■HBIh k Q| \#f E'ji H I 4 1 h L ipgj • • <3 ^ o /r* »« y. , nlT ^ :;;i ia* m 9 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE future was mercifully hidden, — the hardships of the past winter were already forgotten, — the present was theirs ; seldom having experienced serious trouble it did not enter into their thoughts, and meanwhile they enjoyed themselves as those by whom misfortune is unlooked-for only can, — their industry and seeming security, their unstudied attitudes and care- lessly perfect poses, adding but another charm to the many beauties about them. 20 CHAPTER II. S eated thus, in half dreamy con- tent, they were chatting to- gether in the low, quiet tones which characterize the intercourse of Indian families, when two young men of the absent bark party were seen running at full speed along the main road towards the encampment. Unexpected as was this arrival the Micmacs continued their conver- sation, and although the louder tones of the squaws betrayed both anxiety and excitement the men neither evinced curiosity nor ceased for a moment their tranquil labor. Breath- less and almost exhausted the run- ners reached the centre of the group on the village green, and looking 21 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE round for a moment on the peaceful scene about them, awaited from their elders the signal to speak. Then, questioned by the chief, they told the reason of their sudden return. On the evening of the preceding day while the bark party was leisurely making its way through the forest, one of its leaders had heard the low sound of approaching voices, and hastily informing his comrades they had concealed them- selves in the adjoining brushwood. A few moments later they were astounded to see a body of strangers, dressed in war paint, moving rapidly along the path towards the Baie. Such was the news brought by the young men to the circle collected about them, and in an instant the scene changed to one of anguish and 22 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE confusion. Unused to war and its terrors, the frightened squaws uttered cries of alarm, and surrounded by clinging children or pressing the little ones in the “naganes” to their bosoms, threw themselves weeping into the huts as if in them to seek an instant refuge. But though knowing well the full import of tidings like these, the Micmac war- riors, with the stoicism of their race, gave no evidence of surprise or fear. “ Almouts ! ” — “ The dogs ! " — was their contemptuous ejaculation, and while the frail wigwams resounded with piteous sobbing, the fathers of the tribe calmly but rapidly took counsel how best to meet the un- looked for danger. The invaders, said to be numerous, were advancing along one of the 23 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE principal pathways of the forest, a route in constant use leading direct- ly to the village, and according to the calculations of the two runners, would reach the Baie du Bic at an early hour that same evening. The other members of the bark party had remained in the woods to keep watch on the enemy, and to give notice of their approach some hours in advance. What was to be done? Immediate action was necessary as hardly eight hours intervened be- tween the present moment and that when the cry of battle would echo through the woods. As the intruders were approaching by land, a way of escape both simple and safe would under other circumstances have been open, namely, to descend the St. Lawrence in canoes, and join the 24 THE ISLE OF THE MASS A CEE tribe’s encampment at Matane. To carry out this plan, however, a canoe was necessary for each family, and the villagers possessed at the time but five old ones which had recently been repaired, and quite sufficed for the peaceful life that had been theirs an hour before. Flight by land, with old men, women, and children, in presence of a party of war, was plainly impos- sible. Few were the moments left for consideration, speedily the decision of the warriors was taken, and with- out losing further time, the five canoes — equipped and well stocked with provisions — were given to sev- eral of the most aged men of the tribe, under whose charge the women who would soon become 25 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE mothers and those with babes at the breast, were sent down the St. Law- rence to the village of their brethren at Matane. In this way about thirty souls, the most helpless and deserving of pity, were with- drawn from the anguish of the moment and the perils of the future. For those left behind there now only remained to resolve to conquer, or, if die they must, to die fighting bravely in defence of their native soil. Such was the determination taken by the Micmacs, and immedi- ately all possible preparations were made for offering a desperate resis- tance to the invaders. While all this was taking place in the unfortunate encampment, the new comers advanced cautiously but with rapidity through the forest. 26 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE Their route lay along a well de- fined path, crossing a mountainous but easily travelled country which presented on the way neither lakes nor large rivers capable of causing serious delay. The most difficult part of the road was to be met with in the immediate neighborhood of the Baie, but there numerous path- ways circling in the ravines of the mountains and converging towards the village, pathways along which the Micmacs passed daily in going to the adjacent woods for such game as they required, offered to the in- vaders not only an easy way of approach, but incalculable advantages for an attack like that which was meditated. 3 7 CHAPTER III. F rom an intimate knowledge of the ground, and profiting by the confidence of the strangers who in no wise suspected the pres- ence of scouts around them, the Micmacs remaining in the woods had been able to make themselves perfectly acquainted with all that it was important for them to know. On the night of the departure of the two runners for the encampment at Bic, the scouts had easily dis- covered that the party they were watching was a body of Iroquois, bent on pillage, and composed of about a hundred warriors. This band was, in all probability, a de- tachment from one of the great 28 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE expeditions which, at this period, and for a long time after, the Iro- quois nations used to send into the valley of the St. Lawrence. Very rarely did the Iroquois take any other route than that of the St. Lawrence when they ventured so far into the country of their Northern neighbors, for this vast region was to them a veritable pays inconnu, and it would have been necessary, moreover, to cross the territory of the Abenaquis, a valiant and war- like tribe of the Algonquin nation, who would not allow easy passage to the foes of their race. Frequently, however, after having coasted along the St. Lawrence shores, the Iroquois pushed up the streams of the larger tributary rivers, either to hunt, when they needed 29 '"i-NA.iltW"" THE ISLE OP THE MASSACRE provisions, or to raid the villages and scattered settlements of the interior. Aided by their acute observation, and with that marvellous intuition natural to Indians, the Micmacs at once knew that their enemies had reached the interior by the large river which to-day is called the Trois Pistoles, and had then ascended a small river tributary to it now known as the Bouabouscache, until, finding the “ portages ” becoming numerous, and discovering on the banks of the Bouabouscache the “ chemin plaque, ” or blazed forest path recently used by the Micmacs, they had left their canoes in order to follow the tracks of the families whose proximity was thus plainly indicated. These facts ascertained, 3 ° THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE the Micmac scouts divided themselves into two little bands, the duty of one being to follow the Iroquois cautious- ly, to give some hours notice of their approach to the inhabitants of the village, and to remain with them for its defence. The other band, composed of five picked braves, remained in the forest, for the young men had resolved that whether the enemy were successful in attacking the village or not, full revenge would be taken on them for their unwarranted invasion. The duty, therefore, of the five Indians, was to retrace and examine the Iro- quois tracks, to begin, if possible, their task of vengeance, and, having done this, to find the means of ren- dering that vengeance complete. This last party we will follow for 3 ' THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE a time on their delicate and dang- erous mission. ****** After half a day's forced march over the roads so lately trodden by the intruders, they reached the banks of the Bouabouscache River, at a place where the tracks of the Iroquois suddenly ended. The Micmacs had anticipated this, and it did not, there- fore, cause them any surprise. After a minute examination of the neigh- borhood, and knowing this forest of their country so well that it was almost impossible for man or beast to displace a branch unnoticed, they discovered disguised traces of a descent on the south shore of the river, from which the Iroquois, marching in the water, had reached 32 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE a ford of pebbles leading to the road on which they had set out for Bic. The other tracks, unnoticeable to any but Indians, led them to a pile of branches hidden by some uprooted saplings at the foot of a little cliff, and under these branches were found twenty Iroquois canoes, fashioned in a style quite different from those used in the country. The canoes were there — with poles and paddles — but nothing else. As it was quite improbable that the Iroquois had carried with them to Bic all the baggage, and especially all the provisions, necessary for a distant expedition into an unknown land, and, indeed, had seemed lightly laden when on the march, the Micmacs continued their search. At last, about a mile from the spot where the mm 33 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE canoes had been concealed, they succeeded in discovering marks of another descent on the north bank of the river, and following these traces found, near by, the baggage and provisions “ cached ” or buried in the ground by the Iroquois. They had seen everything, and now was the moment for speedy council, after- wards for speedy action. Like all men of contemplative nature, the Indians possessed the precious faculty of concentration, so necessary to singleness of purpose and accom- plishment of aim. Silencing for the time, therefore, their fears for the many loved ones at that moment in peril, they quickly debated what course to pursue, their one thought being that Bic then held a band of hated enemies, who had made war on 34 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE them without cause, and who must be allowed no chance of escape. Distant two days by canoe, was to be found a friendly encampment of the Malechite Indians. The Boua- bouscache, as we have seen, dis- charges itself into the Trois Pistoles. Ascending this latter river a little lake is reached, from which, by a portage of some hundreds of paces, the voyageur arrives at the Acheber- ache chain of lakes, and from these lakes, by way of the Acheberache River, he may descend into the great lake Temiscouata, which empties its waters into the St. John, by the beautiful river Madaouaska. Apart from the descent, short but “ portageuse,” of the Acheberache, 35 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE this route, which is the natural com- munication between the St. Lawrence and St. John valleys, may be tra- versed in canoes with the greatest ease, but a few short and easy “portages” interrupting the use of the paddle, and more than half the passage being made across the sleep- ing waters of the lakes. It was at the mouth of the Madaouaska, on the spot to-day known as Little Falls, that the Malechite village of which we have spoken was then situated. The Malechite Indians are kinsfolk of the Micmacs. They differ from the latter, however, in dialect, and somewhat in customs and usages, exhibiting, also, singular individu- ality in shaping many of the articles they manufacture, and, indeed, even to-day a Malechite canoe may, at a 36 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE long distance, be distinguished from those of the other tribes on account of its peculiar form. Like all Algon- quins, the Malechite Indians had a profound hatred of the Iroquois, and this hatred, richly returned, would have occasioned many more frequent rencontres between the two nations, had the more numerous Iroquois known better the land of the Male- chites. In taking the resolution, therefore, of asking succour from the warriors of Madaouaska, the five Micmacs felt sure that it would be granted them. Without losing an instant, two of the party set out in an Iroquois canoe to summon their kinsmen for a pur- suit of the invaders. The others remained on the banks of the Boua- bouscache to accomplish the three- 37 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE fold object of destroying the canoes and provisions they had found, of preparing ambuscades and hidden paths to facilitate their own retreat from the attack, and of watching cautiously for the return of the enemy. X'- 38 CHAPTER IV. eanwhile we will return to Bic. A little before sunset on the evening of that day, the Iroquois reached the immediate neighborhood of the village. They did not imagine themselves discovered, and, from all they had seen, fully expected to sur- prise the Micmacs in the abandon of perfect security. It was the hour when, on the lower St. Lawrence shore, the sea-gulls re- double their shrill cries, as if to greet beforehand the closing of the day ; the hour when, high in air, the crows reassemble and in noisy and fantastic rounds take their last flight before seeking a resting place for the night. 39 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE Having arrived at the western shore of the Baie, the Iroquois first reconnoitered the pathways converg- ing towards the village, and at once divided their band into several de- tachments. Then, thirsty for blood, with stealthy tread, their bodies crouching forward, and their keen ears intent on every sound, they ad- vanced, tomahawks in hand, lessen- ing at every step the circle formed round the fated village. They reached the cabins, but to their rage and disappointment all that could be seen were the ruins of an encamp- ment which then seemed to have been abandoned several days. Aided by the daylight that remained, they hastily searched the borders of the woods and the shores of the Baie. No human being was there. They 40 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE listened — and no sound was heard other than that of the lapping surge of a calm river caressing the beach — and of the murmuring trees, even- ing requiem of a beautiful day, whispering softly along the water's side. After another and lengthened search, and convinced of their com- plete failure, the call to reassemble was given, and chagrined and dis- comfited they returned to the beach. Before them lay the beautiful sheet of water which fills the basin of the Bic, illumined at the moment by the last reflections of twilight, while the invigorating air of the St. Law- rence, laden with exhalations of salt plants and of sea-weed, refreshed and revivified their exhausted bodies, now drooping from the long and rapid march of the day. Then, re-entering 4 l THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE the woods, they sought the glade oc- cupied that morning by the Micmac wigwams, to prepare a camp for the night, and to give themselves up to the unpleasant reflections caused by their unexpected disappointment. ****** The night was calm and still. The sentinels, whom the Iroquois were always careful to place on watch, heard no noise — only the doleful cry of the owl, attracted by the camp- fire’s smoke. They saw nothing — only the aurora borealis, the wierd “ dance of the marionettes” in the northern heavens, which in this land is so fantastically beautiful. Tranquil as was the night, how- ever, to the Southern invaders it seemed long and dreary, nor was 42 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE their sleep in harmony with the sweet repose of nature around them. At last the faint light of dawn ap- peared in the eastern sky, giving fair promise of a day as peaceful as the night that was ending. It was greeted, instead, by a horrible yell proceeding from the river shore, a yell which reverberated again and again from the echoes in the sur- rounding mountains. The yell was the war cry of the Iroquois. One of their party, restless and unable to sleep, had arisen from his couch at the break of day, to breathe the cool air of morning on the beach of the Baie. Discovering that the basin was dry, and astonished at the disap- pearance of the sheet of water he had seen the previous evening (for low tide on the sea-shore is often THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE a novelty to those who have lived far in the interior), he had walked out over the flats. Suddenly, in the dim twilight, he espied on the sand the marks of human feet, marks which had not been completely effaced by the tide, and which led in a faint trail towards the St. Lawrence. His suspicions were aroused, and lying down at full length on the strand, he peered in- tently in the direction taken by the tracks. Favored by the chilliness of the morning, he perceived, as it were a vapor ascending from the steep cliffs of one of the islets at the entrance of the Baie, distant some hundreds of paces, and to which, at that moment, it was easily possible to walk dry shod. Doubt vanished. The footprints were those of the 44 “A Yell Which Reverberated Again and Again.’ THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE inhabitants of the abandoned village, and that vapor but the effect of a large number of human beings col- lected in a confined space. The Micmacs were there ! It was clear, therefore, that they had no canoes, and that it was impossible for them to escape ! Then it was that the Indian had given a triumphant cry which his awakened comrades, seizing their arms, had instantly repeated. On the islet all was still. No answering shout as yet came from the spot to which the Iroquois, an instant later, pointed the armed warriors assembled around him. But the Micmacs now knew that their hiding place was discovered, and in a small cavern which may still be seen in the steep sides of the islet rock, and in which, all that night, men, 45 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE women, and children, closely packed together, and maintaining the deepest silence, had hoped against hope for escape, vows were once more taken to spend their last drop of blood in defence of the land, the loved land, of their forefathers. ****** Some time elapsed before the preparations of the invaders for the attack were complete, and meanwhile the tide had again begun to rise. The Micmacs had relied greatly on this, as in consequence of it, their chances of offering a successful re- sistance to the enemy were very materially increased. At last, in order of battle, the whole body of Iroquois set forward to the islet. No sooner had they started, than all the Micmacs able to 46 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE bear arms issued from the rocks and stationed themselves, with the war- riors in front, on the narrow beach of the islet, around which the incoming tide was fast mounting. The Iroquois, although confident of victory, felt, nevertheless, that brave men, fighting for the lives of the women and children behind them, were not enemies whom they could afford to despise, or who would die without a hard struggle. They pro- ceeded cautiously, therefore, and in good order, advancing towards the islet along a narrow shoal which connected it with the mainland, and which was rapidly being covered by the inflowing water. From the ranks of both assailed and assailers, clouds of arrows, in silent but deadly flight, I now sped through the air; blood 47 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE flowed freely ; warriors on both sides — singing the death songs of their race — fell mortally wounded, while others, badly hurt by the keen shafts piercing their bodies, retired disabled from the fray. At the outset, the fight went clearly in favor of the Micmacs, who, firmly planted on solid ground, were in the best position possible to make every shot tell, their opponents, meanwhile, progressing slowly and with difficulty over the shifting and unstable sands. At last the foremost Iroquois, hitherto hindered from spreading by the rising tide, gained the beach of the islet, and flinging their bows to the warriors in the ranks behind them, rushed yelling, tomahawks in hand, on their enemies. One final and destructive volley of 48 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE arrows was sent, at near range, by the beleagured villagers, who, closing together, shoulder to shoulder, with war hatchets aloft, and shouting the cry of their people, awaited the charge resolutely. The onslaught was fierce. Noted was the Iroquois race for its fighting men, and the memory of many a former triumph, added to their frequently expressed contempt for the more peaceful Northerners, spurred them on in an effort to end the combat with a single blow. For a time it seemed as if they would succeed, but furious as was their charge it did not break the Micmac phalanx, which, battling with a courage and firmness that were admirable, successfully held its ground. Sorely they were pressed, but gallantly they fought, and at last 49 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE from sheer strength and determina- tion, they succeeded in forcing their adversaries back into the water. The Iroquois, feeling the impossibil- ity of gaining an immediate victory, and seeing the rising flood curling still deeper behind them, finally retreated towards the mainland, keep- ing good order, but pursued by the taunts and arrows of those they had come so far to assail. On both sides a number had been killed and many had been wounded, and both parties were exhausted with fatigue. The wounded of each tribe were carried off by their comrades, and the dead left on the sands, to be rolled about and covered by the mounting water, and to reappear, livid and ghastly, at the next low tide. 5« THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE Disconcerted and beaten for the moment, but confident in their super- ior strength, the Iroquois had but to rest and recover themselves. It was not so with the Micmacs. Their losses, while far less numerous, were relatively far greater, and had been borne, moreover, by the best men of their band, a band composed of com- batants of all ages and capacities. They knew well also, that the Iroquois would not, a second time, commit the mistake of attacking them over a rising tide, and felt that they were not strong enough to meet the enemy openly and without protection. A short consultation was held by the warriors, and the women were immediately directed to raise a species of fortification in front of the cavern. For a design such as this the ground 51 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE was happily suited, as facing and bordering on the entrance to the grotto lay a number of huge detached rocks, in appearance like so many druidical monuments, forming a small semi-circular enclosure about its mouth. The purpose of the Micmacs was to barricade the spaces between these rocks, and having secured a firm foundation, to heighten the whole rampart wall in the manner generally adopted by Indians for defences of the sort. Paddles, — fishing rods, — the poles of wigwams, — and such small saplings as grew here and there among the crevices of the rocks on the islet side, were used by the women to construct a double palisade, which was strength- ened still further by the stones, sand, furs, and even baggage and provis- 5 * THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE ions, piled between, — and so well employed were the hours of respite given by the ebbing water, that the next low tide found the Micmacs behind a strong entrenchment. By its aid they were enabled to avail themselves of the help of their wounded comrades, the women and even the older r children, for the defence, these fighting under protec- tion of the palisade, while the unwounded men still defended the approach from the water’s side. The Iroqouis — from the farther shore — had witnessed the activity of their enemies with curiosity. Not knowing the nature of the ground adjoining the cavern, they had no idea that such effective preparations for resistance were in progress, and immediately on the falling of the tide, S3 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE the whole party once more set for- ward, in order of battle, towards the islet. Longer and more bitter was now the attack ; charge after charge was made on the unfortunate Micmac band, and charge after charge beaten back, — until the Iroquois, finding all efforts to carry the barricade of their antagonists fruitless, were a second time forced to retreat, baffled and dis- comfited, to the mainland. Again both besiegers and besieged were weakened by the loss of killed and wounded, but once more the victory of the Micmacs had been dearly bought. Around the mouth of the cavern which sheltered the weeping women and children, their staunchest war- riors, covered with wounds, lay dead 54 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE or dying, and the despairing survivors, who knew that help could not arrive in time, and that their last victory had been gained, felt that hope had fled. The Iroquois invaders — who had relied on their superior numbers — now discovered that they had under- estimated the desperate resolution of their opponents, and regretted not having availed themselves sooner of other means at their command to obtain a victory. It was plain, too, that the position of the besieged had been well chosen, as from one direction only, that along the low shelving bank which ap- peared at low tide, was it possible to successfully attack them, the steep shores of the little islet in all other places being continually surrounded by deep water. ss THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE The long day was at last beginning to close, and night again brought a full tide, — the last which the doomed Micmacs were to see rise on the shores of their beautiful Baie. The hopelessness of their adver- saries’ position was manifest to the Iroquois, who now feared that under cover of darkness the Micmacs might endeavor to leave the islet, and scattering far and wide among the mountains near the Baie, seek to escape by flight from the death which was so rapidly approaching them. To allow, therefore, of no such possibility, the Southerners passed part of the night guarding the shoal which led from the islet to the mainland. But the precaution was needless. Too well did the villagers know 56 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE the futility of any such attempt, and the beams of their enemies’ fire, dancing across the waters and repell- ing the encircling gloom, served only to reveal a pitiful group, glad to emerge from the stifling cave, and breathing in quiet despair their last deep draughts of the cool St. Lawrence breeze. Another dawn appeared, and with the dawn another low tide, of which the Iroquois hastened to make the best use. Marching towards the islet, their party, when distant about an arrow’s flight from the Micmac rampart, suddenly halted. Then the unfortunate occupants of the cavern, now defended only by old men, women, children, and wounded warriors, saw several of the enemy 57 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE light enormous torches of bark, and set out towards them at a run, each torchbearer being accompanied by two companions carrying broad shields of hard wood, purposely made by them during the night, and against which the strongest driven shafts rattled in vain. Swiftly, on they came, their ad- vance, meanwhile, being well sup- ported by their comrades, who from the higher ground in the rear, swept every foot of the rampart wall with well-directed volleys of arrows. In a few minutes the feeble palisade was on fire. Jeering like fiends, the Iroquois retired about a hundred paces, and awaited, with tomahawks ready, the coming forth of their prey. The waiting was not long. Each Micmac, man or woman, who from sickness, or 58 Beams of Their Enemies' Fire Dancing Across the Water.’ THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE terror, or wounds, was not fated to suffocate, rushed with the last energies of despair on the foe. The conflict was short and could have but one ending, although even then a fresh loss in killed and wounded was the price paid by the Iroquois for victory. Mothers and children, grandsires and maidens, fathers and sons, the Micmacs all perished, either slowly by suffocation, or more speedily under the tomahawks of their remorseless adversaries. Food for the foxes and the crows, their scalped and mutilated bodies lay on the narrow beach or in the gloomy cave, and from that time forward the place was known as the “Isle of the Massacre,” a name it bears down to this day. 59 A LTHOUGH victorious, the Iro- quois invaders were but half content with the result of their expedition. Instead of, as often before, surprising and pillaging an undefended village, they had met with unlooked for and obstinate resist- ance. So obstinate had been this resistance, that of their own men twenty lay dead or dying, while thirty others had been wounded, some so seriously as to be unfit for service, and indeed, when a count of their total strength was made, it was found that, of the one hundred warriors who had arrived at Bic, but sixty able-bodied men now remained. During that and the following day CHAPTER V. 6o THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE the party remained on the shore of the Baie, to recover strength and to complete preparations for the return journey, and the next morning, the fourth after arriving, they again set out for the Bouabouscache River, knowing that any further progress on the expedition was impossible, and hoping soon once more to see the woods, the lakes, and the rivers of their own country. The forest was calm and still; of enemies no trace was seen or sound was heard; and as the party advanced further along the well beaten track and plunged deeper into the gloomy woods, their hope that all the popula- tion of this part of the Micmac territory had been destroyed grew rapidly into the certainty of assurance. The chiefs expected to reach the banks of 61 Another return must now be spoken of — that of the two Micmac messen- gers sent to the Malechite village five days before. Their mission has been accomplished speedily and successful- ly, and on the previous evening they had returned to their comrades, accompanied by twenty-five of their Malechite kinsmen. The allied party thus consisted of only thirty men, not THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE the Bouabouscache by the evening of the second day’s march, and in order to make quicker progress, on the morning of that day divided their band into two detachments, thirty of the most active men going before to fetch the canoes and prepare a camp for the night, while the fifty others, those wounded or carrying baggage, followed more slowly. 62 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE one-half the strength of their foe, but every Indian was a picked warrior, fresh, alert and vigorous, and to him each step in his forest home was as well known as to the caribou roaming over it. Nor had the three Micmacs left by their companions on the banks of the Bouabouscache been meanwhile idle. Having destroyed the canoes and provisions of the Iroquois without in the least altering the external appear- ance of the “ caches,” they had traversed the country bordering on the forest pathway, had prepared ambuscades at different places along it, and from these ambushes had opened hidden tracks through the thick and almost impassable brush- wood, in order that their own retreat from the attack might be easy. 6 3 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE Immediately on the arrival of the allies, a few of each, following the winding routes so well known to the Micmac guides, set out for the Baie du Bic, to watch the movement of the invaders and learn their strength and condition, while from the remaining Micmacs, the Malechites were inform- ed of all that it was important to know, and in conjunction with them, laid plans for an attack on the common enemy. The scouts returned to their friends about the noon of the next day, several hours before the arrival of the Iroquois at the Bouabouscache, bringing news of the strength of the invaders, the condition of their wounded, and the division of their force into two detachments, from which change in the order of march I 64 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE the allies rightly conjectured the purpose of the enemy to lose no time in regaining their canoes. After hearing the report of the scouts, the Micmacs and their friends at once set out to begin the operations they had planned. Meanwhile the two Iroquois bands, distant a couple of hours’ march from each other, steadily approached the river. The Baie du Bic was now far behind, and along the well-trodden path, shaded by majestic trees, they advanced in all confidence, not having the least suspicion that from this silent and seemingly deserted forest a vigilant enemy was watching, and calculating on, their every move. 65 CHAPTER VI. A BOUT the middle of the after- noon, the foremost party of Iroquois reached the ford of pebbles crossing the Bouabouscache. Having crossed the river, they again, as on first arriving, waded through the water along the south beach, and soon reached the spot where their canoes had been con- cealed. Hardly had their hands touched the uppermost branches of the saplings that covered the hiding place, when a volley of arrows issued from all sides of the surrounding thickets. So sudden and unlooked-for was the attack, so exposed was their position, and for the moment so helpless did they feel, that, panic- 66 wm THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE stricken, the band broke ground and fled towards the river in disorder. Profiting by the confusion of their enemies the allies pursued them with tomahawks down to the water’s edge, and it was only on hearing the shouts of the second party of Iroquois answering the cries of the fugitives, that they retired into the forest. Ten scalps were the trophies obtained by the Micmac-Malechite party from this first success, which had not cost them a single man, and which, furthermore, increased consid- erably the number of wounded among their foes. Astounded and dismayed, the Iro- quois bands, once more united on the north bank of the river, took hurried counsel how best to meet this unex- pected danger. The situation was 67 THE ISLE OP THE MASSACRE terrible. Of the original band but seventy men now remained, and of these, half were wounded more or less seriously. Who their assailants were, in what number, or with what resources, they knew not. And their canoes had disappeared. This last loss was one of which, as Indians, they well knew the full meaning, and for an instant it caused the shadow of a sickening fear to hover over their minds. But moments were now precious. The food taken for the expedition to Bic was almost finished, and although it was probable that the “cache” of provisions had undergone the same fate as the canoes, and that there also another ambuscade was in waiting, one course only remained for them to take. In spite of every risk, before night fell, 68 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE an attempt must be made to save what was their only certain means of existence from becoming the spoil of the foe. That a deadly contest would result the chiefs felt convinced, and in order to be prepared it was necessary that they set out in full force. All the men still capable of bearing arms, therefore, to the number of fifty, were mustered for the expedition, the twenty others, whose wounds render- ed them almost helpless, remaining behind to do what they could towards preparing a camp. The “ cache ” of provisions was situated on a low alder covered point formed by an abrupt semi-circular winding of the river, being distant about half an hour’s march along its north bank, and although the first 69 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE visit of the Iroquois to the place had been made in canoes, they had too well noted the locality and surround- ing land-marks to fear mistaking it. Beating through the bush along the river’s side, the band advanced slowly and cautiously, searching the thickets with eye and hand at every step, and taking all possible precaution against a surprise. The first part of the route was traversed with difficulty, but in the vicinity of the point, leafy avenues, where noble elms stretched their giant arms across the forest sward, lessened the danger and toil of their march, and at last the alders were reached and the “ cache ” found. Near it no enemy could be seen, although complete preparations for an ambuscade were discovered to be in readiness. But the provisions and 7 ° THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE war-baggage had entirely disappear- ed. Of all they had hidden there, not a vestige remained. Again and again the Iroquois searched as if unwilling to let them- selves be convinced of the terrible truth, until at last, gloomy and disheartened, and feeling that the end was not yet, they once more turned their steps in the direction of the camp. Twilight was now beginning to close, and down mossy aisles, darkened by lofty trees, the reflec- tions of the torches carried by their leaders danced and wavered. Sud- denly, from an entanglement of saplings and branches shaped like a hunting hedge, which hitherto they had not observed, issued a battle-cry and a fresh volley of arrows, immedi- ately followed by the rustling noise THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE made by men or animals when fleeing in haste through the forest. The Iroquois darted in pursuit but retard- ed as they were by the obstructing brushwood soon saw that the attempt was useless, and rallying once again continued their march towards the fires of the encampment. Still more wounded. Always this invisible, in- tangible foe. Ever ambushes that they did not even suspect. This was no longer war; it was the sport of the huntsman with human beings for game. At last they reached the camp. But what a horrible spectacle was illumined by the fires whose glare they had seen from afar. Of the twenty wounded men left there two hours before not one remained alive. In the pale light of the flickering 7 J THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE camp-fire, their ghastly corpses, muti- lated and scalped, lay weltering on the stained sod. The Iroquois shook with rage and despair and only came to themselves to find that the few provisions, all the utensils, and the remainder of the baggage had been either destroyed or stolen. 73 E xhausted with fatigue and already harassed by the first pangs of hunger, the invaders saw begin for them a terrible night, the forerunner of days and of nights more terrible still. In the council held round the bivouac fire, at which the livid corpses of their slaughtered comrades seemed to assist, and of which, to their superstitious fancy, grinning spectres from the cavern at Bic seemed silent witnesses, there was no voice to point a way to safety. To live, they must hunt or fish ; to see ever again their far-off home, the building of canoes must be at- tempted, for without canoes that home could never be reached. And all this CHAPTER VII. 74 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE must be accomplished in the presence of a vigilant and unseen enemy, in the heart of an unknown country, and in the midst of a forest covered by scouts, at a time when their own band counted many wounded and was destitute of all implements and utensils other than those of war. Difficult indeed was the solving of the problem, and well might the Iroquois hesitate. The allies, meanwhile, determined neither to lose nor to compromise a vengeance that they could relish at leisure, had decided on following one line of action, and with the resolution of men pitiless and unyielding as fate itself, were only too certain to pursue that line to its end. To refrain from 75 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE exposing themselves except in case of urgent need, to allow the Iroquois no means of escape from their desperate situation, to pursue and harass them ceaselessly, and to immolate them in detail, was the course on which both Micmacs and Malechites were fully resolved. During the first part of the night, which the Southern invaders passed in the sleeplessness of insecurity, the allies, guarded by well-posted and watchful sentinels, reposed in restful slumber. And when, a little before day-break, yielding to exhaustion, and in that species of recklessness which is the daughter of despair, the Iroquois had fallen asleep, leaving on guard only a few men dizzy and wearied from the horrible events of the preceding day, their enemies were 76 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE near, gliding under the covert and taking advantage of the early breeze which then filled the forest with the sough of waving trees, to approach nearer and nearer to their victims. Imagining he heard an unusual noise, one of the camp sentinels crept for- ward to reconooitre, when a whistle, keen as the merlin’s cry, caught his ear. The next moment, sending forth cries of anguish and terror, he and his brother sentinels fell pierced by many arrows. Starting from sleep in confusion, the Iroquois seized their arms, but before they could ascertain the cause of tumult or recover from their sudden panic, a volley of shafts from the surrounding darkness swept into their midst. And, as suddenly, the arrows ceased ; the stillness of solitude 77 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE reigned anew about the camp, finding its despairing occupants still further weakened by wounds both grievous and many. Day broke, and the Iroquois pre- pared to depart from this hateful spot which even the birds of the forest had forsaken, and where peril encompass- ed them on every hand. Glad, too, were they to flee from the corpses of their butchered comrades, and from the loathsome temptations which, with the phantom of famine looming near, the sight of them occasioned. For although, at times, the Iroquois had eaten of the flesh of their enemies, the act had been one of pure revenge, and indeed was considered the utmost length to which human vengeance 78 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE could reach ; to feed, therefore, on the dead bodies of their own brothers, would have been accounted an act of the greatest sacrilege. Ignorant of the surrounding coun- try, they determined to make for the Riviere Trois Pistoles, following the detours of the Bouabouscache to avoid any mistake, and this being the route by which they had arrived. But although, in a direct line, the distance was not great, and with canoes could be traversed in a few hours, a march through bush and thicket, and across rocks, morasses, and streams, pro- mised much greater difficulties. And to the fatiguing and interminable work of beating along the bank of a forest river, where the progress of the woodsman is so slow that, when miles seem to have been accomplished, 79 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE furlongs only have been covered, there was added, for the Iroquois, the necessity of existing by hunting or fishing, under circumstances both exceptional and disastrous. When, therefore, the band was ready to start, among the fifty sur- vivors from the assaults of the preceding days there were twelve of the wounded who declared themselves incapable of undertaking the journey, and as was customary with Indian warriors, demanded death. No time could be lost. In accordance with their desire, the unhappy men were tomahawked by their more for- tunate comrades, and their corpses thrown across the burning logs of the camp fire, were speedily con- sumed, in order that these Iroquois scalps should not become triumphal So THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE trophies and ornaments for a fete of the foe. The policy pursued by the allies of abstaining from bodily conflict except as a last resort, was not solely the fruit of calculation and the refine- ment of revenge, but was forced on them by necessity. Less numerous than the enemy, they had fortunate- ly, up to the present moment, been able to operate in a body, but the time had now come when their party must divide into two bands. For it was necessary that the canoes con- taining their provisions, baggage, and reserve arms be kept out of all possible reach, far from the point of attack, and to guard and conduct these, ten men were required. Only 81 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE a score of warriors, therefore, confi- dent but cautious, remained to follow and combat the thirty-eight Iroquois who, though weakened and unnerved, were known to be formidable to the last. Meanwhile the fugitives, before leaving the landing-place on the Bouabouscache, had examined and analyzed the tracks left the previous evening and that morning by the foe, and were now aware that the number of their hidden assailants was few. This discovery, added to the possible chances afforded by a heavy rain which had just commenced, caused a small gleam of hope to sparkle before the eyes of the despairing warriors as they set forth on their fateful journey. But four hours of a tortuous and weary march, equal at most to a 82 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE league as the crow flies, had been accomplished, and several of the wounded stragglers, who, as was usual in the retreats of Indian war, had been left uncared for, fell a prey to the scalping knives of their pursuers. On still went their fleeing comrades, through swamp and covert, across rock and stream, until midday when, famishing with hunger, and reaching a spot where food seemed likely to be procured, the flight was stayed. A few partridges, porcupines, and other small game were the results yielded by a hunt which occupied the remainder of that day, and having set some snares and fish-traps near by, the fugitives, grateful for food and rest, prepared a camp for the night and sank exhausted into slum- 83 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE ber. The morrow came, and, re- freshed by sleep and by the fish and animals found entrapped, they once more set forward on their toilsome march. Three days thus passed in flight and pursuit, days of hardship and of peril, and, already in the fatal chase, eleven of the wounded had paid to their implacable pursuers the debt of blood contracted at the cavern of Bic. On the evening of the third day, approaching the Riviere Trois Pistoles, a grove of giant birch surrounded by hills was reached, and in several places fresh marks on trees, the bark of which had been eaten by moose, were to be seen. Hope lived again in the breasts of the despairing fugitives, for this discovery was to them as the saving plank of a total wreck. Could 84 THE ISLE OF THE MASS A CEE they but procure a small quantity of venison for food, and, from the large bark so found hastily constructed four or five canoes, they might, in a few hours, reach the waters of the great St. Lawrence, and, safe at last, set out again for the land, the far-off land of their fathers. Confident once more, the remaining Indians, who, in spite of the disasters through which they had passed, still retained the courage of their race, began the task before them with all the ardor of strong hearts recovering from the blows of a cruel fortune. At the mouth of a little river in the vicinity was found one of the bare islets formed by the heaping up of sand and gravel brought down by 85 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE the high tides of spring. A narrow channel, which it was possible to ford, separated the islet from the neighboring shores, and here, after the chase, the Iroquois felt that they could spend in peace the few days required for building canoes, without fear of surprise from their hidden foes. On this deserted spot their camp was that night prepared. Early in the morning of the follow- ing day, the party set out to examine the moose traces they had seen when arriving, and soon were successful in finding tracks which had been quite recently left by a cow moose and her calf. The two animals had followed, in their winding course, a slope thick- ly covered with maple trees, and as the Indians soon discovered, had 86 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE walked at a pace which denoted the absence of all uneasiness. The band halted a moment to arrange the details of the hunt, for important though it was that they obtain possession of the game, — an end which could not be accomplished by advancing in a body, — it was equally necessary, on account of the possible presence of the enemy, that their forces be not weakened. Two of the most noted huntsmen of the party, therefore, started in advance to stalk the animals, whilst the others, noiselessly following at some little distance, held themselves in readiness to afford their brothers any help that might be required. For over an hour they advanced in this fashion, silently and slowly, when the practised ears of the two hunters heard in the dis- 87 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE tance, and coming from a winding in the maple-covered slope, the dull, plain- tive cry, “Te-am,” “Te-am,” “Te-am,” of the young moose. The Indians well knew that while, across the deep and hard snows of winter, the chase of the moose, that lordly monarch of the Canadian forest, was easy, during the months of summer it was ex- tremely difficult, and could rarely be successfully accomplished. But now the huntsmen were cunning, the spot was favorable, and life or death hung on the issue. That the stalking might not be frustrated, a few branches, forked across the way, were left by the two Iroquois on the trail they had made, to notify the remainder of the band to halt there and, without danger of frightening the game, to redouble 88 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE their perhaps needed watch. Then, with infinite care, they began the approach, moving, as the wind came thence, straight to the trees amidst which the moose had hidden. Cautiously advancing a step and sinking behind the sheltering bushes, noiselessly rising to look before, and stealthily creeping forward on hands and knees, gliding around the inter- vening clearances, taking advantage of every irregularity in the ground, breaking not a twig or branch on their way — bringing to bear, in a word, all the craft that an intimate knowledge of the forest and of the haunts of its denizens, combined with a desperate patience, could develop, they gradually approached nearer and nearer to the prey. The young moose, half concealed 89 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE by a large fallen tree thickly covered with brambles of rounds and maple, was lying down with its back towards the hunters, while a couple of paces further its mother could be seen, standing as if buried in the dense encircling foliage. Creeping over the forest sward, the stalkers, after many a halt, at length came within close arrow range of the two animals. The female, doubtless chewing the cud, had not stirred, but the plaintive little caller moved restlessly from time to time on its grassy couch. Cautiously raising themselves, the Indians each firmly planted a knee on the sod ; then bend- ing their bows with vigorous arms, and aiming through the openings of the thicket, they discharged at the beasts two strongly driven arrows, QO When Winter’s Shadows Deepen and the Day's Work is Over.' THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE and the next instant to make success sure, rushed forward towards the game. In a moment they reached the bodies of the moose, but ere their knives sank into the palpitating flesh, they themselves, pierced by quivering shafts and without power to utter a cry, fell in the throes of death. The Micmac-Malechites had, before them, killed the cow moose, and having fastened her little one close by, had baited their enemies as they baited the bear, the lynx, or the wolverine of their native forest. But not yet was the man-hunt finished. Hastily placing the bodies of the two huntsmen half upright against the fallen tree and near those of the animals, the allies sent forth a double cry, long and loud, and await- ed in their ambush the coming of the THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE foe. The Iroquois, believing that the stalkers had called, arrived, full of hope which grew into exultation at the sight of their two comrades bend- ing over the fallen game. A volley of murderous arrows was their only welcome. Feeble and discouraged, the unfortunate men attempted no resistance, but fled back to the islet, leaving on the ground nine of their party to be scalped by the avengers. Gaining once more the pebbly bed in the river, the miserable fugitives summoned all their fortitude to meet the death now drawing so near. The allies a few hours later, assembling in full force round the canoes which had been brought for- ward by their companions and drawn up on the beach, decided that the time to finish with their foes had 9 * THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE come, and bent on securing some prisoners to swell the triumph of vic- tory, determined to make the attack at once. Dividing their band, they charged on both sides the islet occupied by the last of the murderers of their brothers. The battle was soon over, although even in this unequal combat three of the Malech- ites were killed and many others of the allied party wounded. With the exception of six taken alive, the entire band of Iroquois was toma- hawked and scalped, and their bodies were left on the reddened sand, to bear ghastly testimony to the vindic- tiveness of Indian revenge. 93 CHAPTER VIII. T HE morrow was a day of triumph for the Micmacs and Malech- ites. Over their camp fire the tender meat of the young moose was put to roast, and meanwhile one of the prisoners, tied to the fatal stake, was made the sport of their cruelty and savage glee. Insults and torments wreaked on the victim served as interludes to the chants, dances, and feast of victory, and at last the unfortunate Iroquois, in the act of expiring, was scalped in the presence of his five comrades, who, bound and helpless, had been silent witnesses of the scene. On the following day, after sharing 94 95 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE decomposing and unrecognizable bodies of those whom once they had loved. Then, after placing within the grotto all the corpses of their murdered kindred, and before bidding the spot a last good-bye (for even to this day the Micmacs never camp at Bic) two stakes were set on the green, and the Iroquois prisoners, with faces turned towards the rugged Isle of the Massacre, were bound thereto. Hav- ing first been scalped alive, they were then subjected to every torture which the most ferocious cruelty could invent, and at last, when about to expire, their naked bodies, surround- ed by fagots of bark, were burned to ashes, as the final and crowning act of Indian retribution. 96 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE For long after, says tradition, the shades of the massacred Micmacs were to be seen at night wandering over the cliffs of the Islet, and ming- ling their sighs with the moaning of the sea. Often, too, at the midnight hour, a band of phantom Indians, armed with pale torches, was ob- served dancing, with grotesque con- tortions, on the beach of the Baie. And it is in harmony with this tradition that the two capes which bound the entry of the St. Lawrence waters, have received the grim names of “Cap Enragd” and “Cap aux Corbeaux.” Centuries have passed, and still in the farmer’s dwelling, when winter’s shadows deepen and the day’s work is over, while the kitchen fire is blazing and the home-brewed ale is drawn, 97 THE ISLE OF THE MASSACRE with bated breath and flushed cheek, the story of the massacre is told. Up to late years the whitened bones of the murdered Micmacs covered the floor of the cavern, and even now, when over its gloomy cliffs a mantle of darkness has fallen, w r hen the owl’s discordant cry can be heard above the booming of the sea, and when, through waving pines and rocky crevasses, the night-wind sings its mournful song, “ uttering,” says the story, “ the plaintive cry as of a soul in pain,” many there are not so bold as to venture on the lonely sepulchre of the unfortunate Indians of Bic. 98