登陆注册
26098900000037

第37章

"All trained warriors and soldiers.And at the best we cannot raise more than three hundreds including old men and boys, and our men, too, are farmers.""But we can beat them.Only give us a chance, Colonel!"exclaimed Captain Ransom.

"I'm afraid the chance will come too soon," said Colonel Butler, and then turning to the five: "Help us all you can.We need scouts and riflemen.Come to the fort for any food and ammunition you may need."The five gave their most earnest assurances that they would stay, and do all in their power.In fact, they had come for that very purpose.Satisfied now that Colonel Butler and his officers had implicit faith in them they went forth to find that, despite the night and the darkness, fugitives were already crossing the river to seek refuge in Forty Fort, bringing with them tales of death and devastation, some of which were exaggerated, but too many true in all their hideous details.Men had been shot and scalped in the fields, houses were burning, women and children were captives for a fate that no one could foretell.Red ruin was already stalking down the valley.

The farmers were bringing their wives and children in canoes and dugouts across the river.Here and there a torch light flickered on the surface of the stream, showing the pale faces of the women and children, too frightened to cry.They had fled in haste, bringing with them only the clothes they wore and maybe a blanket or two.The borderers knew too well what Indian war was, with all its accompaniments of fire and the stake.

Henry and his comrades helped nearly all that night.They secured a large boat and crossed the river again and again, guarding the fugitives with their rifles, and bringing comfort to many a timid heart.Indian bands had penetrated far into the Wyoming Valley, but they felt sure that none were yet in the neighborhood of Forty Fort.

It was about three o'clock in the morning when the last of the fugitives who had yet come was inside Forty Fort, and the labors of the five, had they so chosen, were over for the time.But their nerves were tuned to so high a pitch, and they felt so powerfully the presence of danger, that they could not rest, nor did they have any desire for sleep.

The boat in which they sat was a good one, with two pairs of oars.It had been detailed for their service, and they decided to pull up the river.They thought it possible that they might see the advance of the enemy and bring news worth the telling.

Long Jim and Tom Ross took the oars, and their powerful arms sent the boat swiftly along in the shadow of the western bank.Henry and Paul looked back and saw dim lights at the fort and a few on either shore.The valley, the high mountain wall, and everything else were merged in obscurity.

Both the youths were oppressed heavily by the sense of danger, not for themselves, but for others.In that Kentucky of theirs, yet so new, few people lived beyond the palisades, but here were rich and scattered settlements; and men, even in the face of great peril, are always loth to abandon the homes that they have built with so much toil.

Tom Ross and Long Jim continued to pull steadily with the long strokes that did not tire them, and the lights of the fort and houses sank out of sight.Before them lay the somber surface of the rippling river, the shadowy hills, and silence.The world seemed given over to the night save for themselves, but they knew too well to trust to such apparent desertion.At such hours the Indian scouts come, and Henry did not doubt that they were already near, gathering news of their victims for the Indian and Tory horde.Therefore, it was the part of his comrades and himself to use the utmost caution as they passed up the river.

They bugged the western shore, where they were shadowed by banks and bushes, and now they went slowly, Long Jim and Tom Ross drawing their oars so carefully through the water that there was never a plash to tell of their passing.Henry was in the prow of the boat, bent forward a little, eyes searching the surface of the river, and ears intent upon any sound that might pass on the bank.Suddenly he gave a little signal to the rowers and they let their oars rest.

"Bring the boat in closer to the bank," he whispered.Push it gently among those bushes where we cannot be seen from above."Tom and Jim obeyed.The boat slid softly among tall bushes that shadowed the water, and was hidden completely.Then Henry stepped out, crept cautiously nearly up the bank, which was here very low, and lay pressed closely against the earth, but supported by the exposed root of a tree.He had heard voices, those of Indians, he believed, and he wished to see.Peering through a fringe of bushes that lined the bank he saw seven warriors and one white face sitting under the boughs of a great oak.The face was that of Braxton Wyatt, who was now in his element, with a better prospect of success than any that he had ever known before.Henry shuddered, and for a moment he regretted that he had spared Wyatt's life when he might have taken it.

But Henry was lying against the bank to hear what these men might be saying, not to slay.Two of the warriors, as he saw by their paint, were Wyandots, and he understood the Wyandot tongue.

Moreover, his slight knowledge of Iroquois came into service, and gradually he gathered the drift of their talk.Two miles nearer Forty Fort was a farmhouse one of the Wyandots had seen it-not yet abandoned by its owner, who believed that his proximity to Forty Fort assured his safety.He lived there with his wife and five children, and Wyatt and the Indians planned to raid the place before daylight and kill them all.Henry had heard enough.

He slid back from the bank to the water and crept into the boat.

"Pull back down the river as gently as you can," he whispered, "and then I'll tell you."The skilled oarsmen carried the boat without a splash several hundred yards down the stream, and then Henry told the others of the fiendish plan that he had heard.

同类推荐
  • 佛说阿罗汉具德经

    佛说阿罗汉具德经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 圆觉经道场修证仪

    圆觉经道场修证仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 送卢郎中赴金州

    送卢郎中赴金州

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 跌损妙方

    跌损妙方

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 谷风之什

    谷风之什

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 腹黑少爷难舍弃

    腹黑少爷难舍弃

    她是驰骋商场的销售经理,脑子解决不了直接使用武力,娇俏蛮横却敏感多疑。他与他是商场上的合作伙伴,也是情场上的敌人。一个是她的学长,广告界的精英总裁,温文尔雅却超级腹黑,一个是她的上司,教她如何成长,又宠她如心中的宝贝,霸道且傲娇。到底是要爱了六年的学长陪伴还是接受如涓涓细流的上司?看她如何调教腹黑少爷们。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 亲爱的小狐狸

    亲爱的小狐狸

    张译宸是一个普通高校毕业的学生,他酷爱唱歌,他的梦想是成为一个超级大明星,毕业以后他带着自己的梦想来到北京,处处碰壁的他只能靠在面馆兼职生活,就在他的人生跌入谷底的时候,一只他曾经救过的小狐狸闯入了他的时世界,展开了一段搞笑而有感人的爱情故事
  • 猎兽无双

    猎兽无双

    当高科技时代与蕴藏着无限潜能的万物生灵狭路相逢,它们之间会碰撞出激烈的火花,此后,神迹终于降临。沙漠下,掩埋着历史的谜底……“生命会随着时间的流逝,逐渐腐朽,这个时代也是如此。但我终将改变这一切,让所谓的‘神灵’,在我跟前摇尾乞怜!”——吴语
  • 幽林古宅

    幽林古宅

    一个与妖、冥两界订立了91代契约的家族,一个为打破古老契约的古宅继承者,人也罢、妖也罢、鬼也罢……世间百态皆在幽林古宅上演……--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 许我一场最美的天荒地老

    许我一场最美的天荒地老

    我想要的很简单,不过一爱人,长相厮守而已,却很难实现
  • 都市游戏神

    都市游戏神

    正面临高考的王诺同学,突然有一天,他发现自己能够将游戏中附加各种特殊属性的物品下载到现实世界,这下有趣了,生命药水可以拿来治病救人,魅力指环可以拿来拾获芳心,幸运宝石可以拿来通杀赌局,甚至,高攻高防的装备让他纵横疆场……只是,这一切都得靠人品啊!
  • 创神域

    创神域

    火云央界,修者世代聚居之地。天赋惊人的少年,在修者选拔之日,却被领袖炎魂重创,流放凡人间。悲愤的他,誓以炎魂名,重返央界!在漫长的修炼之路上,少年渐渐卷入了一场毁灭世界的阴谋中。而他,注定是终结乱世,创造和平神域的预言之子……
  • 朱氏点通疗法

    朱氏点通疗法

    本书是一本具有开拓性和探索性的书,它第一次提出了一系列全新的理论、第一次创立了独特而实用的“系统性心理治疗法”。本书提出的理论和技术,对现存的一些陈旧理论和治疗模式是大胆的挑战,是全新的心理治疗设计和无畏的科学实践。
  • 超级CEO成功哲学课——雷军

    超级CEO成功哲学课——雷军

    本书带你了解金山软件掌门人雷军的成功之路,全书分为“三好生”的IT梦想、让自己的梦想燃烧起来、金山公司的顶梁柱,雷军当仁不让、卓越网的诞生与覆灭、深度反思,重新选择,做投资达人、锐意创新,雷军与“小米”的故事等九章内容。
  • 如是观

    如是观

    对于每一种想法和情绪的生起,我们都要保持观照,而不是盲目地跟着跑。禅的本质,是觉醒的心。禅修,就是帮助我们开发觉醒的心。生命的意义在于从无明中觉醒。所以,我们应该为觉醒而活着。从自我感觉很好,到逐步意识到自身不足,正是修行的开始。