This unexpected change from the precautions that Hist had
previously manifested a desire to use, in order to prevent being
seen, to an open exposure of the person of her friend, arose from
the perfect conviction that no Indian would harm a being whom the
Great Spirit had disarmed, by depriving it of its strongest
defence, reason. In this respect, nearly all unsophisticated
nations resemble each other, appearing to offer spontaneously, by a
feeling creditable to human nature, that protection by their own
forbearance, which has been withheld by the inscrutable wisdom of
Providence. Wah-ta-Wah, indeed, knew that in many tribes the
mentally imbecile and the mad were held in a species of religious
reverence, receiving from these untutored inhabitants of the forest
respect and honors, instead of the contumely and neglect that it is
their fortune to meet with among the more pretending and
sophisticated.
Hetty accompanied her new friend without
apprehension or reluctance. It was her wish to reach the camp, and,
sustained by her motives, she felt no more concern for the
consequences than did her companion herself, now the latter was
apprised of the character of the protection that the pale-face
maiden carried with her. Still, as they proceeded slowly along a
shore that was tangled with overhanging bushes, Hetty continued the
discourse, assuming the office of interrogating which the other had
instantly dropped, as soon as she ascertained the character of the
mind to which her questions had been addressed.
"But you are not half-witted," said Hetty, "and
there's no reason why the Serpent should not marry you."
"Hist prisoner, and Mingo got big ear. No speak of
Chingachgook when they by. Promise Hist that, good Hetty."
"I know ñ I know ñ " returned Hetty,
half-whispering, in her eagerness to let the other see she
understood the necessity of caution. "I know ñ Deerslayer and the
Serpent mean to get you away from the Iroquois, and you wish me not
to tell the secret."
"How you know?" said Hist, hastily, vexed at the
moment that the other was not even more feeble minded than was
actually the case. "How you know? Better not talk of any but fader
and Hurry ñ Mingo understand dat; he no understand t'udder. Promise
you no talk about what you no understand."
"But I do understand this, Hist, and so I must talk
about it. Deerslayer as good as told father all about it, in my
presence, and as nobody told me not to listen, I overheard it all,
as I did Hurry and father's discourse about the scalps."
"Very bad for pale-faces to talk about scalps, and
very bad for young woman to hear! Now you love Hist, I know, Hetty,
and so, among Injins, when love hardest never talk most."
"That's not the way among white people, who talk
most about them they love best. I suppose it's because I'm only
half-witted that I don't see the reason why it should be so
different among red people."
"That what Deerslayer call gift. One gift to talk;
t'udder gift to hold tongue. Hold tongue your gift, among Mingos.
If Sarpent want to see Hist, so Hetty want to see Hurry. Good girl
never tell secret of friend."
Hetty understood this appeal, and she promised the
Delaware girl not to make any allusion to the presence of
Chingachgook, or to the motive of his visit to the lake.
"Maybe he get off Hurry and fader, as well as Hist,
if let him have his way," whispered Wah-ta-Wah to her companion, in
a confiding flattering way, just as they got near enough to the
encampment to hear the voices of several of their own sex, who were
apparently occupied in the usual toils of women of their class.
"Tink of dat, Hetty, and put two, twenty finger on mouth. No get
friend free without Sarpent do it."
A better expedient could not have been adopted, to
secure the silence and discretion of Hetty, than that which was now
presented to her mind. As the liberation of her father and the
young frontier man was the great object of her adventure, she felt
the connection between it and the services of the Delaware, and
with an innocent laugh, she nodded her head, and in the same
suppressed manner, promised a due attention to the wishes of her
friend. Thus assured, Hist tarried no longer, but immediately and
openly led the way into the encampment of her captors.


Chapter XI.
"The great King
of Kings
Hath in the table of his law commanded,
That thou shalt do no murder.
Take heed; for he holds vengeance in his hand,
To hurl upon their heads that break his law."
Richard III, I.iv.i95-97 199-200.
That the party to which Hist compulsorily belonged was not one that
was regularly on the war path, was evident by the presence of
females. It was a small fragment of a tribe that had been hunting
and fishing within the English limits, where it was found by the
commencement of hostilities, and, after passing the winter and
spring by living on what was strictly the property of its enemies,
it chose to strike a hostile blow before it finally retired. There
was also deep Indian sagacity in the manoeuvre which had led them
so far into the territory of their foes. When the runner arrived
who announced the breaking out of hostilities between the English
and French ñ a struggle that was certain to carry with it all the
tribes that dwelt within the influence of the respective
belligerents ñ this particular party of the Iroquois were posted on
the shores of the Oneida, a lake that lies some fifty miles nearer
to their own frontier than that which is the scene of our tale.
To have fled in a direct line for the Canadas would
have exposed them to the dangers of a direct pursuit, and the
chiefs had determined to adopt the expedient of penetrating deeper
into a region that had now become dangerous, in the hope of being
able to retire in the rear of their pursuers, instead of having
them on their trail. The presence of the women had induced the
attempt at this ruse, the strength of these feebler members of the
party being unequal to the effort of escaping from the pursuit of
warriors. When the reader remembers the vast extent of the American
wilderness, at that early day, he will perceive that it was
possible for even a tribe to remain months undiscovered in
particular portions of it; nor was the danger of encountering a
foe, the usual precautions being observed, as great in the woods,
as it is on the high seas, in a time of active warfare.
The encampment being temporary, it offered to the
eye no more than the rude protection of a bivouac, relieved in some
slight degree by the ingenious expedients which suggested
themselves to the readiness of those who passed their lives amid
similar scenes. One fire, that had been kindled against the roots
of a living oak, sufficed for the whole party; the weather being
too mild to require it for any purpose but cooking. Scattered
around this centre of attraction, were some fifteen or twenty low
huts, or perhaps kennels would be a better word, into which their
different owners crept at night, and which were also intended to
meet the exigencies of a storm.
These little huts were made of the branches of
trees, put together with some ingenuity, and they were uniformly
topped with bark that had been stripped from fallen trees; of which
every virgin forest possesses hundreds, in all stages of decay. Of
furniture they had next to none. Cooking utensils of the simplest
sort were lying near the fire, a few articles of clothing were to
be seen in or around the huts, rifles, horns, and pouches leaned
against the trees, or were suspended from the lower branches, and
the carcasses of two or three deer were stretched to view on the
same natural shambles.
As the encampment was in the midst of a dense wood,
the eye could not take in its tout ensemble at a glance, but hut
after hut started out of the gloomy picture, as one gazed about him
in quest of objects. There was no centre, unless the fire might be
so considered, no open area where the possessors of this rude
village might congregate, but all was dark, covert and cunning,
like its owners. A few children strayed from hut to hut, giving the
spot a little of the air of domestic life, and the suppressed laugh
and low voices of the women occasionally broke in upon the deep
stillness of the sombre forest. As for the men, they either ate,
slept, or examined their arms.
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