The Free Rangers eBook

Joseph Alexander Altsheler
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 344 pages of information about The Free Rangers.

The Free Rangers eBook

Joseph Alexander Altsheler
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 344 pages of information about The Free Rangers.

The report was so great that it came rolling back in echo after echo, but for a few moments there was no other sound save the echo.  Then followed a rain of burning wood, many pieces falling in the supply fleet, burning and scorching, while others fell hissing in the forest on either shore.  Darkness, too, came over land and water.  All the firing had ceased as if by preconcerted signal, though the combatants on either side were awed by the fate of the vessel.  The smoke bank came back, too, thicker and heavier than before, and the air was filled with the strong, pungent odor of burnt gunpowder.

But the schooner that had blocked the mouth of the bayou was gone forever and the way lay open before them.  Adam Colfax recovered from the shock of the explosion.

“On, men!  On!” he roared, and the whole fleet, animated by a single impulse, sprang forward toward the mouth of the bayou, the cannon blazing anew the path, the gunners loading and firing, as fast as they could.  But the simile of the shiftless one had come true.  The wedge, driven by tremendous strokes, had cleft the log.

The Indian fleet, many of the boats containing white men, too, closed in and sought to bar the way, but they were daunted somewhat by their great disaster, and in an instant the American fleet was upon them cutting a path through to the free river.  Boat often smashed into boat, and the weaker, or the one with less impulse, went down.  Now and then white and red reached over and grasped each other in deadly struggle, but, whatever happened, the supply fleet moved steadily on.

It was to Paul a confused combat, a wild and terrible struggle, the climax of the night-battle.  White and red faces mingled before him in a blur, the water seemed to flow in narrow, black streams between the boats and the pall of smoke was ever growing thicker.  It hung over them, black and charged now with gases.  Paul coughed violently, but he was not conscious of it.  He fired his rifle until it was too hot to hold.  Then he laid it down, and seizing an oar pulled with the energy of fever.

When the boats containing the cannon were through and into the river, they faced about and began firing over the heads of the others into the huddled mass of the enemy behind.  But it was only for a minute or two.  Then the last of the supply fleet; that is, the last afloat, came through, and the gap that they had made was closed up at once by the enemy, who still hung on their rear and who were yet shouting and firing.

The Americans gave a great cheer, deep and full throated, but they did not pause in their great effort.  Boats swung off toward either bank of the bayou’s mouth.  The skirmishers in the bushes who had done such useful work must be taken on board.  Theirs was now the most dangerous position of all, pursued as they certainly would be by the horde of Indians and outlaws, bent upon revenge.

The boat containing the five was among those that touched the northern side of the bayou’s mouth, and everyone of them, rifle in hand, instantly sprang ashore.

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The Free Rangers from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.