THE BATTLE OF THE BAYOU
The priest came directly to the boat,
in which Henry Ware and Adam Colfax were sitting—the
remainder of the five were in the next boat—and
held up his hand as a sign of recognition and relief.
“Father Montigny!” said Henry.
“Yes, my son, it is I, and I
give thanks to Heaven that I have found you in time.”
“What is it, father?”
It seemed natural that at this moment Henry should
be the spokesman for the fleet.
“A great danger has closed upon you and all
here.”
“Alvarez?”
“Yes, he is the master spirit,
but back of him are the allied tribes of the south,
Creeks, Choctaws, Chickasaws, even Osages from the
west, and others, and in addition there are two hundred
desperate white men drawn from all nations. Alvarez
has promised to lead them to great spoil and plunder.
He is the buccaneer chief now and they will follow
him. At night-fall they surprised a French trading
schooner tied to the shore for safety, slaughtered
those on board, and have now drawn the schooner across
the mouth of the bayou to shut you in. The vessel
also carries four bronze nine pounders which they
will use against you. Outside in the Mississippi
is a great fleet of Indian war-canoes which has been
above you in the stream.”
Adam Colfax paled a little.
“It seems,” he said, “that
when we thought we were pulling to safety we were
merely entering a trap.”
“It was a trap,” said
Henry with energy, “but we’re strong enough
to break any trap into which we may fall.”
“That’s so,” said Adam Colfax.
“You may ask me how I knew all
this,” continued the priest. “I tell
you not what I have heard, but what I have seen.
I was with the Choctaws, and I sought to dissuade
them from this campaign upon which they were marching.
I told them that Alvarez was mad with ambition and
disappointment, that he had rebelled against lawful
authority, that he was an outlaw and buccaneer, and
that he could not keep his promises. My words
availed nothing. I continued with them, hoping
still to dissuade them and the other bands that met
them, but still I failed.
“I was yet with the tribe when
they met Alvarez and the wicked renegade, the one
Wyatt, and their men. Alvarez would have used
force, he would have driven me from the camp with
heavy blows; even this, the white man who has inherited
Holy Church would have done, but the red men, born
savages, would not let him. Although they would
not listen to me they let me stay, unharmed.
I witnessed, or rather heard, their attack upon you
last night, and their repulse has made them only the
more eager for your destruction. It has also
united them the more firmly.”
“When do you think they will
attack us, Father Montigny?” asked Henry.
“That I cannot tell. I
heard their plans, and I deemed it my duty to warn
you. A guard, one whom I have converted to our
faith, let me slip away and here I am.”
“And our debt to you is still
growing,” said Henry. “As for myself,
I think the attack will come to-night, when they deem
us disorganized and beaten down by the storm.”
“And so do I,” said Adam
Colfax. “We have no time to waste.”
“May God preserve you,”
said the priest. “I have no desire to witness
scenes of slaughter but I trust, for the sake of yourselves,
for the sake of Bernardo Galvez, the good Governor
General of Louisiana, and for the welfare of this
region, that you may beat them off. But the contest
will be fierce and bloody.”
A young man, at the order of Adam
Colfax, sounded a trumpet, a low thrilling call that
aroused the men from their brief sleep, and the word
was quickly passed that they were blockaded in the
bayou, and that the hordes were advancing to a new
attack. They grumbled less now than at the storm.
Here was a danger that they knew how to meet.
Battle had been a part of all their lives, and they
did not fear it.
The moonlight increased, the forest
was dripping, but there was a noise now of bullet
clinking against bullet, of the ramrod sent home in
the rifle barrel, and of men talking low.
Adam Colfax called a conference in
his boat. His best lieutenants and the five were
present. Should they await the attack or advance
to meet it? In any event, the fleet must escape
from the bayou, and the nearer they were to the river
when the battle occurred the better it would be for
them.
“Ef we know thar’s a danger,”
said Tom Ross, “the best thing fur us to do
is to go to it, an’ lay hold uv it.”
The vote on Tom’s suggestion
was unanimous in its favor, and the fleet once more
began to move. A small force of riflemen marched
on either bank in order to uncover possible skirmishers.
The advance was very slow and in silence
save for the dip of the oars and the paddles.
The moonlight grew stronger and stronger, and they
could now see a good distance on the deep, still bayou.
The five had remained in the leading
boats and they watched closely for sight or sound
of the hostile force, but as yet eye and ear told nothing.
The trees now grew close to the water’s edge
and, looped heavily with trailing vines, they presented
a black wall on either side. But they had no
fear of shots from such a source, as they knew that
the trusty riflemen going in advance would clear out
any skirmishers who might have hidden themselves there.
Paul was beside Henry. Near him
was Long Jim and in the boat next to them was Shif’less
Sol and Tom Ross. At this moment, which they felt
to be heavy with import, it was good to be together.
Paul in particular, Paul, the impressionable and imaginative,
looked around at the familiar figures in the clearing
moonlight, and drew strength and comfort from their
near presence.
The dark fleet moved slowly on, cutting
the deep still waters of the bayou with almost noiseless
keel. The men had ceased whispering. Now
and then an oar splashed or the water gave back the
echo of a paddle’s dip, but little else was
heard. All looked straight ahead.
Suddenly they saw in the middle of
the bayou, about a hundred yards before them, a small,
black shape, so low that it seemed to blend with the
water. It was an Indian canoe, the first outpost
of the savage force, and its occupant, promptly firing
a rifle, raised a long, warning shout. In an
instant the woods on either side began to crackle with
rifle-fire. Skirmishers had met skirmishers,
and the battle of the bayou had begun.
“Press on! Press on!
We must cut through somehow!” cried Adam Colfax,
and the American fleet moved steadily and unfalteringly
on toward its goal. They came now to the narrowest
part of the bayou, and stretched across it they saw
a dark line of canoes, all crowded with Indians and
the desperadoes of Alvarez. Behind them heaved
up the dark bulk of the captured schooner.
The battle blazed in an instant into
volume and fury. Two lines of fire facing each
other were formed across the bayou, one bent upon pushing
forward, the other bent upon holding it back.
These lines, moreover, stretched far into the woods
on either bank, where sharpshooters lay, and both
sides shouted at intervals as the blood in their veins
grew hot.
The dark hulk of the schooner suddenly
burst into spots of flame, and the woods and waters
echoed with heavy reports. The captured nine pounders
were now helping to block the passage, but the brass
twelve pounders on the supply fleet replied.
Steadily the fire of both sides grew in volume and
the lines came closer and closer together.
The moonlight faded again and little
clouds of smoke began to rise. These clouds gradually
grew bigger, then united into one heavy opaque mass
that hung over the combatants. Strips of vapor
were detached from it and floated off into the forest.
A sharp, pungent odor, the smell of burnt gunpowder,
filled the nostrils of the men and added to the fire
that burned in their veins.
This, the largest battle yet fought
in the southern woods, had a somber and unreal aspect
to Paul. All around them now was the encircling
darkness. Only the area in which the battle was
fought showed any light, but here the flashes of the
firing were continuous and intense. The crash
of the rifles never ceased. Now and then it rose
to greater volume and then fell again, but rising
or falling it always went on, while over it boomed
the big guns answering one another in defiant notes
of thunder.
The schooner was the most formidable
obstacle to the passage. It lay full length across
the narrow bayou and, even if the boats of the supply
fleet should reach it, there was little room to pass
on either side. From its decks the nine pounders
were fired fast and often with precision, and the
majority of the Spaniard’s desperate band found
shelter there also, firing with rifles, muskets, and
pistols. Others sent bullets, also, from the
comparative security of port holes. The possession
of the schooner gave them a great advantage and they
did not neglect it. Now and then they sent up
fierce yells, the war-cries of the West Indian pirates,
and their Indian allies answered them with their own
long-drawn, high pitched whoop, so full of ferocity
and menace. Both looked forward to nothing less
than complete triumph.
The space between the combatants was
lighted up by the incessant flash of the firing.
Little jets of water where a missent bullet struck
were continually spouting up, and then would come
a bigger one when a cannon ball plunged into the depths
of the bayou.
Paul suddenly heard a heavy impact,
a crash, as of ripping wood, and a cry. A canoe
near them had been struck by a cannon ball, and practically
broken in half. It sank in an instant, and one
of the men in it, wounded in the arm, and crippled,
was sinking a second time, when Paul sprang into the
water and helped him into their own boat. But
not all the wounded were so fortunate. Some sank,
to stay, and the dark night battle, far more deadly
than that of the night before, reeled to and fro.
The combat at first had been more
of a spectacle than anything else to Paul. The
extraordinary play of light and darkness, the innumerable
shadows and flashes on the surface of the bayou, the
black tracery of the forest on either bank, the red
beads of flame from the rifle fire appearing and re-appearing,
made of it all a vast panorama for him. There
were the sounds, too, the piratical shout, hoarse and
menacing, the Indian whoop, shriller and with more
of the wild beast’s whine in it, the fierce,
sharp note of the rifle fire, steady, insistent, and
full of threat, and over it the heavy thudding of
the great guns.
It was Paul’s eye and ear at
first that received the deep impression, but now the
aspect of a panorama passed away and his soul was stirred
with a fierce desire to get on, to cut through the
hostile line, to crush down the opposition, and to
reach the full freedom of the wide river. He began
to hate those men who opposed them, the fire of passion
that battle breeds was surely mounting to his head.
Unconsciously, Paul, the scholar and coming statesman,
the grave quiet youth, began to shout and to hurl
invectives at those who presumed to hold them back.
The barrel of his rifle grew hot in his hand with
constant loading and firing, but he did not notice
it. He still, at imminent risk to himself, sent
his bullets toward the dark line of Indian canoes
and the flashing hulk of the ship behind them.
The supply fleet was beginning to
suffer severely. A number of boats and canoes
had been sunk and nearly a score of men had been killed.
Many more were wounded and, despite all this loss,
they had made no progress. The fire from the
bank, moreover, was beginning to sting them and to
stop it Adam Colfax landed more men. The increased
force of the Americans on the shore served the purpose
but they were still unable to force the mouth of the
bayou. The schooner seemed to be fixed there and
she never ceased to send a storm of bullets and cannon
balls at them.
Adam Colfax had a slight wound in
the arm, but his slow cold blood was now at the boiling
point.
“We’ve got to force that
schooner!” he cried. “We’ve
got to take her, if it has to be done with boarders!
We can never get by unless we do it!”
But the loss of life even if the attempt
were a success, would be terrible. That was apparent
to everybody and Henry made a suggestion.
“Let’s concentrate our
whole fire upon the ship,” he said. “Mass
the cannon and the rest of us will back them up with
our rifles. Maybe we can silence her, and if
we do then’s the time to take her by storm.”
The supply fleet drew back and its
fire died. It seemed, in truth, as if it were
beaten and that, hemmed in by fire, as it were in the
narrow bayou, it must surrender. A tremendous
shout of triumph burst forth from the men on the schooner,
and the Indians took it up in a vast and shriller
but more terrible chorus.
Then came one of those sudden and
ominous silences that sometimes occur in a battle.
The fire of the Americans ceasing, that of their enemies
ceased for the moment also. But the pause was
more deadly and menacing in its stillness than all
the thunder and shouting of the combat had been.
It seemed unnatural to hear again the sighing of the
wind through the forest and the quiet lap of water
against the shore. The bank of smoke, no longer
increased from below, lifted, thinned, broke up into
patches, and began to float away. The moon’s
rays shot through the mists and vapors once more,
and lighted up the watery battlefield of the night,
the schooner, the desperate men on it, the swarms
of canoes, the coppery, high-cheeked faces of the
Indians, the supply fleet packed now in a rather close
mass, the tanned faces of the men on board it, animated
by the high spirit of daring and enterprise, the wounded
lying silent in the boats, and the wreckage floating
on the bayou.
But the stillness endured for only
a few moments. It was broken by the American
fleet, which seemed to draw itself together into closer
and more compact form. An order in a low tone,
but sharp and precise, was carried from boat to boat,
and it seemed to strengthen the men anew, heart and
body. They straightened up, signs of exhaustion
passed from their faces, and every one made ready
all the arms that he had.
Paul, like the others, had felt the
sudden silence, but perhaps most acutely of all.
His whole imaginative temperament was on fire.
He knew—he would have known, even had he
not heard—that the sudden cessation of the
firing was merely preliminary, a fresh drawing of the
breath as it were for another and supreme effort.
He clasped his hands to his temples, where the pulses
were beating rapidly and heavily, and his face burned
as if in a fever. But it was a fever of the mind
not of the body.
“It’s a big battle, Paul,”
said Shif’less Sol, who had come with Tom Ross
into their boat, “but it’s wuth it.
The arms and other things that we carry in these boats
may be wuth millions an’ millions to the people
who come after us.”
“Do you think we’ll ever break through,
Sol?” asked Paul.
“Shorely,” replied the
shiftless one. “Henry’s got the plan,
and we’re goin’ to cut through like a
wedge druv through a log. Something’s got
to give. Up, Paul, with your gun! Here she
goes ag’in!”
The battle suddenly burst forth afresh
and with greater violence. All the American twelve
pounders were now in a row at the head of the fleet,
and one after another, from right to left and then
from left to right and over and over again, they began
to fire with tremendous rapidity and accuracy at the
schooner. All the best gunners were around the
twelve pounders. If one fell, another took his
place. Many of them were stripped to the waist,
and their own fire lighted up their tan faces and their
brown sinewy arms as they handled rammer and cannon
shot.
The fire of the cannon was supported
by that of scores and scores of rifles, and the enemy
replied with furious energy. But the supply fleet
was animated now by a single purpose. The shiftless
one’s simile of a wedge driven into a log was
true. No attention was paid to anybody in the
hostile boats and canoes. They could fire unheeded.
Every American cannon and rifle sent its load straight
at the schooner. All the upper works of the vessel
were shot away. The men of Alvarez could not live
upon its decks; they were even slain at the port holes
by the terrific rifle fire; cannon shot, grape shot,
and rifle bullets searched every nook and corner of
the vessel, and her desperate crew, one by one, began
to leap into the water and make for the shores.
A shout of exultation rose from the
supply fleet, which was now slowly moving forward.
Flames suddenly burst from the schooner and ran up
the stumps of her masts and spars, reaching out long
arms and laying hold at new points. The cannon
shots had also reached the inside of the ship as fire
began to spout from the port holes, and there was a
steady stream of men leaping from the schooner into
the water of the bayou and making for the land.
The American shout of exultation was
repeated, and the forest gave back the echo.
The Indians answered it with a fierce yell of defiance,
and the forest gave back that, too.
But Adam Colfax had been watching shrewdly.
In his daring life he had been in
more than one naval battle, and when he saw the schooner
wrapped and re-wrapped in great coils and ribbons of
flame he knew what was due. Suddenly he shouted
in a voice that could be heard above the roar of the
battle:
“Back! Back, all! Back for your lives!”
It reached the ears of everybody in
the American fleet, and whether he understood its
words or not every man understood its tone. There
was an involuntary movement common to all. The
fleet stopped its slow advance, seemed to sway in
another direction, and then to sit still on the water.
But all were looking at the schooner with an intense,
fascinated, yet horrified gaze.
Nobody was left on the deck of the
vessel but the dead. The huge, intertwining coil
of fiery ribbons seemed suddenly to unite in one great
glowing mass, out of which flames shot high, sputtering
and crackling. Then came an awful moment of silence,
the vessel trembled, leaped from the water, turned
into a volcano of fire and with a tremendous crash
blew up.
The report was so great that it came
rolling back in echo after echo, but for a few moments
there was no other sound save the echo. Then followed
a rain of burning wood, many pieces falling in the
supply fleet, burning and scorching, while others
fell hissing in the forest on either shore. Darkness,
too, came over land and water. All the firing
had ceased as if by preconcerted signal, though the
combatants on either side were awed by the fate of
the vessel. The smoke bank came back, too, thicker
and heavier than before, and the air was filled with
the strong, pungent odor of burnt gunpowder.
But the schooner that had blocked
the mouth of the bayou was gone forever and the way
lay open before them. Adam Colfax recovered from
the shock of the explosion.
“On, men! On!” he
roared, and the whole fleet, animated by a single
impulse, sprang forward toward the mouth of the bayou,
the cannon blazing anew the path, the gunners loading
and firing, as fast as they could. But the simile
of the shiftless one had come true. The wedge,
driven by tremendous strokes, had cleft the log.
The Indian fleet, many of the boats
containing white men, too, closed in and sought to
bar the way, but they were daunted somewhat by their
great disaster, and in an instant the American fleet
was upon them cutting a path through to the free river.
Boat often smashed into boat, and the weaker, or the
one with less impulse, went down. Now and then
white and red reached over and grasped each other
in deadly struggle, but, whatever happened, the supply
fleet moved steadily on.
It was to Paul a confused combat,
a wild and terrible struggle, the climax of the night-battle.
White and red faces mingled before him in a blur, the
water seemed to flow in narrow, black streams between
the boats and the pall of smoke was ever growing thicker.
It hung over them, black and charged now with gases.
Paul coughed violently, but he was not conscious of
it. He fired his rifle until it was too hot to
hold. Then he laid it down, and seizing an oar
pulled with the energy of fever.
When the boats containing the cannon
were through and into the river, they faced about
and began firing over the heads of the others into
the huddled mass of the enemy behind. But it
was only for a minute or two. Then the last of
the supply fleet; that is, the last afloat, came through,
and the gap that they had made was closed up at once
by the enemy, who still hung on their rear and who
were yet shouting and firing.
The Americans gave a great cheer,
deep and full throated, but they did not pause in
their great effort. Boats swung off toward either
bank of the bayou’s mouth. The skirmishers
in the bushes who had done such useful work must be
taken on board. Theirs was now the most dangerous
position of all, pursued as they certainly would be
by the horde of Indians and outlaws, bent upon revenge.
The boat containing the five was among
those that touched the northern side of the bayou’s
mouth, and everyone of them, rifle in hand, instantly
sprang ashore.