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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, When Wilderness Was King, by Randall Parrish
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: When Wilderness Was King
+ A Tale of the Illinois Country
+
+
+Author: Randall Parrish
+
+
+
+Release Date: March 1, 2006 [eBook #17890]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHEN WILDERNESS WAS KING***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Al Haines
+
+
+
+WHEN WILDERNESS WAS KING
+
+A Tale of the Illinois Country
+
+by
+
+RANDALL PARRISH
+
+Author of "My Lady of the North"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A. L. Burt Company, Publishers
+New York
+Copyright by A. C. McClurg & Co.
+1904
+Published March 26, 1904
+Second Edition, April 20, 1904
+Third Edition, July 2, 1904
+Fourth Edition, September 20, 1904
+Fifth Edition, October 20, 1904
+Sixth Edition, January 2, 1905
+Seventh Edition, December, 1905
+Entered at Stationers' Hall, London
+All Rights Reserved
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAPTER
+
+ I. A Message from the West
+ II. The Call of Duty
+ III. A New Acquaintance
+ IV. Captain Wells of Fort Wayne
+ V. Through the Heart of the Forest
+ VI. From the Jaws of Death
+ VII. A Circle in the Sand
+ VIII. Two Men and a Maid
+ IX. In Sight of the Flag
+ X. A Lane of Peril
+ XI. Old Fort Dearborn
+ XII. The Heart of a Woman
+ XIII. A Wager of Fools
+ XIV. Darkness and Surprise
+ XV. An Adventure Underground
+ XVI. "Prance wins, Monsieur!"
+ XVII. A Contest of Wits
+ XVIII. Glimpses of Danger
+ XIX. A Conference and a Resolve
+ XX. In the Indian Camp
+ XXI. A Council of Chiefs
+ XXII. The Last Night at Dearborn
+ XXIII. The Death-Shadow of the Miamis
+ XXIV. The Day of Doom
+ XXV. In the Jaws of the Tiger
+ XXVI. The Field of the Dead
+ XXVII. A Ghostly Vision
+ XXVIII. An Angel in the Wilderness
+ XXIX. A Soldier of France
+ XXX. The Rescue at the Stake
+ XXXI. A Search, and its Reward
+ XXXII. The Pledge of a Wyandot
+ XXXIII. An Intervention of Fate
+ XXXIV. A Stumble in the Dark
+ XXXV. The Battle on the Shore
+ XXXVI. In the New Gray Dawn
+
+
+
+
+ "I saw a dot upon the map, and a housefly's filmy wing--
+ They said 'twas Dearborn's picket-flag, when Wilderness was King.
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+ I heard the block-house gates unbar, the column's solemn tread,
+ I saw the Tree of a single leaf its splendid foliage shed
+ To wave awhile that August morn above the column's head;
+ I heard the moan of muffled drum, the woman's wail of fife,
+ The Dead March played for Dearborn's men just marching out of life;
+ The swooping of the savage cloud that burst upon the rank
+ And struck it with its thunderbolt in forehead and in flank,
+ The spatter of the musket-shot, the rifles' whistling rain,--
+ The sandhills drift round hope forlorn that never marched again."
+
+ --_Benjamin F. Taylor_.
+
+
+
+
+When Wilderness Was King
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+A MESSAGE FROM THE WEST
+
+Surely it was no longer ago than yesterday. I had left the scythe
+lying at the edge of the long grass, and gone up through the rows of
+nodding Indian corn to the house, seeking a draught of cool water from
+the spring. It was hot in the July sunshine; the thick forest on every
+side intercepted the breeze, and I had been at work for some hours.
+How pleasant and inviting the little river looked in the shade of the
+great trees, while, as I paused a moment bending over the high bank, I
+could see a lazy pike nosing about among the twisted roots below.
+
+My mother, her sleeves rolled high over her round white arms, was in
+the dark interior of the milk-house as I passed, and spoke to me
+laughingly; and I could perceive my father sitting in his great
+splint-bottomed chair just within the front doorway, and I marked how
+the slight current of air toyed with his long gray beard. The old
+Bible lay wide open upon his knee; yet his eyes were resting upon the
+dark green of the woods that skirted our clearing. I wondered, as I
+quaffed the cool sweet water at the spring, if he was dreaming again of
+those old days when he had been a man among men. How distinct in each
+detail the memory of it remains! The blue sky held but one fleecy
+white cloud in all its wide arch; it seemed as if the curling film of
+smoke rising from our chimney had but gathered there and hung suspended
+to render the azure more pronounced. A robin peeked impudently at me
+from an oak limb, and a roguish gray squirrel chattered along the low
+ridge-pole, with seeming willingness to make friends, until Rover,
+suddenly spying me, sprang hastily around the comer of the house to
+lick my hand, with glad barkings and a frantic effort to wave the stub
+of his poor old tail. It was such a homely, quiet scene, there in the
+heart of the backwoods, one I had known unchanged so long, that I
+little dreamed it was soon to witness the turning over of a page of
+destiny in my life, that almost from that hour I was to sever every
+relation of the past, and be sent forth to buffet with the rough world
+alone.
+
+There were no roads, in those days, along that valley of the upper
+Maumee,--merely faint bridle-paths, following ancient Indian trails
+through dense woods or across narrow strips of prairie land; yet as I
+hung the gourd back on its wooden peg, and lifted my eyes carelessly to
+the northward, I saw a horseman riding slowly toward the house along
+the river bank. There were flying rumors of coming Indian outbreaks
+along the fringe of border settlements; but my young eyes were keen,
+and after the first quick thrill of suspicion I knew the approaching
+stranger to be of white blood, although his apparel was scarcely less
+uncivilized than that of the savage. Yet so unusual were visitors,
+that I grasped a gun from its pegs in the kitchen, and called warningly
+to my mother as I passed on to meet the new-comer.
+
+He was a very large and powerful man, with a matted black beard and an
+extremely prominent nose. A long rifle was slung at his back, and the
+heavy bay horse he bestrode bore unmistakable signs of hard travelling.
+As he approached, Rover, spying him, sprang out savagely; but I caught
+and held him with firm grip, for to strangers he was ever a surly brute.
+
+"Is this yere Major Wayland's place?" the man questioned, in a deep,
+gruff voice, reining in his tired horse, and carelessly flinging one
+booted foot across the animal's neck as he faced me.
+
+"Yes," I responded with caution, for we were somewhat suspicious of
+stray travellers in those days, and the man's features were not
+pleasing. "The Major lives here, and I am his son."
+
+He looked at me intently, some curiosity apparent in his eyes, as he
+deliberately drew a folded paper from his belt.
+
+"No? Be ye the lad what downed Bud Eberly at the meetin' over on the
+Cow-skin las' spring?" he questioned, with faintly aroused interest.
+
+I blushed like a school-girl, for this unexpected reference was not
+wholly to my liking, though the man's intentions were evidently most
+kind.
+
+"He bullied me until I could take no more," I answered, doubtfully;
+"yet I hurt him more seriously than I meant."
+
+He laughed at the trace of apology in my words.
+
+"Lord!" he ejaculated, "don't ever let that worry ye, boy. The hull
+settlement is mighty glad 'twas done. Old Hawkins bin on the p'int o'
+doin' it himself a dozen o' times. Told me so. Ye 're quite a lad,
+ain't ye? Weigh all o' hundred an' seventy, I 'll bet; an' strong as
+an ox. How old be ye, anyhow?"
+
+"Twenty," I answered, not a little mollified by his manner. "You must
+live near here, then?"
+
+"Wal, no, but been sorter neighbor o' yourn fer a month er so back;
+stoppin' up at Hawkins's shebang, at the ford, on the Military Road,
+visitin'; but guess I never met up with none o' your folks afore. My
+name 's Burns, Ol' Tom Burns, late o' Connecticut. A sojer from out
+West left this yere letter fer yer father at Hawkins's place more nor a
+week ago. Said as how it was mighty important; but blamed if this was
+n't the fust chance he 's hed to git it over yere sence. I told him I
+'d fetch it, as it was n't more nor a dozen miles er so outer my way."
+
+He held out a square paper packet; and while I turned it over curiously
+in my hand,--the first letter I had ever seen,--he took some loose
+tobacco from an outside pocket and proceeded leisurely to fill his pipe.
+
+My mother rolled my father's chair forward into the open doorway, and
+stood close behind him, as was her custom, one arm resting lightly upon
+the quaintly carved chair-back.
+
+"What is it, John?" she questioned gently. Instantly aroused by her
+voice, I crossed quickly over and placed the packet in my father's thin
+hands. He turned it over twice before he opened it, looking at the odd
+seal, and reading the superscription carefully aloud, as if fearful
+there might be some mistake:
+
+ "Major David Wayland,
+ Along the Upper Maumee.
+ Leave at Hawkins Ford
+ on Military Road."
+ "Important."
+
+
+I can see him yet as he read it, slowly feeling his way through the
+rude, uneven writing, with my mother leaning over his shoulder and
+helping him, her rosy cheeks and dark tresses making strange contrast
+beside his pain-racked features and iron-gray hair.
+
+"Read it aloud, Mary," he said at last. "I shall understand it better.
+'T is from Roger Matherson, of whom you have heard me speak."
+
+My mother was a good scholar, and she read clearly, only hesitating now
+and, then over some ill-written or misspelled word.
+
+
+ At FORT DEARBORN, near the head of the
+ Great Lake. Twelfth June, 1812.
+
+My DEAR OLD FRIEND:
+
+I have come to the end of life; they tell me it will be all over by the
+morrow, and there remains but one thing that greatly troubles me--my
+little girl, my Elsa. You know I have never much feared death, nor do
+I in this hour when I face it once more; for I have ever tried to honor
+God and do my duty as both man and soldier. David, I can scarcely
+write, for my mind wanders strangely, and my fingers will but barely
+grasp the pen. 'T is not the grip of the old sword-hand you knew so
+well, for I am already very weak, and dying. But do you yet remember
+the day I drew you out of the rout at Saratoga, and bore you away
+safely, though the Hessians shot me twice? God knows, old friend, I
+never thought to remind you of the act,--'twas no more than any comrade
+would have done,--yet I am here among strangers, and there is no one
+else living to whom I may turn in my need. David, in memory of it,
+will you not give my little orphan child a home? Your old comrade,
+upon his death-bed, begs this of you with his final breath. She is all
+alone here, save for me, and there is no blood kin in all the world to
+whom I may appeal. I shall leave some property, but not much. As you
+love your own, I pray you be merciful in this hour to my little girl.
+
+ Your old comrade,
+ ROGER MATHERSON.
+
+
+This had been endorsed by another and bolder hand:
+
+
+Captain Roger Matherson, late of the Massachusetts Continental Line,
+died at this fort, of fever, fourteenth June, 1812. His daughter is
+being cared for by the ladies of the garrison.
+
+ NATHAN HEALD,
+ Capt. First Regt. Inf., Commanding.
+
+
+The tears were clinging to my mother's long lashes as she finished the
+reading; she was ever tender of heart and sympathetic with sorrow. My
+father sat in silence, looking far off at the green woods. Presently
+he took the paper again into his hands, folded it carefully in the old
+creases, and placed it safely away between the Bible leaves. I saw my
+mother's fingers steal along the arm of the chair until they closed
+softly over his.
+
+"The poor little lamb!" she said gently.
+
+My father's old sword hung over the fireplace, and I saw his glance
+wander toward it, as something seemed to rise choking in his throat.
+He was always a man who felt deeply, yet said but little; and we both
+knew he was thinking about the old days and the strong ties of
+comradeship.
+
+The stranger struck flint and steel to light his pipe; the act
+instantly recalled my father to the demands of hospitality.
+
+"Friend," he said, speaking firmly, "hitch to the stump yonder, and
+come in. You have brought me sad news enough, yet are no less welcome,
+and must break bread at our board. John," and he turned toward me,
+"see to friend Burns's horse, and help your mother to prepare the
+dinner."
+
+Out in the rude shed, which, answered as a kitchen during summer
+weather, I ventured to ask:
+
+"Mother, do you suppose he will take the little girl?"
+
+"I hope so, John," she answered, soberly; "but your father must decide
+himself. He will not tell us until he has thought it all out alone."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE CALL OF DUTY
+
+It was upon my mind all through that long afternoon, as I swung the
+scythe in the meadow grass. I saw Burns ride away up the river trail
+soon after I returned to work, and wondered if he bore with him any
+message from my father. It was like a romance to me, to whom so few
+important things had ever happened. In some way, the coming of this
+letter out of the great unknown had lifted me above the narrow life of
+the clearing. My world had always been so small, such a petty and
+restricted circle, that this new interest coming within its horizon had
+widened it wonderfully.
+
+I had grown up on the border, isolated from what men term civilization;
+and I could justly claim to know chiefly those secrets which the
+frontier teaches its children. My only remembrance of a different mode
+of life centred about the ragged streets of a small New England
+village, where I had lived in earlier childhood. Ever since, we had
+been in the depths of the backwoods; and after my father's accident I
+became the one upon whom the heavier part of the work fell. I had
+truly thrived upon it. In my hunting-trips, during the dull seasons, I
+learned many a trick of the forest, and had already borne rifle twice
+when the widely scattered settlements were called to arms by Indian
+forays. There were no schools in that country; indeed, our nearest
+neighbor was ten miles distant as the crow flies. But my mother had
+taught me, with much love and patience, from her old treasured
+school-books; and this, with other lore from the few choice volumes my
+father clung to through his wanderings, gave me much to ponder over. I
+still remember the evenings when he read to us gravely out of his old
+Shakespeare, dwelling tenderly upon passages he loved. And he
+instructed me in other things,--in honor and manliness, in woodcraft,
+and many a pretty thing at arms, until no lad in the settlements around
+could outdo me in rough border sport. I loved to hear him, of a
+boisterous winter night,--he spoke of such matters but seldom,--tell
+about his army life, the men he had fought beside and loved, the daring
+deeds born of his younger blood. In that way he had sometimes
+mentioned this Roger Matherson; and it was like a blow to me now to
+hear of his death. I wondered what the little girl would be like; and
+my heart went out to her in her loneliness. Scarcely realizing it, I
+was lonely also.
+
+"Has he spoken yet?" I questioned anxiously of my mother, as I came up
+to the open kitchen door when the evening chores were done.
+
+"No, John," she answered, "he has been sitting there silently looking
+out at the woods ever since the man left. He is thinking, dear, and we
+must not worry him."
+
+The supper-table had been cleared away, and Seth, the hired man, had
+crept up the creaking ladder to his bed under the eaves, before my
+father spoke. We were all three together in the room, and I had drawn
+his chair forward, as was my custom, where the candle-light flickered
+upon his face. I knew by the look of calm resolve in his gray eyes
+that a decision had been reached.
+
+"Mary," he began gravely, "and you, John, we must talk together of this
+new duty which has just come to us. I hardly know what to decide, for
+we are so poor and I am now so helpless; yet I have prayed earnestly
+for guidance, and can but think it must be God's will that we care for
+this poor orphan child of my old friend."
+
+My mother crossed the room to him, and bent down until her soft cheek
+touched his lips.
+
+"I knew you would, David," she whispered, in the tender way she had,
+her hand pressing back his short gray hair. "She shall ever be unto us
+as our own little girl,--the one we lost come back to us again."
+
+My father bent his head wearily upon one hand, his eyes upon the candle
+flame, his other hand patting her fingers.
+
+"It must be all of ten years," he said slowly, "since last I had word
+of Roger Matherson. He was in Canada then, yet has never since been
+long out of my mind. He saved my life, not once alone, as he would
+seem to remember, but three separate times in battle. We were children
+together in the blue Berkshire hills, and during all our younger
+manhood were more than brothers. His little one shall henceforth be as
+my own child. God hath given her unto us, Mary, as truly as if she had
+been born of our love. I knew that Roger had married, yet heard
+nothing of the birth of the child or the loss of his wife. However,
+from this hour the orphan is to be our own; and we must now decide upon
+some safe means of bringing her here without delay."
+
+He paused. No one of us spoke. His glance slowly wandered from the
+candle flame, until it settled gravely upon my face as I sat resting on
+a rude bench fitted into the chimney corner. He looked so intently at
+me that my mother seemed instantly to interpret his thought.
+
+"Oh, surely not that, David?" she exclaimed, pleadingly. "Not John?"
+
+"I know of no other fit messenger, little woman," he answered soberly.
+"It has indeed troubled me far more than all the rest, to decide on
+this; yet there is no one else whom I think equal to the task. John is
+a good boy, mother, and has sufficient experience in woodcraft to make
+the journey."
+
+"But the savages!" she insisted. "'T is said we are upon the verge of
+a fresh outbreak, stirred up by this new war with England, that may
+involve the settlements at any time. You know Burns told you just
+now,--and he is an old scout, familiar with the West,--that British
+agents were active along the whole border, and there was great
+uneasiness among the Indian tribes."
+
+"There is serious promise of danger, 't is true," he admitted, a flash
+of the old fire in his eyes. "Yet that is scarce likely to halt David
+Wayland's son. Indeed, it is the greater reason why this helpless
+orphan child should be early brought to our protection. Think of the
+defenceless little girl exposed alone to such danger! Nor have we
+means of judging, Mary, of the real seriousness of the situation to the
+north and west. War between the nations may very likely arouse the
+spirit of the savages, yet rumors of Indian outbreak are always on the
+lips of the settlers. Burns himself was upon his return westward, and
+did not seem greatly troubled lest he fail to get through. He claimed
+to live at Chicagou Portage, wherever that may be. I only know it is
+the extreme frontier."
+
+My mother did not answer; and now I spoke, my cheeks aflame with
+eagerness.
+
+"Do you truly mean, sir, that I am to go in search of the little girl?"
+I asked, barely trusting my own ears.
+
+"Yes, John," my father replied gravely, motioning me to draw closer to
+his chair. "This is a duty which has fallen to you as well as to your
+mother and me. We can, indeed, but poorly spare you from the work at
+this season; yet Seth will be able to look after the more urgent needs
+of the farm while you are absent, while he would prove quite useless on
+such a mission as this. Do not worry, Mary. Friend Burns is well
+acquainted with all that western country, and he tells me there is
+scarcely a week that parties of soldiers, or friendly Indians, do not
+pass along the trail, and that by waiting at Hawkins's place for a few
+days John will be sure to find some one with whom he may companion on
+the long journey westward. He would himself have accompanied him, but
+must first bear a message to friends at Vincennes. It is now some
+weeks since Roger Matherson died, and we shall prove unworthy of our
+trust if we delay longer in sending for his daughter."
+
+Though my mother was a western woman, patient and long habituated to
+sacrifice and peril, still her eyes, fixed upon my face, were filled
+with tears, and the color had deserted her cheeks.
+
+"I know not why it should be so, David," she urged softly; "but in my
+heart I greatly fear this trip for John. Yet you have ever found me
+ready to yield wherever it seemed best, and I doubt not you are right
+in your decision."
+
+At any other time I should have gone to her with words of comfort and
+good cheer; but now my ambition was so aroused by this impending
+adventure as to permit me to think of nothing else.
+
+"Is it so very far, father, to where I must go?" I questioned, eagerly.
+"Where is this Fort Dearborn, and how am I to journey in reaching
+there? 'T is no garrison of which I have ever heard."
+
+"Bring me the map your mother made of this country, and the regions to
+the westward," he said. "I am not over clear in regard to the matter
+myself, although friend Burns, who claims to know all that country,
+gave me some brief description; but I found him most chary of speech."
+
+I got the map out of the great square cupboard in the corner, and
+spread the paper flat upon the table, placing knives at each corner to
+hold it open. I rolled his chair up before it, and the three of us
+bent our heads over the map together, our faces glowing in the candle
+flame. It was a copy made by a quill from a great government map my
+mother had seen somewhere in her journeying westward; and, though only
+a rude design, it was not badly done, and was sufficiently accurate for
+our purpose. Much of it was still blank; yet the main open trails had
+been traced with care, the principal fords over the larger streams were
+marked, and the various government posts and trading settlements
+distinctly located and named. Searching for the head of the Great
+Lake, we were not long in discovering the position of the fort called
+Dearborn, which seemingly was posted upon the western shore, nearly
+opposite another garrison point at the mouth of the St. Joseph river.
+We were able to trace with clearness the military road that had been
+constructed northward from Fort Wayne, our nearest government post; but
+the map failed to exhibit evidence of any beaten track, or used trail,
+leading westward and around the head of the lake. There were numerous
+irregular lines which denoted unnamed streams, but by far the larger
+portion of the territory extending to the west beyond Fort Wayne had
+been simply designated as "forest land" and "unexplored."
+
+"Friend Burns tells me there is a trail used by both troops and
+savages, which he has traversed several times," my father explained, as
+he lifted his eyes from the map; "but it is not over plain, nor easily
+followed, as communication with the Fort is mostly maintained by means
+of the waterways to the northward. The overland journey, however, will
+prove speedier, besides being less liable to disaster for one
+unaccustomed to boats. How soon can John be ready, mother?"
+
+Her voice trembled, and I felt the pressure of her hand upon my sleeve.
+
+"It will take all of the morrow, David, to prepare his clothing
+properly," she replied, with the patient resignation of the frontier.
+"There is much that will need seeing after."
+
+"Then John will start the next dawn. You had best ride the brown colt,
+my son; he is of good breed, and speedy. Seth shall accompany you
+until you find suitable companionship at Hawkins's. He will bring back
+word of how you started, and that knowledge will greatly comfort your
+mother."
+
+He paused, and held out his thin hands.
+
+"You go upon this strange journey willingly, my son?"
+
+"Yes, father."
+
+"You will be both kind and thoughtful with Roger Matherson's little
+girl?"
+
+"She shall be to me as my own sister."
+
+I felt the confiding clasp of his fingers, and realized how much to him
+would be a successful termination of my journey.
+
+"Kiss your mother, John," he said, a trustful look coming into his
+kindly eyes. "We must all be astir early on the morrow."
+
+Beneath the rived shingles of my little room, under the sloping roof,
+how I turned and tossed through those long night hours! What visions,
+both asleep and awake, came to me, thronging fast upon my heated brain,
+each more marvellous than its fellow, and all alike pointing toward
+that strange country which I was now destined by fate to travel! Vague
+tales of wonder and mystery had come floating to me out of that unknown
+West, and now I was to behold it all with my own eyes. But marvellous
+as were my dreams, the reality was to be even more amazing than these
+pictures of boyish imagination. Had I known the truth that night, I
+doubt greatly whether I should have had the courage to face it.
+
+At last the gray dawn came, stealing in at the only window, and found
+me eager for the trial.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+A NEW ACQUAINTANCE
+
+I drew rein upon the upper river bank, before we finally plunged into
+the dark woods beyond, and glanced back. I had to brush the gathering
+tears from my eyes before I could see clearly; and when I finally rode
+away, the picture of that dear old home was fixed in my memory forever.
+Our house stood near the centre of an oak opening,--a little patch of
+native prairie-land, with a narrow stream skirting it on one side, and
+a dense fringe of forest all about. The small story-and-a-half cabin
+of hewn logs, with its lean-to of rough hand-riven planks, fronted to
+the southward; and the northern expanse of roof was green with moss.
+My father sat in the open doorway, his uplifted hand shading his eyes
+as he gazed after us; while my mother stood by his side, one arm
+resting upon the back of his chair, the other extended, waving a white
+cloth in farewell. Rover was without, where I had bidden him remain,
+eagerly watching for some signal of relenting upon my part. Beyond
+stood the rude out-buildings, silhouetted against the deep green. It
+was a homely, simple scene,--yet till now it had been all the world to
+me.
+
+With a final wave of the hand, I moved forward, until the intervening
+trees, like the falling of a curtain, hid it all from view. Seth was
+astride the old mare, riding bareback, his white goat-like beard
+hanging down his breast until it mingled with her mane, while his long
+thin legs were drawn up in the awkward way he had. He was a strange,
+silent, gloomy man, as austere as his native hills; and we rode on with
+no exchange of speech. Indeed, my thoughts were of a nature that I had
+no wish to share with another; so it was some time before the depth of
+loneliness which oppressed my spirits enabled me to feel even passing
+interest in the things at hand.
+
+"I 'd hate like thunder ter be a-goin' on your trip, Maester John,"
+volunteered Seth at last, solemnly turning on the mare's broad back to
+face me.
+
+"And why?" I asked, wonderingly; for the man's rare gift of silence had
+won him a certain reputation for deep, occult knowledge which I could
+not wholly ignore. "It will bring me the sight of some wonderful
+country, no doubt."
+
+His shrewd gimlet eyes seemed fairly to pierce me, as he deliberately
+helped himself to tobacco from a pouch at his waist.
+
+"Wal, that may all be, Maester John; but I've heerd tell ther is some
+most awful things goes on out yonder," and he swung his long arm
+meaningly toward the west. "Animyles sich as don't prowl raound yere,
+man-yeatin' snakes as big as thet tree, an' the blood-thirstiest
+salvages as ever was. An' arter a while ther ain't no more trees
+grows, ther lan' is thet poor, by gosh! jist a plumb dead levil er'
+short grass, an' no show ter hide ner nuthin'."
+
+"Were you ever there, Seth?" I questioned with growing anxiety, for I
+had heard some such vague rumors as these before.
+
+"Me? Not by a dinged sight!" he replied, emphatically. "This yere is
+a long way further west thin I keer 'bout bein'. Ol' Vermont is plenty
+good 'nough fer this chicken, an' many 's ther day I wish I was back
+ther. But I hed a cousin onct who tuk ter sojerin' 'long with Gineral
+Clarke, an' went 'cross them ther prairies ter git Vincennes frum the
+British. Lor'! it must a' bin more ner thirty year ago! He tol' me
+thet they jist hed ter wade up ter ther neck in water fer days an'
+days. I ain't so durn fond o' water as all thet. An' he said as how
+rattlesnakes was everywhere; an' ther Injuns was mos' twice es big es
+they be yere."
+
+"But Clarke, and nearly all of his men, got back safely," I protested.
+
+"Oh, I guess some on 'em got back, 'cause they was an awful lot in thet
+army, mighty nigh two thousand on 'em, Ephriam said; but, I tell ye,
+they hed a most terrible tough time afore they did git hum. I seed my
+cousin whin he kim back, an' he was jist a mere shadder; though he was
+bigger ner you whin he went 'way."
+
+"But Fort Dearborn is much farther to the north. Perhaps it will be
+better up there."
+
+"Wuss," he insisted, with a most mournful shake of the head, "a dinged
+sight wuss. Ephriam said es how the further north ye wint, the tougher
+it got. He saw an Injun from up near the big lake--a Pottamottamie, or
+somethin' like thet--what was nine fut high, an' he told him es how the
+rivers in his kintry was all full o' man-eatin' critters like snakes,
+an' some on 'em hed a hundred legs ter crawl with, an' cud travel a
+dinged sight faster ner a hoss. By gosh! but you bet I don't want none
+on it. Your father must 'a' been plum crazy fer ter sind ye way out
+ther all 'lone,--jist a green boy like you. What ye a-goin' fer,
+enyhow?"
+
+I explained to him the occasion and necessity for my trip, but he shook
+his head dubiously, his long face so exceedingly mournful that I could
+not remain unaffected by it.
+
+"Wal," he said at length, carefully weighing his words, "maybe it's all
+right 'nough, but I 've got my doubts jist the same. I 'll bet thet
+ther gal is jist one o' them will-o'-the-wisps we hear on, an' you
+never will find her. You 'll jist wander 'round, huntin' an' huntin'
+her, till ye git old, or them monsters git ye. An' I 'll be blamed if
+ever I heerd tell o' no sich fort as thet, nohow."
+
+Seth was certainly proving a Job's comforter; and I was already
+sufficiently troubled about the final outcome of my adventure. Hence
+my only hope of retaining any measure of courage was to discountenance
+further conversation, and we continued to jog along in silence,
+although I caught him looking at me several times in a manner that
+expressed volumes.
+
+We camped that night in the dense heart of some oak woods, beside a
+pleasant stream of clear, cool water. Late the following evening, just
+as the sun was disappearing behind the trees, our wearied horses
+emerged suddenly upon the bank of a broad river, and we could discern
+the dim outlines of Hawkins's buildings amid the deepening shadows of
+the opposite shore.
+
+Upon one thing I was now fully determined. Seth should start back with
+the first streak of the next dawn. His long face and dismal croakings
+kept me constantly upon nettles, and I felt that I should face the
+uncertain future with far stouter heart if he were out of my sight.
+Firm in this resolve, I urged my horse to splash his reluctant way
+through the shallows of the ford; and as our animals rose on the steep
+bank of the western shore, we found ourselves at once in the midst of a
+group of scattered buildings. It seemed quite a settlement in that dim
+light, although the structures were all low and built of logs. The
+largest and most centrally located of these was evidently the
+homestead, as it had a rudely constructed porch in front, and a thin
+cloud of smoke was drifting from its chimney. As I drew nearer, I
+could perceive the reflection of a light streaming out through the open
+doorway.
+
+No one appeared in answer to our shouting,--not even a stray dog; and,
+in despair of thus arousing the inhabitants, I flung my rein to Seth,
+and, mounting the doorstep, peered within. As I did so, a shiny,
+round, black face, with whitened eyes and huge red lips, seemed to
+float directly toward me through the inner darkness. It was so
+startling an apparition that I sprang back in such haste as nearly to
+topple over backward from the steps. Heaven alone knows what I fancied
+it might be; indeed, I had little enough time in which to guess, for I
+had barely touched the ground,--my mind still filled with memories of
+Seth's grotesque horrors,--when the whole figure emerged into view, and
+I knew him instantly for a negro, though I had never before seen one of
+his race. He was a dandified-looking fellow, wearing a stiff white
+waistcoat fastened by gilded buttons, with a pair of short curly
+mustaches, waxed straight out at the ends; and he stood there grinning
+at me in a manner that showed all his gleaming teeth. Before I could
+recover my wits enough to address him, I heard a voice from within the
+house,--a soft, drawling voice, with a marked foreign accent clinging
+to it.
+
+"Sam," it called, "have you found either of the scoundrelly rascals?"
+
+The darkey started as if shot, and glanced nervously back over his
+shoulder.
+
+"No, sah," he replied with vigor, "dat Mistah Hawkins am not yere, sah.
+An' dat Mistah Burns has gone 'way fer gud, sah. But dar am a gemman
+yere, sah,--"
+
+"What!" came a surprised ejaculation that caused the negro to jump, and
+I heard a chair overturned within. "A gentleman? Sam, don't deceive
+me! For the love of Heaven, let me see him. May I be bastinadoed if
+it hasn't been three months since my eyes beheld the last specimen!
+Sam, where was it I saw the last one?"
+
+"Montreal, sah."
+
+"By Saint Guise! 'tis gospel truth," and the speaker strode forward,
+candle in hand. "Here, now, you ace of spades," he cried impatiently,
+"hold the flame until I bid this paragon of the wilderness fit welcome
+in the name of Hawkins, who strangely seems to have vanished from the
+sylvan scene. Alas, poor Hawkins! two gentlemen at one time, I greatly
+fear, will be the death of him. Would that his good friend Burns might
+be with him on this festive occasion. Ye gods, what a time it would
+be!"
+
+As the black hastily reached out for the candlestick, his erratic
+master as quickly changed his mind.
+
+"No," he muttered thoughtfully, drawing back within the hall; "'tis far
+more fit that such formal greeting should occur within, where the
+essentials may be found with which to do full courtesy. I will instead
+retire. Sam, bid the gentleman meet me in the banquet hall, and then,
+mark you, thou archfiend of blackness, seek out at once that man
+Hawkins in his hidden lair, and bid him have ample repast spread
+instantly, on pain of my displeasure. By all the saints! if it be not
+at once forthcoming I will toast the scoundrel over his own slow fire."
+
+"Seth," I said to my staring companion, as soon as I could recover from
+my own surprise, "find a place for the horses somewhere in the stables,
+and come in."
+
+"Where is your master to be found?" I questioned of the black, whose
+air of self-importance had been resumed the moment he was left alone.
+
+"Second door to de right, sah," he answered, gazing curiously at my
+deerskin hunting-shirt as I pressed by.
+
+I had little difficulty in finding it, for all that the way was totally
+dark, as the fellow within was lustily carolling a French love-song. I
+hung back for a moment, striving vainly to distinguish the words.
+
+Without pausing to make my presence known, I opened the door quietly,
+and stepped within. The room was not a large one, though it occupied
+the full width of the house; and the two lighted candles that illumined
+it, one sitting upon a table otherwise bare, the other occupying the
+rude dresser in the far corner, revealed clearly the entire interior.
+
+The sole occupant of the room sat upon a corner of the table, one foot
+resting on the floor, the other dangling carelessly. Hardly more than
+a year my elder, he bore in his face the indelible marks of a life
+vastly different. His features were clear-cut, and undeniably
+handsome, with a curl of rare good-humor to his lips and an audacious
+sparkle within his dark eyes. His hat, cocked and ornamented in
+foreign fashion, lay beside him; and I could not help noting his long
+hair, carefully powdered and arranged with a nicety almost conspicuous,
+while his clothing was rich in both texture and coloring, and exhibited
+many traces of vanity in ribbon and ornament. Within his belt,
+fastened by a large metal clasp, he wore a pearl-handled pistol with
+long barrel; and a rapier, with richly jewelled hilt, dangled at his
+side. Altogether he made a fine figure of a man, and one of a sort I
+had never met before.
+
+If he interested me, doubtless I was no less a study to him. I could
+see the astonishment in his eyes, after my first entrance, change to
+amusement as he gazed. Then he brought a white hand down, with a smart
+slap, upon the board beside him.
+
+"By all the saints!" he exclaimed, "but I believe the black was right.
+'Tis the face of a gentle, or I know naught of the breed, though the
+attire might fool the very elect. Yet, _parbleu_! if memory serves, 't
+is scarcely worse than what I wore in Spain."
+
+He swung down upon his feet and faced me, extending one hand with all
+cordiality, while lips and eyes smiled pleasantly.
+
+"Monsieur," he said, bowing low, and with a grace of movement quite new
+to me, "I bid you hearty welcome to whatsoever of good cheer this
+desert may have to offer, and present to you the companionship of
+Villiers de Croix. It may not seem much, yet I pledge you that kings
+have valued it ere now."
+
+It was a form of introduction most unfamiliar to me, and seemed
+bristling with audacity and conceit; but I recognized the heartiness of
+his purpose, and hastened to make fit response.
+
+"I meet you with much pleasure," I answered, accepting the proffered
+hand. "I am John Wayland."
+
+The graceful recklessness of the fellow, so conspicuous in each word
+and action, strongly attracted me. I confess I liked him from his
+first utterance, although mentally, and perhaps morally as well, no two
+men of our age could possibly be more unlike.
+
+"Wayland?" he mused, with a shrug, as if the sound of the word was
+unpleasant. "Wayland?--'t is a harsh name to my ears, yet I have heard
+it mentioned before in England as that of a great family. You are
+English, then?"
+
+I shook my head emphatically; for the old wounds of controversy and
+battle were then being opened afresh, and the feeling of antagonism ran
+especially high along the border.
+
+"I am of this country," I protested with earnestness, "and we call
+ourselves Americans."
+
+He laughed easily, evidently no little amused at my retort, twisting
+his small mustache through his slender fingers as he eyed me.
+
+"Ah! but that is all one to me; it is ever the blood and not the name
+that counts, my friend. Now I am French by many a generation, Gascon
+by birth, and bearing commission in the Guard of the Emperor; yet
+sooth, 't is the single accursed drop of Irish blood within my veins
+that brings me across the great seas and maroons me in this howling
+wilderness. But sit down, Monsieur. There will be both food and wine
+served presently, and I would speak with you more at ease."
+
+As he spoke he flung himself upon a low settee, carelessly motioning me
+toward another.
+
+"On my word," he said, eying me closely as I crossed over to the bench,
+"but you are a big fellow for your years, and 't is strength, not
+flabby flesh, or I know not how to judge. You would make a fine figure
+of a soldier, John Wayland. Napoleon perchance might offer you a
+marshal's baton, just to see you in the uniform. _Parbleu_! I have
+seen stranger things happen."
+
+"You are now connected with the French army?" I questioned, wondering
+what could have brought him to this remote spot.
+
+"Ay, a Captain of the Guard, yet an exile, banished from the court on
+account of my sins. _Sacre_! but there are others, Monsieur. I have
+but one fault, my friend,--grave enough, I admit, yet but one, upon my
+honor, and even that is largely caused by that drop of Irish blood. I
+love the ladies over-well, I sometimes fear; and once I dared to look
+too high for favor."
+
+"And have you stopped here long?"
+
+"Here--at Hawkins's, mean you? Ten days, as I live; would you believe
+I could ever have survived so grievous a siege?" and he looked
+appealingly about upon the bare apartment. "Ten days of Hawkins and of
+Sam, Monsieur; ay! and of Ol' Burns; of sky, and woods, and river, with
+never so much as a real white man even to drink liquor with. By Saint
+Louis! but I shall be happy enough to face you across the board
+to-night. Yet surely it is not your purpose to halt here long?"
+
+"Only until I succeed in joining some party travelling westward to the
+Illinois country."
+
+"No! is that your aim? 'T is my trip also, if Fate be ever kind enough
+to bring hither a guide. _Sacre_! there was one here but now, as odd a
+devil as ever bore rifle, and he hath taken the western trail alone,
+for he hated me from the start. That was Ol' Burns. Know you him?"
+
+"'T was he who brought the message that sent me here; yet he said
+little of his own journey. But you mention not where you are bound?"
+
+"I seek Fort Dearborn, on the Great Lake."
+
+"That likewise is to be the end of my journey. You go to explore?"
+
+"Explore? Faith, no," and he patted his hand upon the bench most
+merrily. "There are but two reasons to my mind important enough to
+lure a French gentleman into such a hole as this, and send him
+wandering through your backwoods,--either war or love, Monsieur; and I
+know of no war that calleth me."
+
+Love, as he thus spoke of it, was almost an unknown term to me then;
+and, in truth, I scarcely grasped the full significance of his meaning.
+
+"You seek some lady, then, at Fort Dearborn?" I asked, for his tone
+seemed to invite the inquiry.
+
+"Ay!" with quickened enthusiasm; "'tis there Toinette has hidden
+herself for this year or more,--Toinette, on my word as a French
+soldier, the fairest maid of Montreal. I have just discovered her
+whereabouts, yet I shall win her ere I traverse these trails again, or
+I am not Villiers de Croix."
+
+"I travel thither to bring back a little orphan child with me," I
+explained simply, in response to his look, "and will most gladly aid
+you where I can."
+
+Before he could answer, Hawkins, a gaunt, silent frontiersman, together
+with Sam, entered the room, bearing between them our evening meal.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+CAPTAIN WELLS OF FORT WAYNE
+
+We tarried at the table a considerable time,--not because of any
+tempting variety in the repast, as the food furnished was of the
+coarsest, but for the sake of companionship, and because we discovered
+much of passing interest to converse about. De Croix had travelled
+widely, and had seen a great variety of life both in camp and court.
+He proved a vivacious fellow, full of amusing anecdote,--a bottle of
+rich wine drawn from his own private stock so stimulating his
+imagination that I had little to do but sit and listen. Yet he
+contrived to learn from me,--how, I hardly know,--the simple story of
+my life, and, indeed, assumed a certain air of patronizing superiority,
+boasting unduly of his wider experience and achievements in a way that
+somewhat nettled me at last, as I began to comprehend that he was
+merely showing off his genteel graces the better to exhibit his
+contempt for my provincial narrowness. I did not permit this really to
+anger me, for our views upon such matters were totally different, and I
+could not help feel admiration for the brilliant and audacious fellow.
+
+The black waited upon us while we ate and drank, moving noiselessly
+across the rough floor, so keenly observant of his master's slightest
+wish as to convince me the latter possessed a temper which upon
+occasion burst its bounds. Yet now he was surely in the best of
+humors; and with the coming of our second bottle, after the remains of
+the repast had been removed, he sang several love-songs in his native
+tongue, the meaning of which I could only guess at.
+
+"Saint Guise!" he exclaimed at last, flinging one booted foot over the
+table corner. "You are a very sphinx of a fellow. You deny being
+English, yet you have all the silence of that nation. I am hungry,
+Monsieur, for the sweet sound of the French tongue."
+
+"'T is a language of which I know little," I answered, striving to
+speak pleasantly, although his manner was becoming less and less to my
+liking. "I have met with your _coureurs de bois_ in plenty, and picked
+up sufficient of their common phrases to enable me to converse on
+ordinary themes with them; yet I confess I find it difficult to follow
+your speech."
+
+"_Canaille_," he returned, in tone of undisguised contempt, "Canadian
+half-breeds, the very offscourings of our people. _Sacre_! but you
+should know us at home, Monsieur,--we are the conquerors of the world!"
+
+I wish I could picture to you how he said this. Simple as it now
+reads, he made it vital with meaning. The insolent boast was uttered
+with such a swagger that my face instantly flushed, and he noted it.
+
+"Is it not true, Monsieur?" he asked quickly, his own blood heated by
+the wine. "I tell you, the whole of Europe has trembled, and will
+again, at the nod of our Napoleon. Why, even over here we had to come
+with our legions to help you repel the redcoats. Saint Guise! but it
+was the Frenchmen who made you a nation."
+
+"Ay! but only that they might revenge themselves upon England," I
+retorted blindly, "and the force sent merely hurried a result already
+inevitable; yet we gave you a slight touch of our own quality in '98
+that stung a bit, I warrant."
+
+"Bah! a ship or two. 'Twas well for you that our army was so closely
+engaged elsewhere, or the story would have a different ending."
+
+We were both of us upon our feet by this time, glaring at each other
+across the board, our faces hot with the ill-restrained passion of
+youth. A word more from either would surely have precipitated matters;
+but before it could be spoken the door leading into the hallway was
+hurriedly flung aside, and, without apology for the intrusion, two men
+strode forward into the glare of light.
+
+"Serve supper here, Hawkins," commanded the first, his back still
+turned toward us. "Anything you may chance to have in the house,--only
+let there be little delay."
+
+He was a tall, dark-featured man, smoothly shaven, as swarthy as an
+Indian, with stern dark eyes, thick coarse hair, and an abrupt manner
+born of long command. His companion, of lighter build and younger
+face, was attired in a travel-stained uniform of blue and buff; but he
+who was evidently the leader was so completely wrapped within the folds
+of a riding-cloak as to reveal nothing of rank other than his
+unmistakable military presence and bearing. Turning from the door, he
+swept a penetrating glance over us, loosening the clasp of his cloak as
+he did so.
+
+"I regret having thoughtlessly interrupted your quarrel, gentlemen," he
+said brusquely, "but this appears to be the sole excuse for a
+public-room in the place. However, my services are at your command if
+they be desired in any way."
+
+De Croix laughed, perfectly at his ease in a moment.
+
+"'T is scarce so serious," he explained lightly. "A mere interchange
+of compliments over the respective merits of our nations in war."
+
+The stranger looked at him intently, and with some manifest disapproval.
+
+"And yours, no doubt, was France," he said shortly.
+
+De Croix bowed, his hand upon his heart.
+
+"I have worn her uniform, Monsieur."
+
+"I thought as much, and fear my sympathies may be altogether with your
+antagonist in the controversy. Yet what's the use of wasting life like
+that? Surely there is fighting enough in this world of ours for such
+young blades, without inventing cause for quarrel. Come, sit down once
+more, and join with us in whatsoever cheer our landlord may provide."
+
+As he spoke, he flung aside his cloak, revealing beneath merely the
+well-worn dress of a frontiersman, with an army sword-belt buckled
+about the waist.
+
+"Come, Walter," he called to his companion, who remained standing,
+"there is to be no touch of ceremony here to-night. Gentlemen, I am
+Captain Wells, formerly of the army, now Indian agent at Fort Wayne;
+and this is Sergeant Jordan."
+
+The Frenchman bowed gracefully, and extended a card across the table.
+The other glanced at it carelessly.
+
+"Ah! De Croix; pleased to meet you. Think I heard some of our
+officers speak of seeing you a month ago at Detroit,--McBain or Ramsey,
+I have forgotten which."
+
+"I recall a game of cards with a Lieutenant Ramsey, a rather choleric
+Scotchman, with a magnificent capacity for strong whiskey."
+
+The Captain turned inquiringly toward me, and I hastened to name myself.
+
+"Wayland, did you say?" he asked, with deepened interest. "'T is not a
+common appellation, yet I once knew a Major by that name in Wayne's
+command."
+
+"My father, sir," I asserted proudly.
+
+With quick impulsiveness he extended his hand.
+
+"As noble a soldier as I have ever known," he exclaimed heartily. "I
+served with him in two campaigns. But what are you two young fellows
+doing here? for it would be hard to conceive of a more disheartening
+place of residence. Surely, De Croix, you are not permanently located
+in this delightful spot?"
+
+"The saints forbid!" ejaculated the other, with an expression of horror
+that caused the younger officer to smile. "Yet I have already survived
+ten days of it. We seek to join some party bound westward, either to
+Fort Dearborn or beyond."
+
+The elder officer smiled gravely, as his stern eyes wandered
+thoughtfully over our faces in the candle-light.
+
+"You will scarcely find those who go beyond," he said, at last, slowly.
+"That is our extreme frontier; and even this post, I hear it rumored,
+is to be abandoned shortly. Indeed, I am now proceeding thither,
+hoping to escort a niece safely eastward because of that very
+probability. I can offer you naught save companionship and guidance
+upon the journey; yet if you needs must go, you may ride with us and
+welcome. But 't is my first duty to advise you strongly against it."
+
+"You look for trouble?" I asked, for his words and manner were grave.
+
+"I am not one easily alarmed," he answered, scanning our faces as we
+fronted him; "but I have lived long among the Indians, and know them
+well. This new war with England will not pass without atrocities along
+the border, and in my judgment we are now on the eve of a general
+uprising of the savages. It will surely come with the first news of
+British success, and 't is the fear of reverses at Dearborn that has
+hurried me westward. You, sir," and he turned toward me, "are young,
+but it is evident you have been bred to the frontier, so you will
+realize what it may mean to us if we be caught in the Illinois country
+by such an uprising."
+
+I bowed, deeply impressed by his earnestness.
+
+"I have, indeed, seen something of savage warfare, and know much of its
+horror," I replied stoutly. "Yet what you say of the possible future
+only makes more urgent my duty to press on."
+
+"And you?" he asked De Croix.
+
+"Faith, Captain," was the instant reply, "it is the gentle hand of love
+which leads me westward, and never yet did a true Frenchman hesitate in
+such a quest because danger lurked between."
+
+Wells smiled grimly.
+
+"Then my conscience is left clear," he exclaimed heartily; "and if you
+ride with me to death, 'tis of your own choosing. However, glad enough
+we have cause to be thus to gain two more fighting men. I have a party
+of Miamis travelling with me, and I doubt not there will be ample work
+for all before we return. Here comes supper; let us eat, drink, and be
+merry, even though to-morrow it be our fate to die. 'T is the best
+border philosophy."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THROUGH THE HEART OF THE FOREST
+
+We lingered long over the wine,--for that which De Croix had furnished
+proved excellent, and greatly stimulated our discourse. Yet, I must
+confess, it was drunk chiefly by the Frenchman and Jordan; for Wells
+barely touched his glass, while I had never acquired a taste for such
+liquor. De Croix waxed somewhat boastful, toward the last; but we paid
+small heed to him, for I was deeply interested in Captain Wells's
+earlier experiences among the savages, which he related gravely and
+with much detail. Jordan proved himself a reckless, roistering young
+fellow, full of high spirits when in liquor; yet I formed an impression
+that he stood well in his commander's favor, for the latter warned him
+kindly to be more abstemious.
+
+However late it may have been when we finally sought rest, we were
+early astir the next morning. I despatched Seth upon his return
+journey to the farm, bearing under his girdle as cheerful a note of
+farewell as I could frame; and then, though it was scarce later than
+sun-up, the rest of us were fairly upon the westward trail. There were
+in the party thirty Miami Indians, strong, lusty-looking warriors, most
+of them. The larger portion of them travelled in our advance, under
+command of one of their chiefs; a smaller detachment acting in similar
+manner as a rear-guard. The white men, as well as the negro, who
+controlled a pack animal heavily laden with his master's baggage, were
+on horseback; and it pleased me greatly,--for I was young and easily
+flattered,--to have Captain Wells rein in his horse at my side as soon
+as we were safely across the ford, leaving the Frenchman either to
+companion with Jordan or ride alone.
+
+I looked at De Croix curiously, as he moved forward with slow
+carelessness in our front, for he had kept the entire company waiting
+outside the house for half an hour in the gray dawn while he curled and
+powdered his hair. Doubtless this was what so disgusted Wells, whose
+long black locks were worn in a simple queue, tied somewhat negligently
+with a dark cord. I almost smiled at the scowl upon his swarthy face,
+as he contemplated the fashionably attired dandy, whose bright-colored
+raiment was conspicuous against the dark forest-leaves that walled us
+round.
+
+"I have heard it claimed these gay French beaux fight well when need
+arises," he commented at last, thoughtfully; "but 't is surely a poor
+place here for flaunting ribbons and curling locks. Possibly my fine
+gentleman yonder may have occasion to test his mettle before we ride
+back again. Sure it is that if that time ever comes he will not look
+so sweet."
+
+"You make me feel that we go forward into real peril," I said,
+wondering that he should seem so fearful of the outcome. "Have you
+special reason?"
+
+"The Miamis have already been approached by Indian runners, and their
+young men are restless. It was only because I am the adopted son of
+Big Turtle, and a recognized warrior of their tribe, that these have
+consented to accompany me; and I fear they may desert at the first sign
+of a hostile meeting," he answered gravely. "There is an Indian
+conspiracy forming, and a most dangerous one, involving, so far as I
+can learn, every tribe north of the Ohio. Now that war with England
+has actually been declared, there can no longer be doubt that the
+chiefs will take sides with the British. They have everything to gain
+and little to lose by such action. The rumor was at Fort Wayne, even
+before we left, that Mackinac had already fallen; and if that prove
+true, every post west of the Alleghanies is in danger. I fear that
+death and flame will sweep the whole frontier; and I frankly
+acknowledge, Wayland, my only hope in this expedition is that, by hard
+travel, we may be able to reach Chicagou and return again before the
+outbreak comes. Tom Burns, an old scout of Wayne's, and a settler in
+that country, was at Fort Wayne a month since with an urgent message
+from the commandant at Dearborn. I tell you frankly, it will be touch
+and go with us."
+
+"Chicagou?" I questioned, for the word was one I had heard but once
+before and was of an odd sound.
+
+"Ay! old Au Sable called it the Chicagou portage long before the fort
+named Dearborn was ever established there. 'T is the name the French
+applied to a small river entering the Great Lake from the west at that
+point."
+
+"Have you journeyed there before?"
+
+"Once, in 1803. I held Indian council on the spot, and helped lay out
+the government reservation. 'T is a strange flat country, with much
+broken land extending to the northward."
+
+Little by little our conversation lapsed into silence; for the narrow
+trail we followed was a most difficult one, and at times taxed our
+ingenuity to the utmost. It led through dense dark woods, fortunately
+free from underbrush, skirted the uncertain edges of numerous marshes
+in the soft ooze of which the hoofs of our horses sank dangerously, and
+for several miles followed the sinuous course of a small but rapid
+stream, the name of which I have forgotten. There were few openings in
+the thick forest-growth, and the matted branches overhead, interlaced
+with luxuriant wild vines, so completely shut out all vestige of the
+sun that we toiled onward, hour after hour, in continuous twilight.
+
+What mysterious signs our guides followed, I was not sufficiently
+expert in woodcraft to determine. To my eyes,--and I sought to observe
+with care,--there was nowhere visible the slightest sign that others
+had ever preceded us; it was all unbroken, virgin wilderness, marked
+only by slow centuries of growth. The accumulation of moss on the
+tree-trunks, as well as the shading of the leaves, told me that we
+continued to journey almost directly westward; and there was no
+perceptible hesitancy in our steady progress, save as we deviated from
+it here and there because of natural obstacles too formidable to be
+directly surmounted.
+
+We skirted immense trees, veritable monarchs of the ages, hoary with
+time, grim guardians of such forest solitudes; climbed long hills
+roughened by innumerable boulders with sharp edges hidden beneath the
+fallen leaves, that lamed our horses; or descended into dark and gloomy
+ravines, dank with decaying vegetation, finally halting for a brief
+meal upon the southern edge of a small lake, the water of which was as
+clear and blue as the cloudless August sky that arched it. The sand of
+the shore where we rested was white as snow, yet De Croix had his man
+spread a cloak upon it before he ventured to sit down, and with care
+tucked a lace handkerchief about his throat to prevent stray crumbs
+from soiling the delicate yellow of his waistcoat.
+
+"One might fancy this was to be your wedding day, Monsieur," observed
+Wells, sarcastically, as he marked these dainty preparations, and noted
+with disgust the attentive negro hovering near. "We are not perfumed
+courtiers dancing at the court of Versailles."
+
+De Croix glanced about him carelessly.
+
+"_Mon Dieu_, no," he said, tapping the lid of a richly chased silver
+snuff-box with his slender fingers. "Yet, my dear friend, a French
+gentleman cannot wholly forget all that belongs to the refinements of
+society, even in the heart of the wilderness. Sam, by any foul chance
+did you overlook the lavender water?"
+
+"No, sah; it am safe in de saddle-bags."
+
+"And the powder-puff, the small hand-mirror, and the curling-iron?"
+
+"I saw to ebery one ob dem, sah."
+
+De Croix gave a deep sigh of relief, and rested back upon the cloak,
+negligently crossing his legs.
+
+"Captain," he remarked slowly and thoughtfully, "you 've no idea the
+trouble that negro is to me. Would you believe it? he actually left my
+nail-brush behind at Detroit, and not another to be had for love or
+money this side of Montreal! And only last night he mislaid a box of
+rouge, and, by Saint Denis! I hardly dare hope there is so much as an
+ounce of it in the whole party."
+
+"I rather suspect not," was the somewhat crusty reply; "yet if a bit of
+bear's grease could be made to serve your turn, we might possibly find
+some among us."
+
+"I know not its virtue," admitted the Frenchman gravely; "yet if it
+reddens the lips it might be useful. But that which I had came from
+the shop of Jessold in Paris, and is beyond all price."
+
+We were ten days upon this forest journey, from the time of our
+crossing the Maumee; and they were hard days, even to those of us long
+habituated to the hardships of border travel. Indeed, I know few forms
+of exertion that so thoroughly test the mettle of men as journeying
+across the wilderness. There are no artificial surroundings, either to
+inspire or restrain; and insensibly humanity returns to natural
+conditions, permitting the underlying savage to gain ascendency. I
+have seen more than one seemingly polished gentleman, resplendent with
+all the graces of the social code, degenerate into a surly brute with
+only a few hours of such isolation and the ceaseless irritation of the
+trail. Yet I must acknowledge that De Croix accepted it all without a
+murmur, and as became a man. His entire plaint was over the luxuries
+he must forego, and he made far more ado about a bit of dust soiling
+his white linen than about any real hardship of the march. 'T is my
+memory that he rather grew upon us; for his natural spirits were so
+high that he sang where others swore, and found cause for amusement and
+laughter in much that tested sorely even the Indian-like patience of
+Wells. He was like a boy, this gayly perfumed dandy of the French
+court; but beneath his laces and ribbons, his affectations and
+conceits, there hid a stout heart that bade him smile where other men
+would lie down and die. He companioned mostly with Jordan as we
+journeyed, for Wells never could become reconciled to his mincing ways;
+yet I confess now that I began to value him greatly, and longed more
+than once to join with the two who rode in our advance, cheering their
+wearisome way with quips of fancy and snatches of song. He knew it
+too, the tantalizing rascal, and would frequently send back a biting
+squib over his shoulder, hoping thus to draw me away from the silent
+grim-faced soldier beside whom I held place.
+
+It was truly a rough and wild journey, full enough of hardship, and
+without adventure to give zest to the ceaseless toil. I know now that
+we made a wide detour to the southward, trusting thus to avoid any
+possible contact with prowling bands of either Pottawattomies or
+Wyandots, whom our friendly Miamis seemed greatly to dread. This took
+us far from the regular trail, rough and ill-defined as that was, and
+plunged us into ah untrodden wilderness; so that there were times when
+we fairly had to cut our way through the twisted forest branches and
+tangled brakes of cane with tomahawks and hunting-knives. We skirted
+rocky bluffs, toiled painfully over fallen timber, or waded ankle deep
+in softened clay, in the black gloomy shadows of dense woods which
+seemed interminable, meeting with nothing human, yet constantly
+startling wild game from the hidden coverts, and feeling more and more,
+as we advanced, the loneliness and danger of our situation,--realizing
+that each league we travelled only added to the length and peril of our
+retreat if ever disaster came or Fort Dearborn were found deserted.
+
+Captain Wells, naturally grave and silent from his long training among
+savages, grew more and more reticent and watchful as we progressed,
+riding often at my side for hours without uttering a word, his keen
+eyes warily searching the dark openings upon every hand as if
+suspecting that each spot of gloom might prove the chosen place for an
+ambuscade. Our Indian allies moved like shadows, gliding over the
+ground noiselessly; and the occasional outbursts of merriment from De
+Croix and his equally reckless companion grew gradually less frequent,
+and appeared more forced. The constant and never-ending toil of our
+progress, the depressing gloom of the sombre primeval forest on every
+side of us, the knowledge of possible peril lurking in each league of
+this haunted silence, weighed upon us all, and at last closed the lips
+of even the most jovial of our number.
+
+It was the tenth day, as I remember,--though it may have been later,
+for I have no writing to guide me concerning dates,--when we emerged
+into a broad valley, treeless save for a thin fringe of dwarfed growth
+skirting the bank of a shallow stream which ran almost directly
+westward. I cannot describe how sweet, after our gloomy journey, the
+sunlight appeared, as we first marked it play in golden waves over the
+long grass; or the relief we felt at being able to gaze ahead once more
+and see something of the country that we were traversing. 'Twas like a
+sudden release from prison. Our jaded horses felt with us the
+exhilaration of the change, and moved with greater sprightliness than
+they had shown for days. As the sun began its circle downward, vast
+rolling hills of white and yellow sand arose upon the right of our line
+of march,--huge mounds, many of them, glistening in the sunshine, some
+jagged at the summit, others rounded as if by art, so unusual in form
+and presence that I ventured to address our leader regarding them, as
+he rode with his head bent low and a far-off look in his eyes.
+
+"The sand?" he questioned, glancing up as if startled at the sound of
+my voice. "Why, it has been cast there by the stormy waves of the
+Great Lake, my lad, and beaten into those strange and fantastic shapes
+by the action of the wind. Doubtless 'tis the work of centuries of
+storms."
+
+"Are we, then, so close to the lake?" I asked eagerly,--for I had never
+yet seen so large a body of water, and his description fired my
+imagination.
+
+"'T is but just beyond those dunes yonder, and will be still nearer
+when we come to camp. Possibly you might reach the shore before dark
+if you exercise care,--for there is danger of becoming lost in that
+sand desert. Those hills seem all alike when once you are among them."
+
+"What is it that so greatly disturbs your Miamis?" I ventured to ask,
+for I had been noticing for some time that they were restless and
+travelling poorly. "They have been counselling now for two hours."
+
+He glanced aside at me in apparent surprise.
+
+"Why, boy, I thought you were bred to the border; and can you ask me
+such a question? Do you observe nothing, like that fine gentleman
+yonder? What have we been following since first we entered this
+valley?"
+
+"An old Indian trail."
+
+"True," he exclaimed, "and one that has been traversed by a large
+war-party, bound west, within twelve hours."
+
+"How know you this?"
+
+"By a hundred signs far plainer than print will ever be to my eyes. In
+faith, I thought those fellows out yonder would have summoned me to
+council long ere this, instead of threshing it out among themselves.
+They are bolder warriors than I deemed, though they will doubtless
+revolt in earnest when we camp. We shall have to guard them well
+to-night."
+
+As he paused, his eyes fixed anxiously upon our Indian allies, De Croix
+began to hum a popular tune of the day, riding meanwhile, hat in hand,
+with one foot out of the stirrup to beat the time. Then Jordan caught
+up the refrain, and sang a verse. I saw one or two of the older
+Indians glance around at him in grave displeasure.
+
+"The young fools!" muttered Wells, uneasily. "I shall enjoy seeing if
+that French popinjay keeps all of his fine airs when the hour for stern
+work comes."
+
+He lifted his voice.
+
+"Jordan!"
+
+The young soldier instantly ceased his song, and turned in his saddle
+to glance back.
+
+"The time has come when I must insist on less noise, and more decorum
+upon the march," Wells said sternly. "This is not Fort Wayne, nor is
+our road devoid of danger. Captain de Croix, I shall have to request
+you also to cease your singing for the present."
+
+There was that in his voice and manner which forbade remark, and we
+rode on silently. I asked:
+
+"But you have not explained to me how you learned all this of which you
+spoke?"
+
+"By the use of my eyes, of course. It is all simple; there are marks
+beside the beaten trail, as well as in its track, which prove clearly
+the party ahead of us to be moving westward, that it travelled rapidly,
+and was certainly not less than a hundred strong, with ponies and
+lodge-poles. Not more than a league back we passed the evidences of a
+camp that had not been deserted longer than twelve hours; and when we
+crossed the river, a feather from a war-bonnet was lying in the grass.
+These are small details, yet they tell the story. That feather, for
+instance, was dropped from a Pottawattomie head-dress, and no doubt
+there are warriors among those Indians yonder who could name the chief
+who wore it. It simply means, my lad, that the savages are gathering
+in toward Dearborn, and we may reach there all too late."
+
+"Is the way yet long?" and my eyes sought the horizon, where the sun
+hung like a red ball of fire.
+
+"We should be there by the morrow," he answered, "for we are now
+rounding the head of the Great Lake. I wish to God I might see what
+fate awaits us there."
+
+Young and thoughtless as I was in those days, I could not fail to
+realize the depth of feeling which swayed this stern, experienced man;
+and I rode on beside him, questioning no more.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+FROM THE JAWS OF DEATH
+
+I think it must be in the blood of all of New England birth to love the
+sea. They may never have seen it, nor even heard its wild, stern
+music; yet the fascination of great waters is part of their heritage.
+The thought of that vast inland ocean, of the magnitude and sublimity
+of which I had only the vaguest conception, haunted me all that
+afternoon; and I scarcely removed my eyes from those oddly constructed
+mounds of drifted sand, striving vainly to gain, through some
+depression between them, a fleeting glimpse of the restless waters that
+had helped to shape them into such fantastic forms.
+
+As the sun sank, angry red in our faces, presaging a storm, the course
+of the little stream we had been following drew in closer toward these
+grotesque piles, and the trail we followed became narrower, with the
+sluggish current pressing upon one side and that odd bank of gleaming
+sand upon the other. In a little open space, where quite a carpet of
+coarse yellowish grass had found lodgment, beneath the protecting
+shadow of a knot of cottonwoods, we finally made camp, and proceeded to
+prepare our evening meal. Determined to strike north through those
+guarding sand-dunes, and reach the shore of the lake if possible before
+final darkness fell, I hastily crowded my pockets with food, and looked
+eagerly around for some congenial companion. Captain Wells, whom I
+should have preferred to be with me, was deep in conference with one of
+the Miami chiefs, and not to be disturbed; Jordan had seemingly been
+detailed to the command of the night-guard; so, as a last resort, I
+turned aside and sought De Croix. I found him seated cross-legged on a
+blanket beneath one of the cottonwoods, a silver-backed mirror propped
+against a tree-butt in his front, while the obsequious darkey was
+deliberately combing out his long hair and fashioning it anew. The
+Frenchman glanced up at me with a welcoming smile of rare good-humor.
+
+"Ah, sober-face! and have you at last mustered courage to break away
+from the commander of this most notable company?" he cried mockingly.
+"'T is passing strange he does not chain you to his saddle! By Saint
+Guise! 'twould indeed be the only way in which so dull a cavalier would
+ever hold me loyal to his whims. Friend Wayland, I scarce thought you
+would ever thus honor me again; and yet, 't is true, I have had an
+ambition within my heart ever since we first met. 'T is to cause you
+to fling aside those rough habiliments of the wilderness, and attire
+yourself in garments more becoming civilized man. Would that I might
+induce you, even now, to permit Sam to rearrange those heavy blond
+locks _à la Pompadour_. Bless me! but it would make a new man of you."
+
+"Such is not at all my desire, Monsieur," I answered, civilly. "I came
+now merely to learn if you would walk with me through these dunes of
+sand before the daylight fades."
+
+He looked out, idly enough, across that dreary expanse of desolation,
+and shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Use the other powder, Sam, the lighter colored," he murmured
+languidly, as if the sight had wearied him; "and mind you drop not so
+much as a pinch upon the waistcoat."
+
+Then he lifted his eyes inquiringly to mine.
+
+"For what?" he asked.
+
+"To look forth upon the Great Lake. Captain Wells tells me 't is but a
+brief and safe walk from here to the shore-line."
+
+"The lake?--water?" and the expression upon his face made me smile.
+"_Mon Dieu_, man! have you become crazed by the hard march? What have
+I ever said in our brief intercourse that could cause you to conceive I
+care greatly for that? If it were only wine, now!"
+
+"You have no desire to go with me, then?"
+
+"Lay out the red tie, Sam; no, the one with the white spots in it, and
+the small curling-iron. No, Monsieur; what you ask is impossible. I
+travel to the west for higher purpose than to gaze upon a heaving waste
+of water. _Sacre_! did I not have a full hundred days of such pleasure
+when first I left France? My poor stomach has not fairly settled yet
+from its fierce churning. Know ye not, Master Wayland, that we hope to
+be at this Fort Dearborn upon the morrow, and 't is there I meet again
+the fair Toinette? Saints! but I must look my best at such a time, not
+worn and haggard from tramping through the sand. She was ever a most
+critical maid in such matters, and has not likely changed. 'T is
+curled too high upon the right brow, you black imp! and, as I live,
+there is one hair you have missed entirely."
+
+Realizing the uselessness of waiting longer, I turned my back upon his
+vanity, and strode off alone. It is not my nature to swerve from a
+purpose merely because others differ in desires; and I was now
+determined to carry out my plan. I took one of the narrow depressions
+between two mounds of sand and plunged resolutely forward, endeavoring
+to shape my course as directly northward as the peculiarities of the
+path would admit. To my mind, there was little to fear from the
+hostile Indians, as every sign proved them to be hastening westward in
+advance of us; while I was too long accustomed to adventure to be
+easily confused, even in the midst of that lonely desolation.
+
+I soon found the walking difficult; for I sank to the ankles with each
+step, while the soft sliding sand rolled beneath me so as to yield no
+solid foothold. The irregularity of the mounds continually blocked my
+passage, and caused me to deviate in direction, so that I grew somewhat
+bewildered, the entire surface bearing such uniformity of outline as to
+afford little guide. Yet I held to my original course fairly well, for
+I could pilot somewhat by the dim north star; and it was not long
+before my alert ears caught the pounding of surf along the shore-line.
+Much encouraged, I pressed forward with greater rapidity, ignoring the
+lanes between the dunes, and clambering over the mounds themselves in
+my eagerness to reach the lake before the complete closing down of
+night.
+
+At last I topped a particularly high ridge that felt solid to the feet;
+and as I did so the wind came, hard and biting, against my face.
+There, just below me, not fifty feet away, were rolling the great
+waves, white-capped and roaring, pounding like vast sledges upon the
+anvil of the sand. My entire being thrilled at the majestic sight, and
+for the moment I forgot everything as I gazed away across those
+restless, heaving waters, seemingly without limit, stretching forth
+into the dim northward as far as the eye could reach, until water and
+sky imperceptibly met and blended. Each advancing wave, racing toward
+the beach, was a white-lipped messenger of mystery; and the vast
+tumultuous sea, rolling in toward me out of that dark unknown, with its
+deep voice of thunder and high-bursting spray, breathed the sublimest
+lessons of the Infinite to my soul. It awed, impressed, silenced with
+the sense of its solemn power. No dream of ocean grandeur had ever
+approached the reality now outspread before me, as this vast inland sea
+tossed and quivered to the lashing of the storm-wind that swept its
+surface into fury.
+
+To the left and right of where I stood motionless, curved the
+shore-line, a seemingly endless succession of white shining sand-hills,
+with the sloping shingle up which the huge breakers tossed and rolled
+in continuous thunder and foam, rising, breaking, receding, chasing
+each other in gigantic play. How savagely strong it all looked! what
+uncontrollable majesty lived in every line of the scene! The very
+suggestion of tremendous power in it was, to my imagination,
+immeasurably increased by its unutterable loneliness, its seemingly
+total absence of life; for not a fin rose above the surface, not a wing
+brushed the air overhead. The sun, sinking slowly behind the rim of
+sand, shot one golden-red ray far out into that tumbling waste, forming
+a slender bridge of ever-changing light that seemed to rest suspended
+upon the breaking crests of the waves it spanned. Then, gradually,
+stealthily, silently, the denser curtain of the twilight drew closer
+and closer, and my vista narrowed, as the shadows swept toward me like
+black-robed ghosts.
+
+I turned about reluctantly, to retrace my steps while the dim light yet
+lingered. Some unseen angel of mercy it must have been that bade me
+pause, and led me gently down the steep bank to the waters edge, where
+the sharp spray lashed my cheeks. If this be not the cause, then I
+know not why I went; or why, once being there, I should have turned to
+the right, and rounded the edge of the little bay. Yet all of this I
+did; and God knows that many a time since I have thanked Him for it
+upon my knees.
+
+I saw first the thing bobbing up and down behind a bare wave-washed
+rock that lifted a hoary crown close beside the water's edge. A branch
+from off some tree, I thought, until I had taken a half-dozen curious
+steps nearer, and felt my heart bound as I knew it to be a boat. My
+first thought, of course, was of hostile Indians; and I swept the
+sand-hills anxiously for any other sign of human presence. The world
+about me was soundless except for the ceaseless roaring of the waves,
+and there was not even a leaf within my sight to flutter. I crept
+forward cautiously, seeing no footprints on the smooth sand, until my
+searching eyes rested upon a white hand, dangling, as if lifeless, over
+the boat's gunwale. Forgetting everything else in the excitement of
+this discovery, I sprang hastily forward and peered within the boat.
+
+It was an awkward and rudely-formed water-craft, with neither mast nor
+oars, yet of fair size, broad-beamed and seaworthy. In the forward
+part lay the body of a woman; curled up and resting upon the boat's
+bottom, the head buried upon the broad seat so that no face was
+visible, with one hand hidden beneath, the other outstretched above the
+rail. So huddled was her posture that I could distinguish few details
+in the fading light; yet I noted that she wore a white upper garment,
+and that her thick hair flowed in a dense black mass about her
+shoulders.
+
+For a moment I stood there helpless, believing I gazed upon death. She
+either moved slightly, or the waves rocked the boat so as to somewhat
+disturb her posture. That semblance of life sent my blood leaping once
+more within my veins, and I leaned over and touched her cautiously.
+
+"Oh, go away! Please go away!" she cried, not loudly, but with a
+stress of utterance that caused me to start back half in terror. "I am
+not afraid of you, but either take my soul or go away and leave me."
+
+"For whom do you mistake me?" I asked, my hand closing now over hers.
+
+"For another devil come out of the black night to torture me afresh!"
+she answered, never once moving even to my touch. "Ah, what legions
+there must be to send forth so many after the soul of one poor girl!
+'T is not that I shrink from the end. Death! why, have I not died a
+hundred deaths already? Yet do I trust the Christ and Mother Mary.
+But why does the angel of their mercy hold back from me so long?"
+
+Was she crazed, driven mad by some extremity of suffering at which I
+could only guess? That oarless boat, beached amid the desolation of
+sand and the waste of water, alone told a story to make the heart sick.
+I hesitated, not knowing what I had best say. She lifted her head
+slowly, and gazed at me. I caught one glimpse of a pale young face
+framed in masses of black dishevelled hair, and saw large dark eyes
+that seemed to glow with a strange fire.
+
+"You,--you cannot be a devil also," she said, stammeringly. "You do
+not look like those others,--are you a man?"
+
+I bowed in silence, astounded by her words and appearance.
+
+"Yet you are not of the garrison,--not of Dearborn. I have never seen
+your face before. Yet you are surely a man, and white. Holy Mother!
+can it indeed be that you have come to save me?"
+
+"I am here to serve you by every means in my power," I answered
+soberly, for the wildness of her speech almost frightened me. "God, I
+truly think, must have led me to you."
+
+Her wonderful eyes, questioning, anxious, doubtful, never once left my
+face.
+
+"Who are you? How came you here?"
+
+"I am named John Wayland," I replied, striving to speak as simply as
+might be, so that she would comprehend, "and form one of a small party
+travelling overland from the east toward the Fort. We are encamped
+yonder at the edge of the sand. I left the camp an hour ago, and
+wandered hither that I might look out upon the waters of the Great
+Lake; and here, through the strange providence of God, I have found
+you."
+
+She glanced apprehensively backward over her shoulder across the
+darkened waters, and her slight form shook.
+
+"Oh, please, take me away from it!" she cried, a note of undisguised
+terror in her voice, and her hands held out toward me in a pitiful
+gesture of appeal. "Oh, that horrible, cruel water! I have loved it
+in the past, but now I hate it; how horribly it has tortured me! Take
+me away, I beg,--anywhere, so that I can neither see nor hear it any
+more. It has neither heart nor soul." And she hid her face behind the
+streaming hair.
+
+"You will trust me, then?" I asked, for I had little knowledge of
+women. "You will go with me?"
+
+She flung the clinging locks back from her eyes, with an odd, imperious
+gesture which I thought most becoming, holding them in place with one
+hand, while extending the other frankly toward me.
+
+"Go with you? Yes," she replied, unhesitatingly. "I have known many
+men such as you are, men of the border, and have always felt free to
+trust them; they are far more true to helpless womanhood than many a
+perfumed cavalier. You have a face that speaks of honor and manliness.
+Yes, I will go with you gladly."
+
+I was deeply impressed by her sudden calmness, her rapid repression of
+that strange wildness of demeanor that had at first so marked her words
+and manner. As I partially lifted her from the boat to the sand, she
+staggered heavily, and would have fallen had I not instantly caught her
+to me. For a single moment her dark eyes looked up confidingly into
+mine, as she rested panting against my shoulder, and I could feel her
+slender form tremble within my arms.
+
+"You are ill--faint?" I questioned anxiously.
+
+She drew back from me with all gentleness, and did not venture again to
+attempt standing entirely without support.
+
+"I am ashamed so to exhibit my weakness," she murmured. "I fear I am
+greatly in need of food. What day is this?"
+
+"The twelfth of August."
+
+"And it was the night of the tenth when I drifted out of the mouth of
+the river. Ever since then I have been drifting, the sport of the
+winds and waves."
+
+"Sit you down here, then," I commanded, now fully awakened to her
+immediate need. "The sand is yet warm from the sun, and I have food
+with me in my pockets."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+A CIRCLE IN THE SAND
+
+I have since thought it almost providential that my food supply was so
+limited; for, after first asking me if I had eaten all I required, she
+fell upon it like a famished thing, and did not desist until all was
+gone. A threatening bank of dark cloud was creeping slowly up the
+northern sky as we were resting, but directly overhead the stars were
+shining brilliantly, yielding me sufficient light for the study of her
+face. She was certainly less than my own age by two or three years, a
+girl barely rounding into the slender beauty of her earliest womanhood,
+with hints of both in face and form. She was simply dressed, as,
+indeed, might naturally be expected in a wilderness far removed from
+marts of trade; but her clothing was of excellent texture, and became
+her well in spite of its recent exposure, while a bit of rather
+expensive lace at the throat and a flutter of gay ribbons about the
+wrists told plainly that she did not disdain the usual adornments of
+her sex. And this was quickly shown in another way. She had not yet
+completed her frugal meal when her mind reverted to her personal
+appearance, and she paused, with heightened color, to draw back her
+loosened hair and fasten it in place with a knot of scarlet cord. It
+was surely a winsome face that smiled up at me then.
+
+"I feel almost guilty of robbery," she said, "in taking all this food,
+which was no doubt intended for your own supper."
+
+"Merely what chanced to be left of it," I answered heartily. "Had I so
+much as dreamed this stretch of sand was to yield me such
+companionship, I should have stinted myself more."
+
+An expression of bewildered surprise crept into her eyes as I spoke.
+
+"Surely you are not a mere _coureur de bois_, as I supposed from your
+dress," she exclaimed. "Your expression is that of an educated
+gentleman."
+
+I smiled; for I was young enough to feel the force of her unconscious
+flattery.
+
+"I believe I can prove descent from an old and honorable race," I said;
+"but it has been my fortune to be reared in the backwoods, and whatever
+education has come to me I owe to the love and skill of my mother."
+
+My frankness pleased her, and she made no attempt to disguise her
+interest.
+
+"I am so glad you told me," she said simply. "My mother died when I
+was only ten, yet her memory has always been an inspiration. Are you a
+Protestant?"
+
+This unexpected question took me by surprise; yet I answered
+unhesitatingly, "Yes."
+
+"I was educated at the Ursuline Convent in Montreal. It was my
+mother's dearest wish that I should take the vows of that order, but I
+fear I am far too frivolous for so serious a life. I love happy things
+too well, and the beautiful outside world of men and women. I ran away
+from the Sisters, and then my father and I voyaged to this country,
+where we might lead a freer life together."
+
+"Here?" and I glanced questioningly about me into those darkening
+shadows which were momentarily hemming us in more closely.
+
+"To Fort Dearborn," she explained. "We came by boat through the
+straits at the north; and 'twas a trip to remember. My father brought
+out goods from Canada, and traded with the Indians. I have been in
+their villages. Once I was a week alone with a tribe of Sacs near
+Green Bay, and they called me the White Queen. I have met many famous
+warriors of the Wyandots and Pottawattomies, and have seen them dance
+at their council. Once I journeyed as far west as the Great River,
+across leagues and leagues of prairie," and her face lighted up at the
+remembrance. "Father said he thought I must be the first white woman
+who had ever travelled so far inland. We have been at Dearborn for
+nearly a year."
+
+She rose to her feet, and swept her eyes, with some anxiety, around
+upon dim mounds of sand that appeared more fantastic than ever in the
+darkness.
+
+"Had we not better be going?" she asked. "There is surely a storm
+gathering yonder."
+
+"Yes," I answered, for I had not been indifferent to the clouds
+steadily banking up in the north. "Yet you have not told me your name,
+and I should be most glad to know it."
+
+The girl courtesied mockingly, as though half inclined to laugh at my
+insistence.
+
+"What is a name?" she exclaimed. "'Tis not that for which we greatly
+care. Now I--I am simply Mademoiselle Antoinette,--at least, so most
+of those I care for call me; and from now on, the very good friend of
+Master John Wayland."
+
+I was deeply conscious that I blushed at her words and manner; but with
+it there arose an instant query in my mind: could this be the fair
+Toinette whom De Croix sought so ardently? I greatly feared it; yet I
+resolved I would not mention his name to her.
+
+"It has a decided French sound," I stammered.
+
+She laughed at my tone, with a quick shrug of her shoulders.
+
+"And pray, why not, Monsieur? Have you such a prejudice against that
+great people that you need speak of them with so glum a voice? Ah, but
+if I must, then I shall endeavor to teach you a higher regard for us."
+
+"That may not prove so hard a task," I hastened to assure her; "though
+I was surprised,--you speak English with so pure an accent that I had
+not dreamed you other than of my own race."
+
+"My father was of English blood," she answered more gravely; "but I
+fear you will find me quite of my mother's people, if ever we come to
+know each other well. But hark! that was surely thunder! We have
+loitered too long; the storm is about to break."
+
+It was indeed upon us almost before she ceased speaking. A sudden rush
+of wind sent my hat flying into the darkness, and whipped her long
+black hair loose from its restraining knot. I had barely time to wrap
+my hunting-jacket closely around her shoulders, when the rain came
+dashing against our faces.
+
+I drew her unresistingly around the edge of the nearest sand-pile; but
+this supplied poor protection against the storm, the wind lashing the
+fine grit into our faces, stinging us like bits of fire. I tried to
+excavate some sort of cave that might afford us at least a partial
+shelter; but the sand slid down almost as rapidly as I could dig it out
+with my hands.
+
+"Oh, let us press on!" she urged, laying her hand upon my arm, in
+entreaty. "We shall become no wetter moving, and your camp, you said,
+was only a short distance away."
+
+"But are you strong enough to walk?" And as I leaned forward toward
+her, a quick flash of vivid lightning, directly overhead, lit both our
+faces. I marked she did not shrink, and no look of fear came into her
+eyes.
+
+"I am quite myself once more," she answered confidently. "It was
+despair and loneliness that so disheartened me. I have never been
+timid physically, and your presence has brought back the courage I
+needed."
+
+There was a natural frankness, a peculiar confidence, about this girl,
+that robbed me of my usual diffidence; and as we struggled forward
+through the dampening sand, her dress clinging about her and retarding
+progress, I dared to slip one arm about her waist to help in bearing
+her along. She accepted this timely aid in the spirit with which it
+was offered, without so much as a word of protest; and the wind,
+battering at our backs, pushed us forward.
+
+"Oh, that troublesome hair!" she exclaimed, as the long tresses whipped
+in front of our faces, blinding us both. "I have never before felt so
+much like sacrificing it."
+
+"I beg that you will not consider such an act now," I protested, aiding
+her to reclaim the truants, "for as I saw it before the darkness fell,
+your hair was surely worthy of preservation."
+
+"You laugh at me; I know I must have been a far from pretty sight."
+
+"Do you wish me to say with frankness what I thought of your appearance
+under such disadvantages?"
+
+She glanced at me almost archly, in the flash of lightning that rent
+the sky.
+
+"I am really afraid to answer yes,--yet perhaps I am brave enough to
+venture it."
+
+"I have never been at court, Mademoiselle, and so you may not consider
+my judgment in such matters of much moment; but I thought you rarely
+beautiful."
+
+For a moment she did not attempt to speak, but I could distinctly feel
+the heaving of her bosom as I held her hard against the assault of the
+wind, and bent low hoping to catch an answer.
+
+"You are sincere and honest," she said at last, slowly, and I felt that
+the faint trace of mockery had utterly vanished from her soft voice.
+"'T is manifest in your face and words. You speak not lightly, nor
+with mere empty compliment, as would some gilded courtiers I have
+known; and for that reason I do value your opinion."
+
+"You are not angry at my presumption?"
+
+"Angry?--I?" and she stopped and faced me, holding back her hair as she
+did so. "I am a woman, Monsieur; and all women, even those of us
+hidden here in the wilderness, like best those who admire them. I do
+not know that I am as beautiful as you say, yet other men have often
+said the same without being pressed for their opinion. No, I am not
+angry,--I am even glad to know you think so."
+
+"And you surely do know?" I insisted, with a courage strange to me.
+
+"Yes," she answered, but her eyes fell before my eagerness; "you are
+not one who has yet learned to lie, even to women. 'T is a relief to
+know there are such men still in the world."
+
+We had come to a full halt by this time.
+
+"Do you have any idea where we may be?" she asked, peering anxiously
+about, and perhaps glad to change the tone of our conversation. "I
+cannot note a landmark of any kind. These sand-hills seem all alike."
+
+"I believe we have kept to the southward, for we have merely drifted
+with the storm; but I confess my sole guidance has been the direction
+of the wind, as these sand-lanes are most confusing. If there were the
+slightest shelter at hand, I should insist upon your waiting until the
+rain was over."
+
+"No, it is better to go on. I am now wet to the skin, and shall be
+warmer moving than resting on this damp sand."
+
+We must have been moving for an hour, scarcely speaking a word, for the
+severe exertion required all our breath. The rain had ceased, and
+stars began to glimmer amid the cloud-rifts overhead; but I knew now
+that we were lost. She stopped suddenly, and sank down upon the sand.
+
+"I am exhausted," she admitted, "and believe we are merely moving about
+in a circle."
+
+"Yes," I said, reluctantly; "we are wasting our strength to no purpose.
+'T will be better to wait for daylight here."
+
+It was a gloomy place, and the silence of those vast expanses of
+desolate sand was overwhelming. It oppressed me strangely.
+
+"Let me feel the touch of your hand," she said once. "It is so
+desperately lonely. I have been on the wide prairie, at night and
+alone; yet there is always some sound there upon which the mind may
+rest. Here the stillness is like a weight."
+
+Possibly I felt this depressing influence the more because of my long
+forest training, where at least the moaning of limbs, fluttering of
+leaves, or flitting of birds brings relief to the expectant senses;
+while here all was absolute solitude, so profound that our breathing
+itself was startling. The air above appeared empty and void; the earth
+beneath, lifeless and dead. Although neither of us was cowardly of
+heart, yet we instinctively drew closer together, and our eyes strained
+anxiously over the black sand-ridges, now barely discernible through
+the dense gloom. We tried to talk, but even that soon grew to be a
+struggle, so heavily did the suspense rest upon our spirits, so
+oppressed were we by imaginings of evil. I remember telling her my
+simple story, gaining in return brief glimpses of her experiences in
+Canada and the farther West. She even informed me that orders had been
+received, the day before she became lost upon the lake, to abandon Fort
+Dearborn; that an Indian runner--whom she named Winnemeg--had arrived
+from General Hull at Detroit, bringing also news that Mackinac had
+fallen.
+
+"Doubtless your absence has greatly worried them also," I said.
+
+"Oh, no; none of them knew my plight. Possibly some may miss me, but
+they will naturally suppose I have been at Mr. Kinzie's house all this
+time. I have been there often for weeks together, and they have
+frequently urged me to take shelter with them. You see it is far safer
+there than at the Fort, for even the most hostile Indians remain on
+friendly terms with Mr. Kinzie and his family. He has been there so
+many years, and is so just a man in his dealings with them. 'T is
+really strange to see how he leaves his house unguarded, while the
+garrison at the Fort is almost in a state of siege. It makes it hard
+to realize how imminent is the danger. Yet they are terribly alarmed
+at the Fort, and I fear with cause. Even Mr. Kinzie feels the
+situation to be critical. There were fully three hundred Pottawattomie
+warriors encamped without the Fort two days ago; and they were becoming
+bold and impudent,--one chief even firing his gun in Captain Heald's
+office, thinking to frighten him into furnishing them with liquor."
+
+"But the Fort is strong?" I asked. "It is capable of resisting an
+attack?"
+
+"I should suppose so," she answered, hesitatingly; "but that is not a
+matter upon which a girl may judge. I fear, however, all is not
+harmony among its defenders. I know that Captain Heald and Ensign
+Ronan do not agree, and I have heard bitter words spoken by other
+officers of the garrison."
+
+I thought she did not care to speak more about this matter, and we
+drifted off upon other topics, until I felt her head sink slowly down
+upon my shoulder, and knew she slept. I sat there still, pillowing her
+tenderly upon my arm, when the gray light of the dawn stole slowly
+toward us across the ridges of sand and revealed the upturned face.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+TWO MEN AND A MAID
+
+The emotion I felt was new and strange to me; for though I had known
+little of young women, yet as I looked upon her in that dim light of
+dawn I found myself wondering if I already loved this strange girl.
+Fair as her face certainly was, its beauty rendered even more striking
+by the pallor of her late exposure and the blackness of her dishevelled
+hair, it was her frankness and confidence which most appealed to me.
+She had held all my thoughts through the long hours of watchfulness as
+I sat there quietly, feeling the rise and fall of her regular
+breathing, and thrilled by the unconscious caress of stray tresses as
+they were blown against my cheek. How she trusted me, stranger though
+I was! Yet it was through no lack of knowledge of the great world of
+men, for this young girl had known court gallants and rough soldiery,
+soft-spoken courtiers and boastful men-at-arms. So the night through I
+dreamed of what might be; and when the light finally came slowly
+reddening the eastern sky, I feasted my eyes unchecked upon that sweet
+upturned face, and made a rash vow that I would win her heart.
+
+I was still mirroring her image in my memory, forgetful of all
+else,--the broad white brow, the long dark lashes resting in such
+delicate tracery against the smooth velvet of the cheek now slightly
+flushed, the witching pink of the ear, the softly parted lips between
+which gleamed the small and regular teeth of ivory, the round white
+throat swelling ever so slightly to her breathing,--when a sudden shout
+of surprised recognition aroused me from my reverie, and I looked up to
+see Jordan topping the sand-bank in our front, and waving his hand to
+some one beneath him and out of sight.
+
+"See here, De Croix!" he cried, excitedly, "the prodigal has had good
+cause to lag behind. He has found the lost fairy of this wilderness."
+
+Before I could relieve myself of my burden,--for the mockery of his
+words angered me,--the Frenchman appeared at his side, and glanced down
+where his companion's finger pointed. For a moment he gazed; then he
+murmured a sharp French oath, and strode heavily down the sand-bank.
+There was a look in his face that caused me to lay the girl's head back
+upon the sand and rise hastily. The sudden movement awoke her, and her
+dark eyes looked up in startled confusion. By this time I had taken a
+quick step forward, and faced De Croix.
+
+"This lady is under my protection," I said, a bit hotly, not relishing
+the manner of his approach, "and any disrespect from either of you will
+be unwarranted."
+
+He paused, evidently surprised at my bold front, and his lip curled
+contemptuously.
+
+"Ah, my young game-cock!" he ejaculated, surveying me curiously. "So
+you have spurs, and think you can use them? Well, I have no quarrel
+with you, but perchance I may have more reason to be the protector of
+this young lady than you suppose. Stand aside, Monsieur."
+
+She had risen from the sand, and now stood erect beside me. I saw
+Jordan grinning in great enjoyment of the scene, and that De Croix's
+eyes were full of anger; but I would not stir. In my heart I felt a
+dull pain at his words, a fear that they might prove too true; but I
+remained where I was, determined to take no step aside until she
+herself should judge between us.
+
+"Will you stand back, Monsieur?" he said, haughtily, dropping his hand
+upon the hilt of his rapier, "or shall I show you how a gentleman of
+France deals with such impertinence?"
+
+If he thought to affright me with his bravado, he reckoned ill of my
+nature, for I have ever driven badly; my blood seems slow to heat,
+though it was warm enough now.
+
+"If the lady wishes it, you may pass," I answered shortly, my eyes
+never leaving his face. "Otherwise, if you take so much as another
+step I will crush every bone in your body."
+
+He saw I meant it, but there was no cowardice in him; and the steel had
+already flashed in the sunlight to make good his threat, when she
+touched me gently upon the shoulder.
+
+"I beg you do not fight," she urged. "I am not worthy, and 't is all
+unneeded. Captain de Croix," and she swept him a curtsey which had the
+grace of a drawing-room in it, "'t is indeed most strange that we
+should meet again in such a spot as this. No contrast could be greater
+than the memory of our last parting. Yet is there any cause for
+quarrel because this young gentleman has preserved my life?"
+
+De Croix hesitated, standing half-poised for attack, even his glib
+tongue and ready wit failing as she thus calmly questioned him.
+Indeed, as I later learned, there was that of witchery about this young
+girl which held him at bay more effectually than if she had been a
+princess of the royal blood,--a something that laughed his studied art
+to scorn. She noted now his hesitancy, and smiled slightly at the
+evidence of her power.
+
+"Well, Monsieur, 'tis not often that your lips fail of words," she
+continued, archly. "Why is it I am made the subject of your quarrel?"
+
+The slight sarcastic sting in her voice aroused him.
+
+"By all the saints, Toinette!" he exclaimed, striving to appear at his
+ease, "this seems a poor greeting for one who has followed you through
+leagues of forest and across oceans of sand, hopeful at the least to
+gain a smile of welcome from your lips. Know you not I am here, at the
+very end of the world, for you?"
+
+"I think it not altogether unlikely," she replied with calmness. "You
+have ever been of a nature to do strange things, yet it has always been
+of your own sweet will. Surely, Monsieur, I did never bid you come, or
+promise you a greeting."
+
+"No," he admitted regretfully, "'t is, alas, true,"; and his eyes
+seemed to regain something of their old audacity. "But there was that
+about our parting,--you recall it, Toinette, in the shadow of the
+castle wall?--which did afford me hope. No one so fair as you can be
+without heart."
+
+She laughed softly, as though his words recalled memories of other
+days, pressing back her hair within its ribbon.
+
+"Such art of compliment seems more in place at Montreal than here.
+This is a land of deeds, not words, Monsieur. Yet, even though I
+confess your conclusion partially true, what cause does it yield why
+you should seek a quarrel with my good friend, John Wayland?"
+
+"You know him, then?" he asked, in quick astonishment.
+
+"Know him! Do you think I should be here otherwise? Fie, Captain de
+Croix, that you, the very flower of the French court, should express so
+poor a thought of one you profess to respect so highly!"
+
+He looked from one to the other of us, scarce knowing whether she were
+laughing at him or not.
+
+"_Sacre_!" he exclaimed at last. "I believe it not, Mademoiselle. The
+boy would have boasted of such an acquaintance long before this. You
+know him, you say,--for how long?"
+
+"Since yester even, if you must know. But he has a face, Monsieur, a
+face frank and honest, not like that of a man long trained at courts to
+deceive. 'T is for that I trust him, and have called him friend."
+
+"You may rue the day."
+
+"No, Captain de Croix," she exclaimed, proudly. "I know the
+frontiersmen of my father's blood. They are brave men, and true of
+heart. This John Wayland is of that race." And she rested one hand
+lightly upon my arm.
+
+The motion, simple as it was, angered him.
+
+"You ask why I sought quarrel," he said sternly. "'T was because I
+suspected this uncouth hunter had wronged you. Now I understand 't was
+of your own choice. I wish you joy, Mademoiselle, of your new
+conquest."
+
+I felt the girl's slight form straighten, and saw his bold eyes sink
+beneath the flame of her look.
+
+"Captain de Croix," and every sentence stung like the lash of a whip,
+"those are cowardly words, unworthy a French gentleman and soldier.
+Did you leave all your courtesy behind in Montreal, or dream that in
+this wilderness I should cringe to any words you might speak? You wish
+the truth; you shall have it. Three days ago, through an accident, I
+drifted, in an oarless boat, out from the river-mouth at Fort Dearborn
+to the open lake. None knew of my predicament. A storm blew me
+helpless to the southward, and after hours of exposure to danger, and
+great mental anguish, I was driven ashore amid the desolation of this
+sand. This comrade of yours found me scarce alive, ministered to my
+sore need, protected me through the hours of the night, stood but now
+between me and your ribaldry, counting his life but little beside the
+reputation of a woman. He may not wear the latest Paris fashions,
+Monsieur, but he has proved himself a man."
+
+"I meant not all I said, Toinette," he hastened to explain. "You will
+forgive, I know, for I was sorely hurt to find that some one else had
+done the duty that was plainly mine. Surely no rude backwoodsman is to
+come between us now?"
+
+She glanced from the one to the other, with true French coquetry.
+
+"Faith, I cannot tell, Monsieur," she said, gayly; "stranger things
+have happened, and 't is not altogether fine clothes that win the
+hearts of maidens on this far frontier. We learn soon to love
+strength, and the manly traits of the border. On my word, Monsieur,
+this John Wayland seems to have rare powers of body; I imagine he might
+even have crushed you, as he said."
+
+"Think you so?" he asked, eying me curiously. "Yet 't is not always as
+it looks, Mademoiselle."
+
+It came so quickly as to startle me. I was wondering at the smile that
+curled his lips, when he sprang upon me, casting his arms around my
+waist, and twining one leg about mine. The shock of this sudden and
+unexpected onset took me completely by surprise, and I gave back
+sharply, scarce realizing his purpose, till he had the under-hold, and
+sought to lift me for a throw. 'T was my weight alone that saved me,
+together with the rare good fortune that I had been leaning upon my gun.
+
+As the breath came back to me, we locked grimly in a fierce struggle
+for the mastery. I had felt the straining grip of strong arms before,
+but De Croix surprised me,--he was like steel, quick of motion as a
+wildcat, with many a cunning French wrestling trick that tried me
+sorely. I heard a quick exclamation of surprise from the girl, a shout
+of delighted approval from Jordan, and then there was no sound but the
+harsh trampling of our feet and the heavy breathing. De Croix's effort
+was to lift me to his hip for a throw; mine, to press him backward by
+bodily strength. Both of us were sadly hindered by the sliding sand on
+which we strove. Twice I thought I had him, when my footing failed;
+and once he held me fairly uplifted from the ground, yet could not make
+the toss. 'T was a wild grapple, for when we had exhausted all the
+tricks we knew, it came to be a sheer test of physical endurance.
+Then, for the first time, I felt myself the master,--though he was a
+man, that gay French dandy, and never did my ribs crack under the
+pressure of a stronger hand. But I slowly pressed him back, inch by
+inch, struggling like a demon to the last, until I forced his shoulders
+to the sand.
+
+For a moment he lay there, panting heavily; then the old frank and easy
+smile came upon his lips.
+
+"Your hand, monsieur," he said; "that is, if it yet retains sufficient
+strength to lift me."
+
+Upon his feet he brushed the sand from out his long hair, and bowed
+gallantly.
+
+"I have done my very best, Mademoiselle. 'Tis defeat, but not
+disgrace, for I have made your giant puff to win. May I not hope it
+has won me restoration to your good graces?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+IN SIGHT OF THE FLAG
+
+It would have been impossible not to respond to his humor and
+good-nature, even had the girl been desirous of doing otherwise. From
+the first I felt that she liked this reckless courtier, whose easy
+words and actions made me realize more deeply than ever my own
+heaviness of thought and wit.
+
+As he stood there now, bowing low before her, his clothing awry and his
+long hair in disorder from our fierce contest, she smiled upon him
+graciously, and extended a hand that he was prompt enough to accept and
+hold.
+
+"Surely," she said mockingly, "no maid, even in the glorious days of
+chivalry, had ever more heroic figures to do battle for her honor. I
+accept the _amende_, Monsieur, and henceforth enroll you as knight at
+my court. Upon my word," and she looked about at the desolate
+sand-heaps surrounding us, "'tis not much to boast of here; nor, in
+truth, is Dearborn greatly better."
+
+She paused, drawing her hand gently from his grasp, and holding it out
+toward me.
+
+"Yet, Captain," she continued, glancing at him archly over her
+shoulder, "I have likewise another knight, this wood ranger, who hath
+also won my deep regard and gratitude."
+
+De Croix scowled, and twisted his short mustache nervously.
+
+"You put a thorn beside every rose," he muttered. "'T was your way in
+Montreal."
+
+"A few hundred miles of travel do not greatly change one's nature.
+Either at Dearborn or Montreal, I am still Toinette. But, Messieurs, I
+have been told of a camp quite close at hand,--and yet you leave me
+here in the sand to famish while you quarrel."
+
+The tone of her voice, while still full of coquetry, was urgent, and I
+think we both noted for the first time how white of face she was, and
+how wearily her eyes shone. The Frenchman, ever ready in such
+courtesies, was the first to respond by word and act.
+
+"You are faint, Toinette," he cried, instantly forgetful of everything
+else, and springing forward to give her the aid of his arm. "I beg you
+lean upon me. I have been blind not to note your weakness before. 'T
+is indeed not a long walk to our camp from here,--yet, on my life, I
+know nothing of where it lies. Jordan," he added, speaking as if he
+were in command, "lead back along the path we came. _Sacre_! the old
+bear was gruff enough over the delay of our search; he will be savage
+now."
+
+I know not how Jordan ever found his way back, for the sliding sand had
+already obliterated all evidences of former travel; but I walked
+sullenly beside him, leaving De Croix to minister to the needs of the
+girl as best he might. I felt so dull beside his ready tongue that, in
+spite of my real liking for the fellow, his presence angered me. 'T is
+strange we should ever envy in others what we do not ourselves possess,
+ignoring those traits of character we have which they no less desire.
+So to me then it seemed altogether useless to contend for the heart of
+a woman,--such a woman, at least, as this laughing Toinette,--against
+the practised wiles of so gay and debonair a cavalier. I steeled my
+ears to the light badinage they continued to indulge in, and ploughed
+on through the heavy sand at Jordan's heels, in no mood for converse
+with any one.
+
+We came upon the camp suddenly, and discovered Captain Wells pacing
+back and forth, his stern face dark with annoyance. At sight of me,
+his passion burst all restraint.
+
+"By God, sir!" he ejaculated, "if you were a soldier of mine, I would
+teach you what it meant to put us to such a wait as this! Know you
+not, Master Wayland, that the lives of helpless women and children may
+depend upon our haste? And you hold us here in idleness while you
+wander along the lake-shore like a moonstruck boy!"
+
+Before I could answer these harsh words, the girl stepped lightly to my
+side, and standing there, her hand upon my arm, smiled back into his
+angry eyes. I do not think he had even perceived her presence until
+that moment; for he stopped perplexed.
+
+"And am I not worth the saving, Monsieur le Capitaine," she questioned,
+pouting her lips, "that you should blame him so harshly for having
+stopped to rescue me?"
+
+His harsh glance of angry resentment softened as he gazed upon her.
+
+"Ah! was that it, then?" he asked, in gentler tones. "But who are you?
+Surely you are not unattended in this wilderness?"
+
+"I am from Fort Dearborn," she answered, "and though only a girl,
+Monsieur, I have penetrated to the great West even farther than has
+Captain Wells."
+
+"How know you my name?"
+
+"Mrs. Heald told me she believed you would surely come when you learned
+of our plight at the Fort,--it was for that she despatched the man
+Burns with the message,--and she described you so perfectly that I knew
+at once who you must be. There are not so many white men travelling
+toward Dearborn now as to make mistake easy."
+
+"And the Fort?" he asked, anxiously. "Is it still garrisoned, or have
+we come too late?"
+
+"It was safely held two days ago," she answered, "although hundreds of
+savages in war-paint were then encamped without, and holding powwow
+before the gate. No attack had then been made, yet the officers talked
+among themselves of evacuating."
+
+For a moment the stern soldier seemed to have forgotten her, his eyes
+fastened upon the western horizon.
+
+"The fools!" he muttered to himself, seemingly unconscious that he
+spoke aloud; "yet if I can but reach there in time, my knowledge of
+Indian nature may accomplish much."
+
+He turned quickly, with a sharp glance over his military force.
+
+"We delay no longer. Jordan, do you give this lady your horse for
+to-day's journey, and go you forward on foot with the Miamis. Watch
+them closely, and mark well everything in your front as you move."
+
+"But, Captain Wells," she insisted, as he turned away, "I am
+exceedingly hungry, and doubt not this youth would also be much the
+better for a bit of food."
+
+"It will have to be eaten as you travel, then," he answered, not
+unkindly, but with all his thought now fixed on other things, "for our
+duty is to reach Dearborn at the first moment, and save those prisoned
+there from death, and worse."
+
+I shall always remember each detail of that day's march, though I saw
+but little of Toinette save in stolen glances backward, Wells keeping
+me close at his side, while De Croix, as debonair as ever, was her
+constant shadow, ministering assiduously to her wants and cheering her
+journey with agreeable discourse. I heard much of their chatter,
+earnestly as I sought to remain deaf to it. To this end Wells aided me
+but little, for he rode forward in stern silence, completely absorbed
+in his own thoughts.
+
+During the first few hours we passed through a dull desolation of
+desert sand, the queerly shaped hills on either side scarcely breaking
+the dead monotony, although they often hid from our sight our advance
+scouts, and made us feel isolated and alone. Once or twice I imagined
+I heard the deepening roar of waves bursting upon the shore-line to our
+right, but could gain no glimpse of blue water through those obscuring
+dunes. We were following a well-worn Indian trail, beaten hard by many
+a moccasined foot; and at last it ran from out the coarser sand and
+skirted along the western beach, almost at the edge of the waves. 'T
+was a most delightful change from the cramped and narrowed vision that
+had been ours so long. Our faces were now set almost directly
+northward; but I could not withdraw my eyes from the noble expanse of
+water heaving and tumbling in the dazzling sunlight. Indeed, there was
+little else about our course to attract attention; the shore in front
+lay clear and unbroken, bearing a sameness of outline that wearied the
+vision; each breaking wave was but the type of others that had gone
+before, and each jutting point of land was the picture of the next to
+follow. To our left, there extended, parallel to our course of march,
+a narrow ridge of white and firmly beaten sand, as regular in
+appearance as the ramparts of a fort. Here and there a break occurred
+where in some spring flood a sudden, rush of water had burst through.
+Glancing curiously down these narrow aisles, as we rode steadily
+onward, I caught fleeting glimpses of level prairie land, green with
+waving grasses, apparently stretching to the western horizon bare of
+tree or shrub. At first, I took this to be water also; until I
+realized that I looked out upon the great plains of the Illinois.
+
+The Captain was always chary of speech; now he rode onward with so
+stern a face, that presently I spoke in inquiry.
+
+"You are silent, Captain Wells," I said. "One would expect some
+rejoicing, as we draw so close to the end of our long journey."
+
+He glanced aside at me.
+
+"Wayland," he said slowly, "I have been upon the frontier all my life,
+and have, as you know, lived in Indian camps and shared in many a
+savage campaign. I am too old a man, too tried a soldier, ever to
+hesitate to acknowledge fear; but I tell you now, I believe we are
+riding northward to our deaths."
+
+I had known, since first leaving the Maumee, that danger haunted the
+expedition; yet these solemn words came as a surprise.
+
+"Why think you thus?" I asked, with newly aroused anxiety, my thoughts
+more with the girl behind than with myself. "Mademoiselle Toinette
+tells me the Fort is strong and capable of defence, and surely we are
+already nearly there."
+
+"The young girl yonder with De Croix? It may be so, if it also be well
+provisioned for a long siege, as it is scarce likely any rescue party
+will be despatched so far westward. If I mistake not, Hull will have
+no men to spare. Yet I like not the action of the savages about us.
+'T is not in Indian nature to hold off, as these are doing, and permit
+reinforcements to go by, when they might be halted so easily. 'T would
+ease my mind not a little were we attacked."
+
+"Attacked? by whom?"
+
+He faced me with undisguised surprise, a sarcastic smile curling his
+grim mouth. His hand swept along the western sky-line.
+
+"By those red spies hiding behind that ridge of sand," he answered
+shortly. "Boy, where are your eyes not to have seen that every step we
+have taken this day has been but by sufferance of the Pottawattomies?
+Not for an hour since leaving camp have we marched out of shot from
+their guns; it means treachery, yet I can scarce tell where or how. If
+they have spared us this long, there is some good Indian reason for it."
+
+I glanced along that apparently desolate sandbank, barely a hundred
+feet away, feeling a thrill of uneasiness sweep over me at the
+revelation of his words. My eyes saw nothing strange nor suspicious;
+but I could not doubt his well-trained instinct.
+
+"It makes my flesh creep," I admitted; "yet surely the others do not
+know. Hear how the Frenchman chatters in our rear!"
+
+"The young fool!" he muttered, as the sound of a light laugh reached
+us; "it will prove no jest, ere we are out of this again. Yet,
+Wayland," and his voice grew stronger, "the red devils must indeed mean
+to pass us free,--for there is Fort Dearborn, and, unless my sight
+deceive me, the flag is up."
+
+I lifted my eyes eagerly, and gazed northward where his finger pointed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+A LANE OF PERIL
+
+We passed a group of young cottonwoods, the only trees I had noted
+along the shore; and a few hundred feet ahead of us, the ridge of sand,
+which had obscured our westward view so long, gradually fell away,
+permitting the eye to sweep across the wide expanse of level plain
+until halted by a distant row of stunted trees that seemed to line a
+stream of some importance. As Captain Wells spoke, my glance, which
+had been fixed upon these natural objects, was instantly attracted by a
+strange scene of human activity that unfolded to the north and west.
+
+The land before us lay flat and low, with the golden sun of the early
+afternoon resting hot upon it, revealing each detail in an animated
+panorama wherein barbarism and civilization each bore a conspicuous
+part. The Fort was fully a mile and a half distant, and I could
+distinguish little of its outward appearance, save that it seemed low
+and solidly built, like a stockade of logs set upon end in the ground.
+It appeared gloomy, grim, inhospitable, with its gates tightly closed,
+and no sign of life anywhere along its dull walls; yet my heart was
+thrilled at catching the bright colors of the garrison flag as the
+western breeze rippled its folds against the blue background of the sky.
+
+But it was outside those log barriers that our eyes encountered scenes
+of the greatest interest,--a mingling of tawdry decoration and wild
+savagery, where fierce denizens of forest and plain made their barbaric
+show.
+
+No finer stage for such a spectacle could well be conceived. Upon one
+side stretched the great waste of waters; on the other, level plains,
+composed of yellow sand quickly merging into the green and brown of the
+prairie, while, scattered over its surface, from the near lake-shore to
+the distant river, were figures constantly moving, decked in gay
+feathers and daubed with war-paint. Westward from the Fort, toward the
+point where a branch of the main river appeared to emerge from the
+southward, stood a large village of tepees, the sun shining yellow and
+white on their deerskin coverings and making an odd glow in the smoke
+that curled above the lodge-poles. From where we rode it looked to be
+a big encampment, alive with figures of Indians. My companion and I
+both noted, and spoke together of the fact, that they all seemed
+braves; squaws there may have been, but of children there were none
+visible.
+
+Populous as this camp appeared, the plain stretching between it and us
+was literally swarming with savages. A few were mounted upon horses,
+riding here and there with upraised spears, their hair flying wildly
+behind them, their war-bonnets gorgeous in the sunshine. By far the
+greater number, however, were idling about on foot, stalwart, swarthy
+fellows, with long black locks, and half-naked painted forms. One
+group was listening to the words of a chief; others were playing at la
+crosse; but most of them were merely moving restlessly here and there,
+not unlike caged wild animals, eager to be free.
+
+I heard Captain Wells draw in his breath sharply.
+
+"As I live!" he ejaculated, "there can be scarce less than a thousand
+warriors in that band,--and no trading-party either, if I know aught of
+Indian signs."
+
+Before I could answer him, even had I any word to say, a chief broke
+away from the gathering mass in our immediate front, and rode headlong
+down upon us, bringing his horse to its haunches barely a yard away.
+
+He was a large, sinewy man, his face rendered hideous by streaks of
+yellow and red, wearing a high crown of eagle feathers, with a scalp of
+long light-colored hair, still bloody, dangling at his belt. For a
+moment he and Captain Wells looked sternly into each other's eyes
+without speaking. Then the savage broke silence.
+
+"Wau-mee-nuk great brave," he said, sullenly, in broken English, using
+Wells's Indian name, "but him big fool come here now. Why not stay
+with Big Turtle? He tell him Pottawattomie not want him here."
+
+"Big Turtle did tell me," was the quiet answer, "that the
+Pottawattomies had made bad medicine and were dancing the war-dance in
+their villages; but I have met Pottawattomies before, and am not
+afraid. They have been my friends, and I have done them no wrong."
+
+He looked intently at the disguised face before him, seeking to trace
+the features. "You are Topenebe," he said at last.
+
+"True," returned the chief, with proud gravity. "You serve me well
+once; for that I come now, and tell you go back,--there is trouble
+here."
+
+Wells's face darkened.
+
+"Have I ever been a coward," he asked indignantly, "that I should turn
+and run for a threat? Think you, Topenebe, that I fear to sing the
+death-song? I have lived in the woods, and gone forth with your
+war-parties; am I less a warrior, now that I fight with the people of
+my own race? Go take your warning to some squaw; we ride straight on
+to Dearborn, even though we have to fight our way."
+
+The Indian glanced, as Wells pointed, toward the Fort, and sneered.
+
+"All old women in there," he exclaimed derisively. "Say this to-day,
+and that to-morrow. They shut the gates now to keep Indian on outside.
+No trade, no rum, no powder,--just lies. But they no keep back our
+young men much longer." His face grew dark, and his eyes angry.
+
+"Why you bring them?" he asked hotly, designating our escort of Miamis,
+already shrinking from the taunts of the gathering braves. "They dog
+Indians, bad medicine; they run fast when Pottawattomie come."
+
+"Don't be so certain about that, Topenebe," retorted Wells, shortly.
+"But we cannot stop longer here; make way, that we may pass along,
+Jordan, push on with your advance through that rabble there."
+
+The Indian chief drew his horse back beside the trail, and we moved
+slowly forward, our Indian guides slightly in advance, and exhibiting
+in every action the disinclination they felt to proceed, and their
+constantly increasing fear of the wild horde that now resorted to every
+means in their power, short of actual violence, to retard their
+progress. As they closed in more closely around us, taunting the
+Miamis unmercifully, even shaking tomahawks in their faces, with fierce
+eyes full of hatred and murder, I drew back my horse until I ranged up
+beside Mademoiselle Antoinette, and thus we rode steadily onward
+through that frenzied, howling mass, the girl between De Croix and me,
+who thus protected her on either side.
+
+It was truly a weary ride, full of insult, and perchance of grave peril
+had we faced that naked mob less resolutely. Doubtless the chiefs
+restrained their young men somewhat, but more than once we came within
+a hair's-breadth of serious conflict. They hemmed us in so tightly
+that we could only walk our horses; and twice they pressed upon Jordan
+so hard as to halt him altogether, bunching his cowardly Miamis, and
+even striking them contemptuously with their blackened sticks. The
+second time this occurred, Captain Wells rode forward to force a path,
+driving the spurs into his horse so quickly that the startled animal
+fairly cut a lane through the crowded savages before they could draw
+back. Naught restrained them from open violence but their knowledge of
+that stern-faced swarthy soldier who fronted them with such dauntless
+courage. Hundreds in that swarm had seen him before, when, as the
+adopted son of a great war-chief of the Miamis he had been at their
+side in many a wild foray along the border.
+
+"Wau-mee-nuk, the white chief," passed from lip to lip; and sullenly,
+slowly, reluctantly, the frenzied red circle fell back, as he pressed
+his rearing horse full against them.
+
+How hideous their painted faces looked, as we slowly pushed past them,
+their lips shrieking insult, their sinewy hands gripping at our
+stirrups, their brandished weapons shaken in our faces. With firm-set
+lips and watchful eyes I rode, bent well forward, so as best to protect
+the girl, my rifle held across my saddle pommel. Twice some vengeful
+arm struck me a savage blow, and once a young devil with long matted
+hair hanging over his fierce eyes thrust a sharpened stake viciously at
+the girl's face. I struck with quick-clinched hand, and he reeled back
+into the mass with a sharp cry of pain. My eyes caught the sudden
+dazzle, as De Croix whipped out his rapier.
+
+"Not that, Monsieur!" I cried hastily, across her horse's neck. "Use
+the hilt, not the blade, unless you wish to die."
+
+He heard me above the clamor, and with a quick turn of the weapon
+struck fiercely at a scowling brave who grasped at his horse's rein.
+He smiled pleasantly across at me, his fingers twisting his small
+mustache.
+
+"'T is doubtless good advice, friend Wayland," he said, carelessly,
+"but these copper-colored devils are indeed most annoying upon this
+side, and I may lose my temper ere we reach the gate."
+
+"For the sake of her who rides between us, I beg that you hold in hard,
+Monsieur," I answered. "'T would be overmuch to pay, I imagine, for a
+hot brain."
+
+I glanced at her as I spoke, scarcely conscious even then that I had
+removed my eyes from the threatening mob that pressed me, though I know
+I must have done so, for I retain the picture of her yet. She rode
+facing me, although her saddle was of the old army type with merely a
+folded blanket to soften its sharp contours, and her foot could barely
+find firm support within the narrow strap above the wooden stirrup.
+She sat erect and easily, swaying gently to the slow step of the horse.
+Her face was pale, but there was no evidence of timidity in her dark
+eyes, and she smiled at me as our glances met.
+
+"You are surely a brave girl, Mademoiselle!" I exclaimed, unable to
+restrain my admiration. "'T is a scene to try any nerves."
+
+"Yet almost worth the danger," she returned softly, "to realize what
+men can be in such stress of need. You are the real--Beware of that
+half-breed, Monsieur!"
+
+Her last words were a quick warning, yet my eyes were already upon the
+fellow, and as he dodged down, knife in hand, to aim a vicious lunge at
+the forward leg of her horse, I brought the stock of my rifle crunching
+against his shoulder. The next instant we had passed over his naked
+body as he lay gasping in the trail.
+
+"See!" she cried, with eagerness. "The gates are opened!"
+
+We were possibly a hundred yards from the southern front of the
+stockade, when I glanced forward and saw the level ground between a
+seething mass of savage forms, so densely wedged together as to block
+further progress. I could see hundreds of brown sinewy arms uplifted
+from a sea of faces to brandish weapons of every description, and
+marked how the Miamis cowered like whipped curs behind the protection
+of Wells's horse, while close beside him stood Jordan, erect and silent
+as it on parade, a rifle grasped in his hands, his head bare, a great
+welt showing redly across his white forehead.
+
+A little party, hardly more than twenty infantry-men, marched steadily
+out from the open gateway of the Fort. The first file bore bayonets
+fixed upon their guns, and the naked savages fell slowly back before
+the polished steel. It was smartly done, and it thrilled my blood to
+note with what silent determination that small band of disciplined men
+pressed their way onward, passing through the threatening mass of
+redskins as indifferently as if they had been forest trees. A young,
+smooth-faced fellow, wearing a new officer's uniform, led them, sword
+in hand, a smile of light contempt upon his lips.
+
+"Clear the space wider, Campbell!" he said sternly, to the big corporal
+at his side. "Swing your files to left and right, and push the rabble
+out of the way."
+
+They did it with the butts of their guns, laughing at the brandished
+knives and tomahawks and the fierce painted faces that scowled at them,
+paying no apparent heed to the taunts and insults showered from every
+side. There were some stones thrown, a few blows were struck, but no
+rifle-shot broke the brief struggle. The young officer strode forward
+down the open space, and fronted our advance.
+
+"I presume this is Captain Wells, from Fort Wayne?" he said, lifting
+his cap as he spoke.
+
+"It is," was the reply, "and I am very glad to find that you still hold
+Fort Dearborn."
+
+The other's frank and boyish face darkened slightly, as if at an
+unpleasant memory.
+
+"'T is no fault of some," he muttered hastily; then he checked himself.
+"We are glad to greet you, Captain Wells," he added, in a more formal
+tone, glancing about upon us, "and your party. I am Ensign Ronan, of
+the garrison; and if you will kindly pass between my guard lines, you
+will find Captain Heald awaiting you within."
+
+Thus we rode freely forward, with the guarding soldiery on either side
+of us, their faces to the howling savages; we passed in at the great
+southern gate, and halted amid the buildings of old Fort Dearborn.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+OLD FORT DEARBORN
+
+It makes my old head dizzy to recall the events of that hour across the
+years that have intervened. Possibly I, as I write these words, am the
+only person living who has looked upon that old stockade and taken part
+in its tragic history. What a marvellous change has less than a century
+witnessed! Once the outermost guard of our western frontier, it is now
+the site of one of the great cities of two continents. To me, who have
+seen these events and changes, it possesses more than the wonderment of a
+dream.
+
+That day, as I rode forward, I saw but little of the Fort's formation,
+for my eyes and thoughts were so filled with those frenzied savages that
+hemmed us about, and the cool deployment of the few troops that guarded
+our passage-way, that everything else made but a dim impression. Yet the
+glimpse I obtained, even at that exciting moment, together with the
+subsequent experiences that came to me, have indelibly impressed each
+detail of the rude Fort upon my memory.
+
+It stands before me now, clear-cut and prominent, its outlines distinct
+against the background of blue water or green plains. In that early day
+the Fort was a fairly typical outpost of the border, like scores of
+others scattered at wide and irregular intervals from the Carolina
+mountains upon the south to the joining of the great lakes at the north,
+forming one link in the thin chain of frontier fortifications against
+Indian treachery and outbreak. It bore the distinction, among the
+others, of being the most advanced and exposed of all, and its small
+garrison was utterly isolated and alone, a forlorn hope in the heart of
+the great wilderness.
+
+The Fort had been erected nine years before our arrival, upon the
+southern bank of a dull and sluggish stream, emptying into the Great Lake
+from the west, and known to the earlier French explorers as the river
+Chicagou. The spot selected was nearly that where an old-time French
+trading-post had stood, although the latter had been deserted for so long
+that no remnant of it yet lingered when the Americans first took
+possession, and its site remained only as a vague tradition of those
+Indian tribes whose representatives often visited these waters.
+
+The earliest force despatched by the government to this frontier post
+erected here a simple stockade of logs. These were placed standing on
+end, firmly planted in the ground and extending upward some fifteen feet,
+their tops sharpened as an additional protection against savage
+assailants. This log stockade was built quite solid, save for one main
+entrance, facing to the south and secured by a heavy, iron-studded gate,
+with a subterranean or sunken passage leading out beneath the north wall
+to the river, protected by a door which could be raised only from within.
+The enclosure thus formed was sufficiently large to contain a somewhat
+restricted parade-ground, about which were grouped the necessary
+buildings of the garrison, the quarters for the officers, the soldiers'
+barracks, the commandant's office, the guardhouse, and the magazine.
+These rude structures were built in frontier style, of cleaved logs, and
+with one exception were but a single story in height, so that their roofs
+of rived shingles were well below the protection of the palisade of logs.
+Besides these interior buildings, two block-houses were built, each
+constructed so that the second story overhung the first, one of them,
+standing at the southeast and one at the northwest corner of the
+palisaded walls. A narrow wooden support, or walk, accessible only from
+one or the other of these block-houses, enabled its defenders to stand
+within the enclosure and look out over the row of sharpened logs.
+
+At the time of our arrival the protective armament of this primitive
+Fort, besides the small-arms of the garrison, consisted of three pieces
+of light artillery, brass six-pounders of antique pattern, relics of the
+Revolution. Outside the Fort enclosure, only a few yards to the west
+along the river bank, stood the agency building, or, as it was often
+termed, "goods factory," built for purposes of trading with the Indians,
+so that it would not be necessary to open the Fort to them. This agency
+building was a rather large two-story log house, not erected for any
+purposes of defence. Along the southern side of the stream, in both
+directions, the soldiers had excavated numerous root-houses, or cellars,
+in which to store the products of their summer gardens,--these
+excavations fairly honeycombing the bank.
+
+Such was Fort Dearborn in August of the fatal year 1812. It stood ugly,
+rude, isolated, afar from any help in time of need. Its nearest military
+neighbor lay directly across the waters of the Great Lake, where a small
+detachment of troops, scarcely less isolated than itself, garrisoned a
+similar stockade near the mouth of the river Saint Joseph. To the
+westward, the vast plains, as yet scarce pressed by the adventurous feet
+of white explorers, faded away into a mysterious unknown country, roamed
+over by countless tribes of savages; to the northward lay an unbroken
+wilderness for hundreds of leagues, save for a few scattered traders at
+Green Bay, until the military outpost at Mackinac was reached; to the
+eastward rolled the waters of the Great Lake, storm-swept and unvexed by
+keel of ship, an almost unsurpassable barrier, along whose shore
+adventurous voyagers crept in log and bark canoes; while to the southward
+alternating prairie and timber-land stretched away for unnumbered leagues
+the Indian hunting-grounds,--broken only by a few scattered settlements
+of French half-breeds.
+
+From the walls of the Fort the eye ranged over a dull and monotonous
+landscape, nowhere broken by signs of advancing civilization or even of
+human presence. A few hundred yards to the east the waves of Lake
+Michigan broke upon the wide, sandy beach, whence the tossing waters
+stretched away in tumultuous loneliness to their blending with the
+distant sky. Southward, along the shore of the lake, the nearly level
+plain, brown and sun-parched, soon merged into rounded heaps of
+wind-drifted sand, barely diversified by a few straggling groups of
+cottonwoods. To the westward extended the boundless prairie, flat and
+bare as a floor, except where the southern fork of the little river cut
+its way through the soft loam, and gave rise to a scrubby growth of
+cottonwood and willow; while northward, across the main body of the
+river, the land appeared more rugged and broken, and somewhat heavily
+wooded with oak and other forest trees, but equally devoid of evidences
+of habitation.
+
+In all this wide survey from the little knoll on which the Fort stood,
+five houses only were visible. These were built roughly of logs in the
+most primitive style of the frontier, and, with a single exception, were
+now deserted by their occupants, who had retreated for safety to the
+stockade of the Fort. The single exception was the larger and more
+ambitious dwelling standing on the north bank of the river, occupied by
+John Kinzie and his family, himself an old-time Indian trader, whose
+honesty and long dealing with the savages had made him confident of their
+friendship and fidelity. At one time, however, so threatening had become
+the strange bands that flocked in toward Dearborn, as crows to a feast,
+he also deserted his home, and, with those dependent upon him, sought
+refuge within the Fort walls; but, influenced by the pledge of the
+Pottawattomies, and believing that safety lay in trusting to their
+friendship, they had returned to their own house. The other cabins were
+scattered to the westward of the stockade, close to the river bank.
+These dwellings had been occupied by the families of Ouilmette, Burns,
+and Lee, respectively; while the last named owned a second cabin, built
+some distance up the south branch of the river, and occupied by a tenant
+named Liberty White.
+
+The prospect was in truth depressing to one accustomed to other and more
+civilized surroundings. A spirit of loneliness, of fearful isolation,
+seemed to hover over the restless waters upon the one hand, and those
+vast silent plains on the other; sea and sky, sky and sand, met the
+wearied eye wherever it wandered. The scene was unspeakably solemn in
+its immensity and loneliness; while irresistibly the thought would wander
+over those fateful leagues of prairie and forest that stretched
+unbrokenly between this far frontier and the few scattered and remote
+settlements that were its nearest neighbors.
+
+It was not until some time later that these sombre reflections pressed
+upon me with all their force. After the excitement of our first
+boisterous greeting was over, and I found opportunity to lean across the
+top of the guarded stockade and gaze alone over the desolate spectacle I
+have endeavored to describe, I could feel more acutely the hopelessness
+of our situation and the danger threatening us from every side. But at
+the moment of our entrance, all my interest and attention had been
+centred upon the scenes and persons immediately about me. It was my
+first experience within the stockaded walls of an armed government post.
+The scene was new to my young senses, and, in spite of the excitement
+that still heated my blood, I looked upon it with such absorbing interest
+as to be forgetful for the moment even of the fair girl who rode in at my
+side.
+
+The dull clang of the heavy iron-bound gate behind us was a welcome sound
+after the fierce buffetings of our perilous passage; yet it only
+partially shut off the savage howlings, while above the hideous uproar
+came the sharp reports of several guns. But the instant bustle and
+confusion within scarcely allowed opportunity to notice this disorder;
+moreover, there had come to us a sense of safety and security,--we were
+at last within the barriers we had struggled so long to gain. However
+the savage hordes might rage without, we were now beyond their reach, and
+might take breath again.
+
+Our little party, closely bunched together, with Wells and the timorous
+Miamis at its head, surged quickly through between the bars, and came to
+a halt in an open space, evidently the parade-ground of the garrison, the
+bare earth worn smooth and hard by the trampling of many feet. A tall
+flag-pole rose near the centre, and the wavering shadow of the banner at
+its top extended to the eastern edge of the enclosure. Out from the
+log-houses which bordered this enclosure there came a group of people to
+welcome us,--officers and soldiers, women neatly dressed and with bright
+intelligent faces, women of rougher mould attired in calico or deerskin,
+hardy-looking men in rude hunter's garb, picturesque French voyageurs
+wiry of limb and dark of skin, an Indian or two, silent, grave,
+emotionless, a single negro, and trailing behind them a number of dirty,
+delighted children, and dogs of every breed and degree. It was a motley
+gathering, and appeared almost like a multitude as it hurried forth into
+the open parade-ground, and surged joyfully about us, all eager to
+welcome us to Dearborn, and hopeful that we brought them encouragement
+and relief. We were of their own race, a link between them and the
+far-distant East; and our coming told them they were not forgotten.
+
+The odd commingling of tongues, the constant crowding and scraps of
+conversation, the volley of questioning from every side, was confusing
+and unintelligible. I could gain only glimpses here and there of what
+was going on; nor was I able to judge with any accuracy of the number of
+those present. I looked down upon their appealing, anxious faces, with a
+sad heart. In some way the sight of them brought back thoughts of the
+savage, howling mob without, clamoring for blood, through which we had
+won our passage by sheer good-fortune; of those leagues of untracked
+forest amid whose glooms we had ploughed our way. I thought of these
+things as I gazed upon the helpless women and children thronging about
+me, and my heart sank as I realized how great indeed was the burden
+resting upon us all, how frail the hope of safety. Death, savage,
+relentless, inhuman death in its most frightful guise with torture and
+agony unspeakable, lurked along every mile of our possible retreat; nor
+could I conceive how its grim coming might long be delayed by that
+palisade of logs. We were hopeless of rescue. We were alone, deserted,
+the merest handful amid the unnumbered hordes of the vast West. Swift
+and terrible as this conception was when it swept upon me, it grew deeper
+as I learned more fully the details of our situation.
+
+Just in front of where I lingered in my saddle, the crush slightly
+parted, and I noticed a tall man step forward,--a fair man, having a
+light beard slightly tinged with gray, and wearing the undress uniform of
+a captain of infantry. A lady, several years his junior, stood at his
+side, her eyes bright with expectancy. At sight of them, Captain Wells
+instantly sprang from his horse and hastened forward, his dark face
+lighted by one of his rare smiles.
+
+"Captain," he exclaimed, clasping the officers hand warmly, and extending
+his other hand in greeting to the lady, "I am glad indeed to have reached
+you in time to be of service; and you, my own dear niece,--may we yet be
+permitted to bring you safely back to God's country."
+
+I was unable to catch the reply of either; but I noted that the lady
+flung her arms about the speaker's neck and kissed his swarthy cheek.
+
+Then Captain Wells spoke more loudly, so that his words reached my ears.
+
+"But, Heald," he said, "what means all this litter of garrison equipment
+lying scattered about? Surely you have no present intention to leave the
+Fort, in face Of that savage mob out yonder?"
+
+"'T is the orders of General Hull," was the low; and somewhat hesitating
+response, "and the Pottawattomie chiefs have pledged us escort around the
+head of the lake. But this is no place to discuss the matter. As soon
+as possible I would speak with you more fully in my office."
+
+The look of undisguised amazement upon Wells's face startled me; and as I
+glanced about me, wondering whom I might take counsel with, I was
+astonished to note the horse that Toinette had ridden standing with empty
+saddle. De Croix, negligently curling his mustache between his slender
+fingers, gazed at me with a blank stare.
+
+"Where is Mademoiselle?" I questioned anxiously, as he remained silent.
+"Surely she was with us as we came in!"
+
+"Pish! of course," he returned carelessly; "if she chooses to dismount
+and rejoin her friends, what has that to do with John Wayland? Cannot
+the girl so much as move without your permission, Monsieur?"
+
+The words were insolent, not less than the manner that accompanied them.
+Instantly there flashed upon me the thought that this Frenchman sought a
+quarrel with me; but I could conceive no reason therefor, and was not
+greatly disposed to accommodate him.
+
+"'T was no more than curiosity that urged my question," I answered,
+assuming not to notice his bravado. "I was so deeply interested in other
+things as to have forgotten her presence."
+
+"Something no lady is ever likely to forgive," he interjected. "But what
+think you they propose doing with us here?"
+
+As if in direct answer to his question, the young officer who had met us
+without now elbowed his way through the throng, until he stood at our
+horses' heads.
+
+"Gentlemen," he said, with a quick glance into our faces, "dismount and
+come within. There is but little to offer you here at Dearborn, we have
+been cut off from civilization so long; but such as we possess will be
+shared with you most gladly."
+
+De Croix chatted with him in his easy, familiar manner, as we slowly
+crossed the parade; while I followed them in silence, my thoughts upon
+the disappearance of Toinette and the Frenchman's sudden show of
+animosity. My glance fell upon the groups of children scattered along
+our path, and I wondered which among them might prove to be Roger
+Matherson's little one. At the entrance of one of the log houses
+fronting the parade,--a rather ambitious building of two stories, if I
+remember rightly, with a narrow porch along its front,--an officer was
+standing upon the step, talking with a sweet-faced woman who appeared
+scarce older than seventeen.
+
+"Lieutenant Helm," said Ronan, politely, "this is Captain de Croix, of
+the French army."
+
+He presented De Croix to Mrs. Helm, and then turned inquiringly toward me.
+
+"I believe I have failed to learn your name?"
+
+"I am simply John Wayland," I answered, and, with a glance at my face,
+Lieutenant Helm cordially extended his hand.
+
+"We are greatly pleased to welcome you both," he said earnestly, but with
+a grave side-glance at his young wife, "though I fear we have little to
+offer you except privation and danger."
+
+"How many have you in the garrison?" I questioned, my eyes upon the
+moving figures about us. "It looks a crowd, in that narrow space."
+
+"They are all there who are able to crawl," he said, with a grave smile.
+"But in this case our numbers are a weakness. In the garrison proper we
+have four commissioned officers, with fifty-four non-commissioned
+officers and privates. To these may be added twelve settlers acting as
+militiamen, making a total defensive force of seventy men. But fully
+twenty-five of these are upon the sick-list, and totally unfit for active
+duty; while we are further burdened by having under our protection twelve
+women and twenty children. It almost crazes one to think of what their
+fate may be."
+
+"Your defences look strong enough to keep off savages," broke in De
+Croix, "and I am told there is a sufficiency of provisions. Saint Guise!
+I have seen places where I had rather reside in my old age; yet with
+plenty of wine, some good fellows, and as lovely women as have already
+greeted me here, 'twill not prove so bad for a few weeks."
+
+Helm glanced at him curiously; then his gaze, always gravely thoughtful,
+wandered back to me.
+
+"We are to evacuate the Fort," he said quietly.
+
+"Evacuate?" echoed the Frenchman, as if the word were displeasing. "'T
+is a strange military act, in my judgment, and one filled with grave
+peril. Does such decision come from a council?"
+
+"There has been no council," broke in Ronan, hastily. "The commander has
+not honored his officers by calling one. Such were the orders as
+published on parade this morning."
+
+He would have added more, but Helm warned him, by a sudden look of
+disapproval.
+
+"I understand," he explained quietly, "that the instructions received
+from General Hull at Detroit were imperative, and that Captain Heald was
+left no discretion in the matter."
+
+"I have not yet discovered the man who has seen the orders," exclaimed
+the Ensign hotly, "and we all know it means death."
+
+Helm faced him sternly.
+
+"A soldier's first duty is obedience," he said shortly, "and we are
+soldiers. Gentlemen, will you not come in?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+THE HEART OF A WOMAN
+
+As I sat in the officers' quarters, listening to the conversation
+regarding existing conditions at the Fort and the unrest among the
+Indians of the border, my thoughts kept veering from sudden and
+ungracious disappearance of Mademoiselle to the early seeking after
+that hapless orphan child for whose sake I had already travelled so far
+and entered into such danger. Evidently, if I was to aid her my quest
+must be no longer interrupted.
+
+With characteristic gallantry, De Croix had at once been attracted
+toward Lieutenant Helm's young and pretty bride, and they two had
+already forgotten all sense of existing peril in a most animated
+discussion of the latest fashionable modes in Montreal. I was not a
+little amused by the interest manifest in her soft blue eyes as she
+spoke with all the art of a woman versed in such mysteries, and at the
+languid air of elegance with which he bore himself. Meanwhile, I
+answered as best I might the flood of questions addressed to me by the
+two officers, who, having been shut out from the world so long, were
+naturally eager for military news from Fort Wayne and from the seat of
+government. As these partially ceased, I asked: "Has a date been set
+for the abandonment of the Fort?"
+
+"We march out upon the fifteenth," was Helm's reply, "the day after
+to-morrow, unless something occurs meanwhile to change Captain Heald's
+plans. I confess I dread its coming, much as I imagine a condemned man
+might dread the date of his execution," and his grave eyes wandered
+toward his young wife, as if fearful his words might be overheard by
+her. "There are other lives than mine endangered, and their peril
+makes duty doubly hard."
+
+"Lieutenant," I said, recalled to my own mission by these words, "I
+myself am seeking to be of service to one here,--the young daughter of
+one Roger Matherson, an old soldier who died at this post last month.
+He was long my father's faithful comrade in arms, and with his dying
+breath begged our care for his orphan child. It has come to us as a
+sacred trust, and I was despatched upon this errand. Can you tell me
+where this girl is to be found?"
+
+Before he could frame a reply, for he was somewhat slow of speech, his
+wife, who had turned from De Croix, and was listening with interest to
+my story, spoke impulsively.
+
+"Why, we have been wondering, Mr. Wayland, where she could have gone.
+Not that we have worried, for she is a girl well able to care for
+herself, and of a most independent spirit. She disappeared very
+suddenly from the Fort several days ago; we supposed she must have gone
+with my mother when Mr. Kinzie took his family back to their home."
+
+"With Mr. Kinzie?" I questioned, for at that moment I could not recall
+hearing the name. "May I ask where that home is?"
+
+"He is the very good step-father of my wife, and one she loves as truly
+as if he were her own father," answered Helm, warmly; "a man among a
+thousand. Mr. Kinzie is an Indian trader, and has been here for
+several years, if indeed he be not the first white settler, for old
+Pointe Au Sable was a West Indian mulatto. His relations with these
+savages who dwell near the Great Lake, and especially those of the
+Pottawattomie and Wyandot tribes, are so friendly that he has felt safe
+to remain with his family unguarded in his own home. They have always
+called him Shaw-nee-aw-kee, the Silver-man, and trust him as much as he
+trusts them. He is, besides, a great friend of Sau-ga-nash, the
+half-breed Wyandot; and that friendship is a great protection. His
+house is across the river, a little to the east of the Fort; it can
+easily be seen from the summit of the stockade. But we have had no
+direct communication for several days; the orders have been very strict
+since the gates were closed. It is not safe for our soldiers to
+venture outside except in force, and neither Kinzie nor any of his
+family have lately visited us. Doubtless they feel that to do so might
+arouse the suspicion of their Indian friends."
+
+"But are you sure they are there, and safe? And do you believe the one
+I seek will be found with them?"
+
+"Smoke rises from the chimney, as usual, and there was a light burning
+there last evening. We do not know certainly that your friend is
+there, but think such is the case, as she was extremely friendly with a
+young French girl in their employ named Josette La Framboise."
+
+I sat in silence for some time, thinking, and neglectful of the
+conversation being carried on around me by the others, until we were
+called to supper by the soldier who officiated as steward for the
+officers' mess. I remember many details of the situation, as they were
+frankly discussed in my presence while we lingered at the table; yet my
+own reflections were elsewhere, as I was endeavoring to determine my
+duty regarding the safety of her whom I had come so far to aid.
+Surely, my first object now must be to ascertain where she was, in
+order to be at her service when the hour for departure came. Nor had I
+any time to spare, if we were to march out on the fifteenth. I cannot
+describe, at this late day, how strangely my allegiance wavered, in
+that hour, between the unknown, unseen girl, and the fair, vivacious
+Toinette. My heart drew me toward the one, my clear duty to the other;
+and I could see no way out of the dilemma except to find Elsa Matherson
+without delay, in order that the two should be close together where, as
+need arose, I could stand between them and whatever of evil impended.
+
+I fear I was an indifferent guest, for I was never nimble of tongue,
+and that night I was more silent than usual. However, De Croix most
+effectually hid my retirement by his rare good-humor and the sparkling
+badinage with which he concentrated all attention upon himself, and was
+consequently soon in the happiest of moods. I know not how the fellow
+succeeded in working the miracle, but he sat at the board, upon Mrs.
+Helm's left hand, powdered and curled as if he were gracing a banquet
+at the Tuileries. His ruffled shirt, glittering buckles, and bright
+blue waistcoat, were startling amid such homely surroundings; while his
+neatly folded handkerchief of lace exhaled a delicate perfume. Deeply
+as I was immersed in my own thoughts and plans, I could not help
+admiring his easy grace, and more than once forgot myself in listening
+to his marvellous tales and witty anecdotes.
+
+He was detailing a recent scandal of the French court, passing
+delicately over its more objectionable features, when I grasped the
+opportunity to slip unobserved from the room into the open of the
+parade-ground. It proved a dark night without, but the numerous lights
+in the surrounding buildings, whose doors and windows were open,
+sufficiently illumined the place, so that I found my way about with
+little difficulty. A group of soldiers lounged at the open door of the
+guard-house, and I paused a moment to speak with one, a curly-headed
+lad, who sat smoking, his back resting easily against the logs.
+
+"Are the outer gates ever opened at night?" I asked.
+
+He glanced up at me in surprise, shading his eyes to be assured of my
+identity before speaking.
+
+"Scarcely either day or night now, sir," he replied, respectfully, "but
+between sunset and sunrise they are specially barred, and a double
+guard is set. No one can pass except on the order of Captain Heald."
+
+"In which direction is the Kinzie house?"
+
+He pointed toward the northeast corner of the stockade.
+
+"It is just over there, sir, across the river. You might see the light
+from the platform; beyond the shed yonder is the ladder that leads up
+into the blockhouse."
+
+Thanking him, I moved forward as directed, found the ladder, and pushed
+my way up through the narrow opening in the floor of the second story.
+The small square room, feebly lighted by a single sputtering candle
+stuck in the shank of a bayonet, contained half a dozen men, most of
+them idling, although two were standing where they could readily peer
+out through the narrow slits between the logs. All of them were
+heavily armed, and equipped for service. They looked at me curiously
+as I first appeared, but the one who asked my business wore the
+insignia of a corporal, and was evidently in command.
+
+"I wish to look out over the stockade, if there is no objection. I
+came in with Captain Wells's party this afternoon," I said, not knowing
+what their orders might be, or if I would be recognized.
+
+"I remember you, sir," was the prompt response, "and you are at liberty
+to go out there if you desire. That is the door leading to the
+platform."
+
+"The Indians appear to be very quiet to-night."
+
+"The more reason to believe them plotting some fresh deviltry," he
+answered, rising to his feet, and facing me. "We never have much to
+disturb us upon this side, as it overhangs the river and is not easy of
+approach; but the guard on the south wall is kept pretty busy these
+last few nights, and has to patrol the stockade. The Indians have been
+holding some sort of a powwow out at their camp ever since dark, and
+that 's apt to mean trouble sooner or later."
+
+"Then you keep no sentry posted on the platform?" I asked, a thought
+suddenly occurring to me.
+
+"Not regularly, sir; only when something suspicious happens along the
+river. There 's nobody out there now excepting the French girl,--she
+seems to be fond of being out there all alone."
+
+The French girl? Could it be possible that he meant Toinette? I was
+conscious of a strange fluttering of the heart, as I stepped forth upon
+the narrow footway and peered along it, searching for her. I could
+distinguish nothing, however; and as I slowly felt my way forward,
+testing the squared log beneath me with careful foot and keeping hold
+with one hand upon the sharpened palisades, I began to believe the
+corporal had been mistaken. The door, closing behind, shut off the
+last gleam of light, and I was left alone in utter darkness and
+silence, save for the low rumble of voices within the Fort enclosure,
+and the soft plashing below where the river current kissed the bank at
+the foot of the stockade.
+
+I had gone almost the full length of that side, before I came where she
+was leaning against the logs, her chin resting upon one hand, her gaze
+turned northward. Indeed, so silent was she, so intent upon her own
+thought, I might have touched her unnoticed in the gloom, had not the
+stars broken through a rift in the cloud above us, and sent a sudden
+gleam of silver across her face.
+
+"Mademoiselle," I said, striving to address her with something of the
+ease I thought De Croix would exercise at such a moment, "I meant not
+to intrude upon your privacy, yet I am most glad to meet with you once
+more."
+
+She started slightly, as though aroused from reverie, and glanced
+inquiringly toward me.
+
+"I supposed my visitor to be one of the guard," she said pleasantly;
+"and even now I am unable to distinguish your face, yet the sound of
+the voice reminds me of John Wayland."
+
+"I am proud to know that it has not already been forgotten. You
+deserted me so suddenly this afternoon, I almost doubted my being
+welcome now."
+
+She laughed lightly, tapping the ends of the logs with her finger-tips.
+
+"Have you, then, never learned that a woman is full of whims,
+Monsieur?" she questioned. "Why, this afternoon your eyes were so big
+with wonder that they had forgotten to look at me. Truly, I spoke to
+you twice to aid me from the saddle; but you heard nothing, and in my
+desperation I was obliged to turn to the courtesy of Captain de Croix.
+Ah, there is a soldier, my friend, who is never so preoccupied as to
+neglect his duty to a lady."
+
+"It was indeed most ungallant of me," I stammered, scarce knowing
+whether she laughed at me or not. "Yet my surroundings were all new,
+and I have the training of De Croix in such matters."
+
+"Pah! 't is just as well. I am inclined to like you as you are, my
+friend, and we shall not quarrel; yet, with all his love for lesser
+things, your comrade has always shown himself a truly gallant
+gentleman."
+
+I made no answer to these flattering words, for I felt them to be true;
+yet no less this open praise of him, falling from her lips, racked me
+sorely, and I lacked the art to make light of it.
+
+"The soldiers in the block-house tell me you come here often," I
+ventured at last, for the dead silence weighed upon me. "You have
+never seemed to me like one who would seek such loneliness."
+
+"I am one whom very few wholly comprehend, I fear, and surely not upon
+first acquaintance," she answered thoughtfully, "for I am full of
+strange moods, and perhaps dream more than other girls. This may have
+been born of my early convent training, and the mystic tales of the
+nuns; nor has it been lessened by the loneliness of the frontier. So,
+if I differ from other young women, you may know 't is my training, as
+well as my nature, that may account for it. I have led a strange life,
+Monsieur, and one that has known much of sadness. There are times when
+I seek my own thoughts, and find liking for no other company. Then I
+come here, and in some way the loneliness of water and plain soothe me
+as human speech cannot. I used to love to stand yonder by the eastern
+wall and gaze out over the Great Lake, watching the green surges chase
+each other until they burst in spray along the beach. But since I went
+adrift in the little boat, and felt the cruelty of the water, I have
+shrunk from looking out upon it. Monsieur, have you never known how
+restful it sometimes is to be alone?"
+
+"My life has mostly been a solitary one," I answered, responding
+unconsciously to her mood, and, in doing so, forgetting my
+embarrassment. "It is the birthright of all children of the frontier.
+Indeed, I have seen so little of the great world and so much of the
+woods, that I scarcely realize what companionship means, especially
+that of my own age. I have made many a solitary camp leagues from the
+nearest settlement, and have tracked the forest alone for days
+together, so content with my own thought that possibly I understand
+your meaning better than if my life had been passed among crowds."
+
+"Ah! but I like the crowds," she exclaimed hastily, "and the glow and
+excitement of that brighter, fuller life, where people really live. It
+is so dull here,--the same commonplace faces, the tiresome routine of
+drill, the same blue sky, gray water, and green plains, to look upon
+day after day. Oh, but it is all so wearisome, and you cannot conceive
+how I have longed again for Montreal and the many little gaieties that
+brighten a woman's world. There are those here who have never known
+these happier things; their whole horizon of experience has been
+bounded by garrison palisades; but 't is not so with me,--I tasted of
+the sweet wine once, when I was a girl, and the memory never leaves me."
+
+"Yet you are often happy?"
+
+"'T is my nature, Monsieur, a legacy of my mother's people; but I am
+not always gay of heart when my lips smile."
+
+"And the coming of the French gallant has doubtless freshened your
+remembrance of the past?" I said, a trifle bitterly.
+
+"It has indeed," was her frank admission. "He represents a life we
+know so little about here on the far frontier. To you, with your code
+of border manliness, he may appear all affectation, mere shallow
+insincerity; but to me, Captain de Croix represents his class, stands
+for the refinements of social order to which women can never be
+indifferent. Those were the happiest days of my life, Monsieur; and at
+Montreal he was only one among many."
+
+She was gazing out into the black void as she spoke, and the slowly
+clearing skies permitted the starlight to gleam in her dark eyes and
+reveal the soft contour of her cheek.
+
+"You do not understand that?" she questioned finally, as I failed to
+break the silence.
+
+"I have no such pleasant memory to look back upon," I answered; "yet I
+can feel, though possibly in a different way, your longing after better
+things."
+
+"You realize this sense of loneliness?--this absence of all that makes
+life beautiful and worth the living?"
+
+"Perhaps not that,--for life, even here, is well worth living, and to
+my eyes the great sea yonder, and the dark forests, are of more
+interest than city streets. But in one sense I may enter into your
+meaning; my thought also is away from here,--it is with a home,
+scarcely less humble than are our present surroundings, yet it contains
+the one blessing worth striving after--love."
+
+"Love!" she echoed the unexpected word almost scornfully. "'T is a
+phrase so lightly spoken that I scarce know what it may signify to you.
+You love some one then, Monsieur?" and she looked up at me curiously.
+
+"My mother, Mademoiselle."
+
+I saw the expression upon her face change instantly. "Your pardon,"
+she exclaimed, hastily. "'T was not the meaning I had thought. I know
+something of such love as that, and honor you for thus expressing it."
+
+"I have often wondered, since first we met, at your being here,
+seemingly alone, at this outermost post of the frontier. It seems a
+strange home for one of your refinement and evident delight in social
+life."
+
+"'T is not from choice, Monsieur. My mother died when I was but a
+child, as I have already told you. I scarce have memory of her, yet I
+bear her name, and, I am told, inherit many of her peculiarities. She
+was the daughter of a great merchant at Montreal, and the blood of a
+noble family of France flowed in her veins. She gave up all else to
+become my father's wife; nor did she ever live to regret it."
+
+Her voice was so low and plaintive that I hesitated to speak; yet
+finally, as she ceased, and silence fell between us, I asked another
+question:
+
+"And 't was then you voyaged into this wilderness with your father?"
+
+"I have never since left him while he lived," she answered softly, her
+head resting upon her hand. "But he also has gone now, and I merely
+wait opportunity to journey eastward."
+
+"He was a trader, you told me once?"
+
+"A soldier first, Monsieur; a true and gallant soldier, but later he
+traded with the Indians for furs."
+
+I felt that she was weeping softly, although I could see but little,
+and I leaned in silence against the rough logs, gazing out into the
+black night, hesitating to break in upon her grief. Then a voice spoke
+rapidly at the farther end of the stockade, and a sudden glow of light
+shot like an arrow along the platform. I turned quickly, and there in
+the open doorway, clearly outlined against the candle flame, stood De
+Croix.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+A WAGER OF FOOLS
+
+"It looks a narrow walk, my friend," he said rather doubtfully, peering
+forward with shaded eyes, "and 'tis dark as Erebus; yet gladly will I
+make the venture for hope of the reward."
+
+The door closed behind him, shutting off the last vestige of light; and
+we, with our eyes accustomed to the gloom, could mark his dim outline
+as he advanced toward us. His actions belied his words, for he moved
+with all his accustomed jauntiness along the uncertain foot-way, barely
+touching the top of the palisades with one hand to guide his progress.
+He was almost upon the girl before he perceived either of us; and then
+his earliest words surprised me into silence.
+
+"Ah, Toinette!" he cried eagerly, "I fear I must have kept you waiting
+overlong; yet I was with Mrs. Helm,--a most fair and charming
+bride,--and scarce noted the rapid passage of time."
+
+"I naturally supposed it was a woman," she answered, with what I
+interpreted as a strained assumption of indifference, "as that has ever
+been your sufficient reason for breaking faith with me."
+
+"Do not interpret it so, I beg," he hastened to implore. "Surely, my
+being a few moments in arrears is not a matter sufficiently serious to
+be called a breakage of faith. I do assure you, Toinette, you were
+never once absent from my thought."
+
+"Indeed?" she exclaimed incredulously, and with an echo of suppressed
+laughter in her voice. "Then truly you are far more to be commiserated
+on this occasion than I, for in truth, Monsieur de Croix, I have not
+missed you over-much. I have enjoyed most excellent company."
+
+"The mysterious spirits of the starry night?" he questioned, looking
+out into the darkness, "or the dim figures of your own imagination?"
+
+"Very far from either," she retorted, with a laugh; "a most substantial
+reality, as you are bound to confess. Master Wayland, is it not time
+for you fitly to greet Captain de Croix? He may deem you lax in
+cordiality."
+
+I can perceive now how dearly the laughing witch loved to play us one
+against the other, hiding whatever depth of feeling she may have had
+beneath the surface of careless innocence, and keeping us both in an
+uncertainty as aggravating as it was sweet. I could not read the
+expression upon De Croix's face in the gloom, yet I saw him start
+visibly at her almost mocking words, and there was a trace of
+ill-suppressed irritation in his voice.
+
+"Saint Guise! 'T was for that, then, he left us so mysteriously," he
+exclaimed, unconsciously uttering his first thought aloud. "But how
+knew he you were to be here?"
+
+Before she could answer, I spoke, anxious to relieve her of
+embarrassment; for 't was ever my nature to yield much without
+complaint.
+
+"As it chances, Captain de Croix, she did not know," I said, standing
+back from the palisades where he could see me more clearly. "I left
+the table below with no thought of meeting Mademoiselle, and came out
+on this platform for a different purpose. As you know, I am visiting
+Dearborn upon a special mission."
+
+"Ah, true," and I could feel the trace of relief in his voice as he
+instantly recalled my story. "You also sought a girl in this
+wilderness,--may I ask, have you yet found trace of her?"
+
+I heard Mademoiselle move quickly.
+
+"A girl?" she asked in surprise. "Here, at Dearborn?"
+
+"She was at Dearborn until very lately, but they tell me now I must
+seek for her at the Kinzie house. It was for the purpose of marking
+its position from the Fort that I came up here."
+
+For a moment no one of our voices broke the strained silence. I was
+troubled by this knowledge of a pre-arranged meeting between these two,
+yet felt it was nothing with which I had a right to interfere. This
+careless French girl, whom I had known for scarcely two days, was not
+one to be easily guided, even had I either reason or excuse for
+attempting it.
+
+"'T is strange," she said, musingly, "that she has never so much as
+spoken to me about it; yet she was always shy of speech in such
+matters."
+
+"Of whom do you speak, Toinette?" questioned De Croix.
+
+"Of Master Wayland's young friend with the Kinzies," she answered, the
+old sprightliness again in her voice. "I know her very well,
+Monsieur,--a dear, sweet girl,--and shall be only too glad to speed you
+on to her. Yet 't is not so easy of accomplishment, hemmed in as we
+are here now. Yonder is the light, Master Wayland; but much of peril
+may lurk between. 'Tis not far, were the way clear; indeed, in the old
+days of peace a rope ferry connected Fort and house, but now to reach
+there safely will require a wide detour and no little woodcraft. There
+were patrols of savages along the river bank at dusk, and it is
+doubtful if all have been withdrawn."
+
+I looked as she pointed, and easily distinguished the one glittering
+spark that pierced the darkness to the north and east. I wondered at
+her earlier words; yet they might all be true enough, for I knew
+nothing of this Elsa Matherson. Before I could question further, De
+Croix had interfered,--eager, no doubt, to be rid of me.
+
+"Upon my soul!" he exclaimed recklessly, "if I could voyage here from
+Montreal to win but a smile, it should prove a small venture for our
+backwoods friend to cover yonder small distance. _Sacre_! I would do
+the deed myself for one kiss from rosy lips."
+
+I have wondered since what there was about those words to anger me. It
+must have been their boastful tone, the sarcasm that underlay the
+velvet utterance, which stung like salt in a fresh wound. I felt that
+from the summit of his own success he durst laugh at me; and my blood
+boiled instantly.
+
+"You are wondrous bold, Monsieur," I retorted, "when the matter is
+wholly one of words. I regret I cannot pledge you such reward, so that
+I might learn how you would bear yourself in the attempt."
+
+He stared at me haughtily across the shoulder of the girl, as it
+doubting he heard aright.
+
+"You question my courage to venture it?"
+
+"It has been my experience that the cock that crows the loudest fights
+the least."
+
+"Oh, hush, Messieurs!" broke in Mademoiselle, her voice showing
+suppressed amusement. "This platform is far too narrow to quarrel
+upon; and, besides, the condition of the wager is most easily
+met,--that is, if my lips be deemed of sufficiently rosy hue."
+
+I know I stood with opened mouth, so astounded by these mocking words
+as to be stricken dumb; but not so De Croix. The audacity of his
+nature made eager response to the bold challenge.
+
+"Do you mean what you say, Toinette?" he asked, striving to gain a view
+of her face in the darkness.
+
+"Do I? And pray, why not?" she questioned lightly. "One kiss is not
+so very much to give, and I shall never miss it. 'T is duller here
+than at Montreal, and no doubt 't will greatly interest me to witness
+the race. Surely it will prove a better way to end your foolish
+quarrel than to shoot each other. But come, Messieurs, why do you
+hesitate so long? is not the prize enough?"
+
+He bowed gallantly, and took her hand.
+
+"'T would be the ransom of a king," he answered; "though first I wish
+to know the terms of this contest more clearly."
+
+She looked out into that silent and lonely night, her eyes upon the
+distant gleam, and instinctively our glances followed hers. It was a
+dull desolation, with no sound, no movement, in all the black void.
+The stars gleamed dull on the water of the river beneath us, and we
+could dimly see the denser shadow of the opposite shore; beyond this,
+nothing was apparent save that distant candle flame. What lay
+between,--what strange obstruction of land, what ambushed
+foes,--neither of us had means of knowing. We could simply plunge into
+the mystery of it blindfolded by the fates. Yet to draw back now would
+brand either of us forever with the contempt of her who had challenged
+us so lightly.
+
+"'T is all simple enough," she said at last, her eyes glowing with
+quick excitement. "The goal is yonder where that light glows so
+clearly, though I warn you the longest way round may prove the surest
+in the end. To the one of you who reaches there first and returns
+here, I am to give one kiss as a measure of reward. I care not how it
+may be accomplished,--such minor matters rest with your own wits."
+
+"But the young girl we seek," he insisted; "must she also be brought
+here upon the return?"
+
+"Pish! what care I what may be done with the girl? Besides, she is far
+safer from the savages there than she would be here."
+
+I saw De Croix lean far out over the sharpened palisades and peer
+downward. The movement gave me instantly a thought of his purpose,
+and, unnoticed, I loosened the pistol-belt about my waist and silently
+dropped it upon the platform. Whatever desperate chance he might
+choose to take, I was determined now to equal.
+
+"Doth the water of the river come to the very foot of these logs?" he
+asked, unable to determine in the darkness.
+
+"No, Monsieur, the earth slopes downward for some feet, yet the current
+is at this bank, and gives much depth of water at the shore."
+
+"But of what width is the strip of earth between?"
+
+"Perhaps the length of a tall man."
+
+"Saint Guise! 'tis well I thought to ask!" he explained jauntily. "And
+now, Mademoiselle, if you will but kindly hold this coat and sword, I
+shall strive to show you how highly I value the prize offered, and what
+a French gentleman can do for love."
+
+I fully grasped his purpose now, and even as he turned toward her,
+holding out the valuables he hesitated to lose, I scaled the low
+barrier in my front, planted my feet firmly between the pointed stakes,
+and sprang boldly into the darkness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+DARKNESS AND SURPRISE
+
+It was a greater distance to the water than I had supposed, but I
+struck at last fairly enough, and went down until I thought I should
+never come up again. As I rose to the surface and shook the moisture
+from my face and ears, a light laugh rang out high above me, and
+Mademoiselle's clear voice cried mockingly:
+
+"The backwoodsman has taken the first trick, Monsieur."
+
+I saw De Croix's body dart, like a black arrow, far out into the air,
+and come sweeping down. He struck to my left, and a trifle behind me;
+but I waited not to learn just how. With lusty strokes I struck out
+for the north shore. It was a hard swim, for my deerskins held the
+water like so many bags, and the current, though not rapid, was
+sufficiently strong to make me fight valiantly for every foot of way.
+I came out, panting heavily, upon a low bank of soft mud, and crept
+cautiously up under the black shadow of some low bushes growing there.
+I took time, as I rested, to glance back, hoping thus to learn more of
+the direction I should follow; for the Kinzie light was no longer
+visible, and my struggle with the current had somewhat bewildered me.
+I neither saw nor heard anything of De Croix; but the flame of the
+candle gleaming through the narrow slits of the block-house told me
+clearly where it stood, while a wild yelling farther to the southward
+convinced me that our Indian besiegers were yet astir and concocting
+some fresh deviltry at their camp. With a half-uttered prayer that
+they might all be there, I hastily pressed the water from my soggy
+clothes and plunged forward into the unknown darkness. A big
+cottonwood, as from its shape I judged it to be, rose against the stars
+in my front,--a dim outline swaying slightly in the westerly wind, and
+I took it as my first guide-mark, moving over the rough unknown ground
+as rapidly and silently as possible.
+
+The soft moccasins I wore aided me greatly, nor were there many trees
+along the way to drop twigs in the path to crackle under foot; yet I
+found the ground uneven and deceptive, rifted with small gullies, and
+more or less bestrewn with stones, against which I stumbled in the
+darkness. I was too thoroughly trained in the stern and careful school
+of the frontier not to be cautious at such a time, for I knew that
+silence and seeming desolation were no proof of savage desertion; nor
+did I believe that Indian strategy would leave the north of the Fort
+wholly unguarded. Any rock, any black ravine, any clump of trees or
+bushes, might well be the lurking-place of hostiles, who would only too
+gladly wreak their vengeance upon any hapless straggler falling into
+their hands. I was unarmed, save for the long hunting-knife I carried
+in the bosom of my shirt; but my thought was not of fighting,--it was
+to get through without discovery.
+
+To De Croix I gave small consideration, save that the memory of the
+wager was a spur to urge me forward at greater speed. The place was
+strangely, painfully still; even the savage yelling of the distant
+Indians seemed to die away as I advanced, and nothing broke the
+oppressive silence but an occasional flutter of leaves, or my own deep
+breathing. I had gone, I take it, half or three-quarters of a mile,
+not directly north, but circling ever to the eastward, seeking thus to
+reach the house from the rear, when I came to a sharp break in the
+surface of the land, somewhat deeper and more abrupt than those before
+encountered. It seemed like a cut or ravine made by some rush of water
+lakeward; and, as I hesitated upon the edge of it, peering across and
+wondering if I had better risk the plunge, my eyes caught the blaze of
+the Kinzie light scarce a hundred yards from the opposite bank of the
+ravine.
+
+Assured that I was headed right, I stepped off with a new confidence
+that, for the moment, conquered my usual prudence,--for the steep bank
+gave way instantly beneath my weight. I grasped vainly at the edge,
+fell heavily sidewise, and rolled like a great log, bruised and
+half-stunned, into the black gorge below. I remember gripping at a
+slender bush that yielded to my touch; but all the rest was no more
+than a breathless tumble, until I struck something soft at the
+bottom,--something that squirmed and gripped my long hair savagely, and
+pushed my head back with a grasp on the throat that nearly throttled me.
+
+It was all so sudden, so unexpected, that for the moment I was helpless
+as a child, struggling merely from the natural instinct of preservation
+to break free. I could perceive nothing, the darkness was so intense;
+yet as I gradually succeeded in getting my hands loose, I wound them in
+long coarse hair, pressed them against bare flesh, heard deep labored
+breathing close to my face, and believed I was struggling with a savage.
+
+It was a question of mere brute strength, and neither of us had had the
+advantage of surprise. I could feel the sharp prick of my own knife as
+he hugged me to him, but I dare not reach for it, and I held his arms
+so tightly that he lay panting and struggling as if in a vise. It was
+an odd fight, as we turned and tossed, writhed and twisted among those
+sharp pointed rocks like two infuriated wild-cats in the dark, neither
+venturing to break hold for a blow, nor having breath enough in our
+bodies for so much as a curse. My adversary struck me once with his
+head under the chin, so hard a blow that everything turned red before
+me; and then I got my knee up into the pit of his stomach and caused
+him to quiver from the agony of it; yet the fellow clung to me like a
+bull-terrier, and never so much as whined.
+
+It was never my nature to yield easily, and I felt now this struggle
+was to cost his life or mine; so I clinched my teeth, and sought my
+best to push back the other's head until the neck should crack. But if
+I was a powerful man, this other was no less so, and he fought with a
+fierce and silent desperation that foiled me. We dug and tore, gouged
+and struck, digging our heels into the soft earth in a vain endeavor to
+gain some advantage of position. My cheek, I knew, was bleeding from
+contact with a jagged stone, and I was fast growing faint from the
+awful tension, when I felt his arms slip.
+
+"My God!" he panted. "The devil has me!"
+
+So startled was I by these English words, that I loosed my grip,
+staring breathlessly through the darkness.
+
+"Are you white?" I gasped, so weakened I could scarce articulate.
+
+For a moment he did not answer, but I could hear his breath coming in
+gasps and sobs. Then he spoke slowly, his voice hoarse from exertion.
+
+"By the memory of Moses! I was once,--but that squeeze must have
+turned me black, I 'm thinkin'. An' ye're no Injun?"
+
+"Not so much as a feather of one," I retorted. "But that is what I
+took you to be."
+
+We were both sitting up by this time, he with his back against the
+bank, both of us panting as if we could never regain our breath, and
+eagerly seeking to see each other's features in the gloom. Any attempt
+at conversation was painful, but I managed at last to stammer:
+
+"You must be a whalebone man, or I 'd have broken every rib in your
+body."
+
+"An' I 'm not a bit sure ye did n't," was the response, uttered between
+puffs. "'T was the worst grip ever Ol' Tom Burns had squeeze him,--an'
+I 've felt o' bars mor' nor oncet. Who may ye be, anyhow, stranger?
+an' for what cause did ye jump down yere on me?"
+
+There was a trace of growing anger in his tone, as remembrance of the
+outrage returned to his mind, which caused me to smile, now that I
+could breathe less painfully. It seemed such a ludicrous affair,--that
+dark struggle, each mistaking the purpose and color of the other.
+
+"My name is Wayland," I made haste to explain, "and I left the Fort but
+now, hoping by this round-about route to reach the Kinzie place and
+return under cover of darkness. I slipped on the edge of the bank up
+yonder, and the next thing I knew we were at it. I can assure you,
+friend, I supposed myself in the arms of a savage. You say your name
+is Burns?"
+
+"Ol' Tom Burns."
+
+"What? It is not possible you are the same who brought a message to
+Major Wayland on the Maumee?"
+
+"I reckon I am," he said, deliberately. "An' be you the boy I met?"
+
+"Yes," I said, still doubtful. "But how came you here?"
+
+"Wal, here's whar I belong. I've bin a sorter huntin' an' trappin'
+yer'bouts fer goin' on nine year or so, an' I built a shanty to live in
+up yonder by the forks. I hed n't much more nor got home frum down
+east, when the Injuns burnt thet down; an' sence then I ain't bin much
+o' nowhar, but I reckon'd I 'd go inter ther Fort to-morrow and git
+some grub."
+
+He spoke with a slow, deliberate drawl, as if not much accustomed to
+converse; and I pictured him to myself as one of those silent
+plainsmen, so habituated to solitude as almost to shun companionship,
+though he had already let drop a word or two that made me deem him one
+not devoid of humor. Suddenly I thought of De Croix.
+
+"Has any one passed here lately?" I asked, rising to my feet, the old
+emulation throbbing in my veins. "A white man, I mean, going north."
+
+"Wal," he answered slowly, and as he also stood up I could make out,
+what I had not noted in our previous meeting, that he was as tall as I,
+but spare of build; "I ain't seen nuthin', but some sort o' critter
+went ploughin' down inter the gulch up yonder, maybe ten minutes 'fore
+ye lit down yere on me. Dern if I know whether it were a human er a
+bar!"
+
+"Will you show me the nearest way to the Kinzie house?"
+
+"I reckon I 'll show ye all right, but ye bet ye don't git me nigher
+ner a hundred foot o' the door," he returned seriously. "John Kinzie
+'s a mighty good man, stranger, but he an' Ol' Tom Burns ain't never
+hitched worth a cent."
+
+We climbed silently, and came out together upon the top. A slight beam
+of light crept along through the open door of the log house just in
+front of us, and for the first time I caught a fair view of my
+companion. He was a tall, gaunt, wiry fellow, typical in dress and
+manner of his class,--the backwoodsmen of the Southwest,--but with a
+peculiarly solemn face, seamed with wrinkles, and much of it concealed
+beneath a bushy, iron-gray beard. We eyed each other curiously.
+
+"Dern if ever I expected ter meet up with ye agin in no sich way as
+this," he said shortly. "But thet 's the house. Be ye goin' ter stay
+thar long?"
+
+"No," I answered, feeling anxious to have his guidance back to the
+Fort, "not over five minutes. Will you wait?"
+
+"Reckon I may as well," and he seated himself on a stump.
+
+No one greeted me at the house, not even a dog; though I could see
+figures moving within. Either the occupants felt that an assumption of
+confidence was their best security, or experienced no fear of Indian
+treachery, for I rapped twice before there was any response. A young
+girl, with a face of rare beauty and a pair of roguish black eyes,
+peered out curiously. At sight of a stranger she drew back slightly,
+yet paused to ask:
+
+"Did you wish to see some one here?"
+
+"I am seeking for a young girl," I answered, wondering if this could
+possibly be she, "and they told me at the Fort I should probably find
+her here. May I ask if you are Elsa Matherson?"
+
+For a moment she looked out at me, as if I might be an escaped lunatic.
+Then she turned her face over her shoulder toward those within.
+
+"Mr. Kinzie," said she, "here 's another man looking for Elsa
+Matherson."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+AN ADVENTURE UNDERGROUND
+
+A heavily-built man in shirt-sleeves, with a strong, good-humored face,
+and a shock of gray hair, appeared beside the girl in the doorway.
+
+"'T is not the same scamp that kissed you, Josette," he exclaimed,
+after examining me intently in the dim light, "but I doubt not he may
+prove of similar breed, and it behooves you to be careful where you
+stand."
+
+"Has De Croix been here?" I questioned, scarcely deeming it possible he
+could have outstripped me in our race through the night.
+
+"I know not the rascal's name," was the reply, in the man's deep voice,
+"but certain I am there was one here scarce ten minutes agone asking
+after this same Matherson girl. Saint James! but she must have made
+some sweet acquaintances, judging from the looks of her callers!
+Josette has been rubbing the fellow's kiss off her lips ever since he
+caught her unawares."
+
+"He was a dandified young fellow?" I urged, impatient to be off, yet
+eager to be sure.
+
+The girl laughed lightly, her roguish eyes ablaze with merriment.
+
+"He might be sometime, Monsieur," she cried, evidently glad to talk,
+"but to-night he reminded me of those scare-crows the farmers near
+Quebec keep in their fields; a little chap, with a bit of turned-up
+mustache, and a bright eye, but rags,--gracious, such rags as he wore!"
+
+'T was De Croix, there could be no doubt of it,--De Croix, torn and
+dishevelled by his mad rush through the darkness, but with no shred of
+his reckless audacity gone. There was naught left me now but to race
+back upon his trail, hopeful for some chance that might yet allow me to
+come in first on the return journey. In my throat I swore one
+thing,--the graceless villain should never collect his reward at both
+ends of his journey. He had already stolen the sweets from Josette's
+red lips, but he should never claim those of Mademoiselle. I lingered
+for but a single question more.
+
+"But this Elsa Matherson,--she is not here, then?"
+
+"No," returned Mr. Kinzie, somewhat gruffly, "and has not been since
+the closing of the gates of the Fort. I think you are a parcel of mad
+fools, to be chasing around on such an errand; yet humanity leads me to
+bid you come in. There is not a safe foot of ground to-night for any
+strange white man within three hundred miles of Dearborn."
+
+I glanced about me into the black shadows, startled at his solemn words
+of warning. Away to the southward a faint glimmer told of the location
+of the Fort; farther to the west, a sudden blaze swept up into the sky,
+reflected in ruddy radiance on the clouds, and the thought came to me
+that the savages had put torch to the deserted cabin on the south
+branch of the river.
+
+"No doubt 'tis true," I answered hastily; "yet, whatever the danger may
+be, I must regain the stockade before dawn."
+
+I saw him step forward, as if he would halt me in my purpose; but,
+wishing to be detained no longer, my thoughts being all with De Croix
+and Mademoiselle, I turned away quickly and plunged back into the
+darkness.
+
+"You young fool!" he called after me, "come back, or your life will be
+the forfeit!"
+
+Without so much as answering, I ran silently in my moccasins to the
+spot where I had left Ol' Tom Burns. He sat upon his stump,
+motionless, apparently without the slightest interest in anything going
+on about him.
+
+"Ol' Kinzie was gol-dern polite ter ye, sonny," he commented. "Reckon
+if an Injun was a scalpin' me right on his front doorstep he 'd never
+hev asked me ter walk inside like that! He an' me sorter drew on each
+other 'bout a year ago, down at Lee's shebang; an' he don't 'pear ter
+fergit 'bout it."
+
+"Show me the nearest safe passage to the Fort," I said, interrupting
+him, almost rudely.
+
+He got up slowly, and cast his eyes with deliberation southward.
+
+"Oh, thar ain't no sich special hurry, I reckon," he answered with an
+exasperating drawl. "We 'll be thar long afore daylight,--perviding
+allers we don't hit no Injuns meantime,--an' the slower we travel the
+less chance thar is o' thet."
+
+"But, friend Burns," I urged, "it is a racing matter. I must reach
+there in advance of another man, who has already been here ahead of me."
+
+"So I sorter reckoned from what I heerd; but ye need n't rip the shirt
+off ye on thet account. The feller can't git in thar till after
+daylight, nohow. Them sojers is too blame skeered ter open the gates
+in the dark, an' all the critter 'll git if he tries it will be a
+volley o' lead; so ye might just as well take it easylike."
+
+The old man's philosophy seemed sound. De Croix would certainly not
+gain admittance until he could make himself known to the guard, and,
+carefully as the stockade was now patrolled, it was hardly probable he
+would be permitted to approach close enough for identification during
+the night. De Croix was no frontiersman, and was reckless to a degree;
+yet his long training as a soldier would certainly teach him a measure
+of caution in approaching a guarded fort at such a time.
+
+"'Tis doubtless true," I admitted, "yet I shall feel safer if we push
+on at once."
+
+"Ye called the feller De Croix, didn't ye?" he asked. "Is it the
+French dandy as was at Hawkins's?"
+
+"Yes," I answered, "and I guess you don't care much to help him."
+
+Burns wasted no breath in reply, but moved forward with noiseless step.
+Glancing back, I could clearly perceive Kinzie framed in the light of
+his open door. The vivacious French lass stood beside him, peering
+curiously out across his broad shoulders. Then we sank into the
+blackness of the ravine, and everything was blotted from our sight.
+
+Burns evidently knew the intricacies of the path leading to the Fort
+gate, for I soon felt my feet upon a beaten track, and stumbled no more
+over the various obstacles that rendered my former progress so
+uncertain. My guide moved with excessive caution, as it seemed to me,
+frequently pausing to peer forward into the almost impenetrable
+darkness, and sniffing the night air suspiciously as if hoping thus to
+locate any lurking foes when his keen eyes failed in the attempt. So
+dark was it that I had almost to tread upon his heels in order to
+follow him, as not the slightest sound came from his stealthy advance.
+As he surmounted the steeper inclines of land, I was able to perceive
+him dimly, usually leaning well forward and moving with the utmost
+caution, his long rifle held ready for instant use. As we drew nearer
+the river,--or where I supposed the river must be, for I could
+distinguish but little of our position,--he swerved from the footpath
+we were following, and the way instantly grew rougher to our feet.
+
+"Reckon we 'd better hit the crick a bit below the Fort," he muttered,
+over his shoulder; "less likely ter find Injuns waitin' fer us thar."
+
+"You think there are savages on this shore?"
+
+He turned partially, and peered at me through the darkness.
+
+"I never heerd tell as Injuns was fools," he answered briefly. "In
+course thar 's some yere, an' we 're almighty likely ter find 'em."
+
+On the bank of the river, which I could see dimly by the faint light of
+a star or two that had broken through the cloud-rifts, he paused
+suddenly, sniffing the air like a pointer dog.
+
+"The gol-dern fools!" he muttered, striking his rifle-butt on the
+ground with an expression of disgust. "They 've gone and done it now!"
+
+"Done what?" I questioned, almost guessing his meaning as a pungent
+odor assailed my nostrils. "That smells like rum!"
+
+"'T is rum. Dern if ever I see whar the A'mighty finds so many blame
+idjits ter make sojers of! Them ar' fellers in the Fort wer n't in
+tight 'nough pickle, with a thousand savages howlin' 'bout 'em, so they
+'ve went an' poured all their liquor inter the river! If I know Injun
+nature, it jist means the craziest lot o' redskins, whin they find it
+out, ever was on these yere plains. I bet they make thet fool garrison
+pay mighty big fer this job!"
+
+"You mean the destruction of the liquor will anger them?"
+
+"Anger? It'll drive 'em plum crazy,--they'll be ravin' maniacs! It's
+the hope o' spoils thet's held 'em back so long. They 've wanted the
+Fort to be 'vacuated, so as they could plunder it,--thet's been the
+song o' the chiefs to hold their young men from raisin' ha'r. But
+come, sonny, thar 's nothin' gained a-stayin' here, an' dern me if I
+want ter meet any Injun with thet thar smell in the air. I don't swim
+no river smellin' like thet one does. We 'll hev ter go further up, I
+reckon, an' cross over by the ol' agency buildin'."
+
+We crept up the edge of the stream, keeping well in under the north
+bank, and moving with the utmost caution, for the chances were strong
+that this portion of the river would be closely watched by the
+redskins. We met with no obstacle, however, nor were we apparently
+even observed from the stockade, as we slowly passed its overhanging
+shadow. I could distinguish clearly its dark outlines, even making out
+a head or two moving above the palisades; but no hail of any kind rang
+out across the intervening water, and we were soon beyond the upper
+block-house, where a faint light yet shone. We could see the dim shape
+of the two-story factory building, looking gloomy and deserted on the
+south shore. Burns lay flat at the water's edge, studying the building
+intently; and his extreme caution made me a bit nervous, although I
+could scarcely determine why, for I had thus far marked not the
+slightest sign of danger.
+
+"I reckon we 'll hev ter risk it," he said at length, as he bound his
+powder-horn upon his head with a dark cloth. "Come right 'long arter
+me, and don't make no splashin'."
+
+He slipped off so silently that I scarcely knew he was gone, until I
+missed the dark outline of his figure at my side. With all possible
+caution, I followed him. The current was not strong, but I partially
+faced it, and struck out with a long, steady stroke, so that my
+progress, as nearly as I could judge, was almost directly across the
+stream. Burns had been completely lost to my sight, although as I
+looked along the slightly glistening water I could see for some
+distance ahead. I remember a black log bearing silently down upon me,
+and how I shrank from contact with it, fearful lest it might conceal
+some human thing. Soon after it had swirled by, my feet touched the
+shelving bank, and I crept cautiously up into the overhanging shadow.
+Burns was there, and had already reconnoitred our position; for my
+first knowledge of his presence came when he slowly lowered himself
+down the bank until he lay close beside me.
+
+"They're thar," he said, soberly. "Thought most likely they wud be."
+
+"Indians?" I asked, doubtfully,--for I had an impression the factory
+might be garrisoned by some of our own people.
+
+"Sure; I heerd as how the sojers hed been drawed in, an' naturally
+reckoned the Injuns would n't be over-long findin' it out. 'Nother
+fool thing fer the sojers ter dew."
+
+He paused, listening intently. In the silence, above the slight sound
+of the running water, I felt sure I could distinguish voices speaking
+not far distant.
+
+"It 's no place yere ter stay," he whispered, his lips close at my ear.
+"Reckon best thing we kin dew now is to find one o' the sojers'
+root-caves somewhar along the bank, an' crawl in thar till daylight.
+The Injuns ain't so likely to bother us when the guards kin see 'em
+from the Fort. They don't want no out-'n'-out fuss, to my notion, till
+they kin git inter the stockade for good. Creep 'long yere with me,
+sonny, an' 't won't be far till I find a hole somewhar thet 'll hide us
+fer awhile anyhow."
+
+We crawled slowly along, snake-fashion, at the edge of the river, for
+perhaps thirty feet, our movements hidden by the high and slightly
+overhanging bank at our left. The night was so dark that Burns relied
+more upon feeling than sight to guide him. At last he stopped suddenly.
+
+"Here's one o' 'em," he said. "Crawl along in, sonny; thar's lots o'
+room after ye go a foot er two."
+
+It was the merest hole dug into the bank, roughly lined with irregular
+bits of rock, which opened out into quite a cellar about a yard from
+the surface. The air within felt somewhat chill and damp, as I put my
+head cautiously down the narrow opening; but there seemed no cause for
+fear, and I crept nimbly forward, feeling my way as I advanced along
+the rude mud walls. I could hear Burns behind me on his hands and
+knees, puffing slightly as he squeezed through the small aperture that
+led into the larger chamber.
+
+I had advanced perhaps two yards without reaching the end of this odd
+underground apartment, when suddenly, and directly in my front, there
+sounded a deep, hollow, unearthly groan. The sound was so terrifying
+that I stopped with chilled blood and beating heart, gripping my
+knife-hilt and peering forward into the dark as frightened as ever I
+was in my life. I heard Burns gasp and half turn; then, before I could
+move, even had I dared venture such a thing, an instantaneous flash lit
+up the black interior. I caught one confused glimpse of a huge object,
+topped with a head of tumbled hair, of two flapping wings stretching
+out upon either side, and then the impenetrable curtain of the dark hid
+everything once more. Sweat bathed me in cold drops; nor could I have
+moved a limb to save my life. Behind me Burns was muttering what might
+have been a prayer; when the thing groaned again, a hollow, awful moan,
+thrilling with agony, that sent me grovelling upon my face as nearly
+dead as one could well be and yet breathe and know.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+"FRANCE WINS, MONSIEUR!"
+
+For the moment, every muscle of my body seemed paralyzed. I distinctly
+heard the creature moving in my direction, and I backed away violently,
+actuated only by the thought of instant escape into the open air. But
+Burns blocked the solitary passage.
+
+"Back out of here, for God's sake!" I managed to exclaim through
+parched lips. "That devil-thing is coming this way!"
+
+He struggled desperately in the darkness, tugging madly at some
+obstacle, an oath smothered on his lips. I waited and listened, every
+nerve on edge.
+
+"Dern it all, but I can't!" he groaned at last. "My blame of gun hes
+got wedged, and won't give an inch."
+
+Then a half-smothered laugh rippled out of the gloom just in front of
+me.
+
+"Heaven protect me, but it's Wayland!" came a voice, and the laughter
+broke into a roar of merriment.
+
+"Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu! This will be the death of me!"
+
+The voice, choked and muffled as it was, sounded strangely hollow in
+that dark cave; yet it had a familiar tone. So surprising was the
+situation, that I could only stare into the black void, speechless. It
+was Burns who realized the need of action.
+
+"Whoever the dern fool is," he growled, his voice hoarse with anger,
+"choke the wind out of him, or his blame howling will bring every Injun
+on the river yere!"
+
+"De Croix!" I exclaimed quickly, aroused to recollection by the
+seriousness of the situation, "stop that infernal racket, or the two of
+us will throttle you!"
+
+He puffed and gurgled, striving his best to smother the sense of
+ludicrousness that mastered him. To me there was small cause for
+merriment; the supreme terror of those moments merged into hot anger at
+the deception, and I crept forward eager to plant my hand upon the
+rascal's throat.
+
+"What French mockery is this?" I exclaimed, my hand hard upon his arm.
+"Think you, Captain de Croix, that you can play such tricks in this
+wilderness, and not be made to pay for them?"
+
+I felt him tremble under my fierce grasp; yet it was not from fear, for
+my words only served to loosen his laughter once more. Burns now broke
+in, shoving the barrel of his long rifle forward over my shoulder till
+he struck the Frenchman a blow that effectually silenced him.
+
+"You chattering ape!" he said, growling like an angry bear, "another
+yawp like that, and I 'll blow a hole clean through you! Now, you
+French ninny, tell us what this means, an' be quick about it if ye want
+ter save yer hide!"
+
+De Croix did not answer, but he ceased to laugh, and panted as if the
+breath had been knocked out of him. Another impatient movement by
+Burns led me to speak up hastily in his defence.
+
+"Wait," I said, laying my grasp upon his gun, "he has no breath left
+with which to make reply. 'T is the French gallant who raced with me,
+the same whom you met at Hawkins's Ford; and no doubt he felt good
+reason to play the ghost here in this dark pit."
+
+"Ay," panted De Croix painfully, "I truly thought the savages were upon
+me, and sought to frighten them by the only means I could devise.
+_Sacre_! but you hit me a sore blow in the ribs! If I have frightened
+you, 't was no worse than the terror that took me at your entrance
+here."
+
+For a time none spoke, and no sound, save De Croix's labored breathing,
+broke the silence. Burns had turned slightly, and I knew was listening
+intently for any sound without. Apparently satisfied that the noise
+made by us had not been overheard, he asked in his old deliberate drawl:
+
+"How in thunder, Mister Parly-voo, did ye git up thet thar combination,
+anyhow?"
+
+I heard the Frenchman chuckle, and pinched him as a warning to be
+careful. He answered, in his reckless, easy way:
+
+"'T was all simple enough behind the scenes, Messieurs. I but took
+some old sacking discovered here, and used it as a robe, standing my
+hair well on end; and a flash of powder made the scene most realistic.
+The thing indeed worked well. I would I had a picture of Master
+Wayland's face to show Toinette!"
+
+This chance mention of her name recalled me to myself. The undecided
+wager was yet to be won, and the night was now nearly spent. There
+came to me a sudden determination to risk a rush through the darkness
+to the Fort gates, rather than chance any further defeat at the hands
+of this rash gallant. Yet prudence bade me question somewhat further
+before I ventured upon so mad a deed.
+
+"No doubt 't was most happy from your point of view, Monsieur. From
+ours, it was less so; and instead of laughing, you might better be
+thanking your lucky stars that you did not pay more dearly for such
+folly. But what brought you here? Why have you failed to reach the
+stockade?"
+
+"_Sacre_!" he muttered carelessly, "but I had a fierce enough run for
+it as it was. Why did I not reach the stockade? Because, my friend, I
+am no real ghost to be invisible in the night, nor am I a bird to fly.
+'T was in the shadow of that big building yonder that I ran into a nest
+of those copper-colored fiends, and 't was nip and tuck which of us
+won, had I not, by pure good luck, chanced to stumble into this hole,
+and so escape them. Perchance they also thought me a ghost, who knows?
+But, be that as it may, they were beating the river bank for me in the
+flesh, when you came creeping here."
+
+We lay flat on the floor, the three of us, our eyes fastened upon the
+faint light that began to stream in through the entrance. I could hear
+Burns muttering to himself, as is often the way with men who lead lives
+of solitude; and every now and then De Croix would shake silently at
+the recollection of what had just occurred. I minded neither of them,
+but chiefly planned how best I might outwit De Croix and win the prize
+offered by Mademoiselle. The promise of dawning day was in the outer
+air, too dim as yet to render our faces visible. Suddenly the slight
+draft of air veered, and swept a tiny breath of smoke into my nostrils.
+It came so quickly that I scarcely realized its significance until
+Burns scrambled to his knees with a growl.
+
+"God! the devils have run us to cover!" he cried, sullenly. "They have
+started a fire to smoke us out!"
+
+It hardly needed a moment to prove this true; the thin smoke grew more
+and more dense, filling the narrow entrance until we lay gasping for
+breath. De Croix, ever the most impulsive, was the first to act.
+
+"_Parbleu_!" he gasped, pulling himself forward with his hands.
+"Better Indians than this foul air! If I die, it shall at least be in
+the open."
+
+To remain longer cooped in that foul hole was indeed madness; and as
+soon as I could I followed him, rolling out of the entrance to the
+water's edge, fairly sick with the pressure upon my lungs, and caring
+so little what the end might be, provided I might first attain one
+breath of pure air, that before I gained strength to resist I was
+prisoner to as ill-looking a crew of savages as ever my eyes
+encountered. The villains triced us firmly with thongs of skin, and
+sat us up against the bank like so many puppets, dancing about before
+us, snapping their dirty fingers in our faces, and treating us to all
+manner of taunts and insults. 'T was done so quickly as to seem a
+dream, had I not smarted so sorely from the blows dealt me, and my
+limbs chafed where the tight cords were drawn.
+
+I recall glancing aside at Burns; but his seamed and puckered face
+remained emotionless, as the red devils rolled him over till he stared
+straight up at the sky, now gray with coming dawn. The sight of De
+Croix almost set me laughing, which won for me a kick from the brute
+who had me in special charge. The Frenchman was surely no court dandy
+now; his fancy clothing clung to him in rags, while the powder-flash
+within the cellar had blackened his face and made sad havoc with his
+gay mustache. He endeavored to smile at me as our eyes met, but the
+effort produced only what seemed like a demoniac grin.
+
+"'T is a hard life, Monsieur," I could not forbear remarking, "and will
+hardly remind you of Versailles."
+
+His form stiffened in its bonds, as if the words spurred his memory of
+other days.
+
+"A French soldier smiles at fate, wherever it overtakes him," he
+answered, a touch of pride in his voice. "Besides, the game is not
+played out,--I may yet prove the first one in. But see! if I mistake
+not, here comes the chief of all these devils."
+
+The new-comer strode down the high bank alone, and was greeted noisily
+by our captors. It was the same Indian that had halted Captain Wells
+the day previous; and he looked us over with a contemptuous sneer that
+curled his lips and transformed the whole expression of his hideously
+painted face. I noted that he paid but small heed to either De Croix
+or myself, contenting his vengeance with sharp kicks at our prostrate
+bodies; but as he came to Burns, he paused, bending down till he could
+peer into the old borderer's upturned face.
+
+"Bah! I know you," he said, brokenly. "You Ol' Burns. Stake down in
+village for you."
+
+The old man neither moved his head nor gave the slightest sign that he
+had heard.
+
+"Squaw eat heart," went on the Indian, prodding him with his stick;
+"feed bones to dog. All white men go that way now,--Ol' Burns first."
+
+"Topenebe," was the quiet reply, as the victim rolled over until he
+half-sat against the bank, "I had the pleasure o' kickin' ye once down
+on the Kankakee, an' should be mighty glad ter do it agin. I reckon as
+how ye don't feel over friendly ter me, but ye 're simply wastin' yer
+breath tauntin' me. Any time yer derned old fire is hot, I 'm ready to
+dance."
+
+These calm words angered the warrior, and he spat at him; then he
+turned and grunted an order in his own language. With blows of their
+sticks the Indians got us on our feet; but when they sought to drive us
+up the steep bank to the prairie, Ol' Burns balked and absolutely
+refused to move.
+
+"Not one dern step, Topenebe," he swore grimly, "with these yere things
+on my legs. I 'm no pony ter be hobbled, an' blame if I 'll jump 'long
+fer any red-skin. Ye kin carry me, if ye ain't too lazy; but, by
+thunder! thar 'll be no walkin' till ye cut them bonds."
+
+Blows, curses, and threats failed alike to budge the old man. He
+simply sat down and smiled grimly at them; and we followed his example,
+dimly perceiving there must be a purpose in it. Sheer obstinacy wins
+many a battle, and when we went up the bank our lower limbs were free,
+although to my mind we were as hopelessly bound as ever. Not so with
+Burns. I chanced to press close to him, as we came out upon the
+prairie, and he muttered a quick word into my ear.
+
+"See how they herd us in the shade of the Agency! They are not yet
+ready to let the sojers know whut they're re'lly up to. Not an Injun
+will go beyond thet line long enough to be seen. Be ready to run fer
+it as soon as I say 'Go,' an' tell the Frenchman."
+
+I succeeded in making De Croix understand, by means of the mongrel
+French at my command, which seemed not to be intelligible to the
+savages; and we moved forward at as slow a gait as our vigilant guards
+permitted, with every muscle tense for the coming strain. We were
+bunched together, with no pretence of order on the part of our captors;
+indeed, they seemed to be of various minds over what was to be done
+with us, though Topenebe exercised sufficient control over his mongrel
+followers to compel at least partial obedience to his orders. We
+tramped along to the west of the factory, the walls of which shut off
+all view of the Fort, a half-dozen of the savages about us, while the
+chief stalked on a few feet in advance.
+
+We had almost reached the southwestern corner of the big Agency
+building, and Topenebe had already taken a step to the right, carefully
+keeping the log walls as a protection between our movements and the
+eyes of the garrison, when Burns, shaking off the Indians nearest him,
+bounded suddenly forward and struck Topenebe with his head, hurling the
+fellow by his side over backward as he passed.
+
+"Run for the gate!" he yelled.
+
+Like an arrow from the bow, I shot around the Agency corner, and raced
+for the stockade, De Croix, running like a deer, barely a foot behind
+me. I never dreamed, in that moment of intense action, that Burns was
+not also coming,--that he had deliberately sacrificed himself in order
+to hold back the savages and give us the better chance for life.
+Behind arose the sound of struggle, but there was no indication of
+pursuit, and as I rounded the end of the stockade the lower gate swung
+open just before me and I glanced back, half pausing as I realized the
+old borderer had not followed us; then some one tripped me, and I fell
+headlong. With a sudden rush, De Croix swept by.
+
+"France wins, Monsieur!" he cried back in mocking triumph, as I
+staggered to my knees.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+A CONTEST OF WITS
+
+Though I was never of hasty or violent temper, it was quite as well
+that I failed to gain a sight of De Croix as I passed the posts and the
+sentry clanged the gate behind me. The Frenchman's scurvy trick would
+have heated cooler blood than mine; nor was my spirit soothed by the
+harsh fall I suffered. But De Croix had not waited; nowhere along the
+bare sunlit parade was he visible. I saw nothing but a squad of
+grinning soldiers lounging beside the barracks, until Captain Wells,
+issuing from the guard-house door, caught sight of me and came forward.
+
+"Back, are you, Master Wayland?" he said gruffly, and 't was easy to
+see he did not approve of my escapade. "I scarcely thought to see you
+here again with so full a head of hair, after I learned of your mad
+wager. Providence must indeed take special care of fools. Have the
+redskins captured our French friend?"
+
+"He entered a step in my advance."
+
+A gleam of amusement played over his swarthy face.
+
+"Ah, and so you let him win!" he exclaimed; "he, a mere voyager from
+the courts, unused to forest play! Such remissness deserves the
+guard-house, at the very least. Come, how happened it that this gay
+sprig outfooted you?"
+
+"'T was but a trick," I retorted, aroused by these contemptuous words,
+"and one I shall make him pay well for. But I pray you cut these bands
+and set me free."
+
+I think he had not noticed them before; but now, as he quickly drew his
+knife across the deerskin thongs, his whole expression changed.
+
+"'Tis Indian tying," he said earnestly; "you have been in the hands of
+the savages?"
+
+"Ay!" and the memory of it instantly brought back the recollection of
+the sacrifice that had won us our freedom. "There were three of us
+taken at daylight on the river bank, beyond the factory building. De
+Croix and I escaped through the efforts of one who is still a prisoner,
+and marked for torture."
+
+Many were gathering about us by this time, anxious to learn whatever
+news I brought from without; but it was Captain Heald himself who now
+pushed his way through the throng until he fronted me.
+
+"Who was it?" he asked, sharply. "We have lost no men!"
+
+"His name is Burns, sir. I ran across him just back of the Kinzie
+house."
+
+"Burns? Ol' Tom Burns?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+Heald laughed, a look of evident relief on his haggard features.
+
+"We shall not have to worry much as to his fate," he said, turning
+toward Wells. "You remember the fellow, William? He was one of Mad
+Anthony's scouts, and came west with you in 1803 when you first held
+council here."
+
+The other nodded, a twinkle of pleasant recollection in his eyes.
+"Remember him?" he repeated. "I am not likely ever to forget him. He
+it was who brought me your message at Fort Wayne a month ago. My
+sympathies in this case are entirely with the Indians. There are
+likely to be things happening when Ol' Tom is around, unless he has
+lost his versatility and nerve in recent years. Come, my lad, give us
+the details of the story, for it must be worth the hearing if Ol' Burns
+played a leading part. He is as full of tricks as a dog of fleas."
+
+I repeated the story briefly, for I was now eager to be away before De
+Croix could dress and claim his wager. I knew well the conceited
+coxcomb would never seek the presence of Mademoiselle until he had shed
+the rags he wore on entering the Fort. I remember yet that throng of
+faces, anxious yet amused, peering over each other's shoulders to get a
+better view of me as I talked, and constantly augmented as the word
+passed quickly about the garrison that we had safely returned from our
+midnight adventures.
+
+"You will send aid to him?" I questioned, as I concluded, my eyes fixed
+appealingly upon Captain Heald.
+
+"Not I," was the prompt and decisive rejoinder. "No soldier of this
+command shall leave the stockade until the hour for our final
+departure. The fellow had a chance to come in here with the others
+before the gates were closed, but was obstinate as a mule, and must now
+take the consequences. But you need not worry about Ol' Tom, my boy;
+he 'll circumvent those red devils in some way, you may rest assured,
+nor would he even thank us for interference. I have no force with
+which to control the horde of savages that surround us here. A clash
+of arms would be their excuse for immediate attack, and might mean
+death and torture to the whole garrison. Our only hope lies in being
+permitted to pass out without armed collision; and to do this requires
+that we ignore such hidden deeds. 'Twas a mad prank of yours last
+night, and might have involved us all in common ruin. Go this time
+free, except for these words of censure; for you are not directly under
+my orders. Another such attempt, subversive of all discipline, and the
+gates of Dearborn will be closed against you."
+
+These harsh expressions stung me, but I felt them in a measure merited,
+and made no reply.
+
+"'T was but the act of a boy, Heald," interposed Wells kindly, resting
+his hand upon my shoulder, "and you will find the lad well worth having
+when time of trial comes."
+
+I slipped away through an opening in the curious throng, and hastened
+across the open parade toward the messroom. I felt dust-covered and
+bruised from my rough experiences, and hoped to discover opportunities
+for a bath. The building called the mess-room was long, running nearly
+half the length of the stockade, built like the others of logs, two
+stories in height, and containing a number of rooms. The single flight
+of stairs, opening just within the porch, was exceedingly rude, and
+built without any protecting rail. I hesitated a moment when fairly
+within the entrance, scarce knowing which way to turn in search of what
+I sought; but as I waited there, a light step sounded upon the bare
+floor above, and glancing up, with quickened beat of the heart, my eyes
+caught the soft drapery of a woman as she stepped on the upper stair.
+
+I could scarcely have retreated had I wished to do so, though I
+realized instantly who it was, and drew back against the wall, so that
+she came down, singing lightly to herself, without noticing my presence
+until we were face to face. It was a picture to touch the heart of any
+man, and abide forever in the memory. I saw the sunlight as it
+streamed through an upper window along the rough log wall and flecked
+her white dress with ever-changing spots of quivering gold, and, as she
+drew nearer to my standing-place, played softly amid the masses of her
+dark-brown hair, giving it a tinge of glory. How daintily fair she
+was! how archly sweet looked the clear girlish face under the
+coquettish sweep of the broad hat! and with what unconscious grace she
+moved down the rude stairway, one white hand steadying her against the
+brown logs, the other gathering her draperies so close that I could not
+be blind to the daintily slippered foot that shyly peeped below the
+petticoat of ruffled silk. I may not have loved her then as I learned
+to do in later days, but my heart throbbed riotously at her presence,
+and I stood forgetful of all else.
+
+As she turned aside at the foot of the stairs, she saw me, and the
+color deserted her face, only to return instantly in deeper volume,
+while her tell-tale eyes hid themselves behind long lashes.
+
+"And are you indeed returned, Master Wayland?" she asked quickly,
+conquering her first emotion with a proud uplifting of her head. "You
+surprised me greatly. I think I first mistook you for a ghost come
+back to haunt me for having despatched you on so perilous a quest. You
+cannot know how I have been scolded for doing such a thing; yet surely
+you would have gone, even if I had failed to encourage it."
+
+"Perhaps so, Mademoiselle," I answered, hoping I might lead her to
+speak with greater seriousness; "but it was the hope of the reward that
+spurred me forward."
+
+"Ah, of course," she said deliberately ignoring her own offer, and with
+a reckless toss of her head, "you sought a fair girl for whose sake you
+have travelled far. Pray tell me, Monsieur,--I am so curious to
+know,--do you truly think Josette fairer than I?"
+
+She spoke so lightly, smiling softly into my eyes, that I hardly
+detected the faint tinge of regretful sarcasm in her low voice.
+
+"Josette, you ask me? Why, Josette is indeed a most charming girl,
+Mademoiselle; but to my mind there can be no comparison between her and
+you, for you are the fairest woman I have ever known."
+
+Her dark eyes were full upon me, and I saw her parted lips move as if
+she would speak. But no words came, and we stood there silent except
+for the nervous tapping of her foot against the floor. Her look of
+seriousness changed into a smile.
+
+"By my faith, but you pay compliments with so grave a countenance,
+Monsieur, that I hardly know how to receive them. Most men whisper
+such things with a light laugh, or a twinkle of the eye, and I know
+their words to be empty as bubbles of air. But you,--why, you almost
+make me feel you are in earnest."
+
+"And I am," I interrupted, longing to seize her hand as I knew De Croix
+would have done, and pour forth the words that burnt upon my lips. "I
+have not been privileged to see much of the great outside world,
+Mademoiselle,--the world of courts and cities,--nor do I know how
+lovely its women may be; but no ideal formed in dreams satisfies me as
+you do. I know naught of idle compliments, nor the graces of a
+courtier; but my words are from the heart."
+
+"I do truly believe and trust you, John Wayland," and she gave me her
+hand. "But let us talk of this no longer. My vanity is already more
+than satisfied by your frank and honest speech. And so you found
+Josette?"
+
+"Yes," I answered, scarce noting what it was I said, so puzzled was I
+by her quick retreat.
+
+"And that meeting, perchance, was so pleasant that it has taken your
+thought from all else? It must indeed be so, or why is it that Master
+Wayland doth not claim of me the stake of the wager?"
+
+"Because," I stammered, greatly embarrassed by her roguish questioning
+eyes, "I fear it has not been fairly won."
+
+"Not fairly won?" she echoed, puzzled by my tone and manner. "Surely
+you have made the trip, and the terms were plain. Really, Monsieur,
+you do not think I would withhold so small a reward from the winner?"
+
+"But there was another,--the prize was destined for him who came back
+first."
+
+"And has Captain de Croix returned also?"
+
+"We arrived together, Mademoiselle, but it was his good fortune to be
+earliest through the gate."
+
+'Twas good to see how her face lit up with the amusement this reply
+afforded her.
+
+"Pish! but you are in truth the most marvellous man I ever knew. 'T is
+good to meet with such open honesty; and when did maid ever have before
+so unselfish a cavalier to do her honor? Monsieur, I greatly doubt if
+Captain de Croix will prove so thoughtful when his hour comes."
+
+"You are right, Toinette," broke in a voice at my back. "I know not
+what Master Wayland may be yielding up so easily, but, like the Shylock
+of your William Shakespeare, I am here to claim my pound of flesh."
+
+I wheeled and faced him, standing firmly between his approach and the
+girl, my blood instantly boiling at the familiar sound of that drawling
+voice.
+
+"I have refused to accept from Mademoiselle what I had not fairly
+earned," I said, with quiet emphasis, "and so, no doubt, will you."
+
+There was that about my words and action that astonished him, and for
+the moment his old audacity was gone as he swept a puzzled glance over
+our faces. I have often reflected upon the contrast we must have
+presented to her sight as we stood there,--for De Croix had donned his
+best attire, and was once again resplendent in frills and ribbons, with
+heavily powdered hair.
+
+"Oh, most certainly, what I have not earned," he said at length, "but
+the kiss promised is surely mine by every right, as I was the first in."
+
+"'T was done by a most scurvy trick."
+
+"Poof! what of that? 'Tis the same whether the goal be won by wit and
+strategy, or mere fleetness of foot. Toinette will make no such fine
+distinction, I warrant you."
+
+"Mademoiselle," and I turned toward the smiling girl, who seemingly
+enjoyed our interchange of compliments, "what may have been your
+understanding of this wager?"
+
+"Why," she answered slowly, endeavoring to recall the details to mind,
+"Captain de Croix declared he would willingly make the trip for a touch
+of rosy lips, and in a spirit of venture I promised that whichever of
+you two first completed the journey and returned here should obtain
+such reward."
+
+"There, 't is plain enough," he cried, stroking his mustache
+complacently, "and I have won."
+
+"Most surely you have," I retorted, "and the reward has already been
+given you."
+
+"Been given?" she questioned, "and by whom?"
+
+"The girl Josette."
+
+She looked from the one to the other of us, puzzled for a brief moment
+at the odd situation. Then, as her eyes settled upon De Croix's
+flushed and angry face, she laughed gaily, even as she daintily drew
+aside her skirts to pass us by.
+
+"Pish, Monsieur!" she cried, shaking her finger at him, "I doubt it
+not. No, you need not deny it, for 't is but one of your old-time
+tricks, as I knew them well at Montreal. 'T would be no more than
+right were I even now to reward Master Wayland, for he hath truly won
+it,--yet for that I will delay awhile."
+
+And with a flash of her dark eyes that held us speechless, she was gone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+GLIMPSES OF DANGER
+
+If any trace of anger held place in my heart, it utterly vanished as I
+noted the bewildered surprise with which De Croix gazed after
+Mademoiselle's departing figure.
+
+"_Sacre_!" he exclaimed presently, turning toward me, his face flushed,
+and forgetful of all his well-practised graces. "'T was an unworthy
+trick, Master Wayland, and one I am not likely to forget."
+
+"'T was a moment ago," I answered, in great good-humor at his
+discomfiture, "that you claimed wit was as important a factor as
+fleetness of foot in the winning of a race. I did no more than
+illustrate your theory, Monsieur."
+
+The humor of it failed to touch him, and there was a direct menace in
+his manner which caused me to fall back a step in the narrow passage
+and front him warily.
+
+"No boor of the woods shall laugh at me!" He exclaimed, his eyes
+aflame with passion, "be the cause love or war. What mean all these
+sly tricks of speech and action?--this hurried message to the ear of
+Mademoiselle? By my faith, you did not even pause to wash the dust
+from off your face before you sought her company. 'T is strange such
+intimacy could spring up between you in so short a time! But mark you
+this, Master Wayland, once and for all; I have not voyaged here from
+Montreal to be balked in my plans by the interference of an uncouth
+adventurer. I give you now fair warning that if you ever step again
+between Toinette and me, naught but the decision of steel shall end our
+quarrel."
+
+That he was indeed in deadly earnest, and indulged in no vain threat, I
+well knew; his passion was too strongly painted on his face. My own
+temper rose in turn.
+
+"I hear your words, Monsieur," I returned coldly, "and care no more for
+them than for a child's idle boasting. There is naught between
+Mademoiselle and me that the whole world might not know. We are good
+friends enough, but if by any chance love should be born from that
+friendship, no French gallant, though he sport a dozen swords, shall
+come between us. Win her if you can by reckless audacity and
+lavishness of perfume, but dream not to frighten me away from her
+presence by the mutterings of bravado. I am the son of a soldier,
+Monsieur, and have myself borne arms in battle."
+
+"You will fight, then?"
+
+"With pleasure, whenever the occasion arises," I replied slowly,
+struggling hard to keep back more bitter words. "But I see none at
+present, and, if I mistake not, all our skill at arms will soon be
+needed to save this girl, as well as ourselves, from savage hands."
+
+I know not how we would have parted, for 't was evidently his wish to
+goad me on to fight; and there are times when passion overwhelms us
+all. But at that moment I heard the soft rustle of a dress, and
+wheeled to face the fair young wife of Lieutenant Helm. It was plain
+she had been weeping; but De Croix, ever quicker than I in such
+matters, was first to accost her in words of courtesy. A pretty face
+to him was instant inspiration.
+
+"We bow to you, Madame," he exclaimed with excessive gallantry, doffing
+his hat till it swept the stairs; "your coming makes the very sunshine
+a brighter gold."
+
+"I trust it may bring peace as well," she answered, striving to smile
+back at him, although trouble yet shadowed her sweet face; "surely my
+ears caught the sound of harsh words."
+
+"A slight misunderstanding, which will hardly grow to any serious end,"
+he protested.
+
+"I trust not, gentlemen, for the time is come when we women at Dearborn
+surely need you all to protect us. Our case already appears desperate."
+
+"Has something new occurred," I questioned anxiously, "that makes you
+more alarmed?"
+
+Her eyes, grown strangely serious once more, swept our faces.
+
+"You may neither of you comprehend this in its full meaning as clearly
+as I do," she returned gravely, "for I am frontier-bred, and have known
+the Indian character from childhood. We have long been acquainted, in
+my father's family, with many of the chiefs and warriors now encamped
+around us. We have traded in their villages, lived with them in their
+smoke-stained tepees on the great plains, and trusted them as they
+showed faith in us. You, I learn," and she looked at me more intently,
+"were at my father's house no later than last night. In spite of
+rumors of war and tightly guarded Fort-gates, you found his door wide
+open to whosoever might approach, with never a dog to bark at an
+intruder, be he white or red. This is because the Silver-man has
+always dealt fairly with the Indian, and won his respect and gratitude
+in return. Now, in time of peril this trader dares to believe in their
+good faith toward him and his. 'T is because of this I know so well
+all that is going on without, and have been able to inform Captain
+Heald of much his scouts were unable to discover. From the first there
+have been two factions among the savages gathered yonder; and whether
+we live or die may depend upon which counsel prevails among them--that
+of peace or that of war. Until within an hour I have hoped it might be
+peace,--that the older chiefs would hold their young men in control,
+and the red wampum be not seen at Dearborn. Twenty minutes ago one of
+the noblest advocates of peace,--a Pottawattomie warrior named Black
+Partridge,--sought interview with Captain Heald, and his words have
+shown me how desperate indeed has our situation become."
+
+"He threatened?" broke in De Croix, his hand upon his sword-hilt.
+
+"Nay, Monsieur, 't is not the way of an Indian, nor is Black Partridge
+one to indulge in vain words. I have known him long; in childhood I
+sat upon his knee, and believe him so friendly to the whites that
+naught but a sense of duty could move him otherwise. Yet, as I say, he
+came just now to the commandant of this garrison, and returned a medal
+once given him by the government. It was done sadly, and with deep
+regret,--for I overheard his speech. He said: 'Father, I come to
+deliver up to you the medal I wear. It was given me by the Americans,
+and I have long worn it in token of our mutual friendship. Our young
+men are resolved to imbue their hands in the blood of the whites. I
+cannot restrain them, and I will not wear a token of peace while I am
+compelled to act as an enemy.'"
+
+She stopped, her agitated face buried in her hands, and neither of us
+spoke. The solemnity of her words and manner were most impressive.
+
+"You feel, then, that the die is cast?" asked De Croix, all lightness
+vanished from his voice.
+
+"I believe we march forth from these walls to our death to-morrow."
+
+"But why," I protested, "should you, at least, take part in such
+hazard? Your father's family, you tell us, will be safe from attack.
+Surely, that home might also prove your refuge?"
+
+The little woman, with the face of a girl, looked up at me indignantly
+through her tears.
+
+"Lieutenant Helm marches with the troops," she answered quietly, "and I
+am his wife."
+
+I retain no memory, at this late day, of what conversation followed. I
+know that De Croix in his easy carelessness about the future, sought to
+laugh at her fears and restore a feeling of hopefulness; but all my
+thoughts were elsewhere,--upon the grave dilemma in which we found
+ourselves, and my duty to these helpless ones upon every side.
+
+I must have left the two standing there and conversing, though just how
+I moved, and why, is dim to me. I recall crossing the bare parade, and
+noting the company that formed the little garrison drawn up in the
+shadow of the south stockade. At any other time I should have paused
+in interest, for military evolutions always attracted my attention; but
+then I had no sense other than that of mental and physical exhaustion
+from the hours of toil and lack of rest. Owing to my absence the night
+before, no quarters had been assigned me; but finding the barracks of
+the troops unoccupied, and yielding to imperative need, I flung myself,
+without undressing, upon a vacant bunk, and lay there tossing with the
+burden of intense fatigue.
+
+And then how the thoughts I sought to banish thronged upon me! No
+effort of my will could shut them out. I went over again and again the
+quarrel with De Croix, the incidents of the night, the solemn words of
+Mrs. Helm. Little by little, each detail clear and absolute, there
+unrolled before my mind's view the picture of our situation. I saw it
+as a frontiersman must, in all its grim probabilities. The little
+isolated Fort was cut off from all communication, held by a weakened
+garrison. Hope of rescue there was none. Without were already
+gathered hundreds of warriors attracted by rumors of war and promise of
+pillage; and these were growing in number and increasing in ferocity
+each day. I had ridden through them once, when their mood was only to
+annoy, and realized with a shudder of horror what it would mean to face
+them in our retreat, with all restraint of their chiefs removed. I
+thought of those long leagues of tangled forest-land stretching between
+us and the nearest border settlements, of ambuscades, of constant and
+harassing attack on the ever-thinning column as we fought for each foot
+of the way. Once my mind dwelt for an instant upon the quiet home I
+had left on the banks of the Maumee; as my eyes filled at the memory I
+drove it from me, for the present necessity was all too stern to permit
+indulgence in such weakness.
+
+'T was of the women and children I thought most, and their probable
+fate if we failed to win a passage. The half-framed thought of such a
+possibility made my heart throb with dread apprehension, as I set my
+lips together in firm resolve. What had become of Roger Matherson's
+orphan child? 'T was indeed strange that I could gain no trace of the
+little girl. At the Fort they said she was with the Kinzies, at
+Kinzies' they told me she was at the Fort. It was, as Seth had
+prophesied, like seeking after a will-o'-the-wisp; yet surely she must
+be in the flesh somewhere. My plain duty was to find her at once; and
+I resolved to take up the task anew that day, and question every one I
+met till some trace yielded to my persistency. However, I needed first
+to sleep; but as I resolutely closed my eyes, there came gliding into
+my memory another face,--an arch, happy face, with softly rounded
+cheeks and dark laughing eyes, a face that mirrored a hundred moods,
+and back of them all a sweet womanly tenderness to make every mood a
+new and rare delight. Toinette!--never before was woman's name so
+pleasant to my lips. Ignorant as I was in mysteries of the heart, I
+knew not clearly whether I loved her, though this I knew beyond
+cavil,--no savage hand should ever touch her while I lived; and if I
+had to fight each step of the path from that accursed spot to Wayne, I
+swore within my heart she should come safe through. Her gentle memory
+was with me when all the rest yielded to the drowsy god, and in sheer
+exhaustion I slept--to dream.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+A CONFERENCE AND A RESOLVE
+
+"To my mind, the risk would be extreme; and I greatly doubt the wisdom
+of the step."
+
+"But, William, what other alternative offers us any hope?"
+
+"I confess I know not, for your last mistake has greatly aggravated the
+situation."
+
+I sat up hastily, for seemingly these words were spoken at the very
+side of the bunk on which I lay. As I glanced about me I saw the room
+was vacant; so I knew the conference thus accidentally overheard must
+be taking place in an adjoining apartment. I was thoroughly awake when
+Captain Heald's voice spoke again.
+
+"You say a mistake,--what mistake?" he questioned, as though aggrieved.
+"I have done no more than simply obey the orders of my superior
+officer."
+
+"That may be true," broke in the gentler tones of Lieutenant Helm, "but
+of that we are unable to judge, for not one of your officers has been
+privileged to see those orders."
+
+"You shall see them now. If I have been remiss in taking you into my
+confidence in these grave matters, it has been because of certain
+malcontents in the garrison with whom I hesitated to confer."
+
+There was a rustle of paper, and Heald read slowly. I failed to
+distinguish the opening words, but as he reached the more important
+portion of the document his utterance grew deeper, and I heard
+distinctly this sentence:
+
+
+"Evacuate the post if practicable, and in that event distribute the
+property belonging to the United States in the Fort, and in the factory
+or agency, to the Indians in the neighborhood."
+
+
+There was a pause as he concluded. Captain Wells spoke first.
+
+"To my mind, these orders are not positive, and leave much to your
+discretion. Who brought the message, and when?"
+
+"A Wyandot named Winnemeg. He reached here on the ninth."
+
+"I have heard the name, and believe him worthy of confidence. Did you
+advise with him?"
+
+"Ay! Though he had no oral message from General Hull, he counselled
+immediate evacuation. I also felt such action to be wise; but things
+were in such condition within the Fort,--so large a number of helpless
+women and children to be provided for, and so heavy a proportion of the
+garrison on the sick-list,--that I found it impossible to act promptly.
+The Indians gathered so rapidly without, and assumed so hostile a
+manner, that I thought it suicidal to attempt a march through the
+wilderness, encumbered as we should be, without some positive
+understanding with their chiefs."
+
+"I can easily comprehend all this, and that you have sought to act for
+the best," was Wells's comment; "but I fail to realize how you hoped to
+appease those same Indians by the wanton destruction last night of the
+liquor thrown into the river. It was done in direct opposition to the
+orders you have just read, and is bound to increase the hatred of the
+savages. You may be sure they are not ignorant of the contents of your
+despatch, and must resent the destruction of property they consider
+their own."
+
+"'Twas done upon the advice of two of their leading chiefs."
+
+"Indeed! Which two?"
+
+"Topenebe and Little Sauk."
+
+"The two biggest devils in that whole Pottawattomie camp, and the head
+and front of their war-party! Their purpose is clear enough to my
+mind, and seamed with treachery. Well, Heald, from my knowledge of
+Indian nature I must say that whoever goes forth now to confer with
+yonder redskins has a desperate mission; but if you are still
+determined upon such a conference, I will take my chances with you. 'T
+is given unto man but once to die."
+
+"No, William," replied Captain Heald, with more firmness. "It is your
+part to remain here in protection of your niece, my wife; and if my own
+officers refuse to volunteer in this service, I shall go forth alone to
+meet the chiefs. It is my duty as commandant."
+
+"Two of your officers are here," said Wells, "and they can probably
+answer for themselves. Ensign Ronan is not present."
+
+"He is acting as officer of the day," returned Heald, somewhat stiffly,
+"and is therefore not eligible for such service. Perhaps one of the
+officers here present possesses courage enough for the venture?"
+
+Apparently neither cared to express himself, after such an insinuation.
+At last one, whose voice I recognized as that of Surgeon Van Voorhis,
+gave utterance to his refusal.
+
+"As the only medical officer of the garrison, I feel justified in
+declining to go upon so desperate an expedition," he said gravely. "It
+would expose not only my own life to unnecessary peril, but the lives
+of many others as well."
+
+"And what say you, Lieutenant Helm? Have you also personal scruples?"
+
+I could detect a tremor in the younger officer's voice, as he answered
+promptly.
+
+"Captain Heald has before this seen me in time of danger," he said
+quietly, "and can have no reason for ascribing cowardice to me. But I
+will frankly say this, sir, and with all respect to my commanding
+officer, I believe such conference as now proposed with the hostile
+Indians yonder, at this late day, to be perfectly useless, and that
+every hour's delay since the receipt of orders to evacuate the post has
+only tended to increase our danger and lessen our hope of escape. I
+feel now that our only chance of safety lies in defending this stockade
+against attack until a rescue party from the East can reach us. I have
+a young wife among the women of this garrison; to her I owe allegiance,
+as well as to the flag I serve. Feeling as I do, Captain Heald, as a
+soldier I will obey any command you give, and will go forth upon this
+mission if ordered to do so, either in your company or alone; but I
+cannot volunteer for such service. I believe it to be foolhardy, and
+that whoever undertakes it goes forth to almost certain death."
+
+"Then I shall go alone," said Heald, sternly; "nor do I look forward to
+any such disastrous ending to so open a mission of peace."
+
+"Wait," broke in Wells, impulsively. "I have a final suggestion to
+make, if you are resolved to go. There rode in my party hither a
+rattle-brained gallant, bearing a French commission, who ought to prove
+sufficiently reckless to lend you his companionship. Faith! but I
+think it may well suit the fellow. Besides, if he wore his French
+uniform it might have weight with the reds."
+
+"Who is he?" asked Heald, doubtfully. "I seem not to have memory of
+him."
+
+"He calls himself Captain Villiers de Croix, and holds commission in
+the Emperor's Guard."
+
+Scarcely were the words spoken when I was on my feet, all vestige of
+sleep gone from my eyes. De Croix was hardly a friend of mine, since
+late developments, but he had been my comrade for many a league of hard
+forest travel, and I was unwilling to have him carelessly sacrificed in
+a venture regarding the danger of which he knew nothing. Besides, I
+counted on his sword to aid in the defence of Mademoiselle. I
+understood thoroughly the desperate chances of Indian treachery that
+lay before such a commission as was now proposed. It was rash in the
+extreme; and only the terrors of our position could sanction such an
+experiment. The savages that hemmed us in were already in an ugly
+mood, and fully conscious of their power. To go forth to them, unarmed
+and uninvited, as Captain Heald coolly proposed doing, was to walk
+open-eyed into a trap which treachery might snap shut at any time. It
+was not my purpose to halt De Croix, nor to stand between him and any
+adventure he might choose to undertake; but I could at least warn him,
+in a friendly spirit, of the imminent danger such a thing involved.
+
+With this thought in mind, I ran hastily across the open parade into
+the officers' mess-hall, hoping I might find him loitering there. To
+my hasty glance, the place appeared deserted; and I drew back,
+wondering where to turn next in search. As I hesitated on the
+threshold, the low voice of Mademoiselle fell upon my ear; and at that
+moment she emerged from behind the curtain which divided the officers'
+quarters.
+
+"May I hope you are seeking me?" she asked, graciously; "for it has
+been most lonely here all day,--even Captain de Croix seems to have
+forgotten my existence."
+
+"It was De Croix I sought," I answered, somewhat nettled by her prompt
+reference to him; "and doubtless you are well able to give me trace of
+him."
+
+She studied me keenly, marking an angry note in my voice that I sought
+vainly to disguise.
+
+"Forever a quarrel?" she said, regretfully. "Do you know, Master
+Wayland, I had thought better of you. Surely it is not your nature to
+be a brawler, and always seeking opportunity to show the strong hand!
+What has Captain de Croix done now to make you seek him so vengefully?"
+
+"'T is not in quarrel," I explained,--I fear with ill grace, for her
+words in his defence were little inclined to mollify me. "You may
+indeed have so poor conception of me as to misinterpret my coming; yet
+in truth I seek De Croix in friendship, hoping that I may by a chance
+word serve him."
+
+"Indeed! what danger threatens, that he needs to be warned against?"
+
+I hesitated; for, now that my blood had somewhat cooled, my mission
+seemed a bit foolish.
+
+"I insist upon knowing," she continued haughtily, her eyes full upon
+mine, "or I shall believe you sought him for hostile purpose, and would
+deceive me by fair words."
+
+"Mademoiselle," I answered gravely, "you do me wrong. Only a few
+moments ago I chanced to overhear a discussion, by the officers of this
+Fort, regarding a commission to go forth and hold council with the
+Indians. Captain Heald is determined upon such a course; but none will
+volunteer to accompany him, because of the grave danger of savage
+treachery. The Frenchman's name was mentioned as one reckless enough
+to join with such a party; and I sought to warn him ere he accepted
+blindly. He is hardly a friend of mine,--yet it seems no more than
+fair that he should know the full measure of his peril before saying
+'yes.'"
+
+She came impulsively forward, with quickly extended hand, her face
+aglow.
+
+"You are indeed a true heart, John Wayland, and have shamed me rightly.
+I know well the deceit and treachery of Indian nature, and can
+understand the peril such a party would run. Promise me that you will
+prevent Captain de Croix from becoming one of them."
+
+"I?" I exclaimed in perplexed surprise; "I can do no more than warn
+him."
+
+"But you must do more!" she cried imperatively. "He will surely go if
+asked. A warning such as you propose would only stir his blood. I beg
+you to use your wits a little, so that he may know nothing of it."
+
+I looked at her, deeply hurt by the interest so openly displayed.
+
+"You are wondrously aroused for the Frenchman's safety, Mademoiselle!"
+
+"Yes, though not as you may fancy. Captain de Croix came here for my
+sake, even though no word of mine gave him reason for doing so. For
+this reason I could never forgive myself if harm befell him on such a
+journey. 'T would be as if I had lured him to his death. So 'tis for
+my sake, not his, that I ask the favor."
+
+I leaned against the log wall and thought quickly, her anxious eyes
+never leaving my face. There came into my mind a conviction that the
+girl really loved him; and this made the struggle harder for me to
+serve him. Nor did I see clearly how it could well be done, save
+through a sacrifice of myself, such as I had never intended.
+
+"Surely," she urged, "your wits will conceive some way in which it may
+be done?"
+
+"Yes," I answered, eager now to hide my own feeling from her; "'tis not
+hopeless. You desire that he be kept within the Fort, ignorant of this
+commission?"
+
+"I do; 't is the only way."
+
+"Very well, it shall be done, Mademoiselle. No, I need no thanks from
+you. Only do this simple thing, which, I am sure, you will find no
+hardship,--keep Captain de Croix from any possible contact with others
+for an hour. Your eyes will prove sufficient, no doubt, to enchain him
+that long; if not, use other measures."
+
+"But what will you do?"
+
+"That does not count. 'T is the result, not the means, that must
+content you. I have my plan, and it will work; but I cannot stay here
+longer to discuss it. Only do your part well, and I pledge you the
+safety of De Croix."
+
+I left her standing there, the light of questioning still in her eyes;
+but I wished mainly to be safely away, where I might hide my own sudden
+heart-ache in the energy of action.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+IN THE INDIAN CAMP
+
+It cut me deeply to think that this girl would willingly sacrifice me
+to save the French gallant from injury, and an anxiety to escape her
+presence before I should speak words I might always regret caused me to
+leave with scant ceremony. Yet I was none too soon; for scarce had I
+stepped without the door when I met Lieutenant Helm ascending the steps.
+
+"Ah, Wayland!" he said, catching sight of me, "do you happen to know
+where I am most likely to find Captain de Croix?"
+
+"He is scarcely to be disturbed at present, unless the matter be truly
+urgent," I replied, my plan hastily sketched in mind. "Have you
+arranged a banquet in honor of the Frenchman?"
+
+"No such good fortune," was the grave response. "Captain Heald desires
+his company upon an immediate mission to the Pottawattomie camp."
+
+"Oh, is that all? Well, Captain de Croix will hardly be found
+sufficiently recovered from his late adventure to enter upon another
+one so early. 'T is in my thought he either sleeps or is prinking
+himself for more pleasant conquests. But why worry him? In my
+judgment, no poorer choice could be made for so serious a task as you
+propose. He is a mere French courtier,--brave enough, and rash, I
+grant, yet without knowledge of Indian ways and treachery. Might not I
+answer better as his substitute?"
+
+"You?"
+
+"Ay! and why not? I am frontier-bred, long trained in woodcraft and
+savage ways, and surely far better fitted for such a task than is this
+petted darling of the courts. Were it a flirtation, now, the post
+might be truly his."
+
+"'T is true, you would be my choice; but do you realize the peril
+involved?"
+
+"Fully, my friend, yet scarce think it so desperate as you imagine. It
+is my judgment the savages yonder are seeking bigger game than so small
+a party would afford, and will therefore allow us to go free. However,
+if it should prove otherwise," and I spoke the words with a sore heart
+as I recalled what had just occurred, "I am a lone man in the world,
+and to such an one death is not so terrible, even at Indian hands.
+Come, I will go with you to confer with Captain Heald, and offer him my
+services. He can do no more than refuse."
+
+Helm offered no further objection, doubtless feeling it useless in my
+venturesome mood; and we crossed the parade together without speaking.
+
+Captain Wells was the first to see me as we entered, and some instinct
+told him instantly of my purpose.
+
+"Ah, Wayland, my boy! I have been troubled lest you might chance to
+hear of our plight, and jump in. Come now, lad! 't was not you we sent
+after, nor can we use you in so grave a matter."
+
+"And pray, why not?" I questioned, a little touched by this evidence of
+kindness, yet firmly determined to keep my pledge to Mademoiselle. "I
+am a better man for such deeds than the Frenchman, and am eager to go."
+
+"So this is not your Captain de Croix?" said Captain Heald, eying me
+curiously. "Saint George! but he is a big fellow,--the same who made
+the race last night, or I mistake greatly. And what is this man's
+name?"
+
+"It is John Wayland," I answered, anxious to impress him favorably; "a
+frontiersman of the Maumee country, and fairly skilled in Indian ways.
+I have come to volunteer my services to go with you."
+
+"You are anxious to die? have the spirit of a Jesuit, perchance, and
+are ambitious of martyrdom?"
+
+"Not unusually so, sir, but I think the danger overrated by these
+gentlemen. At least, I am ready and willing to go."
+
+"And so you shall, lad!" cried the old soldier, striking a hand upon
+his knee. "You are of the race of the long rifles; I know your kind
+well. Not another word, William! here is a man worth any twenty of
+your French beaux strutting with a sword. Now we start at once, and
+shall have this matter settled speedily."
+
+The earliest haze of the fast-descending twilight was hovering over the
+level plain as we two went forth. In the west, the red tinge of the
+sun, which had just disappeared below the horizon, lingered well up in
+the sky. Against it we could see, clearly outlined in inky blackness,
+the distant Indian wigwams; while to the eastward the crimson light was
+reflected in fantastic glow upon the heaving surface of the lake. For
+a moment we paused, standing upon the slope of the mound on which the
+Fort was built, and gazed about us. There was little movement to
+arrest the eye. The dull, dreary level of shore and prairie was
+deserted; what the more distant mounds of sand or the overhanging river
+banks might hide of savage watchers, we could only conjecture.
+Seemingly the mass of Indian life, which only the day before had
+overflowed that vacant space, had vanished as if by some sorcerer's
+magic. To me, this unexpected silence and dreary barrenness were
+astounding; I gazed about me fairly bewildered, almost dreaming for the
+moment that our foes had lifted the long siege and departed while I
+slept. Heald no doubt read the thought in my eyes, for he laid a
+kindly hand upon my sleeve and pointed westward.
+
+"They are all yonder, lad, at the camp,--in council, like enough. Mark
+you, Wayland, how much farther to the south the limit of their camp
+extends than when the sun sank last night? Saint George! they must
+have added all of fifty wigwams to their village! They gather like
+crows about a dead body. It has an ugly look."
+
+"Yet 't is strange they leave the Fort unguarded, so that the garrison
+may come and go unhindered. 'T is not the usual practice of Indian
+warfare."
+
+"Unguarded? Faith! the hundreds of miles of wilderness between us and
+our nearest neighbor are sufficient guard. But dream not, my lad, that
+we are unobserved; doubtless fifty pair of skulking eyes are even now
+upon us, marking every move. I venture we travel no more than a
+hundred yards from the gate before our way is barred. Note how
+peaceful the stockade appears! But for the closed gates, one would
+never dream it the centre of hostile attack. Upon my word, even
+love-making has not deserted its log-walls!"
+
+I lifted my eyes where he pointed, and even at that distance, and
+through the gathering gloom, I knew it was De Croix and Mademoiselle
+who overhung those eastern palisades in proximity so close. The sight
+was as fire to my blood, and with teeth clinched to keep back the mad
+utterance of a curse, I strode beside Captain Heald silently down the
+declivity to the deserted plain below.
+
+It is my nature to be somewhat chary of speech, and to feel deeply and
+long; but if I doubted it before, I knew now, in, this moment of keen
+and bitter disappointment, that my heart was with that careless girl up
+yonder, who had sent me forth into grave peril apparently without
+thought, and who cared so little even now that she never lifted her
+eyes from the sparkling water to trace our onward progress. Anger,
+disappointment, disgust at her duplicity, her cruel abuse of power,
+swept over and mastered me at the moment when I realized more deeply
+than ever my own love for her, and my utter helplessness to oppose her
+slightest whim. No Indian thongs could bind me half so tightly as the
+false smiles of Toinette.
+
+Plunged into this whirlpool of thought, I moved steadily forward at
+Captain Heald's shoulder, unconscious of what might be taking place
+about us, and for the moment indifferent to the result of our venture.
+But this feeling was not for long. Scarcely had our progress taken us
+across the front of the deserted agency building, and beyond the ken of
+the sentinels in the Fort, when a single warrior rose before us as from
+the ground, and blocked the path. He was a short, sturdy savage, bare
+to the waist save for a chain of teeth which dangled with sinister
+gleam about his brawny throat, and, from the wide sweep of his
+shoulders, evidently possessed of prodigious strength. He held a gun
+extended in front of him, and made a gesture of warning impossible to
+misapprehend.
+
+"What seeks the White Chief?" he questioned bluntly. "Does he come for
+peace or war?"
+
+The query came with such grave abruptness that Heald hesitated in reply.
+
+"Never since I have been at Dearborn have I sought war," he replied at
+last. "Little Sauk knows this well. We travel now that we may have
+council of peace with the chiefs of the Pottawattomies. See!" and he
+held up both empty hands before the Indian's eyes, "we are both
+unarmed, because of our trust in the good faith of your people."
+
+Little Sauk uttered a low grunt of disapproval, and made no motion to
+lower his threatening rifle.
+
+"Ugh! You talk strong! Did any Pottawattomie send to White Chief to
+come to council?"
+
+"No," admitted Heald. "We come because it is the wish of the Great
+Father of the white men down by the sea that we talk together of the
+wrongs of the red men, and make proposals of peace between us. There
+is no cause for these rumors of war, and the Great Father has heard
+that the Pottawattomies are dissatisfied, and it has made him sad."
+
+The Indian looked from one to the other of us in the growing darkness,
+and made a gesture of contempt.
+
+"The real Great White Father wears a red coat, and is friend to the
+Pottawattomie," he said with dignity. "He no lie, no shut Indian out
+of Fort, no steal furs, no throw rum in river. Who this man, White
+Chief? He no soldier,--he long-knife."
+
+"Yes, he is a frontiersman, and came to the Fort yesterday with
+Wau-me-nuk, bringing word of greeting from the Great Father to the
+Pottawattomies. He goes now with me to council. May we pass on to
+your camp?"
+
+For a moment Little Sauk did not answer, stepping closer in order that
+he might better scan my features. Apparently satisfied by the keen
+scrutiny, he turned his broad back upon us and strode off with
+contemptuous dignity.
+
+"Come," he said shortly; and without further word we followed across
+that dim plain and through the thickening darkness.
+
+The Indian's step was noiseless, and his figure cast the merest shadow;
+but as we moved onward others constantly joined us, stalking out of the
+black night like so many phantoms, gliding silently in their noiseless
+moccasins across the soft grass, until fully a dozen spectral forms
+hedged our pathway and kept step to every movement. It was a weird
+procession, through the shifting night-shadows; and although I could
+catch but fleeting glimpses of those savage faces and half-naked forms,
+the knowledge of their presence, and our own helplessness if they
+proved treacherous, caused my heart to throb till I could hear it in
+the painful silence like the beat of a drum. Now and then a guttural
+voice challenged from the darkness, to be instantly answered by those
+in advance, and another savage glided within our narrowed vision,
+scanned us with cruel and curious eyes, and fell in with the same
+silent, tiger-like tread of his fellows.
+
+It was not long that we were compelled to march thus, the gathering
+warriors pressing us closer at each step; and it was well it proved so
+soon ended, for the grim mockery set my nerves on edge. Yet the change
+was hardly for the better. Just before reaching the spot where the
+river forked sharply to the southward, we came to the upper edge of the
+wigwams, and into a bit of light from their scattered fires. There
+rushed out upon us a wild horde of excited savages, warriors and
+squaws, who pushed us about in sheer delirium, and even struck
+viciously at us across the shoulders of our indifferent guard, so that
+it was only by setting my teeth that I held back from grappling with
+the demons. But Heald, older in years and of cooler blood, laid
+restraining hands upon my arm.
+
+"'T is but the riff-raff," he muttered warningly. "The chiefs will
+hold them back from doing us serious harm."
+
+As he spoke, Little Sauk uttered a gruff order, and the grim warriors
+on our flank drove back the jeering, scowling crowd, with fierce Indian
+cursing and blows of their guns, until the way had been cleared for our
+advance. We moved on for two hundred yards or more, the maddened and
+vengeful mob menacing us just beyond reach of the strong arms, and
+howling in their anger until I doubted not their voices reached the
+distant Fort.
+
+We came to a great wigwam of deer-skin, much larger than any I had ever
+seen, with many grotesque figures of animals sketched in red and yellow
+paint upon the outside, and clearly revealed by the blazing fire
+without. A medicine-man of the tribe, hideous with pigment and high
+upstanding hair, sat beating a wooden drum before the entrance, and
+chanting wildly to a ferocious-looking horde of naked savages, many
+bleeding from self-inflicted wounds, who danced around the blaze, the
+leaping figures in the red glare making the scene truly demoniacal.
+Little Sauk strode through the midst of them, unheeding the uproar, and
+flung aside the flap of the tent.
+
+"White Chief and Long Knife wait here," he said Sternly. "Come back
+pretty soon."
+
+There was nothing to be seen within, excepting some skins flung
+carelessly upon the short trodden grass. We sat down silently upon
+these, gazing out through the narrow opening at the blazing fire and
+the numerous moving figures constantly crowding closer about the
+entrance, both of us too deeply immersed in thought to care for speech.
+
+The black shadows upon the tepee cover told me that guards had been
+posted to keep back the rabble from intrusion, and once I saw signs of
+a brief struggle in front when the swarm had grown too inquisitive and
+were forced back with scant ceremony. The weird dance and incantation
+continued; and although I knew but little of the customs of the
+Pottawattomies, there was a cruel savagery and ferocity about it which
+I felt held but little promise of peace.
+
+"'T is the war-dance," whispered Heald in my ear, "and bodes ill for
+our purpose. See! the red wampum is in the fellow's hand."
+
+As I bent forward to catch the gleam of it in the flames, a new figure
+suddenly flitted past our narrow vista, between us and the wild circle
+of dancers. It was a woman, attired in fanciful Indian dress; but
+surely no Pottawattomie squaw ever possessed so graceful a carriage, or
+bore so clear a face.
+
+"Captain!" I ejaculated eagerly. "Did you see that white woman there,
+with the long skirt and red hair?"
+
+"Ay!" he answered as though he scarce had faith in his own eyes. "I
+marked not the color of her hair, but I saw the lass, and, by Saint
+George! she looked to me like old Roger Matherson's daughter."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+A COUNCIL OF CHIEFS
+
+I was on my feet in an instant, forgetful of everything excepting my
+duty to this girl whom I had come so far to find, and who now was
+plainly a prisoner in Indian hands. At the entrance of the tepee, a
+scowling warrior pushed me roughly back, pretending not to understand
+my eager words of expostulation, and, by significant gesture,
+threatening to brain me with his gun-stock if I persisted. A slight
+return of reason alone kept me from striking the fellow down and
+striding over his prostrate body. While I stood struggling with this
+temptation, Captain Heald grasped me firmly.
+
+"Are you mad, Wayland?" he muttered, dragging me back into the dark
+interior of the tepee. "For God's sake, don't anger these fellows!
+Think of all the helpless lives depending on the success of our errand
+here! What is the girl to you?"
+
+"I will wait," I answered, calmed by his earnestness, and ashamed of my
+boyish impetuosity; "but I am here at Dearborn seeking this young
+woman, whom I had supposed rather to be a young child. Her father was
+my father's dearest friend, and wrote us from his death-bed asking our
+protection for her."
+
+"You are Major Wayland's son,--I remember the circumstances now, and
+that I endorsed such a letter. 'T is most strange. This girl
+disappeared from Dearborn some days ago. Mrs. Heald heard the matter
+discussed among the ladies of the garrison, and then all supposed her
+to be at John Kinzie's in company with Josette La Framboise; yet I
+would almost have sworn I saw her again, and not two hours ago, within
+the Fort. By Saint George! the glimpse I got just now makes me doubt
+my own eyesight. She was ever an odd creature,--but what can bring her
+here, walking so freely about in this camp of vengeful savages?"
+
+I could not answer him; the mystery was beyond my clearing. Only, if
+this was the Elsa Matherson for whom I had sought so long, surely God
+had in some way led me on to find her; nor should any peril turn my
+quest aside.
+
+I had hardly time for this resolve, ere the flap of the tepee was held
+back by a dark hand, and in grimly impressive silence warrior after
+warrior, plumed, painted, and gaudily bedecked with savage ornaments,
+stalked solemnly within, circled about us without sign of greeting, and
+seated themselves cross-legged upon the bare ground. The uplifted
+door-skin permitted the red flames from without to play freely over
+their stern, impassive faces, and shone back upon us from their
+glittering eyes. It was an impressive scene, their stoical demeanor
+breathing the deep solemnity of the vast woods and plains amid which
+their savage lives were passed; nor could one fail to feel the deep
+gravity with which they gathered in this council of life or death. To
+them it was evident that the meeting was of most serious portent.
+
+I saw only two faces that I recognized in that red ring,--Topenebe and
+Little Sauk. I knew, however, it was probable there were some great
+chiefs among that company; and I marked especially two, one with long
+white hair, and a tall, slender, rather young fellow, having two wide
+streaks of yellow down either cheek.
+
+The Indians sat motionless, gazing intently at us; and I swept the
+entire dark circle of scowling faces, vainly endeavoring to find one
+hopeful glance, one friendly eye. Open hatred, undisguised distrust,
+implacable enmity, were stamped on every feature. Whatever our plea
+might be, I felt convinced that the chiefs were here only to carry out
+their own purposes and make mock of every offering of peace.
+
+After several moments of this painful silence, the chief with the long
+white hair deliberately lighted a large pipe drawn from his belt. It
+was curiously and grotesquely fashioned, the huge bowl carved to
+resemble the head of a bear. He drew from the stem a single thick
+volume of smoke, breathed it out into the air, and solemnly passed the
+pipe to the warrior seated upon his right. With slow deliberation, the
+symbol moved around the impassive and emotionless circle, passing from
+one red hand to another, until it finally came back to him who had
+first lighted it. Without so much as a word being uttered, he gravely
+offered it to Captain Heald. I heard, and understood, the quick sigh
+of relief with which my companion grasped it; he drew a breath of the
+tobacco, and I followed his example, handing back the smoking pipe to
+the white-haired chief without rising, amid the same impressive silence.
+
+The Indian leader spoke for the first time, his voice deep and guttural.
+
+"The Pottawattomies have met in council with the White Chief and the
+Long Knife," he said soberly, "and have smoked together the peace-pipe.
+For what have the white men come to disturb Gomo and his warriors?"
+
+I gazed at him with new interest. No name of savage chief was wider
+known along the border in those days, none more justly feared by the
+settlers. He was a tall, spare, austere man, his long coarse hair
+whitened by years, but with no stoop in his figure. His eyes, small
+and keen, blazed with a strange ferocity, as I have seen those of
+wildcats in the dark; while his flesh was drawn so closely against his
+prominent cheek-bones as to leave an impression of ghastliness, as of a
+corpse suddenly returned by some miracle to life. With dabs of paint
+across the forehead, and thin lips drawn in a narrow line of cruelty,
+his face formed a picture to be long remembered with a shudder.
+
+It was easy enough to see that Captain Heald felt uncertain how far to
+venture in his proposals, though he spoke up boldly, and with no tremor
+in his voice. His long frontier experience had taught him the danger
+that lay in exhibiting timidity in the face of Indian scorn.
+
+"Gomo," he said firmly, "and you other Chiefs of the Pottawattomies,
+there has never been war between us. We have traded together for many
+seasons; you have eaten at my table, and I have rested by your fires.
+We have been as brothers, and more than once have I judged between you
+and those who would wrong you. I have remembered all this, and have
+now come into your camp through the night, without fear and unarmed,
+that I might talk with you as friends. Am I not right to do this? In
+all the time I have been the White Chief at Dearborn, have I ever done
+wrong to a Pottawattomie?"
+
+He paused; but no warrior made reply. A low guttural murmur ran around
+the line of listeners, but the bead-like eyes never left his face. He
+went on:
+
+"Why should I fear to meet the Pottawattomies, even though word had
+come to me that their young men talk war, and seek alliance with our
+enemy the red-coats? The Chiefs have seen war, and are not crazed for
+the blood of their friends. They will restrain such wild mutterings.
+They know that the White Father to the east is strong, and will drive
+the red-coats back into the sea as he did when they fought before.
+They will ally themselves with the strong one, and make their foolish
+young man take up arms for their friends."
+
+Still no one spoke, no impassive bronze face exhibited the faintest
+interest. It was as if he appealed to stone.
+
+"Is this not so?"
+
+"The White Chief has spoken," was the cold reply. "His words are full
+of eloquence, but Gomo hears nothing that calls for answer. The White
+Chief says not why he has come and demanded council of the
+Pottawattomies."
+
+A low murmur, expressive of approval, swept down the observant line;
+but no man among them stirred a muscle.
+
+"I came for this, Gomo," said Heald, speaking now rapidly, and with an
+evident determination to trust all in a sentence and have it over with,
+for it was clear the savages were in no mood for diplomatic evasion:
+"to ask your guidance and protection on our march eastward on the
+morrow. I come to the Pottawattomies as friends; for I fear we may
+meet with trouble on the way, from roving bands of Wyandots and Miamis,
+and we are greatly burdened by our women and children. It is to ask
+this that I and the Long Knife are here."
+
+"You say the White Father is strong, and will drive the red-coats into
+the sea: did he at Mackinac?"
+
+"There was treachery there."
+
+"Ugh! Why, if White Father so strong, you leave Fort and go way off?"
+
+"Because just now I can serve him better elsewhere; but we shall come
+again."
+
+"My young men have rumor that Detroit go like Mackinac."
+
+"It is untrue; your young men bring false news."
+
+Gomo turned and looked about him upon the expectant warriors; and, as
+if the glance was an invitation to free speech, one sitting half-way
+across the circle asked gruffly:
+
+"Why you pour out rum, if you love Pottawattomie?"
+
+"Because I am only the White Chief at Dearborn," returned Heald, facing
+the questioner, "and, like Peesotum who asks, have higher chiefs
+elsewhere whom I must obey. What they tell me I have to do."
+
+"White Chief lies!" was the short, stern answer. "Winnemeg brought no
+such word."
+
+So furious were the many dark, glowering faces, that I braced myself,
+thinking the next moment would be one of struggle for life or death;
+but Gomo held them motionless with a wave of his hand. He rose slowly
+to his feet, and faced us with grave dignity.
+
+"It is true, as Peesotum says," he said impressively. "The White Chief
+has used a double tongue to the Red man; yet we will deal fairly with
+him, for he has come to us in peace. White Chief, there is to be war
+between us; 't is the will of our young men, and the red wampum has
+passed among our lodges and the lodges of our brothers the Wyandots.
+Yet when you unlock the gates we will go forth with you and your
+people, around the sweep of the water. Such is the will of the Great
+Spirit, and the decision of the Pottawattomie in council of chiefs."
+
+Heald looked about upon the scowling circle with disbelief so clearly
+expressed in his eyes, that Gomo, reading it, turned to his warriors
+and called upon them one by one to say if he spoke the truth. I heard
+him speak thus to Little Sauk, Black Bird, Topenebe, Mankia, Pipe Bird,
+Peesotum, and Ignance; and each answered with the low grunt of assent.
+He fixed his eyes upon the younger Indian who had already attracted my
+attention by the manliness of his face as well as the yellow stripes
+that disfigured him.
+
+"And you, Black Partridge?"
+
+"I have already spoken to the White Chief in his own wigwam, and given
+back the medal of the Americans," was the grave response. "I have no
+more to say."
+
+I confess these words chilled me, as I recalled their meaning; and
+Heald half rose to his feet as though he would protest, but not a
+stolid face among the warriors changed in expression. Gomo drew his
+robes more closely about his gaunt figure in simple but impressive
+dignity.
+
+"Doth Shaw-nee-aw-kee go east also with the white men?" he asked.
+
+"I have not of late conferred with the Silver-man. He has been at his
+own lodge, and doubtless you may know his purpose better than I."
+
+"We wish him to stay. He good man; Pottawattomie's friend."
+
+The Indian stood motionless, his eyes watching keenly the expression of
+each face. He added slowly:
+
+"The White Chief hears the promise of the Pottawattomies. It is
+enough. He can go forth in peace upon the morrow, with all his
+warriors, squaws, and pappooses, and the people of my nation will walk
+with them as guards. It is our pledge; we will counsel no longer."
+
+At a simple commanding gesture of his long arms, the circle melted away
+through the narrow opening as silently as it had gathered, the dark
+figure of each warrior silhouetted for an instant against the red glare
+of the fire, before it suddenly disappeared in the darkness beyond. At
+last Little Sauk alone stood between us and the blaze.
+
+"Come," he commanded gruffly, "White Chief go back to his people."
+
+Enclosed by that same phantom guard of savages, we passed out through
+the limits of the camp; but now the rabble paid not the slightest heed
+to our presence. Our mission known, and no longer a mystery, they
+treated us with the stolid indifference of Indian contempt. I walked
+with eyes alert upon either side of our path for another glimpse of
+that girlish figure that I had seen before so dimly; but we traversed
+nearly the full length of the tepee rows before I saw any one that at
+all resembled her. Even then, I was far from certain, until the sudden
+leaping up of a dying fire reflected on her crown of auburn hair, and
+set my heart to throbbing.
+
+"Little Sauk!" I cried, in my excitement clutching his naked arm, "who
+is that white girl yonder, and how comes she here?"
+
+The startled Indian sprang aside, flinging me from him with a violence
+that showed his giant strength.
+
+"No white girl," he protested, vehemently. "Pottawattomie."
+
+"No Pottawattomie has hair like the sunset," I retorted. "Come, I
+would speak with the girl."
+
+For an instant I saw the bead-like eyes of the savage glittering in the
+darkness and wandering where I pointed. He faced me doggedly.
+
+"Long Knife leave Indian maid alone," he said grimly. "Long Knife go
+Fort; no talk."
+
+I was in a mood to resist the fellow's dictation, and reckless enough
+of consequences at that moment to take the chance; but Heald interfered.
+
+"You can serve her far better, lad, in that way," he muttered hastily.
+"We shall not always be two to twelve."
+
+With teeth gritted to keep back the fierce anger that shook me, I
+strolled sullenly on, not even venturing to glance back lest I should
+give way. It was thus we reached the Fort gate, and entered, leaving
+our dusky escort to slink back into the night. An anxious crowd met
+us. It was Wells who questioned first.
+
+"So those devils have let you go unharmed? What answer made the
+savages?"
+
+"They pledge us safe convoy around the head Of the lake."
+
+"They do? Who spoke the words of the pledge?"
+
+"Old Gomo himself, and it was ratified by each of the chiefs in turn."
+
+"They are lying dogs,--all but one of them. What answered Black
+Partridge?"
+
+Heald made no response; and Wells wheeled impetuously to me.
+
+"Come, lad, the truth,--what reply did Black Partridge make to this
+Indian mummery?"
+
+"He said, 'I have already spoken to the White Chief in his own wigwam,
+and given back the medal of the Americans, and have nothing more to
+say.'"
+
+For a moment the old Indian soldier stared at me, his stern face fairly
+black with the cloud in his eyes. He brought his clinched hand down
+hard against the log wall.
+
+"By God! it is treachery!" he exclaimed fiercely, and turned and walked
+away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+THE LAST NIGHT AT DEARBORN
+
+It was evident that preparations were even then well under way for
+retreat the following morning. Trunks and boxes, together with various
+military stores and arms, strewed the sides of the parade-ground;
+farther back, a number of wagons, partially filled, stood waiting the
+remainder of their loads. Men and women were hastening back and forth,
+and children were darting through the shadows, their little arms piled
+high with bundles, and making play, as children ever will, of what was
+to prove an awful tragedy. A large fire, burning brightly before the
+deserted guard-house, cast its ruddy glow over the animated scene,
+checkering the rude walls with every passing shadow.
+
+I noticed, as I slowly pushed my way along, that the soldiers worked
+seriously, with few jests on their lips, as if they realized the peril
+that menaced them; while many among the women, especially those of the
+humbler sort, were rejoicing over the early release from garrison
+monotony, and careless of what the morrow might bring of danger and
+suffering.
+
+A few steps from the gate, I paused for a moment that I might watch
+their flitting figures, the incessant bustle being a positive relief
+after the dull and ghostly silence without. My mind,--though I strove
+to cast the thought aside,--was still occupied with the mystery of Elsa
+Matherson; but the more I dwelt upon it, the less I was able to
+penetrate the secret of her strange presence in the Indian camp, or
+devise any scheme for reaching her. The ache in my heart made me dread
+to meet again with Mademoiselle Toinette, lest I should utter words of
+reproach which she did not deserve; for, sad as such a confession was,
+I had to acknowledge that she had a perfect right to protect the man
+she loved, even at my cost.
+
+Nor did I greatly desire to run upon De Croix. I knew his temper
+fairly well, and doubtless by this time he had learned the story of my
+interference, and would be in fit mood for a quarrel. Still, as seems
+often to be the case at such a time, before I had taken a dozen steps
+away from the gate, I met him face to face. It was a jaunty picture he
+made in the glare of the fire, the fine gentleman sauntering lazily
+about, with hat of bleached straw pushed rakishly upon his powdered
+hair, and a light cane dangling at his wrist, as fashionably attired as
+if he were loitering upon the boulevards of an August evening, his
+negro man a yard behind, bearing a silken fan which flashed golden in
+the radiance. At sight of him, I stopped instantly, ready enough to
+resent attack if that had been his purpose, though anxious to avoid
+violence for the sake of Mademoiselle. But he merely laughed as he
+surveyed me critically, swinging his bamboo stick as if it were a
+whip-lash.
+
+"_Parbleu_, Master Wayland!" he said, seeming in rare good-humor, "I
+this moment learned of your safe return. 'T would have been an
+excellent joke had the savage found excuse to retain you out yonder, to
+form a part of one of their delightful entertainments! Fit revenge,
+indeed, for the foul deceit you played upon me!"
+
+"Think you so, Monsieur?" for his easy words relieved me greatly. "It
+would have been one less arm for our defence."
+
+"With safe convoy guaranteed by the Indian chiefs, that loss would make
+small odds," he replied carelessly. "But, truly, that was a most
+scurvy trick you played to gain the wager which was offered me. But
+for the happy ending, I should be sorely tempted to break this cane
+across your shoulders in payment therefor."
+
+"Indeed!" I said; "the act might not be as easily accomplished as you
+imagine. But what mean you by happy ending? Had the savages roasted
+me over a slow fire, I should hardly be here for the pleasure of your
+chastisement."
+
+He laughed lightly, his eyes wandering carelessly over the throng of
+figures in front of us.
+
+"Saint Guise! I thought not about your predicament, but rather of the
+happiness which came to me in the society of Mademoiselle. In faith,
+she was most gracious with her favor. 'T is thus you did me a great
+kindness, friend, and have won my gratitude."
+
+The words were as stinging as he meant them to be, for I marked his
+quick glance into my face. So I held my resentment well in check, and
+smiled back at him, apparently unconcerned.
+
+"Then we are again even, Monsieur," I returned quietly, "and can start
+anew upon our score. But why should I remain here to discuss matters
+of such small import, with all this work unfinished which fronts strong
+men to-night? I will break my long fast, and turn to beside these
+others."
+
+He seemed to have further words to say; but I minded him not, and
+pushed past, leaving him to saunter where he willed, accompanied by his
+black satellite. If I could not win Mademoiselle, as I now felt
+assured from his boastful speech I could not, I might at least work for
+her greater safety and comfort; and there was much I could do to help
+in burying my own disappointment.
+
+For all that, it was a night to live long in the memory,--that last
+night we spent at Dearborn. It remains a rare jumble in my mind,--its
+varied incidents crowding so fast upon each other as to leave small
+room for thought regarding any one of them. Without, the dim black
+plain stretched away in unbroken solemnity and silence; nor did the
+sentinels posted along the walls catch glimpse of so much as a skulking
+Indian form amid the grass and sand. A half-moon was in the sky, with
+patches of cloud now and then shadowing it, and in the intervals
+casting its faint silver over the lonely expanse and tipping the crest
+of the waves as they crept in upon the beach. The great Indian village
+to the westward was fairly ablaze with fires; while the unending
+procession of black dots that flitted past them, together with the echo
+of constant uproar, showed that the savages were likewise astir in
+eager preparation for the morrow. We could hear the pounding of wooden
+drums, mingled with shrill yells that split the night-air like so many
+war-missiles. Only those above, upon the platform, could mind these
+things; for the bustle within the enclosure below continued unabated
+until long after midnight.
+
+The report of our mission spread rapidly, and the pledge of protection
+given by the chiefs greatly heartened the men, so that they worked now
+with many a peal of laughter and careless jest. The women and
+children, ever quick to feel the influence of the soldiers, responded
+at once to this new feeling of confidence, which was encouraged by the
+officers, however they may have secretly doubted the good-faith of the
+savages. So the children tumbled about in the red glare of the flames,
+the soldiers swung their traps into the waiting wagons with
+good-natured badinage, their brawny breasts bare and glistening with
+sweat in the hot night; while, as the hour grew late and discipline
+sensibly relaxed, the women danced in the open and sang songs of home.
+
+It was hard enough to realize what it all meant,--what hardship and
+suffering and death lay just before these rejoicing people; what depths
+of cruel treachery and murder lurked for them so few hours away. We
+did not suspect it then; not even those among us who had long learned
+the deceit of Indian nature could unroll the shadowing veil of that
+morrow and reveal the forthcoming tragedy of those silent plains. I
+remember that, doubtful as I felt about the future, I could look on
+with interest at the busy scene, and that more than once a smile lay
+upon my lips. What an odd variety of figures that congested place
+disclosed! what strange life-histories were having their culmination
+there! I saw Ensign Ronan, young, slender, smooth of face, appearing
+scarce more than a boy, his short fatigue-jacket buttoned to the throat
+in spite of the heat, hurrying here and there in his enthusiasm, ever
+upon his lips some happy phrase to take the sting from his word of
+command. Lieutenant Helm, calm but observant of every detail, moved in
+and out among the busy throng, every now and then stealing aside to
+speak a word of encouragement to his young wife, who stood watching by
+the mess-room door. There was quite a bevy gathered there, officers'
+wives for the most part, gazing in mingled interest and apprehension
+upon the scene. I marked among them Josette, who had come in that
+evening with the Kinzies; and as I drew yet nearer the group, a sudden
+blazing up of the fire yielded me a glimpse of Mademoiselle, and I
+turned hastily away, unwilling still to greet or be greeted by her.
+
+Gaunt frontiersmen stalked about, having little to save and nothing to
+do, with the inevitable long rifle held in the hollow of the arm;
+Captain Wells's Miamis skulked uneasily in dark corners, or hung over
+the embers to cook some ration yet unused, their dark skins and long
+coarse hair a reminder to us of the hostiles who watched without.
+Captain Heald, in company with Captain Wells and John Kinzie, the
+latter conspicuous by his white beard, stood long in deep converse near
+the barracks, leaning against the black logs. I felt the two latter
+were urging some change of plan; but in the end Wells left in vexation,
+almost in anger, striding across the parade-ground to the northern
+block-house.
+
+In the shadow of the south stockade, some one was softly playing upon a
+violin, the sweet notes stealing up through the wild hubbub in strains
+of silvery sound. Close upon one side of the fire, forgetful of the
+heat in their deep interest, two young soldiers were engrossed in a
+game of cards, while a group of comrades commented freely on the
+fortunes of the play. Scarcely a yard distant, a grizzled old
+sergeant,--a veteran of the great war, no doubt,--bent above a book
+held open upon his knee, the shape of which bespoke a Bible; while on
+the other side a bevy of children were romping with their dogs or
+playing with sharp knives in the hard ground. A woman over by the gate
+lifted a sweet contralto voice in an old-time love-song, and had hardly
+lilted the opening line before others joined her, making the night
+resound to the tender melody. I saw the soldiers pause in their work
+to beat time, and marked the dark forms of the sentries above on the
+palisades as they leaned over to listen, every heart set throbbing with
+the memory of days gone by.
+
+"Man is indeed a strange animal," said a voice beside me, and I turned
+to greet Ensign Ronan. "He can sing, laugh, and jest, in death's very
+teeth."
+
+"'T is better, surely, than to cry," I commented. "But these do not so
+much as dream of death; the pledge of the Pottawattomies has brought
+renewed hope."
+
+"Yes, I know; though I confess I have little faith in it. And there
+will be plenty of danger about us before we see Fort Wayne, even if
+they pass us in safety around the lake. There will be leagues of
+travel through hostile territory. That," he added, "is, to my mind,
+the only sensible way of preparation, for the morrow."
+
+He pointed to the old sergeant seated beside the fire with his Bible;
+and I glanced into his boyish face with no little surprise.
+
+"Some remark Surgeon Van Voorhis made caused me to deem you indifferent
+in such matters."
+
+"No doubt," he said, dryly. "If one does not subscribe to the creeds,
+he is written down a heretic. I have laughed at folly, and so have won
+the reputation of being an unbeliever. Yet, Wayland, if we ride forth
+to a savage death to-morrow, no one will meet it with more faith in
+Christ than I. The years indeed have not left me spotless, but I have
+never wavered from the great truths my mother taught me. I know not
+the future, lad, but I believe there is ever mercy for the penitent."
+
+In an instant my own thought spanned the leagues of forest to my
+distant home; and I choked back a sob within my throat.
+
+"It is our mothers' love that makes us all better men," I said gravely.
+"And whatever may befall us upon the morrow, that God of whom they
+taught us will be true."
+
+"The words are spoken in the right spirit," he returned, soberly, "and
+have the soldier ring I like best to hear. If it chance that we both
+come forth from this venture in life, I should be most glad to know you
+better."
+
+I was deeply touched by his open, manly spirit, and especially
+impressed with his frank adherence to the Christian faith,--something
+too uncommon in that day along the border.
+
+"'T is rather my wish to begin friendship before that time of trial," I
+said eagerly, and with extended hand. "We shall fight the better for
+it when the hour for fighting comes; and if it be God's will to guide
+us safely through the wilderness, a friendship thus cemented in peril
+will have the strength of comradeship."
+
+The young man's strong and thoughtful face lighted up; but his eyes
+were resting upon the form of the sentry above us, and he did not speak.
+
+"Ronan," I questioned, somewhat doubtfully, "I have long wished to ask
+you the cause of the friction that apparently exists between Captain
+Heald and the officers of this garrison; but have felt it none of my
+business. I cannot but realize you are not in his good graces,
+although he appears to me to be a brave and capable man."
+
+"He is both," was the instant and manly reply; "for all that, he has
+constantly turned for counsel in military matters to others than his
+own officers,--why, I know not, unless he considered us unworthy of his
+confidence. Instead of confiding his orders to us, and asking judgment
+upon his plans, he has been swayed from the beginning by Indian advice;
+and it is only natural for us to resent such unjust and discourteous
+treatment. Moreover, each move thus far made has proved to be a
+mistake, and we must suffer from them in silence and without remedy."
+
+"He does indeed seem strangely headstrong," I admitted reluctantly,
+recalling to mind the words uttered in the room beyond my bed; "but
+surely his conference with the chiefs has resulted well, and is proof
+of his good judgment."
+
+The young officer turned quickly and faced me, his eyes full of
+emotion. "That remains to be decided," he exclaimed. "Such old
+frontiersmen as Captain Wells and John Kinzie say that pledge only
+hides black treachery. They urged him most earnestly, for an hour
+to-night, to reconsider his decision, and give up the immediate
+evacuation of the post. But he fully believes he can put faith in
+those lying, murderous hounds out yonder. So certain is Kinzie of
+trouble, that he has sworn to march forth with us, sending his family
+away by boat, in hope that his influence may hold back the savages from
+open attack; while Wells declares that he will ride forth with
+blackened face, as becomes a Miami who goes to certain death in battle.
+These men are no fools, no strangers to savage warfare and Indian
+deceit,--yet in spite of their warning, Captain Heald persists in
+driving us forth into the very fangs of the wolves. Brave! ay, he is
+indeed brave to the point of rashness; but this bids fair to be a fatal
+bravery to all of us who must obey his orders."
+
+The intense bitterness of these words shocked me and held me dumb,--the
+more so, as I could not be insensible to their truth. As I lifted my
+eyes, I beheld, crossing the parade through the mass of equipment
+scattered here and there, De Croix and Mademoiselle. With a
+half-muttered excuse, I drew hastily back into the protecting shadow of
+the stockade; and as they slowly passed, I heard him jesting lightly,
+and saw her laughing, with a side-glance up at his face.
+
+With these words of warning from Ronan's lips yet ringing in my ears,
+such reckless thoughtlessness of the danger encircling us astounded me;
+and I drew farther back, less willing than ever to make one of them.
+Deep in my heart, I knew this was no time for careless laughter or
+happy jest.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+THE DEATH-SHADOW OF THE MIAMIS
+
+It was after midnight when I finally ceased my labors, feeling I had
+performed my fair share of the hard work of preparation. By this time
+everything was comparatively quiet within the stockade enclosure; the
+wagons were piled with all that could be loaded before morning, and
+many of the wearied soldiers had flung themselves upon the ground to
+snatch what rest they might before the early call to march. The women
+and children had disappeared, to seek such comfort as was possible amid
+the ruins of their former quarters; and only the sentries remained
+alert, pacing their solemn rounds on the narrow walk overlooking the
+palisades and the silent plain without.
+
+Physically wearied as I was, my mind remained intensely active, and I
+felt no desire for sleep. I do not recall that I gave much thought to
+the perils of our situation. One grows careless and indifferent to
+danger,--and in truth I looked forward to no serious trouble with the
+Indians upon the morrow's march through the sand-dunes; not that I
+greatly trusted to those reluctant pledges wrung from the chiefs, but
+because I felt that if properly handled in that open country our force
+was of sufficient fighting strength to repel any ordinary attack from
+ill-armed savages, my long border experience rendering me a bit
+disdainful of Indian courage and resourcefulness. So it was that my
+restless mind dwelt rather upon other matters more directly personal.
+I could not put away the thought of the half-seen girl flitting about
+amid the dusk of the Pottawattomie camp, especially as Captain Heald
+had declared her to be Elsa Matherson. I was surprised to discover
+that she I sought, instead of being a mere child, was a woman grown;
+for in this we were all deceived by the words of her father. What did
+she there, passing with such apparent freedom from restraint among
+those fierce warriors? and how was I ever to reach her with any hope of
+rescue, even if she desired it? There was evidently a mystery here
+which I could never solve through idle musing; and yet I could but ask
+myself where lay my graver duty,--beside this single woman, who
+seemingly needed no defender, or with the many helpless ones who must
+march forth on the morrow on that long and dangerous passage through
+the wilderness? Indeed, what hope could I cherish of aiding the young
+girl, if I now deserted these others, and endeavored alone to penetrate
+that Indian camp in search of her?
+
+Then came another thought. It was of Mademoiselle.
+
+It was this that effectually halted me. To whomsoever else she might
+have given her heart, she was still the one for whom I was most glad
+either to live or die; and in spite of De Croix, I would ride at her
+side on the morrow, within striking distance of any prowling hostile.
+Let the Matherson girl wait; my arm belonged first of all to the
+defence of Mademoiselle.
+
+Busied with these thoughts, and endeavoring to adjust this decision
+with my conscience, I passed out upon the platform, that I might look
+forth once more upon the moonlit waters of the lake. There were a few
+dim figures to be seen, leaning over the logs; but I supposed them to
+be members of the night-guard, and, feeling no desire for
+companionship, I halted in a lonely spot at the northeastern corner of
+the stockade. How desolate, how solemnly impressive, was the scene!
+To the north all was black in the dense night, the shadows of the
+scattering trees obscuring the faint glow of the moon and yielding
+little of detail to the searching eye. Even the single ray of light
+which the evening previous had blazed forth as a friendly beacon from
+the Kinzie home, was now absent. I could vaguely distinguish the dim
+outlines of the deserted house in the distance, and noticed a large
+boat moored close to the bank beneath the Fort stockade,--doubtless the
+one in which the fugitives expected to venture out upon the lake on the
+morrow.
+
+It was the wide stretch of water, gleaming like silver, that fascinated
+me, as it always did in its numberless changing moods. What
+unutterable loneliness spoke to the soul in those unknown leagues of
+tossing sea! how far the eye wandered unchecked, searching vainly for
+aught to rest upon other than glistening surge or darkling hollow! The
+mystery of the ages lay unexpressed in those tossing billows, sweeping
+in out of the black east, making low moan to the unsympathetic and
+unheeding sky. Deeper and deeper the spirit of unrest, of doubt, of
+brooding discontent, weighed down upon me as I gazed; life seemed as
+aimless as that constant turmoil yonder, a mere silver-tinted heaving,
+destined to burst in useless power on a shore of rock, and then roll
+back again into the mighty deep.
+
+I leaned over the palisades, sunk deep in revery of home, recalling one
+by one the strange incidents of the last month that had so curiously
+conspired to cause a total upheaval of my life; and for the moment I
+grew oblivious of my surroundings. A mere lad, knowing little of
+himself and less of life, had ridden westward from the Maumee; a man,
+in thought and character, leaned now over that beleaguered stockade of
+Dearborn.
+
+I was recalled to actualities by a light touch on the sleeve of my
+shirt, and a half-laughing, half-petulant voice at my elbow.
+
+"Well, Master Laggard! do I not show you great honor in thus seeking
+you out, after your avoidance of me all these hours?"
+
+I glanced aside into the fair face and questioning eyes, noting at the
+same time that De Croix stood only a step beyond her in the shadows.
+
+"I have been very busy, Mademoiselle," I tried to explain; "it has been
+a time when every strong hand was needed."
+
+"Fudge!" was the indignant rejoinder. "Did I not perceive you
+loitering more than once to-night,--though each time I drew near,
+hopeful of a word of greeting, it was to behold you disappear as if by
+magic? Do I flatter you by thus showing my interest? Yet 't was only
+that I might have explanation, that I sought you thus. Come, confess
+that you feared my just resentment for going forth on so perilous a
+trip without telling me of your plans."
+
+"'T was not altogether that," I answered, for dissembling was never an
+easy task for me, "as I only did what I believed would most please you.
+Nor have I anything to regret in my action, now that we have thus
+gained the pledge of the Pottawattomies for protection upon the march."
+
+She watched me closely as I spoke, and I wondered if she realized ever
+so dimly the impulse of loving service that had inspired my deed.
+Whether 't was so or not, her whole mood quickly changed.
+
+"I must admit you are a constant puzzle to me, John Wayland,--yet
+rather an interesting one withal. For instance, here is Josette, who
+did assure me but an hour ago that your very name was unknown to her,
+although, if memory serves, you asserted only yesterday that you were
+seeking her from the Maumee country. Perhaps, sir, you can explain the
+contradiction?"
+
+"It was not altogether as you have stated it, Mademoiselle," I
+stammered, confused by the directness of her attack. "I said nothing
+of knowing this Josette, and you have deceived yourself in the matter.
+I came here seeking a young girl, 't is true, but found no trace of her
+until a few hours ago, most curiously, in the heart of that Indian camp
+yonder."
+
+"You found her there? How strange!"
+
+"Most strange indeed, Mademoiselle, especially as she appeared to enjoy
+perfect liberty among the savages."
+
+"You spoke with her?"
+
+"Not a word; it was only a glimpse I caught of her in the firelight,
+and when I sought to go to her the warriors interfered and forced me
+back. But Captain Heald, who saw her at the same time, assured me 't
+was the one I sought."
+
+"'T is small wonder, then, you could stand here at my very side so
+long, and yet see me not, or remain indifferent to my presence," she
+said, drawing slightly back. "Come, Captain de Croix, let us walk to
+the other corner of the stockade, and leave Master Wayland to dream of
+his mysterious beauty undisturbed."
+
+"You misapprehend me," I cried, awakened by her words, but more by De
+Croix's smile. "She has no such hold upon my memory as that, for until
+tonight I had supposed her a mere child. I knew not you were upon the
+platform, believing the forms I saw in the gloom to be those of the
+night-guard. What dark figure is that, even now leaning over the logs
+yonder?"
+
+It was De Croix's deeper voice that made answer.
+
+"'Tis Captain Wells; and we found him in no mood for conversation.
+Seemingly he hath small faith in the pledges of the chiefs."
+
+"My own hope rests far more upon our skill at arms, Monsieur," I
+answered directly; "for I have known Indian treachery all my life.
+They may keep faith with us to-morrow, for John Kinzie has great
+influence with them for good; nevertheless, I shall oil my gun
+carefully before riding forth."
+
+It was in his eyes to make reply, but before it could come the girl
+between us uttered a cry so piercing that it set us gazing where her
+finger pointed out across the lake.
+
+"Look there, Messieurs! Did ever mortal behold so grewsome a sight
+before? What means the portent?"
+
+It is before me now, in each grim, uncanny detail,--though I know well
+that my pen will fail to give it fit description, or convey even feebly
+a sense of the overwhelming dread of what we saw. Nature has power to
+paint what human hand may never hope to copy; and though, as I now know
+well, it was no more than a strange commingling of cloud and moon in
+atmospheric illusion, still the effect was awe-inspiring to a degree
+difficult of realization within the environments of peace and safety.
+To us, it appeared as a dreadful warning,--a mysterious manifestation
+of supernatural power, chilling our blood with terror and striking
+agony into our souls. Up from the far east had rolled an immense black
+cloud, rifted here and there by bars of vivid yellow as electric bolts
+tore it asunder. Moonlight tipped its heavy edges with a pale spectral
+gleam; and as it swiftly rose higher and higher into the sky, blotting
+out the stars, it seemed to dominate the entire expanse, hovering over
+us menacingly, and assuming the shape of some gigantic monster, with
+leering face and cruel mouth, bending forward as if to smite us with
+huge uplifted hand. Perchance our tensioned nerves may have
+exaggerated the resemblance, but nothing more horribly real have my
+eyes ever beheld.
+
+For a moment I cowered, like a nerveless craven, behind the logs,
+gazing up at that awful apparition, that mocking devil's-face, as a man
+fronts death in some terrible and unexpected form. It seemed as if the
+breath of the creature must be pestilence, and that it would smite us
+gasping to earth, or draw us helplessly struggling within its merciless
+clutch. A prayer trembled on my lips, but remained unuttered, for I
+could only stare upward at the mighty, crawling thing now overshadowing
+us, my arms uplifted in impotent effort to avert the crushing blow.
+
+I could hear the girl sob where she had sunk upon the platform, and
+caught one glimpse of De Croix, his face yellow in the weird glare as
+he stared in speechless terror out over the water, his hands clutching
+the palisades. It was Captain Wells, who had been standing near us,
+who first found voice.
+
+"'Tis the Death-Shadow of the Miamis!" he cried, in choked accents,
+striding toward us along the narrow plank, and pointing eastward. "I
+knew it must come, for our doom is sealed."
+
+What centuries of Indian superstition rested behind the fateful
+utterance, I know not; but facing that horrible spectre as we did, his
+words held me in speechless awe. In the blood of us all such terrors
+linger to unman the bravest; and for the moment such fright and panic
+swept me as I have never known before or since. I, who have laughed at
+death even in the hour of torture, sank in deadly agony before that
+mystery of light and shadow, as if it indeed foreshadowed the wrath of
+the Great Spirit.
+
+The sobs of Mademoiselle recalled me somewhat to myself, and led me to
+forget my own terror that I might help to relieve hers.
+
+"I beg you, fear not," I urged, though my voice trembled and my lips
+were dry. "Come, Mademoiselle," and I found her hand and clasped it,
+feeling the touch a positive relief to my unstrung nerves, "look up and
+see! the cloud is even now breaking asunder, and has already lost much
+of its form of terror. Mind not the words of Captain Wells; he has
+been raised among the Indians, and drunk in their superstitions. De
+Croix, arouse yourself, and help me to bring courage to this girl."
+
+He drew back from his grip on the palisades, as if, by sheer power of
+will, he forced his fascinated eyes from the cloud-bank, shivering like
+a man with an ague fit.
+
+"_Sacre_! did ever human eyes behold so foul a thing!" he cried, his
+voice shaking, his hand shading his face. "'T will haunt me till the
+hour I die."
+
+"Bah! 'T will all be forgotten with return of daylight," I was quick
+to reply; for had found relief in action, and could perceive already
+that the clouds were becoming shapeless and drifting rapidly southward
+in a great billowy mass. "Do not stand there moping like a day-blind
+owl, but aid me to make Mademoiselle see the foolishness of her fears."
+
+The sting of these words moved him more than a blow would have done;
+but as he knelt beside her, I noted there was little of the old
+reckless ring in his voice.
+
+"'T is indeed true, Toinette,--'t was but a cloud, and has already
+greatly changed in aspect. 'T will be no more than cause for laughter
+when the sun gilds the plain, and will form a rare tale to tell to the
+gallants at Montreal. Yet, Saint Guise! 't was grewsome enough, and my
+knees quake still from the terror of the thing."
+
+Mademoiselle was as brave and cool-headed a girl as ever I knew; but so
+thoroughly had she been unnerved by this dreadful happening, that it
+was only after the most persistent urging on our part that she
+consented to be led below. There, at the foot of the ladder, I stepped
+aside to permit De Croix to walk with her across the parade; but she
+would not go without a word of parting.
+
+"Do not think me weak and silly," she implored, her face, still white
+from the terror, upturned to me in the moonlight. "It was so spectral
+and ghastly that I gave way to sudden fear."
+
+"You need no excuse," I hastened to assure her. "When the thing
+frightened De Croix and me, and even set so old a soldier as Captain
+Wells to raving, it was no wonder it unnerved a girl, however brave she
+might prove in the presence of real danger. But you can sleep now,
+convinced it was naught but a floating cloud."
+
+She smiled at me over her shoulder, and I watched the pair with jealous
+eyes until they disappeared. I noticed Captain Wells standing beside
+me.
+
+"You thought I raved up yonder," he said gravely; "to-morrow will prove
+that my interpretation of the vision was correct."
+
+"You believe it a prophecy of evil?"
+
+"It was the warning of the Great Spirit--the Death-Shadow of the
+Miamis. Never has it appeared to men of our tribe except on the eve of
+great disaster, the forerunner of grave tragedy. We ride forth from
+these gates to death."
+
+It was plain that no amount of reasoning could change his Indian
+superstition; and with a word more of expostulation I left him standing
+there, and sought a place where I might lie down. Already the numbing
+sensation of supernatural fear had left me, for in the breaking up of
+that odd-formed cloud I realized its cause; and now the physical
+fatigue I felt overmastered all else. I found a quiet corner, and,
+with a saddle for a pillow, was soon fast asleep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+THE DAY OF DOOM
+
+_Fifteenth August, 1812_.--My hand trembles and my pen halts as I write
+the words; for the memory of those tragic hours, far distant as they
+are now, over-masters me, and I see once again the faces of the dead,
+the mutilated forms, the disfigured features of the hapless victims of
+savage treachery. Were I writing romance merely, I might hide much of
+detail behind the veil of silence; but I am penning history, and, black
+as the record is, I can only give it with strict adherence to truth. I
+dread the effort to recall once more the sad incidents of that scene of
+carnage, lest I fail to picture it aright; but I can tell, and that
+poorly, only of what I saw within the narrowed vista of my personal
+experience, where the fate of the day found me. Out of the vortex of
+so fierce and sudden a struggle, the individual, battling madly for his
+own life, catches but hasty and confused glimpses of what others may do
+about him or in other portions of the field; and there has been much
+recorded in what men call the history of that day's battle, about which
+I know nothing. Nor shall I attempt to tell much more than the simple
+story of what befell me and those who faced the danger close at my side.
+
+In spite of the early bustle around me, incident to the preparations
+for departure, I slept late, stupefied by intense fatigue. The sun was
+already high, painting with gold the interior of the western wall of
+the stockade, when some unusual disturbance aroused me, so that I sat
+up and looked about, scarce realizing for the moment where I was. The
+parade was alive with moving figures; and I instantly marked the cheery
+look on the faces of those nearest me, as if the entire garrison
+rejoiced that the hour for departure had at last arrived. The northern
+half of the little open space was filled with loaded wagons of every
+description, to which horses, mules, and even oxen, were being rapidly
+hitched; while women and children were clambering in over the wheels,
+perching themselves upon the heaps of camp accoutrements, and rolling
+up the canvas coverings in order that they might the better see out and
+feel the soft refreshment of the morning air.
+
+The officers of the post were moving here and there among the throng of
+workers, grave of face, yet making no effort to curb the unusual gaiety
+of the enlisted men. For the time, all reins of discipline seemed
+relaxed. The few settlers and plainsmen who had gathered within the
+Fort for protection looked on stolidly, either lying in the shade of
+the log wall or lounging beside their horses already equipped for the
+trail; while the Miamis were gathered restlessly about their breakfast
+fires, their faces unexpressive of emotion, as usual, although many
+among them had blackened their cheeks in expectation of disaster.
+
+Evidently the hour fixed upon for our final desertion of Fort Dearborn
+was close at hand; and I hastened to seek opportunity for a bath and
+breakfast. I do not recall now, looking back after all these years
+upon the events of that day, any dreading of the future, or serious
+thought of the coming ordeal. The bustle of excitement about me, the
+high spirits of the men, were like a tonic; and I remembered only that
+we were east-bound once more, and my chief concern was to be ready to
+ride out promptly with the column.
+
+It could not have been far from nine o'clock when every preparation was
+completed, and the echoing bugle called the laggards from their
+quarters into the open parade. The officers, already mounted, rode
+about quietly, assigning each driver and wagon to position in the
+marching column, and carefully mustering the troops. The many sick of
+the garrison were brought forth from the barracks in their blankets,
+and gently lifted to places beside the women and children in the loaded
+wagons; while the men fit for active duty fell in promptly along the
+southern wall, the right of their slender column resting opposite the
+barred entrance. I was assigned to ride with the rear-guard beside the
+wagons, in company with the few settlers and fifteen of the Miamis
+under command of Sergeant Jordan. Captains Heald and Wells, the latter
+with face blackened so that at first glance I scarcely recognized him,
+took position at the head of the waiting column in front of the closed
+gates, and they sat there on their horses, facing us, and watching
+anxiously our rather slow formation.
+
+John Kinzie joined them, his features grave and careworn, a long rifle
+in his hands; while the ladies of the garrison, plainly dressed for the
+long and hard journey, came forth from their several quarters and were
+assisted to mount the horses reserved for them. De Croix accompanied
+Mademoiselle, attired as for a gay pleasure-ride in the park, and gave
+her his gloved hand to step from into the saddle, with all the
+gallantry he might have shown a queen. I knew this was no boy's play
+before us now; and, crushing back my natural diffidence, I spurred my
+horse boldly forward until we ranged up beside her, even venturing to
+uncover in polite salute.
+
+Never did I see her look fairer than beneath the wide-brimmed hat she
+had donned to keep the hot sun from her clear cheeks; nor was there the
+slightest vestige of last night's terror lurking in the laughing eyes
+that flashed me greeting.
+
+"I surely know of one sad heart amid this gay company," she exclaimed,
+"for while we rejoice at being once more bound for civilization, Master
+Wayland looks most truly mournful; doubtless his thought is with her
+who has turned Indian for a time."
+
+Her careless bantering tone nettled me; but I was quick enough to
+answer, having no wish to awaken her fears as to the safety of our
+journey.
+
+"'T is true, Mademoiselle. I dislike greatly to leave in peril one I
+have journeyed so far to seek; nor can I banish from my mind the
+thought that perhaps I am failing in my duty toward her. Yet surely
+you have small cause for complaint, as I have, instead, deliberately
+chosen to ride here at your side, in order that I may be near to defend
+you should occasion arise,--provided always that my presence shall meet
+your wishes and approval."
+
+She bowed as best she could in her high-peaked saddle, shooting a
+mischievous glance from me to the unconcerned and self-satisfied face
+of the Frenchman.
+
+"I am indeed most gratified and happy, Monsieur, thus to feel myself
+the object of such devotion; but I greatly fear you will prove but a
+poor companion on the journey if you wear so glum a look. Captain de
+Croix is full of wit and good-humor this morning, and has already
+cheered me greatly with reminiscences of happier days."
+
+"Indeed?" I said, looking at the fellow curiously. "He has quickly
+forgotten the baleful portent of last night. I thought the daylight
+would yield him new heart."
+
+"And why not? 'Twas but a cloud, as all of us know now,--though I
+confess it terrified me greatly at the time. You yourself seem not
+even yet to have wholly shaken off its terror."
+
+"'T is not the supernatural that so troubles me," I rejoined. "As you
+may perceive yonder, Captain Wells rides forth with blackened face to
+what he deems to be certain death. I acknowledge, Mademoiselle, that I
+look forward to a serious clash of arms before we are rid of the
+redskins, in spite of their pledges; and shall therefore keep close
+beside you, hopeful that my arm may show you better service than my
+tongue before nightfall."
+
+Her eyes had grown grave as she listened; for I spoke with soberness,
+and there crept into them a look that thrilled me. Before either could
+speak again, Ensign Ronan rode up beside me.
+
+"Wayland," he questioned anxiously, "what is this I hear about a
+strange portent in the eastern sky last night? Saw you anything
+terrifying there?"
+
+"'T was no more serious than a cloud which chanced to assume the form
+of a monster, and its aspect was most terrifying until we understood
+the nature of its formation. Then it became merely an odd memory to
+weave a tale about. Mademoiselle here saw it, and remains in most
+excellent spirits nevertheless."
+
+He lifted his hat to her, and stared hard at De Croix, who barely
+nodded to his greeting.
+
+"By Heavens!" he exclaimed, as if much relieved, "it seemed to me as if
+Nature had conspired with those red demons yonder to sap our courage,
+when first I heard the rumor. I am so convinced that there is trouble
+afoot, that my nerves are all a-tingle at such mystery."
+
+"Are the savages gathering without?"
+
+"Ay! they are in mass of hundreds, awaiting us at the foot of the
+mound, and have been since daybreak. See! the sentries are being
+called down, and the men are at the gate levers. I must be back at my
+post."
+
+He held out his hand, and I clasped it warmly, feeling my heart go out
+instantly to the brave, impetuous lad.
+
+"You ride this day with the rear-guard," he said, lingering as if loath
+to go, "and my duty lies with the van. We may not chance to meet
+again, but the God we spoke about together last night will strengthen
+our hearts to meet their duty. It matters not where men die, but how.
+Good-bye, Mademoiselle! Captain de Croix, I wish you a most pleasant
+journey."
+
+With doffed hat, he struck spurs into his nettlesome horse, and was
+gone; while the ringing notes of the bugle called the waiting column to
+attention.
+
+I watched with deepening interest all that was taking place before me.
+The heavy log-gates were unbarred, swung slowly inward, and left
+unguarded. Captain Heald uttered a single stern word of command, and
+Captain Wells, with a squad of his Miamis pressing hard at his horse's
+heels, rode slowly through the opening out into the flood of sunshine.
+Captain Heald and Mr. Kinzie, side by side, with Mrs. Heald mounted
+upon a spirited bay horse a yard in their rear, followed close; and
+then to Lieutenant Helm's grave order the sturdy column of infantrymen,
+heavily equipped and marching in column of fours, swept in solemn curve
+about the post of the gate, and filed out through the narrow entrance.
+The regular tramp-tramp, the evident discipline, and the confident look
+of the men, impressed me. While I was watching them, the small
+garrison band began suddenly to play, and the smiling soldier faces
+clouded as they glanced around in questioning surprise.
+
+"Saint Guise!" ejaculated De Croix, uneasily; "it is the Dead March!"
+
+I marked the sudden look of terrified astonishment in Mademoiselle's
+eyes, and dropped my hand upon hers where it rested against the
+saddle-pommel. Ensign Ronan spurred swiftly back down the column, with
+an angry face, and hushed the ill sound by a sharp order.
+
+"Another tune, you fool, or none at all!" he said, peremptorily. "The
+foul fiend himself must have assumed charge of our march to-day."
+
+As the column marched away, the groaning wagons one by one fell into
+line behind it, until at last our own turn came, and De Croix and I,
+each with a hand upon the bridle-rein of Mademoiselle's spirited horse,
+rode between the gate-posts out to where we had full view of that
+stirring scene below.
+
+It was a fair, bright morning, with hardly so much as a fleecy white
+cloud in all the expanse of sky; glorious sunlight was flashing its
+prismatic colors over a lake surface barely ruffled by the faintest
+breeze. Never did Nature smile more brightly back into my eyes than
+then, as I gazed out over the broad plain where the glow of the summer
+reflected back in shimmering waves from the tawny prairie and
+glittering sand. With all its desolation, it was a picture to be
+treasured long; nor has a single detail of it ever left my memory.
+
+How vast the distances appeared through that clear, sun-illumined
+atmosphere, and how pronounced and distinctive were the varied colors
+spread to the full vista of the eye, contrasts of shine and shadow no
+human brush, however daring, would venture to depict on canvas. A
+primitive land this, idealized by distance, vast in its wide, sweeping
+plains, its boundless sea, its leagues of glistening sand, and, bending
+over all, the deepest, darkest arch of blue that ever mirrored so fair
+a picture of the wilderness.
+
+Scattered groups of cottonwood trees, the irregular mounds and ridges
+of sand, the silvery ribbon of river, merely emphasized the whole, and
+gave new meaning to what might else have been but sheer desert waste.
+I knew little then of what other years had seen within these solitudes
+and within the circle of my view; yet scraps of border legend came
+floating back into memory, until I recalled the name of many an
+old-time adventurer,--La Salle, Joliet, Marquette the Jesuit,--who must
+have camped beside that very stream out yonder.
+
+The column had halted as our last laggards cleared the gate; and for a
+moment we rested in silence upon the side of the slope, while the long
+line was being re-arranged for travel. The Indians, in seemingly
+disorganized masses, were already enveloping the head of the column
+with noisy clamor, and Wells was having difficulty in holding his Miami
+scouts to their proper position. A few scattered and skulking
+savages,--chiefly squaws, I thought at the time,--were stealthily
+edging their way up the slope of the slight rise, eager to begin the
+spoliation of the Fort as soon as we had deserted it.
+
+Wild and turbulent as was the scene, I perceived no alarming symptoms
+of hostility, and turned toward Mademoiselle with lighter heart. Her
+dark eyes were full of suppressed merriment as they encountered mine.
+
+"I thought you would sit there and dream all day," she said pleasantly;
+"and I hardly have the heart to blame you. 'T is indeed a fair scene,
+and one I almost regret leaving, now that the time to do so has come.
+Never before has its rare beauty so strongly appealed to me."
+
+"'T is the great distance outspread yonder which renders all so soft to
+the eye," I answered, glad to reflect her mood; "yet Captain de Croix
+and I know well 't is far less pleasant travelling over than to look at
+here. We think of the swamps, the forests, the leagues of sand and the
+swift rivers which will hinder our progress."
+
+"I hardly imagine," she murmured softly, "that Captain de Croix is
+guilty of wasting precious time in reflection upon aught so trivial
+this morning. He has been conversing with me upon the proper cut of
+his waistcoat, and I am sure he is too deeply engrossed in that subject
+to give heed to other things."
+
+I glanced at him and smiled as my heart glowed to her gentle sarcasm,
+for surely never did a more incongruous figure take saddle on a western
+trail. By what code of fashion he may have dressed, I know not; but
+from his slender-pointed bronze shoes to his beribboned hat he was
+still the dandy of the boulevards, his dark mustaches curled upward
+till their tips nearly touched his ears, and a delicately carved
+riding-whip swinging idly at his wrist. He seemed to have already
+exhausted his powers of conversation, for he remained oblivious of our
+presence, fumbling with one yellow-gloved hand in the recesses of a
+saddle-bag.
+
+"By Saint Denis, Sam!" he exclaimed, angrily, to his black satellite,
+"I can find nothing of the powder-puff, or the bag of essence!
+_Parbleu_! if they have been left behind you will go back after them,
+though every Indian in this Illinois country stand between. Come, you
+imp of darkness, know you aught of these?"
+
+"Dey am wid de pack-hoss, Massa de Croix," was the oily answer. "I
+done s'posed you would n't need 'em till we got thar."
+
+"Need them! Little you know the requirements of a gentleman! Saint
+Guise! Why, I shall want them both this very day! Ride you forward
+there, and see if they cannot be picked out from among the other
+things."
+
+"See, Monsieur!" cried Mademoiselle suddenly, one hand pressing my arm,
+while she pointed eagerly with the other, "there goes the boat with
+Mistress Kinzie and her children! That must be Josette in the bow,
+with the gay streamer about her hat. She did wish so to ride with us,
+but Mr. Kinzie would not permit it."
+
+The boat had but just cleared the river mouth, and was working
+off-shore, with half a dozen Indians laboring at the oars.
+
+"Yet Josette has by far the easiest passage, as we shall learn before
+night," said I, watching their progress curiously. "I imagine you will
+soon be wishing you were with them."
+
+"Never, Master Wayland!" she cried, with a little shudder, and quick
+uplifting of hands to her face as if to shut out the sight. "Memory of
+the hours when I was last on the lake is still too vivid. I have grown
+to dread the water as if it were an evil spirit. See! the column
+resumes its march, and the savages are moving beside us as might a
+guard of honor."
+
+It was as she had said. The long, hard journey had begun; and slowly,
+like some great snake torpid with a winter's sleep, the crawling column
+drew forward. We at the rear rode down the incline and out upon the
+level plain, every step an unconscious advance toward battle and death.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+IM THE JAWS OF THE TIGER
+
+We chatted carelessly about many things, as we rode slowly onward, our
+unguided horses following those in advance along the well-marked trail
+close beside the water along the sandy beach. Mademoiselle was full of
+life and bubbling over with good-humor; while De Croix, having found
+the essentials of his toilet safe, grew witty and light of speech, even
+interesting me now and then in the idle words that floated to my
+ears,--for he managed to monopolize the attention of the young girl so
+thoroughly that after a little time I sat silent in my saddle, scarce
+adding a word to their gay tilt, my eyes and thought upon the changing
+scene ahead.
+
+I know not why, as I reflect calmly upon the incidents of that morning,
+I should have grown so confident that the savages meant us fair; yet
+this feeling steadily took possession of me, and I even began to regret
+that I had not stayed behind in quest of her for whom I had come so
+far. Surely it was hopeless for me to dangle longer beside
+Mademoiselle, for De Croix knew so well the little ins and cuts of
+social intercourse that I was like a child for his play. Moreover, it
+was clear enough that the girl liked him, or he would never presume so
+to monopolize her attention. That she saw through much of his vain
+pretence, was indeed probable; her words had conveyed this to me.
+Nevertheless, it was plain she found him entertaining; he was like a
+glittering jewel in that rough wilderness, and I was too dull of brain
+and narrow of experience to hope for success against him in a struggle
+for the favor of a girl so fair and gay as this Toinette.
+
+I thought the matter all out as I rode on through the sunlight, my eyes
+upon the painted savages who trooped along upon our right in such
+stolid silence and seeming indifference, my ears open to the light
+badinage and idle compliments of my two companions. Yes, it would be
+better so. When the Indians left the column at the head of the lake, I
+would invent some excuse that might allow me to accompany them on their
+return, and I would remain in the neighborhood of the Fort until Elsa
+Matherson had been found.
+
+Just in front of us, a large army wain struggled along through the
+yielding sand, drawn by a yoke of lumbering oxen. The heavy canvas
+cover had been pushed high up in front, and I could see a number of
+women and children seated upon the bedding piled within, and looking
+with curious interest at the stream of Indians plodding moodily beside
+the wheels. Some of the little tots' faces captivated me with their
+expression of wide-eyed wonder, and I rode forward to speak with them;
+for love of children is always in my heart.
+
+As I turned my horse to draw back beside Mademoiselle, my eyes rested
+upon the stockade of the old Fort, now some little distance in our
+rear; and to my surprise it already swarmed with savages. Not less
+than five hundred Indians,--warriors, all of them, and well
+armed,--tramped as guards beside our long and scattered column, yet
+hundreds of others were even now overrunning the mound and pouring in
+at the Fort gates, eager for plunder. I could hear their shouting,
+their fierce yells of exultation, while the grim and silent fellows who
+accompanied us never so much as glanced around, although I caught here
+and there the glint of a cruel, crafty eye. The sight made me wonder;
+and I swung my long rifle out from the straps at my back down across
+the pommel of my saddle, more ready to my hand.
+
+The trail we had been following now swerved nearer the lake, deflected
+somewhat by a long high ridge of beaten sand, separating the shore from
+the prairie. Here the two advancing lines of white and red diverged,
+the Indians moving around to the western side of the sand-ridge, while
+Captain Wells and his Miami scouts continued their march along the
+beach. There was nothing about this movement to awaken suspicion of
+treachery, for the beach at this point had narrowed too much for so
+great a number moving abreast, and it was therefore only natural that
+our allies should seek a wider space for their marching, knowing they
+could easily reunite with us a mile or so below, where the beach
+broadened again. Their passing thus from our sight was a positive
+relief; and so quiet did everything become, except for groaning wheels
+and the heavy tread of horses, that Mademoiselle glanced up in surprise.
+
+"Why, what has become of the Indians?" she questioned. "Have they
+already left us?"
+
+I pointed to the intervening sand-ridge.
+
+"They move parallel with us, but prefer to walk upon the prairie grass
+rather than these beach pebbles. For my part, I would willingly
+dispense with their guard altogether; for in my judgment we are of
+sufficient strength to defend ourselves."
+
+"Ay, strong enough against savages," interposed De Croix, his eyes upon
+the straggling line ahead; "yet if by any chance treachery was
+intended, surely I never saw military formation less adapted for
+repelling sudden attack. Mark how those fellows march out yonder!--all
+in a bunch, and with not so much as a corporal's guard to protect the
+wagons!"
+
+I was no soldier then, and knew little of military formation; but his
+criticism seemed just, and I ventured not upon answering it. Indeed,
+at that very moment some confusion far in front, where Captain Wells
+led his scouts, attracted my attention. We must have been a mile and a
+half from the Fort by this time, and I recalled to memory the little
+group of trees standing beside the trail where we had halted on our
+journey westward to enjoy our earliest glimpse of Dearborn. At first I
+could make out little of what was taking place ahead; then suddenly I
+saw the squad of Miamis break hastily, like a cloud swept by a whirling
+wind, and the next instant could clearly distinguish Captain Wells
+riding swiftly back toward the column of infantry, his head bare, and
+one arm gesticulating wildly. In a moment the whole line came to a
+startled and wondering pause.
+
+"What is it?" questioned Mademoiselle anxiously, shading her eyes.
+"Have the Indians attacked us?"
+
+"God knows!" I exclaimed, clinching my rifle firmly. "But it must
+be,--look there!"
+
+Wheeling rapidly into line, as if at command, although we could hear no
+sound of the order, the soldiers poured one quick volley into the
+sand-ridge on their right, and then, with a cheer which floated faintly
+back to us, made a wild rush for the summit. This was all I saw of the
+struggle in front,--for, with a cry of dismay, the Miamis composing the
+rearguard broke from their posts beside the wagons and came running
+back past us in a panic of wild terror. I saw Sergeant Jordan throw
+himself across their line of flight, striking fiercely with his gun,
+and cursing them for a pack of cowardly hounds; but he was thrown
+helplessly aside in their blind rush for safety.
+
+"Wayland! De Croix!" he shouted, staggering to his knees, "help me
+stop these curs, if you would save our lives!"
+
+It was a fool thing, yet in the excitement I did it, and De Croix was
+beside me. Two or three of the settlers on foot rallied with us, and
+together we struck so hard against those cowering renegades that for
+the moment we held them, though their fear gave them desperation
+difficult to withstand. I recall noticing De Croix, as he pressed his
+rearing horse into the huddled mass, lashing at the faces of the
+fellows mercilessly with his riding-whip, as if thinking Mademoiselle
+would admire his reckless gallantry.
+
+A wild yell, with the mad thrill of the war-whoop in it, suddenly
+assailed our ears; the Miamis broke to the left like a flock of
+frightened birds, and my startled glance revealed a horde of naked
+Indians, howling like maniacs, and with madly brandished weapons,
+pouring over the sand-ridge not thirty feet away from us. With a shout
+of warning, which was half a curse at my own mad folly, I drove the
+spurs deep into my horse's side in a vain endeavor to fling myself
+between them and the girl. Hardly had the startled animal made one
+quick plunge, when we were locked in that human avalanche as if gripped
+by a vise of steel. A dozen dark hands grasped my bridle or clutched
+at me, their swarthy faces fierce with blood-lust, the eyes that
+fronted me cruel with passion and inflamed by hate. I heard shots not
+far away; but we were all too closely jammed to do more than fight in a
+desperate hand-to-hand struggle with club and knife.
+
+The saddle is a poor place from which to swing a rifle, yet I stood
+high in my wooden stirrups and struck madly at every Indian head I saw,
+battering their faces till from the very horror of it they gave slowly
+back. I won a yard--two yards--three,--my horse biting viciously at
+their naked flesh, and lashing out with both fore-feet like a fiend,
+while I swept my gun-stock in a widening circle of death. For the
+moment, I dreamed we might drive them back; but then those devils
+blocked me, clinging to my horse's legs in their death agony, and
+laughing back into my face as I struck them down.
+
+Once I heard De Croix swearing in French beside me, and glanced around
+through the mad turmoil to see him cutting and hacking with broken
+blade, pushing into the midst of the mêlée as if he had real joy in the
+encounter. While I thus had him in view, a knife whistled through the
+air, there was a quick dazzle in the sunlight, and he reeled backward
+off his horse and disappeared in the ruck below.
+
+Never in a life of fighting have I battled as I did then, feeling that
+I alone might hope to reach her side and beat back these foul fiends
+till help should come to us. The stock of my rifle shattered like
+glass; but I swung the iron barrel with what seemed to me the strength
+of twenty men, striking, thrusting, stabbing, my teeth set, my eyes
+blurring with a mist of blood, caring for nothing except to hit and
+kill. I know not now whether I advanced at all in that last effort,
+though my horse trod on dead bodies. Only once in those awful seconds
+did I gain a glimpse of Mademoiselle through the mist of struggle, the
+maze of uplifted arms and striking steel. She had reined her horse
+back against a wheel of the halted wagon, and with white face and
+burning eyes was lashing desperately with the loaded butt of her
+riding-whip at the red hands which sought to drag her from the saddle.
+
+The sight maddened me, and again my spurs were driven into my horse's
+flanks. As he plunged forward, some one from behind struck me a
+crushing blow across the back of the head, and I reeled from my saddle,
+a red mist over my eyes, and went hurling face downward upon the mass
+of reeling, tangled bodies.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+THE FIELD OF THE DEAD
+
+The fierce plunging of my horse in his death agony, and his final
+pitching forward across my prostrate body, were doubtless all that saved
+my life. Yielding to their mad desire for plunder, the savages scattered
+when I fell, and left me lying there for dead. I do not think I quite
+lost consciousness in those first moments, although everything became
+blurred to my sight, and I was imprisoned by the weight above me so that
+the slightest effort to move proved painful; indeed, I breathed only with
+the greatest difficulty.
+
+But I both heard and saw, and my mind was intensely occupied with the
+rush of thought, the horror of all that was going on about me. How I
+wish I might blot it out,--forget forever the hellish deeds of those
+dancing devils who made mock of human agony and laughed at tears and
+prayers! It was plain, as the wild cries of rejoicing rose on every
+side, that the Indians had swept the field. The distant sound of firing
+ceased, and I could hear the pitiful cries of women, the frightened
+shrieks of children, the shrill note of intense agony wrung from tortured
+lips. Close beside me lay a dead warrior, his hideously painted face,
+with its wide, glaring, dead eyes, so fronting me that I had left only a
+narrow space through which to peer. Within that small opening I saw
+murder done until I closed my eyes in shuddering horror, crazed by my own
+sense of helplessness, and feeling the awful fate that must already have
+befallen her I loved. God knows I had then no faintest wish to live; nor
+did I dream that I should see the sun go down that day. Death was upon
+every side of me, in its most dreadful forms; and every cry that reached
+my ears, every sight that met my eyes, only added to the frightful
+reality of my own helplessness. The inert weight of the horse stifled me
+so that I drew my short breath almost in sobs; nor did I dare venture
+upon the slightest attempt at release, hemmed about as I was by merciless
+fiends now hideously drunk with slaughter. Once I heard a man plead for
+mercy, shrieking the words forth as if his intensity of agony had robbed
+him of all manliness; I saw a young woman fall headlong, the haft of a
+tomahawk cleaving open her head, as a brawny red arm gripped her by the
+throat; a child, with long yellow hair, and face distorted by terror, ran
+past my narrow outlook, a naked savage grasping after her scarcely a foot
+behind. I heard her wild scream of despair and his shout of triumph as
+he struck her down. Then I lost consciousness, overwhelmed by the
+multiplying horrors of that field of blood.
+
+It is hard to tell how long I lay there, or by what miracle of God's
+great mercy I had escaped death and mutilation. It was still day, the
+sun was high in the heaven, and the heat almost intolerable, beating down
+upon the dry and glittering sand. I could distinguish no sound near at
+hand, not even a moan of any kind. The human forms about me were
+stiffening in death; nor did any skulking Indian figures appear in sight.
+
+From away to the northward I could hear the echo of distant yelling; and
+as I lay there, every faculty alert, I became more and more convinced
+that the savages who had attacked us had withdrawn, and that I alone of
+all that fated company was preserved, through some strange dispensation
+of Providence, for what might prove a more terrible fate than any on that
+stricken field. With this thought there was suddenly born within me a
+fresh desire for life, a mad thirsting after revenge on those red demons
+whose merciless work I had been compelled to see. Yet if I hoped to
+preserve my life, I must have water and air; a single hour longer in my
+present situation could only result in death. Fortunately, such relief,
+now that I felt free to exert myself and seek it, was not so difficult as
+it had seemed. The heavy horse rested upon other bodies as well as my
+own, so that, little by little, I succeeded in dragging myself out from
+beneath his weight, until I was finally able to lift my head and glance
+cautiously about me.
+
+I pause now as I sit writing, my face buried in my hands, at the memory
+of that dreadful field of death. I cannot picture it, nor have I wish to
+try. I took one swift glimpse at the riven skulls, the mangled limbs,
+the mutilated bodies, the upturned pleading faces white and ghastly in
+the sunlight, the women and children huddled in heaps of slain, the
+seemingly endless line of disfigured, half-stripped bodies stretching far
+down the white beach; then I fell upon my face in the sand, sobbing like
+a baby. O God, how could such deeds be done? How could creatures shaped
+like men prove themselves such fiends, such hideous devils of malignity?
+It sickened me with horror, and I shrank from those dead bodies as if
+each had been a grim and threatening ghost.
+
+Necessity presently overcame the dread possessing me; and slowly, seeking
+to see no more than I must of the awful scenes about me, I struggled to
+my knees, and peered around cautiously for signs of skulking Indians.
+Not a living creature was near enough to observe me. To the northward
+the savages were swarming about the Fort, and it was evident that they
+had left everything to search for plunder. My uncovered head throbbed
+under the hot sun, and my hair was thick with clotted blood; scarce a
+hundred feet away was the blue lake, and on my hands and knees I crawled
+across the beach to it, forgetful of everything else in my desire to roll
+in the cool sweet water.
+
+I realized that it would be far safer for me to remain there until
+darkness shrouded my movements; but I felt so revived by the touch of the
+water that the old desire for action overcame considerations of personal
+safety. Before night came I must somehow gain possession of a rifle,
+with powder and ball; and I must discover, if possible, the fate of
+Mademoiselle. I cannot describe how, like a frightened child, I shrank
+from going again amid those mutilated corpses. I started twice, only to
+crawl back into the water, nerveless and shaking like the leaf of a
+cottonwood. I knew it must be done, and that the sooner I attempted it
+the safer would be the trial; so at last, with set teeth and almost
+superhuman effort, I crept up the beach among the silent, disfigured dead
+once more.
+
+With little trouble I found the wagon against which I had seen
+Mademoiselle draw back her horse in that last desperate defence. It was
+overturned, scorched with flame, its contents widely scattered; while
+about it lay the bodies of men, women, and children. A single hasty
+glance at most of these was sufficient; but a few were so huddled and
+hidden that I was compelled to move them before I thoroughly convinced
+myself that Mademoiselle was not there. I finally found her horse,
+several rods away, lying against the sand-ridge; but she whose body I
+sought with such fond persistency was not among those mangled forms.
+
+Faint and sick from the awful scene, with head throbbing painfully, I
+sank down upon a slope of sand where I was able to command a clear view
+in either direction, and thought rapidly. I was alone with the dead. Of
+all those lying silent before me, none would stir again. Not a savage
+roamed the stricken field,--though doubtless they would again swarm down
+upon it as soon as the sacking of the Fort had been completed. I must
+plan, and plan quickly, if I would preserve my own life and be of service
+to others. And life was worth preserving now, for there was a
+possibility,--faint, to be sure, yet a possibility,--that Toinette still
+lived. How the mere hope thrilled and animated me! how like a
+trumpet-sound it called to action! She had told me once of friendships
+between her and these blood-stained warriors; of weeks passed in Indian
+camps on the great plains, both with her father and alone; of being
+called the White Queen in the lodges of Sacs, Wyandots, and
+Pottawattomies. Perchance some such friendship may have intervened to
+save her, even in that fierce mêlée, that carnival of lust and murder.
+Some chief, with sufficient power to dare the deed, may have snatched her
+from out the jaws of death, actuated by motives of mercy,--or, more
+likely still, have saved her from the stroke of the tomahawk for a far
+more terrible fate.
+
+This was the thought that brought me again to my feet with burning face
+and tightly clinched teeth. If she lived, a helpless prisoner in those
+black lodges yonder, there was work to be done,--stern, desperate work,
+that would require all my courage and resourcefulness. Firm in manly
+resolve, and rendered reckless now of contact with the dead, I crept back
+among the bodies in eager search for gun and ammunition. For a long time
+I sought vainly; the field had been stripped by many a vandal hand. At
+last, however, I turned over a painted giant of a savage whose head had
+been crushed with a blow, and beneath him discovered a long rifle with
+powder-horn half filled. As I drew it forth, uttering a cry of delight
+at my precious find, my eyes fell upon a pair of bronze boots, with long
+narrow toes, protruding from beneath a tangled mass of the slain. It was
+no doubt the tomb of De Croix; and without so much as a thought that he
+could be alive, I drew the bodies off him and dragged his form forth into
+the sunlight.
+
+Merciful Heaven! his heart still beat,--so faintly, indeed, that I could
+barely note it with my ear at his chest. But life was surely there, and
+with a hasty glance about to assure me that I was unobserved, I ran to
+the lake shore. I returned with hat full of water, with which I
+thoroughly drenched him, rubbing his numbed hands fiercely, and thumping
+his chest until at last the closed eyes partially opened, and he looked
+up into my anxious face, gasping painfully for breath. His lips moved as
+I lifted his head in my arms; and I bent lower, not certain but he was
+dying and had some last message he would whisper in my ear.
+
+"Wayland," he faltered feebly, "is this you? Lord, how my head aches!
+Send Sam to me with the hand-mirror and the perfumed soap."
+
+"Hush!" I answered, almost angry at his flippant utterance. "Sam is no
+doubt dead, and you and I alone are spared of all the company. Do you
+suffer greatly? Think you it would be possible to walk?"
+
+"I have much pain here in the side," he said slowly, "and am yet weak
+from loss of blood. All dead, you say? Is Toinette dead?"
+
+"I know not, but I have not found her body among the others, and believe
+her to be a prisoner to the savages. But, come, De Croix," I urged,
+anxiously, "we run great risk loitering here; there is but one safe spot
+for us until after dark,--yonder, crouched in the waters of the lake.
+The Indians may return at any moment to complete their foul work; and for
+us to be found alive means torture,--most likely the stake,--and will
+remove the last hope for Mademoiselle. Think you it can be made if you
+lean hard on me?"
+
+"_Sacre_! 't will not be because I do not try, Master Wayland," he
+answered, his voice stronger now that he could breathe more freely, and
+with much of his old audacity returned. "Help me to make the start,
+friend, for every joint in my body seems rusty."
+
+His face was white and drawn from agony, and he pressed one hand upon his
+side, while perspiration stood in beads upon his forehead. But no moan
+came from his set lips; and when he rested a moment on his knees, looking
+about him upon the dead, a look of grim approval swept into his eyes.
+
+"Saint Guise, Wayland," he said soberly, "'t was a master fight, and the
+savages had it not all their own way!"
+
+It made me sick to hear such boasting amidst the horror that yet
+overwhelmed me, and I drew the fellow up to his feet with but little
+tenderness.
+
+"God knows 't is sad enough!" I answered, shortly. "Come, there are
+parties of Indians already straying this way from the Fort yonder, and it
+behooves us to get in hiding."
+
+He made the distance between us and the water with far less difficulty
+than I had expected, and with a better use of his limbs at each step. In
+spite of vigorous protest on his part, I forced him out from the shore
+until the water entirely covered us, save only our faces; and there we
+waited for the merciful coming of the night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+A GHOSTLY VISION
+
+The touch of the water brought renewed life to De Croix. This was
+shown by the brighter color stealing into his cheeks, as well as by the
+more careless tone that crept into his voice. The lake proved shallow
+for some considerable distance off shore, and I compelled the Frenchman
+to wade with me southward, and as far out as we dared venture, until we
+must have reached the extreme limit of the field of massacre. Indeed,
+I fully believed we had passed beyond the point where the attack had
+first burst upon Captain Wells's Miamis; for I could perceive no sign
+of any bodies lying opposite us against the white background of sand.
+As the night drew on, squads of savages wandered over the scene of
+slaughter, despoiling the stiffening corpses, and taking from the
+wagons whatever might suit their fancy. Yet we were now so far removed
+that we could distinguish little of their deeds, although the sound of
+their voices echoed plainly enough across the water to our ears.
+
+As time passed, the numbness that had paralyzed my brain, either from
+the cruel blow that felled me or the terrible shock my nerves had
+experienced, gradually passed away, and our situation became more vivid
+to my mind. I thought again of all who had gone forth that morning
+filled with hope and life. I had, it is true, known none of them long,
+but there were many in that ill-fated company who had already grown
+dear to me, and one was among them who I now knew beyond all question
+was to remain in my heart forever.
+
+I recalled the faces one by one, with some tender memory for each in
+turn. I thought of the brave Captain Wells, with his swarthy face, and
+Indian training, who had proved himself so truly my friend for my
+father's sake; of Captain Heald, the typical bluff soldier of the
+border, ready to sacrifice everything to what he deemed his duty; of
+Lieutenant Helm, grave of face and calm of speech, always so thoughtful
+of his sweet girl bride; and of young Ronan, loyal of heart and
+impetuous of deed, whose frank manliness had so drawn me to him. And
+now all these brave, true comrades were dead! Only five or six hours
+ago I had spoken with them, had ridden by their side; now they lay
+motionless yonder, stricken down by the basest treachery, their poor
+bodies hacked and mutilated almost beyond recognition. I could
+scarcely realize the awful truth; it rested upon me like some horrible
+dream, from which I knew I must soon awaken.
+
+But it was Mademoiselle,--Toinette, with the laughing eyes and roguish
+face, which yet could be so tender,--whose memory held me vibrating
+between constant dread and hope. Living or dead, I must know the truth
+concerning her, before I felt the slightest consideration for my own
+preservation. If I lived, it should be for her sake, not mine. Plan
+after plan came to me as I stood there, my face barely raised above the
+water level, praying for the westering sun to sink beneath the horizon.
+Yet all my plans were so vague, so visionary, so filled with
+difficulties and uncertainties, that at last I had nothing practical
+outlined beyond a firm determination in some way to reach the Indian
+camp and there learn what I could of its black secrets. I wondered
+whether this rash hare-brained Frenchman would aid or hinder such a
+purpose; and I glanced aside at him, curious to test the working of his
+mind in such a time of trial.
+
+"Saint Guise!" he exclaimed, marking my look, but misinterpreting it;
+"the sun has gone down at last, and there seems a chill in the air
+where it strikes my wet skin. It is in my thought to wade ashore,
+Master Wayland, and seek food for our journey, as I can perceive no
+savages near at hand."
+
+"It will be safer if we wait here another half-hour," I answered,
+almost inclined to smile at the queer figure he cut, with his long, wet
+hair hanging down his shoulders. Then I added, "What journey do you
+contemplate?"
+
+He gazed at me, his face full of undisguised amazement.
+
+"What journey? Why, Mon Dieu! to the eastward, of course! Surely you
+have no wish to linger in this pleasant spot?"
+
+"And is that the way of a French soldier?" I asked, almost angrily. "I
+thought you made the journey westward, Monsieur, for the sake of one
+you professed greatly to admire; and now you confess yourself willing
+to leave her here to the mercy of these red wolves. Is this the way of
+it?"
+
+I spoke the words coolly, and they cut him to the quick. His face
+flushed and his eyes flashed with anger; yet I faced him quietly,
+though I doubt not I should have felt his hand upon me had we been
+better circumstanced for struggle.
+
+"How know you she lives?" he asked sullenly, eying the rifle I still
+held across my shoulder.
+
+"I do not know, Monsieur, except that her body is not upon the field
+yonder; but I will know before I leave, or give my life in the search.
+And if you really loved her as you professed to do, you would dream of
+nothing less."
+
+"Love her?" he echoed, his gaze upon the sand, now partially obscured
+in the descending twilight. "_Sacre_! I truly thought I did, for the
+girl certainly has beauty and wit, and wove a spell about me in
+Montreal. But she has become as a wild bird out here, and is a most
+perplexing vixen, laughing at my protestations, so that indeed I hardly
+know whether it would be worth the risk to stay."
+
+Hateful and selfish as these words sounded, and much as I longed to
+strike the lips that uttered them so coolly, yet their utterance
+brought a comfort to my heart, and I stared at the fellow, biting my
+tongue to keep back the words of disgust I felt.
+
+"So this is the measure of your French gallantry, Monsieur! I am
+sincerely glad my race holds a different conception of the term. Then
+you will leave me here?"
+
+"Leave you? _Sacre_! how could I ever hope to find my way alone
+through the wilderness? 'T would be impossible. Yet why should we
+stay here? What can you and I hope to accomplish in so mad a search
+amid all these savages? You speak harsh words,--words that under other
+conditions I should make you answer for with the sword; but what is the
+good of it all? You know I am no coward; I can fight if there be need;
+yet to my mind no help can reach Toinette through us, while to remain
+here longer is no less than suicide."
+
+I saw he was in earnest, and I felt there was much truth in his words,
+however little they affected my own determination.
+
+"As you please, Monsieur," I answered coldly, turning from him and
+slowly wading ashore. "With me 't is not matter for argument. I seek
+Mademoiselle. You are at perfect liberty either to accompany me or to
+hunt for safety elsewhere, as you wish."
+
+I never so much as glanced behind, as I went up the beach, now shrouded
+in the swift-descending night; but I was aware that he kept but a step
+behind me. Once I heard him swear; but there was no more speaking
+between us, until, in the darkness, I stumbled and partially fell over
+a dead body outstretched upon the sand.
+
+"A Miami, judging from the fringe of his leggings," I said briefly,
+from my knees. "One of the advance guard, no doubt, brought down in
+flight. 'T is good luck, though, De Croix, for the fellow has retained
+his rifle. Perchance if you be well armed also, it may yield you fresh
+courage."
+
+"_Parbleu_! 'tis not courage I lack," he returned, with something of
+his old-time spirit, "but I hate greatly to yield up a chance for life
+on so mad an errand. More, Master Wayland, had this firearm been in my
+hands when you flouted me in the water yonder, your words should not
+have been so easily passed over."
+
+The stars gave me a dim view of him, and there was a look in his face
+that caused me to feel it would be best to have our trouble settled
+fully, and without delay.
+
+"Monsieur," I said sternly, laying my hand upon his shoulder, and
+compelling him to front me fairly, "I for one am going into danger
+where I shall require every resource in order to preserve my life and
+be of service to others. I have already told you that I care not
+whether you accompany me or no. But this I say: we part here, or else
+you journey with me willingly, and with no more veiled threats or side
+looks of treachery."
+
+"I meant no harm."
+
+"Then act the part of a man, Monsieur, and cease your grumbling. The
+very life of Mademoiselle may hang upon our venture; and if you ever
+interfere or obstruct my purpose, I will kill you as I would a dog.
+You understand that, Monsieur de Croix; now, will you go or stay?"
+
+He looked about him into the lonely, desolate shadows, and I could see
+him shrug his shoulders.
+
+"I go with you, of course. _Sacre_! but I have small choice in the
+matter; 't would be certain death otherwise, for I know not east from
+west in this blind waste of sand."
+
+I turned abruptly from him, and strode forward across the sand-ridge
+out into the short prairie grass beyond, shaping my course westward by
+the stars. However revengeful the Frenchman might feel at my plain
+speaking, I felt no hesitancy in trusting him to follow, as his life
+depended upon my guidance through the wilderness.
+
+My mind by this time was fairly settled upon our first movement. The
+only spot that gave promise of a safe survey of the Indian camp, where
+doubtless such prisoners as there were would be held, I felt sure would
+be found amid the shadows of the west bank of that southerly stream
+along which the lodges were set up. From that vantage point, if from
+any, I should be able to judge how best to proceed on the perilous
+mission of rescue.
+
+While we were feeling our way forward through the darkness, a great
+burst of flame soared high into the northern sky, the red light
+radiating far abroad over the prairie, until even our creeping figures
+cast faint shadows on the level plain.
+
+"Saint Guise! They have set fire to the Fort!" exclaimed De Croix,
+halting and gazing anxiously northward.
+
+"Ay, either to that or to the agency building," I answered. "It was
+not there I expected to find the prisoners, but rather hidden among
+those black lodges yonder whence all the shouting comes. 'T is
+torture, De Croix, which has so aroused those devils; and it will soon
+enough prove our turn to entertain them, if we linger long within this
+glare."
+
+"You have a plan, then?"
+
+"Only a partial one at present,--'t is to put the safeguard of the
+river between us and those yelling fiends. Beyond that it will all be
+the guidance of God."
+
+The stream proved to be a narrow one, and the current was not swift.
+We crossed it easily enough, without wetting our stock of powder, and
+found the western bank somewhat darkened by the numerous groups of
+small stunted trees that lined it. I moved with extreme caution now,
+for each step brought us in closer proximity to those infuriated
+tribesmen who were holding mad carnival in the midst of their lodges.
+I felt sure that our pathway along the western shore was clear, for the
+most astute chief among them would hardly look for the approach of
+enemies from that quarter; but I was enough of a frontiersman not to
+neglect any ordinary precautions, and so we crept like snakes along at
+the water's edge, under the shadow of the bank, until much of the wild
+scene in the village opposite was revealed to our searching eyes.
+
+It was a mad saturnalia, half light, half shadow, amid which the fierce
+figures of the painted warriors passed and repassed in drunken frenzy,
+making night hideous with savage clamor and frenzied gesticulations. I
+would have crept on farther, seeking a place for crossing unobserved,
+had not De Croix suddenly grasped me by the leg. As I turned, the play
+of the flames from across the water struck upon his white face, and I
+could read thereon a terror that held him motionless.
+
+"For Christ's sake, let us go!" he urged, in an agonized whisper, "See
+what those demons are about to do! I fear not battle, Wayland, as you
+know; but the scene yonder unmans me."
+
+It is hard for me to describe now what then I saw. The entire centre
+of the great encampment was brightly lit by a huge blazing fire, around
+which hundreds of Indians were gathered, leaping and shouting in their
+frenzy, while above the noise of their discordant voices we could
+distinguish the flat notes of the wooden drum, the dull pounding of
+which reminded me of the solemn tolling of a funeral bell. What
+atrocities had been going on, I know not; but as we gazed across at
+them in shuddering horror, forth from the entrance of a lodge a dozen
+painted warriors drove a white man, stripped to the waist, his hands
+bound behind him. As he stumbled forward, a bevy of squaws lashed him
+with corded whips. I caught one glimpse of his face in the light of
+the flames; it was that of a young soldier I recalled having seen the
+evening before within the Fort, playing a violin. He was a brave lad,
+and although his face was pale and drawn by suffering, he fronted the
+crazed mob that buffeted him with no sign of fear, his eyes roving
+about as if still seeking some possible avenue of escape. Once he
+sprang suddenly aside, tripping a giant brave who grasped him, and
+disappeared amid the lodges, only to be dragged forth a moment later
+and pushed forward, horribly beaten with clubs at every step.
+
+On a sudden, that shrieking, undulating crowd fell away, and we could
+see the young man standing alone, bound to a stake, his body leaning
+forward as if held to its erect posture merely by the bonds. The limp
+drooping of his head made me think him already unconscious, possibly
+dead from some chance fatal blow; but as the flames burst out in a roar
+at his feet, and shot up, red and glaring, to his waist, he gave
+utterance to one terrible cry of agony, and it seemed to me I gazed
+fairly into his tortured eyes and could read their pitiful appeal.
+Twice I raised my rifle, the sight upon his heart,--but durst not fire.
+No consideration of my own peril held back the pressure of the
+trigger,--'twas the remembrance of Mademoiselle. It was beyond my
+strength of will to withstand such strain long.
+
+"Come," I groaned to De Croix, my hands pressed tightly over my eyes to
+shut out the sight, "it will craze us both to stay here longer, nor
+dare we aid the poor fellow even by a shot."
+
+He lay face downward on the soft mud of the bank, and I had to shake
+him before he so much as moved. We crept on together, until we came
+out through the thick bushes into the open prairie, and faced each
+other, our lips white and our bodies shaking with the horror of what we
+had just seen.
+
+"Mon Dieu!" he faltered, "'twill forever haunt me."
+
+"It has greatly undone me," I answered, striving to control my voice,
+for I felt the necessity of coolness if I hoped to command him; "but if
+we would save her from meeting a like fate, we must remain men."
+
+"Then, for God's sake, find some spot where I may rest for an hour," he
+urged. "My brain seems reeling, and I fear it will give way it I
+remain in sight or sound of such horrors."
+
+In spite of all I had seen, it was still my desire to creep in among
+the deserted lodges while darkness shrouded the outermost of them; but
+I felt that some safe hiding-place must first be found for my
+companion. To attempt to take him with me while in such a nervous
+state would be only to invite disaster.
+
+"De Croix," I asked, "know you if the Indians have destroyed the house
+that stood by the fork of the north river, where the settler Ouilmette
+lived?"
+
+"I marked it through Lieutenant Helm's field-glass yesterday. 'T is
+partially burned, yet the walls still stand."
+
+"Then 't will serve us most excellently to hide in, for there will be
+naught left within likely to attract marauders. Think you that you
+could find it through the night?"
+
+He looked at me, and it was easy to see his nerves were on edge.
+
+"Alone?" he gasped brokenly. "My God, no!"
+
+There was seemingly no way out of it, for it would have been little
+short of murder to leave him alone on that black prairie, nor would
+harsh words have greatly mended matters. We were fully an hour at it,
+creeping cautiously along behind the scattered bushes until we passed
+the forks and swam the river's northerly branch. The action did him
+good, and greatly helped to steady my own nerves, as the uproar of the
+savages died steadily away behind us.
+
+At last we came out upon a slight knoll, and found ourselves close
+beside the low charred walls of what remained of Ouilmette's log-cabin.
+'T was a most gloomy and desolate spot, but quiet enough, with never
+the rustle of a leaf to awake the night, or startle us.
+
+"Have you got back your nerve, Monsieur?" I asked, as we paused before
+the dark outline, "or must I also help you to explore within?"
+
+"'T is not shadows that terrify me," he answered, no doubt thoroughly
+ashamed of his weakness, and eager to make amends; "nor is it likely
+that anything to affright me greatly is behind these walls."
+
+I lay prone in the grass at the corner of the cabin, my eyes fixed upon
+the distant Indian village, where I could yet plainly distinguish
+numberless black figures dodging about between me and the flames; while
+further to the east, the greater blaze of the Fort buildings lighted
+up, in a wide arc, the deserted prairie. I gave little consideration
+to De Croix's exploit,--indeed, I had almost forgotten it, when
+suddenly the fellow sprang backward out of the open door, a cry of wild
+terror upon his lips, and his hands outstretched as it to ward off some
+unearthly vision.
+
+"Mon Dieu!" he sobbed hoarsely, falling upon his knees. "'T was the
+face of Marie!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+AN ANGEL IN THE WILDERNESS
+
+He acted so like a crazed man, grovelling face downward in the grass,
+that I had to hold him, fearful lest his noise might attract attention
+from our enemies.
+
+"Be quiet, De Croix!" I commanded sternly, my hand hard upon him, my
+eyes peering through the darkness to determine if possible the cause
+for his mysterious fright. "What is it that has so driven you out of
+your senses?"
+
+He half rose, staring back at the black shadow of the dim doorway, his
+face white as chalk in the starlight and faint glare of the distant
+fires.
+
+"'T was the face of a dead woman," he gasped, pointing forward, "there,
+just within the door! I saw her buried three years ago, I swear; yet,
+God be merciful! she awaited me yonder in the gloom."
+
+"Pish!" I exclaimed, thoroughly disgusted at his weakness, and rising
+to my feet. "Your nerves are unstrung by what we have been through,
+and you dream of the dead."
+
+"It is not so!" he protested, his voice faltering pitifully; "I saw
+her, Monsieur,--nor was she once this day in my thought until that
+moment."
+
+"Well, I shall soon know if there is a ghost within," I answered
+shortly, determined to make quick end of it. "Remain here, while I go
+into the house and see what I can find."
+
+For a moment he clung to me like a frightened child; but I shook off
+his hands a bit roughly, and stepped boldly across the threshold. That
+was an age when faith in ghostly visitations yet lingered to harass the
+souls of men. I confess my heart beat more rapidly than usual, as I
+paused an instant to peer through the shadowy gloom within. It was a
+small, low room, with a litter of broken furniture strewing the earthen
+floor; but the log walls were quite bare. The flicker of the still
+blazing Fort illuminated the interior sufficiently to enable me to make
+out these simple details, and to see that the place was without living
+occupant.
+
+There was only one other apartment in the building, and I walked back
+until I came upon the door which separated the two, and flung it open.
+As I did so I thought I saw a shadow, the dim flitting of a woman's
+form between me and the farther wall; but as I sprang hastily forward,
+grasping after the spectral vision, I touched nothing save the rough
+logs. Twice I made the circuit of that restricted space, so confident
+was I of my own eye-witness; but I found nothing, and could only pause
+perplexed, staring about in wonder.
+
+It occurred to me that my own overtaxed nerves were at fault, and that
+if I was to accomplish anything before daylight I must say nothing
+likely to alarm De Croix further.
+
+"Come, Monsieur!" I said, as I came out and shook him into attention,
+"there is naught within more dangerous than shadows, or perchance a
+rat. Nor have I any time longer to dally over such boyishness. I had
+supposed you a soldier and a brave man, not a nerveless girl to be
+frightened in the dark. Come, there is ample hiding-space behind the
+walls, and I purpose leaving you here to regain some measure of your
+lost courage while I try a new venture of my own."
+
+"Where go you?"
+
+"To learn if I may gain entrance to the Indian camp unobserved. There
+can be no better time than while they are occupied yonder."
+
+He looked uneasily about him into the dark corners, shuddering.
+
+"I would rather go with you," he protested, weakly. "I have not the
+heart to remain here alone."
+
+"Nevertheless, here you stay," I retorted shortly, thoroughly
+exasperated by his continued childishness; "you are in no spirit to
+meet the perils yonder. Conquer your foolishness, Monsieur, for I know
+well 't is not part of your nature so to exhibit fear."
+
+"'T is naught alive that I so shrink from; never have I been affrighted
+of living man."
+
+"True; nor have I ever found the dead able greatly to harm. But now I
+go forth to a plain duty, and you must wait me here."
+
+I did not glance back at him, although I knew he had sunk dejected on a
+bench beside the door; but with careful look at the priming of my
+rifle, I stepped forth into the open, and started down the slight slope
+leading to the river. A fringe of low, straggling trees hid my
+movements from observation by possible watchers along the southern
+bank; nor could I perceive with any definiteness what was going on
+there. The fires had died down somewhat, and I thought the savage
+yelling and clamor were considerably lessened.
+
+I confess I went forward hesitatingly, and was doubtful enough about
+the outcome; but I saw no other means by which I might hope to locate
+Mademoiselle definitely, and I valued my own life now only as it
+concerned hers. The selfish cowardice of De Croix--if cowardice it
+truly was--served merely to stir me to greater recklessness and daring,
+and I felt ready to venture all if I might thereby only pluck her from
+the grasp of those red fiends. As I crept through the fringe of bushes
+which lined the bank, my eyes were on the darkened upper extremity of
+the Indian camp, and all my thoughts were concentrated upon a plan of
+entrance to it. I may have been somewhat careless, for I had no
+conception of any serious peril until after I had crossed the stream,
+and it certainly startled me to hear a voice at my very elbow,--a
+strange voice, beautifully soft and low.
+
+"You have the movement of an Indian; yet I think you are white. What
+seek you here?"
+
+I turned quickly and faced the speaker, my rifle flung forward ready
+for action. The light was poor enough there amid the shadows, yet the
+single glimpse I had told me instantly I faced the mysterious woman of
+the Indian camp. For a moment I made no response, held speechless by
+surprise; and she questioned again, almost imperatively.
+
+"I asked, why are you here?"
+
+"I am one, by the grace of God, spared from the massacre," I answered
+blindly. "But you?--I saw you within the Indian camp only last night.
+Surely you are not a savage?"
+
+"That I know not. I sometimes fear the savage is part of all our
+natures, and that I am far removed from the divine image of my Master.
+But I am not an Indian, if that is what you mean. If to be white is a
+grace in your sight, I am of that race, though there are times when I
+would have been prouder to wear the darker skin. The red men kill, but
+they do not lie, nor deceive women. I remember you now,--you were with
+the White Chief from Dearborn, and tried to approach me when Little
+Sauk interfered. Why did you do that?"
+
+Her manner and words were puzzling, but I knew no better way than to
+answer frankly.
+
+"I sought Elsa Matherson,--are you she?"
+
+The girl--for she could certainly have been little more--started
+perceptibly at the name, and bent eagerly forward, peering with new
+interest into my face.
+
+"Elsa Matherson?" she questioned, dwelling upon the words as though
+they awoke memories. "It is indeed long since I have heard the name.
+Where knew you her?"
+
+"I have never known her; but her father was my father's friend, and I
+sought her because of that friendship."
+
+"Here?"
+
+"At Fort Dearborn, where she was left an orphan."
+
+"How strange! how very strange indeed! 'T is a small world. Elsa
+Matherson!--and at Dearborn?"
+
+Was it acting, for some purpose unknown to me,--or what might be the
+secret of these strange expressions?
+
+"Then you are not the one I seek?"
+
+She hesitated, looking keenly toward me through the dim light.
+
+"I have not said who I may be," she answered evasively. "Whatever name
+I may once have borne was long ago forgotten, and to the simple
+children about me I am only Sister Celeste. 'T is enough to live by in
+this wilderness, and the recording angel of God knows whether even that
+is worthy. But I have been waiting to learn why you are here, creeping
+through the bushes like a savage! Nor do I believe you to be
+altogether alone. Was there not one with you yonder at the house? Why
+did he cry out so loudly, and fall?"
+
+"He imagined he saw a ghost within. He claimed to have recognized the
+face of a dead woman he once knew."
+
+"A dead woman? What is the man's name? Who is he?"
+
+"Captain de Croix, an officer of the French army."
+
+She sighed quickly, as if relieved, one hand pressed against her
+forehead, and sat thinking.
+
+"I know not the name, but it seems strange that the chance sight of my
+face should work such havoc with his nerves. Spoke he not even the
+name of the woman?"
+
+"I think he cried some name as he fell, but I recall it not."
+
+"And you? You are only seeking a way of escape from the savages?"
+
+For a moment I hesitated; but surely, I thought, this strange young
+woman was of white blood, and seemingly an enthusiast in the religion I
+also professed, and I might safely trust her with my purpose.
+
+"I am seeking entrance within the encampment, hoping thus to rescue a
+maiden whom I believe to be prisoner in the hands of the Indians."
+
+"A maiden,--Elsa Matherson?"
+
+"Nay, another; one I have learned to love so well that I now willingly
+risk even torture for her sake. You are a woman, and have a woman's
+heart; you exercise some strange power among these savages. I beg you
+to aid me."
+
+She sat with clasped hands, her eyes lowered upon the grass.
+
+"Whatsoever power I have comes from God," she said solemnly; "and there
+be times, such as now, when it seems as if He held me unworthy of His
+trust."
+
+"But you will aid me in whatever way you can?"
+
+"You are sure you love this maiden?"
+
+"Would I be here, think you, otherwise?"
+
+She did not answer immediately, but crept across the little space
+separating us until she could look more closely into my face, scanning
+it earnestly with her dark eyes.
+
+"You have the appearance of a true man," she said finally. "Does the
+maid love you?"
+
+"I know not," I stammered honestly, confused by so direct a question.
+"I fear not; yet I would save her even then."
+
+I felt her hand touch mine as if in sudden sympathy.
+
+"Monsieur," she spoke gravely, "love has never been kind to me, and I
+have learned to put small trust in the word as it finds easy utterance
+upon men's lips. A man swore once, even at the altar, that he loved
+me; and when he had won my heart he left me for another. If I believed
+you were such a man I would rather leave this girl to her fate among
+the savages yonder."
+
+"I am not of that school," I protested earnestly. "I am of a race that
+love once and forever. But you, who are you? Why are you here in the
+midst of these savages? You bear a strange likeness to her I would
+save, but for the lighter shade of your hair."
+
+She drew back slightly, removing her hand from mine, but with
+gentleness.
+
+"It would do you little good to know my story," She said firmly. "I am
+no longer of the world, and my life is dedicated to a service you might
+deem sacrifice. Moreover, we waste time in such idle converse; and if
+it be my privilege to aid you at all, I must learn more, so as to plan
+safely."
+
+"You have the freedom of the camp yonder?"
+
+"I hardly know," she responded sadly. "God has placed in my poor
+hands, Monsieur, a portion of His work amid those benighted,
+sin-stained creatures there. Times come, as now, when the wild wolf
+breaks loose, and my life hardly is safe among them. I fled the camp
+to-night,--not from fear, Christ knows, but because I am a woman, and
+too weak physically to bear the sight of suffering that I am helpless
+to relieve. It is indeed Christ's mercy that so few of your company
+were spared to be thus tortured; but there was naught left for me but
+prayer."
+
+She stooped forward, her hands pressed over her eyes as though she
+would shut out the horror.
+
+"Yet know you who among the whites have thus far preserved their
+lives?" I urged, in an agony of suspense. "Were any of the women
+brought alive to the camp?"
+
+"It was my fortune to see but one; nor was I permitted to approach
+her,--a sweet-faced girl, yet she could not be the one you seek, for
+she wore a wedding-ring. She was saved through the friendship of Black
+Partridge, and I heard that she is a daughter of the Silver-man."
+
+"Ay! Mrs. Helm! Thank God! But was she the only one?"
+
+"Truly, I know not; for I was forced away from sight of much that went
+on. Little Sauk has a white maiden hidden in his lodge, who was
+brought from the battle. I have not seen the girl, but know this
+through others who were angry at his good-fortune."
+
+"Could we reach there, think you, unobserved?"
+
+She rose, and gazed anxiously across the stream, her face showing clear
+and fair in the faint light of those distant fires, while I caught the
+glimmer of a pearl rosary about her white throat and marked a silver
+crucifix resting against her breast.
+
+"It will be life itself you venture in such an attempt," she said
+softly, "even its loss through torture; yet 't is a deed that might be
+done, for the Indians are fairly crazed with blood and liquor, and will
+pay small heed to aught save their heathen orgies."
+
+"Then let us venture it."
+
+She turned slightly and looked at me intently, her dark eyes filled
+with serious thought.
+
+"Yes, we will go," she responded at last, slowly. "If through God's
+grace we may thus preserve a life, it will be well worthy the
+sacrifice, and must be His desire."
+
+For another moment we waited there silently, standing side by side,
+gazing anxiously across the dark water, and listening intently to the
+varied discordant sounds borne to us on the night air. I know not what
+may have been in her thought; but upon my lips there was a silent
+prayer that we might be safely guided in our desperate mission. I
+wondered still who this strange young woman could be, so surrounded by
+mystery, a companion of savages, and still gentle and refined in word
+and manner. I dare not ask again, nor urge her confidence; for there
+was that of reserve about her which held me speechless. I glanced
+aside, marking again the clear pure contour of her face, and my look
+seemed instantly to arouse her from her reverie.
+
+"I expect little trouble until we near the centre of the camp," she
+said, thoughtfully. "'T is dark amid the northern lodges, and we shall
+meet with no warriors there unless they be so far gone in intoxication
+as to be no longer a source of danger. But come, friend, the longer we
+tarry the less bright grows the hope of success."
+
+A slender bark canoe rested close beneath the bank, and she motioned me
+into it, grasping the paddle without a word, and sending the narrow
+craft with swift, silent strokes across the stream. The other shore
+was unprotected; so, hesitating only long enough to listen for a
+moment, much as some wild animal might, she crept forward cautiously
+into the black lodge-shadows, while I instantly followed, imitating as
+best I could her slightest movement. We met no obstacle to our
+advance,--not even the snarls and barkings of the innumerable curs,
+usually the sleepless guardians of such encampments of savages. I soon
+saw that as we crept around lodge after lodge in our progress, the
+light of the blazing fires in our front grew constantly brighter and
+the savage turbulence more pronounced.
+
+At last the girl came to a sudden pause, peering cautiously forward
+from beneath the shadow of the lodge that hid us; and as I glanced over
+her shoulder, the wild scene was revealed in each detail of savagery.
+
+"'T is as far as you will dare venture," she whispered, her lips at my
+ear. "I know not the exact limit of our progress, but the lodge of
+Little Sauk lies beyond the fire, and I must make the rest of the
+distance alone."
+
+"But dare you?" I questioned uneasily. "Will they permit even you to
+pass unharmed?"
+
+She smiled almost sadly.
+
+"I have many friends among them, blood-stained as they are, and little
+as I have accomplished for the salvation of their souls. I have been
+with them much, and my father long held their confidence ere he died.
+I have even been adopted into the tribe of the Pottawattomies. None
+are my enemies among that nation save the medicine-men, and they will
+scarce venture to molest me even in this hour of their power and crime.
+Too well they know me to be under protection of their chiefs; nor are
+they insensible to the sanctity of my faith. Ay, and even their
+superstition has proved my safeguard."
+
+The expression of curiosity in my eyes appealed to her, and as if in
+answer she rested one hand upon her uncovered head, the hair of which
+shone like dull red gold in the firelight.
+
+"You mean that?" I asked, dimly recalling something I had once heard.
+
+She shook the heavy coiled mass loose from its bondage, until it
+rippled in gleaming waves of color over her shoulders, and smiled back
+at me, yet not without traces of deep sadness in her eyes.
+
+"'T is an Indian thought," she explained softly, "that such hair as
+mine is a special gift of the Great Spirit, and renders its wearer
+sacred. What was often spoken most lightly about in other days has in
+this dread wilderness proved my strongest defence. God uses strange
+means, Monsieur, to accomplish His purpose with the heathen."
+
+She paused, listening intently to a sudden noise behind us.
+
+"Creep in here, Monsieur," she whispered, quickly lifting an edge of
+the skin-covering of the lodge. "A party is returning from the Fort,
+perchance with more prisoners. Lie quiet there until I return; it will
+not be long."
+
+I crawled through the slight opening into that black interior, turning
+to hold open the flap sufficiently to peer forth once more. I knew not
+where she vanished, as she faded away like a shadow; but I had hardly
+secured refuge, when a dozen painted warriors trooped by, shouting
+their fierce greeting. In the midst of them, half-stripped, and
+bleeding as if from freshly inflicted wounds, staggered a white man;
+and as the firelight fell full upon his haggard face, I recognized De
+Croix.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+A SOLDIER OF FRANCE
+
+What followed was so extraordinary and incredible that I hesitate to
+record it, lest there be those who, judging in their own conceit, and
+knowing little of savage Indian nature, may question the truth of my
+narration, Yet I am now too old a man to permit unjust criticism to
+swerve me from the task I have assumed.
+
+The extreme of misery that overwhelmed me at the moment when I beheld
+my comrade driven forward like a trapped beast to a death by torture,
+found expression in a sudden moan, which, fortunately for me, was
+unnoted amid the shouts of greeting that arose around the fire when
+those gathered there caught sight of the new-comers. Instantly all was
+confusion and uproar; a scene of savage debauchery, unrelieved by a
+redeeming feature or a sign of mercy. It was as if poor De Croix had
+been hurled, bound and gagged, into a den of infuriated wolves, whose
+jaws already dripped with the blood of slaughter. Gleaming weapons,
+glaring and lustful eyes, writhing naked bodies, pressed upon him on
+every side, hurling him back and forth in brute play, every tongue
+mocking him, in every up-lifted hand a weapon for a blow.
+
+The fierce animal nature within these red fiends was now uppermost,
+fanned into hot flame by hours of diabolical torture of previous
+victims, in which they had exhausted every expedient of cruelty to add
+to the dying agony of their prey. To this, fiery liquor had yielded
+its portion; while the weird incantations of their priests had
+transformed the most sober among them into demons of malignity. If
+ever, earlier in the night, their chiefs had exercised any control over
+them, that time was long since past; and now the inflamed warriors,
+bursting all restraint, answered only to the war-drum or made murderous
+response to the superstition of their medicine-men.
+
+The entire centre of the encampment was a scene of drunken orgy, a
+phantasmagoria of savage figures, satanic in their relentless cruelty
+and black barbarity. Painted hundreds, bedecked with tinkling beads
+and waving feathers, howled and leaped in paroxysms of fury about the
+central fire, hacking at the helpless bodies of the dead victims of
+earlier atrocities, tearing their own flesh, beating each other with
+whips like wire, their madly brandished weapons flashing angrily in the
+flame-lit air.
+
+Squaws, dirty of person and foul of mouth, often more ferocious in
+appearance and cruel in action than their masters, were everywhere,
+dodging amid the writhing bodies, screaming shrilly from excitement,
+their long coarse hair whipping in the wind. Nor were they all
+Pottawattomies: others had flocked into this carnival of
+blood,---Wyandots and Sacs, even Miamis, until now it had become a
+contest for supremacy in savagery. 'T was as if hell itself had
+opened, to vomit forth upon the prairie that blood-stained crew of
+dancing demons and shock the night with crime.
+
+A dead white man,--the poor lad whose early torture we had
+witnessed,--his half-burnt body still hanging suspended at the stake,
+was in the midst of them, a red glare of embers beneath him, the
+curling smoke creeping upward into the black sky from about his head
+like devil's incense. In front of this hideous spectacle, regardless
+of the mutilated body, sat the ferocious old demon I had seen the
+evening previous, his head crowned with a bison's horns, his naked
+breast daubed with red and yellow figures to resemble crawling snakes,
+his face the hideous representation of a grinning skull. Above all
+other sounds rang out his yells, inciting his fellows to further
+atrocities, and accompanied by the dull booming of his wooden drum.
+
+It was into this pack of ravening beasts that poor De Croix staggered
+from the surrounding shadows; and they surged about him, clamoring for
+place, greeting their new-found victim with jeers and blows and hoots
+of bitter hatred, viciously slashing at him with their knives, so that
+the very sight of it turned me sick, and made me sink my head upon my
+arms in helplessness and horror. A sudden cessation in the infernal
+uproar led me to peer forth once more. They had dragged the charred
+and blackened trunk of the dead soldier down from the post where it had
+hung suspended, and were fastening De Croix in its place, binding his
+hands behind the support, and kicking aside the still glowing embers of
+the former fire to give him space to stand. It was brutally,
+fiendishly done, with thongs wound about his body so tightly as to lift
+the flesh in great welts, and those who labored at it striking cruel
+blows at his naked, quivering form, spitting viciously into his face,
+with taunting words, seeking through every form of ferocious ingenuity
+to wring from their helpless victim some sign of suffering, some
+shrieking plea for mercy. Once I marked a red devil stick a sharpened
+sliver of wood into the Frenchman's bare shoulder, touched it with
+fire, and then stand back laughing as the bound victim sought vainly to
+dislodge the torturing brand.
+
+Whatever of shrinking fear De Croix may have exhibited an hour before,
+however he may have trembled from ghostly haunting and been made coward
+by contact with the dead, he was a man now, a soldier worthy of his
+uniform and of his manhood. Merciful God! but it made my heart swell
+to see the lad, as he faced those dancing devils and looked coolly into
+the eyes of death. His face was indeed ghastly white in the fire-glow,
+save where the red stains of blood disfigured it; but there was no
+wavering in the bold black eyes, no cowardly shrinking from his fate,
+no moan of weakness from between his tightly pressed lips. Scarce
+could I think of him then as being the same gentle exquisite that rode
+on the westward trail in powdered hair and gaudy waistcoat, worrying
+lest a pinch of dust might soil his faultless linen,--this begrimed,
+blood-stained, torn figure, naked to the waist, his small-clothes
+clinging in rags from his thighs, his head bare and with long black
+locks streaming to his shoulders. Yet it was now, not then, he won my
+respect and honor.
+
+Once I saw him strain desperately at the cords in a mad endeavor to
+break free, his flashing eyes on the demons who were torturing him
+beyond endurance. Well I knew how he longed to lay hand on any weapon,
+and thus die, battling to the end; had he succeeded, I doubt not I
+should have been at his side, forgetful of all else in the struggle.
+The deer-skin thongs, as unyielding as iron, held him fast. I ground
+my teeth and dug my nails into the earth to hold me from leaping
+forward in hopeless attempt at rescue, as a huge brute struck him
+savagely with clinched hand across the lips.
+
+Suddenly, as if in response to some low spoken order, the jostling
+horde fell aside from before him, leaving a narrow space unoccupied. I
+had no time to wonder at this movement before a tomahawk, whirling
+rapidly and flashing like a ruby in the red glare, went hurling
+forward, and buried its shining blade deep in the post an inch from the
+prisoner's head, the handle quivering with the force of impact. Again
+and again, amid yells of derision and encouragement, they threw, twice
+bringing token of blood from the grazed cheek and once cleaving the ear
+nearest me as if by a knife-blow. In spite of all, De Croix sneered at
+them, mocked their efforts, taunted them with their lack of skill, no
+doubt seeking to infuriate them and cause the striking of a merciful
+death-blow.
+
+I trembled as I gazed, held there by a fascination I could not
+overcome, shading my eyes when I saw an arm uplifted to make a cast,
+and opening them in dread unspeakable as I heard the dull impact of the
+blow. Never in my life have I seen such marvellous nerve as this
+French gallant displayed in those awful moments; standing there
+motionless, with never a tremor, no twitching of a muscle, his scornful
+eyes following the deadly steel, his lips jeering at the throwers, as
+he coolly played the game whose stake was death. At last some savage
+cast from farther back amid the mass of howling contestants; I failed
+to see the upraised hand that grasped the weapon, but caught its sudden
+gleam as it sped onward, and De Croix was pinned helpless, the steel
+blade wedging his long hair deep into the wood.
+
+A dozen screaming squaws now hustled forward the materials for a fire;
+I saw branches, roots, and leaves, piled high about his knees, and
+marked with a shudder the film of blue smoke as it soared upward ere
+the flame caught the green wood. Then suddenly some one kicked the
+pile over, hurling it into the faces of those who stooped beside it;
+and the fierce clamor ceased as if by magic.
+
+I staggered to my knees, wondering what it could mean,--this strange
+silence after all the uproar. Then I saw. Out from the shadows, as if
+she herself were one, the strange girl who had been my companion glided
+forward into the red radius of the flame, and faced them, her back to
+De Croix.
+
+Never shall I fail to recall her as she then appeared,--a veritable
+goddess of light fronting the fiends of darkness. With cheeks so white
+as to seem touched with death, her dark eyes glowed in consciousness of
+power, while her long, sweeping tresses rippled below her waist,
+gleaming in a wild red beauty almost supernatural. How womanly she
+was, how fair to look upon, and how unconscious of aught save her
+mission! One hand she held before her in imperious gesture of command;
+with the other she uplifted the crucifix, until the silver Christ
+sparkled in the light. "Back!" she said clearly. "Back! You shall
+not torture this man! I know him. He is a soldier of France!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+THE RESCUE AT THE STAKE
+
+The word uttered by the strange woman was one to conjure with even then
+in the Illinois country. Many a year had passed since the French flag
+ruled those prairies, yet not a warrior there but knew how the men of
+that race avenged an injury,--how swift their stroke, how keen their
+steel.
+
+I watched the startled throng press closely backward, as if awed by her
+mysterious presence, influenced insensibly by her terse sentence of
+command, each dusky face a reflex of its owner's perplexity. Drunken
+as most of them were, crazed with savage blood-lust and hours of
+remorseless torture of their victims, for the moment that sweet vision
+of womanly purity held them motionless, as if indeed the figure of the
+Christ she uplifted before their faces had taught them abhorrence of
+their crimes.
+
+But it was not for long. To hundreds of those present she was merely
+an unknown white woman; while even to those who knew her best, the
+Pottawattomies, she appeared only as one who came to balk them of their
+revenge. They may have held her person inviolate amid their lodges,
+and even have countenanced her strange teaching; but now she had
+ventured too far in attempting thus to stand between them and their
+victim. They held back a single moment, halted by her fearlessness,
+rendered cowardly by vague superstitions regarding her religious power;
+but after the first breathless pause of dumb astonishment and
+irresolution, voice after voice arose in hoarse cries of rage and
+shouts of disapproval. There was a surging forward of the straining
+red line, while in their front howled and gesticulated the hideous old
+medicine-man, his painted face distorted by passion, eager to grasp
+this auspicious moment to cast down forever one who had sought to end
+his superstitious rule among the tribe. I marked how she drew back as
+they advanced, retreating step by step,--not, indeed, as if she feared
+them, but rather as if some definite purpose led her movement. Her
+eyes never wavered, her hand still uplifted the gleaming cross, as she
+retreated slowly, until she stood directly before De Croix, where he
+hung helplessly staring at her with an expression of fear in his face
+strangely at variance with his late show of desperate courage.
+
+"Back!" she cried again, but now in a deeper and fuller voice that
+sounded like a clear-toned bell above the uproar. "I tell you I will
+kill this man with my own hand before I permit you to put further
+torture upon him!"
+
+An instant only did this threat halt the gathering rush. Some one
+voiced an Indian insult, and there came a fierce surging forward,
+although no warrior among them seemed eager to lead in the attack. I
+saw the woman lift her hand, and caught the glimmer of a steel blade;
+and even as I sprang erect, partially flinging aside the obstructing
+flap of the lodge, an Indian, stalking silently forth from the shadows,
+faced the mob, standing motionless within a foot of the desperate girl,
+and with his back toward her. One glance at that tall thin figure, the
+stern face, the long white hair, told me it was the great war-chief of
+the Pottawattomies, Gomo; and I sank back trembling from the reaction
+of that moment's strain.
+
+His words were calm, deliberate, commanding; but the angry roar with
+which they were greeted made me fear the horde he faced so resolutely
+was now beyond control. He smiled, his thin lips curling in derision
+as he gazed with contempt into the threatening faces pressing closer
+upon every side.
+
+"Fear not," he murmured aside to the watchful woman, and resting one
+hand upon her arm. "Cut loose the prisoner!"
+
+She turned instantly to her task, while he spoke briefly the names of
+his chiefs; and as each was called in turn, a warrior came from among
+the mass and silently stood beside him. A dozen came forth thus,
+stalwart, grim-faced braves, many with fresh scalps dangling at their
+belts.
+
+Gomo now spoke again, using the French tongue, that all present might
+better grasp his meaning.
+
+"Brothers," he said gravely, "this squaw is Pottawattomie. She was
+adopted by our people and lives in our lodges. Pottawattomies are
+friends to Frenchmen; there is no war between us. Why should Wyandots
+and Sacs wish to burn a Frenchman?"
+
+For a moment no one ventured to reply; the mob stood halted now, robbed
+of its leaders and its courage, even the noisy medicine-man silenced
+before this stern array of protecting chiefs. Loose as was Indian
+discipline and tribal authority, even in drunkenness those desperate
+warriors dared not openly disregard such a display of power.
+
+"Have the Pottawattomies spoken well?" questioned the old chief,
+sternly, "or have our words wronged our brothers?"
+
+A giant of a fellow, whose broad face and huge head seemed
+disproportionate even to his big body, his long coarse hair profusely
+ornamented with shells and beads flashing gaudily in the firelight,
+pushed his way out from among the silent mass.
+
+"Gomo, the great war-chief of the Pottawattomies, has spoken well," he
+said in a deep voice that rolled like distant thunder. "The Wyandots
+did not know; they war not with Frenchmen, nor harm the women of the
+Pottawattomies. The Great Spirit hath made us brothers, and we have
+smoked together the pipe of peace."
+
+Gomo moved forward with Indian dignity, and exchanged solemn greeting
+with the new-comer.
+
+"It makes the hearts of the Pottawattomies light to hear the words of
+Sau-ga-nash," he said gravely. Then he turned and waved his hand to
+his clustered warriors. "Release the Frenchman, and place him for
+safety in the council lodge. Pass the woman free. It is the will of
+our chiefs."
+
+The council lodge! I glanced about me apprehensively; surely this must
+be the same tepee in which Captain Heald and I had met the chiefs!
+There were no signs of ordinary Indian occupancy, and now as I looked
+about me the firelight from without revealed clearly the shading of
+those grotesque figures I recalled as having been sketched upon the
+outer covering. So it was here that De Croix was to be confined! I
+crept back hastily, dropping into place the loosened flap through which
+I had been peering. A skin or two were lying on the grassy floor; and
+I grasped the larger of these, drawing it over me while I rolled as
+closely as possible against the farther wall, hoping desperately that
+no Indian guards would be posted within.
+
+The uproar outside continued, as if there were still opposition to the
+commands of the chiefs; but presently, as I peeped through a hole in
+the skin held over me, I perceived a sudden flash of light as the flap
+covering the entrance was drawn aside. I saw a number of dark hands
+thrust within, a savage face or two peering for a moment about the
+darkened interior; but to my inexpressible relief only one body was
+thrust inside, with such violence, however, as to cause the man to fall
+face downward at full length. The next instant the lodge was again
+wrapped in utter darkness. By God's mercy I remained undiscovered, and
+was alone with De Croix.
+
+For a short time, assured as I was of this fact, I did not venture to
+creep from my place of concealment, or make my presence known to my
+companion. What ears might be listening, I knew not; nor dared I trust
+too much to the Frenchman's already over-taxed nerves. He did not move
+from the position where he fell; but I could hear him groan and sob,
+with now and then a broken ejaculation. Without, the yelling and
+uproar grew perceptibly less, although an occasional outburst gave
+evidence that the carousal was not wholly ended. Finally I pushed back
+the robe that covered me, now grown uncomfortably warm, and crept
+cautiously toward the place where I knew him to be lying. It was
+intensely dark, and I was still fearful lest he might cry out if I
+startled him.
+
+"De Croix," I whispered, "make no alarm; I am Wayland."
+
+"Wayland!" I could mark the amazement in his tone, as he instantly sat
+upright, peering through the gloom in the direction whence my voice
+came. "_Mon Dieu_! You are here? You saw all of it?"
+
+"Ay," I answered, reaching out and groping in the darkness until I
+grasped his hand. "You have had a hard time, my lad; but the worst is
+over, and hope remains for us both."
+
+He shuddered so violently I could feel the spasm shake his body.
+
+"'Twas not the dying," he protested; "but did you see her, Wayland?
+Merciful God! was it really a living woman who stood there, or a ghost
+returned from the other world to haunt me and make living worse than
+death?"
+
+"You mean the sister who interposed to save you?" I asked. "She was as
+truly alive as either of us. Think you she is not a stranger?"
+
+He groaned, as if the confession was wrung from him by the terror of
+eternal torment.
+
+"_Mon Dieu_! She is my wife!"
+
+"Your wife?"
+
+"Ay, my wife,--Marie Faneuf, of Montreal."
+
+"But how comes she here, Monsieur, living in the Pottawattomie camp?
+And how comes it that you sought another in this wilderness, if you
+were already long wedded?"
+
+"Saint Guise! but I cannot tell you," and his voice shook with the
+emotion that swept him. "'T is like a black dream, from which I must
+yet awaken. She died, I swear she died; the sisters told me so at the
+convent of the Ursulines, whither she fled to escape my
+unkindness,--for I did her wrong; and I stood by the grave as the body
+they called hers was lowered into the ground. For all these years have
+I thought it true; yet the girl yonder was Marie. But you,
+Wayland,--know you aught of her?"
+
+"Only that she guided me hither in search of Mademoiselle. On the way
+we conversed, and she let me know that she had dedicated her life to
+the service of these Indians, seeking to save their souls."
+
+"'T is like enough; she was ever half a nun, and most religious. Yet
+made she no mention of me, and of my crying out at the house?--for I
+must indeed have seen her there!"
+
+"She asked me your name, Monsieur, and when I told her she said she
+recalled it not. Knew she you by some other?"
+
+He did not answer, though I could mark his heavy breathing, as if he
+strove with himself for mastery. Nor did I speak again, eager as I now
+was to arrange some plan for the future; for this man was certainly in
+no condition to counsel with.
+
+I know not how long I may have rested there in silence, seeking vainly
+in my own mind for some opening of escape, or means whereby I might
+communicate with Mademoiselle. Would the strange woman forget me now,
+or would she venture upon a return with her message? If not, I must
+grope forward without her, hampered as I should be by this unnerved and
+helpless Frenchman. Outside, the noise had almost wholly ceased,--at
+least, close to where we were,--and I could perceive that a slight
+tinge of returning day was already in the air, faintly revealing the
+interior of the lodge.
+
+As I sat thus, drifting through inaction into a more despairing mood,
+the rear covering of the tepee moved almost imperceptibly, and I turned
+hastily to seek the cause, my heart in my throat lest it prove an
+enemy, perhaps some stealthy savage still seeking the life of De Croix.
+It was far from being light as yet, but there was sufficient to show me
+the faint outline of a woman's figure. The Frenchman had seemingly
+heard nothing; and I rose quickly and faced her eagerly.
+
+"You have found her?" I questioned anxiously. "I beg you tell me that
+she yet lives!"
+
+"Hush! you speak too loud," was the low reply. "The one you seek is, I
+think, confined within the lodge of Little Sauk, and thus far remains
+unharmed. I have not been able to reach her, but she has been
+described to me as young, with dark hair and eyes, and as having been
+dragged from a horse near the rear of the column. Think you she is the
+one you seek?"
+
+"I do indeed!" I cried, in a rapture of relief. "Where is this lodge
+in which they hold her?"
+
+She hesitated to answer, as if she somewhat doubted my discretion.
+
+"It is the third from the fire, in the row west of this," she said at
+last. "But it is already daylight, and you must lie hidden amid these
+skins until another night, when I will strive to aid you. You will be
+safe here, if you only keep hidden; and I have brought with me food for
+you both."
+
+I had quite forgotten De Croix, in my eagerness to learn news of
+Mademoiselle; but now I realized he had risen to his knees, and was
+gazing at our visitor through the dim shadows as if half fearful even
+yet that she was but a spectre. In that gray dawn his face was ghastly
+in its whiteness,--the dark lines under his eyes, his matted hair, and
+the traces of blood upon his cheek, yielding a haggardness almost
+appalling.
+
+"Marie!" he sobbed, catching his breath between the words as if they
+choked him, "Marie, in God's name, speak one word to me!"
+
+I saw the girl start, looking around at him with eyes widely opened,
+yet with an expression in them I could not fathom; it was neither
+hatred nor love, though it might easily have been sorrow.
+
+"Marie," he urged, rendered despairing by her silence, "I have done you
+wrong, great wrong; but I thought you dead. They told me so,--they
+told me it was your body they buried. Will you not speak a word of
+mercy now?"
+
+Dim as the light was, I saw her eyes were moist as she gazed down upon
+him; but there was no faltering in her voice.
+
+"You were right, Monsieur le Marquis," she said slowly, "Marie Faneuf
+is dead. It is only Sister Celeste who has aided in the preservation
+of your life in the name of the Master. Make your acknowledgment to
+the Mother of Christ, not to me, for such mercy."
+
+I knew not when she passed out, or how; but we were alone once more,
+and De Croix was lying with his face buried in the short grass.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+A SEARCH, AND ITS REWARD
+
+I slept at last, soundly, for several hours, lying well hidden behind
+the skins at the back of the lodge. There seemed nothing else to do;
+for poor De Croix had no thought other than that of the woman who had
+just left us, and I was exhausted by hours of excitement and toil. He
+was asleep when I awoke, lying just as I had left him, his face still
+buried in the short trodden grass that carpeted the floor.
+
+It was so quiet without that I listened in vain for a sound to indicate
+the presence of Indians. Silence so profound was in strange contrast
+with the hideous uproar of the preceding night, and curiosity led me
+finally to project my head from beneath the lodge covering and gain a
+cautious glimpse of the camp without. The yellow sunshine of the calm
+summer afternoon rested hot and glaring on the draped skins of the
+tepees, and on the brown prairie-grass, trampled by hundreds of passing
+feet. I could perceive a few squaws working lazily in the shade of the
+trees near the bank of the river; but no other moving figures were
+visible. Several recumbent forms were within my sight, their faces
+toward the sun, evidently sleeping off the heavy potations of the
+night. Otherwise the great encampment appeared completely deserted;
+there were no spirals of smoke rising above the lodge-poles, no
+gossiping groups anywhere about.
+
+It was plain enough to me. Those of the warriors capable of further
+action were elsewhere engaged upon some fresh foray, while the
+majority, overcome by drinking, were asleep within their darkened
+lodges. Surely, daylight though it was, no safer moment could be
+expected in which to establish communication with Toinette. With night
+the camp would be again astir; and even if I succeeded in reaching her
+at some later hour it would leave small margin of darkness for our
+escape. Every moment of delay now added to our grave peril, and there
+was much planning to be done after we met. Possibly I should have
+waited, as I had been told to do; but it was ever in my blood to act
+rather than reason, and I am sure that in this case no cause remains
+for regret.
+
+I must confess that my heart beat somewhat faster, as I crept slowly
+forth and peered cautiously around the bulging side of the big lodge I
+had just left, to assure myself no savages were stirring. It was not
+that I greatly feared the venture, nor that a sense of danger excited
+my nerves; but rather the one thought in my mind was that now my way
+lay toward Mademoiselle. How would she greet me? Should I learn my
+fate from her tell-tale eyes, or by a sudden gleam of surprise in her
+lovely face? These were the reflections that inspired me, for a new
+hope had been born within me through the forced confession of De Croix.
+
+There was little danger of exposure while I advanced through the
+shelter of the lodges, for I was always under partial cover. But I
+waited and watched long before daring to pass across the wide open
+space in the centre of which the fire had been kindled. The
+torture-post yet stood there, black and charred, while the ground
+beneath was littered with dead ashes. The bodies of three white men,
+two of them naked and marked by fire, lay close at hand, just as they
+had been carelessly flung aside to make room for new victims; yet I
+dared not stop to learn who they might have been in life. The sight of
+their foul disfigurement only rendered me the more eager to reach the
+living with a message of hope.
+
+I moved like a snake, dragging my body an inch at a time by firmly
+grasping with extended hands the tough grass-roots, and writhing
+forward as noiselessly as if I were stalking some prey. There were
+times when I advanced so slowly it would have puzzled a watcher to
+determine whether mine was not also the body of the dead. At length,
+even at that snail's rate of progress, I gained the protection of the
+tepees upon the other side of the camp, and skulked in among them. The
+lodge just before me, blackened by paint and weather, must be the one I
+sought. I rested close within its shadow, striving to assure myself
+there was no possibility of mistake. As my eyes lifted, I could trace
+in dim outline the totem of the chief faintly sketched on the taut
+skin: it was the same I had noted on the brawny breast of Little Sauk.
+
+Never did I move with greater woodland skill, for I felt that all
+depended upon my remaining undiscovered; a single false move now would
+defeat all hope. Who might be within, concealed by that black
+covering, was a mystery to be solved only by extremest caution.
+
+Inch by inch I worked the skin covering of the tepee entrance up from
+the ground, screwing my eye to the aperture in an effort to penetrate
+the shrouded interior. But the glare of the sun was so reflected into
+my eyeballs, that it left me almost blind in the semi-gloom beneath
+that dark roof, and I could distinguish no object with certainty.
+Surely, nothing moved within; and I drew myself slowly forward, until
+half my body lay extended upon the beaten dirt-floor. It was then that
+I caught a glimpse of a face peering at me from out the shadows,--the
+face of Toinette; and, alas for my eager hopes of surprising her heart
+and solving its secrets! the witch was actually laughing in silence at
+my predicament. The sight made my face flush in sudden indignation;
+but before I could find speech, she had hastily accosted me.
+
+"Good faith, Master Wayland! but I greet you gladly!" she said, and her
+soft hand was warm upon mine; "yet it truly caused me to smile to
+observe the marvellous caution with which you came hither."
+
+"It must have been indeed amusing," I answered, losing all my vain
+aspirations in a moment under her raillery; "though it is not every
+prisoner in an Indian camp who could find like cause for merriment."
+
+Her eyes grew sober enough as they rested inquiringly on my face, for
+all that they still held an irritatingly roguish twinkle in their
+depths.
+
+"It was the expression upon your face which so amused me," she
+explained. "I am not indifferent to all that your coming means, nor to
+the horrors this camp has witnessed. More than that, you appear to me
+like one risen from the dead. I have truly mourned for you, John
+Wayland. I lost all power, all desire tor resistance, when I saw you
+stricken from your horse, and often since my eyes have been moist in
+thoughts of you. No doubt 't was but the sudden reaction from seeing
+you again alive that made me so forgetful of these dread surroundings
+as to smile. I beg you to forgive me; it was not heartlessness, but
+merely the way of a thoughtless girl, Monsieur."
+
+It had been impossible for me to resist her cajolery from the
+beginning; and now I read in her eyes the truth of all she spoke.
+
+"There is naught for you to forgive, Mademoiselle," I answered, drawing
+myself wholly within the tepee and resting on my knees. "But are you
+quite alone here, and without guards?"
+
+"For the present, yes. Little Sauk has been gone from the camp for
+some hours. They watch me with some care at night,--yet of what use
+can their guarding be? If I should get without the lodge, escape would
+be hopeless for a girl like me. But now tell me about yourself. Are
+you also prisoner to the Indians? Surely I saw you struck down in that
+mad mêlée. 'Twas then I lost heart, and gave up every hope of rescue."
+
+"No, I am not a prisoner, Mademoiselle. I fell, stunned by a blow
+dealt me from behind, but was saved from capture by the falling of my
+horse across my body. I am here now of my own will, and for no other
+purpose than to save you."
+
+"To save me! Oh, Monsieur! it would make me blush really to think I
+ranked so high in your esteem. Was it not rather that other girl you
+came to seek,--the one you sought so far through the wilderness, only
+to find hidden in this encampment of savages? Tell me, Monsieur, was
+she by any chance of fate the heroine who last night plucked Captain de
+Croix from the flames of torture?"
+
+"You know, then, of his danger and deliverance?" I said, not feeling
+eager to answer her query. "'T was a most brave and womanly act."
+
+"A strange exercise of power, indeed, Monsieur," and she looked
+directly into my eyes; "and the savages tell me she claimed to have
+knowledge of him."
+
+Surely I had a right to relate the whole story of De Croix's
+confession; yet somehow I did not deem it the manly thing to do.
+Rather, I would let her learn the truth in God's own time, and from
+other lips than mine. Perchance she would respect me more in the end
+for keeping silence now. But in this decision I failed to consider
+that hasty words of explanation might naturally lead her to believe the
+existing friendship mine instead of his.
+
+"We met her across the river in the darkness last night," I answered.
+"At my request, she acted as my guide into the Indian camp."
+
+The expression in her eyes puzzled me; nor could I interpret the sudden
+flush that lent color to her cheeks.
+
+"You are frank, Monsieur," she said quietly, "and doubtless 'tis better
+so. But the strange situation of this young woman has much of romance
+about it, and interests me greatly. How chances she to be here?
+Surely she cannot be of Indian blood?"
+
+"She holds connection with some sisterhood of the Church, as I
+understand, and has lived for some time amid the Pottawattomies,
+seeking to win the heathen to Christ."
+
+"A Catholic?" she asked, her eyes brightening with deeper interest.
+
+"Such is my understanding, though in truth she never said as much to
+me. Indeed, we spoke little, Mademoiselle, for our path was in the
+midst of peril, even before the capture of poor De Croix upset all our
+plans."
+
+"Doubtless," she answered with a slight trace of sarcasm in the soft
+voice. "But Captain de Croix,--he was not seriously injured, I trust?
+Where have the savages confined him? And know you what they intend as
+to his future?"
+
+"He will forever bear some scars, I fear," I answered, wondering dully
+at the calmness of her inquiry. "I have just left him sleeping quietly
+in the council tent. Know you anything of what fate has befallen other
+of our friends of the garrison?"
+
+Her eyes grew sad. "Only what little I have learned through the
+taunting of my own captor," she answered, her voice trembling.
+"Captain Wells is dead, together with Ensign Ronan and Surgeon Van
+Voorhees. Both Captain Heald and his wife were sorely wounded, and
+they, with Lieutenant Helm, are prisoners somewhere in the camp; but
+the Lieutenant's wife is safe with the Silver-man's family across the
+river. The Indians hold these in hope of ransom, and wreak their
+vengeance upon the common soldiers who were so unfortunate as to fall
+into their hands alive. Yet few, I think, survived the massacre."
+
+"You have doubtless guessed aright. I noted with what fearful spirit
+of revenge the savages dealt with some of their captives, while sparing
+others. Surely you, for instance, have met with but little hardship
+thus far at the hands of Little Sauk?"
+
+She glanced up at me, with a touch of the old coquettishness in her
+dark eyes and a quick toss of her head, while one white hand smoothed
+her soft hair.
+
+"Think you then, Monsieur, I do not look so ill?"
+
+In spite of every effort at control, my heart swept into my eyes; she
+must have read the swift message, for her own drooped instantly, with a
+quick flutter of long lashes against her cheeks.
+
+"I have already told you how greatly I admire you," I faltered, "and
+you make no less fair a picture now."
+
+"Then I shall not tempt you to add to your compliment," she hastily
+responded, rising to her feet, "for I like loyalty in a man better than
+mere gallantry of speech. You ask me about Little Sauk. He holds me
+for ransom,--although Heaven knows 'twill prove but waste of time, for
+I am aware of no one in all the East who would invest so much as a
+dollar to redeem me from Indian hands. Yet such is his purpose, as
+told to me this morning."
+
+"Perchance, then," I urged, doubtfully, "you may prefer remaining
+quietly here rather than risk the peril of trying to escape?"
+
+She looked at me keenly, as if in wonder at my words; and I could see
+that her eyes were moistening with the sudden rush of feeling.
+
+"You are either dull of comprehension, John Wayland," she said, a bit
+pertly, "or else you understand me less than any man I ever knew. If I
+seem brave and light of heart amidst all this horror, 't is merely that
+I may not utterly break down, and become an object of contempt. I
+feel, Monsieur, I am not devoid of heart nor of the finer qualities of
+womanhood. Prefer to remain here? Holy Mother of Christ! It would be
+my choice to die out yonder on the prairie, rather than stay here in
+these Indian lodges. There is no peril I would not face joyfully, in
+an effort to escape from this place of torture and barbarity. I
+confess that an hour ago I cared not greatly what my end might be; I
+had lost heart and hope. But now your coming, as of one risen from the
+dead, has brought back my courage."
+
+"You will go, then, whenever and wherever I say?"
+
+She stepped forward with her old frank confidence, resting both hands
+in mine, her eyes upon my face.
+
+"Out yonder in the night, and amid the sand, John Wayland," she said
+earnestly, "I remember saying I would travel with you whithersoever you
+wished. I know you far better now than I did then, and I hesitate not
+at taking upon myself the same vow."
+
+What power then sealed my lips, I know not. Doubtless there is a fate
+in such matters, yet 't is strange the light of invitation in her eyes
+did not draw me to lay bare my heart. In naught else had I a drop of
+coward blood within my veins; while here I hesitated, fearful lest her
+pleading face might change to sudden roguishness, and she laugh lightly
+at the love that held my heart in thrall. Truly, the witch had puzzled
+me so sorely with her caprices, her quick change of mood, her odd
+mixture of girlish frankness and womanly reserve, that I knew not which
+might prove the real Toinette,--the one to trust, or the one to doubt.
+So I stood there, clasping her soft hands in mine, my heart throbbing,
+yet my tongue hesitating to perform its office. But at last the
+halting words came in a sudden, irrepressible rush.
+
+"Toinette!" I cried, "Toinette! I could forget all else,--our danger
+here, the horrors of the night just passed, the many dead out
+yonder,--all else but you."
+
+She gave a sudden startled cry, her affrighted eyes gazing across my
+shoulder. I wheeled, with quick intuition of dangers and there, just
+within the entrance of the tepee, the flap of which he had let fall
+behind him, in grave silence stood an Indian.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+THE PLEDGE OF A WYANDOT
+
+A single glance told me who our unwelcome visitor must be. That giant
+body, surmounted by the huge broad face, could belong to none other
+than the Wyandot, Sau-ga-nash,--him who had spoken for the warriors of
+this tribe before the torture-stake. He stood erect and rigid, his
+stern, questioning eyes upon us, his lips a thin line of repression.
+With a quick movement, I thrust the girl behind me, and faced him,
+motionless, but with every muscle strained for action. The Indian
+spoke slowly, and used perfect English.
+
+"Ugh!" he said. "Who are you? A prisoner? Surely you cannot be that
+same Frenchman we helped entertain last night?"
+
+"I am not the Frenchman," I answered deliberately, vainly hoping his
+watchful eyes might wander about the lodge long enough to yield me
+chance for a spring at his throat, "though I was one of his party. I
+only came here to bring comfort to this poor girl."
+
+"No doubt she needs it," he replied drily, "and your way is surely a
+good one. Yet I doubt if Little Sauk would approve it, and as his
+friend, I must speak for him in the matter. Do you say you are also a
+prisoner? To what chief?"
+
+"To none," I answered shortly, resolved now to venture all in a trial
+of strength. He read this decision in my eyes, and stepped back
+warily. At the same instant Toinette flung her arms restrainingly
+about my neck.
+
+"Don't, John!" she urged, using my name thus for the first time; "the
+savage has a gun hidden beneath his robe!"
+
+I saw the weapon as she spoke, and saw too the angry glint in the
+fellow's eye as he thrust the muzzle menacingly forward. As we stood
+thus, glaring at each other, a sudden remembrance made me pause.
+"Sau-ga-nash"?--surely it was neither more nor less than a Wyandot
+expression signifying "Englishman." That broad face was not wholly
+Indian; could this be the half-breed chief of whom I had so often
+heard? 'Twas worth the chance to learn.
+
+"You are Sau-ga-nash?" I asked, slowly, Toinette still clinging to me,
+her face over her shoulder to front the silent savage. "A chief of the
+Wyandots?"
+
+He moved his head slightly, with a mutter of acquiescence, his eyes
+expressing wonder at the question.
+
+"The same whom the Americans name Billy Caldwell?"
+
+"'T is the word used by the whites."
+
+I drew a quick breath of relief, which caused Mademoiselle to release
+her grasp a little, as her anxious eyes sought my face for explanation.
+
+"Recall you a day twelve years ago on the River Raisin?" I asked
+clearly, feeling confident now that my words were no longer idle. "An
+Indian was captured in his canoe by a party of frontiersmen who were
+out to revenge a bloody raid along the valley of the Maumee. That
+Indian was a Wyandot and a chief. He was bound to a tree beside the
+river bank and condemned to torture; when the leader of the rangers, a
+man with a gray beard, stood before him rifle in hand, and swore to
+kill the first white man who put flint and steel to the wood. Recall
+you this, Sau-ga-nash?"
+
+The stolid face of the listening savage changed, the expression of
+revengeful hostility merging into one of undisguised amazement.
+
+"That which you picture has not left my memory," he answered gravely.
+
+"Nor the pledge you gave to that white captain when he brought you
+safely to Detroit?" I queried, eagerly.
+
+"Nor the pledge. But what has all this to do here?"
+
+"Only, Sau-ga-nash, that I am Major David Wayland's son."
+
+The Indian sprang forward, his eyes burning fiercely; and thinking his
+movement to be hostile, I thrust the girl aside that I might be free to
+repel his attack. But he did not touch me, merely peering eagerly into
+my face with a keen questioning look that read my every feature.
+
+"You have the nose and forehead," he reflected aloud; "yes, and the
+eyes. Before the Great Spirit, I will redeem my pledge; a chief of the
+Wyandots cannot lie."
+
+He paused, and I could mark the varied emotions that swayed him, so
+deeply was he moved by this strange discovery. Unconsciously my hand
+clasped Mademoiselle's, for now I felt that our fate hung on his
+decision.
+
+"'T is a hard task, Master Wayland," he admitted at length, almost
+wearily, "but for your father's sake it shall be done. I see only one
+way for it, and that by water. Know you anything about the management
+of boats?"
+
+"Only as I have paddled upon the Maumee," I answered, doubtfully,
+"although I handled a small sail when a mere boy in the far East."
+
+"'T will suffice if the fair weather hold, as is likely at this season.
+At least it may be risked. The land trails are crowded by Indians from
+far-off tribes, hastening hither in hope of fight and spoils. More
+than a hundred came in to-day, painted for war, and angry because too
+late. You could not escape encountering such parties, were you to flee
+by trail eastward; nor would they show mercy to any white. The
+Silver-man has returned to his home north of the river; but 't is all
+that we who are friendly to him can do to keep these warriors from
+attacking even there. 'T is the Indians from far away that make the
+trouble; and these grow more numerous and powerful each day. We keep a
+guard at the house to save the Silver-man and his family; and were more
+whites to seek refuge there, we should lose all control. There is
+still safety at the mouth of the Saint Joseph River, and 't is there
+you must go. The venture must be made to-night, and by water. Is it
+known to any Indian that you are alive and within this camp?"
+
+"To none."
+
+"That is well; we can work best alone. Now listen. At midnight,
+Master Wayland, a boat, prepared for the trip, will await you, hidden
+under the ruins of the Agency building. The river flows under the
+flooring deep enough for the purpose, and I will place the boat there
+with my own hand. Beyond that, all must rest upon your own skill and
+good fortune. You will wait here," and he glanced about anxiously for
+some means of concealment, "lying behind those robes yonder, until the
+hour."
+
+"Here?" I questioned, thinking instantly of my duty to De Croix. "But
+I would first have speech with the Frenchman. He is my friend,
+Sau-ga-nash. Besides, I have left my rifle in the council lodge."
+
+The face of the savage darkened, and his eyes gleamed ominously as they
+roamed questioningly from my face to Toinette's.
+
+"I said you were to stay hidden here," he answered shortly, his tone
+showing anger, and his hand pointing at the robes. "Many of the
+sleeping Pottawattomies are again astir without, and you could not hope
+to gain the council lodge undiscovered. What care I for this
+Frenchman, that I should risk my life to save him? I pledge myself
+only to Major Wayland's son; and even if I aid you, it is on condition
+that you go alone."
+
+"Alone, say you?" and I rested my hand on Mademoiselle's shoulder. "I
+would die here, Sau-ga-nash, and by torture, before I would consent to
+go one step without this girl."
+
+The half-breed scowled at me, drawing his robe about him in haughty
+indifference.
+
+"Then be it so," he said mockingly. "'T is your own choice, I have
+offered redemption of my pledge."
+
+I started to utter some harsh words in answer; but before I could
+speak, Toinette pressed her soft palm upon my lips in protest.
+
+"Refuse him not," she murmured hastily. "'T is the only chance; for my
+sake, do not anger him."
+
+What plan her quick wit may have engendered, I did not know; but I
+yielded to the entreaty in her pleading eyes, and sullenly muttered the
+first conscious lie of my life.
+
+"I accept your terms, Sau-ga-nash, harsh as they are."
+
+He looked from one to the other of us, his face dark with distrust and
+doubt.
+
+"You are not mine to dispose of," he said sternly to the trembling
+girl, who visibly shrank from his approach, and clung once more to me.
+"You are prisoner to Little Sauk; nor will I release one thus held by
+the Pottawattomies. They and the Wyandots are brothers. But I trust
+you, and not the word of this white man. Pledge me not to go with him,
+and I will believe you."
+
+She glanced first at me, then back into the swarthy, merciless face.
+Her cheeks were white and her lips trembled, yet her eyes remained
+clear and calm.
+
+"I give you my word, Sau-ga-nash," she said quietly. "While I am held
+as prisoner by Little Sauk, I will not go away with John Wayland."
+
+Little as I believed these words to be true at the time, the sound of
+them so dulled me with apprehension that I could only stare at her in
+speechless amazement. It seemed to me then as if the power of reason
+had deserted me, as if my brain had been so burdened as to refuse its
+office. I recall that Toinette almost compelled me to lie down against
+the farther side of the lodge, placing a pile of skins in front of me
+and assuming a position herself where she could occasionally reach
+across the barrier and touch me with her soft hand. No doubt she
+realized the struggle in my mind, for she spoke little after the
+departure of the half-breed, as if anxious to permit me to figure out
+the future for myself. Little by little I faced it, and came to an
+irrevocable decision. It was to be Toinette or nothing. While it
+might be true that she was in no immediate danger, and possibly could
+be safely ransomed if I once escaped to civilization, yet the risk of
+such venture and delay was too great; nor would my love abide so vast a
+sacrifice on her part. I thought to say this to her; but there was a
+look of firm decision in her sweet face, as her dark eyes met mine,
+that somehow held me silent. I felt that in her own heart she must
+already know what action I would choose, and the final moment would
+prove sufficient test for her evident determination. Reassured here,
+my thoughts turned to De Croix; but that was useless. I could send no
+message to him; he was no longer in especial peril, and perhaps would
+not willingly desert his newly found wife even to escape the savages.
+Nay,--it was to be Toinette and I, now and forever.
+
+I do not clearly remember at this day what it was we spoke about in the
+brief whispering that passed between us while we waited there. Neither
+of us felt like voicing our real thoughts, and so we but dissembled,
+making commonplaces fill the gaps between our silences. The night
+found us undisturbed, and it shut down so darkly within the narrow
+confines of the lodge that I lost all trace of her presence, but for an
+occasional movement or the sound of her low voice. Without, the
+rapidly increasing noise indicated a return of many savages to the
+camp, until at last a fire was kindled in the open space, its red flame
+sending some slight illumination where we were, but not enough to
+reveal the interior of the lodge. An Indian brought the girl some
+food, entering and leaving without uttering a sound; and we two ate
+together, striving to speak lightly in order to make the coarse meal
+more palatable.
+
+Suddenly I became aware of a faint scratching upon the skin of the
+lodge, at my back. At first I supposed it to be some wild animal, or
+possibly a stray dog; but the regularity of it showed a purpose of some
+kind. Could it be De Croix? Or was it the half-breed with some secret
+message he dared not deliver openly? I lifted the lodge covering
+slightly, and placed my lips to the aperture.
+
+"Is some one there?" I whispered cautiously. "Who is it?"
+
+"I am Sister Celeste," came the immediate low reply. "Are you the
+white man I guided?"
+
+"Ay," I answered, rejoicing at this rare good fortune, "and I beg you
+to listen to what I say. There will be a boat awaiting us beneath the
+old Agency building at midnight. You must be there with De Croix."
+
+"De Croix?"
+
+"Yes; I know not if that be his name to you, but I mean the Frenchman
+whose life you saved. Will you take him thither at midnight, together
+with the rifle I left in the council lodge?"
+
+For a moment she did not answer. Doubtless it was a bitter struggle
+for her thus to agree even to meet the man again. At last she made
+reply, although I could plainly mark the faltering of her voice.
+
+"The man of whom you speak shall be there," she said, "unless some
+accident make it impossible."
+
+As I drew back my head, and sat upright. Mademoiselle spoke
+questioningly.
+
+"With whom were you conversing just now, Monsieur?"
+
+"The young woman of whom we have spoken so often," I answered
+thoughtlessly. "She has pledged herself to bring De Croix to the
+meeting-place."
+
+"Indeed!" she exclaimed, with accent so peculiar I knew not how to
+interpret it. "It almost makes me desire to form one of your party."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+AN INTERVENTION OF FATE
+
+"Form one of our party?" I echoed, believing I must have misunderstood
+her words. "Surely, Mademoiselle, you cannot mean that you take your
+promise to the half-breed so seriously as voluntarily to remain in
+captivity?"
+
+"Yes, but I do, Monsieur!" and the tone in which she said it was firm
+with decision. "The Indian asked my pledge in all solemnity, and has
+gone away trusting to it. My conscience could never again be clear did
+I prove false in such a matter. You also made a pledge, even before
+mine was given; was it not your purpose to abide by it?"
+
+"No," I answered, a bit shortly. "I merely agreed to his proposition
+at your expressed desire that I should, and because I believed you had
+framed some plan of escape. Have you such small respect for me,
+Mademoiselle, as to think I could consent to leave you here alone and
+at the mercy of these red fiends? Have I risked my life in coming here
+for no other end than this?"
+
+I felt her reach her arm across the pile of skins lying between us, and
+grasp my hand within her own.
+
+"But, dear friend, you must!" she said, pleadingly, her softly
+modulated voice dwelling upon the words as if they came hard. "Truly
+you must, John Wayland, and for my sake as well as your own. I am
+comparatively safe here,--safe at least from actual physical harm, so
+long as the savages dream that the sparing of my life will yield them
+profit. You have no right to remain in such peril as surrounds you
+here, when by so doing you benefit no one. You have father and mother
+awaiting in prayer your safe return to them yonder on the Maumee; while
+I,--I have no one even to ask how sad my fate may be. Think you that
+because I am a girl I must therefore be all selfishness? or that I
+would ever permit you thus to sacrifice yourself unnecessarily for me?
+No, no, Monsieur! I will remain prisoner to Little Sauk, for my sacred
+word has been pledged; and you must go, because there are others to
+whom your life is of value. Nor need you go empty-handed, for the one
+you have sought so far and long seems now ready enough to travel
+eastward with you."
+
+Scarcely had her voice ceased, leaving me struggling to find fit words
+to change her mad decision, when a rough hand flung back the entrance
+flap, and the naked body of an Indian, framed for a single instant
+against the light, lurched heavily through the opening. Even that
+brief glimpse told me the man had been drinking to excess; while for
+the moment, as I huddled down closer behind my robes, I was unable to
+make out his identity.
+
+"Where white woman?" he ejaculated gruffly, as he paused, blinded by
+the darkness. "Why she not come help me?"
+
+His quick ear evidently caught the slight rustle of the girl's skirt as
+she rose hastily to her feet, for with a muttered Indian oath the
+savage lurched forward. I could scarcely make out the dimmest shadow
+of them in the dense gloom, yet I seemed to know that he had grasped
+her roughly, though not the slightest sound of fear or pain came from
+her lips.
+
+"Ugh! better come!" he muttered, a veiled savage threat growling in his
+tone. "You my squaw; cook in my lodge; get meal now."
+
+"But where? and how?" she asked, her voice trembling perceptibly, yet
+striving to placate him by a seeming willingness to obey. "I have
+nothing here to cook, nor have I fire."
+
+"Indian squaw no talk back!" he retorted angrily. "This way I show
+white squaw to mind chief!"
+
+I heard plainly the brutal blow he struck her, though even as she
+reeled back she managed to stifle the scream upon her lips, so that it
+was barely audible. With one bound I was over the barrier of robes and
+clutching with tingling fingers for the brute. I touched his feathered
+head-dress at last, and he must have supposed me his helpless victim,
+for with a grunt of satisfaction he struck once again, the blow meeting
+my shoulder, where he judged in the dark her face would be.
+
+"White squaw mind now--"
+
+I had him gripped by the throat before he ended, and we went down
+together for a death-struggle in the darkness, from which each realized
+in an instant both could never rise again. My furious grip sobered
+him, and he made desperate efforts to break free, struggling vainly to
+utter some cry for rescue. Once I felt him groping at his waist for a
+knife; but I got first clasp upon its hilt, though I twisted helplessly
+for some minutes before I could loosen his hold at my wrist so as to
+strike him with the blade. His teeth closed upon my hand, biting deep
+into the flesh like a wildcat, and the sharp sting of it yielded me the
+desperate strength I needed to wrench my hand free, and with one quick
+blow the knife I clutched cut deep into his side, so that I could feel
+the hot blood spurt forth over my hand. I held him in a death grip,
+for I knew a single cry meant ruin to all our plans, until the last
+breath sped, and I knew I lay prostrate above a corpse. It had been so
+swift and fierce a contest that I staggered half-dazed to my feet,
+peering about me as if expecting another attack. I was steadied
+somewhat by the sound of a low sob from the darkness.
+
+"'T is well over with, Toinette," I murmured hastily, my voice
+trembling from the strain that still shook me.
+
+"Oh, John! John Wayland! And you are truly unhurt of the struggle?"
+It was scarcely her voice speaking, so agitated was it. "Have you
+killed him?"
+
+"Yes," I answered, finding my way cautiously toward her, and speaking
+in whispers. "I had no other choice. It was either his life or yours
+and mine. Knew you the savage?"
+
+"It was Little Sauk," she replied, clinging to me, and growing somewhat
+calmer from my presence. "Oh, what can we do now?"
+
+"There remains but one thing, and that is to accept the chance that
+Providence has given us. There remains no longer a shadow of excuse
+for your staying here, even by your own reasoning. You are no longer
+prisoner to Little Sauk. Your pledge has been dissolved by Fate, and
+it must be God's will that you go forth with me. What say you,
+Mademoiselle?" And I crushed her hands in mine.
+
+I could feel her slight form tremble as I waited her reply, and
+believed she peered across my shoulder through the darkness, imagining
+she saw the dead Indian's form lying there.
+
+"Do you truly wish it?" she questioned at last, as though warring with
+herself. "Think you she would greatly care?"
+
+'T is a strangely perverse thing, the human mind. As there dimly
+dawned upon me a conception of her meaning,--a knowledge that this
+seemingly heart-free girl cared enough for me to exhibit such jealousy
+of another,--I would not undeceive her by a word of explanation.
+
+"I certainly do wish it," was my grave answer, "nor does it greatly
+matter what the desire of any other may be. This is not an invitation
+to a ball, Mademoiselle. I beg you answer me; will you go?"
+
+She looked toward me, wondering at my words.
+
+"Yes," she said simply. "Has the time come?"
+
+"I have no certain means of knowing; but it cannot be far from the
+hour, and we shall be much safer without."
+
+I took the Indian's knife with me, wiping the long blade upon the pile
+of skins, and placing it convenient to my hand within the bosom of my
+hunting-shirt. It was dark enough back of the lodge away from the
+glare of the fires, and we rested there well within the shadow, for
+some time, while I scanned the surroundings and planned as best I might
+our future movements.
+
+"Was it from dread of venturing once more upon the water that you held
+back so long?" I asked her, seeking rudely to delve into the secret of
+her reserve.
+
+"Have you ever found me of cowardly heart, Monsieur?" she questioned in
+return, parrying with quick skill, "that you should think any bodily
+terror could hold me back? If I had reasons other than those already
+given, they were worthy ones."
+
+"You are not afraid of the perils before us?"
+
+"No," she answered; "my heart beats fast, but 't is not from fear."
+
+Only a few scattered lodges had been raised to the eastward of where we
+were, nor did these show any signs of life. We crept forward with
+painful slowness, partially hiding our movements by following a
+shallow, curving gully, until we had gained the extreme limits of the
+encampment, where we crawled out into the gloom of the surrounding
+prairie. Not until then did either of us venture to stand erect, or
+advance with any degree of freedom.
+
+Directly ahead of us there was nothing by which I could safely guide
+our course. The flat sameness of the plain offered no landmarks, while
+the night sky was so thickly overcast as to leave no stars visible.
+Nor was there light of any kind, save that of the fires in the camp we
+had just left. I hesitated to risk the open prairie thus unaided, lest
+we should wander astray and lose much valuable time; so, although it
+measurably increased our peril of encountering parties of savages, I
+turned sharply northward, keeping the bright Indian fires upon our
+left, and groping forward through the gloom toward where I knew the
+main branch of the river must lie. It was neither the time nor place
+for speech. I held her hand closely while we moved onward silently,
+carefully guarding each step lest by mischance it should bring
+betrayal. Once, after we had reached the river and were moving
+eastward again, a party of Indians passed us, coming so silently out of
+the black void, in their soft moccasins, that I had barely time to hold
+her motionless before they were fairly upon us. I counted nine of
+them, moving rapidly in single file, like so many black ghosts. We
+waited with wildly throbbing hearts, listening for fear others might
+follow in their trail.
+
+We were almost beside the walls of the factory building before either
+of us was aware of its proximity. Even then, as I lay prone on the
+earth and studied its dim outlines, they possessed nothing of
+familiarity, for the high-pitched roof had fallen in and carried with
+it the greater portion of the upper walls, leaving a mere shell,
+shapeless and empty. I rested there, gazing at it, and wondering how
+best we might proceed to find our way beneath where the boat was to be
+moored, when I felt Mademoiselle's fingers press my arm warningly.
+Scarcely a yard away, on a ridge of higher ground, two dim figures came
+to a sudden pause.
+
+"I perceive naught of the presence of your friends as yet, Monsieur,"
+spoke a soft voice, "but I will remain until certain of the outcome."
+
+"Then your decision is unchanged?" asked the other, in deeper accent,
+full of earnest pleading. "All is to be over between us from this
+hour? And you deliberately choose to devote your life to the
+redemption of these savages?"
+
+"We have discussed all this at length, Monsieur le Marquis, as we came
+along, and, as you fully know, my choice is made beyond recall. I am
+here to serve you to-night, because it seems to be a duty given unto me
+by some strange Providence; and I have relied upon your courtesy to
+make it as little unpleasant as possible. I pray you, beseech me no
+more. The girl I once was lives no longer; the woman I now am has been
+given a special mission by God, too sacred to be cast aside for aught
+that earth has to offer her of happiness. We part in kindness,
+Monsieur,--in friendship even; but that which was once between us may
+never be again."
+
+There was no answer; even the reckless audacity of a courtier was
+silenced by that calm final dismissal. It was Mademoiselle who spoke
+in swift whisper, her lips at my ear.
+
+"Speak! who is she?"
+
+"The woman of whom you have heard so often,--the missionary in the
+Indian camp."
+
+"Yes, I know," impatiently; "but I mean her name?"
+
+"She calls herself Sister Celeste; I have indeed heard mention of
+another, but it abides not in my memory."
+
+"You deceive me, Monsieur; yet I know, and will speak with her," was
+the quick decision. "Mother of God! 'tis a voice too dear ever to be
+forgotten."
+
+She was beside them with a step, seeming no doubt a most fair vision to
+be born so instantly of the night-shadows.
+
+"Marie Faneuf!" she exclaimed, eagerly. "I know not by what strange
+fortune I meet you here, but surely you will not refuse greeting to an
+old friend?"
+
+The girl drew hastily back a step, as if her first thought was flight;
+but ere such end could be accomplished, Mademoiselle had clasped her
+arm impetuously.
+
+"Marie!" she pleaded, "can it be possible you would flee from me?"
+
+"Nay," returned the other, her voice trembling painfully, as she
+struggled to restrain herself. "It is not that. Dear, dear friend! I
+knew you were among the few saved from Dearborn. The American hunter
+told me, and ever since have I tried to avoid you in the camp. 'Twas
+not for lack of the old love, yet I feared to meet you. Much has
+occurred of late to make the keeping of my vow most difficult. I have
+been weak, and grievously tempted; and I felt scarce strong enough,
+even though protected by prayers, to withstand also my deep love for
+you."
+
+Their voices insensibly merged into French, each speaking so rapidly
+and low that I could get little meaning of it. Then I noted De Croix,
+half lying upon the ground, his head hidden within his hands. With
+sudden remembrance of the work before us, I touched his shoulder.
+
+"Come below, Monsieur, and help me search for the boat," I said,
+kindly, for I was truly touched by his grief. "It will help clear your
+mind to have some labor to accomplish."
+
+"I dare not, Wayland!" he answered hoarsely, and the face he uplifted
+toward me was strangely white and drawn. "I must stay with her; I dare
+not leave her again alone, lest she escape me once more. She is mine,
+truly mine by every law of the Church,--my wife, I tell you, and I
+would die here in the wilderness rather than permit her longer to doom
+herself to such a fate as this."
+
+His words and manner were so wild they startled me. Surely, in his
+present frame of mind he would prove useless on such a mission as that
+before us.
+
+"Then remain here, Monsieur!" I said, "and do your best to win her
+consent to accompany us. No doubt Mademoiselle will aid you all that
+is in her power."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+A STUMBLE IN THE DARK
+
+Gloomy as the hole was, there was no help for it. I could perceive
+nothing below, not even my hand when held within a foot of my eyes; nor
+had I the slightest previous knowledge of the place to guide me, even
+had not the fire ruins above effectually blocked every passage-way with
+fallen debris. Listening however intently, my ears could distinguish
+only the faint lapping of the river as it crept about the log piling on
+which the house had been built; but beyond this dim guidance, I had to
+feel my way forward with extended hands and groping feet. Swinging to
+my back the rifle that De Croix had brought, and casting an inquiring
+glance backward at the little group huddled upon the bank, almost
+invisible even at that short distance, I grasped the piling nearest me
+and slid down into the unknown darkness.
+
+My feet found solid earth, although as I reached out toward the left my
+moccasin came in contact with water, which told me at once that only a
+narrow path divided the steep bank of the excavation from the
+encroaching river. The floor above was originally low, so that I could
+easily touch the heavy supporting beams; and I had felt my way scarcely
+a yard before coming in contact with a serious obstruction, where the
+weakened floor had sagged so as almost to close the narrow passage.
+This caused me to wade farther out into the water, testing each step
+carefully as I followed the sharp curving of the shore-line. I had no
+fear of meeting any living enemy within that silent cave, my sole doubt
+being as to whether the half-breed chief had fulfilled his promise and
+brought the boat, my gravest anxiety to discover it early and get my
+party safely away before the Indian encampment learned the truth.
+
+I must have reached the apex of the little cove, moving so cautiously
+that not a ripple of the water revealed my progress, and feeling for
+each inch of way like a blind man along city streets, when my knee
+suddenly struck some obstacle, and seeking to learn what it might be, I
+muttered a silent prayer of thanksgiving as I touched the unmistakable
+sides of a boat. It was a lumping, awkward craft, rudely fashioned,
+yet of a seeming length of keel and breadth of beam that set my heart
+beating with new joy, as I wondered if it was not the same craft in
+which the Kinzie family put forth upon the lake the morning of the
+massacre. This seemed very likely, for there could hardly be two such
+boats at hand, where the Indian water-craft were slender, fragile
+canoes, poorly fitted for serious battle with lake waves. Doubtless
+this was the only vessel Sau-ga-nash could find suitable for the
+venture, or he would never have chosen it for the use of a single man,
+as it was of a size to require the services of several paddles. Yet
+the thought meant much; for this very lack of water-craft was likely to
+render pursuit by the baffled savages impossible, if only once we got
+fairly away from the shore.
+
+With these reflections driving swiftly through my brain, I ran one hand
+hastily along the thwarts of the boat, seeking to discover if paddles
+had been provided, or even a sail of any kind. I touched a coil of
+rope, a rude oar-blade so broad as to seem unwieldy, a tightly rolled
+cloth,--and then my groping fingers rested on the oddest-feeling thing
+that ever a startled man touched in the dark. It was God's mercy I did
+not cry out from the sudden nervous fit that seized me. The thing I
+touched had a round, smooth, creepy feeling of flesh about it, so that
+I believed I fingered a corpse; until it began to turn slowly under my
+hand like a huge ball, the loose skin of it twitching yet revealing no
+human features to my touch. Saint Andrew! but it frightened me! I
+knew not what species of strange animal it might prove to be, nor
+whence its grip or sting might come. Yet the odd feeling of it was
+strangely fascinating,--I could not let it go; the damp flesh-like skin
+seemed to cling to my fingers in a horrible sort of magnetism that
+bound me prisoner, the cold perspiration of terror bursting from every
+pore, even as my other hand, trembling and unnerved, sought in my shirt
+for the knife of Little Sauk.
+
+As I gripped the weapon, the thing began to straighten out, coming up
+in the quick odd jerks with which some snakes uncoil their joints after
+the torpidity of winter. My hand, finding naught to grasp, slipped
+from the smooth round ball, and as it fell touched what seemed an ear,
+and then a human nose.
+
+"Merciful God! 't is a man!" I gasped, in astonishment and yet relief,
+as I closed upon his throat, madly determined to shut off his wind
+before he could give alarm.
+
+"Cuss the luck!" he gasped hoarsely, and I let go of him, scarcely able
+to ejaculate in my intense surprise at that familiar voice.
+
+"Burns? For Heaven's sake, Burns! can this indeed be you?"
+
+For an instant he did not speak, doubtless as greatly perplexed as I at
+the strange situation.
+
+"If ye 're Injun," he ventured at last gravely, "then I 'm a bloody
+ghost; but if by any chance ye 're the lad, Wayland, which yer voice
+sounds like, then it's Ol' Tom Burns as ye 're a-maulin' 'round, which
+seems ter be yer specialty,--a-jumpin' on unoffensive settlers in the
+dark, an' a-chokin' the life outer them."
+
+The growling tone of his voice was growing querulous, and it was
+evident that his temper, never quite childlike, had not been greatly
+improved by his late experiences as an Indian captive.
+
+"But Burns, old friend!" I persisted heartily, my courage returned once
+more, "it was surely enough to stir any man to violence to encounter
+such a thing in the dark! What in Heaven's name has happened to leave
+you with such a poll? What has become of your hair and beard? Is
+their loss a part of Indian torture?"
+
+There was a low chuckle in the darkness, as if the old rascal were
+laughing to himself.
+
+"Injun nuthin!" he returned with vehemence. "Thet 's jist my way of
+sarcumventin' the bloody varmints. I shaved the hull blame thing soon
+as ever they let me loose, an' then played loony, till thar ain't no
+Injun 'long the shore as 'd tech me fer all the wampum in the Illini
+country. 'T ain't the fust time I saved my scalp by some sech dern
+trick. I tell ye, it 's easy 'nough ter beat Injuns if ye only know
+how. By snakes! I 'm sacred, I am,--specially teched by the Great
+Spirit. I tell ye, ter be real loony is dern nigh as good in an Injun
+camp as ter hev red hair like thet thar little Sister Celeste with the
+Pottawattomies. She knows her business, you bet; an' so does Ol' Burns
+know hisn!"
+
+His mention of her name instantly recalled me to the little group
+waiting above us, and doubtless already worried at my prolonged absence.
+
+"Burns," I interrupted, "this is no time for reminiscences. I am here
+seeking some means of escape out of this place of horror. What were
+you doing down here?"
+
+"Sorter contemplatin' a sea v'yage," he said, dryly. "'T was
+rec'mended by my doctor fer the growth o' my har. So, snoopin' 'round
+yere in the dark, an' not over fond o' Injun com'any, I found this yere
+boat. Jest got in ter see how 't was fixed, when ye jumped down
+yonder. Reckon I 'd kinder like ter wet 'er up an' see wot she 's
+like."
+
+"Good! so would I. This boat was placed here for that very purpose.
+Now listen. The young woman you just mentioned, that Indian missionary
+with the auburn hair, is above yonder, together with another young
+white girl rescued from the massacre, and the Frenchman, De Croix. We
+have come here, on pledge of a half-breed chief that this boat would be
+ready for our escape. And we have no time to waste, for we may be
+followed at any moment."
+
+"They ain't seen ye stealin' outer the camp?"
+
+"No, but in doing it I was compelled to kill Little Sauk, and the
+others may find his body at any time."
+
+For a moment the sly old borderer made no response, and I knew he was
+quietly turning over the complicated situation in his own mind
+preparatory to intelligent action. I heard him step from the boat into
+the shallow water.
+
+"All right, lad! I understand," he said heartily, his former
+indifference vanished. "Derned if I wouldn't jist as soon leave that
+Parley-Voo behind; but I 'm with ye, an' I reckon Ol' Burns 'll give
+them thar redskins another dern good jolt. Take hold here, boy, an' we
+'ll run this yere man-o-war outside, where we kin ship the rest o' her
+crew."
+
+The back-water rippling among the old piling was shallow, but the boat
+had little aboard and floated free, so that we worked it forward with
+little difficulty until we succeeded in rounding the slight promontory
+and held its bulging sides close against the mud wall. Leaving Burns
+to keep it in place, I crept silently up the bank.
+
+"Come!" I whispered, making my way to the side of Mademoiselle more by
+instinct than sight. "The boat we sought is here and ready! I have
+even found a boatman to aid us, in the form of Ol' Burns, who, you
+remember, aided De Croix and me at the time of our famous race. Let us
+waste no more of the night here, but do the rest of your talking in
+greater safety on the water."
+
+They came with me down to the edge of the stream without a word of
+protest. I had taken Mademoiselle in my arms and lifted her slight
+form into the boat, when she turned suddenly, as it by an
+unrestrainable impulse, and held out her hands toward the dim figure of
+the silent girl who yet remained motionless several feet away.
+
+"Marie!" she said, anxiously, "it may be wrong of me to urge it, but I
+beg you to think again in this grave matter. Surely such horrible
+massacre as you have witnessed must absolve you from your vow, and
+yield you freedom to return eastward with those you love."
+
+The other did not respond to this passionate appeal, but stood facing
+us silent as a statue.
+
+"What mean you, Mademoiselle?" I asked. "Will not this Sister Celeste
+consent to leave the Indians?"
+
+"Nay, she has made a sacred vow of religion which binds her to this
+sacrifice. I implore you, John Wayland, urge her to go with us! 'T is
+but waste of her life here. She is an old schoolmate of mine, and 't
+will be hard to leave her alone in this wilderness. Captain de Croix,
+she was far from being a stranger to you in those other days at
+Montreal,--will you not add your entreaties to ours?"
+
+I saw him step forward toward that quiet bowed figure, and she
+straightened perceptibly, even in the darkness, as he drew near. His
+words were in French, and spoken so low I missed their meaning; yet we
+all heard plainly her calm answer, while marking the faltering accents
+of her lips.
+
+"Dear, dear friend!" and I felt her eyes, blinded by tears, were
+seeking out Mademoiselle through the gloom, "it breaks my heart to
+answer you nay in this hour of sore trial to us both. Yet my vow to
+God is more sacred than any earthly friendship; nor could peace ever
+again abide in my heart were I to break the vow so lightly. My duty is
+here, be it for life or death; and here I must abide until the Master
+sets me free."
+
+Then, addressing De Croix, she continued sadly, "No, Monsieur, the
+sense of duty that presses upon me and yields me such strength is
+beyond your comprehension. I bid you go back to that world of light
+and gaiety you have always loved so fondly, and think no more of me.
+To you I am, even as you have supposed, a dead woman, yet happier far
+in this sad exile than I ever was in that gilded social cage where men
+laugh while they break the hearts that trust them. My Indians are
+indeed cruel, but there is a deeper cruelty than that of bloodshed, and
+I prefer the open savagery of the woods and plains to things I have
+known in city life. So it must be good-bye, Monsieur!"
+
+I was looking directly at her when she uttered these last words of
+dismissal, yet as she ended she vanished into the black night beyond, I
+knew not how. A moment before, two figures had been standing there, De
+Croix's and hers; and although my eyes never once wavered, suddenly
+there remained but one, that of De Croix, peering forward with bent
+body as if he also knew not how or when the girl had vanished from his
+side. I was staring yet, half believing it was but a trick of my eyes,
+when suddenly, like phantoms from the mist, a half-dozen naked figures
+topped the high bank before me. It was the work almost of a second. I
+caught Burns's low cry of warning from where he sat watching within the
+boat.
+
+"Run!" I shouted to De Croix. "To the boat, quick! The savages are
+upon us!"
+
+He made no motion, and I grasped him. Rarely have I laid so heavy a
+hand on one in friendship; but I lifted him from off his feet and flung
+him bodily into the boat's bottom, scarce waiting till he struck before
+I had my shoulder against the stern to send the craft free from shore.
+I know not what mischance caused it, whether I slipped upon a stone or
+tripped over a hidden root; but as I shoved the boat far out into the
+dark current of the river, instead of springing after it, as I had
+meant to do, I toppled and plunged headlong down at the edge of the
+stream.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV
+
+THE BATTLE ON THE SHORE
+
+What followed was long a famous story on the border, and I have even
+read it written out most carefully in books purporting to tell the
+history of those troublous times. None of them have it as I recall the
+details of the incident, although it all occurred so rapidly that I
+myself can hardly tell just how 't was done.
+
+I know that I scrambled again to my knees, resting half in the water,
+my purpose being to fling myself into the river in an effort to regain
+the boat. But it was already out of sight in the dense gloom, while
+not the slightest sound reached me for guidance. Beyond this, I had no
+time for much save action. Above me, upon the high bank not three
+yards away, I saw several Indian forms peering over; and then others,
+three or four, I am uncertain which, sprang lightly down within a yard
+of where I crouched in waiting.
+
+My father gave me a frontier maxim once, which ran, "If you must fight,
+strike first, and strike hard." The words flashed in my memory, and I
+put them to the test straightway. These prowling savages were
+apparently unaware of my predicament; their sole thought was with the
+boat floating away lakeward down the stream. At all cost, they must be
+blocked in any purpose of pursuit. These were the thoughts that darted
+through my brain like fire through stubble. How many opposed me, how
+desperate would be the struggle, were matters of which I did not stop
+to think. I could at least busy them until the fugitives were safe;
+after that, it was God's affair, and theirs. My rifle was wet and
+useless from my recent tumble; but before the group at the water's edge
+even saw me I was fairly upon them, striking fiercely with my gunstock,
+and two savages went down, shrieking from pain and surprise, before so
+much as a return blow reached me.
+
+It was not a noisy battle; from the outset it was too fierce and rapid
+for any waste of breath. Never did I need my strength of body more,
+nor did the long training of my father come in better play. I made
+that long rifle-barrel both club and sword, knife and axe in one,
+striking, thrusting, clubbing, in the mad fury with which desperation
+bids a man battle for his life. I had no thought to live, but was
+determined that if I went down to earth many a painted savage should
+lie there with me. The enshrouding darkness proved a friendly help;
+for as I backed in closer against the bank, I gained a fair view of my
+opponents, while keeping myself more hidden. Again and again they
+charged upon me, joined now by the others from above; but the circling
+iron I swung with tireless arms formed a dead-line no leaping Indian
+burst through alive.
+
+Once a hurtling tomahawk half buried itself in my shoulder; a long
+knife, thrown by a practised hand, pierced the muscles of my thigh, and
+stuck there quivering, till I struck it loose; and twice they fired at
+me, the second shot tearing the flesh of my side, searing it like fire.
+Yet I scarcely realized I was touched, so fiercely was the battle-blood
+now coursing through my veins, so intense the joy with which I crushed
+them back. I grew delirious, feeling the rage to slay sweep over me as
+never before, giving me the crazed strength of a dozen men, until I
+lost all sense of defensive action, and sprang forth into their midst
+as might an avenging thunderbolt from the black sky. Never had I swung
+flail in peaceful border contest as I did that murderous iron bar in
+the dark of the river-shore, driving them back foot by foot against the
+high bank which held them helpless victims of my wrath. I struck again
+and again, my teeth set together in bulldog tenacity, my breath coming
+in gasps, the streaming blood from a deep cut over my eyes half
+blinding me, yet guided by fierce instinct to find and smite my foes.
+I trod on limp bodies, on writhing forms, and felt my weapon clash
+against iron rifle barrels and clang upon uplifted steel; but nothing
+stopped me,--no cry of terror, no plea for mercy, no clutching hand, no
+deadly numbing blow.
+
+God knows the story of that fight,--how long it lasted, by what miracle
+'t was won. To me it is--and was--little more than a dim haze of
+strange leaping figures, of fierce dark faces, of maddened cries of
+hate, of uplifted hands, of dull-clashing weapons. I seemed to see it
+all through a red fog whence the blood dripped, and I lost
+consciousness of everything save my unswerving duty to strike hard
+until I fell. At last out from the maelstrom of that wild mêlée but a
+single warrior seemed to face me; and some instinct of the fight caused
+me to draw back a pace and wipe the obscuring blood away, that I might
+see him better. It came to me that this was to be the end,--the final
+duel which was to decide that midnight battle. He and I were there
+alone; and the stars bursting through the clouds gave me faint view of
+him, and of those dark, silent forms that lined the shore where they
+had fallen.
+
+A chief, a Pottawattomie,--this much I knew even in that hasty shrouded
+glance. Writers of history affirm my opponent was Peesotum, the same
+fierce warrior whose cruel hand slew the brave Captain Wells and
+wrenched his still beating heart from out the mutilated body. All I
+realized then were his broad sinewy shoulders, his naked brawny body,
+his eyes ablaze with malignant hate. He was the first to close, his
+wild cry for vengeance piercing the still night; and before I knew it,
+the maddened savage was within the guard of my rifle-barrel, and we
+were locked in the stern grapple of death.
+
+It was knife to knife, our blades gleaming dull in the dim light of the
+stars, each man gripping the up-lifted wrist of the other, putting
+forth each last reserve of strength, each cunning trick of fence, to
+break free and strike the ending blow. Back and forth we strove,
+straining like two wild animals, our moccasined feet slipping on the
+wet earth, our muscles strained, and sinews cracking with intensity of
+effort, our breath coming in labored gasps, our bodies tense as
+bow-strings. Such merciless strain could not endure forever, and,
+strong as I was in those young days, the savage was far stronger and
+less exhausted by the struggle, so that inch by inch he pressed me
+backward, battling like a demon, until I could see the cruel gleam of
+his eyes as I gave slowly down. It was God who saved me, for as I fell
+I struck the sharp shelving of the bank, and the quick stoppage swung
+the savage to one side and below me, so that, even as he gave vent to
+an exulting yell of triumph, wrenching his hand loose from my weakening
+clasp to strike the death-blow, I whirled and forced him downward, his
+face buried in the stream.
+
+Those who write history say the rescuing warriors discovered him alive.
+I know not; but this I swear,--I held him there until every struggle
+ceased, until answering yells from the westward told me others were
+already close at hand, and then, breathless and trembling from the
+struggle, blinded by blood and faint from wounds, I sprang forward into
+the night-shadows, dimly conscious that my sole hope for escape lay
+lakeward. I ran but feebly at first, skirting the partially destroyed
+stockade of the old Fort, with its litter of debris, and stumbling
+constantly in the darkness over the obstructions that lined the river
+bank. As my breath returned, and I somewhat cleared my eyes of blood,
+I saw better; and at last ran from the darker soil on to the white sand
+of the beach.
+
+There were now many stars in the sky, with the moon struggling feebly
+to break through the haze; but to my anxious glance nothing was visible
+upon, the water. Surely the boat must have floated to the river-mouth
+by this time,--surely the force of the current would have accomplished
+that; nor was it likely that Ol' Burns would draw far away from shore
+until assured of my fate. The wild shouting told me that savages from
+the camp had already found their dead. A moment more would place them
+on my trail, hot for revenge; and there was no course left me but to
+take the water, before their keen eyes found me out. I waded out,
+seeking thus to get far enough from shore to baffle their search, when
+suddenly a quick spark of light winked from the blackness in front of
+me. Surely it could be nothing less than a signal, the swift stroke of
+flint on steel,--no doubt in the faint hope it would prove a beacon to
+me in my need.
+
+Desperate as the chance was, it was still a chance, and to my mind the
+only one. I glanced behind; a dim figure or two dotted the white sand,
+and my heart lifted a silent prayer to God for guidance. A second
+later I was beyond my depth, breasting the unknown waters, swimming
+steadily toward the place where that mysterious spark had glimmered.
+Once again it flashed, the barest glimpse of light through the intense
+gloom; and I pressed on with new vigor, certain now it was a real
+beacon. But I was so weakened by wounds and spent from exertion, and
+such desperate work is swimming fully clad, that my progress proved
+slow; and twice I was compelled to pause, paddling slowly on my back,
+in the buffeting of the waves, in order to gain strength to renew the
+struggle. I almost lost heart in the black loneliness, as the swirling
+water swept me back and confused me with its ever-tossing motion. Once
+I went down from sheer weakness, choking in a cloud of spray that swept
+my face; and doubtless I should have let the struggle end in despair
+even then, had not the spark leaped up once more through the deep haze;
+and this time so close was it that my ears caught the clashing of the
+flint and steel.
+
+With the new hope of life thus given me, I pushed grimly forward, using
+the silent Indian stroke that never tires, my eyes at the surface level
+where the light of the moon glimmered feebly. At last I saw it,--the
+black lumpy shadow of the boat. I must have splashed a little in my
+weakness and excitement, for I plainly perceived the figure of a man
+hastily leap to his feet, with an oar-blade uplifted threateningly
+above his head.
+
+"Don't strike, Burns!" I managed to cry aloud. "It's Wayland."
+
+The next moment, with scarce so much as a breath remaining in my
+battered body, I laid hand upon the boat's side, and clung there
+panting and well-nigh spent. I felt his hands pressed under my arms,
+and then, with the exercise of his great strength, he drew me steadily
+up, inch by inch, until I topped the rail, and fell forward into the
+bottom of the boat. An instant I rested thus, with tightly closed
+eyes, my head reeling, my breath coming in sobs of pain, every muscle
+of my strained body throbbing in misery. Scarcely conscious of what
+was being done about me, I could still realize that arms touched my
+neck, that my head was gently lifted to a softer resting-place, and
+that a hand, strangely tender, brushed back from my forehead the wet
+tangled hair. The touch was thrilling; and I unclosed my wearied eyes,
+looking up into the sympathetic face of Mademoiselle. The faint
+moonlight rested upon it gently, touching her crown of hair with
+silver; and within the dark depths of her eyes I read clearly the
+message I had waited for so long.
+
+"Toinette!" I murmured, half conscious.
+
+She bowed her head above me, and I felt a sudden plash of tears that
+could not be restrained.
+
+"Do not try to speak now, John!" she whispered softly, her finger at my
+lips. "I can only thank the good God who has brought you back to me."
+
+I made no effort to say more; I could only lie in silence and gaze up
+at her, pressing the hands resting so frankly within my own. Indeed,
+we needed no words in that hour; our hearts had spoken, and
+thenceforward we were one.
+
+Suddenly the heavy boat lurched beneath us, to some quick impetus that
+sent a shudder through every inch of it; and I heard a heavy splash
+alongside, which instantly brought me upright, anxiously grasping the
+rail.
+
+"May Heaven help him!" cried Burns excitedly, and pointing out at the
+black waters. "The Frenchman has gone overboard!"
+
+"Overboard?" I echoed, striving to regain my feet. "Did he fall?"
+
+"Fall? No; it was a dive off the back seat here. Save me! but he went
+into it like a gull."
+
+We sought for him long and vainly, peering over those dark swirling
+waters, calling his name aloud, and striking flint on steel in hope to
+guide him by the spark. Nothing appeared along the rolling surface, no
+answering cry came from the black void; De Croix had disappeared into
+the depths, as desperate men go down to death. Suddenly, as I leaned
+over, sick at heart, peering into the dimness, Toinette drew near and
+touched me softly.
+
+"Let us not mourn," she said, in strange quietness. "No doubt 't is
+better so."
+
+"How?" I questioned, shocked at her seemingly heartless words. "Surely
+you cannot rejoice at such a loss?"
+
+"'T is not a loss," she answered firmly, and the soft moon-rays were
+white upon her face. "He has only gone back to her we left behind; it
+was the beckoning hand of love that called him through the waters. Now
+it is only ours to pray that he may find her."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+IN THE NEW GRAY DAWN
+
+My anxious glance wandered from the face I so dearly loved, out where
+those dark restless waters merged into the brooding mystery of the
+black night. How unspeakably dreary, lonely, hopeless it all was!
+Into what tragic unknown fate had this earliest comrade of my manhood
+been remorselessly swept? Was all indeed well with him? or had the
+Nemesis of a wrong once done dealt its fatal stroke at last? The
+voices of the night were silent; the chambers of the great tossing sea
+hid their secret well. Had this gallant and reckless young soldier of
+France, this petted courtier of the gayest court in Europe, whose very
+name and rank I knew not, succeeded in his desperate deed? Had he
+reached yonder blood-stained shore, lined with infuriated savages, and
+found safe passage through them to the side of the woman he had once
+called wife, and then forgotten? Or had he found, instead, the solemn
+peace of death, amid the swirling waters of this vast inland sea, so
+many leagues to the westward of that sunny land he loved? These were
+the thoughts that shook me, as I leaned out above the rail, her dear
+hand always on my shoulder. Never have the circling years found voice,
+nor the redeemed wilderness made answer.
+
+"Possibly it might be done," I admitted slowly. "'T is scarce farther
+than I swam just now, and he is neither weary nor wounded."
+
+We all realised it was a useless peril to remain there longer, and I
+sat at the helm and watched, while Burns, who developed considerable
+knowledge in such matters, fitted the heavy sail in place. With the
+North Star over the water for our guidance, I headed the blunt nose of
+the boat due eastward into the untracked waters.
+
+I confess that my memory was still lingering upon De Croix, and my eyes
+turned often enough along our foam-flecked wake in vague wonderment at
+his fate. It was Mademoiselle who laid hand softly on my knee at last,
+and aroused my attention to her.
+
+"Why did you tell Sister Celeste that you came to Dearborn seeking Elsa
+Matherson?" she questioned, her clear eyes intently reading my face.
+
+"I had even forgotten that I mentioned it," I answered, surprised at
+this query at such a time. "But it is strictly true. While upon his
+death-bed Elsa Matherson's father wrote to mine,--they were old
+comrades in the great war,--and I was sent hither to bring the orphan
+girl eastward. I sought her as a brother might seek a sister he had
+never seen, Mademoiselle; yet have failed most miserably in my mission."
+
+"How failed?"
+
+"In that I have found no trace of the girl, and beyond doubt she
+perished in the massacre. I know not how, but I have been strangely
+baffled and misled from the first in my search for her, and it was all
+to no purpose."
+
+For the first time since I had fallen dripping into the boat, a slight
+smile was visible in the dark eyes fronting me.
+
+"Why hid you from me with such care the object of your search?"
+
+"I hid nothing, Mademoiselle. We spoke together about it often."
+
+"Ay, indeed you told me you sought a young girl, and your words led me
+to think at first it must be Josette, and later still the Indian
+missionary. But not once did you breathe the name of the girl in my
+ears. The dwellers at Dearborn were neither so many nor so strange to
+me that I could not have aided you in your search."
+
+"You knew this Elsa Matherson?"
+
+"I am not so sure of that, Master Wayland." she returned gravely, her
+eyes wandering into the night. "Once I thought I did, but she has
+changed so greatly in the last few days that I am hardly sure. A young
+girl's life is often filled with mystery, and there are happenings that
+turn girlhood to womanhood in a single hour. Love has power to change
+the nature as by magic, and sorrow also has a like rare gift. Do you
+still greatly wish to find this Elsa Matherson?"
+
+"To find her?" and I gazed about me incredulously into those flitting
+shadows where the waves raced by. "Ay, for I have dreamed of her as of
+a lost sister, and it will sadly grieve those at home to have me return
+thus empty-handed. Yet the thought is foolishness, Mademoiselle, and I
+understand not why you should mock me so."
+
+She drew closer, in the gentle caressing way she had, and found my
+disengaged hand, her sweet face held upward so that I could mark every
+changing expression.
+
+"Never in my useless life was I farther removed from any spirit of
+mockery," she insisted, soberly; "for never before have I seen the
+presence of God so clearly manifest in His mysterious guidance of men.
+You, who sought after poor Elsa Matherson in this wilderness, looking
+perchance for a helpless orphan child, have been led to pluck me in
+safety out from savage hands, and yet never once dreamed that in doing
+so you only fulfilled your earlier mission."
+
+I stared at her, grasping with difficulty the full significance of her
+speech.
+
+"Your words puzzle me."
+
+"Nay, they need not," and I caught the sudden glitter of tears on her
+lashes; "for I am Elsa Matherson."
+
+"You? you?" and I crushed her soft hand within my fingers, as I peered
+forward at the quickly lowered face. "Why, you are French,
+Mademoiselle, and of a different name!"
+
+She glanced up now into my puzzled face, a bit shyly, yet with some of
+the old roguishness visible in her eyes.
+
+"My mother was indeed French, but my father was an American soldier,"
+she said rapidly, as if eager to have the explanation ended. "You
+never asked my name, save that one night when we first met amid the
+sand, and then I gave you only that by which I have been most widely
+known. None except my father ever called me Elsa; to all others I was
+always Toinette. But I am Roger Matherson's only child."
+
+It was clear enough now, and the deception had been entirely my own,
+rendered possible by strange chances of omission, by rare negligence of
+speech--aided by my earlier impression that she whom I sought was a
+mere child.
+
+"And 't was Sister Celeste who told you whom I sought?" I asked, for
+lack of courage to say more.
+
+"Yes, to-night, while we waited for you beside the ruins of the old
+factory. Oh, how far away it all seems now!" and she pointed backward
+across the voters. "Poor, poor girl! Poor Captain de Croix! Oh, it
+is all so sad, so unutterably sad to me! I knew them both so well,
+Monsieur," and she rested her bowed head upon one hand, staring out
+into the night, and speaking almost as if to herself alone; "yet I
+never dreamed that he was a nobleman of France, or that he had married
+Marie Faneuf. She was so sweet a girl then,--and now to be buried
+alive in that wilderness! Think you that he truly loved her?"
+
+"I almost have faith that he did, Mademoiselle," I answered gravely.
+"He was greatly changed from his first sight of her face, though he was
+a difficult man to gauge in such matters. There was a time when I
+believed him in love with you."
+
+She tossed her head.
+
+"Nay," she answered, "he merely thought he was, because he found me
+hard to understand and difficult of conquest; but 't was little more
+than his own vanity that drew him hither. I trust it may be the deeper
+feeling that has taken him back now in face of death to Marie."
+
+"You have indeed proved hard to understand by more than one," I
+ventured, for in spite of her graciousness the old wound rankled. "It
+has puzzled me much to understand how you so gaily sent me forth to a
+mission that might mean death, to save this Captain de Croix."
+
+It was a foolish speech, and she met it bravely, with heightened color
+and a flash of dark eyes.
+
+"'T was no more than the sudden whim of a girl," she answered quickly,
+"and regretted before you were out of sight. Nor did I dream you would
+meet my conditions by such a sacrifice."
+
+"You showed small interest as you stood on the stockade when we went
+forth!"
+
+"You mean when Captain de Croix and I leaned above the eastern
+palisades?"
+
+"Ay, not once did your eyes wander to mark our progress."
+
+Her eyes were smiling now, and her face archly uplifted.
+
+"Indeed, Master Wayland, little you know of the struggles of my heart
+during that hour. Nor will I tell you; for the secrets of a girl must
+be her own. But I marked each step you took onward toward the Indian
+camp, until the night hid you,--the night, or else the gathering tears
+in my eyes."
+
+The sudden yawing of the boat before a gust of wind drew my thought
+elsewhere, and kept back the words ready upon my tongue. When once
+more I had my bearings and had turned back the plunging bow, she sat
+silent, deep in thought that I hesitated to disturb. Soon I noted her
+head droop slightly to the increased movement of the boat.
+
+"You are worn out!" I said tenderly. "Lean here against me, and sleep."
+
+"Indeed, I feel most weary," was her drowsy reply. "Yes, I will rest
+for a few moments."
+
+How clear remains the memory of those hours, while I sat watchful of
+the helm, her head resting peacefully on my lap, and all about us those
+lonely tossing waters! What a mere chip was our boat in the midst of
+that desolate sea; how dark and dreary the changeless night shadows!
+Over and over again I pictured the details of each scene I have here
+set forth so poorly, to dream at the end of a final homecoming which
+should not be alone. It was with heart thankful to God, that I watched
+the slow stealing upward of the gray dawn as the early rays of light
+crept toward us across the heaving of the waters. It was typical of
+all I had hoped,--this, and the black shadows fleeing away into the
+west. Brighter and brighter grew the crimsoning sky over the boat's
+bow, where Burns lay sleeping, until my eyes could distinguish a
+far-off shore-line heavily crowned with trees. I thought to rouse her
+to the glorious sight; but even as I glanced downward into the fair
+young face, her dark eyes opened in instant smile of greeting.
+
+"'T is the morning," she said gladly, "and that dark, dark night has
+passed away."
+
+"For ever, Mademoiselle; and there is even a land of promise to be seen
+out yonder!"
+
+She sat up quickly, shading her eyes with her hand as she gazed with
+eagerness toward where I pointed.
+
+"Think you we shall find shelter and friends there?"
+
+"The half-breed chief said there were yet white settlers upon the Saint
+Joseph, Mademoiselle; and the mouth of that river should be easily
+found."
+
+She turned toward me, a slight frown darkening her face.
+
+"I wish you would not call me Mademoiselle," she said slowly. "It is
+as if we were still mere strangers; and you said Elsa Matherson was to
+be as your sister."
+
+I bent over her suddenly, all my repressed love glowing in my face.
+
+"Toinette!" I whispered passionately, "I would call you by a dearer
+name than that,--by the dearest of all dear names if I might, for you
+have won my heart in the wilderness."
+
+For a single instant she glanced shyly up into my face, her own crimson
+at my sudden ardor. Her eyes drooped and hid themselves behind their
+long lashes.
+
+"Those who sent you forth seeking a sister might not thus wish to
+welcome Elsa Matherson," she said softly.
+
+"'Tis a venture I most gladly make," I insisted, "and would seal it
+with a kiss."
+
+Her eyes flashed up at me, full of sudden merriment.
+
+"The unpaid wager leaves me helpless to resist, Monsieur."
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+The soft haze of Indian summer rested over the valley of the Maumee.
+We rode slowly along the narrow winding trail that hugged the river
+bank; for our journey had been a long one, and the horses were wearied.
+Burns was riding just in advance of Toinette and me, his cap pulled low
+over his eyes, his new growth of hair standing out stiff and black
+beneath its covering. Once he twisted his seamed face about in time to
+catch us smiling at his odd figure, and growled to himself as he kicked
+at his horse's flanks.
+
+It was thus we rounded the bend and saw before us the little clearing
+with the cabin in the centre of its green heart. At sight of it my
+eyes grew moist and I rested my fingers gently upon the white hand that
+lay against her saddle-pommel.
+
+"Fear not, dear heart!" I whispered tenderly.
+
+"It is home for both alike, and the welcome of love awaits you as well
+as me."
+
+She glanced up at me, half shyly as in the old way, and there was a
+mist of tears clinging to the long lashes.
+
+"Those who love you, John, I will love," she said solemnly.
+
+It was Rover who saw us first, and came charging forth with savage
+growl and ruffled fur, until he scented me, and changed his fierceness
+into barks of frantic welcome. Then it was I saw them, even as when I
+last rode forth, my father seated in his great splint chair, my mother
+with her arm along the carved back, one hand shading her eyes as she
+watched our coming.
+
+This is not a memory to be written about for stranger eyes to read, but
+as I turned from them after that first greeting, their glances were
+upon her who stood waiting beside me, so sweet and pure in her young
+womanhood.
+
+"And this, my son?" questioned my father kindly. "We would bid her
+welcome also; yet surely she cannot be that little child for whose sake
+we sent you forth?"
+
+I took her by the hand as we faced them.
+
+"You sent me in search of one whom you would receive even as your own
+child," I answered simply. "This is Roger Matherson's daughter, and
+the dear wife of your son."
+
+What need have I to dwell upon the love that bade her welcome? And so
+it was that out of all the suffering and danger,--forth from the valley
+of the shadow of death,--Toinette and I came home.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHEN WILDERNESS WAS KING***
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, When Wilderness Was King, by Randall Parrish
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: When Wilderness Was King
+ A Tale of the Illinois Country
+
+
+Author: Randall Parrish
+
+
+
+Release Date: March 1, 2006 [eBook #17890]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHEN WILDERNESS WAS KING***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Al Haines
+
+
+
+WHEN WILDERNESS WAS KING
+
+A Tale of the Illinois Country
+
+by
+
+RANDALL PARRISH
+
+Author of "My Lady of the North"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A. L. Burt Company, Publishers
+New York
+Copyright by A. C. McClurg & Co.
+1904
+Published March 26, 1904
+Second Edition, April 20, 1904
+Third Edition, July 2, 1904
+Fourth Edition, September 20, 1904
+Fifth Edition, October 20, 1904
+Sixth Edition, January 2, 1905
+Seventh Edition, December, 1905
+Entered at Stationers' Hall, London
+All Rights Reserved
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAPTER
+
+ I. A Message from the West
+ II. The Call of Duty
+ III. A New Acquaintance
+ IV. Captain Wells of Fort Wayne
+ V. Through the Heart of the Forest
+ VI. From the Jaws of Death
+ VII. A Circle in the Sand
+ VIII. Two Men and a Maid
+ IX. In Sight of the Flag
+ X. A Lane of Peril
+ XI. Old Fort Dearborn
+ XII. The Heart of a Woman
+ XIII. A Wager of Fools
+ XIV. Darkness and Surprise
+ XV. An Adventure Underground
+ XVI. "Prance wins, Monsieur!"
+ XVII. A Contest of Wits
+ XVIII. Glimpses of Danger
+ XIX. A Conference and a Resolve
+ XX. In the Indian Camp
+ XXI. A Council of Chiefs
+ XXII. The Last Night at Dearborn
+ XXIII. The Death-Shadow of the Miamis
+ XXIV. The Day of Doom
+ XXV. In the Jaws of the Tiger
+ XXVI. The Field of the Dead
+ XXVII. A Ghostly Vision
+ XXVIII. An Angel in the Wilderness
+ XXIX. A Soldier of France
+ XXX. The Rescue at the Stake
+ XXXI. A Search, and its Reward
+ XXXII. The Pledge of a Wyandot
+ XXXIII. An Intervention of Fate
+ XXXIV. A Stumble in the Dark
+ XXXV. The Battle on the Shore
+ XXXVI. In the New Gray Dawn
+
+
+
+
+ "I saw a dot upon the map, and a housefly's filmy wing--
+ They said 'twas Dearborn's picket-flag, when Wilderness was King.
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+ I heard the block-house gates unbar, the column's solemn tread,
+ I saw the Tree of a single leaf its splendid foliage shed
+ To wave awhile that August morn above the column's head;
+ I heard the moan of muffled drum, the woman's wail of fife,
+ The Dead March played for Dearborn's men just marching out of life;
+ The swooping of the savage cloud that burst upon the rank
+ And struck it with its thunderbolt in forehead and in flank,
+ The spatter of the musket-shot, the rifles' whistling rain,--
+ The sandhills drift round hope forlorn that never marched again."
+
+ --_Benjamin F. Taylor_.
+
+
+
+
+When Wilderness Was King
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+A MESSAGE FROM THE WEST
+
+Surely it was no longer ago than yesterday. I had left the scythe
+lying at the edge of the long grass, and gone up through the rows of
+nodding Indian corn to the house, seeking a draught of cool water from
+the spring. It was hot in the July sunshine; the thick forest on every
+side intercepted the breeze, and I had been at work for some hours.
+How pleasant and inviting the little river looked in the shade of the
+great trees, while, as I paused a moment bending over the high bank, I
+could see a lazy pike nosing about among the twisted roots below.
+
+My mother, her sleeves rolled high over her round white arms, was in
+the dark interior of the milk-house as I passed, and spoke to me
+laughingly; and I could perceive my father sitting in his great
+splint-bottomed chair just within the front doorway, and I marked how
+the slight current of air toyed with his long gray beard. The old
+Bible lay wide open upon his knee; yet his eyes were resting upon the
+dark green of the woods that skirted our clearing. I wondered, as I
+quaffed the cool sweet water at the spring, if he was dreaming again of
+those old days when he had been a man among men. How distinct in each
+detail the memory of it remains! The blue sky held but one fleecy
+white cloud in all its wide arch; it seemed as if the curling film of
+smoke rising from our chimney had but gathered there and hung suspended
+to render the azure more pronounced. A robin peeked impudently at me
+from an oak limb, and a roguish gray squirrel chattered along the low
+ridge-pole, with seeming willingness to make friends, until Rover,
+suddenly spying me, sprang hastily around the comer of the house to
+lick my hand, with glad barkings and a frantic effort to wave the stub
+of his poor old tail. It was such a homely, quiet scene, there in the
+heart of the backwoods, one I had known unchanged so long, that I
+little dreamed it was soon to witness the turning over of a page of
+destiny in my life, that almost from that hour I was to sever every
+relation of the past, and be sent forth to buffet with the rough world
+alone.
+
+There were no roads, in those days, along that valley of the upper
+Maumee,--merely faint bridle-paths, following ancient Indian trails
+through dense woods or across narrow strips of prairie land; yet as I
+hung the gourd back on its wooden peg, and lifted my eyes carelessly to
+the northward, I saw a horseman riding slowly toward the house along
+the river bank. There were flying rumors of coming Indian outbreaks
+along the fringe of border settlements; but my young eyes were keen,
+and after the first quick thrill of suspicion I knew the approaching
+stranger to be of white blood, although his apparel was scarcely less
+uncivilized than that of the savage. Yet so unusual were visitors,
+that I grasped a gun from its pegs in the kitchen, and called warningly
+to my mother as I passed on to meet the new-comer.
+
+He was a very large and powerful man, with a matted black beard and an
+extremely prominent nose. A long rifle was slung at his back, and the
+heavy bay horse he bestrode bore unmistakable signs of hard travelling.
+As he approached, Rover, spying him, sprang out savagely; but I caught
+and held him with firm grip, for to strangers he was ever a surly brute.
+
+"Is this yere Major Wayland's place?" the man questioned, in a deep,
+gruff voice, reining in his tired horse, and carelessly flinging one
+booted foot across the animal's neck as he faced me.
+
+"Yes," I responded with caution, for we were somewhat suspicious of
+stray travellers in those days, and the man's features were not
+pleasing. "The Major lives here, and I am his son."
+
+He looked at me intently, some curiosity apparent in his eyes, as he
+deliberately drew a folded paper from his belt.
+
+"No? Be ye the lad what downed Bud Eberly at the meetin' over on the
+Cow-skin las' spring?" he questioned, with faintly aroused interest.
+
+I blushed like a school-girl, for this unexpected reference was not
+wholly to my liking, though the man's intentions were evidently most
+kind.
+
+"He bullied me until I could take no more," I answered, doubtfully;
+"yet I hurt him more seriously than I meant."
+
+He laughed at the trace of apology in my words.
+
+"Lord!" he ejaculated, "don't ever let that worry ye, boy. The hull
+settlement is mighty glad 'twas done. Old Hawkins bin on the p'int o'
+doin' it himself a dozen o' times. Told me so. Ye 're quite a lad,
+ain't ye? Weigh all o' hundred an' seventy, I 'll bet; an' strong as
+an ox. How old be ye, anyhow?"
+
+"Twenty," I answered, not a little mollified by his manner. "You must
+live near here, then?"
+
+"Wal, no, but been sorter neighbor o' yourn fer a month er so back;
+stoppin' up at Hawkins's shebang, at the ford, on the Military Road,
+visitin'; but guess I never met up with none o' your folks afore. My
+name 's Burns, Ol' Tom Burns, late o' Connecticut. A sojer from out
+West left this yere letter fer yer father at Hawkins's place more nor a
+week ago. Said as how it was mighty important; but blamed if this was
+n't the fust chance he 's hed to git it over yere sence. I told him I
+'d fetch it, as it was n't more nor a dozen miles er so outer my way."
+
+He held out a square paper packet; and while I turned it over curiously
+in my hand,--the first letter I had ever seen,--he took some loose
+tobacco from an outside pocket and proceeded leisurely to fill his pipe.
+
+My mother rolled my father's chair forward into the open doorway, and
+stood close behind him, as was her custom, one arm resting lightly upon
+the quaintly carved chair-back.
+
+"What is it, John?" she questioned gently. Instantly aroused by her
+voice, I crossed quickly over and placed the packet in my father's thin
+hands. He turned it over twice before he opened it, looking at the odd
+seal, and reading the superscription carefully aloud, as if fearful
+there might be some mistake:
+
+ "Major David Wayland,
+ Along the Upper Maumee.
+ Leave at Hawkins Ford
+ on Military Road."
+ "Important."
+
+
+I can see him yet as he read it, slowly feeling his way through the
+rude, uneven writing, with my mother leaning over his shoulder and
+helping him, her rosy cheeks and dark tresses making strange contrast
+beside his pain-racked features and iron-gray hair.
+
+"Read it aloud, Mary," he said at last. "I shall understand it better.
+'T is from Roger Matherson, of whom you have heard me speak."
+
+My mother was a good scholar, and she read clearly, only hesitating now
+and, then over some ill-written or misspelled word.
+
+
+ At FORT DEARBORN, near the head of the
+ Great Lake. Twelfth June, 1812.
+
+My DEAR OLD FRIEND:
+
+I have come to the end of life; they tell me it will be all over by the
+morrow, and there remains but one thing that greatly troubles me--my
+little girl, my Elsa. You know I have never much feared death, nor do
+I in this hour when I face it once more; for I have ever tried to honor
+God and do my duty as both man and soldier. David, I can scarcely
+write, for my mind wanders strangely, and my fingers will but barely
+grasp the pen. 'T is not the grip of the old sword-hand you knew so
+well, for I am already very weak, and dying. But do you yet remember
+the day I drew you out of the rout at Saratoga, and bore you away
+safely, though the Hessians shot me twice? God knows, old friend, I
+never thought to remind you of the act,--'twas no more than any comrade
+would have done,--yet I am here among strangers, and there is no one
+else living to whom I may turn in my need. David, in memory of it,
+will you not give my little orphan child a home? Your old comrade,
+upon his death-bed, begs this of you with his final breath. She is all
+alone here, save for me, and there is no blood kin in all the world to
+whom I may appeal. I shall leave some property, but not much. As you
+love your own, I pray you be merciful in this hour to my little girl.
+
+ Your old comrade,
+ ROGER MATHERSON.
+
+
+This had been endorsed by another and bolder hand:
+
+
+Captain Roger Matherson, late of the Massachusetts Continental Line,
+died at this fort, of fever, fourteenth June, 1812. His daughter is
+being cared for by the ladies of the garrison.
+
+ NATHAN HEALD,
+ Capt. First Regt. Inf., Commanding.
+
+
+The tears were clinging to my mother's long lashes as she finished the
+reading; she was ever tender of heart and sympathetic with sorrow. My
+father sat in silence, looking far off at the green woods. Presently
+he took the paper again into his hands, folded it carefully in the old
+creases, and placed it safely away between the Bible leaves. I saw my
+mother's fingers steal along the arm of the chair until they closed
+softly over his.
+
+"The poor little lamb!" she said gently.
+
+My father's old sword hung over the fireplace, and I saw his glance
+wander toward it, as something seemed to rise choking in his throat.
+He was always a man who felt deeply, yet said but little; and we both
+knew he was thinking about the old days and the strong ties of
+comradeship.
+
+The stranger struck flint and steel to light his pipe; the act
+instantly recalled my father to the demands of hospitality.
+
+"Friend," he said, speaking firmly, "hitch to the stump yonder, and
+come in. You have brought me sad news enough, yet are no less welcome,
+and must break bread at our board. John," and he turned toward me,
+"see to friend Burns's horse, and help your mother to prepare the
+dinner."
+
+Out in the rude shed, which, answered as a kitchen during summer
+weather, I ventured to ask:
+
+"Mother, do you suppose he will take the little girl?"
+
+"I hope so, John," she answered, soberly; "but your father must decide
+himself. He will not tell us until he has thought it all out alone."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE CALL OF DUTY
+
+It was upon my mind all through that long afternoon, as I swung the
+scythe in the meadow grass. I saw Burns ride away up the river trail
+soon after I returned to work, and wondered if he bore with him any
+message from my father. It was like a romance to me, to whom so few
+important things had ever happened. In some way, the coming of this
+letter out of the great unknown had lifted me above the narrow life of
+the clearing. My world had always been so small, such a petty and
+restricted circle, that this new interest coming within its horizon had
+widened it wonderfully.
+
+I had grown up on the border, isolated from what men term civilization;
+and I could justly claim to know chiefly those secrets which the
+frontier teaches its children. My only remembrance of a different mode
+of life centred about the ragged streets of a small New England
+village, where I had lived in earlier childhood. Ever since, we had
+been in the depths of the backwoods; and after my father's accident I
+became the one upon whom the heavier part of the work fell. I had
+truly thrived upon it. In my hunting-trips, during the dull seasons, I
+learned many a trick of the forest, and had already borne rifle twice
+when the widely scattered settlements were called to arms by Indian
+forays. There were no schools in that country; indeed, our nearest
+neighbor was ten miles distant as the crow flies. But my mother had
+taught me, with much love and patience, from her old treasured
+school-books; and this, with other lore from the few choice volumes my
+father clung to through his wanderings, gave me much to ponder over. I
+still remember the evenings when he read to us gravely out of his old
+Shakespeare, dwelling tenderly upon passages he loved. And he
+instructed me in other things,--in honor and manliness, in woodcraft,
+and many a pretty thing at arms, until no lad in the settlements around
+could outdo me in rough border sport. I loved to hear him, of a
+boisterous winter night,--he spoke of such matters but seldom,--tell
+about his army life, the men he had fought beside and loved, the daring
+deeds born of his younger blood. In that way he had sometimes
+mentioned this Roger Matherson; and it was like a blow to me now to
+hear of his death. I wondered what the little girl would be like; and
+my heart went out to her in her loneliness. Scarcely realizing it, I
+was lonely also.
+
+"Has he spoken yet?" I questioned anxiously of my mother, as I came up
+to the open kitchen door when the evening chores were done.
+
+"No, John," she answered, "he has been sitting there silently looking
+out at the woods ever since the man left. He is thinking, dear, and we
+must not worry him."
+
+The supper-table had been cleared away, and Seth, the hired man, had
+crept up the creaking ladder to his bed under the eaves, before my
+father spoke. We were all three together in the room, and I had drawn
+his chair forward, as was my custom, where the candle-light flickered
+upon his face. I knew by the look of calm resolve in his gray eyes
+that a decision had been reached.
+
+"Mary," he began gravely, "and you, John, we must talk together of this
+new duty which has just come to us. I hardly know what to decide, for
+we are so poor and I am now so helpless; yet I have prayed earnestly
+for guidance, and can but think it must be God's will that we care for
+this poor orphan child of my old friend."
+
+My mother crossed the room to him, and bent down until her soft cheek
+touched his lips.
+
+"I knew you would, David," she whispered, in the tender way she had,
+her hand pressing back his short gray hair. "She shall ever be unto us
+as our own little girl,--the one we lost come back to us again."
+
+My father bent his head wearily upon one hand, his eyes upon the candle
+flame, his other hand patting her fingers.
+
+"It must be all of ten years," he said slowly, "since last I had word
+of Roger Matherson. He was in Canada then, yet has never since been
+long out of my mind. He saved my life, not once alone, as he would
+seem to remember, but three separate times in battle. We were children
+together in the blue Berkshire hills, and during all our younger
+manhood were more than brothers. His little one shall henceforth be as
+my own child. God hath given her unto us, Mary, as truly as if she had
+been born of our love. I knew that Roger had married, yet heard
+nothing of the birth of the child or the loss of his wife. However,
+from this hour the orphan is to be our own; and we must now decide upon
+some safe means of bringing her here without delay."
+
+He paused. No one of us spoke. His glance slowly wandered from the
+candle flame, until it settled gravely upon my face as I sat resting on
+a rude bench fitted into the chimney corner. He looked so intently at
+me that my mother seemed instantly to interpret his thought.
+
+"Oh, surely not that, David?" she exclaimed, pleadingly. "Not John?"
+
+"I know of no other fit messenger, little woman," he answered soberly.
+"It has indeed troubled me far more than all the rest, to decide on
+this; yet there is no one else whom I think equal to the task. John is
+a good boy, mother, and has sufficient experience in woodcraft to make
+the journey."
+
+"But the savages!" she insisted. "'T is said we are upon the verge of
+a fresh outbreak, stirred up by this new war with England, that may
+involve the settlements at any time. You know Burns told you just
+now,--and he is an old scout, familiar with the West,--that British
+agents were active along the whole border, and there was great
+uneasiness among the Indian tribes."
+
+"There is serious promise of danger, 't is true," he admitted, a flash
+of the old fire in his eyes. "Yet that is scarce likely to halt David
+Wayland's son. Indeed, it is the greater reason why this helpless
+orphan child should be early brought to our protection. Think of the
+defenceless little girl exposed alone to such danger! Nor have we
+means of judging, Mary, of the real seriousness of the situation to the
+north and west. War between the nations may very likely arouse the
+spirit of the savages, yet rumors of Indian outbreak are always on the
+lips of the settlers. Burns himself was upon his return westward, and
+did not seem greatly troubled lest he fail to get through. He claimed
+to live at Chicagou Portage, wherever that may be. I only know it is
+the extreme frontier."
+
+My mother did not answer; and now I spoke, my cheeks aflame with
+eagerness.
+
+"Do you truly mean, sir, that I am to go in search of the little girl?"
+I asked, barely trusting my own ears.
+
+"Yes, John," my father replied gravely, motioning me to draw closer to
+his chair. "This is a duty which has fallen to you as well as to your
+mother and me. We can, indeed, but poorly spare you from the work at
+this season; yet Seth will be able to look after the more urgent needs
+of the farm while you are absent, while he would prove quite useless on
+such a mission as this. Do not worry, Mary. Friend Burns is well
+acquainted with all that western country, and he tells me there is
+scarcely a week that parties of soldiers, or friendly Indians, do not
+pass along the trail, and that by waiting at Hawkins's place for a few
+days John will be sure to find some one with whom he may companion on
+the long journey westward. He would himself have accompanied him, but
+must first bear a message to friends at Vincennes. It is now some
+weeks since Roger Matherson died, and we shall prove unworthy of our
+trust if we delay longer in sending for his daughter."
+
+Though my mother was a western woman, patient and long habituated to
+sacrifice and peril, still her eyes, fixed upon my face, were filled
+with tears, and the color had deserted her cheeks.
+
+"I know not why it should be so, David," she urged softly; "but in my
+heart I greatly fear this trip for John. Yet you have ever found me
+ready to yield wherever it seemed best, and I doubt not you are right
+in your decision."
+
+At any other time I should have gone to her with words of comfort and
+good cheer; but now my ambition was so aroused by this impending
+adventure as to permit me to think of nothing else.
+
+"Is it so very far, father, to where I must go?" I questioned, eagerly.
+"Where is this Fort Dearborn, and how am I to journey in reaching
+there? 'T is no garrison of which I have ever heard."
+
+"Bring me the map your mother made of this country, and the regions to
+the westward," he said. "I am not over clear in regard to the matter
+myself, although friend Burns, who claims to know all that country,
+gave me some brief description; but I found him most chary of speech."
+
+I got the map out of the great square cupboard in the corner, and
+spread the paper flat upon the table, placing knives at each corner to
+hold it open. I rolled his chair up before it, and the three of us
+bent our heads over the map together, our faces glowing in the candle
+flame. It was a copy made by a quill from a great government map my
+mother had seen somewhere in her journeying westward; and, though only
+a rude design, it was not badly done, and was sufficiently accurate for
+our purpose. Much of it was still blank; yet the main open trails had
+been traced with care, the principal fords over the larger streams were
+marked, and the various government posts and trading settlements
+distinctly located and named. Searching for the head of the Great
+Lake, we were not long in discovering the position of the fort called
+Dearborn, which seemingly was posted upon the western shore, nearly
+opposite another garrison point at the mouth of the St. Joseph river.
+We were able to trace with clearness the military road that had been
+constructed northward from Fort Wayne, our nearest government post; but
+the map failed to exhibit evidence of any beaten track, or used trail,
+leading westward and around the head of the lake. There were numerous
+irregular lines which denoted unnamed streams, but by far the larger
+portion of the territory extending to the west beyond Fort Wayne had
+been simply designated as "forest land" and "unexplored."
+
+"Friend Burns tells me there is a trail used by both troops and
+savages, which he has traversed several times," my father explained, as
+he lifted his eyes from the map; "but it is not over plain, nor easily
+followed, as communication with the Fort is mostly maintained by means
+of the waterways to the northward. The overland journey, however, will
+prove speedier, besides being less liable to disaster for one
+unaccustomed to boats. How soon can John be ready, mother?"
+
+Her voice trembled, and I felt the pressure of her hand upon my sleeve.
+
+"It will take all of the morrow, David, to prepare his clothing
+properly," she replied, with the patient resignation of the frontier.
+"There is much that will need seeing after."
+
+"Then John will start the next dawn. You had best ride the brown colt,
+my son; he is of good breed, and speedy. Seth shall accompany you
+until you find suitable companionship at Hawkins's. He will bring back
+word of how you started, and that knowledge will greatly comfort your
+mother."
+
+He paused, and held out his thin hands.
+
+"You go upon this strange journey willingly, my son?"
+
+"Yes, father."
+
+"You will be both kind and thoughtful with Roger Matherson's little
+girl?"
+
+"She shall be to me as my own sister."
+
+I felt the confiding clasp of his fingers, and realized how much to him
+would be a successful termination of my journey.
+
+"Kiss your mother, John," he said, a trustful look coming into his
+kindly eyes. "We must all be astir early on the morrow."
+
+Beneath the rived shingles of my little room, under the sloping roof,
+how I turned and tossed through those long night hours! What visions,
+both asleep and awake, came to me, thronging fast upon my heated brain,
+each more marvellous than its fellow, and all alike pointing toward
+that strange country which I was now destined by fate to travel! Vague
+tales of wonder and mystery had come floating to me out of that unknown
+West, and now I was to behold it all with my own eyes. But marvellous
+as were my dreams, the reality was to be even more amazing than these
+pictures of boyish imagination. Had I known the truth that night, I
+doubt greatly whether I should have had the courage to face it.
+
+At last the gray dawn came, stealing in at the only window, and found
+me eager for the trial.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+A NEW ACQUAINTANCE
+
+I drew rein upon the upper river bank, before we finally plunged into
+the dark woods beyond, and glanced back. I had to brush the gathering
+tears from my eyes before I could see clearly; and when I finally rode
+away, the picture of that dear old home was fixed in my memory forever.
+Our house stood near the centre of an oak opening,--a little patch of
+native prairie-land, with a narrow stream skirting it on one side, and
+a dense fringe of forest all about. The small story-and-a-half cabin
+of hewn logs, with its lean-to of rough hand-riven planks, fronted to
+the southward; and the northern expanse of roof was green with moss.
+My father sat in the open doorway, his uplifted hand shading his eyes
+as he gazed after us; while my mother stood by his side, one arm
+resting upon the back of his chair, the other extended, waving a white
+cloth in farewell. Rover was without, where I had bidden him remain,
+eagerly watching for some signal of relenting upon my part. Beyond
+stood the rude out-buildings, silhouetted against the deep green. It
+was a homely, simple scene,--yet till now it had been all the world to
+me.
+
+With a final wave of the hand, I moved forward, until the intervening
+trees, like the falling of a curtain, hid it all from view. Seth was
+astride the old mare, riding bareback, his white goat-like beard
+hanging down his breast until it mingled with her mane, while his long
+thin legs were drawn up in the awkward way he had. He was a strange,
+silent, gloomy man, as austere as his native hills; and we rode on with
+no exchange of speech. Indeed, my thoughts were of a nature that I had
+no wish to share with another; so it was some time before the depth of
+loneliness which oppressed my spirits enabled me to feel even passing
+interest in the things at hand.
+
+"I 'd hate like thunder ter be a-goin' on your trip, Maester John,"
+volunteered Seth at last, solemnly turning on the mare's broad back to
+face me.
+
+"And why?" I asked, wonderingly; for the man's rare gift of silence had
+won him a certain reputation for deep, occult knowledge which I could
+not wholly ignore. "It will bring me the sight of some wonderful
+country, no doubt."
+
+His shrewd gimlet eyes seemed fairly to pierce me, as he deliberately
+helped himself to tobacco from a pouch at his waist.
+
+"Wal, that may all be, Maester John; but I've heerd tell ther is some
+most awful things goes on out yonder," and he swung his long arm
+meaningly toward the west. "Animyles sich as don't prowl raound yere,
+man-yeatin' snakes as big as thet tree, an' the blood-thirstiest
+salvages as ever was. An' arter a while ther ain't no more trees
+grows, ther lan' is thet poor, by gosh! jist a plumb dead levil er'
+short grass, an' no show ter hide ner nuthin'."
+
+"Were you ever there, Seth?" I questioned with growing anxiety, for I
+had heard some such vague rumors as these before.
+
+"Me? Not by a dinged sight!" he replied, emphatically. "This yere is
+a long way further west thin I keer 'bout bein'. Ol' Vermont is plenty
+good 'nough fer this chicken, an' many 's ther day I wish I was back
+ther. But I hed a cousin onct who tuk ter sojerin' 'long with Gineral
+Clarke, an' went 'cross them ther prairies ter git Vincennes frum the
+British. Lor'! it must a' bin more ner thirty year ago! He tol' me
+thet they jist hed ter wade up ter ther neck in water fer days an'
+days. I ain't so durn fond o' water as all thet. An' he said as how
+rattlesnakes was everywhere; an' ther Injuns was mos' twice es big es
+they be yere."
+
+"But Clarke, and nearly all of his men, got back safely," I protested.
+
+"Oh, I guess some on 'em got back, 'cause they was an awful lot in thet
+army, mighty nigh two thousand on 'em, Ephriam said; but, I tell ye,
+they hed a most terrible tough time afore they did git hum. I seed my
+cousin whin he kim back, an' he was jist a mere shadder; though he was
+bigger ner you whin he went 'way."
+
+"But Fort Dearborn is much farther to the north. Perhaps it will be
+better up there."
+
+"Wuss," he insisted, with a most mournful shake of the head, "a dinged
+sight wuss. Ephriam said es how the further north ye wint, the tougher
+it got. He saw an Injun from up near the big lake--a Pottamottamie, or
+somethin' like thet--what was nine fut high, an' he told him es how the
+rivers in his kintry was all full o' man-eatin' critters like snakes,
+an' some on 'em hed a hundred legs ter crawl with, an' cud travel a
+dinged sight faster ner a hoss. By gosh! but you bet I don't want none
+on it. Your father must 'a' been plum crazy fer ter sind ye way out
+ther all 'lone,--jist a green boy like you. What ye a-goin' fer,
+enyhow?"
+
+I explained to him the occasion and necessity for my trip, but he shook
+his head dubiously, his long face so exceedingly mournful that I could
+not remain unaffected by it.
+
+"Wal," he said at length, carefully weighing his words, "maybe it's all
+right 'nough, but I 've got my doubts jist the same. I 'll bet thet
+ther gal is jist one o' them will-o'-the-wisps we hear on, an' you
+never will find her. You 'll jist wander 'round, huntin' an' huntin'
+her, till ye git old, or them monsters git ye. An' I 'll be blamed if
+ever I heerd tell o' no sich fort as thet, nohow."
+
+Seth was certainly proving a Job's comforter; and I was already
+sufficiently troubled about the final outcome of my adventure. Hence
+my only hope of retaining any measure of courage was to discountenance
+further conversation, and we continued to jog along in silence,
+although I caught him looking at me several times in a manner that
+expressed volumes.
+
+We camped that night in the dense heart of some oak woods, beside a
+pleasant stream of clear, cool water. Late the following evening, just
+as the sun was disappearing behind the trees, our wearied horses
+emerged suddenly upon the bank of a broad river, and we could discern
+the dim outlines of Hawkins's buildings amid the deepening shadows of
+the opposite shore.
+
+Upon one thing I was now fully determined. Seth should start back with
+the first streak of the next dawn. His long face and dismal croakings
+kept me constantly upon nettles, and I felt that I should face the
+uncertain future with far stouter heart if he were out of my sight.
+Firm in this resolve, I urged my horse to splash his reluctant way
+through the shallows of the ford; and as our animals rose on the steep
+bank of the western shore, we found ourselves at once in the midst of a
+group of scattered buildings. It seemed quite a settlement in that dim
+light, although the structures were all low and built of logs. The
+largest and most centrally located of these was evidently the
+homestead, as it had a rudely constructed porch in front, and a thin
+cloud of smoke was drifting from its chimney. As I drew nearer, I
+could perceive the reflection of a light streaming out through the open
+doorway.
+
+No one appeared in answer to our shouting,--not even a stray dog; and,
+in despair of thus arousing the inhabitants, I flung my rein to Seth,
+and, mounting the doorstep, peered within. As I did so, a shiny,
+round, black face, with whitened eyes and huge red lips, seemed to
+float directly toward me through the inner darkness. It was so
+startling an apparition that I sprang back in such haste as nearly to
+topple over backward from the steps. Heaven alone knows what I fancied
+it might be; indeed, I had little enough time in which to guess, for I
+had barely touched the ground,--my mind still filled with memories of
+Seth's grotesque horrors,--when the whole figure emerged into view, and
+I knew him instantly for a negro, though I had never before seen one of
+his race. He was a dandified-looking fellow, wearing a stiff white
+waistcoat fastened by gilded buttons, with a pair of short curly
+mustaches, waxed straight out at the ends; and he stood there grinning
+at me in a manner that showed all his gleaming teeth. Before I could
+recover my wits enough to address him, I heard a voice from within the
+house,--a soft, drawling voice, with a marked foreign accent clinging
+to it.
+
+"Sam," it called, "have you found either of the scoundrelly rascals?"
+
+The darkey started as if shot, and glanced nervously back over his
+shoulder.
+
+"No, sah," he replied with vigor, "dat Mistah Hawkins am not yere, sah.
+An' dat Mistah Burns has gone 'way fer gud, sah. But dar am a gemman
+yere, sah,--"
+
+"What!" came a surprised ejaculation that caused the negro to jump, and
+I heard a chair overturned within. "A gentleman? Sam, don't deceive
+me! For the love of Heaven, let me see him. May I be bastinadoed if
+it hasn't been three months since my eyes beheld the last specimen!
+Sam, where was it I saw the last one?"
+
+"Montreal, sah."
+
+"By Saint Guise! 'tis gospel truth," and the speaker strode forward,
+candle in hand. "Here, now, you ace of spades," he cried impatiently,
+"hold the flame until I bid this paragon of the wilderness fit welcome
+in the name of Hawkins, who strangely seems to have vanished from the
+sylvan scene. Alas, poor Hawkins! two gentlemen at one time, I greatly
+fear, will be the death of him. Would that his good friend Burns might
+be with him on this festive occasion. Ye gods, what a time it would
+be!"
+
+As the black hastily reached out for the candlestick, his erratic
+master as quickly changed his mind.
+
+"No," he muttered thoughtfully, drawing back within the hall; "'tis far
+more fit that such formal greeting should occur within, where the
+essentials may be found with which to do full courtesy. I will instead
+retire. Sam, bid the gentleman meet me in the banquet hall, and then,
+mark you, thou archfiend of blackness, seek out at once that man
+Hawkins in his hidden lair, and bid him have ample repast spread
+instantly, on pain of my displeasure. By all the saints! if it be not
+at once forthcoming I will toast the scoundrel over his own slow fire."
+
+"Seth," I said to my staring companion, as soon as I could recover from
+my own surprise, "find a place for the horses somewhere in the stables,
+and come in."
+
+"Where is your master to be found?" I questioned of the black, whose
+air of self-importance had been resumed the moment he was left alone.
+
+"Second door to de right, sah," he answered, gazing curiously at my
+deerskin hunting-shirt as I pressed by.
+
+I had little difficulty in finding it, for all that the way was totally
+dark, as the fellow within was lustily carolling a French love-song. I
+hung back for a moment, striving vainly to distinguish the words.
+
+Without pausing to make my presence known, I opened the door quietly,
+and stepped within. The room was not a large one, though it occupied
+the full width of the house; and the two lighted candles that illumined
+it, one sitting upon a table otherwise bare, the other occupying the
+rude dresser in the far corner, revealed clearly the entire interior.
+
+The sole occupant of the room sat upon a corner of the table, one foot
+resting on the floor, the other dangling carelessly. Hardly more than
+a year my elder, he bore in his face the indelible marks of a life
+vastly different. His features were clear-cut, and undeniably
+handsome, with a curl of rare good-humor to his lips and an audacious
+sparkle within his dark eyes. His hat, cocked and ornamented in
+foreign fashion, lay beside him; and I could not help noting his long
+hair, carefully powdered and arranged with a nicety almost conspicuous,
+while his clothing was rich in both texture and coloring, and exhibited
+many traces of vanity in ribbon and ornament. Within his belt,
+fastened by a large metal clasp, he wore a pearl-handled pistol with
+long barrel; and a rapier, with richly jewelled hilt, dangled at his
+side. Altogether he made a fine figure of a man, and one of a sort I
+had never met before.
+
+If he interested me, doubtless I was no less a study to him. I could
+see the astonishment in his eyes, after my first entrance, change to
+amusement as he gazed. Then he brought a white hand down, with a smart
+slap, upon the board beside him.
+
+"By all the saints!" he exclaimed, "but I believe the black was right.
+'Tis the face of a gentle, or I know naught of the breed, though the
+attire might fool the very elect. Yet, _parbleu_! if memory serves, 't
+is scarcely worse than what I wore in Spain."
+
+He swung down upon his feet and faced me, extending one hand with all
+cordiality, while lips and eyes smiled pleasantly.
+
+"Monsieur," he said, bowing low, and with a grace of movement quite new
+to me, "I bid you hearty welcome to whatsoever of good cheer this
+desert may have to offer, and present to you the companionship of
+Villiers de Croix. It may not seem much, yet I pledge you that kings
+have valued it ere now."
+
+It was a form of introduction most unfamiliar to me, and seemed
+bristling with audacity and conceit; but I recognized the heartiness of
+his purpose, and hastened to make fit response.
+
+"I meet you with much pleasure," I answered, accepting the proffered
+hand. "I am John Wayland."
+
+The graceful recklessness of the fellow, so conspicuous in each word
+and action, strongly attracted me. I confess I liked him from his
+first utterance, although mentally, and perhaps morally as well, no two
+men of our age could possibly be more unlike.
+
+"Wayland?" he mused, with a shrug, as if the sound of the word was
+unpleasant. "Wayland?--'t is a harsh name to my ears, yet I have heard
+it mentioned before in England as that of a great family. You are
+English, then?"
+
+I shook my head emphatically; for the old wounds of controversy and
+battle were then being opened afresh, and the feeling of antagonism ran
+especially high along the border.
+
+"I am of this country," I protested with earnestness, "and we call
+ourselves Americans."
+
+He laughed easily, evidently no little amused at my retort, twisting
+his small mustache through his slender fingers as he eyed me.
+
+"Ah! but that is all one to me; it is ever the blood and not the name
+that counts, my friend. Now I am French by many a generation, Gascon
+by birth, and bearing commission in the Guard of the Emperor; yet
+sooth, 't is the single accursed drop of Irish blood within my veins
+that brings me across the great seas and maroons me in this howling
+wilderness. But sit down, Monsieur. There will be both food and wine
+served presently, and I would speak with you more at ease."
+
+As he spoke he flung himself upon a low settee, carelessly motioning me
+toward another.
+
+"On my word," he said, eying me closely as I crossed over to the bench,
+"but you are a big fellow for your years, and 't is strength, not
+flabby flesh, or I know not how to judge. You would make a fine figure
+of a soldier, John Wayland. Napoleon perchance might offer you a
+marshal's baton, just to see you in the uniform. _Parbleu_! I have
+seen stranger things happen."
+
+"You are now connected with the French army?" I questioned, wondering
+what could have brought him to this remote spot.
+
+"Ay, a Captain of the Guard, yet an exile, banished from the court on
+account of my sins. _Sacre_! but there are others, Monsieur. I have
+but one fault, my friend,--grave enough, I admit, yet but one, upon my
+honor, and even that is largely caused by that drop of Irish blood. I
+love the ladies over-well, I sometimes fear; and once I dared to look
+too high for favor."
+
+"And have you stopped here long?"
+
+"Here--at Hawkins's, mean you? Ten days, as I live; would you believe
+I could ever have survived so grievous a siege?" and he looked
+appealingly about upon the bare apartment. "Ten days of Hawkins and of
+Sam, Monsieur; ay! and of Ol' Burns; of sky, and woods, and river, with
+never so much as a real white man even to drink liquor with. By Saint
+Louis! but I shall be happy enough to face you across the board
+to-night. Yet surely it is not your purpose to halt here long?"
+
+"Only until I succeed in joining some party travelling westward to the
+Illinois country."
+
+"No! is that your aim? 'T is my trip also, if Fate be ever kind enough
+to bring hither a guide. _Sacre_! there was one here but now, as odd a
+devil as ever bore rifle, and he hath taken the western trail alone,
+for he hated me from the start. That was Ol' Burns. Know you him?"
+
+"'T was he who brought the message that sent me here; yet he said
+little of his own journey. But you mention not where you are bound?"
+
+"I seek Fort Dearborn, on the Great Lake."
+
+"That likewise is to be the end of my journey. You go to explore?"
+
+"Explore? Faith, no," and he patted his hand upon the bench most
+merrily. "There are but two reasons to my mind important enough to
+lure a French gentleman into such a hole as this, and send him
+wandering through your backwoods,--either war or love, Monsieur; and I
+know of no war that calleth me."
+
+Love, as he thus spoke of it, was almost an unknown term to me then;
+and, in truth, I scarcely grasped the full significance of his meaning.
+
+"You seek some lady, then, at Fort Dearborn?" I asked, for his tone
+seemed to invite the inquiry.
+
+"Ay!" with quickened enthusiasm; "'tis there Toinette has hidden
+herself for this year or more,--Toinette, on my word as a French
+soldier, the fairest maid of Montreal. I have just discovered her
+whereabouts, yet I shall win her ere I traverse these trails again, or
+I am not Villiers de Croix."
+
+"I travel thither to bring back a little orphan child with me," I
+explained simply, in response to his look, "and will most gladly aid
+you where I can."
+
+Before he could answer, Hawkins, a gaunt, silent frontiersman, together
+with Sam, entered the room, bearing between them our evening meal.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+CAPTAIN WELLS OF FORT WAYNE
+
+We tarried at the table a considerable time,--not because of any
+tempting variety in the repast, as the food furnished was of the
+coarsest, but for the sake of companionship, and because we discovered
+much of passing interest to converse about. De Croix had travelled
+widely, and had seen a great variety of life both in camp and court.
+He proved a vivacious fellow, full of amusing anecdote,--a bottle of
+rich wine drawn from his own private stock so stimulating his
+imagination that I had little to do but sit and listen. Yet he
+contrived to learn from me,--how, I hardly know,--the simple story of
+my life, and, indeed, assumed a certain air of patronizing superiority,
+boasting unduly of his wider experience and achievements in a way that
+somewhat nettled me at last, as I began to comprehend that he was
+merely showing off his genteel graces the better to exhibit his
+contempt for my provincial narrowness. I did not permit this really to
+anger me, for our views upon such matters were totally different, and I
+could not help feel admiration for the brilliant and audacious fellow.
+
+The black waited upon us while we ate and drank, moving noiselessly
+across the rough floor, so keenly observant of his master's slightest
+wish as to convince me the latter possessed a temper which upon
+occasion burst its bounds. Yet now he was surely in the best of
+humors; and with the coming of our second bottle, after the remains of
+the repast had been removed, he sang several love-songs in his native
+tongue, the meaning of which I could only guess at.
+
+"Saint Guise!" he exclaimed at last, flinging one booted foot over the
+table corner. "You are a very sphinx of a fellow. You deny being
+English, yet you have all the silence of that nation. I am hungry,
+Monsieur, for the sweet sound of the French tongue."
+
+"'T is a language of which I know little," I answered, striving to
+speak pleasantly, although his manner was becoming less and less to my
+liking. "I have met with your _coureurs de bois_ in plenty, and picked
+up sufficient of their common phrases to enable me to converse on
+ordinary themes with them; yet I confess I find it difficult to follow
+your speech."
+
+"_Canaille_," he returned, in tone of undisguised contempt, "Canadian
+half-breeds, the very offscourings of our people. _Sacre_! but you
+should know us at home, Monsieur,--we are the conquerors of the world!"
+
+I wish I could picture to you how he said this. Simple as it now
+reads, he made it vital with meaning. The insolent boast was uttered
+with such a swagger that my face instantly flushed, and he noted it.
+
+"Is it not true, Monsieur?" he asked quickly, his own blood heated by
+the wine. "I tell you, the whole of Europe has trembled, and will
+again, at the nod of our Napoleon. Why, even over here we had to come
+with our legions to help you repel the redcoats. Saint Guise! but it
+was the Frenchmen who made you a nation."
+
+"Ay! but only that they might revenge themselves upon England," I
+retorted blindly, "and the force sent merely hurried a result already
+inevitable; yet we gave you a slight touch of our own quality in '98
+that stung a bit, I warrant."
+
+"Bah! a ship or two. 'Twas well for you that our army was so closely
+engaged elsewhere, or the story would have a different ending."
+
+We were both of us upon our feet by this time, glaring at each other
+across the board, our faces hot with the ill-restrained passion of
+youth. A word more from either would surely have precipitated matters;
+but before it could be spoken the door leading into the hallway was
+hurriedly flung aside, and, without apology for the intrusion, two men
+strode forward into the glare of light.
+
+"Serve supper here, Hawkins," commanded the first, his back still
+turned toward us. "Anything you may chance to have in the house,--only
+let there be little delay."
+
+He was a tall, dark-featured man, smoothly shaven, as swarthy as an
+Indian, with stern dark eyes, thick coarse hair, and an abrupt manner
+born of long command. His companion, of lighter build and younger
+face, was attired in a travel-stained uniform of blue and buff; but he
+who was evidently the leader was so completely wrapped within the folds
+of a riding-cloak as to reveal nothing of rank other than his
+unmistakable military presence and bearing. Turning from the door, he
+swept a penetrating glance over us, loosening the clasp of his cloak as
+he did so.
+
+"I regret having thoughtlessly interrupted your quarrel, gentlemen," he
+said brusquely, "but this appears to be the sole excuse for a
+public-room in the place. However, my services are at your command if
+they be desired in any way."
+
+De Croix laughed, perfectly at his ease in a moment.
+
+"'T is scarce so serious," he explained lightly. "A mere interchange
+of compliments over the respective merits of our nations in war."
+
+The stranger looked at him intently, and with some manifest disapproval.
+
+"And yours, no doubt, was France," he said shortly.
+
+De Croix bowed, his hand upon his heart.
+
+"I have worn her uniform, Monsieur."
+
+"I thought as much, and fear my sympathies may be altogether with your
+antagonist in the controversy. Yet what's the use of wasting life like
+that? Surely there is fighting enough in this world of ours for such
+young blades, without inventing cause for quarrel. Come, sit down once
+more, and join with us in whatsoever cheer our landlord may provide."
+
+As he spoke, he flung aside his cloak, revealing beneath merely the
+well-worn dress of a frontiersman, with an army sword-belt buckled
+about the waist.
+
+"Come, Walter," he called to his companion, who remained standing,
+"there is to be no touch of ceremony here to-night. Gentlemen, I am
+Captain Wells, formerly of the army, now Indian agent at Fort Wayne;
+and this is Sergeant Jordan."
+
+The Frenchman bowed gracefully, and extended a card across the table.
+The other glanced at it carelessly.
+
+"Ah! De Croix; pleased to meet you. Think I heard some of our
+officers speak of seeing you a month ago at Detroit,--McBain or Ramsey,
+I have forgotten which."
+
+"I recall a game of cards with a Lieutenant Ramsey, a rather choleric
+Scotchman, with a magnificent capacity for strong whiskey."
+
+The Captain turned inquiringly toward me, and I hastened to name myself.
+
+"Wayland, did you say?" he asked, with deepened interest. "'T is not a
+common appellation, yet I once knew a Major by that name in Wayne's
+command."
+
+"My father, sir," I asserted proudly.
+
+With quick impulsiveness he extended his hand.
+
+"As noble a soldier as I have ever known," he exclaimed heartily. "I
+served with him in two campaigns. But what are you two young fellows
+doing here? for it would be hard to conceive of a more disheartening
+place of residence. Surely, De Croix, you are not permanently located
+in this delightful spot?"
+
+"The saints forbid!" ejaculated the other, with an expression of horror
+that caused the younger officer to smile. "Yet I have already survived
+ten days of it. We seek to join some party bound westward, either to
+Fort Dearborn or beyond."
+
+The elder officer smiled gravely, as his stern eyes wandered
+thoughtfully over our faces in the candle-light.
+
+"You will scarcely find those who go beyond," he said, at last, slowly.
+"That is our extreme frontier; and even this post, I hear it rumored,
+is to be abandoned shortly. Indeed, I am now proceeding thither,
+hoping to escort a niece safely eastward because of that very
+probability. I can offer you naught save companionship and guidance
+upon the journey; yet if you needs must go, you may ride with us and
+welcome. But 't is my first duty to advise you strongly against it."
+
+"You look for trouble?" I asked, for his words and manner were grave.
+
+"I am not one easily alarmed," he answered, scanning our faces as we
+fronted him; "but I have lived long among the Indians, and know them
+well. This new war with England will not pass without atrocities along
+the border, and in my judgment we are now on the eve of a general
+uprising of the savages. It will surely come with the first news of
+British success, and 't is the fear of reverses at Dearborn that has
+hurried me westward. You, sir," and he turned toward me, "are young,
+but it is evident you have been bred to the frontier, so you will
+realize what it may mean to us if we be caught in the Illinois country
+by such an uprising."
+
+I bowed, deeply impressed by his earnestness.
+
+"I have, indeed, seen something of savage warfare, and know much of its
+horror," I replied stoutly. "Yet what you say of the possible future
+only makes more urgent my duty to press on."
+
+"And you?" he asked De Croix.
+
+"Faith, Captain," was the instant reply, "it is the gentle hand of love
+which leads me westward, and never yet did a true Frenchman hesitate in
+such a quest because danger lurked between."
+
+Wells smiled grimly.
+
+"Then my conscience is left clear," he exclaimed heartily; "and if you
+ride with me to death, 'tis of your own choosing. However, glad enough
+we have cause to be thus to gain two more fighting men. I have a party
+of Miamis travelling with me, and I doubt not there will be ample work
+for all before we return. Here comes supper; let us eat, drink, and be
+merry, even though to-morrow it be our fate to die. 'T is the best
+border philosophy."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THROUGH THE HEART OF THE FOREST
+
+We lingered long over the wine,--for that which De Croix had furnished
+proved excellent, and greatly stimulated our discourse. Yet, I must
+confess, it was drunk chiefly by the Frenchman and Jordan; for Wells
+barely touched his glass, while I had never acquired a taste for such
+liquor. De Croix waxed somewhat boastful, toward the last; but we paid
+small heed to him, for I was deeply interested in Captain Wells's
+earlier experiences among the savages, which he related gravely and
+with much detail. Jordan proved himself a reckless, roistering young
+fellow, full of high spirits when in liquor; yet I formed an impression
+that he stood well in his commander's favor, for the latter warned him
+kindly to be more abstemious.
+
+However late it may have been when we finally sought rest, we were
+early astir the next morning. I despatched Seth upon his return
+journey to the farm, bearing under his girdle as cheerful a note of
+farewell as I could frame; and then, though it was scarce later than
+sun-up, the rest of us were fairly upon the westward trail. There were
+in the party thirty Miami Indians, strong, lusty-looking warriors, most
+of them. The larger portion of them travelled in our advance, under
+command of one of their chiefs; a smaller detachment acting in similar
+manner as a rear-guard. The white men, as well as the negro, who
+controlled a pack animal heavily laden with his master's baggage, were
+on horseback; and it pleased me greatly,--for I was young and easily
+flattered,--to have Captain Wells rein in his horse at my side as soon
+as we were safely across the ford, leaving the Frenchman either to
+companion with Jordan or ride alone.
+
+I looked at De Croix curiously, as he moved forward with slow
+carelessness in our front, for he had kept the entire company waiting
+outside the house for half an hour in the gray dawn while he curled and
+powdered his hair. Doubtless this was what so disgusted Wells, whose
+long black locks were worn in a simple queue, tied somewhat negligently
+with a dark cord. I almost smiled at the scowl upon his swarthy face,
+as he contemplated the fashionably attired dandy, whose bright-colored
+raiment was conspicuous against the dark forest-leaves that walled us
+round.
+
+"I have heard it claimed these gay French beaux fight well when need
+arises," he commented at last, thoughtfully; "but 't is surely a poor
+place here for flaunting ribbons and curling locks. Possibly my fine
+gentleman yonder may have occasion to test his mettle before we ride
+back again. Sure it is that if that time ever comes he will not look
+so sweet."
+
+"You make me feel that we go forward into real peril," I said,
+wondering that he should seem so fearful of the outcome. "Have you
+special reason?"
+
+"The Miamis have already been approached by Indian runners, and their
+young men are restless. It was only because I am the adopted son of
+Big Turtle, and a recognized warrior of their tribe, that these have
+consented to accompany me; and I fear they may desert at the first sign
+of a hostile meeting," he answered gravely. "There is an Indian
+conspiracy forming, and a most dangerous one, involving, so far as I
+can learn, every tribe north of the Ohio. Now that war with England
+has actually been declared, there can no longer be doubt that the
+chiefs will take sides with the British. They have everything to gain
+and little to lose by such action. The rumor was at Fort Wayne, even
+before we left, that Mackinac had already fallen; and if that prove
+true, every post west of the Alleghanies is in danger. I fear that
+death and flame will sweep the whole frontier; and I frankly
+acknowledge, Wayland, my only hope in this expedition is that, by hard
+travel, we may be able to reach Chicagou and return again before the
+outbreak comes. Tom Burns, an old scout of Wayne's, and a settler in
+that country, was at Fort Wayne a month since with an urgent message
+from the commandant at Dearborn. I tell you frankly, it will be touch
+and go with us."
+
+"Chicagou?" I questioned, for the word was one I had heard but once
+before and was of an odd sound.
+
+"Ay! old Au Sable called it the Chicagou portage long before the fort
+named Dearborn was ever established there. 'T is the name the French
+applied to a small river entering the Great Lake from the west at that
+point."
+
+"Have you journeyed there before?"
+
+"Once, in 1803. I held Indian council on the spot, and helped lay out
+the government reservation. 'T is a strange flat country, with much
+broken land extending to the northward."
+
+Little by little our conversation lapsed into silence; for the narrow
+trail we followed was a most difficult one, and at times taxed our
+ingenuity to the utmost. It led through dense dark woods, fortunately
+free from underbrush, skirted the uncertain edges of numerous marshes
+in the soft ooze of which the hoofs of our horses sank dangerously, and
+for several miles followed the sinuous course of a small but rapid
+stream, the name of which I have forgotten. There were few openings in
+the thick forest-growth, and the matted branches overhead, interlaced
+with luxuriant wild vines, so completely shut out all vestige of the
+sun that we toiled onward, hour after hour, in continuous twilight.
+
+What mysterious signs our guides followed, I was not sufficiently
+expert in woodcraft to determine. To my eyes,--and I sought to observe
+with care,--there was nowhere visible the slightest sign that others
+had ever preceded us; it was all unbroken, virgin wilderness, marked
+only by slow centuries of growth. The accumulation of moss on the
+tree-trunks, as well as the shading of the leaves, told me that we
+continued to journey almost directly westward; and there was no
+perceptible hesitancy in our steady progress, save as we deviated from
+it here and there because of natural obstacles too formidable to be
+directly surmounted.
+
+We skirted immense trees, veritable monarchs of the ages, hoary with
+time, grim guardians of such forest solitudes; climbed long hills
+roughened by innumerable boulders with sharp edges hidden beneath the
+fallen leaves, that lamed our horses; or descended into dark and gloomy
+ravines, dank with decaying vegetation, finally halting for a brief
+meal upon the southern edge of a small lake, the water of which was as
+clear and blue as the cloudless August sky that arched it. The sand of
+the shore where we rested was white as snow, yet De Croix had his man
+spread a cloak upon it before he ventured to sit down, and with care
+tucked a lace handkerchief about his throat to prevent stray crumbs
+from soiling the delicate yellow of his waistcoat.
+
+"One might fancy this was to be your wedding day, Monsieur," observed
+Wells, sarcastically, as he marked these dainty preparations, and noted
+with disgust the attentive negro hovering near. "We are not perfumed
+courtiers dancing at the court of Versailles."
+
+De Croix glanced about him carelessly.
+
+"_Mon Dieu_, no," he said, tapping the lid of a richly chased silver
+snuff-box with his slender fingers. "Yet, my dear friend, a French
+gentleman cannot wholly forget all that belongs to the refinements of
+society, even in the heart of the wilderness. Sam, by any foul chance
+did you overlook the lavender water?"
+
+"No, sah; it am safe in de saddle-bags."
+
+"And the powder-puff, the small hand-mirror, and the curling-iron?"
+
+"I saw to ebery one ob dem, sah."
+
+De Croix gave a deep sigh of relief, and rested back upon the cloak,
+negligently crossing his legs.
+
+"Captain," he remarked slowly and thoughtfully, "you 've no idea the
+trouble that negro is to me. Would you believe it? he actually left my
+nail-brush behind at Detroit, and not another to be had for love or
+money this side of Montreal! And only last night he mislaid a box of
+rouge, and, by Saint Denis! I hardly dare hope there is so much as an
+ounce of it in the whole party."
+
+"I rather suspect not," was the somewhat crusty reply; "yet if a bit of
+bear's grease could be made to serve your turn, we might possibly find
+some among us."
+
+"I know not its virtue," admitted the Frenchman gravely; "yet if it
+reddens the lips it might be useful. But that which I had came from
+the shop of Jessold in Paris, and is beyond all price."
+
+We were ten days upon this forest journey, from the time of our
+crossing the Maumee; and they were hard days, even to those of us long
+habituated to the hardships of border travel. Indeed, I know few forms
+of exertion that so thoroughly test the mettle of men as journeying
+across the wilderness. There are no artificial surroundings, either to
+inspire or restrain; and insensibly humanity returns to natural
+conditions, permitting the underlying savage to gain ascendency. I
+have seen more than one seemingly polished gentleman, resplendent with
+all the graces of the social code, degenerate into a surly brute with
+only a few hours of such isolation and the ceaseless irritation of the
+trail. Yet I must acknowledge that De Croix accepted it all without a
+murmur, and as became a man. His entire plaint was over the luxuries
+he must forego, and he made far more ado about a bit of dust soiling
+his white linen than about any real hardship of the march. 'T is my
+memory that he rather grew upon us; for his natural spirits were so
+high that he sang where others swore, and found cause for amusement and
+laughter in much that tested sorely even the Indian-like patience of
+Wells. He was like a boy, this gayly perfumed dandy of the French
+court; but beneath his laces and ribbons, his affectations and
+conceits, there hid a stout heart that bade him smile where other men
+would lie down and die. He companioned mostly with Jordan as we
+journeyed, for Wells never could become reconciled to his mincing ways;
+yet I confess now that I began to value him greatly, and longed more
+than once to join with the two who rode in our advance, cheering their
+wearisome way with quips of fancy and snatches of song. He knew it
+too, the tantalizing rascal, and would frequently send back a biting
+squib over his shoulder, hoping thus to draw me away from the silent
+grim-faced soldier beside whom I held place.
+
+It was truly a rough and wild journey, full enough of hardship, and
+without adventure to give zest to the ceaseless toil. I know now that
+we made a wide detour to the southward, trusting thus to avoid any
+possible contact with prowling bands of either Pottawattomies or
+Wyandots, whom our friendly Miamis seemed greatly to dread. This took
+us far from the regular trail, rough and ill-defined as that was, and
+plunged us into ah untrodden wilderness; so that there were times when
+we fairly had to cut our way through the twisted forest branches and
+tangled brakes of cane with tomahawks and hunting-knives. We skirted
+rocky bluffs, toiled painfully over fallen timber, or waded ankle deep
+in softened clay, in the black gloomy shadows of dense woods which
+seemed interminable, meeting with nothing human, yet constantly
+startling wild game from the hidden coverts, and feeling more and more,
+as we advanced, the loneliness and danger of our situation,--realizing
+that each league we travelled only added to the length and peril of our
+retreat if ever disaster came or Fort Dearborn were found deserted.
+
+Captain Wells, naturally grave and silent from his long training among
+savages, grew more and more reticent and watchful as we progressed,
+riding often at my side for hours without uttering a word, his keen
+eyes warily searching the dark openings upon every hand as if
+suspecting that each spot of gloom might prove the chosen place for an
+ambuscade. Our Indian allies moved like shadows, gliding over the
+ground noiselessly; and the occasional outbursts of merriment from De
+Croix and his equally reckless companion grew gradually less frequent,
+and appeared more forced. The constant and never-ending toil of our
+progress, the depressing gloom of the sombre primeval forest on every
+side of us, the knowledge of possible peril lurking in each league of
+this haunted silence, weighed upon us all, and at last closed the lips
+of even the most jovial of our number.
+
+It was the tenth day, as I remember,--though it may have been later,
+for I have no writing to guide me concerning dates,--when we emerged
+into a broad valley, treeless save for a thin fringe of dwarfed growth
+skirting the bank of a shallow stream which ran almost directly
+westward. I cannot describe how sweet, after our gloomy journey, the
+sunlight appeared, as we first marked it play in golden waves over the
+long grass; or the relief we felt at being able to gaze ahead once more
+and see something of the country that we were traversing. 'Twas like a
+sudden release from prison. Our jaded horses felt with us the
+exhilaration of the change, and moved with greater sprightliness than
+they had shown for days. As the sun began its circle downward, vast
+rolling hills of white and yellow sand arose upon the right of our line
+of march,--huge mounds, many of them, glistening in the sunshine, some
+jagged at the summit, others rounded as if by art, so unusual in form
+and presence that I ventured to address our leader regarding them, as
+he rode with his head bent low and a far-off look in his eyes.
+
+"The sand?" he questioned, glancing up as if startled at the sound of
+my voice. "Why, it has been cast there by the stormy waves of the
+Great Lake, my lad, and beaten into those strange and fantastic shapes
+by the action of the wind. Doubtless 'tis the work of centuries of
+storms."
+
+"Are we, then, so close to the lake?" I asked eagerly,--for I had never
+yet seen so large a body of water, and his description fired my
+imagination.
+
+"'T is but just beyond those dunes yonder, and will be still nearer
+when we come to camp. Possibly you might reach the shore before dark
+if you exercise care,--for there is danger of becoming lost in that
+sand desert. Those hills seem all alike when once you are among them."
+
+"What is it that so greatly disturbs your Miamis?" I ventured to ask,
+for I had been noticing for some time that they were restless and
+travelling poorly. "They have been counselling now for two hours."
+
+He glanced aside at me in apparent surprise.
+
+"Why, boy, I thought you were bred to the border; and can you ask me
+such a question? Do you observe nothing, like that fine gentleman
+yonder? What have we been following since first we entered this
+valley?"
+
+"An old Indian trail."
+
+"True," he exclaimed, "and one that has been traversed by a large
+war-party, bound west, within twelve hours."
+
+"How know you this?"
+
+"By a hundred signs far plainer than print will ever be to my eyes. In
+faith, I thought those fellows out yonder would have summoned me to
+council long ere this, instead of threshing it out among themselves.
+They are bolder warriors than I deemed, though they will doubtless
+revolt in earnest when we camp. We shall have to guard them well
+to-night."
+
+As he paused, his eyes fixed anxiously upon our Indian allies, De Croix
+began to hum a popular tune of the day, riding meanwhile, hat in hand,
+with one foot out of the stirrup to beat the time. Then Jordan caught
+up the refrain, and sang a verse. I saw one or two of the older
+Indians glance around at him in grave displeasure.
+
+"The young fools!" muttered Wells, uneasily. "I shall enjoy seeing if
+that French popinjay keeps all of his fine airs when the hour for stern
+work comes."
+
+He lifted his voice.
+
+"Jordan!"
+
+The young soldier instantly ceased his song, and turned in his saddle
+to glance back.
+
+"The time has come when I must insist on less noise, and more decorum
+upon the march," Wells said sternly. "This is not Fort Wayne, nor is
+our road devoid of danger. Captain de Croix, I shall have to request
+you also to cease your singing for the present."
+
+There was that in his voice and manner which forbade remark, and we
+rode on silently. I asked:
+
+"But you have not explained to me how you learned all this of which you
+spoke?"
+
+"By the use of my eyes, of course. It is all simple; there are marks
+beside the beaten trail, as well as in its track, which prove clearly
+the party ahead of us to be moving westward, that it travelled rapidly,
+and was certainly not less than a hundred strong, with ponies and
+lodge-poles. Not more than a league back we passed the evidences of a
+camp that had not been deserted longer than twelve hours; and when we
+crossed the river, a feather from a war-bonnet was lying in the grass.
+These are small details, yet they tell the story. That feather, for
+instance, was dropped from a Pottawattomie head-dress, and no doubt
+there are warriors among those Indians yonder who could name the chief
+who wore it. It simply means, my lad, that the savages are gathering
+in toward Dearborn, and we may reach there all too late."
+
+"Is the way yet long?" and my eyes sought the horizon, where the sun
+hung like a red ball of fire.
+
+"We should be there by the morrow," he answered, "for we are now
+rounding the head of the Great Lake. I wish to God I might see what
+fate awaits us there."
+
+Young and thoughtless as I was in those days, I could not fail to
+realize the depth of feeling which swayed this stern, experienced man;
+and I rode on beside him, questioning no more.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+FROM THE JAWS OF DEATH
+
+I think it must be in the blood of all of New England birth to love the
+sea. They may never have seen it, nor even heard its wild, stern
+music; yet the fascination of great waters is part of their heritage.
+The thought of that vast inland ocean, of the magnitude and sublimity
+of which I had only the vaguest conception, haunted me all that
+afternoon; and I scarcely removed my eyes from those oddly constructed
+mounds of drifted sand, striving vainly to gain, through some
+depression between them, a fleeting glimpse of the restless waters that
+had helped to shape them into such fantastic forms.
+
+As the sun sank, angry red in our faces, presaging a storm, the course
+of the little stream we had been following drew in closer toward these
+grotesque piles, and the trail we followed became narrower, with the
+sluggish current pressing upon one side and that odd bank of gleaming
+sand upon the other. In a little open space, where quite a carpet of
+coarse yellowish grass had found lodgment, beneath the protecting
+shadow of a knot of cottonwoods, we finally made camp, and proceeded to
+prepare our evening meal. Determined to strike north through those
+guarding sand-dunes, and reach the shore of the lake if possible before
+final darkness fell, I hastily crowded my pockets with food, and looked
+eagerly around for some congenial companion. Captain Wells, whom I
+should have preferred to be with me, was deep in conference with one of
+the Miami chiefs, and not to be disturbed; Jordan had seemingly been
+detailed to the command of the night-guard; so, as a last resort, I
+turned aside and sought De Croix. I found him seated cross-legged on a
+blanket beneath one of the cottonwoods, a silver-backed mirror propped
+against a tree-butt in his front, while the obsequious darkey was
+deliberately combing out his long hair and fashioning it anew. The
+Frenchman glanced up at me with a welcoming smile of rare good-humor.
+
+"Ah, sober-face! and have you at last mustered courage to break away
+from the commander of this most notable company?" he cried mockingly.
+"'T is passing strange he does not chain you to his saddle! By Saint
+Guise! 'twould indeed be the only way in which so dull a cavalier would
+ever hold me loyal to his whims. Friend Wayland, I scarce thought you
+would ever thus honor me again; and yet, 't is true, I have had an
+ambition within my heart ever since we first met. 'T is to cause you
+to fling aside those rough habiliments of the wilderness, and attire
+yourself in garments more becoming civilized man. Would that I might
+induce you, even now, to permit Sam to rearrange those heavy blond
+locks _a la Pompadour_. Bless me! but it would make a new man of you."
+
+"Such is not at all my desire, Monsieur," I answered, civilly. "I came
+now merely to learn if you would walk with me through these dunes of
+sand before the daylight fades."
+
+He looked out, idly enough, across that dreary expanse of desolation,
+and shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Use the other powder, Sam, the lighter colored," he murmured
+languidly, as if the sight had wearied him; "and mind you drop not so
+much as a pinch upon the waistcoat."
+
+Then he lifted his eyes inquiringly to mine.
+
+"For what?" he asked.
+
+"To look forth upon the Great Lake. Captain Wells tells me 't is but a
+brief and safe walk from here to the shore-line."
+
+"The lake?--water?" and the expression upon his face made me smile.
+"_Mon Dieu_, man! have you become crazed by the hard march? What have
+I ever said in our brief intercourse that could cause you to conceive I
+care greatly for that? If it were only wine, now!"
+
+"You have no desire to go with me, then?"
+
+"Lay out the red tie, Sam; no, the one with the white spots in it, and
+the small curling-iron. No, Monsieur; what you ask is impossible. I
+travel to the west for higher purpose than to gaze upon a heaving waste
+of water. _Sacre_! did I not have a full hundred days of such pleasure
+when first I left France? My poor stomach has not fairly settled yet
+from its fierce churning. Know ye not, Master Wayland, that we hope to
+be at this Fort Dearborn upon the morrow, and 't is there I meet again
+the fair Toinette? Saints! but I must look my best at such a time, not
+worn and haggard from tramping through the sand. She was ever a most
+critical maid in such matters, and has not likely changed. 'T is
+curled too high upon the right brow, you black imp! and, as I live,
+there is one hair you have missed entirely."
+
+Realizing the uselessness of waiting longer, I turned my back upon his
+vanity, and strode off alone. It is not my nature to swerve from a
+purpose merely because others differ in desires; and I was now
+determined to carry out my plan. I took one of the narrow depressions
+between two mounds of sand and plunged resolutely forward, endeavoring
+to shape my course as directly northward as the peculiarities of the
+path would admit. To my mind, there was little to fear from the
+hostile Indians, as every sign proved them to be hastening westward in
+advance of us; while I was too long accustomed to adventure to be
+easily confused, even in the midst of that lonely desolation.
+
+I soon found the walking difficult; for I sank to the ankles with each
+step, while the soft sliding sand rolled beneath me so as to yield no
+solid foothold. The irregularity of the mounds continually blocked my
+passage, and caused me to deviate in direction, so that I grew somewhat
+bewildered, the entire surface bearing such uniformity of outline as to
+afford little guide. Yet I held to my original course fairly well, for
+I could pilot somewhat by the dim north star; and it was not long
+before my alert ears caught the pounding of surf along the shore-line.
+Much encouraged, I pressed forward with greater rapidity, ignoring the
+lanes between the dunes, and clambering over the mounds themselves in
+my eagerness to reach the lake before the complete closing down of
+night.
+
+At last I topped a particularly high ridge that felt solid to the feet;
+and as I did so the wind came, hard and biting, against my face.
+There, just below me, not fifty feet away, were rolling the great
+waves, white-capped and roaring, pounding like vast sledges upon the
+anvil of the sand. My entire being thrilled at the majestic sight, and
+for the moment I forgot everything as I gazed away across those
+restless, heaving waters, seemingly without limit, stretching forth
+into the dim northward as far as the eye could reach, until water and
+sky imperceptibly met and blended. Each advancing wave, racing toward
+the beach, was a white-lipped messenger of mystery; and the vast
+tumultuous sea, rolling in toward me out of that dark unknown, with its
+deep voice of thunder and high-bursting spray, breathed the sublimest
+lessons of the Infinite to my soul. It awed, impressed, silenced with
+the sense of its solemn power. No dream of ocean grandeur had ever
+approached the reality now outspread before me, as this vast inland sea
+tossed and quivered to the lashing of the storm-wind that swept its
+surface into fury.
+
+To the left and right of where I stood motionless, curved the
+shore-line, a seemingly endless succession of white shining sand-hills,
+with the sloping shingle up which the huge breakers tossed and rolled
+in continuous thunder and foam, rising, breaking, receding, chasing
+each other in gigantic play. How savagely strong it all looked! what
+uncontrollable majesty lived in every line of the scene! The very
+suggestion of tremendous power in it was, to my imagination,
+immeasurably increased by its unutterable loneliness, its seemingly
+total absence of life; for not a fin rose above the surface, not a wing
+brushed the air overhead. The sun, sinking slowly behind the rim of
+sand, shot one golden-red ray far out into that tumbling waste, forming
+a slender bridge of ever-changing light that seemed to rest suspended
+upon the breaking crests of the waves it spanned. Then, gradually,
+stealthily, silently, the denser curtain of the twilight drew closer
+and closer, and my vista narrowed, as the shadows swept toward me like
+black-robed ghosts.
+
+I turned about reluctantly, to retrace my steps while the dim light yet
+lingered. Some unseen angel of mercy it must have been that bade me
+pause, and led me gently down the steep bank to the waters edge, where
+the sharp spray lashed my cheeks. If this be not the cause, then I
+know not why I went; or why, once being there, I should have turned to
+the right, and rounded the edge of the little bay. Yet all of this I
+did; and God knows that many a time since I have thanked Him for it
+upon my knees.
+
+I saw first the thing bobbing up and down behind a bare wave-washed
+rock that lifted a hoary crown close beside the water's edge. A branch
+from off some tree, I thought, until I had taken a half-dozen curious
+steps nearer, and felt my heart bound as I knew it to be a boat. My
+first thought, of course, was of hostile Indians; and I swept the
+sand-hills anxiously for any other sign of human presence. The world
+about me was soundless except for the ceaseless roaring of the waves,
+and there was not even a leaf within my sight to flutter. I crept
+forward cautiously, seeing no footprints on the smooth sand, until my
+searching eyes rested upon a white hand, dangling, as if lifeless, over
+the boat's gunwale. Forgetting everything else in the excitement of
+this discovery, I sprang hastily forward and peered within the boat.
+
+It was an awkward and rudely-formed water-craft, with neither mast nor
+oars, yet of fair size, broad-beamed and seaworthy. In the forward
+part lay the body of a woman; curled up and resting upon the boat's
+bottom, the head buried upon the broad seat so that no face was
+visible, with one hand hidden beneath, the other outstretched above the
+rail. So huddled was her posture that I could distinguish few details
+in the fading light; yet I noted that she wore a white upper garment,
+and that her thick hair flowed in a dense black mass about her
+shoulders.
+
+For a moment I stood there helpless, believing I gazed upon death. She
+either moved slightly, or the waves rocked the boat so as to somewhat
+disturb her posture. That semblance of life sent my blood leaping once
+more within my veins, and I leaned over and touched her cautiously.
+
+"Oh, go away! Please go away!" she cried, not loudly, but with a
+stress of utterance that caused me to start back half in terror. "I am
+not afraid of you, but either take my soul or go away and leave me."
+
+"For whom do you mistake me?" I asked, my hand closing now over hers.
+
+"For another devil come out of the black night to torture me afresh!"
+she answered, never once moving even to my touch. "Ah, what legions
+there must be to send forth so many after the soul of one poor girl!
+'T is not that I shrink from the end. Death! why, have I not died a
+hundred deaths already? Yet do I trust the Christ and Mother Mary.
+But why does the angel of their mercy hold back from me so long?"
+
+Was she crazed, driven mad by some extremity of suffering at which I
+could only guess? That oarless boat, beached amid the desolation of
+sand and the waste of water, alone told a story to make the heart sick.
+I hesitated, not knowing what I had best say. She lifted her head
+slowly, and gazed at me. I caught one glimpse of a pale young face
+framed in masses of black dishevelled hair, and saw large dark eyes
+that seemed to glow with a strange fire.
+
+"You,--you cannot be a devil also," she said, stammeringly. "You do
+not look like those others,--are you a man?"
+
+I bowed in silence, astounded by her words and appearance.
+
+"Yet you are not of the garrison,--not of Dearborn. I have never seen
+your face before. Yet you are surely a man, and white. Holy Mother!
+can it indeed be that you have come to save me?"
+
+"I am here to serve you by every means in my power," I answered
+soberly, for the wildness of her speech almost frightened me. "God, I
+truly think, must have led me to you."
+
+Her wonderful eyes, questioning, anxious, doubtful, never once left my
+face.
+
+"Who are you? How came you here?"
+
+"I am named John Wayland," I replied, striving to speak as simply as
+might be, so that she would comprehend, "and form one of a small party
+travelling overland from the east toward the Fort. We are encamped
+yonder at the edge of the sand. I left the camp an hour ago, and
+wandered hither that I might look out upon the waters of the Great
+Lake; and here, through the strange providence of God, I have found
+you."
+
+She glanced apprehensively backward over her shoulder across the
+darkened waters, and her slight form shook.
+
+"Oh, please, take me away from it!" she cried, a note of undisguised
+terror in her voice, and her hands held out toward me in a pitiful
+gesture of appeal. "Oh, that horrible, cruel water! I have loved it
+in the past, but now I hate it; how horribly it has tortured me! Take
+me away, I beg,--anywhere, so that I can neither see nor hear it any
+more. It has neither heart nor soul." And she hid her face behind the
+streaming hair.
+
+"You will trust me, then?" I asked, for I had little knowledge of
+women. "You will go with me?"
+
+She flung the clinging locks back from her eyes, with an odd, imperious
+gesture which I thought most becoming, holding them in place with one
+hand, while extending the other frankly toward me.
+
+"Go with you? Yes," she replied, unhesitatingly. "I have known many
+men such as you are, men of the border, and have always felt free to
+trust them; they are far more true to helpless womanhood than many a
+perfumed cavalier. You have a face that speaks of honor and manliness.
+Yes, I will go with you gladly."
+
+I was deeply impressed by her sudden calmness, her rapid repression of
+that strange wildness of demeanor that had at first so marked her words
+and manner. As I partially lifted her from the boat to the sand, she
+staggered heavily, and would have fallen had I not instantly caught her
+to me. For a single moment her dark eyes looked up confidingly into
+mine, as she rested panting against my shoulder, and I could feel her
+slender form tremble within my arms.
+
+"You are ill--faint?" I questioned anxiously.
+
+She drew back from me with all gentleness, and did not venture again to
+attempt standing entirely without support.
+
+"I am ashamed so to exhibit my weakness," she murmured. "I fear I am
+greatly in need of food. What day is this?"
+
+"The twelfth of August."
+
+"And it was the night of the tenth when I drifted out of the mouth of
+the river. Ever since then I have been drifting, the sport of the
+winds and waves."
+
+"Sit you down here, then," I commanded, now fully awakened to her
+immediate need. "The sand is yet warm from the sun, and I have food
+with me in my pockets."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+A CIRCLE IN THE SAND
+
+I have since thought it almost providential that my food supply was so
+limited; for, after first asking me if I had eaten all I required, she
+fell upon it like a famished thing, and did not desist until all was
+gone. A threatening bank of dark cloud was creeping slowly up the
+northern sky as we were resting, but directly overhead the stars were
+shining brilliantly, yielding me sufficient light for the study of her
+face. She was certainly less than my own age by two or three years, a
+girl barely rounding into the slender beauty of her earliest womanhood,
+with hints of both in face and form. She was simply dressed, as,
+indeed, might naturally be expected in a wilderness far removed from
+marts of trade; but her clothing was of excellent texture, and became
+her well in spite of its recent exposure, while a bit of rather
+expensive lace at the throat and a flutter of gay ribbons about the
+wrists told plainly that she did not disdain the usual adornments of
+her sex. And this was quickly shown in another way. She had not yet
+completed her frugal meal when her mind reverted to her personal
+appearance, and she paused, with heightened color, to draw back her
+loosened hair and fasten it in place with a knot of scarlet cord. It
+was surely a winsome face that smiled up at me then.
+
+"I feel almost guilty of robbery," she said, "in taking all this food,
+which was no doubt intended for your own supper."
+
+"Merely what chanced to be left of it," I answered heartily. "Had I so
+much as dreamed this stretch of sand was to yield me such
+companionship, I should have stinted myself more."
+
+An expression of bewildered surprise crept into her eyes as I spoke.
+
+"Surely you are not a mere _coureur de bois_, as I supposed from your
+dress," she exclaimed. "Your expression is that of an educated
+gentleman."
+
+I smiled; for I was young enough to feel the force of her unconscious
+flattery.
+
+"I believe I can prove descent from an old and honorable race," I said;
+"but it has been my fortune to be reared in the backwoods, and whatever
+education has come to me I owe to the love and skill of my mother."
+
+My frankness pleased her, and she made no attempt to disguise her
+interest.
+
+"I am so glad you told me," she said simply. "My mother died when I
+was only ten, yet her memory has always been an inspiration. Are you a
+Protestant?"
+
+This unexpected question took me by surprise; yet I answered
+unhesitatingly, "Yes."
+
+"I was educated at the Ursuline Convent in Montreal. It was my
+mother's dearest wish that I should take the vows of that order, but I
+fear I am far too frivolous for so serious a life. I love happy things
+too well, and the beautiful outside world of men and women. I ran away
+from the Sisters, and then my father and I voyaged to this country,
+where we might lead a freer life together."
+
+"Here?" and I glanced questioningly about me into those darkening
+shadows which were momentarily hemming us in more closely.
+
+"To Fort Dearborn," she explained. "We came by boat through the
+straits at the north; and 'twas a trip to remember. My father brought
+out goods from Canada, and traded with the Indians. I have been in
+their villages. Once I was a week alone with a tribe of Sacs near
+Green Bay, and they called me the White Queen. I have met many famous
+warriors of the Wyandots and Pottawattomies, and have seen them dance
+at their council. Once I journeyed as far west as the Great River,
+across leagues and leagues of prairie," and her face lighted up at the
+remembrance. "Father said he thought I must be the first white woman
+who had ever travelled so far inland. We have been at Dearborn for
+nearly a year."
+
+She rose to her feet, and swept her eyes, with some anxiety, around
+upon dim mounds of sand that appeared more fantastic than ever in the
+darkness.
+
+"Had we not better be going?" she asked. "There is surely a storm
+gathering yonder."
+
+"Yes," I answered, for I had not been indifferent to the clouds
+steadily banking up in the north. "Yet you have not told me your name,
+and I should be most glad to know it."
+
+The girl courtesied mockingly, as though half inclined to laugh at my
+insistence.
+
+"What is a name?" she exclaimed. "'Tis not that for which we greatly
+care. Now I--I am simply Mademoiselle Antoinette,--at least, so most
+of those I care for call me; and from now on, the very good friend of
+Master John Wayland."
+
+I was deeply conscious that I blushed at her words and manner; but with
+it there arose an instant query in my mind: could this be the fair
+Toinette whom De Croix sought so ardently? I greatly feared it; yet I
+resolved I would not mention his name to her.
+
+"It has a decided French sound," I stammered.
+
+She laughed at my tone, with a quick shrug of her shoulders.
+
+"And pray, why not, Monsieur? Have you such a prejudice against that
+great people that you need speak of them with so glum a voice? Ah, but
+if I must, then I shall endeavor to teach you a higher regard for us."
+
+"That may not prove so hard a task," I hastened to assure her; "though
+I was surprised,--you speak English with so pure an accent that I had
+not dreamed you other than of my own race."
+
+"My father was of English blood," she answered more gravely; "but I
+fear you will find me quite of my mother's people, if ever we come to
+know each other well. But hark! that was surely thunder! We have
+loitered too long; the storm is about to break."
+
+It was indeed upon us almost before she ceased speaking. A sudden rush
+of wind sent my hat flying into the darkness, and whipped her long
+black hair loose from its restraining knot. I had barely time to wrap
+my hunting-jacket closely around her shoulders, when the rain came
+dashing against our faces.
+
+I drew her unresistingly around the edge of the nearest sand-pile; but
+this supplied poor protection against the storm, the wind lashing the
+fine grit into our faces, stinging us like bits of fire. I tried to
+excavate some sort of cave that might afford us at least a partial
+shelter; but the sand slid down almost as rapidly as I could dig it out
+with my hands.
+
+"Oh, let us press on!" she urged, laying her hand upon my arm, in
+entreaty. "We shall become no wetter moving, and your camp, you said,
+was only a short distance away."
+
+"But are you strong enough to walk?" And as I leaned forward toward
+her, a quick flash of vivid lightning, directly overhead, lit both our
+faces. I marked she did not shrink, and no look of fear came into her
+eyes.
+
+"I am quite myself once more," she answered confidently. "It was
+despair and loneliness that so disheartened me. I have never been
+timid physically, and your presence has brought back the courage I
+needed."
+
+There was a natural frankness, a peculiar confidence, about this girl,
+that robbed me of my usual diffidence; and as we struggled forward
+through the dampening sand, her dress clinging about her and retarding
+progress, I dared to slip one arm about her waist to help in bearing
+her along. She accepted this timely aid in the spirit with which it
+was offered, without so much as a word of protest; and the wind,
+battering at our backs, pushed us forward.
+
+"Oh, that troublesome hair!" she exclaimed, as the long tresses whipped
+in front of our faces, blinding us both. "I have never before felt so
+much like sacrificing it."
+
+"I beg that you will not consider such an act now," I protested, aiding
+her to reclaim the truants, "for as I saw it before the darkness fell,
+your hair was surely worthy of preservation."
+
+"You laugh at me; I know I must have been a far from pretty sight."
+
+"Do you wish me to say with frankness what I thought of your appearance
+under such disadvantages?"
+
+She glanced at me almost archly, in the flash of lightning that rent
+the sky.
+
+"I am really afraid to answer yes,--yet perhaps I am brave enough to
+venture it."
+
+"I have never been at court, Mademoiselle, and so you may not consider
+my judgment in such matters of much moment; but I thought you rarely
+beautiful."
+
+For a moment she did not attempt to speak, but I could distinctly feel
+the heaving of her bosom as I held her hard against the assault of the
+wind, and bent low hoping to catch an answer.
+
+"You are sincere and honest," she said at last, slowly, and I felt that
+the faint trace of mockery had utterly vanished from her soft voice.
+"'T is manifest in your face and words. You speak not lightly, nor
+with mere empty compliment, as would some gilded courtiers I have
+known; and for that reason I do value your opinion."
+
+"You are not angry at my presumption?"
+
+"Angry?--I?" and she stopped and faced me, holding back her hair as she
+did so. "I am a woman, Monsieur; and all women, even those of us
+hidden here in the wilderness, like best those who admire them. I do
+not know that I am as beautiful as you say, yet other men have often
+said the same without being pressed for their opinion. No, I am not
+angry,--I am even glad to know you think so."
+
+"And you surely do know?" I insisted, with a courage strange to me.
+
+"Yes," she answered, but her eyes fell before my eagerness; "you are
+not one who has yet learned to lie, even to women. 'T is a relief to
+know there are such men still in the world."
+
+We had come to a full halt by this time.
+
+"Do you have any idea where we may be?" she asked, peering anxiously
+about, and perhaps glad to change the tone of our conversation. "I
+cannot note a landmark of any kind. These sand-hills seem all alike."
+
+"I believe we have kept to the southward, for we have merely drifted
+with the storm; but I confess my sole guidance has been the direction
+of the wind, as these sand-lanes are most confusing. If there were the
+slightest shelter at hand, I should insist upon your waiting until the
+rain was over."
+
+"No, it is better to go on. I am now wet to the skin, and shall be
+warmer moving than resting on this damp sand."
+
+We must have been moving for an hour, scarcely speaking a word, for the
+severe exertion required all our breath. The rain had ceased, and
+stars began to glimmer amid the cloud-rifts overhead; but I knew now
+that we were lost. She stopped suddenly, and sank down upon the sand.
+
+"I am exhausted," she admitted, "and believe we are merely moving about
+in a circle."
+
+"Yes," I said, reluctantly; "we are wasting our strength to no purpose.
+'T will be better to wait for daylight here."
+
+It was a gloomy place, and the silence of those vast expanses of
+desolate sand was overwhelming. It oppressed me strangely.
+
+"Let me feel the touch of your hand," she said once. "It is so
+desperately lonely. I have been on the wide prairie, at night and
+alone; yet there is always some sound there upon which the mind may
+rest. Here the stillness is like a weight."
+
+Possibly I felt this depressing influence the more because of my long
+forest training, where at least the moaning of limbs, fluttering of
+leaves, or flitting of birds brings relief to the expectant senses;
+while here all was absolute solitude, so profound that our breathing
+itself was startling. The air above appeared empty and void; the earth
+beneath, lifeless and dead. Although neither of us was cowardly of
+heart, yet we instinctively drew closer together, and our eyes strained
+anxiously over the black sand-ridges, now barely discernible through
+the dense gloom. We tried to talk, but even that soon grew to be a
+struggle, so heavily did the suspense rest upon our spirits, so
+oppressed were we by imaginings of evil. I remember telling her my
+simple story, gaining in return brief glimpses of her experiences in
+Canada and the farther West. She even informed me that orders had been
+received, the day before she became lost upon the lake, to abandon Fort
+Dearborn; that an Indian runner--whom she named Winnemeg--had arrived
+from General Hull at Detroit, bringing also news that Mackinac had
+fallen.
+
+"Doubtless your absence has greatly worried them also," I said.
+
+"Oh, no; none of them knew my plight. Possibly some may miss me, but
+they will naturally suppose I have been at Mr. Kinzie's house all this
+time. I have been there often for weeks together, and they have
+frequently urged me to take shelter with them. You see it is far safer
+there than at the Fort, for even the most hostile Indians remain on
+friendly terms with Mr. Kinzie and his family. He has been there so
+many years, and is so just a man in his dealings with them. 'T is
+really strange to see how he leaves his house unguarded, while the
+garrison at the Fort is almost in a state of siege. It makes it hard
+to realize how imminent is the danger. Yet they are terribly alarmed
+at the Fort, and I fear with cause. Even Mr. Kinzie feels the
+situation to be critical. There were fully three hundred Pottawattomie
+warriors encamped without the Fort two days ago; and they were becoming
+bold and impudent,--one chief even firing his gun in Captain Heald's
+office, thinking to frighten him into furnishing them with liquor."
+
+"But the Fort is strong?" I asked. "It is capable of resisting an
+attack?"
+
+"I should suppose so," she answered, hesitatingly; "but that is not a
+matter upon which a girl may judge. I fear, however, all is not
+harmony among its defenders. I know that Captain Heald and Ensign
+Ronan do not agree, and I have heard bitter words spoken by other
+officers of the garrison."
+
+I thought she did not care to speak more about this matter, and we
+drifted off upon other topics, until I felt her head sink slowly down
+upon my shoulder, and knew she slept. I sat there still, pillowing her
+tenderly upon my arm, when the gray light of the dawn stole slowly
+toward us across the ridges of sand and revealed the upturned face.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+TWO MEN AND A MAID
+
+The emotion I felt was new and strange to me; for though I had known
+little of young women, yet as I looked upon her in that dim light of
+dawn I found myself wondering if I already loved this strange girl.
+Fair as her face certainly was, its beauty rendered even more striking
+by the pallor of her late exposure and the blackness of her dishevelled
+hair, it was her frankness and confidence which most appealed to me.
+She had held all my thoughts through the long hours of watchfulness as
+I sat there quietly, feeling the rise and fall of her regular
+breathing, and thrilled by the unconscious caress of stray tresses as
+they were blown against my cheek. How she trusted me, stranger though
+I was! Yet it was through no lack of knowledge of the great world of
+men, for this young girl had known court gallants and rough soldiery,
+soft-spoken courtiers and boastful men-at-arms. So the night through I
+dreamed of what might be; and when the light finally came slowly
+reddening the eastern sky, I feasted my eyes unchecked upon that sweet
+upturned face, and made a rash vow that I would win her heart.
+
+I was still mirroring her image in my memory, forgetful of all
+else,--the broad white brow, the long dark lashes resting in such
+delicate tracery against the smooth velvet of the cheek now slightly
+flushed, the witching pink of the ear, the softly parted lips between
+which gleamed the small and regular teeth of ivory, the round white
+throat swelling ever so slightly to her breathing,--when a sudden shout
+of surprised recognition aroused me from my reverie, and I looked up to
+see Jordan topping the sand-bank in our front, and waving his hand to
+some one beneath him and out of sight.
+
+"See here, De Croix!" he cried, excitedly, "the prodigal has had good
+cause to lag behind. He has found the lost fairy of this wilderness."
+
+Before I could relieve myself of my burden,--for the mockery of his
+words angered me,--the Frenchman appeared at his side, and glanced down
+where his companion's finger pointed. For a moment he gazed; then he
+murmured a sharp French oath, and strode heavily down the sand-bank.
+There was a look in his face that caused me to lay the girl's head back
+upon the sand and rise hastily. The sudden movement awoke her, and her
+dark eyes looked up in startled confusion. By this time I had taken a
+quick step forward, and faced De Croix.
+
+"This lady is under my protection," I said, a bit hotly, not relishing
+the manner of his approach, "and any disrespect from either of you will
+be unwarranted."
+
+He paused, evidently surprised at my bold front, and his lip curled
+contemptuously.
+
+"Ah, my young game-cock!" he ejaculated, surveying me curiously. "So
+you have spurs, and think you can use them? Well, I have no quarrel
+with you, but perchance I may have more reason to be the protector of
+this young lady than you suppose. Stand aside, Monsieur."
+
+She had risen from the sand, and now stood erect beside me. I saw
+Jordan grinning in great enjoyment of the scene, and that De Croix's
+eyes were full of anger; but I would not stir. In my heart I felt a
+dull pain at his words, a fear that they might prove too true; but I
+remained where I was, determined to take no step aside until she
+herself should judge between us.
+
+"Will you stand back, Monsieur?" he said, haughtily, dropping his hand
+upon the hilt of his rapier, "or shall I show you how a gentleman of
+France deals with such impertinence?"
+
+If he thought to affright me with his bravado, he reckoned ill of my
+nature, for I have ever driven badly; my blood seems slow to heat,
+though it was warm enough now.
+
+"If the lady wishes it, you may pass," I answered shortly, my eyes
+never leaving his face. "Otherwise, if you take so much as another
+step I will crush every bone in your body."
+
+He saw I meant it, but there was no cowardice in him; and the steel had
+already flashed in the sunlight to make good his threat, when she
+touched me gently upon the shoulder.
+
+"I beg you do not fight," she urged. "I am not worthy, and 't is all
+unneeded. Captain de Croix," and she swept him a curtsey which had the
+grace of a drawing-room in it, "'t is indeed most strange that we
+should meet again in such a spot as this. No contrast could be greater
+than the memory of our last parting. Yet is there any cause for
+quarrel because this young gentleman has preserved my life?"
+
+De Croix hesitated, standing half-poised for attack, even his glib
+tongue and ready wit failing as she thus calmly questioned him.
+Indeed, as I later learned, there was that of witchery about this young
+girl which held him at bay more effectually than if she had been a
+princess of the royal blood,--a something that laughed his studied art
+to scorn. She noted now his hesitancy, and smiled slightly at the
+evidence of her power.
+
+"Well, Monsieur, 'tis not often that your lips fail of words," she
+continued, archly. "Why is it I am made the subject of your quarrel?"
+
+The slight sarcastic sting in her voice aroused him.
+
+"By all the saints, Toinette!" he exclaimed, striving to appear at his
+ease, "this seems a poor greeting for one who has followed you through
+leagues of forest and across oceans of sand, hopeful at the least to
+gain a smile of welcome from your lips. Know you not I am here, at the
+very end of the world, for you?"
+
+"I think it not altogether unlikely," she replied with calmness. "You
+have ever been of a nature to do strange things, yet it has always been
+of your own sweet will. Surely, Monsieur, I did never bid you come, or
+promise you a greeting."
+
+"No," he admitted regretfully, "'t is, alas, true,"; and his eyes
+seemed to regain something of their old audacity. "But there was that
+about our parting,--you recall it, Toinette, in the shadow of the
+castle wall?--which did afford me hope. No one so fair as you can be
+without heart."
+
+She laughed softly, as though his words recalled memories of other
+days, pressing back her hair within its ribbon.
+
+"Such art of compliment seems more in place at Montreal than here.
+This is a land of deeds, not words, Monsieur. Yet, even though I
+confess your conclusion partially true, what cause does it yield why
+you should seek a quarrel with my good friend, John Wayland?"
+
+"You know him, then?" he asked, in quick astonishment.
+
+"Know him! Do you think I should be here otherwise? Fie, Captain de
+Croix, that you, the very flower of the French court, should express so
+poor a thought of one you profess to respect so highly!"
+
+He looked from one to the other of us, scarce knowing whether she were
+laughing at him or not.
+
+"_Sacre_!" he exclaimed at last. "I believe it not, Mademoiselle. The
+boy would have boasted of such an acquaintance long before this. You
+know him, you say,--for how long?"
+
+"Since yester even, if you must know. But he has a face, Monsieur, a
+face frank and honest, not like that of a man long trained at courts to
+deceive. 'T is for that I trust him, and have called him friend."
+
+"You may rue the day."
+
+"No, Captain de Croix," she exclaimed, proudly. "I know the
+frontiersmen of my father's blood. They are brave men, and true of
+heart. This John Wayland is of that race." And she rested one hand
+lightly upon my arm.
+
+The motion, simple as it was, angered him.
+
+"You ask why I sought quarrel," he said sternly. "'T was because I
+suspected this uncouth hunter had wronged you. Now I understand 't was
+of your own choice. I wish you joy, Mademoiselle, of your new
+conquest."
+
+I felt the girl's slight form straighten, and saw his bold eyes sink
+beneath the flame of her look.
+
+"Captain de Croix," and every sentence stung like the lash of a whip,
+"those are cowardly words, unworthy a French gentleman and soldier.
+Did you leave all your courtesy behind in Montreal, or dream that in
+this wilderness I should cringe to any words you might speak? You wish
+the truth; you shall have it. Three days ago, through an accident, I
+drifted, in an oarless boat, out from the river-mouth at Fort Dearborn
+to the open lake. None knew of my predicament. A storm blew me
+helpless to the southward, and after hours of exposure to danger, and
+great mental anguish, I was driven ashore amid the desolation of this
+sand. This comrade of yours found me scarce alive, ministered to my
+sore need, protected me through the hours of the night, stood but now
+between me and your ribaldry, counting his life but little beside the
+reputation of a woman. He may not wear the latest Paris fashions,
+Monsieur, but he has proved himself a man."
+
+"I meant not all I said, Toinette," he hastened to explain. "You will
+forgive, I know, for I was sorely hurt to find that some one else had
+done the duty that was plainly mine. Surely no rude backwoodsman is to
+come between us now?"
+
+She glanced from the one to the other, with true French coquetry.
+
+"Faith, I cannot tell, Monsieur," she said, gayly; "stranger things
+have happened, and 't is not altogether fine clothes that win the
+hearts of maidens on this far frontier. We learn soon to love
+strength, and the manly traits of the border. On my word, Monsieur,
+this John Wayland seems to have rare powers of body; I imagine he might
+even have crushed you, as he said."
+
+"Think you so?" he asked, eying me curiously. "Yet 't is not always as
+it looks, Mademoiselle."
+
+It came so quickly as to startle me. I was wondering at the smile that
+curled his lips, when he sprang upon me, casting his arms around my
+waist, and twining one leg about mine. The shock of this sudden and
+unexpected onset took me completely by surprise, and I gave back
+sharply, scarce realizing his purpose, till he had the under-hold, and
+sought to lift me for a throw. 'T was my weight alone that saved me,
+together with the rare good fortune that I had been leaning upon my gun.
+
+As the breath came back to me, we locked grimly in a fierce struggle
+for the mastery. I had felt the straining grip of strong arms before,
+but De Croix surprised me,--he was like steel, quick of motion as a
+wildcat, with many a cunning French wrestling trick that tried me
+sorely. I heard a quick exclamation of surprise from the girl, a shout
+of delighted approval from Jordan, and then there was no sound but the
+harsh trampling of our feet and the heavy breathing. De Croix's effort
+was to lift me to his hip for a throw; mine, to press him backward by
+bodily strength. Both of us were sadly hindered by the sliding sand on
+which we strove. Twice I thought I had him, when my footing failed;
+and once he held me fairly uplifted from the ground, yet could not make
+the toss. 'T was a wild grapple, for when we had exhausted all the
+tricks we knew, it came to be a sheer test of physical endurance.
+Then, for the first time, I felt myself the master,--though he was a
+man, that gay French dandy, and never did my ribs crack under the
+pressure of a stronger hand. But I slowly pressed him back, inch by
+inch, struggling like a demon to the last, until I forced his shoulders
+to the sand.
+
+For a moment he lay there, panting heavily; then the old frank and easy
+smile came upon his lips.
+
+"Your hand, monsieur," he said; "that is, if it yet retains sufficient
+strength to lift me."
+
+Upon his feet he brushed the sand from out his long hair, and bowed
+gallantly.
+
+"I have done my very best, Mademoiselle. 'Tis defeat, but not
+disgrace, for I have made your giant puff to win. May I not hope it
+has won me restoration to your good graces?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+IN SIGHT OF THE FLAG
+
+It would have been impossible not to respond to his humor and
+good-nature, even had the girl been desirous of doing otherwise. From
+the first I felt that she liked this reckless courtier, whose easy
+words and actions made me realize more deeply than ever my own
+heaviness of thought and wit.
+
+As he stood there now, bowing low before her, his clothing awry and his
+long hair in disorder from our fierce contest, she smiled upon him
+graciously, and extended a hand that he was prompt enough to accept and
+hold.
+
+"Surely," she said mockingly, "no maid, even in the glorious days of
+chivalry, had ever more heroic figures to do battle for her honor. I
+accept the _amende_, Monsieur, and henceforth enroll you as knight at
+my court. Upon my word," and she looked about at the desolate
+sand-heaps surrounding us, "'tis not much to boast of here; nor, in
+truth, is Dearborn greatly better."
+
+She paused, drawing her hand gently from his grasp, and holding it out
+toward me.
+
+"Yet, Captain," she continued, glancing at him archly over her
+shoulder, "I have likewise another knight, this wood ranger, who hath
+also won my deep regard and gratitude."
+
+De Croix scowled, and twisted his short mustache nervously.
+
+"You put a thorn beside every rose," he muttered. "'T was your way in
+Montreal."
+
+"A few hundred miles of travel do not greatly change one's nature.
+Either at Dearborn or Montreal, I am still Toinette. But, Messieurs, I
+have been told of a camp quite close at hand,--and yet you leave me
+here in the sand to famish while you quarrel."
+
+The tone of her voice, while still full of coquetry, was urgent, and I
+think we both noted for the first time how white of face she was, and
+how wearily her eyes shone. The Frenchman, ever ready in such
+courtesies, was the first to respond by word and act.
+
+"You are faint, Toinette," he cried, instantly forgetful of everything
+else, and springing forward to give her the aid of his arm. "I beg you
+lean upon me. I have been blind not to note your weakness before. 'T
+is indeed not a long walk to our camp from here,--yet, on my life, I
+know nothing of where it lies. Jordan," he added, speaking as if he
+were in command, "lead back along the path we came. _Sacre_! the old
+bear was gruff enough over the delay of our search; he will be savage
+now."
+
+I know not how Jordan ever found his way back, for the sliding sand had
+already obliterated all evidences of former travel; but I walked
+sullenly beside him, leaving De Croix to minister to the needs of the
+girl as best he might. I felt so dull beside his ready tongue that, in
+spite of my real liking for the fellow, his presence angered me. 'T is
+strange we should ever envy in others what we do not ourselves possess,
+ignoring those traits of character we have which they no less desire.
+So to me then it seemed altogether useless to contend for the heart of
+a woman,--such a woman, at least, as this laughing Toinette,--against
+the practised wiles of so gay and debonair a cavalier. I steeled my
+ears to the light badinage they continued to indulge in, and ploughed
+on through the heavy sand at Jordan's heels, in no mood for converse
+with any one.
+
+We came upon the camp suddenly, and discovered Captain Wells pacing
+back and forth, his stern face dark with annoyance. At sight of me,
+his passion burst all restraint.
+
+"By God, sir!" he ejaculated, "if you were a soldier of mine, I would
+teach you what it meant to put us to such a wait as this! Know you
+not, Master Wayland, that the lives of helpless women and children may
+depend upon our haste? And you hold us here in idleness while you
+wander along the lake-shore like a moonstruck boy!"
+
+Before I could answer these harsh words, the girl stepped lightly to my
+side, and standing there, her hand upon my arm, smiled back into his
+angry eyes. I do not think he had even perceived her presence until
+that moment; for he stopped perplexed.
+
+"And am I not worth the saving, Monsieur le Capitaine," she questioned,
+pouting her lips, "that you should blame him so harshly for having
+stopped to rescue me?"
+
+His harsh glance of angry resentment softened as he gazed upon her.
+
+"Ah! was that it, then?" he asked, in gentler tones. "But who are you?
+Surely you are not unattended in this wilderness?"
+
+"I am from Fort Dearborn," she answered, "and though only a girl,
+Monsieur, I have penetrated to the great West even farther than has
+Captain Wells."
+
+"How know you my name?"
+
+"Mrs. Heald told me she believed you would surely come when you learned
+of our plight at the Fort,--it was for that she despatched the man
+Burns with the message,--and she described you so perfectly that I knew
+at once who you must be. There are not so many white men travelling
+toward Dearborn now as to make mistake easy."
+
+"And the Fort?" he asked, anxiously. "Is it still garrisoned, or have
+we come too late?"
+
+"It was safely held two days ago," she answered, "although hundreds of
+savages in war-paint were then encamped without, and holding powwow
+before the gate. No attack had then been made, yet the officers talked
+among themselves of evacuating."
+
+For a moment the stern soldier seemed to have forgotten her, his eyes
+fastened upon the western horizon.
+
+"The fools!" he muttered to himself, seemingly unconscious that he
+spoke aloud; "yet if I can but reach there in time, my knowledge of
+Indian nature may accomplish much."
+
+He turned quickly, with a sharp glance over his military force.
+
+"We delay no longer. Jordan, do you give this lady your horse for
+to-day's journey, and go you forward on foot with the Miamis. Watch
+them closely, and mark well everything in your front as you move."
+
+"But, Captain Wells," she insisted, as he turned away, "I am
+exceedingly hungry, and doubt not this youth would also be much the
+better for a bit of food."
+
+"It will have to be eaten as you travel, then," he answered, not
+unkindly, but with all his thought now fixed on other things, "for our
+duty is to reach Dearborn at the first moment, and save those prisoned
+there from death, and worse."
+
+I shall always remember each detail of that day's march, though I saw
+but little of Toinette save in stolen glances backward, Wells keeping
+me close at his side, while De Croix, as debonair as ever, was her
+constant shadow, ministering assiduously to her wants and cheering her
+journey with agreeable discourse. I heard much of their chatter,
+earnestly as I sought to remain deaf to it. To this end Wells aided me
+but little, for he rode forward in stern silence, completely absorbed
+in his own thoughts.
+
+During the first few hours we passed through a dull desolation of
+desert sand, the queerly shaped hills on either side scarcely breaking
+the dead monotony, although they often hid from our sight our advance
+scouts, and made us feel isolated and alone. Once or twice I imagined
+I heard the deepening roar of waves bursting upon the shore-line to our
+right, but could gain no glimpse of blue water through those obscuring
+dunes. We were following a well-worn Indian trail, beaten hard by many
+a moccasined foot; and at last it ran from out the coarser sand and
+skirted along the western beach, almost at the edge of the waves. 'T
+was a most delightful change from the cramped and narrowed vision that
+had been ours so long. Our faces were now set almost directly
+northward; but I could not withdraw my eyes from the noble expanse of
+water heaving and tumbling in the dazzling sunlight. Indeed, there was
+little else about our course to attract attention; the shore in front
+lay clear and unbroken, bearing a sameness of outline that wearied the
+vision; each breaking wave was but the type of others that had gone
+before, and each jutting point of land was the picture of the next to
+follow. To our left, there extended, parallel to our course of march,
+a narrow ridge of white and firmly beaten sand, as regular in
+appearance as the ramparts of a fort. Here and there a break occurred
+where in some spring flood a sudden, rush of water had burst through.
+Glancing curiously down these narrow aisles, as we rode steadily
+onward, I caught fleeting glimpses of level prairie land, green with
+waving grasses, apparently stretching to the western horizon bare of
+tree or shrub. At first, I took this to be water also; until I
+realized that I looked out upon the great plains of the Illinois.
+
+The Captain was always chary of speech; now he rode onward with so
+stern a face, that presently I spoke in inquiry.
+
+"You are silent, Captain Wells," I said. "One would expect some
+rejoicing, as we draw so close to the end of our long journey."
+
+He glanced aside at me.
+
+"Wayland," he said slowly, "I have been upon the frontier all my life,
+and have, as you know, lived in Indian camps and shared in many a
+savage campaign. I am too old a man, too tried a soldier, ever to
+hesitate to acknowledge fear; but I tell you now, I believe we are
+riding northward to our deaths."
+
+I had known, since first leaving the Maumee, that danger haunted the
+expedition; yet these solemn words came as a surprise.
+
+"Why think you thus?" I asked, with newly aroused anxiety, my thoughts
+more with the girl behind than with myself. "Mademoiselle Toinette
+tells me the Fort is strong and capable of defence, and surely we are
+already nearly there."
+
+"The young girl yonder with De Croix? It may be so, if it also be well
+provisioned for a long siege, as it is scarce likely any rescue party
+will be despatched so far westward. If I mistake not, Hull will have
+no men to spare. Yet I like not the action of the savages about us.
+'T is not in Indian nature to hold off, as these are doing, and permit
+reinforcements to go by, when they might be halted so easily. 'T would
+ease my mind not a little were we attacked."
+
+"Attacked? by whom?"
+
+He faced me with undisguised surprise, a sarcastic smile curling his
+grim mouth. His hand swept along the western sky-line.
+
+"By those red spies hiding behind that ridge of sand," he answered
+shortly. "Boy, where are your eyes not to have seen that every step we
+have taken this day has been but by sufferance of the Pottawattomies?
+Not for an hour since leaving camp have we marched out of shot from
+their guns; it means treachery, yet I can scarce tell where or how. If
+they have spared us this long, there is some good Indian reason for it."
+
+I glanced along that apparently desolate sandbank, barely a hundred
+feet away, feeling a thrill of uneasiness sweep over me at the
+revelation of his words. My eyes saw nothing strange nor suspicious;
+but I could not doubt his well-trained instinct.
+
+"It makes my flesh creep," I admitted; "yet surely the others do not
+know. Hear how the Frenchman chatters in our rear!"
+
+"The young fool!" he muttered, as the sound of a light laugh reached
+us; "it will prove no jest, ere we are out of this again. Yet,
+Wayland," and his voice grew stronger, "the red devils must indeed mean
+to pass us free,--for there is Fort Dearborn, and, unless my sight
+deceive me, the flag is up."
+
+I lifted my eyes eagerly, and gazed northward where his finger pointed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+A LANE OF PERIL
+
+We passed a group of young cottonwoods, the only trees I had noted
+along the shore; and a few hundred feet ahead of us, the ridge of sand,
+which had obscured our westward view so long, gradually fell away,
+permitting the eye to sweep across the wide expanse of level plain
+until halted by a distant row of stunted trees that seemed to line a
+stream of some importance. As Captain Wells spoke, my glance, which
+had been fixed upon these natural objects, was instantly attracted by a
+strange scene of human activity that unfolded to the north and west.
+
+The land before us lay flat and low, with the golden sun of the early
+afternoon resting hot upon it, revealing each detail in an animated
+panorama wherein barbarism and civilization each bore a conspicuous
+part. The Fort was fully a mile and a half distant, and I could
+distinguish little of its outward appearance, save that it seemed low
+and solidly built, like a stockade of logs set upon end in the ground.
+It appeared gloomy, grim, inhospitable, with its gates tightly closed,
+and no sign of life anywhere along its dull walls; yet my heart was
+thrilled at catching the bright colors of the garrison flag as the
+western breeze rippled its folds against the blue background of the sky.
+
+But it was outside those log barriers that our eyes encountered scenes
+of the greatest interest,--a mingling of tawdry decoration and wild
+savagery, where fierce denizens of forest and plain made their barbaric
+show.
+
+No finer stage for such a spectacle could well be conceived. Upon one
+side stretched the great waste of waters; on the other, level plains,
+composed of yellow sand quickly merging into the green and brown of the
+prairie, while, scattered over its surface, from the near lake-shore to
+the distant river, were figures constantly moving, decked in gay
+feathers and daubed with war-paint. Westward from the Fort, toward the
+point where a branch of the main river appeared to emerge from the
+southward, stood a large village of tepees, the sun shining yellow and
+white on their deerskin coverings and making an odd glow in the smoke
+that curled above the lodge-poles. From where we rode it looked to be
+a big encampment, alive with figures of Indians. My companion and I
+both noted, and spoke together of the fact, that they all seemed
+braves; squaws there may have been, but of children there were none
+visible.
+
+Populous as this camp appeared, the plain stretching between it and us
+was literally swarming with savages. A few were mounted upon horses,
+riding here and there with upraised spears, their hair flying wildly
+behind them, their war-bonnets gorgeous in the sunshine. By far the
+greater number, however, were idling about on foot, stalwart, swarthy
+fellows, with long black locks, and half-naked painted forms. One
+group was listening to the words of a chief; others were playing at la
+crosse; but most of them were merely moving restlessly here and there,
+not unlike caged wild animals, eager to be free.
+
+I heard Captain Wells draw in his breath sharply.
+
+"As I live!" he ejaculated, "there can be scarce less than a thousand
+warriors in that band,--and no trading-party either, if I know aught of
+Indian signs."
+
+Before I could answer him, even had I any word to say, a chief broke
+away from the gathering mass in our immediate front, and rode headlong
+down upon us, bringing his horse to its haunches barely a yard away.
+
+He was a large, sinewy man, his face rendered hideous by streaks of
+yellow and red, wearing a high crown of eagle feathers, with a scalp of
+long light-colored hair, still bloody, dangling at his belt. For a
+moment he and Captain Wells looked sternly into each other's eyes
+without speaking. Then the savage broke silence.
+
+"Wau-mee-nuk great brave," he said, sullenly, in broken English, using
+Wells's Indian name, "but him big fool come here now. Why not stay
+with Big Turtle? He tell him Pottawattomie not want him here."
+
+"Big Turtle did tell me," was the quiet answer, "that the
+Pottawattomies had made bad medicine and were dancing the war-dance in
+their villages; but I have met Pottawattomies before, and am not
+afraid. They have been my friends, and I have done them no wrong."
+
+He looked intently at the disguised face before him, seeking to trace
+the features. "You are Topenebe," he said at last.
+
+"True," returned the chief, with proud gravity. "You serve me well
+once; for that I come now, and tell you go back,--there is trouble
+here."
+
+Wells's face darkened.
+
+"Have I ever been a coward," he asked indignantly, "that I should turn
+and run for a threat? Think you, Topenebe, that I fear to sing the
+death-song? I have lived in the woods, and gone forth with your
+war-parties; am I less a warrior, now that I fight with the people of
+my own race? Go take your warning to some squaw; we ride straight on
+to Dearborn, even though we have to fight our way."
+
+The Indian glanced, as Wells pointed, toward the Fort, and sneered.
+
+"All old women in there," he exclaimed derisively. "Say this to-day,
+and that to-morrow. They shut the gates now to keep Indian on outside.
+No trade, no rum, no powder,--just lies. But they no keep back our
+young men much longer." His face grew dark, and his eyes angry.
+
+"Why you bring them?" he asked hotly, designating our escort of Miamis,
+already shrinking from the taunts of the gathering braves. "They dog
+Indians, bad medicine; they run fast when Pottawattomie come."
+
+"Don't be so certain about that, Topenebe," retorted Wells, shortly.
+"But we cannot stop longer here; make way, that we may pass along,
+Jordan, push on with your advance through that rabble there."
+
+The Indian chief drew his horse back beside the trail, and we moved
+slowly forward, our Indian guides slightly in advance, and exhibiting
+in every action the disinclination they felt to proceed, and their
+constantly increasing fear of the wild horde that now resorted to every
+means in their power, short of actual violence, to retard their
+progress. As they closed in more closely around us, taunting the
+Miamis unmercifully, even shaking tomahawks in their faces, with fierce
+eyes full of hatred and murder, I drew back my horse until I ranged up
+beside Mademoiselle Antoinette, and thus we rode steadily onward
+through that frenzied, howling mass, the girl between De Croix and me,
+who thus protected her on either side.
+
+It was truly a weary ride, full of insult, and perchance of grave peril
+had we faced that naked mob less resolutely. Doubtless the chiefs
+restrained their young men somewhat, but more than once we came within
+a hair's-breadth of serious conflict. They hemmed us in so tightly
+that we could only walk our horses; and twice they pressed upon Jordan
+so hard as to halt him altogether, bunching his cowardly Miamis, and
+even striking them contemptuously with their blackened sticks. The
+second time this occurred, Captain Wells rode forward to force a path,
+driving the spurs into his horse so quickly that the startled animal
+fairly cut a lane through the crowded savages before they could draw
+back. Naught restrained them from open violence but their knowledge of
+that stern-faced swarthy soldier who fronted them with such dauntless
+courage. Hundreds in that swarm had seen him before, when, as the
+adopted son of a great war-chief of the Miamis he had been at their
+side in many a wild foray along the border.
+
+"Wau-mee-nuk, the white chief," passed from lip to lip; and sullenly,
+slowly, reluctantly, the frenzied red circle fell back, as he pressed
+his rearing horse full against them.
+
+How hideous their painted faces looked, as we slowly pushed past them,
+their lips shrieking insult, their sinewy hands gripping at our
+stirrups, their brandished weapons shaken in our faces. With firm-set
+lips and watchful eyes I rode, bent well forward, so as best to protect
+the girl, my rifle held across my saddle pommel. Twice some vengeful
+arm struck me a savage blow, and once a young devil with long matted
+hair hanging over his fierce eyes thrust a sharpened stake viciously at
+the girl's face. I struck with quick-clinched hand, and he reeled back
+into the mass with a sharp cry of pain. My eyes caught the sudden
+dazzle, as De Croix whipped out his rapier.
+
+"Not that, Monsieur!" I cried hastily, across her horse's neck. "Use
+the hilt, not the blade, unless you wish to die."
+
+He heard me above the clamor, and with a quick turn of the weapon
+struck fiercely at a scowling brave who grasped at his horse's rein.
+He smiled pleasantly across at me, his fingers twisting his small
+mustache.
+
+"'T is doubtless good advice, friend Wayland," he said, carelessly,
+"but these copper-colored devils are indeed most annoying upon this
+side, and I may lose my temper ere we reach the gate."
+
+"For the sake of her who rides between us, I beg that you hold in hard,
+Monsieur," I answered. "'T would be overmuch to pay, I imagine, for a
+hot brain."
+
+I glanced at her as I spoke, scarcely conscious even then that I had
+removed my eyes from the threatening mob that pressed me, though I know
+I must have done so, for I retain the picture of her yet. She rode
+facing me, although her saddle was of the old army type with merely a
+folded blanket to soften its sharp contours, and her foot could barely
+find firm support within the narrow strap above the wooden stirrup.
+She sat erect and easily, swaying gently to the slow step of the horse.
+Her face was pale, but there was no evidence of timidity in her dark
+eyes, and she smiled at me as our glances met.
+
+"You are surely a brave girl, Mademoiselle!" I exclaimed, unable to
+restrain my admiration. "'T is a scene to try any nerves."
+
+"Yet almost worth the danger," she returned softly, "to realize what
+men can be in such stress of need. You are the real--Beware of that
+half-breed, Monsieur!"
+
+Her last words were a quick warning, yet my eyes were already upon the
+fellow, and as he dodged down, knife in hand, to aim a vicious lunge at
+the forward leg of her horse, I brought the stock of my rifle crunching
+against his shoulder. The next instant we had passed over his naked
+body as he lay gasping in the trail.
+
+"See!" she cried, with eagerness. "The gates are opened!"
+
+We were possibly a hundred yards from the southern front of the
+stockade, when I glanced forward and saw the level ground between a
+seething mass of savage forms, so densely wedged together as to block
+further progress. I could see hundreds of brown sinewy arms uplifted
+from a sea of faces to brandish weapons of every description, and
+marked how the Miamis cowered like whipped curs behind the protection
+of Wells's horse, while close beside him stood Jordan, erect and silent
+as it on parade, a rifle grasped in his hands, his head bare, a great
+welt showing redly across his white forehead.
+
+A little party, hardly more than twenty infantry-men, marched steadily
+out from the open gateway of the Fort. The first file bore bayonets
+fixed upon their guns, and the naked savages fell slowly back before
+the polished steel. It was smartly done, and it thrilled my blood to
+note with what silent determination that small band of disciplined men
+pressed their way onward, passing through the threatening mass of
+redskins as indifferently as if they had been forest trees. A young,
+smooth-faced fellow, wearing a new officer's uniform, led them, sword
+in hand, a smile of light contempt upon his lips.
+
+"Clear the space wider, Campbell!" he said sternly, to the big corporal
+at his side. "Swing your files to left and right, and push the rabble
+out of the way."
+
+They did it with the butts of their guns, laughing at the brandished
+knives and tomahawks and the fierce painted faces that scowled at them,
+paying no apparent heed to the taunts and insults showered from every
+side. There were some stones thrown, a few blows were struck, but no
+rifle-shot broke the brief struggle. The young officer strode forward
+down the open space, and fronted our advance.
+
+"I presume this is Captain Wells, from Fort Wayne?" he said, lifting
+his cap as he spoke.
+
+"It is," was the reply, "and I am very glad to find that you still hold
+Fort Dearborn."
+
+The other's frank and boyish face darkened slightly, as if at an
+unpleasant memory.
+
+"'T is no fault of some," he muttered hastily; then he checked himself.
+"We are glad to greet you, Captain Wells," he added, in a more formal
+tone, glancing about upon us, "and your party. I am Ensign Ronan, of
+the garrison; and if you will kindly pass between my guard lines, you
+will find Captain Heald awaiting you within."
+
+Thus we rode freely forward, with the guarding soldiery on either side
+of us, their faces to the howling savages; we passed in at the great
+southern gate, and halted amid the buildings of old Fort Dearborn.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+OLD FORT DEARBORN
+
+It makes my old head dizzy to recall the events of that hour across the
+years that have intervened. Possibly I, as I write these words, am the
+only person living who has looked upon that old stockade and taken part
+in its tragic history. What a marvellous change has less than a century
+witnessed! Once the outermost guard of our western frontier, it is now
+the site of one of the great cities of two continents. To me, who have
+seen these events and changes, it possesses more than the wonderment of a
+dream.
+
+That day, as I rode forward, I saw but little of the Fort's formation,
+for my eyes and thoughts were so filled with those frenzied savages that
+hemmed us about, and the cool deployment of the few troops that guarded
+our passage-way, that everything else made but a dim impression. Yet the
+glimpse I obtained, even at that exciting moment, together with the
+subsequent experiences that came to me, have indelibly impressed each
+detail of the rude Fort upon my memory.
+
+It stands before me now, clear-cut and prominent, its outlines distinct
+against the background of blue water or green plains. In that early day
+the Fort was a fairly typical outpost of the border, like scores of
+others scattered at wide and irregular intervals from the Carolina
+mountains upon the south to the joining of the great lakes at the north,
+forming one link in the thin chain of frontier fortifications against
+Indian treachery and outbreak. It bore the distinction, among the
+others, of being the most advanced and exposed of all, and its small
+garrison was utterly isolated and alone, a forlorn hope in the heart of
+the great wilderness.
+
+The Fort had been erected nine years before our arrival, upon the
+southern bank of a dull and sluggish stream, emptying into the Great Lake
+from the west, and known to the earlier French explorers as the river
+Chicagou. The spot selected was nearly that where an old-time French
+trading-post had stood, although the latter had been deserted for so long
+that no remnant of it yet lingered when the Americans first took
+possession, and its site remained only as a vague tradition of those
+Indian tribes whose representatives often visited these waters.
+
+The earliest force despatched by the government to this frontier post
+erected here a simple stockade of logs. These were placed standing on
+end, firmly planted in the ground and extending upward some fifteen feet,
+their tops sharpened as an additional protection against savage
+assailants. This log stockade was built quite solid, save for one main
+entrance, facing to the south and secured by a heavy, iron-studded gate,
+with a subterranean or sunken passage leading out beneath the north wall
+to the river, protected by a door which could be raised only from within.
+The enclosure thus formed was sufficiently large to contain a somewhat
+restricted parade-ground, about which were grouped the necessary
+buildings of the garrison, the quarters for the officers, the soldiers'
+barracks, the commandant's office, the guardhouse, and the magazine.
+These rude structures were built in frontier style, of cleaved logs, and
+with one exception were but a single story in height, so that their roofs
+of rived shingles were well below the protection of the palisade of logs.
+Besides these interior buildings, two block-houses were built, each
+constructed so that the second story overhung the first, one of them,
+standing at the southeast and one at the northwest corner of the
+palisaded walls. A narrow wooden support, or walk, accessible only from
+one or the other of these block-houses, enabled its defenders to stand
+within the enclosure and look out over the row of sharpened logs.
+
+At the time of our arrival the protective armament of this primitive
+Fort, besides the small-arms of the garrison, consisted of three pieces
+of light artillery, brass six-pounders of antique pattern, relics of the
+Revolution. Outside the Fort enclosure, only a few yards to the west
+along the river bank, stood the agency building, or, as it was often
+termed, "goods factory," built for purposes of trading with the Indians,
+so that it would not be necessary to open the Fort to them. This agency
+building was a rather large two-story log house, not erected for any
+purposes of defence. Along the southern side of the stream, in both
+directions, the soldiers had excavated numerous root-houses, or cellars,
+in which to store the products of their summer gardens,--these
+excavations fairly honeycombing the bank.
+
+Such was Fort Dearborn in August of the fatal year 1812. It stood ugly,
+rude, isolated, afar from any help in time of need. Its nearest military
+neighbor lay directly across the waters of the Great Lake, where a small
+detachment of troops, scarcely less isolated than itself, garrisoned a
+similar stockade near the mouth of the river Saint Joseph. To the
+westward, the vast plains, as yet scarce pressed by the adventurous feet
+of white explorers, faded away into a mysterious unknown country, roamed
+over by countless tribes of savages; to the northward lay an unbroken
+wilderness for hundreds of leagues, save for a few scattered traders at
+Green Bay, until the military outpost at Mackinac was reached; to the
+eastward rolled the waters of the Great Lake, storm-swept and unvexed by
+keel of ship, an almost unsurpassable barrier, along whose shore
+adventurous voyagers crept in log and bark canoes; while to the southward
+alternating prairie and timber-land stretched away for unnumbered leagues
+the Indian hunting-grounds,--broken only by a few scattered settlements
+of French half-breeds.
+
+From the walls of the Fort the eye ranged over a dull and monotonous
+landscape, nowhere broken by signs of advancing civilization or even of
+human presence. A few hundred yards to the east the waves of Lake
+Michigan broke upon the wide, sandy beach, whence the tossing waters
+stretched away in tumultuous loneliness to their blending with the
+distant sky. Southward, along the shore of the lake, the nearly level
+plain, brown and sun-parched, soon merged into rounded heaps of
+wind-drifted sand, barely diversified by a few straggling groups of
+cottonwoods. To the westward extended the boundless prairie, flat and
+bare as a floor, except where the southern fork of the little river cut
+its way through the soft loam, and gave rise to a scrubby growth of
+cottonwood and willow; while northward, across the main body of the
+river, the land appeared more rugged and broken, and somewhat heavily
+wooded with oak and other forest trees, but equally devoid of evidences
+of habitation.
+
+In all this wide survey from the little knoll on which the Fort stood,
+five houses only were visible. These were built roughly of logs in the
+most primitive style of the frontier, and, with a single exception, were
+now deserted by their occupants, who had retreated for safety to the
+stockade of the Fort. The single exception was the larger and more
+ambitious dwelling standing on the north bank of the river, occupied by
+John Kinzie and his family, himself an old-time Indian trader, whose
+honesty and long dealing with the savages had made him confident of their
+friendship and fidelity. At one time, however, so threatening had become
+the strange bands that flocked in toward Dearborn, as crows to a feast,
+he also deserted his home, and, with those dependent upon him, sought
+refuge within the Fort walls; but, influenced by the pledge of the
+Pottawattomies, and believing that safety lay in trusting to their
+friendship, they had returned to their own house. The other cabins were
+scattered to the westward of the stockade, close to the river bank.
+These dwellings had been occupied by the families of Ouilmette, Burns,
+and Lee, respectively; while the last named owned a second cabin, built
+some distance up the south branch of the river, and occupied by a tenant
+named Liberty White.
+
+The prospect was in truth depressing to one accustomed to other and more
+civilized surroundings. A spirit of loneliness, of fearful isolation,
+seemed to hover over the restless waters upon the one hand, and those
+vast silent plains on the other; sea and sky, sky and sand, met the
+wearied eye wherever it wandered. The scene was unspeakably solemn in
+its immensity and loneliness; while irresistibly the thought would wander
+over those fateful leagues of prairie and forest that stretched
+unbrokenly between this far frontier and the few scattered and remote
+settlements that were its nearest neighbors.
+
+It was not until some time later that these sombre reflections pressed
+upon me with all their force. After the excitement of our first
+boisterous greeting was over, and I found opportunity to lean across the
+top of the guarded stockade and gaze alone over the desolate spectacle I
+have endeavored to describe, I could feel more acutely the hopelessness
+of our situation and the danger threatening us from every side. But at
+the moment of our entrance, all my interest and attention had been
+centred upon the scenes and persons immediately about me. It was my
+first experience within the stockaded walls of an armed government post.
+The scene was new to my young senses, and, in spite of the excitement
+that still heated my blood, I looked upon it with such absorbing interest
+as to be forgetful for the moment even of the fair girl who rode in at my
+side.
+
+The dull clang of the heavy iron-bound gate behind us was a welcome sound
+after the fierce buffetings of our perilous passage; yet it only
+partially shut off the savage howlings, while above the hideous uproar
+came the sharp reports of several guns. But the instant bustle and
+confusion within scarcely allowed opportunity to notice this disorder;
+moreover, there had come to us a sense of safety and security,--we were
+at last within the barriers we had struggled so long to gain. However
+the savage hordes might rage without, we were now beyond their reach, and
+might take breath again.
+
+Our little party, closely bunched together, with Wells and the timorous
+Miamis at its head, surged quickly through between the bars, and came to
+a halt in an open space, evidently the parade-ground of the garrison, the
+bare earth worn smooth and hard by the trampling of many feet. A tall
+flag-pole rose near the centre, and the wavering shadow of the banner at
+its top extended to the eastern edge of the enclosure. Out from the
+log-houses which bordered this enclosure there came a group of people to
+welcome us,--officers and soldiers, women neatly dressed and with bright
+intelligent faces, women of rougher mould attired in calico or deerskin,
+hardy-looking men in rude hunter's garb, picturesque French voyageurs
+wiry of limb and dark of skin, an Indian or two, silent, grave,
+emotionless, a single negro, and trailing behind them a number of dirty,
+delighted children, and dogs of every breed and degree. It was a motley
+gathering, and appeared almost like a multitude as it hurried forth into
+the open parade-ground, and surged joyfully about us, all eager to
+welcome us to Dearborn, and hopeful that we brought them encouragement
+and relief. We were of their own race, a link between them and the
+far-distant East; and our coming told them they were not forgotten.
+
+The odd commingling of tongues, the constant crowding and scraps of
+conversation, the volley of questioning from every side, was confusing
+and unintelligible. I could gain only glimpses here and there of what
+was going on; nor was I able to judge with any accuracy of the number of
+those present. I looked down upon their appealing, anxious faces, with a
+sad heart. In some way the sight of them brought back thoughts of the
+savage, howling mob without, clamoring for blood, through which we had
+won our passage by sheer good-fortune; of those leagues of untracked
+forest amid whose glooms we had ploughed our way. I thought of these
+things as I gazed upon the helpless women and children thronging about
+me, and my heart sank as I realized how great indeed was the burden
+resting upon us all, how frail the hope of safety. Death, savage,
+relentless, inhuman death in its most frightful guise with torture and
+agony unspeakable, lurked along every mile of our possible retreat; nor
+could I conceive how its grim coming might long be delayed by that
+palisade of logs. We were hopeless of rescue. We were alone, deserted,
+the merest handful amid the unnumbered hordes of the vast West. Swift
+and terrible as this conception was when it swept upon me, it grew deeper
+as I learned more fully the details of our situation.
+
+Just in front of where I lingered in my saddle, the crush slightly
+parted, and I noticed a tall man step forward,--a fair man, having a
+light beard slightly tinged with gray, and wearing the undress uniform of
+a captain of infantry. A lady, several years his junior, stood at his
+side, her eyes bright with expectancy. At sight of them, Captain Wells
+instantly sprang from his horse and hastened forward, his dark face
+lighted by one of his rare smiles.
+
+"Captain," he exclaimed, clasping the officers hand warmly, and extending
+his other hand in greeting to the lady, "I am glad indeed to have reached
+you in time to be of service; and you, my own dear niece,--may we yet be
+permitted to bring you safely back to God's country."
+
+I was unable to catch the reply of either; but I noted that the lady
+flung her arms about the speaker's neck and kissed his swarthy cheek.
+
+Then Captain Wells spoke more loudly, so that his words reached my ears.
+
+"But, Heald," he said, "what means all this litter of garrison equipment
+lying scattered about? Surely you have no present intention to leave the
+Fort, in face Of that savage mob out yonder?"
+
+"'T is the orders of General Hull," was the low; and somewhat hesitating
+response, "and the Pottawattomie chiefs have pledged us escort around the
+head of the lake. But this is no place to discuss the matter. As soon
+as possible I would speak with you more fully in my office."
+
+The look of undisguised amazement upon Wells's face startled me; and as I
+glanced about me, wondering whom I might take counsel with, I was
+astonished to note the horse that Toinette had ridden standing with empty
+saddle. De Croix, negligently curling his mustache between his slender
+fingers, gazed at me with a blank stare.
+
+"Where is Mademoiselle?" I questioned anxiously, as he remained silent.
+"Surely she was with us as we came in!"
+
+"Pish! of course," he returned carelessly; "if she chooses to dismount
+and rejoin her friends, what has that to do with John Wayland? Cannot
+the girl so much as move without your permission, Monsieur?"
+
+The words were insolent, not less than the manner that accompanied them.
+Instantly there flashed upon me the thought that this Frenchman sought a
+quarrel with me; but I could conceive no reason therefor, and was not
+greatly disposed to accommodate him.
+
+"'T was no more than curiosity that urged my question," I answered,
+assuming not to notice his bravado. "I was so deeply interested in other
+things as to have forgotten her presence."
+
+"Something no lady is ever likely to forgive," he interjected. "But what
+think you they propose doing with us here?"
+
+As if in direct answer to his question, the young officer who had met us
+without now elbowed his way through the throng, until he stood at our
+horses' heads.
+
+"Gentlemen," he said, with a quick glance into our faces, "dismount and
+come within. There is but little to offer you here at Dearborn, we have
+been cut off from civilization so long; but such as we possess will be
+shared with you most gladly."
+
+De Croix chatted with him in his easy, familiar manner, as we slowly
+crossed the parade; while I followed them in silence, my thoughts upon
+the disappearance of Toinette and the Frenchman's sudden show of
+animosity. My glance fell upon the groups of children scattered along
+our path, and I wondered which among them might prove to be Roger
+Matherson's little one. At the entrance of one of the log houses
+fronting the parade,--a rather ambitious building of two stories, if I
+remember rightly, with a narrow porch along its front,--an officer was
+standing upon the step, talking with a sweet-faced woman who appeared
+scarce older than seventeen.
+
+"Lieutenant Helm," said Ronan, politely, "this is Captain de Croix, of
+the French army."
+
+He presented De Croix to Mrs. Helm, and then turned inquiringly toward me.
+
+"I believe I have failed to learn your name?"
+
+"I am simply John Wayland," I answered, and, with a glance at my face,
+Lieutenant Helm cordially extended his hand.
+
+"We are greatly pleased to welcome you both," he said earnestly, but with
+a grave side-glance at his young wife, "though I fear we have little to
+offer you except privation and danger."
+
+"How many have you in the garrison?" I questioned, my eyes upon the
+moving figures about us. "It looks a crowd, in that narrow space."
+
+"They are all there who are able to crawl," he said, with a grave smile.
+"But in this case our numbers are a weakness. In the garrison proper we
+have four commissioned officers, with fifty-four non-commissioned
+officers and privates. To these may be added twelve settlers acting as
+militiamen, making a total defensive force of seventy men. But fully
+twenty-five of these are upon the sick-list, and totally unfit for active
+duty; while we are further burdened by having under our protection twelve
+women and twenty children. It almost crazes one to think of what their
+fate may be."
+
+"Your defences look strong enough to keep off savages," broke in De
+Croix, "and I am told there is a sufficiency of provisions. Saint Guise!
+I have seen places where I had rather reside in my old age; yet with
+plenty of wine, some good fellows, and as lovely women as have already
+greeted me here, 'twill not prove so bad for a few weeks."
+
+Helm glanced at him curiously; then his gaze, always gravely thoughtful,
+wandered back to me.
+
+"We are to evacuate the Fort," he said quietly.
+
+"Evacuate?" echoed the Frenchman, as if the word were displeasing. "'T
+is a strange military act, in my judgment, and one filled with grave
+peril. Does such decision come from a council?"
+
+"There has been no council," broke in Ronan, hastily. "The commander has
+not honored his officers by calling one. Such were the orders as
+published on parade this morning."
+
+He would have added more, but Helm warned him, by a sudden look of
+disapproval.
+
+"I understand," he explained quietly, "that the instructions received
+from General Hull at Detroit were imperative, and that Captain Heald was
+left no discretion in the matter."
+
+"I have not yet discovered the man who has seen the orders," exclaimed
+the Ensign hotly, "and we all know it means death."
+
+Helm faced him sternly.
+
+"A soldier's first duty is obedience," he said shortly, "and we are
+soldiers. Gentlemen, will you not come in?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+THE HEART OF A WOMAN
+
+As I sat in the officers' quarters, listening to the conversation
+regarding existing conditions at the Fort and the unrest among the
+Indians of the border, my thoughts kept veering from sudden and
+ungracious disappearance of Mademoiselle to the early seeking after
+that hapless orphan child for whose sake I had already travelled so far
+and entered into such danger. Evidently, if I was to aid her my quest
+must be no longer interrupted.
+
+With characteristic gallantry, De Croix had at once been attracted
+toward Lieutenant Helm's young and pretty bride, and they two had
+already forgotten all sense of existing peril in a most animated
+discussion of the latest fashionable modes in Montreal. I was not a
+little amused by the interest manifest in her soft blue eyes as she
+spoke with all the art of a woman versed in such mysteries, and at the
+languid air of elegance with which he bore himself. Meanwhile, I
+answered as best I might the flood of questions addressed to me by the
+two officers, who, having been shut out from the world so long, were
+naturally eager for military news from Fort Wayne and from the seat of
+government. As these partially ceased, I asked: "Has a date been set
+for the abandonment of the Fort?"
+
+"We march out upon the fifteenth," was Helm's reply, "the day after
+to-morrow, unless something occurs meanwhile to change Captain Heald's
+plans. I confess I dread its coming, much as I imagine a condemned man
+might dread the date of his execution," and his grave eyes wandered
+toward his young wife, as if fearful his words might be overheard by
+her. "There are other lives than mine endangered, and their peril
+makes duty doubly hard."
+
+"Lieutenant," I said, recalled to my own mission by these words, "I
+myself am seeking to be of service to one here,--the young daughter of
+one Roger Matherson, an old soldier who died at this post last month.
+He was long my father's faithful comrade in arms, and with his dying
+breath begged our care for his orphan child. It has come to us as a
+sacred trust, and I was despatched upon this errand. Can you tell me
+where this girl is to be found?"
+
+Before he could frame a reply, for he was somewhat slow of speech, his
+wife, who had turned from De Croix, and was listening with interest to
+my story, spoke impulsively.
+
+"Why, we have been wondering, Mr. Wayland, where she could have gone.
+Not that we have worried, for she is a girl well able to care for
+herself, and of a most independent spirit. She disappeared very
+suddenly from the Fort several days ago; we supposed she must have gone
+with my mother when Mr. Kinzie took his family back to their home."
+
+"With Mr. Kinzie?" I questioned, for at that moment I could not recall
+hearing the name. "May I ask where that home is?"
+
+"He is the very good step-father of my wife, and one she loves as truly
+as if he were her own father," answered Helm, warmly; "a man among a
+thousand. Mr. Kinzie is an Indian trader, and has been here for
+several years, if indeed he be not the first white settler, for old
+Pointe Au Sable was a West Indian mulatto. His relations with these
+savages who dwell near the Great Lake, and especially those of the
+Pottawattomie and Wyandot tribes, are so friendly that he has felt safe
+to remain with his family unguarded in his own home. They have always
+called him Shaw-nee-aw-kee, the Silver-man, and trust him as much as he
+trusts them. He is, besides, a great friend of Sau-ga-nash, the
+half-breed Wyandot; and that friendship is a great protection. His
+house is across the river, a little to the east of the Fort; it can
+easily be seen from the summit of the stockade. But we have had no
+direct communication for several days; the orders have been very strict
+since the gates were closed. It is not safe for our soldiers to
+venture outside except in force, and neither Kinzie nor any of his
+family have lately visited us. Doubtless they feel that to do so might
+arouse the suspicion of their Indian friends."
+
+"But are you sure they are there, and safe? And do you believe the one
+I seek will be found with them?"
+
+"Smoke rises from the chimney, as usual, and there was a light burning
+there last evening. We do not know certainly that your friend is
+there, but think such is the case, as she was extremely friendly with a
+young French girl in their employ named Josette La Framboise."
+
+I sat in silence for some time, thinking, and neglectful of the
+conversation being carried on around me by the others, until we were
+called to supper by the soldier who officiated as steward for the
+officers' mess. I remember many details of the situation, as they were
+frankly discussed in my presence while we lingered at the table; yet my
+own reflections were elsewhere, as I was endeavoring to determine my
+duty regarding the safety of her whom I had come so far to aid.
+Surely, my first object now must be to ascertain where she was, in
+order to be at her service when the hour for departure came. Nor had I
+any time to spare, if we were to march out on the fifteenth. I cannot
+describe, at this late day, how strangely my allegiance wavered, in
+that hour, between the unknown, unseen girl, and the fair, vivacious
+Toinette. My heart drew me toward the one, my clear duty to the other;
+and I could see no way out of the dilemma except to find Elsa Matherson
+without delay, in order that the two should be close together where, as
+need arose, I could stand between them and whatever of evil impended.
+
+I fear I was an indifferent guest, for I was never nimble of tongue,
+and that night I was more silent than usual. However, De Croix most
+effectually hid my retirement by his rare good-humor and the sparkling
+badinage with which he concentrated all attention upon himself, and was
+consequently soon in the happiest of moods. I know not how the fellow
+succeeded in working the miracle, but he sat at the board, upon Mrs.
+Helm's left hand, powdered and curled as if he were gracing a banquet
+at the Tuileries. His ruffled shirt, glittering buckles, and bright
+blue waistcoat, were startling amid such homely surroundings; while his
+neatly folded handkerchief of lace exhaled a delicate perfume. Deeply
+as I was immersed in my own thoughts and plans, I could not help
+admiring his easy grace, and more than once forgot myself in listening
+to his marvellous tales and witty anecdotes.
+
+He was detailing a recent scandal of the French court, passing
+delicately over its more objectionable features, when I grasped the
+opportunity to slip unobserved from the room into the open of the
+parade-ground. It proved a dark night without, but the numerous lights
+in the surrounding buildings, whose doors and windows were open,
+sufficiently illumined the place, so that I found my way about with
+little difficulty. A group of soldiers lounged at the open door of the
+guard-house, and I paused a moment to speak with one, a curly-headed
+lad, who sat smoking, his back resting easily against the logs.
+
+"Are the outer gates ever opened at night?" I asked.
+
+He glanced up at me in surprise, shading his eyes to be assured of my
+identity before speaking.
+
+"Scarcely either day or night now, sir," he replied, respectfully, "but
+between sunset and sunrise they are specially barred, and a double
+guard is set. No one can pass except on the order of Captain Heald."
+
+"In which direction is the Kinzie house?"
+
+He pointed toward the northeast corner of the stockade.
+
+"It is just over there, sir, across the river. You might see the light
+from the platform; beyond the shed yonder is the ladder that leads up
+into the blockhouse."
+
+Thanking him, I moved forward as directed, found the ladder, and pushed
+my way up through the narrow opening in the floor of the second story.
+The small square room, feebly lighted by a single sputtering candle
+stuck in the shank of a bayonet, contained half a dozen men, most of
+them idling, although two were standing where they could readily peer
+out through the narrow slits between the logs. All of them were
+heavily armed, and equipped for service. They looked at me curiously
+as I first appeared, but the one who asked my business wore the
+insignia of a corporal, and was evidently in command.
+
+"I wish to look out over the stockade, if there is no objection. I
+came in with Captain Wells's party this afternoon," I said, not knowing
+what their orders might be, or if I would be recognized.
+
+"I remember you, sir," was the prompt response, "and you are at liberty
+to go out there if you desire. That is the door leading to the
+platform."
+
+"The Indians appear to be very quiet to-night."
+
+"The more reason to believe them plotting some fresh deviltry," he
+answered, rising to his feet, and facing me. "We never have much to
+disturb us upon this side, as it overhangs the river and is not easy of
+approach; but the guard on the south wall is kept pretty busy these
+last few nights, and has to patrol the stockade. The Indians have been
+holding some sort of a powwow out at their camp ever since dark, and
+that 's apt to mean trouble sooner or later."
+
+"Then you keep no sentry posted on the platform?" I asked, a thought
+suddenly occurring to me.
+
+"Not regularly, sir; only when something suspicious happens along the
+river. There 's nobody out there now excepting the French girl,--she
+seems to be fond of being out there all alone."
+
+The French girl? Could it be possible that he meant Toinette? I was
+conscious of a strange fluttering of the heart, as I stepped forth upon
+the narrow footway and peered along it, searching for her. I could
+distinguish nothing, however; and as I slowly felt my way forward,
+testing the squared log beneath me with careful foot and keeping hold
+with one hand upon the sharpened palisades, I began to believe the
+corporal had been mistaken. The door, closing behind, shut off the
+last gleam of light, and I was left alone in utter darkness and
+silence, save for the low rumble of voices within the Fort enclosure,
+and the soft plashing below where the river current kissed the bank at
+the foot of the stockade.
+
+I had gone almost the full length of that side, before I came where she
+was leaning against the logs, her chin resting upon one hand, her gaze
+turned northward. Indeed, so silent was she, so intent upon her own
+thought, I might have touched her unnoticed in the gloom, had not the
+stars broken through a rift in the cloud above us, and sent a sudden
+gleam of silver across her face.
+
+"Mademoiselle," I said, striving to address her with something of the
+ease I thought De Croix would exercise at such a moment, "I meant not
+to intrude upon your privacy, yet I am most glad to meet with you once
+more."
+
+She started slightly, as though aroused from reverie, and glanced
+inquiringly toward me.
+
+"I supposed my visitor to be one of the guard," she said pleasantly;
+"and even now I am unable to distinguish your face, yet the sound of
+the voice reminds me of John Wayland."
+
+"I am proud to know that it has not already been forgotten. You
+deserted me so suddenly this afternoon, I almost doubted my being
+welcome now."
+
+She laughed lightly, tapping the ends of the logs with her finger-tips.
+
+"Have you, then, never learned that a woman is full of whims,
+Monsieur?" she questioned. "Why, this afternoon your eyes were so big
+with wonder that they had forgotten to look at me. Truly, I spoke to
+you twice to aid me from the saddle; but you heard nothing, and in my
+desperation I was obliged to turn to the courtesy of Captain de Croix.
+Ah, there is a soldier, my friend, who is never so preoccupied as to
+neglect his duty to a lady."
+
+"It was indeed most ungallant of me," I stammered, scarce knowing
+whether she laughed at me or not. "Yet my surroundings were all new,
+and I have the training of De Croix in such matters."
+
+"Pah! 't is just as well. I am inclined to like you as you are, my
+friend, and we shall not quarrel; yet, with all his love for lesser
+things, your comrade has always shown himself a truly gallant
+gentleman."
+
+I made no answer to these flattering words, for I felt them to be true;
+yet no less this open praise of him, falling from her lips, racked me
+sorely, and I lacked the art to make light of it.
+
+"The soldiers in the block-house tell me you come here often," I
+ventured at last, for the dead silence weighed upon me. "You have
+never seemed to me like one who would seek such loneliness."
+
+"I am one whom very few wholly comprehend, I fear, and surely not upon
+first acquaintance," she answered thoughtfully, "for I am full of
+strange moods, and perhaps dream more than other girls. This may have
+been born of my early convent training, and the mystic tales of the
+nuns; nor has it been lessened by the loneliness of the frontier. So,
+if I differ from other young women, you may know 't is my training, as
+well as my nature, that may account for it. I have led a strange life,
+Monsieur, and one that has known much of sadness. There are times when
+I seek my own thoughts, and find liking for no other company. Then I
+come here, and in some way the loneliness of water and plain soothe me
+as human speech cannot. I used to love to stand yonder by the eastern
+wall and gaze out over the Great Lake, watching the green surges chase
+each other until they burst in spray along the beach. But since I went
+adrift in the little boat, and felt the cruelty of the water, I have
+shrunk from looking out upon it. Monsieur, have you never known how
+restful it sometimes is to be alone?"
+
+"My life has mostly been a solitary one," I answered, responding
+unconsciously to her mood, and, in doing so, forgetting my
+embarrassment. "It is the birthright of all children of the frontier.
+Indeed, I have seen so little of the great world and so much of the
+woods, that I scarcely realize what companionship means, especially
+that of my own age. I have made many a solitary camp leagues from the
+nearest settlement, and have tracked the forest alone for days
+together, so content with my own thought that possibly I understand
+your meaning better than if my life had been passed among crowds."
+
+"Ah! but I like the crowds," she exclaimed hastily, "and the glow and
+excitement of that brighter, fuller life, where people really live. It
+is so dull here,--the same commonplace faces, the tiresome routine of
+drill, the same blue sky, gray water, and green plains, to look upon
+day after day. Oh, but it is all so wearisome, and you cannot conceive
+how I have longed again for Montreal and the many little gaieties that
+brighten a woman's world. There are those here who have never known
+these happier things; their whole horizon of experience has been
+bounded by garrison palisades; but 't is not so with me,--I tasted of
+the sweet wine once, when I was a girl, and the memory never leaves me."
+
+"Yet you are often happy?"
+
+"'T is my nature, Monsieur, a legacy of my mother's people; but I am
+not always gay of heart when my lips smile."
+
+"And the coming of the French gallant has doubtless freshened your
+remembrance of the past?" I said, a trifle bitterly.
+
+"It has indeed," was her frank admission. "He represents a life we
+know so little about here on the far frontier. To you, with your code
+of border manliness, he may appear all affectation, mere shallow
+insincerity; but to me, Captain de Croix represents his class, stands
+for the refinements of social order to which women can never be
+indifferent. Those were the happiest days of my life, Monsieur; and at
+Montreal he was only one among many."
+
+She was gazing out into the black void as she spoke, and the slowly
+clearing skies permitted the starlight to gleam in her dark eyes and
+reveal the soft contour of her cheek.
+
+"You do not understand that?" she questioned finally, as I failed to
+break the silence.
+
+"I have no such pleasant memory to look back upon," I answered; "yet I
+can feel, though possibly in a different way, your longing after better
+things."
+
+"You realize this sense of loneliness?--this absence of all that makes
+life beautiful and worth the living?"
+
+"Perhaps not that,--for life, even here, is well worth living, and to
+my eyes the great sea yonder, and the dark forests, are of more
+interest than city streets. But in one sense I may enter into your
+meaning; my thought also is away from here,--it is with a home,
+scarcely less humble than are our present surroundings, yet it contains
+the one blessing worth striving after--love."
+
+"Love!" she echoed the unexpected word almost scornfully. "'T is a
+phrase so lightly spoken that I scarce know what it may signify to you.
+You love some one then, Monsieur?" and she looked up at me curiously.
+
+"My mother, Mademoiselle."
+
+I saw the expression upon her face change instantly. "Your pardon,"
+she exclaimed, hastily. "'T was not the meaning I had thought. I know
+something of such love as that, and honor you for thus expressing it."
+
+"I have often wondered, since first we met, at your being here,
+seemingly alone, at this outermost post of the frontier. It seems a
+strange home for one of your refinement and evident delight in social
+life."
+
+"'T is not from choice, Monsieur. My mother died when I was but a
+child, as I have already told you. I scarce have memory of her, yet I
+bear her name, and, I am told, inherit many of her peculiarities. She
+was the daughter of a great merchant at Montreal, and the blood of a
+noble family of France flowed in her veins. She gave up all else to
+become my father's wife; nor did she ever live to regret it."
+
+Her voice was so low and plaintive that I hesitated to speak; yet
+finally, as she ceased, and silence fell between us, I asked another
+question:
+
+"And 't was then you voyaged into this wilderness with your father?"
+
+"I have never since left him while he lived," she answered softly, her
+head resting upon her hand. "But he also has gone now, and I merely
+wait opportunity to journey eastward."
+
+"He was a trader, you told me once?"
+
+"A soldier first, Monsieur; a true and gallant soldier, but later he
+traded with the Indians for furs."
+
+I felt that she was weeping softly, although I could see but little,
+and I leaned in silence against the rough logs, gazing out into the
+black night, hesitating to break in upon her grief. Then a voice spoke
+rapidly at the farther end of the stockade, and a sudden glow of light
+shot like an arrow along the platform. I turned quickly, and there in
+the open doorway, clearly outlined against the candle flame, stood De
+Croix.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+A WAGER OF FOOLS
+
+"It looks a narrow walk, my friend," he said rather doubtfully, peering
+forward with shaded eyes, "and 'tis dark as Erebus; yet gladly will I
+make the venture for hope of the reward."
+
+The door closed behind him, shutting off the last vestige of light; and
+we, with our eyes accustomed to the gloom, could mark his dim outline
+as he advanced toward us. His actions belied his words, for he moved
+with all his accustomed jauntiness along the uncertain foot-way, barely
+touching the top of the palisades with one hand to guide his progress.
+He was almost upon the girl before he perceived either of us; and then
+his earliest words surprised me into silence.
+
+"Ah, Toinette!" he cried eagerly, "I fear I must have kept you waiting
+overlong; yet I was with Mrs. Helm,--a most fair and charming
+bride,--and scarce noted the rapid passage of time."
+
+"I naturally supposed it was a woman," she answered, with what I
+interpreted as a strained assumption of indifference, "as that has ever
+been your sufficient reason for breaking faith with me."
+
+"Do not interpret it so, I beg," he hastened to implore. "Surely, my
+being a few moments in arrears is not a matter sufficiently serious to
+be called a breakage of faith. I do assure you, Toinette, you were
+never once absent from my thought."
+
+"Indeed?" she exclaimed incredulously, and with an echo of suppressed
+laughter in her voice. "Then truly you are far more to be commiserated
+on this occasion than I, for in truth, Monsieur de Croix, I have not
+missed you over-much. I have enjoyed most excellent company."
+
+"The mysterious spirits of the starry night?" he questioned, looking
+out into the darkness, "or the dim figures of your own imagination?"
+
+"Very far from either," she retorted, with a laugh; "a most substantial
+reality, as you are bound to confess. Master Wayland, is it not time
+for you fitly to greet Captain de Croix? He may deem you lax in
+cordiality."
+
+I can perceive now how dearly the laughing witch loved to play us one
+against the other, hiding whatever depth of feeling she may have had
+beneath the surface of careless innocence, and keeping us both in an
+uncertainty as aggravating as it was sweet. I could not read the
+expression upon De Croix's face in the gloom, yet I saw him start
+visibly at her almost mocking words, and there was a trace of
+ill-suppressed irritation in his voice.
+
+"Saint Guise! 'T was for that, then, he left us so mysteriously," he
+exclaimed, unconsciously uttering his first thought aloud. "But how
+knew he you were to be here?"
+
+Before she could answer, I spoke, anxious to relieve her of
+embarrassment; for 't was ever my nature to yield much without
+complaint.
+
+"As it chances, Captain de Croix, she did not know," I said, standing
+back from the palisades where he could see me more clearly. "I left
+the table below with no thought of meeting Mademoiselle, and came out
+on this platform for a different purpose. As you know, I am visiting
+Dearborn upon a special mission."
+
+"Ah, true," and I could feel the trace of relief in his voice as he
+instantly recalled my story. "You also sought a girl in this
+wilderness,--may I ask, have you yet found trace of her?"
+
+I heard Mademoiselle move quickly.
+
+"A girl?" she asked in surprise. "Here, at Dearborn?"
+
+"She was at Dearborn until very lately, but they tell me now I must
+seek for her at the Kinzie house. It was for the purpose of marking
+its position from the Fort that I came up here."
+
+For a moment no one of our voices broke the strained silence. I was
+troubled by this knowledge of a pre-arranged meeting between these two,
+yet felt it was nothing with which I had a right to interfere. This
+careless French girl, whom I had known for scarcely two days, was not
+one to be easily guided, even had I either reason or excuse for
+attempting it.
+
+"'T is strange," she said, musingly, "that she has never so much as
+spoken to me about it; yet she was always shy of speech in such
+matters."
+
+"Of whom do you speak, Toinette?" questioned De Croix.
+
+"Of Master Wayland's young friend with the Kinzies," she answered, the
+old sprightliness again in her voice. "I know her very well,
+Monsieur,--a dear, sweet girl,--and shall be only too glad to speed you
+on to her. Yet 't is not so easy of accomplishment, hemmed in as we
+are here now. Yonder is the light, Master Wayland; but much of peril
+may lurk between. 'Tis not far, were the way clear; indeed, in the old
+days of peace a rope ferry connected Fort and house, but now to reach
+there safely will require a wide detour and no little woodcraft. There
+were patrols of savages along the river bank at dusk, and it is
+doubtful if all have been withdrawn."
+
+I looked as she pointed, and easily distinguished the one glittering
+spark that pierced the darkness to the north and east. I wondered at
+her earlier words; yet they might all be true enough, for I knew
+nothing of this Elsa Matherson. Before I could question further, De
+Croix had interfered,--eager, no doubt, to be rid of me.
+
+"Upon my soul!" he exclaimed recklessly, "if I could voyage here from
+Montreal to win but a smile, it should prove a small venture for our
+backwoods friend to cover yonder small distance. _Sacre_! I would do
+the deed myself for one kiss from rosy lips."
+
+I have wondered since what there was about those words to anger me. It
+must have been their boastful tone, the sarcasm that underlay the
+velvet utterance, which stung like salt in a fresh wound. I felt that
+from the summit of his own success he durst laugh at me; and my blood
+boiled instantly.
+
+"You are wondrous bold, Monsieur," I retorted, "when the matter is
+wholly one of words. I regret I cannot pledge you such reward, so that
+I might learn how you would bear yourself in the attempt."
+
+He stared at me haughtily across the shoulder of the girl, as it
+doubting he heard aright.
+
+"You question my courage to venture it?"
+
+"It has been my experience that the cock that crows the loudest fights
+the least."
+
+"Oh, hush, Messieurs!" broke in Mademoiselle, her voice showing
+suppressed amusement. "This platform is far too narrow to quarrel
+upon; and, besides, the condition of the wager is most easily
+met,--that is, if my lips be deemed of sufficiently rosy hue."
+
+I know I stood with opened mouth, so astounded by these mocking words
+as to be stricken dumb; but not so De Croix. The audacity of his
+nature made eager response to the bold challenge.
+
+"Do you mean what you say, Toinette?" he asked, striving to gain a view
+of her face in the darkness.
+
+"Do I? And pray, why not?" she questioned lightly. "One kiss is not
+so very much to give, and I shall never miss it. 'T is duller here
+than at Montreal, and no doubt 't will greatly interest me to witness
+the race. Surely it will prove a better way to end your foolish
+quarrel than to shoot each other. But come, Messieurs, why do you
+hesitate so long? is not the prize enough?"
+
+He bowed gallantly, and took her hand.
+
+"'T would be the ransom of a king," he answered; "though first I wish
+to know the terms of this contest more clearly."
+
+She looked out into that silent and lonely night, her eyes upon the
+distant gleam, and instinctively our glances followed hers. It was a
+dull desolation, with no sound, no movement, in all the black void.
+The stars gleamed dull on the water of the river beneath us, and we
+could dimly see the denser shadow of the opposite shore; beyond this,
+nothing was apparent save that distant candle flame. What lay
+between,--what strange obstruction of land, what ambushed
+foes,--neither of us had means of knowing. We could simply plunge into
+the mystery of it blindfolded by the fates. Yet to draw back now would
+brand either of us forever with the contempt of her who had challenged
+us so lightly.
+
+"'T is all simple enough," she said at last, her eyes glowing with
+quick excitement. "The goal is yonder where that light glows so
+clearly, though I warn you the longest way round may prove the surest
+in the end. To the one of you who reaches there first and returns
+here, I am to give one kiss as a measure of reward. I care not how it
+may be accomplished,--such minor matters rest with your own wits."
+
+"But the young girl we seek," he insisted; "must she also be brought
+here upon the return?"
+
+"Pish! what care I what may be done with the girl? Besides, she is far
+safer from the savages there than she would be here."
+
+I saw De Croix lean far out over the sharpened palisades and peer
+downward. The movement gave me instantly a thought of his purpose,
+and, unnoticed, I loosened the pistol-belt about my waist and silently
+dropped it upon the platform. Whatever desperate chance he might
+choose to take, I was determined now to equal.
+
+"Doth the water of the river come to the very foot of these logs?" he
+asked, unable to determine in the darkness.
+
+"No, Monsieur, the earth slopes downward for some feet, yet the current
+is at this bank, and gives much depth of water at the shore."
+
+"But of what width is the strip of earth between?"
+
+"Perhaps the length of a tall man."
+
+"Saint Guise! 'tis well I thought to ask!" he explained jauntily. "And
+now, Mademoiselle, if you will but kindly hold this coat and sword, I
+shall strive to show you how highly I value the prize offered, and what
+a French gentleman can do for love."
+
+I fully grasped his purpose now, and even as he turned toward her,
+holding out the valuables he hesitated to lose, I scaled the low
+barrier in my front, planted my feet firmly between the pointed stakes,
+and sprang boldly into the darkness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+DARKNESS AND SURPRISE
+
+It was a greater distance to the water than I had supposed, but I
+struck at last fairly enough, and went down until I thought I should
+never come up again. As I rose to the surface and shook the moisture
+from my face and ears, a light laugh rang out high above me, and
+Mademoiselle's clear voice cried mockingly:
+
+"The backwoodsman has taken the first trick, Monsieur."
+
+I saw De Croix's body dart, like a black arrow, far out into the air,
+and come sweeping down. He struck to my left, and a trifle behind me;
+but I waited not to learn just how. With lusty strokes I struck out
+for the north shore. It was a hard swim, for my deerskins held the
+water like so many bags, and the current, though not rapid, was
+sufficiently strong to make me fight valiantly for every foot of way.
+I came out, panting heavily, upon a low bank of soft mud, and crept
+cautiously up under the black shadow of some low bushes growing there.
+I took time, as I rested, to glance back, hoping thus to learn more of
+the direction I should follow; for the Kinzie light was no longer
+visible, and my struggle with the current had somewhat bewildered me.
+I neither saw nor heard anything of De Croix; but the flame of the
+candle gleaming through the narrow slits of the block-house told me
+clearly where it stood, while a wild yelling farther to the southward
+convinced me that our Indian besiegers were yet astir and concocting
+some fresh deviltry at their camp. With a half-uttered prayer that
+they might all be there, I hastily pressed the water from my soggy
+clothes and plunged forward into the unknown darkness. A big
+cottonwood, as from its shape I judged it to be, rose against the stars
+in my front,--a dim outline swaying slightly in the westerly wind, and
+I took it as my first guide-mark, moving over the rough unknown ground
+as rapidly and silently as possible.
+
+The soft moccasins I wore aided me greatly, nor were there many trees
+along the way to drop twigs in the path to crackle under foot; yet I
+found the ground uneven and deceptive, rifted with small gullies, and
+more or less bestrewn with stones, against which I stumbled in the
+darkness. I was too thoroughly trained in the stern and careful school
+of the frontier not to be cautious at such a time, for I knew that
+silence and seeming desolation were no proof of savage desertion; nor
+did I believe that Indian strategy would leave the north of the Fort
+wholly unguarded. Any rock, any black ravine, any clump of trees or
+bushes, might well be the lurking-place of hostiles, who would only too
+gladly wreak their vengeance upon any hapless straggler falling into
+their hands. I was unarmed, save for the long hunting-knife I carried
+in the bosom of my shirt; but my thought was not of fighting,--it was
+to get through without discovery.
+
+To De Croix I gave small consideration, save that the memory of the
+wager was a spur to urge me forward at greater speed. The place was
+strangely, painfully still; even the savage yelling of the distant
+Indians seemed to die away as I advanced, and nothing broke the
+oppressive silence but an occasional flutter of leaves, or my own deep
+breathing. I had gone, I take it, half or three-quarters of a mile,
+not directly north, but circling ever to the eastward, seeking thus to
+reach the house from the rear, when I came to a sharp break in the
+surface of the land, somewhat deeper and more abrupt than those before
+encountered. It seemed like a cut or ravine made by some rush of water
+lakeward; and, as I hesitated upon the edge of it, peering across and
+wondering if I had better risk the plunge, my eyes caught the blaze of
+the Kinzie light scarce a hundred yards from the opposite bank of the
+ravine.
+
+Assured that I was headed right, I stepped off with a new confidence
+that, for the moment, conquered my usual prudence,--for the steep bank
+gave way instantly beneath my weight. I grasped vainly at the edge,
+fell heavily sidewise, and rolled like a great log, bruised and
+half-stunned, into the black gorge below. I remember gripping at a
+slender bush that yielded to my touch; but all the rest was no more
+than a breathless tumble, until I struck something soft at the
+bottom,--something that squirmed and gripped my long hair savagely, and
+pushed my head back with a grasp on the throat that nearly throttled me.
+
+It was all so sudden, so unexpected, that for the moment I was helpless
+as a child, struggling merely from the natural instinct of preservation
+to break free. I could perceive nothing, the darkness was so intense;
+yet as I gradually succeeded in getting my hands loose, I wound them in
+long coarse hair, pressed them against bare flesh, heard deep labored
+breathing close to my face, and believed I was struggling with a savage.
+
+It was a question of mere brute strength, and neither of us had had the
+advantage of surprise. I could feel the sharp prick of my own knife as
+he hugged me to him, but I dare not reach for it, and I held his arms
+so tightly that he lay panting and struggling as if in a vise. It was
+an odd fight, as we turned and tossed, writhed and twisted among those
+sharp pointed rocks like two infuriated wild-cats in the dark, neither
+venturing to break hold for a blow, nor having breath enough in our
+bodies for so much as a curse. My adversary struck me once with his
+head under the chin, so hard a blow that everything turned red before
+me; and then I got my knee up into the pit of his stomach and caused
+him to quiver from the agony of it; yet the fellow clung to me like a
+bull-terrier, and never so much as whined.
+
+It was never my nature to yield easily, and I felt now this struggle
+was to cost his life or mine; so I clinched my teeth, and sought my
+best to push back the other's head until the neck should crack. But if
+I was a powerful man, this other was no less so, and he fought with a
+fierce and silent desperation that foiled me. We dug and tore, gouged
+and struck, digging our heels into the soft earth in a vain endeavor to
+gain some advantage of position. My cheek, I knew, was bleeding from
+contact with a jagged stone, and I was fast growing faint from the
+awful tension, when I felt his arms slip.
+
+"My God!" he panted. "The devil has me!"
+
+So startled was I by these English words, that I loosed my grip,
+staring breathlessly through the darkness.
+
+"Are you white?" I gasped, so weakened I could scarce articulate.
+
+For a moment he did not answer, but I could hear his breath coming in
+gasps and sobs. Then he spoke slowly, his voice hoarse from exertion.
+
+"By the memory of Moses! I was once,--but that squeeze must have
+turned me black, I 'm thinkin'. An' ye're no Injun?"
+
+"Not so much as a feather of one," I retorted. "But that is what I
+took you to be."
+
+We were both sitting up by this time, he with his back against the
+bank, both of us panting as if we could never regain our breath, and
+eagerly seeking to see each other's features in the gloom. Any attempt
+at conversation was painful, but I managed at last to stammer:
+
+"You must be a whalebone man, or I 'd have broken every rib in your
+body."
+
+"An' I 'm not a bit sure ye did n't," was the response, uttered between
+puffs. "'T was the worst grip ever Ol' Tom Burns had squeeze him,--an'
+I 've felt o' bars mor' nor oncet. Who may ye be, anyhow, stranger?
+an' for what cause did ye jump down yere on me?"
+
+There was a trace of growing anger in his tone, as remembrance of the
+outrage returned to his mind, which caused me to smile, now that I
+could breathe less painfully. It seemed such a ludicrous affair,--that
+dark struggle, each mistaking the purpose and color of the other.
+
+"My name is Wayland," I made haste to explain, "and I left the Fort but
+now, hoping by this round-about route to reach the Kinzie place and
+return under cover of darkness. I slipped on the edge of the bank up
+yonder, and the next thing I knew we were at it. I can assure you,
+friend, I supposed myself in the arms of a savage. You say your name
+is Burns?"
+
+"Ol' Tom Burns."
+
+"What? It is not possible you are the same who brought a message to
+Major Wayland on the Maumee?"
+
+"I reckon I am," he said, deliberately. "An' be you the boy I met?"
+
+"Yes," I said, still doubtful. "But how came you here?"
+
+"Wal, here's whar I belong. I've bin a sorter huntin' an' trappin'
+yer'bouts fer goin' on nine year or so, an' I built a shanty to live in
+up yonder by the forks. I hed n't much more nor got home frum down
+east, when the Injuns burnt thet down; an' sence then I ain't bin much
+o' nowhar, but I reckon'd I 'd go inter ther Fort to-morrow and git
+some grub."
+
+He spoke with a slow, deliberate drawl, as if not much accustomed to
+converse; and I pictured him to myself as one of those silent
+plainsmen, so habituated to solitude as almost to shun companionship,
+though he had already let drop a word or two that made me deem him one
+not devoid of humor. Suddenly I thought of De Croix.
+
+"Has any one passed here lately?" I asked, rising to my feet, the old
+emulation throbbing in my veins. "A white man, I mean, going north."
+
+"Wal," he answered slowly, and as he also stood up I could make out,
+what I had not noted in our previous meeting, that he was as tall as I,
+but spare of build; "I ain't seen nuthin', but some sort o' critter
+went ploughin' down inter the gulch up yonder, maybe ten minutes 'fore
+ye lit down yere on me. Dern if I know whether it were a human er a
+bar!"
+
+"Will you show me the nearest way to the Kinzie house?"
+
+"I reckon I 'll show ye all right, but ye bet ye don't git me nigher
+ner a hundred foot o' the door," he returned seriously. "John Kinzie
+'s a mighty good man, stranger, but he an' Ol' Tom Burns ain't never
+hitched worth a cent."
+
+We climbed silently, and came out together upon the top. A slight beam
+of light crept along through the open door of the log house just in
+front of us, and for the first time I caught a fair view of my
+companion. He was a tall, gaunt, wiry fellow, typical in dress and
+manner of his class,--the backwoodsmen of the Southwest,--but with a
+peculiarly solemn face, seamed with wrinkles, and much of it concealed
+beneath a bushy, iron-gray beard. We eyed each other curiously.
+
+"Dern if ever I expected ter meet up with ye agin in no sich way as
+this," he said shortly. "But thet 's the house. Be ye goin' ter stay
+thar long?"
+
+"No," I answered, feeling anxious to have his guidance back to the
+Fort, "not over five minutes. Will you wait?"
+
+"Reckon I may as well," and he seated himself on a stump.
+
+No one greeted me at the house, not even a dog; though I could see
+figures moving within. Either the occupants felt that an assumption of
+confidence was their best security, or experienced no fear of Indian
+treachery, for I rapped twice before there was any response. A young
+girl, with a face of rare beauty and a pair of roguish black eyes,
+peered out curiously. At sight of a stranger she drew back slightly,
+yet paused to ask:
+
+"Did you wish to see some one here?"
+
+"I am seeking for a young girl," I answered, wondering if this could
+possibly be she, "and they told me at the Fort I should probably find
+her here. May I ask if you are Elsa Matherson?"
+
+For a moment she looked out at me, as if I might be an escaped lunatic.
+Then she turned her face over her shoulder toward those within.
+
+"Mr. Kinzie," said she, "here 's another man looking for Elsa
+Matherson."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+AN ADVENTURE UNDERGROUND
+
+A heavily-built man in shirt-sleeves, with a strong, good-humored face,
+and a shock of gray hair, appeared beside the girl in the doorway.
+
+"'T is not the same scamp that kissed you, Josette," he exclaimed,
+after examining me intently in the dim light, "but I doubt not he may
+prove of similar breed, and it behooves you to be careful where you
+stand."
+
+"Has De Croix been here?" I questioned, scarcely deeming it possible he
+could have outstripped me in our race through the night.
+
+"I know not the rascal's name," was the reply, in the man's deep voice,
+"but certain I am there was one here scarce ten minutes agone asking
+after this same Matherson girl. Saint James! but she must have made
+some sweet acquaintances, judging from the looks of her callers!
+Josette has been rubbing the fellow's kiss off her lips ever since he
+caught her unawares."
+
+"He was a dandified young fellow?" I urged, impatient to be off, yet
+eager to be sure.
+
+The girl laughed lightly, her roguish eyes ablaze with merriment.
+
+"He might be sometime, Monsieur," she cried, evidently glad to talk,
+"but to-night he reminded me of those scare-crows the farmers near
+Quebec keep in their fields; a little chap, with a bit of turned-up
+mustache, and a bright eye, but rags,--gracious, such rags as he wore!"
+
+'T was De Croix, there could be no doubt of it,--De Croix, torn and
+dishevelled by his mad rush through the darkness, but with no shred of
+his reckless audacity gone. There was naught left me now but to race
+back upon his trail, hopeful for some chance that might yet allow me to
+come in first on the return journey. In my throat I swore one
+thing,--the graceless villain should never collect his reward at both
+ends of his journey. He had already stolen the sweets from Josette's
+red lips, but he should never claim those of Mademoiselle. I lingered
+for but a single question more.
+
+"But this Elsa Matherson,--she is not here, then?"
+
+"No," returned Mr. Kinzie, somewhat gruffly, "and has not been since
+the closing of the gates of the Fort. I think you are a parcel of mad
+fools, to be chasing around on such an errand; yet humanity leads me to
+bid you come in. There is not a safe foot of ground to-night for any
+strange white man within three hundred miles of Dearborn."
+
+I glanced about me into the black shadows, startled at his solemn words
+of warning. Away to the southward a faint glimmer told of the location
+of the Fort; farther to the west, a sudden blaze swept up into the sky,
+reflected in ruddy radiance on the clouds, and the thought came to me
+that the savages had put torch to the deserted cabin on the south
+branch of the river.
+
+"No doubt 'tis true," I answered hastily; "yet, whatever the danger may
+be, I must regain the stockade before dawn."
+
+I saw him step forward, as if he would halt me in my purpose; but,
+wishing to be detained no longer, my thoughts being all with De Croix
+and Mademoiselle, I turned away quickly and plunged back into the
+darkness.
+
+"You young fool!" he called after me, "come back, or your life will be
+the forfeit!"
+
+Without so much as answering, I ran silently in my moccasins to the
+spot where I had left Ol' Tom Burns. He sat upon his stump,
+motionless, apparently without the slightest interest in anything going
+on about him.
+
+"Ol' Kinzie was gol-dern polite ter ye, sonny," he commented. "Reckon
+if an Injun was a scalpin' me right on his front doorstep he 'd never
+hev asked me ter walk inside like that! He an' me sorter drew on each
+other 'bout a year ago, down at Lee's shebang; an' he don't 'pear ter
+fergit 'bout it."
+
+"Show me the nearest safe passage to the Fort," I said, interrupting
+him, almost rudely.
+
+He got up slowly, and cast his eyes with deliberation southward.
+
+"Oh, thar ain't no sich special hurry, I reckon," he answered with an
+exasperating drawl. "We 'll be thar long afore daylight,--perviding
+allers we don't hit no Injuns meantime,--an' the slower we travel the
+less chance thar is o' thet."
+
+"But, friend Burns," I urged, "it is a racing matter. I must reach
+there in advance of another man, who has already been here ahead of me."
+
+"So I sorter reckoned from what I heerd; but ye need n't rip the shirt
+off ye on thet account. The feller can't git in thar till after
+daylight, nohow. Them sojers is too blame skeered ter open the gates
+in the dark, an' all the critter 'll git if he tries it will be a
+volley o' lead; so ye might just as well take it easylike."
+
+The old man's philosophy seemed sound. De Croix would certainly not
+gain admittance until he could make himself known to the guard, and,
+carefully as the stockade was now patrolled, it was hardly probable he
+would be permitted to approach close enough for identification during
+the night. De Croix was no frontiersman, and was reckless to a degree;
+yet his long training as a soldier would certainly teach him a measure
+of caution in approaching a guarded fort at such a time.
+
+"'Tis doubtless true," I admitted, "yet I shall feel safer if we push
+on at once."
+
+"Ye called the feller De Croix, didn't ye?" he asked. "Is it the
+French dandy as was at Hawkins's?"
+
+"Yes," I answered, "and I guess you don't care much to help him."
+
+Burns wasted no breath in reply, but moved forward with noiseless step.
+Glancing back, I could clearly perceive Kinzie framed in the light of
+his open door. The vivacious French lass stood beside him, peering
+curiously out across his broad shoulders. Then we sank into the
+blackness of the ravine, and everything was blotted from our sight.
+
+Burns evidently knew the intricacies of the path leading to the Fort
+gate, for I soon felt my feet upon a beaten track, and stumbled no more
+over the various obstacles that rendered my former progress so
+uncertain. My guide moved with excessive caution, as it seemed to me,
+frequently pausing to peer forward into the almost impenetrable
+darkness, and sniffing the night air suspiciously as if hoping thus to
+locate any lurking foes when his keen eyes failed in the attempt. So
+dark was it that I had almost to tread upon his heels in order to
+follow him, as not the slightest sound came from his stealthy advance.
+As he surmounted the steeper inclines of land, I was able to perceive
+him dimly, usually leaning well forward and moving with the utmost
+caution, his long rifle held ready for instant use. As we drew nearer
+the river,--or where I supposed the river must be, for I could
+distinguish but little of our position,--he swerved from the footpath
+we were following, and the way instantly grew rougher to our feet.
+
+"Reckon we 'd better hit the crick a bit below the Fort," he muttered,
+over his shoulder; "less likely ter find Injuns waitin' fer us thar."
+
+"You think there are savages on this shore?"
+
+He turned partially, and peered at me through the darkness.
+
+"I never heerd tell as Injuns was fools," he answered briefly. "In
+course thar 's some yere, an' we 're almighty likely ter find 'em."
+
+On the bank of the river, which I could see dimly by the faint light of
+a star or two that had broken through the cloud-rifts, he paused
+suddenly, sniffing the air like a pointer dog.
+
+"The gol-dern fools!" he muttered, striking his rifle-butt on the
+ground with an expression of disgust. "They 've gone and done it now!"
+
+"Done what?" I questioned, almost guessing his meaning as a pungent
+odor assailed my nostrils. "That smells like rum!"
+
+"'T is rum. Dern if ever I see whar the A'mighty finds so many blame
+idjits ter make sojers of! Them ar' fellers in the Fort wer n't in
+tight 'nough pickle, with a thousand savages howlin' 'bout 'em, so they
+'ve went an' poured all their liquor inter the river! If I know Injun
+nature, it jist means the craziest lot o' redskins, whin they find it
+out, ever was on these yere plains. I bet they make thet fool garrison
+pay mighty big fer this job!"
+
+"You mean the destruction of the liquor will anger them?"
+
+"Anger? It'll drive 'em plum crazy,--they'll be ravin' maniacs! It's
+the hope o' spoils thet's held 'em back so long. They 've wanted the
+Fort to be 'vacuated, so as they could plunder it,--thet's been the
+song o' the chiefs to hold their young men from raisin' ha'r. But
+come, sonny, thar 's nothin' gained a-stayin' here, an' dern me if I
+want ter meet any Injun with thet thar smell in the air. I don't swim
+no river smellin' like thet one does. We 'll hev ter go further up, I
+reckon, an' cross over by the ol' agency buildin'."
+
+We crept up the edge of the stream, keeping well in under the north
+bank, and moving with the utmost caution, for the chances were strong
+that this portion of the river would be closely watched by the
+redskins. We met with no obstacle, however, nor were we apparently
+even observed from the stockade, as we slowly passed its overhanging
+shadow. I could distinguish clearly its dark outlines, even making out
+a head or two moving above the palisades; but no hail of any kind rang
+out across the intervening water, and we were soon beyond the upper
+block-house, where a faint light yet shone. We could see the dim shape
+of the two-story factory building, looking gloomy and deserted on the
+south shore. Burns lay flat at the water's edge, studying the building
+intently; and his extreme caution made me a bit nervous, although I
+could scarcely determine why, for I had thus far marked not the
+slightest sign of danger.
+
+"I reckon we 'll hev ter risk it," he said at length, as he bound his
+powder-horn upon his head with a dark cloth. "Come right 'long arter
+me, and don't make no splashin'."
+
+He slipped off so silently that I scarcely knew he was gone, until I
+missed the dark outline of his figure at my side. With all possible
+caution, I followed him. The current was not strong, but I partially
+faced it, and struck out with a long, steady stroke, so that my
+progress, as nearly as I could judge, was almost directly across the
+stream. Burns had been completely lost to my sight, although as I
+looked along the slightly glistening water I could see for some
+distance ahead. I remember a black log bearing silently down upon me,
+and how I shrank from contact with it, fearful lest it might conceal
+some human thing. Soon after it had swirled by, my feet touched the
+shelving bank, and I crept cautiously up into the overhanging shadow.
+Burns was there, and had already reconnoitred our position; for my
+first knowledge of his presence came when he slowly lowered himself
+down the bank until he lay close beside me.
+
+"They're thar," he said, soberly. "Thought most likely they wud be."
+
+"Indians?" I asked, doubtfully,--for I had an impression the factory
+might be garrisoned by some of our own people.
+
+"Sure; I heerd as how the sojers hed been drawed in, an' naturally
+reckoned the Injuns would n't be over-long findin' it out. 'Nother
+fool thing fer the sojers ter dew."
+
+He paused, listening intently. In the silence, above the slight sound
+of the running water, I felt sure I could distinguish voices speaking
+not far distant.
+
+"It 's no place yere ter stay," he whispered, his lips close at my ear.
+"Reckon best thing we kin dew now is to find one o' the sojers'
+root-caves somewhar along the bank, an' crawl in thar till daylight.
+The Injuns ain't so likely to bother us when the guards kin see 'em
+from the Fort. They don't want no out-'n'-out fuss, to my notion, till
+they kin git inter the stockade for good. Creep 'long yere with me,
+sonny, an' 't won't be far till I find a hole somewhar thet 'll hide us
+fer awhile anyhow."
+
+We crawled slowly along, snake-fashion, at the edge of the river, for
+perhaps thirty feet, our movements hidden by the high and slightly
+overhanging bank at our left. The night was so dark that Burns relied
+more upon feeling than sight to guide him. At last he stopped suddenly.
+
+"Here's one o' 'em," he said. "Crawl along in, sonny; thar's lots o'
+room after ye go a foot er two."
+
+It was the merest hole dug into the bank, roughly lined with irregular
+bits of rock, which opened out into quite a cellar about a yard from
+the surface. The air within felt somewhat chill and damp, as I put my
+head cautiously down the narrow opening; but there seemed no cause for
+fear, and I crept nimbly forward, feeling my way as I advanced along
+the rude mud walls. I could hear Burns behind me on his hands and
+knees, puffing slightly as he squeezed through the small aperture that
+led into the larger chamber.
+
+I had advanced perhaps two yards without reaching the end of this odd
+underground apartment, when suddenly, and directly in my front, there
+sounded a deep, hollow, unearthly groan. The sound was so terrifying
+that I stopped with chilled blood and beating heart, gripping my
+knife-hilt and peering forward into the dark as frightened as ever I
+was in my life. I heard Burns gasp and half turn; then, before I could
+move, even had I dared venture such a thing, an instantaneous flash lit
+up the black interior. I caught one confused glimpse of a huge object,
+topped with a head of tumbled hair, of two flapping wings stretching
+out upon either side, and then the impenetrable curtain of the dark hid
+everything once more. Sweat bathed me in cold drops; nor could I have
+moved a limb to save my life. Behind me Burns was muttering what might
+have been a prayer; when the thing groaned again, a hollow, awful moan,
+thrilling with agony, that sent me grovelling upon my face as nearly
+dead as one could well be and yet breathe and know.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+"FRANCE WINS, MONSIEUR!"
+
+For the moment, every muscle of my body seemed paralyzed. I distinctly
+heard the creature moving in my direction, and I backed away violently,
+actuated only by the thought of instant escape into the open air. But
+Burns blocked the solitary passage.
+
+"Back out of here, for God's sake!" I managed to exclaim through
+parched lips. "That devil-thing is coming this way!"
+
+He struggled desperately in the darkness, tugging madly at some
+obstacle, an oath smothered on his lips. I waited and listened, every
+nerve on edge.
+
+"Dern it all, but I can't!" he groaned at last. "My blame of gun hes
+got wedged, and won't give an inch."
+
+Then a half-smothered laugh rippled out of the gloom just in front of
+me.
+
+"Heaven protect me, but it's Wayland!" came a voice, and the laughter
+broke into a roar of merriment.
+
+"Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu! This will be the death of me!"
+
+The voice, choked and muffled as it was, sounded strangely hollow in
+that dark cave; yet it had a familiar tone. So surprising was the
+situation, that I could only stare into the black void, speechless. It
+was Burns who realized the need of action.
+
+"Whoever the dern fool is," he growled, his voice hoarse with anger,
+"choke the wind out of him, or his blame howling will bring every Injun
+on the river yere!"
+
+"De Croix!" I exclaimed quickly, aroused to recollection by the
+seriousness of the situation, "stop that infernal racket, or the two of
+us will throttle you!"
+
+He puffed and gurgled, striving his best to smother the sense of
+ludicrousness that mastered him. To me there was small cause for
+merriment; the supreme terror of those moments merged into hot anger at
+the deception, and I crept forward eager to plant my hand upon the
+rascal's throat.
+
+"What French mockery is this?" I exclaimed, my hand hard upon his arm.
+"Think you, Captain de Croix, that you can play such tricks in this
+wilderness, and not be made to pay for them?"
+
+I felt him tremble under my fierce grasp; yet it was not from fear, for
+my words only served to loosen his laughter once more. Burns now broke
+in, shoving the barrel of his long rifle forward over my shoulder till
+he struck the Frenchman a blow that effectually silenced him.
+
+"You chattering ape!" he said, growling like an angry bear, "another
+yawp like that, and I 'll blow a hole clean through you! Now, you
+French ninny, tell us what this means, an' be quick about it if ye want
+ter save yer hide!"
+
+De Croix did not answer, but he ceased to laugh, and panted as if the
+breath had been knocked out of him. Another impatient movement by
+Burns led me to speak up hastily in his defence.
+
+"Wait," I said, laying my grasp upon his gun, "he has no breath left
+with which to make reply. 'T is the French gallant who raced with me,
+the same whom you met at Hawkins's Ford; and no doubt he felt good
+reason to play the ghost here in this dark pit."
+
+"Ay," panted De Croix painfully, "I truly thought the savages were upon
+me, and sought to frighten them by the only means I could devise.
+_Sacre_! but you hit me a sore blow in the ribs! If I have frightened
+you, 't was no worse than the terror that took me at your entrance
+here."
+
+For a time none spoke, and no sound, save De Croix's labored breathing,
+broke the silence. Burns had turned slightly, and I knew was listening
+intently for any sound without. Apparently satisfied that the noise
+made by us had not been overheard, he asked in his old deliberate drawl:
+
+"How in thunder, Mister Parly-voo, did ye git up thet thar combination,
+anyhow?"
+
+I heard the Frenchman chuckle, and pinched him as a warning to be
+careful. He answered, in his reckless, easy way:
+
+"'T was all simple enough behind the scenes, Messieurs. I but took
+some old sacking discovered here, and used it as a robe, standing my
+hair well on end; and a flash of powder made the scene most realistic.
+The thing indeed worked well. I would I had a picture of Master
+Wayland's face to show Toinette!"
+
+This chance mention of her name recalled me to myself. The undecided
+wager was yet to be won, and the night was now nearly spent. There
+came to me a sudden determination to risk a rush through the darkness
+to the Fort gates, rather than chance any further defeat at the hands
+of this rash gallant. Yet prudence bade me question somewhat further
+before I ventured upon so mad a deed.
+
+"No doubt 't was most happy from your point of view, Monsieur. From
+ours, it was less so; and instead of laughing, you might better be
+thanking your lucky stars that you did not pay more dearly for such
+folly. But what brought you here? Why have you failed to reach the
+stockade?"
+
+"_Sacre_!" he muttered carelessly, "but I had a fierce enough run for
+it as it was. Why did I not reach the stockade? Because, my friend, I
+am no real ghost to be invisible in the night, nor am I a bird to fly.
+'T was in the shadow of that big building yonder that I ran into a nest
+of those copper-colored fiends, and 't was nip and tuck which of us
+won, had I not, by pure good luck, chanced to stumble into this hole,
+and so escape them. Perchance they also thought me a ghost, who knows?
+But, be that as it may, they were beating the river bank for me in the
+flesh, when you came creeping here."
+
+We lay flat on the floor, the three of us, our eyes fastened upon the
+faint light that began to stream in through the entrance. I could hear
+Burns muttering to himself, as is often the way with men who lead lives
+of solitude; and every now and then De Croix would shake silently at
+the recollection of what had just occurred. I minded neither of them,
+but chiefly planned how best I might outwit De Croix and win the prize
+offered by Mademoiselle. The promise of dawning day was in the outer
+air, too dim as yet to render our faces visible. Suddenly the slight
+draft of air veered, and swept a tiny breath of smoke into my nostrils.
+It came so quickly that I scarcely realized its significance until
+Burns scrambled to his knees with a growl.
+
+"God! the devils have run us to cover!" he cried, sullenly. "They have
+started a fire to smoke us out!"
+
+It hardly needed a moment to prove this true; the thin smoke grew more
+and more dense, filling the narrow entrance until we lay gasping for
+breath. De Croix, ever the most impulsive, was the first to act.
+
+"_Parbleu_!" he gasped, pulling himself forward with his hands.
+"Better Indians than this foul air! If I die, it shall at least be in
+the open."
+
+To remain longer cooped in that foul hole was indeed madness; and as
+soon as I could I followed him, rolling out of the entrance to the
+water's edge, fairly sick with the pressure upon my lungs, and caring
+so little what the end might be, provided I might first attain one
+breath of pure air, that before I gained strength to resist I was
+prisoner to as ill-looking a crew of savages as ever my eyes
+encountered. The villains triced us firmly with thongs of skin, and
+sat us up against the bank like so many puppets, dancing about before
+us, snapping their dirty fingers in our faces, and treating us to all
+manner of taunts and insults. 'T was done so quickly as to seem a
+dream, had I not smarted so sorely from the blows dealt me, and my
+limbs chafed where the tight cords were drawn.
+
+I recall glancing aside at Burns; but his seamed and puckered face
+remained emotionless, as the red devils rolled him over till he stared
+straight up at the sky, now gray with coming dawn. The sight of De
+Croix almost set me laughing, which won for me a kick from the brute
+who had me in special charge. The Frenchman was surely no court dandy
+now; his fancy clothing clung to him in rags, while the powder-flash
+within the cellar had blackened his face and made sad havoc with his
+gay mustache. He endeavored to smile at me as our eyes met, but the
+effort produced only what seemed like a demoniac grin.
+
+"'T is a hard life, Monsieur," I could not forbear remarking, "and will
+hardly remind you of Versailles."
+
+His form stiffened in its bonds, as if the words spurred his memory of
+other days.
+
+"A French soldier smiles at fate, wherever it overtakes him," he
+answered, a touch of pride in his voice. "Besides, the game is not
+played out,--I may yet prove the first one in. But see! if I mistake
+not, here comes the chief of all these devils."
+
+The new-comer strode down the high bank alone, and was greeted noisily
+by our captors. It was the same Indian that had halted Captain Wells
+the day previous; and he looked us over with a contemptuous sneer that
+curled his lips and transformed the whole expression of his hideously
+painted face. I noted that he paid but small heed to either De Croix
+or myself, contenting his vengeance with sharp kicks at our prostrate
+bodies; but as he came to Burns, he paused, bending down till he could
+peer into the old borderer's upturned face.
+
+"Bah! I know you," he said, brokenly. "You Ol' Burns. Stake down in
+village for you."
+
+The old man neither moved his head nor gave the slightest sign that he
+had heard.
+
+"Squaw eat heart," went on the Indian, prodding him with his stick;
+"feed bones to dog. All white men go that way now,--Ol' Burns first."
+
+"Topenebe," was the quiet reply, as the victim rolled over until he
+half-sat against the bank, "I had the pleasure o' kickin' ye once down
+on the Kankakee, an' should be mighty glad ter do it agin. I reckon as
+how ye don't feel over friendly ter me, but ye 're simply wastin' yer
+breath tauntin' me. Any time yer derned old fire is hot, I 'm ready to
+dance."
+
+These calm words angered the warrior, and he spat at him; then he
+turned and grunted an order in his own language. With blows of their
+sticks the Indians got us on our feet; but when they sought to drive us
+up the steep bank to the prairie, Ol' Burns balked and absolutely
+refused to move.
+
+"Not one dern step, Topenebe," he swore grimly, "with these yere things
+on my legs. I 'm no pony ter be hobbled, an' blame if I 'll jump 'long
+fer any red-skin. Ye kin carry me, if ye ain't too lazy; but, by
+thunder! thar 'll be no walkin' till ye cut them bonds."
+
+Blows, curses, and threats failed alike to budge the old man. He
+simply sat down and smiled grimly at them; and we followed his example,
+dimly perceiving there must be a purpose in it. Sheer obstinacy wins
+many a battle, and when we went up the bank our lower limbs were free,
+although to my mind we were as hopelessly bound as ever. Not so with
+Burns. I chanced to press close to him, as we came out upon the
+prairie, and he muttered a quick word into my ear.
+
+"See how they herd us in the shade of the Agency! They are not yet
+ready to let the sojers know whut they're re'lly up to. Not an Injun
+will go beyond thet line long enough to be seen. Be ready to run fer
+it as soon as I say 'Go,' an' tell the Frenchman."
+
+I succeeded in making De Croix understand, by means of the mongrel
+French at my command, which seemed not to be intelligible to the
+savages; and we moved forward at as slow a gait as our vigilant guards
+permitted, with every muscle tense for the coming strain. We were
+bunched together, with no pretence of order on the part of our captors;
+indeed, they seemed to be of various minds over what was to be done
+with us, though Topenebe exercised sufficient control over his mongrel
+followers to compel at least partial obedience to his orders. We
+tramped along to the west of the factory, the walls of which shut off
+all view of the Fort, a half-dozen of the savages about us, while the
+chief stalked on a few feet in advance.
+
+We had almost reached the southwestern corner of the big Agency
+building, and Topenebe had already taken a step to the right, carefully
+keeping the log walls as a protection between our movements and the
+eyes of the garrison, when Burns, shaking off the Indians nearest him,
+bounded suddenly forward and struck Topenebe with his head, hurling the
+fellow by his side over backward as he passed.
+
+"Run for the gate!" he yelled.
+
+Like an arrow from the bow, I shot around the Agency corner, and raced
+for the stockade, De Croix, running like a deer, barely a foot behind
+me. I never dreamed, in that moment of intense action, that Burns was
+not also coming,--that he had deliberately sacrificed himself in order
+to hold back the savages and give us the better chance for life.
+Behind arose the sound of struggle, but there was no indication of
+pursuit, and as I rounded the end of the stockade the lower gate swung
+open just before me and I glanced back, half pausing as I realized the
+old borderer had not followed us; then some one tripped me, and I fell
+headlong. With a sudden rush, De Croix swept by.
+
+"France wins, Monsieur!" he cried back in mocking triumph, as I
+staggered to my knees.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+A CONTEST OF WITS
+
+Though I was never of hasty or violent temper, it was quite as well
+that I failed to gain a sight of De Croix as I passed the posts and the
+sentry clanged the gate behind me. The Frenchman's scurvy trick would
+have heated cooler blood than mine; nor was my spirit soothed by the
+harsh fall I suffered. But De Croix had not waited; nowhere along the
+bare sunlit parade was he visible. I saw nothing but a squad of
+grinning soldiers lounging beside the barracks, until Captain Wells,
+issuing from the guard-house door, caught sight of me and came forward.
+
+"Back, are you, Master Wayland?" he said gruffly, and 't was easy to
+see he did not approve of my escapade. "I scarcely thought to see you
+here again with so full a head of hair, after I learned of your mad
+wager. Providence must indeed take special care of fools. Have the
+redskins captured our French friend?"
+
+"He entered a step in my advance."
+
+A gleam of amusement played over his swarthy face.
+
+"Ah, and so you let him win!" he exclaimed; "he, a mere voyager from
+the courts, unused to forest play! Such remissness deserves the
+guard-house, at the very least. Come, how happened it that this gay
+sprig outfooted you?"
+
+"'T was but a trick," I retorted, aroused by these contemptuous words,
+"and one I shall make him pay well for. But I pray you cut these bands
+and set me free."
+
+I think he had not noticed them before; but now, as he quickly drew his
+knife across the deerskin thongs, his whole expression changed.
+
+"'Tis Indian tying," he said earnestly; "you have been in the hands of
+the savages?"
+
+"Ay!" and the memory of it instantly brought back the recollection of
+the sacrifice that had won us our freedom. "There were three of us
+taken at daylight on the river bank, beyond the factory building. De
+Croix and I escaped through the efforts of one who is still a prisoner,
+and marked for torture."
+
+Many were gathering about us by this time, anxious to learn whatever
+news I brought from without; but it was Captain Heald himself who now
+pushed his way through the throng until he fronted me.
+
+"Who was it?" he asked, sharply. "We have lost no men!"
+
+"His name is Burns, sir. I ran across him just back of the Kinzie
+house."
+
+"Burns? Ol' Tom Burns?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+Heald laughed, a look of evident relief on his haggard features.
+
+"We shall not have to worry much as to his fate," he said, turning
+toward Wells. "You remember the fellow, William? He was one of Mad
+Anthony's scouts, and came west with you in 1803 when you first held
+council here."
+
+The other nodded, a twinkle of pleasant recollection in his eyes.
+"Remember him?" he repeated. "I am not likely ever to forget him. He
+it was who brought me your message at Fort Wayne a month ago. My
+sympathies in this case are entirely with the Indians. There are
+likely to be things happening when Ol' Tom is around, unless he has
+lost his versatility and nerve in recent years. Come, my lad, give us
+the details of the story, for it must be worth the hearing if Ol' Burns
+played a leading part. He is as full of tricks as a dog of fleas."
+
+I repeated the story briefly, for I was now eager to be away before De
+Croix could dress and claim his wager. I knew well the conceited
+coxcomb would never seek the presence of Mademoiselle until he had shed
+the rags he wore on entering the Fort. I remember yet that throng of
+faces, anxious yet amused, peering over each other's shoulders to get a
+better view of me as I talked, and constantly augmented as the word
+passed quickly about the garrison that we had safely returned from our
+midnight adventures.
+
+"You will send aid to him?" I questioned, as I concluded, my eyes fixed
+appealingly upon Captain Heald.
+
+"Not I," was the prompt and decisive rejoinder. "No soldier of this
+command shall leave the stockade until the hour for our final
+departure. The fellow had a chance to come in here with the others
+before the gates were closed, but was obstinate as a mule, and must now
+take the consequences. But you need not worry about Ol' Tom, my boy;
+he 'll circumvent those red devils in some way, you may rest assured,
+nor would he even thank us for interference. I have no force with
+which to control the horde of savages that surround us here. A clash
+of arms would be their excuse for immediate attack, and might mean
+death and torture to the whole garrison. Our only hope lies in being
+permitted to pass out without armed collision; and to do this requires
+that we ignore such hidden deeds. 'Twas a mad prank of yours last
+night, and might have involved us all in common ruin. Go this time
+free, except for these words of censure; for you are not directly under
+my orders. Another such attempt, subversive of all discipline, and the
+gates of Dearborn will be closed against you."
+
+These harsh expressions stung me, but I felt them in a measure merited,
+and made no reply.
+
+"'T was but the act of a boy, Heald," interposed Wells kindly, resting
+his hand upon my shoulder, "and you will find the lad well worth having
+when time of trial comes."
+
+I slipped away through an opening in the curious throng, and hastened
+across the open parade toward the messroom. I felt dust-covered and
+bruised from my rough experiences, and hoped to discover opportunities
+for a bath. The building called the mess-room was long, running nearly
+half the length of the stockade, built like the others of logs, two
+stories in height, and containing a number of rooms. The single flight
+of stairs, opening just within the porch, was exceedingly rude, and
+built without any protecting rail. I hesitated a moment when fairly
+within the entrance, scarce knowing which way to turn in search of what
+I sought; but as I waited there, a light step sounded upon the bare
+floor above, and glancing up, with quickened beat of the heart, my eyes
+caught the soft drapery of a woman as she stepped on the upper stair.
+
+I could scarcely have retreated had I wished to do so, though I
+realized instantly who it was, and drew back against the wall, so that
+she came down, singing lightly to herself, without noticing my presence
+until we were face to face. It was a picture to touch the heart of any
+man, and abide forever in the memory. I saw the sunlight as it
+streamed through an upper window along the rough log wall and flecked
+her white dress with ever-changing spots of quivering gold, and, as she
+drew nearer to my standing-place, played softly amid the masses of her
+dark-brown hair, giving it a tinge of glory. How daintily fair she
+was! how archly sweet looked the clear girlish face under the
+coquettish sweep of the broad hat! and with what unconscious grace she
+moved down the rude stairway, one white hand steadying her against the
+brown logs, the other gathering her draperies so close that I could not
+be blind to the daintily slippered foot that shyly peeped below the
+petticoat of ruffled silk. I may not have loved her then as I learned
+to do in later days, but my heart throbbed riotously at her presence,
+and I stood forgetful of all else.
+
+As she turned aside at the foot of the stairs, she saw me, and the
+color deserted her face, only to return instantly in deeper volume,
+while her tell-tale eyes hid themselves behind long lashes.
+
+"And are you indeed returned, Master Wayland?" she asked quickly,
+conquering her first emotion with a proud uplifting of her head. "You
+surprised me greatly. I think I first mistook you for a ghost come
+back to haunt me for having despatched you on so perilous a quest. You
+cannot know how I have been scolded for doing such a thing; yet surely
+you would have gone, even if I had failed to encourage it."
+
+"Perhaps so, Mademoiselle," I answered, hoping I might lead her to
+speak with greater seriousness; "but it was the hope of the reward that
+spurred me forward."
+
+"Ah, of course," she said deliberately ignoring her own offer, and with
+a reckless toss of her head, "you sought a fair girl for whose sake you
+have travelled far. Pray tell me, Monsieur,--I am so curious to
+know,--do you truly think Josette fairer than I?"
+
+She spoke so lightly, smiling softly into my eyes, that I hardly
+detected the faint tinge of regretful sarcasm in her low voice.
+
+"Josette, you ask me? Why, Josette is indeed a most charming girl,
+Mademoiselle; but to my mind there can be no comparison between her and
+you, for you are the fairest woman I have ever known."
+
+Her dark eyes were full upon me, and I saw her parted lips move as if
+she would speak. But no words came, and we stood there silent except
+for the nervous tapping of her foot against the floor. Her look of
+seriousness changed into a smile.
+
+"By my faith, but you pay compliments with so grave a countenance,
+Monsieur, that I hardly know how to receive them. Most men whisper
+such things with a light laugh, or a twinkle of the eye, and I know
+their words to be empty as bubbles of air. But you,--why, you almost
+make me feel you are in earnest."
+
+"And I am," I interrupted, longing to seize her hand as I knew De Croix
+would have done, and pour forth the words that burnt upon my lips. "I
+have not been privileged to see much of the great outside world,
+Mademoiselle,--the world of courts and cities,--nor do I know how
+lovely its women may be; but no ideal formed in dreams satisfies me as
+you do. I know naught of idle compliments, nor the graces of a
+courtier; but my words are from the heart."
+
+"I do truly believe and trust you, John Wayland," and she gave me her
+hand. "But let us talk of this no longer. My vanity is already more
+than satisfied by your frank and honest speech. And so you found
+Josette?"
+
+"Yes," I answered, scarce noting what it was I said, so puzzled was I
+by her quick retreat.
+
+"And that meeting, perchance, was so pleasant that it has taken your
+thought from all else? It must indeed be so, or why is it that Master
+Wayland doth not claim of me the stake of the wager?"
+
+"Because," I stammered, greatly embarrassed by her roguish questioning
+eyes, "I fear it has not been fairly won."
+
+"Not fairly won?" she echoed, puzzled by my tone and manner. "Surely
+you have made the trip, and the terms were plain. Really, Monsieur,
+you do not think I would withhold so small a reward from the winner?"
+
+"But there was another,--the prize was destined for him who came back
+first."
+
+"And has Captain de Croix returned also?"
+
+"We arrived together, Mademoiselle, but it was his good fortune to be
+earliest through the gate."
+
+'Twas good to see how her face lit up with the amusement this reply
+afforded her.
+
+"Pish! but you are in truth the most marvellous man I ever knew. 'T is
+good to meet with such open honesty; and when did maid ever have before
+so unselfish a cavalier to do her honor? Monsieur, I greatly doubt if
+Captain de Croix will prove so thoughtful when his hour comes."
+
+"You are right, Toinette," broke in a voice at my back. "I know not
+what Master Wayland may be yielding up so easily, but, like the Shylock
+of your William Shakespeare, I am here to claim my pound of flesh."
+
+I wheeled and faced him, standing firmly between his approach and the
+girl, my blood instantly boiling at the familiar sound of that drawling
+voice.
+
+"I have refused to accept from Mademoiselle what I had not fairly
+earned," I said, with quiet emphasis, "and so, no doubt, will you."
+
+There was that about my words and action that astonished him, and for
+the moment his old audacity was gone as he swept a puzzled glance over
+our faces. I have often reflected upon the contrast we must have
+presented to her sight as we stood there,--for De Croix had donned his
+best attire, and was once again resplendent in frills and ribbons, with
+heavily powdered hair.
+
+"Oh, most certainly, what I have not earned," he said at length, "but
+the kiss promised is surely mine by every right, as I was the first in."
+
+"'T was done by a most scurvy trick."
+
+"Poof! what of that? 'Tis the same whether the goal be won by wit and
+strategy, or mere fleetness of foot. Toinette will make no such fine
+distinction, I warrant you."
+
+"Mademoiselle," and I turned toward the smiling girl, who seemingly
+enjoyed our interchange of compliments, "what may have been your
+understanding of this wager?"
+
+"Why," she answered slowly, endeavoring to recall the details to mind,
+"Captain de Croix declared he would willingly make the trip for a touch
+of rosy lips, and in a spirit of venture I promised that whichever of
+you two first completed the journey and returned here should obtain
+such reward."
+
+"There, 't is plain enough," he cried, stroking his mustache
+complacently, "and I have won."
+
+"Most surely you have," I retorted, "and the reward has already been
+given you."
+
+"Been given?" she questioned, "and by whom?"
+
+"The girl Josette."
+
+She looked from the one to the other of us, puzzled for a brief moment
+at the odd situation. Then, as her eyes settled upon De Croix's
+flushed and angry face, she laughed gaily, even as she daintily drew
+aside her skirts to pass us by.
+
+"Pish, Monsieur!" she cried, shaking her finger at him, "I doubt it
+not. No, you need not deny it, for 't is but one of your old-time
+tricks, as I knew them well at Montreal. 'T would be no more than
+right were I even now to reward Master Wayland, for he hath truly won
+it,--yet for that I will delay awhile."
+
+And with a flash of her dark eyes that held us speechless, she was gone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+GLIMPSES OF DANGER
+
+If any trace of anger held place in my heart, it utterly vanished as I
+noted the bewildered surprise with which De Croix gazed after
+Mademoiselle's departing figure.
+
+"_Sacre_!" he exclaimed presently, turning toward me, his face flushed,
+and forgetful of all his well-practised graces. "'T was an unworthy
+trick, Master Wayland, and one I am not likely to forget."
+
+"'T was a moment ago," I answered, in great good-humor at his
+discomfiture, "that you claimed wit was as important a factor as
+fleetness of foot in the winning of a race. I did no more than
+illustrate your theory, Monsieur."
+
+The humor of it failed to touch him, and there was a direct menace in
+his manner which caused me to fall back a step in the narrow passage
+and front him warily.
+
+"No boor of the woods shall laugh at me!" He exclaimed, his eyes
+aflame with passion, "be the cause love or war. What mean all these
+sly tricks of speech and action?--this hurried message to the ear of
+Mademoiselle? By my faith, you did not even pause to wash the dust
+from off your face before you sought her company. 'T is strange such
+intimacy could spring up between you in so short a time! But mark you
+this, Master Wayland, once and for all; I have not voyaged here from
+Montreal to be balked in my plans by the interference of an uncouth
+adventurer. I give you now fair warning that if you ever step again
+between Toinette and me, naught but the decision of steel shall end our
+quarrel."
+
+That he was indeed in deadly earnest, and indulged in no vain threat, I
+well knew; his passion was too strongly painted on his face. My own
+temper rose in turn.
+
+"I hear your words, Monsieur," I returned coldly, "and care no more for
+them than for a child's idle boasting. There is naught between
+Mademoiselle and me that the whole world might not know. We are good
+friends enough, but if by any chance love should be born from that
+friendship, no French gallant, though he sport a dozen swords, shall
+come between us. Win her if you can by reckless audacity and
+lavishness of perfume, but dream not to frighten me away from her
+presence by the mutterings of bravado. I am the son of a soldier,
+Monsieur, and have myself borne arms in battle."
+
+"You will fight, then?"
+
+"With pleasure, whenever the occasion arises," I replied slowly,
+struggling hard to keep back more bitter words. "But I see none at
+present, and, if I mistake not, all our skill at arms will soon be
+needed to save this girl, as well as ourselves, from savage hands."
+
+I know not how we would have parted, for 't was evidently his wish to
+goad me on to fight; and there are times when passion overwhelms us
+all. But at that moment I heard the soft rustle of a dress, and
+wheeled to face the fair young wife of Lieutenant Helm. It was plain
+she had been weeping; but De Croix, ever quicker than I in such
+matters, was first to accost her in words of courtesy. A pretty face
+to him was instant inspiration.
+
+"We bow to you, Madame," he exclaimed with excessive gallantry, doffing
+his hat till it swept the stairs; "your coming makes the very sunshine
+a brighter gold."
+
+"I trust it may bring peace as well," she answered, striving to smile
+back at him, although trouble yet shadowed her sweet face; "surely my
+ears caught the sound of harsh words."
+
+"A slight misunderstanding, which will hardly grow to any serious end,"
+he protested.
+
+"I trust not, gentlemen, for the time is come when we women at Dearborn
+surely need you all to protect us. Our case already appears desperate."
+
+"Has something new occurred," I questioned anxiously, "that makes you
+more alarmed?"
+
+Her eyes, grown strangely serious once more, swept our faces.
+
+"You may neither of you comprehend this in its full meaning as clearly
+as I do," she returned gravely, "for I am frontier-bred, and have known
+the Indian character from childhood. We have long been acquainted, in
+my father's family, with many of the chiefs and warriors now encamped
+around us. We have traded in their villages, lived with them in their
+smoke-stained tepees on the great plains, and trusted them as they
+showed faith in us. You, I learn," and she looked at me more intently,
+"were at my father's house no later than last night. In spite of
+rumors of war and tightly guarded Fort-gates, you found his door wide
+open to whosoever might approach, with never a dog to bark at an
+intruder, be he white or red. This is because the Silver-man has
+always dealt fairly with the Indian, and won his respect and gratitude
+in return. Now, in time of peril this trader dares to believe in their
+good faith toward him and his. 'T is because of this I know so well
+all that is going on without, and have been able to inform Captain
+Heald of much his scouts were unable to discover. From the first there
+have been two factions among the savages gathered yonder; and whether
+we live or die may depend upon which counsel prevails among them--that
+of peace or that of war. Until within an hour I have hoped it might be
+peace,--that the older chiefs would hold their young men in control,
+and the red wampum be not seen at Dearborn. Twenty minutes ago one of
+the noblest advocates of peace,--a Pottawattomie warrior named Black
+Partridge,--sought interview with Captain Heald, and his words have
+shown me how desperate indeed has our situation become."
+
+"He threatened?" broke in De Croix, his hand upon his sword-hilt.
+
+"Nay, Monsieur, 't is not the way of an Indian, nor is Black Partridge
+one to indulge in vain words. I have known him long; in childhood I
+sat upon his knee, and believe him so friendly to the whites that
+naught but a sense of duty could move him otherwise. Yet, as I say, he
+came just now to the commandant of this garrison, and returned a medal
+once given him by the government. It was done sadly, and with deep
+regret,--for I overheard his speech. He said: 'Father, I come to
+deliver up to you the medal I wear. It was given me by the Americans,
+and I have long worn it in token of our mutual friendship. Our young
+men are resolved to imbue their hands in the blood of the whites. I
+cannot restrain them, and I will not wear a token of peace while I am
+compelled to act as an enemy.'"
+
+She stopped, her agitated face buried in her hands, and neither of us
+spoke. The solemnity of her words and manner were most impressive.
+
+"You feel, then, that the die is cast?" asked De Croix, all lightness
+vanished from his voice.
+
+"I believe we march forth from these walls to our death to-morrow."
+
+"But why," I protested, "should you, at least, take part in such
+hazard? Your father's family, you tell us, will be safe from attack.
+Surely, that home might also prove your refuge?"
+
+The little woman, with the face of a girl, looked up at me indignantly
+through her tears.
+
+"Lieutenant Helm marches with the troops," she answered quietly, "and I
+am his wife."
+
+I retain no memory, at this late day, of what conversation followed. I
+know that De Croix in his easy carelessness about the future, sought to
+laugh at her fears and restore a feeling of hopefulness; but all my
+thoughts were elsewhere,--upon the grave dilemma in which we found
+ourselves, and my duty to these helpless ones upon every side.
+
+I must have left the two standing there and conversing, though just how
+I moved, and why, is dim to me. I recall crossing the bare parade, and
+noting the company that formed the little garrison drawn up in the
+shadow of the south stockade. At any other time I should have paused
+in interest, for military evolutions always attracted my attention; but
+then I had no sense other than that of mental and physical exhaustion
+from the hours of toil and lack of rest. Owing to my absence the night
+before, no quarters had been assigned me; but finding the barracks of
+the troops unoccupied, and yielding to imperative need, I flung myself,
+without undressing, upon a vacant bunk, and lay there tossing with the
+burden of intense fatigue.
+
+And then how the thoughts I sought to banish thronged upon me! No
+effort of my will could shut them out. I went over again and again the
+quarrel with De Croix, the incidents of the night, the solemn words of
+Mrs. Helm. Little by little, each detail clear and absolute, there
+unrolled before my mind's view the picture of our situation. I saw it
+as a frontiersman must, in all its grim probabilities. The little
+isolated Fort was cut off from all communication, held by a weakened
+garrison. Hope of rescue there was none. Without were already
+gathered hundreds of warriors attracted by rumors of war and promise of
+pillage; and these were growing in number and increasing in ferocity
+each day. I had ridden through them once, when their mood was only to
+annoy, and realized with a shudder of horror what it would mean to face
+them in our retreat, with all restraint of their chiefs removed. I
+thought of those long leagues of tangled forest-land stretching between
+us and the nearest border settlements, of ambuscades, of constant and
+harassing attack on the ever-thinning column as we fought for each foot
+of the way. Once my mind dwelt for an instant upon the quiet home I
+had left on the banks of the Maumee; as my eyes filled at the memory I
+drove it from me, for the present necessity was all too stern to permit
+indulgence in such weakness.
+
+'T was of the women and children I thought most, and their probable
+fate if we failed to win a passage. The half-framed thought of such a
+possibility made my heart throb with dread apprehension, as I set my
+lips together in firm resolve. What had become of Roger Matherson's
+orphan child? 'T was indeed strange that I could gain no trace of the
+little girl. At the Fort they said she was with the Kinzies, at
+Kinzies' they told me she was at the Fort. It was, as Seth had
+prophesied, like seeking after a will-o'-the-wisp; yet surely she must
+be in the flesh somewhere. My plain duty was to find her at once; and
+I resolved to take up the task anew that day, and question every one I
+met till some trace yielded to my persistency. However, I needed first
+to sleep; but as I resolutely closed my eyes, there came gliding into
+my memory another face,--an arch, happy face, with softly rounded
+cheeks and dark laughing eyes, a face that mirrored a hundred moods,
+and back of them all a sweet womanly tenderness to make every mood a
+new and rare delight. Toinette!--never before was woman's name so
+pleasant to my lips. Ignorant as I was in mysteries of the heart, I
+knew not clearly whether I loved her, though this I knew beyond
+cavil,--no savage hand should ever touch her while I lived; and if I
+had to fight each step of the path from that accursed spot to Wayne, I
+swore within my heart she should come safe through. Her gentle memory
+was with me when all the rest yielded to the drowsy god, and in sheer
+exhaustion I slept--to dream.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+A CONFERENCE AND A RESOLVE
+
+"To my mind, the risk would be extreme; and I greatly doubt the wisdom
+of the step."
+
+"But, William, what other alternative offers us any hope?"
+
+"I confess I know not, for your last mistake has greatly aggravated the
+situation."
+
+I sat up hastily, for seemingly these words were spoken at the very
+side of the bunk on which I lay. As I glanced about me I saw the room
+was vacant; so I knew the conference thus accidentally overheard must
+be taking place in an adjoining apartment. I was thoroughly awake when
+Captain Heald's voice spoke again.
+
+"You say a mistake,--what mistake?" he questioned, as though aggrieved.
+"I have done no more than simply obey the orders of my superior
+officer."
+
+"That may be true," broke in the gentler tones of Lieutenant Helm, "but
+of that we are unable to judge, for not one of your officers has been
+privileged to see those orders."
+
+"You shall see them now. If I have been remiss in taking you into my
+confidence in these grave matters, it has been because of certain
+malcontents in the garrison with whom I hesitated to confer."
+
+There was a rustle of paper, and Heald read slowly. I failed to
+distinguish the opening words, but as he reached the more important
+portion of the document his utterance grew deeper, and I heard
+distinctly this sentence:
+
+
+"Evacuate the post if practicable, and in that event distribute the
+property belonging to the United States in the Fort, and in the factory
+or agency, to the Indians in the neighborhood."
+
+
+There was a pause as he concluded. Captain Wells spoke first.
+
+"To my mind, these orders are not positive, and leave much to your
+discretion. Who brought the message, and when?"
+
+"A Wyandot named Winnemeg. He reached here on the ninth."
+
+"I have heard the name, and believe him worthy of confidence. Did you
+advise with him?"
+
+"Ay! Though he had no oral message from General Hull, he counselled
+immediate evacuation. I also felt such action to be wise; but things
+were in such condition within the Fort,--so large a number of helpless
+women and children to be provided for, and so heavy a proportion of the
+garrison on the sick-list,--that I found it impossible to act promptly.
+The Indians gathered so rapidly without, and assumed so hostile a
+manner, that I thought it suicidal to attempt a march through the
+wilderness, encumbered as we should be, without some positive
+understanding with their chiefs."
+
+"I can easily comprehend all this, and that you have sought to act for
+the best," was Wells's comment; "but I fail to realize how you hoped to
+appease those same Indians by the wanton destruction last night of the
+liquor thrown into the river. It was done in direct opposition to the
+orders you have just read, and is bound to increase the hatred of the
+savages. You may be sure they are not ignorant of the contents of your
+despatch, and must resent the destruction of property they consider
+their own."
+
+"'Twas done upon the advice of two of their leading chiefs."
+
+"Indeed! Which two?"
+
+"Topenebe and Little Sauk."
+
+"The two biggest devils in that whole Pottawattomie camp, and the head
+and front of their war-party! Their purpose is clear enough to my
+mind, and seamed with treachery. Well, Heald, from my knowledge of
+Indian nature I must say that whoever goes forth now to confer with
+yonder redskins has a desperate mission; but if you are still
+determined upon such a conference, I will take my chances with you. 'T
+is given unto man but once to die."
+
+"No, William," replied Captain Heald, with more firmness. "It is your
+part to remain here in protection of your niece, my wife; and if my own
+officers refuse to volunteer in this service, I shall go forth alone to
+meet the chiefs. It is my duty as commandant."
+
+"Two of your officers are here," said Wells, "and they can probably
+answer for themselves. Ensign Ronan is not present."
+
+"He is acting as officer of the day," returned Heald, somewhat stiffly,
+"and is therefore not eligible for such service. Perhaps one of the
+officers here present possesses courage enough for the venture?"
+
+Apparently neither cared to express himself, after such an insinuation.
+At last one, whose voice I recognized as that of Surgeon Van Voorhis,
+gave utterance to his refusal.
+
+"As the only medical officer of the garrison, I feel justified in
+declining to go upon so desperate an expedition," he said gravely. "It
+would expose not only my own life to unnecessary peril, but the lives
+of many others as well."
+
+"And what say you, Lieutenant Helm? Have you also personal scruples?"
+
+I could detect a tremor in the younger officer's voice, as he answered
+promptly.
+
+"Captain Heald has before this seen me in time of danger," he said
+quietly, "and can have no reason for ascribing cowardice to me. But I
+will frankly say this, sir, and with all respect to my commanding
+officer, I believe such conference as now proposed with the hostile
+Indians yonder, at this late day, to be perfectly useless, and that
+every hour's delay since the receipt of orders to evacuate the post has
+only tended to increase our danger and lessen our hope of escape. I
+feel now that our only chance of safety lies in defending this stockade
+against attack until a rescue party from the East can reach us. I have
+a young wife among the women of this garrison; to her I owe allegiance,
+as well as to the flag I serve. Feeling as I do, Captain Heald, as a
+soldier I will obey any command you give, and will go forth upon this
+mission if ordered to do so, either in your company or alone; but I
+cannot volunteer for such service. I believe it to be foolhardy, and
+that whoever undertakes it goes forth to almost certain death."
+
+"Then I shall go alone," said Heald, sternly; "nor do I look forward to
+any such disastrous ending to so open a mission of peace."
+
+"Wait," broke in Wells, impulsively. "I have a final suggestion to
+make, if you are resolved to go. There rode in my party hither a
+rattle-brained gallant, bearing a French commission, who ought to prove
+sufficiently reckless to lend you his companionship. Faith! but I
+think it may well suit the fellow. Besides, if he wore his French
+uniform it might have weight with the reds."
+
+"Who is he?" asked Heald, doubtfully. "I seem not to have memory of
+him."
+
+"He calls himself Captain Villiers de Croix, and holds commission in
+the Emperor's Guard."
+
+Scarcely were the words spoken when I was on my feet, all vestige of
+sleep gone from my eyes. De Croix was hardly a friend of mine, since
+late developments, but he had been my comrade for many a league of hard
+forest travel, and I was unwilling to have him carelessly sacrificed in
+a venture regarding the danger of which he knew nothing. Besides, I
+counted on his sword to aid in the defence of Mademoiselle. I
+understood thoroughly the desperate chances of Indian treachery that
+lay before such a commission as was now proposed. It was rash in the
+extreme; and only the terrors of our position could sanction such an
+experiment. The savages that hemmed us in were already in an ugly
+mood, and fully conscious of their power. To go forth to them, unarmed
+and uninvited, as Captain Heald coolly proposed doing, was to walk
+open-eyed into a trap which treachery might snap shut at any time. It
+was not my purpose to halt De Croix, nor to stand between him and any
+adventure he might choose to undertake; but I could at least warn him,
+in a friendly spirit, of the imminent danger such a thing involved.
+
+With this thought in mind, I ran hastily across the open parade into
+the officers' mess-hall, hoping I might find him loitering there. To
+my hasty glance, the place appeared deserted; and I drew back,
+wondering where to turn next in search. As I hesitated on the
+threshold, the low voice of Mademoiselle fell upon my ear; and at that
+moment she emerged from behind the curtain which divided the officers'
+quarters.
+
+"May I hope you are seeking me?" she asked, graciously; "for it has
+been most lonely here all day,--even Captain de Croix seems to have
+forgotten my existence."
+
+"It was De Croix I sought," I answered, somewhat nettled by her prompt
+reference to him; "and doubtless you are well able to give me trace of
+him."
+
+She studied me keenly, marking an angry note in my voice that I sought
+vainly to disguise.
+
+"Forever a quarrel?" she said, regretfully. "Do you know, Master
+Wayland, I had thought better of you. Surely it is not your nature to
+be a brawler, and always seeking opportunity to show the strong hand!
+What has Captain de Croix done now to make you seek him so vengefully?"
+
+"'T is not in quarrel," I explained,--I fear with ill grace, for her
+words in his defence were little inclined to mollify me. "You may
+indeed have so poor conception of me as to misinterpret my coming; yet
+in truth I seek De Croix in friendship, hoping that I may by a chance
+word serve him."
+
+"Indeed! what danger threatens, that he needs to be warned against?"
+
+I hesitated; for, now that my blood had somewhat cooled, my mission
+seemed a bit foolish.
+
+"I insist upon knowing," she continued haughtily, her eyes full upon
+mine, "or I shall believe you sought him for hostile purpose, and would
+deceive me by fair words."
+
+"Mademoiselle," I answered gravely, "you do me wrong. Only a few
+moments ago I chanced to overhear a discussion, by the officers of this
+Fort, regarding a commission to go forth and hold council with the
+Indians. Captain Heald is determined upon such a course; but none will
+volunteer to accompany him, because of the grave danger of savage
+treachery. The Frenchman's name was mentioned as one reckless enough
+to join with such a party; and I sought to warn him ere he accepted
+blindly. He is hardly a friend of mine,--yet it seems no more than
+fair that he should know the full measure of his peril before saying
+'yes.'"
+
+She came impulsively forward, with quickly extended hand, her face
+aglow.
+
+"You are indeed a true heart, John Wayland, and have shamed me rightly.
+I know well the deceit and treachery of Indian nature, and can
+understand the peril such a party would run. Promise me that you will
+prevent Captain de Croix from becoming one of them."
+
+"I?" I exclaimed in perplexed surprise; "I can do no more than warn
+him."
+
+"But you must do more!" she cried imperatively. "He will surely go if
+asked. A warning such as you propose would only stir his blood. I beg
+you to use your wits a little, so that he may know nothing of it."
+
+I looked at her, deeply hurt by the interest so openly displayed.
+
+"You are wondrously aroused for the Frenchman's safety, Mademoiselle!"
+
+"Yes, though not as you may fancy. Captain de Croix came here for my
+sake, even though no word of mine gave him reason for doing so. For
+this reason I could never forgive myself if harm befell him on such a
+journey. 'T would be as if I had lured him to his death. So 'tis for
+my sake, not his, that I ask the favor."
+
+I leaned against the log wall and thought quickly, her anxious eyes
+never leaving my face. There came into my mind a conviction that the
+girl really loved him; and this made the struggle harder for me to
+serve him. Nor did I see clearly how it could well be done, save
+through a sacrifice of myself, such as I had never intended.
+
+"Surely," she urged, "your wits will conceive some way in which it may
+be done?"
+
+"Yes," I answered, eager now to hide my own feeling from her; "'tis not
+hopeless. You desire that he be kept within the Fort, ignorant of this
+commission?"
+
+"I do; 't is the only way."
+
+"Very well, it shall be done, Mademoiselle. No, I need no thanks from
+you. Only do this simple thing, which, I am sure, you will find no
+hardship,--keep Captain de Croix from any possible contact with others
+for an hour. Your eyes will prove sufficient, no doubt, to enchain him
+that long; if not, use other measures."
+
+"But what will you do?"
+
+"That does not count. 'T is the result, not the means, that must
+content you. I have my plan, and it will work; but I cannot stay here
+longer to discuss it. Only do your part well, and I pledge you the
+safety of De Croix."
+
+I left her standing there, the light of questioning still in her eyes;
+but I wished mainly to be safely away, where I might hide my own sudden
+heart-ache in the energy of action.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+IN THE INDIAN CAMP
+
+It cut me deeply to think that this girl would willingly sacrifice me
+to save the French gallant from injury, and an anxiety to escape her
+presence before I should speak words I might always regret caused me to
+leave with scant ceremony. Yet I was none too soon; for scarce had I
+stepped without the door when I met Lieutenant Helm ascending the steps.
+
+"Ah, Wayland!" he said, catching sight of me, "do you happen to know
+where I am most likely to find Captain de Croix?"
+
+"He is scarcely to be disturbed at present, unless the matter be truly
+urgent," I replied, my plan hastily sketched in mind. "Have you
+arranged a banquet in honor of the Frenchman?"
+
+"No such good fortune," was the grave response. "Captain Heald desires
+his company upon an immediate mission to the Pottawattomie camp."
+
+"Oh, is that all? Well, Captain de Croix will hardly be found
+sufficiently recovered from his late adventure to enter upon another
+one so early. 'T is in my thought he either sleeps or is prinking
+himself for more pleasant conquests. But why worry him? In my
+judgment, no poorer choice could be made for so serious a task as you
+propose. He is a mere French courtier,--brave enough, and rash, I
+grant, yet without knowledge of Indian ways and treachery. Might not I
+answer better as his substitute?"
+
+"You?"
+
+"Ay! and why not? I am frontier-bred, long trained in woodcraft and
+savage ways, and surely far better fitted for such a task than is this
+petted darling of the courts. Were it a flirtation, now, the post
+might be truly his."
+
+"'T is true, you would be my choice; but do you realize the peril
+involved?"
+
+"Fully, my friend, yet scarce think it so desperate as you imagine. It
+is my judgment the savages yonder are seeking bigger game than so small
+a party would afford, and will therefore allow us to go free. However,
+if it should prove otherwise," and I spoke the words with a sore heart
+as I recalled what had just occurred, "I am a lone man in the world,
+and to such an one death is not so terrible, even at Indian hands.
+Come, I will go with you to confer with Captain Heald, and offer him my
+services. He can do no more than refuse."
+
+Helm offered no further objection, doubtless feeling it useless in my
+venturesome mood; and we crossed the parade together without speaking.
+
+Captain Wells was the first to see me as we entered, and some instinct
+told him instantly of my purpose.
+
+"Ah, Wayland, my boy! I have been troubled lest you might chance to
+hear of our plight, and jump in. Come now, lad! 't was not you we sent
+after, nor can we use you in so grave a matter."
+
+"And pray, why not?" I questioned, a little touched by this evidence of
+kindness, yet firmly determined to keep my pledge to Mademoiselle. "I
+am a better man for such deeds than the Frenchman, and am eager to go."
+
+"So this is not your Captain de Croix?" said Captain Heald, eying me
+curiously. "Saint George! but he is a big fellow,--the same who made
+the race last night, or I mistake greatly. And what is this man's
+name?"
+
+"It is John Wayland," I answered, anxious to impress him favorably; "a
+frontiersman of the Maumee country, and fairly skilled in Indian ways.
+I have come to volunteer my services to go with you."
+
+"You are anxious to die? have the spirit of a Jesuit, perchance, and
+are ambitious of martyrdom?"
+
+"Not unusually so, sir, but I think the danger overrated by these
+gentlemen. At least, I am ready and willing to go."
+
+"And so you shall, lad!" cried the old soldier, striking a hand upon
+his knee. "You are of the race of the long rifles; I know your kind
+well. Not another word, William! here is a man worth any twenty of
+your French beaux strutting with a sword. Now we start at once, and
+shall have this matter settled speedily."
+
+The earliest haze of the fast-descending twilight was hovering over the
+level plain as we two went forth. In the west, the red tinge of the
+sun, which had just disappeared below the horizon, lingered well up in
+the sky. Against it we could see, clearly outlined in inky blackness,
+the distant Indian wigwams; while to the eastward the crimson light was
+reflected in fantastic glow upon the heaving surface of the lake. For
+a moment we paused, standing upon the slope of the mound on which the
+Fort was built, and gazed about us. There was little movement to
+arrest the eye. The dull, dreary level of shore and prairie was
+deserted; what the more distant mounds of sand or the overhanging river
+banks might hide of savage watchers, we could only conjecture.
+Seemingly the mass of Indian life, which only the day before had
+overflowed that vacant space, had vanished as if by some sorcerer's
+magic. To me, this unexpected silence and dreary barrenness were
+astounding; I gazed about me fairly bewildered, almost dreaming for the
+moment that our foes had lifted the long siege and departed while I
+slept. Heald no doubt read the thought in my eyes, for he laid a
+kindly hand upon my sleeve and pointed westward.
+
+"They are all yonder, lad, at the camp,--in council, like enough. Mark
+you, Wayland, how much farther to the south the limit of their camp
+extends than when the sun sank last night? Saint George! they must
+have added all of fifty wigwams to their village! They gather like
+crows about a dead body. It has an ugly look."
+
+"Yet 't is strange they leave the Fort unguarded, so that the garrison
+may come and go unhindered. 'T is not the usual practice of Indian
+warfare."
+
+"Unguarded? Faith! the hundreds of miles of wilderness between us and
+our nearest neighbor are sufficient guard. But dream not, my lad, that
+we are unobserved; doubtless fifty pair of skulking eyes are even now
+upon us, marking every move. I venture we travel no more than a
+hundred yards from the gate before our way is barred. Note how
+peaceful the stockade appears! But for the closed gates, one would
+never dream it the centre of hostile attack. Upon my word, even
+love-making has not deserted its log-walls!"
+
+I lifted my eyes where he pointed, and even at that distance, and
+through the gathering gloom, I knew it was De Croix and Mademoiselle
+who overhung those eastern palisades in proximity so close. The sight
+was as fire to my blood, and with teeth clinched to keep back the mad
+utterance of a curse, I strode beside Captain Heald silently down the
+declivity to the deserted plain below.
+
+It is my nature to be somewhat chary of speech, and to feel deeply and
+long; but if I doubted it before, I knew now, in, this moment of keen
+and bitter disappointment, that my heart was with that careless girl up
+yonder, who had sent me forth into grave peril apparently without
+thought, and who cared so little even now that she never lifted her
+eyes from the sparkling water to trace our onward progress. Anger,
+disappointment, disgust at her duplicity, her cruel abuse of power,
+swept over and mastered me at the moment when I realized more deeply
+than ever my own love for her, and my utter helplessness to oppose her
+slightest whim. No Indian thongs could bind me half so tightly as the
+false smiles of Toinette.
+
+Plunged into this whirlpool of thought, I moved steadily forward at
+Captain Heald's shoulder, unconscious of what might be taking place
+about us, and for the moment indifferent to the result of our venture.
+But this feeling was not for long. Scarcely had our progress taken us
+across the front of the deserted agency building, and beyond the ken of
+the sentinels in the Fort, when a single warrior rose before us as from
+the ground, and blocked the path. He was a short, sturdy savage, bare
+to the waist save for a chain of teeth which dangled with sinister
+gleam about his brawny throat, and, from the wide sweep of his
+shoulders, evidently possessed of prodigious strength. He held a gun
+extended in front of him, and made a gesture of warning impossible to
+misapprehend.
+
+"What seeks the White Chief?" he questioned bluntly. "Does he come for
+peace or war?"
+
+The query came with such grave abruptness that Heald hesitated in reply.
+
+"Never since I have been at Dearborn have I sought war," he replied at
+last. "Little Sauk knows this well. We travel now that we may have
+council of peace with the chiefs of the Pottawattomies. See!" and he
+held up both empty hands before the Indian's eyes, "we are both
+unarmed, because of our trust in the good faith of your people."
+
+Little Sauk uttered a low grunt of disapproval, and made no motion to
+lower his threatening rifle.
+
+"Ugh! You talk strong! Did any Pottawattomie send to White Chief to
+come to council?"
+
+"No," admitted Heald. "We come because it is the wish of the Great
+Father of the white men down by the sea that we talk together of the
+wrongs of the red men, and make proposals of peace between us. There
+is no cause for these rumors of war, and the Great Father has heard
+that the Pottawattomies are dissatisfied, and it has made him sad."
+
+The Indian looked from one to the other of us in the growing darkness,
+and made a gesture of contempt.
+
+"The real Great White Father wears a red coat, and is friend to the
+Pottawattomie," he said with dignity. "He no lie, no shut Indian out
+of Fort, no steal furs, no throw rum in river. Who this man, White
+Chief? He no soldier,--he long-knife."
+
+"Yes, he is a frontiersman, and came to the Fort yesterday with
+Wau-me-nuk, bringing word of greeting from the Great Father to the
+Pottawattomies. He goes now with me to council. May we pass on to
+your camp?"
+
+For a moment Little Sauk did not answer, stepping closer in order that
+he might better scan my features. Apparently satisfied by the keen
+scrutiny, he turned his broad back upon us and strode off with
+contemptuous dignity.
+
+"Come," he said shortly; and without further word we followed across
+that dim plain and through the thickening darkness.
+
+The Indian's step was noiseless, and his figure cast the merest shadow;
+but as we moved onward others constantly joined us, stalking out of the
+black night like so many phantoms, gliding silently in their noiseless
+moccasins across the soft grass, until fully a dozen spectral forms
+hedged our pathway and kept step to every movement. It was a weird
+procession, through the shifting night-shadows; and although I could
+catch but fleeting glimpses of those savage faces and half-naked forms,
+the knowledge of their presence, and our own helplessness if they
+proved treacherous, caused my heart to throb till I could hear it in
+the painful silence like the beat of a drum. Now and then a guttural
+voice challenged from the darkness, to be instantly answered by those
+in advance, and another savage glided within our narrowed vision,
+scanned us with cruel and curious eyes, and fell in with the same
+silent, tiger-like tread of his fellows.
+
+It was not long that we were compelled to march thus, the gathering
+warriors pressing us closer at each step; and it was well it proved so
+soon ended, for the grim mockery set my nerves on edge. Yet the change
+was hardly for the better. Just before reaching the spot where the
+river forked sharply to the southward, we came to the upper edge of the
+wigwams, and into a bit of light from their scattered fires. There
+rushed out upon us a wild horde of excited savages, warriors and
+squaws, who pushed us about in sheer delirium, and even struck
+viciously at us across the shoulders of our indifferent guard, so that
+it was only by setting my teeth that I held back from grappling with
+the demons. But Heald, older in years and of cooler blood, laid
+restraining hands upon my arm.
+
+"'T is but the riff-raff," he muttered warningly. "The chiefs will
+hold them back from doing us serious harm."
+
+As he spoke, Little Sauk uttered a gruff order, and the grim warriors
+on our flank drove back the jeering, scowling crowd, with fierce Indian
+cursing and blows of their guns, until the way had been cleared for our
+advance. We moved on for two hundred yards or more, the maddened and
+vengeful mob menacing us just beyond reach of the strong arms, and
+howling in their anger until I doubted not their voices reached the
+distant Fort.
+
+We came to a great wigwam of deer-skin, much larger than any I had ever
+seen, with many grotesque figures of animals sketched in red and yellow
+paint upon the outside, and clearly revealed by the blazing fire
+without. A medicine-man of the tribe, hideous with pigment and high
+upstanding hair, sat beating a wooden drum before the entrance, and
+chanting wildly to a ferocious-looking horde of naked savages, many
+bleeding from self-inflicted wounds, who danced around the blaze, the
+leaping figures in the red glare making the scene truly demoniacal.
+Little Sauk strode through the midst of them, unheeding the uproar, and
+flung aside the flap of the tent.
+
+"White Chief and Long Knife wait here," he said Sternly. "Come back
+pretty soon."
+
+There was nothing to be seen within, excepting some skins flung
+carelessly upon the short trodden grass. We sat down silently upon
+these, gazing out through the narrow opening at the blazing fire and
+the numerous moving figures constantly crowding closer about the
+entrance, both of us too deeply immersed in thought to care for speech.
+
+The black shadows upon the tepee cover told me that guards had been
+posted to keep back the rabble from intrusion, and once I saw signs of
+a brief struggle in front when the swarm had grown too inquisitive and
+were forced back with scant ceremony. The weird dance and incantation
+continued; and although I knew but little of the customs of the
+Pottawattomies, there was a cruel savagery and ferocity about it which
+I felt held but little promise of peace.
+
+"'T is the war-dance," whispered Heald in my ear, "and bodes ill for
+our purpose. See! the red wampum is in the fellow's hand."
+
+As I bent forward to catch the gleam of it in the flames, a new figure
+suddenly flitted past our narrow vista, between us and the wild circle
+of dancers. It was a woman, attired in fanciful Indian dress; but
+surely no Pottawattomie squaw ever possessed so graceful a carriage, or
+bore so clear a face.
+
+"Captain!" I ejaculated eagerly. "Did you see that white woman there,
+with the long skirt and red hair?"
+
+"Ay!" he answered as though he scarce had faith in his own eyes. "I
+marked not the color of her hair, but I saw the lass, and, by Saint
+George! she looked to me like old Roger Matherson's daughter."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+A COUNCIL OF CHIEFS
+
+I was on my feet in an instant, forgetful of everything excepting my
+duty to this girl whom I had come so far to find, and who now was
+plainly a prisoner in Indian hands. At the entrance of the tepee, a
+scowling warrior pushed me roughly back, pretending not to understand
+my eager words of expostulation, and, by significant gesture,
+threatening to brain me with his gun-stock if I persisted. A slight
+return of reason alone kept me from striking the fellow down and
+striding over his prostrate body. While I stood struggling with this
+temptation, Captain Heald grasped me firmly.
+
+"Are you mad, Wayland?" he muttered, dragging me back into the dark
+interior of the tepee. "For God's sake, don't anger these fellows!
+Think of all the helpless lives depending on the success of our errand
+here! What is the girl to you?"
+
+"I will wait," I answered, calmed by his earnestness, and ashamed of my
+boyish impetuosity; "but I am here at Dearborn seeking this young
+woman, whom I had supposed rather to be a young child. Her father was
+my father's dearest friend, and wrote us from his death-bed asking our
+protection for her."
+
+"You are Major Wayland's son,--I remember the circumstances now, and
+that I endorsed such a letter. 'T is most strange. This girl
+disappeared from Dearborn some days ago. Mrs. Heald heard the matter
+discussed among the ladies of the garrison, and then all supposed her
+to be at John Kinzie's in company with Josette La Framboise; yet I
+would almost have sworn I saw her again, and not two hours ago, within
+the Fort. By Saint George! the glimpse I got just now makes me doubt
+my own eyesight. She was ever an odd creature,--but what can bring her
+here, walking so freely about in this camp of vengeful savages?"
+
+I could not answer him; the mystery was beyond my clearing. Only, if
+this was the Elsa Matherson for whom I had sought so long, surely God
+had in some way led me on to find her; nor should any peril turn my
+quest aside.
+
+I had hardly time for this resolve, ere the flap of the tepee was held
+back by a dark hand, and in grimly impressive silence warrior after
+warrior, plumed, painted, and gaudily bedecked with savage ornaments,
+stalked solemnly within, circled about us without sign of greeting, and
+seated themselves cross-legged upon the bare ground. The uplifted
+door-skin permitted the red flames from without to play freely over
+their stern, impassive faces, and shone back upon us from their
+glittering eyes. It was an impressive scene, their stoical demeanor
+breathing the deep solemnity of the vast woods and plains amid which
+their savage lives were passed; nor could one fail to feel the deep
+gravity with which they gathered in this council of life or death. To
+them it was evident that the meeting was of most serious portent.
+
+I saw only two faces that I recognized in that red ring,--Topenebe and
+Little Sauk. I knew, however, it was probable there were some great
+chiefs among that company; and I marked especially two, one with long
+white hair, and a tall, slender, rather young fellow, having two wide
+streaks of yellow down either cheek.
+
+The Indians sat motionless, gazing intently at us; and I swept the
+entire dark circle of scowling faces, vainly endeavoring to find one
+hopeful glance, one friendly eye. Open hatred, undisguised distrust,
+implacable enmity, were stamped on every feature. Whatever our plea
+might be, I felt convinced that the chiefs were here only to carry out
+their own purposes and make mock of every offering of peace.
+
+After several moments of this painful silence, the chief with the long
+white hair deliberately lighted a large pipe drawn from his belt. It
+was curiously and grotesquely fashioned, the huge bowl carved to
+resemble the head of a bear. He drew from the stem a single thick
+volume of smoke, breathed it out into the air, and solemnly passed the
+pipe to the warrior seated upon his right. With slow deliberation, the
+symbol moved around the impassive and emotionless circle, passing from
+one red hand to another, until it finally came back to him who had
+first lighted it. Without so much as a word being uttered, he gravely
+offered it to Captain Heald. I heard, and understood, the quick sigh
+of relief with which my companion grasped it; he drew a breath of the
+tobacco, and I followed his example, handing back the smoking pipe to
+the white-haired chief without rising, amid the same impressive silence.
+
+The Indian leader spoke for the first time, his voice deep and guttural.
+
+"The Pottawattomies have met in council with the White Chief and the
+Long Knife," he said soberly, "and have smoked together the peace-pipe.
+For what have the white men come to disturb Gomo and his warriors?"
+
+I gazed at him with new interest. No name of savage chief was wider
+known along the border in those days, none more justly feared by the
+settlers. He was a tall, spare, austere man, his long coarse hair
+whitened by years, but with no stoop in his figure. His eyes, small
+and keen, blazed with a strange ferocity, as I have seen those of
+wildcats in the dark; while his flesh was drawn so closely against his
+prominent cheek-bones as to leave an impression of ghastliness, as of a
+corpse suddenly returned by some miracle to life. With dabs of paint
+across the forehead, and thin lips drawn in a narrow line of cruelty,
+his face formed a picture to be long remembered with a shudder.
+
+It was easy enough to see that Captain Heald felt uncertain how far to
+venture in his proposals, though he spoke up boldly, and with no tremor
+in his voice. His long frontier experience had taught him the danger
+that lay in exhibiting timidity in the face of Indian scorn.
+
+"Gomo," he said firmly, "and you other Chiefs of the Pottawattomies,
+there has never been war between us. We have traded together for many
+seasons; you have eaten at my table, and I have rested by your fires.
+We have been as brothers, and more than once have I judged between you
+and those who would wrong you. I have remembered all this, and have
+now come into your camp through the night, without fear and unarmed,
+that I might talk with you as friends. Am I not right to do this? In
+all the time I have been the White Chief at Dearborn, have I ever done
+wrong to a Pottawattomie?"
+
+He paused; but no warrior made reply. A low guttural murmur ran around
+the line of listeners, but the bead-like eyes never left his face. He
+went on:
+
+"Why should I fear to meet the Pottawattomies, even though word had
+come to me that their young men talk war, and seek alliance with our
+enemy the red-coats? The Chiefs have seen war, and are not crazed for
+the blood of their friends. They will restrain such wild mutterings.
+They know that the White Father to the east is strong, and will drive
+the red-coats back into the sea as he did when they fought before.
+They will ally themselves with the strong one, and make their foolish
+young man take up arms for their friends."
+
+Still no one spoke, no impassive bronze face exhibited the faintest
+interest. It was as if he appealed to stone.
+
+"Is this not so?"
+
+"The White Chief has spoken," was the cold reply. "His words are full
+of eloquence, but Gomo hears nothing that calls for answer. The White
+Chief says not why he has come and demanded council of the
+Pottawattomies."
+
+A low murmur, expressive of approval, swept down the observant line;
+but no man among them stirred a muscle.
+
+"I came for this, Gomo," said Heald, speaking now rapidly, and with an
+evident determination to trust all in a sentence and have it over with,
+for it was clear the savages were in no mood for diplomatic evasion:
+"to ask your guidance and protection on our march eastward on the
+morrow. I come to the Pottawattomies as friends; for I fear we may
+meet with trouble on the way, from roving bands of Wyandots and Miamis,
+and we are greatly burdened by our women and children. It is to ask
+this that I and the Long Knife are here."
+
+"You say the White Father is strong, and will drive the red-coats into
+the sea: did he at Mackinac?"
+
+"There was treachery there."
+
+"Ugh! Why, if White Father so strong, you leave Fort and go way off?"
+
+"Because just now I can serve him better elsewhere; but we shall come
+again."
+
+"My young men have rumor that Detroit go like Mackinac."
+
+"It is untrue; your young men bring false news."
+
+Gomo turned and looked about him upon the expectant warriors; and, as
+if the glance was an invitation to free speech, one sitting half-way
+across the circle asked gruffly:
+
+"Why you pour out rum, if you love Pottawattomie?"
+
+"Because I am only the White Chief at Dearborn," returned Heald, facing
+the questioner, "and, like Peesotum who asks, have higher chiefs
+elsewhere whom I must obey. What they tell me I have to do."
+
+"White Chief lies!" was the short, stern answer. "Winnemeg brought no
+such word."
+
+So furious were the many dark, glowering faces, that I braced myself,
+thinking the next moment would be one of struggle for life or death;
+but Gomo held them motionless with a wave of his hand. He rose slowly
+to his feet, and faced us with grave dignity.
+
+"It is true, as Peesotum says," he said impressively. "The White Chief
+has used a double tongue to the Red man; yet we will deal fairly with
+him, for he has come to us in peace. White Chief, there is to be war
+between us; 't is the will of our young men, and the red wampum has
+passed among our lodges and the lodges of our brothers the Wyandots.
+Yet when you unlock the gates we will go forth with you and your
+people, around the sweep of the water. Such is the will of the Great
+Spirit, and the decision of the Pottawattomie in council of chiefs."
+
+Heald looked about upon the scowling circle with disbelief so clearly
+expressed in his eyes, that Gomo, reading it, turned to his warriors
+and called upon them one by one to say if he spoke the truth. I heard
+him speak thus to Little Sauk, Black Bird, Topenebe, Mankia, Pipe Bird,
+Peesotum, and Ignance; and each answered with the low grunt of assent.
+He fixed his eyes upon the younger Indian who had already attracted my
+attention by the manliness of his face as well as the yellow stripes
+that disfigured him.
+
+"And you, Black Partridge?"
+
+"I have already spoken to the White Chief in his own wigwam, and given
+back the medal of the Americans," was the grave response. "I have no
+more to say."
+
+I confess these words chilled me, as I recalled their meaning; and
+Heald half rose to his feet as though he would protest, but not a
+stolid face among the warriors changed in expression. Gomo drew his
+robes more closely about his gaunt figure in simple but impressive
+dignity.
+
+"Doth Shaw-nee-aw-kee go east also with the white men?" he asked.
+
+"I have not of late conferred with the Silver-man. He has been at his
+own lodge, and doubtless you may know his purpose better than I."
+
+"We wish him to stay. He good man; Pottawattomie's friend."
+
+The Indian stood motionless, his eyes watching keenly the expression of
+each face. He added slowly:
+
+"The White Chief hears the promise of the Pottawattomies. It is
+enough. He can go forth in peace upon the morrow, with all his
+warriors, squaws, and pappooses, and the people of my nation will walk
+with them as guards. It is our pledge; we will counsel no longer."
+
+At a simple commanding gesture of his long arms, the circle melted away
+through the narrow opening as silently as it had gathered, the dark
+figure of each warrior silhouetted for an instant against the red glare
+of the fire, before it suddenly disappeared in the darkness beyond. At
+last Little Sauk alone stood between us and the blaze.
+
+"Come," he commanded gruffly, "White Chief go back to his people."
+
+Enclosed by that same phantom guard of savages, we passed out through
+the limits of the camp; but now the rabble paid not the slightest heed
+to our presence. Our mission known, and no longer a mystery, they
+treated us with the stolid indifference of Indian contempt. I walked
+with eyes alert upon either side of our path for another glimpse of
+that girlish figure that I had seen before so dimly; but we traversed
+nearly the full length of the tepee rows before I saw any one that at
+all resembled her. Even then, I was far from certain, until the sudden
+leaping up of a dying fire reflected on her crown of auburn hair, and
+set my heart to throbbing.
+
+"Little Sauk!" I cried, in my excitement clutching his naked arm, "who
+is that white girl yonder, and how comes she here?"
+
+The startled Indian sprang aside, flinging me from him with a violence
+that showed his giant strength.
+
+"No white girl," he protested, vehemently. "Pottawattomie."
+
+"No Pottawattomie has hair like the sunset," I retorted. "Come, I
+would speak with the girl."
+
+For an instant I saw the bead-like eyes of the savage glittering in the
+darkness and wandering where I pointed. He faced me doggedly.
+
+"Long Knife leave Indian maid alone," he said grimly. "Long Knife go
+Fort; no talk."
+
+I was in a mood to resist the fellow's dictation, and reckless enough
+of consequences at that moment to take the chance; but Heald interfered.
+
+"You can serve her far better, lad, in that way," he muttered hastily.
+"We shall not always be two to twelve."
+
+With teeth gritted to keep back the fierce anger that shook me, I
+strolled sullenly on, not even venturing to glance back lest I should
+give way. It was thus we reached the Fort gate, and entered, leaving
+our dusky escort to slink back into the night. An anxious crowd met
+us. It was Wells who questioned first.
+
+"So those devils have let you go unharmed? What answer made the
+savages?"
+
+"They pledge us safe convoy around the head Of the lake."
+
+"They do? Who spoke the words of the pledge?"
+
+"Old Gomo himself, and it was ratified by each of the chiefs in turn."
+
+"They are lying dogs,--all but one of them. What answered Black
+Partridge?"
+
+Heald made no response; and Wells wheeled impetuously to me.
+
+"Come, lad, the truth,--what reply did Black Partridge make to this
+Indian mummery?"
+
+"He said, 'I have already spoken to the White Chief in his own wigwam,
+and given back the medal of the Americans, and have nothing more to
+say.'"
+
+For a moment the old Indian soldier stared at me, his stern face fairly
+black with the cloud in his eyes. He brought his clinched hand down
+hard against the log wall.
+
+"By God! it is treachery!" he exclaimed fiercely, and turned and walked
+away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+THE LAST NIGHT AT DEARBORN
+
+It was evident that preparations were even then well under way for
+retreat the following morning. Trunks and boxes, together with various
+military stores and arms, strewed the sides of the parade-ground;
+farther back, a number of wagons, partially filled, stood waiting the
+remainder of their loads. Men and women were hastening back and forth,
+and children were darting through the shadows, their little arms piled
+high with bundles, and making play, as children ever will, of what was
+to prove an awful tragedy. A large fire, burning brightly before the
+deserted guard-house, cast its ruddy glow over the animated scene,
+checkering the rude walls with every passing shadow.
+
+I noticed, as I slowly pushed my way along, that the soldiers worked
+seriously, with few jests on their lips, as if they realized the peril
+that menaced them; while many among the women, especially those of the
+humbler sort, were rejoicing over the early release from garrison
+monotony, and careless of what the morrow might bring of danger and
+suffering.
+
+A few steps from the gate, I paused for a moment that I might watch
+their flitting figures, the incessant bustle being a positive relief
+after the dull and ghostly silence without. My mind,--though I strove
+to cast the thought aside,--was still occupied with the mystery of Elsa
+Matherson; but the more I dwelt upon it, the less I was able to
+penetrate the secret of her strange presence in the Indian camp, or
+devise any scheme for reaching her. The ache in my heart made me dread
+to meet again with Mademoiselle Toinette, lest I should utter words of
+reproach which she did not deserve; for, sad as such a confession was,
+I had to acknowledge that she had a perfect right to protect the man
+she loved, even at my cost.
+
+Nor did I greatly desire to run upon De Croix. I knew his temper
+fairly well, and doubtless by this time he had learned the story of my
+interference, and would be in fit mood for a quarrel. Still, as seems
+often to be the case at such a time, before I had taken a dozen steps
+away from the gate, I met him face to face. It was a jaunty picture he
+made in the glare of the fire, the fine gentleman sauntering lazily
+about, with hat of bleached straw pushed rakishly upon his powdered
+hair, and a light cane dangling at his wrist, as fashionably attired as
+if he were loitering upon the boulevards of an August evening, his
+negro man a yard behind, bearing a silken fan which flashed golden in
+the radiance. At sight of him, I stopped instantly, ready enough to
+resent attack if that had been his purpose, though anxious to avoid
+violence for the sake of Mademoiselle. But he merely laughed as he
+surveyed me critically, swinging his bamboo stick as if it were a
+whip-lash.
+
+"_Parbleu_, Master Wayland!" he said, seeming in rare good-humor, "I
+this moment learned of your safe return. 'T would have been an
+excellent joke had the savage found excuse to retain you out yonder, to
+form a part of one of their delightful entertainments! Fit revenge,
+indeed, for the foul deceit you played upon me!"
+
+"Think you so, Monsieur?" for his easy words relieved me greatly. "It
+would have been one less arm for our defence."
+
+"With safe convoy guaranteed by the Indian chiefs, that loss would make
+small odds," he replied carelessly. "But, truly, that was a most
+scurvy trick you played to gain the wager which was offered me. But
+for the happy ending, I should be sorely tempted to break this cane
+across your shoulders in payment therefor."
+
+"Indeed!" I said; "the act might not be as easily accomplished as you
+imagine. But what mean you by happy ending? Had the savages roasted
+me over a slow fire, I should hardly be here for the pleasure of your
+chastisement."
+
+He laughed lightly, his eyes wandering carelessly over the throng of
+figures in front of us.
+
+"Saint Guise! I thought not about your predicament, but rather of the
+happiness which came to me in the society of Mademoiselle. In faith,
+she was most gracious with her favor. 'T is thus you did me a great
+kindness, friend, and have won my gratitude."
+
+The words were as stinging as he meant them to be, for I marked his
+quick glance into my face. So I held my resentment well in check, and
+smiled back at him, apparently unconcerned.
+
+"Then we are again even, Monsieur," I returned quietly, "and can start
+anew upon our score. But why should I remain here to discuss matters
+of such small import, with all this work unfinished which fronts strong
+men to-night? I will break my long fast, and turn to beside these
+others."
+
+He seemed to have further words to say; but I minded him not, and
+pushed past, leaving him to saunter where he willed, accompanied by his
+black satellite. If I could not win Mademoiselle, as I now felt
+assured from his boastful speech I could not, I might at least work for
+her greater safety and comfort; and there was much I could do to help
+in burying my own disappointment.
+
+For all that, it was a night to live long in the memory,--that last
+night we spent at Dearborn. It remains a rare jumble in my mind,--its
+varied incidents crowding so fast upon each other as to leave small
+room for thought regarding any one of them. Without, the dim black
+plain stretched away in unbroken solemnity and silence; nor did the
+sentinels posted along the walls catch glimpse of so much as a skulking
+Indian form amid the grass and sand. A half-moon was in the sky, with
+patches of cloud now and then shadowing it, and in the intervals
+casting its faint silver over the lonely expanse and tipping the crest
+of the waves as they crept in upon the beach. The great Indian village
+to the westward was fairly ablaze with fires; while the unending
+procession of black dots that flitted past them, together with the echo
+of constant uproar, showed that the savages were likewise astir in
+eager preparation for the morrow. We could hear the pounding of wooden
+drums, mingled with shrill yells that split the night-air like so many
+war-missiles. Only those above, upon the platform, could mind these
+things; for the bustle within the enclosure below continued unabated
+until long after midnight.
+
+The report of our mission spread rapidly, and the pledge of protection
+given by the chiefs greatly heartened the men, so that they worked now
+with many a peal of laughter and careless jest. The women and
+children, ever quick to feel the influence of the soldiers, responded
+at once to this new feeling of confidence, which was encouraged by the
+officers, however they may have secretly doubted the good-faith of the
+savages. So the children tumbled about in the red glare of the flames,
+the soldiers swung their traps into the waiting wagons with
+good-natured badinage, their brawny breasts bare and glistening with
+sweat in the hot night; while, as the hour grew late and discipline
+sensibly relaxed, the women danced in the open and sang songs of home.
+
+It was hard enough to realize what it all meant,--what hardship and
+suffering and death lay just before these rejoicing people; what depths
+of cruel treachery and murder lurked for them so few hours away. We
+did not suspect it then; not even those among us who had long learned
+the deceit of Indian nature could unroll the shadowing veil of that
+morrow and reveal the forthcoming tragedy of those silent plains. I
+remember that, doubtful as I felt about the future, I could look on
+with interest at the busy scene, and that more than once a smile lay
+upon my lips. What an odd variety of figures that congested place
+disclosed! what strange life-histories were having their culmination
+there! I saw Ensign Ronan, young, slender, smooth of face, appearing
+scarce more than a boy, his short fatigue-jacket buttoned to the throat
+in spite of the heat, hurrying here and there in his enthusiasm, ever
+upon his lips some happy phrase to take the sting from his word of
+command. Lieutenant Helm, calm but observant of every detail, moved in
+and out among the busy throng, every now and then stealing aside to
+speak a word of encouragement to his young wife, who stood watching by
+the mess-room door. There was quite a bevy gathered there, officers'
+wives for the most part, gazing in mingled interest and apprehension
+upon the scene. I marked among them Josette, who had come in that
+evening with the Kinzies; and as I drew yet nearer the group, a sudden
+blazing up of the fire yielded me a glimpse of Mademoiselle, and I
+turned hastily away, unwilling still to greet or be greeted by her.
+
+Gaunt frontiersmen stalked about, having little to save and nothing to
+do, with the inevitable long rifle held in the hollow of the arm;
+Captain Wells's Miamis skulked uneasily in dark corners, or hung over
+the embers to cook some ration yet unused, their dark skins and long
+coarse hair a reminder to us of the hostiles who watched without.
+Captain Heald, in company with Captain Wells and John Kinzie, the
+latter conspicuous by his white beard, stood long in deep converse near
+the barracks, leaning against the black logs. I felt the two latter
+were urging some change of plan; but in the end Wells left in vexation,
+almost in anger, striding across the parade-ground to the northern
+block-house.
+
+In the shadow of the south stockade, some one was softly playing upon a
+violin, the sweet notes stealing up through the wild hubbub in strains
+of silvery sound. Close upon one side of the fire, forgetful of the
+heat in their deep interest, two young soldiers were engrossed in a
+game of cards, while a group of comrades commented freely on the
+fortunes of the play. Scarcely a yard distant, a grizzled old
+sergeant,--a veteran of the great war, no doubt,--bent above a book
+held open upon his knee, the shape of which bespoke a Bible; while on
+the other side a bevy of children were romping with their dogs or
+playing with sharp knives in the hard ground. A woman over by the gate
+lifted a sweet contralto voice in an old-time love-song, and had hardly
+lilted the opening line before others joined her, making the night
+resound to the tender melody. I saw the soldiers pause in their work
+to beat time, and marked the dark forms of the sentries above on the
+palisades as they leaned over to listen, every heart set throbbing with
+the memory of days gone by.
+
+"Man is indeed a strange animal," said a voice beside me, and I turned
+to greet Ensign Ronan. "He can sing, laugh, and jest, in death's very
+teeth."
+
+"'T is better, surely, than to cry," I commented. "But these do not so
+much as dream of death; the pledge of the Pottawattomies has brought
+renewed hope."
+
+"Yes, I know; though I confess I have little faith in it. And there
+will be plenty of danger about us before we see Fort Wayne, even if
+they pass us in safety around the lake. There will be leagues of
+travel through hostile territory. That," he added, "is, to my mind,
+the only sensible way of preparation, for the morrow."
+
+He pointed to the old sergeant seated beside the fire with his Bible;
+and I glanced into his boyish face with no little surprise.
+
+"Some remark Surgeon Van Voorhis made caused me to deem you indifferent
+in such matters."
+
+"No doubt," he said, dryly. "If one does not subscribe to the creeds,
+he is written down a heretic. I have laughed at folly, and so have won
+the reputation of being an unbeliever. Yet, Wayland, if we ride forth
+to a savage death to-morrow, no one will meet it with more faith in
+Christ than I. The years indeed have not left me spotless, but I have
+never wavered from the great truths my mother taught me. I know not
+the future, lad, but I believe there is ever mercy for the penitent."
+
+In an instant my own thought spanned the leagues of forest to my
+distant home; and I choked back a sob within my throat.
+
+"It is our mothers' love that makes us all better men," I said gravely.
+"And whatever may befall us upon the morrow, that God of whom they
+taught us will be true."
+
+"The words are spoken in the right spirit," he returned, soberly, "and
+have the soldier ring I like best to hear. If it chance that we both
+come forth from this venture in life, I should be most glad to know you
+better."
+
+I was deeply touched by his open, manly spirit, and especially
+impressed with his frank adherence to the Christian faith,--something
+too uncommon in that day along the border.
+
+"'T is rather my wish to begin friendship before that time of trial," I
+said eagerly, and with extended hand. "We shall fight the better for
+it when the hour for fighting comes; and if it be God's will to guide
+us safely through the wilderness, a friendship thus cemented in peril
+will have the strength of comradeship."
+
+The young man's strong and thoughtful face lighted up; but his eyes
+were resting upon the form of the sentry above us, and he did not speak.
+
+"Ronan," I questioned, somewhat doubtfully, "I have long wished to ask
+you the cause of the friction that apparently exists between Captain
+Heald and the officers of this garrison; but have felt it none of my
+business. I cannot but realize you are not in his good graces,
+although he appears to me to be a brave and capable man."
+
+"He is both," was the instant and manly reply; "for all that, he has
+constantly turned for counsel in military matters to others than his
+own officers,--why, I know not, unless he considered us unworthy of his
+confidence. Instead of confiding his orders to us, and asking judgment
+upon his plans, he has been swayed from the beginning by Indian advice;
+and it is only natural for us to resent such unjust and discourteous
+treatment. Moreover, each move thus far made has proved to be a
+mistake, and we must suffer from them in silence and without remedy."
+
+"He does indeed seem strangely headstrong," I admitted reluctantly,
+recalling to mind the words uttered in the room beyond my bed; "but
+surely his conference with the chiefs has resulted well, and is proof
+of his good judgment."
+
+The young officer turned quickly and faced me, his eyes full of
+emotion. "That remains to be decided," he exclaimed. "Such old
+frontiersmen as Captain Wells and John Kinzie say that pledge only
+hides black treachery. They urged him most earnestly, for an hour
+to-night, to reconsider his decision, and give up the immediate
+evacuation of the post. But he fully believes he can put faith in
+those lying, murderous hounds out yonder. So certain is Kinzie of
+trouble, that he has sworn to march forth with us, sending his family
+away by boat, in hope that his influence may hold back the savages from
+open attack; while Wells declares that he will ride forth with
+blackened face, as becomes a Miami who goes to certain death in battle.
+These men are no fools, no strangers to savage warfare and Indian
+deceit,--yet in spite of their warning, Captain Heald persists in
+driving us forth into the very fangs of the wolves. Brave! ay, he is
+indeed brave to the point of rashness; but this bids fair to be a fatal
+bravery to all of us who must obey his orders."
+
+The intense bitterness of these words shocked me and held me dumb,--the
+more so, as I could not be insensible to their truth. As I lifted my
+eyes, I beheld, crossing the parade through the mass of equipment
+scattered here and there, De Croix and Mademoiselle. With a
+half-muttered excuse, I drew hastily back into the protecting shadow of
+the stockade; and as they slowly passed, I heard him jesting lightly,
+and saw her laughing, with a side-glance up at his face.
+
+With these words of warning from Ronan's lips yet ringing in my ears,
+such reckless thoughtlessness of the danger encircling us astounded me;
+and I drew farther back, less willing than ever to make one of them.
+Deep in my heart, I knew this was no time for careless laughter or
+happy jest.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+THE DEATH-SHADOW OF THE MIAMIS
+
+It was after midnight when I finally ceased my labors, feeling I had
+performed my fair share of the hard work of preparation. By this time
+everything was comparatively quiet within the stockade enclosure; the
+wagons were piled with all that could be loaded before morning, and
+many of the wearied soldiers had flung themselves upon the ground to
+snatch what rest they might before the early call to march. The women
+and children had disappeared, to seek such comfort as was possible amid
+the ruins of their former quarters; and only the sentries remained
+alert, pacing their solemn rounds on the narrow walk overlooking the
+palisades and the silent plain without.
+
+Physically wearied as I was, my mind remained intensely active, and I
+felt no desire for sleep. I do not recall that I gave much thought to
+the perils of our situation. One grows careless and indifferent to
+danger,--and in truth I looked forward to no serious trouble with the
+Indians upon the morrow's march through the sand-dunes; not that I
+greatly trusted to those reluctant pledges wrung from the chiefs, but
+because I felt that if properly handled in that open country our force
+was of sufficient fighting strength to repel any ordinary attack from
+ill-armed savages, my long border experience rendering me a bit
+disdainful of Indian courage and resourcefulness. So it was that my
+restless mind dwelt rather upon other matters more directly personal.
+I could not put away the thought of the half-seen girl flitting about
+amid the dusk of the Pottawattomie camp, especially as Captain Heald
+had declared her to be Elsa Matherson. I was surprised to discover
+that she I sought, instead of being a mere child, was a woman grown;
+for in this we were all deceived by the words of her father. What did
+she there, passing with such apparent freedom from restraint among
+those fierce warriors? and how was I ever to reach her with any hope of
+rescue, even if she desired it? There was evidently a mystery here
+which I could never solve through idle musing; and yet I could but ask
+myself where lay my graver duty,--beside this single woman, who
+seemingly needed no defender, or with the many helpless ones who must
+march forth on the morrow on that long and dangerous passage through
+the wilderness? Indeed, what hope could I cherish of aiding the young
+girl, if I now deserted these others, and endeavored alone to penetrate
+that Indian camp in search of her?
+
+Then came another thought. It was of Mademoiselle.
+
+It was this that effectually halted me. To whomsoever else she might
+have given her heart, she was still the one for whom I was most glad
+either to live or die; and in spite of De Croix, I would ride at her
+side on the morrow, within striking distance of any prowling hostile.
+Let the Matherson girl wait; my arm belonged first of all to the
+defence of Mademoiselle.
+
+Busied with these thoughts, and endeavoring to adjust this decision
+with my conscience, I passed out upon the platform, that I might look
+forth once more upon the moonlit waters of the lake. There were a few
+dim figures to be seen, leaning over the logs; but I supposed them to
+be members of the night-guard, and, feeling no desire for
+companionship, I halted in a lonely spot at the northeastern corner of
+the stockade. How desolate, how solemnly impressive, was the scene!
+To the north all was black in the dense night, the shadows of the
+scattering trees obscuring the faint glow of the moon and yielding
+little of detail to the searching eye. Even the single ray of light
+which the evening previous had blazed forth as a friendly beacon from
+the Kinzie home, was now absent. I could vaguely distinguish the dim
+outlines of the deserted house in the distance, and noticed a large
+boat moored close to the bank beneath the Fort stockade,--doubtless the
+one in which the fugitives expected to venture out upon the lake on the
+morrow.
+
+It was the wide stretch of water, gleaming like silver, that fascinated
+me, as it always did in its numberless changing moods. What
+unutterable loneliness spoke to the soul in those unknown leagues of
+tossing sea! how far the eye wandered unchecked, searching vainly for
+aught to rest upon other than glistening surge or darkling hollow! The
+mystery of the ages lay unexpressed in those tossing billows, sweeping
+in out of the black east, making low moan to the unsympathetic and
+unheeding sky. Deeper and deeper the spirit of unrest, of doubt, of
+brooding discontent, weighed down upon me as I gazed; life seemed as
+aimless as that constant turmoil yonder, a mere silver-tinted heaving,
+destined to burst in useless power on a shore of rock, and then roll
+back again into the mighty deep.
+
+I leaned over the palisades, sunk deep in revery of home, recalling one
+by one the strange incidents of the last month that had so curiously
+conspired to cause a total upheaval of my life; and for the moment I
+grew oblivious of my surroundings. A mere lad, knowing little of
+himself and less of life, had ridden westward from the Maumee; a man,
+in thought and character, leaned now over that beleaguered stockade of
+Dearborn.
+
+I was recalled to actualities by a light touch on the sleeve of my
+shirt, and a half-laughing, half-petulant voice at my elbow.
+
+"Well, Master Laggard! do I not show you great honor in thus seeking
+you out, after your avoidance of me all these hours?"
+
+I glanced aside into the fair face and questioning eyes, noting at the
+same time that De Croix stood only a step beyond her in the shadows.
+
+"I have been very busy, Mademoiselle," I tried to explain; "it has been
+a time when every strong hand was needed."
+
+"Fudge!" was the indignant rejoinder. "Did I not perceive you
+loitering more than once to-night,--though each time I drew near,
+hopeful of a word of greeting, it was to behold you disappear as if by
+magic? Do I flatter you by thus showing my interest? Yet 't was only
+that I might have explanation, that I sought you thus. Come, confess
+that you feared my just resentment for going forth on so perilous a
+trip without telling me of your plans."
+
+"'T was not altogether that," I answered, for dissembling was never an
+easy task for me, "as I only did what I believed would most please you.
+Nor have I anything to regret in my action, now that we have thus
+gained the pledge of the Pottawattomies for protection upon the march."
+
+She watched me closely as I spoke, and I wondered if she realized ever
+so dimly the impulse of loving service that had inspired my deed.
+Whether 't was so or not, her whole mood quickly changed.
+
+"I must admit you are a constant puzzle to me, John Wayland,--yet
+rather an interesting one withal. For instance, here is Josette, who
+did assure me but an hour ago that your very name was unknown to her,
+although, if memory serves, you asserted only yesterday that you were
+seeking her from the Maumee country. Perhaps, sir, you can explain the
+contradiction?"
+
+"It was not altogether as you have stated it, Mademoiselle," I
+stammered, confused by the directness of her attack. "I said nothing
+of knowing this Josette, and you have deceived yourself in the matter.
+I came here seeking a young girl, 't is true, but found no trace of her
+until a few hours ago, most curiously, in the heart of that Indian camp
+yonder."
+
+"You found her there? How strange!"
+
+"Most strange indeed, Mademoiselle, especially as she appeared to enjoy
+perfect liberty among the savages."
+
+"You spoke with her?"
+
+"Not a word; it was only a glimpse I caught of her in the firelight,
+and when I sought to go to her the warriors interfered and forced me
+back. But Captain Heald, who saw her at the same time, assured me 't
+was the one I sought."
+
+"'T is small wonder, then, you could stand here at my very side so
+long, and yet see me not, or remain indifferent to my presence," she
+said, drawing slightly back. "Come, Captain de Croix, let us walk to
+the other corner of the stockade, and leave Master Wayland to dream of
+his mysterious beauty undisturbed."
+
+"You misapprehend me," I cried, awakened by her words, but more by De
+Croix's smile. "She has no such hold upon my memory as that, for until
+tonight I had supposed her a mere child. I knew not you were upon the
+platform, believing the forms I saw in the gloom to be those of the
+night-guard. What dark figure is that, even now leaning over the logs
+yonder?"
+
+It was De Croix's deeper voice that made answer.
+
+"'Tis Captain Wells; and we found him in no mood for conversation.
+Seemingly he hath small faith in the pledges of the chiefs."
+
+"My own hope rests far more upon our skill at arms, Monsieur," I
+answered directly; "for I have known Indian treachery all my life.
+They may keep faith with us to-morrow, for John Kinzie has great
+influence with them for good; nevertheless, I shall oil my gun
+carefully before riding forth."
+
+It was in his eyes to make reply, but before it could come the girl
+between us uttered a cry so piercing that it set us gazing where her
+finger pointed out across the lake.
+
+"Look there, Messieurs! Did ever mortal behold so grewsome a sight
+before? What means the portent?"
+
+It is before me now, in each grim, uncanny detail,--though I know well
+that my pen will fail to give it fit description, or convey even feebly
+a sense of the overwhelming dread of what we saw. Nature has power to
+paint what human hand may never hope to copy; and though, as I now know
+well, it was no more than a strange commingling of cloud and moon in
+atmospheric illusion, still the effect was awe-inspiring to a degree
+difficult of realization within the environments of peace and safety.
+To us, it appeared as a dreadful warning,--a mysterious manifestation
+of supernatural power, chilling our blood with terror and striking
+agony into our souls. Up from the far east had rolled an immense black
+cloud, rifted here and there by bars of vivid yellow as electric bolts
+tore it asunder. Moonlight tipped its heavy edges with a pale spectral
+gleam; and as it swiftly rose higher and higher into the sky, blotting
+out the stars, it seemed to dominate the entire expanse, hovering over
+us menacingly, and assuming the shape of some gigantic monster, with
+leering face and cruel mouth, bending forward as if to smite us with
+huge uplifted hand. Perchance our tensioned nerves may have
+exaggerated the resemblance, but nothing more horribly real have my
+eyes ever beheld.
+
+For a moment I cowered, like a nerveless craven, behind the logs,
+gazing up at that awful apparition, that mocking devil's-face, as a man
+fronts death in some terrible and unexpected form. It seemed as if the
+breath of the creature must be pestilence, and that it would smite us
+gasping to earth, or draw us helplessly struggling within its merciless
+clutch. A prayer trembled on my lips, but remained unuttered, for I
+could only stare upward at the mighty, crawling thing now overshadowing
+us, my arms uplifted in impotent effort to avert the crushing blow.
+
+I could hear the girl sob where she had sunk upon the platform, and
+caught one glimpse of De Croix, his face yellow in the weird glare as
+he stared in speechless terror out over the water, his hands clutching
+the palisades. It was Captain Wells, who had been standing near us,
+who first found voice.
+
+"'Tis the Death-Shadow of the Miamis!" he cried, in choked accents,
+striding toward us along the narrow plank, and pointing eastward. "I
+knew it must come, for our doom is sealed."
+
+What centuries of Indian superstition rested behind the fateful
+utterance, I know not; but facing that horrible spectre as we did, his
+words held me in speechless awe. In the blood of us all such terrors
+linger to unman the bravest; and for the moment such fright and panic
+swept me as I have never known before or since. I, who have laughed at
+death even in the hour of torture, sank in deadly agony before that
+mystery of light and shadow, as if it indeed foreshadowed the wrath of
+the Great Spirit.
+
+The sobs of Mademoiselle recalled me somewhat to myself, and led me to
+forget my own terror that I might help to relieve hers.
+
+"I beg you, fear not," I urged, though my voice trembled and my lips
+were dry. "Come, Mademoiselle," and I found her hand and clasped it,
+feeling the touch a positive relief to my unstrung nerves, "look up and
+see! the cloud is even now breaking asunder, and has already lost much
+of its form of terror. Mind not the words of Captain Wells; he has
+been raised among the Indians, and drunk in their superstitions. De
+Croix, arouse yourself, and help me to bring courage to this girl."
+
+He drew back from his grip on the palisades, as if, by sheer power of
+will, he forced his fascinated eyes from the cloud-bank, shivering like
+a man with an ague fit.
+
+"_Sacre_! did ever human eyes behold so foul a thing!" he cried, his
+voice shaking, his hand shading his face. "'T will haunt me till the
+hour I die."
+
+"Bah! 'T will all be forgotten with return of daylight," I was quick
+to reply; for had found relief in action, and could perceive already
+that the clouds were becoming shapeless and drifting rapidly southward
+in a great billowy mass. "Do not stand there moping like a day-blind
+owl, but aid me to make Mademoiselle see the foolishness of her fears."
+
+The sting of these words moved him more than a blow would have done;
+but as he knelt beside her, I noted there was little of the old
+reckless ring in his voice.
+
+"'T is indeed true, Toinette,--'t was but a cloud, and has already
+greatly changed in aspect. 'T will be no more than cause for laughter
+when the sun gilds the plain, and will form a rare tale to tell to the
+gallants at Montreal. Yet, Saint Guise! 't was grewsome enough, and my
+knees quake still from the terror of the thing."
+
+Mademoiselle was as brave and cool-headed a girl as ever I knew; but so
+thoroughly had she been unnerved by this dreadful happening, that it
+was only after the most persistent urging on our part that she
+consented to be led below. There, at the foot of the ladder, I stepped
+aside to permit De Croix to walk with her across the parade; but she
+would not go without a word of parting.
+
+"Do not think me weak and silly," she implored, her face, still white
+from the terror, upturned to me in the moonlight. "It was so spectral
+and ghastly that I gave way to sudden fear."
+
+"You need no excuse," I hastened to assure her. "When the thing
+frightened De Croix and me, and even set so old a soldier as Captain
+Wells to raving, it was no wonder it unnerved a girl, however brave she
+might prove in the presence of real danger. But you can sleep now,
+convinced it was naught but a floating cloud."
+
+She smiled at me over her shoulder, and I watched the pair with jealous
+eyes until they disappeared. I noticed Captain Wells standing beside
+me.
+
+"You thought I raved up yonder," he said gravely; "to-morrow will prove
+that my interpretation of the vision was correct."
+
+"You believe it a prophecy of evil?"
+
+"It was the warning of the Great Spirit--the Death-Shadow of the
+Miamis. Never has it appeared to men of our tribe except on the eve of
+great disaster, the forerunner of grave tragedy. We ride forth from
+these gates to death."
+
+It was plain that no amount of reasoning could change his Indian
+superstition; and with a word more of expostulation I left him standing
+there, and sought a place where I might lie down. Already the numbing
+sensation of supernatural fear had left me, for in the breaking up of
+that odd-formed cloud I realized its cause; and now the physical
+fatigue I felt overmastered all else. I found a quiet corner, and,
+with a saddle for a pillow, was soon fast asleep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+THE DAY OF DOOM
+
+_Fifteenth August, 1812_.--My hand trembles and my pen halts as I write
+the words; for the memory of those tragic hours, far distant as they
+are now, over-masters me, and I see once again the faces of the dead,
+the mutilated forms, the disfigured features of the hapless victims of
+savage treachery. Were I writing romance merely, I might hide much of
+detail behind the veil of silence; but I am penning history, and, black
+as the record is, I can only give it with strict adherence to truth. I
+dread the effort to recall once more the sad incidents of that scene of
+carnage, lest I fail to picture it aright; but I can tell, and that
+poorly, only of what I saw within the narrowed vista of my personal
+experience, where the fate of the day found me. Out of the vortex of
+so fierce and sudden a struggle, the individual, battling madly for his
+own life, catches but hasty and confused glimpses of what others may do
+about him or in other portions of the field; and there has been much
+recorded in what men call the history of that day's battle, about which
+I know nothing. Nor shall I attempt to tell much more than the simple
+story of what befell me and those who faced the danger close at my side.
+
+In spite of the early bustle around me, incident to the preparations
+for departure, I slept late, stupefied by intense fatigue. The sun was
+already high, painting with gold the interior of the western wall of
+the stockade, when some unusual disturbance aroused me, so that I sat
+up and looked about, scarce realizing for the moment where I was. The
+parade was alive with moving figures; and I instantly marked the cheery
+look on the faces of those nearest me, as if the entire garrison
+rejoiced that the hour for departure had at last arrived. The northern
+half of the little open space was filled with loaded wagons of every
+description, to which horses, mules, and even oxen, were being rapidly
+hitched; while women and children were clambering in over the wheels,
+perching themselves upon the heaps of camp accoutrements, and rolling
+up the canvas coverings in order that they might the better see out and
+feel the soft refreshment of the morning air.
+
+The officers of the post were moving here and there among the throng of
+workers, grave of face, yet making no effort to curb the unusual gaiety
+of the enlisted men. For the time, all reins of discipline seemed
+relaxed. The few settlers and plainsmen who had gathered within the
+Fort for protection looked on stolidly, either lying in the shade of
+the log wall or lounging beside their horses already equipped for the
+trail; while the Miamis were gathered restlessly about their breakfast
+fires, their faces unexpressive of emotion, as usual, although many
+among them had blackened their cheeks in expectation of disaster.
+
+Evidently the hour fixed upon for our final desertion of Fort Dearborn
+was close at hand; and I hastened to seek opportunity for a bath and
+breakfast. I do not recall now, looking back after all these years
+upon the events of that day, any dreading of the future, or serious
+thought of the coming ordeal. The bustle of excitement about me, the
+high spirits of the men, were like a tonic; and I remembered only that
+we were east-bound once more, and my chief concern was to be ready to
+ride out promptly with the column.
+
+It could not have been far from nine o'clock when every preparation was
+completed, and the echoing bugle called the laggards from their
+quarters into the open parade. The officers, already mounted, rode
+about quietly, assigning each driver and wagon to position in the
+marching column, and carefully mustering the troops. The many sick of
+the garrison were brought forth from the barracks in their blankets,
+and gently lifted to places beside the women and children in the loaded
+wagons; while the men fit for active duty fell in promptly along the
+southern wall, the right of their slender column resting opposite the
+barred entrance. I was assigned to ride with the rear-guard beside the
+wagons, in company with the few settlers and fifteen of the Miamis
+under command of Sergeant Jordan. Captains Heald and Wells, the latter
+with face blackened so that at first glance I scarcely recognized him,
+took position at the head of the waiting column in front of the closed
+gates, and they sat there on their horses, facing us, and watching
+anxiously our rather slow formation.
+
+John Kinzie joined them, his features grave and careworn, a long rifle
+in his hands; while the ladies of the garrison, plainly dressed for the
+long and hard journey, came forth from their several quarters and were
+assisted to mount the horses reserved for them. De Croix accompanied
+Mademoiselle, attired as for a gay pleasure-ride in the park, and gave
+her his gloved hand to step from into the saddle, with all the
+gallantry he might have shown a queen. I knew this was no boy's play
+before us now; and, crushing back my natural diffidence, I spurred my
+horse boldly forward until we ranged up beside her, even venturing to
+uncover in polite salute.
+
+Never did I see her look fairer than beneath the wide-brimmed hat she
+had donned to keep the hot sun from her clear cheeks; nor was there the
+slightest vestige of last night's terror lurking in the laughing eyes
+that flashed me greeting.
+
+"I surely know of one sad heart amid this gay company," she exclaimed,
+"for while we rejoice at being once more bound for civilization, Master
+Wayland looks most truly mournful; doubtless his thought is with her
+who has turned Indian for a time."
+
+Her careless bantering tone nettled me; but I was quick enough to
+answer, having no wish to awaken her fears as to the safety of our
+journey.
+
+"'T is true, Mademoiselle. I dislike greatly to leave in peril one I
+have journeyed so far to seek; nor can I banish from my mind the
+thought that perhaps I am failing in my duty toward her. Yet surely
+you have small cause for complaint, as I have, instead, deliberately
+chosen to ride here at your side, in order that I may be near to defend
+you should occasion arise,--provided always that my presence shall meet
+your wishes and approval."
+
+She bowed as best she could in her high-peaked saddle, shooting a
+mischievous glance from me to the unconcerned and self-satisfied face
+of the Frenchman.
+
+"I am indeed most gratified and happy, Monsieur, thus to feel myself
+the object of such devotion; but I greatly fear you will prove but a
+poor companion on the journey if you wear so glum a look. Captain de
+Croix is full of wit and good-humor this morning, and has already
+cheered me greatly with reminiscences of happier days."
+
+"Indeed?" I said, looking at the fellow curiously. "He has quickly
+forgotten the baleful portent of last night. I thought the daylight
+would yield him new heart."
+
+"And why not? 'Twas but a cloud, as all of us know now,--though I
+confess it terrified me greatly at the time. You yourself seem not
+even yet to have wholly shaken off its terror."
+
+"'T is not the supernatural that so troubles me," I rejoined. "As you
+may perceive yonder, Captain Wells rides forth with blackened face to
+what he deems to be certain death. I acknowledge, Mademoiselle, that I
+look forward to a serious clash of arms before we are rid of the
+redskins, in spite of their pledges; and shall therefore keep close
+beside you, hopeful that my arm may show you better service than my
+tongue before nightfall."
+
+Her eyes had grown grave as she listened; for I spoke with soberness,
+and there crept into them a look that thrilled me. Before either could
+speak again, Ensign Ronan rode up beside me.
+
+"Wayland," he questioned anxiously, "what is this I hear about a
+strange portent in the eastern sky last night? Saw you anything
+terrifying there?"
+
+"'T was no more serious than a cloud which chanced to assume the form
+of a monster, and its aspect was most terrifying until we understood
+the nature of its formation. Then it became merely an odd memory to
+weave a tale about. Mademoiselle here saw it, and remains in most
+excellent spirits nevertheless."
+
+He lifted his hat to her, and stared hard at De Croix, who barely
+nodded to his greeting.
+
+"By Heavens!" he exclaimed, as if much relieved, "it seemed to me as if
+Nature had conspired with those red demons yonder to sap our courage,
+when first I heard the rumor. I am so convinced that there is trouble
+afoot, that my nerves are all a-tingle at such mystery."
+
+"Are the savages gathering without?"
+
+"Ay! they are in mass of hundreds, awaiting us at the foot of the
+mound, and have been since daybreak. See! the sentries are being
+called down, and the men are at the gate levers. I must be back at my
+post."
+
+He held out his hand, and I clasped it warmly, feeling my heart go out
+instantly to the brave, impetuous lad.
+
+"You ride this day with the rear-guard," he said, lingering as if loath
+to go, "and my duty lies with the van. We may not chance to meet
+again, but the God we spoke about together last night will strengthen
+our hearts to meet their duty. It matters not where men die, but how.
+Good-bye, Mademoiselle! Captain de Croix, I wish you a most pleasant
+journey."
+
+With doffed hat, he struck spurs into his nettlesome horse, and was
+gone; while the ringing notes of the bugle called the waiting column to
+attention.
+
+I watched with deepening interest all that was taking place before me.
+The heavy log-gates were unbarred, swung slowly inward, and left
+unguarded. Captain Heald uttered a single stern word of command, and
+Captain Wells, with a squad of his Miamis pressing hard at his horse's
+heels, rode slowly through the opening out into the flood of sunshine.
+Captain Heald and Mr. Kinzie, side by side, with Mrs. Heald mounted
+upon a spirited bay horse a yard in their rear, followed close; and
+then to Lieutenant Helm's grave order the sturdy column of infantrymen,
+heavily equipped and marching in column of fours, swept in solemn curve
+about the post of the gate, and filed out through the narrow entrance.
+The regular tramp-tramp, the evident discipline, and the confident look
+of the men, impressed me. While I was watching them, the small
+garrison band began suddenly to play, and the smiling soldier faces
+clouded as they glanced around in questioning surprise.
+
+"Saint Guise!" ejaculated De Croix, uneasily; "it is the Dead March!"
+
+I marked the sudden look of terrified astonishment in Mademoiselle's
+eyes, and dropped my hand upon hers where it rested against the
+saddle-pommel. Ensign Ronan spurred swiftly back down the column, with
+an angry face, and hushed the ill sound by a sharp order.
+
+"Another tune, you fool, or none at all!" he said, peremptorily. "The
+foul fiend himself must have assumed charge of our march to-day."
+
+As the column marched away, the groaning wagons one by one fell into
+line behind it, until at last our own turn came, and De Croix and I,
+each with a hand upon the bridle-rein of Mademoiselle's spirited horse,
+rode between the gate-posts out to where we had full view of that
+stirring scene below.
+
+It was a fair, bright morning, with hardly so much as a fleecy white
+cloud in all the expanse of sky; glorious sunlight was flashing its
+prismatic colors over a lake surface barely ruffled by the faintest
+breeze. Never did Nature smile more brightly back into my eyes than
+then, as I gazed out over the broad plain where the glow of the summer
+reflected back in shimmering waves from the tawny prairie and
+glittering sand. With all its desolation, it was a picture to be
+treasured long; nor has a single detail of it ever left my memory.
+
+How vast the distances appeared through that clear, sun-illumined
+atmosphere, and how pronounced and distinctive were the varied colors
+spread to the full vista of the eye, contrasts of shine and shadow no
+human brush, however daring, would venture to depict on canvas. A
+primitive land this, idealized by distance, vast in its wide, sweeping
+plains, its boundless sea, its leagues of glistening sand, and, bending
+over all, the deepest, darkest arch of blue that ever mirrored so fair
+a picture of the wilderness.
+
+Scattered groups of cottonwood trees, the irregular mounds and ridges
+of sand, the silvery ribbon of river, merely emphasized the whole, and
+gave new meaning to what might else have been but sheer desert waste.
+I knew little then of what other years had seen within these solitudes
+and within the circle of my view; yet scraps of border legend came
+floating back into memory, until I recalled the name of many an
+old-time adventurer,--La Salle, Joliet, Marquette the Jesuit,--who must
+have camped beside that very stream out yonder.
+
+The column had halted as our last laggards cleared the gate; and for a
+moment we rested in silence upon the side of the slope, while the long
+line was being re-arranged for travel. The Indians, in seemingly
+disorganized masses, were already enveloping the head of the column
+with noisy clamor, and Wells was having difficulty in holding his Miami
+scouts to their proper position. A few scattered and skulking
+savages,--chiefly squaws, I thought at the time,--were stealthily
+edging their way up the slope of the slight rise, eager to begin the
+spoliation of the Fort as soon as we had deserted it.
+
+Wild and turbulent as was the scene, I perceived no alarming symptoms
+of hostility, and turned toward Mademoiselle with lighter heart. Her
+dark eyes were full of suppressed merriment as they encountered mine.
+
+"I thought you would sit there and dream all day," she said pleasantly;
+"and I hardly have the heart to blame you. 'T is indeed a fair scene,
+and one I almost regret leaving, now that the time to do so has come.
+Never before has its rare beauty so strongly appealed to me."
+
+"'T is the great distance outspread yonder which renders all so soft to
+the eye," I answered, glad to reflect her mood; "yet Captain de Croix
+and I know well 't is far less pleasant travelling over than to look at
+here. We think of the swamps, the forests, the leagues of sand and the
+swift rivers which will hinder our progress."
+
+"I hardly imagine," she murmured softly, "that Captain de Croix is
+guilty of wasting precious time in reflection upon aught so trivial
+this morning. He has been conversing with me upon the proper cut of
+his waistcoat, and I am sure he is too deeply engrossed in that subject
+to give heed to other things."
+
+I glanced at him and smiled as my heart glowed to her gentle sarcasm,
+for surely never did a more incongruous figure take saddle on a western
+trail. By what code of fashion he may have dressed, I know not; but
+from his slender-pointed bronze shoes to his beribboned hat he was
+still the dandy of the boulevards, his dark mustaches curled upward
+till their tips nearly touched his ears, and a delicately carved
+riding-whip swinging idly at his wrist. He seemed to have already
+exhausted his powers of conversation, for he remained oblivious of our
+presence, fumbling with one yellow-gloved hand in the recesses of a
+saddle-bag.
+
+"By Saint Denis, Sam!" he exclaimed, angrily, to his black satellite,
+"I can find nothing of the powder-puff, or the bag of essence!
+_Parbleu_! if they have been left behind you will go back after them,
+though every Indian in this Illinois country stand between. Come, you
+imp of darkness, know you aught of these?"
+
+"Dey am wid de pack-hoss, Massa de Croix," was the oily answer. "I
+done s'posed you would n't need 'em till we got thar."
+
+"Need them! Little you know the requirements of a gentleman! Saint
+Guise! Why, I shall want them both this very day! Ride you forward
+there, and see if they cannot be picked out from among the other
+things."
+
+"See, Monsieur!" cried Mademoiselle suddenly, one hand pressing my arm,
+while she pointed eagerly with the other, "there goes the boat with
+Mistress Kinzie and her children! That must be Josette in the bow,
+with the gay streamer about her hat. She did wish so to ride with us,
+but Mr. Kinzie would not permit it."
+
+The boat had but just cleared the river mouth, and was working
+off-shore, with half a dozen Indians laboring at the oars.
+
+"Yet Josette has by far the easiest passage, as we shall learn before
+night," said I, watching their progress curiously. "I imagine you will
+soon be wishing you were with them."
+
+"Never, Master Wayland!" she cried, with a little shudder, and quick
+uplifting of hands to her face as if to shut out the sight. "Memory of
+the hours when I was last on the lake is still too vivid. I have grown
+to dread the water as if it were an evil spirit. See! the column
+resumes its march, and the savages are moving beside us as might a
+guard of honor."
+
+It was as she had said. The long, hard journey had begun; and slowly,
+like some great snake torpid with a winter's sleep, the crawling column
+drew forward. We at the rear rode down the incline and out upon the
+level plain, every step an unconscious advance toward battle and death.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+IM THE JAWS OF THE TIGER
+
+We chatted carelessly about many things, as we rode slowly onward, our
+unguided horses following those in advance along the well-marked trail
+close beside the water along the sandy beach. Mademoiselle was full of
+life and bubbling over with good-humor; while De Croix, having found
+the essentials of his toilet safe, grew witty and light of speech, even
+interesting me now and then in the idle words that floated to my
+ears,--for he managed to monopolize the attention of the young girl so
+thoroughly that after a little time I sat silent in my saddle, scarce
+adding a word to their gay tilt, my eyes and thought upon the changing
+scene ahead.
+
+I know not why, as I reflect calmly upon the incidents of that morning,
+I should have grown so confident that the savages meant us fair; yet
+this feeling steadily took possession of me, and I even began to regret
+that I had not stayed behind in quest of her for whom I had come so
+far. Surely it was hopeless for me to dangle longer beside
+Mademoiselle, for De Croix knew so well the little ins and cuts of
+social intercourse that I was like a child for his play. Moreover, it
+was clear enough that the girl liked him, or he would never presume so
+to monopolize her attention. That she saw through much of his vain
+pretence, was indeed probable; her words had conveyed this to me.
+Nevertheless, it was plain she found him entertaining; he was like a
+glittering jewel in that rough wilderness, and I was too dull of brain
+and narrow of experience to hope for success against him in a struggle
+for the favor of a girl so fair and gay as this Toinette.
+
+I thought the matter all out as I rode on through the sunlight, my eyes
+upon the painted savages who trooped along upon our right in such
+stolid silence and seeming indifference, my ears open to the light
+badinage and idle compliments of my two companions. Yes, it would be
+better so. When the Indians left the column at the head of the lake, I
+would invent some excuse that might allow me to accompany them on their
+return, and I would remain in the neighborhood of the Fort until Elsa
+Matherson had been found.
+
+Just in front of us, a large army wain struggled along through the
+yielding sand, drawn by a yoke of lumbering oxen. The heavy canvas
+cover had been pushed high up in front, and I could see a number of
+women and children seated upon the bedding piled within, and looking
+with curious interest at the stream of Indians plodding moodily beside
+the wheels. Some of the little tots' faces captivated me with their
+expression of wide-eyed wonder, and I rode forward to speak with them;
+for love of children is always in my heart.
+
+As I turned my horse to draw back beside Mademoiselle, my eyes rested
+upon the stockade of the old Fort, now some little distance in our
+rear; and to my surprise it already swarmed with savages. Not less
+than five hundred Indians,--warriors, all of them, and well
+armed,--tramped as guards beside our long and scattered column, yet
+hundreds of others were even now overrunning the mound and pouring in
+at the Fort gates, eager for plunder. I could hear their shouting,
+their fierce yells of exultation, while the grim and silent fellows who
+accompanied us never so much as glanced around, although I caught here
+and there the glint of a cruel, crafty eye. The sight made me wonder;
+and I swung my long rifle out from the straps at my back down across
+the pommel of my saddle, more ready to my hand.
+
+The trail we had been following now swerved nearer the lake, deflected
+somewhat by a long high ridge of beaten sand, separating the shore from
+the prairie. Here the two advancing lines of white and red diverged,
+the Indians moving around to the western side of the sand-ridge, while
+Captain Wells and his Miami scouts continued their march along the
+beach. There was nothing about this movement to awaken suspicion of
+treachery, for the beach at this point had narrowed too much for so
+great a number moving abreast, and it was therefore only natural that
+our allies should seek a wider space for their marching, knowing they
+could easily reunite with us a mile or so below, where the beach
+broadened again. Their passing thus from our sight was a positive
+relief; and so quiet did everything become, except for groaning wheels
+and the heavy tread of horses, that Mademoiselle glanced up in surprise.
+
+"Why, what has become of the Indians?" she questioned. "Have they
+already left us?"
+
+I pointed to the intervening sand-ridge.
+
+"They move parallel with us, but prefer to walk upon the prairie grass
+rather than these beach pebbles. For my part, I would willingly
+dispense with their guard altogether; for in my judgment we are of
+sufficient strength to defend ourselves."
+
+"Ay, strong enough against savages," interposed De Croix, his eyes upon
+the straggling line ahead; "yet if by any chance treachery was
+intended, surely I never saw military formation less adapted for
+repelling sudden attack. Mark how those fellows march out yonder!--all
+in a bunch, and with not so much as a corporal's guard to protect the
+wagons!"
+
+I was no soldier then, and knew little of military formation; but his
+criticism seemed just, and I ventured not upon answering it. Indeed,
+at that very moment some confusion far in front, where Captain Wells
+led his scouts, attracted my attention. We must have been a mile and a
+half from the Fort by this time, and I recalled to memory the little
+group of trees standing beside the trail where we had halted on our
+journey westward to enjoy our earliest glimpse of Dearborn. At first I
+could make out little of what was taking place ahead; then suddenly I
+saw the squad of Miamis break hastily, like a cloud swept by a whirling
+wind, and the next instant could clearly distinguish Captain Wells
+riding swiftly back toward the column of infantry, his head bare, and
+one arm gesticulating wildly. In a moment the whole line came to a
+startled and wondering pause.
+
+"What is it?" questioned Mademoiselle anxiously, shading her eyes.
+"Have the Indians attacked us?"
+
+"God knows!" I exclaimed, clinching my rifle firmly. "But it must
+be,--look there!"
+
+Wheeling rapidly into line, as if at command, although we could hear no
+sound of the order, the soldiers poured one quick volley into the
+sand-ridge on their right, and then, with a cheer which floated faintly
+back to us, made a wild rush for the summit. This was all I saw of the
+struggle in front,--for, with a cry of dismay, the Miamis composing the
+rearguard broke from their posts beside the wagons and came running
+back past us in a panic of wild terror. I saw Sergeant Jordan throw
+himself across their line of flight, striking fiercely with his gun,
+and cursing them for a pack of cowardly hounds; but he was thrown
+helplessly aside in their blind rush for safety.
+
+"Wayland! De Croix!" he shouted, staggering to his knees, "help me
+stop these curs, if you would save our lives!"
+
+It was a fool thing, yet in the excitement I did it, and De Croix was
+beside me. Two or three of the settlers on foot rallied with us, and
+together we struck so hard against those cowering renegades that for
+the moment we held them, though their fear gave them desperation
+difficult to withstand. I recall noticing De Croix, as he pressed his
+rearing horse into the huddled mass, lashing at the faces of the
+fellows mercilessly with his riding-whip, as if thinking Mademoiselle
+would admire his reckless gallantry.
+
+A wild yell, with the mad thrill of the war-whoop in it, suddenly
+assailed our ears; the Miamis broke to the left like a flock of
+frightened birds, and my startled glance revealed a horde of naked
+Indians, howling like maniacs, and with madly brandished weapons,
+pouring over the sand-ridge not thirty feet away from us. With a shout
+of warning, which was half a curse at my own mad folly, I drove the
+spurs deep into my horse's side in a vain endeavor to fling myself
+between them and the girl. Hardly had the startled animal made one
+quick plunge, when we were locked in that human avalanche as if gripped
+by a vise of steel. A dozen dark hands grasped my bridle or clutched
+at me, their swarthy faces fierce with blood-lust, the eyes that
+fronted me cruel with passion and inflamed by hate. I heard shots not
+far away; but we were all too closely jammed to do more than fight in a
+desperate hand-to-hand struggle with club and knife.
+
+The saddle is a poor place from which to swing a rifle, yet I stood
+high in my wooden stirrups and struck madly at every Indian head I saw,
+battering their faces till from the very horror of it they gave slowly
+back. I won a yard--two yards--three,--my horse biting viciously at
+their naked flesh, and lashing out with both fore-feet like a fiend,
+while I swept my gun-stock in a widening circle of death. For the
+moment, I dreamed we might drive them back; but then those devils
+blocked me, clinging to my horse's legs in their death agony, and
+laughing back into my face as I struck them down.
+
+Once I heard De Croix swearing in French beside me, and glanced around
+through the mad turmoil to see him cutting and hacking with broken
+blade, pushing into the midst of the melee as if he had real joy in the
+encounter. While I thus had him in view, a knife whistled through the
+air, there was a quick dazzle in the sunlight, and he reeled backward
+off his horse and disappeared in the ruck below.
+
+Never in a life of fighting have I battled as I did then, feeling that
+I alone might hope to reach her side and beat back these foul fiends
+till help should come to us. The stock of my rifle shattered like
+glass; but I swung the iron barrel with what seemed to me the strength
+of twenty men, striking, thrusting, stabbing, my teeth set, my eyes
+blurring with a mist of blood, caring for nothing except to hit and
+kill. I know not now whether I advanced at all in that last effort,
+though my horse trod on dead bodies. Only once in those awful seconds
+did I gain a glimpse of Mademoiselle through the mist of struggle, the
+maze of uplifted arms and striking steel. She had reined her horse
+back against a wheel of the halted wagon, and with white face and
+burning eyes was lashing desperately with the loaded butt of her
+riding-whip at the red hands which sought to drag her from the saddle.
+
+The sight maddened me, and again my spurs were driven into my horse's
+flanks. As he plunged forward, some one from behind struck me a
+crushing blow across the back of the head, and I reeled from my saddle,
+a red mist over my eyes, and went hurling face downward upon the mass
+of reeling, tangled bodies.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+THE FIELD OF THE DEAD
+
+The fierce plunging of my horse in his death agony, and his final
+pitching forward across my prostrate body, were doubtless all that saved
+my life. Yielding to their mad desire for plunder, the savages scattered
+when I fell, and left me lying there for dead. I do not think I quite
+lost consciousness in those first moments, although everything became
+blurred to my sight, and I was imprisoned by the weight above me so that
+the slightest effort to move proved painful; indeed, I breathed only with
+the greatest difficulty.
+
+But I both heard and saw, and my mind was intensely occupied with the
+rush of thought, the horror of all that was going on about me. How I
+wish I might blot it out,--forget forever the hellish deeds of those
+dancing devils who made mock of human agony and laughed at tears and
+prayers! It was plain, as the wild cries of rejoicing rose on every
+side, that the Indians had swept the field. The distant sound of firing
+ceased, and I could hear the pitiful cries of women, the frightened
+shrieks of children, the shrill note of intense agony wrung from tortured
+lips. Close beside me lay a dead warrior, his hideously painted face,
+with its wide, glaring, dead eyes, so fronting me that I had left only a
+narrow space through which to peer. Within that small opening I saw
+murder done until I closed my eyes in shuddering horror, crazed by my own
+sense of helplessness, and feeling the awful fate that must already have
+befallen her I loved. God knows I had then no faintest wish to live; nor
+did I dream that I should see the sun go down that day. Death was upon
+every side of me, in its most dreadful forms; and every cry that reached
+my ears, every sight that met my eyes, only added to the frightful
+reality of my own helplessness. The inert weight of the horse stifled me
+so that I drew my short breath almost in sobs; nor did I dare venture
+upon the slightest attempt at release, hemmed about as I was by merciless
+fiends now hideously drunk with slaughter. Once I heard a man plead for
+mercy, shrieking the words forth as if his intensity of agony had robbed
+him of all manliness; I saw a young woman fall headlong, the haft of a
+tomahawk cleaving open her head, as a brawny red arm gripped her by the
+throat; a child, with long yellow hair, and face distorted by terror, ran
+past my narrow outlook, a naked savage grasping after her scarcely a foot
+behind. I heard her wild scream of despair and his shout of triumph as
+he struck her down. Then I lost consciousness, overwhelmed by the
+multiplying horrors of that field of blood.
+
+It is hard to tell how long I lay there, or by what miracle of God's
+great mercy I had escaped death and mutilation. It was still day, the
+sun was high in the heaven, and the heat almost intolerable, beating down
+upon the dry and glittering sand. I could distinguish no sound near at
+hand, not even a moan of any kind. The human forms about me were
+stiffening in death; nor did any skulking Indian figures appear in sight.
+
+From away to the northward I could hear the echo of distant yelling; and
+as I lay there, every faculty alert, I became more and more convinced
+that the savages who had attacked us had withdrawn, and that I alone of
+all that fated company was preserved, through some strange dispensation
+of Providence, for what might prove a more terrible fate than any on that
+stricken field. With this thought there was suddenly born within me a
+fresh desire for life, a mad thirsting after revenge on those red demons
+whose merciless work I had been compelled to see. Yet if I hoped to
+preserve my life, I must have water and air; a single hour longer in my
+present situation could only result in death. Fortunately, such relief,
+now that I felt free to exert myself and seek it, was not so difficult as
+it had seemed. The heavy horse rested upon other bodies as well as my
+own, so that, little by little, I succeeded in dragging myself out from
+beneath his weight, until I was finally able to lift my head and glance
+cautiously about me.
+
+I pause now as I sit writing, my face buried in my hands, at the memory
+of that dreadful field of death. I cannot picture it, nor have I wish to
+try. I took one swift glimpse at the riven skulls, the mangled limbs,
+the mutilated bodies, the upturned pleading faces white and ghastly in
+the sunlight, the women and children huddled in heaps of slain, the
+seemingly endless line of disfigured, half-stripped bodies stretching far
+down the white beach; then I fell upon my face in the sand, sobbing like
+a baby. O God, how could such deeds be done? How could creatures shaped
+like men prove themselves such fiends, such hideous devils of malignity?
+It sickened me with horror, and I shrank from those dead bodies as if
+each had been a grim and threatening ghost.
+
+Necessity presently overcame the dread possessing me; and slowly, seeking
+to see no more than I must of the awful scenes about me, I struggled to
+my knees, and peered around cautiously for signs of skulking Indians.
+Not a living creature was near enough to observe me. To the northward
+the savages were swarming about the Fort, and it was evident that they
+had left everything to search for plunder. My uncovered head throbbed
+under the hot sun, and my hair was thick with clotted blood; scarce a
+hundred feet away was the blue lake, and on my hands and knees I crawled
+across the beach to it, forgetful of everything else in my desire to roll
+in the cool sweet water.
+
+I realized that it would be far safer for me to remain there until
+darkness shrouded my movements; but I felt so revived by the touch of the
+water that the old desire for action overcame considerations of personal
+safety. Before night came I must somehow gain possession of a rifle,
+with powder and ball; and I must discover, if possible, the fate of
+Mademoiselle. I cannot describe how, like a frightened child, I shrank
+from going again amid those mutilated corpses. I started twice, only to
+crawl back into the water, nerveless and shaking like the leaf of a
+cottonwood. I knew it must be done, and that the sooner I attempted it
+the safer would be the trial; so at last, with set teeth and almost
+superhuman effort, I crept up the beach among the silent, disfigured dead
+once more.
+
+With little trouble I found the wagon against which I had seen
+Mademoiselle draw back her horse in that last desperate defence. It was
+overturned, scorched with flame, its contents widely scattered; while
+about it lay the bodies of men, women, and children. A single hasty
+glance at most of these was sufficient; but a few were so huddled and
+hidden that I was compelled to move them before I thoroughly convinced
+myself that Mademoiselle was not there. I finally found her horse,
+several rods away, lying against the sand-ridge; but she whose body I
+sought with such fond persistency was not among those mangled forms.
+
+Faint and sick from the awful scene, with head throbbing painfully, I
+sank down upon a slope of sand where I was able to command a clear view
+in either direction, and thought rapidly. I was alone with the dead. Of
+all those lying silent before me, none would stir again. Not a savage
+roamed the stricken field,--though doubtless they would again swarm down
+upon it as soon as the sacking of the Fort had been completed. I must
+plan, and plan quickly, if I would preserve my own life and be of service
+to others. And life was worth preserving now, for there was a
+possibility,--faint, to be sure, yet a possibility,--that Toinette still
+lived. How the mere hope thrilled and animated me! how like a
+trumpet-sound it called to action! She had told me once of friendships
+between her and these blood-stained warriors; of weeks passed in Indian
+camps on the great plains, both with her father and alone; of being
+called the White Queen in the lodges of Sacs, Wyandots, and
+Pottawattomies. Perchance some such friendship may have intervened to
+save her, even in that fierce melee, that carnival of lust and murder.
+Some chief, with sufficient power to dare the deed, may have snatched her
+from out the jaws of death, actuated by motives of mercy,--or, more
+likely still, have saved her from the stroke of the tomahawk for a far
+more terrible fate.
+
+This was the thought that brought me again to my feet with burning face
+and tightly clinched teeth. If she lived, a helpless prisoner in those
+black lodges yonder, there was work to be done,--stern, desperate work,
+that would require all my courage and resourcefulness. Firm in manly
+resolve, and rendered reckless now of contact with the dead, I crept back
+among the bodies in eager search for gun and ammunition. For a long time
+I sought vainly; the field had been stripped by many a vandal hand. At
+last, however, I turned over a painted giant of a savage whose head had
+been crushed with a blow, and beneath him discovered a long rifle with
+powder-horn half filled. As I drew it forth, uttering a cry of delight
+at my precious find, my eyes fell upon a pair of bronze boots, with long
+narrow toes, protruding from beneath a tangled mass of the slain. It was
+no doubt the tomb of De Croix; and without so much as a thought that he
+could be alive, I drew the bodies off him and dragged his form forth into
+the sunlight.
+
+Merciful Heaven! his heart still beat,--so faintly, indeed, that I could
+barely note it with my ear at his chest. But life was surely there, and
+with a hasty glance about to assure me that I was unobserved, I ran to
+the lake shore. I returned with hat full of water, with which I
+thoroughly drenched him, rubbing his numbed hands fiercely, and thumping
+his chest until at last the closed eyes partially opened, and he looked
+up into my anxious face, gasping painfully for breath. His lips moved as
+I lifted his head in my arms; and I bent lower, not certain but he was
+dying and had some last message he would whisper in my ear.
+
+"Wayland," he faltered feebly, "is this you? Lord, how my head aches!
+Send Sam to me with the hand-mirror and the perfumed soap."
+
+"Hush!" I answered, almost angry at his flippant utterance. "Sam is no
+doubt dead, and you and I alone are spared of all the company. Do you
+suffer greatly? Think you it would be possible to walk?"
+
+"I have much pain here in the side," he said slowly, "and am yet weak
+from loss of blood. All dead, you say? Is Toinette dead?"
+
+"I know not, but I have not found her body among the others, and believe
+her to be a prisoner to the savages. But, come, De Croix," I urged,
+anxiously, "we run great risk loitering here; there is but one safe spot
+for us until after dark,--yonder, crouched in the waters of the lake.
+The Indians may return at any moment to complete their foul work; and for
+us to be found alive means torture,--most likely the stake,--and will
+remove the last hope for Mademoiselle. Think you it can be made if you
+lean hard on me?"
+
+"_Sacre_! 't will not be because I do not try, Master Wayland," he
+answered, his voice stronger now that he could breathe more freely, and
+with much of his old audacity returned. "Help me to make the start,
+friend, for every joint in my body seems rusty."
+
+His face was white and drawn from agony, and he pressed one hand upon his
+side, while perspiration stood in beads upon his forehead. But no moan
+came from his set lips; and when he rested a moment on his knees, looking
+about him upon the dead, a look of grim approval swept into his eyes.
+
+"Saint Guise, Wayland," he said soberly, "'t was a master fight, and the
+savages had it not all their own way!"
+
+It made me sick to hear such boasting amidst the horror that yet
+overwhelmed me, and I drew the fellow up to his feet with but little
+tenderness.
+
+"God knows 't is sad enough!" I answered, shortly. "Come, there are
+parties of Indians already straying this way from the Fort yonder, and it
+behooves us to get in hiding."
+
+He made the distance between us and the water with far less difficulty
+than I had expected, and with a better use of his limbs at each step. In
+spite of vigorous protest on his part, I forced him out from the shore
+until the water entirely covered us, save only our faces; and there we
+waited for the merciful coming of the night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+A GHOSTLY VISION
+
+The touch of the water brought renewed life to De Croix. This was
+shown by the brighter color stealing into his cheeks, as well as by the
+more careless tone that crept into his voice. The lake proved shallow
+for some considerable distance off shore, and I compelled the Frenchman
+to wade with me southward, and as far out as we dared venture, until we
+must have reached the extreme limit of the field of massacre. Indeed,
+I fully believed we had passed beyond the point where the attack had
+first burst upon Captain Wells's Miamis; for I could perceive no sign
+of any bodies lying opposite us against the white background of sand.
+As the night drew on, squads of savages wandered over the scene of
+slaughter, despoiling the stiffening corpses, and taking from the
+wagons whatever might suit their fancy. Yet we were now so far removed
+that we could distinguish little of their deeds, although the sound of
+their voices echoed plainly enough across the water to our ears.
+
+As time passed, the numbness that had paralyzed my brain, either from
+the cruel blow that felled me or the terrible shock my nerves had
+experienced, gradually passed away, and our situation became more vivid
+to my mind. I thought again of all who had gone forth that morning
+filled with hope and life. I had, it is true, known none of them long,
+but there were many in that ill-fated company who had already grown
+dear to me, and one was among them who I now knew beyond all question
+was to remain in my heart forever.
+
+I recalled the faces one by one, with some tender memory for each in
+turn. I thought of the brave Captain Wells, with his swarthy face, and
+Indian training, who had proved himself so truly my friend for my
+father's sake; of Captain Heald, the typical bluff soldier of the
+border, ready to sacrifice everything to what he deemed his duty; of
+Lieutenant Helm, grave of face and calm of speech, always so thoughtful
+of his sweet girl bride; and of young Ronan, loyal of heart and
+impetuous of deed, whose frank manliness had so drawn me to him. And
+now all these brave, true comrades were dead! Only five or six hours
+ago I had spoken with them, had ridden by their side; now they lay
+motionless yonder, stricken down by the basest treachery, their poor
+bodies hacked and mutilated almost beyond recognition. I could
+scarcely realize the awful truth; it rested upon me like some horrible
+dream, from which I knew I must soon awaken.
+
+But it was Mademoiselle,--Toinette, with the laughing eyes and roguish
+face, which yet could be so tender,--whose memory held me vibrating
+between constant dread and hope. Living or dead, I must know the truth
+concerning her, before I felt the slightest consideration for my own
+preservation. If I lived, it should be for her sake, not mine. Plan
+after plan came to me as I stood there, my face barely raised above the
+water level, praying for the westering sun to sink beneath the horizon.
+Yet all my plans were so vague, so visionary, so filled with
+difficulties and uncertainties, that at last I had nothing practical
+outlined beyond a firm determination in some way to reach the Indian
+camp and there learn what I could of its black secrets. I wondered
+whether this rash hare-brained Frenchman would aid or hinder such a
+purpose; and I glanced aside at him, curious to test the working of his
+mind in such a time of trial.
+
+"Saint Guise!" he exclaimed, marking my look, but misinterpreting it;
+"the sun has gone down at last, and there seems a chill in the air
+where it strikes my wet skin. It is in my thought to wade ashore,
+Master Wayland, and seek food for our journey, as I can perceive no
+savages near at hand."
+
+"It will be safer if we wait here another half-hour," I answered,
+almost inclined to smile at the queer figure he cut, with his long, wet
+hair hanging down his shoulders. Then I added, "What journey do you
+contemplate?"
+
+He gazed at me, his face full of undisguised amazement.
+
+"What journey? Why, Mon Dieu! to the eastward, of course! Surely you
+have no wish to linger in this pleasant spot?"
+
+"And is that the way of a French soldier?" I asked, almost angrily. "I
+thought you made the journey westward, Monsieur, for the sake of one
+you professed greatly to admire; and now you confess yourself willing
+to leave her here to the mercy of these red wolves. Is this the way of
+it?"
+
+I spoke the words coolly, and they cut him to the quick. His face
+flushed and his eyes flashed with anger; yet I faced him quietly,
+though I doubt not I should have felt his hand upon me had we been
+better circumstanced for struggle.
+
+"How know you she lives?" he asked sullenly, eying the rifle I still
+held across my shoulder.
+
+"I do not know, Monsieur, except that her body is not upon the field
+yonder; but I will know before I leave, or give my life in the search.
+And if you really loved her as you professed to do, you would dream of
+nothing less."
+
+"Love her?" he echoed, his gaze upon the sand, now partially obscured
+in the descending twilight. "_Sacre_! I truly thought I did, for the
+girl certainly has beauty and wit, and wove a spell about me in
+Montreal. But she has become as a wild bird out here, and is a most
+perplexing vixen, laughing at my protestations, so that indeed I hardly
+know whether it would be worth the risk to stay."
+
+Hateful and selfish as these words sounded, and much as I longed to
+strike the lips that uttered them so coolly, yet their utterance
+brought a comfort to my heart, and I stared at the fellow, biting my
+tongue to keep back the words of disgust I felt.
+
+"So this is the measure of your French gallantry, Monsieur! I am
+sincerely glad my race holds a different conception of the term. Then
+you will leave me here?"
+
+"Leave you? _Sacre_! how could I ever hope to find my way alone
+through the wilderness? 'T would be impossible. Yet why should we
+stay here? What can you and I hope to accomplish in so mad a search
+amid all these savages? You speak harsh words,--words that under other
+conditions I should make you answer for with the sword; but what is the
+good of it all? You know I am no coward; I can fight if there be need;
+yet to my mind no help can reach Toinette through us, while to remain
+here longer is no less than suicide."
+
+I saw he was in earnest, and I felt there was much truth in his words,
+however little they affected my own determination.
+
+"As you please, Monsieur," I answered coldly, turning from him and
+slowly wading ashore. "With me 't is not matter for argument. I seek
+Mademoiselle. You are at perfect liberty either to accompany me or to
+hunt for safety elsewhere, as you wish."
+
+I never so much as glanced behind, as I went up the beach, now shrouded
+in the swift-descending night; but I was aware that he kept but a step
+behind me. Once I heard him swear; but there was no more speaking
+between us, until, in the darkness, I stumbled and partially fell over
+a dead body outstretched upon the sand.
+
+"A Miami, judging from the fringe of his leggings," I said briefly,
+from my knees. "One of the advance guard, no doubt, brought down in
+flight. 'T is good luck, though, De Croix, for the fellow has retained
+his rifle. Perchance if you be well armed also, it may yield you fresh
+courage."
+
+"_Parbleu_! 'tis not courage I lack," he returned, with something of
+his old-time spirit, "but I hate greatly to yield up a chance for life
+on so mad an errand. More, Master Wayland, had this firearm been in my
+hands when you flouted me in the water yonder, your words should not
+have been so easily passed over."
+
+The stars gave me a dim view of him, and there was a look in his face
+that caused me to feel it would be best to have our trouble settled
+fully, and without delay.
+
+"Monsieur," I said sternly, laying my hand upon his shoulder, and
+compelling him to front me fairly, "I for one am going into danger
+where I shall require every resource in order to preserve my life and
+be of service to others. I have already told you that I care not
+whether you accompany me or no. But this I say: we part here, or else
+you journey with me willingly, and with no more veiled threats or side
+looks of treachery."
+
+"I meant no harm."
+
+"Then act the part of a man, Monsieur, and cease your grumbling. The
+very life of Mademoiselle may hang upon our venture; and if you ever
+interfere or obstruct my purpose, I will kill you as I would a dog.
+You understand that, Monsieur de Croix; now, will you go or stay?"
+
+He looked about him into the lonely, desolate shadows, and I could see
+him shrug his shoulders.
+
+"I go with you, of course. _Sacre_! but I have small choice in the
+matter; 't would be certain death otherwise, for I know not east from
+west in this blind waste of sand."
+
+I turned abruptly from him, and strode forward across the sand-ridge
+out into the short prairie grass beyond, shaping my course westward by
+the stars. However revengeful the Frenchman might feel at my plain
+speaking, I felt no hesitancy in trusting him to follow, as his life
+depended upon my guidance through the wilderness.
+
+My mind by this time was fairly settled upon our first movement. The
+only spot that gave promise of a safe survey of the Indian camp, where
+doubtless such prisoners as there were would be held, I felt sure would
+be found amid the shadows of the west bank of that southerly stream
+along which the lodges were set up. From that vantage point, if from
+any, I should be able to judge how best to proceed on the perilous
+mission of rescue.
+
+While we were feeling our way forward through the darkness, a great
+burst of flame soared high into the northern sky, the red light
+radiating far abroad over the prairie, until even our creeping figures
+cast faint shadows on the level plain.
+
+"Saint Guise! They have set fire to the Fort!" exclaimed De Croix,
+halting and gazing anxiously northward.
+
+"Ay, either to that or to the agency building," I answered. "It was
+not there I expected to find the prisoners, but rather hidden among
+those black lodges yonder whence all the shouting comes. 'T is
+torture, De Croix, which has so aroused those devils; and it will soon
+enough prove our turn to entertain them, if we linger long within this
+glare."
+
+"You have a plan, then?"
+
+"Only a partial one at present,--'t is to put the safeguard of the
+river between us and those yelling fiends. Beyond that it will all be
+the guidance of God."
+
+The stream proved to be a narrow one, and the current was not swift.
+We crossed it easily enough, without wetting our stock of powder, and
+found the western bank somewhat darkened by the numerous groups of
+small stunted trees that lined it. I moved with extreme caution now,
+for each step brought us in closer proximity to those infuriated
+tribesmen who were holding mad carnival in the midst of their lodges.
+I felt sure that our pathway along the western shore was clear, for the
+most astute chief among them would hardly look for the approach of
+enemies from that quarter; but I was enough of a frontiersman not to
+neglect any ordinary precautions, and so we crept like snakes along at
+the water's edge, under the shadow of the bank, until much of the wild
+scene in the village opposite was revealed to our searching eyes.
+
+It was a mad saturnalia, half light, half shadow, amid which the fierce
+figures of the painted warriors passed and repassed in drunken frenzy,
+making night hideous with savage clamor and frenzied gesticulations. I
+would have crept on farther, seeking a place for crossing unobserved,
+had not De Croix suddenly grasped me by the leg. As I turned, the play
+of the flames from across the water struck upon his white face, and I
+could read thereon a terror that held him motionless.
+
+"For Christ's sake, let us go!" he urged, in an agonized whisper, "See
+what those demons are about to do! I fear not battle, Wayland, as you
+know; but the scene yonder unmans me."
+
+It is hard for me to describe now what then I saw. The entire centre
+of the great encampment was brightly lit by a huge blazing fire, around
+which hundreds of Indians were gathered, leaping and shouting in their
+frenzy, while above the noise of their discordant voices we could
+distinguish the flat notes of the wooden drum, the dull pounding of
+which reminded me of the solemn tolling of a funeral bell. What
+atrocities had been going on, I know not; but as we gazed across at
+them in shuddering horror, forth from the entrance of a lodge a dozen
+painted warriors drove a white man, stripped to the waist, his hands
+bound behind him. As he stumbled forward, a bevy of squaws lashed him
+with corded whips. I caught one glimpse of his face in the light of
+the flames; it was that of a young soldier I recalled having seen the
+evening before within the Fort, playing a violin. He was a brave lad,
+and although his face was pale and drawn by suffering, he fronted the
+crazed mob that buffeted him with no sign of fear, his eyes roving
+about as if still seeking some possible avenue of escape. Once he
+sprang suddenly aside, tripping a giant brave who grasped him, and
+disappeared amid the lodges, only to be dragged forth a moment later
+and pushed forward, horribly beaten with clubs at every step.
+
+On a sudden, that shrieking, undulating crowd fell away, and we could
+see the young man standing alone, bound to a stake, his body leaning
+forward as if held to its erect posture merely by the bonds. The limp
+drooping of his head made me think him already unconscious, possibly
+dead from some chance fatal blow; but as the flames burst out in a roar
+at his feet, and shot up, red and glaring, to his waist, he gave
+utterance to one terrible cry of agony, and it seemed to me I gazed
+fairly into his tortured eyes and could read their pitiful appeal.
+Twice I raised my rifle, the sight upon his heart,--but durst not fire.
+No consideration of my own peril held back the pressure of the
+trigger,--'twas the remembrance of Mademoiselle. It was beyond my
+strength of will to withstand such strain long.
+
+"Come," I groaned to De Croix, my hands pressed tightly over my eyes to
+shut out the sight, "it will craze us both to stay here longer, nor
+dare we aid the poor fellow even by a shot."
+
+He lay face downward on the soft mud of the bank, and I had to shake
+him before he so much as moved. We crept on together, until we came
+out through the thick bushes into the open prairie, and faced each
+other, our lips white and our bodies shaking with the horror of what we
+had just seen.
+
+"Mon Dieu!" he faltered, "'twill forever haunt me."
+
+"It has greatly undone me," I answered, striving to control my voice,
+for I felt the necessity of coolness if I hoped to command him; "but if
+we would save her from meeting a like fate, we must remain men."
+
+"Then, for God's sake, find some spot where I may rest for an hour," he
+urged. "My brain seems reeling, and I fear it will give way it I
+remain in sight or sound of such horrors."
+
+In spite of all I had seen, it was still my desire to creep in among
+the deserted lodges while darkness shrouded the outermost of them; but
+I felt that some safe hiding-place must first be found for my
+companion. To attempt to take him with me while in such a nervous
+state would be only to invite disaster.
+
+"De Croix," I asked, "know you if the Indians have destroyed the house
+that stood by the fork of the north river, where the settler Ouilmette
+lived?"
+
+"I marked it through Lieutenant Helm's field-glass yesterday. 'T is
+partially burned, yet the walls still stand."
+
+"Then 't will serve us most excellently to hide in, for there will be
+naught left within likely to attract marauders. Think you that you
+could find it through the night?"
+
+He looked at me, and it was easy to see his nerves were on edge.
+
+"Alone?" he gasped brokenly. "My God, no!"
+
+There was seemingly no way out of it, for it would have been little
+short of murder to leave him alone on that black prairie, nor would
+harsh words have greatly mended matters. We were fully an hour at it,
+creeping cautiously along behind the scattered bushes until we passed
+the forks and swam the river's northerly branch. The action did him
+good, and greatly helped to steady my own nerves, as the uproar of the
+savages died steadily away behind us.
+
+At last we came out upon a slight knoll, and found ourselves close
+beside the low charred walls of what remained of Ouilmette's log-cabin.
+'T was a most gloomy and desolate spot, but quiet enough, with never
+the rustle of a leaf to awake the night, or startle us.
+
+"Have you got back your nerve, Monsieur?" I asked, as we paused before
+the dark outline, "or must I also help you to explore within?"
+
+"'T is not shadows that terrify me," he answered, no doubt thoroughly
+ashamed of his weakness, and eager to make amends; "nor is it likely
+that anything to affright me greatly is behind these walls."
+
+I lay prone in the grass at the corner of the cabin, my eyes fixed upon
+the distant Indian village, where I could yet plainly distinguish
+numberless black figures dodging about between me and the flames; while
+further to the east, the greater blaze of the Fort buildings lighted
+up, in a wide arc, the deserted prairie. I gave little consideration
+to De Croix's exploit,--indeed, I had almost forgotten it, when
+suddenly the fellow sprang backward out of the open door, a cry of wild
+terror upon his lips, and his hands outstretched as it to ward off some
+unearthly vision.
+
+"Mon Dieu!" he sobbed hoarsely, falling upon his knees. "'T was the
+face of Marie!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+AN ANGEL IN THE WILDERNESS
+
+He acted so like a crazed man, grovelling face downward in the grass,
+that I had to hold him, fearful lest his noise might attract attention
+from our enemies.
+
+"Be quiet, De Croix!" I commanded sternly, my hand hard upon him, my
+eyes peering through the darkness to determine if possible the cause
+for his mysterious fright. "What is it that has so driven you out of
+your senses?"
+
+He half rose, staring back at the black shadow of the dim doorway, his
+face white as chalk in the starlight and faint glare of the distant
+fires.
+
+"'T was the face of a dead woman," he gasped, pointing forward, "there,
+just within the door! I saw her buried three years ago, I swear; yet,
+God be merciful! she awaited me yonder in the gloom."
+
+"Pish!" I exclaimed, thoroughly disgusted at his weakness, and rising
+to my feet. "Your nerves are unstrung by what we have been through,
+and you dream of the dead."
+
+"It is not so!" he protested, his voice faltering pitifully; "I saw
+her, Monsieur,--nor was she once this day in my thought until that
+moment."
+
+"Well, I shall soon know if there is a ghost within," I answered
+shortly, determined to make quick end of it. "Remain here, while I go
+into the house and see what I can find."
+
+For a moment he clung to me like a frightened child; but I shook off
+his hands a bit roughly, and stepped boldly across the threshold. That
+was an age when faith in ghostly visitations yet lingered to harass the
+souls of men. I confess my heart beat more rapidly than usual, as I
+paused an instant to peer through the shadowy gloom within. It was a
+small, low room, with a litter of broken furniture strewing the earthen
+floor; but the log walls were quite bare. The flicker of the still
+blazing Fort illuminated the interior sufficiently to enable me to make
+out these simple details, and to see that the place was without living
+occupant.
+
+There was only one other apartment in the building, and I walked back
+until I came upon the door which separated the two, and flung it open.
+As I did so I thought I saw a shadow, the dim flitting of a woman's
+form between me and the farther wall; but as I sprang hastily forward,
+grasping after the spectral vision, I touched nothing save the rough
+logs. Twice I made the circuit of that restricted space, so confident
+was I of my own eye-witness; but I found nothing, and could only pause
+perplexed, staring about in wonder.
+
+It occurred to me that my own overtaxed nerves were at fault, and that
+if I was to accomplish anything before daylight I must say nothing
+likely to alarm De Croix further.
+
+"Come, Monsieur!" I said, as I came out and shook him into attention,
+"there is naught within more dangerous than shadows, or perchance a
+rat. Nor have I any time longer to dally over such boyishness. I had
+supposed you a soldier and a brave man, not a nerveless girl to be
+frightened in the dark. Come, there is ample hiding-space behind the
+walls, and I purpose leaving you here to regain some measure of your
+lost courage while I try a new venture of my own."
+
+"Where go you?"
+
+"To learn if I may gain entrance to the Indian camp unobserved. There
+can be no better time than while they are occupied yonder."
+
+He looked uneasily about him into the dark corners, shuddering.
+
+"I would rather go with you," he protested, weakly. "I have not the
+heart to remain here alone."
+
+"Nevertheless, here you stay," I retorted shortly, thoroughly
+exasperated by his continued childishness; "you are in no spirit to
+meet the perils yonder. Conquer your foolishness, Monsieur, for I know
+well 't is not part of your nature so to exhibit fear."
+
+"'T is naught alive that I so shrink from; never have I been affrighted
+of living man."
+
+"True; nor have I ever found the dead able greatly to harm. But now I
+go forth to a plain duty, and you must wait me here."
+
+I did not glance back at him, although I knew he had sunk dejected on a
+bench beside the door; but with careful look at the priming of my
+rifle, I stepped forth into the open, and started down the slight slope
+leading to the river. A fringe of low, straggling trees hid my
+movements from observation by possible watchers along the southern
+bank; nor could I perceive with any definiteness what was going on
+there. The fires had died down somewhat, and I thought the savage
+yelling and clamor were considerably lessened.
+
+I confess I went forward hesitatingly, and was doubtful enough about
+the outcome; but I saw no other means by which I might hope to locate
+Mademoiselle definitely, and I valued my own life now only as it
+concerned hers. The selfish cowardice of De Croix--if cowardice it
+truly was--served merely to stir me to greater recklessness and daring,
+and I felt ready to venture all if I might thereby only pluck her from
+the grasp of those red fiends. As I crept through the fringe of bushes
+which lined the bank, my eyes were on the darkened upper extremity of
+the Indian camp, and all my thoughts were concentrated upon a plan of
+entrance to it. I may have been somewhat careless, for I had no
+conception of any serious peril until after I had crossed the stream,
+and it certainly startled me to hear a voice at my very elbow,--a
+strange voice, beautifully soft and low.
+
+"You have the movement of an Indian; yet I think you are white. What
+seek you here?"
+
+I turned quickly and faced the speaker, my rifle flung forward ready
+for action. The light was poor enough there amid the shadows, yet the
+single glimpse I had told me instantly I faced the mysterious woman of
+the Indian camp. For a moment I made no response, held speechless by
+surprise; and she questioned again, almost imperatively.
+
+"I asked, why are you here?"
+
+"I am one, by the grace of God, spared from the massacre," I answered
+blindly. "But you?--I saw you within the Indian camp only last night.
+Surely you are not a savage?"
+
+"That I know not. I sometimes fear the savage is part of all our
+natures, and that I am far removed from the divine image of my Master.
+But I am not an Indian, if that is what you mean. If to be white is a
+grace in your sight, I am of that race, though there are times when I
+would have been prouder to wear the darker skin. The red men kill, but
+they do not lie, nor deceive women. I remember you now,--you were with
+the White Chief from Dearborn, and tried to approach me when Little
+Sauk interfered. Why did you do that?"
+
+Her manner and words were puzzling, but I knew no better way than to
+answer frankly.
+
+"I sought Elsa Matherson,--are you she?"
+
+The girl--for she could certainly have been little more--started
+perceptibly at the name, and bent eagerly forward, peering with new
+interest into my face.
+
+"Elsa Matherson?" she questioned, dwelling upon the words as though
+they awoke memories. "It is indeed long since I have heard the name.
+Where knew you her?"
+
+"I have never known her; but her father was my father's friend, and I
+sought her because of that friendship."
+
+"Here?"
+
+"At Fort Dearborn, where she was left an orphan."
+
+"How strange! how very strange indeed! 'T is a small world. Elsa
+Matherson!--and at Dearborn?"
+
+Was it acting, for some purpose unknown to me,--or what might be the
+secret of these strange expressions?
+
+"Then you are not the one I seek?"
+
+She hesitated, looking keenly toward me through the dim light.
+
+"I have not said who I may be," she answered evasively. "Whatever name
+I may once have borne was long ago forgotten, and to the simple
+children about me I am only Sister Celeste. 'T is enough to live by in
+this wilderness, and the recording angel of God knows whether even that
+is worthy. But I have been waiting to learn why you are here, creeping
+through the bushes like a savage! Nor do I believe you to be
+altogether alone. Was there not one with you yonder at the house? Why
+did he cry out so loudly, and fall?"
+
+"He imagined he saw a ghost within. He claimed to have recognized the
+face of a dead woman he once knew."
+
+"A dead woman? What is the man's name? Who is he?"
+
+"Captain de Croix, an officer of the French army."
+
+She sighed quickly, as if relieved, one hand pressed against her
+forehead, and sat thinking.
+
+"I know not the name, but it seems strange that the chance sight of my
+face should work such havoc with his nerves. Spoke he not even the
+name of the woman?"
+
+"I think he cried some name as he fell, but I recall it not."
+
+"And you? You are only seeking a way of escape from the savages?"
+
+For a moment I hesitated; but surely, I thought, this strange young
+woman was of white blood, and seemingly an enthusiast in the religion I
+also professed, and I might safely trust her with my purpose.
+
+"I am seeking entrance within the encampment, hoping thus to rescue a
+maiden whom I believe to be prisoner in the hands of the Indians."
+
+"A maiden,--Elsa Matherson?"
+
+"Nay, another; one I have learned to love so well that I now willingly
+risk even torture for her sake. You are a woman, and have a woman's
+heart; you exercise some strange power among these savages. I beg you
+to aid me."
+
+She sat with clasped hands, her eyes lowered upon the grass.
+
+"Whatsoever power I have comes from God," she said solemnly; "and there
+be times, such as now, when it seems as if He held me unworthy of His
+trust."
+
+"But you will aid me in whatever way you can?"
+
+"You are sure you love this maiden?"
+
+"Would I be here, think you, otherwise?"
+
+She did not answer immediately, but crept across the little space
+separating us until she could look more closely into my face, scanning
+it earnestly with her dark eyes.
+
+"You have the appearance of a true man," she said finally. "Does the
+maid love you?"
+
+"I know not," I stammered honestly, confused by so direct a question.
+"I fear not; yet I would save her even then."
+
+I felt her hand touch mine as if in sudden sympathy.
+
+"Monsieur," she spoke gravely, "love has never been kind to me, and I
+have learned to put small trust in the word as it finds easy utterance
+upon men's lips. A man swore once, even at the altar, that he loved
+me; and when he had won my heart he left me for another. If I believed
+you were such a man I would rather leave this girl to her fate among
+the savages yonder."
+
+"I am not of that school," I protested earnestly. "I am of a race that
+love once and forever. But you, who are you? Why are you here in the
+midst of these savages? You bear a strange likeness to her I would
+save, but for the lighter shade of your hair."
+
+She drew back slightly, removing her hand from mine, but with
+gentleness.
+
+"It would do you little good to know my story," She said firmly. "I am
+no longer of the world, and my life is dedicated to a service you might
+deem sacrifice. Moreover, we waste time in such idle converse; and if
+it be my privilege to aid you at all, I must learn more, so as to plan
+safely."
+
+"You have the freedom of the camp yonder?"
+
+"I hardly know," she responded sadly. "God has placed in my poor
+hands, Monsieur, a portion of His work amid those benighted,
+sin-stained creatures there. Times come, as now, when the wild wolf
+breaks loose, and my life hardly is safe among them. I fled the camp
+to-night,--not from fear, Christ knows, but because I am a woman, and
+too weak physically to bear the sight of suffering that I am helpless
+to relieve. It is indeed Christ's mercy that so few of your company
+were spared to be thus tortured; but there was naught left for me but
+prayer."
+
+She stooped forward, her hands pressed over her eyes as though she
+would shut out the horror.
+
+"Yet know you who among the whites have thus far preserved their
+lives?" I urged, in an agony of suspense. "Were any of the women
+brought alive to the camp?"
+
+"It was my fortune to see but one; nor was I permitted to approach
+her,--a sweet-faced girl, yet she could not be the one you seek, for
+she wore a wedding-ring. She was saved through the friendship of Black
+Partridge, and I heard that she is a daughter of the Silver-man."
+
+"Ay! Mrs. Helm! Thank God! But was she the only one?"
+
+"Truly, I know not; for I was forced away from sight of much that went
+on. Little Sauk has a white maiden hidden in his lodge, who was
+brought from the battle. I have not seen the girl, but know this
+through others who were angry at his good-fortune."
+
+"Could we reach there, think you, unobserved?"
+
+She rose, and gazed anxiously across the stream, her face showing clear
+and fair in the faint light of those distant fires, while I caught the
+glimmer of a pearl rosary about her white throat and marked a silver
+crucifix resting against her breast.
+
+"It will be life itself you venture in such an attempt," she said
+softly, "even its loss through torture; yet 't is a deed that might be
+done, for the Indians are fairly crazed with blood and liquor, and will
+pay small heed to aught save their heathen orgies."
+
+"Then let us venture it."
+
+She turned slightly and looked at me intently, her dark eyes filled
+with serious thought.
+
+"Yes, we will go," she responded at last, slowly. "If through God's
+grace we may thus preserve a life, it will be well worthy the
+sacrifice, and must be His desire."
+
+For another moment we waited there silently, standing side by side,
+gazing anxiously across the dark water, and listening intently to the
+varied discordant sounds borne to us on the night air. I know not what
+may have been in her thought; but upon my lips there was a silent
+prayer that we might be safely guided in our desperate mission. I
+wondered still who this strange young woman could be, so surrounded by
+mystery, a companion of savages, and still gentle and refined in word
+and manner. I dare not ask again, nor urge her confidence; for there
+was that of reserve about her which held me speechless. I glanced
+aside, marking again the clear pure contour of her face, and my look
+seemed instantly to arouse her from her reverie.
+
+"I expect little trouble until we near the centre of the camp," she
+said, thoughtfully. "'T is dark amid the northern lodges, and we shall
+meet with no warriors there unless they be so far gone in intoxication
+as to be no longer a source of danger. But come, friend, the longer we
+tarry the less bright grows the hope of success."
+
+A slender bark canoe rested close beneath the bank, and she motioned me
+into it, grasping the paddle without a word, and sending the narrow
+craft with swift, silent strokes across the stream. The other shore
+was unprotected; so, hesitating only long enough to listen for a
+moment, much as some wild animal might, she crept forward cautiously
+into the black lodge-shadows, while I instantly followed, imitating as
+best I could her slightest movement. We met no obstacle to our
+advance,--not even the snarls and barkings of the innumerable curs,
+usually the sleepless guardians of such encampments of savages. I soon
+saw that as we crept around lodge after lodge in our progress, the
+light of the blazing fires in our front grew constantly brighter and
+the savage turbulence more pronounced.
+
+At last the girl came to a sudden pause, peering cautiously forward
+from beneath the shadow of the lodge that hid us; and as I glanced over
+her shoulder, the wild scene was revealed in each detail of savagery.
+
+"'T is as far as you will dare venture," she whispered, her lips at my
+ear. "I know not the exact limit of our progress, but the lodge of
+Little Sauk lies beyond the fire, and I must make the rest of the
+distance alone."
+
+"But dare you?" I questioned uneasily. "Will they permit even you to
+pass unharmed?"
+
+She smiled almost sadly.
+
+"I have many friends among them, blood-stained as they are, and little
+as I have accomplished for the salvation of their souls. I have been
+with them much, and my father long held their confidence ere he died.
+I have even been adopted into the tribe of the Pottawattomies. None
+are my enemies among that nation save the medicine-men, and they will
+scarce venture to molest me even in this hour of their power and crime.
+Too well they know me to be under protection of their chiefs; nor are
+they insensible to the sanctity of my faith. Ay, and even their
+superstition has proved my safeguard."
+
+The expression of curiosity in my eyes appealed to her, and as if in
+answer she rested one hand upon her uncovered head, the hair of which
+shone like dull red gold in the firelight.
+
+"You mean that?" I asked, dimly recalling something I had once heard.
+
+She shook the heavy coiled mass loose from its bondage, until it
+rippled in gleaming waves of color over her shoulders, and smiled back
+at me, yet not without traces of deep sadness in her eyes.
+
+"'T is an Indian thought," she explained softly, "that such hair as
+mine is a special gift of the Great Spirit, and renders its wearer
+sacred. What was often spoken most lightly about in other days has in
+this dread wilderness proved my strongest defence. God uses strange
+means, Monsieur, to accomplish His purpose with the heathen."
+
+She paused, listening intently to a sudden noise behind us.
+
+"Creep in here, Monsieur," she whispered, quickly lifting an edge of
+the skin-covering of the lodge. "A party is returning from the Fort,
+perchance with more prisoners. Lie quiet there until I return; it will
+not be long."
+
+I crawled through the slight opening into that black interior, turning
+to hold open the flap sufficiently to peer forth once more. I knew not
+where she vanished, as she faded away like a shadow; but I had hardly
+secured refuge, when a dozen painted warriors trooped by, shouting
+their fierce greeting. In the midst of them, half-stripped, and
+bleeding as if from freshly inflicted wounds, staggered a white man;
+and as the firelight fell full upon his haggard face, I recognized De
+Croix.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+A SOLDIER OF FRANCE
+
+What followed was so extraordinary and incredible that I hesitate to
+record it, lest there be those who, judging in their own conceit, and
+knowing little of savage Indian nature, may question the truth of my
+narration, Yet I am now too old a man to permit unjust criticism to
+swerve me from the task I have assumed.
+
+The extreme of misery that overwhelmed me at the moment when I beheld
+my comrade driven forward like a trapped beast to a death by torture,
+found expression in a sudden moan, which, fortunately for me, was
+unnoted amid the shouts of greeting that arose around the fire when
+those gathered there caught sight of the new-comers. Instantly all was
+confusion and uproar; a scene of savage debauchery, unrelieved by a
+redeeming feature or a sign of mercy. It was as if poor De Croix had
+been hurled, bound and gagged, into a den of infuriated wolves, whose
+jaws already dripped with the blood of slaughter. Gleaming weapons,
+glaring and lustful eyes, writhing naked bodies, pressed upon him on
+every side, hurling him back and forth in brute play, every tongue
+mocking him, in every up-lifted hand a weapon for a blow.
+
+The fierce animal nature within these red fiends was now uppermost,
+fanned into hot flame by hours of diabolical torture of previous
+victims, in which they had exhausted every expedient of cruelty to add
+to the dying agony of their prey. To this, fiery liquor had yielded
+its portion; while the weird incantations of their priests had
+transformed the most sober among them into demons of malignity. If
+ever, earlier in the night, their chiefs had exercised any control over
+them, that time was long since past; and now the inflamed warriors,
+bursting all restraint, answered only to the war-drum or made murderous
+response to the superstition of their medicine-men.
+
+The entire centre of the encampment was a scene of drunken orgy, a
+phantasmagoria of savage figures, satanic in their relentless cruelty
+and black barbarity. Painted hundreds, bedecked with tinkling beads
+and waving feathers, howled and leaped in paroxysms of fury about the
+central fire, hacking at the helpless bodies of the dead victims of
+earlier atrocities, tearing their own flesh, beating each other with
+whips like wire, their madly brandished weapons flashing angrily in the
+flame-lit air.
+
+Squaws, dirty of person and foul of mouth, often more ferocious in
+appearance and cruel in action than their masters, were everywhere,
+dodging amid the writhing bodies, screaming shrilly from excitement,
+their long coarse hair whipping in the wind. Nor were they all
+Pottawattomies: others had flocked into this carnival of
+blood,---Wyandots and Sacs, even Miamis, until now it had become a
+contest for supremacy in savagery. 'T was as if hell itself had
+opened, to vomit forth upon the prairie that blood-stained crew of
+dancing demons and shock the night with crime.
+
+A dead white man,--the poor lad whose early torture we had
+witnessed,--his half-burnt body still hanging suspended at the stake,
+was in the midst of them, a red glare of embers beneath him, the
+curling smoke creeping upward into the black sky from about his head
+like devil's incense. In front of this hideous spectacle, regardless
+of the mutilated body, sat the ferocious old demon I had seen the
+evening previous, his head crowned with a bison's horns, his naked
+breast daubed with red and yellow figures to resemble crawling snakes,
+his face the hideous representation of a grinning skull. Above all
+other sounds rang out his yells, inciting his fellows to further
+atrocities, and accompanied by the dull booming of his wooden drum.
+
+It was into this pack of ravening beasts that poor De Croix staggered
+from the surrounding shadows; and they surged about him, clamoring for
+place, greeting their new-found victim with jeers and blows and hoots
+of bitter hatred, viciously slashing at him with their knives, so that
+the very sight of it turned me sick, and made me sink my head upon my
+arms in helplessness and horror. A sudden cessation in the infernal
+uproar led me to peer forth once more. They had dragged the charred
+and blackened trunk of the dead soldier down from the post where it had
+hung suspended, and were fastening De Croix in its place, binding his
+hands behind the support, and kicking aside the still glowing embers of
+the former fire to give him space to stand. It was brutally,
+fiendishly done, with thongs wound about his body so tightly as to lift
+the flesh in great welts, and those who labored at it striking cruel
+blows at his naked, quivering form, spitting viciously into his face,
+with taunting words, seeking through every form of ferocious ingenuity
+to wring from their helpless victim some sign of suffering, some
+shrieking plea for mercy. Once I marked a red devil stick a sharpened
+sliver of wood into the Frenchman's bare shoulder, touched it with
+fire, and then stand back laughing as the bound victim sought vainly to
+dislodge the torturing brand.
+
+Whatever of shrinking fear De Croix may have exhibited an hour before,
+however he may have trembled from ghostly haunting and been made coward
+by contact with the dead, he was a man now, a soldier worthy of his
+uniform and of his manhood. Merciful God! but it made my heart swell
+to see the lad, as he faced those dancing devils and looked coolly into
+the eyes of death. His face was indeed ghastly white in the fire-glow,
+save where the red stains of blood disfigured it; but there was no
+wavering in the bold black eyes, no cowardly shrinking from his fate,
+no moan of weakness from between his tightly pressed lips. Scarce
+could I think of him then as being the same gentle exquisite that rode
+on the westward trail in powdered hair and gaudy waistcoat, worrying
+lest a pinch of dust might soil his faultless linen,--this begrimed,
+blood-stained, torn figure, naked to the waist, his small-clothes
+clinging in rags from his thighs, his head bare and with long black
+locks streaming to his shoulders. Yet it was now, not then, he won my
+respect and honor.
+
+Once I saw him strain desperately at the cords in a mad endeavor to
+break free, his flashing eyes on the demons who were torturing him
+beyond endurance. Well I knew how he longed to lay hand on any weapon,
+and thus die, battling to the end; had he succeeded, I doubt not I
+should have been at his side, forgetful of all else in the struggle.
+The deer-skin thongs, as unyielding as iron, held him fast. I ground
+my teeth and dug my nails into the earth to hold me from leaping
+forward in hopeless attempt at rescue, as a huge brute struck him
+savagely with clinched hand across the lips.
+
+Suddenly, as if in response to some low spoken order, the jostling
+horde fell aside from before him, leaving a narrow space unoccupied. I
+had no time to wonder at this movement before a tomahawk, whirling
+rapidly and flashing like a ruby in the red glare, went hurling
+forward, and buried its shining blade deep in the post an inch from the
+prisoner's head, the handle quivering with the force of impact. Again
+and again, amid yells of derision and encouragement, they threw, twice
+bringing token of blood from the grazed cheek and once cleaving the ear
+nearest me as if by a knife-blow. In spite of all, De Croix sneered at
+them, mocked their efforts, taunted them with their lack of skill, no
+doubt seeking to infuriate them and cause the striking of a merciful
+death-blow.
+
+I trembled as I gazed, held there by a fascination I could not
+overcome, shading my eyes when I saw an arm uplifted to make a cast,
+and opening them in dread unspeakable as I heard the dull impact of the
+blow. Never in my life have I seen such marvellous nerve as this
+French gallant displayed in those awful moments; standing there
+motionless, with never a tremor, no twitching of a muscle, his scornful
+eyes following the deadly steel, his lips jeering at the throwers, as
+he coolly played the game whose stake was death. At last some savage
+cast from farther back amid the mass of howling contestants; I failed
+to see the upraised hand that grasped the weapon, but caught its sudden
+gleam as it sped onward, and De Croix was pinned helpless, the steel
+blade wedging his long hair deep into the wood.
+
+A dozen screaming squaws now hustled forward the materials for a fire;
+I saw branches, roots, and leaves, piled high about his knees, and
+marked with a shudder the film of blue smoke as it soared upward ere
+the flame caught the green wood. Then suddenly some one kicked the
+pile over, hurling it into the faces of those who stooped beside it;
+and the fierce clamor ceased as if by magic.
+
+I staggered to my knees, wondering what it could mean,--this strange
+silence after all the uproar. Then I saw. Out from the shadows, as if
+she herself were one, the strange girl who had been my companion glided
+forward into the red radius of the flame, and faced them, her back to
+De Croix.
+
+Never shall I fail to recall her as she then appeared,--a veritable
+goddess of light fronting the fiends of darkness. With cheeks so white
+as to seem touched with death, her dark eyes glowed in consciousness of
+power, while her long, sweeping tresses rippled below her waist,
+gleaming in a wild red beauty almost supernatural. How womanly she
+was, how fair to look upon, and how unconscious of aught save her
+mission! One hand she held before her in imperious gesture of command;
+with the other she uplifted the crucifix, until the silver Christ
+sparkled in the light. "Back!" she said clearly. "Back! You shall
+not torture this man! I know him. He is a soldier of France!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+THE RESCUE AT THE STAKE
+
+The word uttered by the strange woman was one to conjure with even then
+in the Illinois country. Many a year had passed since the French flag
+ruled those prairies, yet not a warrior there but knew how the men of
+that race avenged an injury,--how swift their stroke, how keen their
+steel.
+
+I watched the startled throng press closely backward, as if awed by her
+mysterious presence, influenced insensibly by her terse sentence of
+command, each dusky face a reflex of its owner's perplexity. Drunken
+as most of them were, crazed with savage blood-lust and hours of
+remorseless torture of their victims, for the moment that sweet vision
+of womanly purity held them motionless, as if indeed the figure of the
+Christ she uplifted before their faces had taught them abhorrence of
+their crimes.
+
+But it was not for long. To hundreds of those present she was merely
+an unknown white woman; while even to those who knew her best, the
+Pottawattomies, she appeared only as one who came to balk them of their
+revenge. They may have held her person inviolate amid their lodges,
+and even have countenanced her strange teaching; but now she had
+ventured too far in attempting thus to stand between them and their
+victim. They held back a single moment, halted by her fearlessness,
+rendered cowardly by vague superstitions regarding her religious power;
+but after the first breathless pause of dumb astonishment and
+irresolution, voice after voice arose in hoarse cries of rage and
+shouts of disapproval. There was a surging forward of the straining
+red line, while in their front howled and gesticulated the hideous old
+medicine-man, his painted face distorted by passion, eager to grasp
+this auspicious moment to cast down forever one who had sought to end
+his superstitious rule among the tribe. I marked how she drew back as
+they advanced, retreating step by step,--not, indeed, as if she feared
+them, but rather as if some definite purpose led her movement. Her
+eyes never wavered, her hand still uplifted the gleaming cross, as she
+retreated slowly, until she stood directly before De Croix, where he
+hung helplessly staring at her with an expression of fear in his face
+strangely at variance with his late show of desperate courage.
+
+"Back!" she cried again, but now in a deeper and fuller voice that
+sounded like a clear-toned bell above the uproar. "I tell you I will
+kill this man with my own hand before I permit you to put further
+torture upon him!"
+
+An instant only did this threat halt the gathering rush. Some one
+voiced an Indian insult, and there came a fierce surging forward,
+although no warrior among them seemed eager to lead in the attack. I
+saw the woman lift her hand, and caught the glimmer of a steel blade;
+and even as I sprang erect, partially flinging aside the obstructing
+flap of the lodge, an Indian, stalking silently forth from the shadows,
+faced the mob, standing motionless within a foot of the desperate girl,
+and with his back toward her. One glance at that tall thin figure, the
+stern face, the long white hair, told me it was the great war-chief of
+the Pottawattomies, Gomo; and I sank back trembling from the reaction
+of that moment's strain.
+
+His words were calm, deliberate, commanding; but the angry roar with
+which they were greeted made me fear the horde he faced so resolutely
+was now beyond control. He smiled, his thin lips curling in derision
+as he gazed with contempt into the threatening faces pressing closer
+upon every side.
+
+"Fear not," he murmured aside to the watchful woman, and resting one
+hand upon her arm. "Cut loose the prisoner!"
+
+She turned instantly to her task, while he spoke briefly the names of
+his chiefs; and as each was called in turn, a warrior came from among
+the mass and silently stood beside him. A dozen came forth thus,
+stalwart, grim-faced braves, many with fresh scalps dangling at their
+belts.
+
+Gomo now spoke again, using the French tongue, that all present might
+better grasp his meaning.
+
+"Brothers," he said gravely, "this squaw is Pottawattomie. She was
+adopted by our people and lives in our lodges. Pottawattomies are
+friends to Frenchmen; there is no war between us. Why should Wyandots
+and Sacs wish to burn a Frenchman?"
+
+For a moment no one ventured to reply; the mob stood halted now, robbed
+of its leaders and its courage, even the noisy medicine-man silenced
+before this stern array of protecting chiefs. Loose as was Indian
+discipline and tribal authority, even in drunkenness those desperate
+warriors dared not openly disregard such a display of power.
+
+"Have the Pottawattomies spoken well?" questioned the old chief,
+sternly, "or have our words wronged our brothers?"
+
+A giant of a fellow, whose broad face and huge head seemed
+disproportionate even to his big body, his long coarse hair profusely
+ornamented with shells and beads flashing gaudily in the firelight,
+pushed his way out from among the silent mass.
+
+"Gomo, the great war-chief of the Pottawattomies, has spoken well," he
+said in a deep voice that rolled like distant thunder. "The Wyandots
+did not know; they war not with Frenchmen, nor harm the women of the
+Pottawattomies. The Great Spirit hath made us brothers, and we have
+smoked together the pipe of peace."
+
+Gomo moved forward with Indian dignity, and exchanged solemn greeting
+with the new-comer.
+
+"It makes the hearts of the Pottawattomies light to hear the words of
+Sau-ga-nash," he said gravely. Then he turned and waved his hand to
+his clustered warriors. "Release the Frenchman, and place him for
+safety in the council lodge. Pass the woman free. It is the will of
+our chiefs."
+
+The council lodge! I glanced about me apprehensively; surely this must
+be the same tepee in which Captain Heald and I had met the chiefs!
+There were no signs of ordinary Indian occupancy, and now as I looked
+about me the firelight from without revealed clearly the shading of
+those grotesque figures I recalled as having been sketched upon the
+outer covering. So it was here that De Croix was to be confined! I
+crept back hastily, dropping into place the loosened flap through which
+I had been peering. A skin or two were lying on the grassy floor; and
+I grasped the larger of these, drawing it over me while I rolled as
+closely as possible against the farther wall, hoping desperately that
+no Indian guards would be posted within.
+
+The uproar outside continued, as if there were still opposition to the
+commands of the chiefs; but presently, as I peeped through a hole in
+the skin held over me, I perceived a sudden flash of light as the flap
+covering the entrance was drawn aside. I saw a number of dark hands
+thrust within, a savage face or two peering for a moment about the
+darkened interior; but to my inexpressible relief only one body was
+thrust inside, with such violence, however, as to cause the man to fall
+face downward at full length. The next instant the lodge was again
+wrapped in utter darkness. By God's mercy I remained undiscovered, and
+was alone with De Croix.
+
+For a short time, assured as I was of this fact, I did not venture to
+creep from my place of concealment, or make my presence known to my
+companion. What ears might be listening, I knew not; nor dared I trust
+too much to the Frenchman's already over-taxed nerves. He did not move
+from the position where he fell; but I could hear him groan and sob,
+with now and then a broken ejaculation. Without, the yelling and
+uproar grew perceptibly less, although an occasional outburst gave
+evidence that the carousal was not wholly ended. Finally I pushed back
+the robe that covered me, now grown uncomfortably warm, and crept
+cautiously toward the place where I knew him to be lying. It was
+intensely dark, and I was still fearful lest he might cry out if I
+startled him.
+
+"De Croix," I whispered, "make no alarm; I am Wayland."
+
+"Wayland!" I could mark the amazement in his tone, as he instantly sat
+upright, peering through the gloom in the direction whence my voice
+came. "_Mon Dieu_! You are here? You saw all of it?"
+
+"Ay," I answered, reaching out and groping in the darkness until I
+grasped his hand. "You have had a hard time, my lad; but the worst is
+over, and hope remains for us both."
+
+He shuddered so violently I could feel the spasm shake his body.
+
+"'Twas not the dying," he protested; "but did you see her, Wayland?
+Merciful God! was it really a living woman who stood there, or a ghost
+returned from the other world to haunt me and make living worse than
+death?"
+
+"You mean the sister who interposed to save you?" I asked. "She was as
+truly alive as either of us. Think you she is not a stranger?"
+
+He groaned, as if the confession was wrung from him by the terror of
+eternal torment.
+
+"_Mon Dieu_! She is my wife!"
+
+"Your wife?"
+
+"Ay, my wife,--Marie Faneuf, of Montreal."
+
+"But how comes she here, Monsieur, living in the Pottawattomie camp?
+And how comes it that you sought another in this wilderness, if you
+were already long wedded?"
+
+"Saint Guise! but I cannot tell you," and his voice shook with the
+emotion that swept him. "'T is like a black dream, from which I must
+yet awaken. She died, I swear she died; the sisters told me so at the
+convent of the Ursulines, whither she fled to escape my
+unkindness,--for I did her wrong; and I stood by the grave as the body
+they called hers was lowered into the ground. For all these years have
+I thought it true; yet the girl yonder was Marie. But you,
+Wayland,--know you aught of her?"
+
+"Only that she guided me hither in search of Mademoiselle. On the way
+we conversed, and she let me know that she had dedicated her life to
+the service of these Indians, seeking to save their souls."
+
+"'T is like enough; she was ever half a nun, and most religious. Yet
+made she no mention of me, and of my crying out at the house?--for I
+must indeed have seen her there!"
+
+"She asked me your name, Monsieur, and when I told her she said she
+recalled it not. Knew she you by some other?"
+
+He did not answer, though I could mark his heavy breathing, as if he
+strove with himself for mastery. Nor did I speak again, eager as I now
+was to arrange some plan for the future; for this man was certainly in
+no condition to counsel with.
+
+I know not how long I may have rested there in silence, seeking vainly
+in my own mind for some opening of escape, or means whereby I might
+communicate with Mademoiselle. Would the strange woman forget me now,
+or would she venture upon a return with her message? If not, I must
+grope forward without her, hampered as I should be by this unnerved and
+helpless Frenchman. Outside, the noise had almost wholly ceased,--at
+least, close to where we were,--and I could perceive that a slight
+tinge of returning day was already in the air, faintly revealing the
+interior of the lodge.
+
+As I sat thus, drifting through inaction into a more despairing mood,
+the rear covering of the tepee moved almost imperceptibly, and I turned
+hastily to seek the cause, my heart in my throat lest it prove an
+enemy, perhaps some stealthy savage still seeking the life of De Croix.
+It was far from being light as yet, but there was sufficient to show me
+the faint outline of a woman's figure. The Frenchman had seemingly
+heard nothing; and I rose quickly and faced her eagerly.
+
+"You have found her?" I questioned anxiously. "I beg you tell me that
+she yet lives!"
+
+"Hush! you speak too loud," was the low reply. "The one you seek is, I
+think, confined within the lodge of Little Sauk, and thus far remains
+unharmed. I have not been able to reach her, but she has been
+described to me as young, with dark hair and eyes, and as having been
+dragged from a horse near the rear of the column. Think you she is the
+one you seek?"
+
+"I do indeed!" I cried, in a rapture of relief. "Where is this lodge
+in which they hold her?"
+
+She hesitated to answer, as if she somewhat doubted my discretion.
+
+"It is the third from the fire, in the row west of this," she said at
+last. "But it is already daylight, and you must lie hidden amid these
+skins until another night, when I will strive to aid you. You will be
+safe here, if you only keep hidden; and I have brought with me food for
+you both."
+
+I had quite forgotten De Croix, in my eagerness to learn news of
+Mademoiselle; but now I realized he had risen to his knees, and was
+gazing at our visitor through the dim shadows as if half fearful even
+yet that she was but a spectre. In that gray dawn his face was ghastly
+in its whiteness,--the dark lines under his eyes, his matted hair, and
+the traces of blood upon his cheek, yielding a haggardness almost
+appalling.
+
+"Marie!" he sobbed, catching his breath between the words as if they
+choked him, "Marie, in God's name, speak one word to me!"
+
+I saw the girl start, looking around at him with eyes widely opened,
+yet with an expression in them I could not fathom; it was neither
+hatred nor love, though it might easily have been sorrow.
+
+"Marie," he urged, rendered despairing by her silence, "I have done you
+wrong, great wrong; but I thought you dead. They told me so,--they
+told me it was your body they buried. Will you not speak a word of
+mercy now?"
+
+Dim as the light was, I saw her eyes were moist as she gazed down upon
+him; but there was no faltering in her voice.
+
+"You were right, Monsieur le Marquis," she said slowly, "Marie Faneuf
+is dead. It is only Sister Celeste who has aided in the preservation
+of your life in the name of the Master. Make your acknowledgment to
+the Mother of Christ, not to me, for such mercy."
+
+I knew not when she passed out, or how; but we were alone once more,
+and De Croix was lying with his face buried in the short grass.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+A SEARCH, AND ITS REWARD
+
+I slept at last, soundly, for several hours, lying well hidden behind
+the skins at the back of the lodge. There seemed nothing else to do;
+for poor De Croix had no thought other than that of the woman who had
+just left us, and I was exhausted by hours of excitement and toil. He
+was asleep when I awoke, lying just as I had left him, his face still
+buried in the short trodden grass that carpeted the floor.
+
+It was so quiet without that I listened in vain for a sound to indicate
+the presence of Indians. Silence so profound was in strange contrast
+with the hideous uproar of the preceding night, and curiosity led me
+finally to project my head from beneath the lodge covering and gain a
+cautious glimpse of the camp without. The yellow sunshine of the calm
+summer afternoon rested hot and glaring on the draped skins of the
+tepees, and on the brown prairie-grass, trampled by hundreds of passing
+feet. I could perceive a few squaws working lazily in the shade of the
+trees near the bank of the river; but no other moving figures were
+visible. Several recumbent forms were within my sight, their faces
+toward the sun, evidently sleeping off the heavy potations of the
+night. Otherwise the great encampment appeared completely deserted;
+there were no spirals of smoke rising above the lodge-poles, no
+gossiping groups anywhere about.
+
+It was plain enough to me. Those of the warriors capable of further
+action were elsewhere engaged upon some fresh foray, while the
+majority, overcome by drinking, were asleep within their darkened
+lodges. Surely, daylight though it was, no safer moment could be
+expected in which to establish communication with Toinette. With night
+the camp would be again astir; and even if I succeeded in reaching her
+at some later hour it would leave small margin of darkness for our
+escape. Every moment of delay now added to our grave peril, and there
+was much planning to be done after we met. Possibly I should have
+waited, as I had been told to do; but it was ever in my blood to act
+rather than reason, and I am sure that in this case no cause remains
+for regret.
+
+I must confess that my heart beat somewhat faster, as I crept slowly
+forth and peered cautiously around the bulging side of the big lodge I
+had just left, to assure myself no savages were stirring. It was not
+that I greatly feared the venture, nor that a sense of danger excited
+my nerves; but rather the one thought in my mind was that now my way
+lay toward Mademoiselle. How would she greet me? Should I learn my
+fate from her tell-tale eyes, or by a sudden gleam of surprise in her
+lovely face? These were the reflections that inspired me, for a new
+hope had been born within me through the forced confession of De Croix.
+
+There was little danger of exposure while I advanced through the
+shelter of the lodges, for I was always under partial cover. But I
+waited and watched long before daring to pass across the wide open
+space in the centre of which the fire had been kindled. The
+torture-post yet stood there, black and charred, while the ground
+beneath was littered with dead ashes. The bodies of three white men,
+two of them naked and marked by fire, lay close at hand, just as they
+had been carelessly flung aside to make room for new victims; yet I
+dared not stop to learn who they might have been in life. The sight of
+their foul disfigurement only rendered me the more eager to reach the
+living with a message of hope.
+
+I moved like a snake, dragging my body an inch at a time by firmly
+grasping with extended hands the tough grass-roots, and writhing
+forward as noiselessly as if I were stalking some prey. There were
+times when I advanced so slowly it would have puzzled a watcher to
+determine whether mine was not also the body of the dead. At length,
+even at that snail's rate of progress, I gained the protection of the
+tepees upon the other side of the camp, and skulked in among them. The
+lodge just before me, blackened by paint and weather, must be the one I
+sought. I rested close within its shadow, striving to assure myself
+there was no possibility of mistake. As my eyes lifted, I could trace
+in dim outline the totem of the chief faintly sketched on the taut
+skin: it was the same I had noted on the brawny breast of Little Sauk.
+
+Never did I move with greater woodland skill, for I felt that all
+depended upon my remaining undiscovered; a single false move now would
+defeat all hope. Who might be within, concealed by that black
+covering, was a mystery to be solved only by extremest caution.
+
+Inch by inch I worked the skin covering of the tepee entrance up from
+the ground, screwing my eye to the aperture in an effort to penetrate
+the shrouded interior. But the glare of the sun was so reflected into
+my eyeballs, that it left me almost blind in the semi-gloom beneath
+that dark roof, and I could distinguish no object with certainty.
+Surely, nothing moved within; and I drew myself slowly forward, until
+half my body lay extended upon the beaten dirt-floor. It was then that
+I caught a glimpse of a face peering at me from out the shadows,--the
+face of Toinette; and, alas for my eager hopes of surprising her heart
+and solving its secrets! the witch was actually laughing in silence at
+my predicament. The sight made my face flush in sudden indignation;
+but before I could find speech, she had hastily accosted me.
+
+"Good faith, Master Wayland! but I greet you gladly!" she said, and her
+soft hand was warm upon mine; "yet it truly caused me to smile to
+observe the marvellous caution with which you came hither."
+
+"It must have been indeed amusing," I answered, losing all my vain
+aspirations in a moment under her raillery; "though it is not every
+prisoner in an Indian camp who could find like cause for merriment."
+
+Her eyes grew sober enough as they rested inquiringly on my face, for
+all that they still held an irritatingly roguish twinkle in their
+depths.
+
+"It was the expression upon your face which so amused me," she
+explained. "I am not indifferent to all that your coming means, nor to
+the horrors this camp has witnessed. More than that, you appear to me
+like one risen from the dead. I have truly mourned for you, John
+Wayland. I lost all power, all desire tor resistance, when I saw you
+stricken from your horse, and often since my eyes have been moist in
+thoughts of you. No doubt 't was but the sudden reaction from seeing
+you again alive that made me so forgetful of these dread surroundings
+as to smile. I beg you to forgive me; it was not heartlessness, but
+merely the way of a thoughtless girl, Monsieur."
+
+It had been impossible for me to resist her cajolery from the
+beginning; and now I read in her eyes the truth of all she spoke.
+
+"There is naught for you to forgive, Mademoiselle," I answered, drawing
+myself wholly within the tepee and resting on my knees. "But are you
+quite alone here, and without guards?"
+
+"For the present, yes. Little Sauk has been gone from the camp for
+some hours. They watch me with some care at night,--yet of what use
+can their guarding be? If I should get without the lodge, escape would
+be hopeless for a girl like me. But now tell me about yourself. Are
+you also prisoner to the Indians? Surely I saw you struck down in that
+mad melee. 'Twas then I lost heart, and gave up every hope of rescue."
+
+"No, I am not a prisoner, Mademoiselle. I fell, stunned by a blow
+dealt me from behind, but was saved from capture by the falling of my
+horse across my body. I am here now of my own will, and for no other
+purpose than to save you."
+
+"To save me! Oh, Monsieur! it would make me blush really to think I
+ranked so high in your esteem. Was it not rather that other girl you
+came to seek,--the one you sought so far through the wilderness, only
+to find hidden in this encampment of savages? Tell me, Monsieur, was
+she by any chance of fate the heroine who last night plucked Captain de
+Croix from the flames of torture?"
+
+"You know, then, of his danger and deliverance?" I said, not feeling
+eager to answer her query. "'T was a most brave and womanly act."
+
+"A strange exercise of power, indeed, Monsieur," and she looked
+directly into my eyes; "and the savages tell me she claimed to have
+knowledge of him."
+
+Surely I had a right to relate the whole story of De Croix's
+confession; yet somehow I did not deem it the manly thing to do.
+Rather, I would let her learn the truth in God's own time, and from
+other lips than mine. Perchance she would respect me more in the end
+for keeping silence now. But in this decision I failed to consider
+that hasty words of explanation might naturally lead her to believe the
+existing friendship mine instead of his.
+
+"We met her across the river in the darkness last night," I answered.
+"At my request, she acted as my guide into the Indian camp."
+
+The expression in her eyes puzzled me; nor could I interpret the sudden
+flush that lent color to her cheeks.
+
+"You are frank, Monsieur," she said quietly, "and doubtless 'tis better
+so. But the strange situation of this young woman has much of romance
+about it, and interests me greatly. How chances she to be here?
+Surely she cannot be of Indian blood?"
+
+"She holds connection with some sisterhood of the Church, as I
+understand, and has lived for some time amid the Pottawattomies,
+seeking to win the heathen to Christ."
+
+"A Catholic?" she asked, her eyes brightening with deeper interest.
+
+"Such is my understanding, though in truth she never said as much to
+me. Indeed, we spoke little, Mademoiselle, for our path was in the
+midst of peril, even before the capture of poor De Croix upset all our
+plans."
+
+"Doubtless," she answered with a slight trace of sarcasm in the soft
+voice. "But Captain de Croix,--he was not seriously injured, I trust?
+Where have the savages confined him? And know you what they intend as
+to his future?"
+
+"He will forever bear some scars, I fear," I answered, wondering dully
+at the calmness of her inquiry. "I have just left him sleeping quietly
+in the council tent. Know you anything of what fate has befallen other
+of our friends of the garrison?"
+
+Her eyes grew sad. "Only what little I have learned through the
+taunting of my own captor," she answered, her voice trembling.
+"Captain Wells is dead, together with Ensign Ronan and Surgeon Van
+Voorhees. Both Captain Heald and his wife were sorely wounded, and
+they, with Lieutenant Helm, are prisoners somewhere in the camp; but
+the Lieutenant's wife is safe with the Silver-man's family across the
+river. The Indians hold these in hope of ransom, and wreak their
+vengeance upon the common soldiers who were so unfortunate as to fall
+into their hands alive. Yet few, I think, survived the massacre."
+
+"You have doubtless guessed aright. I noted with what fearful spirit
+of revenge the savages dealt with some of their captives, while sparing
+others. Surely you, for instance, have met with but little hardship
+thus far at the hands of Little Sauk?"
+
+She glanced up at me, with a touch of the old coquettishness in her
+dark eyes and a quick toss of her head, while one white hand smoothed
+her soft hair.
+
+"Think you then, Monsieur, I do not look so ill?"
+
+In spite of every effort at control, my heart swept into my eyes; she
+must have read the swift message, for her own drooped instantly, with a
+quick flutter of long lashes against her cheeks.
+
+"I have already told you how greatly I admire you," I faltered, "and
+you make no less fair a picture now."
+
+"Then I shall not tempt you to add to your compliment," she hastily
+responded, rising to her feet, "for I like loyalty in a man better than
+mere gallantry of speech. You ask me about Little Sauk. He holds me
+for ransom,--although Heaven knows 'twill prove but waste of time, for
+I am aware of no one in all the East who would invest so much as a
+dollar to redeem me from Indian hands. Yet such is his purpose, as
+told to me this morning."
+
+"Perchance, then," I urged, doubtfully, "you may prefer remaining
+quietly here rather than risk the peril of trying to escape?"
+
+She looked at me keenly, as if in wonder at my words; and I could see
+that her eyes were moistening with the sudden rush of feeling.
+
+"You are either dull of comprehension, John Wayland," she said, a bit
+pertly, "or else you understand me less than any man I ever knew. If I
+seem brave and light of heart amidst all this horror, 't is merely that
+I may not utterly break down, and become an object of contempt. I
+feel, Monsieur, I am not devoid of heart nor of the finer qualities of
+womanhood. Prefer to remain here? Holy Mother of Christ! It would be
+my choice to die out yonder on the prairie, rather than stay here in
+these Indian lodges. There is no peril I would not face joyfully, in
+an effort to escape from this place of torture and barbarity. I
+confess that an hour ago I cared not greatly what my end might be; I
+had lost heart and hope. But now your coming, as of one risen from the
+dead, has brought back my courage."
+
+"You will go, then, whenever and wherever I say?"
+
+She stepped forward with her old frank confidence, resting both hands
+in mine, her eyes upon my face.
+
+"Out yonder in the night, and amid the sand, John Wayland," she said
+earnestly, "I remember saying I would travel with you whithersoever you
+wished. I know you far better now than I did then, and I hesitate not
+at taking upon myself the same vow."
+
+What power then sealed my lips, I know not. Doubtless there is a fate
+in such matters, yet 't is strange the light of invitation in her eyes
+did not draw me to lay bare my heart. In naught else had I a drop of
+coward blood within my veins; while here I hesitated, fearful lest her
+pleading face might change to sudden roguishness, and she laugh lightly
+at the love that held my heart in thrall. Truly, the witch had puzzled
+me so sorely with her caprices, her quick change of mood, her odd
+mixture of girlish frankness and womanly reserve, that I knew not which
+might prove the real Toinette,--the one to trust, or the one to doubt.
+So I stood there, clasping her soft hands in mine, my heart throbbing,
+yet my tongue hesitating to perform its office. But at last the
+halting words came in a sudden, irrepressible rush.
+
+"Toinette!" I cried, "Toinette! I could forget all else,--our danger
+here, the horrors of the night just passed, the many dead out
+yonder,--all else but you."
+
+She gave a sudden startled cry, her affrighted eyes gazing across my
+shoulder. I wheeled, with quick intuition of dangers and there, just
+within the entrance of the tepee, the flap of which he had let fall
+behind him, in grave silence stood an Indian.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+THE PLEDGE OF A WYANDOT
+
+A single glance told me who our unwelcome visitor must be. That giant
+body, surmounted by the huge broad face, could belong to none other
+than the Wyandot, Sau-ga-nash,--him who had spoken for the warriors of
+this tribe before the torture-stake. He stood erect and rigid, his
+stern, questioning eyes upon us, his lips a thin line of repression.
+With a quick movement, I thrust the girl behind me, and faced him,
+motionless, but with every muscle strained for action. The Indian
+spoke slowly, and used perfect English.
+
+"Ugh!" he said. "Who are you? A prisoner? Surely you cannot be that
+same Frenchman we helped entertain last night?"
+
+"I am not the Frenchman," I answered deliberately, vainly hoping his
+watchful eyes might wander about the lodge long enough to yield me
+chance for a spring at his throat, "though I was one of his party. I
+only came here to bring comfort to this poor girl."
+
+"No doubt she needs it," he replied drily, "and your way is surely a
+good one. Yet I doubt if Little Sauk would approve it, and as his
+friend, I must speak for him in the matter. Do you say you are also a
+prisoner? To what chief?"
+
+"To none," I answered shortly, resolved now to venture all in a trial
+of strength. He read this decision in my eyes, and stepped back
+warily. At the same instant Toinette flung her arms restrainingly
+about my neck.
+
+"Don't, John!" she urged, using my name thus for the first time; "the
+savage has a gun hidden beneath his robe!"
+
+I saw the weapon as she spoke, and saw too the angry glint in the
+fellow's eye as he thrust the muzzle menacingly forward. As we stood
+thus, glaring at each other, a sudden remembrance made me pause.
+"Sau-ga-nash"?--surely it was neither more nor less than a Wyandot
+expression signifying "Englishman." That broad face was not wholly
+Indian; could this be the half-breed chief of whom I had so often
+heard? 'Twas worth the chance to learn.
+
+"You are Sau-ga-nash?" I asked, slowly, Toinette still clinging to me,
+her face over her shoulder to front the silent savage. "A chief of the
+Wyandots?"
+
+He moved his head slightly, with a mutter of acquiescence, his eyes
+expressing wonder at the question.
+
+"The same whom the Americans name Billy Caldwell?"
+
+"'T is the word used by the whites."
+
+I drew a quick breath of relief, which caused Mademoiselle to release
+her grasp a little, as her anxious eyes sought my face for explanation.
+
+"Recall you a day twelve years ago on the River Raisin?" I asked
+clearly, feeling confident now that my words were no longer idle. "An
+Indian was captured in his canoe by a party of frontiersmen who were
+out to revenge a bloody raid along the valley of the Maumee. That
+Indian was a Wyandot and a chief. He was bound to a tree beside the
+river bank and condemned to torture; when the leader of the rangers, a
+man with a gray beard, stood before him rifle in hand, and swore to
+kill the first white man who put flint and steel to the wood. Recall
+you this, Sau-ga-nash?"
+
+The stolid face of the listening savage changed, the expression of
+revengeful hostility merging into one of undisguised amazement.
+
+"That which you picture has not left my memory," he answered gravely.
+
+"Nor the pledge you gave to that white captain when he brought you
+safely to Detroit?" I queried, eagerly.
+
+"Nor the pledge. But what has all this to do here?"
+
+"Only, Sau-ga-nash, that I am Major David Wayland's son."
+
+The Indian sprang forward, his eyes burning fiercely; and thinking his
+movement to be hostile, I thrust the girl aside that I might be free to
+repel his attack. But he did not touch me, merely peering eagerly into
+my face with a keen questioning look that read my every feature.
+
+"You have the nose and forehead," he reflected aloud; "yes, and the
+eyes. Before the Great Spirit, I will redeem my pledge; a chief of the
+Wyandots cannot lie."
+
+He paused, and I could mark the varied emotions that swayed him, so
+deeply was he moved by this strange discovery. Unconsciously my hand
+clasped Mademoiselle's, for now I felt that our fate hung on his
+decision.
+
+"'T is a hard task, Master Wayland," he admitted at length, almost
+wearily, "but for your father's sake it shall be done. I see only one
+way for it, and that by water. Know you anything about the management
+of boats?"
+
+"Only as I have paddled upon the Maumee," I answered, doubtfully,
+"although I handled a small sail when a mere boy in the far East."
+
+"'T will suffice if the fair weather hold, as is likely at this season.
+At least it may be risked. The land trails are crowded by Indians from
+far-off tribes, hastening hither in hope of fight and spoils. More
+than a hundred came in to-day, painted for war, and angry because too
+late. You could not escape encountering such parties, were you to flee
+by trail eastward; nor would they show mercy to any white. The
+Silver-man has returned to his home north of the river; but 't is all
+that we who are friendly to him can do to keep these warriors from
+attacking even there. 'T is the Indians from far away that make the
+trouble; and these grow more numerous and powerful each day. We keep a
+guard at the house to save the Silver-man and his family; and were more
+whites to seek refuge there, we should lose all control. There is
+still safety at the mouth of the Saint Joseph River, and 't is there
+you must go. The venture must be made to-night, and by water. Is it
+known to any Indian that you are alive and within this camp?"
+
+"To none."
+
+"That is well; we can work best alone. Now listen. At midnight,
+Master Wayland, a boat, prepared for the trip, will await you, hidden
+under the ruins of the Agency building. The river flows under the
+flooring deep enough for the purpose, and I will place the boat there
+with my own hand. Beyond that, all must rest upon your own skill and
+good fortune. You will wait here," and he glanced about anxiously for
+some means of concealment, "lying behind those robes yonder, until the
+hour."
+
+"Here?" I questioned, thinking instantly of my duty to De Croix. "But
+I would first have speech with the Frenchman. He is my friend,
+Sau-ga-nash. Besides, I have left my rifle in the council lodge."
+
+The face of the savage darkened, and his eyes gleamed ominously as they
+roamed questioningly from my face to Toinette's.
+
+"I said you were to stay hidden here," he answered shortly, his tone
+showing anger, and his hand pointing at the robes. "Many of the
+sleeping Pottawattomies are again astir without, and you could not hope
+to gain the council lodge undiscovered. What care I for this
+Frenchman, that I should risk my life to save him? I pledge myself
+only to Major Wayland's son; and even if I aid you, it is on condition
+that you go alone."
+
+"Alone, say you?" and I rested my hand on Mademoiselle's shoulder. "I
+would die here, Sau-ga-nash, and by torture, before I would consent to
+go one step without this girl."
+
+The half-breed scowled at me, drawing his robe about him in haughty
+indifference.
+
+"Then be it so," he said mockingly. "'T is your own choice, I have
+offered redemption of my pledge."
+
+I started to utter some harsh words in answer; but before I could
+speak, Toinette pressed her soft palm upon my lips in protest.
+
+"Refuse him not," she murmured hastily. "'T is the only chance; for my
+sake, do not anger him."
+
+What plan her quick wit may have engendered, I did not know; but I
+yielded to the entreaty in her pleading eyes, and sullenly muttered the
+first conscious lie of my life.
+
+"I accept your terms, Sau-ga-nash, harsh as they are."
+
+He looked from one to the other of us, his face dark with distrust and
+doubt.
+
+"You are not mine to dispose of," he said sternly to the trembling
+girl, who visibly shrank from his approach, and clung once more to me.
+"You are prisoner to Little Sauk; nor will I release one thus held by
+the Pottawattomies. They and the Wyandots are brothers. But I trust
+you, and not the word of this white man. Pledge me not to go with him,
+and I will believe you."
+
+She glanced first at me, then back into the swarthy, merciless face.
+Her cheeks were white and her lips trembled, yet her eyes remained
+clear and calm.
+
+"I give you my word, Sau-ga-nash," she said quietly. "While I am held
+as prisoner by Little Sauk, I will not go away with John Wayland."
+
+Little as I believed these words to be true at the time, the sound of
+them so dulled me with apprehension that I could only stare at her in
+speechless amazement. It seemed to me then as if the power of reason
+had deserted me, as if my brain had been so burdened as to refuse its
+office. I recall that Toinette almost compelled me to lie down against
+the farther side of the lodge, placing a pile of skins in front of me
+and assuming a position herself where she could occasionally reach
+across the barrier and touch me with her soft hand. No doubt she
+realized the struggle in my mind, for she spoke little after the
+departure of the half-breed, as if anxious to permit me to figure out
+the future for myself. Little by little I faced it, and came to an
+irrevocable decision. It was to be Toinette or nothing. While it
+might be true that she was in no immediate danger, and possibly could
+be safely ransomed if I once escaped to civilization, yet the risk of
+such venture and delay was too great; nor would my love abide so vast a
+sacrifice on her part. I thought to say this to her; but there was a
+look of firm decision in her sweet face, as her dark eyes met mine,
+that somehow held me silent. I felt that in her own heart she must
+already know what action I would choose, and the final moment would
+prove sufficient test for her evident determination. Reassured here,
+my thoughts turned to De Croix; but that was useless. I could send no
+message to him; he was no longer in especial peril, and perhaps would
+not willingly desert his newly found wife even to escape the savages.
+Nay,--it was to be Toinette and I, now and forever.
+
+I do not clearly remember at this day what it was we spoke about in the
+brief whispering that passed between us while we waited there. Neither
+of us felt like voicing our real thoughts, and so we but dissembled,
+making commonplaces fill the gaps between our silences. The night
+found us undisturbed, and it shut down so darkly within the narrow
+confines of the lodge that I lost all trace of her presence, but for an
+occasional movement or the sound of her low voice. Without, the
+rapidly increasing noise indicated a return of many savages to the
+camp, until at last a fire was kindled in the open space, its red flame
+sending some slight illumination where we were, but not enough to
+reveal the interior of the lodge. An Indian brought the girl some
+food, entering and leaving without uttering a sound; and we two ate
+together, striving to speak lightly in order to make the coarse meal
+more palatable.
+
+Suddenly I became aware of a faint scratching upon the skin of the
+lodge, at my back. At first I supposed it to be some wild animal, or
+possibly a stray dog; but the regularity of it showed a purpose of some
+kind. Could it be De Croix? Or was it the half-breed with some secret
+message he dared not deliver openly? I lifted the lodge covering
+slightly, and placed my lips to the aperture.
+
+"Is some one there?" I whispered cautiously. "Who is it?"
+
+"I am Sister Celeste," came the immediate low reply. "Are you the
+white man I guided?"
+
+"Ay," I answered, rejoicing at this rare good fortune, "and I beg you
+to listen to what I say. There will be a boat awaiting us beneath the
+old Agency building at midnight. You must be there with De Croix."
+
+"De Croix?"
+
+"Yes; I know not if that be his name to you, but I mean the Frenchman
+whose life you saved. Will you take him thither at midnight, together
+with the rifle I left in the council lodge?"
+
+For a moment she did not answer. Doubtless it was a bitter struggle
+for her thus to agree even to meet the man again. At last she made
+reply, although I could plainly mark the faltering of her voice.
+
+"The man of whom you speak shall be there," she said, "unless some
+accident make it impossible."
+
+As I drew back my head, and sat upright. Mademoiselle spoke
+questioningly.
+
+"With whom were you conversing just now, Monsieur?"
+
+"The young woman of whom we have spoken so often," I answered
+thoughtlessly. "She has pledged herself to bring De Croix to the
+meeting-place."
+
+"Indeed!" she exclaimed, with accent so peculiar I knew not how to
+interpret it. "It almost makes me desire to form one of your party."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+AN INTERVENTION OF FATE
+
+"Form one of our party?" I echoed, believing I must have misunderstood
+her words. "Surely, Mademoiselle, you cannot mean that you take your
+promise to the half-breed so seriously as voluntarily to remain in
+captivity?"
+
+"Yes, but I do, Monsieur!" and the tone in which she said it was firm
+with decision. "The Indian asked my pledge in all solemnity, and has
+gone away trusting to it. My conscience could never again be clear did
+I prove false in such a matter. You also made a pledge, even before
+mine was given; was it not your purpose to abide by it?"
+
+"No," I answered, a bit shortly. "I merely agreed to his proposition
+at your expressed desire that I should, and because I believed you had
+framed some plan of escape. Have you such small respect for me,
+Mademoiselle, as to think I could consent to leave you here alone and
+at the mercy of these red fiends? Have I risked my life in coming here
+for no other end than this?"
+
+I felt her reach her arm across the pile of skins lying between us, and
+grasp my hand within her own.
+
+"But, dear friend, you must!" she said, pleadingly, her softly
+modulated voice dwelling upon the words as if they came hard. "Truly
+you must, John Wayland, and for my sake as well as your own. I am
+comparatively safe here,--safe at least from actual physical harm, so
+long as the savages dream that the sparing of my life will yield them
+profit. You have no right to remain in such peril as surrounds you
+here, when by so doing you benefit no one. You have father and mother
+awaiting in prayer your safe return to them yonder on the Maumee; while
+I,--I have no one even to ask how sad my fate may be. Think you that
+because I am a girl I must therefore be all selfishness? or that I
+would ever permit you thus to sacrifice yourself unnecessarily for me?
+No, no, Monsieur! I will remain prisoner to Little Sauk, for my sacred
+word has been pledged; and you must go, because there are others to
+whom your life is of value. Nor need you go empty-handed, for the one
+you have sought so far and long seems now ready enough to travel
+eastward with you."
+
+Scarcely had her voice ceased, leaving me struggling to find fit words
+to change her mad decision, when a rough hand flung back the entrance
+flap, and the naked body of an Indian, framed for a single instant
+against the light, lurched heavily through the opening. Even that
+brief glimpse told me the man had been drinking to excess; while for
+the moment, as I huddled down closer behind my robes, I was unable to
+make out his identity.
+
+"Where white woman?" he ejaculated gruffly, as he paused, blinded by
+the darkness. "Why she not come help me?"
+
+His quick ear evidently caught the slight rustle of the girl's skirt as
+she rose hastily to her feet, for with a muttered Indian oath the
+savage lurched forward. I could scarcely make out the dimmest shadow
+of them in the dense gloom, yet I seemed to know that he had grasped
+her roughly, though not the slightest sound of fear or pain came from
+her lips.
+
+"Ugh! better come!" he muttered, a veiled savage threat growling in his
+tone. "You my squaw; cook in my lodge; get meal now."
+
+"But where? and how?" she asked, her voice trembling perceptibly, yet
+striving to placate him by a seeming willingness to obey. "I have
+nothing here to cook, nor have I fire."
+
+"Indian squaw no talk back!" he retorted angrily. "This way I show
+white squaw to mind chief!"
+
+I heard plainly the brutal blow he struck her, though even as she
+reeled back she managed to stifle the scream upon her lips, so that it
+was barely audible. With one bound I was over the barrier of robes and
+clutching with tingling fingers for the brute. I touched his feathered
+head-dress at last, and he must have supposed me his helpless victim,
+for with a grunt of satisfaction he struck once again, the blow meeting
+my shoulder, where he judged in the dark her face would be.
+
+"White squaw mind now--"
+
+I had him gripped by the throat before he ended, and we went down
+together for a death-struggle in the darkness, from which each realized
+in an instant both could never rise again. My furious grip sobered
+him, and he made desperate efforts to break free, struggling vainly to
+utter some cry for rescue. Once I felt him groping at his waist for a
+knife; but I got first clasp upon its hilt, though I twisted helplessly
+for some minutes before I could loosen his hold at my wrist so as to
+strike him with the blade. His teeth closed upon my hand, biting deep
+into the flesh like a wildcat, and the sharp sting of it yielded me the
+desperate strength I needed to wrench my hand free, and with one quick
+blow the knife I clutched cut deep into his side, so that I could feel
+the hot blood spurt forth over my hand. I held him in a death grip,
+for I knew a single cry meant ruin to all our plans, until the last
+breath sped, and I knew I lay prostrate above a corpse. It had been so
+swift and fierce a contest that I staggered half-dazed to my feet,
+peering about me as if expecting another attack. I was steadied
+somewhat by the sound of a low sob from the darkness.
+
+"'T is well over with, Toinette," I murmured hastily, my voice
+trembling from the strain that still shook me.
+
+"Oh, John! John Wayland! And you are truly unhurt of the struggle?"
+It was scarcely her voice speaking, so agitated was it. "Have you
+killed him?"
+
+"Yes," I answered, finding my way cautiously toward her, and speaking
+in whispers. "I had no other choice. It was either his life or yours
+and mine. Knew you the savage?"
+
+"It was Little Sauk," she replied, clinging to me, and growing somewhat
+calmer from my presence. "Oh, what can we do now?"
+
+"There remains but one thing, and that is to accept the chance that
+Providence has given us. There remains no longer a shadow of excuse
+for your staying here, even by your own reasoning. You are no longer
+prisoner to Little Sauk. Your pledge has been dissolved by Fate, and
+it must be God's will that you go forth with me. What say you,
+Mademoiselle?" And I crushed her hands in mine.
+
+I could feel her slight form tremble as I waited her reply, and
+believed she peered across my shoulder through the darkness, imagining
+she saw the dead Indian's form lying there.
+
+"Do you truly wish it?" she questioned at last, as though warring with
+herself. "Think you she would greatly care?"
+
+'T is a strangely perverse thing, the human mind. As there dimly
+dawned upon me a conception of her meaning,--a knowledge that this
+seemingly heart-free girl cared enough for me to exhibit such jealousy
+of another,--I would not undeceive her by a word of explanation.
+
+"I certainly do wish it," was my grave answer, "nor does it greatly
+matter what the desire of any other may be. This is not an invitation
+to a ball, Mademoiselle. I beg you answer me; will you go?"
+
+She looked toward me, wondering at my words.
+
+"Yes," she said simply. "Has the time come?"
+
+"I have no certain means of knowing; but it cannot be far from the
+hour, and we shall be much safer without."
+
+I took the Indian's knife with me, wiping the long blade upon the pile
+of skins, and placing it convenient to my hand within the bosom of my
+hunting-shirt. It was dark enough back of the lodge away from the
+glare of the fires, and we rested there well within the shadow, for
+some time, while I scanned the surroundings and planned as best I might
+our future movements.
+
+"Was it from dread of venturing once more upon the water that you held
+back so long?" I asked her, seeking rudely to delve into the secret of
+her reserve.
+
+"Have you ever found me of cowardly heart, Monsieur?" she questioned in
+return, parrying with quick skill, "that you should think any bodily
+terror could hold me back? If I had reasons other than those already
+given, they were worthy ones."
+
+"You are not afraid of the perils before us?"
+
+"No," she answered; "my heart beats fast, but 't is not from fear."
+
+Only a few scattered lodges had been raised to the eastward of where we
+were, nor did these show any signs of life. We crept forward with
+painful slowness, partially hiding our movements by following a
+shallow, curving gully, until we had gained the extreme limits of the
+encampment, where we crawled out into the gloom of the surrounding
+prairie. Not until then did either of us venture to stand erect, or
+advance with any degree of freedom.
+
+Directly ahead of us there was nothing by which I could safely guide
+our course. The flat sameness of the plain offered no landmarks, while
+the night sky was so thickly overcast as to leave no stars visible.
+Nor was there light of any kind, save that of the fires in the camp we
+had just left. I hesitated to risk the open prairie thus unaided, lest
+we should wander astray and lose much valuable time; so, although it
+measurably increased our peril of encountering parties of savages, I
+turned sharply northward, keeping the bright Indian fires upon our
+left, and groping forward through the gloom toward where I knew the
+main branch of the river must lie. It was neither the time nor place
+for speech. I held her hand closely while we moved onward silently,
+carefully guarding each step lest by mischance it should bring
+betrayal. Once, after we had reached the river and were moving
+eastward again, a party of Indians passed us, coming so silently out of
+the black void, in their soft moccasins, that I had barely time to hold
+her motionless before they were fairly upon us. I counted nine of
+them, moving rapidly in single file, like so many black ghosts. We
+waited with wildly throbbing hearts, listening for fear others might
+follow in their trail.
+
+We were almost beside the walls of the factory building before either
+of us was aware of its proximity. Even then, as I lay prone on the
+earth and studied its dim outlines, they possessed nothing of
+familiarity, for the high-pitched roof had fallen in and carried with
+it the greater portion of the upper walls, leaving a mere shell,
+shapeless and empty. I rested there, gazing at it, and wondering how
+best we might proceed to find our way beneath where the boat was to be
+moored, when I felt Mademoiselle's fingers press my arm warningly.
+Scarcely a yard away, on a ridge of higher ground, two dim figures came
+to a sudden pause.
+
+"I perceive naught of the presence of your friends as yet, Monsieur,"
+spoke a soft voice, "but I will remain until certain of the outcome."
+
+"Then your decision is unchanged?" asked the other, in deeper accent,
+full of earnest pleading. "All is to be over between us from this
+hour? And you deliberately choose to devote your life to the
+redemption of these savages?"
+
+"We have discussed all this at length, Monsieur le Marquis, as we came
+along, and, as you fully know, my choice is made beyond recall. I am
+here to serve you to-night, because it seems to be a duty given unto me
+by some strange Providence; and I have relied upon your courtesy to
+make it as little unpleasant as possible. I pray you, beseech me no
+more. The girl I once was lives no longer; the woman I now am has been
+given a special mission by God, too sacred to be cast aside for aught
+that earth has to offer her of happiness. We part in kindness,
+Monsieur,--in friendship even; but that which was once between us may
+never be again."
+
+There was no answer; even the reckless audacity of a courtier was
+silenced by that calm final dismissal. It was Mademoiselle who spoke
+in swift whisper, her lips at my ear.
+
+"Speak! who is she?"
+
+"The woman of whom you have heard so often,--the missionary in the
+Indian camp."
+
+"Yes, I know," impatiently; "but I mean her name?"
+
+"She calls herself Sister Celeste; I have indeed heard mention of
+another, but it abides not in my memory."
+
+"You deceive me, Monsieur; yet I know, and will speak with her," was
+the quick decision. "Mother of God! 'tis a voice too dear ever to be
+forgotten."
+
+She was beside them with a step, seeming no doubt a most fair vision to
+be born so instantly of the night-shadows.
+
+"Marie Faneuf!" she exclaimed, eagerly. "I know not by what strange
+fortune I meet you here, but surely you will not refuse greeting to an
+old friend?"
+
+The girl drew hastily back a step, as if her first thought was flight;
+but ere such end could be accomplished, Mademoiselle had clasped her
+arm impetuously.
+
+"Marie!" she pleaded, "can it be possible you would flee from me?"
+
+"Nay," returned the other, her voice trembling painfully, as she
+struggled to restrain herself. "It is not that. Dear, dear friend! I
+knew you were among the few saved from Dearborn. The American hunter
+told me, and ever since have I tried to avoid you in the camp. 'Twas
+not for lack of the old love, yet I feared to meet you. Much has
+occurred of late to make the keeping of my vow most difficult. I have
+been weak, and grievously tempted; and I felt scarce strong enough,
+even though protected by prayers, to withstand also my deep love for
+you."
+
+Their voices insensibly merged into French, each speaking so rapidly
+and low that I could get little meaning of it. Then I noted De Croix,
+half lying upon the ground, his head hidden within his hands. With
+sudden remembrance of the work before us, I touched his shoulder.
+
+"Come below, Monsieur, and help me search for the boat," I said,
+kindly, for I was truly touched by his grief. "It will help clear your
+mind to have some labor to accomplish."
+
+"I dare not, Wayland!" he answered hoarsely, and the face he uplifted
+toward me was strangely white and drawn. "I must stay with her; I dare
+not leave her again alone, lest she escape me once more. She is mine,
+truly mine by every law of the Church,--my wife, I tell you, and I
+would die here in the wilderness rather than permit her longer to doom
+herself to such a fate as this."
+
+His words and manner were so wild they startled me. Surely, in his
+present frame of mind he would prove useless on such a mission as that
+before us.
+
+"Then remain here, Monsieur!" I said, "and do your best to win her
+consent to accompany us. No doubt Mademoiselle will aid you all that
+is in her power."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+A STUMBLE IN THE DARK
+
+Gloomy as the hole was, there was no help for it. I could perceive
+nothing below, not even my hand when held within a foot of my eyes; nor
+had I the slightest previous knowledge of the place to guide me, even
+had not the fire ruins above effectually blocked every passage-way with
+fallen debris. Listening however intently, my ears could distinguish
+only the faint lapping of the river as it crept about the log piling on
+which the house had been built; but beyond this dim guidance, I had to
+feel my way forward with extended hands and groping feet. Swinging to
+my back the rifle that De Croix had brought, and casting an inquiring
+glance backward at the little group huddled upon the bank, almost
+invisible even at that short distance, I grasped the piling nearest me
+and slid down into the unknown darkness.
+
+My feet found solid earth, although as I reached out toward the left my
+moccasin came in contact with water, which told me at once that only a
+narrow path divided the steep bank of the excavation from the
+encroaching river. The floor above was originally low, so that I could
+easily touch the heavy supporting beams; and I had felt my way scarcely
+a yard before coming in contact with a serious obstruction, where the
+weakened floor had sagged so as almost to close the narrow passage.
+This caused me to wade farther out into the water, testing each step
+carefully as I followed the sharp curving of the shore-line. I had no
+fear of meeting any living enemy within that silent cave, my sole doubt
+being as to whether the half-breed chief had fulfilled his promise and
+brought the boat, my gravest anxiety to discover it early and get my
+party safely away before the Indian encampment learned the truth.
+
+I must have reached the apex of the little cove, moving so cautiously
+that not a ripple of the water revealed my progress, and feeling for
+each inch of way like a blind man along city streets, when my knee
+suddenly struck some obstacle, and seeking to learn what it might be, I
+muttered a silent prayer of thanksgiving as I touched the unmistakable
+sides of a boat. It was a lumping, awkward craft, rudely fashioned,
+yet of a seeming length of keel and breadth of beam that set my heart
+beating with new joy, as I wondered if it was not the same craft in
+which the Kinzie family put forth upon the lake the morning of the
+massacre. This seemed very likely, for there could hardly be two such
+boats at hand, where the Indian water-craft were slender, fragile
+canoes, poorly fitted for serious battle with lake waves. Doubtless
+this was the only vessel Sau-ga-nash could find suitable for the
+venture, or he would never have chosen it for the use of a single man,
+as it was of a size to require the services of several paddles. Yet
+the thought meant much; for this very lack of water-craft was likely to
+render pursuit by the baffled savages impossible, if only once we got
+fairly away from the shore.
+
+With these reflections driving swiftly through my brain, I ran one hand
+hastily along the thwarts of the boat, seeking to discover if paddles
+had been provided, or even a sail of any kind. I touched a coil of
+rope, a rude oar-blade so broad as to seem unwieldy, a tightly rolled
+cloth,--and then my groping fingers rested on the oddest-feeling thing
+that ever a startled man touched in the dark. It was God's mercy I did
+not cry out from the sudden nervous fit that seized me. The thing I
+touched had a round, smooth, creepy feeling of flesh about it, so that
+I believed I fingered a corpse; until it began to turn slowly under my
+hand like a huge ball, the loose skin of it twitching yet revealing no
+human features to my touch. Saint Andrew! but it frightened me! I
+knew not what species of strange animal it might prove to be, nor
+whence its grip or sting might come. Yet the odd feeling of it was
+strangely fascinating,--I could not let it go; the damp flesh-like skin
+seemed to cling to my fingers in a horrible sort of magnetism that
+bound me prisoner, the cold perspiration of terror bursting from every
+pore, even as my other hand, trembling and unnerved, sought in my shirt
+for the knife of Little Sauk.
+
+As I gripped the weapon, the thing began to straighten out, coming up
+in the quick odd jerks with which some snakes uncoil their joints after
+the torpidity of winter. My hand, finding naught to grasp, slipped
+from the smooth round ball, and as it fell touched what seemed an ear,
+and then a human nose.
+
+"Merciful God! 't is a man!" I gasped, in astonishment and yet relief,
+as I closed upon his throat, madly determined to shut off his wind
+before he could give alarm.
+
+"Cuss the luck!" he gasped hoarsely, and I let go of him, scarcely able
+to ejaculate in my intense surprise at that familiar voice.
+
+"Burns? For Heaven's sake, Burns! can this indeed be you?"
+
+For an instant he did not speak, doubtless as greatly perplexed as I at
+the strange situation.
+
+"If ye 're Injun," he ventured at last gravely, "then I 'm a bloody
+ghost; but if by any chance ye 're the lad, Wayland, which yer voice
+sounds like, then it's Ol' Tom Burns as ye 're a-maulin' 'round, which
+seems ter be yer specialty,--a-jumpin' on unoffensive settlers in the
+dark, an' a-chokin' the life outer them."
+
+The growling tone of his voice was growing querulous, and it was
+evident that his temper, never quite childlike, had not been greatly
+improved by his late experiences as an Indian captive.
+
+"But Burns, old friend!" I persisted heartily, my courage returned once
+more, "it was surely enough to stir any man to violence to encounter
+such a thing in the dark! What in Heaven's name has happened to leave
+you with such a poll? What has become of your hair and beard? Is
+their loss a part of Indian torture?"
+
+There was a low chuckle in the darkness, as if the old rascal were
+laughing to himself.
+
+"Injun nuthin!" he returned with vehemence. "Thet 's jist my way of
+sarcumventin' the bloody varmints. I shaved the hull blame thing soon
+as ever they let me loose, an' then played loony, till thar ain't no
+Injun 'long the shore as 'd tech me fer all the wampum in the Illini
+country. 'T ain't the fust time I saved my scalp by some sech dern
+trick. I tell ye, it 's easy 'nough ter beat Injuns if ye only know
+how. By snakes! I 'm sacred, I am,--specially teched by the Great
+Spirit. I tell ye, ter be real loony is dern nigh as good in an Injun
+camp as ter hev red hair like thet thar little Sister Celeste with the
+Pottawattomies. She knows her business, you bet; an' so does Ol' Burns
+know hisn!"
+
+His mention of her name instantly recalled me to the little group
+waiting above us, and doubtless already worried at my prolonged absence.
+
+"Burns," I interrupted, "this is no time for reminiscences. I am here
+seeking some means of escape out of this place of horror. What were
+you doing down here?"
+
+"Sorter contemplatin' a sea v'yage," he said, dryly. "'T was
+rec'mended by my doctor fer the growth o' my har. So, snoopin' 'round
+yere in the dark, an' not over fond o' Injun com'any, I found this yere
+boat. Jest got in ter see how 't was fixed, when ye jumped down
+yonder. Reckon I 'd kinder like ter wet 'er up an' see wot she 's
+like."
+
+"Good! so would I. This boat was placed here for that very purpose.
+Now listen. The young woman you just mentioned, that Indian missionary
+with the auburn hair, is above yonder, together with another young
+white girl rescued from the massacre, and the Frenchman, De Croix. We
+have come here, on pledge of a half-breed chief that this boat would be
+ready for our escape. And we have no time to waste, for we may be
+followed at any moment."
+
+"They ain't seen ye stealin' outer the camp?"
+
+"No, but in doing it I was compelled to kill Little Sauk, and the
+others may find his body at any time."
+
+For a moment the sly old borderer made no response, and I knew he was
+quietly turning over the complicated situation in his own mind
+preparatory to intelligent action. I heard him step from the boat into
+the shallow water.
+
+"All right, lad! I understand," he said heartily, his former
+indifference vanished. "Derned if I wouldn't jist as soon leave that
+Parley-Voo behind; but I 'm with ye, an' I reckon Ol' Burns 'll give
+them thar redskins another dern good jolt. Take hold here, boy, an' we
+'ll run this yere man-o-war outside, where we kin ship the rest o' her
+crew."
+
+The back-water rippling among the old piling was shallow, but the boat
+had little aboard and floated free, so that we worked it forward with
+little difficulty until we succeeded in rounding the slight promontory
+and held its bulging sides close against the mud wall. Leaving Burns
+to keep it in place, I crept silently up the bank.
+
+"Come!" I whispered, making my way to the side of Mademoiselle more by
+instinct than sight. "The boat we sought is here and ready! I have
+even found a boatman to aid us, in the form of Ol' Burns, who, you
+remember, aided De Croix and me at the time of our famous race. Let us
+waste no more of the night here, but do the rest of your talking in
+greater safety on the water."
+
+They came with me down to the edge of the stream without a word of
+protest. I had taken Mademoiselle in my arms and lifted her slight
+form into the boat, when she turned suddenly, as it by an
+unrestrainable impulse, and held out her hands toward the dim figure of
+the silent girl who yet remained motionless several feet away.
+
+"Marie!" she said, anxiously, "it may be wrong of me to urge it, but I
+beg you to think again in this grave matter. Surely such horrible
+massacre as you have witnessed must absolve you from your vow, and
+yield you freedom to return eastward with those you love."
+
+The other did not respond to this passionate appeal, but stood facing
+us silent as a statue.
+
+"What mean you, Mademoiselle?" I asked. "Will not this Sister Celeste
+consent to leave the Indians?"
+
+"Nay, she has made a sacred vow of religion which binds her to this
+sacrifice. I implore you, John Wayland, urge her to go with us! 'T is
+but waste of her life here. She is an old schoolmate of mine, and 't
+will be hard to leave her alone in this wilderness. Captain de Croix,
+she was far from being a stranger to you in those other days at
+Montreal,--will you not add your entreaties to ours?"
+
+I saw him step forward toward that quiet bowed figure, and she
+straightened perceptibly, even in the darkness, as he drew near. His
+words were in French, and spoken so low I missed their meaning; yet we
+all heard plainly her calm answer, while marking the faltering accents
+of her lips.
+
+"Dear, dear friend!" and I felt her eyes, blinded by tears, were
+seeking out Mademoiselle through the gloom, "it breaks my heart to
+answer you nay in this hour of sore trial to us both. Yet my vow to
+God is more sacred than any earthly friendship; nor could peace ever
+again abide in my heart were I to break the vow so lightly. My duty is
+here, be it for life or death; and here I must abide until the Master
+sets me free."
+
+Then, addressing De Croix, she continued sadly, "No, Monsieur, the
+sense of duty that presses upon me and yields me such strength is
+beyond your comprehension. I bid you go back to that world of light
+and gaiety you have always loved so fondly, and think no more of me.
+To you I am, even as you have supposed, a dead woman, yet happier far
+in this sad exile than I ever was in that gilded social cage where men
+laugh while they break the hearts that trust them. My Indians are
+indeed cruel, but there is a deeper cruelty than that of bloodshed, and
+I prefer the open savagery of the woods and plains to things I have
+known in city life. So it must be good-bye, Monsieur!"
+
+I was looking directly at her when she uttered these last words of
+dismissal, yet as she ended she vanished into the black night beyond, I
+knew not how. A moment before, two figures had been standing there, De
+Croix's and hers; and although my eyes never once wavered, suddenly
+there remained but one, that of De Croix, peering forward with bent
+body as if he also knew not how or when the girl had vanished from his
+side. I was staring yet, half believing it was but a trick of my eyes,
+when suddenly, like phantoms from the mist, a half-dozen naked figures
+topped the high bank before me. It was the work almost of a second. I
+caught Burns's low cry of warning from where he sat watching within the
+boat.
+
+"Run!" I shouted to De Croix. "To the boat, quick! The savages are
+upon us!"
+
+He made no motion, and I grasped him. Rarely have I laid so heavy a
+hand on one in friendship; but I lifted him from off his feet and flung
+him bodily into the boat's bottom, scarce waiting till he struck before
+I had my shoulder against the stern to send the craft free from shore.
+I know not what mischance caused it, whether I slipped upon a stone or
+tripped over a hidden root; but as I shoved the boat far out into the
+dark current of the river, instead of springing after it, as I had
+meant to do, I toppled and plunged headlong down at the edge of the
+stream.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV
+
+THE BATTLE ON THE SHORE
+
+What followed was long a famous story on the border, and I have even
+read it written out most carefully in books purporting to tell the
+history of those troublous times. None of them have it as I recall the
+details of the incident, although it all occurred so rapidly that I
+myself can hardly tell just how 't was done.
+
+I know that I scrambled again to my knees, resting half in the water,
+my purpose being to fling myself into the river in an effort to regain
+the boat. But it was already out of sight in the dense gloom, while
+not the slightest sound reached me for guidance. Beyond this, I had no
+time for much save action. Above me, upon the high bank not three
+yards away, I saw several Indian forms peering over; and then others,
+three or four, I am uncertain which, sprang lightly down within a yard
+of where I crouched in waiting.
+
+My father gave me a frontier maxim once, which ran, "If you must fight,
+strike first, and strike hard." The words flashed in my memory, and I
+put them to the test straightway. These prowling savages were
+apparently unaware of my predicament; their sole thought was with the
+boat floating away lakeward down the stream. At all cost, they must be
+blocked in any purpose of pursuit. These were the thoughts that darted
+through my brain like fire through stubble. How many opposed me, how
+desperate would be the struggle, were matters of which I did not stop
+to think. I could at least busy them until the fugitives were safe;
+after that, it was God's affair, and theirs. My rifle was wet and
+useless from my recent tumble; but before the group at the water's edge
+even saw me I was fairly upon them, striking fiercely with my gunstock,
+and two savages went down, shrieking from pain and surprise, before so
+much as a return blow reached me.
+
+It was not a noisy battle; from the outset it was too fierce and rapid
+for any waste of breath. Never did I need my strength of body more,
+nor did the long training of my father come in better play. I made
+that long rifle-barrel both club and sword, knife and axe in one,
+striking, thrusting, clubbing, in the mad fury with which desperation
+bids a man battle for his life. I had no thought to live, but was
+determined that if I went down to earth many a painted savage should
+lie there with me. The enshrouding darkness proved a friendly help;
+for as I backed in closer against the bank, I gained a fair view of my
+opponents, while keeping myself more hidden. Again and again they
+charged upon me, joined now by the others from above; but the circling
+iron I swung with tireless arms formed a dead-line no leaping Indian
+burst through alive.
+
+Once a hurtling tomahawk half buried itself in my shoulder; a long
+knife, thrown by a practised hand, pierced the muscles of my thigh, and
+stuck there quivering, till I struck it loose; and twice they fired at
+me, the second shot tearing the flesh of my side, searing it like fire.
+Yet I scarcely realized I was touched, so fiercely was the battle-blood
+now coursing through my veins, so intense the joy with which I crushed
+them back. I grew delirious, feeling the rage to slay sweep over me as
+never before, giving me the crazed strength of a dozen men, until I
+lost all sense of defensive action, and sprang forth into their midst
+as might an avenging thunderbolt from the black sky. Never had I swung
+flail in peaceful border contest as I did that murderous iron bar in
+the dark of the river-shore, driving them back foot by foot against the
+high bank which held them helpless victims of my wrath. I struck again
+and again, my teeth set together in bulldog tenacity, my breath coming
+in gasps, the streaming blood from a deep cut over my eyes half
+blinding me, yet guided by fierce instinct to find and smite my foes.
+I trod on limp bodies, on writhing forms, and felt my weapon clash
+against iron rifle barrels and clang upon uplifted steel; but nothing
+stopped me,--no cry of terror, no plea for mercy, no clutching hand, no
+deadly numbing blow.
+
+God knows the story of that fight,--how long it lasted, by what miracle
+'t was won. To me it is--and was--little more than a dim haze of
+strange leaping figures, of fierce dark faces, of maddened cries of
+hate, of uplifted hands, of dull-clashing weapons. I seemed to see it
+all through a red fog whence the blood dripped, and I lost
+consciousness of everything save my unswerving duty to strike hard
+until I fell. At last out from the maelstrom of that wild melee but a
+single warrior seemed to face me; and some instinct of the fight caused
+me to draw back a pace and wipe the obscuring blood away, that I might
+see him better. It came to me that this was to be the end,--the final
+duel which was to decide that midnight battle. He and I were there
+alone; and the stars bursting through the clouds gave me faint view of
+him, and of those dark, silent forms that lined the shore where they
+had fallen.
+
+A chief, a Pottawattomie,--this much I knew even in that hasty shrouded
+glance. Writers of history affirm my opponent was Peesotum, the same
+fierce warrior whose cruel hand slew the brave Captain Wells and
+wrenched his still beating heart from out the mutilated body. All I
+realized then were his broad sinewy shoulders, his naked brawny body,
+his eyes ablaze with malignant hate. He was the first to close, his
+wild cry for vengeance piercing the still night; and before I knew it,
+the maddened savage was within the guard of my rifle-barrel, and we
+were locked in the stern grapple of death.
+
+It was knife to knife, our blades gleaming dull in the dim light of the
+stars, each man gripping the up-lifted wrist of the other, putting
+forth each last reserve of strength, each cunning trick of fence, to
+break free and strike the ending blow. Back and forth we strove,
+straining like two wild animals, our moccasined feet slipping on the
+wet earth, our muscles strained, and sinews cracking with intensity of
+effort, our breath coming in labored gasps, our bodies tense as
+bow-strings. Such merciless strain could not endure forever, and,
+strong as I was in those young days, the savage was far stronger and
+less exhausted by the struggle, so that inch by inch he pressed me
+backward, battling like a demon, until I could see the cruel gleam of
+his eyes as I gave slowly down. It was God who saved me, for as I fell
+I struck the sharp shelving of the bank, and the quick stoppage swung
+the savage to one side and below me, so that, even as he gave vent to
+an exulting yell of triumph, wrenching his hand loose from my weakening
+clasp to strike the death-blow, I whirled and forced him downward, his
+face buried in the stream.
+
+Those who write history say the rescuing warriors discovered him alive.
+I know not; but this I swear,--I held him there until every struggle
+ceased, until answering yells from the westward told me others were
+already close at hand, and then, breathless and trembling from the
+struggle, blinded by blood and faint from wounds, I sprang forward into
+the night-shadows, dimly conscious that my sole hope for escape lay
+lakeward. I ran but feebly at first, skirting the partially destroyed
+stockade of the old Fort, with its litter of debris, and stumbling
+constantly in the darkness over the obstructions that lined the river
+bank. As my breath returned, and I somewhat cleared my eyes of blood,
+I saw better; and at last ran from the darker soil on to the white sand
+of the beach.
+
+There were now many stars in the sky, with the moon struggling feebly
+to break through the haze; but to my anxious glance nothing was visible
+upon, the water. Surely the boat must have floated to the river-mouth
+by this time,--surely the force of the current would have accomplished
+that; nor was it likely that Ol' Burns would draw far away from shore
+until assured of my fate. The wild shouting told me that savages from
+the camp had already found their dead. A moment more would place them
+on my trail, hot for revenge; and there was no course left me but to
+take the water, before their keen eyes found me out. I waded out,
+seeking thus to get far enough from shore to baffle their search, when
+suddenly a quick spark of light winked from the blackness in front of
+me. Surely it could be nothing less than a signal, the swift stroke of
+flint on steel,--no doubt in the faint hope it would prove a beacon to
+me in my need.
+
+Desperate as the chance was, it was still a chance, and to my mind the
+only one. I glanced behind; a dim figure or two dotted the white sand,
+and my heart lifted a silent prayer to God for guidance. A second
+later I was beyond my depth, breasting the unknown waters, swimming
+steadily toward the place where that mysterious spark had glimmered.
+Once again it flashed, the barest glimpse of light through the intense
+gloom; and I pressed on with new vigor, certain now it was a real
+beacon. But I was so weakened by wounds and spent from exertion, and
+such desperate work is swimming fully clad, that my progress proved
+slow; and twice I was compelled to pause, paddling slowly on my back,
+in the buffeting of the waves, in order to gain strength to renew the
+struggle. I almost lost heart in the black loneliness, as the swirling
+water swept me back and confused me with its ever-tossing motion. Once
+I went down from sheer weakness, choking in a cloud of spray that swept
+my face; and doubtless I should have let the struggle end in despair
+even then, had not the spark leaped up once more through the deep haze;
+and this time so close was it that my ears caught the clashing of the
+flint and steel.
+
+With the new hope of life thus given me, I pushed grimly forward, using
+the silent Indian stroke that never tires, my eyes at the surface level
+where the light of the moon glimmered feebly. At last I saw it,--the
+black lumpy shadow of the boat. I must have splashed a little in my
+weakness and excitement, for I plainly perceived the figure of a man
+hastily leap to his feet, with an oar-blade uplifted threateningly
+above his head.
+
+"Don't strike, Burns!" I managed to cry aloud. "It's Wayland."
+
+The next moment, with scarce so much as a breath remaining in my
+battered body, I laid hand upon the boat's side, and clung there
+panting and well-nigh spent. I felt his hands pressed under my arms,
+and then, with the exercise of his great strength, he drew me steadily
+up, inch by inch, until I topped the rail, and fell forward into the
+bottom of the boat. An instant I rested thus, with tightly closed
+eyes, my head reeling, my breath coming in sobs of pain, every muscle
+of my strained body throbbing in misery. Scarcely conscious of what
+was being done about me, I could still realize that arms touched my
+neck, that my head was gently lifted to a softer resting-place, and
+that a hand, strangely tender, brushed back from my forehead the wet
+tangled hair. The touch was thrilling; and I unclosed my wearied eyes,
+looking up into the sympathetic face of Mademoiselle. The faint
+moonlight rested upon it gently, touching her crown of hair with
+silver; and within the dark depths of her eyes I read clearly the
+message I had waited for so long.
+
+"Toinette!" I murmured, half conscious.
+
+She bowed her head above me, and I felt a sudden plash of tears that
+could not be restrained.
+
+"Do not try to speak now, John!" she whispered softly, her finger at my
+lips. "I can only thank the good God who has brought you back to me."
+
+I made no effort to say more; I could only lie in silence and gaze up
+at her, pressing the hands resting so frankly within my own. Indeed,
+we needed no words in that hour; our hearts had spoken, and
+thenceforward we were one.
+
+Suddenly the heavy boat lurched beneath us, to some quick impetus that
+sent a shudder through every inch of it; and I heard a heavy splash
+alongside, which instantly brought me upright, anxiously grasping the
+rail.
+
+"May Heaven help him!" cried Burns excitedly, and pointing out at the
+black waters. "The Frenchman has gone overboard!"
+
+"Overboard?" I echoed, striving to regain my feet. "Did he fall?"
+
+"Fall? No; it was a dive off the back seat here. Save me! but he went
+into it like a gull."
+
+We sought for him long and vainly, peering over those dark swirling
+waters, calling his name aloud, and striking flint on steel in hope to
+guide him by the spark. Nothing appeared along the rolling surface, no
+answering cry came from the black void; De Croix had disappeared into
+the depths, as desperate men go down to death. Suddenly, as I leaned
+over, sick at heart, peering into the dimness, Toinette drew near and
+touched me softly.
+
+"Let us not mourn," she said, in strange quietness. "No doubt 't is
+better so."
+
+"How?" I questioned, shocked at her seemingly heartless words. "Surely
+you cannot rejoice at such a loss?"
+
+"'T is not a loss," she answered firmly, and the soft moon-rays were
+white upon her face. "He has only gone back to her we left behind; it
+was the beckoning hand of love that called him through the waters. Now
+it is only ours to pray that he may find her."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+IN THE NEW GRAY DAWN
+
+My anxious glance wandered from the face I so dearly loved, out where
+those dark restless waters merged into the brooding mystery of the
+black night. How unspeakably dreary, lonely, hopeless it all was!
+Into what tragic unknown fate had this earliest comrade of my manhood
+been remorselessly swept? Was all indeed well with him? or had the
+Nemesis of a wrong once done dealt its fatal stroke at last? The
+voices of the night were silent; the chambers of the great tossing sea
+hid their secret well. Had this gallant and reckless young soldier of
+France, this petted courtier of the gayest court in Europe, whose very
+name and rank I knew not, succeeded in his desperate deed? Had he
+reached yonder blood-stained shore, lined with infuriated savages, and
+found safe passage through them to the side of the woman he had once
+called wife, and then forgotten? Or had he found, instead, the solemn
+peace of death, amid the swirling waters of this vast inland sea, so
+many leagues to the westward of that sunny land he loved? These were
+the thoughts that shook me, as I leaned out above the rail, her dear
+hand always on my shoulder. Never have the circling years found voice,
+nor the redeemed wilderness made answer.
+
+"Possibly it might be done," I admitted slowly. "'T is scarce farther
+than I swam just now, and he is neither weary nor wounded."
+
+We all realised it was a useless peril to remain there longer, and I
+sat at the helm and watched, while Burns, who developed considerable
+knowledge in such matters, fitted the heavy sail in place. With the
+North Star over the water for our guidance, I headed the blunt nose of
+the boat due eastward into the untracked waters.
+
+I confess that my memory was still lingering upon De Croix, and my eyes
+turned often enough along our foam-flecked wake in vague wonderment at
+his fate. It was Mademoiselle who laid hand softly on my knee at last,
+and aroused my attention to her.
+
+"Why did you tell Sister Celeste that you came to Dearborn seeking Elsa
+Matherson?" she questioned, her clear eyes intently reading my face.
+
+"I had even forgotten that I mentioned it," I answered, surprised at
+this query at such a time. "But it is strictly true. While upon his
+death-bed Elsa Matherson's father wrote to mine,--they were old
+comrades in the great war,--and I was sent hither to bring the orphan
+girl eastward. I sought her as a brother might seek a sister he had
+never seen, Mademoiselle; yet have failed most miserably in my mission."
+
+"How failed?"
+
+"In that I have found no trace of the girl, and beyond doubt she
+perished in the massacre. I know not how, but I have been strangely
+baffled and misled from the first in my search for her, and it was all
+to no purpose."
+
+For the first time since I had fallen dripping into the boat, a slight
+smile was visible in the dark eyes fronting me.
+
+"Why hid you from me with such care the object of your search?"
+
+"I hid nothing, Mademoiselle. We spoke together about it often."
+
+"Ay, indeed you told me you sought a young girl, and your words led me
+to think at first it must be Josette, and later still the Indian
+missionary. But not once did you breathe the name of the girl in my
+ears. The dwellers at Dearborn were neither so many nor so strange to
+me that I could not have aided you in your search."
+
+"You knew this Elsa Matherson?"
+
+"I am not so sure of that, Master Wayland." she returned gravely, her
+eyes wandering into the night. "Once I thought I did, but she has
+changed so greatly in the last few days that I am hardly sure. A young
+girl's life is often filled with mystery, and there are happenings that
+turn girlhood to womanhood in a single hour. Love has power to change
+the nature as by magic, and sorrow also has a like rare gift. Do you
+still greatly wish to find this Elsa Matherson?"
+
+"To find her?" and I gazed about me incredulously into those flitting
+shadows where the waves raced by. "Ay, for I have dreamed of her as of
+a lost sister, and it will sadly grieve those at home to have me return
+thus empty-handed. Yet the thought is foolishness, Mademoiselle, and I
+understand not why you should mock me so."
+
+She drew closer, in the gentle caressing way she had, and found my
+disengaged hand, her sweet face held upward so that I could mark every
+changing expression.
+
+"Never in my useless life was I farther removed from any spirit of
+mockery," she insisted, soberly; "for never before have I seen the
+presence of God so clearly manifest in His mysterious guidance of men.
+You, who sought after poor Elsa Matherson in this wilderness, looking
+perchance for a helpless orphan child, have been led to pluck me in
+safety out from savage hands, and yet never once dreamed that in doing
+so you only fulfilled your earlier mission."
+
+I stared at her, grasping with difficulty the full significance of her
+speech.
+
+"Your words puzzle me."
+
+"Nay, they need not," and I caught the sudden glitter of tears on her
+lashes; "for I am Elsa Matherson."
+
+"You? you?" and I crushed her soft hand within my fingers, as I peered
+forward at the quickly lowered face. "Why, you are French,
+Mademoiselle, and of a different name!"
+
+She glanced up now into my puzzled face, a bit shyly, yet with some of
+the old roguishness visible in her eyes.
+
+"My mother was indeed French, but my father was an American soldier,"
+she said rapidly, as if eager to have the explanation ended. "You
+never asked my name, save that one night when we first met amid the
+sand, and then I gave you only that by which I have been most widely
+known. None except my father ever called me Elsa; to all others I was
+always Toinette. But I am Roger Matherson's only child."
+
+It was clear enough now, and the deception had been entirely my own,
+rendered possible by strange chances of omission, by rare negligence of
+speech--aided by my earlier impression that she whom I sought was a
+mere child.
+
+"And 't was Sister Celeste who told you whom I sought?" I asked, for
+lack of courage to say more.
+
+"Yes, to-night, while we waited for you beside the ruins of the old
+factory. Oh, how far away it all seems now!" and she pointed backward
+across the voters. "Poor, poor girl! Poor Captain de Croix! Oh, it
+is all so sad, so unutterably sad to me! I knew them both so well,
+Monsieur," and she rested her bowed head upon one hand, staring out
+into the night, and speaking almost as if to herself alone; "yet I
+never dreamed that he was a nobleman of France, or that he had married
+Marie Faneuf. She was so sweet a girl then,--and now to be buried
+alive in that wilderness! Think you that he truly loved her?"
+
+"I almost have faith that he did, Mademoiselle," I answered gravely.
+"He was greatly changed from his first sight of her face, though he was
+a difficult man to gauge in such matters. There was a time when I
+believed him in love with you."
+
+She tossed her head.
+
+"Nay," she answered, "he merely thought he was, because he found me
+hard to understand and difficult of conquest; but 't was little more
+than his own vanity that drew him hither. I trust it may be the deeper
+feeling that has taken him back now in face of death to Marie."
+
+"You have indeed proved hard to understand by more than one," I
+ventured, for in spite of her graciousness the old wound rankled. "It
+has puzzled me much to understand how you so gaily sent me forth to a
+mission that might mean death, to save this Captain de Croix."
+
+It was a foolish speech, and she met it bravely, with heightened color
+and a flash of dark eyes.
+
+"'T was no more than the sudden whim of a girl," she answered quickly,
+"and regretted before you were out of sight. Nor did I dream you would
+meet my conditions by such a sacrifice."
+
+"You showed small interest as you stood on the stockade when we went
+forth!"
+
+"You mean when Captain de Croix and I leaned above the eastern
+palisades?"
+
+"Ay, not once did your eyes wander to mark our progress."
+
+Her eyes were smiling now, and her face archly uplifted.
+
+"Indeed, Master Wayland, little you know of the struggles of my heart
+during that hour. Nor will I tell you; for the secrets of a girl must
+be her own. But I marked each step you took onward toward the Indian
+camp, until the night hid you,--the night, or else the gathering tears
+in my eyes."
+
+The sudden yawing of the boat before a gust of wind drew my thought
+elsewhere, and kept back the words ready upon my tongue. When once
+more I had my bearings and had turned back the plunging bow, she sat
+silent, deep in thought that I hesitated to disturb. Soon I noted her
+head droop slightly to the increased movement of the boat.
+
+"You are worn out!" I said tenderly. "Lean here against me, and sleep."
+
+"Indeed, I feel most weary," was her drowsy reply. "Yes, I will rest
+for a few moments."
+
+How clear remains the memory of those hours, while I sat watchful of
+the helm, her head resting peacefully on my lap, and all about us those
+lonely tossing waters! What a mere chip was our boat in the midst of
+that desolate sea; how dark and dreary the changeless night shadows!
+Over and over again I pictured the details of each scene I have here
+set forth so poorly, to dream at the end of a final homecoming which
+should not be alone. It was with heart thankful to God, that I watched
+the slow stealing upward of the gray dawn as the early rays of light
+crept toward us across the heaving of the waters. It was typical of
+all I had hoped,--this, and the black shadows fleeing away into the
+west. Brighter and brighter grew the crimsoning sky over the boat's
+bow, where Burns lay sleeping, until my eyes could distinguish a
+far-off shore-line heavily crowned with trees. I thought to rouse her
+to the glorious sight; but even as I glanced downward into the fair
+young face, her dark eyes opened in instant smile of greeting.
+
+"'T is the morning," she said gladly, "and that dark, dark night has
+passed away."
+
+"For ever, Mademoiselle; and there is even a land of promise to be seen
+out yonder!"
+
+She sat up quickly, shading her eyes with her hand as she gazed with
+eagerness toward where I pointed.
+
+"Think you we shall find shelter and friends there?"
+
+"The half-breed chief said there were yet white settlers upon the Saint
+Joseph, Mademoiselle; and the mouth of that river should be easily
+found."
+
+She turned toward me, a slight frown darkening her face.
+
+"I wish you would not call me Mademoiselle," she said slowly. "It is
+as if we were still mere strangers; and you said Elsa Matherson was to
+be as your sister."
+
+I bent over her suddenly, all my repressed love glowing in my face.
+
+"Toinette!" I whispered passionately, "I would call you by a dearer
+name than that,--by the dearest of all dear names if I might, for you
+have won my heart in the wilderness."
+
+For a single instant she glanced shyly up into my face, her own crimson
+at my sudden ardor. Her eyes drooped and hid themselves behind their
+long lashes.
+
+"Those who sent you forth seeking a sister might not thus wish to
+welcome Elsa Matherson," she said softly.
+
+"'Tis a venture I most gladly make," I insisted, "and would seal it
+with a kiss."
+
+Her eyes flashed up at me, full of sudden merriment.
+
+"The unpaid wager leaves me helpless to resist, Monsieur."
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+The soft haze of Indian summer rested over the valley of the Maumee.
+We rode slowly along the narrow winding trail that hugged the river
+bank; for our journey had been a long one, and the horses were wearied.
+Burns was riding just in advance of Toinette and me, his cap pulled low
+over his eyes, his new growth of hair standing out stiff and black
+beneath its covering. Once he twisted his seamed face about in time to
+catch us smiling at his odd figure, and growled to himself as he kicked
+at his horse's flanks.
+
+It was thus we rounded the bend and saw before us the little clearing
+with the cabin in the centre of its green heart. At sight of it my
+eyes grew moist and I rested my fingers gently upon the white hand that
+lay against her saddle-pommel.
+
+"Fear not, dear heart!" I whispered tenderly.
+
+"It is home for both alike, and the welcome of love awaits you as well
+as me."
+
+She glanced up at me, half shyly as in the old way, and there was a
+mist of tears clinging to the long lashes.
+
+"Those who love you, John, I will love," she said solemnly.
+
+It was Rover who saw us first, and came charging forth with savage
+growl and ruffled fur, until he scented me, and changed his fierceness
+into barks of frantic welcome. Then it was I saw them, even as when I
+last rode forth, my father seated in his great splint chair, my mother
+with her arm along the carved back, one hand shading her eyes as she
+watched our coming.
+
+This is not a memory to be written about for stranger eyes to read, but
+as I turned from them after that first greeting, their glances were
+upon her who stood waiting beside me, so sweet and pure in her young
+womanhood.
+
+"And this, my son?" questioned my father kindly. "We would bid her
+welcome also; yet surely she cannot be that little child for whose sake
+we sent you forth?"
+
+I took her by the hand as we faced them.
+
+"You sent me in search of one whom you would receive even as your own
+child," I answered simply. "This is Roger Matherson's daughter, and
+the dear wife of your son."
+
+What need have I to dwell upon the love that bade her welcome? And so
+it was that out of all the suffering and danger,--forth from the valley
+of the shadow of death,--Toinette and I came home.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHEN WILDERNESS WAS KING***
+
+
+******* This file should be named 17890.txt or 17890.zip *******
+
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