THE CHOSEN TASK
Adam Colfax had gone through the battle
unharmed, but that terrible night left new gray in
his hair. He was a religious man, and, when the
rifle fire died down in the forest and then went out,
he uttered a devout prayer of thankfulness. He
and his train, on the whole, had come through better
than he had expected. There had been moments in
the bayou when he thought no mortal strength or skill
could break the chain that bound them. But the
savage army and navy had been beaten off, and the core
of his fleet was saved. He could still go on
to Pittsburgh with his precious cargo.
The trumpet was sounded again, and
the boats, drawing together, began to count their
losses. It was a long sad count, but those who
survived were elated over their great victory.
It was then that Adam Colfax discovered
the loss of the five who had helped him so much.
Some one had seen them spring ashore to protect the
escape of the skirmishers, and he ordered the fleet
at once toward the land to save them, or, if too late,
to bring their bodies to the boat.
A dozen boats swung in toward the
bank and that of Adam Colfax was foremost. He
was not conscious of the gentle rain, save that it
felt cooling and pleasant on his face after the heat
and smoke of the battle. Yet the brain of the
stern New Hampshire man was still fevered, too.
The battle had ceased, but the roar of the cannon-shots
and the crash of the rifles yet echoed in his ears.
The black forest that came down to the water’s
edge, was full of mystery and terror, and his was no
timid heart. Smoke of the battle drifted among
the trees or over the river, and the rain did not
drive it all away. In the far distance low thunder
muttered, and now and then flashes of heat lightning
drew a belt of coppery red along the dark horizon.
Adam Colfax, stern man that he was,
shuddered. But he would not flinch. He was
the first to spring ashore. The forest assumed
its most somber aspect. The trees were weird
and ghostly, and there was no sound at all but the
gentle drip, drip of the rain. Here the vapors
and mists seemed to be imprisoned by the boughs and
foliage, and the odors were heavy and acrid.
He had landed upon a little neck of
land, and some one remarked: “It was here
that the Kentuckians landed.” But there
was no sound in the forest and the scouts had reported
already that the enemy had gone away. A great
fear gripped at the heart of Adam Colfax. “They
are all dead,” he thought.
Men brought torches, as they no longer
had any fear of sharpshooters; and Adam Colfax, followed
by twenty others, entered the forest. The wind
rose slightly and whipped the rain in his face, but
he stepped into the deepest shadow, and, taking a
torch from one of the men, held it aloft with his
own hand. The light fell upon a little open space
and, despite himself, Adam Colfax uttered a cry.
A figure lay outstretched under the
shelter of arching boughs and bushes, and four more
beside it were still and silent, leaning against a
fallen log. There was such an absolute lack of
motion, that Colfax at first thought that the soul
of every one was sped.
“Good God! Dead! All dead!”
he exclaimed.
But a great figure quickly uprose.
“No,” said Henry Ware,
a fine smile passing over his boyish face. “We
beat them off, and we’re just resting and waiting.
Only Paul is seriously hurt, and so far we’ve
been afraid to move him.”
Shif’less Sol, Jim Hart, and
Tom Ross rose, too, and shook the raindrops from their
clothes.
“We didn’t have good shelter
here,” said Shif’less Sol, “but I
think the rain and its coolness have helped Paul.”
Adam Colfax bent over the boy and,
in the dawning light, made a critical examination.
“He will live,” he said.
“We’d have come to your relief long ago,
had we known you were here.”
“It was Braxton Wyatt who led
the last attack against us,” said Henry, “and
as usual, he has had the good luck to escape.
At least, we can’t find his body here, and I
haven’t the slightest doubt that he’s living
to do more mischief and that we’ll meet him
again.”
It was true, and a diligent search
revealed no trace of Wyatt. He had escaped, fleeing
North after the battle, to rejoin his old friends,
the Shawnees and Miamis.
Paul was lifted gently, after receiving
treatment from the surgeon of the fleet, and carried
to a boat, where he regained consciousness. His
wound was severe, but his blood was so healthy that
he would recover, according to the surgeon, with great
rapidity.
When all five were together, Adam
Colfax said to them collectively:
“You did the most of all to save the fleet.”
That was enough reward for them.
The body of Father Montigny was buried
in the forest, and a little wooden cross was put at
his head, Christian burial was given to the body of
Alvarez, too, and the supply fleet prepared for a new
start.
* * * *
*
The fleet, two weeks later, was making
its slow progress northward on the Mississippi.
The great river was in an uncommonly friendly mood.
Its usual yellow seemed silver in the brilliant morning
light. Heavy masses of green fringed either low
shore, and keen pleasant odors came from the wilderness.
Oliver Pollock, hearing of the battle
of the bayou, had sent a second detachment from New
Orleans to replace the men and boats lost and the
ammunition shot away by the first, and now, stronger
than ever, it continued under the brave and skillful
leadership of Adam Colfax, on its great mission.
The five sat in the end of one of
the largest boats, under the shade of a sail.
Paul’s strength was fast coming back; he would
not suffer the slightest harm, and they were happy.
“This is jest the life fur a
lazy man like me,” said Shif’less Sol.
“Nothin’ to do but go on an’ on,
with people to wait on you, an’ say you hev
already done your part.”
“We have had a wonderful escape,” said
Paul.
The face of the shiftless one became grave, even reverent.
“So we hev, Paul,” he
said. “Seems to me sometimes that we wuz
spared fur a purpose. We wouldn’t hev come
alive, every one of us, through all that, ef it hadn’t
been intended that we should go on with the work that
we are doin’, helpin’ and defendin’
our people the best we kin. I think we’ve
been chose.”
“I think so, too,” said
Paul, “and here and now we should devote ourselves
to it, as long as it is needed. I want to do so.
Are the rest of you willing?”
“I am,” said Henry with emphasis.
“And I!” said the shiftless one.
“And I!” said Tom Ross.
“And I!” said Long Jim.
“Amen!” said Paul.
THE END