THE LIVE CANOE
Robert was fully aware that their
peril was not yet over—the Indians, too,
might have canoes upon the lake—but he considered
that the bulk of it had passed. So his heart
was light, and, as they shot out toward the middle
of Andiatarocte, he talked of the pursuit and the manner
in which he had escaped it.
“I was led the right way by
a bird, one that sang,” he said. “Your
Manitou, Tayoga, sent that bird to save me.”
“You don’t really believe
it came for that special purpose?” asked the
hunter.
“Why not?” interrupted
the Onondaga. “We do know that miracles
are done often. My nation and all the nations
of the Hodenosaunee have long known it. If Manitou
wishes to stretch out his hand and snatch Dagaeoga
from his foes it is not for us to ask his reason why.”
Willet was silent. He would not
say anything to disturb the belief of Tayoga, he was
never one to attack anybody’s religion, besides
he was not sure that he did not believe, himself.
“We know too,” continued
Tayoga devoutly, “that Tododaho, the mighty
Onondaga chief who went away to his star more than
four hundred years ago, and who sits there watching
over the Hodenosaunee has intervened more than once
in our behalf. He is an arm of Manitou and acts
for him.”
He looked up. The sky was hidden
by the thick darkness. No ray of silver or gray
showed anywhere, but the Onondaga knew where lay the
star upon which sat his patron saint with the wise
snakes, coil on coil, in his hair. He felt that
through the banks of mist and vapor Tododaho was watching
over him, and, as long as he tried to live the right
way taught to him by his fathers, the great Onondaga
chieftain would lead him through all perils, even
as the bird in brilliant blue plumage had shown Robert
the path from the pursuit of Tandakora. The sublime
faith of Tayoga never wavered for an instant.
The wind rose a little, a heavy swell
stirred the lake and their light craft swayed with
vigor, but the two youths were expert canoemen, none
better in all the wilderness, and it shipped no water.
The hunter, sitting with his hands on his rifle, did
not stir, nor did he speak for a long time. Willet,
at that moment, shared the faith of his two younger
comrades. He was grateful too because once more
they had found Robert, for whom he had all the affection
of a father. The three reunited were far stronger
than the three scattered, and he did not believe that
any force on the lakes or in the mountains could trap
them. But his questing eyes watched the vast oblong
of the lake, looking continually for a sign, whether
that of friend or foe.
“What did you find, Robert?” he asked
at last.
“Nothing but the band of Tandakora,”
replied the lad, with a light laugh. “I
took my way squarely into trouble, and then I had hard
work taking it out again. I don’t know
what would have happened to me, if you two hadn’t
come in the canoe.”
“It seems,” said the Onondaga,
in his whimsical precise manner, “that a large
part of our lives, Great Bear, is spent in rescuing
Dagaeoga. Do you think when we go into the Great
Beyond and arrive at the feet of Manitou, and he asks
us what we have done with our time on earth, he will
put it to our credit when we reply that we consumed
at least ten years saving Dagaeoga from his enemies?”
“Yes, Tayoga, we’ll get
white marks for it, because Robert has also saved
us, and there is no nobler work than saving one’s
fellow creatures. Manitou knows also that it is
hard to live in the wilderness and a man must spend
a lot of his time escaping death. Look to the
east, Tayoga, lad, and tell me if you think that’s
a point of light on the mountain over there.”
The Onondaga studied intently the
dark wall of the east, and presently his eyes picked
out a dot against its background, infinitesimal like
the light of a firefly, but not to be ignored by expert
woodsmen.
“Yes, Great Bear,” he
replied, “I see it is not larger than the littlest
star, but it moves from side to side, and I think it
is a signal.”
“So do I, lad. The lake
is narrow here, and the answer, if there be any, will
come from the west shore. Now we’ll look,
all together. Three pairs of eyes are better
than one.”
The two lads ceased paddling, holding
the canoe steady, with an occasional stroke, and began
to search the western cliffs in methodical fashion,
letting the eye travel from the farthest point in
the north gradually toward the south, and neglecting
no place in the dark expanse.
“There it is!” exclaimed
Robert. “Almost opposite us! I believe
it’s in the very cliff at the point of which
I lay!”
“See it, winking and blinking away.”
“Yes, that’s it,”
said Robert. “Now I wonder what those two
lights are saying to each other across Lake George?”
“It might be worth one’s
while to know, for they’re surely signaling.
It may be about us, or it may be about the army in
the south.”
“I didn’t find anything
but trouble,” said Robert. “Now what
did you and Tayoga find?”
“Plenty traces of both white
men and red,” replied the hunter. “The
forests were full of French and Indians. I think
St. Luc with a powerful force is near the north end
of Lake George, and the Marquis de Montcalm will soon
be at Ticonderoga to meet us.”
“But we’ll sweep him away
when our great army comes up from New York.”
“So we should, lad, but the
Marquis is an able general, wily and brave. He
showed his quality at Fort William Henry and we mustn’t
underrate him, though I am afraid that’s what
we’ll do; besides the forest fights for the
defense.”
“It’s not like you to be despondent, Dave,”
said Robert.
“I’m not, lad. I’ve
just a feeling that we should be mighty cautious.
Some think the Marquis won’t stand when our big
army comes, but I do, and I look for a great battle
on the shores of either George or Champlain.”
“And we’ll win it,” said Robert
in sanguine tones.
“That rests on the knees of
the gods,” said Willet thoughtfully. “But
we’ve got to deal with one thing at a time.
It’s our business now to escape from the people
who are making those lights wink at each other, or
the battle wherever it’s fought or whoever wins
won’t include us because we’ll be off
on another star, maybe sitting at the feet of Tayoga’s
Tododaho.”
“There’s another light
on the west shore toward the south,” said the
Onondaga.
“And a fourth on the eastern
cliff also toward the south,” added Robert.
“All four of them are winking now. It seems
to be a general conversation.”
“And I wish we could understand
their language,” said the hunter earnestly.
“I’m thinking, however, that they’re
talking about us. They must have found out in
some manner that we’re on the lake, and they
want to take us.”
“Then,” said Robert, “it’s
time for Manitou to send a heavy mist that we may
escape in it.”
“Manitou can work miracles for
those whom he favors,” said Tayoga, “and
now and then he sends them, but oftenest he withholds
his hand, lest we become spoiled and rely upon him
when we should rely upon ourselves.”
“You never spoke a truer word,
Tayoga,” said the hunter. “It’s
the same as saying that heaven helps those who help
themselves, and we’ve got to do a lot of work
for ourselves this night. I think the Indian
canoes are already on Andiatarocte looking for us.”
Robert would have felt a chill had
it not been for the presence of his comrades.
The danger was unknown, mysterious, it might come from
any point, and, while the foe prepared, they must
wait until he disclosed himself. Waiting was
the hardest thing to do.
“I think we’d better stay
just where we are for a while,” said the hunter.
“It would be foolish to use our strength, until
we know what we are using it for. It’s
certain that Manitou intends to let us fend for ourselves
because the night is lightening, which is a hard thing
for fugitives.”
The clouds floated away toward the
north, a star came out, then another, and then a cluster,
the lofty shores on either side rose up clear and
distinct, no longer vague black walls, the surface
of the water turned to gray, but it was still swept
by a heavy swell, in which the canoe rocked.
Willet finally suggested that they pull to a small
island lying on their right, and anchor in the heavy
foliage overhanging the water.
“If it grows much lighter they’ll
be able to see us from the cliffs,” he said,
“and for us now situated as we are the most important
of all things is to hide.”
It was a tiny island, not more than
a quarter of an acre in size, but it was covered with
heavy forest, and they found refuge among the long
boughs that touched the water, where they rested in
silence, while more stars came out, throwing a silver
radiance over the lake. The three were silent
and Robert watched the western light that lay farthest
south. It seemed to be about two miles away, and,
as he looked he saw it grow, until he became convinced
that it was no longer a light, but a fire.
“What is the meaning of it?”
he asked, calling the attention of Willet.
The hunter looked for a while before
replying. The fire still grew and soon a light
on the eastern shore began to turn into a fire, increasing
in the same manner.
“I take it that they intend
to illuminate the lake, at least this portion of it,”
said Willet. “They’ll have gigantic
bonfires casting their light far over the water, and
they think that we won’t be able to hide then.”
“Which proves that they are
in great force on both shores,” said Tayoga.
“How does it prove it?” asked Robert.
The Onondaga laughed softly.
“O Dagaeoga,” he said,
“you speak before you think. You are always
thinking before you speak, but perhaps it is not your
fault. Manitou gave you a tongue of gold, and
it becomes a man to use that which he can use best.
It is very simple. To drag up the fallen wood
for such big fires takes many men. Nor would
all of them be employed for such work. While
some of them feed the flames others are seeking us.
We can look for their canoes soon.”
“Their plan isn’t a bad
one for what they want to do,” said the hunter.
“A master mind must be directing them. I
am confirmed in my opinion that St. Luc is there.”
“I’ve been sure of it
all the time,” said Robert; “it seems that
fate intends us to be continually matching our wits
against his.”
“It’s a fact, and it’s
strange how it’s come about,” said the
hunter thoughtfully.
Robert looked at him, hoping he would
say more, but he did not continue the subject.
Instead he said:
“That they know what they’re
doing is shown by the fact that we must move.
All the area of the lake about us will be lighted up
soon.”
The two bonfires were now lofty, blazing
pyramids, and a third farther north began also to
send its flames toward the sky.
The surface of the lake glowed with
red light which crept steadily toward the little island,
in the shadow of which the three scouts lay.
It became apparent that they had no time to waste,
if they intended to avoid being trapped.
“Push out,” said Willet,
and, with strong sweeps of the paddle, Robert and
Tayoga sent the canoe from the shelter of the boughs.
But they still kept close to the island and then made
for another about a hundred yards south. The
glow had not yet come near enough to disclose them,
while they were in the open water, but Robert felt
intense relief when they drew again into the shelter
of trees.
The bonfire on the western shore was
the largest, and, despite the distance, he saw passing
before the flames tiny black figures which he knew
to be warriors or French, if any white men were there.
They were still feeding the fire and the pyramid of
light rose to an extraordinary height, but Robert
knew the peril was elsewhere. It would come on
the surface of the lake and he shifted his gaze to
the gray waters, searching everywhere for Indian canoes.
He believed that they would appear first in the north
and he scoured the horizon there from side to side,
trying to detect the first black dot when it should
show over the lake.
The waters where his eyes searched
were wholly in darkness, an unbroken black line of
the sky meeting a heaving surface. He looked
back and forth over the whole extent, a half dozen
times, and found nothing to break the continuity.
Hope that the warriors of Tandakora were not coming
sprang up in his breast, but he put it down again.
Although imagination was so strong in him he was nevertheless,
in moments of peril, a realist. Hard experience
had taught him long since that when his life was in
danger he must face facts.
“There’s another island
about a half mile away,” he said to Willet.
“Don’t you think we’d better make
for it now?”
“In a minute or two, lad, if
nothing happens,” replied the hunter. “I’d
like to see what’s coming here, if anything at
all comes.”
Robert turned his gaze back toward
the north, passing his eyes once more to and fro along
the line where the dusky sky met the dusky lake, and
then he started a little. A dot detached itself
from the center of the line, followed quickly by another,
another and others. They were points infinitely
small, and one at that distance could have told nothing
about them from their appearance only, but he knew
they were Indian canoes. They could be nothing
else. It was certain also that they were seeking
the three.
“Do you see them?” asked Robert.
“Yes, and it’s a fleet,”
replied Willet. “They are lighting up the
lake with their bonfires, and their canoes are coming
south to drive us into the open. There’s
generalship in this. I think St. Luc is surely
in command.”
The hunter expressed frank admiration.
Often, in the long duel between them and the redoubtable
French leader, he paid tribute to the valor and skill
of St. Luc. Like Robert, he never felt any hostility
toward him. There was nothing small about Willet,
and he had abundant esteem for a gallant foe.
“It’s time now to run
for it again,” he said, “and it’s
important to keep out of their sight.”
“I think it will be better for
us to swim,” said Tayoga, “and let the
canoe carry our weapons and ammunition.”
“And for us to hide behind it
as we’ve done before. You’re right,
lad. The canoe is low and does not make much
of a blur upon the lake, but if we are sitting upright
in it we can be much more easily seen. Now, quick’s
the word!”
They took off all their outer clothing
and moccasins, putting the garments and their weapons
into the little craft, and, sinking into the water
behind it, pushed out from the overhanging boughs.
It was a wise precaution. When they reached the
long open stretch of water, Robert felt that the glow
from the nearest bonfire was directly upon them, although
he knew that his fancy made the light much stronger
than it really was.
The canoe still merged with the color
of the waves which were now running freely, and, as
the three swam with powerful strokes sending it swiftly
ahead of them, Robert was hopeful that they would reach
the next island, unseen.
The distance seemed to lengthen and
grow interminable, and their pace, although rapid,
was to Robert like that of a snail. Yet the longest
journey must come to an end. The new island rose
at last before them, larger than the others but like
the rest covered throughout with heavy forest.
They were almost in its shelter, when
a faint cry came from the lofty cliff on the west.
It was a low, whining sound, very distant, but singularly
penetrating, a sinister note with which Robert was
familiar, the Indian war whoop. He recognized
it, and understood its significance. Warriors
had seen the canoe and knew that it marked the flight
of the three.
“What do you think we’d better do?”
he said.
“We’ll stop for a moment
or two at the island and take a look around us,”
replied Willet.
They moored the canoe, and waded to
the shore. Far behind them was the Indian fleet,
about twenty canoes, coming in the formation of an
arrow, while the bonfires on the cliffs towered toward
the sky. A rising wind swept the waves down and
they crumbled one after another, as they broke upon
the island.
“It looks like a trap with us
inside of it,” said the hunter. “That
shout meant that they’ve seen our canoe, as you
lads know. Warriors have already gone below to
head us off, and maybe they’ve got another fleet,
which, answering their signals, will come up from the
south, shutting us between two forces.”
“We are in their trap,”
admitted Robert, “but we can break out of it.
We’ve been in traps before, but none of them
ever held us.”
“So we can, lad. I didn’t
mean to be discouraging. I was just stating the
situation as it now is. We’re a long way
from being taken.”
“The path has been opened to us,” said
the Onondaga.
“What do you mean?” asked Robert.
“Lo, Dagaeoga, the wind grows
strong, and it sweeps toward the south the way we
were going.”
“I hear, Tayoga, but I don’t understand.”
“We will send the canoe with wind and waves,
but we will stay here.”
“Put ’em on a false scent!”
exclaimed the hunter. “It’s a big
risk, but it’s the only thing to be done.
As the bird saved Robert so the wind may save us!
The waves are running pretty fast toward the south
now and the canoe will ride ’em like a thing
of life. They’re too far away to tell whether
we are in it.”
It was a daring thing to do but Robert
too felt that it must be done, and they did not delay
in the doing of it. They took out their clothing,
weapons, and ammunition, Willet gave the canoe a mighty
shove, and it sailed gallantly southward on the crest
of the high waves.
“I feel as if I were saying
good-by to a faithful friend,” said Robert.
“It’s more than a friend,”
said Willet. “It’s an ally that will
draw the enemy after it, and leave us here in safety.”
“If Manitou so wills it,”
said Tayoga. “It is for him to say whether
the men of Tandakora will pass us by. But the
canoe is truly alive, Dagaeoga. It skims over
the lake like a great bird. If it has a spirit
in it, and I do not know that it has not, it guards
us, and means to lead away our enemy in pursuit of
it.”
Quick to receive impressions, Robert
also clothed the canoe with life and a soul, a soul
wholly friendly to the three, who, now stooping down
on the island, amid the foliage, watched the action
of the little craft which seemed, in truth, to be
guided by reason.
“Now it pauses a little,”
said Robert. “It’s beckoning to the
Indian fleet to follow.”
“It is because it hangs on the
top of a wave that is about to break,” said
Willet. “Often you see waves hesitate that
way just before they crumble.”
“I prefer to believe with Dagaeoga,”
said the Onondaga. “The canoe is our ally,
and, knowing that we want the warriors to pass us,
it lingers a bit to call them on.”
“It may be as you say,”
said the hunter, “I’m not one to disturb
the faith of anybody. If the canoe is alive,
as you think, then—it is alive and all
the better for us.”
“Spirits go into the bodies
of inanimate things,” persisted the red youth,
“and make them alive for a while. All the
people of the Hodenosaunee have known that for centuries.”
“The canoe hesitates and beckons
again,” said Robert, “and, as sure as
we are here, the skies have turned somewhat darker.
The warriors in the fleet or on the shore cannot possibly
tell the canoe is empty.”
“Again the hand of Manitou is
stretched forth to protect us,” said Tayoga
devoutly. “It is he who sends the protecting
veil, and we shall be saved.”
“We’ll have to wait and
see whether the warriors stop and search our island
or follow straight after the canoe. Then we’ll
know,” said Willet.
“They will go on,” said
Tayoga, with great confidence. “Look at
the canoe. It is not going so fast now. Why?
Because it wishes to tantalize our enemies, to arouse
in their minds a belief that they can overtake it.
It behaves as if we were in it, and as if we were
becoming exhausted by our great exertions with the
paddles. Its conduct is just like that of a man
who flees for his life. I know, although I cannot
see their eyes, that the pursuing warriors think they
have us now. They believe that our weakness will
grow heavier and heavier upon us until it overpowers
us. Tandakora reckons that our scalps are already
hanging at his belt. Thus does Manitou make foolish
those whom he intends to lead away from their dearest
wish.”
“I begin to think they’re
really going to leave us, but it’s too early
yet to tell definitely,” said the hunter.
“We shouldn’t give them an earthly chance
to see us, and, for that reason, we’d better
retreat into the heart of the island. We mustn’t
leave all the work of deception to the canoe.”
“The Great Bear is right,”
said Tayoga. “Manitou will not help those
who sit still, relying wholly on him.”
They drew back fifteen or twenty yards,
and sat down on a hillock, covered with dense bushes,
though from their place of hiding they could see the
water on all sides. Unless the Indians landed
on the island and made a thorough search they would
not be found. Meanwhile the canoe was faithful
to its trust. The strong wind out of the north
carried it on with few moments of hesitation as it
poised on breaking waves, its striking similitude
to life never being lost for an instant. Robert
began to believe with Tayoga that it was, in very
fact and truth, alive and endowed with reason.
Why not? The Iroquois believed that spirits could
go into wood and who was he to argue that white men
were right, and red men wrong? His life in the
forest had proved to him often that red men were right
and white men wrong.
Whoever might be right the canoe was
still a tantalizing object to the pursuit. It
may have been due to a slight shift of the wind, but
it began suddenly to have the appearance of dancing
upon the waves, swinging a little to and fro, teetering
about, but in the main keeping its general course,
straight ahead.
Tayoga laughed softly.
“The canoe is in a frolicsome
mood,” he said. “It has sport with
the men of Tandakora. It dances, and it throws
jests at them. It says, ’You think you
can catch me, but you cannot. Why do you come
so slowly? Why don’t you hurry? I
am here. See, I wait a little. I do not
go as fast as I can, because I wish to give you a better
chance.’ Ah, here comes the fleet!”
“And here comes our supreme
test,” said Willet gravely. “If they
turn in toward the island then we are lost, and we’ll
know in five minutes.”
Robert’s heart missed a beat
or two, and then settled back steadily. It was
one thing to be captured by the French, and another
to be taken by Tandakora. He resolved to fight
to the last, rather than fall into the hands of the
Ojibway chief who knew no mercy. Neither of the
three spoke, not even in whispers, as they watched
almost with suspended breath the progress of the fleet.
The bonfires had never ceased to rise and expand.
For a long distance the surface of the lake was lighted
up brilliantly. The crests of the waves near them
were tipped with red, as if with blood, and the strong
wind moaned like the voice of evil. Robert felt
a chill in his blood. He knew that the fate of
his comrades and himself hung on a hair.
Nearer came the canoes, and, in the
glare of the fires, they saw the occupants distinctly.
In the first boat, a large one for those waters, containing
six paddles, sat no less a person than the great Ojibway
chief himself, bare as usual to the waist and painted
in many a hideous design. Gigantic in reality,
the gray night and the lurid light of the fires made
him look larger, accentuating every wicked feature.
He seemed to Robert to be, in both
spirit and body, the prince of darkness himself.
Just behind Tandakora sat two white
men whom the three recognized as Auguste de Courcelles
and François de Jumonville, the French officers with
whom they had been compelled to reckon on other fields
of battle and intrigue. There was no longer any
doubt that the French were present in this great encircling
movement, and Robert was stronger than ever in his
belief that St. Luc had the supreme command.
“I could reach Tandakora from
here with a bullet,” whispered Willet, “and
almost I am tempted to do it.”
“But the Great Bear will not
yield to his temptation,” Tayoga whispered back.
“There are two reasons. He knows that he
could slay Tandakora, but it would mean the death
of us all, and the price is too great. Then he
remembers that the Ojibway chief is mine. It is
for me to settle with him, in the last reckoning.”
“Aye, lad, you’re right.
Either reason is good enough. We’ll let
him pass, if pass he means, and I hope devoutly that
he does.”
The fleet preserving its formation
was now almost abreast of the island, and once Robert
thought it was going to turn in toward them.
The long boat of Tandakora wavered and the red giant
looked at the island curiously, but, at the last moment
the empty canoe, far ahead and dim in the dark, beckoned
them on more insistently than ever.
“Now the die is cast,”
whispered the Onondaga tensely. “In twenty
seconds we shall know our fate, and I think the good
spirit that has gone into our canoe means to save
us.”
Tandakora said something to the French
officers, and they too looked at the island, but the
fleeing canoe danced on the crest of a high wave and
its call was potent in the souls of white men and red
alike. It was still too far away for them to
tell that it was empty. Sudden fear assailed
them in the darkness, that it would escape and with
it the three who had eluded them so often, and whom
they wanted most to take. Tandakora spoke sharply
to the paddlers, who bent to their task with increased
energy. The long canoe leaped forward, and with
it the others.
“Manitou has stretched forth
his hand once more, and he has stretched it between
our enemies and us,” said Tayoga, in a voice
of deep emotion.
“It’s so, lad,”
said the hunter, his own voice shaking a little.
“I truly believe you’re right when you
say that as the bird was sent to save Robert so a
good spirit was put into the canoe to save us all.
Who am I and who is anybody to question the religion
and beliefs of another man?”
“Nor will I question them,” said Robert,
with emphasis.
They were stalwart men in the Indian
fleet, skilled and enduring with the paddle, and the
fugitive canoe danced before them, a will o’
the wisp that they must pursue without rest. Their
own canoes leaped forward, and, as the arrow into
which they were formed shot past the island, the three
hidden in its heart drew the deep, long breaths of
those who have suddenly passed from death to life.
“We won’t stop ’em!”
said Robert in a whimsical tone. “Speed
ye, Tandakora, speed ye! Speed ye, De Courcelles
and De Jumonville of treacherous memory! If you
don’t hasten, the flying canoe will yet escape
you! More power to your arms, O ye paddlers!
Bend to your strokes! The canoe that you pursue
is light and it is carried in the heart of the wind!
You have no time to lose, white men and red, if you
would reach the precious prize! The faster you
go the better you will like it! And the better
we will, too! On! swift canoes, on!”
“The imagination of Dagaeoga
has been kindled again,” said Tayoga, “and
the bird with a golden note has gone into his throat.
Now he can talk, and talk much, without ever feeling
weariness—as is his custom.”
“At least I have something to
talk about,” laughed Robert. “I was
never before so glad to see the backs of anybody, as
I am now to look at the backs of those Indians and
Frenchmen.”
“We won’t do anything to stop ’em,”
said the hunter.
From their hillock they saw the fleet
sweep on at a great rate toward the south, while the
fires in the north, no longer necessary to the Indian
plan, began to die. The red tint on the water
then faded, and the surface of the lake became a solemn
gray.
“It’s well for us those
fires sank,” said the hunter, “because
while Tandakora has gone on we can’t live all
the rest of our lives on this little island.
We’ve got to get to the mainland somehow without
being seen.”
“And darkness is our best friend,” said
Robert.
“So it is, and in their pursuit
of the canoe our foes are likely to relax their vigilance
on this part of the lake. Can you see our little
boat now, Robert?”
“Just faintly, and I think it’s
a last glimpse. I hope the wind behind it will
stay so strong that Tandakora will never overtake it.
I should hate to think that a canoe that has been
such a friend to us has been compelled to serve our
enemies. There it goes, leading straight ahead,
and now it’s gone! Farewell, brave and loyal
canoe! Now what do you intend to do, Dave?”
“Swim to the mainland as soon
as those fires sink a little more. We have got
to decide when the head of a swimming man won’t
show to chance warriors in the bushes, and then make
a dash for it, because, if Tandakora overtakes the
canoe, he’ll be coming back.”
“In a quarter of an hour it
will be dark enough for us to risk it,” said
the Onondaga.
Again came the thick dusk so necessary
to those who flee for life. Two fires on the
high cliffs blazed far in the south, but the light
from them did not reach the island where the three
lay, where peril had grazed them before going on.
The water all about them and the nearer shores lay
in shadow.
“The time to go has come,”
said the hunter. “We’ll swim to the
western side and climb through that dip between the
high cliffs.”
“How far would you say it is?” asked Robert.
“About a half mile.”
“Quite a swim even for as good
swimmers as we are, when you consider we have to carry
our equipment. Why not launch one of those fallen
trees that lie near the water’s edge and make
it carry us?”
“A good idea, Robert! A
happy thought does come now and then into that young
head of yours.”
“Dagaeoga is wiser than he looks,” said
the Onondaga.
“I wish I could say the same for you, Tayoga,”
retorted young Lennox.
“Oh, you’ll both learn,” laughed
Willet.
As in the ancient wood everywhere,
there were fallen trees on the island and they rolled
a small one about six inches through at the stem into
the lake. They chose it because it had not been
down long and yet had many living branches, some with
young leaves on them.
“There is enough foliage left
to hide our heads and shoulders,” said Willet.
“The tree will serve a double purpose. It’s
our ship and also our refuge.”
They took off all their clothing and
fastened it and the arms, ammunition and knapsacks
of food on the tree. Then, they pushed off, with
a caution from the hunter that they must not allow
their improvised raft to turn in the water, as the
wetting of the ammunition could easily prove fatal.
With a prayer that fortune which had
favored them so much thus far would still prove kind,
they struck out.