THE FLIGHT OF LONG JIM
Although the terrible ford had been
won, Henry Ware knew that the danger was far from
over. The savages, caught on the flank and shot
down from above, had yielded to momentary panic, but
they would come again. To any souls less daring
than this band of pioneers, the situation would have
been truly appalling. They were in the vast and
unknown wilderness, surrounded everywhere by the black
forest, with the horde, hungry for slaughter, still
hanging upon their flanks; but among them all, scarce
one woman or child showed a craven heart.
Led by Henry Ware, the wagons filed
into an open space—a plain or little prairie—about
a quarter of a mile beyond the ford, and there, still
following his instructions, they drew up in a circle.
He considered this open space a godsend, as no marksmen
hidden in the woods could reach them there with a
bullet. As soon as the circle was completed, the
women and children poured forth from the wagons, and
began to join the men in fortifying. There was
mingled joy for victory and grief for loss. They
had left dead behind in the river, and they had brought
more with them; of wounds, except those that threatened
to be mortal, they took little count. Even as
they worked, scattering shots were fired from the forest,
but they paid no heed to them, as all the bullets
fell short.
Right in the center of the circle,
inclosed by the wagons, a half dozen chosen spademen
dug a deep hole, and then the dead were brought forth,
ready for burial. A minister prayed and the women
sang. Overhead, the late sun burned brilliant
and red, and from the forest, as a kind of stern chorus,
came the pattering rifle shots. But the last ceremony,
all the more solemn and impressive because of these
sights and sounds, went on unbroken. The dead
were buried deep, then covered over, and the ground
trodden that none might disturb their rest. Then
all turned to the living need.
The five, barring slight scratches
suffered by Ross and Shif’less Sol, had escaped
unhurt, and now they labored with the others to throw
up the wall of earth about the wagons. A spring
took its rise in the center of the plain, and flowed
down to the river. This spring was within the
circle of the wagons, and they were assured of plenty
of water.
Henry Ware looked over the crowd,
and he rejoiced at their spirits, which had not been
dampened by the sight of their dead. They had
fought magnificently, and they were ready to fight
again. Already fires were burning within the
circle of the wagons, and the women were cooking supper.
The pleasant odor of food arose, and men began to eat.
Daniel Poe, as usual, turned to Henry.
“You are sure that they will make a new attack?”
he said.
“Yes,” replied Henry.
“They have not come so far to retire after one
repulse. We outflanked them there at the river,
but they think that they will certainly get us, burdened
as we are with the women and children. It’s
still a long road to Wareville.”
“We can never repay the debt
we owe to you and your comrades,” said Daniel
Poe.
“Don’t think of it.
It’s the thing that we were bound to do.”
Daniel Poe looked at the setting sun,
now red like blood. Far over the western forest
twilight shadows were coming.
“I wish this night was over,” he said.
“If they attack we’ll beat them off,”
said Henry confidently.
“But the cost, the cost!” murmured Daniel
Poe.
Paul meanwhile was within the circle
of wagons, in his great role of sustainer. He
had fought like a paladin in the battle, and now he
was telling what a great fight they had made, and
what a greater one they could make, if need be.
High spirits seemed to flow spontaneously from him,
and the others caught the infection. More than
one Amazon looked at him affectionately, as she would
have looked at a son. Shif’less Sol joined
him as he stood by one of the fires.
“I’ve been workin’
out thar with a spade more’n an hour,”
said the shiftless one in a tone of deep disgust,
“an’ I’m tired plumb to death.
I’ll lay down before that fire an’ sleep
till mornin’, ef every one uv you will promise
not to say a word an’ won’t disturb me.”
A laugh arose.
“Why, Mr. Hyde,” exclaimed
one of the Amazons, “they say there was not a
more industrious man in the battle than you.”
“Wa’al,” said Shif’less
Sol, slowly and reflectively, “a man, ef he’s
crowded into a corner, will fight ef his life depends
on it, but I kin come purty near to livin’ without
work.”
“You deserve your sleep, Mr.
Hyde,” said the woman. “Just stretch
out there before the fire.”
“I’ll stretch out, but
I won’t sleep,” said the shiftless one.
He was as good as his word, and admiring
hands brought him food, which he ate contentedly.
Presently he said in a low voice to Paul:
“That’s right, Paul, hearten
’em up. They’ve got a lot to stand
yet, an’ it’s courage that counts.”
Paul knew this truth full well, and
he went back and forth in the circle, ever performing
his chosen task, while Henry outside planned and labored
incessantly for the defense against a new attack.
Fifty men, sharp of eye and ear, were selected to
watch through half the night, when fifty more, also
sharp of eye and ear, were to take their places.
All the others were to sleep, if they could, in order
that they might be strong and fresh for what the next
day would bring forth.
The scattering fire from the forest
ceased, and everything there became silent. No
dusky forms were visible to the defenders. The
sun dropped behind the hills, and night, thick and
dark, came over the earth. The peace of the world
was strange and solemn, and those in the beleaguered
camp felt oppressed by the darkness and the mystery.
They could not see any enemies or hear any, and after
a while they began to argue that since the savages
could no longer be seen or heard, they must have gone
away. But Henry Ware only laughed as they told
him so.
“They have not gone,”
he said to Daniel Poe, “nor will they go to-night
nor to-morrow nor the next night. This train,
when it starts in the morning, must be a moving fort.”
Daniel Poe sighed. As always,
he believed what Henry Ware said, and the prospect
did not invite.
The darkness and the silence endured.
The keenest of the watchers saw and heard nothing.
The moon came out and the earth lightened, then darkened
again as clouds rolled across the heavens; the camp
fires sank, and, despite their alarms, many slept.
The wounded, all of whom had received the rude but
effective surgery of the border, were quiet, and the
whole camp bore the aspect of peace. Paul slipped
from the circle, and joined Henry outside the earthwork.
“Do you see anything, Henry?” he said.
“No, but I’ve heard,”
replied Henry, who had just come out of the darkness.
“The Shawnees are before us, the Miamis behind
us, and the warriors of the smaller tribes on either
side. The night may pass without anything happening,
or it may not. But we have good watchers.”
Paul stayed with him a little while,
but, at Henry’s urgent request, he went back
inside the circle, wrapped himself in a blanket and
lay down, his face upturned to the cloudy skies which
he did not see. He did not think he could sleep.
His brain throbbed with excitement, and his vivid
imagination was wide awake. Despite the danger,
he rejoiced to be there; rejoiced that he and his
comrades should help in the saving of all these people.
The spiritual exaltation that he felt at times swept
over him. Nevertheless, all the pictures faded,
his excited nerves sank to rest, and, with his face
still upturned to the cloudy skies, he slept.
Far after midnight a sudden ring of
fire burst from the dark forest, and women and children
leaped up at the crash of many rifles. Shouting
their war whoop, the tribesmen rushed upon the camp;
but the fifty sentinels, sheltered by the earthwork,
met them with a fire more deadly than their own, and
in a moment the fifty became more than two hundred.
Red Eagle and Yellow Panther had hoped
for a surprise, but when the unerring volleys met
them, they sank back again into the forest, carrying
their dead with them.
“You were right,” said
Daniel Poe to Henry Ware; “they will not leave
us.”
“Not while they think there
is a chance to overpower us. But we’ve shown
’em they can’t count on a surprise.”
The camp, except the watchers, went
back to sleep, and the night passed away without a
second alarm. Dawn came, gray and cloudy, and
the people of the train awoke to their needs, which
they faced bravely. Breakfast was cooked and
eaten, and then the wagons, in a file of four, took
up their march, a cloud of keen-eyed and brave skirmishers
on every side. The train had truly become what
Henry said it must be, a moving fort; and, though
the savages opened fire in the woods, they dared not
attack in force, so resolute and sure-eyed were the
skirmishers and so strong a defense were the heavy
wagons.
All day long this terrible march proceeded,
the women and children sheltered in the wagons, and
the savages, from the shelter of the forest, keeping
up an irregular but unceasing fire on the flanks.
The white skirmishers replied often with deadly effect,
but it grew galling, almost unbearable. The Indians,
who were accustomed either to rapid success or rapid
retreat, showed an extraordinary persistence, and Henry
suspected that Braxton Wyatt was urging them on.
As he thought of the effect of these continued attacks
upon the train, he grew anxious. The bravest
spirit could be worn down by them, and he sought in
vain for a remedy.
They camped the second night in an
open place, and fortified, as before, with a circular
earthwork; but they were harried throughout all the
hours of darkness by irregular firing and occasional
war whoops. Fewer people slept that night than
had slept the night before. Nerves were raw and
suffering, and Paul found his chosen task a hard one.
But he worked faithfully, going up and down within
the fortified circle, cheering, heartening, and predicting
a better day for the morrow.
That day came, cloudless and brilliant
above, but to the accompaniment of shouts, shots,
and alarms below. Once more the terrible march
was resumed, and the savages still hung mercilessly
on their flanks. Henry, with anxious heart, noticed
a waning of spirit, though not of courage, in the
train. The raw nerves grew rawer. This incessant
marching forward between the very walls of death could
not be endured forever. Again he sought a way
out. Such a way they must have, and at last he
believed that he had found it. But he said nothing
at present, and the train, edged on either side with
fire and smoke, went on through the woods.
A third time they camped in an open
space, a third time they fortified; but now, after
the supper was over, Henry called a council of the
leaders.
“We cannot go on as we have
been going,” he said. “The savages
hang to us with uncommon tenacity, and there are limits
to human endurance.”
Daniel Poe shook his head sadly.
The awful lacerating process had never ceased.
More men were wounded, and the spirits of all grew
heavier and heavier. Paul still walked among
the fires, seeking to cheer and inspire, but he could
do little. Dread oppressed the women and children,
and they sat mostly in silence. Outside, an occasional
whoop came from the depths of the forest, and now
and then a rifle was fired. The night was coming
on, thick and ominous. The air had been heavy
all the day, and now somber clouds were rolling across
the sky. At intervals flashes of lightning flared
low down on the black forest. Heavy and somber,
like the skies, were the spirits of all the people.
A wounded horse neighed shrilly, and in an almost
human voice, as he died.
“We must take a new step,”
said Henry; “things cannot go on this way.
It is yet a hundred and fifty miles, perhaps, to Wareville,
and if the savages continue to hang on, we can never
reach it.”
“What do you propose?” asked Daniel Poe.
Henry Ware stood erect. The light
of the council fire flared upon his splendid, indomitable
face. All relied upon him, and he knew it.
“I have a plan,” he said.
“To-morrow we can reach an unforested hill that
I know of, with a spring flowing out of the side.
It is easy to hold, and we shall have plenty of water.
We will stop there and make our stand. Meanwhile,
we will send to Wareville for help. The messenger
must leave to-night. Jim Hart, are you ready?”
Jim Hart had been sitting on a fallen
tree, all humped together. Now he unfolded himself
and stood up, stretched out to his complete length,
six feet four inches of long, slim man, knotted and
jointed, but as tough as wire—the swiftest
runner in all the West. Long Jim, ugly, honest,
and brave, said nothing, but his movement showed that
he was ready.
“Jim Hart was made for speed,”
continued Henry. “At his best he is like
the wind, and he can run all the way to Wareville.
He’ll leave in a half hour, before the moon
has a chance to rise.”
“He’ll never get through!” exclaimed
Daniel Poe.
“Oh, yes, he will!” said
Henry confidently. “Bring all the men Wareville
can spare, Jim, and fall upon them while they are besieging
us at the Table Rock.”
Little more was said. Had the
train afforded paint, they would have stained Jim’s
face in the Indian way; but the utmost that they could
do was to draw up his hair and tie it in a scalp lock,
like those of the Shawnees. Fortunately, his
hair was dark, and his face was so thoroughly tanned
by weather that it might be mistaken in the night for
an Indian’s. Then Long Jim was ready.
He merely shook the hands of his four comrades and
of Daniel Poe, and without another word went forth.
The night was at its darkest when
Jim Hart slipped under one of the wagons and crept
across the open space. The heavy clouds had grown
heavier, and now and then low thunder muttered on
the horizon. The fitful lightning ceased, and
this was occasion for thanks.
Jim Hart crept about twenty yards
from the circle of the wagons, and then he lay flat
upon the earth. He could see nothing in the surrounding
rim of forest, nor could he hear anything. A
light hum from the camp behind him was all that came
to his ears. He slipped forward again in a stooping
position, stopped a moment when he heard a rifle shot
from the other side of the camp, and then resumed
his shambling, but swift, journey. Now he passed
the open space and gained the edge of the woods.
Here the danger lay, but the brave soul of Long Jim
never faltered.
He plunged into the gloom of the bushes
and trees, slipping silently among them. Two
warriors glanced curiously at him in the dark, but
in a moment he was gone; a third farther on spoke
to him, but he shook his head impatiently, as if he
bore some message, and only walked the faster.
Now his keen eyes saw savages all around him, some
talking, others standing or lying down, quite silent.
He was sorry now that he was so tall, as his was a
figure that would cause remark anywhere; but he stooped
over, trying to hide his great height as much as possible.
He passed one group, then two, then three, and now
he was a full four hundred yards from the camp.
His curving flight presently brought him near three
men who were talking earnestly together. They
noticed Hart at the same time, and one of them beckoned
to him. Long Jim pretended not to see, and went
on. Then one of them called to him angrily, and
Jim recognized the voice of Braxton Wyatt.
Long Jim stopped a moment, uncertain
what to do at that critical juncture, and Braxton
Wyatt, stepping forward, seized him by the arm.
It was dark in the woods, but the renegade, looking
up, recognized the face and figure.
“Jim Hart!” he cried.
Long Jim’s right hand was grasping
the stock of his rifle, but his left suddenly flashed
out and smote Braxton Wyatt full in the face.
The renegade gasped and went down unconscious, and
then Long Jim turned, and ran with all the speed that
was in him, leaping over the low bushes and racing
among the tree trunks more like a phantom than a human
being. A shout arose behind him, and a dozen
rifle shots were fired. He felt a sting in his
arm, and then blood dripped down; but it was only a
flesh wound, and he was spurred to greater speed.
A terrible yell arose, and many warriors,
trained runners of the forest, with muscles of steel
and a spirit that never tired, darted after him.
But Long Jim, bending his head a little lower, raced
on through the dark, his strength growing with every
leap and his brain on fire with energy. He passed
two or three savages—far-flung outposts—but
before they could recover from their surprise he was
by them and gone. Bullets sang past him, but
the long, slim figure cut the air like an arrow in
the wind. After him came the savages, but now
he was beyond the last outposts, and the footsteps
of his pursuers were growing fainter behind. Now
he opened his mouth, and emitted a long, quavering,
defiant yell—answer to their own.
After that he was silent, and sped on, never relaxing,
tireless like some powerful machine. The pursuit
died away behind him, and though some might hang on
his trail, none could ever overtake him.
The low thunder still muttered, and
the fitful lightning began to flare again. Now
and then there were gusts of rain, swept by the wind;
but through all the hours of rain and dark the runner
sped on, mile upon mile.
Day dawns and finds him still flitting!
But now there is full need of thy speed, Jim Hart!
Five hundred lives hang upon it!
Speed ye, Long Jim, speed ye!