CHAPTER I
PAUL
Paul stopped in a little open space,
and looked around all the circle of the forest.
Everywhere it was the same—just the curving
wall of red and brown, and beyond, the blue sky, flecked
with tiny clouds of white. The wilderness was
full of beauty, charged with the glory of peace and
silence, and there was naught to indicate that man
had ever come. The leaves rippled a little in
the gentle west wind, and the crisping grass bowed
before it; but Paul saw no living being, save himself,
in the vast, empty world.
The boy was troubled and, despite
his life in the woods, he had full right to be.
This was the great haunted forest of Kain-tuck-ee,
where the red man made his most desperate stand, and
none ever knew when or whence danger would come.
Moreover, he was lost, and the forest told him nothing;
he was not like his friend, Henry Ware, born to the
forest, the heir to all the primeval instincts, alive
to every sight and sound, and able to read the slightest
warning the wilderness might give. Paul Cotter
was a student, a lover of books, and a coming statesman.
Fate, it seemed, had chosen that he and Henry Ware
should go hand in hand, but for different tasks.
Paul gazed once more around the circle
of the glowing forest, and the shadow in his eyes
deepened. Henry and the horses, loaded with powder
for the needy settlement, must be somewhere near,
but whether to right or left he could not tell.
He had gone to look for water, and when he undertook
to return he merely went deeper and deeper into the
forest. Now the boughs, as they nodded before
the gentle breeze, seemed to nod to him in derision.
He felt shame as well as alarm. Henry would not
laugh at him, but the born scholar would be worth,
for the time, at least, far less than the born trailer.
Yet no observer, had there been any,
would have condemned Paul as he condemned himself.
He stood there, a tall, slender boy, with a broad,
high brow, white like a girl’s above the line
of his cap, blue eyes, dark and full, with the width
between that indicates the mind behind, and the firm,
pointed chin that belongs so often to people of intellect.
Paul and Henry were on their way from
Wareville, their home, with horses hearing powder
for Marlowe, the nearest settlement, nearly a hundred
miles away. The secret of making powder from
the nitre dust on the floors of the great caves of
Kentucky had been discovered by the people of Wareville,
and now they wished to share their unfailing supply
with others, in order that the infant colony might
be able to withstand Indian attacks. Henry Ware,
once a captive in a far Northwestern tribe, and noted
for his great strength and skill, had been chosen,
with Paul Cotter, his comrade, to carry it. Both
rejoiced in the great task, which to them meant the
saving of Kentucky.
Paul’s eyes were apt at times
to have a dreamy look, as if he were thinking of things
far away, whether of time or place; but now they were
alive to the present, and to the forest about him.
He listened intently. At last he lay down and
put his ear to the earth, as he had seen Henry do;
but he heard nothing save a soft, sighing sound, which
he knew to be only the note of the wilderness.
He might have fired his rifle. The sharp, lashing
report would go far, carried farther by its own echoes;
but it was more likely to bring foe than friend, and
he refrained.
But he must try, if not one thing,
then another. He looked up at the heavens and
studied the great, red globe of the sun, now going
slowly down the western arch in circles of crimson
and orange light, and then he looked hack at the earth.
If he had not judged the position of the sun wrong,
their little camp lay to the right, and he would choose
that course. He turned at once and walked swiftly
among the trees.
Paul stopped now and then to listen.
He would have uttered the long forest shout, as a
signal to his comrade, but even that was forbidden.
Henry had seen signs in the forest that indicated
more than once to his infallible eye the presence
of roving warriors from the north, and no risk must
be taken. But, as usual, it was only the note
of the wilderness that came to his ears. He stopped
also once or twice, not to listen, but to look at the
splendid country, and to think what a great land it
would surely be.
He walked steadily on for miles, but
the region about him remained unfamiliar. No
smoke from the little camp-fire rose among the trees,
and no welcome sight of Henry or the horses came to
his eyes. For all he knew, he might be going
farther from the camp at every step. Putting aside
caution, he made a trumpet of his two hands, and uttered
the long, quavering cry that serves as a signal in
the forest. It came back in a somber echo from
the darkening wilderness, and Paul saw, with a little
shiver, that the sun was now going down behind the
trees. The breeze rose, and the leaves rustled
together with a soft hiss, like a warning. Chill
came into the air. The sensitive mind of the boy,
so much alive to abstract impressions, felt the omens
of coming danger, and he stopped again, not knowing
what to do. He called himself afraid, but he was
not. It was the greater tribute to his courage
that he remained resolute where another might well
have been in despair.
The sun went down behind the black
forest like a cannon shot into the sea, and darkness
swept over the wilderness. Paul uttered the long
cry again and again, but, as before, no answer came
back; once he fired his rifle, and the sharp note
seemed to run for miles, but still no answer.
Then he decided to take counsel of
prudence, and sleep where he was. If he walked
on, he might go farther and farther away from the camp,
but if he stopped now, while he might not find Henry,
Henry would certainly find him. Any wilderness
trail was an open road to his comrade.
He hunted a soft place under one of
the trees, and, despising the dew, stretched himself
between two giant roots, his rifle by his side.
He was tired and hungry, and he lay for a while staring
at the blank undergrowth, but by and by all his troubles
and doubts floated away. The note of the wind
was soothing, and the huge roots sheltered him.
His eyelids drooped, a singular feeling of peace and
ease crept over him, and he was asleep.
It was yet the intense darkness of
early night, and the outline of his figure was lost
between the giant roots, but after a while a silver
moon brought a gray tint to the skies, and the black
bank over the forest began to thin and lighten.
Then two figures, hideous in paint, crept from the
undergrowth, and stared at the sleeping boy with pitiless
eyes.
Paul slept on, and mercifully knew
nothing of his danger; yet it would have been hard
to find in the world two pairs of eyes that contained
more savagery than those now gazing upon him.
Their owners crept nearer, looking with fierce joy
through the darkness at the sleeping boy who was so
certainly their prey. Their code contained nothing
that taught them to spare a foe, and this youth.
In the van of the white invasion, was the worst of
foes.
The boy still slept, and his slumber
was deep, sweet, and dreamless. No warning came
to him while the savage eyes, bright with cruel fire,
crept closer and closer, and the merciful darkness,
coming again, tried to close down and hide the approaching
tragedy of the forest.
Paul returned with a jerk from his
peaceful heaven. Hands and feet were seized suddenly
and pinned to the earth so tightly that he could not
move, and he gazed up at two hideous, painted faces,
very near to his own, and full of menace. The
boy’s heart turned for a moment to water.
He saw at once, through his vivid and powerful imagination,
all the terrors of his position, and in the same instant
he leaped forward also to the future, and to the agony
it had in store for him. But in a moment his courage
came back, the strong will once more took command
of the body and the spirit, and he looked up with
stoical eyes at his captors. He knew that resistance
now would be in vain, and, relaxing his muscles, he
saved his strength.
The warriors laughed a little, a soundless
laugh that was full of menace, and bound him securely
with strips of buckskin cut from his own garments.
Then they stood up, and Paul, too, rose to a sitting
position, gazing intently at his captors. They
were powerful men, apparently warriors of middle age,
and Paul knew enough of costume and paint to tell that
they were of the Shawnee nation, bitterly hostile
to him and his kind.
His terrors came back upon him in
full sweep. He loved life, and, scholar though
he was, he loved his life in the young wilderness of
Kentucky, where he was at the beginnings of things.
Every detail of what they would do to him, every incident
of the torture was already photographed upon his sensitive
mind, but again the brave lad called up all his courage,
and again he triumphed, keeping his body still and
his face without expression. He merely looked
up at them, as if placidly waiting their will.
The two warriors talked together a
little, and then, seeming to change their minds, they
unbound the boy’s feet. One touched him
on the shoulder, and, pointing to the north, started
in that direction. Paul understood, and, rising
to his feet, followed. The second warrior came
close behind, and Paul was as securely a prisoner
as if he were in the midst of a band of a hundred.
Once or twice he looked around at the silent woods
and thought of running, but it would have been the
wildest folly. His hands tied, he could have
been quickly overtaken, or, if not that, a bullet.
He sternly put down the temptation, and plodded steadily
on between the warriors, the broad, brown back of
the one in front of him always leading the way.
It seemed to him that they sought
the densest part of the undergrowth, where the night
shadows lay thickest, and he was wise enough to know
that they did it to hide their trail from possible
pursuit. Then he thought of Henry, his comrade,
the prince of trailers! He might come! He
would come! Paul’s blood leaped at the
thought, and his head lifted with hope.
Clouds swept up, the moon died, and
in the darkness Paul had little idea of direction.
He only knew that they were still traveling fast amid
the thick bushes, and that when he made too much noise
in passing one or other of the brown savages would
prod him with the muzzle of a gun as a hint to be
more careful. His face became bruised and his
feet weary, but at last they stopped in an opening
among the trees, by the side of a little brook that
trickled over shining pebbles.
The warriors wasted little time.
They rebound Paul’s feet in such tight fashion
that he could scarcely move, and then, lying down near
him, went to sleep so quickly that it seemed to Paul
they accomplished the feat by some sort of a mechanical
arrangement. Tired as he was, he could not close
his own eyes yet, and he longed for his comrade.
Would he come?
Paul’s sensitive nerves were
again keenly alive to every phase of his cruel situation.
The warriors, lying almost at his feet, were monsters,
not men, and this wilderness, which in its finer aspects
he loved, was bristling in the darkness with terrors
known and unknown. Yet his clogged and weary
brain slept at last, and when he awoke again it was
day—a beautiful day of white and gold light,
with the autumnal tints of the forest all about him,
and the leaves rustling in a gentle wind.
But his heart sank to the uttermost
depths when he looked at the warriors. By day
they seemed more brutal and pitiless than at night.
From their long, narrow eyes shone no ray of mercy,
and the ghastly paint on their high cheek bones deepened
their look of ferocity. It was not the appearance
of the warriors alone, it was more the deed for which
they were preparing that appalled Paul. They
were raking dead leaves and fallen brushwood of last
year around a small but stout sapling, and they went
on with their task in a methodical way.
Paul knew well, too well. Hideous
tales of such doings had come now and then to his
ears, but he had never dreamed that he, Paul Cotter,
in his own person would be such a victim. Even
now it seemed incredible in the face of this beautiful
young world that stretched away from him, so quiet
and so peaceful. He, who already in his boyhood
was planning great things for this splendid land,
to die such a death!
The warriors did not cease until their
task was finished. It was but a brief one after
all, for Paul had made no mistake in his guess.
There was not time, perhaps, to take a prisoner beyond
the Ohio, and they could not forego a savage pleasure.
They dragged the hoy to the sapling, stood him erect
against the slim trunk, and hound him fast with green
withes. Then they piled the dead leaves and brushwood
high about him above his knees, and, this done, stood
a little way off and looked at their work.
The warriors spoke together for the
first time since Paul had awakened, and their black
eyes lighted up with a hideous glow of anticipation.
Paul saw it, and an icy chill ran through all his
veins. Had not the green withes held him, he
would have fallen to the ground. Once more his
active mind, foreseeing all that would come, had dissolved
his strength for the moment; but, as always, his will
brought his courage back, and he shut his eyes to
put away the hateful sight of the gloating savages.
He had never asked in any way for
mercy, he had never uttered a word of protest, and
he resolved that he would not cry out if he could help
it. They should not rejoice too much at his sufferings;
he would die as they were taught to die, and he would
show to them that the mind of a white boy could supply
the place of a red man’s physical fortitude.
But Henry might come! Would he come? Oh,
would he come? Resigned to death, Paul yet hoped
for life.
He opened his eyes, and the warriors
were still standing there, looking at him; but in
a moment one approached, and, bending down, began to
strike flint and steel amid the dry leaves at the
boy’s feet. Again, despite himself, the
shivering chill ran through Paul’s veins.
Would Henry come? If he came at all, he must
now come quickly, as only a few minutes were left.
The leaves were obstinate; sparks
flew from the flint and steel, but there was no blaze.
Paul looked down at the head of the warrior who worked
patiently at his task. The second warrior stood
on one side, watching, and when Paul glanced at him
he saw the savage move ever so little, but as if driven
by a sudden impulse, and then raise his head in the
attitude of one who listened intently. Heat replaced
the ice in Paul’s veins. Had something
moved in the forest? Was it Henry? Would
he come?
The standing warrior uttered a low
sound, and he who knelt with the flint and steel raised
his head. Something had moved in the forest!
It might be Henry. For Paul, the emotions of
a life were concentrated in a single moment.
Fear and hope tripped over each other, and the wilderness
grew dim to his sight. A myriad of little black
specks danced before his eyes, and the blood was beating
a quick march in his ears.
The two savages were motionless, as
if carved of brown marble, and over all the wilderness
hung silence. Then out of the silence came a sharp
report, and the warrior who stood erect, rifle in hand,
fell to the earth, stricken by instant death.
Henry had come! His faithful comrade had not
failed him! Paul shouted aloud in his tremendous
relief and joy, forgetful of the second warrior.
The kneeling savage sprang to his
feet, but he had made a fatal mistake. To light
the fire for the torture, he had left his rifle leaning
against the trunk of a tree twenty feet away, and
before he could regain it a terrible figure bounded
from the bushes, the figure of a great youth, clad
in buckskin, his face transformed with anger and his
eyes alight. Before the savage could reach his
weapon he went down, slain by a single blow of a clubbed
rifle, and the next moment Henry was cutting Paul loose
with a few swift slashes of his keen hunting knife.
“I knew you would come!
I knew it!” exclaimed Paul joyously and wildly,
as he stood forth free. “Nobody in the
world but you could have done it, Henry!”
“I don’t know about that,
Paul,” said Henry, “but I’d have
had you back sooner if it hadn’t been for the
dark. I followed you all night the best way I
could, but I couldn’t come up to you until day,
and they began work then.”
He glanced significantly at the leaves
and brushwood, and then, handing Paul’s rifle
to him, looked at those belonging to the savages.
“We’ll take ’em,”
he said. “It’s likely we’ll
need ’em, and their powder and bullets will
be more than welcome, too.”
Paul was rubbing his wrists and ankles,
where the blood flowed painfully as the circulation
was restored, but to him the whole affair was ended.
His life had been saved at the last moment, and the
world was more brilliant and beautiful than ever.
His imagination went quickly to the other extreme.
There was no more danger.
But Henry Ware did not lose his eager,
wary look. It did not take him more than a minute
to transfer the ammunition of the warriors to the pouches
and powder-horns of Paul and himself. Then he
searched the forest with keen, suspicious glances.
“Come, Paul,” he said,
“we must run. The woods are full of the
savages. I’ve found out that there’s
a great war party between us and Marlowe, and I’ve
hid the powder in a cave. I turned the horses
loose, hoping that we’ll get ’em some
time later; but just now you and I have to save ourselves.”
Paul came back to earth. Danger
still threatened! But he was free for the time,
and he was with his comrade!
“You lead the way, Henry,”
he said. “I’ll follow, and do whatever
you say.”
Henry Ware made no reply, but bent
his ear again, in the attitude of one who listens.
Paul watched his face attentively, seeking to read
his knowledge there.
“The big war band is not far
away,” said Henry, “and it’s likely
that they’ve heard my shot. It would carry
far on such a still, clear morning as this. I
didn’t want them to hear it.”
“But I’m glad you did
shoot,” said Paul. “It was a mighty
welcome sound to me.”
“Yes,” said Henry, with
grim humor, “it was the right thing at the right
time. Hark to that!” A single note, very
faint and very far, rose and was quickly gone, like
the dying echo of music. Only the trained ranger
of the wilderness would have noticed it at all, but
Henry Ware knew.
“Yes, they’ve heard,”
he said, “and they’re telling it to each
other. They are also telling it to us. They’re
between us and Marlowe, and they are between us and
Wareville, so we must run to the north, and run as
fast as we can.”
He led the way with swift, light footsteps
through the forest, and Paul followed close behind,
each boy carrying on his shoulder two rifles and at
his waist a double stock of bullets and powder.
Paul scarcely felt any fear now for
the future. The revulsion from the stake and
torture was so great that it did not seem to him that
he could be taken again. Moreover, they had seized
him the first time when he was asleep. They had
taken an unfair advantage.
The sun rose higher, gilding the brown
forest with fine filmy gold, like a veil, and the
boys ran silently on among the trees and the undergrowth.
Behind them, and spread out like a fan, came many warriors,
fierce for their lives. Amid such scenes was
the Great West won.