THE PERILOUS PATH
After a long night of sleep and rest,
the little troop resumed its march the next morning.
The wounded fortunately were not hurt so badly that
they could not limp along with the others, and, while
the surgery of the soldiers was rude, it was effective
nevertheless. Daganoweda, as they had expected,
prepared to leave them for a raid toward the St. Lawrence.
But he said rather grimly that he might return, in
a month perhaps. He knew where they were going
to build their fort, and unless Corlear and all the
other British governors awoke much earlier in the
morning it was more than likely that the young captain
from Philadelphia would need the help of the Mohawks
again.
Then Daganoweda said farewell to Robert,
Tayoga, Willet and Black Rifle, addressing each according
to his quality. Them he trusted. He knew
them to be great warriors and daring rovers of the
wilderness. He had no advice for them, because
he knew they did not need it, but he expected them
to be his comrades often in the great war, and he
wished them well. To Tayoga he said:
“You and I, oh, young chief
of the Onondagas, have hearts that beat alike.
The Onondagas do well to keep aloof from the white
man’s quarrels for the present, and to sit at
peace, though watchful, in the vale of Onondaga, but
your hopes are with our friends the English and you
in person fight for them. We Mohawks know whom
to hate. We know that the French have robbed
us more than any others. We know, that their
Quebec is our Stadacona. So we have dug up the
tomahawk and last night we showed to Sharp Sword and
his men and Tandakora the Ojibway how we could use
it.”
Sharp Sword was the Iroquois name
for St. Luc, who had already proved his great ability
and daring as a forest leader.
“The Ganeagaono are now the
chief barrier against the French and their tribes,”
said Tayoga.
The brilliant eyes of Daganoweda glittered
in his dark face. He knew that Tayoga would not
pay the Mohawks so high a compliment unless he meant
it.
“Tayoga,” he said, “we
belong to the leading nations of the great League
of the Hodenosaunee, you to the Onundahgaono and I
to the Ganeagaono. You are first in the council
and we are first on the warpath. It was Tododaho,
the Onondaga, who first formed the great League and
it was Hayowentha, the Mohawk, who combed the snakes
out of his hair and who strengthened it and who helped
him to build it so firmly that it shall last forever.
Brothers are we, and always shall be.”
He touched his forehead in salute,
and the Onondaga touched his in reply.
“Aye, brothers are we,”
he said, “Mohawk and Onondaga, Onondaga and
Mohawk. The great war of the white kings which
draws us in it has come, but I know that Hayowentha
watches over his people, and Tododaho over his.
In the spring when I went forth in the night to fight
the Hurons I gazed off there in the west where shines
the great star on which Tododaho makes his home, and
I saw him looking down upon me, and casting about
me the veil of his protection.”
Daganoweda looked up at the gleaming
blue of the heavens, and his eyes glittered again.
He believed every word that Tayoga said.
“As Tododaho watches over you,
so Hayowentha watches over me,” he said, “and
he will bring me back in safety and victory from the
St. Lawrence. Farewell again, my brother.”
“Farewell once more, Daganoweda!”
The Mohawk chief plunged into the
forest, and his fifty warriors followed him.
Like a shadow they were gone, and the waving bushes
gave back no sign that they had ever been. Captain
Colden rubbed his eyes and then laughed.
“I never knew men to vanish
so swiftly before,” he said, “but last
night was good proof that they were here, and that
they came in time. I suppose it’s about
the only victory of which we can make boast.”
He spoke the full truth. From
the St. Lawrence to the Ohio the border was already
ravaged with fire and sword. Appeals for help
were pouring in from the distant settlements, and
the governors of New York, Pennsylvania and Massachusetts
scarcely knew what to do. France had struck the
first blow, and she had struck hard. Young Washington,
defeated by overwhelming numbers, was going back to
Virginia, and Duquesne, the fort of the French at
the junction of the Monongahela and Allegheny, was
a powerful rallying place for their own forces and
the swarming Indian bands, pouring out of the wilderness,
drawn by the tales of unlimited scalps and plunder.
The task before Captain Colden’s
slender force was full of danger. His numbers
might have been five times as great and then they would
not have been too many to build and hold the fort
he was sent to build and hold. But he had no
thought of turning back, and, as soon as Daganoweda
and the Mohawks were gone, they started, bending their
course somewhat farther toward the south. At the
ford of a river twenty men with horses carrying food,
ammunition and other supplies were to meet them, and
they reckoned that they could reach it by midnight.
The men with the horses had been sent
from another point, and it was not thought then that
there was any danger of French and Indian attack before
the junction was made, but the colonial authorities
had reckoned without the vigor and daring of St. Luc.
Now the most cruel fears assailed young Captain Colden,
and Robert and the hunter could not find much argument
to remove them. It was possible that the second
force had been ambushed also, and, if so, it had certainly
been destroyed, being capable of no such resistance
as that made by Colden’s men, and without the
aid of the three friends and the Mohawks. And
if the supplies were gone the expedition would be
useless.
“Don’t be downhearted
about it, captain,” said Willet. “You
say there’s not a man in the party who knows
anything about the wilderness, and that they’ve
got just enough woods sense to take them to the ford.
Well, that has its saving grace, because now and then,
the Lord seems to watch over fool men. The best
of hunters are trapped sometimes in the forest, when
fellows who don’t know a deer from a beaver,
go through ’em without harm.”
“Then if there’s any virtue
in what you say we’ll pray that these men are
the biggest fools who ever lived.”
“Smoke! smoke again!”
called Robert cheerily, pointing straight ahead.
Sure enough, that long dark thread
appeared once more, now against the western sky.
Willet laughed.
“They’re the biggest fools
in the forest, just as you hoped, Captain,”
he said, “and they’ve taken no more harm
than if they had built their fires in a Philadelphia
street. They’ve set themselves down for
the night, as peaceful and happy as you please.
If that isn’t the campfire of your men with
the pack horses then I’ll eat my cap.”
Captain Colden laughed, but it was
the slightly hysterical laugh of relief. He was
bent upon doing his task, and, since the Lord had
carried him so far through a mighty danger, the disappointment
of losing the supplies would have been almost too
much to bear.
“You’re sure it’s they, Mr. Willet?”
he said.
“Of course. Didn’t
I tell you it wasn’t possible for another such
party of fools to be here in the wilderness, and that
the God of the white man and the Manitou of the red
man taking pity on their simplicity and innocence
have protected them?”
“I like to think what you say is true, Mr. Willet.”
“It’s true. Be not
afraid that it isn’t. Now, I think we’d
better stop here, and let Robert and Tayoga go ahead,
spy ’em out and make signals. It would
be just like ’em to blaze away at us the moment
they saw the bushes move with our coming.”
Captain Colden was glad to take his
advice, and the white youth and the red went forward
silently through the forest, hearing the sound of
cheerful voices, as they drew near to the campfire
which was a large one blazing brightly. They
also heard the sound of horses moving and they knew
that the detachment had taken no harm. Tayoga
parted the bushes and peered forth.
“Look!” he said.
“Surely they are watched over by Manitou!”
About twenty men, or rather boys,
for all of them were very young, were standing or
lying about a fire. A tall, very ruddy youth in
the uniform of a colonial lieutenant was speaking
to them.
“Didn’t I tell you, lads,”
he said, “there wasn’t an Indian nearer
than Fort Duquesne, and that’s a long way from
here! We’ve come a great distance and not
a foe has appeared anywhere. It may be that the
French vanish when they hear this valiant Quaker troop
is coming, but it’s my own personal opinion
they’ll stay pretty well back in the west with
their red allies.”
The youth, although he called himself
so, did not look much like a Quaker to Robert.
He had a frank face and merry eyes, and manner and
voice indicated a tendency to gayety. Judging
from his words he had no cares and Indians and ambush
were far from his thoughts. Proof of this was
the absence of sentinels. The men, scattered about
the fire, were eating their suppers and the horses,
forty in number, were grazing in an open space.
It all looked like a great picnic, and the effect was
heightened by the youth of the soldiers.
“As the Great Bear truly said,”
whispered Tayoga, “Manitou has watched over
them. The forest does not hold easier game for
the taking, and had Tandakora known that they were
here he would have come seeking revenge for his loss
in the attack upon Captain Colden’s troop.”
“You’re right as usual,
Tayoga, and now we’d better hail them. But
don’t you come forward just yet. They don’t
know the difference between Indians and likely your
welcome would be a bullet.”
“I will wait,” said Tayoga.
“I tell you, Carson,”
the young lieutenant was saying in an oratorical manner,
“that they magnify the dangers of the wilderness.
The ford at which we were to meet Colden is just ahead,
and we’ve come straight to it without the slightest
mishap. Colden is no sluggard, and he should
be here in the morning at the latest. Do you find
anything wrong with my reasoning, Hugh?”
“Naught, William,” replied
the other, who seemed to be second in command.
“Your logic is both precise and beautiful.
The dangers of the border are greatly exaggerated,
and as soon as we get together a good force all these
French and Indians will flee back to Canada. Ah,
who is this?”
Both he and his chief turned and faced
the woods in astonishment. A youth had stepped
forth, and stood in full view. He was taller than
either, but younger, dressed completely in deerskin,
although superior in cut and quality to that of the
ordinary borderer, his complexion fair beneath his
tan, and his hair light. He gazed at them steadily
with bright blue eyes, and both the first lieutenant
and the second lieutenant of the Quaker troop saw
that he was no common person.
“Who are you?” repeated
William Wilton, who was the first lieutenant.
“Who are you?” repeated
Hugh Carson, who was the second lieutenant.
“My name is Robert Lennox,”
replied the young stranger in a mellow voice of amazing
quality, “and you, I suppose, are Lieutenant
William Wilton, the commander of this little troop.”
He spoke directly to the first lieutenant,
who replied, impressed as much by the youth’s
voice as he was by his appearance:
“Yes, such is my name.
But how did you know it? I don’t recall
ever having met you before, which doubtless is my
loss.”
“I heard it from an associate
of yours, your chief in command, Captain James Colden,
and I am here with a message from him.”
“And so Colden is coming up?
Well, we beat him to the place of meeting. We’ve
triumphed with ease over the hardships of the wilderness.”
“Yes, you arrived first, but he was delayed
by a matter of importance, a problem that had to be
solved before he could resume his march.”
“You speak in riddles, sir.”
“Perhaps I do for the present,
but I shall soon make full explanations. I wish
to call first a friend of mine, an Indian—although
you say there are no Indians in the forest—a
most excellent friend of ours. Tayoga, come!”
The Onondaga appeared silently in
the circle of light, a splendid primeval figure, drawn
to the uttermost of his great height, his lofty gaze
meeting that of Wilton, half in challenge and half
in greeting. Robert had been an impressive figure,
but Tayoga, owing to the difference in race, was even
more so. The hands of several of the soldiers
moved towards their weapons.
“Did I not tell you that he
was a friend, a most excellent friend of ours?”
said Robert sharply. “Who raises a hand
against him raises a hand against me also, and above
all raises a hand against our cause. Lieutenant
Wilton, this is Tayoga, of the Clan of the Bear, of
the nation Onondaga, of the great League of the Hodenosaunee.
He is a prince, as much a prince as any in Europe.
His mind and his valor have both been expended freely
in our service, and they will be expended with equal
freedom again.”
Robert’s tone was so sharp and
commanding that Wilton, impressed by it, saluted the
Onondaga with the greatest courtesy, and Tayoga bowed
gravely in reply.
“You’re correct in assuming
that my name is Wilton,” said the young lieutenant.
“I’m William Wilton, of Philadelphia, and
I beg to present my second in command, Hugh Carson,
of the same city.”
He looked questioningly at Robert,
who promptly responded:
“My name is Lennox, Robert Lennox,
and I can claim either Albany or New York as a home.”
“I think I’ve heard of
you,” said Wilton. “A rumor came to
Philadelphia about a man of that name going to Quebec
on an errand for the governor of New York.”
“I was the messenger,”
said Robert, “but since the mission was a failure
it may as well be forgotten.”
“But it will not be forgotten.
I’ve heard that you bore yourself with great
judgment and address. Nevertheless, if your modesty
forbids the subject we’ll come back to another
more pressing. What did you mean when you said
Captain Colden’s delay was due to the solution
of a vexing problem?”
“It had to do with Indians,
who you say are not to be found in these forests.
I could not help overhearing you, as I approached your
camp.”
Wilton reddened and then his generous
impulse and sense of truth came to his aid.
“I’ll admit that I’m
careless and that my knowledge may be small!”
he exclaimed. “But tell me the facts, Mr.
Lennox. I judge by your face that events of grave
importance have occurred.”
“Captain Colden, far east of
this point, was attacked by a strong force of French
and Indians under the renowned partisan leader, St.
Luc. Tayoga, David Willet, the hunter, the famous
ranger Black Rifle and I were able to warn him and
give him some help, but even then we should have been
overborne and destroyed had not a Mohawk chief, Daganoweda,
and a formidable band come to our aid. United,
we defeated St. Luc and drove him northward.
Captain Colden lost several of his men, but with the
rest he is now marching to the junction with you.”
Wilton’s face turned gray, but
in a moment or two his eyes brightened.
“Then a special Providence has
been watching over us,” he said. “We
haven’t seen or heard of an Indian.”
His tone was one of mingled relief
and humor, and Robert could not keep from laughing.
“At all events,” he said,
“you are safe for the present. I’ll
remain with you while Tayoga goes back for Captain
Colden.”
“If you’ll be so good,”
said Wilton, who did not forget his manners, despite
the circumstances. “I’ve begun to
feel that we have more eyes, or at least better ones,
with you among us. Where is that Indian?
You don’t mean to say he’s gone?”
Robert laughed again. Tayoga,
after his fashion, had vanished in silence.
“He’s well on his way
to Captain Colden now,” he said, exaggerating
a little for the sake of effect. “He’ll
be a great chief some day, and meanwhile he’s
the fastest runner in the whole Six Nations.”
Colden and his troop arrived soon,
and the two little commands were united, to the great
joy of all. Lieutenant Wilton had passed from
the extreme of confidence to the utmost distrust.
Where it had not been possible for an Indian to exist
he now saw a scalplock in every bush.
“On my honor,” he said
to Colden, “James, I was never before in my
life so happy to see you. I’m glad you have
the entire command now. As Mr. Lennox said, Providence
saved me so far, but perhaps it wouldn’t lend
a helping hand any longer.”
The pack horses carried surgical supplies
for the wounded, and Willet and Black Rifle were skillful
in using them. All of the hurt, they were sure
would be well again within a week, and there was little
to mar the general feeling of high spirits that prevailed
in the camp. Wilton and Carson were lads of mettle,
full of talk of Philadelphia, then the greatest city
in the British Colonies, and related to most of its
leading families, as was Colden too, his family being
a branch of the New York family of that name.
Robert was at home with them at once, and they were
eager to hear from him about Quebec and the latest
fashions of the French, already the arbiters of fashion,
and recognized as such, despite the war between them,
by English and Americans.
“I had hoped to go to Quebec
myself,” said Wilton reflectively, “but
I suppose it’s a visit that’s delayed
for a long time now.”
“How does it happen that you,
a Quaker, are second in command here?” asked
Robert.
“It must be the belligerency
repressed through three or four generations and breaking
out at last in me,” replied Wilton, his eyes
twinkling. “I suppose there’s just
so much fighting in every family, and if three or
four generations in succession are peaceful the next
that follows is likely to be full of warlike fury.
So, as soon as the war began I started for it.
It’s not inherent in me. As I said, it’s
the confined ardor of generations bursting forth suddenly
in my person. I’m not an active agent.
I’m merely an instrument.”
“It was the same warlike fury
that caused you to come here, build your fire and
set no watch, expecting the woods to be as peaceful
as Philadelphia?” said Colden.
Wilton colored.
“I didn’t dream the French
and Indians were so near,” he replied apologetically.
“If comparisons are valuable
you needn’t feel any mortification about it,
Will,” said Colden. “I was just about
as careless myself, and all of us would have lost
our scalps, if Willet, Lennox and Tayoga hadn’t
come along.”
Wilton was consoled. But both
he and Colden after the severe lesson the latter had
received were now all for vigilance. Many sentinels
had been posted, and since Colden was glad to follow
the advice of Willet and Tayoga they were put in the
best places. They let the fire die early, as
the weather had now become very warm, and all of them,
save the watch soon slept. The night brought
little coolness with it, and the wind that blew was
warm and drying. Under its touch the leaves began
to crinkle up at the edge and turn brown, the grass
showed signs of withering and Willet, who had taken
charge of the guard that night, noticed that summer
was passing into the brown leaf. It caused him
a pang of disappointment.
Great Britain and the Colonies had
not yet begun to move. The Provincial legislatures
still wrangled, and the government at London was provokingly
slow. There was still no plan of campaign, the
great resources of the Anglo-Saxons had not yet been
brought together for use against the quick and daring
French, and while their slow, patient courage might
win in the end, Willet foresaw a long and terrible
war with many disasters at the beginning.
He was depressed for the moment.
He knew what an impression the early French successes
would make on the Indian tribes, and he knew, too,
as he heard the wind rustling through the dry leaves,
that there would be no English campaign that year.
One might lead an army in winter on the good roads
and through the open fields of Europe, but then only
borderers could make way through the vast North American
wilderness in the deep snows and bitter cold, where
Indian trails alone existed. The hunter foresaw
a long delay before the British and Colonial forces
moved, and meanwhile the French and Indians would be
more strongly planted in the territory claimed by
the rival nations, and, while in law possession was
often nine points, it seemed in war to be ten points
and all.
As he walked back and forth Black
Rifle touched him on the arm.
“I’m going, Dave,”
he said. “They don’t need me here
any longer. Daganoweda and his Mohawks, likely
enough, will follow the French and Indians, and have
another brush with ’em. At any rate, it’s
sure that St. Luc and Tandakora won’t come back,
and these young men can go on without being attacked
again and build their fort. But they’ll
be threatened there later on, and I’ll come again
with a warning.”
“I know you will,” said
Willet. “Wherever danger appears on the
border, Black Rifle, there you are. I see great
and terrible days ahead for us all.”
“And so do I,” said Black
Rifle. “This continent is on fire.”
The two shook hands, and the somber
figure of Black Rifle disappeared in the forest.
Willet looked after him thoughtfully, and then resumed
his pacing to and fro.
They made an early start at dawn of
a bright hot day, crossed the ford, and resumed their
long march through the forest which under the light
wind now rustled continually with the increasing dryness.
But the company was joyous. The
wounded were put upon the pack horses, and the others,
young, strong and refreshed by abundant rest, went
forward with springing steps. Robert and Tayoga
walked with the three Philadelphians. Colden
already knew the quality of the Onondaga, and respected
and admired him, and Wilton and Carson, surprised at
first at his excellent English education, soon saw
that he was no ordinary youth. The five, each
a type of his own, were fast friends before the day’s
march was over. Wilton, the Quaker, was the greatest
talker of them all, which he declared was due to suppression
in childhood.
“It’s something like the
battle fever which will come out along about the fourth
or fifth generation,” he said. “I
suppose there’s a certain amount of talk that
every man must do in his lifetime, and, having been
kept in a state of silence by my parents all through
my youth, I’m now letting myself loose in the
woods.”
“Don’t apologize, Will,”
said Colden. “Your chatter is harmless,
and it lightens the spirits of us all.”
“The talker has his uses,”
said Tayoga gravely. “My friend Lennox,
known to the Hodenosaunee as Dagaeoga, is golden-mouthed.
The gift of great speech descends upon him when time
and place are fitting.”
“And so you’re an orator,
are you?” said Carson, looking at Robert.
Young Lennox blushed.
“Tayoga is my very good friend,”
he replied, “and he gives me praise I don’t
deserve.”
“When one has a gift direct
from Manitou,” said the Onondaga, gravely, “it
is not well to deny it. It is a sign of great
favor, and you must not show ingratitude, Dagaeoga.”
“He has you, Lennox,”
laughed Wilton, “but you needn’t say more.
I know that Tayoga is right, and I’m waiting
to hear you talk in a crisis.”
Robert blushed once more, but was
silent. He knew that if he protested again the
young Philadelphians would chaff him without mercy,
and he knew at heart also that Tayoga’s statement
about him was true. He remembered with pride
his defeat of St. Luc in the great test of words in
the vale of Onondaga. But Wilton’s mind
quickly turned to another subject. He seemed
to exemplify the truth of his own declaration that
all the impulses bottled up in four or five generations
of Quaker ancestors were at last bursting out in him.
He talked more than all the others combined, and he
rejoiced in the freedom of the wilderness.
“I’m a spirit released,”
he said. “That’s why I chatter so.”
“Perhaps it’s just as
well, Will, that while you have the chance you should
chatter to your heart’s content, because at any
time an Indian arrow may cut short your chance for
chattering,” said Carson.
“I can’t believe it, Hugh,”
said Wilton, “because if Providence was willing
to preserve us, when we camped squarely among the Indians,
put out no guards, and fairly asked them to come and
shoot at us, then it was for a purpose and we’ll
be preserved through greater and continuous dangers.”
“There may be something in it,
Will. I notice that those who deserve it least
are often the chosen favorites of fortune.”
“Which seems to be a hit at
your superior officer, but I’ll pass it over,
Hugh, as you’re always right at heart though
often wrong in the head.”
Although the young officers talked
much and with apparent lightness, the troop marched
with vigilance now. Willet and Tayoga, and Colden,
who had profited by bitter experience, saw to it.
The hunter and the Onondaga, often assisted by Robert,
scouted on the flanks, and three or four soldiers,
who developed rapid skill in the woods, were soon
able to help. But Tayoga and Willet were the main
reliance, and they found no further trace of Indians.
Nevertheless the guard was never relaxed for an instant.
Robert found the march not only pleasant
but exhilarating. It appealed to his imaginative
and sensitive mind, which magnified everything, and
made the tints more vivid and brilliant. To him
the forests were larger and grander than they were
to the others, and the rivers were wider and deeper.
The hours were more intense, he lived every second
of them, and the future had a scope and brilliancy
that few others would foresee. In company with
youths of his own age coming from the largest city
of the British colonies, the one that had the richest
social traditions, his whole nature expanded, and he
cast away much of his reserve. Around the campfires
in the evening he became one of the most industrious
talkers, and now and then he was carried away so much
by his own impulse that all the rest would cease and
listen to the mellow, golden voice merely for the
pleasure of hearing. Then Tayoga and Willet would
look at each other and smile, knowing that Dagaeoga,
though all unconsciously, held the center of the stage,
and the others were more than willing for him to hold
it.
The friendships of the young ripen
fast, and under such circumstances they ripen faster
than ever. Robert soon felt that he had known
the three young Philadelphians for years, and a warm
friendship, destined to last all their lives, in which
Tayoga was included, was soon formed. Robert
saw that his new comrades, although they did not know
much of the forest, were intelligent, staunch and brave,
and they saw in him all that Tayoga and Willet saw,
which was a great deal.
The heat and dryness increased, and
the brown of leaf and grass deepened. Nearly
all the green was gone now, and autumn would soon
come. The forest was full of game, and Willet
and Tayoga kept them well supplied, yet their progress
became slower. Those who had been wounded severely
approached the critical stage, and once they stopped
two days until all danger had passed.
Three days later a fierce summer storm
burst upon them. Tayoga had foreseen it, and
the whole troop was gathered in the lee of a hill,
with all their ammunition protected by blankets, canvas
and the skins of deer that they had killed. But
the young Philadelphians, unaccustomed to the fury
of the elements in the wilderness, looked upon it
with awe.
In the west the lightning blazed and
the thunder crashed for a long time. Often the
forest seemed to swim in a red glare, and Robert himself
was forced to shut his eyes before the rapid flashes
of dazzling brightness. Then came a great rushing
of wind with a mighty rain on its edge, and, when
the wind died, the rain fell straight down in torrents
more than an hour.
Although they kept their ammunition
and other supplies dry the men themselves were drenched
to the bone, but the storm passed more suddenly than
it had come. The clouds parted on the horizon,
then all fled away. The last raindrop fell and
a shining sun came out in a hot blue sky. As
the men resumed a drooping march their clothes dried
fast in the fiery rays and their spirits revived.
When night came they were dry again,
and youth had taken no harm. The next day they
struck an Indian trail, but both Willet and Tayoga
said it had been made by less than a dozen warriors,
and that they were going north.
“It’s my belief,”
said Willet, “that they were warriors from the
Ohio country on their way to join the French along
the Canadian border.”
“And they’re not staying
to meet us,” said Colden. “I’m
afraid, Will, it’ll be some time before you
have a chance to show your unbottled Quaker valor.”
“Perhaps not so long as you
think,” replied Wilton, who had plenty of penetration.
“I don’t claim to be any great forest rover,
although I do think I’ve learned something since
I left Philadelphia, but I imagine that our building
of a fort in the woods will draw ’em. The
Indian runners will soon be carrying the news of it,
and then they’ll cluster around us like flies
seeking sugar.”
“You’re right, Mr. Wilton,”
said Willet. “After we build this fort
it’s as sure as the sun is in the heavens that
we’ll have to fight for it.”
Two days later they reached the site
for their little fortress which they named Fort Refuge,
because they intended it as a place in which harried
settlers might find shelter. It was a hill near
a large creek, and the source of a small brook lay
within the grounds they intended to occupy, securing
to them an unfailing supply of good water in case
of siege.
Now, the young soldiers entered upon
one of the most arduous tasks of the war, to build
a fort, which was even more trying to them than battle.
Arms and backs ached as Colden, Wilton and Carson,
advised by Willet, drove them hard. A strong
log blockhouse was erected, and then a stout palisade,
enclosing the house and about an acre of ground, including
the precious spring which spouted from under a ledge
of stone at the very wall of the blockhouse itself.
Behind the building they raised a shed in which the
horses could be sheltered, as all of them foresaw
a long stay, dragging into winter with its sleet and
snow, and it was important to save the animals.
Robert, Willet and Tayoga had a roving
commission, and, as they could stay with Colden and
his command as long as they chose, they chose accordingly
to remain where they thought they could do the most
good. Robert took little part in the hunting,
but labored with the soldiers on the building, although
it was not the kind of work to which his mind turned.
The blockhouse itself, was divided
into a number of rooms, in which the soldiers who
were not on guard could sleep, and they had blankets
and the skins of the larger animals the hunters killed
for beds. Venison jerked in great quantities
was stored away in case of siege, and the whole forest
was made to contribute to their larder. The work
was hard, but it toughened the sinews of the young
soldiers, and gave them an occupation in which they
were interested. Before it was finished they
were joined by another small detachment with loaded
pack horses, which by the same kind of miracle had
come safely through the wilderness. Colden now
had a hundred men, fifty horses and powder and lead
for all the needs of which one could think.
“If we only had a cannon!”
he said, looking proudly at their new blockhouse,
“I think I’d build a platform for it there
on the roof, and then we could sweep the forest in
every direction. Eh, Will, my lad?”
“But as we haven’t,”
said Wilton, “we’ll have to do the sweeping
with our rifles.”
“And our men are good marksmen,
as they showed in that fight with St. Luc. But
it seems a world away from Philadelphia, doesn’t
it, Will? I wonder what they’re doing there!”
“Counting their gains in the
West India trade, looking at the latest fashions from
England that have come on the ships up the Delaware,
building new houses out Germantown way, none of them
thinking much of the war, except old Ben Franklin,
who pegs forever at the governor of the Province,
the Legislature, and every influential man to take
action before the French and Indians seize the whole
border.”
“I hope Franklin will stir ’em
up, and that they won’t forget us out here in
the woods. For us at least the French and Indians
are a reality.”
Meanwhile summer had turned into autumn,
and autumn itself was passing.