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<h2> CHAPTER 32 </h2>
<p>"But plagues shall spread, and funeral fires increase,<br/>
Till the great king, without a ransom paid,<br/>
To her own Chrysa send the black-eyed maid."<br/>
—Pope.<br/></p>
<p>During the time Uncas was making this disposition of his forces, the woods
were as still, and, with the exception of those who had met in council,
apparently as much untenanted as when they came fresh from the hands of
their Almighty Creator. The eye could range, in every direction, through
the long and shadowed vistas of the trees; but nowhere was any object to
be seen that did not properly belong to the peaceful and slumbering
scenery.</p>
<p>Here and there a bird was heard fluttering among the branches of the
beeches, and occasionally a squirrel dropped a nut, drawing the startled
looks of the party for a moment to the place; but the instant the casual
interruption ceased, the passing air was heard murmuring above their
heads, along that verdant and undulating surface of forest, which spread
itself unbroken, unless by stream or lake, over such a vast region of
country. Across the tract of wilderness which lay between the Delawares
and the village of their enemies, it seemed as if the foot of man had
never trodden, so breathing and deep was the silence in which it lay. But
Hawkeye, whose duty led him foremost in the adventure, knew the character
of those with whom he was about to contend too well to trust the
treacherous quiet.</p>
<p>When he saw his little band collected, the scout threw "killdeer" into the
hollow of his arm, and making a silent signal that he would be followed,
he led them many rods toward the rear, into the bed of a little brook
which they had crossed in advancing. Here he halted, and after waiting for
the whole of his grave and attentive warriors to close about him, he spoke
in Delaware, demanding:</p>
<p>"Do any of my young men know whither this run will lead us?"</p>
<p>A Delaware stretched forth a hand, with the two fingers separated, and
indicating the manner in which they were joined at the root, he answered:</p>
<p>"Before the sun could go his own length, the little water will be in the
big." Then he added, pointing in the direction of the place he mentioned,
"the two make enough for the beavers."</p>
<p>"I thought as much," returned the scout, glancing his eye upward at the
opening in the tree-tops, "from the course it takes, and the bearings of
the mountains. Men, we will keep within the cover of its banks till we
scent the Hurons."</p>
<p>His companions gave the usual brief exclamation of assent, but, perceiving
that their leader was about to lead the way in person, one or two made
signs that all was not as it should be. Hawkeye, who comprehended their
meaning glances, turned and perceived that his party had been followed
thus far by the singing-master.</p>
<p>"Do you know, friend," asked the scout, gravely, and perhaps with a little
of the pride of conscious deserving in his manner, "that this is a band of
rangers chosen for the most desperate service, and put under the command
of one who, though another might say it with a better face, will not be
apt to leave them idle. It may not be five, it cannot be thirty minutes,
before we tread on the body of a Huron, living or dead."</p>
<p>"Though not admonished of your intentions in words," returned David, whose
face was a little flushed, and whose ordinarily quiet and unmeaning eyes
glimmered with an expression of unusual fire, "your men have reminded me
of the children of Jacob going out to battle against the Shechemites, for
wickedly aspiring to wedlock with a woman of a race that was favored of
the Lord. Now, I have journeyed far, and sojourned much in good and evil
with the maiden ye seek; and, though not a man of war, with my loins
girded and my sword sharpened, yet would I gladly strike a blow in her
behalf."</p>
<p>The scout hesitated, as if weighing the chances of such a strange
enlistment in his mind before he answered:</p>
<p>"You know not the use of any we'pon. You carry no rifle; and believe me,
what the Mingoes take they will freely give again."</p>
<p>"Though not a vaunting and bloodily disposed Goliath," returned David,
drawing a sling from beneath his parti-colored and uncouth attire, "I have
not forgotten the example of the Jewish boy. With this ancient instrument
of war have I practised much in my youth, and peradventure the skill has
not entirely departed from me."</p>
<p>"Ay!" said Hawkeye, considering the deer-skin thong and apron, with a cold
and discouraging eye; "the thing might do its work among arrows, or even
knives; but these Mengwe have been furnished by the Frenchers with a good
grooved barrel a man. However, it seems to be your gift to go unharmed
amid fire; and as you have hitherto been favored—major, you have
left your rifle at a cock; a single shot before the time would be just
twenty scalps lost to no purpose—singer, you can follow; we may find
use for you in the shoutings."</p>
<p>"I thank you, friend," returned David, supplying himself, like his royal
namesake, from among the pebbles of the brook; "though not given to the
desire to kill, had you sent me away my spirit would have been troubled."</p>
<p>"Remember," added the scout, tapping his own head significantly on that
spot where Gamut was yet sore, "we come to fight, and not to musickate.
Until the general whoop is given, nothing speaks but the rifle."</p>
<p>David nodded, as much to signify his acquiescence with the terms; and then
Hawkeye, casting another observant glance over his followers made the
signal to proceed.</p>
<p>Their route lay, for the distance of a mile, along the bed of the
water-course. Though protected from any great danger of observation by the
precipitous banks, and the thick shrubbery which skirted the stream, no
precaution known to an Indian attack was neglected. A warrior rather
crawled than walked on each flank so as to catch occasional glimpses into
the forest; and every few minutes the band came to a halt, and listened
for hostile sounds, with an acuteness of organs that would be scarcely
conceivable to a man in a less natural state. Their march was, however,
unmolested, and they reached the point where the lesser stream was lost in
the greater, without the smallest evidence that their progress had been
noted. Here the scout again halted, to consult the signs of the forest.</p>
<p>"We are likely to have a good day for a fight," he said, in English,
addressing Heyward, and glancing his eyes upward at the clouds, which
began to move in broad sheets across the firmament; "a bright sun and a
glittering barrel are no friends to true sight. Everything is favorable;
they have the wind, which will bring down their noises and their smoke,
too, no little matter in itself; whereas, with us it will be first a shot,
and then a clear view. But here is an end to our cover; the beavers have
had the range of this stream for hundreds of years, and what atween their
food and their dams, there is, as you see, many a girdled stub, but few
living trees."</p>
<p>Hawkeye had, in truth, in these few words, given no bad description of the
prospect that now lay in their front. The brook was irregular in its
width, sometimes shooting through narrow fissures in the rocks, and at
others spreading over acres of bottom land, forming little areas that
might be termed ponds. Everywhere along its bands were the moldering
relics of dead trees, in all the stages of decay, from those that groaned
on their tottering trunks to such as had recently been robbed of those
rugged coats that so mysteriously contain their principle of life. A few
long, low, and moss-covered piles were scattered among them, like the
memorials of a former and long-departed generation.</p>
<p>All these minute particulars were noted by the scout, with a gravity and
interest that they probably had never before attracted. He knew that the
Huron encampment lay a short half mile up the brook; and, with the
characteristic anxiety of one who dreaded a hidden danger, he was greatly
troubled at not finding the smallest trace of the presence of his enemy.
Once or twice he felt induced to give the order for a rush, and to attempt
the village by surprise; but his experience quickly admonished him of the
danger of so useless an experiment. Then he listened intently, and with
painful uncertainty, for the sounds of hostility in the quarter where
Uncas was left; but nothing was audible except the sighing of the wind,
that began to sweep over the bosom of the forest in gusts which threatened
a tempest. At length, yielding rather to his unusual impatience than
taking counsel from his knowledge, he determined to bring matters to an
issue, by unmasking his force, and proceeding cautiously, but steadily, up
the stream.</p>
<p>The scout had stood, while making his observations, sheltered by a brake,
and his companions still lay in the bed of the ravine, through which the
smaller stream debouched; but on hearing his low, though intelligible,
signal the whole party stole up the bank, like so many dark specters, and
silently arranged themselves around him. Pointing in the direction he
wished to proceed, Hawkeye advanced, the band breaking off in single
files, and following so accurately in his footsteps, as to leave it, if we
except Heyward and David, the trail of but a single man.</p>
<p>The party was, however, scarcely uncovered before a volley from a dozen
rifles was heard in their rear; and a Delaware leaping high in to the air,
like a wounded deer, fell at his whole length, dead.</p>
<p>"Ah, I feared some deviltry like this!" exclaimed the scout, in English,
adding, with the quickness of thought, in his adopted tongue: "To cover,
men, and charge!"</p>
<p>The band dispersed at the word, and before Heyward had well recovered from
his surprise, he found himself standing alone with David. Luckily the
Hurons had already fallen back, and he was safe from their fire. But this
state of things was evidently to be of short continuance; for the scout
set the example of pressing on their retreat, by discharging his rifle,
and darting from tree to tree as his enemy slowly yielded ground.</p>
<p>It would seem that the assault had been made by a very small party of the
Hurons, which, however, continued to increase in numbers, as it retired on
its friends, until the return fire was very nearly, if not quite, equal to
that maintained by the advancing Delawares. Heyward threw himself among
the combatants, and imitating the necessary caution of his companions, he
made quick discharges with his own rifle. The contest now grew warm and
stationary. Few were injured, as both parties kept their bodies as much
protected as possible by the trees; never, indeed, exposing any part of
their persons except in the act of taking aim. But the chances were
gradually growing unfavorable to Hawkeye and his band. The quick-sighted
scout perceived his danger without knowing how to remedy it. He saw it was
more dangerous to retreat than to maintain his ground: while he found his
enemy throwing out men on his flank; which rendered the task of keeping
themselves covered so very difficult to the Delawares, as nearly to
silence their fire. At this embarrassing moment, when they began to think
the whole of the hostile tribe was gradually encircling them, they heard
the yell of combatants and the rattling of arms echoing under the arches
of the wood at the place where Uncas was posted, a bottom which, in a
manner, lay beneath the ground on which Hawkeye and his party were
contending.</p>
<p>The effects of this attack were instantaneous, and to the scout and his
friends greatly relieving. It would seem that, while his own surprise had
been anticipated, and had consequently failed, the enemy, in their turn,
having been deceived in its object and in his numbers, had left too small
a force to resist the impetuous onset of the young Mohican. This fact was
doubly apparent, by the rapid manner in which the battle in the forest
rolled upward toward the village, and by an instant falling off in the
number of their assailants, who rushed to assist in maintaining the front,
and, as it now proved to be, the principal point of defense.</p>
<p>Animating his followers by his voice, and his own example, Hawkeye then
gave the word to bear down upon their foes. The charge, in that rude
species of warfare, consisted merely in pushing from cover to cover,
nigher to the enemy; and in this maneuver he was instantly and
successfully obeyed. The Hurons were compelled to withdraw, and the scene
of the contest rapidly changed from the more open ground, on which it had
commenced, to a spot where the assailed found a thicket to rest upon. Here
the struggle was protracted, arduous and seemingly of doubtful issue; the
Delawares, though none of them fell, beginning to bleed freely, in
consequence of the disadvantage at which they were held.</p>
<p>In this crisis, Hawkeye found means to get behind the same tree as that
which served for a cover to Heyward; most of his own combatants being
within call, a little on his right, where they maintained rapid, though
fruitless, discharges on their sheltered enemies.</p>
<p>"You are a young man, major," said the scout, dropping the butt of
"killdeer" to the earth, and leaning on the barrel, a little fatigued with
his previous industry; "and it may be your gift to lead armies, at some
future day, ag'in these imps, the Mingoes. You may here see the philosophy
of an Indian fight. It consists mainly in ready hand, a quick eye and a
good cover. Now, if you had a company of the Royal Americans here, in what
manner would you set them to work in this business?"</p>
<p>"The bayonet would make a road."</p>
<p>"Ay, there is white reason in what you say; but a man must ask himself, in
this wilderness, how many lives he can spare. No—horse*," continued
the scout, shaking his head, like one who mused; "horse, I am ashamed to
say must sooner or later decide these scrimmages. The brutes are better
than men, and to horse must we come at last. Put a shodden hoof on the
moccasin of a red-skin, and, if his rifle be once emptied, he will never
stop to load it again."</p>
<p>* The American forest admits of the passage of horses, there<br/>
being little underbrush, and few tangled brakes. The plan of<br/>
Hawkeye is the one which has always proved the most<br/>
successful in the battles between the whites and the<br/>
Indians. Wayne, in his celebrated campaign on the Miami,<br/>
received the fire of his enemies in line; and then causing<br/>
his dragoons to wheel round his flanks, the Indians were<br/>
driven from their covers before they had time to load. One<br/>
of the most conspicuous of the chiefs who fought in the<br/>
battle of Miami assured the writer, that the red men could<br/>
not fight the warriors with "long knives and leather<br/>
stockings"; meaning the dragoons with their sabers and<br/>
boots.<br/></p>
<p>"This is a subject that might better be discussed at another time,"
returned Heyward; "shall we charge?"</p>
<p>"I see no contradiction to the gifts of any man in passing his breathing
spells in useful reflections," the scout replied. "As to rush, I little
relish such a measure; for a scalp or two must be thrown away in the
attempt. And yet," he added, bending his head aside, to catch the sounds
of the distant combat, "if we are to be of use to Uncas, these knaves in
our front must be got rid of."</p>
<p>Then, turning with a prompt and decided air, he called aloud to his
Indians, in their own language. His words were answered by a shout; and,
at a given signal, each warrior made a swift movement around his
particular tree. The sight of so many dark bodies, glancing before their
eyes at the same instant, drew a hasty and consequently an ineffectual
fire from the Hurons. Without stopping to breathe, the Delawares leaped in
long bounds toward the wood, like so many panthers springing upon their
prey. Hawkeye was in front, brandishing his terrible rifle and animating
his followers by his example. A few of the older and more cunning Hurons,
who had not been deceived by the artifice which had been practiced to draw
their fire, now made a close and deadly discharge of their pieces and
justified the apprehensions of the scout by felling three of his foremost
warriors. But the shock was insufficient to repel the impetus of the
charge. The Delawares broke into the cover with the ferocity of their
natures and swept away every trace of resistance by the fury of the onset.</p>
<p>The combat endured only for an instant, hand to hand, and then the
assailed yielded ground rapidly, until they reached the opposite margin of
the thicket, where they clung to the cover, with the sort of obstinacy
that is so often witnessed in hunted brutes. At this critical moment, when
the success of the struggle was again becoming doubtful, the crack of a
rifle was heard behind the Hurons, and a bullet came whizzing from among
some beaver lodges, which were situated in the clearing, in their rear,
and was followed by the fierce and appalling yell of the war-whoop.</p>
<p>"There speaks the Sagamore!" shouted Hawkeye, answering the cry with his
own stentorian voice; "we have them now in face and back!"</p>
<p>The effect on the Hurons was instantaneous. Discouraged by an assault from
a quarter that left them no opportunity for cover, the warriors uttered a
common yell of disappointment, and breaking off in a body, they spread
themselves across the opening, heedless of every consideration but flight.
Many fell, in making the experiment, under the bullets and the blows of
the pursuing Delawares.</p>
<p>We shall not pause to detail the meeting between the scout and
Chingachgook, or the more touching interview that Duncan held with Munro.
A few brief and hurried words served to explain the state of things to
both parties; and then Hawkeye, pointing out the Sagamore to his band,
resigned the chief authority into the hands of the Mohican chief.
Chingachgook assumed the station to which his birth and experience gave
him so distinguished a claim, with the grave dignity that always gives
force to the mandates of a native warrior. Following the footsteps of the
scout, he led the party back through the thicket, his men scalping the
fallen Hurons and secreting the bodies of their own dead as they
proceeded, until they gained a point where the former was content to make
a halt.</p>
<p>The warriors, who had breathed themselves freely in the preceding
struggle, were now posted on a bit of level ground, sprinkled with trees
in sufficient numbers to conceal them. The land fell away rather
precipitately in front, and beneath their eyes stretched, for several
miles, a narrow, dark, and wooded vale. It was through this dense and dark
forest that Uncas was still contending with the main body of the Hurons.</p>
<p>The Mohican and his friends advanced to the brow of the hill, and
listened, with practised ears, to the sounds of the combat. A few birds
hovered over the leafy bosom of the valley, frightened from their secluded
nests; and here and there a light vapory cloud, which seemed already
blending with the atmosphere, arose above the trees, and indicated some
spot where the struggle had been fierce and stationary.</p>
<p>"The fight is coming up the ascent," said Duncan, pointing in the
direction of a new explosion of firearms; "we are too much in the center
of their line to be effective."</p>
<p>"They will incline into the hollow, where the cover is thicker," said the
scout, "and that will leave us well on their flank. Go, Sagamore; you will
hardly be in time to give the whoop, and lead on the young men. I will
fight this scrimmage with warriors of my own color. You know me, Mohican;
not a Huron of them all shall cross the swell, into your rear, without the
notice of 'killdeer'."</p>
<p>The Indian chief paused another moment to consider the signs of the
contest, which was now rolling rapidly up the ascent, a certain evidence
that the Delawares triumphed; nor did he actually quit the place until
admonished of the proximity of his friends, as well as enemies, by the
bullets of the former, which began to patter among the dried leaves on the
ground, like the bits of falling hail which precede the bursting of the
tempest. Hawkeye and his three companions withdrew a few paces to a
shelter, and awaited the issue with calmness that nothing but great
practise could impart in such a scene.</p>
<p>It was not long before the reports of the rifles began to lose the echoes
of the woods, and to sound like weapons discharged in the open air. Then a
warrior appeared, here and there, driven to the skirts of the forest, and
rallying as he entered the clearing, as at the place where the final stand
was to be made. These were soon joined by others, until a long line of
swarthy figures was to be seen clinging to the cover with the obstinacy of
desperation. Heyward began to grow impatient, and turned his eyes
anxiously in the direction of Chingachgook. The chief was seated on a
rock, with nothing visible but his calm visage, considering the spectacle
with an eye as deliberate as if he were posted there merely to view the
struggle.</p>
<p>"The time has come for the Delaware to strike!" said Duncan.</p>
<p>"Not so, not so," returned the scout; "when he scents his friends, he will
let them know that he is here. See, see; the knaves are getting in that
clump of pines, like bees settling after their flight. By the Lord, a
squaw might put a bullet into the center of such a knot of dark skins!"</p>
<p>At that instant the whoop was given, and a dozen Hurons fell by a
discharge from Chingachgook and his band. The shout that followed was
answered by a single war-cry from the forest, and a yell passed through
the air that sounded as if a thousand throats were united in a common
effort. The Hurons staggered, deserting the center of their line, and
Uncas issued from the forest through the opening they left, at the head of
a hundred warriors.</p>
<p>Waving his hands right and left, the young chief pointed out the enemy to
his followers, who separated in pursuit. The war now divided, both wings
of the broken Hurons seeking protection in the woods again, hotly pressed
by the victorious warriors of the Lenape. A minute might have passed, but
the sounds were already receding in different directions, and gradually
losing their distinctness beneath the echoing arches of the woods. One
little knot of Hurons, however, had disdained to seek a cover, and were
retiring, like lions at bay, slowly and sullenly up the acclivity which
Chingachgook and his band had just deserted, to mingle more closely in the
fray. Magua was conspicuous in this party, both by his fierce and savage
mien, and by the air of haughty authority he yet maintained.</p>
<p>In his eagerness to expedite the pursuit, Uncas had left himself nearly
alone; but the moment his eye caught the figure of Le Subtil, every other
consideration was forgotten. Raising his cry of battle, which recalled
some six or seven warriors, and reckless of the disparity of their
numbers, he rushed upon his enemy. Le Renard, who watched the movement,
paused to receive him with secret joy. But at the moment when he thought
the rashness of his impetuous young assailant had left him at his mercy,
another shout was given, and La Longue Carabine was seen rushing to the
rescue, attended by all his white associates. The Huron instantly turned,
and commenced a rapid retreat up the ascent.</p>
<p>There was no time for greetings or congratulations; for Uncas, though
unconscious of the presence of his friends, continued the pursuit with the
velocity of the wind. In vain Hawkeye called to him to respect the covers;
the young Mohican braved the dangerous fire of his enemies, and soon
compelled them to a flight as swift as his own headlong speed. It was
fortunate that the race was of short continuance, and that the white men
were much favored by their position, or the Delaware would soon have
outstripped all his companions, and fallen a victim to his own temerity.
But, ere such a calamity could happen, the pursuers and pursued entered
the Wyandot village, within striking distance of each other.</p>
<p>Excited by the presence of their dwellings, and tired of the chase, the
Hurons now made a stand, and fought around their council-lodge with the
fury of despair. The onset and the issue were like the passage and
destruction of a whirlwind. The tomahawk of Uncas, the blows of Hawkeye,
and even the still nervous arm of Munro were all busy for that passing
moment, and the ground was quickly strewed with their enemies. Still
Magua, though daring and much exposed, escaped from every effort against
his life, with that sort of fabled protection that was made to overlook
the fortunes of favored heroes in the legends of ancient poetry. Raising a
yell that spoke volumes of anger and disappointment, the subtle chief,
when he saw his comrades fallen, darted away from the place, attended by
his two only surviving friends, leaving the Delawares engaged in stripping
the dead of the bloody trophies of their victory.</p>
<p>But Uncas, who had vainly sought him in the melee, bounded forward in
pursuit; Hawkeye, Heyward and David still pressing on his footsteps. The
utmost that the scout could effect, was to keep the muzzle of his rifle a
little in advance of his friend, to whom, however, it answered every
purpose of a charmed shield. Once Magua appeared disposed to make another
and a final effort to revenge his losses; but, abandoning his intention as
soon as demonstrated, he leaped into a thicket of bushes, through which he
was followed by his enemies, and suddenly entered the mouth of the cave
already known to the reader. Hawkeye, who had only forborne to fire in
tenderness to Uncas, raised a shout of success, and proclaimed aloud that
now they were certain of their game. The pursuers dashed into the long and
narrow entrance, in time to catch a glimpse of the retreating forms of the
Hurons. Their passage through the natural galleries and subterraneous
apartments of the cavern was preceded by the shrieks and cries of hundreds
of women and children. The place, seen by its dim and uncertain light,
appeared like the shades of the infernal regions, across which unhappy
ghosts and savage demons were flitting in multitudes.</p>
<p>Still Uncas kept his eye on Magua, as if life to him possessed but a
single object. Heyward and the scout still pressed on his rear, actuated,
though possibly in a less degree, by a common feeling. But their way was
becoming intricate, in those dark and gloomy passages, and the glimpses of
the retiring warriors less distinct and frequent; and for a moment the
trace was believed to be lost, when a white robe was seen fluttering in
the further extremity of a passage that seemed to lead up the mountain.</p>
<p>"'Tis Cora!" exclaimed Heyward, in a voice in which horror and delight
were wildly mingled.</p>
<p>"Cora! Cora!" echoed Uncas, bounding forward like a deer.</p>
<p>"'Tis the maiden!" shouted the scout. "Courage, lady; we come! we come!"</p>
<p>The chase was renewed with a diligence rendered tenfold encouraging by
this glimpse of the captive. But the way was rugged, broken, and in spots
nearly impassable. Uncas abandoned his rifle, and leaped forward with
headlong precipitation. Heyward rashly imitated his example, though both
were, a moment afterward, admonished of his madness by hearing the
bellowing of a piece, that the Hurons found time to discharge down the
passage in the rocks, the bullet from which even gave the young Mohican a
slight wound.</p>
<p>"We must close!" said the scout, passing his friends by a desperate leap;
"the knaves will pick us all off at this distance; and see, they hold the
maiden so as to shield themselves!"</p>
<p>Though his words were unheeded, or rather unheard, his example was
followed by his companions, who, by incredible exertions, got near enough
to the fugitives to perceive that Cora was borne along between the two
warriors while Magua prescribed the direction and manner of their flight.
At this moment the forms of all four were strongly drawn against an
opening in the sky, and they disappeared. Nearly frantic with
disappointment, Uncas and Heyward increased efforts that already seemed
superhuman, and they issued from the cavern on the side of the mountain,
in time to note the route of the pursued. The course lay up the ascent,
and still continued hazardous and laborious.</p>
<p>Encumbered by his rifle, and, perhaps, not sustained by so deep an
interest in the captive as his companions, the scout suffered the latter
to precede him a little, Uncas, in his turn, taking the lead of Heyward.
In this manner, rocks, precipices and difficulties were surmounted in an
incredibly short space, that at another time, and under other
circumstances, would have been deemed almost insuperable. But the
impetuous young men were rewarded by finding that, encumbered with Cora,
the Hurons were losing ground in the race.</p>
<p>"Stay, dog of the Wyandots!" exclaimed Uncas, shaking his bright tomahawk
at Magua; "a Delaware girl calls stay!"</p>
<p>"I will go no further!" cried Cora, stopping unexpectedly on a ledge of
rock, that overhung a deep precipice, at no great distance from the summit
of the mountain. "Kill me if thou wilt, detestable Huron; I will go no
further."</p>
<p>The supporters of the maiden raised their ready tomahawks with the impious
joy that fiends are thought to take in mischief, but Magua stayed the
uplifted arms. The Huron chief, after casting the weapons he had wrested
from his companions over the rock, drew his knife, and turned to his
captive, with a look in which conflicting passions fiercely contended.</p>
<p>"Woman," he said, "chose; the wigwam or the knife of Le Subtil!"</p>
<p>Cora regarded him not, but dropping on her knees, she raised her eyes and
stretched her arms toward heaven, saying in a meek and yet confiding
voice:</p>
<p>"I am thine; do with me as thou seest best!"</p>
<p>"Woman," repeated Magua, hoarsely, and endeavoring in vain to catch a
glance from her serene and beaming eye, "choose!"</p>
<p>But Cora neither heard nor heeded his demand. The form of the Huron
trembled in every fibre, and he raised his arm on high, but dropped it
again with a bewildered air, like one who doubted. Once more he struggled
with himself and lifted the keen weapon again; but just then a piercing
cry was heard above them, and Uncas appeared, leaping frantically, from a
fearful height, upon the ledge. Magua recoiled a step; and one of his
assistants, profiting by the chance, sheathed his own knife in the bosom
of Cora.</p>
<p>The Huron sprang like a tiger on his offending and already retreating
country man, but the falling form of Uncas separated the unnatural
combatants. Diverted from his object by this interruption, and maddened by
the murder he had just witnessed, Magua buried his weapon in the back of
the prostrate Delaware, uttering an unearthly shout as he committed the
dastardly deed. But Uncas arose from the blow, as the wounded panther
turns upon his foe, and struck the murderer of Cora to his feet, by an
effort in which the last of his failing strength was expended. Then, with
a stern and steady look, he turned to Le Subtil, and indicated by the
expression of his eye all that he would do had not the power deserted him.
The latter seized the nerveless arm of the unresisting Delaware, and
passed his knife into his bosom three several times, before his victim,
still keeping his gaze riveted on his enemy, with a look of
inextinguishable scorn, fell dead at his feet.</p>
<p>"Mercy! mercy! Huron," cried Heyward, from above, in tones nearly choked
by horror; "give mercy, and thou shalt receive from it!"</p>
<p>Whirling the bloody knife up at the imploring youth, the victorious Magua
uttered a cry so fierce, so wild, and yet so joyous, that it conveyed the
sounds of savage triumph to the ears of those who fought in the valley, a
thousand feet below. He was answered by a burst from the lips of the
scout, whose tall person was just then seen moving swiftly toward him,
along those dangerous crags, with steps as bold and reckless as if he
possessed the power to move in air. But when the hunter reached the scene
of the ruthless massacre, the ledge was tenanted only by the dead.</p>
<p>His keen eye took a single look at the victims, and then shot its glances
over the difficulties of the ascent in his front. A form stood at the brow
of the mountain, on the very edge of the giddy height, with uplifted arms,
in an awful attitude of menace. Without stopping to consider his person,
the rifle of Hawkeye was raised; but a rock, which fell on the head of one
of the fugitives below, exposed the indignant and glowing countenance of
the honest Gamut. Then Magua issued from a crevice, and, stepping with
calm indifference over the body of the last of his associates, he leaped a
wide fissure, and ascended the rocks at a point where the arm of David
could not reach him. A single bound would carry him to the brow of the
precipice, and assure his safety. Before taking the leap, however, the
Huron paused, and shaking his hand at the scout, he shouted:</p>
<p>"The pale faces are dogs! the Delawares women! Magua leaves them on the
rocks, for the crows!"</p>
<p>Laughing hoarsely, he made a desperate leap, and fell short of his mark,
though his hands grasped a shrub on the verge of the height. The form of
Hawkeye had crouched like a beast about to take its spring, and his frame
trembled so violently with eagerness that the muzzle of the half-raised
rifle played like a leaf fluttering in the wind. Without exhausting
himself with fruitless efforts, the cunning Magua suffered his body to
drop to the length of his arms, and found a fragment for his feet to rest
on. Then, summoning all his powers, he renewed the attempt, and so far
succeeded as to draw his knees on the edge of the mountain. It was now,
when the body of his enemy was most collected together, that the agitated
weapon of the scout was drawn to his shoulder. The surrounding rocks
themselves were not steadier than the piece became, for the single instant
that it poured out its contents. The arms of the Huron relaxed, and his
body fell back a little, while his knees still kept their position.
Turning a relentless look on his enemy, he shook a hand in grim defiance.
But his hold loosened, and his dark person was seen cutting the air with
its head downward, for a fleeting instant, until it glided past the fringe
of shrubbery which clung to the mountain, in its rapid flight to
destruction.</p>
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