The Little Red Foot. Chambers Robert William

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Dayton's regiment of the New York Line were making camp, and I saw their baggage waggons drive up from the town below and go into park to the east of the Hall, where cattle were lying in the new grass.

      An officer of the Palatine Regiment carrying a torch came up to Joe Scott, where our little company stood at ease along the hedge fence.

      "What troops are these, sir?" he inquired, indicating us with a nervous gesture.

      And when he was informed:

      "Oho!" said he, "there should be material for rangers among your farmer-militia. Pick me two men for Colonel Dayton who live by rifle and trap and who know the wilderness from Albany to the Lakes."

      So our captain told off Nick Stoner and me, and we stepped out of the ranks into the red torch-glow.

      "Thank you, sir," said the Palatine officer to our Captain. And to us: "Follow me, lads."

      He was a brisk, handsome and smartly uniformed officer of militia; and his cheerful demeanor heartened me who had lately witnessed such humiliations and disgrace.

      We followed him through the stockade gate and into the great house, so perfectly familiar to me in happier days.

      Excepting for the noise and confusion of officers coming and going, there was no disorder within; the beautiful furniture stood ranged in stately symmetry; the pictures hung on the walls; but I saw no silver anywhere, and all the candlesticks were pewter.

      As we came to the library, an officer in the uniform of a colonel of the Continental Line turned from a group of men crowded around the centre table, on which lay a map. Nick Stoner and I saluted his epaulettes.

      He came close to us and searched our faces coolly enough, as a farmer inspects an offered horse.

      "This is young Nick Stoner, of Fonda's Bush, sir," said the Palatine officer.

      "Oh," said the Colonel drily, "I have heard of the Stoner boys. And what may be your name?" he inquired, fastening his piercing eyes on mine.

      "John Drogue, sir."

      "I have heard of you, also," he remarked, more drily still.

      For a full minute, it seemed to me, he scrutinized me from head to foot with a sort of curiosity almost brutal. Then, on his features a fine smile softened what had seemed insolence. With a glance he dismissed the Palatine, motioned us to follow him, and we three entered the drawing-room across the hall, which was lighted but empty.

      "Mr. Drogue," said he, "I am Colonel Dayton; and I have in my personal baggage a lieutenant's commission for you from our good Governor, procured, I believe, through the solicitation of our mutual and most excellent friend, Lord Stirling."

      I stood astonished to learn of my preferment, never dreaming nor even wishing for military rank, but perfectly content to carry the sack of a private soldier in this most just of all wars. And as for Billy Alexander remembering to so serve me, I was still more amazed. For Lord Stirling was already a general officer in His Excellency's new army, and I never expected him to remember me amid the desperate anxieties of his new position.

      "Mr. Drogue," said Dayton, "you, I believe, are the only example among the gentry of Tryon County who has openly embraced the cause of our thirteen colonies. I do not include the Albany Patroon; I speak only of the nobility and gentry of this county… And it took courage to turn your back upon your own caste."

      "It would have taken more to turn against my own countrymen, sir."

      He smiled. "Come, sir, were you not sometime Brent-Meester to Sir William?"

      "Yes, sir."

      "Then you should know the forest, Mr. Drogue."

      "I do know it."

      "So General Schuyler has informed me."

      He clasped his gloved hands behind his back and began to pace to and fro, his absent glances on the window candles. Presently he halted:

      "Sir John is fled. Did you know it?" he said abruptly.

      I felt the hot shame burn my face to the roots of my hair.

      "Broke his parole of honour and gone off," added Dayton. "Where do you suppose he is making for with his Tories and Highlanders?"

      I could scarcely speak, so mortified was I that a gentleman of my own class could have so foully conducted. But I made out to say that Sir John, no doubt, was traveling toward Canada. "Certainly," said the Colonel; "but which route?"

      "God knows, sir. By the Sacandaga and the Lakes, no doubt."

      "Could he go by Saratoga and the top o' the Hudson?"

      "It is a pathless wilderness."

      "Yes. And still I think the rogue went that way. I have rangers out looking for signs of him beyond Ballston. Also, I sent half a battalion toward the Sacandaga. Of course Albany Royalists warned him of my coming; I couldn't prevent that, nor could Schuyler, no, nor the very devil himself!

      "And here am I at the Hall, and the fox stole away to the Canadas. And what now to do I know not… Do you?"

      He shot the question in my face point blank; and I stood dumb for a minute, striving to collect and marshall any ideas that might bear upon so urgent a matter.

      "Colonel," said I, "unless the British hold Champlain, Sir John would scarcely risk a flight in that direction. No. He would prefer to plunge into the wilderness and travel by Oswegatchi."

      "Do you so believe, Mr. Drogue?"

      I considered a moment more; then:

      "Yet, if Guy Johnson's Indians have come down toward the Sacandaga to protect him – knowing that he had meant to flee – "

      I looked at Dayton, then turned to Nick.

      "What think you, Nick?" I demanded.

      "By God," he blurted out, "I am of that mind too! Only a madman would attempt the wilderness by Oswegatchi; and I wager that Sir John is already beyond the Sacandaga and making for the Canadas on the old Mohawk war-trail!"

      Colonel Dayton laid one hand on my shoulder:

      "Mr. Drogue," said he, "we have militia and partizans more than sufficient in Tryon. What we need are more regulars, too; but most of all, and in this crisis, we need rangers. God alone knows what is coming upon Tryon County from the North, – what evil is breeding there, – what sinister forces are gathering to overwhelm these defenceless settlements.

      "We have scarcely a fort on this frontier, scarcely a block house. Every town and village and hamlet north of Albany is unprotected; every lonely settler is now at the mercy of this unknown and monstrous menace which is gathering like a thundercloud in the North.

      "Regular regiments require time to muster; the militia have yet to prove their worth; partizans, minute men, alarm companies – the value of all these remains a question still. Damn it, I want rangers! I want them now!"

      He began to stride about the room again in his perplexity, but presently came back to where we stood.

      "How many rifles in your company from Fonda's Bush?" he demanded.

      I

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