We had been four months in Ogdensburg, waiting vainly for some
provocation to fight. Our own drilling was the only sign of war we
could see on either side of the river. At first many moved out of
the village, but the mill was kept running, and after a little they
began to come back. The farms on each side of the river looked as
peaceful as they had ever looked. The command had grown rapidly.
Thurst Miles of my own neighborhood had come to enlist shortly
after D'ri and I enlisted, and was now in my company.
In September, General Brown was ordered to the Western frontier,
and Captain Forsyth came to command us. Early in the morning of
October 2, a man came galloping up the shore with a warning, saying
that the river was black with boats a little way down. Some of us
climbed to the barracks roof, from which we could see and count
them. There were forty, with two gunboats. Cannonading began
before the town was fairly awake. First a big ball went over the
house-tops, hitting a cupola on a church roof and sending bell and
timbers with a crash into somebody's dooryard. Then all over the
village hens began to cackle and children to wail. People came
running out of doors half dressed. A woman, gathering chips in her
dooryard, dropped them, lifted her dress above her head, and ran
for the house. Unable to see her way, she went around in a wide
circle for a minute or two, while the soldiers were laughing.
Another ball hit a big water-tank on top of the lead-works. It
hurled broken staves and a big slop of water upon the housetops,
and rolled a great iron hoop over roofs into the street below,
where it rolled on, chasing a group of men, who ran for their lives
before it. The attack was an odd sort of comedy all through, for
nobody was hurt, and all were frightened save those of us who were
amused. Our cannon gave quick reply, and soon the British stopped
firing and drew near. We knew that they would try to force a
landing, and were ready for them. We drove them back, when they
put off, and that was the end of it.
Next came the fight on the ice in February--a thing not highly
creditable to us, albeit we were then but a handful and they were
many. But D'ri and I had no cause for shame of our part in it. We
wallowed to our waists in the snow, and it was red enough in front
of us. But the others gave way there on the edge of the river, and
we had to follow. We knew when it was time to run; we were never
in the rear rank even then. We made off with the others, although
a sabre's point had raked me in the temple, and the blood had
frozen on me, and I was a sight to scare a trooper. Everybody ran
that day, and the British took the village, holding it only
twenty-four hours. For our part in it D'ri got the rank of
corporal and I was raised from lieutenant to captain. We made our
way to Sackett's Harbor, where I went into hospital for a month.
Then came a galling time of idleness. In June we went with General
Brown--D'ri and I and Thurst Miles and Seth Alexander and half a
dozen others--down the river to the scene of our first fighting at
Ogdensburg, camping well back in the woods. It was the evening of
the 27th of June that the general sent for me. He was at the
mansion of Mr. Parish, where he had been dining. He was sitting in
his dress-suit. His dark side-whiskers and hair were brushed
carefully forward. His handsome face turned toward me with a
kindly look.
"Bell," said he, "I wish to send you on very important business.
You have all the qualities of a good scout. You know the woods.
You have courage and skill and tact. I wish you to start
immediately, go along the river to Morristown, then cut over into
the Black River country and deliver this letter to the Comte de
Chaumont, at the Chateau Le Ray, in Leraysville. If you see any
signs of the enemy, send a report to me at once. I shall be here
three days. Take Alexander, Olin, and Miles with you; they are all
good men. When your letter is delivered, report at the Harbor as
soon as possible."
I was on the road with my party in half an hour. We were all good
horsemen. D'ri knew the shortest way out of the woods in any part
of the north country. Thurst had travelled the forest from Albany
to Sackett's Harbor, and was the best hunter that ever trod a trail
in my time. The night was dark, but we rode at a gallop until we
had left the town far behind us. We were at Morristown before
midnight, pounding on the door of the Red Tavern. The landlord
stuck his head out of an upper window, peering down at us by the
light of a candle.
"Everything quiet," said he. "Crossed the river yesterday. Folks
go back 'n' forth 'bout the same as ever. Wife's in Elizabethtown
now, visiting."
We asked about the west roads and went on our way. Long before
daylight we were climbing the steep road at Rossie to the inn of
the Travellers' Rest--a tavern famous in its time, that stood half
up the hill, with a store, a smithy, and a few houses grouped about
it, We came up at a silent walk on a road cushioned with sawdust.
D'ri rapped on the door until I thought he had roused the whole
village. At last a man came to the upper window. He, too,
inspected us with a candle. Then he opened the door and gave us a
hearty welcome. We put up our horses for a bite, and came into the
bar.
"They say the British are camped this side of the river, north of
us," said he, "with a big tribe of Injuns. Some of their cavalry
came within three miles of us to-day. Everybody scairt t' death."
"Wal," said the latter, as he stroked his thin beard, "when I tuk
the pledge I swore et I hoped t' drop dead 'fore I see myself tek
another drink. I 'm jest goin' t' shet my eyes 'n' hold out my
glass. I don' care what ye gi' me s' long es it's somethin'
powerful."
We ate crackers and cheese while the landlord was telling of the
west roads and the probable location of the British. He stopped
suddenly, peered over my shoulder, and blew out the candle. We
could hear a horse neighing in the yard.
"Some one et the window," he whispered. Then he ran to the door
and drew the bolt. "Ain' much idee who 't is," he added, peering
out of the window. "By gosh! more 'n a dozen folks out here,
soldiers tew, most uv 'em on horseback. Come quick."
We followed him upstairs, in the dark, as they began to pound the
door. From the yard a light flashed up. They were evidently
building a fire so that they would have better shooting if we came
out.
"Rivers uv it," said the landlord. "Tank's connected with the
reservoir o' the lead-works on the hill up there. Big wooden pipe
comes in the gable-end."
"Turn 'er on," said D'ri, quickly, "an' let me hev thet air hose."
The landlord ran up a ladder. D'ri stuck the hose out of the
window. The stream shot away with a loud hiss. I stood by and saw
the jet of water leap forth as big as a pikestaff. A man went off
his horse, sprawling as if he had been hit with a club. The jet
leaped quickly from one to another, roaring on man and beast.
There was a mighty scurry. Horses went headlong down the hill,
some dragging their riders. In the silence of the night, bedlam
had broken loose. The shouting men, the plunging horses, the
stream of water roaring on rock and road, woke the village. Men
came running from behind the house to see what had happened, then
rushed after their horses. Some fell cursing as the water hit
them. The landlord put his mouth to my ear.
We were below-stairs and out of the door in a jiffy. Two men fled
before us at the stable, scrambled over the fence, and went
tumbling downhill. We bridled our horses with all speed, leaped
upon them, and went rushing down the steep road, our swords in
hand, like an avalanche. They tried to stop us at the foot of the
hill, but fell away as we came near. I could hear the snap of
their triggers in passing. Only one pistol-shot came after us, and
that went high.
"Guess their ammunition 's a leetle wet," said D'ri, with a shout
that turned into laughter as we left the British behind us.
A party of four or five mounted and gave chase; but our powder was
a bit drier than theirs, and for a time we raked the road with our
bullets. What befell them I know not, I only know that they held
up and fell out of hearing.
Crossing a small river at daylight, we took the bed of it, making
our way slowly for half a mile or so into the woods. There we
built a fire, and gave the horses half the feed in our saddle-bags,
and ate our mess on a flat rock.
"Never hed no sech joemightyful time es thet afore," said D'ri, as
he sat down, laughing, and shook his head. "Jerushy Jane! Did n't
we come down thet air hill! Luk slidin' on a greased pole."
"Comin' so luk the devil they did n't dast git 'n er way," said
Thurst.
"We wus all rippin' th' air 'ith them air joemightyful big sabres,
tew," D'ri went on. "Hed a purty middlin' sharp edge on us. Stuck
out luk a haystack right 'n' left."
He began bringing wood as he sang the chorus of his favorite
ballad:--
Li toorul I oorul I oorul I ay, etc.
Thurst knew a trail that crossed the river near by and met the
Caraway Pike a few miles beyond. Having eaten, I wrote a despatch
to be taken back by Thurst as soon as we reached the pike. Past
ten o'clock we turned into a rough road, where the three of us went
one way and Thurst another.
I rode slowly, for the horses were nearly fagged. I gave them an
hour's rest when we put up for dinner. Then we pushed on, coming
in sight of the Chateau Le Ray at sundown. A splendid place it
was, the castle of gray stone fronting a fair stretch of wooded
lawn, cut by a brook that went splashing over rocks near by, and
sent its velvet voice through wood and field. A road of fine
gravel led through groves of beech and oak and pine to a grassy
terrace under the castle walls. A servant in livery came to meet
us at the door, and went to call his master. Presently a tall,
handsome man, with black eyes and iron-gray hair and mustache, came
down a path, clapping his hands.
"Welcome, gentlemen! It is the Captain Bell?" said he, with a
marked accent, as he came to me, his hand extended. "You come from
Monsieur the General Brown, do you not?"
"I am glad to see you--ver' glad to see you!" said he, laying his
hands upon my shoulders and giving me a little shake.
Two servants went away with D'ri and Seth and the horses.
"Come, captain," said my host, as he led the way. "You are in good
time for dinner."
We entered a great triangular hall, lighted by wide windows above
the door, and candelabra of shining brass that hung from its high
ceiling. There were sliding doors of polished wood on each side of
it. A great stairway filled the point of the triangle. I was
shown to my room, which was as big as a ball-room, it seemed to me,
and grandly furnished; no castle of my dreams had been quite so
fine. The valet of the count looked after me, with offers of new
linen and more things than I could see use for. He could not speak
English, I remember, and I addressed him in the good French my
mother had taught me.
The kind of life I saw in this grand home was not wholly new to me,
for both my mother and father had known good living in their youth,
and I had heard much of it. I should have been glad of a new
uniform; but after I had had my bath and put on the new shirt and
collar the valet had brought me, I stood before the long pier-glass
and saw no poor figure of a man.
The great dining-hall of the count was lighted with many candles
when we came in to dinner. It had a big fireplace, where logs were
blazing, for the night had turned cool, and a long table with a big
epergne of wrought silver, filled with roses, in its centre. A
great silken rug lay under the table, on a polished floor, and the
walls were hung with tapestry. I sat beside the count, and
opposite me was the daughter of the Sieur Louis Francois de
Saint-Michel, king's forester under Louis XVI. Therese, the
handsome daughter of the count, sat facing him at the farther end
of the table, and beside her was the young Marquis de Gonvello. M.
Pidgeon, the celebrated French astronomer, Moss Kent, brother of
the since famous chancellor, the Sieur Michel, and the Baroness de
Ferre, with her two wards, the Misses Louise and Louison de
Lambert, were also at dinner. These young ladies were the most
remarkable of the company; their beauty was so brilliant, so
fascinating, it kindled a great fire in me the moment I saw it.
They said little, but seemed to have much interest in all the talk
of the table. I looked at them more than was polite, I am sure,
but they looked at me quite as often. They had big, beautiful
brown eyes, and dark hair fastened high with jewelled pins, and
profiles like those of the fair ladies of Sir Peter Lely, so finely
were they cut. One had a form a bit fuller and stronger than the
other's, but they were both as tall and trim as a young beech, with
lips cherry-red and cheeks where one could see faintly the glow of
their young blood. Their gowns were cut low, showing the graceful
lines of neck and shoulder and full bosom. I had seen pretty
girls, many of them, but few high-bred, beautiful young women.
The moment I saw these two some new and mighty force came into me.
There were wine and wit a-plenty at the count's table, and other
things that were also new to me, and for which I retained perhaps
too great a fondness.
The count asked me to tell of our journey, and I told the story
with all the spirit I could put into my words. I am happy to say
it did seem to hit the mark, for I was no sooner done with our
adventure than the ladies began to clap their hands, and the Misses
de Lambert had much delight in their faces when the baroness retold
my story in French.
Dinner over, the count invited me to the smoking-room, where, in a
corner by ourselves, I had some talk with him. He told me of his
father--that he had been a friend of Franklin, that he had given a
ship and a cargo of gunpowder to our navy in '76. Like others I
had met under his roof, the count had seen the coming of the Reign
of Terror in France, and had fled with his great fortune. He had
invested much of it there in the wild country. He loved America,
and had given freely to equip the army for war. He was, therefore,
a man of much influence in the campaign of the North, and no doubt
those in authority there were instructed, while the war was on, to
take special care of his property.
"And will you please tell me," I said at length, "who are the
Misses de Lambert?"
"Daughters of a friend in Paris," said the count. "He is a great
physician. He wishes not for them to marry until they are
twenty-one. Mon Dieu! it was a matter of some difficulty. They
were beautiful."
"They were admired," he went on. "The young men they began to make
trouble. My friend he send them here, with the baroness, to
study--to finish their education. It is healthy, it is quiet,
and--well, there are no young gentlemen. They go to bed early;
they are up at daylight; they have the horse; they have boats; they
amuse themselves ver' much. But they are impatient; they long for
Paris--the salon, the theatre, the opera. They are like prisoners:
they cannot make themselves to be contented. The baroness she has
her villa on a lake back in the woods, and, mon ame! it is
beautiful there--so still, so cool, so delightful! At present they
have a great fear of the British. They lie awake; they listen;
they expect to be carried off; they hear a sound in the night, and,
mon Dieu! it is the soldiers coming."
The count laughed, lifting his shoulders with a gesture of both
hands. Then he puffed thoughtfully at his cigarette.
"Indeed," he went on presently, "I think the invasion is not far
away. They tell me the woods in the north are alive with British
cavalry. I am not able to tell how many, but, Dieu! it is enough.
The army should inform itself immediately. I think it is better
that you penetrate to the river to-morrow, if you are not afraid,
to see what is between, and to return by the woods. I shall
trouble you to take a letter to the General Brown. It will be
ready at any hour."
"At six, certainly, if you desire to start then," he replied.
He rose and took my arm affectionately and conducted me to the big
drawing-room. Two of the ladies were singing as one played the
guitar. I looked in vain for the Misses de Lambert. The others
were all there, but they had gone. I felt a singular depression at
their absence and went to my room shortly to get my rest, for I had
to be off early in the morning. Before going to bed, however, I
sat down to think and do some writing. But I could not for the
life of me put away the thought of the young ladies. They looked
alike, and yet I felt sure they were very different. Somehow I
could not recall in what particular they differed. I sat a time
thinking over it. Suddenly I heard low voices, those of women
speaking in French; I could not tell from where they came.
"I do wish she would die, the hateful thing!" said one. (It must
be understood these words are more violent in English than they
seem in French.)
"The colonel--a fine baroness indeed--vieille tyran! I cannot love
her. Lord! I once tried to love a monkey and had better luck.
The colonel keeps all the men to herself. Whom have I seen for a
year? Dieu! women, grandpapas, greasy guides! Not a young man
since we left Paris."
"My dear Louison!" said the other, "there are many things better
than men."
"Au nom de Dieu! But I should like to know what they are. I have
never seen them."
"But often men are false and evil," said the other, in a sweet, low
voice.
"Nonsense!" said the first, impatiently. "I had rather elope with
a one-legged hostler than always live in these woods."
"Louison! You ought to cross yourself and repeat a Hail Mary."
"Thanks! I have tried prayer. It is n't what I need. I am no nun
like you. My dear sister, don't you ever long for the love of a
man--a big, handsome, hearty fellow who could take you up in his
arms and squeeze the life out of you?"
"Eh bien," said the other, with a sigh, "I suppose it is very nice.
I do not dare to think of it."
"Nice! It is heaven, Louise! And to see a man like that and not
be permitted to--to speak to him! Think of it! A young and
handsome man--the first I have seen for a year! Honestly I could
poison the colonel."
"My dear, it is the count as much as the colonel. She is under his
orders, and he has an eagle eye."
"The old monkey! He enrages me! I could rend him limb from limb!"
I could not help hearing what they said, but I did not think it
quite fair to share their confidence any further, so I went to one
of the windows and closed a shutter noisily. The voices must have
come from a little balcony just under my room.
"My dear sister, you are very terrible," said one of them, and then
the shutter came to, and I heard no more.
A full moon lighted the darkness. A little lake gleamed like
silver between the tree-tops. Worn out with hard travel, I fell
into bed shortly, and lay a long time thinking of those young
ladies, of the past, of to-morrow and its perils, and of the
farther future. A new life had begun for me.