Heralds of Empire eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 271 pages of information about Heralds of Empire.

Heralds of Empire eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 271 pages of information about Heralds of Empire.

Of a sudden M. Radisson wheeled to us standing guard.

“Officers,” he shouted, “first brigade!—­forward!”

From the manner of him we might have had an army under cover behind that bush.

All at once Governor Brigdar’s lace handkerchief was aflutter at the end of a sword, and the representative of King Charles begged leave to land and salute the representative of His Most Christian Majesty, the King of France.

And land they did, pompously peaceful, though their swords clanked so oft every man must have had a hand ready at his baldrick, Pierre Radisson receiving them with the lofty air of a gracious monarch, the others bowing and unhatting and bending and crooking their spines supple as courtiers with a king.

Presently came the soldiers back to us as hostages, while Radisson stepped into the boat to go aboard the Prince Rupert with the captain and governor.  Godefroy called out against such rashness, and Pierre Radisson shouted back that threat about the nippers pulling the end off the fellow’s tongue.

Serving under the French flag, I was not supposed to know English; but when one soldier said he had seen “Mr. What-d’y-call-’im before,” pointing at me, I recognised the mate from whom I had hired passage to England for M. Picot on Captain Gillam’s ship.

“Like enough,” says the other, “’tis a land where no man brings his back history.”

“See here, fellow,” said I, whipping out a crown, “here’s for you to tell me of the New Amsterdam gentleman who sailed from Boston last spring!”

“No New Amsterdam gentleman sailed from Boston,” answered both in one breath.

“I am not paying for lies,” and I returned the crown to my pocket.

Then Radisson came back, urging Captain Gillam against proceeding up the river.

“The Prince Rupert might ground on the shallows,” he warned.

“That will keep them apart till we trap one or both,” he told us, as we set off in our canoe.  But we had not gone out of range before we were ordered ashore.  Picking our way back overland, we spied through the bush for two days, till we saw that Governor Brigdar was taking Radisson’s advice, going no farther up-stream, but erecting a fort on the shore where he had anchored.

“And now,” said Radisson, “we must act.”

While we were spying through the woods, watching the English build their fort, I thought that I saw a figure flitting through the bush to the rear.  I dared not fire.  One shot would have betrayed us to the English.  But I pointed my gun.  The thing came gliding noiselessly nearer.  I clicked the gun-butt without firing.  The thing paused.  Then I called M. Radisson, who said it was Le Borgne, the wall-eyed Indian.  Godefroy vowed ’twas a spy from Ben Gillam’s fort.  The Indian mumbled some superstition of a manitou.  To me it seemed like a caribou; for it faded to nothing the way those fleet creatures have of skimming into distance.

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Heralds of Empire from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.