A FOREST PAGE
When the survivors of the band of
Wyoming fugitives that the five had helped were behind
the walls of Fort Penn, securing the food and rest
they needed so greatly, Henry Ware and his comrades
felt themselves relieved of a great responsibility.
They were also aware how much they owed to Timmendiquas,
because few of the Indians and renegades would have
been so forbearing. Thayendanegea seemed to
them inferior to the great Wyandot. Often when
Brant could prevent the torture of the prisoners and
the slaughter of women and children, he did not do
it. The five could never forget these things
in after life, when Brant was glorified as a great
warrior and leader. Their minds always turned
to Timmendiquas as the highest and finest of Indian
types.
While they were at Fort Penn two other
parties came, in a fearful state of exhaustion, and
also having paid the usual toll of death on the way.
Other groups reached the Moravian towns, where they
were received with all kindness by the German settlers.
The five were able to give some help to several of
these parties, but the beautiful Wyoming Valley lay
utterly in ruins. The ruthless fury of the savages
and of many of the Tories, Canadians, and Englishmen,
can scarcely be told. Everything was slaughtered
or burned. As a habitation of human beings or
of anything pertaining to human beings, the valley
for a time ceased to be. An entire population
was either annihilated or driven out, and finally
Butler’s army, finding that nothing more was
left to be destroyed, gathered in its war parties
and marched northward with a vast store of spoils,
in which scalps were conspicuous. When they
repassed Tioga Point, Timmendiquas and his Wyandots
were still with them. Thayendanegea was also
with them here, and so was Walter Butler, who was
destined shortly to make a reputation equaling that
of his father, “Indian” Butler. Nor
had the terrible Queen Esther ever left them.
She marched at the head of the army, singing, horrid
chants of victory, and swinging the great war tomahawk,
which did not often leave her hand.
The whole force was re-embarked upon
the Susquehanna, and it was still full of the impulse
of savage triumph. Wild Indian songs floated
along the stream or through the meadows, which were
quiet now. They advanced at their ease, knowing
that there was nobody to attack them, but they were
watched by five woodsmen, two of whom were boys.
Meanwhile the story of Wyoming, to an extent that
neither Indians nor woodsmen themselves suspected,
was spreading from town to town in the East, to invade
thence the whole civilized world, and to stir up an
indignation and horror that would make the name Wyoming
long memorable. Wyoming had been a victory for
the flag under which the invaders fought, but it sadly
tarnished the cause of that flag, and the consequences
were to be seen soon.
Henry Ware, Paul Cotter, Sol Hyde,
Tom Ross, and Jim Hart were thinking little of distant
consequences, but they were eager for the present
punishment of these men who had committed so much
cruelty. From the bushes they could easily follow
the canoes, and could recognize some of their occupants.
In one of the rear boats sat Braxton Wyatt and a
young man whom they knew to be Walter Butler, a pallid
young man, animated by the most savage ferocity against
the patriots. He and Wyatt seemed to be on the
best of terms, and faint echoes of their laughter came
to the five who were watching among the bushes on
the river bank. Certainly Braxton Wyatt and
he were a pair well met.
“Henry,” said Shif’less
Sol longingly, “I think I could jest about reach
Braxton Wyatt with a bullet from here. I ain’t
over fond o’ shootin’ from ambush, but
I done got over all scruples so fur ez he’s
concerned. Jest one bullet, one little bullet,
Henry, an’ ef I miss I won’t ask fur a
second chance.”
“No, Sol, it won’t do,”
said Henry. “They’d get off to hunt
us. The whole fleet would be stopped, and we
want ’em to go on as fast as possible.”
“I s’pose you’re
right, Henry,” said the shiftless one sadly,
“but I’d jest like to try it once.
I’d give a month’s good huntin’
for that single trial.”
After watching the British-Indian
fleet passing up the river, they turned back to the
site of the Wyoming fort and the houses near it.
Here everything had been destroyed. It was about
dusk when they approached the battlefield, and they
heard a dreadful howling, chiefly that of wolves.
I think we’d better turn away,”
said Henry. ” We couldn’t do anything with
so many.”
They agreed with him, and, going back,
followed the Indians up the Susquehanna. A light
rain fell that night, but they slept under a little
shed, once attached to a house which had been destroyed
by fire. In some way the shed had escaped the
flames, and it now came into timely use. The
five, cunning in forest practice, drew up brush on
the sides, and half-burned timber also, and, spreading
their blankets on ashes which had not long been cold,
lay well sheltered from the drizzling rain, although
they did not sleep for a long time.
It was the hottest period of the year
in America, but the night had come on cool, and the
rain made it cooler. The five, profiting by
experience, often carried with them two light blankets
instead of one heavy one. With one blanket beneath
the body they could keep warmer in case the weather
was cold.
Now they lay in a row against the
standing wall of the old outhouse, protected by a
six- or seven-foot slant of board roof. They
had eaten of a deer that they had shot in the morning,
and they had a sense of comfort and rest that none
of them had known before in many days. Henry’s
feelings were much like those that he had experienced
when he lay in the bushes in the little canoe, wrapped
up from the storm and hidden from the Iroquois.
But here there was an important increase of pleasure,
the pattering of the rain on the board roof, a pleasant,
soothing sound to which millions of boys, many of
them afterwards great men, have listened in America.
It grew very dark about them, and
the pleasant patter, almost musical in its rhythm,
kept up. Not much wind was blowing, and it,
too, was melodious. Henry lay with his head on
a little heap of ashes, which was covered by his under
blanket, and, for the first time since he had brought
the warning to Wyoming, he was free from all feeling
of danger. The picture itself of the battle,
the defeat, the massacre, the torture, and of the savage
Queen Esther cleaving the heads of the captives, was
at times as vivid as ever, and perhaps would always
return now and then in its original true colors, but
the periods between, when youth, hope, and strength
had their way, grew longer and longer.
Now Henry’s eyelids sank lower
and lower. Physical comfort and the presence
of his comrades caused a deep satisfaction that permeated
his whole being. The light wind mingled pleasantly
with the soft summer rain. The sound of the two
grew strangely melodious, almost piercingly sweet,
and then it seemed to be human. They sang together,
the wind and rain, among the leaves, and the note
that reached his heart, rather than his ear, thrilled
him with courage and hope. Once more the invisible
voice that had upborne him in the great valley of the
Ohio told him, even here in the ruined valley of Wyoming,
that what was lost would be regained.
The chords ended, and the echoes, amazingly clear,
floated far away in the darkness and rain. Henry
roused himself, and came from the imaginative borderland.
He stirred a little, and said in a quiet voice to
Shif’less Sol:
“Did you hear anything, Sol?”
“Nothin’ but the wind an’ the rain.”
Henry knew that such would be the answer.
“I guess you didn’t hear
anything either, Henry,” continued the shiftless
one, “’cause it looked to me that you wuz
’bout ez near sleep ez a feller could be without
bein’ ackshooally so.”
“I was drifting away,” said Henry.
He was beginning to realize that he
had a great power, or rather gift. Paul was
the sensitive, imaginative boy, seeing everything
in brilliant colors, a great builder of castles, not
all of air, but Henry’s gift went deeper.
It was the power to evoke the actual living picture
of the event that bad not yet occurred, something
akin in its nature to prophecy, based perhaps upon
the wonderful power of observation, inherited doubtless,
from countless primitive ancestors. The finest
product of the wilderness, he saw in that wilderness
many things that others did not see, and unconsciously
he drew his conclusions from superior knowledge.
The song had ceased a full ten minutes,
and then came another note, a howl almost plaintive,
but, nevertheless, weird and full of ferocity.
All knew it at once. They had heard the cry
of wolves too often in their lives, but this had an
uncommon note like the yell of the Indian in victory.
Again the cry arose, nearer, haunting, and powerful.
The five, used to the darkness, could see one another’s
faces, and the look that all gave was the same, full
of understanding and repulsion.
“It has been a great day for
the wolf in this valley,” whispered Paul, “and
striking our trail they think they are going to find
what they have been finding in such plenty before.”
“Yes,” nodded Henry, “but
do you remember that time when in the house we took
the place of the man, his wife and children, just
before the Indians came?”
“Yes,” said Paul.
“We’ll treat them wolves the same way,”
said Shif’less Sol.
“I’m glad of the chance,” said Long
Jim.
“Me, too,” said Tom Ross.
The five rose up to sitting positions
against the board wall, and everyone held across his
knees a long, slender barreled rifle, with the muzzle
pointing toward the forest. All accomplished
marksmen, it would only be a matter of a moment for
the stock to leap to the shoulder, the eye to glance
down the barrel, the finger to pull the trigger, and
the unerring bullet to leap forth.
“Henry, you give the word as usual,” said
Shif’less Sol.
Henry nodded.
Presently in the darkness they heard
the pattering of light feet, and they saw many gleaming
eyes draw near. There must have been at least
thirty of the wolves, and the five figures that they
saw reclining, silent and motionless, against the
unburned portion of the house might well have been
those of the dead and scalped, whom they had found
in such numbers everywhere. They drew near in
a semicircular group, its concave front extended toward
the fire, the greatest wolves at the center.
Despite many feastings, the wolves were hungry again.
Nothing had opposed them before, but caution was
instinctive. The big gray leaders did not mind
the night or the wind or the rain, which they had known
all their lives, and which they counted as nothing,
but they always had involuntary suspicion of human
figures, whether living or not, and they approached
slowly, wrinkling back their noses and sniffing the
wind which blew from them instead of the five figures.
But their confidence increased as they advanced.
They had found many such burned houses as this, but
they had found nothing among the ruins except what
they wished.
The big leaders advanced more boldly,
glaring straight at the human figures, a slight froth
on their lips, the lips themselves curling back farther
from the strong white teeth. The outer ends
of the concave semicircle also drew in. The whole
pack was about to spring upon its unresisting prey,
and it is, no doubt, true that many a wolfish pulse
beat a little higher in anticipation. With
a suddenness as startling as it was terrifying the
five figures raised themselves, five long, dark tubes
leaped to their shoulders, and with a suddenness that
was yet more terrifying, a gush of flame shot from
five muzzles. Five of the wolves-and they were
the biggest and the boldest, the leaders-fell dead
upon the ashes of the charred timbers, and the others,
howling their terror to the dark, skies, fled deep
into the forest.
Henry strode over and pushed the body
of the largest wolf with his foot.
“I suppose we only gratified
a kind of sentiment in shooting those wolves,”
he said, ” but I for one am glad we did it.”
“So am I,” said Paul.
“Me, too,” said the other three together.
They went back to their positions
near the wall, and one by one fell asleep. No
more wolves howled that night anywhere near them.
When the five awakened the next morning
the rain had ceased, and a splendid sun was tinting
a blue sky with gold. Jim Hart built a fire
among the blackened logs, and cooked venison.
They had also brought from Fort Penn a little coffee,
which Long Jim carried with a small coffee pot in
his camp kit, and everyone had a small tin cup.
He made coffee for them, an uncommon wilderness luxury,
in which they could rarely indulge, and they were
heartened and strengthened by it.
Then they went again up the valley,
as beautiful as ever, with its silver river in the
center, and its green mountain walls on either side.
But the beauty was for the eye only. It did
not reach the hearts of those who had seen it before.
All of the five loved the wilderness, but they felt
now how tragic silence and desolation could be where
human life and all the daily ways of human life had
been.
It was mid-summer, but the wilderness
was already reclaiming its own. The game knew
that man was gone, and it had come back into the valley.
Deer ate what had grown in the fields and gardens,
and the wolves were everywhere. The whole black
tragedy was written for miles. They were never
out of sight of some trace of it, and their anger
grew again as they advanced in the blackened path
of the victorious Indians.
It was their purpose now to hang on
the Indian flank as scouts and skirmishers, until
an American army was formed for a campaign against
the Iroquois, which they were sure must be conducted
sooner or later. Meanwhile they could be of great
aid, gathering news of the Indian plans, and, when
that army of which they dreamed should finally march,
they could help it most of all by warning it of ambush,
the Indian’s deadliest weapon.
Everyone of the five had already perceived
a fact which was manifest in all wars with the Indians
along the whole border from North to South, as it
steadily shifted farther West. The practical
hunter and scout was always more than a match for the
Indian, man for man, but, when the raw levies of settlers
were hastily gathered to stem invasion, they were
invariably at a great disadvantage. They were
likely to be caught in ambush by overwhelming numbers,
and to be cut down, as had just happened at Wyoming.
The same fate might attend an invasion of the Iroquois
country, even by a large army of regular troops, and
Henry and his comrades resolved upon doing their utmost
to prevent it. An army needed eyes, and it could
have none better than those five pairs. So they
went swiftly up the valley and northward and eastward,
into the country of the Iroquois. They had a
plan of approaching the upper Mohawk village of Canajoharie,
where one account says that Thayendanegea was born,
although another credits his birthplace to the upper
banks of the Ohio.
They turned now from the valley to
the deep woods. The trail showed that the great
Indian force, after disembarking again, split into
large parties, everyone loaded with spoil and bound
for its home village. The five noted several
of the trails, but one of them consumed the whole
attention of Silent Tom Ross.
He saw in the soft soil near a creek
bank the footsteps of about eight Indians, and, mingled
with them, other footsteps, which he took to be those
of a white woman and of several children, captives,
as even a tyro would infer. The soul of Tom,
the good, honest, and inarticulate frontiersman, stirred
within him. A white woman and her children being
carried off to savagery, to be lost forevermore to
their kind! Tom, still inarticulate, felt his
heart pierced with sadness at the tale that the tracks
in the soft mud told so plainly. But despair
was not the only emotion in his heart. The silent
and brave man meant to act.
“Henry,” he said, “see
these tracks here in the soft spot by the creek.”
The young leader read the forest page,
and it told him exactly the same tale that it had
told Tom Ross.
“About a day old, I think,” he said.
“Just about,” said Tom;
“an’ I reckon, Henry, you know what’s
in my mind.”
“I think I do,” said Henry,
” and we ought to overtake them by to-morrow night.
You tell the others, Tom.”
Tom informed Shif’less Sol,
Paul, and Long Jim in a few words, receiving from
everyone a glad assent, and then the five followed
fast on the trail. They knew that the Indians
could not go very fast, as their speed must be that
of the slowest, namely, that of the children, and
it seemed likely that Henry’s prediction of
overtaking them on the following night would come true.
It was an easy trail. Here and
there were tiny fragments of cloth, caught by a bush
from the dress of a captive. In one place they
saw a fragment of a child’s shoe that had been
dropped off and abandoned. Paul picked up the
worn piece of leather and examined it.
“I think it was worn by a girl,”
he said, “and, judging from its size, she could
not have been more than eight years old. Think
of a child like that being made to walk five or six
hundred miles through these woods!”
“Younger ones still have had
to do it,” said Shif’less Sol gravely,
“an’ them that couldn’t-well, the
tomahawk.”
The trail was leading them toward
the Seneca country, and they had no doubt that the
Indians were Senecas, who had been more numerous than
any others of the Six Nations at the Wyoming battle.
They came that afternoon to a camp fire beside which
the warriors and captives had slept the night before.
“They ate bar meat an’
wild turkey,” said Long Jim, looking at some
bones on the ground.
“An’ here,” said
Tom Ross, “on this pile uv bushes is whar the
women an’ children slept, an’ on the other
side uv the fire is whar the warriors lay anywhars.
You can still see how the bodies uv some uv ‘cm
crushed down the grass an’ little bushes.”
“An’ I’m thinkin’,”
said Shif’less Sol, as he looked at the trail
that led away from the camp fire, “that some
o’ them little ones wuz gittin’ pow’ful
tired. Look how these here little trails are
wobblin’ about.”
“Hope we kin come up afore the
Injuns begin to draw thar tomahawks,” said Tom
Ross.
The others were silent, but they knew
the dreadful significance of Tom’s remark, and
Henry glanced at them all, one by one.
“It’s the greatest danger
to be feared,” he said, “and we must overtake
them in the night when they are not suspecting.
If we attack by day they will tomahawk the captives
the very first thing.”
“Shorely,’, said the shiftless one.
“Then,” said Henry, ”
we don’t need to hurry. “We’ll
go on until about midnight, and then sleep until sunrise.”
They continued at a fair pace along
a trail that frontiersmen far less skillful than they
could have followed. But a silent dread was
in the heart of every one of them. As they saw
the path of the small feet staggering more and more
they feared to behold some terrible object beside
the path.
“The trail of the littlest child
is gone,” suddenly announced Paul.
“Yes,” said Henry, “but
the mother has picked it up and is carrying it.
See how her trail has suddenly grown more uneven.”
“Poor woman,” said Paul.
“Henry, we’re just bound to overtake
that band.”
“We’ll do it,” said Henry.
At the appointed time they sank down
among the thickest bushes that they could find, and
slept until the first upshot of dawn. Then they
resumed the trail, haunted always by that fear of
finding something terrible beside it. But it
was a trail that continually grew slower. The
Indians themselves were tired, or, feeling safe from
pursuit, saw no need of hurry. By and by the
trail of the smallest child reappeared.
“It feels a lot better now,”
said Tom Ross. “So do I.”
They came to another camp fire, at
which the ashes were not yet cold. Feathers
were scattered about, indicating that the Indians
had taken time for a little side hunt, and had shot
some birds.
“They can’t be more than
two or three hours ahead,” said Henry, “and
we’ll have to go on now very cautiously.”
They were in a country of high hills,
well covered with forests, a region suited to an ambush,
which they feared but little on their own account;
but, for the sake of extreme caution, they now advanced
slowly. The afternoon was long and warm, but
an hour before sunset they looked over a hill into
a glade, and saw the warriors making camp for the
night.
The sight they beheld made the pulses
of the five throb heavily. The Indians had already
built their fire, and two of them were cooking venison
upon it. Others were lying on the grass, apparently
resting, but a little to one side sat a woman, still
young and of large, strong figure, though now apparently
in the last stages of exhaustion, with her feet showing
through the fragments of shoes that she wore.
Her head was bare, and her dress was in strips.
Four children lay beside her’ the youngest
two with their heads in her lap. The other two,
who might be eleven and thirteen each, had pillowed
their heads on their arms, and lay in the dull apathy
that comes from the finish of both strength and hope.
The woman’s face was pitiful. She had
more to fear than the children, and she knew it.
She was so worn that the skin hung loosely on her
face, and her eyes showed despair only. The
sad spectacle was almost more than Paul could stand.
“I don’t like to shoot
from ambush,” he said, “but we could cut
down half of those warriors at our firs fire and rush
in on the rest.”
“And those we didn’t cut
down at our first volley would tomahawk the woman
and children in an instant,” replied Henry.
” We agreed, you know, that it would be sure to happen.
We can’t do anything until night comes, and
then we’ve got to be mighty cautious.”
Paul could not dispute the truth of
his words, and they withdrew carefully to the crest
of a hill, where they lay in the undergrowth, watching
the Indians complete their fire and their preparations
for the night. It was evident to Henry that they
considered themselves perfectly safe. Certainly
they had every reason for thinking so. It was
not likely that white enemies were within a hundred
miles of them, and, if so, it could only be a wandering
hunter or two, who would flee from this fierce band
of Senecas who bad taken revenge for the great losses
that they’ had suffered the year before at the
Oriskany.
They kept very little watch and built
only a small fire, just enough for broiling deer meat
which they carried. They drank at a little spring
which ran from under a ledge near them, and gave portions
of the meat to the woman and children. After
the woman had eaten, they bound her hands, and she
lay back on the grass, about twenty feet from the
camp fire. Two children lay on either side of
her, and they were soon sound asleep. The warriors,
as Indians will do when they are free from danger
and care, talked a good deal, and showed all the signs
of having what was to them a luxurious time.
They ate plentifully, lolled on the grass, and looked
at some hideous trophies, the scalps that they carried
at their belts. The woman could not keep from
seeing these, too, but her face did not change from
its stony aspect of despair. Then the light
of the fire went out, the sun sank behind the mountains,
and the five could no longer see the little group of
captives and captors.
They still waited, although eagerness
and impatience were tugging at the hearts of every
one of them. But they must give the Indians
time to fall asleep if they would secure rescue, and
not merely revenge. They remained in the bushes,
saying but little and eating of venison that they
carried in their knapsacks.
They let a full three hours pass,
and the night remained dark, but with a faint moon
showing. Then they descended slowly into the
valley, approaching by cautious degrees the spot where
they knew the Indian camp lay. This work required
at least three quarters of an hour, and they reached
a point where they could see the embers of the fire
and the dark figures lying about it. The Indians,
their suspicions lulled, had put out no sentinels,
and all were asleep. But the five knew that,
at the first shot, they would be as wide awake as
if they had never slept, and as formidable as tigers.
Their problem seemed as great as ever. So they
lay in the bushes and held a whispered conference.
“It’s this,” said
Henry. ” We want to save the woman and the children
from the tomahawks, and to do so we must get them out
of range of the blade before the battle begins.”
“How?” said Tom Ross.
“I’ve got to slip up,
release the woman, arm her, tell her to run for the
woods with the children, and then you four must do
the most of the rest.”
“Do you think you can do it,
Henry ?” asked Shif’less Sol.
I can, as I will soon show you.
I’m going to steal forward to the woman, but
the moment you four hear an alarm open with your rifles
and pistols. You can come a little nearer without
being heard.”
All of them moved up close to the
Indian camp, and lay hidden in the last fringe of
bushes except Henry. He lay almost flat upon
the ground, carrying his rifle parallel with his side,
and in his right hand. He was undertaking one
of the severest and most dangerous tests known to
a frontiersman. He meant to crawl into the very
midst of a camp of the Iroquois, composed of the most
alert woodsmen in the world, men who would spring up
at the slightest crackle in the brush. Woodmen
who, warned by some sixth sense, would awaken at the
mere fact of a strange presence.
The four who remained behind in the
bushes could not keep their hearts from beating louder
and faster. They knew the tremendous risk undertaken
by their comrade, but there was not one of them who
would have shirked it, had not all yielded it to the
one whom they knew to be the best fitted for the task.
Henry crept forward silently, bringing
to his aid all the years of skill that he had acquired
in his life in the wilds. His body was like
that of a serpent, going forward, coil by coil.
He was near enough now to see the embers of the fire
not yet quite dead, the dark figures scattered about
it, sleeping upon the grass with the long ease of
custom, and then the outline of the woman apart from
the others with the children about her. Henry
now lay entirely flat, and his motions were genuinely
those of a serpent. It was by a sort of contraction
and relaxation of the body that he moved himself,
and his progress was absolutely soundless.
The object of his advance was the
woman. He saw by the faint light of the moon
that she was not yet asleep. Her face, worn
and weather beaten, was upturned to the skies, and
the stony look of despair seemed to have settled there
forever. She lay upon some pine boughs, and
her hands were tied behind her for the night with
deerskin.
Henry contorted himself on, inch by
inch, for all the world like a great snake.
Now he passed the sleeping Senecas, hideous with war
paint, and came closer to the woman. She was
not paying attention to anything about her, but was
merely looking up at the pale, cold stars, as if everything
in the world had ceased for her.
Henry crept a little nearer.
He made a slight noise, as of a lizard running through
the grass, but the woman took no notice. He
crept closer, and. there he lay flat upon the grass
within six feet of her, his figure merely a slightly
darker blur against the dark blur of the earth.
Then, trusting to the woman’s courage and strength
of mind, he emitted a hiss very soft and low, like
the warning of a serpent, half in fear and half in
anger.
The woman moved a little, and looked
toward the point from which the sound had come.
It might have been the formidable hiss of a coiling
rattlesnake that she heard, but she felt no fear.
She was too much stunned, too near exhaustion to
be alarmed by anything, and she did not look a second
time. She merely settled back on the pine boughs,
and again looked dully up at the pale, cold stars
that cared so little for her or hers.
Henry crept another yard nearer, and
then he uttered that low noise, sibilant and warning,
which the woman, the product of the border, knew to
be made by a human being. She raised herself
a little, although it was difficult with her bound
hands to sit upright, and saw a dark shadow approaching
her. That dark shadow she knew to he the figure
of a man. An Indian would not be approaching
in such a manner, and she looked again, startled into
a sudden acute attention, and into a belief that the
incredible, the impossible, was about to happen.
A voice came from the figure, and its quality was
that of the white voice, not the red.
“Do not move,” said that
incredible voice out of the unknown. “I
have come for your rescue, and others who have come
for the same purpose are near. Turn on one side,
and I will cut the bonds that hold your arms.”
The voice, the white voice, was like
the touch of fire to Mary Newton. A sudden fierce
desire for life and for the lives of her four children
awoke within her just when hope had gone the call
to life came. She had never heard before a voice
so full of cheer and encouragement. It penetrated
her whole being. Exhaustion and despair fled
away.
“Turn a little on your side,” said the
voice.
She turned obediently, and then felt
the sharp edge of cold steel as it swept between her
wrists and cut the thongs that held them together.
Her arms fell apart, and strength permeated every
vein of her being.
“We shall attack in a few moments,”
said the voice, “but at the first shots the
Senecas will try to tomahawk you and your children.
Hold out your hands.”
She held out both hands obediently.
The handle of a tomahawk was pressed into one, and
the muzzle of a double-barreled pistol into the other.
Strength flowed down each hand into her body.
“If the time comes, use them;
you are strong, and you know how,” said the
voice. Then she saw the dark figure creeping
away.