ON THE GREAT RIVER
They remained just within the edge
of the forest, but, despite the lack of moonlight,
they could see far over the surface of the river.
It seemed to be an absolutely clean sweep of waters,
as free from boats as if man had never come, but,
after long looking, Henry thought that he could detect
a half dozen specks moving southward. It was
only for a moment, and then the specks were gone.
“I’m sure it was the Spanish
boats,” said Henry, “and I think they’ve
given up the hunt.”
“More’n likely,”
said Sol, “an’ I guess it’s about
time fur us to pull across an’ pick up Paul
an’ Tom an’ Jim. They’ll wonder
what hez become o’ us. An’ say, Henry,
won’t they be s’prised to see us come proudly
sailin’ into port in our gran’ big gall-yun,
all loaded down with arms an’ supplies an’
treasures that we hev captured?”
Sol spoke in a tone of deep content,
and Henry replied in the same tone:
“If they don’t they’ve
changed mightily since we left ’em.”
Both, in truth, were pervaded with
satisfaction. They felt that they had never done
a better night’s work. They had a splendid
boat filled with the most useful supplies. As
Sol truthfully said, it was one thing to walk a thousand
miles through the woods to New Orleans and another
to float down on the current in a comfortable boat.
They had cause for their deep satisfaction.
They pulled with strong, steady strokes
across the Mississippi, taking a diagonal course,
and they stopped now and then to look for a possible
enemy. But they saw nothing, and at last their
boat touched the western shore. Here Sol uttered
their favorite signal, the cry of the wolf, and it
was quickly answered from the brush.
“They’re all right,”
said Henry, and presently they heard the light footsteps
of the three coming fast.
“Here, Paul, here we are!”
called out Sol a few moments later, “an’
min’, Paul, that your moccasins are clean.
We don’t allow no dirty footsteps on this magnificent,
silver-plated gall-yun o’ ours, an’ ez
fur Jim Hart, ef the Mississippi wuzn’t so muddy
I’d make him take a bath afore he come aboard.”
Henry and the shiftless one certainly
enjoyed the surprise of their comrades who stood staring.
“I suppose you cut her out,
took her from the Spaniards?” said Paul.
“We shorely did,” replied
Sol, “an’, Paul, she’s a shore enough
gall-yun, one o’ the kind you told us them Spaniards
had, ‘cause she’s full o’ good things.
Jest come on board an’ look.”
The three were quickly on the boat
and they followed Sol with surprise and delight, as
he showed them their new treasures one by one.
“You’ve named her right,
Sol,” said Paul. “She is a galleon
to us, sure enough, and that’s what we’ll
call her, ‘The Galleon.’ When we have
time, Sol, you and I will cut that name on her with
our knives.”
They tied their boat to a sapling
and kept the oars and themselves aboard. Tom
Ross volunteered to keep the watch for the few hours
that were left of the night. The others disposed
themselves comfortably in the boat, wrapped their
bodies in the beautiful new Spanish blankets, and were
soon sound asleep.
Tom sat in the prow of the boat, his
rifle across his knees, and his keen hunting knife
by his side. At the first sign of danger from
shore he could cut the rope with a single slash of
his knife and push the boat far out into the current.
But there was no indication of danger
nor did the indefinable sixth sense, that came of
long habit and training, warn him of any. Instead,
it remained a peaceful night, though dark, and Tom
looked contemplatively at his comrades. He was
the oldest of the little party and a man of few words,
but he was deeply attached to his four faithful comrades.
Silently he gave thanks that his lot was cast with
those whom he liked so well.
The night passed away and up came
a beautiful dawn of rose and gold. Tom Ross awakened
his comrades.
“The day is here,” he
said, “an’ we must be up an’ doin’
ef we’re goin’ to keep on the trail o’
them Spanish fellers.”
“All right,” said Shif’less
Sol, opening his eyes. “Jim Hart, is my
breakfus ready? Ef so, you kin jest bring it to
me while I’m layin’ here an’ I’ll
eat it in bed.”
“Your breakfus ready!”
replied Jim Hart indignantly. “What sort
uv nonsense are you talkin’ now, Sol Hyde?”
“Why, ain’t you the ship’s
cook?” said Sol in a hurt tone, “an’
oughtn’t you to be proud o’ bein’
head cook on a splendiferous new gall-yun like this?
I’d a-thought, Jim, you’d be so full o’
enthusiasm over bein’ promoted that you’d
have had ready fur us the grandest breakfus that wuz
ever cooked by a mortal man fur mortal men. It
wuz sech a fine chance fur you.”
“I think we can risk a fire,”
said Henry. “The Spaniards are far out of
sight, and warm food will be good for us.”
After they had eaten, Henry poured
a few drops of the Spanish liquor for each in a small
silver cup that he found in one of the lockers.
“That will hearten us up,”
he said, but directly after they drank it Paul, who
had been making an exploration of his own on the boat,
uttered a cry of joy.
“Coffee!” he said, as
he dragged a bag from under a seat, “and here
is a pot to boil it in.”
“More treasures,” said
Sol gleefully. “That wuz shorely a good
night’s work you an’ me done, Henry!”
There was nothing to do but boil a
pot of the coffee then and there, and each had a long,
delicious drink. Coffee and tea were so rare in
the wilderness that they were valued like precious
treasures. Then they packed their things and
started, pulling out into the middle of the stream
and giving the current only a little assistance with
the oars.
“One thing is shore,”
said Shif’less Sol, lolling luxuriously on a
locker, “that Spanish gang can’t git away
from us. All we’ve got to do is to float
along ez easy ez you please, an’ we’ll
find ’em right in the middle o’ the road.”
“It does beat walkin’,”
said Jim Hart, with equal content, “but this
is shorely a pow’ful big river. I never
seed so much muddy water afore in my life.”
“It’s a good river, a
kind river,” said Paul, “because it’s
taking us right to its bosom, and carrying us on where
we want to go with but little trouble to us.”
It was to Paul, the most imaginative
of them all, to whom the mighty river made the greatest
appeal. It seemed beneficent and kindly to him,
a friend in need. Nature, Paul thought, had often
come to their assistance, watching over them, as it
were, and helping them when they were weakest.
And, in truth, what they saw that morning was enough
to inspire a bold young wilderness rover.
The river turned from yellow to a
lighter tint in the brilliant sunlight. Little
waves raised by the wind ran across the slowly-flowing
current. As far as they could see the stream
extended to eastward, carried by the flood deep into
the forest. The air was crisp, with the sparkle
of spring, and all the adventurers rejoiced.
Now and then great flocks of wild
fowl, ducks and geese, flew over the river, and they
were so little used to man that more than once they
passed close to the boat.
“The Spaniards are too far away
to hear,” said Henry, “and the next time
any wild ducks come near I’m going to try one
of these fowling pieces. We need fresh ducks,
anyway.”
He took out a fowling piece, loaded
it carefully with the powder and shot that the locker
furnished in abundance and waited his time. By
and by a flock of wild ducks flew near and Henry fired
into the midst of them. Three lay floating on
the water after the shot, and when they took them in
Long Jim Hart, a master on all such subjects, pronounced
them to be of a highly edible variety.
Paul, meanwhile, took out one of the
small swords and examined it critically.
“It is certainly a fine one,”
he said, “I suppose it’s what they call
a Toledo blade in Spain, the finest that they make.”
“Could you do much with it, Paul?” asked
Shif’less Sol.
“I could,” replied Paul
confidently. “Mr. Pennypacker served in
the great French war. He was at the taking of
Quebec, and he learned the use of the sword from good
masters. He’s taught me all the tricks.”
“Maybe, then,” said Sol
laughing, “you’ll have to fight Alvarez
with one o’ them stickers. Ef sech a combat
is on it’ll fall to you, Paul. The rest
of us are handier with rifle an’ knife.”
“It’s never likely to happen,” said
Paul.
The morning passed peacefully on,
and the glory of the heavens was undimmed. The
river was a vast, murmuring stream, and the five voyagers
felt that, for the present, their task was an easy
one. A single man at the oars was sufficient
to keep the boat moving as fast as they wished, and
the rest occupied themselves with details that might
provide for a future need.
Paul brought out one of the beautiful
small swords again, and fenced vigorously with an
imaginary antagonist. Jim Hart took a captured
needle and thread and began to mend a rent in his
attire. Henry lifted the folded tent from the
locker and looked carefully at the cloth.
“I think that with this and
a pole or two we might fix up a sail if we needed
it,” he said. “We don’t know
anything about sails, but we can learn by trying.”
Tom Ross was at the oars, but Shif’less
Sol lay back on a locker, closed his eyes, and said:
“Jest wake me up, when we git
to New Or-lee-yuns. I could lay here an’
sleep forever, the boat rockin’ me to sleep like
a cradle.”
They saw nothing of the Spanish force,
but they knew that such a flotilla could not evade
them. Having no reason to hide, the Spaniards
would not seek to conceal so many boats in the flooded
forest. Hence the five felt perfectly easy on
that point. About noon they ran their own boat
among the trees until they reached dry land.
Here they lighted a fire and cooked their ducks, which
they found delicious, and then resumed their leisurely
journey.
The afternoon was as peaceful as the
morning, but it seemed to the sensitive imagination
of Paul that the wilderness aspect of everything was
deepening. The great flooded river broadened until
the line of water and horizon met, and Paul could
easily fancy that they were floating on a boundless
sea. An uncommonly red sun was setting and here
and there the bubbles were touched with fire.
Far in the west dark shadows were stealing up.
“Look,” Henry suddenly
exclaimed, “I think that the Spanish have gone
into camp for the night!”
He pointed down the stream and toward
the western shore, where a thin spire of smoke was
rising.
“It’s that, certain,”
said Tom Ross, “an’ I guess we’d
better make fur camp, too.”
They pulled toward the eastern shore,
in order that the river might be between them and
the Spaniards during the night and soon reached a grove
which stood many feet deep in the water. As they
passed under the shelter of the boughs they took another
long look toward the spire of smoke. Henry, who
had the keenest eyes of all, was able to make out the
dim outline of boats tied to the bank, and any lingering
doubt that the Spaniards might not be there was dispelled.
“When they start in the morning
we’ll start, too,” said Henry.
Then they pushed their boat further
back into the grove. Night was coming fast.
The sun sank in the bosom of the river, the water turned
from yellow to red and then to black, and the earth
lay in darkness.
“I think we’d better tie
up here and eat cold food,” said Henry.
“An’ then sleep,”
said Shif’less Sol. “That wuz a mighty
comf’table Spanish blanket I had last night
an’, Jim Hart, I want to tell you that if you
move ‘roun’ to-night, while you’re
watchin’, please step awful easy, an’
be keerful not to wake me ’cause I’m a
light sleeper. I don’t like to be waked
up either early or late in the night. Tain’t
good fur the health. Makes a feller grow old
afore his time.”
“Sol,” said Henry, who
was captain by fitness and universal consent, “you’ll
take the watch until about one o’clock in the
morning and then Paul will relieve you.”
Jim Hart doubled up his long form
with silent laughter, and smote his knee violently
with the palm of his right hand.
“Oh, yes, Sol Hyde,” he
said, “I’ll step lightly, that is, ef I
happen to be walkin’ ‘roun’ in my
sleep, an’ I’ll take care not to wake you
too suddenly, Sol Hyde. I wouldn’t do it
for anything. I don’t want to stunt your
growth, an’ you already sech a feeble, delicate
sort o’ creetur, not able to take nourishment
‘ceptin’ from a spoon.”
“Thar ain’t no reward
in this world fur a good man,” said the shiftless
one in a resigned tone.
They ate quickly, and, as usual, those
who did not have to watch wrapped themselves in their
blankets and with equal quickness fell asleep.
Shif’less Sol took his place in the prow of the
boat, and his attitude was much like that of Tom Ross
the night before, only lazier and more graceful.
Sol was a fine figure of a young man, drooped in a
luxurious and reclining attitude, his shoulder against
the side of the boat, and a roll of two blankets against
his back. His eyes were half closed, and a stray
observer, had there been any, might have thought that
he was either asleep or dreaming.
But the shiftless one, fit son of
the wilderness, was never more awake in his life.
The eyes, looking from under the lowered lids, pierced
the forest like those of a cat. He saw and noted
every tree trunk within the range of human vision,
and no piece of floating debris on the surface of
the flooded river escaped his attention. His sharp
ears heard, too, every sound in the grove, the rustle
of a stray breeze through the new leaves, or the splash
of a fish, as it leaped from the water and sank back
again.
The hours dragged after one another,
one by one, but Shif’less Sol was not unhappy.
He was really quite willing to keep the watch, and,
as Tom Ross had done, he regarded his sleeping comrades
with pride, and all the warmth of good fellowship.
The night was dark, like its predecessor.
The moon’s rays fell only in uneven streaks,
and revealed a singular scene, a forest standing knee
deep, as it were, in water.
Shif’less Sol presently took
one of the blankets and wrapped it around his shoulders.
A cold damp pervaded the atmosphere, and a fog began
to rise from the river. The shiftless one was
a cautious man and he knew the danger of chills and
fever. His comrades were already well wrapped,
but he stepped softly over and drew Paul’s blanket
a little closer around his neck. Then he resumed
his seat, maintaining his silence.
Shif’less Sol did not like the
rising of the river fog. It was thick and cold,
it might be unhealthy, and it hid the view. His
circle of vision steadily narrowed. Tree trunks
became ghostly, and then were gone. The water,
seen through the fog, had a pallid, unpleasant color.
Eye became of little use, and it was ear upon which
the sentinel must depend.
Shif’less Sol judged that it
was about midnight, and he became troubled. The
sixth sense, that comes of acute natural perceptions
fortified by long habit, was giving him warning.
It seemed to him that he felt the approach of something.
He raised himself up a little higher and stared anxiously
into the thick mass of white fog. He could make
out nothing but a little patch of water and a few
ghostly tree trunks near by. Even the stern of
the boat was half hidden by the fog.
“Wa’al,” thought
the shiftless one philosophically, “ef it’s
hard fur me to find anything it’ll be hard fur
anything to find us.”
But his troubled mind would not be
quiet. Philosophy was not a sufficient reply
to the warning of the sixth sense, and, leaning far
over the edge of the boat, he listened with ears long
trained to every sound of the wilderness. He
heard only the stray murmur of the wind among the
leaves—and was that a ripple in the water?
He strained his ears and decided that it was either
a ripple or the splash of a fish, and he sank back
again in his seat.
Although he had resumed his old position,
the shiftless one was not satisfied. The feeling
of apprehension, like a mysterious mental signal,
was not effaced. That thick, whitish fog was surcharged
with an alien quality, and slowly he raised himself
up once more. Hark! was it the ripple again?
He rose half to his feet, and instantly his eye caught
a glimpse of something brown upon the edge of the
boat. It was a human hand, the brown, powerful
hand of a savage.
The glance of Shif’less Sol
followed the hand and saw a brown face emerging from
the water and fog. Quick as a flash he fired.
There was a terrible, unearthly cry, the hand slipped
from the boat and the head sank from view.
“Up! up! boys!” cried
Sol in thunderous tones. “We’re attacked
by swimmin’ savages!”
He snatched up one of the double-barreled
pistols and fired at another head on the water.
The others were awake in an instant and rose up, rifles
in hand. But they saw only a splash of blood on
the stream that was gone in a moment, then the thick,
whitish fog closed in again, and after that silence!
But they knew Sol too well to doubt him, and the momentary
red splash would have converted even the ignorant.
“Lie low!” exclaimed Henry.
“Everybody down behind the sides of the boat!
They may fire at any time!”
The boat was built of thick timber,
through which no bullet of that time could go, and
they crouched down, merely peeping over the edges and
presenting scarcely any target. They had their
own rifles and the extra fowling pieces and pistols
were made ready, also.
But nothing came from the great pall
of whitish fog, and the silence was chilly and heavy.
It was the most uncanny thing in all Paul’s experience.
Beyond a doubt they were surrounded by savage enemies,
but from which side they would come, and when, nobody
could tell until they were at the very side of the
boat.
“How many did you see, Sol?” whispered
Henry.
“Only two, but one of ’em won’t
ever attack us again.”
“The others must be near by
in their canoes, and the swimmers may have been scouts
and skirmishers. They know where we are, but we
don’t know where they are.”
“That’s so,” said Shif’less
Sol, “an’ it gives ’em an advantage.”
“Which, perhaps, we can take from ’em
by moving our own boat.”
Henry was about to put his plan into
action, but they heard a light splash in the water
to the west, and another to the north. Spots of
piercing red light appeared in the fog, and many rifles
cracked. Fortunately, all had thrown themselves
down, and the bullets spent themselves in the wood
of the boat’s side. Henry and Sol and Tom
fired back at the flashes, but more rifle shots came
out of the fog, and those on the boat had no way of
telling whether any of their bullets had hit.
“I think we’d better hold
our fire,” whispered Henry between rifle shots.
“It’s wasting bullets to shoot at a fog.”
The others nodded and waited.
A long cry, quavering at first, and then rising to
a fierce top note to die away later in a ferocious,
wolfish whine came through the fog. It was uttered
by many throats, and in the uncanny, whitish gloom
it seemed to be on all sides of them. Then shouts
and shots both ceased and the heavy silence came again.
“Now is our time,” whispered
Henry. “Paul, steer southward. Jim,
you and Tom row, and Sol and I will be ready with
the guns. Keep your heads down as low as you
can.”
Jim Hart and Tom Ross took the oars,
pulling them through the water with extreme caution
and slowness. All knew that sharp ears were listening
in the flooded forest, and the splash of oars would
bring the war canoes at once. But they were determined
that the fog which was such a help to their enemies
should be an equal help to them also.
Slowly the heavy boat crept through
the water. Paul, at the tiller, steered with
judgment and craft, and his was no light task.
Now and then low boughs were lapped in the water and
bushes submerged to their tops grew in the way.
To become tangled in them might be fatal and to scrape
against them would be a signal to their enemies, but
Paul steered clear every time.
They had gone perhaps fifty yards
when Henry gave a signal to stop and Jim and Tom rested
on their oars. Then they heard a burst of firing
behind them, and a smile of saturnine triumph spread
slowly but completely over the face of Shif’less
Sol.
“They’re shootin’
at the place whar we wuz, an’ whar we ain’t
now,” he whispered to Henry.
“Yes,” Henry whispered
back, “they haven’t found out yet that
we’ve left, but they are likely to do it pretty
soon. I hope now that this fog will hang on just
as thick as it can. Start up again, boys.”
“‘Twould be funny,”
whispered Sol, “ef the savages should find us
an’ chase us right into the bosoms o’
the Spaniards.”
“Yes,” replied Henry,
“and for that reason I think we’d better
bend around a circle and then go up stream. I’ll
tell Paul to steer that way.”
They went on again, creeping through
the white darkness; fifty yards or so at a time, and
then a pause to listen. Henry judged that they
were about a half mile from their original anchorage,
when the solemn note of an owl arose, to be answered
by a similar note from another point.
“They’ve discovered our
departure,” he whispered, “and they’re
telling it to each other. I imagine that their
war canoes will now come in a kind of half circle
toward the center of the river. They’ll
guess that we won’t retreat toward the land,
because then we might be hemmed in.”
“No doubt of it,” replied
Sol, “and I think we’d better pull off
toward the north now. Mebbe we kin give ’em
the slip.”
Henry gave the word and Paul steered
the boat in the chosen course. The forest grew
thinner, showing that they were approaching the true
stream, but the fog held fast. After a hundred
yards or so they stopped again, and then they distinctly
heard the sound of paddles to their right. It
was not a great splash, but they knew it well.
Paul, at the tiller, fancied that he could see the
faces of the savages bending over their paddles.
They were eager, he knew, for their prey, and either
chance or instinct had brought them through the white
pall in the right course.
The uncertainty, the fog, and the
great mysterious river weighed upon Paul. He
wished, for a moment, that the vapors might lift, and
then they could fight their enemies face to face.
He glanced at his own comrades and they had taken
on an unearthly look. Their forms became gigantic
and unreal in the white darkness. As Henry leaned
forward to listen better his figure was distorted
like that of a misshapen giant.
“Steer straight toward the north,
Paul,” he whispered. “We must shake
them off somehow or other.”
Silently the boat slid through the
water but they heard again those signal cries, the
hoots of the owl and now they were much nearer.
“They must have guessed our
course,” whispered Henry, “or perhaps they
have heard the splash of an oar now and then.
Stop, boys, and let’s see if we can hear their
canoes.”
Their boat lay under the thick, spreading
boughs of some oaks. Paul could see the branches
and twigs showing overhead through the white fog like
lace work, but everything else was invisible twenty
feet away. All heard, however, now and then the
faint splash, splash of paddles, perhaps a hundred
yards distant. Henry tried to tell from the sounds
how many war canoes might be in the party, and he
hazarded a wild guess of twenty. As he listened,
the splash grew a little louder. Obviously the
canoes were keeping on the right course. Shif’less
Sol wet his finger and held it up. When he took
it down he whispered in some alarm to Henry:
“The wind has begun to blow,
an’ it’s shore to rise. It’ll
blow the fog away, an’ we’ll lay in plain
sight o’ all o’ them savages.”
Henry’s instinct for generalship
rose at once and he saw a plan.
“We must keep on for midstream,”
he said. “We know what direction that is,
and, out in open water, we’d have one advantage
even over their numbers. Theirs are only light
canoes, while ours is a big strong boat that will
shelter us from any bullet. Pull away, boys!
I’ll help Sol keep up the watch.”
The boat once more resumed its progress
toward the main current. The wind, as Sol had
predicted, rapidly grew stronger. The deep curtain
of fog began to thin and lighten. Suddenly a
canoe appeared through it and then a second.
A bullet, fired from the first canoe,
whizzed dangerously near the head of Shif’less
Sol. He replied instantly, but the light was so
uncertain and tricky that he missed the savage at
whom he had aimed. The heavy bullet instead ploughed
through the side and bottom of the bark canoe, which
rapidly filled and sank, leaving its occupants struggling
in the water. A bullet had come from the second
canoe, also, but it flew wild, and then the whitish
fog, thick and impenetrable, caught by a contrary current
of wind, closed in again.
“Did you hit anything, Sol?” asked Henry.
“Only a canoe, but I busted
it all up, an’ they’re swimmin’ from
tree to tree until they get to the bank.”
“Now, boys, pull with all your
might!” exclaimed Henry, “and, Paul, you
steer us clear of trees, brush, logs, and snags.
They know where we are and we must get out into the
stream, where there’s a chance for our escape.”
Then ensued a flight and running combat
in a tricky fog that lifted and closed down over and
over again. Henry put down his oars presently
and took up his rifle, but Jim Hart and Tom Ross continued
to pull, and Paul kept a steady hand on the tiller.
Paul’s task was the most trying
of all. Highly sensitive and imaginative, this
battle rolling along in alternate dusky light and white
obscurity, was to him uncanny and unreal. He
saw pink dots of rifle fire in the fog, he caught
glimpses now and then of brown, savage faces or the
prow of a canoe, and then the heavy fog would come
down like a blanket again, shutting out everything.
Paul’s hand trembled. Every
nerve in him was jumping, but he resolutely steered
the boat while the others rowed and fought. Once
he barely grazed a snag and he shivered, knowing how
one of these terrible obstructions could rip the bottom
out of a boat. But soon the trees and bushes almost
disappeared. They were coming into open water.
The fog, too, ceased to close down, and the wind began
to blow steadily out of the north. Banks and
streamers of white vapor rolled away toward the south.
In a few minutes it would all be gone. Out of
the mists behind them rose the shapes of war canoes
not far away, and the fierce triumphant yell that swept
far over the river sent a chill to Paul’s very
marrow. Once again rose the rifle fire, and it
was now a rapid and steady crackle, but the bullets
thudded in vain on the thick sides of “The Galleon.”
All except Paul now pulled desperately
for the middle of the stream, while he, bending as
low as he could, still kept a steady hand on the tiller.
The triumphant shout behind them rose again, and the
great stream gave it back in a weird echo. Paul
suddenly uttered a gasp of despair. Directly in
front of them, not thirty yards away, was a large war
canoe, crowded with a dozen savages while behind them
came the horde.
“What is it, Paul?” asked Henry.
“A big canoe in front of us
full of warriors. We’re cut off! No,
we’re not! I have it! Bend low! bend
low, you fellows, and pull with all the might that’s
in you!”
Paul had an inspiration, and his blood
was leaping. The rifle shots still rattled behind
them, but, as usual, the bullets buried themselves
in the wood with a sigh, doing no harm. Four
pairs of powerful arms and four powerful shoulders
bent suddenly to their task with new strength and
vigor. Paul’s words had been electric, thrilling,
and every one felt their impulse instantly. The
prow of the heavy boat cut swiftly through the water,
and Paul bent still lower to escape the rifle-shots.
No need for him to choose his course now! The
boat was already sent upon its errand.
A wild shout of alarm rose from the
war canoe, and the next instant the prow of “The
Galleon” struck it squarely in the middle.
There were more shouts of alarm or pain, a crunching,
ripping and breaking of wood, and then “The
Galleon,” after its momentary check, went on.
The war canoe had been cut in two, and its late occupants
were swimming for their lives. Not in vain had
Paul read in an old Roman history of the battles between
the fleets when galley cut down galley.
Henry, although he did not look up,
knew at once what had happened, and he could not restrain
admiration and praise.
“Good for you, Paul!”
he cried. “You took us right over the war
canoe and that’s what’s likely to save
us!”
Henry was right. The other canoes,
appalled by the disaster, and busy, too, in picking
up the derelicts, hung back. Henry and Shif’less
Sol took advantage of the opportunity, and sent bullet
after bullet among them, aiming more particularly
at the light bark canoes. Three filled and began
to sink and their occupants had to be rescued.
The utmost confusion and consternation reigned in
the savage fleet, and the distance between it and
“The Galleon” widened rapidly as the latter
bore in a diagonal course across the Mississippi.
“They’ve had all they
want,” said Henry, as he laid down his rifle
and took up the oars again, “but it’s
this big heavy boat that’s saved us. She’s
been a regular floating fort.”
“We took our gall-yun just in
time,” said Shif’less Sol jubilantly, “an’
she is shore the greatest warship that ever floated
on these waters. Oh, she’s a fine boat,
a beautiful boat, the reg’lar King o’ the
seas!”
“Queen, you mean,” said Paul, who felt
the reaction.
“No, King it is,” replied
Sol stoutly. “A boat that carries travelers
may be a she, but shorely one that fights like this
is a he.”
The fog was gone, save for occasional
wisps of white mist, but the day had not yet come,
and the night was by no means light. When they
looked back again they could not see any of the Indian
canoes. Apparently they had retreated into the
flooded forest. Henry and Sol held a consultation.
“It’s hard to pull up
stream,” said Henry, “and we’d exhaust
ourselves doing it. Besides, if the Indians chose
to renew the pursuit, that would cut us off from our
own purpose. We must drop down the river toward
the Spanish camp.”
“You’re always right,
Henry,” said the shiftless one with conviction.
“The Spaniards o’ course, know nothin’
about our fight, ez they wuz much too fur off to hear
the shots, an’, ez we go down that way, the savages
likely will think that we belong to the party, which
is too strong for them to attack. This must be
some band that Braxton Wyatt don’t know nothin’
about. Maybe it’s a gang o’ southern
Indians that’s come away up here in canoes.”
The boat swung close to the western
shore, which was overhung throughout by heavy forests,
and then dropped silently down until it came within
two miles of the Spanish camp. There, in a particularly
dark cove, they tied up to a tree, and drew mighty
breaths of relief. Both Henry and Paul felt an
intense gladness. Despite all the dangers and
hardships through which they had gone, they were but
boys.