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                     UNDER DEWEY AT MANILA.
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                     THE CAMPAIGN OF THE JUNGLE.
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                        ON TO PEKIN.
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               AMERICAN BOYS’ LIFE OF WILLIAM McKINLEY.
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                      WITH WASHINGTON IN THE WEST.
                      MARCHING ON NIAGARA.
                      AT THE FALL OF MONTREAL.
                      ON THE TRAIL OF PONTIAC.


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                          TWO YOUNG LUMBERMEN.

                                -------

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                        AT THE FALL OF MONTREAL








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[Illustration:

  As the weapon rang out the red man leaped upward and fell in a
    heap.—_Page 53._
]


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                            Colonial Series

                      ----------------------------


                        AT THE FALL OF MONTREAL


                                   OR


                     A SOLDIER BOY’S FINAL VICTORY



                                   BY

                           EDWARD STRATEMEYER

         Author of “With Washington in the West,” “Lost on the
          Orinoco,” “American Boys’ Life of William McKinley,”
                “On to Pekin,” “Old Glory Series,” “Ship
                        and Shore Series,” etc.



                      _ILLUSTRATED BY A. B. SHUTE_


[Illustration]


                                 BOSTON
                            LEE AND SHEPARD
                                  1904


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                         Published August, 1903






                  COPYRIGHT, 1903, BY LEE AND SHEPARD

                  Entered at Stationers’ Hall, London

                                -------

                         _All rights reserved_

                                -------

                       _AT THE FALL OF MONTREAL_




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                                CONTENTS

                                -------

         CHAPTER                                            PAGE
              I. INTERESTING SPORT,                            1
             II. THE INDIANS IN THE CANOE,                     8
            III. ON A DANGEROUS MISSION,                      18
             IV. A SQUALL ON LAKE ONTARIO,                    28
              V. PERILS OF THE FOREST,                        38
             VI. AN UNEXPECTED SEPARATION,                    48
            VII. A BEAR AND HER CUBS,                         58
           VIII. IN THE HANDS OF FRIENDS,                     68
             IX. WHAT BEFELL HENRY,                           78
              X. IN THE HANDS OF THE ENEMY,                   88
             XI. ABOARD THE FIRE-BOAT,                        97
            XII. GENERAL WOLFE’S CAMP,                       107
           XIII. SCALING THE HEIGHTS OF QUEBEC,              116
            XIV. WOLFE’S VICTORY AND DEATH,                  126
             XV. NEWS FROM HOME,                             135
            XVI. A FIRE AND AN ESCAPE,                       144
           XVII. THE HOLE IN THE ICE,                        154
          XVIII. WINTER QUARTERS,                            164
            XIX. LOST IN THE SNOW,                           173
             XX. THE SITUATION AT QUEBEC,                    183
            XXI. UNDER ARREST,                               193
           XXII. IN PRISON AND OUT,                          203
          XXIII. FACE TO FACE WITH THE UNEXPECTED,           213
           XXIV. A GAME OF HIDE AND SEEK,                    223
            XXV. TAKEN AS A SPY,                             233
           XXVI. DAVE’S JOURNEY TO QUEBEC,                   242
          XXVII. THE ATTACK OF THE FRENCH,                   250
         XXVIII. IN THE RANKS ONCE MORE,                     260
           XXIX. DARK DAYS,                                  270
            XXX. THE RAPIDS OF THE ST. LAWRENCE,             279
           XXXI. THE FALL OF MONTREAL,                       288
          XXXII. FROM WAR TO PEACE—CONCLUSION,               300


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                                PREFACE


“AT THE FALL OF MONTREAL” is a compete story in itself, but forms the
third volume of a line known by the general title of “Colonial Series.”

The first volume of this series, entitled “With Washington in the West,”
related the fortunes of David Morris, the son of a pioneer who settled
at Wills’ Creek, now known as Cumberland, Va. David became well
acquainted with Washington while the latter was a surveyor, and later on
served under the young commander during the fateful Braddock expedition
against Fort Duquesne.

The defeat of General Braddock left the English frontier at the mercy of
the French and Indians, and in the second volume of the series, entitled
“Marching on Niagara,” were given the particulars of General Forbes’s
advance on Fort Duquesne, and also the particulars of the advance on
Fort Niagara under General’s Prideaux and Johnson, leading up to a
decisive victory which gave the English control of all the vast
territory lying between the great lakes and what was then the Louisiana
Territory.

The French hold on North America was now badly shaken, but not
altogether broken; and in the present volume are related the particulars
of General Wolfe’s brilliant scaling of the Heights of Quebec, the
battle on the Plains of Abraham, and the capture of the city itself.

Following the surrender of Quebec came a winter of dreary waiting for
both sides in this great conflict. Each army looked for re-enforcements,
and early in the spring the French made an attack, hoping to regain the
ground lost. But this attack was repulsed, and then the French
concentrated at Montreal, and hither were hurried the three divisions of
the English army, including a goodly number of Colonial troops. With
these forces was David Morris, doing his duty to the end, until the fall
of Montreal brought this important and far-reaching war with France to a
close.

As in his previous works, the author has sought to be as accurate as
possible in historical detail—no easy task where American, English, and
French historians differ so widely in their statements.

Once again I thank my young friends for the interest they have shown in
my books. May the present volume prove both pleasing and profitable to
them.

                                                     EDWARD STRATEMEYER.

_June 1, 1903._


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                             ILLUSTRATIONS


                                                       PAGE

            As the weapon rang out, the red man          53
              leaped upward and fell in a heap
              (_Frontispiece_)

            As the catamount left the ground, White      46
              Buffalo fired a second arrow

            A short distance away was a                 109
              broad-sterned brig

            He gave it a vigorous kick, which sent      146
              it spinning away from the dangerous
              spot

            “B’ar meat!” yelled Barringford             180

            Four troopers were in hot pursuit           222

            Dave’s musket was up in an instant          268

            “Stand where you are,” ordered the sick     297
              man


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                        AT THE FALL OF MONTREAL.


                                -------




                               CHAPTER I

                           INTERESTING SPORT


“THIS looks like a good spot for fishing.”

“I don’t know but that you are right, Dave. Those trees back of us cut
off most of the sunlight, and a hollow like that ought to be good for at
least one fair-sized trout.”

“Do you think any of the other soldiers have been down to this part of
the lake?”

“Hardly,” answered Henry Morris. “At least, there are no signs of them,”
he went on, as he examined the ground with the care of an Indian
trailer.

“If we are the first to try this vicinity we certainly ought to have
good luck,” continued Dave Morris, as he dropped several of the traps he
carried to the ground and began to prepare his fishing pole for use. “By
the way, do you think there are any Indians in this vicinity?”

“Only those who are under command of Sir William Johnson. They sent all
the French redskins about their business in short order.”

“How long do you suppose our troops will be kept around Fort Niagara?”

“I’m sure I don’t know, Dave. We may get marching orders at any time.
Now that the fort is ours all Sir William has to do is to leave a small
force in command and then sail down the lake and the St. Lawrence to
Montreal and Quebec. We’ve got the French on the run and we ought to
keep ’em on the run until they give up fighting altogether.”

“I wonder if General Wolfe has had a battle yet.”

“I shouldn’t be surprised. Reckon we’ll get word in a few days. But
come, let us keep quiet, or we won’t get even a perch, much less a
trout,” concluded Henry Morris.

David and Henry Morris were two young soldiers in the Colonial army,
stationed at present at Fort Niagara, a stronghold located on the
Niagara River, close to where that stream emptied into Lake Ontario.

The two youths were cousins, and when at home lived at Wills’ Creek,
where the town of Cumberland, Va., stands to-day. The household
consisted of Dave’s father, Mr. James Morris, who was a widower, and of
Mr. Joseph Morris, his wife Lucy, and their three children: Rodney, the
oldest, who was something of a cripple; Henry, already mentioned, and
little Nell, the family pet.

When James Morris’s wife died the man, who was a trapper and a trader,
became very disconsolate, and leaving his son Dave in his brother’s
charge, he wandered to the West and established a trading-post on the
Kinotah, a river flowing into the Ohio. This was at the time when George
Washington was a young surveyor; and in the first volume of this series,
entitled “With Washington in the West,” I related many of the
particulars of how Dave fell in with the future President of our
country, helped him in his surveying, and later on, when war broke out
between the English and the French, marched under Washington in
Braddock’s disastrous campaign against Fort Duquesne, located where the
city of Pittsburg now stands.

The defeat of General Braddock meant much to James Morris. He had spent
both time and money in establishing his trading-post on the Kinotah, and
though a rascally French trader named Jean Bevoir had done his utmost to
cheat him out of his belongings, Mr. Morris had considered his property
safe until the trading-post was taken and he was made a prisoner. Dave
was also captured by the French, but father and son escaped by the aid
of White Buffalo, a friendly Indian of the Delawares, and Sam
Barringford, an old frontiersman and a warm personal friend of all the
Morrises.

Both England and her American colonies were now thoroughly aroused to
the importance of a strong attack on the French and their Indian allies;
and in the second volume of the series, entitled “Marching on Niagara,”
were given the particulars of another campaign against Fort Duquesne,
which was captured and renamed Fort Pitt, and then of a long and hard
campaign against Fort Niagara, in which both Dave and Henry took an
active part, accompanied by the ever-faithful Sam Barringford.

The march against Fort Duquesne and Fort Niagara had come only after a
bloodthirsty uprising by the Indians, which even to-day is well
remembered by the people living in Virginia, Pennsylvania, and New York,
whose forefathers suffered from the attack. Cabins were burned, cattle
stolen, and men, women, and children killed or mutilated. In some
instances children were carried off by the Indians, and among these was
little Nell, the sunshine of the Morris household.

The shock to Mrs. Lucy Morris was severe, and for a long time she could
not be comforted. From various sources it was learned that the child had
been taken first to one place and then another by the Indians, and at
last it was ascertained that Nell was in the hands of some Indians under
the command of Jean Bevoir, who had moved to the vicinity of Niagara
Falls, where he intended to keep the little girl until the Morrises paid
dearly for her ransom.

As soon as the capture of the fort was accomplished, and while some of
the soldiers were hunting for game for food, several wounded prisoners
were brought in, and among them was Jean Bevoir, who had been shot
through the leg. The rascally French trader was now thoroughly cowed,
and when threatened by Henry confessed that little Nell was being held a
prisoner in a cave near the Falls. A march was made in that direction,
and after an exciting chase of some Indians the little girl was rescued.

At the fort the whole matter was laid before Sir William Johnson, the
Indian Superintendent, who had charge of the red men aiding the English,
but who was now, because of the sudden death of General Prideaux, in
command of all the troops. By Johnson’s order Jean Bevoir was placed in
the hospital under military guard, to stand trial when physically able
to do so.

The two young soldiers were overjoyed over the rescue of little Nell and
promised themselves that Jean Bevoir should suffer roundly for his
misdeeds. As for the little maiden, she was anxious to get back to her
home, and soon set off with old Sam Barringford, the frontiersman having
promised her folks that, if she was once found, he would not let her out
of his sight again until she was safe in her mother’s arms.

The days following the fall of Fort Niagara had been comparatively quiet
ones for the two young soldiers. It had not yet been decided what should
be done with the French prisoners, although it was certain a large part
of them would be shipped to England. The women and children who had
followed the French to the fort for protection were placed under the
guidance of some Catholic priests and allowed to depart for Montreal and
other settlements in Canada.

The time was July, 1759, and the region for miles around the Niagara
River and Lake Ontario was an almost unbroken forest, dotted here and
there by the remains of an Indian camp or a French or English
trading-post. Game had suffered but slightly from the hunting tours of
the red men, and while the soldiers from England took but little
interest in such sport, the frontiersman in the ranks seized the
opportunity to supply themselves with fresh meat and also add a pelt or
two to their scanty worldly store. Each day they would bring in one or
more deer, and occasionally a buffalo, besides the skins of foxes,
wild-cats, and other small animals, and innumerable birds, until the
fort took on the look of a trading-post in spite of itself.

Dave and Henry were not slow to join in the hunting, and between them
they one day brought in a deer which was the pride of the camp, weighing
thirty-five pounds more than the next largest. This game Dave had
wounded by a shot in the foreleg, and Henry had finished by a bullet
through the left eye, for Henry, as my old readers already know, was a
natural-born hunter and a skillful marksman as well.

Two days after bringing down the deer, and while the two had a half-day
off-time, Dave proposed that they go fishing. His cousin was more than
willing, and the pair lost no time in fitting up their poles and in
obtaining bait, and thus equipped both set off for the lake front,
tramped along until they came to a spot that looked particularly
inviting, and then, as already described, prepared to try their luck.


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                               CHAPTER II

                        THE INDIANS IN THE CANOE


IT was a warm, clear day, and out on the broad bosom of the lake the sun
shone brightly. There was a faint breeze from the west which rustled the
leaves of the trees and sent an occasional ripple over the water. From
the forest came the notes of the songbirds and the hum of countless
insects.

Dave would have been satisfied to catch a good mess of perch, but he
knew Henry’s heart was set on at least one fair-sized lake trout, so he
did not bait up at once, but stood by, watching his cousin adjust his
fishing outfit.

“There’s a fat fly fit to tempt any trout,” whispered Henry, as he
brought the bait from a small box he carried. “Caught half a dozen of
’em down at the horse stable. The glitter of those bluish wings ought to
fetch something. Here goes!”

Henry advanced to within six feet of the lake shore, at a point where a
large tree and some rough rocks overhung the water. Here was a rather
dark hole where the water was unusually quiet.

With the skill of a born fisherman, the young soldier made his cast, and
as the still buzzing fly struck the water, he whipped it along by jerks,
a few inches at a time.

Of a sudden there came a splash, the appearance and disappearance of
something that might be a fish, and then a strong pull on the line.

“Hurrah, you’ve got him!” cried Dave. “Be careful how you play him, or
he’ll break your line for you.”

“Yes, I’ve got him!” answered Henry, slowly and deliberately, playing
his line as he spoke. “And he’s no small one either. If only those roots
don’t tangle——Here he comes! Whoop!”

As the youth spoke, the fish made another dart. But Henry was ready for
him, and in a twinkling the game lay on the moss between the trees,
flopping wildly in an endeavor to get back into the lake. But both
youths knew too much to let anything like that happen, and in a minute
more Henry had his prize secure and strung on a twig with a forked end.

“What a fine haul for a start,” was Dave’s comment, as he gazed at the
trout, that weighed several pounds. “I don’t believe we’ll get another
fish as good.”

“No, and I don’t believe there is another trout in this vicinity, Dave.
A big fellow like this keeps his territory to himself.”

Nevertheless, Henry tried his luck, not once but several times. But the
flies went begging until some small fish came along and began to nibble
at them, and then Henry drew in.

“That spot just below here ought to be good for perch,” said he, after a
look around, and they moved on to the place mentioned, where both baited
with worms dug up before starting on the trip.

Dave was the first to throw in, and his cousin waited until the bait was
taken with a sudden short jerk. Dave pulled in steadily, and soon
brought to light a perch as round and fat as one would wish to see.

“That’s a good start on perch,” observed Henry, with a smile. “And to my
mind they are just as good to eat as trout, even if they are not so
gamey.”

After this both fell to fishing with all the skill at their command,
Dave remaining at the spot where he had made his first haul and Henry
seeking a point a few rods farther up the shore.

Although both of the young soldiers felt that no enemy was in the
immediate vicinity, yet they took care to keep in sight of each other
and kept a constant watch on the forest behind them. Each had brought
along his trusty flint-lock musket, and the weapons, loaded and primed,
were kept easy to hand.

“Do you think Sam Barringford has reached home with Nell yet?” asked
Dave, as Henry came toward him to get more bait.

“Hardly yet, Dave; but he ought to get there by the end of the week.”

“She’ll be glad to get back, won’t she? And how glad all of them will be
to see her!”

“Yes, indeed!” Henry’s eyes brightened at the thought. “Do you know,
it’s a wonder to me that she didn’t die of fright when she was in the
clutches of those dirty redskins and that mean, miserable Jean Bevoir,”
he went on.

“Bevoir pretends to be in an awfully bad condition, so one of the
hospital surgeons told me. I reckon he is afraid of standing trial.”

“To be sure. He’ll stay in the hospital till they kick him out.” Henry
gave a grave shake of his head. “He ought to be hung; but I suppose they
won’t go as far as that.”

“It isn’t likely.”

The youths separated, and the fishing continued steadily, until each had
a mess of ten or a dozen fish to his credit. The perch were all of good
size, so the load to carry back to the fort would be no light one.

“Let us go down the shore and see if we can’t strike another trout
hole,” said Dave. “I’d like to bring up one, even if he didn’t match
yours.”

They proceeded along the lake shore, and soon reached another shady
spot. Here they found two small trout, which were both landed by Dave,
Henry in the meantime hunting in the forest and bringing out some
sassafras and birch, which both began to munch as a relish.

“What a good trading-post one could establish up here,” observed Henry.
“The game——” He broke off short. “What do you see?”

Dave was gazing out on the lake, and now he climbed on the rock to get a
better view.

“It’s a canoe,” said Dave slowly. “And unless I am mistaken there are
two or three Indians in it.”

“Some of Sir William’s followers most likely. Are they coming this way?”

“They are not paddling at all. They seem to be sleeping.”

“Sleeping? That’s queer.” Henry climbed up beside his cousin and gave an
equally searching look. “I don’t believe they are sleeping at all, Dave.
Those Indians are either dead or else shamming death.”

“Why should they come here shamming death, Henry?”

“Perhaps they are spies. We had better be on guard and keep out of
sight.”

“But I think we ought to watch them.”

“Certainty; we can do it from behind yonder brushwood.”

It took but a minute to pick up their outfits and their catches, and
with these they slipped behind the thicket Henry had mentioned. Here
they kept themselves well hidden, each with his firearm in hand, ready
for use should any shooting be required.

The canoe came closer slowly, and presently they made out that it
contained two red men, both in warpaint and sporting the colors and
feathers of the Delawares.

“If they are Delawares they should be friendly,” whispered Dave.

“Don’t be too sure. Remember, White Buffalo said that even his tribe was
divided, the old chiefs standing up for the French and the young chiefs
swearing by Washington and Sir William.”

“One of the redskins has raised himself and he is trying to paddle,”
went on Dave, after a spell of silence. “He has got a bandage around his
left forearm, as if he was wounded. See, he is talking to his companion,
but the other fellow won’t budge. Do you know what I think? I think they
are both badly wounded.”

“Even so, they may be enemies,” returned Henry, who had learned by
bitter experience not to trust anybody until he proved himself a friend.

Gradually the canoe came up to the shore and they could see the faces of
the occupants plainly. That they were suffering was evident, for the man
at the bottom of the canoe lay in a pool of half-dried blood.

“I believe we ought to help them if we can,” whispered Dave, as the
Indian who had held the paddle dropped in a heap on the seat. “I don’t
believe they could harm us, no matter how they tried.”

After some hesitation Henry agreed, and guns in hand the pair stepped
from the shelter of the bushes and walked down to the spot where the
canoe had grounded.

“Hullo, redskins!” called out Henry. “What brings you here?”

At the sound of the young soldier’s voice the Indian on the seat stirred
feebly. Then as he caught sight of the two on the shore he uttered a
faint cry.

“English soldiers!” he murmured in his native tongue.

“I say, what brings you here?” repeated Henry.

“How?” muttered the red man in return, and tried to brace himself up.
“Blue Crow much hurt. Got fire-water?”

“No, we haven’t any fire-water,” answered Dave. “How did you get hurt?”

“French soldiers shoot Blue Crow and Yellow Nose,” answered the Indian,
with an effort. “Good English help um, yes?”

“Perhaps,” said Henry. “Where did you have the fight?”

“Udder shore of lake. Want to find the Great William. You help or Yellow
Nose die,” went on the Indian, pointing to his silent companion.

Dave and Henry drew closer and lowered their muskets. What Blue Crow
said was true—the Indian in the bottom of the canoe was wounded both in
the breast and the stomach. He was breathing in loud gasps, and it was
easy to see that his earthly career was fast approaching its end.

“I am sorry, but we can do nothing for your friend,” said Dave softly.

“Nothing?” repeated the Indian on the seat. “Nothing,—and Yellow Nose
tried to do much for his English brothers.” He drew his mouth down
bitterly. “His reward must come from the Great Spirit alone.”

“If you want to find Sir William Johnson we can take you to him,” said
Henry. “The fort is only a short distance up the lake. We can paddle the
canoe.”

“Let us bind up your wounds first,” said Dave, and this was done, and
they also tried to do something for the Indian at the bottom of the
canoe. But in the midst of their labors Yellow Nose breathed his last.

Having covered the dead Indian with a coat, and done all they could for
Blue Crow, Dave and Henry took up the two paddles the canoe contained
and lost no time in moving the craft up the lake in the direction of the
Niagara River. They soon reached one of the usual boat landings, and
here fell in with a score or more of soldiers. By this time Blue Crow
had fainted away, and it took all the skill of one of the fort surgeons
to revive him.

“He wants to see Sir William Johnson,” said Dave. “I believe he carries
some sort of message.”

“Then we’ll take him up to the fort on a litter,” said the surgeon. “I
do not believe he can recover. He has lost too much blood.”

By the time the fort was reached Blue Crow was in danger of another
relapse. Sir William Johnson was speedily summoned. As he came in he
recognized the Indian as one he knew fairly well.

“I am sorry for you,” he said, taking the Indian’s hand.

“Blue Crow is glad he has reached the Great William,” replied the red
man. “He was afraid he would die before he met his English friend face
to face. He comes many miles, from beyond the Thousand Islands of the
St. Lawrence.”

“With a message?”

“Yes. He was sent by General Wolfe.”

“And what has General Wolfe to say?” demanded Sir William Johnson
eagerly.

“He has fought the French, and—and has lo—lost. He—says—help—the French
have—slain—I—’tis growing—dark—dark——”

The Indian gave a gasp, and tried to go on. Sir William Johnson raised
him up and called for the surgeon. But it was too late—the red messenger
was dead.


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                              CHAPTER III

                         ON A DANGEROUS MISSION


TO understand fully the importance of the news brought to Sir William
Johnson by Blue Crow we shall have to go back a little and see what the
English and Colonial soldiers were trying to do in this campaign of 1759
against the French.

Encouraged by the success at Fort Pitt and at other points, the king and
the military leaders of the English had decided on a campaign which
should strike at the French in three different places. General Prideaux
and Sir William Johnson were to advance on Oswego and Fort Niagara,
General Amherst was to push his way northward through the Lake Champlain
territory, and General Wolfe was to sail from England with an army of
eight thousand troops and move up the St. Lawrence River upon Quebec. As
soon as the success of General Prideaux and of General Amherst was
assured, these two branches of the English forces were to join Wolfe in
his attack on the French stronghold.

As we have already seen, the attack on Fort Niagara was a brilliant
success. But the advance of Amherst proved difficult. The French fled
slowly before him, doing all they could to hinder his progress, and a
succession of storms on the lake caused him a heavy loss of ships and
stores. Some of his troops, the New Hampshire Rangers under Major
Rogers, went as far as the village of St. Francis, which they destroyed,
thus saving that part of New England from further trouble on the
frontier, but with the coming of winter Amherst was compelled to go into
winter quarters at Crown Point.

In the meantime, General Wolfe, on board the English fleet, reached the
Canadian shore in June. News of his coming had already spread among the
French, and it was felt that his attack would be directed against
Quebec.

“We must save our beloved city, no matter what the cost!” was the cry
throughout Canada; and to Quebec flocked both the regular French troops
and also the French colonists, to the number of many thousands. All of
these soldiers were placed under the command of General Montcalm, a wise
and good soldier and one known for his thorough bravery.

As most of my young readers know, Quebec is located on a high bluff,
overlooking the St. Lawrence. This bluff, or series of bluffs, extends
along the river front for miles, making the task of reaching the city
from the water a difficult one. But Montcalm was not to be caught
napping, and he lost no time in fortifying the bluffs all the way from
Quebec proper down the river to the Falls of Montmorenci, a distance of
about five miles.

It was no easy task for the British fleet to sail up the St. Lawrence,
which was difficult of navigation because of the many hidden rocks and
shoals, but at length they reached the Island of Orleans, just below the
city, and after a short brush with the inhabitants, who soon fled, the
army took possession.

Early on the following morning General Wolfe went to the edge of the
island and took a survey of the situation.

“It will be no easy matter to capture Quebec,” said one of his
subordinates. “’Tis a regular Gibraltar.”

“It must be done,” answered Wolfe quietly.

He well understood the difficulty of the task before him. To scale those
frowning walls would be hard, especially in the face of the French
batteries, and back of the city were the still higher hills of Cape
Diamond, also well fortified. All along the rocky shore could be seen
the frowning cannon of Montcalm.

“General Wolfe must wait for help from Amherst and Prideaux,” was the
comment of more than one old soldier, but Wolfe was resolved not to wait
too long, fearing Montcalm would also be re-enforced, and that his own
supplies would run short.

To destroy the English ships, Montcalm sent out a number of fire-boats,
filled to the gunwales and rails with pitch, tar, and explosives. These
made a brilliant illumination, but failed to do much damage.

Advancing from the Island of Orleans, General Wolfe captured Point Levi,
where the town of Levis now stands. This was directly opposite Quebec,
and from this point he was able to bombard the city, only about a mile
away. This new movement of the English caused great alarm in Quebec, and
plans for an immediate attack on Wolfe were begun by the armed
townspeople, some Indians, and a number of young men from the Seminary.

The attack was to be made on the 12th of July, but as the motley
collection of French and Indians drew close to the English camp in the
darkness there was a sudden alarm, some of the crowd fired on their own
friends, and then followed a panic, and all rushed back to the canoes
which had brought them over, and made haste to paddle back to Quebec.

For this attack Wolfe made the French pay dearly. His cannon were
trained on the water front before Quebec and on parts of the city
itself, and inside of twenty-four hours a Cathedral and eighteen houses
were burnt or wrecked by shot and shell. Mad with terror, the
inhabitants fled to the back country, and sent word to Montcalm
imploring the general to save them.

But it was not Wolfe’s intention to waste his ammunition by merely
battering down the buildings of Quebec. He wished to capture the
stronghold, and as it seemed to offer no chance at the front he resolved
to move down the river once again, make a landing below the Falls of
Montmorenci, and try to find his way around to the enemy’s rear.

The Montmorenci River is a wild and turbulent stream, flowing at the
bottom of a deep gorge and leaping into the St. Lawrence over a cataract
two hundred and more feet in height. On each side of the gorge was a
dense forest, so a camp was made along the stream without molestation
from the French soldiers, who lay concealed in the woods on the opposite
side of the cataract.

General Levis was in command of the French detachment on guard at the
Montmorenci. He wished to dislodge Wolfe at once, but was overruled by
Vaudreuil, the French governor-general. Nevertheless some French Indians
crossed at a hidden ford and drove back some of the English troops, from
which they took thirty-six scalps.

There now ensued a number of small skirmishes in which the honors were
about evenly divided. Some of the English troops landed above Quebec and
gained a foothold, and there was a constant cannonading from both sides
which did but little damage. Montcalm refused to move, and Wolfe at last
decided to make a bold attack, both by the ford of the Montmorenci and
by the river shore, where the receding tide at times left a long stretch
of mud flats.

This was on the last day of July, just one week after the fall of Fort
Niagara. The day promised fair, but in the afternoon there was a heavy
downpour of rain, which wet the ammunition of the soldiers and made
marching in the mud next to impossible. The English troops fought
desperately, but were beaten back by the French batteries, and soon saw
that to climb the slippery slopes before them would be impossible.

“We can’t make it,” said more than one, and reluctantly Wolfe had the
retreat sounded, and the English withdrew, with a loss to the grenadiers
and the Colonials of over four hundred killed and wounded.

It was a bitter blow, but how bitter the colonists at large did not know
until some time later, for in those days there was neither telegraph nor
train to carry the news. Among the Indians in the fight was Blue Crow,
and he and his companion, Yellow Nose, were at once dispatched to Fort
Niagara to tell General Prideaux of what had occurred and to learn when
the force along Lake Ontario might be expected to move down the St.
Lawrence.

The news received by Sir William Johnson was short and unsatisfactory,
and both the bodies of the dead Indians and their canoe were searched
for a possible written message, but without success. Sir William was
much disturbed, for some instructions which had been forwarded to
General Prideaux by General Amherst were also missing, and he scarcely
knew how to turn next. General Gage, he knew, was coming to take command
in his stead, but in the meanwhile time of great value might be lost.

“I will send out some spies toward Oswego,” he said, to several of his
fellow officers. “If they are not stopped they can move on as far as the
St. Lawrence. Perhaps they can bring in the news I wish.”

In the course of a talk with Dave and Henry regarding the manner in
which the dead Indians had first been discovered, the commander
mentioned that he wished to send out the spies, and Henry at once begged
that he be allowed to go along.

“I take a deep interest, sir,” he said respectfully. “And I would
consider it an honor to serve you in that way.”

“And so would I consider it an honor,” added Dave.

“Perhaps but it is likewise a risk, my lads,” answered the Indian
Superintendent.

“We are used to taking risks,” went on Henry. “Both of us are fair shots
and have been serving in the field ever since the war began.”

“I will think it over,” said Sir William. “One thing is in your favor—a
youth can sometimes get through where a man is suspected and halted and
very often shot down.”

“We should expect the same treatment that older men get,” answered Dave
grimly.

Late that evening a party of six was made up, composed of a sharpshooter
named Silvers, who was the leader, three backwoodsmen named Raymond,
Gilfoy, and Shamer, and the two young soldiers. Silvers was given minute
instructions as to what he must do, and was told to impart these
instructions to the others after Fort Niagara was left behind. They were
told to move forward at early dawn, and all spent two hours in getting
ready for the trip, which they knew would be full of peril.

“It’s a big load on your shoulders,” said Shamer to the youths. He was a
Dutch pioneer and had known them ever since they had joined the troops
under Prideaux. “Maybe you don’t know the risk you are taking.”

“No larger on our shoulders than on yours,” laughed Dave.

“There may be French and Indian spies all around this lake,” went on
Shamer.

“Why do you go?” demanded Henry.

“Me? Oh, I like the excitement.”

“Well, I reckon we like the excitement too,” said Dave; and then there
was a short laugh, for nobody fully realized the great peril that the
future held in store for them.

It was hardly four o’clock in the morning when Silvers came around and
awakened the others, who had gone into a little camp of them own down by
the lake front.

“No time to be lost,” he said. “We’ll get breakfast just as quick as we
can.” And the meal was disposed of in short order.

It had been decided that the six should move down the lake in two small
rowboats, each carrying its share of the stores taken along. Everybody
was to take his turn at rowing, and the boats were to move along in the
dark as well as during the daytime. By this means it was hoped that the
distance, about a hundred and thirty miles, would be covered in less
than three days.

“All ready?” asked Silvers, when the dishes were put away.

“All ready,” was the answer, from one and another. Then they entered the
two rowboats, took up the oars, and before the morning sun shone over
the surface of the placid lake the journey down the broad sheet of water
was begun.


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                               CHAPTER IV

                        A SQUALL ON LAKE ONTARIO


“IF General Wolfe has suffered a heavy defeat it means a hard blow to
our cause,” observed Dave, as the two rowboats glided over the water a
short distance from each other.

“You are right,” answered the backwoodsman named Raymond. “Everybody was
hoping he would sail right up the St. Lawrence and capture Quebec before
the French were up to what he was doing.”

“I don’t think this war is over yet,” put in Gilfoy, a round-faced
Irish-American. “Sure, when you sift it down, the French can fight as
well as any of us, and they have just as many redskins to help ’em out
as we have.”

“I think they have more,” put in Henry. “They have been buying up tribe
after tribe with all sorts of presents and bribes—I heard Sir William
himself say so.”

“I wish they had sent George Washington to Quebec,” came from Dave. “I
don’t think he would have failed.”

“What do you know of Washington?” questioned Silvers.

“I used to work for him—when he was a surveyor for old Lord Fairfax—and
I served under him when we marched against Fort Duquesne, at the time
Braddock was defeated. It was Washington who saved what was left of us
from being shot down like so many rabbits, when the redskins surrounded
us in the forest.”

“Well, I know little of Washington, lad. But I do know it is going to
take a plucky commander to capture Quebec, which is set up on high rocks
like a regular fort,” returned the leader of the expedition.

For the first two hours of their journey they kept fairly close to the
shore of the lake, gliding past long stretches of forest which have long
since fallen before the axes of the pioneer and the lumberman. Here and
there was a rocky cove backed up by sweet-scented shrubs and berry
bushes, loaded down with tempting fruit. The morning calls of the birds
could be heard, and the occasional howl of a lonely wolf, or the sharp
bark of a fox.

“No use in talking,” was Henry’s comment, as he cast a longing eye
shoreward. “It’s a regular paradise for game.”

“Then you like hunting, lad?” came from Shamer. “So do I, and nothing
would please me better than to land and spend a day running down
something big. But duty is duty, and we haven’t even a right to linger
here,” and the tall sharpshooter bent his back to the blade he was
working, and Henry, who was opposite, did the same.

The sun was now flooding the surface of the lake with a golden sheen and
the day promised to be a hot one. Several of the soldiers had laid aside
their coats, and now they took off other garments, in order that they
might not perspire too freely.

By noon several of the party calculated that they had traveled
twenty-four miles, and by a vote it was decided to pull into an inviting
cove, where the shade was dense, and rest for half an hour and dispose
of the midday meal.

“There is no use of our killing ourselves at the very start,” said
Raymond. “We want to save ourselves a little, in case we get into some
tight corner and have to row to save our lives.” And the others agreed
with him.

The rest and meal on the grassy bank, overhung by the branches of some
trees which had likely stood there for a century, came to an end all too
soon, and once again they placed their traps in the rowboats and took up
the oars. As they glided out onto the lake Silvers gave a look around.

“So far as I can see, not a soul is within sight of us,” he announced.
“If there are Indians near they are not showing themselves at the water
front.”

Nevertheless, it was not deemed advisable to hug the shore too closely,
and they set a course which soon took them at least quarter of a mile
from land.

It must be confessed that the rowing was now beginning to tell upon both
Dave and Henry. But as they had enlisted to do their full share of the
work, neither complained.

“Sure, and it’s no easy job to row hour after hour,” said Gilfoy
presently. His experiences with a rowboat had been very limited.
“’Twouldn’t be so bad if the sun wasn’t so hot.”

“Some clouds are coming up,” said Shamer a little later. “And by the
feeling in the air I shouldn’t be surprised if we had a storm.”

The clouds he mentioned hung low down to the westward, and it was not
until about four o’clock in the afternoon that they took a turn and came
up with remarkable rapidity. Then followed a rush of cold air which was
very pleasant.

“The wind is beginning to blow,” said Henry. “See the whitecaps it is
tossing up.”

“The wind is all right, if it doesn’t get too strong,” replied Silvers.
“But to my idea we are going to have more than we want of it presently.”

“Yes, and it’s coming now!” cried Shamer. “Look across the lake.”

They did so, and each saw that he was right. The dense clouds had
circled around to the northwestward and the wind was coming in short,
sharp puffs which piled the whitecaps one over the other. Then came a
sudden rush of air which sent the rowboats careening in a dangerous
fashion.

“Hi! we can’t stand this!” exclaimed Gilfoy. “Before we know it we’ll
all be at the bottom. Let us make for shore.”

“Yes, and we can’t be too quick about it,” added Raymond. “This squall
is going to be a heavy one.”

Silvers admitted that they were right, and without delay the two
rowboats were headed for shore, at a point where a curving cove seemed
to promise safety.

All pulled with a will, yet long before the cove was gained, the squall
struck them, sending a shower of spray in all directions and causing
each craft to rock violently.

“Oh!” cried Dave, as some water hit him in the ear. “This is as bad as
was the storm we struck when we rowed from Oswego to Fort Niagara.”

“Don’t say a word—it’s a regular Niagara in itself!” gasped Henry, as a
downpour of rain followed the gust of wind.

“We can be thankful we are not further out on the lake,” came from
Raymond. “Now then, all together, and we’ll soon be safe!”

They bent to the oars with a will, two in each boat rowing and the third
steering. Another gust hit them, giving them a second ducking, and now
followed a veritable cloud-burst of rain. But in a few minutes the cove
was gained, and they glided under some overhanging branches and thick
bushes.

“We are well out of that!” said Henry, when he could catch his breath.
“Just listen to the wind whistle!”

“It won’t last,” said Silvers. “In an hour from now the sun will be
shining as brightly as ever.”

The wind whistled through the treetops, but down close to the water the
breeze did not touch them, and only a few drops of rain entered the
rowboats. Luckily they had covered their stores and ammunition with
tarpaulins, so no damage was done in that direction.

“This is something we didn’t bargain for, eh?” came from Raymond. “Had
we been far out on the lake the chances are we should have been
swamped.”

As the leader of the little expedition had said, the squall did not
last, and in exactly three-quarters of an hour after it began the clouds
shifted, the sun came out, and the rain ceased as if by magic.

“Now, men, we must make up for time lost,” said Silvers. “We’ve all had
a pretty good rest.”

“This squall has changed its course, but I’ll wager a mug of cider it
comes back by sundown,” said Gilfoy.

“And I say the same,” added Shamer.

“In that case we want to get as far as possible before it does come
back,” came from Henry. “The little breeze that is still blowing is in
our favor.”

Once again the two rowboats were headed down the lake, and each stroke
sent the craft shooting on their course. The water was still a trifle
rough, but what they lost by this was more than made up by the breeze
behind them.

“The air puts new life into a fellow,” said Dave. “I feel fresher than I
did when we started after dinner.”

By sundown another ten or twelve miles had been covered. The wind had
now veered around and was blowing strongly from the northeast. The sky
looked heavy, and despite their best efforts it was impossible to make
headway down the lake.

“We’ll have to go ashore for the night,” said Silvers. “More than likely
the wind will die down during the night.”

After their varied experiences of the day, Dave and Henry were not sorry
to leave the oars and take it easy in a sheltered spot picked out by the
leader of the expedition. After a careful survey of the location, to
make certain that no enemies were near, a tiny camp-fire was lit in a
hollow, and over this were broiled some fish which Henry and Raymond
caught.

Silvers had been ordered to keep a constant guard both on the lake and
on the land by Sir William Johnson, and when it came time to lie down to
sleep he divided the night into watches of an hour and a half each, so
that all might share in the duty and yet get the benefit of sufficient
rest for the next day’s work.

Henry was on guard from half-past ten until midnight, when Dave relieved
him.

“Have you seen anything?” asked Dave, as he arose and stretched himself,
for he had been sleeping soundly.

“Nothing at all,” answered his cousin, in a whisper, so as not to arouse
the others. “It looks to me as if a guard is unnecessary; but we have
got to obey orders.”

But little more was said, and in a few minutes Henry was sleeping
peacefully, on a mossy bank close to Raymond the backwoodsman. Dave took
up his musket and began to walk around the camp, to awaken himself still
more, for he was yet drowsy.

The fire had been allowed to die down, for in spite of the storm nobody
seemed to desire the heat, and all had been wet a hundred times before.

After a walk lasting several minutes, and feeling that all was safe,
Dave sat down on a fallen tree trunk to meditate. His thoughts were
scattered, but presently centered on home. In his mind’s eye he could
see the big living room of the cabin, with its immense open chimney, its
rude furnishings, and its neatly sanded floor. In the easy chair in a
corner sat his crippled cousin, Rodney, doing some work that did not
require his moving about, and close at hand was his Aunt Lucy, also
busy, and with a sweet face not easily forgotten. And then he fancied he
could hear a shout from without, and he could see his aunt catch up the
gun behind the door in alarm. But the gun fell from her hands when she
saw it was her husband and Dave’s father approaching, with faithful old
Sam Barringford and little Nell. And then he fancied he saw little Nell
give a leap straight into her mother’s arms and then into the arms of
Rodney.

“I’d like to be there when she gets home,” he thought. “I know Aunt
Lucy’s cheeks will be wet with tears of joy. And they’ll all be glad and
the neighbors will come in and there will be a regular jubilee, and——”

Dave stopped his dreamings and leaped to his feet. A noise in the
brushwood back of the camp had reached his ears. Holding his musket
ready for use, he strained his eyes to pierce the darkness, but he could
see nothing.

“Strange,” he thought, after a pause. “I am sure I heard something. It
must have been a night bird or——Ha!”

He shut his teeth hard. Something was certainly there—a dark form,
moving slowly along, close to the ground. But whether it was man or
beast he could not tell, until the form suddenly arose, and then he made
out that it was an Indian!


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                               CHAPTER V

                          PERILS OF THE FOREST


FOR the instant when Dave made the discovery that the form in the
darkness was that of an Indian, the young soldier knew not what to do.

He raised his musket to fire, but did not pull the trigger, fearing the
newcomer might be a friend.

“Halt!” he called out, a second later. “Who comes there?”

But the Indian did not halt. Instead he made a sudden movement to one
side, and instantly vanished behind a neighboring tree.

“What’s the matter?” came from Silvers, who had heard the young guard’s
challenge. “What did you see?”

“An Indian!” cried Dave. “He just leaped behind a tree over yonder.”

“An Indian!” was the cry from several, and in a moment everybody was on
his feet and had his firearm in hand.

“We may be surrounded,” came from Raymond. “Better lie low,” and his
advice was obeyed. As they scattered to the nearby rocks and bushes,
Silvers moved cautiously towards the spot where Dave had discovered the
red man.

“You are certain it was a redskin?” asked Henry, who had placed himself
beside his cousin. “It’s pretty dark to see anything.”

“I know a redskin when I see him, Henry. But I must admit that he was
very low, and the way he got out of sight was a marvel.”

“Oh, they can move in a hurry when they have to. One thing is certain,
he isn’t friendly to the English, or he wouldn’t be afraid to show
himself.”

The two young soldiers waited with bated breath. Each had put a fresh
priming on his gun and felt to see that his flint-lock was in good
condition. Their very lives might depend upon the shots they made.

Presently they heard voices at a distance, that of Silvers and the
guttural tones of a red man.

“If you are alone, come out here and we won’t shoot you,” they heard the
sharpshooter say. “Boys don’t shoot this fellow!” he called back to his
companions.

“We hear you, cap,” answered Raymond, and a moment later Silvers
appeared from the forest, followed by the Indian, who carried only a bow
and several arrows.

“Why, it’s White Buffalo!” cried Dave in astonishment. And he stepped
forward to greet his old Indian friend, while Henry did the same.

“How? how?” said the Indian chief, taking their hands in his own. “White
Buffalo think it was Dave he see, but was not sure.”

“Do you know this Injun?” demanded Silvers.

“To be sure we do!” cried Dave. “He is White Buffalo, an under chief of
the Delawares. He has often fought with us against the French, and he is
well-known to Washington and to Sir William.”

“In that case, I reckon it’s all right,” said Silvers, and lowered his
musket.

“Are you alone, White Buffalo?” questioned Henry, with interest.

“Yes, White Buffalo is alone,” replied the red chief. “He was out
hunting and hurt his foot on the sharp rocks.” He showed the injury,
which he had bound up with a bit of rag. “He could not get back to his
followers, so walked down to the lake for water.”

“I reckon we can fix up that hurt a little better,” said Dave, and set
to work without delay. While he did this, the Indian chief told of his
adventures, and of how he had brought down a big deer with an arrow and
how his followers had started back to the fort with the game.

“White Buffalo has seen the trail of the French around here,” he went
on. “The white brothers must beware, or they will fall into a snare.”

“We’ll keep our eyes open,” answered Silvers.

White Buffalo said he would remain with the soldiers until morning, and
soon the camp settled down once again to rest. His foot was badly cut,
but when Dave had put on some salve that had been placed among the
stores, he said it felt much better.

“David is right,” he said, while talking to the youth. “This war is not
yet in sight of the end. The French agents have been again among the red
men. They bring valuable presents and much drink, and promise many
things to the Indian if he will but fight with them against the
English.”

“But White Buffalo, you will not listen to them,” cried Dave.

“Has not White Buffalo spoken before?” said the Indian chief in a hurt
tone. “And when he has spoken, his mind is as fast as the rock upon
which he sits.”

“I knew it!” cried the young soldier. “Oh, I wish all the Indians were
as trustworthy as you.”

“The red man’s heart is full of trouble,” went on the Indian chief
sadly. “White Buffalo will stand by the English, but when the war is at
an end, when the hatchet is buried and the smoke of the pipe of peace
floats on the evening air, who shall give to the Indian the land that is
rightfully his own? If the French win they will keep the land, and if
the English win they will keep the land, and White Buffalo and his
brethren will have nothing—the maize land and the hunting land will all
be gone from him.”

“It is a pity, White Buffalo, there is no denying it,” put in Henry.
“You ought to have the land just as well as the white man. But the
trouble is, you won’t cultivate it as we do.”

At this the chief drew himself up. “The Indian is a hunter, not a
farmer,” he said proudly. “He lives by the chase and by what Nature
grows for him.”

“That’s just what causes the trouble, White Buffalo. A man who plants
land can live on a few acres, but one who lives by hunting must have
miles and miles of plains and forests for his roamings. I like hunting
myself, you know I do, so I can understand some of your feelings. But as
more people come over here, or are born on the land, we’ll have to do
less and less of hunting, and more planting and stock raising. In Europe
there are so many people they couldn’t possibly live by hunting even if
they wanted to. What would you do if there were so many Indians here?”

“The Great Spirit who rules the happy hunting ground takes care of
that.” The chief paused. “And then there are wars.”

“Yes, I know you often lose plenty of warriors by your tribal quarrels,”
said Henry. “But to get back to where we started from. If I have my say,
you shall never suffer so long as I have a roof over my head.”

“When the war is over, I want White Buffalo to go with me to the
trading-post on the Kinotah,” put in Dave. “The hunting and fishing
there will delight him, I know.”

At this the red man looked grateful.

“David and Henry are indeed my brothers,” he said softly. “White Buffalo
shall be their friend to the death,” and he placed the back of the hand
of each up to his forehead.

The alarms of the night were not yet at an end. It was still dark, and
Dave and Henry, along with White Buffalo, had dropped into a light
sleep, when a cry from Gilfoy, who was on guard, awakened them.

“Some wild beast prowling around,” he announced. “Sounds to me like a
wildcat.”

“Then I’m going to be on my guard,” said Dave. He had not forgotten how
a wildcat had once leaped upon him while he was in bathing.

All in the camp were soon on the alert. Each listened, but could hear
nothing but the gurgle of the tiny stream that poured over the rocks at
this spot and into the lake.

“Guess you must have been dreaming, Gilfoy,” said Silvers, at length.
“Was it another Injun?”

“No, it was no redskin, onless he was climbin’ the trees,” answered the
Irish-American soldier.

“White Buffalo can hear it,” came from the Indian chief, as they all
listened again. “It comes from over there,” and he pointed with his
finger to a clump of silver maples twenty feet away. “As the white
soldier says, it is a wild beast.”

“You must have keen ears,” put in Silvers. “I can’t hear a thing but the
brook.”

“White Buffalo lives by the hunt.”

“Perhaps you had better go forward and find him then.”

“White Buffalo can do that, too,” was the quick answer.

“I’ll go along,” said Henry and caught up his musket once more.

With extreme caution the two left the circle of the camp-fire which had
been started after the first alarm. The Indian held an arrow to his bow,
and the young soldier had his finger on the trigger of his firearm.

The advance was very slow and absolutely noiseless. Henry now showed his
training as a hunter. Coming to the nearest of the maples, both halted
without a sound and peered upward.

There was nothing to be seen, and they moved around to the next tree.
Then both caught the dim outline of some animal, crouching low on a
thick branch, ready to leap.

There followed the crack of a musket and the whiz of an arrow almost
simultaneously, and the wild animal raised up, with a scream of pain.
Then it made a mad leap, striking Henry on the shoulder, and both rolled
to the ground in the dark.

“Help!” yelled the young soldier, “help!”

The fall had been a peculiar one, and as the youth and beast rolled
over, the animal got its foreleg entangled in the strap of Henry’s
musket. It snapped at the weapon, burying its teeth deeply into the
wooden stock. Then, realizing its mistake, it let the musket go and
snapped at the young soldier, but by this time Henry had rolled out of
reach.

Hearing the cry for help, Dave rushed forward, followed by the others,
Raymond and Gilfoy carrying torches snatched from the camp-fire.

“It’s a catamount!” cried Raymond. “Give it to him, men!” And he opened
fire with his own musket.

Gilfoy threw his torch at the beast, and it landed on the catamount’s
head, causing it to turn and roll over in alarm. Then the beast made
another leap, this time straight for Raymond’s throat.

As the catamount left the ground White Buffalo fired a second arrow. His
first had grazed the catamount’s back. His second aim was more true, and
with a snarl the beast fell back with the point sticking deeply in its
side.

“Good for you, White Buffalo!” cried Henry.

He had scarcely spoken when Dave took a shot at the beast, followed by
Shamer and lastly Silvers. All three of the shots went more or less
true, and the catamount whirled round and round, snapping and snarling.
Then it dropped in a heap, gave a few kicks, and lay still.

“That was a wild one, and no mistake,” said Silvers, after all had
assured themselves that the catamount was really dead.

[Illustration:

  As the catamount left the ground White Buffalo fired a
  second arrow.—_Page 46._
]

“He’s large, too,” said Gilfoy, and the Irish-American soldier was
right. The beast was nearly three feet long, exclusive of the sweeping
tail, and had heavy-set legs and a powerful, “bullish” neck.

“We had better see if there are any more around,” said Henry, and the
search was started as soon as the firearms were reloaded.

But no other wild beasts put in an appearance, and at last, worn out by
the work of the day just past and by the numerous alarms, the soldiers
lay down once more, to snatch another nap ere the sun came up.


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                               CHAPTER VI

                        AN UNEXPECTED SEPARATION


“I DON’T believe the storms are entirely over yet,” said Dave, on the
following morning, after a walk down to the lake shore and a look at the
sky.

“It is going to be cloudy and windy,” answered Henry, as he began to
wash up in a neighboring pool. “We’ll have to work hard for every mile
we gain.”

While the two were talking, White Buffalo joined them. His foot was
still very sore, but he said he intended to turn back toward Fort
Niagara as soon as the morning meal was finished.

It did not take long for the soldiers to prepare breakfast, and
immediately after this the traps were loaded on the boats and the young
soldiers bid White Buffalo good-by.

“Tell Sir William that you met us,” said Silvers, “and tell him how the
storm made us go into camp;” and this the Indian chief promised to do.

There was a strong, raw wind, and despite the rising sun they were glad
to keep on their coats as they bent to the oars and sent the two
rowboats speeding on their way. Once more they hugged the shore, Raymond
stating that they might run into another squall at any moment.

Although they kept their eyes on the alert, no signs of white man or red
were seen during the morning. Once they saw an overturned canoe resting
in the mud, but by the appearance of the craft they came to the
conclusion that it had been rotting there for several months, if not a
year.

“The Indians have deserted this territory and the French have all sailed
to the north shore of the lake,” said Dave. “It will be a long while
before another village or trading-post is established here.”

But a few minutes later Shamer proved that Dave was wrong. Standing up
suddenly, he pointed to a spot where the lake shore was thinly fringed
with trees and brushwood.

“What do you see?” demanded Silvers.

“Redskins—three or four of them,” was the low answer.

“Where?”

“Back of those trees. They are gone now.”

“If that is so, we must be on our guard,” said the leader of the
expedition, and called to those in the second boat to pull further out
into the lake.

They watched for a long time, but nothing more was seen of the Indians,
and presently Silvers asked Shamer if he was sure his eyesight had not
deceived him.

“I am sure I saw them,” said the backwoodsman.

“I saw one of the Injuns myself,” put in Gilfoy. “Just as I spotted him
he dodged out of sight.”

Just ahead of the boats the shore made a deep inward curve and Silvers
decided that they should row directly across the bay thus formed.

“The bay isn’t over a mile across,” he said. “But if the redskins try to
follow us up they will have a good three or four miles to travel.”

“Unless they put out in canoes,” came from Raymond.

“If they do that we can easily see them and be on our guard,” answered
the leader of the expedition.

The constant rowing was beginning to tell on Dave’s hands, and he was
not sorry when it came his turn to steer the craft occupied by himself,
Henry, and Raymond.

Good progress was being made when, about three o’clock in the afternoon,
the sky became unusually black and the wind freshed up at a remarkable
rate.

“Now we are going to catch it,” said Raymond. “And a good deal more of
wind than of rain.”

The backwoodsman was right, and they had just time in which to reach
shore when the wind-storm came rushing on them in all of its fury,
hurling the whitecaps one over another and causing the tall trees to
groan and bend beneath the blast.

“Don’t catch me under the trees in such a blow,” said Gilfoy, and the
others agreed that it would be a foolhardy move to look for shelter
there at such a time. More than one branch came down with a crack like
that of a pistol, and further off they heard half-decayed monarchs of
the forest come down with low booms.

The wind continued to blow, at first in irregular puffs and then in a
steady gale, directly from the east. The raindrops were large and
scattering and scarcely wet the ground.

“It’s of no use to try rowing in this wind,” said Silvers, after a
careful look at the sky. “We’ll be blown back and all our strength
wasted.”

“How far are we from Oswego?” asked Henry.

“I should say about sixty miles.”

“We might tramp that distance,” put in Dave. “But it would take not less
than two days over this rough ground.”

“It’s out of the question, lad. The ground is rougher than you imagine.
No, I think we had better rest until morning. This wind can’t last.”

This being decided, the party proceeded to make themselves comfortable,
moving inland to where a series of rocks formed something of a cliff,
thickly overgrown with vines and bushes. Here they formed a shelter by
leaning long branches and saplings against the rocks, and in a hollow a
fire was lit, where they made something hot to drink.

“We must be on our guard here,” said Silvers. “Those Indians may be
following us. This cliff——”

He stopped short, having received a violent push from Dave, who stood
close at hand, under the shelter of a thick tree branch. As the leader
of the expedition fell an arrow whizzed by his side, and buried itself
in the dirt between the rocks.

“The redskins!” cried Henry. “They are behind us!”

“They are surrounding us,” put in Gilfoy.

Another arrow and still another whizzed through the air, and Shamer was
struck in the arm. Then came a fierce yell from the forest, which was
answered by another from the lake front.

“They must number twenty or thirty,” said Dave.

“We are caught like rats in a trap!” ejaculated Henry. His eyes began to
blaze. “We’ve got to fight for it—and fight our best, too!”

Another yell sounded out and several Indians appeared, hideous in their
warpaint. More arrows were fired—one grazing Henry’s hand—and eight of
the warriors leaped toward the shelter, flourishing their tomahawks.

“Fire on ’em. Don’t waste a bullet!” sang out Silvers, and brought his
long rifle to bear on the leading Indian. As the weapon rang out the red
man leaped upward and fell in a heap, the bullet having pierced his
brain.

The firing now became general and soon the shelter by the rocks was
filled with smoke, so that but little could be seen. Dave was beside
Henry, and both discharged their muskets at the enemy, and they saw two
more Indians stagger and fall back. Then a tomahawk came whizzing
through the air, and poor Gilfoy went down to rise no more. Shamer was
also hit in the leg; and the din became frightful.

“We must get out of here,” cried Raymond, catching Dave by the arm.
“Come on!”

“Come, Henry!” exclaimed Dave. “Follow us!”

“All right,” was the answer, and in a second more the three were running
for the nearest patch of brushwood, loading their muskets as they ran.

As the new shelter was gained, two tall warriors leaped out to meet
them. Tomahawks were raised, but Raymond swung his musket over his head
and sent one Indian reeling to the earth. In the meantime the second
warrior threw his tomahawk at Dave, but the youth dodged and before the
red man could recover from his throw Henry was on him with the hunting
knife he had carried since the breaking out of the war.

“That for you!” cried Henry, wild with excitement, and buried the knife
in the Indian’s shoulder. The warrior sank with a groan; and in a moment
more he and Henry were on the ground, in a fierce hand-to-hand struggle
for life.

Dave was somewhat bewildered by the quickness of the various moves made,
and when he could recover somewhat he found himself by Raymond’s side
running up the lake shore. A fierce yell and shouting came from a
distance, interspersed with gun and pistol shots.

“Whe—where is Henry?” he gasped.

“Reckon he is following us,” answered Raymond.

“Come on, don’t stop here. The Injuns will be after us ag’in in a minute
or two.”

“But I don’t want to—to leave Henry behind.”

“Don’t worry but what he’ll follow, unless they kill him, Dave. Come,
it’s suicide to stay here,” urged Raymond, and caught the youth by the
hand and dragged him forward.

The yells of the Indians now came closer, and fearful of being
surrounded once more the backwoodsman and Dave plunged into the forest.
They chose a point where the tall timber was thick, and they did not
stop in their course until a hundred yards or more had been covered.
Sheltered by some bushes, they reloaded their muskets, which had been
discharged four times since the struggle began.

“This attack has been a bad one, lad,” said Raymond, who was breathing
heavily. “Gilfoy is dead, and I saw Shamer go down, too.”

“And Henry?” panted the young solder. “Oh, do you think——” He could not
go on.

“Let us hope for the best, lad.”

“If I thought I could help him I’d go back.”

“No, no, lad, don’t you try it. The Injuns are three or four to one, and
you’ll lose your scalp just as sure as you are born.”

With great bitterness of mind, Dave was forced to realize that this was
true. Yet, he could not bear to leave Henry to his fate.

“If he is killed I’ll never forgive myself,” he thought.

Listening intently, they heard the Indians moving around the
neighborhood, evidently trying to pick up the trail the whites had left.
Gradually they appeared to come closer.

“We must get out of here,” whispered Raymond. “Follow me, and don’t make
a sound.”

As silently as a shadow he led the way through the brushwood and to the
open forest once more. Fortunately the coming of night now favored them,
along with the heavy clouds which still hung low in the sky.

Deeper and deeper they plunged into the growths until they came to some
rough rocks, back of which was a hollow filled with stagnant water.

“Let us climb over some of the rocks,” whispered the backwoodsman. “That
will cut off the trail—in case they do happen to strike it.”

With a heavy heart Dave did as advised, and the pair covered another
distance of a hundred yards. Here the rocks were larger, forming a cliff
considerably higher than that where the fateful shelter had been
located.

“I see something of an opening,” announced Raymond presently. “It ought
to make a good hiding place.”

He pointed to a split between the rocks. The opening was high and just
wide enough for them to squeeze through. To the rear was located a dark
cave of unknown depth.

“We’ll rest here,” said Raymond, and threw himself on a rocky seat.
“Keep your musket ready for use.”

“It is all ready,” answered Dave, and sank beside his companion,
wondering what had become of Henry, and how this unexpected encounter
was going to terminate.


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                              CHAPTER VII

                          A BEAR AND HER CUBS


SLOWLY an hour slipped by. To Dave it seemed an age, and more than once
he peered up and down the rough rocks to see if there was any sign of
friends or enemies. From a distance had come two shots, but after that
all was quiet as a tomb, save for the wind, which still swept through
the forest, and the occasional patter of a few drops of rain.

“Don’t go too far, lad,” said Raymond, by way of caution, after Dave had
climbed out on the rocks for the fourth time. “Those Injuns may be
closer nor you think.”

“I must find out what has become of Henry,” was the half-desperate
answer.

“Yes, yes, I know, but——”

“Do you think any of our party escaped to the boats?”

“It’s not likely they would expose themselves, lad. If they tried to row
away some of the redskins would be sure to see ’em and send a shower of
arrows after ’em.”

“But it is dreadful to think Henry may be killed, or a prisoner!”

“I know that too, lad. Didn’t I lose my brother Dan on the frontier only
four years ago? I did my best to save him, too, but it was no use. I was
taken prisoner, and they had just started to torture me when some of the
Gordon Rangers came up and saved me. That was the fight in which they
killed old Tom Granby and his son Jabez, and carried off Mrs. Williamson
and little Ned Ford.”

“Did the prisoners ever escape?”

“All but little Ned. He was carried westward, and they have never heard
of him since,” answered Raymond, with a sorry shake of his head.

A lump arose in David’s throat and he found great difficulty in
swallowing it. If Henry was dead how would he ever be able to send the
news to Mrs. Morris and the others?

“It will ’most break Aunt Lucy’s heart,” he thought. “And Uncle Joe’s
heart too. With Rodney a cripple they all depended on Henry so much!”

Raymond was about to take a look around, when a curious sound from the
rear of the cave-like opening caused both the backwoodsman and the young
soldier to leap up in fresh alarm.

“What was that?” cried Dave, as he brought up his musket.

“Don’t know,” whispered Raymond. “Lay low! The Injuns may be coming on
us another way.”

Both crouched back into a niche of the wall and waited. Soon the noise
was repeated, and they heard a scratching on the rocks at the back of
the opening.

“Reckon I know what that is,” said Raymond at length.

“What?”

“Bear’s cubs.”

“Do you really think so?” cried Dave. “If that is true, this must be a
bear’s den.”

“More’n likely, lad, and if it is we had better get out.”

“You think the old she bear will be back?”

“To be sure. She won’t leave her cubs over night. She’d be back before
this, only it’s likely the shots made her timid.”

“It’s queer we didn’t hear the cubs before.”

“They have been asleep and just woke up. Hark!”

They listened and heard the scratching on the rocks again. It came
closer, but when Raymond made a noise, it sounded fainter and fainter.

“They won’t touch us, that’s sure,” said Dave. “But the old she bear——”

“Something is coming!” interrupted Raymond. “Reckon it’s her!”

He was right—the mother of the cubs—a black bear of good size, was
coming slowly along at the foot of the rocks. She sniffed the air and
looked from side to side with keen suspicion.

“Hadn’t we better get out without being seen?” whispered the young
soldier. “If we kill her, the Indians will hear the shots.”

“Yes, come on,” replied Raymond.

Side by side they started to leave the entrance to the bear’s den. But
as they stepped out the old she bear uttered a whine, and the cubs in
the cave gave answer. Then the mother bear saw the intruders in the
semi-darkness and let out a growl of savage rage.

“She’s going to fight!” cried Dave.

“She thinks we have hurt her cubs!” returned the backwoodsman.

Raymond was right, and before they could take a dozen steps up the rocks
the black bear was leaping after them, snarling viciously and showing
her long, white teeth.

“We’ll have to shoot—or be chewed up!” gasped Dave, when the bear was
less than fifty feet from him.

He had scarcely uttered the words when Raymond’s rifle rang out. But the
aim of the backwoodsman was poor, and the bullet passed wide of the
beast. The report stopped the bear but a second, then she came on as
furiously as ever.

It was now Dave’s turn to shoot, and he lost no time in blazing away. He
was more fortunate, and the black beast was brought to another halt,
this time with a bullet in her shoulder. But the fight was not yet
knocked out of her, and she tried to limp over the rocks, uttering growl
after growl.

“She won’t give in,” said Raymond, and both started to reload. While
they were doing this the cubs, two in number, appeared at the entrance
to the cave-like opening.

On catching sight of her offspring, the wounded bear paused once again.
She evidently wished to pursue her enemies and at the same time she
wished to make certain that her cubs were really unharmed. Slowly she
limped back to her own.

“Now is our chance!” cried Dave, and over the rocks went the young
soldier and the backwoodsman, scrambling along with all possible speed.
The route was a rough one, and more than once they had their hands and
faces scratched and their uniforms torn.

“Those shots will put the Indians on the watch,” said Raymond, as they
pushed along.

“Perhaps they will bring some of our friends to the vicinity,” returned
Dave. “If Henry——Oh!”

Dave’s speech ended in a cry of pain. He had slipped on the rocks and
his left leg had received a severe wrench at the knee. He tried to rise
and then fell back with a groan of agony.

“What’s the matter, lad?”

“I’ve twisted my knee.”

“Can’t you get up?”

“I’ll try it. Oh!”

Dave stood up on the limb that was uninjured and tried to take a step.
But the pain was too great and he was forced to sit down on a rock.

“That’s too bad, certainly,” said Raymond sympathetically. “If you can’t
walk, I really don’t know what we are to do.”

“Perhaps you had better go on alone.”

“No, I shan’t leave you, Dave—it wouldn’t be human.”

“Yes, but—but we left Henry,” said the young soldier bluntly.

“That was in the midst of a fight and a different thing altogether. If
you can’t walk, can you climb yonder tree, do you think?”

“Perhaps, with your help.”

“Then let us both get up. The bear can’t climb with a wounded leg, and
if she does I can give her a shot right in the head when she comes up,”
went on the backwoodsman.

He picked the youth up in his arms and walked over to the tree he had
pointed out. The darkness of night had now settled down, and it was with
difficulty that they made their way among the lower limbs. Dave wanted
to shriek with pain, but gritted his teeth and kept silent.

It was a lonely and never-to-be-forgotten night. In an hour or two the
wind went down and it began to rain steadily. Dave did not feel like
stirring, and all he could do was to rub the cords of his limb that had
become so sadly twisted. Raymond remained on guard, but neither the bear
nor anything else came to disturb them.

At daybreak it was still raining, but the clouds showed signs of
breaking away, and before nine o’clock the hot midsummer sun shone as
brightly as ever.

“We are in a bad plight, no two ways about it,” said the backwoodsman.
“What is best to do I must say I don’t know.”

“I don’t believe I can walk very far yet,” answered Dave despondently.
“My knee feels as stiff as if it was in a vise.”

“Perhaps I had better scout around a little, leaving you here. It is
barely possible I may run across some of the others and find out what
became of your cousin.”

“Then go, by all means!” cried Dave. “You cannot do me a greater favor
than to find Henry.”

“But you must lay low, lad. The Injuns may be closer nor you think.”

“I will keep quiet. But I’d like to have a drink before you go,”
answered the young soldier.

Some water was obtained, and he gulped it down eagerly, and bathed his
sprained knee with what remained. Then cautioning him once more, Raymond
left him, the backwoodsman setting off in the direction of the lake
front.

If the night had seemed lonely, the time now was doubly so to Dave, who
could do nothing but nurse his bruise and keep a lookout for a possible
enemy. His thoughts traveled constantly to his cousin, and he wondered
if Raymond would bring in any news of Henry.

“He ought to learn something,” he told himself over and over. “I am sure
I could if I was in his place.”

Nine o’clock came and then ten o’clock, and still the silence of the
forest remained unbroken save for the occasional song of some distant
bird, and the buzzing of bees around an adjacent bee-tree. The nearness
of this bee-tree put Dave in mind of that discovered by his uncle and
himself while on their trip to Annapolis some years before. What great
changes had occurred since that time!

“This war has been an awful thing, and I shall be glad when it is at an
end,” he thought. “But unless we win, there will be trouble with the
Indians and the French for years and years to come.”

It was almost noon when he heard a faint sound in the woods to the north
of the tree. Instantly he caught up his musket, which had been resting
in a crotch close at hand.

Slowly the sound came closer, and he could hear the labored breathing of
some man or animal. He leaned as far down as possible to catch a glimpse
of the newcomer.

“Shamer!” he murmured.

He called the soldier’s name softly, and Shamer paused in wonderment.

“Who is calling me?” he panted.

“I am, Dave Morris, Shamer. I am up in the tree. Are you alone?”

“Yes, and I can hardly walk,” groaned the soldier. “A bullet struck me
in the calf of the leg. Any Indians around here?”

“I haven’t seen any. My knee is hurt. Raymond was with me, but he has
gone down to the shore to take a look around. Do you know anything of my
cousin Henry and the others?”

“Gilfoy is dead.”

“Yes, Raymond said they had killed him. And the others?”

“The Indians captured both Silvers and Henry and carried them off,” was
Shamer’s answer, which caused Dave’s heart to sink like a lump of lead
in his bosom.


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                              CHAPTER VIII

                        IN THE HANDS OF FRIENDS


SHAMER was completely exhausted, and reaching the trunk of the tree in
which Dave was perched he threw himself down to rest and regain his
breath. His uniform was much torn and covered with dirt and there were
ugly scratches on his hands and face.

“I had a terrible time of it after we got separated,” he said, after a
pause. “Four redskins attacked me, and I had to knock over two of them
before I could get away. Then I ran down to the shore, and got into
another mix-up with an Indian and some Frenchmen, who had just come down
the lake in a big flat-bottomed boat.”

“Was that when you saw Henry and Silvers?”

“No, I didn’t see them until two hours later, after the fight came to an
end. I hid in the rocks down near the lake, and while I was there I saw
the flat-bottomed boat again. There were six Indians in it and two
Frenchmen, besides Silvers and your cousin.”

“Was Henry much hurt?”

“I can’t tell you about that. Both he and Silvers were bound with ropes
and crowded into the bow of the boat, and I couldn’t get a very good
look at them on account of the others. I might have given the Frenchmen
and the redskins a shot or two, but I was afraid they would come ashore
again and catch me, for I was too tired out to run. I went back into the
woods, and early this morning I got into a fight with another Indian.
But he was wounded, and I soon got the best of him,” concluded the
soldier.

“How was the flat-bottomed boat headed?” asked Dave, after another
pause.

“The last I saw of it it was headed almost due north.”

“Then the Frenchmen and the Indians were bound to Canada with their
prisoners,” groaned Dave.

“It looks like it, Morris.”

A long spell of silence followed, Dave turning the situation over in his
mind and Shamer dragging himself to the pool, to drink and to bathe his
wounds.

It was some time after the noon hour when Raymond came back, skulking
through the forest as silently as a shadow. On catching sight of Shamer
he raised his musket, but just as quickly lowered the weapon.

“So you escaped, eh?” said he. “I am glad to hear it. I saw poor
Gilfoy’s body, scalped, and I was afraid you and the others had shared
the same fate.”

He sat down and had the German-American soldier tell his story, as it
had already been told to Dave.

“It’s too bad,” he declared. “And the worst of it is, we are not yet out
of this trap. The most of the redskins are gone, and I saw no Frenchmen,
but at least four Injuns are still on guard—two at the lake front and
two down on a trail leading to Fort Oswego.”

“That means that we are hemmed in,” said Dave, who was leaning down from
the tree branch listening.

“Yes, lad. How is the knee?”

“I am sorry to say it is just as bad as ever, if not worse.”

Raymond climbed into the tree and inspected the injured limb, which was
considerably swollen.

“It certainty does look bad,” he said. “One thing is certain, you are
not able to sneak through the woods now, and it’s doubtful if you can do
it after sundown.”

“Well, I suppose I can’t remain here forever,” returned the young
soldier, rather helplessly.

“We can help him along, after I get my wind back,” put in Shamer, who
had bound up the arrow wound he had received.

During his tour of inspection Raymond had been able to pick up a few
stores, left near the shelter by the rocks, and he now offered both of
his companions something to eat. Shamer partook readily of the food, but
poor Dave was almost choked by it. The young soldier’s thoughts were
constantly with Henry. Would he ever see his cousin again?

Raymond noticed how downcast the lad was, and did his best to cheer him
up.

“Don’t take it so hard, Dave,” he said kindly. “Remember, he isn’t
killed, and many a prisoner has escaped ere this. Besides, if they put
him in prison, this war is bound to come to an end, sooner or later, and
then he’ll be set free.”

“That may be true,” returned the young soldier. “But you know as well as
I do what the French prisons are like—the very worst holes on earth.”

“That may be only evil report, my lad. True it is that some Frenchmen,
even though they be our enemies, are as good-hearted as any Englishman
ever dared to be.”

“That is true,” broke in Shamer. “A good man is a good man, and a bad
one is a bad one, no matter what his nationality. But I have no use for
an Indian.”

“Well, there are some good Indians,” added Dave quickly. “White Buffalo,
for instance. If he was here I am sure he would help us out of our
trouble. But I can’t get Henry out of my mind,” he added, with a sigh.

Dave was glad enough to leave his cramped position in the tree and
stretch himself at full length on a bed of dry leaves in the sunshine.
So the balance of the day passed, with nothing coming to disturb them.
Raymond half expected to see the old she bear, but she did not show
herself, and he was content to let her remain with her cubs.

“How far is the trail to Fort Oswego from here?” asked the young
soldier, when the darkness began to gather.

“Not over half a mile.”

“I was thinking I might get that far on a pinch. But even if we got to
the trail, what then?”

“I’ve got a plan,” said Raymond. “I’ll carry you on my back. We can take
our time, and we are bound to reach Fort Oswego sooner or later.”

“If we don’t fall into some redskins’ trap,” put in Shamer.

“Well, I suppose we must take some chances,” said Dave. “It is very kind
to offer to carry me.”

The start was begun a short while later, Shamer carrying the guns and
what was left of the provisions, and Dave perched on Raymond’s
shoulders, for that was the manner in which the backwoodsman declare he
could carry the load most comfortably.

It was a good hour before the trail to Fort Oswego was gained—a rough,
narrow path, first used by the buffalo of upper New York State and then
by the Indians and traders. They advanced with caution, Shamer leading
the way with his musket held before him, ready to fight at the first
sign of an enemy.

The night proved to be clear, with no moon, but with countless stars.
Along the trail all was silent—even the night birds failing to utter
their lonely notes.

After a rest the journey along the trail was begun, Shamer leading the
way as before. The forest was thick on either side, and in many spots
there were rough rocks to cross, which made Raymond puff and blow over
his load. More than once Dave said he would get down and try to walk,
but the backwoodsman would not allow it.

“I’ve brought in a big deer on my shoulders more than once,” he
declared. “And you don’t weigh any more.”

By daylight ten or eleven miles had been covered, and all were glad to
rest again, by the side of a brook flowing into the lake. The journey
had been no easier for Dave than for the others, and more than once he
had felt like crying out with pain when Raymond gripped his sore limb
harder than usual.

“Ours has certainly been an ill-fated expedition,” observed Raymond, as
he munched a bit of biscuit, while the others did the same. “If we ever
get out of it alive, it will be a sorry report we’ll have to offer to
the commander at Fort Oswego and to Sir William Johnson.”

“I can’t see how we are to be blamed,” answered Dave. “We were attacked
by a superior force and fought as well as we could.”

“Sir William told us to keep to the lake,” put in Shamer. “But of course
we couldn’t do that with such a wind.”

It had been decided that it would be safest to rest during the day and
travel at night. Accordingly Raymond and Shamer lay down for a nap of
four hours, leaving Dave on guard.

The four hours were almost up, and the young soldier was beginning to
feel sleepy himself, when a noise in the forest on the other side of the
brook caused him to start up.

“It must be either a man or a wild animal,” he reasoned and placed his
finger on the trigger of his flint-lock musket, after satisfying himself
that the priming was in good condition.

Slowly the noise came closer, and presently he heard two men talking in
English.

“If they are English they must be friends,” thought the young man
joyfully, but still he continued on guard. He awakened Raymond and
Shamer by a light touch.

“What is it?” came from Raymond.

“Two men are over yonder. I can hear them talking.”

“Then we had better get out of sight until we are sure of who they are,”
put in Shamer.

Secreted in the bushes they waited until the two unknown ones came down
the edge of the brook. They were dressed in the garb of frontiersmen and
each carried a rifle and a game-bag.

“Game is putty well scart off, Chester,” said one. “The cap’n won’t git
much fresh meat from us,” and he gave a droll laugh.

“That’s about the size on it, Holden,” was the reply. “Yet I reckoned on
some b’ar bein’ around here.”

“I am sure they will be friends,” whispered Dave. “They are probably
from the fort.”

Raymond nodded. Then he called aloud:

“Hullo, there, friends!”

The two frontiersmen started, and each raised his rifle.

“Who calls?” questioned the one named Chester.

“A lost soldier,” answered Raymond, and presented himself to view. “I
take it you are English,” he added.

“We are. Where are you from?”

Raymond told them, and then Dave and Shamer also presented themselves.
The two frontiersmen leaped the brook and listened to their story with
keen interest.

“You’ve certainty had a tough fight of it,” said the man named Holden.
“I held all along thet them Frenchmen would be over here nosin’ ’round
an’ thet they’d bring some redskins with ’em.”

“Are you from Fort Oswego?” asked Dave.

“We are. We are attached to Cap’n Neely’s company o’ rangers. We came
out lookin’ for a bit o’ fresh meat. But now I reckon the best thing we
can do is to help you to git to the fort, ain’t thet so?”

“If you will be so kind.”

“Aint no kindness; it’s jest plain duty,” said Chester.

The frontiersmen felt certain that no more Indians were left in the
vicinity. Yet they promised to keep a strict guard, and a little later
our friends moved off once more in the direction of Fort Oswego, the
frontiersman named Chester carrying Dave on his back for a mile or two
and then being relieved by his companion, and later by Raymond.

Thus the march was kept up all of that day and also part of the next,
and at two o’clock in the afternoon they came in sight of Fort Oswego,
with the flag of old England floating proudly in the breeze above it.


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                               CHAPTER IX

                           WHAT BEFELL HENRY


LET us now return to Henry, and see what happened to him during the time
that Dave was making his escape to Fort Oswego.

As we already know, Henry had attacked one of the Indians with his
hunting knife. In a moment more both were struggling on the ground, in a
close embrace which was truly desperate.

Henry was strong for his age and during his life had been in more than
one close encounter with both red men and wild animals. He felt that he
was fighting for his life and he did not intend to give the Indian the
slightest advantage.

The young soldier felt the red man’s hand creeping toward his throat,
but he caught the wrist and bent it backward, until the Indian had to
squirm to one side to prevent that member from being broken. But then
the Indian made another twist and got his arm over Henry’s neck,
pressing him closer and closer.

There was but one way left in which to throw the Indian off, and this
the young solder used without delay. Drawing up his knee he set it
against the enemy’s chest and forced it forward, at the same time
holding the red man across the back by one hand and by the leg with the
other.

The awful pressure thus brought to bear was more than the Indian could
stand. Fearful of having his ribs crushed in, he released Henry’s
throat. At once the youth threw up the leg he was holding and the red
man went spinning over on his back.

By this time other Indians were at hand, and an arrow hit Henry in the
fleshy part of the arm. Raising his hunting knife, he struck at one of
the newcomers, piercing his shoulder. Then he made a leap up the rock
and another to the bushes beyond, and with the swiftness of a wild
animal disappeared into the forest.

The blood of the Indian who had been struck was now aroused, as was also
the anger of the one who had been thrown down, and the pair made after
the young soldier, followed by two other warriors.

Through the forest went pursued and pursuers, until, having run in
something of a semicircle, Henry came out on the lake front, at a spot
some distance above where the two rowboats had been drawn up. Here he
espied an Indian canoe, and, leaping in, began to paddle out into the
lake with all speed.

The first intimation he had of the closeness of his enemies was when an
arrow flew by the canoe, to land in the water beyond. Other arrows
followed, and then came the report of a gun, but he remained untouched.

The Indians were now running along shore, and soon they came upon the
two Frenchmen already mentioned in these pages. They belonged to the
Canadian militia and their uniforms were such in name only. They had
come to the south shore of the lake for information, having been
promised a good reward by the Governor-General of Canada if they
succeeded in bringing back news of importance.

Under the directions of the Frenchmen four of the Indians set off in one
of the rowboats after Henry, who was still paddling westward with all
the speed at his command. The red men were ordered to capture the young
soldier alive if possible, but if not, to kill him.

It was not long before Henry discovered how the pursuit had been
renewed. He had now reached a good-sized inlet and was still some
distance from the shore. He turned in with all speed, knowing that a
fight of four to one on the water could only end in his defeat.

“If I only had my musket,” he said, half aloud, but the firearm had been
left on the ground at the camp, after the first hand-to-hand struggle.

The shore was almost reached, when the Indians set up a yell, and while
two of them continued to row the other two rose up and fixed arrows in
their bows.

“White soldier stop!” cried one, in bad English. “Stop, or be killed!”

“I reckon you’ll kill me anyway,” muttered Henry, and as the canoe
grated on the shore, he dropped the paddle, caught up his hunting knife,
and leaped to land.

It is barely possible that the youth might have escaped to the forest
once more. But as he ran for the trees, two Indians suddenly appeared
before him. One carried a stout stick, and without warning he struck
Henry a heavy blow on the head. The young soldier uttered a moan,
staggered from side to side, and then fell senseless.

In a moment more, and just as the Indian who had struck the blow was
bending over the unconscious youth to scalp him, the Indians in the
rowboat came up.

“Rising Moon must stop,” called one of the number. “He must not scalp
the pale face.” He spoke in his native tongue.

“Why does Falling Waters speak thus?” demanded the other. “It was Rising
Moon’s hand who laid the English soldier boy low.”

“Rising Moon has earned the scalp,” went on the first Indian. “But
Falling Waters has orders to bring the soldier back alive.”

At this Rising Moon’s face took on a sour look.

“Who gave the order?”

“The Frenchman, Jacques Volnier. He is here with another. They seek news
of importance from the English. We have sworn to stand by them, and we
must obey,” added Falling Waters.

A long and angry discussion arose, but in the end Falling Waters carried
his point, and Henry was taken to a rendezvous which the Canadian
Indians had once occupied on the south shore of Lake Ontario.

The fight had by this time terminated, and the Frenchmen and the Indians
had come out on the lake in a flat-bottomed boat. With his arms bound
behind him, Henry, who was just recovering from the blow he had
received, was made to march down to the boat. Here he found Silvers also
a prisoner, and suffering from several arrow wounds.

“Hullo, are you a prisoner?” cried the leader of the expedition, when
one of the Frenchmen arose and clapped a hand over his mouth.

“Ze prisonair must not talk now,” he said, in broken English. “Ze
prisonair can talk when we haf left ze shore.”

“All right,” muttered Silvers, and glad that the Frenchmen had compelled
the Indians to spare his life, he relapsed into silence.

As for poor Henry, his head was in a whirl and ached as if ready to
split open. More than this, he felt stiff and sore all over, and he sat
in the bow of the boat only with the greatest of difficulty.

As Shamer had told Dave, the boat contained six Indians, besides the two
Frenchmen and the prisoners, so it was heavily loaded. The red men were
at the oars, and they rowed with a steadiness that showed they had had
practice in this art as well as with a paddle. The boat shot forward
with good speed, and soon the south shore of the lake became a dim,
uncertain line in the distance.

“Now ze prisonairs can tell us who za air,” said one of the Frenchmen,
evidently the leader of the party.

“I am not ashamed of that,” answered Silvers. “My name is Louis
Silvers.”

“Ah, Louis—zat ees a good name. And you?” went on the Frenchman, turning
to the young soldier.

“I am Henry Morris.”

“You belong to ze soldiers at Fort Oswego, not so?”

“We do not,” answered Silvers.

“Zen where from you come?”

“We have been up at Fort Niagara.”

“Ah, I see—you help at ze capture of zat place, eh?”

“Yes.”

The Frenchman shook his head thoughtfully.

“Zat was von bad work—zat fight. I no haf been dair, but I hear, yes, I
hear it all.”

“Who are you?” asked Henry boldly.

“Me? Ah, I am not much, my bold little troopair, I am plain Jacques
Volnier, a hunter and trappair.”

“Then why have you captured us?” went on Henry curiously.

At this the Frenchman shrugged his shoulders.

“Because—yes, because we want ze company,” he answered, with a smile.

Henry frowned, and so did Silvers, and at this both Frenchmen laughed at
what they thought was a good joke. Then they talked to each other in
their own tongue, leaving the prisoners to themselves.

“What do you think they will do with us?” asked Henry, in a low voice.

“Throw us into a French prison, more than likely,” answered Silvers
gloomily.

“What did you do with Sir William’s message?”

“Hush! I threw it overboard,” said the other, in a still lower voice.

The strong sun was now beginning to tell upon Henry, and he said no
more. He wanted to keep his senses, but presently all seemed to fade
from him. He felt himself pitch into Silvers’ arms, and then he knew no
more for the time being.

“Poor lad,” murmured Silvers.

“What is ze mattair?” demanded Jacques Volnier.

“He has fainted. Won’t you untie me so that I can do something for him?”

“_Oui! oui!_” was the answer, and in a moment more Silvers was free. He
untied Henry and bathed his forehead, and presently the young soldier
opened his eyes. But it was not until long after sundown that Henry felt
anything like himself again, and even then he was almost too weak to
stand.

The two prisoners wondered where they were being taken, but could get
nothing from either the Frenchmen or the Indians. The rowboat was headed
to the northeast, and this showed that the general direction was for the
mouth of the St. Lawrence. On and on swept the craft, through the dismal
night and still on when the morning came.

“They are going quite a distance,” said Henry, after he had swallowed a
piece of bread that had been given to him. “Can it be that they mean to
move right down the river?”

“It is possible,” answered Silvers. “Montreal, you know, is not so very
far away.”

At last the boat turned to the eastward, and that evening a landing was
made near what is to-day Wolfe Island. There had been a small settlement
here, but this was abandoned, the inhabitants having withdrawn to a fort
on the mainland.

At the island the Indians left the party and some other Frenchmen
appeared, one owning a fair-sized sloop, which boasted a small swivel
gun. The prisoners were made to board the sloop, and now their hands
were chained behind them. The sloop had a small cuddy and into this they
were forced, the door being closed and locked after them.

“We are in a pickle now surely!” groaned Henry. “I believe they are
going to take us down the river.”

It was not until late at night when the anchor was hoisted and the sails
of the sloop were set. Then the craft slipped by the island, and past
Fort Frontenac, and stood boldly down the stream in the direction of the
Thousand Islands.


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                               CHAPTER X

                       IN THE HANDS OF THE ENEMY


THE night passed slowly to the two prisoners confined in the narrow
space of the sloop’s cuddy. No one came to speak to them, and as hour
after hour went by first one and then the other dropped off to sleep.

When Henry awoke it was broad daylight, and the sloop was bounding along
at a rapid rate of speed. Through the one narrow window of the cuddy he
saw that they were passing a shore filled with waving grass and dotted
here and there with low trees.

“We are going down the St. Lawrence, that is certain. But to where?”

In vain he asked the question of himself, and then of Silvers. The
sharpshooter merely shrugged his shoulders.

“I know nothing of these parts, lad,” he said. “We must take what
comes.”

At noon they received a scanty meal and a drink of lukewarm water. A
sailor served this, and as he could talk French only they learned
nothing from him.

It was nightfall when the sloop’s trip came to an end. Cramped and
stiff, the prisoners were made to march ashore, to where was located an
old convent, now fallen mostly to decay. Some soldiers were quartered
here, and the prisoners were turned over to a guard and promptly put
into what had once been the cell of a monk.

“Worse and worse,” said Henry. “What do you think will happen next?”

Again Silvers shrugged his shoulders.

“I don’t know, lad, unless they march us out to be shot.”

“Would they do that? They did not catch us in French territory.”

“As we are in their power they can do with us as they please.”

Early in the morning the pair were aroused by the roll of a drum. Some
of the soldiers were getting ready to march away, and the prisoners were
told that they were to march with them.

“To where?” asked Henry.

“To Montreal, and perhaps to Quebec,” said the officer addressed, who
could speak excellent English. Henry wanted to ask more questions, but
the officer had no time to listen to him.

By eight o’clock the soldiers were on the march, with the two prisoners
in their midst. The way was along the river trail, past many pretty
farms and handsome French estates, many of which, however, were now
abandoned. At one point in the road they came upon several ladies on
horseback, who stared in wonder at the prisoners.

“They seem to think we are wild beasts,” laughed Silvers. He bowed
politely, but the ladies turned and rode away.

It will be unnecessary to go into the details of the weary march that
followed the tramp along the river trail. For four days the prisoners
were kept on the road. Montreal was passed, with only a faraway glimpse
of its large cathedral and its seminary, and then the course was almost
straight for Quebec.

So far the prisoners had been treated fairly well, but now came a change
in the command; and they were given food that was hardly fit to eat.

“We can’t stand this very long,” was Henry’s comment, as he threw away a
moldy crust that it was impossible to swallow. “I’d choke on such
stuff.”

The officer in charge of them saw the crust thrown away, and came up
shaking his fist at them.

“Zat ees ze best you vill git,” he cried. “Of you no eat zat, you
starve!”

“All right, we’ll starve then,” replied Henry recklessly.

“Bah! you think you are ze brave boy, eh? Ze English za be all grand
cowards!” And the Frenchman went off in disgust.

“He’s a cheerful dog,” muttered Silvers.

The next day the fare was even worse, and both of the prisoners were on
the point of open rebellion. At night the French officer brought in an
aged Englishman to talk to them. The Englishman was a Canadian settler.

“They are bound to make you talk,” said the Englishman. “If you will
tell all you know they will treat you better.”

“Tell what?” asked Silvers.

“Tell all the plans of the English soldiers.”

“But we know very little,” put in Henry.

“The French captain thinks you know a great deal. He says the man who
captured you, Jacques Volnier, is certain one of you is a noted spy.”

“He must mean me,” said Silvers. “If so, he is much mistaken. I am
nothing but a plain soldier.”

“And so am I,” added Henry.

“I am willing to believe that, for your faces are honest ones,” said the
old Englishman. “But you know how suspicious these Frenchmen are.”

“How come you here?” asked Henry.

“It is a long story. Years ago I married a young lady whose parents
lived not far from Quebec. When they died, they left her the farm and
all its fine buildings. We moved to this place and have been here ever
since. I am seventy-three years old, and so far I have refused to take
either side in this struggle.”

“Did they send you here to bribe us?”

The old man drew himself up.

“They could not do that. They asked me to talk to you, that is all. I am
afraid if you will tell them nothing it will go hard with you.”

“We cannot tell what we do not know,” said Silvers.

“That is true.”

The old man asked them their names, and in return said his name was
Peter Merton. He said he had a son, who had left home at the beginning
of the war, and what had become of his offspring he did not know.

“I have an idea he joined the English army,” he said. “If so, I
sincerely trust that no harm comes to him.”

The old Englishman remained with them for the best part of an hour. He
told them that the camp was located not far from the north bank of the
St. Lawrence, a few miles above Quebec.

“I cannot tell you what General Wolfe is now doing,” he said. “We get
very little news.”

“I heard some cannon firing last night,” said Henry.

“Oh, yes, we get plenty of that. But very little damage is done. I do
not believe that General Wolfe really means to demolish Quebec.” And in
this surmise the old man was correct.

When the old man was leaving, he shook hands with them. As he did this
he pressed into the hand of each a piece of gold money.

“You may find it useful,” he whispered. And before they could protest he
was gone.

“He is certainly a good-hearted fellow,” said Henry.

“He might have helped us to escape,” said Silvers, as he slipped the
gold piece in his pocket.

“No, I think he was too old for that,” returned Henry, and then glancing
on the ground he uttered a low cry, for there lay a small and
exceedingly sharp dagger.

“He dropped that, and most likely on purpose,” exclaimed the
sharpshooter. “I’ll keep it, for it may come in handy,” and he placed
the dagger in his bosom.

Henry and Silvers had been confined for the night in an old house. Two
sleepy French soldiers were on guard. As one of them came in to see that
they were up to no mischief Silvers motioned to him.

“Do you talk English?” he asked.

“Verra little,” answered the soldier, who was of the peasantry and
exceedingly stupid.

“We are hungry, and want something to eat and to drink,” went on
Silvers, and pointed to his mouth.

At this the soldier shrugged his shoulders.

“We will pay for whatever you get us,” went on the sharpshooter, showing
the gold coin. “You buy us something, and keep half the money.”

The eyes of the peasant opened widely at sight of the gold coin, the
like of which he had not seen for months, for his pay as a soldier was
but a few francs per week.

“I no—you——” he stammered.

For reply Silvers made a motion as to cut the coin in half. Then he
pointed to the soldier’s pocket and then to his own mouth and to Henry’s
mouth. The peasant comprehended and a dull smile overspread his
features. He went out to consult the other soldier on guard.

A few minutes later the fellow came back and took the gold coin. Then,
regardless of army regulations, he left his gun with his companion and
stole away in the darkness.

“He has gone for the food,” whispered Silvers to Henry. “Now the
question is, shall we wait for him to get back, or make a dash for
liberty?”

“Let us try for liberty,” exclaimed the young soldier eagerly. “If we
can only get away, I am sure we can find something to eat somewhere.”

“I have a plan,” said the sharpshooter. “Do you see yonder chimney?”

“Of course.”

“We might pretend to run away and hide in that. Then, when the soldiers
disperse to hunt for us, we can cut sticks and off.”

This plan was agreed to, and having examined the chimney and found out
how they could secrete themselves inside, they both peeped out at the
single guard, who was walking up and down, humming to himself.

“Now!” cried Silvers, and they made a racket as if climbing through a
side window, letting the sash fall with a crash. Then both ran to the
chimney and hid with all possible speed.

The guard gave a cry in French and came running up. One glance showed
him the empty room and his eyes strayed to the window.

“Gone!” he muttered, in his native tongue. “And through yonder window!
Oh, the artful rascals! But I shall catch them, or shoot them down!”

He made off, and they heard him start to give the alarm. But then he
thought of his companion and the gold piece. If the commanding officer
heard of how the one guard had gone off there would be trouble ahead for
both. He ran around wildly, at length taking a road leading to the river
bank.

“Now is our chance,” said Henry, and dropped out of the chimney, covered
with soot and as black as a negro. Rushing outside, he caught up the gun
belonging to the guard who had gone for the food. As he did this Silvers
drew the dagger he had picked up, and thus armed the pair started for
the nearest patch of woodland, several hundred feet away.

But the alarm was now general, in spite of the guard’s effort to keep
the affair quiet, and they heard calls from several directions.

“If we get away it’s going to be a tight squeeze,” said Silvers.

“We must get away,” cried Henry. “Come on,” and he set off at a faster
pace than ever.


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                               CHAPTER XI

                          ABOARD THE FIRE-BOAT


THE edge of the woods was gained when a shot rang out, but whether
directed at Henry or the sharpshooter neither could tell.

“They will be after us hot-footed in another minute,” said the young
soldier. “How shall we turn?”

“It will be folly to turn to the river just yet,” answered Silvers.
“They will be sure to hunt for us there. Let us hide in the opposite
direction until the alarm is over.”

As the pair passed into the wood they saw a man coming along a
well-beaten path. He carried a bundle under one arm and two bottles
under the other. As he came closer they recognized the soldier who had
taken the gold piece. He had brought food and some wine from a chateau
not far away, where he was well known. He started to yell, but Silvers
stopped him.

“Silence!” he cried. “Silence, if you value your life.”

But the peasant was too frightened to listen, and yelling loudly he
dropped his bundle and bottles and ran for the soldiers’ camp as swiftly
as his slim legs would carry him.

“This may come useful,” said Henry, as he picked up the bundle, which
was done up in a bit of white cloth.

“Ditto one of these,” added Silvers, and slipped a bottle of wine into
his coat pocket.

The wood passed they came in sight of the chateau, a pretty place, built
of stone, covered with ivy, and set in a park of shrubbery. Back of the
chateau were a barn and several other outbuildings.

A light was burning in an upper room of the chateau, but otherwise the
entire place was dark.

“Let us make for the barns,” whispered Silvers. “They ought to afford
some sort of a hiding place.”

Henry was willing, and in a trice they had leaped the fence fronting a
road and were running to the nearest of the outbuildings, which loomed
up vaguely in the darkness. The shelter of the structure gained, they
found an open door and ran inside.

The barn was divided into two parts, one for the horses, of which there
were four, and the other for hay and grain. Back of the barn were a
cow-shed and a milk house.

“Shall we get into the hay?” whispered Henry. They could already hear
the pursuers on the roadway.

“They will be sure to search that,” answered Silvers. “Wait a second.”

The sharpshooter bent down and tried several of the boards of the floor.
As he had hoped, one was loose, and beneath was an opening of no mean
size.

“Just the thing. In you go,” he went on, and Henry dropped down,
followed by his companion, and the board was lowered into place over
them.

It was a damp, foul-smelling hole, but to this they did not just then
pay attention. With bated breath they strained their ears to catch some
sound of those who were after them.

It was a good five minutes before anybody came into the place, to tramp
loudly directly over their heads. There were four or five soldiers, and
the two in hiding heard them move among the horses and through the grain
room and the hay mow. The soldiers spoke in French, so neither Henry nor
Silvers knew what was said.

Following the examination of the barn, the soldiers looked over the
other buildings, and even into the water vat of the milk house. Then
they went outside and looked around the trees in the chateau park, and
among the bushes.

“They must have gone further,” said the corporal in charge, in French.
“They were afraid to stay here.”

“Unless we catch them it will go hard with Gaston and Pasmont,” said
another. “The captain said they must keep a good watch over the sly
rascals.”

After the French soldiers had gone the barn became as silent as a tomb.

“What an escape!” whispered Henry half joyously.

“Hush, lad,” warned Silvers. “We are not yet out of the woods.”

For half an hour they remained under the flooring of the barn, and then,
unable to endure the smell any longer, they left the hole and moved up
into the hay mow, now half filled with the summer crop.

Henry had brought the food in the cloth with him, and, being hungry,
both proceeded to make a meal in the hay, Silvers drinking from the
bottle of wine and the young soldier procuring some water from the milk
house.

“What shall be our next move?” asked Henry, feeling that the
sharpshooter was the leader.

“Better stay here until to-morrow night,” answered Silvers.

“As long as that!”

“Why not? It’s more comfortable here than in prison, and by to-morrow
night the excitement will have blown over and we’ll have a much better
chance to get away than we’ll have now.”

Henry could not help but see the force of this argument. Yet to wait
twenty-four hours under such circumstances appeared to be a never-ending
period of time.

Slowly the balance of the night wore away and day came on. A farmhand
came to feed the horses and hitch one to a cart, and a maid came out to
milk three cows, but otherwise they did not see or hear a soul. As she
worked around the milk house the maid sang a gay song in French, as if
no such thing as a war existed.

“It takes a French girl to do that,” observed Silvers. “No English girl
could sing so happily with danger at the very door of the home.”

“The French are a gay people,” answered Henry. “But, just the same, they
can fight when they want to.”

At last the sun went down and night came on. They had eaten the last of
the food brought along, and Silvers had long since finished his bottle
of wine. It was somewhat cloudy, which promised to be in their favor.

“Now we’ll see what fate has in store for us,” said Silvers, after a
long look around the outbuildings. “Shall I carry the musket, or will
you?”

“As you are the best shot, you had better take it,” answered Henry.

“Then I’ll give you the knife,” went on the sharpshooter, and passed
over the dagger.

The gun was in the same condition as when taken from the prison, and
they had taken care to preserve the powder for priming.

They left the barn by a back door and lost no time in crossing a turnip
and onion lot to a row of berry bushes skirting a ditch. Once at the
ditch, they crawled along until they gained the shelter of the woods.

“Now we can make for the river,” said Silvers. “But how we are to get
across remains a problem still to solve.”

“Perhaps we can find a canoe or a rowboat. Or, on a pinch, we can build
a raft.”

“Not so easy, lad, without tools.”

The woods were thick with underbrush, and it was no mean task to push a
way through. Soon, however, they came to a well-beaten path, and along
this they moved faster, Silvers in the lead, and both with eyes and ears
strained to the utmost, for a possible sign of an enemy.

“There is a building ahead,” said the sharpshooter, after a quarter of a
mile had been covered.

It proved to be a fair-sized summer house, standing on a rocky cliff.
Beyond was a series of rough stone steps, leading to the river bank, far
below. At the shore was a rude dock, and here rested a long,
strange-looking object, half boat and half raft, piled high with some
straw and several barrels of pitch.

“Some kind of a craft,” murmured Henry, as he looked forward in the
uncertain light.

“Be quiet, there may be soldiers on guard here,” whispered Silvers in
return.

Making certain that they were not observed, the pair stole down the
rough steps. They were almost at the bottom when a loose stone turned
under Silvers’ foot and went crashing downward.

The crash of the falling stone was followed by a cry from a sentry
stationed on the cliff. The cry was answered by another sentry, and soon
several forms appeared.

“We must hide!” cried Henry, and ran away from the steps.

“To the boat!” answered Silvers, and ran for the rude craft.

The young soldier followed, and just as they gained the boat a shot rang
out. Then two soldiers came rushing down the rough steps.

“That will keep you back,” muttered the sharpshooter, and fired the
musket. One of the soldiers was hit in the breast and fell, and the
other lost no time in seeking cover.

Once on board of the boat, the pair untied the line which held it to the
rude dock. Poles were handy and they pushed off into the stream. Then
each took a paddle and did what he could to move the craft to the south
shore of the St. Lawrence.

“She’s a clumsy one, lad,” observed Silvers, as they pushed the craft
around only with the greatest of difficulty.

“I never saw such a boat before,” answered Henry.

“It’s a fire-boat, that’s what it is. The straw and pitch will make a
red-hot fire.”

“A fire-boat? What for?”

“To send out among the shipping. Most likely the French thought to burn
some of General Wolfe’s ships with it.”

“I see. Hadn’t we better dump the straw and the barrels overboard? She
will move quicker with no load.”

“No time now, lad. Pull, and pull for all you are worth, if you want to
get away.”

Both did their best, and as they worked they heard a dozen or more of
their enemies running up and down the river bank.

“They are looking for another boat,” said Silvers. “I trust to luck they
find none.”

Suddenly they heard the cry of a number of Indians, who had joined the
French sentries. Then came several shots, one striking a barrel of pitch
and causing the stuff to overflow upon the straw.

“Keep out of range, lad,” cried Silvers.

“Yes, and you do the same,” panted the young soldier. He was working
with might and main to move the fire-boat further from the shore. “Do
you see anything of another boat?”

“Not yet. But it can’t be that there are none somewhere about,” went on
the sharpshooter.

Presently they beheld what looked like several torches flashing through
the night. They were a dozen or more feet apart.

“By Joseph! but I don’t like that!” cried Silvers.

“Don’t like what?” queried Henry.

Scarcely had he spoken when he understood what the sharpshooter meant.
There was a whizzing, and the flaming arrows—for they were nothing
less—flew all around the fire-boat. One touched the straw, but Silvers
caught it instantly and hurled it into the water.

“They mean to fire the boat!” gasped Henry. “If one of them plants
itself in that pitch——”

He got no further, for at that moment came another flight of the flaming
arrows, seven or eight in number. Four fell on the boat, one in the very
spot where the pitch had overflowed upon the straw.

The pair on the craft did their best to put out the flames, and two of
the arrows went overboard the instant they landed. But the others could
not be removed, and in two seconds more there was a flash and a roar,
and the fire-boat burst into flames from end to end!


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                              CHAPTER XII

                          GENERAL WOLFE’S CAMP


“WE can’t put out this fire!”

“We must jump for our lives!”

Such were the exclamations which burst simultaneously from the lips of
Henry and the sharpshooter, as the flames shot skyward from the
fire-boat.

Both leaped to the stern of the craft, where there was a plank extending
over the water a distance of a few feet.

“Let us haul the board overboard,” cried Silvers. “That will give us
something to rest on.”

This advice was followed with difficulty. But at last the plank went
down with a splash and the two escaping prisoners went with it.

They were none too soon. The fire-boat now blazed up with increasing
fury, and Henry’s coat was in a flame in two places. But the souse in
the river saved the young soldier from more than a scorching.

“Whi—which way now?” he sputtered as he came up and caught hold of one
end of the plank, while Silvers grasped the other end.

“Let us see if we can’t make the opposite shore. It’s our only chance.”

“The night won’t help us much, now the fire-boat is ablaze,” said Henry.
For the conflagration cast a ruddy glare all around them.

The fire-boat had been located a short distance below Sillery Cove,
where the St. Lawrence was a little over a mile wide. The tide, which
had been high in the afternoon, was running out rapidly, and this
carried both the fire-boat and the plank along with it. Thus the Indians
who had shot the flaming arrows and the French soldiers who had given
the alarm were soon left far behind.

Both Henry and Silvers tried to guide the plank towards the south bank
of the river, but in this they were only partly successful. Yet it was a
great satisfaction to both to see that they were getting further and
further away from the shore of the enemy.

“If we are not careful we will be washed right out to sea,” said Henry,
after a long spell of silence, in which they gazed back in the
semi-darkness, to see if they were being pursued.

[Illustration:

  A short distance away was a broad-sterned brig.—_Page 109._
]

“We are still a long distance from the ocean, lad,” responded Silvers.

“Are we close to Quebec?”

“A mile or two above it, I think.”

Another spell of silence followed, and then Henry let out a faint shout.

“A ship! We are drifting directly upon a ship!”

His words proved true. But a short distance away was a broad-sterned
brig, standing slowly down the stream.

“If it’s a French craft we are lost,” whispered Silvers.

In a minute more the plank bumped up against the side of the brig, and
they could see half a dozen sailors at the rail.

“Hullo there!” cried a rough English voice. “Keelhaul me, if there are
not two soldiers on a board!”

“Frenchmen! spies!” put in another voice.

“No! no! we are not spies!” called back Silvers joyfully. “We are
prisoners escaped from the French.”

“Harken to that, mate. Escaped prisoners! In that case we must help ’em
aboard.”

It was not long before a rope was thrown overboard, and with great
difficulty Henry and Silvers climbed to the main deck of the ship, where
they were immediately surrounded by the captain and several other
officers.

“Who are you?” demanded the captain sharply.

“Royal Americans, sir,” responded Silvers, touching his forelock, while
Henry did the same. “We were captured by the French and Indians about a
week ago and made our escape last night.”

“If you are Royal Americans where do you belong? Certainly not in
General Wolfe’s camp.”

“We belong to the army that was under General Prideaux. But he is dead,
and Sir William Johnson took command.”

“Prideaux—at Fort Niagara? That is a long distance from here.”

“We were on our way to Oswego when we were taken. The French brought us
across the lake, and then marched us down the river road to a prison
near Sillery Cove.”

The captain of the brig listened to their tale with much interest.

“If you have been among the French you ought to be able to tell General
Wolfe something worth listening to,” he said, when they had finished.
“Some of the men on board are bound for his camp, and you may go along
if you wish.”

“Where is his camp?” asked Henry.

“On the upper bank of this river, just below the Falls of Montmorenci.
The general has been sick, but I heard this morning that he is now
somewhat better.”

“May I ask if you have been in a fight with the French?” came from the
young soldier curiously.

“Hardly a fight. We have been ordered to stand up and down the river
with the tide. This has kept the enemy on the move, watching not only
this brig, but also a number of other ships, and is gradually wearing
the French soldiers out. Did you hear anything of their colonists
deserting?”

“I did,” cried Henry. “Two men who were on guard said that a hundred men
had left in one day, so he had heard. I didn’t get any particulars.”

“Montcalm will find that this campaign is not yet over,” responded the
captain of the brig grimly. “He thinks Quebec cannot be taken, but Wolfe
will teach him a trick or two ere we hoist anchor for England.”

It was an hour later when the brig dropped anchor in the stream, midway
between the Island of Orleans and the northwest shore of the St.
Lawrence. Not a battery from Quebec had fired on the ship, and the
English batteries on the southeast shore were also silent.

“It is my duty to send you over to General Wolfe’s camp under guard,”
said the captain of the brig. “I do not doubt but that you are to be
trusted, but duty is duty, you know.”

“We’ll not complain,” answered Silvers.

A boat was soon lowered and the sharpshooter and Henry entered this,
followed by a coxswain and his crew, and two army officers, who had been
on the trip of the brig. This boat was followed by a second and a third,
and then all three headed for the shore below the Falls of Montmorenci.

It did not take long to reach the mud flats below the rocks fronting the
river bank. Here the party was challenged by the grenadier guards, but
quickly passed, and Henry and Silvers were marched up the bank by a
rough trail.

Both the young soldier and the sharpshooter were thoroughly worn out by
the trials they had endured, and having received some food on the brig,
and dried their clothing, they did not remain awake long after having
been assigned quarters.

It was Henry who was the first to stir in the morning. The roll call of
the long drums aroused him, and gazing out on something of a parade
ground he saw the grenadiers forming to answer to their names.

“This looks natural,” he observed to his companion, who arose lazily and
stretched himself. “I must say these soldiers of General Wolfe look as
if they meant business.”

It was not long after this that a guard came in and told them to prepare
for an interview with General Wolfe. They at once brushed up as best
they could, and the guard supplied them with caps, to replace those
which had been lost.

General Wolfe’s headquarters were in a house some distance back from the
Falls of Montmorenci. The general had been taken seriously ill about the
middle of August and was now slowly recovering.

At the time of this campaign, which was to make him famous in the
world’s history, General James Wolfe was but thirty-two years of age. He
was tall and slender, with sloping shoulders and with a face that showed
more of quietness than determination. But his eyes were bright and under
certain circumstances could flash forth a hidden fire that meant much.
His hair was red, and worn in a cue, as was the fashion at that time.

James Wolfe came of fighting stock, his father, Major-General Edward
Wolfe, being a distinguished officer before him. The son entered the
King’s army at the age of fifteen, and one year later served in Flanders
as the adjutant of a regiment. From Flanders he went to Scotland, to
fight gallantly at Culloden, and then at Stirling, Perth, and Glasgow.
At twenty-three he was a lieutenant-colonel, holding that rank for five
years, when he obtained leave of absence and spent a long vacation in
Paris.

With the breaking out of the war with France Wolfe was again in his
element. He sailed on the expedition against Louisburg, where he served
with great honor to himself. Because of this service he was chosen by
Pitt to command the expedition against Quebec. He sailed on the 17th of
February, his fleet consisting of twenty-two ships of the line, and also
numerous frigates, transports, and other craft. We have already seen how
he landed on the Island of Orleans and at other points, and how he tried
to break in upon the almost impregnable French position at the Falls of
Montmorenci.

Henry had heard much about General Wolfe and of what a sturdy and
well-trained army officer he was, and the young soldier was rather
surprised to find himself ushered into the presence of one who looked so
young and mild. Wolfe’s sickness had left him pale and weak, yet he soon
showed that he had all his old-time determination to win still in him.

“You may tell me your story, but be brief,” he said, to Henry, who had
been brought in first, and then settled back in his chair to listen. He
did not interrupt the recital, but when the young soldier had finished
he asked a number of questions, all of which Henry answered as clearly
as he could.

“You have certainly had your share of adventures,” said General Wolfe.
“I imagine you did not expect to find yourself here when you started out
for Oswego.”

“That is true, sir,” answered Henry.

“And you wish to get back at once? That will be rather difficult, I am
afraid.”

“I do not care so much about getting back, sir. But I should like to
know what has become of my cousin, David Morris, and the others.”

“You had better rest for a few days, and then I will have one of my aids
see what can be done for you.”

“Thank you, general,” said Henry, and with a salute he withdrew.

The interview accorded to Silvers was similar to the foregoing,
excepting that the sharpshooter was questioned in regard to such French
defenses as he had seen along the river front. Then both were told that
they were no longer under guard, and could come and go, within the
limits of the camp, as they pleased.


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                              CHAPTER XIII

                     SCALING THE HEIGHTS OF QUEBEC


BOTH Henry and Silvers were much interested in the inspection of the
camp General Wolfe had established near the Falls of Montmorenci and
along the St. Lawrence River.

The falls at this point were a grand sight, tumbling over the rough
rocks that lined the gorge with a thunder which to the young soldier
seemed a second Niagara. Below the falls was a stretch of smooth water,
and here was a succession of shoals, dry, or nearly so, during low tide.

The French camp was within sight between the trees, and it is said that
the English and French guards occasionally spoke to each other further
up the small stream, where the noise was not so loud. But men as well as
officers had to be careful, for each army had its sharpshooters posted,
ready to bring down any enemy who showed himself.

During the time spent near the falls General Wolfe had not been idle. He
had tried his best to draw General Montcalm from his secure position by
making moves up and down the St. Lawrence and by sending detachments
hither and thither, to attack and destroy various villages, towns, and
isolated chateaux and farmhouses. All were given over to the flames, and
night after night the sky was lit up by the conflagrations.

All of these deeds made the Marquis de Montcalm very angry, but he was
too wily a general to be drawn into any trap. “Wolfe cannot dislodge
me,” he said. “And soon his supplies will give out, winter will be on
him, and he and his fleet will have to sail for home.”

His remarks were not mere guesswork. From various sources he learned
that the English supplies were running low, and that many of the British
soldiers were sick. Those on the fleet were growing tired of drifting up
and down the river, and the admiral in charge knew that winter came
early around Quebec.

“Something will have to be done between now and the first of October,”
said the admiral. “To remain in these waters after that would be a
hardship.”

“Something shall be done,” said General Wolfe, and, still weak from his
spell of sickness, he began to lay new plans to force Montcalm into a
battle.

Several days slipped by, and Henry was glad enough to take the rest thus
afforded. On the fourth day a messenger appeared bringing in news from
Fort Oswego.

“Hurrah!” shouted Henry, as he ran up to where Silvers sat smoking on a
rock. “Dave is safe, and so are Shamer and Raymond. Oh, how glad I am!”

“That is good news!” returned the sharpshooter. “Wonder how they managed
to escape?”

“The messenger didn’t know the full particulars. He says each was hurt a
little, but not of any account. I can tell you, I feel much relieved”

“I don’t doubt it, Henry. I know you think a good deal of your cousin.”

“And why shouldn’t I? We have been playmates for years, and we have
hunted and fished and fought together for ever so long, too. Dave is as
close as a brother to me.”

“Well, now you know he is safe, I reckon you won’t be so anxious to get
to Fort Oswego as you was.”

“No, I am going to send word to him that I am here, and then stay a
while.”

“So am I going to stay,” went on Silvers. “I feel it in my bones that
there will be a big fight here before this campaign closes.”

General Wolfe had under him three brigadiers, Murray, Monckton, and
Townshend. He now called them to him for consultation and submitted
several propositions. A debate lasting a long time followed, and at last
it was decided to attack the French at a point some distance above the
city of Quebec. By doing this, Montcalm would be cut off from his base
of supplies and compelled to either fight or surrender.

The task which General Wolfe had set for himself and his men was an
exceedingly difficult one. As already mentioned, the river was fronted
by a high wall of rocks, and to scale these seemed next to impossible.
Besides, the French were on constant guard, and would be sure to sound
the alarm quickly and pour a hot fire into the advancing British.

In order to carry out the plan decided upon General Wolfe had first to
abandon the camp at the falls. He knew the French would harass him as
much as possible, and so sent Monckton from Point Levi with a number of
soldiers, under pretense of attacking Beauport, midway between the falls
and the city. Montcalm looked on this with new alarm and sent his troops
in that direction; and Wolfe withdrew without further trouble.

Henry and Silvers were with the soldiers who abandoned the Montmorenci
and soon found themselves at Point Levi, where they joined a handful of
other Colonial English mixed in with the Royal Grenadiers. This was
early in September, and a few days later the troops were transferred to
the ships under Admiral Holmes, and here General Wolfe joined the
expedition.

To the French it looked as if the English were going to give up the
campaign, and Wolfe and his officers, as well as the admiral of the
squadrons, did all in their power to make the deception more real.
Cannon were taken up and placed aboard the vessels in the most open
manner, and soldiers were made to pack away the camp outfits as if
getting ready for a long voyage. “The English are going to sail!” cried
the people of Quebec and vicinity, and their hopes arose, to think that
they would at last be free from the grim terror which had hung over them
so long.

But Wolfe was not yet ready to force the attack. The plan of action was
still in the rough. There was a high stone bluff, or cliff, to scale,
and how to do it in comparative safety was a delicate problem to solve.
The general listened patiently to what several who were acquainted with
the locality had to say, and then surveyed the north shore with a
telescope. Near what was then Anse du Foulon, and now called Wolfe’s
Cove, he discovered a narrow path running between rocks and bushes from
the water’s edge to the top of the bluff.

“That is our course,” he said, quietly but firmly. On the bluff at this
point were but a dozen soldiers’ tents, so he concluded that the French
guard there could not be a heavy one.

But to have given the French an inkling of what was in his mind would
have ruined everything, so once again Wolfe set to work to fool the
enemy. His ships sailed still further up the river, as if looking for a
landing, and the French batteries opened with vigor, but without doing
any harm.

A heavy downpour of rain now made further operations impossible for two
days. It was a cold, raw storm, and the soldiers in the transports could
not stand it, and had to be landed once more on the south shore, where
they built camp-fires, sought such shelters as were handy, and did what
they could to make themselves comfortable. The weather was very trying
on General Wolfe, but he refused to take again to his bed, declaring
that he was now going to see the campaign to a finish.

On the 12th of September all seemed in readiness for the attack. The
French soldiers were worn out through following the passage of the
English ships up and down the river, while the stay on the south shore
had rested the grenadiers and others in the English ranks.

For the daring expedition Wolfe selected forty-eight hundred men. He
knew that the enemy must be at least twice as strong, and to engage
Montcalm’s attention once again in a different direction, he had Admiral
Saunders make a move as if to land at Beauport. This deception was
carried on in grand style, with signals flashing from ship to ship,
cannons roaring, and boatload after boatload of sailors and marines
putting off as if to dash upon the mud flats. In great haste Montcalm
massed his men at the Beauport batteries, satisfied at last that this
was to be the real point of attack, while the movement up the river was
only a blind.

Fortune now seemed to be at last in Wolfe’s favor. He was ten miles away
from the din at Beauport, with nearly five thousand of his soldiers, and
creeping upon the north shore of the river with the silence of a shadow.
There was no moon, but otherwise the night was clear. Wolfe occupied a
place in one of the foremost boats. Behind him came a long procession,
containing the Highlanders and grenadiers and also a handful of
Colonials, including Henry and Silvers, who had been armed, and who were
just as anxious to aid in the taking of Quebec as anybody.

Once or twice from out of the darkness came a challenge.

“Who comes?” was the question, put in French.

“France!” was the answer, of one who could speak the language well.

“What boats are those?”

“The provision boats. Hush, or the English will hear. They are not far
away.”

The sentry knew that some provision boats were expected along that
night, so said no more. As a matter of fact, the order to send the
provisions down the river had been countermanded but a few hours before,
but without the sentry’s knowledge. Thus fortune again favored the
English.

At last the headland above Anse du Foulon was gained. Here the tide
swept along rapidly and some boats were carried partly past the cove.

“No guard in sight,” whispered one of the lookouts.

“It is well,” murmured Wolfe.

Only the sound of a gurgling brook as it rushed into the St. Lawrence
broke the stillness of the night. Before the boats lay the dark,
frowning bluff, with its loose rocks, and its straggling cedars, other
trees, and brushwood. The path was there, doubly uncertain in the
darkness.

Twenty-four volunteers, picked men, good shots, and with nerves of iron,
led the way. In the meantime those in the other boats waited by the
shore, for the signal to land if it proved safe, or to pull away with
might and main should the French have led them into a trap.

“Tell you what, Henry, this is a ticklish task,” whispered Silvers, as
he examined the new firearm he had received.

“It certainly is that,” answered the young soldier. “But I reckon
General Wolfe knows what he is doing.”

“Silence there,” came the low command, and the two said no more.

A painful period of waiting followed. Far up the bluff they could hear
the volunteers climbing along. Then came a shot, followed by others, and
then a ringing English cheer.

“We have them! We have them!” was the cry. “Come up!”

“Hurrah!” came a mighty cry. “_Up we go!_” And in a twinkle the soldiers
were out of the boats and scaling the rocks as best they could, some by
way of the path and others by rocks and bushes.

It was a climb that Henry never forgot. The path was choked with
grenadiers, each with his gun slung over his back and each loaded down
with knapsack and blanket.

“We can get up this way just as well,” said Silvers, and up they went,
side by side, over some rough stones, and then hauling, pushing, and
pulling themselves from one point of vantage to another, until, fairly
panting for breath, they reached the top and joined the forces gathering
on the field above, known as the Plains of Abraham.


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                              CHAPTER XIV

                       WOLFE’S VICTORY AND DEATH


A SLIGHT shower of rain was falling when Henry and Silvers, still
panting for breath, followed the grenadiers and Highlanders to the
Plains of Abraham, so called after Abraham Martin, a Canadian pilot who
had once owned a stretch of land in that locality. The plains were
tolerably level, covered here and there with grass and brushwood. To the
southward stretched the St. Lawrence, and to the north and east the
River St. Charles. Quebec stood at the extreme southeast point, hidden
from view by a series of rocks and low hills, and partly protected by
the city wall.

“This is surely a surprise to the French,” remarked Henry, as a distant
cannon roared forth a warning. “Outside of the guard that was routed not
a soldier has come into view.”

But it was not long before a detachment of the French appeared on the
ridge before the city. They were a battalion sent forward from an
encampment on the St. Charles. The soldiers were in their showy white
uniforms, in strong contrast to the red of the British. Drums beat, the
Highlanders piped bravely on their pipes, and a skirmish ensued which
quickly forced the French to retire for consultation. An attack was also
made on the rear, by Bougainville’s forces, but this was likewise
repulsed.

Hearing the distant firing, Montcalm rode forward in hot haste to learn
what it meant. He still imagined it might be a ruse, and that the main
attack would be at Beauport, but one glance at the long and solid ranks
of the English made him realize the bitter truth—that Wolfe had
outwitted him, and that the English were now between him and his
supplies. He must either fight and win or surrender.

The French commander knew that he must act quickly, for the English
might start to intrench themselves, or, worse yet, march on the city, at
any moment. Orders were rushed furiously in all directions, and the
troops came up pell-mell, some over the plains, some by the St. Charles
bridge, and some by way of the city’s gates, the regulars in white, the
French Colonials in their nondescript tatters, and the Indians in their
savage warpaint. Drums beat, trumpets blared defiance, and proud banners
waved through the rainy air. But the English ranks stood silent, the
grim look on the men’s faces telling how they were prepared to meet any
shock that might come.

The battle was not long in starting. The French took possession of
several rises of ground and of some cornfields, and a scattering fire
began, gradually growing stronger and stronger.

“Be calm, men!” cried Wolfe, riding up and down, in front and beyond his
men. A short while later a bullet struck him in the wrist, but he bound
the wound up with a handkerchief, and refused to quit the field.

Henry and Silvers were firing with the rest. Soon the fight caused them
to drift apart. Henry was with some grenadiers, tall, strong-looking
soldiers, who fought with a rare courage that nothing could daunt. With
Henry were fifteen or twenty Royal Americans, who had been at first
guarding the boats at the landing, but who had now come up to do their
share of the fighting.

There was a constant rattle of musketry, punctuated occasionally by
heavy artillery. Montcalm’s army was now at hand, and a fierce onslaught
ensued, the French general himself leading his men and urging them to do
their best.

“Forward!” was the cry on the English side, and the soldiers advanced a
couple of hundred feet. Then the French rushed to the front, while the
English reloaded their pieces. A solid volley was delivered which
created terrific havoc in the ranks of the wearers of the white uniform,
who were seen to pitch in all directions, dead and dying.

“The day is ours!” was the British cry. “At them! At them, Britons! At
them!” And another advance was made.

Begrimed with dirt and smoke, and perspiring freely, Henry went on with
the rest. He had fired his musket several times, and now came the order
to fix bayonets. Bullets were whistling in all directions, and the young
soldier saw more than one companion go down, several to their death. He
himself was “scotched” in the arm, but did not notice the hurt until
long afterward.

Slowly the French gave way, first in one direction and then another.
Then came the order to charge, and a mighty yell went up as the
grenadiers and others ran over the field on the very heels of the
retreating French. To one side was a field in which were stationed a
number of French sharpshooters.

“They must be dislodged,” cried Wolfe, and led the charge. Back of him
came the Louisburg Grenadiers, those men who had made such a record for
themselves in other campaigns. With these grenadiers was Louis Silvers,
running with many others into the very jaws of death.

Again the bullets whistled around them, and again General Wolfe was hit.
He was seen to stagger, but kept on, when a third bullet took him in the
breast.

“The general is killed!” was the cry, and Silvers ran to support him.
But ere the brave sharpshooter who had been Henry’s companion through so
much of peril could gain the general’s side, a bullet hit him in the
side of the head, and he fell over on his face, dead.

Several officers and solders had seen General Wolfe’s condition, and a
lieutenant and two privates ran to support him and carry him to the
rear.

“Le—let me down, men,” he murmured. “Don’t take me from the field.”

“General, you must have a surgeon,” said one.

“There is no need; it is—is all over with me,” he gasped, and sank as in
a faint.

“Run for a surgeon,” said another, and two privates sped away on the
errand.

At that moment came another yell from the end of the field, some
distance away:

“They run! They run! Hurrah! See them run!”

Breathing heavily, Wolfe raised himself up.

“Who—run?” he murmured.

“The enemy, general; they are giving ground in every direction,”
answered the officer who knelt beside him.

Instantly the face of General Wolfe took on a look of quiet
satisfaction.

“Tell”—he murmured,—“tell Colonel Burton—march regiment—Webb’s—Charles
River—cut off retreat!” He breathed heavily, and then with a long sigh
continued: “Now, God be praised, I will die in peace!”

And but a short time later he expired.

The fall of Wolfe was disheartening to the English, but victory was
already in their grasp, and on the French side General Montcalm had also
been hit, as he was riding in the midst of the soldiers who were
retreating toward the city. A shot passed through his body and he was
supported through the St. Louis gate, now a place of intense excitement.
Those who were in the city became panic-stricken, and many sought to get
together their worldly possessions and fly for their lives.

There was one body of the French soldiery that had not as yet been
defeated. These were the colonists, who had been held at and near the
city. They now went forward and took possession of a hill and a
cornfield, from which they were dislodged only after a heavy loss by the
English.

In the meantime the French general further up the river did his best to
gather together his scattered guards and attack the British from the
rear. But by the time he came up General Wolfe’s army, now under the
command of Townshend, for Monckton had also fallen with Wolfe, was
safely intrenched. From Beauport also came the Governor-General,
Vaudreuil, amazed and bewildered, and able to do little but look on
helplessly. He was met by half of the demoralized French army, who
insisted upon it that all was lost.

In the city the confusion was tinged with a sadness hardly to be
described. Montcalm, the well-beloved, was dying, and his second in
command, Brigadier Senezergues, was also mortally hurt. What was to be
done? Another day would find the English strongly intrenched, for in the
darkness they were already bringing up cannon and training them on the
city walls.

“We must retreat—nothing more is left to us,” said more than one French
officer, and the word swept the rounds with incredible swiftness.
“Retreat! retreat, ere it is too late!” was the French cry, and away
fled regulars and colonists, in a mad rush that was little short of a
panic. The red men, who before the battle had boasted of what they would
do, disappeared as if the ground had opened and swallowed them up.

That night the Marquis de Montcalm, as brave a soldier as ever lived,
breathed his last. There was no coffin at hand in which to bury him, and
his remains were placed in a rude pine box and deposited under the floor
of the Ursuline Convent. As one historian has fitly said, the funeral of
Montcalm was the funeral of New France.

Wolfe and Montcalm! brave, generous soldiers both of them. Is it a
wonder that the people of Canada, French and English combined love their
memory, and that on what was the Plains of Abraham there stands to-day a
pyramid raised in their combined honor?

Ramesey was in command of Quebec, but under the orders of the
Governor-General. From a safe distance Vaudreuil wrote to the commandant
telling him not to let the English carry the place by assault.

“As soon as provisions fail, raise the white flag, and make the best
terms you can,” wrote the Governor-General, and Ramesey prepared to
obey. At one time he hesitated, hoping to be relieved by General Lévis,
who wanted the army to march back. But in a day or two matters grew
worse, and at last the white flag was raised, and Quebec capitulated.

“The city is ours!” cried Henry. “What a victory!”

It was indeed a victory, but one tinged with sadness, for General Wolfe
was loved by all. The remains of the officer were tenderly cared for,
and, later on, sent to England, where another monument to his memory was
erected in Westminster Abbey.

It was a great shock to Henry to find that Silvers had been shot and
killed. The man was comparatively a new acquaintance, yet their mutual
experiences of the past few weeks had made them feel more like old
friends. Silvers was buried in a trench outside of Quebec, along with
many others who had fallen, and Henry was a sincere mourner at the brief
funeral. Later on, the young soldier carved out a rude slab with his
jackknife which he erected over the mound. Fortunately Louis Silvers was
a bachelor, so there remained no wife or children to mourn his loss.


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                               CHAPTER XV

                             NEWS FROM HOME


“LETTERS! letters! letters!”

This was the cry which circulated around Fort Oswego one morning some
weeks after Dave had reached the stronghold, in company with Raymond,
Shamer, and the two hunters the party had met in the forest.

Dave was slowly recovering from his hurt knee. The twist had proved more
severe than at first anticipated, and he had found it necessary to go to
the hospital more than once, to have it examined and dressed.

A courier from Albany had come in, with saddle-bags filled with letters
of all kinds, written on the thinnest of paper, so that they should not
weigh too much, for postage went by weight and was very high.

“A letter for me!” cried Dave, as it was handed to him. It was addressed
to Fort Niagara, but as some of the soldiers of that place were now
coming down to Oswego all the mail was sorted at this point before any
was forwarded further.

The letter proved to be one written by Dave’s father, and filled four
closely written sheets. In it James Morris said that the summer had been
a fairly prosperous one at the homestead. The new cabin, built to take
the place of that burnt by the Indians, was now in a comfortable
condition, and both he and his brother had had a large crop of corn and
hay, while garden vegetables had never done better. Rodney, the cripple,
had gone out considerable during the warm days, and had on one occasion
shot a deer drinking at the brook below the cabin, and had also brought
in more than one acceptable string of fish.

    “Your Aunt Lucy is real well,” [the letter continued]. “She
    awaited the coming of Nell with Sam Barringford with tremendous
    anxiety, and when the two appeared on the trail, Sam on a horse
    he had borrowed at Winchester and Nell on a pony, the good woman
    almost fell dead with joy. We were all affected, and although
    they came at ten in the morning, no more work was done that day,
    excepting such as was necessary to make them comfortable. Sam
    told his story in detail and then we listened to Nell, and I
    must confess there was not a dry eye among us when she told of
    the hardships among the redskins, and of how Jean Bevoir had
    treated her. I sincerely hope that scoundrelly trader is sent to
    prison for a long term of years, for he has earned it.

    “The news that Fort Niagara was taken was hailed with joy by all
    of us, and we are proud of the part you and Henry played. Both
    of you must be careful and not run into needless danger. Now if
    Generals Wolfe and Amherst can only do as well this cruel war
    will soon come to an end, and then I can go and re-establish the
    post on the Kinotah, where, so I have been told by an old
    frontiersman, the game is now more plentiful than ever, since
    the Indians have left the hunting ground to go to war with the
    French.

    “Sam wishes me to say that he is going to remain here and at
    Winchester only about a week longer. Then he is going to rejoin
    the army at Lake Ontario, to keep his eye on you and Henry.
    Henry will be sent a letter by his father in this same mail.”

Dave read the letter over three times before he allowed it to drop in
his lap. In his mind’s eye he could picture the new cabin, and the joy
of the inmates over the safe arrival of little Nell and honest Sam
Barringford. And then a spasm of pain shot across his heart as he
thought of Henry.

“If he was killed what a shock it will prove!” he murmured with downcast
face. “Poor Henry! I’d give my right hand to know he was alive and
safe!”

“Bad news?” came from Raymond, who came up at that moment.

“No,” answered Dave, and went on: “It is a letter from home. They are
all well and send best wishes to me and to my cousin Henry. I was
thinking of how they will feel when they learn that—that——”

“Don’t take it so hard, Dave,” said the backwoodsman sympathetically.
“He may have escaped, after all. Just as strange things have happened.”

The young soldier shook his head doubtfully. “He had a hot fight—I don’t
see how he could escape if he was wounded. He is either dead or a
prisoner in some foul Canadian prison.”

Dave had been told to come to the hospital that afternoon at four
o’clock and have his knee looked after again. He was on hand promptly,
and the surgeon gave it a careful examination.

“It is doing nicely,” he said. “Be a bit careful of it for a week
longer, and it will be as well as ever.” And then he gave the young
soldier a box of salve to be used each night and morning.

Dave was about to leave the hospital when his attention was attracted to
a number of patients who had just been brought down in boats from Fort
Niagara. One of the men lying on a cot looked familiar, and drawing
closer he recognized Jean Bevoir.

The French trader looked pale and thin, for he had suffered not a
little. He looked at Dave curiously, and when the young soldier got the
chance he went up and spoke to the man.

“I suppose you know me, Bevoir?”

“Yees,” was the low reply. “You air Daf Morris, not so?”

“Yes, I am Dave Morris, a cousin to little Nell Morris.”

At these words the wounded man winced a little. Being a prisoner and in
the hospital had taken a good deal of his former bravado out of him.

“You haf made von great mistake,” he whined. “I am not ze bad man you
think, no.”

“I know all about that,” returned Dave coldly.

“Must I stand ze trial when I am well?”

“Certainly.”

“It ees verra hard on a poor man, yes, verra hard.”

“You brought it on yourself, Bevoir. You have caused our family a good
deal of trouble.”

“You are ze son of James Morris, not so?”

“I am—the same James Morris that you tried to rob of a trading-post on
the Kinotah,” answered the young soldier, bound that Jean Bevoir should
understand the situation fully.

“Zat was ze bad bus’ness, yes. I think ze tradin’-post mine. I haf ze
papairs to show of it.”

“The grant is my father’s, and always was,” retorted Dave.

“Do not be too sure,” answered the trader craftily. “I can bring ze men
to swear it ees mine—two, t’ree men.”

“Your title is no good.”

“We vill see ’bout zat. If I bring ze men ze court will say it ees mine,
and why not? I haf been dare long before your fadder, yes.”

There was a pause, for Dave did not know how to reply to this speech.
The French trader looked at the youth’s face searchingly.

“You listen,” he whispered, so that those around might not hear. “I tell
you something, yes.”

“What?” questioned Dave, wondering what was coming next.

“If you send me to ze prison for two, t’ree year what goot haf dat been?
Nodding, no nodding to you! I go and I come out, and ze trading-post
still belongs to Jean Bevoir, not to your fadder.”

“I don’t believe it.”

“Still it ees so. But now listen—I haf ze gran’ plan—ze plan to do you
goot! Ze tradin’-post ees mine, but I gif it to you and your fadder,
yes, efery-t’ing, if——” And here the French trader paused.

“If what?” questioned Dave, although he guessed what was coming.

“If you say noddings ’bout me here—if you help me to get away,” answered
Jean Bevoir, in a still lower whisper.

“Help you to get away?” cried Dave.

“Sh-sh! Not so loud. Yes, help me. It vill be easy to do zat. An English
uniform, a dark night, and it ees done. You haf ze tradin’-post, and I
also gif you dis.”

As Jean Bevoir spoke he drew from his bosom a small bag tied with a long
string. Opening the bag he produced half a dozen English and French
pieces of gold, worth probably a hundred dollars all told.

“You will give me that money if I help you to get away?” said Dave
slowly.

“Yees, efery piece of it. Now vat you say? Am I not ze goot-hearted
man?”

“Good-hearted?” said Dave scornfully. “I think you are a first-class
villain, and if you weren’t in the hospital I’d do my best to knock you
down for your impudence.” Dave was speaking loudly. “You can keep your
dirty gold, and I shall do my best to put you in prison. And as for the
trading-post——”

“Here, here, what is the trouble?” burst in the voice of a surgeon, as
he strode up. “We allow no quarreling in this ward.”

“This rascal has been trying to bribe me into helping him to escape,”
answered Dave, his eyes flashing. “He wanted me to get him an English
uniform on the sly.”

“What! Is this true?” ejaculated the surgeon. “If it is, he deserves a
flogging instead of medical care.”

“No! no!” shrieked Jean Bevoir. “It ees all von gran’ mistake.” He
hurriedly stowed the gold in his bosom. “How can I escape ven I haf ze
shot in ze leg——”

“It is getting better fast,” responded the surgeon. “I fancy we had
better keep an eye on you, and by the end of the week I’ll pass you over
to the prison guard for safe keeping.”

“I hope you do, sir,” said Dave. “He is a great criminal as well as a
prisoner of war,” and he told a few of the particulars of Jean Bevoir’s
doings.

“I am glad you did not let him tempt you,” said the surgeon. “He is
certainly a rascal of the first water. But I don’t want you to talk to
him any longer. A quarrel will only excite the other patients here,” and
he led the way from the building. As he was going out, Dave looked back
to see what Bevoir was doing. The French trader scowled at him and shook
his fist in rage.

“He will hate me worse than ever for this,” reasoned the young soldier.
“But I am glad I showed him up to the surgeon. It would be a great pity
if he was allowed to slip away unnoticed.”


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                              CHAPTER XVI

                          A FIRE AND AN ESCAPE


THE next day was an exceedingly hot one in and around Fort Oswego, and
Dave was content to remain in the shade of some trees and take it easy.

Early in the morning a detachment of soldiers from Fort Niagara arrived,
having been sent down by General Gage, who had now superseded Sir
William Johnson in command.

These soldiers were followed by others, who had scouted through the
woods lining the lake shore and who declared that all the French and
unfriendly Indians had left the locality.

The soldiers brought with them two barge loads of powder which the
commandant at Oswego desired. The powder did not come in until almost
dark, but it was decided to place it in the powder house that night,
rather than leave it on the lake until morning.

For the want of something better to do, Dave walked down to the powder
house and watched the soldiers bring in the kegs of powder, and also
several boxes of flints. It was rather hard work, in such warm weather,
and it caused more than one soldier to grumble.

“I didn’t enlist for this,” grumbled one pioneer. “Between such work and
working on the fort at Niagara, I’ve toiled harder than when I built my
cabin on the Mohawk.”

“Never mind,” said another, who was more cheerful. “Remember, it’s all
for the good of the cause.”

“Yes, the good of England,” growled the first speaker. “After this war
between England and France is over, the Canadians will still be our
neighbors, and do you think they’ll like it because we walloped them?
Not to my style of thinking.”

One of the kegs of powder had burst open, and this left a train of
grains running from the lake front almost to the powder-house door. Some
of the powder was spilt on a rough rock, but nobody noticed this, until
a soldier in passing scraped his foot on the rock, when there was a
flash which made him jump high in the air and drop the keg he was
carrying.

“It’s powder!” he roared, and ran for his life.

A dozen others saw the flash, including Dave, and many leaped back,
while half a dozen other spurts of flame went up from the long grass,
which was now on fire. The keg the soldier had dropped rolled into this
long grass, and might have exploded had not Dave rushed forward.

“Hi! what are you up to?” roared one soldier. “Look out, or you will be
killed!”

“I’ll risk it,” muttered the young soldier, and sprang beside the keg.
He gave it a vigorous kick, which sent it spinning away from the
dangerous spot.

The train of fire had burnt backward as well as forward, and it reached
another patch of grass close to where two half-kegs of powder rested,
the last taken from one of the barges. Nobody cared to go near these,
and a minute later one exploded with a loud report, hurling stones,
dirt, and the other half-keg into the lake.

The sound of the exploding powder caused an alarm in and around the
fort, and soldiers came hurrying from all directions.

“The grass is on fire in a dozen places!”

“It is creeping up to the powder house!”

“If the house goes up we had best all take to the woods!”

[Illustration:

  He gave it a vigorous kick, which sent it spinning away
  from the dangerous spot.—_Page 146._
]

These and other cries rang out, and for the moment nobody knew what to
do. A few began to stamp on the grass and thereby burnt their shoes, but
the majority felt like retreating in short order.

“Form a bucket brigade!” at last shouted an officer, and a rush was made
for the leathern buckets, while other, coming suddenly to their senses,
ran for picks and shovels, with which to dig away the burning grass.

It was perilous work, for there was no telling how soon the flames might
leap to the powder house and blow everything for rods around sky-high.

In the excitement Dave forgot all about his sore knee, and catching up a
bucket, he worked as manfully as anybody to bring water. Two lines were
formed, one passing up the water and the other returning the empty
buckets, and soon the work began to tell in spite of the dryness of the
grass, which seemed to burn like so much tinder.

It was a good hour before the excitement came to an end, and to make
sure that there should be no more danger of fire, the grass all around
the powder house was dug up and cast to one side, and the ditch thus
formed was filled with water. Then the remaining grass was thoroughly
saturated; and the danger was over.

“Rather a close call, Dave,” remarked Raymond, when the two were washing
up, later on. “I thought sure we’d all be blown to kingdom come.”

“I thought that, too,” put in Shamer. “I felt more like running than
like trying to put out the fire.”

“It was certainly exciting enough,” answered Dave. “I forgot all about
my knee,” and he rubbed that member tenderly, for it had now begun to
assert itself once more.

“They tell me that two of the sick prisoners in the hospital are
missing,” came from a soldier standing near. “They took French leave
during the confusion.”

“Two prisoners missing?” queried Dave with interest. “Do you know who
they were?”

“I do not.”

“I’m going to find out.”

“Do you think one was that rascal of a Bevoir?” asked Raymond.

“It would be just my luck if it was,” answered Dave, as he hurried away.

At the hospital the guards could give no information, for they had been
ordered to keep silent. But a little later Dave found the surgeon who
had caught him talking to the French trader.

“Yes, one of the missing ones is Jean Bevoir,” said the surgeon. “The
explosion of the powder, and the fire, upset both the nurses and the
guards, and in the excitement Bevoir got away, with another Frenchman
named Chalette.”

“It’s too bad.”

The surgeon gazed at Dave sharply.

“You are quite sure you didn’t change your mind about helping that man?”
he demanded.

“Me? Not much, sir. Why, I’ve been out fighting the fire.”

“He kicked away one of the kegs of powder,” said a nurse, who had
chanced to see the brave act. “He couldn’t have been around here when
the men got away.”

A detachment of soldiers was sent out to roam the woods and watch the
lake front, in an effort to locate Bevoir and his companion. But though
the search was kept up for four days, nothing was seen or heard of the
escaped prisoners.

“This is certainly too bad,” said Raymond to Dave, when the search was
practically given up. “I suppose you reckoned on sending him to prison.”

“Yes, and he deserved it.”

“You want to be on your guard against such a man, Dave. He will not
forget you, remember that.”

“I only wish I could meet him!” burst out Dave.

“He will probably get over to Canada just as fast as he can. He knows he
won’t dare to show himself around any English camp, or at that
trading-post again.”

Dave was still on the sick list, and to spend the time went fishing the
next day. He had just pulled in a fine perch when a well-known voice
reached his ears, causing him to leap up from the rock on which he was
fishing and drop his pole.

“So here ye air, eh?” came to his ears. “Jest as nateral as ever, bless
my eyes if ye aint!”

“Sam Barringford!” exclaimed Dave, and caught the old frontiersman by
both hands. “Oh, how glad I am to see you again! I’ve been looking for
you for several days.”

“Have ye now? Waal, it’s good to be looked fer—better’n when folks hopes
ye will stay away.” Barringford winked one eye. “I had to stop at Albany
on business. How air ye, an’ where is Henry?”

“Henry—oh, Sam, how can I tell you. He——”

“Don’t say Henry is dead, lad—no, no, not that!” And all the color in
the honest hunter’s face seemed to die away. “He’s alive, o’ course he
is.”

“I—I hope so. But I don’t know. We had a fearful fight with the Indians,
and Henry was captured by them, and by some Frenchmen, and taken away in
a boat.” And Dave told the whole story, just as it has been written in
these pages.

Sam Barringford listened in utter silence, shaking his head from time to
time, to show that he understood. Henry was very dear to him, as old
readers of this series know, and the pair had been on many a hunting
expedition together.

“I don’t think the Frenchmen would kill him,—not in cold blood and they
wearing the army uniform,” he said slowly. “But the redskins are the Old
Nick’s own, and if they got Henry to themselves——”

“That is what I am thinking, Sam. Oh, it is awful.”

“Ye got no news at all?”

“Not a word.”

“Have ye been back to the spot?”

“I couldn’t go. My knee——”

“Oh, yes, I forgot. How is the knee now?”

“A good deal better.”

“I’ll go up to thet spot to-morrow,” said Barringford with sudden
determination.

“But they went off in a boat.”

“Perhaps thet was a blind, lad.”

Barringford had but little to tell outside of what Dave had already
learned through the medium of Mr. Morris’s letter. The journey to Wills’
Creek with little Nell and the Rose twins had proved uneventful, but the
neighbors had flocked from far and near to see the restored children.

“It would have done your heart good to have seen your aunt,” said the
old hunter. “She nearly went crazy, laughin’ one minit an’ cryin’ the
next, and little Nell and Rodney laughed and cried too. Your father and
Uncle Joe and me couldn’t stand it nohow, and we went down to the barn
and blubbered too. Never felt so queer in my hull life afore.” And
Barringford rubbed his coat sleeve over his eyes. The tears were in
Dave’s eyes too, and he was not ashamed of them either.

“I know I ought to write home about Henry,” said the young soldier, when
he could trust himself to speak. “But, somehow, I can’t bring myself to
do it, although I’ve tried a dozen times. Every day I live in the hope
that the next day will bring good news.”

“Wait until I’ve made thet trip I spoke about, Dave.”

“Shall I go along?”

“Best not, with that hurt knee. A hurt knee aint to be fooled with. Jack
Pepper twisted his knee onct, and walked lame the rest o’ his nateral
life.”

“Oh, I hope I won’t have to do that!” cried Dave. “I’ll take the best
care I can of it.” And he did.


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                              CHAPTER XVII

                          THE HOLE IN THE ICE


SAM BARRINGFORD kept his word, by starting on his search early the next
morning. Dave begged to go along, but the old frontiersman shook his
head.

“No, lad, I’d like your company, ye know that, but I can make time by
going it alone,” he said.

The week to follow was an anxious one to the youth. Day after day he
looked for Barringford’s return. In the meantime, he nursed his twisted
knee faithfully, until that member seemed as strong and limber as ever.

The young soldier was now back in the ranks, and it was whispered about
that he would soon be made an officer. But this honor he declined.

“Give the older heads a chance,” he said. “I am content to do my duty as
a private,” and Raymond was elected in his stead.

On the eighth day Sam Barringford came back, thoroughly tired out by a
tramp that had taken him over many miles of the territory covering the
lake front.

“Didn’t see anybuddy but a couple o’ redskins,” he said. “They were old
men and could tell nuthin’.”

“And you found no trace?” faltered Dave.

“Nary a trace, lad. It’s too bad, but it can’t be helped.” And
Barringford’s voice almost broke in spite of his effort to control it.

Drilling was now going on every morning and afternoon, for it was felt
that the Colonial militia must be brought up as far as possible to the
standard of the royal troops. In the militia men were constantly coming
and going, suiting their own convenience in spite of all the officers
could do to restrain them.

“We’ll not be able to do much more this season,” remarked Barringford to
Dave, one day. “It won’t be long before winter is on us and then the
campaign will have to come to an end.”

One day there came the glorious news of Wolfe’s victory on the Plains of
Abraham, followed almost immediately by the news that Quebec had been
taken.

The soldiers went wild with excitement, and the officers did not attempt
to restrain them. In the evening bonfires were lit and the general
jollification lasted until the next morning.

“That is the end of French rule in America,” said Raymond. “Now if
Amherst can only advance we’ll soon have the garlic-eaters on the run.”
But, as already mentioned in these pages, Amherst’s advance was so slow
that the storms of early winter drove his ships on Lake Champlain back
and he was compelled to go into quarters for the season at Crown Point,
leaving the British army at Quebec to take care of itself.

“I must write home and tell of this victory,” said Dave.
“But—but—Henry——”

“Better wait a bit longer, Dave,” said Barringford. “If the French are
licked we may learn somethin’ o’ their prisoners, an’ Henry may be among
’em.”

Two days later came a pony express with letters for many of the
soldiers, some from home and some from others in the various armies of
the English.

“A letter from Quebec!” murmured Dave, as he received the epistle. His
hand shook so that he could scarcely read the address. That handwriting
looked familiar. Oh, if only it was from Henry! He breathed a silent
prayer, and then broke the seal.

“Who is it from?” questioned Barringford, who was standing near.

“Oh, Sam, it’s from Henry! He is alive! Think of it!” The tears of joy
stood in the young soldier’s eyes. “He was with Wolfe—after escaping
from the French—he and Silvers. But Silvers, poor man, was shot dead in
the battle,” he went on, reading rapidly.

“Is Henry all right?”

“Yes, and he says he has learned that I am safe, too. A messenger from
Oswego brought the news some time ago.”

“Lad, ye can thank God for His many marcies,” said Barringford
reverently.

“Yes, Sam, and I do, from the bottom of my heart,” returned Dave.

The letter was a long one, and the two walked to an out-of-the-way spot,
where Dave read it aloud, while the frontiersman listened with close
attention. Henry gave many of the particulars of his capture and escape,
and also mentioned that he was now doing guard duty in Quebec. He added
that he had sent home a letter, telling of his safety, and that for the
present he was going to remain where he was, and hoped that sooner or
later Dave and the command to which he was attached would join him.

“This is the best news yet,” cried Dave, after the letter had been read
twice. “Sam, my heart is as light as air!”

“So is mine, Dave. It’s a heavy weight removed, eh? I could ’most dance
a jig.”

“What a big fight it must have been, and how sad to think that General
Wolfe had to die just as he accomplished what he had planned so many
months.”

“’Twas better to die thus than to have the fate of General Montcalm,”
replied Barringford. “To die in victory is nothing to dying in defeat.”

“I guess you must be right.” Dave paused for a moment. “Now Quebec is
taken, what do you think will be the next move for our army to make?”

“That is hard to say, lad. Maybe the French will come back at Quebec
before long. But come, let us get back to the camp-fire. It is too cold
to stay here, even while discussin’ such good news.”

Barringford was right about it being cold. It was the middle of
September and the air was nipping. A few days later came a cold rain
that seemed to penetrate to the very marrow of Dave’s bones, for the lad
from Virginia was not used to such a climate as that of upper New York
State.

“Ugh, but it’s awful!” he said, as he came in from two hours of guard
duty, with his clothing soaked. “It’s enough to give one his death of
cold.”

“Strip yourself, and rub down good,” said Barringford. “It certainly is
rough on a fellow o’ Southern blood.”

“I hope the rain don’t last.”

“This is what we call a pond-filler, Dave. As soon as all the ponds fill
up it will git colder, mark what I tell ye.”

Barringford’s prediction was correct. The rain came down until all the
ponds and streams were overflowing and then the storm came to an end. A
week after this came a flurry of snow, followed by a high wind which
blew down several old trees in that vicinity.

“Winter’s coming now,” said more than one, and the officers lost no time
in giving the soldiers directions for going into winter quarters. It was
felt by all that military operations must, for the time being, come to
an end.

At first Dave had thought to return home for the winter. But Barringford
did not care to make another trip to Wills’ Creek and the young soldier
was not in the humor to go alone or in the company of strangers.

“Might as well settle down right here,” said Barringford. “We can fix
ourselves a putty comfortable hut, and there will be sure to be plenty
o’ huntin’ and fishin’ for whomsoever wants it.”

Many of the soldiers were quartered in the fort and in the trading-posts
scattered about, but there was not room for all, and the others had to
build themselves shelters of boards and canvas. Barringford, Raymond,
and Dave formed a party by themselves, and it was not long before the
trio completed a shelter of which they were justly proud.

The hut was about twelve feet square, of rough logs and tree branches,
interlaced with willow withes. On one corner were several rocks and an
opening, where they could build a camp-fire, if they wished, and three
couches of cedar branches were also provided, filling the air of the
shelter with a sweet and wholesome smell.

“Now we are about fixed fer the winter,” said Barringford. “When the
snow comes, we can bank some up against the sides, to keep out the wind,
and then we’ll be as snug as bugs under a hearthstone.”

“I don’t believe provisions will be any too plentiful, with so many of
the soldiers coming in from Fort Niagara and other points,” said
Raymond. “But as we are all good shots, and know something about fishing
through holes in the ice, we ought not to go hungry.”

It was not long after the shelter was completed that winter came upon
them in earnest. One evening a light snow began to fall and in the
morning it was snowing more heavily than ever. This kept up for two days
and nights, leaving the ground covered to the depth of a foot and a
half.

“Now we can bank up the sides of the hut,” said Barringford, and this
was done without delay. They also went into the woods and helped to cut
large quantities of firewood, which was brought to the fort and the camp
on drags drawn by horses.

The snow was followed by a spell of clear, cold weather, which to Dave
was far more acceptable than the rain had been. The streams in the
vicinity were now frozen up and also a good part of the lake front.

“I’d like to try fishing through the ice,” said Dave, one morning when
there was nothing for him and Barringford to do.

“Jest the thing, Dave,” replied the old frontiersman. “I’ve an idee
they’ll bite well to-day.”

Preparations were soon made, and they passed along the Oswego River to
where there was something of a sheltered cove. Here the ice was not more
than six inches in thickness, and they made good-sized holes without
much trouble.

Barringford knew exactly how to go about fixing their lines, and Dave
stood by while the frontiersman baited to his satisfaction.

“You take the upper hole and I’ll take the lower,” said Barringford,
when the lines were ready. “We’ll see who can ketch the fust one.”

David did as told, and having allowed his hook to go down almost to the
bottom, waited patiently for a bite.

“Ye want to keep movin’ it around a bit!” shouted Barringford. “A fish
likes to snatch a bait on the fly. Ef ye——”

The rest of the sentence was lost in a pull and a splash, followed by a
flopping on the ice. The fish tried its best to get back into the hole,
but Barringford was too quick for it and speedily strung it on the end
of a twig he had cut while coming over to the cove.

From that time on fishing went forward with more or less success for two
hours, when each had a mess of about twenty, mostly of fair size.

“Not bad by any means,” declared Barringford, as he surveyed the catch.
“But they’ll be fatter in a month or six weeks more, an’ sweeter, too.”

“Whoop! I’ve got another!” cried Dave, a second later. There came a
savage tug on his line. “Must be a big one, Sam!”

“Perhaps you had better play him a bit,” suggested the frontiersman, but
just then Dave brought the catch to light—an ugly water snake of a
darkish color and with cold, staring eyes.

“My stars!” ejaculated Dave, and as the snake whipped toward him, he
stepped back. Then the snake, somewhat dazed at being brought to the
surface at this season of the year, made another turn, and struck at
Dave’s foot. The young soldier gave a jump, and, like a flash, slipped
into the hole in the ice. He tried to clutch the edge of the hole with
his hands, but it was too slippery, and before Barringford could grab
him, he had disappeared from view, and the water snake behind him.


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                             CHAPTER XVIII

                            WINTER QUARTERS


FOR the instant after Dave disappeared under the water of the river he
gave himself up for lost. The fearful chill struck him to the very
heart, and he could think of nothing to do to save himself.

As mentioned, the snake came down after him, dragging a good part of the
line, until the upper end was stopped by Barringford. Then, by a chance
turn, the reptile loosened itself and lost no time in sinking away to
parts unknown.

Dave gave a gasp and the icy water filled his mouth and some entered his
lungs. Then his presence of mind returned and he floundered around,
trying to reach the surface once more.

He came up, but not at the hole. Instead his head bumped with
considerable force against the under side of the icy covering of the
stream.

“I am lost! I shall die for the want of a breath!” was the horrible
thought that crossed his mind. And then he prayed that his life might be
spared to him.

It was by the merest chance that his hand came in contact with part of
the fishing line. The sharp hook pricked his thumb and he at once
recognized what it was.

“The line,” he thought. “I must follow that back to the hole!” And as
well as he could he felt along the line foot by foot, swimming and
holding on at the same time.

His senses were fast leaving him and he was still some distance from the
hole when he felt a jerk on the line. He gave a jerk in return and then
half a dozen in quick succession. Then, as in a dream, he wound the line
around his wrist.

Dave could never tell, afterwards, what happened directly after this. He
felt himself drawn along, and felt the ice scratch his nose and his
chin. Then a hand grabbed him by the hair and by the arm, and he was
lifted up, dripping like a drowned rat, and too weak to open his eyes or
make a move.

“Got him, thanks to Heaven!” burst from Sam Barringford’s lips. “An’ he
aint dead nuther! But I’ll have to hustle back to camp or he’ll be
frozen stiff!”

Leaving the lines and the catches where they lay, he took Dave by the
heels and held him up head downward. A little water ran from the young
soldier’s mouth and he gave a gasp and a shiver.

“Breathin’ yet,” muttered the old frontiersman. “Wot he wants now is a
hot blanket an’ a hot drink, and he shall have it too, in jig time.”

With Dave slung over his shoulder, he set off on a run through the woods
for the fort, a distance of nearly half a mile. The way was rough and
the jouncing helped to keep up the youth’s feeble circulation.

Soon Barringford came within sight of some of the soldiers. They wanted
to know what was wrong, but he would not stop.

“Who has got the hottest fire here?” he demanded, as he rushed into the
camp, and being directed to the spot, he requested some soldiers to heat
up a pair of the thickest blankets to be found. He also asked for some
steaming coffee, knowing Dave would not touch liquor.

A short time later found Dave stripped and between the hot blankets, and
with jugs of hot water placed at his feet and over his heart. He had
also been given some of the smoking coffee, and these various
applications soon put him into a perspiration.

“Sam, you are very, very good,” he managed to whisper, for he was almost
too weak to speak. “If it hadn’t been for you I wouldn’t have come——”

“Never mind now, Dave,” interrupted the backwoodsman. “Jest you keep
quiet an’ git back your strength. Yes, I know it was a close shave.”

Barringford’s quick work saved Dave from serious sickness, and the young
soldier suffered nothing more than a slight cold and a few pains in the
knee that had been wrenched. The frontiersman went back the next day for
the lines and the fish that had been caught, and by Dave’s advice the
fish were distributed among those who had given their aid to him.

After this the winter passed without special incident. During the heavy
snows the fort and the camp were cut off for several weeks at a time
from communication with other points. Time often hung heavily on the
soldiers’ hands and they did what they could to amuse themselves. One
favorite sport was to shoot at a target, and as the commander was
anxious to have all his soldiers good shots he allowed his men to use
more powder and bullets than would otherwise have been the case.

Dave was interested in the shooting, and went into one of the contests,
the captain of the company having put up three prizes—a new pair of
boots, a silk neckerchief, and a jackknife.

“I don’t suppose I’ll win a prize,” said the young soldier. “But I am
going to make all the points I can.”

Each man was allowed three shots, and each shot could count on the
target from 1 to 5 points. On his first shot the young soldier made 4
points.

“Not bad, lad,” said Barringford. “Be a leetle more careful the next
time and you’ll make it a 5.”

When Dave’s turn came again he did make it a 5. This was followed by
another 4—giving him a total of 13 points out of a possible 15 points.

The best shots of the company took their turns last, among them Raymond
and Barringford. Each of these scored 15 points, and so did two other
old riflemen. Two scores of 14 were made, three of 13, including Dave’s,
and the others ranged from 12 down to 6.

“Thirteen isn’t bad, Dave,” said Barringford encouragingly. “There are
twice as many that are worse than those that are better.”

“Henry could do better,” answered Dave. “But then he’s a natural-born
marksman and I am not.”

Much interest was displayed in the shooting-off of the tie between the
four who had made a full 15 points. The target was placed at twice the
distance it had before been and each man was allowed two shots.

Raymond was the first to shoot and scored a 4. He was followed by a
sharpshooter named Russell, who also made a 4; and then came an old
hunter named Bauermann, who made a 3.

“Now, Sam, you must make a bull’s-eye,” whispered Dave, and the old
frontiersman did so, hitting the target squarely in the center.

It was now Raymond’s turn to try his second and last shot, and he took
it with great care, making a 5, giving him a total of 9. Then came
Russell with a 2, and Bauermann with a 4.

“Now, Sam, another bull’s-eye,” cried Dave, who was more excited than
was the old frontiersman.

“Not so easy,” answered Barringford, but there was a quiet smile on his
face. Up came his musket, and on the instant there was a crack, and his
second bullet landed directly on top of his first.

“What’s the total score?” was the cry from a dozen throats.

“Total score as follows,” sang out the man at the target. “Barringford
10, Raymond 9, Bauermann 7, and Russell 6. Barringford, Raymond, and
Bauermann take the first, second, and third prizes in the order named.”

“Hurrah for Barringford!” cried Dave, and led in the cheering. Then
there was a call for a speech, and the old frontiersman was hauled
forward and made to mount a flat rock.

“I don’t know what ye want me to say,” he remarked half sheepishly.
“I’ve done my best to win them boots, and I guess I won ’em. They’ll
keep my feet warm, while Raymond, he kin keep his neck warm with the
kerchief, an’ old man Bauermann kin sit by the fire and whittle sticks
to his heart’s content. I thank ye for your kindness, and I vote we all
thank the cap’n for the prizes an’ the good time——”

“Whoop! Huzza!” cried the crowd. And then somebody added: “All in favor
of thankin’ the cap’n will please march up and present arms to him!” And
then the crowd caught up their guns and marched past the officer in a
long line, each presenting arms as he passed. And thus the shooting
match ended very pleasantly.

During the winter Dave and Barringford, and occasionally Raymond, went
out in the forest to hunt. They brought in several small deer and two
bears, as well as a large quantity of rabbits and not a few wild birds.
Others went fishing through holes in the ice, but Dave declared that he
had had enough of such sport.

Only once came a letter from home. This was around New Year’s, and
brought the information that all were doing well, excepting Rodney, who
was worse and who must now submit to another operation by the surgeon.
The folks had heard from Henry and were glad to learn that he had
escaped from the French. In the letter Mr. James Morris said he was
sorry to hear that Jean Bevoir had gotten away.

“He will surely try to make more trouble for us,” he wrote. “You must
beware of him. He is worse than a snake in the grass.”

But Dave was more disturbed about Rodney than he was just then about
Jean Bevoir.

“It is too bad he must submit to another operation,” he told
Barringford. “I am afraid he will get so he can’t walk at all.”

“It hurt him to travel when the old cabin was burnt down,” answered the
frontiersman. “He told me so privately, but he didn’t want to say
nuthin’ afore his folks, cause, ye see, it wouldn’t do no good. That was
a hard journey.”

“I have always suspected as much,” answered Dave. “Rodney is a good deal
of a hero, and I know he won’t let folks know how much he suffers. And
it pains him, too, to think that he must sit still or at the most
shuffle around a little, while Henry and I can come and go as we please.
I can tell you what, Sam, a person’s health is a good deal to him.”

“My lad, health is the greatest blessing ever God give to ye, an’ don’t
ye never forgit it, nuther. Wot’s riches, if ye can’t live to enj’y it?
Onct, when I was down in the mouth because I hadn’t so much as a
farthing in my pocket, I was in Annapolis. There I met a rich old
merchant in his lordly coach, with a driver and footman, an’ I don’t
know what all. Did he look happy? No, siree! He was bent almost double
with gout an’ rheumatism an’ other diseases an’ sufferin’ tortures
uncounted. Sez I to myself, sez I: ‘Sam Barringford, you’re a fool to be
down in the mouth! You’ve got your health an’ strength, an’ you’re
richer ten times over nor thet feller with all his hoard o’ gold. Go
back to the woods an’ scratch fer a livin’ an’ bless God you kin walk
an’ run, an’ jump, and eat an’ drink as ye please, an’ enj’y life.’ An’
back to the woods I come, an’ been happy ever sence. Yes, Dave, health
is the greatest blessin’ a man ever had.”


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                              CHAPTER XIX

                            LOST IN THE SNOW


ABOUT the middle of February news came to the camp that a French soldier
and two French traders had been captured at a post on Lake Ontario some
twenty miles to the northeast of Fort Oswego. There had been a sharp
fight between a detachment of Colonial militia and the French, who had
been in the act of removing some stores which they had left hidden in
the woods months before, and one of the enemy had been killed and two
militiamen badly wounded.

“I wonder if one of the traders can be Jean Bevoir,” said Dave, when he
heard of the affair.

“It is not impossible, Dave,” answered Barringford. “He was around these
ere diggin’s a long time, when he was holding little Nell a captive, and
he must have brung some things with him when he scooted away from your
father’s post on the Kinotah.”

“I’m going to try to find out who they are,” went on the young soldier,
and lost no time in seeking the officer who had received the report.

From this person Dave learned that the French soldier’s name was
Hildegard. The traders were sullen and refused to talk.

“Will they be brought to this fort?” asked Dave.

“Why are you so interested?”

Upon this Dave told a part of his story.

“Ah, yes, I remember now, Morris. No, I am sorry to say we have sent out
orders that they be taken down to Fort Stanwix. Some soldiers were bound
for that post, and we decided that the prisoners should accompany them.
You see, if we keep them here, and they escape, it is too easy a matter
for them to get to Canada.”

“I would like to make sure that one is not Jean Bevoir,” went on Dave.

“Well, you can take a run up there if you want to and see. They will not
start for Fort Stanwix until day after to-morrow.”

“Then I will go by all means. Can I take Sam Barringford with me? He is
a member of our company, and an old friend of mine.”

“Very well, you can take him. I will give you four days’ leave of
absence. Do you know the road?”

“I know something of it. But Barringford is an old hunter and trapper,
so we won’t have much trouble keeping to the trail,” answered Dave.

Barringford was glad enough to get away from the camp for a few days,
and the preparations for the journey were completed in short order.

“Like as not we’ll scare up some game on the way,” he said. “So be
prepared.” And each took with him as much powder as could be spared and
also a new flint for his musket.

It was a clear, cold day, and the sun made the ice and snow glitter like
diamonds. There was no wind, and in the forest all was as silent as a
tomb. They picked their way with care, Barringford taking the lead.

“It’s as good as a holiday,” said Dave. “Now, if we only had skates we
could skate along the edge of the lake for quite a distance.”

“Never mind, Dave; if we stick to land there won’t be no danger of ye
going into another hole in the ice.”

Dave gave a shiver.

“You’re right, Sam; once is enough.”

For several miles the trail was a smooth one and easily followed. But
after that they had two gullies to cross, and some rough rocks, a task
by no means easy. In one of the gullies the snow lay to a depth of
twenty or thirty feet.

“If we fell in there it would be no easy task getting out,” remarked
Dave.

At noon they rested for an hour, building a camp-fire in a sheltered
spot. They carried some provisions, and on the way Barringford had
brought down a fat rabbit, which was speedily done to a turn, and as
quickly eaten up.

“We have covered more than half the distance,” said the old
frontiersman. “But I don’t know if we’ll be able to cover the balance o’
the way afore nightfall.”

“Well, we can try,” answered Dave, and once more they set off, at a
brisk pace, for the nooning had rested them greatly.

But now the trail was very rough, and more than once they had to
consider how to get around a certain spot. It took Dave’s wind to climb
up some of the slippery rocks; and once, when the pull was extra hard,
he called on Barringford to halt.

“Got—got to—to get m-m—my wind!” he gasped.

“We had better call it a day,” announced the old hunter.

It was four o’clock, and already growing dark. A nook was found where
some bushes grew between the rocks. The bushes were cut down and piled
on top of the opening, and soon they had a fairly comfortable “corner,”
as Dave called it, with a roaring fire to cheer them as they rested.
More rabbits had been brought low, and Barringford fixed up supper in
his own particular style. If the cooking was not of the best, neither of
the travelers grumbled, for fresh air and hunger, real hunger, are the
best sauces in the world.

In such a lonely spot it was not considered necessary to remain on
guard, and after fixing the fire so it would burn for a long while, they
turned in, and slept “like rocks” until daybreak.

A loud whistle from Barringford made Dave leap from his couch of pine
boughs. The old frontiersman had breakfast ready, and this was quickly
eaten, and soon they were on the way once more. Dave was a bit stiff,
but did not complain.

“We’ll make it by noon,” said Barringford, and it lacked a good hour of
that time when they came in sight of the post, flying its colors of the
King as bravely as did Fort Oswego. A guard stopped them, but matters
were quickly explained, and they were conducted to the captain in
charge.

“I don’t know the prisoners,” said Captain Wilbur, “although I have
heard about Hildegard. You can look them over.” And he called an aid.

The two traders were confined in a hut just outside of the camp. They
were chained to a stake, so escape was next to impossible. They scowled
darkly at Dave and Barringford.

“A fool’s errand,” said Dave, after a glance at the men. Neither of the
prisoners was Jean Bevoir.

“That’s true,” returned Barringford. “But it may be they can tell you
something about Bevoir, Dave.”

“If they can speak English,” returned the young soldier.

It was speedily learned that neither of the traders could speak English.
Then an interpreter was called in; but the Frenchmen refused to say
whether they knew Bevoir or not.

“Never saw such stubborn men,” said the interpreter. “They won’t tell a
thing. We’ve tried to starve ’em into speaking; but it’s no use.”

The commander of the post was glad to listen to what little news Dave
and Barringford had to tell, and treated them to the best dinner the
post afforded.

It was ten o’clock of the following morning when Dave and the old hunter
started to return to Fort Oswego. The day was a gloomy one, with a
promise of more snow.

“We don’t want to lose any time,” said Barringford. “If we do, we may
git snow-bound.”

Some hunters from the post went with them a distance of a mile, but
after that the pair were allowed to shift for themselves. They took the
trail by which they had come, although they were told they could save a
mile or two by going a different way.

“We know this one,” said Barringford. “And it aint no use to take risks,
‘specially ef it’s goin’ to snow.”

It was not yet noon when the first flakes of the coming storm floated
lazily down upon them. The flakes were large, and soon they increased so
thickly that it was impossible to see a dozen yards in any direction.

“I am afraid that is going to be serious, Dave.”

“Big flakes can’t last very long, can they?”

“No, big flakes can’t, but we’ll have more snow, even so.”

Barringford was right, the large flakes presently gave way to smaller
ones, and then the snow became like salt, which the rising wind blew
directly into their faces.

“It’s goin’ to be a hummer!” exclaimed Barringford, as the wind suddenly
rose with a shriek. “Reckon as how we wuz fools to leave the post.”

“What shall we do, Sam? We can’t very well go back.”

“True, lad, but——By gum!”

A wild animal of some kind had leaped up almost in front of them. Around
came Barringford’s musket, and he blazed away, and then Dave did the
same. There were a roar and a snarl, and over in the snow tumbled a
small bear, clawing viciously at everything around it.

[Illustration:

  “B’ar meat!” yelled Barringford.—_Page 180._
]

“B’ar meat!” yelled Barringford, and ran forward, drawing his hunting
knife. Watching his chance he drove the knife into the wounded beast’s
throat, and soon the game breathed its last.

The wind was now blowing a regular gale, causing the tree boughs to snap
and crack in all directions. Try their best they could scarcely locate
themselves, for every part of the trail had been obliterated.

“We are lost in the snow!” exclaimed Dave blankly. “And the storm is
growing worse every minute!”

“We must make some sort o’ shelter, Dave,” returned the frontiersman.
And then he added: “It’s a rare good thing we shot the b’ar. It may save
our lives.”

“You mean for food?”

“Exactly. Come with me, and ketch holt.”

Dragging the game between them, they pushed forward until they reached
the shelter of some rocks. Here were several clumps of bushes and some
tall timber, and they lost no time in starting up a fire, for the
temperature had fallen greatly, so that both were in danger of freezing
to death. With a hatchet they cut a quantity of firewood, and made a
lean-to against the tallest of the rocks. They worked hard, and this
helped to keep up the circulation of their blood.

Hour after hour went by, and the storm showed no signs of abating.
Barringford skinned the bear, and the pelt was hung upon the boughs of
the lean-to to keep off a portion of the wind. In the hollow the snow
was damp and could be packed, and this they used to build a sort of
house, of snow, boughs, and bearskin combined. It was by no means a
comfortable dwelling but it was far better than nothing. The fire was
close by, and gave them not only warmth, but also a good deal of smoke,
when the wind chanced to veer around, as it often did.

Slowly the balance of the day went by, and the night to follow was one
Dave remembered for many a year after. It was bitterly cold, and they
could do but little more than pile the wood on the fire, and crouch by
it, so closely that more than once their clothing was singed. They
cooked a huge chunk of the bear’s meat, and ate of it several times; and
added some of the fat to the fire, in the hope of gaining additional
heat. Once, a lean and hungry wolf came close, snarling viciously, and
looking wistfully at the meat, and Dave brought it down with a bullet
from his musket.

But morning came at last, and with it the end of the storm. As the sun
arose it became slightly warmer, and by ten o’clock they were again on
the way, each carrying a load of bear meat, and Barringford the pelt
also. The walk was a tiresome one, and it was two days ere they came in
sight of Fort Oswego.

“I am glad the trip is over,” muttered Dave. And Barringford echoed the
sentiment. Soon they were among their friends, where they related their
experiences, and then took a long and much-needed rest.


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                               CHAPTER XX

                        THE SITUATION AT QUEBEC


IMMEDIATELY after the fall of Quebec, the English resolved to hold the
city at any cost, and to that end every defense was strengthened without
loss of time.

As Wolfe was dead and Monckton wounded and unable to act, the command
fell upon General Murray. Under his directions the soldiers leveled the
breastworks erected on the Plains of Abraham, so that they might give no
shelter to any advancing French army, and strengthened the defenses of
Quebec proper. The men also cut and brought in large quantities of
firewood, for use during the winter, which all felt would be long and
bitter, and likewise aided in storing the provisions sent ashore from
the fleet.

The ships could not winter very well in the river, and it was not long
before they left, taking with them also a portion of the grenadiers and
rangers. At Quebec were left ten battalions of grenadiers, one company
of rangers, a strong force of the artillery, and likewise a sprinkling
of Colonial free lances and friendly Indians—the latter to be used
chiefly as scouts, spies, and messengers.

The city had suffered much from the bombardment of the artillery. The
cathedral was honeycombed with cannon balls, and many public buildings
and private houses and shops had been completely wrecked. The people who
were left in the place were almost terror-stricken, and it was a long
time before quiet, and even a semblance of order, could be restored.

For over a week Henry was kept at work on the outer defenses of the
city. It was hard labor, but he did not grumble, having already realized
that the path of the soldier is not one simply of glory. The death of
Silvers made him unusually sober, and in his heart he was sincerely
thankful that an all-powerful Providence had spared his life.

The middle of the winter found Henry on guard at the lower end of the
city. Here were a number of stores which had been broken down by the
bombardment, and some of the owners were missing. A quantity of goods
had been stolen, and Henry and four other soldiers were set at the task
of guarding the property.

On the second day that Henry was on guard he noticed something which did
not at all please him. Two of the soldiers, named Fenley and Prent, were
unusually friendly, and, when they supposed they were not being watched,
one or the other would slip into one of the stores. When the fellow
would reappear, he would have something concealed under his coat, and
this, later on, he would pass over to another soldier, named Harkness,
who had charge of a watch-house a square away.

“I believe that those fellows are up to no good,” thought Henry, after
he had watched the movements of the three soldiers several times. “They
act like a regular pack of sneaks.”

But Henry was too open-hearted and square to suspect the trio of
deliberate wrongdoing, until one day Prent accosted him and asked him
how he liked his pay as a soldier.

“I think we get mighty little for what we do,” said Prent. “And Fenley
and Harkness think the same.”

“It is certainty not much,” answered Henry, totally unsuspicious that he
was being “sounded.”

“Wouldn’t you like to have the chance to make a bit more?” went on
Prent, in a lower voice, and with an anxious look around.

“What do you mean, Prent?”

“Oh, nothing much, only if you’d like to make some money on the outside,
perhaps I can place you in the way of it.”

“I am out to make any money that I can make honestly,” answered the
young soldier.

“Oh! Well, this isn’t—well, it isn’t just work, you know. But you can
make a neat sum if you want to stand in the game.”

“I’ll stand in no game that isn’t strictly honest,” burst out Henry, and
now his suspicion was aroused.

“Oh, all right!”

“What have you in mind to do?”

“Nothing—if that’s the way you feel about it,” retorted Prent, and
turning on his heel, he walked rapidly away.

After that the other soldiers were more careful than ever of their
movements. But Henry could not get the talk out of his mind, and he at
last resolved to play the spy, and see what they were doing, or proposed
to do.

One day Henry was on guard, from two in the afternoon until six. At that
hour Fenley came to relieve him, while Prent came to relieve another
soldier named Groom. Groom at once retired to his quarters, but Henry
merely walked around the corner, where he secreted his musket in an
out-of-the-way place, and then crawled back in the darkness, for the
winter day was now at an end.

From the broken stonework of a house steps, Henry saw Prent walk up and
down his beat several times, meeting Fenley at one end. Then Prent gave
a low whistle, to which Fenley instantly responded. A moment later Prent
disappeared into one of the stores he had been set to guard.

“He is up to no good, that is certain,” reasoned Henry. “I wish I could
see just what he is doing.”

Watching his opportunity, he sped quickly across the street, which at
this point was not very wide. The store, or shop, stood on a corner, and
on the side was a broken window, partly boarded up. A board was loose at
its lower end, and, lifting it up, Henry crawled through the window.

All was dark around him, and, standing on the floor, near some boxes, he
listened intently. He knew that Prent could not be far away.

Presently he heard a foot bang against a box or barrel. “Hang the luck!”
came in Prent’s voice. “It’s as dark as the River Styx! I’ll have to
make a light, or I’ll break my neck.” The striking of a flint in a
tinder-box followed, and soon Henry saw the faint light of a tallow dip.

Prent was moving toward a stairs leading into a cellar, and this brought
him to within a few feet of where Henry was crouching. But the young
soldier remained undiscovered, and in a moment more he heard the other
soldier shuffle carefully down the stairs and walk across the cellar
floor.

Henry’s curiosity was now aroused to a high pitch, and he resolved to
see what was taking place in the cellar, no matter what the risk to be
run. He tiptoed his way to the stair, and went down step by step on his
tiptoes.

The stairs creaked, but the sound was not heard by Prent, who was
rummaging around a score of small boxes, all of hard wood, bound with
iron. One of the boxes was open and showed that it was filled with
surgical and mathematical instruments.

“Bah! I cannot do much with that truck!” Prent muttered, after looking
some of the articles over. “The other boxes probably contain things more
to my liking.”

The fellow had brought a hatchet and chisel with him, and was soon at
work prying open another iron-bound box. Occasionally he paused to
listen, as if waiting for a signal from Fenley, but none came, and he
continued his work.

When the second box came open, Henry could scarcely repress a cry of
amazement. The box was filled with silverware, for the shop was one
which had been used by a gold and silver smith. There were silver
drinking cups and decanters, and also half a dozen silver trays, and
frames for miniatures.

“Ha! Now we have the right thing!” muttered Prent, gazing at the
collection with satisfaction. “If we can only get it away without being
discovered we will be rich.”

“He has turned thief!” thought Henry. “What a rascal! And I thought he
was an honest soldier!”

He watched Prent examine the various silver things, and place some in
his pockets and his breast. Then the fellow started to open up another
of the iron-bound boxes.

Henry was in a quandary, not knowing what to do. He felt that it was his
duty to report Prent, and have the man arrested. But then he remembered
the order that had but recently been issued by General Murray—that any
man caught plundering in Quebec should be hanged.

“I can’t see the fellow strung up,” thought the young soldier. “That
would be too horrible. Perhaps if I talk to him he’d get out and leave
the things alone.”

At first Henry decided that he would talk to the would-be thief when he
left the building. But then he remembered that it would be best to have
Prent put the things back in the boxes and nail the latter up. A few
steps took him to the stairs, and once there he called softly:

“Prent!”

Had a gun gone off at his ear the evil-doer would not have been more
astonished. He dropped the silver mug he was examining and leaped back a
step.

“Wh—who calls?” he gasped.

“Prent, I have caught you fairly and squarely, and I want you to leave
those things alone.”

“Ha, so it is you, Henry Morris!” burst from the other soldier’s lips.
And then he added quickly: “Are you alone?”

“I am.”

“What brought you here?”

“I came to find out what your little game was. I reckon I know the
truth.”

“You don’t know anything,” blustered Prent. The exposure had come so
unexpectedly he knew not what to say.

“I know you are here for no good purpose. If it were otherwise you would
not come here like a thief in the night.”

“Are you going to expose me?”

“That depends on yourself. I have no desire to see you hanged.”

At these words Prent gave a shiver, for he was at heart a coward.

“I—I—you——” he stammered, and could not go on.

“Listen to me, Prent, and you may save yourself a whole lot of trouble,”
went on Henry, as calmly as he could. “I hate to play the spy on a
fellow soldier, but I felt that it was necessary, after what you had
said to me. You wanted to draw me into this robbery. Now, as I said
before, I don’t want to see you hanged, or even sent to prison. But I am
not going to allow you to rob this place, either.”

“I haven’t said I was going to rob it yet,” burst out Prent. “I—I
haven’t taken a thing.”

“You have. Your pockets and your breast are full of silverware. Now I
want you——”

At this moment came a loud whistle from outside, followed by the
pounding of a musket butt on an outer cellar door.

“An alarm! Let me get out of here!” yelled Prent and made a leap for the
stairs, which were narrow and old.

Before Henry could stand on guard he found himself in the other
soldier’s grasp. Then Prent gave him a shove which sent him over the
side of the steps head first. Henry tried to save himself, but went down
between two barrels with a crash. Before he could extricate himself from
the tight position his assailant had fled. Then the tallow dip
spluttered up and went out, and the young soldier was left in total
darkness.


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                              CHAPTER XXI

                              UNDER ARREST


FOR the moment after the tallow dip went out, Henry, half stunned by his
tumble, knew not what to do.

“Hi, Prent!” he called out. “What do you mean by knocking me over and
leaving me?”

No answer came back to his query, and a few seconds later he heard a
crash of woodwork, followed by several exclamations.

“What’s the meaning of this?” he heard a rough voice demand.

“A thief is here,” answered another voice, which, somehow, sounded
familiar.

“A thief? Where?”

“I believe he is in the cellar.”

“After him, men. He must not escape. There has already been too much
looting here.”

There was the tramping of half a dozen soldiers on the floor overhead,
and then the flash of a bull’s-eye lantern. As the light reached Henry
he staggered up the cedar stairs.

“Ha! here he is!”

“Up with your hands, you rascal, or we’ll fire on you!”

“Don’t fire,” gasped the young soldier. “I—I am no thief.”

“Then what are you doing here?”

“I was after a thief. I followed——”

Before Henry could finish he saw Prent push his way forward and catch
the English officer of the guard by the arm.

“That’s the man!” he bawled. “That’s the rascal! Look out, I think he’s
a desperate fellow!”

“Is this the man you saw sneaking around?” demanded the officer.

“The same, sir.”

“If that’s the case, we’ve caught you red-handed, fellow.”

“Caught me?” faltered Henry. He was so amazed he could scarcely speak.

“Does it not look like it?”

“But I am no thief.”

“Then why are you here?”

“I came down after that man”—pointing to Prent.

“Do hear that!” ejaculated the would-be thief in well-assumed surprise.
“After me—when I’ve been on guard outside this last hour, and can prove
it by the next guard.”

“This soldier told us you were here,” said the officer of the guard. “He
wasn’t here himself.”

“He was here!” cried Henry. “I saw him sneak in, and I came after him,
to see what he intended to do. Then he knocked me over and ran away.”

“False! utterly false!” roared Prent. He strode forward. “Say that again
and I’ll knock you down in truth. I am an honest man.”

“I’ve told the truth,” answered Henry doggedly.

“But we found you here, while he was outside,” insisted the officer.

“He ran away, as I said, after knocking me down. If you’ll search him
you’ll find his pockets full of stolen things.”

“Search me, by all means,” cried Prent, who had thrown the stolen
articles into a corner when leaving the building. He pulled out several
of his pockets. “I haven’t a thing that is not my own.”

“Men, make that fellow a prisoner,” cried the officer of the guard,
raising his finger and pointing to Henry.

“But sir——” gasped the young soldier, with a sinking heart.

“And now answer my questions. What is your name?”

“Henry Morris, sir. But——”

“To what command do you belong?”

“To Captain Werrick’s detachment, Royal Americans. But, sir, if you’ll
only listen——”

“Are you stationed anywhere?”

“I have been on guard here for the last week.”

“On guard here?” repeated the officer of the guard. He turned to Prent.
“And you are on guard here, too?”

“Yes, lieutenant. He went off when I came on. But he did not go to
quarters, but hung around, and so I suspected him. In fact, he tried, I
think, to get me into some of his plans day before yesterday.”

“How was that?”

“He came to me and said he could show me a way to make money if I could
keep my tongue from wagging. He said——”

“You miserable wretch!” interrupt Henry. “You know you are telling a
falsehood.” He turned to the officer of the guard. “As a matter of fact,
he came to me and wanted me to go into his dirty game——”

“Stop!” interrupted the officer of the guard. “We will examine into the
details of this later. Men, make a search, and see if any other thieves
are about. But don’t let either of these men get away.”

At once two of the soldiers stood guard over Henry and Prent, while the
others scattered through the cellar, which was long and narrow. They had
but two lanterns, both small, so the search was made under difficulties.

As one of the guardsmen reached the back end of the cellar there was a
slight scraping sound, followed by the fall of a trap door. The men
started forward to investigate, but could see nobody.

“What was that, Jameson?”

“Flog me, if I know, Lowder. Somebody went through a door, I think.”

“Exactly my notion. But where is the door?”

It was not long before they found the door, a small, heavy oaken affair,
leading to a shaft-like opening, dark and dismal. A lantern was brought
forward and on the damp ground the footprints of a man could be seen
plainly.

“Another thief, and he has escaped!” cried the officer of the guard.

The officer sent three men into the passageway, the leader with one of
the lanterns. They were gone the best part of ten minutes, and when they
returned they reported that the passageway led to the cellar of a house
on the next street.

“Was anybody in the house?” demanded the officer of the guard.

“The place was deserted,” answered one of the soldiers. “A back window
was wide open and on the window sill was some mud, the same as that of
the passageway down here.”

“Was anybody with you?” demanded the officer, turning to Henry.

“No, sir. But there may have been somebody down here with Prent.”

“At it again!” howled the soldier mentioned. “I was never down here
until now. I am an honest man.”

“We will see about that later. At present I arrest you both and will
have you taken to the guard-house. We must find out something about the
rascal who escaped—if we can.”

The officer of the guard was obdurate, and inside of half an hour Henry
found himself at the guard-house, which, in this case, was a small
private dwelling, from which the owner had fled when first Quebec was
bombarded. He was placed in one room, while Prent was placed in another.

As luck would have it, Prent was well acquainted with one of the guards
at the house, and through this fellow he managed to send a message to
Fenley and Harkness, in which he asked to see one or the other. Fenley
came, and saw him for a few minutes on the sly, and a scheme was
concocted by which all promised to stand by Prent in the affair,
declaring Henry the sole guilty one.

It is easy to imagine that Henry felt thoroughly miserable when he found
himself in solitary confinement in the temporary prison.

“Instead of taking chances with Prent, I should have had him arrested on
the spot,” he thought dismally. “Now he has turned the tables on me, and
how I am to clear myself I do not know.”

The search for the man who had escaped through the narrow passage was
continued for several days, but without success. In the meantime Henry
was held without examination.

But at last he was told that he was appear before General Murray and a
board of officers, and the next day he was marched off to where the
general and his staff had their headquarters.

He could not help feeling nervous, and when he saw the general and his
fellow officers, sitting at a long table, each in full uniform, his
peace of mind was not increased.

“Henry Morris, you are charged with attempted robbery,” said one of the
officers. “General Murray wishes to hear what you have to say for
yourself. Tell your story in as few words possible.”

As well as he was able, Henry told of his duty as a guard, told of what
Prent had said to him, and of how he had followed the soldier to the
cellar and tried to get him to come away without taking anything. Then
he spoke of the alarm, and of how Prent had knocked him from the stairs,
and of how the officer of the guard had come and placed him under
arrest.

The officers listened in silence, each watching his face closely. All
were evidently impressed by his sincerity.

“Do you not know it was your duty to report Prent when you saw him go
into the building?” questioned General Murray.

“I wanted to make sure of what he was doing, sir. Besides, I didn’t want
to see him turn thief and be hanged for it.”

Henry was then removed, and Prent was called in, followed by Fenley and
Harkness. All three of the conspirators told of how they had suspected
Henry for several nights and of how they had seen him on one occasion
carrying away something bulky under his coat.

“Why did you not have him searched?” questioned General Murray.

“We couldn’t make ourselves believe that such a young fellow could be a
thief,” answered Fenley glibly.

“We can’t say that he was a thief, exactly,” put in Prent. “He may have
been only looking at the things.” Bad as the soldier was, he did not
wish to see Henry hanged.

“But what of that bundle you saw him carry under his coat?”

“That might have been something else,” said Fenley.

“Do you want to shield him?”

“Oh, no, general!”

“Do you know anything about this other man who was in the cellar?” asked
another officer, after he whispered to General Murray. He addressed
Prent.

“No, sir.”

“Then you don’t know he was caught last night?”

At this Prent’s knees began to knock together.

“Wh—who is he?” he faltered.

“Never mind just now. As he was in the cellar he, of course, heard all
that went on there.”

Prent grew white and it was with difficulty that he kept his knees from
sinking beneath him.

“I—I—he didn’t hear anything—that is, he doesn’t know anything about
me,” he said weakly. “He must be in league with Henry Morris.”

“Perhaps,” said the officer dryly. “But I imagine not.”

At this moment an aid came in hurriedly, and asked permission to deliver
a message.

“What is it, Lieutenant Caswell?” questioned General Murray.

“We have information that the French intend to attack the post at
Lorette this afternoon,” said the aid.

“In that case, this hearing is postponed indefinitely,” said General
Murray. “Let the guards remove the prisoners.”


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                              CHAPTER XXII

                           IN PRISON AND OUT


THE man who had been in the cellar and who had escaped, had not been
caught, as one of the officers of the court-martial had intimated. But
he had been heard from, and in the most unexpected manner.

Late the evening before, an old Canadian, living in the most wretched
quarter of Quebec, had appeared at the headquarters of the officers with
a note, which he said had been given to him by a man, muffled up in a
military cloak, whom he had met outside of the city, while bringing in a
load of firewood.

“The man gave me no time to speak with him,” said the Canadian, in
French. “He thrust this into my hand, made me promise to deliver it here
to-night, pressed this silver piece in my palm, and then rode off on
horseback at a wild gallop.”

“Was he a French soldier?”

“I believe, sir, he was,” answered the old Canadian. “But he was dirty
and unshaven and looked as if he had not eaten his fill for a week or
more.”

The note thus strangely brought to light ran as follows, although
written in French:

    “TO GENERAL MURRAY:

    “I am a Frenchman leaving Quebec, an honest man, but your enemy
    in war. I write this to save the young soldier who was caught in
    the cellar of the goldsmith’s shop. He is innocent and the man
    who knocked him down is guilty. I write this at my own peril,
    because I cannot stand idly by and see the innocent suffer.

                   “Yours in truth,

                             “L. C. G.”

The note was a mere scrawl, written on a bit of coarse paper and
unsealed.

General Murray was much mystified by the communication, and spoke of it
to several of his brother officers.

“I believe it is genuine,” said one. “The man was probably a French
spy.”

“It is more likely a fraud,” said another. “A fraud gotten up by one of
Morris’s friends to clear him.”

Here were the two sides of the matter, and General Murray did not know
which side to believe. The examination of Henry threw no new light on
the affair, and it was then that one of the officers suggested, in a
whisper, that Prent be made to believe that the stranger in the cellar
had been caught. The outcome of this the reader already knows.

Henry had been removed before the stranger was mentioned, and he knew
nothing of how nearly Prent had come to breaking down and exposing
himself.

From the sounds which reached him in his prison, Henry knew that
something unusual had occurred to break the quiet monotony of army life
in the captured city. Soldiers were hurrying in various directions, and
he heard some artillery being dragged down the street by six or eight
horses. Drums were rolling, and from a great distance he imagined he
heard the sound of firing through the clear, nipping air.

Ever since the English had taken Quebec and signified their intention of
holding it, at any cost, there had been rumors that the enemy were
coming to the attack before the winter was over. The alarm came in
November, when the news went flying in all directions that General Lévis
was marching toward the city, at the head of fifteen thousand men.

“He means to capture the city, and has sworn to dine here with his army
on Christmas day,” was the report.

The guard was strengthened, and the watchfulness of the outposts
increased. But Lévis failed to appear, for the simple reason that he was
by no means ready to make an attack. Then the holidays came and went
quietly, and for a few weeks the alarm subsided.

The main outposts at this time were at St. Foy, and at Old Lorette. At
each place a strong guard was placed, for the French were not far
distant, and bent on doing all the damage possible to the English.

Old Lorette had now been attacked by a body of French regulars, who came
up when least expected, and drove off a large herd of cattle upon which
the British had levied. This made the rangers in that vicinity very
angry. A hasty plan against the French was arranged, and just as hastily
carried out, and the enemy fell back with one or two men wounded,
leaving the rangers to re-gather the cattle, that had in the meantime
strayed away in various directions.

But it was not this firing that Henry heard. The French had come up
during a storm and taken possession of Point Levi, on the south shore of
the St. Lawrence. They dared the English to come out and meet them, and
a detachment under Major Dalling was sent over the river on the ice,
which was now thick enough to bear almost any weight. A sharp skirmish
followed, and the French were beaten back. A few days later there was
another encounter, in which General Murray himself took part, and also a
detachment of the Highlanders, and this time the enemy fled in terror,
leaving a handful of their men to be captured.

During these exciting days nobody came near Henry but the prison guards,
and the majority of these soldiers were rough fellows who had neither
sympathy nor pity for the youthful prisoner.

“It’s a bad hole ye have got yourself into,” said one. “An’ if ye are
hung ’twill but serve ye right.”

“’Tis hung he should be,” said another. “A thief is no better than a
murderer.” This fellow had charge of the food served to Henry, and he
gave the youth stuff which was scarcely fit to eat.

As the days went by Henry grew more miserable, and to tease him one of
the guards told another, in Henry’s hearing, that he had heard the
prisoner was soon to dance upon nothing, as a warning to other thieves.

It was a cruel joke, and gotten off so seriously that Henry was much
inclined to believe the report. That night he could not sleep, and when
he arose in the morning his face wore a cold, calculating look that had
never been there before.

“They shan’t hang me,” he thought bitterly. “I am innocent and I won’t
suffer—not if I can help it. What will mother and the others say, if
they hear I was hanged for a thief?”

A day later it snowed heavily, and the guards around the house were more
out of humor than ever. They were not allowed to smoke, but did so on
the sly, and one man drank liberally of some rum which one of the detail
brought in from somewhere.

Henry was watching his chance as a hawk watches young chickens, and late
that afternoon noticed that the guard seemed unusually drowsy. The man
sat on a bench in a front room of the improvised prison, and if he did
not sleep he was certainly far from being wide awake.

There was a window in Henry’s room. It had been nailed up, but one
window pane was broken, letting in cold air that nearly froze him to
death during the night time. Outside several slats of wood had been
placed across the window, which happened to be without the heavy wooden
shutters so common at that period.

Through the broken window pane Henry had worked at two of the slats and
now had them much loosened. As night came on he noticed that the guard
still dozed. The man’s cap had fallen on the floor, and his heavy coat
had slipped beside it.

“If I could only get that cap and coat,” thought the young prisoner. The
door to the next room was unlocked,—indeed, it had never had a lock on
it,—and it was an easy matter to step up to the guard. In a moment more
Henry had the articles he desired. Then he turned back, for he knew that
another guard was in the street, near the door leading to the
thoroughfare.

“Hullo! How cold it is!” Henry heard the guard mutter. He waited to hear
no more, but as the man stretched himself he ran to the window, smashed
out what remained of the glass, pushed aside the loosened bars, and
leaped out into the snow of the yard.

There was now an alarm, and the youth knew that in another moment three
or four guards would be after him, each with a musket, ready to shoot
him on sight. He leaped for the shelter of a nearby woodshed, donned the
cap and military overcoat, and then continued to the back of the yard,
where he hopped over a fence, and darted into an alleyway leading to
another street.

As Henry gained the alleyway the report of a musket rang out on the
early night air, and soon the commotion in and around the prison
increased.

“What’s the rumpus?” demanded the officer of the guard, running up.

“Morris has escaped!”

“He attacked me like a savage beast,” said the guard, who had been
dozing. “He—he complained of being half frozen, and then he turned on me
like a fury.”

“You’re a set of numskulls!” roared the officer of the guard, in great
wrath. “After him, and if you do not bring him back, dead or alive,
somebody shall pay dearly for this blundering.”

One thing prison life had given Henry. That was plenty of rest, and now
as he ran through the alleyway and out on the next street he felt as if
he could cover ten or twenty miles without stopping.

“They shan’t catch me,” he told himself. “I’ll show them what an
American can do when he is put to it.”

On account of the darkness and the cold the street was almost deserted,
and the few people he met hardly noticed him; doubtless thinking he was
merely some soldier hurrying to his quarters after a chilling tour of
guard duty on the ramparts.

During the time Henry had been free to come and go in Quebec he had
visited nearly every part of the city, which in those days was far from
large. Consequently, he knew where he was and how to turn to get to
where he wanted to go.

“I’ll have to leave the city to-night, that is certain,” he told
himself. “In the morning there will be a warning sent out, and to pass
any of the guards will be impossible.”

But how to get out was a serious problem until he caught sight of a
covered wagon drawn by a team of horses, moving slowly toward the gate
of St. John. This wagon contained supplies for the hospital, located to
the northward, on a bend of the St. Charles River. The supplies were
needed at once, hence they were being sent out at night instead of
waiting until morning.

Climbing upon the wagon from behind, Henry secreted himself between
several boxes and bundles. Neither the driver of the wagon nor his
assistant noticed the movement, and in a moment more the wagon was at
the gate.

“What wagon is that?” Henry heard a guard call out.

“General Hospital Wagon No. 4,” was the answer from the driver. And he
showed a slip of paper.

“Right; pass on,” answered the guard, and the gate was opened, the wagon
passed through, and then the gate was closed again.

Hardly daring to breathe, the young soldier remained crouched between
boxes and bundles, as the wagon jounced over the rough road, deep with
snow in some places, and swept bare by the wind in others. Then, when he
calculated that half the distance to the hospital had been covered, and
they came to another road leading westward, he dropped off behind, and
the hospital wagon rolled out of sight without him.


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                             CHAPTER XXIII

                    FACE TO FACE WITH THE UNEXPECTED


SO far Henry had given but scant thought to where he was going. His
whole mind had been concentrated on getting away from Quebec, and from
those who wished to make him suffer for a crime which he had not
committed.

But now, as he stood in the middle of the deserted roadway, with the
gloom of night on every side of him, and with a cutting wind blowing the
drifting snow into his face, he realized that he must find shelter, and
that quickly. He was not accustomed to such a severe winter, and the
cold seemed to pierce him like a knife.

At a corner of the roadway stood a signboard, a rough affair, with an
arrow pointing to the northeast, and under this the name St. Foy.

“That must lead to one of the outposts,” thought the young soldier. “I
can’t go there. I wonder if there isn’t some French farmhouse in this
vicinity where they will give me shelter for the night, and some food?”

To keep warm he began to tramp along the road. He had gone but a short
distance when he came to a cross road. Here everything was covered with
snow, and half blinded by the whirlings of the wind he got onto the
cross road without knowing it.

Two miles were covered, and poor Henry was almost exhausted. More than
once he thought to sit down and rest. But he realized that this would be
madness. “I’d never get up again,” he told himself. “It would be the
sleep of death!”

At last, when he could scarcely drag one limb after the other, he espied
a light shining from the upper window of a small house some distance
away. He fairly staggered toward this, and, reaching the house, knocked
loudly on the door.

After a moment of silence an upper window was opened, and an old woman
peered down from out of her night-cap.

“Who is there, and what is desired?” she asked in French.

“I am freezing!” said Henry in English. “Let me in.”

The old women did not understand his words, but she seemed to understand
the situation, and soon hobbled downstairs and threw open the door.
Henry almost fell into the kitchen, and sank into a heap before the fire
which smoldered in the big chimney-place.

“Poor fellow—and so young!” murmured the old French woman. “He is almost
frozen.” And she bustled about, stirred up the fire, and put on some
fresh sticks of wood, and then made him some hot tea to drink.

It was a good half-hour before Henry felt anything like himself. He was
given some bread and butter, and some warmed-up meat and another cup of
tea. The old woman plied him with questions, and he had a hard task to
make her understand that he wished to remain at the house until
daylight. But when he pointed to the fire, and then at himself, and made
out as if he was sleeping and snoring, she smiled and nodded her head in
assent.

It must be confessed that Henry slept but little that night, even though
his couch on a blanket before the smoldering fire was a fairly
comfortable one. His brain was racked with the question of what to do on
the morrow. Traveling during the daytime would be extremely hazardous,
so long as he remained in the English lines, and when he crossed into
the French lines the situation would be just as bad.

“And it’s too cold to travel at night,” he thought dismally.

The morning found the snow coming down at a furious rate, so that the
landscape was blotted out on every side. The roadway was drifted high
with snow, which lay against the kitchen door to a depth of three feet.

“I reckon I am safe here for the present,” thought the young soldier.
“Nobody will think of visiting this house during such a snow-storm.”

The old woman came down as soon as it was light. She found Henry fixing
the fire, and he had already set the pot of water for boiling.

“You are snow-bound,” she said, but of course he did not understand her.
He gazed thoughtfully out of one of the windows, while she prepared a
simple morning meal from her scanty stock of provisions. He wished he
could pay her, but could only point to his empty pockets, at which she
smiled again, as if that did not matter.

“A good, motherly sort,” he told himself. “Mother at home couldn’t treat
a French soldier any better than this woman is treating me.”

The snow-storm kept up for several days, and after that there were
fierce high winds, which sent the snow flying and drifting in half a
dozen directions at once.

During those days Henry and the old woman were left entirely alone. By
an effort on the part of both he learned that she was a widow with a son
somewhere in the French army, and that her name was Garrot. She deplored
the war, and wished only for peace, no matter which side won.

“And at her age I cannot blame her,” thought Henry. “Probably she has
lost a great deal by the forages of both armies.” And his surmise was
correct.

On the morning of the fourth day at the cottage, the young soldier heard
firing at a distance. The sounds seemed to come closer at noon, but
shortly after that died away utterly.

“Some sort of a skirmish,” thought the youth. “Can it be that the French
have attacked Quebec?”

On the day following, the sun came out, and the weather moderated
greatly. Henry now thought he must set off once more, fearing that some
French troopers might appear at any moment. As best he could he thanked
Madam Garrot for what she had done for him, and then trudged off.

The young soldier had in mind to move up the river bank a distance of
several miles, and then cross the St. Lawrence on the ice. Once in
English territory, he would strike out southward, trusting to luck to
reach some settlement. He carried a small stock of provisions, and also
a pistol and some powder, which he had begged of the old woman, who
seemed, strangely enough, much interested in him.

Henry found walking through the snow as difficult as ever. But after
trudging along for half a mile he reached a long stretch which the wind
had swept clear, and which he covered with ease. He kept his eyes and
ears on the alert, but neither French nor English soldiers appeared to
challenge his progress.

That night found the young soldier a good many miles up the St.
Lawrence, at a place which had in years gone by been a combined French
and Indian settlement. Most of the buildings were burnt down, and the
place was entirely abandoned. In searching around he found one part of a
log cabin which could be used as a shelter, and into this he crawled,
and built a small fire in the half-tumbled-down chimney-place.

“Not much of a tavern,” he thought grimly. “But I can be content if I
fare no worse during this journey.”

His physical distress, even though great, was nothing compared to the
trouble he suffered in his mind. He was branded as a thief, and even if
he escaped to his home, how was he to clear his name, and how escape the
military judgment meted out to him for the crime? Even if he was allowed
to go free, folks would point the finger of scorn at him. And then his
mother—he hardly dared to think of her.

“This news will almost kill her,” he said to himself. “She always
expected so much of me!”

The next day he continued his journey up the river bank. He had now
crossed a road where the tracks of several sleighs could be plainly
seen, and was on his guard constantly.

It was almost nightfall when Henry reached a large barn located in the
middle of a field which was deep with snow. A house had stood near by,
but this had been burnt down by the Indians at the outbreak of the war.
But some half-burnt sticks of timber were still visible, and some of
these he gathered, and built himself a fire at which to thaw out his
half-frozen limbs.

The fugitive was utterly worn out, and, having consumed the last of his
scant stock of provisions, he wrapped himself up in some hay in the
barn, and soon fell asleep.

How soundly he slept Henry did not know until nearly daylight, when the
kicking of a horse’s hoofs on the side of a stall below awoke him. He
listened intently, and heard several steeds moving about.

“Some French troopers must be around,” he reasoned, and his heart almost
stopped beating at the thought. With extreme care he peered below. He
could see two forms stretched out in the semi-darkness. Listening, he
heard snoring from another quarter. Not less than six men were below
asleep.

“Now I’m as good as caught,” he thought, but an instant after set his
teeth hard. No, he would not give in thus easily. He would fight first.

“They must have come in too late to notice the fire I built,” he told
himself. “But they’ll see it when they awaken and start on a tour of
discovery. I must get away if I wish to save myself.”

There was a small window at one end of the barn, and he found he could
drop out and into the snow with ease. But just as he was climbing out
another thought came to him—one that amazed even himself, at the risk
involved. Why not try to appropriate one of the French troopers’ horses,
and perhaps a saber and some food as well?

The exposure had made Henry reckless and he did not stop to consider the
plan twice. Turning, he found the rude ladder leading to the lower floor
and went down to the bottom.

There were exactly seven of the troopers, all burly fellows, and one an
under-officer, who was snoring lustily on the top of a feed box.

Henry’s first move was to untie the horse nearest to the stable door.
The snow had drifted in beneath the door, and this helped to deaden the
sounds of the animal’s hoofs as it was led outside. Then the young
soldier returned and picked up the officer’s saber, and also a pistol
and a horn of powder and balls. A knapsack was handy, and into this he
stuffed a mass of provisions taken from three other knapsacks. The
provisions were only army rations, but they were vastly better than
nothing.

As Henry slipped from the stable a second time one of the men stirred
uneasily and opened his eyes.

“Who is there?” he asked sleepily, in French.

Of course Henry did not answer. Instead, he swung himself into the
saddle, which had been left on the steed, and started away from the
stable on a gallop. Reaching the rude stone wall of the field, he made
the horse take it at a bound, and then continued on his way along the
river road.

He had not yet reached some timber ahead of him, when a shot rang out,
followed by another, showing that he was discovered. The bullets,
however, flew wide of the mark, and soon he felt that he was practically
out of range, for the muskets and pistols of those days did not carry as
far, nor as accurately, as do those of modern construction.

“They will be after me,” thought the young soldier, as he continued to
urge the horse onward, and at the same time fastened the knapsack to his
back and the saber to his waist. “Well, if they come, I reckon I can
fight for it,” he continued, and set his teeth together more firmly than
ever.

The timber was gained a few minutes later. Just before passing out of
sight between the trees he looked back. Four troopers had left the barn
on their horses and were in hot pursuit.

[Illustration:

  Four troopers were in hot pursuit.—_Page 222._
]


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                              CHAPTER XXIV

                        A GAME OF HIDE AND SEEK


FORTUNATELY for Henry, the road through the timber was on a slight
ridge, which the wind had swept almost free of snow. Here and there the
elements had torn down branches, and even trees themselves, but the
horse the young soldier rode appeared to know something of
steeplechasing and took every obstruction without difficulty.

For a distance of half a mile the way was straight, and looking back he
saw the four troopers plainly. They were riding about as fast as
himself, but no faster.

“They won’t catch me just yet,” he reasoned, as he sped onward. “And
perhaps I’ll soon come to some cross-roads, where I can give them the
slip.”

Once came another shot but it did not reach the fugitive, and only made
him urge his steed along at a better speed. Then the road began to lead
downward from the ridge, and soon Henry found his horse plowing and
panting through snow a foot deep, and steadily growing deeper.

Here was cause for fresh alarm, and now the youth’s heart beat
anxiously. A turn had hidden the troopers from view, but he could hear
them shouting to each other, for the horse of one had stumbled over a
log, and thrown his rider headlong into a snowbank.

“They’ve got a chance to get up to me now,” thought Henry, as he gazed
at his almost exhausted animal. “Oh, if only we could get to some spot
where there wasn’t so much snow!”

Another turn was ahead, and Henry made for this, hoping it would
disclose something to his advantage. It did, for here were three other
roads, running in as many different directions.

“Too bad to give up the horse, but I guess it has got to be done,” he
thought. He turned the horse up one of the side roads and brought him to
a standstill under a low-hanging tree. Then he leaped into the branches
and gave the steed a smart slap with the flat side of the sabre. “Up
with you!” he cried. “Get along!”

Stung by the blow and urged on by the words, the horse gave a leap
forward, and started off at a good pace that soon took him out of sight.
Then Henry climbed up into the tree and lay among the branches, hardly
daring to breathe.

It was not long before the young soldier heard the French troopers at
the cross-roads. They came to a halt, examined the ground, and then put
on after the riderless horse, passing directly beneath the tree in which
the fugitive was hiding.

“That was a lucky idea,” thought Henry, and as soon as the party had
passed he slid down out of the tree. He did not take to the road at
once, but made a détour through the brushwood, to a point on one of the
other roads a quarter of a mile away. Then he struck out bravely once
again in the direction of the river.

Henry found trudging along with a knapsack on his back far from easy,
and at the end of an hour he was glad enough to seek the shelter of some
rocks and trees and rest. The sun was shining brightly, and at a long
distance he could make out the frozen surface of the St. Lawrence,
glistening in patches like a mirror.

“I suppose I may as well make for the river and cross it here, instead
of farther up,” he mused. “I’ve got to get to some place before all my
supplies give out.”

He took his time over the rations which the knapsack afforded, keeping
his eyes and ears open for the possible sound of pursuers. But nobody
came near him, and the country for miles around looked absolutely
deserted.

The distance to the river was fully as far as it looked, and before half
the space was covered Henry was almost exhausted. He had found a
deserted farmhouse, and here he rested again, and then resolved to
remain at the farmhouse over night.

“One day won’t make any difference,” he reasoned.

The farmhouse had been looted of all of value, yet a rude table, two
benches, and a few old cooking utensils remained, and close at hand was
some firewood ready for use. Growing reckless again, the youth started
up a fire, and warmed up some of his rations, and also his
half-stiffened body.

Slowly the day faded from sight and the stars began to glitter in the
sky. It was clear and quiet, and never had the young soldier felt so
lonely. His thoughts traveled to home and then to Dave. What would his
cousin think of him when he heard of what had happened?

“I’m sure Dave won’t think I turned thief,” he reflected. “But that
won’t help me any. Oh, was ever a fellow in such a fix before!”

It was nearly midnight when Henry heard a strange noise outside of the
old farmhouse. He leaped up from his position in front of the fire and
gazed out of a window. In the dim light he saw three men approaching on
horseback.

“The troopers!” he told himself. He wanted to flee, but there was not
time. Gathering up his pistol and saber he fled up the narrow stairs
leading to the sloping room above.

In a few minutes the door below was thrown open, and the three men
entered. They were talking earnestly, but the sight of the smoldering
fire cut short the conversation. Some excited questions followed, and
presently one of the men opened the door leading to the stairs.

“Is anybody up there?” he demanded in French.

Instead of replying, Henry tiptoed his way to a corner of the room. Here
was a sheltered nook, between the chimney and the sloping roof, and he
squeezed himself into this.

“I say, is there anybody up there?” demanded the Frenchman once more.

He waited a moment and then slammed the door shut. More talking
followed, but only an indistinct murmur reached Henry’s ears. The young
soldier scarcely dared to breathe, and he tried in vain to think of what
would be best to do next.

“I reckon I’ll have to drop from the window, just as I was going to do
at the barn,” thought the youth, but before he could put the plan into
execution, the door below was thrown open once more and the Frenchman
reappeared, this time with a torch taken from the fire, which he and his
companions had started up again.

“I’m in for it now,” Henry told himself, and he was right. In a moment
more the Frenchman discovered him and drew a pistol.

“Who are you?” he demanded, in his native tongue.

“Don’t fire,” answered Henry.

“Ha, you are von Englishmans, hey?” cried the Frenchman, and now Henry
saw that he was dressed in civilian’s clothes.

“Yes, I am an English soldier,” answered Henry recklessly. “What do you
want of me?”

“You come de stairs down, an’ you make me no trouble,” was the reply.

As there was no help for it, Henry descended to the ground floor of the
farmhouse. The talking had brought the others to their feet and each
Frenchman had a pistol drawn as he appeared.

“Jean Bevoir!” gasped Henry, as his eyes rested on one of the newcomers.

“Ha, you know me?” came in return. The trader gazed at Henry sharply,
and uttered an imprecation in French. “It ees zat Henry Morris!”

“Henry Morris?” repeated the man who had remained below with Bevoir.

“_Oui_, Chalette;” and then he continued in French: “Do you not remember
seeing him at Fort Niagara?”

“Yes. But he is not the Morris who came to the hospital,” answered
Chalette, who was the prisoner who had escaped with Jean Bevoir, during
the powder-house excitement.

“No, this is a cousin—the brother to that little Nell Morris.”

“Ah, I see. Is he alone? If he is, we have made a fine haul,” was
Chalette’s comment.

“He is the only person I saw,” said the third Frenchman, a hunter named
Gasse. “I will look again. You watch this fellow.”

“To be sure we shall watch him,” cried Jean Bevoir, and at the point of
the pistol he disarmed Henry and made him stand up in a corner, facing
the wall. The young soldier wanted to fight for his liberty, but saw it
was useless, for Chalette also kept his pistol ready for use.

It was not long before Gasse returned, saying that nobody else was
anywhere around. Then Henry’s hands were bound behind him and he was
tied fast to a bench, which was stood up on end for that purpose.

“Now, my fine fellow, you vill tell me how it ees zat you came here,”
began Jean Bevoir.

“I rode part of the distance and walked the rest,” answered Henry, as
lightly as he could. He felt it would do him no good to “show the white
feather.”

“Where did you come from, tell me zat and tell ze truf.”

“I came from Quebec, if you want to know so bad.”

“Ha, Quebec! You march all ze way from Fort Niagara to Quebec?”

“No, I came part of the way by boat.”

“’Tis mooch ze same. Vat ees it zat you do here?”

“That is my own affair.”

“You play ze spy on ze French, not so?”

“No, I am not a spy.”

“But ze English air not here—za know enough to stay near to Quebec.”

“If you must know, I am trying to get home,” answered Henry.

“Geet home? You leaf ze army?”

“Yes.”

“For vat?”

“I have my reasons.”

“You geet afraid of ze French bullets, hey?”

“Perhaps.”

“Maybe you haf deserted ze army?” burst out Jean Bevoir, and gave the
young soldier a shrewd look from his wicked eyes.

“If I have it is none of your affair, Jean Bevoir. Now let me ask a few
questions. How did you get here? Did General Johnson let you go?”

“Yees,” answered Bevoir, without hesitation. “He examine me an’ say I am
free.”

The falsehood was told so readily that Henry was staggered by it.

“General Johnson made a mistake to let you free!” he cried. “If this war
ever comes to an end, you shall suffer for what you have done.”

“Ha, you threaten me, you, von prisonair!” roared the French trader,
shaking his fist in Henry’s face.

“You don’t deserve your freedom, and you know it.”

Bevoir drew a long breath. “Ve vill not talk about zat,” he said. “I
shall tell ze French commander zat you are von spy—an’ Chalette an’
Gasse shall tell ze same. You vill soon learn zat ze French know vat to
do to ze spy, ha! ha!” And he laughed wickedly.

At these words Henry’s heart sank within him. He realized only too well
what Bevoir’s words meant. If taken into the French camp as a spy he
would most likely be shot.

Truly in breaking out of the guard-house in Quebec and coming to this
place he had leaped “out of the frying-pan into the fire.”


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                              CHAPTER XXV

                             TAKEN AS A SPY


THE Frenchmen now began an earnest conversation in their native tongue,
and they spoke so rapidly that Henry could understand little of what was
being said. But he knew that they were talking about him, and more than
once he heard his own name and that of Dave, and of his Uncle James
mentioned, and once he heard them mention the trading-post on the
Kinotah.

“Jean Bevoir is going to square accounts if he possibly can,” thought
the young captive dismally. “He is going to make me suffer for all his
troubles. How General Johnson could let such a rascal go is more than I
can understand.”

At length the Frenchmen turned to prepare themselves something to eat,
and one went out to care for the horses, which were stabled in a lean-to
of the farmhouse. Then Henry’s bonds were examined and an additional
strap passed over his lower limbs, after which the bench was let down,
that he might lie at full length.

“Now, if you can sleep, you sleep,” said Bevoir roughly. “But do not try
to get away, or ze bullet from a pistol shall find you verra soon.”

The Frenchmen laid down after this, and once again the farmhouse became
quiet. Henry tried several times to free himself, but found the task
impossible. At last worn out by the struggle, he too, passed into the
land of dreams.

When the captive was released at daybreak he found himself so cramped
that he could scarcely stand. His hands were now untied that he might
eat the little breakfast allotted to him, and were then refastened in
front of him.

Soon after this the farmhouse was left behind, and the whole party
started down the river road single file, Henry taking turns in riding
with each of the others. It was still cold and clear, and traveling was
by no means easy. Yet the horses were of large build and covered many
miles before being halted for midday lunch.

It was nightfall when the camp of a French outpost was discovered,
quarter of a mile back from the St. Lawrence, and close to a settlement
named Girot, since entirely abandoned. Here some fur traders, well known
to Jean Bevoir, had erected something of a fort and stockade, and the
French soldiers had taken possession.

The flare of several camp-fires lit up the outside of the fort, as the
prisoner and his captors rode through the stockade gate. Here were
assembled several companies of foot soldiers, and half a troop of French
cavalry, under the command of Captain Rachepin, a burly fellow, who had
won his position by daring work in the campaigns gone by.

“An English prisoner, eh?” he said, as he gazed at Henry. “That makes
the third this week. Well, the more the merrier.” And without further
ado Henry was thrown into a low, dirty hut, that did duty as a prison.

Two other prisoners were already in the hut, one an English grenadier,
and the other a ranger from New Hampshire. Both were half-starved, and
each had been captured while miles away looking for game for their own
camp larder.

“Hit’s ’ard luck, my boy,” sighed the grenadier gloomily. “Hi didn’t
hexpect nothink like hit when I took the King’s shilling, Hi can tell ye
that.”

“Never seed nothin’ like them pesky garlic-eaters,” said the ranger.
“Neow deown ter our camp we treated the prisoners fair an’ square, but
here—gee shoo! Why, the eatin’ aint fit for hogs, let alone human
critters!”

“Perhaps they haven’t enough for themselves,” answered Henry.

“They ’ave that,” put in the grenadier. “Hi ’ave seen hit with my hown
blessed heyes. But the bloomin’ tykes are selfish. They ’ave flip and
spruce beer galore, but hit is nothink but cold water fer us, with stale
bread an’ salt pork as is worse than stale!” And the grenadier heaved a
long sigh. “Hif ever Hi git ’ome again, strike me dead hif Hi leave a
second time!”

“An’ thet aint the wust on it, not by er jugful,” continued the ranger,
who rejoiced in the name of Pity-All-Sinners Skinner, but was called Pit
for short. “When I got ketched I had a’most seven shillin’s in my
pocket, an’ neow I aint got a smell on’t, flay ’em!”

“I don’t suppose you gave them the money,” remarked Henry.

“Gave it to ’em? Not by er jugful! I’ll see ’em all drawn an’ quartered
fust! They took it—stole it plain and simple. But yeou jest wait! This
here war aint done yet—an’ Pit Skinner aint dead yet nuther!” concluded
the ranger, with a wrathful shake of his head.

For several days nobody came near Henry outside of the guard who brought
in the miserable prison fare, already mentioned by the grenadier and the
New Hampshire ranger. It was certainly food scarcely fit to eat, and it
was a whole day before the young soldier could touch it. But a keen
appetite can overcome many objections, and at last he ate just enough to
satisfy the intense craving of his stomach. Even the drinking water was
poor, and, as Pity-All-Sinners Skinner said, hardly fit for washing.

On the Monday following Henry’s arrival at the post a messenger came in
with some important dispatches. Following this there was a good deal of
bustle and excitement, and soon some guards appeared and told the
prisoners to get ready for a journey.

“Where are we going now?” asked Henry, but the guard addressed either
could not, or would not, answer the question.

Chained together, hand-to-hand, the three were made to march from the
fort. The foot soldiers of the French were already in the ranks and the
prisoners were placed in their midst. Then the little column moved off
by fours, up the St. Lawrence, in the direction of Montreal.

“Something has happened, thet’s certain,” said Skinner. “Looks ter me
like a retreat.”

The march of the soldiers with their prisoners was kept up for three
days, when the outskirts of Montreal were reached. Then came other
dispatches for the commander of the little column, and the prisoners
were sent into the city under a guard of six men, while the main body of
the soldiery moved eastward again.

At the time of which I write, Montreal, now a large and flourishing
city, was but a small town, consisted principally of low one- and
two-storied houses, of logs and stone. There were several stores, or
rather trading shops and some little shipping during the summer time,
along the waterfront. The people, mostly Catholics, were very religious
and had three churches and also a seminary, which, on account of its
towers, could be seen from a great distance.

The defenses of the town were not many and the place had suffered much
from having quartered the army of Montcalm on more than one occasion.
During those times the French soldiers had eaten very nearly all the
food in sight, leaving the town people to famish. Business and trading
were almost at a standstill, and at times even money could not procure
the necessities of life.

On entering Montreal Henry saw but little of the place, for he was
hurried without ceremony to a stone building which the French had turned
into an army prison. In this building were huddled over a score of
prisoners of all descriptions—a motley, half-dressed and half-starved
crowd, some grenadiers, some rangers, and some civilians. Everybody in
the crowd was out of humor, and groans and curses were frequent. But the
prisoners did not dare to talk too loudly, for if they did, a guard
would appear and threaten them with solitary confinement in a stone cell
under one of the churches.

“What an awful place to stay in,” was Henry’s mental comment. He found
himself pushed hither and thither, while the stench of the prison made
him literally sick. “This is Jean Bevoir’s work. He will make me suffer
as much as he possibly can.”

After a good deal of pushing and shoving, Henry found himself in
something of an alcove, and here dropped on the bench which was built
around two sides of the room. Beside him sat an old soldier, who was
suffering from a heavy cold, and who coughed continually.

“It is not fit for a dog here,” said the old soldier. “I have been here
two weeks, and I know. They mean to kill us all off.”

“Two weeks—in this hole!” cried Henry.

“Yes, and that is nothing. Some of the poor fellows have been here three
months.”

“I couldn’t stand it—I’d—I’d die for the want of fresh air.”

“And that is what they want you to do. When you die they won’t have to
feed you any more.” The cough of the old soldier grew steadily worse,
and, although, at the last moment a surgeon came and gave him a little
medicine, he died eight days later, and was carried away for burial in a
trench outside of the town.

Henry had been separated from Pity-All-Sinners Skinner and from the
English grenadier, and so knew absolutely nobody in the prison. More
than this, no one seemed to care for him, and, if the truth must be
told, he likewise cared for nobody. Everybody felt miserable and it was
in very truth a struggle to keep body and soul together and to keep from
catching some fatal disease.

The young soldier was in the prison over a month before Jean Bevoir came
to see him. The French trader could only speak to him through the rudely
slatted door and in the presence of the other captives.

“I trust zat you like ze surroundings,” said Bevoir, with a sickly grin.
“It ees just suited to you, hey?”

“You’re a miserable scoundrel, Bevoir!” burst out Henry. “What have you
told the commander about me?”

“I haf tole him zat you are a spy an’ a verra deep one, too! Some day,
ven he has ze time, he vill bring you up before ze military court.”

“And then?” questioned the young soldier.

Jean Bevoir shrugged his lean shoulders.

“Zen you can die ze death of ze spy, and it ees vat you an’ all your
familee deserve. Ees not zat von pleasant thought, hey?”

And with a sinister leer the French trader moved away from the slatted
door and left the prison as rapidly as he had entered it.

As for poor Henry, his feelings can be better imagined than described.
Walking to a corner of the cell he threw himself down on the bench,
almost overcome. The last door of hope seemed to be shut against him.


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                              CHAPTER XXVI

                        DAVE’S JOURNEY TO QUEBEC


IT was not long after he was lost in the snow, that Dave heard news from
Quebec that disheartened him greatly. This was that Henry had been
arrested for stealing and was likely to be hanged for the offense.

The news came in through several messengers who arrived at Fort Ontario
on important business for General Murray. One of the messengers knew Sam
Barringford well, and it was this man who gave the news, first to the
old frontiersman and then to Dave.

“Henry arrested for stealing!” exclaimed the young soldier. He could
scarcely believe that he heard aright.

“Sorry for you, young man, but it’s the truth,” was the reply of the
messenger, and he gave what few particulars he knew. He had left Quebec
before Henry ran away, so knew nothing of this new turn of affairs.

It was to Barringford that the messenger told how Henry was in danger of
hanging. “General Murray is bound that looting shall stop,” said he. “So
some time ago he had notices posted up giving warning that a thief
caught in the act would be hanged.”

“I’ll wager my life on it, Henry aint no thief,” said Barringford
warmly. “Thet boy is as honest as the day is long.”

“I know nothing of that. He is now in prison, or, for all I know, he may
be dead.”

Barringford considered it his duty to tell Dave of the fate that
overhung his cousin, and the two talked the matter over for the best
part of a night.

“If I could get to Quebec I’d go,” declared Dave. “Perhaps I could do
something—if—if——” He wanted to say if it was not too late but the words
stuck in his throat.

“Say the word an’ I’ll go with ye, Dave,” responded Barringford. “Thar
don’t seem to be no ust o’ stayin’ here.”

“Can we make it, Sam? Quebec is a long distance from here.”

“I aint afraid to try it, Dave. I allow as we are goin’ to have a spell
o’ good weather.”

“But the Indians?”

“The Injuns don’t stir much in the winter. An’ if we have our muskets
an’ a pistol or two I reckon we kin hold our own ag’in ’em.”

The upshot of this conversation was that both Dave and the old hunter
went to lay the case before their commander the next morning. The
general listened patiently to what they had to say.

“To me such an undertaking is foolhardy at this season of the year,”
said the general. “But if you feel that you really want to go, you have
my permission, and I will give you each a paper to that effect. But if
you lose your lives in the attempt your friends must not blame me.”

Dave and Barringford set off the very next day, in company with two of
the messengers, named Grassbrook and Heppy. Both of the messengers were
old hunters who knew the trails well, and it was said that Heppy had a
trace of Indian blood in him.

The party was two days on its way when they came to the Indian village
of Kanankee, presided over by an old chief named Leaping Elk. The
Indians were friendly, and the travelers were glad enough to remain with
them over night.

In the morning an agreeable surprise awaited Dave. During the night six
warriors of the Delawares had come in, under the command of White
Buffalo.

“White Buffalo!” cried the young soldier. “Where did you come from?”

“From the southward,” answered White Buffalo. “And where goes White
Buffalo’s young friend David?”

“To Quebec—if we can get that far.”

“It will take many days to make the journey.”

“I suppose so—but that cannot be helped.”

Dave then told the Indian chief why he was making the journey. White
Buffalo listened attentively and his eyes flashed fire when he heard
that Henry had been arrested as a thief.

“The English chief at Quebec is a fool,” he said. “My white brother
Henry is no thief. I will tell the English chief that to his face. He is
a fool.”

“I want to save Henry if I possibly can,” answered Dave.

“What will David do?”

“I don’t know yet. But I have some letters that tell of Henry’s bravery
in battle, and those may help him.”

White Buffalo was silent after this and had but little to say while
supper was being prepared and eaten. But before he retired for the night
he came to Dave again.

“Would my white brother like White Buffalo to go with him to Quebec?” he
asked.

“Oh, White Buffalo, that is asking a good deal of you!”

“Then White Buffalo may go?”

“If you want to go, certainly. But—but—haven’t you anything else to do?”

At this the Indian chief shook his head sadly.

“No, White Buffalo has nothing much left. His tribe is split and broken.
Some have gone to the French, many are dead, or wounded, or sick. Six
warriors only remain, but they are of the best, and they have sworn by
the Great Spirit to stay with their chief to the finish. Let us go with
you, and if we meet unfriendly Indians, or the French, we will do what
we can to defend you.”

“Now ye air talkin’ right from the heart!” cried Sam Barringford, as he
caught White Buffalo’s hand. “Come on by all means. Ye air the whitest
Injun I ever seed!” And his face glowed with satisfaction, which pleased
White Buffalo greatly.

The journey was resumed as soon as the sun was fairly up. White Buffalo
now took the lead, in company with Heppy, and the others followed on
behind in close order.

White Buffalo had been over this ground but a short time before, and
knew even a better trail than did the messengers from General Murray. He
also knew where the snow was lightest, and took them along a ridge where
the walking was by no means bad.

For several days the journey proceeded without interruption. Not a sign
of Indians or French was seen, and the landscape at times looked utterly
deserted. Occasionally when they passed through a patch of woods, or
through the forest, they would stir up some wild animal, and they were
never without game for a meal all the time they were on the trip.

Half the journey to Quebec was accomplished when there came a light fall
of snow, followed by a wind that for twenty-four hours constantly
increased in violence. For several hours they kept on in this wind, but
as last both the whites and the Indians called a halt.

“White Buffalo knows of shelter close to this spot,” said the Indian
chief. “We had best go there, and wait until the mighty wind has
fallen.”

All willingly followed White Buffalo to the shelter, which was the under
side of a hollowed-out cliff, fronted by some heavy brush and a row of
saplings. Here all set to work to clear out a space for themselves and
another for a camp-fire, for the wind made the air seem much colder.

Several of the men were taking it easy on some boughs they had cut,
while the others were huddled around the camp-fire, warming up, and
preparing something to eat, when the wind arose with greater violence
than ever. It was a winter “fall,” as it is called in that territory and
it whistled and shrieked with a fury that caused more than one in the
party to spring to his feet in alarm.

“By gum! This aint no June zephyr!” declared Barringford, as he gazed
from the shelter with an anxious look on his bronzed face. “It’s a
reg’lar fall, thet’s wot it is!”

“High wind, truly,” put in White Buffalo. “Great Spirit knock down many
trees that are proud.”

The Indian chief had scarcely spoken when there came another whirl,
which caused the camp-fire to fly in several directions. Then, before
anybody could run away, there followed a crash on top of the cliff and
then one in front of it.

“The trees are coming down!” yelled Dave.

“We must git out—we’ll be buried under the cliff!” came from
Barringford.

As both spoke they tried to leave their dangerous quarters. But the
movement came too late. With a thud the tree that had stood above them
came down in front of the opening, and an instant later another tree
before the cliff landed on top of the first.

A huge branch caught both Dave and Barringford and hurled them flat.
Then came another crash, and Dave found himself buried under small
stones and dirt, and for the moment he felt as if the end of the world
had come.


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                             CHAPTER XXVII

                        THE ATTACK OF THE FRENCH


“DAVE! are ye alive?”

“I—I—reckon so, Sam—bu—but I am not sure!”

“We must git out o’ here, or we’ll run the danger o’ being burnt up!”

Barringford was right; already the scattered camp-fire, aided by the
high wind, was commencing to set fire to the tree limbs that rested
under the cliff.

On Dave’s breast was a mass of small stones, dirt, and snow, and it was
with difficulty that he managed to sit up. Then he discovered that one
leg was held down tightly by a branch of one of the fallen trees.

“I’m in a regular bear trap,” he panted.

“Both legs, lad?”

“No, only the left.”

“I’ll free ye,” answered the old frontiersman, and set to work
immediately.

He was still laboring when White Buffalo crawled over the fallen trees
toward them. Close at hand the flames were springing up, but the Indian
stamped them out. Then he chopped away at the limb, and soon Dave was
released.

“Are the others safe?” asked the young soldier. “I had an idea we would
all be killed.”

All were out of the wreckage but one Indian and Heppy the messenger.
These two had been lying under a large rock, which had loosened, and it
was at first supposed that both were dead, but then came a faint cry for
help.

“They are in a hollow tree under the rock,” said Grassbrook.

Such proved to be the case, and then arose the question of how the
unhappy pair might be released.

“We must put out all the fire first,” said Barringford, and this was
done, the flames being fought with flat sticks and with chunks of snow
and dirt.

As soon as the last of the fires were extinguished, the large rock
resting over the hollow was examined. There was an opening to the space
below, so the prisoners beneath did not suffer from the want of air.

“We are both all right,” announced Heppy. “But we want to get out.”

“We must pry the rock off the hollow,” said Barringford.

Two long and heavy poles were cut for that purpose, and despite the wind
and the cold, the whole party set to work to move the big rock from its
resting place. The poles were placed under other rocks, acting as
fulcrums, and all of those who could “get in line” were pressed into
service.

“Hurrah! it is moving!” cried Dave.

He was right, and after straining for a minute more the huge rock rolled
over and went crashing into another hollow below.

When Heppy and the Indian came out of the hole it was found they were
somewhat bruised, but otherwise all right.

The wind still blew strongly, but the fury of the blast had spent
itself, and they easily made themselves safe under the fallen trees,
after looking to it that the giants of the forest were in no danger of
rolling over and crushing them.

The next day found them again on the journey. They now skirted a valley
where, in a sheltered spot, they saw a herd of deer. Two of the animals
were laid low by Barringford and White Buffalo, and these gave them meat
until the trip came to an end.

It was nearly the last of March when the party came in sight of the St.
Lawrence, almost opposite to Quebec. An English outpost was not far
distant, and they marched to this, where they were promptly challenged
by a sentry, and escorted under guard to the officer in command.

“You have come a long distance, truly,” said the officer, after
examining the passes they carried. “It is more of a journey than I
should wish to take in such weather as this.”

“May I ask if you have had any battles with the French since Quebec was
taken?” asked Dave.

“Not of much account. They tried to rout us out once or twice, but we
beat them off easily. There is, however, a rumor that they intend to
descend upon us in force early this spring, so if you remain here a
while you may see more fighting.”

The ice on the river was now breaking up, and Dave and the others, after
bidding a temporary farewell to White Buffalo and his followers, crossed
the stream in a bateau which the English officer loaned them. They were
soon on the opposite shore, and half an hour later found them in Quebec,
and on the way to General Murray’s local headquarters.

Dave and Barringford had a good hour to wait before they could see the
English commander, for General Murray had just received additional news
concerning the expected attack by the French.

“Who are you and what do you wish?” demanded the general, tersely, as
they came in.

Dave speedily introduced himself and Barringford, and handed the
commander the letter he had brought from Fort Oswego, which Murray
glanced over hastily.

“You are a cousin to Henry Morris, eh?” he said slowly.

“Yes, sir. May I ask have you—is he—he—still in prison?”

“Why shouldn’t he be in prison?” questioned the general keenly.

“I thought perhaps that you—you had punished him. They told me, sir,
that you had issued an order——” Dave tried to go on, but could not. “Oh,
sir,” he burst out, “he is not guilty! I am sure he is no thief!”

“Were you afraid I had put that order of mine into execution against
him?” questioned General Murray, and now his tone was kindlier.

“I was, sir! That is why I came here—to save him if I can! He is such a
good fellow—he wouldn’t steal from anybody.”

“That’s the truth, general,” put in Barringford. “I’ve known him from a
babby, an’ he’s as honest as they grow ’em. Thar must be some mistake
somewhar. Can’t Henry explain himself?”

“He has not tried,” answered General Murray dryly.

“Hasn’t tried?” ejaculated Dave. “Why, what——”

“He escaped from prison and left Quebec some time ago.”

“Is it possible!” came from Dave, his face full of conflicting emotions.

“Do you mean to say the boy up an’ run away?” came from Barringford.

“Yes.”

Both Dave and the old frontiersman shook their heads at this. The news
was so unexpected it stunned them.

“I am half inclined to believe that he was not guilty,” went on General
Murray. “I have learned that one of the fellows mixed up in the affair,
a soldier named Prent, has a bad reputation, and one of Prent’s friends,
Harkness, is a man who once served time in a Scotch prison. More than
this, I received a letter from some party unknown, which would tend to
prove that Henry Morris was the victim of circumstances or a plot.” And
here the general drew out the letter already given in full in a former
chapter.

“And nothing has been seen or heard of Henry since he ran away from
here?” asked Dave.

“Nothing. How he got out of Quebec is unknown, and it is barely possible
that he may be in hiding here, although I do not think so. He was
foolish to run away.”

“But wouldn’t you run away if you were afraid of being hanged?” asked
Dave quickly.

At this a faint smile crossed General Murray’s face. He was still a
young man, and he could understand Dave’s feelings fully.

“It would be better to stay and face a trial—especially if innocent,” he
said evasively; and after a few words more they were excused.

“I don’t know whether to be glad or sorry,” remarked Dave, as he and
Barringford walked down the street. “What do you say, Sam?”

“I’d rather see Henry run than be hanged,” was the answer. “But it gits
me whar he went, especially in the freezin’ cold weather. I hope he
didn’t git lost in the snow and froze to death.”

Both Dave and Barringford soon found that Quebec was in a state of
suppressed excitement. Alarms had been frequent, and now General Murray
felt certain that an attack by the French would not be long delayed.

In this the young commander was correct. The French leader, Lévis, angry
to think that Vaudreuil, the Governor-General, would not march on the
city immediately after the English took possession, chafed all winter
with his troops to do the enemy battle.

But the Governor-General was cautious. He knew that General Amherst, at
Crown Point, only wanted a chance to fall upon Montreal, and so it was
at Montreal that the French army gathered, and here the majority of them
remained until early in April.

Presently came in reports that the English had lost many men by
desertion and through sickness, and that Amherst at Crown Point could
not yet think of moving, and Vaudreuil at length consented to listen to
Lévis.

“We shall never have a better opportunity than now,” said General Lévis.
“Murray is at present cut off from all outside supplies. If we wait
until summer comes he will obtain re-enforcements from England, Boston,
or New York, and then we will have a task that may be beyond us.”

Lévis had his way, and at once the sleepy town of Montreal awoke to
life. The colonists who had been allowed to go home on furlough were
recalled, drills were had daily, and large quantities of army stores
were collected. Some troops demurred at what was required of them, but
Vaudreuil was firm, and told them that they must either fight or suffer
death.

It was decided to descend upon Quebec by way of the river, and for this
purpose two frigates, two sloops-of-war, and a perfect swarm of bateaux
and other small craft were pressed into service. The army numbered about
six thousand men, and was, further down the St. Lawrence, increased to
over eight thousand.

Some distance above Quebec is the small stream of Cap-Rouge, which flows
into the St. Lawrence, and just beyond this is the settlement of St.
Augustin. Amid much difficulty, for the river was still full of floating
ice, the army, half perished with the cold, landed at St. Augustin,
built a temporary bridge over the Cap-Rouge, and marched forward on the
English outpost at Old Lorette.

It is likely that the outpost was taken somewhat by surprise, and after
a lively skirmish the English garrison fell back to St. Foy, where
active preparations were made to combat the French as soon as they
should appear.

Had nature permitted it, it is possible that St. Foy would have fallen
as quickly as did Old Lorette, for the marching enemy was strong in
numbers. But as General Lévis advanced, through a long stretch of
dangerous marshland, a heavy thunderstorm came on, and the rain
descended in torrents. To this difficulty was added the darkness at
night, and foot soldiers and troopers floundered about, scarcely knowing
where they were going.

The delay had aided the English, and when, the next morning, the French
appeared in front of St. Foy, they found the village fortified with
cannon. There was an assault, and the French were driven back, and then
Lévis, not knowing how few English soldiers were really intrenched
before him, determined to wait until night before meeting the English
again.


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                             CHAPTER XXVIII

                         IN THE RANKS ONCE MORE


DAVE and Barringford had found quarters with some rangers down near the
river front, and here the two remained day after day, each wondering
what they had best do next.

“I don’t feel much like returning to Oswego,” said the young soldier. “I
want to hear something from Henry before I do that.”

“That’s jest my way o’ looking at it, Dave,” answered the old
frontiersman. “But it don’t seem like we was to hear a word, does it?”

“I can’t imagine where Henry went to, Sam. If he left Quebec he would be
almost certain to fall into the hands of the French or their murderous
Indian allies.”

Several of the rangers had work to do along the river front, and this
lasted until late one Saturday night. Dave and Barringford had been
helping the men at their task, but when it was finished the young
soldier did not feel in the humor to retire, and he and Barringford sat
in a little watch-house, the frontiersman smoking and both talking over
the past, until it was well after midnight.

Down the dark stream floated huge cakes of ice and masses of driftwood,
for the day had been rather warm and had freed much that had before been
ice-bound. As the two gazed out at this they were suddenly aroused by a
faint cry for help.

“What’s that?” asked Dave.

“Somebuddy callin’,” answered Barringford, peering forth on the river.

The cry was repeated, in a French voice, and then, at a great distance
from shore, they made out the form of a man stretched flat on a big mass
of drifting ice.

“Some soldier!” ejaculated Dave. “More than likely he is half dead from
the cold.”

“If we had a boat we might save him,” said Barringford.

Both rushed around to see if a boat was handy, and their actions aroused
a number of others near the watch-house.

In the meantime the mass of ice had drifted further down the St.
Lawrence, to where the frigate _Racehorse_ lay in her dock. The watch on
the deck of the frigate also heard the sufferer and saw him put up an
arm pleadingly.

“A castaway, sir,” said the sailor, running to Captain Macartney.

“Where?” demanded the master of the _Racehorse_.

“On a cake of ice, sir. He is about frozen.”

Captain Macartney wasted no time in ordering a small boat to the rescue,
and, running along the shore, Dave and Barringford saw the man brought
in and taken aboard of the frigate.

The man who was rescued proved to be a French cannoneer. At first he
could not speak, but after being warmed up he let out the information
that, while trying to land at Cap-Rouge with a number of others, the
boat had been upset. He was closely questioned, and the news was
obtained that General Lévis was marching upon Quebec with all possible
speed, with a view to catching Murray unawares.

“Our commander must know of this at once,” said the master of the
_Racehorse_, and he had some of his sailors carry the rescued Frenchman
on a litter to General Murray’s headquarters at three o’clock Sunday
morning.

Soon the drums and bugles were sounding, and Dave and Barringford, who
had retired to sleep after seeing the Frenchman rescued, leaped up with
the other soldiers. “The French are marching on Quebec!” was the cry.
“They have already attacked the outposts at Lorette!”

By daybreak Murray was on the move, with about a thousand men and
several pieces of cannon. Most of the field-pieces had to be pulled by
the soldiers themselves, and when Dave and Barringford asked for
permission to join the outgoing army, a captain of artillery immediately
pressed them into service.

“Ye can’t go as soldiers,” he said, with a grin. “But come on as horses,
and welcome.”

“I’m not afraid to do it,” responded Dave quickly, and caught hold of
the long rope, and seeing this Barringford did the same.

A nasty, cold rain was falling, and though sixteen men were dragging at
the rope of each piece of artillery, it was all they could do to move
the cannon through the mud and slush. Sometimes some of the soldiers
would drop out and others would take their places, but Dave and
Barringford stuck to their posts.

It was not long before St. Foy was reached. The garrison was being hotly
pressed by the French when General Murray’s artillery opened a fire on
the enemy, driving them back with considerable loss.

“Make ’em run!” was the English cry, and soon the foot soldiers were
charging straight past the town. Dave and Barringford were in this
charge, and for ten minutes were exposed to a raking fire from two
sides. Neither was struck, although Barringford had the sleeve of his
coat torn by a bullet.

But Murray knew that the French outnumbered him, and that it would be
foolish just then to try to hold St. Foy. His object was to offer
protection to the various garrisons falling back on the city, and in
this he was successful. Soon St. Foy was abandoned, and the church,
containing a large amount of military stores, blown up.

The fight had been a hard one, and when the men got back to Quebec, some
of them were half perished with the wet and cold. Dave himself was in a
shiver, and when a big bonfire was lit in a public square he got as
close to it as possible to dry and warm himself.

Although he had fallen back on Quebec, General Murray did not intend to
remain there. He felt that the walls of the city were in no condition to
withstand a bombardment at the hands of Lévis, and that to raise
earthworks outside would be an almost impossible task, owing to the
half-frozen condition of the ground.

“If we remain here we shall have to stand a long siege,” said he to his
fellow-officers. “Lévis is exhausted by his forced marches. Let us fall
upon him without delay.”

Officers and soldiers were willing to meet the French, and some even
left the hospital that they might take part in the coming contest. All
was bustle and excitement, and soon Murray had around him his whole
force of about three thousand soldiers.

The march forward was as tiresome as the one to St. Foy had been. Five
hundred men dragged twenty-four pieces of artillery and the tumbrils
containing the ammunition. In spots the cannon and carts sank down
hub-deep, and had to be pried out with logs and poles. More than one
soldier fell into a hole up to his waist and had to be dragged out to
save him from being frozen to death.

“It’s no fun, that is sure,” said Dave, as he puffed for breath. He had
hold of the rope attached to a cannon.

“We long ago made up our minds thet war wasn’t fun, Dave,” answered
Barringford, who was just in front of him, and also on the rope.

Besides the grenadiers and artillery there were with Murray a company of
rangers under Hazen and another company of volunteers under MacDonald.
The rangers and volunteers were on the left flank, and with these went
Dave and his old friend when the time came for battle.

The English army had reached the ground occupied by Montcalm when the
French general was shot down, and here they came to a temporary halt. In
the meantime General Lévis was moving from St. Foy to a ridge of ground
known as Sillery Wood. He had not yet had time to place his whole army
in position.

“Now is the time to strike,” said General Murray, and he ordered another
advance.

In a moment more the cannon spoke up, followed by the continued rattle
of musketry. The onslaught was a fierce one, and in certain quarters the
French were seen to give way. The smoke of battle was thick, and cannon
ball and bullet often sent the mud and slush flying in all directions.

“The French are retreating!” was the cry a little later, and again the
English troops pressed forward. But this surmise was incorrect. The
enemy were merely taking a new position, and soon the English found
themselves at a disadvantage, having given up a stretch of high ground
for one which was low and uncertain.

The left flank of the army had been brought up close to the edge of a
wood, and soon the French began to pour into the ranks a deadly fire
that laid many a soldier low. Not far away were two block-houses, and
these were filled with Canadian sharpshooters, who began to pick off the
officers one after another.

“We must take the block-houses,” was the order received, and the
volunteers rushed at one stronghold, while the rangers rushed at the
other.

The din of battle was now terrific, and for a few moments Dave could
scarcely hear when spoken to, or when a command was given. Bullets were
flying in all directions, and he was struck twice, once in the fleshy
part of the arm, and once in the little finger of his left hand.
Barringford was also hit in the shoulder, but kept on fighting,
regardless of the loss of blood.

“Up and at them!” was the constant cry. “Up and at them!” And then the
volunteers made straight for one of the block-houses, and in a few
minutes the enemy were retreating with all possible speed.

But the block-house could not be held, for the French were now moving on
the rangers and volunteers in a larger number than before. The white
uniforms covered the edge of the wood, and in a minute the command to
which Dave and Barringford had attached themselves was almost
surrounded.

“We can’t hold this nohow,” came from Barringford, who was re-loading
his smoking musket. “Them Frenchm——”

“Down!” cried Dave, and shoved the old frontiersman backward. Then came
a report from behind the block-house, and Barringford pitched over on
his side and lay as one dead.

Dave’s musket was up in an instant, and taking careful aim he fired. He
hit the man who had brought Barringford low, and the Frenchman went back
with a ball through his breast.

“We must get out of here!” was the cry a few minutes later, and the
retreat was sounded.

Dave bent over Barringford and found the frontiersman still breathing.
He was shot in the head, just above the right ear, and covered with
blood.

“Oh, if he only lives!” thought the young soldier. The idea of losing
his old friend was too horrible to contemplate. Slinging his musket over
his shoulder, he raised Barringford in his arms and gazed around
helplessly.

“I’ll help ye, boy!” cried a ranger, who was running past, and he took
hold of Barringford’s lower limbs, while Dave took him under the arms.
Thus they ran a hundred yards or more, when two other volunteers came to
their assistance, and Barringford was carried to the rear, and, later
on, back to the general hospital.

[Illustration:

  Dave’s musket was up in an instant.—_Page 268._
]

But the fighting was not yet at an end, and it continued for half an
hour longer, the English doing their best to drive Lévis from the strong
position he now occupied. But this was impossible, and at last General
Murray’s army began to move back to Quebec, keeping the retreat well
covered.

“The victory is ours!” came the French cry, and they started in pursuit.
But General Lévis soon saw that the English were not retreating in
disorder, and so ordered his soldiers to hold the ground they had gained
and go no further.


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                              CHAPTER XXIX

                               DARK DAYS


THE days to follow the tattle just described were gloomy enough, both
for Dave and for the little army now assembled at Quebec.

All told, General Murray had lost, in killed, wounded and missing, about
a thousand men, or one-third of his force, while the loss to the enemy
was estimated at about the same. In addition, the English had lost some
cannon and also some of their ammunition and muskets. When the army got
back to Quebec it was thoroughly exhausted, and the men were hardly fit
for work of any kind. Confusion reined supreme, and had Murray permitted
it, there would have been a panic and perhaps the place would have been
abandoned.

“The jig is up,” said more than one soldier. “We must surrender, or else
the French will either bombard us or starve us out.”

But General Murray was not so easily daunted, and soon brought a
semblance of order out of apparent chaos. The wounded were cared for,
and those able to work were immediately set to the task of fortifying
Quebec from every available point. Bags were filled with sand and placed
at the gates, and the cannon were planted so as to command every
approach. Even the convalescent in the hospital had to do their share by
making wadding for the cannon. Soldiers who would not obey orders were
promptly disciplined, and one man who was caught plundering a house was
promptly hanged as a thief.

This public execution brought to Dave’s mind the fate that hung over
Henry. Would his cousin come back, and, if so, what would General Murray
do to him? This thought made Dave shiver.

“He is certainly very stern,” thought the young soldier. “And unless
Henry can clear himself it will surely go hard with him. But perhaps
Henry is dead!” And he shook his head sorrowfully.

Dave had gone with Barringford to the general hospital and seen to it
that the old frontiersman had every attention. At first he was afraid
Barringford was going to die in a few days, but now the surgeon in
attendance held out a faint hope of his recovery.

“But he was hard hit,” said the surgeon. “An inch nearer, and the bullet
would have passed through his brain.”

For days Barringford lay unconscious, knowing nobody and breathing
heavily. During that time Dave came to see him as often as permitted,
and had his own wounds dressed. The young soldier had lost the end of
his little finger, but he counted this as nothing in comparison with his
other troubles. “I’d rather lose the hand than see Sam go,” was what he
told himself.

General Lévis lost no time in strengthening his position around Quebec.
Extra cannon were sent for, and the French commander waited anxiously
for some news of a French warship which was expected.

“If he gets the help of a fleet we are doomed,” said more than one
English officer, and a watch was set, to announce the coming of any sail
up the St. Lawrence. At the same time, the cannon planted on the walls
of Quebec did all they possibly could to make Lévis keep his distance,
and prevent him from throwing up the intrenchments he so much desired.

“A ship is in sight!” was the cry that was raised in the city on the
ninth day of May. “A ship! A ship!”

“What is she?” was the question asked.

This could not, as yet, be answered, and General Murray lost no time in
making his way to where a good look could be had of the lower St.
Lawrence. Sure enough, there was a large ship, but without a flag.

“Hoist the colors at Cape Diamond!” ordered the English commander, and
the flag was raised without delay. In the meantime the warship came
closer and could be seen to be crowded with men. Would she prove to be a
friend or an enemy?

Slowly the flag mounted to the masthead, and unfurled to the breeze. It
was the red cross of St. George.

“’Tis our own ship! Quebec is saved! Huzza! huzza!” was the cry, and
almost immediately the soldiers went wild with joy, some dancing on the
ramparts of the city, in full view of the much-chagrined French, who had
hoped the vessel would prove to be one of their own.

Soon the ship, the _Lowestoffe_, was firing a royal salute, to which the
city batteries replied with vigor, the gunners making the river and
rocky cliffs echo and re-echo with their glad tidings. In the city the
grenadiers marched, sang, and drank toasts, and the gloom of the days
gone by was dispelled as if by magic.

The ship that had come in brought news of an English fleet which was
expected to reach Quebec in a few days. In desperation Lévis began an
immediate attack on the city, but with poor success. Then he assembled
his own ships of war, but six in number, and waited bravely for the
coming of the English vessels.

It was the middle of May when the English fleet sailed up the river. The
battle on the water was of short duration, although the French sailors
fought desperately against overwhelming odds. Seeing they could not win,
one vessel threw her guns overboard and sailed away and the others ran
into the mud flats, where their crews set fire to them, and escaped by
wading and in small boats.

“The day is ours; Lévis cannot stand this defeat on the water,” said
General Murray, and he was right. The loss of the warships carried
consternation into the camp of the French, and that very night they
began to retreat, the English sending shot and shell after them to
hasten their departure. In their hurry they left many cannon, muskets,
and army stores behind them.

“That was a victory worth the winning,” said Dave, as he marched out,
several days later, to help bring in some of the abandoned army stores.
“A few more like that and I reckon the French will leave Quebec alone.”

“Well, we aint got so all-fired much to crow about,” answered one of the
rangers who was working near. “Things looked mighty black all around
afore them ships hove in sight.”

“What do you suppose the French commander will do next?” asked Dave, for
he knew that the ranger, although not a well-spoken man, was a clever
fellow.

“I don’t see how he kin do anything but fall back on Montreal,” answered
the ranger. “We’ll blockade the St. Lawrence on him, an’ sooner or later
the army at Oswego will be a-comin’ this way, and the army from Crown
Point, an’ he’ll have to look out for himself right sharp.”

A few days after this talk Dave called again upon Barringford. He found
the old frontiersman conscious, but somewhat out of his head, the effect
of the bullet wound. Barringford did not know him at first.

“Seems to me I know ye,” he said slowly. “But it’s beyond me—a long way
off. Air ye Henry, or Dave, or thet Jameson boy?”

“I’m Dave, Sam. Don’t you know me?”

“Dave, eh?” The sufferer took the hand held out to him. “All right,
Dave, ef it’s you. But why did ye shoot me in the head? I thought better
o’ you than thet, yes, I did!”

“I didn’t shoot you, Sam; it was a Frenchman did that, and I laid the
Frenchman low for it.”

“Did ye? Queer, I should think you shot me.” Barringford tried to
collect his thoughts, but failed. “Mighty bad place this,” he went on.
“Folks shoving me all day an’ all night, an’ tryin’ to drive wooden pins
into my head.” And then he sank back and dozed off.

“Will he remain this way?” asked Dave of the surgeon, his heart fairly
aching for his old friend.

The surgeon shrugged his shoulders. “Let us hope not, my lad.”

“But they do sometimes, is that what you mean?” questioned the young
soldier quickly.

“I am sorry to say that is true. You see, the bullet grazed the brain.
If he recovers it will be very slowly.”

“Can I do anything for him?”

“No, we are doing all that can be done.”

“This is not a very nice place.”

“As soon as the weather moderates we will transfer him to a hospital on
the Island of Orleans. There the accommodations will be much improved,
and I will see to it personally that he has every attention.”

“If you will do that, sir, I shall be very thankful. He is one of my
best and closest friends. I do not want to leave him unless I am certain
he is in the best of hands.”

“Leave him? Do you mean you are going away?”

“I belong to the army at Fort Oswego, and my furlough is running out, so
I must get back, if I possibly can,” answered Dave.

What he said was true. He had already remained at Quebec longer than
intended. The very next day found him going back to Fort Oswego, in
company with eight rangers and an English officer. The officer belonged
to General Amherst’s staff, and from him Dave learned, later on, that
Amherst himself was going to take charge of the expedition to move
against Lévis at Montreal, by way of Lake Ontario and the rapids of the
upper St. Lawrence.

The particulars of the trip back to Fort Oswego need not be given here,
for nothing out of the ordinary occurred during the journey, which,
because of one delay and another, lasted over two weeks. While still
eight miles from the fort the little expedition was joined by forty
Indians who were, much to Dave’s astonishment, under the leadership of
White Buffalo.

“Why, White Buffalo, I thought your braves had deserted you!” cried the
young soldier, after the first greeting was over.

“The old braves of my tribe have come back to their reason,” answered
the Indian chief with a smiling face. “They have learned that the French
are their enemies, and gave their word only to break it. Henceforth they
will fight under White Buffalo and Sir William Johnson to the end.”

“That is certainly good news,” said Dave. “I suppose you are going to
rejoin Sir William at Fort Oswego.”

“Yes, and we bring with us an old Indian who knows the swift waters of
the St. Lawrence, if the great Sir William sees best to move upon the
enemy by that course.”

“Most likely he will move down the St. Lawrence, White Buffalo. But I
have heard the rapids are very swift, and more than one man has lost his
life trying to shoot them.”

The want of news about Henry and the sad tidings concerning Barringford
hurt White Buffalo greatly, and he did not hesitate to show his
feelings.

“’Tis a black cloud hanging over us,” he said. “May the Great Spirit
roll it away, bringing Henry back to us unharmed, and lifting the Demon
Spirit from Barringford’s mind.”


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                              CHAPTER XXX

                     THE RAPIDS OF THE ST. LAWRENCE


AUGUST of the year 1760 found General Amherst at Oswego with a force of
ten thousand men, consisting of royal grenadiers, Colonial militia and
rangers and volunteers. To this body was also attached over seven
hundred Indians, under the leadership of Sir William Johnson.

In the meantime the troops at Crown Point had been left under the
command of General Haviland. They were ordered to move forward without
delay, and Haviland did so, his force numbering a little over three
thousand soldiers of all sorts, including the now celebrated Roger’s
Rangers. The first point of attack was Isle-aux-Noix, fortified by the
French under Bougainville. Here the English were victorious, and then
the enemy were followed to St. John and Chambly, and by the activity of
the rangers were compelled to give way once more, this time seeking the
protection of the St. Lawrence. Haviland now awaited the coming of
Amherst, and at the same time communicated with General Murray at
Quebec, with a view to a threefold attack on Montreal.

General Amherst lost no time in getting his army afloat. It mustered
several ships, and a bewildering number of bateaux and rowboats, while
the Indians moved down the lake in their canoes. The larger boats
carried many cannon and a great quantity of ammunition, and it was felt
by all that Amherst’s advance would surely be one to victory.

During the days spent in Oswego getting ready for this trip, a slight
ray of hope had come to Dave. This was the news that at Montreal were a
number of English prisoners, captured on the battlefield, or while at
work in the vicinity of Quebec.

“Perhaps Henry was captured,” he thought. “And if he was he may be in a
Montreal prison at this minute.”

Dave had returned to his old command, and his fellow soldiers did all
they could to comfort him. All knew Henry and Barringford well, and many
were the words of sympathy poured into the young soldier’s ears. Nobody
believed that Henry was a thief, yet none could tell what General Murray
would do if the missing one was found.

“One thing is certain, Morris,” said one old soldier. “Henry’s past
record is in his favor. We can all swear that he was honest while he was
with us.”

While the army was floating down the lake the weather proved fair, and
La Galette was reached without mishap. Here a French brig named the
_Ottawa_ was sighted. She began firing on the army transports while they
were yet at a distance.

“This will not do,” said General Amherst, and had several of his
gunboats attack the brig. The fight was sharp, but likewise short, and
soon the French ship struck her colors. A few of the crew escaped to the
shore, but the others were made prisoners.

The rapids of the St. Lawrence were now close at hand, and General
Amherst was considering the problem of how to get his expedition through
in safety, when a new peril presented itself.

On an island in the river, just above the rapids, was Fort Lévis, well
fortified, and now under the command of Captain Pouchot, he who had
commanded at Fort Niagara the year previous. Pouchot was awaiting
anxiously for a chance to “even up” his defeat at Niagara, and no sooner
did the leading boats of Amherst’s fleet appear than he opened a heavy
fire on them.

“So this is the game,” said General Amherst. “Well, I think I can wait
long enough to put you out of the fight.”

He at once landed a portion of his army and some cannon on the river
bank, and on some nearby islands, and began that very day to cannonade
Fort Lévis with vigor.

“What a noise!” said Dave, and he was right; the din was terrific, for
the French replied with vigor. The fort was composed principally of logs
and dirt, which the cannon balls sent flying in all directions. The
soldiers had but little to do, and Dave sat in the top of a tall tree
watching proceedings.

The bombardment of the fort continued for three days, when the
stronghold was more than half battered to pieces. Pouchot, seeing he
could not hold out, at last surrendered, and he and his brave men became
prisoners.

The Indians under General Johnson had waited patiently for the surrender
of the French, and when they saw the flag go down many of them rushed
for their canoes, their intention being to visit the fort, and kill and
scalp Pouchot and those around him. But Sir William Johnson would not
allow this.

“You must stay back; there will be no scalping here,” he said.

“No scalping!” cried a hundred voices at once. “We must have scalps or
we will not fight,” said others; and thereupon more than half of the
Indians withdrew from the expedition in disgust.

Dave was glad to see that White Buffalo had not taken part in the
attempted rush on the French after the surrender. But when he spoke of
it to the chief the Indian hardly knew how to answer.

“White Buffalo cannot understand,” he said at last. “Ten of his braves
have left. The French are our bitter enemies—then why not kill and scalp
them? The great Sir William must know what is best—but the poor Indian
cannot understand.”

“It isn’t Christian-like, that’s why, White Buffalo. After an enemy
gives in we ought to treat him fairly and squarely.”

“The French would let their Indians kill and scalp you, David.”

“Perhaps; but two wrongs don’t make a right,” answered the young
soldier. “War is war, but we needn’t make it any worse than is
necessary.”

With the fall of Fort Lévis, the army under Amherst moved on again down
the St. Lawrence. Soon the rapids of the Galops, the Plat, the Long
Saut, and the Côteau du Lac came into view, followed by the Cedars, the
Buisson, and the Cascades.

“That water is running mighty fast,” said Dave to the others as he
watched the rolling river, glistening brightly in the sunshine. “Unless
I am mistaken, the current is powerful.”

“You are not mistaken,” replied an old ranger, who sat near the youth.
“These rapids are almost as bad as the rapids of the Niagara. I tried to
go through ’em once, six years ago, and I know. There were four of us in
the canoe, which upset, and one of the party was drowned while the other
three were almost dead before we got back to shore.”

“Well, the French and Indian pilots ought to know how to direct the
boats,” put in another soldier. “General Amherst has several of the best
of them.”

On and on swept the long line of boats, stretching out for a distance of
over two miles. The progress was growing faster and faster as the fierce
current just above the worst of the rapids caught hold of one boat after
another.

The craft in which Dave was seated was a long, broad, flat-bottomed
affair, containing twelve men, an under-officer, and a small stock of
ammunition. Two men were at the sweeps, or oars, following the
directions of the officer, who stood in the bow, directing them to the
right or the left as occasion required.

“There is surely going to be trouble!” whispered Dave, when a shrill cry
came from ahead. Looking in that direction they saw a boat had hit on
the rocks, and that half of the occupants were struggling in the water,
which boiled and foamed all around them.

“To the right! To the right!” yelled the officer in the bow. “Be quick,
or we’ll run them down, and smash our own boat!”

“Can’t we help ’em, leftenant?” queried one of the soldiers.

Before an answer could be given, the boat had swerved to the right and
was sliding past the hidden rocks. One soldier in the water made a
frantic clutch for the passing craft, and caught hold of a but of
tarpaulin which covered the ammunition.

“Hold tight, I’ll pull you in!” sang out Dave, and with the assistance
of another soldier he pulled the suffering one on board of the boat.
Then the craft swept onward toward another soldier, and he was likewise
assisted. But the rest had to be left behind, to shift for themselves.
All but two were picked up by other boats in the rear. Of the two one
managed to reach shore, and became a prisoner of the French, and the
other was never seen or heard of again.

It was now seen that more than one boat in front and to the rear were in
difficulty, and ever and anon a sickening crash could be heard above the
roaring of the rapids. The nerves of all the soldiers were strained to
the utmost, and many sat rigid, fearing that the next moment would be
their last.

“We should have portaged our boats around the rapids,” growled one old
hunter. “I’d ruther walk fifty miles than ride one in sech water as
this,” and more than one hearer agreed with him.

Some dangerous rapids had been passed, but one still more dangerous was
ahead. The lieutenant had been warned of this, and was watching closely.

“To the left! To the left!” he sang out suddenly. “To the left! Swing
her over!”

“She won’t swing!” came stubbornly from one of the men at the sweeps.
“The current’s stronger nor a mill-race.”

“We must bring her over,” said the officer. “Now then, pull for all you
are worth. We—ha!”

The last cry was echoed by half a dozen in the boat, and several sprang
to their feet regardless of the first order given to them, to sit still.
A boat ahead of them had bumped into another craft, and both had dashed
headlong on a hidden rock. Splintered wood, soldiers, army stores, and
foaming water seemed hopelessly mixed, and from out of the mass came
shrieks of pain and piteous calls for help.

“To the left!” yelled the lieutenant once more, but the cry did no good.
The boat swept onward with increased speed, directly into the midst of
the wreckage. A shock and a crash followed, and the next instant Dave
found himself in the water, surrounded by a score of other soldiers, all
fighting madly to save themselves from drowning.


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                              CHAPTER XXXI

                          THE FALL OF MONTREAL


IN his career as a soldier Dave had been in many positions of peril, yet
scarcely one had been as dire as that which now confronted him.

The shock came so quickly that he hardly realized what was happening
before he was under water, and somebody seemed to be doing his best to
stand on the young soldier’s shoulders.

Flinging the feet above to one side, Dave tried to reach the surface of
the river. In doing this he slid past two more soldiers, both of whom
clutched at him, one catching him by the coat, and the other by the
neck.

To be held by the coat was of small importance in comparison to being
deprived of one’s wind, and Dave lost no time in fighting off the fellow
who had him by the neck. The hold was a strong one, and the youth feared
he would be choked unless he broke it without delay.

There was a wild floundering on all sides, and in the mêlée somebody
above kicked out sharply with his heavy boots. One boot struck the man
who held Dave by the throat, and the grip was broken just when the youth
was about to give up in despair. Then the young soldier felt his coat
also freed, and he came up with a rush, to get a badly needed breath of
air.

The majority of the soldiers were struggling madly to hold fast to the
bits of wreckage floating around. Yells and groans rent the air, with an
occasional prayer for assistance. Some had already gone down to their
death, and others were fast losing what little strength was left to
them.

“It’s no use trying to get hold of a board, or anything,” thought Dave.
“They are all fighting like so many cats and dogs. I’ll save my
strength, and strike out for shore.”

But striking out with his clothing on was by no means easy, and Dave had
hardly covered a hundred feet when he found himself well-nigh exhausted.
He tried to pull off his coat, but as he was doing this another boat
hove into sight, coming straight for him.

“Hi! don’t run me down!” he screamed, and then, as the boat swerved to
one side, he made a clutch at one of the oars. Willing hands were
out-stretched to him, and in a moment more he was on board, where he
sank to the bottom, panting for breath. Two others were picked up in
similar fashion, and then the boat swept on to its destination.

The shooting of the St. Lawrence rapids by the army under General
Amherst was never forgotten by those who participated in it. During that
reckless ride over sixty boats were either totally wrecked or greatly
damaged, and more than eighty soldiers lost their lives through
drowning. As one boat after another shot through the swirling waters the
French gathered on the upper bank of the river, fully expecting to see
every one of their enemy go down to destruction.

The rapids passed, the boats, or what was left of them, sailed down Lake
St. Louis, and landed at Isle Perrot, at a point about twenty miles
above Montreal. Here many of the half-drowned ones were cared for, and
some of the boats were temporarily repaired.

“We are well out of that,” said Dave, when on land once more. “I shall
never attempt to shoot those rapids again;” and he never did.

It had taken three weeks to reach Isle Perrot, and now word came in by
Indian messengers that General Murray was also advancing on Montreal
from the northeastward, and that General Haviland was ready to strike
whenever required.

“We now have the French as in a vise,” said General Amherst. “They
cannot get away from us.” The next day, early in the morning, the army
left Isle Perrot again, and landed on the north bank of the river at La
Chine. Here there was some slight show of opposition, but soon the
French outposts, and also a number of the inhabitants of La Chine, fled
towards Montreal, leaving the English army to land its guns and stores
at its leisure.

“On to Montreal!” was now the cry on all sides, and the spirits of the
soldiers revived wonderfully, for all felt that a deathblow was soon to
be struck to the war which had now lasted for five long years.

It was a beautiful day in early September, and had Dave not been
troubled by thoughts of Henry and Barringford, he would have enjoyed the
march along the river bank. A regimental band played the liveliest of
military airs, and when the band did not play a Colonial drummer and a
fifer kept the Royal Americans in step.

Yet it must be confessed that the soldiers were a motley collection.
Even the showy uniforms of the grenadiers, and the Royal Artillery, were
sadly in need of repairs, while the so-called uniforms of the Royal
Americans, never very good, and of a dozen different designs, were
practically in tatters. Dave’s uniform confessed to half a dozen rents,
and twice as many patches, and his gun, a flint-lock dating back to the
war in Scotland, was a clumsy affair that looked as if it was in danger
of exploding every time he discharged it.

The next day found Amherst’s army encamped almost under the walls of
Montreal, to which city the French had flocked from all directions,
pleading for protection at the hands of Governor-General Vaudreuil. As
Amherst drew near from one direction, Murray and his army came up from
the other, while Haviland encamped on the south shore of the St.
Lawrence, immediately in front of Montreal.

The city was now in a state of siege, and the French well knew that if
they opened fire on the English the enemy would retaliate by bombarding
houses, public buildings, and churches, with a great loss of life and
property. Many of the Canadians had gone home to their farms, and some
of the French regulars had also deserted, so that the army in the city
did not number over twenty-five hundred men.

“We cannot fight them,” said Vaudreuil. “They have not less than
seventeen thousand soldiers, and hundreds of cannon, and large
quantities of ammunition. If we fight, the city will be laid low from
end to end; and men, women, and children ruthlessly slaughtered.”

Lévis, a born fighter, demurred at first, but soon saw the wisdom of the
advice; and a council of war was held. It was a stormy scene, and it
took many hours to draw up a form of capitulation. The French officers
wished to march out of Montreal with the honors of war, and wished many
other things; and these were all put into the paper which was sent to
General Amherst the next morning.

“I cannot grant this form of capitulation,” said Amherst, on looking the
paper over. “I will grant some conditions, but not others. The whole
force must lay down its arms, and not serve again during the present
war.”

When this answer was brought back, Vaudreuil merely shrugged his
shoulders, but Lévis went into a rage, and vowed he would never submit.

“I will myself send a note to General Amherst to show him that he is
asking too much,” said Lévis, and sent the note without delay. In return
Amherst stated that he was fully resolved to make the army lay down its
arms. He was horrified over the way the French Indians had been allowed
to massacre wounded and helpless English soldiers, and he considered
that the enemy must be taught a stern lesson in retaliation.

It was a time of wild excitement in Montreal, for the citizens, and
those who had come into the city for protection, were afraid that the
English might bombard the place at any moment. When a cannon boomed out
as a signal, a hundred cries would ring out. Business had come to a
complete standstill, and many places were boarded and locked up; and in
some instances goods of value, and money, and jewels, were buried.

For the time being those in the various prisons about the city were
practically neglected, and in at least three cases the prisoners almost
starved to death because of this neglect. The keeper of the jail in
which Henry was confined went off one night, and failed to appear during
the next day.

“Something is wrong, that’s sure,” said one of the prisoners. Then he
yelled loudly for water, but nobody came to answer his demand.

Henry was pale and thin, and suffered as much for the want of fresh air
as for proper food. The jail was a vile place, and the conditions there
were steadily growing worse. One prisoner had committed suicide, and
another had gone stark, raving crazy.

“If this keeps on I’ll go crazy myself,” said Henry. “The food is not
fit for a dog to eat.”

Strange to say, he had not seen or heard of Jean Bevoir since the French
trader had threatened him through the bars of the prison door. As a
matter of fact, Bevoir had attempted to have the youth brought before
the military court as a spy, but the French commander had refused to
listen to his plea.

“You are too anxious in this, sir,” said the officer sternly. “I think
you must have a grudge against the young fellow. I have no official
report against him, and in such a prison he is probably suffering as
much as he deserves.” And Jean Bevoir sneaked away from headquarters
feeling very much as if somebody had kicked him.

Truth to tell, the French commander felt that a crisis was at hand, and
that it would not now do to hang or maltreat any of the English
prisoners. He even ordered that the prisoners be given better rations,
but this order, in the case of the jailer at Henry’s jail, was
disobeyed, the jailer selling the extra rations to the outsiders in the
town at a handsome profit.

On the night following the disappearance of the jailer, matters reached
a climax in the prison. There was a fight for some water that still
remained in a keg in one corner, and this quickly changed to a revolt,
in which the jail door was broken down. The prisoners ran forth and
scattered in all directions; and although a French guard soon came on
the scene and shot down two of the men, the others got away.

With the escaping ones went Henry, almost as reckless as were the
leaders. For a while he remained with two of the soldiers who had been
quite friendly, but when the shooting began he ran through a back yard,
leaped over a stone wall, and made his way along a street that was
almost deserted. He was now entirely alone, and, coming to an open
hallway, he slipped into a house. He heard sounds of voices in a lower
room, and, without stopping to think twice, bounded up the stairs to the
second floor.

“Perhaps I’m running into a trap, but I’ve got to risk it,” he told
himself; and after a slight hesitation opened a door near the head of
the stairs. The room was a bedchamber, and in the center stood a large,
square, “four-poster” bed, with the top hangings partly drawn. A man lay
on the bed, tossing uneasily, as if in something of a fever. On a chair
rested a French uniform, showing that the sleeper was an officer.

[Illustration:

  “Stand where you are,” ordered the sick man.—_Page 297._
]

“It won’t do for me to stay in such hot quarters as these,” thought
Henry. “I had better get out just as fast as I came in.”

He started back for the hallway, but now came steps on the stairs, and
the rattle of dishes, followed by some talking. Henry glanced around
him, saw a closet in a corner of the room, and dove into it. Just as he
closed the door of the closet he caught a brief glimpse of a woman with
a tray, followed by a girl of about his own age. Both entered the
bedchamber, closing the door tightly behind them.

A murmur of voices followed, and Henry surmised that the sleeping man
had awakened, and that the two women were urging him to partake of the
food they had brought. The talking was in French, so he understood but
little.

Presently the girl moved across the bedchamber, and before Henry
realized what was coming the door of the closet was flung open. As the
young soldier was exposed to view, the girl gave a scream, and then
uttered several words in French:

“A man! An English soldier!”

“What is it you say?” demanded the man in the bed, and, turning over, he
drew a pistol from under his pillow.

“A man—an English soldier,” repeated the girl. “Oh, Louis, what shall we
do?”

“Stand where you are!” ordered the sick man, and sat up in bed with the
pistol pointed at Henry’s head.

“Oh, Louis, my son, have a care!” put in the woman. “He may kill you!”

“I am not afraid, mother,” was the answer. “You forget what risks I have
taken in the past——”

“But you are still weak. The doctor——”

“The doctor doesn’t know me, mother. I am worth a dozen sick men at this
minute. Please let me deal with him, and both of you stand aside, so
that the fellow can’t hide himself behind you.”

The girl and the woman were willing enough to do this, and shrank away
from the closet. Then, struck by a sudden idea, the woman backed herself
up to the door leading to the hallway.

Feeling himself cornered, Henry threw up his hands, and stepped out of
the closet.

“Don’t fire,” he said as quietly as he could, although his heart was
thumping loudly in his breast.

“If you have a pistol throw it on the bed,” said the Frenchman in
excellent English.

“I am totally unarmed,” was Henry’s ready answer.

“Is it possible! Where did you come from?”

Henry began to explain, when the French officer suddenly interrupted
him.

“Am I mistaken, or have we met before?” he said.

“I do not remember you,” returned Henry, puzzled at the unexpected
question.

“Did you come from Quebec?”

“I did.”

“You were on guard duty there?”

“I was.”

“At and near the shop of one Lavelle, a gold and silver smith?”

“Yes, yes! But you—you——” faltered Henry.

At this the French officer gave a chuckle.

“I was there, too,” he said. “It was I who escaped from the cellar that
night. They tried to catch me, but ha! ha! I was too quick for them. I
showed them what a French spy can do when he is put to it!”


------------------------------------------------------------------------




                             CHAPTER XXXII

                      FROM WAR TO PEACE—CONCLUSION


“IT looks as if we’d have to fight after all, Morris.”

“What makes you think that?” questioned Dave, who had just come in from
four hours of guard duty.

“I just got an inkling from headquarters,” said the soldier who had
first spoken. “The Frenchmen don’t want to agree to General Amherst’s
demands.”

“They will be foolish if they don’t,” said the young soldier. “With a
combined army of seventeen thousand men to draw on we can knock Montreal
higher than a kite if we start in to do it.”

“To be sure, Morris.”

“But I hope it doesn’t come to a fight,” went on Dave, his face
clouding.

“Why; you are not afraid, are you?”

“No. I was thinking of the English prisoners in Montreal. They will be
sure to suffer, with no way by which they can help themselves.”

“True for you. But the French sick will suffer, too. A cannon ball goes
where it pleases, once it is fired.”

During the night had come one alarm. Some Canadians had attempted to
leave the city with some plunder, taken from houses that happened to be
deserted. A part of this crowd was shot down within the city walls by
Lévis’ guards, and the others were shot down by the guards under Amherst
and Murray.

“No matter what may happen, I will have no plundering,” said Vaudreuil;
and Lévis, Amherst, and Murray said the same.

It must be confessed that the outcome of another council of war within
the walls of Montreal was anxiously awaited by the English on both sides
of the St. Lawrence. Each branch of the army was held in readiness for
immediate service, the soldiers sleeping on their arms and the
cannoneers under their pieces.

In the city the hubbub was greater than ever. The citizens gathered
around headquarters and begged for peace. The Governor-General had to
listen to endless advice. Lévis protested to the last that he wanted the
honors of war accorded to his troops. But Amherst, as said before, was
unyielding; and at last Vaudreuil signed the paper which, in the course
of time, gave all of the Canadian possessions into the hands of the
English government and made of the French-Canadians British subjects.

The news was carried far and wide as swift as horses and messengers
could travel. “Canada has surrendered! The war is over!” was the glad
tidings, and in every portion of the English colonies, as well as in
England itself, there was great rejoicing. Cannon were fired, bonfires
lit, and bells tolled, and in some places special church services were
held, to give thanks to God that the agony of such long standing was at
an end. Even the Canadians rejoiced to think that peace was come, and
that they could again go to their farms unmolested alike by soldier or
Indian.

The capitulation took place on September 8, 1760. It was agreed that the
French soldiers and sailors should be allowed to return to France, and
that the Canadians should return to their homes, unmolested. No one was
to suffer because of his religion, and it was further agreed that, with
a few exceptions, all military and political prisoners should be set
free. The Indians on both sides were to be held in firm check, so that
the atrocities of former campaigns should not be repeated. This last
agreement made the Indians on both sides very angry, and the great
majority of them tore up their wigwams in disgust and departed for parts
unknown. Only a handful remained with Sir William Johnson, this band
including White Buffalo and four old braves, the braves remaining to get
some money that had been promised to them and the chief that he might be
near Dave, to go home with the young soldier when the latter was
discharged.

“Montreal is ours after all!” cried the young soldier, when the news
reached camp. “And we didn’t have to fire a shot, excepting at the
scoundrels who tried to plunder the place.”

Dave was anxious to get into Montreal, to learn something concerning
Henry if possible. But it was a good two weeks before he got the chance
to enter the city. Then he was placed on a detail sent to visit one of
the hospitals.

As the detail was passing down a side street of the city the young
soldier chanced to look into the window of one of the houses they were
passing.

“Can it be possible!” burst from his lips. Then he ran to the officer in
command of the detail. “Will you—you let me off a while—just a few
minutes, lieutenant?”

“Why, what’s the matter, Morris?” queried the officer. “You look as if
you’d seen a ghost.”

“Perhaps it was a ghost. I thought I saw my cousin Henry at the window
of the house back there.”

“Indeed! All right, go back and make sure. But don’t stay too long.”

The caution was not yet finished when Dave started back on a run. As he
gained the door of the residence the barrier was flung back and Henry
came forth, cap in hand.

“Dave!”

“Henry!”

“I thought I saw you passing!”

“And I thought I saw you at the window!”

And then the pair fell into each other’s arms, while tears of joy stood
in their eyes. They shook hands over and over again, and it was fully a
minute before either could trust himself to speak again.

“How pale and thin you look,” declared Dave, at last. “Have you been
sick?”

“I’ve been in prison.”

“You mean up at Quebec?”

“There and here too.” Henry’s face fell a little. “Then you know the
news?”

“Know the news? Didn’t Sam Barringford and I travel all the way to
Quebec to help you? But when we got there you were missing.”

“Good for you and Sam, Dave! How is Sam now? I see you are in pretty
good shape.”

“Poor Sam is in the hospital at Quebec. He was struck in the head with a
bullet and it made him rather out of his head. But we’re hoping he’ll
get over it.” Dave paused a moment. “Henry, I’m afraid you’ve gotten
yourself into an awful hole,” he went on anxiously.

“How so?” And a faint smile crept around the corners of Henry’s mouth.

“Why, by running away after you were placed under arrest.”

“But I didn’t want to be hanged.”

“I know, but now the case will look blacker against you than ever. They
will say you didn’t dare to stand trial.”

“But I can prove my innocence, Dave,” cried Henry triumphantly.

“What! How?”

“Easily enough, although the story is rather a wonderful one. You see,
while I was in prison here we had a revolt, and all the prisoners broke
jail. I ran away by myself and hid in this house, to escape the French
soldiers. I was discovered by the lady and daughter who live here, and
by the lady’s son, who was sick in bed. The son began to question me,
and then he said he had seen me before. We compared notes, and I learned
that the son was Captain Louis Gaulette, a noted French spy. Captain
Gaulette was in Quebec on a secret mission for General Lévis, and he was
in hiding in the cellar of the gold and silver smith’s shop when I went
down there and tried to reason with Prent. He sent a note to General
Murray about it, and he supposed I was set at liberty.”

“Good!” almost shouted Dave, and his face began to beam. “In that case,
Henry, you can establish your innocence without much trouble.”

“That is what I expect to do,” answered Henry. “And let me tell you, I
am mighty glad this affair has turned out as it has. But what about the
war? Is it really ended?”

“Yes, Henry, and I reckon our soldier-boy days have ended with it,”
answered Dave.

                  *       *       *       *       *

Let me add a few words more and then bring to a close this story of
military adventure before and “At the Fall of Montreal.”

As both of the young soldiers had surmised, it was an easy matter to
prove Henry innocent of the charge that had been made against him, and
in the end he received not only a full pardon from General Murray, but
also a letter exonerating him from all blame. For the despicable part he
had played Prent was sentenced to five years in an English prison, and
with him went Fenley and Harkness for a period of three years. Louis
Gaulette became Henry’s firm friend and it may be mentioned here that,
years later, Gaulette entered the American army under General Lafayette
and served as a spy for Washington during the last years of the War of
Independence.

As soon as Dave and Henry were free to come and go as they pleased they
took passage on a sloop of war bound down the St. Lawrence to Quebec. At
this point they had a man with a rowboat take them over to the Island of
Orleans, which was still being used as a hospital. They inquired for
Barringford of a guard they met and after some slight trouble were taken
to the ward in which the sufferer belonged.

“Dave an’ Henry!” cried the old frontiersman, on seeing them, and Dave’s
heart leapt with joy to see his eyes as bright and intelligent as ever.
“Ef this ain’t better’n a dose o’ medicine. Whar did ye come from?” And
he shook hands warmly.

“First tell us how you feel?” said Dave.

“Fust-rate, Dave, fust-rate. I had a mighty bad spell o’ it
though—somethin’ like a nightmare—an’ the doctor says as how I aint
quite strong enough yit to walk around much. Lost some o’ my ha’r, too,”
the old hunter added, pointing to the scar over his ear. “But thet don’t
count—I’m thankful to pull through with my life.”

“We can all be thankful,” said Henry.

“How is it you air free, Henry?” went on the frontiersman, and on being
told he slapped his thigh in satisfaction. “Thet’s splenderiferous news.
The folks ter hum will be glad to hear on it.”

“That they will,” answered Henry, “and I have already sent them a
letter.”

“Be you goin’ home soon?”

“Just as soon as we can obtain our discharge and as soon as you can go
with us, Sam,” answered Dave.

“Me?”

“To be sure. We wouldn’t go home without you; you know that.”

“I might hev knowed it, Dave.” A tear glistened in the old hunter’s eye,
and he took their hands again. “Both my boys, aint ye?—through thick an’
thin!”

“Yes, we are, Sam,” said Henry.

“And glad of it,” added Dave.

The start for home did not take place until winter had again set in.
They went with a great number of other soldiers as far as Philadelphia,
and then struck out for themselves, in company with half a dozen
neighbors and White Buffalo.

At Winchester both James and Joseph Morris met them, and the meeting
between fathers and sons was a most affectionate one. Nor were Sam
Barringford and White Buffalo forgotten. There were many embraces, and
the story of the boys’ doings, and of the others, had to be told over
and over again.

“The best news from home is that Rodney is improving fast,” said Joseph
Morris. “The last operation on his leg was a complete success, so the
doctors say, and by next spring they think he will be almost as strong
as any of us.”

“Next spring I am going back to the Kinotah,” said James Morris. “My
claim to that land is now fully established, and with Jean Bevoir dead
there is little likelihood that anybody will ever try to disturb me
again.”

“Bevoir dead?” burst out Dave. “How do you know that?”

“Why didn’t you hear of it?” queried his father. “And you right on the
ground too!”

“I heard nothing of him later than when he threatened Henry at
Montreal.”

“When Montreal was besieged Jean Bevoir joined a crowd of men who tried
to loot many of the houses and stores. The French guard got after the
pilferers and shot some of them down, and then they fled out of the
city, and the English soldiers shot down the rest, or made them
prisoners. Among the number shot down was Jean Bevoir. This news came
straight to me from two soldiers who were at Winchester last week.”

“Shot down!” repeated Dave. Then he drew a deep breath. “Well, if he was
shot down outside of the city perhaps I had a hand in it. But I don’t
know for sure, and—and—I’m rather glad of it.”

“He deserved what he got,” came from Barringford. “He was a traitor to
everybuddy, even his best friends.” And the others felt that the old
frontiersman spoke the exact truth.

Yet though they all thought Jean Bevoir dead such was not a fact. The
French trader was seriously wounded, and for a long while lay between
life and death. But he ultimately recovered, and how he crossed the path
of our friends later on will be told in another volume, to be entitled,
“On the Trail of Pontiac; or, The Pioneer Boys of the Ohio,” in which we
shall meet many of our old characters again and learn something of what
was done to establish trading-posts on the Kinotah and elsewhere after
the war with France, and of how the wily Indian chief Pontiac did his
best to wipe out all white settlements in that territory.

The home-coming was an event long to be remembered. As the riders came
in sight of the new cabin Mrs. Morris, Rodney, and little Nell rushed
out to greet them.

“Home again! Home again!” shouted Dave and Henry, and flung themselves
into the arms out-stretched to receive them.

“My son!” murmured Mrs. Morris, as she kissed Henry, “and my Dave!” she
added, as she also kissed her nephew.

“Oh, but aint I dreadfully delighted to see you back,” piped up little
Nell, and kissed them all around, even to White Buffalo. “And now you
mustn’t go away again, none of you, but stay with me for years and years
and years!”

“That’s the way to talk, Nell,” said Rodney, also beaming with pleasure.
“We’ve had enough of this going-away to last for a lifetime.” And then
he added: “Just watch how I can walk now!” and led the way to the cabin,
walking almost as well as any of them.

It was an old-time feast that awaited those who had come to the cabin,
and it lasted far into the night. During that time many neighbors
dropped in, wishing them well.

“It would seem that all of our troubles are at an end,” said Mrs.
Morris. “Now if the Indians will only keep the peace I am sure we will
prosper.”

“They must keep the peace,” said White Buffalo. “My war hatchet is
buried, and White Buffalo will not dig it up again unless there is no
help for it.”

“I’ve had enough of war,” came from Dave. “In the future let me till the
soil and hunt game, and I’ll be content.”

And here let us bid our friends, for the time being, good-by.




------------------------------------------------------------------------

------------------------------------------------------------------------

               American Boys’ Life of Theodore Roosevelt

                      ----------------------------

By EDWARD STRATEMEYER 325 pages Illustrated from photographs $1.25

                      ----------------------------

Ever since the enormous success of Mr. Stratemeyer’s “American Boys’
Life of William McKinley” there has been an urgent demand that he follow
the volume with one on the life of our present President, and this has
now been done with a care and a faithfulness certain to win immediate
appreciation everywhere.

The book covers the whole life of our honored executive step by step, as
schoolboy, college student, traveler, author, State assemblyman, Civil
Service and Police Commissioner, Governor of New York, as a leader of
the Rough Riders in Cuba, as Vice-President, and finally as President.
Many chapters have also been devoted to Mr. Roosevelt’s numerous
adventures as a hunter and as a ranchman (true stories which are bound
to be dear to the heart of all boys who love the strenuous life), and
full particulars are given of the daring battles for Cuban liberty, in
which our worthy President, as Lieutenant-Colonel of the Rough Riders,
took such a conspicuous part.

The Appendix contains a Chronology of Theodore Roosevelt, and also brief
extracts from some of his most famous speeches and addresses.

_For sale by all booksellers, or sent postpaid, on receipt of price, by
the publishers._

                      ----------------------------

                            LEE AND SHEPARD
                                 BOSTON

------------------------------------------------------------------------


                      ----------------------------

                American Boys’ Life Of William McKinley

By EDWARD STRATEMEYER 300 pages Illustrated by A. B. Shute, and from
photographs $1.25

                      ----------------------------

Here is told the whole story of McKinley’s boyhood days, his life at
school and at college, his work as a school teacher, his glorious career
in the army, his struggles to obtain a footing as a lawyer, his efforts
as a Congressman, and lastly his prosperous career as our President.
There are many side lights on the work at the White House during the war
with Spain, and in China, all told in a style particularly adapted to
boys and young men. The book is full of interesting anecdotes, all taken
from life, showing fully the sincere, honest, painstaking efforts of a
life cut all too short. The volume will prove an inspiration to all boys
and young men, and should be in every one’s library.

                      ----------------------------

_For sale by all booksellers, or sent postpaid, on receipt of price, by
the publishers._


                      ----------------------------

                            LEE AND SHEPARD
                                 BOSTON

                      ----------------------------


------------------------------------------------------------------------


                     THE FAMOUS “OLD GLORY SERIES”

                         By EDWARD STRATEMEYER

_Author of “The Bound to Succeed Series,” “The Ship and Shore Series,”
“Colonial Series,” “Pan-American Series,” etc._

Six volumes - Cloth - Illustrated - Price per volume $1.25

    UNDER DEWEY AT MANILA
        Or The War Fortunes of a Castaway

    A YOUNG VOLUNTEER IN CUBA
        Or Fighting for the Single Star

    FIGHTING IN CUBAN WATERS
        Or Under Schley on the Brooklyn

    UNDER OTIS IN THE PHILIPPINES
        Or A Young Officer in the Tropics

    THE CAMPAIGN OF THE JUNGLE
        Or Under Lawton through Luzon

    UNDER MACARTHUR IN LUZON
        Or Last Battles in the Philippines

“A boy once addicted to Stratemeyer stays by him.”—_The Living Church._

“The boys’ delight—the ‘Old Glory Series.’”—_The Christian Advocate, New
York._

“Stratemeyer’s style suits the boys.”—JOHN TERHUNE, _Supt. of Public
Instruction, Bergen Co., New Jersey_.

“Mr. Stratemeyer is in a class by himself when it comes to writing about
American heroes, their brilliant doings on land and sea.”—_Times,
Boston._

“Mr. Stratemeyer has written a series of books which, while historically
correct and embodying the most important features of the
Spanish-American War and the rebellion of the Filipinos, are
sufficiently interwoven with fiction to render them most entertaining to
young readers.”—_The Call, San Francisco._


                      ----------------------------


 _For sale by all booksellers, or sent, postpaid, on receipt of price by_

                       LEE AND SHEPARD, Publishers,
                                  BOSTON


------------------------------------------------------------------------

                          THE COLONIAL SERIES

                         By EDWARD STRATEMEYER

      _Author of “Pan-American Series,” “Old Glory Series,” “Great
              American Industries Series,” “American Boys’
                      Biographical Series,” etc._

                      ----------------------------

 Four volumes - Cloth - Illustrated by A. B. Shute - Price per volume,
                                 $1.25

    WITH WASHINGTON IN THE WEST
      Or A Soldier Boy’s Battles in the Wilderness

    MARCHING ON NIAGARA
      Or The Soldier Boys of the Old Frontier

    AT THE FALL OF MONTREAL
      Or The Soldier Boy’s Final Victory

    ON THE TRAIL OF PONTIAC
      Or The Pioneer Boys of the Ohio

“Mr. Stratemeyer has put his best work into the ‘Colonial
Series.’”—_Christian Register, Boston._

“A series that doesn’t fall so very far short of being history
itself.”—_Boston Courier._

“The tales of war are incidental to the dramatic adventures of two boys,
so well told that the historical facts are all the better
remembered.”—_Boston Globe._

“Edward Stratemeyer has in many volumes shown himself master of the art
of producing historic studies in the pleasing story form.”—_Minneapolis
Journal._

“The author, Edward Stratemeyer, has used his usual care in matters of
historical detail and accuracy, and gives a splendid picture of the
times in general.”—_Milwaukee Sentinel._

“Told by one who knows how to write so as to interest boys, while still
having a care as to accuracy.”—_Commercial Advertiser, New York._

                      ----------------------------

 _For sale by all booksellers, or sent, postpaid, on receipt of price by_

                       LEE AND SHEPARD, Publishers
                                  BOSTON


------------------------------------------------------------------------




 ● Transcriber’s Notes:
    ○ Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
    ○ Typographical errors were silently corrected.
    ○ Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only
      when a predominant form was found in this book.
    ○ Text that:
      was in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).