None of the five knew how far they
were down the lake, but they were able to guide their
course by the sun, and, keeping the low bank of forest
far beyond gunshot on their right, they moved before
a favoring wind. The schoolmaster regained his
strength fast. He was old, but a temperate life
in the open air reenforced by plenty of exercise, had
kept him wiry and strong. Now he sat up and listened
to the long tale of the adventures of the five, whom
he had not seen for many months previous to their
great journey to New Orleans.
“You have done well you
have done more than well,” he said. “You
have performed magnificent deeds. It is a beautiful
land for which we fight, and, although our enemies
are many and terrible and we suffer much, we shall
surely triumph in the end. Bird with his cannon
was compelled to go back. He could have battered
down the palisade walls of any of the stations, but
he feared the gathering of the white hunters and fighters.
Above all he feared the coming of George Rogers Clark,
the shield of the border.”
Henry’s heart throbbed at the
name of Clark, renowned victor of Vincennes and Kaskaskia.
“Clark!” he exclaimed. “Is
he in Kentucky?”
“There or to the northward.
It is said that he is gathering a force to attack
the Indian villages.”
“If it could only be true!” said Paul.
The others echoed the wish.
Henry remained silent, but for a long
time he was very thoughtful. The news that Wareville
was untouched by the raid had relieved him immensely,
and he was very hopeful also that George Rogers Clark
was coming again to the rescue. The name of Clark
was one with which to conjure. It would draw
all the best men of the border and moreover it would
cause Timmendiquas, Caldwell and their great force
to turn aside. Once more hope was in the ascendant.
Meanwhile, the sparkling breeze blew them southward,
and the eyes of all grew brighter. Fresh life
poured into the veins of the schoolmaster, and he sat
up, looking with pleasure at the rippling surface
of the lake.
“It reminds me in a way of the
time when we fled from the place of the giant bones,”
he said, “and I hope and believe that our flight
will end as happily.”
“That looks like a long time
ago, Mr. Pennypacker,” said Tom Ross, “an’
we hev traveled a mighty lot since. I reckon that
we’ve been to places that I never heard uv until
Paul told about ’em, Troy and Rome an’
Alexander ”
“Tom,” broke in Shif’less
Sol, “you’re gettin’ mixed.
Troy’s dead, an’ we may hev got close
to Rome, but we never did ackshally reach the town.
An’ ez fur Alexander, that wuz a man an’
not a city.”
“It don’t make no difference,”
replied Tom, not at all abashed. “What do
all them old names amount to anyhow? Like ez not
the people that lived in ’em got mixed about
’em themselves.”
Mr. Pennypacker smiled.
“It doesn’t make any difference
about Rome and Troy,” he said. “You’ve
been all the way down to New Orleans and you’ve
fought in the East with the Continental troops.
Your adventures have been fully as wonderful as those
of Ulysses, and you have traveled a greater distance.”
They sailed on all through the day,
still seeing that low shore almost like a cloud bank
on their right, but nothing save water ahead of them.
Henry was sure that it was not above sixty miles across
the lake, but he calculated that they had been blown
about a great deal in the storm, and for all they
knew the island might have been far out of their course.
It was evident that they could not
reach the south shore before dusk, and they turned
in toward the land. Shif’less Sol hailed
the turning of the boat’s course with delight.
“Boats are all right fur travelin’,”
he said, “when the wind’s blowin’
an’ you’ve a sail. A lazy man like
me never wants nothin’ better, but when the
night comes on an’ you need to sleep, I want
the land. I never feel the land heavin’
an’ pitchin’ under me, an’ it gives
me more of a safe an’ home feelin’.”
“Watch, everybody, for a landing
place,” said Henry, “and Paul, you steer.”
The green shore began to rise, showing
a long unbroken wall of forest, but the dusk was coming
too, and all of them were anxious to make land.
Presently, they were only three or four hundred yards
from the coast and they skimmed rapidly along it,
looking for an anchorage. It was full night before
Henry’s sharp eyes saw the mouth of a creek almost
hidden by tall grass, and, taking down the sail, they
pulled the boat into it. They tied their craft
securely to a tree, and the night passed without alarm.
They resumed the voyage early the
next morning, and that day reached the southern coast
of the lake. Here they reluctantly left the boat.
They might have found a river emptying into the lake
down which they could have gone a hundred or more
miles further, but they were not sufficiently acquainted
with this part of the country to spend their time
in hunting for it. They drew their good little
craft as far as they could among the weeds and bushes
that grew at the water’s edge.
“That’s two good boats
we’ve got hid on the water ways,” said
Shif’less Sol, “besides a half dozen canoes
scattered here an’ thar, an’ mebbe we’ll
find ’em an’ use ’em some day.”
“This cost us nothin’,”
said Jim Hart, “so I reckon we ain’t got
any right to grieve, ‘cause we’re givin’
up what we never paid fur.”
They took out of the boat all the
supplies that they could conveniently carry, and then
started toward the southwest. The course to Kentucky
now led through the heart of the Indian country.
Between them and the Ohio lay the great Indian villages
of Chillicothe, Piqua and many others, and the journey
in any event would be dangerous. But the presence
of the old schoolmaster was likely to make it more
so, since he could not travel with any approach to
the speed and skill of the others. Yet no one
thought, for a moment, of blaming him. They were
happy to have rescued him, and, moreover, he had brought
them the good news that Wareville was untouched by
the Bird invasion. Yet speed was vital. The
scattered stations must be warned against the second
and greater expedition under Caldwell and Timmendiquas.
Mr. Pennypacker himself perceived the fact and he
urged them to go on and leave him. He felt sure
that with a rifle and plenty of ammunition he could
reach Wareville in safety.
“You can give me a lot of food,”
he said, “and doubtless I shall be able to shoot
some game. Now go ahead and leave me. Many
lives may depend upon it.”
They only laughed, but Shif’less
Sol and Henry, who had been whispering together, announced
a plan.
“This here expedition is goin’
to split,” said the shiftless one. “Henry
is the fastest runner an’ the best woodsman of
us all. I hate to admit that he’s better
than me, but he is, an’ he’s goin’
on ahead. Now you needn’t say anything,
Mr. Pennypacker, about your makin’ trouble,
’cause you don’t. We’d make
Henry run on afore, even ef you wuzn’t with
us. That boy needs trainin’ down, an’
we intend to see that he gits the trainin’.”
There was nothing more to be said
and the rest was done very quietly and quickly.
A brief farewell, a handshake for everyone, and he
was gone.
Henry had never been in finer physical
condition, and the feeling of responsibility seemed
to strengthen him also in both body and mind.
In one way he was sorry to leave his comrades and
in another he was glad. Alone he would travel
faster, and in the wilderness he never feared the
loneliness and the silence. A sense, dead or atrophied
in the ordinary human being, came out more strongly
in him. It seemed to be a sort of divination
or prescience, as if messages reached him through the
air, like the modern wireless.
He went southward at a long walk half
a run for an hour or two before he stopped. Then
he stood on the crest of a little hill and saw the
deep woods all about him. There was no sign of
his comrades whom he had left far behind, nor was
there any indication of human life save himself.
Yet he had seldom seen anything that appealed to him
more than this bit of the wilderness. The trees,
oak, beech and elm, were magnificent. Great coiling
grape vines now and then connected a cluster of trees,
but there was little undergrowth. Overhead, birds
chattered and sang among the leaves, and far up in
the sky a pair of eagles were speeding like black
specks toward the lake. Henry inhaled deep breaths.
The odors of the woods came to him and were sweet
in his nostrils. All the wilderness filled him
with delight. A black bear passed and climbed
a tree in search of honey. Two deer came in sight,
but the human odor reached them and they fled swiftly
away, although they were in no danger from Henry.
Then he, too, resumed his journey,
and sped swiftly toward the south through the unbroken
forest. He came after a while to marshy country,
half choked with fallen wood from old storms.
He showed his wonderful agility and strength.
He leaped rapidly from one fallen log to another and
his speed was scarcely diminished. Now and then
he saw wide black pools, and once he crossed a deep
creek on a fallen tree. Night found him yet in
this marshy region, but he was not sorry as he had
left no trail behind, and, after looking around some
time, he found a little oasis of dry land with a mighty
oak tree growing in the center. Here he felt
absolutely secure, and, making his supper of dried
venison, he lay down under the boughs of the oak,
with one blanket beneath him and another above him
and was soon in a deep and dreamless sleep.
He awoke about midnight to find a
gorgeous parade of the moon and all the stars, and
he lay for a while watching them through the leaves
of the oak. Powerful are nature and habit, and
Henry’s life was in accordance with both.
Lying alone at midnight on that little knoll in the
midst of a great marsh in the country of wary and cruel
enemies, he was thankful that it had been given to
him to be there, and that his lot had been cast among
the conditions that surrounded him.
He heard a slight noise to the left
of him, but he knew that it was only another hungry
bear stealing about. There was a light splash
in the pool at the foot of the knoll, but it was only
a large fish leaping up and making a noise as it fell
back. Far to the south something gleamed fitfully
among the trees, but it was only marsh fire. None
of these things disturbed him, and knowing that the
wilderness was at peace he laid his head back on the
turf and fell asleep again. At break of day he
was up and away, and until afternoon he sped toward
the south in the long running walk which frontiersmen
and Indians could maintain for hours with ease.
About 4 o’clock in the afternoon, he stopped
as suddenly as if he had come to a river’s brink.
He had struck a great trail, not a path made by three
or four persons but by hundreds. He could see
their road a hundred yards wide. Here so many
feet had trodden that the grass was yet thinner than
elsewhere; there lay the bones of deer, eaten clean
and thrown away. Further on was a feather trimmed
and dyed that had fallen from a scalp lock, and beyond
that, a blanket discarded as too old and ragged lay
rotting.
These were signs that spoke to Henry
as plainly as if the words themselves were uttered.
A great wilderness army had passed that way and for
a while he was in doubt. Was it the force of Bird
coming back to the North? But it was undoubtedly
a trail several weeks old. Everything indicated
it. The bones had been bleached by the sun, the
feather was beaten partly into the earth by rain,
and the tattered old blanket had been pawed and torn
still further by wolves. But none of these things
told what army it might be. He hunted, instead,
for some low place that might have been soft and marshy
when the warriors passed, and which, when it dried,
would preserve the outline of a footstep. He advanced
a full mile, following the broad trail which was like
an open road to him until he came to such a place.
Then he kneeled and examined it critically. In
a half dozen places he saw held in the hard earth the
outline of footsteps. They would have been traces
of footsteps to most people and nothing more, but
he knew that every one of them pointed to the south.
A mile further on and in another low place he had full
verification of that, which, in fact, he already knew.
Here the prints were numerous. Chance had brought
him upon the trail of Timmendiquas, and he resolved,
for the present, to follow it.
Henry came to this determination because
it was extremely important to know the location and
plans of the invading army. More news of an attack
would not be nearly so valuable as the time and place
at which the attack was to be delivered. The
course seemed plain to him and he followed the broad
trail with speed and ardor, noting all along the indications
that the army took no care to conceal itself or hide
its trail. Why should it? There was nothing
in these woods powerful enough to meet the Anglo-Indian
combination.
For four days and for a part of every
night he followed without a break. He saw the
trail grow fresher, and he judged that he was moving
at least twice as fast as the army. He could
see where English or Tory boots had crushed down the
grass and he saw also the lighter imprints of moccasins.
He passed numerous camps marked by ashes, bones of
deer, buffalo, bear and smaller animals, and fragments
of old worn-out garments, such as an army casts away
as it goes along. He read in these things unlimited
confidence on the part of both Indians and white men.
An unusually large camp had been made
at one place and some bark shelters had been thrown
up. Henry inferred that the army had spent two
or three days here, and he could account for the fact
only on the ground that some division of counsels
had occurred. Perhaps the weather had been stormy
meanwhile, and the bark shelters had been constructed
for the officers and chiefs.
He spent a night in this camp and
used one of the shelters, as it began to rain heavily
just after dark. It was a little place, but it
kept him dry and he watched with interest as the wind
and rain drove across the opening and through the
forest. He was as close and snug as a bear in
its lair, but the storm was heavy with thunder and
vivid with lightning. The lightning was uncommonly
bright. Frequently the wet boughs and trees stood
out in the glare like so much carving, and Henry was
forced to shut his dazzled eyes. But he was neither
lonely nor afraid. He recognized the tremendous
power of nature, but it seemed to him that he had
his part here, and the whole was to him a majestic
and beautiful panorama.
Henry remembered the fight that he
and his comrades had had at the deserted village,
and he found some similarity in his present situation,
but he did not anticipate the coming of another enemy,
and, secure in the belief, he slept while the storm
still blew. When morning came, the rain had ceased.
He replenished his food supplies with a deer that he
had shot by the way and he cooked a little on one of
the heaps of stones that the Indians had used for
the same purpose. When he had eaten he glanced
at the other bark shelters and he saw the name of Braxton
Wyatt cut on one of them. Henry shuddered with
aversion. He had seen so much of death and torture
done on the border that he could not understand how
Simon Girty, Braxton Wyatt and their like could do
such deeds upon their own countrymen. But he
felt that the day was coming fast when many of them
would be punished.
He began the great trail anew upon
turf, now soft and springy from the rain, and, refreshed
by the long night’s sleep in the bark shelter,
he went rapidly. Eight or ten miles beyond the
camp the trail made an abrupt curve to the eastward.
Perhaps they were coming to some large river of which
the Indian scouts knew and the turn was made in order
to reach a ford, but he followed it another hour and
there was no river. The nature of the country
also indicated that no great stream could be at hand,
and Henry believed that it signified a change of plan,
a belief strengthened by a continuation of the trail
toward the east as he followed it hour by hour.
What did it mean? Undoubtedly it was something
of great significance to his enterprise, but now he
grew more wary. Since the course of the army
was changed bands of Indians might be loitering behind,
and he must take every precaution lest he run into
one of them. He noticed from time to time small
trails coming into the larger one, and he inferred
that they were hunting parties sent off from the main
body and now returning.
The trail maintained the change and
still bore toward the east. It had been obliterated
to some extent by the rains, but it was as wide as
ever, and Henry knew that no division had taken place.
But he was yet convinced that some subject of great
importance had been debated at the place of the long
camp. On the following day he saw two warriors,
and he lay in the bush while they passed only twenty
yards away, close enough for him to see that they
were Miamis. They were proceeding leisurely,
perhaps on a hunting expedition, and it was well for
them that they did not search at this point for any
enemy. The most formidable figure on all the
border lay in the thicket with both rifle and pistol
ready. Henry heard them talking, but he had no
wish for an encounter even with the advantage of ambush
and surprise on his side. He was concerned with
far more important business.
The two Indians looked at the broad
trail, but evidently they knew all about it, as it
did not claim more than a half minute’s attention.
Then they went northward, and when Henry was sure
that they were a mile or two away, he resumed his
pursuit, a single man following an army. Now
all his wonderful skill and knowledge and developed
power of intuition came into play. Soon he passed
the point where the trail had been made fainter by
the latest rains, and now it became to his eyes broad
and deep. He came to a place where many fires
had been built obviously for cooking, and the ashes
of the largest fires were near the center of the camp.
A half circle of unburned logs lay around these ashes.
As the logs were not sunk in the ground at all they
had evidently been drawn there recently, and Henry,
sitting down on one of them, began to study the problem.
On the other side of the ashes where
no logs lay were slight traces in the earth.
It seemed to him that they had been made by heels,
and he also saw at one place a pinch of brown ashes
unlike the white ashes left by the fire. He went
over, knelt down and smelled of the brown pinch.
The odor was faint, very faint, but it was enough to
tell him that it had been made by tobacco. A
pipe had been smoked here, not to soothe the mind
or body, but for a political purpose. At once
his knowledge and vivid imagination reconstructed
the whole scene. An important council had been
held. The logs had been drawn up as seats for
the British and Tory officers. Opposite them
on the bare ground the chiefs, after their custom,
had sat in Turkish fashion, and the pipe had been passed
from one to another until the circle was complete.
It must have been a most vital question or they would
not have smoked the pipe. He came back to the
logs and found in one of them a cut recently made.
Someone had been indulging in the western custom of
whittling with a strong clasp knife and he had no
doubt that it was Braxton Wyatt who had cut his name
with the same knife on the bark shelter. It would
take one whittling casually a long time to make so
deep a cut. Then they had debated there for two
or three hours. This meant that the leaders were
in doubt. Perhaps Timmendiquas and Caldwell had
disagreed. If it could only be true! Then
the little stations would have time to renew their
breath and strength before another great attack could
be made.
He sat on the log and concentrated
his mind with great intensity upon the problem.
He believed that the master mind in the council had
been that of Timmendiquas. He also had inspired
the change of route and perhaps Caldwell, Girty and
Wyatt had tried to turn him back. Doubtless the
course of Timmendiquas had been inspired by news from
the South. Would the trail turn again?
He renewed the eager pursuit.
He followed for a full day, but it still ran toward
the east, and was growing fresher much faster than
before. He argued from this fact that the speed
of the army had slackened greatly. On the day
after that, although the course of the main body was
unchanged he saw where a considerable band had left
it and gone northward. What did this mean?
The band could not have numbered less than fifty.
It must be making for some one of the great Indian
towns, Chillicothe or Piqua. Once more the reader
of the wilderness page translated. They had received
news from the South, and it was not such as they wished.
The Indian towns had been threatened by something,
and the band had gone to protect or help them.
Shortly before nightfall he noticed
another trail made by perhaps twenty warriors coming
from the south and joining that of the main body.
The briers and grass were tangled considerably, and,
as he looked closely, his eyes caught a tint of red
on the earth. It was only a spot, and once more
the wilderness reader read what was printed in his
book. This band had brought wounded men with
it, and the tribes were not fighting among themselves.
They had encountered the Kentuckians, hunters perhaps,
or a larger force maybe, and they had not escaped
without damage. Henry exulted, not because blood
had been shed, but because some prowling band intent
upon scalps had met a check.
He followed the ruddy trail until
it emerged into the broader one and then to a point
beside it, where a cluster of huge oaks flung a pleasant
shade. Here the wounds of the warriors had been
bandaged, as fragments of deerskin lay about.
One of them had certainly suffered a broken arm or
leg, because pieces of stout twigs with which they
had made splints lay under one of the trees.
The next day he turned another page
in his book, and read about the great feast the army
had held. He reached one of the little prairies
so common in that region. Not many days before
it had been a great berry field, but now it was trampled,
and stripped. Seven or eight hundred warriors
had eaten of the berries and they had also eaten of
much solid food. At the far edge of the prairie
just within the shade of the forest he found the skeletons
of three buffaloes and several deer, probably shot
by the hunters on that very prairie. A brook of
fine clear water flowed by, and both banks were lined
with footsteps. Here the warriors after eating
heavily had come to drink. Many of the trees near
by contained the marks of hatchet strokes, and Henry
read easily that the warriors had practiced there
with their tomahawks, perhaps for prizes offered by
their white leaders. Cut in the soft bark of a
beech he read the words “Braxton Wyatt.”
So he had been at work with the clasp knife again,
and Henry inferred that the young renegade was worried
and nervous or he would not have such uneasy hands.
Most of the heavier footprints, those
that turned out, were on one side of the camp and
Henry read from this the fact that the English and
Tories had drawn somewhat apart, and that the differences
between them and the Indians had become greater.
He concentrated his mind again upon the problem, and
at length drew his conclusion from what he had read.
The doubts of Timmendiquas concerning
his allies were growing stronger, so Henry construed.
The great Wyandot chief had been induced with difficulty
to believe that the soldiers of the British king would
repay their red allies, and would defend the Indian
villages if a large force from Kentucky were sent
against them. The indications that such a force
was moving or would move must be growing stronger.
Doubtless the original turn to the eastward had been
in order to deflect the attack against the settlements
on the upper Ohio, most probably against Fort Henry.
Now it was likely that the second plan had been abandoned
for a third. What would that third be?
He slept that night in a dense covert
about half a mile from the camp, and he was awakened
once by the howling of wolves. He knew that they
were prowling about the deserted camp in search of
remnants of food, and he felt sure that others also
were following close behind the Indian army, in order
to obtain what they might leave at future camps.
Perhaps they might trail him too, but he had his rifle
and pistol and, unafraid, he went to sleep again.
The broad trail led the next day to
a river which Henry reached about noon. It was
fordable, but the army had not crossed. It had
stopped abruptly at the brink and then had marched
almost due north. Henry read this chapter easily
and he read it joyfully. The dissatisfaction among
the Indian chiefs had reached a climax, and the river,
no real obstacle in itself, had served as the straw
to turn them into a new course. Timmendiquas
had boldly led the way northward and from Kentucky.
He, Red Eagle, Yellow Panther and the rest were going
to the Indian villages, and Caldwell and the other
white men were forced either to go with them or return
to Detroit. He followed the trail for a day and
a half, saw it swing in toward the west, and theory
became certainty. The army was marching toward
Chillicothe and Piqua.
After this last great turn Henry studied
the trail with the utmost care. He had read much
there, but he intended to read every word that it said.
He noticed that the division, the British and Tories
on one side and the Indians on the other, continued,
and he was quite sure now that he would soon come
upon some important development.
He found the next day that for which
he was looking. The army had camped in another
of the little prairies, and the Indians had held a
great dance. The earth, trampled heavily over
a regulated space, showed it clearly. Most of
the white men had stayed in one group on the right.
Here were the deep traces of military boot heels such
as the officers might wear.
Again his vivid imagination and power
of mental projection into the dark reconstructed the
whole scene. The Indians, Wyandots, Shawnees,
Miamis and the others, had danced wildly, whirling
their tomahawks about their heads, their naked bodies
painted in many colors, their eyes glaring with the
intoxication of the dance. Timmendiquas and the
other chiefs had stood here looking on; over there,
on the right, Caldwell and his officers had stood,
and few words had passed between officers and chiefs.
“Now the division will become
more complete,” said Henry to himself, as he
followed the trail anew into the forest, and he was
so sure of it that he felt no surprise when, within
a mile, it split abruptly. The greater trail
continued to the west, the smaller turned abruptly
to the north, and this was the one that contained
the imprints of the military boot heels. Once
more he read his text with ease. Timmendiquas
and Caldwell had parted company. The English
and Tories were returning to Detroit. Timmendiquas,
hot with wrath because his white allies would not
help him, was going on with the warriors to the defense
of their villages.
Without beholding with his own eyes
a single act of this army he had watched the growth
of the quarrel between red and white and he had been
a witness to its culmination. But all these movements
had been influenced by some power of which he knew
nothing. It was his business to discover the
nature of this power, and he would follow the Indian
trail a little while longer.
Henry had not suffered for food.
Despite the passage of the Indian army the country
was so full of game that he was able to shoot what
he wished almost when he wished, but he felt that
he was now coming so near to the main body that he
could not risk a shot which might be heard by outlying
hunters or skirmishers. He also redoubled his
care and rarely showed himself on the main trail,
keeping to the woods at the side, where he would be
hidden, an easy matter, as except for the little prairies
the country was covered with exceedingly heavy forest.
The second day after the parting of
the two forces he saw smoke ahead, and he believed
that it was made by the rear guard. It was a thin
column rising above the trees, but the foliage was
so heavy and the underbrush so dense that he was compelled
to approach very close before he saw that the fire
was not made by Indians, but by a group of white men,
Simon Girty, Blackstaffe, Quarles, Braxton Wyatt and
others, about a dozen in all. They had cooked
their noonday meal at a small fire and were eating
it apparently in perfect confidence of security.
The renegades sat in the dense forest. Underbrush
grew thickly to the very logs on which they were sitting,
and, as Henry heard the continuous murmur of their
voices, he resolved to learn what they were saying.
He might discover then the nature of the menace that
had broken up or deferred the great invasion.
He knew well the great danger of such an attempt but
he was fully resolved to make it.
Lying down in the bushes and grass
he drew himself slowly forward. His approach
was like that of a wild animal stalking its prey.
He lay very close to the earth and made no sound that
was audible a yard away, pulling himself on, foot
by foot. Yet his patience conquered, and presently
he lay in the thickest of the undergrowth not far from
the renegades, and he could hear everything they said.
Girty was speaking, and his words soon showed that
he was in no pleasant mood.
“Caldwell and the other English
were too stiff,” he said. “I don’t
like Timmendiquas because he doesn’t like me,
but the English oughtn’t to forget that an alliance
is for the sake of the two parties to it. They
should have come with Timmendiquas and his friends
to their villages to help them.”
“And all our pretty plans are
broken up,” said Braxton Wyatt viciously.
“If we had only gone on and struck before they
could recover from Bird’s blows we might have
swept Kentucky clean of every station.”
“Timmendiquas was right,”
said Girty. “We have to beware of that fellow
at the Falls. He’s dangerous. His is
a great name. The Kentucky riflemen will come
to the call of the man who took Kaskaskia and Vincennes.”
The prone figure in the bushes started.
He was reading further into this most interesting
of all volumes. What could the “Falls”
mean but the Falls of the Ohio at the brand new settlement
of Louisville, and the victor of Vincennes and Kaskaskia
was none other than the great George Rogers Clark,
the sword of the border. He understood. Clark’s
name was the menace that had turned back Timmendiquas.
Undoubtedly the hero was gathering a new force and
would give back Bird’s blows. Timmendiquas
wished to protect his own, but the English had returned
to Detroit. The prone figure in the bushes rejoiced
without noise.
“What will be the result of
it all?” asked Blackstaffe, his tone showing
anxiety.
Girty most detested name
in American history, next to that of Benedict Arnold considered.
The side of his face was turned to Henry, and the
bold youth wished that they were standing in the open,
face to face, arms in hand. But he was compelled
to lie still and wait. Nor could he foresee that
Girty, although he was not destined to fall in battle,
should lose everything, become an exile, go blind and
that no man should know when he met death or where
his body lay. The renegade at length replied:
“It means that we cannot now
destroy Kentucky without a supreme effort. Despite
all that we do, despite all our sieges and ambuscades,
new men continually come over the mountains.
Every month makes them stronger, and yet only this
man Clark and a few like him have saved them so far.
If Caldwell and a British force would make a campaign
with us, we might yet crush Clark and whatever army
he may gather. We may even do it without Caldwell.
In this vast wilderness which the Indians know so well
it is almost impossible for a white army to escape
ambush. I am, for that reason, in favor of going
on and joining Timmendiquas. I want a share in
the victory that our side will win at the Indian towns.
I am sure that the triumph will be ours.”
“It seems the best policy to
me,” said Braxton Wyatt. “Timmendiquas
does not like me any more than he does you, but the
Indians appreciate our help. I suppose we’d
better follow at once.”
“Take it easy,” said Girty.
“There’s no hurry. We can overtake
Timmendiquas in a day, and we are quite sure that there
are no Kentuckians in the woods. Besides, it
will take Clark a considerable time to assemble a
large force at the Falls, and weeks more to march
through the forest. You will have a good chance
then, Braxton, to show your skill as a forest leader.
With a dozen good men hanging on his flank you ought
to cause Mr. Clark much vexation.”
“It could be done,” replied
Wyatt, “but there are not many white men out
here fighting on our side. In the East the Tories
are numerous, and I had a fine band there, but it
was destroyed in that last fight at the big Indian
town.”
“Your old playmate, Henry Ware,
had something to do with that, did he not?”
asked Girty, not without a touch of sarcasm.
“He did,” replied Wyatt
venomously, “and it’s a good thing that
he’s now a prisoner at Detroit. He and
those friends of his could be both the eyes and ears
of Clark. It would have been better if Timmendiquas
had let the Indians make an end to him. Only
in that manner could we be sure that he would always
be out of the way.”
“I guess you’re right,” said Girty.
The prone figure in the bushes laughed
silently, a laugh that did not cause the movement
of a single muscle, but which nevertheless was full
of heartfelt enjoyment. What would Wyatt and Girty
have thought if they had known that the one of whom
they were talking, whom they deemed a prisoner held
securely at Detroit, was lying within ten feet of them,
as free as air and with weapons of power?
Henry had heard enough and he began
to creep away, merely reversing the process by which
he had come. It was a harder task than the first,
but he achieved it deftly, and after thirty yards
he rose to his feet, screening himself behind the
trunk of an oak. He could still see the renegades,
and the faint murmur of their voices yet reached him.
That old temptation to rid the earth of one of these
men who did so much harm came back to him, but knowing
that he had other work to do he resisted it, and,
passing in a wide circle about them, followed swiftly
on the trail of Timmendiquas.
He saw the Indian camp that night,
pitched in a valley. Numerous fires were burning
and discipline was relaxed somewhat, but so many warriors
were about that there was no opportunity to come near.
He did not wish, however, to make any further examination.
Merely to satisfy himself that the army had made no
further change in its course was enough. After
lingering a half hour or so he turned to the north
and traveled rapidly a long time, having now effected
a complete circuit since he left his comrades.
It was his purpose now to rejoin them, which he did
not believe would prove a very difficult task.
Shif’less Sol, the leader in his absence, was
to come with the party down the bank of the Scioto,
unless they found Indians in the way. Their speed
would be that of the slowest of their number, Mr.
Pennypacker, and he calculated that he would meet
them in about three days.
Bearing in toward the right he soon
struck the banks of the Scioto and followed the stream
northward all the next day. He saw several Indian
canoes upon the river, but he was so completely hidden
by the dense foliage on the bank that he was safe
from observation. It was not a war party, the
Indians were merely fishing. Some of the occupants
of the boats were squaws. It was a pleasant
and peaceful occupation, and for a few moments Henry
envied them, but quickly dismissing such thoughts he
proceeded northward again at the old running walk.
On the afternoon of the second day
Henry lay in the bushes and uttered their old signal,
the cry of the wolf repeated with certain variations,
and as unmistakable as are the telegrapher’s
dots and dashes of to-day. There was no answer.
He had expected none. It was yet too soon, according
to his calculations, but he would not risk their passing
him through an unexpected burst of speed. All
that afternoon and the next morning he repeated the
signal at every half hour. Still the same silence.
Nothing stirred in the great woods, but the leaves
and bushes swaying before the wind. Several times
he examined the Scioto, but he saw no more Indians.
About noon of the third day when he
uttered the signal an answer, very faint, came from
a point far to the west. At first he was not sure
of the variations, the sound had traveled such a great
distance, but having gone in that direction a quarter
of a mile, he repeated it. Then it came back,
clear and unmistakable. Once more he read his
book with ease. Shif’less Sol and the others
were near by and they would await him. His pulse
leaped with delight. He would be with these brave
comrades again and he would bring them good news.
He advanced another two or three hundred
yards and repeated the cry. The answer instantly
came from a point very near at hand. Then he pressed
boldly through the bushes and Shif’less Sol walked
forward to meet him followed by the others, all gaunt
with travel, but strong and well.