THE PURSUIT ON THE RIVER
The story of the frontier is filled
with heroines, from the far days of Hannah Dustin
down to the present, and Mary Newton, whom the unknown
figure in the dark had just aroused, is one of them.
It had seemed to her that God himself had deserted
her, but at the last moment he had sent some one.
She did not doubt, she could not doubt, because the
bonds had been severed, and there she lay with a deadly
weapon in either hand. The friendly stranger
who had come so silently was gone as he had come, but
she was not helpless now. Like many another frontier
woman, she was naturally lithe and powerful, and,
stirred by a great hope, all her strength had returned
for the present.
Nobody who lives in the wilderness
can wholly escape superstition, and Mary Newton began
to believe that some supernatural creature had intervened
in her behalf. She raised herself just a little
on one elbow and surveyed the surrounding thicket.
She saw only the dead embers of the fire, and the
dark forms of the Indians lying upon the bare ground.
Had it not been for the knife and pistol in her hand,
she could have believed that the voice was only a
dream.
There was a slight rustling in the
thicket, and a Seneca rose quickly to his knees, grasping
his rifle in both hands. The woman’s fingers
clutched the knife and pistol more tightly, and her
whole gaunt figure trembled. The Seneca listened
only a moment. Then he gave a sharp cry, and
all the other warriors sprang up. But three
of them rose only to fall again, as the rifles cracked
in the bushes, while two others staggered from wounds.
The triumphant shout of the frontiersmen
came from the thicket, and then they rushed upon the
camp. Quick as a flash two of the Senecas started
toward the woman and children with their tomahawks,
but Mary Newton was ready. Her heart had leaped
at the shots when the Senecas fell, and she kept her
courage. Now she sprang to her full height,
and, with the children screaming at her feet, fired
one barrel of the pistol directly into the face of
the first warrior, and served the second in the same
way with the other barrel when he was less than four
feet away. Then, tomahawk in hand, she rushed
forward. In judging Mary Newton, one must consider
time and place.
But happily there was no need for
her to use her tomahawk. As the five rushed
in, four of them emptied their double-barreled pistols,
while Henry swung his clubbed rifle with terrible
effect. It was too much for the Senecas.
The apparition of the armed woman, whom they had
left bound, and the deadly fire from the five figures
that sprang upon them, was like a blow from the hand
of Aieroski. The unhurt and wounded fled deep
into the forest, leaving their dead behind.
Mary Newton, her great deed done, collapsed from emotion
and weakness. The screams of the children sank
in a few moments to frightened whimpers. But
the oldest, when they saw the white faces, knew that
rescue had come.
Paul brought water from the brook
in his cap, and Mary Newton was revived; Jim was reassuring
the children, and the other three were in the thickets,
watching lest the surviving Senecas return for attack.
“I don’t know who you
are, but I think the good God himself must have sent
you to our rescue,” said Mary Newton reverently.
“We don’t know,”
said Paul, “but we are doing the best we can.
Do you think you can walk now?”
“Away from the savages?
Yes!” she said passionately. She looked
down at the dead figures of the Senecas, and she did
not feel a single trace of pity for them. Again
it is necessary to consider time and place.
“Some of my strength came back
while I was lying here,” she said, “and
much more of it when you drove away the Indians.”
“Very well,” said Henry,
who had returned to the dead camp fire with his comrades,
“we must start on the back trail at once.
The surviving Senecas, joined by other Iroquois,
will certainly pursue, and we need all the start that
we can get.”
Long Jim picked up one of the two
younger children and flung him over his shoulder;
Tom Ross did as much for the other, but the older
two scorned help. They were full of admiration
for the great woodsmen, mighty heroes who had suddenly
appeared out of the air, as it were, and who had swept
like a tornado over the Seneca band. It did
not seem possible now that they, could be retaken.
But Mary Newton, with her strength
and courage, had also recovered her forethought.
“Maybe it will not be better
to go on the back trail,” she said. “One
of the Senecas told me to-day that six or seven miles
farther on was a river flowing into the Susquehanna,
and that they would cross this river on a boat now
concealed among bushes on the bank. The crossing
was at a sudden drop between high banks. Might
not we go on, find the boat, and come back in it down
the river and into the Susquehanna?”
“That sounds mighty close to
wisdom to me,” said Shif’less Sol.
“Besides, it’s likely to have the advantage
o’ throwin’ the Iroquois off our track.
They’ll think, o’ course, that we’ve
gone straight back, an’ we’ll pass ’em
ez we’re going forward.”
“It’s certainly the best
plan,” said Henry, “and it’s worth
our while to try for that hidden boat of the Iroquois.
Do you know the general direction?”
“Almost due north.”
“Then we’ll make a curve
to the right, in order to avoid any Iroquois who may
be returning to this camp, and push for it.”
Henry led the way over hilly, rough
ground, and the others followed in a silent file,
Long Jim and Tom still carrying the two smallest children,
who soon fell asleep on their shoulders. Henry
did not believe that the returning Iroquois could follow
their trail on such a dark night, and the others agreed
with him.
After a while they saw the gleam of
water. Henry knew that it must be very near,
or it would have been wholly invisible on such a dark
night.
“I think, Mrs. Newton,”
he said, “that this is the river of which you
spoke, and the cliffs seem to drop down just as you
said they would.”
The woman smiled.
“Yes,” she said, “you’ve
done well with my poor guess, and the boat must be
hidden somewhere near here.”
Then she sank down with exhaustion,
and the two older children, unable to walk farther,
sank down beside her. But the two who slept
soundly on the shoulders of Long Jim and Tom Ross did
not awaken. Henry motioned to Jim and Tom to
remain there, and Shif’less Sol bent upon them
a quizzical and approving look.
“Didn’t think it was in
you, Jim Hart, you old horny-handed galoot,”
he said, “carryin’ a baby that tender.
Knew Jim could sling a little black bar ‘roun’
by the tail, but I didn’t think you’d
take to nussin’ so easy.”
“I’d luv you to know,
Sol Hyde,” said Jim Hart in a tone of high condescension,
“that Tom Ross an’ me are civilized human
bein’s. In face uv danger we are ez brave
ez forty thousand lions, but with the little an’
the weak we’re as easy an’ kind an’
soft ez human bein’s are ever made to be.”
“You’re right, old hoss,” said Tom
Ross.
“Well,” said the shiftless
one, “I can’t argify with you now, ez
the general hez called on his colonel, which is me,
an’ his major, which is Paul, to find him a
nice new boat like one o’ them barges o’
Clepatry that Paul tells about, all solid silver,
with red silk sails an’ gold oars, an’
we’re meanin’ to do it.”
Fortune was with them, and in a quarter
of an hour they discovered, deep among bushes growing
in the shallow water, a large, well-made boat with
two pairs of oars and with small supplies of parched
corn and venison hidden in it.
“Good luck an’ bad luck
come mixed,” said the shift-less one, “an’
this is shorely one o’ our pieces o’ good
luck. The woman an’ the children are clean
tuckered out, an’ without this boat we could
never hev got them back. Now it’s jest
a question o’ rowin’ an’ fightin’.”
“Paul and I will pull her out
to the edge of the clear water,” said Henry,
“while you can go back and tell the others, Sol.”
“That just suits a lazy man,”
said Sol, and he walked away jauntily. Under
his apparent frivolity he concealed his joy at the
find, which he knew to be of such vast importance.
He approached the dusky group, and his really tender
heart was stirred with pity for the rescued captives.
Long Jim and Silent Tom held the smaller two on their
shoulders, but the older ones and the woman, also,
had fallen asleep. Sol, in order to conceal
his emotion, strode up rather roughly. Mary Newton
awoke.
“Did you find anything?” she asked.
“Find anything?” repeated
Shif’less Sol. “Well, Long Jim an’
Tom here might never hev found anything, but Henry
an’ Paul an’ me, three eddicated men,
scholars, I might say, wuz jest natcherally bound
to find it whether it wuz thar or not. Yes, we’ve
unearthed what Paul would call an argosy, the grandest
craft that ever floated on this here creek, that I
never saw before, an’ that I don’t know
the name uv. She’s bein’ floated
out now, an’ I, the Gran’ Hidalgo an’
Majordomo, hev come to tell the princes and princesses,
an’ the dukes and dukesses, an’ all the
other gran’ an’ mighty passengers, that
the barge o’ the Dog o’ Venice is in the
stream, an’ the Dog, which is Henry Ware, is
waitin’, settin’ on the Pup to welcome
ye.”
“Sol,” said Long Jim,
“you do talk a power uv foolishness, with your
Dogs an’ Pups.”
“It ain’t foolishness,”
rejoined the shiftless one. “I heard Paul
read it out o’ a book oncet, plain ez day.
They’ve been ruled by Dogs at Venice for more
than a thousand years, an’ on big ’casions
the Dog comes down a canal in a golden barge, settin’
on the Pup. I’ll admit it ’pears
strange to me, too, but who are you an’ me,
Jim Hart, to question the ways of foreign countries,
thousands o’ miles on the other side o’
the sea?”
“They’ve found the boat,”
said Tom Ross, “an’ that’s enough!”
“Is it really true?” asked Mrs. Newton.
“It is,” replied Shif’less
Sol, “an’ Henry an’ Paul are in it,
waitin’ fur us. We’re thinkin’,
Mrs. Newton, that the roughest part of your trip
is over.”
In another five minutes all were in
the boat, which was a really fine one, and they were
delighted. Mary Newton for the first time broke
down and wept, and no one disturbed her. The
five spread the blankets on the bottom of the boat,
where the children soon went to sleep once more, and
Tom Ross and Shif’less Sol took the oars.
“Back in a boat ag’in,”
said the shiftless one exultantly. “Makes
me feel like old times. My fav’rite mode
o’ travelin’ when Jim Hart, ‘stead
o’ me, is at the oars.”
“Which is most o’ the time,” said
Long Jim.
It was indeed a wonderful change to
these people worn by the wilderness. They lay
at ease now, while two pairs of powerful arms, with
scarcely an effort, propelled the boat along the stream.
The woman herself lay down on the blankets and fell
asleep with the children. Henry at the prow,
Tom Ross at the stern, and Paul amidships watched
in silence, but with their rifles across their knees.
They knew that the danger was far from over.
Other Indians were likely to use this stream, unknown
to them, as a highway, and those who survived of their
original captors could pick up their trail by daylight.
And the Senecas, being mad for revenge, would surely
get help and follow. Henry believed that
the theory of returning toward the Wyoming Valley
was sound. That region had been so thoroughly
ravaged now that all the Indians would be going northward.
If they could float down a day or so without molestation,
they would probably be safe. The creek, or,
rather, little river, broadened, flowing with a smooth,
fairly swift current. The forest on either side
was dense with oak, hickory, maple, and other splendid
trees, often with a growth of underbrush. The
three riflemen never ceased to watch intently.
Henry always looked ahead. It would have been
difficult for any ambushed marksman to have escaped
his notice. But nothing occurred to disturb
them. Once a deer came down to drink, and fled
away at sight of the phantom boat gliding almost without
noise on the still waters. Once the far scream
of a panther came from the woods, but Mary Newton
and her children, sleeping soundly, did not hear it.
The five themselves knew the nature of the sound,
and paid no attention. The boat went steadily
on, the three riflemen never changing their position,
and soon the day began to come. Little arrows
of golden light pierced through the foliage of the
trees, and sparkled on the surface of the water.
In the cast the red sun was coming from his nightly
trip. Henry looked down at the sleepers.
They were overpowered by exhaustion, and would not
awake of their own accord for a long time.
Shif’less Sol caught his look.
“Why not let ’em sleep on?” he said.
Then he and Jim Hart took the oars,
and the shiftless one and Tom Ross resumed their rifles.
The day was coming fast, and the whole forest was
soon transfused with light.
No one of the five had slept during
the night. They did not feel the need of sleep,
and they were upborne, too, by a great exaltation.
They had saved the prisoners thus far from a horrible
fate, and they were firmly resolved to reach, with
them, some strong settlement and safety. They
felt, too, a sense of exultation over Brant, Sangerachte,
Hiokatoo, the Butlers, the Johnsons, Wyatt, and all
the crew that had committed such terrible devastation
in the Wyoming Valley and elsewhere.
The full day clothed the earth in
a light that turned from silver to gold, and the woman
and the children still slept. The five chewed
some strips of venison, and looked rather lugubriously
at the pieces they were saving for Mary Newton and
the children.
“We ought to hev more’n
that,” said Shif’less Sol. Ef the
worst comes to the worst, we’ve got to land
somewhar an’ shoot a deer.”
“But not yet,” said Henry
in a whisper, lest he wake the sleepers. “I
think we’ll come into the Susquehanna pretty
soon, and its width will be a good thing for us.
I wish we were there now. I don’t like
this narrow stream. Its narrowness affords too
good an ambush.”
“Anyway, the creek is broadenin’
out fast,” said the shiftless one, “an’
that is a good sign., What’s that you see ahead,
Henry-ain’t it a river?”
“It surely is,” replied
Henry, who caught sight of a broad expanse of water,
“and it’s the Susquehanna. Pull hard,
Sol! In five more minutes we’ll be in
the river.”
It was less than five when they turned
into the current of the Susquehanna, and less than
five more when they heard a shout behind them, and
saw at least a dozen canoes following. The canoes
were filled with Indians and Tories, and they had spied
the fugitives.
“Keep the women and the children
down, Paul,” cried Henry.
All knew that Henry and Shif’less
Sol were the best shots, and, without a word, Long
Jim and Tom, both powerful and skilled watermen, swung
heavily on the oars, while Henry and Shif’less
Sol sat in the rear with their rifles ready.
Mary Newton awoke with a cry at the sound of the shots,
and started to rise, but Paul pushed her down.
“We’re on the Susquehanna
now, Mrs. Newton,” he said, ” and we are pursued.
The Indians and Tories have just seen us, but don’t
be afraid. The two who are watching there are
the best shots in the world.”
He looked significantly at Henry and
Shif’less Sol, crouching in the stern of the
boat like great warriors from some mighty past, kings
of the forest whom no one could overcome, and her courage
came back. The children, too, had awakened with
frightened cries, but she and Paul quickly soothed
them, and, obedient to commands, the four, and Mary
Newton with them, lay flat upon the bottom of the
boat, which was now being sent forward rapidly by
Jim Hart and Tom. Paul took up his rifle and
sat in a waiting attitude, either to relieve one of
the men at the oars or to shoot if necessary.
The clear sun made forest and river
vivid in its light. The Indians, after their
first cry, made no sound, but so powerful were Long
Jim and Tom that they were gaining but little, although
some of the boats contained six or eight rowers.
As the light grew more intense Henry
made out the two white faces in the first boat.
One was that of Braxton Wyatt, and the other, he
was quite sure, belonged to the infamous Walter Butler.
Hot anger swept through all his veins, and the little
pulses in his temples began to beat like trip hammers.
Now the picture of Wyoming, the battle, the massacre,
the torture, and Queen Esther wielding her great tomahawk
on the bound captives, grew astonishingly vivid, and
it was printed blood red on his brain. The spirit
of anger and defiance, of a desire to taunt those who
had done such things, leaped up in his heart.
“Are you there, Braxton Wyatt?”
he called clearly across the intervening water.
“Yes, I see that it is you, murderer of women
and children, champion of the fire and stake, as savage
as any of the savages. And it is you, too, Walter
Butler, wickeder son of a wicked father. Come
a little closer, won’t you? We’ve
messengers here for both of you!”
He tapped lightly the barrel of his
own rifle and that of Shif’less Sol, and repeated
his request that they come a little closer.
They understood his words, and they
understood, also, the significant gesture when he
patted the barrel of the rifles. The hearts
of both Butler and Wyatt were for the moment afraid,
and their boat dropped back to third place.
Henry laughed aloud when he saw. The Viking
rage was still upon him. This was the primeval
wilderness, and these were no common foes.
“I see that you don’t
want to receive our little messengers,” he cried.
“Why have you dropped back to third place in
the line, Braxton Wyatt and Walter Butler, when you
were first only a moment ago? Are you cowards
as well as murderers of women and children?”
“That’s pow’ful
good talk,” said Shif’less Sol admiringly.
“Henry, you’re a real orator. Give
it to ’em, an’ mebbe I’ll get a
chance at one o’ them renegades.”
It seemed that Henry’s words
had an effect, because the boat of the renegades pulled
up somewhat, although it did not regain first place.
Thus the chase proceeded down the Susquehanna.
The Indian fleet was gaining a little,
and Shif’less Sol called Henry’s attention
to it.
“Don’t you think I’d
better take a shot at one o’ them rowers in
the first boat?” he said to Henry. “Wyatt
an’ Butler are a leetle too fur away.”
“I think it would give them
a good hint, Sol!” said Henry. “Take
that fellow on the right who is pulling so hard.”
The shiftless one raised his rifle,
lingered but a little over his aim, and pulled the
trigger. The rower whom Henry had pointed out
fell back in the boat, his hands slipping from the
handles of his oars. The boat was thrown into
confusion, and dropped back in the race. Scattering
shots were fired in return, but all fell short, the
water spurting up in little jets where they struck.
Henry, who had caught something of
the Indian nature in his long stay among them in the
northwest, laughed in loud irony.
“That was one of our little
messengers, and it found a listener!” he shouted.
“And I see that you are afraid, Braxton Wyatt
and Walter Butler, murderers of women and children!
Why don’t you keep your proper places in the
front?”
“That’s the way to talk
to ’em,” whispered Shif’less Sol,
as he reloaded. “Keep it up, an’
mebbe we kin git a chance at Braxton Wyatt hisself.
Since Wyoming I’d never think o’ missin’
sech a chance.”
“Nor I, either,” said
Henry, and he resumed in his powerful tones:
“The place of a leader is in front, isn’t
it? Then why don’t you come up?”
Braxton Wyatt and Walter Butler did
not come up. They were not lacking in courage,
but Wyatt knew what deadly marksmen the fugitive boat
contained, and he had also told Butler. So they
still hung back, although they raged at Henry Ware’s
taunts, and permitted the Mohawks and Senecas to take
the lead in the chase.
“They’re not going to
give us a chance,” said Henry. “I’m
satisfied of that. They’ll let redskins
receive our bullets, though just now I’d rather
it were the two white ones. What do you think,
Sol, of that leading boat? Shouldn’t we
give another hint?”
“I agree with you, Henry,”
said the shiftless one. They’re comin’
much too close fur people that ain’t properly
interduced to us. This promiskus way o’
meetin’ up with strangers an’ lettin’
’em talk to you jest ez ef they’d knowed
you all their lives hez got to be stopped. It’s
your time, Henry, to give ’em a polite hint,
an’ I jest suggest that you take the big fellow
in the front o’ the boat who looks like a Mohawk.”
Henry raised his rifle, fired, and
the Mohawk would row no more. Again confusion
prevailed in the pursuing fleet, and there was a decline
of enthusiasm. Braxton Wyatt and Walter Butler
raged and swore, but, as they showed no great zeal
for the lead themselves, the Iroquois did not gain
on the fugitive boat. They, too, were fast learning
that the two who crouched there with their rifles
ready were among the deadliest marksmen in existence.
They fired a dozen shots, perhaps, but their rifles
did not have the long range of the Kentucky weapons,
and again the bullets fell short, causing little jets
of water to spring up.
“They won’t come any nearer,
at least not for the present,” said Henry, “but
will hang back just out of rifle range, waiting for
some chance to help them.”
Shif’less Sol looked the other
way, down the Susquehanna, and announced that he could
see no danger. There was probably no Indian
fleet farther down the river than the one now pursuing
them, and the danger was behind them, not before.
Throughout the firing, Silent Tom
Ross and Long Jim Hart had not said a word, but they
rowed with a steadiness and power that would have
carried oarsmen of our day to many a victory.
Moreover, they had the inducement not merely of a
prize, but of life itself, to row and to row hard.
They had rolled up their sleeves, and the mighty
muscles on those arms of woven steel rose and fell
as they sent the boat swiftly with the silver current
of the Susquehanna.
Mary Newton still lay on the bottom
of the boat. The children had cried out in fright
once or twice at the sound of the firing, but she
and Paul bad soothed them and kept them down.
Somehow Mary Newton had become possessed of a great
faith. She noticed the skill, speed, and success
with which the five always worked, and, so long given
up to despair, she now went to the other extreme.
With such friends as these coming suddenly out of
the void, everything must succeed. She had no
doubt of it, but lay peacefully on the bottom of the
boat, not at all disturbed by the sound of the shots.
Paul and Sol after a while relieved
Long Jim and Tom at the oars. The Iroquois thought
it a chance to creep up again, but they were driven
back by a third bullet, and once more kept their distance.
Shif’less Sol, while he pulled as powerfully
as Tom Ross, whose place he had taken, nevertheless
was not silent.
“I’d like to know the
feelin’s o’ Braxton Wyatt an’ that
feller Butler,” he said. ” Must be powerful
tantalizin’ to them to see us here, almost where
they could stretch out their hands an’ put ‘em
on us. Like reachn’ fur ripe, rich fruit,
an’ failin’ to git it by half a finger’s
length.”
“They are certainly not pleased,”
said Henry,” but this must end some way or other,
you know.”
“I say so, too, now that I’m
a-rowin’,” rejoined the shiftless one,
“but when my turn at the oars is finished I wouldn’t
care. Ez I’ve said more’n once before,
floatin’ down a river with somebody else pullin’
at the oars is the life jest suited to me.”
Henry looked up. “A summer
thunderstorm is coming,” he said, ” and from
the look of things it’s going to be pretty black.
Then’s when we must dodge ’em.”
He was a good weather prophet.
In a half hour the sky began to darken rapidly.
There was a great deal of thunder and lightning,
but when the rain came the air was almost as dark as
night. Mary Newton and her children were covered
as much as possible with the blankets, and then they
swung the boat rapidly toward the eastern shore.
They had already lost sight of their pursuers in the
darkness, and as they coasted along the shore they
found a large creek flowing into the river from the
east.
They ran up the creek, and were a
full mile from its mouth when the rain ceased.
Then the sun came out bright and warm, quickly drying
everything.
They pulled about ten miles farther,
until the creek grew too shallow for them, when they
hid the boat among bushes and took to the land.
Two days later they arrived at a strong fort and
settlement, where Mary Newton and her four children,
safe and well, were welcomed by relatives who had
mourned them as dead.