THE FRENCH CAMP
They returned to the camp without
further event. Colden and Strong were gratified
to learn that the retreat of St. Luc was real, and
that he was certainly going toward Champlain, with
the obvious intention of joining Montcalm.
“We owe you a great debt of
gratitude, Colonel,” said the young officer,
frankly, to Elihu Strong. “If you had not
come I don’t think we could have held out against
St. Luc.”
“We did the best we could,”
replied Elihu Strong. “If the Governor and
Legislature of Massachusetts had done their full duty
we’d have been here earlier, with twice as many
men and guns, but as it is we did our best, and man
can do no more.”
They decided that they would hold
the point and await the coming of the great army under
Abercrombie which was to crush Montcalm. The
outworks were built higher and stronger and the brass
cannon were mounted upon them at points, where they
could sweep the forest. These fine twelve-pounders
were sources of much moral courage and added greatly
to the spirits of the troops. They had shown their
power at the forcing of the ford and at the taking
of the ridge, and their brazen mouths, menacing the
forest, looked well.
Willet and his comrades considered
it their duty to stay there also, and wait for Abercrombie,
and, the third day after the retreat of St. Luc, Robert
and Tayoga went into the woods to see whether Tandakora
had turned back again with his warriors. They
reckoned that the Ojibway chief’s anger was
so strong that he would make another attempt at revenge
upon those who had defeated him. There was a rumor
that the Indians with the French were becoming much
dissatisfied, that they were awed by the reports of
the mighty British and American force advancing under
Abercrombie, and might leave the French to meet it
alone.
“Do you think there is much
in these rumors?” asked Robert, as he and the
Onondaga went into the forest.
“I do,” replied Tayoga.
“The warriors with the French do not like the
cannon, and they say the force that is coming against
Montcalm is very vast. A great battle may be
fought, but Tandakora and his men are not likely to
be there. They will go away and await a better
day.”
“Then I’m glad they’ll
desert for a while. They’re the eyes and
ears of the French. That will leave our own scouts
and forest runners the lords of the wild, though it
seems to me, Tayoga, that you’re the true and
veritable lord of the wild.”
“Then if that were so, though
you praise my skill too much, Dagaeoga, you and the
Great Bear and Black Rifle also are lords of the wild.”
“Lords of the wild! I like
the term. It is something to be that at this
time and in this region. We’re mainly a
wilderness people, Tayoga, and our wars are waged
in the woods. We’re not more than two miles
from the camp now, and yet we’re completely lost
in the forest. There’s not a trace of man.
I don’t even see any smoke soiling the sky.”
“It is so, Dagaeoga, and we
are again in the shadow of peril. Dangers in
the forest are as thick as leaves on the trees.
Here is an old trail of our enemies.”
“I’m not interested in
old trails. What we’re looking for is new
ones.”
“If we keep going toward the
north it may be that we will find them, Dagaeoga.”
Several miles farther on they came
to other trails which the Onondaga examined with great
interest and care. Two or three he pronounced
quite recent, but he did not read any particular purpose
in them.
“It is likely that they were
made by hunters,” he said. “While
the armies are gathering, the warriors are sure to
seek game. Here two of them passed, and here
they stood behind a tree. It is sure now that
those two were hunting. I think they stood behind
a tree to ambush a deer. The deer was to the
west of them. The traces they left in the soft
earth under the tree show that the toes of their moccasins
pointed toward the west and so they were looking that
way, at the deer, which probably stood in the thicket
over there nibbling at its food. They must have
had an easy shot. Now, we’ll enter the thicket.
Lo, Dagaeoga, here is where the deer fell! Look
at the little bushes broken and at the dark stain
on the ground where its life flowed out. They
dragged the body to the other side of the thicket,
and cut it up there. Nothing could be plainer,
the traces are so numerous. They were casual
hunters, and it is not worth our while to follow them.”
Northward they still pursued their
course, and struck another and larger trail which
made Tayoga look grave.
“This is the path of seven or
eight warriors,” he said, “and it is likely
that they are a scouting party. They have come
back, as we expected, to spy upon us and to cut off
stragglers from our camp. We will follow it a
little while.”
It led south by west and seemed to
go on with a definite purpose, but, after a mile or
so, it divided, four warriors, as Tayoga said, going
in one direction and three in the other.
“Suppose I follow those on the
north a short distance while you take those on the
south,” suggested Robert.
“We will do so,” said
Tayoga, “and in an hour come back to this point.”
The three warriors were on the north,
and, as the earth was soft, Robert saw their trail
quite clearly leading steadily west by north.
His own ambition to excel as a trailer was aroused
and he followed it with great energy. Two or
three times when the ground became hard and rocky
he lost it, but a little search always disclosed it
again, and he renewed the pursuit with increased zeal.
He went on over a hill and then into a wide valley,
well grown with thickets. Pushing his way through
the bushes he sought the traces and was startled by
a sound almost at his shoulder. Keyed to the
dangers of the forest he whirled instantly, but it
was too late. A powerful warrior threw himself
upon him, and though Robert, by a great effort, threw
him off he sprang back and another on the other side
also seized him. He was borne to the earth and
a third Indian coming up, he was quickly secured.
Robert at first was so sick with chagrin
that he did not think about his life. In nine
cases out of ten the warriors would have tomahawked
him, and this he soon realized, thankful at the same
time that he had been spared, for the present, at
least. Yet his mortification endured. What
would Tayoga say when he saw by the trail that he had
been caught so easily? He had fairly walked into
the trap, and he was now a prisoner the second time.
Yet he showed the stoicism that he had learned in
a forest life. While the Indians bound his wrists
tightly with rawhide thongs he stood up and looked
them squarely in the face.
One of the warriors took his rifle
and examined it with a pleased eye. Another appropriated
his pistol and a third helped himself to his knife
and hatchet.
“I’ve four shillings in
an inside pocket,” said Robert. “If
you want ’em, take ’em.”
But the warriors did not understand
English and shook their heads. Evidently they
were satisfied with the spoil they had taken already.
“Which way?” asked Robert.
They replied by leading him to the
northwest. He was hopeful at first that Tayoga
might rescue him as he had done once before, but the
warriors were wary and powerful, and three, too, were
too many for the Onondaga alone to attack. The
thought passed and by an effort of the will he resigned
himself to his immediate captivity. They did not
mean to take his life, and while there was no hope
for the present there was plenty of it for the future.
He could be in a far worse case. His unfailing
optimism broke through the shell of mortification,
and he became resolutely cheerful.
“Which way, my friends?” he said to the
warriors.
But again they understood no English and shook their
heads.
“Don’t plume yourself
too much on that rifle,” he said, speaking to
the warrior who had taken his favorite weapon.
“You have it for the present, but when I escape
for the second time I mean to take it with me.
I give you fair warning.”
The warrior, who seemed to be good
natured, shook his head once more, and grinned, not
abating at all his air of proprietorship so far as
the rifle was concerned.
“And you with the pistol,”
continued the prisoner, “I beg to tell you it’s
mine, not yours, and I shall claim it again. What,
you don’t understand? Well, I’ll
have to find some way to make you comprehend later
on.”
The three warriors walked briskly
and Robert, of course, had no choice but to keep pace
with them. They indicated very conclusively that
they knew where they meant to go, and so he assumed
that a hostile camp was not very far away. Resolved
to show no sign of discouragement, he held his head
erect and stepped springily.
About three miles, and he saw a gleam
of uniforms through the trees, a few steps more and
his heart gave a leap. He beheld a group of Indians,
and several Frenchmen, and one of them, tall, young,
distinguished, was St. Luc.
The Chevalier was in a white uniform,
trimmed with silver, a silver hilted small sword by
his side, and his smile was not unpleasant when he
said to Robert:
“I sent out these three warriors
to find me a prisoner and bring him in, but I little
suspected that it would be you.”
“I suspected as little that
it was you to whom I was being taken,” said
Robert. “But since I had to be a prisoner
I’m glad I’m yours instead of De Courcelles’
or Jumonville’s, as those two soldiers of France
have as little cause to love me as I have to love them.”
“Monsieur De Courcelles is suffering
from a bullet wound.”
“It was my bullet.”
“You say that rather proudly,
but perhaps I’d better not tell it to him.
It seems, Mr. Lennox, that you have a certain facility
in getting yourself captured, as this is the second
time within a year.”
“I was treated so well by the
French that I thought I could risk it again,”
said Robert jauntily.
The Chevalier smiled. Robert
felt again that current of understanding and sympathy,
that, so it seemed to him, had passed so often between
them.
“I see,” said St. Luc,
“that you are willing to give credit to France,
the evergreen nation, the nation of light and eternal
life. We may lose at times, we may be defeated
at times, but we always rise anew. You British
and Americans will realize that some day.”
“I do not hate France.”
“I don’t think you do.
But this is scarcely a time for me to give you a lecture
on French qualities. Sit down on this log.
I trust that my warriors did not treat you with undue
harshness.”
“I’ve nothing to complain
of. They took my weapons, but that is the law
of war. I’d have done the same in their
place. As I see it, they’re not particularly
bad Indians. But if you don’t mind, I’d
like you to cut these rawhide thongs that bind my
wrists. They’re beginning to sting.”
The Chevalier drew a knife and with
one sweep of its keen edge severed the rawhide.
Robert’s wrists flew apart and the blood once
more flowed freely through his veins. Though
the stinging did not cease he felt great relief.
“I thank you,” he said
politely, “but, as I told you before, I do not
hold it against your warriors, because they bound me.
I’d have escaped had they given me any chance
at all, and I warn you now, as I warned them, that
I intend to escape later on.”
St. Luc smiled.
“I’ll accept the challenge,”
he said, “and I’ll see that you don’t
make good your boast. I can assure you, too, if
by any possibility you should escape, it certainly
will not be before the great battle.”
“Great battle! What great
battle? You don’t mean that Montcalm will
dare to meet Abercrombie?”
“Such an idea was in my mind.”
“Why, we’ll come with
four or five to one! The Marquis de Montcalm
cannot stand against such a powerful force as ours.
We’ve definite information that he won’t
be able to muster more than three or four thousand
men. We hear, too, that the Indians, frightened
by our power, are leaving him, for the time, at least.”
“Some of your surmises may be
correct, but your facts don’t follow from them.
The Marquis de Montcalm, our great leader, will await
your Abercrombie, no matter what your force may be.
I violate no military secret when I tell you that,
and I tell you also that you are very far from being
assured of any victory.”
The Chevalier suddenly dropped his
light manner, and became intensely earnest. His
eyes gleamed for an instant with blue fire, but it
was only a passing moment of emotion. He was
in an instant his old, easy self again.
“We talk like the debaters of
the schools,” he said, “when we are at
war. I am to march in a few minutes. I suggest
that in return for certain liberties you give me your
pledge to attempt no escape until we arrive at the
camp of the Marquis de Montcalm.”
“I can’t do it. Since
I’ve promised you that I will escape I must
neglect no chance.”
“So be it. Then I must
guard you well, but I will not have your wrists bound
again. Here comes an expert rover of the forest
who will be your immediate jailer.”
A white man at the head of several
warriors was approaching through the woods. He
was young, lean, with a fierce, hooked Roman nose,
and a bold, aggressive face, tanned to the color of
mahogany. Robert recognized him at once, and
since he had to be a prisoner a second time, he took
a certain pleasure in the meeting.
“How do you do, Monsieur Langlade?”
he said. “You see, I’ve come back.
I forgot to tell you good-by, and I’m here to
make amends for my lack of politeness. And how
is the patient and watchful spouse, the Dove?”
Robert spoke in good French and the
partisan stared in astonishment. Then a pleased
look of recognition came into his eyes.
“Ah, it’s young Mr. Lennox,”
he exclaimed. “Young Mr. Lennox come back
to us. It’s not mere politeness that makes
me tell you I’m glad to see you. You did
make a very clever escape with the aid of that Indian
friend of yours. I hope to capture Tayoga some
day, and, if I do, it will be an achievement of which
I shall boast all the rest of my life. But we’ll
take good care that you don’t leave us again.”
“He has just warned me that
he intends to escape a second time,” said St.
Luc.
“Then it will be a pretty test
of mettle,” said the Owl, appreciation showing
in his tone, “and we welcome it. Have you
any commands for me, sir?”
He spoke with great respect when he
addressed the query to St. Luc, and the Chevalier
replied that they would march in a half hour.
Then Langlade gave Robert food, and took a little
himself, sitting with the prisoner and informing him
that the Dove had worried greatly over his escape.
Although she was not to blame, she considered that
in some indirect manner it was a reflection upon her
vigilance, and it was many months before she was fully
consoled.
“I must send word to her by
one of our runners that you have been retaken,”
said the Owl, “and I wish to tell you, Mr. Lennox,
that the Dove’s younger sister, who is so much
like her in looks and character, is still unmarried
and perhaps it may come into the mind of the Chevalier
de St. Luc or the Marquis de Montcalm to send you back
to our village.”
“You’re once more most
polite,” laughed Robert, “but I’m
far too young, yet, to think of marriage.”
“It’s not an offer that
I’d make to many young men,” said Langlade
regretfully. “In truth, I know of none other
to whom I’d have mentioned it.”
When they took up the march the force
numbered about fifty men, and Robert walked between
Langlade and a stalwart Indian. St. Luc was further
on. They did not seem to fear any ambush and Langlade
chattered after his fashion. He made the most
of the French resources. He spoke as if the Marquis
de Montcalm had ten or fifteen thousand veteran French
regulars, and half as many Indian warriors.
“Don’t consider me contentious,
Monsieur Langlade,” said Robert, at last, “but
I know full well that your general has not half that
many troops, no, not a third, and that nearly all
his Indians are about to leave him.”
“And how do you know that?”
exclaimed the Owl. “Well, one Frenchman
equals two of the English or the Bostonnais, and that
doubles our numbers. You don’t see any
chance to escape, do you?”
“Not at present,” laughed Robert.
“Not now, nor at any other time.
No man ever escapes twice from the French.”
The talk of Langlade, his frank egotism
and boastfulness for himself personally and for the
French collectively, beguiled the journey which soon
became strenuous, the force advancing at a great pace
through the forest. At night a fire was built
in the deep woods, the knapsacks furnished plenty
of food, and Robert slept soundly on a blanket until
dawn. He had seen before closing his eyes that
a strict guard was set, and he knew that it was not
worth while to keep awake in the hope of escape.
Like a wise man he dismissed the hope of the impossible
at once, and waited calmly for another time.
He knew too that St. Luc had originally sent out his
warriors to capture a prisoner from whom they might
drag information, but that the Chevalier would not
try to cross-examine him, knowing its futility.
They traveled northward by east all
the next day, through very rough country, slept another
night in the forest, and on the third day approached
a great camp, which held the main French force.
Robert’s heart thrilled. Here was the center
of the French power in North America. Vaudreuil
and Bigot at Quebec might plan and plot and weave
their webs, but in the end the mighty struggle between
French and English and their colonies must be decided
by the armies.
He knew that this was the outlet of
Lake George and he knew also that the army of Abercrombie
was gathering at the head of the same lake. His
interest grew keener as they drew nearer. He saw
clusters of tents, cannon parked, and many fires.
There were no earthworks or other fortifications,
and he inferred from their absence that Montcalm was
undecided whether to go or stay. But Robert thought
proudly that he would surely go, when the invincible
Anglo-American army advanced from its base at the
head of the lake. The whole camp lay under his
eye, and he had enough military experience now to judge
the French numbers by its size. He did not think
they were much in excess of three thousand, and as
Abercrombie would come four or five to one, Montcalm
must surely retreat.
“I take it that this is Ticonderoga,”
he said to St. Luc.
“Aye,” replied the Chevalier.
“And in effect you have Champlain
on one side of you and George on the other. But
you can’t hold the place against our great force.
I’m here in time to join you in your retreat.”
“We don’t seem to be retreating,
as you’ll notice, Mr. Lennox, and I don’t
know that we will. Still, that rests on the knees
of the gods. I think you’ll find here some
old friends and enemies of yours, and though your
people have made a great outcry against the Marquis
de Montcalm because of the affair at Fort William
Henry, I am sure you will find that the French know
how to treat a prisoner. I shall put you for
the present in the care of Monsieur Langlade, with
whom you appear to have no quarrel. He has his
instructions.”
It was the second time that Robert
had entered the camp of Montcalm and his keen interest
drove away for the present all thought of himself.
He noted anew the uniforms, mostly white faced with
blue or violet or red or yellow, and with black, three-cornered
hats. There were the battalions of Guienne, La
Reine, Béarn, La Sarre, Languedoc, Berry and Royal
Roussillon. The Canadians, swarthy, thick and
strong, wore white with black facings. Some Indians
were about, but fewer than Robert had expected.
It was true then that they had become alarmed at Abercrombie’s
advancing might, and were leaving the French to their
fate.
“You are to stay in a tent with
me,” said Langlade, “and you will be so
thoroughly surrounded by the army, that you will have
no earthly chance of escape. So I think it better
that you pledge your word not to attempt it for a
while, and I can make things easier for you.”
“No, I decline again to give
such a pledge,” said Robert firmly. “I
warn you, as I’ve warned the Chevalier de St.
Luc, that I’m going to escape.”
Langlade looked at him searchingly,
and then the face of the partisan kindled.
“I believe you mean it!”
he exclaimed. “You rely on yourself and
you think, too, that clever Onondaga, Tayoga, will
come again to your aid. I acknowledge that he’s
a great trailer, that he’s master of some things
that even I, Charles Langlade, the Owl, do not know,
but he cannot steal you away a second time.”
“I admit that I’ve been
thinking of Tayoga. He may be here now close
to us.”
The Owl gave a startled look at the
empty air, as if he expected Tayoga to be hovering
there, formidable but invisible.
“I see you do fear him,” laughed Robert.
“I do, but we shall be a match
for him this time, though I never underrate his powers.”
A young officer in a captain’s
uniform stopped suddenly and looked at Robert.
Then he advanced and extended his hand.
“It is evident that you like
the French,” he said, “since you are continually
coming back to them.”
“De Galissonnière!” exclaimed
Robert, as he warmly shook the extended hand.
“Yes, here I am, and I do like many of the French.
I’m sorry we’re official enemies.”
“I know that our people will
treat you well,” jested De Galissonnière, “and
then, when we take New York, you can tell the inhabitants
of that city what good masters we are and teach them
to be reconciled.”
Young Lennox made a reply in like
spirit, and De Galissonnière passed on. But a
man walking near with his shoulder well bound greeted
him in no such friendly manner. Instead a heavy
frown came over his face and his eyes flashed cruelly.
It was De Courcelles, nursing the wound Robert had
given him, and at the same time increasing his anger.
The youth returned his gaze defiantly.
“Colonel De Courcelles does
not like you,” said Langlade, who had noticed
the brief exchange.
“He does not,” replied
Robert. “It was my bullet that hurt his
shoulder, but I gave him the wound in fair combat.”
“And he hates you because of it?”
“That and other things.”
“What a strange man! A
wound received in fair and honorable battle should
be a tie that binds. If you had given it to me
in a combat on equal terms I’d have considered
it an honor conferred upon me by you. It would
have wiped away all grievance and have made us friends.”
“Then, Monsieur Langlade, I’m
afraid I missed my opportunity to make our friendship
warmer than it is.”
“How is that?”
“I held you also under the muzzle
of my rifle in that battle in the forest, but when
I recognized you I could not send the bullet.
I turned the weapon aside.”
“Ah, that was in truth a most
worthy and chivalrous act! Embrace me, my friend!”
“No! No! We American
men never embrace or kiss one another!”
“I should have remembered.
A cold people! But never mind! You are my
brother, and I esteem you so highly that I shall let
nothing on earth take you away from us. Can you
not reconsider your decision about the sister of the
Dove? She would make you a most admirable wife,
and after the war we could become the greatest rangers,
you and I, that the forest has ever known. And
the life in the woods is marvelous in its freedom
and variety!”
But Robert plead extreme youth once
more, and the Owl was forced to be resigned.
The small tent in which guard and prisoner were to
sleep was almost in the center of the camp and Robert
truly would have needed wings and the power of invisibility
to escape then. Instead of it he let the thought
pass for a while and went to sleep on a blanket.
* * * *
*
While young Lennox slept St. Luc was
in the tent of Montcalm talking with his leader.
The Marquis was in much perplexity. His spies
had brought him word of the great force that was mustering
in the south, and he did not know whether to await
the attack at Ticonderoga or to retreat to the powerful
fortifications at Crown Point on Lake Champlain.
His own ardent soul, flushed by the successes he had
already won, told him to stay, but prudence bade him
go. Now he wanted to hear what St. Luc had to
say and wanting it he knew also that the Chevalier
was the most valiant and daring of his captains.
He wished to hear from the dauntless leader just what
he wished to hear and nothing else.
“Your observations, then, confirm
what the spies have reported?” he said.
“The enemy can easily control Lake George!”
“He has only to make an effort
to do so, my general,” replied St. Luc.
“I could have captured the boat builders on the
point or have compelled their retirement, but large
forces came to their relief. The numbers of the
foe are even greater than we had feared.”
“How many men do you think General
Abercrombie will have when he advances against us?”
“Not less than fifteen thousand, sir, perhaps
more.”
The face of Montcalm fell.
“As many as that!” he exclaimed.
“It is more than four to one!”
“He cannot have less, sir,” repeated St.
Luc positively.
Montcalm’s brow clouded and he paced back and
forth.
“And the Indians who have been
so powerful an ally,” he said at last.
“They are frightened by the reports concerning
the Anglo-American army. After their fashion
they wish to run away before superior force, and fight
when the odds are not so great. It is most embarrassing
to lose their help, at such a critical time.
Can you do nothing with this sullen giant, Tandakora,
who has such influence over them?”
“I fear not, sir. He was
with me on the expedition from which I have just returned,
and he fared ill. He is in a most savage humor.
He is like a bear that will hide in the woods and
lick its hurts until the sting has passed. I
think we may consider it certain, sir, that they will
desert us, for the time.”
“And we shall have but little
more than three thousand French and Canadians to defend
the honor of France and His Majesty’s great colony
in North America. We might retreat to the fortifications
at Crown Point, and make an advantageous stand there,
but it goes ill with me to withdraw. Still, prudence
cries upon me to do so. I have talked with Bourlamaque,
Trepezec, Lotbiniére, the engineer, Langy, the partisan,
and other of my lieutenants whom you know. They
express varying opinions. Now, Colonel de St.
Luc, I want yours, an opinion that is absolutely your
own.”
St. Luc drew himself up and his warrior
soul flashed through his blue eyes.
“Sir,” he said, “it
goes as ill with me as it does with you to retreat.
My heart is here at Ticonderoga. Nor does prudence
suggest to me that we retreat to Crown Point.
My head agreeing with my heart says that we should
stand here.”
“And that is your conviction?”
“It is, sir. Ticonderoga is ours and we
can keep it.”
“Upon what do you base this
opinion? In such a crisis as this we must be
influenced by sound military reasons and not by sentiment.”
“My reasons, sir, are military.
That is why my heart goes with my head. It is
true that the Anglo-American army will come in overwhelming
numbers, but they may be overwhelming numbers that
will not overwhelm. As we know, the British commanders
have not adapted themselves as well as the French
to wilderness, campaigning. Their tactics and
strategy are the same as those they practice in the
open fields of Europe, and it puts them at a great
disadvantage. We have been willing to learn from
the Indians, who have practiced forest warfare for
centuries. And the British Colonials, the Bostonnais,
fall into the faults of the parent country. In
spite of all experience they, continue to despise
wilderness wile and stratagem, and in a manner that
is amazing. They walk continually into ambush,
and are cut up before they can get out of it.
I am not one to cheapen the valor of British and British
Colonials. It has been proved too often on desperate
fields, but in the kind of war we must wage here deep
in the wilds of North America, valor is often unavailing,
and I think, sir, that we can rely upon one fact.
The enemy will take us too lightly. He is sure
to do something that will keep him from using his whole
force at the right moment against us. Our forest
knowledge will work all the time in our behalf.
I entreat you, sir, to keep the army here at Ticonderoga
and await the attack.”
St. Luc spoke with intense earnestness,
and his words had all the ring of conviction.
Montcalm’s dark face was illumined. Again
he walked back and forth, in deep thought.
“The engineer, Lotbiniére, a
man whose opinion I respect, is of your mind,”
he said at last. “He says that whether Crown
Point or Ticonderoga, it’s merely either horn
of the dilemma, and naturally, if the dangers of the
two places are even, we prefer Ticonderoga and no
retreat. The Marquis de Vaudreuil had a plan to
save Ticonderoga by means of a diversion with a heavy
force under Bourlamaque, De Levis and Longueuil into
the Mohawk Valley. But some American rangers taken
near Lake George by Langy told him that Abercrombie
already had thirty thousand men at the head of George
and the Marquis at once abandoned the scheme.
It was lucky for us the rangers exaggerated so much
that the plan was destined to failure, as we needed
here the men who were sent on it. We save or
lose Ticonderoga by fighting at Ticonderoga itself
and by nothing else. I thank you, Colonel de St.
Luc, for your gallant and timely words, I have been
wavering and they have decided me. We stay here
and await the Anglo-American army.”
“And the star of France will
not fail us,” said St Luc, with intense conviction.
“I trust not. I feel more
confidence since I have decided, and I do know this:
the young men who are my lieutenants are as brave and
skillful leaders as any chief could desire. And
the troops will fight even ten to one, if I ask it
of them. It is a pleasure and a glory to command
troops of such incomparable bravery as the French.
But we must try to keep the Indians with us.
I confess that I know little about dealing with them.
Has this savage chief, Tandakora, come back to Ticonderoga?”
“I think he is here, sir.
Do you wish me to talk with him?”
“I do. I wish it very much.”
“He is very sullen, sir.
He holds that the Indians have received no rewards
for their services.”
“We have given them blankets
and food and muskets and ammunition.”
“He takes those as a matter
of course. But he means something else.
To tell you the truth, sir, the savages want us to
give prisoners to them.”
Montcalm’s face clouded again.
“To burn at the stake, or to
torture to death otherwise!” he exclaimed.
“My reputation and what is more, the reputation
of France, suffers already from the massacre at William
Henry, though God knows I would have prevented it
if I could. It happened so suddenly and so unexpectedly
that I could not stop it, until the harm was done.
But never, St. Luc, never will I give up a prisoner
to them for their tortures, though every savage in
our armies desert us!”
“I hold with you, sir, that
we cannot surrender prisoners to them, even though
the cause of France should suffer.”
“Then talk to this savage chief.
Make him see reason. Promise him and his people
what you wish in muskets, ammunition, blankets and
such things, but no prisoners, not one.”
St. Luc, with a respectful salute,
left the tent. He was torn by conflicting emotions.
He was depressed over the smallness of the French
numbers, and yet he was elated by Montcalm’s
decision to stay at Ticonderoga and await Abercrombie.
He was confident, as he had said, that some lucky
chance would happen, and that the overwhelming superiority
of the Anglo-American army would be nullified.
The Chevalier cast a discriminating
eye over the French position. The staunch battalion
of Berry lay near the foot of Lake George, but the
greater part of the army under the direct command of
Montcalm was in camp near a saw mill. The valiant
Bourlamaque was at the head of the portage, and another
force held the point of embarkation on Lake George.
But he knew that Montcalm would change these dispositions
when the day of battle came.
On the westward side of the camp several
fires burned and dark figures lay near them.
St. Luc marked one of these, a gigantic savage, stretched
at his ease, and he walked toward him. He pretended,
at first, that his errand had nothing to do with Tandakora,
but stood thoughtfully by the fire, for a minute or
two. Nor did the Ojibway chief take any notice.
He lay at ease, and it was impossible to tell what
thoughts were hidden behind his sullen face.
“Does Tandakora know what the
commander of the French army has decided to do?”
said St. Luc, at last.
“Tandakora is not thinking much
about it,” replied the chief.
“Montcalm is a brave general.
He shows that he is not afraid of the great army the
English and the Bostonnais have gathered. He will
not retreat to Crown Point or anywhere else, but will
stay at Ticonderoga and defeat his foes.”
The black eyes of the Ojibway flickered.
“Tandakora does not undertake
to tell Montcalm what he must do,” he said,
“nor must Montcalm undertake to tell Tandakora
what he should do. What Montcalm may do will
not now keep Tandakora awake.”
St. Luc’s heart filled with
hot anger, but he was used to dealing with Indians.
He understood their minds from the inside, and he had
a superb self-control of his own.
“We know that Tandakora is a
great chief,” he said evenly. “We
know too that he and his men are as free as the winds.
As they blow where they please so the warriors of
Tandakora go where they wish. But Onontio [The
Governor-General of Canada.] and Tandakora have long
been friends. They have been allies, they have
fought side by side in many a battle. If Onontio
falls, Tandakora falls with him. If the British
and Bostonnais are victorious, there will be room for
none of the tribes save the League of the Hodenosaunee,
and them Tandakora hates. Onontio will not be
able to protect them any more, and they will be driven
from all their hunting grounds.”
He paused to watch his words take
effect and they obviously stirred the soul of the
savage chief who moved uneasily.
“It is true,” he said.
“Sharp Sword never tells a falsehood. If
Onontio is struck down then the British, the Bostonnais
and the Hodenosaunee triumph, but my warriors bring
me word that our enemies have gathered the greatest
force the world has ever seen at the head of Andiatarocte.
They come thicker than the leaves of the forest.
They have more guns than we can count. They will
trample Montcalm and his soldiers under their feet.
So, according to our custom, Tandakora and his warriors
would go away into the forest, until the British and
the Bostonnais scatter, unable to find us. Then,
when they are not looking, we will strike them and
take many scalps.”
Tandakora spoke in his most impressive
manner, and, when he ceased, his eyes met St. Luc’s
defiantly. Again the blood of the Chevalier burned
with wrath, but as before he restrained himself, and
his smooth voice gave no hint of anger as he replied:
“Odds are of no avail against
Montcalm. The children of Onontio are used to
dealing with them. Remember, Tandakora, the great
victories Montcalm won at Oswego and William Henry.
He has the soul of a mighty chief. He has decided
to stay here at Ticonderoga and await the enemy, confident
that he will win the victory. Tandakora is a great
warrior, is he willing to have no share in such a
triumph?”
The cruel eyes of the Ojibway glistened.
“The heart of Tandakora is heavy
within him,” he said. “He and his
warriors are not afraid of the British and the Bostonnais.
They have fought by the side of Montcalm, but they
do not receive all the rewards that Onontio owes them.”
“Onontio has given to them freely
of his muskets and powder and bullets, and of his
blankets and food.”
“But he takes from them the
prisoners. We have no scalps to carry home.”
“It is against the custom of
the French to put prisoners to death or torture.
Moreover, we have no prisoners here. The rangers
taken by Langy have already been sent to Canada.”
“There is one in the camp now.
He was captured by three of my warriors, those you
sent out, and by the law of war he belongs to me.
Yet Sharp Sword and Montcalm hold him. I speak
of the youth Lennox, the comrade of the Onondaga,
Tayoga, who is my bitterest enemy. I hate Lennox
too because he has stood so often in my way and I demand
him, to do with as I please, because it is my right.”
The Ojibway moved close to St. Luc
and the fierce black eyes glared into those of stern
blue. The Chevalier did not change his smooth,
placatory tone as he replied:
“I cannot give up Lennox.
It is true that he was taken by your warriors, but
they were then in my service, so he is my prisoner.
But he is only a single captive, a lad. Ask for
some other and greater reward, Tandakora, and it shall
be yours.”
“Give me the prisoner, Lennox,
and I and my warriors stay and fight with you at Ticonderoga.
Refuse him and we go.”
The chief’s words were sharp
and decisive and St. Luc understood him. He knew
that the savage Ojibway hated young Lennox intensely,
and would put him to the torture. He never hesitated
an instant.
“I cannot yield the prisoner
to you,” he said. “The custom of the
French will not permit it.”
“The warriors are a great help
in battle, and the reward I ask is but small.
St. Luc knows that Montcalm needs men here. What
is this boy to St. Luc that he refuses so great a
price for him?”
“It cannot be done, Tandakora.
I keep the prisoner, Lennox, and later I will send
him to Canada to be held there until the war is over.”
“Then the forest to-morrow will
swallow up Tandakora and his warriors.”
The chief returned to the fire and
lay at ease in his blanket. St. Luc walked thoughtfully
back toward the tent of Montcalm. He knew that
it was his duty to report the offer of Tandakora to
his chief, but he did so reluctantly.
“You have refused it already?” said the
Marquis.
“I have, sir,” replied St. Luc.
“Then you have done well. I confirm you
in the refusal.”
St. Luc saluted with great respect, and again retired
from the tent.