The savages are near us,
moreover, and the difficulty is, to get out of the river without
being shot down like deer standing at a lick!"
"Are you sartain, Master Hutter, that the red-skins
you dread are ra'al Canadas?" asked Deerslayer, in a modest but
earnest manner. "Have you seen any, and can you describe their
paint?"
"I have fallen in with the signs of their being in
the neighborhood, but have seen none of 'em. I was down stream a
mile or so, looking to my traps, when I struck a fresh trail,
crossing the corner of a swamp, and moving northward. The man had
not passed an hour; and I know'd it for an Indian footstep, by the
size of the foot, and the intoe, even before I found a worn
moccasin, which its owner had dropped as useless. For that matter,
I found the spot where he halted to make a new one, which was only
a few yards from the place where he had dropped the old one."
"That doesn't look much like a red-skin on the war
path!" returned the other, shaking his head. "An exper'enced
warrior, at least, would have burned, or buried, or sunk in the
river such signs of his passage; and your trail is, quite likely, a
peaceable trail. But the moccasin may greatly relieve my mind, if
you bethought you of bringing it off. I've come here to meet a
young chief myself; and his course would be much in the direction
you've mentioned. The trail may have been his'n."
"Hurry Harry, you're well acquainted with this young
man, I hope, who has meetings with savages in a part of the country
where he has never been before?" demanded Hutter, in a tone and in
a manner that sufficiently indicated the motive of the question;
these rude beings seldom hesitating, on the score of delicacy, to
betray their feelings. "Treachery is an Indian virtue; and the
whites, that live much in their tribes, soon catch their ways and
practices."
"True ñ true as the Gospel, old Tom; but not
personable to Deerslayer, who's a young man of truth, if he has no
other ricommend. I'll answer for his honesty, whatever I may do for
his valor in battle."
"I should like to know his errand in this strange
quarter of the country."
"That is soon told, Master Hutter," said the young
man, with the composure of one who kept a clean conscience. "I
think, moreover, you've a right to ask it. The father of two such
darters, who occupies a lake, after your fashion, has just the same
right to inquire into a stranger's business in his neighborhood, as
the colony would have to demand the reason why the Frenchers put
more rijiments than common along the lines. No, no, I'll not deny
your right to know why a stranger comes into your habitation or
country, in times as serious as these."
"If such is your way of thinking, friend, let me
hear your story without more words."
"'T is soon told, as I said afore; and shall be
honestly told. I'm a young man, and, as yet, have never been on a
war-path; but no sooner did the news come among the Delawares, that
wampum and a hatchet were about to be sent in to the tribe, than
they wished me to go out among the people of my own color, and get
the exact state of things for 'em. This I did, and, after
delivering my talk to the chiefs, on my return, I met an officer of
the crown on the Schoharie, who had messages to send to some of the
fri'ndly tribes that live farther west. This was thought a good
occasion for Chingachgook, a young chief who has never struck a
foe, and myself; to go on our first war path in company, and an
app'intment was made for us, by an old Delaware, to meet at the
rock near the foot of this lake. I'll not deny that Chingachgook
has another object in view, but it has no consarn with any here,
and is his secret and not mine; therefore I'll say no more about
it."
"'Tis something about a young woman," interrupted
Judith hastily, then laughing at her own impetuosity, and even
having the grace to colour a little, at the manner in which she had
betrayed her readiness to impute such a motive. "If 'tis neither
war, nor a hunt, it must be love."
"Ay, it comes easy for the young and handsome, who
hear so much of them feelin's, to suppose that they lie at the
bottom of most proceedin's; but, on that head, I say nothin'.
Chingachgook is to meet me at the rock, an hour afore sunset
tomorrow evening, after which we shall go our way together,
molesting none but the king's inimies, who are lawfully our own.
Knowing Hurry of old, who once trapped in our hunting grounds, and
falling in with him on the Schoharie, just as he was on the p'int
of starting for his summer ha'nts, we agreed to journey in company;
not so much from fear of the Mingos, as from good fellowship, and,
as he says, to shorten a long road."
"And you think the trail I saw may have been that of
your friend, ahead of his time?" said Hutter.
"That's my idee, which may be wrong, but which may
be right. If I saw the moccasin, howsever, I could tell, in a
minute, whether it is made in the Delaware fashion, or not."
"Here it is, then," said the quick-witted Judith,
who had already gone to the canoe in quest of it. "Tell us what it
says; friend or enemy. You look honest, and I believe all you say,
whatever father may think."
"That's the way with you, Jude; forever finding out
friends, where I distrust foes," grumbled Tom: "but, speak out,
young man, and tell us what you think of the moccasin."
"That's not Delaware made," returned Deerslayer,
examining the worn and rejected covering for the foot with a
cautious eye. "I'm too young on a war-path to be positive, but I
should say that moccasin has a northern look, and comes from beyond
the Great Lakes."
"If such is the case, we ought not to lie here a
minute longer than is necessary," said Hutter, glancing through the
leaves of his cover, as if he already distrusted the presence of an
enemy on the opposite shore of the narrow and sinuous stream. "It
wants but an hour or so of night, and to move in the dark will be
impossible, without making a noise that would betray us. Did you
hear the echo of a piece in the mountains, half-an-hour since?"
"Yes, old man, and heard the piece itself," answered
Hurry, who now felt the indiscretion of which he had been guilty,
"for the last was fired from my own shoulder."
"I feared it came from the French Indians; still it
may put them on the look-out, and be a means of discovering us. You
did wrong to fire in war-time, unless there was good occasion.
"So I begin to think myself, Uncle Tom; and yet, if
a man can't trust himself to let off his rifle in a wilderness that
is a thousand miles square, lest some inimy should hear it, where's
the use in carrying one?"
Hutter now held a long consultation with his two
guests, in which the parties came to a true understanding of their
situation. He explained the difficulty that would exist in
attempting to get the ark out of so swift and narrow a stream, in
the dark, without making a noise that could not fail to attract
Indian ears. Any strollers in their vicinity would keep near the
river or the lake; but the former had swampy shores in many places,
and was both so crooked and so fringed with bushes, that it was
quite possible to move by daylight without incurring much danger of
being seen. More was to be apprehended, perhaps, from the ear than
from the eye, especially as long as they were in the short,
straitened, and canopied reaches of the stream.
"I never drop down into this cover, which is handy
to my traps, and safer than the lake from curious eyes, without
providing the means of getting out ag'in," continued this singular
being; "and that is easier done by a pull than a push. My anchor is
now lying above the suction, in the open lake; and here is a line,
you see, to haul us up to it.
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