Savage Illusions
Page 46
In a daze, he mounted his horse again. With his head hanging and his heart and soul empty, he sent his horse up the side of the steep incline again. Surely Two Ridges would be there now, waiting for him. It made no sense that his friend would leave him at such a time.
If ever Spotted Eagle needed a friend, it was now.
Finally back on solid ground, the shadows of the forest on one side of him, the sheer cliff on the other, Spotted Eagle placed a hand over his eyes to shield them from the blinding rays of the sun, scanning the land for his friend.
Again his jaw tightened, now seeing Two Ridges as a coward, one who rode from death instead of looking it straight in the eye!
But too caught up in sadness, Spotted Eagle gave Two Ridges no more thought and rode off with hunched shoulders toward his village.
Never had he felt so alone as now. It was as though he had lost Sweet Dove a second timeand he knew that this time he would never get over the loss!
Chapter Nineteen
Moaning, her whole body aching, Jolena slowly opened her eyes. The embers of a fire glowed warm beside her and the aroma of cooked rabbit wafted to her nose from the spit it hung on, low over the fire, dripping its tantalizing juices into the glowing coals beneath it.
Feeling around her with her hands, she soon realized that she was lying on a layer of blankets.
Her gaze moved upward, but she could see no stars, no sky, no moon.
"Where am I?" she whispered, leaning up on one elbow, moaning again as she realized how much more she ached with the effort of moving. How did she get here? Why was she aching so badly?
Moving slowly to a sitting position, she looked more carefully around her. When she spied someone lying across the fire from her, obviously asleep, she sucked in a wild breath of relief, thinking it was Spotted Eagle.
Her sigh drew Two Ridges awake, and he bolted to a sitting position, remembering that he had not bound Jolena's wrists and ankles. She would not have had a chance to flee him while he stayed awake, guarding her, but he had not counted on being weary enough to go to sleep so easily.
When he saw that the fire had died down only to embers, he realized just how long he had been asleep.
Too long.
He was lucky that Jolena was still there.
Jolena gasped and grabbed a blanket protectively around her when she discovered that she was not with Spotted Eagle at all! She was staring over the embers at Two Ridges.
Her pulse raced as fear crept into her heart, and she looked wildly around her, realizing that she was in a cave, with no memory at all of how she might have gotten there.
Not seeing any sign of Spotted Eagle anywhere, Jolena glared over at Two Ridges. "I do not have to ask how I got here," she said in a hiss. "You brought me. How could Spotted Eagle have allowed it? Where is he now?"
Before Two Ridges had the chance to respond, what had happened during the storm began coming to Jolena in flashes, as though bolts of lightning were going off and on inside her brain. Each flash brought up new memories that made her heart seem to stop still within her body and her throat to constrict. Everything was so vivid to her in her mind's eye that she could not scream or even talk.
The blinding rain!
The lurid flashes of lightning!
The frightened, wild-eyed mules!
Her screams as she watched the other wagons plunging over the sides of the cliff.
She held her face in her hands as she began sobbing. Then something else came to her, flooding her memory. She thought she had felt strong arms around her waist, dragging her from the wagon just before it toppled over the cliff.
But she now realized it had to have been a savage illusion. The moment she hit the ground, she had been knocked uncons
cious from the force of the fall.
She lifted sorrowful eyes up at Two Ridges, unable to remember who had saved her.
"Who else survived but the two of us?" she demanded, moving to her knees, yet still clutching the blanket around her shoulders. "Two Ridges, tell me who lived… and who died."
Two Ridges moved to his feet and stepped around the fire, squatting down onto his haunches before her. "We are the only survivors," he said, the lie slipping across his lips easier than he would have imagined. "I have brought you to a cave. I have built you a fire for warmth and have prepared food for you. Perhaps it is best now if you eat, not talk. You will need your strength to travel onward to my village."