HENRY’S SLIDE
Henry Ware, lingering at the edge
of the clearing, his body hidden behind one of the
great tree trunks, had been watching the scene with
a fascinated interest that would not let him go.
He knew that his work there was done already.
Everything would be utterly destroyed by the flames
which, driven by the wind, leaped from one half-ruined
building to another. Braxton Wyatt and his band
would have enough to do sheltering themselves from
the fierce winter, and the settlements could rest
for a while at least. Undeniably he felt exultation
as be witnessed the destructive work of his hand.
The border, with its constant struggle for-life and
terrible deeds, bred fierce passions.
In truth, although he did not know
it himself, he stayed there to please his eye and
heart. A new pulse beat triumphantly every time
a timber, burned through, fell in, or a crash came
from a falling roof. He laughed inwardly as
the flames disclosed the dismay on the faces of the
Iroquois and Tories, and it gave him deep satisfaction
to see Braxton Wyatt, his gaudy little sword at his
thigh, stalking about helpless. It was while
he was looking, absorbed in such feelings, that the
warrior of the alert eye saw him and gave the warning
shout.
Henry turned in an instant, and darted
away among the trees, half running, half sliding over
the smooth, icy covering of the snow. After
him came warriors and some Tories who had put on their
snowshoes preparatory to the search through the forest
for shelter. Several bullets were fired, but
he was too far away for a good aim. He heard
one go zip against a tree, and another cut the surface
of the ice near him, but none touched him, and he
sped easily on his snowshoes through the frozen forest.
But Henry was fully aware of one thing that constituted
his greatest danger. Many of these Iroquois
had been trained all their lives to snowshoes, while
he, however powerful and agile, was comparatively
a beginner. He glanced back again and saw their
dusky figures running among the trees, but they did
not seem to be gaining. If one should draw too
near, there was his rifle, and no man, white or red,
in the northern or southern forests, could use it
better. But for the present it was not needed.
He pressed it closely, almost lovingly, to his side,
this best friend of the scout and frontiersman.
He had chosen his course at the first
leap. It was southward, toward the lake, and
he did not make the mistake of diverging from his
line, knowing that some part of the wide half circle
of his pursuers would profit by it.
Henry felt a great upward surge.
He had been the victor in what he meant to achieve,
and he was sure that he would escape. The cold
wind, whistling by, whipped his blood and added new
strength to his great muscles. His ankles were
not chafed or sore, and he sped forward on the snowshoes,
straight and true. Whenever he came to a hill
the pursuers would gain as he went up it, but when
he went down the other side it was he who gained.
He passed brooks, creeks, and once a small river,
but they were frozen over, many inches deep, and he
did not notice them. Again it was a lake a mile
wide, but the smooth surface there merely increased
his speed. Always he kept a wary look ahead for
thickets through which he could not pass easily, and
once he sent back a shout of defiance, which the Iroquois
answered with a yell of anger.
He was fully aware that any accident
to his snowshoes would prove fatal, the slipping of
the thongs on his ankles or the breaking of a runner
would end his flight, and in a long chase such an
accident might happen. It might happen, too,
to one or more of the Iroquois, but plenty of them
would be left. Yet Henry had supreme confidence
in his snowshoes. He had made them himself,
he had seen that every part was good, and every thong
had been fastened with care.
The wind which bad been roaring so
loudly at the time of the fire sank to nothing.
The leafless trees stood up, the branches unmoving.
The forest was bare and deserted. All the animals,
big and little, had gone into their lairs. Nobody
witnessed the great pursuit save pursuers and pursued.
Henry kept his direction clear in his mind, and allowed
the Iroquois to take no advantage of a curve save
once. Then he came to a thicket so large that
he was compelled to make a considerable circle to pass
it. He turned to the right, hence the Indians
on the right gained, and they sent up a yell of delight.
He replied defiantly and increased his speed.
But one of the Indians, a flying Mohawk,
had come dangerously near-near enough, in fact, to
fire a bullet that did not miss the fugitive much.
It aroused Henry’s anger. He took it as
an indignity rather than a danger, and he resolved
to avenge it. So far as firing was concerned,
he was at a disadvantage. He must stop and turn
around for his shot, while the Iroquois, without even
checking speed, could fire straight at the flying target,
ahead.
Nevertheless, he took the chance.
He turned deftly on the snowshoes, fired as quick
as lightning at the swift Mohawk, saw him fall, then
Whirled and resumed his flight. He had lost
ground, but he had inspired respect. A single
man could not afford to come too near to a marksman
so deadly, and the three or four who led dropped back
with the main body.
Now Henry made his greatest effort.
He wished to leave the foe far behind, to shake off
his pursuit entirely. He bounded over the ice
and snow with great leaps, and began to gain.
Yet he felt at last the effects of so strenuous a
flight. His breath became shorter; despite the
intense cold, perspiration stood upon his face, and
the straps that fastened the snowshoes were chafing
his ankles. An end must come even to such strength
as his. Another backward look, and he saw that
the foe was sinking into the darkness. If he
could only increase his speed again, be might leave
the Iroquois now. He made a new call upon the
will, and the body responded. For a few minutes
his speed became greater. A disappointed shout
arose behind him, and several shots were fired.
But the bullets fell a hundred yards short, and then,
as he passed over a little hill and into a wood beyond,
he was hidden from the sight of his pursuers.
Henry knew that the Iroquois could
trail him over the snow, but they could not do it
at full speed, and he turned sharply off at an angle.
Pausing a second or two for fresh breath, he continued
on his new course, although not so fast as before.
He knew that the Iroquois would rush straight ahead,
and would not discover for two or three minutes that
they were off the trail. It would take them
another two or three minutes to recover, and he would
make a gain of at least five minutes. Five minutes
had saved the life of many a man on the border.
How precious those five minutes were!
He would take them all. He ran forward some
distance, stopped where the trees grew thick, and
then enjoyed the golden five, minute by minute.
He had felt that he was pumping the very lifeblood
from his heart. His breath had come painfully,
and the thongs of the snowshoes were chafing his ankles
terribly. But those minutes were worth a year.
Fresh air poured into his lungs, and the muscles became
elastic once more. In so brief a space be had
recreated himself.
Resuming his flight, he went at a
steady pace, resolved not to do his utmost unless
the enemy came in sight. About ten minutes later
he heard a cry far behind him, and he believed it to
be a signal from some Indian to the others that the
trail was found again. But with so much advantage
he felt sure that he was now quite safe. He
ran, although at decreased speed, for about two hours
more, and then he sat down on the upthrust root of
a great oak. Here he depended most upon his
ears. The forest was so silent that he could
hear any noise at a great distance, but there was
none. Trusting to his ears to warn him, he would
remain there a long time for a thorough rest.
He even dared to take off his snowshoes that he might
rub his sore ankles, but he wrapped his heavy blanket
about his body, lest he take deep cold in cooling
off in such a temperature after so long a flight.
He sat enjoying a half hour, golden
like the five minutes, and then he saw, outlined against
the bright, moonlit sky, something that told him he
must be on the alert again. It was a single
ring of smoke, like that from a cigar, only far greater.
It rose steadily, untroubled by wind until it was
dissipated. It meant “attention!”
and presently it was followed by a column of such
rings, one following another beautifully. The
column said: ” The foe is near.”
Henry read the Indian signs perfectly. The rings
were made by covering a little fire with a blanket
for a moment and then allowing the smoke to ascend.
On clear days such signals could be seen a distance
of thirty miles or more, and he knew that they were
full of significance.
Evidently the Iroquois party had divided
into two or more bands. One had found his trail,
and was signaling to the other. The party sending
up the smoke might be a half mile away, but the others,
although his trail was yet hidden from them, might
be nearer. It was again time for flight.
He swiftly put on the snowshoes, neglecting
no thong or lace, folded the blanket on his back again,
and, leaving the friendly root, started once more.
He ran forward at moderate speed for perhaps a mile,
when he suddenly heard triumphant yells on both right
and left. A strong party of Iroquois were coming
up on either side, and luck had enabled them to catch
him in a trap.
They were so near that they fired
upon him, and one bullet nicked his glove, but he
was hopeful that after his long rest he might again
stave them off. He sent back no defiant cry,
but, settling into determined silence, ran at his
utmost speed. The forest here was of large trees,
with no undergrowth, and he noticed that the two parties
did not join, but kept on as they had come, one on
the right and the other on the left. This fact
must have some significance, but he could not fathom
it. Neither could he guess whether the Indians
were fresh or tired, but apparently they made no effort
to come within range of his rifle.
Presently he made a fresh spurt of
speed, the forest opened out, and then both bands
uttered a yell full of ferocity and joy, the kind
that savages utter only when they see their triumph
complete.
Before, and far below Henry, stretched
a vast, white expanse. He had come to the lake,
but at a point where the cliff rose high like a mountain,
and steep like a wall. The surface of the lake
was so far down that it was misty white like a cloud.
Now he understood the policy of the Indian bands
in not uniting. They knew that they would soon
reach the lofty cliffs of the lake, and if he turned
to either right or left there was a band ready to
seize him.
Henry’s heart leaped up and
then sank lower than ever before in his life.
It seemed that he could not escape from so complete
a trap, and Braxton Wyatt was not one who would spare
a prisoner. That was perhaps the bitterest thing
of all, to be taken and tortured by Braxton Wyatt.
He was there. He could hear his voice in one
of the bands, and then the courage that never failed
him burst into fire again.
The Iroquois were coming toward him,
shutting him out from retreat to either right or left,
but not yet closing in because of his deadly rifle.
He gave them a single look, put forth his voice in
one great cry of defiance, and, rushing toward the
edge of the mighty cliff, sprang boldly over.
As Henry plunged downward he heard
behind him a shout of amazement and chagrin poured
forth from many Iroquois throats, and, taking a single
glance backward, he caught a glimpse of dusky faces
stamped with awe. But the bold youth had not
made a leap to destruction. In the passage of
a second he had calculated rapidly and well.
While the cliff at first glance seemed perpendicular,
it could not be so. There was a slope coated
with two feet of snow, and swinging far back on the
heels of his snowshoes, he shot downward like one
taking a tremendous slide on a toboggan. Faster
and faster he went, but deeper and deeper he dug his
shoes into the snow, until he lay back almost flat
against its surface. This checked his speed somewhat,
but it was still very great, and, preserving his self-control
perfectly, he prayed aloud to kindly Providence to
save him from some great boulder or abrupt drop.
The snow from his runners flew in
a continuous shower behind him as he descended.
Yet he drew himself compactly together, and held
his rifle parallel with his body. Once or twice,
as he went over a little ridge, he shot clear of the
snow, but he held his body rigid, and the snow beyond
saved him from a severe bruise. Then his speed
was increased again, and all the time the white surface
of the lake below, seen dimly through the night and
his flight, seemed miles away.
He might never reach that surface
alive, but of one thing lie was sure. None of
the Iroquois or Tories had dared to follow.
Braxton Wyatt could have no triumph over him.
He was alone in his great flight. Once a projection
caused him to turn a little to one side. He
was in momentary danger of turning entirely, and then
of rolling head over heels like a huge snowball, but
with a mighty effort he righted himself, and continued
the descent on the runners, with the heels plowing
into the ice and the snow.
Now that white expanse which had seemed
so far away came miles nearer. Presently he
would be there. The impossible had become possible,
the unattainable was about to be attained. He
gave another mighty dig with his shoes, the last reach
of the slope passed behind him, and he shot out on
the frozen surface of the lake, bruised and breathless,
but without a single broken bone.
The lake was covered with ice a foot
thick, and over this lay frozen snow, which stopped
Henry forty or fifty yards from the cliff. There
he lost his balance at last, and fell on his side,
where he lay for a few moments, weak, panting, but
triumphant.
When he stood upright again he felt
his body, but he had suffered nothing save some bruises,
that would heal in their own good time. His
deerskin clothing was much torn, particularly on the
back, where he had leaned upon the ice and snow, but
the folded blanket had saved him to a considerable
extent. One of his shoes was pulled loose, and
presently he discovered that his left ankle was smarting
and burning at a great rate. But he did not mind
these things at all, so complete was his sense of victory.
He looked up at the mighty white wall that stretched
above him fifteen hundred feet, and he wondered at
his own tremendous exploit. The wall ran away
for miles, and the Iroquois could not reach him by
any easier path. He tried to make out figures
on the brink looking down at him, but it was too far
away, and he saw only a black line.
He tightened the loose shoe and struck
out across the lake. He was far away from “The
Alcove,” and he did not intend to go there,
lest the Iroquois, by chance, come upon his trail and
follow it to the refuge. But as it was no more
than two miles across the lake at that point, and
the Iroquois would have to make a great curve to reach
the other side, he felt perfectly safe. He walked
slowly across, conscious all the time of an increasing
pain in his left ankle, which must now be badly swollen,
and he did not stop until he penetrated some distance
among low bills. Here, under an overhanging cliff
with thick bushes in front, he found a partial shelter,
which he cleared out yet further. Then with
infinite patience he built a fire with splinters that
he cut from dead boughs, hung his blanket in front
of it on two sticks that the flame might not be seen,
took off his snowshoes, leggins, and socks, and bared
his ankles. Both were swollen, but the left
much more badly than the other. He doubted whether
he would be able to walk on the following day, but
he rubbed them a long time, both with the palms of
his hands and with snow, until they felt better.
Then he replaced his clothing, leaned back against
the faithful snowshoes which had saved his life, however
much they had hurt his ankles, and gave himself up
to the warmth of the fire.
It was very luxurious, this warmth
and this rest, after so long and terrible a flight,
and he was conscious of a great relaxation, one which,
if he yielded to it completely, would make his muscles
so stiff and painful that he could not use them.
Hence he stretched his arms and legs many times,
rubbed his ankles again, and then, remembering that
he had venison, ate several strips.
He knew that he had taken a little
risk with the fire, but a fire he was bound to have,
and he fed it again until he had a great mass of glowing
coals, although there was no blaze. Then he took
down the blanket, wrapped himself in it, and was soon
asleep before the fire. He slept long and deeply,
and although, when he awoke, the day had fully come,
the coals were not yet out entirely. He arose,
but such a violent pain from his left ankle shot through
him that he abruptly sat down again. As he bad
feared, it had swollen badly during the night, and
he could not walk.
In this emergency Henry displayed
no petulance, no striving against unchangeable circumstance.
He drew up more wood, which he had stacked against
the cliff, and put it on the coals. He hung
up the blanket once more in order that it might hide
the fire, stretched out his lame leg, and calmly made
a breakfast off the last of his venison.
He knew be was in a plight that might appall the
bravest, but be kept himself in hand. It was
likely that the Iroquois thought him dead, crushed
into a shapeless mass by his frightful slide of fifteen
hundred feet, and he had little fear of them, but
to be unable to walk and alone in an icy wilderness
without food was sufficient in itself. He calculated
that it was at least a dozen miles to “The Alcove,”
and the chances were a hundred to one against any of
his comrades wandering his way. He looked once
more at his swollen left ankle, and he made a close
calculation. It would be three days, more likely
four, before he could walk upon it. Could he
endure hunger that long? He could. He
would! Crouched in his nest with his back to
the cliff, he had defense against any enemy in his
rifle and pistol. By faithful watching he might
catch sight of some wandering animal, a target for
his rifle and then food for his stomach. His
wilderness wisdom warned him that there was nothing
to do but sit quiet and wait.
He scarcely moved for hours.
As long as he was still his ankle troubled him but
little. The sun came out, silver bright, but
it had no warmth. The surface of the lake was
shown only by the smoothness of its expanse; the icy
covering was the same everywhere over hills and valleys.
Across the lake he saw the steep down which he had
slid, looming white and lofty. In the distance
it looked perpendicular, and, whatever its terrors,
it had, beyond a doubt, saved his life. He glanced
down at his swollen ankle, and, despite his helpless
situation, he was thankful that he had escaped so
well.
About noon he moved enough to throw
up the snowbanks higher all around himself in the
fashion of an Eskimos house. Then he let the
fire die except some coals that gave forth no smoke,
stretched the blanket over his head in the manner of
a roof, and once more resumed his quiet and stillness.
He was now like a crippled animal in its lair, but
he was warm, and his wound did not hurt him.
But hunger began to trouble him. He was young
and so powerful that his frame demanded much sustenance.
Now it cried aloud its need! He ate two or
three handfuls of snow, and for a few moments it seemed
to help him a little, but his hunger soon came back
as strong as ever. Then he tightened his belt
and sat in grim silence, trying to forget that there
was any such thing as food.
The effort of the will was almost
a success throughout the afternoon, but before night
it failed. He began to have roseate visions
of Long Jim trying venison, wild duck, bear, and buffalo
steaks over the coals. He could sniff the aroma,
so powerful had his imagination become, and, in fancy,
his month watered, while its roof was really dry.
They were daylight visions, and he knew it well,
but they taunted him and made his pain fiercer.
He slid forward a little to the mouth of his shelter,
and thrust out his rifle in the hope that be would
see some wild creature, no matter what; he felt that
be could shoot it at any distance, and then he would
feast!
He saw nothing living, either on earth
or in the air, only motionless white, and beyond,
showing but faintly now through the coming twilight,
the lofty cliff that had saved him.
He drew back into his lair, and the
darkness came down. Despite his hunger, he slept
fairly well. In the night a little snow fell
at times, but his blanket roof protected him, and he
remained dry and warm. The new snow was, in a
way, a satisfaction, as it completely hid his trail
from the glance of any wandering Indian.
He awoke the next morning to a gray, somber day,
with piercing winds from the northwest. He did
not feel the pangs of hunger until he had been awake
about a half hour, and then they came with redoubled
force. Moreover, he bad become weaker in the
night, and, added to the loss of muscular strength,
was a decrease in the power of the will. Hunger
was eating away his mental as well as his physical
fiber. He did not face the situation with quite
the same confidence that he felt the day before.
The wilderness looked a little more threatening.
His lips felt as if he were suffering
from fever, and his shoulders and back were stiff.
But he drew his belt tighter again, and then uncovered
his left ankle. The swelling had gone down a
little, and he could move it with more freedom than
on the day before, but he could not yet walk.
Once more he made his grim calculation. In
two days he could certainly walk and hunt game or
make a try for “The Alcove,” so far as
his ankle was concerned, but would hunger overpower
him before that time? Gaining strength in one
direction, he was losing it in another.
Now he began to grow angry with himself.
The light inroad that famine made upon his will was
telling. It seemed incredible that he, so powerful,
so skillful, so self reliant, so long used to the
wilderness and to every manner of hardship, should
be held there in a snowbank by a bruised ankle to
die like a crippled rabbit. His comrades could
not be more than ten miles away. He could walk.
He would walk! He stood upright and stepped
out into the snow, but pain, so agonizing that he
could scarcely keep from crying out, shot through
his whole body, and he sank back into the shelter,
sure not to make such an experiment again for another
full day.
The day passed much like its predecessor,
except that he took down the blanket cover of his
snow hut and kindled up his fire again, more for the
sake of cheerfulness than for warmth, because he was
not suffering from cold. There was a certain
life and light about the coals and the bright flame,
but the relief did not last long, and by and by he
let it go out. Then be devoted himself to watching
the heavens and the surface of the snow. Some
winter bird, duck or goose, might be flying by, or
a wandering deer might be passing. He must not
lose any such chance. He was more than ever
a fierce creature of prey, sitting at the mouth of
his den, the rifle across his knee, his tanned face
so thin that the cheek bones showed high and sharp,
his eyes bright with fever and the fierce desire for
prey, and the long, lean body drawn forward as if
it were about to leap.
He thought often of dragging himself
down to the lake, breaking a hole in the ice, and
trying to fish, but the idea invariably came only
to be abandoned. He had neither hook nor bait.
In the afternoon he chewed the edge of his buckskin
hunting shirt, but it was too thoroughly tanned and
dry. It gave back no sustenance. He abandoned
the experiment and lay still for a long time.
That night he had a slight touch of
frenzy, and began to laugh at himself. It was
a huge joke! What would Timmendiquas or Thayendanegea
think of him if they knew how he came to his end?
They would put him with old squaws or little children.
And how Braxton Wyatt and his lieutenant, the squat
Tory, would laugh! That was the bitterest thought
of all. But the frenzy passed, and he fell into
a sleep which was only a succession of bad dreams.
He was running the gauntlet again among the Shawnees.
Again, kneeling to drink at the clear pool, he saw
in the water the shadow of the triumphant warrior
holding the tomahawk above him. One after another
the most critical periods of his life were lived over
again, and then he sank into a deep torpor, from which
he did not rouse himself until far into the next day.
Henry was conscious that he was very
weak, but he seemed to have regained much of his lost
will. He looked once more at the fatal left
ankle. It had improved greatly. He could
even stand upon it, but when he rose to his feet he
felt a singular dizziness. Again, what he had
gained in one way he had lost in another. The
earth wavered. The smooth surface of the lake
seemed to rise swiftly, and then to sink as swiftly.
The far slope down which he had shot rose to the
height of miles. There was a pale tinge, too,
over the world. He sank down, not because of
his ankle, but because he was afraid his dizzy head
would make him fall.
The power of will slipped away again
for a minute or two. He was ashamed of such
extraordinary weakness. He looked at one of his
hands. It was thin, like the band of a man wasted
with fever, and the blue veins stood out on the back
of it. He could scarcely believe that the hand
was his own. But after the first spasm of weakness
was over, the precious will returned. He could
walk. Strength enough to permit him to hobble
along had returned to the ankle at last, and mind
must control the rest of his nervous system, however
weakened it might be. He must seek food.
He withdrew into the farthest recess
of his covert, wrapped the blanket tightly about his
body, and lay still for a long time. He was
preparing both mind and body for the supreme effort.
He knew that everything hung now on the surviving
remnants of his skill and courage.
Weakened by shock and several days
of fasting, he had no great reserve now except the
mental, and he used that to the utmost. It was
proof of his youthful greatness that it stood the last
test. As he lay there, the final ounce of will
and courage came. Strength which was of the
mind rather than of the body flowed back into his
veins; he felt able to dare and to do; the pale aspect
of the world went away, and once more he was Henry
Ware, alert, skillful, and always triumphant.
Then he rose again, folded the blanket,
and fastened it on his shoulders. He looked
at the snowshoes, but decided that his left ankle,
despite its great improvement, would not stand the
strain. He must break his way through the snow,
which was a full three feet in depth. Fortunately
the crust had softened somewhat in the last two or
three days, and he did not have a covering of ice
to meet.
He pushed his way for the first time
from the lair under the cliff, his rifle held in his
ready hands, in order that he might miss no chance
at game. To an ordinary observer there would
have been no such chance at all. It was merely
a grim white wilderness that might have been without
anything living from the beginning. But Henry,
the forest runner, knew better. Somewhere in
the snow were lairs much like the one that he had left,
and in these lairs were wild animals. To any
such wild animal, whether panther or bear, the hunter
would now have been a fearsome object, with his hollow
cheeks, his sunken fiery eyes, and his thin lips opening
now and then, and disclosing the two rows of strong
white teeth.
Henry advanced about a rod, and then
he stopped, breathing hard, because it was desperate
work for one in his condition to break his way through
snow so deep. But his ankle stood the strain
well, and his courage increased rather than diminished.
He was no longer a cripple confined to one spot.
While be stood resting, he noticed a clump of bushes
about half a rod to his left, and a hopeful idea came
to him.
He broke his way slowly to the bushes,
and then he searched carefully among them. The
snow was not nearly so thick there, and under the
thickest clump, where the shelter was best, he saw
a small round opening. In an instant all his
old vigorous life, all the abounding hope which was
such a strong characteristic of his nature, came back
to him. Already he had triumphed over Indians,
Tories, the mighty slope, snow, ice, crippling, and
starvation.
He laid the rifle on the snow and
took the ramrod in his right hand. He thrust
his left hand into the hole, and when the rabbit leaped
for life from his warm nest a smart blow of the ramrod
stretched him dead at the feet of the hunter.
Henry picked up the rabbit. It was large and
yet fat. Here was food for two meals.
In the race between the ankle and starvation, the ankle
had won.
He did not give way to any unseemly
elation. He even felt a momentary sorrow that
a life must perish to save his own, because all these
wild things were his kindred now. He returned
by the path that he had broken, kindled his fire anew,
dexterously skinned and cleaned his rabbit, then cooked
it and ate half, although he ate slowly and with intervals
between each piece. How delicious it tasted,
and how his physical being longed to leap upon it
and devour it, but the power of the mind was still
supreme. He knew what was good for himself, and
he did it. Everything was done in order and
with sobriety. Then he put the rest of the rabbit
carefully in his food pouch, wrapped the blanket about
his body, leaned back, and stretched his feet to the
coals.
What an extraordinary change had come
over the world in an hour! He had not noticed
before the great beauty of the lake, the lofty cliffs
on the farther shore, and the forest clothed in white
and hanging with icicles.
The winter sunshine was molten silver,
pouring down in a flood.
It was not will now, but actuality,
that made him feel the strength returning to his frame.
He knew that the blood in his veins had begun to
sparkle, and that his vitality was rising fast.
He could have gone to sleep peacefully, but instead
he went forth and hunted again. He knew that
where the rabbit had been, others were likely to be
near, and before he returned he had secured two more.
Both of these he cleaned and cooked at once.
When this was done night had come, but he ate again,
and then, securing all his treasures about him, fell
into the best sleep that he had enjoyed since his
flight.
He felt very strong the next morning,
and he might have started then, but he was prudent.
There was still a chance of meeting the Iroquois,
and the ankle might not stand so severe a test.
He would rest in his nest for another day, and then
he would be equal to anything. Few could lie
a whole day in one place with but little to do and
with nothing passing before the eyes, but it was a
part of Henry’s wilderness training, and he showed
all the patience of the forester. He knew, too,
as the hours went by, that his strength was rising
all the while. To-morrow almost the last soreness
would be gone from his ankle and then he could glide
swiftly over the snow, back to his comrades.
He was content. He had, in fact, a sense of
great triumph because he had overcome so much, and
here was new food in this example for future efforts
of the mind, for future victories of the will over
the body. The wintry sun came to the zenith,
then passed slowly down the curve, but all the time
the boy scarcely stirred. Once there was a flight
of small birds across the heavens, and he watched
them vaguely, but apparently he took no interest.
Toward night he stood up in his recess and flexed
and tuned his muscles for a long time, driving out
any stiffness that might come through long lack of
motion. Then he ate and lay down, but he did
not yet sleep.
The night was clear, and he looked
away toward the point where he knew “The Alcove”
lay. A good moon was now shining, and stars by
the score were springing out. Suddenly at a point
on that far shore a spark of red light appeared and
twinkled. Most persons would have taken it for
some low star, but Henry knew better. It was
fire put there by human hand for a purpose, doubtless
a signal, and as he looked a second spark appeared
by the first, then a third, then a fourth. He
uttered a great sigh of pleasure. It was his
four friends signaling to him somewhere in the vast
unknown that they were alive and well, and beckoning
him to come. The lights burned for fifteen or
twenty minutes, and then all went out together.
Henry turned over on his side and fell sound asleep.
In the morning he put on his snowshoes and started.