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+Project Gutenberg's With Ethan Allen at Ticonderoga, by W. Bert Foster
+
+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: With Ethan Allen at Ticonderoga
+
+Author: W. Bert Foster
+
+Illustrator: F. A. Carter
+
+Release Date: January 13, 2010 [EBook #30952]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WITH ETHAN ALLEN AT TICONDEROGA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank, D Alexander and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WITH ETHAN ALLEN AT TICONDEROGA
+
+by
+
+W. BERT FOSTER
+
+Author of
+
+"With Washington at Valley Forge" etc
+
+Illustrated by F. A. Carter
+
+THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY
+
+PHILADELPHIA
+
+MCMIV
+
+
+
+
+Copyright 1903 by The Penn Publishing Company
+
+With Ethan Allen at Ticonderoga
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: "FORWARD!" HE SHOUTED]
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+ I A Boy of the Wilderness 5
+ II Enoch Harding Feels Himself a Man 19
+ III The Ambush 31
+ IV 'Siah Bolderwood's Stratagem 45
+ V The Pioneer Home 60
+ VI The Stump Burning 76
+ VII A Night Attack 94
+ VIII The Traitor's Way 107
+ IX The Otter Creek Raid 127
+ X The Warning 139
+ XI An Unequal Battle 160
+ XII Backwoods Justice 174
+ XIII The Wolf Pack 191
+ XIV The Testimony of Crow Wing 208
+ XV The Storm Cloud Gathers 220
+ XVI The Westminster Massacre 236
+ XVII The Cloven Hoof 251
+ XVIII "The Cross of Fire" 270
+ XIX The Rising of the Clans 284
+ XX The Rival Commanders 298
+ XXI The Escape of the Spy 313
+ XXII The End of Simon Halpen 330
+ XXIII The Dawn of the Tenth of May 343
+ XXIV The Guns of Old Ti Speak 355
+
+
+
+
+WITH ETHAN ALLEN AT TICONDEROGA
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+A BOY OF THE WILDERNESS
+
+
+The forest was still. A calm lay upon its vast extent, from the
+green-capped hills in the east to the noble river which, fed by the
+streams so quietly meandering through the pleasantly wooded country,
+found its way to the sea where the greatest city of the New World was
+destined to stand. The clear, bell-like note of a waking bird startled
+the morning hush. A doe and her fawn that had couched in a thicket
+seemed roused to activity by this early matin and suddenly showered the
+short turf with a dewy rain from the bushes which they disturbed as they
+leaped away toward the "lick." The gentle creatures first slaked their
+thirst at the margin of the creek hard by and then stood a moment with
+outstretched nostrils, snuffing the wind before tasting the salt
+impregnated earth trampled as hard as adamant by a thousand hoofs. The
+fawn dropped its muzzle quickly; but the mother, not so well assured,
+snuffed again and yet again.
+
+In the wilderness, before the white man came, there were to be found
+paths made by the wild folk going to and from their watering places and
+feeding grounds, and paths made by the red hunter and warrior. Although
+hundreds of deer traveled to this lick yearly, they had not originally
+made the trail. It was an ancient Indian runaway, for the creek was
+fordable near this point. The tribesmen had used it for generations
+until it was worn almost knee-deep in the forest mould, but wide enough
+only to be traveled in single file. Along this ancient trail, and
+approaching the lick with infinite caution, came a boy of thirteen,
+bearing a heavy rifle.
+
+Although so young, Enoch Harding was well built, and the play of his
+hardened muscles was easily observed under his tight-fitting, homespun
+garments. The circumstances of border life in the eighteenth century
+molded hardy men and sturdy boys. His face was as brown as a berry and
+his eyes clear and frankly open. The brown hair curled tightly above his
+perspiring brow, from which his old otter-skin cap was thrust back. His
+coming to the bank of the wide stream was attended with all the care and
+silent observation of an Indian on the trail. He set his feet so firmly
+and with such precision that not even the rustle of a leaf or the
+crackling of a twig would have warned the sharpest ear of his approach.
+The wind was in his favor, too, blowing from the creek toward him. The
+doe, which he could not yet see but the patter of whose light hoofs he
+had heard as she trotted with her fawn to the drinking place, could not
+possibly have discovered his presence; yet she continued to raise her
+muzzle at intervals and snuff the wind suspiciously.
+
+The dark aisles of the forest, as yet unillumined by the sun whose
+crimson banners would soon be flung above the mountain-tops, seemed
+deserted. In the distance the birds were beginning their morning song;
+but here the shadow of the mountains lay heavy upon wood and stream and
+the feathered choristers awoke more slowly. The two deer at the lick and
+the boy who now, from behind the massive bole of a tree, surveyed them,
+seemed the only living objects within view.
+
+Enoch raised his heavy rifle, resting the barrel against the tree trunk,
+and drew bead at the doe's side. He was chancing a long shot, rather
+than taking the risk of approaching any nearer to the animals. He had
+seen that the doe was suspicious and she might be off in a flash into
+the thicker forest beyond unless he fired at once. Had he been more
+experienced he would have wondered what had made the creature
+suspicious, his own approach to the lick being quite evidently
+undiscovered. But he thought only of getting a perfect sight and that
+the larder at home was empty. And this last fact was sufficient to make
+the boy's aim certain, his principal care being to waste no powder and
+to bring down his game with as little loss of time as might be.
+
+The next moment the heavy muzzle-loading gun roared and the buckshot
+sped on its mission. The mother deer gave a convulsive spring forward,
+thus warning the poor fawn, which disappeared in the brush like a flash
+of brown light. The doe dropped in a heap upon the sward and Enoch,
+flushed with success, ran forward to view his prize. In so doing,
+however, the boy forgot the first rule of the border ranger and hunter.
+He did not reload his weapon.
+
+Stumbling over the widely spread roots of the great tree behind which he
+had hidden, he reached the opening in the forest where the tragedy had
+been enacted, and would have been on his knees beside the dead deer in
+another instant had not an appalling sound stayed him. A scream, the
+like of which once heard is never to be forgotten, thrilled him to the
+marrow. He started back, casting his glance upward. There was a rustling
+in the thick branches of the tree beneath which the doe had fallen.
+Again the maddened scream rang out and a tawny body flashed from
+concealment in the foliage.
+
+"A catamount!" Enoch shouted, and seeing the creature fairly over his
+head in its flight through the air, he leaped away toward the creek, his
+feet winged with fear. Of all the wild creatures of the Northern
+wilderness this huge cat was most to be avoided. It would not hesitate
+to attack man when hungry, and maddened and disappointed as this one
+was, its charge could not be stayed. At the instant when the beast was
+prepared to leap upon either the doe or her fawn, Enoch's shot had laid
+the one low and frightened the other away. His appearance upon the scene
+attracted the attention of the cat and had given it a new object of
+attack. Possibly the creature did not even notice the fall of the deer,
+being now bent upon vengeance for the loss of its prey, for which it had
+doubtless searched unsuccessfully all the night through.
+
+The young hunter was in a desperate situation. His gun was empty and the
+prospect of an encounter with the catamount would have quenched the
+courage of the bravest. And to run from it was still more foolish, yet
+this was the first thought which inspired him. The creek was beyond and
+although the ford was some rods above the deer-lick, he thought to cast
+himself into the stream and thus escape his enemy. The beast, possessing
+that well-known trait of the feline tribe which causes it to shrink from
+water, might not follow him into the creek.
+
+A long log, the end of which had caught upon the bank, swung its length
+into the stream, forming a boom against which light drift-stuff had
+gathered; the swift current foamed about the timber as though vexed at
+this delay to its progress. Upon the tree Enoch leaped and ran to the
+further extremity. His feet, shod in home-made moccasins of deer-hide,
+did not slip on this insecure footing; but his weight on the stranded
+log set it in motion. The timber began to swing off from the shore and
+one terrified glance about him assured the boy that he was at a most
+deep and dangerous part of the stream.
+
+Although so shallow above at the ford, the bed of the creek directly
+below was of rock instead of gravel, and ragged boulders thrust
+themselves up from the depths, causing many whirlpools which dimpled the
+surface of the water. About the boulders the current tore, the brown
+froth from the angry jaws of rock dancing lightly away upon the waves.
+Although even with his clothing on he might have swum in a quiet pool,
+to do so here would be almost impossible. The boy was between two
+perils!
+
+He turned about in horror to escape the flood, and was in time to see
+the huge cat gain the end of the log in a single bound as it was torn
+from the shore by the current. There the beast crouched, less than
+twenty feet away, lashing its tail and snarling menace at the victim of
+its wrath. The situation was paralyzing. As for loading his rifle now,
+the boy had not the strength to do it. The fascination of the beast's
+blazing eyes held him motionless, like a bird charmed by the unwinking
+gaze of a black snake.
+
+And Enoch Harding knew, if he knew anything, that the beast would not
+give him time to reload the clumsy gun. At his first movement it would
+spring. And if he leaped into the water, it might follow him,
+considering its present savage mood. He beheld its muscles, which
+slipped so easily under the tawny skin, knotting themselves for a
+spring. The forelegs were drawn up under the breast the curved,
+sabre-sharp claws scratching the bark on the floating timber. In another
+instant the fatal leap would be made.
+
+Never had the boy been in such danger. He did not utterly lose his
+presence of mind; but he was helpless. What chance had he with an empty
+gun before the savage brute? He seized the barrel in both hands and
+raised the weapon above his head. It was too heavy for him to swing with
+any ease, and being so would fall but lightly on the creature, did he
+succeed in reaching it at all. He could not hope to stun the cat at a
+single blow. And beside, the tree, rocking now like a water-logged
+canoe, made his footing more and more insecure. In a moment it would be
+among the boulders and at the first collision be overturned.
+
+But he could not drag his eyes from those of the catamount. With a
+fierce snarl which ended in a thrilling scream, the brute cast itself
+into the air! At the moment it rose, exposing its lighter colored breast
+to view, a gun-shot shattered the silence of river and forest. The
+spring of the cat was not stayed, but its yell again changed--this time
+to a note of agony.
+
+"Jump, lad, jump!" shouted a voice and Enoch, as though awaking from a
+dream, obeyed the command. He leaped sideways, and landed upon a
+slippery rock, falling to his knees, yet securing a hand-hold upon a
+protuberance. Nor did he lose hold of his gun with the other hand.
+
+The body of the catamount landed just where he had stood; but then
+rolled off the log and disappeared in the rushing stream, while the
+timber itself crashed instantly into one of the larger boulders. Enoch
+staggered to his feet, his hand bleeding and also his knee, where the
+stocking had been torn away by the rock. The log swung broadside to the
+current again, and seeing his chance, the boy ran along its length and
+leaped from its end into comparatively shallow water under the bank.
+
+His rescuer was at hand and dragged him, panting and exhausted, to the
+shore, where he fell weakly on the turf, unable for a moment to utter a
+word. The man who leaned over him was lean, as dark as an Indian, and in
+a day when smoothly shaven features were the rule, his face was marked
+by a tangled growth of iron-gray beard. His hair hung to the fringed
+collar of his deerskin shirt, and straggled over his low brow in
+careless locks, instead of being tightly drawn back and fastened in a
+queue; and out of this wilderness of hair and beard looked two eyes as
+sharp as the hawk's.
+
+He was so tall that there was a slight stoop to his shoulders as though,
+when he walked, he feared to collide with the branches of the trees
+under which he passed. Erect, he must have lacked but a few inches of
+seven feet and, possessing not an ounce of superfluous flesh on his big
+bones, his appearance was not impressive. The deerskin hunting shirt,
+worked in a curious pattern on the breast with red and blue porcupine
+quills, fitted him tightly, as did his linsey-woolsey breeches; and his
+thin shanks were covered with gray hose darned clumsily in more than one
+place. He would have been selected at first sight as a wood-ranger and
+hunter, and carried his long rifle with more grace than he ever held
+plough or wielded reaping-hook.
+
+Indeed, Josiah Bolderwood was one of that strange class of white men so
+frequently found during the pioneer era of our Eastern country. He
+seemed to have been born, as he often said himself, with a gun in his
+hands. His mother, lying on her couch behind the double wall of a
+blockhouse in the Maine wilderness, loaded spare guns for her husband
+and his comrades while they beat off the yelling redskins, when Josiah
+was but a few days old. He was a ranger and trapper from the beginning.
+He had slept under the canopy of the forest more often than in a bed and
+beneath a roof made by men's hands. From early youth he had hunted all
+through the northern wilderness, and had been no more able to tie
+himself to a farm, and earn his bread by tilling the soil, than an
+Indian. Indeed, he was more of an Indian than a white man in habits,
+tastes, and feelings; he lacked only that marvelous appreciation of
+signs and sounds in the forest, in which the white can never hope to
+equal the red man.
+
+"Lad, that was a near chance for you!" he said, when he saw that Enoch
+was practically unhurt. "The Almighty surely brought me to this lick
+jest right. I knowed you was here when I heard the shot; but as your
+marm said you'd gone for a deer, I didn't s'pose you'd be huntin' for
+catamounts, too! Howsomever, somethin' tol' me ter run when I heard your
+gun, an' run I did."
+
+"I didn't shoot at the wild-cat, 'Siah," said the boy, getting upon his
+feet. "See yonder; there's the doe I knocked over. But the critter was
+after her, too, and it madded him when I fired, I s'pose."
+
+"And ye didn't git your gun loaded again!" exclaimed Bolderwood.
+
+His young friend blushed with shame. "I--I didn't think. I ran over to
+look at the doe, and the critter jumped at me outer the tree. Then I got
+on the log and he follered me----"
+
+"Jonas Harding's boy'd oughter known better than that," declared the old
+ranger, with some vexation.
+
+"I know it, 'Siah. Poor father told me 'nough times never to move outer
+my tracks till I had loaded again. An' I reckon this'll be a lesson for
+me. I--I ain't got over it yet."
+
+"Wal," said Bolderwood, "while you git yer breath, Nuck, I'll flay that
+critter and hang her up. I'm in somethin' of a hurry this mornin'; but
+as the widder's needin' the meat, we won't leave the carcass to the
+varmints."
+
+"You've been to my house, 'Siah?" cried Enoch, following him across the
+little glade.
+
+"Yes. Jest stopped there on my way down from Manchester. That's how I
+knew you was over here hunting."
+
+"But if you're in a hurry, leave me to do that," said the boy. "I'm all
+right now."
+
+"You're in as big a hurry as I be, Nuck," returned the ranger, with a
+grim smile. "I'm going to take you with me over to Mr. James
+Breckenridge's. Ev'ry gun we kin git may count to-day, lad."
+
+"Did mother say I could go, 'Siah?" cried the youngster, with undoubted
+satisfaction in his voice. "You're the best man that I know to get her
+to say 'yes'!"
+
+Bolderwood looked up from his work with much gravity. "This ain't no
+funnin' we're goin' on, Nuck. It's serious business. You kin shoot
+straight, an' that's why I begged for ye. This may be the most turrible
+day you ever seen, my lad, for the day on which a man or boy sees
+bloodshed for the fust time, is a mem'ry that he takes with him to the
+grave."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+ENOCH HARDING FEELS HIMSELF A MAN
+
+
+Although Enoch Harding had not grasped the serious nature of the matter
+which the ranger's words suggested, there was something he had realized,
+however, and this thought sent the blood coursing through his veins with
+more than wonted vigor and his eyes sparkled. He was a man. He was to
+play a man's part on this day and the neighbors--even the old ranger who
+had stood his friend on so many occasions already--recognized him as the
+head of the family.
+
+Bolderwood saw this thought expressed in his face and without desiring
+to "take him down" and humble his pride, wished to show him the serious
+side of the situation. To this end he spoke upon another subject,
+beginning: "D'ye remember where we be, Nuck? 'Member this place? Seems
+strange that you sh'd have such a caper here with that catamount after
+what happened only last spring, doesn't it?" He glanced keenly at young
+Harding and saw that his words had at once the desired effect. Enoch
+stood up, the skinning-knife in his hand, and looked over the little
+glade. In a moment his brown eyes filled with tears, which rolled
+unchastened down his smooth cheeks.
+
+"Aye, Nuck, a sorry day for you an' yourn when Jonas Harding met his
+death here. And a sorry day was it for me, too, lad. I loved him like a
+brother. He an' I, Nuck, trapped this neck of woods together before the
+settlement was started. We knew how rich the land was and naught but the
+wars with the redskins an' them French kept us from comin' here long
+before the Robinsons. Jonas wouldn't come 'less it was safe to bring
+your mother an' you--an' he was right. There's little good in a man's
+roamin' the world without a wife an' fireside ter tie to. I was sayin'
+the same to neighbor Allen last week, an' he agreed--though he's wuss
+off than me, for he has a family back in Litchfield an' is under anxiety
+all the time to bring them here, if the Yorkers but leave us in peace.
+As for me--well, a tough old knot like me ain't fit to marry an' settle
+down. I'm wuss nor an Injin."
+
+It is doubtful if the boy heard half this monologue. He stood with
+thoughtful mien and his eyes were still wet when Bolderwood's words
+finally aroused him. "Do you know, Nuck, there's many a time I stop at
+this ford and think of your father's death? There's things about it I'll
+never understand, I reckon."
+
+Enoch Harding started and flashed a quick glance at his friend. "What
+things?" he asked.
+
+"Well, lad, mainly that Jonas Harding, who was as quick on the trail and
+as good a woodsman as myself, should be worsted by a mad buck; it seems
+downright impossible, Nuck."
+
+"I know. But there could be no mistake about it, 'Siah. There were the
+hoof-marks--and there was no bullet wound on the body, only those gashes
+made by the critter's horns. Simon Halpen----"
+
+Bolderwood raised his hand quickly. "Nay, lad! don't utter evil even
+about that Yorker. We all know he was anigh here when your father died.
+He was seen at Bennington the night before, and later crossed James
+Breckenridge's farm on his way to Albany. Black enemy as he is to you
+and yourn, there's naught to be gained by accusing him of Jonas' death.
+It would be impossible. There was not, as you say, a bullet wound upon
+your father's body. There was not a mark of man's footstep near the lick
+here but your father's own. How else, then, could he have been killed
+but by the charge of the buck?"
+
+"You say yourself that father was far too sharp to so be taken by
+surprise," muttered the boy.
+
+"Aye--that is so. But the facts are there, lad. I s'arched the ground
+over--I headed the band of scouts who found him--remember that! Nobody
+had been near the lick but Jonas. There wasn't a footmark for rods
+around. Even an Injin couldn't have got near enough to strike Jonas down
+with his gun-butt----"
+
+"You believe that wound on his head, then, was made by no deer's
+antler?" exclaimed Enoch, eagerly.
+
+"Tut, tut! You jump too quick," said Bolderwood, turning his face away.
+"That's never well. Allus look b'fore ye leap, Nuck. My 'pinion be that
+your father struck his head on a stone in falling----"
+
+"Where is there a stone here?" demanded the boy, with a speaking gesture
+of his disengaged hand. "I saw that deep wound in father's skull. I
+never believed a buck did that."
+
+"And yet there was naught but the prints of the buck's hoofs in the soil
+here--be sure of that. The ground was trampled all about as though the
+fight had been desp'rate--as indeed it must have been."
+
+"But that blow on the head?" reiterated Enoch.
+
+"Ah, lad, I can't understand that. The wound certainly was mainly like a
+blow from a gun-stock," admitted Bolderwood.
+
+"Then Simon Halpen compassed his death--I am sure of it!" cried the boy.
+"You well know how he hated father. Halpen would never forget the
+beech-sealing he got last fall. He threatened to be terribly revenged on
+us; and Bryce and I heard him threaten father, too, when he fought him
+upon the crick bank and father tossed the Yorker into the middle of the
+stream."
+
+Bolderwood chuckled. "Simon as well might tackle Ethan Allen himself as
+to have wrastled with Jonas," he said.... "But we must hurry, lad. We
+have work--and perhaps serious work--before us this day. It may be the
+battle of our lives; we may l'arn to-day whether we are to be free
+people here in Bennington, or are to be driven out like sheep at the
+command of a flunkey under a royal person who lives so far across the
+sea that he knows naught of, nor cares naught for us."
+
+"You talk desp'rately against the King, Mr. Bolderwood!" exclaimed
+Enoch, looking askance at his companion.
+
+"Nay--what is the King to me?" demanded the ranger, in disgust. "He
+would be lost in these woods, I warrant. We're free people over here;
+why should we bother our heads about kings and parliament? They are no
+good to us."
+
+"You talk more boldly than Mr. Ethan Allen," said the boy. "He was at
+our house once to talk with father. Father said he was a master bold man
+and feared neither the King nor the people."
+
+"And no man need fear either if he fear God," declared the ranger,
+simply. "We are only seeing the beginnings of great trouble, Nuck. We
+may do battle to Yorkers now; perhaps we shall one day have to fight the
+King's men for our farms and housel-stuff. The Governor of New York is a
+powerful man and is friendly to men high in the King's councils, they
+say. This Sheriff Ten Eyck may bring real soldiers against us some day."
+
+"You don't believe that, 'Siah?" cried the boy.
+
+"Indeed and I do, lad," returned the ranger, rising now with the carcass
+of the doe flayed and ready for hanging up.
+
+"But we'll fight for our lands!" cried Enoch. "My father fought Simon
+Halpen for our farm. I'll fight him, too, if he comes here and tries to
+take it, now father is dead."
+
+"Mayhap this day's work will settle it for all time, Nuck," said the
+ranger, hopefully. "But do you shin up that sapling yonder, and bend it
+down. We wanter hang this carcass where no varmit--not even a
+catamount--can git it."
+
+The boy did as he was bade and soon the fruit of Enoch Harding's early
+morning adventure was hanging from the top of a young tree, too small to
+be climbed by any wild-cat and far enough from the ground to be out of
+reach of the wolves and foxes. "Now we'll git right out o' here, lad,"
+Bolderwood said, picking up his rifle and starting for the ford. "We've
+got to hurry," and Enoch, nothing loath, followed him across the creek
+and into the forest on the other bank.
+
+"Do you r'ally think there'll be fightin', Master Bolderwood?" he asked.
+
+"I hope God'll forbid that," responded the ranger, with due reverence.
+"But if the Yorkers expect ter walk in an' take our farms the way this
+sheriff wants ter take Master Breckenridge's, we'll show 'em diff'rent!"
+He increased his stride and Enoch had such difficulty in keeping up with
+his long-legged companion that he had no breath for rejoinder and they
+went on in silence.
+
+The controversy between the New York colony and the settlers of the
+Hampshire Grants who had bought their farms of Governor Benning
+Wentworth, of New Hampshire, was a very important incident of the
+pre-Revolutionary period. The not always bloodless battles over the
+Disputed Ground arose from the claim of New York that the old patent of
+King Charles to the Duke of York, giving to him all the territory lying
+between the Connecticut River on the east and Delaware Bay on the west,
+was still valid north of the Massachusetts line.
+
+In 1740 King George II had declared "that the northern boundary of
+Massachusetts be a similar curved line, pursuing the course of the
+Merrimac River at three miles distant on the north side thereof,
+beginning at the Atlantic Ocean and ending at a point due north of a
+place called Pawtucket Falls, and by a straight line from thence due
+west till it meets with his Majesty's other governments." Nine years
+later Governor Wentworth made the claim that, because of this
+established boundary between Massachusetts and New Hampshire, the
+latter's western boundary was the same as Massachusetts'--a line
+parallel with and twenty miles from the Hudson River--and he informed
+Governor Clinton, of New York, that he should grant lands to settlers as
+far west as this twenty-mile line. Therewith he granted to William
+Williams and sixty-one others the township of Bennington (named in his
+honor) and it was surveyed in October of that same year. But the
+outbreak of the French and Indian troubles made the occupation of this
+exposed territory impossible until 1761, when there came into the rich
+and fertile country lying about what is now the town of Bennington,
+several families of settlers from Hardwick, Mass., in all numbering
+about twenty souls.
+
+But there had been an earlier survey of the territory along Walloomscoik
+Creek under the old Dutch patent and in 1765 Captain Campbell, under
+instructions from the New York colony, attempted to resurvey this old
+grant. He came to the land of Samuel Robinson who, with his neighbors,
+drove the Yorkers off. For this Robinson and two others were carried to
+Albany where they were confined in the jail for some weeks and afterward
+fined for "rioting." At once the settlers, who had increased greatly
+since '61, saw that they must present their case before the King if they
+would have justice rendered them; so Captain Robinson went to England to
+represent their side of the matter. Unfortunately he died there before
+completing his work.
+
+On the part of the governors of New Hampshire and New York it was merely
+a land speculation, and both officials were after the fees accruing from
+granting the lands; whereas the settlers who had gone upon the farms,
+and established their families and risked their little all in the
+undertaking, bore the brunt of the fight. The speculators and the men
+they desired to place on the farms of the New Hampshire grantees,
+hovered along the Twenty-Mile Line, and occasionally made sorties upon
+the more unprotected farmers, despite the fact that the King had
+instructed the Governor of New York to make no further grants until the
+rights of the controversy should be plainly established. This settled
+determination of the New York authorities to drive them out convinced
+the men of the Grants that they must combine to defend their homes and
+when, early in July, 1771, news came from Albany that Sheriff Ten Eyck
+with a large party of armed men was intending to march to James
+Breckenridge's farm and seize it in the name of the New York government,
+the people of Bennington in town-meeting assembled determined to defend
+their townsman's rights.
+
+Sheriff Ten Eyck started from Albany on the 18th of July with more than
+300 men and at once the settlers began to gather near the threatened
+farmstead. 'Siah Bolderwood having no farm of his own, was sent through
+the country raising men and guns for the defense of the Breckenridge
+place. On his way back he had stopped for Enoch Harding and learning
+that the boy had gone hunting before daybreak, the ranger followed him,
+arriving at the deer-lick in time to render important assistance in the
+dramatic scene just pictured. After crossing the creek at the spot where
+the boy's father had met his frightful and mysterious death a few months
+before, the two volunteers, while still the day was new, reached the
+place of the settlers' gathering.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE AMBUSH
+
+
+The house of James Breckenridge was built at the foot of a slight ridge
+of land running east and west, which ridge was heavily wooded. It was
+only a mile from the Twenty-Mile Line and therefore particularly open to
+attack by the New York authorities. Once before had an attempt been made
+by the grasping land speculators of the sister colony to oust its
+rightful owner, but at that time naught but a wordy controversy had
+ensued, whereas the present attack bade fair to be more serious.
+Breckenridge had sent his family to the settlement in expectation of
+this trouble, while he and his neighbors made ready to meet the sheriff
+and his army. Some of the Bennington men had arrived at the farm the
+evening before when news went forth that the invaders were only seven
+miles away, at Sancock. But the greater number of the defenders came, as
+did 'Siah Bolderwood and young Enoch Harding, soon after sun-up.
+
+This gathering of Grants men was a memorable one. Heretofore, the
+clashes with the Yorkers had been little more than skirmishes in which
+half a dozen or a dozen men on both sides had taken part. Ethan Allen,
+Seth Warner, Remember Baker, and others of the more venturesome spirits,
+had seized some of the land-grabbers and their tools, and delivered upon
+their bared backs more strokes of "the twigs of the wilderness," as
+Allen called the blue beech rods, than the unhappy Yorkers thus treated
+would forget in many a day.
+
+Ethan Allen was not as long in the settlement as many of the other men
+about him; but he was a born leader, and entering heart and soul into
+the cause of the Grants was soon acknowledged the most fiery spirit
+among the settlers. He was born in Litchfield, Conn., January 10, 1737,
+and probably came to the Hampshire Grants some time in '69. Although but
+thirty-four years old at this time he carried his point in most
+arguments regarding the well-being of the settlers, and the Green
+Mountain boys, as his followers came to be called, fairly worshipped
+him. He was singularly handsome, with ruddy face, a ready wit, bold,
+unpolished, brave and almost a giant in size, for though not so tall as
+Seth Warner he was a much heavier and broader man.
+
+With this company of armed men, too, was Remember Baker and his
+flint-lock musket, which seldom left his side waking or sleeping. Baker
+was the best shot on the northern border and performed feats of
+marksmanship with this musket that could scarce be equaled by any of our
+famous marksmen to-day with their improved weapons. Like the stories
+told of Robin Hood and his cloth-yard shafts, Baker could split a wand
+with a bullet and always filed the flint on his musket to a sharp point.
+
+Other men there were in this early morning assembly destined to be heard
+from later in the affairs of the struggling community, but none so
+filled young Enoch Harding's eye as did these two. Remember Baker lived
+not far from the Harding farm and Enoch often went there to visit young
+Robert Baker, or had Robert to stay all night with him at his home. But
+Enoch's closest boy friend was James Breckenridge's nephew, Lot, who was
+two years young Harding's senior and bore arms on this morning with the
+older youths and men. At once when the two spied each other they found
+opportunity to step aside and hold such confidences as boys are wont.
+Yet they were so excited by the prospect of the forthcoming battle with
+the Yorkers that even Nuck's adventure with the catamount was lightly
+passed over.
+
+Meanwhile the settlers were divided into several bands, each captained
+by an efficient officer who, as 'Siah Bolderwood expressed it, "had
+snuffed powder." Bolderwood himself was given command of the larger
+number and arranged his men along the top of the ridge behind the house,
+where they would be concealed by the brush but could draw bead upon any
+person passing along the road or approaching the farmhouse. One hundred
+and twenty under a second leader were hidden beside the road while
+eighteen and an officer were stationed inside the house itself.
+
+These arrangements had scarce been made when a figure was descried
+approaching at top speed. It was a messenger to warn the settlers of the
+coming of the enemy. "Run down to the house, Nuck," commanded 'Siah,
+"and get the news for me. Keep your heads down, lads! Let them Yorkers
+when they come, think there ain't nobody to home!"
+
+Enoch crept through the brush and descended the slope, appearing before
+the house just as the runner reached it. Coming so suddenly from behind
+the dwelling Enoch startled the newcomer, who sprang back and placed his
+hand on the hunting knife at his belt. Then, with a contemptuous grunt,
+the messenger passed Enoch by and lifted the latch-string which had been
+left hanging out. Enoch followed him into the Breckenridge house.
+
+The runner was a tall Indian lad with a keen face and coal-black eyes
+and hair. Enoch knew him, for his people had camped for several years
+near the Harding place. But Jonas Harding had had that contempt for the
+red race which characterized many of the pioneer people and was the
+foundation for more than half the trouble between the whites and reds;
+and he had often expressed this contempt before young Crow Wing, who was
+a chief's son although his tribe was scattered and decimated by disease.
+Crow Wing had hated Enoch's father for his taunts and unkind words, and
+now that the elder Harding was dead the young Indian considered his son
+cast in the same mould and worthy of the same hatred which he had borne
+Jonas. Naturally Enoch would have shared his parent's contempt for the
+Indians; but 'Siah Bolderwood, although he had camped, hunted and fought
+with Enoch's father for so many years, did not share the latter's
+opinion of the Indian character, and from him Enoch had imbibed many
+ideas of late which changed his opinion of the red men. There was a
+time, however, when the white boy had ridiculed Crow Wing and the latter
+had not forgotten.
+
+Enoch watched him now with admiration. The young brave had run for
+several miles, having been sent out toward Sancock by one of the
+settlers for whom he sometimes worked, but he breathed as easily as
+though he had walked instead of run. When one of the men in the
+Breckenridge kitchen spoke to him he answered in a perfectly even voice
+which showed no tremor of fatigue.
+
+"Him sheriff march now," he said. "Mebbe t'ink um t'ree mile off."
+
+"Where did you leave them?" asked the man in command of the house. The
+Indian youth told him. "And how many are there, Crow Wing?" asked
+another.
+
+"Many--many!" cried the Indian, his eyes flashing. He held up both hands
+and spread all his ten fingers rapidly seven times. "Seventy!" cried one
+of the white men. "He means seven hundred," declared the leader. "That
+so, Crow Wing, eh?"
+
+The Indian nodded. "Many white men--many guns," he said.
+
+"It's not true," growled one man. "You can't believe anything an Injin
+says. Where would the New York sheriff get seven hundred men?"
+
+Crow Wing's eyes flashed and he drew himself up proudly. "Me no lie--me
+speak true. Injin not two-tongue like white man!" he declared, with
+scorn, and turning his back on his traducer, stalked out of the house.
+
+The settlers, however, paid little attention to his departure. Enoch
+scuttled back to the ridge where 'Siah was waiting to hear the news.
+There he lay down beside Lot Breckenridge and the two boys talked
+earnestly as the men about them smoked or chatted while waiting for the
+coming of the Yorkers. Seven hundred seemed a great number to oppose.
+The odds would be more than two to one. Despite the ambush which had
+been so carefully laid for them, the sheriff and his men might fight as
+desperately as the settlers themselves.
+
+"Tell ye what!" whispered Lot to Enoch, "I ain't fixin' to git shot.
+Marm didn't want Uncle Jim to let me come, but he said ev'ry gun'd count
+this mornin', so she 'lowed I'd hafter. But she says if I git shot
+she'll larrup me well."
+
+Enoch chuckled. Although Lot was his senior he was more of a child than
+young Harding. The experiences of the last few months had aged Enoch a
+good deal. "My mother won't whip me if I git shot; but I mustn't run
+into danger, for she wouldn't know what to do without me," he said,
+proudly. "Bryce ain't much use yet, you know."
+
+"Zuckers!" exclaimed Lot, "I wisht my marm was like yourn. I ain't got
+no father neither; but Uncle Jim don't let me do nothin', an' marm's
+allus wearin' out a beech twig on me."
+
+"Guess you do somethin' for it," said Enoch, wisely.
+
+"She'd do it jest th' same if I didn't," declared Lot, yet with perfect
+good-nature, as though the Widow Breckenridge's vigorous applications of
+the beech wand was a part of existence not to be escaped. "Gran'pap says
+I might's well be hung for an ole sheep as a lamb, so in course I do
+somethin' for it--mostly."
+
+"If the Yorkers fight we'll hafter stay right here and shoot like the
+men," said Nuck, reflectively. "It'll be like the Injin fights my father
+and 'Siah were in. I s'pose we'll take trees, an' scatter out so't the
+Yorkers can't git up around us here----"
+
+"An' we'll raise the warwhoop an' shoot jest as fast as we kin!"
+exclaimed Lot, excitedly. "Crow Wing taught me the warwhoop last year.
+An' I know how to scalp, too."
+
+"Oh, I wouldn't do that!" exclaimed Enoch, in horror.
+
+"Umph! Yorkers ain't no better'n Injins, an' I'd scalp an Injin,"
+declared Lot, blood-thirstily.
+
+"I wouldn't. My father never did that, an' he was in the war. He said
+that was why the Injins warn't no better'n brute-beasts, an' didn't have
+no souls--'cause they scalped their enemies."
+
+"Be still there, you youngsters!" growled 'Siah, coming down the line.
+"If you want to be men, l'arn to keep yer tongues quiet. Voices carry
+far on a day like this. What'd they say down ter the house, Nuck, 'bout
+the signal?"
+
+"When they want help, or want us to sail into 'em, they're goin' to
+raise a red flag through the chimbley," replied the boy.
+
+"Wal, I'm hopin' they won't fight," said the ranger, squinting along the
+road below the ridge.
+
+"Oh, I wanter see a fight--zuckers, I do!" exclaimed Lot.
+
+"Be still, you bloodthirsty young savage!" commanded 'Siah. "You wanter
+shoot down men of your own color, do ye? Beech-sealin' an' duckin' is
+all right; but it's an awful thing to draw bead on another white man, as
+ye'll l'arn some day."
+
+"But you fought the Frenchmen with the Injins," declared Lot.
+
+"Huh! Them's only half-bred. Frenchmen ain't no more'n savages," said
+'Siah, gloomily.
+
+An hour passed--a long, long time to the excited boys. Then, far down
+the winding road quite a piece of which they could observe from the
+summit of the wooded ridge, was seen the sudden glint of sunlight on
+metal. "They're coming!" the message went round and the settlers in
+ambush crouched more closely behind their screens and even the hearts of
+old Indian fighters beat faster at the nearing prospect of an
+engagement. James Breckenridge, Ethan Allen, and several others advanced
+slowly from the direction of the house to the bridge across which the
+Yorkers must pass. Sheriff Ten Eyck spurred forward with his personal
+staff to meet them. With him came the infamous John Munro who, as a
+justice of the peace under commission from New York, was such a thorn in
+the flesh of the settlers. The sheriff was a very pompous Dutchman who
+believed without question in the validity of New York's jurisdiction
+over the Grants, and who, despite his bombastic manner, was personally
+no coward.
+
+"Master Breckenridge," he said to the man whom he had come to evict from
+his home, "we have heard that you and your neighbors are armed to oppose
+the authority vested in me by His Most Gracious Majesty's colony of New
+York. If there be blood shed this day, it will be upon your head, for I
+here command you to leave this neighborhood and give over the possession
+of this land to its rightful owners."
+
+[Illustration: "I COMMAND YOU TO LEAVE THIS NEIGHBORHOOD"]
+
+"I cannot do that, Master Sheriff," said Breckenridge, quietly. "As for
+blood being upon my head for this day's work, you can see that I am
+unarmed," and he spread his hands widely. "Besides, I have nothing to do
+with this grant at the present time. The township of Bennington has
+taken the farm upon its own hands, and it will oppose your entrance with
+armed resistance. I have nothing to do with it."
+
+"What is the township of Bennington?" demanded Ten Eyck. "This land
+belongs to the colony of New York under the crown. There is no town of
+Bennington. What legal rights have a parcel of squatters to this
+territory?"
+
+Then Allen spoke. "The gods of the valleys are not the gods of the
+hills, Sir Sheriff. You on the other side of the Twenty-Mile Line may
+acknowledge the Governor of New York as your master; we on this side are
+a free people. We have bought our lands from the government to which
+they were granted by the King, and you shall not drive us from them!"
+
+The colloquy ended and the settlers went back toward the house. After
+the main body of his army came up, and their numbers seemed quite as
+formidable as Crow Wing had reported, the sheriff pressed forward across
+the bridge and approached the Breckenridge dwelling. Every settler had
+disappeared by now and even those inside the house were still. Neither
+the sheriff nor his men suspected that quite three hundred guns were
+turned upon them and that, at the first fire, the carnage would be
+terrible.
+
+"Open in the name of the law!" exclaimed Ten Eyck, thundering at the
+stout oak door of the house. "I demand admittance and that all within
+come peaceably forth. Open, or I shall break down the door!"
+
+There was silence for a moment, and then a voice said clearly from
+within: "Attempt it and you are a dead man!"
+
+The reply angered the doughty sheriff. He was being flouted and the
+majesty of the law scorned. That was more than he could quietly bear.
+"Come out and deliver up your arms in the name o' the King!" he cried.
+"Ye rebels! I'll take the last of ye to Albany jail if ye do not
+surrender!"
+
+At this a chorus of derisive groans issued from behind the barred door
+and shutters, and these sounds were echoed by other groans from the men
+in ambush, until the very forest itself seemed deriding the Yorkers. The
+knowledge that he and his men had fallen into a trap did not balk the
+sheriff; his rage rose to white heat and calling for an axe he advanced
+to the attack. The moment was freighted with peril. If the Yorkers
+attacked the house a withering fire would spring from the guns in the
+bushes and on the ridge and blood would flow in plenty in that
+heretofore peaceful vale of the northern forest.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+'SIAH BOLDERWOOD'S STRATAGEM
+
+
+Sheriff Ten Eyck was a man of determination and although he had before
+tested the mettle of the Grants men, he felt a burden of confidence now
+with this army behind him. The ridicule of the party in ambush stung his
+pride, and although warned that a considerable number of settlers were
+hidden in the wood, he was not disposed to temporize. But the men who
+had accompanied him on his nefarious mission were far differently
+impressed by the situation. They had followed the doughty sheriff in the
+hope of plunder, it is true; if the settlers of the Hampshire Grants
+were to be driven incontinently from their homes as Ten Eyck and the
+Governor declared, somebody must benefit by the circumstance, and the
+sheriff's men hoped to be of the benefited party. But this armed
+opposition was disheartening. When the chorus of groans rose from the
+surrounding forest, his men as well as himself, knew that they had
+fallen into ambush, and this thought troubled the Yorkers greatly.
+
+From the top of the ridge 'Siah Bolderwood had heard much of the
+controversy at the door of the Breckenridge house and as the really
+serious moment approached the old ranger was blessed with a sudden
+inspiration. He sprang forward and seizing Enoch Harding by the collar
+dragged him to his knees and whispered a command in his ear. "Quick, you
+young snipe you!" he exclaimed, as Enoch prepared to obey. "Run like the
+wind--and don't let 'em see you or you may get potted!"
+
+Enoch was off in an instant, trailing his gun behind him and stooping
+low that the passage of his body through the brush might not be noted.
+He got the house between him and the sheriff's column and soon reached
+the side of the road where the other settlers in ambush were stationed.
+He found their leader and whispered Bolderwood's message to him.
+Instantly the man caught the idea and the word was passed down the
+straggling line. Enoch did not return but waited with these men, who
+were nearer the enemy, to see the matter out.
+
+The sheriff was on the verge of giving the command to break down the
+door of the besieged house when suddenly a wild yell broke out upon the
+ridge above and was taken up by the settlers in the brush by the
+roadside. It was the warwhoop--the yell which originally incited the red
+warriors to action and was supposed to strike terror to the hearts of
+their enemies. The shrill cry echoed through the wood with startling
+significance. At the same instant every man's cap was raised upon his
+gun barrel and thrust forward into view of the startled Yorkers, while
+the settlers themselves showed their heads, but nearer the ground. Only
+for a moment were they thus visible; then they dropped back into hiding
+again.
+
+But the effect upon the sheriff's unwilling army was paralyzing. The
+Yorkers thought that twice as many men were hidden in the forest as were
+really there, for the hats on the gun barrels had seemed like heads,
+too. They thought every man in Bennington--and indeed, as far east as
+Brattleboro and Westminster--must have come to defend James
+Breckenridge's farm, and they clamored loudly to return to the
+Twenty-Mile Line and safety.
+
+In vain the sheriff fumed and stormed, threatening all manner of
+punishment for his mutinous troops; the army was determined to a man to
+have no conflict with the settlers of the Disputed Ground. Like "the
+noble Duke of York" in the old catch-song familiar at that day, Sheriff
+Ten Eyck had marched his seven hundred or more men up to James
+Breckenridge's door only "to march them down again!" 'Siah Bolderwood's
+idea had taken all the desire for fight out of the Yorkers, and after
+some wrangling between the personal attendants of the sheriff and the
+volunteer army, the whole crew marched away, leaving the farm to the
+undisputed possession of its rightful owner.
+
+When the Yorkers departed the little garrison of the house appeared and
+cheered lustily; but the men in the woods did not come out of hiding
+until the last of the enemy had disappeared, for they did not wish the
+invaders to know how badly they had been deceived regarding their
+numbers. By and by Bolderwood and his men marched down from the ridge
+and 'Siah was congratulated upon his happy thought in bringing about the
+confusion of the Yorkers.
+
+"You've a long head on those narrow shoulders of yours, neighbor,"
+declared Ethan Allen, striking the old ranger heartily on the back.
+"That little wile finished them. And this is the boy I saw trailing
+through the bushes, is it?" and he seized Enoch and turned his face
+upward that he might the better view his features. "Why, holloa, my
+little man! I've seen you before surely?"
+
+"It is poor Jonas Harding's eldest lad, neighbor Allen," Bolderwood
+said. "He's the head of the family now, and bein' sech, had to come
+along to fight the Yorkers."
+
+"I remember your father," declared Allen, kindly. "A noble specimen of
+the Almighty's workmanship. I stopped a night with him once at his
+cabin--do you remember me?"
+
+As though Nuck could have forgotten it! His youthful mind had made Ethan
+Allen a veritable hero ever since, placing him upon a pedestal before
+which he worshipped. But he only nodded for bashfulness.
+
+"You'll make a big man, too," said the giant. "And if you can shoot
+straight there'll be plenty of chance for you later on. This is only the
+beginning, 'Siah," he pursued, turning to Bolderwood and letting his
+huge hand drop from Enoch's head. "There will be court-doings,
+now--writs, and ejectments, and enough red seals to run the King's court
+itself. But while the Yorkers are red-sealing us, we'll blue-seal
+them--if they come over here, eh?" and he went off with a great shout of
+laughter at his own punning.
+
+The men were minded to scatter but slowly. All were rejoiced that the
+battle had been a bloodless one; yet none believed the matter ended. The
+fiasco of the New York sheriff might act as a wet blanket for the time
+upon the movements of the authorities across the line; but the land
+speculators were too numerous and active to allow the people of the
+Grants to remain in peace. Parties of marauders might swoop down at any
+time upon the more unprotected settlers, drive them out of their homes,
+destroy their property, and possibly do bodily injury to the helpless
+people. Methods must be devised to keep these Yorkers on their own side
+of the disputed line. Those settlers, such as the widow Harding, who
+were least able to protect themselves, must have the help of their
+neighbors. The present victory proved the benefit to be derived from
+concerted action. Now, in the flush of this triumph, the leaders went
+among the yeomanry who had gathered here and outlined a plan for
+permanent military organization. In all the colonies at that day,
+"training bands," or militia, had become popular, made so in part by the
+interest aroused by the wars with the French and Indians. Many of the
+men who joined these military companies did not look deeply into the
+affairs of the colonies, nor were they much interested in politics; but
+their leaders looked ahead--just as did Ethan Allen and his conferees in
+the Grants--and realized that an armed yeomanry might some time be
+called upon to face hirelings of the King.
+
+"Even a lad like you can bear a rifle, and your mother will spare you
+from the farm for drill," Allen said, with his hand again on Enoch's
+shoulder, before riding away. "I shall expect to see Jonas Harding's boy
+at Bennington when word is sent round for the first drill." And Enoch,
+his heart beating high with pride at this notice, promised to gain his
+mother's permission if possible.
+
+Bolderwood had already gone, and Lot Breckenridge detained Enoch until
+after the dinner hour. Lot would have kept him all night, but the latter
+knew his mother would be anxious to see him safe home, and he started an
+hour or two before sunset, on the trail which Bolderwood and he had
+followed early in the morning. Being one of the last to leave James
+Breckenridge's house, he traveled the forest alone. But he had no
+feeling of fear. The trails and by-paths were as familiar to him as the
+streets of his hometown are to a boy of to-day. And the numberless
+sounds which reached his ears were distinguished and understood by the
+pioneer boy. The hoarse laugh of the jay as it winged its way home over
+the tree-tops, the chatter of the squirrel in the hollow oak, the sudden
+scurry of deer in the brake, the barking of a fox on the hillside, were
+all sounds with which Enoch Harding was well acquainted.
+
+As he crossed a heavily shadowed creek, a splash in the water attracted
+his particular attention and he crept to the brink in time to see a pair
+of sleek dark heads moving swiftly down the stream. Soon the heads
+stopped, bobbed about near a narrow part of the stream, and finally came
+out upon the bank, one on either side. The trees stood thick together
+here, and both animals attacked a straight, smooth trunk standing near
+the creek, their sharp teeth making the chips fly as they worked. They
+were a pair of beavers beginning a dam for the next winter. Enoch marked
+the spot well. About January he would come over with Lot, or with Robbie
+Baker, stop up the mouth of the beaver's tunnel, break in the dome of
+his house, and capture the family. Beaver pelts were a common article of
+barter in a country where real money was a curiosity.
+
+But watching the beavers delayed Enoch and it was growing dark in the
+forest when he again turned his face homewards. He knew the path well
+enough--the runway he traveled was so deep that he could scarce miss it
+and might have followed it with his eyes blindfolded,--but he quickened
+his pace, not desiring to be too late in reaching his mother's cabin.
+Unless some neighbor had passed and given them the news of the victory
+at James Breckenridge's they might be worried for fear there had
+actually been a battle. Deep in the forest upon the mountainside there
+sounded the human-like scream of a catamount, and the memory of his
+adventure of the morning was still very vivid in his mind. He began to
+fear his mother's censure for his delay, too, for Mistress Harding
+brought up her children to strict obedience and Enoch, man though he
+felt himself to be because of this day's work, knew he had no business
+to loiter until after dark in the forest.
+
+He stumbled on now in some haste and was approaching the ford in the
+wide stream near which he had shot the doe, when a flicker of light off
+at one side of the trail attracted his attention. It was a newly kindled
+campfire and the pungent smoke of it reached his nostrils at the instant
+the flame was apparent to his eyes. He leaped behind a tree and peered
+through the thickening darkness at the spot where the campfire was
+built. His heart beat rapidly, for despite the supposed peacefulness of
+the times there was always the possibility of enemies lurking in the
+forest. And the settlers had grown wary since the controversy with the
+Yorkers became so serious.
+
+Enoch was nearing the boundaries of his father's farm now and ever since
+Simon Halpen had endeavored to evict them and especially since Jonas
+Harding's death, the possibility of the Yorkers' return had been a
+nightmare to Enoch. Lying a moment almost breathless behind the tree, he
+began to recover his presence of mind and fortitude. First he freshened
+the priming of his gun and then, picking his way cautiously, approached
+the campfire. Like a shadow he flitted from tree to tree and from brush
+clump to stump, circling the camp, but ever drawing nearer. With the
+instinct of the born wood-ranger he took infinite pains in approaching
+the spot and from the moment he had observed the light he spent nearly
+an hour in circling about until he finally arrived at a point where he
+could view successfully the tiny clearing.
+
+Now, at once, he descried a figure sitting before the blaze. The man had
+his back against a tree and that is why Enoch had found such difficulty
+at first in seeing him. He was nodding, half asleep, with his cap pulled
+down over his eyes, so that only the merest outline of his face was
+revealed. It was apparent that he had eaten his own supper, for there
+were the indications of the meal upon the ground; but it looked as
+though he expected some other person to join him. The wind began to moan
+in the tree-tops; far away the mournful scream of the catamount broke
+the silence again. The boy cast his gaze upward into the branches,
+feeling as though one of the terrible creatures, with which he had
+engaged in so desperate a struggle that very morning, was even then
+watching him from the foliage.
+
+[Illustration: A HAND WAS PRESSED OVER HIS LIPS]
+
+And he was indeed being watched, and by eyes well nigh as keen as those
+of the wild-cat. While he stood behind the tree, all of half a gun-shot
+from the camp, a figure stepped silently out of the shadows and stood at
+his elbow before the startled lad realized that he was not alone. A
+vice-like hand seized his arm so that he could not turn his rifle upon
+this unexpected enemy. Before he could cry out a second hand was pressed
+firmly over his parted lips. "No speak!" breathed a voice in Enoch
+Harding's ear. "If speak, white boy die!"
+
+It was Crow Wing, the young Iroquois, and Enoch obeyed. He found himself
+forced rapidly away from the campfire and when they were out of ear-shot
+of the unconscious stranger, and not until then, did the grasp of the
+Indian relax. "What do you want with me?" Enoch demanded, in a whisper.
+The other did not reply. He only pushed the white boy on until they came
+to the ford of the creek where Enoch and 'Siah Bolderwood had crossed
+early in the day. There Crow Wing released him altogether and pointed
+sternly across the river. "Your house--that way!" he said. "Go!"
+
+"Who is that man back yonder?" cried Enoch, angrily. "You can't make me
+do what you say----"
+
+Crow Wing tapped the handle of the long knife at his belt suggestively.
+"White boy go--go now!" he commanded again, and in spite of his being
+armed with a rifle while the Indian had no such weapon, Enoch felt
+convinced that it would be wiser for him to obey without parley.
+Although Crow Wing could not have been three years his senior, he was
+certainly the master on this occasion. With lagging step he descended
+the bank and began to ford the stream. He glanced back and saw the
+Indian, standing like a statue of bronze, on the bank above him. When he
+reached the middle of the stream, however, he felt the full ignominy of
+his retreat before a foe who was not armed equally with himself. What
+would Bolderwood say if he told him? What would his father have done?
+
+He swung about quickly and raised the rifle to his shoulder. But the
+Indian lad had gone. Not an object moved upon the further shore of the
+creek and, after a minute or two of hesitation, the white boy stumbled
+on through the stream and reached the other bank. He was angry with
+himself for being afraid of Crow Wing, and he was also angry that he had
+not seen the face of the stranger at the campfire. It must have been
+somebody whom Crow Wing knew and did not wish the white boy to see.
+Enoch Harding continued his homeward way, his mind greatly disturbed by
+the adventure and with a feeling of deep resentment against the Indian
+youth.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE PIONEER HOME
+
+
+Enoch arrived feeling not of half so much importance as he had on
+starting from the Breckenridge farm. His adventure with Crow Wing had
+mightily taken down his self-conceit. Like most of the settlers he had
+very little confidence in the Indian character; so, although Crow Wing
+had rendered the defenders of the Grants a signal service that very day,
+Enoch was not at all sure that the red youth was not helping the
+Yorkers, too.
+
+But when he came out of the wood at the edge of the great corn-field
+which his father had cleared first of all, and saw the light of the
+candles shining through the doorway of the log house, he forgot his
+recent rage against Crow Wing and hurried on to greet those whom he
+loved. The children came running out to meet him and the light of the
+candles was shrouded as his mother's tall form appeared in the doorway.
+Bryce, who was eleven years old, was almost as tall as Enoch, although
+he lacked his elder brother's breadth of shoulders and gravity of
+manner. Enoch was deliberate in everything he did; Bryce was of a more
+nervous temperament and was apt to act upon impulse. He was a
+fair-haired boy and was forever smiling. Now he reached Nuck first and
+fairly hugged him around the neck, exclaiming:
+
+"We thought you were shot! However came you to be so long comin' back,
+Nuck? Mother's quite worritted 'bout you, she says."
+
+Katie, the fly-away sister of ten, hurled herself next upon her elder
+brother and seized the heavy rifle from his hands. "Look out for it,
+Kate!" commanded Nuck. "It's been freshly primed." But Katie was not
+afraid of firearms. She shouldered the gun and marched bravely toward
+the house. Mary, demure and curly headed, and little Harry, remained
+nearer the door, and lifted their faces to be kissed in turn by Enoch
+when he arrived. Then the boy turned to his mother.
+
+"Come in, my son," she said. "I have saved your supper for you. I could
+not send the children to bed before you came. They were a-well nigh wild
+to see you and hear about the doings at farmer Breckenridge's. You are
+late."
+
+This was all she said regarding his tardiness at the moment. She was a
+very pleasant featured woman of thirty-five, with kind eyes and a
+cheery, if grave, smile; but Enoch knew she could be stern enough if
+occasion required. Indeed, she was a far stricter disciplinarian than
+his father had been. They crowded into the house and Mrs. Harding went
+to the fire and hung the pot over the glowing coals to heat again the
+stewed venison which she had saved for Enoch's supper.
+
+"Tell us about it, Enoch, my son," she said. "Did the Yorkers come as
+friend Bolderwood said they would--in such numbers?"
+
+"In greater numbers," declared the boy, and he went on to recount the
+incidents of the morning when Sheriff Ten Eyck had demanded the
+surrender of the Breckenridge house and farm. The incident had appealed
+strongly to the boy and he drew a faithful picture of the scene when the
+army of Yorkers marched up to the farmhouse door and demanded admission.
+
+"And Mr. Allen was there and spoke to me--he did!" declared Enoch. "He's
+a master big man--and so handsome. He asked me if I remembered his
+coming here once to see father, and he told me to be sure and go to
+Bennington when the train-band is mustered in. I can, can't I, mother?"
+
+"And me, too!" cried Bryce. "I can carry Nuck's musket now't he shoots
+with father's gun. I can shoot, too--from a rest."
+
+"Huh!" exclaimed his elder brother, "you can't carry the old musket
+even, and march."
+
+"Yes I can!"
+
+"No you can't!"
+
+But the mother's voice recalled the boys to their better behavior. "I
+will talk with 'Siah Bolderwood about your joining the train-band,
+Enoch. And if you go to Bennington with Enoch, Bryce, who will defend
+our home? You must stay here and guard mother and the other children, my
+boy."
+
+Bryce felt better at that suggestion and the argument between Enoch and
+himself was dropped. The widow soon sent all but Enoch to bed in the
+loft over the kitchen and living room of the cabin. There was a bedroom
+occupied by herself partitioned off from the living room, while Enoch
+slept on a "shakedown" near the door. This he had insisted upon doing
+ever since his father's death.
+
+"You were very late in returning, my son," said the widow when the
+others had climbed the ladder to the loft.
+
+"Yes, marm."
+
+"You did not come right home?"
+
+"No, marm. I stayed to eat with Lot Breckenridge. And then I wanted to
+hear the men talk."
+
+"You should have started earlier for home, Enoch," she said, sternly.
+
+"Well, I'd got here pretty near sunset if it hadn't been for somethin'
+that happened just the other side of the crick," Enoch declared,
+forgetting the fact that he had stopped to watch the beavers before ever
+he saw the campfire in the wood.
+
+"What was it?" she asked.
+
+"There's somebody over there--a tall man, but I couldn't see his
+face----"
+
+"Where?"
+
+"Beyond the crick; 'twarn't half a mile from where father was killed at
+the deer-lick. I saw a light in the bushes. It was a campfire an' I
+couldn't go by without seein' what it was for. So I crept up on it an'
+bymeby I saw the man."
+
+"You don't know who he was?" asked the widow, quickly.
+
+"No, marm."
+
+"Did he have a dark face and was his nose hooked?"
+
+"I couldn't see his face. He was sittin' down all the time. His face was
+shaded with his cap. He sat with his back up against a tree. I was a
+long while gittin' near enough to see him, an' then----"
+
+"Well, what happened, my son?"
+
+"Then that Crow Wing--you know him; the Injin boy that useter live down
+the crick with his folks--Crow Wing come out of the forest an' grabbed
+me an' told me not to holler or he'd kill me. I wasn't 'zactly 'fraid of
+him," added Enoch, thinking some explanation necessary, "but I saw if I
+fought him it would bring the man at the fire to help, and I couldn't
+fight two of 'em, anyway. The pesky Injin made me walk to the crick with
+him an' then he told me to go home and not come back. I wish 'Siah
+Bolderwood was here. We'd fix 'em!"
+
+"The Indian threatened you!" cried the widow. "Have you done anything to
+anger him, Enoch? I know your father was very bitter toward them all;
+but I hoped----"
+
+"I never done a thing to him!" declared the boy. "I don't play with him
+much, though Lot does; but I let him alone. I useter make fun of him
+b'fore--b'fore 'Siah told me more about his folks. Crow Wing's father is
+a good friend to the whites. He fought with our folks ag'in the French
+Injins."
+
+"But who could the man have been?" asked the widow, gravely. "The
+children saw a man lurking about the corn-field at the lower end to-day.
+And when I was milking, Mary came and told me that he was then across
+the river at the ox-bow, looking over at the house. If it should be
+Simon Halpen! He will not give up his hope of getting our rich pastures,
+I am afraid. We must watch carefully, Enoch."
+
+"I'll shoot him if he comes again!" declared the boy, belligerently.
+Then he closed and barred the door and rapidly prepared for bed. His
+mother retired to her own room, but long after Enoch was soundly
+sleeping on his couch, the good woman was upon her knees beside her bed.
+Although she was proud to see Enoch so sturdy and helpful, she feared
+this controversy with the Yorkers would do him much harm; and it was for
+him, as well as for the safety of them all in troublous times, that she
+prayed to the God in whom she so implicitly trusted.
+
+The next day 'Siah Bolderwood came striding up to the cabin with the
+carcass of the doe Enoch had shot across his shoulders, and found the
+widow at her loom, just within the door. She welcomed the lanky ranger
+warmly, for he had not only been her husband's closest friend but had
+been of great assistance to her children and herself since Jonas' death.
+"The children will be glad to see you, 'Siah," she said. "I will call
+them up early and get supper for us all. I will have raised biscuit,
+too--it is not often you get anything but Johnny-cake, I warrant. The
+boys are working to clear the new lot to-day."
+
+"Aye, I saw them as I came along," said Bolderwood, laughing. "There was
+Mistress Kate on top of a tall stump, her black hair flying in the wind,
+and Nuck's old musket in her hands. She said she was on guard, and she
+hailed me before I got out of the wood. Her eyes are sharp."
+
+"She should have been a boy," sighed the widow. "Indeed, this wilderness
+is no place for girls at all."
+
+"Bless their dear little souls!" exclaimed Bolderwood, with feeling.
+"What'd we do without Kate an' Mary? They keep the boys sweet, mistress!
+And Kate's as good as a boy any day when it comes to looking out for
+herself; while as I came through the stumpage Mary was working with the
+best of 'em to pull roots and fire-weed."
+
+"The boys want a stump-burning as soon as possible. Jonas got the new
+lot near cleared. There's only the rubbish to burn."
+
+"Good idea. Nuck and Bryce are doing well.... But what was the sentinel
+for?"
+
+"It isn't all play," said the widow, stopping her work and speaking
+seriously. "Yesterday the children saw a strange man hanging about the
+creek yonder. And last night on his way back from Master Breckenridge's,
+Enoch saw a campfire in the forest and a man sitting by it. An Indian
+youth whom perhaps you have seen here--Crow Wing, he is called--was with
+the man. Crow Wing drove Enoch off before he could find out who the
+white man was."
+
+"Crow Wing, eh?" repeated 'Siah, shaking his head thoughtfully. "I know
+the red scamp. If he was treated right by the settlers, though, he'd be
+decent enough. But he got angry at Breckenridge's yesterday, they tell
+me. Somebody spoke roughly to him. You can ruffle the feathers of them
+birds mighty easy."
+
+This was all the comment the ranger made upon the story; but later he
+wandered down to the new lot which the Hardings were clearing, and
+instead of lending a hand inquired particularly of Enoch where he had
+seen the campfire the night before. Learning the direction he plunged
+into the wood without further ado and went to the ford, crossing it with
+caution and going at once to the vicinity of the fire which Enoch had
+observed. But the ashes had been carefully covered and little trace of
+the occupation of the spot left. At one point, however, 'Siah found
+where two persons--a white man and a red one--had embarked in a canoe
+which had been hidden under the bank of the creek. Evidently Crow Wing
+had expected the place would be searched and had done all in his power
+to mystify the curious.
+
+When 'Siah returned Mistress Harding had called up the children and
+supper--a holiday meal--was almost ready. A lamb had been killed the day
+before and was stuffed and baked in the Dutch oven. There were light
+white-flour biscuits, Enoch had ridden to Bennington with the wheat
+slung across his saddle to have it ground, and there was sweet butter
+and refined maple sap which every family in the Grants boiled down in
+the spring for its own use, although as yet there was little market for
+it. It was a jolly meal, for when 'Siah came the children were sure of
+something a bit extra, both to eat and to do. He taught the girls how to
+make doll babies with cornsilk hair, and begged powder and shot of their
+mother for Bryce and Enoch to use in shooting at a mark. Under his
+instructions Enoch had become a fairly good marksman, while Bryce, by
+resting his gun in the fork of a sapling set upright in the ground, did
+almost as well as his elder brother.
+
+After supper Bolderwood talked with the widow while he smoked his pipe.
+"We need boys like Enoch, Mistress Harding," he said. "While he's young
+I don't dispute, he's big for his age and can handle that rifle pretty
+well. You must let him go up to Bennington next week and drill with the
+other young fellows. There will be no need of his going on any raids
+with the older men. We shall keep the boys out of it, and most of the
+beech-sealin' will be done by the men who hain't got no fam'blies here
+and are free in their movements. But the drill will be good for him and
+the time may come when all this drillin' will pay."
+
+"You really look for serious trouble with the Yorkers, Master
+Bolderwood?" she asked.
+
+"I reckon I do. With them or--or others. Things is purty tick'lish--you
+know that, widder. The King ain't treatin' us right, an' his ministers
+and advisers don't care anything about these colonies, 'ceptin' if we
+don't make 'em rich. Then they trouble us. And the governors are mostly
+all alike. I don't think a bit better of Benning Wentworth than I do of
+these 'ere New York governors. They don't re'lly care nothin' for us
+poor folk."
+
+So the widow agreed to allow Enoch to go to Bennington; and when the day
+came for the gathering of those youths and men who could be spared from
+the farms, to meet there, he mounted the old claybank mare, his shoes
+and stockings slung before him over the saddle bow that his great toes
+might be the easier used as spurs, and with a bag of corn behind him to
+be left for grinding at the mill, trotted along the trail to the
+settlement. Before he had gone far on the road he saw other men and boys
+bound in the same direction. Remember Baker passed him, with Robbie, his
+boy, perched behind on the saddle, and clinging like a leech to his
+father's coat-tails as the horse galloped over the rough road. Enoch saw
+Robbie later, however, and invited him to the stump burning which was to
+take place the following week. He saw Lot Breckenridge, too, at the
+Green Mountain Inn, and invited him to come, and sent word to other boys
+and girls in the Breckenridge neighborhood.
+
+Lot's mother would not let him carry a gun, but he had come to look on
+and see the "greenhorns" take their first lesson in the manual of arms.
+Stephen Fay, mine host of the "Catamount" Inn as the hostlery had come
+to be called--a large, jocund individual who was a Grants man to the
+core and earnest in the cause of the Green Mountain Boys--made all
+welcome and the old house was crowded from daylight till dark. In the
+gallery which ran along the face of the inn, even with the second story
+windows, the ladies of the town sat and viewed the maneuvres of the
+newly formed train-band. Before the door stood the twenty-five foot post
+that held the sign and was likewise capped by a stuffed catamount, in a
+very lifelike pose, its grinning teeth and extended claws turned toward
+the New York border in defiance of "Yorker rule."
+
+The leaders of the party which had suggested these drills--all staunch
+Whigs and active in their defiance of the Yorkers,--met together in the
+inn that day, too, and laid plans for a campaign against certain
+settlers from New York who had come into the Grants and taken up farms
+without having paid the New Hampshire authorities for the same. In not
+all cases had these New York settlers driven off people who had bought
+the land of New Hampshire or her agents; but if it was really the
+property of that colony the Yorkers had no right upon the eastern side
+of the Twenty-Mile Line, or on that side of the lake, at all. As far
+north as the opposite shore from Fort Ticonderoga, that key to the
+Canadian route which had been wrested from the French but a few years
+before, Yorkers had settled; and the Green Mountain Boys determined that
+these people must leave the Disputed Ground or suffer for their
+temerity.
+
+After the failure of Ten Eyck to capture the Breckenridge farm, New York
+began a system of flattery and underhanded methods against the Grants
+men which was particularly effective. The Yorkers chose certain more or
+less influential individuals and offered them local offices, gifts of
+money, and even promised royal titles to some, if they would range
+themselves against the Green Mountain Boys. In some cases these offers
+were accepted; in this way John Munro had become a justice of the peace,
+and Benjamin Hough followed his example. Some foolish folk went so far
+as to accept commissions as New York officers, but hoped to hide the
+fact from their neighbors until a fitting season--when the Grants were
+not afflicted with the presence of the Green Mountain Boys. But in
+almost every case such cowardly sycophants were discovered and either
+made ridiculous before their neighbors by being tried and hoisted in a
+chair before the Catamount Inn, or were sealed with the twigs of the
+wilderness--and the Green Mountain Boys wielded the beech wands with no
+light hand.
+
+Almost every week the military drills were held in Bennington and Enoch
+attended. But before the second one the "stump burning" came off at the
+Harding place and that was an occasion worthy of being chronicled.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE STUMP BURNING
+
+
+Enoch and Lot Breckenridge, with Robbie Baker, had completed all the
+plans for the stump burning that first training day at Bennington. Lot,
+who lived so far from the Harding cabin, agreed to come over the night
+before if his mother would let him, and Robbie was to remain with Enoch
+the night after. The stumps and rubbish would be pretty well piled up
+and fired by afternoon, and then the boys could run races, and play
+games, and perhaps shoot at a mark, until supper-time. Mrs. Harding had
+already promised if the boys worked well to make a nice supper for them.
+
+"An' we'll have the girls," said Lot.
+
+"Oh, what good'll they be at a stump burnin'?" demanded young Baker,
+ungallantly.
+
+"Lots o' good. They allus want good times, too," said Lot, standing up
+for his sisters manfully. "You have no sisters, an' that's why you don't
+want 'em."
+
+"They'll be in the way. Their frocks'll git torn if they help us, an'
+they'll git afire--or--or somethin'!"
+
+"Nuck's sisters will be there. They'll want other girls," said the wise
+Lot. "An' b'sides, Mis' Harding'll be lots better to us if the girls is
+there. She allus is--my marm is. Mothers like girls, but boys is only a
+nuisance, they says." Lot had drawn these conclusions from the remarks
+of his own mother, who was troubled by many children and lacked that
+"faculty," as New England folk used to term it, for bringing them up
+cheerfully.
+
+"I guess we'll get a better supper if the girls are there," admitted
+Nuck, quietly.
+
+"But what'll they do?" demanded Robbie, the embryo woman-hater.
+
+"I'll get mother ter be layin' out a quilt, or something, an' the girls
+can help about that."
+
+"Zuckers!" cried Lot. "We'll have the finest time ever was. I'll be sure
+an' tell ev'rybody down my way. An' we'll all bring powder an' shot; it
+won't matter so much about guns, for them that don't have 'em can borry
+of them that has, when it comes to shootin'."
+
+"And I'll get Master Bolderwood to come an' be empire," declared Nuck,
+no farther out in his pronunciation of the word than some boys are
+nowadays.
+
+So the girls were allowed to come, and an hour or two after sun-up on
+the day in question the Harding place was fairly overrun with young folk
+of both sexes. Those boys who came from a goodly distance brought their
+sisters with them; but the greater number of the girls, living within a
+radius of a few miles of the Harding cabin, did not come until after
+dinner, having to remain at home to help their own mothers before
+attending the merrymaking.
+
+And what a merrymaking it was! Truly, all work and no play makes Jack a
+dull boy, and in a country and at a time when all young people had to
+work almost as hard as their parents, the pioneer fathers and mothers
+encouraged the young folk to mix pleasure well with their tasks. Indeed,
+it was a system followed by the older folks as well on many occasions.
+Corn-shuckings, apple-parings, log-rollings, sugaring-off--all these
+tasks even down to "hog-killings"--were made the excuse for social
+gatherings. The idea of helping one another in the heavier tasks of
+their existence on the frontier was likewise combined in this. Many
+hands make light work, and a cabin which would have kept one family busy
+for a fortnight was often put up and the roof of drawn shingles laid in
+a day's time, by the neighbors of the proprietor of the new structure
+all taking hold of the work.
+
+So in this stump burning, which usually followed upon the clearing of a
+new piece of ground. More than a year before Jonas Harding had begun on
+this lot, with the intention of clearing it entirely and in the end
+having a handsome piece of grass-land along the edge of the creek. In
+the fall a fire had run over the piece and now the stumps were mostly
+dead, although the fire-weed was waist high. Some of the stumps had
+already been pulled up, but many were too large for the muscles of the
+young Hardings and it was the help of their companions to pull these
+stumps to which they looked forward to-day.
+
+With patience remarkable in such youngsters, Enoch and Bryce had dug
+around the base of all the big stumps, had cut off the long side roots,
+and when possible had dug beneath and cut the tap-root of the tree, thus
+making the final extraction of the big stumps all the easier of
+accomplishment. They were piled up and set burning, and round these
+bonfires the boys danced like wild Indians and kept the fires fed up to
+noon-time. Between the sunshine and the flames the youngsters were all
+pretty well scorched by then.
+
+But before the horn was blown for dinner there were two arrivals on the
+scene, one joyfully welcomed by all and the other rather unexpected but
+not less welcome to many of the boys. 'Siah Bolderwood entered the
+clearing from a forest-path at almost the same instant that a lithe
+young figure appeared from the direction of the creek. Enoch ran to his
+old friend and hugged him in his delight. "Ain't I glad you've come,
+'Siah! We got most of the work done; we're goin' to get lots of nice
+ashes, too. We're goin' ter have races and a wrastling match after
+dinner."
+
+"Hullo! who's this?" said 'Siah, pointing across the clearing.
+
+Enoch turned to see the Indian youth, Crow Wing, striding up from the
+water's edge. A good half of the boys had turned with shouts of welcome
+to meet him, for he was popular with them. Ordinarily Crow Wing was a
+very social fellow and taught the white boys to make arrows, string
+their bows, build canoes, and set ingenious snares. "I don't want him
+here!" declared Enoch to the ranger.
+
+"Tut, tut, what do you care? There's no need in your making an enemy of
+that fellow, Nuck. Let him be."
+
+"But think how he used me the other night when I was trying to find out
+about that man in the woods! I don't like him."
+
+"Well, we can't like everybody in this world," said Bolderwood,
+philosophically. "We gotter take folks as we find 'em--that's my motter.
+You let the Injin stay. He's come to help and to have the fun arterward;
+you sent 'round the invitation pretty promisc'us like, an' I calkerlate
+you can't ask him to leave 'thout makin' yerself mighty onpop'lar. Take
+my advice an' let him stay."
+
+So, much against his will, Enoch did so. But he and the Indian lad
+avoided each other and nothing Crow Wing did could gain any word of
+approbation from his young host. However, Crow Wing and Bolderwood were
+in time to help do the heaviest of the work and soon the last stump was
+out of the soil and piled upon a flaming pyre. The several bonfires
+could not spread to the underbrush, so the boys were able to leave them
+for the time and rush away to the creek for a swim before dinner. After
+they had washed off the smut and smoke, they engaged in races and in
+diving matches until the horn blew to recall them to the house. In all
+aquatic sports Lot Breckenridge was the master, for even Crow Wing could
+not perform the tricks that he could, nor could the Indian swim so far
+nor so fast.
+
+Mistress Harding had arranged two long tables outside the cabin, making
+them of planks and "horses," and spreading her unbleached sheets over
+them for table-cloths. The girls had picked flowers and decorated the
+tables very prettily. There were all kinds and conditions of dishes for
+use--earthen, tin, pewter, and even wooden bowls carved out of "whorls."
+And as for spoons and knives and forks--well, they were very scarce
+indeed. But every boy carried a pocket or hunting knife, and some had
+even been thoughtful enough to bring a knife and fork from home.
+Nevertheless, despite the lack of articles which we now consider the
+commonest of possessions, the table manners of these pioneer boys and
+girls were very good. They were on their best behavior while visiting,
+and the presence of the girls had a good influence on the boys.
+
+The dinner was not to be the great meal of the day, for the boys did not
+wish to eat too much before the activities of the afternoon. Mistress
+Harding and the big girls had promised several dainties for supper,
+among which was a berry pudding, the girls having picked the berries
+that morning while their brothers were clearing the stumpage. The day
+before Enoch had shot a quantity of wood-pigeons, too, and there was to
+be a huge pigeon pie baked in the Dutch oven. There could be no stuffed
+lamb on this occasion, however; sheep were too hard to raise and the
+pioneers tasted mutton but seldom, for the fleece was too valuable for
+them to kill the animal which supplied it. But Bolderwood had brought in
+a fawn which he had hung until it was of the right flavor, and this was
+dressed and roasted like a young kid. When the boys heard of these good
+things it almost took their appetites away at the dinner table, for they
+did not wish to eat more than was absolutely necessary before the
+holiday supper.
+
+They were quickly back in the new lot, raked the fires together, flung
+the last root and chip on the blaze, and then repaired to the level
+meadow by the riverside where the games were to take place. The meadow
+had been mown some days before (they always got two mowings a season off
+the rich creek bottoms) and the new grass had sprung up just enough to
+be soft and velvety to the feet. Off came the shoes and stockings of
+those boys who had been trammeled by such articles of attire--all except
+Crow Wing. He still wore his moccasins. The foot-races were to come
+first, and Bolderwood and Lot carefully measured the distance along the
+bank where the land was almost level, setting stakes at either end of
+the course. It was not a long run and everybody lined up for the first
+trial and they charged down upon the further stake like a gang of wild
+colts. Crow Wing, Enoch, Lot, and Robbie Baker were easily ahead of the
+others, and they with two more who had shown promise, were lined up for
+a second trial. This was really to be the contest and the six prepared
+to do their best, while the onlookers, girls and all, cheered their
+favorites.
+
+Bolderwood lined up the half dozen youths very carefully. The white boys
+had thrown aside their outer shirts so as to give the freer play to
+their muscles. Crow Wing wore but one upper garment anyway, and he made
+no change in his dress excepting to pull his belt a little tighter. When
+the ranger had them placed to his satisfaction and all had signified
+that they were ready, he started them off with a shout. This time the
+race was to be down to the further post and back again, each contestant
+being obliged to go around the post before turning back, and a watch was
+set there that no one should make a mistake in this. There was a swift
+patter of feet on the sod for a minute and then Crow Wing and Enoch
+forged ahead. They rounded the stake almost together and came down the
+home stretch far in the lead of the other contestants. First the white
+boy was ahead, then the Indian, and finally when the race ended they
+were elbow to elbow and one not an inch in advance of the other!
+
+The spectators cheered lustily, but the race must be run over by these
+two to learn who really was the winner. Bolderwood allowed them a few
+minutes between the trials; but the Indian did not seem to need the
+rest. He still breathed easily, while Enoch lay panting on the sod. The
+white boy finally went to the line with the assurance in his own heart
+that he should be beaten; but he was too plucky to give up the fight
+without trying again. This race was even more hardly contested than the
+others had been and although it was apparent that Crow Wing ran more
+easily than did Enoch, the latter worked so hard that it was doubtful
+for a time whether the Indian could win after all. Enoch ran until his
+knees almost gave under him and his breath came in great gasps from his
+chest. Had he been a less healthy and active boy he might have
+permanently injured himself from the overstrain of the contest. As it
+was, Crow Wing managed to cross the line first and was pronounced
+champion.
+
+Enoch had just strength enough to shake the winner's hand before he fell
+upon the grass, and there he lay exhausted while the other boys held a
+"potato race" and jumped hurdles. It provoked young Harding terribly to
+see how seemingly fresh Crow Wing still was, while he was nearly dead
+with fatigue. He began to take interest in the proceedings, however,
+when his brother Bryce won the potato race after a close contest with
+Robbie Baker; and rejoiced when Lot beat Crow Wing in jumping. "That red
+rascal ain't goin' to beat everybody here," thought Enoch, and he got up
+and ceased sulking.
+
+The wrestling match was the last of the day's sports. Bolderwood paired
+the boys off to the best of his judgment for the first bout; but the
+winners drew lots to see who they should wrestle with the second time.
+Lot had Crow Wing for an antagonist on this occasion, and Enoch was
+paired with Smith Hubbard, a hulking great fellow, bigger and taller
+than any other boy in the crowd. But he was also slower and more awkward
+than most, having won his first throw by sheer weight rather than skill.
+Enoch threw him fairly at the second trial, while the Indian lad quite
+as easily worsted young Breckenridge.
+
+The winners drew again and Enoch had quite a tug with another
+contestant; but Crow Wing put his antagonist on the ground three times
+in succession, and with apparent ease. It was plain that the match was
+to end with another contest between the Indian and Enoch Harding and the
+interest waxed high. Enoch was determined to keep his head and control
+his temper this time. Crow Wing was nominally his guest and he played
+fair; there was no reason why he should not bear off all the honors if
+he could do so. But the white boy determined to give the red the fight
+of his life for the honor of champion wrestler.
+
+Enoch had long been considered the best wrestler among the boys of his
+age. Although Lot was older and taller than him, he threw the bigger boy
+easily. Crow Wing had quite as easily worsted young Breckenridge; but
+when the Indian and Enoch finally faced each other in the ring the
+latter gritted his teeth and determined to put forth every ounce of
+strength, and use every legitimate trick he knew, to beat his
+antagonist.
+
+He had recovered his wind now and felt fresh and strong. He measured the
+lithe form of Crow Wing before the word was given and saw that, although
+the Indian was doubtless stronger than he in the legs and through the
+loins, where much of the strain comes in a wrestling match, his own arms
+and shoulders were much better. Crow Wing ran a great deal, or walked.
+He was on the trail almost continually, and thus his leg muscles were
+splendidly developed. Whereas the white boy swung an axe or wielded a
+hoe almost every day and the upper part of his body was in excellent
+condition. He saw that if he could seize Crow Wing quickly and with a
+first effort overpower him, the victory would be his.
+
+So he went into the wrestling match with the intention of getting a
+"down" at once, and the first round was over almost before Crow Wing
+knew what Enoch was about. "A fair fall! a fair fall!" cried the boys,
+and danced about the pair as it was seen that both Crow Wing's hips and
+his shoulders were squarely on the turf. The Indian rose slowly,
+evidently much surprised by the white boy's tactics. If he was angry he
+did not show it. His face was as passive as ever.
+
+"Quick work that," said Bolderwood. "You'll have to wake up, Crow Wing,
+if you want to get the best of Nuck."
+
+"Hurrah for Nuck!" shouted the boys.
+
+But the second trial was another matter. Crow Wing approached warily. He
+feinted several times and then leaped away when Enoch tried to seize him
+as he had before. He had felt the power of the white boy's muscles, and
+he did not propose to allow a second quick stroke. Enoch followed him
+around the ring and finally clutched him, but at arms' length. It was
+not a good hold; he knew it on the instant. But he had as good a chance
+as Crow Wing and there they were, swaying to and fro, and panting for
+several minutes, before either obtained the advantage.
+
+Finally the Indian lad forced Enoch over his leg and slowly, yet
+determinedly, pushed him backward to the ground. When they fell Crow
+Wing was on top, but it was several moments ere he managed to force
+Enoch's shoulders and hips to the earth together. The second round was
+declared won by Crow Wing and the boys took a rest before the third and
+final one. Enoch was glad to see that his antagonist suffered as much as
+he did this time, laboring for breath and with his face and arms covered
+with perspiration. When Bolderwood called them for the third round the
+Indian flung off his hunting shirt, thus showing that he considered the
+white boy a worthy antagonist indeed.
+
+Enoch was more confident than before. He saw that he could not repeat
+his first quick throw; but he would not be deceived again into getting
+any uncertain hold. Crow Wing continued his former tactics, but Enoch
+simply followed him about, feinting as well as the Indian, and at last,
+when Crow Wing ran in, thinking he had a chance for an under hold, he
+caught him like a young bear and hugged him to his chest until the
+breath was fairly forced from the other's lungs. Although taller than
+the white boy the Indian was not so heavy and this display of muscle
+startled him. With one arm caught between his own body and Enoch's he
+could do little to help himself and Enoch squeezed hard before he let
+him go. Then, with a quick toss, stooping as he made it, Enoch flung
+him, long legs and all, over his shoulder, and before Crow Wing could
+rise he was upon him and held him down. The Indian was so breathless
+that it was a small matter for Enoch to get the "four points" necessary
+to win the fall and he rose at last triumphant.
+
+The boys and girls cheered him and Bolderwood said he was a good
+wrestler, and then Crow Wing, who had slipped into his shirt again, came
+to him and said, with a still impassive face: "Umph! white boy big
+wrestler--beat Crow Wing fair!" He held out his hand gravely and, after
+shaking Enoch's, stalked away while the others were busy, his absence
+being unnoticed until it came time to go up to the house for supper.
+"Guess he didn't like being licked," said Robbie Baker to Enoch. "You
+better look out for him, Nuck. My pa says them Injins is as treacherous
+as wolves."
+
+But somehow Enoch felt that Crow Wing was a better friend to him than he
+had been before. Something in the Indian's handshake seemed to have told
+him this. The supper was quite as good as the boys had expected. After
+the meal they shot at a target under 'Siah Bolderwood's direction and
+Robbie Baker, son of the greatest shot in the settlement, as was
+expected, bore off the honors. The company went home through the forest
+trails by moonlight and thus ended a long and happy day, in which much
+that was useful had been accomplished as well as a "good time" enjoyed.
+
+As Enoch stood at the door of the cabin and watched the red glow from
+the fires in the newly cleared lot, he went over in his mind the
+incidents of the day. Such holidays were not plentiful in his life. It
+was mostly work and little play, and he would remember this occasion for
+many months. He did not suspect how many months would elapse, and how
+many momentous happenings would occur, before he saw all his young
+friends together once again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+A NIGHT ATTACK
+
+
+Not often did the Harding children enjoy such a day as that of the
+stump-burning. Life was very real indeed to pioneer folks, although the
+fact that every family in the community had to work hard left no
+loophole for complaint on any side. There were no very poor people then,
+and there were no immensely rich. It is only by comparison that human
+beings become discontented with their lot.
+
+The widow's children had to work little harder than their neighbors.
+Their mother labored with them in the fields, as well as paying full
+attention to her household duties. She could swing an axe with most men
+in the township, and was no mean shot with the rifle. She led the corn
+hoeing and taught the older boys to do those things which were needful
+about the farm. The crops during this summer prospered well, and after
+clearing up and barreling the ashes made during the stump-burning, Enoch
+and Bryce ploughed and harrowed the new piece along the creek's edge.
+They sowed it to winter grain and hung "scare-crows" all about the field
+to keep the wild birds from pulling up the tender shoots when they
+appeared above the mold.
+
+Besides leading her children in the work of the farm, Mistress Harding
+paid more attention to their education than most parents of the
+settlement could. There was a school in Bennington during the winter
+months; but it was too far away for any of the Hardings to attend. But
+the widow had been a school-teacher before her marriage and she had
+brought some books with her from her old home. So part of almost every
+day she taught her children. The girls and little Harry, who was just
+learning his letters and "a-b, abs," studied during the daytime; but the
+older boys did their lessons by the light of the candle dips, or lying
+on the hearth before the dancing fire. Both summer and winter these
+studies were kept up and therefore Enoch and his brothers and sisters
+were rather farther advanced in learning than the other children of the
+scattered community.
+
+To this study Enoch took rather kindly; but to Bryce, who possessed more
+of his father's roving disposition, the school hour was distasteful.
+Bryce, too, complained more than a little because he was not allowed to
+go to Bennington on training days. He was growing rapidly and was well
+nigh as big as his brother, and he felt that he should be counted a
+member of the military company.
+
+This drilling in the manual of arms had become a very serious matter to
+the Grants people. The Green Mountain Boys, which nickname had before
+the end of the summer become fixed upon the bands, were divided into
+four companies of which Seth Warner, 'Member Baker, Robert Cochran and
+Gideon Warner were the captains. Ethan Allen was elected colonel
+commanding by acclamation and plans were made to watch over many of the
+outlying districts liable to be troubled most frequently by the Yorkers.
+With all his impulsiveness, Allen was long-headed and something of a
+strategist; yet he leaned to some extent upon Captain Warner's good
+sense. Warner was a man of much finer mould than the chief of the Green
+Mountain Boys, was well educated and had a personal following of his own
+in the Grants, second only to Allen's. But there was never any jealousy
+between them. Allen's was a nature too frank and generous to harbor such
+a despicable feeling, while Warner was too deeply interested in the
+cause to do so.
+
+Nuck Harding was a proud boy indeed, for he was nigh the youngest among
+those who drilled. Such raiding as was done by the Green Mountain Boys
+that year was the work of small parties under Allen, Warner, or Cochran,
+and no general engagement occurred between the Grants settlers and the
+New York authorities, so Nuck saw no real service. At home, however, he
+and Bryce frequently talked over what they would do if Simon Halpen
+should visit them. That he had been scouting about the farm on the day
+of Sheriff Ten Eyck's fiasco at James Breckenridge's place, the older
+boy was sure. He was certain that the man he had seen beside the
+campfire in the wood, and whom Crow Wing seemed to befriend, was the
+Yorker who, twice before, had tried to drive the Hardings from their
+home. But neither the man nor the Indian youth appeared in the
+neighborhood as the summer waned and the autumn harvests approached.
+
+Nevertheless, after harvest, when the farm work was well cleared up, the
+boys put into practice a plan which, after much thought they had
+evolved. Many a frontier home of that, and an earlier day, had connected
+with it an underground passage, or room which, although usually devoted
+to the simple storage of potatoes and roots, could in time of need be
+used as a refuge for the family. Of an Indian attack there was little
+danger; but they did not know to what length the Yorkers might go when
+once they did appear. Nuck believed Simon Halpen to be a man without
+compassion or mercy, and that the house might be attacked and burned
+over their heads.
+
+So, while still the frost held off, they constructed beneath the
+fireplace a deep stonewalled apartment nearly eight feet square--large
+enough to hold the entire family if need should come. When finished the
+entrance was gained by raising a large flat stone which was a part of
+the hearth. But the winter came without any alarm to the Hardings, and
+drew its slow length across the green hills and valleys like some albino
+monster of prehistoric times. The firs were snow-crowned and the white
+mantle lay deep in the hollows. Bryce and Enoch added generously to the
+family larder by the fruit of their hunting-trips, for there was plenty
+of time for such sport now. They had learned to weave snow-shoes in
+Indian fashion, too, and Bolderwood taught Enoch to tan and "work" the
+deer hides so well that their mother was able to use the pliable leather
+for moccasins for the family. "Boughten" shoes they had; but they were
+kept for best, for the money to purchase them with came hard indeed to
+the widow.
+
+Not until the sap began to flow from the maples was winter counted
+broken. Robbie Baker rode over about the middle of March and begged so
+hard that Mrs. Harding allowed Enoch to return with him to help at the
+Baker's "sugaring." There were plenty of fine maples near the Baker
+house and Nuck was promised a share of the refined sugar. There was no
+need of a hut at the sugar orchard, for they slept at Baker's house, and
+only a shelter was built over the great kettle in which the sap was
+boiled. Captain Baker made the incisions in the generous trees, and
+fitted the troughs; but Robbie and Nuck collected the sap and brought
+it, bucket by bucket, to the fire which Mrs. Baker tended. It was hard
+work but there was some fun connected with it, too, and Nuck enjoyed his
+week's visit--or would have done so had it not been for the incident
+with which the outing closed.
+
+Through the winter the people of the Grants had lived almost entirely at
+peace with their troublesome neighbors over the border. But there were
+certain active spirits among the Yorkers who were waiting only for the
+coming of spring to continue their persecutions. Because of the raids by
+the leaders of the Green Mountain Boys, there were warrants out for
+several, and Captain Baker was one of these who was wanted by the Albany
+authorities. The infamous John Munro who had accepted the office of
+Justice of the Peace from the New York party, gathered ten or twelve
+choice spirits on the night of March 22d, and feeling the security of
+numbers approached the home of the Grants' remarkable marksman, his mind
+fixed firmly upon the reward that had been offered for the apprehension
+of "the outlaw, Baker."
+
+The Green Mountain Boy was not a man to be attacked without due
+consideration, and the Yorkers came to the house in the dead of night,
+breaking in without warning, and capturing Captain Baker in his bed.
+Even thus handicapped Baker fought with desperation and, overpowered by
+numbers and cruelly wounded, only gave over the struggle when he saw
+that the Yorkers were beating his wife and son as well.
+
+"I surrender to ye, ye dogs!" he cried. "But let the woman and child
+alone," and at that they ceased to belabor Mrs. Baker and Robbie and set
+about removing the captive as expeditiously as possible. Robbie had been
+asleep in the loft with his guest when the attack was made and had run
+down the ladder to get at the guns; but this last was impossible.
+Enoch's rifle was likewise down-stairs and he was unable to help his
+friends; but instead of showing himself to the enemy he lifted a corner
+of the bark roof and crept outside. It was dark, and although there was
+a watch kept without the house, he was not observed and managed to reach
+the ground by climbing down the corner logs.
+
+By this time Captain Baker was a prisoner. They allowed him to partly
+dress and then securing him with thongs, brought him forth and threw him
+into a sledge which was in waiting. Their haste was obvious. Even in the
+night, and at this distance from any succor, the cowardly justice and
+his friends feared that members of the Green Mountain company would be
+aroused, and they had no wish to face Baker's comrades. Their idea was
+to get him across the Hudson and to Albany as swiftly as possible.
+
+But Enoch, though unable to render his friends any assistance in the
+fight, had not been idle. Keeping the house between him and the Yorkers
+at the door, he reached the stable. Mrs. Baker's voice rose above the
+general din, begging the Yorkers to spare her husband--to at least allow
+her to bind up the wound in his head before they took him away. But they
+merely laughed at her request. It made Enoch grit his teeth in rage, and
+pulling open the door of the stable he quickly entered and flung the
+captain's saddle upon the horse. Buckling the girth tightly he backed
+the steed out of the hovel and was astride it before the enemy observed
+him.
+
+With a smart slap on the creature's flank Nuck sent the horse tearing
+down the road to Bennington and was almost out of rifle shot before the
+Yorkers realized his escape and the meaning of it. Several shots
+followed him, so reckless were the justice's companions, but there was
+no pursuit. Instead, the villains tumbled into the sledge and upon the
+backs of their own steeds, and amid the cries of the woman and Robbie,
+took the way to the Twenty-Mile Line and Albany. The prisoner's wife and
+son scarcely realized what Nuck's escape meant; it looked as though the
+guest had fled when peril threatened the helpless family. But Nuck very
+well knew what he was about.
+
+It was still several hours before dawn, but the moon brilliantly
+illumined the forest road and as the way was fairly well beaten, Nuck
+set the horse at his fastest pace. He knew that he could find men at
+Bennington--particularly at the Green Mountain Inn--who would consider
+no hardship too great to assist the captured settler. Many of Remember
+Baker's own company of Green Mountain Boys would be in town and Stephen
+Fay, the host, would be able to tell him where to find these men
+quickly. It was a long ride to the Hudson and the hope of overtaking the
+Yorkers and their prisoner spurred the boy on.
+
+On and on flew the horse and rider until at last the scattered houses of
+the hamlet came into view. The settlement lay lifeless under the cold
+winter sky; not a spiral of smoke rose from the broad-topped chimneys,
+for the fires in every house were banked during the night, and it was
+too early for the spryest kitchen-maid to be astir. The horse thundered
+up to the door of the Catamount Inn and Nuck's wild halloa brought a
+night-capped head to the window instantly--that of the innkeeper.
+
+"What might be the news, neighbor?" he demanded.
+
+"Captain Baker has been carried off by the Yorkers!" shouted Nuck, and
+his words were heard by other night-capped heads at other windows about
+the inn. "'Squire Munro and some others came and got him out of bed.
+They've driven off toward the Line."
+
+"'Member Baker's captured!" The word was taken up by a dozen voices and
+the settlers dressed hurriedly and ran forth from their houses.
+Meanwhile Master Fay had aroused certain men who happened to be in his
+hostelry, as well as the stablemen in the yard. There was a great bustle
+about the inn. "Boy!" cried the innkeeper to Nuck, who still bestrode
+Captain Baker's horse, "do you go and call Isaac Clark and Joe Safford.
+They'll have their horses handy--and good horses, too, I'll be bound.
+Tell them to come here with saddle and rifle."
+
+These two men lived at the other end of the village. Nuck routed them
+out and in fifteen minutes was back with them at the inn. By that time
+quite a crowd had collected and ten men beside Nuck were found to be
+mounted and ready to set forth after the Yorkers. Each was a tried Green
+Mountain Boy and eager to take satisfaction for the attack upon their
+leader. Ten men were considered ample to attack the Yorkers, and with a
+promise to the bystanders to recapture 'Member Baker, even though they
+followed him to Albany, the cavalcade galloped away from the Green
+Mountain Inn, Enoch riding in their train.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE TRAITOR'S WAY
+
+
+Remember Baker lived at Arlington, and the distance from that new
+settlement, it could hardly be called a village, to Bennington was about
+two and a half miles. Enoch Harding might have given the alarm to the
+neighbors of the captured man, but he knew that they would not be able
+to pursue the Yorkers, for good horse flesh was scarce outside of
+Bennington. And Robbie would doubtless rouse them, anyway, as soon as he
+was recovered from his fright. As he saw it, Enoch believed his duty to
+point to the Catamount Inn, and we have seen how quickly a company was
+formed there for the chase of the Yorkers and their prisoner.
+
+Enoch had ridden Baker's horse hard into town and now he followed behind
+the ten rescuers, urging the animal to still greater efforts. The
+hard-packed snow rang merrily under the hoofs of the steeds. Fortunately
+the boy's mount had been well "sharpened" by the local smith shortly
+before, or riding recklessly as he did the horse might have suffered a
+fall, and Enoch been flung off. Nevertheless he could not keep up with
+Isaac Clark and his companions, so gradually fell behind. His steed's
+wind was sound, however, and he pursued the trail steadily.
+
+The rescuers showed no hesitation in choosing their route. There were
+but a few beaten trails and they knew the road John Munro and his party
+would take with the prisoner to the bank of the Hudson. They could not
+miss it. The road from Arlington broke into this main trail at a point
+not far beyond the confines of Bennington and there it was at once
+apparent that the sledge and horsemen had passed that way not long
+before. There were plain marks of the runners and the ice and snow were
+cut up by the feet of the flying horses. The fact that the Yorkers
+numbered as many--if not more--than themselves, did not disturb the
+Green Mountain Boys in the least. "A Grants man who is not good for two
+or three of the scurvy Yorkers, is no good at all!" Stephen Fay had
+declared when they set forth, and probably the only emotions the ten
+felt as they rode on were eagerness and wrath.
+
+Meanwhile, behind them raced Enoch Harding, desiring mightily to "be in
+at the death," as the fox-hunters say. His heavy farmhorse could not
+compete with the mounts of the possé, however, and with tears in his
+eyes he saw them increase the distance between themselves and his
+animal. But he doggedly pursued the road, while the clatter of hoofs
+grew mellow in the distance. The morning was very still; the moon had
+sunk now and the stars were fading before the gray light of the coming
+day. In the east behind him the sky was even streaked with pink above
+the mountain-tops; the wind blew more keenly and he suddenly awoke to
+the fact that he was almost perished with the cold, for he had stopped
+for neither greatcoat nor mittens.
+
+Finally arriving at the top of a ridge of land he saw before him--at
+least two miles along the road and just mounting another ridge--a group
+of flying horses with a sledge in their midst, the prisoner and his
+captors. At first he did not see the Green Mountain Boys at all; but as
+his own horse plunged down the slope he suddenly observed the squadron
+which had left the Bennington Inn, come out of the dip of the valley
+where the trees were thickest, and begin the ascent of the further
+ridge. The two parties were less than half a mile apart.
+
+But from the elevation he was on Enoch had seen something else. The
+second ridge was lower than this and over it and not very far beyond he
+had caught a glimpse of the frozen Hudson! The river was not far away.
+Would the settlers catch the scoundrelly New York justice and his
+companions before they reached the river?
+
+And this must be done if they would rescue Captain Baker. It was all
+very well to talk of following the party to Albany; but that would
+simply result in the imprisonment of all in the jail. Once at the river
+the Yorkers would be among friends and would find plenty of people to
+help them beat off the Green Mountain Boys. The latter understood this
+well enough. They did not need young Enoch Harding to tell them, and it
+was quite evident to the boy that his friends were spurring their horses
+desperately up the farther slope in a last grand burst of speed to
+overtake the fugitives.
+
+On and on they sped and finally, when Enoch reached the dip of the vale,
+Clark and his party were over the hill and had disappeared. The boy
+dared not urge his horse up the ascent too rapidly and he lost much
+precious time before reaching the summit. But once here he had a broad
+outlook over the slope and plain beyond and if he could not be present,
+at least he had an unobstructed view of the end of the chase. The Green
+Mountain Boys had spurred down the hill madly and gained upon the sledge
+so rapidly that the faint-hearted Yorkers were thrown into a panic. The
+horses attached to the sledge gave out and one of them slipped and fell
+in the harness. Instead of stopping to help Munro get the animal on its
+feet, the horsemen, with the fear of punishment from the angry pursuers
+before their eyes, rode on and scattered in the thick woods beyond,
+leaving the doughty justice to meet the possé alone. Munro was not a
+physical coward and he felt that with the majesty of the law--New York
+law--behind him, he could face Baker's friends.
+
+They bore down upon him with threatening cries, but he stood his ground
+and warned them at the top of his voice neither to shoot nor to try to
+rescue his prisoner. There was no need of firearms, of course, for they
+were ten to one now. But they laughed his authority to scorn. What!
+allow him to carry 'Member Baker to Albany to be tried by a judge who
+was himself interested in land speculations, and by a jury antagonistic
+to the settlers of the Grants? It was preposterous!
+
+Baker, who suffered sorely from his wounds, was untied and placed upon
+one of the horses which could carry double. The possé felt ugly, but
+they did not harm the justice and after some wordy warfare rode away
+again, leaving Munro to get his horse up and harnessed again to the
+sledge without their help. His threats of future punishment for the
+entire party were unnoticed. Their wild ride had been crowned with
+success, for they had recovered their wounded comrade within a mile of
+the Hudson River, and they took him home without any molestation.
+
+But Captain Baker was weak from the loss of blood and terribly shaken by
+the experience and was in bed and under the care of a surgeon for some
+days. The news of the Yorkers' raid spread throughout the Grants and the
+settlers whose fears had been lulled to sleep by the peace of the
+winter, were roused to a realization of the fact that the land grabbers
+intended to be quite as active in the future as they had been in the
+past. The next training day the conversation of the Green Mountain Boys
+who were present in Bennington was bitter indeed. Cochran, and such
+reckless spirits, were for retaliating with fire and bullet on the New
+York border. Nevertheless Warner and other more moderate men counseled
+forbearance.
+
+"We overawed the sheriff's army last year, it is true. But at that time
+we had given the people of New York no reasonable excuse for attacking
+us," declared Warner. "We've beech-sealed more than one surveyor and
+warned New York settlers off the farms they had stolen since then. We've
+been obliged to use force and now force will be used against us. But I
+find that many of these New York settlers have been brought here under a
+misapprehension. They did not understand the controversy before they got
+the farms, and believed that the land-grabbers really owned the property
+of which they are in possession. To visit our righteous wrath upon
+helpless women and children will not help the cause of the Grants."
+
+Many of his hearers, however, were not convinced. "'Member Baker's been
+beaten and his wife and boy ill-treated. What are we going to do about
+it?" was the demand.
+
+"Complaint has already been made to Governor Tryon of New York, and John
+Munro may be punished by his own side for what he did the other night."
+
+"And there's 'Member's gun," spoke up another ill-affected partisan.
+"Munro stole it and has got it to his house. I'm told so by a neighbor
+of his. 'Member thinks a deal of that gun."
+
+"I'll get that," said Warner, quickly. "'Member shall have his property
+back before next training day."
+
+And with that promise the disaffected spirits were satisfied for the
+time being. When Enoch rode away from Bennington on his return home that
+afternoon, the Connecticut giant overtook him on the road. Warner was a
+fine-looking man, younger even than Ethan Allen and idolized by the
+women and children of the community as Allen was by the men. But there
+was nothing effeminate about Warner. He was of the better class of
+borderers, possessing more education than most of his neighbors and with
+that measure of refinement and cultivation which placed George
+Washington above the majority of his associates. Warner had no patrician
+bearing, however, but entered into the work, sports and pursuits of his
+fellows. He was a superb horseman and rode on this day a mount which the
+governor of New York himself might covet.
+
+Enoch Harding had grown used, by this time, to seeing these prominent
+leaders of the Grants and had spoken with Captain Warner before. "Master
+Harding, your road lies my way for some distance," declared Warner,
+smiling on the boy. "We will go together."
+
+"You do not ride this way frequently, sir," said Enoch.
+
+"Nay. But you heard my promise to-day. I must get 'Member's gun. That
+rascally Munro may have to be taught a lesson, too."
+
+"But will you go alone?" cried the boy.
+
+Warner laughed. "Why, it is a peaceful mission. See--I have not even my
+rifle--only my sword as captain of our military company. A show of force
+might only make matters worse--and dear knows they are bad enough as it
+stands."
+
+"Munro will be among his friends, sir. Ought you not to have somebody
+with you?"
+
+"There might be some doubt regarding that, Master Harding. A man like
+Munro is never blessed with an overabundance of friends. He may have
+minions that, for wage, would help him in his nefarious deeds. But I
+shall meet him when he least expects to see a Green Mountain Boy and I
+fear no serious trouble. But if you have doubt as to my safety," and he
+smiled again, "you may ride with me and see that the doughty 'Squire
+does not capture and run away with me as he attempted to with Captain
+Baker."
+
+Enoch's eyes sparkled at this permission and he spurred on after Captain
+Warner although the direction was one which carried him some distance
+out of his way. A two hours' ride brought them to the settlement where
+the New York justice lived. Before they reached the place the figure of
+Warner was spied and recognized and Munro met the Green Mountain Boy in
+the roadway before his own house, surrounded by several of his
+neighbors. Enoch kept in the rear and as they rode up the boy unslung
+his gun and laid it across his saddle. Warner smiled as he noted this
+act, and then his face grew stern again as he drew rein before the
+much-hated Yorker.
+
+"Master Munro," he said, without parley, "it has been brought to my
+attention that, upon your late evening visit to Captain Remember Baker,
+you carried away from his house a certain weapon which Captain Baker
+highly prizes. You mistook it for your own, I presume, and the duties of
+your office have doubtless been so onerous since then that you have not
+had opportunity to return it. Happening to be in this neighborhood I
+have stopped to request the return of the gun."
+
+"Ha, ye rebel!" exclaimed Munro. "Dare ye put yourself in the lion's
+jaws in this way? I'll show ye----"
+
+"Whether I have put myself in the jaws of a lion or a jackal may be a
+question which is aside from our present discussion," interrupted
+Warner, scornfully. "I have come for Captain Baker's property."
+
+"Baker is an outlaw--as are you," declared Munro, wrathfully, "and as
+such I took away his arms. An' I shall keep the gun."
+
+"Now, 'Squire, if you had stated the reverse of that proposition I
+should have the more easily believed you," cried Warner, with flashing
+eyes. "Even a New York justice of the peace may not rob his neighbor
+with impunity in the Grants. I shall carry that gun away with me to-day.
+So, sir, deliver it without further ado!"
+
+[Illustration: HE WHIPPED OUT HIS SWORD]
+
+
+"Ye threaten me, do ye?" cried Munro, lashing himself into a rage.
+"Seize this villain, neighbors! I call on ye to assist in the capture of
+Seth Warner, the outlaw!" He seized the bridle of Warner's horse, which
+reared with him and struck out angrily. But the justice hung on, still
+calling to the bystanders to interfere and help him. Enoch urged his own
+horse forward; but there was no fear of the neighbors aiding in Seth
+Warner's capture. They refused to do so, and perhaps as much out of fear
+of the Connecticut man himself, as out of dislike for the justice.
+
+Warner's horse was a mettlesome beast and Munro's act in seizing the
+bridle angered it. The Green Mountain boy had all he could do to handle
+his steed for a moment and, as Munro continued to cling to the bridle,
+Warner suddenly whipped out his sword and whirling it about his head
+brought the flat of the weapon down upon the officer's pate! The blow
+caused Munro to relax his hold and knocked him to the ground, where he
+lay, roaring with pain and anger. Warner rode over him and approached
+the open door of the house to which Mrs. Munro, frightened by her
+husband's overthrow, quickly brought the gun in question and handed it
+to the victor.
+
+"Many thanks, 'Squire Munro!" cried Warner, waving the gun above his
+head and holding in his charger. "And when next ye seek to impound me,
+come in force, sir--come in force!" and letting his mount go, he and
+Enoch rode away at a swift canter.
+
+Young Harding went home that night full of the afternoon's doings, and
+loud in his praise of Captain Warner's prowess. He and Bryce made many
+plans for the reception of the Yorkers if they came to their farm; but
+after this matters were quiet for some weeks and the settlers were
+enabled to begin the spring work and get the seed into the ground in
+peace. On May 19th Governor Tryon sent a letter to the Grants proposing
+a conference and promising amnesty to all those who had taken an active
+part in the raids of the Green Mountain Boys excepting Ethan Allen, Seth
+Warner, Baker and Robert Cochran. The King had commanded that New York
+do nothing further toward surveying or settling the lands east of Lake
+Champlain and the Twenty-Mile Line until the difficulty could be
+properly adjusted, and Tryon promised that the land-grabbers should be
+kept away from the Grants.
+
+The farmers were delighted with this letter. They had been living in
+continual fear of dispossession since the first attack on the
+Breckenridge farm in '69. Now they felt that they would be free to
+follow the peaceful pursuits of their calling and began to improve their
+possessions, believing that, after all, the right would prevail. None
+were more pleased at this turn of affairs than the widow Harding and
+Enoch. Bryce, it must be confessed, felt a little disappointed that he
+had seen no active service; but they were all happy in their work and
+the Harding place bade fair to be one of the most profitable farms in
+the township that year.
+
+The boys labored well and after the second corn hoeing in August the
+work was so far along that Enoch was able to accompany 'Siah Bolderwood
+on a hunting trip. The old ranger, lacking any regular abiding place of
+his own, often visited the Hardings and helped in the work of the farm.
+But he was a wanderer by nature and could not stay in one place long at
+a time. So, being off to the northward, the widow allowed Enoch to join
+him for a week or two.
+
+It was not wholly game that Bolderwood was after, however. At least, not
+game for present killing. He was mapping out his next winter's campaign
+against the wild creatures of the forest. His strings of traps and
+dead-falls would be laid along the route which he and his young comrade
+traversed. Reaching the southern extremity of Lake Champlain Bolderwood
+found a canoe which, well hidden in a hollow log--all that remained of a
+monster king of the woodland--had lain untouched since his last visit to
+the lake. In this light bark they set sail upon that beautiful body of
+water on the shores of which the French and English had so often met in
+battle. It has been well said that the Champlain Valley was the school
+grounds of the early colonists, and that here were largely unfolded the
+elements of character which became of supreme importance in the
+Revolutionary struggle.
+
+On the west bank of this lower, and narrower, portion of the lake, stood
+the frowning walls of Fort Ticonderoga--"Old Ti" as the settlers called
+it--wrested not long since from the French backed by their Huron and
+Algonquin allies. That promontory signalized a more ancient landmark of
+history even than the Pilgrim stone at Plymouth, and one quite as
+important to our country at large. Eleven years before the Mayflower
+began her voyage to America, Champlain met the Iroquois in battle on the
+site of Ticonderoga, and this battle made the Iroquois the friends of
+the English and the enemies of the French for generations. Ticonderoga
+was an important link in the chain of French posts extending from the
+St. Lawrence to the Mississippi, which was designed to shut the English
+colonists into that narrow strip of the continent east of the
+Alleghanies.
+
+From the beginning Fort Frederick (Crown Point) and Ticonderoga were a
+menace to the English. From these points the red allies of the French
+descended upon the border settlements to the south and burned and
+pillaged at pleasure. Two fearful campaigns were needed to reduce
+Ticonderoga and place the command of the Champlain in the hands of the
+British. Since its capture Ticonderoga had fallen somewhat into decay,
+for with the changing of the Canadian government from French to English,
+danger of attack, even by Indian bands, from the north was little to be
+expected by the settlers who had flocked into the rich lands near the
+lake after the close of the war.
+
+Bolderwood and his young comrade passed Old Ti and, continuing up the
+lake, paddled by Crown Point and reached the mouth of the Otter. Here
+they encamped for several days, hunting and fishing, and living in a
+nomadic fashion that charmed Enoch. But when they were about to return
+another party of hunters came to the spot--men whom Bolderwood
+knew--bound for the upper end of the lake and into the wilderness lying
+east of that point. Enoch could not go so far because of the work on the
+farm; but he urged Bolderwood to accompany this party, as he knew very
+well he could find his way home in safety by either the land or water
+route. In fact, he rather coveted the chance to make his way home alone,
+for he wished to prove to the ranger his ability to do for himself.
+
+It was therefore arranged that the boy should take Bolderwood's canoe
+and go up Otter Creek to a certain settler's house, there to leave the
+canoe and make his way overland to Bennington, and the next day they
+separated. The hunters did not start until afternoon on their northern
+journey, however, and Enoch left at the same time. Not far up the creek
+was a settlement of Hampshire farmers who on one occasion had been
+driven out by Yorkers in the employ of a Scotchman named Reid. But the
+Yorkers who had taken these farms stayed but a short time and the real
+owners of the property had come back the year before. Here Enoch
+expected to remain the first night of his lonely journey.
+
+He did not arrive until late, however, and the houses were in
+darkness--indeed they seemed deserted. The mill (built by Colonel Reid's
+followers) stood silent, the stones having been broken by the Green
+Mountain Boys on the occasion of the driving out of the New York
+settlers. Enoch, having heard such good accounts of this settlement, was
+astonished by the appearance of inactivity.
+
+Nevertheless he landed and soon found a stockade surrounding a
+blockhouse, which was evidently occupied. The people seemed to live
+under this single roof as though they were in fear of an Indian raid,
+and the boy approached the place cautiously. He was not molested,
+however, for no watch was being kept; but when he rapped smartly on the
+door he knew by the sudden hush of voices within that the occupants of
+the dwelling were startled. There was the clatter of arms and a sudden
+command. Fearing that he might be treated as an enemy, Enoch knocked
+again and was about to raise his voice in the "view halloa" of the
+settlers, when the door was snapped open for an instant and the sharp
+blade of a sword thrust out of the darkness, the light of the candles
+having been quenched at his first summons.
+
+The boy sprang back with an exclamation of fear, and only his agility
+saved him from serious injury, for the point of the sword cut a slit in
+his hunting coat. And the attack, so utterly unexpected, quite deprived
+him of speech or further motion as the heavy door slammed in his face.
+Such a welcome was, to say the least, disconcerting.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THE OTTER CREEK RAID
+
+
+The late visitor at the Otter Creek settlement shrank away from the door
+and, dumbfounded by the sword-thrust which was evidently meant for his
+heart instead of his coat, waited to see what the next move of those in
+the blockhouse would be. He heard low voices and words which sounded
+like military commands. Suppose the occupants of the wooden fort should
+fire upon him?
+
+At this idea he dropped upon all fours and it is perhaps well that he
+did so, for one bullet did come from a loophole, singing viciously above
+his head. Then an angry voice of command rose on the night air: "Haud
+yir hand, mon! Let's see an' it be fri'nd or foe." The tone and accent
+were broadly Scotch, and this, too, added to Enoch's amazement. He had
+not heard of Scotch people coming to Otter Creek since those placed
+there by Colonel Reid had been driven forth. At once his suspicions were
+aroused, but he cried aloud:
+
+"I am a friend and am alone. I only came for a night's lodging."
+
+"'Tis a laddie, mon! There's naught t' fear," declared the voice within,
+as though answering some objection which Enoch could not hear. The
+candles were lighted and in another moment the door was opened again,
+revealing a tall, raw-boned Scot with a shock of red hair and beard. He
+grasped a bared sword, almost as big as a two-handed claymore, and he
+looked sternly upon the boy as the latter approached.
+
+"Ha! 'tis wrang for a laddie t' be oot this time o' night," he declared.
+"Air ye sure alone?"
+
+"Quite alone," Enoch replied. "I have been hunting west of here and we
+camped at the mouth of the creek. My comrades have gone northward and I
+was returning home by way of the creek. I did not know that the settlers
+here were in fear of Indians----"
+
+"Ha! 'tis little we think o' them rid chiels. There's war nor they in
+yon forest-land, an' well we ken that."
+
+"Who do you mean?" demanded Enoch, now stepping within the open door.
+
+"Why, the robber Allen, an' his followers. We do oor wark wi' guns in
+oor han's for fear of them same outlaws. Eh, mon! but they're a bold
+mob."
+
+Enoch made no reply, but advanced to the gun rack and stood up his rifle
+and dropped his pack. He knew now what had occurred at the settlement.
+The land-grabber Reid had come back to the Grants, ousted the Hampshire
+settlers, and again established minions of his own in their places. The
+boy glanced about and saw at least a dozen hardy looking Scots. Every
+one of them had doubtless served in Colonel Reid's regiment of
+Highlanders. They were descended from men almost as wild and
+bloodthirsty as the red Indians themselves, and although ordinarily they
+might be harmless enough, that thrust of the sword had shown Enoch that
+they were likely to fight first and inquire the reason for it afterward.
+They had come to Otter Creek in force this time, and evidently
+determined to battle for their master's holdings under the New York law.
+
+But the man who had let him in, and who was a Cameron, was evidently
+bent upon treating hospitably the guest which he had so nearly run
+through with his sword. "Jamie Henderson," he said to one of the solemn
+faced Scots, "speir ane o' the wimmen t' gie us a bite for the lad," and
+the repast which was prepared and put before him was generous and kindly
+given. While he was eating and John Cameron sat by to watch him enjoy
+the food, Enoch gathered courage to ask a few questions.
+
+"We heard down Bennington way that Colonel Reid's people had left this
+land and the settlers who formerly owned it had come back," he said,
+suggestively. The Scot's eyes contracted as he looked at the visitor.
+"Aye, aye?" he said, questioningly. "How long have you been here?"
+queried the boy.
+
+"Sin' June. The men ye call settlers were nae proper holders o' their
+titles. Lieutenant-Colonel Reid bought this land and put fairmers here
+first."
+
+"But he did not get his title from New Hampshire," Enoch said.
+
+"Nae--w'y should he? New York owns the land to yon big river--th'
+Connecticut call ye it? Our fri'nds settled here in '69. The titles
+these auld settlers held wes no guide--na, na! But Colonel Reid is a
+guide mon--'deed yes."
+
+"How do you make that out?" demanded Enoch. He wanted to tell the Scot
+what he thought of this business, but he dared not. He knew Ethan Allen
+and the other leaders of the Green Mountain Boys should know of it, and
+as he, perhaps, was the first to learn of the return of the Scotch, he
+must get away early in the morning and reach Bennington in the quickest
+possible time. While the Grants men were resting in supposed safety and
+peace because of Governor Tryon's letter promising inactivity on the
+part of the land speculators, the latter were hurrying their minions
+over the line, evicting the rightful owners of the Grants, and stealing
+their farms. The boy's heart swelled with anger; but he was wise enough
+to hold his tongue and say nothing to rouse the suspicions of the Scots.
+
+In reply to his question regarding Colonel Reid's "guideness" Cameron
+told how he, with other Scots, had landed in New York early in June and
+had been engaged by the Colonel at once to go and occupy his land in the
+Disputed Territory. Reid came with them to the settlement, being at
+considerable expense to transport them, their wives, children and
+baggage. The day after their arrival while viewing the land covered by
+Reid's title, they observed a crop of Indian corn, wheat, and garden
+stuff, and a stack of hay belonging to two New England men who,
+according to Cameron, had squatted on the land without right or title.
+Reid paid these two men $15 for their standing crops and the hay and
+made over the same to his new tenants. This was a novel way of telling
+how the owners of the titles to the farms received from the New
+Hampshire governor years before, were evicted. But Enoch held his peace.
+He had considerable doubt in his own mind regarding Colonel Reid's
+"guideness," nevertheless, and rose early in the morning and left the
+settlement in Bolderwood's canoe. Instead of keeping on up the Otter he
+turned back to the lake. The route by which he and the ranger had come
+from Bennington would be far shorter than the one he had started upon;
+so he went back that way. News of the return of Reid's people must be
+conveyed to Ethan Allen and the other leaders of the Green Mountain Boys
+as quickly as possible.
+
+He scarcely stopped for food, so anxious was he to get home. He met
+nobody on his trip until he reached Manchester and there his story was
+hardly believed, for the letter of the New York governor in May,
+inviting the Grants representatives to a council, had made a strong and
+favorable impression upon public sentiment. This council had advised
+that all legal processes against the Grants settlers cease and even now
+the echoes had not died away of the jubilation of the deluded people
+over what was considered the end of the bitter controversy.
+
+But when he arrived at home and told his mother of his discovery she,
+like the truly patriotic woman she was, became vastly disturbed. "You
+may not rest idly here, Enoch, while such wrong is being done. Colonel
+Allen should know of it at once. He rode past here but yesterday on his
+way to Bennington, and gave us a cry. He asked for you, too," she said,
+with pride, "and told me how well you carried yourself at training.
+There is a council being held in town to-day, I believe, for I suspect
+that Colonel Allen and Captain Warner have not been deceived by the
+false promises of Governor Tryon. And this business at the Otter Creek
+will wake up many of those who would cry 'Peace!' when there is no
+peace. Bryce will saddle the horse for you, Enoch," she added, "and
+while you eat I will prepare your best breeches and coat. You cannot
+appear at the inn before the gentlemen in your old clothing."
+
+The careful woman bustled away and laid out her son's Sabbath suit and
+his boughten shoes and, tired as Enoch was, he rode away toward
+Bennington an hour after reaching the ox-bow farm.
+
+As his mother had declared, Colonel Allen and several other leaders were
+in conference in Stephen Fay's private parlor, and when he had whispered
+his story to the innkeeper, the latter brought him at once before the
+gentlemen, rightly considering the matter of such importance as to brook
+no delay in the telling. Never before had Enoch seen Ethan Allen in any
+capacity but that of a leader in action. In the boy's mind he had ever
+been connected with scenes of riot, or in the capacity of a commander on
+training day. But it was a very serious looking group which surrounded
+the table now, and the man at the head of the board lacked nothing in
+dignity and stern bearing in comparison with the other members of the
+committee.
+
+It was Allen, however, who turned from the subject under discussion and
+beckoned Master Fay and Enoch nearer. "What have we here?" he asked.
+"Something of moment, I warrant, from the look on Stephen's face. And
+there is young Nuck Harding. Is aught amiss in your district, lad?"
+
+"Nay, Colonel," Enoch replied; "but I have been in the north and bring
+back news that my mother was sure you would wish to hear at once. So I
+rode over without delay to tell you, sir."
+
+"God bless the woman!" Allen exclaimed, heartily. "She's fighting away
+there in the wilderness with her pack of babies in a way to make grown
+men blush. I was by there but yesterday.... And what's the news you
+bring, Nuck?"
+
+"The Yorkers have come back to the mill on Otter Creek."
+
+"What, sir?" cried Allen, leaping from his chair.
+
+"That's not to be believed," cried one of the others. "How know ye this,
+boy?"
+
+Enoch told them, using few words; but the tremor in his voice showed the
+depth of his feeling. The injury done the settlers--the treachery of the
+Yorkers--had affected him as it had his mother. Allen listened with
+marked attention, having dropped back into his wide-armed chair, but he
+watched the boy's countenance the while. "Egad!" cried he when the story
+was done, "there's a boy after my own heart. He knows when he sees a
+snake in the brush!" Then he turned instantly to his companions. "We
+will postpone this other matter, gentlemen. What we may do in the event
+of his Majesty's placing other and more onerous burdens upon these
+colonies, affects us not so nearly as what these New York Tories do to
+us now. We have no standing either with the colonies or with the King;
+we are outlaws, forsooth; our hand is against every man's and every
+man's hand against us. Yet, belike in time the trouble between the King
+and the colonies may be the salvation of the Hampshire Grants.
+
+"We have other business now. I am away at once, friends," he said,
+rising again. "Do so to me and more also, if I allow more time than is
+necessary to pass before I fall upon those Scotch scoundrels and smite
+them hip and thigh! Send the word around, Stephen Fay. Let them that
+will gather here. Be sure Warner knows of this; I will send for 'Member
+myself. His company will be first ready, I have no doubt. 'Member's
+wound is scarce yet healed, and the sting of it needs dressing," and he
+laughed, knowing Captain Baker's fiery temper and his hatred of the
+Yorkers who had served him so evilly that very spring. "Let it be known
+that we start from Bennington by sunrise."
+
+Enoch returned home, more than a little puffed with pride because of
+Colonel Allen's commendation and although he was too young to join the
+party which, under Allen and Captain Baker, marched to punish the Scots
+at Vergennes, he knew that his fortunate discovery would make him
+something of a hero in the eyes of his mates. The Green Mountain Boys
+fell upon the Scots unexpectedly, burned the cabins, pastured their
+horses in the standing corn, broke the millstones to pieces, and drove
+the New York settlers to Crown Point where they took shelter until the
+land-speculator, Reid, could gain them transportation to other and more
+honestly acquired lands. As for Reid himself, had he been overtaken by
+the Grants men he certainly would have been "viewed"--a phrase used by
+the Green Mountain Boys, meaning to be whipped. The settlement was,
+however, for the time being abandoned by both parties, for it was so
+deep in the wilderness that neither could properly defend it from
+attack.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE WARNING
+
+
+After his return from this hunting trip, Enoch Harding was forced to
+neglect the training days on several occasions because of the increased
+work at home. The harvest was soon upon them and nobly had the fields of
+the ox-bow farm borne for the widow and her children. While they were
+hard at work getting under cover, or in stack, the last of their crops,
+the Manchester Convention was held, from which James Breckenridge and
+Captain Jehiel Hawley were sent to London to represent the struggling
+settlers, their former minister to the king, Samuel Robinson, having
+died before accomplishing the work which he had so well begun.
+
+With the discovery that Governor Tryon's declaration of an armistice had
+been an act of treachery, and that the Yorkers were likely to continue
+their raids and seize the honestly purchased lands of the New Hampshire
+settlers, as Colonel Reid had at Vergennes, the Hardings began to fear
+the return of Simon Halpen again. But the summer and fall passed without
+the little family being alarmed. With the snow came hog-killing, and
+among pioneer people this season was usually one of rejoicing. In the
+old times it had been a sort of festival, for with the first fall of
+snow all danger from marauding bands of red men ceased. The Indians
+would not send out war parties when every footstep would be plainly
+visible to the white settlers. The pioneers longed for the snow as soon
+as their scanty crops were out of the field, for they were safe then
+until the spring. So instead of celebrating "harvest home" they rejoiced
+at "hog killing time."
+
+The Hardings had quite a drove of hogs which ran wild in the forest
+during the summer and fed on the mast in the fall. But every few days
+the widow fed them near the hovel, so as to keep them in the habit of
+coming home, and particularly to teach the youngsters where to come if
+the old swine should be killed by bears or wild-cats. Now the whole
+drove was brought up and "folded" and for two weeks every member of the
+family was busy. During that time the bulk of their winter's meat was
+salted down, the toothsome sausage made, and all the other delicacies
+which old-fashioned folks knew so well how to prepare from the pig.
+Somebody has said that at our present day abatoirs they can put to some
+use every part of the animal but the pig's squeal; pioneer housewives
+were almost as economical.
+
+When the hard work was over Mistress Harding allowed the children to
+invite some of the neighborhood youngsters for an evening frolic and
+such a gathering had not been enjoyed since the famous stump burning.
+Enoch was nearly sixteen now and although Bryce was almost as tall as
+his elder brother, the first named was broadening out wonderfully. Few
+young men of Bennington under nineteen could have thrown Enoch in a
+match of strength, and he had really become the head of the household.
+But he was still enough of a boy to enjoy the party to the full.
+
+There was an old hovel near the house, but nearer the river bank, which
+their father had first erected--even before building the house
+itself--when he came to the ox-bow, and for years this hovel had
+sheltered the cattle. But the fall before he died the pioneer had
+erected a new and better stable and shed, quite handy to the house. The
+children, therefore, had long considered this hovel their own especial
+playhouse. At spare moments Enoch and Bryce built a stone and clay
+chimney and laid a good hearth in the old structure, and now they
+planned to have the party here, where they could do quite as they
+pleased.
+
+The girls had scoured the woods for beech, hazel, and hickory nuts, and
+Robbie Baker came over on his horse with nigh a bushel of peeled
+chestnuts which his father brought him from Manchester way after the
+first frost. Then, there were potatoes to roast and a wild turkey which
+Nuck had shot two days before and hung in the smoke-house. The bird was
+not plucked, but after being entrailed was stuffed with chestnuts to
+give it a flavor and then rolled in the tub of sticky clay brought up
+from the creek bottom. This great ball was put in the fire early so that
+by supper-time it would be done to a turn. The pigs' tails had all been
+saved and cleaned, too, and being likewise rolled in clay were baked in
+the ashes.
+
+The girls had brought flour bread and made Johnny-cake, and although
+there was no tablecloth, the long board table was roomy and fairly
+groaned under the good things heaped upon it. The ball of mud, all hard
+and red now and cracked like a badly burned brick, was rolled out upon
+the hearth and Enoch broke it with one blow of the axe. The hard shell
+fell apart and to the burned clay adhered every feather and pin-quill of
+the great gobbler which would not have weighed an ounce less than
+twenty-five pounds. And the flesh was done to a turn.
+
+In the midst of the good time, while the fun waxed furious, the door of
+the hovel opened and there stood in the opening the tall, slim figure of
+Crow Wing. As he had come unbidden to the stump burning, so he came now
+unexpectedly to this frolic. The white children welcomed him
+boisterously, for his people had moved away from the Walloomscoik and
+for months he had not been seen near Bennington. But Crow Wing had
+evidently not come to join in the merrymaking. His face was impassive
+and much older in expression than it had been the year before. And in
+his hair was a bunch of eagle feathers which showed that, to his own
+people even, he was now a brave and no longer a boy.
+
+"Umph!" he grunted, drawing the blanket draped from his shoulders more
+closely around him. "Harding--me talk to you!" He looked boldly at
+Enoch, and the latter waving the others back, followed the Indian out of
+the hovel. Without speaking or looking behind him Crow Wing led the
+white boy to the riverside, and some distance from the hovel. There he
+halted and pointed suddenly across the stream in the direction of that
+place in the forest where Enoch had once seen the mysterious white man
+sitting beside the campfire.
+
+"'Member?" asked Crow Wing, flashing a keen glance at the white boy.
+
+"The man in the woods!" exclaimed Enoch. "You wish to tell me something
+about him?"
+
+"Umph! He come again. Look out. Crow Wing tell you, because white boy
+strong--know how to fight. Watch 'em sharp!" and with this brief
+declaration the Indian youth strode away and the astonished Enoch
+watched him disappear in the tall brush along the creek bank. He went
+back to the merry party at the hovel with a heavy heart and not until
+after the last of the visitors had gone home--the boys swinging pine
+torches and giving the warwhoop to scare off any lurking wolves or
+catamounts--did Enoch find opportunity to tell his mother of Crow Wing's
+warning.
+
+"Simon Halpen is surely coming to evict us," he declared. "I am sure it
+was he I saw in the forest last year. And now, taking advantage of our
+being lulled by hopes of peace, he will try to strike an unexpected blow
+as Colonel Reid did."
+
+"The neighbors will help us," the widow said.
+
+"But suppose he comes with a big force? And we cannot expect the
+neighbors to neglect their own homes," said Enoch. "I will try and see
+Captain Baker, if you think it best, mother."
+
+"Captain Baker will help us. He knows how hard it would be if the
+Yorkers stripped us of our all. He is a kind-hearted man, though often
+rude and fretful."
+
+"Well, marm, he has cause to be fretful," said Enoch. "Perhaps we can
+get a few of the boys to stay with us nights for awhile."
+
+And this they did, for Captain Baker sent three or four sturdy Green
+Mountain Boys around to the widow's farm every night for a week. But the
+Yorker and his crew did not appear. At this time, when he might have
+been of such assistance to them, 'Siah Bolderwood was away. He had
+recently bought a track of land on the lake shore not far from Old Ti
+and had gone to look it over and build some sort of a camp there, thus
+utilizing his time to good advantage before the trapping season began.
+
+Even after their fears were lulled, either Enoch or Bryce remained
+always in sight of the house. But about a fortnight after the
+hog-killing frolic an incident occurred which served to take both Bryce
+and Enoch away from the cabin. There had been a second fall of snow and
+the nights were becoming very cold. But all the wild animals had not yet
+sought their winter sleeping quarters, for there descended upon the
+Hardings' hog-pen an old bear who evidently desired one more meal of
+succulent pork before retiring to his burrow. The remaining swine were
+shut up now in a close yard of logs; but the bear got over that fence
+with ease.
+
+The trouble occurred in the early morning and aroused by the clamor
+Enoch, despite the inch or two of snow on the ground, grabbed the rifle
+and ran out just as he got out of bed and without shoes or stockings.
+But when he saw the huge bear seeking to climb out of the enclosure,
+hugging a lively shote to his furry breast, the boy was not likely to
+notice the cold and snow. He climbed the end logs of the hog-pen himself
+so as to get a shot at the marauder, and rested the rifle on the top
+rail; but the logs were slippery and just as he pulled the trigger he
+went down himself and the charge flew high over the bear's head, while
+Enoch sprawled most ungracefully on the ground.
+
+The old bear uttered a wild "oof-oof!" and without trying to climb the
+barrier again, flung his huge body against it and a length of the fence
+went down with a crash. By this time Bryce, who had kept the old musket
+by his side since Crow Wing's warning, and slept in the loft, was
+aroused by the disturbance, and he pushed up the corner of the bark roof
+and blazed away at the beast just as it scrambled through the wreck of
+the hog fence. The bear had continued to cling to the squealing and
+kicking shote, for bruin is a strangely perverse and obstinate creature,
+unwilling to give up what he has once set his mind upon. There was a
+wild shriek of agony from the poor pig and when the bear moved clumsily
+away still clinging to the porker there was a broad trail of blood on
+the snow.
+
+"I shot him! I shot him!" yelled Bryce, dodging down into the loft and
+beginning to hastily pull on his breeches. But when he came down-stairs
+Enoch had returned to the house and was calmly dressing. "Why didn't ye
+foller him?" demanded the younger boy. "He's bad wounded. He'd dropped
+that shote in a minute."
+
+"You killed the shote all right," said Enoch in disgust. "Neither of the
+shots touched the bear at all. There's no use chasing after the critter
+now. We'll wait till after breakfast. He won't go far, lugging that
+shote."
+
+The bear was fat and in the best possible condition for salting down for
+winter use. So even Mrs. Harding had no objection to make when the boys
+started after breakfast to follow the trail. She herself, with the help
+of the younger children, collected the hogs in the pen again and put up
+the log fence. Meanwhile Nuck and Bryce found that the bear had made for
+a piece of swamp about two miles away. The swamp was close grown with
+saplings and brush, while here and there a monster tree shot skyward.
+Some of these big trees were so old that they had become hollow and
+without doubt there was more than one lair of wild creatures in the
+swamp.
+
+But it was easy enough to follow the early morning visitor to the cabin.
+After carrying the shote into the edge of the swamp, bruin had stopped
+and made a hasty meal upon the porker. Indeed the boys, who started on
+his trail scarcely two hours after the raid had been committed,
+undoubtedly disturbed him at his repast. The shote was not completely
+eaten when they found the bear's breakfast-table. "It is a mighty big
+bear anyway," Bryce declared, looking at the marks of the marauder's
+feet. "He couldn't have brought that pig so far if he hadn't been."
+
+"He warn't big enough for you to hit," said Nuck, slyly.
+
+"Huh! guess you can't crow any," responded the younger boy. "You missed
+him good and wide, too."
+
+They hurried on then, easily tracking the big, human-like spoor of the
+bear in the soil which here was not frozen. Indeed, in some places they
+"slumped in" rather deeply. The bear seemed to have picked out his path
+by instinct. But he could not hide his trail and before long the hunters
+came to a huge tree standing amid a clump of brush on the top of a
+hillock. The high ground was surrounded by water and rather hard to come
+at; but the boys were determined to get the bear after chasing it so
+far. They approached with caution, however, Enoch making Bryce remain in
+the rear.
+
+"If I fire and don't kill him you must be in reserve with your gun," he
+whispered cautiously. "He'd be an ugly customer if he turned on us. He's
+as big as a steer."
+
+"Huh! who's afraid?" demanded Bryce.
+
+"Jest you remember how father was killed," Enoch said, gravely. "Who'd
+ha' believed a bull-deer could kill an old hunter like him? You do as I
+say!"
+
+So Bryce dropped behind and watched his brother crawl up the side of the
+hummock with infinite caution, parting the brush with the barrel of his
+rifle, which he held in readiness to use at any instant. Suddenly, from
+the heart of the brush clump, there sounded an angry growl. The bear was
+not to be taken unawares. And when a big bear growls in anger the sound
+is hair-raising to the uninitiated. Bryce felt a chill in the region of
+his spine and if his old cap did not actually rise off his head, it
+certainly felt as though it would. He was to one side of Nuck's position
+so as not to get his brother between him and the bear should the
+creature come forth, and suddenly he saw the shaggy head and shoulders
+of the beast rise up over the brush. It looked enormous and when the
+bear opened its jaws, and displayed its great teeth and blood-red gums,
+it was indeed a fearsome spectacle.
+
+"Shoot him! shoot him!" exclaimed Bryce, excitedly. But Nuck remained
+comparatively cool--at least, to all appearance. He stood up, too, with
+the rifle at his shoulder. The bear stretched wide his great fore-paws
+and plunged forward to seize the boy; but the rifle spoke and the smoke
+of the piece hid the creature for a moment.
+
+When the cloud passed there was a great commotion in the brush, and
+Bryce saw that Nuck had darted back several paces and was rapidly
+loading his gun again. The younger boy could not see the bear; but it
+was badly wounded without doubt. The thrashing in the brush told that.
+Recovering his courage he pushed forward and finally saw the huge brown
+body on the ground, writhing in the muscular activity which follows
+death. The charge of Nuck's rifle had reached a vital spot.
+
+But something more Bryce saw. A second bear had followed the dead one
+from the hollow tree, and the boy observed this one whisk back into the
+dark opening between two roots. The tree was all of a dozen feet in
+circumference and there was doubtless a good-sized cavity in the tall
+trunk. "Come on! come on!" cried Bryce, excitedly. "Here's another,
+Nuck."
+
+"Have a care, boy!" responded the older lad. "Don't go too near. It may
+turn on us." He hastily finished the loading of his rifle and came up
+the hill again. They could see the entrance to the lair plainly; but no
+sight could they get of the second bear. Bryce brought a handful of
+clods and flung one after another into the hole in the tree. The bear
+did not even growl, so they were pretty sure that the missiles had not
+reached it. "He's climbed up inside," declared Nuck. "I warrant that
+tree's holler up to the first crotch."
+
+"What'll we do?" demanded Bryce. "You shot that one, Nuck. Now I wanter
+git the other, before we go home."
+
+"We'll smoke him out," declared the elder brother. "You stay right here
+and watch, and I'll get some wood." Nuck had brought a tomahawk which,
+with his skinning knife, was thrust into his belt. With the hatchet he
+obtained dry branches from the lower limbs of some spruce-trees which
+grew near, and packed a big fagot through the mire to the hillock where
+Bryce stood guard. This wood he flung into the mouth of the lair,
+started the fire with his flint and steel, and when the flames began to
+wreathe the branches hungrily, he flung on leaves and grass to make a
+"smudge." His suspicions regarding the hollowness of the tree proved
+true, for the draft through the hollow hole acted like a chimney and
+sucked the smoke upward. It began to wreathe out between the first
+limbs, some thirty feet or more from the ground.
+
+Suddenly there was a great clatter and scraping of claws inside the tree
+and then there popped out between the branches the head and shoulders of
+a smaller bear than the one which now lay still in the bushes. "Wait
+till he gits out!" shouted Nuck, as the excited Bryce raised his musket.
+"If you shoot him there he'll tumble back into the hole."
+
+Bryce was cool enough to see the wisdom of this advice and stay his
+hand. But in a moment the bear was completely out and then he fired. The
+bullet struck home and the bear lost its hold upon the limbs and dropped
+to the ground, landing with fearful force at the roots of the tree. But
+it was not dead and after a moment's struggle, got upon its feet again.
+But the shock had dazed it and for a little it could neither see its
+assailants nor find any means of escape. Nuck ran in, placed the muzzle
+of his rifle within a foot of the creature, and finished it off with
+despatch.
+
+Bryce was dancing about and yelling like a wild Indian; but it was not
+for joy over the death of this second bear. He was pointing on high and
+Nuck looked upward to see a third bear in the tree-top. This one had
+followed the second out of the hollow trunk and was mounting among the
+branches with great agility. The smoke pouring up through the hollow had
+driven the whole family into the open air. The Hardings reloaded their
+guns with despatch and then, on either side of the tree, fired at the
+remaining bear. Both bullets went true, but in falling the bear became
+wedged in the crotch of a big limb and Nuck, throwing aside his shoes
+and stockings, essayed to climb the trunk to push the dead beast off to
+the ground.
+
+This was no simple matter, for all he had to cling to were the knots and
+"warts" on the side of the trunk. It was almost like climbing up the
+wall of a house. But he reached the first crotch finally and after
+resting a spell, found the remainder of the climb easy enough. Before he
+pushed the carcass of the bear out of its resting-place he took an
+observation of the forest, for he was high above the swamp here and
+could see beyond the creek. In some way they would have to get the
+carcasses to the creek bank and transport them to the cabin by canoe. It
+would be no easy task.
+
+And as he scanned the stretch of river which he could see from his high
+perch he suddenly observed something which almost caused him to lose his
+hold upon the tree and fall, like the bear, to the ground. Coming up the
+stream were two canoes, each paddled by a couple of Indians, and with
+three white men in each craft. Even at that distance Enoch knew them to
+be strangers, and they were not a hunting party. Naturally his mind
+reverted to the warning Crow Wing had brought him a fortnight before,
+and without stopping to dislodge the dead bear, he descended the tree in
+utmost haste.
+
+"Why don't you push the bear off?" shouted Bryce from below.
+
+Nuck leaned over and placed his finger on his lips, shaking his head
+warningly. Then he slid down the remainder of the way, falling in a heap
+on the carcass of the second bear. "Quick!" he gasped, seizing his shoes
+and stockings. "They're coming."
+
+"What's coming?"
+
+"The Yorkers. I seen 'em on the river. Two canoes full."
+
+"Simon Halpen!" exclaimed the younger boy, his face blanching.
+
+"I don't know. Couldn't tell any of 'em so far away. But they be'n't
+Bennington men, that's sure." Nuck was hastily pulling on his stockings.
+"You run back and tell mother. I'll watch 'em till they land and see
+what they intend to do."
+
+"But the bears----" began Bryce.
+
+"We'll have to leave 'em. That one in the tree will be all right for a
+while for sure. Now hurry."
+
+Bryce obeyed at once and a moment later the elder boy started off in the
+other direction for the bank of the creek. He ran carefully, however, so
+as not to make any noise and thus warn the canoe party of his presence.
+In half an hour he was abreast of the boats, for they progressed but
+slowly up the stream. Here he had a good view of the men. In the first
+canoe he saw Crow Wing and another young Indian of his tribe, while the
+paddlers in the second were likewise Iroquois. The white men were
+Yorkers he was sure, and all were heavily armed.
+
+As he scrutinized the whites his eyes rested finally on one man in the
+leading canoe whom he was sure he had seen before. He could not mistake
+that lean, dark face and hooked nose. Whether or not it was the person
+he had seen in the wood the day of Sheriff Ten Eyck's fiasco at the
+Breckenridge farm, he was certain of the man's identity. It was Simon
+Halpen who, under a New York patent, claimed territory on the
+Walloomscoik, a part of which the Harding farm was.
+
+Dodging from tree to tree, the boy followed the canoes and finally,
+before they came in sight of the Harding house, saw the party land. The
+Indians remained with the canoes; but the white men disembarked with
+considerable baggage. One of the men carried a surveyor's instrument,
+while a second bore a chain. Halpen led them and when he had seen the
+party strike into the forest in the direction of the house, Enoch sped
+away on a parallel trail and headed them off, arriving first at the
+destination.
+
+He found that his mother and the children had already put up the
+shutters and made ready to receive the Yorkers. The cattle were shut in
+the yard surrounding the barn and the smaller children were put in their
+mother's bed to be out of the way. Bryce went into the loft where he
+could watch for the appearance of the enemy; but Enoch remained outside
+the door, his rifle in the hollow of his arm, ready to parley with the
+Yorkers who soon were reported by Bryce as coming through the lower
+fields.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+AN UNEQUAL BATTLE
+
+
+A masterful spirit had entered into Enoch Harding during the past few
+months. He was no longer a child; he thought and acted as a man in many
+things. Now, with this danger threatening them all, he did not shrink
+from the ordeal, and none might know his inmost feelings from the
+expression of his face. He did not speak to his mother, nor did she seek
+to advise him. Long before they had talked this emergency over, and it
+had been agreed that the homestead must and should be defended even to
+the point of firing on the Yorkers who might come to dispossess them.
+The legal authority claimed by Simon Halpen was not recognized in the
+Grants and did the Hardings put themselves in Halpen's power by agreeing
+to let the New York authorities arbitrate the matter, they would lose
+all that they had toiled and suffered for during the past ten years.
+
+The widow saw that the windows of the cabin were shuttered and that
+Bryce had both powder and bullets beside him in the loft. Then she went
+into her own chamber and falling upon her knees prayed as only a mother
+can whose children are in bodily and imminent danger. How far the
+Yorkers would dare go--to what lengths Halpen might force the fight for
+the ox-bow farm--it was impossible even to imagine. He was a cruel and
+unscrupulous man, but he had already had a taste of the temper of the
+Bennington settlers and perhaps the remembrance of the beech-sealing
+which had been dealt out to him two years and more before, would make
+him chary of coming to blows.
+
+Soon the six Yorkers appeared around the corner of the log fence which
+enclosed the cattleyard. Four of them, including Halpen, were armed with
+guns. The surveyor and his assistant carried their tools only, and
+walked in the rear of the more warlike quartette. Their leader, his
+lean, black face clouded by a threatening scowl, strode across the home
+lot and approached the cabin door. His beady eyes glittered and when he
+was enraged his hooked nose seemed to glow a dull red beneath the dusky
+skin, like a half-heated iron.
+
+Simon Halpen was much better dressed than the citizens of Bennington
+were apt to be, and he carried himself haughtily. His hair was done
+carefully and the queue tied with a silk ribbon. His rifle was
+silver-mounted and his powder-horn was partly of silver filagree work.
+In every way--dress, accoutrements and manner--he bore out the account
+the Hardings had received of him, that he was a wealthy and proud man.
+The three other armed men were fellows of the baser sort, hired at
+Albany for the purpose of driving the widow and her children from their
+home.
+
+[Illustration: THE BOY STOOD LIKE A STATUE]
+
+Enoch Harding thought this as he saw the party approach, and his heart
+beat faster while his cheeks were dyed with crimson. Should these men
+march up and deprive his mother and brothers and sisters of their home?
+Not as long as he held a gun and had powder and shot with which to load
+it! The fearful thought of shooting down one or more of these men in
+cold blood did not shock him now. The bitterness which filled his heart
+against Simon Halpen overbore any other emotion. He raised his rifle
+threateningly and cried aloud: "Halt there--halt I say! What d'ye want
+on our land?"
+
+The three retainers of Halpen, as well as the surveyor and his
+'prentice, halted instantly, but Simon strode on, his eyes blazing and
+his great nose growing ruddier as his rage increased. "Your land--your
+land, forsooth!" he exclaimed. "I'll teach ye better than that, ye young
+viper!"
+
+Instantly Enoch had his rifle to his shoulder and had drawn bead upon
+the Yorker. The muzzle of the weapon covered Halpen's heart. The boy
+stood like a statue--there was no trembling to his young arms. "Back! If
+you come a yard nearer I will fire!" he cried. He did not recognize his
+own voice, but Halpen heard him plainly and was impressed with his
+earnestness. He stopped suddenly, half raising his own gun. "Don't do
+that!" cried Enoch, instantly. "Keep your gun down. Why, I have but to
+press this trigger and you will drop where you are! Be warned."
+
+"Hi, captain," growled one of his supporters, "the little varmint means
+it. Have a care."
+
+"You--you----" Halpen only sputtered for a moment. He could not find
+words to properly express his rage. "I believe on my life, he would
+shoot me."
+
+"I certainly will, Master Simon Halpen, if you come nearer. You are
+quite near enough. You have come here for no good purpose. We own this
+land--my father paid for it and has improved it. He may be dead, but we
+will show you how we can defend the place from you Yorkers."
+
+"You crow loud, my young cock-o'-th'-walk!" exclaimed Simon Halpen, yet
+seeking to come no nearer the boy. "But you cannot hope to stand before
+his Majesty's officers--though some of you vagabond Whigs have become
+bold of late. Know ye that I bear authority from the loyal governor of
+his Majesty's Colony of New York, to turn you off this land, which is
+mine and has been mine for these six years."
+
+"And I have told you that you cannot come here and drive us off, for we
+shall fight ye!" declared Enoch, his anger rising. "And what be more,
+Master Halpen, though ye might succeed in driving us off, ye could not
+hold this land. It is too near Bennington, and ye know well what sort of
+men Bennington folk are, and what they would do to you."
+
+At this reminder of his former embarrassment, when caught by the
+neighbors and "viewed," Simon Halpen flew into a towering rage. He shook
+his rifle in the air as he berated the fearless youth. "Have a care with
+that gun, Master Halpen," said Enoch, "for it might go off by accident.
+And if such a thing should happen I would shoot you down--'deed and I
+would!"
+
+This warning cooled the man's ardor somewhat. For a full minute he stood
+silent eyeing Enoch from under his shaggy brows. "Would you dare flout
+me to my face?" he demanded.
+
+"I dare keep my rights here, Master Halpen, as my father did before me,"
+said Enoch, his voice trembling for the first time. And at the mention
+of the dead and gone Jonas Harding more than Enoch were moved. Halpen's
+manner changed; his face paled perceptibly; the fire died out of his
+eyes and his nose no longer glowed. He dropped his head and half turned
+as though to leave the spot.
+
+But suddenly one of his retainers stepped forward and whispered in his
+ear. The whisper brought the leader to his old mind. His head came up
+and he flashed a look of bitter hatred at Enoch. He nodded to the man
+who had spoken and instantly the three armed retainers began to quietly
+spread out as though to surround the house. "I'll parley no longer with
+you, my lad," Halpen said, shortly. "This land is mine and you are
+naught but squatters on it. And as such you shall be put off, or my name
+is not Simon Halpen!"
+
+Quick as thought Enoch darted backward to the house, for he had noted
+the action of the three men. "It is fighting you want, then, Master
+Halpen?" cried the boy, shrilly. "And you will get bullets instead of
+fair words if you press us--now I tell ye that! This is our home and we
+shall fight for it."
+
+"Stop the young rascal!" roared Halpen, raising his gun now in earnest,
+when he saw that Enoch no longer had him "covered." But the boy dodged
+into the house and slammed to the heavy door. As he did so a bullet
+buried itself in the door frame. Halpen had actually fired.
+
+The widow herself dropped the bars into place, for she had come out of
+her chamber and heard the conversation between her son and the Yorker.
+Now Enoch ran to one of the loopholes from which he could observe the
+movements of the man who had shot at him in so cowardly a manner. He saw
+that the surveyor, who had thus far kept in the background, was
+expostulating with the angry man. He could not hear what they said, but
+it was evident that the surveyor was a man of some conscience and could
+not see such murderous actions without striving to put Halpen in better
+mind. But the latter shook him off in rage and loaded his gun again. The
+house was now surrounded by the four armed men and the three
+understrappers were only waiting Halpen's command to fire.
+
+"Shall I shoot him? shall I shoot him?" cried Bryce, from the loft.
+
+"Hold your fire!" commanded Enoch. "You may have blood on your hands
+yet, if you be not careful."
+
+"But he fired at you."
+
+"And a poor job he made of it. We will not fire unless we are forced
+to."
+
+His mother said never a word. She went into her chamber again and with
+the girls and little Harry crouched upon the bed. But she glanced
+frequently from the loophole to observe the movements of the Yorker upon
+that side of the clearing.
+
+By and by Halpen raised his voice and addressed the besieged. "Open the
+door and come out, or we will batter it down. And it will go hard with
+you then, I warrant! If you give up the place peaceably you may cart
+away your household stuff and the cattle and hogs. I'll not be too hard
+on you."
+
+"If you come near this door I will send a bullet through your black
+heart!" was Enoch's reply, poking the muzzle of his rifle through the
+loophole beside which he stood.
+
+The widow came running from the chamber. "Enoch! Enoch!" she cried, in
+horror. "Would you kill him?"
+
+"He killed my father!" cried the boy, before he thought what explanation
+of his secret suspicions that remark might necessitate.
+
+"The child is mad!" she murmured, after staring at him a full minute.
+"You do not know what you say, Enoch. Master Halpen had naught to do
+with your poor father's death."
+
+But Enoch had not to reply. A cry came from Bryce in the loft. "Look at
+that! Look at that!" he shouted, with excitement. "I just will shoot
+him!"
+
+And then his old musket spoke. There was a yell from without. Enoch
+thought Simon Halpen himself had been shot, but the Yorker only ran
+around the end of the cabin to where one of his men stood howling like a
+wolf, and holding on to his swinging arm.
+
+"I've broke his arm!" declared Bryce, proudly, coming to the head of the
+ladder. "He was flinging blazing clods on the roof."
+
+"What shall we do?" gasped the mother. "My boys will be murderers."
+
+"I'll kill them all before they'll harm you, mother," declared young
+Bryce, very proud indeed that he had hit the mark, but secretly
+delighted as well that he had done the villainous Yorker no serious
+damage.
+
+But the moment after, he shrieked aloud and came again to the top of the
+ladder. His face was blanched. "Oh, oh! they've done it--they've done
+it!" he cried. "The roof is afire. Don't you smell it?"
+
+Enoch could not believe that this horror was true until he had run up to
+the loft. The red flames were already showing at the edge of the house
+wall, and the crackling without told him that the bark and binders of
+the roof were burning fiercely. "Tear it off!" he shouted, and dropping
+his rifle he seized a length of sawed scantling which his father had
+brought from the mill, and began to break up the burning roof and cast
+it off. But as it fell to the ground against the house, soon the logs
+outside were afire. The dwelling was indeed imperiled.
+
+"Come out! come out!" shouted Simon Halpen's voice. "The hut will burn
+to the ground an' ye'll burn with it. Ye'll go to Albany jail for this,
+every last one of ye!"
+
+"Let me shoot him, mother!" cried Bryce, doubly excited now. "He'll
+never take you to jail."
+
+"Come down from the loft, Bryce," the widow commanded, calmly. "Nothing
+can save the cabin now."
+
+The children were crying with fear. The red flames began to lick the
+edges of the shutters and the door frame was afire. If they escaped they
+must pass through a wall of flame. The men outside, frightened by the
+result of their awful act, were shouting orders and berating each other
+madly. Yet none dared come too near, for they feared the guns of the
+defenders of the homestead. Enoch for the moment completely lost his
+head and stood as one daft.
+
+But his mother was not so. Swiftly did she sweep aside the ashes on the
+hearth. Then of her own exertions she lifted on its edge the flat stone
+which covered the underground apartment. There was the ladder the boys
+had made leading down into the cool depths. "Down with you--all!" she
+commanded, seizing little Harry first and thrusting his feet upon the
+ladder.
+
+"Oh, we'll smother down there, mother!" cried Kate.
+
+"Nonsense!" exclaimed the widow, yet with shaking voice. "Do you think
+mother would tell you to do anything that would hurt you?"
+
+But though she encouraged them to descend, in her own mind she was
+simply choosing the lesser of two terrible evils. The girls and Harry
+descended quickly; but she had to fairly force Bryce down. He wanted to
+stay and fight, and he clung to the old musket desperately. Although the
+tears were running down his face, he was made of the stuff which holds
+the soldier, though frightened, to his post.
+
+"Go down yourself, mother," Enoch said, recovering his presence of mind
+and speaking calmly now. "I will follow you and drop the stone into
+place. But first I want to look out----"
+
+He ran to the loophole, through which the smoke was now pouring. But
+after a moment there was a break in the cloud and he saw the group of
+frightened Yorkers plainly. They stood not many rods away and poking his
+rifle through the hole, he aimed at the villainous Halpen and, pulling
+the trigger, ran back to the hearth before the echo of the shot died
+away. Down the ladder he darted, dropping the heavy hearthstone into
+place, and leaving the cabin which for so many years had been their
+home, to be consumed above their heads. But his heart sank when he found
+how closely the six packed the tiny room and realized how little air
+reached them down here in the earth.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+BACKWOODS JUSTICE
+
+
+At daybreak on this very morning when the Yorkers attacked the Harding
+place, 'Siah Bolderwood returning from the direction of Old Ti, suddenly
+came upon a little glade on the bank of the Walloomscoik Creek. With the
+instinct long gained by his life as hunter and woodsman, he never
+crossed an open space in the forest without examining it well. In this
+glade he saw, at first glance, the signs of recent occupancy. The
+smouldering ashes of a campfire and the marks on the creek bank told him
+that a canoe party had camped there during the night and that they had
+been under way but shortly. Making sure that they were now out of sight
+he more closely examined the spot. The party numbered at least half a
+dozen, and there had been two canoes. He had come up the creek bank
+himself; therefore, not having seen the strangers, they had gone on
+ahead of him. Five miles or so up the stream lay the ox-bow at which his
+old friend Jonas Harding settled when he came into the Disputed Grounds,
+and where the widow and her brood now lived. After examining the camp he
+quickened his step toward the Harding place.
+
+A mile further on, however, he heard the stroke of paddles and the sound
+of men's voices. He would have gone to the fringed river bank and peered
+out upon the stream had not a figure suddenly risen before him as though
+from the ground itself and barred his way. "How d'ye, Crow Wing!" he
+exclaimed, yet showing no surprise at the Indian youth's appearance. The
+latter bore a brace of rabbits on his gun and Bolderwood guessed that he
+belonged to the canoe party and had left them to get this game for their
+dinner.
+
+"Umph!" returned the Indian and looked at him stolidly.
+
+"Your people?" asked the ranger, with a gesture toward the river.
+
+"Umph!" was the reply. It might have meant yes or no. Crow Wing seemed
+undecided. "Why you no at Hardings?" he demanded finally.
+
+"I'm bound that a-way now," said the white man.
+
+"Hunting?" grunted Crow Wing.
+
+"Been up to Old Ti. Bought some land up there."
+
+Crow Wing seemed about to pass on. But over his shoulder he said: "You
+go to Hardings' farm. They want you--mebbe."
+
+"What for?"
+
+The Indian shrugged his shoulders and walked on. But Bolderwood strode
+after him. "What's going on?" he asked, anxiously. "Who's that out
+yonder?" nodding again toward the creek.
+
+"Umph! Men hire Crow Wing to paddle canoe. They go to Hardings'."
+
+"Yorkers!" exclaimed Bolderwood.
+
+But the Indian youth said no more and quickly disappeared in the bushes
+which overhung the creek. The ranger hesitated a moment, appeared to
+think of following him, and then turned abruptly and plunged into the
+forest on a course diagonal from the river. Therefore, when Nuck and
+Bryce were fighting the bears in the swamp he did not hear their guns,
+being by that time some miles away and striding rapidly toward
+Arlington. He had suspected the truth and instead of wasting time
+observing the party of which Crow Wing was a member, he had it in his
+mind to rouse the neighbors to go to the aid of the widow and her
+children. After the affair at Otter Creek, which he was sorry indeed to
+have missed, Bolderwood had expected something like the present raid.
+He, like the Hardings, believed that Simon Halpen would find the time
+ripe for the carrying out of his nefarious designs.
+
+It was the season of the year when the farm work having been completed,
+the pioneers felt free to go about more, and hunting was popular. Many
+men were off with their rifles; but Bolderwood picked up some half dozen
+determined fellows and hastened back to the Harding place. While yet
+some distance away they heard a rifle shot and so disturbed was the
+ranger by this, that he started on the run for the ox-bow farm, and was
+far ahead of his friends when he broke cover at the edge of the forest
+and beheld the cabin.
+
+His horror and despair when he saw the house wrapped in flames and the
+Yorkers running across the fields toward the river, knew no bounds. Yet
+even then he did not suppose that the widow and her family were within
+the burning dwelling. He presumed they must be hiding in the
+outbuildings and he ran on after the fleeing Yorkers, thinking only to
+take vengeance upon them for their wanton cruelty in burning down the
+poor woman's house at the beginning of winter.
+
+One man kept turning back to look at the blazing structure which was now
+more than half consumed; and this fellow the ranger quickly overtook. It
+was the surveyor and he was wringing his hands and weeping as he ran.
+Bolderwood dashed past him without a word, seeing plainly that he was
+not armed and was sore frightened. "I'll attend to your case later," the
+ranger muttered, and spurred on after the rest of the party. But they
+were too quick for him, and having reached the bank of the creek leaped
+into their canoes and the Indians pushed off. The fear of what they had
+done pressed them hard and they had run like madmen from their single
+pursuer. Now at an order from Halpen the Indians stolidly paddled down
+the river again and were quickly out of sight around the nearest bend in
+the stream.
+
+Bolderwood went back and found the surveyor prone upon the ground and
+weeping like a woman. "Get up, you great ca'f!" cried the ranger.
+"Nobody'll kill you for your part in this matter though you desarve
+little mercy.... Was that Simon Halpen?"
+
+"It was indeed--the demon!" gasped the fellow, dragged unceremoniously
+to his feet by the borderer.
+
+"If he ever comes into this colony again I doubt but he'll be hung as
+high as Haman," Bolderwood declared. "And you were the surveyor, eh? One
+of Duane & Kempe's men? Well, sir, your back will be well tickled, or my
+name's not 'Siah Bolderwood! But bear up, man--'tis no killing
+punishment."
+
+"What, sir?" cried the fellow. "Do you think I weep because of your
+promised punishment? I fear you not--I am a leal subject of the King and
+peaceful. You cannot touch me. But I weep because of the work that
+dastard has done this day."
+
+"What do you mean?" cried Bolderwood, fiercely. "Where is the woman and
+her bairns?"
+
+The surveyor pointed a shaking finger at the cabin, the smoking walls of
+which were now all that were standing. "They are there. Wait! let me
+tell you. I had nothing to do with the dreadful work. Nor, indeed, did
+Simon Halpen mean to destroy the house and the poor woman and children.
+They meant to burn the roof off to scare them out, and one man threw
+burning clods on it. But those inside tore off the flaming roof and it
+fell all around the cabin and set the walls afire. They dared not run
+out through that wall of flame and smothered to death they were--God
+pity them!" and he began to weep aloud again.
+
+Bolderwood was speechless--well-nigh overcome, indeed, with the horror
+of this. He saw his friends appear from the wood on the other side of
+the house and he walked toward them like one in a dream. But still he
+clung to the surveyor's arm and forced him to approach the cabin. The
+roof had, of course, been completely consumed, and the outside of the
+walls was blackened and still blazed fiercely at the corners. The window
+shutters and door were burned away and the interior of the place was
+badly demolished.
+
+"Where's the widder and the boys?" shouted one of the newcomers to
+Bolderwood. The old ranger did not answer, but his hand tightened upon
+the surveyor's arm. Suddenly the latter shrieked and would have fallen
+to the ground had not the grasp upheld him. In the door of the burning
+cabin stood the figure of Enoch Harding, his face covered with smut and
+his clothing half burned off his back. For a moment the surveyor
+believed the dead had risen and he covered his face with his hands to
+shut out the sight of the boy.
+
+"Are ye all alive, lad?" shouted Bolderwood, dropping the surveyor and
+running forward.
+
+"We're all right, but well-nigh smothered," returned Enoch, hoarsely.
+"Bring--bring some water!"
+
+He staggered out of the cabin and fell upon the ground. In a moment the
+surprised neighbors were running with buckets and pans from the well,
+for Mistress Harding's milk vessels had been left to dry outside the
+springhouse. Bolderwood took it upon himself to revive the
+half-strangled Enoch, while the others dashed water over the smouldering
+interior of the cabin, putting out the fire on the floor which was
+burning briskly, and finally being able to draw the widow and the
+smaller children from the secret room under the hearth and carry them to
+the outer air. Here they quickly revived and Mistress Harding with the
+girls and little Harry took shelter in one of the hovels.
+
+The destruction of the cabin was practically complete. There was not a
+log that was not charred, and the interior furnishings of the house were
+ruined. The kind-hearted neighbors saved the chests of bedclothing and
+the family's best garments, for the flames had not gotten at them. But
+everything was sadly smoked. And the house would have to be torn down
+and rebuilt with new timber throughout. It was a sad spectacle indeed
+for Enoch and Bryce to look upon. "I wish I had shot them all!" cried
+the latter in a rage. But Enoch said nothing. He would not whisper how
+his anger had made him aim to kill Simon Halpen. Now, in cool blood, he
+was glad that the bullet had not sped true.
+
+But the condition of the house filled him with despair. Winter was at
+hand and it would be next to impossible to build a good house before
+spring, although the timbers could be drawn and squared while the snow
+was on the ground. What would they do for a shelter until then? "We'll
+make yonder hovel that you boys play in, all tight and warm for the
+winter, Nuck," Bolderwood observed, seeing the tears running down the
+boy's cheeks. "Don't cry about it. And we'll have up a better house than
+this in the spring, lad. The neighbors will all help ye."
+
+Meanwhile, however, Bolderwood had kept his eye upon the surveyor. The
+latter, seeing that the family had been so miraculously saved from the
+fire, sought to get away while the men were saving those goods which
+were unconsumed. But Bolderwood was after him with mighty strides and
+dragged him back, a prisoner. "Nay, friend, you'll be needed here as a
+witness," he said, grimly. "We don't allow such gentry as you in the
+Hampshire Grants without presenting you with a token of our respect and
+consideration. Ha!" he added, suddenly, "whom have we here?"
+
+A horseman rode quickly out of the wood and approached the burned cabin.
+Before he pulled in his steed the men welcomed him vociferously, for it
+was Captain Baker. "Look at this, 'Member!" cried Bolderwood, dragging
+the trembling surveyor forward. "What a sight this is to blister the
+eyes of decent men! A poor widder's house burned about her ears and only
+by the mercy of God were she and her youngsters saved."
+
+"The villains!" roared Baker. "And is that one of them?"
+
+"He was with the party. But I truly believe that he had little to do
+with this dastardly work. He's only a poor surveyor body."
+
+"We'll find shelter with some neighbor for Mistress Harding and the
+little ones," said Baker, "and then attend to his case without delay."
+
+But the widow was not minded to leave her homestead. It was not yet very
+cold and the hovel in which the children had had their frolic a
+fortnight before was easily made comfortable for the family. She set
+about this at once while Captain Baker and the neighbors sat in judgment
+upon the trembling surveyor. These impromptu courts held by the Green
+Mountain Boys when they happened to capture a Yorker guilty of meddling
+with the settlers, were in the nature of a court martial. Sometimes the
+sentences imposed were doubtless unjust, for the judges and juries were
+naturally bitter against the prisoners; but the punishment seldom went
+beyond a sound whipping, and in this case the surveyor, still sputtering
+and objecting to the illegal procedure, was sentenced to two score
+lashes, save one, and Enoch and Bryce selected the blue beech wands with
+which the sentence was to be carried out.
+
+The surveyor was taken behind the log barn, his coat and shirt stripped
+from his back, and Bolderwood and one of the other neighbors fulfilled
+the order of Captain Baker as judge of the military court. Bolderwood,
+remembering the tears the prisoner had shed when he thought the family
+burned alive, could not be too hard upon him, and although the woodsman
+made every appearance of striking tremendous blows, he scarce raised a
+welt upon the man's back. But when the other executioner laid on for the
+last nineteen strokes, the surveyor roared with pain and without doubt
+the lesson was one which did him good. It would be many a day before he
+ventured to survey the lands east of the Twenty-Mile Line--at least, not
+until his back stopped smarting. Finally he was given his clothing, and
+part of the band marched him across country to the New York border and
+turned him loose.
+
+The attack of Simon Halpen upon the Hardings had practically failed. Yet
+the loss of their home was a sore blow. In a couple of days, with the
+help of Bolderwood, the old hovel was made very habitable. But it was
+small and so many of their possessions had been burned that even Bryce
+cried about it. Nevertheless their supply of food was all right, and the
+cattle had not been injured. Also, with Bolderwood's assistance, the
+three bears which the boys had so happily killed, were brought home, the
+hams smoked, some of the meat salted, and the pelts stretched and dried
+for winter bed coverings. By the time the snow lay deep upon the earth
+the Hardings were once more comfortable.
+
+The boys did very little trapping and hunting that winter of '72-'73 for
+they could not attend to traps set very far from the ox-bow, and the
+Walloomscoik country was becoming scarce of game. 'Siah Bolderwood did
+not go back to Old Ti, either, but contented himself with making short
+hunting trips around the lower part of the lake, for he spent all the
+time he could spare in helping the widow and her boys to get the timber
+ready for their new abode. Enoch and Bryce were determined that this new
+structure should be much better than the log cabin which their father
+had erected ten years before, and every timber dragged to the site by
+the slow moving oxen was squared with the broad ax and carefully fitted
+so as to "lock" at the corners. Some planks were sawed at the mill and
+sledded to the ox-bow on the ice, too, and when the plaintive call of
+the muckawis--the Indian name for the "whip-poor-will,"--ushered in the
+spring, a noble company of Green Mountain Boys gathered to build the
+widow's house again.
+
+Although the new house was put up and made habitable in about ten days,
+it took some time to fit window-frames, build two partitions, for there
+were to be two sleeping chambers on the ground floor in this house,
+which was larger than the old structure, and lay the floor of the loft,
+build bunks to sleep in, make a new meal chest and dresser, and
+construct other articles of furniture which were needed to replace the
+stuff burned in the fire. Enoch had a mechanical turn of mind and Bryce
+made an able assistant. Between them they turned out a new table,
+several chairs with hide backs and seats, and even essayed a "rocker"
+for their mother which, although rudely built and with its rockers not
+exactly even, was declared by Mrs. Harding to be a marvel of
+workmanship.
+
+All these things had to be done besides the regular work of the farm
+during the spring and summer, and the studies of the older boys were
+rather neglected that year, greatly to the delight of Bryce. Indeed,
+several of their mother's precious books had been destroyed by the
+flames, and had it not been for the sorrow he knew she felt at their
+loss, Bryce would have openly expressed his satisfaction. He was born
+for the woods and fields, and although he made no objection to farmwork,
+it was plain that his father's roving disposition had entered strongly
+into the make-up of the lad.
+
+He still felt injured--indeed, the feeling grew with his own
+growth--because he was not allowed to join the military companies; but
+Mistress Harding had finally promised that if he could trap enough game
+the next winter to pay for a new gun--a rifle instead of the old musket
+which had once been Nuck's and which their father had brought with him
+on his return from the French wars--he should be allowed to attend the
+Bennington drills. That was putting the privilege a year ahead, but
+Bryce was partially contented with it.
+
+Lot Breckenridge had finally been allowed to join the Green Mountain
+Boys and so Enoch had somebody in his company near his own age. On
+several occasions there were frolics in the neighborhood to which the
+young people foregathered, and before the new house was built Lot and
+Enoch had gone on a very brief hunting trio. But as fall again
+approached the two friends, Lot and Enoch, planned to go trapping on the
+upper waters of the Otter and its branches as soon as harvest and
+hog-killing should be over and the winter really set in. Lot had several
+steel traps which had belonged to his father, and Enoch was likewise
+supplied. Both had canoes, but they agreed to use Enoch's only, as one
+was all they cared to "pack" over the portage to the upper Otter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+THE WOLF PACK
+
+
+Meantime throughout the Grants the line between the Whigs and Tories had
+become more distinct. Although it had been forbidden for any person to
+hold office or issue writs under advice from New York, in certain
+sections where the Tory sentiment was strong, New York justices
+continued to write papers of ejectment against the Hampshire settlers,
+and other Yorkers were found to serve the documents and on occasion to
+drive helpless farmers and their families from their homes. These
+affairs went on openly in the town of Durham, which was a Tory
+stronghold.
+
+Justice Benjamin Spencer was the principal official who dealt out the
+New York brand of justice in this town, and he resided in the village of
+Clarendon. Early in the fall Ethan Allen and a force of Green Mountain
+Boys, appeared at Clarendon and read to the people the resolutions
+passed by the Bennington Council to the effect that no person should do
+any official act under New York authority, and that all lands should be
+held under title from New Hampshire. The Durhamites were threatened
+that, if they refused to comply with these orders within a reasonable
+time, they would be made to suffer for their temerity. At this visit
+Judge Spencer absconded, remaining away from home until he was sure "the
+awful Green Mountain outlaws" had decamped.
+
+Enoch and Lot planned their start into the woods in November, and they
+were nearly ready when the second raid on Durham was proposed. The boys
+knew that the matter had been discussed by Colonel Allen and the other
+leaders for some time, for Justice Spencer still continued to disobey
+the orders of the Council of Safety, and the matter could not be
+ignored. It was past the middle of November when the commander of the
+Green Mountain Boys and some of his followers set out in the direction
+of Durham, and Lot and Enoch hurried their own going, determined to hide
+their canoe when once they reached the Otter and join in the descent
+upon Clarendon village.
+
+It was eleven o'clock at night, November 20th, that Colonel Allen,
+Captain Baker, and more than a score of their friends, entered the
+settlement with all the care and circumlocution of Indians. Nuck and Lot
+Breckenridge had joined the party at supper time in a certain rendezvous
+of Allen's in the woods, having hidden their canoe and traps on the bank
+of the Otter several miles away. The attacking force of Green Mountain
+Boys was heavily armed and might have been bound upon an expedition
+against Fort Ticonderoga itself, one might imagine. But a show of force
+was thought to be necessary to overawe the Yorkers who made up more than
+half the population of the village.
+
+The Green Mountain Boys awakened nobody in their approach to the house
+of Justice Spencer, until the leader himself thundered at the door and
+demanded that the New York official come down. After some parley, and
+seeing that there was no help for his case, Spencer descended and, as
+the next day was Sunday and nothing could be done then, the prisoner was
+hidden in the house of Mr. Green, some mile and a half from the
+settlement, until Monday morning. Early on that day, a still larger
+force of Grants men having gathered, as well as settlers whose titles
+had been derived from New York, Justice Spencer was taken to the door of
+his own house and tried.
+
+The inquest, with Allen, Warner, Baker, and Cochran, sitting in
+judgment, was carried forward with all due formality, although the
+judges were the principal accusers of the prisoners, and the sentence
+was finally pronounced that the prisoner's house be burned and he
+himself give his bond to not again act as a New York justice. At this
+the doughty justice broke down, for he plainly saw that his captors were
+quite able, and in the mind, to carry out the sentence. He told the
+court that if his house were burned his store of dry goods and all his
+property would be destroyed and his wife and children made destitute.
+
+"And have you and your like not made many of our friends destitute?"
+cried some of the crowd. But more showed some heart for the justice,
+notably Captain Warner. Warner finally suggested that as the dry goods
+store was a public benefit and was one of the few stores in the
+township, it should be saved if possible; and it would be too hard at
+that time of year to turn the man and his family out of their home. He
+declared for taking off the roof of the prisoner's house and then
+putting it on again, providing that Spencer acknowledged that it was put
+on under a New Hampshire title, and that he would purchase the same at
+once. Spencer, who might have felt some gratitude by this time, promised
+compliance in every particular, and with great shouting and good-nature,
+the roof of the house was lifted off and then put on again. And the
+lesson to the Durhamites was a salutary one.
+
+Enoch Harding and his chum left immediately after the settlement of the
+case and returned to their canoe. They feared the approach of a storm
+which threatened, and were desirous of building their winter camp and
+getting their traps set before the forest would be full of snow and the
+streams completely frozen. Both boys were very good woodsmen by this
+time, for Bolderwood had been Enoch's mentor and Lot's uncle was an old
+ranger who knew every trick of the forest and trail. They selected a
+heavily wooded gulley not far from the Otter and built there a log
+lean-to against the rocky side-hill, sheltered from the north and open
+to such sunshine as might penetrate the forest. The traps were set along
+the bank of the stream, some of them in the water itself, where the
+boys' sharp eyes told them that the fur-bearing game of which they were
+in search, were wont to pass.
+
+A fortnight after the Durham riot, as the Yorkers were pleased to call
+the visit of the Green Mountain Boys, the two friends were very cozily
+fixed in the gully. One heavy snow had fallen, and their traps had begun
+to repay their attention most generously. Then the Otter froze over
+solidly and they had to keep the ice open about their traps with the
+axe. They were in a lonely piece of wood and day after day saw nor heard
+nobody but themselves. The bears had taken to their long winter sleep;
+but the fierce catamount was still abroad, and at night the howling of
+the wolf-pack as it followed some hard-pressed doe or decrepit buck,
+reached the boys' ears. And at that day the timber-wolf of the Green
+Mountains--a long, lean, gray creature as big as a mastiff--was much to
+be feared.
+
+The traps stretched so far along the creek that if one went out alone to
+examine and bait them, almost the entire day was consumed. The boys did
+not possess ice-runners, or skates, with which they might have skimmed
+over the frozen creek and visited the traps in a couple of hours. Each
+had brought a pair of snow-shoes, but these were of no use on the creek.
+So baiting the traps was no easy task. Usually they divided the work
+between them and thus got it over and had time to stretch and scrape
+their pelts in the afternoon. One day, however, Lot remained at camp to
+make some repairs on his clothing, and Enoch set out early to go the
+rounds by himself.
+
+It had been a very cold night and the ice was frozen solidly about the
+traps. The catch had been good, too, and both of these facts delayed the
+young trapper more than common. There were fish lines to examine, also,
+for some of the traps were baited with fish which was considered
+particularly tempting food for certain of the beasts they wished to
+catch. It was long past noon when Enoch got back to the camp for dinner,
+and then he had gone over but half the line of traps. When he started in
+the other direction after hastily eating the meal, he knew he should be
+out until past moonrise, and told Lot so.
+
+"I'll come and meet you," said his campmate.
+
+"No need. Reckon I can find my way back alone," said Enoch. "The moon'll
+be up by seven and it's nigh full."
+
+It was so, yet Enoch had no thought when he left the camp that he would
+be as long delayed as he was. It was full moonrise, before the boy had
+examined the last trap. He had a goodly load on turning his face
+campward and was glad of the company of his rifle as he heard the wolves
+clamoring in the forest. The bitter cold would make them ravenous by
+now, for many of the more easily caught animals had retired for the
+winter, while the strong crust on the snow enabled the deer to
+outdistance their shaggy enemies. While still three miles or more from
+camp he heard the beasts howling so savagely that he really became
+alarmed and would have thrown down his pack and run had he not shrunk
+from so betraying his fear to Lot.
+
+He knew, too, by the nature of the wolves' cries that they were close on
+the track of some quarry, and that it could not be his trail they were
+following, for they were approaching the creek through the timber on the
+western side of the stream. But the sound of the chase drew rapidly
+nearer, and desperately as Enoch hurried he could not distance the pack.
+The western bank was high and sloping just here and with anxious eyes
+the boy looked up the white incline, where the trees stood rather far
+apart, to catch the first glimpse possible of the wolves and their prey.
+Suddenly there came into view several dark objects moving swiftly over
+the snow. One was ahead, flitting from tree to tree, its identity almost
+indistinguishable at first. Then, with almost a shriek of horror, Enoch
+recognized the wolves' quarry as a human being!
+
+The pursued was on snow-shoes and coming to a steeper part of the creek
+bank, at once slid down to the ice. After him, their red tongues hanging
+to their breasts, and baying at every leap, came a round dozen of the
+ravenous creatures. Enoch saw that the unfortunate man was armed with a
+gun, but that evidently the weapon had been injured in some way, for he
+did not make use of it to beat off the wolves. He limped as he ran, too,
+and the young trapper saw plainly that the pack would overtake and pull
+him down in a very few moments.
+
+Once upon the ice the beasts spread out and almost surrounded him. While
+he limped on most awkwardly, the strong, sharp claws of the wolves
+helped them over the surface and soon the leader--a gaunt, gray monster
+with cropped ears and scarred back--leaped to seize the prey. Enoch,
+without a thought of his own danger, had hurried on, re-priming his
+rifle as he ran; but he was scarcely within fair gun-shot when the wolf
+leaped. The beast caught the fugitive by the shoulder, and its weight
+dragged the man down. He tripped upon his snow-shoes and in an instant
+was falling face-downward on the ice with the pack of hungry beasts
+fighting above him!
+
+Enoch fired his rifle into the midst of the pack as he ran, but although
+one of the wolves rolled over, kicking convulsively upon the ice, the
+others scarcely noticed the attack. So eager were they to get at the
+quarry which they had followed far, that the shot did not frighten them.
+But the boy was among them in a moment, his gun clubbed, and a fierce
+desire in his heart to slay the horrid beasts.
+
+He really thought the fallen man was killed, and his attack was inspired
+wholly by a desire for revenge. He laid about him with the gun-stock in
+a most furious fashion, and the wolves were soon cleared from above
+their prostrate victim. His attack quelled the courage of the pack for a
+little, and even the leader shrank away, howling dolefully. But the
+respite was not sufficient to allow Enoch to reload his gun.
+
+When the brutes fell back, the man upon the ice showed that he was by no
+means dead, though his exhaustion was plain. He struggled to his knees,
+and reaching up seized the hunting-knife from Enoch's belt, and the
+small axe with which the latter had cut the ice away from his traps.
+With one of these weapons in each hand he crouched in readiness to
+defend himself when the wolves should renew their attack.
+
+And he had not long to wait, for both hunger and natural ferocity urged
+them on. Suddenly the leader, with a savage snarl which fairly turned
+the blood cold in Enoch's veins, cast itself full at him!
+
+Raised upon his hind legs the old timber-wolf, the hero of a thousand
+fights with other pack-leaders, or with the young upstarts of his own
+tribe, was fully as tall as his antagonist. The sight of its wide red
+jaws, from which the froth flew as it does from the lips of a mad dog,
+the gleaming yellow teeth, the capacious throat which seemed fairly to
+steam with the fetid breath expelled from the beast's lungs, almost
+overcame young Harding. For the moment he was enthralled by the
+terrifying appearance of the wolf, and his arms lacked the strength
+necessary to swing his gun.
+
+[Illustration: THE WOLF SPRANG AT HIS THROAT]
+
+The charge would surely have overborne him had Enoch not slipped upon
+the ice as he shrank back, and providentially he fell upon one knee. The
+wolf had sprung at his throat and the pioneer lad's sinking to the ice
+caused the beast to leap clear over both the human actors in the drama.
+But as its lean gray body flashed past, the stranger reached up and with
+Enoch's keen hunting-knife slit a great wound in the exposed body. A
+wild yell rose above the clamor of the pack and the old wolf rolled over
+and over on the ice in the agonies of death, the blood spurting from the
+wound at every pump of its heart.
+
+Instantly half the pack sprang upon the dying leader, every male
+desiring to be master, and all doubtless bearing upon their own bodies
+marks of the wounded beast's displeasure. This change of front enabled
+Enoch to recover both his equilibrium and his presence of mind; and when
+the other beasts gathered courage to attack him in turn, he was ready to
+beat them off with his gun and to ably assist his companion in
+continuing the slaughter. The wolf he had first shot was attacked by its
+comrades, too, for at the smell and taste of blood the creatures showed
+all the characteristics of cannibals.
+
+Nevertheless, Enoch and the man crouching at his feet, had all they
+could do to defend themselves from the charges of the remaining wolves.
+If the beasts sprang high the boy met them with long-arm swings of his
+rifle; if they fell short the axe or the knife flashed and the wolves
+limped away with savage howls, their blood dyeing the frozen surface of
+the creek. For yards about the besieged the ice soon had the appearance
+of a mighty strife and although he had only received a scratch or two
+himself, Enoch was well spattered with blood.
+
+Hunger and the issue from their own veins drowned the natural cowardice
+of the canines. They charged blindly, and as fast as one went down
+beneath the blows of Enoch's gun, or was seriously wounded by his
+companion, another wolf sprang to the attack. Three already lay dead on
+the ice, torn limb from limb by their comrades, and three others limped
+upon the outer edge of the circle, seriously wounded; but still the
+fierce brutes sprang at their prey, and sprang again!
+
+Involuntarily Enoch shouted aloud at every blow he struck, but his
+companion maintained a desperate silence. The boy did not cry out
+because he expected any aid; yet assistance was within call. A figure
+came running over the ice from up stream and the sharp crack of a rifle
+announced the approach of Lot Breckenridge, who had come out to meet his
+friend. Another wolf rolled over in the throes of death, to be seized by
+its companions and torn to pieces with horrid cries. Lot came on with
+shouts of encouragement and together with Enoch laid about him with
+clubbed rifle until the remaining wolves, their cries now turned to
+yelps of fear, stampeded from the scene of the battle and sought safety
+in the forest, from the edge of which they howled their disappointment
+at their antagonists.
+
+It was Lot who first regained his breath and spoke. "Zuckers! but that
+was a great fight," he cried, hugging Enoch in his joy at finding him
+practically unhurt. "But you look as though you had been killin' beeves,
+Nuck. And who's this with you?" The individual in question rose stiffly
+to his feet with a significant "Umph!" "Why!" exclaimed Lot, "it's an
+Injin--it's Crow Wing! Where'd you pick him up, Nuck?"
+
+Enoch was vastly astonished to see whom he had befriended. "I had no
+idea who it was," he said. "How came you in this country, Crow Wing?"
+
+The Indian, now grown to be a tall and magnificent looking warrior, was
+breathing heavily and had some difficulty in answering for a moment. He
+stood, too, on one foot, holding up his left one like a lamed stork.
+"Umph!" he grunted at last, "White boys in good time. Save Injin sure!"
+He gravely offered his hand first to Enoch and then to Lot. "Crow Wing
+lame. Hurt foot--break gun--wolves come howl, howl, howl! No can scare
+'em; no can make fire; no can run good. Umph!"
+
+"You'll have to go to our camp," said Enoch. "You can't travel on that
+foot. You've sprained or broken it."
+
+Crow Wing nodded. He made no sign that the foot hurt him, excepting by
+holding it off the ice. "Some wolf pelts good," he remarked,
+sententiously.
+
+Lot had already turned away to examine the dead beasts. Only two skins
+were fit to be stripped from the carcasses and added to the pelts Enoch
+had brought from the traps. The two white boys quickly obtained these
+and then, with the Indian hobbling between them, and leaning on their
+shoulders, the trio made their way to camp through the moonlight, while
+the remaining wolves slunk back to the scene of the battle and devoured
+their dead comrades.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE TESTIMONY OF CROW WING
+
+
+The natures of the white man and the red are so opposed that it was
+impossible from the beginning of our North American history that either
+should really understand the sentiments and desires of the other. In the
+eyes of the Indian the most stoical and repressive white man was little
+better than a garrulous old woman. The "Yenghese," as the Indians called
+the English, were less criticised on this point than were the French;
+but the latter, being an imitative race, more easily adapted themselves
+to the manner and life of the red man, and therefore won his confidence
+if not his respect.
+
+Crow Wing displayed neither astonishment at finding the two white boys
+here, nor pain at the serious accident which had overtaken him. And it
+would have been a waste of time to urge him to explain more fully his
+being in this neighborhood. When he was ready to speak he would do so,
+and long after Lot Breckenridge was asleep, rolled up in his blanket and
+with his feet to the fire which blazed at the opening of the hut, did
+Enoch wait for the story. Crow Wing waited until he had slowly smoked
+out the little brass-bowled pipe which he carried with tobacco in a
+pouch at his belt. This pouch of tobacco and another of parched Indian
+corn, were all the provisions the ordinary Indian carried when on the
+march. The forest must supply his larder from time to time as he had
+need; and if game was scarce the red man went uncomplainingly with empty
+stomach.
+
+"Harding and Lot found much pelt?" he said, questioningly, waving his
+hand at the bales of furs in the back of the shelter.
+
+"So-so. We can't complain, Crow Wing. You were trapping, too?"
+
+"Yonder," replied the Indian, pointing to the west. "Crow Wing look at
+trap; wolves met him; wolves very hungry; make much mad when hungry.
+Umph!"
+
+"And they attacked you right away?"
+
+"Umph! Me shoot; then club gun. Hit tree first time; break gun; then run
+some more. Catch foot and fall; much hurt. That all."
+
+"Are you alone at your camp yonder?"
+
+"Umph!" said the Indian, nodding affirmatively.
+
+"You had better stay here till your foot's well. I reckon that gun can
+be repaired, too. Only the stock is broken."
+
+The Indian's eyes gleamed, showing that this statement pleased him
+vastly. Crow Wing's "fire-tube" was his most precious possession. "Me
+thought no good," he said.
+
+"I know of a man in Bennington who can fix it," declared Enoch. "Have
+you many pelts at your camp?"
+
+On his fingers Crow Wing showed how many beaver skins, otter pelts, wolf
+hides, and other and less worthy furs, he had obtained. He also stated
+that he had three steel wolf traps and two beaver or otter traps which
+he had obtained from a farmer for whom he had worked.
+
+"We can bring 'em all over here. Lot and I will go for them. You can't
+get around on that foot much for several weeks. It's bad. You 'tend camp
+and stretch pelts, while Lot and I look out for the traps. Then, when we
+go home, you take one third of the pelts."
+
+Crow Wing thought of this silently for a moment and then held out his
+hand with gravity. "Good! Crow Wing go to Bennington with Harding and
+Lot; sell pelts there and get gun fixed. Umph!"
+
+Although Enoch had suggested this scheme upon his own responsibility he
+knew Lot would agree to it. Really, it was a good thing for all three.
+Crow Wing's gun was useless, and his lame foot made traveling next to
+impossible for a while. But he could keep camp all right and look after
+the pelts. The traps the Indian had would be of much service to the
+white boys and would increase their own gains not a little. So upon this
+amicable basis the Indian joined the party and the next day Lot and
+Enoch, directed by Crow Wing, traveled to the Indian's camp and packed
+back both the traps and the skins.
+
+The boys learned that Crow Wing's people now resided in New York colony,
+on the shores of Lake George, and that the young warrior had not been
+east of the Twenty-Mile Line since the raid of Simon Halpen upon the
+Widow Harding's cabin. By patient questioning Enoch learned that Halpen
+had lived for months at a time with the tribe, but that he was not an
+adopted member of it, and was not altogether trusted by Crow Wing's
+people.
+
+"When burn cabin, old chief--my father--be told. Injins friends with
+Bennin'ton men; friends with York men, too. But Hawknose," the Indian's
+sobriquet for Simon Halpen, "sent away. He never come back."
+
+"You have hunted with him?" said Enoch, with some eagerness. "You were
+with him that day--you know--long ago; the day the Yorkers came up to
+James Breckenridge's farm?"
+
+Crow Wing made no reply for some time, gazing with gloomy eyes into the
+fire. Finally he said, speaking in an oracular manner, yet brokenly as
+he always did, for the English tongue was hard to him: "Jonas Harding
+not friend to Injin; Injin not friend to him. You friend to Crow Wing.
+You fight Crow Wing; fight 'um fair; when foot well we fight once more?
+Umph!"
+
+Enoch laughed. "I'll wrastle you any time you like, Crow Wing. But you
+can beat me running."
+
+The Indian, undisturbed, went on: "You not like father; you not speak
+Injin like he be slave-man; Injin free!" and he said it proudly, for the
+redskins looked down upon the negroes because they were the slaves of
+the colonists. "Hawknose no like Jonas Harding; he own your land; he buy
+it from Great Father of York and he buy it from Injin. All land Injin's
+once," he added, with a cloud upon his face. "Injin come with Hawknose
+to measure land; white man bring little thing to measure it; Jonas
+Harding throw Hawknose in creek and more white men beat him. White man,
+like Injin, feel he squaw when beat. Hawknose mad; tell Injin he kill
+Jonas Harding; drive you from land."
+
+"But father was killed by a buck in the forest," said Enoch, carefully
+hiding the emotion he felt.
+
+"Umph!" grunted Crow Wing, and would say nothing further at the time.
+
+Lot, although he had been often a companion of the Indian when the
+latter lived near his uncle's farm, looked upon him just as he did upon
+Sambo, Breckenridge's slave boy. He had played with him, swam with him,
+learned to use the bow and arrow under Crow Wing's instruction, and had
+gained something of forest lore from the Indian youth; but he had no
+respect for him, or for his peculiarities. He had not learned at 'Siah
+Bolderwood's knee of the really admirable qualities of these people whom
+the whites were pleased to call "savages." Lot made no objection to Crow
+Wing's joining them, for his presence, and the use of his traps, was a
+very good thing for them. He patronized the Indian, however, and was not
+above suggesting that, as the redman was so ignorant, it would not
+really be necessary to divide the pelts in even thirds at the end of the
+season.
+
+"The trader won't give him but about so much for them, anyway, no matter
+how many he offers," he said to Enoch. "You know how it is with them.
+Injins can't count and the traders fool 'em and cheat 'em. We'd better
+take some of his ourselves and so get some good out of them."
+
+"That isn't honest, Lot!" cried Enoch, hotly.
+
+"Huh! it's honest enough. We won't be cheating the Injin, for they'll do
+him no good. And there's no use in the traders makin' so much on him."
+
+"Then we'll go with him and see that the traders treat him honestly,"
+declared young Harding.
+
+"Zuckers!" exclaimed the careless Lot. "Catch me putting myself out that
+way for a redskin."
+
+"You're glad enough to use his traps, Lot!" cried Enoch. And the two old
+friends came very near having a falling out over the matter. Lot simply
+followed the example of the older settlers whom he knew. It was no
+particular sin to cheat an Indian. They were too much like children to
+look out for themselves in a bargain, anyway.
+
+But as week followed week, Crow Wing's manner toward Enoch Harding
+showed that he had adopted him, Indian fashion, as "brother." Not that
+the red youth displayed any affection; that was beneath a brave. But he
+appreciated Enoch's respectful treatment of him. Crow Wing treasured
+this in his mind and, when the spring came, and they packed their bales
+of furs by canoe and hand-sled to Bennington, and Enoch took pains to
+make the traders pay the Indian quite as liberally as they did Lot and
+himself for his furs, his gratitude blossomed in its fulness.
+
+Lot went home to see his mother; but Enoch took Crow Wing to the Harding
+house with him and gave him an old canoe in which the red youth could
+make his way by water and portage to his home on the shores of Lake
+George. Crow Wing did not go near the house when Enoch met his mother
+and the younger Hardings after his long absence; but he sat down to
+dinner with them and if he used his fingers oftener than his hunting
+knife to prepare his food it was not remarked, for forks were not always
+used by the settlers themselves at that day. His gravity awed the
+younger children, while Bryce admired his proportions openly. The Indian
+youth was certainly a magnificently built fellow.
+
+Before he went away he sat beside the creek and silently smoked a
+farewell pipe while his white friend waited for his last words. Enoch
+believed Crow Wing had something to tell him regarding Simon Halpen and
+that the time for speech had come; but knowing his nature the white
+youth had not tried to hurry this confidence.
+
+"Hawknose come here once more--what you do?" Crow Wing asked, when the
+pipe was finished.
+
+"Simon Halpen is my enemy. If you have an enemy what do you do?"
+returned Enoch, with some emotion.
+
+The Indian nodded. "Hawknose, Jonas Harding's enemy. No deer kill Jonas
+Harding. Hawknose yonder then," and he waved his hand toward the
+deer-lick at which the dead settler had been found three years before.
+
+"How does Crow Wing know that?" queried the white boy, eagerly.
+
+"Crow Wing there, too."
+
+"You saw him----" began Enoch, but the Indian cut him short with an
+emphatic "Umph! No see. Hear shot. Shot kill doe. Jonas Harding kill
+doe. Gun empty."
+
+"Yes, we found the gun and the dead doe. And there were marks of a big
+buck all about the place and father--was dead."
+
+"Hawknose there," said the Indian, gravely. "Crow Wing see him--running.
+Pass him--so," with a gesture which led Enoch to believe that the
+running Halpen had crossed the Indian's path within a few feet. "He no
+see Crow Wing. He run fast--look back over shoulder. And blood--blood on
+shirt--blood on hands--blood on gun! Go wash 'em in river. Then run
+more."
+
+"You saw him running away from the lick?" gasped Enoch. "But there were
+no footprints but father's near the place. Only the hoof prints of the
+big buck."
+
+"Umph! Crow Wing no see big deer; no hear 'um. But see Hawknose run,"
+said the Indian significantly.
+
+"But I can't understand how Halpen could have killed him, Crow Wing. He
+did not shoot him, and if he had been near enough to strike father down,
+why did his moccasins leave no mark?"
+
+The Indian rose gravely. "Some time we see. Crow Wing come back here.
+Harding go with him to deer-lick. Look, look--find out, mebbe."
+
+"But after three years how can anything be found?" demanded Enoch, in
+despair.
+
+"Will see," returned Crow Wing, and, without further word, entered the
+canoe and pushed out into the river. Nor did he turn about to look at
+the white youth once while the canoe was in sight. But he left Enoch
+Harding stirred to his depths by the brief and significant conversation.
+The youth did not understand how Simon Halpen could have compassed his
+father's death; yet Crow Wing evidently suspected something which he had
+not seen fit to divulge.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+THE STORM CLOUD GATHERS
+
+
+Enoch scarce knew Bryce after his winter's absence. The younger boy had
+felt the responsibility of his position as head of the family pro tem
+and although he had lost none of his cheeriness and love of action, he
+had gained some cautiousness. His care for little Henry and the girls
+was delightful and Mrs. Harding was undoubtedly proud of him. Although
+kept at home almost continually by his duties, Bryce had been able to
+trap enough beavers to buy the rifle which he had long wanted and on the
+first training day after the roads dried up in the spring, he went with
+Enoch to Bennington and was enrolled in Captain Baker's company.
+
+And during this year of '74 the train bands became of more importance
+than ever before. While in Boston and in other cities of the colonies,
+meetings were held in secret and companies of minute men were drilled by
+stealth, here in the Grants the Whigs trained openly, and the reason for
+it was known, too. The course of the foolish King and his ministers was
+widening the breach between the mother country and the American colonies
+until, when the Continental Congress met on September 5th of this year,
+royal authority was suspended almost everywhere but in the New York
+Colony. Within its confines were the strongest and most influential
+Tories, while the Dutch, who made up a goodly share of the population,
+although becoming good patriots in the end and warmly supporting the
+struggling nation which was born of that Congress, were phlegmatic of
+nature and slow to rouse.
+
+During these months so pregnant with coming trouble, the controversy
+between the land jobbers and the Grants waned but little. The Yorkers
+had received so many sharp lessons, however, that they were careful to
+attack no settlers who were within reach of assistance from any body of
+Green Mountain Boys. And as Allen, Warner, and Cochran had many
+"hide-outs" in the hills, where they kept munitions of war and to which
+they summoned their followers by means which actually seemed to savor of
+the Black Art to their enemies, it was difficult for the Yorkers to know
+where it was really safe to carry on their attacks against the peaceful
+grantees. Being "viewed" became a most serious matter indeed, and many a
+luckless surveyor or other underling of the sheriff of Albany, carried
+the blue-seal of the Green Mountain Boys upon his person for months
+after an unexpected meeting with those rangers of the forest.
+
+But the Yorkers kept away from Benningford and the surrounding district.
+More farms had been taken up there by Hampshire grantees than in other
+parts of the disputed ground and the reign of the Green Mountain Boys
+was supreme. The Hardings had been very happy since the building of the
+new house, and, as there had been a school established in the vicinity,
+the girls and Harry attended for six months in the year. Kate had grown
+to be a tall girl and looked like her mother, while Mary and Harry were
+becoming of considerable use outside of, as well as in, the house.
+
+Enoch and Bryce cleared a piece of woodland that year and late in the
+fall there was another stump-burning. 'Siah Bolderwood came down from
+his "farm" near Old Ti to join in the festivities; but several of the
+young people who had attended the stump-burning three years before were
+not present. Robbie Baker was up north with his father, and Lot
+Breckenridge had moved away from the vicinity of Bennington; Crow Wing
+did not come to try his skill at wrestling with Enoch, so the latter sat
+by with 'Siah as one of the judges, for he was older than the other
+contestants. Lot's mother had married a man named Lewis who owned and
+worked a farm much nearer the Connecticut River, in the town of
+Westminster, and after his return from their winter's trapping the
+spring before, Lot had gone across the mountains to work for his
+stepfather.
+
+Lot had always been his dearest friend and Enoch missed him sorely, and
+as he could not go trapping with him this winter, he agreed to visit
+Westminster for a fortnight or so, some time during the idle months. It
+was March when he started to cross the range and although the roads were
+still full of snow, he went horseback. A sleigh was a luxury that few
+Bennington people owned, although Nuck might have hitched the old
+wood-sled to Dobbin. He spent one night at a farmer's on the road, and
+was welcomed at supper time the next evening at the Lewis house.
+
+"Zuckers!" exclaimed Lot, running out to drag his friend off his horse,
+"I tell ye, I'm glad to see ye! And so'll marm be--if the young uns
+don't bother her too much. There's three Lewis young uns, too, besides
+the baby, and I tell ye, they're a wild lot. I'd rayther tackle them
+wolves that you'n Crow Wing got mixed up with last winter. Seen the
+Injin since?"
+
+"Not since I sent him home with more money than he had ever seen before
+in his life," replied Enoch.
+
+"Very foolish of you! We might have had some of his pelts just as well's
+not."
+
+"You don't mean that, Lot," said Enoch, who knew that young Breckenridge
+talked a deal more recklessly than he really felt.
+
+"Well, never mind all that," said Lot. "Tell me the news. What's goin'
+on 'tother side the mountings? Did ye know that lots more red-coats had
+come to Boston? And they say--leastways, a pedlar that come through here
+told us so last week--that the Boston folks have got a lot of guns and
+ammunition stored in the country towns and the minute men are drilling
+day and night. Do you s'pose there'll be war there, Nuck?"
+
+"If the Massachusetts people feel like we do here in the Grants,
+there'll be fighting," said Enoch, his eyes flashing. "What d'you
+suppose would happen if troops were quartered on us?"
+
+"I'm goin' to Boston if there's a fight," declared his friend. "Mr.
+Lewis says I can. He's a nice man--marm's second husband--and he's
+strong for the Grants, too. He's got a Hampshire title. But there's lots
+of Tories around here. The court's goin' to sit next week an' there'll
+be trouble then, mark my word. Lots of the cases these Tories have
+hatched up against our people are goin' to be tried, an' the Whigs ain't
+goin' to stand it. Judge Chandler ain't so bad a man; but Judge Sabin
+and the others are dead set ag'in all our folks. They say the sheriff
+has sworn in a big lot of deperties. Mebbe you'll see some fun before
+you go back to Bennington, Nuck."
+
+As Lot's idea of "fun" was pretty sure to be a scrimmage of some kind,
+it can be easily seen how strained the relations were then between the
+Whigs and the Tory court of the district. Whereas Tories and Whigs had
+lived at peace before, now they became bitter in controversy and even
+families were divided upon the questions of the hour.
+
+Enoch found Lot's stepfather to be a very quiet, pleasant man, who made
+it a point to be at harmony with all his neighbors, yet whose personal
+feelings and opinions as a Whig were well known. Lot delighted in being
+where the older men of the community discussed the trend of public
+affairs and it was due to him that Enoch, the second night after his
+arrival, gained some little notoriety in Westminster by an encounter he
+had at the Royal Inn, kept by one John Norton.
+
+The tap-room and parlors of the inn were occupied every evening at this
+time by the men of Westminster, and by certain visitors who had, for
+some days, been gathering for the meeting of the General Court. And all
+these visitors were not attorneys, or plaintiffs and defendants in the
+several cases which would come up for hearing before their Worships the
+justices. The sheriff was already at Westminster and there were more
+armed men about the town than had ever been seen there before at one
+time. Until the closing hour earnest discussions were carried on in the
+inn, for although the Royal, or "Norton's house" as it was called, was
+the headquarters of the Tories, many Whigs frequented it, too.
+Naturally, the young men and half-grown boys wished to listen on the
+outskirts of these groups, and Lot Breckenridge was desirous of hearing
+all that went on. Enoch went with him to the inn rather against his
+will. Mistress Harding did not approve of such places for youths and
+Enoch had not grown so old or so big as to wish to disobey his mother,
+or even to believe that she was less able to guide him than she had
+formerly been.
+
+The inn was well filled, indeed, that night and Master Norton was
+bustling about from group to group, dropping a word here and another
+there, determined to keep all his guests pleased as maybe; for despite
+his Tory principles, the innkeeper was first for his own pocket and
+would not antagonize any man knowingly. Mine Host was particularly
+attentive to a party of ten or a dozen gentlemen who, having eaten, now
+sat grouped before one of the fires engaged in earnest, and somewhat
+noisy, conversation. The figure of the sheriff was the centre of this
+group.
+
+Lot and Enoch stood with other young men within ear-shot and heard many
+remarks which plainly showed the affiliation of the sheriff and his
+friends to the Tory cause; and the party had dined so well that they
+were not particularly careful to modulate their voices so that others in
+the vicinity who might be of a different mind, should not overhear them.
+The sheriff was a pompous man who, when he spoke, commanded the
+attention of all about him. The dignity of his office rode him hard and
+his companions deferred to him almost servilely, for at that day such an
+officer was held in great reverence, especially by the King's adherents.
+
+"These malcontents who would question the right of the King to govern
+them, should be punished, every man Jack of them!" the sheriff declared,
+looking about fiercely at his auditors. "I care not who they are, nor
+how high they stand. That Dr. Warren and Mr. Otis of Boston are
+gentlemen of education and position I grant ye; but they should feel the
+heavy hand of the law nevertheless--yes, sir! And some of these fellows
+who have gone to Philadelphia and are making such a rumpus there--they
+should be taught their place!"
+
+"That they should, Master Sheriff!" cried one of his supporters.
+
+"The King's men treated that Otis just right some months back," growled
+another--a man who sat back in the shadow of the high mantel and wore a
+cloak, the high collar of which half muffled his face. At the speech of
+this one Enoch, who had been dragging at the sleeve of his companion to
+get him away, ceased this and pushed forward himself. Something in the
+tone of the last speaker's voice had attracted his attention and he
+strove to see his features.
+
+"They should be whipped--every man Jack of them!" cried the sheriff,
+repeating his favorite expression.
+
+"Better let Ethan Allen and his boys beech-seal them, eh, Sir Sheriff?"
+cried some Whig on the outskirts of the group, and a laugh was raised
+among those of like feeling.
+
+"We shall settle that villain Allen--we shall settle him, sir!" declared
+the sheriff, angrily. "The Honorable Court will punish these fellows who
+retain their lands without proper authority from the King and our
+Governor. There will be an overturn in these Grants ere long--mark my
+word, sir!"
+
+"The dogs should be driven back to Massachusetts and Connecticut--where
+they came from," growled the man with the cloak.
+
+"That's true!" exclaimed several of the group.
+
+"Aye, and the time approaches when it may be done," cried the sheriff.
+
+"But what think you Ethan Allen, Seth Warner, 'Member, and the rest of
+the boys will be doing, Sir Sheriff?" demanded the same Whig who had
+before spoken.
+
+"They'll be clapped into Albany jail--that's what will become of them!"
+declared the sheriff.
+
+"And a right good place for them," said he of the cloak. Enoch was still
+maneuvring to get a sight of this man, but the shadow of the high mantel
+was cast across his face. All the boy could see was the gleam of his
+eyes as he turned with an angry gesture toward the audience. "The
+boldness of these outlaws is astonishing."
+
+"That Allen appears to have many followers," suggested a mild mannered
+man beside the sheriff.
+
+"He is a bully; they fear him!" declared the former speaker, vigorously.
+
+"How is that, John Norton?" cried the Whig, who evidently was a bold man
+to so flout the sheriff and his friends. "You know Colonel Allen
+personally. Should you call him a bully and say that he governs men by
+fear?"
+
+"Not I!" exclaimed the innkeeper. "And saving your presence, sheriff, it
+would be a man of some stomach who would dare say that to Ethan Allen's
+face. As for these same Green Mountain Boys, it is not fear that keeps
+them together."
+
+"I tell you they are a set of masterless villains!" cried the dark man,
+turning angrily about so that at last the collar of his cloak fell back.
+"They should be driven out of the colony and their houses burned to the
+ground----"
+
+Suddenly he stopped. His harsh voice died to a whisper and his
+astonished companions looked at him in amazement. For a moment he seemed
+to have been frozen in his chair, and their eyes following his glance
+fell upon the white and angry face of Enoch Harding who had pushed
+through the ring of listeners. "And it is you who would set the torch to
+their homes!" exclaimed the youth, his voice shaking. "You already have
+one count of the kind against you, and if you ever come to Bennington
+again there'll be more than a beech-sealing awaiting you--you villain!"
+
+Some of the crew sprang up in astonishment, and some in anger. "Who is
+that bold rascal, landlord?" demanded the sheriff. "Bring him here."
+
+But Lot had fairly dragged the angry Enoch to the door and now pushed
+him out of the inn. "What's the matter with you, Nuck?" he demanded.
+"D'you want to get us all into trouble?"
+
+"That's Simon Halpen!" exclaimed Enoch, panting with excitement. "I'd
+have flown at his throat in another moment."
+
+"Zuckers!" exclaimed Lot. "The feller that burned down your marm's
+house? Don't blame ye for bein' mad. But ye don't wanter stir up a fuss
+here. Our game is ter lay low and let the Tories start the row if
+they're minded to. You'll see. Mr. Lewis an' some others is goin' to see
+the judges to-morrow an' try to keep the court from sittin'. They'll
+sure be trouble if the Tories bring our people before the court. We
+can't git no fair trial, so we won't be tried at all."
+
+Enoch was very silent on the way back to Lot's house. The shock of
+seeing Simon Halpen again after all this time, had stirred the youth
+greatly. Despite the fact that the villain was so far away from the
+Walloomscoik, and would probably not dare go near Bennington, Enoch
+could not help feeling troubled by the circumstance of his presence
+within the borders of the Grants. And he was glad that 'Siah Bolderwood
+had promised to remain at or near the Hardings' home while he, Enoch,
+was at Westminster.
+
+Under Lot's advice the two boys said nothing of the little scene at the
+inn and the next morning Mr. Lewis went with other stable men of the
+town to call upon the justices who would preside at the court when it
+met. The feeling between Whigs and Tories was so strong that all
+peace-loving men feared bloodshed. At the first blow a terrible civil
+war might begin--a war in which neighbor would engage with neighbor and
+the community be utterly ruined. And if the court sat and tried the
+cases against those settlers who refused to purchase New York titles to
+their lands, or to leave their homes at the order of the sheriff and his
+deputies, the battle would begin. Nobody could doubt that.
+
+Despite the fact that the offices were held by the Tories, the Whigs
+were greatly in the majority. And this majority declared the will of the
+people should be upheld, and that will was that no court should sit
+until matters quieted down and the heat had gone out of the political
+veins of the community. They presented this matter strongly to the
+judges and warned them of what might be expected if the court undertook
+to sit at Westminster. Although staunch Tories, the judges were
+impressed by what was told them by the committee; Justice Chandler,
+indeed, gave his word that nothing should be done toward convening the
+court until time had been given the people to cool down. It was
+promised, too, that the sheriff and his men should not be given a free
+hand in the town.
+
+With these assurances from Judge Chandler the committee of Whigs
+returned. To make sure that the sheriff, who with his men were spending
+every day and night at the Royal Inn, did not seize the court-house in
+defiance of the people's will, the Whigs sent a guard to that building
+on the evening of the 13th--the day before that set for the convening of
+the court. This guard, however, was armed only with clubs, and was set
+to keep the troublesome factions of both parties in order, and was
+recruited from among the better affected families of the town. Lot
+Breckenridge and Enoch were allowed by Mr. Lewis to join these
+volunteers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+THE WESTMINSTER MASSACRE
+
+
+What March 5, 1770, had been to the people of Boston and the Colony of
+Massachusetts, March 14, 1775, was destined to become to the patriot
+citizens of Vermont. That date reminds them to-day of the first blood
+shed in the great struggle within the borders of the Grants--the first
+pitched battle between American yeomanry and the minions of a cruel and
+tyrannical king. Before the martyrs were shot down at Lexington was the
+Westminster Massacre--an incident which set the torch to the passions of
+the Whigs throughout the Grants.
+
+Despite the efforts of Judge Chandler, who really was honestly bent on
+peace, the associate Judge Sabin and the fire-eating sheriff brought
+about that clash of arms, the stain of which was to be wiped out by
+nearly eight years of bitter war. The Tory officials and their henchmen
+gathered about the court-house when it was known that the Whigs had
+seized it, and threatened an attack early in the evening of the 13th;
+but apparently willing to abide by the decision of the chief justice,
+they dispersed after that worthy had promised the Whigs that nothing
+should be done to oust them from the premises until the following day.
+Chandler doubtless went to his repose, believing that his partisans
+would uphold him in his promise.
+
+But the sheriff had other views. He had gathered a noble army at John
+Norton's inn. There were no Whigs there that night. They sought other
+houses of entertainment, or their own homes, for their leaders had
+counseled moderation. But the wily sheriff finally gave his orders, and
+those orders were inspired by Judge Sabin and other rank Tories.
+Separating as they issued from the inn into three bodies, the sheriff's
+men approached the guarded court-house from as many directions and were
+thundering at the doors before the Whigs were aware that such treachery
+was intended. There was not a fire-arm in the court-house, but when
+called upon to surrender the guard refused and strove to barricade the
+entrance.
+
+Although the young men had expected nothing like this, they had not
+taken their duty lightly. They were of the best Whig families of the
+neighborhood and had not accepted the responsibility as a lark. Enoch
+became acquainted with one of his companions early in the evening who,
+because of his open face, free and gentle manner, and earnest
+conversation impressed the Bennington boy as being a youth of better
+parts than were most of the backwoods people. Lot told his guest that
+this individual was William French, the son of a Mr. Nathaniel French, a
+man well known and respected highly by his neighbors. Like Lot, young
+French was deeply interested in the affairs of the colonies, especially
+in what was occurring in and about Boston. He had planned to go to the
+Massachusetts colony and offer his services to the Committee of Safety
+there if war really became imminent, though he would go, Enoch saw, in a
+much different spirit from Lot's. Lot was eager for a fight for the
+fight's sake; but French realized the root of the trouble and espoused
+the cause of the persecuted colonists from principle.
+
+It was eleven o'clock at night when the sheriff and his men attacked the
+Whig guards, and many of the latter were asleep. The uproar was great as
+the besieged tried to keep the Tories out of the building; but the
+latter were reckless and knew that they had to do with a practically
+helpless enemy. They forced an entrance, though the Whigs rallied well
+and delivered some telling blows with their clubs. These blows doubtless
+had much to do with what followed, for the sheriff's men became greatly
+incensed. All the lights in the house were put out and for several
+moments the antagonists fought in the dark. Enoch was not behind in the
+battle and was one of those in the front rank which strove to beat the
+sheriff's men back to the door. William French fought next him, while he
+could hear his friend Lot shouting encouragement not far away.
+
+The Tories were under a disadvantage in the dark and some of those still
+without ran with torches and thrust them in, that the battleground might
+be illumined. At that the sheriff, spurred by rage and the smart of a
+blow he had received, cried to his men: "Fire! Fire at the rascals who
+defy the law's authority!"
+
+Some of his men took him at his word and putting their pieces to their
+shoulders, they had been using them as clubs, shot blank-point into the
+group of opposing Whigs!
+
+It was a terrible scene that followed. Several men fell about Enoch, and
+groans and cries rose from the wounded. A bullet had sent Enoch's cap
+spinning into the air, but he did not notice that. Young William French
+had fallen beside him and the Bennington boy stooped and caught the
+young man's head and shoulders from the floor that he might not be
+trampled upon.
+
+Shouts and imprecations deafened him. The Whigs still fought, but some
+had already tried to escape by a side passage and were being brought
+back by the sheriff's men. That wicked man was calling upon the Whigs to
+surrender, and more than one shot was fired after that first volley.
+
+Enoch, with the head of the bleeding youth in his arms, cried to those
+about him to move aside and bring a light. All were too much inflamed by
+passion to heed him for a time; but suddenly one man sprang forward and
+thrust a huge, brass-locked pistol into his own face. The boy was
+frightened, and strove to throw himself backward out of range; but the
+pistol snapped!
+
+Providentially the weapon was either unloaded, or the powder was damp.
+Otherwise that moment would have ended Enoch Harding's earthly career.
+And in the flash of torchlight which was an instant later cast upon the
+scene, the startled boy recognized the dark features and hawk nose of
+Simon Halpen. The villain had sought him out and had striven to pay off
+old scores in that moment of confusion and uproar.
+
+But the confusion helped Enoch to escape, too. Lot seized his shoulder
+and dragged him up from his knees. "Let him alone, poor chap!" he
+whispered hoarsely in his friend's ear, and Enoch saw that he was
+crying, "Let him alone. He is dead. Oh, these villains shall be punished
+for this--they shall be punished! War has begun, Nuck--and we have seen
+its beginning!" In his horror and despair Lot Breckenridge was
+prophetic. War had begun; the first blood of the revolution--antedating
+in its sacrifice the Battle of Lexington--had been shed.
+
+Indeed, Lot and Enoch were fortunate to escape from the building, for
+ten of the Whigs had been wounded beside poor French, and seven of the
+remaining were taken prisoner. The town was roused and a great concourse
+of people gathered in the streets. The sheriff and his men were loudly
+execrated, and even some of the Tories expressed their indignation. The
+men who had done the deed were forced to remain under cover for the rest
+of the night while the alarm went into all the countryside and by
+daybreak the patriot farmers were pouring into Westminster--a horde of
+indignant citizens before whom the Tory officials trembled.
+
+The very judges themselves were taken into custody and had not the
+better counsel of the staid and solid men prevailed, the sheriff and
+those who aided him might have been hung to a gibbet erected in the
+court-house yard. On the fifteenth Captain Cochran and forty Green
+Mountain Boys, who had been apprised of the terrible affair, marched
+over the mountain to arraign themselves upon the side of the Whigs if
+the matter should come to real warfare. But fortunately further
+bloodshed was averted, and never again did a Tory judiciary hold court
+in Eastern Vermont.
+
+Enoch went back to Bennington with some of Robert Cochran's company.
+News of the Westminster affair had preceded him and the Catamount Inn
+was thronged with earnest men discussing the matter and various other
+news-packets which had lately come from other colonies. War with the
+mother country seemed inevitable and Ethan Allen and men of his stamp
+looked forward to it not without some eagerness. It was not that they
+were reckless and irresponsible, or did not understand the terrible
+situation in which the colonies might find themselves should the mother
+country send across the sea a great army. But in the coming struggle
+they beheld the salvation of their own people and of the Hampshire
+Grants.
+
+Therefore, perhaps even previous to this time, immediately following the
+Westminster Massacre, these leaders had earnestly discussed the
+possibilities of war and what the Green Mountain Boys could do to
+further the cause of the colonies. On the shores of the beautiful lake
+which was the colonists' boast, were two of the strongest fortresses--or
+two which had been and could be made again the strongest--of the New
+World, Ticonderoga and Crown Point. At Old Ti were many stores and
+munitions of war and the place was held by a comparatively small guard
+of red-coats who had a great contempt for, and therefore small
+appreciation of, the valor of the colonials.
+
+With these circumstances in mind Old Ti was already an object of the
+conferences of Vermont's leading men. Possessing that fortress, Crown
+Point, and Skenesboro, the lake would be free of British and the way to
+Canada open; and at that early date it was strongly believed by the
+patriots that the French descendants of the early settlers of Canada
+would join the Colonies in their fight for freedom.
+
+Young Enoch Harding did not see the leaders as he passed through
+Bennington; but he was waylaid there a dozen times, and upon his road
+home, to satisfy the curiosity and interest of his neighbors in the
+Westminster trouble. Letters from Boston had roused them to the highest
+pitch, too. Nor were his mother and Bryce any less anxious to hear and
+discuss the news. Mistress Harding had lived within a few miles of
+Boston and felt a deep interest still in the people and the affairs of
+the Massachusetts Colony. That a foreign soldiery should have been
+landed on her shores fired even this good and gentle woman with anger,
+and when Bryce said he'd go to Boston, too, along with Lot Breckenridge,
+if there was war, she did not say him nay.
+
+But the Hardings had little time to waste upon politics. The boys had to
+drop the drilling soon, too, for it came ploughing and seed time. 'Siah
+Bolderwood remained about the settlement rather later than usual that
+year; and mainly for the reason that public affairs were so strained. He
+said his own crop of corn which he intended putting into the lot near
+Old Ti upon which he "had let the light of day" could wait a bit, under
+the circumstances, for there might be occasion to "beat his ploughshare
+into a sword" before corn-planting time.
+
+Therefore he was still with the Hardings that day late in April when
+Ethan Allen, riding out of Bennington into the north to carry a torch
+which should fire every farm and hamlet with patriotic fervor, reined in
+his steed at the door of the farmhouse. The children saw the great man
+coming and ran from the fields with Bolderwood, while the widow appeared
+at her door and welcomed Colonel Allen.
+
+"Will you 'light, sir?" she asked him. "It has been long since you
+favored us with a visit."
+
+"And long will it be ere I come again, perhaps, Mistress Harding. I am
+like Sampson--I have taken an oath. And mine is not to rest, nor to give
+this critter rest, until I have spoken to as many true men in these
+Grants as may be seen in a week. The time has come to act!"
+
+"Reckon I'd better be joggin' erlong toward Old Ti, heh, Colonel?"
+remarked the ranger, leaning an elbow on the pommel of the saddle.
+
+"You had, 'Siah, you had. We can depend upon you, and those red-coated
+rascals there must be kept unsuspicious and their fears--if they have
+any--lulled to sleep. I have one man already who proposes to put his
+head in the Lion's mouth and return--providing the jaws do not close on
+him--to tell us in what state the old pile of stone is kept."
+
+"But what has started you out so suddenly, Colonel Allen?" demanded the
+widow.
+
+"What! have ye not heard? There was a packet came from Boston
+yesterday."
+
+"We have seen nobody this week," declared Enoch.
+
+"There has been blood shed, friends," said the giant, earnestly, his
+eyes flashing and the color in his cheek deepening. "American freemen
+have been shot down like sheep in the slaughter!"
+
+"Where? Who were killed? What was the cause? Who did it?" were some of
+the queries hurled at their informant by the little group.
+
+"Fifty men, they say, were murdered. At Lexington, in Massachusetts.
+There were munitions stored there belonging to the militia. The British
+got word of it and marched from Boston to destroy the goods. They fired
+on our people at the bridge and when the poor fellows broke and ran they
+followed and potted them like rabbits! War has begun, friends. Nothing
+under the blue canopy can stop it now. American blood has been shed and
+I tell you it is but the beginning of the flood which must pour from our
+veins until these colonies are free!"
+
+"Oh, Colonel! you do not believe that?" cried the widow. "Surely this
+trouble can be averted. Calmer and more honest men will gain control and
+prevail. War is an awful thing."
+
+"True, Widow Harding. And well may you say it who have two sons to give
+for freedom. But mark my words, madam! Those two boys of yours will be
+needed, and if the Almighty spares them they will be some years older
+before either side in this controversy gives in.... Now friends, I must
+away. You know what is expected of you, 'Siah. Young Nuck, you'll be
+wanted at Bennington to-morrow."
+
+"Oh, shall our people really attack Ticonderoga?" cried Kate. "The
+schoolmaster says that is the strongest fortress in the Colonies."
+
+"Your schoolmaster is a bit of a Tory, I fear, miss," said Allen,
+smiling down upon her. "We shall have to 'view' him if he tells such
+tales in school," and waving his gauntleted hand he rode swiftly away
+from the homestead.
+
+"I am off at once, folks," said 'Siah, beginning to make his pack for
+the journey. "I'll see you up near Old Ti, Nuck, for the Colonel means
+business sure! We may have some such doin's up there as your father and
+I had under Rogers and Old Put years ago."
+
+He went away shortly and there was little the Hardings could do that day
+but talk over the wonderful news and let their fancy run upon the
+future. The widow saw that coming which she had feared for months, but
+she was cheerful. Nuck must go on this expedition to Lake Champlain, and
+she said it with unshaken voice. Bryce was to remain to guard the home,
+for there was no knowing what the result of the attack on Old Ti might
+be.
+
+The alarming intelligence brought by Colonel Allen had its effect upon
+the younger members of the family as well as on the older, for late in
+the afternoon Harry came running to his mother with the information that
+there was a man lurking in the forest across the creek. The child had
+seen the stranger twice and being fearful that the man was there for no
+good purpose was much troubled. The older boys were in the field at
+work, but when the widow blew the horn Enoch came up to learn the cause,
+for it was not yet supper time. Hearing Harry's report he seized his
+rifle and went to the creek bank, approaching the spot very carefully,
+for he feared at once that their enemy, Simon Halpen, might have dared
+follow him from Westminster.
+
+He had scarcely reached the creek, however, when he was apprised of the
+identity of the visitor. A head, in the black locks of which a tuft of
+eagle feathers was fastened, appeared above the bushes, and the next
+moment the person thus betrayed came out into full view and beckoned
+him. It was Crow Wing who had approached the Harding place through the
+forest. Enoch leaped into his own boat and paddled across, remembering
+the Indian's promise the year before to visit him at some time for the
+purpose of examining the vicinity of the spot where Jonas Harding had
+been slain.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE CLOVEN HOOF
+
+
+The grave face of the young Indian brave was undisturbed by a smile as
+he greeted the white youth whom he had not seen for more than a year.
+But he shook Enoch's hand with an emphatic "Umph!" when the latter
+sprang ashore.
+
+"Crow Wing!" exclaimed young Harding. "I thought you had forgotten us in
+these parts. You've been away a long time."
+
+"Umph! Injin no forget friends," remarked Crow Wing, sententiously.
+
+"And you've come here to see me--'way from Lake George?"
+
+"Umph!" was again the non-committal answer. "Harding and Crow Wing go
+hunt,--shoot deer? Crow Wing need new moccasins," and he thrust forward
+one foot on which was a ragged covering. But Nuck knew well enough the
+Indian had not traveled through the wilderness from Lake George merely
+for the pleasure of going on a deer hunt with him. But he said,
+doubtfully: "We're pretty busy just now, Crow Wing. Can't go far with
+you."
+
+"Not go far. Plenty deer yonder," and he pointed in the direction of the
+lick where Jonas Harding had been killed. Nuck understood. "I'll go with
+you. Will you come across and eat supper with us?"
+
+But the Indian shook his head vigorously. "Will eat yonder. Have meat.
+Harding get rifle and blanket. Will make fire."
+
+He turned about instantly and plunged into the forest. Enoch was
+astonished by his manner and words, familiar as he was with the
+peculiarities of the red race. Crow Wing had never refused to eat with
+them before; he had always seemed to enjoy the "white squaw's" cooking.
+But Enoch had no fear that his one-time enemy was playing him a trick.
+He paddled across the creek for his blanket, told his mother that he was
+going on a torchlight hunt, with whom he was going, and without further
+explanation returned to follow his red friend. He had noted the
+direction the young brave had taken. The way led directly to that little
+glade where, nearly four years before, he had spied upon Simon Halpen,
+the Yorker, and Crow Wing had driven him so ignominiously home. There
+was a fire here now, but the Indian was alone.
+
+An appetizing odor of broiling flesh greeted the white youth, for it was
+already growing dark in the forest and Crow Wing was preparing supper.
+Enoch did not open the conversation, but busied himself with making a
+couple of bark platters out of which they might eat the meat when it was
+cooked. He was anxious enough to broach the subject uppermost in his
+mind; but he knew Crow Wing better than to do that. Anxiety, or
+curiosity, were emotions which only squaws gave way to, and Enoch would
+not exhibit his feelings and so disgust his red brother.
+
+Crow Wing was evidently a man of importance in his tribe now, and his
+gravity was far beyond his years. While they ate Enoch asked a question
+or two about his people, and if the decimated tribe, which had never
+recovered numerically from a scourge of smallpox, still resided near
+Lake George. He learned then that the Indians had struck their lodges
+and were journeying toward the northern wilderness. The old chief, Crow
+Wing's father, was dead, and the youth himself aspired to be the leader
+of his people. From a word or two he let drop and from his manner of
+speaking, Enoch judged that the older men of the tribe had some doubt of
+Crow Wing's ability to govern the braves; but evidently the youth had
+strong hopes of gaining their confidence--and that by some act in the
+near future. What his plan for advancement was, Enoch could not get his
+friend to tell.
+
+"Why do your people leave the shores of the pleasant water?" asked the
+white boy.
+
+"Injin not 'lone there now. Red-coat come; then white farmer. Push,
+push; crowd, crowd; no game. Injin starve."
+
+"And where are you going?"
+
+"To the hunting grounds of the Hurons."
+
+"But then there will be war between your people and the Hurons."
+
+"No; no war. Hurons be squaws--children; Iroquois master 'em. Then,
+war-hatchet buried between Hurons and Six Nations. Buried when French
+and Yenghese bury hatchet--long time 'go."
+
+Enoch, with more than curiosity, yet speaking in a careless manner,
+continued his questioning: "What would the people of Crow Wing do if
+there was another war?"
+
+The Indian flashed a sudden sharp glance at him. "How could be?" he
+asked, craftily. "Yenghese got many red-coats--much gun. French no fight
+more."
+
+"Suppose we should fight the red-coats?"
+
+"Umph! Me hear Long-guns" (the Virginians) "talk fight to Six Nations.
+No. Yenghese send too many big chiefs over water."
+
+"Those big chiefs aren't always good," returned Enoch, quickly. "Your
+people remember General Abercrombie. He did not know how to fight in
+these forests. And there was Braddock; he was no good at all. He
+wouldn't have been beaten if he'd taken Colonel Washington's advice. I'd
+give a lot more when it comes to a fight for our Major Putnam, Mr.
+Washington, and Ethan Allen."
+
+The Indian's face was gloomy. He had finished eating now and leaned back
+against a tree while he puffed the tobacco in the little copper pipe
+which was his constant companion. Not until the pipe was smoked out did
+he speak. "Harding my friend," he finally said, in his grave tone,
+repeating a formula which he had used so many times since the night Nuck
+had saved him from the wolves. "Harding my friend. Crow Wing know what
+is in his mind. He thinks to fight the red-coats--to take their great
+stockades; he is not afraid of their many guns. But he is foolish; he is
+as a child; he does not understand. Let him open his ears and listen to
+his friend."
+
+The young chief had assumed that oracular tone and manner so dear to the
+red man in his counsels. His earnestness, however, impressed Enoch. "The
+white youth and his friends are angry with the great King across the
+water; they would kill his red-coats. But the red-coats are like leaves
+when the frost comes; they fall to the ground and so cover the earth;
+and it is thus with the red-coats for numbers. And the Six Nations will
+be with the red-coats; Crow Wing's people will be with them. If there is
+war we will take many scalps; we will come here," with a gesture,
+sweeping in the Bennington country, "and then Crow Wing and Harding not
+be friends. So Crow Wing come now to say to Harding, 'Good-bye.'"
+
+"But why do not the Indians help us instead of the red-coats?" demanded
+Enoch, striving to speak calmly.
+
+"The great King give us blankets; he give us powder for scalp; he give
+us gun. The red-coats let Injin fight his own way. And Crow Wing be
+great war chief!" he exclaimed, with some emphasis. It was plain that he
+expected to make his position with his tribe secure by his valor in
+battle, should the settlers and the British come to a rupture. He
+refrained from speaking longer, however, rising soon and covering the
+fire which he had kindled. Then, seizing a bundle of torches and his
+rifle, he motioned Enoch to follow and they set off through the forest
+toward the deer-lick.
+
+Although he felt the utmost confidence in the fact that Crow Wing had
+not come clear from Lake George simply to give him this warning and to
+bid him good-bye, Enoch still remained silent upon that subject which
+the Indian's appearance had brought so forcibly to his mind. Through the
+darkened forest, in which the owls now hooted mournfully, the white
+youth followed the red without a word; every step was taking them nearer
+to that place where his father had been found dead so long ago. Crow
+Wing had spoken with some confidence the year before of being able to
+find, even at this late day, some sign which should disprove the
+generally accepted belief in the manner of Jonas Harding's death.
+
+The brave soon reached the deeply worn runway which Enoch, on the
+morning he was introduced to the reader, followed to the creek, and soon
+the two came upon the little glade where the saline deposits in the
+earth had attracted the deer and other animals since such creatures
+inhabited the forest. Dark as it was Enoch could even distinguish the
+very tree out of which the catamount had sprung at him, and the murmur
+of the hurrying waters down the rocky bed reached his ear. Here 'Siah
+Bolderwood and the other neighbors had found the dead body of the elder
+Harding, apparently trampled and gored to death by the huge buck whose
+hoofprints marked the ground all about. Enoch had seldom passed the spot
+without a shudder--especially since he had so nearly lost his own life
+there.
+
+Still the Indian made no comment, nor mentioned the real reason for
+which they had come to the lick. He wet his finger and held it up so as
+to get the direction of the wind. Then circling the lick and getting
+between it and the creek-bank, he flung down the bundle of torches and
+motioned Enoch back into the deeper shadow. With his own flint and
+steel, and using a bit of tinder from the leather pouch he carried, he
+lit one of the resinous torches. This he stood upright some little
+distance away, yet not too near the piece of ground where the creatures
+of the forest were accustomed to obtain their salt. Then, crouching
+beside his white friend, the Indian remained motionless and speechless
+for the next three hours. Once Enoch crept out and renewed the torch
+which had burned low; then he returned to Crow Wing's side.
+
+All the sounds of the forest at night are not to be distinguished with
+ease. Even Enoch, bred in the wilderness and possessing much knowledge
+of wood-ranging, heard only the coarser sounds. Therefore he lay half
+dreaming for some moments after the Indian raised his head and lent an
+attentive ear to some noise which came from far away. The night-owl's
+hoot was intermittent; a lone wolf howled mournfully on the hillside; in
+the swamp a catamount screamed as it pounced upon its prey. But it was
+none of these sounds which had attracted the Indian's attention. Enoch
+suddenly roused to see Crow Wing softly reach for his gun and bring the
+weapon slowly to his shoulder.
+
+The white youth already had his own weapon in hand. He tried to pierce
+the darkness beyond the flickering torch with his eyes, seeing naught at
+first but shapeless shadows. At length, however, the sound that had
+warned Crow Wing of the approach of their game, was audible to Enoch's
+much less acute ear. It was that of a steady grinding of a ruminant
+animal feeding. The creature was coming slowly nearer and soon the
+hunters could plainly hear it cropping the leaves and twigs along the
+path; then, having gained a choice mouthful, the grinding of the molars
+recommenced.
+
+Suddenly the thick brush across the glade parted and the animal halted
+with a surprised snuff--one might almost say gasp of astonishment. The
+crash in the bushes betrayed that the creature had flung itself half
+around in its contemplated flight; then it hesitated; the flaming torch
+spurred its curiosity and, there being no movement in the glade, except
+of the shadows caused by the dancing flame from the fragrant pine, the
+startled creature was tempted.
+
+And being tempted to the point of hesitation, it was lost! Slowly,
+blowing as it came yet drawing nearer and nearer to the light, the beast
+moved out of the brush into the open. Suddenly Enoch saw it--the
+branching antlers, the fawn-colored breast, the pointed, outstretched,
+eager muzzle, the great eyes in which the torch reflected a glint of
+fire. It was a magnificent buck, the largest specimen of the deer tribe
+the youth had ever seen. Suddenly Crow Wing jogged his elbow. A glance
+passed between them. Each understood the other's intention. The Indian
+fired, his ball entering just above the buck's breast and ploughing
+slantingly upward through the throat. With a snort of terror the buck
+swerved to one side and might have gotten away had not Enoch's shot
+found a more vulnerable spot behind the foreleg. The heart of the great
+deer was punctured, and it fell in the agony of death.
+
+"Umph! Now Crow Wing have new moccasins," the Indian grunted, without
+emotion. But Enoch went forward, lighting a second torch the better to
+view the great buck. It was still now and outstretched on the earth
+looked even larger than when in life. The thought flashed through his
+mind: "Ah! perhaps this was the very brute--this enormous fellow with
+his hoofs bigger than those of a steer and his terrible horns--that
+killed my father here. Could it be possible?"
+
+Looking upon this huge buck, noting its power and its fierce aspect,
+though the brute's eye was glazed by death, he wondered if, by any
+chance, he had been accusing an innocent person? This brute would have
+been perfectly able to kill a man. Naught but the hoof-marks of the deer
+were found about the body of his father. How, then, could Simon Halpen
+be in any wise guilty of his enemy's death?
+
+But Crow Wing brought the white youth to a realization of present
+things. The Indian knew that their hunting was over for that night. No
+other deer would approach the lick, for the smell of the blood from the
+slain buck would warn its mates away. Only the creatures of prey would
+be attracted now. So he was down on his knees and had already begun to
+flay the dead carcass, and Enoch, seeing this, began to help him. It was
+near midnight, and when the hide was off, the tongue and the most tasty
+parts removed, Crow Wing built another fire, wrapped his blanket about
+him, and lay down to sleep.
+
+But Enoch could not sleep. He had cut off and hung up near the camp a
+haunch of the venison to take back with him in the morning. They had
+removed so far from the lick that certain preying beasts dared quarrel
+over the remains of the noble buck until daylight; but the youth sat
+with his back against a tree and his rifle across his knees until the
+dimpling water of the creek was kissed by the first beams of the sun
+which shot over the distant range of hills. His thoughts were sufficient
+to keep him wide awake.
+
+Enoch was not the first to stir; but Crow Wing, possessing the hunter's
+faculty of awaking at any desired hour, sat up and threw back his
+blanket. "My brother did not sleep," he said, looking upon the white
+youth with gloomy brow.
+
+"No; I couldn't do that, Crow Wing," Enoch returned, sadly.
+
+The Indian got upon his feet, threw wood upon the fire, and prepared to
+cook the deer meat he had reserved. They ate in silence as they had the
+night before. Never had young Harding seen the redskin act so strangely,
+for during the winter Crow Wing had spent with Enoch and Lot on the
+Otter, he had by no means been silent or morose. The white youth could
+not fail to see that something--something beside what troubled
+Enoch--bore heavily upon Crow Wing's mind.
+
+After eating the Indian scattered and covered the embers of the fire and
+prepared to leave the spot. He went toward the lick where the deer had
+been torn to pieces by the prowling animals Enoch had heard. At the edge
+of the clearing he halted and attracted his companion's attention by a
+commanding gesture. "Harding's father found here by the tall white man,"
+he said, simply.
+
+"Yes. 'Siah Bolderwood found him," Enoch sadly admitted.
+
+"Then we look--see how Hawknose kill him."
+
+"But Crow Wing, it was four years ago----"
+
+The Indian stopped him with a gesture of disdain. "Does my brother think
+we look for trail? No, no! The white man not find trail?"
+
+"Of course not. There were only marks of the buck's hoofs."
+
+Crow Wing pointed to the spoor of the dead buck made the night before.
+"Trail big as that?" he asked.
+
+"Yes. It might have been this buck."
+
+"No buck," declared the other, emphatically and then began to move about
+the open glade, examining each tree trunk as he went. Enoch did not
+understand his actions but he followed him. The Indian gazed upon each
+tree scrutinizingly, and no knothole in the rough boles escaped his
+attention.
+
+When the tree proved to be hollow at its base the searcher experimented
+with his gun barrel, poking it into the farther extremity of the cavity
+and rattling out the decayed wood and the débris of squirrel nests and
+owl lairs. In several cases these creatures themselves were disturbed,
+the lively squirrels to run chattering up the higher branches, the owls
+lumbering away into the forest, bumping against the trees in their
+blindness, and hooting mournfully at the disturbers of their peace. All
+this time Crow Wing continued with an unmoved face. Not an interstice in
+the roots of the trees escaped his eye and to Enoch, who could not
+imagine what he was looking for, his actions seemed without reason. But
+he knew better than to ask him the nature of his search.
+
+For two hours Crow Wing circled about the little glade. There was not a
+tree which escaped him, nor did any hollow go unexamined which was
+within reach of the tallest man. Crow Wing's face betrayed neither hope
+nor disappointment and therefore his companion could not tell how
+important this search was. The patience displayed by the Indian was all
+that suggested the object of his examination to be of any moment.
+
+At length, in poking the barrel of his gun into the hollow at the base
+of a big tree Crow Wing disturbed some object which fell out upon the
+ground. Enoch, who looked over his shoulder could not at first imagine
+what it was. He saw several rotting straps attached to the thing,
+however, and as his companion with a grunt of evident satisfaction,
+began poking into the hollow still further, the white boy picked the
+object up and knocked the dirt and decayed wood off it. It was so
+strange an object that at first Enoch saw no connection between it and
+the matter which he and Crow Wing had discussed--Jonas Harding's death.
+
+It was the dry and broken hoof of some ruminant animal--an ox, perhaps,
+for it was too large for any deer that Enoch had ever seen. It was even
+larger than the hoof of the buck he and Crow Wing had recently shot. And
+when the boy thought of that he was reminded of the hoof prints which
+had been found all about the lick when his father's body was discovered
+lying there. He uttered a stifled exclamation and drawing up one foot
+fitted the cloven hoof against the sole of his moccasin. The rotten
+straps or thongs would once have bound the thing to a man's foot. He
+might have stood upon it--walked upon it, indeed; and the impression
+left by this cloven hoof would naturally lead one to suppose that a big
+deer had been that way!
+
+Enoch turned with sweating brow and shaking hands toward the Indian.
+Crow Wing stood upright again and now held a second hoof, likewise
+supplied with thongs, in his hand. They looked at each other.
+
+"Umph!" grunted Crow Wing. "Now Harding know? See moose hoofs. Crow Wing
+know where moose killed--see moose killed. Hawknose kill much that
+winter; Hawknose hunt with Injins up north; then come back to crick.
+Harding 'member what Crow Wing tell him when trapping on Otter Crick?
+See Hawknose running; blood on clothes; blood on hands and on gun. Now
+Harding know how father be killed."
+
+Enoch's eyes blazed with wrath. "I know, Crow Wing. I believe what you
+tell me. I see no other explanation of the affair. Give me those hoofs,
+Crow Wing."
+
+"Harding keep them till he punish Hawknose?" queried the Indian.
+
+"Yes."
+
+The young brave pulled his belt tighter and prepared to depart.
+"Hawknose never Crow Wing's brother," he said. "Harding been brother.
+But now the hatchet will be dug up. The Long-guns cannot get the Six
+Nations to fight the red-coats. And the friends of my white brother will
+be beaten. They will become the squaws of the red-coats and of the great
+King across the sea. So my people will go north and join the red-coats."
+He shook Enoch's hand gravely. "Crow Wing and Harding been brothers; but
+when they meet again be enemies. Umph?"
+
+"I hope we'll never meet again, then, Crow Wing," declared the white
+youth. "I hope there will be no war. More than that, I hope your people
+will not join the British if there is war."
+
+But without further speech, or a glance behind him, the Indian brave
+strode away into the forest and was quickly lost to view.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+"THE CROSS OF FIRE"
+
+
+Having at length been assured beyond peradventure that his suspicions
+were true, a desire for vengeance upon Simon Halpen sprang to life in
+Enoch's heart. He forgot the momentous matter which had filled his mind
+before the appearance of Crow Wing the evening before. He thought only
+of his father's murderer, the man who had tried to injure them all, even
+to the point of destroying their home and attempting to shoot himself.
+
+As he tramped back to the house with the haunch of venison on his
+shoulder, he determined to tell nobody there of the finding of the moose
+hoofs which explained the mystery of his father's death. The hoofs he
+saved to show Bolderwood, and for evidence against Simon Halpen if the
+opportunity ever arose to punish that villain. It was easy to see with
+this evidence before him, how the awful deed had been accomplished. With
+the moose hoofs strapped upon his feet the Yorker had crept through the
+forest on the trail of the unconscious Jonas Harding; had seen him shoot
+the doe; and then falling upon him suddenly had beaten him to the earth
+with his clubbed rifle and had bruised and mangled him so terribly that
+the neighbors, at first glance, pronounced the poor man killed by a mad
+buck. Hurrying from the vicinity, dress and hands covered with blood as
+Crow Wing had seen him, Halpen had hidden the deer hoofs in the hollow
+of the tree, and escaped to Albany, his vengeance accomplished.
+
+"But he shall suffer for this yet," thought the youth, with compressed
+lips. "God will punish him if the courts do not. And sometime he may be
+delivered into my hand, and if he is----"
+
+The implied threat frightened him, and he did not follow it even in his
+thoughts, but by again turning his attention to the matter which Ethan
+Allen's visit the day before had suggested, he strove to bring his mind
+into better tone before meeting his mother. He feared that the
+expression on his features would betray something of his horror and
+determination to her sharp eyes. When he reached home, however, he found
+the family so greatly excited that nobody thought to either ask
+questions or to notice his behavior. A drill had been called at
+Bennington and Enoch was forced to saddle the horse and hurry away at
+once. Under the present conditions it was thought best for Bryce to
+remain at home, for if the Green Mountain Boys marched upon Ticonderoga
+the younger Harding could not be spared to accompany the expedition.
+
+The Council was in session and the leaders of the Green Mountain Boys
+remained in Bennington for more than a week. Couriers had arrived from
+the south and east and it was known that the British were rapidly being
+shut up in Boston. The Massachusetts Colony was afire with wrath because
+of the Lexington massacre. The Grants people were quite as rebellious
+against the King's authority, with the sad affair at Westminster fresh
+in their minds. The proposal to capture the British strongholds on the
+lake met with favor everywhere. Small bodies of armed men began to come
+in and a camp was planned at Castleton. It was said that a large body of
+troops was to march from Western Massachusetts and Connecticut to aid
+the expedition. When Ethan Allen returned and heard of these
+reinforcements he immediately desired to bring in more of his own people
+for the work proposed.
+
+"This is our work," he declared. "We have planned to lead this campaign
+and lead it we shall. We must show the southerners that we are one in
+heart and intention and therefore every able-bodied man in the Grants
+must come in. It isn't enough for us to have some men; we must have the
+most men and thereby control the expedition. We want the honor of it!"
+
+"You must lead us, Colonel!" exclaimed Warner, who, although he had no
+such following as did Allen, was sure of a goodly company of determined
+men to join the expedition. "We'll follow you into Old Ti or anywhere
+else; but no stranger must command."
+
+"Then I must have more men to my following than anybody else," declared
+Allen, vigorously. "I have seen a great many myself, but there are
+districts I haven't been able to reach."
+
+"We must send out a cross of fire to rouse the clans," Captain Warner
+said, with a smile. "But who shall go? Bolderwood?"
+
+"'Siah has reached his own land--where he's let the light in upon some
+acres, I understand--near Old Ti. And he's got his work cut out for him
+there. No; I have the chap in mind to send up along the Otter. There's
+only one thing I fear. I understand that a plaguey Yorker has been seen
+about Manchester for a week past. Just what he's so attentive to certain
+people for at this time bothers me, Seth."
+
+"But if he's only a surveyor, or speculator----"
+
+"A Yorker means a King's man these times," exclaimed Allen. "I got a
+sight of him--a lean, hook-nosed fellow with a face puckered like a
+walnut; but we didn't pass the time o' day. I think he's spying on us."
+
+"If he is----" began Warner, wrathfully.
+
+"I'm sorry for him, that's all," declared the Green Mountain leader. "If
+I catch him and it's proven against him, I'll hang him to the highest
+limb in this neck of woods."
+
+"But the person you will send out with the warning, Colonel?" cried
+Warner. "Whom have you in your mind?"
+
+"I see him coming now," declared the leader, laughing. "I sent word to
+him last evening. He should have been to Castleton ere this; but the
+widow----"
+
+"It's young Harding!" cried Captain Warner. "I recognize him. And,
+Colonel, from what I have seen of the young man, he'll bear out your
+confidence in him."
+
+Enoch had approached near enough to hear this last and he flushed
+deeply. "I was told you wanted to see me, Colonel Allen," he said,
+saluting awkwardly.
+
+"I do indeed," said Allen. "You're ready for campaigning, I see. Leave
+your traps--even to your blanket and gun--with Master Fay here. You'll
+want to travel light where I send you," and he proceeded to explain the
+mission he wished the youth to perform.
+
+"I am ready, Colonel," declared Enoch, throwing off his knapsack.
+
+"Good! Away with you at once. Use yonder horse till you get to
+Manchester. Beyond that there will scarcely be bridle paths, so a horse
+will be in your way. Take the word around that the time has come to
+strike. And have them rendezvous at Castleton. Be off, my boy, and may
+success go with you!"
+
+The horse in question was a fine steed that Allen had ridden into town
+that very morning. The youth sprang into the saddle and, understanding
+that haste and cautiousness were the two things most desired of him,
+trotted the animal easily out of the town and then put the spurs to him
+along the road to Manchester. He spared neither the horse nor himself
+until he reached the latter place and had left the steed in the keeping
+of a loyal man to be returned at the first opportunity to Colonel Allen.
+Of course, all the men in this section of the Grants had been warned of
+the proposed expedition against the fortresses on Champlain; it was
+those who dwelt deeper in the wilderness to whom young Enoch Harding had
+been sent.
+
+He knew what was expected of him. And he knew, too, how most of the
+Grants people would receive the news. Colonel Allen was beloved by them
+as were few leaders. This Connecticut giant who had given up his desire
+for a college education and a life among books because duty called him
+to the work of supporting his family, who had been by turn a farmer, an
+iron forger, had tried mining and other toilsome industries, but who
+nearly always worked with a book in his hand or beside him where he
+could read and study--this man with his free, jovial air and utterly
+reckless courage, was become as one of the heroes of old to the people
+of Vermont. The men on his side of the controversy in which Allen had
+taken such a deep interest, loved him devotedly; those who espoused the
+New York cause hated him quite as dearly, for they feared him.
+
+So when Enoch set out from Manchester to go from farmstead to farmstead
+and from clearing to clearing, he was not in much doubt as to whom he
+should send to Castleton and whom he should pass by without speaking to
+regarding the proposed expedition. There would be no doubtful settlers.
+The line between Tories and Whigs was drawn too sharply; and every Whig
+stood by Ethan Allen.
+
+Enoch had learned something of the paths and runways of this part of the
+Grants. It had been near here that Lot Breckenridge and himself, with
+Crow Wing, had spent a winter trapping. Lot had now gone, so he had
+heard, to Boston as he said he should if fighting began. He had gone to
+help Israel Putnam and the other New England leaders pen the British
+into the city and aid in that series of maneuvres which finally drove
+the red-coats into their ships. As for himself, Enoch was only eager to
+be one of those who should storm the walls of Ticonderoga, and glad as
+he was to have been singled out for this present duty, he was determined
+to husband his strength so as to get back to Castleton before the army
+gathering there should move against the British fortifications.
+
+He walked rapidly; more often he ran. In the pouch at his belt he
+carried parched corn, like an Indian on the warpath. Occasionally at a
+clearing, where some hardy borderer was scratching a living from the
+half-cleared soil, he would stop long enough to eat. But usually he
+halted only to give the good man of the house the message from Ethan
+Allen and, as he passed on and entered the forest on the further side he
+looked back to see the settler, his gun on his shoulder, bidding his
+family good-bye preparatory to setting out for the rendezvous appointed
+for the American troops.
+
+But nature revolts when a certain point of exhaustion is reached.
+Refusing to remain the night at one kindly settler's home, Enoch finally
+found himself in the forest a goodly distance from any other house. The
+path could be followed quite easily, the woods being open; but he was
+footsore and thoroughly wearied. He shrank from lying down beside the
+trail, however, for more reasons than one. On several occasions that
+afternoon he had heard of the presence of another traveler in the
+vicinity, and the identity of this man he could not learn. The settlers
+who had mentioned him, however, declared they believed him to be a New
+York agent, or a spy from the British across the lake, who was going
+through the region to discover just how the people felt regarding the
+rising trouble between the Colonials and the mother country. Such, at
+least, had been the trend of his conversation with the loyal Americans
+to whom he had been unwise enough to speak.
+
+The appearance of the man, too, rather troubled Enoch. He was said to be
+tall and lean, with a very black face, a huge nose and fiery eyes. The
+youth remembered how Simon Halpen looked a few weeks before when he saw
+him at Westminster, and this pretty well described the scoundrel. Halpen
+was in the Grants--or had been recently. Perhaps he had dared come
+across the mountains toward the lake on some errand for the Tory party,
+and the thought that the man who had murdered his father and who had
+tried to take his own life, might be within rifle shot, troubled the
+youth exceedingly. He could not drive away this thought and when finally
+he was forced to stop for rest he trembled to think that perhaps the
+light of his campfire would attract an enemy more to be feared than
+either the wolves or catamounts.
+
+But he built his fire, broiled a piece of meat which the last settler he
+spoke to had given him, ate his supper, and then prepared to sleep for a
+few hours. The moon would rise late, and he desired to set forward on
+his journey again as soon as it was light enough in the forest. Just at
+present the darkness shrouded all objects. But when he lay down with his
+feet toward the blaze and his head upon a heap of moss for a pillow, he
+could not sleep, tired though he was. His nerves were all alive. His
+limbs twitched so that he could not keep them still. Every sound of the
+forest smote upon his ear with insistence. Although his muscles were
+wearied his eyes would not close.
+
+Who was the Yorker that had crossed his path so many times during the
+past few hours? What did he desire here in the Otter country? Was he a
+spy for the British? or was he upon his own business? And, above all,
+was he, Nuck Harding, in danger? The stranger might be roaming the
+forest even then, hunting for the messenger of the Green Mountain
+chieftain. He had likely heard that Nuck was going from farmer to
+farmer, as Nuck had heard of his presence, and the man might contemplate
+stopping him. It would be easy for him to creep upon and shoot the
+defenseless youth as he lay before the fire.
+
+Nuck's only weapons were his knife and the hatchet stuck in his belt.
+Lying there within the circle of light cast by the flames he would be an
+easy mark for any enemy. As minute after minute passed it seemed utterly
+impossible for him to quench this fear and he finally rose to his feet
+and got out of the fire light. He stood in the deep shadow of a tree
+trunk and cast searching glances around the tiny clearing in which he
+had established his camp. Not a living thing did he observe.
+
+But if there was an enemy on his trail, and he should come near the camp
+and see it deserted he would suspect a trap at once. Either he would
+circle about so as to finally find Enoch, or he would fly from the
+ambush at once. "I expect I am very foolish,--losing good sleep that I
+need, too!" muttered the young fellow. "But still----"
+
+He could not explain the strange unrest that possessed him. He was not
+of a particularly nervous temperament; therefore his present mood
+troubled him the more. There was danger menacing him; he felt it, if he
+could not see nor understand it. The only possibility of peril which
+reason suggested was through the agency of that stranger. "I must have
+things here so that he will not suspect that I am on my guard," the
+youth muttered.
+
+Forthwith he dragged a piece of a broken tree-trunk to the fire, wrapped
+his coat about it and placed his cap at the end of the stick farthest
+from the blaze. He was careful to place the rude dummy far enough away
+from the fire so that its flickering light should not be cast upon it
+too strongly. It really looked, when he was through, as though some
+person lay there asleep. He did not feed the flames too generously, but
+left burning some hardwood sticks, the glowing coals of which would lend
+but little light to the scene. Then he retired again to the shadow of
+the tree where, crouching between two huge exposed roots, he waited with
+sleepless eyes for that which was, perhaps, merely the phantom of his
+fears.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+THE RISING OF THE CLANS
+
+
+As still as the shadow of the tree itself, Enoch lay with his face
+toward the camp. Truly, had the forest not been so dark outside the
+radiance of the fire, he would have set out again upon his journey, and
+left this spot which seemed to his troubled mind the lurking place of
+some serious danger. The minutes grew to an hour, however, without a
+suspicious sound reaching his ears. The usual noises of the forest--the
+hooting of the owl, the wolf's cry, the whimper of the wild-cat--were
+all that disturbed the repose of the wilderness.
+
+But suddenly a dry twig snapped somewhere near him. The sound went
+through the anxious youth like a shock of electricity. Its direction he
+could not fathom; yet he was sure that the branch had crackled under the
+pressure of a foot. Somebody--or something--was approaching his fire,
+which now threw a dull red light across the forest glade. Enoch's eyes
+were fastened first upon one blot of shadow and then another.
+Occasionally, too, he darted a glance over his shoulder, that the
+approaching enemy might not come upon him unawares. Just at that time
+Enoch would have given much for his rifle. Its presence would have
+inspired him with a deal of courage. The very fact that the danger,
+which intuition rather than reason assured him was threatening, came
+from an unknown source, increased his fears. Perhaps Simon Halpen was
+not within a hundred miles of that identical spot. He who was visiting
+the Tories and New York sympathizers of this region was possibly nothing
+worse than the agent of a land speculator. The youthful Green Mountain
+Boy might be the only human being within five miles.
+
+But suddenly that happened which shattered this fallacious web of
+thought in an instant. In the deep shadow of a thick clump of brush upon
+the other side of the fire, the youth observed a movement--rather, a
+flash or glint of light. The fire, increasing unexpectedly by the
+falling apart of one of the logs, had sent a penetrating ray of light
+into the thicket and there it glittered upon some polished piece of
+metal. Nothing else could have sent forth this answering gleam; it was
+not a pair of eyes; Enoch was confident of that.
+
+"He is there!" whispered the youth, and he crouched lower between the
+roots. His eyes, sharp as they were, could not penetrate the gloom of
+the brush clump, and the glittering metal had now disappeared. But he
+was sure that the intruder was still there, reconnoitering the camp.
+Would he suspect the ruse? Would he observe that the body lying by the
+fire was simply a dummy? The youth was glad to see that the log with his
+jacket and cap upon it lay almost entirely in the shadow and that one
+coat-sleeve was stretched out upon the ground in a very natural manner
+indeed.
+
+The moments that passed then were really terrible to young Harding. He
+knew himself to be in no immediate danger from this mysterious
+individual who had crept near his camp. Surely, the man could not see
+him where he lay shrouded in the darkness. Yet the thought that he was
+being dogged by a deadly enemy possessed him, and the doubt as to what
+the unknown would do next, brought the sweat to his brow and limbs and
+set him trembling like one with an ague. Not a breath disturbed the
+bushes, yet he felt that the man was there--there across the opening in
+the forest with his eyes fixed upon the supine figure near the fire. Had
+he not been warned by that mysterious feeling which had kept his eyes
+open and his nerves alert he, Enoch Harding, might now be lying
+unconscious with a deadly weapon trained upon him!
+
+And then the shot was fired! Enoch expected it, yet the explosion almost
+betrayed him to the enemy. A gasp of terror left his lips. Incidental
+with the explosion he heard the thud of the ball as it penetrated the
+log, and the shock of the impact actually stirred the dummy. It leaped
+upon the uneven ground!
+
+This fact was an awful accessory to the attempted murder. The inanimate
+object had moved as a human being would if suddenly shot through a vital
+part. Perhaps the very gasp of horror Enoch had uttered reached the ears
+of him who had fired from ambush. At least the enemy did not seek to
+come nearer. Indeed, the youth heard a crash in the brush and then the
+retreat of rapid footsteps. Having done, as he supposed, the awful deed,
+the murderer fled from the spot. Enoch had half risen to his feet. Now
+he sank upon his knees, clasped his hands, and thanked God for his
+preservation.
+
+But he did not leave the sanctuary of the forest's shadow until he was
+fully convinced that the villain who had made the attempt upon his life
+was far away. Then, still shaking from the nervous terror inspired by
+the incident, he crept to the dying fire, secured his cap and coat, and
+went back to the roots of the tree again until the growing glow above
+the tree-tops announced the rising of the moon. The sky grew bright
+rapidly and soon the moonbeams wandered among the straight, handsome
+trees and lay calmly upon the earth. He could once more see objects
+about him with almost the clearness of full daylight.
+
+Enoch arose and crossed to the clump of brush from which the treacherous
+shot had been fired. Through a break in the branches a flood of
+moonlight now silvered the earth at this point. He dropped upon one knee
+and examined the ground closely. There were the marks of the feet of him
+who had tried to shoot a helpless and sleeping human being. Enoch
+shuddered and placed his fingers in the impression of the moccasins. The
+incident that had just transpired was very real to him now.
+
+But he had not come here merely to assure himself of this fact. The
+bullet in the log and the hole through his coat were sufficient, if he
+had indeed doubted his eyes and ears before. He glanced down at the
+coat. Oddly enough the bullet had torn its way through the stout
+homespun directly over his heart!
+
+He glanced keenly now from side to side and saw that the enemy who made
+the treacherous attack had come from the trail he had followed that
+afternoon, and had returned in the same direction. He followed the
+footsteps which led away from the brush clump. In doing this he was
+quickly assured that the man who had shot at him was a white man. An
+Indian walks with his toes pointed inward; this individual, even as he
+ran, pointed his toes out. He was certain, therefore, that his enemy was
+no wandering redskin.
+
+"It was Halpen--I am sure of it!" muttered the youth, striking into the
+trail at last and continuing the journey upon which the darkness had
+overtaken him. "He believes that he has killed me. I only hope he will
+not be undeceived. But if he is ever in my power he shall suffer! What a
+villain the man is to follow our family and seek to murder and injure
+us! Oh, I hope this war which Colonel Allen says is surely beginning,
+will give us folks of the Grants our freedom from New York as well as
+from England. I fear men like Halpen more than I do the soldiers of the
+King."
+
+Although he had not slept, Enoch was rested in body and he traveled
+quite rapidly. Before dawn he had aroused two settlers from their
+slumbers, delivered Colonel Allen's message, and gone on his way. He
+observed no signs of his enemy of the night and was confident that the
+man had not continued on this trail, and was not, therefore, ahead of
+him. But he determined not to sleep in the forest during the remainder
+of his journey. He spent the day in alarming the farmers, circling
+around into the mountains before night and stopping at last with a
+distant pioneer who, with his two grown sons, promised to go back with
+him to the rendezvous of Allen's army at Castleton in the morning.
+
+Enoch's mind was burdened with the mystery of Halpen's presence in the
+Grants at this time, however. Surely the Yorker could not be upon
+private business. He must have a mission from either the land
+speculators, the New York authorities, or from those even higher. The
+plans of the Colonials to attack Old Ti and seize the munitions of war
+stored there, might have been whispered in the ears of the British
+commander, De la Place. Perhaps he had sent this man, who knew the
+territory so well, to spy upon the Green Mountain Boys and their
+friends. Simon Halpen could do the cause afoot much harm by returning
+swiftly to the lake and warning the commander of Fort Ticonderoga. Enoch
+believed Colonel Allen should know of Halpen's presence as soon as
+possible; and he was determined to return at once, although he certainly
+deserved rest and refreshment after his arduous journey through the
+wilderness. Therefore he urged the hurried departure of these three
+pioneers and before dawn the quartette started for Castleton.
+
+Meanwhile, at the camp of the Green Mountain Boys much was transpiring
+of importance to the expedition. The honor of capturing Ticonderoga
+history gives unconditionally to Ethan Allen and his handful of
+followers; but the suggestion and preparations for the momentous task
+was divided between the Colonies of Connecticut, Massachusetts, and the
+Hampshire Grants, or Vermont, as it was now beginning to be called. In
+April the authorities of Connecticut raised three hundred pounds for the
+expense of this expedition and Samuel H. Parsons, Silas Deane (afterward
+one of America's representatives in Paris, but an arch enemy of
+Washington) and Benedict Arnold, raised a handful of troops to send
+north as a nucleus of that army which was expected to fall upon one of
+the strongest British forts in the country.
+
+At Pittsfield, in western Massachusetts, Colonel Easton had recruited a
+larger band of earnest patriots, and these, joined with the company from
+the more southern colony, made a very respectable force to march through
+the country to Bennington, where they arrived on May third. In the
+meantime at Albany Messrs. Halsey and Stephens had been pleading with
+the New York Congress to grant permission for troops to be raised for,
+and money devoted to, the capture of the same fortresses as the New
+England leaders had in mind. But, as we have seen, New York was at that
+time lukewarm in the uprising of the colonies. Beside, the Continental
+Congress was to meet in seven days and it was judged better by the
+cautious Yorkers to wait and see what that body of representatives would
+do before any direct act of war was indulged in. Therefore New York lost
+her opportunity of joining in one of the most glorious campaigns of the
+entire Revolutionary period.
+
+The Committee of Safety in Massachusetts, on the other hand, had decided
+to act against Old Ti. Benedict Arnold, after stirring up the people to
+fever pitch in his own colony, Connecticut, went post-haste to Cambridge
+and demanded a commission and authority to raise and lead the troops
+against the Champlain forts. This first move of this much-hated man in
+the Revolution savored of intrigue and self-seeking--as did most of his
+other public acts. He desired the honor of commanding this expedition,
+and he was personally courageous enough to march up to the mouths of Old
+Ti's guns if need be; but he had no personal following and could not
+hope to recruit men himself for the expedition. Nevertheless, he
+proposed to have the backing of a regular commission from the
+Massachusetts committee and thus supersede Colonel Easton. This desire
+on his part might have become a fact had it not been for one person whom
+Benedict Arnold did not take into consideration.
+
+The Massachusetts and Connecticut forces were guided to the camp of the
+Green Mountain Boys while the leaders held a conference at the Catamount
+Inn in Bennington. Colonel Easton was a truly brave man, and as such was
+not disturbed by petty jealousy. It was left to fate to decide who
+should command the expedition, and Ethan Allen having the largest
+personal following, was acclaimed commander. Greatly to Captain--now
+Major--Warner's disappointment his own men did not number as many as the
+Massachusetts troops; but he gracefully yielded second place to Easton
+and accepted third himself. Plans for the march through the wilderness
+were then carefully discussed and the leaders rode to Castleton and
+reviewed the raw recruits whose valor was, at a later day, to be so
+noised abroad.
+
+The Green Mountain Boys, after four years of training, presented much
+the better appearance. And every man was practically a sharpshooter.
+What their rifles and muskets could do against the thick, if crumbling,
+walls of Ticonderoga, might with good judgment be asked; but they lacked
+neither courage nor faith in their leader. They would have followed
+Ethan Allen through a wall of fire if need be to the line of the British
+fortifications. In their eyes he was invincible.
+
+On the morning of the start from Castleton the army was paraded--a few
+hundred meagrely armed men to march against a fortress, to capture which
+had cost the British two expensive campaigns and the loss of some three
+thousand men. Their leaders harangued them, and Ethan Allen's promises
+of glory and honor inspired quite as much enthusiasm as the commander of
+any expedition could have wished. There had gathered to observe the
+departure many gentlemen of the countryside, and not a few of those
+individuals who, at a time like this, always occupy a prominent position
+"on the fence"--that is, they having not yet decided which cause to
+espouse, waited to see whether the King's troops or the earnest patriots
+would win.
+
+Among these spectators was a well set up man of military bearing, indeed
+garbed in a military coat, with a cockade in his hat and his hair
+carefully dressed. He was quite a dandy, or a "macoroni" as the
+exquisites of that day were called both in London and in the Colonies.
+His dark visage and hawk-like eye commanded more than a passing glance
+from all and when, just before the troops started, he was observed to
+walk across the parade and calmly approach the group of officers
+standing at one side, all eyes became fixed upon him.
+
+"Who is that haughty looking man yonder?" asked one spectator of his
+neighbor who happened to be better informed than his friend, "and what
+does he here?"
+
+"What he does here I know not," declared the individual thus addressed,
+"but his name I can tell you, having seen him in Hartford on several
+occasions. It is Benedict Arnold, a name quite well known--and not
+altogether honorably--in that part of Connecticut."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+THE RIVAL COMMANDERS
+
+
+At this time Benedict Arnold was thirty-five years of age, a restless,
+ambitious man who had sought frequently for an opportunity to
+distinguish himself in life, but who had never been willing to pay the
+world's price for real success. He looked for a short-cut to power and
+fortune, and because of his impatience of restraint and the small
+chances of promotion, he had once deserted from the British army. When
+the Revolution broke out he was living in Hartford, Connecticut, where
+his business was that of druggist, and where his reputation was not of
+the most savory among the more respectable merchants of the town. His
+character, however, contained those elements of recklessness and
+personal daring which stand for bravery with many people, and he was
+something of a hero in the eyes of his thoughtless associates.
+
+It seemed a peculiar fatality that both Arnold and Allen, coming from
+the same colony, should go to Bennington and be thrown together at just
+this time. It was a great moment in Ethan Allen's life; the time was
+likewise pregnant with the elements which so influenced the after
+existence of Benedict Arnold. Ethan Allen's mind was filled with a
+desire to help the Grants, and despite the military glory he craved, he
+entered into the scheme for the capture of Ticonderoga with a real hope
+of assisting the patriot cause. He was, indeed, a patriot from the
+bottom, ready to sacrifice his own interests as well as his life for the
+general good. Arnold saw in this rising of his fellow-Americans the long
+sought chance to distinguish himself and gain that power and influence
+which his nature craved. He saw in the proposed expedition to
+Ticonderoga a quick road to prominence. For him to see this chance was
+to grasp it.
+
+Having no following of his own he planned to seize the troops gathered
+at Castleton and thus have his name go before the Continental Congress
+as the leader of the expedition. If it was successful the honor would be
+his; if it failed, his name would be quite as prominent and the affair
+might gain him advancement which he could hope for in no other way. He
+had no thought nor care for the men who, after weeks of toilsome effort,
+had gathered the little army together. Their feelings in the matter, or
+their standing with their followers, did not enter into his
+calculations.
+
+That, indeed, was the secret of Benedict Arnold's life. He never thought
+of others. He was ever for self. As a boy we read that he was cruel to
+those smaller and weaker than himself, being the "bully" of the school
+and of the town in which he lived. He was ever utterly reckless of his
+reputation and his greatest pleasure seemed to be found in some form of
+malicious mischief. Personally, however, he did not lack boldness and
+physical courage. It is told of him that, being dared by other boys, he
+once seized the arms of a waterwheel and followed its revolutions half a
+dozen times, being completely submerged in the millrace at every turn.
+The danger to a handful of illy-armed troops attacking a fortress like
+Ticonderoga appealed strongly to the man's reckless daring.
+
+Although Allen and Warner came from the same colony as the newcomer,
+neither knew nor recognized Arnold as he approached the group of
+officers at this important moment. But Arnold was not a man who could be
+for long ignored. His military bearing, his dress, and the hauteur of
+his countenance attracted the attention of the three leaders. "Sir,"
+said Allen, courteously, "you evidently have some communication to make
+to us?"
+
+"I have, sir," replied Arnold, calmly. "But not having the pleasure of a
+personal acquaintance with you----"
+
+"I am Colonel Allen, commander of this expedition," interrupted the
+other, brusquely. "This is Colonel Easton; this Major Warner. What is
+your desire?"
+
+"I am Colonel Benedict Arnold," said the newly arrived officer, "and
+bear a commission from the Massachusetts Committee of Safety with
+authority to take command of the troops here gathered, or which shall be
+gathered, and proceed against Forts Ticonderoga and Crown Point," and he
+drew the commission from his pocket and presented it to the company.
+
+Allen's ruddy face paled for an instant and his eyes flashed. "Do I
+understand you aright?" he exclaimed, and his voice was sharp enough to
+be heard by many of the troops near by. "You have come to take command
+of these men?" and his gesture took in the lines of waiting patriots.
+
+"I have, sir. There is my commission."
+
+Allen's wrath got the better of his politeness and he struck the
+offending paper from Arnold's hand. Warner stooped hastily and secured
+it. He and Easton examined the document with angry scrutiny. Both had
+given way with cheerfulness to Ethan Allen's superiority in the matter;
+but this affront was personal to them as well as to their beloved
+leader. Allen, with his arms akimbo and fire flashing from his eyes
+faced the suave and cold intruder. "Sir!" he exclaimed, "I do not care
+to see your commission, nor do I acknowledge your authority. I bear a
+commission from a higher court and recognize an authority higher still."
+
+"What do you mean, Colonel Allen?" demanded Arnold, for the moment
+fearing that the Green Mountain leader had indeed received some
+appointment from the Continental Congress, perhaps, which would
+invalidate his own.
+
+"I mean, sir, that my authority is based upon some slight precedence in
+this matter--a prior claim which dates back some years now, Colonel
+Arnold. I have led some of these men in defending their homes on more
+than one occasion and by their free act of will they have made me their
+leader now."
+
+"Your commission, sir? Where is it?" inquired Arnold, cool again, upon
+finding that his antagonist's rights were based upon a matter of
+sentiment.
+
+"It is there, sir!" cried Allen, furiously, turning and pointing to the
+lines of waiting men. "It is there, sir,--writ on the hearts of those
+Green Mountain Boys. And a higher commission than any Committee of
+Safety can seal."
+
+The words were heard by the files of waiting troops and already they had
+begun to murmur. That their beloved leader should be displaced by any
+person--no matter how high his office--was more than distasteful to
+them. At once they were in revolt.
+
+"Ethan Allen forever!" arose the cry. "We'll not march without he
+commands us!" and more than one threw down his arms. Arnold found
+himself facing the possibility of marching upon Ticonderoga alone, for
+the mutiny seemed general.
+
+"Sir, sir!" exclaimed Warner, in anxiety, addressing Arnold. "You see
+the feeling of these true-hearted men. No person can come here and take
+command of them in this way. We are not regular troops. We are banded
+together for the good of all, but we do not yet acknowledge the
+authority of a sister colony. We desire to be a commonwealth of our own
+here in the Grants and have already been disturbed enough by usurpers
+from outside. Reconsider this, I beg of you. For if you persevere the
+expedition must fail and that which might result in great good to our
+struggling brethren, will end in harm because of this folly."
+
+Arnold, if ambitious and unfeeling, already saw that he was beaten. He
+was not obstinate enough to do that which would be sure to redound to
+his own hurt and discredit. He had not expected such opposition, for he
+did not know the veneration in which the Green Mountain Boys held Ethan
+Allen. Now, seeing himself undone, he did that which for the time
+endeared him to all. His countenance cleared; a frank emotion played
+upon his features and advancing a step toward Ethan Allen he said in a
+clarion voice, heard by all:
+
+"Colonel Allen, you have precedence here after all. I was mistaken in my
+premises. Give me a musket and let me march in the ranks. I shall be
+proud to be led by so gallant a commander."
+
+Instantly a volley of cheers broke out among the soldiery, and Allen
+who, above all men, could appreciate such generosity, offered his hand
+cordially. "Egad, sir!" he cried, "you are a man after my own heart.
+When there are so many jealous cattle running about the woods, it is a
+pleasure to meet with a man. Give me your hand, Colonel Arnold! There is
+glory enough in this campaign for all, and you shall share the command
+with me, if you will."
+
+He turned then to his followers. "Men of the Green Mountains!" he cried,
+"we are to march at once. Fall in! And with your courage and the help of
+Jehovah we shall succeed in our undertaking. To your places, gentlemen,"
+to the minor officers, "and Colonel Arnold and I will lead you."
+
+Amid cheers the column moved forward into the forest and took up its
+line of march toward the shore of Lake Champlain. Never had the Green
+Mountain wilderness echoed to the tread of such a body of men. And they
+were worth more than a passing glance for they represented the spirit
+which made the American Revolution one of the greatest struggles of the
+ages. Like the campaigns of Joshua of old, the battles of the American
+yeoman with the trained military of King George proved that, when guided
+by the God of Battles, the weak can overcome the strong. These men,
+fighting for their homes and firesides, were inspired with a confidence
+that overcame even impossibilities. They possessed a faith in their
+cause and in their leader like that which threw down the walls of
+Jericho and defeated the allied armies of Canaan.
+
+Even had De la Place and his garrison been informed of their approach,
+and of their numbers, he would doubtless have laughed at the possibility
+of their successfully attacking his fortress. And one there was among
+the Green Mountain Boys who feared that news of the expedition had
+already gone to the British commander. Upon his return from the Otter,
+Enoch Harding had sought and obtained an audience with Colonel Allen,
+and to him had related his adventure with the Yorker whom he believed to
+be his deadly enemy, and told his suspicions regarding the man's
+business in the region. But Ethan Allen was not to be shaken in his
+confidence, or in his intentions.
+
+"I have an honest man at Ticonderoga now, Master Harding," he said. "If
+spies were through the country we should hear of them from other
+sources. But you did right to come to me with this, and if Simon Halpen
+falls into our hands I will hang him for his past offenses, if not for
+this attempt on your life."
+
+The appearance of the American troops was welcomed along the route with
+acclamation. Many settlers, knowing the course the army would take, had
+waited to join it as it passed their own doors. Shopkeepers and
+mechanics left their work and fell into the ranks; the farmer left his
+plow in the furrow, seized his rifle, and joined his neighbors; a
+woodsman who was "letting sunlight" into the gloom of the virgin forest,
+hid his axe under a fallen log and with a deadlier weapon on his
+shoulder followed in the train; the hunter on the trail of the
+frightened buck saw the column coming through the forest road and
+allowed his prey to escape while he turned his attention to matters of
+graver moment. Thus the army of Americans was swelled from hour to hour
+by new recruits.
+
+To camp at night was a small matter to these hardy pioneers. The scouts
+sent out upon either flank acted as hunters and fresh meat was abundant.
+Besides, every man was fairly supplied with provisions brought from
+Castleton. Inspired by the energy of Ethan Allen the column rapidly
+approached the shore of the lake. While some miles away, however, the
+group of officers riding ahead of the main body, suddenly descried a
+tall woodsman striding through the forest toward them. "Who is this
+chap, Major?" demanded Allen of his friend Warner. "Had I not sent 'Siah
+Bolderwood to watch Old Ti like a cat at a rathole, I'd declare this to
+be he."
+
+"And so it is, Colonel!" returned the other. "Something of moment must
+have sent our lengthy friend this way, for he is a man who knows how to
+obey orders," and he spurred forward to meet the footman.
+
+"Wall, Captain," was 'Siah's greeting, squinting around the horseman at
+the long column of marching men, "you look like you had a slather of
+folks yonder. I guess there'll be something in the wind around Old Ti
+'fore long, hey?"
+
+"And how is it you are not there, Bolderwood?" demanded Warner.
+
+"Wall, I got an idee into my noddle an' leavin' Smith and Brown to watch
+Old Ti, for it might run away 'fore ye git there, ye know, I trotted
+down this way ter see the Colonel. Ev'rything is safe there so fur, but
+there's one thing we've neglected."
+
+"What is that, Bolderwood?" cried Allen, riding up and hearing this last
+sentence.
+
+"Why, Colonel, although I count you as purty near ekal to 'most
+anything, an' them fellers behind ye seemed armed to deal with any foe,
+still I calkerlate you ain't expectin' ol' Champlain ter open for ye to
+pass over dry shod, hey?"
+
+Allen smote his thigh with his gauntleted hand and the expression on his
+face changed. "Right, 'Siah! I can't forgive myself for my
+thoughtlessness. We must have boats--and plenty of them--to cross to the
+fort."
+
+"That's what struck me last night, Colonel. So I left the others ter
+watch the fort--an' a sarpint that wriggled into aour han's
+yesterday--and come kitin' down here for orders."
+
+"A serpent, 'Siah?" said Warner. "Who is it?"
+
+"One o' them Yorkers, an' one that I've not had my eyes on--let alone my
+hands--for a good many months. An' I see a chap behind you there that'll
+be some interested in meeting the rascal, too."
+
+'Siah had looked past the officers and, in the very front rank, caught
+sight of his young friend Enoch. The latter waved his hand to the tall
+woodsman and Bolderwood, knowing that discipline was lax on the march,
+beckoned Enoch forward. "Come here, youngster, and hear what news I've
+got for ye," he cried. But Allen caught at the matter instantly, and
+understood to whom Bolderwood referred by his appellation of "the
+serpent."
+
+"You mean to say you've got Simon Halpen?" he asked.
+
+"That's the identical sarpint, Colonel," declared the ranger. "We caught
+him tryin' ter cross to Old Ti and thought it was best, under the
+sarcumstances, ter keep him close till this leetle business is over.
+What he was doin' riskin' his carcass on this side of the line is more'n
+I can tell----"
+
+"The boy was right, Major!" exclaimed Allen, turning to Warner. "Harding
+met the fellow while he was stirring up our folks in the Otter country
+last week. He thought he was up to some rascality then, and the fellow
+did try to take his life."
+
+"Tried it again, did he?" cried 'Siah, as Enoch approached. "Is that so,
+Nuck?"
+
+Enoch repeated his adventure with the murderous Halpen. "If I'd knowed
+this," the ranger declared, "I'd saved the grub the scoundrel is
+eating."
+
+"We'll make an example of him when we reach the lake, 'Siah," declared
+the leader of the Green Mountain Boys. "But now for this other matter.
+It is most important. Every bateau within reach must be secured."
+
+"I know where there are three of 'em. And there may be others down the
+lake furder."
+
+"You shall have charge of this, Bolderwood!" the commander cried. "I
+make you our captain of scouts. Take any reasonable number of men with
+you and hurry ahead. Every moment is precious."
+
+"Good!" said the ranger. "With Smith and Brown I won't need but eight or
+ten more. And I'll begin by taking young Nuck here. He's a good oar."
+
+"Take whom you wish. We depend on you," replied Allen, and within the
+hour the ranger and his party, including Enoch Harding, set off on their
+mission ahead of the more slowly moving army.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+THE ESCAPE OF THE SPY
+
+
+In sixteen hours 'Siah Bolderwood had traveled from his camp on the
+shore of Lake Champlain opposite the frowning walls of Fort Ticonderoga;
+when the long ranger was in a hurry he did not spare himself. Perhaps no
+other man in the Vermont wilderness could have covered so much ground
+afoot as he, within the time. But he set off now on his return journey,
+with nearly a dozen men at his heels, as fresh as though he had rested
+for a night instead of for an hour. His muscles were seemingly of steel
+and his limbs of iron. He led at such a pace that Enoch Harding, who
+came first behind him, could scarcely keep up with his stride and place
+his feet, Indian fashion, in the prints of his friend's moccasins.
+
+The company of scouts traveled in single file and, having no need to
+follow the wood-road on which the army was marching, they soon left that
+out of view. 'Siah found an Indian path which suited him far better than
+the broader trail, for it would bring them much sooner to the lake, and
+for hour after hour he strode on with scarce a look behind him to see
+how his companions kept up. The men he had chosen, save Enoch, were
+tried and trained woodsmen, with powers of endurance second only to his
+own. And as for the lad whom he loved, he knew his high spirit and
+pride. Enoch Harding would not fall behind until the last ounce of his
+strength had been expended.
+
+Finally the party reached a little stream and here the leader gave the
+signal to halt. Enoch flung himself down on the short sward and fell
+asleep almost instantly. 'Siah looked down upon him in some pride.
+"That's the stuff we make men of in this country," he said aloud. "I
+knew his father as well as I know myself. The lad will be another Jonas
+Harding."
+
+"He'll hold us back if we've to keep up this pace, 'Siah," said one of
+the others, doubtfully.
+
+"Nay, you're mistaken there, neighbor. You and I will travel until we
+feel that it ain't best for us to go any furder. Enoch'll keep up till
+he drops. He won't hold us back."
+
+And it was true. Others of the party cried "enough!" before the
+afternoon was over; but the youth, his lips pale and compressed and the
+perspiration fairly pouring from his limbs, would have died before he
+acknowledged that the pace was too great for him. At night 'Siah called
+another halt and they ate heartily of such provisions as they carried
+and then lay down to rest. But 'Siah arranged for a guard. They were
+nearing the lake now and some ill-affected settler (there were several
+families of Tories near Champlain) might see them and wonder what such a
+large party of armed men was doing here. If the news of the approach of
+the main army did not travel ahead, it would be more because of good
+fortune than good management.
+
+The party broke up into groups of two and three in the morning and went
+different ways to the shore. It was agreed that, where the settlers who
+owned boats were known to be staunch Whigs, it would be safe to tell
+them for what purpose their crafts were needed. But several boats were
+owned by Tories and royalist sympathizers and these people must be
+deceived for, although the scouts were doubtless well armed and
+determined enough to take the boats without saying "by your leave," such
+a proceeding might be disastrous to the expedition.
+
+'Siah Bolderwood chose Enoch as his companion and went himself toward
+the home of a farmer who stoutly upheld the King and his ministers and
+who had, in fact, held the title of his land from New York through all
+the years of trouble between his neighbors and the Albany courts. His
+homestead, however, was in such an out-of-the-way place and so secluded
+that the Green Mountain Boys had left him unmolested. Now Bolderwood was
+determined to have the roomy canoe and a large bateau which he was known
+to possess.
+
+"But if the pesky critter gits an inkling of what we're up to, he'll
+start for Old Ti--that he will!" the ranger said to Enoch. "We gotter
+get around him somehow. An' you leave it ter me. Ye better keep aout o'
+sight, I reckon, anyway; numbers might make the ol' codger suspicious."
+
+So Enoch hid in the wood surrounding the clearing on the lake shore
+while his tall friend went toward the Tory's door. The old man, who
+depended upon his nephew and a slave or two to do his work, was sitting
+looking out across the lake. He was too far away to distinguish the
+battlements of Ticonderoga, but he happened to be looking in that
+direction when Bolderwood presented himself. "Neighbor!" said the
+latter, in a most friendly tone, "ye look hearty. What's the news?"
+
+"Humph!" grunted the old man, staring at the Yankee shrewdly, "you're
+the feller that's been clearin' land above us yander, ain't ye?"
+
+"That I can't deny, sir," responded the ranger. "An' jest for the sake
+o' bein' neighborly, I'm down here ter arsk a favor."
+
+"What is it?" grunted the old man, doubtfully.
+
+"Why, my partner an' me have got a job to do, an' we're wantin' ter
+borry one or both o' your boats," and he pointed down to the water
+where, at the end of a little dock, the big flatboat and a long canoe
+were both moored. The old man could not see the boats without rising,
+but this he did as though to make sure that they were in their places.
+"What ye want 'em for?" he asked. "An' howsumever, I can't lend ye more
+than one o' them. We might want the other ourselves."
+
+"What for?" asked Bolderwood, with the usual freedom of the community,
+and likewise proving himself a true Yankee by responding to one question
+with another.
+
+"Might wanter go acrosst," said the farmer. "They say there's goin' ter
+be a lot o' reinforcements come up to Old Ti an' my nevvy and I want to
+see 'em when they come."
+
+"That's what we're wantin' the boats for--to go acrosst to the fort,"
+said 'Siah, with apparent frankness. "We've got some things to take over
+an' it's too fur to swim."
+
+"I sh'd say it was!" exclaimed the Tory. "Then I take it the report that
+reinforcements air comin' is true? Captain De la Place is buyin' cattle
+to feed the garrison?"
+
+"I reckon he'll need a good many to feed all that's comin'," returned
+Bolderwood, non-committingly.
+
+"Wall, I can't lend ye both, sir," declared the old man. "The canoe
+wouldn't do ye much good, though 'tis a master big one. Seems ter me
+there's a good deal o' boatin' on the lake to-day. I seen two barges go
+along north a'ready. Folks goin' fishin' I s'pose."
+
+"Like enough--like enough," declared 'Siah hastily. "I'll git right down
+and take the bateau."
+
+"Ain't ye got no one ter help ye?"
+
+"I'll find my partner somewhere up the lake. He was lookin' for boats,
+too," returned the ranger.
+
+He started to descend the bank and the old farmer arose and hobbled
+after him. The instant he reached the brink where he could again see his
+little dock, he gave voice to an exclamation of disgust and anger.
+"There it be! That Pomp is the most no 'count critter that ever eat
+smoked hog. He was a usin' that canoe this mornin', an' now look at it!"
+
+Seemingly the big canoe had slipped her moorings and was floating
+rapidly around the wooded point near the dock. 'Siah might have been
+astonished a little himself had he not had sharper eyes than the Tory.
+He saw that several articles of apparel lay in the canoe and he
+recognized Enoch Harding's old otter-skin cap. "Hold on, sir!" he cried.
+"No matter about calling your hands from the field to git it. I'll have
+that canoe in a jiffy."
+
+He ran down the steep bank, unfastened the bateau, and with a powerful
+shove sent it out into the lake. There were two long sweeps aboard and
+with one of these 'Siah quickly propelled the heavy craft in the same
+direction as the canoe--down the lake. The latter craft was scarcely out
+of sight of the old man when the bateau came along side. There was
+nothing showing of the swimmer but his head and one hand which clutched
+the painter.
+
+"Come aboard here, ye young rascal!" exclaimed the woodsman, with a
+chuckle. "You'll have that whole spatter of Tories arter us. Couldn't
+you hide your clothes better 'n that? Might have left 'em ashore. If the
+old gentleman hadn't been blinder'n a bat at midday, he'd seen 'em."
+
+"I didn't think of that," Enoch admitted, rather ruefully, climbing over
+the bow of the canoe and then passing the thong to 'Siah, who fastened
+it to the stern of the bateau. "I heard him say you couldn't have both,
+and I thought it too bad. This canoe will hold a dozen men."
+
+"Wall, grab that sweep. Never mind your clothes just now. I warrant
+ye'll keep warm enough till we git to the camp."
+
+The newly made captain of scouts and his young companion were by no
+means the first to reach the rendezvous on the shore opposite
+Ticonderoga. Nor is it to be supposed that the boats being there
+collected were brought boldly up in daylight. They were hidden in little
+coves near by, which could be reached by the scouts without attracting
+attention from the fort, to be brought after dark to the landing from
+which Ethan Allen expected to embark his troops. There were but two
+craft moored opposite the camp which Bolderwood and his companions had
+occupied for more than a week. Bolderwood held the title of a long strip
+of land along the lake shore, but he had never built a cabin. A shack,
+or hut, of branches was all the shelter the trio enjoyed.
+
+Here the ranger and Enoch found several of their friends beside Smith
+and Brown in waiting. The shore of the lake on this side had been fairly
+scoured for bateaus. They dared not cross to the New York side to obtain
+boats, for by so doing they would be sure to excite suspicion. With
+those already obtained and some which their companions were now gone
+for, the expedition must be content. The one mistake of their bold
+leader might bring about failure to the enterprise; yet so confident
+were they in Ethan Allen's ability that they firmly believed he would
+find some way to overcome the lack of transportation. The forced march
+of the scouts the day before, and for a good share of the night as well,
+had brought them to the lake long before the expedition itself could
+possibly reach the landing. Besides, the leaders would hold back until
+after dark. The attack upon the fortress must be accomplished under the
+cover of night. Bolderwood hoped, when he saw the meagre provision he
+was able to make for transportation, that the army would arrive early
+enough to allow of two, and even three, voyages to be made from shore to
+shore, that the entire force might take part in the attack.
+
+To Enoch, however, there was another matter of grave interest to be
+attended to when he and his tall friend arrived at the temporary camp.
+He wished to see the spy whom Bolderwood had mentioned to Ethan Allen.
+The ranger, too, looked sharply about the camp for the man. "Where's
+that slippery critter we captured the other night?" he asked. "If he
+gits away before Colonel Allen comes there'll be trouble for some of
+us."
+
+"We'd better have hung him up and so saved his food," grunted Brown,
+who, because the Yorkers had burned his house and driven his wife and
+children into the forest, had no love for anybody from the west side of
+the lake.
+
+"You haven't let him go?" demanded Bolderwood.
+
+"Nay, 'Siah. He's safe enough," returned Smith. "He's yonder behind the
+camp. He'd be an eel or a sarpint to wriggle out of them thongs."
+
+"A sarpint he is," declared Bolderwood, and strode away to look at the
+prisoner. Enoch followed him. There, sitting with his back against a
+tree, his ankles fastened together and a strong deer thong wrapped about
+his body and about the tree itself, was Simon Halpen. When he saw the
+ranger he scowled. When he observed the boy, however, his eyes flashed
+and the blood rushed to his face. "I reckon he knows ye, Nuck," said the
+ranger.
+
+"What are you going to do with me?" demanded the Yorker, with bravado.
+"You'll all suffer for this outrage, I promise ye! Wait until I get to
+Albany----"
+
+"And you ever see Albany again you're a lucky man," said Bolderwood,
+satisfying himself that the bonds were tight. "The Colonel will see to
+ye, my fine bird."
+
+Enoch still remained before his enemy when the ranger went back to the
+camp. The villain returned his glance boldly. "You are satisfied now, I
+suppose?" he muttered.
+
+"Not yet," replied young Harding.
+
+"I shall be avenged!" declared Halpen, with a burst of wrath. "If I am
+injured I have powerful friends who will punish you. I care nothing for
+Ethan Allen----"
+
+"A power higher than Colonel Allen will punish you," Enoch said,
+gravely.
+
+"Pooh! I care nothing for your Whig courts. You had best do what you can
+for me, Master Harding."
+
+"I will leave you to the punishment you deserve. And you will receive
+it."
+
+"What have I done, I'd like to know?" exclaimed the prisoner. "It was
+not my fault that your house was burned and your mother and you placed
+in danger of your lives. It was a mistake."
+
+"Was it a mistake when you crept to my camp the other night and fired at
+me as I lay sleeping beside the fire?" demanded the boy, sternly.
+
+The red flush left the prisoner's cheek then. "What--what do you mean?"
+he gasped.
+
+"You know well what I mean. See here!" Enoch showed him the hole in the
+breast of his coat. "That was made by your bullet."
+
+"The boy's life is charmed!" muttered Halpen.
+
+"You had much better have used your gun-stock, Master Halpen. You would
+have been surer to kill me then."
+
+At this an expression of positive terror came into the prisoner's
+features. "I am not a murderer," he exclaimed. "You are mistaken if you
+think that I fired at you."
+
+"It is true I cannot prove it," Enoch replied. "But something else I can
+prove." He advanced a step nearer to the man. "Do you remember where you
+hid the moose hoofs, Simon Halpen?"
+
+The prisoner shrank back against the tree and his eyes fairly glared up
+at the youth. "You--you----" he gasped.
+
+"Yes. They are found. We now know how my poor father was killed. And you
+were seen running from the place with his blood upon your clothes and
+upon your gun. Even your Albany courts would punish you for that!" Then
+the boy, unable to trust himself longer in the presence of the man who
+had so injured him, hastily left the spot.
+
+[Illustration: PUNISHMENT WAS NEAR AT HAND]
+
+And the prisoner--how did he feel while tied to that tree, waiting for
+the judgment which was to fall upon him for his crimes? No human being
+but the criminal himself can ever appreciate half the agony of the
+condemned. It was long since discovered that the gift of speech was
+given man to conceal his thoughts. To the man of strong will the face is
+a mask to conceal his feelings. And Simon Halpen was not a weakling. He
+may have betrayed some emotion when accused by Enoch; it was a small
+part only of what he felt.
+
+He saw now, as plainly as he saw the lengthening shadows about him, that
+punishment for his crimes was near. These stern woodsmen, whose plan for
+attacking Ticonderoga he had discovered, were in no mood to trifle with
+him. And what Enoch had told him was an assurance that though he might
+live to be brought before a court of justice, he must stand trial for
+his crimes. Neither political influence nor his wealth could save him
+from the result of his offenses against the laws of man and God. He was
+made desperate by these thoughts.
+
+He could see from his uncomfortable position the company of scouts busy
+with their supper. The ordinary observer would not have imagined that
+these men were the pioneers of two hundred and thirty Green Mountain
+Boys and the Massachusetts and Connecticut troops. But Halpen knew the
+army of Americans was coming, and the object of their approach.
+Unwarned, Captain De la Place and his garrison might be surprised and
+overwhelmed by these backwoodsmen. Halpen had no particular love for the
+King, nor for the royal government; but he hated these men who had
+defended their farms for so many years from the aggressions of his own
+party. Fear of punishment was reinforced by a desire to worst the Green
+Mountain Boys. He began to struggle against his bonds.
+
+He had done that early in the day when he was first fastened to the
+tree; and the thongs had cut into his arms and breast. But now he felt
+these abrasions not at all. He was mad to be free, and free he would be!
+The scouts paid him no attention. The sun was set and the forest grew
+dark. Would he escape he must accomplish the matter soon, or likely
+Bolderwood or young Harding would come to examine him again, and then
+the chance would be past.
+
+At last, his flesh cut so deeply that blood ran from arms and body, he
+stretched the hide rope until he was able to wriggle out of it. There
+were then his ankles to untie. This he did in a very few moments. He was
+free! Rising to his knees, his limbs were so paralyzed by inaction that
+he could not yet stand upright, he crept into the brush and, like the
+serpent that Bolderwood declared to be his prototype, glided away from
+the camp and down toward the brush-bordered shore of the lake.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+THE END OF SIMON HALPEN
+
+
+As they are to-day, the surroundings of Fort Ticonderoga were most
+picturesque. Nor is the country about the fortifications, and across the
+lake where the camp of Bolderwood's scouts was established at the time
+of our story, and later where the Grenadier Battery was raised, much
+more thickly settled to-day than it was then. Mt. Defiance, south of the
+Lake George outlet on the west side of Champlain was a heavily wooded
+eminence. Behind the scouts' camp a rugged shoulder of ground, later
+called Mount Independence, raised its bulk out of the surrounding
+forest. The formidable promontory on which the French had built
+Ticonderoga twenty years before, commanded a great sweep of the lake.
+For mere foot-soldiers, without artillery or explosives, to attack these
+fortifications seemed utterly preposterous.
+
+Where Bolderwood and his companions were waiting they had an excellent
+view of the fort. At sunset the garrison was paraded and one gun boomed
+resonantly across the calm lake. Just before it became too dark to see
+the other shore, the Americans observed a man come out of the covered
+way by which the fortifications were entered and approach the shore.
+There was a light canoe moored there and into this he stepped and
+paddled out into the lake, evidently aiming his craft for a cove near
+the scouts' position. Bolderwood and his comrades were so deeply
+interested in the maneuvres of this man that Simon Halpen was for the
+time forgotten.
+
+"We'll have to take that feller in and hold him for the Colonel to talk
+to," suggested one of the scouts when it became apparent that the
+stranger from the fort was coming ashore near at hand. "He'll see them
+boats an' suspicion something."
+
+"We'll meet him," said Bolderwood; "but I'm reck'ning that he'll be as
+glad to see the Colonel as the Colonel is ter see him. I know that
+somebody was over there in the fort to find out how the land lies and
+what sort o' shape them red-coats is in, an' 'twouldn't s'prise me if
+this was the chap."
+
+They all followed 'Siah down to the cove--even Enoch--and met the
+stranger as he came ashore. The latter seemed in nowise troubled by
+seeing so many armed men and after mooring his canoe came at once to the
+group of Americans. "Friends, I presume, sirs?" he asked, glancing
+keenly from man to man.
+
+"Reckon so," admitted Bolderwood.
+
+"Where is Colonel Allen?"
+
+"If you don't mind waitin' with us I shouldn't be s'prised if ye see him
+'fore long," declared the long-legged scout. "Wanter see him
+pertic'lar?"
+
+"I do," the stranger admitted. "You are the advance guard of our boys, I
+presume?"
+
+"Well, as you don't know us, an' we don't know you, we'd better not
+discuss private matters till we're interduced, as ye might say. I
+sh'dn't be astonished ter see the Colonel come along here 'most any time
+now."
+
+"Very well, sir. I am at your service," was the response, and the
+newcomer walked back to the camp with them. But Enoch had gone on ahead,
+remembering that the captive had been left alone for nearly half an
+hour. Suddenly his voice rose in a shout of anger and surprise. "He has
+escaped!" cried Bolderwood, the instant he heard his young friend, and
+plunged at once into the wood toward the spot where Halpen had been
+tied. Truly, the spy was gone.
+
+"The rascal was sharper than I thought," gasped the ranger. "And--and
+what will Colonel Allen say?"
+
+"That isn't the worst of it," declared the youth.
+
+"Yes; you think it is worse that a villain like him should escape
+without punishment. I doubt not that Ethan Allen would have hung him."
+
+"He may have deserved hanging," Enoch returned, with a shudder. "But I
+am not thinking of that. I fear that he will yet do us harm. If he gets
+across the lake and warns the folks at Old Ti, I'll never forgive myself
+for not sitting down here and watching him all the time."
+
+"He sartainly should have been watched," admitted 'Siah. "But I didn't
+b'lieve he had the pluck to git away. See here! The thongs are wet with
+the man's blood. He must ha' cut himself badly."
+
+"We must find him, 'Siah! If he secures a boat and crosses the lake the
+expedition will be ruined. This man who has just come across declares
+Captain De la Place knows nothing about our army as yet. But if Simon
+Halpen reaches the fortifications----"
+
+'Siah rushed back to his company and sent them to search the bank of the
+lake. He ordered, too, one man to remain with each group of boats so
+that the escaped spy might not secure one and get such a start across
+the lake that he could not be overtaken. But it had now grown quite dark
+and the scouts were unable to find Halpen in the vicinity of the camp.
+'Siah was confident that he and his men had obtained every craft on this
+eastern shore for miles up and down the lake, so he did not believe
+Halpen could really get across to the fort in time to warn the garrison.
+He was naturally too tender-hearted to wish to see the fellow hung to
+the nearest tree, which might be his fate had Ethan Allen examined him
+and found him guilty of spying upon the patriotic settlers.
+
+Now that night had come and the darkness would have covered the
+movements of the American troops, as the head of the column did not
+appear, Bolderwood and his comrades began to fear that something had
+detained their friends and that the attack upon Ticonderoga might be
+postponed until the night of the tenth. How the fleet of bateaus and
+canoes could be held in the vicinity for many hours without suspicions
+being aroused as to their proposed use, was a question hard to answer.
+The captain of the scouts sent two of his men out upon the trail by
+which they expected Ethan Allen and the troops under him to advance.
+
+Meanwhile Enoch Harding had not given up the search for the escaped spy.
+He feared what the fellow might yet do to weaken or utterly ruin the
+hopes of the American troops. Halpen was not armed, so the youth had no
+fear of being attacked by him; but he spent his time creeping through
+the brushwood up and down the lake shore, hoping to stumble upon the
+Yorker. He did not believe that Halpen had gone far from the encampment.
+Finally, in his wanderings, he came to the cove where the scout who had
+spent the day inside the fort, had landed. The bateaus were on the other
+side of the cove; the canoe the scout had used was alone in the shadow
+of a big oak, although a sentinel watched the bateaus. This sentinel had
+neglected to remove the canoe to his side of the cove and as Enoch came
+down the hillside he observed something moving in the shadow of the oak.
+A moment later, before he was really sure whether this something was a
+man or an animal, the canoe left the bank. The trees threw their shadows
+upon the water and it was almost impossible to observe the moving craft
+clearly; yet he was pretty sure that there was a figure in it and that
+it had been unmoored.
+
+The youth was too far away to risk a shot; the sentinel was much farther
+from the point of embarkation. If Simon Halpen had found and seized this
+canoe it looked for a moment as though he would surely escape.
+
+Enoch ran down to the edge of the water, but when he reached the point
+at which the canoe had been moored it was almost out of sight. He could
+not see the figure in the boat clearly enough to shoot. Indeed, he
+shrank from committing what seemed like murder. Simon Halpen was
+defenseless. "But he must not escape!" the boy exclaimed and started
+around the shore of the cove. The fugitive kept the canoe within the
+deep shadow of the trees which bordered the inlet. He did not paddle out
+into the centre; there he might have been seen by the sentinel on the
+other side.
+
+The boy ran along the edge of the cove, stumbling over the tree roots
+and fallen logs, yet endeavoring to follow the course of the canoe as
+quietly as possible. There was a chance of his passing the fugitive and
+reaching the mouth of the cove first. Then, he thought, Halpen would be
+at his mercy. The better to do this unobserved he made a detour into the
+woods and finally, after ten minutes of rapid work, came out upon the
+extreme point which guarded the inlet. As he reached this place his
+quick ear distinguished the splash of a paddle not far away. Straining
+his eyes he soon observed through the gloom the canoe moving amid the
+shadows. The spy had very nearly escaped from the cove. Once out in the
+open lake it would be impossible to overtake him.
+
+Then Enoch wished he had aroused his comrades; at least the sentinel
+guarding the bateaus would have heard his cry and come to his
+assistance. But now if the spy was to be stopped it must be by his
+individual effort. Throwing down his rifle and removing his outside
+garments, he slid into the water with scarcely a ripple of its surface
+and finding the lake deep at this point, began to swim at once. The
+canoe was almost upon him when suddenly, with a muttered exclamation,
+the fugitive turned the craft by one swift stroke of the paddle and sent
+it darting away from the shore. Enoch had been seen or heard, and Halpen
+feared what was the fact--that one of his enemies was striving to
+overtake him.
+
+Enoch flung himself forward in the water and with a strong overhand
+stroke took a diagonal course to intercept the canoe. He could see the
+man bending to his paddle. Every stroke of the blade sent the
+phosphorescent water flying about the frail bark. The next few moments
+were of vital importance to both pursued and pursuer.
+
+Enoch's plunge into the water had driven Halpen to paddle away from the
+shore. Now he was heading the craft across the cove and therefore toward
+the station of the sentinel. If he pursued this course for many rods he
+would be within rifle shot. And once out of the shadow of the trees the
+light on the water would make him an easy mark. To pass Enoch before the
+latter reached the edge of the line of shadow was therefore Simon
+Halpen's object.
+
+But the American youth was determined that Halpen should not do this. He
+was a strong swimmer and spurred by both the desire to recapture his
+enemy and to save the cause to which he was bound--the capture of
+Ticonderoga--he put forth every atom of his strength to overtake the
+canoe. The paddle flashed first upon one side, then on the other of the
+craft, which fairly darted through the water. But suddenly a hand and
+arm rose from the lake and seized the paddle just back of the blade.
+Enoch had dived under the surface and come up beside the canoe as Halpen
+was speeding past.
+
+"Ha! would you do it?" gasped the spy, striving to tear the paddle from
+the youth's grasp. The canoe rocked dangerously. The man flung himself
+to the other side and his superior strength wrenched the paddle away.
+Not contented to use the instrument in an attempt to escape, however, he
+tried to strike the youth with it. The canoe was all but overturned,
+although its momentum carried it on, and once out of Enoch's grasp the
+spy could have easily gotten away. Whether he recognized his enemy or
+not, Halpen was inclined to deliver a second blow. He rose to do this
+and Enoch, fairly leaping forward, seized the stern of the canoe with
+both hands.
+
+"Throw down your paddle, Simon Halpen!" he commanded.
+
+"It is you, then?" cried the spy, now sure of the identity of the youth.
+He aimed a fearful stroke at the boy's head. But instantly the latter
+tipped the canoe first one way, then the other, and the spy, losing his
+balance, plunged with a resounding splash into the lake!
+
+The canoe turned completely over. This was not what Enoch wished, but
+the shock of Halpen's fall was so great that he could not help it. The
+boy's desire had been to pitch the man out, get in himself, and then
+have the spy at his mercy. But chance--nay, Providence, for the man's
+sins had deserved death--willed otherwise.
+
+Simon Halpen could not swim. In falling into the lake he even lost his
+grip upon the paddle. So, when he rose to the surface, he had nothing to
+cling to, but struggled wildly and cried out in fear. "Help! I am
+choking! I will drown!" His voice rose to a screech. An answering shout
+came from the distant shore where the sentinel was stationed. But the
+latter was too far away to render aid. If the spy was to be saved it
+depended upon the efforts of the youth whose father had died under
+Halpen's hand, and whose own life the scoundrel had twice sought.
+
+At that fearful cry, however, Enoch launched himself at the sinking man.
+His head was already under water when the boy reached down and seized
+his collar. He brought him to the surface. The water gurgled from his
+throat and he breathed again. Had he been content to abandon himself to
+his rescuer then he would have been saved.
+
+But terror rode him like a nightmare. He feared drowning; he feared,
+too, the enemy whom he would have killed had he been able the instant
+before. He could not appreciate the generous spirit which had prompted
+Enoch to come to his assistance. He thought the boy strove only to force
+him beneath the lake and he fought and screamed with passion and horror
+of imminent death.
+
+"Be still! be still!" cried Enoch, well-nigh overcome himself by the mad
+actions of the man. "Lie quiet or I cannot save you. Be still!"
+
+Halpen did not hear him; or, if he heard, he would not believe. He tore
+himself from Enoch's grasp, and as the youth tried to seize him again he
+struck out wildly and his fist found lodgment against Enoch's jaw. The
+blow stunned the latter and he sank. Halpen strove to reach the
+overturned canoe. It was too far away. He felt himself going down for a
+third time and his lungs were already half filled with water. A fearful
+scream rent the night--the last cry of a terrified soul going to its
+end--and he sank. He never rose to the surface after that third plunge
+beneath the lake.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+THE DAWN OF THE TENTH OF MAY
+
+
+Enoch Harding, after a moment of breathless agony beneath the water,
+struggled to the air again. The blow he had received so dulled his
+senses that, had the canoe not fortunately been within the reach of his
+arm, he would have a second time gone down into the depths of the lake
+and possibly shared the fate of his enemy. But when his hand, flung out
+in that despair which is said to make a drowning person catch at even a
+straw, came in contact with the boat he seized it with a grip that could
+not be shaken. He had not the strength necessary to turn it over and to
+climb into the craft; but fortunately rescue was near.
+
+The sentinel had heard the voices out upon the water, and Simon Halpen's
+despairing scream as he went down for the last time, echoed from the
+wooded bluffs and reached the ears of the other Green Mountain Boys in
+the neighborhood. The sentinel leaped into the big canoe which Enoch had
+that morning secured from the Tory farmer up the lake, and paddled
+rapidly toward the mouth of the cove. He suspected at once that the
+escaped spy was trying to cross the lake and that some one of his
+brother scouts had discovered him.
+
+Suddenly the rescuer saw the upturned canoe and the almost exhausted boy
+clinging to it. He drove his own craft alongside and reaching quickly
+seized Enoch's shoulder, bearing him up as the youth's own hands slipped
+from their resting-place on the keel of the canoe. "Courage--courage!"
+cried the scout, heartily. "You are not goin' down yet, Nuck Harding!
+Where's the other?"
+
+"Gone--gone!" gasped Enoch, horrified by the death of Simon Halpen.
+
+"Who was it?"
+
+"The spy."
+
+"Ah! I thought so. Well, we can't help the poor wretch now. Can you aid
+yourself at all? Brace up, man!"
+
+"I'm--I'm all right," the youth declared, finally shaking off the
+feeling which had numbed him. "Let me get a grip on your boat--there!
+Now you can paddle ashore. I'll not lose my hold this time."
+
+"Right it is, then." The rescuer paddled slowly toward the bateaus. When
+he came to the shore with the boy dragging behind him, Bolderwood and
+several other members of the company had arrived in answer to the
+expiring scream of the drowned Yorker. Upon hearing the explanation of
+the affair the chief scout's face became grave indeed. "The poor wretch
+has gone to his just desarts, I don't doubt," he said. "But so
+sudden--so sudden! It seems a turrible thing, friends, for a man to live
+the life he lived and then to go before his Maker without no
+preparation. He murdered poor Jonas Harding as sure as aigs is aigs, an'
+he tried twice ter kill the boy here, an' burned the widder's home. Yet
+I'd wished him time to make his peace with God. It's an awful affair....
+But come!" he added, recovering himself, "there's something else to do
+now. We've got word from Colonel Allen. The troops are almost here. An'
+as good as we've done, there ain't ha'f enough boats to transport our
+boys across the lake."
+
+"There may be more comin' from the north, 'Siah," suggested Brown. "Y'
+know ye sent some of the boys up that way this arternoon."
+
+"Small hope o' their gettin' anything----"
+
+The chief scout's words were interrupted by a shout from one of the
+others. Around the point which defended the little cove a boat was
+appearing--or, rather, a lantern which betrayed the approach of a boat.
+"Here's another!" was the cry. "Here's Major Skeene's big bateau--an'
+Major Skeene's nigger, too!" as the loud and angry voice of a black man
+was heard across the calm water.
+
+"The boys are having a hard time with our black-and-tan friend," said
+Bolderwood with a chuckle. Then he held up his hand for silence. "Hark!
+there's the ring of a horse's hoof--and the tramp of feet. The troops
+are coming."
+
+With a rattle of accoutrements a cavalcade of horsemen descended the
+bluff to the tiny cove. Enoch recognized Colonel Allen, Major Warner,
+the stranger, Arnold, and Colonel Easton, the commander of the
+Massachusetts and Connecticut forces. "Praise the Lord, 'Siah!" cried
+the hearty voice of the Green Mountain leader. "We're arrived at last.
+'Twas like a task of Hercules to get here. And the night is already far
+gone. Where are your boats, man?"
+
+"The bulk of 'em are right here, Colonel. We ain't got what I wished;
+but we've taken 'em from friend and foe, and here comes the last of my
+boys with Major Skeene's big raft and, if I ain't mighty mistaken, with
+a bag o' charcoal aboard that must ha' caused 'em consider'ble trouble."
+
+The voice of the negro, who was the property of one of the wealthiest
+royalists on the lake, became more and more vociferous as the bateau
+approached the shore. "Wot de goodness youse shakaroons doin' yere? We
+ain't goin' land yere--no, sir! Dis ain't no place fur us. Who yo' t'ink
+capen ob dis craft, anyway?"
+
+"Oh, come along, old man! we wanter see ye!" shouted Bolderwood from the
+shore. "We won't eat ye up."
+
+"Dis ain' no place for us, I tells yo'!" cried the darky, and as the
+outline of the bateau and the objects upon it were now visible, they
+could see the whites of his rolling eyes. "I ain' got nuttin' ter do wid
+yo' shakaroons."
+
+"Come on, there!" shouted Allen. "Gag that black rascal if he doesn't
+talk less and use his sweeps well."
+
+"Who dat say fur ter gag me?" demanded the black, his teeth chattering.
+"D'you knows who I is, sah? I'se Major Skeene's nigger, an' dis Major
+Skeene's bateau, an' we gotter load o' freight fo' de castle."
+
+"We've got another sort of freight for you, my man," said the Green
+Mountain leader. "So come ashore here and have no more words about it."
+
+"But dese yere gemmen say dey goin' fishin' an' git me ter lend 'em
+passage!" cried the darky, in despair.
+
+"And so we are going fishing," cried Ethan Allen. "And you shall go,
+too, my black friend. But it will be different fishing from any that
+you've experienced before. Out with you, now!" he added, as the bateau
+grounded on the shore. "Get that freight off, men. What boats we have we
+must use at once. Perhaps they can be returned for another party to
+cross after us. I'll never forgive myself if this oversight makes a
+wreck of our expedition."
+
+At that moment the man who, earlier in the evening, had crossed the lake
+from the fort, came and spoke to Ethan Allen. The leader of the
+Americans listened attentively, slapping his thigh now and again with
+evident satisfaction as he heard the report of this faithful patriot
+who, as Allen had previously said, dared enter the lion's jaws. He had
+gone to Ticonderoga as a trader, had spent parts of two days in the
+fort, learning much that encouraged Allen in this desperate game he was
+playing. Although expecting additions to the garrison, Captain De la
+Place had not yet received the reinforcements. The buttresses of the
+fort, too, were in a sad state of repair. Indeed, since the British had
+swept the French from the lake, and with them driven the Hurons and
+Algonquins into the northern wilderness, few if any repairs had been
+made upon Ticonderoga. The British had simply held it as a storehouse
+and the garrison was small. If the American troops now gathering upon
+the eastern shore of Lake Champlain could once cross the water and
+approach the fort unperceived, there was hope in the hearts of all that
+the stronghold would be captured and the garrison overcome without any
+great loss of life.
+
+"The God of Battles has been with ye!" exclaimed Allen, when the man had
+finished his report. "And if He is with us, as I believe, yonder fort
+and all it contains shall be ours before sunrise.... But hasten! Tell
+Baker to bring up his troops. Bolderwood, you and your scouts must go
+over first with us. Colonel Arnold, you will come in my boat if you
+wish. Major Warner, I leave you to assist our good friend Easton. The
+boats shall return as soon as we have landed. Count the men who enter
+these boats, gentlemen. The lake is calm; but do not overload the craft.
+We desire no accident to delay our landing on the other side."
+
+Enoch Harding kept close to his friend, the old ranger, and was
+therefore in one of the foremost boats. He was near Colonel Allen when
+word was passed to that brave leader that those in the boats numbered
+but eighty-three. "Eighty-three!" exclaimed the Green Mountain hero.
+"And every man worth three red-coats. Once we get within those walls and
+I'll answer for them. Yet, sirs, I would that we had not been so long
+delayed on the road, or that there were more bateaus to our hand."
+
+"Shall the attack be given up--postponed till a more fitting
+occasion--if we cannot get more across?" asked Arnold.
+
+"Postponed!" cried Allen, his face darkening. "And pray tell me, sir,
+how can it be postponed? With the dawn our troops will be observed upon
+both sides of the lake by those in the fort, or by Tories who will
+gladly run with warning to the red-coats. A blind kitten could see what
+we are about. Nay, Colonel Arnold; we have put our hands to the plough
+and we'll cut a deep furrow or none at all!"
+
+The bold courage of their leader inspired the handful of men with actual
+belief in the successful outcome of the attack. There were no doubts
+expressed during the voyage across the lake. But when the landing was
+made, at the foot of the bluff on which the fort was built, the east was
+already streaked with pink. The dawn of the tenth of May, 1775--a day as
+marked in American history as any which we celebrate--was at hand. Less
+than a hundred patriotic Green Mountain Boys had disembarked from the
+boats under the shadow of Ticonderoga. With the rising of the sun their
+presence would be discovered by the garrison of the fort, and once
+warned of their approach, the British could easily defend the works from
+any attack of infantry. Circumstances seemed to presage at that moment
+the defeat of the cause and utter humiliation of the participators in
+the proposed attack.
+
+The boats had left the shore and were no longer to be descried, for a
+light fog covered the water. There was no retreat. To hide this party on
+the New York shore of the lake would be impossible. There were too many
+Tories about. Allen turned to his men. His voice was low, but intense,
+so that not only those around him, of which Enoch was one, but those at
+a distance heard every word uttered.
+
+"Friends! we have come here for a single purpose. It is to advance upon
+yonder fortifications and capture them. We already outnumber the
+garrison; I have certain information upon this point. But our companions
+await on the other shore to be transported to this spot and join in our
+glorious work. In the east, however, is a warning we can all read.
+Before our friends can join us it will be day. We shall be observed
+here; the garrison will be called to arms; our opportunity be lost. So,
+my brave companions, we cannot wait.
+
+"I shall attack the fort at once. I force no man to an act which caution
+forbids. If any of you doubt, fall out of the ranks and make good your
+escape. But I am going forward and those who trust in God and to my
+leadership will advance at once!" He drew his sword and advanced a long
+stride before the column of anxious patriots. "Forward!" he cried, and
+inspired by the same spirit which animated their gallant leader, every
+Green Mountain Boy obeyed the command. They would have cheered, but the
+moment for anything of that kind was not opportune. The rising mist
+scarcely concealed the fortress above them.
+
+With Colonel Arnold by his side the indomitable Allen climbed the slope
+and approached the covered way which led into the fort. Not a word was
+spoken. The sullen tramp of the column was all that broke the stillness
+of the dawn. The sentinel placed here to guard the entrance--a matter of
+military rule rather than of precaution--leaned half asleep upon his
+musket. Had he been alert the approach of the troops must have been
+discovered ere they were visible. But Providence willed that he,
+together with all the garrison, should be totally unsuspicious of the
+planned attack of the provincials.
+
+Suddenly, through the curling mist, appeared the head of the column. The
+sentinel started from his dream and, scarce understanding what he saw,
+advanced his musket, crying: "Halt! who goes there?"
+
+The Americans accelerated their pace while Ethan Allen, whirling his
+sword above his head, shouted: "Forward!" The attacking force reached
+the mouth of the covered way at a double-quick. Repeating the command to
+halt the sentinel darted back, raised his weapon to his shoulder, and
+aiming full at the head of the commander of the Green Mountain Boys,
+pressed the trigger!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+THE GUNS OF OLD TI SPEAK
+
+
+The fate of more than a brave man hung in the balance at that moment.
+The ultimate happiness and secure footing of a state was at stake when
+the sentinel pressed the trigger of his weapon. Had the ball reached its
+mark, the establishment of Vermont as a free state might have been
+postponed for many years. Ethan Allen's diplomacy in later dealing with
+the British agents who sought to wean Vermont from her federation with
+the struggling colonies, doubtless saved the Green Mountains from being
+overrun by a horde of Hessians and Indians who would have brought death
+and disaster to the patriotic settlers.
+
+But Providence had other work for the leader of the Green Mountain Boys
+to do. The musket missed fire and flinging down the piece the sentinel
+turned and ran through the passage into the fort, shrieking that the
+enemy was at hand. With a cheer the little band of patriots followed,
+and before the garrison was awake to its situation, the Green Mountain
+Boys had reached the parade. Instructed by their captains what to do,
+the men ran hither and thither to seize the guns whose threatening
+muzzles peered through the embrasures of the walls, and to guard the
+entrances to the barracks where the garrison slept.
+
+'Siah Bolderwood, seizing an axe, attacked the door of the ammunition
+cellar; for the American spy who had spent the previous day within the
+works had explained to the ranger the situation of this important
+compartment. The ringing blows of the woodman's axe doubtless awakened
+many of the sleeping soldiery. In half a minute the stout oak door was
+down. "There, Nuck Harding!" cried the long ranger, "I leave you to
+guard that 'ere. If they show fight, fire your rifle into the place. If
+so be, we'll all go up together; but Old Ti is ourn and if we're driven
+forth we'll wreck the fortifications as we go."
+
+Meanwhile Ethan Allen, knowing well the sleeping quarters of Captain De
+la Place, having received his information from the same source as
+Bolderwood, leaped up the stairway to the apartment of the commander of
+the fort. His shoulder burst in the door without the loss of an instant,
+and he found the astounded captain sitting up in bed. "What is this,
+sir? Who are you?" cried the British officer.
+
+"I call on ye to surrender, Captain De la Place!" cried the Green
+Mountain leader.
+
+"In whose name do ye make this demand, sir?"
+
+"In the name of the great Jehovah and the Continental Congress!" replied
+Allen, sternly. Then, describing a circle about his head with his sword,
+he added in a tone not to be mistaken: "I demand the surrender of your
+fort and all the stores and goods it may contain; and, sir, unless you
+comply with my demand and parade your men without arms at once, I'll
+send your head, sir, spinning across this floor!" and the whistling
+steel blade was advanced until the British officer shrank in fear.
+
+"I surrender! I surrender!" he cried, and word was passed at once to
+both the garrison and the Americans on the parade below. And thus the
+strongest British fortress within the borders of the disaffected
+colonies, capitulated to the American arms without a gun being fired.
+What if, when the news of the remarkable feat reached Philadelphia where
+the Continental Congress was in session, the act of Ethan Allen and his
+brave Green Mountain Boys was deplored, and a considerable party was for
+returning the stronghold to the king, while others wished to withdraw
+the American garrison, believing that the Champlain forts were too far
+on the frontier to be held successfully against the enemy? These
+suggestions were but the result of over-cautiousness on the part of some
+members of Congress. Happily their wishes were overborne and Ticonderoga
+remained an American fort until the cowardly St. Clair abandoned it
+before the advance of Burgoyne.
+
+At the moment, however, the satisfaction of Ethan Allen and his brave
+companions was unbounded. While the British soldiers were being paraded
+without their weapons before their conquerors, a second body of Green
+Mountain Boys under Major Warner entered the fort. The tall Connecticut
+man came to Allen with considerable chagrin expressed in his
+countenance. "Colonel, you have selfishly seized all the honors this
+time!" he cried, yet congratulating his friend with a warm handclasp.
+"You are a regular Achilles; there is nothing heroic for the rest of us
+to do."
+
+"Nonsense--nonsense, Seth!" cried Ethan Allen, yet unable to hide his
+delight at the outcome of the attack. "There is glory enough for every
+officer and every man Jack in the ranks. There is yet Crown Point to
+capture and you, Major, shall command that expedition. Take Bolderwood
+and some of his scouts with you and approach the other fortress by
+water--and good fortune and my blessing go with you!"
+
+A moment later the great guns of Old Ti began to speak. And they spoke a
+new tongue that morning. The Voice of Liberty as expressed by the
+resonant thunders of the old cannon echoed and reëchoed from height to
+height. The promontory which had been the scene of the bloody struggle
+between Champlain and the Iroquois, and the site of two fearful battles
+of the British and French, was at length sanctified by the presence of
+this band of liberty loving men destined, through the next few years, to
+offer their lives and possessions on the altar of their country.
+
+Then Warner and his men again embarked in the boats and sailed down the
+lake. Enoch Harding went with the expedition and saw the bloodless
+capitulation of the other British stronghold. Later, Benedict Arnold
+with a small command captured a British corvette farther down the lake
+and with that act the supremacy of the Americans on Champlain was
+assured. A garrison was placed in each fortress and then the Green
+Mountain Boys dispersed to their homes having accomplished the object
+for which they had been gathered by their leader. Enoch and the old
+ranger returned to the ox-bow farm where their welcome can be better
+imagined than narrated.
+
+Yet the Widow Harding during the struggle which followed the capture of
+Ticonderoga made many sacrifices more noble even than that of allowing
+her eldest son to join in this expedition, but pioneer mothers were
+called upon so to do. Lot Breckenridge's mother had allowed her son to
+march away to Boston where, under Israel Putman, he saw most active
+service during the campaign which finally drove the red-coats out of the
+Massachusetts capital. Robbie Baker was with his father when, while
+reconnoitering outside St. Johns, the Green Mountain sharpshooter was
+killed by an Indian ally of the British.
+
+Enoch Harding, too, joined that ill-fated expedition into Canada where
+the rash attempt of Ethan Allen and his followers before Montreal
+resulted in the capture and imprisonment of the intrepid leader. Enoch,
+returning with the broken columns of the American army, but with a
+lieutenant's commission, was sent south and took no further part in the
+struggles about Lake Champlain. But Bryce, two years after the capture
+of Ticonderoga, well sustained the family name and honor while fighting
+with Stark at Bennington.
+
+The girls and young Henry became their mother's sole support in her work
+of tilling the farm which Jonas Harding had cleared, and throughout the
+uncertain years of the Revolution the family continued to sow and reap,
+like so many other patriotic folk, that the army might be clothed and
+fed while fighting the King's hirelings. Perhaps the part played by the
+"non-combatants" in the Revolution was not the least loyal nor the least
+helpful to the cause of liberty.
+
+The war between the confederated states and Great Britain did not end
+the controversy regarding the rights of the settlers in the Hampshire
+Grants; it simply postponed the vexing matter. But in the end the
+freedom of Vermont as a state was brought about. After the war, and
+while the Thirteen States were endeavoring to bring order out of the
+chaotic conditions which had been the legacy of the great struggle, it
+was really New York herself that urged the admittance of Vermont into
+the Union. Even at that early date the supremacy of the South was
+feared, and when Kentucky applied for entrance to the Union, Vermont was
+made a state also to counteract the addition of another of southern
+sentiment.
+
+During the war, however, the condition of Vermont was very precarious.
+It was due to Ethan Allen, as much as to any one man, that the Green
+Mountains and the Champlain Valley were not overrun with foes both white
+and red. While imprisoned in the hulks in New York Bay Allen was
+approached by agents of the crown who strove to buy his good-will by
+presents and promises. They did not understand the rugged honesty of the
+Green Mountain Boy; but he, knowing the exposed situation of his friends
+and neighbors, craftily led his captors to believe that they might
+obtain Vermont and her sturdy people on their own side.
+
+When Ethan Allen was exchanged and came back to the Green Mountains, he
+still, with other leaders, carefully watched the British agents and thus
+saved the rich farming lands of the Otter and Wonooski from bloodshed,
+that the patriot farmers might continue to plant and reap the grain
+which was truly "the sinews of war." It is true therefore that few
+leaders of the Revolution deserve greater commendation, for none
+displayed more consecrated courage, nor was more beloved by his
+followers, than the hero of Ticonderoga.
+
+
+
+
+HISTORICAL STORIES FOR BOYS
+
+THE EVE OF WAR
+
+By W. Bert Foster. Illustrated by F. A. Carter.
+
+A story of the critical days just before the Civil War, when every hour
+made history. Joe Ransom learns of the plan to assassinate President
+Lincoln on the way to his inauguration, and is sent by the United
+States Government officials to warn the President-elect. His mission is
+accomplished, and largely as a result of his services the plot comes to
+naught. Historical facts are closely followed, but this nowhere
+interferes with the interest in the story.
+
+
+WITH ETHAN ALLEN AT TICONDEROGA
+
+By W. Bert Foster. Illustrated by F. A. Carter.
+
+A vivid picture of the struggles of those heroic New Englanders, the
+Green Mountain Boys, against the Tory residents. That dramatic
+character in revolutionary history, Ethan Allen, with whom the young
+hero is continually in touch, is the central figure of the narrative,
+and the incidents which lead up to the capture of Fort Ticonderoga are
+told in a wonderfully interesting manner.
+
+WITH WASHINGTON AT VALLEY FORGE
+
+By W. Bert Foster. Illustrated by F. A. Carter.
+
+The hero, a boy of sixteen, is an enthusiastic patriot. He soon enlists
+his services with his country, and performs many heroic deeds in the
+capacity of a courier in the battles of Brandywine, Monmouth, and at
+the Paoli massacre. He renders great service to our forces at Valley
+Forge, and participates in the hardships which the struggling American
+army endured during that memorable winter.
+
+Cloth Binding--Illustrated--Each, $1.25
+
+THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY
+
+923 ARCH STREET--PHILADELPHIA
+
+
+
+
+UNCROWNING A KING
+
+By Edward S. Ellis, A. M. Illustrated by J. Steeple Davis.
+
+A tale of the Indian war waged by King Philip in 1675. The adventures
+of the young hero during that eventful period, his efforts in behalf of
+the attacked towns, his capture by the Indians, and his subsequent
+release through the efforts of King Philip himself, with a vivid
+account of the tragic death of that renowned Indian chieftain, form a
+most interesting and instructive story.
+
+AT THE SIEGE OF QUEBEC
+
+By James Otis. Illustrated by F. A. Carter.
+
+Two boys living on the Kennebec River join Benedict Arnold's expedition
+as it passes their dwelling en route for the Canadian border. They,
+with their command, are taken prisoners before Quebec. The terrible
+march through the wilderness, the incidents of the siege, and the
+disastrous assault, which cost the gallant General Montgomery his life,
+are in the highest degree thrilling, and true in every particular.
+
+WITH PURITAN AND PEQUOT
+
+By William Murray Graydon. Illustrated by Clyde O. Deland.
+
+There is a swing of martial spirit and a spice of bold enterprise in
+this story of colonial times. Rufus Jennicom, the impetuous Puritan
+boy, finds fighting Indians more to his taste than raising Indian corn.
+It is his rare good fortune to have for his friend Roger Williams and
+to meet with Captain Miles Standish. The incidents that go to make up
+this stirring tale have much to do with the struggles of the early New
+England colonies.
+
+Cloth Binding--Illustrated--Each, $1.25
+
+THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY
+
+923 ARCH STREET--PHILADELPHIA
+
+
+
+
+IN THE DAYS OF WASHINGTON
+
+By William Murray Graydon. Illustrated by J. C. Claghorn.
+
+The story opens in Philadelphia just prior to its evacuation by the
+British in 1778. Nathan Stanbury, a bright lad of seventeen, joins the
+Continental Army, which is then suffering the hardships of the winter
+at Valley Forge. A short time later the Battle of Monmouth is fought,
+and in this the young hero figures quite prominently, as he does
+afterward at the Massacre of Wyoming.
+
+THE BOER BOY OF THE TRANSVAAL
+
+By Kate Milner Rabb. Illustrated by F. A. Carter.
+
+The career of the Boer boy is one series of exciting adventures. In the
+gallant service for his country he comes face to face with President
+Kruger, General Cronje, and General Joubert. Much interesting
+information pertaining to this country and its people is introduced,
+and the reader will understand as never before the cause of the intense
+hatred of the Boers for the British.
+
+ON WOOD COVE ISLAND
+
+By Elbridge S. Brooks. Illustrated by Frederic J. Boston.
+
+A trio of bright New England children are given an island on which to
+spend their summer vacation. Here they establish a little colony, the
+management of which gives them a large amount of amusement and at times
+causes some seemingly serious difficulties. In the solution of their
+perplexing problems the young people receive much encouragement and
+counsel from the poet Longfellow, whose delightful acquaintance they
+form in a very unexpected and amusing manner.
+
+Cloth Binding--Illustrated--Each, $1.25
+
+THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY
+
+923 ARCH STREET--PHILADELPHIA
+
+
+
+
+UNDER THE TAMARACKS
+
+By Elbridge S. Brooks. Illustrated.
+
+An interesting and healthful story for boys and girls, representing a
+summer's outing of young people among the Thousand Islands. It is timed
+to include the visit of General Grant at Alexandria Bay, and several
+interesting conversations between one of the boys and the hero of the
+Rebellion shed pleasing side lights upon the great General's character.
+
+Cloth Binding--Illustrated--Each, $1.25
+
+THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY
+
+923 ARCH STREET--PHILADELPHIA
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's With Ethan Allen at Ticonderoga, by W. Bert Foster
+
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+Project Gutenberg's With Ethan Allen at Ticonderoga, by W. Bert Foster
+
+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
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+
+
+Title: With Ethan Allen at Ticonderoga
+
+Author: W. Bert Foster
+
+Illustrator: F. A. Carter
+
+Release Date: January 13, 2010 [EBook #30952]
+
+Language: English
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+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WITH ETHAN ALLEN AT TICONDEROGA ***
+
+
+
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+Produced by Roger Frank, D Alexander and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
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+</pre>
+
+
+
+<div class='titlepage'>
+<p class='tac fs18 mt30 mb40'><i>With</i><br />ETHAN ALLEN<br /><i>at</i><br />TICONDEROGA</p>
+<p class='mb30'><i>by</i><br />
+<span class='fsl'>W. Bert Foster</span><br />
+<i>Author of</i><br />
+<span class='fsl'>&#8220;With Washington<br />at Valley Forge&#8221; etc.</span></p>
+<p class='fss mb40'>Illustrated<br />
+by<br />
+<span class='fsl'>F. A. Carter</span></p>
+<p class='mb30'><span class='fsl'>THE PENN<br />PUBLISHING COMPANY</span><br />
+PHILADELPHIA<br />
+M&#160;&#160;C&#160;&#160;M&#160;&#160;IV</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='titlepage'>
+<hr class='tb10' />
+<p>C<span class='fss'>OPYRIGHT</span> 1903 <span class='fss'>BY</span> T<span class='fss'>HE</span> P<span class='fss'>ENN</span> P<span class='fss'>UBLISHING</span> C<span class='fss'>OMPANY</span></p>
+<hr class='tb10' />
+<p class='mt20'>With Ethan Allen at Ticonderoga</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='figcenter'> <img src='images/i003.jpg' id="img001" alt='' /> <p class='center caption sc'> &#8220;F<span class='fss'>ORWARD</span>!&#8221; H<span class='fss'>E</span> S<span class='fss'>HOUTED</span></p></div><!-- figure -->
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='toc'>
+<table summary='TOC'>
+<tr><td colspan='3' class='tac fs16'>Contents</td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class='tcol1 fss'>CHAP.</span></td><td><span class='tcol3 fss'>PAGE</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_0'>I</a></td><td class='tcol2'>A Boy of the Wilderness</td><td class='tcol3'>5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_1'>II</a></td><td class='tcol2'>Enoch Harding Feels Himself a Man</td><td class='tcol3'>19</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_2'>III</a></td><td class='tcol2'>The Ambush</td><td class='tcol3'>31</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_3'>IV</a></td><td class='tcol2'>&#8217;Siah Bolderwood&#8217;s Stratagem</td><td class='tcol3'>45</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_4'>V</a></td><td class='tcol2'>The Pioneer Home</td><td class='tcol3'>60</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_5'>VI</a></td><td class='tcol2'>The Stump Burning</td><td class='tcol3'>76</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_6'>VII</a></td><td class='tcol2'>A Night Attack</td><td class='tcol3'>94</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_7'>VIII</a></td><td class='tcol2'>The Traitor&#8217;s Way</td><td class='tcol3'>107</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_8'>IX</a></td><td class='tcol2'>The Otter Creek Raid</td><td class='tcol3'>127</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_9'>X</a></td><td class='tcol2'>The Warning</td><td class='tcol3'>139</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_10'>XI</a></td><td class='tcol2'>An Unequal Battle</td><td class='tcol3'>160</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_11'>XII</a></td><td class='tcol2'>Backwoods Justice</td><td class='tcol3'>174</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_12'>XIII</a></td><td class='tcol2'>The Wolf Pack</td><td class='tcol3'>191</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_13'>XIV</a></td><td class='tcol2'>The Testimony of Crow Wing</td><td class='tcol3'>208</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_14'>XV</a></td><td class='tcol2'>The Storm Cloud Gathers</td><td class='tcol3'>220</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_15'>XVI</a></td><td class='tcol2'>The Westminster Massacre</td><td class='tcol3'>236</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_16'>XVII</a></td><td class='tcol2'>The Cloven Hoof</td><td class='tcol3'>251</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_17'>XVIII</a></td><td class='tcol2'>&#8220;The Cross of Fire&#8221;</td><td class='tcol3'>270</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_18'>XIX</a></td><td class='tcol2'>The Rising of the Clans</td><td class='tcol3'>284</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_19'>XX</a></td><td class='tcol2'>The Rival Commanders</td><td class='tcol3'>298</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_20'>XXI</a></td><td class='tcol2'>The Escape of the Spy</td><td class='tcol3'>313</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_21'>XXII</a></td><td class='tcol2'>The End of Simon Halpen</td><td class='tcol3'>330</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_22'>XXIII</a></td><td class='tcol2'>The Dawn of the Tenth of May</td><td class='tcol3'>343</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'><a href='#link_23'>XXIV</a></td><td class='tcol2'>The Guns of Old Ti Speak</td><td class='tcol3'>355</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan='3' style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em;'></td></tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<h1>WITH ETHAN ALLEN AT TICONDEROGA</h1>
+
+<h2><a id='link_0'></a>CHAPTER I<br /><span class='fss'>A BOY OF THE WILDERNESS</span></h2>
+
+<p>The forest was still. A calm lay upon its vast extent, from the
+green-capped hills in the east to the noble river which, fed by the
+streams so quietly meandering through the pleasantly wooded country,
+found its way to the sea where the greatest city of the New World was
+destined to stand. The clear, bell-like note of a waking bird startled
+the morning hush. A doe and her fawn that had couched in a thicket
+seemed roused to activity by this early matin and suddenly showered the
+short turf with a dewy rain from the bushes which they disturbed as
+they leaped away toward the &#8220;lick.&#8221; The gentle creatures
+first slaked their thirst at the margin of the creek hard by and then
+stood a moment with outstretched nostrils, snuffing the wind before
+tasting the salt impregnated earth trampled as hard as adamant by a
+thousand hoofs. The fawn dropped its muzzle quickly; but the mother,
+not so well assured, snuffed again and yet again.</p>
+
+<p>In the wilderness, before the white man came, there were to be found
+paths made by the wild folk going to and from their watering places and
+feeding grounds, and paths made by the red hunter and warrior. Although
+hundreds of deer traveled to this lick yearly, they had not originally
+made the trail. It was an ancient Indian runaway, for the creek was
+fordable near this point. The tribesmen had used it for generations
+until it was worn almost knee-deep in the forest mould, but wide enough
+only to be traveled in single file. Along this ancient trail, and
+approaching the lick with infinite caution, came a boy of thirteen,
+bearing a heavy rifle.</p>
+
+<p>Although so young, Enoch Harding was well built, and the play of his
+hardened muscles was easily observed under his tight-fitting, homespun
+garments. The circumstances of border life in the eighteenth century
+molded hardy men and sturdy boys. His face was as brown as a berry and
+his eyes clear and frankly open. The brown hair curled tightly above
+his perspiring brow, from which his old otter-skin cap was thrust back.
+His coming to the bank of the wide stream was attended with all the
+care and silent observation of an Indian on the trail. He set his feet
+so firmly and with such precision that not even the rustle of a leaf or
+the crackling of a twig would have warned the sharpest ear of his
+approach. The wind was in his favor, too, blowing from the creek toward
+him. The doe, which he could not yet see but the patter of whose light
+hoofs he had heard as she trotted with her fawn to the drinking place,
+could not possibly have discovered his presence; yet she continued to
+raise her muzzle at intervals and snuff the wind suspiciously.</p>
+
+<p>The dark aisles of the forest, as yet unillumined by the sun whose
+crimson banners would soon be flung above the mountain-tops, seemed
+deserted. In the distance the birds were beginning their morning song;
+but here the shadow of the mountains lay heavy upon wood and stream and
+the feathered choristers awoke more slowly. The two deer at the lick
+and the boy who now, from behind the massive bole of a tree, surveyed
+them, seemed the only living objects within view.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch raised his heavy rifle, resting the barrel against the tree
+trunk, and drew bead at the doe&#8217;s side. He was chancing a long
+shot, rather than taking the risk of approaching any nearer to the
+animals. He had seen that the doe was suspicious and she might be off
+in a flash into the thicker forest beyond unless he fired at once. Had
+he been more experienced he would have wondered what had made the
+creature suspicious, his own approach to the lick being quite evidently
+undiscovered. But he thought only of getting a perfect sight and that
+the larder at home was empty. And this last fact was sufficient to make
+the boy&#8217;s aim certain, his principal care being to waste no
+powder and to bring down his game with as little loss of time as might
+be.</p>
+
+<p>The next moment the heavy muzzle-loading gun roared and the buckshot
+sped on its mission. The mother deer gave a convulsive spring forward,
+thus warning the poor fawn, which disappeared in the brush like a flash
+of brown light. The doe dropped in a heap upon the sward and Enoch,
+flushed with success, ran forward to view his prize. In so doing,
+however, the boy forgot the first rule of the border ranger and hunter.
+He did not reload his weapon.</p>
+
+<p>Stumbling over the widely spread roots of the great tree behind
+which he had hidden, he reached the opening in the forest where the
+tragedy had been enacted, and would have been on his knees beside the
+dead deer in another instant had not an appalling sound stayed him. A
+scream, the like of which once heard is never to be forgotten, thrilled
+him to the marrow. He started back, casting his glance upward. There
+was a rustling in the thick branches of the tree beneath which the doe
+had fallen. Again the maddened scream rang out and a tawny body flashed
+from concealment in the foliage.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;A catamount!&#8221; Enoch shouted, and seeing the creature
+fairly over his head in its flight through the air, he leaped away
+toward the creek, his feet winged with fear. Of all the wild creatures
+of the Northern wilderness this huge cat was most to be avoided. It
+would not hesitate to attack man when hungry, and maddened and
+disappointed as this one was, its charge could not be stayed. At the
+instant when the beast was prepared to leap upon either the doe or her
+fawn, Enoch&#8217;s shot had laid the one low and frightened the other
+away. His appearance upon the scene attracted the attention of the cat
+and had given it a new object of attack. Possibly the creature did not
+even notice the fall of the deer, being now bent upon vengeance for the
+loss of its prey, for which it had doubtless searched unsuccessfully
+all the night through.</p>
+
+<p>The young hunter was in a desperate situation. His gun was empty and
+the prospect of an encounter with the catamount would have quenched the
+courage of the bravest. And to run from it was still more foolish, yet
+this was the first thought which inspired him. The creek was beyond and
+although the ford was some rods above the deer-lick, he thought to cast
+himself into the stream and thus escape his enemy. The beast,
+possessing that well-known trait of the feline tribe which causes it to
+shrink from water, might not follow him into the creek.</p>
+
+<p>A long log, the end of which had caught upon the bank, swung its
+length into the stream, forming a boom against which light drift-stuff
+had gathered; the swift current foamed about the timber as though vexed
+at this delay to its progress. Upon the tree Enoch leaped and ran to
+the further extremity. His feet, shod in home-made moccasins of
+deer-hide, did not slip on this insecure footing; but his weight on the
+stranded log set it in motion. The timber began to swing off from the
+shore and one terrified glance about him assured the boy that he was at
+a most deep and dangerous part of the stream.</p>
+
+<p>Although so shallow above at the ford, the bed of the creek directly
+below was of rock instead of gravel, and ragged boulders thrust
+themselves up from the depths, causing many whirlpools which dimpled
+the surface of the water. About the boulders the current tore, the
+brown froth from the angry jaws of rock dancing lightly away upon the
+waves. Although even with his clothing on he might have swum in a quiet
+pool, to do so here would be almost impossible. The boy was between two
+perils!</p>
+
+<p>He turned about in horror to escape the flood, and was in time to
+see the huge cat gain the end of the log in a single bound as it was
+torn from the shore by the current. There the beast crouched, less than
+twenty feet away, lashing its tail and snarling menace at the victim of
+its wrath. The situation was paralyzing. As for loading his rifle now,
+the boy had not the strength to do it. The fascination of the
+beast&#8217;s blazing eyes held him motionless, like a bird charmed by
+the unwinking gaze of a black snake.</p>
+
+<p>And Enoch Harding knew, if he knew anything, that the beast would
+not give him time to reload the clumsy gun. At his first movement it
+would spring. And if he leaped into the water, it might follow him,
+considering its present savage mood. He beheld its muscles, which
+slipped so easily under the tawny skin, knotting themselves for a
+spring. The forelegs were drawn up under the breast the curved,
+sabre-sharp claws scratching the bark on the floating timber. In
+another instant the fatal leap would be made.</p>
+
+<p>Never had the boy been in such danger. He did not utterly lose his
+presence of mind; but he was helpless. What chance had he with an empty
+gun before the savage brute? He seized the barrel in both hands and
+raised the weapon above his head. It was too heavy for him to swing
+with any ease, and being so would fall but lightly on the creature, did
+he succeed in reaching it at all. He could not hope to stun the cat at
+a single blow. And beside, the tree, rocking now like a water-logged
+canoe, made his footing more and more insecure. In a moment it would be
+among the boulders and at the first collision be overturned.</p>
+
+<p>But he could not drag his eyes from those of the catamount. With a
+fierce snarl which ended in a thrilling scream, the brute cast itself
+into the air! At the moment it rose, exposing its lighter colored
+breast to view, a gun-shot shattered the silence of river and forest.
+The spring of the cat was not stayed, but its yell again
+changed&#8211;this time to a note of agony.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Jump, lad, jump!&#8221; shouted a voice and Enoch, as though
+awaking from a dream, obeyed the command. He leaped sideways, and
+landed upon a slippery rock, falling to his knees, yet securing a
+hand-hold upon a protuberance. Nor did he lose hold of his gun with the
+other hand.</p>
+
+<p>The body of the catamount landed just where he had stood; but then
+rolled off the log and disappeared in the rushing stream, while the
+timber itself crashed instantly into one of the larger boulders. Enoch
+staggered to his feet, his hand bleeding and also his knee, where the
+stocking had been torn away by the rock. The log swung broadside to the
+current again, and seeing his chance, the boy ran along its length and
+leaped from its end into comparatively shallow water under the
+bank.</p>
+
+<p>His rescuer was at hand and dragged him, panting and exhausted, to
+the shore, where he fell weakly on the turf, unable for a moment to
+utter a word. The man who leaned over him was lean, as dark as an
+Indian, and in a day when smoothly shaven features were the rule, his
+face was marked by a tangled growth of iron-gray beard. His hair hung
+to the fringed collar of his deerskin shirt, and straggled over his low
+brow in careless locks, instead of being tightly drawn back and
+fastened in a queue; and out of this wilderness of hair and beard
+looked two eyes as sharp as the hawk&#8217;s.</p>
+
+<p>He was so tall that there was a slight stoop to his shoulders as
+though, when he walked, he feared to collide with the branches of the
+trees under which he passed. Erect, he must have lacked but a few
+inches of seven feet and, possessing not an ounce of superfluous flesh
+on his big bones, his appearance was not impressive. The deerskin
+hunting shirt, worked in a curious pattern on the breast with red and
+blue porcupine quills, fitted him tightly, as did his linsey-woolsey
+breeches; and his thin shanks were covered with gray hose darned
+clumsily in more than one place. He would have been selected at first
+sight as a wood-ranger and hunter, and carried his long rifle with more
+grace than he ever held plough or wielded reaping-hook.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, Josiah Bolderwood was one of that strange class of white men
+so frequently found during the pioneer era of our Eastern country. He
+seemed to have been born, as he often said himself, with a gun in his
+hands. His mother, lying on her couch behind the double wall of a
+blockhouse in the Maine wilderness, loaded spare guns for her husband
+and his comrades while they beat off the yelling redskins, when Josiah
+was but a few days old. He was a ranger and trapper from the beginning.
+He had slept under the canopy of the forest more often than in a bed
+and beneath a roof made by men&#8217;s hands. From early youth he had
+hunted all through the northern wilderness, and had been no more able
+to tie himself to a farm, and earn his bread by tilling the soil, than
+an Indian. Indeed, he was more of an Indian than a white man in habits,
+tastes, and feelings; he lacked only that marvelous appreciation of
+signs and sounds in the forest, in which the white can never hope to
+equal the red man.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Lad, that was a near chance for you!&#8221; he said, when he
+saw that Enoch was practically unhurt. &#8220;The Almighty surely
+brought me to this lick jest right. I knowed you was here when I heard
+the shot; but as your marm said you&#8217;d gone for a deer, I
+didn&#8217;t s&#8217;pose you&#8217;d be huntin&#8217; for catamounts,
+too! Howsomever, somethin&#8217; tol&#8217; me ter run when I heard
+your gun, an&#8217; run I did.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t shoot at the wild-cat, &#8217;Siah,&#8221;
+said the boy, getting upon his feet. &#8220;See yonder; there&#8217;s
+the doe I knocked over. But the critter was after her, too, and it
+madded him when I fired, I s&#8217;pose.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And ye didn&#8217;t git your gun loaded again!&#8221;
+exclaimed Bolderwood.</p>
+
+<p>His young friend blushed with shame. &#8220;I&#8211;I didn&#8217;t
+think. I ran over to look at the doe, and the critter jumped at me
+outer the tree. Then I got on the log and he follered
+me&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Jonas Harding&#8217;s boy&#8217;d oughter known better than
+that,&#8221; declared the old ranger, with some vexation.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I know it, &#8217;Siah. Poor father told me &#8217;nough
+times never to move outer my tracks till I had loaded again. An&#8217;
+I reckon this&#8217;ll be a lesson for me. I&#8211;I ain&#8217;t got
+over it yet.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wal,&#8221; said Bolderwood, &#8220;while you git yer breath,
+Nuck, I&#8217;ll flay that critter and hang her up. I&#8217;m in
+somethin&#8217; of a hurry this mornin&#8217;; but as the
+widder&#8217;s needin&#8217; the meat, we won&#8217;t leave the carcass
+to the varmints.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve been to my house, &#8217;Siah?&#8221; cried
+Enoch, following him across the little glade.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes. Jest stopped there on my way down from Manchester.
+That&#8217;s how I knew you was over here hunting.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But if you&#8217;re in a hurry, leave me to do that,&#8221;
+said the boy. &#8220;I&#8217;m all right now.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re in as big a hurry as I be, Nuck,&#8221; returned
+the ranger, with a grim smile. &#8220;I&#8217;m going to take you with
+me over to Mr. James Breckenridge&#8217;s. Ev&#8217;ry gun we kin git
+may count to-day, lad.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Did mother say I could go, &#8217;Siah?&#8221; cried the
+youngster, with undoubted satisfaction in his voice.
+&#8220;You&#8217;re the best man that I know to get her to say
+&#8216;yes&#8217;!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Bolderwood looked up from his work with much gravity. &#8220;This
+ain&#8217;t no funnin&#8217; we&#8217;re goin&#8217; on, Nuck.
+It&#8217;s serious business. You kin shoot straight, an&#8217;
+that&#8217;s why I begged for ye. This may be the most turrible day you
+ever seen, my lad, for the day on which a man or boy sees bloodshed for
+the fust time, is a mem&#8217;ry that he takes with him to the
+grave.&#8221;</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<h2><a id='link_1'></a>CHAPTER II<br /><span class='fss'>ENOCH HARDING FEELS HIMSELF A MAN</span></h2>
+
+<p>Although Enoch Harding had not grasped the serious nature of the
+matter which the ranger&#8217;s words suggested, there was something he
+had realized, however, and this thought sent the blood coursing through
+his veins with more than wonted vigor and his eyes sparkled. He was a
+man. He was to play a man&#8217;s part on this day and the
+neighbors&#8211;even the old ranger who had stood his friend on so many
+occasions already&#8211;recognized him as the head of the family.</p>
+
+<p>Bolderwood saw this thought expressed in his face and without
+desiring to &#8220;take him down&#8221; and humble his pride, wished to
+show him the serious side of the situation. To this end he spoke upon
+another subject, beginning: &#8220;D&#8217;ye remember where we be,
+Nuck? &#8217;Member this place? Seems strange that you sh&#8217;d have
+such a caper here with that catamount after what happened only last
+spring, doesn&#8217;t it?&#8221; He glanced keenly at young Harding and
+saw that his words had at once the desired effect. Enoch stood up, the
+skinning-knife in his hand, and looked over the little glade. In a
+moment his brown eyes filled with tears, which rolled unchastened down
+his smooth cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Aye, Nuck, a sorry day for you an&#8217; yourn when Jonas
+Harding met his death here. And a sorry day was it for me, too, lad. I
+loved him like a brother. He an&#8217; I, Nuck, trapped this neck of
+woods together before the settlement was started. We knew how rich the
+land was and naught but the wars with the redskins an&#8217; them
+French kept us from comin&#8217; here long before the Robinsons. Jonas
+wouldn&#8217;t come &#8217;less it was safe to bring your mother
+an&#8217; you&#8211;an&#8217; he was right. There&#8217;s little good
+in a man&#8217;s roamin&#8217; the world without a wife an&#8217;
+fireside ter tie to. I was sayin&#8217; the same to neighbor Allen last
+week, an&#8217; he agreed&#8211;though he&#8217;s wuss off than me, for
+he has a family back in Litchfield an&#8217; is under anxiety all the
+time to bring them here, if the Yorkers but leave us in peace. As for
+me&#8211;well, a tough old knot like me ain&#8217;t fit to marry
+an&#8217; settle down. I&#8217;m wuss nor an Injin.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It is doubtful if the boy heard half this monologue. He stood with
+thoughtful mien and his eyes were still wet when Bolderwood&#8217;s
+words finally aroused him. &#8220;Do you know, Nuck, there&#8217;s many
+a time I stop at this ford and think of your father&#8217;s death?
+There&#8217;s things about it I&#8217;ll never understand, I
+reckon.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Enoch Harding started and flashed a quick glance at his friend.
+&#8220;What things?&#8221; he asked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, lad, mainly that Jonas Harding, who was as quick on the
+trail and as good a woodsman as myself, should be worsted by a mad
+buck; it seems downright impossible, Nuck.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I know. But there could be no mistake about it, &#8217;Siah.
+There were the hoof-marks&#8211;and there was no bullet wound on the
+body, only those gashes made by the critter&#8217;s horns. Simon
+Halpen&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Bolderwood raised his hand quickly. &#8220;Nay, lad! don&#8217;t
+utter evil even about that Yorker. We all know he was anigh here when
+your father died. He was seen at Bennington the night before, and later
+crossed James Breckenridge&#8217;s farm on his way to Albany. Black
+enemy as he is to you and yourn, there&#8217;s naught to be gained by
+accusing him of Jonas&#8217; death. It would be impossible. There was
+not, as you say, a bullet wound upon your father&#8217;s body. There
+was not a mark of man&#8217;s footstep near the lick here but your
+father&#8217;s own. How else, then, could he have been killed but by
+the charge of the buck?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You say yourself that father was far too sharp to so be taken
+by surprise,&#8221; muttered the boy.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Aye&#8211;that is so. But the facts are there, lad. I
+s&#8217;arched the ground over&#8211;I headed the band of scouts who
+found him&#8211;remember that! Nobody had been near the lick but Jonas.
+There wasn&#8217;t a footmark for rods around. Even an Injin
+couldn&#8217;t have got near enough to strike Jonas down with his
+gun-butt&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You believe that wound on his head, then, was made by no
+deer&#8217;s antler?&#8221; exclaimed Enoch, eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Tut, tut! You jump too quick,&#8221; said Bolderwood, turning
+his face away. &#8220;That&#8217;s never well. Allus look b&#8217;fore
+ye leap, Nuck. My &#8217;pinion be that your father struck his head on
+a stone in falling&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Where is there a stone here?&#8221; demanded the boy, with a
+speaking gesture of his disengaged hand. &#8220;I saw that deep wound
+in father&#8217;s skull. I never believed a buck did that.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And yet there was naught but the prints of the buck&#8217;s
+hoofs in the soil here&#8211;be sure of that. The ground was trampled
+all about as though the fight had been desp&#8217;rate&#8211;as indeed
+it must have been.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But that blow on the head?&#8221; reiterated Enoch.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ah, lad, I can&#8217;t understand that. The wound certainly
+was mainly like a blow from a gun-stock,&#8221; admitted
+Bolderwood.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then Simon Halpen compassed his death&#8211;I am sure of
+it!&#8221; cried the boy. &#8220;You well know how he hated father.
+Halpen would never forget the beech-sealing he got last fall. He
+threatened to be terribly revenged on us; and Bryce and I heard him
+threaten father, too, when he fought him upon the crick bank and father
+tossed the Yorker into the middle of the stream.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Bolderwood chuckled. &#8220;Simon as well might tackle Ethan Allen
+himself as to have wrastled with Jonas,&#8221; he said.... &#8220;But
+we must hurry, lad. We have work&#8211;and perhaps serious
+work&#8211;before us this day. It may be the battle of our lives; we
+may l&#8217;arn to-day whether we are to be free people here in
+Bennington, or are to be driven out like sheep at the command of a
+flunkey under a royal person who lives so far across the sea that he
+knows naught of, nor cares naught for us.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You talk desp&#8217;rately against the King, Mr.
+Bolderwood!&#8221; exclaimed Enoch, looking askance at his
+companion.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Nay&#8211;what is the King to me?&#8221; demanded the ranger,
+in disgust. &#8220;He would be lost in these woods, I warrant.
+We&#8217;re free people over here; why should we bother our heads about
+kings and parliament? They are no good to us.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You talk more boldly than Mr. Ethan Allen,&#8221; said the
+boy. &#8220;He was at our house once to talk with father. Father said
+he was a master bold man and feared neither the King nor the
+people.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And no man need fear either if he fear God,&#8221; declared
+the ranger, simply. &#8220;We are only seeing the beginnings of great
+trouble, Nuck. We may do battle to Yorkers now; perhaps we shall one
+day have to fight the King&#8217;s men for our farms and housel-stuff.
+The Governor of New York is a powerful man and is friendly to men high
+in the King&#8217;s councils, they say. This Sheriff Ten Eyck may bring
+real soldiers against us some day.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t believe that, &#8217;Siah?&#8221; cried the
+boy.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Indeed and I do, lad,&#8221; returned the ranger, rising now
+with the carcass of the doe flayed and ready for hanging up.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But we&#8217;ll fight for our lands!&#8221; cried Enoch.
+&#8220;My father fought Simon Halpen for our farm. I&#8217;ll fight
+him, too, if he comes here and tries to take it, now father is
+dead.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Mayhap this day&#8217;s work will settle it for all time,
+Nuck,&#8221; said the ranger, hopefully. &#8220;But do you shin up that
+sapling yonder, and bend it down. We wanter hang this carcass where no
+varmit&#8211;not even a catamount&#8211;can git it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The boy did as he was bade and soon the fruit of Enoch
+Harding&#8217;s early morning adventure was hanging from the top of a
+young tree, too small to be climbed by any wild-cat and far enough from
+the ground to be out of reach of the wolves and foxes. &#8220;Now
+we&#8217;ll git right out o&#8217; here, lad,&#8221; Bolderwood said,
+picking up his rifle and starting for the ford. &#8220;We&#8217;ve got
+to hurry,&#8221; and Enoch, nothing loath, followed him across the
+creek and into the forest on the other bank.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you r&#8217;ally think there&#8217;ll be fightin&#8217;,
+Master Bolderwood?&#8221; he asked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I hope God&#8217;ll forbid that,&#8221; responded the ranger,
+with due reverence. &#8220;But if the Yorkers expect ter walk in
+an&#8217; take our farms the way this sheriff wants ter take Master
+Breckenridge&#8217;s, we&#8217;ll show &#8217;em
+diff&#8217;rent!&#8221; He increased his stride and Enoch had such
+difficulty in keeping up with his long-legged companion that he had no
+breath for rejoinder and they went on in silence.</p>
+
+<p>The controversy between the New York colony and the settlers of the
+Hampshire Grants who had bought their farms of Governor Benning
+Wentworth, of New Hampshire, was a very important incident of the
+pre-Revolutionary period. The not always bloodless battles over the
+Disputed Ground arose from the claim of New York that the old patent of
+King Charles to the Duke of York, giving to him all the territory lying
+between the Connecticut River on the east and Delaware Bay on the west,
+was still valid north of the Massachusetts line.</p>
+
+<p>In 1740 King George II had declared &#8220;that the northern
+boundary of Massachusetts be a similar curved line, pursuing the course
+of the Merrimac River at three miles distant on the north side thereof,
+beginning at the Atlantic Ocean and ending at a point due north of a
+place called Pawtucket Falls, and by a straight line from thence due
+west till it meets with his Majesty&#8217;s other governments.&#8221;
+Nine years later Governor Wentworth made the claim that, because of
+this established boundary between Massachusetts and New Hampshire, the
+latter&#8217;s western boundary was the same as
+Massachusetts&#8217;&#8211;a line parallel with and twenty miles from
+the Hudson River&#8211;and he informed Governor Clinton, of New York,
+that he should grant lands to settlers as far west as this twenty-mile
+line. Therewith he granted to William Williams and sixty-one others the
+township of Bennington (named in his honor) and it was surveyed in
+October of that same year. But the outbreak of the French and Indian
+troubles made the occupation of this exposed territory impossible until
+1761, when there came into the rich and fertile country lying about
+what is now the town of Bennington, several families of settlers from
+Hardwick, Mass., in all numbering about twenty souls.</p>
+
+<p>But there had been an earlier survey of the territory along
+Walloomscoik Creek under the old Dutch patent and in 1765 Captain
+Campbell, under instructions from the New York colony, attempted to
+resurvey this old grant. He came to the land of Samuel Robinson who,
+with his neighbors, drove the Yorkers off. For this Robinson and two
+others were carried to Albany where they were confined in the jail for
+some weeks and afterward fined for &#8220;rioting.&#8221; At once the
+settlers, who had increased greatly since &#8217;61, saw that they must
+present their case before the King if they would have justice rendered
+them; so Captain Robinson went to England to represent their side of
+the matter. Unfortunately he died there before completing his work.</p>
+
+<p>On the part of the governors of New Hampshire and New York it was
+merely a land speculation, and both officials were after the fees
+accruing from granting the lands; whereas the settlers who had gone
+upon the farms, and established their families and risked their little
+all in the undertaking, bore the brunt of the fight. The speculators
+and the men they desired to place on the farms of the New Hampshire
+grantees, hovered along the Twenty-Mile Line, and occasionally made
+sorties upon the more unprotected farmers, despite the fact that the
+King had instructed the Governor of New York to make no further grants
+until the rights of the controversy should be plainly established. This
+settled determination of the New York authorities to drive them out
+convinced the men of the Grants that they must combine to defend their
+homes and when, early in July, 1771, news came from Albany that Sheriff
+Ten Eyck with a large party of armed men was intending to march to
+James Breckenridge&#8217;s farm and seize it in the name of the New
+York government, the people of Bennington in town-meeting assembled
+determined to defend their townsman&#8217;s rights.</p>
+
+<p>Sheriff Ten Eyck started from Albany on the 18th of July with more
+than 300 men and at once the settlers began to gather near the
+threatened farmstead. &#8217;Siah Bolderwood having no farm of his own,
+was sent through the country raising men and guns for the defense of
+the Breckenridge place. On his way back he had stopped for Enoch
+Harding and learning that the boy had gone hunting before daybreak, the
+ranger followed him, arriving at the deer-lick in time to render
+important assistance in the dramatic scene just pictured. After
+crossing the creek at the spot where the boy&#8217;s father had met his
+frightful and mysterious death a few months before, the two volunteers,
+while still the day was new, reached the place of the settlers&#8217;
+gathering.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_2'></a>CHAPTER III<br /><span
+class='fss'>THE AMBUSH</span></h2>
+
+<p>The house of James Breckenridge was built at the foot of a slight
+ridge of land running east and west, which ridge was heavily wooded. It
+was only a mile from the Twenty-Mile Line and therefore particularly
+open to attack by the New York authorities. Once before had an attempt
+been made by the grasping land speculators of the sister colony to oust
+its rightful owner, but at that time naught but a wordy controversy had
+ensued, whereas the present attack bade fair to be more serious.
+Breckenridge had sent his family to the settlement in expectation of
+this trouble, while he and his neighbors made ready to meet the sheriff
+and his army. Some of the Bennington men had arrived at the farm the
+evening before when news went forth that the invaders were only seven
+miles away, at Sancock. But the greater number of the defenders came,
+as did &#8217;Siah Bolderwood and young Enoch Harding, soon after
+sun-up.</p>
+
+<p>This gathering of Grants men was a memorable one. Heretofore, the
+clashes with the Yorkers had been little more than skirmishes in which
+half a dozen or a dozen men on both sides had taken part. Ethan Allen,
+Seth Warner, Remember Baker, and others of the more venturesome
+spirits, had seized some of the land-grabbers and their tools, and
+delivered upon their bared backs more strokes of &#8220;the twigs of
+the wilderness,&#8221; as Allen called the blue beech rods, than the
+unhappy Yorkers thus treated would forget in many a day.</p>
+
+<p>Ethan Allen was not as long in the settlement as many of the other
+men about him; but he was a born leader, and entering heart and soul
+into the cause of the Grants was soon acknowledged the most fiery
+spirit among the settlers. He was born in Litchfield, Conn., January
+10, 1737, and probably came to the Hampshire Grants some time in
+&#8217;69. Although but thirty-four years old at this time he carried
+his point in most arguments regarding the well-being of the settlers,
+and the Green Mountain boys, as his followers came to be called, fairly
+worshipped him. He was singularly handsome, with ruddy face, a ready
+wit, bold, unpolished, brave and almost a giant in size, for though not
+so tall as Seth Warner he was a much heavier and broader man.</p>
+
+<p>With this company of armed men, too, was Remember Baker and his
+flint-lock musket, which seldom left his side waking or sleeping. Baker
+was the best shot on the northern border and performed feats of
+marksmanship with this musket that could scarce be equaled by any of
+our famous marksmen to-day with their improved weapons. Like the
+stories told of Robin Hood and his cloth-yard shafts, Baker could split
+a wand with a bullet and always filed the flint on his musket to a
+sharp point.</p>
+
+<p>Other men there were in this early morning assembly destined to be
+heard from later in the affairs of the struggling community, but none
+so filled young Enoch Harding&#8217;s eye as did these two. Remember
+Baker lived not far from the Harding farm and Enoch often went there to
+visit young Robert Baker, or had Robert to stay all night with him at
+his home. But Enoch&#8217;s closest boy friend was James
+Breckenridge&#8217;s nephew, Lot, who was two years young
+Harding&#8217;s senior and bore arms on this morning with the older
+youths and men. At once when the two spied each other they found
+opportunity to step aside and hold such confidences as boys are wont.
+Yet they were so excited by the prospect of the forthcoming battle with
+the Yorkers that even Nuck&#8217;s adventure with the catamount was
+lightly passed over.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the settlers were divided into several bands, each
+captained by an efficient officer who, as &#8217;Siah Bolderwood
+expressed it, &#8220;had snuffed powder.&#8221; Bolderwood himself was
+given command of the larger number and arranged his men along the top
+of the ridge behind the house, where they would be concealed by the
+brush but could draw bead upon any person passing along the road or
+approaching the farmhouse. One hundred and twenty under a second leader
+were hidden beside the road while eighteen and an officer were
+stationed inside the house itself.</p>
+
+<p>These arrangements had scarce been made when a figure was descried
+approaching at top speed. It was a messenger to warn the settlers of
+the coming of the enemy. &#8220;Run down to the house, Nuck,&#8221;
+commanded &#8217;Siah, &#8220;and get the news for me. Keep your heads
+down, lads! Let them Yorkers when they come, think there ain&#8217;t
+nobody to home!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Enoch crept through the brush and descended the slope, appearing
+before the house just as the runner reached it. Coming so suddenly from
+behind the dwelling Enoch startled the newcomer, who sprang back and
+placed his hand on the hunting knife at his belt. Then, with a
+contemptuous grunt, the messenger passed Enoch by and lifted the
+latch-string which had been left hanging out. Enoch followed him into
+the Breckenridge house.</p>
+
+<p>The runner was a tall Indian lad with a keen face and coal-black
+eyes and hair. Enoch knew him, for his people had camped for several
+years near the Harding place. But Jonas Harding had had that contempt
+for the red race which characterized many of the pioneer people and was
+the foundation for more than half the trouble between the whites and
+reds; and he had often expressed this contempt before young Crow Wing,
+who was a chief&#8217;s son although his tribe was scattered and
+decimated by disease. Crow Wing had hated Enoch&#8217;s father for his
+taunts and unkind words, and now that the elder Harding was dead the
+young Indian considered his son cast in the same mould and worthy of
+the same hatred which he had borne Jonas. Naturally Enoch would have
+shared his parent&#8217;s contempt for the Indians; but &#8217;Siah
+Bolderwood, although he had camped, hunted and fought with
+Enoch&#8217;s father for so many years, did not share the
+latter&#8217;s opinion of the Indian character, and from him Enoch had
+imbibed many ideas of late which changed his opinion of the red men.
+There was a time, however, when the white boy had ridiculed Crow Wing
+and the latter had not forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch watched him now with admiration. The young brave had run for
+several miles, having been sent out toward Sancock by one of the
+settlers for whom he sometimes worked, but he breathed as easily as
+though he had walked instead of run. When one of the men in the
+Breckenridge kitchen spoke to him he answered in a perfectly even voice
+which showed no tremor of fatigue.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Him sheriff march now,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Mebbe
+t&#8217;ink um t&#8217;ree mile off.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Where did you leave them?&#8221; asked the man in command of
+the house. The Indian youth told him. &#8220;And how many are there,
+Crow Wing?&#8221; asked another.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Many&#8211;many!&#8221; cried the Indian, his eyes flashing.
+He held up both hands and spread all his ten fingers rapidly seven
+times. &#8220;Seventy!&#8221; cried one of the white men. &#8220;He
+means seven hundred,&#8221; declared the leader. &#8220;That so, Crow
+Wing, eh?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Indian nodded. &#8220;Many white men&#8211;many guns,&#8221; he
+said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s not true,&#8221; growled one man. &#8220;You
+can&#8217;t believe anything an Injin says. Where would the New York
+sheriff get seven hundred men?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Crow Wing&#8217;s eyes flashed and he drew himself up proudly.
+&#8220;Me no lie&#8211;me speak true. Injin not two-tongue like white
+man!&#8221; he declared, with scorn, and turning his back on his
+traducer, stalked out of the house.</p>
+
+<p>The settlers, however, paid little attention to his departure. Enoch
+scuttled back to the ridge where &#8217;Siah was waiting to hear the
+news. There he lay down beside Lot Breckenridge and the two boys talked
+earnestly as the men about them smoked or chatted while waiting for the
+coming of the Yorkers. Seven hundred seemed a great number to oppose.
+The odds would be more than two to one. Despite the ambush which had
+been so carefully laid for them, the sheriff and his men might fight as
+desperately as the settlers themselves.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Tell ye what!&#8221; whispered Lot to Enoch, &#8220;I
+ain&#8217;t fixin&#8217; to git shot. Marm didn&#8217;t want Uncle Jim
+to let me come, but he said ev&#8217;ry gun&#8217;d count this
+mornin&#8217;, so she &#8217;lowed I&#8217;d hafter. But she says if I
+git shot she&#8217;ll larrup me well.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Enoch chuckled. Although Lot was his senior he was more of a child
+than young Harding. The experiences of the last few months had aged
+Enoch a good deal. &#8220;My mother won&#8217;t whip me if I git shot;
+but I mustn&#8217;t run into danger, for she wouldn&#8217;t know what
+to do without me,&#8221; he said, proudly. &#8220;Bryce ain&#8217;t
+much use yet, you know.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Zuckers!&#8221; exclaimed Lot, &#8220;I wisht my marm was
+like yourn. I ain&#8217;t got no father neither; but Uncle Jim
+don&#8217;t let me do nothin&#8217;, an&#8217; marm&#8217;s allus
+wearin&#8217; out a beech twig on me.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Guess you do somethin&#8217; for it,&#8221; said Enoch,
+wisely.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;She&#8217;d do it jest th&#8217; same if I
+didn&#8217;t,&#8221; declared Lot, yet with perfect good-nature, as
+though the Widow Breckenridge&#8217;s vigorous applications of the
+beech wand was a part of existence not to be escaped.
+&#8220;Gran&#8217;pap says I might&#8217;s well be hung for an ole
+sheep as a lamb, so in course I do somethin&#8217; for
+it&#8211;mostly.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If the Yorkers fight we&#8217;ll hafter stay right here and
+shoot like the men,&#8221; said Nuck, reflectively. &#8220;It&#8217;ll
+be like the Injin fights my father and &#8217;Siah were in. I
+s&#8217;pose we&#8217;ll take trees, an&#8217; scatter out so&#8217;t
+the Yorkers can&#8217;t git up around us here&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;An&#8217; we&#8217;ll raise the warwhoop an&#8217; shoot jest
+as fast as we kin!&#8221; exclaimed Lot, excitedly. &#8220;Crow Wing
+taught me the warwhoop last year. An&#8217; I know how to scalp,
+too.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I wouldn&#8217;t do that!&#8221; exclaimed Enoch, in
+horror.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Umph! Yorkers ain&#8217;t no better&#8217;n Injins, an&#8217;
+I&#8217;d scalp an Injin,&#8221; declared Lot, blood-thirstily.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I wouldn&#8217;t. My father never did that, an&#8217; he was
+in the war. He said that was why the Injins warn&#8217;t no
+better&#8217;n brute-beasts, an&#8217; didn&#8217;t have no
+souls&#8211;&#8217;cause they scalped their enemies.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Be still there, you youngsters!&#8221; growled &#8217;Siah,
+coming down the line. &#8220;If you want to be men, l&#8217;arn to keep
+yer tongues quiet. Voices carry far on a day like this. What&#8217;d
+they say down ter the house, Nuck, &#8217;bout the signal?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;When they want help, or want us to sail into &#8217;em,
+they&#8217;re goin&#8217; to raise a red flag through the
+chimbley,&#8221; replied the boy.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wal, I&#8217;m hopin&#8217; they won&#8217;t fight,&#8221;
+said the ranger, squinting along the road below the ridge.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I wanter see a fight&#8211;zuckers, I do!&#8221;
+exclaimed Lot.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Be still, you bloodthirsty young savage!&#8221; commanded
+&#8217;Siah. &#8220;You wanter shoot down men of your own color, do ye?
+Beech-sealin&#8217; an&#8217; duckin&#8217; is all right; but
+it&#8217;s an awful thing to draw bead on another white man, as
+ye&#8217;ll l&#8217;arn some day.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But you fought the Frenchmen with the Injins,&#8221; declared
+Lot.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Huh! Them&#8217;s only half-bred. Frenchmen ain&#8217;t no
+more&#8217;n savages,&#8221; said &#8217;Siah, gloomily.</p>
+
+<p>An hour passed&#8211;a long, long time to the excited boys. Then,
+far down the winding road quite a piece of which they could observe
+from the summit of the wooded ridge, was seen the sudden glint of
+sunlight on metal. &#8220;They&#8217;re coming!&#8221; the message went
+round and the settlers in ambush crouched more closely behind their
+screens and even the hearts of old Indian fighters beat faster at the
+nearing prospect of an engagement. James Breckenridge, Ethan Allen, and
+several others advanced slowly from the direction of the house to the
+bridge across which the Yorkers must pass. Sheriff Ten Eyck spurred
+forward with his personal staff to meet them. With him came the
+infamous John Munro who, as a justice of the peace under commission
+from New York, was such a thorn in the flesh of the settlers. The
+sheriff was a very pompous Dutchman who believed without question in
+the validity of New York&#8217;s jurisdiction over the Grants, and who,
+despite his bombastic manner, was personally no coward.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Master Breckenridge,&#8221; he said to the man whom he had
+come to evict from his home, &#8220;we have heard that you and your
+neighbors are armed to oppose the authority vested in me by His Most
+Gracious Majesty&#8217;s colony of New York. If there be blood shed
+this day, it will be upon your head, for I here command you to leave
+this neighborhood and give over the possession of this land to its
+rightful owners.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I cannot do that, Master Sheriff,&#8221; said Breckenridge,
+quietly. &#8220;As for blood being upon my head for this day&#8217;s
+work, you can see that I am unarmed,&#8221; and he spread his hands
+widely. &#8220;Besides, I have nothing to do with this grant at the
+present time. The township of Bennington has taken the farm upon its
+own hands, and it will oppose your entrance with armed resistance. I
+have nothing to do with it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'> <img src='images/i044.jpg' id="img002" alt='' /> <p class='center caption sc'> &#8220;I C<span class='fss'>OMMAND</span> Y<span class='fss'>OU TO</span> L<span class='fss'>EAVE</span> T<span class='fss'>HIS</span> N<span class='fss'>EIGHBORHOOD</span>&#8221; </p></div><!-- figure -->
+
+<p>&#8220;What is the township of Bennington?&#8221; demanded Ten Eyck.
+&#8220;This land belongs to the colony of New York under the crown.
+There is no town of Bennington. What legal rights have a parcel of
+squatters to this territory?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Then Allen spoke. &#8220;The gods of the valleys are not the gods of
+the hills, Sir Sheriff. You on the other side of the Twenty-Mile Line
+may acknowledge the Governor of New York as your master; we on this
+side are a free people. We have bought our lands from the government to
+which they were granted by the King, and you shall not drive us from
+them!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The colloquy ended and the settlers went back toward the house.
+After the main body of his army came up, and their numbers seemed quite
+as formidable as Crow Wing had reported, the sheriff pressed forward
+across the bridge and approached the Breckenridge dwelling. Every
+settler had disappeared by now and even those inside the house were
+still. Neither the sheriff nor his men suspected that quite three
+hundred guns were turned upon them and that, at the first fire, the
+carnage would be terrible.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Open in the name of the law!&#8221; exclaimed Ten Eyck,
+thundering at the stout oak door of the house. &#8220;I demand
+admittance and that all within come peaceably forth. Open, or I shall
+break down the door!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>There was silence for a moment, and then a voice said clearly from
+within: &#8220;Attempt it and you are a dead man!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The reply angered the doughty sheriff. He was being flouted and the
+majesty of the law scorned. That was more than he could quietly bear.
+&#8220;Come out and deliver up your arms in the name o&#8217; the
+King!&#8221; he cried. &#8220;Ye rebels! I&#8217;ll take the last of ye
+to Albany jail if ye do not surrender!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>At this a chorus of derisive groans issued from behind the barred
+door and shutters, and these sounds were echoed by other groans from
+the men in ambush, until the very forest itself seemed deriding the
+Yorkers. The knowledge that he and his men had fallen into a trap did
+not balk the sheriff; his rage rose to white heat and calling for an
+axe he advanced to the attack. The moment was freighted with peril. If
+the Yorkers attacked the house a withering fire would spring from the
+guns in the bushes and on the ridge and blood would flow in plenty in
+that heretofore peaceful vale of the northern forest.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_3'></a>CHAPTER IV<br /><span
+class='fss'>&#8217;SIAH BOLDERWOOD&#8217;S STRATAGEM</span></h2>
+
+<p>Sheriff Ten Eyck was a man of determination and although he had
+before tested the mettle of the Grants men, he felt a burden of
+confidence now with this army behind him. The ridicule of the party in
+ambush stung his pride, and although warned that a considerable number
+of settlers were hidden in the wood, he was not disposed to temporize.
+But the men who had accompanied him on his nefarious mission were far
+differently impressed by the situation. They had followed the doughty
+sheriff in the hope of plunder, it is true; if the settlers of the
+Hampshire Grants were to be driven incontinently from their homes as
+Ten Eyck and the Governor declared, somebody must benefit by the
+circumstance, and the sheriff&#8217;s men hoped to be of the benefited
+party. But this armed opposition was disheartening. When the chorus of
+groans rose from the surrounding forest, his men as well as himself,
+knew that they had fallen into ambush, and this thought troubled the
+Yorkers greatly.</p>
+
+<p>From the top of the ridge &#8217;Siah Bolderwood had heard much of
+the controversy at the door of the Breckenridge house and as the really
+serious moment approached the old ranger was blessed with a sudden
+inspiration. He sprang forward and seizing Enoch Harding by the collar
+dragged him to his knees and whispered a command in his ear.
+&#8220;Quick, you young snipe you!&#8221; he exclaimed, as Enoch
+prepared to obey. &#8220;Run like the wind&#8211;and don&#8217;t let
+&#8217;em see you or you may get potted!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Enoch was off in an instant, trailing his gun behind him and
+stooping low that the passage of his body through the brush might not
+be noted. He got the house between him and the sheriff&#8217;s column
+and soon reached the side of the road where the other settlers in
+ambush were stationed. He found their leader and whispered
+Bolderwood&#8217;s message to him. Instantly the man caught the idea
+and the word was passed down the straggling line. Enoch did not return
+but waited with these men, who were nearer the enemy, to see the matter
+out.</p>
+
+<p>The sheriff was on the verge of giving the command to break down the
+door of the besieged house when suddenly a wild yell broke out upon the
+ridge above and was taken up by the settlers in the brush by the
+roadside. It was the warwhoop&#8211;the yell which originally incited
+the red warriors to action and was supposed to strike terror to the
+hearts of their enemies. The shrill cry echoed through the wood with
+startling significance. At the same instant every man&#8217;s cap was
+raised upon his gun barrel and thrust forward into view of the startled
+Yorkers, while the settlers themselves showed their heads, but nearer
+the ground. Only for a moment were they thus visible; then they dropped
+back into hiding again.</p>
+
+<p>But the effect upon the sheriff&#8217;s unwilling army was
+paralyzing. The Yorkers thought that twice as many men were hidden in
+the forest as were really there, for the hats on the gun barrels had
+seemed like heads, too. They thought every man in Bennington&#8211;and
+indeed, as far east as Brattleboro and Westminster&#8211;must have come
+to defend James Breckenridge&#8217;s farm, and they clamored loudly to
+return to the Twenty-Mile Line and safety.</p>
+
+<p>In vain the sheriff fumed and stormed, threatening all manner of
+punishment for his mutinous troops; the army was determined to a man to
+have no conflict with the settlers of the Disputed Ground. Like
+&#8220;the noble Duke of York&#8221; in the old catch-song familiar at
+that day, Sheriff Ten Eyck had marched his seven hundred or more men up
+to James Breckenridge&#8217;s door only &#8220;to march them down
+again!&#8221; &#8217;Siah Bolderwood&#8217;s idea had taken all the
+desire for fight out of the Yorkers, and after some wrangling between
+the personal attendants of the sheriff and the volunteer army, the
+whole crew marched away, leaving the farm to the undisputed possession
+of its rightful owner.</p>
+
+<p>When the Yorkers departed the little garrison of the house appeared
+and cheered lustily; but the men in the woods did not come out of
+hiding until the last of the enemy had disappeared, for they did not
+wish the invaders to know how badly they had been deceived regarding
+their numbers. By and by Bolderwood and his men marched down from the
+ridge and &#8217;Siah was congratulated upon his happy thought in
+bringing about the confusion of the Yorkers.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve a long head on those narrow shoulders of yours,
+neighbor,&#8221; declared Ethan Allen, striking the old ranger heartily
+on the back. &#8220;That little wile finished them. And this is the boy
+I saw trailing through the bushes, is it?&#8221; and he seized Enoch
+and turned his face upward that he might the better view his features.
+&#8220;Why, holloa, my little man! I&#8217;ve seen you before
+surely?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It is poor Jonas Harding&#8217;s eldest lad, neighbor
+Allen,&#8221; Bolderwood said. &#8220;He&#8217;s the head of the family
+now, and bein&#8217; sech, had to come along to fight the
+Yorkers.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I remember your father,&#8221; declared Allen, kindly.
+&#8220;A noble specimen of the Almighty&#8217;s workmanship. I stopped
+a night with him once at his cabin&#8211;do you remember me?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>As though Nuck could have forgotten it! His youthful mind had made
+Ethan Allen a veritable hero ever since, placing him upon a pedestal
+before which he worshipped. But he only nodded for bashfulness.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ll make a big man, too,&#8221; said the giant.
+&#8220;And if you can shoot straight there&#8217;ll be plenty of chance
+for you later on. This is only the beginning, &#8217;Siah,&#8221; he
+pursued, turning to Bolderwood and letting his huge hand drop from
+Enoch&#8217;s head. &#8220;There will be court-doings, now&#8211;writs,
+and ejectments, and enough red seals to run the King&#8217;s court
+itself. But while the Yorkers are red-sealing us, we&#8217;ll blue-seal
+them&#8211;if they come over here, eh?&#8221; and he went off with a
+great shout of laughter at his own punning.</p>
+
+<p>The men were minded to scatter but slowly. All were rejoiced that
+the battle had been a bloodless one; yet none believed the matter
+ended. The fiasco of the New York sheriff might act as a wet blanket
+for the time upon the movements of the authorities across the line; but
+the land speculators were too numerous and active to allow the people
+of the Grants to remain in peace. Parties of marauders might swoop down
+at any time upon the more unprotected settlers, drive them out of their
+homes, destroy their property, and possibly do bodily injury to the
+helpless people. Methods must be devised to keep these Yorkers on their
+own side of the disputed line. Those settlers, such as the widow
+Harding, who were least able to protect themselves, must have the help
+of their neighbors. The present victory proved the benefit to be
+derived from concerted action. Now, in the flush of this triumph, the
+leaders went among the yeomanry who had gathered here and outlined a
+plan for permanent military organization. In all the colonies at that
+day, &#8220;training bands,&#8221; or militia, had become popular, made
+so in part by the interest aroused by the wars with the French and
+Indians. Many of the men who joined these military companies did not
+look deeply into the affairs of the colonies, nor were they much
+interested in politics; but their leaders looked ahead&#8211;just as
+did Ethan Allen and his conferees in the Grants&#8211;and realized that
+an armed yeomanry might some time be called upon to face hirelings of
+the King.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Even a lad like you can bear a rifle, and your mother will
+spare you from the farm for drill,&#8221; Allen said, with his hand
+again on Enoch&#8217;s shoulder, before riding away. &#8220;I shall
+expect to see Jonas Harding&#8217;s boy at Bennington when word is sent
+round for the first drill.&#8221; And Enoch, his heart beating high
+with pride at this notice, promised to gain his mother&#8217;s
+permission if possible.</p>
+
+<p>Bolderwood had already gone, and Lot Breckenridge detained Enoch
+until after the dinner hour. Lot would have kept him all night, but the
+latter knew his mother would be anxious to see him safe home, and he
+started an hour or two before sunset, on the trail which Bolderwood and
+he had followed early in the morning. Being one of the last to leave
+James Breckenridge&#8217;s house, he traveled the forest alone. But he
+had no feeling of fear. The trails and by-paths were as familiar to him
+as the streets of his hometown are to a boy of to-day. And the
+numberless sounds which reached his ears were distinguished and
+understood by the pioneer boy. The hoarse laugh of the jay as it winged
+its way home over the tree-tops, the chatter of the squirrel in the
+hollow oak, the sudden scurry of deer in the brake, the barking of a
+fox on the hillside, were all sounds with which Enoch Harding was well
+acquainted.</p>
+
+<p>As he crossed a heavily shadowed creek, a splash in the water
+attracted his particular attention and he crept to the brink in time to
+see a pair of sleek dark heads moving swiftly down the stream. Soon the
+heads stopped, bobbed about near a narrow part of the stream, and
+finally came out upon the bank, one on either side. The trees stood
+thick together here, and both animals attacked a straight, smooth trunk
+standing near the creek, their sharp teeth making the chips fly as they
+worked. They were a pair of beavers beginning a dam for the next
+winter. Enoch marked the spot well. About January he would come over
+with Lot, or with Robbie Baker, stop up the mouth of the beaver&#8217;s
+tunnel, break in the dome of his house, and capture the family. Beaver
+pelts were a common article of barter in a country where real money was
+a curiosity.</p>
+
+<p>But watching the beavers delayed Enoch and it was growing dark in
+the forest when he again turned his face homewards. He knew the path
+well enough&#8211;the runway he traveled was so deep that he could
+scarce miss it and might have followed it with his eyes
+blindfolded,&#8211;but he quickened his pace, not desiring to be too
+late in reaching his mother&#8217;s cabin. Unless some neighbor had
+passed and given them the news of the victory at James
+Breckenridge&#8217;s they might be worried for fear there had actually
+been a battle. Deep in the forest upon the mountainside there sounded
+the human-like scream of a catamount, and the memory of his adventure
+of the morning was still very vivid in his mind. He began to fear his
+mother&#8217;s censure for his delay, too, for Mistress Harding brought
+up her children to strict obedience and Enoch, man though he felt
+himself to be because of this day&#8217;s work, knew he had no business
+to loiter until after dark in the forest.</p>
+
+<p>He stumbled on now in some haste and was approaching the ford in the
+wide stream near which he had shot the doe, when a flicker of light off
+at one side of the trail attracted his attention. It was a newly
+kindled campfire and the pungent smoke of it reached his nostrils at
+the instant the flame was apparent to his eyes. He leaped behind a tree
+and peered through the thickening darkness at the spot where the
+campfire was built. His heart beat rapidly, for despite the supposed
+peacefulness of the times there was always the possibility of enemies
+lurking in the forest. And the settlers had grown wary since the
+controversy with the Yorkers became so serious.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch was nearing the boundaries of his father&#8217;s farm now and
+ever since Simon Halpen had endeavored to evict them and especially
+since Jonas Harding&#8217;s death, the possibility of the
+Yorkers&#8217; return had been a nightmare to Enoch. Lying a moment
+almost breathless behind the tree, he began to recover his presence of
+mind and fortitude. First he freshened the priming of his gun and then,
+picking his way cautiously, approached the campfire. Like a shadow he
+flitted from tree to tree and from brush clump to stump, circling the
+camp, but ever drawing nearer. With the instinct of the born
+wood-ranger he took infinite pains in approaching the spot and from the
+moment he had observed the light he spent nearly an hour in circling
+about until he finally arrived at a point where he could view
+successfully the tiny clearing.</p>
+
+<p>Now, at once, he descried a figure sitting before the blaze. The man
+had his back against a tree and that is why Enoch had found such
+difficulty at first in seeing him. He was nodding, half asleep, with
+his cap pulled down over his eyes, so that only the merest outline of
+his face was revealed. It was apparent that he had eaten his own
+supper, for there were the indications of the meal upon the ground; but
+it looked as though he expected some other person to join him. The wind
+began to moan in the tree-tops; far away the mournful scream of the
+catamount broke the silence again. The boy cast his gaze upward into
+the branches, feeling as though one of the terrible creatures, with
+which he had engaged in so desperate a struggle that very morning, was
+even then watching him from the foliage.</p>
+
+<p>And he was indeed being watched, and by eyes well nigh as keen as
+those of the wild-cat. While he stood behind the tree, all of half a
+gun-shot from the camp, a figure stepped silently out of the shadows
+and stood at his elbow before the startled lad realized that he was not
+alone. A vice-like hand seized his arm so that he could not turn his
+rifle upon this unexpected enemy. Before he could cry out a second hand
+was pressed firmly over his parted lips. &#8220;No speak!&#8221;
+breathed a voice in Enoch Harding&#8217;s ear. &#8220;If speak, white
+boy die!&#8221;</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'> <img src='images/i059.jpg' id="img003" alt='' /> <p class='center caption sc'>A H<span class='fss'>AND WAS</span> P<span class='fss'>RESSED OVER</span> H<span class='fss'>IS</span> L<span class='fss'>IPS</span></p></div><!-- figure -->
+
+<p>It was Crow Wing, the young Iroquois, and Enoch obeyed. He found
+himself forced rapidly away from the campfire and when they were out of
+ear-shot of the unconscious stranger, and not until then, did the grasp
+of the Indian relax. &#8220;What do you want with me?&#8221; Enoch
+demanded, in a whisper. The other did not reply. He only pushed the
+white boy on until they came to the ford of the creek where Enoch and
+&#8217;Siah Bolderwood had crossed early in the day. There Crow Wing
+released him altogether and pointed sternly across the river.
+&#8220;Your house&#8211;that way!&#8221; he said. &#8220;Go!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Who is that man back yonder?&#8221; cried Enoch, angrily.
+&#8220;You can&#8217;t make me do what you say&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Crow Wing tapped the handle of the long knife at his belt
+suggestively. &#8220;White boy go&#8211;go now!&#8221; he commanded
+again, and in spite of his being armed with a rifle while the Indian
+had no such weapon, Enoch felt convinced that it would be wiser for him
+to obey without parley. Although Crow Wing could not have been three
+years his senior, he was certainly the master on this occasion. With
+lagging step he descended the bank and began to ford the stream. He
+glanced back and saw the Indian, standing like a statue of bronze, on
+the bank above him. When he reached the middle of the stream, however,
+he felt the full ignominy of his retreat before a foe who was not armed
+equally with himself. What would Bolderwood say if he told him? What
+would his father have done?</p>
+
+<p>He swung about quickly and raised the rifle to his shoulder. But the
+Indian lad had gone. Not an object moved upon the further shore of the
+creek and, after a minute or two of hesitation, the white boy stumbled
+on through the stream and reached the other bank. He was angry with
+himself for being afraid of Crow Wing, and he was also angry that he
+had not seen the face of the stranger at the campfire. It must have
+been somebody whom Crow Wing knew and did not wish the white boy to
+see. Enoch Harding continued his homeward way, his mind greatly
+disturbed by the adventure and with a feeling of deep resentment
+against the Indian youth.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_4'></a>CHAPTER V<br /><span
+class='fss'>THE PIONEER HOME</span></h2>
+
+<p>Enoch arrived feeling not of half so much importance as he had on
+starting from the Breckenridge farm. His adventure with Crow Wing had
+mightily taken down his self-conceit. Like most of the settlers he had
+very little confidence in the Indian character; so, although Crow Wing
+had rendered the defenders of the Grants a signal service that very
+day, Enoch was not at all sure that the red youth was not helping the
+Yorkers, too.</p>
+
+<p>But when he came out of the wood at the edge of the great corn-field
+which his father had cleared first of all, and saw the light of the
+candles shining through the doorway of the log house, he forgot his
+recent rage against Crow Wing and hurried on to greet those whom he
+loved. The children came running out to meet him and the light of the
+candles was shrouded as his mother&#8217;s tall form appeared in the
+doorway. Bryce, who was eleven years old, was almost as tall as Enoch,
+although he lacked his elder brother&#8217;s breadth of shoulders and
+gravity of manner. Enoch was deliberate in everything he did; Bryce was
+of a more nervous temperament and was apt to act upon impulse. He was a
+fair-haired boy and was forever smiling. Now he reached Nuck first and
+fairly hugged him around the neck, exclaiming:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We thought you were shot! However came you to be so long
+comin&#8217; back, Nuck? Mother&#8217;s quite worritted &#8217;bout
+you, she says.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Katie, the fly-away sister of ten, hurled herself next upon her
+elder brother and seized the heavy rifle from his hands. &#8220;Look
+out for it, Kate!&#8221; commanded Nuck. &#8220;It&#8217;s been freshly
+primed.&#8221; But Katie was not afraid of firearms. She shouldered the
+gun and marched bravely toward the house. Mary, demure and curly
+headed, and little Harry, remained nearer the door, and lifted their
+faces to be kissed in turn by Enoch when he arrived. Then the boy
+turned to his mother.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Come in, my son,&#8221; she said. &#8220;I have saved your
+supper for you. I could not send the children to bed before you came.
+They were a-well nigh wild to see you and hear about the doings at
+farmer Breckenridge&#8217;s. You are late.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>This was all she said regarding his tardiness at the moment. She was
+a very pleasant featured woman of thirty-five, with kind eyes and a
+cheery, if grave, smile; but Enoch knew she could be stern enough if
+occasion required. Indeed, she was a far stricter disciplinarian than
+his father had been. They crowded into the house and Mrs. Harding went
+to the fire and hung the pot over the glowing coals to heat again the
+stewed venison which she had saved for Enoch&#8217;s supper.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Tell us about it, Enoch, my son,&#8221; she said. &#8220;Did
+the Yorkers come as friend Bolderwood said they would&#8211;in such
+numbers?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;In greater numbers,&#8221; declared the boy, and he went on
+to recount the incidents of the morning when Sheriff Ten Eyck had
+demanded the surrender of the Breckenridge house and farm. The incident
+had appealed strongly to the boy and he drew a faithful picture of the
+scene when the army of Yorkers marched up to the farmhouse door and
+demanded admission.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And Mr. Allen was there and spoke to me&#8211;he did!&#8221;
+declared Enoch. &#8220;He&#8217;s a master big man&#8211;and so
+handsome. He asked me if I remembered his coming here once to see
+father, and he told me to be sure and go to Bennington when the
+train-band is mustered in. I can, can&#8217;t I, mother?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And me, too!&#8221; cried Bryce. &#8220;I can carry
+Nuck&#8217;s musket now&#8217;t he shoots with father&#8217;s gun. I
+can shoot, too&#8211;from a rest.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Huh!&#8221; exclaimed his elder brother, &#8220;you
+can&#8217;t carry the old musket even, and march.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes I can!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No you can&#8217;t!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But the mother&#8217;s voice recalled the boys to their better
+behavior. &#8220;I will talk with &#8217;Siah Bolderwood about your
+joining the train-band, Enoch. And if you go to Bennington with Enoch,
+Bryce, who will defend our home? You must stay here and guard mother
+and the other children, my boy.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Bryce felt better at that suggestion and the argument between Enoch
+and himself was dropped. The widow soon sent all but Enoch to bed in
+the loft over the kitchen and living room of the cabin. There was a
+bedroom occupied by herself partitioned off from the living room, while
+Enoch slept on a &#8220;shakedown&#8221; near the door. This he had
+insisted upon doing ever since his father&#8217;s death.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You were very late in returning, my son,&#8221; said the
+widow when the others had climbed the ladder to the loft.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, marm.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You did not come right home?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, marm. I stayed to eat with Lot Breckenridge. And then I
+wanted to hear the men talk.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You should have started earlier for home, Enoch,&#8221; she
+said, sternly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I&#8217;d got here pretty near sunset if it
+hadn&#8217;t been for somethin&#8217; that happened just the other side
+of the crick,&#8221; Enoch declared, forgetting the fact that he had
+stopped to watch the beavers before ever he saw the campfire in the
+wood.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What was it?&#8221; she asked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s somebody over there&#8211;a tall man, but I
+couldn&#8217;t see his face&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Where?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Beyond the crick; &#8217;twarn&#8217;t half a mile from where
+father was killed at the deer-lick. I saw a light in the bushes. It was
+a campfire an&#8217; I couldn&#8217;t go by without seein&#8217; what
+it was for. So I crept up on it an&#8217; bymeby I saw the
+man.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t know who he was?&#8221; asked the widow,
+quickly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, marm.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Did he have a dark face and was his nose hooked?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I couldn&#8217;t see his face. He was sittin&#8217; down all
+the time. His face was shaded with his cap. He sat with his back up
+against a tree. I was a long while gittin&#8217; near enough to see
+him, an&#8217; then&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, what happened, my son?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then that Crow Wing&#8211;you know him; the Injin boy that
+useter live down the crick with his folks&#8211;Crow Wing come out of
+the forest an&#8217; grabbed me an&#8217; told me not to holler or
+he&#8217;d kill me. I wasn&#8217;t &#8217;zactly &#8217;fraid of
+him,&#8221; added Enoch, thinking some explanation necessary,
+&#8220;but I saw if I fought him it would bring the man at the fire to
+help, and I couldn&#8217;t fight two of &#8217;em, anyway. The pesky
+Injin made me walk to the crick with him an&#8217; then he told me to
+go home and not come back. I wish &#8217;Siah Bolderwood was here.
+We&#8217;d fix &#8217;em!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The Indian threatened you!&#8221; cried the widow.
+&#8220;Have you done anything to anger him, Enoch? I know your father
+was very bitter toward them all; but I hoped&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I never done a thing to him!&#8221; declared the boy.
+&#8220;I don&#8217;t play with him much, though Lot does; but I let him
+alone. I useter make fun of him b&#8217;fore&#8211;b&#8217;fore
+&#8217;Siah told me more about his folks. Crow Wing&#8217;s father is a
+good friend to the whites. He fought with our folks ag&#8217;in the
+French Injins.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But who could the man have been?&#8221; asked the widow,
+gravely. &#8220;The children saw a man lurking about the corn-field at
+the lower end to-day. And when I was milking, Mary came and told me
+that he was then across the river at the ox-bow, looking over at the
+house. If it should be Simon Halpen! He will not give up his hope of
+getting our rich pastures, I am afraid. We must watch carefully,
+Enoch.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll shoot him if he comes again!&#8221; declared the
+boy, belligerently. Then he closed and barred the door and rapidly
+prepared for bed. His mother retired to her own room, but long after
+Enoch was soundly sleeping on his couch, the good woman was upon her
+knees beside her bed. Although she was proud to see Enoch so sturdy and
+helpful, she feared this controversy with the Yorkers would do him much
+harm; and it was for him, as well as for the safety of them all in
+troublous times, that she prayed to the God in whom she so implicitly
+trusted.</p>
+
+<p>The next day &#8217;Siah Bolderwood came striding up to the cabin
+with the carcass of the doe Enoch had shot across his shoulders, and
+found the widow at her loom, just within the door. She welcomed the
+lanky ranger warmly, for he had not only been her husband&#8217;s
+closest friend but had been of great assistance to her children and
+herself since Jonas&#8217; death. &#8220;The children will be glad to
+see you, &#8217;Siah,&#8221; she said. &#8220;I will call them up early
+and get supper for us all. I will have raised biscuit, too&#8211;it is
+not often you get anything but Johnny-cake, I warrant. The boys are
+working to clear the new lot to-day.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Aye, I saw them as I came along,&#8221; said Bolderwood,
+laughing. &#8220;There was Mistress Kate on top of a tall stump, her
+black hair flying in the wind, and Nuck&#8217;s old musket in her
+hands. She said she was on guard, and she hailed me before I got out of
+the wood. Her eyes are sharp.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;She should have been a boy,&#8221; sighed the widow.
+&#8220;Indeed, this wilderness is no place for girls at all.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Bless their dear little souls!&#8221; exclaimed Bolderwood,
+with feeling. &#8220;What&#8217;d we do without Kate an&#8217; Mary?
+They keep the boys sweet, mistress! And Kate&#8217;s as good as a boy
+any day when it comes to looking out for herself; while as I came
+through the stumpage Mary was working with the best of &#8217;em to
+pull roots and fire-weed.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The boys want a stump-burning as soon as possible. Jonas got
+the new lot near cleared. There&#8217;s only the rubbish to
+burn.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Good idea. Nuck and Bryce are doing well.... But what was the
+sentinel for?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It isn&#8217;t all play,&#8221; said the widow, stopping her
+work and speaking seriously. &#8220;Yesterday the children saw a
+strange man hanging about the creek yonder. And last night on his way
+back from Master Breckenridge&#8217;s, Enoch saw a campfire in the
+forest and a man sitting by it. An Indian youth whom perhaps you have
+seen here&#8211;Crow Wing, he is called&#8211;was with the man. Crow
+Wing drove Enoch off before he could find out who the white man
+was.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Crow Wing, eh?&#8221; repeated &#8217;Siah, shaking his head
+thoughtfully. &#8220;I know the red scamp. If he was treated right by
+the settlers, though, he&#8217;d be decent enough. But he got angry at
+Breckenridge&#8217;s yesterday, they tell me. Somebody spoke roughly to
+him. You can ruffle the feathers of them birds mighty easy.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>This was all the comment the ranger made upon the story; but later
+he wandered down to the new lot which the Hardings were clearing, and
+instead of lending a hand inquired particularly of Enoch where he had
+seen the campfire the night before. Learning the direction he plunged
+into the wood without further ado and went to the ford, crossing it
+with caution and going at once to the vicinity of the fire which Enoch
+had observed. But the ashes had been carefully covered and little trace
+of the occupation of the spot left. At one point, however, &#8217;Siah
+found where two persons&#8211;a white man and a red one&#8211;had
+embarked in a canoe which had been hidden under the bank of the creek.
+Evidently Crow Wing had expected the place would be searched and had
+done all in his power to mystify the curious.</p>
+
+<p>When &#8217;Siah returned Mistress Harding had called up the
+children and supper&#8211;a holiday meal&#8211;was almost ready. A lamb
+had been killed the day before and was stuffed and baked in the Dutch
+oven. There were light white-flour biscuits, Enoch had ridden to
+Bennington with the wheat slung across his saddle to have it ground,
+and there was sweet butter and refined maple sap which every family in
+the Grants boiled down in the spring for its own use, although as yet
+there was little market for it. It was a jolly meal, for when
+&#8217;Siah came the children were sure of something a bit extra, both
+to eat and to do. He taught the girls how to make doll babies with
+cornsilk hair, and begged powder and shot of their mother for Bryce and
+Enoch to use in shooting at a mark. Under his instructions Enoch had
+become a fairly good marksman, while Bryce, by resting his gun in the
+fork of a sapling set upright in the ground, did almost as well as his
+elder brother.</p>
+
+<p>After supper Bolderwood talked with the widow while he smoked his
+pipe. &#8220;We need boys like Enoch, Mistress Harding,&#8221; he said.
+&#8220;While he&#8217;s young I don&#8217;t dispute, he&#8217;s big for
+his age and can handle that rifle pretty well. You must let him go up
+to Bennington next week and drill with the other young fellows. There
+will be no need of his going on any raids with the older men. We shall
+keep the boys out of it, and most of the beech-sealin&#8217; will be
+done by the men who hain&#8217;t got no fam&#8217;blies here and are
+free in their movements. But the drill will be good for him and the
+time may come when all this drillin&#8217; will pay.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You really look for serious trouble with the Yorkers, Master
+Bolderwood?&#8221; she asked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon I do. With them or&#8211;or others. Things is purty
+tick&#8217;lish&#8211;you know that, widder. The King ain&#8217;t
+treatin&#8217; us right, an&#8217; his ministers and advisers
+don&#8217;t care anything about these colonies, &#8217;ceptin&#8217; if
+we don&#8217;t make &#8217;em rich. Then they trouble us. And the
+governors are mostly all alike. I don&#8217;t think a bit better of
+Benning Wentworth than I do of these &#8217;ere New York governors.
+They don&#8217;t re&#8217;lly care nothin&#8217; for us poor
+folk.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>So the widow agreed to allow Enoch to go to Bennington; and when the
+day came for the gathering of those youths and men who could be spared
+from the farms, to meet there, he mounted the old claybank mare, his
+shoes and stockings slung before him over the saddle bow that his great
+toes might be the easier used as spurs, and with a bag of corn behind
+him to be left for grinding at the mill, trotted along the trail to the
+settlement. Before he had gone far on the road he saw other men and
+boys bound in the same direction. Remember Baker passed him, with
+Robbie, his boy, perched behind on the saddle, and clinging like a
+leech to his father&#8217;s coat-tails as the horse galloped over the
+rough road. Enoch saw Robbie later, however, and invited him to the
+stump burning which was to take place the following week. He saw Lot
+Breckenridge, too, at the Green Mountain Inn, and invited him to come,
+and sent word to other boys and girls in the Breckenridge
+neighborhood.</p>
+
+<p>Lot&#8217;s mother would not let him carry a gun, but he had come to
+look on and see the &#8220;greenhorns&#8221; take their first lesson in
+the manual of arms. Stephen Fay, mine host of the
+&#8220;Catamount&#8221; Inn as the hostlery had come to be
+called&#8211;a large, jocund individual who was a Grants man to the
+core and earnest in the cause of the Green Mountain Boys&#8211;made all
+welcome and the old house was crowded from daylight till dark. In the
+gallery which ran along the face of the inn, even with the second story
+windows, the ladies of the town sat and viewed the maneuvres of the
+newly formed train-band. Before the door stood the twenty-five foot
+post that held the sign and was likewise capped by a stuffed catamount,
+in a very lifelike pose, its grinning teeth and extended claws turned
+toward the New York border in defiance of &#8220;Yorker
+rule.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The leaders of the party which had suggested these drills&#8211;all
+staunch Whigs and active in their defiance of the Yorkers,&#8211;met
+together in the inn that day, too, and laid plans for a campaign
+against certain settlers from New York who had come into the Grants and
+taken up farms without having paid the New Hampshire authorities for
+the same. In not all cases had these New York settlers driven off
+people who had bought the land of New Hampshire or her agents; but if
+it was really the property of that colony the Yorkers had no right upon
+the eastern side of the Twenty-Mile Line, or on that side of the lake,
+at all. As far north as the opposite shore from Fort Ticonderoga, that
+key to the Canadian route which had been wrested from the French but a
+few years before, Yorkers had settled; and the Green Mountain Boys
+determined that these people must leave the Disputed Ground or suffer
+for their temerity.</p>
+
+<p>After the failure of Ten Eyck to capture the Breckenridge farm, New
+York began a system of flattery and underhanded methods against the
+Grants men which was particularly effective. The Yorkers chose certain
+more or less influential individuals and offered them local offices,
+gifts of money, and even promised royal titles to some, if they would
+range themselves against the Green Mountain Boys. In some cases these
+offers were accepted; in this way John Munro had become a justice of
+the peace, and Benjamin Hough followed his example. Some foolish folk
+went so far as to accept commissions as New York officers, but hoped to
+hide the fact from their neighbors until a fitting season&#8211;when
+the Grants were not afflicted with the presence of the Green Mountain
+Boys. But in almost every case such cowardly sycophants were discovered
+and either made ridiculous before their neighbors by being tried and
+hoisted in a chair before the Catamount Inn, or were sealed with the
+twigs of the wilderness&#8211;and the Green Mountain Boys wielded the
+beech wands with no light hand.</p>
+
+<p>Almost every week the military drills were held in Bennington and
+Enoch attended. But before the second one the &#8220;stump
+burning&#8221; came off at the Harding place and that was an occasion
+worthy of being chronicled.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_5'></a>CHAPTER VI<br /><span
+class='fss'>THE STUMP BURNING</span></h2>
+
+<p>Enoch and Lot Breckenridge, with Robbie Baker, had completed all the
+plans for the stump burning that first training day at Bennington. Lot,
+who lived so far from the Harding cabin, agreed to come over the night
+before if his mother would let him, and Robbie was to remain with Enoch
+the night after. The stumps and rubbish would be pretty well piled up
+and fired by afternoon, and then the boys could run races, and play
+games, and perhaps shoot at a mark, until supper-time. Mrs. Harding had
+already promised if the boys worked well to make a nice supper for
+them.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;An&#8217; we&#8217;ll have the girls,&#8221; said Lot.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, what good&#8217;ll they be at a stump
+burnin&#8217;?&#8221; demanded young Baker, ungallantly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Lots o&#8217; good. They allus want good times, too,&#8221;
+said Lot, standing up for his sisters manfully. &#8220;You have no
+sisters, an&#8217; that&#8217;s why you don&#8217;t want
+&#8217;em.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They&#8217;ll be in the way. Their frocks&#8217;ll git torn
+if they help us, an&#8217; they&#8217;ll git afire&#8211;or&#8211;or
+somethin&#8217;!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Nuck&#8217;s sisters will be there. They&#8217;ll want other
+girls,&#8221; said the wise Lot. &#8220;An&#8217; b&#8217;sides,
+Mis&#8217; Harding&#8217;ll be lots better to us if the girls is there.
+She allus is&#8211;my marm is. Mothers like girls, but boys is only a
+nuisance, they says.&#8221; Lot had drawn these conclusions from the
+remarks of his own mother, who was troubled by many children and lacked
+that &#8220;faculty,&#8221; as New England folk used to term it, for
+bringing them up cheerfully.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I guess we&#8217;ll get a better supper if the girls are
+there,&#8221; admitted Nuck, quietly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But what&#8217;ll they do?&#8221; demanded Robbie, the embryo
+woman-hater.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll get mother ter be layin&#8217; out a quilt, or
+something, an&#8217; the girls can help about that.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Zuckers!&#8221; cried Lot. &#8220;We&#8217;ll have the finest
+time ever was. I&#8217;ll be sure an&#8217; tell ev&#8217;rybody down
+my way. An&#8217; we&#8217;ll all bring powder an&#8217; shot; it
+won&#8217;t matter so much about guns, for them that don&#8217;t have
+&#8217;em can borry of them that has, when it comes to
+shootin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And I&#8217;ll get Master Bolderwood to come an&#8217; be
+empire,&#8221; declared Nuck, no farther out in his pronunciation of
+the word than some boys are nowadays.</p>
+
+<p>So the girls were allowed to come, and an hour or two after sun-up
+on the day in question the Harding place was fairly overrun with young
+folk of both sexes. Those boys who came from a goodly distance brought
+their sisters with them; but the greater number of the girls, living
+within a radius of a few miles of the Harding cabin, did not come until
+after dinner, having to remain at home to help their own mothers before
+attending the merrymaking.</p>
+
+<p>And what a merrymaking it was! Truly, all work and no play makes
+Jack a dull boy, and in a country and at a time when all young people
+had to work almost as hard as their parents, the pioneer fathers and
+mothers encouraged the young folk to mix pleasure well with their
+tasks. Indeed, it was a system followed by the older folks as well on
+many occasions. Corn-shuckings, apple-parings, log-rollings,
+sugaring-off&#8211;all these tasks even down to
+&#8220;hog-killings&#8221;&#8211;were made the excuse for social
+gatherings. The idea of helping one another in the heavier tasks of
+their existence on the frontier was likewise combined in this. Many
+hands make light work, and a cabin which would have kept one family
+busy for a fortnight was often put up and the roof of drawn shingles
+laid in a day&#8217;s time, by the neighbors of the proprietor of the
+new structure all taking hold of the work.</p>
+
+<p>So in this stump burning, which usually followed upon the clearing
+of a new piece of ground. More than a year before Jonas Harding had
+begun on this lot, with the intention of clearing it entirely and in
+the end having a handsome piece of grass-land along the edge of the
+creek. In the fall a fire had run over the piece and now the stumps
+were mostly dead, although the fire-weed was waist high. Some of the
+stumps had already been pulled up, but many were too large for the
+muscles of the young Hardings and it was the help of their companions
+to pull these stumps to which they looked forward to-day.</p>
+
+<p>With patience remarkable in such youngsters, Enoch and Bryce had dug
+around the base of all the big stumps, had cut off the long side roots,
+and when possible had dug beneath and cut the tap-root of the tree,
+thus making the final extraction of the big stumps all the easier of
+accomplishment. They were piled up and set burning, and round these
+bonfires the boys danced like wild Indians and kept the fires fed up to
+noon-time. Between the sunshine and the flames the youngsters were all
+pretty well scorched by then.</p>
+
+<p>But before the horn was blown for dinner there were two arrivals on
+the scene, one joyfully welcomed by all and the other rather unexpected
+but not less welcome to many of the boys. &#8217;Siah Bolderwood
+entered the clearing from a forest-path at almost the same instant that
+a lithe young figure appeared from the direction of the creek. Enoch
+ran to his old friend and hugged him in his delight. &#8220;Ain&#8217;t
+I glad you&#8217;ve come, &#8217;Siah! We got most of the work done;
+we&#8217;re goin&#8217; to get lots of nice ashes, too. We&#8217;re
+goin&#8217; ter have races and a wrastling match after
+dinner.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hullo! who&#8217;s this?&#8221; said &#8217;Siah, pointing
+across the clearing.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch turned to see the Indian youth, Crow Wing, striding up from
+the water&#8217;s edge. A good half of the boys had turned with shouts
+of welcome to meet him, for he was popular with them. Ordinarily Crow
+Wing was a very social fellow and taught the white boys to make arrows,
+string their bows, build canoes, and set ingenious snares. &#8220;I
+don&#8217;t want him here!&#8221; declared Enoch to the ranger.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Tut, tut, what do you care? There&#8217;s no need in your
+making an enemy of that fellow, Nuck. Let him be.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But think how he used me the other night when I was trying to
+find out about that man in the woods! I don&#8217;t like
+him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, we can&#8217;t like everybody in this world,&#8221;
+said Bolderwood, philosophically. &#8220;We gotter take folks as we
+find &#8217;em&#8211;that&#8217;s my motter. You let the Injin stay.
+He&#8217;s come to help and to have the fun arterward; you sent
+&#8217;round the invitation pretty promisc&#8217;us like, an&#8217; I
+calkerlate you can&#8217;t ask him to leave &#8217;thout makin&#8217;
+yerself mighty onpop&#8217;lar. Take my advice an&#8217; let him
+stay.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>So, much against his will, Enoch did so. But he and the Indian lad
+avoided each other and nothing Crow Wing did could gain any word of
+approbation from his young host. However, Crow Wing and Bolderwood were
+in time to help do the heaviest of the work and soon the last stump was
+out of the soil and piled upon a flaming pyre. The several bonfires
+could not spread to the underbrush, so the boys were able to leave them
+for the time and rush away to the creek for a swim before dinner. After
+they had washed off the smut and smoke, they engaged in races and in
+diving matches until the horn blew to recall them to the house. In all
+aquatic sports Lot Breckenridge was the master, for even Crow Wing
+could not perform the tricks that he could, nor could the Indian swim
+so far nor so fast.</p>
+
+<p>Mistress Harding had arranged two long tables outside the cabin,
+making them of planks and &#8220;horses,&#8221; and spreading her
+unbleached sheets over them for table-cloths. The girls had picked
+flowers and decorated the tables very prettily. There were all kinds
+and conditions of dishes for use&#8211;earthen, tin, pewter, and even
+wooden bowls carved out of &#8220;whorls.&#8221; And as for spoons and
+knives and forks&#8211;well, they were very scarce indeed. But every
+boy carried a pocket or hunting knife, and some had even been
+thoughtful enough to bring a knife and fork from home. Nevertheless,
+despite the lack of articles which we now consider the commonest of
+possessions, the table manners of these pioneer boys and girls were
+very good. They were on their best behavior while visiting, and the
+presence of the girls had a good influence on the boys.</p>
+
+<p>The dinner was not to be the great meal of the day, for the boys did
+not wish to eat too much before the activities of the afternoon.
+Mistress Harding and the big girls had promised several dainties for
+supper, among which was a berry pudding, the girls having picked the
+berries that morning while their brothers were clearing the stumpage.
+The day before Enoch had shot a quantity of wood-pigeons, too, and
+there was to be a huge pigeon pie baked in the Dutch oven. There could
+be no stuffed lamb on this occasion, however; sheep were too hard to
+raise and the pioneers tasted mutton but seldom, for the fleece was too
+valuable for them to kill the animal which supplied it. But Bolderwood
+had brought in a fawn which he had hung until it was of the right
+flavor, and this was dressed and roasted like a young kid. When the
+boys heard of these good things it almost took their appetites away at
+the dinner table, for they did not wish to eat more than was absolutely
+necessary before the holiday supper.</p>
+
+<p>They were quickly back in the new lot, raked the fires together,
+flung the last root and chip on the blaze, and then repaired to the
+level meadow by the riverside where the games were to take place. The
+meadow had been mown some days before (they always got two mowings a
+season off the rich creek bottoms) and the new grass had sprung up just
+enough to be soft and velvety to the feet. Off came the shoes and
+stockings of those boys who had been trammeled by such articles of
+attire&#8211;all except Crow Wing. He still wore his moccasins. The
+foot-races were to come first, and Bolderwood and Lot carefully
+measured the distance along the bank where the land was almost level,
+setting stakes at either end of the course. It was not a long run and
+everybody lined up for the first trial and they charged down upon the
+further stake like a gang of wild colts. Crow Wing, Enoch, Lot, and
+Robbie Baker were easily ahead of the others, and they with two more
+who had shown promise, were lined up for a second trial. This was
+really to be the contest and the six prepared to do their best, while
+the onlookers, girls and all, cheered their favorites.</p>
+
+<p>Bolderwood lined up the half dozen youths very carefully. The white
+boys had thrown aside their outer shirts so as to give the freer play
+to their muscles. Crow Wing wore but one upper garment anyway, and he
+made no change in his dress excepting to pull his belt a little
+tighter. When the ranger had them placed to his satisfaction and all
+had signified that they were ready, he started them off with a shout.
+This time the race was to be down to the further post and back again,
+each contestant being obliged to go around the post before turning
+back, and a watch was set there that no one should make a mistake in
+this. There was a swift patter of feet on the sod for a minute and then
+Crow Wing and Enoch forged ahead. They rounded the stake almost
+together and came down the home stretch far in the lead of the other
+contestants. First the white boy was ahead, then the Indian, and
+finally when the race ended they were elbow to elbow and one not an
+inch in advance of the other!</p>
+
+<p>The spectators cheered lustily, but the race must be run over by
+these two to learn who really was the winner. Bolderwood allowed them a
+few minutes between the trials; but the Indian did not seem to need the
+rest. He still breathed easily, while Enoch lay panting on the sod. The
+white boy finally went to the line with the assurance in his own heart
+that he should be beaten; but he was too plucky to give up the fight
+without trying again. This race was even more hardly contested than the
+others had been and although it was apparent that Crow Wing ran more
+easily than did Enoch, the latter worked so hard that it was doubtful
+for a time whether the Indian could win after all. Enoch ran until his
+knees almost gave under him and his breath came in great gasps from his
+chest. Had he been a less healthy and active boy he might have
+permanently injured himself from the overstrain of the contest. As it
+was, Crow Wing managed to cross the line first and was pronounced
+champion.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch had just strength enough to shake the winner&#8217;s hand
+before he fell upon the grass, and there he lay exhausted while the
+other boys held a &#8220;potato race&#8221; and jumped hurdles. It
+provoked young Harding terribly to see how seemingly fresh Crow Wing
+still was, while he was nearly dead with fatigue. He began to take
+interest in the proceedings, however, when his brother Bryce won the
+potato race after a close contest with Robbie Baker; and rejoiced when
+Lot beat Crow Wing in jumping. &#8220;That red rascal ain&#8217;t
+goin&#8217; to beat everybody here,&#8221; thought Enoch, and he got up
+and ceased sulking.</p>
+
+<p>The wrestling match was the last of the day&#8217;s sports.
+Bolderwood paired the boys off to the best of his judgment for the
+first bout; but the winners drew lots to see who they should wrestle
+with the second time. Lot had Crow Wing for an antagonist on this
+occasion, and Enoch was paired with Smith Hubbard, a hulking great
+fellow, bigger and taller than any other boy in the crowd. But he was
+also slower and more awkward than most, having won his first throw by
+sheer weight rather than skill. Enoch threw him fairly at the second
+trial, while the Indian lad quite as easily worsted young
+Breckenridge.</p>
+
+<p>The winners drew again and Enoch had quite a tug with another
+contestant; but Crow Wing put his antagonist on the ground three times
+in succession, and with apparent ease. It was plain that the match was
+to end with another contest between the Indian and Enoch Harding and
+the interest waxed high. Enoch was determined to keep his head and
+control his temper this time. Crow Wing was nominally his guest and he
+played fair; there was no reason why he should not bear off all the
+honors if he could do so. But the white boy determined to give the red
+the fight of his life for the honor of champion wrestler.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch had long been considered the best wrestler among the boys of
+his age. Although Lot was older and taller than him, he threw the
+bigger boy easily. Crow Wing had quite as easily worsted young
+Breckenridge; but when the Indian and Enoch finally faced each other in
+the ring the latter gritted his teeth and determined to put forth every
+ounce of strength, and use every legitimate trick he knew, to beat his
+antagonist.</p>
+
+<p>He had recovered his wind now and felt fresh and strong. He measured
+the lithe form of Crow Wing before the word was given and saw that,
+although the Indian was doubtless stronger than he in the legs and
+through the loins, where much of the strain comes in a wrestling match,
+his own arms and shoulders were much better. Crow Wing ran a great
+deal, or walked. He was on the trail almost continually, and thus his
+leg muscles were splendidly developed. Whereas the white boy swung an
+axe or wielded a hoe almost every day and the upper part of his body
+was in excellent condition. He saw that if he could seize Crow Wing
+quickly and with a first effort overpower him, the victory would be
+his.</p>
+
+<p>So he went into the wrestling match with the intention of getting a
+&#8220;down&#8221; at once, and the first round was over almost before
+Crow Wing knew what Enoch was about. &#8220;A fair fall! a fair
+fall!&#8221; cried the boys, and danced about the pair as it was seen
+that both Crow Wing&#8217;s hips and his shoulders were squarely on the
+turf. The Indian rose slowly, evidently much surprised by the white
+boy&#8217;s tactics. If he was angry he did not show it. His face was
+as passive as ever.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Quick work that,&#8221; said Bolderwood. &#8220;You&#8217;ll
+have to wake up, Crow Wing, if you want to get the best of
+Nuck.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hurrah for Nuck!&#8221; shouted the boys.</p>
+
+<p>But the second trial was another matter. Crow Wing approached
+warily. He feinted several times and then leaped away when Enoch tried
+to seize him as he had before. He had felt the power of the white
+boy&#8217;s muscles, and he did not propose to allow a second quick
+stroke. Enoch followed him around the ring and finally clutched him,
+but at arms&#8217; length. It was not a good hold; he knew it on the
+instant. But he had as good a chance as Crow Wing and there they were,
+swaying to and fro, and panting for several minutes, before either
+obtained the advantage.</p>
+
+<p>Finally the Indian lad forced Enoch over his leg and slowly, yet
+determinedly, pushed him backward to the ground. When they fell Crow
+Wing was on top, but it was several moments ere he managed to force
+Enoch&#8217;s shoulders and hips to the earth together. The second
+round was declared won by Crow Wing and the boys took a rest before the
+third and final one. Enoch was glad to see that his antagonist suffered
+as much as he did this time, laboring for breath and with his face and
+arms covered with perspiration. When Bolderwood called them for the
+third round the Indian flung off his hunting shirt, thus showing that
+he considered the white boy a worthy antagonist indeed.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch was more confident than before. He saw that he could not
+repeat his first quick throw; but he would not be deceived again into
+getting any uncertain hold. Crow Wing continued his former tactics, but
+Enoch simply followed him about, feinting as well as the Indian, and at
+last, when Crow Wing ran in, thinking he had a chance for an under
+hold, he caught him like a young bear and hugged him to his chest until
+the breath was fairly forced from the other&#8217;s lungs. Although
+taller than the white boy the Indian was not so heavy and this display
+of muscle startled him. With one arm caught between his own body and
+Enoch&#8217;s he could do little to help himself and Enoch squeezed
+hard before he let him go. Then, with a quick toss, stooping as he made
+it, Enoch flung him, long legs and all, over his shoulder, and before
+Crow Wing could rise he was upon him and held him down. The Indian was
+so breathless that it was a small matter for Enoch to get the
+&#8220;four points&#8221; necessary to win the fall and he rose at last
+triumphant.</p>
+
+<p>The boys and girls cheered him and Bolderwood said he was a good
+wrestler, and then Crow Wing, who had slipped into his shirt again,
+came to him and said, with a still impassive face: &#8220;Umph! white
+boy big wrestler&#8211;beat Crow Wing fair!&#8221; He held out his hand
+gravely and, after shaking Enoch&#8217;s, stalked away while the others
+were busy, his absence being unnoticed until it came time to go up to
+the house for supper. &#8220;Guess he didn&#8217;t like being
+licked,&#8221; said Robbie Baker to Enoch. &#8220;You better look out
+for him, Nuck. My pa says them Injins is as treacherous as
+wolves.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But somehow Enoch felt that Crow Wing was a better friend to him
+than he had been before. Something in the Indian&#8217;s handshake
+seemed to have told him this. The supper was quite as good as the boys
+had expected. After the meal they shot at a target under &#8217;Siah
+Bolderwood&#8217;s direction and Robbie Baker, son of the greatest shot
+in the settlement, as was expected, bore off the honors. The company
+went home through the forest trails by moonlight and thus ended a long
+and happy day, in which much that was useful had been accomplished as
+well as a &#8220;good time&#8221; enjoyed.</p>
+
+<p>As Enoch stood at the door of the cabin and watched the red glow
+from the fires in the newly cleared lot, he went over in his mind the
+incidents of the day. Such holidays were not plentiful in his life. It
+was mostly work and little play, and he would remember this occasion
+for many months. He did not suspect how many months would elapse, and
+how many momentous happenings would occur, before he saw all his young
+friends together once again.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_6'></a>CHAPTER VII<br /><span
+class='fss'>A NIGHT ATTACK</span></h2>
+
+<p>Not often did the Harding children enjoy such a day as that of the
+stump-burning. Life was very real indeed to pioneer folks, although the
+fact that every family in the community had to work hard left no
+loophole for complaint on any side. There were no very poor people
+then, and there were no immensely rich. It is only by comparison that
+human beings become discontented with their lot.</p>
+
+<p>The widow&#8217;s children had to work little harder than their
+neighbors. Their mother labored with them in the fields, as well as
+paying full attention to her household duties. She could swing an axe
+with most men in the township, and was no mean shot with the rifle. She
+led the corn hoeing and taught the older boys to do those things which
+were needful about the farm. The crops during this summer prospered
+well, and after clearing up and barreling the ashes made during the
+stump-burning, Enoch and Bryce ploughed and harrowed the new piece
+along the creek&#8217;s edge. They sowed it to winter grain and hung
+&#8220;scare-crows&#8221; all about the field to keep the wild birds
+from pulling up the tender shoots when they appeared above the
+mold.</p>
+
+<p>Besides leading her children in the work of the farm, Mistress
+Harding paid more attention to their education than most parents of the
+settlement could. There was a school in Bennington during the winter
+months; but it was too far away for any of the Hardings to attend. But
+the widow had been a school-teacher before her marriage and she had
+brought some books with her from her old home. So part of almost every
+day she taught her children. The girls and little Harry, who was just
+learning his letters and &#8220;a-b, abs,&#8221; studied during the
+daytime; but the older boys did their lessons by the light of the
+candle dips, or lying on the hearth before the dancing fire. Both
+summer and winter these studies were kept up and therefore Enoch and
+his brothers and sisters were rather farther advanced in learning than
+the other children of the scattered community.</p>
+
+<p>To this study Enoch took rather kindly; but to Bryce, who possessed
+more of his father&#8217;s roving disposition, the school hour was
+distasteful. Bryce, too, complained more than a little because he was
+not allowed to go to Bennington on training days. He was growing
+rapidly and was well nigh as big as his brother, and he felt that he
+should be counted a member of the military company.</p>
+
+<p>This drilling in the manual of arms had become a very serious matter
+to the Grants people. The Green Mountain Boys, which nickname had
+before the end of the summer become fixed upon the bands, were divided
+into four companies of which Seth Warner, &#8217;Member Baker, Robert
+Cochran and Gideon Warner were the captains. Ethan Allen was elected
+colonel commanding by acclamation and plans were made to watch over
+many of the outlying districts liable to be troubled most frequently by
+the Yorkers. With all his impulsiveness, Allen was long-headed and
+something of a strategist; yet he leaned to some extent upon Captain
+Warner&#8217;s good sense. Warner was a man of much finer mould than
+the chief of the Green Mountain Boys, was well educated and had a
+personal following of his own in the Grants, second only to
+Allen&#8217;s. But there was never any jealousy between them.
+Allen&#8217;s was a nature too frank and generous to harbor such a
+despicable feeling, while Warner was too deeply interested in the cause
+to do so.</p>
+
+<p>Nuck Harding was a proud boy indeed, for he was nigh the youngest
+among those who drilled. Such raiding as was done by the Green Mountain
+Boys that year was the work of small parties under Allen, Warner, or
+Cochran, and no general engagement occurred between the Grants settlers
+and the New York authorities, so Nuck saw no real service. At home,
+however, he and Bryce frequently talked over what they would do if
+Simon Halpen should visit them. That he had been scouting about the
+farm on the day of Sheriff Ten Eyck&#8217;s fiasco at James
+Breckenridge&#8217;s place, the older boy was sure. He was certain that
+the man he had seen beside the campfire in the wood, and whom Crow Wing
+seemed to befriend, was the Yorker who, twice before, had tried to
+drive the Hardings from their home. But neither the man nor the Indian
+youth appeared in the neighborhood as the summer waned and the autumn
+harvests approached.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, after harvest, when the farm work was well cleared up,
+the boys put into practice a plan which, after much thought they had
+evolved. Many a frontier home of that, and an earlier day, had
+connected with it an underground passage, or room which, although
+usually devoted to the simple storage of potatoes and roots, could in
+time of need be used as a refuge for the family. Of an Indian attack
+there was little danger; but they did not know to what length the
+Yorkers might go when once they did appear. Nuck believed Simon Halpen
+to be a man without compassion or mercy, and that the house might be
+attacked and burned over their heads.</p>
+
+<p>So, while still the frost held off, they constructed beneath the
+fireplace a deep stonewalled apartment nearly eight feet
+square&#8211;large enough to hold the entire family if need should
+come. When finished the entrance was gained by raising a large flat
+stone which was a part of the hearth. But the winter came without any
+alarm to the Hardings, and drew its slow length across the green hills
+and valleys like some albino monster of prehistoric times. The firs
+were snow-crowned and the white mantle lay deep in the hollows. Bryce
+and Enoch added generously to the family larder by the fruit of their
+hunting-trips, for there was plenty of time for such sport now. They
+had learned to weave snow-shoes in Indian fashion, too, and Bolderwood
+taught Enoch to tan and &#8220;work&#8221; the deer hides so well that
+their mother was able to use the pliable leather for moccasins for the
+family. &#8220;Boughten&#8221; shoes they had; but they were kept for
+best, for the money to purchase them with came hard indeed to the
+widow.</p>
+
+<p>Not until the sap began to flow from the maples was winter counted
+broken. Robbie Baker rode over about the middle of March and begged so
+hard that Mrs. Harding allowed Enoch to return with him to help at the
+Baker&#8217;s &#8220;sugaring.&#8221; There were plenty of fine maples
+near the Baker house and Nuck was promised a share of the refined
+sugar. There was no need of a hut at the sugar orchard, for they slept
+at Baker&#8217;s house, and only a shelter was built over the great
+kettle in which the sap was boiled. Captain Baker made the incisions in
+the generous trees, and fitted the troughs; but Robbie and Nuck
+collected the sap and brought it, bucket by bucket, to the fire which
+Mrs. Baker tended. It was hard work but there was some fun connected
+with it, too, and Nuck enjoyed his week&#8217;s visit&#8211;or would
+have done so had it not been for the incident with which the outing
+closed.</p>
+
+<p>Through the winter the people of the Grants had lived almost
+entirely at peace with their troublesome neighbors over the border. But
+there were certain active spirits among the Yorkers who were waiting
+only for the coming of spring to continue their persecutions. Because
+of the raids by the leaders of the Green Mountain Boys, there were
+warrants out for several, and Captain Baker was one of these who was
+wanted by the Albany authorities. The infamous John Munro who had
+accepted the office of Justice of the Peace from the New York party,
+gathered ten or twelve choice spirits on the night of March 22d, and
+feeling the security of numbers approached the home of the
+Grants&#8217; remarkable marksman, his mind fixed firmly upon the
+reward that had been offered for the apprehension of &#8220;the outlaw,
+Baker.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Green Mountain Boy was not a man to be attacked without due
+consideration, and the Yorkers came to the house in the dead of night,
+breaking in without warning, and capturing Captain Baker in his bed.
+Even thus handicapped Baker fought with desperation and, overpowered by
+numbers and cruelly wounded, only gave over the struggle when he saw
+that the Yorkers were beating his wife and son as well.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I surrender to ye, ye dogs!&#8221; he cried. &#8220;But let
+the woman and child alone,&#8221; and at that they ceased to belabor
+Mrs. Baker and Robbie and set about removing the captive as
+expeditiously as possible. Robbie had been asleep in the loft with his
+guest when the attack was made and had run down the ladder to get at
+the guns; but this last was impossible. Enoch&#8217;s rifle was
+likewise down-stairs and he was unable to help his friends; but instead
+of showing himself to the enemy he lifted a corner of the bark roof and
+crept outside. It was dark, and although there was a watch kept without
+the house, he was not observed and managed to reach the ground by
+climbing down the corner logs.</p>
+
+<p>By this time Captain Baker was a prisoner. They allowed him to
+partly dress and then securing him with thongs, brought him forth and
+threw him into a sledge which was in waiting. Their haste was obvious.
+Even in the night, and at this distance from any succor, the cowardly
+justice and his friends feared that members of the Green Mountain
+company would be aroused, and they had no wish to face Baker&#8217;s
+comrades. Their idea was to get him across the Hudson and to Albany as
+swiftly as possible.</p>
+
+<p>But Enoch, though unable to render his friends any assistance in the
+fight, had not been idle. Keeping the house between him and the Yorkers
+at the door, he reached the stable. Mrs. Baker&#8217;s voice rose above
+the general din, begging the Yorkers to spare her husband&#8211;to at
+least allow her to bind up the wound in his head before they took him
+away. But they merely laughed at her request. It made Enoch grit his
+teeth in rage, and pulling open the door of the stable he quickly
+entered and flung the captain&#8217;s saddle upon the horse. Buckling
+the girth tightly he backed the steed out of the hovel and was astride
+it before the enemy observed him.</p>
+
+<p>With a smart slap on the creature&#8217;s flank Nuck sent the horse
+tearing down the road to Bennington and was almost out of rifle shot
+before the Yorkers realized his escape and the meaning of it. Several
+shots followed him, so reckless were the justice&#8217;s companions,
+but there was no pursuit. Instead, the villains tumbled into the sledge
+and upon the backs of their own steeds, and amid the cries of the woman
+and Robbie, took the way to the Twenty-Mile Line and Albany. The
+prisoner&#8217;s wife and son scarcely realized what Nuck&#8217;s
+escape meant; it looked as though the guest had fled when peril
+threatened the helpless family. But Nuck very well knew what he was
+about.</p>
+
+<p>It was still several hours before dawn, but the moon brilliantly
+illumined the forest road and as the way was fairly well beaten, Nuck
+set the horse at his fastest pace. He knew that he could find men at
+Bennington&#8211;particularly at the Green Mountain Inn&#8211;who would
+consider no hardship too great to assist the captured settler. Many of
+Remember Baker&#8217;s own company of Green Mountain Boys would be in
+town and Stephen Fay, the host, would be able to tell him where to find
+these men quickly. It was a long ride to the Hudson and the hope of
+overtaking the Yorkers and their prisoner spurred the boy on.</p>
+
+<p>On and on flew the horse and rider until at last the scattered
+houses of the hamlet came into view. The settlement lay lifeless under
+the cold winter sky; not a spiral of smoke rose from the broad-topped
+chimneys, for the fires in every house were banked during the night,
+and it was too early for the spryest kitchen-maid to be astir. The
+horse thundered up to the door of the Catamount Inn and Nuck&#8217;s
+wild halloa brought a night-capped head to the window
+instantly&#8211;that of the innkeeper.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What might be the news, neighbor?&#8221; he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Captain Baker has been carried off by the Yorkers!&#8221;
+shouted Nuck, and his words were heard by other night-capped heads at
+other windows about the inn. &#8220;&#8217;Squire Munro and some others
+came and got him out of bed. They&#8217;ve driven off toward the
+Line.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;&#8217;Member Baker&#8217;s captured!&#8221; The word was
+taken up by a dozen voices and the settlers dressed hurriedly and ran
+forth from their houses. Meanwhile Master Fay had aroused certain men
+who happened to be in his hostelry, as well as the stablemen in the
+yard. There was a great bustle about the inn. &#8220;Boy!&#8221; cried
+the innkeeper to Nuck, who still bestrode Captain Baker&#8217;s horse,
+&#8220;do you go and call Isaac Clark and Joe Safford. They&#8217;ll
+have their horses handy&#8211;and good horses, too, I&#8217;ll be
+bound. Tell them to come here with saddle and rifle.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>These two men lived at the other end of the village. Nuck routed
+them out and in fifteen minutes was back with them at the inn. By that
+time quite a crowd had collected and ten men beside Nuck were found to
+be mounted and ready to set forth after the Yorkers. Each was a tried
+Green Mountain Boy and eager to take satisfaction for the attack upon
+their leader. Ten men were considered ample to attack the Yorkers, and
+with a promise to the bystanders to recapture &#8217;Member Baker, even
+though they followed him to Albany, the cavalcade galloped away from
+the Green Mountain Inn, Enoch riding in their train.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_7'></a>CHAPTER VIII<br /><span
+class='fss'>THE TRAITOR&#8217;S WAY</span></h2>
+
+<p>Remember Baker lived at Arlington, and the distance from that new
+settlement, it could hardly be called a village, to Bennington was
+about two and a half miles. Enoch Harding might have given the alarm to
+the neighbors of the captured man, but he knew that they would not be
+able to pursue the Yorkers, for good horse flesh was scarce outside of
+Bennington. And Robbie would doubtless rouse them, anyway, as soon as
+he was recovered from his fright. As he saw it, Enoch believed his duty
+to point to the Catamount Inn, and we have seen how quickly a company
+was formed there for the chase of the Yorkers and their prisoner.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch had ridden Baker&#8217;s horse hard into town and now he
+followed behind the ten rescuers, urging the animal to still greater
+efforts. The hard-packed snow rang merrily under the hoofs of the
+steeds. Fortunately the boy&#8217;s mount had been well
+&#8220;sharpened&#8221; by the local smith shortly before, or riding
+recklessly as he did the horse might have suffered a fall, and Enoch
+been flung off. Nevertheless he could not keep up with Isaac Clark and
+his companions, so gradually fell behind. His steed&#8217;s wind was
+sound, however, and he pursued the trail steadily.</p>
+
+<p>The rescuers showed no hesitation in choosing their route. There
+were but a few beaten trails and they knew the road John Munro and his
+party would take with the prisoner to the bank of the Hudson. They
+could not miss it. The road from Arlington broke into this main trail
+at a point not far beyond the confines of Bennington and there it was
+at once apparent that the sledge and horsemen had passed that way not
+long before. There were plain marks of the runners and the ice and snow
+were cut up by the feet of the flying horses. The fact that the Yorkers
+numbered as many&#8211;if not more&#8211;than themselves, did not
+disturb the Green Mountain Boys in the least. &#8220;A Grants man who
+is not good for two or three of the scurvy Yorkers, is no good at
+all!&#8221; Stephen Fay had declared when they set forth, and probably
+the only emotions the ten felt as they rode on were eagerness and
+wrath.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, behind them raced Enoch Harding, desiring mightily to
+&#8220;be in at the death,&#8221; as the fox-hunters say. His heavy
+farmhorse could not compete with the mounts of the possé, however, and
+with tears in his eyes he saw them increase the distance between
+themselves and his animal. But he doggedly pursued the road, while the
+clatter of hoofs grew mellow in the distance. The morning was very
+still; the moon had sunk now and the stars were fading before the gray
+light of the coming day. In the east behind him the sky was even
+streaked with pink above the mountain-tops; the wind blew more keenly
+and he suddenly awoke to the fact that he was almost perished with the
+cold, for he had stopped for neither greatcoat nor mittens.</p>
+
+<p>Finally arriving at the top of a ridge of land he saw before
+him&#8211;at least two miles along the road and just mounting another
+ridge&#8211;a group of flying horses with a sledge in their midst, the
+prisoner and his captors. At first he did not see the Green Mountain
+Boys at all; but as his own horse plunged down the slope he suddenly
+observed the squadron which had left the Bennington Inn, come out of
+the dip of the valley where the trees were thickest, and begin the
+ascent of the further ridge. The two parties were less than half a mile
+apart.</p>
+
+<p>But from the elevation he was on Enoch had seen something else. The
+second ridge was lower than this and over it and not very far beyond he
+had caught a glimpse of the frozen Hudson! The river was not far away.
+Would the settlers catch the scoundrelly New York justice and his
+companions before they reached the river?</p>
+
+<p>And this must be done if they would rescue Captain Baker. It was all
+very well to talk of following the party to Albany; but that would
+simply result in the imprisonment of all in the jail. Once at the river
+the Yorkers would be among friends and would find plenty of people to
+help them beat off the Green Mountain Boys. The latter understood this
+well enough. They did not need young Enoch Harding to tell them, and it
+was quite evident to the boy that his friends were spurring their
+horses desperately up the farther slope in a last grand burst of speed
+to overtake the fugitives.</p>
+
+<p>On and on they sped and finally, when Enoch reached the dip of the
+vale, Clark and his party were over the hill and had disappeared. The
+boy dared not urge his horse up the ascent too rapidly and he lost much
+precious time before reaching the summit. But once here he had a broad
+outlook over the slope and plain beyond and if he could not be present,
+at least he had an unobstructed view of the end of the chase. The Green
+Mountain Boys had spurred down the hill madly and gained upon the
+sledge so rapidly that the faint-hearted Yorkers were thrown into a
+panic. The horses attached to the sledge gave out and one of them
+slipped and fell in the harness. Instead of stopping to help Munro get
+the animal on its feet, the horsemen, with the fear of punishment from
+the angry pursuers before their eyes, rode on and scattered in the
+thick woods beyond, leaving the doughty justice to meet the possé
+alone. Munro was not a physical coward and he felt that with the
+majesty of the law&#8211;New York law&#8211;behind him, he could face
+Baker&#8217;s friends.</p>
+
+<p>They bore down upon him with threatening cries, but he stood his
+ground and warned them at the top of his voice neither to shoot nor to
+try to rescue his prisoner. There was no need of firearms, of course,
+for they were ten to one now. But they laughed his authority to scorn.
+What! allow him to carry &#8217;Member Baker to Albany to be tried by a
+judge who was himself interested in land speculations, and by a jury
+antagonistic to the settlers of the Grants? It was preposterous!</p>
+
+<p>Baker, who suffered sorely from his wounds, was untied and placed
+upon one of the horses which could carry double. The possé felt ugly,
+but they did not harm the justice and after some wordy warfare rode
+away again, leaving Munro to get his horse up and harnessed again to
+the sledge without their help. His threats of future punishment for the
+entire party were unnoticed. Their wild ride had been crowned with
+success, for they had recovered their wounded comrade within a mile of
+the Hudson River, and they took him home without any molestation.</p>
+
+<p>But Captain Baker was weak from the loss of blood and terribly
+shaken by the experience and was in bed and under the care of a surgeon
+for some days. The news of the Yorkers&#8217; raid spread throughout
+the Grants and the settlers whose fears had been lulled to sleep by the
+peace of the winter, were roused to a realization of the fact that the
+land grabbers intended to be quite as active in the future as they had
+been in the past. The next training day the conversation of the Green
+Mountain Boys who were present in Bennington was bitter indeed.
+Cochran, and such reckless spirits, were for retaliating with fire and
+bullet on the New York border. Nevertheless Warner and other more
+moderate men counseled forbearance.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We overawed the sheriff&#8217;s army last year, it is true.
+But at that time we had given the people of New York no reasonable
+excuse for attacking us,&#8221; declared Warner. &#8220;We&#8217;ve
+beech-sealed more than one surveyor and warned New York settlers off
+the farms they had stolen since then. We&#8217;ve been obliged to use
+force and now force will be used against us. But I find that many of
+these New York settlers have been brought here under a misapprehension.
+They did not understand the controversy before they got the farms, and
+believed that the land-grabbers really owned the property of which they
+are in possession. To visit our righteous wrath upon helpless women and
+children will not help the cause of the Grants.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Many of his hearers, however, were not convinced.
+&#8220;&#8217;Member Baker&#8217;s been beaten and his wife and boy
+ill-treated. What are we going to do about it?&#8221; was the
+demand.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Complaint has already been made to Governor Tryon of New
+York, and John Munro may be punished by his own side for what he did
+the other night.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And there&#8217;s &#8217;Member&#8217;s gun,&#8221; spoke up
+another ill-affected partisan. &#8220;Munro stole it and has got it to
+his house. I&#8217;m told so by a neighbor of his. &#8217;Member thinks
+a deal of that gun.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll get that,&#8221; said Warner, quickly.
+&#8220;&#8217;Member shall have his property back before next training
+day.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And with that promise the disaffected spirits were satisfied for the
+time being. When Enoch rode away from Bennington on his return home
+that afternoon, the Connecticut giant overtook him on the road. Warner
+was a fine-looking man, younger even than Ethan Allen and idolized by
+the women and children of the community as Allen was by the men. But
+there was nothing effeminate about Warner. He was of the better class
+of borderers, possessing more education than most of his neighbors and
+with that measure of refinement and cultivation which placed George
+Washington above the majority of his associates. Warner had no
+patrician bearing, however, but entered into the work, sports and
+pursuits of his fellows. He was a superb horseman and rode on this day
+a mount which the governor of New York himself might covet.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch Harding had grown used, by this time, to seeing these
+prominent leaders of the Grants and had spoken with Captain Warner
+before. &#8220;Master Harding, your road lies my way for some
+distance,&#8221; declared Warner, smiling on the boy. &#8220;We will go
+together.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You do not ride this way frequently, sir,&#8221; said
+Enoch.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Nay. But you heard my promise to-day. I must get
+&#8217;Member&#8217;s gun. That rascally Munro may have to be taught a
+lesson, too.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But will you go alone?&#8221; cried the boy.</p>
+
+<p>Warner laughed. &#8220;Why, it is a peaceful mission. See&#8211;I
+have not even my rifle&#8211;only my sword as captain of our military
+company. A show of force might only make matters worse&#8211;and dear
+knows they are bad enough as it stands.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Munro will be among his friends, sir. Ought you not to have
+somebody with you?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There might be some doubt regarding that, Master Harding. A
+man like Munro is never blessed with an overabundance of friends. He
+may have minions that, for wage, would help him in his nefarious deeds.
+But I shall meet him when he least expects to see a Green Mountain Boy
+and I fear no serious trouble. But if you have doubt as to my
+safety,&#8221; and he smiled again, &#8220;you may ride with me and see
+that the doughty &#8217;Squire does not capture and run away with me as
+he attempted to with Captain Baker.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Enoch&#8217;s eyes sparkled at this permission and he spurred on
+after Captain Warner although the direction was one which carried him
+some distance out of his way. A two hours&#8217; ride brought them to
+the settlement where the New York justice lived. Before they reached
+the place the figure of Warner was spied and recognized and Munro met
+the Green Mountain Boy in the roadway before his own house, surrounded
+by several of his neighbors. Enoch kept in the rear and as they rode up
+the boy unslung his gun and laid it across his saddle. Warner smiled as
+he noted this act, and then his face grew stern again as he drew rein
+before the much-hated Yorker.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Master Munro,&#8221; he said, without parley, &#8220;it has
+been brought to my attention that, upon your late evening visit to
+Captain Remember Baker, you carried away from his house a certain
+weapon which Captain Baker highly prizes. You mistook it for your own,
+I presume, and the duties of your office have doubtless been so onerous
+since then that you have not had opportunity to return it. Happening to
+be in this neighborhood I have stopped to request the return of the
+gun.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ha, ye rebel!&#8221; exclaimed Munro. &#8220;Dare ye put
+yourself in the lion&#8217;s jaws in this way? I&#8217;ll show
+ye&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Whether I have put myself in the jaws of a lion or a jackal
+may be a question which is aside from our present discussion,&#8221;
+interrupted Warner, scornfully. &#8220;I have come for Captain
+Baker&#8217;s property.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Baker is an outlaw&#8211;as are you,&#8221; declared Munro,
+wrathfully, &#8220;and as such I took away his arms. An&#8217; I shall
+keep the gun.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Now, &#8217;Squire, if you had stated the reverse of that
+proposition I should have the more easily believed you,&#8221; cried
+Warner, with flashing eyes. &#8220;Even a New York justice of the peace
+may not rob his neighbor with impunity in the Grants. I shall carry
+that gun away with me to-day. So, sir, deliver it without further
+ado!&#8221;</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'> <img src='images/i122.jpg' id="img004" alt='' /> <p class='center caption sc'>H<span class='fss'>E</span> W<span class='fss'>HIPPED</span> O<span class='fss'>UT</span> H<span class='fss'>IS</span> S<span class='fss'>WORD</span></p></div><!-- figure -->
+
+<p>&#8220;Ye threaten me, do ye?&#8221; cried Munro, lashing himself
+into a rage. &#8220;Seize this villain, neighbors! I call on ye to
+assist in the capture of Seth Warner, the outlaw!&#8221; He seized the
+bridle of Warner&#8217;s horse, which reared with him and struck out
+angrily. But the justice hung on, still calling to the bystanders to
+interfere and help him. Enoch urged his own horse forward; but there
+was no fear of the neighbors aiding in Seth Warner&#8217;s capture.
+They refused to do so, and perhaps as much out of fear of the
+Connecticut man himself, as out of dislike for the justice.</p>
+
+<p>Warner&#8217;s horse was a mettlesome beast and Munro&#8217;s act in
+seizing the bridle angered it. The Green Mountain boy had all he could
+do to handle his steed for a moment and, as Munro continued to cling to
+the bridle, Warner suddenly whipped out his sword and whirling it about
+his head brought the flat of the weapon down upon the officer&#8217;s
+pate! The blow caused Munro to relax his hold and knocked him to the
+ground, where he lay, roaring with pain and anger. Warner rode over him
+and approached the open door of the house to which Mrs. Munro,
+frightened by her husband&#8217;s overthrow, quickly brought the gun in
+question and handed it to the victor.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Many thanks, &#8217;Squire Munro!&#8221; cried Warner, waving
+the gun above his head and holding in his charger. &#8220;And when next
+ye seek to impound me, come in force, sir&#8211;come in force!&#8221;
+and letting his mount go, he and Enoch rode away at a swift canter.</p>
+
+<p>Young Harding went home that night full of the afternoon&#8217;s
+doings, and loud in his praise of Captain Warner&#8217;s prowess. He
+and Bryce made many plans for the reception of the Yorkers if they came
+to their farm; but after this matters were quiet for some weeks and the
+settlers were enabled to begin the spring work and get the seed into
+the ground in peace. On May 19th Governor Tryon sent a letter to the
+Grants proposing a conference and promising amnesty to all those who
+had taken an active part in the raids of the Green Mountain Boys
+excepting Ethan Allen, Seth Warner, Baker and Robert Cochran. The King
+had commanded that New York do nothing further toward surveying or
+settling the lands east of Lake Champlain and the Twenty-Mile Line
+until the difficulty could be properly adjusted, and Tryon promised
+that the land-grabbers should be kept away from the Grants.</p>
+
+<p>The farmers were delighted with this letter. They had been living in
+continual fear of dispossession since the first attack on the
+Breckenridge farm in &#8217;69. Now they felt that they would be free
+to follow the peaceful pursuits of their calling and began to improve
+their possessions, believing that, after all, the right would prevail.
+None were more pleased at this turn of affairs than the widow Harding
+and Enoch. Bryce, it must be confessed, felt a little disappointed that
+he had seen no active service; but they were all happy in their work
+and the Harding place bade fair to be one of the most profitable farms
+in the township that year.</p>
+
+<p>The boys labored well and after the second corn hoeing in August the
+work was so far along that Enoch was able to accompany &#8217;Siah
+Bolderwood on a hunting trip. The old ranger, lacking any regular
+abiding place of his own, often visited the Hardings and helped in the
+work of the farm. But he was a wanderer by nature and could not stay in
+one place long at a time. So, being off to the northward, the widow
+allowed Enoch to join him for a week or two.</p>
+
+<p>It was not wholly game that Bolderwood was after, however. At least,
+not game for present killing. He was mapping out his next
+winter&#8217;s campaign against the wild creatures of the forest. His
+strings of traps and dead-falls would be laid along the route which he
+and his young comrade traversed. Reaching the southern extremity of
+Lake Champlain Bolderwood found a canoe which, well hidden in a hollow
+log&#8211;all that remained of a monster king of the woodland&#8211;had
+lain untouched since his last visit to the lake. In this light bark
+they set sail upon that beautiful body of water on the shores of which
+the French and English had so often met in battle. It has been well
+said that the Champlain Valley was the school grounds of the early
+colonists, and that here were largely unfolded the elements of
+character which became of supreme importance in the Revolutionary
+struggle.</p>
+
+<p>On the west bank of this lower, and narrower, portion of the lake,
+stood the frowning walls of Fort Ticonderoga&#8211;&#8220;Old Ti&#8221;
+as the settlers called it&#8211;wrested not long since from the French
+backed by their Huron and Algonquin allies. That promontory signalized
+a more ancient landmark of history even than the Pilgrim stone at
+Plymouth, and one quite as important to our country at large. Eleven
+years before the Mayflower began her voyage to America, Champlain met
+the Iroquois in battle on the site of Ticonderoga, and this battle made
+the Iroquois the friends of the English and the enemies of the French
+for generations. Ticonderoga was an important link in the chain of
+French posts extending from the St. Lawrence to the Mississippi, which
+was designed to shut the English colonists into that narrow strip of
+the continent east of the Alleghanies.</p>
+
+<p>From the beginning Fort Frederick (Crown Point) and Ticonderoga were
+a menace to the English. From these points the red allies of the French
+descended upon the border settlements to the south and burned and
+pillaged at pleasure. Two fearful campaigns were needed to reduce
+Ticonderoga and place the command of the Champlain in the hands of the
+British. Since its capture Ticonderoga had fallen somewhat into decay,
+for with the changing of the Canadian government from French to
+English, danger of attack, even by Indian bands, from the north was
+little to be expected by the settlers who had flocked into the rich
+lands near the lake after the close of the war.</p>
+
+<p>Bolderwood and his young comrade passed Old Ti and, continuing up
+the lake, paddled by Crown Point and reached the mouth of the Otter.
+Here they encamped for several days, hunting and fishing, and living in
+a nomadic fashion that charmed Enoch. But when they were about to
+return another party of hunters came to the spot&#8211;men whom
+Bolderwood knew&#8211;bound for the upper end of the lake and into the
+wilderness lying east of that point. Enoch could not go so far because
+of the work on the farm; but he urged Bolderwood to accompany this
+party, as he knew very well he could find his way home in safety by
+either the land or water route. In fact, he rather coveted the chance
+to make his way home alone, for he wished to prove to the ranger his
+ability to do for himself.</p>
+
+<p>It was therefore arranged that the boy should take
+Bolderwood&#8217;s canoe and go up Otter Creek to a certain
+settler&#8217;s house, there to leave the canoe and make his way
+overland to Bennington, and the next day they separated. The hunters
+did not start until afternoon on their northern journey, however, and
+Enoch left at the same time. Not far up the creek was a settlement of
+Hampshire farmers who on one occasion had been driven out by Yorkers in
+the employ of a Scotchman named Reid. But the Yorkers who had taken
+these farms stayed but a short time and the real owners of the property
+had come back the year before. Here Enoch expected to remain the first
+night of his lonely journey.</p>
+
+<p>He did not arrive until late, however, and the houses were in
+darkness&#8211;indeed they seemed deserted. The mill (built by Colonel
+Reid&#8217;s followers) stood silent, the stones having been broken by
+the Green Mountain Boys on the occasion of the driving out of the New
+York settlers. Enoch, having heard such good accounts of this
+settlement, was astonished by the appearance of inactivity.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless he landed and soon found a stockade surrounding a
+blockhouse, which was evidently occupied. The people seemed to live
+under this single roof as though they were in fear of an Indian raid,
+and the boy approached the place cautiously. He was not molested,
+however, for no watch was being kept; but when he rapped smartly on the
+door he knew by the sudden hush of voices within that the occupants of
+the dwelling were startled. There was the clatter of arms and a sudden
+command. Fearing that he might be treated as an enemy, Enoch knocked
+again and was about to raise his voice in the &#8220;view halloa&#8221;
+of the settlers, when the door was snapped open for an instant and the
+sharp blade of a sword thrust out of the darkness, the light of the
+candles having been quenched at his first summons.</p>
+
+<p>The boy sprang back with an exclamation of fear, and only his
+agility saved him from serious injury, for the point of the sword cut a
+slit in his hunting coat. And the attack, so utterly unexpected, quite
+deprived him of speech or further motion as the heavy door slammed in
+his face. Such a welcome was, to say the least, disconcerting.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_8'></a>CHAPTER IX<br /><span
+class='fss'>THE OTTER CREEK RAID</span></h2>
+
+<p>The late visitor at the Otter Creek settlement shrank away from the
+door and, dumbfounded by the sword-thrust which was evidently meant for
+his heart instead of his coat, waited to see what the next move of
+those in the blockhouse would be. He heard low voices and words which
+sounded like military commands. Suppose the occupants of the wooden
+fort should fire upon him?</p>
+
+<p>At this idea he dropped upon all fours and it is perhaps well that
+he did so, for one bullet did come from a loophole, singing viciously
+above his head. Then an angry voice of command rose on the night air:
+&#8220;Haud yir hand, mon! Let&#8217;s see an&#8217; it be fri&#8217;nd
+or foe.&#8221; The tone and accent were broadly Scotch, and this, too,
+added to Enoch&#8217;s amazement. He had not heard of Scotch people
+coming to Otter Creek since those placed there by Colonel Reid had been
+driven forth. At once his suspicions were aroused, but he cried
+aloud:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am a friend and am alone. I only came for a night&#8217;s
+lodging.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;&#8217;Tis a laddie, mon! There&#8217;s naught t&#8217;
+fear,&#8221; declared the voice within, as though answering some
+objection which Enoch could not hear. The candles were lighted and in
+another moment the door was opened again, revealing a tall, raw-boned
+Scot with a shock of red hair and beard. He grasped a bared sword,
+almost as big as a two-handed claymore, and he looked sternly upon the
+boy as the latter approached.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ha! &#8217;tis wrang for a laddie t&#8217; be oot this time
+o&#8217; night,&#8221; he declared. &#8220;Air ye sure
+alone?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Quite alone,&#8221; Enoch replied. &#8220;I have been hunting
+west of here and we camped at the mouth of the creek. My comrades have
+gone northward and I was returning home by way of the creek. I did not
+know that the settlers here were in fear of Indians&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ha! &#8217;tis little we think o&#8217; them rid chiels.
+There&#8217;s war nor they in yon forest-land, an&#8217; well we ken
+that.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Who do you mean?&#8221; demanded Enoch, now stepping within
+the open door.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, the robber Allen, an&#8217; his followers. We do oor
+wark wi&#8217; guns in oor han&#8217;s for fear of them same outlaws.
+Eh, mon! but they&#8217;re a bold mob.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Enoch made no reply, but advanced to the gun rack and stood up his
+rifle and dropped his pack. He knew now what had occurred at the
+settlement. The land-grabber Reid had come back to the Grants, ousted
+the Hampshire settlers, and again established minions of his own in
+their places. The boy glanced about and saw at least a dozen hardy
+looking Scots. Every one of them had doubtless served in Colonel
+Reid&#8217;s regiment of Highlanders. They were descended from men
+almost as wild and bloodthirsty as the red Indians themselves, and
+although ordinarily they might be harmless enough, that thrust of the
+sword had shown Enoch that they were likely to fight first and inquire
+the reason for it afterward. They had come to Otter Creek in force this
+time, and evidently determined to battle for their master&#8217;s
+holdings under the New York law.</p>
+
+<p>But the man who had let him in, and who was a Cameron, was evidently
+bent upon treating hospitably the guest which he had so nearly run
+through with his sword. &#8220;Jamie Henderson,&#8221; he said to one
+of the solemn faced Scots, &#8220;speir ane o&#8217; the wimmen
+t&#8217; gie us a bite for the lad,&#8221; and the repast which was
+prepared and put before him was generous and kindly given. While he was
+eating and John Cameron sat by to watch him enjoy the food, Enoch
+gathered courage to ask a few questions.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We heard down Bennington way that Colonel Reid&#8217;s people
+had left this land and the settlers who formerly owned it had come
+back,&#8221; he said, suggestively. The Scot&#8217;s eyes contracted as
+he looked at the visitor. &#8220;Aye, aye?&#8221; he said,
+questioningly. &#8220;How long have you been here?&#8221; queried the
+boy.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Sin&#8217; June. The men ye call settlers were nae proper
+holders o&#8217; their titles. Lieutenant-Colonel Reid bought this land
+and put fairmers here first.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But he did not get his title from New Hampshire,&#8221; Enoch
+said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Nae&#8211;w&#8217;y should he? New York owns the land to yon
+big river&#8211;th&#8217; Connecticut call ye it? Our fri&#8217;nds
+settled here in &#8217;69. The titles these auld settlers held wes no
+guide&#8211;na, na! But Colonel Reid is a guide mon&#8211;&#8217;deed
+yes.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How do you make that out?&#8221; demanded Enoch. He wanted to
+tell the Scot what he thought of this business, but he dared not. He
+knew Ethan Allen and the other leaders of the Green Mountain Boys
+should know of it, and as he, perhaps, was the first to learn of the
+return of the Scotch, he must get away early in the morning and reach
+Bennington in the quickest possible time. While the Grants men were
+resting in supposed safety and peace because of Governor Tryon&#8217;s
+letter promising inactivity on the part of the land speculators, the
+latter were hurrying their minions over the line, evicting the rightful
+owners of the Grants, and stealing their farms. The boy&#8217;s heart
+swelled with anger; but he was wise enough to hold his tongue and say
+nothing to rouse the suspicions of the Scots.</p>
+
+<p>In reply to his question regarding Colonel Reid&#8217;s
+&#8220;guideness&#8221; Cameron told how he, with other Scots, had
+landed in New York early in June and had been engaged by the Colonel at
+once to go and occupy his land in the Disputed Territory. Reid came
+with them to the settlement, being at considerable expense to transport
+them, their wives, children and baggage. The day after their arrival
+while viewing the land covered by Reid&#8217;s title, they observed a
+crop of Indian corn, wheat, and garden stuff, and a stack of hay
+belonging to two New England men who, according to Cameron, had
+squatted on the land without right or title. Reid paid these two men
+$15 for their standing crops and the hay and made over the same to his
+new tenants. This was a novel way of telling how the owners of the
+titles to the farms received from the New Hampshire governor years
+before, were evicted. But Enoch held his peace. He had considerable
+doubt in his own mind regarding Colonel Reid&#8217;s
+&#8220;guideness,&#8221; nevertheless, and rose early in the morning
+and left the settlement in Bolderwood&#8217;s canoe. Instead of keeping
+on up the Otter he turned back to the lake. The route by which he and
+the ranger had come from Bennington would be far shorter than the one
+he had started upon; so he went back that way. News of the return of
+Reid&#8217;s people must be conveyed to Ethan Allen and the other
+leaders of the Green Mountain Boys as quickly as possible.</p>
+
+<p>He scarcely stopped for food, so anxious was he to get home. He met
+nobody on his trip until he reached Manchester and there his story was
+hardly believed, for the letter of the New York governor in May,
+inviting the Grants representatives to a council, had made a strong and
+favorable impression upon public sentiment. This council had advised
+that all legal processes against the Grants settlers cease and even now
+the echoes had not died away of the jubilation of the deluded people
+over what was considered the end of the bitter controversy.</p>
+
+<p>But when he arrived at home and told his mother of his discovery
+she, like the truly patriotic woman she was, became vastly disturbed.
+&#8220;You may not rest idly here, Enoch, while such wrong is being
+done. Colonel Allen should know of it at once. He rode past here but
+yesterday on his way to Bennington, and gave us a cry. He asked for
+you, too,&#8221; she said, with pride, &#8220;and told me how well you
+carried yourself at training. There is a council being held in town
+to-day, I believe, for I suspect that Colonel Allen and Captain Warner
+have not been deceived by the false promises of Governor Tryon. And
+this business at the Otter Creek will wake up many of those who would
+cry &#8216;Peace!&#8217; when there is no peace. Bryce will saddle the
+horse for you, Enoch,&#8221; she added, &#8220;and while you eat I will
+prepare your best breeches and coat. You cannot appear at the inn
+before the gentlemen in your old clothing.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The careful woman bustled away and laid out her son&#8217;s Sabbath
+suit and his boughten shoes and, tired as Enoch was, he rode away
+toward Bennington an hour after reaching the ox-bow farm.</p>
+
+<p>As his mother had declared, Colonel Allen and several other leaders
+were in conference in Stephen Fay&#8217;s private parlor, and when he
+had whispered his story to the innkeeper, the latter brought him at
+once before the gentlemen, rightly considering the matter of such
+importance as to brook no delay in the telling. Never before had Enoch
+seen Ethan Allen in any capacity but that of a leader in action. In the
+boy&#8217;s mind he had ever been connected with scenes of riot, or in
+the capacity of a commander on training day. But it was a very serious
+looking group which surrounded the table now, and the man at the head
+of the board lacked nothing in dignity and stern bearing in comparison
+with the other members of the committee.</p>
+
+<p>It was Allen, however, who turned from the subject under discussion
+and beckoned Master Fay and Enoch nearer. &#8220;What have we
+here?&#8221; he asked. &#8220;Something of moment, I warrant, from the
+look on Stephen&#8217;s face. And there is young Nuck Harding. Is aught
+amiss in your district, lad?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Nay, Colonel,&#8221; Enoch replied; &#8220;but I have been in
+the north and bring back news that my mother was sure you would wish to
+hear at once. So I rode over without delay to tell you, sir.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;God bless the woman!&#8221; Allen exclaimed, heartily.
+&#8220;She&#8217;s fighting away there in the wilderness with her pack
+of babies in a way to make grown men blush. I was by there but
+yesterday.... And what&#8217;s the news you bring, Nuck?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The Yorkers have come back to the mill on Otter
+Creek.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What, sir?&#8221; cried Allen, leaping from his chair.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s not to be believed,&#8221; cried one of the
+others. &#8220;How know ye this, boy?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Enoch told them, using few words; but the tremor in his voice showed
+the depth of his feeling. The injury done the settlers&#8211;the
+treachery of the Yorkers&#8211;had affected him as it had his mother.
+Allen listened with marked attention, having dropped back into his
+wide-armed chair, but he watched the boy&#8217;s countenance the while.
+&#8220;Egad!&#8221; cried he when the story was done,
+&#8220;there&#8217;s a boy after my own heart. He knows when he sees a
+snake in the brush!&#8221; Then he turned instantly to his companions.
+&#8220;We will postpone this other matter, gentlemen. What we may do in
+the event of his Majesty&#8217;s placing other and more onerous burdens
+upon these colonies, affects us not so nearly as what these New York
+Tories do to us now. We have no standing either with the colonies or
+with the King; we are outlaws, forsooth; our hand is against every
+man&#8217;s and every man&#8217;s hand against us. Yet, belike in time
+the trouble between the King and the colonies may be the salvation of
+the Hampshire Grants.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We have other business now. I am away at once,
+friends,&#8221; he said, rising again. &#8220;Do so to me and more
+also, if I allow more time than is necessary to pass before I fall upon
+those Scotch scoundrels and smite them hip and thigh! Send the word
+around, Stephen Fay. Let them that will gather here. Be sure Warner
+knows of this; I will send for &#8217;Member myself. His company will
+be first ready, I have no doubt. &#8217;Member&#8217;s wound is scarce
+yet healed, and the sting of it needs dressing,&#8221; and he laughed,
+knowing Captain Baker&#8217;s fiery temper and his hatred of the
+Yorkers who had served him so evilly that very spring. &#8220;Let it be
+known that we start from Bennington by sunrise.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Enoch returned home, more than a little puffed with pride because of
+Colonel Allen&#8217;s commendation and although he was too young to
+join the party which, under Allen and Captain Baker, marched to punish
+the Scots at Vergennes, he knew that his fortunate discovery would make
+him something of a hero in the eyes of his mates. The Green Mountain
+Boys fell upon the Scots unexpectedly, burned the cabins, pastured
+their horses in the standing corn, broke the millstones to pieces, and
+drove the New York settlers to Crown Point where they took shelter
+until the land-speculator, Reid, could gain them transportation to
+other and more honestly acquired lands. As for Reid himself, had he
+been overtaken by the Grants men he certainly would have been
+&#8220;viewed&#8221;&#8211;a phrase used by the Green Mountain Boys,
+meaning to be whipped. The settlement was, however, for the time being
+abandoned by both parties, for it was so deep in the wilderness that
+neither could properly defend it from attack.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_9'></a>CHAPTER X<br /><span
+class='fss'>THE WARNING</span></h2>
+
+<p>After his return from this hunting trip, Enoch Harding was forced to
+neglect the training days on several occasions because of the increased
+work at home. The harvest was soon upon them and nobly had the fields
+of the ox-bow farm borne for the widow and her children. While they
+were hard at work getting under cover, or in stack, the last of their
+crops, the Manchester Convention was held, from which James
+Breckenridge and Captain Jehiel Hawley were sent to London to represent
+the struggling settlers, their former minister to the king, Samuel
+Robinson, having died before accomplishing the work which he had so
+well begun.</p>
+
+<p>With the discovery that Governor Tryon&#8217;s declaration of an
+armistice had been an act of treachery, and that the Yorkers were
+likely to continue their raids and seize the honestly purchased lands
+of the New Hampshire settlers, as Colonel Reid had at Vergennes, the
+Hardings began to fear the return of Simon Halpen again. But the summer
+and fall passed without the little family being alarmed. With the snow
+came hog-killing, and among pioneer people this season was usually one
+of rejoicing. In the old times it had been a sort of festival, for with
+the first fall of snow all danger from marauding bands of red men
+ceased. The Indians would not send out war parties when every footstep
+would be plainly visible to the white settlers. The pioneers longed for
+the snow as soon as their scanty crops were out of the field, for they
+were safe then until the spring. So instead of celebrating
+&#8220;harvest home&#8221; they rejoiced at &#8220;hog killing
+time.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Hardings had quite a drove of hogs which ran wild in the forest
+during the summer and fed on the mast in the fall. But every few days
+the widow fed them near the hovel, so as to keep them in the habit of
+coming home, and particularly to teach the youngsters where to come if
+the old swine should be killed by bears or wild-cats. Now the whole
+drove was brought up and &#8220;folded&#8221; and for two weeks every
+member of the family was busy. During that time the bulk of their
+winter&#8217;s meat was salted down, the toothsome sausage made, and
+all the other delicacies which old-fashioned folks knew so well how to
+prepare from the pig. Somebody has said that at our present day
+abatoirs they can put to some use every part of the animal but the
+pig&#8217;s squeal; pioneer housewives were almost as economical.</p>
+
+<p>When the hard work was over Mistress Harding allowed the children to
+invite some of the neighborhood youngsters for an evening frolic and
+such a gathering had not been enjoyed since the famous stump burning.
+Enoch was nearly sixteen now and although Bryce was almost as tall as
+his elder brother, the first named was broadening out wonderfully. Few
+young men of Bennington under nineteen could have thrown Enoch in a
+match of strength, and he had really become the head of the household.
+But he was still enough of a boy to enjoy the party to the full.</p>
+
+<p>There was an old hovel near the house, but nearer the river bank,
+which their father had first erected&#8211;even before building the
+house itself&#8211;when he came to the ox-bow, and for years this hovel
+had sheltered the cattle. But the fall before he died the pioneer had
+erected a new and better stable and shed, quite handy to the house. The
+children, therefore, had long considered this hovel their own especial
+playhouse. At spare moments Enoch and Bryce built a stone and clay
+chimney and laid a good hearth in the old structure, and now they
+planned to have the party here, where they could do quite as they
+pleased.</p>
+
+<p>The girls had scoured the woods for beech, hazel, and hickory nuts,
+and Robbie Baker came over on his horse with nigh a bushel of peeled
+chestnuts which his father brought him from Manchester way after the
+first frost. Then, there were potatoes to roast and a wild turkey which
+Nuck had shot two days before and hung in the smoke-house. The bird was
+not plucked, but after being entrailed was stuffed with chestnuts to
+give it a flavor and then rolled in the tub of sticky clay brought up
+from the creek bottom. This great ball was put in the fire early so
+that by supper-time it would be done to a turn. The pigs&#8217; tails
+had all been saved and cleaned, too, and being likewise rolled in clay
+were baked in the ashes.</p>
+
+<p>The girls had brought flour bread and made Johnny-cake, and although
+there was no tablecloth, the long board table was roomy and fairly
+groaned under the good things heaped upon it. The ball of mud, all hard
+and red now and cracked like a badly burned brick, was rolled out upon
+the hearth and Enoch broke it with one blow of the axe. The hard shell
+fell apart and to the burned clay adhered every feather and pin-quill
+of the great gobbler which would not have weighed an ounce less than
+twenty-five pounds. And the flesh was done to a turn.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of the good time, while the fun waxed furious, the door
+of the hovel opened and there stood in the opening the tall, slim
+figure of Crow Wing. As he had come unbidden to the stump burning, so
+he came now unexpectedly to this frolic. The white children welcomed
+him boisterously, for his people had moved away from the Walloomscoik
+and for months he had not been seen near Bennington. But Crow Wing had
+evidently not come to join in the merrymaking. His face was impassive
+and much older in expression than it had been the year before. And in
+his hair was a bunch of eagle feathers which showed that, to his own
+people even, he was now a brave and no longer a boy.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Umph!&#8221; he grunted, drawing the blanket draped from his
+shoulders more closely around him. &#8220;Harding&#8211;me talk to
+you!&#8221; He looked boldly at Enoch, and the latter waving the others
+back, followed the Indian out of the hovel. Without speaking or looking
+behind him Crow Wing led the white boy to the riverside, and some
+distance from the hovel. There he halted and pointed suddenly across
+the stream in the direction of that place in the forest where Enoch had
+once seen the mysterious white man sitting beside the campfire.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;&#8217;Member?&#8221; asked Crow Wing, flashing a keen glance
+at the white boy.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The man in the woods!&#8221; exclaimed Enoch. &#8220;You wish
+to tell me something about him?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Umph! He come again. Look out. Crow Wing tell you, because
+white boy strong&#8211;know how to fight. Watch &#8217;em sharp!&#8221;
+and with this brief declaration the Indian youth strode away and the
+astonished Enoch watched him disappear in the tall brush along the
+creek bank. He went back to the merry party at the hovel with a heavy
+heart and not until after the last of the visitors had gone
+home&#8211;the boys swinging pine torches and giving the warwhoop to
+scare off any lurking wolves or catamounts&#8211;did Enoch find
+opportunity to tell his mother of Crow Wing&#8217;s warning.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Simon Halpen is surely coming to evict us,&#8221; he
+declared. &#8220;I am sure it was he I saw in the forest last year. And
+now, taking advantage of our being lulled by hopes of peace, he will
+try to strike an unexpected blow as Colonel Reid did.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The neighbors will help us,&#8221; the widow said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But suppose he comes with a big force? And we cannot expect
+the neighbors to neglect their own homes,&#8221; said Enoch. &#8220;I
+will try and see Captain Baker, if you think it best,
+mother.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Captain Baker will help us. He knows how hard it would be if
+the Yorkers stripped us of our all. He is a kind-hearted man, though
+often rude and fretful.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, marm, he has cause to be fretful,&#8221; said Enoch.
+&#8220;Perhaps we can get a few of the boys to stay with us nights for
+awhile.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And this they did, for Captain Baker sent three or four sturdy Green
+Mountain Boys around to the widow&#8217;s farm every night for a week.
+But the Yorker and his crew did not appear. At this time, when he might
+have been of such assistance to them, &#8217;Siah Bolderwood was away.
+He had recently bought a track of land on the lake shore not far from
+Old Ti and had gone to look it over and build some sort of a camp
+there, thus utilizing his time to good advantage before the trapping
+season began.</p>
+
+<p>Even after their fears were lulled, either Enoch or Bryce remained
+always in sight of the house. But about a fortnight after the
+hog-killing frolic an incident occurred which served to take both Bryce
+and Enoch away from the cabin. There had been a second fall of snow and
+the nights were becoming very cold. But all the wild animals had not
+yet sought their winter sleeping quarters, for there descended upon the
+Hardings&#8217; hog-pen an old bear who evidently desired one more meal
+of succulent pork before retiring to his burrow. The remaining swine
+were shut up now in a close yard of logs; but the bear got over that
+fence with ease.</p>
+
+<p>The trouble occurred in the early morning and aroused by the clamor
+Enoch, despite the inch or two of snow on the ground, grabbed the rifle
+and ran out just as he got out of bed and without shoes or stockings.
+But when he saw the huge bear seeking to climb out of the enclosure,
+hugging a lively shote to his furry breast, the boy was not likely to
+notice the cold and snow. He climbed the end logs of the hog-pen
+himself so as to get a shot at the marauder, and rested the rifle on
+the top rail; but the logs were slippery and just as he pulled the
+trigger he went down himself and the charge flew high over the
+bear&#8217;s head, while Enoch sprawled most ungracefully on the
+ground.</p>
+
+<p>The old bear uttered a wild &#8220;oof-oof!&#8221; and without
+trying to climb the barrier again, flung his huge body against it and a
+length of the fence went down with a crash. By this time Bryce, who had
+kept the old musket by his side since Crow Wing&#8217;s warning, and
+slept in the loft, was aroused by the disturbance, and he pushed up the
+corner of the bark roof and blazed away at the beast just as it
+scrambled through the wreck of the hog fence. The bear had continued to
+cling to the squealing and kicking shote, for bruin is a strangely
+perverse and obstinate creature, unwilling to give up what he has once
+set his mind upon. There was a wild shriek of agony from the poor pig
+and when the bear moved clumsily away still clinging to the porker
+there was a broad trail of blood on the snow.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I shot him! I shot him!&#8221; yelled Bryce, dodging down
+into the loft and beginning to hastily pull on his breeches. But when
+he came down-stairs Enoch had returned to the house and was calmly
+dressing. &#8220;Why didn&#8217;t ye foller him?&#8221; demanded the
+younger boy. &#8220;He&#8217;s bad wounded. He&#8217;d dropped that
+shote in a minute.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You killed the shote all right,&#8221; said Enoch in disgust.
+&#8220;Neither of the shots touched the bear at all. There&#8217;s no
+use chasing after the critter now. We&#8217;ll wait till after
+breakfast. He won&#8217;t go far, lugging that shote.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The bear was fat and in the best possible condition for salting down
+for winter use. So even Mrs. Harding had no objection to make when the
+boys started after breakfast to follow the trail. She herself, with the
+help of the younger children, collected the hogs in the pen again and
+put up the log fence. Meanwhile Nuck and Bryce found that the bear had
+made for a piece of swamp about two miles away. The swamp was close
+grown with saplings and brush, while here and there a monster tree shot
+skyward. Some of these big trees were so old that they had become
+hollow and without doubt there was more than one lair of wild creatures
+in the swamp.</p>
+
+<p>But it was easy enough to follow the early morning visitor to the
+cabin. After carrying the shote into the edge of the swamp, bruin had
+stopped and made a hasty meal upon the porker. Indeed the boys, who
+started on his trail scarcely two hours after the raid had been
+committed, undoubtedly disturbed him at his repast. The shote was not
+completely eaten when they found the bear&#8217;s breakfast-table.
+&#8220;It is a mighty big bear anyway,&#8221; Bryce declared, looking
+at the marks of the marauder&#8217;s feet. &#8220;He couldn&#8217;t
+have brought that pig so far if he hadn&#8217;t been.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He warn&#8217;t big enough for you to hit,&#8221; said Nuck,
+slyly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Huh! guess you can&#8217;t crow any,&#8221; responded the
+younger boy. &#8220;You missed him good and wide, too.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They hurried on then, easily tracking the big, human-like spoor of
+the bear in the soil which here was not frozen. Indeed, in some places
+they &#8220;slumped in&#8221; rather deeply. The bear seemed to have
+picked out his path by instinct. But he could not hide his trail and
+before long the hunters came to a huge tree standing amid a clump of
+brush on the top of a hillock. The high ground was surrounded by water
+and rather hard to come at; but the boys were determined to get the
+bear after chasing it so far. They approached with caution, however,
+Enoch making Bryce remain in the rear.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If I fire and don&#8217;t kill him you must be in reserve
+with your gun,&#8221; he whispered cautiously. &#8220;He&#8217;d be an
+ugly customer if he turned on us. He&#8217;s as big as a
+steer.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Huh! who&#8217;s afraid?&#8221; demanded Bryce.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Jest you remember how father was killed,&#8221; Enoch said,
+gravely. &#8220;Who&#8217;d ha&#8217; believed a bull-deer could kill
+an old hunter like him? You do as I say!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>So Bryce dropped behind and watched his brother crawl up the side of
+the hummock with infinite caution, parting the brush with the barrel of
+his rifle, which he held in readiness to use at any instant. Suddenly,
+from the heart of the brush clump, there sounded an angry growl. The
+bear was not to be taken unawares. And when a big bear growls in anger
+the sound is hair-raising to the uninitiated. Bryce felt a chill in the
+region of his spine and if his old cap did not actually rise off his
+head, it certainly felt as though it would. He was to one side of
+Nuck&#8217;s position so as not to get his brother between him and the
+bear should the creature come forth, and suddenly he saw the shaggy
+head and shoulders of the beast rise up over the brush. It looked
+enormous and when the bear opened its jaws, and displayed its great
+teeth and blood-red gums, it was indeed a fearsome spectacle.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Shoot him! shoot him!&#8221; exclaimed Bryce, excitedly. But
+Nuck remained comparatively cool&#8211;at least, to all appearance. He
+stood up, too, with the rifle at his shoulder. The bear stretched wide
+his great fore-paws and plunged forward to seize the boy; but the rifle
+spoke and the smoke of the piece hid the creature for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>When the cloud passed there was a great commotion in the brush, and
+Bryce saw that Nuck had darted back several paces and was rapidly
+loading his gun again. The younger boy could not see the bear; but it
+was badly wounded without doubt. The thrashing in the brush told that.
+Recovering his courage he pushed forward and finally saw the huge brown
+body on the ground, writhing in the muscular activity which follows
+death. The charge of Nuck&#8217;s rifle had reached a vital spot.</p>
+
+<p>But something more Bryce saw. A second bear had followed the dead
+one from the hollow tree, and the boy observed this one whisk back into
+the dark opening between two roots. The tree was all of a dozen feet in
+circumference and there was doubtless a good-sized cavity in the tall
+trunk. &#8220;Come on! come on!&#8221; cried Bryce, excitedly.
+&#8220;Here&#8217;s another, Nuck.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Have a care, boy!&#8221; responded the older lad.
+&#8220;Don&#8217;t go too near. It may turn on us.&#8221; He hastily
+finished the loading of his rifle and came up the hill again. They
+could see the entrance to the lair plainly; but no sight could they get
+of the second bear. Bryce brought a handful of clods and flung one
+after another into the hole in the tree. The bear did not even growl,
+so they were pretty sure that the missiles had not reached it.
+&#8220;He&#8217;s climbed up inside,&#8221; declared Nuck. &#8220;I
+warrant that tree&#8217;s holler up to the first crotch.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;ll we do?&#8221; demanded Bryce. &#8220;You shot
+that one, Nuck. Now I wanter git the other, before we go
+home.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll smoke him out,&#8221; declared the elder brother.
+&#8220;You stay right here and watch, and I&#8217;ll get some
+wood.&#8221; Nuck had brought a tomahawk which, with his skinning
+knife, was thrust into his belt. With the hatchet he obtained dry
+branches from the lower limbs of some spruce-trees which grew near, and
+packed a big fagot through the mire to the hillock where Bryce stood
+guard. This wood he flung into the mouth of the lair, started the fire
+with his flint and steel, and when the flames began to wreathe the
+branches hungrily, he flung on leaves and grass to make a
+&#8220;smudge.&#8221; His suspicions regarding the hollowness of the
+tree proved true, for the draft through the hollow hole acted like a
+chimney and sucked the smoke upward. It began to wreathe out between
+the first limbs, some thirty feet or more from the ground.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly there was a great clatter and scraping of claws inside the
+tree and then there popped out between the branches the head and
+shoulders of a smaller bear than the one which now lay still in the
+bushes. &#8220;Wait till he gits out!&#8221; shouted Nuck, as the
+excited Bryce raised his musket. &#8220;If you shoot him there
+he&#8217;ll tumble back into the hole.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Bryce was cool enough to see the wisdom of this advice and stay his
+hand. But in a moment the bear was completely out and then he fired.
+The bullet struck home and the bear lost its hold upon the limbs and
+dropped to the ground, landing with fearful force at the roots of the
+tree. But it was not dead and after a moment&#8217;s struggle, got upon
+its feet again. But the shock had dazed it and for a little it could
+neither see its assailants nor find any means of escape. Nuck ran in,
+placed the muzzle of his rifle within a foot of the creature, and
+finished it off with despatch.</p>
+
+<p>Bryce was dancing about and yelling like a wild Indian; but it was
+not for joy over the death of this second bear. He was pointing on high
+and Nuck looked upward to see a third bear in the tree-top. This one
+had followed the second out of the hollow trunk and was mounting among
+the branches with great agility. The smoke pouring up through the
+hollow had driven the whole family into the open air. The Hardings
+reloaded their guns with despatch and then, on either side of the tree,
+fired at the remaining bear. Both bullets went true, but in falling the
+bear became wedged in the crotch of a big limb and Nuck, throwing aside
+his shoes and stockings, essayed to climb the trunk to push the dead
+beast off to the ground.</p>
+
+<p>This was no simple matter, for all he had to cling to were the knots
+and &#8220;warts&#8221; on the side of the trunk. It was almost like
+climbing up the wall of a house. But he reached the first crotch
+finally and after resting a spell, found the remainder of the climb
+easy enough. Before he pushed the carcass of the bear out of its
+resting-place he took an observation of the forest, for he was high
+above the swamp here and could see beyond the creek. In some way they
+would have to get the carcasses to the creek bank and transport them to
+the cabin by canoe. It would be no easy task.</p>
+
+<p>And as he scanned the stretch of river which he could see from his
+high perch he suddenly observed something which almost caused him to
+lose his hold upon the tree and fall, like the bear, to the ground.
+Coming up the stream were two canoes, each paddled by a couple of
+Indians, and with three white men in each craft. Even at that distance
+Enoch knew them to be strangers, and they were not a hunting party.
+Naturally his mind reverted to the warning Crow Wing had brought him a
+fortnight before, and without stopping to dislodge the dead bear, he
+descended the tree in utmost haste.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why don&#8217;t you push the bear off?&#8221; shouted Bryce
+from below.</p>
+
+<p>Nuck leaned over and placed his finger on his lips, shaking his head
+warningly. Then he slid down the remainder of the way, falling in a
+heap on the carcass of the second bear. &#8220;Quick!&#8221; he gasped,
+seizing his shoes and stockings. &#8220;They&#8217;re
+coming.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s coming?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The Yorkers. I seen &#8217;em on the river. Two canoes
+full.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Simon Halpen!&#8221; exclaimed the younger boy, his face
+blanching.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know. Couldn&#8217;t tell any of &#8217;em so
+far away. But they be&#8217;n&#8217;t Bennington men, that&#8217;s
+sure.&#8221; Nuck was hastily pulling on his stockings. &#8220;You run
+back and tell mother. I&#8217;ll watch &#8217;em till they land and see
+what they intend to do.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But the bears&#8213;&#8221; began Bryce.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll have to leave &#8217;em. That one in the tree
+will be all right for a while for sure. Now hurry.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Bryce obeyed at once and a moment later the elder boy started off in
+the other direction for the bank of the creek. He ran carefully,
+however, so as not to make any noise and thus warn the canoe party of
+his presence. In half an hour he was abreast of the boats, for they
+progressed but slowly up the stream. Here he had a good view of the
+men. In the first canoe he saw Crow Wing and another young Indian of
+his tribe, while the paddlers in the second were likewise Iroquois. The
+white men were Yorkers he was sure, and all were heavily armed.</p>
+
+<p>As he scrutinized the whites his eyes rested finally on one man in
+the leading canoe whom he was sure he had seen before. He could not
+mistake that lean, dark face and hooked nose. Whether or not it was the
+person he had seen in the wood the day of Sheriff Ten Eyck&#8217;s
+fiasco at the Breckenridge farm, he was certain of the man&#8217;s
+identity. It was Simon Halpen who, under a New York patent, claimed
+territory on the Walloomscoik, a part of which the Harding farm
+was.</p>
+
+<p>Dodging from tree to tree, the boy followed the canoes and finally,
+before they came in sight of the Harding house, saw the party land. The
+Indians remained with the canoes; but the white men disembarked with
+considerable baggage. One of the men carried a surveyor&#8217;s
+instrument, while a second bore a chain. Halpen led them and when he
+had seen the party strike into the forest in the direction of the
+house, Enoch sped away on a parallel trail and headed them off,
+arriving first at the destination.</p>
+
+<p>He found that his mother and the children had already put up the
+shutters and made ready to receive the Yorkers. The cattle were shut in
+the yard surrounding the barn and the smaller children were put in
+their mother&#8217;s bed to be out of the way. Bryce went into the loft
+where he could watch for the appearance of the enemy; but Enoch
+remained outside the door, his rifle in the hollow of his arm, ready to
+parley with the Yorkers who soon were reported by Bryce as coming
+through the lower fields.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_10'></a>CHAPTER XI<br /><span
+class='fss'>AN UNEQUAL BATTLE</span></h2>
+
+<p>A masterful spirit had entered into Enoch Harding during the past
+few months. He was no longer a child; he thought and acted as a man in
+many things. Now, with this danger threatening them all, he did not
+shrink from the ordeal, and none might know his inmost feelings from
+the expression of his face. He did not speak to his mother, nor did she
+seek to advise him. Long before they had talked this emergency over,
+and it had been agreed that the homestead must and should be defended
+even to the point of firing on the Yorkers who might come to dispossess
+them. The legal authority claimed by Simon Halpen was not recognized in
+the Grants and did the Hardings put themselves in Halpen&#8217;s power
+by agreeing to let the New York authorities arbitrate the matter, they
+would lose all that they had toiled and suffered for during the past
+ten years.</p>
+
+<p>The widow saw that the windows of the cabin were shuttered and that
+Bryce had both powder and bullets beside him in the loft. Then she went
+into her own chamber and falling upon her knees prayed as only a mother
+can whose children are in bodily and imminent danger. How far the
+Yorkers would dare go&#8211;to what lengths Halpen might force the
+fight for the ox-bow farm&#8211;it was impossible even to imagine. He
+was a cruel and unscrupulous man, but he had already had a taste of the
+temper of the Bennington settlers and perhaps the remembrance of the
+beech-sealing which had been dealt out to him two years and more
+before, would make him chary of coming to blows.</p>
+
+<p>Soon the six Yorkers appeared around the corner of the log fence
+which enclosed the cattleyard. Four of them, including Halpen, were
+armed with guns. The surveyor and his assistant carried their tools
+only, and walked in the rear of the more warlike quartette. Their
+leader, his lean, black face clouded by a threatening scowl, strode
+across the home lot and approached the cabin door. His beady eyes
+glittered and when he was enraged his hooked nose seemed to glow a dull
+red beneath the dusky skin, like a half-heated iron.</p>
+
+<p>Simon Halpen was much better dressed than the citizens of Bennington
+were apt to be, and he carried himself haughtily. His hair was done
+carefully and the queue tied with a silk ribbon. His rifle was
+silver-mounted and his powder-horn was partly of silver filagree work.
+In every way&#8211;dress, accoutrements and manner&#8211;he bore out
+the account the Hardings had received of him, that he was a wealthy and
+proud man. The three other armed men were fellows of the baser sort,
+hired at Albany for the purpose of driving the widow and her children
+from their home.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch Harding thought this as he saw the party approach, and his
+heart beat faster while his cheeks were dyed with crimson. Should these
+men march up and deprive his mother and brothers and sisters of their
+home? Not as long as he held a gun and had powder and shot with which
+to load it! The fearful thought of shooting down one or more of these
+men in cold blood did not shock him now. The bitterness which filled
+his heart against Simon Halpen overbore any other emotion. He raised
+his rifle threateningly and cried aloud: &#8220;Halt there&#8211;halt I
+say! What d&#8217;ye want on our land?&#8221;</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'> <img src='images/i167.jpg' id="img005" alt='' /> <p class='center caption sc'>T<span class='fss'>HE</span> B<span class='fss'>OY</span> S<span class='fss'>TOOD</span> L<span class='fss'>IKE A</span> S<span class='fss'>TATUE</span> </p></div><!-- figure -->
+
+<p>The three retainers of Halpen, as well as the surveyor and his
+&#8217;prentice, halted instantly, but Simon strode on, his eyes
+blazing and his great nose growing ruddier as his rage increased.
+&#8220;Your land&#8211;your land, forsooth!&#8221; he exclaimed.
+&#8220;I&#8217;ll teach ye better than that, ye young viper!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Instantly Enoch had his rifle to his shoulder and had drawn bead
+upon the Yorker. The muzzle of the weapon covered Halpen&#8217;s heart.
+The boy stood like a statue&#8211;there was no trembling to his young
+arms. &#8220;Back! If you come a yard nearer I will fire!&#8221; he
+cried. He did not recognize his own voice, but Halpen heard him plainly
+and was impressed with his earnestness. He stopped suddenly, half
+raising his own gun. &#8220;Don&#8217;t do that!&#8221; cried Enoch,
+instantly. &#8220;Keep your gun down. Why, I have but to press this
+trigger and you will drop where you are! Be warned.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hi, captain,&#8221; growled one of his supporters, &#8220;the
+little varmint means it. Have a care.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You&#8211;you&#8213;&#8221; Halpen only sputtered for a
+moment. He could not find words to properly express his rage. &#8220;I
+believe on my life, he would shoot me.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I certainly will, Master Simon Halpen, if you come nearer.
+You are quite near enough. You have come here for no good purpose. We
+own this land&#8211;my father paid for it and has improved it. He may
+be dead, but we will show you how we can defend the place from you
+Yorkers.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You crow loud, my young cock-o&#8217;-th&#8217;-walk!&#8221;
+exclaimed Simon Halpen, yet seeking to come no nearer the boy.
+&#8220;But you cannot hope to stand before his Majesty&#8217;s
+officers&#8211;though some of you vagabond Whigs have become bold of
+late. Know ye that I bear authority from the loyal governor of his
+Majesty&#8217;s Colony of New York, to turn you off this land, which is
+mine and has been mine for these six years.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And I have told you that you cannot come here and drive us
+off, for we shall fight ye!&#8221; declared Enoch, his anger rising.
+&#8220;And what be more, Master Halpen, though ye might succeed in
+driving us off, ye could not hold this land. It is too near Bennington,
+and ye know well what sort of men Bennington folk are, and what they
+would do to you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>At this reminder of his former embarrassment, when caught by the
+neighbors and &#8220;viewed,&#8221; Simon Halpen flew into a towering
+rage. He shook his rifle in the air as he berated the fearless youth.
+&#8220;Have a care with that gun, Master Halpen,&#8221; said Enoch,
+&#8220;for it might go off by accident. And if such a thing should
+happen I would shoot you down&#8211;&#8217;deed and I would!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>This warning cooled the man&#8217;s ardor somewhat. For a full
+minute he stood silent eyeing Enoch from under his shaggy brows.
+&#8220;Would you dare flout me to my face?&#8221; he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I dare keep my rights here, Master Halpen, as my father did
+before me,&#8221; said Enoch, his voice trembling for the first time.
+And at the mention of the dead and gone Jonas Harding more than Enoch
+were moved. Halpen&#8217;s manner changed; his face paled perceptibly;
+the fire died out of his eyes and his nose no longer glowed. He dropped
+his head and half turned as though to leave the spot.</p>
+
+<p>But suddenly one of his retainers stepped forward and whispered in
+his ear. The whisper brought the leader to his old mind. His head came
+up and he flashed a look of bitter hatred at Enoch. He nodded to the
+man who had spoken and instantly the three armed retainers began to
+quietly spread out as though to surround the house. &#8220;I&#8217;ll
+parley no longer with you, my lad,&#8221; Halpen said, shortly.
+&#8220;This land is mine and you are naught but squatters on it. And as
+such you shall be put off, or my name is not Simon Halpen!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Quick as thought Enoch darted backward to the house, for he had
+noted the action of the three men. &#8220;It is fighting you want,
+then, Master Halpen?&#8221; cried the boy, shrilly. &#8220;And you will
+get bullets instead of fair words if you press us&#8211;now I tell ye
+that! This is our home and we shall fight for it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Stop the young rascal!&#8221; roared Halpen, raising his gun
+now in earnest, when he saw that Enoch no longer had him
+&#8220;covered.&#8221; But the boy dodged into the house and slammed to
+the heavy door. As he did so a bullet buried itself in the door frame.
+Halpen had actually fired.</p>
+
+<p>The widow herself dropped the bars into place, for she had come out
+of her chamber and heard the conversation between her son and the
+Yorker. Now Enoch ran to one of the loopholes from which he could
+observe the movements of the man who had shot at him in so cowardly a
+manner. He saw that the surveyor, who had thus far kept in the
+background, was expostulating with the angry man. He could not hear
+what they said, but it was evident that the surveyor was a man of some
+conscience and could not see such murderous actions without striving to
+put Halpen in better mind. But the latter shook him off in rage and
+loaded his gun again. The house was now surrounded by the four armed
+men and the three understrappers were only waiting Halpen&#8217;s
+command to fire.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Shall I shoot him? shall I shoot him?&#8221; cried Bryce,
+from the loft.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hold your fire!&#8221; commanded Enoch. &#8220;You may have
+blood on your hands yet, if you be not careful.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But he fired at you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And a poor job he made of it. We will not fire unless we are
+forced to.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>His mother said never a word. She went into her chamber again and
+with the girls and little Harry crouched upon the bed. But she glanced
+frequently from the loophole to observe the movements of the Yorker
+upon that side of the clearing.</p>
+
+<p>By and by Halpen raised his voice and addressed the besieged.
+&#8220;Open the door and come out, or we will batter it down. And it
+will go hard with you then, I warrant! If you give up the place
+peaceably you may cart away your household stuff and the cattle and
+hogs. I&#8217;ll not be too hard on you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If you come near this door I will send a bullet through your
+black heart!&#8221; was Enoch&#8217;s reply, poking the muzzle of his
+rifle through the loophole beside which he stood.</p>
+
+<p>The widow came running from the chamber. &#8220;Enoch! Enoch!&#8221;
+she cried, in horror. &#8220;Would you kill him?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He killed my father!&#8221; cried the boy, before he thought
+what explanation of his secret suspicions that remark might
+necessitate.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The child is mad!&#8221; she murmured, after staring at him a
+full minute. &#8220;You do not know what you say, Enoch. Master Halpen
+had naught to do with your poor father&#8217;s death.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But Enoch had not to reply. A cry came from Bryce in the loft.
+&#8220;Look at that! Look at that!&#8221; he shouted, with excitement.
+&#8220;I just will shoot him!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And then his old musket spoke. There was a yell from without. Enoch
+thought Simon Halpen himself had been shot, but the Yorker only ran
+around the end of the cabin to where one of his men stood howling like
+a wolf, and holding on to his swinging arm.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve broke his arm!&#8221; declared Bryce, proudly,
+coming to the head of the ladder. &#8220;He was flinging blazing clods
+on the roof.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What shall we do?&#8221; gasped the mother. &#8220;My boys
+will be murderers.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll kill them all before they&#8217;ll harm you,
+mother,&#8221; declared young Bryce, very proud indeed that he had hit
+the mark, but secretly delighted as well that he had done the
+villainous Yorker no serious damage.</p>
+
+<p>But the moment after, he shrieked aloud and came again to the top of
+the ladder. His face was blanched. &#8220;Oh, oh! they&#8217;ve done
+it&#8211;they&#8217;ve done it!&#8221; he cried. &#8220;The roof is
+afire. Don&#8217;t you smell it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Enoch could not believe that this horror was true until he had run
+up to the loft. The red flames were already showing at the edge of the
+house wall, and the crackling without told him that the bark and
+binders of the roof were burning fiercely. &#8220;Tear it off!&#8221;
+he shouted, and dropping his rifle he seized a length of sawed
+scantling which his father had brought from the mill, and began to
+break up the burning roof and cast it off. But as it fell to the ground
+against the house, soon the logs outside were afire. The dwelling was
+indeed imperiled.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Come out! come out!&#8221; shouted Simon Halpen&#8217;s
+voice. &#8220;The hut will burn to the ground an&#8217; ye&#8217;ll
+burn with it. Ye&#8217;ll go to Albany jail for this, every last one of
+ye!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Let me shoot him, mother!&#8221; cried Bryce, doubly excited
+now. &#8220;He&#8217;ll never take you to jail.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Come down from the loft, Bryce,&#8221; the widow commanded,
+calmly. &#8220;Nothing can save the cabin now.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The children were crying with fear. The red flames began to lick the
+edges of the shutters and the door frame was afire. If they escaped
+they must pass through a wall of flame. The men outside, frightened by
+the result of their awful act, were shouting orders and berating each
+other madly. Yet none dared come too near, for they feared the guns of
+the defenders of the homestead. Enoch for the moment completely lost
+his head and stood as one daft.</p>
+
+<p>But his mother was not so. Swiftly did she sweep aside the ashes on
+the hearth. Then of her own exertions she lifted on its edge the flat
+stone which covered the underground apartment. There was the ladder the
+boys had made leading down into the cool depths. &#8220;Down with
+you&#8211;all!&#8221; she commanded, seizing little Harry first and
+thrusting his feet upon the ladder.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, we&#8217;ll smother down there, mother!&#8221; cried
+Kate.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Nonsense!&#8221; exclaimed the widow, yet with shaking voice.
+&#8220;Do you think mother would tell you to do anything that would
+hurt you?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But though she encouraged them to descend, in her own mind she was
+simply choosing the lesser of two terrible evils. The girls and Harry
+descended quickly; but she had to fairly force Bryce down. He wanted to
+stay and fight, and he clung to the old musket desperately. Although
+the tears were running down his face, he was made of the stuff which
+holds the soldier, though frightened, to his post.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Go down yourself, mother,&#8221; Enoch said, recovering his
+presence of mind and speaking calmly now. &#8220;I will follow you and
+drop the stone into place. But first I want to look
+out&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He ran to the loophole, through which the smoke was now pouring. But
+after a moment there was a break in the cloud and he saw the group of
+frightened Yorkers plainly. They stood not many rods away and poking
+his rifle through the hole, he aimed at the villainous Halpen and,
+pulling the trigger, ran back to the hearth before the echo of the shot
+died away. Down the ladder he darted, dropping the heavy hearthstone
+into place, and leaving the cabin which for so many years had been
+their home, to be consumed above their heads. But his heart sank when
+he found how closely the six packed the tiny room and realized how
+little air reached them down here in the earth.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_11'></a>CHAPTER XII<br /><span
+class='fss'>BACKWOODS JUSTICE</span></h2>
+
+<p>At daybreak on this very morning when the Yorkers attacked the
+Harding place, &#8217;Siah Bolderwood returning from the direction of
+Old Ti, suddenly came upon a little glade on the bank of the
+Walloomscoik Creek. With the instinct long gained by his life as hunter
+and woodsman, he never crossed an open space in the forest without
+examining it well. In this glade he saw, at first glance, the signs of
+recent occupancy. The smouldering ashes of a campfire and the marks on
+the creek bank told him that a canoe party had camped there during the
+night and that they had been under way but shortly. Making sure that
+they were now out of sight he more closely examined the spot. The party
+numbered at least half a dozen, and there had been two canoes. He had
+come up the creek bank himself; therefore, not having seen the
+strangers, they had gone on ahead of him. Five miles or so up the
+stream lay the ox-bow at which his old friend Jonas Harding settled
+when he came into the Disputed Grounds, and where the widow and her
+brood now lived. After examining the camp he quickened his step toward
+the Harding place.</p>
+
+<p>A mile further on, however, he heard the stroke of paddles and the
+sound of men&#8217;s voices. He would have gone to the fringed river
+bank and peered out upon the stream had not a figure suddenly risen
+before him as though from the ground itself and barred his way.
+&#8220;How d&#8217;ye, Crow Wing!&#8221; he exclaimed, yet showing no
+surprise at the Indian youth&#8217;s appearance. The latter bore a
+brace of rabbits on his gun and Bolderwood guessed that he belonged to
+the canoe party and had left them to get this game for their
+dinner.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Umph!&#8221; returned the Indian and looked at him
+stolidly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Your people?&#8221; asked the ranger, with a gesture toward
+the river.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Umph!&#8221; was the reply. It might have meant yes or no.
+Crow Wing seemed undecided. &#8220;Why you no at Hardings?&#8221; he
+demanded finally.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m bound that a-way now,&#8221; said the white
+man.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hunting?&#8221; grunted Crow Wing.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Been up to Old Ti. Bought some land up there.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Crow Wing seemed about to pass on. But over his shoulder he said:
+&#8220;You go to Hardings&#8217; farm. They want
+you&#8211;mebbe.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What for?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Indian shrugged his shoulders and walked on. But Bolderwood
+strode after him. &#8220;What&#8217;s going on?&#8221; he asked,
+anxiously. &#8220;Who&#8217;s that out yonder?&#8221; nodding again
+toward the creek.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Umph! Men hire Crow Wing to paddle canoe. They go to
+Hardings&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yorkers!&#8221; exclaimed Bolderwood.</p>
+
+<p>But the Indian youth said no more and quickly disappeared in the
+bushes which overhung the creek. The ranger hesitated a moment,
+appeared to think of following him, and then turned abruptly and
+plunged into the forest on a course diagonal from the river. Therefore,
+when Nuck and Bryce were fighting the bears in the swamp he did not
+hear their guns, being by that time some miles away and striding
+rapidly toward Arlington. He had suspected the truth and instead of
+wasting time observing the party of which Crow Wing was a member, he
+had it in his mind to rouse the neighbors to go to the aid of the widow
+and her children. After the affair at Otter Creek, which he was sorry
+indeed to have missed, Bolderwood had expected something like the
+present raid. He, like the Hardings, believed that Simon Halpen would
+find the time ripe for the carrying out of his nefarious designs.</p>
+
+<p>It was the season of the year when the farm work having been
+completed, the pioneers felt free to go about more, and hunting was
+popular. Many men were off with their rifles; but Bolderwood picked up
+some half dozen determined fellows and hastened back to the Harding
+place. While yet some distance away they heard a rifle shot and so
+disturbed was the ranger by this, that he started on the run for the
+ox-bow farm, and was far ahead of his friends when he broke cover at
+the edge of the forest and beheld the cabin.</p>
+
+<p>His horror and despair when he saw the house wrapped in flames and
+the Yorkers running across the fields toward the river, knew no bounds.
+Yet even then he did not suppose that the widow and her family were
+within the burning dwelling. He presumed they must be hiding in the
+outbuildings and he ran on after the fleeing Yorkers, thinking only to
+take vengeance upon them for their wanton cruelty in burning down the
+poor woman&#8217;s house at the beginning of winter.</p>
+
+<p>One man kept turning back to look at the blazing structure which was
+now more than half consumed; and this fellow the ranger quickly
+overtook. It was the surveyor and he was wringing his hands and weeping
+as he ran. Bolderwood dashed past him without a word, seeing plainly
+that he was not armed and was sore frightened. &#8220;I&#8217;ll attend
+to your case later,&#8221; the ranger muttered, and spurred on after
+the rest of the party. But they were too quick for him, and having
+reached the bank of the creek leaped into their canoes and the Indians
+pushed off. The fear of what they had done pressed them hard and they
+had run like madmen from their single pursuer. Now at an order from
+Halpen the Indians stolidly paddled down the river again and were
+quickly out of sight around the nearest bend in the stream.</p>
+
+<p>Bolderwood went back and found the surveyor prone upon the ground
+and weeping like a woman. &#8220;Get up, you great ca&#8217;f!&#8221;
+cried the ranger. &#8220;Nobody&#8217;ll kill you for your part in this
+matter though you desarve little mercy.... Was that Simon
+Halpen?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It was indeed&#8211;the demon!&#8221; gasped the fellow,
+dragged unceremoniously to his feet by the borderer.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If he ever comes into this colony again I doubt but
+he&#8217;ll be hung as high as Haman,&#8221; Bolderwood declared.
+&#8220;And you were the surveyor, eh? One of Duane &amp; Kempe&#8217;s
+men? Well, sir, your back will be well tickled, or my name&#8217;s not
+&#8217;Siah Bolderwood! But bear up, man&#8211;&#8217;tis no killing
+punishment.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What, sir?&#8221; cried the fellow. &#8220;Do you think I
+weep because of your promised punishment? I fear you not&#8211;I am a
+leal subject of the King and peaceful. You cannot touch me. But I weep
+because of the work that dastard has done this day.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What do you mean?&#8221; cried Bolderwood, fiercely.
+&#8220;Where is the woman and her bairns?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The surveyor pointed a shaking finger at the cabin, the smoking
+walls of which were now all that were standing. &#8220;They are there.
+Wait! let me tell you. I had nothing to do with the dreadful work. Nor,
+indeed, did Simon Halpen mean to destroy the house and the poor woman
+and children. They meant to burn the roof off to scare them out, and
+one man threw burning clods on it. But those inside tore off the
+flaming roof and it fell all around the cabin and set the walls afire.
+They dared not run out through that wall of flame and smothered to
+death they were&#8211;God pity them!&#8221; and he began to weep aloud
+again.</p>
+
+<p>Bolderwood was speechless&#8211;well-nigh overcome, indeed, with the
+horror of this. He saw his friends appear from the wood on the other
+side of the house and he walked toward them like one in a dream. But
+still he clung to the surveyor&#8217;s arm and forced him to approach
+the cabin. The roof had, of course, been completely consumed, and the
+outside of the walls was blackened and still blazed fiercely at the
+corners. The window shutters and door were burned away and the interior
+of the place was badly demolished.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Where&#8217;s the widder and the boys?&#8221; shouted one of
+the newcomers to Bolderwood. The old ranger did not answer, but his
+hand tightened upon the surveyor&#8217;s arm. Suddenly the latter
+shrieked and would have fallen to the ground had not the grasp upheld
+him. In the door of the burning cabin stood the figure of Enoch
+Harding, his face covered with smut and his clothing half burned off
+his back. For a moment the surveyor believed the dead had risen and he
+covered his face with his hands to shut out the sight of the boy.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Are ye all alive, lad?&#8221; shouted Bolderwood, dropping
+the surveyor and running forward.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re all right, but well-nigh smothered,&#8221;
+returned Enoch, hoarsely. &#8220;Bring&#8211;bring some
+water!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He staggered out of the cabin and fell upon the ground. In a moment
+the surprised neighbors were running with buckets and pans from the
+well, for Mistress Harding&#8217;s milk vessels had been left to dry
+outside the springhouse. Bolderwood took it upon himself to revive the
+half-strangled Enoch, while the others dashed water over the
+smouldering interior of the cabin, putting out the fire on the floor
+which was burning briskly, and finally being able to draw the widow and
+the smaller children from the secret room under the hearth and carry
+them to the outer air. Here they quickly revived and Mistress Harding
+with the girls and little Harry took shelter in one of the hovels.</p>
+
+<p>The destruction of the cabin was practically complete. There was not
+a log that was not charred, and the interior furnishings of the house
+were ruined. The kind-hearted neighbors saved the chests of bedclothing
+and the family&#8217;s best garments, for the flames had not gotten at
+them. But everything was sadly smoked. And the house would have to be
+torn down and rebuilt with new timber throughout. It was a sad
+spectacle indeed for Enoch and Bryce to look upon. &#8220;I wish I had
+shot them all!&#8221; cried the latter in a rage. But Enoch said
+nothing. He would not whisper how his anger had made him aim to kill
+Simon Halpen. Now, in cool blood, he was glad that the bullet had not
+sped true.</p>
+
+<p>But the condition of the house filled him with despair. Winter was
+at hand and it would be next to impossible to build a good house before
+spring, although the timbers could be drawn and squared while the snow
+was on the ground. What would they do for a shelter until then?
+&#8220;We&#8217;ll make yonder hovel that you boys play in, all tight
+and warm for the winter, Nuck,&#8221; Bolderwood observed, seeing the
+tears running down the boy&#8217;s cheeks. &#8220;Don&#8217;t cry about
+it. And we&#8217;ll have up a better house than this in the spring,
+lad. The neighbors will all help ye.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, however, Bolderwood had kept his eye upon the surveyor.
+The latter, seeing that the family had been so miraculously saved from
+the fire, sought to get away while the men were saving those goods
+which were unconsumed. But Bolderwood was after him with mighty strides
+and dragged him back, a prisoner. &#8220;Nay, friend, you&#8217;ll be
+needed here as a witness,&#8221; he said, grimly. &#8220;We don&#8217;t
+allow such gentry as you in the Hampshire Grants without presenting you
+with a token of our respect and consideration. Ha!&#8221; he added,
+suddenly, &#8220;whom have we here?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A horseman rode quickly out of the wood and approached the burned
+cabin. Before he pulled in his steed the men welcomed him vociferously,
+for it was Captain Baker. &#8220;Look at this, &#8217;Member!&#8221;
+cried Bolderwood, dragging the trembling surveyor forward. &#8220;What
+a sight this is to blister the eyes of decent men! A poor
+widder&#8217;s house burned about her ears and only by the mercy of God
+were she and her youngsters saved.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The villains!&#8221; roared Baker. &#8220;And is that one of
+them?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He was with the party. But I truly believe that he had little
+to do with this dastardly work. He&#8217;s only a poor surveyor
+body.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll find shelter with some neighbor for Mistress
+Harding and the little ones,&#8221; said Baker, &#8220;and then attend
+to his case without delay.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But the widow was not minded to leave her homestead. It was not yet
+very cold and the hovel in which the children had had their frolic a
+fortnight before was easily made comfortable for the family. She set
+about this at once while Captain Baker and the neighbors sat in
+judgment upon the trembling surveyor. These impromptu courts held by
+the Green Mountain Boys when they happened to capture a Yorker guilty
+of meddling with the settlers, were in the nature of a court martial.
+Sometimes the sentences imposed were doubtless unjust, for the judges
+and juries were naturally bitter against the prisoners; but the
+punishment seldom went beyond a sound whipping, and in this case the
+surveyor, still sputtering and objecting to the illegal procedure, was
+sentenced to two score lashes, save one, and Enoch and Bryce selected
+the blue beech wands with which the sentence was to be carried out.</p>
+
+<p>The surveyor was taken behind the log barn, his coat and shirt
+stripped from his back, and Bolderwood and one of the other neighbors
+fulfilled the order of Captain Baker as judge of the military court.
+Bolderwood, remembering the tears the prisoner had shed when he thought
+the family burned alive, could not be too hard upon him, and although
+the woodsman made every appearance of striking tremendous blows, he
+scarce raised a welt upon the man&#8217;s back. But when the other
+executioner laid on for the last nineteen strokes, the surveyor roared
+with pain and without doubt the lesson was one which did him good. It
+would be many a day before he ventured to survey the lands east of the
+Twenty-Mile Line&#8211;at least, not until his back stopped smarting.
+Finally he was given his clothing, and part of the band marched him
+across country to the New York border and turned him loose.</p>
+
+<p>The attack of Simon Halpen upon the Hardings had practically failed.
+Yet the loss of their home was a sore blow. In a couple of days, with
+the help of Bolderwood, the old hovel was made very habitable. But it
+was small and so many of their possessions had been burned that even
+Bryce cried about it. Nevertheless their supply of food was all right,
+and the cattle had not been injured. Also, with Bolderwood&#8217;s
+assistance, the three bears which the boys had so happily killed, were
+brought home, the hams smoked, some of the meat salted, and the pelts
+stretched and dried for winter bed coverings. By the time the snow lay
+deep upon the earth the Hardings were once more comfortable.</p>
+
+<p>The boys did very little trapping and hunting that winter of
+&#8217;72-&#8217;73 for they could not attend to traps set very far
+from the ox-bow, and the Walloomscoik country was becoming scarce of
+game. &#8217;Siah Bolderwood did not go back to Old Ti, either, but
+contented himself with making short hunting trips around the lower part
+of the lake, for he spent all the time he could spare in helping the
+widow and her boys to get the timber ready for their new abode. Enoch
+and Bryce were determined that this new structure should be much better
+than the log cabin which their father had erected ten years before, and
+every timber dragged to the site by the slow moving oxen was squared
+with the broad ax and carefully fitted so as to &#8220;lock&#8221; at
+the corners. Some planks were sawed at the mill and sledded to the
+ox-bow on the ice, too, and when the plaintive call of the
+muckawis&#8211;the Indian name for the
+&#8220;whip-poor-will,&#8221;&#8211;ushered in the spring, a noble
+company of Green Mountain Boys gathered to build the widow&#8217;s
+house again.</p>
+
+<p>Although the new house was put up and made habitable in about ten
+days, it took some time to fit window-frames, build two partitions, for
+there were to be two sleeping chambers on the ground floor in this
+house, which was larger than the old structure, and lay the floor of
+the loft, build bunks to sleep in, make a new meal chest and dresser,
+and construct other articles of furniture which were needed to replace
+the stuff burned in the fire. Enoch had a mechanical turn of mind and
+Bryce made an able assistant. Between them they turned out a new table,
+several chairs with hide backs and seats, and even essayed a
+&#8220;rocker&#8221; for their mother which, although rudely built and
+with its rockers not exactly even, was declared by Mrs. Harding to be a
+marvel of workmanship.</p>
+
+<p>All these things had to be done besides the regular work of the farm
+during the spring and summer, and the studies of the older boys were
+rather neglected that year, greatly to the delight of Bryce. Indeed,
+several of their mother&#8217;s precious books had been destroyed by
+the flames, and had it not been for the sorrow he knew she felt at
+their loss, Bryce would have openly expressed his satisfaction. He was
+born for the woods and fields, and although he made no objection to
+farmwork, it was plain that his father&#8217;s roving disposition had
+entered strongly into the make-up of the lad.</p>
+
+<p>He still felt injured&#8211;indeed, the feeling grew with his own
+growth&#8211;because he was not allowed to join the military companies;
+but Mistress Harding had finally promised that if he could trap enough
+game the next winter to pay for a new gun&#8211;a rifle instead of the
+old musket which had once been Nuck&#8217;s and which their father had
+brought with him on his return from the French wars&#8211;he should be
+allowed to attend the Bennington drills. That was putting the privilege
+a year ahead, but Bryce was partially contented with it.</p>
+
+<p>Lot Breckenridge had finally been allowed to join the Green Mountain
+Boys and so Enoch had somebody in his company near his own age. On
+several occasions there were frolics in the neighborhood to which the
+young people foregathered, and before the new house was built Lot and
+Enoch had gone on a very brief hunting trio. But as fall again
+approached the two friends, Lot and Enoch, planned to go trapping on
+the upper waters of the Otter and its branches as soon as harvest and
+hog-killing should be over and the winter really set in. Lot had
+several steel traps which had belonged to his father, and Enoch was
+likewise supplied. Both had canoes, but they agreed to use
+Enoch&#8217;s only, as one was all they cared to &#8220;pack&#8221;
+over the portage to the upper Otter.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_12'></a>CHAPTER XIII<br /><span
+class='fss'>THE WOLF PACK</span></h2>
+
+<p>Meantime throughout the Grants the line between the Whigs and Tories
+had become more distinct. Although it had been forbidden for any person
+to hold office or issue writs under advice from New York, in certain
+sections where the Tory sentiment was strong, New York justices
+continued to write papers of ejectment against the Hampshire settlers,
+and other Yorkers were found to serve the documents and on occasion to
+drive helpless farmers and their families from their homes. These
+affairs went on openly in the town of Durham, which was a Tory
+stronghold.</p>
+
+<p>Justice Benjamin Spencer was the principal official who dealt out
+the New York brand of justice in this town, and he resided in the
+village of Clarendon. Early in the fall Ethan Allen and a force of
+Green Mountain Boys, appeared at Clarendon and read to the people the
+resolutions passed by the Bennington Council to the effect that no
+person should do any official act under New York authority, and that
+all lands should be held under title from New Hampshire. The Durhamites
+were threatened that, if they refused to comply with these orders
+within a reasonable time, they would be made to suffer for their
+temerity. At this visit Judge Spencer absconded, remaining away from
+home until he was sure &#8220;the awful Green Mountain outlaws&#8221;
+had decamped.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch and Lot planned their start into the woods in November, and
+they were nearly ready when the second raid on Durham was proposed. The
+boys knew that the matter had been discussed by Colonel Allen and the
+other leaders for some time, for Justice Spencer still continued to
+disobey the orders of the Council of Safety, and the matter could not
+be ignored. It was past the middle of November when the commander of
+the Green Mountain Boys and some of his followers set out in the
+direction of Durham, and Lot and Enoch hurried their own going,
+determined to hide their canoe when once they reached the Otter and
+join in the descent upon Clarendon village.</p>
+
+<p>It was eleven o&#8217;clock at night, November 20th, that Colonel
+Allen, Captain Baker, and more than a score of their friends, entered
+the settlement with all the care and circumlocution of Indians. Nuck
+and Lot Breckenridge had joined the party at supper time in a certain
+rendezvous of Allen&#8217;s in the woods, having hidden their canoe and
+traps on the bank of the Otter several miles away. The attacking force
+of Green Mountain Boys was heavily armed and might have been bound upon
+an expedition against Fort Ticonderoga itself, one might imagine. But a
+show of force was thought to be necessary to overawe the Yorkers who
+made up more than half the population of the village.</p>
+
+<p>The Green Mountain Boys awakened nobody in their approach to the
+house of Justice Spencer, until the leader himself thundered at the
+door and demanded that the New York official come down. After some
+parley, and seeing that there was no help for his case, Spencer
+descended and, as the next day was Sunday and nothing could be done
+then, the prisoner was hidden in the house of Mr. Green, some mile and
+a half from the settlement, until Monday morning. Early on that day, a
+still larger force of Grants men having gathered, as well as settlers
+whose titles had been derived from New York, Justice Spencer was taken
+to the door of his own house and tried.</p>
+
+<p>The inquest, with Allen, Warner, Baker, and Cochran, sitting in
+judgment, was carried forward with all due formality, although the
+judges were the principal accusers of the prisoners, and the sentence
+was finally pronounced that the prisoner&#8217;s house be burned and he
+himself give his bond to not again act as a New York justice. At this
+the doughty justice broke down, for he plainly saw that his captors
+were quite able, and in the mind, to carry out the sentence. He told
+the court that if his house were burned his store of dry goods and all
+his property would be destroyed and his wife and children made
+destitute.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And have you and your like not made many of our friends
+destitute?&#8221; cried some of the crowd. But more showed some heart
+for the justice, notably Captain Warner. Warner finally suggested that
+as the dry goods store was a public benefit and was one of the few
+stores in the township, it should be saved if possible; and it would be
+too hard at that time of year to turn the man and his family out of
+their home. He declared for taking off the roof of the prisoner&#8217;s
+house and then putting it on again, providing that Spencer acknowledged
+that it was put on under a New Hampshire title, and that he would
+purchase the same at once. Spencer, who might have felt some gratitude
+by this time, promised compliance in every particular, and with great
+shouting and good-nature, the roof of the house was lifted off and then
+put on again. And the lesson to the Durhamites was a salutary one.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch Harding and his chum left immediately after the settlement of
+the case and returned to their canoe. They feared the approach of a
+storm which threatened, and were desirous of building their winter camp
+and getting their traps set before the forest would be full of snow and
+the streams completely frozen. Both boys were very good woodsmen by
+this time, for Bolderwood had been Enoch&#8217;s mentor and Lot&#8217;s
+uncle was an old ranger who knew every trick of the forest and trail.
+They selected a heavily wooded gulley not far from the Otter and built
+there a log lean-to against the rocky side-hill, sheltered from the
+north and open to such sunshine as might penetrate the forest. The
+traps were set along the bank of the stream, some of them in the water
+itself, where the boys&#8217; sharp eyes told them that the fur-bearing
+game of which they were in search, were wont to pass.</p>
+
+<p>A fortnight after the Durham riot, as the Yorkers were pleased to
+call the visit of the Green Mountain Boys, the two friends were very
+cozily fixed in the gully. One heavy snow had fallen, and their traps
+had begun to repay their attention most generously. Then the Otter
+froze over solidly and they had to keep the ice open about their traps
+with the axe. They were in a lonely piece of wood and day after day saw
+nor heard nobody but themselves. The bears had taken to their long
+winter sleep; but the fierce catamount was still abroad, and at night
+the howling of the wolf-pack as it followed some hard-pressed doe or
+decrepit buck, reached the boys&#8217; ears. And at that day the
+timber-wolf of the Green Mountains&#8211;a long, lean, gray creature as
+big as a mastiff&#8211;was much to be feared.</p>
+
+<p>The traps stretched so far along the creek that if one went out
+alone to examine and bait them, almost the entire day was consumed. The
+boys did not possess ice-runners, or skates, with which they might have
+skimmed over the frozen creek and visited the traps in a couple of
+hours. Each had brought a pair of snow-shoes, but these were of no use
+on the creek. So baiting the traps was no easy task. Usually they
+divided the work between them and thus got it over and had time to
+stretch and scrape their pelts in the afternoon. One day, however, Lot
+remained at camp to make some repairs on his clothing, and Enoch set
+out early to go the rounds by himself.</p>
+
+<p>It had been a very cold night and the ice was frozen solidly about
+the traps. The catch had been good, too, and both of these facts
+delayed the young trapper more than common. There were fish lines to
+examine, also, for some of the traps were baited with fish which was
+considered particularly tempting food for certain of the beasts they
+wished to catch. It was long past noon when Enoch got back to the camp
+for dinner, and then he had gone over but half the line of traps. When
+he started in the other direction after hastily eating the meal, he
+knew he should be out until past moonrise, and told Lot so.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll come and meet you,&#8221; said his campmate.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No need. Reckon I can find my way back alone,&#8221; said
+Enoch. &#8220;The moon&#8217;ll be up by seven and it&#8217;s nigh
+full.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was so, yet Enoch had no thought when he left the camp that he
+would be as long delayed as he was. It was full moonrise, before the
+boy had examined the last trap. He had a goodly load on turning his
+face campward and was glad of the company of his rifle as he heard the
+wolves clamoring in the forest. The bitter cold would make them
+ravenous by now, for many of the more easily caught animals had retired
+for the winter, while the strong crust on the snow enabled the deer to
+outdistance their shaggy enemies. While still three miles or more from
+camp he heard the beasts howling so savagely that he really became
+alarmed and would have thrown down his pack and run had he not shrunk
+from so betraying his fear to Lot.</p>
+
+<p>He knew, too, by the nature of the wolves&#8217; cries that they
+were close on the track of some quarry, and that it could not be his
+trail they were following, for they were approaching the creek through
+the timber on the western side of the stream. But the sound of the
+chase drew rapidly nearer, and desperately as Enoch hurried he could
+not distance the pack. The western bank was high and sloping just here
+and with anxious eyes the boy looked up the white incline, where the
+trees stood rather far apart, to catch the first glimpse possible of
+the wolves and their prey. Suddenly there came into view several dark
+objects moving swiftly over the snow. One was ahead, flitting from tree
+to tree, its identity almost indistinguishable at first. Then, with
+almost a shriek of horror, Enoch recognized the wolves&#8217; quarry as
+a human being!</p>
+
+<p>The pursued was on snow-shoes and coming to a steeper part of the
+creek bank, at once slid down to the ice. After him, their red tongues
+hanging to their breasts, and baying at every leap, came a round dozen
+of the ravenous creatures. Enoch saw that the unfortunate man was armed
+with a gun, but that evidently the weapon had been injured in some way,
+for he did not make use of it to beat off the wolves. He limped as he
+ran, too, and the young trapper saw plainly that the pack would
+overtake and pull him down in a very few moments.</p>
+
+<p>Once upon the ice the beasts spread out and almost surrounded him.
+While he limped on most awkwardly, the strong, sharp claws of the
+wolves helped them over the surface and soon the leader&#8211;a gaunt,
+gray monster with cropped ears and scarred back&#8211;leaped to seize
+the prey. Enoch, without a thought of his own danger, had hurried on,
+re-priming his rifle as he ran; but he was scarcely within fair
+gun-shot when the wolf leaped. The beast caught the fugitive by the
+shoulder, and its weight dragged the man down. He tripped upon his
+snow-shoes and in an instant was falling face-downward on the ice with
+the pack of hungry beasts fighting above him!</p>
+
+<p>Enoch fired his rifle into the midst of the pack as he ran, but
+although one of the wolves rolled over, kicking convulsively upon the
+ice, the others scarcely noticed the attack. So eager were they to get
+at the quarry which they had followed far, that the shot did not
+frighten them. But the boy was among them in a moment, his gun clubbed,
+and a fierce desire in his heart to slay the horrid beasts.</p>
+
+<p>He really thought the fallen man was killed, and his attack was
+inspired wholly by a desire for revenge. He laid about him with the
+gun-stock in a most furious fashion, and the wolves were soon cleared
+from above their prostrate victim. His attack quelled the courage of
+the pack for a little, and even the leader shrank away, howling
+dolefully. But the respite was not sufficient to allow Enoch to reload
+his gun.</p>
+
+<p>When the brutes fell back, the man upon the ice showed that he was
+by no means dead, though his exhaustion was plain. He struggled to his
+knees, and reaching up seized the hunting-knife from Enoch&#8217;s
+belt, and the small axe with which the latter had cut the ice away from
+his traps. With one of these weapons in each hand he crouched in
+readiness to defend himself when the wolves should renew their
+attack.</p>
+
+<p>And he had not long to wait, for both hunger and natural ferocity
+urged them on. Suddenly the leader, with a savage snarl which fairly
+turned the blood cold in Enoch&#8217;s veins, cast itself full at
+him!</p>
+
+<p>Raised upon his hind legs the old timber-wolf, the hero of a
+thousand fights with other pack-leaders, or with the young upstarts of
+his own tribe, was fully as tall as his antagonist. The sight of its
+wide red jaws, from which the froth flew as it does from the lips of a
+mad dog, the gleaming yellow teeth, the capacious throat which seemed
+fairly to steam with the fetid breath expelled from the beast&#8217;s
+lungs, almost overcame young Harding. For the moment he was enthralled
+by the terrifying appearance of the wolf, and his arms lacked the
+strength necessary to swing his gun.</p>
+
+<p>The charge would surely have overborne him had Enoch not slipped
+upon the ice as he shrank back, and providentially he fell upon one
+knee. The wolf had sprung at his throat and the pioneer lad&#8217;s
+sinking to the ice caused the beast to leap clear over both the human
+actors in the drama. But as its lean gray body flashed past, the
+stranger reached up and with Enoch&#8217;s keen hunting-knife slit a
+great wound in the exposed body. A wild yell rose above the clamor of
+the pack and the old wolf rolled over and over on the ice in the
+agonies of death, the blood spurting from the wound at every pump of
+its heart.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'> <img src='images/i208.jpg' id="img006" alt='' /> <p class='center caption sc'>T<span class='fss'>HE</span> W<span class='fss'>OLF</span> S<span class='fss'>PRANG AT</span> H<span class='fss'>IS</span> T<span class='fss'>HROAT</span></p></div><!-- figure -->
+
+<p>Instantly half the pack sprang upon the dying leader, every male
+desiring to be master, and all doubtless bearing upon their own bodies
+marks of the wounded beast&#8217;s displeasure. This change of front
+enabled Enoch to recover both his equilibrium and his presence of mind;
+and when the other beasts gathered courage to attack him in turn, he
+was ready to beat them off with his gun and to ably assist his
+companion in continuing the slaughter. The wolf he had first shot was
+attacked by its comrades, too, for at the smell and taste of blood the
+creatures showed all the characteristics of cannibals.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, Enoch and the man crouching at his feet, had all they
+could do to defend themselves from the charges of the remaining wolves.
+If the beasts sprang high the boy met them with long-arm swings of his
+rifle; if they fell short the axe or the knife flashed and the wolves
+limped away with savage howls, their blood dyeing the frozen surface of
+the creek. For yards about the besieged the ice soon had the appearance
+of a mighty strife and although he had only received a scratch or two
+himself, Enoch was well spattered with blood.</p>
+
+<p>Hunger and the issue from their own veins drowned the natural
+cowardice of the canines. They charged blindly, and as fast as one went
+down beneath the blows of Enoch&#8217;s gun, or was seriously wounded
+by his companion, another wolf sprang to the attack. Three already lay
+dead on the ice, torn limb from limb by their comrades, and three
+others limped upon the outer edge of the circle, seriously wounded; but
+still the fierce brutes sprang at their prey, and sprang again!</p>
+
+<p>Involuntarily Enoch shouted aloud at every blow he struck, but his
+companion maintained a desperate silence. The boy did not cry out
+because he expected any aid; yet assistance was within call. A figure
+came running over the ice from up stream and the sharp crack of a rifle
+announced the approach of Lot Breckenridge, who had come out to meet
+his friend. Another wolf rolled over in the throes of death, to be
+seized by its companions and torn to pieces with horrid cries. Lot came
+on with shouts of encouragement and together with Enoch laid about him
+with clubbed rifle until the remaining wolves, their cries now turned
+to yelps of fear, stampeded from the scene of the battle and sought
+safety in the forest, from the edge of which they howled their
+disappointment at their antagonists.</p>
+
+<p>It was Lot who first regained his breath and spoke. &#8220;Zuckers!
+but that was a great fight,&#8221; he cried, hugging Enoch in his joy
+at finding him practically unhurt. &#8220;But you look as though you
+had been killin&#8217; beeves, Nuck. And who&#8217;s this with
+you?&#8221; The individual in question rose stiffly to his feet with a
+significant &#8220;Umph!&#8221; &#8220;Why!&#8221; exclaimed Lot,
+&#8220;it&#8217;s an Injin&#8211;it&#8217;s Crow Wing! Where&#8217;d
+you pick him up, Nuck?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Enoch was vastly astonished to see whom he had befriended. &#8220;I
+had no idea who it was,&#8221; he said. &#8220;How came you in this
+country, Crow Wing?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Indian, now grown to be a tall and magnificent looking warrior,
+was breathing heavily and had some difficulty in answering for a
+moment. He stood, too, on one foot, holding up his left one like a
+lamed stork. &#8220;Umph!&#8221; he grunted at last, &#8220;White boys
+in good time. Save Injin sure!&#8221; He gravely offered his hand first
+to Enoch and then to Lot. &#8220;Crow Wing lame. Hurt foot&#8211;break
+gun&#8211;wolves come howl, howl, howl! No can scare &#8217;em; no can
+make fire; no can run good. Umph!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ll have to go to our camp,&#8221; said Enoch.
+&#8220;You can&#8217;t travel on that foot. You&#8217;ve sprained or
+broken it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Crow Wing nodded. He made no sign that the foot hurt him, excepting
+by holding it off the ice. &#8220;Some wolf pelts good,&#8221; he
+remarked, sententiously.</p>
+
+<p>Lot had already turned away to examine the dead beasts. Only two
+skins were fit to be stripped from the carcasses and added to the pelts
+Enoch had brought from the traps. The two white boys quickly obtained
+these and then, with the Indian hobbling between them, and leaning on
+their shoulders, the trio made their way to camp through the moonlight,
+while the remaining wolves slunk back to the scene of the battle and
+devoured their dead comrades.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_13'></a>CHAPTER XIV<br /><span
+class='fss'>THE TESTIMONY OF CROW WING</span></h2>
+
+<p>The natures of the white man and the red are so opposed that it was
+impossible from the beginning of our North American history that either
+should really understand the sentiments and desires of the other. In
+the eyes of the Indian the most stoical and repressive white man was
+little better than a garrulous old woman. The &#8220;Yenghese,&#8221;
+as the Indians called the English, were less criticised on this point
+than were the French; but the latter, being an imitative race, more
+easily adapted themselves to the manner and life of the red man, and
+therefore won his confidence if not his respect.</p>
+
+<p>Crow Wing displayed neither astonishment at finding the two white
+boys here, nor pain at the serious accident which had overtaken him.
+And it would have been a waste of time to urge him to explain more
+fully his being in this neighborhood. When he was ready to speak he
+would do so, and long after Lot Breckenridge was asleep, rolled up in
+his blanket and with his feet to the fire which blazed at the opening
+of the hut, did Enoch wait for the story. Crow Wing waited until he had
+slowly smoked out the little brass-bowled pipe which he carried with
+tobacco in a pouch at his belt. This pouch of tobacco and another of
+parched Indian corn, were all the provisions the ordinary Indian
+carried when on the march. The forest must supply his larder from time
+to time as he had need; and if game was scarce the red man went
+uncomplainingly with empty stomach.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Harding and Lot found much pelt?&#8221; he said,
+questioningly, waving his hand at the bales of furs in the back of the
+shelter.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;So-so. We can&#8217;t complain, Crow Wing. You were trapping,
+too?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yonder,&#8221; replied the Indian, pointing to the west.
+&#8220;Crow Wing look at trap; wolves met him; wolves very hungry; make
+much mad when hungry. Umph!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And they attacked you right away?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Umph! Me shoot; then club gun. Hit tree first time; break
+gun; then run some more. Catch foot and fall; much hurt. That
+all.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Are you alone at your camp yonder?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Umph!&#8221; said the Indian, nodding affirmatively.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You had better stay here till your foot&#8217;s well. I
+reckon that gun can be repaired, too. Only the stock is
+broken.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Indian&#8217;s eyes gleamed, showing that this statement pleased
+him vastly. Crow Wing&#8217;s &#8220;fire-tube&#8221; was his most
+precious possession. &#8220;Me thought no good,&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I know of a man in Bennington who can fix it,&#8221; declared
+Enoch. &#8220;Have you many pelts at your camp?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>On his fingers Crow Wing showed how many beaver skins, otter pelts,
+wolf hides, and other and less worthy furs, he had obtained. He also
+stated that he had three steel wolf traps and two beaver or otter traps
+which he had obtained from a farmer for whom he had worked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We can bring &#8217;em all over here. Lot and I will go for
+them. You can&#8217;t get around on that foot much for several weeks.
+It&#8217;s bad. You &#8217;tend camp and stretch pelts, while Lot and I
+look out for the traps. Then, when we go home, you take one third of
+the pelts.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Crow Wing thought of this silently for a moment and then held out
+his hand with gravity. &#8220;Good! Crow Wing go to Bennington with
+Harding and Lot; sell pelts there and get gun fixed. Umph!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Although Enoch had suggested this scheme upon his own responsibility
+he knew Lot would agree to it. Really, it was a good thing for all
+three. Crow Wing&#8217;s gun was useless, and his lame foot made
+traveling next to impossible for a while. But he could keep camp all
+right and look after the pelts. The traps the Indian had would be of
+much service to the white boys and would increase their own gains not a
+little. So upon this amicable basis the Indian joined the party and the
+next day Lot and Enoch, directed by Crow Wing, traveled to the
+Indian&#8217;s camp and packed back both the traps and the skins.</p>
+
+<p>The boys learned that Crow Wing&#8217;s people now resided in New
+York colony, on the shores of Lake George, and that the young warrior
+had not been east of the Twenty-Mile Line since the raid of Simon
+Halpen upon the Widow Harding&#8217;s cabin. By patient questioning
+Enoch learned that Halpen had lived for months at a time with the
+tribe, but that he was not an adopted member of it, and was not
+altogether trusted by Crow Wing&#8217;s people.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;When burn cabin, old chief&#8211;my father&#8211;be told.
+Injins friends with Bennin&#8217;ton men; friends with York men, too.
+But Hawknose,&#8221; the Indian&#8217;s sobriquet for Simon Halpen,
+&#8220;sent away. He never come back.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You have hunted with him?&#8221; said Enoch, with some
+eagerness. &#8220;You were with him that day&#8211;you know&#8211;long
+ago; the day the Yorkers came up to James Breckenridge&#8217;s
+farm?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Crow Wing made no reply for some time, gazing with gloomy eyes into
+the fire. Finally he said, speaking in an oracular manner, yet brokenly
+as he always did, for the English tongue was hard to him: &#8220;Jonas
+Harding not friend to Injin; Injin not friend to him. You friend to
+Crow Wing. You fight Crow Wing; fight &#8217;um fair; when foot well we
+fight once more? Umph!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Enoch laughed. &#8220;I&#8217;ll wrastle you any time you like, Crow
+Wing. But you can beat me running.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Indian, undisturbed, went on: &#8220;You not like father; you
+not speak Injin like he be slave-man; Injin free!&#8221; and he said it
+proudly, for the redskins looked down upon the negroes because they
+were the slaves of the colonists. &#8220;Hawknose no like Jonas
+Harding; he own your land; he buy it from Great Father of York and he
+buy it from Injin. All land Injin&#8217;s once,&#8221; he added, with a
+cloud upon his face. &#8220;Injin come with Hawknose to measure land;
+white man bring little thing to measure it; Jonas Harding throw
+Hawknose in creek and more white men beat him. White man, like Injin,
+feel he squaw when beat. Hawknose mad; tell Injin he kill Jonas
+Harding; drive you from land.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But father was killed by a buck in the forest,&#8221; said
+Enoch, carefully hiding the emotion he felt.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Umph!&#8221; grunted Crow Wing, and would say nothing further
+at the time.</p>
+
+<p>Lot, although he had been often a companion of the Indian when the
+latter lived near his uncle&#8217;s farm, looked upon him just as he
+did upon Sambo, Breckenridge&#8217;s slave boy. He had played with him,
+swam with him, learned to use the bow and arrow under Crow Wing&#8217;s
+instruction, and had gained something of forest lore from the Indian
+youth; but he had no respect for him, or for his peculiarities. He had
+not learned at &#8217;Siah Bolderwood&#8217;s knee of the really
+admirable qualities of these people whom the whites were pleased to
+call &#8220;savages.&#8221; Lot made no objection to Crow Wing&#8217;s
+joining them, for his presence, and the use of his traps, was a very
+good thing for them. He patronized the Indian, however, and was not
+above suggesting that, as the redman was so ignorant, it would not
+really be necessary to divide the pelts in even thirds at the end of
+the season.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The trader won&#8217;t give him but about so much for them,
+anyway, no matter how many he offers,&#8221; he said to Enoch.
+&#8220;You know how it is with them. Injins can&#8217;t count and the
+traders fool &#8217;em and cheat &#8217;em. We&#8217;d better take some
+of his ourselves and so get some good out of them.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That isn&#8217;t honest, Lot!&#8221; cried Enoch, hotly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Huh! it&#8217;s honest enough. We won&#8217;t be cheating the
+Injin, for they&#8217;ll do him no good. And there&#8217;s no use in
+the traders makin&#8217; so much on him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then we&#8217;ll go with him and see that the traders treat
+him honestly,&#8221; declared young Harding.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Zuckers!&#8221; exclaimed the careless Lot. &#8220;Catch me
+putting myself out that way for a redskin.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re glad enough to use his traps, Lot!&#8221; cried
+Enoch. And the two old friends came very near having a falling out over
+the matter. Lot simply followed the example of the older settlers whom
+he knew. It was no particular sin to cheat an Indian. They were too
+much like children to look out for themselves in a bargain, anyway.</p>
+
+<p>But as week followed week, Crow Wing&#8217;s manner toward Enoch
+Harding showed that he had adopted him, Indian fashion, as
+&#8220;brother.&#8221; Not that the red youth displayed any affection;
+that was beneath a brave. But he appreciated Enoch&#8217;s respectful
+treatment of him. Crow Wing treasured this in his mind and, when the
+spring came, and they packed their bales of furs by canoe and hand-sled
+to Bennington, and Enoch took pains to make the traders pay the Indian
+quite as liberally as they did Lot and himself for his furs, his
+gratitude blossomed in its fulness.</p>
+
+<p>Lot went home to see his mother; but Enoch took Crow Wing to the
+Harding house with him and gave him an old canoe in which the red youth
+could make his way by water and portage to his home on the shores of
+Lake George. Crow Wing did not go near the house when Enoch met his
+mother and the younger Hardings after his long absence; but he sat down
+to dinner with them and if he used his fingers oftener than his hunting
+knife to prepare his food it was not remarked, for forks were not
+always used by the settlers themselves at that day. His gravity awed
+the younger children, while Bryce admired his proportions openly. The
+Indian youth was certainly a magnificently built fellow.</p>
+
+<p>Before he went away he sat beside the creek and silently smoked a
+farewell pipe while his white friend waited for his last words. Enoch
+believed Crow Wing had something to tell him regarding Simon Halpen and
+that the time for speech had come; but knowing his nature the white
+youth had not tried to hurry this confidence.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hawknose come here once more&#8211;what you do?&#8221; Crow
+Wing asked, when the pipe was finished.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Simon Halpen is my enemy. If you have an enemy what do you
+do?&#8221; returned Enoch, with some emotion.</p>
+
+<p>The Indian nodded. &#8220;Hawknose, Jonas Harding&#8217;s enemy. No
+deer kill Jonas Harding. Hawknose yonder then,&#8221; and he waved his
+hand toward the deer-lick at which the dead settler had been found
+three years before.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How does Crow Wing know that?&#8221; queried the white boy,
+eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Crow Wing there, too.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You saw him&#8213;&#8221; began Enoch, but the Indian cut him
+short with an emphatic &#8220;Umph! No see. Hear shot. Shot kill doe.
+Jonas Harding kill doe. Gun empty.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, we found the gun and the dead doe. And there were marks
+of a big buck all about the place and father&#8211;was dead.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hawknose there,&#8221; said the Indian, gravely. &#8220;Crow
+Wing see him&#8211;running. Pass him&#8211;so,&#8221; with a gesture
+which led Enoch to believe that the running Halpen had crossed the
+Indian&#8217;s path within a few feet. &#8220;He no see Crow Wing. He
+run fast&#8211;look back over shoulder. And blood&#8211;blood on
+shirt&#8211;blood on hands&#8211;blood on gun! Go wash &#8217;em in
+river. Then run more.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You saw him running away from the lick?&#8221; gasped Enoch.
+&#8220;But there were no footprints but father&#8217;s near the place.
+Only the hoof prints of the big buck.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Umph! Crow Wing no see big deer; no hear &#8217;um. But see
+Hawknose run,&#8221; said the Indian significantly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But I can&#8217;t understand how Halpen could have killed
+him, Crow Wing. He did not shoot him, and if he had been near enough to
+strike father down, why did his moccasins leave no mark?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Indian rose gravely. &#8220;Some time we see. Crow Wing come
+back here. Harding go with him to deer-lick. Look, look&#8211;find out,
+mebbe.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But after three years how can anything be found?&#8221;
+demanded Enoch, in despair.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Will see,&#8221; returned Crow Wing, and, without further
+word, entered the canoe and pushed out into the river. Nor did he turn
+about to look at the white youth once while the canoe was in sight. But
+he left Enoch Harding stirred to his depths by the brief and
+significant conversation. The youth did not understand how Simon Halpen
+could have compassed his father&#8217;s death; yet Crow Wing evidently
+suspected something which he had not seen fit to divulge.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_14'></a>CHAPTER XV<br /><span
+class='fss'>THE STORM CLOUD GATHERS</span></h2>
+
+<p>Enoch scarce knew Bryce after his winter&#8217;s absence. The
+younger boy had felt the responsibility of his position as head of the
+family pro tem and although he had lost none of his cheeriness and love
+of action, he had gained some cautiousness. His care for little Henry
+and the girls was delightful and Mrs. Harding was undoubtedly proud of
+him. Although kept at home almost continually by his duties, Bryce had
+been able to trap enough beavers to buy the rifle which he had long
+wanted and on the first training day after the roads dried up in the
+spring, he went with Enoch to Bennington and was enrolled in Captain
+Baker&#8217;s company.</p>
+
+<p>And during this year of &#8217;74 the train bands became of more
+importance than ever before. While in Boston and in other cities of the
+colonies, meetings were held in secret and companies of minute men were
+drilled by stealth, here in the Grants the Whigs trained openly, and
+the reason for it was known, too. The course of the foolish King and
+his ministers was widening the breach between the mother country and
+the American colonies until, when the Continental Congress met on
+September 5th of this year, royal authority was suspended almost
+everywhere but in the New York Colony. Within its confines were the
+strongest and most influential Tories, while the Dutch, who made up a
+goodly share of the population, although becoming good patriots in the
+end and warmly supporting the struggling nation which was born of that
+Congress, were phlegmatic of nature and slow to rouse.</p>
+
+<p>During these months so pregnant with coming trouble, the controversy
+between the land jobbers and the Grants waned but little. The Yorkers
+had received so many sharp lessons, however, that they were careful to
+attack no settlers who were within reach of assistance from any body of
+Green Mountain Boys. And as Allen, Warner, and Cochran had many
+&#8220;hide-outs&#8221; in the hills, where they kept munitions of war
+and to which they summoned their followers by means which actually
+seemed to savor of the Black Art to their enemies, it was difficult for
+the Yorkers to know where it was really safe to carry on their attacks
+against the peaceful grantees. Being &#8220;viewed&#8221; became a most
+serious matter indeed, and many a luckless surveyor or other underling
+of the sheriff of Albany, carried the blue-seal of the Green Mountain
+Boys upon his person for months after an unexpected meeting with those
+rangers of the forest.</p>
+
+<p>But the Yorkers kept away from Benningford and the surrounding
+district. More farms had been taken up there by Hampshire grantees than
+in other parts of the disputed ground and the reign of the Green
+Mountain Boys was supreme. The Hardings had been very happy since the
+building of the new house, and, as there had been a school established
+in the vicinity, the girls and Harry attended for six months in the
+year. Kate had grown to be a tall girl and looked like her mother,
+while Mary and Harry were becoming of considerable use outside of, as
+well as in, the house.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch and Bryce cleared a piece of woodland that year and late in
+the fall there was another stump-burning. &#8217;Siah Bolderwood came
+down from his &#8220;farm&#8221; near Old Ti to join in the
+festivities; but several of the young people who had attended the
+stump-burning three years before were not present. Robbie Baker was up
+north with his father, and Lot Breckenridge had moved away from the
+vicinity of Bennington; Crow Wing did not come to try his skill at
+wrestling with Enoch, so the latter sat by with &#8217;Siah as one of
+the judges, for he was older than the other contestants. Lot&#8217;s
+mother had married a man named Lewis who owned and worked a farm much
+nearer the Connecticut River, in the town of Westminster, and after his
+return from their winter&#8217;s trapping the spring before, Lot had
+gone across the mountains to work for his stepfather.</p>
+
+<p>Lot had always been his dearest friend and Enoch missed him sorely,
+and as he could not go trapping with him this winter, he agreed to
+visit Westminster for a fortnight or so, some time during the idle
+months. It was March when he started to cross the range and although
+the roads were still full of snow, he went horseback. A sleigh was a
+luxury that few Bennington people owned, although Nuck might have
+hitched the old wood-sled to Dobbin. He spent one night at a
+farmer&#8217;s on the road, and was welcomed at supper time the next
+evening at the Lewis house.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Zuckers!&#8221; exclaimed Lot, running out to drag his friend
+off his horse, &#8220;I tell ye, I&#8217;m glad to see ye! And
+so&#8217;ll marm be&#8211;if the young uns don&#8217;t bother her too
+much. There&#8217;s three Lewis young uns, too, besides the baby, and I
+tell ye, they&#8217;re a wild lot. I&#8217;d rayther tackle them wolves
+that you&#8217;n Crow Wing got mixed up with last winter. Seen the
+Injin since?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not since I sent him home with more money than he had ever
+seen before in his life,&#8221; replied Enoch.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Very foolish of you! We might have had some of his pelts just
+as well&#8217;s not.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t mean that, Lot,&#8221; said Enoch, who knew
+that young Breckenridge talked a deal more recklessly than he really
+felt.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, never mind all that,&#8221; said Lot. &#8220;Tell me
+the news. What&#8217;s goin&#8217; on &#8217;tother side the mountings?
+Did ye know that lots more red-coats had come to Boston? And they
+say&#8211;leastways, a pedlar that come through here told us so last
+week&#8211;that the Boston folks have got a lot of guns and ammunition
+stored in the country towns and the minute men are drilling day and
+night. Do you s&#8217;pose there&#8217;ll be war there,
+Nuck?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If the Massachusetts people feel like we do here in the
+Grants, there&#8217;ll be fighting,&#8221; said Enoch, his eyes
+flashing. &#8220;What d&#8217;you suppose would happen if troops were
+quartered on us?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m goin&#8217; to Boston if there&#8217;s a
+fight,&#8221; declared his friend. &#8220;Mr. Lewis says I can.
+He&#8217;s a nice man&#8211;marm&#8217;s second husband&#8211;and
+he&#8217;s strong for the Grants, too. He&#8217;s got a Hampshire
+title. But there&#8217;s lots of Tories around here. The court&#8217;s
+goin&#8217; to sit next week an&#8217; there&#8217;ll be trouble then,
+mark my word. Lots of the cases these Tories have hatched up against
+our people are goin&#8217; to be tried, an&#8217; the Whigs ain&#8217;t
+goin&#8217; to stand it. Judge Chandler ain&#8217;t so bad a man; but
+Judge Sabin and the others are dead set ag&#8217;in all our folks. They
+say the sheriff has sworn in a big lot of deperties. Mebbe you&#8217;ll
+see some fun before you go back to Bennington, Nuck.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>As Lot&#8217;s idea of &#8220;fun&#8221; was pretty sure to be a
+scrimmage of some kind, it can be easily seen how strained the
+relations were then between the Whigs and the Tory court of the
+district. Whereas Tories and Whigs had lived at peace before, now they
+became bitter in controversy and even families were divided upon the
+questions of the hour.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch found Lot&#8217;s stepfather to be a very quiet, pleasant man,
+who made it a point to be at harmony with all his neighbors, yet whose
+personal feelings and opinions as a Whig were well known. Lot delighted
+in being where the older men of the community discussed the trend of
+public affairs and it was due to him that Enoch, the second night after
+his arrival, gained some little notoriety in Westminster by an
+encounter he had at the Royal Inn, kept by one John Norton.</p>
+
+<p>The tap-room and parlors of the inn were occupied every evening at
+this time by the men of Westminster, and by certain visitors who had,
+for some days, been gathering for the meeting of the General Court. And
+all these visitors were not attorneys, or plaintiffs and defendants in
+the several cases which would come up for hearing before their Worships
+the justices. The sheriff was already at Westminster and there were
+more armed men about the town than had ever been seen there before at
+one time. Until the closing hour earnest discussions were carried on in
+the inn, for although the Royal, or &#8220;Norton&#8217;s house&#8221;
+as it was called, was the headquarters of the Tories, many Whigs
+frequented it, too. Naturally, the young men and half-grown boys wished
+to listen on the outskirts of these groups, and Lot Breckenridge was
+desirous of hearing all that went on. Enoch went with him to the inn
+rather against his will. Mistress Harding did not approve of such
+places for youths and Enoch had not grown so old or so big as to wish
+to disobey his mother, or even to believe that she was less able to
+guide him than she had formerly been.</p>
+
+<p>The inn was well filled, indeed, that night and Master Norton was
+bustling about from group to group, dropping a word here and another
+there, determined to keep all his guests pleased as maybe; for despite
+his Tory principles, the innkeeper was first for his own pocket and
+would not antagonize any man knowingly. Mine Host was particularly
+attentive to a party of ten or a dozen gentlemen who, having eaten, now
+sat grouped before one of the fires engaged in earnest, and somewhat
+noisy, conversation. The figure of the sheriff was the centre of this
+group.</p>
+
+<p>Lot and Enoch stood with other young men within ear-shot and heard
+many remarks which plainly showed the affiliation of the sheriff and
+his friends to the Tory cause; and the party had dined so well that
+they were not particularly careful to modulate their voices so that
+others in the vicinity who might be of a different mind, should not
+overhear them. The sheriff was a pompous man who, when he spoke,
+commanded the attention of all about him. The dignity of his office
+rode him hard and his companions deferred to him almost servilely, for
+at that day such an officer was held in great reverence, especially by
+the King&#8217;s adherents.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;These malcontents who would question the right of the King to
+govern them, should be punished, every man Jack of them!&#8221; the
+sheriff declared, looking about fiercely at his auditors. &#8220;I care
+not who they are, nor how high they stand. That Dr. Warren and Mr. Otis
+of Boston are gentlemen of education and position I grant ye; but they
+should feel the heavy hand of the law nevertheless&#8211;yes, sir! And
+some of these fellows who have gone to Philadelphia and are making such
+a rumpus there&#8211;they should be taught their place!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That they should, Master Sheriff!&#8221; cried one of his
+supporters.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The King&#8217;s men treated that Otis just right some months
+back,&#8221; growled another&#8211;a man who sat back in the shadow of
+the high mantel and wore a cloak, the high collar of which half muffled
+his face. At the speech of this one Enoch, who had been dragging at the
+sleeve of his companion to get him away, ceased this and pushed forward
+himself. Something in the tone of the last speaker&#8217;s voice had
+attracted his attention and he strove to see his features.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They should be whipped&#8211;every man Jack of them!&#8221;
+cried the sheriff, repeating his favorite expression.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Better let Ethan Allen and his boys beech-seal them, eh, Sir
+Sheriff?&#8221; cried some Whig on the outskirts of the group, and a
+laugh was raised among those of like feeling.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We shall settle that villain Allen&#8211;we shall settle him,
+sir!&#8221; declared the sheriff, angrily. &#8220;The Honorable Court
+will punish these fellows who retain their lands without proper
+authority from the King and our Governor. There will be an overturn in
+these Grants ere long&#8211;mark my word, sir!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The dogs should be driven back to Massachusetts and
+Connecticut&#8211;where they came from,&#8221; growled the man with the
+cloak.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s true!&#8221; exclaimed several of the group.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Aye, and the time approaches when it may be done,&#8221;
+cried the sheriff.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But what think you Ethan Allen, Seth Warner, &#8217;Member,
+and the rest of the boys will be doing, Sir Sheriff?&#8221; demanded
+the same Whig who had before spoken.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They&#8217;ll be clapped into Albany jail&#8211;that&#8217;s
+what will become of them!&#8221; declared the sheriff.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And a right good place for them,&#8221; said he of the cloak.
+Enoch was still maneuvring to get a sight of this man, but the shadow
+of the high mantel was cast across his face. All the boy could see was
+the gleam of his eyes as he turned with an angry gesture toward the
+audience. &#8220;The boldness of these outlaws is
+astonishing.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That Allen appears to have many followers,&#8221; suggested a
+mild mannered man beside the sheriff.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He is a bully; they fear him!&#8221; declared the former
+speaker, vigorously.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How is that, John Norton?&#8221; cried the Whig, who
+evidently was a bold man to so flout the sheriff and his friends.
+&#8220;You know Colonel Allen personally. Should you call him a bully
+and say that he governs men by fear?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not I!&#8221; exclaimed the innkeeper. &#8220;And saving your
+presence, sheriff, it would be a man of some stomach who would dare say
+that to Ethan Allen&#8217;s face. As for these same Green Mountain
+Boys, it is not fear that keeps them together.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I tell you they are a set of masterless villains!&#8221;
+cried the dark man, turning angrily about so that at last the collar of
+his cloak fell back. &#8220;They should be driven out of the colony and
+their houses burned to the ground&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he stopped. His harsh voice died to a whisper and his
+astonished companions looked at him in amazement. For a moment he
+seemed to have been frozen in his chair, and their eyes following his
+glance fell upon the white and angry face of Enoch Harding who had
+pushed through the ring of listeners. &#8220;And it is you who would
+set the torch to their homes!&#8221; exclaimed the youth, his voice
+shaking. &#8220;You already have one count of the kind against you, and
+if you ever come to Bennington again there&#8217;ll be more than a
+beech-sealing awaiting you&#8211;you villain!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Some of the crew sprang up in astonishment, and some in anger.
+&#8220;Who is that bold rascal, landlord?&#8221; demanded the sheriff.
+&#8220;Bring him here.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But Lot had fairly dragged the angry Enoch to the door and now
+pushed him out of the inn. &#8220;What&#8217;s the matter with you,
+Nuck?&#8221; he demanded. &#8220;D&#8217;you want to get us all into
+trouble?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s Simon Halpen!&#8221; exclaimed Enoch, panting
+with excitement. &#8220;I&#8217;d have flown at his throat in another
+moment.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Zuckers!&#8221; exclaimed Lot. &#8220;The feller that burned
+down your marm&#8217;s house? Don&#8217;t blame ye for bein&#8217; mad.
+But ye don&#8217;t wanter stir up a fuss here. Our game is ter lay low
+and let the Tories start the row if they&#8217;re minded to.
+You&#8217;ll see. Mr. Lewis an&#8217; some others is goin&#8217; to see
+the judges to-morrow an&#8217; try to keep the court from
+sittin&#8217;. They&#8217;ll sure be trouble if the Tories bring our
+people before the court. We can&#8217;t git no fair trial, so we
+won&#8217;t be tried at all.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Enoch was very silent on the way back to Lot&#8217;s house. The
+shock of seeing Simon Halpen again after all this time, had stirred the
+youth greatly. Despite the fact that the villain was so far away from
+the Walloomscoik, and would probably not dare go near Bennington, Enoch
+could not help feeling troubled by the circumstance of his presence
+within the borders of the Grants. And he was glad that &#8217;Siah
+Bolderwood had promised to remain at or near the Hardings&#8217; home
+while he, Enoch, was at Westminster.</p>
+
+<p>Under Lot&#8217;s advice the two boys said nothing of the little
+scene at the inn and the next morning Mr. Lewis went with other stable
+men of the town to call upon the justices who would preside at the
+court when it met. The feeling between Whigs and Tories was so strong
+that all peace-loving men feared bloodshed. At the first blow a
+terrible civil war might begin&#8211;a war in which neighbor would
+engage with neighbor and the community be utterly ruined. And if the
+court sat and tried the cases against those settlers who refused to
+purchase New York titles to their lands, or to leave their homes at the
+order of the sheriff and his deputies, the battle would begin. Nobody
+could doubt that.</p>
+
+<p>Despite the fact that the offices were held by the Tories, the Whigs
+were greatly in the majority. And this majority declared the will of
+the people should be upheld, and that will was that no court should sit
+until matters quieted down and the heat had gone out of the political
+veins of the community. They presented this matter strongly to the
+judges and warned them of what might be expected if the court undertook
+to sit at Westminster. Although staunch Tories, the judges were
+impressed by what was told them by the committee; Justice Chandler,
+indeed, gave his word that nothing should be done toward convening the
+court until time had been given the people to cool down. It was
+promised, too, that the sheriff and his men should not be given a free
+hand in the town.</p>
+
+<p>With these assurances from Judge Chandler the committee of Whigs
+returned. To make sure that the sheriff, who with his men were spending
+every day and night at the Royal Inn, did not seize the court-house in
+defiance of the people&#8217;s will, the Whigs sent a guard to that
+building on the evening of the 13th&#8211;the day before that set for
+the convening of the court. This guard, however, was armed only with
+clubs, and was set to keep the troublesome factions of both parties in
+order, and was recruited from among the better affected families of the
+town. Lot Breckenridge and Enoch were allowed by Mr. Lewis to join
+these volunteers.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_15'></a>CHAPTER XVI<br /><span
+class='fss'>THE WESTMINSTER MASSACRE</span></h2>
+
+<p>What March 5, 1770, had been to the people of Boston and the Colony
+of Massachusetts, March 14, 1775, was destined to become to the patriot
+citizens of Vermont. That date reminds them to-day of the first blood
+shed in the great struggle within the borders of the Grants&#8211;the
+first pitched battle between American yeomanry and the minions of a
+cruel and tyrannical king. Before the martyrs were shot down at
+Lexington was the Westminster Massacre&#8211;an incident which set the
+torch to the passions of the Whigs throughout the Grants.</p>
+
+<p>Despite the efforts of Judge Chandler, who really was honestly bent
+on peace, the associate Judge Sabin and the fire-eating sheriff brought
+about that clash of arms, the stain of which was to be wiped out by
+nearly eight years of bitter war. The Tory officials and their henchmen
+gathered about the court-house when it was known that the Whigs had
+seized it, and threatened an attack early in the evening of the 13th;
+but apparently willing to abide by the decision of the chief justice,
+they dispersed after that worthy had promised the Whigs that nothing
+should be done to oust them from the premises until the following day.
+Chandler doubtless went to his repose, believing that his partisans
+would uphold him in his promise.</p>
+
+<p>But the sheriff had other views. He had gathered a noble army at
+John Norton&#8217;s inn. There were no Whigs there that night. They
+sought other houses of entertainment, or their own homes, for their
+leaders had counseled moderation. But the wily sheriff finally gave his
+orders, and those orders were inspired by Judge Sabin and other rank
+Tories. Separating as they issued from the inn into three bodies, the
+sheriff&#8217;s men approached the guarded court-house from as many
+directions and were thundering at the doors before the Whigs were aware
+that such treachery was intended. There was not a fire-arm in the
+court-house, but when called upon to surrender the guard refused and
+strove to barricade the entrance.</p>
+
+<p>Although the young men had expected nothing like this, they had not
+taken their duty lightly. They were of the best Whig families of the
+neighborhood and had not accepted the responsibility as a lark. Enoch
+became acquainted with one of his companions early in the evening who,
+because of his open face, free and gentle manner, and earnest
+conversation impressed the Bennington boy as being a youth of better
+parts than were most of the backwoods people. Lot told his guest that
+this individual was William French, the son of a Mr. Nathaniel French,
+a man well known and respected highly by his neighbors. Like Lot, young
+French was deeply interested in the affairs of the colonies, especially
+in what was occurring in and about Boston. He had planned to go to the
+Massachusetts colony and offer his services to the Committee of Safety
+there if war really became imminent, though he would go, Enoch saw, in
+a much different spirit from Lot&#8217;s. Lot was eager for a fight for
+the fight&#8217;s sake; but French realized the root of the trouble and
+espoused the cause of the persecuted colonists from principle.</p>
+
+<p>It was eleven o&#8217;clock at night when the sheriff and his men
+attacked the Whig guards, and many of the latter were asleep. The
+uproar was great as the besieged tried to keep the Tories out of the
+building; but the latter were reckless and knew that they had to do
+with a practically helpless enemy. They forced an entrance, though the
+Whigs rallied well and delivered some telling blows with their clubs.
+These blows doubtless had much to do with what followed, for the
+sheriff&#8217;s men became greatly incensed. All the lights in the
+house were put out and for several moments the antagonists fought in
+the dark. Enoch was not behind in the battle and was one of those in
+the front rank which strove to beat the sheriff&#8217;s men back to the
+door. William French fought next him, while he could hear his friend
+Lot shouting encouragement not far away.</p>
+
+<p>The Tories were under a disadvantage in the dark and some of those
+still without ran with torches and thrust them in, that the
+battleground might be illumined. At that the sheriff, spurred by rage
+and the smart of a blow he had received, cried to his men: &#8220;Fire!
+Fire at the rascals who defy the law&#8217;s authority!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Some of his men took him at his word and putting their pieces to
+their shoulders, they had been using them as clubs, shot blank-point
+into the group of opposing Whigs!</p>
+
+<p>It was a terrible scene that followed. Several men fell about Enoch,
+and groans and cries rose from the wounded. A bullet had sent
+Enoch&#8217;s cap spinning into the air, but he did not notice that.
+Young William French had fallen beside him and the Bennington boy
+stooped and caught the young man&#8217;s head and shoulders from the
+floor that he might not be trampled upon.</p>
+
+<p>Shouts and imprecations deafened him. The Whigs still fought, but
+some had already tried to escape by a side passage and were being
+brought back by the sheriff&#8217;s men. That wicked man was calling
+upon the Whigs to surrender, and more than one shot was fired after
+that first volley.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch, with the head of the bleeding youth in his arms, cried to
+those about him to move aside and bring a light. All were too much
+inflamed by passion to heed him for a time; but suddenly one man sprang
+forward and thrust a huge, brass-locked pistol into his own face. The
+boy was frightened, and strove to throw himself backward out of range;
+but the pistol snapped!</p>
+
+<p>Providentially the weapon was either unloaded, or the powder was
+damp. Otherwise that moment would have ended Enoch Harding&#8217;s
+earthly career. And in the flash of torchlight which was an instant
+later cast upon the scene, the startled boy recognized the dark
+features and hawk nose of Simon Halpen. The villain had sought him out
+and had striven to pay off old scores in that moment of confusion and
+uproar.</p>
+
+<p>But the confusion helped Enoch to escape, too. Lot seized his
+shoulder and dragged him up from his knees. &#8220;Let him alone, poor
+chap!&#8221; he whispered hoarsely in his friend&#8217;s ear, and Enoch
+saw that he was crying, &#8220;Let him alone. He is dead. Oh, these
+villains shall be punished for this&#8211;they shall be punished! War
+has begun, Nuck&#8211;and we have seen its beginning!&#8221; In his
+horror and despair Lot Breckenridge was prophetic. War had begun; the
+first blood of the revolution&#8211;antedating in its sacrifice the
+Battle of Lexington&#8211;had been shed.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, Lot and Enoch were fortunate to escape from the building,
+for ten of the Whigs had been wounded beside poor French, and seven of
+the remaining were taken prisoner. The town was roused and a great
+concourse of people gathered in the streets. The sheriff and his men
+were loudly execrated, and even some of the Tories expressed their
+indignation. The men who had done the deed were forced to remain under
+cover for the rest of the night while the alarm went into all the
+countryside and by daybreak the patriot farmers were pouring into
+Westminster&#8211;a horde of indignant citizens before whom the Tory
+officials trembled.</p>
+
+<p>The very judges themselves were taken into custody and had not the
+better counsel of the staid and solid men prevailed, the sheriff and
+those who aided him might have been hung to a gibbet erected in the
+court-house yard. On the fifteenth Captain Cochran and forty Green
+Mountain Boys, who had been apprised of the terrible affair, marched
+over the mountain to arraign themselves upon the side of the Whigs if
+the matter should come to real warfare. But fortunately further
+bloodshed was averted, and never again did a Tory judiciary hold court
+in Eastern Vermont.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch went back to Bennington with some of Robert Cochran&#8217;s
+company. News of the Westminster affair had preceded him and the
+Catamount Inn was thronged with earnest men discussing the matter and
+various other news-packets which had lately come from other colonies.
+War with the mother country seemed inevitable and Ethan Allen and men
+of his stamp looked forward to it not without some eagerness. It was
+not that they were reckless and irresponsible, or did not understand
+the terrible situation in which the colonies might find themselves
+should the mother country send across the sea a great army. But in the
+coming struggle they beheld the salvation of their own people and of
+the Hampshire Grants.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore, perhaps even previous to this time, immediately following
+the Westminster Massacre, these leaders had earnestly discussed the
+possibilities of war and what the Green Mountain Boys could do to
+further the cause of the colonies. On the shores of the beautiful lake
+which was the colonists&#8217; boast, were two of the strongest
+fortresses&#8211;or two which had been and could be made again the
+strongest&#8211;of the New World, Ticonderoga and Crown Point. At Old
+Ti were many stores and munitions of war and the place was held by a
+comparatively small guard of red-coats who had a great contempt for,
+and therefore small appreciation of, the valor of the colonials.</p>
+
+<p>With these circumstances in mind Old Ti was already an object of the
+conferences of Vermont&#8217;s leading men. Possessing that fortress,
+Crown Point, and Skenesboro, the lake would be free of British and the
+way to Canada open; and at that early date it was strongly believed by
+the patriots that the French descendants of the early settlers of
+Canada would join the Colonies in their fight for freedom.</p>
+
+<p>Young Enoch Harding did not see the leaders as he passed through
+Bennington; but he was waylaid there a dozen times, and upon his road
+home, to satisfy the curiosity and interest of his neighbors in the
+Westminster trouble. Letters from Boston had roused them to the highest
+pitch, too. Nor were his mother and Bryce any less anxious to hear and
+discuss the news. Mistress Harding had lived within a few miles of
+Boston and felt a deep interest still in the people and the affairs of
+the Massachusetts Colony. That a foreign soldiery should have been
+landed on her shores fired even this good and gentle woman with anger,
+and when Bryce said he&#8217;d go to Boston, too, along with Lot
+Breckenridge, if there was war, she did not say him nay.</p>
+
+<p>But the Hardings had little time to waste upon politics. The boys
+had to drop the drilling soon, too, for it came ploughing and seed
+time. &#8217;Siah Bolderwood remained about the settlement rather later
+than usual that year; and mainly for the reason that public affairs
+were so strained. He said his own crop of corn which he intended
+putting into the lot near Old Ti upon which he &#8220;had let the light
+of day&#8221; could wait a bit, under the circumstances, for there
+might be occasion to &#8220;beat his ploughshare into a sword&#8221;
+before corn-planting time.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore he was still with the Hardings that day late in April when
+Ethan Allen, riding out of Bennington into the north to carry a torch
+which should fire every farm and hamlet with patriotic fervor, reined
+in his steed at the door of the farmhouse. The children saw the great
+man coming and ran from the fields with Bolderwood, while the widow
+appeared at her door and welcomed Colonel Allen.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Will you &#8217;light, sir?&#8221; she asked him. &#8220;It
+has been long since you favored us with a visit.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And long will it be ere I come again, perhaps, Mistress
+Harding. I am like Sampson&#8211;I have taken an oath. And mine is not
+to rest, nor to give this critter rest, until I have spoken to as many
+true men in these Grants as may be seen in a week. The time has come to
+act!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Reckon I&#8217;d better be joggin&#8217; erlong toward Old
+Ti, heh, Colonel?&#8221; remarked the ranger, leaning an elbow on the
+pommel of the saddle.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You had, &#8217;Siah, you had. We can depend upon you, and
+those red-coated rascals there must be kept unsuspicious and their
+fears&#8211;if they have any&#8211;lulled to sleep. I have one man
+already who proposes to put his head in the Lion&#8217;s mouth and
+return&#8211;providing the jaws do not close on him&#8211;to tell us in
+what state the old pile of stone is kept.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But what has started you out so suddenly, Colonel
+Allen?&#8221; demanded the widow.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What! have ye not heard? There was a packet came from Boston
+yesterday.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We have seen nobody this week,&#8221; declared Enoch.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There has been blood shed, friends,&#8221; said the giant,
+earnestly, his eyes flashing and the color in his cheek deepening.
+&#8220;American freemen have been shot down like sheep in the
+slaughter!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Where? Who were killed? What was the cause? Who did
+it?&#8221; were some of the queries hurled at their informant by the
+little group.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Fifty men, they say, were murdered. At Lexington, in
+Massachusetts. There were munitions stored there belonging to the
+militia. The British got word of it and marched from Boston to destroy
+the goods. They fired on our people at the bridge and when the poor
+fellows broke and ran they followed and potted them like rabbits! War
+has begun, friends. Nothing under the blue canopy can stop it now.
+American blood has been shed and I tell you it is but the beginning of
+the flood which must pour from our veins until these colonies are
+free!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, Colonel! you do not believe that?&#8221; cried the widow.
+&#8220;Surely this trouble can be averted. Calmer and more honest men
+will gain control and prevail. War is an awful thing.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;True, Widow Harding. And well may you say it who have two
+sons to give for freedom. But mark my words, madam! Those two boys of
+yours will be needed, and if the Almighty spares them they will be some
+years older before either side in this controversy gives in.... Now
+friends, I must away. You know what is expected of you, &#8217;Siah.
+Young Nuck, you&#8217;ll be wanted at Bennington to-morrow.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, shall our people really attack Ticonderoga?&#8221; cried
+Kate. &#8220;The schoolmaster says that is the strongest fortress in
+the Colonies.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Your schoolmaster is a bit of a Tory, I fear, miss,&#8221;
+said Allen, smiling down upon her. &#8220;We shall have to
+&#8216;view&#8217; him if he tells such tales in school,&#8221; and
+waving his gauntleted hand he rode swiftly away from the homestead.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am off at once, folks,&#8221; said &#8217;Siah, beginning
+to make his pack for the journey. &#8220;I&#8217;ll see you up near Old
+Ti, Nuck, for the Colonel means business sure! We may have some such
+doin&#8217;s up there as your father and I had under Rogers and Old Put
+years ago.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He went away shortly and there was little the Hardings could do that
+day but talk over the wonderful news and let their fancy run upon the
+future. The widow saw that coming which she had feared for months, but
+she was cheerful. Nuck must go on this expedition to Lake Champlain,
+and she said it with unshaken voice. Bryce was to remain to guard the
+home, for there was no knowing what the result of the attack on Old Ti
+might be.</p>
+
+<p>The alarming intelligence brought by Colonel Allen had its effect
+upon the younger members of the family as well as on the older, for
+late in the afternoon Harry came running to his mother with the
+information that there was a man lurking in the forest across the
+creek. The child had seen the stranger twice and being fearful that the
+man was there for no good purpose was much troubled. The older boys
+were in the field at work, but when the widow blew the horn Enoch came
+up to learn the cause, for it was not yet supper time. Hearing
+Harry&#8217;s report he seized his rifle and went to the creek bank,
+approaching the spot very carefully, for he feared at once that their
+enemy, Simon Halpen, might have dared follow him from Westminster.</p>
+
+<p>He had scarcely reached the creek, however, when he was apprised of
+the identity of the visitor. A head, in the black locks of which a tuft
+of eagle feathers was fastened, appeared above the bushes, and the next
+moment the person thus betrayed came out into full view and beckoned
+him. It was Crow Wing who had approached the Harding place through the
+forest. Enoch leaped into his own boat and paddled across, remembering
+the Indian&#8217;s promise the year before to visit him at some time
+for the purpose of examining the vicinity of the spot where Jonas
+Harding had been slain.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_16'></a>CHAPTER XVII<br /><span
+class='fss'>THE CLOVEN HOOF</span></h2>
+
+<p>The grave face of the young Indian brave was undisturbed by a smile
+as he greeted the white youth whom he had not seen for more than a
+year. But he shook Enoch&#8217;s hand with an emphatic
+&#8220;Umph!&#8221; when the latter sprang ashore.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Crow Wing!&#8221; exclaimed young Harding. &#8220;I thought
+you had forgotten us in these parts. You&#8217;ve been away a long
+time.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Umph! Injin no forget friends,&#8221; remarked Crow Wing,
+sententiously.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And you&#8217;ve come here to see me&#8211;&#8217;way from
+Lake George?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Umph!&#8221; was again the non-committal answer.
+&#8220;Harding and Crow Wing go hunt,&#8211;shoot deer? Crow Wing need
+new moccasins,&#8221; and he thrust forward one foot on which was a
+ragged covering. But Nuck knew well enough the Indian had not traveled
+through the wilderness from Lake George merely for the pleasure of
+going on a deer hunt with him. But he said, doubtfully:
+&#8220;We&#8217;re pretty busy just now, Crow Wing. Can&#8217;t go far
+with you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not go far. Plenty deer yonder,&#8221; and he pointed in the
+direction of the lick where Jonas Harding had been killed. Nuck
+understood. &#8220;I&#8217;ll go with you. Will you come across and eat
+supper with us?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But the Indian shook his head vigorously. &#8220;Will eat yonder.
+Have meat. Harding get rifle and blanket. Will make fire.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He turned about instantly and plunged into the forest. Enoch was
+astonished by his manner and words, familiar as he was with the
+peculiarities of the red race. Crow Wing had never refused to eat with
+them before; he had always seemed to enjoy the &#8220;white
+squaw&#8217;s&#8221; cooking. But Enoch had no fear that his one-time
+enemy was playing him a trick. He paddled across the creek for his
+blanket, told his mother that he was going on a torchlight hunt, with
+whom he was going, and without further explanation returned to follow
+his red friend. He had noted the direction the young brave had taken.
+The way led directly to that little glade where, nearly four years
+before, he had spied upon Simon Halpen, the Yorker, and Crow Wing had
+driven him so ignominiously home. There was a fire here now, but the
+Indian was alone.</p>
+
+<p>An appetizing odor of broiling flesh greeted the white youth, for it
+was already growing dark in the forest and Crow Wing was preparing
+supper. Enoch did not open the conversation, but busied himself with
+making a couple of bark platters out of which they might eat the meat
+when it was cooked. He was anxious enough to broach the subject
+uppermost in his mind; but he knew Crow Wing better than to do that.
+Anxiety, or curiosity, were emotions which only squaws gave way to, and
+Enoch would not exhibit his feelings and so disgust his red
+brother.</p>
+
+<p>Crow Wing was evidently a man of importance in his tribe now, and
+his gravity was far beyond his years. While they ate Enoch asked a
+question or two about his people, and if the decimated tribe, which had
+never recovered numerically from a scourge of smallpox, still resided
+near Lake George. He learned then that the Indians had struck their
+lodges and were journeying toward the northern wilderness. The old
+chief, Crow Wing&#8217;s father, was dead, and the youth himself
+aspired to be the leader of his people. From a word or two he let drop
+and from his manner of speaking, Enoch judged that the older men of the
+tribe had some doubt of Crow Wing&#8217;s ability to govern the braves;
+but evidently the youth had strong hopes of gaining their
+confidence&#8211;and that by some act in the near future. What his plan
+for advancement was, Enoch could not get his friend to tell.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why do your people leave the shores of the pleasant
+water?&#8221; asked the white boy.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Injin not &#8217;lone there now. Red-coat come; then white
+farmer. Push, push; crowd, crowd; no game. Injin starve.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And where are you going?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;To the hunting grounds of the Hurons.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But then there will be war between your people and the
+Hurons.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No; no war. Hurons be squaws&#8211;children; Iroquois master
+&#8217;em. Then, war-hatchet buried between Hurons and Six Nations.
+Buried when French and Yenghese bury hatchet&#8211;long time
+&#8217;go.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Enoch, with more than curiosity, yet speaking in a careless manner,
+continued his questioning: &#8220;What would the people of Crow Wing do
+if there was another war?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Indian flashed a sudden sharp glance at him. &#8220;How could
+be?&#8221; he asked, craftily. &#8220;Yenghese got many
+red-coats&#8211;much gun. French no fight more.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Suppose we should fight the red-coats?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Umph! Me hear Long-guns&#8221; (the Virginians) &#8220;talk
+fight to Six Nations. No. Yenghese send too many big chiefs over
+water.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Those big chiefs aren&#8217;t always good,&#8221; returned
+Enoch, quickly. &#8220;Your people remember General Abercrombie. He did
+not know how to fight in these forests. And there was Braddock; he was
+no good at all. He wouldn&#8217;t have been beaten if he&#8217;d taken
+Colonel Washington&#8217;s advice. I&#8217;d give a lot more when it
+comes to a fight for our Major Putnam, Mr. Washington, and Ethan
+Allen.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Indian&#8217;s face was gloomy. He had finished eating now and
+leaned back against a tree while he puffed the tobacco in the little
+copper pipe which was his constant companion. Not until the pipe was
+smoked out did he speak. &#8220;Harding my friend,&#8221; he finally
+said, in his grave tone, repeating a formula which he had used so many
+times since the night Nuck had saved him from the wolves.
+&#8220;Harding my friend. Crow Wing know what is in his mind. He thinks
+to fight the red-coats&#8211;to take their great stockades; he is not
+afraid of their many guns. But he is foolish; he is as a child; he does
+not understand. Let him open his ears and listen to his
+friend.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The young chief had assumed that oracular tone and manner so dear to
+the red man in his counsels. His earnestness, however, impressed Enoch.
+&#8220;The white youth and his friends are angry with the great King
+across the water; they would kill his red-coats. But the red-coats are
+like leaves when the frost comes; they fall to the ground and so cover
+the earth; and it is thus with the red-coats for numbers. And the Six
+Nations will be with the red-coats; Crow Wing&#8217;s people will be
+with them. If there is war we will take many scalps; we will come
+here,&#8221; with a gesture, sweeping in the Bennington country,
+&#8220;and then Crow Wing and Harding not be friends. So Crow Wing come
+now to say to Harding, &#8216;Good-bye.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But why do not the Indians help us instead of the
+red-coats?&#8221; demanded Enoch, striving to speak calmly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The great King give us blankets; he give us powder for scalp;
+he give us gun. The red-coats let Injin fight his own way. And Crow
+Wing be great war chief!&#8221; he exclaimed, with some emphasis. It
+was plain that he expected to make his position with his tribe secure
+by his valor in battle, should the settlers and the British come to a
+rupture. He refrained from speaking longer, however, rising soon and
+covering the fire which he had kindled. Then, seizing a bundle of
+torches and his rifle, he motioned Enoch to follow and they set off
+through the forest toward the deer-lick.</p>
+
+<p>Although he felt the utmost confidence in the fact that Crow Wing
+had not come clear from Lake George simply to give him this warning and
+to bid him good-bye, Enoch still remained silent upon that subject
+which the Indian&#8217;s appearance had brought so forcibly to his
+mind. Through the darkened forest, in which the owls now hooted
+mournfully, the white youth followed the red without a word; every step
+was taking them nearer to that place where his father had been found
+dead so long ago. Crow Wing had spoken with some confidence the year
+before of being able to find, even at this late day, some sign which
+should disprove the generally accepted belief in the manner of Jonas
+Harding&#8217;s death.</p>
+
+<p>The brave soon reached the deeply worn runway which Enoch, on the
+morning he was introduced to the reader, followed to the creek, and
+soon the two came upon the little glade where the saline deposits in
+the earth had attracted the deer and other animals since such creatures
+inhabited the forest. Dark as it was Enoch could even distinguish the
+very tree out of which the catamount had sprung at him, and the murmur
+of the hurrying waters down the rocky bed reached his ear. Here
+&#8217;Siah Bolderwood and the other neighbors had found the dead body
+of the elder Harding, apparently trampled and gored to death by the
+huge buck whose hoofprints marked the ground all about. Enoch had
+seldom passed the spot without a shudder&#8211;especially since he had
+so nearly lost his own life there.</p>
+
+<p>Still the Indian made no comment, nor mentioned the real reason for
+which they had come to the lick. He wet his finger and held it up so as
+to get the direction of the wind. Then circling the lick and getting
+between it and the creek-bank, he flung down the bundle of torches and
+motioned Enoch back into the deeper shadow. With his own flint and
+steel, and using a bit of tinder from the leather pouch he carried, he
+lit one of the resinous torches. This he stood upright some little
+distance away, yet not too near the piece of ground where the creatures
+of the forest were accustomed to obtain their salt. Then, crouching
+beside his white friend, the Indian remained motionless and speechless
+for the next three hours. Once Enoch crept out and renewed the torch
+which had burned low; then he returned to Crow Wing&#8217;s side.</p>
+
+<p>All the sounds of the forest at night are not to be distinguished
+with ease. Even Enoch, bred in the wilderness and possessing much
+knowledge of wood-ranging, heard only the coarser sounds. Therefore he
+lay half dreaming for some moments after the Indian raised his head and
+lent an attentive ear to some noise which came from far away. The
+night-owl&#8217;s hoot was intermittent; a lone wolf howled mournfully
+on the hillside; in the swamp a catamount screamed as it pounced upon
+its prey. But it was none of these sounds which had attracted the
+Indian&#8217;s attention. Enoch suddenly roused to see Crow Wing softly
+reach for his gun and bring the weapon slowly to his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>The white youth already had his own weapon in hand. He tried to
+pierce the darkness beyond the flickering torch with his eyes, seeing
+naught at first but shapeless shadows. At length, however, the sound
+that had warned Crow Wing of the approach of their game, was audible to
+Enoch&#8217;s much less acute ear. It was that of a steady grinding of
+a ruminant animal feeding. The creature was coming slowly nearer and
+soon the hunters could plainly hear it cropping the leaves and twigs
+along the path; then, having gained a choice mouthful, the grinding of
+the molars recommenced.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly the thick brush across the glade parted and the animal
+halted with a surprised snuff&#8211;one might almost say gasp of
+astonishment. The crash in the bushes betrayed that the creature had
+flung itself half around in its contemplated flight; then it hesitated;
+the flaming torch spurred its curiosity and, there being no movement in
+the glade, except of the shadows caused by the dancing flame from the
+fragrant pine, the startled creature was tempted.</p>
+
+<p>And being tempted to the point of hesitation, it was lost! Slowly,
+blowing as it came yet drawing nearer and nearer to the light, the
+beast moved out of the brush into the open. Suddenly Enoch saw
+it&#8211;the branching antlers, the fawn-colored breast, the pointed,
+outstretched, eager muzzle, the great eyes in which the torch reflected
+a glint of fire. It was a magnificent buck, the largest specimen of the
+deer tribe the youth had ever seen. Suddenly Crow Wing jogged his
+elbow. A glance passed between them. Each understood the other&#8217;s
+intention. The Indian fired, his ball entering just above the
+buck&#8217;s breast and ploughing slantingly upward through the throat.
+With a snort of terror the buck swerved to one side and might have
+gotten away had not Enoch&#8217;s shot found a more vulnerable spot
+behind the foreleg. The heart of the great deer was punctured, and it
+fell in the agony of death.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Umph! Now Crow Wing have new moccasins,&#8221; the Indian
+grunted, without emotion. But Enoch went forward, lighting a second
+torch the better to view the great buck. It was still now and
+outstretched on the earth looked even larger than when in life. The
+thought flashed through his mind: &#8220;Ah! perhaps this was the very
+brute&#8211;this enormous fellow with his hoofs bigger than those of a
+steer and his terrible horns&#8211;that killed my father here. Could it
+be possible?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Looking upon this huge buck, noting its power and its fierce aspect,
+though the brute&#8217;s eye was glazed by death, he wondered if, by
+any chance, he had been accusing an innocent person? This brute would
+have been perfectly able to kill a man. Naught but the hoof-marks of
+the deer were found about the body of his father. How, then, could
+Simon Halpen be in any wise guilty of his enemy&#8217;s death?</p>
+
+<p>But Crow Wing brought the white youth to a realization of present
+things. The Indian knew that their hunting was over for that night. No
+other deer would approach the lick, for the smell of the blood from the
+slain buck would warn its mates away. Only the creatures of prey would
+be attracted now. So he was down on his knees and had already begun to
+flay the dead carcass, and Enoch, seeing this, began to help him. It
+was near midnight, and when the hide was off, the tongue and the most
+tasty parts removed, Crow Wing built another fire, wrapped his blanket
+about him, and lay down to sleep.</p>
+
+<p>But Enoch could not sleep. He had cut off and hung up near the camp
+a haunch of the venison to take back with him in the morning. They had
+removed so far from the lick that certain preying beasts dared quarrel
+over the remains of the noble buck until daylight; but the youth sat
+with his back against a tree and his rifle across his knees until the
+dimpling water of the creek was kissed by the first beams of the sun
+which shot over the distant range of hills. His thoughts were
+sufficient to keep him wide awake.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch was not the first to stir; but Crow Wing, possessing the
+hunter&#8217;s faculty of awaking at any desired hour, sat up and threw
+back his blanket. &#8220;My brother did not sleep,&#8221; he said,
+looking upon the white youth with gloomy brow.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No; I couldn&#8217;t do that, Crow Wing,&#8221; Enoch
+returned, sadly.</p>
+
+<p>The Indian got upon his feet, threw wood upon the fire, and prepared
+to cook the deer meat he had reserved. They ate in silence as they had
+the night before. Never had young Harding seen the redskin act so
+strangely, for during the winter Crow Wing had spent with Enoch and Lot
+on the Otter, he had by no means been silent or morose. The white youth
+could not fail to see that something&#8211;something beside what
+troubled Enoch&#8211;bore heavily upon Crow Wing&#8217;s mind.</p>
+
+<p>After eating the Indian scattered and covered the embers of the fire
+and prepared to leave the spot. He went toward the lick where the deer
+had been torn to pieces by the prowling animals Enoch had heard. At the
+edge of the clearing he halted and attracted his companion&#8217;s
+attention by a commanding gesture. &#8220;Harding&#8217;s father found
+here by the tall white man,&#8221; he said, simply.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes. &#8217;Siah Bolderwood found him,&#8221; Enoch sadly
+admitted.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then we look&#8211;see how Hawknose kill him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But Crow Wing, it was four years ago&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Indian stopped him with a gesture of disdain. &#8220;Does my
+brother think we look for trail? No, no! The white man not find
+trail?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course not. There were only marks of the buck&#8217;s
+hoofs.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Crow Wing pointed to the spoor of the dead buck made the night
+before. &#8220;Trail big as that?&#8221; he asked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes. It might have been this buck.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No buck,&#8221; declared the other, emphatically and then
+began to move about the open glade, examining each tree trunk as he
+went. Enoch did not understand his actions but he followed him. The
+Indian gazed upon each tree scrutinizingly, and no knothole in the
+rough boles escaped his attention.</p>
+
+<p>When the tree proved to be hollow at its base the searcher
+experimented with his gun barrel, poking it into the farther extremity
+of the cavity and rattling out the decayed wood and the débris of
+squirrel nests and owl lairs. In several cases these creatures
+themselves were disturbed, the lively squirrels to run chattering up
+the higher branches, the owls lumbering away into the forest, bumping
+against the trees in their blindness, and hooting mournfully at the
+disturbers of their peace. All this time Crow Wing continued with an
+unmoved face. Not an interstice in the roots of the trees escaped his
+eye and to Enoch, who could not imagine what he was looking for, his
+actions seemed without reason. But he knew better than to ask him the
+nature of his search.</p>
+
+<p>For two hours Crow Wing circled about the little glade. There was
+not a tree which escaped him, nor did any hollow go unexamined which
+was within reach of the tallest man. Crow Wing&#8217;s face betrayed
+neither hope nor disappointment and therefore his companion could not
+tell how important this search was. The patience displayed by the
+Indian was all that suggested the object of his examination to be of
+any moment.</p>
+
+<p>At length, in poking the barrel of his gun into the hollow at the
+base of a big tree Crow Wing disturbed some object which fell out upon
+the ground. Enoch, who looked over his shoulder could not at first
+imagine what it was. He saw several rotting straps attached to the
+thing, however, and as his companion with a grunt of evident
+satisfaction, began poking into the hollow still further, the white boy
+picked the object up and knocked the dirt and decayed wood off it. It
+was so strange an object that at first Enoch saw no connection between
+it and the matter which he and Crow Wing had discussed&#8211;Jonas
+Harding&#8217;s death.</p>
+
+<p>It was the dry and broken hoof of some ruminant animal&#8211;an ox,
+perhaps, for it was too large for any deer that Enoch had ever seen. It
+was even larger than the hoof of the buck he and Crow Wing had recently
+shot. And when the boy thought of that he was reminded of the hoof
+prints which had been found all about the lick when his father&#8217;s
+body was discovered lying there. He uttered a stifled exclamation and
+drawing up one foot fitted the cloven hoof against the sole of his
+moccasin. The rotten straps or thongs would once have bound the thing
+to a man&#8217;s foot. He might have stood upon it&#8211;walked upon
+it, indeed; and the impression left by this cloven hoof would naturally
+lead one to suppose that a big deer had been that way!</p>
+
+<p>Enoch turned with sweating brow and shaking hands toward the Indian.
+Crow Wing stood upright again and now held a second hoof, likewise
+supplied with thongs, in his hand. They looked at each other.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Umph!&#8221; grunted Crow Wing. &#8220;Now Harding know? See
+moose hoofs. Crow Wing know where moose killed&#8211;see moose killed.
+Hawknose kill much that winter; Hawknose hunt with Injins up north;
+then come back to crick. Harding &#8217;member what Crow Wing tell him
+when trapping on Otter Crick? See Hawknose running; blood on clothes;
+blood on hands and on gun. Now Harding know how father be
+killed.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Enoch&#8217;s eyes blazed with wrath. &#8220;I know, Crow Wing. I
+believe what you tell me. I see no other explanation of the affair.
+Give me those hoofs, Crow Wing.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Harding keep them till he punish Hawknose?&#8221; queried the
+Indian.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The young brave pulled his belt tighter and prepared to depart.
+&#8220;Hawknose never Crow Wing&#8217;s brother,&#8221; he said.
+&#8220;Harding been brother. But now the hatchet will be dug up. The
+Long-guns cannot get the Six Nations to fight the red-coats. And the
+friends of my white brother will be beaten. They will become the squaws
+of the red-coats and of the great King across the sea. So my people
+will go north and join the red-coats.&#8221; He shook Enoch&#8217;s
+hand gravely. &#8220;Crow Wing and Harding been brothers; but when they
+meet again be enemies. Umph?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I hope we&#8217;ll never meet again, then, Crow Wing,&#8221;
+declared the white youth. &#8220;I hope there will be no war. More than
+that, I hope your people will not join the British if there is
+war.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But without further speech, or a glance behind him, the Indian brave
+strode away into the forest and was quickly lost to view.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_17'></a>CHAPTER XVIII<br /><span
+class='fss'>&#8220;THE CROSS OF FIRE&#8221;</span></h2>
+
+<p>Having at length been assured beyond peradventure that his
+suspicions were true, a desire for vengeance upon Simon Halpen sprang
+to life in Enoch&#8217;s heart. He forgot the momentous matter which
+had filled his mind before the appearance of Crow Wing the evening
+before. He thought only of his father&#8217;s murderer, the man who had
+tried to injure them all, even to the point of destroying their home
+and attempting to shoot himself.</p>
+
+<p>As he tramped back to the house with the haunch of venison on his
+shoulder, he determined to tell nobody there of the finding of the
+moose hoofs which explained the mystery of his father&#8217;s death.
+The hoofs he saved to show Bolderwood, and for evidence against Simon
+Halpen if the opportunity ever arose to punish that villain. It was
+easy to see with this evidence before him, how the awful deed had been
+accomplished. With the moose hoofs strapped upon his feet the Yorker
+had crept through the forest on the trail of the unconscious Jonas
+Harding; had seen him shoot the doe; and then falling upon him suddenly
+had beaten him to the earth with his clubbed rifle and had bruised and
+mangled him so terribly that the neighbors, at first glance, pronounced
+the poor man killed by a mad buck. Hurrying from the vicinity, dress
+and hands covered with blood as Crow Wing had seen him, Halpen had
+hidden the deer hoofs in the hollow of the tree, and escaped to Albany,
+his vengeance accomplished.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But he shall suffer for this yet,&#8221; thought the youth,
+with compressed lips. &#8220;God will punish him if the courts do not.
+And sometime he may be delivered into my hand, and if he
+is&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The implied threat frightened him, and he did not follow it even in
+his thoughts, but by again turning his attention to the matter which
+Ethan Allen&#8217;s visit the day before had suggested, he strove to
+bring his mind into better tone before meeting his mother. He feared
+that the expression on his features would betray something of his
+horror and determination to her sharp eyes. When he reached home,
+however, he found the family so greatly excited that nobody thought to
+either ask questions or to notice his behavior. A drill had been called
+at Bennington and Enoch was forced to saddle the horse and hurry away
+at once. Under the present conditions it was thought best for Bryce to
+remain at home, for if the Green Mountain Boys marched upon Ticonderoga
+the younger Harding could not be spared to accompany the
+expedition.</p>
+
+<p>The Council was in session and the leaders of the Green Mountain
+Boys remained in Bennington for more than a week. Couriers had arrived
+from the south and east and it was known that the British were rapidly
+being shut up in Boston. The Massachusetts Colony was afire with wrath
+because of the Lexington massacre. The Grants people were quite as
+rebellious against the King&#8217;s authority, with the sad affair at
+Westminster fresh in their minds. The proposal to capture the British
+strongholds on the lake met with favor everywhere. Small bodies of
+armed men began to come in and a camp was planned at Castleton. It was
+said that a large body of troops was to march from Western
+Massachusetts and Connecticut to aid the expedition. When Ethan Allen
+returned and heard of these reinforcements he immediately desired to
+bring in more of his own people for the work proposed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;This is our work,&#8221; he declared. &#8220;We have planned
+to lead this campaign and lead it we shall. We must show the
+southerners that we are one in heart and intention and therefore every
+able-bodied man in the Grants must come in. It isn&#8217;t enough for
+us to have some men; we must have the most men and thereby control the
+expedition. We want the honor of it!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You must lead us, Colonel!&#8221; exclaimed Warner, who,
+although he had no such following as did Allen, was sure of a goodly
+company of determined men to join the expedition. &#8220;We&#8217;ll
+follow you into Old Ti or anywhere else; but no stranger must
+command.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then I must have more men to my following than anybody
+else,&#8221; declared Allen, vigorously. &#8220;I have seen a great
+many myself, but there are districts I haven&#8217;t been able to
+reach.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We must send out a cross of fire to rouse the clans,&#8221;
+Captain Warner said, with a smile. &#8220;But who shall go?
+Bolderwood?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;&#8217;Siah has reached his own land&#8211;where he&#8217;s
+let the light in upon some acres, I understand&#8211;near Old Ti. And
+he&#8217;s got his work cut out for him there. No; I have the chap in
+mind to send up along the Otter. There&#8217;s only one thing I fear. I
+understand that a plaguey Yorker has been seen about Manchester for a
+week past. Just what he&#8217;s so attentive to certain people for at
+this time bothers me, Seth.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But if he&#8217;s only a surveyor, or
+speculator&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;A Yorker means a King&#8217;s man these times,&#8221;
+exclaimed Allen. &#8220;I got a sight of him&#8211;a lean, hook-nosed
+fellow with a face puckered like a walnut; but we didn&#8217;t pass the
+time o&#8217; day. I think he&#8217;s spying on us.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If he is&#8213;&#8221; began Warner, wrathfully.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sorry for him, that&#8217;s all,&#8221; declared
+the Green Mountain leader. &#8220;If I catch him and it&#8217;s proven
+against him, I&#8217;ll hang him to the highest limb in this neck of
+woods.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But the person you will send out with the warning,
+Colonel?&#8221; cried Warner. &#8220;Whom have you in your
+mind?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I see him coming now,&#8221; declared the leader, laughing.
+&#8220;I sent word to him last evening. He should have been to
+Castleton ere this; but the widow&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s young Harding!&#8221; cried Captain Warner.
+&#8220;I recognize him. And, Colonel, from what I have seen of the
+young man, he&#8217;ll bear out your confidence in him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Enoch had approached near enough to hear this last and he flushed
+deeply. &#8220;I was told you wanted to see me, Colonel Allen,&#8221;
+he said, saluting awkwardly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I do indeed,&#8221; said Allen. &#8220;You&#8217;re ready for
+campaigning, I see. Leave your traps&#8211;even to your blanket and
+gun&#8211;with Master Fay here. You&#8217;ll want to travel light where
+I send you,&#8221; and he proceeded to explain the mission he wished
+the youth to perform.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am ready, Colonel,&#8221; declared Enoch, throwing off his
+knapsack.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Good! Away with you at once. Use yonder horse till you get to
+Manchester. Beyond that there will scarcely be bridle paths, so a horse
+will be in your way. Take the word around that the time has come to
+strike. And have them rendezvous at Castleton. Be off, my boy, and may
+success go with you!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The horse in question was a fine steed that Allen had ridden into
+town that very morning. The youth sprang into the saddle and,
+understanding that haste and cautiousness were the two things most
+desired of him, trotted the animal easily out of the town and then put
+the spurs to him along the road to Manchester. He spared neither the
+horse nor himself until he reached the latter place and had left the
+steed in the keeping of a loyal man to be returned at the first
+opportunity to Colonel Allen. Of course, all the men in this section of
+the Grants had been warned of the proposed expedition against the
+fortresses on Champlain; it was those who dwelt deeper in the
+wilderness to whom young Enoch Harding had been sent.</p>
+
+<p>He knew what was expected of him. And he knew, too, how most of the
+Grants people would receive the news. Colonel Allen was beloved by them
+as were few leaders. This Connecticut giant who had given up his desire
+for a college education and a life among books because duty called him
+to the work of supporting his family, who had been by turn a farmer, an
+iron forger, had tried mining and other toilsome industries, but who
+nearly always worked with a book in his hand or beside him where he
+could read and study&#8211;this man with his free, jovial air and
+utterly reckless courage, was become as one of the heroes of old to the
+people of Vermont. The men on his side of the controversy in which
+Allen had taken such a deep interest, loved him devotedly; those who
+espoused the New York cause hated him quite as dearly, for they feared
+him.</p>
+
+<p>So when Enoch set out from Manchester to go from farmstead to
+farmstead and from clearing to clearing, he was not in much doubt as to
+whom he should send to Castleton and whom he should pass by without
+speaking to regarding the proposed expedition. There would be no
+doubtful settlers. The line between Tories and Whigs was drawn too
+sharply; and every Whig stood by Ethan Allen.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch had learned something of the paths and runways of this part of
+the Grants. It had been near here that Lot Breckenridge and himself,
+with Crow Wing, had spent a winter trapping. Lot had now gone, so he
+had heard, to Boston as he said he should if fighting began. He had
+gone to help Israel Putnam and the other New England leaders pen the
+British into the city and aid in that series of maneuvres which finally
+drove the red-coats into their ships. As for himself, Enoch was only
+eager to be one of those who should storm the walls of Ticonderoga, and
+glad as he was to have been singled out for this present duty, he was
+determined to husband his strength so as to get back to Castleton
+before the army gathering there should move against the British
+fortifications.</p>
+
+<p>He walked rapidly; more often he ran. In the pouch at his belt he
+carried parched corn, like an Indian on the warpath. Occasionally at a
+clearing, where some hardy borderer was scratching a living from the
+half-cleared soil, he would stop long enough to eat. But usually he
+halted only to give the good man of the house the message from Ethan
+Allen and, as he passed on and entered the forest on the further side
+he looked back to see the settler, his gun on his shoulder, bidding his
+family good-bye preparatory to setting out for the rendezvous appointed
+for the American troops.</p>
+
+<p>But nature revolts when a certain point of exhaustion is reached.
+Refusing to remain the night at one kindly settler&#8217;s home, Enoch
+finally found himself in the forest a goodly distance from any other
+house. The path could be followed quite easily, the woods being open;
+but he was footsore and thoroughly wearied. He shrank from lying down
+beside the trail, however, for more reasons than one. On several
+occasions that afternoon he had heard of the presence of another
+traveler in the vicinity, and the identity of this man he could not
+learn. The settlers who had mentioned him, however, declared they
+believed him to be a New York agent, or a spy from the British across
+the lake, who was going through the region to discover just how the
+people felt regarding the rising trouble between the Colonials and the
+mother country. Such, at least, had been the trend of his conversation
+with the loyal Americans to whom he had been unwise enough to
+speak.</p>
+
+<p>The appearance of the man, too, rather troubled Enoch. He was said
+to be tall and lean, with a very black face, a huge nose and fiery
+eyes. The youth remembered how Simon Halpen looked a few weeks before
+when he saw him at Westminster, and this pretty well described the
+scoundrel. Halpen was in the Grants&#8211;or had been recently. Perhaps
+he had dared come across the mountains toward the lake on some errand
+for the Tory party, and the thought that the man who had murdered his
+father and who had tried to take his own life, might be within rifle
+shot, troubled the youth exceedingly. He could not drive away this
+thought and when finally he was forced to stop for rest he trembled to
+think that perhaps the light of his campfire would attract an enemy
+more to be feared than either the wolves or catamounts.</p>
+
+<p>But he built his fire, broiled a piece of meat which the last
+settler he spoke to had given him, ate his supper, and then prepared to
+sleep for a few hours. The moon would rise late, and he desired to set
+forward on his journey again as soon as it was light enough in the
+forest. Just at present the darkness shrouded all objects. But when he
+lay down with his feet toward the blaze and his head upon a heap of
+moss for a pillow, he could not sleep, tired though he was. His nerves
+were all alive. His limbs twitched so that he could not keep them
+still. Every sound of the forest smote upon his ear with insistence.
+Although his muscles were wearied his eyes would not close.</p>
+
+<p>Who was the Yorker that had crossed his path so many times during
+the past few hours? What did he desire here in the Otter country? Was
+he a spy for the British? or was he upon his own business? And, above
+all, was he, Nuck Harding, in danger? The stranger might be roaming the
+forest even then, hunting for the messenger of the Green Mountain
+chieftain. He had likely heard that Nuck was going from farmer to
+farmer, as Nuck had heard of his presence, and the man might
+contemplate stopping him. It would be easy for him to creep upon and
+shoot the defenseless youth as he lay before the fire.</p>
+
+<p>Nuck&#8217;s only weapons were his knife and the hatchet stuck in
+his belt. Lying there within the circle of light cast by the flames he
+would be an easy mark for any enemy. As minute after minute passed it
+seemed utterly impossible for him to quench this fear and he finally
+rose to his feet and got out of the fire light. He stood in the deep
+shadow of a tree trunk and cast searching glances around the tiny
+clearing in which he had established his camp. Not a living thing did
+he observe.</p>
+
+<p>But if there was an enemy on his trail, and he should come near the
+camp and see it deserted he would suspect a trap at once. Either he
+would circle about so as to finally find Enoch, or he would fly from
+the ambush at once. &#8220;I expect I am very foolish,&#8211;losing
+good sleep that I need, too!&#8221; muttered the young fellow.
+&#8220;But still&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He could not explain the strange unrest that possessed him. He was
+not of a particularly nervous temperament; therefore his present mood
+troubled him the more. There was danger menacing him; he felt it, if he
+could not see nor understand it. The only possibility of peril which
+reason suggested was through the agency of that stranger. &#8220;I must
+have things here so that he will not suspect that I am on my
+guard,&#8221; the youth muttered.</p>
+
+<p>Forthwith he dragged a piece of a broken tree-trunk to the fire,
+wrapped his coat about it and placed his cap at the end of the stick
+farthest from the blaze. He was careful to place the rude dummy far
+enough away from the fire so that its flickering light should not be
+cast upon it too strongly. It really looked, when he was through, as
+though some person lay there asleep. He did not feed the flames too
+generously, but left burning some hardwood sticks, the glowing coals of
+which would lend but little light to the scene. Then he retired again
+to the shadow of the tree where, crouching between two huge exposed
+roots, he waited with sleepless eyes for that which was, perhaps,
+merely the phantom of his fears.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_18'></a>CHAPTER XIX<br /><span
+class='fss'>THE RISING OF THE CLANS</span></h2>
+
+<p>As still as the shadow of the tree itself, Enoch lay with his face
+toward the camp. Truly, had the forest not been so dark outside the
+radiance of the fire, he would have set out again upon his journey, and
+left this spot which seemed to his troubled mind the lurking place of
+some serious danger. The minutes grew to an hour, however, without a
+suspicious sound reaching his ears. The usual noises of the
+forest&#8211;the hooting of the owl, the wolf&#8217;s cry, the whimper
+of the wild-cat&#8211;were all that disturbed the repose of the
+wilderness.</p>
+
+<p>But suddenly a dry twig snapped somewhere near him. The sound went
+through the anxious youth like a shock of electricity. Its direction he
+could not fathom; yet he was sure that the branch had crackled under
+the pressure of a foot. Somebody&#8211;or something&#8211;was
+approaching his fire, which now threw a dull red light across the
+forest glade. Enoch&#8217;s eyes were fastened first upon one blot of
+shadow and then another. Occasionally, too, he darted a glance over his
+shoulder, that the approaching enemy might not come upon him unawares.
+Just at that time Enoch would have given much for his rifle. Its
+presence would have inspired him with a deal of courage. The very fact
+that the danger, which intuition rather than reason assured him was
+threatening, came from an unknown source, increased his fears. Perhaps
+Simon Halpen was not within a hundred miles of that identical spot. He
+who was visiting the Tories and New York sympathizers of this region
+was possibly nothing worse than the agent of a land speculator. The
+youthful Green Mountain Boy might be the only human being within five
+miles.</p>
+
+<p>But suddenly that happened which shattered this fallacious web of
+thought in an instant. In the deep shadow of a thick clump of brush
+upon the other side of the fire, the youth observed a
+movement&#8211;rather, a flash or glint of light. The fire, increasing
+unexpectedly by the falling apart of one of the logs, had sent a
+penetrating ray of light into the thicket and there it glittered upon
+some polished piece of metal. Nothing else could have sent forth this
+answering gleam; it was not a pair of eyes; Enoch was confident of
+that.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He is there!&#8221; whispered the youth, and he crouched
+lower between the roots. His eyes, sharp as they were, could not
+penetrate the gloom of the brush clump, and the glittering metal had
+now disappeared. But he was sure that the intruder was still there,
+reconnoitering the camp. Would he suspect the ruse? Would he observe
+that the body lying by the fire was simply a dummy? The youth was glad
+to see that the log with his jacket and cap upon it lay almost entirely
+in the shadow and that one coat-sleeve was stretched out upon the
+ground in a very natural manner indeed.</p>
+
+<p>The moments that passed then were really terrible to young Harding.
+He knew himself to be in no immediate danger from this mysterious
+individual who had crept near his camp. Surely, the man could not see
+him where he lay shrouded in the darkness. Yet the thought that he was
+being dogged by a deadly enemy possessed him, and the doubt as to what
+the unknown would do next, brought the sweat to his brow and limbs and
+set him trembling like one with an ague. Not a breath disturbed the
+bushes, yet he felt that the man was there&#8211;there across the
+opening in the forest with his eyes fixed upon the supine figure near
+the fire. Had he not been warned by that mysterious feeling which had
+kept his eyes open and his nerves alert he, Enoch Harding, might now be
+lying unconscious with a deadly weapon trained upon him!</p>
+
+<p>And then the shot was fired! Enoch expected it, yet the explosion
+almost betrayed him to the enemy. A gasp of terror left his lips.
+Incidental with the explosion he heard the thud of the ball as it
+penetrated the log, and the shock of the impact actually stirred the
+dummy. It leaped upon the uneven ground!</p>
+
+<p>This fact was an awful accessory to the attempted murder. The
+inanimate object had moved as a human being would if suddenly shot
+through a vital part. Perhaps the very gasp of horror Enoch had uttered
+reached the ears of him who had fired from ambush. At least the enemy
+did not seek to come nearer. Indeed, the youth heard a crash in the
+brush and then the retreat of rapid footsteps. Having done, as he
+supposed, the awful deed, the murderer fled from the spot. Enoch had
+half risen to his feet. Now he sank upon his knees, clasped his hands,
+and thanked God for his preservation.</p>
+
+<p>But he did not leave the sanctuary of the forest&#8217;s shadow
+until he was fully convinced that the villain who had made the attempt
+upon his life was far away. Then, still shaking from the nervous terror
+inspired by the incident, he crept to the dying fire, secured his cap
+and coat, and went back to the roots of the tree again until the
+growing glow above the tree-tops announced the rising of the moon. The
+sky grew bright rapidly and soon the moonbeams wandered among the
+straight, handsome trees and lay calmly upon the earth. He could once
+more see objects about him with almost the clearness of full
+daylight.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch arose and crossed to the clump of brush from which the
+treacherous shot had been fired. Through a break in the branches a
+flood of moonlight now silvered the earth at this point. He dropped
+upon one knee and examined the ground closely. There were the marks of
+the feet of him who had tried to shoot a helpless and sleeping human
+being. Enoch shuddered and placed his fingers in the impression of the
+moccasins. The incident that had just transpired was very real to him
+now.</p>
+
+<p>But he had not come here merely to assure himself of this fact. The
+bullet in the log and the hole through his coat were sufficient, if he
+had indeed doubted his eyes and ears before. He glanced down at the
+coat. Oddly enough the bullet had torn its way through the stout
+homespun directly over his heart!</p>
+
+<p>He glanced keenly now from side to side and saw that the enemy who
+made the treacherous attack had come from the trail he had followed
+that afternoon, and had returned in the same direction. He followed the
+footsteps which led away from the brush clump. In doing this he was
+quickly assured that the man who had shot at him was a white man. An
+Indian walks with his toes pointed inward; this individual, even as he
+ran, pointed his toes out. He was certain, therefore, that his enemy
+was no wandering redskin.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It was Halpen&#8211;I am sure of it!&#8221; muttered the
+youth, striking into the trail at last and continuing the journey upon
+which the darkness had overtaken him. &#8220;He believes that he has
+killed me. I only hope he will not be undeceived. But if he is ever in
+my power he shall suffer! What a villain the man is to follow our
+family and seek to murder and injure us! Oh, I hope this war which
+Colonel Allen says is surely beginning, will give us folks of the
+Grants our freedom from New York as well as from England. I fear men
+like Halpen more than I do the soldiers of the King.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Although he had not slept, Enoch was rested in body and he traveled
+quite rapidly. Before dawn he had aroused two settlers from their
+slumbers, delivered Colonel Allen&#8217;s message, and gone on his way.
+He observed no signs of his enemy of the night and was confident that
+the man had not continued on this trail, and was not, therefore, ahead
+of him. But he determined not to sleep in the forest during the
+remainder of his journey. He spent the day in alarming the farmers,
+circling around into the mountains before night and stopping at last
+with a distant pioneer who, with his two grown sons, promised to go
+back with him to the rendezvous of Allen&#8217;s army at Castleton in
+the morning.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch&#8217;s mind was burdened with the mystery of Halpen&#8217;s
+presence in the Grants at this time, however. Surely the Yorker could
+not be upon private business. He must have a mission from either the
+land speculators, the New York authorities, or from those even higher.
+The plans of the Colonials to attack Old Ti and seize the munitions of
+war stored there, might have been whispered in the ears of the British
+commander, De la Place. Perhaps he had sent this man, who knew the
+territory so well, to spy upon the Green Mountain Boys and their
+friends. Simon Halpen could do the cause afoot much harm by returning
+swiftly to the lake and warning the commander of Fort Ticonderoga.
+Enoch believed Colonel Allen should know of Halpen&#8217;s presence as
+soon as possible; and he was determined to return at once, although he
+certainly deserved rest and refreshment after his arduous journey
+through the wilderness. Therefore he urged the hurried departure of
+these three pioneers and before dawn the quartette started for
+Castleton.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, at the camp of the Green Mountain Boys much was
+transpiring of importance to the expedition. The honor of capturing
+Ticonderoga history gives unconditionally to Ethan Allen and his
+handful of followers; but the suggestion and preparations for the
+momentous task was divided between the Colonies of Connecticut,
+Massachusetts, and the Hampshire Grants, or Vermont, as it was now
+beginning to be called. In April the authorities of Connecticut raised
+three hundred pounds for the expense of this expedition and Samuel H.
+Parsons, Silas Deane (afterward one of America&#8217;s representatives
+in Paris, but an arch enemy of Washington) and Benedict Arnold, raised
+a handful of troops to send north as a nucleus of that army which was
+expected to fall upon one of the strongest British forts in the
+country.</p>
+
+<p>At Pittsfield, in western Massachusetts, Colonel Easton had
+recruited a larger band of earnest patriots, and these, joined with the
+company from the more southern colony, made a very respectable force to
+march through the country to Bennington, where they arrived on May
+third. In the meantime at Albany Messrs. Halsey and Stephens had been
+pleading with the New York Congress to grant permission for troops to
+be raised for, and money devoted to, the capture of the same fortresses
+as the New England leaders had in mind. But, as we have seen, New York
+was at that time lukewarm in the uprising of the colonies. Beside, the
+Continental Congress was to meet in seven days and it was judged better
+by the cautious Yorkers to wait and see what that body of
+representatives would do before any direct act of war was indulged in.
+Therefore New York lost her opportunity of joining in one of the most
+glorious campaigns of the entire Revolutionary period.</p>
+
+<p>The Committee of Safety in Massachusetts, on the other hand, had
+decided to act against Old Ti. Benedict Arnold, after stirring up the
+people to fever pitch in his own colony, Connecticut, went post-haste
+to Cambridge and demanded a commission and authority to raise and lead
+the troops against the Champlain forts. This first move of this
+much-hated man in the Revolution savored of intrigue and
+self-seeking&#8211;as did most of his other public acts. He desired the
+honor of commanding this expedition, and he was personally courageous
+enough to march up to the mouths of Old Ti&#8217;s guns if need be; but
+he had no personal following and could not hope to recruit men himself
+for the expedition. Nevertheless, he proposed to have the backing of a
+regular commission from the Massachusetts committee and thus supersede
+Colonel Easton. This desire on his part might have become a fact had it
+not been for one person whom Benedict Arnold did not take into
+consideration.</p>
+
+<p>The Massachusetts and Connecticut forces were guided to the camp of
+the Green Mountain Boys while the leaders held a conference at the
+Catamount Inn in Bennington. Colonel Easton was a truly brave man, and
+as such was not disturbed by petty jealousy. It was left to fate to
+decide who should command the expedition, and Ethan Allen having the
+largest personal following, was acclaimed commander. Greatly to
+Captain&#8211;now Major&#8211;Warner&#8217;s disappointment his own men
+did not number as many as the Massachusetts troops; but he gracefully
+yielded second place to Easton and accepted third himself. Plans for
+the march through the wilderness were then carefully discussed and the
+leaders rode to Castleton and reviewed the raw recruits whose valor
+was, at a later day, to be so noised abroad.</p>
+
+<p>The Green Mountain Boys, after four years of training, presented
+much the better appearance. And every man was practically a
+sharpshooter. What their rifles and muskets could do against the thick,
+if crumbling, walls of Ticonderoga, might with good judgment be asked;
+but they lacked neither courage nor faith in their leader. They would
+have followed Ethan Allen through a wall of fire if need be to the line
+of the British fortifications. In their eyes he was invincible.</p>
+
+<p>On the morning of the start from Castleton the army was
+paraded&#8211;a few hundred meagrely armed men to march against a
+fortress, to capture which had cost the British two expensive campaigns
+and the loss of some three thousand men. Their leaders harangued them,
+and Ethan Allen&#8217;s promises of glory and honor inspired quite as
+much enthusiasm as the commander of any expedition could have wished.
+There had gathered to observe the departure many gentlemen of the
+countryside, and not a few of those individuals who, at a time like
+this, always occupy a prominent position &#8220;on the
+fence&#8221;&#8211;that is, they having not yet decided which cause to
+espouse, waited to see whether the King&#8217;s troops or the earnest
+patriots would win.</p>
+
+<p>Among these spectators was a well set up man of military bearing,
+indeed garbed in a military coat, with a cockade in his hat and his
+hair carefully dressed. He was quite a dandy, or a
+&#8220;macoroni&#8221; as the exquisites of that day were called both
+in London and in the Colonies. His dark visage and hawk-like eye
+commanded more than a passing glance from all and when, just before the
+troops started, he was observed to walk across the parade and calmly
+approach the group of officers standing at one side, all eyes became
+fixed upon him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Who is that haughty looking man yonder?&#8221; asked one
+spectator of his neighbor who happened to be better informed than his
+friend, &#8220;and what does he here?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What he does here I know not,&#8221; declared the individual
+thus addressed, &#8220;but his name I can tell you, having seen him in
+Hartford on several occasions. It is Benedict Arnold, a name quite well
+known&#8211;and not altogether honorably&#8211;in that part of
+Connecticut.&#8221;</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_19'></a>CHAPTER XX<br /><span
+class='fss'>THE RIVAL COMMANDERS</span></h2>
+
+<p>At this time Benedict Arnold was thirty-five years of age, a
+restless, ambitious man who had sought frequently for an opportunity to
+distinguish himself in life, but who had never been willing to pay the
+world&#8217;s price for real success. He looked for a short-cut to
+power and fortune, and because of his impatience of restraint and the
+small chances of promotion, he had once deserted from the British army.
+When the Revolution broke out he was living in Hartford, Connecticut,
+where his business was that of druggist, and where his reputation was
+not of the most savory among the more respectable merchants of the
+town. His character, however, contained those elements of recklessness
+and personal daring which stand for bravery with many people, and he
+was something of a hero in the eyes of his thoughtless associates.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed a peculiar fatality that both Arnold and Allen, coming
+from the same colony, should go to Bennington and be thrown together at
+just this time. It was a great moment in Ethan Allen&#8217;s life; the
+time was likewise pregnant with the elements which so influenced the
+after existence of Benedict Arnold. Ethan Allen&#8217;s mind was filled
+with a desire to help the Grants, and despite the military glory he
+craved, he entered into the scheme for the capture of Ticonderoga with
+a real hope of assisting the patriot cause. He was, indeed, a patriot
+from the bottom, ready to sacrifice his own interests as well as his
+life for the general good. Arnold saw in this rising of his
+fellow-Americans the long sought chance to distinguish himself and gain
+that power and influence which his nature craved. He saw in the
+proposed expedition to Ticonderoga a quick road to prominence. For him
+to see this chance was to grasp it.</p>
+
+<p>Having no following of his own he planned to seize the troops
+gathered at Castleton and thus have his name go before the Continental
+Congress as the leader of the expedition. If it was successful the
+honor would be his; if it failed, his name would be quite as prominent
+and the affair might gain him advancement which he could hope for in no
+other way. He had no thought nor care for the men who, after weeks of
+toilsome effort, had gathered the little army together. Their feelings
+in the matter, or their standing with their followers, did not enter
+into his calculations.</p>
+
+<p>That, indeed, was the secret of Benedict Arnold&#8217;s life. He
+never thought of others. He was ever for self. As a boy we read that he
+was cruel to those smaller and weaker than himself, being the
+&#8220;bully&#8221; of the school and of the town in which he lived. He
+was ever utterly reckless of his reputation and his greatest pleasure
+seemed to be found in some form of malicious mischief. Personally,
+however, he did not lack boldness and physical courage. It is told of
+him that, being dared by other boys, he once seized the arms of a
+waterwheel and followed its revolutions half a dozen times, being
+completely submerged in the millrace at every turn. The danger to a
+handful of illy-armed troops attacking a fortress like Ticonderoga
+appealed strongly to the man&#8217;s reckless daring.</p>
+
+<p>Although Allen and Warner came from the same colony as the newcomer,
+neither knew nor recognized Arnold as he approached the group of
+officers at this important moment. But Arnold was not a man who could
+be for long ignored. His military bearing, his dress, and the hauteur
+of his countenance attracted the attention of the three leaders.
+&#8220;Sir,&#8221; said Allen, courteously, &#8220;you evidently have
+some communication to make to us?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I have, sir,&#8221; replied Arnold, calmly. &#8220;But not
+having the pleasure of a personal acquaintance with
+you&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am Colonel Allen, commander of this expedition,&#8221;
+interrupted the other, brusquely. &#8220;This is Colonel Easton; this
+Major Warner. What is your desire?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am Colonel Benedict Arnold,&#8221; said the newly arrived
+officer, &#8220;and bear a commission from the Massachusetts Committee
+of Safety with authority to take command of the troops here gathered,
+or which shall be gathered, and proceed against Forts Ticonderoga and
+Crown Point,&#8221; and he drew the commission from his pocket and
+presented it to the company.</p>
+
+<p>Allen&#8217;s ruddy face paled for an instant and his eyes flashed.
+&#8220;Do I understand you aright?&#8221; he exclaimed, and his voice
+was sharp enough to be heard by many of the troops near by. &#8220;You
+have come to take command of these men?&#8221; and his gesture took in
+the lines of waiting patriots.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I have, sir. There is my commission.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Allen&#8217;s wrath got the better of his politeness and he struck
+the offending paper from Arnold&#8217;s hand. Warner stooped hastily
+and secured it. He and Easton examined the document with angry
+scrutiny. Both had given way with cheerfulness to Ethan Allen&#8217;s
+superiority in the matter; but this affront was personal to them as
+well as to their beloved leader. Allen, with his arms akimbo and fire
+flashing from his eyes faced the suave and cold intruder.
+&#8220;Sir!&#8221; he exclaimed, &#8220;I do not care to see your
+commission, nor do I acknowledge your authority. I bear a commission
+from a higher court and recognize an authority higher still.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What do you mean, Colonel Allen?&#8221; demanded Arnold, for
+the moment fearing that the Green Mountain leader had indeed received
+some appointment from the Continental Congress, perhaps, which would
+invalidate his own.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I mean, sir, that my authority is based upon some slight
+precedence in this matter&#8211;a prior claim which dates back some
+years now, Colonel Arnold. I have led some of these men in defending
+their homes on more than one occasion and by their free act of will
+they have made me their leader now.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Your commission, sir? Where is it?&#8221; inquired Arnold,
+cool again, upon finding that his antagonist&#8217;s rights were based
+upon a matter of sentiment.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It is there, sir!&#8221; cried Allen, furiously, turning and
+pointing to the lines of waiting men. &#8220;It is there,
+sir,&#8211;writ on the hearts of those Green Mountain Boys. And a
+higher commission than any Committee of Safety can seal.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The words were heard by the files of waiting troops and already they
+had begun to murmur. That their beloved leader should be displaced by
+any person&#8211;no matter how high his office&#8211;was more than
+distasteful to them. At once they were in revolt.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ethan Allen forever!&#8221; arose the cry. &#8220;We&#8217;ll
+not march without he commands us!&#8221; and more than one threw down
+his arms. Arnold found himself facing the possibility of marching upon
+Ticonderoga alone, for the mutiny seemed general.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Sir, sir!&#8221; exclaimed Warner, in anxiety, addressing
+Arnold. &#8220;You see the feeling of these true-hearted men. No person
+can come here and take command of them in this way. We are not regular
+troops. We are banded together for the good of all, but we do not yet
+acknowledge the authority of a sister colony. We desire to be a
+commonwealth of our own here in the Grants and have already been
+disturbed enough by usurpers from outside. Reconsider this, I beg of
+you. For if you persevere the expedition must fail and that which might
+result in great good to our struggling brethren, will end in harm
+because of this folly.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Arnold, if ambitious and unfeeling, already saw that he was beaten.
+He was not obstinate enough to do that which would be sure to redound
+to his own hurt and discredit. He had not expected such opposition, for
+he did not know the veneration in which the Green Mountain Boys held
+Ethan Allen. Now, seeing himself undone, he did that which for the time
+endeared him to all. His countenance cleared; a frank emotion played
+upon his features and advancing a step toward Ethan Allen he said in a
+clarion voice, heard by all:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Colonel Allen, you have precedence here after all. I was
+mistaken in my premises. Give me a musket and let me march in the
+ranks. I shall be proud to be led by so gallant a commander.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Instantly a volley of cheers broke out among the soldiery, and Allen
+who, above all men, could appreciate such generosity, offered his hand
+cordially. &#8220;Egad, sir!&#8221; he cried, &#8220;you are a man
+after my own heart. When there are so many jealous cattle running about
+the woods, it is a pleasure to meet with a man. Give me your hand,
+Colonel Arnold! There is glory enough in this campaign for all, and you
+shall share the command with me, if you will.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He turned then to his followers. &#8220;Men of the Green
+Mountains!&#8221; he cried, &#8220;we are to march at once. Fall in!
+And with your courage and the help of Jehovah we shall succeed in our
+undertaking. To your places, gentlemen,&#8221; to the minor officers,
+&#8220;and Colonel Arnold and I will lead you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Amid cheers the column moved forward into the forest and took up its
+line of march toward the shore of Lake Champlain. Never had the Green
+Mountain wilderness echoed to the tread of such a body of men. And they
+were worth more than a passing glance for they represented the spirit
+which made the American Revolution one of the greatest struggles of the
+ages. Like the campaigns of Joshua of old, the battles of the American
+yeoman with the trained military of King George proved that, when
+guided by the God of Battles, the weak can overcome the strong. These
+men, fighting for their homes and firesides, were inspired with a
+confidence that overcame even impossibilities. They possessed a faith
+in their cause and in their leader like that which threw down the walls
+of Jericho and defeated the allied armies of Canaan.</p>
+
+<p>Even had De la Place and his garrison been informed of their
+approach, and of their numbers, he would doubtless have laughed at the
+possibility of their successfully attacking his fortress. And one there
+was among the Green Mountain Boys who feared that news of the
+expedition had already gone to the British commander. Upon his return
+from the Otter, Enoch Harding had sought and obtained an audience with
+Colonel Allen, and to him had related his adventure with the Yorker
+whom he believed to be his deadly enemy, and told his suspicions
+regarding the man&#8217;s business in the region. But Ethan Allen was
+not to be shaken in his confidence, or in his intentions.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I have an honest man at Ticonderoga now, Master
+Harding,&#8221; he said. &#8220;If spies were through the country we
+should hear of them from other sources. But you did right to come to me
+with this, and if Simon Halpen falls into our hands I will hang him for
+his past offenses, if not for this attempt on your life.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The appearance of the American troops was welcomed along the route
+with acclamation. Many settlers, knowing the course the army would
+take, had waited to join it as it passed their own doors. Shopkeepers
+and mechanics left their work and fell into the ranks; the farmer left
+his plow in the furrow, seized his rifle, and joined his neighbors; a
+woodsman who was &#8220;letting sunlight&#8221; into the gloom of the
+virgin forest, hid his axe under a fallen log and with a deadlier
+weapon on his shoulder followed in the train; the hunter on the trail
+of the frightened buck saw the column coming through the forest road
+and allowed his prey to escape while he turned his attention to matters
+of graver moment. Thus the army of Americans was swelled from hour to
+hour by new recruits.</p>
+
+<p>To camp at night was a small matter to these hardy pioneers. The
+scouts sent out upon either flank acted as hunters and fresh meat was
+abundant. Besides, every man was fairly supplied with provisions
+brought from Castleton. Inspired by the energy of Ethan Allen the
+column rapidly approached the shore of the lake. While some miles away,
+however, the group of officers riding ahead of the main body, suddenly
+descried a tall woodsman striding through the forest toward them.
+&#8220;Who is this chap, Major?&#8221; demanded Allen of his friend
+Warner. &#8220;Had I not sent &#8217;Siah Bolderwood to watch Old Ti
+like a cat at a rathole, I&#8217;d declare this to be he.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And so it is, Colonel!&#8221; returned the other.
+&#8220;Something of moment must have sent our lengthy friend this way,
+for he is a man who knows how to obey orders,&#8221; and he spurred
+forward to meet the footman.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wall, Captain,&#8221; was &#8217;Siah&#8217;s greeting,
+squinting around the horseman at the long column of marching men,
+&#8220;you look like you had a slather of folks yonder. I guess
+there&#8217;ll be something in the wind around Old Ti &#8217;fore long,
+hey?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And how is it you are not there, Bolderwood?&#8221; demanded
+Warner.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wall, I got an idee into my noddle an&#8217; leavin&#8217;
+Smith and Brown to watch Old Ti, for it might run away &#8217;fore ye
+git there, ye know, I trotted down this way ter see the Colonel.
+Ev&#8217;rything is safe there so fur, but there&#8217;s one thing
+we&#8217;ve neglected.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What is that, Bolderwood?&#8221; cried Allen, riding up and
+hearing this last sentence.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, Colonel, although I count you as purty near ekal to
+&#8217;most anything, an&#8217; them fellers behind ye seemed armed to
+deal with any foe, still I calkerlate you ain&#8217;t expectin&#8217;
+ol&#8217; Champlain ter open for ye to pass over dry shod,
+hey?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Allen smote his thigh with his gauntleted hand and the expression on
+his face changed. &#8220;Right, &#8217;Siah! I can&#8217;t forgive
+myself for my thoughtlessness. We must have boats&#8211;and plenty of
+them&#8211;to cross to the fort.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s what struck me last night, Colonel. So I left
+the others ter watch the fort&#8211;an&#8217; a sarpint that wriggled
+into aour han&#8217;s yesterday&#8211;and come kitin&#8217; down here
+for orders.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;A serpent, &#8217;Siah?&#8221; said Warner. &#8220;Who is
+it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;One o&#8217; them Yorkers, an&#8217; one that I&#8217;ve not
+had my eyes on&#8211;let alone my hands&#8211;for a good many months.
+An&#8217; I see a chap behind you there that&#8217;ll be some
+interested in meeting the rascal, too.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8217;Siah had looked past the officers and, in the very front
+rank, caught sight of his young friend Enoch. The latter waved his hand
+to the tall woodsman and Bolderwood, knowing that discipline was lax on
+the march, beckoned Enoch forward. &#8220;Come here, youngster, and
+hear what news I&#8217;ve got for ye,&#8221; he cried. But Allen caught
+at the matter instantly, and understood to whom Bolderwood referred by
+his appellation of &#8220;the serpent.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You mean to say you&#8217;ve got Simon Halpen?&#8221; he
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s the identical sarpint, Colonel,&#8221; declared
+the ranger. &#8220;We caught him tryin&#8217; ter cross to Old Ti and
+thought it was best, under the sarcumstances, ter keep him close till
+this leetle business is over. What he was doin&#8217; riskin&#8217; his
+carcass on this side of the line is more&#8217;n I can
+tell&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The boy was right, Major!&#8221; exclaimed Allen, turning to
+Warner. &#8220;Harding met the fellow while he was stirring up our
+folks in the Otter country last week. He thought he was up to some
+rascality then, and the fellow did try to take his life.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Tried it again, did he?&#8221; cried &#8217;Siah, as Enoch
+approached. &#8220;Is that so, Nuck?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Enoch repeated his adventure with the murderous Halpen. &#8220;If
+I&#8217;d knowed this,&#8221; the ranger declared, &#8220;I&#8217;d
+saved the grub the scoundrel is eating.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll make an example of him when we reach the lake,
+&#8217;Siah,&#8221; declared the leader of the Green Mountain Boys.
+&#8220;But now for this other matter. It is most important. Every
+bateau within reach must be secured.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I know where there are three of &#8217;em. And there may be
+others down the lake furder.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You shall have charge of this, Bolderwood!&#8221; the
+commander cried. &#8220;I make you our captain of scouts. Take any
+reasonable number of men with you and hurry ahead. Every moment is
+precious.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Good!&#8221; said the ranger. &#8220;With Smith and Brown I
+won&#8217;t need but eight or ten more. And I&#8217;ll begin by taking
+young Nuck here. He&#8217;s a good oar.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Take whom you wish. We depend on you,&#8221; replied Allen,
+and within the hour the ranger and his party, including Enoch Harding,
+set off on their mission ahead of the more slowly moving army.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_20'></a>CHAPTER XXI<br /><span
+class='fss'>THE ESCAPE OF THE SPY</span></h2>
+
+<p>In sixteen hours &#8217;Siah Bolderwood had traveled from his camp
+on the shore of Lake Champlain opposite the frowning walls of Fort
+Ticonderoga; when the long ranger was in a hurry he did not spare
+himself. Perhaps no other man in the Vermont wilderness could have
+covered so much ground afoot as he, within the time. But he set off now
+on his return journey, with nearly a dozen men at his heels, as fresh
+as though he had rested for a night instead of for an hour. His muscles
+were seemingly of steel and his limbs of iron. He led at such a pace
+that Enoch Harding, who came first behind him, could scarcely keep up
+with his stride and place his feet, Indian fashion, in the prints of
+his friend&#8217;s moccasins.</p>
+
+<p>The company of scouts traveled in single file and, having no need to
+follow the wood-road on which the army was marching, they soon left
+that out of view. &#8217;Siah found an Indian path which suited him far
+better than the broader trail, for it would bring them much sooner to
+the lake, and for hour after hour he strode on with scarce a look
+behind him to see how his companions kept up. The men he had chosen,
+save Enoch, were tried and trained woodsmen, with powers of endurance
+second only to his own. And as for the lad whom he loved, he knew his
+high spirit and pride. Enoch Harding would not fall behind until the
+last ounce of his strength had been expended.</p>
+
+<p>Finally the party reached a little stream and here the leader gave
+the signal to halt. Enoch flung himself down on the short sward and
+fell asleep almost instantly. &#8217;Siah looked down upon him in some
+pride. &#8220;That&#8217;s the stuff we make men of in this
+country,&#8221; he said aloud. &#8220;I knew his father as well as I
+know myself. The lad will be another Jonas Harding.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;ll hold us back if we&#8217;ve to keep up this pace,
+&#8217;Siah,&#8221; said one of the others, doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Nay, you&#8217;re mistaken there, neighbor. You and I will
+travel until we feel that it ain&#8217;t best for us to go any furder.
+Enoch&#8217;ll keep up till he drops. He won&#8217;t hold us
+back.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And it was true. Others of the party cried &#8220;enough!&#8221;
+before the afternoon was over; but the youth, his lips pale and
+compressed and the perspiration fairly pouring from his limbs, would
+have died before he acknowledged that the pace was too great for him.
+At night &#8217;Siah called another halt and they ate heartily of such
+provisions as they carried and then lay down to rest. But &#8217;Siah
+arranged for a guard. They were nearing the lake now and some
+ill-affected settler (there were several families of Tories near
+Champlain) might see them and wonder what such a large party of armed
+men was doing here. If the news of the approach of the main army did
+not travel ahead, it would be more because of good fortune than good
+management.</p>
+
+<p>The party broke up into groups of two and three in the morning and
+went different ways to the shore. It was agreed that, where the
+settlers who owned boats were known to be staunch Whigs, it would be
+safe to tell them for what purpose their crafts were needed. But
+several boats were owned by Tories and royalist sympathizers and these
+people must be deceived for, although the scouts were doubtless well
+armed and determined enough to take the boats without saying &#8220;by
+your leave,&#8221; such a proceeding might be disastrous to the
+expedition.</p>
+
+<p>&#8217;Siah Bolderwood chose Enoch as his companion and went himself
+toward the home of a farmer who stoutly upheld the King and his
+ministers and who had, in fact, held the title of his land from New
+York through all the years of trouble between his neighbors and the
+Albany courts. His homestead, however, was in such an out-of-the-way
+place and so secluded that the Green Mountain Boys had left him
+unmolested. Now Bolderwood was determined to have the roomy canoe and a
+large bateau which he was known to possess.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But if the pesky critter gits an inkling of what we&#8217;re
+up to, he&#8217;ll start for Old Ti&#8211;that he will!&#8221; the
+ranger said to Enoch. &#8220;We gotter get around him somehow.
+An&#8217; you leave it ter me. Ye better keep aout o&#8217; sight, I
+reckon, anyway; numbers might make the ol&#8217; codger
+suspicious.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>So Enoch hid in the wood surrounding the clearing on the lake shore
+while his tall friend went toward the Tory&#8217;s door. The old man,
+who depended upon his nephew and a slave or two to do his work, was
+sitting looking out across the lake. He was too far away to distinguish
+the battlements of Ticonderoga, but he happened to be looking in that
+direction when Bolderwood presented himself. &#8220;Neighbor!&#8221;
+said the latter, in a most friendly tone, &#8220;ye look hearty.
+What&#8217;s the news?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Humph!&#8221; grunted the old man, staring at the Yankee
+shrewdly, &#8220;you&#8217;re the feller that&#8217;s been
+clearin&#8217; land above us yander, ain&#8217;t ye?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That I can&#8217;t deny, sir,&#8221; responded the ranger.
+&#8220;An&#8217; jest for the sake o&#8217; bein&#8217; neighborly,
+I&#8217;m down here ter arsk a favor.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What is it?&#8221; grunted the old man, doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, my partner an&#8217; me have got a job to do, an&#8217;
+we&#8217;re wantin&#8217; ter borry one or both o&#8217; your
+boats,&#8221; and he pointed down to the water where, at the end of a
+little dock, the big flatboat and a long canoe were both moored. The
+old man could not see the boats without rising, but this he did as
+though to make sure that they were in their places. &#8220;What ye want
+&#8217;em for?&#8221; he asked. &#8220;An&#8217; howsumever, I
+can&#8217;t lend ye more than one o&#8217; them. We might want the
+other ourselves.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What for?&#8221; asked Bolderwood, with the usual freedom of
+the community, and likewise proving himself a true Yankee by responding
+to one question with another.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Might wanter go acrosst,&#8221; said the farmer. &#8220;They
+say there&#8217;s goin&#8217; ter be a lot o&#8217; reinforcements come
+up to Old Ti an&#8217; my nevvy and I want to see &#8217;em when they
+come.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s what we&#8217;re wantin&#8217; the boats
+for&#8211;to go acrosst to the fort,&#8221; said &#8217;Siah, with
+apparent frankness. &#8220;We&#8217;ve got some things to take over
+an&#8217; it&#8217;s too fur to swim.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I sh&#8217;d say it was!&#8221; exclaimed the Tory.
+&#8220;Then I take it the report that reinforcements air comin&#8217;
+is true? Captain De la Place is buyin&#8217; cattle to feed the
+garrison?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon he&#8217;ll need a good many to feed all
+that&#8217;s comin&#8217;,&#8221; returned Bolderwood,
+non-committingly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wall, I can&#8217;t lend ye both, sir,&#8221; declared the
+old man. &#8220;The canoe wouldn&#8217;t do ye much good, though
+&#8217;tis a master big one. Seems ter me there&#8217;s a good deal
+o&#8217; boatin&#8217; on the lake to-day. I seen two barges go along
+north a&#8217;ready. Folks goin&#8217; fishin&#8217; I
+s&#8217;pose.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Like enough&#8211;like enough,&#8221; declared &#8217;Siah
+hastily. &#8220;I&#8217;ll git right down and take the
+bateau.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ain&#8217;t ye got no one ter help ye?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll find my partner somewhere up the lake. He was
+lookin&#8217; for boats, too,&#8221; returned the ranger.</p>
+
+<p>He started to descend the bank and the old farmer arose and hobbled
+after him. The instant he reached the brink where he could again see
+his little dock, he gave voice to an exclamation of disgust and anger.
+&#8220;There it be! That Pomp is the most no &#8217;count critter that
+ever eat smoked hog. He was a usin&#8217; that canoe this
+mornin&#8217;, an&#8217; now look at it!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Seemingly the big canoe had slipped her moorings and was floating
+rapidly around the wooded point near the dock. &#8217;Siah might have
+been astonished a little himself had he not had sharper eyes than the
+Tory. He saw that several articles of apparel lay in the canoe and he
+recognized Enoch Harding&#8217;s old otter-skin cap. &#8220;Hold on,
+sir!&#8221; he cried. &#8220;No matter about calling your hands from
+the field to git it. I&#8217;ll have that canoe in a jiffy.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He ran down the steep bank, unfastened the bateau, and with a
+powerful shove sent it out into the lake. There were two long sweeps
+aboard and with one of these &#8217;Siah quickly propelled the heavy
+craft in the same direction as the canoe&#8211;down the lake. The
+latter craft was scarcely out of sight of the old man when the bateau
+came along side. There was nothing showing of the swimmer but his head
+and one hand which clutched the painter.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Come aboard here, ye young rascal!&#8221; exclaimed the
+woodsman, with a chuckle. &#8220;You&#8217;ll have that whole spatter
+of Tories arter us. Couldn&#8217;t you hide your clothes better
+&#8217;n that? Might have left &#8217;em ashore. If the old gentleman
+hadn&#8217;t been blinder&#8217;n a bat at midday, he&#8217;d seen
+&#8217;em.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t think of that,&#8221; Enoch admitted, rather
+ruefully, climbing over the bow of the canoe and then passing the thong
+to &#8217;Siah, who fastened it to the stern of the bateau. &#8220;I
+heard him say you couldn&#8217;t have both, and I thought it too bad.
+This canoe will hold a dozen men.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wall, grab that sweep. Never mind your clothes just now. I
+warrant ye&#8217;ll keep warm enough till we git to the
+camp.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The newly made captain of scouts and his young companion were by no
+means the first to reach the rendezvous on the shore opposite
+Ticonderoga. Nor is it to be supposed that the boats being there
+collected were brought boldly up in daylight. They were hidden in
+little coves near by, which could be reached by the scouts without
+attracting attention from the fort, to be brought after dark to the
+landing from which Ethan Allen expected to embark his troops. There
+were but two craft moored opposite the camp which Bolderwood and his
+companions had occupied for more than a week. Bolderwood held the title
+of a long strip of land along the lake shore, but he had never built a
+cabin. A shack, or hut, of branches was all the shelter the trio
+enjoyed.</p>
+
+<p>Here the ranger and Enoch found several of their friends beside
+Smith and Brown in waiting. The shore of the lake on this side had been
+fairly scoured for bateaus. They dared not cross to the New York side
+to obtain boats, for by so doing they would be sure to excite
+suspicion. With those already obtained and some which their companions
+were now gone for, the expedition must be content. The one mistake of
+their bold leader might bring about failure to the enterprise; yet so
+confident were they in Ethan Allen&#8217;s ability that they firmly
+believed he would find some way to overcome the lack of transportation.
+The forced march of the scouts the day before, and for a good share of
+the night as well, had brought them to the lake long before the
+expedition itself could possibly reach the landing. Besides, the
+leaders would hold back until after dark. The attack upon the fortress
+must be accomplished under the cover of night. Bolderwood hoped, when
+he saw the meagre provision he was able to make for transportation,
+that the army would arrive early enough to allow of two, and even
+three, voyages to be made from shore to shore, that the entire force
+might take part in the attack.</p>
+
+<p>To Enoch, however, there was another matter of grave interest to be
+attended to when he and his tall friend arrived at the temporary camp.
+He wished to see the spy whom Bolderwood had mentioned to Ethan Allen.
+The ranger, too, looked sharply about the camp for the man.
+&#8220;Where&#8217;s that slippery critter we captured the other
+night?&#8221; he asked. &#8220;If he gits away before Colonel Allen
+comes there&#8217;ll be trouble for some of us.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;d better have hung him up and so saved his
+food,&#8221; grunted Brown, who, because the Yorkers had burned his
+house and driven his wife and children into the forest, had no love for
+anybody from the west side of the lake.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You haven&#8217;t let him go?&#8221; demanded Bolderwood.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Nay, &#8217;Siah. He&#8217;s safe enough,&#8221; returned
+Smith. &#8220;He&#8217;s yonder behind the camp. He&#8217;d be an eel
+or a sarpint to wriggle out of them thongs.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;A sarpint he is,&#8221; declared Bolderwood, and strode away
+to look at the prisoner. Enoch followed him. There, sitting with his
+back against a tree, his ankles fastened together and a strong deer
+thong wrapped about his body and about the tree itself, was Simon
+Halpen. When he saw the ranger he scowled. When he observed the boy,
+however, his eyes flashed and the blood rushed to his face. &#8220;I
+reckon he knows ye, Nuck,&#8221; said the ranger.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What are you going to do with me?&#8221; demanded the Yorker,
+with bravado. &#8220;You&#8217;ll all suffer for this outrage, I
+promise ye! Wait until I get to Albany&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And you ever see Albany again you&#8217;re a lucky
+man,&#8221; said Bolderwood, satisfying himself that the bonds were
+tight. &#8220;The Colonel will see to ye, my fine bird.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Enoch still remained before his enemy when the ranger went back to
+the camp. The villain returned his glance boldly. &#8220;You are
+satisfied now, I suppose?&#8221; he muttered.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not yet,&#8221; replied young Harding.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I shall be avenged!&#8221; declared Halpen, with a burst of
+wrath. &#8220;If I am injured I have powerful friends who will punish
+you. I care nothing for Ethan Allen&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;A power higher than Colonel Allen will punish you,&#8221;
+Enoch said, gravely.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Pooh! I care nothing for your Whig courts. You had best do
+what you can for me, Master Harding.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I will leave you to the punishment you deserve. And you will
+receive it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What have I done, I&#8217;d like to know?&#8221; exclaimed
+the prisoner. &#8220;It was not my fault that your house was burned and
+your mother and you placed in danger of your lives. It was a
+mistake.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Was it a mistake when you crept to my camp the other night
+and fired at me as I lay sleeping beside the fire?&#8221; demanded the
+boy, sternly.</p>
+
+<p>The red flush left the prisoner&#8217;s cheek then.
+&#8220;What&#8211;what do you mean?&#8221; he gasped.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You know well what I mean. See here!&#8221; Enoch showed him
+the hole in the breast of his coat. &#8220;That was made by your
+bullet.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The boy&#8217;s life is charmed!&#8221; muttered Halpen.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You had much better have used your gun-stock, Master Halpen.
+You would have been surer to kill me then.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>At this an expression of positive terror came into the
+prisoner&#8217;s features. &#8220;I am not a murderer,&#8221; he
+exclaimed. &#8220;You are mistaken if you think that I fired at
+you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It is true I cannot prove it,&#8221; Enoch replied.
+&#8220;But something else I can prove.&#8221; He advanced a step nearer
+to the man. &#8220;Do you remember where you hid the moose hoofs, Simon
+Halpen?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The prisoner shrank back against the tree and his eyes fairly glared
+up at the youth. &#8220;You&#8211;you&#8213;&#8221; he gasped.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes. They are found. We now know how my poor father was
+killed. And you were seen running from the place with his blood upon
+your clothes and upon your gun. Even your Albany courts would punish
+you for that!&#8221; Then the boy, unable to trust himself longer in
+the presence of the man who had so injured him, hastily left the
+spot.</p>
+
+<p>And the prisoner&#8211;how did he feel while tied to that tree,
+waiting for the judgment which was to fall upon him for his crimes? No
+human being but the criminal himself can ever appreciate half the agony
+of the condemned. It was long since discovered that the gift of speech
+was given man to conceal his thoughts. To the man of strong will the
+face is a mask to conceal his feelings. And Simon Halpen was not a
+weakling. He may have betrayed some emotion when accused by Enoch; it
+was a small part only of what he felt.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'> <img src='images/i333.jpg' id="img007" alt='' /> <p class='center caption'>P<span class='fss'>UNISHMENT WAS</span> N<span class='fss'>EAR AT</span> H<span class='fss'>AND</span></p></div><!-- figure -->
+
+<p>He saw now, as plainly as he saw the lengthening shadows about him,
+that punishment for his crimes was near. These stern woodsmen, whose
+plan for attacking Ticonderoga he had discovered, were in no mood to
+trifle with him. And what Enoch had told him was an assurance that
+though he might live to be brought before a court of justice, he must
+stand trial for his crimes. Neither political influence nor his wealth
+could save him from the result of his offenses against the laws of man
+and God. He was made desperate by these thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>He could see from his uncomfortable position the company of scouts
+busy with their supper. The ordinary observer would not have imagined
+that these men were the pioneers of two hundred and thirty Green
+Mountain Boys and the Massachusetts and Connecticut troops. But Halpen
+knew the army of Americans was coming, and the object of their
+approach. Unwarned, Captain De la Place and his garrison might be
+surprised and overwhelmed by these backwoodsmen. Halpen had no
+particular love for the King, nor for the royal government; but he
+hated these men who had defended their farms for so many years from the
+aggressions of his own party. Fear of punishment was reinforced by a
+desire to worst the Green Mountain Boys. He began to struggle against
+his bonds.</p>
+
+<p>He had done that early in the day when he was first fastened to the
+tree; and the thongs had cut into his arms and breast. But now he felt
+these abrasions not at all. He was mad to be free, and free he would
+be! The scouts paid him no attention. The sun was set and the forest
+grew dark. Would he escape he must accomplish the matter soon, or
+likely Bolderwood or young Harding would come to examine him again, and
+then the chance would be past.</p>
+
+<p>At last, his flesh cut so deeply that blood ran from arms and body,
+he stretched the hide rope until he was able to wriggle out of it.
+There were then his ankles to untie. This he did in a very few moments.
+He was free! Rising to his knees, his limbs were so paralyzed by
+inaction that he could not yet stand upright, he crept into the brush
+and, like the serpent that Bolderwood declared to be his prototype,
+glided away from the camp and down toward the brush-bordered shore of
+the lake.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_21'></a>CHAPTER XXII<br /><span
+class='fss'>THE END OF SIMON HALPEN</span></h2>
+
+<p>As they are to-day, the surroundings of Fort Ticonderoga were most
+picturesque. Nor is the country about the fortifications, and across
+the lake where the camp of Bolderwood&#8217;s scouts was established at
+the time of our story, and later where the Grenadier Battery was
+raised, much more thickly settled to-day than it was then. Mt.
+Defiance, south of the Lake George outlet on the west side of Champlain
+was a heavily wooded eminence. Behind the scouts&#8217; camp a rugged
+shoulder of ground, later called Mount Independence, raised its bulk
+out of the surrounding forest. The formidable promontory on which the
+French had built Ticonderoga twenty years before, commanded a great
+sweep of the lake. For mere foot-soldiers, without artillery or
+explosives, to attack these fortifications seemed utterly
+preposterous.</p>
+
+<p>Where Bolderwood and his companions were waiting they had an
+excellent view of the fort. At sunset the garrison was paraded and one
+gun boomed resonantly across the calm lake. Just before it became too
+dark to see the other shore, the Americans observed a man come out of
+the covered way by which the fortifications were entered and approach
+the shore. There was a light canoe moored there and into this he
+stepped and paddled out into the lake, evidently aiming his craft for a
+cove near the scouts&#8217; position. Bolderwood and his comrades were
+so deeply interested in the maneuvres of this man that Simon Halpen was
+for the time forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll have to take that feller in and hold him for the
+Colonel to talk to,&#8221; suggested one of the scouts when it became
+apparent that the stranger from the fort was coming ashore near at
+hand. &#8220;He&#8217;ll see them boats an&#8217; suspicion
+something.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll meet him,&#8221; said Bolderwood; &#8220;but
+I&#8217;m reck&#8217;ning that he&#8217;ll be as glad to see the
+Colonel as the Colonel is ter see him. I know that somebody was over
+there in the fort to find out how the land lies and what sort o&#8217;
+shape them red-coats is in, an&#8217; &#8217;twouldn&#8217;t
+s&#8217;prise me if this was the chap.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They all followed &#8217;Siah down to the cove&#8211;even
+Enoch&#8211;and met the stranger as he came ashore. The latter seemed
+in nowise troubled by seeing so many armed men and after mooring his
+canoe came at once to the group of Americans. &#8220;Friends, I
+presume, sirs?&#8221; he asked, glancing keenly from man to man.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Reckon so,&#8221; admitted Bolderwood.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Where is Colonel Allen?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If you don&#8217;t mind waitin&#8217; with us I
+shouldn&#8217;t be s&#8217;prised if ye see him &#8217;fore
+long,&#8221; declared the long-legged scout. &#8220;Wanter see him
+pertic&#8217;lar?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I do,&#8221; the stranger admitted. &#8220;You are the
+advance guard of our boys, I presume?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, as you don&#8217;t know us, an&#8217; we don&#8217;t
+know you, we&#8217;d better not discuss private matters till
+we&#8217;re interduced, as ye might say. I sh&#8217;dn&#8217;t be
+astonished ter see the Colonel come along here &#8217;most any time
+now.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Very well, sir. I am at your service,&#8221; was the
+response, and the newcomer walked back to the camp with them. But Enoch
+had gone on ahead, remembering that the captive had been left alone for
+nearly half an hour. Suddenly his voice rose in a shout of anger and
+surprise. &#8220;He has escaped!&#8221; cried Bolderwood, the instant
+he heard his young friend, and plunged at once into the wood toward the
+spot where Halpen had been tied. Truly, the spy was gone.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The rascal was sharper than I thought,&#8221; gasped the
+ranger. &#8220;And&#8211;and what will Colonel Allen say?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That isn&#8217;t the worst of it,&#8221; declared the
+youth.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes; you think it is worse that a villain like him should
+escape without punishment. I doubt not that Ethan Allen would have hung
+him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He may have deserved hanging,&#8221; Enoch returned, with a
+shudder. &#8220;But I am not thinking of that. I fear that he will yet
+do us harm. If he gets across the lake and warns the folks at Old Ti,
+I&#8217;ll never forgive myself for not sitting down here and watching
+him all the time.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He sartainly should have been watched,&#8221; admitted
+&#8217;Siah. &#8220;But I didn&#8217;t b&#8217;lieve he had the pluck
+to git away. See here! The thongs are wet with the man&#8217;s blood.
+He must ha&#8217; cut himself badly.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We must find him, &#8217;Siah! If he secures a boat and
+crosses the lake the expedition will be ruined. This man who has just
+come across declares Captain De la Place knows nothing about our army
+as yet. But if Simon Halpen reaches the
+fortifications&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8217;Siah rushed back to his company and sent them to search the
+bank of the lake. He ordered, too, one man to remain with each group of
+boats so that the escaped spy might not secure one and get such a start
+across the lake that he could not be overtaken. But it had now grown
+quite dark and the scouts were unable to find Halpen in the vicinity of
+the camp. &#8217;Siah was confident that he and his men had obtained
+every craft on this eastern shore for miles up and down the lake, so he
+did not believe Halpen could really get across to the fort in time to
+warn the garrison. He was naturally too tender-hearted to wish to see
+the fellow hung to the nearest tree, which might be his fate had Ethan
+Allen examined him and found him guilty of spying upon the patriotic
+settlers.</p>
+
+<p>Now that night had come and the darkness would have covered the
+movements of the American troops, as the head of the column did not
+appear, Bolderwood and his comrades began to fear that something had
+detained their friends and that the attack upon Ticonderoga might be
+postponed until the night of the tenth. How the fleet of bateaus and
+canoes could be held in the vicinity for many hours without suspicions
+being aroused as to their proposed use, was a question hard to answer.
+The captain of the scouts sent two of his men out upon the trail by
+which they expected Ethan Allen and the troops under him to
+advance.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Enoch Harding had not given up the search for the escaped
+spy. He feared what the fellow might yet do to weaken or utterly ruin
+the hopes of the American troops. Halpen was not armed, so the youth
+had no fear of being attacked by him; but he spent his time creeping
+through the brushwood up and down the lake shore, hoping to stumble
+upon the Yorker. He did not believe that Halpen had gone far from the
+encampment. Finally, in his wanderings, he came to the cove where the
+scout who had spent the day inside the fort, had landed. The bateaus
+were on the other side of the cove; the canoe the scout had used was
+alone in the shadow of a big oak, although a sentinel watched the
+bateaus. This sentinel had neglected to remove the canoe to his side of
+the cove and as Enoch came down the hillside he observed something
+moving in the shadow of the oak. A moment later, before he was really
+sure whether this something was a man or an animal, the canoe left the
+bank. The trees threw their shadows upon the water and it was almost
+impossible to observe the moving craft clearly; yet he was pretty sure
+that there was a figure in it and that it had been unmoored.</p>
+
+<p>The youth was too far away to risk a shot; the sentinel was much
+farther from the point of embarkation. If Simon Halpen had found and
+seized this canoe it looked for a moment as though he would surely
+escape.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch ran down to the edge of the water, but when he reached the
+point at which the canoe had been moored it was almost out of sight. He
+could not see the figure in the boat clearly enough to shoot. Indeed,
+he shrank from committing what seemed like murder. Simon Halpen was
+defenseless. &#8220;But he must not escape!&#8221; the boy exclaimed
+and started around the shore of the cove. The fugitive kept the canoe
+within the deep shadow of the trees which bordered the inlet. He did
+not paddle out into the centre; there he might have been seen by the
+sentinel on the other side.</p>
+
+<p>The boy ran along the edge of the cove, stumbling over the tree
+roots and fallen logs, yet endeavoring to follow the course of the
+canoe as quietly as possible. There was a chance of his passing the
+fugitive and reaching the mouth of the cove first. Then, he thought,
+Halpen would be at his mercy. The better to do this unobserved he made
+a detour into the woods and finally, after ten minutes of rapid work,
+came out upon the extreme point which guarded the inlet. As he reached
+this place his quick ear distinguished the splash of a paddle not far
+away. Straining his eyes he soon observed through the gloom the canoe
+moving amid the shadows. The spy had very nearly escaped from the cove.
+Once out in the open lake it would be impossible to overtake him.</p>
+
+<p>Then Enoch wished he had aroused his comrades; at least the sentinel
+guarding the bateaus would have heard his cry and come to his
+assistance. But now if the spy was to be stopped it must be by his
+individual effort. Throwing down his rifle and removing his outside
+garments, he slid into the water with scarcely a ripple of its surface
+and finding the lake deep at this point, began to swim at once. The
+canoe was almost upon him when suddenly, with a muttered exclamation,
+the fugitive turned the craft by one swift stroke of the paddle and
+sent it darting away from the shore. Enoch had been seen or heard, and
+Halpen feared what was the fact&#8211;that one of his enemies was
+striving to overtake him.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch flung himself forward in the water and with a strong overhand
+stroke took a diagonal course to intercept the canoe. He could see the
+man bending to his paddle. Every stroke of the blade sent the
+phosphorescent water flying about the frail bark. The next few moments
+were of vital importance to both pursued and pursuer.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch&#8217;s plunge into the water had driven Halpen to paddle away
+from the shore. Now he was heading the craft across the cove and
+therefore toward the station of the sentinel. If he pursued this course
+for many rods he would be within rifle shot. And once out of the shadow
+of the trees the light on the water would make him an easy mark. To
+pass Enoch before the latter reached the edge of the line of shadow was
+therefore Simon Halpen&#8217;s object.</p>
+
+<p>But the American youth was determined that Halpen should not do
+this. He was a strong swimmer and spurred by both the desire to
+recapture his enemy and to save the cause to which he was
+bound&#8211;the capture of Ticonderoga&#8211;he put forth every atom of
+his strength to overtake the canoe. The paddle flashed first upon one
+side, then on the other of the craft, which fairly darted through the
+water. But suddenly a hand and arm rose from the lake and seized the
+paddle just back of the blade. Enoch had dived under the surface and
+come up beside the canoe as Halpen was speeding past.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ha! would you do it?&#8221; gasped the spy, striving to tear
+the paddle from the youth&#8217;s grasp. The canoe rocked dangerously.
+The man flung himself to the other side and his superior strength
+wrenched the paddle away. Not contented to use the instrument in an
+attempt to escape, however, he tried to strike the youth with it. The
+canoe was all but overturned, although its momentum carried it on, and
+once out of Enoch&#8217;s grasp the spy could have easily gotten away.
+Whether he recognized his enemy or not, Halpen was inclined to deliver
+a second blow. He rose to do this and Enoch, fairly leaping forward,
+seized the stern of the canoe with both hands.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Throw down your paddle, Simon Halpen!&#8221; he
+commanded.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It is you, then?&#8221; cried the spy, now sure of the
+identity of the youth. He aimed a fearful stroke at the boy&#8217;s
+head. But instantly the latter tipped the canoe first one way, then the
+other, and the spy, losing his balance, plunged with a resounding
+splash into the lake!</p>
+
+<p>The canoe turned completely over. This was not what Enoch wished,
+but the shock of Halpen&#8217;s fall was so great that he could not
+help it. The boy&#8217;s desire had been to pitch the man out, get in
+himself, and then have the spy at his mercy. But chance&#8211;nay,
+Providence, for the man&#8217;s sins had deserved death&#8211;willed
+otherwise.</p>
+
+<p>Simon Halpen could not swim. In falling into the lake he even lost
+his grip upon the paddle. So, when he rose to the surface, he had
+nothing to cling to, but struggled wildly and cried out in fear.
+&#8220;Help! I am choking! I will drown!&#8221; His voice rose to a
+screech. An answering shout came from the distant shore where the
+sentinel was stationed. But the latter was too far away to render aid.
+If the spy was to be saved it depended upon the efforts of the youth
+whose father had died under Halpen&#8217;s hand, and whose own life the
+scoundrel had twice sought.</p>
+
+<p>At that fearful cry, however, Enoch launched himself at the sinking
+man. His head was already under water when the boy reached down and
+seized his collar. He brought him to the surface. The water gurgled
+from his throat and he breathed again. Had he been content to abandon
+himself to his rescuer then he would have been saved.</p>
+
+<p>But terror rode him like a nightmare. He feared drowning; he feared,
+too, the enemy whom he would have killed had he been able the instant
+before. He could not appreciate the generous spirit which had prompted
+Enoch to come to his assistance. He thought the boy strove only to
+force him beneath the lake and he fought and screamed with passion and
+horror of imminent death.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Be still! be still!&#8221; cried Enoch, well-nigh overcome
+himself by the mad actions of the man. &#8220;Lie quiet or I cannot
+save you. Be still!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Halpen did not hear him; or, if he heard, he would not believe. He
+tore himself from Enoch&#8217;s grasp, and as the youth tried to seize
+him again he struck out wildly and his fist found lodgment against
+Enoch&#8217;s jaw. The blow stunned the latter and he sank. Halpen
+strove to reach the overturned canoe. It was too far away. He felt
+himself going down for a third time and his lungs were already half
+filled with water. A fearful scream rent the night&#8211;the last cry
+of a terrified soul going to its end&#8211;and he sank. He never rose
+to the surface after that third plunge beneath the lake.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_22'></a>CHAPTER XXIII<br /><span
+class='fss'>THE DAWN OF THE TENTH OF MAY</span></h2>
+
+<p>Enoch Harding, after a moment of breathless agony beneath the water,
+struggled to the air again. The blow he had received so dulled his
+senses that, had the canoe not fortunately been within the reach of his
+arm, he would have a second time gone down into the depths of the lake
+and possibly shared the fate of his enemy. But when his hand, flung out
+in that despair which is said to make a drowning person catch at even a
+straw, came in contact with the boat he seized it with a grip that
+could not be shaken. He had not the strength necessary to turn it over
+and to climb into the craft; but fortunately rescue was near.</p>
+
+<p>The sentinel had heard the voices out upon the water, and Simon
+Halpen&#8217;s despairing scream as he went down for the last time,
+echoed from the wooded bluffs and reached the ears of the other Green
+Mountain Boys in the neighborhood. The sentinel leaped into the big
+canoe which Enoch had that morning secured from the Tory farmer up the
+lake, and paddled rapidly toward the mouth of the cove. He suspected at
+once that the escaped spy was trying to cross the lake and that some
+one of his brother scouts had discovered him.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly the rescuer saw the upturned canoe and the almost exhausted
+boy clinging to it. He drove his own craft alongside and reaching
+quickly seized Enoch&#8217;s shoulder, bearing him up as the
+youth&#8217;s own hands slipped from their resting-place on the keel of
+the canoe. &#8220;Courage&#8211;courage!&#8221; cried the scout,
+heartily. &#8220;You are not goin&#8217; down yet, Nuck Harding!
+Where&#8217;s the other?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Gone&#8211;gone!&#8221; gasped Enoch, horrified by the death
+of Simon Halpen.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Who was it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The spy.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ah! I thought so. Well, we can&#8217;t help the poor wretch
+now. Can you aid yourself at all? Brace up, man!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m&#8211;I&#8217;m all right,&#8221; the youth
+declared, finally shaking off the feeling which had numbed him.
+&#8220;Let me get a grip on your boat&#8211;there! Now you can paddle
+ashore. I&#8217;ll not lose my hold this time.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Right it is, then.&#8221; The rescuer paddled slowly toward
+the bateaus. When he came to the shore with the boy dragging behind
+him, Bolderwood and several other members of the company had arrived in
+answer to the expiring scream of the drowned Yorker. Upon hearing the
+explanation of the affair the chief scout&#8217;s face became grave
+indeed. &#8220;The poor wretch has gone to his just desarts, I
+don&#8217;t doubt,&#8221; he said. &#8220;But so sudden&#8211;so
+sudden! It seems a turrible thing, friends, for a man to live the life
+he lived and then to go before his Maker without no preparation. He
+murdered poor Jonas Harding as sure as aigs is aigs, an&#8217; he tried
+twice ter kill the boy here, an&#8217; burned the widder&#8217;s home.
+Yet I&#8217;d wished him time to make his peace with God. It&#8217;s an
+awful affair.... But come!&#8221; he added, recovering himself,
+&#8220;there&#8217;s something else to do now. We&#8217;ve got word
+from Colonel Allen. The troops are almost here. An&#8217; as good as
+we&#8217;ve done, there ain&#8217;t ha&#8217;f enough boats to
+transport our boys across the lake.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There may be more comin&#8217; from the north,
+&#8217;Siah,&#8221; suggested Brown. &#8220;Y&#8217; know ye sent some
+of the boys up that way this arternoon.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Small hope o&#8217; their gettin&#8217;
+anything&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The chief scout&#8217;s words were interrupted by a shout from one
+of the others. Around the point which defended the little cove a boat
+was appearing&#8211;or, rather, a lantern which betrayed the approach
+of a boat. &#8220;Here&#8217;s another!&#8221; was the cry.
+&#8220;Here&#8217;s Major Skeene&#8217;s big bateau&#8211;an&#8217;
+Major Skeene&#8217;s nigger, too!&#8221; as the loud and angry voice of
+a black man was heard across the calm water.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The boys are having a hard time with our black-and-tan
+friend,&#8221; said Bolderwood with a chuckle. Then he held up his hand
+for silence. &#8220;Hark! there&#8217;s the ring of a horse&#8217;s
+hoof&#8211;and the tramp of feet. The troops are coming.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>With a rattle of accoutrements a cavalcade of horsemen descended the
+bluff to the tiny cove. Enoch recognized Colonel Allen, Major Warner,
+the stranger, Arnold, and Colonel Easton, the commander of the
+Massachusetts and Connecticut forces. &#8220;Praise the Lord,
+&#8217;Siah!&#8221; cried the hearty voice of the Green Mountain
+leader. &#8220;We&#8217;re arrived at last. &#8217;Twas like a task of
+Hercules to get here. And the night is already far gone. Where are your
+boats, man?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The bulk of &#8217;em are right here, Colonel. We ain&#8217;t
+got what I wished; but we&#8217;ve taken &#8217;em from friend and foe,
+and here comes the last of my boys with Major Skeene&#8217;s big raft
+and, if I ain&#8217;t mighty mistaken, with a bag o&#8217; charcoal
+aboard that must ha&#8217; caused &#8217;em consider&#8217;ble
+trouble.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The voice of the negro, who was the property of one of the
+wealthiest royalists on the lake, became more and more vociferous as
+the bateau approached the shore. &#8220;Wot de goodness youse
+shakaroons doin&#8217; yere? We ain&#8217;t goin&#8217; land
+yere&#8211;no, sir! Dis ain&#8217;t no place fur us. Who yo&#8217;
+t&#8217;ink capen ob dis craft, anyway?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, come along, old man! we wanter see ye!&#8221; shouted
+Bolderwood from the shore. &#8220;We won&#8217;t eat ye up.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Dis ain&#8217; no place for us, I tells yo&#8217;!&#8221;
+cried the darky, and as the outline of the bateau and the objects upon
+it were now visible, they could see the whites of his rolling eyes.
+&#8220;I ain&#8217; got nuttin&#8217; ter do wid yo&#8217;
+shakaroons.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Come on, there!&#8221; shouted Allen. &#8220;Gag that black
+rascal if he doesn&#8217;t talk less and use his sweeps
+well.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Who dat say fur ter gag me?&#8221; demanded the black, his
+teeth chattering. &#8220;D&#8217;you knows who I is, sah? I&#8217;se
+Major Skeene&#8217;s nigger, an&#8217; dis Major Skeene&#8217;s bateau,
+an&#8217; we gotter load o&#8217; freight fo&#8217; de
+castle.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ve got another sort of freight for you, my
+man,&#8221; said the Green Mountain leader. &#8220;So come ashore here
+and have no more words about it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But dese yere gemmen say dey goin&#8217; fishin&#8217;
+an&#8217; git me ter lend &#8217;em passage!&#8221; cried the darky, in
+despair.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And so we are going fishing,&#8221; cried Ethan Allen.
+&#8220;And you shall go, too, my black friend. But it will be different
+fishing from any that you&#8217;ve experienced before. Out with you,
+now!&#8221; he added, as the bateau grounded on the shore. &#8220;Get
+that freight off, men. What boats we have we must use at once. Perhaps
+they can be returned for another party to cross after us. I&#8217;ll
+never forgive myself if this oversight makes a wreck of our
+expedition.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>At that moment the man who, earlier in the evening, had crossed the
+lake from the fort, came and spoke to Ethan Allen. The leader of the
+Americans listened attentively, slapping his thigh now and again with
+evident satisfaction as he heard the report of this faithful patriot
+who, as Allen had previously said, dared enter the lion&#8217;s jaws.
+He had gone to Ticonderoga as a trader, had spent parts of two days in
+the fort, learning much that encouraged Allen in this desperate game he
+was playing. Although expecting additions to the garrison, Captain De
+la Place had not yet received the reinforcements. The buttresses of the
+fort, too, were in a sad state of repair. Indeed, since the British had
+swept the French from the lake, and with them driven the Hurons and
+Algonquins into the northern wilderness, few if any repairs had been
+made upon Ticonderoga. The British had simply held it as a storehouse
+and the garrison was small. If the American troops now gathering upon
+the eastern shore of Lake Champlain could once cross the water and
+approach the fort unperceived, there was hope in the hearts of all that
+the stronghold would be captured and the garrison overcome without any
+great loss of life.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The God of Battles has been with ye!&#8221; exclaimed Allen,
+when the man had finished his report. &#8220;And if He is with us, as I
+believe, yonder fort and all it contains shall be ours before
+sunrise.... But hasten! Tell Baker to bring up his troops. Bolderwood,
+you and your scouts must go over first with us. Colonel Arnold, you
+will come in my boat if you wish. Major Warner, I leave you to assist
+our good friend Easton. The boats shall return as soon as we have
+landed. Count the men who enter these boats, gentlemen. The lake is
+calm; but do not overload the craft. We desire no accident to delay our
+landing on the other side.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Enoch Harding kept close to his friend, the old ranger, and was
+therefore in one of the foremost boats. He was near Colonel Allen when
+word was passed to that brave leader that those in the boats numbered
+but eighty-three. &#8220;Eighty-three!&#8221; exclaimed the Green
+Mountain hero. &#8220;And every man worth three red-coats. Once we get
+within those walls and I&#8217;ll answer for them. Yet, sirs, I would
+that we had not been so long delayed on the road, or that there were
+more bateaus to our hand.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Shall the attack be given up&#8211;postponed till a more
+fitting occasion&#8211;if we cannot get more across?&#8221; asked
+Arnold.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Postponed!&#8221; cried Allen, his face darkening. &#8220;And
+pray tell me, sir, how can it be postponed? With the dawn our troops
+will be observed upon both sides of the lake by those in the fort, or
+by Tories who will gladly run with warning to the red-coats. A blind
+kitten could see what we are about. Nay, Colonel Arnold; we have put
+our hands to the plough and we&#8217;ll cut a deep furrow or none at
+all!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The bold courage of their leader inspired the handful of men with
+actual belief in the successful outcome of the attack. There were no
+doubts expressed during the voyage across the lake. But when the
+landing was made, at the foot of the bluff on which the fort was built,
+the east was already streaked with pink. The dawn of the tenth of May,
+1775&#8211;a day as marked in American history as any which we
+celebrate&#8211;was at hand. Less than a hundred patriotic Green
+Mountain Boys had disembarked from the boats under the shadow of
+Ticonderoga. With the rising of the sun their presence would be
+discovered by the garrison of the fort, and once warned of their
+approach, the British could easily defend the works from any attack of
+infantry. Circumstances seemed to presage at that moment the defeat of
+the cause and utter humiliation of the participators in the proposed
+attack.</p>
+
+<p>The boats had left the shore and were no longer to be descried, for
+a light fog covered the water. There was no retreat. To hide this party
+on the New York shore of the lake would be impossible. There were too
+many Tories about. Allen turned to his men. His voice was low, but
+intense, so that not only those around him, of which Enoch was one, but
+those at a distance heard every word uttered.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Friends! we have come here for a single purpose. It is to
+advance upon yonder fortifications and capture them. We already
+outnumber the garrison; I have certain information upon this point. But
+our companions await on the other shore to be transported to this spot
+and join in our glorious work. In the east, however, is a warning we
+can all read. Before our friends can join us it will be day. We shall
+be observed here; the garrison will be called to arms; our opportunity
+be lost. So, my brave companions, we cannot wait.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I shall attack the fort at once. I force no man to an act
+which caution forbids. If any of you doubt, fall out of the ranks and
+make good your escape. But I am going forward and those who trust in
+God and to my leadership will advance at once!&#8221; He drew his sword
+and advanced a long stride before the column of anxious patriots.
+&#8220;Forward!&#8221; he cried, and inspired by the same spirit which
+animated their gallant leader, every Green Mountain Boy obeyed the
+command. They would have cheered, but the moment for anything of that
+kind was not opportune. The rising mist scarcely concealed the fortress
+above them.</p>
+
+<p>With Colonel Arnold by his side the indomitable Allen climbed the
+slope and approached the covered way which led into the fort. Not a
+word was spoken. The sullen tramp of the column was all that broke the
+stillness of the dawn. The sentinel placed here to guard the
+entrance&#8211;a matter of military rule rather than of
+precaution&#8211;leaned half asleep upon his musket. Had he been alert
+the approach of the troops must have been discovered ere they were
+visible. But Providence willed that he, together with all the garrison,
+should be totally unsuspicious of the planned attack of the
+provincials.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, through the curling mist, appeared the head of the column.
+The sentinel started from his dream and, scarce understanding what he
+saw, advanced his musket, crying: &#8220;Halt! who goes
+there?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Americans accelerated their pace while Ethan Allen, whirling his
+sword above his head, shouted: &#8220;Forward!&#8221; The attacking
+force reached the mouth of the covered way at a double-quick. Repeating
+the command to halt the sentinel darted back, raised his weapon to his
+shoulder, and aiming full at the head of the commander of the Green
+Mountain Boys, pressed the trigger!</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_23'></a>CHAPTER XXIV<br /><span
+class='fss'>THE GUNS OF OLD TI SPEAK</span></h2>
+
+<p>The fate of more than a brave man hung in the balance at that
+moment. The ultimate happiness and secure footing of a state was at
+stake when the sentinel pressed the trigger of his weapon. Had the ball
+reached its mark, the establishment of Vermont as a free state might
+have been postponed for many years. Ethan Allen&#8217;s diplomacy in
+later dealing with the British agents who sought to wean Vermont from
+her federation with the struggling colonies, doubtless saved the Green
+Mountains from being overrun by a horde of Hessians and Indians who
+would have brought death and disaster to the patriotic settlers.</p>
+
+<p>But Providence had other work for the leader of the Green Mountain
+Boys to do. The musket missed fire and flinging down the piece the
+sentinel turned and ran through the passage into the fort, shrieking
+that the enemy was at hand. With a cheer the little band of patriots
+followed, and before the garrison was awake to its situation, the Green
+Mountain Boys had reached the parade. Instructed by their captains what
+to do, the men ran hither and thither to seize the guns whose
+threatening muzzles peered through the embrasures of the walls, and to
+guard the entrances to the barracks where the garrison slept.</p>
+
+<p>&#8217;Siah Bolderwood, seizing an axe, attacked the door of the
+ammunition cellar; for the American spy who had spent the previous day
+within the works had explained to the ranger the situation of this
+important compartment. The ringing blows of the woodman&#8217;s axe
+doubtless awakened many of the sleeping soldiery. In half a minute the
+stout oak door was down. &#8220;There, Nuck Harding!&#8221; cried the
+long ranger, &#8220;I leave you to guard that &#8217;ere. If they show
+fight, fire your rifle into the place. If so be, we&#8217;ll all go up
+together; but Old Ti is ourn and if we&#8217;re driven forth
+we&#8217;ll wreck the fortifications as we go.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Ethan Allen, knowing well the sleeping quarters of Captain
+De la Place, having received his information from the same source as
+Bolderwood, leaped up the stairway to the apartment of the commander of
+the fort. His shoulder burst in the door without the loss of an
+instant, and he found the astounded captain sitting up in bed.
+&#8220;What is this, sir? Who are you?&#8221; cried the British
+officer.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I call on ye to surrender, Captain De la Place!&#8221; cried
+the Green Mountain leader.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;In whose name do ye make this demand, sir?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;In the name of the great Jehovah and the Continental
+Congress!&#8221; replied Allen, sternly. Then, describing a circle
+about his head with his sword, he added in a tone not to be mistaken:
+&#8220;I demand the surrender of your fort and all the stores and goods
+it may contain; and, sir, unless you comply with my demand and parade
+your men without arms at once, I&#8217;ll send your head, sir, spinning
+across this floor!&#8221; and the whistling steel blade was advanced
+until the British officer shrank in fear.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I surrender! I surrender!&#8221; he cried, and word was
+passed at once to both the garrison and the Americans on the parade
+below. And thus the strongest British fortress within the borders of
+the disaffected colonies, capitulated to the American arms without a
+gun being fired. What if, when the news of the remarkable feat reached
+Philadelphia where the Continental Congress was in session, the act of
+Ethan Allen and his brave Green Mountain Boys was deplored, and a
+considerable party was for returning the stronghold to the king, while
+others wished to withdraw the American garrison, believing that the
+Champlain forts were too far on the frontier to be held successfully
+against the enemy? These suggestions were but the result of
+over-cautiousness on the part of some members of Congress. Happily
+their wishes were overborne and Ticonderoga remained an American fort
+until the cowardly St. Clair abandoned it before the advance of
+Burgoyne.</p>
+
+<p>At the moment, however, the satisfaction of Ethan Allen and his
+brave companions was unbounded. While the British soldiers were being
+paraded without their weapons before their conquerors, a second body of
+Green Mountain Boys under Major Warner entered the fort. The tall
+Connecticut man came to Allen with considerable chagrin expressed in
+his countenance. &#8220;Colonel, you have selfishly seized all the
+honors this time!&#8221; he cried, yet congratulating his friend with a
+warm handclasp. &#8220;You are a regular Achilles; there is nothing
+heroic for the rest of us to do.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Nonsense&#8211;nonsense, Seth!&#8221; cried Ethan Allen, yet
+unable to hide his delight at the outcome of the attack. &#8220;There
+is glory enough for every officer and every man Jack in the ranks.
+There is yet Crown Point to capture and you, Major, shall command that
+expedition. Take Bolderwood and some of his scouts with you and
+approach the other fortress by water&#8211;and good fortune and my
+blessing go with you!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A moment later the great guns of Old Ti began to speak. And they
+spoke a new tongue that morning. The Voice of Liberty as expressed by
+the resonant thunders of the old cannon echoed and reëchoed from height
+to height. The promontory which had been the scene of the bloody
+struggle between Champlain and the Iroquois, and the site of two
+fearful battles of the British and French, was at length sanctified by
+the presence of this band of liberty loving men destined, through the
+next few years, to offer their lives and possessions on the altar of
+their country.</p>
+
+<p>Then Warner and his men again embarked in the boats and sailed down
+the lake. Enoch Harding went with the expedition and saw the bloodless
+capitulation of the other British stronghold. Later, Benedict Arnold
+with a small command captured a British corvette farther down the lake
+and with that act the supremacy of the Americans on Champlain was
+assured. A garrison was placed in each fortress and then the Green
+Mountain Boys dispersed to their homes having accomplished the object
+for which they had been gathered by their leader. Enoch and the old
+ranger returned to the ox-bow farm where their welcome can be better
+imagined than narrated.</p>
+
+<p>Yet the Widow Harding during the struggle which followed the capture
+of Ticonderoga made many sacrifices more noble even than that of
+allowing her eldest son to join in this expedition, but pioneer mothers
+were called upon so to do. Lot Breckenridge&#8217;s mother had allowed
+her son to march away to Boston where, under Israel Putman, he saw most
+active service during the campaign which finally drove the red-coats
+out of the Massachusetts capital. Robbie Baker was with his father
+when, while reconnoitering outside St. Johns, the Green Mountain
+sharpshooter was killed by an Indian ally of the British.</p>
+
+<p>Enoch Harding, too, joined that ill-fated expedition into Canada
+where the rash attempt of Ethan Allen and his followers before Montreal
+resulted in the capture and imprisonment of the intrepid leader. Enoch,
+returning with the broken columns of the American army, but with a
+lieutenant&#8217;s commission, was sent south and took no further part
+in the struggles about Lake Champlain. But Bryce, two years after the
+capture of Ticonderoga, well sustained the family name and honor while
+fighting with Stark at Bennington.</p>
+
+<p>The girls and young Henry became their mother&#8217;s sole support
+in her work of tilling the farm which Jonas Harding had cleared, and
+throughout the uncertain years of the Revolution the family continued
+to sow and reap, like so many other patriotic folk, that the army might
+be clothed and fed while fighting the King&#8217;s hirelings. Perhaps
+the part played by the &#8220;non-combatants&#8221; in the Revolution
+was not the least loyal nor the least helpful to the cause of
+liberty.</p>
+
+<p>The war between the confederated states and Great Britain did not
+end the controversy regarding the rights of the settlers in the
+Hampshire Grants; it simply postponed the vexing matter. But in the end
+the freedom of Vermont as a state was brought about. After the war, and
+while the Thirteen States were endeavoring to bring order out of the
+chaotic conditions which had been the legacy of the great struggle, it
+was really New York herself that urged the admittance of Vermont into
+the Union. Even at that early date the supremacy of the South was
+feared, and when Kentucky applied for entrance to the Union, Vermont
+was made a state also to counteract the addition of another of southern
+sentiment.</p>
+
+<p>During the war, however, the condition of Vermont was very
+precarious. It was due to Ethan Allen, as much as to any one man, that
+the Green Mountains and the Champlain Valley were not overrun with foes
+both white and red. While imprisoned in the hulks in New York Bay Allen
+was approached by agents of the crown who strove to buy his good-will
+by presents and promises. They did not understand the rugged honesty of
+the Green Mountain Boy; but he, knowing the exposed situation of his
+friends and neighbors, craftily led his captors to believe that they
+might obtain Vermont and her sturdy people on their own side.</p>
+
+<p>When Ethan Allen was exchanged and came back to the Green Mountains,
+he still, with other leaders, carefully watched the British agents and
+thus saved the rich farming lands of the Otter and Wonooski from
+bloodshed, that the patriot farmers might continue to plant and reap
+the grain which was truly &#8220;the sinews of war.&#8221; It is true
+therefore that few leaders of the Revolution deserve greater
+commendation, for none displayed more consecrated courage, nor was more
+beloved by his followers, than the hero of Ticonderoga.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='adpage'>
+<p class='tac fs14 mb20'>HISTORICAL STORIES FOR BOYS</p>
+
+<p class='fs12 mt10'>THE EVE OF WAR</p>
+
+<p class='ti2'>By <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>W. Bert Foster</span>. Illustrated by <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>F. A. Carter</span>.
+A story of the critical days just before the Civil War, when
+every hour made history. Joe Ransom learns of the plan
+to assassinate President Lincoln on the way to his inauguration,
+and is sent by the United States Government
+officials to warn the President-elect. His mission is accomplished,
+and largely as a result of his services the plot
+comes to naught. Historical facts are closely followed,
+but this nowhere interferes with the interest in the story.</p>
+
+<p class='fs12 mt10'>WITH ETHAN ALLEN AT TICONDEROGA</p>
+
+<p class='ti2'>By <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>W. Bert Foster</span>. Illustrated by <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>F. A. Carter</span>.
+A vivid picture of the struggles of those heroic New Englanders,
+the Green Mountain Boys, against the Tory residents.
+That dramatic character in revolutionary history, Ethan
+Allen, with whom the young hero is continually in touch,
+is the central figure of the narrative, and the incidents
+which lead up to the capture of Fort Ticonderoga are told
+in a wonderfully interesting manner.</p>
+
+<p class='fs12 mt10'>WITH WASHINGTON AT VALLEY FORGE</p>
+
+<p class='ti2'>By <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>W. Bert Foster</span>. Illustrated by <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>F. A. Carter</span>.
+The hero, a boy of sixteen, is an enthusiastic patriot. He
+soon enlists his services with his country, and performs
+many heroic deeds in the capacity of a courier in the battles
+of Brandywine, Monmouth, and at the Paoli massacre. He
+renders great service to our forces at Valley Forge, and
+participates in the hardships which the struggling American
+army endured during that memorable winter.</p>
+
+<p class='tac mt20'>Cloth Binding&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;Illustrated&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;Each, $1.25<br />
+THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY<br />
+923 ARCH STREET&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;PHILADELPHIA</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='adpage'>
+<p class='tac fs14 mb20'>HISTORICAL STORIES FOR BOYS</p>
+
+<p class='fs12 mt10'>UNCROWNING A KING</p>
+
+<p class='ti2'>By <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Edward S. Ellis</span>, A. M. Illustrated by <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>J. Steeple
+Davis</span>. A tale of the Indian war waged by King Philip
+in 1675. The adventures of the young hero during that
+eventful period, his efforts in behalf of the attacked towns,
+his capture by the Indians, and his subsequent release
+through the efforts of King Philip himself, with a vivid account
+of the tragic death of that renowned Indian chieftain,
+form a most interesting and instructive story.</p>
+
+<p class='fs12 mt10'>AT THE SIEGE OF QUEBEC</p>
+
+<p class='ti2'>By <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>James Otis</span>. Illustrated by <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>F. A. Carter</span>. Two boys
+living on the Kennebec River join Benedict Arnold&#8217;s expedition
+as it passes their dwelling en route for the Canadian
+border. They, with their command, are taken prisoners
+before Quebec. The terrible march through the wilderness,
+the incidents of the siege, and the disastrous assault, which
+cost the gallant General Montgomery his life, are in the
+highest degree thrilling, and true in every particular.</p>
+
+<p class='fs12 mt10'>WITH PURITAN AND PEQUOT</p>
+
+<p class='ti2'>By <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>William Murray Graydon</span>. Illustrated by <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Clyde
+O. Deland</span>. There is a swing of martial spirit and a spice
+of bold enterprise in this story of colonial times. Rufus
+Jennicom, the impetuous Puritan boy, finds fighting Indians
+more to his taste than raising Indian corn. It is
+his rare good fortune to have for his friend Roger Williams
+and to meet with Captain Miles Standish. The incidents
+that go to make up this stirring tale have much to do
+with the struggles of the early New England colonies.</p>
+
+<p class='tac mt20'>Cloth Binding&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;Illustrated&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;Each, $1.25<br />
+THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY<br />
+923 ARCH STREET&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;PHILADELPHIA</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='adpage'>
+<p class='tac fs14 mb20'>HISTORICAL STORIES FOR BOYS</p>
+
+<p class='fs12 mt10'>IN THE DAYS OF WASHINGTON</p>
+
+<p class='ti2'>By <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>William Murray Graydon</span>. Illustrated by <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>J.
+C. Claghorn</span>. The story opens in Philadelphia just prior
+to its evacuation by the British in 1778. Nathan Stanbury,
+a bright lad of seventeen, joins the Continental Army, which
+is then suffering the hardships of the winter at Valley
+Forge. A short time later the Battle of Monmouth is
+fought, and in this the young hero figures quite prominently,
+as he does afterward at the Massacre of Wyoming.</p>
+
+<p class='fs12 mt10'>THE BOER BOY OF THE TRANSVAAL</p>
+
+<p class='ti2'>By <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Kate Milner Rabb</span>. Illustrated by <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>F. A. Carter</span>.
+The career of the Boer boy is one series of exciting adventures.
+In the gallant service for his country he comes
+face to face with President Kruger, General Cronje, and
+General Joubert. Much interesting information pertaining
+to this country and its people is introduced, and the reader
+will understand as never before the cause of the intense
+hatred of the Boers for the British.</p>
+
+<p class='fs12 mt10'>ON WOOD COVE ISLAND</p>
+
+<p class='ti2'>By <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Elbridge S.
+Brooks</span>. Illustrated by <span
+style='font-variant:small-caps'>Frederic J. Boston</span>. A trio of
+bright New England children are given an island on which to spend their
+summer vacation. Here they establish a little colony, the management of
+which gives them a large amount of amusement and at times causes some
+seemingly serious difficulties. In the solution of their perplexing
+problems the young people receive much encouragement and counsel from
+the poet Longfellow, whose delightful acquaintance they form in a very
+unexpected and amusing manner.</p>
+
+<p class='tac mt20'>Cloth Binding&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;Illustrated&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;Each, $1.25<br />
+THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY<br />
+923 ARCH STREET&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;PHILADELPHIA</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='adpage'>
+<p class='tac fs14 mb20'>HISTORICAL STORIES FOR BOYS</p>
+
+<p class='fs12 mt10'>UNDER THE TAMARACKS</p>
+
+<p class='ti2'>By <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Elbridge S.
+Brooks</span>. Illustrated. An interesting and healthful story for boys
+and girls, representing a summer&#8217;s outing of young people among
+the Thousand Islands. It is timed to include the visit of General Grant
+at Alexandria Bay, and several interesting conversations between one of
+the boys and the hero of the Rebellion shed pleasing side lights upon
+the great General&#8217;s character.</p>
+
+<div style='margin:40px auto; text-align:center;'> <img alt='emblem' src='images/iadlast.jpg' /> </div>
+
+<p class='tac mt20'>Cloth Binding&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;Illustrated&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;Each, $1.25<br />
+THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY<br />
+923 ARCH STREET&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;PHILADELPHIA</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='figcenter'> <img src='images/icover.jpg' id="imgcvr" alt='' /></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's With Ethan Allen at Ticonderoga, by W. Bert Foster
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WITH ETHAN ALLEN AT TICONDEROGA ***
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+Project Gutenberg's With Ethan Allen at Ticonderoga, by W. Bert Foster
+
+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: With Ethan Allen at Ticonderoga
+
+Author: W. Bert Foster
+
+Illustrator: F. A. Carter
+
+Release Date: January 13, 2010 [EBook #30952]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WITH ETHAN ALLEN AT TICONDEROGA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank, D Alexander and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WITH ETHAN ALLEN AT TICONDEROGA
+
+by
+
+W. BERT FOSTER
+
+Author of
+
+"With Washington at Valley Forge" etc
+
+Illustrated by F. A. Carter
+
+THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY
+
+PHILADELPHIA
+
+MCMIV
+
+
+
+
+Copyright 1903 by The Penn Publishing Company
+
+With Ethan Allen at Ticonderoga
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: "FORWARD!" HE SHOUTED]
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+ I A Boy of the Wilderness 5
+ II Enoch Harding Feels Himself a Man 19
+ III The Ambush 31
+ IV 'Siah Bolderwood's Stratagem 45
+ V The Pioneer Home 60
+ VI The Stump Burning 76
+ VII A Night Attack 94
+ VIII The Traitor's Way 107
+ IX The Otter Creek Raid 127
+ X The Warning 139
+ XI An Unequal Battle 160
+ XII Backwoods Justice 174
+ XIII The Wolf Pack 191
+ XIV The Testimony of Crow Wing 208
+ XV The Storm Cloud Gathers 220
+ XVI The Westminster Massacre 236
+ XVII The Cloven Hoof 251
+ XVIII "The Cross of Fire" 270
+ XIX The Rising of the Clans 284
+ XX The Rival Commanders 298
+ XXI The Escape of the Spy 313
+ XXII The End of Simon Halpen 330
+ XXIII The Dawn of the Tenth of May 343
+ XXIV The Guns of Old Ti Speak 355
+
+
+
+
+WITH ETHAN ALLEN AT TICONDEROGA
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+A BOY OF THE WILDERNESS
+
+
+The forest was still. A calm lay upon its vast extent, from the
+green-capped hills in the east to the noble river which, fed by the
+streams so quietly meandering through the pleasantly wooded country,
+found its way to the sea where the greatest city of the New World was
+destined to stand. The clear, bell-like note of a waking bird startled
+the morning hush. A doe and her fawn that had couched in a thicket
+seemed roused to activity by this early matin and suddenly showered the
+short turf with a dewy rain from the bushes which they disturbed as they
+leaped away toward the "lick." The gentle creatures first slaked their
+thirst at the margin of the creek hard by and then stood a moment with
+outstretched nostrils, snuffing the wind before tasting the salt
+impregnated earth trampled as hard as adamant by a thousand hoofs. The
+fawn dropped its muzzle quickly; but the mother, not so well assured,
+snuffed again and yet again.
+
+In the wilderness, before the white man came, there were to be found
+paths made by the wild folk going to and from their watering places and
+feeding grounds, and paths made by the red hunter and warrior. Although
+hundreds of deer traveled to this lick yearly, they had not originally
+made the trail. It was an ancient Indian runaway, for the creek was
+fordable near this point. The tribesmen had used it for generations
+until it was worn almost knee-deep in the forest mould, but wide enough
+only to be traveled in single file. Along this ancient trail, and
+approaching the lick with infinite caution, came a boy of thirteen,
+bearing a heavy rifle.
+
+Although so young, Enoch Harding was well built, and the play of his
+hardened muscles was easily observed under his tight-fitting, homespun
+garments. The circumstances of border life in the eighteenth century
+molded hardy men and sturdy boys. His face was as brown as a berry and
+his eyes clear and frankly open. The brown hair curled tightly above his
+perspiring brow, from which his old otter-skin cap was thrust back. His
+coming to the bank of the wide stream was attended with all the care and
+silent observation of an Indian on the trail. He set his feet so firmly
+and with such precision that not even the rustle of a leaf or the
+crackling of a twig would have warned the sharpest ear of his approach.
+The wind was in his favor, too, blowing from the creek toward him. The
+doe, which he could not yet see but the patter of whose light hoofs he
+had heard as she trotted with her fawn to the drinking place, could not
+possibly have discovered his presence; yet she continued to raise her
+muzzle at intervals and snuff the wind suspiciously.
+
+The dark aisles of the forest, as yet unillumined by the sun whose
+crimson banners would soon be flung above the mountain-tops, seemed
+deserted. In the distance the birds were beginning their morning song;
+but here the shadow of the mountains lay heavy upon wood and stream and
+the feathered choristers awoke more slowly. The two deer at the lick and
+the boy who now, from behind the massive bole of a tree, surveyed them,
+seemed the only living objects within view.
+
+Enoch raised his heavy rifle, resting the barrel against the tree trunk,
+and drew bead at the doe's side. He was chancing a long shot, rather
+than taking the risk of approaching any nearer to the animals. He had
+seen that the doe was suspicious and she might be off in a flash into
+the thicker forest beyond unless he fired at once. Had he been more
+experienced he would have wondered what had made the creature
+suspicious, his own approach to the lick being quite evidently
+undiscovered. But he thought only of getting a perfect sight and that
+the larder at home was empty. And this last fact was sufficient to make
+the boy's aim certain, his principal care being to waste no powder and
+to bring down his game with as little loss of time as might be.
+
+The next moment the heavy muzzle-loading gun roared and the buckshot
+sped on its mission. The mother deer gave a convulsive spring forward,
+thus warning the poor fawn, which disappeared in the brush like a flash
+of brown light. The doe dropped in a heap upon the sward and Enoch,
+flushed with success, ran forward to view his prize. In so doing,
+however, the boy forgot the first rule of the border ranger and hunter.
+He did not reload his weapon.
+
+Stumbling over the widely spread roots of the great tree behind which he
+had hidden, he reached the opening in the forest where the tragedy had
+been enacted, and would have been on his knees beside the dead deer in
+another instant had not an appalling sound stayed him. A scream, the
+like of which once heard is never to be forgotten, thrilled him to the
+marrow. He started back, casting his glance upward. There was a rustling
+in the thick branches of the tree beneath which the doe had fallen.
+Again the maddened scream rang out and a tawny body flashed from
+concealment in the foliage.
+
+"A catamount!" Enoch shouted, and seeing the creature fairly over his
+head in its flight through the air, he leaped away toward the creek, his
+feet winged with fear. Of all the wild creatures of the Northern
+wilderness this huge cat was most to be avoided. It would not hesitate
+to attack man when hungry, and maddened and disappointed as this one
+was, its charge could not be stayed. At the instant when the beast was
+prepared to leap upon either the doe or her fawn, Enoch's shot had laid
+the one low and frightened the other away. His appearance upon the scene
+attracted the attention of the cat and had given it a new object of
+attack. Possibly the creature did not even notice the fall of the deer,
+being now bent upon vengeance for the loss of its prey, for which it had
+doubtless searched unsuccessfully all the night through.
+
+The young hunter was in a desperate situation. His gun was empty and the
+prospect of an encounter with the catamount would have quenched the
+courage of the bravest. And to run from it was still more foolish, yet
+this was the first thought which inspired him. The creek was beyond and
+although the ford was some rods above the deer-lick, he thought to cast
+himself into the stream and thus escape his enemy. The beast, possessing
+that well-known trait of the feline tribe which causes it to shrink from
+water, might not follow him into the creek.
+
+A long log, the end of which had caught upon the bank, swung its length
+into the stream, forming a boom against which light drift-stuff had
+gathered; the swift current foamed about the timber as though vexed at
+this delay to its progress. Upon the tree Enoch leaped and ran to the
+further extremity. His feet, shod in home-made moccasins of deer-hide,
+did not slip on this insecure footing; but his weight on the stranded
+log set it in motion. The timber began to swing off from the shore and
+one terrified glance about him assured the boy that he was at a most
+deep and dangerous part of the stream.
+
+Although so shallow above at the ford, the bed of the creek directly
+below was of rock instead of gravel, and ragged boulders thrust
+themselves up from the depths, causing many whirlpools which dimpled the
+surface of the water. About the boulders the current tore, the brown
+froth from the angry jaws of rock dancing lightly away upon the waves.
+Although even with his clothing on he might have swum in a quiet pool,
+to do so here would be almost impossible. The boy was between two
+perils!
+
+He turned about in horror to escape the flood, and was in time to see
+the huge cat gain the end of the log in a single bound as it was torn
+from the shore by the current. There the beast crouched, less than
+twenty feet away, lashing its tail and snarling menace at the victim of
+its wrath. The situation was paralyzing. As for loading his rifle now,
+the boy had not the strength to do it. The fascination of the beast's
+blazing eyes held him motionless, like a bird charmed by the unwinking
+gaze of a black snake.
+
+And Enoch Harding knew, if he knew anything, that the beast would not
+give him time to reload the clumsy gun. At his first movement it would
+spring. And if he leaped into the water, it might follow him,
+considering its present savage mood. He beheld its muscles, which
+slipped so easily under the tawny skin, knotting themselves for a
+spring. The forelegs were drawn up under the breast the curved,
+sabre-sharp claws scratching the bark on the floating timber. In another
+instant the fatal leap would be made.
+
+Never had the boy been in such danger. He did not utterly lose his
+presence of mind; but he was helpless. What chance had he with an empty
+gun before the savage brute? He seized the barrel in both hands and
+raised the weapon above his head. It was too heavy for him to swing with
+any ease, and being so would fall but lightly on the creature, did he
+succeed in reaching it at all. He could not hope to stun the cat at a
+single blow. And beside, the tree, rocking now like a water-logged
+canoe, made his footing more and more insecure. In a moment it would be
+among the boulders and at the first collision be overturned.
+
+But he could not drag his eyes from those of the catamount. With a
+fierce snarl which ended in a thrilling scream, the brute cast itself
+into the air! At the moment it rose, exposing its lighter colored breast
+to view, a gun-shot shattered the silence of river and forest. The
+spring of the cat was not stayed, but its yell again changed--this time
+to a note of agony.
+
+"Jump, lad, jump!" shouted a voice and Enoch, as though awaking from a
+dream, obeyed the command. He leaped sideways, and landed upon a
+slippery rock, falling to his knees, yet securing a hand-hold upon a
+protuberance. Nor did he lose hold of his gun with the other hand.
+
+The body of the catamount landed just where he had stood; but then
+rolled off the log and disappeared in the rushing stream, while the
+timber itself crashed instantly into one of the larger boulders. Enoch
+staggered to his feet, his hand bleeding and also his knee, where the
+stocking had been torn away by the rock. The log swung broadside to the
+current again, and seeing his chance, the boy ran along its length and
+leaped from its end into comparatively shallow water under the bank.
+
+His rescuer was at hand and dragged him, panting and exhausted, to the
+shore, where he fell weakly on the turf, unable for a moment to utter a
+word. The man who leaned over him was lean, as dark as an Indian, and in
+a day when smoothly shaven features were the rule, his face was marked
+by a tangled growth of iron-gray beard. His hair hung to the fringed
+collar of his deerskin shirt, and straggled over his low brow in
+careless locks, instead of being tightly drawn back and fastened in a
+queue; and out of this wilderness of hair and beard looked two eyes as
+sharp as the hawk's.
+
+He was so tall that there was a slight stoop to his shoulders as though,
+when he walked, he feared to collide with the branches of the trees
+under which he passed. Erect, he must have lacked but a few inches of
+seven feet and, possessing not an ounce of superfluous flesh on his big
+bones, his appearance was not impressive. The deerskin hunting shirt,
+worked in a curious pattern on the breast with red and blue porcupine
+quills, fitted him tightly, as did his linsey-woolsey breeches; and his
+thin shanks were covered with gray hose darned clumsily in more than one
+place. He would have been selected at first sight as a wood-ranger and
+hunter, and carried his long rifle with more grace than he ever held
+plough or wielded reaping-hook.
+
+Indeed, Josiah Bolderwood was one of that strange class of white men so
+frequently found during the pioneer era of our Eastern country. He
+seemed to have been born, as he often said himself, with a gun in his
+hands. His mother, lying on her couch behind the double wall of a
+blockhouse in the Maine wilderness, loaded spare guns for her husband
+and his comrades while they beat off the yelling redskins, when Josiah
+was but a few days old. He was a ranger and trapper from the beginning.
+He had slept under the canopy of the forest more often than in a bed and
+beneath a roof made by men's hands. From early youth he had hunted all
+through the northern wilderness, and had been no more able to tie
+himself to a farm, and earn his bread by tilling the soil, than an
+Indian. Indeed, he was more of an Indian than a white man in habits,
+tastes, and feelings; he lacked only that marvelous appreciation of
+signs and sounds in the forest, in which the white can never hope to
+equal the red man.
+
+"Lad, that was a near chance for you!" he said, when he saw that Enoch
+was practically unhurt. "The Almighty surely brought me to this lick
+jest right. I knowed you was here when I heard the shot; but as your
+marm said you'd gone for a deer, I didn't s'pose you'd be huntin' for
+catamounts, too! Howsomever, somethin' tol' me ter run when I heard your
+gun, an' run I did."
+
+"I didn't shoot at the wild-cat, 'Siah," said the boy, getting upon his
+feet. "See yonder; there's the doe I knocked over. But the critter was
+after her, too, and it madded him when I fired, I s'pose."
+
+"And ye didn't git your gun loaded again!" exclaimed Bolderwood.
+
+His young friend blushed with shame. "I--I didn't think. I ran over to
+look at the doe, and the critter jumped at me outer the tree. Then I got
+on the log and he follered me----"
+
+"Jonas Harding's boy'd oughter known better than that," declared the old
+ranger, with some vexation.
+
+"I know it, 'Siah. Poor father told me 'nough times never to move outer
+my tracks till I had loaded again. An' I reckon this'll be a lesson for
+me. I--I ain't got over it yet."
+
+"Wal," said Bolderwood, "while you git yer breath, Nuck, I'll flay that
+critter and hang her up. I'm in somethin' of a hurry this mornin'; but
+as the widder's needin' the meat, we won't leave the carcass to the
+varmints."
+
+"You've been to my house, 'Siah?" cried Enoch, following him across the
+little glade.
+
+"Yes. Jest stopped there on my way down from Manchester. That's how I
+knew you was over here hunting."
+
+"But if you're in a hurry, leave me to do that," said the boy. "I'm all
+right now."
+
+"You're in as big a hurry as I be, Nuck," returned the ranger, with a
+grim smile. "I'm going to take you with me over to Mr. James
+Breckenridge's. Ev'ry gun we kin git may count to-day, lad."
+
+"Did mother say I could go, 'Siah?" cried the youngster, with undoubted
+satisfaction in his voice. "You're the best man that I know to get her
+to say 'yes'!"
+
+Bolderwood looked up from his work with much gravity. "This ain't no
+funnin' we're goin' on, Nuck. It's serious business. You kin shoot
+straight, an' that's why I begged for ye. This may be the most turrible
+day you ever seen, my lad, for the day on which a man or boy sees
+bloodshed for the fust time, is a mem'ry that he takes with him to the
+grave."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+ENOCH HARDING FEELS HIMSELF A MAN
+
+
+Although Enoch Harding had not grasped the serious nature of the matter
+which the ranger's words suggested, there was something he had realized,
+however, and this thought sent the blood coursing through his veins with
+more than wonted vigor and his eyes sparkled. He was a man. He was to
+play a man's part on this day and the neighbors--even the old ranger who
+had stood his friend on so many occasions already--recognized him as the
+head of the family.
+
+Bolderwood saw this thought expressed in his face and without desiring
+to "take him down" and humble his pride, wished to show him the serious
+side of the situation. To this end he spoke upon another subject,
+beginning: "D'ye remember where we be, Nuck? 'Member this place? Seems
+strange that you sh'd have such a caper here with that catamount after
+what happened only last spring, doesn't it?" He glanced keenly at young
+Harding and saw that his words had at once the desired effect. Enoch
+stood up, the skinning-knife in his hand, and looked over the little
+glade. In a moment his brown eyes filled with tears, which rolled
+unchastened down his smooth cheeks.
+
+"Aye, Nuck, a sorry day for you an' yourn when Jonas Harding met his
+death here. And a sorry day was it for me, too, lad. I loved him like a
+brother. He an' I, Nuck, trapped this neck of woods together before the
+settlement was started. We knew how rich the land was and naught but the
+wars with the redskins an' them French kept us from comin' here long
+before the Robinsons. Jonas wouldn't come 'less it was safe to bring
+your mother an' you--an' he was right. There's little good in a man's
+roamin' the world without a wife an' fireside ter tie to. I was sayin'
+the same to neighbor Allen last week, an' he agreed--though he's wuss
+off than me, for he has a family back in Litchfield an' is under anxiety
+all the time to bring them here, if the Yorkers but leave us in peace.
+As for me--well, a tough old knot like me ain't fit to marry an' settle
+down. I'm wuss nor an Injin."
+
+It is doubtful if the boy heard half this monologue. He stood with
+thoughtful mien and his eyes were still wet when Bolderwood's words
+finally aroused him. "Do you know, Nuck, there's many a time I stop at
+this ford and think of your father's death? There's things about it I'll
+never understand, I reckon."
+
+Enoch Harding started and flashed a quick glance at his friend. "What
+things?" he asked.
+
+"Well, lad, mainly that Jonas Harding, who was as quick on the trail and
+as good a woodsman as myself, should be worsted by a mad buck; it seems
+downright impossible, Nuck."
+
+"I know. But there could be no mistake about it, 'Siah. There were the
+hoof-marks--and there was no bullet wound on the body, only those gashes
+made by the critter's horns. Simon Halpen----"
+
+Bolderwood raised his hand quickly. "Nay, lad! don't utter evil even
+about that Yorker. We all know he was anigh here when your father died.
+He was seen at Bennington the night before, and later crossed James
+Breckenridge's farm on his way to Albany. Black enemy as he is to you
+and yourn, there's naught to be gained by accusing him of Jonas' death.
+It would be impossible. There was not, as you say, a bullet wound upon
+your father's body. There was not a mark of man's footstep near the lick
+here but your father's own. How else, then, could he have been killed
+but by the charge of the buck?"
+
+"You say yourself that father was far too sharp to so be taken by
+surprise," muttered the boy.
+
+"Aye--that is so. But the facts are there, lad. I s'arched the ground
+over--I headed the band of scouts who found him--remember that! Nobody
+had been near the lick but Jonas. There wasn't a footmark for rods
+around. Even an Injin couldn't have got near enough to strike Jonas down
+with his gun-butt----"
+
+"You believe that wound on his head, then, was made by no deer's
+antler?" exclaimed Enoch, eagerly.
+
+"Tut, tut! You jump too quick," said Bolderwood, turning his face away.
+"That's never well. Allus look b'fore ye leap, Nuck. My 'pinion be that
+your father struck his head on a stone in falling----"
+
+"Where is there a stone here?" demanded the boy, with a speaking gesture
+of his disengaged hand. "I saw that deep wound in father's skull. I
+never believed a buck did that."
+
+"And yet there was naught but the prints of the buck's hoofs in the soil
+here--be sure of that. The ground was trampled all about as though the
+fight had been desp'rate--as indeed it must have been."
+
+"But that blow on the head?" reiterated Enoch.
+
+"Ah, lad, I can't understand that. The wound certainly was mainly like a
+blow from a gun-stock," admitted Bolderwood.
+
+"Then Simon Halpen compassed his death--I am sure of it!" cried the boy.
+"You well know how he hated father. Halpen would never forget the
+beech-sealing he got last fall. He threatened to be terribly revenged on
+us; and Bryce and I heard him threaten father, too, when he fought him
+upon the crick bank and father tossed the Yorker into the middle of the
+stream."
+
+Bolderwood chuckled. "Simon as well might tackle Ethan Allen himself as
+to have wrastled with Jonas," he said.... "But we must hurry, lad. We
+have work--and perhaps serious work--before us this day. It may be the
+battle of our lives; we may l'arn to-day whether we are to be free
+people here in Bennington, or are to be driven out like sheep at the
+command of a flunkey under a royal person who lives so far across the
+sea that he knows naught of, nor cares naught for us."
+
+"You talk desp'rately against the King, Mr. Bolderwood!" exclaimed
+Enoch, looking askance at his companion.
+
+"Nay--what is the King to me?" demanded the ranger, in disgust. "He
+would be lost in these woods, I warrant. We're free people over here;
+why should we bother our heads about kings and parliament? They are no
+good to us."
+
+"You talk more boldly than Mr. Ethan Allen," said the boy. "He was at
+our house once to talk with father. Father said he was a master bold man
+and feared neither the King nor the people."
+
+"And no man need fear either if he fear God," declared the ranger,
+simply. "We are only seeing the beginnings of great trouble, Nuck. We
+may do battle to Yorkers now; perhaps we shall one day have to fight the
+King's men for our farms and housel-stuff. The Governor of New York is a
+powerful man and is friendly to men high in the King's councils, they
+say. This Sheriff Ten Eyck may bring real soldiers against us some day."
+
+"You don't believe that, 'Siah?" cried the boy.
+
+"Indeed and I do, lad," returned the ranger, rising now with the carcass
+of the doe flayed and ready for hanging up.
+
+"But we'll fight for our lands!" cried Enoch. "My father fought Simon
+Halpen for our farm. I'll fight him, too, if he comes here and tries to
+take it, now father is dead."
+
+"Mayhap this day's work will settle it for all time, Nuck," said the
+ranger, hopefully. "But do you shin up that sapling yonder, and bend it
+down. We wanter hang this carcass where no varmit--not even a
+catamount--can git it."
+
+The boy did as he was bade and soon the fruit of Enoch Harding's early
+morning adventure was hanging from the top of a young tree, too small to
+be climbed by any wild-cat and far enough from the ground to be out of
+reach of the wolves and foxes. "Now we'll git right out o' here, lad,"
+Bolderwood said, picking up his rifle and starting for the ford. "We've
+got to hurry," and Enoch, nothing loath, followed him across the creek
+and into the forest on the other bank.
+
+"Do you r'ally think there'll be fightin', Master Bolderwood?" he asked.
+
+"I hope God'll forbid that," responded the ranger, with due reverence.
+"But if the Yorkers expect ter walk in an' take our farms the way this
+sheriff wants ter take Master Breckenridge's, we'll show 'em diff'rent!"
+He increased his stride and Enoch had such difficulty in keeping up with
+his long-legged companion that he had no breath for rejoinder and they
+went on in silence.
+
+The controversy between the New York colony and the settlers of the
+Hampshire Grants who had bought their farms of Governor Benning
+Wentworth, of New Hampshire, was a very important incident of the
+pre-Revolutionary period. The not always bloodless battles over the
+Disputed Ground arose from the claim of New York that the old patent of
+King Charles to the Duke of York, giving to him all the territory lying
+between the Connecticut River on the east and Delaware Bay on the west,
+was still valid north of the Massachusetts line.
+
+In 1740 King George II had declared "that the northern boundary of
+Massachusetts be a similar curved line, pursuing the course of the
+Merrimac River at three miles distant on the north side thereof,
+beginning at the Atlantic Ocean and ending at a point due north of a
+place called Pawtucket Falls, and by a straight line from thence due
+west till it meets with his Majesty's other governments." Nine years
+later Governor Wentworth made the claim that, because of this
+established boundary between Massachusetts and New Hampshire, the
+latter's western boundary was the same as Massachusetts'--a line
+parallel with and twenty miles from the Hudson River--and he informed
+Governor Clinton, of New York, that he should grant lands to settlers as
+far west as this twenty-mile line. Therewith he granted to William
+Williams and sixty-one others the township of Bennington (named in his
+honor) and it was surveyed in October of that same year. But the
+outbreak of the French and Indian troubles made the occupation of this
+exposed territory impossible until 1761, when there came into the rich
+and fertile country lying about what is now the town of Bennington,
+several families of settlers from Hardwick, Mass., in all numbering
+about twenty souls.
+
+But there had been an earlier survey of the territory along Walloomscoik
+Creek under the old Dutch patent and in 1765 Captain Campbell, under
+instructions from the New York colony, attempted to resurvey this old
+grant. He came to the land of Samuel Robinson who, with his neighbors,
+drove the Yorkers off. For this Robinson and two others were carried to
+Albany where they were confined in the jail for some weeks and afterward
+fined for "rioting." At once the settlers, who had increased greatly
+since '61, saw that they must present their case before the King if they
+would have justice rendered them; so Captain Robinson went to England to
+represent their side of the matter. Unfortunately he died there before
+completing his work.
+
+On the part of the governors of New Hampshire and New York it was merely
+a land speculation, and both officials were after the fees accruing from
+granting the lands; whereas the settlers who had gone upon the farms,
+and established their families and risked their little all in the
+undertaking, bore the brunt of the fight. The speculators and the men
+they desired to place on the farms of the New Hampshire grantees,
+hovered along the Twenty-Mile Line, and occasionally made sorties upon
+the more unprotected farmers, despite the fact that the King had
+instructed the Governor of New York to make no further grants until the
+rights of the controversy should be plainly established. This settled
+determination of the New York authorities to drive them out convinced
+the men of the Grants that they must combine to defend their homes and
+when, early in July, 1771, news came from Albany that Sheriff Ten Eyck
+with a large party of armed men was intending to march to James
+Breckenridge's farm and seize it in the name of the New York government,
+the people of Bennington in town-meeting assembled determined to defend
+their townsman's rights.
+
+Sheriff Ten Eyck started from Albany on the 18th of July with more than
+300 men and at once the settlers began to gather near the threatened
+farmstead. 'Siah Bolderwood having no farm of his own, was sent through
+the country raising men and guns for the defense of the Breckenridge
+place. On his way back he had stopped for Enoch Harding and learning
+that the boy had gone hunting before daybreak, the ranger followed him,
+arriving at the deer-lick in time to render important assistance in the
+dramatic scene just pictured. After crossing the creek at the spot where
+the boy's father had met his frightful and mysterious death a few months
+before, the two volunteers, while still the day was new, reached the
+place of the settlers' gathering.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE AMBUSH
+
+
+The house of James Breckenridge was built at the foot of a slight ridge
+of land running east and west, which ridge was heavily wooded. It was
+only a mile from the Twenty-Mile Line and therefore particularly open to
+attack by the New York authorities. Once before had an attempt been made
+by the grasping land speculators of the sister colony to oust its
+rightful owner, but at that time naught but a wordy controversy had
+ensued, whereas the present attack bade fair to be more serious.
+Breckenridge had sent his family to the settlement in expectation of
+this trouble, while he and his neighbors made ready to meet the sheriff
+and his army. Some of the Bennington men had arrived at the farm the
+evening before when news went forth that the invaders were only seven
+miles away, at Sancock. But the greater number of the defenders came, as
+did 'Siah Bolderwood and young Enoch Harding, soon after sun-up.
+
+This gathering of Grants men was a memorable one. Heretofore, the
+clashes with the Yorkers had been little more than skirmishes in which
+half a dozen or a dozen men on both sides had taken part. Ethan Allen,
+Seth Warner, Remember Baker, and others of the more venturesome spirits,
+had seized some of the land-grabbers and their tools, and delivered upon
+their bared backs more strokes of "the twigs of the wilderness," as
+Allen called the blue beech rods, than the unhappy Yorkers thus treated
+would forget in many a day.
+
+Ethan Allen was not as long in the settlement as many of the other men
+about him; but he was a born leader, and entering heart and soul into
+the cause of the Grants was soon acknowledged the most fiery spirit
+among the settlers. He was born in Litchfield, Conn., January 10, 1737,
+and probably came to the Hampshire Grants some time in '69. Although but
+thirty-four years old at this time he carried his point in most
+arguments regarding the well-being of the settlers, and the Green
+Mountain boys, as his followers came to be called, fairly worshipped
+him. He was singularly handsome, with ruddy face, a ready wit, bold,
+unpolished, brave and almost a giant in size, for though not so tall as
+Seth Warner he was a much heavier and broader man.
+
+With this company of armed men, too, was Remember Baker and his
+flint-lock musket, which seldom left his side waking or sleeping. Baker
+was the best shot on the northern border and performed feats of
+marksmanship with this musket that could scarce be equaled by any of our
+famous marksmen to-day with their improved weapons. Like the stories
+told of Robin Hood and his cloth-yard shafts, Baker could split a wand
+with a bullet and always filed the flint on his musket to a sharp point.
+
+Other men there were in this early morning assembly destined to be heard
+from later in the affairs of the struggling community, but none so
+filled young Enoch Harding's eye as did these two. Remember Baker lived
+not far from the Harding farm and Enoch often went there to visit young
+Robert Baker, or had Robert to stay all night with him at his home. But
+Enoch's closest boy friend was James Breckenridge's nephew, Lot, who was
+two years young Harding's senior and bore arms on this morning with the
+older youths and men. At once when the two spied each other they found
+opportunity to step aside and hold such confidences as boys are wont.
+Yet they were so excited by the prospect of the forthcoming battle with
+the Yorkers that even Nuck's adventure with the catamount was lightly
+passed over.
+
+Meanwhile the settlers were divided into several bands, each captained
+by an efficient officer who, as 'Siah Bolderwood expressed it, "had
+snuffed powder." Bolderwood himself was given command of the larger
+number and arranged his men along the top of the ridge behind the house,
+where they would be concealed by the brush but could draw bead upon any
+person passing along the road or approaching the farmhouse. One hundred
+and twenty under a second leader were hidden beside the road while
+eighteen and an officer were stationed inside the house itself.
+
+These arrangements had scarce been made when a figure was descried
+approaching at top speed. It was a messenger to warn the settlers of the
+coming of the enemy. "Run down to the house, Nuck," commanded 'Siah,
+"and get the news for me. Keep your heads down, lads! Let them Yorkers
+when they come, think there ain't nobody to home!"
+
+Enoch crept through the brush and descended the slope, appearing before
+the house just as the runner reached it. Coming so suddenly from behind
+the dwelling Enoch startled the newcomer, who sprang back and placed his
+hand on the hunting knife at his belt. Then, with a contemptuous grunt,
+the messenger passed Enoch by and lifted the latch-string which had been
+left hanging out. Enoch followed him into the Breckenridge house.
+
+The runner was a tall Indian lad with a keen face and coal-black eyes
+and hair. Enoch knew him, for his people had camped for several years
+near the Harding place. But Jonas Harding had had that contempt for the
+red race which characterized many of the pioneer people and was the
+foundation for more than half the trouble between the whites and reds;
+and he had often expressed this contempt before young Crow Wing, who was
+a chief's son although his tribe was scattered and decimated by disease.
+Crow Wing had hated Enoch's father for his taunts and unkind words, and
+now that the elder Harding was dead the young Indian considered his son
+cast in the same mould and worthy of the same hatred which he had borne
+Jonas. Naturally Enoch would have shared his parent's contempt for the
+Indians; but 'Siah Bolderwood, although he had camped, hunted and fought
+with Enoch's father for so many years, did not share the latter's
+opinion of the Indian character, and from him Enoch had imbibed many
+ideas of late which changed his opinion of the red men. There was a
+time, however, when the white boy had ridiculed Crow Wing and the latter
+had not forgotten.
+
+Enoch watched him now with admiration. The young brave had run for
+several miles, having been sent out toward Sancock by one of the
+settlers for whom he sometimes worked, but he breathed as easily as
+though he had walked instead of run. When one of the men in the
+Breckenridge kitchen spoke to him he answered in a perfectly even voice
+which showed no tremor of fatigue.
+
+"Him sheriff march now," he said. "Mebbe t'ink um t'ree mile off."
+
+"Where did you leave them?" asked the man in command of the house. The
+Indian youth told him. "And how many are there, Crow Wing?" asked
+another.
+
+"Many--many!" cried the Indian, his eyes flashing. He held up both hands
+and spread all his ten fingers rapidly seven times. "Seventy!" cried one
+of the white men. "He means seven hundred," declared the leader. "That
+so, Crow Wing, eh?"
+
+The Indian nodded. "Many white men--many guns," he said.
+
+"It's not true," growled one man. "You can't believe anything an Injin
+says. Where would the New York sheriff get seven hundred men?"
+
+Crow Wing's eyes flashed and he drew himself up proudly. "Me no lie--me
+speak true. Injin not two-tongue like white man!" he declared, with
+scorn, and turning his back on his traducer, stalked out of the house.
+
+The settlers, however, paid little attention to his departure. Enoch
+scuttled back to the ridge where 'Siah was waiting to hear the news.
+There he lay down beside Lot Breckenridge and the two boys talked
+earnestly as the men about them smoked or chatted while waiting for the
+coming of the Yorkers. Seven hundred seemed a great number to oppose.
+The odds would be more than two to one. Despite the ambush which had
+been so carefully laid for them, the sheriff and his men might fight as
+desperately as the settlers themselves.
+
+"Tell ye what!" whispered Lot to Enoch, "I ain't fixin' to git shot.
+Marm didn't want Uncle Jim to let me come, but he said ev'ry gun'd count
+this mornin', so she 'lowed I'd hafter. But she says if I git shot
+she'll larrup me well."
+
+Enoch chuckled. Although Lot was his senior he was more of a child than
+young Harding. The experiences of the last few months had aged Enoch a
+good deal. "My mother won't whip me if I git shot; but I mustn't run
+into danger, for she wouldn't know what to do without me," he said,
+proudly. "Bryce ain't much use yet, you know."
+
+"Zuckers!" exclaimed Lot, "I wisht my marm was like yourn. I ain't got
+no father neither; but Uncle Jim don't let me do nothin', an' marm's
+allus wearin' out a beech twig on me."
+
+"Guess you do somethin' for it," said Enoch, wisely.
+
+"She'd do it jest th' same if I didn't," declared Lot, yet with perfect
+good-nature, as though the Widow Breckenridge's vigorous applications of
+the beech wand was a part of existence not to be escaped. "Gran'pap says
+I might's well be hung for an ole sheep as a lamb, so in course I do
+somethin' for it--mostly."
+
+"If the Yorkers fight we'll hafter stay right here and shoot like the
+men," said Nuck, reflectively. "It'll be like the Injin fights my father
+and 'Siah were in. I s'pose we'll take trees, an' scatter out so't the
+Yorkers can't git up around us here----"
+
+"An' we'll raise the warwhoop an' shoot jest as fast as we kin!"
+exclaimed Lot, excitedly. "Crow Wing taught me the warwhoop last year.
+An' I know how to scalp, too."
+
+"Oh, I wouldn't do that!" exclaimed Enoch, in horror.
+
+"Umph! Yorkers ain't no better'n Injins, an' I'd scalp an Injin,"
+declared Lot, blood-thirstily.
+
+"I wouldn't. My father never did that, an' he was in the war. He said
+that was why the Injins warn't no better'n brute-beasts, an' didn't have
+no souls--'cause they scalped their enemies."
+
+"Be still there, you youngsters!" growled 'Siah, coming down the line.
+"If you want to be men, l'arn to keep yer tongues quiet. Voices carry
+far on a day like this. What'd they say down ter the house, Nuck, 'bout
+the signal?"
+
+"When they want help, or want us to sail into 'em, they're goin' to
+raise a red flag through the chimbley," replied the boy.
+
+"Wal, I'm hopin' they won't fight," said the ranger, squinting along the
+road below the ridge.
+
+"Oh, I wanter see a fight--zuckers, I do!" exclaimed Lot.
+
+"Be still, you bloodthirsty young savage!" commanded 'Siah. "You wanter
+shoot down men of your own color, do ye? Beech-sealin' an' duckin' is
+all right; but it's an awful thing to draw bead on another white man, as
+ye'll l'arn some day."
+
+"But you fought the Frenchmen with the Injins," declared Lot.
+
+"Huh! Them's only half-bred. Frenchmen ain't no more'n savages," said
+'Siah, gloomily.
+
+An hour passed--a long, long time to the excited boys. Then, far down
+the winding road quite a piece of which they could observe from the
+summit of the wooded ridge, was seen the sudden glint of sunlight on
+metal. "They're coming!" the message went round and the settlers in
+ambush crouched more closely behind their screens and even the hearts of
+old Indian fighters beat faster at the nearing prospect of an
+engagement. James Breckenridge, Ethan Allen, and several others advanced
+slowly from the direction of the house to the bridge across which the
+Yorkers must pass. Sheriff Ten Eyck spurred forward with his personal
+staff to meet them. With him came the infamous John Munro who, as a
+justice of the peace under commission from New York, was such a thorn in
+the flesh of the settlers. The sheriff was a very pompous Dutchman who
+believed without question in the validity of New York's jurisdiction
+over the Grants, and who, despite his bombastic manner, was personally
+no coward.
+
+"Master Breckenridge," he said to the man whom he had come to evict from
+his home, "we have heard that you and your neighbors are armed to oppose
+the authority vested in me by His Most Gracious Majesty's colony of New
+York. If there be blood shed this day, it will be upon your head, for I
+here command you to leave this neighborhood and give over the possession
+of this land to its rightful owners."
+
+[Illustration: "I COMMAND YOU TO LEAVE THIS NEIGHBORHOOD"]
+
+"I cannot do that, Master Sheriff," said Breckenridge, quietly. "As for
+blood being upon my head for this day's work, you can see that I am
+unarmed," and he spread his hands widely. "Besides, I have nothing to do
+with this grant at the present time. The township of Bennington has
+taken the farm upon its own hands, and it will oppose your entrance with
+armed resistance. I have nothing to do with it."
+
+"What is the township of Bennington?" demanded Ten Eyck. "This land
+belongs to the colony of New York under the crown. There is no town of
+Bennington. What legal rights have a parcel of squatters to this
+territory?"
+
+Then Allen spoke. "The gods of the valleys are not the gods of the
+hills, Sir Sheriff. You on the other side of the Twenty-Mile Line may
+acknowledge the Governor of New York as your master; we on this side are
+a free people. We have bought our lands from the government to which
+they were granted by the King, and you shall not drive us from them!"
+
+The colloquy ended and the settlers went back toward the house. After
+the main body of his army came up, and their numbers seemed quite as
+formidable as Crow Wing had reported, the sheriff pressed forward across
+the bridge and approached the Breckenridge dwelling. Every settler had
+disappeared by now and even those inside the house were still. Neither
+the sheriff nor his men suspected that quite three hundred guns were
+turned upon them and that, at the first fire, the carnage would be
+terrible.
+
+"Open in the name of the law!" exclaimed Ten Eyck, thundering at the
+stout oak door of the house. "I demand admittance and that all within
+come peaceably forth. Open, or I shall break down the door!"
+
+There was silence for a moment, and then a voice said clearly from
+within: "Attempt it and you are a dead man!"
+
+The reply angered the doughty sheriff. He was being flouted and the
+majesty of the law scorned. That was more than he could quietly bear.
+"Come out and deliver up your arms in the name o' the King!" he cried.
+"Ye rebels! I'll take the last of ye to Albany jail if ye do not
+surrender!"
+
+At this a chorus of derisive groans issued from behind the barred door
+and shutters, and these sounds were echoed by other groans from the men
+in ambush, until the very forest itself seemed deriding the Yorkers. The
+knowledge that he and his men had fallen into a trap did not balk the
+sheriff; his rage rose to white heat and calling for an axe he advanced
+to the attack. The moment was freighted with peril. If the Yorkers
+attacked the house a withering fire would spring from the guns in the
+bushes and on the ridge and blood would flow in plenty in that
+heretofore peaceful vale of the northern forest.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+'SIAH BOLDERWOOD'S STRATAGEM
+
+
+Sheriff Ten Eyck was a man of determination and although he had before
+tested the mettle of the Grants men, he felt a burden of confidence now
+with this army behind him. The ridicule of the party in ambush stung his
+pride, and although warned that a considerable number of settlers were
+hidden in the wood, he was not disposed to temporize. But the men who
+had accompanied him on his nefarious mission were far differently
+impressed by the situation. They had followed the doughty sheriff in the
+hope of plunder, it is true; if the settlers of the Hampshire Grants
+were to be driven incontinently from their homes as Ten Eyck and the
+Governor declared, somebody must benefit by the circumstance, and the
+sheriff's men hoped to be of the benefited party. But this armed
+opposition was disheartening. When the chorus of groans rose from the
+surrounding forest, his men as well as himself, knew that they had
+fallen into ambush, and this thought troubled the Yorkers greatly.
+
+From the top of the ridge 'Siah Bolderwood had heard much of the
+controversy at the door of the Breckenridge house and as the really
+serious moment approached the old ranger was blessed with a sudden
+inspiration. He sprang forward and seizing Enoch Harding by the collar
+dragged him to his knees and whispered a command in his ear. "Quick, you
+young snipe you!" he exclaimed, as Enoch prepared to obey. "Run like the
+wind--and don't let 'em see you or you may get potted!"
+
+Enoch was off in an instant, trailing his gun behind him and stooping
+low that the passage of his body through the brush might not be noted.
+He got the house between him and the sheriff's column and soon reached
+the side of the road where the other settlers in ambush were stationed.
+He found their leader and whispered Bolderwood's message to him.
+Instantly the man caught the idea and the word was passed down the
+straggling line. Enoch did not return but waited with these men, who
+were nearer the enemy, to see the matter out.
+
+The sheriff was on the verge of giving the command to break down the
+door of the besieged house when suddenly a wild yell broke out upon the
+ridge above and was taken up by the settlers in the brush by the
+roadside. It was the warwhoop--the yell which originally incited the red
+warriors to action and was supposed to strike terror to the hearts of
+their enemies. The shrill cry echoed through the wood with startling
+significance. At the same instant every man's cap was raised upon his
+gun barrel and thrust forward into view of the startled Yorkers, while
+the settlers themselves showed their heads, but nearer the ground. Only
+for a moment were they thus visible; then they dropped back into hiding
+again.
+
+But the effect upon the sheriff's unwilling army was paralyzing. The
+Yorkers thought that twice as many men were hidden in the forest as were
+really there, for the hats on the gun barrels had seemed like heads,
+too. They thought every man in Bennington--and indeed, as far east as
+Brattleboro and Westminster--must have come to defend James
+Breckenridge's farm, and they clamored loudly to return to the
+Twenty-Mile Line and safety.
+
+In vain the sheriff fumed and stormed, threatening all manner of
+punishment for his mutinous troops; the army was determined to a man to
+have no conflict with the settlers of the Disputed Ground. Like "the
+noble Duke of York" in the old catch-song familiar at that day, Sheriff
+Ten Eyck had marched his seven hundred or more men up to James
+Breckenridge's door only "to march them down again!" 'Siah Bolderwood's
+idea had taken all the desire for fight out of the Yorkers, and after
+some wrangling between the personal attendants of the sheriff and the
+volunteer army, the whole crew marched away, leaving the farm to the
+undisputed possession of its rightful owner.
+
+When the Yorkers departed the little garrison of the house appeared and
+cheered lustily; but the men in the woods did not come out of hiding
+until the last of the enemy had disappeared, for they did not wish the
+invaders to know how badly they had been deceived regarding their
+numbers. By and by Bolderwood and his men marched down from the ridge
+and 'Siah was congratulated upon his happy thought in bringing about the
+confusion of the Yorkers.
+
+"You've a long head on those narrow shoulders of yours, neighbor,"
+declared Ethan Allen, striking the old ranger heartily on the back.
+"That little wile finished them. And this is the boy I saw trailing
+through the bushes, is it?" and he seized Enoch and turned his face
+upward that he might the better view his features. "Why, holloa, my
+little man! I've seen you before surely?"
+
+"It is poor Jonas Harding's eldest lad, neighbor Allen," Bolderwood
+said. "He's the head of the family now, and bein' sech, had to come
+along to fight the Yorkers."
+
+"I remember your father," declared Allen, kindly. "A noble specimen of
+the Almighty's workmanship. I stopped a night with him once at his
+cabin--do you remember me?"
+
+As though Nuck could have forgotten it! His youthful mind had made Ethan
+Allen a veritable hero ever since, placing him upon a pedestal before
+which he worshipped. But he only nodded for bashfulness.
+
+"You'll make a big man, too," said the giant. "And if you can shoot
+straight there'll be plenty of chance for you later on. This is only the
+beginning, 'Siah," he pursued, turning to Bolderwood and letting his
+huge hand drop from Enoch's head. "There will be court-doings,
+now--writs, and ejectments, and enough red seals to run the King's court
+itself. But while the Yorkers are red-sealing us, we'll blue-seal
+them--if they come over here, eh?" and he went off with a great shout of
+laughter at his own punning.
+
+The men were minded to scatter but slowly. All were rejoiced that the
+battle had been a bloodless one; yet none believed the matter ended. The
+fiasco of the New York sheriff might act as a wet blanket for the time
+upon the movements of the authorities across the line; but the land
+speculators were too numerous and active to allow the people of the
+Grants to remain in peace. Parties of marauders might swoop down at any
+time upon the more unprotected settlers, drive them out of their homes,
+destroy their property, and possibly do bodily injury to the helpless
+people. Methods must be devised to keep these Yorkers on their own side
+of the disputed line. Those settlers, such as the widow Harding, who
+were least able to protect themselves, must have the help of their
+neighbors. The present victory proved the benefit to be derived from
+concerted action. Now, in the flush of this triumph, the leaders went
+among the yeomanry who had gathered here and outlined a plan for
+permanent military organization. In all the colonies at that day,
+"training bands," or militia, had become popular, made so in part by the
+interest aroused by the wars with the French and Indians. Many of the
+men who joined these military companies did not look deeply into the
+affairs of the colonies, nor were they much interested in politics; but
+their leaders looked ahead--just as did Ethan Allen and his conferees in
+the Grants--and realized that an armed yeomanry might some time be
+called upon to face hirelings of the King.
+
+"Even a lad like you can bear a rifle, and your mother will spare you
+from the farm for drill," Allen said, with his hand again on Enoch's
+shoulder, before riding away. "I shall expect to see Jonas Harding's boy
+at Bennington when word is sent round for the first drill." And Enoch,
+his heart beating high with pride at this notice, promised to gain his
+mother's permission if possible.
+
+Bolderwood had already gone, and Lot Breckenridge detained Enoch until
+after the dinner hour. Lot would have kept him all night, but the latter
+knew his mother would be anxious to see him safe home, and he started an
+hour or two before sunset, on the trail which Bolderwood and he had
+followed early in the morning. Being one of the last to leave James
+Breckenridge's house, he traveled the forest alone. But he had no
+feeling of fear. The trails and by-paths were as familiar to him as the
+streets of his hometown are to a boy of to-day. And the numberless
+sounds which reached his ears were distinguished and understood by the
+pioneer boy. The hoarse laugh of the jay as it winged its way home over
+the tree-tops, the chatter of the squirrel in the hollow oak, the sudden
+scurry of deer in the brake, the barking of a fox on the hillside, were
+all sounds with which Enoch Harding was well acquainted.
+
+As he crossed a heavily shadowed creek, a splash in the water attracted
+his particular attention and he crept to the brink in time to see a pair
+of sleek dark heads moving swiftly down the stream. Soon the heads
+stopped, bobbed about near a narrow part of the stream, and finally came
+out upon the bank, one on either side. The trees stood thick together
+here, and both animals attacked a straight, smooth trunk standing near
+the creek, their sharp teeth making the chips fly as they worked. They
+were a pair of beavers beginning a dam for the next winter. Enoch marked
+the spot well. About January he would come over with Lot, or with Robbie
+Baker, stop up the mouth of the beaver's tunnel, break in the dome of
+his house, and capture the family. Beaver pelts were a common article of
+barter in a country where real money was a curiosity.
+
+But watching the beavers delayed Enoch and it was growing dark in the
+forest when he again turned his face homewards. He knew the path well
+enough--the runway he traveled was so deep that he could scarce miss it
+and might have followed it with his eyes blindfolded,--but he quickened
+his pace, not desiring to be too late in reaching his mother's cabin.
+Unless some neighbor had passed and given them the news of the victory
+at James Breckenridge's they might be worried for fear there had
+actually been a battle. Deep in the forest upon the mountainside there
+sounded the human-like scream of a catamount, and the memory of his
+adventure of the morning was still very vivid in his mind. He began to
+fear his mother's censure for his delay, too, for Mistress Harding
+brought up her children to strict obedience and Enoch, man though he
+felt himself to be because of this day's work, knew he had no business
+to loiter until after dark in the forest.
+
+He stumbled on now in some haste and was approaching the ford in the
+wide stream near which he had shot the doe, when a flicker of light off
+at one side of the trail attracted his attention. It was a newly kindled
+campfire and the pungent smoke of it reached his nostrils at the instant
+the flame was apparent to his eyes. He leaped behind a tree and peered
+through the thickening darkness at the spot where the campfire was
+built. His heart beat rapidly, for despite the supposed peacefulness of
+the times there was always the possibility of enemies lurking in the
+forest. And the settlers had grown wary since the controversy with the
+Yorkers became so serious.
+
+Enoch was nearing the boundaries of his father's farm now and ever since
+Simon Halpen had endeavored to evict them and especially since Jonas
+Harding's death, the possibility of the Yorkers' return had been a
+nightmare to Enoch. Lying a moment almost breathless behind the tree, he
+began to recover his presence of mind and fortitude. First he freshened
+the priming of his gun and then, picking his way cautiously, approached
+the campfire. Like a shadow he flitted from tree to tree and from brush
+clump to stump, circling the camp, but ever drawing nearer. With the
+instinct of the born wood-ranger he took infinite pains in approaching
+the spot and from the moment he had observed the light he spent nearly
+an hour in circling about until he finally arrived at a point where he
+could view successfully the tiny clearing.
+
+Now, at once, he descried a figure sitting before the blaze. The man had
+his back against a tree and that is why Enoch had found such difficulty
+at first in seeing him. He was nodding, half asleep, with his cap pulled
+down over his eyes, so that only the merest outline of his face was
+revealed. It was apparent that he had eaten his own supper, for there
+were the indications of the meal upon the ground; but it looked as
+though he expected some other person to join him. The wind began to moan
+in the tree-tops; far away the mournful scream of the catamount broke
+the silence again. The boy cast his gaze upward into the branches,
+feeling as though one of the terrible creatures, with which he had
+engaged in so desperate a struggle that very morning, was even then
+watching him from the foliage.
+
+[Illustration: A HAND WAS PRESSED OVER HIS LIPS]
+
+And he was indeed being watched, and by eyes well nigh as keen as those
+of the wild-cat. While he stood behind the tree, all of half a gun-shot
+from the camp, a figure stepped silently out of the shadows and stood at
+his elbow before the startled lad realized that he was not alone. A
+vice-like hand seized his arm so that he could not turn his rifle upon
+this unexpected enemy. Before he could cry out a second hand was pressed
+firmly over his parted lips. "No speak!" breathed a voice in Enoch
+Harding's ear. "If speak, white boy die!"
+
+It was Crow Wing, the young Iroquois, and Enoch obeyed. He found himself
+forced rapidly away from the campfire and when they were out of ear-shot
+of the unconscious stranger, and not until then, did the grasp of the
+Indian relax. "What do you want with me?" Enoch demanded, in a whisper.
+The other did not reply. He only pushed the white boy on until they came
+to the ford of the creek where Enoch and 'Siah Bolderwood had crossed
+early in the day. There Crow Wing released him altogether and pointed
+sternly across the river. "Your house--that way!" he said. "Go!"
+
+"Who is that man back yonder?" cried Enoch, angrily. "You can't make me
+do what you say----"
+
+Crow Wing tapped the handle of the long knife at his belt suggestively.
+"White boy go--go now!" he commanded again, and in spite of his being
+armed with a rifle while the Indian had no such weapon, Enoch felt
+convinced that it would be wiser for him to obey without parley.
+Although Crow Wing could not have been three years his senior, he was
+certainly the master on this occasion. With lagging step he descended
+the bank and began to ford the stream. He glanced back and saw the
+Indian, standing like a statue of bronze, on the bank above him. When he
+reached the middle of the stream, however, he felt the full ignominy of
+his retreat before a foe who was not armed equally with himself. What
+would Bolderwood say if he told him? What would his father have done?
+
+He swung about quickly and raised the rifle to his shoulder. But the
+Indian lad had gone. Not an object moved upon the further shore of the
+creek and, after a minute or two of hesitation, the white boy stumbled
+on through the stream and reached the other bank. He was angry with
+himself for being afraid of Crow Wing, and he was also angry that he had
+not seen the face of the stranger at the campfire. It must have been
+somebody whom Crow Wing knew and did not wish the white boy to see.
+Enoch Harding continued his homeward way, his mind greatly disturbed by
+the adventure and with a feeling of deep resentment against the Indian
+youth.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE PIONEER HOME
+
+
+Enoch arrived feeling not of half so much importance as he had on
+starting from the Breckenridge farm. His adventure with Crow Wing had
+mightily taken down his self-conceit. Like most of the settlers he had
+very little confidence in the Indian character; so, although Crow Wing
+had rendered the defenders of the Grants a signal service that very day,
+Enoch was not at all sure that the red youth was not helping the
+Yorkers, too.
+
+But when he came out of the wood at the edge of the great corn-field
+which his father had cleared first of all, and saw the light of the
+candles shining through the doorway of the log house, he forgot his
+recent rage against Crow Wing and hurried on to greet those whom he
+loved. The children came running out to meet him and the light of the
+candles was shrouded as his mother's tall form appeared in the doorway.
+Bryce, who was eleven years old, was almost as tall as Enoch, although
+he lacked his elder brother's breadth of shoulders and gravity of
+manner. Enoch was deliberate in everything he did; Bryce was of a more
+nervous temperament and was apt to act upon impulse. He was a
+fair-haired boy and was forever smiling. Now he reached Nuck first and
+fairly hugged him around the neck, exclaiming:
+
+"We thought you were shot! However came you to be so long comin' back,
+Nuck? Mother's quite worritted 'bout you, she says."
+
+Katie, the fly-away sister of ten, hurled herself next upon her elder
+brother and seized the heavy rifle from his hands. "Look out for it,
+Kate!" commanded Nuck. "It's been freshly primed." But Katie was not
+afraid of firearms. She shouldered the gun and marched bravely toward
+the house. Mary, demure and curly headed, and little Harry, remained
+nearer the door, and lifted their faces to be kissed in turn by Enoch
+when he arrived. Then the boy turned to his mother.
+
+"Come in, my son," she said. "I have saved your supper for you. I could
+not send the children to bed before you came. They were a-well nigh wild
+to see you and hear about the doings at farmer Breckenridge's. You are
+late."
+
+This was all she said regarding his tardiness at the moment. She was a
+very pleasant featured woman of thirty-five, with kind eyes and a
+cheery, if grave, smile; but Enoch knew she could be stern enough if
+occasion required. Indeed, she was a far stricter disciplinarian than
+his father had been. They crowded into the house and Mrs. Harding went
+to the fire and hung the pot over the glowing coals to heat again the
+stewed venison which she had saved for Enoch's supper.
+
+"Tell us about it, Enoch, my son," she said. "Did the Yorkers come as
+friend Bolderwood said they would--in such numbers?"
+
+"In greater numbers," declared the boy, and he went on to recount the
+incidents of the morning when Sheriff Ten Eyck had demanded the
+surrender of the Breckenridge house and farm. The incident had appealed
+strongly to the boy and he drew a faithful picture of the scene when the
+army of Yorkers marched up to the farmhouse door and demanded admission.
+
+"And Mr. Allen was there and spoke to me--he did!" declared Enoch. "He's
+a master big man--and so handsome. He asked me if I remembered his
+coming here once to see father, and he told me to be sure and go to
+Bennington when the train-band is mustered in. I can, can't I, mother?"
+
+"And me, too!" cried Bryce. "I can carry Nuck's musket now't he shoots
+with father's gun. I can shoot, too--from a rest."
+
+"Huh!" exclaimed his elder brother, "you can't carry the old musket
+even, and march."
+
+"Yes I can!"
+
+"No you can't!"
+
+But the mother's voice recalled the boys to their better behavior. "I
+will talk with 'Siah Bolderwood about your joining the train-band,
+Enoch. And if you go to Bennington with Enoch, Bryce, who will defend
+our home? You must stay here and guard mother and the other children, my
+boy."
+
+Bryce felt better at that suggestion and the argument between Enoch and
+himself was dropped. The widow soon sent all but Enoch to bed in the
+loft over the kitchen and living room of the cabin. There was a bedroom
+occupied by herself partitioned off from the living room, while Enoch
+slept on a "shakedown" near the door. This he had insisted upon doing
+ever since his father's death.
+
+"You were very late in returning, my son," said the widow when the
+others had climbed the ladder to the loft.
+
+"Yes, marm."
+
+"You did not come right home?"
+
+"No, marm. I stayed to eat with Lot Breckenridge. And then I wanted to
+hear the men talk."
+
+"You should have started earlier for home, Enoch," she said, sternly.
+
+"Well, I'd got here pretty near sunset if it hadn't been for somethin'
+that happened just the other side of the crick," Enoch declared,
+forgetting the fact that he had stopped to watch the beavers before ever
+he saw the campfire in the wood.
+
+"What was it?" she asked.
+
+"There's somebody over there--a tall man, but I couldn't see his
+face----"
+
+"Where?"
+
+"Beyond the crick; 'twarn't half a mile from where father was killed at
+the deer-lick. I saw a light in the bushes. It was a campfire an' I
+couldn't go by without seein' what it was for. So I crept up on it an'
+bymeby I saw the man."
+
+"You don't know who he was?" asked the widow, quickly.
+
+"No, marm."
+
+"Did he have a dark face and was his nose hooked?"
+
+"I couldn't see his face. He was sittin' down all the time. His face was
+shaded with his cap. He sat with his back up against a tree. I was a
+long while gittin' near enough to see him, an' then----"
+
+"Well, what happened, my son?"
+
+"Then that Crow Wing--you know him; the Injin boy that useter live down
+the crick with his folks--Crow Wing come out of the forest an' grabbed
+me an' told me not to holler or he'd kill me. I wasn't 'zactly 'fraid of
+him," added Enoch, thinking some explanation necessary, "but I saw if I
+fought him it would bring the man at the fire to help, and I couldn't
+fight two of 'em, anyway. The pesky Injin made me walk to the crick with
+him an' then he told me to go home and not come back. I wish 'Siah
+Bolderwood was here. We'd fix 'em!"
+
+"The Indian threatened you!" cried the widow. "Have you done anything to
+anger him, Enoch? I know your father was very bitter toward them all;
+but I hoped----"
+
+"I never done a thing to him!" declared the boy. "I don't play with him
+much, though Lot does; but I let him alone. I useter make fun of him
+b'fore--b'fore 'Siah told me more about his folks. Crow Wing's father is
+a good friend to the whites. He fought with our folks ag'in the French
+Injins."
+
+"But who could the man have been?" asked the widow, gravely. "The
+children saw a man lurking about the corn-field at the lower end to-day.
+And when I was milking, Mary came and told me that he was then across
+the river at the ox-bow, looking over at the house. If it should be
+Simon Halpen! He will not give up his hope of getting our rich pastures,
+I am afraid. We must watch carefully, Enoch."
+
+"I'll shoot him if he comes again!" declared the boy, belligerently.
+Then he closed and barred the door and rapidly prepared for bed. His
+mother retired to her own room, but long after Enoch was soundly
+sleeping on his couch, the good woman was upon her knees beside her bed.
+Although she was proud to see Enoch so sturdy and helpful, she feared
+this controversy with the Yorkers would do him much harm; and it was for
+him, as well as for the safety of them all in troublous times, that she
+prayed to the God in whom she so implicitly trusted.
+
+The next day 'Siah Bolderwood came striding up to the cabin with the
+carcass of the doe Enoch had shot across his shoulders, and found the
+widow at her loom, just within the door. She welcomed the lanky ranger
+warmly, for he had not only been her husband's closest friend but had
+been of great assistance to her children and herself since Jonas' death.
+"The children will be glad to see you, 'Siah," she said. "I will call
+them up early and get supper for us all. I will have raised biscuit,
+too--it is not often you get anything but Johnny-cake, I warrant. The
+boys are working to clear the new lot to-day."
+
+"Aye, I saw them as I came along," said Bolderwood, laughing. "There was
+Mistress Kate on top of a tall stump, her black hair flying in the wind,
+and Nuck's old musket in her hands. She said she was on guard, and she
+hailed me before I got out of the wood. Her eyes are sharp."
+
+"She should have been a boy," sighed the widow. "Indeed, this wilderness
+is no place for girls at all."
+
+"Bless their dear little souls!" exclaimed Bolderwood, with feeling.
+"What'd we do without Kate an' Mary? They keep the boys sweet, mistress!
+And Kate's as good as a boy any day when it comes to looking out for
+herself; while as I came through the stumpage Mary was working with the
+best of 'em to pull roots and fire-weed."
+
+"The boys want a stump-burning as soon as possible. Jonas got the new
+lot near cleared. There's only the rubbish to burn."
+
+"Good idea. Nuck and Bryce are doing well.... But what was the sentinel
+for?"
+
+"It isn't all play," said the widow, stopping her work and speaking
+seriously. "Yesterday the children saw a strange man hanging about the
+creek yonder. And last night on his way back from Master Breckenridge's,
+Enoch saw a campfire in the forest and a man sitting by it. An Indian
+youth whom perhaps you have seen here--Crow Wing, he is called--was with
+the man. Crow Wing drove Enoch off before he could find out who the
+white man was."
+
+"Crow Wing, eh?" repeated 'Siah, shaking his head thoughtfully. "I know
+the red scamp. If he was treated right by the settlers, though, he'd be
+decent enough. But he got angry at Breckenridge's yesterday, they tell
+me. Somebody spoke roughly to him. You can ruffle the feathers of them
+birds mighty easy."
+
+This was all the comment the ranger made upon the story; but later he
+wandered down to the new lot which the Hardings were clearing, and
+instead of lending a hand inquired particularly of Enoch where he had
+seen the campfire the night before. Learning the direction he plunged
+into the wood without further ado and went to the ford, crossing it with
+caution and going at once to the vicinity of the fire which Enoch had
+observed. But the ashes had been carefully covered and little trace of
+the occupation of the spot left. At one point, however, 'Siah found
+where two persons--a white man and a red one--had embarked in a canoe
+which had been hidden under the bank of the creek. Evidently Crow Wing
+had expected the place would be searched and had done all in his power
+to mystify the curious.
+
+When 'Siah returned Mistress Harding had called up the children and
+supper--a holiday meal--was almost ready. A lamb had been killed the day
+before and was stuffed and baked in the Dutch oven. There were light
+white-flour biscuits, Enoch had ridden to Bennington with the wheat
+slung across his saddle to have it ground, and there was sweet butter
+and refined maple sap which every family in the Grants boiled down in
+the spring for its own use, although as yet there was little market for
+it. It was a jolly meal, for when 'Siah came the children were sure of
+something a bit extra, both to eat and to do. He taught the girls how to
+make doll babies with cornsilk hair, and begged powder and shot of their
+mother for Bryce and Enoch to use in shooting at a mark. Under his
+instructions Enoch had become a fairly good marksman, while Bryce, by
+resting his gun in the fork of a sapling set upright in the ground, did
+almost as well as his elder brother.
+
+After supper Bolderwood talked with the widow while he smoked his pipe.
+"We need boys like Enoch, Mistress Harding," he said. "While he's young
+I don't dispute, he's big for his age and can handle that rifle pretty
+well. You must let him go up to Bennington next week and drill with the
+other young fellows. There will be no need of his going on any raids
+with the older men. We shall keep the boys out of it, and most of the
+beech-sealin' will be done by the men who hain't got no fam'blies here
+and are free in their movements. But the drill will be good for him and
+the time may come when all this drillin' will pay."
+
+"You really look for serious trouble with the Yorkers, Master
+Bolderwood?" she asked.
+
+"I reckon I do. With them or--or others. Things is purty tick'lish--you
+know that, widder. The King ain't treatin' us right, an' his ministers
+and advisers don't care anything about these colonies, 'ceptin' if we
+don't make 'em rich. Then they trouble us. And the governors are mostly
+all alike. I don't think a bit better of Benning Wentworth than I do of
+these 'ere New York governors. They don't re'lly care nothin' for us
+poor folk."
+
+So the widow agreed to allow Enoch to go to Bennington; and when the day
+came for the gathering of those youths and men who could be spared from
+the farms, to meet there, he mounted the old claybank mare, his shoes
+and stockings slung before him over the saddle bow that his great toes
+might be the easier used as spurs, and with a bag of corn behind him to
+be left for grinding at the mill, trotted along the trail to the
+settlement. Before he had gone far on the road he saw other men and boys
+bound in the same direction. Remember Baker passed him, with Robbie, his
+boy, perched behind on the saddle, and clinging like a leech to his
+father's coat-tails as the horse galloped over the rough road. Enoch saw
+Robbie later, however, and invited him to the stump burning which was to
+take place the following week. He saw Lot Breckenridge, too, at the
+Green Mountain Inn, and invited him to come, and sent word to other boys
+and girls in the Breckenridge neighborhood.
+
+Lot's mother would not let him carry a gun, but he had come to look on
+and see the "greenhorns" take their first lesson in the manual of arms.
+Stephen Fay, mine host of the "Catamount" Inn as the hostlery had come
+to be called--a large, jocund individual who was a Grants man to the
+core and earnest in the cause of the Green Mountain Boys--made all
+welcome and the old house was crowded from daylight till dark. In the
+gallery which ran along the face of the inn, even with the second story
+windows, the ladies of the town sat and viewed the maneuvres of the
+newly formed train-band. Before the door stood the twenty-five foot post
+that held the sign and was likewise capped by a stuffed catamount, in a
+very lifelike pose, its grinning teeth and extended claws turned toward
+the New York border in defiance of "Yorker rule."
+
+The leaders of the party which had suggested these drills--all staunch
+Whigs and active in their defiance of the Yorkers,--met together in the
+inn that day, too, and laid plans for a campaign against certain
+settlers from New York who had come into the Grants and taken up farms
+without having paid the New Hampshire authorities for the same. In not
+all cases had these New York settlers driven off people who had bought
+the land of New Hampshire or her agents; but if it was really the
+property of that colony the Yorkers had no right upon the eastern side
+of the Twenty-Mile Line, or on that side of the lake, at all. As far
+north as the opposite shore from Fort Ticonderoga, that key to the
+Canadian route which had been wrested from the French but a few years
+before, Yorkers had settled; and the Green Mountain Boys determined that
+these people must leave the Disputed Ground or suffer for their
+temerity.
+
+After the failure of Ten Eyck to capture the Breckenridge farm, New York
+began a system of flattery and underhanded methods against the Grants
+men which was particularly effective. The Yorkers chose certain more or
+less influential individuals and offered them local offices, gifts of
+money, and even promised royal titles to some, if they would range
+themselves against the Green Mountain Boys. In some cases these offers
+were accepted; in this way John Munro had become a justice of the peace,
+and Benjamin Hough followed his example. Some foolish folk went so far
+as to accept commissions as New York officers, but hoped to hide the
+fact from their neighbors until a fitting season--when the Grants were
+not afflicted with the presence of the Green Mountain Boys. But in
+almost every case such cowardly sycophants were discovered and either
+made ridiculous before their neighbors by being tried and hoisted in a
+chair before the Catamount Inn, or were sealed with the twigs of the
+wilderness--and the Green Mountain Boys wielded the beech wands with no
+light hand.
+
+Almost every week the military drills were held in Bennington and Enoch
+attended. But before the second one the "stump burning" came off at the
+Harding place and that was an occasion worthy of being chronicled.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE STUMP BURNING
+
+
+Enoch and Lot Breckenridge, with Robbie Baker, had completed all the
+plans for the stump burning that first training day at Bennington. Lot,
+who lived so far from the Harding cabin, agreed to come over the night
+before if his mother would let him, and Robbie was to remain with Enoch
+the night after. The stumps and rubbish would be pretty well piled up
+and fired by afternoon, and then the boys could run races, and play
+games, and perhaps shoot at a mark, until supper-time. Mrs. Harding had
+already promised if the boys worked well to make a nice supper for them.
+
+"An' we'll have the girls," said Lot.
+
+"Oh, what good'll they be at a stump burnin'?" demanded young Baker,
+ungallantly.
+
+"Lots o' good. They allus want good times, too," said Lot, standing up
+for his sisters manfully. "You have no sisters, an' that's why you don't
+want 'em."
+
+"They'll be in the way. Their frocks'll git torn if they help us, an'
+they'll git afire--or--or somethin'!"
+
+"Nuck's sisters will be there. They'll want other girls," said the wise
+Lot. "An' b'sides, Mis' Harding'll be lots better to us if the girls is
+there. She allus is--my marm is. Mothers like girls, but boys is only a
+nuisance, they says." Lot had drawn these conclusions from the remarks
+of his own mother, who was troubled by many children and lacked that
+"faculty," as New England folk used to term it, for bringing them up
+cheerfully.
+
+"I guess we'll get a better supper if the girls are there," admitted
+Nuck, quietly.
+
+"But what'll they do?" demanded Robbie, the embryo woman-hater.
+
+"I'll get mother ter be layin' out a quilt, or something, an' the girls
+can help about that."
+
+"Zuckers!" cried Lot. "We'll have the finest time ever was. I'll be sure
+an' tell ev'rybody down my way. An' we'll all bring powder an' shot; it
+won't matter so much about guns, for them that don't have 'em can borry
+of them that has, when it comes to shootin'."
+
+"And I'll get Master Bolderwood to come an' be empire," declared Nuck,
+no farther out in his pronunciation of the word than some boys are
+nowadays.
+
+So the girls were allowed to come, and an hour or two after sun-up on
+the day in question the Harding place was fairly overrun with young folk
+of both sexes. Those boys who came from a goodly distance brought their
+sisters with them; but the greater number of the girls, living within a
+radius of a few miles of the Harding cabin, did not come until after
+dinner, having to remain at home to help their own mothers before
+attending the merrymaking.
+
+And what a merrymaking it was! Truly, all work and no play makes Jack a
+dull boy, and in a country and at a time when all young people had to
+work almost as hard as their parents, the pioneer fathers and mothers
+encouraged the young folk to mix pleasure well with their tasks. Indeed,
+it was a system followed by the older folks as well on many occasions.
+Corn-shuckings, apple-parings, log-rollings, sugaring-off--all these
+tasks even down to "hog-killings"--were made the excuse for social
+gatherings. The idea of helping one another in the heavier tasks of
+their existence on the frontier was likewise combined in this. Many
+hands make light work, and a cabin which would have kept one family busy
+for a fortnight was often put up and the roof of drawn shingles laid in
+a day's time, by the neighbors of the proprietor of the new structure
+all taking hold of the work.
+
+So in this stump burning, which usually followed upon the clearing of a
+new piece of ground. More than a year before Jonas Harding had begun on
+this lot, with the intention of clearing it entirely and in the end
+having a handsome piece of grass-land along the edge of the creek. In
+the fall a fire had run over the piece and now the stumps were mostly
+dead, although the fire-weed was waist high. Some of the stumps had
+already been pulled up, but many were too large for the muscles of the
+young Hardings and it was the help of their companions to pull these
+stumps to which they looked forward to-day.
+
+With patience remarkable in such youngsters, Enoch and Bryce had dug
+around the base of all the big stumps, had cut off the long side roots,
+and when possible had dug beneath and cut the tap-root of the tree, thus
+making the final extraction of the big stumps all the easier of
+accomplishment. They were piled up and set burning, and round these
+bonfires the boys danced like wild Indians and kept the fires fed up to
+noon-time. Between the sunshine and the flames the youngsters were all
+pretty well scorched by then.
+
+But before the horn was blown for dinner there were two arrivals on the
+scene, one joyfully welcomed by all and the other rather unexpected but
+not less welcome to many of the boys. 'Siah Bolderwood entered the
+clearing from a forest-path at almost the same instant that a lithe
+young figure appeared from the direction of the creek. Enoch ran to his
+old friend and hugged him in his delight. "Ain't I glad you've come,
+'Siah! We got most of the work done; we're goin' to get lots of nice
+ashes, too. We're goin' ter have races and a wrastling match after
+dinner."
+
+"Hullo! who's this?" said 'Siah, pointing across the clearing.
+
+Enoch turned to see the Indian youth, Crow Wing, striding up from the
+water's edge. A good half of the boys had turned with shouts of welcome
+to meet him, for he was popular with them. Ordinarily Crow Wing was a
+very social fellow and taught the white boys to make arrows, string
+their bows, build canoes, and set ingenious snares. "I don't want him
+here!" declared Enoch to the ranger.
+
+"Tut, tut, what do you care? There's no need in your making an enemy of
+that fellow, Nuck. Let him be."
+
+"But think how he used me the other night when I was trying to find out
+about that man in the woods! I don't like him."
+
+"Well, we can't like everybody in this world," said Bolderwood,
+philosophically. "We gotter take folks as we find 'em--that's my motter.
+You let the Injin stay. He's come to help and to have the fun arterward;
+you sent 'round the invitation pretty promisc'us like, an' I calkerlate
+you can't ask him to leave 'thout makin' yerself mighty onpop'lar. Take
+my advice an' let him stay."
+
+So, much against his will, Enoch did so. But he and the Indian lad
+avoided each other and nothing Crow Wing did could gain any word of
+approbation from his young host. However, Crow Wing and Bolderwood were
+in time to help do the heaviest of the work and soon the last stump was
+out of the soil and piled upon a flaming pyre. The several bonfires
+could not spread to the underbrush, so the boys were able to leave them
+for the time and rush away to the creek for a swim before dinner. After
+they had washed off the smut and smoke, they engaged in races and in
+diving matches until the horn blew to recall them to the house. In all
+aquatic sports Lot Breckenridge was the master, for even Crow Wing could
+not perform the tricks that he could, nor could the Indian swim so far
+nor so fast.
+
+Mistress Harding had arranged two long tables outside the cabin, making
+them of planks and "horses," and spreading her unbleached sheets over
+them for table-cloths. The girls had picked flowers and decorated the
+tables very prettily. There were all kinds and conditions of dishes for
+use--earthen, tin, pewter, and even wooden bowls carved out of "whorls."
+And as for spoons and knives and forks--well, they were very scarce
+indeed. But every boy carried a pocket or hunting knife, and some had
+even been thoughtful enough to bring a knife and fork from home.
+Nevertheless, despite the lack of articles which we now consider the
+commonest of possessions, the table manners of these pioneer boys and
+girls were very good. They were on their best behavior while visiting,
+and the presence of the girls had a good influence on the boys.
+
+The dinner was not to be the great meal of the day, for the boys did not
+wish to eat too much before the activities of the afternoon. Mistress
+Harding and the big girls had promised several dainties for supper,
+among which was a berry pudding, the girls having picked the berries
+that morning while their brothers were clearing the stumpage. The day
+before Enoch had shot a quantity of wood-pigeons, too, and there was to
+be a huge pigeon pie baked in the Dutch oven. There could be no stuffed
+lamb on this occasion, however; sheep were too hard to raise and the
+pioneers tasted mutton but seldom, for the fleece was too valuable for
+them to kill the animal which supplied it. But Bolderwood had brought in
+a fawn which he had hung until it was of the right flavor, and this was
+dressed and roasted like a young kid. When the boys heard of these good
+things it almost took their appetites away at the dinner table, for they
+did not wish to eat more than was absolutely necessary before the
+holiday supper.
+
+They were quickly back in the new lot, raked the fires together, flung
+the last root and chip on the blaze, and then repaired to the level
+meadow by the riverside where the games were to take place. The meadow
+had been mown some days before (they always got two mowings a season off
+the rich creek bottoms) and the new grass had sprung up just enough to
+be soft and velvety to the feet. Off came the shoes and stockings of
+those boys who had been trammeled by such articles of attire--all except
+Crow Wing. He still wore his moccasins. The foot-races were to come
+first, and Bolderwood and Lot carefully measured the distance along the
+bank where the land was almost level, setting stakes at either end of
+the course. It was not a long run and everybody lined up for the first
+trial and they charged down upon the further stake like a gang of wild
+colts. Crow Wing, Enoch, Lot, and Robbie Baker were easily ahead of the
+others, and they with two more who had shown promise, were lined up for
+a second trial. This was really to be the contest and the six prepared
+to do their best, while the onlookers, girls and all, cheered their
+favorites.
+
+Bolderwood lined up the half dozen youths very carefully. The white boys
+had thrown aside their outer shirts so as to give the freer play to
+their muscles. Crow Wing wore but one upper garment anyway, and he made
+no change in his dress excepting to pull his belt a little tighter. When
+the ranger had them placed to his satisfaction and all had signified
+that they were ready, he started them off with a shout. This time the
+race was to be down to the further post and back again, each contestant
+being obliged to go around the post before turning back, and a watch was
+set there that no one should make a mistake in this. There was a swift
+patter of feet on the sod for a minute and then Crow Wing and Enoch
+forged ahead. They rounded the stake almost together and came down the
+home stretch far in the lead of the other contestants. First the white
+boy was ahead, then the Indian, and finally when the race ended they
+were elbow to elbow and one not an inch in advance of the other!
+
+The spectators cheered lustily, but the race must be run over by these
+two to learn who really was the winner. Bolderwood allowed them a few
+minutes between the trials; but the Indian did not seem to need the
+rest. He still breathed easily, while Enoch lay panting on the sod. The
+white boy finally went to the line with the assurance in his own heart
+that he should be beaten; but he was too plucky to give up the fight
+without trying again. This race was even more hardly contested than the
+others had been and although it was apparent that Crow Wing ran more
+easily than did Enoch, the latter worked so hard that it was doubtful
+for a time whether the Indian could win after all. Enoch ran until his
+knees almost gave under him and his breath came in great gasps from his
+chest. Had he been a less healthy and active boy he might have
+permanently injured himself from the overstrain of the contest. As it
+was, Crow Wing managed to cross the line first and was pronounced
+champion.
+
+Enoch had just strength enough to shake the winner's hand before he fell
+upon the grass, and there he lay exhausted while the other boys held a
+"potato race" and jumped hurdles. It provoked young Harding terribly to
+see how seemingly fresh Crow Wing still was, while he was nearly dead
+with fatigue. He began to take interest in the proceedings, however,
+when his brother Bryce won the potato race after a close contest with
+Robbie Baker; and rejoiced when Lot beat Crow Wing in jumping. "That red
+rascal ain't goin' to beat everybody here," thought Enoch, and he got up
+and ceased sulking.
+
+The wrestling match was the last of the day's sports. Bolderwood paired
+the boys off to the best of his judgment for the first bout; but the
+winners drew lots to see who they should wrestle with the second time.
+Lot had Crow Wing for an antagonist on this occasion, and Enoch was
+paired with Smith Hubbard, a hulking great fellow, bigger and taller
+than any other boy in the crowd. But he was also slower and more awkward
+than most, having won his first throw by sheer weight rather than skill.
+Enoch threw him fairly at the second trial, while the Indian lad quite
+as easily worsted young Breckenridge.
+
+The winners drew again and Enoch had quite a tug with another
+contestant; but Crow Wing put his antagonist on the ground three times
+in succession, and with apparent ease. It was plain that the match was
+to end with another contest between the Indian and Enoch Harding and the
+interest waxed high. Enoch was determined to keep his head and control
+his temper this time. Crow Wing was nominally his guest and he played
+fair; there was no reason why he should not bear off all the honors if
+he could do so. But the white boy determined to give the red the fight
+of his life for the honor of champion wrestler.
+
+Enoch had long been considered the best wrestler among the boys of his
+age. Although Lot was older and taller than him, he threw the bigger boy
+easily. Crow Wing had quite as easily worsted young Breckenridge; but
+when the Indian and Enoch finally faced each other in the ring the
+latter gritted his teeth and determined to put forth every ounce of
+strength, and use every legitimate trick he knew, to beat his
+antagonist.
+
+He had recovered his wind now and felt fresh and strong. He measured the
+lithe form of Crow Wing before the word was given and saw that, although
+the Indian was doubtless stronger than he in the legs and through the
+loins, where much of the strain comes in a wrestling match, his own arms
+and shoulders were much better. Crow Wing ran a great deal, or walked.
+He was on the trail almost continually, and thus his leg muscles were
+splendidly developed. Whereas the white boy swung an axe or wielded a
+hoe almost every day and the upper part of his body was in excellent
+condition. He saw that if he could seize Crow Wing quickly and with a
+first effort overpower him, the victory would be his.
+
+So he went into the wrestling match with the intention of getting a
+"down" at once, and the first round was over almost before Crow Wing
+knew what Enoch was about. "A fair fall! a fair fall!" cried the boys,
+and danced about the pair as it was seen that both Crow Wing's hips and
+his shoulders were squarely on the turf. The Indian rose slowly,
+evidently much surprised by the white boy's tactics. If he was angry he
+did not show it. His face was as passive as ever.
+
+"Quick work that," said Bolderwood. "You'll have to wake up, Crow Wing,
+if you want to get the best of Nuck."
+
+"Hurrah for Nuck!" shouted the boys.
+
+But the second trial was another matter. Crow Wing approached warily. He
+feinted several times and then leaped away when Enoch tried to seize him
+as he had before. He had felt the power of the white boy's muscles, and
+he did not propose to allow a second quick stroke. Enoch followed him
+around the ring and finally clutched him, but at arms' length. It was
+not a good hold; he knew it on the instant. But he had as good a chance
+as Crow Wing and there they were, swaying to and fro, and panting for
+several minutes, before either obtained the advantage.
+
+Finally the Indian lad forced Enoch over his leg and slowly, yet
+determinedly, pushed him backward to the ground. When they fell Crow
+Wing was on top, but it was several moments ere he managed to force
+Enoch's shoulders and hips to the earth together. The second round was
+declared won by Crow Wing and the boys took a rest before the third and
+final one. Enoch was glad to see that his antagonist suffered as much as
+he did this time, laboring for breath and with his face and arms covered
+with perspiration. When Bolderwood called them for the third round the
+Indian flung off his hunting shirt, thus showing that he considered the
+white boy a worthy antagonist indeed.
+
+Enoch was more confident than before. He saw that he could not repeat
+his first quick throw; but he would not be deceived again into getting
+any uncertain hold. Crow Wing continued his former tactics, but Enoch
+simply followed him about, feinting as well as the Indian, and at last,
+when Crow Wing ran in, thinking he had a chance for an under hold, he
+caught him like a young bear and hugged him to his chest until the
+breath was fairly forced from the other's lungs. Although taller than
+the white boy the Indian was not so heavy and this display of muscle
+startled him. With one arm caught between his own body and Enoch's he
+could do little to help himself and Enoch squeezed hard before he let
+him go. Then, with a quick toss, stooping as he made it, Enoch flung
+him, long legs and all, over his shoulder, and before Crow Wing could
+rise he was upon him and held him down. The Indian was so breathless
+that it was a small matter for Enoch to get the "four points" necessary
+to win the fall and he rose at last triumphant.
+
+The boys and girls cheered him and Bolderwood said he was a good
+wrestler, and then Crow Wing, who had slipped into his shirt again, came
+to him and said, with a still impassive face: "Umph! white boy big
+wrestler--beat Crow Wing fair!" He held out his hand gravely and, after
+shaking Enoch's, stalked away while the others were busy, his absence
+being unnoticed until it came time to go up to the house for supper.
+"Guess he didn't like being licked," said Robbie Baker to Enoch. "You
+better look out for him, Nuck. My pa says them Injins is as treacherous
+as wolves."
+
+But somehow Enoch felt that Crow Wing was a better friend to him than he
+had been before. Something in the Indian's handshake seemed to have told
+him this. The supper was quite as good as the boys had expected. After
+the meal they shot at a target under 'Siah Bolderwood's direction and
+Robbie Baker, son of the greatest shot in the settlement, as was
+expected, bore off the honors. The company went home through the forest
+trails by moonlight and thus ended a long and happy day, in which much
+that was useful had been accomplished as well as a "good time" enjoyed.
+
+As Enoch stood at the door of the cabin and watched the red glow from
+the fires in the newly cleared lot, he went over in his mind the
+incidents of the day. Such holidays were not plentiful in his life. It
+was mostly work and little play, and he would remember this occasion for
+many months. He did not suspect how many months would elapse, and how
+many momentous happenings would occur, before he saw all his young
+friends together once again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+A NIGHT ATTACK
+
+
+Not often did the Harding children enjoy such a day as that of the
+stump-burning. Life was very real indeed to pioneer folks, although the
+fact that every family in the community had to work hard left no
+loophole for complaint on any side. There were no very poor people then,
+and there were no immensely rich. It is only by comparison that human
+beings become discontented with their lot.
+
+The widow's children had to work little harder than their neighbors.
+Their mother labored with them in the fields, as well as paying full
+attention to her household duties. She could swing an axe with most men
+in the township, and was no mean shot with the rifle. She led the corn
+hoeing and taught the older boys to do those things which were needful
+about the farm. The crops during this summer prospered well, and after
+clearing up and barreling the ashes made during the stump-burning, Enoch
+and Bryce ploughed and harrowed the new piece along the creek's edge.
+They sowed it to winter grain and hung "scare-crows" all about the field
+to keep the wild birds from pulling up the tender shoots when they
+appeared above the mold.
+
+Besides leading her children in the work of the farm, Mistress Harding
+paid more attention to their education than most parents of the
+settlement could. There was a school in Bennington during the winter
+months; but it was too far away for any of the Hardings to attend. But
+the widow had been a school-teacher before her marriage and she had
+brought some books with her from her old home. So part of almost every
+day she taught her children. The girls and little Harry, who was just
+learning his letters and "a-b, abs," studied during the daytime; but the
+older boys did their lessons by the light of the candle dips, or lying
+on the hearth before the dancing fire. Both summer and winter these
+studies were kept up and therefore Enoch and his brothers and sisters
+were rather farther advanced in learning than the other children of the
+scattered community.
+
+To this study Enoch took rather kindly; but to Bryce, who possessed more
+of his father's roving disposition, the school hour was distasteful.
+Bryce, too, complained more than a little because he was not allowed to
+go to Bennington on training days. He was growing rapidly and was well
+nigh as big as his brother, and he felt that he should be counted a
+member of the military company.
+
+This drilling in the manual of arms had become a very serious matter to
+the Grants people. The Green Mountain Boys, which nickname had before
+the end of the summer become fixed upon the bands, were divided into
+four companies of which Seth Warner, 'Member Baker, Robert Cochran and
+Gideon Warner were the captains. Ethan Allen was elected colonel
+commanding by acclamation and plans were made to watch over many of the
+outlying districts liable to be troubled most frequently by the Yorkers.
+With all his impulsiveness, Allen was long-headed and something of a
+strategist; yet he leaned to some extent upon Captain Warner's good
+sense. Warner was a man of much finer mould than the chief of the Green
+Mountain Boys, was well educated and had a personal following of his own
+in the Grants, second only to Allen's. But there was never any jealousy
+between them. Allen's was a nature too frank and generous to harbor such
+a despicable feeling, while Warner was too deeply interested in the
+cause to do so.
+
+Nuck Harding was a proud boy indeed, for he was nigh the youngest among
+those who drilled. Such raiding as was done by the Green Mountain Boys
+that year was the work of small parties under Allen, Warner, or Cochran,
+and no general engagement occurred between the Grants settlers and the
+New York authorities, so Nuck saw no real service. At home, however, he
+and Bryce frequently talked over what they would do if Simon Halpen
+should visit them. That he had been scouting about the farm on the day
+of Sheriff Ten Eyck's fiasco at James Breckenridge's place, the older
+boy was sure. He was certain that the man he had seen beside the
+campfire in the wood, and whom Crow Wing seemed to befriend, was the
+Yorker who, twice before, had tried to drive the Hardings from their
+home. But neither the man nor the Indian youth appeared in the
+neighborhood as the summer waned and the autumn harvests approached.
+
+Nevertheless, after harvest, when the farm work was well cleared up, the
+boys put into practice a plan which, after much thought they had
+evolved. Many a frontier home of that, and an earlier day, had connected
+with it an underground passage, or room which, although usually devoted
+to the simple storage of potatoes and roots, could in time of need be
+used as a refuge for the family. Of an Indian attack there was little
+danger; but they did not know to what length the Yorkers might go when
+once they did appear. Nuck believed Simon Halpen to be a man without
+compassion or mercy, and that the house might be attacked and burned
+over their heads.
+
+So, while still the frost held off, they constructed beneath the
+fireplace a deep stonewalled apartment nearly eight feet square--large
+enough to hold the entire family if need should come. When finished the
+entrance was gained by raising a large flat stone which was a part of
+the hearth. But the winter came without any alarm to the Hardings, and
+drew its slow length across the green hills and valleys like some albino
+monster of prehistoric times. The firs were snow-crowned and the white
+mantle lay deep in the hollows. Bryce and Enoch added generously to the
+family larder by the fruit of their hunting-trips, for there was plenty
+of time for such sport now. They had learned to weave snow-shoes in
+Indian fashion, too, and Bolderwood taught Enoch to tan and "work" the
+deer hides so well that their mother was able to use the pliable leather
+for moccasins for the family. "Boughten" shoes they had; but they were
+kept for best, for the money to purchase them with came hard indeed to
+the widow.
+
+Not until the sap began to flow from the maples was winter counted
+broken. Robbie Baker rode over about the middle of March and begged so
+hard that Mrs. Harding allowed Enoch to return with him to help at the
+Baker's "sugaring." There were plenty of fine maples near the Baker
+house and Nuck was promised a share of the refined sugar. There was no
+need of a hut at the sugar orchard, for they slept at Baker's house, and
+only a shelter was built over the great kettle in which the sap was
+boiled. Captain Baker made the incisions in the generous trees, and
+fitted the troughs; but Robbie and Nuck collected the sap and brought
+it, bucket by bucket, to the fire which Mrs. Baker tended. It was hard
+work but there was some fun connected with it, too, and Nuck enjoyed his
+week's visit--or would have done so had it not been for the incident
+with which the outing closed.
+
+Through the winter the people of the Grants had lived almost entirely at
+peace with their troublesome neighbors over the border. But there were
+certain active spirits among the Yorkers who were waiting only for the
+coming of spring to continue their persecutions. Because of the raids by
+the leaders of the Green Mountain Boys, there were warrants out for
+several, and Captain Baker was one of these who was wanted by the Albany
+authorities. The infamous John Munro who had accepted the office of
+Justice of the Peace from the New York party, gathered ten or twelve
+choice spirits on the night of March 22d, and feeling the security of
+numbers approached the home of the Grants' remarkable marksman, his mind
+fixed firmly upon the reward that had been offered for the apprehension
+of "the outlaw, Baker."
+
+The Green Mountain Boy was not a man to be attacked without due
+consideration, and the Yorkers came to the house in the dead of night,
+breaking in without warning, and capturing Captain Baker in his bed.
+Even thus handicapped Baker fought with desperation and, overpowered by
+numbers and cruelly wounded, only gave over the struggle when he saw
+that the Yorkers were beating his wife and son as well.
+
+"I surrender to ye, ye dogs!" he cried. "But let the woman and child
+alone," and at that they ceased to belabor Mrs. Baker and Robbie and set
+about removing the captive as expeditiously as possible. Robbie had been
+asleep in the loft with his guest when the attack was made and had run
+down the ladder to get at the guns; but this last was impossible.
+Enoch's rifle was likewise down-stairs and he was unable to help his
+friends; but instead of showing himself to the enemy he lifted a corner
+of the bark roof and crept outside. It was dark, and although there was
+a watch kept without the house, he was not observed and managed to reach
+the ground by climbing down the corner logs.
+
+By this time Captain Baker was a prisoner. They allowed him to partly
+dress and then securing him with thongs, brought him forth and threw him
+into a sledge which was in waiting. Their haste was obvious. Even in the
+night, and at this distance from any succor, the cowardly justice and
+his friends feared that members of the Green Mountain company would be
+aroused, and they had no wish to face Baker's comrades. Their idea was
+to get him across the Hudson and to Albany as swiftly as possible.
+
+But Enoch, though unable to render his friends any assistance in the
+fight, had not been idle. Keeping the house between him and the Yorkers
+at the door, he reached the stable. Mrs. Baker's voice rose above the
+general din, begging the Yorkers to spare her husband--to at least allow
+her to bind up the wound in his head before they took him away. But they
+merely laughed at her request. It made Enoch grit his teeth in rage, and
+pulling open the door of the stable he quickly entered and flung the
+captain's saddle upon the horse. Buckling the girth tightly he backed
+the steed out of the hovel and was astride it before the enemy observed
+him.
+
+With a smart slap on the creature's flank Nuck sent the horse tearing
+down the road to Bennington and was almost out of rifle shot before the
+Yorkers realized his escape and the meaning of it. Several shots
+followed him, so reckless were the justice's companions, but there was
+no pursuit. Instead, the villains tumbled into the sledge and upon the
+backs of their own steeds, and amid the cries of the woman and Robbie,
+took the way to the Twenty-Mile Line and Albany. The prisoner's wife and
+son scarcely realized what Nuck's escape meant; it looked as though the
+guest had fled when peril threatened the helpless family. But Nuck very
+well knew what he was about.
+
+It was still several hours before dawn, but the moon brilliantly
+illumined the forest road and as the way was fairly well beaten, Nuck
+set the horse at his fastest pace. He knew that he could find men at
+Bennington--particularly at the Green Mountain Inn--who would consider
+no hardship too great to assist the captured settler. Many of Remember
+Baker's own company of Green Mountain Boys would be in town and Stephen
+Fay, the host, would be able to tell him where to find these men
+quickly. It was a long ride to the Hudson and the hope of overtaking the
+Yorkers and their prisoner spurred the boy on.
+
+On and on flew the horse and rider until at last the scattered houses of
+the hamlet came into view. The settlement lay lifeless under the cold
+winter sky; not a spiral of smoke rose from the broad-topped chimneys,
+for the fires in every house were banked during the night, and it was
+too early for the spryest kitchen-maid to be astir. The horse thundered
+up to the door of the Catamount Inn and Nuck's wild halloa brought a
+night-capped head to the window instantly--that of the innkeeper.
+
+"What might be the news, neighbor?" he demanded.
+
+"Captain Baker has been carried off by the Yorkers!" shouted Nuck, and
+his words were heard by other night-capped heads at other windows about
+the inn. "'Squire Munro and some others came and got him out of bed.
+They've driven off toward the Line."
+
+"'Member Baker's captured!" The word was taken up by a dozen voices and
+the settlers dressed hurriedly and ran forth from their houses.
+Meanwhile Master Fay had aroused certain men who happened to be in his
+hostelry, as well as the stablemen in the yard. There was a great bustle
+about the inn. "Boy!" cried the innkeeper to Nuck, who still bestrode
+Captain Baker's horse, "do you go and call Isaac Clark and Joe Safford.
+They'll have their horses handy--and good horses, too, I'll be bound.
+Tell them to come here with saddle and rifle."
+
+These two men lived at the other end of the village. Nuck routed them
+out and in fifteen minutes was back with them at the inn. By that time
+quite a crowd had collected and ten men beside Nuck were found to be
+mounted and ready to set forth after the Yorkers. Each was a tried Green
+Mountain Boy and eager to take satisfaction for the attack upon their
+leader. Ten men were considered ample to attack the Yorkers, and with a
+promise to the bystanders to recapture 'Member Baker, even though they
+followed him to Albany, the cavalcade galloped away from the Green
+Mountain Inn, Enoch riding in their train.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE TRAITOR'S WAY
+
+
+Remember Baker lived at Arlington, and the distance from that new
+settlement, it could hardly be called a village, to Bennington was about
+two and a half miles. Enoch Harding might have given the alarm to the
+neighbors of the captured man, but he knew that they would not be able
+to pursue the Yorkers, for good horse flesh was scarce outside of
+Bennington. And Robbie would doubtless rouse them, anyway, as soon as he
+was recovered from his fright. As he saw it, Enoch believed his duty to
+point to the Catamount Inn, and we have seen how quickly a company was
+formed there for the chase of the Yorkers and their prisoner.
+
+Enoch had ridden Baker's horse hard into town and now he followed behind
+the ten rescuers, urging the animal to still greater efforts. The
+hard-packed snow rang merrily under the hoofs of the steeds. Fortunately
+the boy's mount had been well "sharpened" by the local smith shortly
+before, or riding recklessly as he did the horse might have suffered a
+fall, and Enoch been flung off. Nevertheless he could not keep up with
+Isaac Clark and his companions, so gradually fell behind. His steed's
+wind was sound, however, and he pursued the trail steadily.
+
+The rescuers showed no hesitation in choosing their route. There were
+but a few beaten trails and they knew the road John Munro and his party
+would take with the prisoner to the bank of the Hudson. They could not
+miss it. The road from Arlington broke into this main trail at a point
+not far beyond the confines of Bennington and there it was at once
+apparent that the sledge and horsemen had passed that way not long
+before. There were plain marks of the runners and the ice and snow were
+cut up by the feet of the flying horses. The fact that the Yorkers
+numbered as many--if not more--than themselves, did not disturb the
+Green Mountain Boys in the least. "A Grants man who is not good for two
+or three of the scurvy Yorkers, is no good at all!" Stephen Fay had
+declared when they set forth, and probably the only emotions the ten
+felt as they rode on were eagerness and wrath.
+
+Meanwhile, behind them raced Enoch Harding, desiring mightily to "be in
+at the death," as the fox-hunters say. His heavy farmhorse could not
+compete with the mounts of the posse, however, and with tears in his
+eyes he saw them increase the distance between themselves and his
+animal. But he doggedly pursued the road, while the clatter of hoofs
+grew mellow in the distance. The morning was very still; the moon had
+sunk now and the stars were fading before the gray light of the coming
+day. In the east behind him the sky was even streaked with pink above
+the mountain-tops; the wind blew more keenly and he suddenly awoke to
+the fact that he was almost perished with the cold, for he had stopped
+for neither greatcoat nor mittens.
+
+Finally arriving at the top of a ridge of land he saw before him--at
+least two miles along the road and just mounting another ridge--a group
+of flying horses with a sledge in their midst, the prisoner and his
+captors. At first he did not see the Green Mountain Boys at all; but as
+his own horse plunged down the slope he suddenly observed the squadron
+which had left the Bennington Inn, come out of the dip of the valley
+where the trees were thickest, and begin the ascent of the further
+ridge. The two parties were less than half a mile apart.
+
+But from the elevation he was on Enoch had seen something else. The
+second ridge was lower than this and over it and not very far beyond he
+had caught a glimpse of the frozen Hudson! The river was not far away.
+Would the settlers catch the scoundrelly New York justice and his
+companions before they reached the river?
+
+And this must be done if they would rescue Captain Baker. It was all
+very well to talk of following the party to Albany; but that would
+simply result in the imprisonment of all in the jail. Once at the river
+the Yorkers would be among friends and would find plenty of people to
+help them beat off the Green Mountain Boys. The latter understood this
+well enough. They did not need young Enoch Harding to tell them, and it
+was quite evident to the boy that his friends were spurring their horses
+desperately up the farther slope in a last grand burst of speed to
+overtake the fugitives.
+
+On and on they sped and finally, when Enoch reached the dip of the vale,
+Clark and his party were over the hill and had disappeared. The boy
+dared not urge his horse up the ascent too rapidly and he lost much
+precious time before reaching the summit. But once here he had a broad
+outlook over the slope and plain beyond and if he could not be present,
+at least he had an unobstructed view of the end of the chase. The Green
+Mountain Boys had spurred down the hill madly and gained upon the sledge
+so rapidly that the faint-hearted Yorkers were thrown into a panic. The
+horses attached to the sledge gave out and one of them slipped and fell
+in the harness. Instead of stopping to help Munro get the animal on its
+feet, the horsemen, with the fear of punishment from the angry pursuers
+before their eyes, rode on and scattered in the thick woods beyond,
+leaving the doughty justice to meet the posse alone. Munro was not a
+physical coward and he felt that with the majesty of the law--New York
+law--behind him, he could face Baker's friends.
+
+They bore down upon him with threatening cries, but he stood his ground
+and warned them at the top of his voice neither to shoot nor to try to
+rescue his prisoner. There was no need of firearms, of course, for they
+were ten to one now. But they laughed his authority to scorn. What!
+allow him to carry 'Member Baker to Albany to be tried by a judge who
+was himself interested in land speculations, and by a jury antagonistic
+to the settlers of the Grants? It was preposterous!
+
+Baker, who suffered sorely from his wounds, was untied and placed upon
+one of the horses which could carry double. The posse felt ugly, but
+they did not harm the justice and after some wordy warfare rode away
+again, leaving Munro to get his horse up and harnessed again to the
+sledge without their help. His threats of future punishment for the
+entire party were unnoticed. Their wild ride had been crowned with
+success, for they had recovered their wounded comrade within a mile of
+the Hudson River, and they took him home without any molestation.
+
+But Captain Baker was weak from the loss of blood and terribly shaken by
+the experience and was in bed and under the care of a surgeon for some
+days. The news of the Yorkers' raid spread throughout the Grants and the
+settlers whose fears had been lulled to sleep by the peace of the
+winter, were roused to a realization of the fact that the land grabbers
+intended to be quite as active in the future as they had been in the
+past. The next training day the conversation of the Green Mountain Boys
+who were present in Bennington was bitter indeed. Cochran, and such
+reckless spirits, were for retaliating with fire and bullet on the New
+York border. Nevertheless Warner and other more moderate men counseled
+forbearance.
+
+"We overawed the sheriff's army last year, it is true. But at that time
+we had given the people of New York no reasonable excuse for attacking
+us," declared Warner. "We've beech-sealed more than one surveyor and
+warned New York settlers off the farms they had stolen since then. We've
+been obliged to use force and now force will be used against us. But I
+find that many of these New York settlers have been brought here under a
+misapprehension. They did not understand the controversy before they got
+the farms, and believed that the land-grabbers really owned the property
+of which they are in possession. To visit our righteous wrath upon
+helpless women and children will not help the cause of the Grants."
+
+Many of his hearers, however, were not convinced. "'Member Baker's been
+beaten and his wife and boy ill-treated. What are we going to do about
+it?" was the demand.
+
+"Complaint has already been made to Governor Tryon of New York, and John
+Munro may be punished by his own side for what he did the other night."
+
+"And there's 'Member's gun," spoke up another ill-affected partisan.
+"Munro stole it and has got it to his house. I'm told so by a neighbor
+of his. 'Member thinks a deal of that gun."
+
+"I'll get that," said Warner, quickly. "'Member shall have his property
+back before next training day."
+
+And with that promise the disaffected spirits were satisfied for the
+time being. When Enoch rode away from Bennington on his return home that
+afternoon, the Connecticut giant overtook him on the road. Warner was a
+fine-looking man, younger even than Ethan Allen and idolized by the
+women and children of the community as Allen was by the men. But there
+was nothing effeminate about Warner. He was of the better class of
+borderers, possessing more education than most of his neighbors and with
+that measure of refinement and cultivation which placed George
+Washington above the majority of his associates. Warner had no patrician
+bearing, however, but entered into the work, sports and pursuits of his
+fellows. He was a superb horseman and rode on this day a mount which the
+governor of New York himself might covet.
+
+Enoch Harding had grown used, by this time, to seeing these prominent
+leaders of the Grants and had spoken with Captain Warner before. "Master
+Harding, your road lies my way for some distance," declared Warner,
+smiling on the boy. "We will go together."
+
+"You do not ride this way frequently, sir," said Enoch.
+
+"Nay. But you heard my promise to-day. I must get 'Member's gun. That
+rascally Munro may have to be taught a lesson, too."
+
+"But will you go alone?" cried the boy.
+
+Warner laughed. "Why, it is a peaceful mission. See--I have not even my
+rifle--only my sword as captain of our military company. A show of force
+might only make matters worse--and dear knows they are bad enough as it
+stands."
+
+"Munro will be among his friends, sir. Ought you not to have somebody
+with you?"
+
+"There might be some doubt regarding that, Master Harding. A man like
+Munro is never blessed with an overabundance of friends. He may have
+minions that, for wage, would help him in his nefarious deeds. But I
+shall meet him when he least expects to see a Green Mountain Boy and I
+fear no serious trouble. But if you have doubt as to my safety," and he
+smiled again, "you may ride with me and see that the doughty 'Squire
+does not capture and run away with me as he attempted to with Captain
+Baker."
+
+Enoch's eyes sparkled at this permission and he spurred on after Captain
+Warner although the direction was one which carried him some distance
+out of his way. A two hours' ride brought them to the settlement where
+the New York justice lived. Before they reached the place the figure of
+Warner was spied and recognized and Munro met the Green Mountain Boy in
+the roadway before his own house, surrounded by several of his
+neighbors. Enoch kept in the rear and as they rode up the boy unslung
+his gun and laid it across his saddle. Warner smiled as he noted this
+act, and then his face grew stern again as he drew rein before the
+much-hated Yorker.
+
+"Master Munro," he said, without parley, "it has been brought to my
+attention that, upon your late evening visit to Captain Remember Baker,
+you carried away from his house a certain weapon which Captain Baker
+highly prizes. You mistook it for your own, I presume, and the duties of
+your office have doubtless been so onerous since then that you have not
+had opportunity to return it. Happening to be in this neighborhood I
+have stopped to request the return of the gun."
+
+"Ha, ye rebel!" exclaimed Munro. "Dare ye put yourself in the lion's
+jaws in this way? I'll show ye----"
+
+"Whether I have put myself in the jaws of a lion or a jackal may be a
+question which is aside from our present discussion," interrupted
+Warner, scornfully. "I have come for Captain Baker's property."
+
+"Baker is an outlaw--as are you," declared Munro, wrathfully, "and as
+such I took away his arms. An' I shall keep the gun."
+
+"Now, 'Squire, if you had stated the reverse of that proposition I
+should have the more easily believed you," cried Warner, with flashing
+eyes. "Even a New York justice of the peace may not rob his neighbor
+with impunity in the Grants. I shall carry that gun away with me to-day.
+So, sir, deliver it without further ado!"
+
+[Illustration: HE WHIPPED OUT HIS SWORD]
+
+
+"Ye threaten me, do ye?" cried Munro, lashing himself into a rage.
+"Seize this villain, neighbors! I call on ye to assist in the capture of
+Seth Warner, the outlaw!" He seized the bridle of Warner's horse, which
+reared with him and struck out angrily. But the justice hung on, still
+calling to the bystanders to interfere and help him. Enoch urged his own
+horse forward; but there was no fear of the neighbors aiding in Seth
+Warner's capture. They refused to do so, and perhaps as much out of fear
+of the Connecticut man himself, as out of dislike for the justice.
+
+Warner's horse was a mettlesome beast and Munro's act in seizing the
+bridle angered it. The Green Mountain boy had all he could do to handle
+his steed for a moment and, as Munro continued to cling to the bridle,
+Warner suddenly whipped out his sword and whirling it about his head
+brought the flat of the weapon down upon the officer's pate! The blow
+caused Munro to relax his hold and knocked him to the ground, where he
+lay, roaring with pain and anger. Warner rode over him and approached
+the open door of the house to which Mrs. Munro, frightened by her
+husband's overthrow, quickly brought the gun in question and handed it
+to the victor.
+
+"Many thanks, 'Squire Munro!" cried Warner, waving the gun above his
+head and holding in his charger. "And when next ye seek to impound me,
+come in force, sir--come in force!" and letting his mount go, he and
+Enoch rode away at a swift canter.
+
+Young Harding went home that night full of the afternoon's doings, and
+loud in his praise of Captain Warner's prowess. He and Bryce made many
+plans for the reception of the Yorkers if they came to their farm; but
+after this matters were quiet for some weeks and the settlers were
+enabled to begin the spring work and get the seed into the ground in
+peace. On May 19th Governor Tryon sent a letter to the Grants proposing
+a conference and promising amnesty to all those who had taken an active
+part in the raids of the Green Mountain Boys excepting Ethan Allen, Seth
+Warner, Baker and Robert Cochran. The King had commanded that New York
+do nothing further toward surveying or settling the lands east of Lake
+Champlain and the Twenty-Mile Line until the difficulty could be
+properly adjusted, and Tryon promised that the land-grabbers should be
+kept away from the Grants.
+
+The farmers were delighted with this letter. They had been living in
+continual fear of dispossession since the first attack on the
+Breckenridge farm in '69. Now they felt that they would be free to
+follow the peaceful pursuits of their calling and began to improve their
+possessions, believing that, after all, the right would prevail. None
+were more pleased at this turn of affairs than the widow Harding and
+Enoch. Bryce, it must be confessed, felt a little disappointed that he
+had seen no active service; but they were all happy in their work and
+the Harding place bade fair to be one of the most profitable farms in
+the township that year.
+
+The boys labored well and after the second corn hoeing in August the
+work was so far along that Enoch was able to accompany 'Siah Bolderwood
+on a hunting trip. The old ranger, lacking any regular abiding place of
+his own, often visited the Hardings and helped in the work of the farm.
+But he was a wanderer by nature and could not stay in one place long at
+a time. So, being off to the northward, the widow allowed Enoch to join
+him for a week or two.
+
+It was not wholly game that Bolderwood was after, however. At least, not
+game for present killing. He was mapping out his next winter's campaign
+against the wild creatures of the forest. His strings of traps and
+dead-falls would be laid along the route which he and his young comrade
+traversed. Reaching the southern extremity of Lake Champlain Bolderwood
+found a canoe which, well hidden in a hollow log--all that remained of a
+monster king of the woodland--had lain untouched since his last visit to
+the lake. In this light bark they set sail upon that beautiful body of
+water on the shores of which the French and English had so often met in
+battle. It has been well said that the Champlain Valley was the school
+grounds of the early colonists, and that here were largely unfolded the
+elements of character which became of supreme importance in the
+Revolutionary struggle.
+
+On the west bank of this lower, and narrower, portion of the lake, stood
+the frowning walls of Fort Ticonderoga--"Old Ti" as the settlers called
+it--wrested not long since from the French backed by their Huron and
+Algonquin allies. That promontory signalized a more ancient landmark of
+history even than the Pilgrim stone at Plymouth, and one quite as
+important to our country at large. Eleven years before the Mayflower
+began her voyage to America, Champlain met the Iroquois in battle on the
+site of Ticonderoga, and this battle made the Iroquois the friends of
+the English and the enemies of the French for generations. Ticonderoga
+was an important link in the chain of French posts extending from the
+St. Lawrence to the Mississippi, which was designed to shut the English
+colonists into that narrow strip of the continent east of the
+Alleghanies.
+
+From the beginning Fort Frederick (Crown Point) and Ticonderoga were a
+menace to the English. From these points the red allies of the French
+descended upon the border settlements to the south and burned and
+pillaged at pleasure. Two fearful campaigns were needed to reduce
+Ticonderoga and place the command of the Champlain in the hands of the
+British. Since its capture Ticonderoga had fallen somewhat into decay,
+for with the changing of the Canadian government from French to English,
+danger of attack, even by Indian bands, from the north was little to be
+expected by the settlers who had flocked into the rich lands near the
+lake after the close of the war.
+
+Bolderwood and his young comrade passed Old Ti and, continuing up the
+lake, paddled by Crown Point and reached the mouth of the Otter. Here
+they encamped for several days, hunting and fishing, and living in a
+nomadic fashion that charmed Enoch. But when they were about to return
+another party of hunters came to the spot--men whom Bolderwood
+knew--bound for the upper end of the lake and into the wilderness lying
+east of that point. Enoch could not go so far because of the work on the
+farm; but he urged Bolderwood to accompany this party, as he knew very
+well he could find his way home in safety by either the land or water
+route. In fact, he rather coveted the chance to make his way home alone,
+for he wished to prove to the ranger his ability to do for himself.
+
+It was therefore arranged that the boy should take Bolderwood's canoe
+and go up Otter Creek to a certain settler's house, there to leave the
+canoe and make his way overland to Bennington, and the next day they
+separated. The hunters did not start until afternoon on their northern
+journey, however, and Enoch left at the same time. Not far up the creek
+was a settlement of Hampshire farmers who on one occasion had been
+driven out by Yorkers in the employ of a Scotchman named Reid. But the
+Yorkers who had taken these farms stayed but a short time and the real
+owners of the property had come back the year before. Here Enoch
+expected to remain the first night of his lonely journey.
+
+He did not arrive until late, however, and the houses were in
+darkness--indeed they seemed deserted. The mill (built by Colonel Reid's
+followers) stood silent, the stones having been broken by the Green
+Mountain Boys on the occasion of the driving out of the New York
+settlers. Enoch, having heard such good accounts of this settlement, was
+astonished by the appearance of inactivity.
+
+Nevertheless he landed and soon found a stockade surrounding a
+blockhouse, which was evidently occupied. The people seemed to live
+under this single roof as though they were in fear of an Indian raid,
+and the boy approached the place cautiously. He was not molested,
+however, for no watch was being kept; but when he rapped smartly on the
+door he knew by the sudden hush of voices within that the occupants of
+the dwelling were startled. There was the clatter of arms and a sudden
+command. Fearing that he might be treated as an enemy, Enoch knocked
+again and was about to raise his voice in the "view halloa" of the
+settlers, when the door was snapped open for an instant and the sharp
+blade of a sword thrust out of the darkness, the light of the candles
+having been quenched at his first summons.
+
+The boy sprang back with an exclamation of fear, and only his agility
+saved him from serious injury, for the point of the sword cut a slit in
+his hunting coat. And the attack, so utterly unexpected, quite deprived
+him of speech or further motion as the heavy door slammed in his face.
+Such a welcome was, to say the least, disconcerting.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THE OTTER CREEK RAID
+
+
+The late visitor at the Otter Creek settlement shrank away from the door
+and, dumbfounded by the sword-thrust which was evidently meant for his
+heart instead of his coat, waited to see what the next move of those in
+the blockhouse would be. He heard low voices and words which sounded
+like military commands. Suppose the occupants of the wooden fort should
+fire upon him?
+
+At this idea he dropped upon all fours and it is perhaps well that he
+did so, for one bullet did come from a loophole, singing viciously above
+his head. Then an angry voice of command rose on the night air: "Haud
+yir hand, mon! Let's see an' it be fri'nd or foe." The tone and accent
+were broadly Scotch, and this, too, added to Enoch's amazement. He had
+not heard of Scotch people coming to Otter Creek since those placed
+there by Colonel Reid had been driven forth. At once his suspicions were
+aroused, but he cried aloud:
+
+"I am a friend and am alone. I only came for a night's lodging."
+
+"'Tis a laddie, mon! There's naught t' fear," declared the voice within,
+as though answering some objection which Enoch could not hear. The
+candles were lighted and in another moment the door was opened again,
+revealing a tall, raw-boned Scot with a shock of red hair and beard. He
+grasped a bared sword, almost as big as a two-handed claymore, and he
+looked sternly upon the boy as the latter approached.
+
+"Ha! 'tis wrang for a laddie t' be oot this time o' night," he declared.
+"Air ye sure alone?"
+
+"Quite alone," Enoch replied. "I have been hunting west of here and we
+camped at the mouth of the creek. My comrades have gone northward and I
+was returning home by way of the creek. I did not know that the settlers
+here were in fear of Indians----"
+
+"Ha! 'tis little we think o' them rid chiels. There's war nor they in
+yon forest-land, an' well we ken that."
+
+"Who do you mean?" demanded Enoch, now stepping within the open door.
+
+"Why, the robber Allen, an' his followers. We do oor wark wi' guns in
+oor han's for fear of them same outlaws. Eh, mon! but they're a bold
+mob."
+
+Enoch made no reply, but advanced to the gun rack and stood up his rifle
+and dropped his pack. He knew now what had occurred at the settlement.
+The land-grabber Reid had come back to the Grants, ousted the Hampshire
+settlers, and again established minions of his own in their places. The
+boy glanced about and saw at least a dozen hardy looking Scots. Every
+one of them had doubtless served in Colonel Reid's regiment of
+Highlanders. They were descended from men almost as wild and
+bloodthirsty as the red Indians themselves, and although ordinarily they
+might be harmless enough, that thrust of the sword had shown Enoch that
+they were likely to fight first and inquire the reason for it afterward.
+They had come to Otter Creek in force this time, and evidently
+determined to battle for their master's holdings under the New York law.
+
+But the man who had let him in, and who was a Cameron, was evidently
+bent upon treating hospitably the guest which he had so nearly run
+through with his sword. "Jamie Henderson," he said to one of the solemn
+faced Scots, "speir ane o' the wimmen t' gie us a bite for the lad," and
+the repast which was prepared and put before him was generous and kindly
+given. While he was eating and John Cameron sat by to watch him enjoy
+the food, Enoch gathered courage to ask a few questions.
+
+"We heard down Bennington way that Colonel Reid's people had left this
+land and the settlers who formerly owned it had come back," he said,
+suggestively. The Scot's eyes contracted as he looked at the visitor.
+"Aye, aye?" he said, questioningly. "How long have you been here?"
+queried the boy.
+
+"Sin' June. The men ye call settlers were nae proper holders o' their
+titles. Lieutenant-Colonel Reid bought this land and put fairmers here
+first."
+
+"But he did not get his title from New Hampshire," Enoch said.
+
+"Nae--w'y should he? New York owns the land to yon big river--th'
+Connecticut call ye it? Our fri'nds settled here in '69. The titles
+these auld settlers held wes no guide--na, na! But Colonel Reid is a
+guide mon--'deed yes."
+
+"How do you make that out?" demanded Enoch. He wanted to tell the Scot
+what he thought of this business, but he dared not. He knew Ethan Allen
+and the other leaders of the Green Mountain Boys should know of it, and
+as he, perhaps, was the first to learn of the return of the Scotch, he
+must get away early in the morning and reach Bennington in the quickest
+possible time. While the Grants men were resting in supposed safety and
+peace because of Governor Tryon's letter promising inactivity on the
+part of the land speculators, the latter were hurrying their minions
+over the line, evicting the rightful owners of the Grants, and stealing
+their farms. The boy's heart swelled with anger; but he was wise enough
+to hold his tongue and say nothing to rouse the suspicions of the Scots.
+
+In reply to his question regarding Colonel Reid's "guideness" Cameron
+told how he, with other Scots, had landed in New York early in June and
+had been engaged by the Colonel at once to go and occupy his land in the
+Disputed Territory. Reid came with them to the settlement, being at
+considerable expense to transport them, their wives, children and
+baggage. The day after their arrival while viewing the land covered by
+Reid's title, they observed a crop of Indian corn, wheat, and garden
+stuff, and a stack of hay belonging to two New England men who,
+according to Cameron, had squatted on the land without right or title.
+Reid paid these two men $15 for their standing crops and the hay and
+made over the same to his new tenants. This was a novel way of telling
+how the owners of the titles to the farms received from the New
+Hampshire governor years before, were evicted. But Enoch held his peace.
+He had considerable doubt in his own mind regarding Colonel Reid's
+"guideness," nevertheless, and rose early in the morning and left the
+settlement in Bolderwood's canoe. Instead of keeping on up the Otter he
+turned back to the lake. The route by which he and the ranger had come
+from Bennington would be far shorter than the one he had started upon;
+so he went back that way. News of the return of Reid's people must be
+conveyed to Ethan Allen and the other leaders of the Green Mountain Boys
+as quickly as possible.
+
+He scarcely stopped for food, so anxious was he to get home. He met
+nobody on his trip until he reached Manchester and there his story was
+hardly believed, for the letter of the New York governor in May,
+inviting the Grants representatives to a council, had made a strong and
+favorable impression upon public sentiment. This council had advised
+that all legal processes against the Grants settlers cease and even now
+the echoes had not died away of the jubilation of the deluded people
+over what was considered the end of the bitter controversy.
+
+But when he arrived at home and told his mother of his discovery she,
+like the truly patriotic woman she was, became vastly disturbed. "You
+may not rest idly here, Enoch, while such wrong is being done. Colonel
+Allen should know of it at once. He rode past here but yesterday on his
+way to Bennington, and gave us a cry. He asked for you, too," she said,
+with pride, "and told me how well you carried yourself at training.
+There is a council being held in town to-day, I believe, for I suspect
+that Colonel Allen and Captain Warner have not been deceived by the
+false promises of Governor Tryon. And this business at the Otter Creek
+will wake up many of those who would cry 'Peace!' when there is no
+peace. Bryce will saddle the horse for you, Enoch," she added, "and
+while you eat I will prepare your best breeches and coat. You cannot
+appear at the inn before the gentlemen in your old clothing."
+
+The careful woman bustled away and laid out her son's Sabbath suit and
+his boughten shoes and, tired as Enoch was, he rode away toward
+Bennington an hour after reaching the ox-bow farm.
+
+As his mother had declared, Colonel Allen and several other leaders were
+in conference in Stephen Fay's private parlor, and when he had whispered
+his story to the innkeeper, the latter brought him at once before the
+gentlemen, rightly considering the matter of such importance as to brook
+no delay in the telling. Never before had Enoch seen Ethan Allen in any
+capacity but that of a leader in action. In the boy's mind he had ever
+been connected with scenes of riot, or in the capacity of a commander on
+training day. But it was a very serious looking group which surrounded
+the table now, and the man at the head of the board lacked nothing in
+dignity and stern bearing in comparison with the other members of the
+committee.
+
+It was Allen, however, who turned from the subject under discussion and
+beckoned Master Fay and Enoch nearer. "What have we here?" he asked.
+"Something of moment, I warrant, from the look on Stephen's face. And
+there is young Nuck Harding. Is aught amiss in your district, lad?"
+
+"Nay, Colonel," Enoch replied; "but I have been in the north and bring
+back news that my mother was sure you would wish to hear at once. So I
+rode over without delay to tell you, sir."
+
+"God bless the woman!" Allen exclaimed, heartily. "She's fighting away
+there in the wilderness with her pack of babies in a way to make grown
+men blush. I was by there but yesterday.... And what's the news you
+bring, Nuck?"
+
+"The Yorkers have come back to the mill on Otter Creek."
+
+"What, sir?" cried Allen, leaping from his chair.
+
+"That's not to be believed," cried one of the others. "How know ye this,
+boy?"
+
+Enoch told them, using few words; but the tremor in his voice showed the
+depth of his feeling. The injury done the settlers--the treachery of the
+Yorkers--had affected him as it had his mother. Allen listened with
+marked attention, having dropped back into his wide-armed chair, but he
+watched the boy's countenance the while. "Egad!" cried he when the story
+was done, "there's a boy after my own heart. He knows when he sees a
+snake in the brush!" Then he turned instantly to his companions. "We
+will postpone this other matter, gentlemen. What we may do in the event
+of his Majesty's placing other and more onerous burdens upon these
+colonies, affects us not so nearly as what these New York Tories do to
+us now. We have no standing either with the colonies or with the King;
+we are outlaws, forsooth; our hand is against every man's and every
+man's hand against us. Yet, belike in time the trouble between the King
+and the colonies may be the salvation of the Hampshire Grants.
+
+"We have other business now. I am away at once, friends," he said,
+rising again. "Do so to me and more also, if I allow more time than is
+necessary to pass before I fall upon those Scotch scoundrels and smite
+them hip and thigh! Send the word around, Stephen Fay. Let them that
+will gather here. Be sure Warner knows of this; I will send for 'Member
+myself. His company will be first ready, I have no doubt. 'Member's
+wound is scarce yet healed, and the sting of it needs dressing," and he
+laughed, knowing Captain Baker's fiery temper and his hatred of the
+Yorkers who had served him so evilly that very spring. "Let it be known
+that we start from Bennington by sunrise."
+
+Enoch returned home, more than a little puffed with pride because of
+Colonel Allen's commendation and although he was too young to join the
+party which, under Allen and Captain Baker, marched to punish the Scots
+at Vergennes, he knew that his fortunate discovery would make him
+something of a hero in the eyes of his mates. The Green Mountain Boys
+fell upon the Scots unexpectedly, burned the cabins, pastured their
+horses in the standing corn, broke the millstones to pieces, and drove
+the New York settlers to Crown Point where they took shelter until the
+land-speculator, Reid, could gain them transportation to other and more
+honestly acquired lands. As for Reid himself, had he been overtaken by
+the Grants men he certainly would have been "viewed"--a phrase used by
+the Green Mountain Boys, meaning to be whipped. The settlement was,
+however, for the time being abandoned by both parties, for it was so
+deep in the wilderness that neither could properly defend it from
+attack.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE WARNING
+
+
+After his return from this hunting trip, Enoch Harding was forced to
+neglect the training days on several occasions because of the increased
+work at home. The harvest was soon upon them and nobly had the fields of
+the ox-bow farm borne for the widow and her children. While they were
+hard at work getting under cover, or in stack, the last of their crops,
+the Manchester Convention was held, from which James Breckenridge and
+Captain Jehiel Hawley were sent to London to represent the struggling
+settlers, their former minister to the king, Samuel Robinson, having
+died before accomplishing the work which he had so well begun.
+
+With the discovery that Governor Tryon's declaration of an armistice had
+been an act of treachery, and that the Yorkers were likely to continue
+their raids and seize the honestly purchased lands of the New Hampshire
+settlers, as Colonel Reid had at Vergennes, the Hardings began to fear
+the return of Simon Halpen again. But the summer and fall passed without
+the little family being alarmed. With the snow came hog-killing, and
+among pioneer people this season was usually one of rejoicing. In the
+old times it had been a sort of festival, for with the first fall of
+snow all danger from marauding bands of red men ceased. The Indians
+would not send out war parties when every footstep would be plainly
+visible to the white settlers. The pioneers longed for the snow as soon
+as their scanty crops were out of the field, for they were safe then
+until the spring. So instead of celebrating "harvest home" they rejoiced
+at "hog killing time."
+
+The Hardings had quite a drove of hogs which ran wild in the forest
+during the summer and fed on the mast in the fall. But every few days
+the widow fed them near the hovel, so as to keep them in the habit of
+coming home, and particularly to teach the youngsters where to come if
+the old swine should be killed by bears or wild-cats. Now the whole
+drove was brought up and "folded" and for two weeks every member of the
+family was busy. During that time the bulk of their winter's meat was
+salted down, the toothsome sausage made, and all the other delicacies
+which old-fashioned folks knew so well how to prepare from the pig.
+Somebody has said that at our present day abatoirs they can put to some
+use every part of the animal but the pig's squeal; pioneer housewives
+were almost as economical.
+
+When the hard work was over Mistress Harding allowed the children to
+invite some of the neighborhood youngsters for an evening frolic and
+such a gathering had not been enjoyed since the famous stump burning.
+Enoch was nearly sixteen now and although Bryce was almost as tall as
+his elder brother, the first named was broadening out wonderfully. Few
+young men of Bennington under nineteen could have thrown Enoch in a
+match of strength, and he had really become the head of the household.
+But he was still enough of a boy to enjoy the party to the full.
+
+There was an old hovel near the house, but nearer the river bank, which
+their father had first erected--even before building the house
+itself--when he came to the ox-bow, and for years this hovel had
+sheltered the cattle. But the fall before he died the pioneer had
+erected a new and better stable and shed, quite handy to the house. The
+children, therefore, had long considered this hovel their own especial
+playhouse. At spare moments Enoch and Bryce built a stone and clay
+chimney and laid a good hearth in the old structure, and now they
+planned to have the party here, where they could do quite as they
+pleased.
+
+The girls had scoured the woods for beech, hazel, and hickory nuts, and
+Robbie Baker came over on his horse with nigh a bushel of peeled
+chestnuts which his father brought him from Manchester way after the
+first frost. Then, there were potatoes to roast and a wild turkey which
+Nuck had shot two days before and hung in the smoke-house. The bird was
+not plucked, but after being entrailed was stuffed with chestnuts to
+give it a flavor and then rolled in the tub of sticky clay brought up
+from the creek bottom. This great ball was put in the fire early so that
+by supper-time it would be done to a turn. The pigs' tails had all been
+saved and cleaned, too, and being likewise rolled in clay were baked in
+the ashes.
+
+The girls had brought flour bread and made Johnny-cake, and although
+there was no tablecloth, the long board table was roomy and fairly
+groaned under the good things heaped upon it. The ball of mud, all hard
+and red now and cracked like a badly burned brick, was rolled out upon
+the hearth and Enoch broke it with one blow of the axe. The hard shell
+fell apart and to the burned clay adhered every feather and pin-quill of
+the great gobbler which would not have weighed an ounce less than
+twenty-five pounds. And the flesh was done to a turn.
+
+In the midst of the good time, while the fun waxed furious, the door of
+the hovel opened and there stood in the opening the tall, slim figure of
+Crow Wing. As he had come unbidden to the stump burning, so he came now
+unexpectedly to this frolic. The white children welcomed him
+boisterously, for his people had moved away from the Walloomscoik and
+for months he had not been seen near Bennington. But Crow Wing had
+evidently not come to join in the merrymaking. His face was impassive
+and much older in expression than it had been the year before. And in
+his hair was a bunch of eagle feathers which showed that, to his own
+people even, he was now a brave and no longer a boy.
+
+"Umph!" he grunted, drawing the blanket draped from his shoulders more
+closely around him. "Harding--me talk to you!" He looked boldly at
+Enoch, and the latter waving the others back, followed the Indian out of
+the hovel. Without speaking or looking behind him Crow Wing led the
+white boy to the riverside, and some distance from the hovel. There he
+halted and pointed suddenly across the stream in the direction of that
+place in the forest where Enoch had once seen the mysterious white man
+sitting beside the campfire.
+
+"'Member?" asked Crow Wing, flashing a keen glance at the white boy.
+
+"The man in the woods!" exclaimed Enoch. "You wish to tell me something
+about him?"
+
+"Umph! He come again. Look out. Crow Wing tell you, because white boy
+strong--know how to fight. Watch 'em sharp!" and with this brief
+declaration the Indian youth strode away and the astonished Enoch
+watched him disappear in the tall brush along the creek bank. He went
+back to the merry party at the hovel with a heavy heart and not until
+after the last of the visitors had gone home--the boys swinging pine
+torches and giving the warwhoop to scare off any lurking wolves or
+catamounts--did Enoch find opportunity to tell his mother of Crow Wing's
+warning.
+
+"Simon Halpen is surely coming to evict us," he declared. "I am sure it
+was he I saw in the forest last year. And now, taking advantage of our
+being lulled by hopes of peace, he will try to strike an unexpected blow
+as Colonel Reid did."
+
+"The neighbors will help us," the widow said.
+
+"But suppose he comes with a big force? And we cannot expect the
+neighbors to neglect their own homes," said Enoch. "I will try and see
+Captain Baker, if you think it best, mother."
+
+"Captain Baker will help us. He knows how hard it would be if the
+Yorkers stripped us of our all. He is a kind-hearted man, though often
+rude and fretful."
+
+"Well, marm, he has cause to be fretful," said Enoch. "Perhaps we can
+get a few of the boys to stay with us nights for awhile."
+
+And this they did, for Captain Baker sent three or four sturdy Green
+Mountain Boys around to the widow's farm every night for a week. But the
+Yorker and his crew did not appear. At this time, when he might have
+been of such assistance to them, 'Siah Bolderwood was away. He had
+recently bought a track of land on the lake shore not far from Old Ti
+and had gone to look it over and build some sort of a camp there, thus
+utilizing his time to good advantage before the trapping season began.
+
+Even after their fears were lulled, either Enoch or Bryce remained
+always in sight of the house. But about a fortnight after the
+hog-killing frolic an incident occurred which served to take both Bryce
+and Enoch away from the cabin. There had been a second fall of snow and
+the nights were becoming very cold. But all the wild animals had not yet
+sought their winter sleeping quarters, for there descended upon the
+Hardings' hog-pen an old bear who evidently desired one more meal of
+succulent pork before retiring to his burrow. The remaining swine were
+shut up now in a close yard of logs; but the bear got over that fence
+with ease.
+
+The trouble occurred in the early morning and aroused by the clamor
+Enoch, despite the inch or two of snow on the ground, grabbed the rifle
+and ran out just as he got out of bed and without shoes or stockings.
+But when he saw the huge bear seeking to climb out of the enclosure,
+hugging a lively shote to his furry breast, the boy was not likely to
+notice the cold and snow. He climbed the end logs of the hog-pen himself
+so as to get a shot at the marauder, and rested the rifle on the top
+rail; but the logs were slippery and just as he pulled the trigger he
+went down himself and the charge flew high over the bear's head, while
+Enoch sprawled most ungracefully on the ground.
+
+The old bear uttered a wild "oof-oof!" and without trying to climb the
+barrier again, flung his huge body against it and a length of the fence
+went down with a crash. By this time Bryce, who had kept the old musket
+by his side since Crow Wing's warning, and slept in the loft, was
+aroused by the disturbance, and he pushed up the corner of the bark roof
+and blazed away at the beast just as it scrambled through the wreck of
+the hog fence. The bear had continued to cling to the squealing and
+kicking shote, for bruin is a strangely perverse and obstinate creature,
+unwilling to give up what he has once set his mind upon. There was a
+wild shriek of agony from the poor pig and when the bear moved clumsily
+away still clinging to the porker there was a broad trail of blood on
+the snow.
+
+"I shot him! I shot him!" yelled Bryce, dodging down into the loft and
+beginning to hastily pull on his breeches. But when he came down-stairs
+Enoch had returned to the house and was calmly dressing. "Why didn't ye
+foller him?" demanded the younger boy. "He's bad wounded. He'd dropped
+that shote in a minute."
+
+"You killed the shote all right," said Enoch in disgust. "Neither of the
+shots touched the bear at all. There's no use chasing after the critter
+now. We'll wait till after breakfast. He won't go far, lugging that
+shote."
+
+The bear was fat and in the best possible condition for salting down for
+winter use. So even Mrs. Harding had no objection to make when the boys
+started after breakfast to follow the trail. She herself, with the help
+of the younger children, collected the hogs in the pen again and put up
+the log fence. Meanwhile Nuck and Bryce found that the bear had made for
+a piece of swamp about two miles away. The swamp was close grown with
+saplings and brush, while here and there a monster tree shot skyward.
+Some of these big trees were so old that they had become hollow and
+without doubt there was more than one lair of wild creatures in the
+swamp.
+
+But it was easy enough to follow the early morning visitor to the cabin.
+After carrying the shote into the edge of the swamp, bruin had stopped
+and made a hasty meal upon the porker. Indeed the boys, who started on
+his trail scarcely two hours after the raid had been committed,
+undoubtedly disturbed him at his repast. The shote was not completely
+eaten when they found the bear's breakfast-table. "It is a mighty big
+bear anyway," Bryce declared, looking at the marks of the marauder's
+feet. "He couldn't have brought that pig so far if he hadn't been."
+
+"He warn't big enough for you to hit," said Nuck, slyly.
+
+"Huh! guess you can't crow any," responded the younger boy. "You missed
+him good and wide, too."
+
+They hurried on then, easily tracking the big, human-like spoor of the
+bear in the soil which here was not frozen. Indeed, in some places they
+"slumped in" rather deeply. The bear seemed to have picked out his path
+by instinct. But he could not hide his trail and before long the hunters
+came to a huge tree standing amid a clump of brush on the top of a
+hillock. The high ground was surrounded by water and rather hard to come
+at; but the boys were determined to get the bear after chasing it so
+far. They approached with caution, however, Enoch making Bryce remain in
+the rear.
+
+"If I fire and don't kill him you must be in reserve with your gun," he
+whispered cautiously. "He'd be an ugly customer if he turned on us. He's
+as big as a steer."
+
+"Huh! who's afraid?" demanded Bryce.
+
+"Jest you remember how father was killed," Enoch said, gravely. "Who'd
+ha' believed a bull-deer could kill an old hunter like him? You do as I
+say!"
+
+So Bryce dropped behind and watched his brother crawl up the side of the
+hummock with infinite caution, parting the brush with the barrel of his
+rifle, which he held in readiness to use at any instant. Suddenly, from
+the heart of the brush clump, there sounded an angry growl. The bear was
+not to be taken unawares. And when a big bear growls in anger the sound
+is hair-raising to the uninitiated. Bryce felt a chill in the region of
+his spine and if his old cap did not actually rise off his head, it
+certainly felt as though it would. He was to one side of Nuck's position
+so as not to get his brother between him and the bear should the
+creature come forth, and suddenly he saw the shaggy head and shoulders
+of the beast rise up over the brush. It looked enormous and when the
+bear opened its jaws, and displayed its great teeth and blood-red gums,
+it was indeed a fearsome spectacle.
+
+"Shoot him! shoot him!" exclaimed Bryce, excitedly. But Nuck remained
+comparatively cool--at least, to all appearance. He stood up, too, with
+the rifle at his shoulder. The bear stretched wide his great fore-paws
+and plunged forward to seize the boy; but the rifle spoke and the smoke
+of the piece hid the creature for a moment.
+
+When the cloud passed there was a great commotion in the brush, and
+Bryce saw that Nuck had darted back several paces and was rapidly
+loading his gun again. The younger boy could not see the bear; but it
+was badly wounded without doubt. The thrashing in the brush told that.
+Recovering his courage he pushed forward and finally saw the huge brown
+body on the ground, writhing in the muscular activity which follows
+death. The charge of Nuck's rifle had reached a vital spot.
+
+But something more Bryce saw. A second bear had followed the dead one
+from the hollow tree, and the boy observed this one whisk back into the
+dark opening between two roots. The tree was all of a dozen feet in
+circumference and there was doubtless a good-sized cavity in the tall
+trunk. "Come on! come on!" cried Bryce, excitedly. "Here's another,
+Nuck."
+
+"Have a care, boy!" responded the older lad. "Don't go too near. It may
+turn on us." He hastily finished the loading of his rifle and came up
+the hill again. They could see the entrance to the lair plainly; but no
+sight could they get of the second bear. Bryce brought a handful of
+clods and flung one after another into the hole in the tree. The bear
+did not even growl, so they were pretty sure that the missiles had not
+reached it. "He's climbed up inside," declared Nuck. "I warrant that
+tree's holler up to the first crotch."
+
+"What'll we do?" demanded Bryce. "You shot that one, Nuck. Now I wanter
+git the other, before we go home."
+
+"We'll smoke him out," declared the elder brother. "You stay right here
+and watch, and I'll get some wood." Nuck had brought a tomahawk which,
+with his skinning knife, was thrust into his belt. With the hatchet he
+obtained dry branches from the lower limbs of some spruce-trees which
+grew near, and packed a big fagot through the mire to the hillock where
+Bryce stood guard. This wood he flung into the mouth of the lair,
+started the fire with his flint and steel, and when the flames began to
+wreathe the branches hungrily, he flung on leaves and grass to make a
+"smudge." His suspicions regarding the hollowness of the tree proved
+true, for the draft through the hollow hole acted like a chimney and
+sucked the smoke upward. It began to wreathe out between the first
+limbs, some thirty feet or more from the ground.
+
+Suddenly there was a great clatter and scraping of claws inside the tree
+and then there popped out between the branches the head and shoulders of
+a smaller bear than the one which now lay still in the bushes. "Wait
+till he gits out!" shouted Nuck, as the excited Bryce raised his musket.
+"If you shoot him there he'll tumble back into the hole."
+
+Bryce was cool enough to see the wisdom of this advice and stay his
+hand. But in a moment the bear was completely out and then he fired. The
+bullet struck home and the bear lost its hold upon the limbs and dropped
+to the ground, landing with fearful force at the roots of the tree. But
+it was not dead and after a moment's struggle, got upon its feet again.
+But the shock had dazed it and for a little it could neither see its
+assailants nor find any means of escape. Nuck ran in, placed the muzzle
+of his rifle within a foot of the creature, and finished it off with
+despatch.
+
+Bryce was dancing about and yelling like a wild Indian; but it was not
+for joy over the death of this second bear. He was pointing on high and
+Nuck looked upward to see a third bear in the tree-top. This one had
+followed the second out of the hollow trunk and was mounting among the
+branches with great agility. The smoke pouring up through the hollow had
+driven the whole family into the open air. The Hardings reloaded their
+guns with despatch and then, on either side of the tree, fired at the
+remaining bear. Both bullets went true, but in falling the bear became
+wedged in the crotch of a big limb and Nuck, throwing aside his shoes
+and stockings, essayed to climb the trunk to push the dead beast off to
+the ground.
+
+This was no simple matter, for all he had to cling to were the knots and
+"warts" on the side of the trunk. It was almost like climbing up the
+wall of a house. But he reached the first crotch finally and after
+resting a spell, found the remainder of the climb easy enough. Before he
+pushed the carcass of the bear out of its resting-place he took an
+observation of the forest, for he was high above the swamp here and
+could see beyond the creek. In some way they would have to get the
+carcasses to the creek bank and transport them to the cabin by canoe. It
+would be no easy task.
+
+And as he scanned the stretch of river which he could see from his high
+perch he suddenly observed something which almost caused him to lose his
+hold upon the tree and fall, like the bear, to the ground. Coming up the
+stream were two canoes, each paddled by a couple of Indians, and with
+three white men in each craft. Even at that distance Enoch knew them to
+be strangers, and they were not a hunting party. Naturally his mind
+reverted to the warning Crow Wing had brought him a fortnight before,
+and without stopping to dislodge the dead bear, he descended the tree in
+utmost haste.
+
+"Why don't you push the bear off?" shouted Bryce from below.
+
+Nuck leaned over and placed his finger on his lips, shaking his head
+warningly. Then he slid down the remainder of the way, falling in a heap
+on the carcass of the second bear. "Quick!" he gasped, seizing his shoes
+and stockings. "They're coming."
+
+"What's coming?"
+
+"The Yorkers. I seen 'em on the river. Two canoes full."
+
+"Simon Halpen!" exclaimed the younger boy, his face blanching.
+
+"I don't know. Couldn't tell any of 'em so far away. But they be'n't
+Bennington men, that's sure." Nuck was hastily pulling on his stockings.
+"You run back and tell mother. I'll watch 'em till they land and see
+what they intend to do."
+
+"But the bears----" began Bryce.
+
+"We'll have to leave 'em. That one in the tree will be all right for a
+while for sure. Now hurry."
+
+Bryce obeyed at once and a moment later the elder boy started off in the
+other direction for the bank of the creek. He ran carefully, however, so
+as not to make any noise and thus warn the canoe party of his presence.
+In half an hour he was abreast of the boats, for they progressed but
+slowly up the stream. Here he had a good view of the men. In the first
+canoe he saw Crow Wing and another young Indian of his tribe, while the
+paddlers in the second were likewise Iroquois. The white men were
+Yorkers he was sure, and all were heavily armed.
+
+As he scrutinized the whites his eyes rested finally on one man in the
+leading canoe whom he was sure he had seen before. He could not mistake
+that lean, dark face and hooked nose. Whether or not it was the person
+he had seen in the wood the day of Sheriff Ten Eyck's fiasco at the
+Breckenridge farm, he was certain of the man's identity. It was Simon
+Halpen who, under a New York patent, claimed territory on the
+Walloomscoik, a part of which the Harding farm was.
+
+Dodging from tree to tree, the boy followed the canoes and finally,
+before they came in sight of the Harding house, saw the party land. The
+Indians remained with the canoes; but the white men disembarked with
+considerable baggage. One of the men carried a surveyor's instrument,
+while a second bore a chain. Halpen led them and when he had seen the
+party strike into the forest in the direction of the house, Enoch sped
+away on a parallel trail and headed them off, arriving first at the
+destination.
+
+He found that his mother and the children had already put up the
+shutters and made ready to receive the Yorkers. The cattle were shut in
+the yard surrounding the barn and the smaller children were put in their
+mother's bed to be out of the way. Bryce went into the loft where he
+could watch for the appearance of the enemy; but Enoch remained outside
+the door, his rifle in the hollow of his arm, ready to parley with the
+Yorkers who soon were reported by Bryce as coming through the lower
+fields.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+AN UNEQUAL BATTLE
+
+
+A masterful spirit had entered into Enoch Harding during the past few
+months. He was no longer a child; he thought and acted as a man in many
+things. Now, with this danger threatening them all, he did not shrink
+from the ordeal, and none might know his inmost feelings from the
+expression of his face. He did not speak to his mother, nor did she seek
+to advise him. Long before they had talked this emergency over, and it
+had been agreed that the homestead must and should be defended even to
+the point of firing on the Yorkers who might come to dispossess them.
+The legal authority claimed by Simon Halpen was not recognized in the
+Grants and did the Hardings put themselves in Halpen's power by agreeing
+to let the New York authorities arbitrate the matter, they would lose
+all that they had toiled and suffered for during the past ten years.
+
+The widow saw that the windows of the cabin were shuttered and that
+Bryce had both powder and bullets beside him in the loft. Then she went
+into her own chamber and falling upon her knees prayed as only a mother
+can whose children are in bodily and imminent danger. How far the
+Yorkers would dare go--to what lengths Halpen might force the fight for
+the ox-bow farm--it was impossible even to imagine. He was a cruel and
+unscrupulous man, but he had already had a taste of the temper of the
+Bennington settlers and perhaps the remembrance of the beech-sealing
+which had been dealt out to him two years and more before, would make
+him chary of coming to blows.
+
+Soon the six Yorkers appeared around the corner of the log fence which
+enclosed the cattleyard. Four of them, including Halpen, were armed with
+guns. The surveyor and his assistant carried their tools only, and
+walked in the rear of the more warlike quartette. Their leader, his
+lean, black face clouded by a threatening scowl, strode across the home
+lot and approached the cabin door. His beady eyes glittered and when he
+was enraged his hooked nose seemed to glow a dull red beneath the dusky
+skin, like a half-heated iron.
+
+Simon Halpen was much better dressed than the citizens of Bennington
+were apt to be, and he carried himself haughtily. His hair was done
+carefully and the queue tied with a silk ribbon. His rifle was
+silver-mounted and his powder-horn was partly of silver filagree work.
+In every way--dress, accoutrements and manner--he bore out the account
+the Hardings had received of him, that he was a wealthy and proud man.
+The three other armed men were fellows of the baser sort, hired at
+Albany for the purpose of driving the widow and her children from their
+home.
+
+[Illustration: THE BOY STOOD LIKE A STATUE]
+
+Enoch Harding thought this as he saw the party approach, and his heart
+beat faster while his cheeks were dyed with crimson. Should these men
+march up and deprive his mother and brothers and sisters of their home?
+Not as long as he held a gun and had powder and shot with which to load
+it! The fearful thought of shooting down one or more of these men in
+cold blood did not shock him now. The bitterness which filled his heart
+against Simon Halpen overbore any other emotion. He raised his rifle
+threateningly and cried aloud: "Halt there--halt I say! What d'ye want
+on our land?"
+
+The three retainers of Halpen, as well as the surveyor and his
+'prentice, halted instantly, but Simon strode on, his eyes blazing and
+his great nose growing ruddier as his rage increased. "Your land--your
+land, forsooth!" he exclaimed. "I'll teach ye better than that, ye young
+viper!"
+
+Instantly Enoch had his rifle to his shoulder and had drawn bead upon
+the Yorker. The muzzle of the weapon covered Halpen's heart. The boy
+stood like a statue--there was no trembling to his young arms. "Back! If
+you come a yard nearer I will fire!" he cried. He did not recognize his
+own voice, but Halpen heard him plainly and was impressed with his
+earnestness. He stopped suddenly, half raising his own gun. "Don't do
+that!" cried Enoch, instantly. "Keep your gun down. Why, I have but to
+press this trigger and you will drop where you are! Be warned."
+
+"Hi, captain," growled one of his supporters, "the little varmint means
+it. Have a care."
+
+"You--you----" Halpen only sputtered for a moment. He could not find
+words to properly express his rage. "I believe on my life, he would
+shoot me."
+
+"I certainly will, Master Simon Halpen, if you come nearer. You are
+quite near enough. You have come here for no good purpose. We own this
+land--my father paid for it and has improved it. He may be dead, but we
+will show you how we can defend the place from you Yorkers."
+
+"You crow loud, my young cock-o'-th'-walk!" exclaimed Simon Halpen, yet
+seeking to come no nearer the boy. "But you cannot hope to stand before
+his Majesty's officers--though some of you vagabond Whigs have become
+bold of late. Know ye that I bear authority from the loyal governor of
+his Majesty's Colony of New York, to turn you off this land, which is
+mine and has been mine for these six years."
+
+"And I have told you that you cannot come here and drive us off, for we
+shall fight ye!" declared Enoch, his anger rising. "And what be more,
+Master Halpen, though ye might succeed in driving us off, ye could not
+hold this land. It is too near Bennington, and ye know well what sort of
+men Bennington folk are, and what they would do to you."
+
+At this reminder of his former embarrassment, when caught by the
+neighbors and "viewed," Simon Halpen flew into a towering rage. He shook
+his rifle in the air as he berated the fearless youth. "Have a care with
+that gun, Master Halpen," said Enoch, "for it might go off by accident.
+And if such a thing should happen I would shoot you down--'deed and I
+would!"
+
+This warning cooled the man's ardor somewhat. For a full minute he stood
+silent eyeing Enoch from under his shaggy brows. "Would you dare flout
+me to my face?" he demanded.
+
+"I dare keep my rights here, Master Halpen, as my father did before me,"
+said Enoch, his voice trembling for the first time. And at the mention
+of the dead and gone Jonas Harding more than Enoch were moved. Halpen's
+manner changed; his face paled perceptibly; the fire died out of his
+eyes and his nose no longer glowed. He dropped his head and half turned
+as though to leave the spot.
+
+But suddenly one of his retainers stepped forward and whispered in his
+ear. The whisper brought the leader to his old mind. His head came up
+and he flashed a look of bitter hatred at Enoch. He nodded to the man
+who had spoken and instantly the three armed retainers began to quietly
+spread out as though to surround the house. "I'll parley no longer with
+you, my lad," Halpen said, shortly. "This land is mine and you are
+naught but squatters on it. And as such you shall be put off, or my name
+is not Simon Halpen!"
+
+Quick as thought Enoch darted backward to the house, for he had noted
+the action of the three men. "It is fighting you want, then, Master
+Halpen?" cried the boy, shrilly. "And you will get bullets instead of
+fair words if you press us--now I tell ye that! This is our home and we
+shall fight for it."
+
+"Stop the young rascal!" roared Halpen, raising his gun now in earnest,
+when he saw that Enoch no longer had him "covered." But the boy dodged
+into the house and slammed to the heavy door. As he did so a bullet
+buried itself in the door frame. Halpen had actually fired.
+
+The widow herself dropped the bars into place, for she had come out of
+her chamber and heard the conversation between her son and the Yorker.
+Now Enoch ran to one of the loopholes from which he could observe the
+movements of the man who had shot at him in so cowardly a manner. He saw
+that the surveyor, who had thus far kept in the background, was
+expostulating with the angry man. He could not hear what they said, but
+it was evident that the surveyor was a man of some conscience and could
+not see such murderous actions without striving to put Halpen in better
+mind. But the latter shook him off in rage and loaded his gun again. The
+house was now surrounded by the four armed men and the three
+understrappers were only waiting Halpen's command to fire.
+
+"Shall I shoot him? shall I shoot him?" cried Bryce, from the loft.
+
+"Hold your fire!" commanded Enoch. "You may have blood on your hands
+yet, if you be not careful."
+
+"But he fired at you."
+
+"And a poor job he made of it. We will not fire unless we are forced
+to."
+
+His mother said never a word. She went into her chamber again and with
+the girls and little Harry crouched upon the bed. But she glanced
+frequently from the loophole to observe the movements of the Yorker upon
+that side of the clearing.
+
+By and by Halpen raised his voice and addressed the besieged. "Open the
+door and come out, or we will batter it down. And it will go hard with
+you then, I warrant! If you give up the place peaceably you may cart
+away your household stuff and the cattle and hogs. I'll not be too hard
+on you."
+
+"If you come near this door I will send a bullet through your black
+heart!" was Enoch's reply, poking the muzzle of his rifle through the
+loophole beside which he stood.
+
+The widow came running from the chamber. "Enoch! Enoch!" she cried, in
+horror. "Would you kill him?"
+
+"He killed my father!" cried the boy, before he thought what explanation
+of his secret suspicions that remark might necessitate.
+
+"The child is mad!" she murmured, after staring at him a full minute.
+"You do not know what you say, Enoch. Master Halpen had naught to do
+with your poor father's death."
+
+But Enoch had not to reply. A cry came from Bryce in the loft. "Look at
+that! Look at that!" he shouted, with excitement. "I just will shoot
+him!"
+
+And then his old musket spoke. There was a yell from without. Enoch
+thought Simon Halpen himself had been shot, but the Yorker only ran
+around the end of the cabin to where one of his men stood howling like a
+wolf, and holding on to his swinging arm.
+
+"I've broke his arm!" declared Bryce, proudly, coming to the head of the
+ladder. "He was flinging blazing clods on the roof."
+
+"What shall we do?" gasped the mother. "My boys will be murderers."
+
+"I'll kill them all before they'll harm you, mother," declared young
+Bryce, very proud indeed that he had hit the mark, but secretly
+delighted as well that he had done the villainous Yorker no serious
+damage.
+
+But the moment after, he shrieked aloud and came again to the top of the
+ladder. His face was blanched. "Oh, oh! they've done it--they've done
+it!" he cried. "The roof is afire. Don't you smell it?"
+
+Enoch could not believe that this horror was true until he had run up to
+the loft. The red flames were already showing at the edge of the house
+wall, and the crackling without told him that the bark and binders of
+the roof were burning fiercely. "Tear it off!" he shouted, and dropping
+his rifle he seized a length of sawed scantling which his father had
+brought from the mill, and began to break up the burning roof and cast
+it off. But as it fell to the ground against the house, soon the logs
+outside were afire. The dwelling was indeed imperiled.
+
+"Come out! come out!" shouted Simon Halpen's voice. "The hut will burn
+to the ground an' ye'll burn with it. Ye'll go to Albany jail for this,
+every last one of ye!"
+
+"Let me shoot him, mother!" cried Bryce, doubly excited now. "He'll
+never take you to jail."
+
+"Come down from the loft, Bryce," the widow commanded, calmly. "Nothing
+can save the cabin now."
+
+The children were crying with fear. The red flames began to lick the
+edges of the shutters and the door frame was afire. If they escaped they
+must pass through a wall of flame. The men outside, frightened by the
+result of their awful act, were shouting orders and berating each other
+madly. Yet none dared come too near, for they feared the guns of the
+defenders of the homestead. Enoch for the moment completely lost his
+head and stood as one daft.
+
+But his mother was not so. Swiftly did she sweep aside the ashes on the
+hearth. Then of her own exertions she lifted on its edge the flat stone
+which covered the underground apartment. There was the ladder the boys
+had made leading down into the cool depths. "Down with you--all!" she
+commanded, seizing little Harry first and thrusting his feet upon the
+ladder.
+
+"Oh, we'll smother down there, mother!" cried Kate.
+
+"Nonsense!" exclaimed the widow, yet with shaking voice. "Do you think
+mother would tell you to do anything that would hurt you?"
+
+But though she encouraged them to descend, in her own mind she was
+simply choosing the lesser of two terrible evils. The girls and Harry
+descended quickly; but she had to fairly force Bryce down. He wanted to
+stay and fight, and he clung to the old musket desperately. Although the
+tears were running down his face, he was made of the stuff which holds
+the soldier, though frightened, to his post.
+
+"Go down yourself, mother," Enoch said, recovering his presence of mind
+and speaking calmly now. "I will follow you and drop the stone into
+place. But first I want to look out----"
+
+He ran to the loophole, through which the smoke was now pouring. But
+after a moment there was a break in the cloud and he saw the group of
+frightened Yorkers plainly. They stood not many rods away and poking his
+rifle through the hole, he aimed at the villainous Halpen and, pulling
+the trigger, ran back to the hearth before the echo of the shot died
+away. Down the ladder he darted, dropping the heavy hearthstone into
+place, and leaving the cabin which for so many years had been their
+home, to be consumed above their heads. But his heart sank when he found
+how closely the six packed the tiny room and realized how little air
+reached them down here in the earth.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+BACKWOODS JUSTICE
+
+
+At daybreak on this very morning when the Yorkers attacked the Harding
+place, 'Siah Bolderwood returning from the direction of Old Ti, suddenly
+came upon a little glade on the bank of the Walloomscoik Creek. With the
+instinct long gained by his life as hunter and woodsman, he never
+crossed an open space in the forest without examining it well. In this
+glade he saw, at first glance, the signs of recent occupancy. The
+smouldering ashes of a campfire and the marks on the creek bank told him
+that a canoe party had camped there during the night and that they had
+been under way but shortly. Making sure that they were now out of sight
+he more closely examined the spot. The party numbered at least half a
+dozen, and there had been two canoes. He had come up the creek bank
+himself; therefore, not having seen the strangers, they had gone on
+ahead of him. Five miles or so up the stream lay the ox-bow at which his
+old friend Jonas Harding settled when he came into the Disputed Grounds,
+and where the widow and her brood now lived. After examining the camp he
+quickened his step toward the Harding place.
+
+A mile further on, however, he heard the stroke of paddles and the sound
+of men's voices. He would have gone to the fringed river bank and peered
+out upon the stream had not a figure suddenly risen before him as though
+from the ground itself and barred his way. "How d'ye, Crow Wing!" he
+exclaimed, yet showing no surprise at the Indian youth's appearance. The
+latter bore a brace of rabbits on his gun and Bolderwood guessed that he
+belonged to the canoe party and had left them to get this game for their
+dinner.
+
+"Umph!" returned the Indian and looked at him stolidly.
+
+"Your people?" asked the ranger, with a gesture toward the river.
+
+"Umph!" was the reply. It might have meant yes or no. Crow Wing seemed
+undecided. "Why you no at Hardings?" he demanded finally.
+
+"I'm bound that a-way now," said the white man.
+
+"Hunting?" grunted Crow Wing.
+
+"Been up to Old Ti. Bought some land up there."
+
+Crow Wing seemed about to pass on. But over his shoulder he said: "You
+go to Hardings' farm. They want you--mebbe."
+
+"What for?"
+
+The Indian shrugged his shoulders and walked on. But Bolderwood strode
+after him. "What's going on?" he asked, anxiously. "Who's that out
+yonder?" nodding again toward the creek.
+
+"Umph! Men hire Crow Wing to paddle canoe. They go to Hardings'."
+
+"Yorkers!" exclaimed Bolderwood.
+
+But the Indian youth said no more and quickly disappeared in the bushes
+which overhung the creek. The ranger hesitated a moment, appeared to
+think of following him, and then turned abruptly and plunged into the
+forest on a course diagonal from the river. Therefore, when Nuck and
+Bryce were fighting the bears in the swamp he did not hear their guns,
+being by that time some miles away and striding rapidly toward
+Arlington. He had suspected the truth and instead of wasting time
+observing the party of which Crow Wing was a member, he had it in his
+mind to rouse the neighbors to go to the aid of the widow and her
+children. After the affair at Otter Creek, which he was sorry indeed to
+have missed, Bolderwood had expected something like the present raid.
+He, like the Hardings, believed that Simon Halpen would find the time
+ripe for the carrying out of his nefarious designs.
+
+It was the season of the year when the farm work having been completed,
+the pioneers felt free to go about more, and hunting was popular. Many
+men were off with their rifles; but Bolderwood picked up some half dozen
+determined fellows and hastened back to the Harding place. While yet
+some distance away they heard a rifle shot and so disturbed was the
+ranger by this, that he started on the run for the ox-bow farm, and was
+far ahead of his friends when he broke cover at the edge of the forest
+and beheld the cabin.
+
+His horror and despair when he saw the house wrapped in flames and the
+Yorkers running across the fields toward the river, knew no bounds. Yet
+even then he did not suppose that the widow and her family were within
+the burning dwelling. He presumed they must be hiding in the
+outbuildings and he ran on after the fleeing Yorkers, thinking only to
+take vengeance upon them for their wanton cruelty in burning down the
+poor woman's house at the beginning of winter.
+
+One man kept turning back to look at the blazing structure which was now
+more than half consumed; and this fellow the ranger quickly overtook. It
+was the surveyor and he was wringing his hands and weeping as he ran.
+Bolderwood dashed past him without a word, seeing plainly that he was
+not armed and was sore frightened. "I'll attend to your case later," the
+ranger muttered, and spurred on after the rest of the party. But they
+were too quick for him, and having reached the bank of the creek leaped
+into their canoes and the Indians pushed off. The fear of what they had
+done pressed them hard and they had run like madmen from their single
+pursuer. Now at an order from Halpen the Indians stolidly paddled down
+the river again and were quickly out of sight around the nearest bend in
+the stream.
+
+Bolderwood went back and found the surveyor prone upon the ground and
+weeping like a woman. "Get up, you great ca'f!" cried the ranger.
+"Nobody'll kill you for your part in this matter though you desarve
+little mercy.... Was that Simon Halpen?"
+
+"It was indeed--the demon!" gasped the fellow, dragged unceremoniously
+to his feet by the borderer.
+
+"If he ever comes into this colony again I doubt but he'll be hung as
+high as Haman," Bolderwood declared. "And you were the surveyor, eh? One
+of Duane & Kempe's men? Well, sir, your back will be well tickled, or my
+name's not 'Siah Bolderwood! But bear up, man--'tis no killing
+punishment."
+
+"What, sir?" cried the fellow. "Do you think I weep because of your
+promised punishment? I fear you not--I am a leal subject of the King and
+peaceful. You cannot touch me. But I weep because of the work that
+dastard has done this day."
+
+"What do you mean?" cried Bolderwood, fiercely. "Where is the woman and
+her bairns?"
+
+The surveyor pointed a shaking finger at the cabin, the smoking walls of
+which were now all that were standing. "They are there. Wait! let me
+tell you. I had nothing to do with the dreadful work. Nor, indeed, did
+Simon Halpen mean to destroy the house and the poor woman and children.
+They meant to burn the roof off to scare them out, and one man threw
+burning clods on it. But those inside tore off the flaming roof and it
+fell all around the cabin and set the walls afire. They dared not run
+out through that wall of flame and smothered to death they were--God
+pity them!" and he began to weep aloud again.
+
+Bolderwood was speechless--well-nigh overcome, indeed, with the horror
+of this. He saw his friends appear from the wood on the other side of
+the house and he walked toward them like one in a dream. But still he
+clung to the surveyor's arm and forced him to approach the cabin. The
+roof had, of course, been completely consumed, and the outside of the
+walls was blackened and still blazed fiercely at the corners. The window
+shutters and door were burned away and the interior of the place was
+badly demolished.
+
+"Where's the widder and the boys?" shouted one of the newcomers to
+Bolderwood. The old ranger did not answer, but his hand tightened upon
+the surveyor's arm. Suddenly the latter shrieked and would have fallen
+to the ground had not the grasp upheld him. In the door of the burning
+cabin stood the figure of Enoch Harding, his face covered with smut and
+his clothing half burned off his back. For a moment the surveyor
+believed the dead had risen and he covered his face with his hands to
+shut out the sight of the boy.
+
+"Are ye all alive, lad?" shouted Bolderwood, dropping the surveyor and
+running forward.
+
+"We're all right, but well-nigh smothered," returned Enoch, hoarsely.
+"Bring--bring some water!"
+
+He staggered out of the cabin and fell upon the ground. In a moment the
+surprised neighbors were running with buckets and pans from the well,
+for Mistress Harding's milk vessels had been left to dry outside the
+springhouse. Bolderwood took it upon himself to revive the
+half-strangled Enoch, while the others dashed water over the smouldering
+interior of the cabin, putting out the fire on the floor which was
+burning briskly, and finally being able to draw the widow and the
+smaller children from the secret room under the hearth and carry them to
+the outer air. Here they quickly revived and Mistress Harding with the
+girls and little Harry took shelter in one of the hovels.
+
+The destruction of the cabin was practically complete. There was not a
+log that was not charred, and the interior furnishings of the house were
+ruined. The kind-hearted neighbors saved the chests of bedclothing and
+the family's best garments, for the flames had not gotten at them. But
+everything was sadly smoked. And the house would have to be torn down
+and rebuilt with new timber throughout. It was a sad spectacle indeed
+for Enoch and Bryce to look upon. "I wish I had shot them all!" cried
+the latter in a rage. But Enoch said nothing. He would not whisper how
+his anger had made him aim to kill Simon Halpen. Now, in cool blood, he
+was glad that the bullet had not sped true.
+
+But the condition of the house filled him with despair. Winter was at
+hand and it would be next to impossible to build a good house before
+spring, although the timbers could be drawn and squared while the snow
+was on the ground. What would they do for a shelter until then? "We'll
+make yonder hovel that you boys play in, all tight and warm for the
+winter, Nuck," Bolderwood observed, seeing the tears running down the
+boy's cheeks. "Don't cry about it. And we'll have up a better house than
+this in the spring, lad. The neighbors will all help ye."
+
+Meanwhile, however, Bolderwood had kept his eye upon the surveyor. The
+latter, seeing that the family had been so miraculously saved from the
+fire, sought to get away while the men were saving those goods which
+were unconsumed. But Bolderwood was after him with mighty strides and
+dragged him back, a prisoner. "Nay, friend, you'll be needed here as a
+witness," he said, grimly. "We don't allow such gentry as you in the
+Hampshire Grants without presenting you with a token of our respect and
+consideration. Ha!" he added, suddenly, "whom have we here?"
+
+A horseman rode quickly out of the wood and approached the burned cabin.
+Before he pulled in his steed the men welcomed him vociferously, for it
+was Captain Baker. "Look at this, 'Member!" cried Bolderwood, dragging
+the trembling surveyor forward. "What a sight this is to blister the
+eyes of decent men! A poor widder's house burned about her ears and only
+by the mercy of God were she and her youngsters saved."
+
+"The villains!" roared Baker. "And is that one of them?"
+
+"He was with the party. But I truly believe that he had little to do
+with this dastardly work. He's only a poor surveyor body."
+
+"We'll find shelter with some neighbor for Mistress Harding and the
+little ones," said Baker, "and then attend to his case without delay."
+
+But the widow was not minded to leave her homestead. It was not yet very
+cold and the hovel in which the children had had their frolic a
+fortnight before was easily made comfortable for the family. She set
+about this at once while Captain Baker and the neighbors sat in judgment
+upon the trembling surveyor. These impromptu courts held by the Green
+Mountain Boys when they happened to capture a Yorker guilty of meddling
+with the settlers, were in the nature of a court martial. Sometimes the
+sentences imposed were doubtless unjust, for the judges and juries were
+naturally bitter against the prisoners; but the punishment seldom went
+beyond a sound whipping, and in this case the surveyor, still sputtering
+and objecting to the illegal procedure, was sentenced to two score
+lashes, save one, and Enoch and Bryce selected the blue beech wands with
+which the sentence was to be carried out.
+
+The surveyor was taken behind the log barn, his coat and shirt stripped
+from his back, and Bolderwood and one of the other neighbors fulfilled
+the order of Captain Baker as judge of the military court. Bolderwood,
+remembering the tears the prisoner had shed when he thought the family
+burned alive, could not be too hard upon him, and although the woodsman
+made every appearance of striking tremendous blows, he scarce raised a
+welt upon the man's back. But when the other executioner laid on for the
+last nineteen strokes, the surveyor roared with pain and without doubt
+the lesson was one which did him good. It would be many a day before he
+ventured to survey the lands east of the Twenty-Mile Line--at least, not
+until his back stopped smarting. Finally he was given his clothing, and
+part of the band marched him across country to the New York border and
+turned him loose.
+
+The attack of Simon Halpen upon the Hardings had practically failed. Yet
+the loss of their home was a sore blow. In a couple of days, with the
+help of Bolderwood, the old hovel was made very habitable. But it was
+small and so many of their possessions had been burned that even Bryce
+cried about it. Nevertheless their supply of food was all right, and the
+cattle had not been injured. Also, with Bolderwood's assistance, the
+three bears which the boys had so happily killed, were brought home, the
+hams smoked, some of the meat salted, and the pelts stretched and dried
+for winter bed coverings. By the time the snow lay deep upon the earth
+the Hardings were once more comfortable.
+
+The boys did very little trapping and hunting that winter of '72-'73 for
+they could not attend to traps set very far from the ox-bow, and the
+Walloomscoik country was becoming scarce of game. 'Siah Bolderwood did
+not go back to Old Ti, either, but contented himself with making short
+hunting trips around the lower part of the lake, for he spent all the
+time he could spare in helping the widow and her boys to get the timber
+ready for their new abode. Enoch and Bryce were determined that this new
+structure should be much better than the log cabin which their father
+had erected ten years before, and every timber dragged to the site by
+the slow moving oxen was squared with the broad ax and carefully fitted
+so as to "lock" at the corners. Some planks were sawed at the mill and
+sledded to the ox-bow on the ice, too, and when the plaintive call of
+the muckawis--the Indian name for the "whip-poor-will,"--ushered in the
+spring, a noble company of Green Mountain Boys gathered to build the
+widow's house again.
+
+Although the new house was put up and made habitable in about ten days,
+it took some time to fit window-frames, build two partitions, for there
+were to be two sleeping chambers on the ground floor in this house,
+which was larger than the old structure, and lay the floor of the loft,
+build bunks to sleep in, make a new meal chest and dresser, and
+construct other articles of furniture which were needed to replace the
+stuff burned in the fire. Enoch had a mechanical turn of mind and Bryce
+made an able assistant. Between them they turned out a new table,
+several chairs with hide backs and seats, and even essayed a "rocker"
+for their mother which, although rudely built and with its rockers not
+exactly even, was declared by Mrs. Harding to be a marvel of
+workmanship.
+
+All these things had to be done besides the regular work of the farm
+during the spring and summer, and the studies of the older boys were
+rather neglected that year, greatly to the delight of Bryce. Indeed,
+several of their mother's precious books had been destroyed by the
+flames, and had it not been for the sorrow he knew she felt at their
+loss, Bryce would have openly expressed his satisfaction. He was born
+for the woods and fields, and although he made no objection to farmwork,
+it was plain that his father's roving disposition had entered strongly
+into the make-up of the lad.
+
+He still felt injured--indeed, the feeling grew with his own
+growth--because he was not allowed to join the military companies; but
+Mistress Harding had finally promised that if he could trap enough game
+the next winter to pay for a new gun--a rifle instead of the old musket
+which had once been Nuck's and which their father had brought with him
+on his return from the French wars--he should be allowed to attend the
+Bennington drills. That was putting the privilege a year ahead, but
+Bryce was partially contented with it.
+
+Lot Breckenridge had finally been allowed to join the Green Mountain
+Boys and so Enoch had somebody in his company near his own age. On
+several occasions there were frolics in the neighborhood to which the
+young people foregathered, and before the new house was built Lot and
+Enoch had gone on a very brief hunting trio. But as fall again
+approached the two friends, Lot and Enoch, planned to go trapping on the
+upper waters of the Otter and its branches as soon as harvest and
+hog-killing should be over and the winter really set in. Lot had several
+steel traps which had belonged to his father, and Enoch was likewise
+supplied. Both had canoes, but they agreed to use Enoch's only, as one
+was all they cared to "pack" over the portage to the upper Otter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+THE WOLF PACK
+
+
+Meantime throughout the Grants the line between the Whigs and Tories had
+become more distinct. Although it had been forbidden for any person to
+hold office or issue writs under advice from New York, in certain
+sections where the Tory sentiment was strong, New York justices
+continued to write papers of ejectment against the Hampshire settlers,
+and other Yorkers were found to serve the documents and on occasion to
+drive helpless farmers and their families from their homes. These
+affairs went on openly in the town of Durham, which was a Tory
+stronghold.
+
+Justice Benjamin Spencer was the principal official who dealt out the
+New York brand of justice in this town, and he resided in the village of
+Clarendon. Early in the fall Ethan Allen and a force of Green Mountain
+Boys, appeared at Clarendon and read to the people the resolutions
+passed by the Bennington Council to the effect that no person should do
+any official act under New York authority, and that all lands should be
+held under title from New Hampshire. The Durhamites were threatened
+that, if they refused to comply with these orders within a reasonable
+time, they would be made to suffer for their temerity. At this visit
+Judge Spencer absconded, remaining away from home until he was sure "the
+awful Green Mountain outlaws" had decamped.
+
+Enoch and Lot planned their start into the woods in November, and they
+were nearly ready when the second raid on Durham was proposed. The boys
+knew that the matter had been discussed by Colonel Allen and the other
+leaders for some time, for Justice Spencer still continued to disobey
+the orders of the Council of Safety, and the matter could not be
+ignored. It was past the middle of November when the commander of the
+Green Mountain Boys and some of his followers set out in the direction
+of Durham, and Lot and Enoch hurried their own going, determined to hide
+their canoe when once they reached the Otter and join in the descent
+upon Clarendon village.
+
+It was eleven o'clock at night, November 20th, that Colonel Allen,
+Captain Baker, and more than a score of their friends, entered the
+settlement with all the care and circumlocution of Indians. Nuck and Lot
+Breckenridge had joined the party at supper time in a certain rendezvous
+of Allen's in the woods, having hidden their canoe and traps on the bank
+of the Otter several miles away. The attacking force of Green Mountain
+Boys was heavily armed and might have been bound upon an expedition
+against Fort Ticonderoga itself, one might imagine. But a show of force
+was thought to be necessary to overawe the Yorkers who made up more than
+half the population of the village.
+
+The Green Mountain Boys awakened nobody in their approach to the house
+of Justice Spencer, until the leader himself thundered at the door and
+demanded that the New York official come down. After some parley, and
+seeing that there was no help for his case, Spencer descended and, as
+the next day was Sunday and nothing could be done then, the prisoner was
+hidden in the house of Mr. Green, some mile and a half from the
+settlement, until Monday morning. Early on that day, a still larger
+force of Grants men having gathered, as well as settlers whose titles
+had been derived from New York, Justice Spencer was taken to the door of
+his own house and tried.
+
+The inquest, with Allen, Warner, Baker, and Cochran, sitting in
+judgment, was carried forward with all due formality, although the
+judges were the principal accusers of the prisoners, and the sentence
+was finally pronounced that the prisoner's house be burned and he
+himself give his bond to not again act as a New York justice. At this
+the doughty justice broke down, for he plainly saw that his captors were
+quite able, and in the mind, to carry out the sentence. He told the
+court that if his house were burned his store of dry goods and all his
+property would be destroyed and his wife and children made destitute.
+
+"And have you and your like not made many of our friends destitute?"
+cried some of the crowd. But more showed some heart for the justice,
+notably Captain Warner. Warner finally suggested that as the dry goods
+store was a public benefit and was one of the few stores in the
+township, it should be saved if possible; and it would be too hard at
+that time of year to turn the man and his family out of their home. He
+declared for taking off the roof of the prisoner's house and then
+putting it on again, providing that Spencer acknowledged that it was put
+on under a New Hampshire title, and that he would purchase the same at
+once. Spencer, who might have felt some gratitude by this time, promised
+compliance in every particular, and with great shouting and good-nature,
+the roof of the house was lifted off and then put on again. And the
+lesson to the Durhamites was a salutary one.
+
+Enoch Harding and his chum left immediately after the settlement of the
+case and returned to their canoe. They feared the approach of a storm
+which threatened, and were desirous of building their winter camp and
+getting their traps set before the forest would be full of snow and the
+streams completely frozen. Both boys were very good woodsmen by this
+time, for Bolderwood had been Enoch's mentor and Lot's uncle was an old
+ranger who knew every trick of the forest and trail. They selected a
+heavily wooded gulley not far from the Otter and built there a log
+lean-to against the rocky side-hill, sheltered from the north and open
+to such sunshine as might penetrate the forest. The traps were set along
+the bank of the stream, some of them in the water itself, where the
+boys' sharp eyes told them that the fur-bearing game of which they were
+in search, were wont to pass.
+
+A fortnight after the Durham riot, as the Yorkers were pleased to call
+the visit of the Green Mountain Boys, the two friends were very cozily
+fixed in the gully. One heavy snow had fallen, and their traps had begun
+to repay their attention most generously. Then the Otter froze over
+solidly and they had to keep the ice open about their traps with the
+axe. They were in a lonely piece of wood and day after day saw nor heard
+nobody but themselves. The bears had taken to their long winter sleep;
+but the fierce catamount was still abroad, and at night the howling of
+the wolf-pack as it followed some hard-pressed doe or decrepit buck,
+reached the boys' ears. And at that day the timber-wolf of the Green
+Mountains--a long, lean, gray creature as big as a mastiff--was much to
+be feared.
+
+The traps stretched so far along the creek that if one went out alone to
+examine and bait them, almost the entire day was consumed. The boys did
+not possess ice-runners, or skates, with which they might have skimmed
+over the frozen creek and visited the traps in a couple of hours. Each
+had brought a pair of snow-shoes, but these were of no use on the creek.
+So baiting the traps was no easy task. Usually they divided the work
+between them and thus got it over and had time to stretch and scrape
+their pelts in the afternoon. One day, however, Lot remained at camp to
+make some repairs on his clothing, and Enoch set out early to go the
+rounds by himself.
+
+It had been a very cold night and the ice was frozen solidly about the
+traps. The catch had been good, too, and both of these facts delayed the
+young trapper more than common. There were fish lines to examine, also,
+for some of the traps were baited with fish which was considered
+particularly tempting food for certain of the beasts they wished to
+catch. It was long past noon when Enoch got back to the camp for dinner,
+and then he had gone over but half the line of traps. When he started in
+the other direction after hastily eating the meal, he knew he should be
+out until past moonrise, and told Lot so.
+
+"I'll come and meet you," said his campmate.
+
+"No need. Reckon I can find my way back alone," said Enoch. "The moon'll
+be up by seven and it's nigh full."
+
+It was so, yet Enoch had no thought when he left the camp that he would
+be as long delayed as he was. It was full moonrise, before the boy had
+examined the last trap. He had a goodly load on turning his face
+campward and was glad of the company of his rifle as he heard the wolves
+clamoring in the forest. The bitter cold would make them ravenous by
+now, for many of the more easily caught animals had retired for the
+winter, while the strong crust on the snow enabled the deer to
+outdistance their shaggy enemies. While still three miles or more from
+camp he heard the beasts howling so savagely that he really became
+alarmed and would have thrown down his pack and run had he not shrunk
+from so betraying his fear to Lot.
+
+He knew, too, by the nature of the wolves' cries that they were close on
+the track of some quarry, and that it could not be his trail they were
+following, for they were approaching the creek through the timber on the
+western side of the stream. But the sound of the chase drew rapidly
+nearer, and desperately as Enoch hurried he could not distance the pack.
+The western bank was high and sloping just here and with anxious eyes
+the boy looked up the white incline, where the trees stood rather far
+apart, to catch the first glimpse possible of the wolves and their prey.
+Suddenly there came into view several dark objects moving swiftly over
+the snow. One was ahead, flitting from tree to tree, its identity almost
+indistinguishable at first. Then, with almost a shriek of horror, Enoch
+recognized the wolves' quarry as a human being!
+
+The pursued was on snow-shoes and coming to a steeper part of the creek
+bank, at once slid down to the ice. After him, their red tongues hanging
+to their breasts, and baying at every leap, came a round dozen of the
+ravenous creatures. Enoch saw that the unfortunate man was armed with a
+gun, but that evidently the weapon had been injured in some way, for he
+did not make use of it to beat off the wolves. He limped as he ran, too,
+and the young trapper saw plainly that the pack would overtake and pull
+him down in a very few moments.
+
+Once upon the ice the beasts spread out and almost surrounded him. While
+he limped on most awkwardly, the strong, sharp claws of the wolves
+helped them over the surface and soon the leader--a gaunt, gray monster
+with cropped ears and scarred back--leaped to seize the prey. Enoch,
+without a thought of his own danger, had hurried on, re-priming his
+rifle as he ran; but he was scarcely within fair gun-shot when the wolf
+leaped. The beast caught the fugitive by the shoulder, and its weight
+dragged the man down. He tripped upon his snow-shoes and in an instant
+was falling face-downward on the ice with the pack of hungry beasts
+fighting above him!
+
+Enoch fired his rifle into the midst of the pack as he ran, but although
+one of the wolves rolled over, kicking convulsively upon the ice, the
+others scarcely noticed the attack. So eager were they to get at the
+quarry which they had followed far, that the shot did not frighten them.
+But the boy was among them in a moment, his gun clubbed, and a fierce
+desire in his heart to slay the horrid beasts.
+
+He really thought the fallen man was killed, and his attack was inspired
+wholly by a desire for revenge. He laid about him with the gun-stock in
+a most furious fashion, and the wolves were soon cleared from above
+their prostrate victim. His attack quelled the courage of the pack for a
+little, and even the leader shrank away, howling dolefully. But the
+respite was not sufficient to allow Enoch to reload his gun.
+
+When the brutes fell back, the man upon the ice showed that he was by no
+means dead, though his exhaustion was plain. He struggled to his knees,
+and reaching up seized the hunting-knife from Enoch's belt, and the
+small axe with which the latter had cut the ice away from his traps.
+With one of these weapons in each hand he crouched in readiness to
+defend himself when the wolves should renew their attack.
+
+And he had not long to wait, for both hunger and natural ferocity urged
+them on. Suddenly the leader, with a savage snarl which fairly turned
+the blood cold in Enoch's veins, cast itself full at him!
+
+Raised upon his hind legs the old timber-wolf, the hero of a thousand
+fights with other pack-leaders, or with the young upstarts of his own
+tribe, was fully as tall as his antagonist. The sight of its wide red
+jaws, from which the froth flew as it does from the lips of a mad dog,
+the gleaming yellow teeth, the capacious throat which seemed fairly to
+steam with the fetid breath expelled from the beast's lungs, almost
+overcame young Harding. For the moment he was enthralled by the
+terrifying appearance of the wolf, and his arms lacked the strength
+necessary to swing his gun.
+
+[Illustration: THE WOLF SPRANG AT HIS THROAT]
+
+The charge would surely have overborne him had Enoch not slipped upon
+the ice as he shrank back, and providentially he fell upon one knee. The
+wolf had sprung at his throat and the pioneer lad's sinking to the ice
+caused the beast to leap clear over both the human actors in the drama.
+But as its lean gray body flashed past, the stranger reached up and with
+Enoch's keen hunting-knife slit a great wound in the exposed body. A
+wild yell rose above the clamor of the pack and the old wolf rolled over
+and over on the ice in the agonies of death, the blood spurting from the
+wound at every pump of its heart.
+
+Instantly half the pack sprang upon the dying leader, every male
+desiring to be master, and all doubtless bearing upon their own bodies
+marks of the wounded beast's displeasure. This change of front enabled
+Enoch to recover both his equilibrium and his presence of mind; and when
+the other beasts gathered courage to attack him in turn, he was ready to
+beat them off with his gun and to ably assist his companion in
+continuing the slaughter. The wolf he had first shot was attacked by its
+comrades, too, for at the smell and taste of blood the creatures showed
+all the characteristics of cannibals.
+
+Nevertheless, Enoch and the man crouching at his feet, had all they
+could do to defend themselves from the charges of the remaining wolves.
+If the beasts sprang high the boy met them with long-arm swings of his
+rifle; if they fell short the axe or the knife flashed and the wolves
+limped away with savage howls, their blood dyeing the frozen surface of
+the creek. For yards about the besieged the ice soon had the appearance
+of a mighty strife and although he had only received a scratch or two
+himself, Enoch was well spattered with blood.
+
+Hunger and the issue from their own veins drowned the natural cowardice
+of the canines. They charged blindly, and as fast as one went down
+beneath the blows of Enoch's gun, or was seriously wounded by his
+companion, another wolf sprang to the attack. Three already lay dead on
+the ice, torn limb from limb by their comrades, and three others limped
+upon the outer edge of the circle, seriously wounded; but still the
+fierce brutes sprang at their prey, and sprang again!
+
+Involuntarily Enoch shouted aloud at every blow he struck, but his
+companion maintained a desperate silence. The boy did not cry out
+because he expected any aid; yet assistance was within call. A figure
+came running over the ice from up stream and the sharp crack of a rifle
+announced the approach of Lot Breckenridge, who had come out to meet his
+friend. Another wolf rolled over in the throes of death, to be seized by
+its companions and torn to pieces with horrid cries. Lot came on with
+shouts of encouragement and together with Enoch laid about him with
+clubbed rifle until the remaining wolves, their cries now turned to
+yelps of fear, stampeded from the scene of the battle and sought safety
+in the forest, from the edge of which they howled their disappointment
+at their antagonists.
+
+It was Lot who first regained his breath and spoke. "Zuckers! but that
+was a great fight," he cried, hugging Enoch in his joy at finding him
+practically unhurt. "But you look as though you had been killin' beeves,
+Nuck. And who's this with you?" The individual in question rose stiffly
+to his feet with a significant "Umph!" "Why!" exclaimed Lot, "it's an
+Injin--it's Crow Wing! Where'd you pick him up, Nuck?"
+
+Enoch was vastly astonished to see whom he had befriended. "I had no
+idea who it was," he said. "How came you in this country, Crow Wing?"
+
+The Indian, now grown to be a tall and magnificent looking warrior, was
+breathing heavily and had some difficulty in answering for a moment. He
+stood, too, on one foot, holding up his left one like a lamed stork.
+"Umph!" he grunted at last, "White boys in good time. Save Injin sure!"
+He gravely offered his hand first to Enoch and then to Lot. "Crow Wing
+lame. Hurt foot--break gun--wolves come howl, howl, howl! No can scare
+'em; no can make fire; no can run good. Umph!"
+
+"You'll have to go to our camp," said Enoch. "You can't travel on that
+foot. You've sprained or broken it."
+
+Crow Wing nodded. He made no sign that the foot hurt him, excepting by
+holding it off the ice. "Some wolf pelts good," he remarked,
+sententiously.
+
+Lot had already turned away to examine the dead beasts. Only two skins
+were fit to be stripped from the carcasses and added to the pelts Enoch
+had brought from the traps. The two white boys quickly obtained these
+and then, with the Indian hobbling between them, and leaning on their
+shoulders, the trio made their way to camp through the moonlight, while
+the remaining wolves slunk back to the scene of the battle and devoured
+their dead comrades.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE TESTIMONY OF CROW WING
+
+
+The natures of the white man and the red are so opposed that it was
+impossible from the beginning of our North American history that either
+should really understand the sentiments and desires of the other. In the
+eyes of the Indian the most stoical and repressive white man was little
+better than a garrulous old woman. The "Yenghese," as the Indians called
+the English, were less criticised on this point than were the French;
+but the latter, being an imitative race, more easily adapted themselves
+to the manner and life of the red man, and therefore won his confidence
+if not his respect.
+
+Crow Wing displayed neither astonishment at finding the two white boys
+here, nor pain at the serious accident which had overtaken him. And it
+would have been a waste of time to urge him to explain more fully his
+being in this neighborhood. When he was ready to speak he would do so,
+and long after Lot Breckenridge was asleep, rolled up in his blanket and
+with his feet to the fire which blazed at the opening of the hut, did
+Enoch wait for the story. Crow Wing waited until he had slowly smoked
+out the little brass-bowled pipe which he carried with tobacco in a
+pouch at his belt. This pouch of tobacco and another of parched Indian
+corn, were all the provisions the ordinary Indian carried when on the
+march. The forest must supply his larder from time to time as he had
+need; and if game was scarce the red man went uncomplainingly with empty
+stomach.
+
+"Harding and Lot found much pelt?" he said, questioningly, waving his
+hand at the bales of furs in the back of the shelter.
+
+"So-so. We can't complain, Crow Wing. You were trapping, too?"
+
+"Yonder," replied the Indian, pointing to the west. "Crow Wing look at
+trap; wolves met him; wolves very hungry; make much mad when hungry.
+Umph!"
+
+"And they attacked you right away?"
+
+"Umph! Me shoot; then club gun. Hit tree first time; break gun; then run
+some more. Catch foot and fall; much hurt. That all."
+
+"Are you alone at your camp yonder?"
+
+"Umph!" said the Indian, nodding affirmatively.
+
+"You had better stay here till your foot's well. I reckon that gun can
+be repaired, too. Only the stock is broken."
+
+The Indian's eyes gleamed, showing that this statement pleased him
+vastly. Crow Wing's "fire-tube" was his most precious possession. "Me
+thought no good," he said.
+
+"I know of a man in Bennington who can fix it," declared Enoch. "Have
+you many pelts at your camp?"
+
+On his fingers Crow Wing showed how many beaver skins, otter pelts, wolf
+hides, and other and less worthy furs, he had obtained. He also stated
+that he had three steel wolf traps and two beaver or otter traps which
+he had obtained from a farmer for whom he had worked.
+
+"We can bring 'em all over here. Lot and I will go for them. You can't
+get around on that foot much for several weeks. It's bad. You 'tend camp
+and stretch pelts, while Lot and I look out for the traps. Then, when we
+go home, you take one third of the pelts."
+
+Crow Wing thought of this silently for a moment and then held out his
+hand with gravity. "Good! Crow Wing go to Bennington with Harding and
+Lot; sell pelts there and get gun fixed. Umph!"
+
+Although Enoch had suggested this scheme upon his own responsibility he
+knew Lot would agree to it. Really, it was a good thing for all three.
+Crow Wing's gun was useless, and his lame foot made traveling next to
+impossible for a while. But he could keep camp all right and look after
+the pelts. The traps the Indian had would be of much service to the
+white boys and would increase their own gains not a little. So upon this
+amicable basis the Indian joined the party and the next day Lot and
+Enoch, directed by Crow Wing, traveled to the Indian's camp and packed
+back both the traps and the skins.
+
+The boys learned that Crow Wing's people now resided in New York colony,
+on the shores of Lake George, and that the young warrior had not been
+east of the Twenty-Mile Line since the raid of Simon Halpen upon the
+Widow Harding's cabin. By patient questioning Enoch learned that Halpen
+had lived for months at a time with the tribe, but that he was not an
+adopted member of it, and was not altogether trusted by Crow Wing's
+people.
+
+"When burn cabin, old chief--my father--be told. Injins friends with
+Bennin'ton men; friends with York men, too. But Hawknose," the Indian's
+sobriquet for Simon Halpen, "sent away. He never come back."
+
+"You have hunted with him?" said Enoch, with some eagerness. "You were
+with him that day--you know--long ago; the day the Yorkers came up to
+James Breckenridge's farm?"
+
+Crow Wing made no reply for some time, gazing with gloomy eyes into the
+fire. Finally he said, speaking in an oracular manner, yet brokenly as
+he always did, for the English tongue was hard to him: "Jonas Harding
+not friend to Injin; Injin not friend to him. You friend to Crow Wing.
+You fight Crow Wing; fight 'um fair; when foot well we fight once more?
+Umph!"
+
+Enoch laughed. "I'll wrastle you any time you like, Crow Wing. But you
+can beat me running."
+
+The Indian, undisturbed, went on: "You not like father; you not speak
+Injin like he be slave-man; Injin free!" and he said it proudly, for the
+redskins looked down upon the negroes because they were the slaves of
+the colonists. "Hawknose no like Jonas Harding; he own your land; he buy
+it from Great Father of York and he buy it from Injin. All land Injin's
+once," he added, with a cloud upon his face. "Injin come with Hawknose
+to measure land; white man bring little thing to measure it; Jonas
+Harding throw Hawknose in creek and more white men beat him. White man,
+like Injin, feel he squaw when beat. Hawknose mad; tell Injin he kill
+Jonas Harding; drive you from land."
+
+"But father was killed by a buck in the forest," said Enoch, carefully
+hiding the emotion he felt.
+
+"Umph!" grunted Crow Wing, and would say nothing further at the time.
+
+Lot, although he had been often a companion of the Indian when the
+latter lived near his uncle's farm, looked upon him just as he did upon
+Sambo, Breckenridge's slave boy. He had played with him, swam with him,
+learned to use the bow and arrow under Crow Wing's instruction, and had
+gained something of forest lore from the Indian youth; but he had no
+respect for him, or for his peculiarities. He had not learned at 'Siah
+Bolderwood's knee of the really admirable qualities of these people whom
+the whites were pleased to call "savages." Lot made no objection to Crow
+Wing's joining them, for his presence, and the use of his traps, was a
+very good thing for them. He patronized the Indian, however, and was not
+above suggesting that, as the redman was so ignorant, it would not
+really be necessary to divide the pelts in even thirds at the end of the
+season.
+
+"The trader won't give him but about so much for them, anyway, no matter
+how many he offers," he said to Enoch. "You know how it is with them.
+Injins can't count and the traders fool 'em and cheat 'em. We'd better
+take some of his ourselves and so get some good out of them."
+
+"That isn't honest, Lot!" cried Enoch, hotly.
+
+"Huh! it's honest enough. We won't be cheating the Injin, for they'll do
+him no good. And there's no use in the traders makin' so much on him."
+
+"Then we'll go with him and see that the traders treat him honestly,"
+declared young Harding.
+
+"Zuckers!" exclaimed the careless Lot. "Catch me putting myself out that
+way for a redskin."
+
+"You're glad enough to use his traps, Lot!" cried Enoch. And the two old
+friends came very near having a falling out over the matter. Lot simply
+followed the example of the older settlers whom he knew. It was no
+particular sin to cheat an Indian. They were too much like children to
+look out for themselves in a bargain, anyway.
+
+But as week followed week, Crow Wing's manner toward Enoch Harding
+showed that he had adopted him, Indian fashion, as "brother." Not that
+the red youth displayed any affection; that was beneath a brave. But he
+appreciated Enoch's respectful treatment of him. Crow Wing treasured
+this in his mind and, when the spring came, and they packed their bales
+of furs by canoe and hand-sled to Bennington, and Enoch took pains to
+make the traders pay the Indian quite as liberally as they did Lot and
+himself for his furs, his gratitude blossomed in its fulness.
+
+Lot went home to see his mother; but Enoch took Crow Wing to the Harding
+house with him and gave him an old canoe in which the red youth could
+make his way by water and portage to his home on the shores of Lake
+George. Crow Wing did not go near the house when Enoch met his mother
+and the younger Hardings after his long absence; but he sat down to
+dinner with them and if he used his fingers oftener than his hunting
+knife to prepare his food it was not remarked, for forks were not always
+used by the settlers themselves at that day. His gravity awed the
+younger children, while Bryce admired his proportions openly. The Indian
+youth was certainly a magnificently built fellow.
+
+Before he went away he sat beside the creek and silently smoked a
+farewell pipe while his white friend waited for his last words. Enoch
+believed Crow Wing had something to tell him regarding Simon Halpen and
+that the time for speech had come; but knowing his nature the white
+youth had not tried to hurry this confidence.
+
+"Hawknose come here once more--what you do?" Crow Wing asked, when the
+pipe was finished.
+
+"Simon Halpen is my enemy. If you have an enemy what do you do?"
+returned Enoch, with some emotion.
+
+The Indian nodded. "Hawknose, Jonas Harding's enemy. No deer kill Jonas
+Harding. Hawknose yonder then," and he waved his hand toward the
+deer-lick at which the dead settler had been found three years before.
+
+"How does Crow Wing know that?" queried the white boy, eagerly.
+
+"Crow Wing there, too."
+
+"You saw him----" began Enoch, but the Indian cut him short with an
+emphatic "Umph! No see. Hear shot. Shot kill doe. Jonas Harding kill
+doe. Gun empty."
+
+"Yes, we found the gun and the dead doe. And there were marks of a big
+buck all about the place and father--was dead."
+
+"Hawknose there," said the Indian, gravely. "Crow Wing see him--running.
+Pass him--so," with a gesture which led Enoch to believe that the
+running Halpen had crossed the Indian's path within a few feet. "He no
+see Crow Wing. He run fast--look back over shoulder. And blood--blood on
+shirt--blood on hands--blood on gun! Go wash 'em in river. Then run
+more."
+
+"You saw him running away from the lick?" gasped Enoch. "But there were
+no footprints but father's near the place. Only the hoof prints of the
+big buck."
+
+"Umph! Crow Wing no see big deer; no hear 'um. But see Hawknose run,"
+said the Indian significantly.
+
+"But I can't understand how Halpen could have killed him, Crow Wing. He
+did not shoot him, and if he had been near enough to strike father down,
+why did his moccasins leave no mark?"
+
+The Indian rose gravely. "Some time we see. Crow Wing come back here.
+Harding go with him to deer-lick. Look, look--find out, mebbe."
+
+"But after three years how can anything be found?" demanded Enoch, in
+despair.
+
+"Will see," returned Crow Wing, and, without further word, entered the
+canoe and pushed out into the river. Nor did he turn about to look at
+the white youth once while the canoe was in sight. But he left Enoch
+Harding stirred to his depths by the brief and significant conversation.
+The youth did not understand how Simon Halpen could have compassed his
+father's death; yet Crow Wing evidently suspected something which he had
+not seen fit to divulge.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+THE STORM CLOUD GATHERS
+
+
+Enoch scarce knew Bryce after his winter's absence. The younger boy had
+felt the responsibility of his position as head of the family pro tem
+and although he had lost none of his cheeriness and love of action, he
+had gained some cautiousness. His care for little Henry and the girls
+was delightful and Mrs. Harding was undoubtedly proud of him. Although
+kept at home almost continually by his duties, Bryce had been able to
+trap enough beavers to buy the rifle which he had long wanted and on the
+first training day after the roads dried up in the spring, he went with
+Enoch to Bennington and was enrolled in Captain Baker's company.
+
+And during this year of '74 the train bands became of more importance
+than ever before. While in Boston and in other cities of the colonies,
+meetings were held in secret and companies of minute men were drilled by
+stealth, here in the Grants the Whigs trained openly, and the reason for
+it was known, too. The course of the foolish King and his ministers was
+widening the breach between the mother country and the American colonies
+until, when the Continental Congress met on September 5th of this year,
+royal authority was suspended almost everywhere but in the New York
+Colony. Within its confines were the strongest and most influential
+Tories, while the Dutch, who made up a goodly share of the population,
+although becoming good patriots in the end and warmly supporting the
+struggling nation which was born of that Congress, were phlegmatic of
+nature and slow to rouse.
+
+During these months so pregnant with coming trouble, the controversy
+between the land jobbers and the Grants waned but little. The Yorkers
+had received so many sharp lessons, however, that they were careful to
+attack no settlers who were within reach of assistance from any body of
+Green Mountain Boys. And as Allen, Warner, and Cochran had many
+"hide-outs" in the hills, where they kept munitions of war and to which
+they summoned their followers by means which actually seemed to savor of
+the Black Art to their enemies, it was difficult for the Yorkers to know
+where it was really safe to carry on their attacks against the peaceful
+grantees. Being "viewed" became a most serious matter indeed, and many a
+luckless surveyor or other underling of the sheriff of Albany, carried
+the blue-seal of the Green Mountain Boys upon his person for months
+after an unexpected meeting with those rangers of the forest.
+
+But the Yorkers kept away from Benningford and the surrounding district.
+More farms had been taken up there by Hampshire grantees than in other
+parts of the disputed ground and the reign of the Green Mountain Boys
+was supreme. The Hardings had been very happy since the building of the
+new house, and, as there had been a school established in the vicinity,
+the girls and Harry attended for six months in the year. Kate had grown
+to be a tall girl and looked like her mother, while Mary and Harry were
+becoming of considerable use outside of, as well as in, the house.
+
+Enoch and Bryce cleared a piece of woodland that year and late in the
+fall there was another stump-burning. 'Siah Bolderwood came down from
+his "farm" near Old Ti to join in the festivities; but several of the
+young people who had attended the stump-burning three years before were
+not present. Robbie Baker was up north with his father, and Lot
+Breckenridge had moved away from the vicinity of Bennington; Crow Wing
+did not come to try his skill at wrestling with Enoch, so the latter sat
+by with 'Siah as one of the judges, for he was older than the other
+contestants. Lot's mother had married a man named Lewis who owned and
+worked a farm much nearer the Connecticut River, in the town of
+Westminster, and after his return from their winter's trapping the
+spring before, Lot had gone across the mountains to work for his
+stepfather.
+
+Lot had always been his dearest friend and Enoch missed him sorely, and
+as he could not go trapping with him this winter, he agreed to visit
+Westminster for a fortnight or so, some time during the idle months. It
+was March when he started to cross the range and although the roads were
+still full of snow, he went horseback. A sleigh was a luxury that few
+Bennington people owned, although Nuck might have hitched the old
+wood-sled to Dobbin. He spent one night at a farmer's on the road, and
+was welcomed at supper time the next evening at the Lewis house.
+
+"Zuckers!" exclaimed Lot, running out to drag his friend off his horse,
+"I tell ye, I'm glad to see ye! And so'll marm be--if the young uns
+don't bother her too much. There's three Lewis young uns, too, besides
+the baby, and I tell ye, they're a wild lot. I'd rayther tackle them
+wolves that you'n Crow Wing got mixed up with last winter. Seen the
+Injin since?"
+
+"Not since I sent him home with more money than he had ever seen before
+in his life," replied Enoch.
+
+"Very foolish of you! We might have had some of his pelts just as well's
+not."
+
+"You don't mean that, Lot," said Enoch, who knew that young Breckenridge
+talked a deal more recklessly than he really felt.
+
+"Well, never mind all that," said Lot. "Tell me the news. What's goin'
+on 'tother side the mountings? Did ye know that lots more red-coats had
+come to Boston? And they say--leastways, a pedlar that come through here
+told us so last week--that the Boston folks have got a lot of guns and
+ammunition stored in the country towns and the minute men are drilling
+day and night. Do you s'pose there'll be war there, Nuck?"
+
+"If the Massachusetts people feel like we do here in the Grants,
+there'll be fighting," said Enoch, his eyes flashing. "What d'you
+suppose would happen if troops were quartered on us?"
+
+"I'm goin' to Boston if there's a fight," declared his friend. "Mr.
+Lewis says I can. He's a nice man--marm's second husband--and he's
+strong for the Grants, too. He's got a Hampshire title. But there's lots
+of Tories around here. The court's goin' to sit next week an' there'll
+be trouble then, mark my word. Lots of the cases these Tories have
+hatched up against our people are goin' to be tried, an' the Whigs ain't
+goin' to stand it. Judge Chandler ain't so bad a man; but Judge Sabin
+and the others are dead set ag'in all our folks. They say the sheriff
+has sworn in a big lot of deperties. Mebbe you'll see some fun before
+you go back to Bennington, Nuck."
+
+As Lot's idea of "fun" was pretty sure to be a scrimmage of some kind,
+it can be easily seen how strained the relations were then between the
+Whigs and the Tory court of the district. Whereas Tories and Whigs had
+lived at peace before, now they became bitter in controversy and even
+families were divided upon the questions of the hour.
+
+Enoch found Lot's stepfather to be a very quiet, pleasant man, who made
+it a point to be at harmony with all his neighbors, yet whose personal
+feelings and opinions as a Whig were well known. Lot delighted in being
+where the older men of the community discussed the trend of public
+affairs and it was due to him that Enoch, the second night after his
+arrival, gained some little notoriety in Westminster by an encounter he
+had at the Royal Inn, kept by one John Norton.
+
+The tap-room and parlors of the inn were occupied every evening at this
+time by the men of Westminster, and by certain visitors who had, for
+some days, been gathering for the meeting of the General Court. And all
+these visitors were not attorneys, or plaintiffs and defendants in the
+several cases which would come up for hearing before their Worships the
+justices. The sheriff was already at Westminster and there were more
+armed men about the town than had ever been seen there before at one
+time. Until the closing hour earnest discussions were carried on in the
+inn, for although the Royal, or "Norton's house" as it was called, was
+the headquarters of the Tories, many Whigs frequented it, too.
+Naturally, the young men and half-grown boys wished to listen on the
+outskirts of these groups, and Lot Breckenridge was desirous of hearing
+all that went on. Enoch went with him to the inn rather against his
+will. Mistress Harding did not approve of such places for youths and
+Enoch had not grown so old or so big as to wish to disobey his mother,
+or even to believe that she was less able to guide him than she had
+formerly been.
+
+The inn was well filled, indeed, that night and Master Norton was
+bustling about from group to group, dropping a word here and another
+there, determined to keep all his guests pleased as maybe; for despite
+his Tory principles, the innkeeper was first for his own pocket and
+would not antagonize any man knowingly. Mine Host was particularly
+attentive to a party of ten or a dozen gentlemen who, having eaten, now
+sat grouped before one of the fires engaged in earnest, and somewhat
+noisy, conversation. The figure of the sheriff was the centre of this
+group.
+
+Lot and Enoch stood with other young men within ear-shot and heard many
+remarks which plainly showed the affiliation of the sheriff and his
+friends to the Tory cause; and the party had dined so well that they
+were not particularly careful to modulate their voices so that others in
+the vicinity who might be of a different mind, should not overhear them.
+The sheriff was a pompous man who, when he spoke, commanded the
+attention of all about him. The dignity of his office rode him hard and
+his companions deferred to him almost servilely, for at that day such an
+officer was held in great reverence, especially by the King's adherents.
+
+"These malcontents who would question the right of the King to govern
+them, should be punished, every man Jack of them!" the sheriff declared,
+looking about fiercely at his auditors. "I care not who they are, nor
+how high they stand. That Dr. Warren and Mr. Otis of Boston are
+gentlemen of education and position I grant ye; but they should feel the
+heavy hand of the law nevertheless--yes, sir! And some of these fellows
+who have gone to Philadelphia and are making such a rumpus there--they
+should be taught their place!"
+
+"That they should, Master Sheriff!" cried one of his supporters.
+
+"The King's men treated that Otis just right some months back," growled
+another--a man who sat back in the shadow of the high mantel and wore a
+cloak, the high collar of which half muffled his face. At the speech of
+this one Enoch, who had been dragging at the sleeve of his companion to
+get him away, ceased this and pushed forward himself. Something in the
+tone of the last speaker's voice had attracted his attention and he
+strove to see his features.
+
+"They should be whipped--every man Jack of them!" cried the sheriff,
+repeating his favorite expression.
+
+"Better let Ethan Allen and his boys beech-seal them, eh, Sir Sheriff?"
+cried some Whig on the outskirts of the group, and a laugh was raised
+among those of like feeling.
+
+"We shall settle that villain Allen--we shall settle him, sir!" declared
+the sheriff, angrily. "The Honorable Court will punish these fellows who
+retain their lands without proper authority from the King and our
+Governor. There will be an overturn in these Grants ere long--mark my
+word, sir!"
+
+"The dogs should be driven back to Massachusetts and Connecticut--where
+they came from," growled the man with the cloak.
+
+"That's true!" exclaimed several of the group.
+
+"Aye, and the time approaches when it may be done," cried the sheriff.
+
+"But what think you Ethan Allen, Seth Warner, 'Member, and the rest of
+the boys will be doing, Sir Sheriff?" demanded the same Whig who had
+before spoken.
+
+"They'll be clapped into Albany jail--that's what will become of them!"
+declared the sheriff.
+
+"And a right good place for them," said he of the cloak. Enoch was still
+maneuvring to get a sight of this man, but the shadow of the high mantel
+was cast across his face. All the boy could see was the gleam of his
+eyes as he turned with an angry gesture toward the audience. "The
+boldness of these outlaws is astonishing."
+
+"That Allen appears to have many followers," suggested a mild mannered
+man beside the sheriff.
+
+"He is a bully; they fear him!" declared the former speaker, vigorously.
+
+"How is that, John Norton?" cried the Whig, who evidently was a bold man
+to so flout the sheriff and his friends. "You know Colonel Allen
+personally. Should you call him a bully and say that he governs men by
+fear?"
+
+"Not I!" exclaimed the innkeeper. "And saving your presence, sheriff, it
+would be a man of some stomach who would dare say that to Ethan Allen's
+face. As for these same Green Mountain Boys, it is not fear that keeps
+them together."
+
+"I tell you they are a set of masterless villains!" cried the dark man,
+turning angrily about so that at last the collar of his cloak fell back.
+"They should be driven out of the colony and their houses burned to the
+ground----"
+
+Suddenly he stopped. His harsh voice died to a whisper and his
+astonished companions looked at him in amazement. For a moment he seemed
+to have been frozen in his chair, and their eyes following his glance
+fell upon the white and angry face of Enoch Harding who had pushed
+through the ring of listeners. "And it is you who would set the torch to
+their homes!" exclaimed the youth, his voice shaking. "You already have
+one count of the kind against you, and if you ever come to Bennington
+again there'll be more than a beech-sealing awaiting you--you villain!"
+
+Some of the crew sprang up in astonishment, and some in anger. "Who is
+that bold rascal, landlord?" demanded the sheriff. "Bring him here."
+
+But Lot had fairly dragged the angry Enoch to the door and now pushed
+him out of the inn. "What's the matter with you, Nuck?" he demanded.
+"D'you want to get us all into trouble?"
+
+"That's Simon Halpen!" exclaimed Enoch, panting with excitement. "I'd
+have flown at his throat in another moment."
+
+"Zuckers!" exclaimed Lot. "The feller that burned down your marm's
+house? Don't blame ye for bein' mad. But ye don't wanter stir up a fuss
+here. Our game is ter lay low and let the Tories start the row if
+they're minded to. You'll see. Mr. Lewis an' some others is goin' to see
+the judges to-morrow an' try to keep the court from sittin'. They'll
+sure be trouble if the Tories bring our people before the court. We
+can't git no fair trial, so we won't be tried at all."
+
+Enoch was very silent on the way back to Lot's house. The shock of
+seeing Simon Halpen again after all this time, had stirred the youth
+greatly. Despite the fact that the villain was so far away from the
+Walloomscoik, and would probably not dare go near Bennington, Enoch
+could not help feeling troubled by the circumstance of his presence
+within the borders of the Grants. And he was glad that 'Siah Bolderwood
+had promised to remain at or near the Hardings' home while he, Enoch,
+was at Westminster.
+
+Under Lot's advice the two boys said nothing of the little scene at the
+inn and the next morning Mr. Lewis went with other stable men of the
+town to call upon the justices who would preside at the court when it
+met. The feeling between Whigs and Tories was so strong that all
+peace-loving men feared bloodshed. At the first blow a terrible civil
+war might begin--a war in which neighbor would engage with neighbor and
+the community be utterly ruined. And if the court sat and tried the
+cases against those settlers who refused to purchase New York titles to
+their lands, or to leave their homes at the order of the sheriff and his
+deputies, the battle would begin. Nobody could doubt that.
+
+Despite the fact that the offices were held by the Tories, the Whigs
+were greatly in the majority. And this majority declared the will of the
+people should be upheld, and that will was that no court should sit
+until matters quieted down and the heat had gone out of the political
+veins of the community. They presented this matter strongly to the
+judges and warned them of what might be expected if the court undertook
+to sit at Westminster. Although staunch Tories, the judges were
+impressed by what was told them by the committee; Justice Chandler,
+indeed, gave his word that nothing should be done toward convening the
+court until time had been given the people to cool down. It was
+promised, too, that the sheriff and his men should not be given a free
+hand in the town.
+
+With these assurances from Judge Chandler the committee of Whigs
+returned. To make sure that the sheriff, who with his men were spending
+every day and night at the Royal Inn, did not seize the court-house in
+defiance of the people's will, the Whigs sent a guard to that building
+on the evening of the 13th--the day before that set for the convening of
+the court. This guard, however, was armed only with clubs, and was set
+to keep the troublesome factions of both parties in order, and was
+recruited from among the better affected families of the town. Lot
+Breckenridge and Enoch were allowed by Mr. Lewis to join these
+volunteers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+THE WESTMINSTER MASSACRE
+
+
+What March 5, 1770, had been to the people of Boston and the Colony of
+Massachusetts, March 14, 1775, was destined to become to the patriot
+citizens of Vermont. That date reminds them to-day of the first blood
+shed in the great struggle within the borders of the Grants--the first
+pitched battle between American yeomanry and the minions of a cruel and
+tyrannical king. Before the martyrs were shot down at Lexington was the
+Westminster Massacre--an incident which set the torch to the passions of
+the Whigs throughout the Grants.
+
+Despite the efforts of Judge Chandler, who really was honestly bent on
+peace, the associate Judge Sabin and the fire-eating sheriff brought
+about that clash of arms, the stain of which was to be wiped out by
+nearly eight years of bitter war. The Tory officials and their henchmen
+gathered about the court-house when it was known that the Whigs had
+seized it, and threatened an attack early in the evening of the 13th;
+but apparently willing to abide by the decision of the chief justice,
+they dispersed after that worthy had promised the Whigs that nothing
+should be done to oust them from the premises until the following day.
+Chandler doubtless went to his repose, believing that his partisans
+would uphold him in his promise.
+
+But the sheriff had other views. He had gathered a noble army at John
+Norton's inn. There were no Whigs there that night. They sought other
+houses of entertainment, or their own homes, for their leaders had
+counseled moderation. But the wily sheriff finally gave his orders, and
+those orders were inspired by Judge Sabin and other rank Tories.
+Separating as they issued from the inn into three bodies, the sheriff's
+men approached the guarded court-house from as many directions and were
+thundering at the doors before the Whigs were aware that such treachery
+was intended. There was not a fire-arm in the court-house, but when
+called upon to surrender the guard refused and strove to barricade the
+entrance.
+
+Although the young men had expected nothing like this, they had not
+taken their duty lightly. They were of the best Whig families of the
+neighborhood and had not accepted the responsibility as a lark. Enoch
+became acquainted with one of his companions early in the evening who,
+because of his open face, free and gentle manner, and earnest
+conversation impressed the Bennington boy as being a youth of better
+parts than were most of the backwoods people. Lot told his guest that
+this individual was William French, the son of a Mr. Nathaniel French, a
+man well known and respected highly by his neighbors. Like Lot, young
+French was deeply interested in the affairs of the colonies, especially
+in what was occurring in and about Boston. He had planned to go to the
+Massachusetts colony and offer his services to the Committee of Safety
+there if war really became imminent, though he would go, Enoch saw, in a
+much different spirit from Lot's. Lot was eager for a fight for the
+fight's sake; but French realized the root of the trouble and espoused
+the cause of the persecuted colonists from principle.
+
+It was eleven o'clock at night when the sheriff and his men attacked the
+Whig guards, and many of the latter were asleep. The uproar was great as
+the besieged tried to keep the Tories out of the building; but the
+latter were reckless and knew that they had to do with a practically
+helpless enemy. They forced an entrance, though the Whigs rallied well
+and delivered some telling blows with their clubs. These blows doubtless
+had much to do with what followed, for the sheriff's men became greatly
+incensed. All the lights in the house were put out and for several
+moments the antagonists fought in the dark. Enoch was not behind in the
+battle and was one of those in the front rank which strove to beat the
+sheriff's men back to the door. William French fought next him, while he
+could hear his friend Lot shouting encouragement not far away.
+
+The Tories were under a disadvantage in the dark and some of those still
+without ran with torches and thrust them in, that the battleground might
+be illumined. At that the sheriff, spurred by rage and the smart of a
+blow he had received, cried to his men: "Fire! Fire at the rascals who
+defy the law's authority!"
+
+Some of his men took him at his word and putting their pieces to their
+shoulders, they had been using them as clubs, shot blank-point into the
+group of opposing Whigs!
+
+It was a terrible scene that followed. Several men fell about Enoch, and
+groans and cries rose from the wounded. A bullet had sent Enoch's cap
+spinning into the air, but he did not notice that. Young William French
+had fallen beside him and the Bennington boy stooped and caught the
+young man's head and shoulders from the floor that he might not be
+trampled upon.
+
+Shouts and imprecations deafened him. The Whigs still fought, but some
+had already tried to escape by a side passage and were being brought
+back by the sheriff's men. That wicked man was calling upon the Whigs to
+surrender, and more than one shot was fired after that first volley.
+
+Enoch, with the head of the bleeding youth in his arms, cried to those
+about him to move aside and bring a light. All were too much inflamed by
+passion to heed him for a time; but suddenly one man sprang forward and
+thrust a huge, brass-locked pistol into his own face. The boy was
+frightened, and strove to throw himself backward out of range; but the
+pistol snapped!
+
+Providentially the weapon was either unloaded, or the powder was damp.
+Otherwise that moment would have ended Enoch Harding's earthly career.
+And in the flash of torchlight which was an instant later cast upon the
+scene, the startled boy recognized the dark features and hawk nose of
+Simon Halpen. The villain had sought him out and had striven to pay off
+old scores in that moment of confusion and uproar.
+
+But the confusion helped Enoch to escape, too. Lot seized his shoulder
+and dragged him up from his knees. "Let him alone, poor chap!" he
+whispered hoarsely in his friend's ear, and Enoch saw that he was
+crying, "Let him alone. He is dead. Oh, these villains shall be punished
+for this--they shall be punished! War has begun, Nuck--and we have seen
+its beginning!" In his horror and despair Lot Breckenridge was
+prophetic. War had begun; the first blood of the revolution--antedating
+in its sacrifice the Battle of Lexington--had been shed.
+
+Indeed, Lot and Enoch were fortunate to escape from the building, for
+ten of the Whigs had been wounded beside poor French, and seven of the
+remaining were taken prisoner. The town was roused and a great concourse
+of people gathered in the streets. The sheriff and his men were loudly
+execrated, and even some of the Tories expressed their indignation. The
+men who had done the deed were forced to remain under cover for the rest
+of the night while the alarm went into all the countryside and by
+daybreak the patriot farmers were pouring into Westminster--a horde of
+indignant citizens before whom the Tory officials trembled.
+
+The very judges themselves were taken into custody and had not the
+better counsel of the staid and solid men prevailed, the sheriff and
+those who aided him might have been hung to a gibbet erected in the
+court-house yard. On the fifteenth Captain Cochran and forty Green
+Mountain Boys, who had been apprised of the terrible affair, marched
+over the mountain to arraign themselves upon the side of the Whigs if
+the matter should come to real warfare. But fortunately further
+bloodshed was averted, and never again did a Tory judiciary hold court
+in Eastern Vermont.
+
+Enoch went back to Bennington with some of Robert Cochran's company.
+News of the Westminster affair had preceded him and the Catamount Inn
+was thronged with earnest men discussing the matter and various other
+news-packets which had lately come from other colonies. War with the
+mother country seemed inevitable and Ethan Allen and men of his stamp
+looked forward to it not without some eagerness. It was not that they
+were reckless and irresponsible, or did not understand the terrible
+situation in which the colonies might find themselves should the mother
+country send across the sea a great army. But in the coming struggle
+they beheld the salvation of their own people and of the Hampshire
+Grants.
+
+Therefore, perhaps even previous to this time, immediately following the
+Westminster Massacre, these leaders had earnestly discussed the
+possibilities of war and what the Green Mountain Boys could do to
+further the cause of the colonies. On the shores of the beautiful lake
+which was the colonists' boast, were two of the strongest fortresses--or
+two which had been and could be made again the strongest--of the New
+World, Ticonderoga and Crown Point. At Old Ti were many stores and
+munitions of war and the place was held by a comparatively small guard
+of red-coats who had a great contempt for, and therefore small
+appreciation of, the valor of the colonials.
+
+With these circumstances in mind Old Ti was already an object of the
+conferences of Vermont's leading men. Possessing that fortress, Crown
+Point, and Skenesboro, the lake would be free of British and the way to
+Canada open; and at that early date it was strongly believed by the
+patriots that the French descendants of the early settlers of Canada
+would join the Colonies in their fight for freedom.
+
+Young Enoch Harding did not see the leaders as he passed through
+Bennington; but he was waylaid there a dozen times, and upon his road
+home, to satisfy the curiosity and interest of his neighbors in the
+Westminster trouble. Letters from Boston had roused them to the highest
+pitch, too. Nor were his mother and Bryce any less anxious to hear and
+discuss the news. Mistress Harding had lived within a few miles of
+Boston and felt a deep interest still in the people and the affairs of
+the Massachusetts Colony. That a foreign soldiery should have been
+landed on her shores fired even this good and gentle woman with anger,
+and when Bryce said he'd go to Boston, too, along with Lot Breckenridge,
+if there was war, she did not say him nay.
+
+But the Hardings had little time to waste upon politics. The boys had to
+drop the drilling soon, too, for it came ploughing and seed time. 'Siah
+Bolderwood remained about the settlement rather later than usual that
+year; and mainly for the reason that public affairs were so strained. He
+said his own crop of corn which he intended putting into the lot near
+Old Ti upon which he "had let the light of day" could wait a bit, under
+the circumstances, for there might be occasion to "beat his ploughshare
+into a sword" before corn-planting time.
+
+Therefore he was still with the Hardings that day late in April when
+Ethan Allen, riding out of Bennington into the north to carry a torch
+which should fire every farm and hamlet with patriotic fervor, reined in
+his steed at the door of the farmhouse. The children saw the great man
+coming and ran from the fields with Bolderwood, while the widow appeared
+at her door and welcomed Colonel Allen.
+
+"Will you 'light, sir?" she asked him. "It has been long since you
+favored us with a visit."
+
+"And long will it be ere I come again, perhaps, Mistress Harding. I am
+like Sampson--I have taken an oath. And mine is not to rest, nor to give
+this critter rest, until I have spoken to as many true men in these
+Grants as may be seen in a week. The time has come to act!"
+
+"Reckon I'd better be joggin' erlong toward Old Ti, heh, Colonel?"
+remarked the ranger, leaning an elbow on the pommel of the saddle.
+
+"You had, 'Siah, you had. We can depend upon you, and those red-coated
+rascals there must be kept unsuspicious and their fears--if they have
+any--lulled to sleep. I have one man already who proposes to put his
+head in the Lion's mouth and return--providing the jaws do not close on
+him--to tell us in what state the old pile of stone is kept."
+
+"But what has started you out so suddenly, Colonel Allen?" demanded the
+widow.
+
+"What! have ye not heard? There was a packet came from Boston
+yesterday."
+
+"We have seen nobody this week," declared Enoch.
+
+"There has been blood shed, friends," said the giant, earnestly, his
+eyes flashing and the color in his cheek deepening. "American freemen
+have been shot down like sheep in the slaughter!"
+
+"Where? Who were killed? What was the cause? Who did it?" were some of
+the queries hurled at their informant by the little group.
+
+"Fifty men, they say, were murdered. At Lexington, in Massachusetts.
+There were munitions stored there belonging to the militia. The British
+got word of it and marched from Boston to destroy the goods. They fired
+on our people at the bridge and when the poor fellows broke and ran they
+followed and potted them like rabbits! War has begun, friends. Nothing
+under the blue canopy can stop it now. American blood has been shed and
+I tell you it is but the beginning of the flood which must pour from our
+veins until these colonies are free!"
+
+"Oh, Colonel! you do not believe that?" cried the widow. "Surely this
+trouble can be averted. Calmer and more honest men will gain control and
+prevail. War is an awful thing."
+
+"True, Widow Harding. And well may you say it who have two sons to give
+for freedom. But mark my words, madam! Those two boys of yours will be
+needed, and if the Almighty spares them they will be some years older
+before either side in this controversy gives in.... Now friends, I must
+away. You know what is expected of you, 'Siah. Young Nuck, you'll be
+wanted at Bennington to-morrow."
+
+"Oh, shall our people really attack Ticonderoga?" cried Kate. "The
+schoolmaster says that is the strongest fortress in the Colonies."
+
+"Your schoolmaster is a bit of a Tory, I fear, miss," said Allen,
+smiling down upon her. "We shall have to 'view' him if he tells such
+tales in school," and waving his gauntleted hand he rode swiftly away
+from the homestead.
+
+"I am off at once, folks," said 'Siah, beginning to make his pack for
+the journey. "I'll see you up near Old Ti, Nuck, for the Colonel means
+business sure! We may have some such doin's up there as your father and
+I had under Rogers and Old Put years ago."
+
+He went away shortly and there was little the Hardings could do that day
+but talk over the wonderful news and let their fancy run upon the
+future. The widow saw that coming which she had feared for months, but
+she was cheerful. Nuck must go on this expedition to Lake Champlain, and
+she said it with unshaken voice. Bryce was to remain to guard the home,
+for there was no knowing what the result of the attack on Old Ti might
+be.
+
+The alarming intelligence brought by Colonel Allen had its effect upon
+the younger members of the family as well as on the older, for late in
+the afternoon Harry came running to his mother with the information that
+there was a man lurking in the forest across the creek. The child had
+seen the stranger twice and being fearful that the man was there for no
+good purpose was much troubled. The older boys were in the field at
+work, but when the widow blew the horn Enoch came up to learn the cause,
+for it was not yet supper time. Hearing Harry's report he seized his
+rifle and went to the creek bank, approaching the spot very carefully,
+for he feared at once that their enemy, Simon Halpen, might have dared
+follow him from Westminster.
+
+He had scarcely reached the creek, however, when he was apprised of the
+identity of the visitor. A head, in the black locks of which a tuft of
+eagle feathers was fastened, appeared above the bushes, and the next
+moment the person thus betrayed came out into full view and beckoned
+him. It was Crow Wing who had approached the Harding place through the
+forest. Enoch leaped into his own boat and paddled across, remembering
+the Indian's promise the year before to visit him at some time for the
+purpose of examining the vicinity of the spot where Jonas Harding had
+been slain.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE CLOVEN HOOF
+
+
+The grave face of the young Indian brave was undisturbed by a smile as
+he greeted the white youth whom he had not seen for more than a year.
+But he shook Enoch's hand with an emphatic "Umph!" when the latter
+sprang ashore.
+
+"Crow Wing!" exclaimed young Harding. "I thought you had forgotten us in
+these parts. You've been away a long time."
+
+"Umph! Injin no forget friends," remarked Crow Wing, sententiously.
+
+"And you've come here to see me--'way from Lake George?"
+
+"Umph!" was again the non-committal answer. "Harding and Crow Wing go
+hunt,--shoot deer? Crow Wing need new moccasins," and he thrust forward
+one foot on which was a ragged covering. But Nuck knew well enough the
+Indian had not traveled through the wilderness from Lake George merely
+for the pleasure of going on a deer hunt with him. But he said,
+doubtfully: "We're pretty busy just now, Crow Wing. Can't go far with
+you."
+
+"Not go far. Plenty deer yonder," and he pointed in the direction of the
+lick where Jonas Harding had been killed. Nuck understood. "I'll go with
+you. Will you come across and eat supper with us?"
+
+But the Indian shook his head vigorously. "Will eat yonder. Have meat.
+Harding get rifle and blanket. Will make fire."
+
+He turned about instantly and plunged into the forest. Enoch was
+astonished by his manner and words, familiar as he was with the
+peculiarities of the red race. Crow Wing had never refused to eat with
+them before; he had always seemed to enjoy the "white squaw's" cooking.
+But Enoch had no fear that his one-time enemy was playing him a trick.
+He paddled across the creek for his blanket, told his mother that he was
+going on a torchlight hunt, with whom he was going, and without further
+explanation returned to follow his red friend. He had noted the
+direction the young brave had taken. The way led directly to that little
+glade where, nearly four years before, he had spied upon Simon Halpen,
+the Yorker, and Crow Wing had driven him so ignominiously home. There
+was a fire here now, but the Indian was alone.
+
+An appetizing odor of broiling flesh greeted the white youth, for it was
+already growing dark in the forest and Crow Wing was preparing supper.
+Enoch did not open the conversation, but busied himself with making a
+couple of bark platters out of which they might eat the meat when it was
+cooked. He was anxious enough to broach the subject uppermost in his
+mind; but he knew Crow Wing better than to do that. Anxiety, or
+curiosity, were emotions which only squaws gave way to, and Enoch would
+not exhibit his feelings and so disgust his red brother.
+
+Crow Wing was evidently a man of importance in his tribe now, and his
+gravity was far beyond his years. While they ate Enoch asked a question
+or two about his people, and if the decimated tribe, which had never
+recovered numerically from a scourge of smallpox, still resided near
+Lake George. He learned then that the Indians had struck their lodges
+and were journeying toward the northern wilderness. The old chief, Crow
+Wing's father, was dead, and the youth himself aspired to be the leader
+of his people. From a word or two he let drop and from his manner of
+speaking, Enoch judged that the older men of the tribe had some doubt of
+Crow Wing's ability to govern the braves; but evidently the youth had
+strong hopes of gaining their confidence--and that by some act in the
+near future. What his plan for advancement was, Enoch could not get his
+friend to tell.
+
+"Why do your people leave the shores of the pleasant water?" asked the
+white boy.
+
+"Injin not 'lone there now. Red-coat come; then white farmer. Push,
+push; crowd, crowd; no game. Injin starve."
+
+"And where are you going?"
+
+"To the hunting grounds of the Hurons."
+
+"But then there will be war between your people and the Hurons."
+
+"No; no war. Hurons be squaws--children; Iroquois master 'em. Then,
+war-hatchet buried between Hurons and Six Nations. Buried when French
+and Yenghese bury hatchet--long time 'go."
+
+Enoch, with more than curiosity, yet speaking in a careless manner,
+continued his questioning: "What would the people of Crow Wing do if
+there was another war?"
+
+The Indian flashed a sudden sharp glance at him. "How could be?" he
+asked, craftily. "Yenghese got many red-coats--much gun. French no fight
+more."
+
+"Suppose we should fight the red-coats?"
+
+"Umph! Me hear Long-guns" (the Virginians) "talk fight to Six Nations.
+No. Yenghese send too many big chiefs over water."
+
+"Those big chiefs aren't always good," returned Enoch, quickly. "Your
+people remember General Abercrombie. He did not know how to fight in
+these forests. And there was Braddock; he was no good at all. He
+wouldn't have been beaten if he'd taken Colonel Washington's advice. I'd
+give a lot more when it comes to a fight for our Major Putnam, Mr.
+Washington, and Ethan Allen."
+
+The Indian's face was gloomy. He had finished eating now and leaned back
+against a tree while he puffed the tobacco in the little copper pipe
+which was his constant companion. Not until the pipe was smoked out did
+he speak. "Harding my friend," he finally said, in his grave tone,
+repeating a formula which he had used so many times since the night Nuck
+had saved him from the wolves. "Harding my friend. Crow Wing know what
+is in his mind. He thinks to fight the red-coats--to take their great
+stockades; he is not afraid of their many guns. But he is foolish; he is
+as a child; he does not understand. Let him open his ears and listen to
+his friend."
+
+The young chief had assumed that oracular tone and manner so dear to the
+red man in his counsels. His earnestness, however, impressed Enoch. "The
+white youth and his friends are angry with the great King across the
+water; they would kill his red-coats. But the red-coats are like leaves
+when the frost comes; they fall to the ground and so cover the earth;
+and it is thus with the red-coats for numbers. And the Six Nations will
+be with the red-coats; Crow Wing's people will be with them. If there is
+war we will take many scalps; we will come here," with a gesture,
+sweeping in the Bennington country, "and then Crow Wing and Harding not
+be friends. So Crow Wing come now to say to Harding, 'Good-bye.'"
+
+"But why do not the Indians help us instead of the red-coats?" demanded
+Enoch, striving to speak calmly.
+
+"The great King give us blankets; he give us powder for scalp; he give
+us gun. The red-coats let Injin fight his own way. And Crow Wing be
+great war chief!" he exclaimed, with some emphasis. It was plain that he
+expected to make his position with his tribe secure by his valor in
+battle, should the settlers and the British come to a rupture. He
+refrained from speaking longer, however, rising soon and covering the
+fire which he had kindled. Then, seizing a bundle of torches and his
+rifle, he motioned Enoch to follow and they set off through the forest
+toward the deer-lick.
+
+Although he felt the utmost confidence in the fact that Crow Wing had
+not come clear from Lake George simply to give him this warning and to
+bid him good-bye, Enoch still remained silent upon that subject which
+the Indian's appearance had brought so forcibly to his mind. Through the
+darkened forest, in which the owls now hooted mournfully, the white
+youth followed the red without a word; every step was taking them nearer
+to that place where his father had been found dead so long ago. Crow
+Wing had spoken with some confidence the year before of being able to
+find, even at this late day, some sign which should disprove the
+generally accepted belief in the manner of Jonas Harding's death.
+
+The brave soon reached the deeply worn runway which Enoch, on the
+morning he was introduced to the reader, followed to the creek, and soon
+the two came upon the little glade where the saline deposits in the
+earth had attracted the deer and other animals since such creatures
+inhabited the forest. Dark as it was Enoch could even distinguish the
+very tree out of which the catamount had sprung at him, and the murmur
+of the hurrying waters down the rocky bed reached his ear. Here 'Siah
+Bolderwood and the other neighbors had found the dead body of the elder
+Harding, apparently trampled and gored to death by the huge buck whose
+hoofprints marked the ground all about. Enoch had seldom passed the spot
+without a shudder--especially since he had so nearly lost his own life
+there.
+
+Still the Indian made no comment, nor mentioned the real reason for
+which they had come to the lick. He wet his finger and held it up so as
+to get the direction of the wind. Then circling the lick and getting
+between it and the creek-bank, he flung down the bundle of torches and
+motioned Enoch back into the deeper shadow. With his own flint and
+steel, and using a bit of tinder from the leather pouch he carried, he
+lit one of the resinous torches. This he stood upright some little
+distance away, yet not too near the piece of ground where the creatures
+of the forest were accustomed to obtain their salt. Then, crouching
+beside his white friend, the Indian remained motionless and speechless
+for the next three hours. Once Enoch crept out and renewed the torch
+which had burned low; then he returned to Crow Wing's side.
+
+All the sounds of the forest at night are not to be distinguished with
+ease. Even Enoch, bred in the wilderness and possessing much knowledge
+of wood-ranging, heard only the coarser sounds. Therefore he lay half
+dreaming for some moments after the Indian raised his head and lent an
+attentive ear to some noise which came from far away. The night-owl's
+hoot was intermittent; a lone wolf howled mournfully on the hillside; in
+the swamp a catamount screamed as it pounced upon its prey. But it was
+none of these sounds which had attracted the Indian's attention. Enoch
+suddenly roused to see Crow Wing softly reach for his gun and bring the
+weapon slowly to his shoulder.
+
+The white youth already had his own weapon in hand. He tried to pierce
+the darkness beyond the flickering torch with his eyes, seeing naught at
+first but shapeless shadows. At length, however, the sound that had
+warned Crow Wing of the approach of their game, was audible to Enoch's
+much less acute ear. It was that of a steady grinding of a ruminant
+animal feeding. The creature was coming slowly nearer and soon the
+hunters could plainly hear it cropping the leaves and twigs along the
+path; then, having gained a choice mouthful, the grinding of the molars
+recommenced.
+
+Suddenly the thick brush across the glade parted and the animal halted
+with a surprised snuff--one might almost say gasp of astonishment. The
+crash in the bushes betrayed that the creature had flung itself half
+around in its contemplated flight; then it hesitated; the flaming torch
+spurred its curiosity and, there being no movement in the glade, except
+of the shadows caused by the dancing flame from the fragrant pine, the
+startled creature was tempted.
+
+And being tempted to the point of hesitation, it was lost! Slowly,
+blowing as it came yet drawing nearer and nearer to the light, the beast
+moved out of the brush into the open. Suddenly Enoch saw it--the
+branching antlers, the fawn-colored breast, the pointed, outstretched,
+eager muzzle, the great eyes in which the torch reflected a glint of
+fire. It was a magnificent buck, the largest specimen of the deer tribe
+the youth had ever seen. Suddenly Crow Wing jogged his elbow. A glance
+passed between them. Each understood the other's intention. The Indian
+fired, his ball entering just above the buck's breast and ploughing
+slantingly upward through the throat. With a snort of terror the buck
+swerved to one side and might have gotten away had not Enoch's shot
+found a more vulnerable spot behind the foreleg. The heart of the great
+deer was punctured, and it fell in the agony of death.
+
+"Umph! Now Crow Wing have new moccasins," the Indian grunted, without
+emotion. But Enoch went forward, lighting a second torch the better to
+view the great buck. It was still now and outstretched on the earth
+looked even larger than when in life. The thought flashed through his
+mind: "Ah! perhaps this was the very brute--this enormous fellow with
+his hoofs bigger than those of a steer and his terrible horns--that
+killed my father here. Could it be possible?"
+
+Looking upon this huge buck, noting its power and its fierce aspect,
+though the brute's eye was glazed by death, he wondered if, by any
+chance, he had been accusing an innocent person? This brute would have
+been perfectly able to kill a man. Naught but the hoof-marks of the deer
+were found about the body of his father. How, then, could Simon Halpen
+be in any wise guilty of his enemy's death?
+
+But Crow Wing brought the white youth to a realization of present
+things. The Indian knew that their hunting was over for that night. No
+other deer would approach the lick, for the smell of the blood from the
+slain buck would warn its mates away. Only the creatures of prey would
+be attracted now. So he was down on his knees and had already begun to
+flay the dead carcass, and Enoch, seeing this, began to help him. It was
+near midnight, and when the hide was off, the tongue and the most tasty
+parts removed, Crow Wing built another fire, wrapped his blanket about
+him, and lay down to sleep.
+
+But Enoch could not sleep. He had cut off and hung up near the camp a
+haunch of the venison to take back with him in the morning. They had
+removed so far from the lick that certain preying beasts dared quarrel
+over the remains of the noble buck until daylight; but the youth sat
+with his back against a tree and his rifle across his knees until the
+dimpling water of the creek was kissed by the first beams of the sun
+which shot over the distant range of hills. His thoughts were sufficient
+to keep him wide awake.
+
+Enoch was not the first to stir; but Crow Wing, possessing the hunter's
+faculty of awaking at any desired hour, sat up and threw back his
+blanket. "My brother did not sleep," he said, looking upon the white
+youth with gloomy brow.
+
+"No; I couldn't do that, Crow Wing," Enoch returned, sadly.
+
+The Indian got upon his feet, threw wood upon the fire, and prepared to
+cook the deer meat he had reserved. They ate in silence as they had the
+night before. Never had young Harding seen the redskin act so strangely,
+for during the winter Crow Wing had spent with Enoch and Lot on the
+Otter, he had by no means been silent or morose. The white youth could
+not fail to see that something--something beside what troubled
+Enoch--bore heavily upon Crow Wing's mind.
+
+After eating the Indian scattered and covered the embers of the fire and
+prepared to leave the spot. He went toward the lick where the deer had
+been torn to pieces by the prowling animals Enoch had heard. At the edge
+of the clearing he halted and attracted his companion's attention by a
+commanding gesture. "Harding's father found here by the tall white man,"
+he said, simply.
+
+"Yes. 'Siah Bolderwood found him," Enoch sadly admitted.
+
+"Then we look--see how Hawknose kill him."
+
+"But Crow Wing, it was four years ago----"
+
+The Indian stopped him with a gesture of disdain. "Does my brother think
+we look for trail? No, no! The white man not find trail?"
+
+"Of course not. There were only marks of the buck's hoofs."
+
+Crow Wing pointed to the spoor of the dead buck made the night before.
+"Trail big as that?" he asked.
+
+"Yes. It might have been this buck."
+
+"No buck," declared the other, emphatically and then began to move about
+the open glade, examining each tree trunk as he went. Enoch did not
+understand his actions but he followed him. The Indian gazed upon each
+tree scrutinizingly, and no knothole in the rough boles escaped his
+attention.
+
+When the tree proved to be hollow at its base the searcher experimented
+with his gun barrel, poking it into the farther extremity of the cavity
+and rattling out the decayed wood and the debris of squirrel nests and
+owl lairs. In several cases these creatures themselves were disturbed,
+the lively squirrels to run chattering up the higher branches, the owls
+lumbering away into the forest, bumping against the trees in their
+blindness, and hooting mournfully at the disturbers of their peace. All
+this time Crow Wing continued with an unmoved face. Not an interstice in
+the roots of the trees escaped his eye and to Enoch, who could not
+imagine what he was looking for, his actions seemed without reason. But
+he knew better than to ask him the nature of his search.
+
+For two hours Crow Wing circled about the little glade. There was not a
+tree which escaped him, nor did any hollow go unexamined which was
+within reach of the tallest man. Crow Wing's face betrayed neither hope
+nor disappointment and therefore his companion could not tell how
+important this search was. The patience displayed by the Indian was all
+that suggested the object of his examination to be of any moment.
+
+At length, in poking the barrel of his gun into the hollow at the base
+of a big tree Crow Wing disturbed some object which fell out upon the
+ground. Enoch, who looked over his shoulder could not at first imagine
+what it was. He saw several rotting straps attached to the thing,
+however, and as his companion with a grunt of evident satisfaction,
+began poking into the hollow still further, the white boy picked the
+object up and knocked the dirt and decayed wood off it. It was so
+strange an object that at first Enoch saw no connection between it and
+the matter which he and Crow Wing had discussed--Jonas Harding's death.
+
+It was the dry and broken hoof of some ruminant animal--an ox, perhaps,
+for it was too large for any deer that Enoch had ever seen. It was even
+larger than the hoof of the buck he and Crow Wing had recently shot. And
+when the boy thought of that he was reminded of the hoof prints which
+had been found all about the lick when his father's body was discovered
+lying there. He uttered a stifled exclamation and drawing up one foot
+fitted the cloven hoof against the sole of his moccasin. The rotten
+straps or thongs would once have bound the thing to a man's foot. He
+might have stood upon it--walked upon it, indeed; and the impression
+left by this cloven hoof would naturally lead one to suppose that a big
+deer had been that way!
+
+Enoch turned with sweating brow and shaking hands toward the Indian.
+Crow Wing stood upright again and now held a second hoof, likewise
+supplied with thongs, in his hand. They looked at each other.
+
+"Umph!" grunted Crow Wing. "Now Harding know? See moose hoofs. Crow Wing
+know where moose killed--see moose killed. Hawknose kill much that
+winter; Hawknose hunt with Injins up north; then come back to crick.
+Harding 'member what Crow Wing tell him when trapping on Otter Crick?
+See Hawknose running; blood on clothes; blood on hands and on gun. Now
+Harding know how father be killed."
+
+Enoch's eyes blazed with wrath. "I know, Crow Wing. I believe what you
+tell me. I see no other explanation of the affair. Give me those hoofs,
+Crow Wing."
+
+"Harding keep them till he punish Hawknose?" queried the Indian.
+
+"Yes."
+
+The young brave pulled his belt tighter and prepared to depart.
+"Hawknose never Crow Wing's brother," he said. "Harding been brother.
+But now the hatchet will be dug up. The Long-guns cannot get the Six
+Nations to fight the red-coats. And the friends of my white brother will
+be beaten. They will become the squaws of the red-coats and of the great
+King across the sea. So my people will go north and join the red-coats."
+He shook Enoch's hand gravely. "Crow Wing and Harding been brothers; but
+when they meet again be enemies. Umph?"
+
+"I hope we'll never meet again, then, Crow Wing," declared the white
+youth. "I hope there will be no war. More than that, I hope your people
+will not join the British if there is war."
+
+But without further speech, or a glance behind him, the Indian brave
+strode away into the forest and was quickly lost to view.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+"THE CROSS OF FIRE"
+
+
+Having at length been assured beyond peradventure that his suspicions
+were true, a desire for vengeance upon Simon Halpen sprang to life in
+Enoch's heart. He forgot the momentous matter which had filled his mind
+before the appearance of Crow Wing the evening before. He thought only
+of his father's murderer, the man who had tried to injure them all, even
+to the point of destroying their home and attempting to shoot himself.
+
+As he tramped back to the house with the haunch of venison on his
+shoulder, he determined to tell nobody there of the finding of the moose
+hoofs which explained the mystery of his father's death. The hoofs he
+saved to show Bolderwood, and for evidence against Simon Halpen if the
+opportunity ever arose to punish that villain. It was easy to see with
+this evidence before him, how the awful deed had been accomplished. With
+the moose hoofs strapped upon his feet the Yorker had crept through the
+forest on the trail of the unconscious Jonas Harding; had seen him shoot
+the doe; and then falling upon him suddenly had beaten him to the earth
+with his clubbed rifle and had bruised and mangled him so terribly that
+the neighbors, at first glance, pronounced the poor man killed by a mad
+buck. Hurrying from the vicinity, dress and hands covered with blood as
+Crow Wing had seen him, Halpen had hidden the deer hoofs in the hollow
+of the tree, and escaped to Albany, his vengeance accomplished.
+
+"But he shall suffer for this yet," thought the youth, with compressed
+lips. "God will punish him if the courts do not. And sometime he may be
+delivered into my hand, and if he is----"
+
+The implied threat frightened him, and he did not follow it even in his
+thoughts, but by again turning his attention to the matter which Ethan
+Allen's visit the day before had suggested, he strove to bring his mind
+into better tone before meeting his mother. He feared that the
+expression on his features would betray something of his horror and
+determination to her sharp eyes. When he reached home, however, he found
+the family so greatly excited that nobody thought to either ask
+questions or to notice his behavior. A drill had been called at
+Bennington and Enoch was forced to saddle the horse and hurry away at
+once. Under the present conditions it was thought best for Bryce to
+remain at home, for if the Green Mountain Boys marched upon Ticonderoga
+the younger Harding could not be spared to accompany the expedition.
+
+The Council was in session and the leaders of the Green Mountain Boys
+remained in Bennington for more than a week. Couriers had arrived from
+the south and east and it was known that the British were rapidly being
+shut up in Boston. The Massachusetts Colony was afire with wrath because
+of the Lexington massacre. The Grants people were quite as rebellious
+against the King's authority, with the sad affair at Westminster fresh
+in their minds. The proposal to capture the British strongholds on the
+lake met with favor everywhere. Small bodies of armed men began to come
+in and a camp was planned at Castleton. It was said that a large body of
+troops was to march from Western Massachusetts and Connecticut to aid
+the expedition. When Ethan Allen returned and heard of these
+reinforcements he immediately desired to bring in more of his own people
+for the work proposed.
+
+"This is our work," he declared. "We have planned to lead this campaign
+and lead it we shall. We must show the southerners that we are one in
+heart and intention and therefore every able-bodied man in the Grants
+must come in. It isn't enough for us to have some men; we must have the
+most men and thereby control the expedition. We want the honor of it!"
+
+"You must lead us, Colonel!" exclaimed Warner, who, although he had no
+such following as did Allen, was sure of a goodly company of determined
+men to join the expedition. "We'll follow you into Old Ti or anywhere
+else; but no stranger must command."
+
+"Then I must have more men to my following than anybody else," declared
+Allen, vigorously. "I have seen a great many myself, but there are
+districts I haven't been able to reach."
+
+"We must send out a cross of fire to rouse the clans," Captain Warner
+said, with a smile. "But who shall go? Bolderwood?"
+
+"'Siah has reached his own land--where he's let the light in upon some
+acres, I understand--near Old Ti. And he's got his work cut out for him
+there. No; I have the chap in mind to send up along the Otter. There's
+only one thing I fear. I understand that a plaguey Yorker has been seen
+about Manchester for a week past. Just what he's so attentive to certain
+people for at this time bothers me, Seth."
+
+"But if he's only a surveyor, or speculator----"
+
+"A Yorker means a King's man these times," exclaimed Allen. "I got a
+sight of him--a lean, hook-nosed fellow with a face puckered like a
+walnut; but we didn't pass the time o' day. I think he's spying on us."
+
+"If he is----" began Warner, wrathfully.
+
+"I'm sorry for him, that's all," declared the Green Mountain leader. "If
+I catch him and it's proven against him, I'll hang him to the highest
+limb in this neck of woods."
+
+"But the person you will send out with the warning, Colonel?" cried
+Warner. "Whom have you in your mind?"
+
+"I see him coming now," declared the leader, laughing. "I sent word to
+him last evening. He should have been to Castleton ere this; but the
+widow----"
+
+"It's young Harding!" cried Captain Warner. "I recognize him. And,
+Colonel, from what I have seen of the young man, he'll bear out your
+confidence in him."
+
+Enoch had approached near enough to hear this last and he flushed
+deeply. "I was told you wanted to see me, Colonel Allen," he said,
+saluting awkwardly.
+
+"I do indeed," said Allen. "You're ready for campaigning, I see. Leave
+your traps--even to your blanket and gun--with Master Fay here. You'll
+want to travel light where I send you," and he proceeded to explain the
+mission he wished the youth to perform.
+
+"I am ready, Colonel," declared Enoch, throwing off his knapsack.
+
+"Good! Away with you at once. Use yonder horse till you get to
+Manchester. Beyond that there will scarcely be bridle paths, so a horse
+will be in your way. Take the word around that the time has come to
+strike. And have them rendezvous at Castleton. Be off, my boy, and may
+success go with you!"
+
+The horse in question was a fine steed that Allen had ridden into town
+that very morning. The youth sprang into the saddle and, understanding
+that haste and cautiousness were the two things most desired of him,
+trotted the animal easily out of the town and then put the spurs to him
+along the road to Manchester. He spared neither the horse nor himself
+until he reached the latter place and had left the steed in the keeping
+of a loyal man to be returned at the first opportunity to Colonel Allen.
+Of course, all the men in this section of the Grants had been warned of
+the proposed expedition against the fortresses on Champlain; it was
+those who dwelt deeper in the wilderness to whom young Enoch Harding had
+been sent.
+
+He knew what was expected of him. And he knew, too, how most of the
+Grants people would receive the news. Colonel Allen was beloved by them
+as were few leaders. This Connecticut giant who had given up his desire
+for a college education and a life among books because duty called him
+to the work of supporting his family, who had been by turn a farmer, an
+iron forger, had tried mining and other toilsome industries, but who
+nearly always worked with a book in his hand or beside him where he
+could read and study--this man with his free, jovial air and utterly
+reckless courage, was become as one of the heroes of old to the people
+of Vermont. The men on his side of the controversy in which Allen had
+taken such a deep interest, loved him devotedly; those who espoused the
+New York cause hated him quite as dearly, for they feared him.
+
+So when Enoch set out from Manchester to go from farmstead to farmstead
+and from clearing to clearing, he was not in much doubt as to whom he
+should send to Castleton and whom he should pass by without speaking to
+regarding the proposed expedition. There would be no doubtful settlers.
+The line between Tories and Whigs was drawn too sharply; and every Whig
+stood by Ethan Allen.
+
+Enoch had learned something of the paths and runways of this part of the
+Grants. It had been near here that Lot Breckenridge and himself, with
+Crow Wing, had spent a winter trapping. Lot had now gone, so he had
+heard, to Boston as he said he should if fighting began. He had gone to
+help Israel Putnam and the other New England leaders pen the British
+into the city and aid in that series of maneuvres which finally drove
+the red-coats into their ships. As for himself, Enoch was only eager to
+be one of those who should storm the walls of Ticonderoga, and glad as
+he was to have been singled out for this present duty, he was determined
+to husband his strength so as to get back to Castleton before the army
+gathering there should move against the British fortifications.
+
+He walked rapidly; more often he ran. In the pouch at his belt he
+carried parched corn, like an Indian on the warpath. Occasionally at a
+clearing, where some hardy borderer was scratching a living from the
+half-cleared soil, he would stop long enough to eat. But usually he
+halted only to give the good man of the house the message from Ethan
+Allen and, as he passed on and entered the forest on the further side he
+looked back to see the settler, his gun on his shoulder, bidding his
+family good-bye preparatory to setting out for the rendezvous appointed
+for the American troops.
+
+But nature revolts when a certain point of exhaustion is reached.
+Refusing to remain the night at one kindly settler's home, Enoch finally
+found himself in the forest a goodly distance from any other house. The
+path could be followed quite easily, the woods being open; but he was
+footsore and thoroughly wearied. He shrank from lying down beside the
+trail, however, for more reasons than one. On several occasions that
+afternoon he had heard of the presence of another traveler in the
+vicinity, and the identity of this man he could not learn. The settlers
+who had mentioned him, however, declared they believed him to be a New
+York agent, or a spy from the British across the lake, who was going
+through the region to discover just how the people felt regarding the
+rising trouble between the Colonials and the mother country. Such, at
+least, had been the trend of his conversation with the loyal Americans
+to whom he had been unwise enough to speak.
+
+The appearance of the man, too, rather troubled Enoch. He was said to be
+tall and lean, with a very black face, a huge nose and fiery eyes. The
+youth remembered how Simon Halpen looked a few weeks before when he saw
+him at Westminster, and this pretty well described the scoundrel. Halpen
+was in the Grants--or had been recently. Perhaps he had dared come
+across the mountains toward the lake on some errand for the Tory party,
+and the thought that the man who had murdered his father and who had
+tried to take his own life, might be within rifle shot, troubled the
+youth exceedingly. He could not drive away this thought and when finally
+he was forced to stop for rest he trembled to think that perhaps the
+light of his campfire would attract an enemy more to be feared than
+either the wolves or catamounts.
+
+But he built his fire, broiled a piece of meat which the last settler he
+spoke to had given him, ate his supper, and then prepared to sleep for a
+few hours. The moon would rise late, and he desired to set forward on
+his journey again as soon as it was light enough in the forest. Just at
+present the darkness shrouded all objects. But when he lay down with his
+feet toward the blaze and his head upon a heap of moss for a pillow, he
+could not sleep, tired though he was. His nerves were all alive. His
+limbs twitched so that he could not keep them still. Every sound of the
+forest smote upon his ear with insistence. Although his muscles were
+wearied his eyes would not close.
+
+Who was the Yorker that had crossed his path so many times during the
+past few hours? What did he desire here in the Otter country? Was he a
+spy for the British? or was he upon his own business? And, above all,
+was he, Nuck Harding, in danger? The stranger might be roaming the
+forest even then, hunting for the messenger of the Green Mountain
+chieftain. He had likely heard that Nuck was going from farmer to
+farmer, as Nuck had heard of his presence, and the man might contemplate
+stopping him. It would be easy for him to creep upon and shoot the
+defenseless youth as he lay before the fire.
+
+Nuck's only weapons were his knife and the hatchet stuck in his belt.
+Lying there within the circle of light cast by the flames he would be an
+easy mark for any enemy. As minute after minute passed it seemed utterly
+impossible for him to quench this fear and he finally rose to his feet
+and got out of the fire light. He stood in the deep shadow of a tree
+trunk and cast searching glances around the tiny clearing in which he
+had established his camp. Not a living thing did he observe.
+
+But if there was an enemy on his trail, and he should come near the camp
+and see it deserted he would suspect a trap at once. Either he would
+circle about so as to finally find Enoch, or he would fly from the
+ambush at once. "I expect I am very foolish,--losing good sleep that I
+need, too!" muttered the young fellow. "But still----"
+
+He could not explain the strange unrest that possessed him. He was not
+of a particularly nervous temperament; therefore his present mood
+troubled him the more. There was danger menacing him; he felt it, if he
+could not see nor understand it. The only possibility of peril which
+reason suggested was through the agency of that stranger. "I must have
+things here so that he will not suspect that I am on my guard," the
+youth muttered.
+
+Forthwith he dragged a piece of a broken tree-trunk to the fire, wrapped
+his coat about it and placed his cap at the end of the stick farthest
+from the blaze. He was careful to place the rude dummy far enough away
+from the fire so that its flickering light should not be cast upon it
+too strongly. It really looked, when he was through, as though some
+person lay there asleep. He did not feed the flames too generously, but
+left burning some hardwood sticks, the glowing coals of which would lend
+but little light to the scene. Then he retired again to the shadow of
+the tree where, crouching between two huge exposed roots, he waited with
+sleepless eyes for that which was, perhaps, merely the phantom of his
+fears.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+THE RISING OF THE CLANS
+
+
+As still as the shadow of the tree itself, Enoch lay with his face
+toward the camp. Truly, had the forest not been so dark outside the
+radiance of the fire, he would have set out again upon his journey, and
+left this spot which seemed to his troubled mind the lurking place of
+some serious danger. The minutes grew to an hour, however, without a
+suspicious sound reaching his ears. The usual noises of the forest--the
+hooting of the owl, the wolf's cry, the whimper of the wild-cat--were
+all that disturbed the repose of the wilderness.
+
+But suddenly a dry twig snapped somewhere near him. The sound went
+through the anxious youth like a shock of electricity. Its direction he
+could not fathom; yet he was sure that the branch had crackled under the
+pressure of a foot. Somebody--or something--was approaching his fire,
+which now threw a dull red light across the forest glade. Enoch's eyes
+were fastened first upon one blot of shadow and then another.
+Occasionally, too, he darted a glance over his shoulder, that the
+approaching enemy might not come upon him unawares. Just at that time
+Enoch would have given much for his rifle. Its presence would have
+inspired him with a deal of courage. The very fact that the danger,
+which intuition rather than reason assured him was threatening, came
+from an unknown source, increased his fears. Perhaps Simon Halpen was
+not within a hundred miles of that identical spot. He who was visiting
+the Tories and New York sympathizers of this region was possibly nothing
+worse than the agent of a land speculator. The youthful Green Mountain
+Boy might be the only human being within five miles.
+
+But suddenly that happened which shattered this fallacious web of
+thought in an instant. In the deep shadow of a thick clump of brush upon
+the other side of the fire, the youth observed a movement--rather, a
+flash or glint of light. The fire, increasing unexpectedly by the
+falling apart of one of the logs, had sent a penetrating ray of light
+into the thicket and there it glittered upon some polished piece of
+metal. Nothing else could have sent forth this answering gleam; it was
+not a pair of eyes; Enoch was confident of that.
+
+"He is there!" whispered the youth, and he crouched lower between the
+roots. His eyes, sharp as they were, could not penetrate the gloom of
+the brush clump, and the glittering metal had now disappeared. But he
+was sure that the intruder was still there, reconnoitering the camp.
+Would he suspect the ruse? Would he observe that the body lying by the
+fire was simply a dummy? The youth was glad to see that the log with his
+jacket and cap upon it lay almost entirely in the shadow and that one
+coat-sleeve was stretched out upon the ground in a very natural manner
+indeed.
+
+The moments that passed then were really terrible to young Harding. He
+knew himself to be in no immediate danger from this mysterious
+individual who had crept near his camp. Surely, the man could not see
+him where he lay shrouded in the darkness. Yet the thought that he was
+being dogged by a deadly enemy possessed him, and the doubt as to what
+the unknown would do next, brought the sweat to his brow and limbs and
+set him trembling like one with an ague. Not a breath disturbed the
+bushes, yet he felt that the man was there--there across the opening in
+the forest with his eyes fixed upon the supine figure near the fire. Had
+he not been warned by that mysterious feeling which had kept his eyes
+open and his nerves alert he, Enoch Harding, might now be lying
+unconscious with a deadly weapon trained upon him!
+
+And then the shot was fired! Enoch expected it, yet the explosion almost
+betrayed him to the enemy. A gasp of terror left his lips. Incidental
+with the explosion he heard the thud of the ball as it penetrated the
+log, and the shock of the impact actually stirred the dummy. It leaped
+upon the uneven ground!
+
+This fact was an awful accessory to the attempted murder. The inanimate
+object had moved as a human being would if suddenly shot through a vital
+part. Perhaps the very gasp of horror Enoch had uttered reached the ears
+of him who had fired from ambush. At least the enemy did not seek to
+come nearer. Indeed, the youth heard a crash in the brush and then the
+retreat of rapid footsteps. Having done, as he supposed, the awful deed,
+the murderer fled from the spot. Enoch had half risen to his feet. Now
+he sank upon his knees, clasped his hands, and thanked God for his
+preservation.
+
+But he did not leave the sanctuary of the forest's shadow until he was
+fully convinced that the villain who had made the attempt upon his life
+was far away. Then, still shaking from the nervous terror inspired by
+the incident, he crept to the dying fire, secured his cap and coat, and
+went back to the roots of the tree again until the growing glow above
+the tree-tops announced the rising of the moon. The sky grew bright
+rapidly and soon the moonbeams wandered among the straight, handsome
+trees and lay calmly upon the earth. He could once more see objects
+about him with almost the clearness of full daylight.
+
+Enoch arose and crossed to the clump of brush from which the treacherous
+shot had been fired. Through a break in the branches a flood of
+moonlight now silvered the earth at this point. He dropped upon one knee
+and examined the ground closely. There were the marks of the feet of him
+who had tried to shoot a helpless and sleeping human being. Enoch
+shuddered and placed his fingers in the impression of the moccasins. The
+incident that had just transpired was very real to him now.
+
+But he had not come here merely to assure himself of this fact. The
+bullet in the log and the hole through his coat were sufficient, if he
+had indeed doubted his eyes and ears before. He glanced down at the
+coat. Oddly enough the bullet had torn its way through the stout
+homespun directly over his heart!
+
+He glanced keenly now from side to side and saw that the enemy who made
+the treacherous attack had come from the trail he had followed that
+afternoon, and had returned in the same direction. He followed the
+footsteps which led away from the brush clump. In doing this he was
+quickly assured that the man who had shot at him was a white man. An
+Indian walks with his toes pointed inward; this individual, even as he
+ran, pointed his toes out. He was certain, therefore, that his enemy was
+no wandering redskin.
+
+"It was Halpen--I am sure of it!" muttered the youth, striking into the
+trail at last and continuing the journey upon which the darkness had
+overtaken him. "He believes that he has killed me. I only hope he will
+not be undeceived. But if he is ever in my power he shall suffer! What a
+villain the man is to follow our family and seek to murder and injure
+us! Oh, I hope this war which Colonel Allen says is surely beginning,
+will give us folks of the Grants our freedom from New York as well as
+from England. I fear men like Halpen more than I do the soldiers of the
+King."
+
+Although he had not slept, Enoch was rested in body and he traveled
+quite rapidly. Before dawn he had aroused two settlers from their
+slumbers, delivered Colonel Allen's message, and gone on his way. He
+observed no signs of his enemy of the night and was confident that the
+man had not continued on this trail, and was not, therefore, ahead of
+him. But he determined not to sleep in the forest during the remainder
+of his journey. He spent the day in alarming the farmers, circling
+around into the mountains before night and stopping at last with a
+distant pioneer who, with his two grown sons, promised to go back with
+him to the rendezvous of Allen's army at Castleton in the morning.
+
+Enoch's mind was burdened with the mystery of Halpen's presence in the
+Grants at this time, however. Surely the Yorker could not be upon
+private business. He must have a mission from either the land
+speculators, the New York authorities, or from those even higher. The
+plans of the Colonials to attack Old Ti and seize the munitions of war
+stored there, might have been whispered in the ears of the British
+commander, De la Place. Perhaps he had sent this man, who knew the
+territory so well, to spy upon the Green Mountain Boys and their
+friends. Simon Halpen could do the cause afoot much harm by returning
+swiftly to the lake and warning the commander of Fort Ticonderoga. Enoch
+believed Colonel Allen should know of Halpen's presence as soon as
+possible; and he was determined to return at once, although he certainly
+deserved rest and refreshment after his arduous journey through the
+wilderness. Therefore he urged the hurried departure of these three
+pioneers and before dawn the quartette started for Castleton.
+
+Meanwhile, at the camp of the Green Mountain Boys much was transpiring
+of importance to the expedition. The honor of capturing Ticonderoga
+history gives unconditionally to Ethan Allen and his handful of
+followers; but the suggestion and preparations for the momentous task
+was divided between the Colonies of Connecticut, Massachusetts, and the
+Hampshire Grants, or Vermont, as it was now beginning to be called. In
+April the authorities of Connecticut raised three hundred pounds for the
+expense of this expedition and Samuel H. Parsons, Silas Deane (afterward
+one of America's representatives in Paris, but an arch enemy of
+Washington) and Benedict Arnold, raised a handful of troops to send
+north as a nucleus of that army which was expected to fall upon one of
+the strongest British forts in the country.
+
+At Pittsfield, in western Massachusetts, Colonel Easton had recruited a
+larger band of earnest patriots, and these, joined with the company from
+the more southern colony, made a very respectable force to march through
+the country to Bennington, where they arrived on May third. In the
+meantime at Albany Messrs. Halsey and Stephens had been pleading with
+the New York Congress to grant permission for troops to be raised for,
+and money devoted to, the capture of the same fortresses as the New
+England leaders had in mind. But, as we have seen, New York was at that
+time lukewarm in the uprising of the colonies. Beside, the Continental
+Congress was to meet in seven days and it was judged better by the
+cautious Yorkers to wait and see what that body of representatives would
+do before any direct act of war was indulged in. Therefore New York lost
+her opportunity of joining in one of the most glorious campaigns of the
+entire Revolutionary period.
+
+The Committee of Safety in Massachusetts, on the other hand, had decided
+to act against Old Ti. Benedict Arnold, after stirring up the people to
+fever pitch in his own colony, Connecticut, went post-haste to Cambridge
+and demanded a commission and authority to raise and lead the troops
+against the Champlain forts. This first move of this much-hated man in
+the Revolution savored of intrigue and self-seeking--as did most of his
+other public acts. He desired the honor of commanding this expedition,
+and he was personally courageous enough to march up to the mouths of Old
+Ti's guns if need be; but he had no personal following and could not
+hope to recruit men himself for the expedition. Nevertheless, he
+proposed to have the backing of a regular commission from the
+Massachusetts committee and thus supersede Colonel Easton. This desire
+on his part might have become a fact had it not been for one person whom
+Benedict Arnold did not take into consideration.
+
+The Massachusetts and Connecticut forces were guided to the camp of the
+Green Mountain Boys while the leaders held a conference at the Catamount
+Inn in Bennington. Colonel Easton was a truly brave man, and as such was
+not disturbed by petty jealousy. It was left to fate to decide who
+should command the expedition, and Ethan Allen having the largest
+personal following, was acclaimed commander. Greatly to Captain--now
+Major--Warner's disappointment his own men did not number as many as the
+Massachusetts troops; but he gracefully yielded second place to Easton
+and accepted third himself. Plans for the march through the wilderness
+were then carefully discussed and the leaders rode to Castleton and
+reviewed the raw recruits whose valor was, at a later day, to be so
+noised abroad.
+
+The Green Mountain Boys, after four years of training, presented much
+the better appearance. And every man was practically a sharpshooter.
+What their rifles and muskets could do against the thick, if crumbling,
+walls of Ticonderoga, might with good judgment be asked; but they lacked
+neither courage nor faith in their leader. They would have followed
+Ethan Allen through a wall of fire if need be to the line of the British
+fortifications. In their eyes he was invincible.
+
+On the morning of the start from Castleton the army was paraded--a few
+hundred meagrely armed men to march against a fortress, to capture which
+had cost the British two expensive campaigns and the loss of some three
+thousand men. Their leaders harangued them, and Ethan Allen's promises
+of glory and honor inspired quite as much enthusiasm as the commander of
+any expedition could have wished. There had gathered to observe the
+departure many gentlemen of the countryside, and not a few of those
+individuals who, at a time like this, always occupy a prominent position
+"on the fence"--that is, they having not yet decided which cause to
+espouse, waited to see whether the King's troops or the earnest patriots
+would win.
+
+Among these spectators was a well set up man of military bearing, indeed
+garbed in a military coat, with a cockade in his hat and his hair
+carefully dressed. He was quite a dandy, or a "macoroni" as the
+exquisites of that day were called both in London and in the Colonies.
+His dark visage and hawk-like eye commanded more than a passing glance
+from all and when, just before the troops started, he was observed to
+walk across the parade and calmly approach the group of officers
+standing at one side, all eyes became fixed upon him.
+
+"Who is that haughty looking man yonder?" asked one spectator of his
+neighbor who happened to be better informed than his friend, "and what
+does he here?"
+
+"What he does here I know not," declared the individual thus addressed,
+"but his name I can tell you, having seen him in Hartford on several
+occasions. It is Benedict Arnold, a name quite well known--and not
+altogether honorably--in that part of Connecticut."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+THE RIVAL COMMANDERS
+
+
+At this time Benedict Arnold was thirty-five years of age, a restless,
+ambitious man who had sought frequently for an opportunity to
+distinguish himself in life, but who had never been willing to pay the
+world's price for real success. He looked for a short-cut to power and
+fortune, and because of his impatience of restraint and the small
+chances of promotion, he had once deserted from the British army. When
+the Revolution broke out he was living in Hartford, Connecticut, where
+his business was that of druggist, and where his reputation was not of
+the most savory among the more respectable merchants of the town. His
+character, however, contained those elements of recklessness and
+personal daring which stand for bravery with many people, and he was
+something of a hero in the eyes of his thoughtless associates.
+
+It seemed a peculiar fatality that both Arnold and Allen, coming from
+the same colony, should go to Bennington and be thrown together at just
+this time. It was a great moment in Ethan Allen's life; the time was
+likewise pregnant with the elements which so influenced the after
+existence of Benedict Arnold. Ethan Allen's mind was filled with a
+desire to help the Grants, and despite the military glory he craved, he
+entered into the scheme for the capture of Ticonderoga with a real hope
+of assisting the patriot cause. He was, indeed, a patriot from the
+bottom, ready to sacrifice his own interests as well as his life for the
+general good. Arnold saw in this rising of his fellow-Americans the long
+sought chance to distinguish himself and gain that power and influence
+which his nature craved. He saw in the proposed expedition to
+Ticonderoga a quick road to prominence. For him to see this chance was
+to grasp it.
+
+Having no following of his own he planned to seize the troops gathered
+at Castleton and thus have his name go before the Continental Congress
+as the leader of the expedition. If it was successful the honor would be
+his; if it failed, his name would be quite as prominent and the affair
+might gain him advancement which he could hope for in no other way. He
+had no thought nor care for the men who, after weeks of toilsome effort,
+had gathered the little army together. Their feelings in the matter, or
+their standing with their followers, did not enter into his
+calculations.
+
+That, indeed, was the secret of Benedict Arnold's life. He never thought
+of others. He was ever for self. As a boy we read that he was cruel to
+those smaller and weaker than himself, being the "bully" of the school
+and of the town in which he lived. He was ever utterly reckless of his
+reputation and his greatest pleasure seemed to be found in some form of
+malicious mischief. Personally, however, he did not lack boldness and
+physical courage. It is told of him that, being dared by other boys, he
+once seized the arms of a waterwheel and followed its revolutions half a
+dozen times, being completely submerged in the millrace at every turn.
+The danger to a handful of illy-armed troops attacking a fortress like
+Ticonderoga appealed strongly to the man's reckless daring.
+
+Although Allen and Warner came from the same colony as the newcomer,
+neither knew nor recognized Arnold as he approached the group of
+officers at this important moment. But Arnold was not a man who could be
+for long ignored. His military bearing, his dress, and the hauteur of
+his countenance attracted the attention of the three leaders. "Sir,"
+said Allen, courteously, "you evidently have some communication to make
+to us?"
+
+"I have, sir," replied Arnold, calmly. "But not having the pleasure of a
+personal acquaintance with you----"
+
+"I am Colonel Allen, commander of this expedition," interrupted the
+other, brusquely. "This is Colonel Easton; this Major Warner. What is
+your desire?"
+
+"I am Colonel Benedict Arnold," said the newly arrived officer, "and
+bear a commission from the Massachusetts Committee of Safety with
+authority to take command of the troops here gathered, or which shall be
+gathered, and proceed against Forts Ticonderoga and Crown Point," and he
+drew the commission from his pocket and presented it to the company.
+
+Allen's ruddy face paled for an instant and his eyes flashed. "Do I
+understand you aright?" he exclaimed, and his voice was sharp enough to
+be heard by many of the troops near by. "You have come to take command
+of these men?" and his gesture took in the lines of waiting patriots.
+
+"I have, sir. There is my commission."
+
+Allen's wrath got the better of his politeness and he struck the
+offending paper from Arnold's hand. Warner stooped hastily and secured
+it. He and Easton examined the document with angry scrutiny. Both had
+given way with cheerfulness to Ethan Allen's superiority in the matter;
+but this affront was personal to them as well as to their beloved
+leader. Allen, with his arms akimbo and fire flashing from his eyes
+faced the suave and cold intruder. "Sir!" he exclaimed, "I do not care
+to see your commission, nor do I acknowledge your authority. I bear a
+commission from a higher court and recognize an authority higher still."
+
+"What do you mean, Colonel Allen?" demanded Arnold, for the moment
+fearing that the Green Mountain leader had indeed received some
+appointment from the Continental Congress, perhaps, which would
+invalidate his own.
+
+"I mean, sir, that my authority is based upon some slight precedence in
+this matter--a prior claim which dates back some years now, Colonel
+Arnold. I have led some of these men in defending their homes on more
+than one occasion and by their free act of will they have made me their
+leader now."
+
+"Your commission, sir? Where is it?" inquired Arnold, cool again, upon
+finding that his antagonist's rights were based upon a matter of
+sentiment.
+
+"It is there, sir!" cried Allen, furiously, turning and pointing to the
+lines of waiting men. "It is there, sir,--writ on the hearts of those
+Green Mountain Boys. And a higher commission than any Committee of
+Safety can seal."
+
+The words were heard by the files of waiting troops and already they had
+begun to murmur. That their beloved leader should be displaced by any
+person--no matter how high his office--was more than distasteful to
+them. At once they were in revolt.
+
+"Ethan Allen forever!" arose the cry. "We'll not march without he
+commands us!" and more than one threw down his arms. Arnold found
+himself facing the possibility of marching upon Ticonderoga alone, for
+the mutiny seemed general.
+
+"Sir, sir!" exclaimed Warner, in anxiety, addressing Arnold. "You see
+the feeling of these true-hearted men. No person can come here and take
+command of them in this way. We are not regular troops. We are banded
+together for the good of all, but we do not yet acknowledge the
+authority of a sister colony. We desire to be a commonwealth of our own
+here in the Grants and have already been disturbed enough by usurpers
+from outside. Reconsider this, I beg of you. For if you persevere the
+expedition must fail and that which might result in great good to our
+struggling brethren, will end in harm because of this folly."
+
+Arnold, if ambitious and unfeeling, already saw that he was beaten. He
+was not obstinate enough to do that which would be sure to redound to
+his own hurt and discredit. He had not expected such opposition, for he
+did not know the veneration in which the Green Mountain Boys held Ethan
+Allen. Now, seeing himself undone, he did that which for the time
+endeared him to all. His countenance cleared; a frank emotion played
+upon his features and advancing a step toward Ethan Allen he said in a
+clarion voice, heard by all:
+
+"Colonel Allen, you have precedence here after all. I was mistaken in my
+premises. Give me a musket and let me march in the ranks. I shall be
+proud to be led by so gallant a commander."
+
+Instantly a volley of cheers broke out among the soldiery, and Allen
+who, above all men, could appreciate such generosity, offered his hand
+cordially. "Egad, sir!" he cried, "you are a man after my own heart.
+When there are so many jealous cattle running about the woods, it is a
+pleasure to meet with a man. Give me your hand, Colonel Arnold! There is
+glory enough in this campaign for all, and you shall share the command
+with me, if you will."
+
+He turned then to his followers. "Men of the Green Mountains!" he cried,
+"we are to march at once. Fall in! And with your courage and the help of
+Jehovah we shall succeed in our undertaking. To your places, gentlemen,"
+to the minor officers, "and Colonel Arnold and I will lead you."
+
+Amid cheers the column moved forward into the forest and took up its
+line of march toward the shore of Lake Champlain. Never had the Green
+Mountain wilderness echoed to the tread of such a body of men. And they
+were worth more than a passing glance for they represented the spirit
+which made the American Revolution one of the greatest struggles of the
+ages. Like the campaigns of Joshua of old, the battles of the American
+yeoman with the trained military of King George proved that, when guided
+by the God of Battles, the weak can overcome the strong. These men,
+fighting for their homes and firesides, were inspired with a confidence
+that overcame even impossibilities. They possessed a faith in their
+cause and in their leader like that which threw down the walls of
+Jericho and defeated the allied armies of Canaan.
+
+Even had De la Place and his garrison been informed of their approach,
+and of their numbers, he would doubtless have laughed at the possibility
+of their successfully attacking his fortress. And one there was among
+the Green Mountain Boys who feared that news of the expedition had
+already gone to the British commander. Upon his return from the Otter,
+Enoch Harding had sought and obtained an audience with Colonel Allen,
+and to him had related his adventure with the Yorker whom he believed to
+be his deadly enemy, and told his suspicions regarding the man's
+business in the region. But Ethan Allen was not to be shaken in his
+confidence, or in his intentions.
+
+"I have an honest man at Ticonderoga now, Master Harding," he said. "If
+spies were through the country we should hear of them from other
+sources. But you did right to come to me with this, and if Simon Halpen
+falls into our hands I will hang him for his past offenses, if not for
+this attempt on your life."
+
+The appearance of the American troops was welcomed along the route with
+acclamation. Many settlers, knowing the course the army would take, had
+waited to join it as it passed their own doors. Shopkeepers and
+mechanics left their work and fell into the ranks; the farmer left his
+plow in the furrow, seized his rifle, and joined his neighbors; a
+woodsman who was "letting sunlight" into the gloom of the virgin forest,
+hid his axe under a fallen log and with a deadlier weapon on his
+shoulder followed in the train; the hunter on the trail of the
+frightened buck saw the column coming through the forest road and
+allowed his prey to escape while he turned his attention to matters of
+graver moment. Thus the army of Americans was swelled from hour to hour
+by new recruits.
+
+To camp at night was a small matter to these hardy pioneers. The scouts
+sent out upon either flank acted as hunters and fresh meat was abundant.
+Besides, every man was fairly supplied with provisions brought from
+Castleton. Inspired by the energy of Ethan Allen the column rapidly
+approached the shore of the lake. While some miles away, however, the
+group of officers riding ahead of the main body, suddenly descried a
+tall woodsman striding through the forest toward them. "Who is this
+chap, Major?" demanded Allen of his friend Warner. "Had I not sent 'Siah
+Bolderwood to watch Old Ti like a cat at a rathole, I'd declare this to
+be he."
+
+"And so it is, Colonel!" returned the other. "Something of moment must
+have sent our lengthy friend this way, for he is a man who knows how to
+obey orders," and he spurred forward to meet the footman.
+
+"Wall, Captain," was 'Siah's greeting, squinting around the horseman at
+the long column of marching men, "you look like you had a slather of
+folks yonder. I guess there'll be something in the wind around Old Ti
+'fore long, hey?"
+
+"And how is it you are not there, Bolderwood?" demanded Warner.
+
+"Wall, I got an idee into my noddle an' leavin' Smith and Brown to watch
+Old Ti, for it might run away 'fore ye git there, ye know, I trotted
+down this way ter see the Colonel. Ev'rything is safe there so fur, but
+there's one thing we've neglected."
+
+"What is that, Bolderwood?" cried Allen, riding up and hearing this last
+sentence.
+
+"Why, Colonel, although I count you as purty near ekal to 'most
+anything, an' them fellers behind ye seemed armed to deal with any foe,
+still I calkerlate you ain't expectin' ol' Champlain ter open for ye to
+pass over dry shod, hey?"
+
+Allen smote his thigh with his gauntleted hand and the expression on his
+face changed. "Right, 'Siah! I can't forgive myself for my
+thoughtlessness. We must have boats--and plenty of them--to cross to the
+fort."
+
+"That's what struck me last night, Colonel. So I left the others ter
+watch the fort--an' a sarpint that wriggled into aour han's
+yesterday--and come kitin' down here for orders."
+
+"A serpent, 'Siah?" said Warner. "Who is it?"
+
+"One o' them Yorkers, an' one that I've not had my eyes on--let alone my
+hands--for a good many months. An' I see a chap behind you there that'll
+be some interested in meeting the rascal, too."
+
+'Siah had looked past the officers and, in the very front rank, caught
+sight of his young friend Enoch. The latter waved his hand to the tall
+woodsman and Bolderwood, knowing that discipline was lax on the march,
+beckoned Enoch forward. "Come here, youngster, and hear what news I've
+got for ye," he cried. But Allen caught at the matter instantly, and
+understood to whom Bolderwood referred by his appellation of "the
+serpent."
+
+"You mean to say you've got Simon Halpen?" he asked.
+
+"That's the identical sarpint, Colonel," declared the ranger. "We caught
+him tryin' ter cross to Old Ti and thought it was best, under the
+sarcumstances, ter keep him close till this leetle business is over.
+What he was doin' riskin' his carcass on this side of the line is more'n
+I can tell----"
+
+"The boy was right, Major!" exclaimed Allen, turning to Warner. "Harding
+met the fellow while he was stirring up our folks in the Otter country
+last week. He thought he was up to some rascality then, and the fellow
+did try to take his life."
+
+"Tried it again, did he?" cried 'Siah, as Enoch approached. "Is that so,
+Nuck?"
+
+Enoch repeated his adventure with the murderous Halpen. "If I'd knowed
+this," the ranger declared, "I'd saved the grub the scoundrel is
+eating."
+
+"We'll make an example of him when we reach the lake, 'Siah," declared
+the leader of the Green Mountain Boys. "But now for this other matter.
+It is most important. Every bateau within reach must be secured."
+
+"I know where there are three of 'em. And there may be others down the
+lake furder."
+
+"You shall have charge of this, Bolderwood!" the commander cried. "I
+make you our captain of scouts. Take any reasonable number of men with
+you and hurry ahead. Every moment is precious."
+
+"Good!" said the ranger. "With Smith and Brown I won't need but eight or
+ten more. And I'll begin by taking young Nuck here. He's a good oar."
+
+"Take whom you wish. We depend on you," replied Allen, and within the
+hour the ranger and his party, including Enoch Harding, set off on their
+mission ahead of the more slowly moving army.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+THE ESCAPE OF THE SPY
+
+
+In sixteen hours 'Siah Bolderwood had traveled from his camp on the
+shore of Lake Champlain opposite the frowning walls of Fort Ticonderoga;
+when the long ranger was in a hurry he did not spare himself. Perhaps no
+other man in the Vermont wilderness could have covered so much ground
+afoot as he, within the time. But he set off now on his return journey,
+with nearly a dozen men at his heels, as fresh as though he had rested
+for a night instead of for an hour. His muscles were seemingly of steel
+and his limbs of iron. He led at such a pace that Enoch Harding, who
+came first behind him, could scarcely keep up with his stride and place
+his feet, Indian fashion, in the prints of his friend's moccasins.
+
+The company of scouts traveled in single file and, having no need to
+follow the wood-road on which the army was marching, they soon left that
+out of view. 'Siah found an Indian path which suited him far better than
+the broader trail, for it would bring them much sooner to the lake, and
+for hour after hour he strode on with scarce a look behind him to see
+how his companions kept up. The men he had chosen, save Enoch, were
+tried and trained woodsmen, with powers of endurance second only to his
+own. And as for the lad whom he loved, he knew his high spirit and
+pride. Enoch Harding would not fall behind until the last ounce of his
+strength had been expended.
+
+Finally the party reached a little stream and here the leader gave the
+signal to halt. Enoch flung himself down on the short sward and fell
+asleep almost instantly. 'Siah looked down upon him in some pride.
+"That's the stuff we make men of in this country," he said aloud. "I
+knew his father as well as I know myself. The lad will be another Jonas
+Harding."
+
+"He'll hold us back if we've to keep up this pace, 'Siah," said one of
+the others, doubtfully.
+
+"Nay, you're mistaken there, neighbor. You and I will travel until we
+feel that it ain't best for us to go any furder. Enoch'll keep up till
+he drops. He won't hold us back."
+
+And it was true. Others of the party cried "enough!" before the
+afternoon was over; but the youth, his lips pale and compressed and the
+perspiration fairly pouring from his limbs, would have died before he
+acknowledged that the pace was too great for him. At night 'Siah called
+another halt and they ate heartily of such provisions as they carried
+and then lay down to rest. But 'Siah arranged for a guard. They were
+nearing the lake now and some ill-affected settler (there were several
+families of Tories near Champlain) might see them and wonder what such a
+large party of armed men was doing here. If the news of the approach of
+the main army did not travel ahead, it would be more because of good
+fortune than good management.
+
+The party broke up into groups of two and three in the morning and went
+different ways to the shore. It was agreed that, where the settlers who
+owned boats were known to be staunch Whigs, it would be safe to tell
+them for what purpose their crafts were needed. But several boats were
+owned by Tories and royalist sympathizers and these people must be
+deceived for, although the scouts were doubtless well armed and
+determined enough to take the boats without saying "by your leave," such
+a proceeding might be disastrous to the expedition.
+
+'Siah Bolderwood chose Enoch as his companion and went himself toward
+the home of a farmer who stoutly upheld the King and his ministers and
+who had, in fact, held the title of his land from New York through all
+the years of trouble between his neighbors and the Albany courts. His
+homestead, however, was in such an out-of-the-way place and so secluded
+that the Green Mountain Boys had left him unmolested. Now Bolderwood was
+determined to have the roomy canoe and a large bateau which he was known
+to possess.
+
+"But if the pesky critter gits an inkling of what we're up to, he'll
+start for Old Ti--that he will!" the ranger said to Enoch. "We gotter
+get around him somehow. An' you leave it ter me. Ye better keep aout o'
+sight, I reckon, anyway; numbers might make the ol' codger suspicious."
+
+So Enoch hid in the wood surrounding the clearing on the lake shore
+while his tall friend went toward the Tory's door. The old man, who
+depended upon his nephew and a slave or two to do his work, was sitting
+looking out across the lake. He was too far away to distinguish the
+battlements of Ticonderoga, but he happened to be looking in that
+direction when Bolderwood presented himself. "Neighbor!" said the
+latter, in a most friendly tone, "ye look hearty. What's the news?"
+
+"Humph!" grunted the old man, staring at the Yankee shrewdly, "you're
+the feller that's been clearin' land above us yander, ain't ye?"
+
+"That I can't deny, sir," responded the ranger. "An' jest for the sake
+o' bein' neighborly, I'm down here ter arsk a favor."
+
+"What is it?" grunted the old man, doubtfully.
+
+"Why, my partner an' me have got a job to do, an' we're wantin' ter
+borry one or both o' your boats," and he pointed down to the water
+where, at the end of a little dock, the big flatboat and a long canoe
+were both moored. The old man could not see the boats without rising,
+but this he did as though to make sure that they were in their places.
+"What ye want 'em for?" he asked. "An' howsumever, I can't lend ye more
+than one o' them. We might want the other ourselves."
+
+"What for?" asked Bolderwood, with the usual freedom of the community,
+and likewise proving himself a true Yankee by responding to one question
+with another.
+
+"Might wanter go acrosst," said the farmer. "They say there's goin' ter
+be a lot o' reinforcements come up to Old Ti an' my nevvy and I want to
+see 'em when they come."
+
+"That's what we're wantin' the boats for--to go acrosst to the fort,"
+said 'Siah, with apparent frankness. "We've got some things to take over
+an' it's too fur to swim."
+
+"I sh'd say it was!" exclaimed the Tory. "Then I take it the report that
+reinforcements air comin' is true? Captain De la Place is buyin' cattle
+to feed the garrison?"
+
+"I reckon he'll need a good many to feed all that's comin'," returned
+Bolderwood, non-committingly.
+
+"Wall, I can't lend ye both, sir," declared the old man. "The canoe
+wouldn't do ye much good, though 'tis a master big one. Seems ter me
+there's a good deal o' boatin' on the lake to-day. I seen two barges go
+along north a'ready. Folks goin' fishin' I s'pose."
+
+"Like enough--like enough," declared 'Siah hastily. "I'll git right down
+and take the bateau."
+
+"Ain't ye got no one ter help ye?"
+
+"I'll find my partner somewhere up the lake. He was lookin' for boats,
+too," returned the ranger.
+
+He started to descend the bank and the old farmer arose and hobbled
+after him. The instant he reached the brink where he could again see his
+little dock, he gave voice to an exclamation of disgust and anger.
+"There it be! That Pomp is the most no 'count critter that ever eat
+smoked hog. He was a usin' that canoe this mornin', an' now look at it!"
+
+Seemingly the big canoe had slipped her moorings and was floating
+rapidly around the wooded point near the dock. 'Siah might have been
+astonished a little himself had he not had sharper eyes than the Tory.
+He saw that several articles of apparel lay in the canoe and he
+recognized Enoch Harding's old otter-skin cap. "Hold on, sir!" he cried.
+"No matter about calling your hands from the field to git it. I'll have
+that canoe in a jiffy."
+
+He ran down the steep bank, unfastened the bateau, and with a powerful
+shove sent it out into the lake. There were two long sweeps aboard and
+with one of these 'Siah quickly propelled the heavy craft in the same
+direction as the canoe--down the lake. The latter craft was scarcely out
+of sight of the old man when the bateau came along side. There was
+nothing showing of the swimmer but his head and one hand which clutched
+the painter.
+
+"Come aboard here, ye young rascal!" exclaimed the woodsman, with a
+chuckle. "You'll have that whole spatter of Tories arter us. Couldn't
+you hide your clothes better 'n that? Might have left 'em ashore. If the
+old gentleman hadn't been blinder'n a bat at midday, he'd seen 'em."
+
+"I didn't think of that," Enoch admitted, rather ruefully, climbing over
+the bow of the canoe and then passing the thong to 'Siah, who fastened
+it to the stern of the bateau. "I heard him say you couldn't have both,
+and I thought it too bad. This canoe will hold a dozen men."
+
+"Wall, grab that sweep. Never mind your clothes just now. I warrant
+ye'll keep warm enough till we git to the camp."
+
+The newly made captain of scouts and his young companion were by no
+means the first to reach the rendezvous on the shore opposite
+Ticonderoga. Nor is it to be supposed that the boats being there
+collected were brought boldly up in daylight. They were hidden in little
+coves near by, which could be reached by the scouts without attracting
+attention from the fort, to be brought after dark to the landing from
+which Ethan Allen expected to embark his troops. There were but two
+craft moored opposite the camp which Bolderwood and his companions had
+occupied for more than a week. Bolderwood held the title of a long strip
+of land along the lake shore, but he had never built a cabin. A shack,
+or hut, of branches was all the shelter the trio enjoyed.
+
+Here the ranger and Enoch found several of their friends beside Smith
+and Brown in waiting. The shore of the lake on this side had been fairly
+scoured for bateaus. They dared not cross to the New York side to obtain
+boats, for by so doing they would be sure to excite suspicion. With
+those already obtained and some which their companions were now gone
+for, the expedition must be content. The one mistake of their bold
+leader might bring about failure to the enterprise; yet so confident
+were they in Ethan Allen's ability that they firmly believed he would
+find some way to overcome the lack of transportation. The forced march
+of the scouts the day before, and for a good share of the night as well,
+had brought them to the lake long before the expedition itself could
+possibly reach the landing. Besides, the leaders would hold back until
+after dark. The attack upon the fortress must be accomplished under the
+cover of night. Bolderwood hoped, when he saw the meagre provision he
+was able to make for transportation, that the army would arrive early
+enough to allow of two, and even three, voyages to be made from shore to
+shore, that the entire force might take part in the attack.
+
+To Enoch, however, there was another matter of grave interest to be
+attended to when he and his tall friend arrived at the temporary camp.
+He wished to see the spy whom Bolderwood had mentioned to Ethan Allen.
+The ranger, too, looked sharply about the camp for the man. "Where's
+that slippery critter we captured the other night?" he asked. "If he
+gits away before Colonel Allen comes there'll be trouble for some of
+us."
+
+"We'd better have hung him up and so saved his food," grunted Brown,
+who, because the Yorkers had burned his house and driven his wife and
+children into the forest, had no love for anybody from the west side of
+the lake.
+
+"You haven't let him go?" demanded Bolderwood.
+
+"Nay, 'Siah. He's safe enough," returned Smith. "He's yonder behind the
+camp. He'd be an eel or a sarpint to wriggle out of them thongs."
+
+"A sarpint he is," declared Bolderwood, and strode away to look at the
+prisoner. Enoch followed him. There, sitting with his back against a
+tree, his ankles fastened together and a strong deer thong wrapped about
+his body and about the tree itself, was Simon Halpen. When he saw the
+ranger he scowled. When he observed the boy, however, his eyes flashed
+and the blood rushed to his face. "I reckon he knows ye, Nuck," said the
+ranger.
+
+"What are you going to do with me?" demanded the Yorker, with bravado.
+"You'll all suffer for this outrage, I promise ye! Wait until I get to
+Albany----"
+
+"And you ever see Albany again you're a lucky man," said Bolderwood,
+satisfying himself that the bonds were tight. "The Colonel will see to
+ye, my fine bird."
+
+Enoch still remained before his enemy when the ranger went back to the
+camp. The villain returned his glance boldly. "You are satisfied now, I
+suppose?" he muttered.
+
+"Not yet," replied young Harding.
+
+"I shall be avenged!" declared Halpen, with a burst of wrath. "If I am
+injured I have powerful friends who will punish you. I care nothing for
+Ethan Allen----"
+
+"A power higher than Colonel Allen will punish you," Enoch said,
+gravely.
+
+"Pooh! I care nothing for your Whig courts. You had best do what you can
+for me, Master Harding."
+
+"I will leave you to the punishment you deserve. And you will receive
+it."
+
+"What have I done, I'd like to know?" exclaimed the prisoner. "It was
+not my fault that your house was burned and your mother and you placed
+in danger of your lives. It was a mistake."
+
+"Was it a mistake when you crept to my camp the other night and fired at
+me as I lay sleeping beside the fire?" demanded the boy, sternly.
+
+The red flush left the prisoner's cheek then. "What--what do you mean?"
+he gasped.
+
+"You know well what I mean. See here!" Enoch showed him the hole in the
+breast of his coat. "That was made by your bullet."
+
+"The boy's life is charmed!" muttered Halpen.
+
+"You had much better have used your gun-stock, Master Halpen. You would
+have been surer to kill me then."
+
+At this an expression of positive terror came into the prisoner's
+features. "I am not a murderer," he exclaimed. "You are mistaken if you
+think that I fired at you."
+
+"It is true I cannot prove it," Enoch replied. "But something else I can
+prove." He advanced a step nearer to the man. "Do you remember where you
+hid the moose hoofs, Simon Halpen?"
+
+The prisoner shrank back against the tree and his eyes fairly glared up
+at the youth. "You--you----" he gasped.
+
+"Yes. They are found. We now know how my poor father was killed. And you
+were seen running from the place with his blood upon your clothes and
+upon your gun. Even your Albany courts would punish you for that!" Then
+the boy, unable to trust himself longer in the presence of the man who
+had so injured him, hastily left the spot.
+
+[Illustration: PUNISHMENT WAS NEAR AT HAND]
+
+And the prisoner--how did he feel while tied to that tree, waiting for
+the judgment which was to fall upon him for his crimes? No human being
+but the criminal himself can ever appreciate half the agony of the
+condemned. It was long since discovered that the gift of speech was
+given man to conceal his thoughts. To the man of strong will the face is
+a mask to conceal his feelings. And Simon Halpen was not a weakling. He
+may have betrayed some emotion when accused by Enoch; it was a small
+part only of what he felt.
+
+He saw now, as plainly as he saw the lengthening shadows about him, that
+punishment for his crimes was near. These stern woodsmen, whose plan for
+attacking Ticonderoga he had discovered, were in no mood to trifle with
+him. And what Enoch had told him was an assurance that though he might
+live to be brought before a court of justice, he must stand trial for
+his crimes. Neither political influence nor his wealth could save him
+from the result of his offenses against the laws of man and God. He was
+made desperate by these thoughts.
+
+He could see from his uncomfortable position the company of scouts busy
+with their supper. The ordinary observer would not have imagined that
+these men were the pioneers of two hundred and thirty Green Mountain
+Boys and the Massachusetts and Connecticut troops. But Halpen knew the
+army of Americans was coming, and the object of their approach.
+Unwarned, Captain De la Place and his garrison might be surprised and
+overwhelmed by these backwoodsmen. Halpen had no particular love for the
+King, nor for the royal government; but he hated these men who had
+defended their farms for so many years from the aggressions of his own
+party. Fear of punishment was reinforced by a desire to worst the Green
+Mountain Boys. He began to struggle against his bonds.
+
+He had done that early in the day when he was first fastened to the
+tree; and the thongs had cut into his arms and breast. But now he felt
+these abrasions not at all. He was mad to be free, and free he would be!
+The scouts paid him no attention. The sun was set and the forest grew
+dark. Would he escape he must accomplish the matter soon, or likely
+Bolderwood or young Harding would come to examine him again, and then
+the chance would be past.
+
+At last, his flesh cut so deeply that blood ran from arms and body, he
+stretched the hide rope until he was able to wriggle out of it. There
+were then his ankles to untie. This he did in a very few moments. He was
+free! Rising to his knees, his limbs were so paralyzed by inaction that
+he could not yet stand upright, he crept into the brush and, like the
+serpent that Bolderwood declared to be his prototype, glided away from
+the camp and down toward the brush-bordered shore of the lake.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+THE END OF SIMON HALPEN
+
+
+As they are to-day, the surroundings of Fort Ticonderoga were most
+picturesque. Nor is the country about the fortifications, and across the
+lake where the camp of Bolderwood's scouts was established at the time
+of our story, and later where the Grenadier Battery was raised, much
+more thickly settled to-day than it was then. Mt. Defiance, south of the
+Lake George outlet on the west side of Champlain was a heavily wooded
+eminence. Behind the scouts' camp a rugged shoulder of ground, later
+called Mount Independence, raised its bulk out of the surrounding
+forest. The formidable promontory on which the French had built
+Ticonderoga twenty years before, commanded a great sweep of the lake.
+For mere foot-soldiers, without artillery or explosives, to attack these
+fortifications seemed utterly preposterous.
+
+Where Bolderwood and his companions were waiting they had an excellent
+view of the fort. At sunset the garrison was paraded and one gun boomed
+resonantly across the calm lake. Just before it became too dark to see
+the other shore, the Americans observed a man come out of the covered
+way by which the fortifications were entered and approach the shore.
+There was a light canoe moored there and into this he stepped and
+paddled out into the lake, evidently aiming his craft for a cove near
+the scouts' position. Bolderwood and his comrades were so deeply
+interested in the maneuvres of this man that Simon Halpen was for the
+time forgotten.
+
+"We'll have to take that feller in and hold him for the Colonel to talk
+to," suggested one of the scouts when it became apparent that the
+stranger from the fort was coming ashore near at hand. "He'll see them
+boats an' suspicion something."
+
+"We'll meet him," said Bolderwood; "but I'm reck'ning that he'll be as
+glad to see the Colonel as the Colonel is ter see him. I know that
+somebody was over there in the fort to find out how the land lies and
+what sort o' shape them red-coats is in, an' 'twouldn't s'prise me if
+this was the chap."
+
+They all followed 'Siah down to the cove--even Enoch--and met the
+stranger as he came ashore. The latter seemed in nowise troubled by
+seeing so many armed men and after mooring his canoe came at once to the
+group of Americans. "Friends, I presume, sirs?" he asked, glancing
+keenly from man to man.
+
+"Reckon so," admitted Bolderwood.
+
+"Where is Colonel Allen?"
+
+"If you don't mind waitin' with us I shouldn't be s'prised if ye see him
+'fore long," declared the long-legged scout. "Wanter see him
+pertic'lar?"
+
+"I do," the stranger admitted. "You are the advance guard of our boys, I
+presume?"
+
+"Well, as you don't know us, an' we don't know you, we'd better not
+discuss private matters till we're interduced, as ye might say. I
+sh'dn't be astonished ter see the Colonel come along here 'most any time
+now."
+
+"Very well, sir. I am at your service," was the response, and the
+newcomer walked back to the camp with them. But Enoch had gone on ahead,
+remembering that the captive had been left alone for nearly half an
+hour. Suddenly his voice rose in a shout of anger and surprise. "He has
+escaped!" cried Bolderwood, the instant he heard his young friend, and
+plunged at once into the wood toward the spot where Halpen had been
+tied. Truly, the spy was gone.
+
+"The rascal was sharper than I thought," gasped the ranger. "And--and
+what will Colonel Allen say?"
+
+"That isn't the worst of it," declared the youth.
+
+"Yes; you think it is worse that a villain like him should escape
+without punishment. I doubt not that Ethan Allen would have hung him."
+
+"He may have deserved hanging," Enoch returned, with a shudder. "But I
+am not thinking of that. I fear that he will yet do us harm. If he gets
+across the lake and warns the folks at Old Ti, I'll never forgive myself
+for not sitting down here and watching him all the time."
+
+"He sartainly should have been watched," admitted 'Siah. "But I didn't
+b'lieve he had the pluck to git away. See here! The thongs are wet with
+the man's blood. He must ha' cut himself badly."
+
+"We must find him, 'Siah! If he secures a boat and crosses the lake the
+expedition will be ruined. This man who has just come across declares
+Captain De la Place knows nothing about our army as yet. But if Simon
+Halpen reaches the fortifications----"
+
+'Siah rushed back to his company and sent them to search the bank of the
+lake. He ordered, too, one man to remain with each group of boats so
+that the escaped spy might not secure one and get such a start across
+the lake that he could not be overtaken. But it had now grown quite dark
+and the scouts were unable to find Halpen in the vicinity of the camp.
+'Siah was confident that he and his men had obtained every craft on this
+eastern shore for miles up and down the lake, so he did not believe
+Halpen could really get across to the fort in time to warn the garrison.
+He was naturally too tender-hearted to wish to see the fellow hung to
+the nearest tree, which might be his fate had Ethan Allen examined him
+and found him guilty of spying upon the patriotic settlers.
+
+Now that night had come and the darkness would have covered the
+movements of the American troops, as the head of the column did not
+appear, Bolderwood and his comrades began to fear that something had
+detained their friends and that the attack upon Ticonderoga might be
+postponed until the night of the tenth. How the fleet of bateaus and
+canoes could be held in the vicinity for many hours without suspicions
+being aroused as to their proposed use, was a question hard to answer.
+The captain of the scouts sent two of his men out upon the trail by
+which they expected Ethan Allen and the troops under him to advance.
+
+Meanwhile Enoch Harding had not given up the search for the escaped spy.
+He feared what the fellow might yet do to weaken or utterly ruin the
+hopes of the American troops. Halpen was not armed, so the youth had no
+fear of being attacked by him; but he spent his time creeping through
+the brushwood up and down the lake shore, hoping to stumble upon the
+Yorker. He did not believe that Halpen had gone far from the encampment.
+Finally, in his wanderings, he came to the cove where the scout who had
+spent the day inside the fort, had landed. The bateaus were on the other
+side of the cove; the canoe the scout had used was alone in the shadow
+of a big oak, although a sentinel watched the bateaus. This sentinel had
+neglected to remove the canoe to his side of the cove and as Enoch came
+down the hillside he observed something moving in the shadow of the oak.
+A moment later, before he was really sure whether this something was a
+man or an animal, the canoe left the bank. The trees threw their shadows
+upon the water and it was almost impossible to observe the moving craft
+clearly; yet he was pretty sure that there was a figure in it and that
+it had been unmoored.
+
+The youth was too far away to risk a shot; the sentinel was much farther
+from the point of embarkation. If Simon Halpen had found and seized this
+canoe it looked for a moment as though he would surely escape.
+
+Enoch ran down to the edge of the water, but when he reached the point
+at which the canoe had been moored it was almost out of sight. He could
+not see the figure in the boat clearly enough to shoot. Indeed, he
+shrank from committing what seemed like murder. Simon Halpen was
+defenseless. "But he must not escape!" the boy exclaimed and started
+around the shore of the cove. The fugitive kept the canoe within the
+deep shadow of the trees which bordered the inlet. He did not paddle out
+into the centre; there he might have been seen by the sentinel on the
+other side.
+
+The boy ran along the edge of the cove, stumbling over the tree roots
+and fallen logs, yet endeavoring to follow the course of the canoe as
+quietly as possible. There was a chance of his passing the fugitive and
+reaching the mouth of the cove first. Then, he thought, Halpen would be
+at his mercy. The better to do this unobserved he made a detour into the
+woods and finally, after ten minutes of rapid work, came out upon the
+extreme point which guarded the inlet. As he reached this place his
+quick ear distinguished the splash of a paddle not far away. Straining
+his eyes he soon observed through the gloom the canoe moving amid the
+shadows. The spy had very nearly escaped from the cove. Once out in the
+open lake it would be impossible to overtake him.
+
+Then Enoch wished he had aroused his comrades; at least the sentinel
+guarding the bateaus would have heard his cry and come to his
+assistance. But now if the spy was to be stopped it must be by his
+individual effort. Throwing down his rifle and removing his outside
+garments, he slid into the water with scarcely a ripple of its surface
+and finding the lake deep at this point, began to swim at once. The
+canoe was almost upon him when suddenly, with a muttered exclamation,
+the fugitive turned the craft by one swift stroke of the paddle and sent
+it darting away from the shore. Enoch had been seen or heard, and Halpen
+feared what was the fact--that one of his enemies was striving to
+overtake him.
+
+Enoch flung himself forward in the water and with a strong overhand
+stroke took a diagonal course to intercept the canoe. He could see the
+man bending to his paddle. Every stroke of the blade sent the
+phosphorescent water flying about the frail bark. The next few moments
+were of vital importance to both pursued and pursuer.
+
+Enoch's plunge into the water had driven Halpen to paddle away from the
+shore. Now he was heading the craft across the cove and therefore toward
+the station of the sentinel. If he pursued this course for many rods he
+would be within rifle shot. And once out of the shadow of the trees the
+light on the water would make him an easy mark. To pass Enoch before the
+latter reached the edge of the line of shadow was therefore Simon
+Halpen's object.
+
+But the American youth was determined that Halpen should not do this. He
+was a strong swimmer and spurred by both the desire to recapture his
+enemy and to save the cause to which he was bound--the capture of
+Ticonderoga--he put forth every atom of his strength to overtake the
+canoe. The paddle flashed first upon one side, then on the other of the
+craft, which fairly darted through the water. But suddenly a hand and
+arm rose from the lake and seized the paddle just back of the blade.
+Enoch had dived under the surface and come up beside the canoe as Halpen
+was speeding past.
+
+"Ha! would you do it?" gasped the spy, striving to tear the paddle from
+the youth's grasp. The canoe rocked dangerously. The man flung himself
+to the other side and his superior strength wrenched the paddle away.
+Not contented to use the instrument in an attempt to escape, however, he
+tried to strike the youth with it. The canoe was all but overturned,
+although its momentum carried it on, and once out of Enoch's grasp the
+spy could have easily gotten away. Whether he recognized his enemy or
+not, Halpen was inclined to deliver a second blow. He rose to do this
+and Enoch, fairly leaping forward, seized the stern of the canoe with
+both hands.
+
+"Throw down your paddle, Simon Halpen!" he commanded.
+
+"It is you, then?" cried the spy, now sure of the identity of the youth.
+He aimed a fearful stroke at the boy's head. But instantly the latter
+tipped the canoe first one way, then the other, and the spy, losing his
+balance, plunged with a resounding splash into the lake!
+
+The canoe turned completely over. This was not what Enoch wished, but
+the shock of Halpen's fall was so great that he could not help it. The
+boy's desire had been to pitch the man out, get in himself, and then
+have the spy at his mercy. But chance--nay, Providence, for the man's
+sins had deserved death--willed otherwise.
+
+Simon Halpen could not swim. In falling into the lake he even lost his
+grip upon the paddle. So, when he rose to the surface, he had nothing to
+cling to, but struggled wildly and cried out in fear. "Help! I am
+choking! I will drown!" His voice rose to a screech. An answering shout
+came from the distant shore where the sentinel was stationed. But the
+latter was too far away to render aid. If the spy was to be saved it
+depended upon the efforts of the youth whose father had died under
+Halpen's hand, and whose own life the scoundrel had twice sought.
+
+At that fearful cry, however, Enoch launched himself at the sinking man.
+His head was already under water when the boy reached down and seized
+his collar. He brought him to the surface. The water gurgled from his
+throat and he breathed again. Had he been content to abandon himself to
+his rescuer then he would have been saved.
+
+But terror rode him like a nightmare. He feared drowning; he feared,
+too, the enemy whom he would have killed had he been able the instant
+before. He could not appreciate the generous spirit which had prompted
+Enoch to come to his assistance. He thought the boy strove only to force
+him beneath the lake and he fought and screamed with passion and horror
+of imminent death.
+
+"Be still! be still!" cried Enoch, well-nigh overcome himself by the mad
+actions of the man. "Lie quiet or I cannot save you. Be still!"
+
+Halpen did not hear him; or, if he heard, he would not believe. He tore
+himself from Enoch's grasp, and as the youth tried to seize him again he
+struck out wildly and his fist found lodgment against Enoch's jaw. The
+blow stunned the latter and he sank. Halpen strove to reach the
+overturned canoe. It was too far away. He felt himself going down for a
+third time and his lungs were already half filled with water. A fearful
+scream rent the night--the last cry of a terrified soul going to its
+end--and he sank. He never rose to the surface after that third plunge
+beneath the lake.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+THE DAWN OF THE TENTH OF MAY
+
+
+Enoch Harding, after a moment of breathless agony beneath the water,
+struggled to the air again. The blow he had received so dulled his
+senses that, had the canoe not fortunately been within the reach of his
+arm, he would have a second time gone down into the depths of the lake
+and possibly shared the fate of his enemy. But when his hand, flung out
+in that despair which is said to make a drowning person catch at even a
+straw, came in contact with the boat he seized it with a grip that could
+not be shaken. He had not the strength necessary to turn it over and to
+climb into the craft; but fortunately rescue was near.
+
+The sentinel had heard the voices out upon the water, and Simon Halpen's
+despairing scream as he went down for the last time, echoed from the
+wooded bluffs and reached the ears of the other Green Mountain Boys in
+the neighborhood. The sentinel leaped into the big canoe which Enoch had
+that morning secured from the Tory farmer up the lake, and paddled
+rapidly toward the mouth of the cove. He suspected at once that the
+escaped spy was trying to cross the lake and that some one of his
+brother scouts had discovered him.
+
+Suddenly the rescuer saw the upturned canoe and the almost exhausted boy
+clinging to it. He drove his own craft alongside and reaching quickly
+seized Enoch's shoulder, bearing him up as the youth's own hands slipped
+from their resting-place on the keel of the canoe. "Courage--courage!"
+cried the scout, heartily. "You are not goin' down yet, Nuck Harding!
+Where's the other?"
+
+"Gone--gone!" gasped Enoch, horrified by the death of Simon Halpen.
+
+"Who was it?"
+
+"The spy."
+
+"Ah! I thought so. Well, we can't help the poor wretch now. Can you aid
+yourself at all? Brace up, man!"
+
+"I'm--I'm all right," the youth declared, finally shaking off the
+feeling which had numbed him. "Let me get a grip on your boat--there!
+Now you can paddle ashore. I'll not lose my hold this time."
+
+"Right it is, then." The rescuer paddled slowly toward the bateaus. When
+he came to the shore with the boy dragging behind him, Bolderwood and
+several other members of the company had arrived in answer to the
+expiring scream of the drowned Yorker. Upon hearing the explanation of
+the affair the chief scout's face became grave indeed. "The poor wretch
+has gone to his just desarts, I don't doubt," he said. "But so
+sudden--so sudden! It seems a turrible thing, friends, for a man to live
+the life he lived and then to go before his Maker without no
+preparation. He murdered poor Jonas Harding as sure as aigs is aigs, an'
+he tried twice ter kill the boy here, an' burned the widder's home. Yet
+I'd wished him time to make his peace with God. It's an awful affair....
+But come!" he added, recovering himself, "there's something else to do
+now. We've got word from Colonel Allen. The troops are almost here. An'
+as good as we've done, there ain't ha'f enough boats to transport our
+boys across the lake."
+
+"There may be more comin' from the north, 'Siah," suggested Brown. "Y'
+know ye sent some of the boys up that way this arternoon."
+
+"Small hope o' their gettin' anything----"
+
+The chief scout's words were interrupted by a shout from one of the
+others. Around the point which defended the little cove a boat was
+appearing--or, rather, a lantern which betrayed the approach of a boat.
+"Here's another!" was the cry. "Here's Major Skeene's big bateau--an'
+Major Skeene's nigger, too!" as the loud and angry voice of a black man
+was heard across the calm water.
+
+"The boys are having a hard time with our black-and-tan friend," said
+Bolderwood with a chuckle. Then he held up his hand for silence. "Hark!
+there's the ring of a horse's hoof--and the tramp of feet. The troops
+are coming."
+
+With a rattle of accoutrements a cavalcade of horsemen descended the
+bluff to the tiny cove. Enoch recognized Colonel Allen, Major Warner,
+the stranger, Arnold, and Colonel Easton, the commander of the
+Massachusetts and Connecticut forces. "Praise the Lord, 'Siah!" cried
+the hearty voice of the Green Mountain leader. "We're arrived at last.
+'Twas like a task of Hercules to get here. And the night is already far
+gone. Where are your boats, man?"
+
+"The bulk of 'em are right here, Colonel. We ain't got what I wished;
+but we've taken 'em from friend and foe, and here comes the last of my
+boys with Major Skeene's big raft and, if I ain't mighty mistaken, with
+a bag o' charcoal aboard that must ha' caused 'em consider'ble trouble."
+
+The voice of the negro, who was the property of one of the wealthiest
+royalists on the lake, became more and more vociferous as the bateau
+approached the shore. "Wot de goodness youse shakaroons doin' yere? We
+ain't goin' land yere--no, sir! Dis ain't no place fur us. Who yo' t'ink
+capen ob dis craft, anyway?"
+
+"Oh, come along, old man! we wanter see ye!" shouted Bolderwood from the
+shore. "We won't eat ye up."
+
+"Dis ain' no place for us, I tells yo'!" cried the darky, and as the
+outline of the bateau and the objects upon it were now visible, they
+could see the whites of his rolling eyes. "I ain' got nuttin' ter do wid
+yo' shakaroons."
+
+"Come on, there!" shouted Allen. "Gag that black rascal if he doesn't
+talk less and use his sweeps well."
+
+"Who dat say fur ter gag me?" demanded the black, his teeth chattering.
+"D'you knows who I is, sah? I'se Major Skeene's nigger, an' dis Major
+Skeene's bateau, an' we gotter load o' freight fo' de castle."
+
+"We've got another sort of freight for you, my man," said the Green
+Mountain leader. "So come ashore here and have no more words about it."
+
+"But dese yere gemmen say dey goin' fishin' an' git me ter lend 'em
+passage!" cried the darky, in despair.
+
+"And so we are going fishing," cried Ethan Allen. "And you shall go,
+too, my black friend. But it will be different fishing from any that
+you've experienced before. Out with you, now!" he added, as the bateau
+grounded on the shore. "Get that freight off, men. What boats we have we
+must use at once. Perhaps they can be returned for another party to
+cross after us. I'll never forgive myself if this oversight makes a
+wreck of our expedition."
+
+At that moment the man who, earlier in the evening, had crossed the lake
+from the fort, came and spoke to Ethan Allen. The leader of the
+Americans listened attentively, slapping his thigh now and again with
+evident satisfaction as he heard the report of this faithful patriot
+who, as Allen had previously said, dared enter the lion's jaws. He had
+gone to Ticonderoga as a trader, had spent parts of two days in the
+fort, learning much that encouraged Allen in this desperate game he was
+playing. Although expecting additions to the garrison, Captain De la
+Place had not yet received the reinforcements. The buttresses of the
+fort, too, were in a sad state of repair. Indeed, since the British had
+swept the French from the lake, and with them driven the Hurons and
+Algonquins into the northern wilderness, few if any repairs had been
+made upon Ticonderoga. The British had simply held it as a storehouse
+and the garrison was small. If the American troops now gathering upon
+the eastern shore of Lake Champlain could once cross the water and
+approach the fort unperceived, there was hope in the hearts of all that
+the stronghold would be captured and the garrison overcome without any
+great loss of life.
+
+"The God of Battles has been with ye!" exclaimed Allen, when the man had
+finished his report. "And if He is with us, as I believe, yonder fort
+and all it contains shall be ours before sunrise.... But hasten! Tell
+Baker to bring up his troops. Bolderwood, you and your scouts must go
+over first with us. Colonel Arnold, you will come in my boat if you
+wish. Major Warner, I leave you to assist our good friend Easton. The
+boats shall return as soon as we have landed. Count the men who enter
+these boats, gentlemen. The lake is calm; but do not overload the craft.
+We desire no accident to delay our landing on the other side."
+
+Enoch Harding kept close to his friend, the old ranger, and was
+therefore in one of the foremost boats. He was near Colonel Allen when
+word was passed to that brave leader that those in the boats numbered
+but eighty-three. "Eighty-three!" exclaimed the Green Mountain hero.
+"And every man worth three red-coats. Once we get within those walls and
+I'll answer for them. Yet, sirs, I would that we had not been so long
+delayed on the road, or that there were more bateaus to our hand."
+
+"Shall the attack be given up--postponed till a more fitting
+occasion--if we cannot get more across?" asked Arnold.
+
+"Postponed!" cried Allen, his face darkening. "And pray tell me, sir,
+how can it be postponed? With the dawn our troops will be observed upon
+both sides of the lake by those in the fort, or by Tories who will
+gladly run with warning to the red-coats. A blind kitten could see what
+we are about. Nay, Colonel Arnold; we have put our hands to the plough
+and we'll cut a deep furrow or none at all!"
+
+The bold courage of their leader inspired the handful of men with actual
+belief in the successful outcome of the attack. There were no doubts
+expressed during the voyage across the lake. But when the landing was
+made, at the foot of the bluff on which the fort was built, the east was
+already streaked with pink. The dawn of the tenth of May, 1775--a day as
+marked in American history as any which we celebrate--was at hand. Less
+than a hundred patriotic Green Mountain Boys had disembarked from the
+boats under the shadow of Ticonderoga. With the rising of the sun their
+presence would be discovered by the garrison of the fort, and once
+warned of their approach, the British could easily defend the works from
+any attack of infantry. Circumstances seemed to presage at that moment
+the defeat of the cause and utter humiliation of the participators in
+the proposed attack.
+
+The boats had left the shore and were no longer to be descried, for a
+light fog covered the water. There was no retreat. To hide this party on
+the New York shore of the lake would be impossible. There were too many
+Tories about. Allen turned to his men. His voice was low, but intense,
+so that not only those around him, of which Enoch was one, but those at
+a distance heard every word uttered.
+
+"Friends! we have come here for a single purpose. It is to advance upon
+yonder fortifications and capture them. We already outnumber the
+garrison; I have certain information upon this point. But our companions
+await on the other shore to be transported to this spot and join in our
+glorious work. In the east, however, is a warning we can all read.
+Before our friends can join us it will be day. We shall be observed
+here; the garrison will be called to arms; our opportunity be lost. So,
+my brave companions, we cannot wait.
+
+"I shall attack the fort at once. I force no man to an act which caution
+forbids. If any of you doubt, fall out of the ranks and make good your
+escape. But I am going forward and those who trust in God and to my
+leadership will advance at once!" He drew his sword and advanced a long
+stride before the column of anxious patriots. "Forward!" he cried, and
+inspired by the same spirit which animated their gallant leader, every
+Green Mountain Boy obeyed the command. They would have cheered, but the
+moment for anything of that kind was not opportune. The rising mist
+scarcely concealed the fortress above them.
+
+With Colonel Arnold by his side the indomitable Allen climbed the slope
+and approached the covered way which led into the fort. Not a word was
+spoken. The sullen tramp of the column was all that broke the stillness
+of the dawn. The sentinel placed here to guard the entrance--a matter of
+military rule rather than of precaution--leaned half asleep upon his
+musket. Had he been alert the approach of the troops must have been
+discovered ere they were visible. But Providence willed that he,
+together with all the garrison, should be totally unsuspicious of the
+planned attack of the provincials.
+
+Suddenly, through the curling mist, appeared the head of the column. The
+sentinel started from his dream and, scarce understanding what he saw,
+advanced his musket, crying: "Halt! who goes there?"
+
+The Americans accelerated their pace while Ethan Allen, whirling his
+sword above his head, shouted: "Forward!" The attacking force reached
+the mouth of the covered way at a double-quick. Repeating the command to
+halt the sentinel darted back, raised his weapon to his shoulder, and
+aiming full at the head of the commander of the Green Mountain Boys,
+pressed the trigger!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+THE GUNS OF OLD TI SPEAK
+
+
+The fate of more than a brave man hung in the balance at that moment.
+The ultimate happiness and secure footing of a state was at stake when
+the sentinel pressed the trigger of his weapon. Had the ball reached its
+mark, the establishment of Vermont as a free state might have been
+postponed for many years. Ethan Allen's diplomacy in later dealing with
+the British agents who sought to wean Vermont from her federation with
+the struggling colonies, doubtless saved the Green Mountains from being
+overrun by a horde of Hessians and Indians who would have brought death
+and disaster to the patriotic settlers.
+
+But Providence had other work for the leader of the Green Mountain Boys
+to do. The musket missed fire and flinging down the piece the sentinel
+turned and ran through the passage into the fort, shrieking that the
+enemy was at hand. With a cheer the little band of patriots followed,
+and before the garrison was awake to its situation, the Green Mountain
+Boys had reached the parade. Instructed by their captains what to do,
+the men ran hither and thither to seize the guns whose threatening
+muzzles peered through the embrasures of the walls, and to guard the
+entrances to the barracks where the garrison slept.
+
+'Siah Bolderwood, seizing an axe, attacked the door of the ammunition
+cellar; for the American spy who had spent the previous day within the
+works had explained to the ranger the situation of this important
+compartment. The ringing blows of the woodman's axe doubtless awakened
+many of the sleeping soldiery. In half a minute the stout oak door was
+down. "There, Nuck Harding!" cried the long ranger, "I leave you to
+guard that 'ere. If they show fight, fire your rifle into the place. If
+so be, we'll all go up together; but Old Ti is ourn and if we're driven
+forth we'll wreck the fortifications as we go."
+
+Meanwhile Ethan Allen, knowing well the sleeping quarters of Captain De
+la Place, having received his information from the same source as
+Bolderwood, leaped up the stairway to the apartment of the commander of
+the fort. His shoulder burst in the door without the loss of an instant,
+and he found the astounded captain sitting up in bed. "What is this,
+sir? Who are you?" cried the British officer.
+
+"I call on ye to surrender, Captain De la Place!" cried the Green
+Mountain leader.
+
+"In whose name do ye make this demand, sir?"
+
+"In the name of the great Jehovah and the Continental Congress!" replied
+Allen, sternly. Then, describing a circle about his head with his sword,
+he added in a tone not to be mistaken: "I demand the surrender of your
+fort and all the stores and goods it may contain; and, sir, unless you
+comply with my demand and parade your men without arms at once, I'll
+send your head, sir, spinning across this floor!" and the whistling
+steel blade was advanced until the British officer shrank in fear.
+
+"I surrender! I surrender!" he cried, and word was passed at once to
+both the garrison and the Americans on the parade below. And thus the
+strongest British fortress within the borders of the disaffected
+colonies, capitulated to the American arms without a gun being fired.
+What if, when the news of the remarkable feat reached Philadelphia where
+the Continental Congress was in session, the act of Ethan Allen and his
+brave Green Mountain Boys was deplored, and a considerable party was for
+returning the stronghold to the king, while others wished to withdraw
+the American garrison, believing that the Champlain forts were too far
+on the frontier to be held successfully against the enemy? These
+suggestions were but the result of over-cautiousness on the part of some
+members of Congress. Happily their wishes were overborne and Ticonderoga
+remained an American fort until the cowardly St. Clair abandoned it
+before the advance of Burgoyne.
+
+At the moment, however, the satisfaction of Ethan Allen and his brave
+companions was unbounded. While the British soldiers were being paraded
+without their weapons before their conquerors, a second body of Green
+Mountain Boys under Major Warner entered the fort. The tall Connecticut
+man came to Allen with considerable chagrin expressed in his
+countenance. "Colonel, you have selfishly seized all the honors this
+time!" he cried, yet congratulating his friend with a warm handclasp.
+"You are a regular Achilles; there is nothing heroic for the rest of us
+to do."
+
+"Nonsense--nonsense, Seth!" cried Ethan Allen, yet unable to hide his
+delight at the outcome of the attack. "There is glory enough for every
+officer and every man Jack in the ranks. There is yet Crown Point to
+capture and you, Major, shall command that expedition. Take Bolderwood
+and some of his scouts with you and approach the other fortress by
+water--and good fortune and my blessing go with you!"
+
+A moment later the great guns of Old Ti began to speak. And they spoke a
+new tongue that morning. The Voice of Liberty as expressed by the
+resonant thunders of the old cannon echoed and reechoed from height to
+height. The promontory which had been the scene of the bloody struggle
+between Champlain and the Iroquois, and the site of two fearful battles
+of the British and French, was at length sanctified by the presence of
+this band of liberty loving men destined, through the next few years, to
+offer their lives and possessions on the altar of their country.
+
+Then Warner and his men again embarked in the boats and sailed down the
+lake. Enoch Harding went with the expedition and saw the bloodless
+capitulation of the other British stronghold. Later, Benedict Arnold
+with a small command captured a British corvette farther down the lake
+and with that act the supremacy of the Americans on Champlain was
+assured. A garrison was placed in each fortress and then the Green
+Mountain Boys dispersed to their homes having accomplished the object
+for which they had been gathered by their leader. Enoch and the old
+ranger returned to the ox-bow farm where their welcome can be better
+imagined than narrated.
+
+Yet the Widow Harding during the struggle which followed the capture of
+Ticonderoga made many sacrifices more noble even than that of allowing
+her eldest son to join in this expedition, but pioneer mothers were
+called upon so to do. Lot Breckenridge's mother had allowed her son to
+march away to Boston where, under Israel Putman, he saw most active
+service during the campaign which finally drove the red-coats out of the
+Massachusetts capital. Robbie Baker was with his father when, while
+reconnoitering outside St. Johns, the Green Mountain sharpshooter was
+killed by an Indian ally of the British.
+
+Enoch Harding, too, joined that ill-fated expedition into Canada where
+the rash attempt of Ethan Allen and his followers before Montreal
+resulted in the capture and imprisonment of the intrepid leader. Enoch,
+returning with the broken columns of the American army, but with a
+lieutenant's commission, was sent south and took no further part in the
+struggles about Lake Champlain. But Bryce, two years after the capture
+of Ticonderoga, well sustained the family name and honor while fighting
+with Stark at Bennington.
+
+The girls and young Henry became their mother's sole support in her work
+of tilling the farm which Jonas Harding had cleared, and throughout the
+uncertain years of the Revolution the family continued to sow and reap,
+like so many other patriotic folk, that the army might be clothed and
+fed while fighting the King's hirelings. Perhaps the part played by the
+"non-combatants" in the Revolution was not the least loyal nor the least
+helpful to the cause of liberty.
+
+The war between the confederated states and Great Britain did not end
+the controversy regarding the rights of the settlers in the Hampshire
+Grants; it simply postponed the vexing matter. But in the end the
+freedom of Vermont as a state was brought about. After the war, and
+while the Thirteen States were endeavoring to bring order out of the
+chaotic conditions which had been the legacy of the great struggle, it
+was really New York herself that urged the admittance of Vermont into
+the Union. Even at that early date the supremacy of the South was
+feared, and when Kentucky applied for entrance to the Union, Vermont was
+made a state also to counteract the addition of another of southern
+sentiment.
+
+During the war, however, the condition of Vermont was very precarious.
+It was due to Ethan Allen, as much as to any one man, that the Green
+Mountains and the Champlain Valley were not overrun with foes both white
+and red. While imprisoned in the hulks in New York Bay Allen was
+approached by agents of the crown who strove to buy his good-will by
+presents and promises. They did not understand the rugged honesty of the
+Green Mountain Boy; but he, knowing the exposed situation of his friends
+and neighbors, craftily led his captors to believe that they might
+obtain Vermont and her sturdy people on their own side.
+
+When Ethan Allen was exchanged and came back to the Green Mountains, he
+still, with other leaders, carefully watched the British agents and thus
+saved the rich farming lands of the Otter and Wonooski from bloodshed,
+that the patriot farmers might continue to plant and reap the grain
+which was truly "the sinews of war." It is true therefore that few
+leaders of the Revolution deserve greater commendation, for none
+displayed more consecrated courage, nor was more beloved by his
+followers, than the hero of Ticonderoga.
+
+
+
+
+HISTORICAL STORIES FOR BOYS
+
+THE EVE OF WAR
+
+By W. Bert Foster. Illustrated by F. A. Carter.
+
+A story of the critical days just before the Civil War, when every hour
+made history. Joe Ransom learns of the plan to assassinate President
+Lincoln on the way to his inauguration, and is sent by the United
+States Government officials to warn the President-elect. His mission is
+accomplished, and largely as a result of his services the plot comes to
+naught. Historical facts are closely followed, but this nowhere
+interferes with the interest in the story.
+
+
+WITH ETHAN ALLEN AT TICONDEROGA
+
+By W. Bert Foster. Illustrated by F. A. Carter.
+
+A vivid picture of the struggles of those heroic New Englanders, the
+Green Mountain Boys, against the Tory residents. That dramatic
+character in revolutionary history, Ethan Allen, with whom the young
+hero is continually in touch, is the central figure of the narrative,
+and the incidents which lead up to the capture of Fort Ticonderoga are
+told in a wonderfully interesting manner.
+
+WITH WASHINGTON AT VALLEY FORGE
+
+By W. Bert Foster. Illustrated by F. A. Carter.
+
+The hero, a boy of sixteen, is an enthusiastic patriot. He soon enlists
+his services with his country, and performs many heroic deeds in the
+capacity of a courier in the battles of Brandywine, Monmouth, and at
+the Paoli massacre. He renders great service to our forces at Valley
+Forge, and participates in the hardships which the struggling American
+army endured during that memorable winter.
+
+Cloth Binding--Illustrated--Each, $1.25
+
+THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY
+
+923 ARCH STREET--PHILADELPHIA
+
+
+
+
+UNCROWNING A KING
+
+By Edward S. Ellis, A. M. Illustrated by J. Steeple Davis.
+
+A tale of the Indian war waged by King Philip in 1675. The adventures
+of the young hero during that eventful period, his efforts in behalf of
+the attacked towns, his capture by the Indians, and his subsequent
+release through the efforts of King Philip himself, with a vivid
+account of the tragic death of that renowned Indian chieftain, form a
+most interesting and instructive story.
+
+AT THE SIEGE OF QUEBEC
+
+By James Otis. Illustrated by F. A. Carter.
+
+Two boys living on the Kennebec River join Benedict Arnold's expedition
+as it passes their dwelling en route for the Canadian border. They,
+with their command, are taken prisoners before Quebec. The terrible
+march through the wilderness, the incidents of the siege, and the
+disastrous assault, which cost the gallant General Montgomery his life,
+are in the highest degree thrilling, and true in every particular.
+
+WITH PURITAN AND PEQUOT
+
+By William Murray Graydon. Illustrated by Clyde O. Deland.
+
+There is a swing of martial spirit and a spice of bold enterprise in
+this story of colonial times. Rufus Jennicom, the impetuous Puritan
+boy, finds fighting Indians more to his taste than raising Indian corn.
+It is his rare good fortune to have for his friend Roger Williams and
+to meet with Captain Miles Standish. The incidents that go to make up
+this stirring tale have much to do with the struggles of the early New
+England colonies.
+
+Cloth Binding--Illustrated--Each, $1.25
+
+THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY
+
+923 ARCH STREET--PHILADELPHIA
+
+
+
+
+IN THE DAYS OF WASHINGTON
+
+By William Murray Graydon. Illustrated by J. C. Claghorn.
+
+The story opens in Philadelphia just prior to its evacuation by the
+British in 1778. Nathan Stanbury, a bright lad of seventeen, joins the
+Continental Army, which is then suffering the hardships of the winter
+at Valley Forge. A short time later the Battle of Monmouth is fought,
+and in this the young hero figures quite prominently, as he does
+afterward at the Massacre of Wyoming.
+
+THE BOER BOY OF THE TRANSVAAL
+
+By Kate Milner Rabb. Illustrated by F. A. Carter.
+
+The career of the Boer boy is one series of exciting adventures. In the
+gallant service for his country he comes face to face with President
+Kruger, General Cronje, and General Joubert. Much interesting
+information pertaining to this country and its people is introduced,
+and the reader will understand as never before the cause of the intense
+hatred of the Boers for the British.
+
+ON WOOD COVE ISLAND
+
+By Elbridge S. Brooks. Illustrated by Frederic J. Boston.
+
+A trio of bright New England children are given an island on which to
+spend their summer vacation. Here they establish a little colony, the
+management of which gives them a large amount of amusement and at times
+causes some seemingly serious difficulties. In the solution of their
+perplexing problems the young people receive much encouragement and
+counsel from the poet Longfellow, whose delightful acquaintance they
+form in a very unexpected and amusing manner.
+
+Cloth Binding--Illustrated--Each, $1.25
+
+THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY
+
+923 ARCH STREET--PHILADELPHIA
+
+
+
+
+UNDER THE TAMARACKS
+
+By Elbridge S. Brooks. Illustrated.
+
+An interesting and healthful story for boys and girls, representing a
+summer's outing of young people among the Thousand Islands. It is timed
+to include the visit of General Grant at Alexandria Bay, and several
+interesting conversations between one of the boys and the hero of the
+Rebellion shed pleasing side lights upon the great General's character.
+
+Cloth Binding--Illustrated--Each, $1.25
+
+THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY
+
+923 ARCH STREET--PHILADELPHIA
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's With Ethan Allen at Ticonderoga, by W. Bert Foster
+
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