3stalwarts

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by Unknown


  In the woods ahead they heard a whistle shrilling. The firing had stopped, except for sporadic outbursts way to right and left, where a few Indians still persisted.

  Then Herkimer’s voice came to them surprisingly loud.

  “Get out your hatchets, boys. They’re going to try bayonets.”

  To Gil it seemed as though the fight had begun all over again. Lying behind a tree was one thing. Standing up in the open was something he had not thought of.

  But Gardinier suddenly found something he could understand. He heaved his great bulk up and asked, “What you got, Bub?” When Gil merely stared, “Hatchet or bagnet, son?”

  Gil reached for the hatchet at his belt with stiff fingers.

  “All right. You give them one shot with your rifle. I’ve got a bagnet.” He was fixing it to the muzzle of his army musket. He wheeled back and roared, “Come on.”

  He seemed surprised when some of his own company came round the trees behind.

  Gil saw them coming. They all saw them, in the green gloom under the trees which covered their faces with a pale shine. They were like water coming toward the militia, flowing round the tree trunks, bending down the brush, an uneven line that formed in places and broke with the shape of the ground and formed.

  There was a moment of silence on both sides as the militia rose up confronting them. It was almost as if the militia were surprised. Herkimer’s warning had suggested to them that regular troops were going to attack. Instead they saw only the green coats they knew belonged to Johnson’s company of Tories, and men in hunting shirts and homespun like themselves.

  As the line came nearer, they saw that some of these men were the Scotch from Johnstown who had fled with Sir John. They weren’t Sillinger’s army at all. They were the men who had passed threats of gutting the valley wide open. For a moment the militia could hardly believe what they were seeing.

  Then it seemed as if the senseless glut of war would overflow. Men fired and flung their muskets down and went for each other with their hands. The American flanks turned in, leaving the Indians where they were. The woods filled suddenly with men swaying together, clubbing rifle barrels, swinging hatchets, yelling like the Indians themselves. There were no shots. Even the yelling stopped after the first joining of the lines, and men began to go down.

  The immediate silence of the woods was broken afresh. Gil, jostled and flung forward, saw a face in front of him met by a musket stock. The face seemed to burst. He swung his hatchet feebly against the arm that clubbed the musket and felt the axe ripped from his fingers. The man he had struck cried out, a small clear sound as if enunciated in a great stillness. Then Gil’s ears cleared and he heard a man crying and he stepped on a body and felt it wince under his boot. The wince threw him, and he hit the dirt with his knees, and at the same time a gun exploded in front of him and he thought his whole arm had been torn away.

  The boughs of the hemlocks heeled away from him, and the back of his head struck the ground and a man walked over him, three steps, down the length of his body, and he felt sick and then he forgot entirely everything but the fact that he was dying.

  He did not feel any more. He was lying on the ground. It seemed to him that every needle leaf and twig on the ground stood up with painful clearness beyond any plausible dimension. A little way off someone kept yelling, “For God’s sake, oh, for God’s sake.” He thought that if he could look he could see what the sound was, but he could not look.

  Then the forest darkened. There was a blinding flash. He felt a man’s hands taking hold of his shoulders. He felt himself moving backward while his legs trailed behind him. He was jerked up and put on his feet, and he knew that it was raining. He thought, “The drought’s broken.”

  Peal after peal of thunder shook the hemlocks. The rain fell directly down, hissing on the dry ground, and raising mist in the trees. There was no sound left but the pouring rain and the continuous devastating thunder. You couldn’t see when you opened your eyes. Only the tree trunks rising close to you, shining black with wet and the falling rain and the distortion of the lightning glares that lit up crooked alleys in the woods and shut them off again.

  He felt himself being shaken, and a voice was saying, “Can you walk, Bub?”

  He tried to walk, but his feet were overcome with a preposterous weariness.

  “Put them down, Bub, put them down. Flat on your feet and stand up. Have a drink; you’re all right.”

  He opened his eyes again and saw the beard of Gardinier matted with rain, and the wild white teeth and staring eyes of the Frenchman.

  “Brandy makes the world go round,” said the Frenchman. “It makes the girl handy, it makes for boys and girls, Bub. It’ll fix you. Hell, you ain’t only creased in one arm, and me, I’ve lost an ear.”

  The side of his face was streaming blood into his collar.

  “They’ve quit, Bub. They’re all to hell and gone. We’ve licked the pus clean out of them. Come on. Doc will fix you.”

  He sat Gil down on a mound, and then Dr. Petry’s big fleshy face, muttering, looking enraged and tired, bent down. The Doc was splashing alcohol of some sort on his arm. He was being bandaged. The stinging revived him, and he looked up and saw just above him old Herkimer, white in the face now, but still puffing at his pipe, which he held in his mouth inverted against the rain.

  “They’ll come back,” Herkimer was saying. “They’re bound to. But we’ll rest while it rains.”

  A little way off a man was eating on a log. The rest were standing, lying on the ground, steaming in the rain. Everyone looked tired, a little sick, and ugly, as if there had been a tremendous drunk a while before.

  Nobody was keeping watch. They merely stood there in the rain.

  The rain passed as suddenly as it had broken. The men got up and kicked other men to get up, and picked up their rifles. They drew the priming and reprimed, or loaded entirely fresh.

  Gil got to his feet shakily, surprised to find his rifle still in his hand. It seemed a long time since the rain. The woods had changed so that he did not know where west lay, or east, or any direction.

  Then he saw that Herkimer had moved the position so that the militia were in the centre of the level ground between the first ravine and a smaller, shallower watercourse. Any new attack would have to take them on a narrow flank, or directly up the new slope on top of which their line was formed.

  The first shots came scatteringly. The Indians were firing from long range. They seemed to have lost their taste for war. They were being very careful now. Everybody was being careful. The militia stood their ground, but kept to cover.

  In a line running north and south through the new position, a broken mass of men lay on the ground, like an uneven windrow of some preposterous corn. They seemed almost equally made up of militia and the greencoated troops that had come through the hemlocks. They lay in queer positions, on their arms, grasping knife or hatchet or musket, the purpose still on the blank face like an overlying plaster; or else they lay on their backs, their empty hands flung out as if to catch the rain.

  The militia stepped over this line impersonally. There was an Indian transfixed to a tree by a bayonet, waist high, with his legs dangling lifelessly against the ground. But he kept his eyes open and the eyes seemed to Gil to turn as he went by.

  A little way along a face struck him as familiar. He looked at it again. The possessor of the face had fallen with his chin over a log so that the face was tilted up. Gil looked at it curiously before he recognized it for Christian Reall’s face. He had been scalped. The top of his head looked flat and red; and the circumcision of the crown had allowed the muscles to give way so that his cheeks hung down in jowls, tugging his eyes open and showing enormous bloody underlids.

  The two armies merely sniped at each other for an hour. Then the second attack by the enemy developed from the southwest along the level ground. At first the militia mistook them for reinforcements from the fort. The direction they came from and the fact that they ha
d pinned up their hat brims to look like the tricorn hats of Continental soldiers were deceptive.

  The militia broke cover, cheering, and rushed forward to shake hands, and the enemy let them come. There was no firing. It was only at the last moment that the sun came through the wet trees, dazzling all the ground and showing the bright green of the approaching company.

  Gil was not in the direct contact of the two companies. From where he stood he seemed divorced from the whole proceeding.

  But another company of green coats was coming round the first in his direction, with the same quiet march, and the same bright glitter on their advanced bayonets.

  He became aware of the instinct to run away. It suddenly occurred to him that he was hungry. Not merely hungry as one is at supper or breakfast; but a persisting, all-consuming gnawing in his intestines that moved and hurt. He felt that it was not worth staying for. He was too tired. And the oncoming men looked tired. And it seemed to take forever for them to make a contact. But they came like people who couldn’t stop themselves, while he himself could not make his feet move to carry him away.

  They made less noise. The rainstorm which had broken the drought had not had power to take the dryness from their throats. They seemed to strike each other with preposterous slow weary blows, which they were too slow to dodge, and they fell down under them preposterously.

  It couldn’t last.

  Gil found himself standing alone in the militia. There were a few men near him, but there was no one whose face he recognized. They kept looking at each other as if they would have liked to speak.

  On the flank, the firing continued where the Indians still skirmished. But that, too, broke off except for stray shots, the last survivors of all the holocaust of firing.

  The Indians were calling in the woods. A high barbaric word, over and over. “Oonah, Oonah, Oonah.” Suddenly a man shouted, “They’ve pulled foot!”

  At first they thought another thunderstorm had started. Then they realized that what they had heard, with such surprising force, had been three successive cannon shots.

  The messengers had reached the fort, and the garrison was making a diversion.

  A deliberate understanding gradually dawned on all their faces. They leaned on their rifles and looked round. The woods were empty, but for themselves, for their dead, and for the enemy dead. The living enemy had run away.

  Those that could walk began a retrograde movement to the knoll on which Herkimer was sitting under his tree. The old man was looking at them; his black eyes, yet ardent, passing feverishly from face to face, and then turning slowly to the lines of dead.

  One of the officers spoke fatuously, “Do we go on to the fort now, Honnikol?” He paused, swallowed, and said, as if to excuse himself, “We know they know we’re here.”

  The little German swung his eyes to the speaker. The eyes filled and he put his hand over them.

  Peter Bellinger and Peter Tygert came up to him and touched his shoulder. They said to the officer, “We can’t move forward.”

  They picked Herkimer up by the arms.

  “I can’t walk, boys.” He swallowed his tears noisily. “There’s still Sillinger up there. With the British regulars there ain’t enough of us. I think we’d better go home.”

  He asked first that the live men be assembled and counted. It was a slow business, getting them to their feet and lining them up under the trees. The earth was still steaming from the rain. There was a sick smell of blood from the ravine.

  The naming of men took too long. The officers went along the wavering lines, cutting notches in sticks for every ten men. They figured that after Fisscher pulled foot with the Mohawk company there had been about six hundred and fifty concerned in the ambush and battle. Out of them about two hundred were judged able to walk. There were forty more who were not dead. How many had been killed and how many taken prisoner no one could say.

  Stretchers were made of coats and poles, and the worst wounded were piled onto them. Those who were not acting as bearers dully reprimed or loaded their guns. They started east.

  It seemed a long way to the ravine where the battle had started. It seemed a long time, longer than they could remember, since they had seen it last. It was sunset by the time they reached Oriskany Creek.

  From there men were sent ahead to order boats rowed up the Mohawk, to meet the wounded at the ford. The whole army lay down when they reached the ford. They lay in the darkness, along the edge of the sluggish river, until the boats came up. They were apathetic.

  Only when the boats arrived did they get onto their feet and help put the wounded men in. Several of them afterwards remembered Herkimer’s face in the light of the fire. He had stopped smoking, though the pipe was still fast in his teeth. He wasn’t saying anything. He sat still, holding onto his knee.

  At the time they had just stood around watching him being loaded aboard the boat and laid out in the bottom. Then they had been told to march through the ford, and along the road. They went wearily, too exhausted to talk, even to think. And tired as they were, they were forced to do the same march they had taken three days to make on the way up.

  They did not look at the terrified white faces of the people when they came to the settlement. They were too exhausted to see. The word had already gone down the river. People were expecting the appearance of the enemy.

  It was a calamity. The army had looked so big going west that nobody had thought they would not get through to the fort. Now they were back; they looked licked, and they acted licked, and they had not even met the regulars. It was pointless to think that the enemy had left the scene of battle before they had.

  An officer, some said afterwards that it was Major Clyde, yelled from the foot of the fort stockade that they were dismissed. They were to go home and try to rest while they could. They should expect another summons very soon.

  But the men did not stop to listen to him. Ever since they had come out of the woods at Schuyler they had been dropping from the ranks. The instinct to get home was irresistible. They weren’t an army any more, and they knew it better than anyone could have told them.

  4

  STANWIX (1777)

  1. The Women

  Mrs. McKlennar simply would not hear of removing to a fort. “What’s the use of women being left behind in a war, if they can’t stay home and do the man’s work?”

  “Yes, ma’am.”

  Captain Jacob Small, who had been placed in command of Eldridge Blockhouse, shifted his feet on the kitchen floor, turned his hat over twice in his hands, and looked anxiously towards the fireplace. “It’s orders, though. ‘Where women and children shall be gathered together,’ it says. And me and other men over sixty and under sixteen is to collect with them and protect them.”

  “Pshaw, Captain Small, don’t you think I can look after myself?”

  “Yes, ma’am.” Captain Small was uneasy. “But them’s the orders. You’re rightly in my district. But if you don’t want to come to Eldridge, you can go over the river to Herkimer, I guess. Only we’ve been keeping the corner space in the shed for you.”

  “Shed!” snorted Mrs. McKlennar. “Do I look like the kind of woman at my time of life who’d go live in a shed? Herded up like a freshened heifer. With everybody else, eh?”

  “Yes, ma’am.” Captain Jacob looked appalled. “I mean, no, ma’am.”

  “Well, look at me, damn it, man. Can’t I take care of myself?”

  “Yes, ma’am.” Captain Small raised his eyes and turned them abruptly away again towards the fireplace.

  “If you want to spit,” said Mrs. McKlennar, “for God’s sake, spit, and get it over with.” There was an almost piercing look about her long nose as he availed himself of the ashes. “I suppose it’s nice of you to come down here to make a damn-fool woman see some sense. The trouble is my idea of sense just doesn’t coincide with yours.”

  The captain said, “Well, I only tried to be neighborly. But if you change your mind we’ll have the corner space
ready for you. Phil Helmer has got his cows in it now, but we’ll move them right out any time.”

  “Thank you, captain.”

  Captain Small hawked a little, as he reached the door. He looked over his spit at Fort Herkimer beyond the river.

  “See there,” he said significantly. “Ma’am, there’s some women coming to the fort now.”

  A line of teetering carts, overloaded with goods and women and children, dragged across the flats from the southern hills.

  Mrs. McKlennar blew out her breath.

  “I’ve been seeing them for two days. I’m sick of the sight. Scared as rabbits.”

  Mrs. McKlennar watched him trudge away down the road. Then she stamped over the porch and down the steps and went towards the barn. “Indians!” she said to herself.

  She saw Lana coming down from the springhouse with a crock of butter in her arms. “How much did it make?” called Mrs. McKlennar.

  “About three pounds,” Lana replied. She looked cool and pink, but her eyes seemed to darken. “Was that Captain Small, Mrs. McKlennar?”

  “Yes, it was.”

  “Did he have any news?”

  “He was down to try to persuade us to move into his blockhouse. He’s got a stall ready for us. There’s some cows in it now, but he was cordial enough to suggest he would prefer us.”

  Lana smiled slightly. She was getting used to the widow’s way of talking.

  Mrs. McKlennar said, “And then he pointed out some women going in to Fort Herkimer. And he said a lot more about the way Indians handled women.” She paused and looked keenly at Lana. “What do you think about it, Magdelana? Getting scared?”

  Lana said, “No,” quietly. She wasn’t looking at Mrs. McKlennar; with the crock still hugged up in her arms, she was staring westward. “Gil expected I’d stay here, unless we got news things had gone wrong out west. When he comes back, he’ll probably expect to find me here.”

  “Good for you,” said Mrs. McKlennar. She tramped away to the barn to curry the horses. It was a job she fancied just then. She didn’t have the faintest idea of what might happen, but in any case she had no intention of living like a pig in a sty and having all the farm women constantly peering at her to see what kind of underclothes she wore… .

 

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