THE INTELLIGENT CANOE
Lennox, Willet and Tayoga fell asleep,
one by one, and the Onondaga was the last to close
his eyes. Then the three, wrapped in their blankets,
lay in complete darkness on the stone shelf, with the
canoe beside them. They were no more than the
point of a pin in the vast wilderness that stretched
unknown thousands of miles from the Hudson to the Pacific,
apparently as lost to the world as the sleepers in
a cave ages earlier, when the whole earth was dark
with forest and desert.
Although the storm could not reach
them it beat heavily for long hours while they slept.
The sweep of the rain maintained a continuous driving
sound. Boughs cracked and broke beneath it.
The waters of the river, swollen by the floods of
tributary creeks and brooks, rose fast, bearing upon
their angry surface the wreckage of trees, but they
did not reach the stone shelf upon which the travelers
lay.
Tayoga awoke before the morning, while
it was yet so dark that his trained eyes could see
but dimly the figures of his comrades. He sat
up and listened, knowing that he must depend for warning
upon his hearing, which had been trained to extreme
acuteness by the needs of forest life. All three
of them were great wilderness trailers and scouts,
but Tayoga was the first of the three. Back of
him lay untold generations that had been compelled
to depend upon the physical senses and the intuition
that comes from their uttermost development and co-ordination.
Now, Tayoga, the product of all those who had gone
before, was also their finest flower.
He had listened at first, resting
on his elbow, but after a minute or two he sat up.
He heard the rushing of the rain, the crack of splintering
boughs, the flowing of the rising river, and the gurgling
of its waters as they lapped against the stone shelf.
They would not enter it he knew, as he had observed
that the highest marks of the floods lay below them.
The sounds made by the rain and the
river were steady and unchanged. But the intuition
that came from the harmonious working of senses, developed
to a marvelous degree, sounded a warning note.
A danger threatened. He did not know what the
danger was nor whence it would come, but the soul
of the Onondaga was alive and every nerve and muscle
in his body was attuned for any task that might lie
before him. He looked at his sleeping comrades.
They did not stir, and their long, regular breathing
told him that no sinister threat was coming to them.
But Tayoga never doubted. The
silent and invisible warning, like a modern wireless
current, reached him again. Now, he knelt at the
very edge of the shelf, and drew his long hunting
knife. He tried to pierce the darkness with his
eyes, and always he looked up the stream in the direction
in which they had come. He strained his ears too
to the utmost, concentrating the full powers of his
hearing upon the river, but the only sounds that reached
him were the flowing of the current, the bubbling
of the water at the edges, and its lapping against
a tree or bush torn up by the storm and floating on
the surface of the stream.
The Onondaga stepped from the shelf,
finding a place for his feet in crevices below, the
water rising almost to his knees, and leaned farther
forward to listen. One hand held firmly to a projection
of stone above and the other clasped the knife.
Tayoga maintained the intense concentration
of his faculties, as if he had drawn them together
in an actual physical way, until they bore upon one
point, and he poured so much strength and vitality
into them that he made the darkness thin away before
his eyes and he heard noises of the water that had
not come to him before.
A broken bough, a bush and a sapling
washed past. Then came a tree, and deflecting
somewhat from the current it floated toward the shelf.
Leaning far over and extending the hand that held the
knife, Tayoga struck. When the blade came back
it was red and the young Onondaga uttered a tremendous
war whoop that rang and echoed in the confines of
the stony hollow.
Lennox and Willet sprang to their
feet, all sleep driven away at once, and instinctively
grasped their rifles.
“What is it, Tayoga?” exclaimed the startled
Willet.
“The attack of the savage warriors,”
replied the Onondaga. “One came floating
on a tree. He thought to slay us as we slept and
take away our scalps, but the river that brought him
living has borne him away dead.”
“And so they know we’re
here,” said the hunter, “and your watchfulness
has saved us. Well, Tayoga, it’s one more
deed for which we have to thank you, but I think you’d
better get back on the shelf. They can fire from
the other side, farther up, and although it would be
at random, a bullet or two might strike here.”
The Onondaga swung himself back and
all three flattened themselves against the rock.
After Tayoga’s triumphant shout there was no
sound save those of the river and the rain. But
Robert expected it. He knew the horde would be
quiet for a while, hoping for a surprise the second
time after the first one had failed.
“It was bold,” he said,
“for a single warrior to come floating down the
stream in search of us.”
“But it would have succeeded
if Tayoga hadn’t been awake,” said the
hunter. “One warrior could have knifed us
all at his leisure.”
“Where do you think they are now?”
“They must be crouched in the
shelter of rocks. If they had nothing over them
the storm would take the fighting spirit for the time
out of savages, even wild for scalps. I’m
mighty glad we have the canoe. It holds the food
we need for a siege, and if the chance for escape comes
it will bear us away. I think, Tayoga, I can see
a figure stirring among the boulders on the other
side farther up.”
“I see two,” said the
Onondaga, “and doubtless there are others whom
we cannot see. Keep close, my friends, I think
they are going to fire.”
A dozen rifles were discharged from
a point about a hundred yards away, the exploding
powder making red dots in the darkness, the bullets
rattling on the stone cliff or sending up little spurts
of water from the river. The volley was followed
by a shrill, fierce war whoop, and then nothing was
heard but the flowing of the river and the rushing
of the rain.
“You are not touched?”
said Tayoga, and Robert and Willet quickly answered
in the negative.
“They don’t know just
which way to aim their guns,” said Willet, “and
so long as we keep quiet now they won’t learn.
That shout of yours, Tayoga, was not enough to tell
them.”
“But they must remember about
where the hollow is, although they can’t pull
trigger directly upon it, owing to the darkness and
storm,” said Robert.
“That about sums it up, my boy,”
said the hunter. “If they do a lot of random
firing the chances are about a hundred to one they
won’t hit us, and the Indians don’t have
enough ammunition to waste that way.”
“I don’t suppose we can
launch the canoe and slip away in it?”
“No, it would be swamped by
the rain and the flood. It’s likely, too,
that they’re on watch for us farther down the
stream.”
“Then this is our home and fortress
for an indefinite time, and, that being the case,
I’m going to make myself as easy as I can.”
He drew the blanket under his body
again and lay on his elbow, but he held his rifle
before him, ready for battle at an instant’s
notice. His feeling of comfort returned and with
it the sense of safety. The bullets of the savages
had gone so wild and the darkness was so deep that
their shelter appeared to him truly as a fortress
which no numbers of besiegers could storm.
“Do you think they’ll
try floating down the stream on trees or logs again,
Tayoga?” he asked.
“No, the danger is too great,”
replied the Onondaga. “They know now that
we’re watching.”
An hour passed without any further
sign from the foe. The rain decreased somewhat
in violence, but, as the wind rose, its rush and sweep
made as much sound as ever. Then the waiting
was broken by scattering shots, accompanied by detached
war whoops, as if different bands were near.
From their shelter they watched the red dots that marked
the discharges from the rifles, but only one bullet
came near them, and after chipping a piece of stone
over their heads it dropped harmlessly to the floor.
“That was the one chance out
of a hundred,” said Willet, “and now we’re
safe from the next ninety-nine bullets.”
“I trust the rule will work,” said Robert.
“I wish you’d hold my left hand in a firm
grip,” said Willet.
“I will, but why?” returned the youth.
“If I get a chance I’m
going to drag up some of that dead and floating wood
and lay it along the edge of the shelf. In the
dark the savages can’t pick us off, but we’ll
need a barrier in the morning.”
“You’re right, Dave, of course. I’m
sorry I didn’t think of it myself.”
“One of us thought of it, and
that’s enough. Hold my hand hard, Robert.
Don’t let your grip slip.”
By patient waiting and help from the
others Willet was able to draw up two logs of fair
size, and some smaller pieces which they placed carefully
on the edge of the stone shelf. Lying flat behind
them, they would be almost hidden, and now they could
await the coming of daylight with more serenity.
A long time passed. The three
ate strips of the deer meat, and Robert even slept
for a short while. He awoke to find a further
decrease in the rain, although the river was still
rising, and Tayoga and Willet were of the opinion
that it would stop soon, a belief that was justified
in an hour. Robert soon afterward saw the clouds
move away, and disclose a strip of dark blue sky,
into which the stars began to come one by one.
“The night will grow light soon,”
said Tayoga, “then it will darken again for
a little time before the coming of the day.”
“And we’ve built our breastwork
none too soon,” said Willet. “There’ll
be so many stars by and by that those fellows can pick
out our place and send their bullets to it. What
do you think, Tayoga? Is it just a band taking
the chance to get some scalps, or are they sent out
by the Governor General of Canada to do wicked work
in the forest and then be disowned if need be?”
“I cannot tell,” replied
the Onondaga. “Much goes on in the land
of Onontio at Stadacona (Quebec). He talks long
in whispers with the northern chiefs, and often he
does not let his left ear know what the right ear
hears. Onontio moves in the night, while Corlear
sleeps.”
“That may be so, Tayoga, but
whether it’s so or not I like our straightforward
English and American way best. We may blunder
along for a while and lose at first, but to be open
and honest is to be strong.”
“I did not say the ways of Corlear
would prevail. It is not the talk of Corlear
that will keep the Hodenosaunee faithful to the English
side, but it is the knowledge of the fifty sachems
that when Onontio is speaking in a voice of honey
he is to be trusted the least.”
Willet laughed.
“I understand, Tayoga,”
he said. “You’re for us not because
you have so much faith in Corlear, but because you
have less in Onontio. Well, it’s a good
enough reason, I suppose. But all Frenchmen are
not tricksters. Most of ’em are brave,
and when they’re friends they’re good and
true. About all I’ve got to say against
’em is that they’re willing to shut their
eyes to the terrible things their allies do in their
name. But I’ve had a lot to do with ’em
on the border, and you can get to like ’em.
Now, that St. Luc we met was a fine upstanding man.”
“But if an enemy, an enemy to
be dreaded,” said Tayoga with his usual gravity.
“I wouldn’t mind that
if it came to war. In such cases the best men
make the best enemies, I suppose. He had a sharp
eye. I could see how he measured us, and reckoned
us up, but he looked most at Robert here.”
“His sharp eye recognized that
I was the most important of the three,” said
Robert lightly.
“Every fellow is mighty important
to himself,” said Willet, “and he can’t
get away from it. Tayoga, do you think you see
figures moving on the other bank there, up the stream?”
“Two certainly, others perhaps,
Great Bear,” replied the Onondaga. “I
might reach one with my rifle.”
“Don’t try it, Tayoga.
We’re on the defense, and we’ll let ’em
make all the beginnings. The sooner they shoot
away their ammunition the better it will be for us.
I think they’ll open fire pretty soon now, because
the night is growing uncommon bright. The stars
are so big and shining, and there are so many of them
they all look as if they had come to a party.
Flatten yourselves down, boys! I can see a figure
kneeling by a bowlder and that means one shot, if
not more.”
They lay close and Robert was very
thankful now for the logs they had dragged up from
the water, as they afforded almost complete shelter.
The crouching warrior farther up the stream fired,
and his bullet struck the hollow above their heads.
“A better aim than they often show,” said
Willet.
More shots were fired, and one buried
itself in the log in front of Robert. He heard
the thud made by the bullet as it entered, and once
more he was thankful for their rude breastwork.
But it was the only one that struck so close and presently
the savages ceased their fire, although the besieged
three were still able to see them in the brilliant
moonlight among the bowlders.
“They’re getting a bit
too insolent,” said the hunter. “Maybe
they think it’s a shorter distance from them
to us than it is from us to them, and that our bullets
would drop before they got to ’em. I think,
Tayoga, I’ll prove that it’s not so.”
“Choose the man at the edge
of the water,” said Tayoga. “He has
fired three shots at us, and we should give him at
least one in return.”
“I’ll pay the debt, Tayoga.”
Robert saw the warrior, his head and
shoulders and painted chest appearing above the stone.
The distance was great for accuracy, but the light
was brilliant, and the rifle of the hunter rose to
his shoulder. The muzzle bore directly upon the
naked chest, and when Willet pulled the trigger a
stream of fire spurted from the weapon.
The savage uttered a cry, shot forward
and fell into the stream. His lifeless body tossed
like dead wood on the swift current, reappeared and
floated by the little fortress of the three. Robert
shuddered as he saw the savage face again, and then
he saw it no more.
The savages uttered a shout of grief
and rage over the loss of the warrior, but the besieged
were silent. Willet, as he reloaded his rifle,
gave it an affectionate little pat or two.
“It’s a good weapon,”
he said, “and with a fair light I was sure I
wouldn’t miss. We’ve given ’em
fair warning that they’ve got a nest of panthers
here to deal with, and that when they attack they’re
taking risks. Can you see any of ’em now,
Tayoga?”
“All have taken to cover.
There is not one among them who is willing to face
again the rifle of the Great Bear.”
Willet smiled with satisfaction at
the compliment. He was proud of his sharp-shooting,
and justly so, but he said modestly:
“I had a fair target, and it
will do for a warning. I think we can look for
another long rest now.”
The dark period that precedes the
dawn came, and then the morning flashed over the woods.
Robert, from the hollow, looking across the far shore,
saw lofty, wooded hills and back of them blue mountains.
Beads of rain stood on the leaves, and the wilderness
seemed to emerge, fresh and dripping, from a glorious
bath. Pleasant odors of the wild came to him,
and now he felt the sting of imprisonment there among
the rocks. He wished they could go at once on
their errand. It was a most unfortunate chance
to have been found there by the Indians and to be held
indefinitely in siege. The flooded river would
have borne them swiftly in their canoe toward the
St. Lawrence.
“Mourning, Robert?” said Willet who noticed
his face.
“For the moment, yes,”
admitted young Lennox, “but it has passed.
I wanted to be going on this lively river and through
the green wood, but since I have to wait I can do
it.”
“I feel the same way about it,
and we’re lucky to have such a fort as the one
we are in. I think the savages will hang on here
for a long while. Indians always have plenty
of time. That’s why they’re more
patient than white men. Like as not we won’t
get a peep out of them all the morning.”
“Lennox feels the beauty of
the day,” said Tayoga, “and that’s
why he wants to leave the hollow and go into the woods.
But if Lennox will only think he’ll know that
other days as fine will come.”
The eye of the young Onondaga twinkled
as he delivered his jesting advice.
“I’ll be as patient as
I can,” replied Robert in the same tone, “but
tomorrow is never as good as today. I wait like
you and Dave only because I have to do so.”
“In the woods you must do as
the people who live there do,” said the hunter
philosophically. “They learn how to wait
when they’re young. We don’t know
how long we’ll be here. A little more of
the deer, Tayoga. It’s close to the middle
of the day now and we must keep our strength.
I wish we had better water than that of a flooded
and muddy river to drink, but it’s water, anyhow.”
They ate, drank and refreshed themselves
and another long period of inaction followed.
The warriors—at intervals—fired
a few shots but they did no damage. Only one
entered the hollow, and it buried itself harmlessly
in their wooden barrier. They suffered from nothing
except the soreness and stiffness that came from lying
almost flat and so long in one position. The
afternoon, cloudless and brilliant, waned, and the
air in the recess grew warm and heavy. Had it
not been for the necessity of keeping guard Robert
could have gone to sleep again. The flood in the
river passed its zenith and was now sinking visibly.
No more trees or bushes came floating on the water.
Willet showed disappointment over the failure of the
besiegers to make any decided movement.
“I was telling you, Robert,
a while ago,” he said, “that Indians mostly
have a lot of time, but I’m afraid the band that’s
cornered us here has got too much. They may send
out a warrior or two to hunt, and the others may sit
at a distance and wait a week for us to come out.
At least it looks that way to a ’possum up a
tree. What do you think of it, Tayoga?”
“The Great Bear is right,”
replied the Onondaga. “He is always right
when he is not wrong.”
“Come now, Tayoga, are you making game of me?”
“Not so, my brother, because
the Great Bear is nearly always right and very seldom
wrong. It is given only to Manitou never to be
wrong.”
“That’s better, Tayoga.
If I can keep up a high average of accuracy I’m
satisfied.”
Tayoga’s English was always
precise and a trifle bookish, like that of a man speaking
a language he has learned in a school, which in truth
was the case with the Onondaga. Like the celebrated
Thayendanegea, the Mohawk, otherwise known as Joseph
Brant, he had been sent to a white school and he had
learned the English of the grammarian. Willet
too spoke in a manner much superior to that of the
usual scout and hunter.
“If the Indians post lines out
of range and merely maintain a watch what will we
do?” asked Robert. “I, for one, don’t
want to stay here indefinitely.”
“Nor do any of us,” replied
Willet. “We ought to be moving. A long
delay here won’t help us. We’ve got
to think of something.”
The two, actuated by the same impulse,
looked at Tayoga. He was very thoughtful and
presently glanced up at the heavens.
“What does the Great Bear think of the sky?”
he asked.
“I think it’s a fine sky,
Tayoga,” Willet replied with a humorous inflection.
“But I’ve always admired it, whether it’s
blue or gray or just black, spangled with stars.”
Tayoga smiled.
“What does the Great Bear think
of the sky?” he repeated. “Do the
signs say to him that the coming night will be dark
like the one that has just gone before?”
“They say it will be dark, Tayoga,
but I don’t believe we’ll have the rain
again.”
“We do not want the rain, but
we do want the dark. Tonight when the moon and
stars fail to come we must leave the hollow.”
“By what way, Tayoga?”
The Onondaga pointed to the river.
“We have the canoe,” he said.
“But if they should hear or
see us we’d make a fine target in it,”
said Robert.
“We won’t be in it,”
said the Onondaga, “although our weapons and
clothes will.”
“Ah, I understand! We’re
to launch the canoe, put in it everything including
our clothes, except ourselves, and swim by the side
of it. Three good swimmers are we, Tayoga, and
I believe we can do it.”
The Onondaga looked at Willet, who nodded his approval.
“The chances will favor us,
and we’d better try it,” he said, “that
is, if the night is dark, as I think it will be.”
“Then it is agreed,” said Robert.
“It is so,” said Tayoga.
No more words were needed, and they
strengthened their hearts for the daring attempt,
waiting patiently for the afternoon to wane and die
into the night, which, arrived moonless and starless
and heavy with dark, as they had hoped and predicted.
Just before, a little spasmodic firing came from the
besiegers, but they did not deign to answer. Instead
they waited patiently until the night was far advanced
and then they prepared quickly for running the gauntlet,
a task that would require the greatest skill, courage
and presence of mind. Robert’s heart beat
hard. Like the others he was weary of the friendly
hollow that had served them so well, and the murmuring
of the river, as it flowed, invited them to come on
and use it as the road of escape.
The three took off all their clothing
and disposed everything carefully in the canoe, laying
the rifles on top where they could be reached with
a single swift movement of the arm. Then they
stared up and down the stream, and listened with all
their powers of hearing. No savage was to be
seen nor did anyone make a sound that reached the three,
although Robert knew they lay behind the rocks not
so very far away.
“They’re not stirring,
Tayoga,” whispered the hunter. “Perhaps
they think we don’t dare try the river, and
in this case as in most others the boldest way is
the best. Take the other end of the canoe, and
we’ll lift it down gently.”
He and the Onondaga lowered the canoe
so slowly that it made no splash when it took the
water, and then the three lowered themselves in turn,
sinking into the stream to their throats.
“Keep close to the bank,”
whispered the hunter, “and whatever you do don’t
make any splash as you swim.”
The three were on the side of the
craft next to the cliff and their heads did not appear
above its side. Then the canoe moved down the
stream at just about the speed of the current, and
no human hands appeared, nor was any human agency
visible. It was just a wandering little boat,
set adrift upon the wilderness waters, a light shell,
but with an explorer’s soul. It moved casually
along, keeping nearest to the cliff, the safest place
for so frail a structure, hesitating two or three
times at points of rocks, but always making up its
mind to go on once more, and see where this fine but
strange river led.
Luckily it was very dark by the cliff.
The shadows fell there like black blankets, and no
eye yet rested upon the questing canoe which kept its
way, idly exploring the reaches of the river.
Gasna Gaowo, this bark canoe of red elm, was not large,
but it was a noble specimen of its kind, a forest
product of Onondaga patience and skill. On either
side near the prow was painted in scarlet a great
eagle’s eye, and now the two large red eyes
of the canoe gazed ahead into the darkness, seeking
to pierce the unknown.
The canoe went on with a gentle, rocking
motion made by the current, strayed now and then a
little way from the cliff, but always came back to
it. The pair of great red eyes stared at the cliff
so close and at the other cliff farther away and at
the middle of the stream, which was now tranquil and
unruffled by the wreckage of the forest blown into
the water by the storm. The canoe also looked
into one or two little coves, and seeing nothing there
but the river edge bubbling against the stone, went
on, came to a curve, rounded it in an easy, sauntering
but skillful fashion, and entered a straight reach
of the stream.
So far the canoe was having a lone
and untroubled journey. The river widening now
and flowing between descending banks was wholly its
own, but clinging to the habit it had formed when
it started it still hung to the western bank.
The night grew more and more favorable to the undiscovered
voyage it wished to make. Masses of clouds gathered
and hovered over that particular river, as if they
had some especial object in doing so, and they made
the night so dark that the red eyes of the canoe,
great in size though they were, could see but a little
way down the stream. Yet it kept on boldly and
there was a purpose in its course. Often it seemed
to be on the point of recklessly running against the
rocky shore, but always it sheered off in time, and
though its advance was apparently casual it was moving
down the stream at a great rate.
The canoe had gone fully four hundred
yards when an Abenaki warrior on the far side of the
river caught a glimpse of a shadow moving in the shadow
of the bank, and a sustained gaze soon showed to him
that it was a canoe, and, in his opinion, a derelict,
washed by the flood from some camp a long distance
up the stream. He watched it for a little while,
and was then confirmed in his opinion by its motion
as it floated lazily with the current.
The darkness was not too great to
keep the Abenaki from seeing that it was a good canoe,
a fine shell of Iroquois make, and canoes were valuable.
He had not been able to secure any scalp, which was
a sad disappointment, and now Manitou had sent this
stray craft to him as a consolation prize. He
was not one to decline the gifts of the gods, and
he ran along the edge of the cliff until he came to
a low point well ahead of the canoe. Then he
put his rifle on the ground, dropped lightly into
the stream, and swam with swift sure strokes for the
derelict.
As the warrior approached he saw that
his opinion of the canoe was more than justified.
It had been made with uncommon skill and he admired
its strong, graceful lines. It was not often
that such a valuable prize came to a man and asked
to be taken. He reached it and put one hand upon
the side. Then a heavy fist stretched entirely
over the canoe and struck him such a mighty blow upon
the jaw that he sank senseless, and when he revived
two minutes later on a low bank where the current had
cast him, he did not know what had happened to him.
Meanwhile the uncaptured canoe sailed
on in lonely majesty down the stream.
“That was a shrewd blow of yours,
Dave,” said Robert. “You struck fairly
upon his jaw bone.”
“It’s not often that I
fight an Indian with my fists, and the chance having
come I made the most of it,” said the hunter.
“He may have been a sentinel set to watch for
just such an attempt as we are making, but it’s
likely they thought if we made a dash for it we’d
be in the canoe.”
“It was great wisdom for us
to swim,” said Tayoga. “Another sentinel
seeing the canoe may also think it was washed away
somewhere and is merely floating on the waters.
I can see a heap of underbrush that has gathered against
a projecting point, and the current would naturally
bring the canoe into it. Suppose we let it rest
there until it seems to work free by the action of
the water, and then go on down the river.”
“It’s a good idea, Tayoga,
but it’s a pretty severe test to remain under
fire, so to speak, in order to deceive your enemy,
when the road is open for you to run away.”
“But we can do it, all three
of us,” said Tayoga, confidently.
A spit of high ground projected into
the river and in the course of time enough driftwood
brought by the stream and lodged there had made a raft
of considerable width and depth, against which the
canoe in its wandering course lodged. But it
was evident that its stay in such a port would be
but temporary, as the current continually pushed and
sucked at it, and the light craft quivered and swayed
continually under the action of the current.
The three behind the canoe thrust
themselves back into the mass of vegetation, reckless
of scratches, and were hidden completely for the time.
Since he was no longer kept warm by the act of swimming
Robert felt the chill of the water entering his bones.
His physical desire to shiver he controlled by a powerful
effort of the will, and, standing on the bottom with
his head among the boughs, he remained quiet.
None of the three spoke and in a few
minutes a warrior on the other side of the stream,
watching in the bushes, saw the dim outline of the
canoe in the darkness. He came to the edge of
the water and looked at it attentively. It was
apparent to him, as it had been to the other savage,
that it was a stray canoe, and valuable, a fine prize
for the taking. But he was less impulsive than
the first man had been and at that point the river
spread out to a much greater width. He did not
know that his comrade was lying on the bank farther
up in a half stunned condition, but he was naturally
cautious and he stared at the canoe a long time.
He saw that the action of the current would eventually
work it loose from the raft, but he believed it would
yet hang there for at least ten minutes. So he
would have time to go back to his nearest comrade and
return with him. Then one could enter the water
and salvage the canoe, while the other stayed on the
bank and watched. Having reached this wise conclusion
he disappeared in the woods, seeking the second Indian,
but before the two could come together the canoe had
worked loose and was gone.
The three hidden in the bushes had
watched the Indian as well as the dusk would permit
and they read his mind. They knew that when he
turned away he had gone for help and they knew equally
well that it was time for the full power of the current
to take effect.
“Shove it off, Tayoga,”
whispered Willet, “and I think we’d better
help along with some strokes of our own.”
“It is so,” said Tayoga.
Now the wandering canoe was suddenly
endowed with more life and purpose, or else the current
grew much swifter. After an uneasy stay with the
boughs, it left them quickly, sailed out toward the
middle of the stream, and floated at great speed between
banks that were growing high again. The friendly
dark was also an increasing protection to the three
who were steering it. The heavy but rainless clouds
continued to gather over them, and the canoe sped
on at accelerated speed in an opaque atmosphere.
A mile farther and Willet suggested that they get into
the canoe and paddle with all their might. The
embarkation, a matter of delicacy and difficulty,
was made with success, and then they used the paddles
furiously.
The canoe, suddenly becoming a live
thing, leaped forward in the water, and sped down
the stream, as if it were the leader in a race.
Far behind them rose a sudden war cry, and the three
laughed.
“I suppose they’ve discovered
in some way that we’ve fled,” said Robert.
“That is so,” said Tayoga.
“And they’ll come down
the river as fast as they can,” said Willet,
“but they’ll do no more business with
us. I don’t want to brag, but you can’t
find three better paddlers in the wilderness than we
are, and with a mile start we ought soon to leave
behind any number of warriors who have to run through
the woods and follow the windings of the stream.”
“They cannot catch us now,”
said Tayoga, “and I will tell them so.”
He uttered a war whoop so piercing
and fierce that Robert was startled. It cut the
air like the slash of a sword, but it was a long cry,
full of varied meaning. It expressed satisfaction,
triumph, a taunt for the foe, and then it died away
in a sinister note like a threat for any who tried
to follow. Willet laughed under his breath.
“That’ll stir ’em,
Tayoga,” he said. “You put a little
dart squarely in their hearts, and they don’t
like it. But they can squirm as much as they
please, we’re out of their reach now. Hark,
they’re answering!”
They heard a cry from the savage who
had besieged them, but it was followed by a long silence.
The three paddled with their utmost strength, the
great muscles on their arms rising and falling with
their exertions, and beads of perspiration standing
out on their foreheads.
Hours passed. Mile after mile
fell behind them. The darkness began to thin,
and then the air was shot with golden beams from the
rising sun. Willet, heaving an immense sigh of
relief, laid his paddle across the canoe.
“The danger has passed,”
he said. “Now we’ll land, put on our
clothes and become respectable.”