NEW FRANCE
The huge and savage warrior had never
looked more malignant. His face and his bare
chest were painted with the most hideous devices, and
his eyes, in the single glance that he cast upon Robert
and his comrades, showed full of black and evil passions.
Then, as if they were no longer present, he stalked
to the fire, took up some cooked deer meat that lay
beside it, and, sitting down Turkish fashion like the
other Indians, began to eat, not saying a word to
the Frenchmen.
It was the action of a savage of the
savages, but Robert, startled at first by the unexpected
appearance of such an enemy, called to his aid the
forest stoicism that he had learned and sat down, calm,
outwardly at least. The initiative was not his
now, nor that of his comrades, and he glanced anxiously
at de Courcelles to see how he would take this rude
invasion of his camp. The French colonel looked
at Tandakora, then at Jumonville, and Jumonville looked
at him. The two shrugged their shoulders, and
in a flash of intuition he was convinced that they
knew the Ojibway well.
Whatever anger de Courcelles may have
felt at the manners of the savage he showed none at
all. All the tact and forbearance which the French
used with such wonderful effect in their dealings with
the North American Indians were summoned to his aid.
He spoke courteously to Tandakora, but, as his words
were in the Ojibway dialect, Robert did not understand
them. The Indian made a guttural reply and continued
to gnaw fiercely at the bone of the deer. De
Courcelles still took no offense, and spoke again,
his words smooth and his face smiling. Then Tandakora,
in his deep guttural, spoke rapidly and with heat.
When he had finished de Courcelles turned to his guests,
and with a deprecatory gesture, said:
“Tandakora’s heart burns
with wrath. He says that you attacked him and
his party in the forest and have slain some of his
warriors.”
“Tandakora lies!”
It was the Onondaga who spoke.
His voice was not raised, but every syllable was articulated
clearly, and the statement came with the impact of
a bullet. The tan of de Courcelles’ face
could not keep a momentary flush from breaking through,
but he kept his presence of mind.
“It is easy enough to call a
man a liar,” he said, “but it is another
thing to prove it.”
“Since when,” said Tayoga,
haughtily, “has the word of an Ojibway, a barbarian
who knows not the law, been worth more than that of
one who is a member of the clan of the Bear, of the
nation Onondaga, of the great League of the Hodenosaunee?”
He spoke in English, which Robert
knew the Ojibway understood and which both Frenchmen
spoke fluently. The great hand of Tandakora drifted
down toward the handle of his tomahawk, but Tayoga
apparently did not see him, his fathomless eyes again
staring into the fire. Robert looked at Willet,
and he saw the hunter’s eye also fall upon the
handle of his tomahawk, a weapon which he knew the
Great Bear could hurl with a swiftness and precision
equal to those of any Indian. He understood at
once that Tayoga was protected by the hunter from any
sudden movement by the Ojibway and his great strain
relaxed.
De Courcelles frowned, but his face
cleared in an instant. Robert, watching him now,
believed he was not at all averse to a quarrel between
the Onondaga and the Ojibway.
“It is not a question for me
to decide,” he replied. “The differences
of the Hodenosaunee and the western tribes are not
mine, though His Majesty, King Louis of France, wishes
all his red brethren to dwell together in peace.
Yet I but tell to you, Tayoga, what Tandakora has
told to me. He says that you three attacked him
and peaceful warriors back there in a gorge of the
river, and slew some of his comrades.”
“Tandakora lies,” repeated
Tayoga in calm and measured tones. “It is
true that warriors who were with them fell beneath
our bullets, but they came swimming in the night,
seeking to murder us while we slept, and while there
is yet no war between us. An Onondaga or a Mohawk
or any warrior of the Hodenosaunee hates and despises
a snake.”
The words, quiet though they were,
were fairly filled with concentrated loathing.
The eyes of the huge Ojibway flashed and his clutch
on the handle of his tomahawk tightened convulsively,
but the fixed gaze of the hunter seemed to draw him
at that moment. He saw that Willet’s eyes
were upon him, that every muscle was attuned and that
the tomahawk would leap from his belt like a flash
of lightning, and seeing, Tandakora paused.
The two Frenchmen looked at Tayoga,
at Tandakora and at Willet. Then they looked
at each other, and being acute men with a full experience
of forest life, they understood the silent drama.
“I don’t undertake to
pass any judgment here,” said de Courcelles,
after a pause. “It is the word of one warrior
against another, and I cannot say which is the better.
But since you are going to the Marquis Duquesne at
Quebec, Mr. Lennox, the matter may be laid before him,
and it is for those who make charges to bring proof.”
The words were silky, but Robert saw
that they were intended to weave a net.
“We are on an official mission
from the Governor of the Province of New York to the
Governor General of Canada,” he said. “We
cannot be tried at Quebec for an offense that we have
never committed, and for our commission of which you
have only the word of a barbarian who twice tried
to murder us.”
The hand of Tandakora on the handle
of his tomahawk again made a convulsive movement,
but the gaze of the hunter was fixed upon him with
deadly menace, and another hand equally as powerful
and perhaps quicker than his own was clutched around
the handle of another tomahawk. Again the Ojibway
paused and chose the way of peace.
“Patience, Tandakora,”
said Jumonville, taking the initiative for the first
time. “If you have suffered wrongs Onontio
will avenge them. His eye sees everything, and
he does not forget his children of the western forests.”
“When we first saw him,”
said Robert, “he was with the Chevalier Raymond
Louis de St. Luc, who was going with belts from the
Marquis Duquesne to the council of the fifty chiefs
in the vale of Onondaga. Now he has come on another
course, and is here far from the vale of Onondaga.”
“We will dismiss the matter,”
said de Courcelles, who evidently was for peace also.
“Since you and your friends are our guests, Mr.
Lennox, we cannot treat you except as such. Take
to your blankets and you rest as safely with us as
if you were sleeping in your own town of Albany.”
Willet removed his hand from the handle
of his tomahawk, and, rising to his full height, stretched
himself and yawned.
“We accept your pledge in the
spirit in which it is given, Colonel de Courcelles,”
he said, “and being worn from a long day and
long toil I, for one, shall find sweet slumber here
on the leaves with a kindly sky above me.”
“Then, sir, I bid you a happy
good night,” said Colonel de Courcelles.
Without further ado the three folded
their blankets them and fell asleep on the leaves.
Robert, before closing his eyes, had
felt assured that no harm would befall them while
they were in the camp of de Courcelles, knowing that
the French colonel could not permit any attack in his
own camp upon those who bore an important message
from the Governor of New York to the Governor General
of Canada. Hence his heart was light as he was
wafted away to the land of slumber, and it was light
again when he awoke the next morning at the first
rays of dawn.
Tayoga and Willet still slept, and
he knew that they shared his confidence, else these
wary rovers of the woods would have been watching
rather than sleeping. Jumonville also was still
rolled in his blankets, but de Courcelles was up,
fully dressed, and alert. Several of the Canadians
and Indians were building a fire. Robert’s
questing eye sought at once for the Ojibway, but he
was gone, and the youth was not surprised. His
departure in the night was a relief to everybody, even
to the French, and Robert felt that an evil influence
was removed. The air that for a space the night
before had been poisonous to the lungs was now pure
and bracing. He took deep breaths, and his eyes
sparkled as he looked at the vast green forest curving
about them. Once more he felt to the full the
beauty and majesty of the wilderness. Habit and
use could never dull it for him.
De Courcelles turned upon him a frank
and appreciative eye. Robert saw that he intended
to be pleasant, even genial that morning, having no
reason for not showing his better side, and the lad,
who was learning not only to fence and parry with
words, but also to take an intellectual pleasure in
their use, was willing to meet him half way.
“I see, Mr. Lennox,” said
de Courcelles gayly, “that you are in a fine
humor this morning. Your experience with the Ojibway
has left no ill results. He departed in the night.
One can never tell what strange ideas these savages
will take into their heads.”
“I have forgotten it,”
said Robert lightly. “I knew that a French
gentleman could not take the word of a wild Ojibway
against ours.”
De Courcelles gave him a sharp glance,
but the youth’s face was a mask.
“At least,” he said, “the
matter is not one of which I could dispose. Nor
can any government take note of everything that passes
in a vast wilderness. I, too, shall forget it.
Nor is it likely that it will ever be taken before
the Marquis Duquesne. Come, our breakfast will
soon be ready and your comrades are awakening.”
Robert walked down to a small brook,
bathed his face, and returned to find the food ready.
He did not wholly trust either de Courcelles or Jumonville,
but their manners were good, and it was quite evident
that they no longer wished to interfere with the progress
of the mission. Tayoga and Willet also seemed
to have forgotten the episode of the night before,
and asked no questions about Tandakora. After
breakfast, the three put their canoe back in the river,
and thanking their hosts for the courtesy of a night
in their camp, shot out into the stream. De Courcelles
and Jumonville, standing on the bank, waved them farewell,
and they held their paddles aloft a moment or two in
salute. Then a bend shut them from view.
“I don’t trust them,”
said Robert, after a long silence. “This
is our soil, but they march over it and calmly assume
that it’s their own.”
“King George claims it, and
King Louis claims it, too,” said Willet in a
whimsical tone, “but I’m thinking it belongs
to neither. The ownership, I dare say, will not
be decided for many a year. Now, Tayoga, what
do you think has become of that demon, Tandakora?”
The Onondaga looked at the walls of
foliage on either side of the stream before answering.
“One cannot tell,” he
said in his precise language of the schools. “The
mind of the Ojibway is a fitful thing, but always it
is wild and lawless. He longs, night and day,
for scalps, and he covets ours most. It is because
we have defeated the attempts he has made already.”
“Do you think he has gone ahead
with the intention of ambushing us? Would he
dare?”
“Yes, he would dare. If
he were to succeed he would have little to fear.
A bullet in one of our hearts, fired from cover on
the bank, and then the wilderness would swallow him
up and hide him from pursuit. He could go to
the country around the last and greatest of the lakes,
where only the white trapper or explorer has been.”
“It gives me a tremendously
uncomfortable feeling, Tayoga, to think that bloodthirsty
wretch may be waiting for a shot at us. How are
we to guard against him?”
“We must go fast and watch as
we go. Our eyes are keen, and we may see him
moving among the trees. The Ojibway is no marksman,
and unless we sit still it is not likely that he can
hit us.”
Tayoga spoke very calmly, but his
words set Robert’s heart to beating, understanding
what an advantage Tandakora had if he sought to lie
in ambush. He knew that the soul of the Ojibway
was full of malice and that his craving for scalps
was as strong as the Onondaga had said it was.
Had it been anyone else he would not follow them, but
Robert foresaw in Tandakora a bitter and persistent
enemy. Both he and Willet, feeling the wisdom
of Tayoga’s advice, began to paddle faster.
But the hunter presently slowed down a little.
“No use to take so much out
of ourselves now that we’ll just creep along
later on,” he said.
“The temptation to go fast is
very strong,” said Robert. “You feel
then that you’re really dodging bullets.”
Tayoga was looking far ahead toward
a point where the stream became much narrower and
both banks were densely wooded, as usual.
“If Tandakora really means to
ambush us,” he said, “he will be there,
because it offers the best opportunity, and it is a
place that the heart of a murderer would love.
Suppose that Dagaeoga and I paddle, and that the Great
Bear rests with his rifle across his knees ready to
fire at the first flash. We know what a wonderful
marksman the Great Bear is, and it may be Tandakora
who will fall.”
“The plan, like most of yours,
is good, Tayoga,” said Willet. “The
Lord has given me some skill with the rifle, and I
have improved it with diligent practice. I think
I can watch both sides of the stream pretty well,
and if the Ojibway fires I can fire back at the flash.
We’ll rely upon our speed to make his bullet
miss, and anyway we must take the chance. You
lads needn’t exert yourselves until we come to
the narrow part of the stream. Then use the paddles
for your lives.”
Robert found it hard to be slow, but
his will took command of his muscles and he imitated
the long easy strokes of Tayoga. As the current
helped much, their speed was considerable, nevertheless.
The river flowed, a silver torrent, in the clear light
of the morning, a fish leaping up now and then in
the waters so seldom stirred by any strange presence.
The whole scene was saturated with the beauty and the
majesty of the wilderness, and to the eye that did
not know it suggested only peace. But Robert
often lifted his gaze from the paddle and the river
to search the green thickets on either side.
They were only casual glances, Willet being at once
their sentinel and guard.
The great hunter was never more keenly
alert. His thick, powerful figure was poised
evenly in the canoe, and the long-barreled rifle lay
in the hollow of his arm, his hand on the lock and
his finger on the trigger. Eyes, trained by many
years in the forest, searched continually among the
trees for a figure that did not belong there, and,
at the same time, he listened for the sound of any
movement not natural to the wilderness. He felt
his full responsibility as the rifleman of the fleet
of one canoe, and he accepted it.
“Lads,” he said, “we’re
approaching the narrowest part of the river. It
runs straight, I can see a full mile ahead, and for
all that distance it’s not more than thirty
yards from shore to shore. Now use the strength
that you’ve been saving, and send the canoe forward
like an arrow. Those are grand strokes, Tayoga!
And yours too, Robert! Now, our speed is increasing!
We fairly fly! Good lads! I knew you were
both wonderful with the paddle, but I did not know
you were such marvels! Never mind the woods,
Robert, I’m watching ’em! Faster!
A little faster, if you can! I think I see something
moving in a thicket on our right! Bang, there
goes his rifle! Just as I expected, his bullet
hit the water twenty feet from us! And bang goes
my own rifle! How do you like that, my good friend
Tandakora?”
“Did you make an end of him?” asked Robert
breathlessly.
“No,” replied the hunter,
although his tone was one of satisfaction. “I
had to shoot when I saw the flash of his rifle, and
I had only a glimpse of him. But I saw enough
to know that my bullet took him in the shoulder.
His rifle fell from his hand, and then he dropped down
in the underbrush, thinking one of you might snatch
up a weapon and fire. No, I didn’t make
an end of him, Robert, but I did make an end of his
warfare upon us for a while. That bullet must
have gone clean through his shoulder, and for the
present at least he’ll have to quit scalp hunting.
But how he must hate us!”
“Let him hate,” said Robert.
“I don’t care how much his hate increases,
so long as he can’t lie in ambush for us.
It’s pretty oppressive to have an invisible
death lurking around you, unable to fend it off, and
never knowing when or where it will strike.”
“But we did fend it off,”
said the big hunter, as he reloaded the rifle of which
he had made such good use. “And now I can
see the stream widening ahead of us, with natural
meadows on either side, where no enemy can lay an
ambush. Easy now, lads! The danger has passed.
That fiend is lying in the thicket binding up his
wounded shoulder as best he can, and tomorrow we’ll
be in Canada. Draw in your paddles, and I’ll
take mine. You’re entitled to a rest.
You couldn’t have done better if you had been
in a race, and, after all, it was a race for life.”
Robert lifted his paddle and watched
the silver bubbles fall from it into the stream.
Then he sank back in his seat, relaxing after his great
effort, his breath coming at first in painful gasps,
but gradually becoming long and easy.
“I’m glad we’ll
be in Canada tomorrow, Dave,” he said, “because
the journey has surely been most difficult.”
“Pretty thick with dangers,
that’s true,” laughed the hunter, “but
we’ve run past most of ’em. The rest
of the day will be easy, safe and pleasant.”
His prediction came true, their journey
on the river continuing without interruption.
Two or three times they saw distant smoke rising above
the forest, but they judged that it came from the
camp fires of hunters, and they paid no further attention
to it. That night they took the canoe from the
river once more, carrying it into the woods and sleeping
beside it, and the next day they entered the mighty
St. Lawrence.
“This is Canada,” said
Willet. “Farther west we claim that our
territory comes to the river and that we have a share
in it. But here it’s surely French by right
of long occupation. We can reach Montreal by night,
where we’ll get a bigger boat, and then we’ll
go on to Quebec. It’s a fine river, isn’t
it, Robert?”
“So it is,” replied Robert,
looking at the vast sheet of water, blue then under
a perfectly blue sky, flowing in a mighty mass toward
the sea. Tayoga’s eyes sparkled also.
The young warrior could feel to the full the splendors
of the great forests, rivers and lakes of his native
land.
“I too shall be glad to see
Stadacona,” he said, “the mighty rock that
once belonged to a nation of the Hodenosaunee, the
Mohawks, the Keepers of the Eastern Gate.”
“It is the French who have pressed
upon you and who have driven you from some of your
old homes, but it is the English who have respected
all your rights,” said Robert, not wishing Tayoga
to forget who were the friends of the Hodenosaunee.
“It is so,” said the Onondaga.
Taking full advantage of the current,
and sparing the paddles as much as they could, they
went down the stream, which was not bare of life.
They saw two great canoes, each containing a dozen
Indians, who looked curiously at them, but who showed
no hostility.
“It’s likely they take
us for French,” said Willet. “Of what
tribe are these men, Tayoga?”
“I cannot tell precisely,”
replied the Onondaga, “but they belong to the
wild tribes that live in the regions north of the Great
Lakes. They bring furs either to Montreal or
Quebec, and they will carry back blankets and beads
and guns and ammunition. Above the Great Lakes
and running on, no man knows how far, are many other
vast lakes. It is said that some in the distant
north are as large as Erie or Ontario or larger, but
I cannot vouch for it, as we warriors of the Hodenosaunee
have never been there, hearing the tales from warriors
of other tribes that have come down to trade.”
“It’s true, Tayoga,”
said Willet. “I’ve roamed north of
the Great Lakes myself, and I’ve met Indians
of the tribes called Cree and Assiniboine, and they’ve
told me about those lakes, worlds and worlds of ’em,
and some of ’em so big that you can paddle days
without reaching the end. I suppose there are
chains and chains of lakes running up and down a hollow
in the middle of this continent of ours, though it’s
only a guess of mine about the middle. Nobody
knows how far it is across from sea to sea.”
“We better go in closer to the
shore,” said Tayoga. “A wind is coming
and on so big a river big waves will rise.”
“That’s so, Tayoga,”
said Willet. “A little bark canoe like ours
wasn’t made to fight with billows.”
They paddled near to the southern
shore, and, being protected by the high banks, the
chief force of the wind passed over their heads.
In the center of the stream the water rose in long
combers like those of the sea, and a distant boat
with oarsmen rocked violently.
“Hugging the land will be good
for us until the wind passes,” said Willet.
“Suppose we draw in among those bushes growing
in the edge of the water and stop entirely.”
“A good idea,” said Robert,
who did not relish a swamping of the canoe in the
cold St. Lawrence.
A few strokes of the paddle and they
were in the haven, but the three still watched the
distant boat, which seemed to be of large size, and
which still kept in the middle of the stream.
“It has a mast and can carry
a sail when it wishes,” said Willet, after a
long examination.
“French officers are in it,” said Tayoga.
“I believe you are right, boy.
I think I caught the glitter of a uniform.”
“And the boat has steered about
and is coming this way, Great Bear. The French
officers no doubt have the glasses that magnify, and,
having seen us, are coming to discover what we are.”
“Correct again, Tayoga.
They’ve turned their prow toward us, and, as
we don’t want to have even the appearance of
hiding, I think we’d better paddle out of the
bushes and make way slowly again close to the shore.”
A few sweeps of the paddle and the
canoe was proceeding once more down the St. Lawrence,
keeping in comparatively quiet waters near the southern
side. The large boat was approaching them fast,
but they pretended not to have seen it.
“Probably it comes from Hochelaga,” said
Tayoga.
“And your Hochelaga, which is
the French Montreal, was Iroquois once, also,”
said Robert.
“Our fathers and grandfathers
are not sure,” replied Tayoga. “Cartier
found there a great village surrounded by a palisade,
and many of our people think that a nation of the
Hodenosaunee, perhaps the Mohawks, lived in it, but
other of our old men say it was a Huron town.
It is certain though that the Hodenosaunee lived at
Stadacona.”
“In any event, most of this
country was yours or races kindred to yours owned
it. So, Tayoga, you are traveling on lands and
waters that once belonged to your people. But
we’re right in believing that boat has come
to spy us out. I can see an officer standing up
and watching us with glasses.”
“Let ’em come,”
said Willet. “There’s no war—at
least, not yet—and there’s plenty
of water in the St. Lawrence for all the canoes, boats
and ships that England and France have.”
“If they hail us,” said
Robert, “and demand, as they probably will, what
we’re about, I shall tell them that we’re
going to the Marquis Duquesne at Quebec and show our
credentials.”
The large boat rapidly came nearer,
and as men on board furled the sail others at the
oars drew it alongside the little canoe, which seemed
a mere cork on the waves of the mighty St. Lawrence.
But Robert, Tayoga and Willet paddled calmly on, as
if boats, barges and ships were everyday matters to
them, and were not to be noticed unduly. A tall
young man standing up in the boat hailed them in French
and then in English. Robert, watching out of
the corner of his eye, saw that he was fair, like
so many of the northern French, that he was dressed
in a uniform of white with violet facings, and that
his hat was black and three-cornered. He learned
afterward that it was the uniform of a battalion of
Languedoc. He saw also that the boat carried sixteen
men, all except the oarsmen being in uniform.
“Who are you?” demanded the officer imperiously.
Robert, to whom the others conceded
the position of spokesman, had decided already that
his course should be one of apparent indifference.
“Travelers,” he replied
briefly, and the three bent to their paddles.
“What travelers are you and
where are you going?” demanded the officer,
in the same imperious manner.
The wash of the heavy boat made the
frail canoe rock perilously, but its three occupants
appeared not to notice it. Using wonderful skill,
they always brought it back to the true level and
maintained a steady course ahead. On board the
larger boat the oarsmen, rowing hard, kept near, and
for the third time the officer demanded:
“Who are you? I represent
the authority of His Majesty, King Louis of France,
upon this river, and unless you answer explicitly I
shall order my men to run you down.”
“But we are messengers,”
said Robert calmly. “We bear letters of
great importance to the Marquis Duquesne at Quebec.
If you sink us it’s likely the letters will
go down with us.”
“It’s another matter if
you are on such a mission, but I must demand once
more your names.”
“The highest in rank among us
is the young chief, or coming chief, Tayoga, of the
clan of the Bear, of the nation Onondaga, of the great
League of the Hodenosaunee. Next comes David Willet,
a famous hunter and scout, well known throughout the
provinces of New York and Massachusetts and even in
Canada, and often called by his friends, the Iroquois,
the Great Bear. As for me, I am Robert Lennox,
of Albany and sometimes of New York, without rank
or office.”
The officer abated his haughty manner.
The answer seemed to please him.
“That surely is explicit enough,”
he said. “I am Louis de Galisonnière, a
captain of the battalion Languedoc, stationed for the
present at Montreal and charged with the duty of watching
the river for all doubtful characters, in which class
I was compelled to put the three of you, if you gave
no explanations.”
“Galisonnière! That is
a distinguished name. Was there not a Governor
General of Canada who bore it?”
“A predecessor of the present
Governor General, the Marquis Duquesne. It gives
me pride to say that the Count de Galisonnière was
my uncle.”
Robert saw that he had found the way
to young Galisonnière’s good graces through
his family and he added with the utmost sincerity,
too:
“New France has had many a great
Governor General, as we of the English colonies ought
to know, from the Sieur de Roberval, through Champlain,
Frontenac, de Beauharnais and on to your uncle, the
Count de Galisonnière.”
Willet and the Onondaga gave Robert
approving looks, and the young Frenchman flushed with
pleasure.
“You have more courtesy and
appreciation for us than most of the Bostonnais,”
he said. “I would talk further with you,
but conversation is carried on with difficulty under
such circumstances. Suppose we run into the first
cove, lift your canoe aboard, and we’ll take
you to Montreal, since that’s our own port of
destination.”
Robert agreed promptly. He wished
to make a good impression upon de Galisonnière, and,
since the big boat was now far safer and more comfortable
than the canoe, two ends would be served at the same
time. Willet and the Onondaga also nodded in
acquiescence, and a mile or two farther on they and
the canoe too went aboard de Galisonnière’s stout
craft. Then the sail was set again, they steered
to the center of the stream and made speed for Montreal.