These turnings gave her time, and they
had also the effect of gradually bringing both canoe and Ark within
the deeper gloom, cast by the shadows from the hills. They also
gradually increased the distance between the fugitive and her
pursuers, until Judith called out to her companions to cease
rowing, for she had completely lost sight of the canoe.
When this mortifying announcement was made, Hetty
was actually so near as to understand every syllable her sister
uttered, though the latter had used the precaution of speaking as
low as circumstances would allow her to do, and to make herself
heard. Hetty stopped paddling at the same moment, and waited the
result with an impatience that was breathless, equally from her
late exertions, and her desire to land. A dead silence immediately
fell on the lake, during which the three in the Ark were using
their senses differently, in order to detect the position of the
canoe. Judith bent forward to listen, in the hope of catching some
sound that might betray the direction in which her sister was
stealing away, while her two companions brought their eyes as near
as possible to a level with the water, in order to detect any
object that might be floating on its surface. All was vain,
however, for neither sound nor sight rewarded their efforts. All
this time Hetty, who had not the cunning to sink into the canoe,
stood erect, a finger pressed on her lips, gazing in the direction
in which the voices had last been heard, resembling a statue of
profound and timid attention. Her ingenuity had barely sufficed to
enable her to seize the canoe and to quit the Ark, in the noiseless
manner related, and then it appeared to be momentarily exhausted.
Even the doublings of the canoe had been as much the consequence of
an uncertain hand and of nervous agitation, as of any craftiness or
calculation.
The pause continued several minutes, during which
Deerslayer and the Delaware conferred together in the language of
the latter. Then the oars dipped, again, and the Ark moved away,
rowing with as little noise as possible. It steered westward, a
little southerly, or in the direction of the encampment of the
enemy. Having reached a point at no great distance from the shore,
and where the obscurity was intense on account of the proximity of
the land, it lay there near an hour, in waiting for the expected
approach of Hetty, who, it was thought, would make the best of her
way to that spot as soon as she believed herself released from the
danger of pursuit. No success rewarded this little blockade,
however, neither appearance nor sound denoting the passage of the
canoe. Disappointed at this failure, and conscious of the
importance of getting possession of the fortress before it could be
seized by the enemy, Deerslayer now took his way towards the
castle, with the apprehension that all his foresight in securing
the canoes would be defeated by this unguarded and alarming
movement on the part of the feeble-minded Hetty.


Chapter X.
"But who in this
wild wood
May credit give to either eye, or ear?
From rocky precipice or hollow cave,
'Midst the confused sound of rustling leaves,
And creaking boughs, and cries of nightly birds,
Returning seeming answer!"
Joanna Baihie, "Rayner: A Tragedy," II.L3-4, 6-g.
Fear, as much as calculation, had induced Hetty to
cease paddling, when she found that her pursuers did not know in
which direction to proceed. She remained stationary until the Ark
had pulled in near the encampment, as has been related in the
preceding chapter, when she resumed the paddle and with cautious
strokes made the best of her way towards the western shore. In
order to avoid her pursuers, however, who, she rightly suspected,
would soon be rowing along that shore themselves, the head of the
canoe was pointed so far north as to bring her to land on a point
that thrust itself into the lake, at the distance of near a league
from the outlet. Nor was this altogether the result of a desire to
escape, for, feeble minded as she was, Hetty Hutter had a good deal
of that instinctive caution which so often keeps those whom God has
thus visited from harm. She was perfectly aware of the importance
of keeping the canoes from falling into the hands of the Iroquois,
and long familiarity with the lake had suggested one of the
simplest expedients, by which this great object could be rendered
compatible with her own purpose.
The point in question was the first projection that
offered on that side of the lake, where a canoe, if set adrift with
a southerly air would float clear of the land, and where it would
be no great violation of probabilities to suppose it might even hit
the castle; the latter lying above it, almost in a direct line with
the wind. Such then was Hetty's intention, and she landed on the
extremity of the gravelly point, beneath an overhanging oak, with
the express intention of shoving the canoe off from the shore, in
order that it might drift up towards her father's insulated abode.
She knew, too, from the logs that occasionally floated about the
lake, that did it miss the castle and its appendages the wind would
be likely to change before the canoe could reach the northern
extremity of the lake, and that Deerslayer might have an
opportunity of regaining it in the morning, when no doubt he would
be earnestly sweeping the surface of the water, and the whole of
its wooded shores, with glass. In all this, too, Hetty was less
governed by any chain of reasoning than by her habits, the latter
often supplying the place of mind, in human beings, as they perform
the same for animals of the inferior classes.
The girl was quite an hour finding her way to the
point, the distance and the obscurity equally detaining her, but
she was no sooner on the gravelly beach than she prepared to set
the canoe adrift, in the manner mentioned. While in the act of
pushing it from her, she heard low voices that seemed to come among
the trees behind her. Startled at this unexpected danger Hetty was
on the point of springing into the canoe in order to seek safety in
flight, when she thought she recognized the tones of Judith's
melodious voice. Bending forward so as to catch the sounds more
directly, they evidently came from the water, and then she
understood that the Ark was approaching from the south, and so
close in with the western shore, as necessarily to cause it to pass
the point within twenty yards of the spot where she stood. Here,
then, was all she could desire; the canoe was shoved off into the
lake, leaving its late occupant alone on the narrow strand.
When this act of self-devotion was performed, Hetty
did not retire. The foliage of the overhanging trees and bushes
would have almost concealed her person, had there been light, but
in that obscurity it was utterly impossible to discover any object
thus shaded, at the distance of a few feet. Flight, too, was
perfectly easy, as twenty steps would effectually bury her in the
forest. She remained, therefore, watching with intense anxiety the
result of her expedient, intending to call the attention of the
others to the canoe with her voice, should they appear to pass
without observing it. The Ark approached under its sail, again,
Deerslayer standing in its bow, with Judith near him, and the
Delaware at the helm. It would seem that in the bay below it had
got too close to the shore, in the lingering hope of intercepting
Hetty, for, as it came nearer, the latter distinctly heard the
directions that the young man forward gave to his companion aft, in
order to clear the point.
"Lay her head more off the shore, Delaware," said
Deerslayer for the third time, speaking in English that his fair
companion might understand his words ñ "Lay her head well off
shore. We have got embayed here, and needs keep the mast clear of
the trees. Judith, there's a canoe!"
The last words were uttered with great earnestness,
and Deerslayer's hand was on his rifle ere they were fairly out of
his mouth.
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