Meaning, of course, that the world, packed with things unknown, was often startling – even discounting the secrets women knew.
The Robins' War-leader, Chad Budnarik, always added, 'Response,' meaning a man- – who was a man – met surprises with speed, force, and modest good sense.
These sayings were not in Pete Aiken's mind on Wild-plum Mountain, but
No one could say that a Pete-led posse didn't swiftly respond. The notion of hunting immediately thrown away, the notion of killing-or-capturing immediately in its place.
So down the mountainside went Pete Aiken; down the mountainside went Lou and Gerald and Gerald's brother, Patrick. The Boston-woman – a sort of Person for sure, who for sure had not walked far in these Robin mountains – did not rise up into the air, but limped and scuttled like a wounded bobcat down to the hemlocks.
'Ours!' Pete called, and led them down – then ducked since Gerald's brother, running behind, had thrown a javelin… sent it hissing barely over everyone's head.
The javelin went nowhere near the Boston-woman, but she ducked away as if it had… and was gone, tucked into the stands of evergreens.
'Never again,' Pete said, which was taken to mean he wouldn't go hunting with Gerald's brother, anymore. Pete had his hatchet out – better for tangled fighting – so everyone else gripped theirs, and followed him into the hemlocks, calling,
Deep in the trees, dark under tree-shadow, Patience stood waiting, wishing for sooner night, her greatcoat's blue blending into shade. She'd drawn her sword,
With the next birth, her mother had died.
… The Robins seemed a noisy four, young, cheerful, and confident in their mountain country at the corner of old Map-Kentucky. Patience smelled them, heard them coming in, and caught a distant glimpse of one – then another – between shaggy hemlocks. Presentable young men, lean-muscled, with cropped curly beards and mustaches, and already becoming summer-tanned, possessing the gloss and glow that well-fed savages sported while young. They'd be thickly scarred up and down their bare chests and bellies in sinuous feather-and-plumage patterns, to honor their totem… None would go naked as Sparrows and Thrushes often went. These all would be wearing – as those she'd glimpsed were wearing – the mid-east tribes' leather kilts and strap sandals. The hunt leader likely sporting a headdress of feathers dyed robin's-egg blue.
One – 'Lou'? – was coming ducking through evergreen branches directly toward her… perhaps following a faint trail of disturbed foliage.
Regretting her slung left arm, Patience tightened her right-hand's grip on the scimitar's hilt… and slowly raised the blade high, cocked it slightly over her shoulder. The odor of evergreens seemed to grow almost overpowering…
The Robin came on, making more woods-noise than he would have if a deer or armed man were waiting. Or if he were older, and wise.
One of his friends called, a distance through the trees.
The young man, almost certainly 'Lou,' stepped stooping through the thicket… was close enough to almost touch – and saw her standing nearly beside him as he started to straighten.
As always, in her experience of those moments, Patience felt time's sudden winter, a moment's freezing, slow, and difficult to strike through. The young man – blue eyes startled as a frightened child's – crouched for some purpose, perhaps to leap away, then raise his hatchet or javelin for fighting.
Patience saw, as he saw in their shared instant, that would not be possible.
'Farewell, Lou,' Patience said – and almost hidden beneath green hemlock fronds on the forest's floor, the head's mouth trembled as if to answer.
Death, though not noisy, had somehow echoed through the woods, and the other Robins were silent as Patience was silent. Then – as if killing had given them its direction – they came booming, leaping through greenwood toward their dead friend, while Patience fled.
… Boston had never preached to praise the night; though perhaps the Productive Mothers, in their pens, welcomed darkness to shroud the remembered sight of their odd or ruined children. Still, Patience composed her own prayers for nightfall while she ran, insistant as if she had every right to demand the whole world go rolling faster. She begged the Mountains' Jesus and Kingdom River's Floating One; she offered what she didn't have to Lady Weather – intending to pay that debt later – while every stride, every leap over winter-fallen timber was a knife-thrust into her shoulder.
The three men came after her, tracking fast, bird-calling back and forth to keep their interval. They hadn't paused at Headless Lou.
Only the mountainside's broken country in dimming light, the tangled rough here-and-there of the thick hemlock grove, gave Patience chances to pause… scent the men's quarterings on errant breezes, then scramble in the other direction. Once or twice, she doubled back to almost meet them – so they passed her by WT yards as she crouched panting quietly as she could, mouth open, her eyes closed as if to see was to be seen.
After a while, exhausted – by hunger even more than pain – she become a dreaming girl again, full of wishes. She imagined Sam Monroe had come to stand beside her in the dusk, amused, liking her as he always had through every exasperation. If he were alive, he would come to help her in just that way. Not as a king, but as the war-worn young man she'd met in the Sierra those many years ago. His hard face, kind eyes, the long-sword strapped down his back.
He – and others, if they were alive – would have come to aid her. It seemed unfair that mere death should keep her from her friends.
Night was falling with the last of sunset's shadows, their darker shade amid the hemlocks, but would not come quite soon enough. Patience was running her last run along the top of an embankment choked with toppled great trees – dredged out and thrown down by the mountain's spring flooding years before. The bark was rotting from huge logs piled confused as if the Lady and Lord Winter played there at pickup sticks.
The men were close behind her; Patience could hear their swift steps through the trash.
Soon to be caught. Then a fight – and perhaps another Robin killed before they hacked her down.
She slowed… slowed to turn to meet them – and saw amid the splintered tumble of ruined trees below, a possible spoiled hollow. She thought it was a shadow, then thought not – and leaped out into the air to fall thudding into timber… rolled off some rough round and fell again through jumbled stacks of trunks and branches, her shoulder a lance of agony flashing in her mind white as washed wool.
When she lay still, bark-burned and bleeding, her scabbarded sword's belt twisted and turned beneath her, Patience took time for only one difficult breath… then crawled deeper into the wreckage, crawled beaten and bruised as if her back were broken, to where she'd seen the hollow. She sought through descending night… and heard the Robins' chirps and whistles above, as they trotted searching along the embankment's edge.
She crawled and clambered – then saw the dark hollow, its massive log-end angled between two smaller broken trees. Gritting her teeth against groans, Patience struggled over the lowest log – and found the hollow just above her. She reached up, right-handed, into its dark crumbling space… hauled herself half into it… and had to shake her left arm out of its sling to aid.
Then, with pain past pain filling her mind like an icy ocean, Patience used both arms – left shoulder twisting in and out of joint with soft crunching, brilliant blazes of agony – used both arms to drag herself up and into a rough,