to take us along, using the paddles only to maintain direction.

Once a great cloud of pigeons flew up, darkening the sky for a full two minutes as they swept by, a dusty brown screen between us and the sun. Further along we encountered three buffaloes swimming the river, but we had plenty of buffalo meat and had killed three wild turkeys earlier in the day.

This was my world and I was at ease with it--with the river, its waters still strong from melting snow, and with the dark, mysterious walls of the forest on either hand. I had never known the ease of cities or the trading and haggling of the marketplace. What I now had was what I wanted, to know the wilderness at first hand, to wander its lonely paths, to discover, to see, to feel, to search out the unknown and meet it face to face.

'You have been to the Far Seeing Lands?' I asked Keokotah.

'I have. Others of my people have. We Kickapoo are great wanderers.'

This he had said before and I acknowledged it, for so I had been told in the lodges of the Cherokees.

'No people lived there,' he said, 'until now. A few came, then more, but they are very few even in this day.'

'Where do they come from?'

'North, they come from the north, always there are people coming down from the north. And some from the east. There are people like you who sell guns to Indians. The Indians who have guns make war against Indians who have none, and the Indians without guns come westward to escape. These Indians push against other Indians until finally some have had to go out into the Far Seeing Lands.'

It made sense. We had heard that the Dutch at Hudson's River were trading guns to the Indians. One thing more I had learned: more than any other Indians the Kickapoos, because of their inclination to wander, knew most about other tribes.

The Indian did not own land. A tribe might claim an area for hunting and gathering, but a stronger tribe might push them out, or they themselves might move when game became scarce.

Other things I learned from the casual talk of Keokotah, and one of these was that only those Indians who were present when an agreement was made need abide by its terms. A chief was so by prestige alone, a prestige won by his greatness as a warrior, his success as a leader, or his wisdom in council.

That night we camped on the bank of a creek emptying into the Hiwasee. It was a grassy shore with forest all around, fuel enough, and a good place to hide our fire. We talked much, and as we talked Keokotah's tongue loosened and words forgotten returned to him. His English friend had taught him well, obviously impressed by Keokotah's quick intelligence.

Once during the night I caught a faint sound from the forest, not a sound of wind among the trees, not a sound of an animal moving, but of something else, someone or something. I lay wide-eyed, listening. Keokotah seemed asleep but with him one never knew.

Our fire was down to a few coals, our canoe bottom up on the shore, our weapons at hand. All was still, and I heard no further sounds, yet I had heardsomething.

Morning came and Keokotah said nothing. Had he heard the sound in the night? Did he not think it important? Or was it a sound he had expected? How could I know there were not other Kickapoos about? So I said nothing of what I had heard.

It was a lazy, easy, sun-filled morning. We watched the river for other Indians but saw none. Hiwasee could not be far away down the river, and many Indians would be there.

'What game is further west?' I asked him.

He shrugged. 'Like here.' There were deer of several kinds, one his English friend called wapiti. 'I do not know what is wapiti. Much buffalo west. More than here. Bears, ver' large bears. A bear with silver hair almost as large as a small buffalo.'

'A bear? As large as a buffalo?'

'Not so great. Nearly. He has a hump on his back and he is hard to kill. You see this bear you go away before he sees you. He ver' fierce bear.'

He dipped his paddle and the canoe glided around a rock, and Keokotah added, 'There is big animal, big as a bear, maybe much bigger. He is yellow, long hair, very long claws. He dig. Much dig.

'Then there is big animal, much meat. He have long nose, two spears.'

'Spears?An animal that carriesspears? '

Keokotah made a sign for a long nose and two curved spears. An elephant?Here?

I had never seen an elephant, although Sakim had drawn pictures of them, and my father had, I believed, seen one in England.

'No,' I shook my head. 'Not here.'

'I speak clear.' Keokotah was suddenly very dignified. 'I see only one time. Long time. I know old man who hunt him many times. He is big, ver' big animal. Much hair.'

That was wrong. I knew about elephants and they did not have much hair. Only short, stiff bristles sometimes. 'There is such an animal, but he does not live here.'

That was a mistake. 'He lives,' Keokotah spoke stiffly. 'I see him.'

He did not speak again for many hours and I knew I had seriously offended him.

The idea was preposterous, yet how could he have even known of such an animal? His English friend, perhaps? But why would Keokotah lie?

Twice we sighted Indians on the shore, and once a canoe tried to overtake us, but it was no such canoe as ours and we left them far behind.

Suddenly Keokotah pointed. A land mass seemed to block the river. 'Hiwasee!' he said.

As if commanded by the sound of his voice, two canoes shot into the main stream, each propelled by four paddlers. Dipping their paddles deep, they overtook us, one on either side.

'Cherokees,' I spoke to Keokotah. 'Hold your hand!'

Chapter Five.

They were beside us, weapons ready. To attempt escape was to die. If we fought, the odds were against us, but I had friends among the Cherokees over the mountains. Even here I might find friends.

We had traded with Cherokees at Shooting Creek, and we had carried trade goods to Cherokee towns to the south and east of us.

Of Barnabas they must surely know. His name had become legend. Kin had often gone to their villages and had many friends among them, but of these Over Hill Cherokees we knew too little and that only by hearsay.

Kin and Yance had hunted with the Cherokee, and had been on war parties with them. Yance, I had heard, was especially loved by them, my wild, rowdy, and reckless brother of great strength and an unfailing sense of humor.

How could they know of me, the Quiet One? He who walked in the shadows among the laurel sticks and stood alone on the balds when the sun was rising?

'Hold your hand,' I warned the Kickapoo.

'They are enemies! I fear none of them!'

'I know you do not fear and they know it as well, but if you would live, hold your hand and be guided by me. I am not their enemy and they shall know it.'

'Is it that you fear?'

'If you walk beside me you shall see if I fear, but if they will permit I shall be a man of peace. I have no feud with the Cherokee.'

'They need no feud. A scalp is a scalp.'

My friend the Kickapoo was no fool, but we had no choice. The friendship of the red man was based upon different considerations than with us, although there were places where our trails of belief crossed. It behooves one to be wary when among strangers and not to trust too much.

To the shore we were guided, and when we drew our canoes up on the land one of my captors reached for my bow. Their village was close-by.

Drawing it away from him I stared into his eyes and said, 'I am a friend. I am Sackett.'

The warrior's hand fell away.'Sack-ett!' he exclaimed.

'He is Sack-ett,' another said. 'He has the face of Sack-ett.'

'I do not know him,' another said. 'I do not see him.'

'We come as friends, to smoke with the Cherokee. Then we go to the Great River, and beyond.'

Вы читаете Jubal Sackett (1985)
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