<h2><SPAN name="chap32"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXII.</h2>
<p class="poem">
Allow him not a parting word;<br/>
Short be the shrift, and sure the cord!</p>
<p class="left">
—<i>Rokeby</i>.</p>
<p>The peddler and his companion soon reached the valley, and after pausing to
listen, and hearing no sounds which announced that pursuers were abroad, they
entered the highway. Acquainted with every step that led through the mountains,
and possessed of sinews inured to toil, Birch led the way, with the lengthened
strides that were peculiar to the man and his profession; his pack alone was
wanting to finish the appearance of his ordinary business air. At times, when
they approached one of those little posts held by the American troops, with
which the Highlands abounded, he would take a circuit to avoid the sentinels,
and plunge fearlessly into a thicket, or ascend a rugged hill, that to the eye
seemed impassable. But the peddler was familiar with every turn in their
difficult route, knew where the ravines might be penetrated, or where the
streams were fordable. In one or two instances, Henry thought that their
further progress was absolutely at an end, but the ingenuity, or knowledge, of
his guide, conquered every difficulty. After walking at a great rate for three
hours, they suddenly diverged from the road, which inclined to the east, and
held their course directly across the hills, in a due south direction. This
movement was made, the peddler informed his companion, in order to avoid the
parties who constantly patrolled in the southern entrance of the Highlands, as
well as to shorten the distance, by traveling in a straight line. After
reaching the summit of a hill, Harvey seated himself by the side of a little
run, and opening a wallet, that he had slung where his pack was commonly
suspended, he invited his comrade to partake of the coarse fare it contained.
Henry had kept pace with the peddler, more by the excitement natural to his
situation, than by the equality of his physical powers. The idea of a halt was
unpleasant, so long as there existed a possibility of the horse getting below
him in time to intercept their retreat through the neutral ground. He therefore
stated his apprehensions to his companion, and urged a wish to proceed.</p>
<p>“Follow my example, Captain Wharton,” said the peddler, commencing
his frugal meal. “If the horse have started, it will be more than man can
do to head them; and if they have not, work is cut out for them, that will
drive all thoughts of you and me from their brains.”</p>
<p>“You said yourself, that two hours’ detention was all-important to
us, and if we loiter here, of what use will be the advantage that we may have
already obtained?”</p>
<p>“The time is past, and Major Dunwoodie thinks little of following two
men, when hundreds are waiting for him on the banks of the river.”</p>
<p>“Listen!” interrupted Henry, “there are horse at this moment
passing the foot of the hill. I hear them even laughing and talking to each
other. Hist! there is the voice of Dunwoodie himself; he calls to his comrade
in a manner that shows but little uneasiness. One would think that the
situation of his friend would lower his spirits; surely Frances could not have
given him the letter.”</p>
<p>On hearing the first exclamation of the captain, Birch arose from his seat, and
approached cautiously to the brow of the hill, taking care to keep his body in
the shadow of the rocks, so as to be unseen at any distance, and earnestly
reconnoitered the group of passing horsemen. He continued listening, until
their quick footsteps were no longer audible, and then quietly returned to his
seat, and with incomparable coolness resumed his meal.</p>
<p>“You have a long walk, and a tiresome one, before you, Captain Wharton;
you had better do as I do—you were eager for food at the hut above
Fishkill, but traveling seems to have worn down your appetite.”</p>
<p>“I thought myself safe, then, but the information of my sister fills me
with uneasiness, and I cannot eat.”</p>
<p>“You have less reason to be troubled now than at any time since the night
before you were taken, when you refused my advice, and an offer to see you in
safety,” returned the peddler. “Major Dunwoodie is not a man to
laugh and be gay when his friend is in difficulty. Come, then, and eat, for no
horse will be in our way, if we can hold our legs for four hours longer, and
the sun keeps behind the hills as long as common.”</p>
<p>There was a composure in the peddler’s manner that encouraged his
companion; and having once determined to submit to Harvey’s government,
he suffered himself to be persuaded into a tolerable supper, if quantity be
considered without any reference to the quality. After completing their repast,
the peddler resumed his journey.</p>
<p>Henry followed in blind submission to his will. For two hours more they
struggled with the difficult and dangerous passes of the Highlands, without
road, or any other guide than the moon, which was traveling the heavens, now
wading through flying clouds, and now shining brightly. At length they arrived
at a point where the mountains sank into rough and unequal hillocks, and passed
at once from the barren sterility of the precipices, to the imperfect culture
of the neutral ground.</p>
<p>The peddler now became more guarded in the manner in which they proceeded, and
took divers precautions to prevent meeting any moving parts of the Americans.
With the stationary posts he was too familiar to render it probable he might
fall upon any of them unawares. He wound among the hills and vales, now keeping
the highways and now avoiding them, with a precision that seemed instinctive.
There was nothing elastic in his tread, but he glided over the ground with
enormous strides, and a body bent forward, without appearing to use exertion,
or know weariness.</p>
<p>The moon had set, and a faint streak of light was beginning to show itself in
the east. Captain Wharton ventured to express a sense of fatigue, and to
inquire if they were not yet arrived at a part of the country where it might be
safe to apply at some of the farmhouses for admission.</p>
<p>“See here,” said the peddler, pointing to a hill, at a short
distance in the rear, “do you not see a man walking on the point of that
rock? Turn, so as to bring the daylight in the range—now, see, he moves,
and seems to be looking earnestly at something to the eastward. That is a royal
sentinel; two hundred of the rig’lar troops lay on that hill, no doubt
sleeping on their arms.”</p>
<p>“Then,” cried Henry, “let us join them, and our danger is
ended.”</p>
<p>“Softly, softly, Captain Wharton,” said the peddler, dryly,
“you’ve once been in the midst of three hundred of them, but there
was a man who could take you out; see you not yon dark body, on the side of the
opposite hill, just above the cornstalks? There are the—the rebels (since
that is the word for us loyal subjects), waiting only for day, to see who will
be master of the ground.”</p>
<p>“Nay, then,” exclaimed the fiery youth, “I will join the
troops of my prince, and share their fortune, be it good or be it bad.”</p>
<p>“You forget that you fight with a halter round your neck; no, no—I
have promised one whom I must not disappoint, to carry you safe in; and unless
you forget what I have already done, and what I have risked for you, Captain
Wharton, you will turn and follow me to Harlem.”</p>
<p>To this appeal the youth felt unwillingly obliged to submit; and they continued
their course towards the city. It was not long before they gained the banks of
the Hudson. After searching for a short time under the shore, the peddler
discovered a skiff, that appeared to be an old acquaintance; and entering it
with his companion he landed him on the south side of the Croton. Here Birch
declared they were in safety; for the royal troops held the continentals at
bay, and the former were out in too great strength for the light parties of the
latter to trust themselves below that river, on the immediate banks of the
Hudson.</p>
<p>Throughout the whole of this arduous flight, the peddler had manifested a
coolness and presence of mind that nothing appeared to disturb. All his
faculties seemed to be of more than usual perfection, and the infirmities of
nature to have no dominion over him. Henry had followed him like a child in
leading strings, and he now reaped his reward, as he felt a bound of pleasure
at his heart, on hearing that he was relieved from apprehension, and permitted
to banish every doubt of security.</p>
<p>A steep and laborious ascent brought them from the level of the tidewaters to
the high lands that form, in this part of the river, the eastern banks of the
Hudson. Retiring a little from the highway, under the shelter of a thicket of
cedars, the peddler threw his form on a flat rock, and announced to his
companion that the hour for rest and refreshment was at length arrived. The day
was now opened, and objects could be seen in the distance, with distinctness.
Beneath them lay the Hudson, stretching to the south in a straight line, as far
as the eye could reach. To the north, the broken fragments of the Highlands
threw upwards their lofty heads, above masses of fog that hung over the water,
and by which the course of the river could be traced into the bosom of hills
whose conical summits were grouping togather, one behind another, in that
disorder which might be supposed to have succeeded their gigantic, but
fruitless, efforts to stop the progress of the flood. Emerging from these
confused piles, the river, as if rejoicing at its release from the struggle,
expanded into a wide bay, which was ornamented by a few fertile and low points
that jutted humbly into its broad basin. On the opposite, or western shore, the
rocks of Jersey were gathered into an array that has obtained for them the name
of the “Palisades,” elevating themselves for many hundred feet, as
if to protect the rich country in their rear from the inroads of the conqueror;
but, disdaining such an enemy, the river swept proudly by their feet, and held
its undeviating way to the ocean. A ray of the rising sun darted upon the
slight cloud that hung over the placid river, and at once the whole scene was
in motion, changing and assuming new forms, and exhibiting fresh objects in
each successive moment. At the daily rising of this great curtain of nature, at
the present time, scores of white sails and sluggish vessels are seen
thickening on the water, with that air of life which denotes the neighborhood
to the metropolis of a great and flourishing empire; but to Henry and the
peddler it displayed only the square yards and lofty masts of a vessel of war,
riding a few miles below them. Before the fog had begun to move, the tall spars
were seen above it, and from one of them a long pennant was feebly borne abroad
in the current of night air, that still quivered along the river; but as the
smoke arose, the black hull, the crowded and complicated mass of rigging, and
the heavy yards and booms, spreading their arms afar, were successively brought
into view.</p>
<p>“There, Captain Wharton,” said the peddler, “there is a safe
resting place for you; America has no arm that can reach you, if you gain the
deck of that ship. She is sent up to cover the foragers, and support the
troops; the rig’lar officers are fond of the sound of cannon from their
shipping.”</p>
<p>Without condescending to reply to the sarcasm conveyed in this speech, or
perhaps not noticing it, Henry joyfully acquiesced in the proposal, and it was
accordingly arranged between them, that, as soon as they were refreshed, he
should endeavor to get on board the vessel.</p>
<p>While busily occupied in the very indispensable operation of breaking their
fast, our adventurers were startled with the sound of distant firearms. At
first a few scattering shots were fired, which were succeeded by a long and
animated roll of musketry, and then quick and heavy volleys followed each
other.</p>
<p>“Your prophecy is made good,” cried the English officer, springing
upon his feet. “Our troops and the rebels are at it! I would give six
months’ pay to see the charge.”</p>
<p>“Umph!” returned his companion, without ceasing his meal,
“they do very well to look at from a distance; I can’t say but the
company of this bacon, cold as it is, is more to my taste, just now, than a hot
fire from the continentals.”</p>
<p>“The discharges are heavy for so small a force; but the fire seems
irregular.”</p>
<p>“The scattering guns are from the Connecticut militia,” said
Harvey, raising his head to listen; “they rattle it off finely, and are
no fools at a mark. The volleys are the rig’lars, who, you know, fire by
word—as long as they can.”</p>
<p>“I like not the warmth of what you call a scattering fire,”
exclaimed the captain, moving about with uneasiness; “it is more like the
roll of a drum than skirmishers’ shooting.”</p>
<p>“No, no; I said not skrimmagers,” returned the other, raising
himself upon a knee, and ceasing to eat; “so long as they stand, they are
too good for the best troops in the royal army. Each man does his work as if
fighting by the job; and then, they think while they fight, and don’t
send bullets to the clouds, that were meant to kill men on earth.”</p>
<p>“You talk and look, sir, as if you wished them success,” said
Henry, sternly.</p>
<p>“I wish success to the good cause only, Captain Wharton. I thought you
knew me too well, to be uncertain which party I favored.”</p>
<p>“Oh! you are reputed loyal, Mr. Birch. But the volleys have
ceased!”</p>
<p>Both now listened intently for a little while, during which the irregular
reports became less brisk, and suddenly heavy and repeated volleys followed.</p>
<p>“They’ve been at the bayonet,” said the peddler; “the
rig’lars have tried the bayonet, and the rebels are driven.”</p>
<p>“Aye, Mr. Birch, the bayonet is the thing for the British soldier, after
all. They delight in the bayonet!”</p>
<p>“Well, to my notion,” said the peddler, “there’s but
little delight to be taken in any such fearful weapon. I dare say the militia
are of my mind, for half of them don’t carry the ugly things. Lord! Lord!
captain, I wish you’d go with me once into the rebel camp, and hear what
lies the men will tell about Bunker Hill and Burg’yne; you’d think
they loved the bayonet as much as they do their dinners.”</p>
<p>There was a chuckle, and an air of affected innocency about his companion, that
rather annoyed Henry, and he did not deign to reply.</p>
<p>The firing now became desultory, occasionally intermingled with heavy volleys.
Both of the fugitives were standing, listening with much anxiety, when a man,
armed with a musket, was seen stealing towards them, under the shelter of the
cedar bushes, that partially covered the hill. Henry first observed this
suspicious-looking stranger, and instantly pointed him out to his companion.
Birch started, and certainly made an indication of sudden flight; but
recollecting himself, he stood, in sullen silence, until the stranger was
within a few yards of them.</p>
<p>“’Tis friends,” said the fellow, clubbing his gun, but
apparently afraid to venture nearer.</p>
<p>“You had better retire,” said Birch; “here are rig’lars
at hand. We are not near Dunwoodie’s horse now, and you will not find me
an easy prize to-day.”</p>
<p>“Damn Major Dunwoodie and his horse!” cried the leader of the
Skinners (for it was he); “God bless King George! and a speedy end to the
rebellion, say I. If you would show me the safe way in to the refugees, Mr.
Birch, I’ll pay you well, and ever after stand your friend, in the
bargain.”</p>
<p>“The road is as open to you as to me,” said Birch, turning from him
in ill-concealed disgust. “If you want to find the refugees, you know
well where they lay.”</p>
<p>“Aye, but I’m a little doubtful of going in upon them by myself;
now, you are well known to them all, and it will be no detriment to you just to
let me go in with you.”</p>
<p>Henry here interfered, and after holding a short dialogue with the fellow, he
entered into a compact with him, that, on condition of surrendering his arms,
he might join the party. The man complied instantly, and Birch received his gun
with eagerness; nor did he lay it upon his shoulder to renew their march,
before he had carefully examined the priming, and ascertained, to his
satisfaction, that it contained a good, dry, ball cartridge.</p>
<p>As soon as this engagement was completed, they commenced their journey anew. By
following the bank of the river, Birch led the way free from observation, until
they reached the point opposite to the frigate, when, by making a signal, a
boat was induced to approach. Some time was spent, and much precaution used,
before the seamen would trust themselves ashore; but Henry having finally
succeeded in making the officer who commanded the party credit his assertions,
he was able to rejoin his companions in arms in safety. Before taking leave of
Birch, the captain handed him his purse, which was tolerably well supplied for
the times; the peddler received it, and, watching an opportunity, he conveyed
it, unnoticed by the Skinner, to a part of his dress that was ingeniously
contrived to hold such treasures.</p>
<p>The boat pulled from the shore, and Birch turned on his heel, drawing his
breath, like one relieved, and shot up the hills with the strides for which he
was famous. The Skinner followed, and each party pursued the common course,
casting frequent and suspicious glances at the other, and both maintaining a
most impenetrable silence.</p>
<p>Wagons were moving along the river road, and occasional parties of horse were
seen escorting the fruits of the inroad towards the city. As the peddler had
views of his own, he rather avoided falling in with any of these patrols, than
sought their protection. But, after traveling a few miles on the immediate
banks of the river, during which, notwithstanding the repeated efforts of the
Skinner to establish something like sociability, he maintained a most
determined silence, keeping a firm hold of the gun, and always maintaining a
jealous watchfulness of his associate, the peddler suddenly struck into the
highway, with an intention of crossing the hills towards Harlem. At the moment
he gained the path, a body of horse came over a little eminence, and was upon
him before he perceived them. It was too late to retreat, and after taking a
view of the materials that composed this party, Birch rejoiced in the
rencounter, as a probable means of relieving him from his unwelcome companion.
There were some eighteen or twenty men, mounted and equipped as dragoons,
though neither their appearance nor manners denoted much discipline. At their
head rode a heavy, middle-aged man, whose features expressed as much of animal
courage, and as little of reason, as could be desired for such an occupation.
He wore the dress of an officer, but there was none of that neatness in his
attire, nor grace in his movements, that was usually found about the gentlemen
who bore the royal commission. His limbs were firm, and not pliable, and he sat
his horse with strength and confidence, but his bridle hand would have been
ridiculed by the meanest rider amongst the Virginians. As he expected, this
leader instantly hailed the peddler, in a voice by no means more conciliating
than his appearance.</p>
<p>“Hey! my gentlemen, which way so fast?” he cried, “Has
Washington sent you down as spies?”</p>
<p>“I am an innocent peddler,” returned Harvey meekly, “and am
going below, to lay in a fresh stock of goods.”</p>
<p>“And how do you expect to get below, my innocent peddler? Do you think we
hold the forts at King’s Bridge to cover such peddling rascals as you, in
your goings in and comings out?”</p>
<p>“I believe I hold a pass that will carry me through,” said the
peddler, handing him a paper, with an air of indifference.</p>
<p>The officer, for such he was, read it, and cast a look of surprise and
curiosity at Harvey, when he had done.</p>
<p>Then turning to one or two of his men, who had officiously stopped the way, he
cried,—</p>
<p>“Why do you detain the man? Give way, and let him pass in peace. But whom
have we here? Your name is not mentioned in the pass!”</p>
<p>“No, sir,” said the Skinner, lifting his hat with humility.
“I have been a poor, deluded man, who has been serving in the rebel army;
but, thank God, I’ve lived to see the error of my ways, and am now come
to make reparation, by enlisting under the Lord’s anointed.”</p>
<p>“Umph! a deserter—a Skinner, I’ll swear, wanting to turn
Cowboy! In the last brush I had with the scoundrels, I could hardly tell my own
men from the enemy. We are not over well supplied with coats, and as for
countenances, the rascals change sides so often, that you may as well count
their faces for nothing; but trudge on, we will contrive to make use of you,
sooner or later.”</p>
<p>Ungracious as was this reception, if you could judge of the Skinner’s
feelings from his manner, it nevertheless delighted him. He moved with alacrity
towards the city, and really was so happy to escape the brutal looks and
frightful manner of his interrogator, as to lose sight of all other
considerations. But the man who performed the functions of orderly in the
irregular troop, rode up to the side of his commander, and commenced a close
and apparently a confidential discourse with his principal. They spoke in
whispers, and cast frequent and searching glances at the Skinner, until the
fellow began to think himself an object of more than common attention. His
satisfaction at this distinction was somewhat heightened, at observing a smile
on the face of the captain, which, although it might be thought grim, certainly
denoted satisfaction. This pantomime occupied the time they were passing a
hollow, and concluded as they rose another hill. Here the captain and his
sergeant both dismounted, and ordered the party to halt. The two partisans each
took a pistol from his holster, a movement that excited no suspicion or alarm,
as it was a precaution always observed, and beckoned to the peddler and the
Skinner to follow. A short walk brought them to a spot where the hill overhung
the river, the ground falling nearly perpendicularly to the shore. On the brow
of the eminence stood a deserted and dilapidated barn. Many boards of its
covering were torn from their places, and its wide doors were lying, the one in
front of the building, and the other halfway down the precipice, whither the
wind had cast it. Entering this desolate spot, the refugee officer very coolly
took from his pocket a short pipe, which, from long use, had acquired not only
the hue but the gloss of ebony, a tobacco box, and a small roll of leather,
that contained steel, flint, and tinder. With this apparatus, he soon furnished
his mouth with a companion that habit had long rendered necessary to
reflection. So soon as a large column of smoke arose from this arrangement, the
captain significantly held forth a hand towards his assistant. A small cord was
produced from the pocket of the sergeant, and handed to the other. The refugee
threw out vast puffs of smoke, until nearly all of his head was obscured, and
looked around the building with an inquisitive eye. At length he removed the
pipe, and inhaling a draft of pure air, returned it to its domicile, and
proceeded at once to business. A heavy piece of timber lay across the girths of
the barn, but a little way from the southern door, which opened directly upon a
full view of the river, as it stretched far away towards the bay of New York.
Over this beam the refugee threw one end of the rope, and, regaining it, joined
the two parts in his hand. A small and weak barrel, that wanted a head, the
staves of which were loose, and at one end standing apart, was left on the
floor, probably as useless. The sergeant, in obedience to a look from his
officer, placed it beneath the beam. All of these arrangements were made with
composure, and they now seemed completed to the officer’s perfect
satisfaction.</p>
<p>“Come,” he said coolly to the Skinner, who, admiring the
preparations, had stood a silent spectator of their progress. He obeyed; and it
was not until he found his neckcloth removed, and hat thrown aside, that he
took the alarm. But he had so often resorted to a similar expedient to extort
information, or plunder, that he by no means felt the terror an unpracticed man
would have suffered, at these ominous movements. The rope was adjusted to his
neck with the same coolness that formed the characteristic of the whole
movement, and a fragment of board being laid upon the barrel, he was ordered to
mount.</p>
<p>“But it may fall,” said the Skinner, for the first time beginning
to tremble. “I will tell you anything—even how to surprise our
party at the Pond, without all this trouble, and it is commanded by my own
brother.”</p>
<p>“I want no information,” returned his executioner (for such he now
seemed really to be), throwing the rope repeatedly over the beam, first drawing
it tight so as to annoy the Skinner a little, and then casting the end from
him, beyond the reach of anyone.</p>
<p>“This is joking too far,” cried the Skinner, in a tone of
remonstrance, and raising himself on his toes, with the vain hope of releasing
himself from the cord, by slipping his head through the noose. But the caution
and experience of the refugee officer had guarded against this escape.</p>
<p>“What have you done with the horse you stole from me, rascal?”
muttered the officer of the Cowboys, throwing out columns of smoke while he
waited for a reply.</p>
<p>“He broke down in the chase,” replied the Skinner quickly;
“but I can tell you where one is to be found that is worth him and his
sire.”</p>
<p>“Liar! I will help myself when I am in need; you had better call upon God
for aid, as your hour is short.” On concluding this consoling advice, he
struck the barrel a violent blow with his heavy foot, and the slender staves
flew in every direction, leaving the Skinner whirling in the air. As his hands
were unconfined, he threw them upwards, and held himself suspended by main
strength.</p>
<p>“Come, captain,” he said, coaxingly, a little huskiness creeping
into his voice, and his knees beginning to shake with tremor, “end the
joke; ’tis enough to make a laugh, and my arms begin to tire—I
can’t hold on much longer.”</p>
<p>“Harkee, Mr. Peddler,” said the refugee, in a voice that would not
be denied, “I want not your company. Through that door lies your
road—march! offer to touch that dog, and you’ll swing in his place,
though twenty Sir Henrys wanted your services.” So saying, he retired to
the road with the sergeant, as the peddler precipitately retreated down the
bank.</p>
<p>Birch went no farther than a bush that opportunely offered itself as a screen
to his person, while he yielded to an unconquerable desire to witness the
termination of this extraordinary scene.</p>
<p>Left alone, the Skinner began to throw fearful glances around, to espy the
hiding places of his tormentors. For the first time the horrid idea seemed to
shoot through his brain that something serious was intended by the Cowboy. He
called entreatingly to be released, and made rapid and incoherent promises of
important information, mingled with affected pleasantry at their conceit, which
he would hardly admit to himself could mean anything so dreadful as it seemed.
But as he heard the tread of the horses moving on their course, and in vain
looked around for human aid, violent trembling seized his limbs, and his eyes
began to start from his head with terror. He made a desperate effort to reach
the beam; but, too much exhausted with his previous exertions, he caught the
rope in his teeth, in a vain effort to sever the cord, and fell to the whole
length of his arms. Here his cries were turned into shrieks.</p>
<p>“Help! cut the rope! captain!—Birch! good peddler! Down with
the<br/>
Congress!—sergeant! for God’s sake, help! Hurrah for the
king!—O God!<br/>
O God!—mercy, mercy—mercy!”</p>
<p>As his voice became suppressed, one of his hands endeavored to make its way
between the rope and his neck, and partially succeeded; but the other fell
quivering by his side. A convulsive shuddering passed over his whole frame, and
he hung a hideous corpse.</p>
<p>Birch continued gazing on this scene with a kind of infatuation. At its close
he placed his hands to his ears, and rushed towards the highway. Still the
cries for mercy rang through his brain, and it was many weeks before his memory
ceased to dwell on the horrid event. The Cowboys rode steadily on their route,
as if nothing had occurred; and the body was left swinging in the wind, until
chance directed the wandering footsteps of some lonely straggler to the place.</p>
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