He may pretend to some
right of that natur', but he is so far away that his claim will
never trouble old Tom Hutter, who has got possession, and is like
to keep it as long as his life lasts. Tom is no squatter, not being
on land; I call him a floater."
"I invy that man! I know it's wrong, and I strive
ag'in the feelin', but I invy that man! Don't think, Hurry, that
I'm consorting any plan to put myself in his moccasins, for such a
thought doesn't harbor in my mind; but I can't help a little invy!
'Tis a nat'ral feelin', and the best of us are but nat'ral, a'ter
all, and give way to such feelin's at times."
"You've only to marry Hetty to inherit half the
estate," cried Hurry, laughing; "the gal is comely; nay, if it
wasn't for her sister's beauty she would be even handsome; and then
her wits are so small that you may easily convart her into one of
your own way of thinking, in all things. Do you take Hetty off the
old fellow's hands, and I'll engage he'll give you an interest in
every deer you can knock over within five miles of his lake."
"Does game abound!" suddenly demanded the other, who
paid but little attention to March's raillery.
"It has the country to itself. Scarce a trigger is
pulled on it; and as for the trappers, this is not a region they
greatly frequent. I ought not to be so much here myself, but Jude
pulls one way, while the beaver pulls another. More than a hundred
Spanish dollars has that creatur' cost me the last two seasons, and
yet I could not forego the wish to look upon her face once
more."
"Do the redmen often visit this lake, Hurry?"
continued Deerslayer, pursuing his own train of thought.
"Why, they come and go; sometimes in parties, and
sometimes singly. The country seems to belong to no native tribe in
particular; and so it has fallen into the hands of the Hutter
tribe. The old man tells me that some sharp ones have been
wheedling the Mohawks for an Indian deed, in order to get a title
out of the colony; but nothing has come of it, seeing that no one
heavy enough for such a trade has yet meddled with the matter. The
hunters have a good life-lease still of this wilderness."
"So much the better, so much the better, Hurry. If I
was King of England, the man that felled one of these trees without
good occasion for the timber, should be banished to a desarted and
forlorn region, in which no fourfooted animal ever trod. Right glad
am I that Chingachgook app'inted our meeting on this lake, for
hitherto eye of mine never looked on such a glorious
spectacle."
"That's because you've kept so much among the
Delawares, in whose country there are no lakes. Now, farther north
and farther west these bits of water abound; and you're young, and
may yet live to see 'em. But though there be other lakes,
Deerslayer, there's no other Judith Hutter!"
At this remark his companion smiled, and then he
dropped his paddle into the water, as if in consideration of a
lover's haste. Both now pulled vigorously until they got within a
hundred yards of the "castle," as Hurry familiarly called the house
of Hutter, when they again ceased paddling; the admirer of Judith
restraining his impatience the more readily, as he perceived that
the building was untenanted, at the moment. This new pause was to
enable Deerslayer to survey the singular edifice, which was of a
construction so novel as to merit a particular description.
Muskrat Castle, as the house had been facetiously
named by some waggish officer, stood in the open lake, at a
distance of fully a quarter of a mile from the nearest shore. On
every other side the water extended much farther, the precise
position being distant about two miles from the northern end of the
sheet, and near, if not quite, a mile from its eastern shore. As
there was not the smallest appearance of any island, but the house
stood on piles, with the water flowing beneath it, and Deerslayer
had already discovered that the lake was of a great depth, he was
fain to ask an explanation of this singular circumstance. Hurry
solved the difficulty by telling him that on this spot alone, a
long, narrow shoal, which extended for a few hundred yards in a
north and south direction, rose within six or eight feet of the
surface of the lake, and that Hutter had driven piles into it, and
placed his habitation on them, for the purpose of security.
"The old fellow was burnt out three times, atween
the Indians and the hunters; and in one affray with the red-skins
he lost his only son, since which time he has taken to the water
for safety. No one can attack him here, without coming in a boat,
and the plunder and scalps would scarce be worth the trouble of
digging out canoes. Then it's by no means sartain which would whip
in such a scrimmage, for old Tom is well supplied with arms and
ammunition, and the castle, as you may see, is a tight breastwork
ag'in light shot."
Deerslayer had some theoretical knowledge of
frontier warfare, though he had never yet been called on to raise
his hand in anger against a fellow-creature. He saw that Hurry did
not overrate the strength of this position in a military point of
view, since it would not be easy to attack it without exposing the
assailants to the fire of the besieged. A good deal of art had also
been manifested in the disposition of the timber of which the
building was constructed and which afforded a protection much
greater than was usual to the ordinary log-cabins of the frontier.
The sides and ends were composed of the trunks of large pines, cut
about nine feet long, and placed upright, instead of being laid
horizontally, as was the practice of the country. These logs were
squared on three sides, and had large tenons on each end. Massive
sills were secured on the heads of the piles, with suitable grooves
dug out of their upper surfaces, which had been squared for the
purpose, and the lower tenons of the upright pieces were placed in
these grooves, giving them secure fastening below. Plates had been
laid on the upper ends of the upright logs, and were kept in their
places by a similar contrivance; the several corners of the
structure being well fastened by scarfing and pinning the sills and
plates. The doors were made of smaller logs, similarly squared, and
the roof was composed of light poles, firmly united, and well
covered with bark.
The effect of this ingenious arrangement was to give
its owner a house that could be approached only by water, the sides
of which were composed of logs closely wedged together, which were
two feet thick in their thinnest parts, and which could be
separated only by a deliberate and laborious use of human hands, or
by the slow operation of time. The outer surface of the building
was rude and uneven, the logs being of unequal sizes; but the
squared surfaces within gave both the sides and door as uniform an
appearance as was desired, either for use or show. The chimney was
not the least singular portion of the castle, as Hurry made his
companion observe, while he explained the process by which it had
been made. The material was a stiff clay, properly worked, which
had been put together in a mould of sticks, and suffered to harden,
a foot or two at a time, commencing at the bottom. When the entire
chimney had thus been raised, and had been properly bound in with
outward props, a brisk fire was kindled, and kept going until it
was burned to something like a brick-red.
1 comment