THE SAFE RETURN
The surface of the snow had frozen
again in the night, and Henry found good footing for
his shoes. For a while he leaned most on the
right ankle, but, as his left developed no signs of
soreness, he used them equally, and sped forward,
his spirits rising at every step. The air was
cold, and there was but little breeze, but his own
motion made a wind that whipped his face. The
hollows were mostly gone from his cheeks, and his eyes
no longer had the fierce, questing look of the famishing
wild animal in search of prey. A fine red color
was suffused through the brown of his face.
He had chosen his course with due precaution.
The broad surface, smooth, white, and glittering,
tempted, but he put the temptation away. He
did not wish to run any chance whatever of another
Iroquois pursuit, and he kept in the forest that ran
down close to the water’s edge. It was
tougher traveling there, but he persisted.
But all thought of weariness and trouble
was lost in his glorious freedom. With his crippled
ankle he had been really like a prisoner in his cell,
with a ball and chain to his foot. Now he flew
along, while the cold wind whipped his blood, and felt
what a delight it was merely to live. He went
on thus for hours, skirting down toward the cliffs
that contained “The Alcove.” He
rested a while in the afternoon and ate the last of
his rabbit, but before twilight he reached the creek,
and stood at the hidden path that led up to their
home.
Henry sat down behind thick bushes
and took off his snowshoes. To one who had never
come before, the whole place would have seemed absolutely
desolate, and even to one not a stranger no sign of
life would have been visible had he not possessed
uncommonly keen eyes. But Henry had such eyes.
He saw the faintest wisp of smoke stealing away against
the surface of the cliff, and he felt confident that
all four were there. He resolved to surprise
them.
Laying the shoes aside, he crept so
carefully up the path that he dislodged no snow and
made no noise of any kind. As be gradually approached
“The Alcove” he beard the murmur of voices,
and presently, as he turned an angle in the path,
he saw a beam of glorious mellow light falling on
the snow.
But the murmur of the voices sent
a great thrill of delight through him. Low and
indistinct as they were, they had a familiar sound.
He knew all those tones. They were the voices
of his faithful comrades, the four who had gone with
him through so many perils and hardships, the little
band who with himself were ready to die at any time,
one for another.
He crept a little closer, and then
a little closer still. Lying almost flat on
the steep path, and drawing himself forward, he looked
into “The Alcove.” A fire of deep,
red coals glowed in one corner, and disposed about
it were the four. Paul lay on his elbow on a
deerskin, and was gazing into the coals. Tom
Ross was working on a pair of moccasins, Long Jim
was making some kind of kitchen implement, and Shif’less
Sol was talking. Henry could hear the words
distinctly, and they were about himself.
“Henry will turn up all right,”
he was saying. “Hasn’t he always
done it afore? Then ef he’s always done
it afore he’s shorely not goin’ to break
his rule now. I tell you, boys, thar ain’t
enough Injuns an’ Tories between Canady an’
New Orleans, an’ the Mississippi an’ the
Atlantic, to ketch Henry. I bet I could guess
what he’s doin’ right at this moment.”
“What is he doing, Sol?” asked Paul.
“When I shet my eyes ez I’m
doin’ now I kin see him,” said the shiftless
one. “He’s away off thar toward the
north, skirtin’ around an Injun village, Mohawk
most likely, lookin’ an’ listenin’
an’ gatherin’ talk about their plans.”
“He ain’t doin’ any sech thing,”
broke in Long Jim.
“I’ve sleet my eyes, too,
Sol Hyde, jest ez tight ez you’ve shet yours,
an’ I see him, too, but he ain’t doin’
any uv the things that you’re talkin’
about.”
“What is he doing, Jim?” asked Paul.
“Henry’s away off to the
south, not to the north,” replied the long one,
“an’ he’s in the Iroquois village
that we burned. One house has been left standin’,
an’ he’s been occupyin’ it while
the big snow’s on the groun’. A whole
deer is hangin’ from the wall, an’ he’s
been settin’ thar fur days, eatin’ so much
an’ hevin’ such a good time that the fat’s
hangin’ down over his cheeks, an’ his
whole body is threatenin’ to bust right out uv
his huntin’ shirt.”
Paul moved a little on his elbow and
turned the other side of his face to the fire.
Then he glanced at the silent worker with the moccasins.
“Sol and Jim don’t seem
to agree much in their second sight,” he said.
“Can you have any vision, too, Tom?”
“Yes,” replied Tom Ross,
“I kin. I shet my eyes, but I don’t
see like either Sol or Jim, ’cause both uv ’em
see wrong. I see Henry, an’ I see him
plain. He’s had a pow’ful tough time.
He ain’t threatenin’ to bust with fat
out uv no huntin’ shirt, his cheeks ain’t
so full that they are fallin’ down over his jaws.
It’s t’other way roun’; them cheeks
are sunk a mite, he don’t fill out his clothes,
an’ when he crawls along he drags his left leg
a leetle, though he hides it from hisself. He
ain’t spyin’ on no Injun village, an’
he ain’t in no snug camp with a dressed deer
hangin’ by the side uv him. It’s
t’other way ‘roan’. He’s
layin’ almost flat on his face not twenty feet
from us, lookin’ right in at us, an’ I
wuz the first to see him.”
All the others sprang to their feet
in astonishment, and Henry likewise sprang to his
feet. Three leaps, and he was in the mellow
glow.
“And so you saw me, Tom,”
he exclaimed, as he joyously grasped one hand after
another. “I might have known that, while
I could stalk some of you, I could not stalk all of
you.”
“I caught the glimpse uv you,”
said Silent Tom, while Sol an’ Jim wuz talkin’
the foolish talk that they most always talk, an’
when Paul called on me, I thought I would give ’em
a dream that ’wuz true, an’ worth tellin’.”
“You’re right,”
said Henry. “I’ve not been having
any easy time, and for a while, boys, it looked as
if I never would come back. Sit down, and I
will tell you all about it.”
They gave him the warmest place by
the fire, brought him the tenderest food, and he told
the long and thrilling tale.
“I don’t believe anybody
else but you would have tried it, Henry,” said
Paul, when they heard of the fearful slide.
“Any one of you would have done
it,” said Henry, modestly.
“I’m pow’ful glad
that you done it for two reasons,” said Shif’less
Sol. “One, ‘cause it helped you to
git away, an’ the other, ’cause that scoundrel,
Braxton Wyatt, didn’t take you. ’Twould
hurt my pride tre-men-jeous for any uv us to be took
by Braxton Wyatt.”
“You speak for us all there, Sol,” said
Paul.
“What have all of you been doing?” asked
Henry.
“Not much of anything,”
replied Shif’less Sol. We’ve been
scoutin’ several times, lookin’ fur you,
though we knowed you’d come in some time or
other, but mostly we’ve been workin’ ‘roun’
the place here, fixin’ it up warmer an’
storin’ away food.”
“We’ll have to continue
at that for some time, I’m afraid,” said
Henry, “unless this snow breaks up. Have
any of you heard if any movement is yet on foot against
the Iroquois?”
“Tom ran across some scouts
from the militia,” replied Paul, “and
they said nothing could be done until warm weather
came. Then a real army would march.”
“I hope so,” said Henry earnestly.
But for the present the five could
achieve little. The snow lasted a long time,
but it was finally swept away by big rains.
It poured for two days and nights, and even when the
rain ceased the snow continued to melt under the warmer
air. The water rushed in great torrents down
the cliffs, and would have entered “The Alcove”
had not the five made provision to turn it away.
As it was, they sat snug and dry, listening to the
gush of the water, the sign of falling snow, and the
talk of one another. Yet the time dragged.
“Man wuz never made to be a
caged animile,” said Shif’less Sol.
“The longer I stay shet up in one place, the
weaker I become. My temper don’t improve,
neither, an’ I ain’t happy.”
“Guess it’s the same with all uv us,”
said Tom Ross.
But when the earth came from beneath
the snow, although it was still cold weather, they
began again to range the forest far in every direction,
and they found that the Indians, and the Tories also,
were becoming active. There were more burnings,
more slaughters, and more scalpings. The whole
border was still appalled at the massacres of Wyoming
and Cherry Valley, and the savages were continually
spreading over a wider area. Braxton Wyatt at
the head of his band, and with the aid of his Tory
lieutenant, Levi Coleman, had made for himself a name
equal to that of Walter Butler. As for “Indian”
Butler and his men, no men were hated more thoroughly
than they.
The five continued to do the best
they could, which was much, carrying many a warning,
and saving some who would otherwise have been victims.
While they devoted themselves to their strenuous
task, great events in which they were to take a part
were preparing. The rear guard of the Revolution
was about to become for the time the main guard.
A great eye had been turned upon the ravaged and
bleeding border, and a great mind, which could bear
misfortune-even disaster-without complaint, was preparing
to send help to those farther away. So mighty
a cry of distress had risen, that the power of the
Iroquois must be destroyed. As the warm weather
came, the soldiers began to march.
Rumors that a formidable foe was about
to advance reached the Iroquois and their allies,
the Tories, the English, and the Canadians.
There was a great stirring among the leaders, Thayendanegea,
Hiokatoo, Sangerachte, the Johnsons, the Butlers,
Claus, and the rest. Haldimand, the king’s
representative in Canada, sent forth an urgent call
to all the Iroquois to meet the enemy. The Tories
were’ extremely active. Promises were made
to the tribes that they should have other victories
even greater than those of Wyoming and Cherry Valley,
and again the terrible Queen Esther went among them,
swinging her great war tomahawk over her head and
chanting her song of death. She, more than any
other, inflamed the Iroquois, and they were eager for
the coming contest.
Timmendiquas had gone back to the
Ohio country in the winter, but, faithful to his promise
to give Thayendanegea help to the last, he returned
in the spring with a hundred chosen warriors of the
Wyandot nation, a reenforcement the value of which
could not be estimated too highly.
Henry and his comrades felt the stir
as they roamed through the forest, and they thrilled
at the thought that the crisis was approaching.
Then they set out for Lake Otsego, where the army
was gathering for the great campaign. They were
equipped thoroughly, and they were now so well known
in the region that they knew they would be welcome.
They traveled several days, and were
preparing to encamp for the last night within about
fifteen miles of the lake when Henry, scouting as
usual to see if an enemy were near, heard a footstep
in the forest. He wheeled instantly to cover
behind the body of a great beech tree, and the stranger
sought to do likewise, only he had no convenient tree
that was so large. It was about the twelfth
hour, but Henry could see a portion of a body protruding
beyond a slim oak, and he believed that he recognized
it. As he held the advantage he would, at any
rate, hail the stranger.
“Ho, Cornelius Heemskerk, Dutchman,
fat man, great scout and woodsman, what are you doing
in my wilderness? Stand forth at once and give
an account of yourself, or I will shoot off the part
of your body that sticks beyond that oak tree!”
The answer was instantaneous.
A round, plump body revolved from the partial shelter
of the tree and stood upright in the open, rifle in
hand and cap thrown back from a broad ruddy brow.
“Ho, Mynheer Henry Ware,”
replied Cornelius Heemskerk in a loud, clear tone,
“I am in your woods on perhaps the same errand
that you are. Come from behind that beech and
let us see which has the stronger grip.”
Henry stood forth, and the two clasped
hands in a grip so powerful that both winced.
Then they released hands simultaneously, and Heemskerk
asked:
“And the other four mynheers?
Am I wrong to say that they are near, somewhere ?”
“You are not wrong,” replied
Henry. “They are alive, well and hungry,
not a mile from here. There is one man whom they
would be very glad to see, and his name is Cornelius
Heemskerk, who is roaming in our woods without a permit.”
The round, ruddy face of the Dutchman
glowed. It was obvious that he felt as much
delight in seeing Henry as Henry felt in seeing him.
“My heart swells,” he
said. “I feared that you might have been
killed or scalped, or, at the best, have gone back
to that far land of Kentucky.”
“We have wintered well,”
said Henry, “in a place of which I shall not
tell you now, and we are here to see the campaign through.”
“I come, too, for the same purpose,”
said Heemskerk. “We shall be together.
It is goot.” “Meanwhile,”
said Henry, “our camp fire is lighted.
Jim Hart, whom you have known of old, is cooking
strips of meat over the coals, and, although it is
a mile away, the odor of them is very pleasant in
my nostrils. I wish to go back there, and it
will be all the more delightful to me, and to those
who wait, if I can bring with me such a welcome guest.”
“Lead on, mynheer,” said
Cornelius Heemskerk sententiously.
He received an equally emphatic welcome
from the others, and then they ate and talked.
Heemskerk was sanguine.
“Something will be done this
time,” he said. “Word has come from
the great commander that the Iroquois must be crushed.
The thousands who have fallen must be avenged, and
this great fire along our border must be stopped.
If it cannot be done, then we perish. We have
old tales in my own country of the cruel deeds that
the Spaniards did long, long ago, but they were not
worse than have been done here.”
The five made no response, but the
mind of every one of them traveled back to Wyoming
and all that they had seen there, and the scars and
traces of many more tragedies.
They reached the camp on Lake Otsego
the next day, and Henry saw that all they had heard
was true. The most formidable force that they
had ever seen was gathering. There were many
companies in the Continental buff and blue, epauletted
officers, bayonets and cannon. The camp was
full of life, energy, and hope, and the five at once
felt the influence of it. They found here old
friends whom they had known in the march on Oghwaga,
William Gray, young Taylor, and others, and they were
made very welcome. They were presented to General
James Clinton, then in charge, received roving commissions
as scouts and hunters, and with Heemskerk and the
two celebrated borderers, Timothy Murphy and David
Elerson, they roamed the forest in a great circle about
the lake, bringing much valuable information about
the movements of the enemy, who in their turn were
gathering in force, while the royal authorities were
dispatching both Indians and white men from Canada
to help them.
These great scouting expeditions saved
the five from much impatience. It takes a long
time for an army to gather and then to equip itself
for the march, and they were so used to swift motion
that it was now a part of their nature. At last
the army was ready, and it left the lake. Then
it proceeded in boats down the Tioga flooded to a
sufficient depth by an artificial dam built with immense
labor, to its confluence with the larger river.
Here were more men, and the five saw a new commander,
General James Sullivan, take charge of the united force.
Then the army, late in August, began its march upon
the Iroquois.
The five were now in the van, miles
ahead of the main guard. They knew that no important
movement of so large a force could escape the notice
of the enemy, but they, with other scouts, made it
their duty to see that the Americans marched into no
trap.
It was now the waning summer.
The leaves were lightly touched with brown, and the
grass had begun to wither. Berries were ripening
on the vines, and the quantity of game had increased,
the wild animals returning to the land from which civilized
man had disappeared. The desolation seemed even
more complete than in the autumn before. In
the winter and spring the Iroquois and Tories had
destroyed the few remnants of houses that were left.
Braxton Wyatt and his band had been particularly
active in this work, and many tales had come of his
cruelty and that of his swart Tory lieutenant, Coleman.
Henry was sure, too, that Wyatt’s band, which
numbered perhaps fifty Indians and Tories, was now
in front of them.
He, his comrades, Heemskerk, Elerson,
Murphy, and four others, twelve brave forest runners
all told, went into camp one night about ten miles
ahead of the army. They lighted no fire, and,
even had it been cold, they would not have done so,
as the region was far too dangerous for any light.
Yet the little band felt no fear. They were
only twelve, it is true, but such a twelve! No
chance would either Indians or Tories have to surprise
them.
They merely lay down in the thick
brushwood, three intending to keep watch while the
others slept. Henry, Shif’less Sol, and
Heemskerk were the sentinels. It was very late,
nearly midnight; the sky was clear, and presently
they saw smoke rings ascending from high hills to
their right, to be answered soon by other rings of
smoke to their left. The three watched them with
but little comment, and read every signal in turn.
They said: “The enemy is still advancing,”
“He is too strong for us…... We must
retreat and await our brethren.”
“It means that there will be
no battle to-morrow, at least,” whispered Heemskerk.
” Brant is probably ahead of us in command, and he
will avoid us until he receives the fresh forces from
Canada.”
“I take it that you’re
right,” Henry whispered back. “Timmendiquas
also is with him, and the two great chiefs are too
cunning to fight until they can bring their last man
into action.”
“An’ then,” said
the shiftless one, “we’ll see what happens.”
“Yes,” said Henry very
gravely, “we’ll see what happens.
The Iroquois are a powerful confederacy. They’ve
ruled in these woods for hundreds of years.
They’re led by great chiefs, and they’re
helped by our white enemies. You can’t
tell what would happen even to an army like ours in
an ambush.”
Shif’less Sol nodded, and they
said no more until an hour later, when they heard
footsteps. They awakened the others, and the
twelve, crawling to the edge of the brushwood, lay
almost flat upon their faces, with their hands upon
the triggers of their rifles.
Braxton Wyatt and his band of nearly
threescore, Indians and Tories in about equal numbers,
were passing. Wyatt walked at the head.
Despite his youth, he had acquired an air of command,
and he seemed a fit leader for such a crew.
He wore a faded royal uniform, and, while a small
sword hung at his side, he also carried a rifle on
his shoulder. Close behind him was the swart
and squat Tory, Coleman, and then came Indians and
Tories together.
The watchful eyes of Henry saw three
fresh scalps hanging from as many belts, and the finger
that lay upon the trigger of his rifle fairly ached
to press it. What an opportunity this would be
if the twelve were only forty, or even thirty!
With the advantage of surprise they might hope to
annihilate this band which had won such hate for itself
on the border. But twelve were not enough and
twelve such lives could not be spared at a time when
the army needed them most.
Henry pressed his teeth firmly together
in order to keep down his disappointment by a mere
physical act if possible. He happened to look
at Shif’less Sol, and saw that his teeth were
pressed together in the same manner. It is probable
that like feelings swayed every one of the twelve,
but they were so still in the brushwood that no Iroquois
heard grass or leaf rustle. Thus the twelve
watched the sixty pass, and after they were gone, Henry,
Shif’less Sol, and Tim Murphy followed for several
miles. They saw Wyatt proceed toward the Chemung
River, and as they approached the stream they beheld
signs of fortifications. It was now nearly daylight,
and, as Indians were everywhere, they turned back.
But they were convinced that the enemy meant to fight
on the Chemung.