped the tomahawk or the
stake, had been taken captive, including such famous
men as Boone and Kenton. It was a name that inspired
dread and hate on the border, but the five were full
of eagerness to see it, and they hoped that the march
of Timmendiquas would take them thither.
“I hear they’ve got big
forts thar,” said Shif’less Sol, “but
ef we don’t lose our cunnin’, an’
I don’t think we will, we five kin spy among
‘em an’ read thar secrets.”
“There are many white men at
Detroit,” said Henry, “and I’ve no
doubt that we can slip in among them without being
detected. Tories and renegades who are strangers
to the British officers at Detroit must be continually
arriving there. In that lies our chance.”
Later in the night they approached
the Wyandot camp, but they did not dare to go very
close, as they saw that it was everywhere guarded
carefully and that but few lights were burning.
They slept in the woods two or three miles away, and
the next day they followed the trail as before.
Thus the northward march went on for several days,
the great White Lightning of the Wyandots and his
warriors moving swiftly, and Henry and his comrades
keeping the same pace six or seven miles in the rear.
They advanced through country that
none of the five had ever seen before, but it was
a beautiful land that appealed alike to the eye and
ear of the forest runner. It was not inferior
to Kentucky, and in addition it had many beautiful
little lakes. Game, however, was not abundant
as here were the villages of the Indian tribes, and
the forests were hunted more. But the five found
deer and buffalo sufficient for their needs, although
they took great risks when they fired. Once the
shot was heard by a detachment of the Shawnees who
also were after game, and they were trailed for a
long time, but when night came they shook them off,
and the next morning they followed Timmendiquas, as
usual, though at a much greater distance.
Their escape in this instance had
been so easy that they took enjoyment from it, but
they prudently resolved to retain their present great
distance in the rear. The trail could not be lost
and the danger would be less. The course that
Timmendiquas maintained also led steadily on toward
Detroit, and they felt so sure now of his destination
that they even debated the advisability of passing
ahead of the column, in order to reach the neighborhood
of Detroit before him. But they decided finally
in the negative, and maintained their safe distance
in the rear.
As they continued northward the Indian
signs increased. Twice they crossed the trails
of Indian hunting parties, and at last they came to
a deserted village. Either it had been abandoned
because of warfare or to escape an unhealthy location,
but the five examined it with great curiosity.
Many of the lodges built of either poles or birch bark
were still standing, with fragments of useless and
abandoned household goods here and there. Paul
found in one of the lodges a dried scalp with long
straight hair, but, obeying a sensitive impulse he
hid it from the others, thrusting it between two folds
of the birch bark.
They also found fragments of arrows
and broken bows. The path leading down to a fine
spring was not yet overgrown with grass, and they
inferred from it that the Indians had not been gone
many months. There was also an open space showing
signs of cultivation. Evidently maize and melons
had grown there.
“I wonder why they went away?”
said Long Jim to Shif’less Sol. “You’ve
made two guesses unhealthiness or danger
from Injuns. Now this site looks purty good to
me, an’ the Injun tribes up here are generally
friendly with one another.”
“Them’s only guesses,”
said Sol, “an’ we’ll never know why.
But I take it that Delawares lived here. This
is just about thar country. Mebbe they’ve
gone North to be near Detroit, whar the arms an’
supplies are.”
“Likely enough,” said
Henry, “but suppose we populate this village
for to-night. It looks as if rain were coming
on, and none of us is fond of sleeping out in the
wet.”
“You’re talkin’
wisdom,” said Shif’less Sol, “an’
I think we kin find a place in the big wigwam over
thar that looks like a Council House.”
He pointed to a rough structure of
bark and poles, with a dilapidated roof and walls,
but in better state of preservation than any of the
wigwams, probably because it had been built stronger.
They entered it and found that it originally had a
floor of bark, some portions of which remained, and
there was enough area of sound roof and walls to shelter
them from the rain. They were content and with
dry bark beneath them and on all sides of them they
disposed themselves for the night.
It yet lacked an hour or so of sunset,
but the heavy clouds already created a twilight, and
the wind began to moan through the forest, bringing
with it a cold rain that made a monotonous and desolate
patter on leaves and grass. The comrades were
glad enough now of their shelter in the abandoned
Council House. They had made at Pittsburg a purchase
which conduced greatly to their comfort, that is, a
pair of exceedingly light but warm blankets for everyone something
of very high quality. They always slept between
these, the under blankets fending off the cold that
rose from the ground.
Now they lay, dry and warm against
the wall of the old Council House, and listened to
the steady drip, drip of the rain on the roof, and
through the holes in the roof upon the floor.
But it did not reach them. They were not sleepy,
and they talked of many things, but as the twilight
came on and the thick clouds still hovered, the abandoned
village took on a ghostly appearance. Nearly all
the wall opposite that against which they lay was
gone, and, as it faced the larger part of the village,
they could see the ruined wigwams and the skeleton
frames that had been used for drying game. Out
of the forest came the long lonesome howl of a wolf,
some ragged, desolate creature that had not yet found
shelter with his kind. The effect upon everyone
was instantaneous and the same. This flight from
the Indians and the slaying of the great hound by
Tom Ross with his silver bullet came back in vivid
colors.
But the howl was not repeated and
the steady drip of the cold rain remained unbroken.
It gathered finally in little puddles on the floor
not far from them, but their own corner remained dry
and impervious. They noticed these things little,
however, as the mystic and ghostly effect of the village
was deepening. Seen through the twilight and the
rain it was now but a phantom. Henry’s mind,
always so sensitive to the things of the forest, repeopled
it. From under his drooping lids he saw the warriors
coming in from the hunt or the chase, the women tanning
skins or curing game, and the little Indian boys practicing
with bows and arrows. He felt a sort of sympathy
for them in this wild life, a life that he knew so
well and that he had lived himself. But he came
quickly out of his waking dream, because his acute
ear had heard something not normal moving in the forest.
He straightened up and his hand slid to the breech
of his rifle. He listened for a few minutes and
then glanced at Shif’less Sol.
“Someone comes our way,” said Henry.
“Yes,” said Shif’less
Sol, “but it ain’t more’n two or
three. Thar, you kin hear the footsteps ag’in,
an’ their bodies brushing ag’in’
the wet bushes.”
“Three at the utmost,”
said Henry, “so we’ll sit here and wait.”
It was not necessary to tell them
to be ready with their weapons. That was a matter
of course with every borderer in such moments.
So the five remained perfectly still in a sitting
position, every one with his back pressed against
the bark wall, a blanket wrapped around his figure,
and a cocked rifle resting upon his knees. They
were so quick that in the darkness and falling rain
they might have passed for so many Indian mummies,
had it not been for the long slender-barreled rifles
and their threatening muzzles.
Yet nobody could have been more alert
than they. Five pairs of trained ears listened
for every sound that rose above the steady drip of
the rain, five pairs of eyes, uncommonly keen in their
keenness, watched the bushes whence the first faint
signals of approach had come. Now they heard
more distinctly that brushing of clothing against the
bushes, and then a muttered oath or two. Evidently
the strangers were white men, perhaps daring hunters
who were not afraid to enter the very heart of the
Indian country. Nevertheless the hands still remained
on their rifles and the muzzles still bore on the
point whence the sounds came.
Three white men, dripping with rain,
emerged from the forest. They were clad in garb,
half civilized and half that of the hunter. All
were well armed and deeply tanned by exposure, but
the attention of the five was instantly concentrated
upon the first of the strangers, a young man of medium
height, but of the most extraordinary ugliness.
His skin, even without the tan, would have been very
dark. His eyes, narrow and oblique, were almost
Oriental in cast and his face was disfigured by a
hideous harelip. The whole effect was sinister
to the last degree, but Henry and his comrades were
fair enough to credit it to a deformity of nature
and not to a wicked soul behind. The two with
him were a little older. They were short, thickly
built, and without anything unusual in their appearance.
The three strangers were dripping
with water and when they came into the abandoned village
they stood for a few moments talking together.
Then their eyes began to roam around in search of
shelter.
“They’ll be coming this
way soon,” whispered Henry to Paul, “because
it’s about the only place large enough to keep
three men dry.”
“Of course they’ll come
here,” Paul whispered back; “now I wonder
who and what they are.”
Henry did not reply and the five remained
as motionless as ever, five dusky figures in a row,
sitting on the bark floor, and leaning against the
bark wall. But every sense in them was acutely
alive, and they watched the strangers look into one
ruined lodge after another. None offered sufficient
shelter and gradually they came toward the Council
House. Always the man with the harelip and ugly
face led. Henry watched him closely. The
twilight and the rain did not allow any very clear
view of him, just enough to disclose that his face
was hideous and sinister. But Henry had a singularly
clear mind and he tried to trace the malignant impression
to the fact of physical ugliness, unwilling to do
injury, even in thought merely, to anyone.
At last the eyes of the three alighted
upon the old Council House, and they came forward
quickly toward the open end. They were about to
enter, but they saw the five figures against the wall
and stopped abruptly. The man with the harelip
bent forward and gazed at them. Henry soon saw
by the expression of his face that he knew they were
no mummies. He now thrust his rifle forward and
his hand slipped down toward the trigger. Then
Henry spoke.
“Come in,” he said quickly;
“we are white like yourselves, and we claim
no exclusive rights to this Council House, which is
about the only real shelter left in the Indian town.
We are hunters and scouts.”
“So are we,” said the
man with the harelip, speaking grammatically and with
a fair degree of courtesy. “We are hardened
to the wilderness, but we are thankful for the shelter
which you seem to have found before us.”
“There is room for all,”
said Henry. “You will observe the large
dry place at the south end. The bark floor there
is solid and no matter how the wind blows the rain
cannot reach you.”
“We’ll use it,”
said the ugly man, and now his teeth began to chatter,
“but I confess that I need more than mere shelter.
The rain and cold have entered my system, and I shall
suffer severely unless we have a fire. Is it
not possible to build one here near the center of the
Council House? The dry bark will feed it, until
it is strong enough to take hold of the wet wood.”
“It is the Indian country,”
said Henry, and yet he pitied him of the harelip.
“I know,” replied the
man, “I know too that all the tribes are on the
war path, and that they are exceedingly bitter against
us. My name is Holdsworth, and I am from Connecticut.
These are my men, Fowler and Perley, also from the
East. We’re not altogether hunters, as we
have seen service in the Eastern army, and we are
now scouting toward Detroit with the intention of
carrying back news about the British and Indian power
there. But I feel that I must light the fire,
despite all Indian danger.”
He shook violently and Henry again
felt sorry for him. So did the rest of the five.
These three had become their comrades for the night,
and it would not be fair to prevent the fire that
the man so evidently needed.
“We can see that what you say
is true,” said Henry, “and we’ll
help you kindle a blaze. These friends of mine
are Tom Ross, Jim Hart, Solomon Hyde, and Paul Cotter.
My own name is Henry Ware.”
He saw the ugly man start a little,
and then smile in a way that made his disfigured lip
more hideous than ever.
“I’ve heard the names,”
said the stranger. “The woods are immense,
but there are not many of us, and those of marked
qualities soon become known. It seems to me that
I’ve heard you were at Wyoming and the Chemung.”
“Yes,” said Henry, “we
were at both places. But since we’re going
to have a fire, it’s best that we have it as
soon as possible.”
They fell to work with flint and steel
on the dry bark. The two men, Fowler and Perley,
had said nothing.
“Not especially bright,”
said Holdsworth to Henry in a whisper, as he nodded
toward them, “but excellent foresters and very
useful in the work that I have to do.”
“You can’t always tell
a man by his looks,” replied Henry in the same
tone.
It was not a difficult matter to light
the fire. They scraped off the inside of the
bark until they accumulated a little heap of tinder.
It was ignited with a few sparks of the flint and
steel, and then the bark too caught fire. After
that they had nothing to do but feed the flames which
grew and grew, casting a luminous red glare in every
corner of the old Council House. Then it was
so strong that it readily burned the wet bark from
the dismantled lodges near by.
The cold rain still came down steadily
and the night, thick and dark, had settled over the
forest. Henry and his comrades were bound to
confess that the fire was a vivid core of cheer and
comfort. It thrust out a grateful heat, the high
flames danced, and the coals, red and yellow, fell
into a great glowing heap. Holdsworth, Fowler
and Perley took off nearly all their clothing, dried
their bodies, and then their wet garments. Holdsworth
ceased to shiver, and while Fowler and Perley still
fed the fire, the five resumed their places against
the wall, their rifles again lying across their knees,
a forest precaution so customary that no one could
take exception to it. Apparently they dozed,
but they were nevertheless wide awake. Holdsworth
and his men reclothed themselves in their dry raiment,
and when they finished the task, Henry said:
“We’ve three kinds of
dried meat, venison, bear and buffalo, and you can
take your choice, one kind, two kinds, or all kinds.”
“I thank you, sir,” said
Holdsworth, “but we also carry a plentiful supply
of provisions in our knapsacks, and we have partaken
freely of them. We are now dry, and there is
nothing else for us to do but sleep.”
“Then we had better put out
the fire,” said Henry. “As we agreed
before, we’re in the heart of the Indian country,
and we do not wish to send up a beacon that will bring
the savages down upon us.”
But Holdsworth demurred.
“The Indians themselves would
not be abroad on such a night,” he said.
“There can be no possible danger of an attack
by them, and I suggest that we keep it burning.
Then we will be all the stronger and warmer in the
morning.”
Henry was about to say something,
but he changed his mind and said something else.
“Let it burn, then,” he
acquiesced. “The flame is hidden on three
sides anyhow and, as you say, the savages themselves
will keep under cover now. Perhaps, Mr. Holdsworth,
as you have come from the East since we have, you
can tell us about our future there.”
“Not a great deal,” replied
the man, “but I fear that we are not prospering
greatly. Our armies are weak. Although their
country is ruined, war parties under Brant came down
from the British forts, and ravaged the Mohawk valley
anew. ’Tis said by many that the Americans
cannot hold out much longer against the forces of the
king.”
“Your words coming from a great
patriot are discouraging,” said Henry.
“It is because I cannot make
them otherwise,” replied Holdsworth.
Henry, from under the edge of his
cap, again examined him critically. Holdsworth
and his men were reclining against the bark wall in
the second largest dry spot, not more than ten feet
away. The man was ugly, extremely ugly beyond
a doubt, and in the glow of the firelight he seemed
more sinister than ever. Yet the young forest
runner tried once more to be fair. He recalled
all of Holdsworth’s good points. The man
had spoken in a tone of sincerity, and he had been
courteous. He had not said or done anything offensive.
If he was discouraged over the patriot cause, it was
because he could not help it.
While Henry studied him, there was
a silence for a little space. Meantime the rain
increased in volume, but it came straight down, making
a steady, droning sound that was not unpleasant.
The heavy darkness moved up to the very door of the
old Council House, and, despite the fire, the forest
beyond was invisible. Holdsworth was still awake,
but the two men with him seemed to doze. Shif’less
Sol was also watching Holdsworth with keen and anxious
eyes, but he left the talk to his young comrade, their
acknowledged leader.
“You know,” said Henry
at length, “that some great movement among the
Indians is on foot.”
Holdsworth stirred a little against
the bark wall, and it seemed to Henry that a new eagerness
came into his eyes. But he replied:
“No, I have not heard of it
yet. You are ahead of me there. But the
Indians and British at Detroit are always plotting
something against us. What particular news do
you have?”
“That Timmendiquas, the Wyandot,
the greatest of the western chiefs, accompanied by
the head chiefs of the Shawnees and Miamis, and a body
of chosen warriors is marching to Detroit. We
have been following them, and they are now not more
than twenty-five or thirty miles ahead of us.
I take it that there will be a great council at Detroit,
composed of the British, the Tories, the Western Indians
with Timmendiquas at their head, and perhaps also
the Iroquois and other Eastern Indians with Thayendanegea
leading them. The point of attack will be the
settlements in Kentucky. If the allied forces
are successful the tomahawk and the scalping knife
will spare none. Doesn’t the prospect fill
you with horror, Mr. Holdsworth?”
Holdsworth shaded his face with his
hand, and replied slowly:
“It does inspire fear, but perhaps
the English and Indian leaders will be merciful.
These are great matters of which you tell me, Mr. Ware.
I had heard some vague reports, but yours are the
first details to reach me. Perhaps if we work
together we can obtain information that will be of
great service to the settlements.”
“Perhaps,” said Henry,
and then he relapsed into silence. Holdsworth
remained silent too and gazed into the fire, but Henry
saw that his thoughts were elsewhere. A long
time passed and no one spoke. The fire had certainly
added much to the warmth and comfort of the old house.
They were all tired with long marches, and the steady
droning sound of the rain, which could not reach them,
was wonderfully soothing. The figures against
the bark walls relaxed, and, as far as the human eye
could see, they dropped asleep one by one, the five
on one side and the three on the other.
The fire, well fed in the beginning,
burned for two or three hours, but after awhile it
begun to smolder, and sent up a long thin column of
smoke. The rain came lighter and then ceased entirely.
The clouds parted in the center as if they had been
slashed across by a sword blade, and then rolled away
to left and right. The heavens became a silky
blue, and the stars sprang out in sparkling groups.
It was past midnight when Holdsworth
moved slightly, like one half awakening from a deep
sleep. But his elbow touched the man Fowler, and
he said a few words to him in a whisper. Then
he sank back into his relaxed position, and apparently
was asleep again. Fowler himself did not move
for at least ten minutes. Then he arose, slipped
out of the Council House, and returned with a great
armful of wet leaves, which he put gently upon the
fire. Quickly and quietly he sank back into his
old position by the wall.
Dense smoke came from the coals and
heap of leaves, but it rose in a strong spire and
passed out through the broken part of the roof, the
great hole there creating a draught. It rose high
and in the night, now clear and beautiful, it could
be seen afar. Yet all the eight five
on one side and three on the other seemed
to be sound asleep once more.
The column of smoke thickened and
rose higher into the sky, and presently the man Fowler
was at work again. Rising and stepping, with
wonderful lightness for a thick-set heavy man, he spread
his open blanket over the smoke, and then quickly
drew it away. He repeated the operation at least
twenty times and at least twenty great coiling rings
of smoke arose, sailing far up into the blue sky, and
then drifting away over the forest, until they were
lost in the distance.
Fowler folded the blanket again, but
he did not resume his place against the wall.
Holdsworth and Perley rose lightly and joined him.
Then the three gazed intently at the five figures
on the other side of the smoke. Not one of them
stirred. So far as the three could see, the five
were buried in the most profound slumber.
Holdsworth made a signal and the three,
their rifles in the hollows of their arms, glided
from the Council House and into the forest.
As soon as they were lost in the darkness,
Henry Ware sprang to his feet, alive in every nerve
and fiber, and tingling with eagerness.
“Up; up, boys!” he cried.
“Those three men are Tories or English, and
they are coming back with the savages. The rings
of smoke made the signal to their friends. But
we’ll beat them at their own trick.”
All were on their feet in an instant in
fact, only Jim Hart and Paul had fallen asleep and
they ran silently into the forest in a direction opposite
to that which the three had chosen. But they did
not go far. At Henry’s whispered signal,
they sank down among some dense bushes where they
could lie hidden, and yet see all that passed at the
Council House. The water from the bushes that
they had moved dropped upon them, but they did not
notice it. Nor did they care either that the spire
of smoke still rose through the roof of the old Council
House. Five pairs of uncommonly keen eyes were
watching the forest to see their enemies come forth.
“I saw the fellow make the big
smoke,” said Shif’less Sol, “but
I knowed that you saw, too. So I jest waited
till you give the word, Henry.”
“I wanted them to go through
to the end with it,” replied Henry. “If
we had stopped the man when he was bringing in the
leaves he might have made some sort of excuse, and
we should have had no proof at all against them.”
“Them’s false names they gave o’
course.”
“Of course. It is likely
that the man who called himself Holdsworth is somebody
of importance. His manner indicated it. How
ugly that harelipped fellow was!”
“How long do you think it will
be before they come back?” asked Shif’less
Sol.
“Not long. The Indian force
could not have been more than a mile or so away, or
they would not have relied on smoke signals in the
night. It will be only a short wait, Sol, until
we see something interesting. Now I wish I knew
that harelipped man!”
Henry and his comrades could have
slipped away easily in the darkness, but they had
no mind to do so. Theirs was a journey of discovery,
and, since here was an opportunity to do what they
wished, they would not avoid it, no matter how great
the risk. So they waited patiently. The
forest still dripped water, but they had seldom seen
the skies a brighter blue at night. The spire
of smoke showed against it sharp and clear, as if
it had been day. In the brilliant moonlight the
ruined village assumed another ghostly phase.
All the rugged outlines of half-fallen tepees were
silvered and softened. Henry, with that extraordinary
sensitiveness of his to nature and the wilderness,
felt again the mysticism and unreality of this place,
once inhabited by man and now given back to the forest.
In another season or two the last remnant of bark
would disappear, the footpaths would be grown up with
bushes, and the wild animals would roam there unafraid.
All these thoughts passed like a succession
of mental flashes through the mind of the forest dreamer and
a dreamer he was, a poet of the woods as
he waited there for what might be, and what probably
would be, a tragedy. But as these visions flitted
past there was no relaxation of his vigilance.
It was he who first heard the slight swishing sound
of the bushes on the far side of the Council House;
it was he who first heard the light tread of an approaching
moccasin, and it was he who first saw the ugly harelipped
face of a white man appear at the forest edge.
Then all saw, and slow, cold anger rose in five breasts
at the treacherous trick.
Behind the harelipped man appeared
Perley and Fowler, and six savage warriors, armed
fully, and coated thickly with war paint. Now
Henry knew that the sinister effect of Holdsworth’s
face was not due wholly to his harelip, and the ugliness
of all his features. He was glad in a way because
he had not done the man injustice.
The three white men and the six Indians
waited a long time at the edge of the woods.
They were using both eye and ear to tell if the five
in the old Council House slept soundly. The fire
now gave forth nothing but smoke, and they could not
see clearly into the depths. They must come nearer
if they would make sure of their victims. They
advanced slowly across the open, their weapons ready.
All the idealist was gone from Henry now. They
had taken these three men into what was then their
house; they had been warmed and dried by their fire,
and now they came back to kill. He watched them
slip across the open space, and he saw in the moonlight
that their faces were murderous, the white as bad as
the red.
The band reached the end of the Council
House and looked in, uttering low cries of disappointment
when they saw nothing there. None of the five
ever knew whether they had waited there for the purpose
of giving battle to the raiding band, but at this
moment Paul moved a little in order to get a better
view, and a bush rustled under his incautious moccasin.
One of the savages heard it, gave a warning cry, and
in an instant the whole party threw themselves flat
upon the earth, with the wall of the Council House
between themselves and that point in the forest from
which the sound had come. Silence and invisibility
followed, yet the forest battle was on.