THE BLOODY ROCK
Seeing that all was lost, the five
drew farther away into the woods. They were
not wounded, yet their faces were white despite the
tan. They had never before looked upon so terrible
a scene. The Indians, wild with the excitement
of a great triumph and thirsting for blood, were running
over the field scalping the dead, killing some of
the wounded, and saving others for the worst of tortures.
Nor were their white allies one whit behind them.
They bore a full part in the merciless war upon the
conquered. Timmendiquas, the great Wyandot, was
the only one to show nobility. Several of the
wounded he saved from immediate death, and he tried
to hold back the frenzied swarm of old squaws who
rushed forward and began to practice cruelties at which
even the most veteran warrior might shudder.
But Queen Esther urged them on, and “Indian”
Butler himself and the chiefs were afraid of her.
Henry, despite himself, despite all
his experience and powers of self-control, shuddered
from head to foot at the cries that came from the
lost field, and he was sure that the others were doing
the same. The sun was setting, but its dying
light, brilliant and intense, tinged the field as
if with blood, showing all the yelling horde as the
warriors rushed about for scalps, or danced in triumph,
whirling their hideous trophies about their heads.
Others were firing at men who were escaping to the
far bank of the Susquehanna, and others were already
seeking the fugitives in their vain hiding places
on the little islet.
The five moved farther into the forest,
retreating slowly, and sending in a shot now and then
to protect the retreat of some fugitive who was seeking
the shelter of the woods. The retreat had become
a rout and then a massacre. The savages raged
up and down in the greatest killing they had known
since Braddock’s defeat. The lodges of
the Iroquois would be full of the scalps of white
men.
All the five felt the full horror
of the scene, but it made its deepest impress, perhaps,
upon Paul. He had taken part in border battles
before, but this was the first great defeat.
He was not blind to the valor and good qualities of
the Indian and his claim upon the wilderness, but
he saw the incredible cruelties that he could commit,
and he felt a horror of those who used him as an ally,
a horror that he could never dismiss from his mind
as long as he lived.
“Look!” he exclaimed, “look at that!”
A man of seventy and a boy of fourteen
were running for the forest. They might have
been grandfather and grandson. Undoubtedly they
had fought in the Battalion of the Very Old and the
Very Young, and now, when everything else was lost,
they were seeking to save their lives in the friendly
shelter of the woods. But they were pursued
by two groups of Iroquois, four warriors in one, and
three in the other, and the Indians were gaining fast.
“I reckon we ought to save them,”
said Shif’less Sol.
“No doubt of it,” said
Henry. “Paul, you and Sol move off to the
right a little, and take the three, while the rest
of us will look out for the four.”
The little band separated according
to the directions, Paul and Sol having the lighter
task, as the others were to meet the group of four
Indians at closer range. Paul and Sol were behind
some trees, and, turning at an angle, they ran forward
to intercept the three Indians. It would have
seemed to anyone who was not aware of the presence
of friends in the forest that the old man and the
boy would surely be overtaken and be tomahawked, but
three rifles suddenly flashed among the foliage.
Two of the warriors in the group of four fell, and
a third uttered a yell of pain. Paul and Shif’less
Sol fired at the same time at the group of three.
One fell before the deadly rifle of Shif’less
Sol, but Paul only grazed his man. Nevertheless,
the whole pursuit stopped, and the boy and the old
man escaped to the forest, and subsequently to safety
at the Moravian towns.
Paul, watching the happy effect of
the shots, was about to say something to Shif’less
Sol, when an immense force was hurled upon him, and
he was thrown to the ground. His comrade was
served in the same way, but the shiftless one was
uncommonly strong and agile. He managed to writhe
half way to his knees, and he shouted in a tremendous
voice:
“Run, Henry, run! You
can’t do anything for us now!”
Braxton Wyatt struck him fiercely
across the mouth. The blood came, but the shiftless
one merely spat it out, and looked curiously at the
renegade.
“I’ve often wondered about
you, Braxton,” he said calmly. ” I used to
think that anybody, no matter how bad, had some good
in him, but I reckon you ain’t got none.”
Wyatt did not answer, but rushed forward
in search of the others. But Henry, Silent Tom,
and Long Jim had vanished. A powerful party
of warriors had stolen upon Shif’less Sol and
Paul, while they were absorbed in the chase of the
old man and the boy, and now they were prisoners,
bound securely. Braxton Wyatt came back from
the fruitless search for the three, but his face was
full of savage joy as he looked down at the captured
two.
“We could have killed you just
as easily,” he said, “but we didn’t
want to do that. Our friends here are going to
have their fun with you first.”
Paul’s cheeks whitened a little
at the horrible suggestion, but Shif’less Sol
faced them boldly. Several white men in uniform
had come up, and among them was an elderly one, short
and squat, and with a great flame colored handkerchief
tied around his bead.
“You may burn us alive, or you
may do other things jest ez bad to us, all under the
English flag,” said Shif’less Sol, ” but
I’m thinkin’ that a lot o’ people
in England will be ashamed uv it when they hear the
news.”
“Indian” Butler and his
uniformed soldiers turned away, leaving Shif’less
Sol and Paul in the hands of the renegade and the
Iroquois. The two prisoners were jerked to their
feet and told to march.
“Come on, Paul,” said
Shif’less Sol. “’Tain’t wuth
while fur us to resist. But don’t you
quit hopin’, Paul. We’ve escaped
from many a tight corner, an’ mebbe we’re
goin’ to do it ag’in.”
“Shut up!” said Braxton
Wyatt savagely. “If you say another word
I’ll gag you in a way that will make you squirm.”
Shif’less Sol looked him squarely
in the eye. Solomon Hyde, who was not shiftless
at all, had a dauntless soul, and he was not afraid
now in the face of death preceded by long torture.
“I had a dog once, Braxton Wyatt,”
he said, “an’ I reckon he wuz the meanest,
ornierest cur that ever lived. He liked to live
on dirt, the dirtier the place he could find the better;
he’d rather steal his food than get it honestly;
he wuz sech a coward that he wuz afeard o’ a
rabbit, but ef your back wuz turned to him he’d
nip you in the ankle. But bad ez that dog wuz,
Braxton, he wuz a gentleman ‘longside o’
you.”
Some of the Indians understood English,
and Wyatt knew it. He snatched a pistol from
his belt, and was about to strike Sol with the butt
of it, but a tall figure suddenly appeared before him,
and made a commanding gesture. The gesture said
plainly: “Do not strike; put that pistol
back!” Braxton Wyatt, whose soul was afraid
within him, did not strike, and he put the pistol back.
It was Timmendiquas, the great White
Lightning of the Wyandots, who with his little detachment
had proved that day how mighty the Wyandot warriors
were, full equals of Thayendanegea’s Mohawks,
the Keepers of the Western Gate. He was bare
to the waist. One shoulder was streaked with
blood from a slight wound, but his countenance was
not on fire with passion for torture and slaughter
like those of the others.
“There is no need to strike
prisoners,” he said in English. “Their
fate will be decided later.”
Paul thought that he caught a look
of pity from the eyes of the great Wyandot, and Shif’less
Sol said:
“I’m sorry, Timmendiquas,
since I had to be captured, that you didn’t
capture me yourself. I’m glad to say that
you’re a great warrior.”
Wyatt growled under his breath, but
he was still afraid to speak out, although he knew
that Timmendiquas was merely a distant and casual
ally, and had little authority in that army.
Yet he was overawed, and so were the Indians with
him.
“We were merely taking the prisoners
to Colonel Butler,” he said. “That
is all.”
Timmendiquas stared at him, and the
renegade’s face fell. But he and the Indians
went on with the prisoners, and Timmendiquas looked
after them until they were out of sight.
“I believe White Lightning was
sorry that we’d been captured,” whispered
Shif’less Sol.
“I think so, too,” Paul whispered back.
They had no chance for further conversation,
as they were driven rapidly now to that point of the
battlefield which lay nearest to the fort, and here
they were thrust into the midst of a gloomy company,
fellow captives, all bound tightly, and many wounded.
No help, no treatment of any kind was offered for
hurts. The Indians and renegades stood about
and yelled with delight when the agony of some man’s
wound wrung from him a groan. The scene was
hideous in every respect. The setting sun shone
blood red over forest, field, and river. Far
off burning houses still smoked like torches.
But the mountain wall in the east, was growing dusky
with the coming twilight. From the island, where
they were massacring the fugitives in their vain hiding
places, came the sound of shots and cries, but elsewhere
the firing had ceased. All who could escape
had done so already, and of the others, those who
were dead were fortunate.
The sun sank like a red ball behind
the mountains, and darkness swept down over the earth.
Fires began to blaze up here and there, some for
terrible purpose. The victorious Iroquois; stripped
to the waist and painted in glaring colors, joined
in a savage dance that would remain forever photographed
on the eye of Paul Cotter. As they jumped to
and fro, hundreds of them, waving aloft tomahawks
and scalping knives, both of which dripped red, they
sang their wild chant of war and triumph. White
men, too, as savage as they, joined them. Paul
shuddered again and again from head to foot at this
sight of an orgy such as the mass of mankind escapes,
even in dreams.
The darkness thickened, the dance
grew wilder. It was like a carnival of demons,
but it was to be incited to a yet wilder pitch.
A singular figure, one of extraordinary ferocity,
was suddenly projected into the midst of the whirling
crowd, and a chant, shriller and fiercer, rose above
all the others. The figure was that of Queen
Esther, like some monstrous creature out of a dim
past, her great tomahawk stained with blood, her eyes
bloodshot, and stains upon her shoulders. Paul
would have covered his eyes had his hands not been
tied instead, he turned his head away. He could
not bear to see more. But the horrible chant
came to his ears, nevertheless, and it was reinforced
presently by other sounds still more terrible.
Fires sprang up in the forest, and cries came from
these fires. The victorious army of “Indian”
Butler was beginning to burn the prisoners alive.
But at this point we must stop. The details
of what happened around those fires that night are
not for the ordinary reader. It suffices to
say that the darkest deed ever done on the soil of
what is now the United States was being enacted.
Shif’less Sol himself, iron
of body and soul, was shaken. He could not close
his ears, if he would, to the cries that came from
the fires, but he shut his eyes to keep out the demon
dance. Nevertheless, he opened them again in
a moment. The horrible fascination was too great.
He saw Queen Esther still shaking her tomahawk, but
as he looked she suddenly darted through the circle,
warriors willingly giving way before her, and disappeared
in the darkness. The scalp dance went on, but
it had lost some of its fire and vigor.
Shif’less Sol felt relieved.
“She’s gone,” he
whispered to Paul, and the boy, too, then opened his
eyes. The rest of it, the mad whirlings and jumpings
of the warriors, was becoming a blur before him, confused
and without meaning.
Neither he nor Shif’less Sol
knew how long they had been sitting there on the ground,
although it had grown yet darker, when Braxton Wyatt
thrust a violent foot against the shiftless one and
cried:
“Get up! You’re wanted!”
A half dozen Seneca warriors were
with him, and there was no chance of resistance.
The two rose slowly to their feet, and walked where
Braxton Wyatt led. The Senecas came on either
side, and close behind them, tomahawks in their hands.
Paul, the sensitive, who so often felt the impression
of coming events from the conditions around him, was
sure that they were marching to their fate.
Death he did not fear so greatly, although he did
not want to die, but when a shriek came to him from
one of the fires that convulsive shudder shook him
again from head to foot. Unconsciously he strained
at his bound arms, not for freedom, but that he might
thrust his fingers in his ears and shut out the awful
sounds. Shif’less Sol, because he could
not use his hands, touched his shoulder gently against
Paul’s.
“Paul,” he whispered,
“I ain’t sure that we’re goin’
to die, leastways, I still have hope; but ef we do,
remember that we don’t have to die but oncet.”
“I’ll remember, Sol,” Paul whispered
back.
“Silence, there!” exclaimed
Braxton Wyatt. But the two had said all they
wanted to say, and fortunately their senses were somewhat
dulled. They had passed through so much that
they were like those who are under the influence of
opiates. The path was now dark, although both
torches and fires burned in the distance. Presently
they heard that chant with which they had become familiar,
the dreadful notes of the hyena woman, and they knew
that they were being taken into her presence, for what
purpose they could not tell, although they were sure
that it was a bitter one. As they approached,
the woman’s chant rose to an uncommon pitch
of frenzy, and Paul felt the blood slowly chilling
within him.
“Get up there!” exclaimed
Braxton Wyatt, and the Senecas gave them both a push.
Other warriors who were standing at the edge of an
open space seized them and threw them forward with
much violence. When they struggled into a sitting
position, they saw Queen Esther standing upon a broad
flat rock and whirling in a ghastly dance that had
in it something Oriental. She still swung the
great war hatchet that seemed always to be in her hand.
Her long black hair flew wildly about her head, and
her red dress gleamed in the dusk. Surely no
more terrible image ever appeared in the American
wilderness! In front of her, lying upon the
ground, were twenty bound Americans, and back of them
were Iroquois in dozens, with a sprinkling of their
white allies.
What it all meant, what was about
to come to pass, nether Paul nor Shif’less Sol
could guess, but Queen Esther sang:
We have found them, the Yengees
Who built their houses in the valley,
They came forth to meet us in battle,
Our rifles and tomahawks cut them down,
As the Yengees lay low the forest.
Victory and glory Aieroski gives to his
children,
The Mighty Six Nations, greatest of men.
There will be feasting in the lodges of
the Iroquois,
And scalps will hang on the high ridge
pole,
But wolves will roam where the Yengees
dwelt
And will gnaw the bones of them all,
Of the man, the woman, and the child.
Victory and glory Aieroski gives to his
children,
The Mighty Six Nations, greatest of men.
Such it sounded to Shif’less
Sol, who knew the tongue of the Iroquois, and so it
went on, verse after verse, and at the end of each
verse came the refrain, in which the warriors joined:
“Victory and glory Aieroski
gives to his children. The mighty Six Nations,
greatest of men.”
“What under the sun is she about?”
whispered Shif’less Sol.
“It is a fearful face,” was Paul’s
only reply.
Suddenly the woman, without stopping
her chant, made a gesture to the warriors. Two
powerful Senecas seized one of the bound prisoners,
dragged him to his feet, and held him up before her.
She uttered a shout, whirled the great tomahawk about
her head, its blade glittering in the moonlight, and
struck with all her might. The skull of the
prisoner was cleft to the chin, and without a cry
he fell at the feet of the woman who had killed him.
Paul uttered a shout of horror, but it was lost in
the joyful yells of the Iroquois, who, at the command
of the woman, offered a second victim. Again
the tomahawk descended, and again a man fell dead
without a sound.
Shif’less Sol and Paul wrenched
at their thongs, but they could not move them.
Braxton Wyatt laughed aloud. It was strange
to see how fast one with a bad nature could fall when
the opportunities were spread before him. Now
he was as cruel as the Indians themselves. Wilder
and shriller grew the chant of the savage queen.
She was intoxicated with blood. She saw it
everywhere. Her tomahawk clove a third skull,
a fourth, a fifth, a sixth, a seventh, and eighth.
As fast as they fell the warriors at her command
brought up new victims for her weapon. Paul
shut his eyes, but he knew by the sounds what was passing.
Suddenly a stern voice cried:
“Hold, woman! Enough of
this! Will your tomahawk never be satisfied?”
Paul understood it , the meaning,
but not the words. He opened his eyes and saw
the great figure of Timmendiquas striding forward,
his hand upraised in protest.
The woman turned her fierce gaze upon
the young chief. “Timmendiquas,”
she said, “we are the Iroquois, and we are the
masters. You are far from your own land, a guest
in our lodges, and you cannot tell those who have
won the victory how they shall use it. Stand
back!”
A loud laugh came from the Iroquois.
The fierce old chiefs, Hiokatoo and Sangerachte,
and a dozen warriors thrust themselves before Timmendiquas.
The woman resumed her chant, and a hundred throats
pealed out with her the chorus:
Victory and glory Aieroski gives to
his children The mighty Six Nations, greatest of men.
She gave the signal anew. The
ninth victim stood before her, and then fell, cloven
to the chin; then the tenth, and the eleventh, and
the twelfth, and the thirteenth, and the fourteenth,
and the fifteenth, and the sixteenth-sixteen bound
men killed by one woman in less than fifteen minutes.
The four in that group who were left had all the
while been straining fearfully at their bonds.
Now they bad slipped or broken them, and, springing
to their feet, driven on by the mightiest of human
impulses, they dashed through the ring of Iroquois
and into the forest. Two were hunted down by
the warriors and killed, but the other two, Joseph
Elliott and Lebbeus Hammond, escaped and lived to be
old men, feeling that life could never again hold
for them anything so dreadful as that scene at “The
Bloody Rock.”
A great turmoil and confusion arose
as the prisoners fled and the Indians pursued.
Paul and Shif’less Sol; full of sympathy and
pity for the fugitives and having felt all the time
that their turn, too, would come under that dreadful
tomahawk, struggled to their feet. They did
not see a form slip noiselessly behind them, but a
sharp knife descended once, then twice, and the bands
of both fell free.
“Run! run!” exclaimed
the voice of Timmendiquas, low but penetrating.
“I would save you from this!”
Amid the darkness and confusion the
act of the great Wyandot was not seen by the other
Indians and the renegades. Paul flashed him
one look of gratitude, and then he and Shif’less
Sol darted away, choosing a course that led them from
the crowd in pursuit of the other flying fugitives.
At such a time they might have secured
a long lead without being noticed, had it not been
for the fierce swarm of old squaws who were first
in cruelty that night. A shrill wild howl arose,
and the pointing fingers of the old women showed to
the warriors the two in flight. At the same
time several of the squaws darted forward to intercept
the fugitives.
“I hate to hit a woman,”
breathed Shif’less Sol to Paul, “but I’m
goin’ to do it now.”
A hideous figure sprang before them.
Sol struck her face with his open hand, and with
a shriek she went down. He leaped over her,
although she clawed at his feet as he passed, and ran
on, with Paul at his side. Shots were now fired
at him, but they went wild, but Paul, casting a look
backward out of the corner of his eye, saw that a
real pursuit, silent and deadly, had begun.
Five Mohawk warriors, running swiftly, were only a
few hundred yards away. They carried rifle,
tomahawk, and knife, and Paul and Shif’less
Sol were unarmed. Moreover, they were coming
fast, spreading out slightly, and the shiftless one,
able even at such a time to weigh the case coolly,
saw that the odds were against them. Yet he
would not despair. Anything might happen.
It was night. There was little organization
in the army of the Indians and of their white allies,
which was giving itself up to the enjoyment of scalps
and torture. Moreover, he and Paul were, animated
by the love of life, which is always stronger than
the desire to give death.
Their flight led them in a diagonal
line toward the mountains. Only once did the
pursuers give tongue. Paul tripped over a root,
and a triumphant yell came from the Mohawks.
But it merely gave him new life. He recovered
himself in an instant and ran faster. But it
was terribly hard work. He could hear Shif’less
Sol’s sobbing breath by his side, and he was
sure that his own must have the same sound for his
comrade.
“At any rate one uv ’em
is beat,” gasped Shif’less Sol. “Only
four are ban-in’ on now.”
The ground rose a little and became
rougher. The lights from the Indian fires had
sunk almost out of sight behind them, and a dense
thicket lay before them. Something stirred in
the thicket, and the eyes of Shif’less Sol caught
a glimpse of a human shoulder. His heart sank
like a plummet in a pool. The Indians were ahead
of them. They would be caught, and would be carried
back to become the victims of the terrible tomahawk.
The figure in the bushes rose a little
higher, the muzzle of a rifle was projected, and flame
leaped from the steel tube.
But it was neither Shif’less
Sol nor Paul who fell. They heard a cry behind
them, and when Shif’less Sol took a hasty glance
backward he saw one of the Mohawks fall. The
three who were left hesitated and stopped. When
a second shot was fired from the bushes and another
Mohawk went down, the remaining two fled.
Shif’less Sol understood now,
and he rushed into the bushes, dragging Paul after
him. Henry, Tom, and Long Jim rose up to receive
them.
“So you wuz watchin’ over
us! “exclaimed the shiftless one joyously.
“It wuz you that clipped off the first Mohawk,
an’ we didn’t even notice the shot.”
“Thank God, you were here!”
exclaimed Paul. “You don’t know what
Sol and I have seen!”
Overwrought, he fell forward, but
his comrades caught him.