Rogers had been shooting at a mark that morning with Lieutenant Irwin of the regulars. The enemy had overheard the firing and ambuscaded us.
Putnam was leading his men. As he left the clearing, and entered the forest, the yelling and firing began. Several Indians rushed at him. His gun missed fire, and he with three or four men was captured by the Indians.
[Sidenote: BEN WRESTLES WITH AN INDIAN]
The redskins forced the Connecticut men back, the light infantry held their ground, and we of the Rangers struggled through the bushes as best we could, to get to the front.
Every one fought for himself. I had fired my gun just as I reached an open s.p.a.ce, and seeing a number of men on the other side, I started to run across to them.
Of course I should have reloaded before I attempted this; but one does not always do the right thing, especially in a hot fight. I had gone but a short distance when an Indian fired at me from the bushes, and then ran at me with a tomahawk.
I turned, parried the blow with my gun, and the tomahawk was struck from his hand.
We grappled each other. He was a fine, large man, decked out with feathers and warpaint, and was the strongest and most active man I ever got hold of. He seemed to be made of steel springs. As I struggled with him, I couldn"t help thinking, "What a splendid wrestler you would make if you only knew the tricks!" I gave him Jonas Parker"s best throw, and we came down together, and I on top.
The fall knocked the wind out of him and partly stunned him. I got hold of my hatchet and brained him. I had not noticed or thought of anything but him. But now I heard a crack! crack! zip! zip!
As I started to run I felt a pain in my left arm, and also in my left leg. But I got off to our men among the bushes, and they bound my arm up, and put a bandage round my leg.
I saw an Indian leap in among the regulars, and kill two men with his hatchet. Then he jumped on a log and taunted our men. A soldier struck at him with his gun and made him bleed. The Indian was returning the blow with his tomahawk, when Rogers shot him.
I was still able to load and shoot. We fought some two hours before they gave way. At last they broke up into little parties and ran off. We remained and buried our dead.
[Sidenote: BEN WOUNDED]
We lost about fifty men. The French and Indians left over one hundred dead on the field; and their loss was much heavier, for they carried off most of their dead.
My wounds now made me so lame and stiff that I could not walk, and was carried on a litter of branches.
Rogers came alongside, and said: "That was a mighty pretty wrestle, Comee. Big stakes up too; glad you won. But I believe if that Indian had been taught the tricks like a Christian, you would have met your match."
"That"s just what I was thinking myself, major, all the time I was wrestling with him. It"s an awful pity to have to kill a man like that."
"Oh, pshaw, nothing but a cussed redskin. That makes one less of the vermin. All of us on both sides round that clearing watched you and him, and did not pay much attention to each other till it was over. When you killed him, and got up, they fired at you, and we began to fire at them again. But for a short time all of us watched you. He must have been a big Injun among them."
"Major, where is Amos Locke?"
"I don"t know. I don"t think he was among the killed or wounded; and if he isn"t with our party here, he"s probably a prisoner, perhaps roasted and scalped by this time."
Edmund came up later. "I"m afraid, Ben, we shan"t see Amos again. He and I were together for a while. But in running through the bushes we got separated, and I can"t find him among our men. If he were with our party, he would have come to us by this time."
"Poor fellow! I can"t bear to think of him in the woods, dead; or worse still, being tortured by the Indians. He may turn up again, after all."
When we arrived at camp at Lake George, we found that it had been strongly intrenched.
The camp was dirty and filthy, particularly the portion occupied by the provincials, for our officers were ignorant in such matters.
On the way to and from Ticonderoga the men had drunk a good deal of lake water, and this with the grief over our defeat and the filthy state of our camp had caused much sickness.
[Sidenote: PROVINCIALS BEAT REGULARS SHOOTING]
Having been out in the woods on scouts, I was in good condition, and my wounds began to heal quickly. Edmund took me over to see the man we had rescued at Ticonderoga. We found him doing well, cursing the French, and aching to get at them again. We looked up our kinsmen Hector and Donald and struck up a great friendship with the men of the Black Watch. Hector and Donald were both G.o.d-fearing men, and went with us several times to hear Parson Cleveland of Bagley"s regiment preach. He gave us sermons full of meat, and we enjoyed them.
The regulars and provincials did not get on well together. The Englishmen looked down on the provincial officers and men, and this caused much hard feeling. One day in August, the regulars and provincials practised firing with great guns at a target in the lake, and our men beat the regulars thoroughly. That pleased us and made the old country men feel pretty glum. Although the regulars scorned the provincials, yet they held the Rangers in high esteem.
"Why is it, Donald," I asked, "that the regulars think so well of us, and laugh at the rest of the provincials?"
"Well, man, one reason is, because you"re no province soldiers at all, being in the direct pay and service of the King, like ourselves. And then you"re a braw set of men, and ken this fighting in the woods a deal better than we do, and we know it. But the provincials are gawks from country towns, without discipline, and with no more knowledge of the woods than we have."
"But Edmund and I are from a town like them."
"You"ve keppit gude company, since you"ve been with the Rangers, and have been long enough with them to look and act like the rest of them.
One would take you for hunters and woodsmen."
"But the provincials were the last to leave the field at Ticonderoga."
"I"m no denying it. They fought well."
"And for country greenhorns, they did pretty well with the cannon the other day."
"Aye, man, I"m no saying they didn"t. I"m a truthful man, and I maun say I was sair disappointed when they beat us shooting." And he changed the subject.
[Sidenote: LAKE GEORGE]
Though our camp was foul, yet the lake was the fairest spot I have ever seen--dotted with islands and hemmed in by mountains. Even Hector and Donald said it was "a bonny place, just for all the world like old Scotland."
We used to row on the lake, among the pretty islands, or lie in the boat and gaze at the mountains and the clouds floating over them. It seemed absurd that two great bodies of men should come to such a serene, peaceful place, and occupy their time killing each other.
About two weeks after the Fort Anne fight, Edmund and I had a chance to get away from camp for several hours, and started off with "Bijah Thompson of Woburn, whom we found in Colonel Nichols"s regiment.
We pulled out on the lake, went in swimming, and then rowed slowly along with our fish-lines trailing behind. But the fish didn"t bite. We cut across the upper part of the lake, and as we approached the further side, Edmund said: "What"s that over on the sh.o.r.e, Ben? There"s some one there who seems to be making motions to us."
We rowed in that direction, and saw a man waving his arms, and heard a "h.e.l.lo!"
"That"s no Frenchman. That"s one of our men who has got lost in the woods, or who has escaped from the French."
As we came nearer, we saw that he was almost naked. We pulled toward the sh.o.r.e, and beheld a pitiful, haggard fellow, with nothing on him but a pair of ragged breeches and a tattered shirt. We were about to ask him some questions, when he exclaimed:--
"B-B-Ben and Edmund, and "B-Bijah Thompson too, by gum! An-An-And ain"t I glad to see you?"
"Amos Locke! And we"re glad to see you, too. Where have you been?"
"B-Been? I"ve been in h-h.e.l.l. Say, have you got anything to eat? I"m starved."
We had a lot of rye and Injun bread, cheese, and boiled beef with us. We brought it out, and Amos gulped away at it like a hungry dog. We also had a wooden bottle into which we had poured our rations of rum, and then filled it up with water. We pa.s.sed it to Amos, and he took a long swig at it. As he took it away from his mouth, a happy grin came over his face.
[Sidenote: AMOS COMES BACK]