“Why, what has happened?” asked Paul, still in the depths of astonishment.
Then Henry spoke, and he spoke gravely.
“Sol did not sleep long, Paul,” he said, “and when he awoke he joined us. Then we went to meet the three Shawnee messengers, carrying war belts and peace belts, for the Miamis to choose. It was not a business for you, Paul. We met them, there was a fight—well, they will never appear in the Miami village, and we are here in their place.”
Paul understood, and he shuddered a little at the deadly conflict that must have raged out there in the forest while he slept. Then he looked curiously at the three. He never would have known any one of them anywhere. They were savages in every aspect—painted and garbed like them, and with their hair drawn up in the defiant scalp lock.
“What are you going to do?” he asked.
“Deliver the belts at the Miami village,” replied Henry Ware, “but they will be peace belts, not war belts.”
“It is death,” said Paul in protest.
“It is not death,” replied Henry. “We will come back safely, and it is for a great stake. You and Jim must remain here in the woods, waiting for us again, and we’ll trust to your skill and caution not to be caught. If the warriors become too thick around here you might retreat to the island. Anyway, the signal will be as before—three wails of the whip-poor-will.”
Paul was impressed by his words, which were spoken with gravity and emphasis.
“Yes, it’s in a great cause, Henry,” he said, “and we’ll wait, expecting you to come back.”
Five minutes later the three newly made warriors took their path through the forest, and they never looked back. Yet Henry Ware felt emotion. Although he regarded Paul Cotter almost as a younger brother, he respected him as a high type of one kind of being, and they were comrades true as steel. Moreover, he knew that he and Ross and Sol were engaged upon the most dangerous of tasks, and the chances were that they would not come back. Yet he faced them with a high heart and dauntless courage.
The three walked swiftly and silently in single file, and neither Shawnee nor Miami eye would have known that they were not Indian. They walked, toes in, as Indians do, and they had every trick of manner or gesture that the red men have. All trace of civilization was gone. Henry Ware, Thomas floss, and Solomon Hyde had disappeared. In their places were Big Fox, Brown Bear, and The Bat, Shawnee warriors who bore belts to the Miami village, and who would talk about the war to be made upon the white intruders far to the south of the Ohio.