THE HUT ON THE ISLET
Henry Ware waited at least a quarter
of an hour by the creek on the exact spot at which
he and Solomon Hyde, called the shiftless one, had
parted, but he knew all the while that his last comrade
was not coming. The same powerful and mysterious
hand that swept the others away had taken him, the
wary and cunning Shif’less Sol, master of forest
lore and with all the five senses developed to the
highest pitch. Yet his powers had availed him
nothing, and the boy again felt that cold chill running
down his spine.
Henry expected the omnipotent force
to come against him, also, but his instinctive caution
made him turn and creep into the thickest of the forest,
continuing until he found a place in the bushes so
thoroughly hidden that no one could see him ten feet
away. There he lay down and rapidly ran over
in his mind the events connected with the four disappearances.
They were few, and he had little on which to go,
but his duty to seek his four comrades, since he alone
must do it, was all the greater. Such a thought
as deserting them and fleeing for his own life never
entered his mind. He would not only seek them,
but he would penetrate the mystery of the power that
had taken them.
It was like him now to go about his
work with calmness and method. To approach an
arduous task right one must possess freshness and
vigor, and one could have neither without sleep.
His present place of hiding seemed to be as secure
as any that could be found. So composing himself
he took all chances and sought slumber. Yet
it needed a great effort of the will to calm his nerves,
and it was a half hour before he began to feel any
of the soothing effect that precedes sleep.
But fall asleep he did at last, and, despite everything,
he slept soundly until the morning.
Henry did not awake to a bright day.
The sun had risen, but it was obscured by gray clouds,
and the whole heavens were somber. A cold wind
began to blow, and with it came drops of rain.
He shivered despite the enfolding blanket.
The coming of the morning had invariably brought cheerfulness
and increase of spirits, but now he felt depression.
He foresaw heavy rain again, and it would destroy
any but the deepest trail. Moreover, his supplies
of food were exhausted and he must replenish them in
some manner before proceeding further.
A spirit even as bold and strong as
Henry’s might well have despaired. He
had found his comrades, only to lose them again, and
the danger that had threatened them, and the elements
as well, now threatened him, too. An acute judge
of sky and air, he knew that the rain, cold, insistent,
penetrating, would fall all day, and that he must
seek shelter if he would keep his strength.
The Indians themselves always took to cover at such
times.
He wrapped the blanket around himself,
covering his body well from neck to ankle, putting
his rifle just inside the fold, but with his hand
upon it, ready for instant use if it should be needed.
Then he started, walking straight ahead until he came
to the crown of a little hill. The clouds meanwhile
thickened, and the rain, of the kind that he had foreseen
and as cold as ice, was blown against him. The
grass and bushes were reeking, and his moccasins became
sodden. Despite the vigorous walking, lie felt
the wet cold entering his system. There come
times when the hardiest must yield, and be saw the
increasing need of refuge.
He surveyed the country attentively
from the low hill. All around was a dull gray
horizon from which the icy rain dripped everywhere.
There was no open country. All was forest, and
the heavy rolling masses of foliage dripped with icy
water, too.
Toward the south the land seemed to
dip down, and Henry surmised that in a valley he would
be more likely to find the shelter that he craved.
He needed it badly. As he stood there he shivered
again and again from head to foot, despite the folds
of the blanket. So he started at once, walking
fast, and feeling little fear of a foe. It was
not likely that any would be seeking him at such a
time. The rain struck him squarely in the face
now. Water came from his moccasins every time
his foot was pressed against the earth, and, no matter
how closely he drew the folds of the blanket, little
streams of it, like ice to the touch, flowed down
his neck and made their way under his clothing.
He could not remember a time when he had felt more
miserable.
He came in about an hour to the dip
which, as he had surmised, was the edge of a considerable
valley. He ran down the slope, and looked all
about for some place of shelter, a thick windbreak
in the lee of a hill, or an outcropping of stone, but
he saw neither, and, as he continued the search, he
came to marshy ground. He saw ahead among the
weeds and bushes the gleam of standing pools, and
he was about to turn back, when he noticed three or
four stones, in a row and about a yard from one another,
projecting slightly above the black muck. It
struck him that the stones would not naturally be
in the soft mud, and, his curiosity aroused, he stepped
lightly from one stone to another. When he came
to the last stone that he had seen from the hard ground
he beheld several more that had been hidden from him
by the bushes. Sure now that he had happened
upon something not created by nature alone, he followed
these stones, leading like steps into the very depths
of the swamp, which was now deep and dark with ooze
all about him. He no longer doubted that the
stones, the artificial presence of which might have
escaped the keenest eye and most logical mind, were
placed there for a purpose, and he was resolved to
know its nature.
The stepping stones led him about
sixty yards into the swamp, and the last thirty yards
were at an angle from the first thirty. Then
he came to a bit of hard ground, a tiny islet in the
mire, upon which he could stand without sinking at
all. He looked back from there, and he could
not see his point of departure. Bushes, weeds,
and saplings grew out of the swamp to a height of a
dozen or fifteen feet, and he was inclosed completely.
All the vegetation dripped with cold water, and the
place was one of the most dismal that he had ever
seen. But he had no thought of turning back.
Henry made a shrewd guess as to whither
the path led, but he inferred from the appearance
of the stepping stones-chiefly from the fact that
an odd one here and there had sunk completely out
of sight-that they had not been used in a long time,
perhaps for years. He found on the other side
of the islet a second line of stones, and they led
across a marsh, that was almost like a black liquid,
to another and larger island.
Here the ground was quite firm, supporting
a thick growth of large trees. It seemed to
Henry that this island might be seventy or eighty
yards across, and he began at once to explore it.
In the center, surrounded so closely by swamp oaks
that they almost formed a living wall, he found what
he had hoped to find, and his relief was so great
that, despite his natural and trained stoicism, he
gave a little cry of pleasure when he saw it.
A small lodge, made chiefly of poles
and bark after the Iroquois fashion, stood within
the circle of the trees, occupying almost the whole
of the space. It was apparently abandoned long
ago, and time and weather had done it much damage.
But the bark walls, although they leaned in places
at dangerous angles, still stood. The bark roof
was pierced by holes on one side, but on the other
it was still solid, and shed all the rain from its
slope.
The door was open, but a shutter made
of heavy pieces of bark cunningly joined together
leaned against the wall, and Henry saw that he could
make use of it. He stepped inside. The
hut had a bark floor which was dry on one side, where
the roof was solid, but dripping on the other.
Several old articles of Indian use lay about.
In one corner was a basket woven of split willow and
still fit for service. There were pieces of thread
made of Indian hemp and the inner bark of the elm.
There were also a piece of pottery and a large, beautifully
carved wooden spoon such as every Iroquois carried.
In the corner farthest from the door was a rude fireplace
made of large flat stones, although there was no opening
for the smoke.
Henry surveyed it all thoughtfully,
and he came to the conclusion that it was a hut for
hunting, built by some warrior of an inquiring mind
who had found this secret place, and who had recognized
its possibilities. Here after an expedition for
game he could lie hidden from enemies and take his
comfort without fear. Doubtless he had sat in
this hut on rainy days like the present one and smoked
his pipe in the long, patient calm of which the Indian
is capable.
Yes, there was the pipe, unnoticed
before, trumpet shaped and carved beautifully, lying
on a small bark shelf. Henry picked it tip and
examined the bowl. It was as dry as a bone, and
not a particle of tobacco was left there. He
believed that it had not been used for at least a
year. Doubtless the Indian who had built this
hunting lodge had fallen in some foray, and the secret
of it had been lost until Henry Ware, seeking through
the cold and rain, had stumbled upon it.
It was nothing but a dilapidated little
lodge of poles and bark, all a-leak, but the materials
of a house were there, and Henry was strong and skillful.
He covered the holes in tile roof with fallen pieces
of bark, laying heavy pieces of wood across them to
hold them in place. Then he lifted the bark shutter
into position and closed the door. Some drops
of rain still came in through the roof, but they were
not many, and he would not mind them for the present.
Then he opened the door and began his hardest task.
He intended to build a fire on the
flat stones, and, securing fallen wood, he stripped
off the bark and cut splinters from the inside.
It was slow work and he was very cold, his wet feet
sending chills through him, but be persevered, and
the little heap of dry splinters grew to a respectable
size. Then he cut larger pieces, laying them
on one side while he worked with his flint and steel
on the splinters.
Flint and steel are not easily handled
even by the most skillful, and Henry saw the spark
leap up and die out many times before it finally took
hold of the end of the tiniest splinter and grew.
He watched it as it ran along the little piece of
wood and ignited another and then another, the beautiful
little red and yellow flames leaping up half a foot
in height. Already he felt the grateful warmth
and glow, but he would not let himself indulge in
premature joy. He fed it with larger and larger
pieces until the flames, a deeper and more beautiful
red and yellow, rose at least two feet, and big coals
began to form. He left the door open a while
in order that the smoke might go out, but when the
fire had become mostly coals he closed it again, all
except a crack of about six inches, which would serve
at once to let any stray smoke out, and to let plenty
of fresh air in.
Now Henry, all his preparations made,
no detail neglected, proceeded to luxuriate.
He spread the soaked blanket out on the bark floor,
took off the sodden moccasins and placed them at one
angle of the fire, while he sat with his bare feet
in front. What a glorious warmth it was!
It seemed to enter at his toes and proceed upward
through his body, seeking out every little nook and
cranny, to dry and warm it, and fill it full of new
glow and life.
He sat there a long time, his being
radiating with physical comfort. The moccasins
dried on one side, and he turned the other.
Finally they dried all over and all through, and he
put them on again. Then he hung the blanket
on the bark wall near the fire, and it, too, would
be dry in another hour or so. He foresaw a warm
and dry place for the night, and sleep. Now if
one only had food! But he must do without that
for the present.
He rose and tested all his bones and
muscles. No stiffness or soreness had come from
the rain and cold, and he was satisfied. He
was fit for any physical emergency. He looked
out through the crevice. Night was coming, and
on the little island in the swamp it looked inexpressibly
black and gloomy. His stomach complained, but
he shrugged his shoulders, acknowledging primitive
necessity, and resumed his seat by the fire.
There he sat until the blanket had dried, and deep
night had fully come.
In the last hour or two Henry did
not move. He remained before the fire, crouched
slightly forward, while the generous heat fed the
flame of life in him. A glowing bar, penetrating
the crevice at the door, fell on the earth outside,
but it did not pass beyond the close group of circling
trees. The rain still fell with uncommon steadiness
and persistence, but at times hail was mingled with
it. Henry could not remember in his experience
a more desolate night. It seemed that the whole
world dwelt in perpetual darkness, and that he was
the only living being on it. Yet within the
four or five feet square of the hut it was warm and
bright, and he was not unhappy.
He would forget the pangs of hunger,
and, wrapping himself in the dry blanket, he lay down
before the bed of coals, having first raked ashes
over them, and he slept one of the soundest sleeps
of his life. All night long, the dull cold rain
fell, and with it, at intervals, came gusts of hail
that rattled like bird shot on the bark walls of the
hut. Some of the white pellets blew in at the
door, and lay for a moment or two on the floor, then
melted in the glow of the fire, and were gone.
But neither wind, rain nor hail awoke
Henry. He was as safe, for the time, in the
hut on the islet, as if he were in the fort at Pittsburgh
or behind the palisades at Wareville. Dawn came,
the sky still heavy and dark with clouds, and the
rain still falling.
Henry, after his first sense of refreshment
and pleasure, became conscious of a fierce hunger
that no amount of the will could now keep quiet.
His was a powerful system, needing much nourishment,
and he must eat. That hunger became so great
that it was acute physical pain. He was assailed
by it at all points, and it could be repelled by only
one thing, food. He must go forth, taking all
risks, and seek it.
He put on fresh wood, covering it
with ashes in order that it might not blaze too high,
and left the islet. The stepping stones were
slippery with water, and his moccasins soon became
soaked again, but he forgot the cold and wet in that
ferocious hunger, the attacks of which became more
violent every minute. He was hopeful that he
might see a deer, or even a squirrel, but the animals
themselves were likely to keep under cover in such
a rain. He expected a hard hunt, and it would
be attended also by much danger — these woods
must be full of Indians — but be thought little
of the risk. His hunger was taking complete
possession of his mind. He was realizing now
that one might want a thing so much that it would
drive away all other thoughts.
Rifle in hand, ready for any quick
shot, he searched hour after hour through the woods
and thickets. He was wet, bedraggled, and as
fierce as a famishing panther, but neither skill nor
instinct guided him to anything. The rabbit
hid in his burrow, the squirrel remained in his hollow
tree, and the deer did not leave his covert.
Henry could not well calculate the
passage of time, it seemed so fearfully long, and
there was no one to tell him, but he judged that it
must be about noon, and his temper was becoming that
of the famished panther to which he likened himself.
He paused and looked around the circle of the dripping
woods. He had retained his idea of direction
and he knew that he could go straight back to the
hut in the swamp. But he had no idea of returning
now. A power that neither he nor anyone else
could resist was pushing him on his search.
Searching the gloomy horizon again,
he saw against the dark sky a thin and darker line
that he knew to be smoke. He inferred, also,
with certainty, that it came from an Indian camp, and,
without hesitation, turned his course toward it.
Indian camp though it might be, and containing the
deadliest of foes, he was glad to know something lived
beside himself in this wilderness.
He approached with great caution,
and found his surmise to be correct. Lying full
length in a wet thicket he saw a party of about twenty
warriors-Mohawks he took them to be-in an oak opening.
They had erected bark shelters, they had good fires,
and they were cooking. He saw them roasting the
strips over the coals-bear meat, venison, squirrel,
rabbit, bird-and the odor, so pleasant at other times,
assailed his nostrils. But it was now only a
taunt and a torment. It aroused every possible
pang of hunger, and every one of them stabbed like
a knife.
The warriors, so secure in their forest
isolation, kept no sentinels, and they were enjoying
themselves like men who had everything they wanted.
Henry could hear them laughing and talking, and he
watched them as they ate strip after strip of the
delicate, tender meat with the wonderful appetite that
the Indian has after long fasting. A fierce,
unreasoning anger and jealousy laid hold of him.
He was starving, and they rejoiced in plenty only
fifty yards away. He began to form plans for
a piratical incursion upon them. Half the body
of a deer lay near the edge of the opening, he would
rush upon it, seize it, and dart away. It might
be possible to escape with such spoil.
Then he recalled his prudence.
Such a thing was impossible. The whole band
of warriors would be upon him in an instant.
The best thing that he could do was to shut out the
sight of so much luxury in which he could not share,
and he crept away among the bushes wondering what
he could do to drive away those terrible pains.
His vigorous system was crying louder than ever for
the food that would sustain it. His eyes were
burning a little too brightly, and his face was touched
with fever.
Henry stopped once to catch a last
glimpse of the fires and the feasting Indians under
the bark shelters. He saw a warrior raise a
bone, grasping it in both hands, and bite deep into
the tender flesh that clothed it. The sight
inflamed him into an anger almost uncontrollable.
He clenched his fist and shook it at the warrior,
who little suspected the proximity of a hatred so
intense. Then he bent his head down and rushed
away among the wet bushes which in rebuke at his lack
of caution raked him across the face.
Henry walked despondently back toward
the islet in the swamp. The aspect of air and
sky had not changed. The heavens still dripped
icy water, and there was no ray of cheerfulness anywhere.
The game remained well hidden.
It was a long journey back, and as
he felt that he was growing weak he made no haste.
He came to dense clumps of bushes, and plowing his
way through them, he saw a dark opening under some
trees thrown down by an old hurricane. Having
some vague idea that it might be the lair of a wild
animal, he thrust the muzzle of his rifle into the
darkness. It touched a soft substance.
There was a growl, and a black form shot out almost
into his face. Henry sprang aside, and in an
instant all his powers and faculties returned.
He had stirred up a black bear, and before the animal,
frightened as much as he was enraged, could run far
the boy, careless how many Indians might hear, threw
up his rifle and fired.
His aim was good. The bear,
shot through the head, fell, and was dead. Henry,
transformed, ran up to him. Bear life had been
given up to sustain man’s. Here was food
for many days, and he rejoiced with a great joy.
He did not now envy those warriors back there.
The bear, although small, was very
fat. Evidently he had fed well on acorns and
wild honey, and he would yield up steaks which, to
one with Henry’s appetite, would be beyond compare.
He calculated that it was more than a mile to the
swamp, and, after a few preliminaries, he flung the
body of the bear over his shoulder. Through
some power of the mind over the body his full strength
had returned to him miraculously, and when he reached
the stepping stones he crossed from one to another
lightly and firmly, despite the weight that he carried.
He came to the little bark hut which
he now considered his own. The night had fallen
again, but some coals still glowed under the ashes,
and there was plenty of dry wood. He did everything
decently and in order. He took the pelt from
the bear, carved the body properly, and then, just
as the Indians had done, he broiled strips over the
coals. He ate them one after another, slowly,
and tasting all the savor, and, intense as was the
mere physical pleasure, it was mingled with a deep
thankfulness. Not only was the life nourished
anew in him, but he would now regain the strength
to seek his comrades.
When he had eaten enough he fastened
the body of the bear, now in several portions, on
hooks high upon the walls, hooks which evidently had
been placed there by the former owner of the hut for
this very purpose. Then, sure that the savor
of the food would draw other wild animals, he brought
one of the stepping stones and placed it on the inside
of the door. The door could not be pushed aside
without arousing him, and, secure in the knowledge,
he went to sleep before the coals.