THE ONONDAGA
Tayoga, of the Clan of the Bear, of
the nation Onondaga, of the great League of the Hodenosaunee,
advanced with utmost caution through a forest, so
thick with undergrowth that it hid all objects twenty
yards away. He was not armed with a rifle, but
carried instead a heavy bow, while a quiver full of
arrows hung over his shoulder. He wore less clothing
than when he was in the white man’s school at
Albany, his arms and shoulders being bare, though
not painted.
The young Indian’s aspect, too,
had changed. The great struggle between English
and French, drawing with it the whole North American
wilderness, had begun and, although the fifty sachems
still sought to hold the Six Nations neutral, many
of their bravest warriors were already serving with
the Americans and English, ranging the forest as scouts
and guides and skirmishers, bringing to the campaign
an unrivaled skill, and a faith sealed by the long
alliance.
Tayoga had thrown himself into the
war heart and soul. Nothing could diminish by
a hair his hostility to the French and the tribes allied
with them. The deeds of Champlain and Frontenac
were but of yesterday, and the nation to which they
belonged could never be a friend of the Hodenosaunee.
He trusted the Americans and the English, but his chief
devotion, by the decree of nature was for his own people,
and now, that fighting in the forest had occurred
between the rival nations, he shed more of the white
ways and became a true son of the wilderness, seeing
as red men saw and thinking as red men thought.
He was bent over a little, as he walked
slowly among the bushes, in the position of one poised
for instant flight or pursuit as the need might be.
His eyes, black and piercing, ranged about incessantly,
nothing escaping a vision so keen and trained so thoroughly
that he not only heard everything passing in the wilderness,
but he knew the nature of the sound, and what had
made it.
The kindly look that distinguished
Tayoga in repose had disappeared. Unnumbered
generations were speaking in him now, and the Indian,
often so gentle in peace, had become his usual self,
stern and unrelenting in war. His strong sharp
chin was thrust forward. His cheek bones seemed
to be a little higher. His tread was so light
that the grass scarcely bent before his moccasins,
and no leaves rustled. He was in every respect
the wilderness hunter and warrior, fitted perfectly
by the Supreme Hand into his setting, and if an enemy
appeared now he would fight as his people had fought
for centuries, and the customs and feelings of the
new races that had come across the ocean would be
nothing to him.
A hundred yards more, and he sat down
by the trunk of a great oak, convinced that no foe
was near. His own five splendid senses had told
him so, and the fact had been confirmed by an unrivaled
sentinel hidden among the leaves over his head, a
small bird that poured forth a wonderful volume of
song. Were any other coming the bird would cease
his melody and fly away, but Tayoga felt that this
tiny feathered being was his ally and would not leave
because of him. The song had wonderful power,
too, soothing his senses and casting a pleasing spell.
His imaginative mind, infused with the religion and
beliefs of his ancestors, filled the forest with friendly
spirits. Unseen, they hovered in the air and
watched over him, and the trees, alive, bent protecting
boughs toward him. He saw, too, the very spot
in the heavens where the great shining star on which
Tododaho lived came out at night and glittered.
He remembered the time when he had
gone forth in the dusk to meet Tandakora and his friends,
and how Tododaho had looked down on him with approval.
He had found favor in the sight of the great league’s
founder, and the spirit that dwelt on the shining star
still watched over him. The Ojibway, whom he
hated and who hated him in yet greater measure, might
be somewhere in the forest, but if he came near, the
feathered sentinel among the leaves over his head would
give warning.
Tayoga sat nearly half an hour listening
to the song of the bird. He had no object in
remaining there, his errand bade him move on, but
there was no hurry and he was content merely to breathe
and to feel the glory and splendor of the forest about
him. He knew now that the Indian nature had never
been taken out of him by the schools. He loved
the wilderness, the trees, the lakes, the streams and
all their magnificent disorder, and war itself did
not greatly trouble him, since the legends of the
tribes made it the natural state of man. He knew
well that he was in Tododaho’s keeping, and,
if by chance, the great chief should turn against
him it would be for some grave fault, and he would
deserve his punishment.
He sat in that absolute stillness
of which the Indian by nature and training was capable,
the green of his tanned and beautifully soft deerskin
blending so perfectly with the emerald hue of the foliage
that the bird above his head at last took him for a
part of the forest itself and so, having no fear,
came down within a foot of his head and sang with
more ecstasy than ever. It was a little gray bird,
but Tayoga knew that often the smaller a bird was,
and the more sober its plumage the finer was its song.
He understood those musical notes too. They expressed
sheer delight, the joy of life just as he felt it
then himself, and the kinship between the two was strong.
The bird at last flew away and the
Onondaga heard its song dying among the distant leaves.
A portion of the forest spell departed with it, and
Tayoga, returning to thoughts of his task, rose and
walked on, instinct rather than will causing him to
keep a close watch on earth and foliage. When
he saw the faint trace of a large moccasin on the
earth all that was left of the spell departed suddenly
and he became at once the wilderness warrior, active,
alert, ready to read every sign.
He studied the imprint, which turned
in, and hence had been made by an Indian. Its
great size too indicated to him that it might be that
of Tandakora, a belief becoming with him almost a
certainty as he found other and similar traces farther
on. He followed them about a mile, reaching stony
ground where they vanished altogether, and then he
turned to the west.
The fact that Tandakora was so near,
and might approach again was not unpleasant to him,
as Tayoga, having all the soul of a warrior, was anxious
to match himself with the gigantic Ojibway, and since
the war was now active on the border it seemed that
the opportunity might come. But his attention
must be occupied with something else for the present,
and he went toward the west for a full hour through
the primeval forest. Now and then he stopped
to listen, even lying down and putting his ear to
the ground, but the sounds he heard, although varied
and many, were natural to the wild.
He knew them all. The steady
tapping was a woodpecker at work upon an old tree.
The faint musical note was another little gray bird
singing the delight of his soul as he perched himself
upon a twig; the light shuffling noise was the tread
of a bear hunting succulent nuts; a caw-caw so distant
that it was like an echo was the voice of a circling
crow, and the tiny trickling noise that only the keenest
ear could have heard was made by a brook a yard wide
taking a terrific plunge over a precipice six inches
high. The rustling, one great blended note, universal
but soft, was that of the leaves moving in harmony
before the gentle wind.
The young Onondaga was sure that the
forest held no alien presence. The traces of
Tandakora were hours old, and he must now be many
miles away with his band, and, such being the case,
it was fit time for him to choose a camp and call
his friends.
It pleased Tayoga, zealous of mind,
to do all the work before the others came, and, treading
so lightly and delicately, that he would not have
alarmed a rabbit in the bush, he gathered together
dead sticks and heaped them in a little sunken place,
clear of undergrowth. Flint and steel soon lighted
a fire, and then he sent forth his call, the long
penetrating whine of the wolf. The reply came
from the north, and, building his fire a little higher,
he awaited the result, without anxiety.
The dry wood crackled and many little
flames red or yellow arose. Tayoga heaped dead
leaves against the trunk of a tree and sat down comfortably,
his shoulders and back resting against the bark.
Presently he heard the first alien sound in the forest,
a light tread approaching That he knew was Willet,
and then he heard the second tread, even lighter than
the first, and he knew that it was the footstep of
Robert.
“All ready! It’s
like you, Tayoga,” said Willet, as he entered
the open space. “Here you are, with the
house built and the fire burning on the hearth!”
“I lighted the fire,”
said Tayoga, rising, “but Manitou made the hearth,
and built the house which is worthy of Him.”
He looked with admiration at the magnificent
trees spreading away on every side, and the foliage
in its most splendid, new luxuriant green.
“It is worthy, Tayoga,”
said Robert, whose soul was like that of the Onondaga,
“and it takes Manitou himself a century or more
to grow trees like these.”
“Some of them, I dare say, are
three or four hundred years old or more,” said
Willet, “and the forest goes west, so I’ve
heard the Indians say, a matter of near two thousand
miles. It’s pleasant to know that if all
the axes in the world were at work it couldn’t
all be cut down in our time or in the time of our
children.”
Tayoga’s heart swelled with
indignation at the idea that the forest might be destroyed,
but he said nothing, as he knew that Willet and Robert
shared his feeling.
“Here’s your rifle, Tayoga,”
said the hunter; “I suppose you didn’t
have an occasion to use your bow and arrows.”
“No, Great Bear,” replied
the Onondaga, “but I might have had the chance
had I come earlier.”
“What do you mean by that?”
“I saw on the grass a human
trace. It was made by a foot clothed in a moccasin,
a large foot, a very large foot, the foot of a man
whom we all have cause to hate.”
“I take it you’re speaking of Tandakora,
the Ojibway.”
“None other. I cannot be
mistaken. But the trail was cold. He and
his warriors have gone north. They may be thirty,
forty miles from here.”
“Likely enough, Tayoga.
They’re on their way to join the force the French
are sending to the fort at the junction of the Monongahela
and the Alleghany. Perhaps St. Luc—and
there isn’t a cleverer officer in this continent—is
with them. I tell you, Tayoga, and you too, Robert,
I don’t like it! That young Washington ought
to have been sent earlier into the Ohio country, and
they should have given him a much larger force.
We’re sluggards and all our governors are sluggards,
except maybe Shirley of Massachusetts. With the
war just blazing up the French are already in possession,
and we’re to drive ’em out, which doubles
our task. It was a great victory for us to keep
the Hodenosaunee on our side, or, in the main, neutral,
but it’s going to be uphill work for us to win.
The young French leaders are genuine kings of the
wilderness. You know that, Robert, as well as
I do.”
“Yes,” said the youth.
“I know they’re the men whom the English
colonies have good cause to fear.”
When he spoke he was thinking of St.
Luc, as he had last seen him in the vale of Onondaga,
defeated in the appeal to the fifty sachems, but gallant,
well bred, showing nothing of chagrin, and sure to
be a formidable foe on the field of battle. He
was an enemy of whom one could be proud, and Robert
felt an actual wish to see him again, even though
in opposing ranks.
“We may come into contact with
some of ’em,” said the hunter. “The
French are using all their influence over the Indians,
and are directing their movements. I know that
St. Luc, Jumonville, Beaujeu, Dumas, De Villiers,
De Courcelles and all their best men are in the forest.
It’s likely that Tandakora, fierce and wild as
he is, is acting under the direction of some Frenchman.
St. Luc could control him.”
Robert thought it highly probable
that the chevalier was in truth with the Indians on
the border, either leading some daring band or gathering
the warriors to the banner of France. His influence
with them would be great, as he understood their ways,
adapted himself to them and showed in battle a skill
and daring that always make a powerful appeal to the
savage heart. The youth had matched himself against
St. Luc in the test of words in the vale of Onondaga,
and now he felt that he must match himself anew, but
in the test of forest war.
Tayoga having lighted the fire, the
hunter cooked the food over it, while the two youths
reposed calmly. Robert watched Willet with interest,
and he was impressed for the thousandth time by his
great strength, and the lightness of his movements.
When he was younger, the disparity in years had made
him think of Willet as an old man, but he saw now
that he was only in early middle age. There was
not a gray hair on his head, and his face was free
from wrinkles.
An extraordinarily vivid memory of
that night in Quebec when the hunter had faced Boucher,
the bully and bravo, reputed the best swordsman of
France, leaped up in Robert’s mind. He had
found no time to think of Willet’s past recently
and he realized now that he knew little about it.
The origin of that hunter was as obscure as his own.
But the story of the past and its mysteries must wait.
The present was so great and overwhelming that it
blotted out everything else.
“The venison and the bacon are
ready,” said Willet, “and you two lads
can fall on. You’re not what I’d call
epicures, but I’ve never known your appetites
to fail.”
“Nor will they,” said
Robert, as he and Tayoga helped themselves. “What’s
the news from Britain, Dave? You must have heard
a lot when you were in Albany.”
“It’s vague, Robert, vague.
The English are slow, just as we Americans are, too.
They’re going to send out troops, but the French
have dispatched a fleet and regiments already.
The fact that our colonies are so much larger than
theirs is perhaps an advantage to them, as it gives
them a bigger target to aim at, and our people who
are trying to till their farms, will be struck down
by their Indians from ambush.”
“And you see now what a bulwark
the great League of the Hodenosaunee is to the English,”
said Tayoga.
“A fact that I’ve always
foreseen,” said Willet warmly. “Nobody
knows better than I do the power of the Six Nations,
and nobody has ever been readier to admit it.”
“I know, Great Bear. You
have always been our true friend. If all the
white men were like you no trouble would ever arise
between them and the Hodenosaunee.”
Robert finished his food and resumed
a comfortable place against a tree. Willet put
out the fire and he and Tayoga sat down in like fashion.
Their trees were close together, but they did not talk
now. Each was absorbed in his own thoughts and
Robert had much to think about.
The war was going slowly. He
had believed a great flare would come at once and
that everybody would soon be in the thick of action,
but since young Washington had been defeated by Coulon
de Villiers at the Great Meadows the British Colonies
had spent much time debating and pulling in different
directions. The union for which his eager soul
craved did not come, and the shadow of the French power
in the north, reinforced by innumerable savages, hung
heavy and black over the land. Every runner brought
news of French activities. Rumor painted as impregnable
the fort they had built where two rivers uniting formed
the Ohio, and it was certain that many bands already
ranged down in the regions the English called their
own.
Spring had lingered far into summer
where they were, and the foliage was not yet touched
by heat. All the forest was in deep and heavy
green, hiding every object a hundred yards away, but
from their opening they saw a blue and speckless sky,
which the three by and by watched attentively, and
with the same motive. Before the dark had begun
to come in the east they saw a thin dark line drawn
slowly across it, the trail of smoke. It might
not have been noticed by eyes less keen, but they
understood at once that it was a signal. Robert
noted its drifting progress across the heavens, and
then he said to Willet:
“How far from here do you calculate
the base of that smoke is, Dave?”
“A long distance, Robert.
Several miles maybe. The fire, I’ve no
doubt, was kindled on top of a hill. It may be
French speaking to Indians, or Indians talking to
Indians.”
“And you don’t think it’s people
of ours?”
“I’m sure it isn’t.
We’ve no hunters or runners in these parts, except
ourselves.”
“And it’s not Tandakora,”
said the Onondaga. “He must be much farther
away.”
“But the signal may be intended
for him,” said the hunter. “It may
be carried to him by relays of smoke. I wish
I could read that trail across the sky.”
“It’s thinning out fast,”
said Robert. “You can hardly see it! and
now it’s gone entirely!”
But the hunter continued to look thoughtfully
at the sky, where the smoke had been. He never
underrated the activity of the French, and he believed
that a movement of importance, something the nature
of which they should discover was at hand.
“Lads,” he said, “I
expected an easy night of good sleep for all three
of us, but I’m thinking instead that we’d
better take to the trail, and travel toward the place
where that smoke was started.”
“It’s what scouts would do,” said
Tayoga tersely.
“And such we claim to be,” said Robert.
As the sun began to sink they saw
far in the west another smoke, that would have been
invisible had it not been outlined against a fiery
red sky, across which it lay like a dark thread.
It was gone in a few moments, and then the dusk began
to come.
“An answer to the first signal,”
said Tayoga. “It is very likely that a
strong force is gathering. Perhaps Tandakora has
come back and is planning a blow.”
“It can’t be possible
that they’re aiming it at us,” said the
hunter, thoughtfully. “They don’t
know of our presence here, and if they did we’ve
too small a party for such big preparations.”
“Perhaps a troop of Pennsylvanians
are marching westward,” said Tayoga, “and
the French and their allies are laying a trap for them.”
“Then,” said Robert, “there
is but one thing for us to do. We must warn our
friends and save them from the snare.”
“Of course,” said Willet,
“but we don’t know where they are, and
meanwhile we’d better wait an hour or two.
Perhaps something will happen that will help us to
locate them.”
Robert and Tayoga nodded and the three
remained silent while the night came. The blazing
red in the west faded rapidly and darkness swept down
over the wilderness. The three, each leaning against
his tree, did not move but kept their rifles across
their knees ready at once for possible use. Tayoga
had fastened his bow over his back by the side of
his quiver, and their packs were adjusted also.
Robert was anxious not so much for
himself as for the unknown others who were marching
through the wilderness, and for whom the French and
Indians were laying an ambush. It had been put
forward first as a suggestion, but it quickly became
a conviction with him, and he felt that his comrades
and he must act as if it were a certainty. But
no sound that would tell them which way to go came
out of this black forest, and they remained silent,
waiting for the word.
The night thickened and they were
still uncertain what to do. Robert made a silent
prayer to the God of the white man, the Manitou of
the red man, for a sign, but none came, and infected
strongly as he was with the Indian philosophy and
religion, he felt that it must be due to some lack
of virtue in himself. He searched his memory,
but he could not discover in what particular he had
erred, and he was forced to continue his anxious waiting,
until the stars should choose to fight for him.
Tayoga too was troubled, his mind
in its own way being as active as Robert’s.
He knew all the spirits of earth, air and water were
abroad, but he hoped at least one of them would look
upon him with favor, and give him a warning.
He sought Tododaho’s star in the heavens, but
the clouds were too thick, and, eye failing, he relied
upon his ear for the signal which he and his young
white comrade sought so earnestly.
If Tayoga had erred either in omission
or commission then the spirits that hovered about
him forgave him, as when the night was thickest they
gave the sign. It was but the faint fall of a
foot, and, at first, he thought a bear or a deer had
made it, but at the fourth or fifth fall he knew that
it was a human footstep and he whispered to his comrades:
“Some one comes!”
As if by preconcerted signal the three
arose and crept silently into the dense underbrush,
where they crouched, their rifles thrust forward.
“It is but one man and he walks
directly toward us,” whispered Tayoga.
“I hear him now,” said
Robert. “He is wearing moccasins, as his
step is too light for boots.”
“Which means that he’s
a rover like ourselves,” said Willet. “Now
he’s stopped. There isn’t a sound.
The man, whoever he is, has taken alarm, or at least
he’s decided that it’s best for him to
be more watchful. Perhaps he’s caught a
whiff from the ashes of our fire. He’s
white or he wouldn’t be here alone, and he’s
used to the forest, or he wouldn’t have suspected
a presence from so little.”
“The Great Bear thinks clearly,”
said Tayoga. “It is surely a white man
and some great scout or hunter. He moved a little
now to the right, because I heard his buckskin brush
lightly against a bush. I think Great Bear is
right about the fire. The wind has brought the
ashes from it to his nostrils, and he will lie in the
bush long before moving.”
“Which doesn’t suit our
plans at all,” said Willet. “There’s
a chance, just a chance, that I may know who he is.
White men of the kind to go scouting through the wilderness
are not so plenty on the border that one has to make
many guesses. You lads move away a little so
you won’t be in line if a shot comes, and I’ll
give a signal.”
Robert and Tayoga crept to other points
in the brush, and the hunter uttered a whistle, low
but very clear and musical. In a moment or two,
a like answer came from a place about a hundred yards
away, and Willet rising, advanced without hesitation.
Robert and Tayoga followed promptly, and a tall figure,
emerging from the darkness, came forward to meet them.
The stranger was a man of middle years,
and of a singularly wild appearance. His eyes
roved continually, and were full of suspicion, and
of a sort of smoldering anger, as if he had a grievance
against all the world. His hair was long and
tangled, his face brown with sun and storm, and his
dress more Indian than white. He was heavily armed,
and, whether seen in the dusk or in the light, his
whole aspect was formidable and dangerous. But
Willet continued to advance without hesitation.
“Captain Jack,” he said
extending his hand. “We were not looking
for you tonight, but no man could be more welcome.
These are young friends of mine, brave warriors both,
the white and the red, Robert Lennox, who is almost
a son to me, and Tayoga, the Onondaga, to whom I feel
nearly like a father too.”
Now Robert knew him, and he felt a
thrill of surprise, and of the most intense curiosity.
Who along the whole border had not heard of Captain
Jack, known also as the Black Hunter, the Black Rifle
and by many other names? The tale had been told
in every cabin in the woods how returning home, he
had found his wife and children tomahawked and scalped,
and how he had taken a vow of lifelong vengeance upon
the Indians, a vow most terribly kept. In all
the villages in the Ohio country and along the Great
Lakes, the name of Black Rifle was spoken with awe
and terror. No more singular and ominous figure
ever crossed the pages of border story.
He swept the two youths with questing
glances, but they met his gaze firmly, and while his
eye had clouded at first sight of the Onondaga the
threatening look soon passed.
“Friends of yours are friends
of mine, Dave Willet,” he said. “I
know you to be a good man and true, and once when
I was at Albany I heard of Robert Lennox, and of the
great young warrior, Tayoga, of the clan of the Bear,
of the nation Onondaga, of the great League of the
Hodenosaunee.”
The young Onondaga’s eyes flashed
with pleasure, but he was silent.
“How does it happen, Willet?”
asked Black Rifle, “that we meet here in the
forest at such a time?”
“We’re on our way to the
Ohio country to learn something about the gathering
of the French and Indian forces. Just before sundown
we saw smoke signals and we think our enemies are
planning to cut off a force of ours, somewhere here
in the forest.”
Black Rifle laughed, but it was not
a pleasant laugh. It had in it a quality that
made Robert shudder.
“Your guesses are good, Dave,”
said Black Rifle. “About fifty men of the
Pennsylvania militia are in camp on the banks of a
little creek two miles from here. They have been
sent out to guard the farthest settlements. Think
of that, Dave! They’re to be a guard against
the French and Indians!”
His face contracted into a wry smile,
and Robert understood his feeling of derision for
the militia.
“As I told you, they’re
in camp,” continued Black Rifle. “They
built a fire there to cook their supper, and to show
the French and Indians where they are, lest they miss
’em in the darkness. They don’t know
what part of the country they’re in, but they’re
sure it’s a long distance west of Philadelphia,
and if the Indians will only tell ’em when they’re
coming they’ll be ready for ’em. Oh,
they’re brave enough! They’ll probably
all die with their faces to the enemy.”
He spoke with grim irony and Robert
shuddered. He knew how helpless men from the
older parts of the country were in the depths of the
wilderness, and he was sure that the net was already
being drawn about the Pennsylvanians.
“Are the French here too, Black Rifle?”
asked Willet.
The strange man pointed toward the north.
“A band led by a Frenchman is
there,” he replied. “He is the most
skillful of all their men in the forest, the one whom
they call St. Luc.”
“I thought so!” exclaimed
Robert. “I believed all the while he would
be here. I’ve no doubt he will direct the
ambush.”
“We must warn this troop,”
said Willet, “and save ’em if they will
let us. You agree with me, don’t you, Tayoga?”
“The Great Bear is right.”
“And you’ll back me up,
of course, Robert. Will you help us too, Black
Rifle?”
The singular man smiled again, but
his smile was not like that of anybody else.
It was sinister and full of menace. It was the
smile of a man who rejoiced in sanguinary work, and
it made Robert think again of his extraordinary history,
around which the border had built so much of truth
and legend.
“I will help, of course,”
he replied. “It’s my trade. It
was my purpose to warn ’em before I met you,
but I feared they would not listen to me. Now,
the words of four may sound more real to ’em
than the words of one.”
“Then lead the way,” said
Willet. “’Tis not a time to linger.”
Black Rifle, without another word,
threw his rifle over his shoulder and started toward
the north, the others falling into Indian file behind
him. A light, pleased smile played over his massive
and rugged features. More than the rest he rejoiced
in the prospect of combat. They did not seek
battle and they fought only when they were compelled
to do so, but he, with his whole nature embittered
forever by that massacre of long ago, loved it for
its own sake. He had ranged the border, a torch
of fire, for years, and now he foresaw more of the
revenge that he craved incessantly.
He led without hesitation straight
toward the north. All four were accomplished
trailers and the flitting figures were soundless as
they made their swift march through the forest.
In a half hour they reached the crest of a rather
high hill and Black Rifle, stopping, pointed with
a long forefinger toward a low and dim light.
“The camp of the Pennsylvanians,”
he said with bitter irony. “As I told you,
fearing lest the savages should miss ’em in the
forest they keep their fire burning as a beacon.”
“Don’t be too hard on
’em, Black Rifle,” said Willet. “Maybe
they come from Philadelphia itself, and city bred
men can scarcely be expected to learn all about the
wilderness in a few days.”
“They’ll learn, when it’s
too late, at the muzzles of the French and Indian
rifles,” rejoined Black Rifle, abating a little
his tone of savage derision.
“At least they’re likely
to be brave men,” said Willet, “and now
what do you think will be our best manner of approaching
’em?”
“We’ll walk directly toward
their fire, the four of us abreast. They’ll
blaze away all fifty of ’em together, as soon
as they see us, but the darkness will spoil their
aim, and at least one of us will be left alive, able
to walk, and able to tell ’em of their danger.
We don’t know who’ll be the lucky man,
but we’ll see.”
“Come, come, Captain Jack!
Give ’em a chance! They may be a more
likely lot than you think. You three wait here
and I’ll go forward and announce our coming.
I dare say we’ll be welcome.”
Willet advanced boldly toward the
fire, which he soon saw consisted of a great bed of
coals, surrounded by sleepers. But the figures
of men, pacing back and forth, showed that the watch
had not been neglected, although in the deep forest
such sentinels would be but little protection against
the kind of ambush the French and Indians were able
to lay.
Not caring to come within the circle
of light lest he be fired upon, the hunter whistled,
and when he saw that the sentinels were at attention
he whistled again. Then he emerged from the bushes,
and walked boldly toward the fire.
“Who are you?” a voice
demanded sharply, and a young man in a fine uniform
stood up in front of the fire. The hunter’s
quick and penetrating look noted that he was tall,
built well, and that his face was frank and open.
“My name is David Willet,”
he replied, “and I am sometimes called by my
friends, the Iroquois, the Great Bear. Behind
me in the woods are three comrades, young Robert Lennox,
of New York and Albany; Tayoga, a young warrior of
the clan of the Bear, of the nation Onondaga, of the
great League of the Hodenosaunee, and the famous hunter
and border fighter, of whom everybody has heard, Captain
Jack, Black Hunter, or Black Rifle as he has been
called variously.”
“I know the name,” replied
the young man, “and yours too, Mr. Willet.
My own is Colden, James Colden of Philadelphia, and
I am in command of this troop, sent to guard the farthest
settlements against the French and Indians. Will
you call your comrades, Mr. Willet? All of you
are welcome.”
The hunter whistled again, and Robert,
Tayoga and Black Rifle, advancing from the forest,
came within the area of half light cast by the glow
from the coals, young Captain Colden watching them
with the most intense curiosity as they approached.
And well he might feel surprise. All, even Robert,
wore the dress of the wilderness, and their appearance
at such a time was uncommon and striking. Most
of the soldiers had been awakened by the voices, and
were sitting up, rubbing sleepy eyes. Robert
saw at once that they were city men, singularly out
of place in the vast forest and the darkness.
“We welcome you to our camp,”
said young Captain Colden, with dignity. “If
you are hungry we have food, and if you are without
blankets we can furnish them to you.”
Willet and Tayoga looked at Robert
and he knew they expected him to fill his usual role
of spokesman. The words rushed to his lips, but
they were held there by embarrassment. The soldiers
who had been awakened were already going back to sleep.
Captain Colden sat down on a log and waited for them
to state their wants. Then Robert spoke, knowing
they could not afford to delay.
“We thank you, Captain Colden,”
he said, “for the offer of supper and bed, but
I must say to you, sir, that it’s no time for
either.”
“I don’t take your meaning, Mr. Lennox.”
“Tayoga, Mr. Willet and Black
Rifle, are the best scouts in the wilderness, and
before sunset they saw smoke on the horizon. Then
they saw smoke answering smoke, and Black Rifle has
seen more. The French and Indians, sir, are in
the forest, and they’re led, too, by Frenchmen.”
Young James Colden was a brave man,
and his eyes glittered.
“We ask nothing better than
to meet ’em,” he said, “At the first
breath of dawn we’ll march against ’em,
if your friends will only be so good as to show us
the way.”
“It’s not a matter of
waiting until dawn, nor even of going to meet ’em.
They’ll bring the battle to us. You and
your force, Captain Colden, are surrounded already.”
The young captain stared at Robert,
but his eyes were full of incredulity. Several
of the soldiers were standing near, and they too heard,
but the warning found no answer in their minds.
Robert looked around at the men asleep and the others
ready to follow them, and, despite his instinctive
liking for Colden, his anger began to rise.
“I said that you were surrounded,”
he repeated sharply, “and it’s no time,
Captain Colden, for unbelief! Mr. Willet, Tayoga
and I saw the signals of the enemy, but Black Rifle
here has looked upon the warriors themselves.
They’re led too by the French, and the best of
all the French forest captains, St. Luc, is undoubtedly
with them off there.”
He waved his hand toward the north,
and a little of the high color left Colden’s
face. The youth’s manner was so earnest
and his words were spoken with so much power of conviction
that they could not fail to impress.
“You really mean that the French
and Indians are here, that they’re planning
to attack us tonight?” said the Philadelphian.
“Beyond a doubt and we must be prepared to meet
them.”
Colden took a few steps back and forth,
and then, like the brave young man he was, he swallowed
his pride.
“I confess that I don’t
know much of the forest, nor do my men,” he
said, “and so I shall have to ask you four to
help me.”
“We’ll do it gladly,”
said Robert. “What do you propose, Dave?”
“I think we’d better draw
off some distance from the fire,” replied the
hunter. “To the right there is a low hill,
covered with thick brush, and old logs thrown down
by an ancient storm. It’s the very place.”
“Then,” said Captain Colden
briskly, “we’ll occupy it inside of five
minutes. Up, men, up!”
The sleepers were awakened rapidly,
and, although they were awkward and made much more
noise than was necessary, they obeyed their captain’s
sharp order, and marched away with all their arms and
stores to the thicket on the hill, where, as Willet
had predicted, they found also a network of fallen
trees, affording a fine shelter and defense.
Here they crouched and Willet enjoined upon them the
necessity of silence.
“Sir,” said young Captain
Colden, again putting down his pride, “I beg
to thank you and your comrades.”
“You don’t owe us any
thanks. It’s just what we ought to have
done,” said Willet lightly. “The
wilderness often turns a false face to those who are
not used to it, and if we hadn’t warned you we’d
have deserved shooting.”
The faint whine of a wolf came from
a point far in the north.
“It’s one of their signals,”
said Willet. “They’ll attack inside
of an hour.”
Then they relapsed into silence and
waited, every heart beating hard.