It seemed strange to Mabel Dunham, as she passed along on her way to find
her female companion, that others should be so composed, while she herself
felt as if the responsibilities of life and death rested on her shoulders.
It is true that distrust of June's motives mingled with her forebodings;
but when she came to recall the affectionate and natural manner of the
young Indian girl, and all the evidences of good faith and sincerity she
had seen in her conduct during the familiar intercourse of their journey,
she rejected the idea with the unwillingness of a generous disposition to
believe ill of others. She saw, however, that she could not put her
companions properly on their guard without letting them into the secret of
her conference with June; and she found herself compelled to act
cautiously and with a forethought to which she was unaccustomed, more
especially in a matter of so much moment.
The soldier's wife was told to transport the necessaries into the
blockhouse, and admonished not to be far from it at any time during the
day. Mabel did not explain her reasons. She merely stated that she had
detected some signs in walking about the island, which induced her to
apprehend that the enemy had more knowledge of its position than had been
previously believed, and that they two at least, would do well to be in
readiness to seek a refuge at the shortest notice. It was not difficult to
arouse the apprehension of this person, who, though a stout-hearted
Scotchwoman, was ready enough to listen to anything that confirmed her
dread of Indian cruelties. As soon as Mabel believed that her companion
was sufficiently frightened to make her wary, she threw out some hints
touching the inexpediency of letting the soldiers know the extent of their
own fears. This was done with a view to prevent discussions and inquiries
that might embarrass our heroine: she determining to render her uncle, the
Corporal, and his men more cautious, by adopting a different course.
Unfortunately, the British army could not have furnished a worse person
for the particular duty that he was now required to discharge than
Corporal M'Nab, the individual who had been left in command during the
absence of Sergeant Dunham. On the one hand, he was resolute, prompt,
familiar with all the details of a soldier's life, and used to war; on the
other, he was supercilious as regards the provincials, opinionated on
every subject connected with the narrow limits of his professional
practice, much disposed to fancy the British empire the centre of all that
is excellent in the world, and Scotland the focus of, at least, all moral
excellence in that empire. In short, he was an epitome, though on a scale
suited to his rank, of those very qualities which were so peculiar to the
servants of the Crown that were sent into the colonies, as these servants
estimated themselves in comparison with the natives of the country; or, in
other words, he considered the American as an animal inferior to the
parent stock, and viewed all his notions of military service, in
particular, as undigested and absurd. A more impracticable subject,
therefore, could not well have offered for the purpose of Mabel, and yet
she felt obliged to lose no time in putting her plan in execution.
“My father has left you a responsible command, Corporal,” she said, as
soon as she could catch M'Nab a little apart; “for should the island fall
into the hands of the enemy, not only should we be captured, but the party
that is now out would in all probability become their prisoners also.”
“It needs no journey from Scotland to this place to know the facts needful
to be o' that way of thinking.” returned M'Nab drily.
“I do not doubt your understanding it as well as myself, Mr. M'Nab, but
I'm fearful that you veterans, accustomed as you are to dangers and
battles, are a little apt to overlook some of the precautions that may be
necessary in a situation as peculiar as ours.”
“They say Scotland is no conquered country, young woman, but I'm thinking
there must be some mistak' in the matter, as we, her children, are so
drowsy-headed and apt to be o'ertaken when we least expect it.”
“Nay, my good friend, you mistake my meaning. In the first place, I'm not
thinking of Scotland at all, but of this island; and then I am far from
doubting your vigilance when you think it necessary to practise it; but my
great fear is that there may be danger to which your courage will make you
indifferent.”
“My courage, Mistress Dunham, is doubtless of a very pool quality, being
nothing but Scottish courage; your father's is Yankee, and were he here
among us we should see different preparations, beyond a doubt. Well, times
are getting wrang, when foreigners hold commissions and carry halberds in
Scottish corps; and I no wonder that battles are lost, and campaigns go
wrang end foremost.”
Mabel was almost in despair; but the quiet warning of June was still too
vividly impressed on her mind to allow her to yield the matter. She
changed her mode of operating, therefore, still clinging to the hope of
getting the whole party within the blockhouse, without being compelled to
betray the source whence she obtained her notices of the necessity of
vigilance.
“I daresay you are right, Corporal M'Nab,” she observed; “for I've often
heard of the heroes of your country, who have been among the first of the
civilized world, if what they tell me of them is true.”
“Have you read the history of Scotland, Mistress Dunham?” demanded the
Corporal, looking up at his pretty companion, for the first time with
something like a smile on his hard, repulsive countenance.
“I have read a little of it, Corporal, but I've heard much more. The lady
who brought me up had Scottish blood in her veins, and was fond of the
subject.”
“I'll warrant ye, the Sergeant no' troubled himself to expatiate on the
renown of the country where his regiment was raised?”
“My father has other things to think of, and the little I know was got
from the lady I have mentioned.”
“She'll no' be forgetting to tall ye o' Wallace?”
“Of him I've even read a good deal.”
“And o' Bruce, and the affair of Bannockburn?”
“Of that too, as well as of Culloden Muir.”
The last of these battles was then a recent event, it having actually been
fought within the recollection of our heroine, whose notions of it,
however, were so confused that she scarcely appreciated the effect her
allusion might produce on her companion. She knew it had been a victory,
and had often heard the guests of her patroness mention it with triumph;
and she fancied their feelings would find a sympathetic chord in those of
every British soldier. Unfortunately, M'Nab had fought throughout that
luckless day on the side of the Pretender; and a deep scar that garnished
his face had been left there by the sabre of a German soldier in the
service of the House of Hanover. He fancied that his wound bled afresh at
Mabel's allusion; and it is certain that the blood rushed to his face in a
torrent, as if it would pour out of his skin at the cicatrix.
“Hoot! hoot awa'!” he fairly shouted, “with your Culloden and Sherriff
muirs, young woman; ye'll no' be understanding the subject at all, and
will manifest not only wisdom but modesty in speaking o' your ain country
and its many failings. King George has some loyal subjects in the
colonies, na doubt, but 'twill be a lang time before he sees or hears any
guid of them.”
Mabel was surprised at the Corporal's heat, for she had not the smallest
idea where the shoe pinched; but she was determined not to give up the
point.
“I've always heard that the Scotch had two of the good qualities of
soldiers,” she said, “courage and circumspection; and I feel persuaded
that Corporal M'Nab will sustain the national renown.”
“Ask yer own father, Mistress Dunham; he is acquaint' with Corporal M'Nab,
and will no' be backward to point out his demerits. We have been in battle
thegither, and he is my superior officer, and has a sort o' official right
to give the characters of his subordinates.”
“My father thinks well of you, M'Nab, or he would not have left you in
charge of this island and all it contains, his own daughter included.
Among other things, I well know that he calculates largely on your
prudence. He expects the blockhouse in particular to be strictly attended
to.”
“If he wishes to defend the honor of the 55th behind logs, he ought to
have remained in command himsel'; for, to speak frankly, it goes against a
Scotchman's bluid and opinions to be beaten out of the field even before
he is attacked. We are broadsword men, and love to stand foot to foot with
the foe. This American mode of fighting, that is getting into so much
favor, will destroy the reputation of his Majesty's army, if it no'
destroy its spirit.”
“No true soldier despises caution. Even Major Duncan himself, than whom
there is none braver, is celebrated for his care of his men.”
“Lundie has his weakness, and is fast forgetting the broadsword and open
heaths in his tree and rifle practice. But, Mistress Dunham, tak' the word
of an old soldier, who has seen his fifty-fifth year, when he talls ye
that there is no surer method to encourage your enemy than to seem to fear
him; and that there is no danger in this Indian warfare that the fancies
and imaginations of your Americans have not enlarged upon, until they see
a savage in every bush. We Scots come from a naked region, and have no
need and less relish for covers, and so ye'll be seeing, Mistress Dunham—”
The Corporal gave a spring into the air, fell forward on his face, and
rolled over on his back, the whole passing so suddenly that Mabel had
scarcely heard the sharp crack of the rifle that had sent a bullet through
his body. Our heroine did not shriek—did not even tremble; for the
occurrence was too sudden, too awful, and too unexpected for that
exhibition of weakness; on the contrary, she stepped hastily forward, with
a natural impulse to aid her companion. There was just enough of life left
in M'Nab to betray his entire consciousness of all that had passed. His
countenance had the wild look of one who had been overtaken by death by
surprise; and Mabel, in her cooler moments, fancied that it showed the
tardy repentance of a willful and obstinate sinner.
“Ye'll be getting into the blockhouse as fast as possible,” M'Nab
whispered, as Mabel leaned over him to catch his dying words.
Then came over our heroine the full consciousness of her situation and of
the necessity of exertion. She cast a rapid glance at the body at her
feet, saw that it had ceased to breathe, and fled. It was but a few
minutes' run to the blockhouse, the door of which Mabel had barely gained
when it was closed violently in her face by Jennie, the soldier's wife,
who in blind terror thought only of her own safety. The reports of five or
six rifles were heard while Mabel was calling out for admittance; and the
additional terror they produced prevented the woman within from undoing
quickly the very fastenings she had been so expert in applying. After a
minute's delay, however, Mabel found the door reluctantly yielding to her
constant pressure, and she forced her slender body through the opening the
instant it was large enough to allow of its passage. By this time Mabel's
heart ceased to beat tulmultuously and she gained sufficient self-command
to act collectedly. Instead of yielding to the almost convulsive efforts
of her companion to close the door again, she held it open long enough to
ascertain that none of her own party was in sight, or likely on the
instant to endeavor to gain admission: then she allowed the opening to be
shut. Her orders and proceedings now became more calm and rational. But a
single bar was crossed, and Jennie was directed to stand in readiness to
remove even that at any application from a friend. She then ascended the
ladder to the room above, where by means of a loophole she was enabled to
get as good a view of the island as the surrounding bushes would allow.
Admonishing her associate below to be firm and steady, she made as careful
an examination of the environs as her situation permitted.
To her great surprise, Mabel could not at first see a living soul on the
island, friend or enemy. Neither Frenchman nor Indian was visible, though
a small straggling white cloud that was floating before the wind told her
in which quarter she ought to look for them. The rifles had been
discharged from the direction of the island whence June had come, though
whether the enemy were on that island, or had actually landed on her own,
Mabel could not say. Going to the loop that commanded a view of the spot
where M'Nab lay, her blood curdled at perceiving all three of his soldiers
lying apparently lifeless at his side. These men had rushed to a common
centre at the first alarm, and had been shot down almost simultaneously by
the invisible foe whom the Corporal had affected to despise.
Neither Cap nor Lieutenant Muir was to be seen. With a beating heart,
Mabel examined every opening through the trees, and ascended even to the
upper story or garret of the blockhouse, where she got a full view of the
whole island, so far as its covers would allow, but with no better
success. She had expected to see the body of her uncle lying on the grass
like those of the soldiers, but it was nowhere visible. Turning towards
the spot where the boat lay, Mabel saw that it was still fastened to the
shore; and then she supposed that by some accident Muir had been prevented
from effecting his retreat in that quarter. In short, the island lay in
the quiet of the grave, the bodies of the soldiers rendering the scone as
fearful as it was extraordinary.
“For God's holy sake, Mistress Mabel,” called out the woman from below;
for, though her fear had become too ungovernable to allow her to keep
silence, our heroine's superior refinement, more than the regimental
station of her father, still controlled her mode of address,—“Mistress
Mabel, tell me if any of our friends are living! I think I hear groans
that grow fainter and fainter, and fear that they will all be tomahawked!”
Mabel now remembered that one of the soldiers was this woman's husband,
and she trembled at what might be the immediate effect of her sorrow,
should his death become suddenly known to her. The groans, too, gave a
little hope, though she feared they might come from her uncle, who lay out
of view.
“We are in His holy keeping, Jennie,” she answered. “We must trust in
Providence, while we neglect none of its benevolent means of protecting
ourselves. Be careful with the door; on no account open it without my
directions.”
“Oh, tell me, Mistress Mabel, if you can anywhere see Sandy! If I could
only let him know that I'm in safety, the guid man would be easier in his
mind, whether free or a prisoner.”
Sandy was Jennie's husband, and he lay dead in plain view of the loop from
which our heroine was then looking.
“You no' tell me if you're seeing of Sandy,” the woman repeated from
below, impatient at Mabel's silence.
“There are some of our people gathered about the body of M'Nab,” was the
answer; for it seemed sacrilegious in her eyes to tell a direct untruth
under the awful circumstances in which she was placed.
“Is Sandy amang them?” demanded the woman, in a voice that sounded
appalling by its hoarseness and energy.
“He may be certainly; for I see one, two, three, four, and all in the
scarlet coats of the regiment.”
“Sandy!” called out the woman frantically; “why d'ye no' care for
yoursal', Sandy? Come hither the instant, man, and share your wife's
fortunes in weal or woe. It's no' a moment for your silly discipline and
vain-glorious notions of honor! Sandy! Sandy!”
Mabel heard the bar turn, and then the door creaked on its hinges.
Expectation, not to say terror, held her in suspense at the loop, and she
soon beheld Jennie rushing through the bushes in the direction of the
cluster of the dead. It took the woman but an instant to reach the fatal
spot. So sudden and unexpected had been the blow, that she in her terror
did not appear to comprehend its weight. Some wild and half-frantic notion
of a deception troubled her fancy, and she imagined that the men were
trifling with her fears. She took her husband's hand, and it was still
warm, while she thought a covert smile was struggling on his lip.
“Why will ye fool life away, Sandy?” she cried, pulling at the arm. “Ye'll
all be murdered by these accursed Indians, and you no' takin' to the block
like trusty soldiers! Awa'! awa'! and no' be losing the precious moments.”
In her desperate efforts, the woman pulled the body of her husband in a
way to cause the head to turn completely over, when the small hole in the
temple, caused by the entrance of a rifle bullet, and a few drops of blood
trickling over the skin, revealed the meaning of her husband's silence. As
the horrid truth flashed in its full extent on her mind, the woman clasped
her hands, gave a shriek that pierced the glades of every island near, and
fell at length on the dead body of the soldier. Thrilling, heartreaching,
appalling as was that shriek, it was melody to the cry that followed it so
quickly as to blend the sounds. The terrific war-whoop arose out of the
covers of the island, and some twenty savages, horrible in their paint and
the other devices of Indian ingenuity, rushed forward, eager to secure the
coveted scalps. Arrowhead was foremost, and it was his tomahawk that
brained the insensible Jennie; and her reeking hair was hanging at his
girdle as a trophy in less than two minutes after she had quitted the
blockhouse. His companions were equally active, and M'Nab and his soldiers
no longer presented the quiet aspect of men who slumbered. They were left
in their gore, unequivocally butchered corpses.
All this passed in much less time than has been required to relate it, and
all this did Mabel witness. She had stood riveted to the spot, gazing on
the whole horrible scene, as if enchained by some charm, nor did the idea
of self or of her own danger once obtrude itself on her thoughts. But no
sooner did she perceive the place where the men had fallen covered with
savages, exulting in the success of their surprise, than it occurred to
her that Jennie had left the blockhouse door unbarred. Her heart beat
violently, for that defence alone stood between her and immediate death,
and she sprang toward the ladder with the intention of descending to make
sure of it. Her foot had not yet reached the floor of the second story,
however, when she heard the door grating on its hinges, and she gave
herself up for lost. Sinking on her knees, the terrified but courageous
girl endeavored to prepare herself for death, and to raise her thoughts to
God. The instinct of life, however, was too strong for prayer, and while
her lips moved, the jealous senses watched every sound beneath. When her
ears heard the bars, which went on pivots secured to the centre of the
door, turning into their fastenings, not one, as she herself had directed,
with a view to admit her uncle should he apply, but all three, she started
again to her feet, all spiritual contemplations vanishing in her actual
temporal condition, and it seemed as if all her faculties were absorbed in
the sense of hearing.
The thoughts are active in a moment so fearful. At first Mabel fancied
that her uncle had entered the blockhouse, and she was about to descend
the ladder and throw herself into his arms; then the idea that it might be
an Indian, who had barred the door to shut out intruders while he
plundered at leisure, arrested the movement. The profound stillness below
was unlike the bold, restless movements of Cap, and it seemed to savor
more of the artifices of an enemy. If a friend at all, it could only be
her uncle or the Quartermaster; for the horrible conviction now presented
itself to our heroine that to these two and herself were the whole party
suddenly reduced, if, indeed, the two latter survived. This consideration
held Mabel in check, and for full two minutes more a breathless silence
reigned in the building. During this time the girl stood at the foot of
the upper ladder, the trap which led to the lower opening on the opposite
side of the floor; the eyes of Mabel were riveted on this spot, for she
now began to expect to see at each instant the horrible sight of a savage
face at the hole. This apprehension soon became so intense, that she
looked about her for a place of concealment. The procrastination of the
catastrophe she now fully expected, though it were only for a moment,
afforded a relief. The room contained several barrels; and behind two of
these Mabel crouched, placing her eyes at an opening by which she could
still watch the trap. She made another effort to pray; but the moment was
too horrible for that relief. She thought, too, that she heard a low
rustling, as if one were ascending the lower ladder with an effort at
caution so great as to betray itself by its own excess; then followed a
creaking that she was certain came from one of the steps of the ladder,
which had made the same noise under her own light weight as she ascended.
This was one of those instants into which are compressed the sensations of
years of ordinary existence. Life, death, eternity, and extreme bodily
pain were all standing out in bold relief from the plane of every-day
occurrences; and she might have been taken at that moment for a beautiful
pallid representation of herself, equally without motion and without
vitality. But while such was the outward appearance of the form, never had
there been a time in her brief career when Mabel heard more acutely, saw
more clearly, or felt more vividly. As yet, nothing was visible at the
trap, but her ears, rendered exquisitely sensitive by intense feeling,
distinctly acquainted her that some one was within a few inches of the
opening in the floor. Next followed the evidence of her eyes, which beheld
the dark hair of an Indian rising so slowly through the passage that the
movements of the head might be likened to that of the minute-hand of a
clock; then came the dark skin and wild features, until the whole of the
swarthy face had risen above the floor. The human countenance seldom
appears to advantage when partially concealed; and Mabel imagined many
additional horrors as she first saw the black, roving eyes and the
expression of wildness as the savage countenance was revealed, as it might
be, inch by inch; but when the entire head was raised above the floor, a
second and a better look assured our heroine that she saw the gentle,
anxious, and even handsome face of June.
