A motley and picturesque-looking crowd had gathered within
the walls of Fort Richelieu to attend the annual distribution
of powder and lead, to take part in the winter drills and
target practice, and to join in the Christmas festivities,
that would last until the fast-approaching New Year.
Coureurs des bois from the Western country, scouts, hunters,
trappers, militiamen, and habitants from the surrounding
settlements, Indian warriors from the neighbouring tribe of
friendly Abenakis, were all placed under the military
instruction of the company of regular marine infantry that
garrisoned the fort constructed in 1665, by M. de Saurel, at
the mouth of the Richelieu River, where it flows into the
waters of the St. Lawrence, forty-five miles below Montreal.
It was on Christmas eve of the year 1706, and the dreaded
Iroquois were committing depredations in the surrounding
country, burning farm-houses, stealing cattle and horses, and
killing every man, woman, and child whom they could not carry
away to their own villages to torture at the stake.
The Richelieu River was the natural highway to the Iroquois
country during the open season, but now that its waters were
icebound, it was hard to tell whence the attacks from those
terrible savages could be expected.
The distribution of arms and ammunition having been made,
under the joint supervision of the notary royal and the
commandant of the fort, the men had retired to the barracks,
where they were drinking, singing, and telling stories.
Tales of the most extraordinary adventures were being
unfolded by some of the hunters, who were vying with one
another in their attempts at relating some unheard-of and
fantastic incidents that would create a sensation among their
superstitious and wonder-loving comrades.
A sharp lookout was kept outside on the bastions, where four
sentries were pacing up and down, repeating every half-hour
the familiar watch-cry:
"Sentinelles! Prenez garde … vous!"
Old Sergeant Bellehumeur of the regulars, who had seen forty
years of service in Canada, and who had come over with the
regiment of Carignan-Salieres, was quietly sitting in a corner
of the guard-room, smoking his Indian calumet, and watching
over and keeping order among the men who were inclined to
become boisterous over the oft-repeated libations.
One of the men, who had accompanied La Salle in his first
expedition in search of the mouths of the Mississippi, was in
the act of reciting his adventures with the hostile tribes
that they had met in that far-off country, when the crack of
a musket was heard from the outside, through the battlements.
A second report immediately followed the first one, and the
cry, "Aux armes!" was soon heard, with two more shots
following close on each other.
The four sentries had evidently fired their muskets at some
enemy or enemies, and the guard tumbled out in a hurry,
followed by all the men, who had seized their arms, ready for
an emergency.
The officer on duty was already on the spot when Sergeant
Bellehumeur arrived to inquire into the cause of all this
turmoil.
The sentry who had fired the first shot declared excitedly
that all at once, on turning round on his beat, he had seen a
party of red devils dancing around a bush fire, a couple of
hundred yards away, right across the river from the fort, on
the point covered with tall pine-trees. He had fired his
musket in their direction, more with the intention of giving
alarm than in the hope of hitting any of them at that
distance.
The second, third, and fourth shots had been successively
fired by the other sentries, who had not seen anything of the
Indians, but who had joined in the firing with the idea of
calling the guard to the spot, and scaring away the enemy who
might be prowling around.
"But where are the Indians now?" inquired the officer, who
had climbed on the parapet, "and where is the fire of which
you speak?"
"They seem to have disappeared as by enchantment, sir,"
answered the soldier, in astonishment; "but they were there a
few moments ago, when I fired my musket at them."
"Well, we will see"; and, turning to Bellehumeur: "Sergeant,
take ten men with you, and proceed over there cautiously, to
see whether you can discover any signs of the presence of
Indians on the point. Meanwhile, see to it that the guard is
kept under arms until your return, to prevent any surprise."
Bellehumeur did as he was ordered, picking ten of his best
men to accompany him. The gate of the fort was opened, and
the drawbridge was lowered to give passage to the party, who
proceeded to cross the river, over the ice, marching at first
in Indian file. When nearing the opposite shore, near the
edge of the wood, the men were seen to scatter, and to advance
carefully, taking advantage of every tree to protect
themselves against a possible ambush.
The night was a bright one, and any dark object could be
plainly seen on the white snow, in the clearing that
surrounded the fort.
The men disappeared for a short time, but were soon seen
again, coming back in the same order and by the same route.
"Nothing, sir," said the sergeant, in saluting the officer.
"Not a sign of fire of any kind, and not a single Indian
track, in the snow, over the point."
"Well, that is curious, I declare! Had the sentry been
drinking, sergeant, before going on post?"
"No more than the rest of the men, sir; and I could see no
sign of liquor on him when the relief was sent out, an hour
ago."
"Well, the man must be a fool or a poltroon to raise such an
alarm without any cause whatever. See that he is immediately
relieved from his post, sergeant, and have him confined in the
guard-house until he appears before the commandant in the
morning."
The sentry was duly relieved, and calm was restored among
the garrison. The men went back to their quarters, and the
conversation naturally fell on the peculiar circumstances that
had just taken place.
An old weather-beaten trapper who had just returned from the
Great Lakes volunteered the remark that, for his part, he was
not so very sure that the sentry had not acted in perfect good
faith, and had not been deceived by a band of loups-garous
werwolves who came and went, appeared and disappeared, just
as they pleased, under the protection of old Nick himself.
"I have seen them more than once in my travels," continued
the trapper; "and only last year I had occasion to fire at
just such a band of miscreants, up on the Ottawa River, above
the portage of the Grandes-Chaudieres."
"Tell us about it!" chimed in the crowd of superstitious
adventurers, whose credulous curiosity was instantly awakened
by the promise of a story that would appeal to their love of
the supernatural.
And everyone gathered about the old trapper, who was
evidently proud to have the occasion to recite his exploits
before as distinguished an assemblage of dare-devils as one
could find anywhere, from Quebec to Michilimackinac.
"We had left Lachine, twenty-four of us, in three
war-canoes, bound for the Illinois country, by way of the
Ottawa River and the Upper Lakes; and in four days we had
reached the portage of the Grandes-Chaudieres, where we rested
for one day to renew our stock of meat, which was getting
exhausted. Along with one of my companions, I had followed
some deer-tracks, which led us several miles up the river, and
we soon succeeded in killing a splendid animal. We divided
the meat so as to make it easier for us to carry, and it was
getting on toward nightfall when we began to retrace our steps
in the direction of the camp. Darkness overtook us on the
way, and as we were heavily burdened, we had stopped to rest
and to smoke a pipe in a clump of maple trees on the edge of
the river. All at once, and without warning of any kind, we
saw a bright fire of balsam boughs burning on a small island
in the middle of the river. Ten or twelve renegades, half
human and half beasts, with heads and tails like wolves, arms,
legs, and bodies like men, and eyes glaring like burning
coals, were dancing around the fire and barking a sort of
outlandish chant that was now and then changed to peals of
infernal laughter. We could also vaguely perceive, lying on
the ground, the body of a human being that two of the imps
were engaged in cutting up, probably getting it ready for the
horrible meal that the miscreants would make when the dance
would be over. Although we were sitting in the shadow of the
trees, partly concealed by the underbrush, we were at once
discovered by the dancers, who beckoned to us to go and join
them in their disgusting feast. That is the way they entrap
unwary hunters for their bloody sacrifices. Our first impulse
was to fly toward the woods; but we soon realised that we had
to deal with loups-garous; and as we had both been to
confession and taken holy communion before embarking at
Lachine, we knew we had nothing to fear from them. White
loups-garous are bad enough at any time, and you all know that
only those who have remained seven years without performing
their Easter duties are liable to be changed into wolves,
condemned to prowl about at night until they are delivered by
some Christian drawing blood from them by inflicting a wound
on their forehead in the form of a cross. But we had to deal
with Indian renegades, who had accepted the sacraments only in
mockery, and we had never since performed any of the duties
commanded by the Church. They are the worst loups-garous that
one can meet, because they are constantly intent on capturing
some misguided Christian, to drink his blood and to eat his
flesh in their horrible fricots. Had we been in possession of
holy water to sprinkle at them, or of a four-leaved clover to
make wadding for our muskets, we might have exterminated the
whole crowd, after having cut crosses on the lead of our
bullets. But we were powerless to interfere with them,
knowing full well that ordinary ammunition was useless, and
that bullets would flatten out on their tough and impenetrable
hides. Wolves at night, those devils would assume again,
during the day, the appearance of ordinary Indians; but their
hide is only turned inside out, with the hair growing inward.
We were about to proceed on our way to the camp, leaving the
loups-garous to continue their witchcraft unmolested, when a
thought struck me that we might at least try to give them a
couple of parting shots. We both withdrew the bullets from
our muskets, cut crosses on them with our hunting-knives,
placed them back in the barrels, along with two dizaines [a
score] of beads from the blessed rosary which I carried in my
pocket. That would surely make the renegades sick, if it did
not kill them outright.
"We took good aim, and fired together. Such unearthly
howling and yelling I have never heard before or since.
Whether we killed any of them I could not say; but the fire
instantly disappeared, and the island was left in darkness,
while the howls grew fainter and fainter as the loups-garous
seemed to be scampering in the distance. We returned to camp,
where our companions were beginning to be anxious about our
safety.
We found that one man, a hard character who bragged of his
misdeeds, had disappeared during the day, and when we left on
the following morning he had not yet returned to camp, neither
did we ever hear of him afterward. In paddling up the river
in our canoes, we passed close to the island where we had seen
the loups-garous the night before. We landed, and searched
around for some time; but we could find no traces of fire, or
any signs of the passage of werewolves or of any other
animals. I knew that it would turn out just so, because it is
a well-known fact that those accursed brutes never leave any
tracks behind them. My opinion was then, and has never
changed to this day, that the man who strayed from our camp,
and never returned, was captured by the loups-garous, and was
being eaten up by them when we disturbed their horrible
feast."
"Well, is that all?" inquired Sergeant Bellehumeur, with an
ill-concealed contempt.
"Yes, that is all; but is it not enough to make one think
that the sentry who has just been confined in the guard-house
by the lieutenant for causing a false alarm has been deceived
by a band of loups-garous who were picnicking on the point,
and who disappeared in a twinkle when they found out that they
were discovered?"
EndSoldiers have to contend not only with Indians, but werewolves as well.