Henry made no mistake when he predicted
that they would have the right of way to the Falls.
Days passed and the broad river bore them peacefully
onward, the wind blowing into ripples its yellow surface
which the sunshine turned into deep gold. The
woods still formed a solid bank of dark green on either
shore, and they knew that warriors might be lurking
in them, but they kept to the middle of the current,
and the Ohio was so wide that they were fairly safe
from sharpshooters. In addition to the caution,
habitual to borderers, they usually kept pretty well
sheltered behind the stout sides of their boat.
“Tain’t no use takin’
foolish risks,” said Shif’less Sol wisely.
“A bullet that you ain’t lookin’
fur will hurt jest ez bad ez one that you’re
expectin’, an’ the surprise gives a lot
o’ pain, too.”
Hence they always anchored at night,
far out in the water, put out all lights, and never
failed to keep watch. Several times they detected
signs of their wary enemy. Once they saw flames
twinkling on the northern shore, and twice they heard
signal cries in the southern woods. But the warriors
did not make any nearer demonstration, and they went
on, content to leave alone when they were left alone.
All were eager to see the new settlement
at the Falls, of which reports had come to them through
the woods, and they were particularly anxious to find
it a tower of strength against the fresh Indian invasion.
Their news concerning it was not yet definite, but
they heard that the first blockhouse was built on
an island. Hence every heart beat a little faster
when they saw the low outline of a wooden island rising
from the bosom of the Ohio.
“According to all we’ve
heard,” said Henry, “that should be the
place.”
“It shorely is,” said
Shif’less Sol, “an’ besides I see
smoke risin’ among them trees.”
“Yes, and I see smoke rising
on the southern shore also,” said Henry.
“Which may mean that they’ve
made a second settlement, one on the mainland,”
said Paul.
As they drew nearer Henry sent a long
quavering cry, the halloo of the woodsman, across
the waters, and an answering cry came from the edge
of the island. Then a boat containing two white
men, clad in deerskin, put out and approached the
five cautiously. Henry and Paul stood up to show
that they were white and friends, and the boat then
came swiftly.
“Who are you?” called one of the men.
Henry replied, giving their identity briefly, and
the man said:
“My name is Charles Curd, and
this is Henry Palmer. We live at Louisville and
we are on the watch for friends and enemies alike.
We’re glad to know that you’re the former.”
They escorted the five back to the
island, and curious people came down to the beach
to see the forest runners land. Henry and his
comrades for their part were no less curious and soon
they were inspecting this little settlement which
for protection had been cast in a spot surrounded
by the waters of the Ohio. They saw Corn Island,
a low stretch of soil, somewhat sandy but originally
covered with heavy forest, now partly cleared away.
Yet the ax had left sycamores ten feet through and
one hundred feet high.
The whole area of the island was only
forty-three acres, but it already contained several
fields in which fine corn and pumpkins were raised.
On a slight rise was built the blockhouse in the form
of an Egyptian cross, the blockhouse proper forming
the body of the cross, while the cabins of the settlers
constituted the arms. In addition to the sycamores,
great cottonwoods had grown here, but nearly all of
them had been cut down, and then had been split into
rails and boards. Back of the field and at the
western edge of the river, was a magnificent growth
of cane, rising to a height of more than twenty feet.
This little settlement, destined to
be one of the great cities of the West, had been founded
by George Rogers Clark only two or three years before,
and he had founded it in spite of himself. Starting
from Redstone on the Monongahela with one hundred
and fifty militia for the conquest of the Illinois
country he had been accompanied by twenty pioneer
families who absolutely refused to be turned back.
Finding that they were bound to go with him Clark
gave them his protection, but they stopped at Corn
Island in the Ohio and there built their blockhouse.
Now it was a most important frontier post, a stronghold
against the Indians.
Before they ate of the food offered
to them Henry looked inquiringly at the smoke on the
southern shore. Curd said with some pride:
“We’re growing here.
We spread to the mainland in a year. Part of our
people have moved over there, and some new ones have
come from Virginia. On the island and the mainland
together, we’ve now got pretty nearly two hundred
people and we’ve named our town Louisville in
honor of King Louis of France who is helping us in
the East. We’ve got history, too, or rather
it was made before we came here. An old chief,
whom the whites called Tobacco, told George Rogers
Clark that the Alligewi, which is their name for the
Mound Builders, made their last stand here against
the Shawnees, Miamis and other Indians who now roam
in this region. A great battle occurred on an
island at the Falls and the Mound Builders were exterminated.
As for myself, I know nothing about it, but it’s
what Tobacco said.”
Paul’s curiosity was aroused
instantly and he made a mental note to investigate
the story, when he found an opportunity, but he was
never able to get any further than the Indian legend
which most likely had a basis of truth. For the
present, he and his comrades were content with the
welcome which the people on Corn Island gave them,
a welcome full of warmth and good cheer. Their
hosts put before them water cooled in gourds, cakes
of Indian meal, pies of pumpkin, all kinds of game,
and beef and pork besides. While they ate and
drank Henry, who as usual was spokesman, told what
had occurred at Detroit, further details of the successful
advance of the Indians and English under Bird, of which
they had already heard, and the much greater but postponed
scheme of destruction planned by Timmendiquas, de
Peyster, Girty and their associates. Curd, Palmer
and the others paled a little under their tan as they
listened, but their courage came back swiftly.
“At any rate,” said Curd,
“we’ve got a man to lead us against them,
a man who strikes fast, sure and hard, George Rogers
Clark, the hero of Vincennes and Kaskaskia, the greatest
leader in all the West.”
“Why, is he here?” exclaimed
Henry in surprise. “I thought he was farther
East.”
“You’ll see him inside
of half an hour. He was at the other blockhouse
on the southern shore, and we sent up a signal that
strangers were here. There he comes now.”
A boat had put out from the southern
bank. It contained three men, two of whom were
rowing, while the third sat upright in a military fashion.
All his body beneath his shoulders was hidden by the
boat’s sides, but his coat was of the Continental
buff and blue, while a border cap of raccoon skin
crowned his round head. Such incongruous attire
detracted nothing from the man’s dignity and
presence. Henry saw that his face was open, his
gaze direct, and that he was quite young. He was
looking straight toward the five who had come with
their new friends down to the river’s edge,
and, when he sprang lightly upon the sand, he gave
them a military salute. They returned it in like
manner, while they looked with intense curiosity at
the famous leader of the border forces. Clark
turned to Henry, whose figure and bearing indicated
the chief.
“You come from the North, from
the depths of the Indian country, I take it,”
he said.
“From the very heart of it,”
replied the youth. “I was a prisoner at
Detroit, and my comrades were near by outside the walls.
We have also seen Bird returning from his raid with
his prisoners and we know that Timmendiquas, de Peyster,
Girty, Caldwell, and the others are going to make
a supreme effort to destroy every settlement west of
the Alleghanies. A great force under Timmendiquas,
Caldwell and Girty came part of the way but turned
back, partly, I think, because of divisions among
themselves and partly because they heard of your projected
advance. But it will come again.”
The shoulders in the military coat
seemed to stiffen and the eyes under the raccoon skin
cap flashed.
“I did want to go back to Virginia,”
said Clark, “but I’m glad that I’m
here. Mr. Ware, young as you are, you’ve
seen a lot of forest work, I take it, and so I ask
you what is the best way to meet an attack?”
“To attack first.”
“Good! good! That was my
plan! Report spoke true! We’ll strike
first. We’ll show these officers and chiefs
that we’re not the men to sit idly and wait
for our foe. We’ll go to meet him.
Nay more, we’ll find him in his home and destroy
him. Doesn’t that appeal to you, my lads?”
“It does,” said five voices,
emphatic and all together, and then Henry added, speaking
he knew for his comrades as well as himself:
“Colonel Clark, we wish to volunteer
for the campaign that we know you have planned.
Besides the work that we have done here in the West,
we have seen service in the East. We were at
Wyoming when the terrible massacre occurred, and we
were with General Sullivan when he destroyed the Iroquois
power. But, sir, I wish to say that we do best
in an independent capacity, as scouts, skirmishers,
in fact as a sort of vanguard.”
Clark laughed and clapped a sinewy
hand upon Henry’s shoulder.
“I see,” he said.
“You wish to go with me to war, but you wish
at the same time to be your own masters. It might
be an unreasonable request from some people, but,
judging from what I see of you and what I have heard
of you and your comrades, it is just the thing.
You are to watch as well as fight for me. Were
you not the eyes of the fleet that Adam Colfax brought
up the Ohio?”
Henry blushed and hesitated, but Clark
exclaimed heartily:
“Nay, do not be too modest,
my lad! We are far apart here in the woods, but
news spreads, nevertheless, and I remember sitting
one afternoon and listening to an old friend, Major
George Augustus Braithwaite, tell a tale of gallant
deeds by river and forest, and how a fort and fleet
were saved largely through the efforts of five forest
runners, two of whom were yet boys. Major Braithwaite
gave me detailed descriptions of the five, and they
answer so exactly to the appearance of you and your
comrades that I am convinced you are the same.
Since you are so modest, I will tell you to your face
that I’d rather have you five than fifty ordinary
men. Now, young sir, blush again and make the
most of it!”
Henry did blush, and said that the
Colonel gave them far too much credit, but at heart
he, like the other four, felt a great swell of pride.
Their deeds in behalf of the border were recognized
by the great leader, and surely it was legitimate
to feel that one had not toiled and fought in vain
for one’s people.
A few minutes later they sat down
with Clark and some of the others under the boughs
of the big sycamore, and gave a detailed account of
their adventures, including all that they had seen
from the time they had left for New Orleans until
the present moment.
“A great tale! a great tale!”
said Clark, meditatively, “and I wish to add,
Mr. Ware, an illuminating one also. It throws
light upon forest councils and forest plans.
Besides your service in battle, you bring us news
that shows us how to meet our enemy and nothing could
be of greater value. Now, I wish to say to you
that it will take us many weeks to collect the needful
force, and that will give you two lads ample time,
if you wish, to visit your home in Wareville, taking
with you the worthy schoolmaster whom you have rescued
so happily.”
Henry and Paul decided at once to
accept the suggestion. Both felt the great pulses
leap at mention of Wareville and home. They had
not seen their people for nearly two years, although
they had sent word several times that they were well.
Now they felt an overwhelming desire to see once again
their parents and the neat little village by the river,
enclosed within its strong palisades. Yet they
delayed a few days longer to attend to necessary preliminaries
of the coming campaign. Among other things they
went the following morning to see the overflow settlement
on the south shore, now but a year old.
This seed of a great city was yet
faint and small. The previous winter had been
a terrible one for the immigrants. The Ohio had
been covered with thick ice from shore to shore.
Most of their horses and cattle had frozen to death.
Nevertheless they had no thought of going away, and
there were many things to encourage the brave.
They had a good harbor on the river at the mouth of
a fine creek, that they named Beargrass, and back
of them was a magnificent forest of gum, buckeye, cherry,
sycamore, maple and giant poplars. It had been
proved that the soil was extremely fertile, and they
were too staunch to give up so fair a place. They
also had a strong fort overlooking the river, and,
with Clark among them, they were ready to defy any
Indian force that might come.
But the time passed quickly, and Henry
and Paul and the schoolmaster were ready for the last
stage of their journey, deciding, in order that they
might save their strength, to risk once more the dangers
of the water passage. They would go in a canoe
until they came to the mouth of the river that flowed
by Wareville and then row up the current of the latter
until they reached home. Shif’less Sol,
Jim and Tom were going to remain with Clark until
their return. But these three gave them hand-clasps
of steel when they departed.
“Don’t you get trapped
by wanderin’ Indians, Henry,” said the
shiftless one. “We couldn’t get along
very well without you fellers. Do most o’
your rowin’ at night an’ lay by under overhangin’
boughs in the day. You know more’n I do,
Henry, but I’m so anxious about you I can’t
keep from givin’ advice.”
“Don’t any of you do too
much talkin’,” said Silent Tom. “Injuns
hear pow’ful well, an’ many a feller hez
been caught in an ambush, an’ hez lost
his scalp jest ‘cause he would go along sayin’
idle words that told the Injuns whar he wuz, when
he might hev walked away safe without thar ever knowin’
he wuz within a thousand miles uv them.”
“An’ be mighty particular
about your cookin’,” said Long Jim.
“Many a good man hez fell sick an’
died, jest ’cause his grub wuzn’t fixed
eggzackly right. An’ when you light your
fires fur ven’son an’ buffalo steaks be
shore thar ain’t too much smoke. More than
once smoke hez brought the savages down on people.
Cookin’ here in the woods is not cookin’
only, it’s also a delicate an’ bee-yu-ti-ful
art that saves men’s lives when it’s done
right, by not leadin’ Shawnees, Wyandots an’
other ferocious warriors down upon ’em.”
Henry promised every one of the three
to follow his advice religiously, and there was moisture
in his and Paul’s eyes when they caught the last
view of them standing upon the bank and waving farewell.
The next instant they were hidden by a curve of the
shore, and then Henry said:
“It’s almost like losing
one’s right arm to leave those three behind.
I don’t feel complete without them.”
“Nor do I,” said Paul.
“I believe they were giving us all that advice
partly to hide their emotion.”
“Undoubtedly they were,”
said Mr. Pennypacker in a judicial tone, “and
I wish to add that I do not know three finer characters,
somewhat eccentric perhaps, but with hearts in the
right place, and with sound heads on strong shoulders.
They are like some ancient classic figures of whom
I have read, and they are fortunate, too, to live in
the right time and right place for them.”
They made a safe passage over a stretch
of the Ohio and then turned up the tributary river,
rowing mostly, as Shif’less Sol had suggested,
by night, and hiding their canoe and themselves by
day. It was not difficult to find a covert as
the banks along the smaller river were nearly always
overhung by dense foliage, and often thick cane and
bushes grew well into the water’s edge.
Here they would stop when the sun was brightest, and
sometimes the heat was so great that not refuge from
danger alone made them glad to lie by when the golden
rays came vertically. Then they would make themselves
as comfortable as possible in the boat and bearing
Silent Tom’s injunction in mind, talk in very
low tones, if they talked at all. But oftenest
two of them slept while the third watched.
They had been three days upon the
tributary when it was Henry who happened to be watching.
Both Paul and the teacher slumbered very soundly.
Paul lay at the stern of the boat and Mr. Pennypacker
in the middle. Henry was in the prow, sitting
at ease with his rifle across his knees. The
boat was amid a tall growth of canes, the stalks and
blades rising a full ten feet above their heads, and
hiding them completely. Henry had been watching
the surface of the river, but at last the action grew
wholly mechanical. Had anything appeared there
he would have seen it, but his thoughts were elsewhere.
His whole life, since he had arrived, a boy of fifteen,
in the Kentucky wilderness, was passing before him
in a series of pictures, vivid and wonderful, standing
out like reality itself. He was in a sort of
twilight midway between the daylight and a dream,
and it seemed to him once more that Providence had
kept a special watch over his comrades and himself.
How else could they have escaped so many dangers?
How else could fortune have turned to their side,
when the last chance seemed gone? No skill, even
when it seemed almost superhuman, could have dragged
them back from the pit of death. He felt with
all the power of conviction that a great mission had
been given to them, and that they had been spared again
and again that they might complete it.
While he yet watched and saw, he visited
a misty world. The wind had risen and out of
the dense foliage above him came its song upon the
stalks and blades of the cane. A low note at first,
it swelled into triumph, and it sounded clearly in
his ear, bar on bar. He did not have the power
to move, as he listened then to the hidden voice.
His blood leaped and a deep sense of awe, and of the
power of the unknown swept over him. But he was
not afraid. Rather he shared in the triumph that
was expressed so clearly in the mystic song.
The note swelled, touched upon its
highest note and then died slowly away in fall after
fall, until it came in a soft echo and then the echo
itself was still. Henry returned to the world
of reality with every sense vivid and alert.
He heard the wind blowing in the cane and nothing
more. The surface of the river rippled lightly
in the breeze, but neither friend nor enemy passed
there. The stream was as lonely and desolate
as if man had never come. He shook himself a little,
but the spiritual exaltation, born of the song and
the misty region that he had visited, remained.
“A sign, a prophecy!”
he murmured. His heart swelled. The new task
would be achieved as the others had been. It
did not matter whether he had heard or had dreamed.
His confidence in the result was absolute. He
sat a long time looking out upon the water, but never
moving. Anyone observing him would have concluded
after a while that he was no human being, merely an
image. It would not have seemed possible that
any living organism could have remained as still as
a stone so many hours.
When the sun showed that it was well
past noon, Paul awoke. He glanced at Henry, who
nodded. The nod meant that all was well.
By and by Mr. Pennypacker, also, awoke and then Henry
in his turn went to sleep so easily and readily that
it seemed a mere matter of will. The schoolmaster
glanced at him and whispered to Paul:
“A great youth, Paul! Truly
a great youth! It is far from old Greece to this
forest of Kaintuckee, but he makes me think of the
mighty heroes who are enshrined in the ancient legends
and stories.”
“That thought has come to me,
too,” Paul whispered back. “I like
to picture him as Hector, but Hector with a better
fate. I don’t think Henry was born for
any untimely end.”
“No, that could not be,”
said the schoolmaster with conviction.
Then they relapsed into silence and
just about the time the first shadow betokened the
coming twilight Paul heard a faint gurgling sound which
he was sure was made by oars. He touched the
schoolmaster and whispered to him to listen.
Then he pulled Henry’s shoulder slightly, and
instantly the great youth sat up, wide awake.
“Someone is near,” whispered Paul.
“Listen!”
Henry bent his head close to the water
and distinctly heard the swishing of paddles, coming
in the direction that they had followed in the night.
It was a deliberate sound and Henry inferred at once
that those who approached were in no hurry and feared
no enemy. Then he drew the second inference that
it was Indians. White men would know that danger
was always about them in these woods.
“We have nothing to do but lie
here and see them as they pass,” he whispered
to his companions. “We are really as safe
among these dense canes as if we were a hundred miles
away, provided we make no noise.”
There was no danger that any of them
would make a noise. They lay so still that their
boat never moved a hair and not even the wariest savage
on the river would have thought that one of their most
formidable enemies and two of his friends lay hidden
in the canes so near.
“Look!” whispered Henry. “There
is Braxton Wyatt!”
Henry and Paul were eager enough to
see but the schoolmaster was perhaps the most eager
of all. This was something new in his experience.
He had heard much of Braxton Wyatt, the renegade, once
a pupil of his, and he did not understand how one
of white blood and training could turn aside to join
the Indians, and to become a more ruthless enemy of
his own people than the savages themselves. Yet
there could be no doubt of its truth, and now that
he saw Wyatt he understood. Evil passions make
an evil face. Braxton Wyatt’s jaw was now
heavy and projecting, his eyes were dark and lowering,
and his cheek bones seemed to have become high like
those of the warriors with whom he lived. The
good Mr. Pennypacker shuddered. He had lived
long and he could read the hearts of men. He
knew now that Braxton Wyatt, despite his youth, was
lost beyond redemption to honor and truth. The
schoolmaster shuddered again.
The boat a large one contained
besides Wyatt a white man, obviously a renegade, and
six sturdy Shawnee warriors who were wielding the paddles.
The warriors were quite naked, save for the breechcloth,
and their broad shoulders and chests were painted
with many hideous decorations. Their rifles lay
beside them. Braxton Wyatt’s manner showed
that he was the leader and Henry had no doubt that
this was a party of scouts come to spy upon Wareville.
It was wholly likely that Braxton Wyatt, who knew
the place so thoroughly, should undertake such an errand.
Henry was right. Timmendiquas,
de Peyster and Girty as leaders of the allied forces
preparing for invasion in case Clark could not gather
a sufficient force for attack, were neglecting no
precaution. They had sent forth small parties
to examine into the condition of every station in
Kentucky. These parties were not to make any demonstration,
lest the settlers be put on their guard, but, after
obtaining their information, were to retire as silently
as they had come. Braxton Wyatt had promptly
secured command of the little force sent toward Wareville,
taking with him as lieutenant a young renegade, a
kindred spirit named Early.
Strange emotions agitated Wyatt when
he started. He had a desire to see once more
the place where he had been a boy with other boys of
his own white race, and where he might yet have been
with his own kind, if a soul naturally turning to
malice had not sent him off to the savages. Because
he was now an outcast, although of his own making,
he hated his earlier associates all the more.
He sought somehow to blame them for it. They
had never appreciated him enough. Had they put
him forward and given him his due, he would not now
be making war upon them. Foolish and blind, they
must suffer the consequences of their own stupidity.
When Wareville was taken, he might induce the Indians
to spare a few, but there were certainly some who
should not be spared. His brow was black and
his thoughts were blacker. It may be that Henry
read them, because his hand slid gently forward to
the hammer of his rifle. But his will checked
the hand before it could cock the weapon, and he shook
his head impatiently.
“Not now,” he said in
the softest of whispers, “but we must follow
that boat. It is going toward Wareville and that
is our way. Since we have seen him it is for
us to deal with Wyatt before he can do more mischief.”
Paul nodded, and even the soul of
the good schoolmaster stirred with warlike ardor.
He was not a child of the forest. He knew little
of ambush and the trail, but he was ready to spend
his strength and blood for the good of his own people.
So he too nodded, and then waited for their young
leader to act.
Braxton Wyatt passed on southward
and up the stream of the river. There was no
song among the leaves for him, but his heart was still
full of cruel passions. He did not dream that
a boat containing the one whom he hated most had lain
in the cane within twenty yards of him. He was
thinking instead of Wareville and of the way in which
he would spy out every weak place there. He and
Early had become great friends, and now he told his
second much about the village.
“Wareville is strong,”
he said, “and they have many excellent riflemen.
We were repulsed there once, when we made an attack
in force, and we must take it by surprise. Once
we are inside the palisade everything will soon be
over. I hope that we will catch Ware and his comrades
there when we catch the others.”
“He seems hard to hold,”
said Early. “That escape of his from Detroit
was a daring and skillful thing. I could hardly
believe it when we heard of it at the Ohio. You’re
bound to admit that, Braxton.”
“I admit it readily enough,”
said Wyatt. “Oh, he’s brave and cunning
and strong. He would not be so much worth taking
if he were not all those things!”
Early glanced at the face of his leader.
“You do dislike him, that’s sure!”
he said.
“You make no mistake when you
say so,” replied Wyatt. “There are
not many of us here in the woods, and somehow he and
I seem to have been always in opposition in the last
two or three years. I think, however, that a
new campaign will end in overwhelming victory for us,
and Kaintuckee will become a complete wilderness again.”
The stalwart Shawnees paddled on all
that afternoon without stopping or complaining once.
It was a brilliant day in early summer, all golden
sunshine, but not too warm. The river flowed in
curve after curve, and its surface was always illumined
by the bright rays save where the unbroken forest
hung in a green shadow over either edge. Scarlet
tanagers darted like flashes of flame from tree to
tree, and from low boughs a bird now and then poured
forth a full measure of song. Braxton Wyatt had
never looked upon a more peaceful wilderness, but before
the sun began to set he was afflicted with a strange
disquiet. An expert woodsman with an instinct
for the sounds and stirrings of the forest, he began
to have a belief that they were not alone on the river.
He heard nothing and saw nothing, yet he felt in a
vague, misty way that they were followed. He
tried to put aside the thought as foolish, but it
became so strong that at last he gave a signal to stop.
“What is it?” asked Early,
as the paddles ceased to sigh through the water.
“I thought I heard something
behind us,” replied Wyatt, although he had heard
nothing, “and you know we cannot afford to be
seen here by any white scout or hunter.”
The Indians listened intently with
their trained ears and then shook their heads.
There was no sound behind them, save the soft flowing
of the river, as it lapped against either bank.
“I hear nothing,” said Early.
“Nor do I,” admitted Wyatt,
“yet I could have sworn a few minutes ago that
we were being followed. Instinct is sometimes
a good guide in the forest.”
“Then I suggest,” said
Early, “that we turn back for a few miles.
We can float with the current close up to the bank
under the overhanging boughs, and, if hunters or scouts
are following us, they’ll soon wish they were
somewhere else.”
He laughed and Braxton Wyatt joined
him in his savage mirth.
“Your idea is a good one,”
said Wyatt, “and we may catch a mouse or two
in our trap.”
He gave another signal and the Shawnees
turned the boat about, permitting it to float back
with the stream, but as Early had suggested, keeping
it in the shadow. Despite his experience and the
lack of proof that anyone else was near, Wyatt’s
heart began to beat fast. Suppose the game was
really there, and it should prove to be of the kind
that he wanted most to take! This would be indeed
a triumph worth while, and he would neglect no precaution
to achieve it. They had gone back about a mile
now, and he signaled to the warriors to swing the boat
yet a little closer to the bank. He still heard
no sound, but the belief was once more strong upon
him that the quarry was there. They drifted slowly
and yet there was nothing. His eye alighted upon
a great mass of bushes growing in the shallow water
at the edge of the river. He told the paddlers
to push the boat among them until it should be completely
hidden and then he waited.
But time passed and nothing came.
The sun dropped lower. The yellow light on the
water turned to red, and the forest flamed under the
setting sun. A light breeze sprang up and the
foliage rustled under its touch. Braxton Wyatt,
from his covert among the bushes, watched with anger
gnawing at his heart. He had been wrong or whoever
it was that followed had been too wary. He was
crafty and had laid his trap well, but others were
crafty, too, and would turn from the door of an open
trap.
The sun sank further. The red
in the west deepened but gray shadows were creeping
over the east and the surface of the river began to
darken. Nothing had come. Nothing was coming.
Braxton Wyatt said reluctantly to himself that his
instinct had been wrong. He gave the word to pull
the boat from the canes, and to proceed up the stream
again. He was annoyed. He had laid a useless
trap and he had made himself look cheap before the
Indians. So he said nothing for a long time, but
allowed his anger to simmer. When it was fully
dark they tied up the boat and camped on shore, in
the bushes near the water.
Wyatt was too cautious to permit a
fire, and they ate cold food in the darkness.
After a while, all slept but two of the Shawnees who
kept watch. Wyatt’s slumbers were uneasy.
About midnight he awoke, and he was oppressed by the
same presentiment that had made him turn back the boat.
He heard nothing and saw nothing save his own men,
but his instinct was at work once more, and it told
him that his party was watched. He lay in dark
woods in a vast wilderness, but he felt in every bone
that near them was an alien presence.
Wyatt raised himself upon his arm
and looked at the two red sentinels. Not a muscle
of either had stirred. They were so much carven
bronze. Their rifles lay across their knees and
they stared fixedly at the forest. But he knew
that their eyes and ears were of the keenest and that
but little could escape their attention. Yet they
had not discovered the presence. He rose finally
to his feet. The Indians heard the faint noise
that he made and glanced at him. But he was their
commander and they said nothing, resuming in an instant
their watch of the forest.
Wyatt did not take his rifle.
Instead, he kept his hand on the hilt of a fine double-barreled
pistol in his belt. After some hesitation he walked
to the river and looked at the boat. It was still
there, tied securely. No one had meddled with
it. The moon was obscured and the surface of the
river looked black. No object upon it could be
seen far away. He listened attentively and heard
nothing. But he could not rid himself of the
belief that they had been followed, that even now a
foe was near. He walked back to the little camp
and looked at Early who was sleeping soundly.
He was impatient with himself because he could not
do likewise, and then, shrugging his shoulders, he
went further into the forest.
The trees grew closely where Wyatt
stood and there were bushes everywhere. His concealment
was good and he leaned against the trunk of a huge
oak to listen. He could not see fifteen feet away,
but he did not believe that any human being could
pass near and escape his hearing. He stood thus
in the darkness for a full ten minutes, and then he
was quite sure that he did hear a sound as of a heavy
body moving slightly. It was not instinct or
prescience, the product of a vivid fancy, but a reality.
He had been too long in the woods to mistake the fact.
Something was stalking something else and undoubtedly
the stalker was a man.
What was the unknown stalking?
Suddenly a cold sweat broke out on Braxton Wyatt’s
face. It was he who was being stalked and he was
now beyond the sight of his own sentinels. He
was, for the moment, alone in the midnight woods,
and he was afraid. Braxton Wyatt was not naturally
a coward, and he had been hardened in the school of
forest warfare, but superstitious terrors assailed
him now. He was sorry that he had left the camp.
His curiosity had been too great. If he wished
to explore the woods, why had he not brought some
of the Indians with him?
He called upon his courage, a courage
that had seldom failed him, but it would not come
now. He heard the stalker moving again in the
bushes, not fifteen yards away, and the hand on the
pistol belt became wet. He glanced up but there
was no moon and clouds hid the sky. Only ear could
tell when the danger was about to fall, and then it
would be too late.
He made a supreme effort, put his
will in control of his paralyzed limbs, and wrenched
himself away. He almost ran to the camp.
Then bringing his pride to his aid he dropped to a
walk, and stepped back into the circle of the camp.
But he was barely able to restrain a cry of relief
as the chill passed from his backbone. Angry and
humiliated, he awakened four of the Shawnees and sent
them into the woods in search of a foe. Early
was aroused by the voices and sat up, rubbing his eyes.
“What is it, Braxton?”
he asked. “Are we about to be attacked?”
“No,” replied Wyatt, calming
himself with a violent effort, “but I am convinced
that there is someone in the bushes watching us.
I know that I heard the noise of footsteps and I only
hope that our Shawnees will run afoul of him.”
“If he’s there they’ll get him,”
said Early confidently.
“I don’t know,” said Braxton Wyatt.
The Indians came back presently, and
one of them spoke to Wyatt, who went with them into
the bushes. The moon had come out a little and,
by its faint light, they showed him traces of footsteps.
The imprints were ever so light, but experienced trailers
could not doubt that human beings had passed.
The renegade felt at the same time a certain relief
and a certain alarm, relief to know that he had not
been a mere prey to foolish fears, and alarm because
they had been stalked by some spy so skillful and
wary that they could not follow him. The Indians
had endeavored to pursue the trail, but after a rod
or so it was lost among the bushes.
Wyatt, apprehensive lest his mission
should fail, doubled the watch and then sought sleep.
He did not find it for a long time, but toward morning
he fell into a troubled slumber from which he was awakened
by Early about an hour after the sun had appeared
above the eastern forest.
“We must be moving,” said
Early, “if we’re going to spy out that
Wareville of yours and tell our people how to get in.”
“You’re right,”
said Wyatt, “but we must watch behind us now
as well as before. It is certain that we are
followed and I’m afraid that we’re followed
by an enemy most dangerous.”
Neglecting no precaution, he ordered
a warrior to follow along the bank about two miles
in the rear. An Indian in the deep brush could
not be seen and the renegade’s savage heart
thrilled at the thought that after all he might be
setting a trap into which his enemy would walk.
Then his boat moved forward, more slowly now, and
hugging the bank more closely than ever. Wyatt
knew the way well. He had been several times along
this river, a fine broad stream. He meant to
leave the boat and take to the forest when within
twenty miles of Wareville, but, before doing so, he
hoped to achieve a victory which would console him
for many defeats.
The warrior left behind for purposes
of ambush was to rejoin them at noon, but at the appointed
hour he did not come. Nor did he come at one
o’clock or at two. He never came, and after
Wyatt had raged with disappointment and apprehension
until the middle of the afternoon he sent back a second
warrior to see what had become of him. The second
warrior was the best trailer and scout in the band,
a Shawnee with a great reputation among his fellows,
but when the night arrived neither he nor the other
warrior arrived with it. They waited long for
both. Three of the Indians in a group went back,
but they discovered no sign. They returned full
of superstitious terror which quickly communicated
itself to the others and Wyatt and Early, despite their
white blood, felt it also.
A most vigilant watch was kept that
night. No fire was lighted and nobody slept.
The renegade still hoped that the two missing warriors
would return, but they did not do so. The other
Indians began to believe that the evil spirit had
taken them, and they were sorry that they had come
upon such an errand. They wished to go back down
the stream and beyond the Ohio. Near morning
a warrior saw something moving in the bushes and fired
at it. The shot was returned quick as a flash,
and the warrior, who would fire no more, fell at the
feet of the others and lay still. Wyatt and his
men threw themselves upon their faces, and, after a
long wait, searched the bushes, but found nothing.
Now the Indians approached the point
of rebellion. It was against the will of Manitou
that they should prosper on their errand. The
loss of three comrades was the gravest of warnings
and they should turn back. But Wyatt rebuked
them angrily. He did not mean to be beaten in
such a way by an enemy who remained in hiding.
The bullet had shown that it was an earthly foe, and,
as far as Manitou was concerned, he always awarded
the victory to courage, skill and luck. The Indians
went forward reluctantly.
The next night they tied up again
by the wooded bank. Wyatt wanted two of the warriors
to remain in the boat, but they refused absolutely
to do so. Despite all that he could say their
superstitious fears were strong upon them, and they
meant to stay close to their comrades upon the solid
earth. Dreading too severe a test of his authority
the renegade consented, and all of them, except the
guards, lay down among the bushes near the shore.
It was a fine summer night, not very dark, and Wyatt
did not believe a foe could come near them without
being seen. He felt more confidence, but again
he was sleepless. He closed his eyes and sought
slumber by every device that he knew, but it would
not come. At last he made a circuit with Early
and two of the Indians in the forest about the camp,
but saw and heard nothing. Returning, he lay down
on his blanket and once more wooed sleep with shut
eyes.
Sleep still refused obstinately to
come, and in ten minutes the renegade reopened his
eyes. His glance wandered idly over the recumbent
Indians who were sound asleep, and then to those who
watched. It passed from them to the river and
the black blur of the boat lying upon the water about
twenty yards away. Then it passed on and after
a while came back again to the boat.
Braxton Wyatt knew that optical illusions
were common, especially in the obscurity of night.
One could look so long at a motionless object that
it seemed to move. That was why the boat, tied
securely to low boughs, did that curious trick of
apparently gliding over the surface of the river.
Wyatt laughed at himself. In the faint light,
brain was superior to eye. He would not allow
himself to be deceived, and the quality of mind that
saved him from delusions gave him pride. He did
not have a very good view of the boat from the point
where he lay, but he saw enough of it to know that
when he looked again it would be lying exactly where
it had been all the time, despite that illusory trick
of movement. So, to show the superiority of will
over fancy, he kept his eyes shut a longer time than
usual, and when he opened them once more he looked
directly at the boat. Surely the shifting light
was playing him new tricks. Apparently it was
much farther out in the stream and was drifting with
the current.
Wyatt reproved himself as an unsteady
fool. His nerves were shaken, and in order to
restore his calmness he closed his eyes once more.
But the eyes would not stay shut. Will was compelled
to yield at last to impulse and the lids came apart.
He was somewhat angry at himself. He did not
wish to look at the boat again, and repeat those foolish
illusions, but he did so nevertheless.
Braxton Wyatt sprang to his feet with
a cry of alarm and warning. It was no trick of
fancy. He saw with eyes that did not lie a boat
out in the middle of the stream and every moment going
faster with the current. The power that propelled
it was unseen, but Wyatt knew it to be there.
“Fire! Fire!” he
shouted to his men. “Somebody is carrying
off our boat!”
Rifles flashed and bullets made the
water spout. Two struck the boat itself, but
it moved on with increasing swiftness. Wyatt,
Early and the Indians dashed to the water’s
edge, but a sharp crack came from the further shore,
and Early fell forward directly into the river.
Wyatt and the Indians shrank back into the bushes
where they lay hidden. But the renegade, with
a sort of frightened fascination, watched the water
pulling at the body of his slain comrade, until it
was carried away by the current and floated out of
sight. The boat, meanwhile, moved on until it,
too, passed a curve, and was lost from view.
Wyatt recovered his courage and presence
of mind, but he sought in vain to urge the Shawnees
in pursuit. Superstition held them in a firm grasp.
It was true that Early had been slain by a bullet,
but a mystic power was taking the boat away.
The hand of Manitou was against them and they would
return to the country north of the Ohio. They
started at once, and Wyatt, raging, was compelled
to go with them, since he did not dare to go southward
alone.