THE MELANCHOLY FLIGHT
Paul revived in a few minutes.
They were still lying in the bushes, and when he
was able to stand up again, they moved at an angle
several hundred yards before they stopped. One
pistol was thrust into Paul’s hand and another
into that of Shif’less Sol.
Keep those until we can get rifles
for you,” said Henry. “You may need
’em to-night.”
They crouched down in the thicket
and looked back toward the Indian camp. The
warriors whom they had repulsed were not returning
with help, and, for the moment, they seemed to have
no enemy to fear, yet they could still see through
the woods the faint lights of the Indian camps, and
to Paul, at least, came the echoes of distant cries
that told of things not to be written.
“We saw you captured, and we
heard Sol’s warning cry,” said Henry.
” There was nothing to do but run. Then we hid
and waited a chance for rescue.”
“It would never have come if
it had not been for Timmendiquas,” said Paul.
“Timmendiquas!” exclaimed Henry.
“Yes, Timmendiquas,” said
Paul, and then be told the story of “The Bloody
Rock,” and how, in the turmoil and excitement
attending the flight of the last four, Timmendiquas
had cut the bonds of Shif’less Sol and himself.
“I think the mind o’ White
Lightnin’, Injun ez he is,” said Shif’less
Sol, “jest naterally turned aginst so much slaughter
an’ torture o’ prisoners.”
“I’m sure you’re right,” said
Henry.
“’Pears strange to me,”
said Long Jim Hart, “that Timmendiquas was made
an Injun. He’s jest the kind uv man who
ought to be white, an’ he’d be pow’ful
useful, too. I don’t jest eggzactly understan’
it.”
“He has certainly saved the
lives of at least three of us,” said Henry.
“I hope we will get a chance to pay him back
in full.”
“But he’s the only one,”
said Shif’less Sol, thinking of all that he
had seen that night. “The Iroquois an’
the white men that’s allied with ’em won’t
ever get any mercy from me, ef any uv ’em happen
to come under my thumb. I don’t think the
like o’ this day an’ night wuz ever done
on this continent afore. I’m for revenge,
I am, like that place where the Bible says, ’an
eye for an eye, an’ a tooth for a tooth,’
an’ I’m goin’ to stay in this part
o’ the country till we git it!”
It was seldom that Shif’less
Sol spoke with so much passion and energy.
“We’re all going to stay
with you, Sol,” said Henry. We’re
needed here. I think we ought to circle about
the fort, slip in if we can, and fight with the defense.”
“Yes, we’ll do that,”
said Shif’less Sol, “but the Wyoming fort
can’t ever hold out. Thar ain’t a
hundred men left in it fit to fight, an’ thar
are more than than a thousand howlin’ devils
outside ready to attack it. Thar may be worse
to come than anything we’ve yet seen.”
“Still, we’ll go in an’
help,” said Henry. “Sol, when you
an’ Paul have rested a little longer we’ll
make a big loop around in the woods, and come up to
the fort on the other side.”
They were in full accord, and after
an hour in the bushes, where they lay completely hidden,
recovering their vitality and energy, they undertook
to reach the fort and cabins inclosed by the palisades.
Paul was still weak from shock, but Shif’less
Sol had fully recovered. Neither bad weapons,
but they were sure that the want could be supplied
soon. They curved around toward the west, intending
to approach the fort from the other side, but they
did not wholly lose sight of the fires, and they heard
now and then the triumphant war whoop. The victors
were still engaged in the pleasant task of burning
the prisoners to death. Little did the five,
seeing and feeling only their part of it there in
the dark woods, dream that the deeds of this day and
night would soon shock the whole civilized world, and
remain, for generations, a crowning act of infamy.
But they certainly felt it deeply enough, and in
each heart burned a fierce desire for revenge upon
the Iroquois.
It was almost midnight when they secured
entrance into the fort, which was filled with grief
and wailing. That afternoon more than one hundred
and fifty women within those walls had been made widows,
and six hundred children had been made orphans.
But few men fit to bear arms were left for its defense,
and it was certain that the allied British and Indian
army would easily take it on the morrow. A demand
for its surrender in the name of King George III of
England had already been made, and, sitting at a little
rough table in the cabin of Thomas Bennett, the room
lighted only by a single tallow wick, Colonel Butler
and Colonel Dennison were writing an agreement that
the fort be surrendered the next day, with what it
should contain. But Colonel Butler put his wife
on a horse and escaped with her over the mountains.
Stragglers, evading the tomahawk in
the darkness, were coming in, only to be surrendered
the next day; others were pouring forth in a stream,
seeking the shelter of the mountains and the forest,
preferring any dangers that might be found there to
the mercies of the victors.
When Shif’less Sol learned that
the fort was to be given up, be said:
“It looks ez ef we had escaped
from the Iroquois jest in time to beg ’em to
take us back.”
“I reckon I ain’t goin’
to stay ‘roun’ here while things are bein’
surrendered,” said Long Jim Hart.
“I’ll do my surrenderin’
to Iroquois when they’ve got my hands an’
feet tied, an’ six or seven uv ’em are
settin’ on my back,” said Tom Ross.
“We’ll leave as soon as
we can get arms for Sol and Paul,” said Henry.
“Of course it would be foolish of us to stay
here and be captured again. Besides, we’ll
be needed badly enough by the women and children that
are going.”
Good weapons were easily obtained
in the fort. It was far better to let Sol and
Paul have them than to leave them for the Indians.
They were able to select two fine rifles of the Kentucky
pattern, long and slender barreled, a tomahawk and
knife for each, and also excellent double-barreled
pistols. The other three now had double-barreled
pistols, too. In addition they resupplied themselves
with as much ammunition as scouts and hunters could
conveniently carry, and toward morning left the fort.
Sunrise found them some distance from
the palisades, and upon the flank of a frightened
crowd of fugitives. It was composed of one hundred
women and children and a single man, James Carpenter,
who was doing his best to guide and protect them.
They were intending to flee through the wilderness
to the Delaware and Lehigh settlements, chiefly Fort
Penn, built by Jacob Stroud, where Stroudsburg now
is.
When the five, darkened by weather
and looking almost like Indians themselves, approached,
Carpenter stepped forward and raised his rifle.
A cry of dismay rose from the melancholy line, a
cry so intensely bitter that it cut Henry to the very
heart. He threw up his hand, and exclaimed in
a loud voice:
“We are friends, not Indians
or Tories! We fought with you yesterday, and
we are ready to fight for you now!”
Carpenter dropped the muzzle of the
rifle. He had fought in the battle, too, and
he recognized the great youth and his comrades who
had been there with him.
“What do you want of us?” asked he.
“Nothing,” replied Henry, “except
to help you.”
Carpenter looked at them with a kind of sad pathos.
“You don’t belong here
in Wyoming,” he said, “and there’s
nothing to make you stick to us. What are you
meaning to do?”
“We will go with you wherever
you intend to go,” replied Henry; “do
fighting for you if you need it, and hunt game for
you, which you are certain to need.”
The weather-beaten face of the farmer worked.
“I thought God had clean deserted
us,” he said, “but I’m ready to
take it back. I reckon that he has sent you five
to help me with all these women and little ones.”
It occurred to Henry that perhaps
God, indeed, had sent them for this very purpose,
but he replied simply:
“You lead on, and we’ll
stay in the rear and on the sides to watch for the
Indians. Draw into the woods, where we’ll
be hidden.”
Carpenter, obscure hero, shouldered
his rifle again, and led on toward the woods.
The long line of women and children followed.
Some of the women carried in their arms children
too small to walk. Yet they were more hopeful
now when they saw that the five were friends.
These lithe, active frontiersmen, so quick, so skillful,
and so helpful, raised their courage. Yet it
was a most doleful flight. Most of these women
had been made widows the day before, some of them
had been made widows and childless at the same time,
and wondered why they should seek to live longer.
But the very mental stupor of many of them was an
aid. They ceased to cry out, and some even ceased
to be afraid.
Henry, Shif’less Sol, and Tom
dropped to the rear. Paul and Long Jim were
on either flank, while Carpenter led slowly on toward
the mountains.
“’Pears to me,”
said Tom, “that the thing fur us to do is to
hurry ’em up ez much ez possible.”
“So the Indians won’t
see ’em crossing the plain,” said Henry.
“We couldn’t defend them against a large
force, and it would merely be a massacre. We
must persuade them to walk faster.”
Shif’less Sol was invaluable
in this crisis. He could talk forever in his-placid
way, and, with his gentle encouragement, mild sarcasm,
and anecdotes of great feminine walkers that he had
known, he soon had them moving faster.
Henry and Tom dropped farther to the
rear. They could see ahead of them the long
dark line, coiling farther into the woods, but they
could also see to right and left towers of smoke rising
in the clear morning sunlight. These, they knew,
came from burning houses, and they knew, also, that
the valley would be ravaged from end to end and from
side to side. After the surrender of the fort
the Indians would divide into small bands, going everywhere,
and nothing could escape them.
The sun rose higher, gilding the earth
with glowing light, as if the black tragedy had never
happened, but the frontiersmen recognized their greatest
danger in this brilliant morning. Objects could
be seen at a great distance, and they could be seen
vividly.
Keen of sight and trained to know
what it was they saw, Henry, Sol, and Tom searched
the country with their eyes, on all sides. They
caught a distant glimpse of the Susquehanna, a silver
spot among some trees, and they saw the sunlight glancing
off the opposite mountains, but for the present they
saw nothing that seemed hostile.
They allowed the distance between
them and the retreating file to grow until it was
five or six hundred yards, and they might have let
it grow farther, but Henry made a signal, and the three
lay down in the grass.
“You see ’em, don’t
you!” the youth whispered to his comrade.
“Yes, down thar at the foot
o’ that hillock,” replied Shif’less
Sol; ” two o’ em, an’ Senecas, I take it.”
“They’ve seen that crowd
of women and children,” said Henry.
It was obvious that the flying column
was discovered. The two Indians stepped upon
the hillock and gazed under their hands. It
was too far away for the three to see their faces,
but they knew the joy that would be shown there.
The two could return with a few warriors and massacre
them all.
“They must never get back to
the other Indians with their news,” whispered
Henry. “I hate to shoot men from ambush,
but it’s got to be done. Wait, they’re
coming a little closer.”
The two Senecas advanced about thirty
yards, and stopped again.
“S’pose you fire at the
one on the right, Henry,” said Tom, ” an’
me an’ Sol will take the one to the left.”
” All right,” said Henry. “Fire!”
They wasted no time, but pulled trigger.
The one at whom Henry had aimed fell, but the other,
uttering a cry, made off, wounded, but evidently with
plenty of strength left.
“We mustn’t let him escape!
We mustn’t let him carry a warning!”
cried Henry.
But Shif’less Sol and Tom Ross
were already in pursuit, covering the ground with
long strides, and reloading as they ran. Under
ordinary circumstances no one of the three would have
fired at a man running for his life, but here the
necessity was vital. If he lived, carrying the
tale that he had to tell, a hundred innocent ones
might perish. Henry followed his comrades, reloading
his own rifle, also, but he stayed behind. The
Indian had a good lead, and he was gaining, as the
others were compelled to check speed somewhat as they
put the powder and bullets in their rifles.
But Henry was near enough to Shif’less Sol and
Silent Tom to hear them exchange a few words.
“How far away is that savage?” asked Shif’less
Sol.
“Hundred and eighty yards,” said Tom Ross.
“Well, you take him in the head, and I’ll
take him in the body.”
Henry saw the two rifle barrels go
up and two flashes of flame leap from the muzzles.
The Indian fell forward and lay still. They
went up to him, and found that he was shot through
the head and also through the body.
“We may miss once, but we don’t twice,”
said Tom Ross.
The human mind can be influenced so
powerfully by events that the three felt no compunction
at all at the shooting of this fleeing Indian.
It was but a trifle compared with what they had seen
the day and night before.
“We’d better take the
weapons an’ ammunition o’ both uv ’em,”
said Sol. “They may be needed, an’
some o ’ the women in that crowd kin shoot.”
They gathered up the arms, powder,
and ball, and waited a little to see whether the shots
had been heard by any other Indians, but there was
no indication of the presence of more warriors, and
the rejoined the fugitives. Long Jim had dropped
back to the end of the line, and when he saw that
his comrades carried two extra rifles, he understood.
“They didn’t give no alarm,
did they?” he asked in a tone so low that none
of the fugitives could hear.
“They didn’t have any
chance,” replied Henry. “We’ve
brought away all their weapons and ammunition, but
just say to the women that we found them in an abandoned
house.”
The rifles and the other arms were
given to the boldest and most stalwart of the women,
and they promised to use them if the need came.
Meanwhile the flight went on, and the farther it went
the sadder it became. Children became exhausted,
and had to be carried by people so tired that they
could scarcely walk themselves. There was nobody
in the line who had not lost some beloved one on that
fatal river bank, killed in battle, or tortured to
death. As they slowly ascended the green slope
of the mountain that inclosed a side of the valley,
they looked back upon ruin and desolation. The
whole black tragedy was being consummated. They
could see the houses in flames, and they knew that
the Indian war parties were killing and scalping everywhere.
They knew, too, that other bodies of fugitives, as
stricken as their own, were fleeing into the mountains,
they scarcely knew whither.
As they paused a few moments and looked
back, a great cry burst from the weakest of the women
and children. Then it became a sad and terrible
wail, and it was a long time before it ceased.
It was an awful sound, so compounded of despair and
woe and of longing for what they had lost that Henry
choked, and the tears stood in Paul’s eyes.
But neither the five nor Carpenter made any attempt
to check the wailing. They thought it best for
them to weep it out, but they hurried the column as
much as they could, often carrying some of the smaller
children themselves. Paul and Long Jim were
the best as comforters. The two knew how, each
in his own way, to soothe and encourage. Carpenter,
who knew the way to Fort Penn, led doggedly on, scarcely
saying a word. Henry, Shif’less Sol, and
Tom were the rear guard, which was, in this case,
the one of greatest danger and responsibility.
Henry was thankful that it was only
early summer the Fourth of July, the second anniversary
of the Declaration of Independence-and that the foliage
was heavy and green on the slopes of the mountain.
In this mass of greenery the desolate column was
now completely hidden from any observer in the valley,
and he believed that other crowds of fugitives would
be hidden in the same manner. He felt sure that
no living human being would be left in the valley,
that it would be ravaged from end to end and then
left to desolation, until new people, protected by
American bayonets, should come in and settle it again.
At last they passed the crest of the
ridge, and the fires in the valley, those emblems
of destruction, were hidden. Between them and
Fort Penn, sixty miles away, stretched a wilderness
of mountain, forest, and swamp. But the five
welcomed the forest. A foe might lie there in
ambush, but they could not see the fugitives at a
distance. What the latter needed now was obscurity,
the green blanket of the forest to hide them.
Carpenter led on over a narrow trail; the others
followed almost in single file now, while the five
scouted in the woods on either flank and at the rear.
Henry and Shif’less Sol generally kept together,
and they fully realized the overwhelming danger should
an Indian band, even as small as ten or a dozen warriors,
appear. Should the latter scatter, it would
be impossible to protect all the women and children
from their tomahawks.
The day was warm, but the forest gave
them coolness as well as shelter. Henry and
Sol were seldom so far back that they could not see
the end of the melancholy line, now moving slowly,
overborne by weariness. The shiftless one shook
his head sadly.
“No matter what happens, some
uv ’em will never get out o’ these woods.”
His words came true all too soon.
Before the afternoon closed, two women, ill before
the flight, died of terror and exhaustion, and were
buried in shallow graves under the trees. Before
dark a halt was made at the suggestion of Henry, and
all except Carpenter and the scouts sat in a close,
drooping group. Many of the children cried,
though the women had all ceased to weep. They
had some food with them, taken in the hurried flight,
and now the men asked them to eat. Few could
do it, and others insisted on saving what little they
had for the children. Long Jim found a spring
near by, and all drank at it.
The six men decided that, although
night had not yet come, it would be best to remain
there until the morning. Evidently the fugitives
were in no condition, either mental or physical, to
go farther that day, and the rest was worth more than
the risk.
When this decision was announced to
them, most of the women took it apathetically.
Soon they lay down upon a blanket, if one was to
be had; otherwise, on leaves and branches. Again
Henry thanked God that it was summer, and that these
were people of the frontier, who could sleep in the
open. No fire was needed, and, outside of human
enemies, only rain was to be dreaded.
And yet this band, desperate though
its case, was more fortunate than some of the others
that fled from the Wyoming Valley. It had now
to protect it six men Henry and Paul, though boys in
years, were men in strength and ability — five
of whom were the equals of any frontiersmen on the
whole border. Another crowd of women was escorted
by a single man throughout its entire flight.
Henry and his comrades distributed
themselves in a circle about the group. At times
they helped gather whortleberries as food for the
others, but they looked for Indians or game, intending
to shoot in either case. When Paul and Henry
were together they once heard a light sound in a thicket,
which at first they were afraid was made by an Indian
scout, but it was a deer, and it bounded away too
soon for either to get a shot. They could not
find other game of any kind, and they came back toward
the camp-if a mere stop in the woods, without shelter
of any kind, could be called a camp.
The sun was now setting, blood red.
It tinged the forest with a fiery mist, reminding
the unhappy group of all that they had seen.
But the mist was gone in a few moments, and then the
blackness of night came with a weird moaning wind that
told of desolation. Most of the children, having
passed through every phase of exhaustion and terror,
had fallen asleep. Some of the women slept,
also, and others wept. But the terrible wailing
note, which the nerves of no man could stand, was heard
no longer.
The five gathered again at a point
near by, and Carpenter came to them.
“Men,” he said simply,
“don’t know much about you, though I know
you fought well in the battle that we lost, but for
what you’re doin’ now nobody can ever
repay you. I knew that I never could get across
the mountains with all these weak ones.”
The five merely said that any man
who was a man would help at such a time. Then
they resumed their march in a perpetual circle about
the camp.
Some women did not sleep at all that
night. It is not easy to conceive what the frontier
women of America endured so many thousands of times.
They had seen their husbands, brothers, and sons
killed in the battle, and they knew that the worst
of torture had been practiced in the Indian camp.
Many of them really did not want to live any longer.
They merely struggled automatically for life.
The darkness settled down thicker and thicker; the
blackness in the forest was intense, and they could
see the faces of one another only at a little distance.
The desolate moan of the wind came through the leaves,
and, although it was July, the night grew cold.
The women crept closer together, trying to cover
up and protect the children. The wind, with
its inexpressibly mournful note, was exactly fitted
to their feelings. Many of them wondered why
a Supreme Being had permitted such things. But
they ceased to talk. No sound at all came from
the group, and any one fifty yards away, not forewarned,
could not have told that they were there.
Henry and Paul met again about midnight,
and sat a long time on a little hillock. Theirs
had been the most dangerous of lives on the most dangerous
of frontiers, but they had never been stirred as they
were tonight. Even Paul, the mildest of the five,
felt something burning within him, a fire that only
one thing could quench.
“Henry,” said he, “we’re
trying to get these people to Fort Penn, and we may
get some of them there, but I don’t think our
work will be ended them. I don’t think
I could ever be happy again if we went straight from
Fort Penn to Kentucky.”
Henry understood him perfectly.
“No, Paul,” he said, “I
don’t want to go, either, and I know the others
don’t. Maybe you are not willing to tell
why we want to stay, but it is vengeance. I
know it’s Christian to forgive your enemies,
but I can’t see what I have seen, and hear what
I have heard, and do it.”
“When the news of these things
spreads,” said Paul, “they’ll send
an army from the east. Sooner or later they’ll
just have to do it to punish the Iroquois and their
white allies, and we’ve got to be here to join
that army.”
“I feel that way, too, Paul,” said Henry.
They were joined later by the other
three, who stayed a little while, and they were in
accord with Henry and Paul.
Then they began their circles about
the camp again, always looking and always listening.
About two o’clock in the morning they heard
a scream, but it was only the cry of a panther.
Before day there were clouds, a low rumble of distant
thunder, and faint far flashes of lightning.
Henry was in dread of rain, but the lightning and
thunder ceased, and the clouds went away. Then
dawn came, rosy and bright, and all but three rose
from the earth. The three-one woman and two
children-had died in silence in the night, and they
were buried, like the others, in shallow graves in
the woods. But there was little weeping or external
mourning over them. All were now heavy and apathetic,
capable of but little more emotion.
Carpenter resumed his position at
the head of the column, which now moved slowly over
the mountain through a thick forest matted with vines
and bushes and without a path. The march was
now so painful and difficult that they did not make
more than two miles an hour. The stronger of
them helped the men to gather more whortleberries,
as it was easy to see that the food they had with
them would never last until they reached Fort Penn,
should they ever reach it.
The condition of the country into
which they had entered steadily grew worse.
They were well into the mountains, a region exceedingly
wild and rough, but little known to the settlers, who
had gone around it to build homes in the fertile and
beautiful valley of Wyoming. The heavy forest
was made all the more difficult by the presence everywhere
of almost impassable undergrowth. Now and then
a woman lay down under the bushes, and in two cases
they died there because the power to live was no longer
in them. They grew weaker and weaker. The
food that they had brought from the Wyoming fort was
almost exhausted, and the wild whortleberries were
far from sustaining. Fortunately there was plenty
of water flowing tinder the dark woods and along the
mountainside. But they were compelled to stop
at intervals of an hour or two to rest, and the more
timid continually expected Indian ambush.
The five met shortly after noon and
took another reckoning of the situation. They
still realized to the full the dangers of Indian pursuit,
which in this case might be a mere matter of accident.
Anybody could follow the broad trail left by the
fugitives, but the Iroquois, busy with destruction
in the valley, might not follow, even if they saw
it. No one could tell. The danger of starvation
or of death from exhaustion was more imminent, more
pressing, and the five resolved to let scouting alone
for the rest of the day and seek game.
“There’s bound to be a
lot of it in these woods,” said Shif’less
Sol, “though it’s frightened out of the
path by our big crowd, but we ought to find it.”
Henry and Shif’less Sol went
in one direction, and Paul, Tom, and Long Jim in another.
But with all their hunting they succeeded in finding
only one little deer, which fell to the rifle of Silent
Tom. It made small enough portions for the supper
and breakfast of nearly a hundred people, but it helped
wonderfully, and so did the fires which Henry and
his comrades would now have built, even had they not
been needed for the cooking. They saw that light
and warmth, the light and warmth of glowing coals,
would alone rouse life in this desolate band.
They slept the second night on the
ground among the trees, and the next morning they
entered that gloomy region of terrible memory, the
Great Dismal Swamp of the North, known sometimes, to
this day, as “The Shades of Death.”