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"It's our business to know if the painted snakes are nearabout the river in any great force."
"And how may we learn that, unless we tramp along the sh.o.r.e?"
"The chances are that the snakes would fire at us, not countin' on the main force bein' so near."
"In which case we should gain the information by being shot--perhaps killed."
"I reckon one of us would come out alive, an' he could get back to give the news," Kenton said quietly, as if the possibility of our losing our lives was as nothing so long as the volunteers were warned. "But there's a good chance we'd all slip through without a scratch, even though the reptiles had gathered in full force, for they're not the best marksmen to be found hereabout, an' by keepin' well in the middle of the stream it should be safe sailin'. Now I'm thinkin' we'd better keep our tongues quiet, and set our eyes at work, else there's a show of slippin' by what we've been sent to find. If you see the least auspicious looking thing, sing out, and we'll know what it means before goin' any further."
Paul listened to these words as if they had no especial concern for him, and I was near to being vexed with the lad because of his seeming indifference when life was in danger; but checked myself with the thought that he would put on a different look if he fully understood the situation.
By this time Simon Kenton was keeping his eyes at work as he labored at the paddle, refusing my proffer of a.s.sistance, and I question if a single bent twig or broken bough escaped his notice. It was as if he saw both sides of the river at the same instant, listening as eagerly as he gazed, and it can be fancied that I did not dare attempt anything in the way of conversation.
It is needless for me to explain at length in what fashion we rounded this point, or skirted that cove half hidden by the overhanging foliage, for all know full well how voyagers on the Ohio in the days of the revolution guarded against ambush or sudden attack.
To my mind we might as well have remained with the volunteers during this portion of the journey, for in case we came upon any considerable body of savages there was little chance either of us would succeed in carrying back the news to those who virtually placed their lives in our keeping.
[Ill.u.s.tration: Within five seconds I had fired, using the curl of vapor for a target.--Page 108. _On The Kentucky Frontier._]
We had been sailing three hours or more; the sun was low in the heavens, and the shadows were already so dense on the western bank that a hundred painted brutes might have been concealed beneath the low hanging branches without our being any the wiser.
To me it seemed foolish to continue on any further, if our only purpose was to scan both sides of the river carefully, and I was on the point of saying as much to Kenton when a tiny puff of smoke darted out from amid the foliage to the right of us, hardly more than fifty yards away; a sharp report like unto the crack of a whip could be heard, while the splinters flew from the paddle in the scout's hand.
It goes without saying that I was startled; but not to such an extent as to deprive me of my wits.
I knew full well none but a savage would have fired at us, and the knowledge that the villainous enemy was so near served to make me forget the fear which had beset me a short time previous.
Within five seconds from the instant the tiny puff of smoke darted out like the tongue of a snake, I had fired, using the curl of vapor for a target, and Simon Kenton said approvingly, but with no trace of excitement in his tone:
"That was well done! A lad who is so quick with a shot should not be taken at a disadvantage, whatever turns up."
He had forced the bow of the dugout from the sh.o.r.e even before I fired, and, bending low, was paddling with all his strength as if the one idea of escape was all that occupied his mind.
Paul had neither spoken nor moved; at the moment his back was toward me, a fact which I regretted because I could not see his face to learn if he changed color.
We were no more than in mid-stream before a second shot was heard, this time coming from a point lower down the river; but the bullet flew harmlessly over our heads.
I made no effort to return the shot, for the very good reason that there was no chance I could do any execution at such a distance, even though he who had fired remained motionless, which was hardly to be expected.
Kenton pulled around the next bend, hugging the eastern sh.o.r.e closely, and when we were come to a small creek he forced the canoe up the tiny water course until it was completely hidden by the foliage.
"We might have gone on without fear," I said in a whisper, surprised by this manoeuver, "We were traveling faster than the savages could walk, and might easily have outstripped them."
"Which is exactly what we don't count on doin'," he said quietly, speaking in an ordinary tone, and thus showing he had no thought of danger while we remained on this side the river.
"Why not?" Paul asked mildly.
"Because it's our business to know how many of the reptiles are on yonder bank."
"But how will you find out?"
"Go back there, an' have a look at 'em. In less than an hour we can do the trick in fine style."
Paul and I looked at each other in mingled fear and amazement while one might have counted ten, and then I turned my eyes away, understanding by this time that to gather such information was the only reason why we had come down the river ahead of the volunteers.
Kenton sat like a statue in the center of the canoe, we lads being at either end, and it seemed to me as if a full hour pa.s.sed before a word was spoken.
Then the night was so near upon us that, save directly in the middle of the river, it was impossible to distinguish objects twenty paces distant.
"I reckon we may as well get to work," and Kenton cautiously forced the canoe out from amid the tangle of foliage until the current carried her down stream.
He did not use the paddle save to keep her from running afoul of dry brush or logs on the bank, and we had drifted two miles, perhaps, when he suddenly bent to his work, sending the light craft across the river at a speed I had never before seen equaled, even by my father.
I fully expected to hear the report of a rifle, or feel the sting of a bullet when we were in the middle of the stream where a sharp-eyed savage might see us; but nothing occurred to check our progress, and in a marvelously short s.p.a.ce of time we were once more screened from view; but now on the same side of the river where we knew the painted snakes lurked.
"You are to stay in the dugout," Simon Kenton whispered to me as he raised his rifle. "If it so chances that I'm not back here by sunrise, you must work your way up stream to warn Major Clarke."
Had he given me the opportunity I should have urged that he take us with him, or wait till near morning before undertaking so dangerous a venture; but the words had no more than been spoken when he was gone.
At one instant he was speaking with me, and at the next he had vanished as completely and silently as if the waters had covered him. No Indian who ever lived could have equaled him in swiftness and noiselessness.
Paul was mystified when he turned and failed to see Kenton, and I felt forced to explain in whispers what had happened, else I believe of a verity the lad would have cried out in his bewilderment.
It is not possible for those who have always lived in large settlements or towns to realize the desolateness of such a position as was ours while we waited for the return of the scout.
He had ventured into the forest where we knew to a certainty were bloodthirsty enemies, and that he realized all the possibilities had been shown by the order for us to work our way up-stream to warn the on-coming boats, in case he failed to return by sunrise.
My heart was almost in my mouth as I sat there holding Paul's hand, starting at the lightest sound, and hearing even in the rippling of the water some token of the savages. My tongue was parched; I could not have uttered a single word had it been necessary to speak, and only with the greatest difficulty did I prevent my hand from trembling, thus exposing to my companion that I was wofully afraid.
When perhaps an hour had pa.s.sed it seemed to me as if we had been there a full night, and then came that sound which I had at the same time been expecting and fearing to hear.
From the distance, half a mile away, I guessed, came the crack of a rifle; then another and another, and after that the same deathly silence as before.
"Think you any harm has come to him?" Paul whispered tremulously, and I replied as I believed truly:
"Not unless he met with an accident before that first shot was fired. If there had been a large number of savages nearabout, he would have used every effort to return without loss of time, that we might go to warn the volunteers. There may have been only a few, with, perhaps, a captive, and he has attempted a rescue."
I was heartened by my own words, which sounded plausible, and remained on the alert ten minutes or more, expecting each instant to see Kenton appear as silently as he had vanished.
When that length of time had elapsed, however, and he yet remained absent, fear crept over me, and I imagined the worst.
After half an hour went by, and I kept note of time by counting, there was no longer any hope in my heart.
After firing a shot Kenton would, had he been able, come back to us at once; for even though he had not learned all which seemed necessary, he must have understood that he would no longer be able to spy upon the foe.
I tried to decide what should be done; but my brain was in a whirl. I could hardly have defended myself if one of the painted brutes had shown himself close at hand.
It was Paul who aroused me from what was little less than the stupefaction of despair, by whispering in my ear: