The Flamingo Feather eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 175 pages of information about The Flamingo Feather.

The Flamingo Feather eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 175 pages of information about The Flamingo Feather.

After eating together a meal of dried venison that the elder produced from his wallet, the two Seminoles sat, concealed behind a thick cluster of cactus, watching the river for any signs of pursuit, and forming plans for future action.  Cat-sha told Chitta that he had left his band in their most inaccessible stronghold among the bayous and deep morasses of the great Okeefenokee Swamp.  He also said that, were it not for the presence of so large a number of friendly Indians in the immediate vicinity of Fort Caroline, he should bring his warriors to attack it; for he had decided that the chances were in favor of his success in so doing.

“Ha!” exclaimed Chitta, interrupting his chief at this point, “I may, in that case, be of service to thee, though I am as yet untried in battle.”  Then he told Cat-sha a secret that was known to but few of his people, and which he himself had only discovered by accident.  It was the same that Has-se had declined to confide to Rene when the latter questioned him as to the manner of his escape from the fort, and it was indeed a secret of the utmost value to enemies of the white men.

Cat-sha listened attentively, and when Chitta had finished he exclaimed, “Well done, my young brave!  Thy serpent’s wisdom is already proving of value to us.  What thou hast just told me makes clear our plan of attack upon this nest of pale-faces, and removes one of the chief difficulties in our way.  Having this information, I regard the fort and all that it contains as already in our power.  We have only to bide our time.  Well may the white man tremble; for ere many days the tiger, guided by the serpent, will spring at his throat.”

As they talked, their attention was directed to a dark moving mass floating down the river, close under its bank.  Cat-sha soon pronounced it to be a fleet of canoes filled with people, and they watched them with eager curiosity.

It was, indeed, the tribe from which Chitta had fled, moving, under the leadership of their chief, Micco, towards the land of the Alachuas, where food in abundance awaited them.  At the outset of their journey they kept as close as possible under the river-bank, to avoid observation from the white men in Fort Caroline, who, they feared, might oppose their departure if they learned of it.  It was not until they reached the bold bluff from the summit of which the two Seminoles watched their progress that they felt they were safe from the eyes of the fort, and might strike boldly out into the river.  Here, aided by the full strength of the ebbing tide, they proceeded rapidly on their way towards its mouth.

Seeing that the canoes which were thus passing beneath them contained, besides the warriors of the tribe, its women and children, and all of its movable property, Cat-sha concluded that it was a general movement of Micco’s people towards some distant place; and from the direction they were taking, he guessed that their destination was the fertile land of the Alachuas.

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The Flamingo Feather from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.