CHAPTER I
THE HERALDS OF PERIL
The three, the white youth, the red
youth, and the white man, lay deep in the forest,
watching the fire that burned on a low hill to the
west, where black figures flitted now and then before
the flame. They did not stir or speak for a long
time, because a great horror was upon them. They
had seen an army destroyed a few days before by a savage
but invisible foe. They had heard continually
for hours the fierce triumphant yells of the warriors
and they had seen the soldiers dropping by hundreds,
but the woods and thickets had hid the foe who sent
forth such a rain of death.
Robert Lennox could not yet stop the
quiver of his nerves when he recalled the spectacle,
and Willet, the hunter, hardened though he was to
war, shuddered in spite of himself at the memory of
that terrible battle in the leafy wilderness.
Nor was Tayoga, the young Onondaga, free from emotion
when he thought of Braddock’s defeat, and the
blazing triumph it meant for the western tribes, the
enemies of his people.
They had turned back, availing themselves
of their roving commission, when they saw that the
victors were not pursuing the remains of the beaten
army, and now they were watching the French and Indians.
Fort Duquesne was not many miles away, but the fire
on the hill had been built by a party of Indians led
by a Frenchman, his uniform showing when he passed
between eye and flame, the warriors being naked save
for the breech cloth.
“I hope it’s not St. Luc,” said
Robert.
“Why?” asked Willet.
“He was in the battle. We saw him leading
on the Indian hosts.”
“I know. That was fair
combat, I suppose, and the French used the tools they
had. The Chevalier could scarcely have been a
loyal son of France if he had not fought us then,
but I don’t like to think of him over there
by the fire, leading a band of Indians who will kill
and scalp women and children as well as men along
the border.”
“Nor I, either, though I’m
not worried about it. I can’t tell who the
man is, but I know it’s not St. Luc. Now
I see him black against the blaze, and it’s
not the Chevalier’s figure.”
Robert suddenly drew a long breath,
as if he had made a surprising recognition.
“I’m not sure,”
he said, “but I notice a trick of movement now
and then reminding me of someone. I’m thinking
it’s the same Auguste de Courcelles, Colonel
of France, whom we met first in the northern woods
and again in Quebec. There was one memorable night,
as you know, Dave, when we had occasion to mark him
well.”
“I think you’re right,
Robert,” said the hunter. “It looks
like De Courcelles.”
“I know he is right,”
said Tayoga, speaking for the first time. “I
have been watching him whenever he passed before the
fire, and I cannot mistake him.”
“I wonder what he’s doing
here,” said Robert. “He may have been
in the battle, or he may have come to Duquesne a day
or two later.”
“I think,” said Willet,
“that he’s getting ready to lead a band
against the border, now almost defenseless.”
“He is a bad man,” said
Tayoga. “His soul is full of wickedness
and cruelty, and it should be sent to the dwelling
place of the evil minded. If Great Bear and Dagaeoga
say the word I will creep through the thickets and
kill him.”
Robert glanced at him. The Onondaga
had spoken in the gentle tones of one who felt grief
rather than anger. Robert knew that his heart
was soft, that in ordinary life none was kinder than
Tayoga. And yet he was and always would be an
Indian. De Courcelles had a bad mind, and he was
also a danger that should be removed. Then why
not remove him?
“No, Tayoga,” said Willet.
“We can’t let you risk yourself that way.
But we might go a little closer without any great
danger. Ah, do you see that new figure passing
before the blaze?”
“Tandakora!” exclaimed
the white youth and the red youth together.
“Nobody who knows him could
mistake him, even at this distance. I think he
must be the biggest Indian in all the world.”
“But a bullet would bring him
crashing to earth as quickly as any other,”
said the Onondaga.
“Aye, so it would, Tayoga, but
his time hasn’t come yet, though it will come,
and may we be present when your Manitou deals with
him as he deserves. Suppose we curve to the right
through these thick bushes, and from the slope there
I think we can get a much better view of the band.”
They advanced softly upon rising ground,
and being able to approach two or three hundred yards,
saw quite clearly all those around the fire. The
white man was in truth De Courcelles, and the gigantic
Indian, although there could have been no mistake
about him, was Tandakora, the Ojibway. The warriors,
about thirty in number, were, Willet thought, a mingling
of Ojibways, Pottawattomies and Ottawas. All were
in war paint and were heavily armed, many of them
carrying big muskets with bayonets on the end, taken
from Braddock’s fallen soldiers. Three had
small swords belted to their naked waists, not as
weapons, but rather as the visible emblems of triumph.
As he looked, Robert’s head
grew hot with the blood pumped up from his angry heart.
It seemed to him that they swaggered and boasted, although
they were but true to savage nature.
“Easy, lad,” said Willet,
putting a restraining hand upon his shoulder.
“It’s their hour. You can’t
deny that, and we’ll have to bide a while.”
“But will our hour ever come,
Dave? Our army has been beaten, destroyed.
The colonies and mother country alike are sluggish,
and now have no plans, the whole border lies at the
mercy of the tomahawk and the French power in Canada
not only grows all the time, but is directed by able
and daring men.”
“Patience, lad, patience!
Our strength is greater than that of the foe, although
we may be slower in using it. But I tell you we’ll
see our day of triumph yet.”
“They are getting ready to move,”
whispered the Onondaga. “The Frenchman
and the band will march northward.”
“And not back to Duquesne?”
said Willet. “What makes you think so,
Tayoga?”
“What is left for them to do
at Duquesne? It will be many a day before the
English and Americans come against it again.”
“That, alas, is true, Tayoga.
They’re not needed longer here, nor are we.
They’ve put out their fire, and now they’re
off toward the north, just as you said they would
be. Tandakora and De Courcelles lead, marching
side by side. A pretty pair, well met here in
the forest. Now, I wish I knew where they were
going!”
“Can’t the Great Bear guess?” said
the Onondaga.
“No, Tayoga. How should I?”
“Doesn’t Great Bear remember
the fort in the forest, the one called Refuge?”
“Of course I do, Tayoga!
And the brave lads, Colden and Wilton and Carson and
their comrades who defended it so long and so well.
That’s the most likely point of attack, and
now, since Braddock’s army is destroyed it’s
too far in the wilderness, too exposed, and should
be abandoned. Suppose we carry a warning!”
Robert’s eyes glistened.
The idea made a strong appeal to him. He had
mellow memories of those Philadelphia lads, and it
would be pleasant to see them again. The three,
in bearing the alarm, might achieve, too, a task that
would lighten, in a measure, the terror along the border.
It would be a relief at least to do something while
the government disagreed and delayed.
“Let’s start at once for
Fort Refuge,” he said, “and help them to
get away before the storm breaks. What do you
say, Tayoga?”
“It is what we ought to do,”
replied the Onondaga, in his precise English of the
schools.
“Come,” said Willet, leading
the way, and the three, leaving the fire behind them,
marched rapidly into the north and east. Two miles
gone, and they stopped to study the sun, by which
they meant to take their reckoning.
“The fort lies there,”
said Willet, pointing a long finger, “and by
my calculations it will take us about five days and
nights to reach it, that is, if nothing gets in our
way.”
“You think, then,” asked
Robert, “that the French and Indians are already
spreading a net?”
“The Indians might stop, Robert,
my lad, to exult over their victory and to celebrate
it with songs and dances, but the French leaders, whose
influence with them is now overwhelming, will push
them on. They will want to reap all the fruits
of their great triumph by the river. I’ve
often told you about the quality of the French and
you’ve seen for yourself. Ligneris, Contrecoeur,
De Courcelles, St. Luc and the others will flame like
torches along the border.”
“And St. Luc will be the most
daring, skillful and energetic of them all.”
“It’s a fact that all
three of us know, Robert, and now, having fixed our
course, we must push ahead with all speed. De
Courcelles, Tandakora and the warriors are on the
march, too, and we may see them again before we see
Fort Refuge.”
“The forest will be full of
warriors,” said Tayoga, speaking with great
gravity. “The fort will be the first thought
of the western barbarians, and of the tribes from
Canada, and they will wish to avenge the defeat they
suffered before it.”
It was not long until they had ample
proof that the Onondaga’s words were true.
They saw three trails in the course of the day, and
all of them led toward the fort. Willet and Tayoga,
with their wonderful knowledge of the forest, estimated
that about thirty warriors made one trail, about twenty
another, and fifteen the smallest.
“They’re going fast, too,”
said the hunter, “but we must go faster.”
“They will see our traces,”
said Tayoga, “and by signaling to one another
they will tell all that we are in the woods. Then
they will set a force to destroy us, while the greater
bands go on to take the fort.”
“But we’ll pass ’em,”
said Robert confidently. “They can’t
stop us!”
Tayoga and the hunter glanced at him.
Then they looked at each other and smiled. They
knew Robert thoroughly, they understood his vivid and
enthusiastic nature which, looking forward with so
much confidence to success, was apt to consider it
already won, a fact that perhaps contributed in no
small measure to the triumph wished so ardently.
At last, the horror of the great defeat in the forest
and the slaughter of an army was passing. It
was Robert’s hopeful temperament and brilliant
mind that gave him such a great charm for all who met
him, a charm to which even the fifty wise old sachems
in the vale of Onondaga had not been insensible.
“No, Robert,” said the
Great Bear gravely, “I don’t think anything
can stop us. I’ve a prevision that De Courcelles
and Tandakora will stand in our way, but we’ll
just brush ’em out of it.”
They had not ceased to march at speed,
while they talked, and now Tayoga announced the presence
of a river, an obstacle that might prove formidable
to foresters less expert than they. It was lined
on both sides with dense forest, and they walked along
its bank about a mile until they came to a comparatively
shallow place where they forded it in water above
their knees. However, their leggings and moccasins
dried fast in the midsummer sun, and, experiencing
no discomfort, they pressed forward with unabated
speed.
All the afternoon they continued their
great journey to save those at the fort, fording another
river and a half dozen creeks and leaping across many
brooks. Twice they crossed trails leading to the
east and twice other trails leading to the west, but
they felt that all of them would presently turn and
join in the general march converging upon Fort Refuge.
They were sure, too, that De Courcelles, Tandakora
and their band were marching on a line almost parallel
with them, and that they would offer the greatest
danger.
Night came, a beautiful, bright summer
night with a silky blue sky in which multitudes of
silver stars danced, and they sought a covert in a
dense thicket where they lay on their blankets, ate
venison, and talked a little before they slept.
Robert’s brilliant and enthusiastic
mood lasted. He could see nothing but success.
With the fading of the great slaughter by the river
came other pictures, deep of hue, intense and charged
with pleasant memories. Life recently had been
a great panorama to him, bright and full of changes.
He could not keep from contrasting his present position,
hid in a thicket to save himself from cruel savages,
with those vivid days at Quebec, his gorgeous period
in New York, and the gay time with sporting youth
in the cozy little capital of Williamsburg.
But the contrast, so far from making
him unhappy, merely expanded his spirit. He rejoiced
in the pleasures that he had known and adapted himself
to present conditions. Always influenced greatly
by what lay just around him, he considered their thicket
the best thicket in which he had ever been hidden.
The leaves of last year, drifted into little heaps
on which they lay, were uncommonly large and soft.
The light breeze rustling the boughs over his head
whispered only of peace and ease, and the two comrades,
who lay on either side of him, were the finest comrades
any lad ever had.
“Tayoga,” he asked, and
his voice was sincerely earnest, “can you see
on his star Tododaho, the founder and protector of
the great league of the Hodenosaunee?”
The young Onondaga, his face mystic
and reverential, gazed toward the west where a star
of great size and beauty quivered and blazed.
“I behold him,” he replied.
“His face is turned toward us, and the wise
serpents lie, coil on coil, in his hair. There
are wreaths of vapor about his eyes, but I can see
them shining through, shining with kindness, as the
mighty chief, who went away four hundred years ago,
watches over us. His eyes say that so long as
our deeds are just, so long as we walk in the path
that Manitou wishes, we shall be victorious.
Now a cloud passes before the star, and I cannot see
the face of Tododaho, but he has spoken, and it will
be well for us to remember his words.”
He sank back on his blanket and closed
his eyes as if he, too, in thought, had shot through
space to some great star. Robert and Willet were
silent, sharing perhaps in his emotion. The religion
and beliefs of the Indian were real and vital to them,
and if Tododaho promised success to Tayoga then the
promise would be fulfilled.
“I think, Robert,” said
Willet, “that you’d better keep the first
watch. Wake me a little while before midnight,
and I’ll take the second.”
“Good enough,” said Robert.
“I think I can hear any footfall Tandakora may
make, if he approaches.”
“It is not enough to hear the
footfall of the Ojibway,” said Tayoga, opening
his eyes and sitting up. “To be a great
sentinel and forester worthy to be compared with the
greatest, Dagaeoga must hear the whisper of the grass
as it bends under the lightest wind, he must hear the
sound made by the little leaf as it falls, he must
hear the ripple in the brook that is flowing a hundred
yards from us, and he must hear the wild flowers talking
together in the night. Only then can Dagaeoga
call himself a sentinel fit to watch over two such
sleeping foresters as the Great Bear and myself.”
“Close your eyes and go to sleep
without fear,” said Robert in the same vein.
“I shall hear Tandakora breathing if he comes
within a mile of us, at the same distance I shall
hear the moccasin of De Courcelles, when it brushes
against last year’s fallen leaf, and at half
a mile I shall see the look of revenge and cruelty
upon the face of the Ojibway seeking for us.”
Willet laughed softly, but with evident satisfaction.
“You two boys are surely the
greatest talkers I’ve heard for a long time,”
he said. “You have happy thoughts and you
put ’em into words. If I didn’t know
that you had a lot of deeds, too, to your credit, I’d
call you boasters, but knowing it, I don’t.
Go ahead and spout language, because you’re
only lads and I can see that you enjoy it.”
“I’m going to sleep now,”
said Tayoga, “but Dagaeoga can keep on talking
and be happy, because he will talk to himself long
after we have gone to the land of dreams.”
“If I do talk to myself,”
said Robert, “it’s because I like to talk
to a bright fellow, and I like to have a bright fellow
talk to me. Sleep as soundly as you please, you
two, because while you’re sleeping I can carry
on an intellectual conversation.”
The hunter laughed again.
“It’s no use, Tayoga,”
he said. “You can’t put him down.
The fifty wise old sachems in the vale of Onondaga
proclaimed him a great orator, and great orators must
always have their way.”
“It is so,” said the Onondaga.
“The voice of Dagaeoga is like a river.
It flows on forever, and like the murmur of the stream
it will soothe me to deeper slumbers. Now I sleep.”
“And so do I,” said the hunter.
It seemed marvelous that such formal
announcements should be followed by fact, but within
three minutes both went to that pleasant land of dreams
of which they had been talking so lightly. Their
breathing was long and regular and, beyond a doubt,
they had put absolute faith in their sentinel.
Robert’s mind, so quick to respond to obvious
confidence, glowed with resolve. There was no
danger now that he would relax the needed vigilance
a particle, and, rifle in the hollow of his arm, he
began softly to patrol the bushes.
He was convinced that De Courcelles
and Tandakora were not many miles away—they
might even be within a mile—and memory of
a former occasion, somewhat similar, when Tayoga had
detected the presence of the Ojibway, roused his emulation.
He was determined that, while he was on watch, no
creeping savage should come near enough to strike.
Hand on the hammer and trigger of
his rifle he walked in an ever widening circle about
his sleeping comrades, searching the thickets with
eyes, good naturally and trained highly, and stopping
now and then to listen. Two or three times he
put his ear to the earth that he might hear, as Tayoga
had bade him, the rustle of leaves a mile away.
His eager spirit, always impatient
for action, found relief in the continuous walking,
and the steady enlargement of the circle in which he
traveled, acquiring soon a radius of several hundred
yards. On the western perimeter he was beyond
the deep thicket, and within a magnificent wood, unchoked
by undergrowth. Here the trees stood up in great,
regular rows, ordered by nature, and the brilliant
moonlight clothed every one of them in a veil of silver.
On such a bright night in summer the wilderness always
had for him an elusive though powerful beauty, but
he felt its danger. Among the mighty trunks, with
no concealing thickets, he could be seen easily, if
prowling savages were near, and, as he made his circles,
he always hastened through what he called to himself
his park, until he came to the bushes, in the density
of which he was well hidden from any eye fifty feet
away.
It was an hour until midnight, and
the radius of his circle had increased another fifty
yards, when he came again to the great spaces among
the oaks and beeches. Halfway through and he sank
softly down behind the trunk of a huge oak. Either
in fact or in a sort of mental illusion, he had heard
a moccasin brush a dry leaf far away. The command
of Tayoga, though spoken in jest, had been so impressive
that his ear was obeying it. Firm in the belief
that his own dark shadow blurred with the dark trunk,
and that he was safe from the sight of a questing
eye, he lay there a long time, listening.
In time, the sound, translated from
fancy into fact, came again, and now he knew that
it was near, perhaps not more than a hundred yards
away, the rustling of a real moccasin against a real
dry leaf. Twice and thrice his ear signaled to
his brain. It could not be fancy. It was
instead an alarming fact.
He was about to creep from the tree,
and return to his comrades with word that the enemy
was near, but he restrained his impulse, merely crouching
a little lower that his dark shadow might blend with
the dark earth as well as the dark trunk. Then
he heard several rustlings and the very low murmur
of voices.
Gradually the voices which had been
blended together, detached themselves and Robert recognized
those of Tandakora and De Courcelles. Presently
they came into the moonlight, followed by the savage
band, and they passed within fifty yards of the youth
who lay in the shelter of the trunk, pressing himself
into the earth.
The Frenchman and the Ojibway were
talking with great earnestness and Robert’s
imagination, plumbing the distance, told him the words
they said. Tandakora was stating with great emphasis
that the three whose trail they had found had gone
on very fast, obviously with the intention of warning
the garrison at the fort, and if they were to be cut
off the band must hasten, too. De Courcelles
was replying that in his opinion Tandakora was right,
but it would not be well to get too far ahead.
They must throw out flankers as they marched, but
there was no immediate need of them. If the band
spread out before dawn it would be sufficient.
Robert’s fancy was so intense
and creative that, beginning by imagining these things
so, he made them so. The band therefore was sure
to go on without searching the thickets on either
right or left at present, and all immediate apprehension
disappeared from his mind. Tandakora and De Courcelles
were in the center of the moonlight, and although knowing
them evil, he was surprised to see how very evil their
faces looked, each in its own red or white way.
He could remember nothing at that moment but their
wickedness, and their treacherous attacks upon his
life and those of his friends, and the memory clothed
them about with a hideous veil through which only
their cruel souls shone. It was characteristic
of him that he should always see everything in extreme
colors, and in his mind the good were always very good
and the bad were very bad.
Hence it was to him an actual physical
as well as mental relief, when the Frenchman, the
Ojibway and their band, passing on, were blotted from
his eyes by the forest. Then he turned back to
the thicket in which his comrades lay, and bent over
them for the purpose of awakening them. But before
he could speak or lay a hand upon either, Tayoga sat
up, his eyes wide open.
“You come with news that the enemy has been
at hand!”
“Yes, but how did you know it?”
“I see it in your look, and,
also when I slept, the Keeper of Dreams whispered
it in my ear. An evil wind, too, blew upon my
face and I knew it was the breath of De Courcelles
and Tandakora. They have been near.”
“They and their entire band
passed not more than four hundred yards to the eastward
of us. I lay in the bush and saw them distinctly.
They’re trying to beat us to Fort Refuge.”
“But they won’t do it,
because we won’t let ’em,” said Willet,
who had awakened at the talking. “We’ll
make a curve and get ahead of ’em again.
You watched well, Robert.”
“I obeyed the strict injunctions
of Tayoga,” said young Lennox, smiling faintly.
“He bade me listen so intently that I should
hear the rustle of a dry leaf when a moccasin touched
it a mile away in the forest. Well, I heard it,
and going whence the sound came I saw De Courcelles,
Tandakora and their warriors pass by.”
“You love to paint pictures
with words, Robert. I see that well, but ’tis
not likely that you exaggerate so much, after all.
I’m sorry you won’t get your share of
sleep, but we must be up and away.”
“I’ll claim a double portion
of it later on, Dave, but I agree with you that what
we need most just now is silence and speed, and speed
and silence.”
The three, making a curve toward the
east, traveled at high speed through the rest of the
night, Tayoga now leading and showing all his inimitable
skill as a forest trailer. In truth, the Onondaga
was in his element. His spirits, like Robert’s,
rose as dangers grew thicker around them, and he had
been affected less than either of his comrades by the
terrible slaughter of Braddock’s men. Mentally
at least, he was more of a stoic, and woe to the vanquished
was a part of the lore of all the Indian tribes.
The French and their allies had struck a heavy blow
and there was nothing left for the English and Americans
to do but to strike back. It was all very simple.
Day came, and at the suggestion of
Willet they rested again in the thickets. Robert
was not really weary, at least the spirit uplifted
him, though he knew that he must not overtask the
body. His enthusiasm, based upon such a sanguine
temperament, continued to rise. Again he foresaw
glittering success. They would shake off all their
foes, reach the fort in time, and lead the garrison
and the people who had found refuge there safely out
of the wilderness.
Where they lay the bushes were very
dense. Before hiding there they had drunk abundantly
at a little brook thirty or forty feet away, and now
they ate with content the venison that formed their
breakfast. Over the vast forest a brilliant sun
was rising and here the leaves and grass were not
burned much by summer heat. It looked fresh and
green, and the wind sang pleasantly through its cool
shadows. It appealed to Robert. With his
plastic nature he was all for the town when he was
in town, and now in the forest he was all for the
forest.
“I can understand why you love
it so well,” he said to Tayoga, waving his hand
at the verdant world that curved about them.
“My people and their ancestors
have lived in it for more generations than anyone
knows,” said the Onondaga, his eyes glistening.
“I have been in the white man’s schools,
and the white man’s towns, and I have seen the
good in them, but this is my real home. This is
what I love best. My heart beats strongest for
the forest.”
“My own heart does a lot of
beating for the woods,” said Willet, thoughtfully,
“and it ought to do so, I’ve spent so many
years of my life in them—happy years, too.
They say that no matter how great an evil may be some
good will come out of it, and this war will achieve
one good end.”
“What is that, Great Bear?”
“It will delay the work of the
ax. Men will be so busy with the rifle that they
will have mighty little time for the ax. The trees
will stop falling for a while, and the forest will
cover again the places where it has been cleared away.
Why, the game itself will increase!”
“How long do you think we’d
better stay here?” asked Robert, his eager soul
anxious to be on again.
“Patience! patience, my lad,”
replied Willet. “It’s one thing that
you’ll have to practice. We don’t
want to run squarely into De Courcelles, Tandakora
and their band, and meanwhile we’re very comfortable
here, gathering strength. Look at Tayoga there
and learn from him. If need be he could lie in
the same place a week and be happy.”
“I hope the need will not come,” laughed
the Onondaga.
Robert felt the truth of Willet’s
words, and he put restraint upon himself, resolved
that he would not be the first to propose the new
start. He had finished breakfast and he lay on
his elbow gazing up through the green tracery of the
bushes at the sky. It was a wonderful sky, a
deep, soft, velvet blue, and it tinted the woods with
glorious and kindly hues. It seemed strange to
Robert, at the moment, that a forest so beautiful
should bristle with danger, but he knew it too well
to allow its softness and air of innocence to deceive
him.
It was almost the middle of the morning
when Willet gave the word to renew the march, and
they soon saw they had extreme need of caution.
Evidence that warriors had passed was all about them.
Now and then they saw the faint imprint of a moccasin.
Twice they found little painted feathers that had
fallen from a headdress or a scalplock, and once Tayoga
saw a red bead lying in the grass where it had dropped,
perhaps, from a legging.
“We shall have to pass by Tandakora’s
band and perhaps other bands in the night,”
said Tayoga.
“It’s possible, too,”
said Willet, “that they know we’re on our
way to the fort, and may try to stop us. Our
critical time will soon be at hand.”
They listened throughout the afternoon
for the signals that bands might make to one another,
but heard nothing. Willet, in truth, was not
surprised.
“Silence will serve them best,”
he said, “and they’ll send runners from
band to band. Still, if they do give signals we
want to know it.”
“There is a river, narrow but
deep, about five miles ahead,” said Tayoga,
“and we’ll have to cross it on our way
to the fort. I think it is there that Tandakora
will await us.”
“It’s pretty sure to be
the place,” said Willet. “Do you know
where there’s a ford, Tayoga?”
“There is none.”
“Then we’ll have to swim
for it. That’s bad. But you say it’s
a narrow stream?”
“Yes, Great Bear. Two minutes would carry
us across it.”
“Then we must find some place
for the fording where the trees lean over from either
side and the shadow is deep.”
Tayoga nodded, and, after that, they
advanced in silence, redoubling their caution as they
drew near to the river. The night was not so
bright as the one that had just gone before, but it
furnished sufficient light for wary and watching warriors
to see their figures at a considerable distance, and,
now and then, they stopped to search the thickets
with their own eyes. No wind blew, their footsteps
made no sound and the intense stillness of the forest
wove itself into the texture of Robert’s mind.
His extraordinary fancy peopled it with phantoms.
There was a warrior in every bush, but, secure in the
comradeship of his two great friends, he went on without
fear.
“There is no signal,”
whispered Tayoga at last. “They do not even
imitate the cry of bird or beast, and it proves one
thing, Great Bear.”
“So it does, Tayoga.”
“You know as well as I do, Great
Bear, that they make no sound because they have set
the trap, and they do not wish to alarm the game which
they expect to walk into it.”
“Even so, Tayoga. Our minds travel in the
same channel.”
“But the game is suspicious,
nevertheless,” continued Tayoga in his precise
school English, “and the trap will not fall.”
“No, Tayoga, it won’t
fall, because the game won’t walk into it.”
“Tandakora will suffer great
disappointment. He is a mighty hunter and he
has hunted mighty game, but the game that he hunts
now is more wary than the stag or the bear, and has
greater power to strike back than either.”
“Well spoken, Tayoga.”
The hunter and the Onondaga looked
at each other in the dark and laughed. Their
spirits were as wild as the wilderness, and they were
enjoying the prospect of the Ojibway’s empty
trap. Robert laughed with them. Already
in his eager mind success was achieved and the crossing
was made. After a while he saw dim silver through
the trees, and he knew they had come to the river.
Then the three sank down and approached inch by inch,
sure that De Courcelles, Tandakora and their forces
would be watching on the other side.