“We shall leave a broad path to the river.”

“The broader the better; when there, it will surpass Mingo cunning even to say which way the canoe has gone; upstream or down. Water is the only thing in natur’ that will thoroughly wash out a trail, and even water will not always do it, when the scent is strong. Do you not see, Eau-douce, that if any Mingos have seen our path below the falls, they will strike off toward this smoke, and that they will natirally conclude that they who began by going upstream will end by going upstream. If they know anything, they now know a party is out from the fort, and it will exceed even Mingo wit to fancy that we have come up here just for the pleasure of going back again, and that, too, the same day, and at the risk of our scalps.”

“Certainly,” added Jasper, who was talking apart with the Pathfinder, as they moved toward the windrow, “they cannot know anything about the sergeant’s daughter, for the greatest secrecy has been observed on her account.”

“And they will l’arn nothing here,” returned Pathfinder, causing his companion to see that he trod with the utmost care on the impressions left on the leaves by the little foot of Mabel, “unless this old salt-water fish has been taking his niece about in the windrow, like a fa’n playing by the side of the old doe.”

“Buck, you mean, Pathfinder.”

“Isn’t he a queerity? Now, I can consort with such a sailor as yourself, Eau-douce, and find nothing very contrary in our gifts, though yours belong to the lakes and mine to the woods. Harkee, Jasper,” continued the scout, laughing in his noiseless manner; “suppose we try the temper of his blade, and run him over the falls?”

“And what would be done with the pretty niece in the meanwhile?”

“Nay—nay—no harm shall come to her; she must walk around the portage, at any rate; but you and I can try this Atlantic oceaner, and then all parties will become better acquainted. We shall find out whether his flint will strike fire, and he may come to know something of frontier tricks?”

Young Jasper smiled, for he was not averse to fun and had been a little touched by Cap’s superciliousness; but Mabel’s fair face, light agile form, and winning smiles stood like a shield between her uncle and the intended experiment.

“Perhaps the sergeant’s daughter will be frightened,” he said.

“Not she, if she has any of the sergeant’s spirit in her. She doesn’t look like a skeary thing, at all. Leave it to me, Eau-douce, and I will manage the affair alone.”

“Not you, Pathfinder; you would only drown both. If the canoe goes over, I must go in it.”

“Well, have it so, then; shall we smoke the pipe of agreement on the bargain?”

Jasper laughed, nodded his head, by way of consent, and the subject was dropped, for the party had reached the canoe so often mentioned, and fewer words had determined much greater things between the parties.

CHAPTER III

Before these fields were shorn and tilled,
Full to the brim our rivers flowed;
The melody of waters filled
The fresh and boundless wood;
And torrents dashed, and rivulets played,
And fountains spouted in the shade.

BRYANT

 

IT IS GENERALLY KNOWN that the waters which flow into the southern side of Ontario are, in general, narrow, sluggish, and deep. There are some exceptions to this rule, for many of the rivers have rapids, or, as they are termed in the language of the region, rifts, and some have falls. Among the latter was the particular stream on which our adventurers were now journeying. The Oswego is formed by the junction of the Oneida and the Onondaga, both of which flow from lakes; and it pursues its way through a gentle undulating country a few miles, until it reaches the margin of a sort of natural terrace, down which it tumbles some ten or fifteen feet to another level across which it glides, or glances, or pursues its course with the silent, stealthy progress of deep water, until it throws its tribute into the broad receptacle of Ontario. The canoe in which Cap and his party had traveled from Fort Stanwix, the last military station on the Mohawk, lay by the side of this river, and into it the whole party now entered, with the exception of Pathfinder, who remained on the land, in order to shove the light vessel off.

“Let her starn drift downstream, Jasper,” said the man of the woods to the young mariner of the lake, who had dispossessed Arrowhead of his paddle and taken his own station as steersman; “let it go down with the current. Should any of them infarnals, the Mingos, strike our trail, or follow it to this point, they will not fail to look for the signs in the mud, and if they discover that we have left the shore with the nose of the canoe upstream, it is a natural belief to think we went thataway.”

This direction was followed, and, giving a vigorous shove, the Pathfinder, who was in the flower of his strength and activity, made a leap, landing lightly and without disturbing its equilibrium, in the bow of the canoe. As soon as it had reached the center of the river, or the strength of the current, the boat was turned, and it began to glide noiselessly down the stream.

The vessel in which Cap and his niece had embarked for their long and adventurous journey was one of the canoes of bark which the Indians are in the habit of constructing, and which, by their exceeding lightness and the ease with which they are propelled, are admirably adapted to a navigation in which shoals, flood wood, and other similar obstructions so often occur. The two men who composed its original crew had several times carried it, when emptied of its luggage, many hundred yards; and it would not have exceeded the strength of a single man to lift its weight. Still, it was long, and for a canoe, wide, a want of steadiness being its principal defect in the eyes of the uninitiated. A few hours’ practice, however, in a great measure remedied this evil, and both Mabel and her uncle had learned so far to humor its movements that they now maintained their places with perfect composure; nor did the additional weight of the three guides tax its powers in any particular degree, the breadth of the rounded bottom allowing the necessary quantity of water to be displaced without bringing the gunwale very sensibly nearer to the surface of the stream. Its workmanship was neat; the timbers were small and secured by thongs; and the whole fabric, though it was so slight and precarious to the eye, was probably capable of conveying double the number of persons that it now contained.

Cap was seated on a low thwart in the center of the canoe; the Big Serpent knelt near him. Arrowhead and his wife occupied places forward of both, the former having relinquished his post aft. Mabel was half-reclining on some of her own effects, behind her uncle, while the Pathfinder and Eau-douce stood erect, the one in the bow and the other in the stern, each using a paddle with a long, steady, noiseless sweep. The conversation was carried on in low tones, all the party beginning to feel the necessity of prudence, as they drew nearer to the outskirts of the fort and had no longer the cover of the woods.

The Oswego, just at that place, was a deep, dark stream of no great width, its still, gloomy-looking current winding its way among overhanging trees that, in particular spots, almost shut out the light of the heavens. Here and there some half-fallen giant of the forest lay nearly across its surface, rendering care necessary to avoid the limbs; and most of the distance, the lower branches and leaves of the trees of smaller growth were laved by its waters. The picture which has been so beautifully described by our own admirable poet, and which we have placed at the head of this chapter as an epigraph, was here realized; the earth fattened by the decayed vegetation of centuries and black with loam, the stream that filled the banks nearly to overflowing, and the “fresh and boundless wood,” being all as visible to the eye, as the pen of Bryant has elsewhere vividly presented them to the imagination. In short, the entire scene was one of a rich and benevolent nature, before it has been subjected to the uses and desires of man; luxuriant, wild, full of promise, and not without the charm of the picturesque, even in its rudest state. It will be remembered that this was in the year 175-, or long before even speculation had brought any portion of western New York within the bounds of civilization, or the projects of the adventurous. At that distant day, there were two great channels of military communication between the inhabited portion of the colony of New York and the frontiers that lay adjacent to the Canadas—that by Lakes Champlain and George, and that by means of the Mohawk, Wood Creek, the Oneida, and the rivers we have been describing. Along both these lines of communication, military posts had been established, though there existed a blank space of a hundred miles between the last fort at the head of the Mohawk and the outlet of the Oswego, which embraced most of the distance that Cap and Mabel had journeyed under the protection of Arrowhead.

“I sometimes wish for peace again,” said the Pathfinder, “when one can range the forest without s’arching for any other enemy than the beasts and fishes. Ah’s me! Many is the day that the Sarpent, there, and I have passed happily among the streams, living on venison, salmon, and trout, without thought of a Mingo or a scalp! I sometimes wish that them blessed days might come back, for it is not my raal gift to slay my own kind. I’m sartain the sergeant’s daughter don’t think me a wretch that takes pleasure in preying on human natur’?”

At this remark, a sort of half-interrogatory, Pathfinder looked behind him, and, though the most partial friend could scarcely term his sunburned and hard features handsome, even Mabel thought his smile attractive, by its simple ingenuousness and the uprightness that beamed in every lineament of his honest countenance.

“I do not think my father would have sent one like those you mention to see his daughter through the wilderness,” the young woman answered, returning the smile as frankly as it was given, and much more sweetly.

“That he wouldn’t, that he wouldn’t; the sergeant is a man of feelin’, and many is the march and the fight that we have stood shoulder to shoulder in, as he would call it—though I always keep my limbs free, when near a Frencher or a Mingo.”

“You are then the young friend of whom my father has spoken so often in his letters?”

“His young friend—the sergeant has the advantage of me by thirty years; yes, he is thirty years my senior, and as many my better.”

“Not in the eyes of the daughter, perhaps, friend Pathfinder,” put in Cap, whose spirits began to revive when he found the water once more flowing around him.