The Forest Runners eBook

Joseph Alexander Altsheler
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 295 pages of information about The Forest Runners.

The Forest Runners eBook

Joseph Alexander Altsheler
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 295 pages of information about The Forest Runners.

Paul stayed with him a little while, but, at Henry’s urgent request, he went back inside the circle, wrapped himself in a blanket and lay down, his face upturned to the cloudy skies which he did not see.  He did not think he could sleep.  His brain throbbed with excitement, and his vivid imagination was wide awake.  Despite the danger, he rejoiced to be there; rejoiced that he and his comrades should help in the saving of all these people.  The spiritual exaltation that he felt at times swept over him.  Nevertheless, all the pictures faded, his excited nerves sank to rest, and, with his face still upturned to the cloudy skies, he slept.

Far after midnight a sudden ring of fire burst from the dark forest, and women and children leaped up at the crash of many rifles.  Shouting their war whoop, the tribesmen rushed upon the camp; but the fifty sentinels, sheltered by the earthwork, met them with a fire more deadly than their own, and in a moment the fifty became more than two hundred.

Red Eagle and Yellow Panther had hoped for a surprise, but when the unerring volleys met them, they sank back again into the forest, carrying their dead with them.

“You were right,” said Daniel Poe to Henry Ware; “they will not leave us.”

“Not while they think there is a chance to overpower us.  But we’ve shown ’em they can’t count on a surprise.”

The camp, except the watchers, went back to sleep, and the night passed away without a second alarm.  Dawn came, gray and cloudy, and the people of the train awoke to their needs, which they faced bravely.  Breakfast was cooked and eaten, and then the wagons, in a file of four, took up their march, a cloud of keen-eyed and brave skirmishers on every side.  The train had truly become what Henry said it must be, a moving fort; and, though the savages opened fire in the woods, they dared not attack in force, so resolute and sure-eyed were the skirmishers and so strong a defense were the heavy wagons.

All day long this terrible march proceeded, the women and children sheltered in the wagons, and the savages, from the shelter of the forest, keeping up an irregular but unceasing fire on the flanks.  The white skirmishers replied often with deadly effect, but it grew galling, almost unbearable.  The Indians, who were accustomed either to rapid success or rapid retreat, showed an extraordinary persistence, and Henry suspected that Braxton Wyatt was urging them on.  As he thought of the effect of these continued attacks upon the train, he grew anxious.  The bravest spirit could be worn down by them, and he sought in vain for a remedy.

They camped the second night in an open place, and fortified, as before, with a circular earthwork; but they were harried throughout all the hours of darkness by irregular firing and occasional war whoops.  Fewer people slept that night than had slept the night before.  Nerves were raw and suffering, and Paul found his chosen task a hard one.  But he worked faithfully, going up and down within the fortified circle, cheering, heartening, and predicting a better day for the morrow.

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Project Gutenberg
The Forest Runners from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.