They noticed one day a high bluff shooting up on the eastern
bank and running along for some distance. It was clothed in
dense green forest, and it was rather a welcome break in the
monotony of the low shores.
"A big city will be built there some day," said the
prophetic Paul.*
[* It is probable that the bluff, indicated by Paul, is the one
on which the present city of Memphis stands.]
"Now, Paul, why in tarnation do you say that?" exclaimed Tom
Ross.
"Why, because it's such a good place. It's a high hill on a
great river so well suited to navigation, and it has a vast, rich
country behind it."
But Tom Ross shook his head.
"Seems to me, Paul," he said, "that you're bitin' off a lot
more'n you can chaw. Things that are to happen a hundred years
from now ain't never happenin' fur me."
But Paul merely smiled and held to his opinion.
On the following day they tied up at a point, where the
river began a sharp and wide curve around a long, narrow
peninsula. It was just about dark when they stopped and, as
usual, they were able to run the boat into dense foliage at the
margin, where not even the keenest eye could see it.
"We've got plenty of goose and duck left over from dinner,"
said Henry, "so I'm thinking, Jim, that you'd better not light
the fire on your bricks tonight."
"All right," replied Jim, "I don't mind restin'. I feel
about ez lazy ez Sol Hyde looks."
But Henry Ware had another and more important thing in mind.
His was the keenest eye of them all, and just before landing he
had noticed to the southward and on the other side of the
peninsula a faint, dark line against the edge of the sunset.
Few, even with an eye good enough to see it, would have taken it
for anything but a wisp of cloud, but the physical sense of Henry
Ware, so acute that it bordered upon intuition, was not deceived.
"Sol," he said after they had eaten a little, "let's walk
across this neck of land and explore a bit."
"It's a dark night to be traveling," said Paul. But Henry
only laughed. Tom Ross may have had his suspicions, but he did
not deem it worth while to say anything. He knew that Henry and
Shif'less Sol were quite competent to achieve any task that they
might be undertaking.
Henry and Sol strolled carelessly into the bush, but before
they had gone a dozen steps their whole manner changed. Each
became eager and alert.
"What is it, Henry?" asked Shif'less Sol. "What have you
seed?"
"Smoke! The smoke of a camp fire and it's on the other side
of this neck. I think it's the camp of Alvarez. He must have
been going more slowly than we thought."
"We'll soon find out," said Shif'less Sol, as they advanced.
But the task was not as easy as they had thought. The peninsula
was very low and the greater part of it had been overflowed
recently. Their feet, no matter how lightly they stepped, sank
in the mire, and when they pulled them out again the mud emitted
a sticky sigh. An owl perched in a tree, high above the marsh,
began to hoot dismally, and Shif'less Sol uttered a growl.
"I wish we had the big, dry woods o' Kentucky to go
through," he whispered to Henry. "I am't much o' a mud-crawler."
"But as we haven't got those big, dry woods," Henry
whispered back, "we'll have to crawl, creep, or walk through the
mud."
It was about two miles across the neck, and as they went
very slowly for fear of making noise, it took them a full hour to
reach the other side, or to come near enough to see what might be
there. Then they found that Henry's belief, or rather intuition,
was right.
They could see quite well from the dense covert. All the
Spanish boats were tied up at the shore and two or three fires
had been built for the purposes of cooking. The soldiers in
their picturesque costumes lounged about. The hum of
conversation and now and then a laugh arose.
Henry soon marked Francisco Alvarez. The Spanish leader sat
on a little heap of boughs on the highest and dryest spot in the
camp, and all who approached him did so with every sign of
respect-if they spoke it was hat in hand.
The firelight fell in a red blaze across the face of
Francisco Alvarez and revealed every feature in minute detail to
the keen eyes in the covert. It was a thin, haughty face,
clear-cut and cruel, but just now its air was that of
satisfaction, as if in the opinion of Francisco Alvarez all
things were going well with his plans. Henry believed that he
could guess his thoughts.
"He thinks that the Spanish are already committed against us
and that he and Braxton Wyatt with a force of Spaniards and the
tribes will yet destroy our settlements in Kentucky."
Thinking of Braxton Wyatt he looked for him and, as he
looked, the renegade came from a point near the shore toward the
commander. It was evident that Wyatt had been faring well. His
frontier dress had been partly replaced with gay Spanish
garments. He now wore a cap with a feather in it, and a velvet
doublet. He, too, had a most complacent look.
Wyatt approached Alvarez and the commander courteously
invited him to a seat on the hillock near him. When he took the
seat a soldier brought the renegade a cup of wine, and he drank,
first lifting the cup toward Alvarez as if he drank a toast to
the success of the alliance. There could be no doubt about the
perfect understanding of the two; and Henry's anger rose. It was
impossible to set a limit on what a ruthless and determined man
like Francisco Alvarez might do.
Wyatt rose presently after a nod to the commander and walked
among the soldiers. He seemed to have no particular object in
view and his strollings brought him near to the edge of the
swampy forest.
"Perhaps he's spying about, and will come into the woods
where we are," whispered Henry. "Maybe he has those maps and
plans upon him, and it would be a great thing to get them. I
don't believe he could make a new set soon."
"It's a risky thing to try," said Shif'less Sol, "but ef he
comes in here, an' you think it the best thing to do, I'm ready
to help."
The two crouched a little lower and remained breathless.
Braxton Wyatt strolled on. He was making a sort of vague
inspection of the camp, but he was really thinking more about the
great triumph that he saw ahead. Since he had turned renegade,
leaving his own white race to join the Indians, a thing that was
sometimes done, he had been stung by many defeats and he wished a
great revenge that would pour oil upon all these wounds.
A bad nature grows worse with failure. Seeking to injure
his former people and failing at every turn, Braxton Wyatt hated
them more and more all the time. His wrath was particularly
directed against the five who had been such great instruments in
sending his careful plans astray. His scheme with the Indian
league had failed chiefly through them, but he felt that he could
now come with a Spanish force that would prove irresistible.
That was why he glowed with internal warmth and pride. The
settlements would be destroyed and he, in fact, would be the
destroyer.
Braxton Wyatt entered the edge of the woods, still occupied
with the cruel triumph that was to be his. He did not notice
that the foliage was gradually shutting out the firelight.
Presently he saw, or believed that he saw, a shadowy but terrible
figure. It was the figure of the one whom he dreaded most on
earth.
It was but a glimpse of a form, seen through the bushes, but
Wyatt's blood turned cold in every vein. He uttered a
half-choked cry, and running back through the bushes, sprang into
the firelight. Two or three Spanish soldiers looked at him in
amazement, but he was not a coward, and he had pride of a kind.
As soon as he leaped back into the firelight he felt that he had
made a fool of himself. Henry Ware could not have been there -
he and his comrades had been left behind long ago. Coming
suddenly out of his thoughts, he had been deceived in the dark by
a bush and imagination had done the rest. Yes, it was only
fancy!
"A rattlesnake! I nearly trod on him," he said in broken
Spanish words that he had picked up, and then walked in as
careless a manner as he could assume toward the mound where
Francisco Alvarez sat. But he could not wholly control himself -
the shock had been too great - and his body yet trembled. He did
not know it, but the pallor of his face showed through the tan,
and Alvarez noticed it.
"You have had a fright, Senior Wyatt," he said in his
precise, cold English. "What is it?"
"Not a fright," replied Wyatt in tones that he sought to
make indifferent, "but a start. I nearly trod on a rattlesnake
that lay coiled ready to strike, and I got away just in time.
The Spaniard regarded him with a penetrating look, but the chilly
blue eyes expressed nothing. Yet Francisco Alvarez thought that
a bold woodsman like Braxton Wyatt would not show so much fear
after a harmless passage with any kind of a snake.
"Do you think the five, the party that you said were so much
to be dreaded, are still following us?" he asked presently.
The pallor showed again for a moment through the tan in
Braxton Wyatt's face, but he answered again as carelessly as he
could:
"It may be. I hate them, but I do not deny that they are
bold and resourceful. They have a good boat, and they may
follow; but what harm could they do?"
"As I told you, they might go before Bernardo Galvez, our
Governor General at New Orleans, and spoil the pretty plan that
you, and I have formed. Galvez is - as he calls himself - a
Liberal. He would help these rebels and fight England. How can
a Spaniard lend himself to the cause of Republican rebels and
injure monarchy? Cannot he foresee, cannot he look ahead a
little and tell what rebel success means? It would in the end be
as great a blow to Spain as to England. If Kaintock is permitted
to grow she will threaten Louisiana. These men in their
buckskins are daring and dangerous and we must attend to them!"
The Spaniard clenched his hands in anger, and the blue light
of his eyes was singularly cruel.
"Galvez is a fool," he continued. "He is not allowing the
English to trade at New Orleans, but he is giving the American
rebels full chance. He has allowed one, Pollock, Oliver Pollock,
to establish a base there. This Pollock has formed a company of
New York, Philadelphia, and Boston merchants, and they are
sending arms and ammunition in fleets of canoes up the
Mississippi and then up the Ohio to Fort Pitt, where they are
unloaded and then taken eastward by land for the use of the
rebels. A fleet of these canoes is to start about the time we
arrive in New Orleans."
"We might meet it," suggested Braxton Wyatt, "and say that
it attacked us."
The Spaniard smiled.
"The idea is not bad," he said, "and it could be done. We
could sink their whole fleet of canoes with the pretty little
cannon that we carry, and we could prove that they began the
attack. But I do not choose to run the risk of compromising
myself just yet. There is a more glorious enterprise afoot.
Hark you, Senior Wyatt."
Braxton Wyatt leaned forward and listened attentively.
Francisco Alvarez had drank of wine that evening, and his blood
was warm. He, too, dreamed a great dream.
"You are a man of discretion and you have helped me. I
speak to you as one devoted to my cause. If you should but
breathe what I say to another I would first swear that it was a
lie, and then deliver you to these five gentlemen, former friends
of yours who would tear you in pieces."
Braxton Wyatt shivered again, and the Spaniard, seeing the
shiver, laughed and was convinced.
"Why should I betray you?" said the renegade. "I have no
motive to do so and every possible motive to keep faith."
"I know it," replied Alvarez, "and, that is why I speak. It
is to your interest to be faithful to me and when my enterprise
succeeds, as it certainly will, you shall have your proper share
of the reward. Bernardo Galvez, as you know, is the Governor
General of Louisiana, and his father is the Viceroy of Mexico.
They are powerful, very powerful, and I am only a commander of
troops under the son, but I, too, am powerful. My family is one
of the first in Spain. It sits upon the very steps of the throne
and more than once royal blood has entered our veins. I was a
favorite at the court and I have many friends there. The King
might be persuaded that Bernardo Galvez is not a fit
representative of the royal interests in Louisiana."
Francisco Alvarez leaned a little forward and his blue eyes,
usually so chill, sparkled now with fire. He was speaking of
what lay next to his heart.
Braxton Wyatt, full of shrewdness and perception, understood
at once.
"Bernardo Galvez might give way as Governor General of
Louisiana," said the renegade, "to be succeeded by a better man,
one who had the real interests of Spain at heart, one who would
refuse to give the slightest aid to rebels, rebels who would
strike against a throne!"
The Spaniard looked pleased.
"I see that you are a man of penetration, Senior Wyatt," he
said, "and I am fortunate in having you as a lieutenant. You
have divined my thought. I work, not for the interests of a man
whose name has been mentioned by neither of us, but for the true
interests of Spain and the divine right of kings. What is this
miserable Kaintock which is springing up? We will crush it out
as you would have crushed the rattlesnake! The people of New
Orleans and Louisiana hate rebels! Why should they not? It is
the rebels who in time will take Louisiana from us if they can,
not England."
Braxton Wyatt smiled. He was delighted to the very center
of his cunning heart. His plans and those of Alvarez marched
well together. Each strengthened the other.
"I am with you to the end," he said.
"The end will be a glorious triumph," said the Spaniard in
emphatic tones.
Meanwhile Henry and Shif'less Sol still lay in the thicket.
Their project to seize Braxton Wyatt and strip him of the maps
and plans had been defeated.
Henry knew that the renegade had caught a glimpse of him in
the dusk and among the thick bushes and he expected an immediate
alarm. But when Wyatt raised none, he and Sol lingered. They
saw the renegade go to the Spaniard's side on the little mound,
and they saw the two talk long and earnestly, but, of course,
they could not understand a word of what was said.
"They look mighty pleased with one another," whispered
Shif'less Sol, "so it's bound to mean that they're up to the
worst sort o' mischief."
"Yes," replied Henry, "and that mischief is sure to be aimed
at our people."
They waited about a half hour longer and then picked their
way back through the marsh to their own side of the peninsula.
It was now very late and Paul and Jim Hart were sound asleep in
the boat, but Tom Ross was keeping vigilant guard.
"Wuz it them?" he asked.
"Yes," replied Henry. "They're camped on the other side of
this neck, and Braxton Wyatt is still with them. There's big
mischief afoot and we've got to keep on following, waiting our
chance, which, I think, will come."
They did not start until noon the next day, in order to give
the Spaniards a longer lead, and they rounded the neck of land
very slowly lest they run into a trap. But when the river lay
straight before them again they beheld nothing. They passed the
point where the Spaniards had camped and saw the dead coals of
their fires, but they did not stop, continuing instead their
steady progress down stream.
It now grew hot upon the water. They had come many hundreds
of miles since the start, and they were in a warmer climate. The
character of the vegetation was changing. The cypress and the
magnolia became frequent on the banks, and now and then they saw
great, drooping live oaks. The soil seemed to grow softer and
the water was more deeply permeated with mud. Although the flood
was gone, the river spread out in places to a vast width, and
even at its narrowest it was a gigantic stream. Other great,
lazy rivers poured in their volume from east and west. Narrow,
doublets, half-hidden in vegetation, extended from either side.
There were bayous, although the five had not yet heard the name,
and many of them swarmed with fish.
The warm air was heavy and languorous and now Shif'less Sol
confessed.
"I'm gittin' too much o' it, even fur a lazy man," he said.
"'Pears to me I'm always wantin' to sleep. Now, I like about
sixteen hours sleepin' out o' the twenty-four, but when it comes
to keep awake jest long enough to eat three meals a day I'm in
favor of it."
"It must be a rich country, though," said Tom Ross. "No
wonder them Spaniards want to keep it."
That day they passed at some distance three canoes
containing Indians, but the canoes showed no wish to come near
and investigate. Henry said that the Indians in them looked
sprawling and dirty, unlike the alert, clean-limbed natives of
the North.
"They probably belong," said Paul, "to the Natchez tribe who
were beaten into submission long ago by the French, and who
doubtless lack energy anyhow."
The Indian canoes went lazily on, and soon were lost to
sight. Now a serious problem arose. They were approaching the
settled parts of Louisiana. It is true, it was only the thinnest
fringe of white people extending along either shore of the river
a short distance above New Orleans, but they were coming to a
region in which they would be noticed, and they might have to
explain their presence before they wished to do so. Nor had they
found any opportunity to capture Braxton Wyatt and his maps and
plans. Nevertheless, they hung so closely on the trail of
Alvarez that every night and morning they could see the smoke of
his camp fire.
They stopped one evening in a cove of the river, sheltered
by great mournful cypresses, and Henry and Shif'less Sol went out
again to scrutinize the Spanish camp. They returned before
midnight with unusual news. Alvarez with his whole force had
turned from the Mississippi and had gone up a bayou about four
miles. There he had landed some of his small cannon and stores
at a rude wharf, and showed all the signs of making a stay, but
whether short or long they could not tell.
"Alvarez must have a place, a plantation, I believe they
call it, near here," said Paul intuitively, "and he's going to
stop at it. As he wants to get Spain into a war with us he could
plot a lot of mischief in a house of his own away from New
Orleans."
"Of course, that's it," said Henry with conviction. "Now if
we could only capture Braxton Wyatt and then carry off the fellow
and his maps and plans with us, it would be a great stroke. It
might make Alvarez quit his wicked plot."
Henry and Shif'less Sol slept briefly, and rising before
daylight, went forth to investigate again. When they arrived at
the edge of the bayou, they saw that the work of removal had been
resumed already. All the boats had been tied up securely, and a
mongrel lot of new men had joined the Spanish force, shiftless
and half-civilized Houma and Natchez Indians, coal black negroes,
some from the West Indies and some from Africa, Acadians, and
fierce-looking adventurers from Europe. Most of them seemed to
be laborers, however, and they worked with the arms and baggage
taken from the boats. Among these laborers were several stalwart
negro women with blazing red handkerchiefs tied around their
heads.
Alvarez came off one of the boats, followed by Braxton
Wyatt. The Spanish commander had attired himself with great
care, and he was a really splendid figure in his glittering
uniform and plumed hat. His gold-hilted small sword swung by his
side. He bore himself as a lord proprietor, and in fact he was
such at this moment. He was about to go, surrounded by his
retainers, to his own house on a huge grant of land made to him
by the Spanish King-Spanish kings granted lands very freely in
America to favorites, and the relatives of favorites.
Braxton Wyatt also showed pride. Was he not the most
trusted friend of an able man who was dreaming a great dream, a
dream that would come true? The last remnants of his border
attire had disappeared and he, too, was dressed wholly as a
Spanish officer, though by no means so splendidly as his chief.
Alvarez addressed a few words to a man in civilian attire,
evidently his overseer, a dark, heavy West India Spaniard who
carried a pistol in his sash, and then advanced through the
rabble, which quickly fell back on either side to let him pass.
Horses were in waiting for Alvarez, Wyatt, and several
others, and mounting, they rode off. Henry and Shif'less Sol
watching from the bush as well as they could, and following. The
way of the officers led through a great plantation but partially
redeemed from the ancient forest. Cane and grain fields were on
either side of the path, and presently they approached a large
house of only one story, built of wood, and surrounded by a wide
veranda supported with posts at regular intervals. This house
was built around a court in the center of which was a clear pool.
Henry and the shiftless one saw Alvarez and his company dismount
and enter the house. They noticed others who approached on foot,
but who did not enter, obviously men who did not dare to enter
unless asked. Among them was a thin, middle-aged Natchez
Indian, whose extraordinary, feline face had won for him the name
of The Cat. Henry particularly observed this man, whose manner
was in accordance with his appearance and name. Like those they
had seen in the canoes he had a hangdog, shiftless look,
different from the bold warrior of the more northerly forests.
The two did not remain long. So many people were about that
they were likely to be seen, and they returned through the forest
to the cypress cove in which "The Galleon" lay hidden. Here, it
was agreed that they should go forth later in the day on another
tour of inspection, re-inforced by Tom Ross, while Long Jim and
Paul should remain to guard the boat and their precious stores.
When the three had gone, Long Jim sat on the edge of the
boat and looked around at the sluggish waters of the bayou, the
sad cypresses, and the drooping live oaks. An ugly water snake
twined its slimy length just within the edge of the bayou, and
the odor of the still forest about them was heavy and oppressive.
Long Jim took a long, comprehensive look, and then heaved a
deep sigh.
"What's the matter?" asked Paul.
"I don't think the country and the climate agree with me,"
replied Long Jim lugubriously. "I wuz never so fur south afore,
an' I'm a delicate plant, I am. I need the snow and the north
wind to keep me fresh an' bloomin'. All this gits on me. My
lungs don't feel clean. I'm longin' fur them big, fine woods up
in our country, whar you may run agin a b'ar, but whar you ain't
likely to step on a snake a fore you see it."
"Give me the temperate climate, too," said Paul, "but we've
come on a great errand, Jim, and we've come a long way. It's
good, too, to see new things."
"So it is, but I don't like to set here waitin' in this
swamp. Think I'll stretch my legs a little on the bank thar, ef
it's firm enough to hold me up, though I do have an abidin'
distrust uv most uv the land hereabouts."
Jim leaped upon the bank which upheld him, and stretched his
long legs with obvious relief.
"A boat's mighty easy," he said, "but now an' then walkin's
good."
He strode up and down two or three times and then he
stopped. He had heard a sound, faint, it is true, but enough to
arrest the attention of Long Jim. Then he went on with a look of
disgust. It was surely one of those snakes again!
He was about to pass a great cypress when a pair of long,
brown arms reached out and grasped him by the throat. Long Jim
was a strong man and, despite his early advantage, it would have
gone hard with the owner of the arms, none other than The Cat
himself, but three or four men, springing from the covert, threw
themselves upon him.
Paul heard the first sounds of the contest and sprang up.
He saw Long Jim struggling in the grasp of many hands, and
snatching at the first weapon that lay near, he sprang to the
bank, rushing to the assistance of his comrade.
A shout of derisive laughter greeted Paul. Long Jim had
been thrown down and held fast and the lad was confronted by none
other than Alvarez himself, while Braxton Wyatt, smiling in
malignant triumph, stood just behind him.
"Well, my young man of Kaintock," said Francisco Alvarez in
his precise English, "we have taken you and at least one of your
brother thieves. In good time we'll have the others, too. It
was an evil day when you ventured on my plantation so near such a
wonderful tracker as The Cat. Why, he detected them
instinctively when your comrades ventured near us!"
The eyes of the stooping Natchez Indian flashed at the
compliment but, in a moment, he resumed his immobility. All the
blood rushed to Paul's face, and he could not contain his anger.
"Thief! how dare you call me a thief!" he said.
"This is my boat before me," replied Alvarez.
"You stole it."
"Not so," replied Paul. "We captured it. You seized and
held me a prisoner when I came to your camp on a friendly
mission, and we took it in fair reprisal and for a good purpose.
Moreover, you are plotting with that vile renegade there to
destroy our people in Kentucky!"
"You are a thief," repeated Francisco Alvarez calmly, "you
stole my boat. Why, the very sword that you hold in your hand is
mine, stolen from me."
Paul glanced down. In his haste and excitement he had
snatched up one of the beautiful small swords when he leaped from
the boat, but he had been unconscious of it. He was yet free and
he held a sword in his hand. One of the men who was holding Jim
Hart suddenly kicked him to make him keep quiet, and Paul's wrath
blazed up under the double incentive of the blow and the sneering
face of Francisco Alvarez.
The lad rushed forward, sword in hand, and one of the
soldiers raised his musket. Alvarez pushed the weapon down.
"Since this young rebel wants to fight, and has a stolen
sword of mine in his hand," he said, "he can fight with me. I
will give him that honor."
So speaking Alvarez drew his own sword and held up the blade
to the light until it glittered. A shout of approval arose from
the soldiers, but Long Jim cried out:
"It ain't fair! It ain't right to take one uv your kind uv
weepin's an' attack him! 'It's murder! Let me loose an' I'll
fight you with rifles."
"Have you got that ruffian securely bound? " asked Alvarez.
"Yes," replied one of his men.
"Then I'll teach this youth a lesson, as I said."
Paul had stopped in his rush, and suddenly he became cool
and collected.
"Don't you be afraid for me, Jim," he said. " I can take
care of myself, and I'll fight him."
Alvarez laughed derisively and the others echoed the laugh
of their master, but Paul held up his own sword, also, until it
glittered in the light. Every nerve and muscle became taut, and
the blood went back from his brain, leaving it cool and clear.
"Come on," he said to Alvarez. "I'm ready." They stood in a
level glade, and the two faced each other, the sunshine lighting
up all the area enclosed by the cypresses. Around them stood
Braxton Wyatt and the followers of Alvarez.