<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter VI. </h2>
<p>"So spake the apostate Angel, though in pain,<br/>
Vaunting aloud, but racked with deep despair."<br/>
<br/>
Paradise lost, I. 125-26.<br/></p>
<p>Shortly after the disappearance of Judith, a light southerly air arose,
and Hutter set a large square sail, that had once been the flying top-sail
of an Albany sloop, but which having become threadbare in catching the
breezes of Tappan, had been condemned and sold. He had a light, tough spar
of tamarack that he could raise on occasion, and with a little
contrivance, his duck was spread to the wind in a sufficiently
professional manner. The effect on the ark was such as to supersede the
necessity of rowing; and in about two hours the castle was seen, in the
darkness, rising out of the water, at the distance of a hundred yards. The
sail was then lowered, and by slow degrees the scow drifted up to the
building, and was secured.</p>
<p>No one had visited the house since Hurry and his companion left it. The
place was found in the quiet of midnight, a sort of type of the solitude
of a wilderness. As an enemy was known to be near, Hutter directed his
daughters to abstain from the use of lights, luxuries in which they seldom
indulged during the warm months, lest they might prove beacons to direct
their foes where they might be found.</p>
<p>"In open daylight I shouldn't fear a host of savages behind these stout
logs, and they without any cover to skulk into," added Hutter, when he had
explained to his guests the reasons why he forbade the use of light; "for
I've three or four trusty weapons always loaded, and Killdeer, in
particular, is a piece that never misses. But it's a different thing at
night. A canoe might get upon us unseen, in the dark; and the savages have
so many cunning ways of attacking, that I look upon it as bad enough to
deal with 'em under a bright sun. I built this dwelling in order to have
'em at arm's length, in case we should ever get to blows again. Some
people think it's too open and exposed, but I'm for anchoring out here,
clear of underbrush and thickets, as the surest means of making a safe
berth."</p>
<p>"You was once a sailor, they tell me, old Tom?" said Hurry, in his abrupt
manner, struck by one or two expressions that the other had just used,
"and some people believe you could give us strange accounts of inimies and
shipwrecks, if you'd a mind to come out with all you know?"</p>
<p>"There are people in this world, Hurry," returned the other, evasively,
"who live on other men's thoughts; and some such often find their way into
the woods. What I've been, or what I've seen in youth, is of less matter
now than what the savages are. It's of more account to find out what will
happen in the next twenty-four hours than to talk over what happened
twenty-four years since."</p>
<p>"That's judgment, Deerslayer; yes, that's sound judgment. Here's Judith
and Hetty to take care of, to say nothing of our own top-knots; and, for
my part, I can sleep as well in the dark as I could under a noonday sun.
To me it's no great matter whether there is light or not, to see to shut
my eyes by."</p>
<p>As Deerslayer seldom thought it necessary to answer his companion's
peculiar vein of humor, and Hutter was evidently indisposed to dwell
longer on the subject, it's discussion ceased with this remark. The latter
had something more on his mind, however, than recollections. His daughters
had no sooner left them, with an expressed intention of going to bed, than
he invited his two companions to follow him again into the scow. Here the
old man opened his project, keeping back the portion that he had reserved
for execution by Hurry and himself.</p>
<p>"The great object for people posted like ourselves is to command the
water," he commenced. "So long as there is no other craft on the lake, a
bark canoe is as good as a man-of-war, since the castle will not be easily
taken by swimming. Now, there are but five canoes remaining in these
parts, two of which are mine, and one is Hurry's. These three we have with
us here; one being fastened in the canoe-dock beneath the house, and the
other two being alongside the scow. The other canoes are housed on the
shore, in hollow logs, and the savages, who are such venomous enemies,
will leave no likely place unexamined in the morning, if they 're serious
in s'arch of bounties—"</p>
<p>"Now, friend Hutter," interrupted Hurry, "the Indian don't live that can
find a canoe that is suitably wintered. I've done something at this
business before now, and Deerslayer here knows that I am one that can hide
a craft in such a way that I can't find it myself."</p>
<p>"Very true, Hurry," put in the person to whom the appeal had been made,
"but you overlook the sarcumstance that if you couldn't see the trail of
the man who did the job, I could. I'm of Master Hutter's mind, that it's
far wiser to mistrust a savage's ingenuity, than to build any great
expectations on his want of eye-sight. If these two canoes can be got off
to the castle, therefore, the sooner it's done the better."</p>
<p>"Will you be of the party that's to do it?" demanded Hutter, in a way to
show that the proposal both surprised and pleased him.</p>
<p>"Sartain. I'm ready to enlist in any enterprise that's not ag'in a white
man's lawful gifts. Natur' orders us to defend our lives, and the lives of
others, too, when there's occasion and opportunity. I'll follow you,
Floating Tom, into the Mingo camp, on such an arr'nd, and will strive to
do my duty, should we come to blows; though, never having been tried in
battle, I don't like to promise more than I may be able to perform. We all
know our wishes, but none know their might till put to the proof."</p>
<p>"That's modest and suitable, lad," exclaimed Hurry. "You've never yet
heard the crack of an angry rifle; and, let me tell you, 'tis as different
from the persuasion of one of your venison speeches, as the laugh of
Judith Hutter, in her best humor, is from the scolding of a Dutch house
keeper on the Mohawk. I don't expect you'll prove much of a warrior,
Deerslayer, though your equal with the bucks and the does don't exist in
all these parts. As for the ra'al sarvice, however, you'll turn out rather
rearward, according to my consait."</p>
<p>"We'll see, Hurry, we'll see," returned the other, meekly; so far as human
eye could discover, not at all disturbed by these expressed doubts
concerning his conduct on a point on which men are sensitive, precisely in
the degree that they feel the consciousness of demerit; "having never been
tried, I'll wait to know, before I form any opinion of myself; and then
there'll be sartainty, instead of bragging. I've heard of them that was
valiant afore the fight, who did little in it; and of them that waited to
know their own tempers, and found that they weren't as bad as some
expected, when put to the proof."</p>
<p>"At any rate, we know you can use a paddle, young man," said Hutter, "and
that's all we shall ask of you to-night. Let us waste no more time, but
get into the canoe, and do, in place of talking."</p>
<p>As Hutter led the way, in the execution of his project, the boat was soon
ready, with Hurry and Deerslayer at the paddles. Before the old man
embarked himself, however, he held a conference of several minutes with
Judith, entering the house for that purpose; then, returning, he took his
place in the canoe, which left the side of the ark at the next instant.</p>
<p>Had there been a temple reared to God, in that solitary wilderness, its
clock would have told the hour of midnight as the party set forth on their
expedition. The darkness had increased, though the night was still clear,
and the light of the stars sufficed for all the purposes of the
adventurers. Hutter alone knew the places where the canoes were hid, and
he directed the course, while his two athletic companions raised and
dipped their paddles with proper caution, lest the sound should be carried
to the ears of their enemies, across that sheet of placid water, in the
stillness of deep night. But the bark was too light to require any
extraordinary efforts, and skill supplying the place of strength, in about
half an hour they were approaching the shore, at a point near a league
from the castle.</p>
<p>"Lay on your paddles, men," said Hutter, in a low voice, "and let us look
about us for a moment. We must now be all eyes and ears, for these vermin
have noses like bloodhounds."</p>
<p>The shores of the lake were examined closely, in order to discover any
glimmering of light that might have been left in a camp; and the men
strained their eyes, in the obscurity, to see if some thread of smoke was
not still stealing along the mountainside, as it arose from the dying
embers of a fire. Nothing unusual could be traced; and as the position was
at some distance from the outlet, or the spot where the savages had been
met, it was thought safe to land. The paddles were plied again, and the
bows of the canoe ground upon the gravelly beach with a gentle motion, and
a sound barely audible. Hutter and Hurry immediately landed, the former
carrying his own and his friend's rifle, leaving Deerslayer in charge of
the canoe. The hollow log lay a little distance up the side of the
mountain, and the old man led the way towards it, using so much caution as
to stop at every third or fourth step, to listen if any tread betrayed the
presence of a foe. The same death-like stillness, however, reigned on the
midnight scene, and the desired place was reached without an occurrence to
induce alarm.</p>
<p>"This is it," whispered Hutter, laying a foot on the trunk of a fallen
linden; "hand me the paddles first, and draw the boat out with care, for
the wretches may have left it for a bait, after all."</p>
<p>"Keep my rifle handy, butt towards me, old fellow," answered March. "If
they attack me loaded, I shall want to unload the piece at 'em, at least.
And feel if the pan is full."</p>
<p>"All's right," muttered the other; "move slow, when you get your load, and
let me lead the way."</p>
<p>The canoe was drawn out of the log with the utmost care, raised by Hurry
to his shoulder, and the two began to return to the shore, moving but a
step at a time, lest they should tumble down the steep declivity. The
distance was not great, but the descent was extremely difficult; and,
towards the end of their little journey, Deerslayer was obliged to land
and meet them, in order to aid in lifting the canoe through the bushes.
With his assistance the task was successfully accomplished, and the light
craft soon floated by the side of the other canoe. This was no sooner
done, than all three turned anxiously towards the forest and the mountain,
expecting an enemy to break out of the one, or to come rushing down the
other. Still the silence was unbroken, and they all embarked with the
caution that had been used in coming ashore.</p>
<p>Hutter now steered broad off towards the centre of the lake. Having got a
sufficient distance from the shore, he cast his prize loose, knowing that
it would drift slowly up the lake before the light southerly air, and
intending to find it on his return. Thus relieved of his tow, the old man
held his way down the lake, steering towards the very point where Hurry
had made his fruitless attempt on the life of the deer. As the distance
from this point to the outlet was less than a mile, it was like entering
an enemy's country; and redoubled caution became necessary. They reached
the extremity of the point, however, and landed in safety on the little
gravelly beach already mentioned. Unlike the last place at which they had
gone ashore, here was no acclivity to ascend, the mountains looming up in
the darkness quite a quarter of a mile farther west, leaving a margin of
level ground between them and the strand. The point itself, though long,
and covered with tall trees, was nearly flat, and for some distance only a
few yards in width. Hutter and Hurry landed as before, leaving their
companion in charge of the boat.</p>
<p>In this instance, the dead tree that contained the canoe of which they had
come in quest lay about half-way between the extremity of the narrow slip
of land and the place where it joined the main shore; and knowing that
there was water so near him on his left, the old man led the way along the
eastern side of the belt with some confidence walking boldly, though still
with caution. He had landed at the point expressly to get a glimpse into
the bay and to make certain that the coast was clear; otherwise he would
have come ashore directly abreast of the hollow tree. There was no
difficulty in finding the latter, from which the canoe was drawn as
before, and instead of carrying it down to the place where Deerslayer lay,
it was launched at the nearest favorable spot. As soon as it was in the
water, Hurry entered it, and paddled round to the point, whither Hutter
also proceeded, following the beach. As the three men had now in their
possession all the boats on the lake, their confidence was greatly
increased, and there was no longer the same feverish desire to quit the
shore, or the same necessity for extreme caution. Their position on the
extremity of the long, narrow bit of land added to the feeling of
security, as it permitted an enemy to approach in only one direction, that
in their front, and under circumstances that would render discovery, with
their habitual vigilance, almost certain. The three now landed together,
and stood grouped in consultation on the gravelly point.</p>
<p>"We've fairly tree'd the scamps," said Hurry, chuckling at their success;
"if they wish to visit the castle, let 'em wade or swim! Old Tom, that
idee of your'n, in burrowing out in the lake, was high proof, and carries
a fine bead. There be men who would think the land safer than the water;
but, after all, reason shows it isn't; the beaver, and rats, and other
l'arned creatur's taking to the last when hard pressed. I call our
position now, entrenched, and set the Canadas at defiance."</p>
<p>"Let us paddle along this south shore," said Hutter, "and see if there's
no sign of an encampment; but, first, let me have a better look into the
bay, for no one has been far enough round the inner shore of the point to
make suit of that quarter yet."</p>
<p>As Hutter ceased speaking, all three moved in the direction he had named.
Scarce had they fairly opened the bottom of the bay, when a general start
proved that their eyes had lighted on a common object at the same instant.
It was no more than a dying brand, giving out its flickering and failing
light; but at that hour, and in that place, it was at once as conspicuous
as "a good deed in a naughty world." There was not a shadow of doubt that
this fire had been kindled at an encampment of the Indians. The situation,
sheltered from observation on all sides but one, and even on that except
for a very short distance, proved that more care had been taken to conceal
the spot than would be used for ordinary purposes, and Hutter, who knew
that a spring was near at hand, as well as one of the best
fishing-stations on the lake, immediately inferred that this encampment
contained the women and children of the party.</p>
<p>"That's not a warrior's encampment," he growled to Hurry; "and there's
bounty enough sleeping round that fire to make a heavy division of
head-money. Send the lad to the canoes, for there'll come no good of him
in such an onset, and let us take the matter in hand at once, like men."</p>
<p>"There's judgment in your notion, old Tom, and I like it to the backbone.
Deerslayer, do you get into the canoe, lad, and paddle off into the lake
with the spare one, and set it adrift, as we did with the other; after
which you can float along shore, as near as you can get to the head of the
bay, keeping outside the point, howsever, and outside the rushes, too. You
can hear us when we want you; and if there's any delay, I'll call like a
loon—yes, that'll do it—the call of a loon shall be the
signal. If you hear rifles, and feel like sogering, why, you may close in,
and see if you can make the same hand with the savages that you do with
the deer."</p>
<p>"If my wishes could be followed, this matter would not be undertaken,
Hurry——"</p>
<p>"Quite true—nobody denies it, boy; but your wishes can't be
followed; and that inds the matter. So just canoe yourself off into the
middle of the lake, and by the time you get back there'll be movements in
that camp!"</p>
<p>The young man set about complying with great reluctance and a heavy heart.
He knew the prejudices of the frontiermen too well, however, to attempt a
remonstrance. The latter, indeed, under the circumstances, might prove
dangerous, as it would certainly prove useless. He paddled the canoe,
therefore, silently and with the former caution, to a spot near the centre
of the placid sheet of water, and set the boat just recovered adrift, to
float towards the castle, before the light southerly air. This expedient
had been adopted, in both cases, under the certainty that the drift could
not carry the light barks more than a league or two, before the return of
light, when they might easily be overtaken in order to prevent any
wandering savage from using them, by swimming off and getting possession,
a possible but scarcely a probable event, all the paddles were retained.</p>
<p>No sooner had he set the recovered canoe adrift, than Deerslayer turned
the bows of his own towards the point on the shore that had been indicated
by Hurry. So light was the movement of the little craft, and so steady the
sweep of its master's arm, that ten minutes had not elapsed ere it was
again approaching the land, having, in that brief time, passed over fully
half a mile of distance. As soon as Deerslayer's eye caught a glimpse of
the rushes, of which there were many growing in the water a hundred feet
from the shore, he arrested the motion of the canoe, and anchored his boat
by holding fast to the delicate but tenacious stem of one of the drooping
plants. Here he remained, awaiting, with an intensity of suspense that can
be easily imagined, the result of the hazardous enterprise.</p>
<p>It would be difficult to convey to the minds of those who have never
witnessed it, the sublimity that characterizes the silence of a solitude
as deep as that which now reigned over the Glimmerglass. In the present
instance, this sublimity was increased by the gloom of night, which threw
its shadowy and fantastic forms around the lake, the forest, and the
hills. It is not easy, indeed, to conceive of any place more favorable to
heighten these natural impressions, than that Deerslayer now occupied. The
size of the lake brought all within the reach of human senses, while it
displayed so much of the imposing scene at a single view, giving up, as it
might be, at a glance, a sufficiency to produce the deepest impressions.
As has been said, this was the first lake Deerslayer had ever seen.
Hitherto, his experience had been limited to the courses of rivers and
smaller streams, and never before had he seen so much of that wilderness,
which he so well loved, spread before his gaze. Accustomed to the forest,
however, his mind was capable of portraying all its hidden mysteries, as
he looked upon its leafy surface. This was also the first time he had been
on a trail where human lives depended on the issue. His ears had often
drunk in the traditions of frontier warfare, but he had never yet been
confronted with an enemy.</p>
<p>The reader will readily understand, therefore, how intense must have been
the expectation of the young man, as he sat in his solitary canoe,
endeavoring to catch the smallest sound that might denote the course of
things on shore. His training had been perfect, so far as theory could go,
and his self-possession, notwithstanding the high excitement, that was the
fruit of novelty, would have done credit to a veteran. The visible
evidences of the existence of the camp, or of the fire could not be
detected from the spot where the canoe lay, and he was compelled to depend
on the sense of hearing alone. He did not feel impatient, for the lessons
he had heard taught him the virtue of patience, and, most of all,
inculcated the necessity of wariness in conducting any covert assault on
the Indians. Once he thought he heard the cracking of a dried twig, but
expectation was so intense it might mislead him. In this manner minute
after minute passed, until the whole time since he left his companions was
extended to quite an hour. Deerslayer knew not whether to rejoice in or to
mourn over this cautious delay, for, if it augured security to his
associates, it foretold destruction to the feeble and innocent.</p>
<p>It might have been an hour and a half after his companions and he had
parted, when Deerslayer was aroused by a sound that filled him equally
with concern and surprise. The quavering call of a loon arose from the
opposite side of the lake, evidently at no great distance from its outlet.
There was no mistaking the note of this bird, which is so familiar to all
who know the sounds of the American lakes. Shrill, tremulous, loud, and
sufficiently prolonged, it seems the very cry of warning. It is often
raised, also, at night, an exception to the habits of most of the other
feathered inmates of the wilderness; a circumstance which had induced
Hurry to select it as his own signal. There had been sufficient time,
certainly, for the two adventurers to make their way by land from the
point where they had been left to that whence the call had come, but it
was not probable that they would adopt such a course. Had the camp been
deserted they would have summoned Deerslayer to the shore, and, did it
prove to be peopled, there could be no sufficient motive for circling it,
in order to re-embark at so great a distance. Should he obey the signal,
and be drawn away from the landing, the lives of those who depended on him
might be the forfeit—and, should he neglect the call, on the
supposition that it had been really made, the consequences might be
equally disastrous, though from a different cause. In this indecision he
waited, trusting that the call, whether feigned or natural, would be
speedily renewed. Nor was he mistaken. A very few minutes elapsed before
the same shrill warning cry was repeated, and from the same part of the
lake. This time, being on the alert, his senses were not deceived.
Although he had often heard admirable imitations of this bird, and was no
mean adept himself in raising its notes, he felt satisfied that Hurry, to
whose efforts in that way he had attended, could never so completely and
closely follow nature. He determined, therefore, to disregard that cry,
and to wait for one less perfect and nearer at hand.</p>
<p>Deerslayer had hardly come to this determination, when the profound
stillness of night and solitude was broken by a cry so startling, as to
drive all recollection of the more melancholy call of the loon from the
listener's mind. It was a shriek of agony, that came either from one of
the female sex, or from a boy so young as not yet to have attained a manly
voice. This appeal could not be mistaken. Heart rending terror—if
not writhing agony—was in the sounds, and the anguish that had
awakened them was as sudden as it was fearful. The young man released his
hold of the rush, and dashed his paddle into the water; to do, he knew not
what—to steer, he knew not whither. A very few moments, however,
removed his indecision. The breaking of branches, the cracking of dried
sticks, and the fall of feet were distinctly audible; the sounds appearing
to approach the water though in a direction that led diagonally towards
the shore, and a little farther north than the spot that Deerslayer had
been ordered to keep near. Following this clue, the young man urged the
canoe ahead, paying but little attention to the manner in which he might
betray its presence. He had reached a part of the shore, where its
immediate bank was tolerably high and quite steep. Men were evidently
threshing through the bushes and trees on the summit of this bank,
following the line of the shore, as if those who fled sought a favorable
place for descending. Just at this instant five or six rifles flashed, and
the opposite hills gave back, as usual, the sharp reports in prolonged
rolling echoes. One or two shrieks, like those which escape the bravest
when suddenly overcome by unexpected anguish and alarm, followed; and then
the threshing among the bushes was renewed, in a way to show that man was
grappling with man.</p>
<p>"Slippery devil!" shouted Hurry with the fury of disappointment—"his
skin's greased! I sha'n't grapple! Take that for your cunning!"</p>
<p>The words were followed by the fall of some heavy object among the smaller
trees that fringed the bank, appearing to Deerslayer as if his gigantic
associate had hurled an enemy from him in this unceremonious manner. Again
the flight and pursuit were renewed, and then the young man saw a human
form break down the hill, and rush several yards into the water. At this
critical moment the canoe was just near enough to the spot to allow this
movement, which was accompanied by no little noise, to be seen, and
feeling that there he must take in his companion, if anywhere, Deerslayer
urged the canoe forward to the rescue. His paddle had not been raised
twice, when the voice of Hurry was heard filling the air with
imprecations, and he rolled on the narrow beach, literally loaded down
with enemies. While prostrate, and almost smothered with his foes, the
athletic frontierman gave his loon-call, in a manner that would have
excited laughter under circumstances less terrific. The figure in the
water seemed suddenly to repent his own flight, and rushed to the shore to
aid his companion, but was met and immediately overpowered by half a dozen
fresh pursuers, who, just then, came leaping down the bank.</p>
<p>"Let up, you painted riptyles—let up!" cried Hurry, too hard pressed
to be particular about the terms he used; "isn't it enough that I am
withed like a saw-log that ye must choke too!"</p>
<p>This speech satisfied Deerslayer that his friends were prisoners, and that
to land would be to share their fate. He was already within a hundred feet
of the shore, when a few timely strokes of the paddle not only arrested
his advance, but forced him off to six or eight times that distance from
his enemies. Luckily for him, all of the Indians had dropped their rifles
in the pursuit, or this retreat might not have been effected with
impunity; though no one had noted the canoe in the first confusion of the
melee.</p>
<p>"Keep off the land, lad," called out Hutter; "the girls depend only on
you, now; you will want all your caution to escape these savages. Keep
off, and God prosper you, as you aid my children!"</p>
<p>There was little sympathy in general between Hutter and the young man, but
the bodily and mental anguish with which this appeal was made served at
the moment to conceal from the latter the former's faults. He saw only the
father in his sufferings, and resolved at once to give a pledge of
fidelity to its interests, and to be faithful to his word.</p>
<p>"Put your heart at ease, Master Hutter," he called out; "the gals shall be
looked to, as well as the castle. The inimy has got the shore, 'tis no use
to deny, but he hasn't got the water. Providence has the charge of all,
and no one can say what will come of it; but, if good-will can sarve you
and your'n, depend on that much. My exper'ence is small, but my will is
good."</p>
<p>"Ay, ay, Deerslayer," returned Hurry, in this stentorian voice, which was
losing some of its heartiness, notwithstanding,—"Ay, ay, Deerslayer.
You mean well enough, but what can you do? You're no great matter in the
best of times, and such a person is not likely to turn out a miracle in
the worst. If there's one savage on this lake shore, there's forty, and
that's an army you ar'n't the man to overcome. The best way, in my
judgment, will be to make a straight course to the castle; get the gals
into the canoe, with a few eatables; then strike off for the corner of the
lake where we came in, and take the best trail for the Mohawk. These
devils won't know where to look for you for some hours, and if they did,
and went off hot in the pursuit, they must turn either the foot or the
head of the lake to get at you. That's my judgment in the matter; and if
old Tom here wishes to make his last will and testament in a manner
favorable to his darters, he'll say the same."</p>
<p>"'Twill never do, young man," rejoined Hutter. "The enemy has scouts out
at this moment, looking for canoes, and you'll be seen and taken. Trust to
the castle; and above all things, keep clear of the land. Hold out a week,
and parties from the garrisons will drive the savages off."</p>
<p>"'Twon't be four-and-twenty hours, old fellow, afore these foxes will be
rafting off to storm your castle," interrupted Hurry, with more of the
heat of argument than might be expected from a man who was bound and a
captive, and about whom nothing could be called free but his opinions and
his tongue. "Your advice has a stout sound, but it will have a fatal
tarmination. If you or I was in the house, we might hold out a few days,
but remember that this lad has never seen an inimy afore to-night, and is
what you yourself called settlement-conscienced; though for my part, I
think the consciences in the settlements pretty much the same as they are
out here in the woods. These savages are making signs, Deerslayer, for me
to encourage you to come ashore with the canoe; but that I'll never do, as
it's ag'in reason and natur'. As for old Tom and myself, whether they'll
scalp us to-night, keep us for the torture by fire, or carry us to Canada,
is more than any one knows but the devil that advises them how to act.
I've such a big and bushy head that it's quite likely they'll indivor to
get two scalps off it, for the bounty is a tempting thing, or old Tom and
I wouldn't be in this scrape. Ay—there they go with their signs
ag'in, but if I advise you to land may they eat me as well as roast me.
No, no, Deerslayer—do you keep off where you are, and after
daylight, on no account come within two hundred yards—"</p>
<p>This injunction of Hurry's was stopped by a hand being rudely slapped
against his mouth, the certain sign that some one in the party
sufficiently understood English to have at length detected the drift of
his discourse. Immediately after, the whole group entered the forest,
Hutter and Hurry apparently making no resistance to the movement. Just as
the sounds of the cracking bushes were ceasing, however, the voice of the
father was again heard.</p>
<p>"As you're true to my children, God prosper you, young man!" were the
words that reached Deerslayer's ears; after which he found himself left to
follow the dictates of his own discretion.</p>
<p>Several minutes elapsed, in death-like stillness, when the party on the
shore had disappeared in the woods. Owing to the distance—rather
more than two hundred yards—and the obscurity, Deerslayer had been
able barely to distinguish the group, and to see it retiring; but even
this dim connection with human forms gave an animation to the scene that
was strongly in contrast to the absolute solitude that remained. Although
the young man leaned forward to listen, holding his breath and condensing
every faculty in the single sense of hearing, not another sound reached
his ears to denote the vicinity of human beings. It seemed as if a silence
that had never been broken reigned on the spot again; and, for an instant,
even that piercing shriek, which had so lately broken the stillness of the
forest, or the execrations of March, would have been a relief to the
feeling of desertion to which it gave rise.</p>
<p>This paralysis of mind and body, however, could not last long in one
constituted mentally and physically like Deerslayer. Dropping his paddle
into the water, he turned the head of the canoe, and proceeded slowly, as
one walks who thinks intently, towards the centre of the lake. When he
believed himself to have reached a point in a line with that where he had
set the last canoe adrift, he changed his direction northward, keeping the
light air as nearly on his back as possible. After paddling a quarter of a
mile in this direction, a dark object became visible on the lake, a little
to the right; and turning on one side for the purpose, he had soon secured
his lost prize to his own boat. Deerslayer now examined the heavens, the
course of the air, and the position of the two canoes. Finding nothing in
either to induce a change of plan, he lay down, and prepared to catch a
few hours' sleep, that the morrow might find him equal to its exigencies.</p>
<p>Although the hardy and the tired sleep profoundly, even in scenes of
danger, it was some time before Deerslayer lost his recollection. His mind
dwelt on what had passed, and his half-conscious faculties kept figuring
the events of the night, in a sort of waking dream. Suddenly he was up and
alert, for he fancied he heard the preconcerted signal of Hurry summoning
him to the shore. But all was still as the grave again. The canoes were
slowly drifting northward, the thoughtful stars were glimmering in their
mild glory over his head, and the forest-bound sheet of water lay embedded
between its mountains, as calm and melancholy as if never troubled by the
winds, or brightened by a noonday sun. Once more the loon raised his
tremulous cry, near the foot of the lake, and the mystery of the alarm was
explained. Deerslayer adjusted his hard pillow, stretched his form in the
bottom of the canoe, and slept.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />