The method by which Mr. and Mrs. Ware undertook to teach Henry a
sense of responsibility was an increase of work. Founding a new
state was no light matter, and he must do his share. Since he
loved to fish, it became his duty to supply the table with fish,
and that, too, at regular hours, and he also began to think of
traps and snares, which he would set in the autumn for game. It
was always wise for the pioneer to save his powder and lead, the
most valuable of his possessions and the hardest to obtain. Any
food that could be procured without its use was a welcome
addition.
But fishing remained his easiest task, and he did it all with a
pole that he cut with his clasp knife, a string and a little
piece of bent and stiffened wire. He caught perch, bass,
suckers, trout, sunfish, catfish, and other kinds, the names of
which he did not know. Sometimes when his hook and line had
brought him all that was needed, and the day was hot, he would
take off his clothing and plunge into the deep, cool pools.
Often his friend, Paul Cotter, was with him. Paul was a year
younger than Henry, and not so big. Hence the larger boy felt
himself, in a certain sense, Paul's teacher and protector, which
gave him a comfortable feeling, and a desire to help his comrade
as much as he could.
He taught the smaller lad new tricks in swimming, and scarcely a
day passed when two sunburned, barefooted boys did not go to the
river, quickly throw off their clothing, and jump into the clear
water. There they swam and floated for a long time, dived, and
ducked each other, and then lay on the grass in the sun until
they dried.
"Paul," said Henry once, as they were stretched thus on the bank,
"wouldn't you like to have nothing to do, but wander through the
woods just as you pleased, sleep wherever you wished, and kill
game when you grew hungry, just like the Indians?"
Henry's eyes were on the black line of the forest, and the blue
haze of the sky beyond. His spirit was away in the depths of the
unknown.
"I don't know," replied Paul. "I guess a white boy has to become
a white man, after a while, and they say that the difference
between a white man and the Indian is that the white man has to
work."
"But the Indians get along without it," said Henry.
"No they don't," replied Paul. "We win all the country because
we've learned how to do things while we are working."
Yet Henry was unconvinced, and his thoughts wandered far into the
black forest and the blue haze.
The cattle pastured near the deepest of the swimming holes, and
it often fell to the lot of the boys to bring them into the
palisade at sunset. This was a duty of no little importance,
because if any of the cattle wandered away into the forest and
were lost, they could not be replaced. It was now the latter
half of summer, and the grass and foliage were fast turning brown
in the heat. Late on the afternoon of one of the very hottest
days Henry and Paul went to the deepest swimming hole. There had
not been a breath of air stirring since morning; not a blade of
grass, not a leaf quivered. The skies burned like a sheet of
copper.
The boys panted, and their clothing, wet with perspiration, clung
to them. The earth was hot under their feet. Quickly they threw
off their garments and sprang into the water. How cool and
grateful it felt. There they lingered long, and did not notice
the sudden obscurity of the sun and darkening of the southwest.
A slight wind sprang up presently, and the dry leaves and grass
began to rustle. There was thunder in the distance and a stroke
of lightning. The boys were aroused, and scrambling out of the
water put on their clothing.
"A storm's coming," said Henry, who was weatherwise, "and we must
get the cattle in."
These sons of the forest did not fear rain, but they hurried on
their clothing, and they noticed, too, how rapidly the storm was
gathering. The heat had been great for days, and the earth was
parched and thirsty. The men had talked in the evening of rain,
and said how welcome it would be, and now the boys shared the
general feeling. The drought would be ended. The thirsty earth
would drink deep and grow green again.
The rolling clouds, drawn like a great curtain over the
southwest, advanced and covered all the heavens. The flashes of
lightning followed each other so fast that, at times, they seemed
continuous; the forest groaned as it bent before the wind. Then
the great drops fell, and soon they were beating the earth like
volleys of pistol bullets. Fragments of boughs, stripped off by
the wind, swept by. Never had the boys in their Eastern home
known such thunder and lightning. The roar of one was always in
their ears, and the flash of the other always in their eyes.
The frightened cattle were gathered into a group, pressing close
together for company and protection. The boys hurried them
toward the stockade, but one cow, driven by terror, broke from
the rest and ran toward the woods. Agile Henry, not willing to
lose a single straggler, pursued the fugitive, and Paul, wishing
to be as zealous, followed. The rest of the cattle, being so
near and obeying the force of habit, went on into the stockade.
It was the wildest cow of the herd that made a plunge for the
woods, and Henry, knowing her nature, expected trouble. So he
ran as fast as he could, and he was not aware until they were in
the forest that Paul was close behind him. Then he shouted:
"Go back, Paul! I'll bring her in."
But Paul would not turn. There was fire in his blood. He
considered it as much his duty to help as it was Henry's.
Moreover, he would not desert his comrade.
The fugitive, driven by the storm acting upon its wild nature,
continued at great speed, and the panting boys were not able to
overtake her. So on the trio went, plunging through the woods,
and saving themselves from falls, or collisions with trees, only
by the light from the flashes of lightning. Many boys, even on
the border, would have turned back, but there was something
tenacious in Henry's nature; he had undertaken to do a thing, and
he did not wish to give it up. Besides that cow was too
valuable. And Paul would not leave his comrade.
Away the cow went, and behind her ran her pursuers. The rain
came rushing and roaring through the woods, falling now in
sheets, while overhead the lightning still burned, and the
thunder still crashed, though with less frequency. Both the boys
were drenched, but they did not mind it; they did not even know
it at the time. The lightning died presently, the thunder ceased
to rumble, and then the darkness fell like a great blanket over
the whole forest. The chase was blotted out from them, and the
two boys, stopping, grasped each other's hands for the sake of
company. They could not see twenty feet before them, but the
rain still poured.
"We'll have to give her up," said Henry reluctantly. "We
couldn't follow a whole herd of buffaloes in all this black
night."
"Maybe we can find her to-morrow," said Paul.
"Maybe so,". replied Henry. "We've got to wait anyhow. Let's go
home."
They started back for Wareville, keeping close together, lest
they lose each other in the darkness, and they realized suddenly
that they were uncomfortable. The rain was coming in such sheets
directly in their faces that it half blinded them, now and then
their feet sank deep in mire and their drenched bodies began to
grow cold. The little log houses in which they lived now seemed
to them palaces, fit for a king, and they hastened their
footsteps, often tripping on vines or running into bushes. But
Henry was trying to see through the dark woods.
"We ought to be near the clearing," he said.
They stopped and looked all about, seeking, to see a light. They
knew that one would be shining from the tower of the blockhouse
as a guide to them. But they saw none. They had misjudged the
distance, so they thought, and they pushed on a half hour longer,
but there was still no light, nor did they come to a clearing.
Then they paused. Dark as it was each saw a look of dismay on
the face of the other.
"We've come the wrong way!" exclaimed Paul.
"Maybe we have," reluctantly admitted Henry.
But their dismay lasted only a little while. They were strong
boys, used to the wilderness, and they did not fear even darkness
and wandering through the woods. Moreover, they were sure that
they should find Wareville long before midnight.
They changed their course and continued the search. The rain
ceased by and by, the clouds left the heavens, and the moon came
out, but they saw nothing familiar about them. The great woods
were dripping with water, and it was the only sound they heard,
besides that made by themselves. They stopped again, worn out
and disconsolate at last. All their walking only served to
confuse them the more. Neither now had any idea of the direction
in which Wareville lay, and to be lost in the wilderness was a
most desperate matter. They might travel a thousand miles,
should strength last them for so great a journey, and never see a
single human being. They leaned against the rough bark of a
great oak tree, and stared blankly at each other.
"What are we to do?" asked Paul.
"I can't say," replied Henry.
The two boys still looked blank, but at last they laughed-and
each laughed at the other's grewsome face. Then they began once
more to cast about them. The cold had passed and warm winds were
blowing up from the south. The forest was drying, and Henry and
Paul, taking off their coats, wrung the water from them. They
were strong lads, inured to many hardships of the border and the
forest, and they did not fear ill results from a mere wetting.
Nevertheless, they wished to be comfortable, and under the
influence of the warm wind they soon found themselves dry again.
But they were so intensely sleepy that they could scarcely keep
their eyes open, and now the wilderness training of both came
into use.
It was a hilly country, with many outcroppings of stone and
cavelike openings in the sides of the steep but low hills, and
such a place as this the boys now sought. But it was a long hunt
and they grew more tired and sleepy at every step. They were
hungry, too, but if they might only sleep they could forget that.
They heard again the hooting of owls, and the wind, moaning among
the leaves, made strange noises. Once there was a crash in a
thicket beside them, and they jumped in momentary alarm, but it
was only a startled deer, far more scared than they, running
through the bushes, and Henry was ashamed of his nervous impulse.
They found at last their resting place, a sheltered ledge of dry
stone in the hollow of a hill. The stone arched above them, and
it was dark in the recess, but the boys were too tired now to
worry about shadows. They crept into the hollow, and, scraping
up fallen leaves to soften the hard stone, lay down. Both were
off to slumberland in less than five minutes.
The hollow faced the East, and the bright sun, shining into their
eyes, awakened them at last. Henry sprang up, amazed. The skies
were a silky blue, with little white clouds sailing here and
there. The forest, new-washed by the rain, smelt clean and
sweet. The south wind was still blowing. The world was bright
and beautiful, but he was conscious of an acute pain at the
center of his being. That is, he was increasingly hungry. Paul
showed equal surprise, and was a prey to the same annoying
sensation in an important region. He looked up at the sun, and
found that it was almost directly overhead, indicating noon.
All the country about them was strange, an unbroken expanse of
hill and forest, and nowhere a sign of a human being. They
scrutinized the horizon with the keen eyes of boyhood, but they
saw no line of smoke, rising from the chimneys of Wareville.
Whether the villages lay north or south or east or west of them
they did not know, and the wind that sighed so gently through the
forest never told. They were alone in the wilderness and they
knew, moreover, that the wilderness was very vast and they were
very small. But Henry and Paul did not despair; in fact no such
thought entered Henry's mind. Instead he began to find a certain
joy in the situation; it appealed to his courage. They resolved
to find something to eat, and they used first a temporary cure
for the pangs of hunger. Each had a strong clasp knife and they
cut strips of the soft inner bark of the slippery-elm tree, which
they chewed, drawing from it a little strength and sustenance.
They found an hour or two later some nearly ripe wild plums,
which they ate in small quantities, and, later on, ripe
blackberries very juicy and sweet. Paul wanted to be voracious,
but Henry restrained him, knowing well that if he indulged
liberally he might suffer worse pangs than those of hunger.
Slender as was this diet the boys felt much strengthened, and
their spirits rose in a wonderful manner.
"We're bound to be found sooner or later," said Henry, "and it's
strange if we can't live in the woods until then."
"If we only had our guns and ammunition," said Paul, "we could
get all the meat we wanted, and live as well as if we were at
home."
This was true, because in the untrodden forest the game was
plentiful all about them, but guns and ammunition they did not
have, and it was vain to wish for them. They must obtain more
solid food than wild plums and blackberries, if they would retain
their strength, and both boys knew it. Yet they saw no way and
they continued wandering until they came to a creek. They sat a
while on its banks and looked down at the fish with which it was
swarming, and which they could see distinctly in its clear
waters.
"Oh, if we only had one of those fine fellows," said Paul.
"Then why not have him?" exclaimed Henry, a sudden flash
appearing in his eye.
"Yes, why not?" replied Paul with sarcasm. "I suppose that all
we have to do is to whistle and the finest of 'em will come right
out here on the bank, and ask us to cook and eat 'em."
"We haven't any hooks and lines now but we might make 'em," said
Henry.
"Make 'em I" said Paul, and he looked in amazement at his
comrade.
"Out of our clothes," replied Henry.
Then he proceeded to show what he meant and Paul, too, when he
saw him begin, was quickly taken with the idea. They drew many
long strands from the fiber of their clothing-cloth in those days
was often made as strong as leather-and twisted and knotted them
together until they had a line fifteen feet long. It took them
at least two hours to complete this task, and then they
contemplated their work with pride. But the look of joy on
Paul's face did not last long.
"How on earth are we to get a hook, Henry?" he asked.
"I'll furnish that," replied Henry, and he took the small steel
buckle with which his trousers were fastened together at the
back. Breaking this apart he bent the slenderest portion of it
into the shape of a hook, and fastened it to the end of his line.
"If we get a fish on this he may slip off or he may not, but we
must try," he said.
The fishing rod and the bait were easy matters. A slender stem
of dogwood, cut with a clasp knife, served for the first, and, to
get the latter, they had nothing to do but turn up a flat stone,
and draw angle worms from the moist earth beneath.
The hook was baited and with a triumphant flourish Henry swung it
toward the stream.
"Now," he said, "for the biggest fish that ever swam in this
creek."
The boys might have caught nothing with such a rude outfit, but
doubtless that stream was never fished in before, and its
inhabitants, besides being full of a natural curiosity, did not
dream of any danger coming from the outer air. Therefore they
bit at the curious-looking metallic thing with the tempting food
upon it which was suddenly dropped from somewhere.
But the first fish slipped off as Henry had feared, and then
there was nothing to do but try again. It was not until the
sixth or seventh bite that he succeeded in landing a fine perch
upon the bank, and then Paul uttered a cry of triumph, but Henry,
as became his superior dignity at that moment, took his victory
modestly. It was in reality something to rejoice over, as these
two boys were perhaps in a more dangerous situation than they,
with all their knowledge of the border, understood. The
wilderness was full of animal life, but it was fleeter than man,
and, without weapons they were helpless.
"And now to cook him," said Henry. So speaking, he took from his
pocket the flint and steel that he had learned from the men
always to carry, while Paul began to gather fallen brushwood.
To light the fire Henry expected to be the easiest of their
tasks, but it proved to be one of the most difficult. He struck
forth the elusive sparks again and again, but they went out
before setting fire to the wood. He worked until his fingers
ached and then Paul relieved him. It fell to the younger boy's
lot to succeed. A bright spark flying forth rested a moment
among the lightest and driest of the twigs, igniting them. A
tiny point of flame appeared, then grew and leaped up. In a few
moments the great pile of brushwood was in a roaring blaze, and
then the boys cooked their fish over the coals. They ate it all
with supreme content, and they believed they could feel the blood
flowing in a new current through their veins and their strength
growing, too.
But they knew that they would have to prepare for the future and
draw upon all their resources of mind and body. Their hook and
line was but a slender appliance and they might not have such
luck with it again. Paul suggested that they make a fish trap,
of sticks tied together with strips cut from their clothing, and
put it in the creek, and Henry thought it was a good idea, too.
So they agreed to try it on the morrow, if they should not be
found meanwhile, and then they debated the subject of snares.
The undergrowth was swarming with rabbits, and they would make
most toothsome food. Rabbits they must have, and again Henry led
the way. He selected a small clear spot near the thick
undergrowth where a rabbit would naturally love to make his nest
and around a circle about six inches in diameter he drove a
number of smooth pegs. Then he tied a strong cord made of strips
of their clothing to one end of a stout bush, which he bent over
until it curved in a semicircle. The other end of the cord was
drawn in a sliding loop around the pegs, and was attached to a
little wooden trigger, set in the center of the enclosure.
The slightest pressure upon this trigger would upset it, cause
the noose to slip off the pegs and close with a jerk around the
neck of anything that might have its head thrust into the
enclosure. The bush, too, would fly back into place and there
would be the intruder, really hanged by himself. It was the
common form of snare, devised for small game by the boys of early
Kentucky, and still used by them.
Henry and Paul made four of these ingenious little contrivances,
and baited them with bruised pieces of the small plantain leaves
that the rabbits love. Then they contemplated their work again
with satisfaction. But Paul suddenly began to look rueful.
"If we have to pay out part of our clothes every time we get a
dinner we soon won't have any left," he said.
Henry only laughed.
It was now near sunset, and, as they had worked hard they would
have been thankful for supper, but there was none to be thankful
for, and they were too tired to fish again. So they concluded to
go to sleep, which their hard work made very easy, and dream of
abundant harvests on the morrow.
They gathered great armfuls of the fallen brushwood, littering
the forest, and built a heap as high as their heads, which blazed
and roared in a splendid manner, sending up, too, a column of
smoke that rose far above the trees and trailed off in the blue
sky.
It was a most cheerful bonfire, and it was a happy thought for
the boys to build it, even aside from its uses as a signal, as
the coming of night in the wilderness is always most lonesome and
weird.
They lay down near each other on the soft turf, and Henry watched
the red sun sink behind the black forest in the west. The
strange, sympathetic feeling for the wilderness again came into
his mind. He thought once more of the mysterious regions that
lay beyond the line where the black and red met. He could live
in the woods, he was living now without arms, even, and if he
only had his rifle and ammunition he could live in luxury. And
then the wonderful freedom! That old thought came to him with
renewed force. To roam as he pleased, to stop when he pleased
and to sleep where he pleased! He would make a canoe, and float
down the great rivers to their mouths. Then he would wander far
out on the vast plains, which they say lay beyond the thousand
miles of forest, and see the buffalo in millions go thundering
by. That would be a life without care.
He fell asleep presently, but he was awakened after a while by a
long-drawn plaintive shriek answered by a similar cry. Once he
would have been alarmed by the sound, but now he knew it was
panther talking to panther. He and Paul were unarmed, but they
had something as effective as guns against panthers and that was
the great bonfire which still roared and blazed near them. He
was glad now for a new reason that they had built it high,
because the panther's cry was so uncanny and sent such a chill
down one's back. He looked at Paul, but his comrade still slept
soundly, a peaceful smile showing on his face. He remembered the
words of Ross that no wild animal would trouble man if man did
not trouble him, and, rolling a little nearer to Paul, he shut
his eyes and sought sleep.
But sleep would not come, and presently he heard the cry of the
panther again but much nearer. He was lying with his ear to the
ground. Now the earth is a conductor of sound and Henry was sure
that he heard a soft tread. He rose upon his elbow and gazed
into the darkness. There he beheld at last a dim form moving
with sinuous motion, and slowly it took the shape of a great
catlike animal. Then he saw just behind it another as large, and
he knew that they were the two panthers whose cries he had heard.
Henry was not frightened, although there was something weird and
uncanny in the spectacle of these two powerful beasts of prey,
stealing about the fire, before which two unarmed boys reposed.
He knew, however, that they were drawn not by the desire to
attack, but by a kind of terrified curiosity. The fire was to
them the magnet that the snake is to the fascinated bird. He
longed then for his gun, the faithful little rifle that was
reposing on the hooks over his bed in his father's house.
"I'd make you cry for something," he said to himself, looking at
the largest of the panthers.
The animals lingered, glaring at the boys and the fire with great
red eyes, and presently Henry, doing as he had done on a former
occasion, picked up a blazing torch and, shouting, rushed at
them..
The panthers sprang headlong through the undergrowth, in their
eagerness to get away from the terrible flaming vision that was
darting down upon them. Their flight was so quick that they
disappeared in an instant and Henry knew they would not venture
near the site of the fire again in a long time. He turned back
and found Paul surprised and alarmed standing erect and rubbing
his eyes.
"Why-wh-what's the matter?" cried Paul.
"Oh, it's nothing," replied Henry.
Then he told about the panthers. Paul did not know as much as
Henry concerning panthers and the affair got on his nerves. The
lonely and vast grandeur of the wilderness did not have the
attraction for him that it had for his comrade, and he wished
again for the strong log walls and comfortable roofs of
Wareville. But Henry reassured him. The testimony of the
hunters about the timidity of wild beasts so was unanimous and he
need have no fears. So Paul went to sleep again, but Henry
lingered as before.
He threw fresh fuel oil the fire. Then he lay down again and
gradually weary nature became the master of him. The woods grew
dim, and faded away, the fire vanished and he was in slumberland.
When Henry awoke it was because some one was tugging at his
shoulder. He knew now that the Indian warriors had come across
the Ohio, and had seized him, and he sprang up ready to make a
fierce resistance.
"Don't fight, Henry! It's me-Paul!" cried a boyish voice, and
Henry letting his muscles relax rubbed the sleep out of his eyes.
It was Paul sure enough standing beside him, and the sun again
was high up in the heavens. The fire was still burning, though
it had died down somewhat.
"Oh, my breakfast!" cried Henry as he felt a sudden pang.
"Come, let's see if we're going to have any," said Paul, and off
they went to their snares. The first had not been touched, nor
had the second. The bait was gone from the third, and the loop
sprung, but there was nothing in it. The hearts of the boys sank
and they thought again of wild plums and blackberries which were
but a light diet. But when they came to the fourth snare their
triumph was complete. A fat rabbit, caught in the loop, was
hanging by the neck, beside the bush.
"It's lucky the forest is so full of game that some of it falls
into our trap," said Henry.
They cooked the rabbit, and again they were so hungry that they
ate it all. Then they improvised new fishing tackle and both
boys began to fish. They knew that they must devote their whole
time to this problem of food, and they decided, for the present,
not to leave the creek. They were afraid to renew the search for
Wareville, lest they wander deeper into the wilderness, and
moreover lose the way to the creek which seemed to be the surest
source of food. So they would stay a while where they were, and
keep their fire burning high as a signal to searchers.
Either the fish had learned that the curiously shaped thing with
the tempting bait upon it was dangerous, or they had gone to
visit friends in distant parts of the creek, for, at least two
hours passed, without either boy getting a bite. When the fish
did lay hold it was usually to slip again from the rude hook, and
it was at least another hour before they caught a fish. It was
Paul who achieved the feat, and it repaid him for being asleep
when the panthers came, a matter that had lain upon his mind
somewhat.
They persisted in this work until Henry also made a catch and
then they gathered more plums and berries. They dug up, too, the
root of the Indian turnip, an herb that burnt the mouth like
fire, but which Henry said they could use, after soaking it a
long time in water. Then they discussed the matter of the fish
trap which they thought they could make in a day's work. This
would relieve them of much toil, but they deferred its beginning
until the morrow, and used the rest of the day in making two more
snares for rabbits.
Paul now suggested that they accumulate as much food as possible,
cook it and putting it on their backs follow the creek to its
mouth. He had no doubt that it emptied into the river that
flowed by Wareville and then by following the stream, if his
surmise was right, they could reach home again. It was a
plausible theory and Henry agreed with him. Meanwhile they built
their fire high again and lay down for another night's rest in
the woods. The next day they devoted to the fish trap which was
successfully completed, and put in the river, and then they took
their places on the turf for the third night beside the camp
fire.
The day, like its predecessor, had been close and hot. All
traces of the great rain were gone. Forest and earth were again
as dry as tinder. They refreshed themselves with a swim in the
creek just before lying down to sleep, but they were soon panting
with the heat. It seemed to hang in heavy clouds, and the forest
shut out any fresh air that might be moving high up.
Despite the great heat the boys had built the fire as high as
usual, because they knew that the search for them would never
cease so long as there was a hope of success, and they thought
that the signal should not be lacking. But now they moved away
from it and into the shadow of the woods.
"If only the wind would blow I," said Henry.
"And I'd be willing to stand a rain like the one in which we got
lost," said Paul.
But neither rain nor wind came, and after a while they fell
asleep. Henry was awakened at an unknown hour of the night by a
roaring in his ears, and at first he believed that Paul was about
to have his storm. Then he was dazzled by a great rush of light
in his eyes, and he sprang to his feet in sudden alarm.
"Up, Paul!" he cried, grasping his comrade by the shoulder. "The
woods are on fire!"
Paul was on his feet in an instant, and the two were just in
time. Sparks flew in their faces and the flames twisting into
pyramids and columns leaped from tree to tree with a sound like
thunder as, they came. Boughs, burnt through, fell to the ground
with a crash. The sparks rose in millions.
The boys had slept in their clothes or rather what was left of
them, and, grasping each other's hands, they ran at full speed
toward the creek, with the great fire roaring and rushing after
them. Henry looked back once but the sight terrified him and the
sparks scorched his face. He knew that the conflagration had
been set by their own bonfire, fanned by a rising wind as they
slept, but it was no time to lament. The rush and sweep of the
flames, feeding upon the dry forest and gathering strength as
they came, was terrific. It was indeed like the thunder of a
storm in the ears of the frightened boys, and they fairly skimmed
over the ground in the effort to escape the red pursuer. They
could feel its hot breath on their necks, while the smoke and the
sparks flew over their heads. They dashed into the creek, and
each dived down under the water which felt so cool and
refreshing.
"Let's stay here," said Paul, who enjoyed the present.
"We can't think of such a thing," replied Henry. "This creek
won't stop that fire half a minute!
A fire in a sun-dried Western forest is a terrible thing. It
rushes on at a gallop, roaring and crackling like the
battle-front of an army, and destroying everything that lies
before it. It leaves but blackened stumps and charred logs
behind, and it stops only when there is no longer food for it to
devour.
The boys sprang out of the creek and ran up the hill. Henry
paused a moment at its crest, and looked back again. The aspect
of the fire was more frightful than ever. The flames leaped
higher than the tops of the tallest trees, and thrust out long
red twining arms, like coiling serpents. Beneath was the solid
red bank of the conflagration, preceded by showers of ashes and
smoke and sparks. The roar increased and was like that of many
great guns in battle.
"Paul!" exclaimed Henry seizing his comrade's hand again. "We've
got to run, as we've never run before! It's for our lives now!"
It was in good truth for their lives, and bending low their
heads, the two boys, hand in hand, raced through the forest, with
the ruthless pursuer thundering after them. Henry as he ran,
glanced back once more and saw that the fire was gaining upon
them. The serpents of flame were coming nearer and nearer and
the sparks flew over their heads in greater showers. Paul was
panting, and being the younger and smaller of the two his
strength was now failing. Henry felt his comrade dragging upon
his hand. If he freed himself from Paul's grasp he could run
faster, but he remembered his silent resolve to take Paul back to
his people. Even were it not for those others at Wareville he
could never desert his friend at such a moment. So he pulled on
Paul's hand to hasten his speed, and together the boys went on.
The two noticed presently that they were not alone in their
flight, a circumstance that had escaped them in the first hurry
and confusion. Deer and rabbits, too, flew before the hurricane
of fire. The deer were in a panic of terror, and a great stag
ran for a few moments beside the boys, not noticing them, or, in
his fear of greater evil, having no fear of human beings who were
involved in the same danger. Three or four buffaloes, too,
presently joined the frightened herd of game, one, a great bull
running with head down and blowing steam from his nostrils.
Paul suddenly sank to his knees and gasped:
"I can't go on! Let me stay here and you save yourself, Henry!"
Henry looked back at the great fiery wall that swept over the
ground, roaring like a storm. It was very near now and the smoke
almost blinded him. A boy with a spirit less stanch than his
might well have fled in a panic, leaving his companion to his
death. But the nearer the danger came the more resolute he grew.
He saw, too, that he must bring Paul into renewed action.
"Get up!" he exclaimed, and he jerked the fainting boy to his
feet. Then, snatching a stick, he struck. Paul several smart
blows on his back. Paul cried out with the sudden pain and,
stimulated by it into physical action, began to run with renewed
speed.
"That's right, Paul!" cried Henry, dropping his stick and seizing
his comrade again by the hand. "One more big try and we'll get
away! Just over this hill here it's open ground, and the fire
will have to stop!
It was a guess, only made to encourage Paul, and Henry had small
hope that it would come true, but when they reached the brow of
the hill both uttered a shout of delight. There was no forest
for perhaps a quarter of a mile beyond, and down the center of
the open glittered a silver streak that meant running water.
Henry was so joyous that he cried out again.
"See, Paul! See!" he exclaimed. "Here's safety! Now we'll run!"
How they did run! The sight gave them new strength. They shot
out of that terrible forest and across the short dry grass, burnt
brown by late summer days, running for life toward the flowing
water.
They did not stop to notice the size of the stream, but plunged
at once into its current. Henry sank with a mighty splash, and
went down, down, it seemed to him, a mile. Then his feet touched
a hard, rocky bottom, and he shot back to the surface,
spluttering and blowing the water out of eyes, mouth and
nostrils. A head was bobbing beside him. He seized hair, pulled
it up, and disclosed the features of his comrade.
Paul, too, began to splutter and at the same time to try to swim.
Splash! A heavy body struck the water beside them with a thud too
great for that of a man. It was the stag leaping also for safety
and he began to swim about, looking at the boys with great
pathetic eyes, as if he would ask them what he ought to do next
for his life. Apparently his fear of mankind had passed for the
moment. They were bound together by the community of danger.
Splash! Splash! Splash!
The water resounded like the beating of a bass drum. Three more
deer, a buffalo, and any number of smaller game sprang into the
stream, and remained there swimming or wading.
"Here, Paul! Here's a bar that we can stand on," said Henry who
had found a footing. At the same time he grasped Paul by the
wrist, and drew him to the bar. There they stood in the water to
their necks, and watched the great fire as it divided at the
little prairie, and swept around them, passing to left and right.
It was a grim sight. All the heavens seemed ablaze, and the
clouds of smoke were suffocating. Even there in the river the
heat was most oppressive, and at times the faces of the boys were
almost scorched. Then they would thrust their heads under the
water, and keep them there as long as they could hold their
breath, coming up again greatly refreshed. The wild game
clustered near in common terror.
"It's a lucky thing for us the river and prairie are here," said
Henry. "Another half mile and we'd have been ashes."
Paul was giving thanks under his breath, and watching the fire
with awe-stricken eyes. It swept past them and rushed on, in a
great red cloud, that ate all in its path and gave forth much
noise.
It was now on the far side of the prairie, and soon began to grow
smaller in the distance. Yet so great was the wall of fire that
it was long in sight, dying at last in a red band under the
horizon. Even then all the skies were still filled with drifting
smoke and ashes.
The boys looked back at the path over which they had come, and
although the joy of escape was still upon them it was with real
grief that they beheld the stricken forest, lately so grand a
sight. It was now but a desolate and blackened ruin. Here and
there charred trunks stood like the chimneys of burned houses,
and others lay upon the ground like fallen and smoking rafters.
Scattered about were great beds of living coals, where the brush
had been thickest, and smoke rose in columns from the burned
grass and hot earth. It was all like some great temple destroyed
by fire; and such it was, the grandest of all temples, the
natural temple of the forest.
"We kindled that fire," said Paul.
"I guess we did," responded Henry, "but we didn't know our spark
would grow into so great a blaze."
They swam to the bank and walked toward the remains of the
forest. But the ground was still hot to their feet, and the
smoke troubled them. Near the edge of the wood they found a deer
still alive and with a broken leg, tripped in its panic-stricken
flight or struck by a fallen tree. Henry approached cautiously
and slew him with his clasp knife. He felt strong pity as the
fallen animal looked at him with great mournful eyes, but they
were two hungry boys, and they must have a food supply if they
would live in the woods.
They cleaned and dressed the deer and found that the carcass was
as much as they could carry. But with great toil they lifted it
over the hot ground, and then across another little prairie,
until they came to woods only partially burned. There they hung
the body to the bough of a tree, out of the reach of beasts of
prey.
Then they took thought for the future. Barring the deer which
would last some time they would now have to begin all over again,
but they resolved to spend the rest of the present day, there
under the shade of the trees. They were too much exhausted with
exertion and excitement to undertake any new task just yet.
Paul was afflicted with a great longing for home that afternoon.
The fire and their narrow escape were still on his nerves. His
muscular fiber was not so enduring as that of Henry, and the
wilderness did not make so keen an appeal to him. Their
hardships were beginning to weigh upon him and he thought all the
time of Wareville, and the comfortable little log houses and the
certain and easy supplies of food. Henry knew what was on his
comrade's mind but he did not upbraid him for weakness of spirit.
He, too, had memories of Wareville, and he pitied the grief of
their people who must now be morning them as lost forever. But
he had been thinking long and hard and he had a plan. Finally he
announced to Paul that they would build a raft.
"I believe this is the same river that runs by Wareville," he
said. "I never heard Ross or Shif'less Sol or any of the men
speak of another river, near enough for us to have reached it,
since we've been wandering around. So it must be the same. Now
either we are above Wareville or we are below it. We've got to
guess at that and take the risk of it. We can roll a lot of the
logs and timber into the river, tie 'em together, and float with
the stream until we come to Wareville."
"But if we never come to it?" asked Paul.
"Then all we have to do is to get off the raft and follow the
river back up the bank. Then we are sure to reach home."
This was so plausible that Paul was full of enthusiasm and they
decided that they would set to work on the raft early in the
morning.