A GLOOMY COUNCIL
The next night after Henry Ware and
his comrades lay in the brushwood and saw Braxton
Wyatt and his band pass, a number of men, famous or
infamous in their day, were gathered around a low
camp fire on the crest of a small hill. The most
distinguished of them all in looks was a young Indian
chief of great height and magnificent build, with
a noble and impressive countenance. He wore
nothing of civilized attire, the nearest approach to
it being the rich dark-blue blanket that was flung
gracefully over his right shoulder. It was none
other than the great Wyandot chief, Timmendiquas,
saying little, and listening without expression to
the words of the others.
Near Timmendiquas sat Thayendanegea,
dressed as usual in his mixture of savage and civilized
costume, and about him were other famous Indian chiefs,
The Corn Planter, Red jacket, Hiokatoo, Sangerachte,
Little Beard, a young Seneca renowned for ferocity,
and others.
On the other side of the fire sat
the white men: the young Sir John Johnson, who,
a prisoner to the Colonials, had broken his oath of
neutrality, the condition of his release, and then,
fleeing to Canada, had returned to wage bloody war
on the settlements; his brother-in-law, Colonel Guy
Johnson; the swart and squat John Butler of Wyoming
infamy; his son, Walter Butler, of the pallid face,
thin lips, and cruel heart; the Canadian Captain MacDonald;
Braxton Wyatt; his lieutenant, the dark Tory, Coleman;
and some others who had helped to ravage their former
land.
Sir John Johnson, a tall man with
blue eyes set close together, wore the handsome uniform
of his Royal Greens; he had committed many dark deeds
or permitted them to be done by men under his command,
and he had secured the opportunity only through his
broken oath, but he had lost greatly. The vast
estates of his father, Sir William Johnson, were being
torn from him, and perhaps he saw, even then, that
in return for what he had done he would lose all and
become an exile from the country in which he was born.
It was not a cheerful council.
There was no exultation as after Wyoming and Cherry
Valley and the Minisink and other places. Sir
John bit his lip uneasily, and his brother-in-law,
resting his hand on his knee, stared gloomily at the
fire. The two Butlers were silent, and the dark
face of Thayendanegea was overcast.
A little distance before these men
was a breastwork about half a mile long, connecting
with a bend of the river in such a manner that an
enemy could attack only in front and on one flank,
that flank itself being approached only by the ascent
of a steep ridge which ran parallel to the river.
The ground about the camp was covered with pine and
scrub oaks. Many others had been cut down and
added to the breastwork. A deep brook ran at
the foot of the hill on which the leaders sat.
About the slopes of this hill and another, a little
distance away, sat hundreds of Indian warriors, all
in their war paint, and other hundreds of their white
allies, conspicuous among them Johnson’s Royal
Greens and Butler’s Rangers. These men
made but little noise now. They were resting
and waiting.
Thayendanegea was the first to break
the silence in the group at the fire. He turned
his dark face to Sir John Johnson and said in his
excellent English: “The king promised us
that if we would take up arms for him against the
Yankees, he would send a great army, many thousands,
to help us. We believed him, and we took up
the hatchet for him. We fought in the dark and
the storm with Herkimer at the Oriskany, and many
of our warriors fell. But we did not sulk in
our lodges. We have ravaged and driven in the
whole American border along a line of hundreds of miles.
Now the Congress sends an army to attack us, to avenge
what we have done, and the great forces of the king
are not here. I have been across the sea; I
have seen the mighty city of London and its people
as numerous as the blades of grass. Why has not
the king kept his promise and sent men enough to save
the Iroquois ?”
Sir John Johnson and Thayendanegea
were good friends, but the soul of the great Mohawk
chief was deeply stirred. His penetrating mind
saw the uplifted hand about to strike-and the target
was his own people. His tone became bitterly
sarcastic as he spoke, and when he ceased he looked
directly at the baronet in a manner that showed a
reply must be given. Sir John moved uneasily,
but he spoke at last.
“Much that you say is true,
Thayendanegea,” he admitted, “but the
king has many things to do. The war is spread
over a vast area, and he must keep his largest armies
in the East. But the Royal Greens, the Rangers,
and all others whom we can raise, even in Canada,
are here to help you. In the coming battle your
fortunes are our fortunes.”
Thayendanegea nodded, but he was not
yet appeased. His glance fell upon the two Butlers,
father and son, and he frowned.
“There are many in England itself,”
he said, “who wish us harm, and who perhaps
have kept us from receiving some of the help that
we ought to have. They speak of Wyoming and Cherry
Valley, of the torture and of the slaughter of women
and children, and they say that war must not be carried
on in such a way. But there are some among us
who are more savage than the savages themselves, as
they call us. It was you, John Butler, who led
at Wyoming, and it was you, Walter Butler, who allowed
the women and children to be killed at Cherry Valley,
and more would have been slain there had I not, come
up in time.”
The dark face of “Indian”
Butler grew darker, and the pallid face of his son
grew more pallid. Both were angry, and at the
same time a little afraid.
“We won at Wyoming in fair battle,”
said the elder Butler.
“But afterwards?” said Thayendanegea.
The man was silent.
“It is these two places that
have so aroused the Bostonians against us,”
continued Thayendanegea. “It is because
of them that the commander of the Bostonians has sent
a great army, and the Long House is threatened with
destruction.”
“My son and I have fought for
our common cause,” said “Indian”
Butler, the blood flushing through his swarthy face.
Sir John Johnson interfered.
“We have admitted, Joseph, the
danger to the Iroquois,” he said, calling the
chieftain familiarly by his first Christian name,
“but I and my brother-in-law and Colonel Butler
and Captain Butler have already lost though we may
regain. And with this strong position and the
aid of ambush it is likely that we can defeat the
rebels.”
The eyes of Thayendanegea brightened
as he looked at the long embankment, the trees, and
the dark forms of the warriors scattered numerously
here and there.
“You may be right, Sir John,”
he said; “yes, I think you are right, and by
all the gods, red and white, we shall see. I
wish to fight here, because this is the best place
in which to meet the Bostonians. What say you,
Timmendiquas, sworn brother of mine, great warrior
and great chief of the Wyandots, the bravest of all
the western nations?”
The eye of Timmendiquas expressed
little, but his voice was sonorous, and his words
were such as Thayendanegea wished to hear.
“If we fight-and we must fight-this
is the place in which to meet the, white army,”
he said. “The Wyandots are here to help
the Iroquois, as the Iroquois would go to help them.
The Manitou of the Wyandots, the Aieroski of the
Iroquois, alone knows the end.”
He spoke with the utmost gravity,
and after his brief reply he said no more. All
regarded him with respect and admiration. Even
Braxton Wyatt felt that it was a noble deed to remain
and face destruction for the sake of tribes not his
own.
Sir John Johnson turned to Braxton
Wyatt, who had sat all the while in silence.
“You have examined the evening’s
advance, Wyatt,” he said. “What
further information can you give us?”
“We shall certainly be attacked
to-morrow,” replied Wyatt, “and the American
army is advancing cautiously. It has out strong
flanking parties, and it is preceded by the scouts,
those Kentuckians whom I know and have met often,
Murphy, Elerson, Heemskerk, and the others.”
“If we could only lead them
into an ambush,” said Sir John. “Any
kind of troops, even the best of regulars, will give
way before an unseen foe pouring a deadly fire upon
them from the deep woods. Then they magnify
the enemy tenfold.”
“It is so,” said the fierce
old Seneca chief, Hiokatoo. “When we killed
Braddock and all his men, they thought that ten warriors
stood in the moccasins of only one.”
Sir John frowned. He did not
like this allusion to the time when the Iroquois fought
against the English, and inflicted on them a great
defeat. But he feared to rebuke the old chief.
Hiokatoo and the Senecas were too important.
“There ought to be a chance
yet for an ambuscade,” he said. “The
foliage is still thick and heavy, and Sullivan, their
general, is not used to forest warfare. What
say you to this, Wyatt?”
Wyatt shook his head. He knew
the caliber of the five from Kentucky, and he had
little hope of such good fortune.
“They have learned from many
lessons,” he replied, and their scouts are the
best. Moreover, they will attempt anything.”
They relapsed into silence again,
and the sharp eyes of the renegade roved about the
dark circle of trees and warriors that inclosed them.
Presently he saw something that caused him to rise
and walk a little distance from the fire. Although
his eye suspected and his mind confirmed, Braxton
Wyatt could not believe that it was true. It
was incredible. No one, be he ever so daring,
would dare such a thing. But the figure down
there among the trees, passing about among the warriors,
many of whom did not know one another, certainly looked
familiar, despite the Indian paint and garb.
Only that of Timmendiquas could rival it in height
and nobility. These were facts that could not
be hidden by any disguise.
“What is it, Wyatt?” asked
Sir John. “What do you see? Why do
you look so startled?”
Wyatt sought to reply calmly.
“There is a warrior among those
trees over there whom I have not seen here before,”
he replied. “he is as tall and as powerful as
Timmendiquas, and there is only one such. There
is a spy among us, and it is Henry Ware.”
He snatched a pistol from his belt,
ran forward, and fired at the flitting figure, which
was gone in an instant among the trees and the warriors.
“What do you say?” exclaimed
Thayendanegea, as he ran forward, “a spy, and
you know him to be such!”
“Yes, he is the worst of them
all,” replied Wyatt. “I know him.
I could not mistake him. But he has dared too
much. He cannot get away.”
The great camp was now in an uproar.
The tall figure was seen here and there, always to
vanish quickly. Twenty shots were fired at it.
None hit. Many more would have been fired, but
the camp was too much crowded to take such a risk.
Every moment the tumult and confusion increased,
but Thayendanegea quickly posted warriors on the embankment
and the flanks, to prevent the escape of the fugitive
in any of those directions.
But the tall figure did not appear
at either embankment or flank. It was next seen
near the river, when a young warrior, striving to
strike with a tomahawk, was dashed to the earth with
great force. The next instant the figure leaped
far out into the stream. The moonlight glimmered
an instant on the bare head, while bullets the next
moment pattered on the water where it had been.
Then, with a few powerful strokes, the stranger reclaimed
the land, sprang upon the shore, and darted into the
woods with more vain bullets flying about him.
But he sent back a shout of irony and triumph that
made the chiefs and Tories standing on the bank bite
their lips in anger.