CHAPTER I
THE LONE CANOE
A light canoe of bark, containing
a single human figure, moved swiftly up one of the
twin streams that form the Ohio. The water,
clear and deep, coming through rocky soil, babbled
gently at the edges, where it lapped the land, but
in the center the full current flowed steadily and
without noise.
The thin shadows of early dusk were
falling, casting a pallid tint over the world, a tint
touched here and there with living fire from the sun,
which was gone, though leaving burning embers behind.
One glowing shaft, piercing straight through the heavy
forest that clothed either bank, fell directly upon
the figure in the boat, as a hidden light illuminates
a great picture, while the rest is left in shadow.
It was no common forest runner who sat in the middle
of the red beam. Yet a boy, in nothing but years,
he swung the great paddle with an ease and vigor that
the strongest man in the West might have envied.
His rifle, with the stock carved beautifully, and
the long, slender blue barrel of the border, lay by
his side. He could bring the paddle into the
boat, grasp the rifle, and carry it to his shoulder
with a single, continuous movement.
His most remarkable aspect, one that
the casual observer even would have noticed, was an
extraordinary vitality. He created in the minds
of those who saw him a feeling that he lived intensely
every moment of his life. Born and-bred in the
forest, he was essentially its child, a perfect physical
being, trained by the utmost hardship and danger,
and with every faculty, mental and physical, in complete
coordination. It is only by a singular combination
of time and place, and only once in millions of chances,
that Nature produces such a being.
The canoe remained a few moments in
the center of the red light, and its occupant, with
a slight swaying motion of the paddle, held it steady
in the current, while he listened. Every feature
stood out in the glow, the firm chin, the straight
strong nose, the blue eyes, and the thick yellow hair.
The red blue, and yellow beads on his dress of beautifully
tanned deerskin flashed in the brilliant rays.
He was the great picture of fact, not of fancy, a
human being animated by a living, dauntless soul.
He gave the paddle a single sweep
and shot from the light into the shadow. His
canoe did not stop until it grazed the northern shore,
where bushes and overhanging boughs made a deep shadow.
It would have taken a keen eye now to have seen either
the canoe or its occupant, and Henry Ware paddled
slowly and without noise in the darkest heart of the
shadow.
The sunlight lingered a little longer
in the center of the stream. Then the red changed
to pink. The pink, in its turn, faded, and the
whole surface of the river was somber gray, flowing
between two lines of black forest.
The coming of the darkness did not
stop the boy. He swung a little farther out
into the stream, where the bushes and hanging boughs
would not get in his way, and continued his course
with some increase of speed.
The great paddle swung swiftly through
the water, and the length of stroke was amazing, but
the boy’s breath did not come faster, and the
muscles on his arms and shoulders rippled as if it
were the play of a child. Henry was in waters
unknown to him. He had nothing more than hearsay
upon which to rely, and he used all the wilderness
caution that he had acquired through nature and training.
He called into use every faculty of his perfect physical
being. His trained eyes continually pierced the
darkness. At times, he stopped and listened with
ears that could hear the footfall of the rabbit, but
neither eye nor ear brought report of anything unusual.
The river flowed with a soft, sighing sound.
Now and then a wild creature stirred in the forest,
and once a deer came down to the margin to drink, but
this was the ordinary life of the woods, and he passed
it by.
He went on, hour after hour.
The river narrowed. The banks grew higher and
rockier, and the water, deep and silvery under the
moon, flowed in a somewhat swifter current. Henry
gave a little stronger sweep to the paddle, and the
speed of the canoe was maintained. He still
kept within the shadow of the northern bank.
He noticed after a while that fleecy
vapor was floating before the moon. The night
seemed to be darkening, and a rising wind came out
of the southwest. The touch of the air on, his
face was damp. It was the token of rain, and
he felt that it would not be delayed long.
It was no part of his plan to be caught
in a storm on the Monongahela. Besides the discomfort,
heavy rain and wind might sink his frail canoe, and
he looked for a refuge. The river was widening
again, and the banks sank down until they were but
little above the water. Presently he saw a place
that he knew would be suitable, a stretch of thick
bushes and weeds growing into the very edge of the
water, and extending a hundred yards or more along
the shore.
He pushed his canoe far into the undergrowth,
and then stopped it in shelter so close that, keen
as his own eyes were, he could scarcely see the main
stream of the river. The water where he came
to rest was not more than a foot deep, but he remained
in the canoe, half reclining and wrapping closely
around himself and his rifle a beautiful blanket woven
of the tightest fiber.
His position, with his head resting
on the edge of the canoe and his shoulder pressed
against the side, was full of comfort to him, and
he awaited calmly whatever might come. Here and
there were little spaces among the leaves overhead,
and through them he saw a moon, now almost hidden
by thick and rolling vapors, and a sky that had grown
dark and somber. The last timid star had ceased
to twinkle, and the rising wind was wet and cold.
He was glad of the blanket, and, skilled forest runner
that he was, he never traveled without it. Henry
remained perfectly still. The light canoe did
not move beneath his weight the fraction of an inch.
His upturned eyes saw the little cubes of sky that
showed through the leaves grow darker and darker.
The bushes about him were now bending before the
wind, which blew steadily from the south, and presently
drops of rain began to fall lightly on the water.
The boy, alone in the midst of all
that vast wilderness, surrounded by danger in its
most cruel forms, and with a black midnight sky above
him, felt neither fear nor awe. Being what nature
and circumstance had made him, he was conscious, instead,
of a deep sense of peace and comfort. He was
at ease, in a nest for the night, and there was only
the remotest possibility that the prying eye of an
enemy would see him. The leaves directly over
his head were so thick that they formed a canopy, and,
as he heard the drops fall upon them, it was like
the rain on a roof, that soothes the one beneath its
shelter.
Distant lightning flared once or twice,
and low thunder rolled along the southern horizon,
but both soon ceased, and then a rain, not hard, but
cold and persistent, began to fall, coming straight
down. Henry saw that it might last all night,
but he merely eased himself a little in the canoe,
drew the edges of the blanket around his chin, and
let his eyelids droop.
The rain was now seeping through the
leafy canopy of green, but he did not care.
It could not penetrate the close fiber of the blanket,
and the fur cap drawn far down on his head met the
blanket. Only his face was uncovered, and when
a cold drop fell upon it, it was to him, hardened
by forest life, cool and pleasant to the touch.
Although the eyelids still drooped,
he did not yet feel the tendency to sleep. It
was merely a deep, luxurious rest, with the body completely
relaxed, but with the senses alert. The wind
ceased to blow, and the rain came down straight with
an even beat that was not unmusical. No other
sound was heard in the forest, as the ripple of the
river at the edges was merged into it. Henry
began to feel the desire for sleep by and by, and,
laying the paddle across the boat in such a way that
it sheltered his face, he closed his eyes. In
five minutes he would have been sleeping as soundly
as a man in a warm bed under a roof, but with a quick
motion he suddenly put the paddle aside and raised
himself a little in the canoe, while one hand slipped
down under the folds of the blanket to the hammer
of his rifle.
His ear had told him in time that
there was a new sound on the river. He heard
it faintly above the even beat of the rain, a soft
sound, long and sighing, but regular. He listened,
and then he knew it. It was made by oars, many
of them swung in unison, keeping admirable time.
Henry did not yet feel fear, although
it must be a long boat full of Indian warriors, as
it was not likely, that anybody else would be abroad
upon these waters at such a time. He made no
attempt to move. Where he lay it was black as
the darkest cave, and his cool judgment told him that
there was no need of flight.
The regular rhythmic beat of the oars
came nearer, and presently as he looked through the
covert of leaves the dusky outline of a great war
canoe came into view. It contained at least twenty
warriors, of what tribe he could not tell, but they
were wet, and they looked cold and miserable.
Soon they were opposite him, and he saw the outline
of every figure. Scalp locks drooped in the
rain, and he knew that the warriors, hardy as they
might be, were suffering.
Henry expected to see the long boat
pass on, but it was turned toward a shelving bank
fifty or sixty yards below, and they beached it there.
Then all sprang out, drew it up on the land, and,
after turning it over, propped it up at an angle.
When this was done they sat under it in a close group,
sheltered from the rain. They were using their
great canoe as a roof, after the habit of Shawnees
and Wyandots.
The boy watched them for a long time
through one of the little openings in the bushes,
and he believed that they would remain as they were
all night, but presently he saw a movement among them,
and a little flash of light. He understood it.
They were trying to kindle a fire-with flint and
steel, under the shelter of the boat. He continued
to watch them ’lazily and without alarm.
Their fire, if they succeeded in making
it, would cast no light upon him in the dense covert,
but they would be outlined against the flame, and
he could see them better, well enough, perhaps, to
tell to what tribe they belonged.
He watched under his lowered eyelids
while the warriors, gathered in a close group to make
a shelter from stray puffs of wind, strove with flint
and steel. Sparks sprang up and went out, but
Henry at last saw a little blaze rise and cling to
life. Then, fed with tinder and bark, it grew
under the roof made by the boat until it was ruddy
and strong. The boat was tilted farther back,
and the fire, continuing to grow, crackled cheerfully,
while the flames leaped higher.
By a curious transfer of the senses,
Henry, as he lay in the thick blackness felt the influence
of the fire, also. Its warmth was upon his face,
and it was pleasing to see the red and yellow light
victorious against the sodden background of the rain
and dripping forest. The figures of the warriors
passed and repassed before the fire, and the boy in
the boat moved suddenly. His body was not shifted
more than an inch, but his surprise was great.
A warrior stood between him and the
fire, outlined perfectly against the red light.
It was a splendid figure, young, much beyond the
average height, the erect and noble head crowned with
the defiant scalplock, the strong, slightly curved
nose and the massive chin cut as clearly as if they
had been carved in copper. The man who had laid
aside a wet blanket was bare now to the waist, and
Henry could see the powerful muscles play on chest
and shoulders as he moved.
The boy knew him. It was Timmendiquas,
the great White Lightning of the Wyandots, the youngest,
but the boldest and ablest of all the Western chiefs.
Henry’s pulses leaped a little at the sight
of his old foe and almost friend. As always,
he felt admiration at the sight of the young chief.
It was not likely that he would ever behold such
another magnificent specimen of savage manhood.
The presence of Timmendiquas so far
east was also full of significance. The great
fleet under Adam Colfax, and with Henry and his comrades
in the van, had reached Pittsburgh at last.
Thence the arms, ammunition, and other supplies were
started on the overland journey for the American army,
but the five lingered before beginning the return
to Kentucky. A rumor came that the Indian alliance
was spreading along the entire frontier, both west
and north. It was said that Timmendiquas, stung
to fiery energy by his defeats, was coming east to
form a league with the Iroquois, the famous Six Nations.
These warlike tribes were friendly with the Wyandots,
and the league would be a formidable danger to the
Colonies, the full strength of which was absorbed
already in the great war.
But the report was a new call of battle
to Henry, Shif’less Sol, and the others.
The return to Kentucky was postponed. They
could be of greater service here, and they plunged
into the great woods to the north and, east to see
what might be stirring among the warriors.
Now Henry, as be looked at Timmendiquas,
knew that report had told the truth. The great
chief would not be on the fringe of the Iroquois country,
if be did not have such a plan, and he had the energy
and ability to carry it through. Henry shuddered
at the thought of the tomahawk flashing along every
mile of a frontier so vast, and defended so thinly.
He was glad in every fiber that he and his comrades
had remained to hang upon the Indian hordes, and be
heralds of their marches. In the forest a warning
usually meant the saving of life.
The rain ceased after a while, although
water dripped from the trees everywhere. But
the big fire made an area of dry earth about it, and
the warriors replaced the long boat in the water.
Then all but four or five of them lay beside the
coals and went to sleep. Timmendiquas was one
of those who remained awake, and Henry saw that he
was in deep thought. He walked back and forth
much like a white man, and now and then he folded his
hands behind his back, looking toward the earth, but
not seeing it. Henry could guess what was in
his mind. He would draw forth the full power
of the Six Nations, league them with the Indians of
the great valley, and hurl them all in one mass upon
the frontier. He was planning now the means
to the end.
The chief, in his little walks back
and forth, came close to the edge of the bushes in
which Henry lay, It was not at all probable that he
would conclude to search among them, but some accident,
a chance, might happen, and Henry began to feel a
little alarm. Certainly, the coming of the day
would make his refuge insecure, and he resolved to
slip away while it was yet light.
The boy rose a little in the boat,
slowly and with the utmost caution, because the slightest
sound out of the common might arouse Timmendiquas
to the knowledge of a hostile presence. The
canoe must make no plash in the water. Gradually
he unwrapped the blanket and tied it in a folded square
at his back. Then he took thought a few moments.
The forest was so silent now that he did not believe
he could push the canoe through the bushes without
being heard. He would leave it there for use
another day and go on foot through the woods to his
comrades.
Slowly he put one foot down the side
until it rested on the bottom, and then he remained
still. The chief had paused in his restless
walk back and forth. Could it be possible that
he had heard so slight a sound as that of a human
foot sinking softly into the water? Henry waited
with his rifle ready. If necessary he would
fire, and then dart away among the bushes.
Five or six intense moments passed,
and the chief resumed his restless pacing. If
he had heard, he had passed it by as nothing, and
Henry raised the other foot out of the canoe.
He was as delicate in his movement as a surgeon mending
the human eye, and he had full cause, as not eye alone,
but life as well, depended upon his success.
Both feet now rested upon the muddy bottom, and he
stood there clear of the boat.
The chief did not stop again, and
as the fire had burned higher, his features were disclosed
more plainly in his restless walk back and forth before
the flames. Henry took a final look at the lofty
features, contracted now into a frown, then began to
wade among the bushes, pushing his way softly.
This was the most delicate and difficult task of
all. The water must not be allowed to plash
around him nor the bushes to rustle as he passed.
Forward he went a yard, then two, five, ten, and his
feet were about to rest upon solid earth, when a stick
submerged in the mud broke under his moccasin with
a snap singularly loud in the silence of the night.
Henry sprang at once upon dry land,
whence he cast back a single swift glance. He
saw the chief standing rigid and gazing in the direction
from which the sound had come. Other warriors
were just behind him, following his look, aware that
there was an unexpected presence in the forest, and
resolved to know its nature.
Henry ran northward. So confident
was he in his powers and the protecting darkness of
the night that he sent back a sharp cry, piercing
and defiant, a cry of a quality that could come only
from a white throat. The warriors would know
it, and he intended for them to know it. Then,
holding his rifle almost parallel with his body, he
darted swiftly away through the black spaces of the
forest. But an answering cry came to his, the
Indian yell taking up his challenge, and saying that
the night would not check pursuit.
Henry maintained his swift pace for
a long time, choosing the more open places that he
might make no noise among the bushes and leaves.
Now and then water dripped in his face, and his moccasins
were wet from the long grass, but his body was warm
and dry, and he felt little weariness. The clouds
were now all gone, and the stars sprang out, dancing
in a sky of dusky blue. Trained eyes could see
far in the forest despite the night, and Henry felt
that he must be wary. He recalled the skill and
tenacity of Timmendiquas. A fugitive could scarcely
be trailed in the darkness, but the great chief would
spread out his forces like a fan and follow.
He had been running perhaps three
hours when he concluded to stop in a thicket, where
he lay down on the damp grass, and rested with his
head under his arm.
His breath had been coming a little
faster, but his heart now resumed its regular beat.
Then he heard a soft sound, that of footsteps.
He thought at first that some wild animal was prowling
near, but second thought convinced him that human beings
had come. Gazing through the thicket, he saw
an Indian warrior walking among the trees, looking
searchingly about him as if he were a scout.
Another, coming from a different direction, approached
him, and Henry felt sure that they were of the party
of Timmendiquas. They had followed him in some
manner, perhaps by chance, and it behooved Mm now
to lie close.
A third warrior joined them and they
began to examine the ground. Henry realized
that it was much lighter. Keen eyes under such
a starry sky could see much, and they might strike
his trail. The fear quickly became fact.
One of the warriors, uttering a short cry, raised
his head and beckoned to the others. He had seen
broken twigs or trampled grass, and Henry, knowing
that it was no time to hesitate, sprang from his covert.
Two of the warriors caught a glimpse of his dusky
figure and fired, the bullets cutting the leaves close
to his head, but Henry ran so fast that he was lost
to view in an instant.
The boy was conscious that his position
contained many elements of danger. He was about
to have another example of the tenacity and resource
of the great young chief of the Wyandots, and he felt
a certain anger. He, did not wish to be disturbed
in his plans, he wished to rejoin his comrades and
move farther east toward the chosen lands of the Six
Nations; instead, he must spend precious moments running
for his life.
Henry did not now flee toward the
camp of his friends. He was too wise, too unselfish,
to bring a horde down upon them, and he curved away
in a course that would take him to the south of them.
He glanced up and saw that the heavens were lightening
yet more. A thin gray color like a mist was
appearing in the east. It was the herald of
day, and now the Indians would be able to find his
trail. But Henry was not afraid. His anger
over the loss of time quickly passed, and he ran swiftly
on, the fall of his moccasins making scarcely any
noise as be passed.
It was no unusual incident.
Thousands of such pursuits occurred in the border
life of our country, and were lost to the chronicler.
For generations they were almost a part of the daily
life of the frontier, but the present, while not out
of the common in itself, had, uncommon phases.
It was the most splendid type of white life in all
the wilderness that fled, and the finest type of red
life that followed.
It was impossible for Henry to feel
anger or hate toward Timmendiquas. In his place
he would have done what he was doing. It was
hard to give up these great woods and beautiful lakes
and rivers, and the wild life that wild men lived
and loved. There was so much chivalry in the
boy’s nature that he could think of all these
things while he fled to escape the tomahawk or the
stake.
Up came the sun. The gray light
turned to silver, and then to red and blazing gold.
A long, swelling note, the triumphant cry of the
pursuing warriors, rose behind him. Henry turned
his head for one look. He saw a group of them
poised for a moment on the crest of a low hill and
outlined against the broad flame in the east.
He saw their scalp locks, the rifles in their hands,
and their bare chests shining bronze in the glow.
Once more he sent back his defiant cry, now in answer
to theirs, and then, calling upon his reserves of
strength and endurance, fled with a speed that none
of the warriors had ever seen surpassed.
Henry’s flight lasted all that
day, and he used every device to evade the pursuit,
swinging by vines, walking along fallen logs, and
wading in brooks. He did not see the warriors
again, but instinct warned him that they were yet
following. At long intervals he would rest for
a quarter of an hour or so among the bushes, and at
noon he ate a little of the venison that he always
carried. Three hours later he came to the river
again, and swimming it he turned on his course, but
kept to the southern side. When the twilight
was falling once more he sat still in dense covert
for a long time. He neither saw nor heard a sign
of human presence, and he was sure now that the pursuit
had failed. Without an effort he dismissed it
from his mind, ate a little more of the venison, and
made his bed for the night.
The whole day had been bright, with
a light wind blowing, and the forest was dry once
more. As far as Henry could see it circled away
on every side, a solid dark green, the leaves of oak
and beech, maple and elm making a soft, sighing sound
as they waved gently in the wind. It told Henry
of nothing but peace. He had eluded the pursuit,
hence it was no more. This was a great, friendly
forest, ready to shelter him, to soothe him, and to
receive him into its arms for peaceful sleep.
He found a place among thick trees
where the leaves of last year lay deep upon the ground.
He drew up enough of them for a soft bed, because
now and for the moment he was a forest sybarite.
He was wise enough to take his ease when he found
it, knowing that it would pay his body to relax.
He lay down upon the leaves, placed
the rifle by his side, and spread the blanket over
himself and the weapon. The twilight was gone,
and the night, dark and without stars, as he wished
to see it, rolled up, fold after fold, covering and
hiding everything. He looked a little while
at a breadth of inky sky showing through the leaves,
and then, free from trouble or fear, he fell asleep.