Read From Sea to Shining Sea Online

Authors: James Alexander Thom

Tags: #Historical

From Sea to Shining Sea (115 page)

BOOK: From Sea to Shining Sea
11.08Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

They had come along and come along then beyond the great Yellowstone, feeding on the plentiful elk and buffalo and beaver shot by Drouillard or the Fields brothers, or by the captains themselves, and on geese and rabbits, and even a small antelope that Scannon killed and dragged into camp; they had seen the amazing, nimble big-horned sheep springing along the faces of perpendicular cliffs. And here above the Yellowstone they also had had their first encounters with the formidable grizzly bears of which the Indians had warned them. In late April, Lewis and a hunter had shot a young male of the species, weighing about three hundred pounds, and deduced that the legendary beasts perhaps were not so formidable or dangerous as they had been represented. But that appraisal had gradually begun to change as the party met more and more, bigger and bigger ones. On May 5, William had entered in his journal:

in the evening we saw a Brown or Grisley beare on a sand beech, I went out with one man Geo Drewyer & killed the bear, which was verry large and a turrible looking animal, which we found verry hard to kill we Shot ten Balls into him before we killed him, & 5 of those Balls through his lights

The beast had measured eight feet seven and a half inches long, and its heart was as large as that of an ox. And Lewis, after another encounter, had written:

I find that the curiossity of our party is pretty well satisfyed with rispect to this anamal, the formidable appearance of
the male bear killed on the 5th added to the difficulty with which they die even when shot through the vital parts, has staggered the resolution of several of them, others however seem keen for action with the bear; I expect these gentlemen will give us some amusement shotly as they (the bears) soon begin to coppolate.

Burping happily after one of the best dinners he had ever eaten, Lewis sat chuckling and writing in his journal an entry that he believed would entertain thoroughly Thomas Jefferson the gourmet:

Thursday May 9th 1805

Capt. C killed 2 bucks and 2 buffaloe, I also killed one buffaloe which proved to be the best meat it was in tolerable order; we saved the best of the meat and from the cow I killed we saved the necessary materials for making what our wrighthand cook Charbono calls the boudin (poudingue) blanc, and immediately set him about preparing them for supper; this white pudding we all esteem one of the greatest delacies of the forrest; it may not be amiss therefore to give it a place.

About 6 feet of the lower extremity of the large gut of the Buffaloe is the first mosel that the cook makes love to, this he holds fast at one end with the right hand, while with the forefinger and thumb of the left he gently compresses it, and discharges what he says
is not good to eat,
but of which in the sequel we get a moderate portion; the mustle lying underneath the shoulder blade next to the back, and fillets are next saught, these are needed up very fine with a good portion of kidney suet; to this composition is then added a just proportion of pepper and salt and a small quantity of flour; thus far advanced, our skilfull opporater
C—–
o seizes his recepticle, which has never once touched the water, for that would intirely distroy the regular order of the whole procedure … and tying it fast at one end turns it inward and begins now with repeated evolutions of the hand and arm, and a brisk motion of the finger and thumb to put in what he says is bon pour manger; thus by stuffing and compressing he soon distends the recepticle to the utmost limmits of it’s power of expansion, and in the course of it’s longitudinal progress it drives from the other end of the recepticle a much larger portion of
the—–than was prevously discharged by the finger and thumb of the left hand in a former part of the operation; thus when the sides of the recepticle are skilfully exchanged the outer for the iner, and all is compleatly filled with
something good to eat,
it is tyed at the other end, but not any cut off, for that would make the pattern too scant; it is then baptised in the Missouri with two dips and a flirt, and bobbed into the kettle; from whence, after it be well boiled it is taken and fryed with bears oil untill it becomes brown, when it is ready to esswage the pangs of a keen appetite of such as travelers in the wilderness are seldom at a loss for.

William was amused by the sight of his friend grinning over his notebook. Lewis, who oftimes had been uncomfortably intense or gloomy during the winter, was happier now than William had ever seen him.

Lewis looked up from his notebook, his eyes twinkling in the firelight, to say:

“We should send Charbonneau back to Washington, as chef for Mr. Jefferson’s kitchen, eh? Can’t you imagine him in the Executive household, this great rancid goat? Ha, ha!”

Over by the big bonfire, the fiddle was squeaking happily and the men were cavorting and laughing over their evening dram. The wind boomed against the skin tent where Sacajawea sat tending to her son Pomp; the river hissed in the darkness beyond. William gazed in wonder at Lewis, at his dishevelled hair, his torn buckskins, his stained, dusty tricorn, his face tanned dark as oiled leather and glinting with chin-stubble.

“My friend,” William said, “it’s all I can do to imagine
you
in the White House!” Yet, strange though it was, this gristly little frontiersman here beside him—this bodacious, dog-eating, cliff-hanging, grizzly-bear hunter, squatting here by a wind-whipped campfire twenty-three hundred miles from civilization digesting a meal of buffalo guts—actually had lived in the White House! Fate, William thought, plays curious games!

May 14, 1805

B
OTH CAPTAINS WERE WALKING ON SHORE THIS EVENING
. That was unusual. But the land was interesting, and they had things to discuss, so they walked along the shore together, now and then glancing out toward the white pirogue, which was
coming along under sail in midstream. Charbonneau was visible at the helm, his red wool cap marking him. Sacajawea sat under the awning amidships with her baby in her arms. Three oarsmen, one of them Cruzatte, were working against the stiff current while another man held the brace of the squaresail, and the boat was making the pace of a walking man. Following were the red pirogue and the dugout canoes, in a ragged single file. The weather had been changeable all day; the riverbanks downriver were softly illuminated now by a setting sun, but across the river a drift of black clouds came flying low, its lower edge sweeping along like a tattered skirt. The waves on the river were building up and beginning to break into whitecaps.

“Hey, now,” William said to Lewis, “I wish it wasn’t Charbonneau on that tiller.” He was remembering the last time.

Lewis opened his mouth to reply, but paused at the sound of rifle fire far behind. Four shots, faint over the wind, in close sequence. They peered down along the river, counting sails. Five. One of the canoes was either still around the bend or had put ashore. “What d’you reckon?” said Lewis. “They gone ashore to hunt?”

“A salvo like that, I’ll wager they’re makin’ war on a grizzly,” William said.

They walked a bit farther, the wind from across the river whipping at their clothing, and Lewis looked worried, glancing first at the choppy waters and then back down the river.

Two more rifle shots sounded. And after a while four more at close intervals. “Damnation,” William said, stopping and turning around, “s’pose they’ve got attacked by Indians?”

“Oh, oh!” Lewis cried just then, staring out into the wind. William looked. The white pirogue was heeling and turning under a blast of wind from the squall line; William saw the wind come shivering across the water, blowing tops off the waves, and felt it beat cold around his face, and just then Lewis cried into the gale at the top of his lungs:

“PUT HER BEFORE THE WIND! HEY! YOU FOOL! PUT HER BEFORE THE WIND!”

But Charbonneau was responding dead wrong, just as he had the last time. He threw the tiller to the left and the pirogue luffed into the wind. The squaresail immediately began whipping and fluttering violently, so violently it tore the brace out of the soldier’s hand, and the vessel went onto her side as if shoved over by a giant unseen hand.

“Godalmighty!” Lewis screamed into the wind, watching the vessel with all its valuable cargo—almost everything needed to
complete the journey—laying over in the pounding waves, shipping water fast, only the resistance of the awning against the water so far keeping her from turning turtle. Lewis and William both were shouting now, but the wind across the water virtually blew their voices back into their mouths, and the tiny figures aboard the boat kept moving with an infinite slowness, doing nothing effectual. Lewis fired his rifle into the air to attract their attention; William fired his; but the little figures continued their slow, confused movements, unheeding. William, his heart sinking with a sense of tragic helplessness, watched Charbonneau drop the tiller and fall to his knees in the bilges, wringing his hands; he saw Scannon slide and fall overboard into the icy water; he saw Cruzatte hanging onto the bow for his life while the soldiers clawed the gunwale for a grip. They could hear Charbonneau’s screaming prayer come across the wind:
“Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu, aidez-moi!”
Cruzatte’s voice came, too; he was yelling in rage at Charbonneau. Sacajawea, now to her waist in water, seemed to be grabbing for items as they floated over the side. And far downstream, as if to add to the confusion, another rifle banged.

“CUT THE HALYARDS! HAUL IN THE SAIL!” William roared through cupped hands. He heard something hit the ground beside him. It was Lewis’s rifle. Then his shot pouch and espontoon fell beside it, and William turned to see Lewis unbuttoning his coat and running toward the water’s edge.

“No!” William yelled, and sprinted after him. He caught his wrist in an iron grip just as Lewis flung off his coat.

“Let me go! I’m—”

“You can’t swim in that! You’d perish in two minutes!” He hung onto Lewis’s straining arm and turned to shout again: “HAUL IN THE SAIL! Look,” he cried, “they’re doing it!” The men were gathering in the sail, desperately, with great difficulty. William prayed silently for them; he knew that two of them could not swim, and neither could Charbonneau. And this water was too cold for even a vigorous swimmer.

Lewis was watching, no longer pulling toward the water, perhaps beginning to realize that the high waves and frigid water would be fatal. “God!” he groaned, “if that boat goes under, I’m as well off dead!”

“Swallow such talk,” William snapped. “Look! She’s righting!” The mast was a little more vertical now, as the sail came in. But the hull was almost submerged, full to the gunwales with icy water, waves breaking over her windward side. The woman remained kneeling in water amidships, babe in one arm, snatching
up floating objects with her free hand. Charbonneau was still bellowing supplications to his God, utterly ignoring the swinging tiller, and the boat was in danger of getting swamped by a wave broadside. But now Cruzatte was roaring at Charbonneau; he had drawn his pistol and was pointing it at Charbonneau in the far end of the pirogue.
“Tirez! Tirez!”
His voice came on the wind now: “Take the helm, or I shoot!”

William stood, still holding Lewis’s wrist, and watched the desperate little crisis act itself out among the tiny figures, so remotely distant, but so detail-clear in the glorious cross-light of a prairie sunset. The red pirogue and the following canoes were having their own battle with the gusting winds, but were not in any trouble. “Never do I give that buffoon the tiller again,” Lewis hissed through clenched teeth. “He’s surely the most timid waterman in all the world!”

“Aye! That woman of his, though. Look!” She was still working swiftly, holding her baby while capturing drifting articles in the sloshing water.

“There! He’s come to. He’s got the helm now!” Cruzatte’s threat had at last moved Charbonneau out of his paralysis, and he was at the tiller. The sail was in now, and Cruzatte had organized the crew. Two men were bailing with kettles, while Cruzatte and another were on oars, pulling the pirogue and its great load of water toward the shore, slipping fast downstream on the current. The vessel was so low in the water, so fully swamped, that the high waves broke over her, refilling her as fast as the bailers could pour. But, little by little, she was coming across the distance. Scannon, his head a dark spot on the river, apparently tired of swimming around and just then decided to climb back aboard; one big forepaw reached over the gunwale. Oh, no, William thought, that great beast’ll overset her again.

Cruzatte was yelling at the dog, now threatening him with an oar.

“SCANNON!” Lewis yelled. “SCANNON! COME!”

The dog, fortunately, heard, and turned away from the boat to come swimming strongly toward his master.

Scannon came floundering out of the river’s edge a few minutes later, shook himself mightily, and then ran up and down the bank, barking in his deep voice at the oncoming pirogue. The other vessels had turned toward the bank now. William and Lewis waded out into the numbing water to their waists to meet the vessel and help haul her in. The danger past, Cruzatte and Charbonneau were yelling at each other in French, Cruzatte damning, Charbonneau whining in his own defense. Despite
their exertions, the people in the pirogue were shaking with cold. As they hopped out and pulled with their last energies to get the vessel onshore, William looked in dismay at the pathetic mess floating or sunk everywhere in the hull: notebooks, charts, lists, specimens, medicine boxes, navigational instruments, pans, parfleche bags, decanters, strips of jerky, flour kegs, powder horns and canisters, hats, moccasins, beads, medallions, and trinkets meant to be used as Indian gifts. God knows what’s lost in the river or spoiled, he thought.

T
HEY MADE CAMP ON THE SPOT
. A
LARGE BONFIRE WAS
built to warm and dry the occupants of the pirogue. The men stripped to the skin and rubbed the fire’s heat into their bodies, then hung their sodden buckskins on poles and bushes to steam in the fire’s heat. Sacajawea was trembling violently, but was tending first to her baby, kneeling near the fire, drying him. William got a dry blanket and draped it over her shoulders, and she looked up at him with eyes eloquent in gratitude. He made a hand sign which meant “good,” and then returned to the shore, where a desperate effort was being made to salvage the articles. William’s own wet leggings and breeches were chilling him through, making his old winter rheumatism ache, but there was much to do and little light left. The sky was blown nearly clean of clouds now; it seemed there would be no rain in the night. That was a boon. Everything from the canoe was lifted out, dribbling, and carried up and laid out on the bank to drain. Papers were spread on the ground and stones set on their corners to keep them from blowing away. As this process was continued in the twilight, it became apparent that although everything was soaked, hardly anything was missing except a few iron cooking utensils, which had sunk, and one notebook containing Captain Lewis’s journal for the first year of the voyage.

BOOK: From Sea to Shining Sea
11.08Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

A Reckless Beauty by Kasey Michaels
A Cup of Rage by Raduan Nassar
The Dating Deal by Melanie Marks
Phantom Prey by John Sandford
Extra Time by Morris Gleitzman
Lillipilly Hill by Eleanor Spence
Forbidden Quest by Alaina Stanford
Pack and Coven by Jody Wallace