The people of Wareville had good reason alike for pride and for
sorrow, pride for victory, and sorrow for the fallen, but they
spent no time in either, at least openly, resuming at once the
task of founding a new state.
Henry Ware, the hero of the hour and the savior of the village,
laid aside his wild garb and took a place in his father's fields.
The work was heavy, the Indian corn was planted, but trees were
to be felled, fences were to be cut down, and as he was so strong
a larger share than usual was expected of him. His own father
appreciated these hopes and was resolved that his son should do
his full duty.
Henry entered upon his task and from the beginning he had
misgivings, but he refused to indulge them. He handled a hoe on
his first day from dawn till dark in a hot field, and all the
while the mighty wilderness about him was crying out to him in
many voices. While the sun glowed upon him, and the sweat ran
down his face he could see the deep cool shade of the forest-how
restful and peaceful it looked there! He knew a sheltered glade
where the buffalo were feeding, he could find the deer reposing
in a thicket, and to the westward was a new region of hills and
clear brooks, over which he might be the first white man to roam.
His blood tingled with his thoughts, but he never said a word,
only bending lower to his task, and hardening his resolve. The
voices of the wilderness might call, and he could not keep from
hearing them, but he need not go. The amount of work he did that
day was wonderful to all who saw, his vast strength put him far
ahead of all others and back of his strength was his will. But
they said nothing and he was glad they did not speak.
When he went home in the dusk he overtook Lucy Upton near the
palisade. She was in the same red dress that she wore when she
ran the gauntlet and in the twilight it seemed to be tinged to a
deeper scarlet. She was walking swiftly with the easy, swinging
grace of a good figure and good health, but when he joined her
she went more slowly.
He did not speak for a few moments, and she gave him a silent
glance of sympathy. In her woman's heart she guessed the cause
of his trouble, and while she had been afraid of him when he
appeared suddenly as the Indian warrior yet she liked him better
in that part than as she now saw him. Then he was majestic, now
he was prosaic, and it seemed to her that his present role was
unfitting.
"You are tired," she said at last.
"Well, not in the body exactly, but I feel like resting."
There was no complaint in his tone, but a slight touch of irony.
"Do you think that you will make a good farmer?" she asked.
"As good as the times and our situation allow," he replied.
"Wandering parties of the savages are likely to pass near here
and in the course of time they may send back an army. Besides
one has to hunt now, as for a long while we must depend on the
forest for a part of our food."
It seemed to her that these things did not cause him sorrow, that
he turned to them as a sort of relief: his eyes sparkled more
brightly when he spoke of the necessity for hunting and the
possible passage of Indian parties which must be repelled. Girl
though she was, she felt again a little glow of sympathy,
guessing as she did his nature; she could understand how he
thrilled when he heard the voices of the forest calling to him.
They reached the gate of the palisade and passed within. It was
full dusk now, the forest blurring together into a mighty black
wall, and the outlines of the houses becoming shadowy. The Ware
family sat awhile that evening by the hearth fire, and John Ware
was full of satisfaction. A worthy man, he had neither
imagination nor primitive instincts and he valued the wilderness
only as a cheap place in which to make homes. He spoke much of
clearing the ground, of the great crops that would come, and of
the profit and delight afforded by regular work year after year
on the farm. Henry Ware sat in silence, listening to his
father's oracular tones, but his mother, glancing at him, had
doubts to which she gave no utterance.
The days passed and as the spring glided into summer they grew
hotter. The sun glowed upon the fields, and the earth parched
with thirst. In the forest the leaves were dry and they rustled
when the wind blew upon them. The streams sank away again, as
they had done during the siege, and labor became more trying.
Yet Henry Ware never murmured, though his soul was full of black
bitterness. Often he would resolutely turn his eyes from the
forest where he knew the deep cool pools were, and keep them on
the sun-baked field. His rifle, which had seemed to reproach
him, inanimate object though it was, he hid in a corner of the
house where he could not see it and its temptation. In order to
create a counter-irritant he plunged into work with the most
astonishing vigor.
John Ware, in those days, was full of pride and satisfaction, he
rejoiced in the industrial prowess of his son, and he felt that
his own influence had prevailed, he had led Henry back to the
ways of civilization, the only right ways, and he enjoyed his
triumph. But the schoolmaster, in secret, often shook his head.
The summer grew drier and hotter, it was a period of drought
again and the little children gasped through the sweating nights.
Afar they saw the blaze of forest fires and ashes and smoke came
on the wind. Henry toiled with a dogged spirit, but every day
the labor grew more bitter to him; he took no interest in it, he
did not wish to calculate the result in the years to come, when
all around him, extending thousands of miles, was an untrodden
wilderness, in which he might roam and hunt until the end,
although his years should be a hundred.
It was worst at night, when he lay awake by a window, breathing
the hot air, then the deep cool forest extended to him her
kindest invitation, and it took all his resolution to resist her
welcome. The wind among the trees was like music, but it was a
music to which he must close his ears. Then he remembered his
vast wanderings with Black Cloud and his red friends, how they
had crossed great and unnamed rivers, the days in the endless
forest and the other days on the endless plains, and of the
mighty lake, they had reached in their northernmost journey. How
cool and pleasant that lake seemed now! His mind ran over every
detail of the great buffalo hunts, of those trips along the
streams to trap the beaver and the events in the fight with the
hostile tribe.
All these recollections seemed very vivid and real to him now,
and the narrow life of Wareville faded into a mist out of which
shone only the faces of those whom he loved-it was they alone who
had brought him back to Wareville, but he knew that their ways
were not his ways, and it was hard to confine his spirit within
the narrow limits of a settlement.
But his long martyrdom went on, the summer was growing old, with
the work of planting and cultivating almost done and the harvest
soon to follow, and whatever his feelings may have been he had
never flinched a single time. Nourished by his great labors the
Ware farm far surpassed all others, and the pride of John Ware
grew. He also grew more exacting with his pride, and this
quality brought on the crisis.
Henry was building a fence one particularly hot afternoon, and
his father coming by, cool and fresh, found fault with his work,
chiefly to show his authority, because the work was not badly
done. Mr. Ware was a good man, but like other good men he had a
rare fault-finding impulse. The voices in the woods had been
calling very loudly that day, and Henry's temper suddenly flashed
into a flame. But he did not give way to any external outburst
of passion, speaking in a level, measured voice.
"I am sorry you do not like it," he said, "because it is the last
work I am going to do here."
"Wh-what do you mean?" exclaimed his father in astonishment.
"I am done," replied Henry in his firm tones, and dropping the
fence rail that he held he walked to the house, every nerve in
him thrilling with expectation of the pleasure that was to come.
His mother was there, and she started in fear at his face.
"It is true, mother," he said, "I am not going to deceive you, I
am going into the forest, but I will come again and often. It is
the only life that I can lead, I was made for it I suppose; I
have tried the other out there in the fields, and I have tried
hard, but I cannot stand it."
She knew too well to seek to stop him. He took his rifle from
its secluded comer, and the feeling of it, stock and barrel, was
good to his hands. He put on the buckskin hunting shirt,
leggings and moccasins, fringed and beaded, and with them he felt
all his old zest and pride returning. He kissed his mother and
sister good-by, shook hands with his younger brother, did the
same with his astonished father at the door, and then, rifle on
shoulder, disappeared in the circling forest.
That night Braxton Wyatt sneered and said that a savage could not
keep from being a savage, but Paul Cotter turned upon him so
fiercely that he took it back. The schoolmaster made no comment
aloud, but to himself he said, "It was bound to come and perhaps
it is no loss that it has come."
Meanwhile Henry Ware was tasting the fiercest and keenest joy of
his life. The great forest seemed to reach out its boughs like
kind arms to welcome and embrace. How cool was the shade! How
the shafts of sunlight piercing the leaves fell like golden
arrows on the ground! How the little brooks laughed and danced
over the pebbles! This was his world and he had been too long
away from it. Everything was friendly, the huge tree trunks were
like old comrades, the air was fresher and keener than any that
he had breathed in a long time, and was full of new life and
zest. All his old wilderness love rushed back to him, and now
after many months he felt at home.
Strong as he was already new strength flowed into his frame and
he threw back his head, and laughed a low happy laugh. Then
rifle at the trail he ran for miles among the trees from the pure
happiness of living, but noting as he passed with wonderfully
keen eyes every trail of a wild animal and all the forest signs
that he knew so well. He ran many miles and he felt no
weariness. Then he throw himself down on Mother Earth, and
rejoiced at her embrace. He lay there a long time, staring up
through the leaves and the shifting sunlight, and he was so still
that a hare hopped through the undergrowth almost at his feet,
never taking alarm. To Henry Ware then the world seemed grand
and beautiful, and of all things in it God had made the
wilderness the finest, lingering over every detail with a loving
hand.
He watched the setting of the sun and the coming of the twilight.
The sun was a great blazing ball and the western sky flowed away
from it in circling waves of blue and pink and gold, then long
shadows came over the forest, and the distant trees began to melt
together into a gigantic dark wall. To the dweller in cities all
this vast loneliness and desolation would have been dreary and
weird beyond description; he would have shuddered with
superstitious awe, starting in fear at the slightest sound, but
there was no such quality in it for Henry Ware. He saw only
comradeship and the friendly veil of the great creeping shadow.
His eye could pierce the thickest night, and fear, either of the
darkness or things physical, was not in him.
He rose after a while, when the last sign of day was gone, and
walked on, though more slowly. He made no noise as he passed,
stepping lightly, but with sure foot like one with both genius
and training for the wilderness. He knelt at a little brook to
slake his thirst, but did not stop long there. His happiness
decreased in nowise. The familiar voices of the night were
speaking to him. He heard the distant hoot of an owl, a deer
rustled in the bush, a lizard scuttled over the leaves, and he
rejoiced at the sounds. He did not think of hunger but toward
midnight he raked some of last year's fallen leaves close to the
trunk of a big tree, lay down upon them, and fell in a few
moments into happy and dreamless sleep.
He awoke with the first rays of the dawn, shot a deer after an
hour's search, and then cooked his breakfast by the side of one
of the little brooks. It was the first food that had tasted just
right to him in many weeks and afterwards he lay by the camp fire
awhile and luxuriated. He had the most wonderful feeling of
peace and ease; all the world was his to go where he chose and to
do what he chose, and he began to think of an autumn camp, a tiny
lodge in the deepest recess of the wilderness, where he could
store spare ammunition, furs and skins and find a frequent
refuge, when the time for storms and cold came. He would build
at his ease-there was plenty of time and he would fill in the
intervals with hunting and exploration.
He ranged that day toward the north and the west, moving with
deliberation, and not until the third or the fourth day did he
come to the place that he had in mind. In the triangle between
the junction of two streams was a marshy area, thickly grown with
bushes and slim trees, that thrust their roots deep down through
the mire into more solid soil. The marsh was perhaps two acres
in extent; right in the heart of it was a piece of firm earth
about forty feet square and here Henry meant to build his lodge.
He alone knew the path across the marsh over fallen logs lying
near enough to each other to be reached by an agile man, and on
the tiny island all his possessions would be safe.
He worked a week at his hut, and it was done, a little lean-to of
bark and saplings, partly lined with skins, but proof against
rain or snow. On the floor he spread the skins and furs of
animals that he killed, and on the walls he hung trophies of the
hunt.
Two weeks after his house was finished he used it at its full
value. Summer was gone and autumn was coming, a great rain
poured and the wind blew cold. Dead leaves fell in showers from
the trees, and the boughs swaying before the gale creaked
dismally against each other. But it all gave to Henry a supreme
sense of physical comfort. He lay in his snug hut, and, pulling
a little to one side the heavy buffalo robe that hung over the
doorway, watched the storm rage through the wilderness. He had
no sense of loneliness, his mind was in perfect tune with
everything about him, and delighted in the triumphant
manifestation of nature.
He stayed there all day, content to lie still and meditate
vaguely of anything that came of its own accord into his mind.
About the twilight hour he cooked some venison, ate it and then
slept a dreamless sleep through the night.
The rain ceased the next day but the air became crisp and cold,
and autumn was fully come. In a week the forest was dyed into
the most glowing colors, red and yellow and brown, and the shades
between. The heavens were pure blue and gold, and it was a
poignant delight to breathe the keen air. Again he ranged far
and rejoiced in the hunting. His infallible rifle never missed,
and in the little hut in the marsh the stock of furs and skins
grew so fast that scarcely room for himself was left. He hid a
fresh store at another place in the forest, and then he returned
to Wareville for a day. His father greeted him with some
constraint, not with coldness exactly, but with lack of
understanding. His mother and his sister wept with joy and Mrs.
Ware said: "I was expecting you about this time and you have not
disappointed me."
He stayed two days and his keen eyes, so observant of material
matters, noted that the colony was not doing well for the time,
the drought having almost ruined the crops and there was full
promise of scanty food and a hard winter. Now came his
opportunity. He had looked upon his month in the forest as in
part a holiday, and he never intended to throw aside all
responsibility for others, roving the wilderness absolutely free
from care. He knew that he would have work to do, he felt that
he should have it, and now he saw the way to do the kind of work
that he loved to do.
He replenished his supply of ammunition, took up his rifle again
and returned to the forest. Now he used all his surpassing
knowledge and skill in the chase, and game began to pour into the
colony, bear, deer, buffalo and the smaller animals, until he
alone seemed able to feed the entire settlement through the
winter.
He experienced a new thrill keener and more delightful than any
that had gone before; he was doing for others and the knowledge
was most pleasant. Winter came on, fierce and unyielding with
almost continuous snow and ice, and Henry Ware was the chief
support of that little village in the wilderness. The game
wandering with its fancy, or perhaps taking alarm at the new
settlement had drifted far, and he alone of all the hunters could
find it. The voices that had been raised against him a second
time were stilled again, because no one dared to accuse when his
single figure stood between them and starvation.
He took Paul Cotter with him on some of his hunts, but never even
to Paul did he tell the secret of his hut in the morass; that was
to be guarded for himself alone. He was fond of Paul, but Paul
able though he was fell far behind Henry in the forest.
The debt of Wareville to him grew and none felt privileged to
criticize him now, as he appeared from the forest and disappeared
into it again on his self-chosen tasks.
The winter broke up at last, but with the spring came a new and
more formidable danger. Small parties of Indians, not strong
enough to attack Wareville itself but sufficient for forest
ambush, began to appear in the country, and two or three lives
that could be ill spared were lost. Now Henry Ware showed his
supreme value; he was a match and more than a match for the
savages at all their own tricks, and he became the ranger for the
settlement, its champion against a wild and treacherous foe.
The tales of his skill and prowess spread far through the
wilderness. Single handed he would not hesitate in the depths of
the forest to attack war parties of half a dozen, and while
suffering heavily themselves, they could never catch their daring
tormentor. These tales even spread across the Ohio to the Indian
villages, where they told of a blond and giant white youth in the
South who was the spirit of death, whom no runner could overtake,
whom no bullet could slay and who raged against the red man with
an invincible wrath.
As his single hand had fed them through the winter so, his single
hand protected them from death in the spring. He seemed to know
by instinct when the war parties were coming and where they would
appear. Always he confronted them with some devious attack that
they did not know how to meet, and Wareville remained inviolate.
Then, in the summer, when the war bands were all gone he came
back to Wareville to stay a while, although, everyone, himself
included, knew that he would always remain a son of the
wilderness, spending but part of his time in the houses of men.