THE TERRIBLE FORD
“The ford ain’t much more
than an hour’s march farther on,” said
Dick Salter to Daniel Poe, “an’ the way
to it leads over purty smooth groun’.”
“And we have not seen anything
of the warriors yet, except the trails of small bands,”
said Daniel Poe hopefully. “It may be that
our new friends are mistaken.”
Dick Salter shook his head.
“Tom Ross never makes a mistake
in matters uv that kind,” he said, “an’
that boy, Henry Ware, couldn’t ef he tried.
He’s wonderful, Mr. Poe.”
“Yes,” said Daniel Poe.
“Nobody else ever made such an impression upon
me. And the one they call Paul is a fine fellow,
too. I wish I had a son like that.”
“He’s the most popular
fellow in the train already,” said Dick Salter.
Both looked admiringly at Paul, who
was walking near the head of the line, a group of
lithe, strong-limbed boys and girls surrounding him
and begging him for stories of the wilderness.
Paul remained with the train by arrangement.
It was his business to cheer, invigorate, and hearten
for a great task, while his comrades roamed the forest
and looked for the danger that they knew would surely
come. Never did youth succeed better at his chosen
task, as confidence spread from him like a contagion.
Paul presently quickened his steps,
and came quite to the head of the line, where Daniel
Poe and Dick Salter were walking, both circling the
forest ahead of them with anxious eyes. They and
Paul at the same time saw a figure emerge from the
woods in front. It was Henry, and he was coming
on swift foot. In an instant he was before them,
and Paul knew by his look that he had news.
“They are waiting?” said Paul.
“Yes,” replied Henry.
“They are in the thickets at the ford, less than
two miles ahead.”
Daniel Poe shuddered again—for
the five hundred lives in his charge—and
then his heart rose. The waiting, the terrible
suspense, were over, and it was battle now. The
fact contained relief.
“Shall we halt?” he said
to Henry. Unconsciously, he, too, was submitting
to the generalship of this king of forest runners.
“No,” replied Henry; “we’ve
got to go on some time or other, and they can wait
as long as we can. We must force the passage of
the ford. We can do it.”
He spoke with confidence, and courage
seemed to leap like sparks from him and set fire to
the others.
“Then it’s go ahead,”
said Daniel Poe grimly. “We’ll force
the passage.”
“Put all the little children,
and all the women who don’t fight, in the wagons,
and make them lie down,” said Henry. “The
men must swarm on either flank. My comrades will
remain in the front, watching until we reach the river.”
Then a great bustle and the chatter
of many voices arose; but it soon died away before
stern commands and equally stern preparations, because
they were preparing to run as terrible a gantlet as
human beings ever face, these dauntless pioneers of
the wilderness. The children were quickly loaded
in the wagons, and all the weaker of the women; but
with the men on the flanks marched at least two-score
grim Amazons, rifle in hand.
Then the train resumed its slow march,
and nothing was heard but the rolling of the wheels
and the low cluck of the drivers to their horses.
The way still led through an open, parklike country,
and the road was easy. Soon those in front saw
a faint streak cutting across the forest. The
streak was silvery at first, and then blue, and it
curved away to north and south among low hills.
“The river!” said Daniel Poe, and he shut
his teeth hard.
All the men and the Amazons drew a
long, deep breath, like a sigh; but they said nothing,
and continued to march steadily forward. The river
broadened, the blue of its waters deepened, and from
the high ground on which they marched they could see
the low banks on the farther shore, crowned by clustering
thickets.
Three men emerged from the undergrowth.
They were Tom Ross, Shif’less Sol, and Long
Jim Hart. The shiftless one looked lazy and careless,
and Jim Hart, stretching himself, looked longer and
thinner than ever.
“We found it, Henry,”
said Ross. “Little more’n a mile to
the south, men wadin’ to the waist kin cross.”
“Good!” said Henry. “We’re
lucky!”
He began to give rapid, incisive commands,
and everyone obeyed as a matter of course, and without
jealousy. Daniel Poe was the leader of the wagon
train, but Henry Ware, whom they had known but a few
days, was its leader in battle.
“Take fifty men,” he said
to Ross, “the best marksmen and the stanchest
fighters, and cross there. Then come silently
among the thickets up the bank, to strike them when
they strike us.”
Paul listened with admiration.
He knew Henry’s genius for battle, and, like
the others, he was inspired by his comrade’s
confidence. The fifty men were quickly told off
behind the wagons, and, headed by Tom Ross and Jim
Hart, they disappeared at once in the woods. Shif’less
Sol remained with Henry and Paul.
“Now, forward!” said Henry
Ware, and the terrible, grim march was begun again.
There was the river, growing broader and broader and
bluer and bluer as they came closer. The children
and women—except the Amazons—saw
nothing because they were crouched upon the floors
of the wagon beds, but the drivers, every one of whom
had a rifle lying upon the seat beside him, were at
that moment the bravest of them all, because they faced
the greatest danger.
“Slowly!” said Henry,
to the leading wagons. “We must give Sol
and his men time for their circuit.”
He noted with deep joy that the ford
was wide. At least five wagons could enter it
abreast, and he made them advance in five close lines.
“When you reach the water,”
he said to the drivers, “lie down behind the
front of the wagon beds, and drive any way you can.
Now, Sol, you and I and Dick Salter must rouse them
from the thickets.”
The three crept forward, and looked
at the peaceful river under the peaceful sky.
So far as the ordinary eye could see, there was no
human being on its shores. The bushes waved a
little in the gentle wind, and the water broke in
brilliant bubbles on the shallows.
But Henry Ware’s eyes were not
ordinary. There was not a keener pair on the
continent, and among the thickets on the farther bank
he saw a stir that was not natural. The wind
blew north, and now and then a bush would bend a little
toward the south. He crept closer, and at last
he saw a coppery face here and there, and savage,
gleaming eyes staring through the bushes.
“Tell the wagons to come on
boldly,” he said to Shif’less Sol, and
the shiftless one obeyed.
“Now, Sol,” he said, when
the man returned, “take fifty more riflemen,
and hide in that thicket, at the highest part of the
bank. Stay there. You will know what else
to do.”
“I think I will,” said
the shiftless one, and every trace of indifference
or laziness was gone from him. He was the forester,
alert and indomitable—a fit second to Henry
Ware. Then Henry and Jim Hart alone were left
near the river’s brink. Henry did not look
back.
“Are the wagons coming fast?” he asked.
“Yes,” said Jim Hart,
“but I’m beckonin’ to ’em to
come still faster. They’ll be in the water
in three minutes. Listen! The drivers are
whippin’ up the horses!”
The loud cracking of whips arose,
and the horses advanced at a trot toward the ford.
At the same instant Henry Ware raised his rifle, and
fired like a flash of lightning at one of the coppery
faces in the thicket on the opposite shore. The
death cry of the savage rose, but far above it rose
the taunting shout of the white youth, louder and more
terrible than their own. The savages, surprised,
abandoned their ambush. The leading wagons dashed
into the water, and down upon them dashed the picked
power of the allied western tribes.
In an instant the far edge of the
water was swarming with coppery bodies and savage
faces, and the war whoop, given again and again, echoed
far up and down the stream, and through the thickets
and forest. Rifles cracked rapidly, and then
blazed into volleys. Bullets sighed as they struck
on human flesh or the wood of wagons, and now and
then they spattered on the water. Cries of pain
or shouts of defiance rose, and the furious conflict
between white man and red rapidly thickened and deepened,
becoming a confused and terrible medley.
Henry Ware and Jim Hart ran down into
the stream by the side of the leading wagons, and
loaded and fired swiftly into the dense brown mass
before them. Nor did they send a bullet amiss.
Henry Ware was conscious at that moment of a fierce
desire to see the face of Braxton Wyatt amid the brown
horde. He knew he was there, somewhere, and in
the rage of conflict he would gladly have sent a bullet
through the renegade’s black heart. He
did not see him, but the dauntless youth pressed steadily
forward, continually shouting encouragement and showing
the boldest example of them all.
A bank of blue and white smoke arose
over the stream, shot through by the flashes of the
rifle firing, and out of this bank came the defiant
shouts of the combatants. Suddenly, from the
high bank, on the shore that they had just left, burst
a tremendous volley—fifty rifles fired at
once. A yell of pain and rage burst from the
savages. Those rifles had mowed a perfect swath
of death among them.
“Good old Sol! Good old
Sol!” exclaimed Henry, twice through his shut
teeth. “On, men, on! Trample them down!
Drive the wagons into them!”
A second time the unexpected volley
burst from the hill, and a storm of bullets beat upon
the packed mass of the savages at the edge of the water.
Henry Ware had been a true general that day. Shif’less
Sol and his men, from their height and hid among the
bushes, poured volley after volley into the savages
below, spurred on by their own success and the desperation
of the cause.
The front wagons advanced deeper into
the water and the smoke bank, and the others came,
closely packed behind in a huddle. Unearthly screams
arose—the cries of wounded or dying horses,
shot by the savages.
“Cut them loose from the gear,”
cried Henry, “and on! always on!”
Swift and skillful hands obeyed him,
and some of the wagons, in the wild energy of the
moment, were carried on, partly by a single horse and
partly by the weight of those behind them. The
shouts of the savages never ceased, but above them
rose the cry of the dauntless soul that now led the
wagon train. More than one savage fired at the
splendid figure, never more splendid than when in
battle; but always the circling smoke or the hand of
Providence protected him, and he still led on, unhurt.
They were now near the middle of the river, and Shif’less
Sol and his men never ceased to pour their fire over
their heads and into the red ranks.
“Now! Now!” muttered
Henry, through his shut teeth. He was praying
for Tom Ross and the first fifty, and as he prayed
his prayer was answered.
A great burst of fire came from the
thickets on their own side of the river, and the savages
were smitten on the flanks, as if by a bolt of lightning.
It seemed to them at the same moment as if the fire
of the men with the wagon train, and of those on the
high bluff, doubled. They recoiled. They
gave back and they shivered as that terrible fire smote
them a second and a third time on the flank. The
soul of Shawnee, Miami, and Wyandot alike filled with
dread. In vain Yellow Panther and Red Eagle,
great war chiefs, raged back and forth, and encouraged
their warriors to go on. In vain they risked
their lives again and again. The great bulk of
the wagons bore steadily down upon them, and they were
continually lashed by an unerring fire from three
points. Well for the people of the wagon train
that a born leader had planned their crossing and had
led them that day!
“They give, they give!”
shouted Henry Ware. “We win, we win!”
“They give, they give!
We win, we win!” shouted the brave riflemen,
and they pressed forward more strongly than ever.
By their side waded the bold Amazons, fighting with
the best.
The wagons themselves offered great
shelter for the pioneers. As Henry had foreseen,
they were driven forward in a mass, which was carried
partly by its own impetus. If the Indians had
thought to fire chiefly upon the horses they would
have accomplished more, but the few of these that were
slain did not check the progress of the others.
Meanwhile, the riflemen lurked amid the wheels and
behind the wagon beds, incessantly pouring their deadly
hail of bullets upon the exposed savages, and the drivers
from sheltered places did the same. The train
became a moving fort, belching forth fire and death
upon its enemies.
The defenders did not advance without
loss. Now and then a man sank and died in the
stream, many others suffered wounds, and even the women
and children did not escape; but through it all, through
all the roar and tumult, all the shouting and cries,
the train drew steadily closer to the western bank.
“Now, boys,” shouted Shif’less
Sol to his faithful fifty, “they’re about
to run! Pour it into ’em!”
At the same time Tom Ross was giving
a similar command to his own equally faithful fifty,
and they closed up on the flank of the allied tribes,
and stung and stung. Henry Ware, through the
drifting clouds of smoke and vapor, saw the savages
waver again, and, shouting to the boldest to follow,
he rushed forward. Then Shawnees, Miamis, and
Wyandots, despite the fierce commands of Yellow Panther
and Red Eagle, broke and fled from the water to the
shore. There Tom Ross stung them more fiercely
than ever on the flank, and the fire of Shif’less
Sol from the high bluff reached them with deadly aim.
They broke again, and, filled with superstitious terror
at their awful losses, fled, a panic horde, into the
woods.
“On, on!” shouted Henry
Ware, in tremendous tones. “They run, they
run!”
The whole train seemed to heave forward,
as if by one convulsive but triumphant movement.
Shif’less Sol and his men came down from the
bluff and dashed into the water behind them; Ross
and his fifty came forward from the thicket to meet
them; and thus, dripping with water, smoke, blood,
and sweat, the whole train passed up the western bank.
The terrible ford had been won!