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"Ma.s.s' Morgan talk sabbage. Want to flog Pomp."
"No, no, he does not, and I want you to look and tell me."
"Pomp look and tell Ma.s.s' George, but now too 'leepy, an' eye all 'tick togedder much, tell Ma.s.s' Morgan."
"Then tell me," I whispered.
He looked again, then seemed suddenly to grow interested, and as excited as we were, as he caught my arm.
"Dem Injum!"
"There, Master George. Quick! Fetch the captain."
"No, no, fire and give the alarm," I said.
"No. Better not. It will alarm them too. Go and fetch the captain."
I hurried away, closely followed by Pomp, and luckily found my father on his way to go the rounds in company with Colonel Preston.
I told them what we had seen, and they hurried with us to the spot where Morgan was on duty.
"It can only mean one thing," said the colonel, excitedly. "They would not trouble much about plunder."
"What do you mean then?" said my father; "a point from which to attack?"
"No," said the colonel, hoa.r.s.ely. "That!"
As he said the words, there was a faint gleam of light in the direction of the house, a flash, then quite a burst of ruddy flame; and by the time we reached Morgan, his face was lit up by the glow as the wooden structure blazed away rapidly, and the flames like great golden tongues licked at porch and veranda; while from one window, which showed quite plainly, so great a volume rushed out that it showed where the house had been fired.
There was no need to sound an alarm, the great golden fire-flag which floated in the darkness of the night brought every man out to gaze; and as the flames mounted higher, illuminating the settlement far and near, the other houses stood forth plainly, the trees seemed turned to gold, and the wavy corn and cane came into sight and died out again in a way wonderful to behold.
"Preston! Bruton!" said a firm voice, "round to the men. Every one on his guard. Reserves in the centre ready. This is a ruse to take our attention prior to an attack."
I looked up admiringly at the stern old man, who gave his orders so promptly, and then saw my father and the colonel hurry off, while the General shaded his eyes, and looked keenly over the place.
"No," he said, as if to himself, as he drew back. "Ah, you boys! Your eyes are young and sharp. Try if you can see the Indians crossing along by the edges of either of the plantations, or coming this way."
"No, sir," I said, quickly. "I have been trying to see them."
"Injum gone round dah," said Pomp, pointing.
"Ah!" cried the general; "you saw them?"
"Yes; gone dat big house."
"Mine," said the General, with a quick catching of the breath. "Yes; there is no doubt about that."
For as we were speaking, a tiny tongue of fire began to creep up one of the pine-tree supports of the porch, which, quite invisible before, now stood out plainly, and in a very few minutes was blazing furiously, while a light from the back showed that it had been fired there as well.
"Watch for the men who are doing this, my boy," said the General.
"Here, sentry, can you use that piece of yours?"
"Middlin', sir, middlin'," replied Morgan.
"Then wait till you see one of the wretches, and try and bring him down.
No," he said, directly after, "it would be useless. It would have no good effect."
The Indians who had fired the General's house must have stolen off by the back, for Pomp did not see them go; and we were not long in learning that they were busy still, for at intervals of only a few minutes, six more of the best of the settlers' houses were blazing furiously, lighting up the whole of the clearings, while the sparks ascended in great clouds, and floated gently away as if a fall of snow had been suddenly turned into gold.
Overhead a cloud of wreathing smoke rolled over and over, turned ruddy by the burning homes, as if a second fire were in the heavens, and reflecting the light so that the block-house and the enc.u.mbered enclosure, with its piles of boxes and rough furniture, with here and there a tent, rapidly grew lighter and lighter, but with shadows of intense blackness marked out where the light did not fall.
So clearly did the defenders' faces show now, as they sheltered behind the defences, that had there been high ground near that the enemy could have held, our position would have been bad, so excellent a mark should we have made for the Indian arrows. But, fortunately for us, save where Colonel Preston's house stood, the land round the fort was absolutely flat, and the Indians could not very well get into position for attack without exposing themselves to a rain of bullets.
Our officers were soon fairly well satisfied that if an attack were coming it would be from the dark side, and there our forces were concentrated to stand waiting, while scarcely any one but the sentries stood at the fence nearest the house and watched the flames.
Had the houses been together, the whole place would have been rapidly burned down; but, fortunately for us, each little house stood in the middle of its own plot, fifty, a hundred, and sometimes several hundred yards apart, so that they burned as so many separate fires, others springing up in various directions till twelve were blazing, and no effort could be made to check the flames.
"It would only be sending men to their death," I heard my father say as I stood near, hot with impotent rage.
"Yes. It is impossible to do anything," replied the General. "If we were free to act, our whole force could not save the houses; and I cannot set the men to work with their buckets in the blazing light, to be shot down by the arrows of the Indians hidden somewhere in the darkness."
As the twelfth house blazed up, with the Indians still cunningly keeping out of sight and crawling among the trees or crops, we all stood watching the houses left, wondering which would be the next to burst out into flame; but now we waited in vain, for the destruction had ceased as far as fresh additions were concerned. But the doomed dwellings crackled and flashed, and every time a beam or a ceiling fell in, the heavens were brilliant with the great bursts of sparks, which eddied and rose higher and higher, to join the great cloud floating quietly toward the now golden river.
Still there was no sign of Indians; and at last my father walked round to the other side to join the most keen-sighted of our men in the look-out for the enemy, who was momentarily expected to be detected creeping up.
From where I now stood I could hear the buzz of voices in the block-house, where the whole of the occupants were watching the destruction--in twelve of the cases this being the sweeping away of a treasured and peaceful home.
By degrees the exclamations and words of sorrow--more than once mingled with sobs--grew fainter, and there was a terrible silence, through which came the sharp hissing and crackling of the burning wood, with again and again a dull thud as some beam went down. At such times the flames seemed to glow with twofold brilliancy, and the sparks were doubled in size, while after a few minutes the fire, that had been temporarily damped, blazed up higher than ever.
"If we only had the orders to shoot," I heard one man say to another, "I wouldn't care then."
"But there's nothing to shoot at," was the reply. "I say, though, I've been thinking."
"What?"
"Suppose that they could manage to set fire to the block-house here."
"Don't talk about it, man. What? With those women and children there!
No; we must shelter them from that, even if we die for it."
I was standing with my father when Colonel Preston's house had been reduced to a glowing heap of embers, and he came up to my father to say in a light, cheerful way--
"Ah, I've been looking for you, Bruton. I wanted to tell you that I thoroughly understand now what your feelings must have been like the other night."
"Don't talk about it," said my father.
"Oh, I don't know," said the colonel. "It's painful, but one knows the worst."