The tranquillity of the previous night was not contradicted by the
movements of the day. Although Mabel and June went to every loophole, not
a sign of the presence of a living being on the island was at first to be
seen, themselves excepted. There was a smothered fire on the spot where
M'Nab and his comrades had cooked, as if the smoke which curled upwards
from it was intended as a lure to the absent; and all around the huts had
been restored to former order and arrangement. Mabel started involuntarily
when her eye at length fell on a group of three men, dressed in the
scarlet of the 55th, seated on the grass in lounging attitudes, as if they
chatted in listless security; and her blood curdled as, on a second look,
she traced the bloodless faces and glassy eyes of the dead. They were very
near the blockhouse, so near indeed as to have been overlooked at the
first eager inquiry, and there was a mocking levity in their postures and
gestures, for their limbs were stiffening in different attitudes, intended
to resemble life, at which the soul revolted. Still, horrible as these
objects were to those near enough to discover the frightful discrepancy
between their assumed and their real characters, the arrangement had been
made with so much art that it would have deceived a negligent observer at
the distance of a hundred yards. After carefully examining the shores of
the island, June pointed out to her companion the fourth soldier, seated,
with his feet hanging over the water, his back fastened to a sapling, and
holding a fishing-rod in his hand. The scalpless heads were covered with
the caps, and all appearance of blood had been carefully washed from each
countenance.
Mabel sickened at this sight, which not only did so much violence to all
her notions of propriety, but which was in itself so revolting and so
opposed to natural feeling. She withdrew to a seat, and hid her face in
her apron for several minutes, until a low call from June again drew her
to a loophole. The latter then pointed out the body of Jennie seemingly
standing in the door of a hut, leaning forward as if to look at the group
of men, her cap fluttering in the wind, and her hand grasping a broom. The
distance was too great to distinguish the features very accurately; but
Mabel fancied that the jaw had been depressed, as if to distort the mouth
into a sort of horrible laugh.
“June! June!” she exclaimed; “this exceeds all I have ever heard, or
imagined as possible, in the treachery and artifices of your people.”
“Tuscarora very cunning,” said June, in a way to show that she rather
approved of than condemned the uses to which the dead bodies had been
applied. “Do soldier no harm now; do Iroquois good; got the scalp first;
now make bodies work. By and by, burn 'em.”
This speech told Mabel how far she was separated from her friend in
character; and it was several minutes before she could again address her.
But this temporary aversion was lost on June, who set about preparing
their simple breakfast, in a way to show how insensible she was to
feelings in others which her own habits taught her to discard. Mabel ate
sparingly, and her companion, as if nothing had happened. Then they had
leisure again for their thoughts, and for further surveys of the island.
Our heroine, though devoured with a feverish desire to be always at the
loops, seldom went that she did not immediately quit them in disgust,
though compelled by her apprehensions to return again in a few minutes,
called by the rustling of leaves, or the sighing of the wind. It was,
indeed, a solemn thing to look out upon that deserted spot, peopled by the
dead in the panoply of the living, and thrown into the attitudes and acts
of careless merriment and rude enjoyment. The effect on our heroine was
much as if she had found herself an observer of the revelries of demons.
Throughout the livelong day not an Indian nor a Frenchman was to be seen,
and night closed over the frightful but silent masquerade, with the steady
and unalterable progress with which the earth obeys her laws, indifferent
to the petty actors and petty scenes that are in daily bustle and daily
occurrence on her bosom. The night was far more quiet than that which had
preceded it, and Mabel slept with an increasing confidence; for she now
felt satisfied that her own fate would not be decided until the return of
her father. The following day he was expected, however, and when our
heroine awoke, she ran eagerly to the loops in order to ascertain the
state of the weather and the aspect of the skies, as well as the condition
of the island. There lounged the fearful group on the grass; the fisherman
still hung over the water, seemingly intent on his sport; and the
distorted countenance of Jennie glared from out the hut in horrible
contortions. But the weather had changed; the wind blew fresh from the
southward, and though the air was bland, it was filled with the elements
of storm.
“This grows more and more difficult to bear, June,” Mabel said, when she
left the window. “I could even prefer to see the enemy than to look any
longer on this fearful array of the dead.”
“Hush! Here they come. June thought hear a cry like a warrior's shout when
he take a scalp.”
“What mean you? There is no more butchery!—there can be no more.”
“Saltwater!” exclaimed June, laughing, as she stood peeping through a
loophole.
“My dear uncle! Thank God! he then lives! Oh, June, June, you will
not let them harm him?”
“June, poor squaw. What warrior t'ink of what she say? Arrowhead bring him
here.”
By this time Mabel was at a loop; and, sure enough, there were Cap and the
Quartermaster in the hands of the Indians, eight or ten of whom were
conducting them to the foot of the block, for, by this capture, the enemy
now well knew that there could be no man in the building. Mabel scarcely
breathed until the whole party stood ranged directly before the door, when
she was rejoiced to see that the French officer was among them. A low
conversation followed, in which both the white leader and Arrowhead spoke
earnestly to their captives, when the Quartermaster called out to her in a
voice loud enough to be heard.
“Pretty Mabel! Pretty Mabel!” said he; “Look out of one of the loopholes,
and pity our condition. We are threatened with instant death unless you
open the door to the conquerors. Relent, then or we'll no' be wearing our
scalps half an hour from this blessed moment.”
Mabel thought there were mockery and levity in this appeal, and its manner
rather fortified than weakened her resolution to hold the place as long as
possible.
“Speak to me, uncle,” said she, with her mouth at a loop, “and tell me
what I ought to do.”
“Thank God! thank God!” ejaculated Cap; “the sound of your sweet voice,
Magnet, lightens my heart of a heavy load, for I feared you had shared the
fate of poor Jennie. My breast has felt the last four-and-twenty hours as
if a ton of kentledge had been stowed in it. You ask me what you ought to
do, child, and I do not know how to advise you, though you are my own
sister's daughter! The most I can say just now, my poor girl, is most
heartily to curse the day you or I ever saw this bit of fresh water.”
“But, uncle, is your life in danger—do you think I ought to
open the door?”
“A round turn and two half-hitches make a fast belay; and I would counsel
no one who is out of the hands of these devils to unbar or unfasten
anything in order to fall into them. As to the Quartermaster and myself,
we are both elderly men, and not of much account to mankind in general, as
honest Pathfinder would say; and it can make no great odds to him whether
he balances the purser's books this year or the next; and as for myself,
why, if I were on the seaboard, I should know what to do, but up here, in
this watery wilderness, I can only say, that if I were behind that bit of
a bulwark, it would take a good deal of Indian logic to rouse me out of
it.”
“You'll no' be minding all your uncle says, pretty Mabel,” put in Muir,
“for distress is obviously fast unsettling his faculties, and he is far
from calculating all the necessities of the emergency. We are in the hands
here of very considerate and gentlemanly pairsons, it must be
acknowledged, and one has little occasion to apprehend disagreeable
violence. The casualties that have occurred are the common incidents of
war, and can no' change our sentiments of the enemy, for they are far from
indicating that any injustice will be done the prisoners. I'm sure that
neither Master Cap nor myself has any cause of complaint since we have
given ourselves up to Master Arrowhead, who reminds me of a Roman or a
Spartan by his virtues and moderation; but ye'll be remembering that
usages differ, and that our scalps may be lawful sacrifices to appease the
manes of fallen foes, unless you save them by capitulation.”
“I shall do wiser to keep within the blockhouse until the fate of the
island is settled,” returned Mabel. “Our enemies can feel no concern on
account of one like me, knowing that I can do them no harm, and I greatly
prefer to remain here as more befitting my sex and years.”
“If nothing but your convenience were concerned, Mabel, we should all
cheerfully acquiesce in your wishes, but these gentlemen fancy that the
work will aid their operations, and they have a strong desire to possess
it. To be frank with you, finding myself and your uncle in a very peculiar
situation, I acknowledge that, to avert consequences, I have assumed the
power that belongs to his Majesty's commission, and entered into a verbal
capitulation, by which I have engaged to give up the blockhouse and the
whole island. It is the fortune of war, and must be submitted to; so open
the door, pretty Mabel, forthwith, and confide yourself to the care of
those who know how to treat beauty and virtue in distress. There's no
courtier in Scotland more complaisant than this chief, or who is more
familiar with the laws of decorum.”
“No leave blockhouse,” muttered June, who stood at Mabel's side, attentive
to all that passed. “Blockhouse good—got no scalp.”
Our heroine might have yielded but for this appeal; for it began to appear
to her that the wisest course would be to conciliate the enemy by
concessions instead of exasperating them by resistance. They must know
that Muir and her uncle were in their power; that there was no man in the
building, and she fancied they might proceed to batter down the door, or
cut their way through the logs with axes, if she obstinately refused to
give them peaceable admission, since there was no longer any reason to
dread the rifle. But the words of June induced her to hesitate, and the
earnest pressure of the hand and entreating looks of her companion
strengthened a resolution that was faltering.
“No prisoner yet,” whispered June; “let 'em make prisoner before 'ey take
prisoner—talk big; June manage 'em.”
Mabel now began to parley more resolutely with Muir, for her uncle seemed
disposed to quiet his conscience by holding his tongue, and she plainly
intimated that it was not her intention to yield the building.
“You forget the capitulation, Mistress Mabel,” said Muir; “the honor of
one of his Majesty's servants is concerned, and the honor of his Majesty
through his servant. You will remember the finesse and delicacy that
belong to military honor?”
“I know enough, Mr. Muir, to understand that you have no command in this
expedition, and therefore can have no right to yield the blockhouse; and I
remember, moreover, to have heard my dear father say that a prisoner loses
all his authority for the time being.”
“Rank sophistry, pretty Mabel, and treason to the king, as well as
dishonoring his commission and discrediting his name. You'll no' be
persevering in your intentions, when your better judgment has had leisure
to reflect and to make conclusions on matters and circumstances.”
“Ay,” put in Cap, “this is a circumstance, and be d——d to it!”
“No mind what'e uncle say,” ejaculated June, who was occupied in a far
corner of the room. “Blockhouse good—got no scalp.”
“I shall remain as I am, Mr. Muir, until I get some tidings of my father.
He will return in the course of the next ten days.”
“Ah, Mabel, this artifice will no' deceive the enemy, who, by means that
would be unintelligible, did not our suspicions rest on an unhappy young
man with too much plausibility, are familiar with all our doings and
plans, and well know that the sun will not set before the worthy Sergeant
and his companions will be in their power. Aweel! Submission to Providence
is truly a Christian virtue!”
“Mr. Muir, you appear to be deceived in the strength of this work, and to
fancy it weaker than it is. Do you desire to see what I can do in the way
of defence, if so disposed?”
“I dinna mind if I do,” answered the Quartermaster, who always grew Scotch
as he grew interested.
“What do you think of that, then? Look at the loop of the upper story!”
As soon as Mabel had spoken, all eyes were turned upward, and beheld the
muzzle of a rifle cautiously thrust through a hole, June having resorted
again to a ruse which had already proved so successful. The result
did not disappoint expectation. No sooner did the Indians catch a sight of
the fatal weapon than they leaped aside, and in less than a minute every
man among them had sought a cover. The French officer kept his eye on the
barrel of the piece in order to ascertain that it was not pointed in his
particular direction, and he coolly took a pinch of snuff. As neither Muir
nor Cap had anything to apprehend from the quarter in which the others
were menaced, they kept their ground.
“Be wise, my pretty Mabel, be wise!” exclaimed the former; “and no' be
provoking useless contention. In the name of all the kings of Albin, who
have ye closeted with you in that wooden tower that seemeth so
bloody-minded? There is necromancy about this matter, and all our
characters may be involved in the explanation.”
“What do you think of the Pathfinder, Master Muir, for a garrison to so
strong a post?” cried Mabel, resorting to an equivocation which the
circumstances rendered very excusable. “What will your French and Indian
companions think of the aim of the Pathfinder's rifle?”
“Bear gently on the unfortunate, pretty Mabel, and do not confound the
king's servants—may Heaven bless him and all his royal lineage!—with
the king's enemies. If Pathfinder be indeed in the blockhouse, let him
speak, and we will hold our negotiations directly with him. He knows us as
friends, and we fear no evil at his hands, and least of all to myself; for
a generous mind is apt to render rivalry in a certain interest a sure
ground of respect and amity, since admiration of the same woman proves a
community of feeling and tastes.”
The reliance on Pathfinder's friendship did not extend beyond the
Quartermaster and Cap, however, for even the French officer, who had
hitherto stood his ground so well, shrank back at the sound of the
terrible name. So unwilling, indeed, did this individual, a man of iron
nerves, and one long accustomed to the dangers of the peculiar warfare in
which he was engaged, appear to remain exposed to the assaults of
Killdeer, whose reputation throughout all that frontier was as well
established as that of Marlborough in Europe, that he did not disdain to
seek a cover, insisting that his two prisoners should follow him. Mabel
was too glad to be rid of her enemies to lament the departure of her
friends, though she kissed her hand to Cap through the loop, and called
out to him in terms of affection as he moved slowly and unwillingly away.
The enemy now seemed disposed to abandon all attempts on the blockhouse
for the present; and June, who had ascended to a trap in the roof, whence
the best view was to be obtained, reported that the whole party had
assembled to eat, on a distant and sheltered part of the island, where
Muir and Cap were quietly sharing in the good things which were going, as
if they had no concern on their minds. This information greatly relieved
Mabel, and she began to turn her thoughts again to the means of effecting
her own escape, or at least of letting her father know of the danger that
awaited him. The Sergeant was expected to return that afternoon, and she
knew that a moment gained or lost might decide his fate.
Three or four hours flew by. The island was again buried in a profound
quiet, the day was wearing away, and yet Mabel had decided on nothing.
June was in the basement, preparing their frugal meal, and Mabel herself
had ascended to the roof, which was provided with a trap that allowed her
to go out on the top of the building, whence she commanded the best view
of surrounding objects that the island possessed; still it was limited,
and much obstructed by the tops of trees. The anxious girl did not dare to
trust her person in sight, knowing well that the unrestrained passions of
some savage might induce him to send a bullet through her brain. She
merely kept her head out of the trap, therefore, whence, in the course of
the afternoon, she made as many surveys of the different channels about
the island as “Anne, sister Anne,” took of the environs of the castle of
Blue Beard.
The sun had actually set; no intelligence had been received from the
boats, and Mabel ascended to the roof to take a last look, hoping that the
party would arrive in the darkness; which would at least prevent the
Indians from rendering their ambuscade so fatal as it might otherwise
prove, and which possibly might enable her to give some more intelligible
signal, by means of fire, than it would otherwise be in her power to do.
Her eye had turned carefully round the whole horizon, and she was just on
the point of drawing in her person, when an object that struck her as new
caught her attention. The islands lay grouped so closely, that six or
eight different channels or passages between them were in view; and in one
of the most covered, concealed in a great measure by the bushes of the
shore, lay what a second look assured her was a bark canoe. It contained a
human being beyond a question. Confident that if an enemy her signal could
do no harm, and; if a friend, that it might do good, the eager girl waved
a little flag towards the stranger, which she had prepared for her father,
taking care that it should not be seen from the island.
Mabel had repeated her signal eight or ten times in vain, and she began to
despair of its being noticed, when a sign was given in return by the wave
of a paddle, and the man so far discovered himself as to let her see it
was Chingachgook. Here, then, at last, was a friend; one, too, who was
able, and she doubted not would be willing to aid her. From that instant
her courage and her spirits revived. The Mohican had seen her; must have
recognized her, as he knew that she was of the party; and no doubt, as
soon as it was sufficiently dark, he would take the steps necessary to
release her. That he was aware of the presence of the enemy was apparent
by the great caution he observed, and she had every reliance on his
prudence and address. The principal difficulty now existed with June; for
Mabel had seen too much of her fidelity to her own people, relieved as it
was by sympathy for herself, to believe she would consent to a hostile
Indian's entering the blockhouse, or indeed to her leaving it, with a view
to defeat Arrowhead's plans. The half-hour which succeeded the discovery
of the presence of the Great Serpent was the most painful of Mabel
Dunham's life. She saw the means of effecting all she wished, as it might
be within reach of her hand, and yet it eluded her grasp. She knew June's
decision and coolness, notwithstanding all her gentleness and womanly
feeling; and at last she came reluctantly to the conclusion that there was
no other way of attaining her end than by deceiving her tried companion
and protector. It was revolting to one so sincere and natural, so pure of
heart, and so much disposed to ingenuousness as Mabel Dunham, to practise
deception on a friend like June; but her own father's life was at stake,
her companion would receive no positive injury, and she had feelings and
interests directly touching herself which would have removed greater
scruples.
As soon as it was dark, Mabel's heart began to beat with increased
violence; and she adopted and changed her plan of proceeding at least a
dozen times in a single hour. June was always the source of her greatest
embarrassment; for she did not well see, first, how she was to ascertain
when Chingachgook was at the door, where she doubted not he would soon
appear; and, secondly, how she was to admit him, without giving the alarm
to her watchful companion. Time pressed, however; for the Mohican might
come and go away again, unless she was ready to receive him. It would be
too hazardous to the Delaware to remain long on the island; and it became
absolutely necessary to determine on some course, even at the risk of
choosing one that was indiscreet. After running over various projects in
her mind, therefore, Mabel came to her companion, and said, with as much
calmness as she could assume,—
“Are you not afraid, June, now your people believe Pathfinder is in the
blockhouse, that they will come and try to set it on fire?”
“No t'ink such t'ing. No burn blockhouse. Blockhouse good; got no scalp.”
“June, we cannot know. They hid because they believed what I told them of
Pathfinder's being with us.”
“Believe fear. Fear come quick, go quick. Fear make run away; wit make
come back. Fear make warrior fool, as well as young girl.”
Here June laughed, as her sex is apt to laugh when anything particularly
ludicrous crosses their youthful fancies.
“I feel uneasy, June; and wish you yourself would go up again to the roof
and look out upon the island, to make certain that nothing is plotting
against us; you know the signs of what your people intend to do better
than I.”
“June go, Lily wish; but very well know that Indian sleep; wait for 'e
fader. Warrior eat, drink, sleep, all time, when don't fight and go on
war-trail. Den never sleep, eat, drink—never feel. Warrior sleep
now.”
“God send it may be so! but go up, dear June, and look well about you.
Danger may come when we least expect it.”
June arose, and prepared to ascend to the roof; but she paused, with her
foot on the first round of the ladder. Mabel's heart beat so violently
that she was fearful its throbs would be heard; and she fancied that some
gleamings of her real intentions had crossed the mind of her friend. She
was right in part, the Indian woman having actually stopped to consider
whether there was any indiscretion in what she was about to do. At first
the suspicion that Mabel intended to escape flashed across her mind; then
she rejected it, on the ground that the pale-face had no means of getting
off the island, and that the blockhouse was much the most secure place she
could find. The next thought was, that Mabel had detected some sign of the
near approach of her father. This idea, too, lasted but an instant; for
June entertained some such opinion of her companion's ability to
understand symptoms of this sort—symptoms that had escaped her own
sagacity—as a woman of high fashion entertains of the
accomplishments of her maid. Nothing else in the same way offering, she
began slowly to mount the ladder.
Just as she reached the upper floor, a lucky thought suggested itself to
our heroine; and, by expressing it in a hurried but natural manner, she
gained a great advantage in executing her projected scheme.
“I will go down,” she said, “and listen by the door, June, while you are
on the roof; and we will thus be on our guard, at the same time, above and
below.”
Though June thought this savored of unnecessary caution, well knowing that
no one could enter the building unless aided from within, nor any serious
danger menace them from the exterior without giving sufficient warning,
she attributed the proposition to Mabel's ignorance and alarm; and, as it
was made apparently with frankness, it was received without distrust. By
these means our heroine was enabled to descend to the door, as her friend
ascended to the roof. The distance between the two was now too great to
admit of conversation; and for three or four minutes one was occupied in
looking about her as well as the darkness would allow, and the other in
listening at the door with as much intentness as if all her senses were
absorbed in the single faculty of hearing.
June discovered nothing from her elevated stand; the obscurity indeed
almost forbade the hope of such a result; but it would not be easy to
describe the sensation with which Mabel thought she perceived a slight and
guarded push against the door. Fearful that all might not be as she
wished, and anxious to let Chingachgook know that she was near, she began,
though in tremulous and low notes, to sing. So profound was the stillness
of the moment that the sound of the unsteady warbling ascended to the roof
and in a minute June began to descend. A slight tap at the door was heard
immediately after. Mabel was bewildered, for there was no time to lose.
Hope proved stronger than fear; and with unsteady hands she commenced
unbarring the door. The moccasin of June was heard on the floor above her
when only a single bar was turned. The second was released as her form
reached half-way down the lower ladder.
“What you do?” exclaimed June angrily. “Run away—mad—leave
blockhouse; blockhouse good.” The hands of both were on the last bar, and
it would have been cleared from the fastenings but for a vigorous shove
from without, which jammed the wood. A short struggle ensued, though both
were disinclined to violence. June would probably have prevailed, had not
another and a more vigorous push from without forced the bar past the
trifling impediment that held it, when the door opened. The form of a man
was seen to enter; and both the females rushed up the ladder, as if
equally afraid of the consequences. The stranger secured the door; and,
first examining the lower room with great care, he cautiously ascended the
ladder. June, as soon as it became dark, had closed the loops of the
principal floor, and lighted a candle. By means of this dim taper, then,
the two females stood in expectation, waiting to ascertain the person of
their visitor, whose wary ascent of the ladder was distinctly audible,
though sufficiently deliberate. It would not be easy to say which was the
more astonished on finding, when the stranger had got through the trap,
that Pathfinder stood before them.
“God be praised!” Mabel exclaimed, for the idea that the blockhouse would
be impregnable with such a garrison at once crossed her mind. “O
Pathfinder! what has become of my father?”
“The Sergeant is safe as yet, and victorious; though it is not in the gift
of man to say what will be the ind of it. Is not that the wife of
Arrowhead skulking in the corner there?”
“Speak not of her reproachfully, Pathfinder; I owe her my life, my present
security. Tell me what has happened to my father's party—why you are
here; and I will relate all the horrible events that have passed upon this
island.”
“Few words will do the last, Mabel; for one used to Indian devilries needs
but little explanations on such a subject. Everything turned out as we had
hoped with the expedition; for the Sarpent was on the look-out, and he met
us with all the information heart could desire. We ambushed three boats,
druv' the Frenchers out of them, got possession and sunk them, according
to orders, in the deepest part of the channel; and the savages of Upper
Canada will fare badly for Indian goods this winter. Both powder and ball,
too, will be scarcer among them than keen hunters and active warriors may
relish. We did not lose a man or have even a skin barked; nor do I think
the inimy suffered to speak of. In short, Mabel, it has been just such an
expedition as Lundie likes; much harm to the foe, and little harm to
ourselves.”
“Ah, Pathfinder, I fear, when Major Duncan comes to hear the whole of the
sad tale, he will find reason to regret he ever undertook the affair.”
“I know what you mean, I know what you mean; but by telling my story
straight you will understand it better. As soon as the Sergeant found
himself successful, he sent me and the Sarpent off in canoes to tell you
how matters had turned out, and he is following with the two boats, which,
being so much heavier, cannot arrive before morning. I parted from
Chingachgook this forenoon, it being agreed that he should come up one set
of channels, and I another, to see that the path was clear. I've not seen
the chief since.”
Mabel now explained the manner in which she had discovered the Mohican,
and her expectation that he would yet come to the blockhouse.
“Not he, not he! A regular scout will never get behind walls or logs so
long as he can keep the open air and find useful employment. I should not
have come myself, Mabel, but I promised the Sergeant to comfort you and to
look after your safety. Ah's me! I reconnoitred the island with a heavy
heart this forenoon; and there was a bitter hour when I fancied you might
be among the slain.”
“By what lucky accident were you prevented from paddling up boldly to the
island and from falling into the hands of the enemy?”
“By such an accident, Mabel, as Providence employs to tell the hound where
to find the deer and the deer how to throw off the hound. No, no! these
artifices and devilries with dead bodies may deceive the soldiers of the
55th and the king's officers; but they are all lost upon men who have
passed their days in the forest. I came down the channel in face of the
pretended fisherman; and, though the riptyles have set up the poor wretch
with art, it was not ingenious enough to take in a practysed eye. The rod
was held too high, for the 55th have learned to fish at Oswego, if they
never knew how before; and then the man was too quiet for one who got
neither prey nor bite. But we never come in upon a post blindly; and I
have lain outside a garrison a whole night, because they had changed their
sentries and their mode of standing guard. Neither the Sarpent nor myself
would be likely to be taken in by these clumsy contrivances, which were
most probably intended for the Scotch, who are cunning enough in some
particulars, though anything but witches when Indian sarcumventions are in
the wind.”
“Do you think my father and his men may yet be deceived?” said Mabel
quickly.
“Not if I can prevent it, Mabel. You say the Sarpent is on the look-out
too; so there is a double chance of our succeeding in letting him know his
danger; though it is by no means sartain by which channel the party may
come.”
“Pathfinder,” said our heroine solemnly, for the frightful scenes she had
witnessed had clothed death with unusual horrors,—“Pathfinder, you
have professed love for me, a wish to make me your wife?”
“I did ventur' to speak on that subject, Mabel, and the Sergeant has even
lately said that you are kindly disposed; but I am not a man to persecute
the thing I love.”
“Hear me, Pathfinder, I respect you, honor you, revere you; save my father
from this dreadful death, and I can worship you. Here is my hand, as a
solemn pledge for my faith, when you come to claim it.”
“Bless you, bless you, Mabel; this is more than I desarve—more, I
fear, than I shall know how to profit by as I ought. It was not wanting,
however, to make me sarve the Sergeant. We are old comrades, and owe each
other a life; though I fear me, Mabel, being a father's comrade is not
always the best recommendation with a daughter.”
“You want no other recommendation than your own acts—your courage,
your fidelity. All that you do and say, Pathfinder, my reason approves,
and the heart will, nay, it shall follow.”
“This is a happiness I little expected this night; but we are in God's
hands, and He will protect us in His own way. These are sweet words,
Mabel; but they were not wanting to make me do all that man can do in the
present circumstances; they will not lessen my endeavors, neither.”
“Now we understand each other, Pathfinder,” Mabel added hoarsely, “let us
not lose one of the precious moments, which may be of incalculable value.
Can we not get into your canoe and go and meet my father?”
“That is not the course I advise. I don't know by which channel the
Sergeant will come, and there are twenty; rely on it, the Sarpent will be
winding his way through them all. No, no! my advice is to remain here. The
logs of this blockhouse are still green, and it will not be easy to set
them on fire; and I can make good the place, bating a burning, ag'in a
tribe. The Iroquois nation cannot dislodge me from this fortress, so long
as we can keep the flames off it. The Sergeant is now 'camped on some
island, and will not come in until morning. If we hold the block, we can
give him timely warning, by firing rifles, for instance; and should he
determine to attack the savages, as a man of his temper will be very
likely to do, the possession of this building will be of great account in
the affair. No, no! my judgment says remain, if the object be to sarve the
Sergeant, though escape for our two selves will be no very difficult
matter.”
“Stay,” murmured Mabel, “stay, for God's sake, Pathfinder! Anything,
everything to save my father!”
“Yes, that is natur'. I am glad to hear you say this, Mabel, for I own a
wish to see the Sergeant fairly supported. As the matter now stands, he
has gained himself credit; and, could he once drive off these miscreants,
and make an honorable retreat, laying the huts and block in ashes, no
doubt, Lundie would remember it and sarve him accordingly. Yes, yes,
Mabel, we must not only save the Sergeant's life, but we must save his
reputation.”
“No blame can rest on my father on account of the surprise of this
island.”
“There's no telling, there's no telling; military glory is a most
unsartain thing. I've seen the Delawares routed, when they desarved more
credit than at other times when they've carried the day. A man is wrong to
set his head on success of any sort, and worst of all on success in war. I
know little of the settlements, or of the notions that men hold in them;
but up hereaway even the Indians rate a warrior's character according to
his luck. The principal thing with a soldier is never to be whipt; nor do
I think mankind stops long to consider how the day was won or lost. For my
part, Mabel, I make it a rule when facing the inimy to give him as good as
I can send, and to try to be moderate after a defeat, little need be said
on that score, as a flogging is one of the most humbling things in natur'.
The parsons preach about humility in the garrison; but if humility would
make Christians, the king's troops ought to be saints, for they've done
little as yet this war but take lessons from the French, beginning at Fort
du Quesne and ending at Ty.”
“My father could not have suspected that the position of the island was
known to the enemy,” resumed Mabel, whose thoughts were running on the
probable effect of the recent events on the Sergeant.
“That is true; nor do I well see how the Frenchers found it out. The spot
is well chosen, and it is not an easy matter, even for one who has
travelled the road to and from it, to find it again. There has been
treachery, I fear; yes, yes, there must have been treachery.”
“Oh, Pathfinder! can this be?”
“Nothing is easier, Mabel, for treachery comes as nat'ral to some men as
eating. Now when I find a man all fair words I look close to his deeds;
for when the heart is right, and really intends to do good, it is
generally satisfied to let the conduct speak instead of the tongue.”
“Jasper Western is not one of these,” said Mabel impetuously. “No youth
can be more sincere in his manner, or less apt to make the tongue act for
the head.”
“Jasper Western! tongue and heart are both right with that lad, depend on
it, Mabel; and the notion taken up by Lundie, and the Quartermaster, and
the Sergeant, and your uncle too, is as wrong as it would be to think that
the sun shone by night and the stars shone by day. No, no; I'll answer for
Eau-douce's honesty with my own scalp, or, at need, with my own rifle.”
“Bless you, bless you, Pathfinder!” exclaimed Mabel, extending her own
hand and pressing the iron fingers of her companion, under a state of
feeling that far surpassed her own consciousness of its strength. “You are
all that is generous, all that is noble! God will reward you for it.”
“Ah, Mabel, I fear me, if this be true, I should not covet such a wife as
yourself; but would leave you to be sued for by some gentleman of the
garrison, as your desarts require.”
“We will not talk of this any more to-night,” Mabel answered in a voice so
smothered as to seem nearly choked. “We must think less of ourselves just
now, Pathfinder, and more of our friends. But I rejoice from my soul that
you believe Jasper innocent. Now let us talk of other things—ought
we not to release June?”
“I've been thinking about the woman; for it will not be safe to shut our
eyes and leave hers open, on this side of the blockhouse door. If we put
her in the upper room, and take away the ladder, she'll be a prisoner at
least.”
“I cannot treat one thus who has saved my life. It would be better to let
her depart, for I think she is too much my friend to do anything to harm
me.”
“You do not know the race, Mabel, you do not know the race. It's true
she's not a full-blooded Mingo, but she consorts with the vagabonds, and
must have larned some of their tricks. What is that?”
“It sounds like oars; some boat is passing through the channel.”
Pathfinder closed the trap that led to the lower room, to prevent June
from escaping, extinguished the candle, and went hastily to a loop, Mabel
looking over his shoulder in breathless curiosity. These several movements
consumed a minute or two; and by the time the eye of the scout had got a
dim view of things without, two boats had swept past and shot up to the
shore, at a spot some fifty yards beyond the block, where there was a
regular landing. The obscurity prevented more from being seen; and
Pathfinder whispered to Mabel that the new-comers were as likely to be
foes as friends, for he did not think her father could possibly have
arrived so soon. A number of men were now seen to quit the boats, and then
followed three hearty English cheers, leaving no further doubts of the
character of the party. Pathfinder sprang to the trap, raised it, glided
down the ladder, and began to unbar the door, with an earnestness that
proved how critical he deemed the moment. Mabel had followed, but she
rather impeded than aided his exertions, and but a single bar was turned
when a heavy discharge of rifles was heard. They were still standing in
breathless suspense, as the war-whoop rang in all the surrounding
thickets. The door now opened, and both Pathfinder and Mabel rushed into
the open air. All human sounds had ceased. After listening half a minute,
however, Pathfinder thought he heard a few stifled groans near the boats;
but the wind blew so fresh, and the rustling of the leaves mingled so much
with the murmurs of the passing air, that he was far from certain. But
Mabel was borne away by her feelings, and she rushed by him, taking the
way towards the boats.
“This will not do, Mabel,” said the scout in an earnest but low voice,
seizing her by an arm; “this will never do. Sartain death would follow,
and that without sarving any one. We must return to the block.”
“Father! my poor, dear, murdered father!” said the girl wildly, though
habitual caution, even at that trying moment, induced her to speak low.
“Pathfinder, if you love me, let me go to my dear father.”
“This will not do, Mabel. It is singular that no one speaks; no one
returns the fire from the boats; and I have left Killdeer in the block!
But of what use would a rifle be when no one is to be seen?”
At that moment the quick eye of Pathfinder, which, while he held Mabel
firmly in his grasp, had never ceased to roam over the dim scene, caught
an indistinct view of five or six dark crouching forms, endeavoring to
steal past him, doubtless with the intention of intercepting the retreat
to the blockhouse. Catching up Mabel, and putting her under an arm, as if
she were an infant, the sinewy frame of the woodsman was exerted to the
utmost, and he succeeded in entering the building. The tramp of his
pursuers seemed immediately at his heels. Dropping his burden, he turned,
closed the door, and had fastened one bar, as a rush against the solid
mass threatened to force it from the hinges. To secure the other bars was
the work of an instant.
Mabel now ascended to the first floor, while Pathfinder remained as a
sentinel below. Our heroine was in that state in which the body exerts
itself, apparently without the control of the mind. She relighted the
candle mechanically, as her companion had desired, and returned with it
below, where he was waiting her reappearance. No sooner was Pathfinder in
possession of the light than he examined the place carefully, to make
certain no one was concealed in the fortress, ascending to each floor in
succession, after assuring himself that he left no enemy in his rear. The
result was the conviction that the blockhouse now contained no one but
Mabel and himself, June having escaped. When perfectly convinced on this
material point, Pathfinder rejoined our heroine in the principal
apartment, setting down the light and examining the priming of Killdeer
before he seated himself.
“Our worst fears are realized!” said Mabel, to whom the hurry and
excitement of the last five minutes appeared to contain the emotions of a
life. “My beloved father and all his party are slain or captured!”
“We don't know that—morning will tell us all. I do not think the
affair so settled as that, or we should hear the vagabond Mingos yelling
out their triumph around the blockhouse. Of one thing we may be sartain;
if the inimy has really got the better, he will not be long in calling
upon us to surrender. The squaw will let him into the secret of our
situation; and, as they well know the place cannot be fired by daylight,
so long as Killdeer continues to desarve his reputation, you may depend on
it that they will not be backward in making their attempt while darkness
helps them.”
“Surely I hear a groan!”
“'Tis fancy, Mabel; when the mind gets to be skeary, especially a woman's
mind, she often concaits things that have no reality. I've known them that
imagined there was truth in dreams.”
“Nay, I am not deceived; there is surely one below, and in pain.”
Pathfinder was compelled to own that the quick senses of Mabel had not
deceived her. He cautioned her, however, to repress her feelings; and
reminded her that the savages were in the practice of resorting to every
artifice to attain their ends, and that nothing was more likely than that
the groans were feigned with a view to lure them from the blockhouse, or,
at least, to induce them to open the door.
“No, no, no!” said Mabel hurriedly; “there is no artifice in those sounds,
and they come from anguish of body, if not of spirit. They are fearfully
natural.”
“Well, we shall soon know whether a friend is there or not. Hide the light
again, Mabel, and I will speak the person from a loop.”
Not a little precaution was necessary, according to Pathfinder's judgment
and experience, in performing even this simple act; for he had known the
careless slain by their want of proper attention to what might have seemed
to the ignorant supererogatory means of safety. He did not place his mouth
to the loop itself, but so near it that he could be heard without raising
his voice, and the same precaution was observed as regards his ear.
“Who is below?” Pathfinder demanded, when his arrangements were made to
his mind. “Is any one in suffering? If a friend, speak boldly, and depend
on our aid.”
“Pathfinder!” answered a voice that both Mabel and the person addressed at
once knew to be the Sergeant's,—“Pathfinder, in the name of God,
tell me what has become of my daughter.”
“Father, I am here, unhurt, safe! and oh that I could think the same of
you!”
The ejaculation of thanksgiving that followed was distinctly audible to
the two, but it was clearly mingled with, a groan of pain.
“My worst forebodings are realized!” said Mabel with a sort of desperate
calmness. “Pathfinder, my father must be brought within the block, though
we hazard everything to do it.”
“This is natur', and it is the law of God. But, Mabel, be calm, and
endivor to be cool. All that can be effected for the Sergeant by human
invention shall be done. I only ask you to be cool.”
“I am, I am, Pathfinder. Never in my life was I more calm, more collected,
than at this moment. But remember how perilous may be every instant; for
Heaven's sake, what we do, let us do without delay.”
Pathfinder was struck with the firmness of Mabel's tones, and perhaps he
was a little deceived by the forced tranquillity and self-possession she
had assumed. At all events, he did not deem any further explanations
necessary, but descended forthwith, and began to unbar the door. This
delicate process was conducted with the usual caution, but, as he warily
permitted the mass of timber to swing back on the hinges, he felt a
pressure against it, that had nearly induced him to close it again. But,
catching a glimpse of the cause through the crack, the door was permitted
to swing back, when the body of Sergeant Dunham, which was propped against
it, fell partly within the block. To draw in the legs and secure the
fastenings occupied the Pathfinder but a moment. Then there existed no
obstacle to their giving their undivided care to the wounded man.
Mabel, in this trying scene, conducted herself with the sort of unnatural
energy that her sex, when aroused, is apt to manifest. She got the light,
administered water to the parched lips of her father, and assisted
Pathfinder in forming a bed of straw for his body and a pillow of clothes
for his head. All this was done earnestly, and almost without speaking;
nor did Mabel shed a tear, until she heard the blessings of her father
murmured on her head for this tenderness and care. All this time Mabel had
merely conjectured the condition of her parent. Pathfinder, however, had
shown greater attention to the physical danger of the Sergeant. He had
ascertained that a rifle-ball had passed through the body of the wounded
man; and he was sufficiently familiar with injuries of this nature to be
certain that the chances of his surviving the hurt were very trifling, if
any.
