<h2><SPAN name="chap14"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
<p class="poem">
“Guard.—Qui est la?<br/>
Puc. —Paisans, pauvres gens de France.”<br/>
—King Henry VI</p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/5215.jpg" width-obs="348" height-obs="550" alt="[Illustration]" /> <p class="caption">The scout resumed his post in the advance</p> </div>
<p>During the rapid movement from the blockhouse, and until the party was deeply
buried in the forest, each individual was too much interested in the escape to
hazard a word even in whispers. The scout resumed his post in advance, though
his steps, after he had thrown a safe distance between himself and his enemies,
were more deliberate than in their previous march, in consequence of his utter
ignorance of the localities of the surrounding woods. More than once he halted
to consult with his confederates, the Mohicans, pointing upward at the moon,
and examining the barks of the trees with care. In these brief pauses, Heyward
and the sisters listened, with senses rendered doubly acute by the danger, to
detect any symptoms which might announce the proximity of their foes. At such
moments, it seemed as if a vast range of country lay buried in eternal sleep;
not the least sound arising from the forest, unless it was the distant and
scarcely audible rippling of a water-course. Birds, beasts, and man, appeared
to slumber alike, if, indeed, any of the latter were to be found in that wide
tract of wilderness. But the sounds of the rivulet, feeble and murmuring as
they were, relieved the guides at once from no trifling embarrassment, and
toward it they immediately held their way.</p>
<p>When the banks of the little stream were gained, Hawkeye made another halt; and
taking the moccasins from his feet, he invited Heyward and Gamut to follow his
example. He then entered the water, and for near an hour they traveled in the
bed of the brook, leaving no trail. The moon had already sunk into an immense
pile of black clouds, which lay impending above the western horizon, when they
issued from the low and devious water-course to rise again to the light and
level of the sandy but wooded plain. Here the scout seemed to be once more at
home, for he held on this way with the certainty and diligence of a man who
moved in the security of his own knowledge. The path soon became more uneven,
and the travelers could plainly perceive that the mountains drew nigher to them
on each hand, and that they were, in truth, about entering one of their gorges.
Suddenly, Hawkeye made a pause, and, waiting until he was joined by the whole
party, he spoke, though in tones so low and cautious, that they added to the
solemnity of his words, in the quiet and darkness of the place.</p>
<p>“It is easy to know the pathways, and to find the licks and water-courses
of the wilderness,” he said; “but who that saw this spot could
venture to say, that a mighty army was at rest among yonder silent trees and
barren mountains?”</p>
<p>“We are, then, at no great distance from William Henry?” said
Heyward, advancing nigher to the scout.</p>
<p>“It is yet a long and weary path, and when and where to strike it is now
our greatest difficulty. See,” he said, pointing through the trees toward
a spot where a little basin of water reflected the stars from its placid bosom,
“here is the ‘bloody pond’; and I am on ground that I have
not only often traveled, but over which I have fou’t the enemy, from the
rising to the setting sun.”</p>
<p>“Ha! that sheet of dull and dreary water, then, is the sepulcher of the
brave men who fell in the contest. I have heard it named, but never have I
stood on its banks before.”</p>
<p>“Three battles did we make with the Dutch-Frenchman<SPAN href="#fn14.1" name="fnref14.1" id="fnref14.1"><sup>[1]</sup></SPAN>
in a day,” continued Hawkeye, pursuing the train of his own thoughts,
rather than replying to the remark of Duncan. “He met us hard by, in our
outward march to ambush his advance, and scattered us, like driven deer,
through the defile, to the shores of Horican. Then we rallied behind our fallen
trees, and made head against him, under Sir William—who was made Sir
William for that very deed; and well did we pay him for the disgrace of the
morning! Hundreds of Frenchmen saw the sun that day for the last time; and even
their leader, Dieskau himself, fell into our hands, so cut and torn with the
lead, that he has gone back to his own country, unfit for further acts in
war.”</p>
<p class="footnote">
<SPAN name="fn14.1" id="fn14.1"></SPAN> <SPAN href="#fnref14.1">[1]</SPAN>
Baron Dieskau, a German, in the service of France. A few years previously to
the period of the tale, this officer was defeated by Sir William Johnson, of
Johnstown, New York, on the shores of Lake George.</p>
<p>“’Twas a noble repulse!” exclaimed Heyward, in the heat of
his youthful ardor; “the fame of it reached us early, in our southern
army.”</p>
<p>“Ay! but it did not end there. I was sent by Major Effingham, at Sir
William’s own bidding, to outflank the French, and carry the tidings of
their disaster across the portage, to the fort on the Hudson. Just hereaway,
where you see the trees rise into a mountain swell, I met a party coming down
to our aid, and I led them where the enemy were taking their meal, little
dreaming that they had not finished the bloody work of the day.”</p>
<p>“And you surprised them?”</p>
<p>“If death can be a surprise to men who are thinking only of the cravings
of their appetites. We gave them but little breathing time, for they had borne
hard upon us in the fight of the morning, and there were few in our party who
had not lost friend or relative by their hands.”</p>
<p>“When all was over, the dead, and some say the dying, were cast into that
little pond. These eyes have seen its waters colored with blood, as natural
water never yet flowed from the bowels of the ’arth.”</p>
<p>“It was a convenient, and, I trust, will prove a peaceful grave for a
soldier. You have then seen much service on this frontier?”</p>
<p>“Ay!” said the scout, erecting his tall person with an air of
military pride; “there are not many echoes among these hills that
haven’t rung with the crack of my rifle, nor is there the space of a
square mile atwixt Horican and the river, that ‘killdeer’
hasn’t dropped a living body on, be it an enemy or be it a brute beast.
As for the grave there being as quiet as you mention, it is another matter.
There are them in the camp who say and think, man, to lie still, should not be
buried while the breath is in the body; and certain it is that in the hurry of
that evening, the doctors had but little time to say who was living and who was
dead. Hist! see you nothing walking on the shore of the pond?”</p>
<p>“’Tis not probable that any are as houseless as ourselves in this
dreary forest.”</p>
<p>“Such as he may care but little for house or shelter, and night dew can
never wet a body that passes its days in the water,” returned the scout,
grasping the shoulder of Heyward with such convulsive strength as to make the
young soldier painfully sensible how much superstitious terror had got the
mastery of a man usually so dauntless.</p>
<p>“By heaven, there is a human form, and it approaches! Stand to your arms,
my friends; for we know not whom we encounter.”</p>
<p>“Qui vive?” demanded a stern, quick voice, which sounded like a
challenge from another world, issuing out of that solitary and solemn place.</p>
<p>“What says it?” whispered the scout; “it speaks neither
Indian nor English.”</p>
<p>“Qui vive?” repeated the same voice, which was quickly followed by
the rattling of arms, and a menacing attitude.</p>
<p>“France!” cried Heyward, advancing from the shadow of the trees to
the shore of the pond, within a few yards of the sentinel.</p>
<p>“D’ou venez-vous—ou allez-vous, d’aussi bonne
heure?” demanded the grenadier, in the language and with the accent of a
man from old France.</p>
<p>“Je viens de la découverte, et je vais me coucher.”</p>
<p>“Etes-vous officier du roi?”</p>
<p>“Sans doute, mon camarade; me prends-tu pour un provincial! Je suis
capitaine de chasseurs (Heyward well knew that the other was of a regiment in
the line); j’ai ici, avec moi, les filles du commandant de la
fortification. Aha! tu en as entendu parler! je les ai fait prisonnières près
de l’autre fort, et je les conduis au général.”</p>
<p>“Ma foi! mesdames; j’en suis faché pour vous,” exclaimed the
young soldier, touching his cap with grace; “mais—fortune de
guerre! vous trouverez notre général un brave homme, et bien poli avec les
dames.”</p>
<p>“C’est le caractere des gens de guerre,” said Cora, with
admirable self-possession. “Adieu, mon ami; je vous souhaiterais un
devoir plus agréable a remplir.”</p>
<p>The soldier made a low and humble acknowledgment for her civility; and Heyward
adding a “Bonne nuit, mon camarade,” they moved deliberately
forward, leaving the sentinel pacing the banks of the silent pond, little
suspecting an enemy of so much effrontery, and humming to himself those words
which were recalled to his mind by the sight of women, and, perhaps, by
recollections of his own distant and beautiful France:</p>
<p class="poem">
“Vive le vin, vive l’amour,” &c., &c.</p>
<p>“’Tis well you understood the knave!” whispered the scout,
when they had gained a little distance from the place, and letting his rifle
fall into the hollow of his arm again; “I soon saw that he was one of
them uneasy Frenchers; and well for him it was that his speech was friendly and
his wishes kind, or a place might have been found for his bones among those of
his countrymen.”</p>
<p>He was interrupted by a long and heavy groan which arose from the little basin,
as though, in truth, the spirits of the departed lingered about their watery
sepulcher.</p>
<p>“Surely it was of flesh,” continued the scout; “no spirit
could handle its arms so steadily.”</p>
<p>“It <i>was</i> of flesh; but whether the poor fellow still belongs to
this world may well be doubted,” said Heyward, glancing his eyes around
him, and missing Chingachgook from their little band. Another groan more faint
than the former was succeeded by a heavy and sullen plunge into the water, and
all was still again as if the borders of the dreary pool had never been
awakened from the silence of creation. While they yet hesitated in uncertainty,
the form of the Indian was seen gliding out of the thicket. As the chief
rejoined them, with one hand he attached the reeking scalp of the unfortunate
young Frenchman to his girdle, and with the other he replaced the knife and
tomahawk that had drunk his blood. He then took his wonted station, with the
air of a man who believed he had done a deed of merit.</p>
<p>The scout dropped one end of his rifle to the earth, and leaning his hands on
the other, he stood musing in profound silence. Then, shaking his head in a
mournful manner, he muttered:</p>
<p>“’Twould have been a cruel and an unhuman act for a white-skin; but
’tis the gift and natur’ of an Indian, and I suppose it should not
be denied. I could wish, though, it had befallen an accursed Mingo, rather than
that gay young boy from the old countries.”</p>
<p>“Enough!” said Heyward, apprehensive the unconscious sisters might
comprehend the nature of the detention, and conquering his disgust by a train
of reflections very much like that of the hunter; “’tis done; and
though better it were left undone, cannot be amended. You see, we are, too
obviously within the sentinels of the enemy; what course do you propose to
follow?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Hawkeye, rousing himself again; “’tis as
you say, too late to harbor further thoughts about it. Ay, the French have
gathered around the fort in good earnest and we have a delicate needle to
thread in passing them.”</p>
<p>“And but little time to do it in,” added Heyward, glancing his eyes
upwards, toward the bank of vapor that concealed the setting moon.</p>
<p>“And little time to do it in!” repeated the scout. “The thing
may be done in two fashions, by the help of Providence, without which it may
not be done at all.”</p>
<p>“Name them quickly for time presses.”</p>
<p>“One would be to dismount the gentle ones, and let their beasts range the
plain, by sending the Mohicans in front, we might then cut a lane through their
sentries, and enter the fort over the dead bodies.”</p>
<p>“It will not do—it will not do!” interrupted the generous
Heyward; “a soldier might force his way in this manner, but never with
such a convoy.”</p>
<p>“’Twould be, indeed, a bloody path for such tender feet to wade
in,” returned the equally reluctant scout; “but I thought it
befitting my manhood to name it. We must, then, turn in our trail and get
without the line of their lookouts, when we will bend short to the west, and
enter the mountains; where I can hide you, so that all the devil’s hounds
in Montcalm’s pay would be thrown off the scent for months to
come.”</p>
<p>“Let it be done, and that instantly.”</p>
<p>Further words were unnecessary; for Hawkeye, merely uttering the mandate to
“follow,” moved along the route by which they had just entered
their present critical and even dangerous situation. Their progress, like their
late dialogue, was guarded, and without noise; for none knew at what moment a
passing patrol, or a crouching picket of the enemy, might rise upon their path.
As they held their silent way along the margin of the pond, again Heyward and
the scout stole furtive glances at its appalling dreariness. They looked in
vain for the form they had so recently seen stalking along in silent shores,
while a low and regular wash of the little waves, by announcing that the waters
were not yet subsided, furnished a frightful memorial of the deed of blood they
had just witnessed. Like all that passing and gloomy scene, the low basin,
however, quickly melted in the darkness, and became blended with the mass of
black objects in the rear of the travelers.</p>
<p>Hawkeye soon deviated from the line of their retreat, and striking off towards
the mountains which form the western boundary of the narrow plain, he led his
followers, with swift steps, deep within the shadows that were cast from their
high and broken summits. The route was now painful; lying over ground ragged
with rocks, and intersected with ravines, and their progress proportionately
slow. Bleak and black hills lay on every side of them, compensating in some
degree for the additional toil of the march by the sense of security they
imparted. At length the party began slowly to rise a steep and rugged ascent,
by a path that curiously wound among rocks and trees, avoiding the one and
supported by the other, in a manner that showed it had been devised by men long
practised in the arts of the wilderness. As they gradually rose from the level
of the valleys, the thick darkness which usually precedes the approach of day
began to disperse, and objects were seen in the plain and palpable colors with
which they had been gifted by nature. When they issued from the stunted woods
which clung to the barren sides of the mountain, upon a flat and mossy rock
that formed its summit, they met the morning, as it came blushing above the
green pines of a hill that lay on the opposite side of the valley of the
Horican.</p>
<p>The scout now told the sisters to dismount; and taking the bridles from the
mouths, and the saddles off the backs of the jaded beasts, he turned them
loose, to glean a scanty subsistence among the shrubs and meager herbage of
that elevated region.</p>
<p>“Go,” he said, “and seek your food where natur’ gives
it to you; and beware that you become not food to ravenous wolves yourselves,
among these hills.”</p>
<p>“Have we no further need of them?” demanded Heyward.</p>
<p>“See, and judge with your own eyes,” said the scout, advancing
toward the eastern brow of the mountain, whither he beckoned for the whole
party to follow; “if it was as easy to look into the heart of man as it
is to spy out the nakedness of Montcalm’s camp from this spot, hypocrites
would grow scarce, and the cunning of a Mingo might prove a losing game,
compared to the honesty of a Delaware.”</p>
<p>When the travelers reached the verge of the precipices they saw, at a glance,
the truth of the scout’s declaration, and the admirable foresight with
which he had led them to their commanding station.</p>
<p>The mountain on which they stood, elevated perhaps a thousand feet in the air,
was a high cone that rose a little in advance of that range which stretches for
miles along the western shores of the lake, until meeting its sisters miles
beyond the water, it ran off toward the Canadas, in confused and broken masses
of rock, thinly sprinkled with evergreens. Immediately at the feet of the
party, the southern shore of the Horican swept in a broad semicircle from
mountain to mountain, marking a wide strand, that soon rose into an uneven and
somewhat elevated plain. To the north stretched the limpid, and, as it appeared
from that dizzy height, the narrow sheet of the “holy lake,”
indented with numberless bays, embellished by fantastic headlands, and dotted
with countless islands. At the distance of a few leagues, the bed of the water
became lost among mountains, or was wrapped in the masses of vapor that came
slowly rolling along their bosom, before a light morning air. But a narrow
opening between the crests of the hills pointed out the passage by which they
found their way still further north, to spread their pure and ample sheets
again, before pouring out their tribute into the distant Champlain. To the
south stretched the defile, or rather broken plain, so often mentioned. For
several miles in this direction, the mountains appeared reluctant to yield
their dominion, but within reach of the eye they diverged, and finally melted
into the level and sandy lands, across which we have accompanied our
adventurers in their double journey. Along both ranges of hills, which bounded
the opposite sides of the lake and valley, clouds of light vapor were rising in
spiral wreaths from the uninhabited woods, looking like the smoke of hidden
cottages; or rolled lazily down the declivities, to mingle with the fogs of the
lower land. A single, solitary, snow-white cloud floated above the valley, and
marked the spot beneath which lay the silent pool of the “bloody
pond.”</p>
<p>Directly on the shore of the lake, and nearer to its western than to its
eastern margin, lay the extensive earthen ramparts and low buildings of William
Henry. Two of the sweeping bastions appeared to rest on the water which washed
their bases, while a deep ditch and extensive morasses guarded its other sides
and angles. The land had been cleared of wood for a reasonable distance around
the work, but every other part of the scene lay in the green livery of nature,
except where the limpid water mellowed the view, or the bold rocks thrust their
black and naked heads above the undulating outline of the mountain ranges. In
its front might be seen the scattered sentinels, who held a weary watch against
their numerous foes; and within the walls themselves, the travelers looked down
upon men still drowsy with a night of vigilance. Toward the southeast, but in
immediate contact with the fort, was an entrenched camp, posted on a rocky
eminence, that would have been far more eligible for the work itself, in which
Hawkeye pointed out the presence of those auxiliary regiments that had so
recently left the Hudson in their company. From the woods, a little further to
the south, rose numerous dark and lurid smokes, that were easily to be
distinguished from the purer exhalations of the springs, and which the scout
also showed to Heyward, as evidences that the enemy lay in force in that
direction.</p>
<p>But the spectacle which most concerned the young soldier was on the western
bank of the lake, though quite near to its southern termination. On a strip of
land, which appeared from his stand too narrow to contain such an army, but
which, in truth, extended many hundreds of yards from the shores of the Horican
to the base of the mountain, were to be seen the white tents and military
engines of an encampment of ten thousand men. Batteries were already thrown up
in their front, and even while the spectators above them were looking down,
with such different emotions, on a scene which lay like a map beneath their
feet, the roar of artillery rose from the valley, and passed off in thundering
echoes along the eastern hills.</p>
<p>“Morning is just touching them below,” said the deliberate and
musing scout, “and the watchers have a mind to wake up the sleepers by
the sound of cannon. We are a few hours too late! Montcalm has already filled
the woods with his accursed Iroquois.”</p>
<p>“The place is, indeed, invested,” returned Duncan; “but is
there no expedient by which we may enter? capture in the works would be far
preferable to falling again into the hands of roving Indians.”</p>
<p>“See!” exclaimed the scout, unconsciously directing the attention
of Cora to the quarters of her own father, “how that shot has made the
stones fly from the side of the commandant’s house! Ay! these Frenchers
will pull it to pieces faster than it was put together, solid and thick though
it be!”</p>
<p>“Heyward, I sicken at the sight of danger that I cannot share,”
said the undaunted but anxious daughter. “Let us go to Montcalm, and
demand admission: he dare not deny a child the boon.”</p>
<p>“You would scarce find the tent of the Frenchman with the hair on your
head”; said the blunt scout. “If I had but one of the thousand
boats which lie empty along that shore, it might be done! Ha! here will soon be
an end of the firing, for yonder comes a fog that will turn day to night, and
make an Indian arrow more dangerous than a molded cannon. Now, if you are equal
to the work, and will follow, I will make a push; for I long to get down into
that camp, if it be only to scatter some Mingo dogs that I see lurking in the
skirts of yonder thicket of birch.”</p>
<p>“We are equal,” said Cora, firmly; “on such an errand we will
follow to any danger.”</p>
<p>The scout turned to her with a smile of honest and cordial approbation, as he
answered:</p>
<p>“I would I had a thousand men, of brawny limbs and quick eyes, that
feared death as little as you! I’d send them jabbering Frenchers back
into their den again, afore the week was ended, howling like so many fettered
hounds or hungry wolves. But, stir,” he added, turning from her to the
rest of the party, “the fog comes rolling down so fast, we shall have but
just the time to meet it on the plain, and use it as a cover. Remember, if any
accident should befall me, to keep the air blowing on your left
cheeks—or, rather, follow the Mohicans; they’d scent their way, be
it in day or be it at night.”</p>
<p>He then waved his hand for them to follow, and threw himself down the steep
declivity, with free, but careful footsteps. Heyward assisted the sisters to
descend, and in a few minutes they were all far down a mountain whose sides
they had climbed with so much toil and pain.</p>
<p>The direction taken by Hawkeye soon brought the travelers to the level of the
plain, nearly opposite to a sally-port in the western curtain of the fort,
which lay itself at the distance of about half a mile from the point where he
halted to allow Duncan to come up with his charge. In their eagerness, and
favored by the nature of the ground, they had anticipated the fog, which was
rolling heavily down the lake, and it became necessary to pause, until the
mists had wrapped the camp of the enemy in their fleecy mantle. The Mohicans
profited by the delay, to steal out of the woods, and to make a survey of
surrounding objects. They were followed at a little distance by the scout, with
a view to profit early by their report, and to obtain some faint knowledge for
himself of the more immediate localities.</p>
<p>In a very few moments he returned, his face reddened with vexation, while he
muttered his disappointment in words of no very gentle import.</p>
<p>“Here has the cunning Frenchman been posting a picket directly in our
path,” he said; “red-skins and whites; and we shall be as likely to
fall into their midst as to pass them in the fog!”</p>
<p>“Cannot we make a circuit to avoid the danger,” asked Heyward,
“and come into our path again when it is passed?”</p>
<p>“Who that once bends from the line of his march in a fog can tell when or
how to find it again! The mists of Horican are not like the curls from a
peace-pipe, or the smoke which settles above a mosquito fire.”</p>
<p>He was yet speaking, when a crashing sound was heard, and a cannon-ball entered
the thicket, striking the body of a sapling, and rebounding to the earth, its
force being much expended by previous resistance. The Indians followed
instantly like busy attendants on the terrible messenger, and Uncas commenced
speaking earnestly and with much action, in the Delaware tongue.</p>
<p>“It may be so, lad,” muttered the scout, when he had ended;
“for desperate fevers are not to be treated like a toothache. Come, then,
the fog is shutting in.”</p>
<p>“Stop!” cried Heyward; “first explain your
expectations.”</p>
<p>“’Tis soon done, and a small hope it is; but it is better than
nothing. This shot that you see,” added the scout, kicking the harmless
iron with his foot, “has plowed the ’arth in its road from the
fort, and we shall hunt for the furrow it has made, when all other signs may
fail. No more words, but follow, or the fog may leave us in the middle of our
path, a mark for both armies to shoot at.”</p>
<p>Heyward perceiving that, in fact, a crisis had arrived, when acts were more
required than words, placed himself between the sisters, and drew them swiftly
forward, keeping the dim figure of their leader in his eye. It was soon
apparent that Hawkeye had not magnified the power of the fog, for before they
had proceeded twenty yards, it was difficult for the different individuals of
the party to distinguish each other in the vapor.</p>
<p>They had made their little circuit to the left, and were already inclining
again toward the right, having, as Heyward thought, got over nearly half the
distance to the friendly works, when his ears were saluted with the fierce
summons, apparently within twenty feet of them, of:</p>
<p>“Qui va là?”</p>
<p>“Push on!” whispered the scout, once more bending to the left.</p>
<p>“Push on!” repeated Heyward; when the summons was renewed by a
dozen voices, each of which seemed charged with menace.</p>
<p>“C’est moi,” cried Duncan, dragging rather than leading those
he supported swiftly onward.</p>
<p>“Bête!—qui?—moi!”</p>
<p>“Ami de la France.”</p>
<p>“Tu m’as plus l’air d’un <i>ennemi</i> de la France;
arrete ou pardieu je te ferai ami du diable. Non! feu, camarades, feu!”</p>
<p>The order was instantly obeyed, and the fog was stirred by the explosion of
fifty muskets. Happily, the aim was bad, and the bullets cut the air in a
direction a little different from that taken by the fugitives; though still so
nigh them, that to the unpractised ears of David and the two females, it
appeared as if they whistled within a few inches of the organs. The outcry was
renewed, and the order, not only to fire again, but to pursue, was too plainly
audible. When Heyward briefly explained the meaning of the words they heard,
Hawkeye halted and spoke with quick decision and great firmness.</p>
<p>“Let us deliver our fire,” he said; “they will believe it a
sortie, and give way, or they will wait for reinforcements.”</p>
<p>The scheme was well conceived, but failed in its effects. The instant the
French heard the pieces, it seemed as if the plain was alive with men, muskets
rattling along its whole extent, from the shores of the lake to the furthest
boundary of the woods.</p>
<p>“We shall draw their entire army upon us, and bring on a general
assault,” said Duncan: “lead on, my friend, for your own life and
ours.”</p>
<p>The scout seemed willing to comply; but, in the hurry of the moment, and in the
change of position, he had lost the direction. In vain he turned either cheek
toward the light air; they felt equally cool. In this dilemma, Uncas lighted on
the furrow of the cannon ball, where it had cut the ground in three adjacent
ant-hills.</p>
<p>“Give me the range!” said Hawkeye, bending to catch a glimpse of
the direction, and then instantly moving onward.</p>
<p>Cries, oaths, voices calling to each other, and the reports of muskets, were
now quick and incessant, and, apparently, on every side of them. Suddenly a
strong glare of light flashed across the scene, the fog rolled upward in thick
wreaths, and several cannons belched across the plain, and the roar was thrown
heavily back from the bellowing echoes of the mountain.</p>
<p>“’Tis from the fort!” exclaimed Hawkeye, turning short on his
tracks; “and we, like stricken fools, were rushing to the woods, under
the very knives of the Maquas.”</p>
<p>The instant their mistake was rectified, the whole party retraced the error
with the utmost diligence. Duncan willingly relinquished the support of Cora to
the arm of Uncas and Cora as readily accepted the welcome assistance. Men, hot
and angry in pursuit, were evidently on their footsteps, and each instant
threatened their capture, if not their destruction.</p>
<p>“Point de quartier aux coquins!” cried an eager pursuer, who seemed
to direct the operations of the enemy.</p>
<p>“Stand firm, and be ready, my gallant Sixtieths!” suddenly
exclaimed a voice above them; “wait to see the enemy, fire low and sweep
the glacis.”</p>
<p>“Father! father!” exclaimed a piercing cry from out the mist:
“it is I! Alice! thy own Elsie! Spare, oh! save your daughters!”</p>
<p>“Hold!” shouted the former speaker, in the awful tones of parental
agony, the sound reaching even to the woods, and rolling back in solemn echo.
“’Tis she! God has restored me to my children! Throw open the
sally-port; to the field, Sixtieths, to the field; pull not a trigger, lest ye
kill my lambs! Drive off these dogs of France with your steel.”</p>
<p>Duncan heard the grating of the rusty hinges, and darting to the spot, directed
by the sound, he met a long line of dark red warriors, passing swiftly toward
the glacis. He knew them for his own battalion of the Royal Americans, and
flying to their head, soon swept every trace of his pursuers from before the
works.</p>
<p>For an instant, Cora and Alice had stood trembling and bewildered by this
unexpected desertion; but before either had leisure for speech, or even
thought, an officer of gigantic frame, whose locks were bleached with years and
service, but whose air of military grandeur had been rather softened than
destroyed by time, rushed out of the body of mist, and folded them to his
bosom, while large scalding tears rolled down his pale and wrinkled cheeks, and
he exclaimed, in the peculiar accent of Scotland:</p>
<p>“For this I thank thee, Lord! Let danger come as it will, thy servant is
now prepared!”</p>
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