He stood braced, two warriors grasping him. The drum suddenly boomed with a new note, the warriors shoved him--"Go!" The air trembled with the expectant clamor. But Simon, a b.l.o.o.d.y white-skinned giant, veered aside. He avoided the butcher-knives; he struck for the clear, the lines broke in furious pursuit, headed him off, he doubled like a rabbit, doubled again, sighted an open place, felled two Indians with his fists, headed for the opening, was tackled, stumbled under the blows, recovered, lunged on, and gasping clutched the post at the council-house doorway. It was sanctuary.
He was seized none too kindly, wrenched from the post, and with his arms bound was seated under a guard, outside the council-house, while the council of chiefs, surrounded by squatting warriors, voted upon whether to burn him now or later.
The white man came out to bring him the news.
"You are to be taken to Wakatomica."
That was another Shawnee town, about seventy miles north.
"What will they do with me there?" Simon asked.
"Burn you, by thunder," the white man snarled; and swore at him, and strode away as angrily as any of the red men.
All the Black Fish people, whatever their color, evidently were bent upon the destruction of Simon. A great pother, this, over the theft of a few horses, taken as the spoil of war! But it was not the horses alone that counted. There was the escape of Big Turtle, and the defeat at Boonesborough, and the shooting by Simon of the two Indians on the pony, and to cap the climax, there was his nerve in taking horses from the town pound, under the very noses of the Shawnee warriors.
Simon cogitated. The council broke up and to his alarm he was treated more kindly. He was unbound, his clothes were given back to him, and he was left unguarded. That looked bad; it meant that he was being saved for the stake. The white Indian, had spoken truly.
A firm resolve surged in his breast. If he could but plunge into another thicket, on the way to Wakatomica, he might yet escape. And if they recaptured him, why, the fire could be no hotter for that. He had a fighting chance.
The Shawnees did not delay. Within a half hour a large band of the chiefs and warriors started out, he in their midst. Several times, on the way, he almost darted aside--and each time his heart failed him.
He dreaded more beatings--he was very sore and worn.
But after they had marched a distance unknown to him, although it seemed long, they commenced to beat their drum, and raise the scalp halloo. The next village was near; they were calling for the gauntlet, and the stake. This made his flesh cringe, and p.r.i.c.ked him to action.
Now, or never! With a great spring and a wild whoop he bolted into the brush.
He tore through; his sudden strength was that of a buffalo, his speed that of a stag. He was running for his life; and he was getting free, too, for they did not catch him. He left them behind, their pursuit whoops grew m.u.f.fled and uncertain, he had the wide forest before him, and hope swelled; he had distanced bullet and horse and foot. Then, full tilt he fairly rammed into the very midst of a party of other Shawnees, who had come out from the village.
It was a sickening disappointment. He quit, breathless, and they seized him, put a rope around his neck, this time, and led him to the town.
The village was Pickaway or Piqua, just south of present Springfield in west central Ohio, on the road to Wakatomica. They tied him to a post in front of the council-house here, and held another debate. After that the village and its visitors danced around him and threatened him and scolded him, until late at night. Simon really did not care. He had done his best, they might do their worst.
In the morning he was taken on up to Wakatomica. It was a larger town.
On this trip he had been closely watched; and here he was punished by the gauntlet in earnest. It about finished him. Then they painted him black, the death color. Half clothed, battered and spent, he was sitting upon the dirt floor of the bark council-house, while the Shawnees squatted in a circle and discussed the next event (which probably was to be the burning at the stake), when a new party entered the doorway.
They were three white men in Indian garb, a white woman and seven children as prisoners, and one Indian bearing a bunch of seven fresh scalps!
The woman"s name proved to be Mrs. Mark Kennedy. A pitiable object she was, too. Simon recognized the three white men: Simon Girty himself (his scout-partner at Fort Pitt), James Girty, a brother, and John Ward--all squaw-men who were aiding the Shawnees against the Americans.
None of them appeared to know him; and before they spoke to him he was put outside, while the council heard their report and decided what to do with the women and children.
Surely, Simon Butler-Kenton realized that he was in a very nest of trouble. The council-talk continued for a long, long time. It was late in the afternoon before he was hauled inside again, to hear his fate p.r.o.nounced. He had given up hope. He could expect mercy from the Girtys least of all. They had deserted the American service in a huff, and were noted as the bitterest enemies of everything and everybody connected with it. Their hearts were hot and red.
He was greeted with a general, savage scowl. Simon Girty pointed to a dirty blanket spread upon the floor.
"Sit down."
Simon the victim tottered a moment; the insulting tone angered him.
Girty grabbed him by the shoulder and forced him down.
"How many soldiers are there in Kentucky?"
"I don"t know. I"m only a private and it"s not my business to know. I can tell you the number of officers and you can judge for yourself."
"Do you know Captain Stuart?"
Captain Stuart was a leader of the Virginia militia, had tried to save the life of Chief Corn-stalk at the Point Pleasant fort, and had defended settlements against the Shawnees.
"I know him well. He is an old friend."
"What is your name?"
"Simon Butler."
Girty stared as if paralyzed. Simon Butler! This wretched man Simon Butler, the young comrade whom he had loved when they were scouts together, back "home"!
With a strange choked cry he rushed from his seat and hugged him.
"Butler! You? I"ve got to save you."
He turned upon the astonished warriors, who did not understand. He made an earnest speech, in the Shawnee tongue, with many gestures.
Simon caught only the drift of it, but Girty the renegade was arguing for the life of a friend. He explained that here was a man as dear to him as a brother. They had traveled the same trail, slept under the same blanket, lived in the same house. He had never asked a favor before. He had been with them three years and helped them. Now he wished only the life of this man, his former brother.
Several of the older chiefs grunted approval. Simon"s heart rose. But others spoke opposing. They said that the council already had decided; the Shawnees should not change their minds like squaws. Here was a very bad man. He had taken scalps, had stolen their horses, had flashed a gun at them when they tried to get their horses back again.
He was too bad to be a Shawnee. He was from Kentucky, and henceforth all Kentuckians were to be killed. Even Captain Boone had deceived them. Besides, people had come to Wakatomica, to see the fun, and ought not to be disappointed!
Simon"s heart fell.
Girty leaped up and spoke again, at length. He was answered. The debate lasted for an hour and a half. The council proceeded to a vote.
The war-club was pa.s.sed from hand to hand. Those who struck the floor with it, voted for death. Those who merely pa.s.sed it on, voted for life. An old man, sitting in the center, kept tally by cutting notches in the two edges of a stick--one series of notches for the yeas, one series for the nays.
Simon watched intently. He dared not show any sign of joy, but his heart thrilled to bursting when he saw that the nays were winning. The old man announced the result. Simon Girty turned to Simon Butler.
"Well, my friend, you are safe. Come with me."
It was the shortest speech yet, and the best.
He led Simon outside. No Indian opposed. He took him to the trader"s store and fitted him with moccasins, leggins, shirt, a handkerchief for his neck and another for his head. Took him home; had his own squaw dress the wounds from club and knife and switch. Made him one of the family.
For twenty-one days Simon lived in clover. The Indians all treated him kindly. He wandered where he pleased, in the neighborhood. It seemed too good to be true.
At the end of the blissful three weeks, he and Simon his friend were at Solomon"s Town, a short distance from Wakatomica. They heard a shrill whoop; an Indian came running from Wakatomica. The heart of Simon Butler sank again. He did not like whoops in that tone of voice, and the Indian was signaling _them_.
"It"s the distress halloo. We are summoned to the council-house," said Simon Girty. "We must go at once."
They and their friend Red Pole, a Shawnee, went to meet the runner. He shook hands with Red Pole and Simon Girty, but he refused Simon Butler"s hand and scowled upon him.
Matters looked bad once more. Fortune was playing tricks, still.
Matters looked worse in the council-house. The place was thronged with chiefs and warriors. There were a number of strange chiefs. Hands were shaken, but not the hand of Simon. He received only scowls.