The Forest Runners A Story of the Great War Trail in Early Kentucky by Altsheler, Joseph A. (Joseph Alexander) - CHAPTER XX

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The Forest Runners A Story of the Great War Trail in Early Kentucky

CHAPTER XX

THE TER­RI­BLE FORD

“The ford ain't much more than an hour's march far­ther on,” said Dick Salter to Daniel Poe, “an' the way to it leads over pur­ty smooth groun'.”

“And we have not seen any­thing of the war­riors yet, ex­cept the trails of small bands,” said Daniel Poe hope­ful­ly. “It may be that our new friends are mis­tak­en.”

Dick Salter shook his head.

“Tom Ross nev­er makes a mis­take in mat­ters uv that kind,” he said, “an' that boy, Hen­ry Ware, couldn't ef he tried. He's won­der­ful, Mr. Poe.”

“Yes,” said Daniel Poe. “No­body else ev­er made such an im­pres­sion up­on me. And the one they call Paul is a fine fel­low, too. I wish I had a son like that.”

“He's the most pop­ular fel­low in the train al­ready,” said Dick Salter.

Both looked ad­mir­ing­ly at Paul, who was walk­ing near the head of the line, a group of lithe, strong-​limbed boys and girls sur­round­ing him and beg­ging him for sto­ries of the wilder­ness. Paul re­mained with the train by ar­range­ment. It was his busi­ness to cheer, in­vig­orate, and heart­en for a great task, while his com­rades roamed the for­est and looked for the dan­ger that they knew would sure­ly come. Nev­er did youth suc­ceed bet­ter at his cho­sen task, as con­fi­dence spread from him like a con­ta­gion.

Paul present­ly quick­ened his steps, and came quite to the head of the line, where Daniel Poe and Dick Salter were walk­ing, both cir­cling the for­est ahead of them with anx­ious eyes. They and Paul at the same time saw a fig­ure emerge from the woods in front. It was Hen­ry, and he was com­ing on swift foot. In an in­stant he was be­fore them, and Paul knew by his look that he had news.

“They are wait­ing?” said Paul.

“Yes,” replied Hen­ry. “They are in the thick­ets at the ford, less than two miles ahead.”

Daniel Poe shud­dered again--for the five hun­dred lives in his charge--and then his heart rose. The wait­ing, the ter­ri­ble sus­pense, were over, and it was bat­tle now. The fact con­tained re­lief.

“Shall we halt?” he said to Hen­ry. Un­con­scious­ly, he, too, was sub­mit­ting to the gen­er­al­ship of this king of for­est run­ners.

“No,” replied Hen­ry; “we've got to go on some time or oth­er, and they can wait as long as we can. We must force the pas­sage of the ford. We can do it.”

He spoke with con­fi­dence, and courage seemed to leap like sparks from him and set fire to the oth­ers.

“Then it's go ahead,” said Daniel Poe grim­ly. “We'll force the pas­sage.”

“Put all the lit­tle chil­dren, and all the wom­en who don't fight, in the wag­ons, and make them lie down,” said Hen­ry. “The men must swarm on ei­ther flank. My com­rades will re­main in the front, watch­ing un­til we reach the riv­er.”

Then a great bus­tle and the chat­ter of many voic­es arose; but it soon died away be­fore stern com­mands and equal­ly stern prepa­ra­tions, be­cause they were prepar­ing to run as ter­ri­ble a gant­let as hu­man be­ings ev­er face, these daunt­less pi­oneers of the wilder­ness. The chil­dren were quick­ly load­ed in the wag­ons, and all the weak­er of the wom­en; but with the men on the flanks marched at least two-​score grim Ama­zons, ri­fle in hand.

Then the train re­sumed its slow march, and noth­ing was heard but the rolling of the wheels and the low cluck of the drivers to their hors­es. The way still led through an open, park­like coun­try, and the road was easy. Soon those in front saw a faint streak cut­ting across the for­est. The streak was sil­very at first, and then blue, and it curved away to north and south among low hills.

“The riv­er!” said Daniel Poe, and he shut his teeth hard.

All the men and the Ama­zons drew a long, deep breath, like a sigh; but they said noth­ing, and con­tin­ued to march steadi­ly for­ward. The riv­er broad­ened, the blue of its wa­ters deep­ened, and from the high ground on which they marched they could see the low banks on the far­ther shore, crowned by clus­ter­ing thick­ets.

Three men emerged from the un­der­growth. They were Tom Ross, Shif'less Sol, and Long Jim Hart. The shift­less one looked lazy and care­less, and Jim Hart, stretch­ing him­self, looked longer and thin­ner than ev­er.

“We found it, Hen­ry,” said Ross. “Lit­tle more'n a mile to the south, men wadin' to the waist kin cross.”

“Good!” said Hen­ry. “We're lucky!”

He be­gan to give rapid, in­ci­sive com­mands, and ev­ery­one obeyed as a mat­ter of course, and with­out jeal­ousy. Daniel Poe was the lead­er of the wag­on train, but Hen­ry Ware, whom they had known but a few days, was its lead­er in bat­tle.

“Take fifty men,” he said to Ross, “the best marks­men and the stanch­est fight­ers, and cross there. Then come silent­ly among the thick­ets up the bank, to strike them when they strike us.”

Paul lis­tened with ad­mi­ra­tion. He knew Hen­ry's ge­nius for bat­tle, and, like the oth­ers, he was in­spired by his com­rade's con­fi­dence. The fifty men were quick­ly told off be­hind the wag­ons, and, head­ed by Tom Ross and Jim Hart, they dis­ap­peared at once in the woods. Shif'less Sol re­mained with Hen­ry and Paul.

“Now, for­ward!” said Hen­ry Ware, and the ter­ri­ble, grim march was be­gun again. There was the riv­er, grow­ing broad­er and broad­er and bluer and bluer as they came clos­er. The chil­dren and wom­en--ex­cept the Ama­zons--saw noth­ing be­cause they were crouched up­on the floors of the wag­on beds, but the drivers, ev­ery one of whom had a ri­fle ly­ing up­on the seat be­side him, were at that mo­ment the bravest of them all, be­cause they faced the great­est dan­ger.

“Slow­ly!” said Hen­ry, to the lead­ing wag­ons. “We must give Sol and his men time for their cir­cuit.”

He not­ed with deep joy that the ford was wide. At least five wag­ons could en­ter it abreast, and he made them ad­vance in five close lines.

“When you reach the wa­ter,” he said to the drivers, “lie down be­hind the front of the wag­on beds, and drive any way you can. Now, Sol, you and I and Dick Salter must rouse them from the thick­ets.”

The three crept for­ward, and looked at the peace­ful riv­er un­der the peace­ful sky. So far as the or­di­nary eye could see, there was no hu­man be­ing on its shores. The bush­es waved a lit­tle in the gen­tle wind, and the wa­ter broke in bril­liant bub­bles on the shal­lows.

But Hen­ry Ware's eyes were not or­di­nary. There was not a keen­er pair on the con­ti­nent, and among the thick­ets on the far­ther bank he saw a stir that was not nat­ural. The wind blew north, and now and then a bush would bend a lit­tle to­ward the south. He crept clos­er, and at last he saw a cop­pery face here and there, and sav­age, gleam­ing eyes star­ing through the bush­es.

“Tell the wag­ons to come on bold­ly,” he said to Shif'less Sol, and the shift­less one obeyed.

“Now, Sol,” he said, when the man re­turned, “take fifty more ri­fle­men, and hide in that thick­et, at the high­est part of the bank. Stay there. You will know what else to do.”

“I think I will,” said the shift­less one, and ev­ery trace of in­dif­fer­ence or lazi­ness was gone from him. He was the forester, alert and in­domitable--a fit sec­ond to Hen­ry Ware. Then Hen­ry and Jim Hart alone were left near the riv­er's brink. Hen­ry did not look back.

“Are the wag­ons com­ing fast?” he asked.

“Yes,” said Jim Hart, “but I'm beck­onin' to 'em to come still faster. They'll be in the wa­ter in three min­utes. Lis­ten! The drivers are whip­pin' up the hors­es!”

The loud crack­ing of whips arose, and the hors­es ad­vanced at a trot to­ward the ford. At the same in­stant Hen­ry Ware raised his ri­fle, and fired like a flash of light­ning at one of the cop­pery faces in the thick­et on the op­po­site shore. The death cry of the sav­age rose, but far above it rose the taunt­ing shout of the white youth, loud­er and more ter­ri­ble than their own. The sav­ages, sur­prised, aban­doned their am­bush. The lead­ing wag­ons dashed in­to the wa­ter, and down up­on them dashed the picked pow­er of the al­lied west­ern tribes.

In an in­stant the far edge of the wa­ter was swarm­ing with cop­pery bod­ies and sav­age faces, and the war whoop, giv­en again and again, echoed far up and down the stream, and through the thick­ets and for­est. Ri­fles cracked rapid­ly, and then blazed in­to vol­leys. Bul­lets sighed as they struck on hu­man flesh or the wood of wag­ons, and now and then they spat­tered on the wa­ter. Cries of pain or shouts of de­fi­ance rose, and the fu­ri­ous con­flict be­tween white man and red rapid­ly thick­ened and deep­ened, be­com­ing a con­fused and ter­ri­ble med­ley.

Hen­ry Ware and Jim Hart ran down in­to the stream by the side of the lead­ing wag­ons, and load­ed and fired swift­ly in­to the dense brown mass be­fore them. Nor did they send a bul­let amiss. Hen­ry Ware was con­scious at that mo­ment of a fierce de­sire to see the face of Brax­ton Wy­att amid the brown horde. He knew he was there, some­where, and in the rage of con­flict he would glad­ly have sent a bul­let through the rene­gade's black heart. He did not see him, but the daunt­less youth pressed steadi­ly for­ward, con­tin­ual­ly shout­ing en­cour­age­ment and show­ing the bold­est ex­am­ple of them all.

A bank of blue and white smoke arose over the stream, shot through by the flash­es of the ri­fle fir­ing, and out of this bank came the de­fi­ant shouts of the com­bat­ants. Sud­den­ly, from the high bank, on the shore that they had just left, burst a tremen­dous vol­ley--fifty ri­fles fired at once. A yell of pain and rage burst from the sav­ages. Those ri­fles had mowed a per­fect swath of death among them.

“Good old Sol! Good old Sol!” ex­claimed Hen­ry, twice through his shut teeth. “On, men, on! Tram­ple them down! Drive the wag­ons in­to them!”

A sec­ond time the un­ex­pect­ed vol­ley burst from the hill, and a storm of bul­lets beat up­on the packed mass of the sav­ages at the edge of the wa­ter. Hen­ry Ware had been a true gen­er­al that day. Shif'less Sol and his men, from their height and hid among the bush­es, poured vol­ley af­ter vol­ley in­to the sav­ages be­low, spurred on by their own suc­cess and the des­per­ation of the cause.

The front wag­ons ad­vanced deep­er in­to the wa­ter and the smoke bank, and the oth­ers came, close­ly packed be­hind in a hud­dle. Un­earth­ly screams arose--the cries of wound­ed or dy­ing hors­es, shot by the sav­ages.

“Cut them loose from the gear,” cried Hen­ry, “and on! al­ways on!”

Swift and skill­ful hands obeyed him, and some of the wag­ons, in the wild en­er­gy of the mo­ment, were car­ried on, part­ly by a sin­gle horse and part­ly by the weight of those be­hind them. The shouts of the sav­ages nev­er ceased, but above them rose the cry of the daunt­less soul that now led the wag­on train. More than one sav­age fired at the splen­did fig­ure, nev­er more splen­did than when in bat­tle; but al­ways the cir­cling smoke or the hand of Prov­idence pro­tect­ed him, and he still led on, un­hurt. They were now near the mid­dle of the riv­er, and Shif'less Sol and his men nev­er ceased to pour their fire over their heads and in­to the red ranks.

“Now! Now!” mut­tered Hen­ry, through his shut teeth. He was pray­ing for Tom Ross and the first fifty, and as he prayed his prayer was an­swered.

A great burst of fire came from the thick­ets on their own side of the riv­er, and the sav­ages were smit­ten on the flanks, as if by a bolt of light­ning. It seemed to them at the same mo­ment as if the fire of the men with the wag­on train, and of those on the high bluff, dou­bled. They re­coiled. They gave back and they shiv­ered as that ter­ri­ble fire smote them a sec­ond and a third time on the flank. The soul of Shawnee, Mi­ami, and Wyan­dot alike filled with dread. In vain Yel­low Pan­ther and Red Ea­gle, great war chiefs, raged back and forth, and en­cour­aged their war­riors to go on. In vain they risked their lives again and again. The great bulk of the wag­ons bore steadi­ly down up­on them, and they were con­tin­ual­ly lashed by an unerring fire from three points. Well for the peo­ple of the wag­on train that a born lead­er had planned their cross­ing and had led them that day!

“They give, they give!” shout­ed Hen­ry Ware. “We win, we win!”

“They give, they give! We win, we win!” shout­ed the brave ri­fle­men, and they pressed for­ward more strong­ly than ev­er. By their side wad­ed the bold Ama­zons, fight­ing with the best.

The wag­ons them­selves of­fered great shel­ter for the pi­oneers. As Hen­ry had fore­seen, they were driv­en for­ward in a mass, which was car­ried part­ly by its own im­pe­tus. If the In­di­ans had thought to fire chiefly up­on the hors­es they would have ac­com­plished more, but the few of these that were slain did not check the progress of the oth­ers. Mean­while, the ri­fle­men lurked amid the wheels and be­hind the wag­on beds, in­ces­sant­ly pour­ing their dead­ly hail of bul­lets up­on the ex­posed sav­ages, and the drivers from shel­tered places did the same. The train be­came a mov­ing fort, belch­ing forth fire and death up­on its en­emies.

The de­fend­ers did not ad­vance with­out loss. Now and then a man sank and died in the stream, many oth­ers suf­fered wounds, and even the wom­en and chil­dren did not es­cape; but through it all, through all the roar and tu­mult, all the shout­ing and cries, the train drew steadi­ly clos­er to the west­ern bank.

“Now, boys,” shout­ed Shif'less Sol to his faith­ful fifty, “they're about to run! Pour it in­to 'em!”

At the same time Tom Ross was giv­ing a sim­ilar com­mand to his own equal­ly faith­ful fifty, and they closed up on the flank of the al­lied tribes, and stung and stung. Hen­ry Ware, through the drift­ing clouds of smoke and va­por, saw the sav­ages wa­ver again, and, shout­ing to the bold­est to fol­low, he rushed for­ward. Then Shawnees, Mi­amis, and Wyan­dots, de­spite the fierce com­mands of Yel­low Pan­ther and Red Ea­gle, broke and fled from the wa­ter to the shore. There Tom Ross stung them more fierce­ly than ev­er on the flank, and the fire of Shif'less Sol from the high bluff reached them with dead­ly aim. They broke again, and, filled with su­per­sti­tious ter­ror at their aw­ful loss­es, fled, a pan­ic horde, in­to the woods.

“On, on!” shout­ed Hen­ry Ware, in tremen­dous tones. “They run, they run!”

The whole train seemed to heave for­ward, as if by one con­vul­sive but tri­umphant move­ment. Shif'less Sol and his men came down from the bluff and dashed in­to the wa­ter be­hind them; Ross and his fifty came for­ward from the thick­et to meet them; and thus, drip­ping with wa­ter, smoke, blood, and sweat, the whole train passed up the west­ern bank. The ter­ri­ble ford had been won!