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Chapter XII. The Shadow in the Forest

The Free Rangers





Luiz and his comrades escorted Henry back to the prison, and the
expressive face of Luiz showed pleasure. He made a vigorous
pantomime and spoke words in Spanish.

"Yes, I understand your meaning if not your language, my
friend," said Henry, "and I thank you. I am glad to know that I have
your good will."

When the door of his prison was thrown open and Henry was then
shut in again with his comrades they looked at him expectantly.

"Well?" said Paul.

"What happened?" said Long Jim.

"Anything to tell?" said Tom Ross.

"How's your shoulder, Paul?" asked Henry.

"Fast getting well," replied Paul, who knew that his comrade
would speak in his own good time.

Henry sat on the floor and leaned against the wall in as
comfortable a position as he could assume. Then he looked rather
humorously at his comrades.

"Alvarez wanted to bribe me," he said.

"To bribe you? What do you mean?"

"Yes, to bribe me - and all of us together. He wanted us to
serve him here in Louisiana, and help him in an attempt to bring over
Kentucky to Spain."

"That is, he wanted to make Braxton Wyatts out of us?" said
Paul.

"You put it exactly right, Paul," said Henry. "I laughed at him,
and called him by the names that belonged to him. He brought in
Braxton Wyatt and the soldiers and ordered me to be put in irons,
there in his presence."

"What!" exclaimed Paul, "did he dare that, too?"

"Yes. His object, of course, was to humiliate me - and all of
us. It was stopped by one who came in at the right moment. You
couldn't guess who it was."

"It must a-been Shif'less Sol," said Long Jim, whose mind ran to
physical deeds. "I guess he sent a bullet right into the middle uv
that rascal crew. Sol's the boy to be right on the spot when he's
needed."

Henry laughed.

"No, Jim," he said. "That's a pretty wild guess. It was none
other than Father Montigny, the man whom we helped. He paid us back
sooner than we thought. You ought to have seen him, Paul. He looked
like an avenging angel. He stood there, a single, unarmed man, and
they were afraid of him. I could see fear on every one of their
faces."

Paul's vivid imagination instantly painted the whole scene. It
appealed to him with tremendous power. It was the triumph of mind
and character over force and wickedness.

"I can see Father Montigny now," he said. "A man who always does
right and has no fear whatever of death, is afraid of nothing, either
in this world or the world to come."

"Which gives him a pow'ful sight uv freedom," said Long Jim.

"When he told them to stop they took away their balls and
chain," said Henry, "and sent me back here. Alvarez realized that he
had gone too far, but I think that he fears Father Montigny for other
reasons, too. The priest may put the Governor General on his
guard."

"So we ain't alone," said Long Jim musingly. "Curious how you
git help when you ain't expectin' it. The wicked hev it their way
fur a while, an' then they don't. They don't ever seem able to
finish up their work. Sometimes I think the right is jest like a
river flowin' on in its nateral channel, an' boun' to git to the sea
after a while, no matter what happens. The wrong is all them dams,
an' san' bars an' snags, and brush an' drift-wood that people an'
chance pile up in the way. They do choke up the waters, an' send 'em
around in other channels. They can make a heap uv trouble, but by
and by them waters git to the sea jest the same."

"I hope so, Jim," said Paul.

"Now thar ain't no doubt uv what I say," said Long Jim.. "Take
this case uv ourn. Jest when we need it most fur a thousand miles uv
river travel we git a bee-yu-ti-ful boat, all fitted up with
everything we want. Jest when that Spaniard gits his paws on us, he
don't git his paws on one uv us, an' that's Shif'less Sol out thar in
the woods. An' so long ez Shif'less So! is free out thar in the
woods we're mighty nigh free ourselves. Then, when this same
Spaniard is ready to load irons on Henry in a way that no free-born
man kin stand, in pops a priest who likes us - an' we don't belong to
his church either - an' puts a stop to the whole thing."

While they were talking Francisco Alvarez also was busy with a
kindred theme, as he entertained a guest. That guest was Father
Montigny, to whom he had made up his mind to be courteous, although
he would not condescend to any further apology. He ordered that the
priest should receive food and attention, and that men should look
after and replenish his canoe which was now tied in the bayou. After
all these orders were given, Alvarez sat in the great room of
Beaulieu and smoked the cigarro of his time.

There was a bitter drop in the well of his satisfaction. The
coming of the priest had been unforeseen and unfortunate. He knew
Father Montigny, and Father Montigny knew him. Now how much did
Father Montigny know of his plans? That was the important
question.

While he was yet speaking, Father Montigny, whom a very little
of rest and food always sufficed, entered the room, his manner full
of austerity. Francisco Alvarez rose, all blandness and courtesy.

"Be seated, Father," he said. "It is a poor place that we have
here, but we give you of our best. Who would deserve it more than
you, a man of such long travels and such great hardships in the
holiest of all causes?"

The face of the priest did not relax. He sat down upon one of
the cane chairs and gazed sternly at Alvarez. Truly, it is a
terrible thing to meet the accusing gaze of a man who fears neither
torture, nor death, nor the world to come! The accusation is likely
to be true. Alvarez looked away. Twice within one day he who, with
reason, thought himself so courageous had been forced to yield to the
gaze of another, and his heart was full of angry rebellion. But he
knew that knowledge and power dwelt under the simple black robe of
this man.

"It seems," said Father Montigny, and there was a slight touch
of irony in his tone, "that I came at the right moment."

Francisco Alvarez compelled his face to smile, though his heart
was raging.

"I have already apologized, Father Montigny," he said, "for what
I was about to do. And yet the phrase 'about to do' is wrong. Even
if you had not come I should have repented of myself, and sent away
the irons. I can repeat, too, in my defense that I was provoked
beyond endurance by this youth's insolence."

His tone was silky, light, indolent, as if he would dismiss a
trifle about which too much had been said already. It might have
been convincing to any other man, but he felt the stern, reproving
gaze of Father Montigny still fixed upon him.

"And what of the ring and the professional swordsman?" said the
priest. "Are you to turn a youth to a gladiator, even as the blessed
martyrs were given to the lions and tigers by the Roman pagans! What
of that, Francisco Alvarez? Are such deeds to be done, here, in our
day, in Louisiana, and to pass unchallenged?"

The priest's voice rose and it cut like the sharp edge of a
knife. Never since his boyhood had Francisco Alvarez flushed more
deeply, and he moved uneasily on his cane chair.

"You give it a name that does not belong to it," he said. "It
was play, or not much more. Romildo, the swordsman, had orders not
to hurt him much."

"That may or may not be true, Francisco Alvarez," said the
priest, speaking slowly and precisely. "But I have more to ask you.
What of this plot of yours to set the Indian tribes and a Spanish
force with cannon upon Kaintock? What of your plan to become
Governor General in place of Galvez? What of your intention to make
distant war upon the rebel colonies and therefore commit Spain to an
alliance with England? Answer me, Francisco Alvarez. What of these
things?"

The priest rose from his seat, as he spoke, and lifted that
stern, accusing finger. Alvarez was as still as if struck by
lightning. His great plan known to this man, this man who feared not
even torture, or death, or the world to come! He shrank visibly both
mentally and physically, but then his courage came back under the
spur of dreadful necessity.

"A priest can take great liberties," he said. "Sometimes I
think it scarcely fair that you of the Book may denounce us of the
sword and that we may say nothing in return, although we may be right
and you may be wrong. It is sufficient now for me to tell you that I
do not know what you are talking about. I, the Governor General!
Any man may dream of that! I have done so, and I have no doubt that
many others have done the same. I favor, too, an alliance with
England, as do nearly all the Spanish officers in Louisiana, but I am
a faithful servant of His Majesty, the King, and though I may hold my
opinions, I know of no plot, either against Bernardo Galvez or to
make a war upon Kaintock."

"I have heard you, Francisco Alvarez," said the priest, "but it
is for your actions to prove the truth of your words. See to it,
also, that there is no further cruelty practiced against these men
from Kaintock."

"They are my prisoners," replied Alvarez, "and I mean to hold
them. There you cannot interfere, Father Montigny. They were taken
in arms against us upon our soil of Louisiana, and that they are my
prisoners even you cannot dispute.

"No," replied Father Montigny. "I do not dispute it; at
least not for the present. But if they are held as prisoners they
should be sent to Bernardo Galvez at New Orleans, and not be retained
here."

He walked out without waiting for an answer, and Francisco
Alvarez was glad to see him go. Five minutes later the Spaniard sent
for Braxton Wyatt and the two remained long in consultation.
Meanwhile, something was stirring in the forest not far from
Beaulieu. It was a forest of magnolia, willow, and cypress, and of
oaks, from which hung great solemn festoons of moss. A deep still
bayou cut across it, and here and there were pools of stagnant water,
in which coiling black forms swam.

Night was deepening over the wilderness upon which the estate of
Beaulieu had made only a scratch. Pale moonlight fell over the
drooping green forest and across the deep waters of the bayou. The
something that had stirred resolved itself into the shadowy figure of
a man who came out of the heart of the forest toward its edge. He
walked with a singularly agile step. His moccasined feet made no
noise when they touched the ground and the bushes seemed to part for
the passage of his body.

When the man reached the edge of the forest next to the Chateau
of Beaulieu, he paused for a long time, standing in the shadow of the
trees. Always he looked fixedly at a single building, the log hut,
in which Alvarez held his four prisoners from Kaintock. While he
stood there, stray rays of moonlight coming through the cypresses
fell upon him, revealing a tanned face, yellow hair, and a tall,
athletic form. He did not look like a Spaniard or an Acadian, or one
of the Frenchmen who had emigrated from Canada, or any kind of a West
Indian.

His was certainly an alien presence in those regions. The moon
slid back behind a cloud, the silver rays failed, and the figure of
the man became more indistinct, almost a shadow, thin and impalpable.
Then he bent far over in a stooping position, passed rapidly through
a patch of scrub bushes, and came much nearer to the log prison.

At the edge of the bushes he stopped again and watched the
prison for at least a minute. Two soldiers were on watch in front of
it before the single door, two soldiers in Spanish uniform, who were
suffering from tedium, and who were quite sure, anyway, that unarmed
prisoners could not escape from a one-room building of logs with but
a single door, secured by a huge, oak shutter, and two windows, each
too small to admit the passage of a boy's or man's body.

The two soldiers slouched in their walk, and presently, when
their beats met before the door, they let the butts of their guns
rest on the ground, and exchanged pleasant talk about pretty, dark
girls that they had known in far-away Spain. One boldly lighted a
cigarrito and the other encouraged by his example did likewise.
Hark, what was that? "A lizard in the grass," said Carlos. "Yes,
certainly," said Juan. They continued to smoke their cigarritos
blissfully, and talk of the pretty, dark girls that they had known in
far-away Spain.

As they smoked and talked, and found smoke, talk, and company
pleasant, they did not see a shadow glide swiftly from the bushes and
pass to the rear of the log prison that they were guarding so well.
Nor could they see the shadow, since the building was now between
them, resolve itself again into the figure of a man, who stood
upright against the wall, his face at one of the little slits of
windows.

Their own talk was so pleasant, and the sound of their voices
was such a cure for lonesomeness on a dark night, that they did not
hear the man at the little slit of a window utter a faint warning
hiss. Nor did they hear something a moment later fall with a slight
metalic sound on the bark floor of the prison. The sound was repeated
in an instant, but still they did not hear it, and then the figure of
a man, melting back to a shadow, glided away from the house and into
the bushes and thence to the forest, where it was lost.

Carlos and Juan chatted until their cigarritos were smoked out.
Then they shouldered their muskets and continued the watch that
seemed to them so easy. How could unarmed men escape through such a
thickness of logs? The shadow in the forest was lost to the sight of
any possible Spaniard, but not to the sight of another shadow that
arose from the bushes and flitted after it. The two shadows were now
deep in the forest, but the second hung close on the first, making no
noise, and sinking quickly to the ground, when the other looked
back.

This second shadow, as it passed through a partially open space,
also revealed itself in the moonlight as a man, but a man ghastly and
terrible in appearance. He had a hideous, feline face, and he was
naked, save a breech-cloth at the waist. He carried but a single
weapon, a knife in his ready hand, but the eyes were those of the
most utter savage expecting a speedy prey.

The first shadow reached a little grove free from undergrowth
and stopped. He was about to lie down, rifle by his side, and seek
sleep, but his ear, attuned to the wilderness, caught a faint sound.
It was not the wind among the leaves, nor the gliding of a snake, nor
the chirp of an insect, but a sound that was not a part of the night
harmony. The sensitive ear had given him warning, as the instinct of
an animal warns that an enemy has come.

The first shadow slid from the grove and into the undergrowth,
sank low, and, waiting, caught sight of the second shadow, the man
who pursued. He saw the naked figure, the feline face, and the ready
knife in hand. The skill and wonderful forest intuition of the
second man had been matched by those of the first.

The pursued, when he caught that glimpse of his pursuer, laid
his rifle carefully on the earth, because he did not wish a shot to
be heard, and drew his own knife. Slight as was the sound that he
made the other heard it, turned in a flash, and the two sprang at
each other.

The moonlight streamed for a moment along their knife blades and
then they struck. One stepped back, and remained standing upright.
The other swayed a moment and then fell without a sound, lying upon
his back.

He who lay staring with sightless eyes up at the moon was the
man with the feline face and the body naked save for the cloth at the
waist. The other, unharmed, stood, looking at him a moment or two,
and then plunged deeper into the forest.

Morning dawned. The sun swung up through a terrace of rosy
clouds, and Luiz brought the four their breakfast, callas tous
chauds, other food of La Louisiane, and milk and coffee. They ate
and drank with a great appetite, and it seemed to Luiz that they were
quite cheerful, for which he was truly glad, because one of these men
had saved his life, and the wounded youth who made an especial appeal
to him had been subjected to barbarous treatment. But Paul could use
his injured arm already. His was so healthy that the scratch of the
sword healed fast.

Three hours later Francisco Alvarez and Braxton Wyatt entered
the prison. The renegade was not above showing by his looks that he
rejoiced in his triumph over his enemies, but the face of Alvarez was
without expression.

"I have come to tell you," said the Spaniard, "that you will be
held here subject to my will. But you will not be treated badly. At
such time as I think fit you may be taken to New Orleans."

"It seems that the words of Father Montigny were not to be
despised," said Henry maliciously.

"Father Montigny disposes of nothing here," said Alvarez. "This
is to be done because I think it best."

Then he and Wyatt went out, but that afternoon when Alvarez was
sitting in the cool shadow of the pillared portico, there came to him
a man, dusty, and riding fast, who delivered to him a document sealed
with red seals, and important in appearance.

When Alvarez read the paper he frowned, and then cursed under
his breath. It was written in plain letters and its meaning was
plain, also. It stated that Bernardo Galvez, the Governor General at
New Orleans, had learned that his brave and loyal captain, Don
Francisco Louis Philip Ferdinand Alvarez, held in his possession four
prisoners from Kaintock, persons of daring, whose presence in
Louisiana might be of great significance. Therefore His Excellency,
Bernardo Galvez, Governor General of Louisiana, commanded his trusty
and loyal captain, Don Francisco Louis Philip Ferdinand Alvarez, to
bring the aforesaid four prisoners, from Kaintock, to New Orleans at
once.

"At once!" repeated Alvarez angrily to himself. "That means not
next week but now, and I am compelled to obey. To refuse or to evade
would make a breach too soon."

He sent for Braxton Wyatt and told him of the letter. The
renegade was startled, but he counseled immediate obedience from
motives of policy.

"How could Galvez have known?" said Alvarez. "How could the news
have reached New Orleans so soon?"

"Perhaps the priest has told," suggested Wyatt.

"No, that is impossible. He came from up river, and I am glad
to say that he left again in his canoe this morning. Those Capuchins
to whom he belongs shall be well punished, if I gain the power in
Louisiana. They shall be expelled, every one of them, from New
Orleans, and their old rivals, the Jesuits, shall take their place.
It's one of the first things that I mean to do."

"It would be a wise thing to do," said Braxton Wyatt. He cared
nothing for either Capuchin or Jesuit, but he hated and feared Father
Montigny, and would be glad to know that he was driven from the
country.

"We must start in the morning" said Alvarez. "It will not take
us long to reach New Orleans by the river, and I can spin a tale that
will lull the suspicions of Galvez."

"You can prove many things by me," said Braxton Wyatt
significantly.

"Yes, Senior Wyatt, you are a good lieutenant," said Alvarez,
and he meant it. We will make our preparations to-night and start
with a strong force in the morning. We need not bring the prisoners
forth until we are ready."

Alvarez slept peacefully that night. He had recovered his
spirits, shaken by the arrival of the King's messenger. Aided by the
dexterous renegade, Braxton Wyatt, he would soon persuade Bernardo
Galvez that he had acted for the best in the matter of the men from
Kaintock.

He rose early the next morning and, as a mark of signal favor,
invited Braxton Wyatt to take breakfast with him. While they sat
together Luiz came in with a long face.

"Now what is it, my brave Luiz?" said Alvarez, who was in an
exceeding good humor, "why this saturnine countenance?"

"I beg to report, your Excellency," said Luiz, "that the Natchez
Indian whom they call The Cat has been found dead in the forest, of a
knife thrust that came out behind the shoulder."

"That is bad," said Alvarez. "Have they found out who did
it?"

"No, Your Excellency. There were some signs of a struggle, and
a few traces of foot-steps, but the trail was gone before they had
followed it a dozen yards."

"We have lost a good man," said Alvarez, "a matchless spy and
trailer, but it cannot be helped. I suppose it was a quarrel with
some savage like himself. I would investigate the matter, but we
have not time now. Come, Luiz, we will take out the prisoners, and
then to the boats."

He led the way across the grass to the log house, two sentinels,
again it was Carlos and Juan, walked up and down in front of it, and
the Spanish captain was pleased at their vigilance. He gave them a
very good morning as they saluted respectfully.

"Unlock the door, Luiz," he said. "This is a strong prison and a
close one. I've no doubt our gallants from Kaintock, where there is
much room, will be glad to be outside again."

Luiz inserted the huge iron key, turned it in the lock, and
threw wide the door. Alvarez looked in, and then uttered a cry so
charged with rage that even Braxton Wyatt was startled. He pressed
close up to his chief and gazed over his shoulder. The prison was
empty!

"What does this mean?" shouted Alvarez at the trembling
sentinels. "The prisoners have escaped! Idiots! Blind men! What
have you been doing? Have you helped them yourselves? If it is so,
both of you shall be shot!"

The unfortunates, Carlos and Juan, stared at the empty prison
and crossed themselves. "Witchcraft," muttered Carlos, the readier
of the two. "We have watched faithfully all night, my captain. We
saw nothing, we heard nothing, and the door was locked, as you
behold. We are honest men and we have been faithful!"

Braxton Wyatt pointed to the dark corner of the prison. "See,"
he said, "that is how they went."

Heaped against the wall was a pile of dirt, and in its place a
hole large enough to admit a man's body led under the logs. The
Spaniard cried out in rage again.

"We see how they have gone!" he exclaimed, "but in what way did
they do it? Who has helped them!"

Braxton Wyatt examined the tunnel. The bottom logs of the cabin
rested squarely upon the ground, after the primitive fashion. The
floor was of bark, and a section of this had been lifted. The
prisoners had then dug their hole under the log.

"It was done with metal tools of some kind," said Wyatt. "But
they had nothing when we locked them in here. I can swear to that,
as I was one of those who searched them well."

"Then they must have had help!" exclaimed Alvarez, and again he
turned fiercely upon the sentinels, but Braxton Wyatt intervened. He
was glad that he could patronize Alvarez at least once and show
himself to be the superior in discernment.

"These men, Your Excellency, of whom I told you to beware, were
five," he said. "We captured four, therefore one was left, and I
said beware of him, even alone. He is a fellow of great cunning and
skill who would try anything. He has come for his comrades, and he
has taken them away with him."

"It must be as you say," said Alvarez, seeking now to hide his
anger. He was not sorry on the whole that the sentinels were
obviously innocent, as he needed as many adherents as he could keep,
in order to carry out his great plan.

"Knowing that the window was too small to admit them, we watched
only the front where the door is, Your Excellency," said Carlos,
still trembling. "Who would have dreamed that these men of Kaintock
were magicians, that without picks or shovels they could burrow under
the earth and be gone like ghosts."

"Begone yourselves!" exclaimed Alvarez. "Get ready for the boats
at once!"

Carlos and Juan fled away, glad to escape the sight of their
master.

"Now that they have escaped, what do you think they will do?"
asked Alvarez of Wyatt.

"They will go to New Orleans," replied the renegade promptly,
"and appear before Bernardo Galvez to denounce you."

"Then our own start must not be delayed a moment!" exclaimed
Alvarez.

In an hour he and his force were ready to embark.







                                                                                    

 

 

Go back to the Altsheler page for related resources.
Move on to the next section in this etext, Chapter XIII. The White Stallion.

The Free Rangers

Chapter I. The Call
Chapter II. A Forest Envoy
Chapter III. An Invisible Chase
Chapter IV. Taking a Galleon
Chapter V. On the Great River
Chapter VI. Battle and Storm
Chapter VII. The Lone Voyager
Chapter VIII. The Chateau of Beaulieu
Chapter IX. Paul and the Spaniard
Chapter X. A Barbaric Ordeal
Chapter XI. The Spaniard's Offer
Chapter XII. The Shadow in the Forest
Chapter XIII. The White Stallion
Chapter XIV. New Orleans
Chapter XV. Before Bernardo Galvez
Chapter XVI. In Prison
Chapter XVII. The Flaw in the Armor
Chapter XVIII. Northward With the Fleet
Chapter XIX. The Battle of the Bank
Chapter XX. The Battle of the Bayou
Chapter XXI. The Defense of the Five
Chapter XXII. The Chosen Task

 


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