WYOMING
The five made no attempt to pursue.
In fact, they did not leave the cabin, but stood
there a while, looking down at the fallen, hideous
with war paint, but now at the end of their last trail.
Their tomahawks lay upon the floor, and glittered
when the light from the fire fell upon them.
Smoke, heavy with the odor of burned gunpowder, drifted
about the room.
Henry threw open the two shuttered
windows, and fresh currents of air poured into the
room. Over the mountains in the east came the
first shaft of day. The surface of the river
was lightening.
“What shall we do with them?”
asked Paul, pointing to the silent forms on the floor.
“Leave them,” said Henry.
“Butler’s army is burning everything
before it, and this house and all in it is bound to
go. You notice, however, that Braxton Wyatt
is not here.”
“Trust him to escape every time,”
said Shif’less Sol. “Of course he
stood back while the Indians rushed the house.
But ez shore ez we live somebody will get him some
day. People like that can’t escape always.”
They slipped from the house, turning
toward the river bank, and not long after it was full
daylight they were at Forty Fort again, where they
found Standish and his family. Henry replied
briefly to the man’s questions, but two hours
later a scout came in and reported the grim sight
that he had seen in the Standish home. No one
could ask for further proof of the fealty of the five,
who sought a little sleep, but before noon were off
again.
They met more fugitives, and it was
now too dangerous to go farther up the valley.
But not willing to turn back, they ascended the mountains
that hem it in, and from the loftiest point that they
could find sought a sight of the enemy.
It was an absolutely brilliant day
in summer. The blue of the heavens showed no
break but the shifting bits of white cloud, and the
hills and mountains rolled away, solid masses of rich,
dark green. The river, a beautiful river at
any time, seemed from this height a great current
of quicksilver. Henry pointed to a place far
up the stream where black dots appeared on its surface.
These dots were moving, and they came on in four
lines.
“Boys,” he said, “you
know what those lines of black dots are?”
“Yes,” replied Shif’less
Sol, “it’s Butler’s army of Indians,
Tories, Canadians, an’ English. They’ve
come from Tioga Point on the river, an’ our
Colonel Butler kin expect ’em soon.”
The sunlight became dazzling, and
showed the boats, despite the distance, with startling
clearness. The five, watching from their peak,
saw them turn in toward the land, where they poured
forth a motley stream of red men and white, a stream
that was quickly swallowed up in the forest.
“They are coming down through
the woods on the fort, said Tom Ross.
“And they’re coming fast,”
said Henry. “It’s for us to carry
the warning.”
They sped back to the Wyoming fort,
spreading the alarm as they passed, and once more
they were in the council room with Colonel Zebulon
Butler and his officers around him.
“So they are at hand, and you
have seen them?” said the colonel.
“Yes,” replied Henry,
the spokesman, “they came down from Tioga Point
in boats, but have disembarked and are advancing through
the woods. They will be here today.”
There was a little silence in the
room. The older men understood the danger perhaps
better than the younger, who were eager for battle.
“Why should we stay here and
wait for them?” exclaimed one of the younger
captains at length-some of these captains were mere
boys. “Why not go out, meet them, and
beat them ?”
“They outnumber us about five
to one,” said Henry. “Brant, if he
is still with them, though be may have gone to some
other place from Tioga Point, is a great captain.
So is Timmendiquas, the Wyandot, and they say that
the Tory leader is energetic and capable.”
“It is all true!” exclaimed
Colonel Butler. “We must stay in the fort!
We must not go out to meet them! We are not
strong enough!”
A murmur of protest and indignation
came from the younger officers.
“And leave the valley to be
ravaged! Women and children to be scalped, while
we stay behind log walls!” said one of them
boldly.
The men in the Wyoming fort were not
regular troops, merely militia, farmers gathered hastily
for their own defense.
Colonel Butler flushed.
“We have induced as many as
we could to seek refuge,” he said. “It
hurts me as much as you to have the valley ravaged
while we sit quiet here. But I know that we
have no chance against so large a force, and if we
fall what is to become of the hundreds whom we now
protect?”
But the murmur of protest grew.
All the younger men were indignant. They would
not seek shelter for themselves while others were
suffering. A young lieutenant saw from a window
two fires spring up and burn like torch lights against
the sky. They were houses blazing before the
Indian brand.
“Look at that!,” he cried,
pointing with an accusing finger, “and we are
here, under cover, doing nothing!”
A deep angry mutter went about the
room, but Colonel Butler, although the flush remained
on his face, still shook his head. He glanced
at Tom Ross, the oldest of the five.
“You know about the Indian force,”
he exclaimed. What should we do?”
The face of Tom Ross was very grave,
and he spoke slowly, as was his wont.
“It’s a hard thing to
set here,” he exclaimed, “but it will be
harder to go out an’ meet ’em on their
own ground, an’ them four or five to one.”
“We must not go out,”
repeated the Colonel, glad of such backing.
The door was thrust open, and an officer entered.
“A rumor has just arrived, saying
that the entire Davidson family has been killed and
scalped,” he said.
A deep, angry cry went up. Colonel
Butler and the few who stood with him were overborne.
Such things as these could not be endured, and reluctantly
the commander gave his consent. They would go
out and fight. The fort and its enclosures were
soon filled with the sounds of preparation, and the
little army was formed rapidly.
“We will fight by your side,
of course,” said Henry, “but we wish to
serve on the flank as an independent band. We
can be of more service in that manner.”
The colonel thanked them gratefully.
“Act as you think best,” he said.
The five stood near one of the gates,
while the little force formed in ranks. Almost
for the first time they were gloomy upon going into
battle. They had seen the strength of that army
of Indians, renegades, Tories, Canadians, and English
advancing under the banner of England, and they knew
the power and fanaticism of the Indian leaders.
They believed that the terrible Queen Esther, tomahawk
in hand, had continually chanted to them her songs
of blood as they came down the river. It was
now the third of July, and valley and river were beautiful
in the golden sunlight. The foliage showed vivid
and deep green on either line of high hills.
The summer sun had never shown more kindly over the
lovely valley.
The time was now three o’clock.
The gates of the fort were thrown open, and the little
army marched out, only three hundred, of whom seventy
were old men, or boys so young that in our day they
would be called children. Yet they marched bravely
against the picked warriors of the Iroquois, trained
from infancy to the forest and war, and a formidable
body of white rovers who wished to destroy the little
colony of “rebels,” as they called them.
Small though it might be, it was a
gallant army. Young and old held their heads
high. A banner was flying, and a boy beat a
steady insistent roll upon a drum. Henry and
his comrades were on the left flank, the river was
on the right. The great gates had closed behind
them, shutting in the women and the children.
The sun blazed down, throwing everything into relief
with its intense, vivid light playing upon the brown
faces of the borderers, their rifles and their homespun
clothes. Colonel Butler and two or three of
his officers were on horseback, leading the van.
Now that the decision was to fight, the older officers,
who had opposed it, were in the very front. Forward
they went, and spread out a little, but with the right
flank still resting on the river, and the left extended
on the plain.
The five were on the edge of the plain,
a little detached from the others, searching the forest
for a sign of the enemy, who was already so near.
Their gloom did not decrease. Neither the rolling
of the drum nor the flaunting of the banner had any
effect. Brave though the men might be, this was
not the way in which they should meet an Indian foe
who outnumbered them four or five to one.
“I don’t like it,” muttered Tom
Ross.
“Nor ’ do I,” said
Henry, “but remember that whatever happens we
all stand together.”
“We remember!” said the others.
On-they went, and the five moving
faster were now ahead of the main force some hundred
yards. They swung in a little toward the river.
The banks here were highland off to the left was a
large swamp. The five now checked speed and
moved with great wariness. They saw nothing,
and they heard nothing, either, until they went forty
or fifty yards farther. Then a low droning sound
came to their ears. It was the voice of one
yet far away, but they knew it. It was the terrible
chant of Queen Esther, in this moment the most ruthless
of all the savages, and inflaming them continuously
for the combat.
The five threw themselves flat on
their faces, and waited a little. The chant
grew louder, and then through the foliage they saw
the ominous figure approaching. She was much
as she had been on that night when they first beheld
her. She wore the same dress of barbaric colors,
she swung the same great tomahawk about her head,
and sang all the time of fire and blood and death.
They saw behind her the figures of
chiefs, naked to the breech cloth for battle, their
bronze bodies glistening with the war paint, and bright
feathers gleaming in their hair. Henry recognized
the tall form of Timmendiquas, notable by his height,
and around him his little band of Wyandots, ready to
prove themselves mighty warriors to their eastern
friends the Iroquois. Back of these was a long
line of Indians and their white allies, Sir John Johnson’s
Royal Greens and Butler’s Rangers in the center,
bearing the flag of England. The warriors, of
whom the Senecas were most numerous, were gathered
in greatest numbers on their right flank, facing the
left flank of the Americans. Sangerachte and
Hiokatoo, who had taken two English prisoners at Braddock’s
defeat, and who had afterwards burned them both alive
with his own hand, were the principal leaders of the
Senecas. Henry caught a glimpse of “Indian”
Butler in the center, with a great blood-red handkerchief
tied around his head, and, despite the forest, he
noticed with a great sinking of the heart how far
the hostile line extended. It could wrap itself
like a python around the defense.
“It’s a tale that will soon be told,”
said Paul.
They went back swiftly, and warned
Colonel Butler that the enemy was at band. Even
as they spoke they heard the loud wailing chant of
Queen Esther, and then came the war whoop, pouring
from a thousand throats, swelling defiant and fierce
like the cry of a wounded beast. The farmers,
the boys, and the old men, most of whom had never
been in battle, might well tremble at this ominous
sound, so great in volume and extending so far into
the forest. But they stood firm, drawing themselves
into a somewhat more compact body, and still advancing
with their banners flying, and the boy beating out
that steady roll on the drum.
The enemy now came into full sight,
and Colonel Butler deployed his force in line of battle,
his right resting on the high bank of the river and
his left against the swamp. Forward pressed the
motley army of the other Butler, he of sanguinary and
cruel fame, and the bulk of his force came into view,
the sun shining down on the green uniforms of the
English and the naked brown bodies of the Iroquois.
The American commander gave the order
to fire. Eager fingers were already on the trigger,
and a blaze of light ran along the entire rank.
The Royal Greens and Rangers, although replying with
their own fire, gave back before the storm of bullets,
and the Wyoming men, with a shout of triumph, sprang
forward. It was always a characteristic of the
border settler, despite many disasters and a knowledge
of Indian craft and cunning, to rush straight at his
foe whenever he saw him. His, unless a trained
forest warrior himself, was a headlong bravery, and
now this gallant little force asked for nothing but
to come to close grips with the enemy.
The men in the center with “Indian”
Butler gave back still more. With cries of victory
the Wyoming men pressed forward, firing rapidly, and
continuing to drive the mongrel white force.
The rifles were cracking rapidly, and smoke arose
over the two lines. The wind caught wisps of
it and carried them off down the river.
“It goes better than I thought,”
said Paul as he reloaded his rifle.
“Not yet,” said Henry,
“we are fighting the white men only. Where
are all the Indians, who alone outnumber our men more
than two to one?”
“Here they come,” said
Shif’less Sol, pointing to the depths of the
swamp, which was supposed to protect the left flank
of the Wyoming force.
The five saw in the spaces, amid the
briars and vines, scores of dark figures leaping over
the mud, naked to the breech cloth, armed with rifle
and tomahawk, and rushing down upon the unprotected
side of their foe. The swamp had been but little
obstacle to them.
Henry and his comrades gave the alarm
at once. As many as possible were called off
immediately from the main body, but they were not
numerous enough to have any effect. The Indians
came through the swamp in hundreds and hundreds, and,
as they uttered their triumphant yell, poured a terrible
fire into the Wyoming left flank. The defenders
were forced to give ground, and the English and Tories
came on again.
The fire was now deadly and of great
volume. The air was filled with the flashing
of the rifles. The cloud of smoke grew heavier,
and faces, either from heat or excitement, showed red
through it. The air was filled with bullets,
and the Wyoming force was being cut down fast, as
the fire of more than a thousand rifles converged
upon it.
The five at the fringe of the swamp
loaded and fired as fast as they could at the Indian
horde, but they saw that it was creeping closer and
closer, and that the hail of bullets it sent in was
cutting away the whole left flank of the defenders.
They saw the tall figure of Timmendiquas, a very
god of war, leading on the Indians, with his fearless
Wyandots in a close cluster around him. Colonel
John Durkee, gathering up a force of fifty or sixty,
charged straight at the warriors, but he was killed
by a withering volley, which drove his men back.
Now occurred a fatal thing, one of
those misconceptions which often decide the fate of
a battle. The company of Captain Whittlesey,
on the extreme left, which was suffering most severely,
was ordered to fall back. The entire little army,
which was being pressed hard now, seeing the movement
of Whittlesey, began to retreat. Even without
the mistake it is likely they would have lost in the
face of such numbers.
The entire horde of Indians, Tories,
Canadians, English, and renegades, uttering a tremendous
yell, rushed forward. Colonel Zebulon Butler,
seeing the crisis, rode up and down in front of his
men, shouting: “Don’t leave me, my
children! the victory is ours!” Bravely his
officers strove to stop the retreat. Every captain
who led a company into action was killed. Some
of these captains were but boys. The men were
falling by dozens.
All the Indians, by far the most formidable
part of the invading force, were through the swamp
now, and, dashing down their unloaded rifles, threw
themselves, tomahawk in hand, upon the defense.
Not more than two hundred of the Wyoming men were
left standing, and the impact of seven or eight hundred
savage warriors was so great that they were hurled
back in confusion. A wail of grief and terror
came from the other side of the river, where a great
body of women and children were watching the fighting.
“The battle’s lost,” said Shif’less
Sol,
“Beyond hope of saving it,”
said Henry, “but, boys, we five are alive yet,
and we’ll do our best to help the others protect
the retreat.”
They kept under cover, fighting as
calmly as they could amid such a terrible scene, picking
off warrior after warrior, saving more than one soldier
ere the tomahawk fell. Shif’less Sol took
a shot at “Indian” Butler, but he was
too far away, and the bullet missed him.
“I’d give five years of
my life if he were fifty yards nearer,” exclaimed
the shiftless one.
But the invading force came in between
and he did not get another shot. There was now
a terrible medley, a continuous uproar, the crashing
fire of hundreds of rifles, the shouts of the Indians,
and the cries of the wounded. Over them all hovered
smoke and dust, and the air was heavy, too, with the
odor of burnt gunpowder. The division of old
men and very young boys stood next, and the Indians
were upon them, tomahawk in hand, but in the face
of terrible odds all bore themselves with a valor worthy
of the best of soldiers. Three fourths of them
died that day, before they were driven back on the
fort.
The Wyoming force was pushed away
from the edge of the swamp, which had been some protection
to the left, and they were now assailed from all sides
except that of the river. “Indian”
Butler raged at the head of his men, who had been driven
back at first, and who had been saved by the Indians.
Timmendiquas, in the absence of Brant, who was not
seen upon this field, became by valor and power of
intellect the leader of all the Indians for this moment.
The Iroquois, although their own fierce chiefs, I-Tiokatoo,
Sangerachte, and the others fought with them, unconsciously
obeyed him. Nor did the fierce woman, Queen
Esther, shirk the battle. Waving her great tomahawk,
she was continually among the warriors, singing her
song of war and death.
They were driven steadily back toward
the fort, and the little band crumbled away beneath
the deadly fire. Soon none would be left unless
they ran for their lives. The five drew away
toward the forest. They saw that the fort itself
could not hold out against such a numerous and victorious
foe, and they had no mind to be trapped. But
their retreat was slow, and as they went they sent
bullet after bullet into the Indian flank. Only
a small percentage of the Wyoming force was left,
and it now broke. Colonel Butler and Colonel
Dennison, who were mounted, reached the fort.
Some of the men jumped into the river, swam to the
other shore and escaped. Some swam to a little
island called Monocacy, and hid, but the Tories and
Indians hunted them out and slew them. One Tory
found his brother there, and killed him with his own
hand, a deed of unspeakable horror that is yet mentioned
by the people of that region. A few fled into
the forest and entered the fort at night.