"I won't hev nuthin' to do with this bizness. The chiefs hev condemned the
village, an' it'll hev to go. If you fellars hed been careful, no white blood
would hev been spilled. I
advise you all to lay low till it's over."
"Will you let me speak to your men, to try and get them to follow me?"
"Heckewelder asked that same thing. He was
persistent, and I took a vote fer
him just to show how my men stood. Eighteen of them said they'd follow him;
the rest wouldn't interfere."
"Eighteen! My God!" cried Jim, voicing the
passion which consumed him. "You
are white men, yet you will stand by and see these
innocent people murdered!
Man, where's your
humanity? Your
manhood? These converted Indians are
savages
no longer, they are Christians. Their children are as good, pure,
innocent as
your own. Can you remain idle and see these little ones murdered?"
Williamson made no answer, the men who had
crowded round were
equally silent.
Not one lowered his head. many looked at the im
passioned
missionary; others
gazed at the
savages who were circling around the trees brandishing their
weapons. If any pitied the
unfortunate Christians, none showed it. They were
indifferent, with the
indifference of men hardened to cruel scenes.
Jim understood, at last, as he turned from face to face to find everywhere
that same imperturbability. These bordermen were like Wetzel and Jonathan
Zane. The only good Indian was a dead Indian. Years of war and
bloodshed, of
merciless
cruelty at the hands of redmen, of the hard, border life had
rendered these frontiersmen
incapable of com
passion for any
savage.
Jim no longer restrained himself.
"Bordermen you may be, but from my
standpoint, from any man's, from God's, you
are a lot of
coldlyindifferentcowards!" exclaimed Jim, with white, quivering
lips. "I understand now. Few of you will risk anything for Indians. You will
not believe a
savage can be a Christian. You don't care if they are all
murdered. Any man among you--any man, I say--would step out before those
howling fiends and
boldly demand that there be no
bloodshed. A courageous
leader with a band of determined followers could avert this
tragedy. You might
readily intimidate yonder horde of
drunken demons. Captain Williamson, I am
only a
minister, far removed from a man of war and leader, as you claim to be,
but, sir, I curse you as a
miserablecoward. If I ever get back to
civilization I'll brand this inhuman
coldness of yours, as the most infamous
and dastardly
cowardice that ever disgraced a white man. You are worse than
Girty!"
Williamson turned a
sickly yellow; he fumbled a second with the handle of his
tomahawk, but made no answer. The other bordermen
maintained the same careless
composure. What to them was the raving of a mad preacher?
Jim saw it and turned baffled,
fiercely angry, and
hopeless. As he walked away
Jeff Lynn took his arm, and after they were clear of the crowd of frontiersmen
he said:
"Young feller, you give him
pepper, an' no mistake. An' mebbe you're right
from your side the fence. But you can't see the Injuns from our side. We
hunters hevn't much
humanity--I
reckon that's what you called it--but we've
lost so many friends an' relatives, an' hearn of so many murders by the reddys
that we look on all of 'em as wild varmints that should be killed on sight.
Now, mebbe it'll interest you to know I was the feller who took the vote
Williamson told you about, an' I did it 'cause I had an interest in you. I wus
watchin' you when Edwards and the other
missionary got shot. I like grit in a
man, an' I seen you had it clear through. So when Heckewelder comes over I
talked to the fellers, an' all I could git interested was eighteen, but they
wanted to fight simply fer fightin' sake. Now, ole Jeff Lynn is your friend.
You just lay low until this is over."
Jim thanked the old riverman and left him. He hardly knew which way to turn.
He would make one more effort. He crossed the
clearing to where the renegades'
teepee stood. McKee and Elliott were sitting on a log. Simon Girty stood
beside them, his hard, keen, roving eyes on the scene. The
missionary was
impressed by the white leader. There was a difference in his
aspect, a wilder
look than the others wore, as if the man had suddenly awakened to the fury of
his Indians. Nevertheless the young man went straight toward him.
"Girty, I come---"
"Git out! You meddlin' preacher!" yelled the renegade, shaking his fist at
Jim.
Simon Girty was drunk.
Jim turned from the white fiends. He knew his life to them was not worth a
pinch of powder.
"Lost! Lost! All lost!" he exclaimed in despair.
As he went toward the church he saw hundreds of
savages bounding over the
grass, brandishing weapons and whooping fiendishly. They were concentrating
around Girty's teepee, where already a great
throng had congregated. Of all
the Indians to be seen not one walked. They leaped by Jim, and ran over the
grass
nimble as deer.
He saw the eager, fire in their dusky eyes, and the
cruelly clenched teeth
like those of wolves when they snarl. He felt the hissing
breath of many
savages as they raced by him. More than one whirled a tomahawk close to Jim's
head, and uttered
horrible yells in his ear. They were like tigers lusting for
blood.
Jim
hurried to the church. Not an Indian was
visible near the log structure.
Even the
savage guards had gone. He entered the open door to be instantly
struck with
reverence and awe.
The Christians were singing.
Miserable and full of
sickening dread though Jim was, he could not but realize
that the scene before him was one of
extraordinary beauty and pathos. The
doomed Indians lifted up their voices in song. Never had they sung so
feelingly, so harmoniously.
When the song ended Zeisberger, who stood upon a
platform, opened his Bible
and read:
"In a little wrath I hid my face from thee for a moment, but with everlasting
kindness will I have mercy on thee, saith the Lord, thy Redeemer."
In a voice low and
tremulous the
venerablemissionary began his
sermon.
The shadow of death hovered over these Christian martyrs; it was reflected in
their
somber eyes, yet not one was
sullen or sad. The children who were too
young to understand, but
instinctively feeling the
tragedy soon to be enacted
there, cowered close to their mothers.
Zeisberger preached a
touching and
impressive, though short,
sermon. At its
conclusion the whole
congregation rose and surrounded the
missionary. The men
shook his hands, the women kissed them, the children clung to his legs. It was
a wonderful
manifestation of affection.
Suddenly Glickhican, the old Delaware chief, stepped on the
platform, raised
his hand and shouted one Indian word.
A long, low wail went up from the children and youths; the women slowly,
meekly bowed their heads. The men, due to the stoicism of their nature and the
Christianity they had
learned, stood
proudly erect awaiting the death that had
been decreed.
Glickhican pulled the bell rope.
A deep,
mellow tone pealed out.
The sound transfixed all the Christians. No one moved.
Glickhican had given the signal which told the murderers the Christians were
ready.
"Come, man, my God! We can't stay here!" cried Jim to Zeisberger.
As they went out both men turned to look their last on the martyrs. The death
knell which had rung in the ears of the Christians, was to them the voice of
God. Stern, dark visages of men and the sweet, submissive faces of women were
uplifted with rapt attention. A light seemed to shine from these faces as if
the
contemplation of God had illumined them.
As Zeisberger and Jim left the church and
hurried toward the cabins, they saw
the crowd of
savages in a black mass round Girty's teepee. The yelling and
leaping had ceased.
Heckewelder opened the door. Evidently he had watched for them.
"Jim! Jim!" cried Nell, when he entered the cabin. "Oh-h! I was afraid. Oh! I
am glad you're back safe. See, this noble Indian has come to help us."
Wingenund stood calm and erect by the door.
"Chief, what will you do?"
"Wingenund will show you the way to the big river," answered the
chieftain, in
his deep bass.
"Run away? No, never! That would be
cowardly. Heckewelder, you would not go?
Nor you, Zeisberger? We may yet be of use, we may yet save some of the
Christians."
"Save the yellow-hair,"
sternly said Wingenund.
"Oh, Jim, you don't understand. The chief has come to warn me of Girty. He