LITTLE BEARD’S TOWN
The trumpets called early the next
morning, and the five rose, refreshed, ready for new
labors. The fires were already lighted, and
breakfast was cooking. Savory odors permeated
the forest. But as soon as all had eaten, the
army marched, going northward and westward, intending
to cut through the very center of the Iroquois country.
Orders had come from the great commander that the
power of the Six Nations, which had been so long such
a terrible scourge on the American frontier, must
be annihilated. They must be made strangers
in their own country. Women and children were
not to be molested, but their towns must perish.
As Thayendanegea had said the night
before the Battle of the Chemung, the power beyond
the seas that had urged the Iroquois to war on the
border did not save them. It could not.
British and Tories alike had promised them certain
victory, and for a while it had seemed that the promises
would come true. But the tide had turned, and
the Iroquois were fugitives in their own country.
The army continued its march through
the wilderness, the scouts in front and heavy parties
of riflemen on either flank. There was no chance
for a surprise. Henry and his comrades were aware
that Indian bands still lurked in the forest, and they
had several narrow escapes from the bullets of ambushed
foes, but the progress of the army was irresistible.
Nothing could check it for a moment, however much
the Indian and Tory chiefs might plan.
They camped again that night in the
forest, with a thorough ring of sentinels posted against
surprise, although there was little danger of the
latter, as the enemy could not, for the present at
least, bring a sufficient force into the field.
But after the moon had risen, the five, with Heemskerk,
went ahead through the forest. The Iroquois
town of Kanawaholla lay just ahead, and the army would
reach it on the morrow. It was the intention of
the scouts to see if it was still occupied.
It was near midnight when the little
party drew near to Kanawaholla and watched it from
the shelter of the forest. Like most other Iroquois
towns, it contained wooden houses, and cultivated
fields were about it. No smoke rose from any
of the chimneys, but the sharp eyes of the scouts
saw loaded figures departing through a great field
of ripe and waving corn. It was the last of
the inhabitants, fleeing with what they could carry.
Two or three warriors might have been in that group
of fugitives, but the scouts made no attempt to pursue.
They could not restrain a little feeling of sympathy
and pity, although a just retribution was coming.
“If the Iroquois had only stood
neutral at the beginning of the war, as we asked them,”
said Heemskerk, “how much might have been spared
to both sides! Look! Those people are stopping
for a moment.”
The burdened figures, perhaps a dozen,
halted at the far edge of the corn field. Henry
and Paul readily imagined that they were taking a
last look at their town, and the feeling of pity and
sympathy deepened, despite Wyoming, Cherry Valley,
and all the rest. But that feeling never extended
to the white allies of the Iroquois, whom Thayendanegea
characterized in word and in writing as “more
savage than the savages themselves.”
The scouts waited an hour, and then
entered the town. Not a soul was in Kanawaholla.
Some of the lighter things had been taken away, but
that was all. Most of the houses were in disorder,
showing the signs of hasty flight, but the town lay
wholly at the mercy of the advancing army. Henry
and his comrades withdrew with the news, and the next
day, when the troops advanced, Kanawaholla was put
to the torch. In an hour it was smoking ruins,
and then the crops and fruit trees were destroyed.
Leaving ruin behind, the army continued
its march, treading the Iroquois power under foot
and laying waste the country. One after another
the Indian towns were destroyed, Catherinetown, Kendaia,
Kanadesaga, Shenanwaga, Skoiyase, Kanandaigua, Honeyoye,
Kanaghsawa, Gathtsewarohare, and others, forming a
long roll, bearing the sounding Iroquois names.
Villages around Cayuga and other lakes were burned
by detachments. The smoke of perishing towns
arose everywhere in the Iroquois country, while the
Iroquois themselves fled before the advancing army.
They sent appeal after appeal for help from those
to whom they had given so much help, but none came.
It was now deep autumn, and the nights
grew cold. The forests blazed with brilliant
colors. The winds blew, leaves rustled and fell.
The winter would soon be at hand, and the Iroquois,
so proud of what they had achieved, would have to
find what shelter they could in the forests or at
the British posts on the Canadian frontier.
Thayendanegea was destined to come again with bands
of red men and white and inflict great loss, but the
power of the Six Nations was overthrown forever, after
four centuries of victory and glory. Henry,
Paul, and the rest were all the time in the thick
of it. The army, as the autumn advanced, marched
into the Genesee Valley, destroying everything.
Henry and Paul, as they lay on their blankets one
night, counted fires in three different directions,
and every one of the three marked a perishing Indian
village. It was not a work in which they took
any delight; on the contrary, it often saddened them,
but they felt that it had to be done, and they could
not shirk the task.
In October, Henry, despite his youth,
took command of a body of scouts and riflemen which
beat up the ways, and skirmished in advance of the
army. It was a democratic little band, everyone
saying what he pleased, but yielding in the end to
the authority of the leader. They were now far
up the Genesee toward the Great Lakes, and Henry formed
the plan of advancing ahead of the army on the great
Seneca village known variously as the Seneca Castle
and Little Beard’s Town, after its chief, a full
match in cruelty for the older Seneca chief, Hiokatoo.
Several causes led to this decision. It was
reported that Thayendanegea, Timmendiquas, all the
Butlers and Johnsons, and Braxton Wyatt were there.
While not likely to be true about all, it was probably
true about some of them, and a bold stroke might effect
much.
It is probable that Henry had Braxton
Wyatt most in mind. The renegade was in his
element among the Indians and Tories, and he had developed
great abilities as a partisan, being skillfully seconded
by the squat Tory, Coleman. His reputation now
was equal at least to that of Walter Butler, and he
had skirmished more than once with the vanguard of
the army. Growing in Henry’s heart was
a strong desire to match forces with him, and it was
quite probable that a swift advance might find him
at the Seneca Castle.
The riflemen took up their march on
a brisk morning in late autumn. The night had
been clear and cold, with a touch of winter in it,
and the brilliant colors of the foliage had now turned
to a solid brown. Whenever the wind blew, the
leaves fell in showers. The sky was a fleecy
blue, but over hills, valley, and forest hung a fine
misty veil that is the mark of Indian summer.
The land was nowhere inhabited. They saw the
cabin of neither white man nor Indian. A desolation
and a silence, brought by the great struggle, hung
over everything. Many discerning eyes among
the riflemen noted the beauty and fertility of the
country, with its noble forests and rich meadows.
At times they caught glimpses of the river, a clear
stream sparkling under the sun.
“Makes me think o’ some
o’ the country ’way down thar in Kentucky,”
said Shif’less Sol, “an’ it seems
to me I like one about ez well ez t’other.
Say, Henry, do you think we’ll ever go back
home? ‘Pears to me that we’re always
goin’ farther an’ farther away.”
Henry laughed.
“It’s because circumstances
have taken us by the hand and led us away, Sol,”
he replied.
“Then,” said the shiftless
one with a resigned air, “I hope them same circumstances
will take me by both hands, an’ lead me gently,
but strongly, back to a place whar thar is peace an’
rest fur a lazy an’ tired man like me.”
“I think you’ll have to
endure a lot, until next spring at least,” said
Henry.
The shiftless one heaved a deep sigh,
but his next words were wholly irrelevant.
“S’pose we’ll light
on that thar Seneca Castle by tomorrow night?”
he asked.
“It seems to me that for a lazy
and tired man you’re extremely anxious for a
fight,” Henry replied.
“I try to be resigned,”
said Shif’less Sol. But his eyes were
sparkling with the light of battle.
They went into camp that night in
a dense forest, with the Seneca Castle about ten miles
ahead. Henry was quite sure that the Senecas
to whom it belonged had not yet abandoned it, and with
the aid of the other tribes might make a stand there.
It was more than likely, too, that the Senecas had
sharpshooters and sentinels well to the south of their
town, and it behooved the riflemen to be extremely
careful lest they run into a hornet’s nest.
Hence they lighted no fires, despite a cold night
wind that searched them through until they wrapped
themselves in their blankets.
The night settled down thick and dark,
and the band lay close in the thickets. Shif’less
Sol was within a yard of Henry. He had observed
his young leader’s face closely that day, and
he had a mind of uncommon penetration.
“Henry,” he whispered,
“you’re hopin’ that you’ll
find Braxton Wyatt an’ his band at Little Beard’s
town?”
“That among other things,”
replied Henry in a similar whisper.
“That first, and the others
afterwards,” persisted the shiftless one.
“It may be so,” admitted Henry.
“I feel the same way you do,”
said Shif’less Sol. “You see, we’ve
knowed Braxton Wyatt a long time, an’ it seems
strange that one who started out a boy with you an’
Paul could turn so black. An’ think uv
all the cruel things that he’s done an’
helped to do. I ain’t hidin’ my
feelin’s. I’m jest itchin’
to git at him.”
“Yes,” said Henry, “I’d
like for our band to have it out with his.”
Henry and Shif’less Sol, and
in fact all of the five, slept that night, because
Henry wished to be strong and vigorous for the following
night, in view of an enterprise that he had in mind.
The rosy Dutchman, Heemskerk, was in command of the
guard, and he revolved continually about the camp
with amazing ease, and with a footstep so light that
it made no sound whatever. Now and then he came
back in the thicket and looked down at the faces of
the sleeping five from Kentucky. “Goot
boys,” he murmured to himself. “Brave
boys, to stay here and help. May they go through
all our battles and take no harm. The goot and
great God often watches over the brave.”
Mynheer Cornelius Heemskerk, native
of Holland, but devoted to the new nation of which
he had made himself a part, was a devout man, despite
a life of danger and hardship. The people of
the woods do not lose faith, and he looked up at the
dark skies as if he found encouragement there.
Then he resumed his circle about the camp.
He heard various noises-the hoot of an owl, the long
whine of a wolf, and twice the footsteps of deer going
down to the river to drink. But the sounds were
all natural, made by the animals to which they belonged,
and Heemskerk knew it. Once or twice he went
farther into the forest, but he found nothing to indicate
the presence of a foe, and while he watched thus, and
beat up the woods, the night passed, eventless, away.
They went the next day much nearer
to the Seneca Castle, and saw sure indications that
it was still inhabited, as the Iroquois evidently
were not aware of the swift advance of the riflemen.
Henry had learned that this was one of the largest
and strongest of all the Iroquois towns, containing
between a hundred and two hundred wooden houses, and
with a population likely to be swollen greatly by
fugitives from the Iroquois towns already destroyed.
The need of caution-great caution-was borne in upon
him, and he paid good heed.
The riflemen sought another covert
in the deep forest, now about three miles from Little
Beard’s Town, and lay there, while Henry, according
to his plan, went forth at night with Shif’less
Sol and Tom Ross. He was resolved to find out
more about this important town, and his enterprise
was in full accord with his duties, chief among which
was to save the vanguard of the army from ambush.
When the complete darkness of night
had come, the three left the covert, and, after traveling
a short distance through the forest, turned in toward
the river. As the town lay on or near the river,
Henry thought they might see some signs of Indian life
on the stream, and from this they could proceed to
discoveries.
But when they first saw the river
it was desolate. Not a canoe was moving on its
surface, and the three, keeping well in the undergrowth,
followed the bank toward the town. But the forest
soon ceased, and they came upon a great field, where
the Senecas had raised corn, and where stalks, stripped
of their ears and browned by the autumn cold, were
still standing. But all the work of planting,
tending, and reaping this great field, like all the
other work in all the Iroquois fields, had been done
by the Iroquois women, not by the warriors.
Beyond the field they saw fruit trees,
and beyond these, faint lines of smoke, indicating
the position of the great Seneca Castle. The
dry cornstalks rustled mournfully as the wind blew
across the field.
“The stalks will make a little
shelter,” said Henry, “and we must cross
the field. We want to keep near the river.”
“Lead on,” said Shif’less Sol.
They took a diagonal course, walking
swiftly among the stalks and bearing back toward the
river. They crossed the field without being
observed, and came into a thick fringe of trees and
undergrowth along the river. They moved cautiously
in this shelter for a rod or two, and then the three,
without word from any one of them, stopped simultaneously.
They heard in the water the unmistakable ripple made
by a paddle, and then the sound of several more.
They crept to the edge of the bank and crouched down
among the bushes. Then they saw a singular procession.
A half-dozen Iroquois canoes were
moving slowly up the stream. They were in single
file, and the first canoe was the largest. But
the aspect of the little fleet was wholly different
from that of an ordinary group of Iroquois war canoes.
It was dark, somber, and funereal, and in every canoe,
between the feet of the paddlers, lay a figure, stiff
and impassive, the body of a chief slain in battle.
It had all the appearance of a funeral procession,
but the eyes of the three, as they roved over it,
fastened on a figure in the first canoe, and, used
as they were to the strange and curious, every one
of them gave a start.
The figure was that of a woman, a
wild and terrible creature, who half sat, half crouched
in the canoe, looking steadily downward. Her
long black hair fell in disordered masses from her
uncovered head. She wore a brilliant red dress
with savage adornments, but it was stained and torn.
The woman’s whole attitude expressed grief,
anger, and despair.
“Queen Esther!” whispered
Henry. The other two nodded.
So horrifying had been the impression
made upon him by this woman at Wyoming that he could
not feel any pity for her now. The picture of
the great war tomahawk cleaving the heads of bound
prisoners was still too vivid. She had several
sons, one or two of whom were slain in battle with
the colonists, and the body that lay in the boat may
have been one of them. Henry always believed
that it was-but he still felt no pity.
As the file came nearer they heard
her chanting a low song, and now she raised her face
and tore at her black hair.
“They’re goin’ to land,” whispered
Shif’less Sol.
The head of the file was turned toward
the shore, and, as it approached, a group of warriors,
led by Little Beard, the Seneca chief, appeared among
the trees, coming forward to meet them. The
three in their covert crouched closer, interested so
intensely that they were prepared to brave the danger
in order to remain. But the absorption of the
Iroquois in what they were about to do favored the
three scouts.
As the canoes touched the bank, Catharine
Montour rose from her crouching position and uttered
a long, piercing wail, so full of grief, rage, and
despair that the three in the bushes shuddered.
It was fiercer than the cry of a wolf, and it came
back from the dark forest in terrifying echoes.
“It’s not a woman, but
a fiend,” whispered Henry; and, as before, his
comrades nodded in assent.
The woman stood erect, a tall and
stalwart figure, but the beauty that had once caused
her to be received in colonial capitals was long since
gone. Her white half of blood had been submerged
years ago in her Indian half, and there was nothing
now about her to remind one of civilization or of
the French Governor General of Canada who was said
to have been her father.
The Iroquois stood respectfully before
her. It was evident that she had lost none of
her power among the Six Nations, a power proceeding
partly from her force and partly from superstition.
As the bodies were brought ashore, one by one, and
laid upon the ground, she uttered the long wailing
cry again and again, and the others repeated it in
a sort of chorus.
When the bodies-and Henry was sure
that they must all be those of chiefs-were laid out,
she tore her hair, sank down upon the ground, and
began a chant, which Tom Ross was afterwards able to
interpret roughly to the others. She sang:
The white men have come with the cannon
and bayonet,
Numerous as forest leaves the army has
come.
Our warriors are driven like deer by the
hunter,
Fallen is the League of the Ho-de-no-sau-nee!
Our towns are burned and our fields uprooted,
Our people flee through the forest for
their lives,
The king who promised to help us comes
not.
Fallen is the League of the Ho-de-no-sau-nee!
The great chiefs are slain and their bodies
lie here.
No longer will they lead the warriors
in battle;
No more will they drive the foe from the
thicket.
Fallen is the League of the Ho-de-no-sau-nee!
Scalps we have taken from all who hated
us;
None, but feared us in the days of our
glory.
But the cannon and bayonet have taken
our country;
Fallen is the League of the Ho-de-no-sau-nee!
She chanted many verses, but these
were all that Tom Ross could ever remember or translate.
But every verse ended with the melancholy refrain:
“Fallen is the League of the Ho-de-no-sau-nee!”
which the others also repeated in chorus. Then
the warriors lifted up the bodies, and they moved in
procession toward the town. The three watched
them, but they did not rise until the funeral train
had reached the fruit trees. Then they stood
up, looked at one another, and breathed sighs of relief.
“I don’t care ef I never
see that woman ag’in,” said Shif’less
Sol. “She gives me the creeps. She
must be a witch huntin’ for blood. She
is shore to stir up the Iroquois in this town.”
“That’s true,” said
Henry, “but I mean to go nearer.”
“Wa’al,” said Tom
Ross, “I reckon that if you mean it we mean it,
too.”
“There are certainly Tories
in the town,” said Henry, and if we are seen
we can probably pass for them. I’m bound
to find out what’s here.”
“Still huntin’ fur Braxton
Wyatt,” said Shif’less Sol.
“I mean to know if he’s here,” said
Henry.
“Lead on,” said the shiftless one.
They followed in the path of the procession,
which was now out of sight, and entered the orchard.
From that point they saw the houses and great numbers
of Indians, including squaws and children, gathered
in the open spaces, where the funeral train was passing.
Queen Esther still stalked at its head, but her chant
was now taken up by many scores of voices, and the
volume of sound penetrated far in the night.
Henry yet relied upon the absorption of the Iroquois
in this ceremonial to give him a chance for a good
look through the town, and he and his comrades advanced
with boldness.
They passed by many of the houses,
all empty, as their occupants had gone to join in
the funeral lament, but they soon saw white men-a
few of the Royal Greens, and some of the Rangers, and
other Tories, who were dressed much like Henry and
his comrades. One of them spoke to Shif’less
Sol, who nodded carelessly and passed by. The
Tory seemed satisfied and went his way.
“Takes us fur some o’
the crowd that’s come runnin’ in here ahead
o’ the army,” said the shiftless one.
Henry was noting with a careful eye
the condition of the town. He saw that no preparations
for defense had been made, and there was no evidence
that any would be made. All was confusion and
despair. Already some of the squaws were fleeing,
carrying heavy burdens. The three coupled caution
with boldness. If they met a Tory they merely
exchanged a word or two, and passed swiftly on.
Henry, although he had seen enough to know that the
army could advance without hesitation, still pursued
the quest. Shif’less Sol was right.
At the bottom of Henry’s heart was a desire
to know whether Braxton Wyatt was in Little Beard’s
Town, a desire soon satisfied, as they reached the
great Council House, turned a corner of it, and met
the renegade face to face.
Wyatt was with his lieutenant, the
squat Tory, Coleman, and he uttered a cry when he
saw the tall figure of the great youth. There
was no light but that of the moon, but he knew his
foe in an instant.
“Henry Ware!” he cried,
and snatched his pistol from his belt.
They were so close together that Henry
did not have time to use a weapon. Instinctively
he struck out with his fist, catching Wyatt on the
jaw, and sending him down as if he had been shot.
Shif’less Sol and Tom Ross ran bodily over
Coleman, hurling him down, and leaping across his
prostrate figure. Then they ran their utmost,
knowing that their lives depended on speed and skill.
They quickly put the Council House
between them and their pursuers, and darted away among
the houses. Braxton Wyatt was stunned, but he
speedily regained his wits and his feet.
“It was the fellow Ware, spying
among us again! be cried to his lieutenant, who, half
dazed, was also struggling up. “Come, men!
After them! After them!”
A dozen men came at his call, and,
led by the renegade, they began a search among the
houses. But it was hard to find the fugitives.
The light was not good, many flitting figures were
about, and the frantic search developed confusion.
Other Tories were often mistaken for the three scouts,
and were overhauled, much to their disgust and that
of the overhaulers. Iroquois, drawn from the
funeral ceremony, began to join in the hunt, but Wyatt
could give them little information. He had merely
seen an enemy, and then the enemy had gone.
It was quite certain that this enemy, or, rather,
three of them, was still in the town.
Henry and his comrades were crafty.
Trained by ambush and escape, flight and pursuit,
they practiced many wiles to deceive their pursuers.
When Wyatt and Coleman were hurled down they ran
around the Council House, a large and solid structure,
and, finding a door on the opposite side and no one
there or in sight from that point, they entered it,
closing the door behind them.
They stood in almost complete darkness,
although at length they made out the log wall of the
great, single room which constituted the Council House.
After that, with more accustomed eyes, they saw on
the wall arms, pipes, wampum, and hideous trophies,
some with long hair and some with short. The
hair was usually blonde, and most of the scalps had
been stretched tight over little hoops. Henry
clenched his fist in the darkness.
“Mebbe we’re walkin’
into a trap here,” said Shif’less Sol.
“I don’t think so,”
said Henry. “At any rate they’d find
us if we were rushing about the village. Here
we at least have a chance.”
At the far end of the Council House
hung mats, woven of rushes, and the three sat down
behind them in the very heart of the Iroquois sanctuary.
Should anyone casually enter the Council House they
would still be hidden. They sat in Turkish fashion
on the floor, close together and with their rifles
lying across their knees. A thin light filtered
through a window and threw pallid streaks on the floor,
which they could see when they peeped around the edge
of the mats. But outside they heard very clearly
the clamor of the hunt as it swung to and fro in the
village. Shif’less Sol chuckled.
It was very low, but it was a chuckle, nevertheless,
and the others heard.
“It’s sorter takin’
an advantage uv ’em,” said the shiftless
one, “layin’ here in thar own church,
so to speak, while they’re ragin’ an’
tearin’ up the earth everywhar else lookin’
fur us. Gives me a mighty snug feelin’,
though, like the one you have when you’re safe
in a big log house, an’ the wind an’ the
hail an’ the snow are beatin’ outside.”
“You’re shorely right, Sol,” said
Tom Ross.
“Seems to me,” continued
the irrepressible Sol, “that you did git in
a good lick at Braxton Wyatt, after all. Ain’t
he unhappy now, bitin’ his fingers an’
pawin’ the earth an’ findin’ nothin’?
I feel real sorry, I do, fur Braxton. It’s
hard fur a nice young feller to have to suffer sech
disappointments.”
Shif’less Sol chuckled again,
and Henry was forced to smile in the darkness.
Shif’less Sol was not wholly wrong. It
would be a bitter blow to Braxton Wyatt. Moreover,
it was pleasant where they sat. A hard floor
was soft to them, and as they leaned against the wall
they could relax and rest.
“What will our fellows out thar
in the woods think?” asked Tom Ross.
“They won’t have to think,”
replied Henry. “They’ll sit quiet
as we’re doing and wait.”
The noise of the hunt went on for
a long time outside. War whoops came from different
points of the village. There were shrill cries
of women and children, and the sound of many running
feet. After a while it began to sink, and soon
after that they heard no more noises than those of
people preparing for flight. Henry felt sure
that the town would be abandoned on the morrow, but
his desire to come to close quarters with Braxton
Wyatt was as strong as ever. It was certain
that the army could not overtake Wyatt’s band,
but he might match his own against it. He was
thinking of making the attempt to steal from the place
when, to their great amazement, they heard the door
of the Council House open and shut, and then footsteps
inside.
Henry looked under the edge of the
hanging mat and saw two dusky figures near the window.