[The Scouts of the Valley by Joseph A. Altsheler]@TWC D-Link book
The Scouts of the Valley

CHAPTER XVI
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They were introduced to the colonel by the celebrated scout and hunter, Tini Murphy, whom they had met several times in the woods, and they were received warmly.
"I've heard of you," said Colonel Butler with much warmth, "both from hunters and scouts, and also from Adam Colfax.

Two of you were to have been tomahawked by Queen Esther at Wyoming." Henry indicated the two.
"What you saw at Wyoming is not likely to decrease your zeal against the Indians and their white allies," continued Colonel Butler.
"Anyone who was there," said Henry, "would feel all his life, the desire to punish those who did it." "I think so, too, from all that I have heard," continued Colonel Butler.
"It is the business of you young men to keep ahead of our column and warn us of what lies before us.

I believe you have volunteered for that duty." The five looked over Colonel Butler's little army, which numbered only two hundred and fifty men, but they were all strong and brave, and it was the best force that could yet be sent to the harassed border.
It might, after all, strike a blow for Wyoming if it marched into no ambush, and Henry and his comrades were resolved to guard it from that greatest of all dangers.
When the little column moved from the Johnstown settlement, the five were far ahead, passing through the woods, up the Susquehanna, toward the Indian villages that lay on its banks, though a great distance above Wyoming.

The chief of these was Oghwaga, and, knowing that it was the destination of the little army, they were resolved to visit it, or at least come so near it that they could see what manner of place it was.
"If it's a big village," said Colonel Butler, "it will be too strong to attack, but it may be that most of the warriors are absent on expeditions." They had obtained before starting very careful descriptions of the approaches to the village, and toward the close of an October evening they knew that they were near Oghwaga, the great base of the Iroquois supplies.

They considered it very risky and unwise to approach in the daytime, and accordingly they lay in the woods until the dark should come.
The appearance of the wilderness had changed greatly in the three months since Wyoming.


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