But the truth flashed on the mind of the quick-witted
girl, and she instantly told her companion that the boat must be
that in which her sister had fled.
"Keep the scow straight, Delaware; steer as straight
as your bullet flies when sent ag'in a buck; there ñ I have
it."
The canoe was seized, and immediately secured again
to the side of the Ark. At the next moment the sail was lowered,
and the motion of the Ark arrested by means of the oars.
"Hetty!" called out Judith, concern, even affection
betraying itself in her tones. "Are you within hearing, sister ñ
for God's sake answer, and let me hear the sound of your voice,
again! Hetty! ñ dear Hetty."
"I'm here, Judith ñ here on the shore, where it will
be useless to follow me, as I will hide in the woods."
"Oh! Hetty what is't you do! Remember 'tis drawing
near midnight, and that the woods are filled with savages and wild
beasts!"
"Neither will harm a poor half-witted girl, Judith.
God is as much with me, here, as he would be in the Ark or in the
hut. I am going to help my father, and poor Hurry Harry, who will
be tortured and slain unless some one cares for them."
"We all care for them, and intend to-morrow to send
them a flag of truce, to buy their ransom. Come back then, sister;
trust to us, who have better heads than you, and who will do all we
can for father."
"I know your head is better than mine, Judith, for
mine is very weak, to be sure; but I must go to father and poor
Hurry. Do you and Deerslayer keep the castle, sister; leave me in
the hands of God."
"God is with us all, Hetty ñ in the castle, or on
the shore ñ father as well as ourselves, and it is sinful not to
trust to his goodness. You can do nothing in the dark; will lose
your way in the forest, and perish for want of food."
"God will not let that happen to a poor child that
goes to serve her father, sister. I must try and find the
savages."
"Come back for this night only; in the morning, we
will put you ashore, and leave you to do as you may think
right."
"You say so, Judith, and you think so; but you would
not. Your heart would soften, and you'd see tomahawks and scalping
knives in the air. Besides, I've got a thing to tell the Indian
chief that will answer all our wishes, and I'm afraid I may forget
it, if I don't tell it to him at once. You'll see that he will let
father go, as soon as he hears it!"
"Poor Hetty! What can you say to a ferocious savage
that will be likely to change his bloody purpose!"
"That which will frighten him, and make him let
father go ñ " returned the simple-minded girl, positively. "You'll
see, sister; you'll see, how soon it will bring him to, like a
gentle child!"
"Will you tell me, Hetty, what you intend to say?"
asked Deerslayer. "I know the savages well, and can form some idee
how far fair words will be likely, or not, to work on their bloody
natur's. If it's not suited to the gifts of a red-skin, 'twill be
of no use; for reason goes by gifts, as well as conduct."
"Well, then," answered Hetty, dropping her voice to
a low, confidential, tone, for the stillness of the night, and the
nearness of the Ark, permitted her to do this and still to be heard
ñ "Well, then, Deerslayer, as you seem a good and honest young man
I will tell you. I mean not to say a word to any of the savages
until I get face to face with their head chief, let them plague me
with as many questions as they please I'll answer none of them,
unless it be to tell them to lead me to their wisest man ñ Then,
Deerslayer, I'll tell him that God will not forgive murder, and
thefts; and that if father and Hurry did go after the scalps of the
Iroquois, he must return good for evil, for so the Bible commands,
else he will go into everlasting punishment. When he hears this,
and feels it to be true, as feel it he must, how long will it be
before he sends father, and Hurry, and me to the shore, opposite
the castle, telling us all three to go our way in peace?"
The last question was put in a triumphant manner,
and then the simple-minded girl laughed at the impression she never
doubted that her project had made on her auditors. Deerslayer was
dumb-founded at this proof of guileless feebleness of mind, but
Judith had suddenly bethought her of a means of counteracting this
wild project, by acting on the very feelings that had given it
birth. Without adverting to the closing question, or the laugh,
therefore, she hurriedly called to her sister by name, as one
suddenly impressed with the importance of what she had to say. But
no answer was given to the call.
By the snapping of twigs, and the rustling of
leaves, Hetty had evidently quitted the shore, and was already
burying herself in the forest. To follow would have been fruitless,
since the darkness, as well as the dense cover that the woods
everywhere offered, would have rendered her capture next to
impossible, and there was also the never ceasing danger of falling
into the hands of their enemies. After a short and melancholy
discussion, therefore, the sail was again set, and the Ark pursued
its course towards its habitual moorings, Deerslayer silently
felicitating himself on the recovery of the canoe, and brooding
over his plans for the morrow. The wind rose as the party quitted
the point, and in less than an hour they reached the castle. Here
all was found as it had been left, and the reverse of the
ceremonies had to be taken in entering the building, that had been
used on quitting it. Judith occupied a solitary bed that night
bedewing the pillow with her tears, as she thought of the innocent
and hitherto neglected creature, who had been her companion from
childhood, and bitter regrets came over her mind, from more causes
than one, as the weary hours passed away, making it nearly morning
before she lost her recollection in sleep. Deerslayer and the
Delaware took their rest in the Ark, where we shall leave them
enjoying the deep sleep of the honest, the healthful and fearless,
to return to the girl we have last seen in the midst of the
forest.
When Hetty left the shore, she took her way
unhesitatingly into the woods, with a nervous apprehension of being
followed. Luckily, this course was the best she could have hit on
to effect her own purpose, since it was the only one that led her
from the point. The night was so intensely dark, beneath the
branches of the trees, that her progress was very slow, and the
direction she went altogether a matter of chance, after the first
few yards. The formation of the ground, however, did not permit her
to deviate far from the line in which she desired to proceed. On
one hand it was soon bounded by the acclivity of the hill, while
the lake, on the other, served as a guide. For two hours did this
single-hearted and simple-minded girl toil through the mazes of the
forest, sometimes finding herself on the brow of the bank that
bounded the water, and at others struggling up an ascent that
warned her to go no farther in that direction, since it necessarily
ran at right angles to the course on which she wished to proceed.
Her feet often slid from beneath her, and she got many falls,
though none to do her injury; but, by the end of the period
mentioned, she had become so weary as to want strength to go any
farther.
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