CHAPTER I
THE BLUE BIRD
The tall youth, turning to the right,
went down a gentle slope until he came to a little
stream, where he knelt and drank. Despite his
weariness, his thirst and his danger he noticed the
silvery color of the water, and its soft sighing sound,
as it flowed over its pebbly bed, made a pleasant
murmur in his ear. Robert Lennox always had an
eye for the beautiful, and the flashing brook, in its
setting of deep, intense forest green, soothed his
senses, speaking to him of comfort and hope.
He drank again and then sat back among
the bushes, still breathing heavily, but with much
more freedom. The sharp pain left his chest,
new strength began to flow into his muscles, and, as
the body was renewed, so the spirit soared up and
became sanguine once more. He put his ear to
the earth and listened long, but heard nothing, save
sounds natural to the wilderness, the rustling of
leaves before the light wind, the whisper of the tiny
current, and the occasional sweet note of a bird in
brilliant dress, pluming itself on a bough in its pride.
He drew fresh courage from the peace of the woods,
and resolved to remain longer there by the stream.
Settling himself into the bushes and tall grass, until
he was hidden from all but a trained gaze, he waited,
body and soul alike growing steadily in vigor.
The forest was in its finest colors.
Spring had never brought to it a more splendid robe,
gorgeous and glowing, its green adorned with wild
flowers, and the bloom of bush and tree like a gigantic
stretch of tapestry. The great trunks of oak
and elm and maple grew in endless rows and overhead
the foliage gleamed, a veil of emerald lace before
the sun.
Robert drank in the glory, eye and
ear, but he never failed to watch the thickets, and
to listen for hostile sounds. He knew full well
that his life rested upon his vigilance and, often
as he had been in danger in the great northern woods,
he valued too much these precious days of his youth
to risk their sudden end through any neglect of his
own.
He looked now and then at the bird
which still preened itself on a little bough.
When the shadows from the waving foliage fell upon
its feathers it showed a bright purple, but when the
sunlight poured through, it glowed a glossy blue.
He did not know its name, but it was a brave bird,
a gay bird. Now and then it ceased its hopping
back and forth, raised its head and sent forth a deep,
sweet, thrilling note, amazing in volume to come from
so small a body. Had he dared to make a sound
Robert would have whistled a bar or two in reply.
The bird was a friend to one alone and in need, and
its dauntless melody made his own heart beat higher.
If a creature so tiny was not afraid in the wilderness
why should he be!
He had learned to take sharp notice
of everything. On the border and in such times,
man was compelled to observe with eye and ear, with
all the five senses; and often too with a sixth sense,
an intuition, an outgrowth of the other five, developed
by long habit and training, which the best of the
rangers possessed to a high degree, and in which the
lad was not lacking. He knew that the minutest
trifle must not escape his attention, or the forfeit
might be his life.
While he relaxed his own care not
at all, he felt that the bird was a wary sentinel
for him. He knew that if an enemy came in haste
through the undergrowth it would fly away before him.
He had been warned in that manner in another crisis
and he had full faith now in the caution of the valiant
little singer. His trust, in truth, was so great
that he rose from his covert and bent down for a third
drink of the clear cool water. Then he stood
up, his figure defiant, and took long, deep breaths,
his heart now beating smoothly and easily, as if it
had been put to no painful test. Still no sound
of a foe, and he thought that perhaps the pursuit
had died down, but he knew enough of the warriors
of the woods to make sure, before he resumed a flight
that would expose him in the open.
He crept back into the thicket, burying
himself deep, and was careful not to break a twig
or brush a leaf which to the unerring eyes of those
who followed could mark where he was. Hidden well,
but yet lying where he could see, he turned his gaze
back to the bird. It was now pouring out an unbroken
volume of song as it swayed on a twig, like a leaf
shaken in the wind. Its voice was thrillingly
sweet, and it seemed mad with joy, as its tiny throat
swelled with the burden of its melody. Robert,
in the thicket, smiled, because he too shared in so
much gladness.
A faint sound out of the far west
came to him. It was so slight that it was hard
to tell it from the whisper of the wind. It barely
registered on the drum of the ear, but when he listened
again and with all his powers he was sure that it
was a new and foreign note. Then he separated
it from the breeze among the leaves, and it seemed
to him to contain a quality like that of the human
voice. If so, it might be hostile, because his
friends, Willet, the hunter, and Tayoga, the Onondaga,
were many miles away. He had left them on the
shore of the lake, called by the whites, George, but
more musically by the Indians, Andiatarocte, and there
was nothing in their plans that would now bring them
his way. However welcome they might be he could
not hope for them; foes only were to be expected.
The faint cry, scarcely more than
a variation of the wind, registered again though lightly
on the drum of his ear, and now he knew that it came
from the lungs of man, man the pursuer, man the slayer,
and so, in this case, the red man, perhaps Tandakora,
the fierce Ojibway chief himself. Doubtless it
was a signal, one band calling to another, and he
listened anxiously for the reply, but he did not hear
it, the point from which it was sent being too remote,
and he settled back into his bed of bushes and grass,
resolved to keep quite still until he could make up
his mind about the next step. On the border as
well as elsewhere it was always wise, when one did
not know what to do, to do nothing.
But the tall youth was keenly apprehensive.
The signals indicated that the pursuing force had
spread out, and it might enclose him in a fatal circle.
His eager temperament, always sensitive to impressions,
was kindled into fire, and his imagination painted
the whole forest scene in the most vivid colors.
A thought at first, it now became a conviction with
him that Tandakora led the pursuit. The red leader
had come upon his trail in some way, and, venomous
from so many failures, would follow now for days in
an effort to take him. He saw the huge Ojibway
again with all the intensity of reality, his malignant
face, his mighty body, naked to the waist and painted
in hideous designs. He saw too the warriors who
were with him, many of them, and they were fully as
eager and fierce as their chief.
But his imagination which was so vital
a part of him did not paint evil and danger alone;
it drew the good in colors no less deep and glowing.
It saw himself refreshed, stronger of body and keener
of mind than ever, escaping every wile and snare laid
for his ruin. It saw him making a victorious
flight through the forest, his arrival at the shining
lake, and his reunion with Willet and Tayoga, those
faithful friends of many a peril.
He knew that if he waited long enough
he would hear the Indian call once more, as the bands
must talk to one another if they carried out a concerted
pursuit, and he decided that when it came he would
go. It would be his signal too. The only
trouble lay in the fact that they might be too near
when the cry was sent. Yet he must take the risk,
and there was his sentinel bird still pluming itself
in brilliant colors on its waving bough.
The bird sang anew, pouring forth
a brilliant tune, and Robert from his covert smiled
up at it again. It had a fine spirit, a gay spirit
like his own and now it would surely warn him if danger
crept too close. While the thought was fresh
in his mind the third signal came, and now it was
so clear and distinct that it indicated a rapid approach.
But he was still unable to choose a way for his flight
and he lingered for a sign from the bird. If
the warriors were stealing through the bushes it would
fly directly from them. At least he believed
so, and fancy had so much power over him, especially
in such a situation that belief became conviction.
The bird stopped singing suddenly,
but kept his perch on the waving bough. Robert
always insisted that it looked straight at him before
it uttered two or three sharp notes, and then, rising
in the air, hovered for a few minutes above the bough.
It was obvious to him that his call had come.
Steeped in Indian lore he had seen earth and air work
miracles, and it was not less wonderful that a living
creature should perform one now, and in his behalf.
For a breathless instant or two he
forgot the warriors and watched the bird, a flash
of blue flame against the green veil of the forest.
It was perched there in order to be sure that he saw,
and then it would show the way! With every pulse
beating hard he stood up silently, his eyes still
on the blue flash, confident that a new miracle was
at hand.
The bird uttered three or four notes,
not short or sharp now, but soft, long and beckoning,
dying away in the gentlest of echoes. His imagination,
as vivid as ever, translated it into a call to him
to come, and he was not in the least surprised, when
the blue flame like the pillow of cloud by day moved
slowly to the northeast, and toward the lake.
Stepping cautiously he followed his sign, thrilled
at the doing of the miracle, his eyes on his flying
guide, his ears attuned to warn him if any danger
threatened from the forest so near.
It never occurred to Robert that he
might not be led aright. His faith and confidence
were supreme. He had lived too much with Tayoga
not to share his belief that the hand of Manitou was
stretched forth now to lead those who put their trust
in him.
The blue flame that was a living bird
flew slowly on, pausing an instant or two on a bough,
turning for a short curve to right or left, but always
coming back to the main course that pointed toward
Andiatarocte.
He walked beside the little brook
from which he had drunk, then across it and over a
low hill, into a shallow valley, the forest everywhere,
but the undergrowth not too dense for easy passage.
His attentive ear brought no sound from either flank
save those natural to the woods, though he was sure
that a hostile call would come soon. It would
be time for the bands to talk to one another.
But he had no fear. The supreme intervention
had been made in his favor, and he kept his eyes on
his flying guide.
They crossed the valley and began
the ascent of another and high hill, rough with rocky
outcrops and a heavy growth of briars and vines.
His pace became slower of necessity and once or twice
he thought he had lost the blue flame, but it always
reappeared, and, for the first time since its flight
from the bough, it sang a few notes, a clear melodious
treble, carrying far through the windy forest.
The lad believed that the song was
meant for him. Clearly it said to him to follow,
and, with equal clearness, it told him that safety
lay only in the path he now traveled. He believed,
with all the ardor of his soul, and there was no weariness
in his body as he climbed the high hill. Near
the summit, he heard on his right the long dying Indian
cry so full of menace, its answer to the left, and
then a third shout directly behind him. He understood.
He was between the horns of a crescent, and they were
not far away. He left faint traces only as he
fled, but they had so much skill they could follow
with speed, and he was quite sure they expected to
take him. This belief did not keep his heart
from beating high. They did not know how he was
protected and led, and there was the blue flame before
him always showing him the way. He reached the
crest of the hill, and saw other hills, fold on fold,
lying before him. He had hoped to catch a glimpse
of the lake from the summit, but no glint of its waters
came, and then he knew it must yet be miles away.
His heart sank for a moment. Andiatarocte had
appealed to him as a refuge. Just why he did not
know, but he vaguely expected to find safety there.
Perhaps he would meet Willet and Tayoga by its shore,
and to him the three united always seemed invincible.
His courage was gone only an instant
or two. Then it came back stronger than ever.
The note of his guide, clear and uplifting, rose again,
and he increased his speed, lest he be enclosed within
those horns. The far slope was rocky and he leaped
from one stony outcrop to another. Even if he
could hide his trail only a few yards it would be
so much time gained while they were compelled to seek
it. He was forced to watch his steps here, but,
when he was at the bottom and looked up, the blue
flame was still before him. On it went over the
next slope and he followed at speed, noticing with
joy that the rocky nature of the ground continued,
and the most skillful warrior who ever lived must
spend many minutes hunting his traces. He had
no doubt that he was gaining and he had proof of it
in the fact that the pursuers now uttered no cry.
Had they been closing in on him they would have called
to one another in triumph.
Well for him that he was so strong
and sound of heart and lung! Well for him too
that he was borne up by a great spirit and by his belief
that a supreme power was working in his behalf.
He felt little weariness as he climbed a ridge.
His breath was easy and regular and his steps were
long and swift. His guide was before him.
Whatever his pace, whether fast or slow, the distance
between them never seemed to change. The bird
would dart aside, perhaps to catch an insect, but it
always returned promptly to its course.
His eyes caught a gleam of silver
from the crest of the fourth ridge that he crossed,
and he knew it was a ray of sunlight striking upon
the waters of the lake. Now his coveted haven
was not so far away, and the great pulses in his temples
throbbed. He would reach the lake, and he would
find refuge. Tandakora, in all his malice, would
fail once more. The thought was so pleasant to
him that he laughed aloud, and now feeling the need
to use the strength he had saved with such care he
began to run as fast as he could. It was his object
to open up a wide gap between himself and the warriors,
one so great that, if occasion came, he might double
or turn without being seen.
The forest remained dense, a sea of
trees with many bushes and clinging vines in which
an ignorant or incautious runner would have tripped
and fallen, but Robert was neither, and he did not
forget, as he fled, to notice where his feet fell.
His skill and presence of mind kept him from stumbling
or from making any noise that would draw the attention
of possible pursuers who might have crept up on his
flank. While they had only his faint trail to
guide them the pursuit was impeded, and, as long as
they did not see him, his chance to hide was far greater.
He lost sight of his feathered guide
two or three times, but the bird never failed to reappear,
a brilliant blue flame against the green wall of the
wilderness, his emblem of hope, leading him over the
hills and valleys toward Andiatarocte. Now he
saw the lake from a crest, not a mere band of silver
showing through the trees, but a broad surface reflecting
the sunlight in varied colors. It was a beacon
to him, and, summoning the last ounce of his strength
and will, he ran at amazing speed. Once more
he heard the warriors behind him calling to one another,
and they were much farther away. His mighty effort
had not been in vain. His pulses beat hard with
the throb of victory not yet won, but of which he
felt sure, and he rejoiced too, because he had come
again upon rocky ground, where his flight left so little
trace that Tandakora himself would be baffled for
a while.
He knew that the shores of the lake
at the point he was nearing were comparatively low,
and a vague plan to hide in the dense foliage at the
water’s edge came into his mind. He did
not know just how he would do it, but he would be
guided by events as they developed. The bird
surely would not lead him on unless less to safety,
and no doubt entered his mind. But it was highly
important to widen yet more the distance between him
and the warriors, and he still ran with all the speed
at his command.
The last crest was reached and before
him spread the splendid lake in its deep green setting,
a glittering spectacle that he never failed to admire,
and that he admired even now, when his life was in
peril, and instants were precious. The bird perched
suddenly on a bough, uttered a few thrilling notes,
and was then gone, a last blue flash into the dense
foliage. He did not see it again, and he did not
expect to do so. Its work was done. Strong
in the faith of the wilderness, he believed and always
believed.
He crouched a few moments on a ledge
and looked back. Tandakora and his men had not
yet come in sight, nor could he hear them. Doubtless
they had lost his trail, when he leaped from one stone
to another, and were now looking for it. His
time to hide, if he were to have one, was at hand,
and he meant to make the most of the chance. He
bent lower and remained there until his breathing
became regular and easy after his mighty effort, all
his five senses and the sixth that was instinct or
divination, alert to every sound.
Two or three birds began to sing,
but they were not his bird and he gave them no attention.
A rabbit leaped from its nest under the bushes and
ran. It went back on his trail and he considered
it a sure sign that his pursuers were yet distant.
He might steal another precious minute or two for
his overworked lungs and heart. He knew the need
of doing everything to gain a little more strength.
It was his experience in border war and the stern
training of Willet and Tayoga that made him able to
do so, and he was ruler enough of himself to wait yet
a little longer than he had planned. Then when
he felt that Tandakora must be near, he straightened
up, though not to his full height, and ran swiftly
down the long slope to the lake.
He found at the bottom a narrow place
between cliff and water, grown thickly with bushes,
and he followed it at least half a mile, until the
shores towered above him dark and steep, and the lake
came up against them like a wall. He could go
no farther and he waded into a dense growth of bushes
and weeds, where he stood up to his waist in water
and waited, hidden well.
He knew that if the warriors followed
and saw him he would have little opportunity to escape,
but the chances were a hundred to one against their
finding him in such a covert. Rock and water had
blotted out his trail and he felt safe. He secured
his belt, containing his smaller weapons and ammunition,
about his shoulders beyond touch of water, and put
his rifle in the forks of two bushes, convenient to
his hands.
It was a luxury to rest, even if one
did stand half-sunken in a lake. The water was
cold, but he did not yet feel the chill, and he listened
for possible sounds of pursuit. He heard, after
a while, the calls of warriors to one another and
he laughed softly to himself. The shouts were
faint and moreover they came from the crest of the
cliff. They had not found his trail down the
slope and they were hunting for him on the heights.
He laughed again with sheer satisfaction. He had
been right. Rock and water had come to his aid,
and he was too well hidden even for the eager eyes
of Tandakora and his warriors to follow him.
He waited a long time. He heard
the cries nearer him, then farther away, and, at last,
at such a great distance that they could barely be
separated from the lap of the waters. He was growing
cold now; the chill from the lake was rising in his
body, but with infinite patience bred by long practice
of the wilderness he did not stir. He knew that
silence could be deceptive. Some of the warriors
might come back, and might wait in a thicket, hoping
that he would rise and disclose himself, thinking
the danger past. More than one careless wanderer
in the past had been caught in such a manner, and he
was resolved to guard against the trick. Making
the last call upon his patience, he stood motionless,
while the chill crept steadily upward through his
veins and muscles.
He could see the surface of the open
lake through the veil of bushes and tall grass.
The water broke in gentle waves under a light wind,
and kept up a soft sighing that was musical and soothing.
Had he been upon dry land he could have closed his
eyes and gone to sleep, but, as it was, he did not
complain, since he had found safety, if not comfort.
He even found strength in himself, despite his situation,
to admire the gleaming expanse of Andiatarocte with
its shifting colors, and the far cliffs lofty and
dim.
Much of Robert’s life, much
of its most eventful portion, was passing around this
lake, and he had a peculiar affection for it.
It always aroused in him a sense of beauty, of charm
and of majesty, and he had grown too to look upon
it as a friend and protector. He believed that
it had brought him good luck, and he did not doubt
that it would do so again.
He looked for a canoe, one perhaps
that might contain Willet and Tayoga, seeking him
and keeping well beyond the aim of a lurking marksman
on the shore, but he saw no shadow on the water, nothing
that could be persuaded into the likeness of a boat,
only wild fowl circling and dipping, and, now and
then, a gleam where a fish leaped up to fall swiftly
back again. He was alone, and he must depend upon
himself only.
He began to move a little, to lift
one foot and then the other, careful to make no splash
in the water, and the slight exercise checked the
creeping chill. Encouraged, he increased it, stopping
at intervals to listen for the approach of a foe.
There was no sound and he walked back and forth a
little. Presently his eyes, trained to observe
all things, noticed a change in the air. A gray
tint, so far a matter of quality rather than color,
was coming into it, and his heart leaped with joy.
Absorbed in his vital struggle he had failed to reckon
the passage of time. The day was closing and blessed,
covering night was at hand. Robert loved the
day and the sun, but darkness was always a friend
of those who fled, and now he prayed that it would
come thick and dark.
The sun still hung over the eastern
shores, red and blazing, but before long it went down,
seeming to sink into the lake, and the night that
Robert had wished, heavy and black, swept over the
earth. Then he left the water, and stood upon
dry land, the narrow ledge between the cliff and the
waves, where he took off his lower garments, wrung
them as nearly dry as he could, and, hanging them
on the bushes, waited for the wind to do the rest.
His sense of triumph had never been so strong.
Alone and relying only upon his own courage and skill,
he had escaped the fierce Tandakora and his persistent
warriors. He could even boast of it to Willet
and Tayoga, when he found them again.
It was wonderful to feel safe, after
great peril, and his bright imagination climbed the
heights. As he had escaped them then, so he would
slip always from the snares of his foes. It was
this quality in him, the spirit of eternal hope, that
appealed so strongly to all who knew him, and that
made him so attractive.
After a while, he took venison and
hominy from his knapsack and ate with content.
Then he resumed his clothing, now dried completely
by the wind, and felt that he had never been stronger
or more fitted to cope with attack.
The darkness was intense and the surface
of the lake showed through it, only a fitful gray.
The cliff behind him was now a black bank, and its
crest could not be seen at all. He was eager to
go, but he still used the patience so necessary in
the wilderness, knowing that the longer he waited
the less likely he was to meet the band of Tandakora.
He lay down in a thicket of tall grass
and bushes, resolved not to start before midnight,
and he felt so much at peace that before he knew he
was going to sleep he was sleeping. When he awoke
he felt a little dismay at first, but it was soon
gone. After all, he had passed the time of waiting
in the easiest way, and no enemy had come. The
moon and stars were not to be seen, but instinct told
him that it was not beyond midnight.
He arose to go, but a slight sound
came from the lake, and he stayed. It was merely
the cry of the night bird, calling to its mate, one
would have said, but Robert’s attention was attracted
by an odd inflection in it, a strain that seemed familiar.
He listened with the utmost attention, and when it
came a second time, he was so sure that his pulses
beat very fast.
Willet and Tayoga, as he had hoped
in the day, were out there on the lake. It had
been foolish of him to think they would come in the
full sunlight, exposed to every hostile eye.
It was their natural course to approach in the dark
and send a signal that he would know. He imitated
the call, a soft, low note, but one that traveled far,
and soon the answer came. No more was needed.
The circle was complete. Willet and Tayoga were
on the lake and they knew that he was at the foot of
the cliff, waiting.
He took a long breath of intense relief
and delight. Tandakora would resume the search
for him in the morning, hunting along the crest, and
he might even find his way to the narrow ledge on which
Robert now stood, but the lad would be gone across
the waters, where he left no trail.
He saw a stout young bush growing
on the edge of the lake, and, leaning far out while
he held on to it with one hand, he watched. He
did not repeat the call. One less cautious would
have done so, but he knew that his friends had located
him already and he meant to run no risk of telling
the warriors also where he stood. Meanwhile, he
listened attentively for the sound of the paddles,
but many long minutes passed before he heard the faint
dip, dip that betokened the approach of Willet and
Tayoga. He never doubted for an instant that
it was their canoe and again his heart felt that triumphant
feeling. Surely no man ever had more loyal or
braver comrades! If he had malignant enemies
he also had staunch friends who more than offset them.
He saw presently a faint shadow, a
deeper dark in the darkness, and he uttered very low
the soft note of the bird. In an instant came
the answer, and then the shadow, turning, glided toward
him. A canoe took form and shape and he saw in
it two figures, which were unmistakably those of Willet
and Tayoga, swinging their paddles with powerful hands.
Again he felt a thrill of joy because these two trusty
comrades had come. But it was absurd ever to
doubt for an instant that they would come!
He leaned out from the tree to the
last inch, and called in a penetrating whisper:
“Dave! Tayoga! This way!”
The canoe shifted its course a little,
and entered the bushes by the side of Robert, the
hunter and the Onondaga putting down their dripping
paddles, and stepping out in the shallow water.
In the dusk the great figure of Willet loomed up,
more than ever a tower of strength, and the slender
but muscular form of Tayoga, the very model of a young
Indian warrior, seemed to be made of gleaming bronze.
Had Robert needed any infusion of courage and will
their appearance alone would have brought it with
them.
“And we have found Dagaeoga
again!” said the Onondaga, in a whimsical tone.
“No I have found you,”
said Robert. “You were lost from me, I was
not lost from you.”
“It is the same, and I think
by your waiting here at midnight that you have been
in great peril.”
“So I have been, and I may be
yet—and you too. I have been pursued
by warriors, Tandakora at their head. I have not
seen them, but I know from the venom and persistence
of the pursuit that he leads them. I eluded them
by coming down the cliff and hiding among the bushes
here. I stood in the water all the afternoon.”
“We thought you might be somewhere
along the western shore. After we divided for
our scout about the lake, the Great Bear and I met
as we had arranged, but you did not come. We
concluded that the enemy had got in the way, and so
we took from its hiding place a canoe which had been
left on a former journey, and began to cruise upon
Andiatarocte, calling at far intervals for you.”
He spoke in his usual precise school
English and in a light playful tone, but Robert knew
the depth of his feelings. The friendship of the
white lad and the red was held by hooks of steel like
that of Damon and Pythias of old.
“I think I heard your first
call,” said Robert. “It wasn’t
very loud, but never was a sound more welcome, nor
can I be too grateful for that habit you have of hiding
canoes here and there in the wilderness. It’s
saved us all more than once.”
“It is merely the custom of
my people, forced upon us by need, and I but follow.”
“It doesn’t alter my gratitude.
I see that the canoe is big enough for me too.”
“So it is, Dagaeoga. You
can enter it. Take my paddle and work.”
The three adjusted their weight in
the slender craft, and Robert, taking Willet’s
paddle instead of Tayoga’s, they pushed out into
the lake, while the great hunter sat with his long
rifle across his knees, watching for the least sign
that the warriors might be coming.