HOW SOLOMON SHIFTED THE SKEER
In the spring news came of a great force of British which was being
organized in Canada for a descent upon New York through Lake Champlain.
Frontier settlers in Tryon County were being massacred by Indians.
Generals Herkimer and Schuyler had written to Washington, asking for
the services of the famous scout, Solomon Binkus, in that region.
"He knows the Indian as no other man knows him and can speak his
language and he also knows the bush," Schuyler had written. "If there
is any place on earth where his help is needed just now, it is here."
"Got to leave ye, my son," Solomon said to Jack one evening soon after
that.
"How so?" the young man asked.
"Goin' hum to fight Injuns. The Great Father has ordered it. I'll
like it better. Gittin' lazy here. Summer's comin' an' I'm a born
bush man. I'm kind o' oneasy--like a deer in a dooryard. I ain't had
to run fer my life since we got here. My hoofs are complainin'. I
ain't shot a gun in a month."
A look of sorrow spread over the face of Solomon.
"I'm tired of this place," said Jack. "The British are scared of us
and we're scared of the British. There's nothing going on. I'd love
to go back to the big bush with you."
"I'll tell the Great Father that you're a born bush man. Mebbe he'll
let ye go. They'll need us both. Rum, Injuns an' the devil have
j'ined hands. The Long House will be the center o' hell an' its line
fences 'll take in the hull big bush."
That day Jack's name was included in the order.
"I am sorry that it is not yet possible to pay you or any of the men
who have served me so faithfully," said Washington. "If you need money
I shall be glad to lend you a sum to help you through this journey."
"I ain't fightin' fer pay," Solomon answered. "I'll hoe an' dig, an'
cook, an' guide fer money. But I won't fight no more fer money--partly
'cause I don't need it--partly 'cause I'm fightin' fer myself. I got a
little left in my britches pocket, but if I hadn't, my ol' Marier
wouldn't let me go hungry."
2
In April the two friends set out afoot for the lower end of the
Highlands. On the river they hired a Dutch farmer to take them on to
Albany in his sloop. After two delightful days at home, General
Schuyler suggested that they could do a great service by traversing the
wilderness to the valley of the great river of the north, as far as
possible toward Swegachie, and reporting their observations to Crown
Point or Fort Edward, if there seemed to be occasion for it, and if
not, they were to proceed to General Herkimer's camp at Oriskany and
give him what help they could in protecting the settlers in the west.
"You would need to take all your wit and courage with you," the General
warned them. "The Indians are in bad temper. They have taken to
roasting their prisoners at the stake and eating their flesh. This is
a hazardous undertaking. Therefore, I give you a suggestion and not an
order."
"I'll go 'lone," said Solomon. "If I get et up it needn't break
nobody's heart. Let Jack go to one o' the forts."
"No, I'd rather go into the bush with you," said Jack. "We're both
needed there. If necessary we could separate and carry our warning in
two directions. We'll take a couple of the new double-barreled rifles
and four pistols. If we had to, I think we could fight a hole through
any trouble we are likely to have."
So it was decided that they should go together on this scouting trip
into the north bush. Solomon had long before that invented what he
called "a lightnin' thrower" for close fighting with Indians, to be
used if one were hard pressed and outnumbered and likely to have his
scalp taken. This odd contrivance he had never had occasion to use.
It was a thin, round shell of cast iron with a tube, a flint and
plunger. The shell was of about the size of a large apple. It was to
be filled with missiles and gunpowder. The plunger, with its spring,
was set vertically above the tube. In throwing this contrivance one
released its spring by the pressure of his thumb. The hammer fell and
the spark it made ignited a fuse leading down to the powder. Its owner
had to throw it from behind a tree or have a share in the peril it was
sure to create.
While Jack was at home with his people Solomon spent a week in the
foundry and forge and, before they set out on their journey, had three
of these unique weapons, all loaded and packed in water-proof wrappings.
About the middle of May they proceeded in a light bark canoe to Fort
Edward and carried it across country to Lake George and made their way
with paddles to Ticonderoga. There they learned that scouts were
operating only on and near Lake Champlain. The interior of Tryon
County was said to be dangerous ground. Mohawks, Cagnawagas, Senecas,
Algonquins and Hurons were thick in the bush and all on the warpath.
They were torturing and eating every white man that fell in their
hands, save those with a Tory mark on them.
"We're skeered o' the bush," said an elderly bearded soldier, who was
sitting on a log. "A man who goes into the wildwood needs to be a good
friend o' God."
"But Schuyler thinks a force of British may land somewhere along the
big river and come down through the bush, building a road as they
advance," said Jack.
"A thousand men could make a tol'able waggin road to Fort Edward in a
month," Solomon declared. "That's mebbe the reason the Injuns are out
in the bush eatin' Yankees. They're tryin' fer to skeer us an' keep us
erway. By the hide an' horns o' the devil! We got to know what's
a-goin' on out thar. You fellers are a-settin' eround these 'ere forts
as if ye had nothin' to do but chaw beef steak an' wipe yer rifles an'
pick yer teeth. Why don't ye go out thar in the bush and do a little
skeerin' yerselves? Ye're like a lot o' ol' women settin' by the fire
an' tellin' ghos' stories."
"We got 'nuff to do considerin' the pay we git," said a sergeant.
"Hell an' Tophet! What do ye want o' pay?" Solomon answered. "Ain't
ye willin' to fight fer yer own liberty without bein' paid fer it? Ye
been kicked an' robbed an' spit on, an' dragged eround by the heels,
an' ye don't want to fight 'less somebody pays ye. What a dam' corn
fiddle o' a man ye mus' be!"
Solomon was putting fresh provisions in his pack as he talked.
"All the Injuns o' Kinady an' the great grass lands may be snookin'
down through the bush. We're bound fer t' know what's a-goin' on out
thar. We're liable to be skeered, but also an' likewise we'll do some
skeerin' 'fore we give up--you hear to me."
Jack and Solomon set out in the bush that afternoon and before night
fell were up on the mountain slants north of the Glassy Water, as Lake
George was often called those days. But for Solomon's caution an evil
fate had perhaps come to them before their first sleep on the journey.
The new leaves were just out, but not quite full. The little maples
and beeches flung their sprays of vivid green foliage above the darker
shades of the witch hopple into the soft-lighted air of the great house
of the wood and filled it with a pleasant odor. A mile or so back,
Solomon had left the trail and cautioned Jack to keep close and step
softly. Soon the old scout stopped, and listened and put his ear to
the ground. He rose and beckoned to Jack and the two turned aside and
made their way stealthily up the slant of a ledge. In the edge of a
little thicket on a mossy rock shelf they sat down. Solomon looked
serious. There were deep furrows in the skin above his brow.
When he was excited in the bush he had the habit of swallowing and the
process made a small, creaky sound in his throat. This Jack observed
then and at other times. Solomon was peering down through the bushes
toward the west, now and then moving his head a little. Jack looked in
the same direction and presently saw a move in the bushes below, but
nothing more. After a few minutes Solomon turned and whispered:
"Four Injun braves jist went by. Mebbe they're scoutin' fer a big
band--mebbe not. If so, the crowd is up the trail. If they're comin'
by, it'll be 'fore dark. We'll stop in this 'ere tavern. They's a
cave on t'other side o' the ledge as big as a small house."
They watched until the sun had set. Then Solomon led Jack to the cave,
in which their packs were deposited.
From the cave's entrance they looked upon the undulating green roof of
the forest dipping down into a deep valley, cut by the smooth surface
of a broad river with mirrored shores, and lifting to the summit of a
distant mountain range. Its blue peaks rose into the glow of the
sunset.
"Yonder is the great stairway of Heaven!" Jack exclaimed.
"I've put up in this 'ere ol' tavern many a night," said Solomon. "Do
ye see its sign?"
He pointed to a great dead pine that stood a little below it, towering
with stark, outreaching limbs more than a hundred and fifty feet into
the air.
"I call it The Dead Pine Tavern," Solomon remarked.
"On the road to Paradise," said Jack as he gazed down the valley, his
hands shading his eyes.
"Wisht we could have a nice hot supper, but 'twon't do to build no
fire. Nothin' but cold vittles! I'll go down with the pot to a spring
an' git some water. You dig fer our supper in that pack o' mine an'
spread it out here. I'm hungry."
They ate their bread and dried meat moistened with spring water, picked
some balsam boughs and covered a corner of the mossy floor with them.
When the rock chamber was filled with their fragrance, Jack said:
"If my dream comes true and Margaret and I are married, I shall bring
her here. I want her to see The Dead Pine Tavern and its outlook."
"Ayes, sir, when ye're married safe," Solomon answered. "We'll come up
here fust summer an' fish, an' hunt, an' I'll run the tavern an' do the
cookin' an' sweep the floor an' make the beds!"
"I'm a little discouraged," said Jack. "This war may last for years."
"Keep up on high ground er ye'll git mired down," Solomon answered.
"Ain't nuther on ye very old yit, an' fust ye know these troubles 'll
be over an' done."
Jack awoke at daylight and found that he was alone. Solomon returned
in half an hour or so.
"Been scoutin' up the trail," he said. "Didn't see a thing but an ol'
gnaw bucket. We'll jest eat a bite an' p'int off to the nor'west an'
keep watch o' this 'ere trail. They's Injuns over thar on the slants.
We got to know how they look an' 'bout how many head they is."
They went on, keeping well away from the trail.
"We'll have to watch it with our ears," said Solomon in a whisper.
His ear was often on the ground that morning and twice he left Jack "to
snook" out to the trail and look for tracks. Solomon could imitate the
call of the swamp robin, and when they were separated in the bush, he
gave it so that his friend could locate him. At midday they sat down
in deep shade by the side of a brook and ate their luncheon.
"This 'ere is Peppermint Brook," said Solomon. "It's 'nother one o' my
taverns."
"Our food isn't going to last long at the rate we are eating it," Jack
remarked. "If we can't shoot a gun what are we going to do when it's
all gone?"
"Don't worry," Solomon answered. "Ye're in my kentry now an' there's a
better tavern up in the high trail."
They fared along, favored by good weather, and spent that night on the
shore of a little pond not more than fifty paces off the old blazed
thoroughfare. Next day, about "half-way from dawn to dark," as Solomon
was wont, now and then, to speak of the noon hour, they came suddenly
upon fresh "sign." It was where the big north trail from the upper
waters of the Mohawk joined the one near which they had been traveling.
When they were approaching the point Solomon had left Jack in a thicket
and cautiously crept out to the "juncshin." There was half an hour of
silence before the old scout came back in sight and beckoned to Jack.
His face had never looked more serious. The young man approached him.
Solomon swallowed--a part of the effort to restrain his emotions.
"Want to show ye suthin'," he whispered.
The two went cautiously toward the trail. When they reached it the old
scout led the way to soft ground near a brook. Then he pointed down at
the mud. There were many footprints, newly made, and among them the
print of that wooden peg with an iron ring around its bottom, which
they had seen twice before, and which was associated with the blackest
memories they knew. For some time Solomon studied the surface of the
trail in silence.
"More'n twenty Injuns, two captives, a pair o' hosses, a cow an' the
devil," he whispered to Jack. "Been a raid down to the Mohawk Valley.
The cow an' the hosses are loaded with plunder. I've noticed that when
the Injuns go out to rob an' kill folks ye find, 'mong their tracks,
the print o' that 'ere iron ring. I seen it twice in the Ohio kentry.
Here is the heart o' the devil an' his fire-water. Red Snout has got
to be started on a new trail. His ol' peg leg is goin' down to the
gate o' hell to-night."
Solomon's face had darkened with anger. There were deep furrows across
his brow.
Standing before Jack about three feet away, he drew out his ram rod and
tossed it to the young man, who caught it a little above the middle.
Jack knew the meaning of this. They were to put their hands upon the
ram rod, one above the other. The last hand it would hold was to do
the killing. It was Solomon's.
"Thank God!" he whispered, as his face brightened.
He seemed to be taking careful aim with his right eye.
"It's my job," said he. "I wouldn't 'a' let ye do it if ye'd drawed
the chanst. It's my job--proper. They ain't an hour ahead.
Mebbe--it's jest possible--he may go to sleep to-night 'fore I do, an'
I wouldn't be supprised. They'll build their fire at the Caverns on
Rock Crick an' roast a captive. We'll cross the bush an' come up on t'
other side an' see what's goin' on."
They crossed a high ridge, with Solomon tossing his feet in that long,
loose stride of his, and went down the slope into a broad valley. The
sun sank low and the immeasurable green roofed house of the wild was
dim and dusk when the old scout halted. Ahead in the distance they had
heard voices and the neighing of a horse.
"My son," said Solomon as he pointed with his finger, "do you see the
brow o' the hill yonder whar the black thickets be?"
Jack nodded.
"If ye hear to me yell stay this side. This 'ere business is kind o'
neevarious. I'm a-goin' clus up. If I come back ye'll hear the call
o' the bush owl. If I don't come 'fore mornin' you p'int fer hum an'
the good God go with ye."
"I shall go as far as you go," Jack answered.
Solomon spoke sternly. The genial tone of good comradeship, had left
him.
"Ye kin go, but ye ain't obleeged," said he. "Bear in mind, boy.
To-night I'm the Cap'n. Do as I tell ye--_exact_."
He took the lightning hurlers out of the packs and unwrapped them and
tried the springs above the hammers. Earlier in the day he had looked
to the priming. Solomon gave one to Jack and put the other two in his
pockets. Each examined his pistols and adjusted them in his belt.
They started for the low lying ridge above the little valley of Rock
Creek. It was now quite dark and looking down through the thickets of
hemlock they could see the firelight of the Indians and hear the wash
of the creek water. Suddenly a wild whooping among the red men, savage
as the howl of wolves on the trail of a wounded bison, ran beyond them,
far out into the forest, and sent its echoes traveling from hilltop to
mountain side. Then came a sound which no man may hear without
getting, as Solomon was wont to say, "a scar on his soul which he will
carry beyond the last cape." It was the death cry of a captive.
Solomon had heard it before. He knew what it meant. The fire was
taking hold and the smoke had begun to smother him. Those cries were
like the stabbing of a knife and the recollection of them like
blood-stains.
They hurried down the slant, brushing through the thicket, the sound of
their approach being covered by the appalling cries of the victim and
the demon-like tumult of the drunken braves. The two scouts were
racked with soul pain as they went on so that they could scarcely hold
their peace and keep their feet from running. A new sense of the
capacity for evil in the heart of man entered the mind of Jack. They
had come close to the frightful scene, when suddenly a deep silence
fell upon it. Thank God, the victim had gone beyond the reach of pain.
Something had happened in his passing--perhaps the savages had thought
it a sign from Heaven. For a moment their clamor had ceased. The two
scouts could plainly see the poor man behind a red veil of flame.
Suddenly the white leader of the raiders approached the pyre, limping
on his wooden stump, with a stick in his hand, and prodded the face of
the victim. It was his last act. Solomon was taking aim. His rifle
spoke. Red Snout tumbled forward into the fire. Then what a scurry
among the Indians! They vanished and so suddenly that Jack wondered
where they had gone. Solomon stood reloading the rifle barrel he had
just emptied. Then he said:
"Come on an' do as I do."
Solomon ran until they had come near. Then he jumped from tree to
tree, stopping at each long enough to survey the ground beyond it.
This was what he called "swapping cover." From behind a tree near the
fire he shouted in the Indian tongue:
"Red men, you have made the Great Spirit angry. He has sent the Son of
the Thunder to slay you with his lightning."
No truer words had ever left the lips of man. His hand rose and swung
back of his shoulder and shot forward. The round missile sailed
through the firelight and beyond it and sank into black shadows in the
great cavern at Rocky Creek--a famous camping-place in the old time.
Then a flash of white light and a roar that shook the hills! A blast
of gravel and dust and debris shot upward and pelted down upon the
earth. Bits of rock and wood and an Indian's arm and foot fell in the
firelight. A number of dusky figures scurried out of the mouth of the
cavern and ran for their lives shouting prayers to Manitou as they
disappeared in the darkness. Solomon pulled the embers from around the
feet of the victim.
"Now, by the good God A'mighty, 'pears to me we got the skeer shifted
so the red man'll be the rabbit fer a while an' I wouldn't wonder,"
said Solomon, as he stood looking down at the scene. "He ain't a-goin'
to like the look o' a pale face--not overly much. Them Injuns that got
erway 'll never stop runnin' till they've reached the middle o' next
week."
He seized the foot of Red Snout and pulled his head out of the fire.
"You ol' hellion!" Solomon exclaimed. "You dog o' the devil! Tumbled
into hell whar ye b'long at last, didn't ye? Jack, you take that
luther bucket an' bring some water out o' the creek an' put out this
fire. The ring on this 'ere ol' wooden leg is wuth a hundred pounds."
Solomon took the hatchet from his belt and hacked off the end of Red
Snout's wooden leg and put it in his coat pocket, saying:
"'From now on a white man can walk in the bush without gittin' his
bones picked. Injuns is goin' to be skeered o' us--a few an' I
wouldn't be supprised."
When Jack came back with the water, Solomon poured it on the embers,
and looked at the swollen form which still seemed to be straining at
the green withes of moose wood.
"Nothin' kin be done fer him," said the old scout. "He's gone erway.
I tell ye, Jack, it g'in my soul a sweat to hear him dyin'."
A moment of silence full of the sorrow of the two men followed.
Solomon broke it by saying:
"That 'ere black pill o' mine went right down into the stummick o' the
hill an' give it quite a puke--you hear to me."
They went to the cavern's mouth and looked in.
"They's an awful mess in thar. I don't keer to see it," said Solomon.
Near them they discovered a warrior who had crawled out of that death
chamber in the rocks. He had been stunned and wounded about the
shoulders. They helped him to his feet and led him away. He was
trembling with fear. Solomon found a pine torch, still burning, near
where the fire had been. By its light they dressed his wounds--the old
scout having with him always a small surgeon's outfit.
"Whar is t' other captive?" he asked in the Indian tongue.
"About a mile down the trail. It's a woman and a boy," said the
warrior.
"Take us whar they be," Solomon commanded.
The three started slowly down the trail, the warrior leading them.
"Son of the Thunder, throw no more lightning and I will kiss your
mighty hand and do as you tell me," said the Indian, as they set out.
It was now dark. Jack saw, through the opening in the forest roof
above the trail, Orion and the Pleiades looking down at them, as
beautiful as ever, and now he could hear the brook singing merrily.
"I could have chided the stars and the brook while the Indian and I
were waiting for Solomon to bring the packs," he wrote in his diary.