“Not at all.” Blue Water Woman smiled sweetly. “You would make some man a fine wife.”

Shakespeare snorted in mock indignation. “ ‘O curse of marriage, that we call these delicate creatures ours.’ ” He bent and kissed her on the cheek. “Don’t think I don’t know what you’re up to, wench.”

“Pardon me?”

“You’re trying to keep me from worrying by taking my mind off that gash in your skull. But it won’t work. I love you too much.”

Blue Water Woman reached up and squeezed his hand. “As I love you, Carcajou.”

Shakespeare closed the door. He came around the travois, climbed on the mare, and started off at a turtle’s pace. “If I jostle you, I’m sorry. I’ll do the best I can not to.”

“You are most considerate.” Blue Water Woman was warm and snug. She closed her eyes and felt the motion of the travois under her.

Despite his worry, Shakespeare was optimistic. It appeared she wasn’t severely hurt. A couple of weeks to mend, and she would be her old self.

“Husband?”

“Yes, nag of my life?”

“How do you think Zach is faring?”

“That boy can handle himself better than most.” But deep down Shakespeare was worried. Blood warriors were fierce fighters. He wished he could have gone with the boy.

“Husband?”

“Yes, oh chattering chipmunk?”

“Why do you think the Blood took Louisa?”

“Maybe he hankered for companionship.” But Shakespeare doubted it.

The Blackfoot Confederacy was notorious for its hatred of whites. The last time he went to Bent’s Fort he’d been surprised to hear that several priests had gone into Blackfoot country to convert them. It struck him about as silly as trying to get a griz to give up meat.

“Husband?”

“Will you hush and rest? You talk more now than before you got that knock on the noggin.”

“I only wanted to say that after you get me home, you should go after Zachary.”

“No.”

“I will be fine by myself.”

“It’s still no.”

“Zach and Lou might need you. I could not bear it if anything were to happen to them.”

“I couldn’t bear it if anything happened to you.” The very thought made Shakespeare’s eyes mist. “Zach will understand. He’d do the same if he were in my moccasins.”

“May I ask you one more thing? And then I will be quiet.”

Shakespeare shifted to check that the travois was dragging as it should. Sometimes the poles came apart if they weren’t tied tight. “I’ll believe that when I don’t hear it. But go ahead. Ask away.”

“Are you sure you would not like to have a child of our own? We could go to St. Louis and adopt.”

“Are you insane? At our age?” Shakespeare laughed. “My heart might say yes, but my aching joints say no. It’s sweet of you, though.”

They were halfway to Nate’s cabin. The shore became rocky, so much so that Shakespeare reined closer to the trees, where the ground was largely rock free. He gazed at the wooded slopes to the west and spied a cloud of dust high up. The cloud grew, borne by the breeze. What caused it, he wasn’t rightly sure.

“Husband?”

“So much for your promise. You are falser than vows made in wine.”

“I insist you go find Zach and Lou. It will be partly my fault if they come to harm.”

“How do you figure?”

“If I had not been hurt, you would have gone with him.”

“Did you invite the Blood to our valley? Did you ask to be hit on the head? Quit being ridiculous.” Shakespeare shifted in the saddle. “When I get you to our cabin, you had better still that tongue of yours or I will by god sew your mouth shut.”

“You are adorable when you are angry.”

Shakespeare had a retort on the tip of his tongue, but just then the undergrowth crackled and out of the forest lumbered the last thing he wanted to run into with his wife lying helpless on a travois and the mare unable to go any faster than a walk.

It was a bull buffalo.

The seven Tunkua had seen the whole thing, and marveled at the destruction. They had crept to within an arrow’s flight of the young white woman and the warrior and were watching from concealment. They saw the warrior cut her hands free and remove the gag.

When they used sign talk, Skin Shredder almost gave himself away. He rose higher to see better and the brush he was hidden in rustled. But neither the warrior nor the woman looked up. He didn’t know which tribe the warrior belonged to. Since all tribes were his enemies, it didn’t matter.

Skin Shredder was about to signal to begin the stalk when a rider appeared lower down. That it turned out to be the young breed was no surprise. His people knew that the breed and the young woman lived in the same lodge. The breed had come to save her.

Skin Shredder expected blood to be spilled. He decided to await the outcome. He was amazed when the white woman attacked the warrior. She had great courage, that one. He was even more amazed when they tumbled onto the talus and caused part of the slope to break away.

Now the sliding of the earth had ceased. The talus was still. Thick clouds of dust rose over it.

Skin Shredder slashed the air with a hand and he and his fellow warriors cautiously moved lower. The warrior’s animal was tied to a tree and shied at their approach. Thanks to the breeze, the dust soon cleared— revealing nothing but talus.

“I do not see any of them,” Splashes Blood declared.

“Nor I,” Star Dancer said.

“We will circle around and search,” Skin Shredder instructed “You three go that way. You others come with me.”

“Do we finish them with arrows?” Star Dancer asked.

“It has been too long since our people ate a live heart. If they are breathing, we take them back with us.”

To the Tunkua, eating a heart was their most sacred ritual. Everyone took part. The sacrifice was fed a last meal the night before. At sunrise the sacrifice was stripped and washed and tied to a stake. Then came the dance of knives. By the time it was done the sacrifice was cut from head to toe. Usually they screamed and wailed. But they did not scream long. The taking of the heart came next; it was cut from them while they were alive. Then the medicine man would hold it aloft and go among them, and every Tunkua—man, woman and child—would reverently touch it. The heart was then cut into small pieces, and a piece placed on the tongue of each.

More than any other ceremony, it spoke to who they were and firmed the bond they shared as Tunkua.

Skin Shredder hoped they found one of the three alive.

Wisps of dust still rose. Here and there pebbles rattled.

They looked for bodies—an arm, a leg, anything.

“A bad way to die,” Splashes Blood said.

“Not fit for a warrior,” another agreed.

To Skin Shredder, death was death. His time would come one day, and he looked forward to it. The Tunkua believed there were three spirit worlds in the afterlife: one for animals, another for enemies, and a third for Tunkua. Life was much like it was in this world except there were no ailments or pain or misery, and the hearts tasted sweeter.

“They must be buried.”

“Keep looking.”

Вы читаете The Outcast
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату