Savage Illusions
Page 60
"Yes," Double Runner said solemnly. "It is your now. The Cree loses not only his life, but his means of travel to the Sand Hills." Brown Elk nodded his approval, then turned and went inside his tepee.
Quiet, their heads bowed, the people turned and went to their own dwellings.
Gray Bear gave Spotted Eagle a father's hug, stared down at Jolena questioningly for a moment, then wandered away toward his own dwelling.
Spotted Eagle placed an arm around Jolena's waist and ushered her to his tepee at the far edge of the village, where a meandering stream passed behind it, silver in the moonlight.
As Spotted Eagle held the buckskin entrance flap aside, Jolena paused and grew even more somber and quiet when she heard the sudden sorrowful wails of her father. She cringed and tried to close her ears to the sound, but nothing stopped the mourning cries from reaching her.
'' Oh, ah! No-ko-I! Ah, Ah! No-ko-I! My son! My son!" cried Brown Elk, over and over again, filling the still night air with the sound, as though thousands of arrows were piercing it.
Spotted Eagle placed a firm arm around Jolena's waist and whisked her inside his tepee.
Wiping tears from her eyes, Jolena found two Indian women there. One was readying the fire, while the other held a large black kettle with pleasant aromas wafting from it.
Spotted Eagle gestured toward a couch cushioned with pelts beside a fire that was now taking hold, sending its flames around the logs, as though in a sensuous caress.
Jolena sat down. Recognizing one of the two women as Moon Flower, she found it easy to smile as the women cast her humble glances just before leaving Jolena and Spotted Eagle alone.
After the women left, Spotted Eagle sat down beside Jolena. Taking two wooden bowls that had been placed close to the fire, he ladled out enough soup for them both, then handed a bowl and wooden spoon to Jolena.
"Eat," he said softly. "Sometimes it is good to feed the physical body at times like this, if not the soul."
Jolena nodded and took the bowl and spoon. Without reluctance she began sipping the soup from the spoon, finding it rich and delicious, and in a way it filled part of that empty void that the day's events had caused. Her gaze swept around her. Spotted Eagle's lodge was the same as her father'svery large and handsome, well supplied with parfleches, saddles, food, robes, and bowls. It was comfortable and cozy, what Jolena would have expected in the lodge of her Blackfoot warrior.
Spotted Eagle ate in silence, then set his empty bowl aside as Jolena set hers down on the floor at her right side.
"Tell me how you happened to find our village of Blackfoot," Spotted Eagle then asked, not able to hold in the questions that were eating away at him any longer. "Tell me what you know about Two Ridges' feeling toward you."
Jolena turned her eyes slowly to Spotted Eagle. "I, too, have questions," she murmured. "And, darling, do you remember how we have both said that we should never keep secrets from each other? I will tell you things that need to be said, if you will also empty your heart of feelings that are troubling you."
"About Two Ridges?" Spotted Eagle said, stretching one long, lean leg out before him, leaning back so that he was resting on his right elbow.
"Yes, about Two Ridges," Jolena said, swallowing hard.
"Besides myself, you are the only one that will know the truth," Spotted Eagle said, his voice drawn.
"And you know that it will go no farther," Jolena said, moving to her knees beside him. She gazed intensely into Spotted Eagle's eyes. "Darling, what I have to say can hurt you deeply."
"The hurt is already there," Spotted Eagle said. " Kyi. I know of Two Ridges' feelings toward you. I know that he intended to kill me because of you, yet I find it hard to know the exact reason he felt that this was necessary."
Jolena lowered her eyes and again swallowed hard, trying to find the courage to tell him what she needed to thrust from within her, so that she could enjoy some semblance of peace again. She wanted to be free to be happy with her beloved warrior and to be a part of her true people.
She raised her chin and looked Spotted Eagle square in the eye again. "I was thrown from my wagon on the day of the accident," she explained. "Two Ridges found me before you did. He took me to a cave." She was finding the story difficult to tell, because telling it seemed the same as reli?
?ving it.
But she finally found the courage to continue.
"Two Ridges was gentle at first," she said, her voice soft and quavering. "But then… then he began kissing and touching me. He tried to rape me, Spotted Eagle. I… found a rock. I hit him over the head, then escaped."
A quick rage heated up Spotted Eagle's insides. His eyes were lit with fire as he sat up and reached for Jolena's hands and clutched them tightly. "He did that?" he said, his jaw tight. "Two Ridges was capable of even that sort of deceit?"
"You wondered what would make him feel that it was necessary to kill you?" Jolena said, tears streaming down her cheeks. "He could not face you knowing the truth, and he knew that I would tell you if ever I had the chance. He had to know that it would be either you or he who would die. I don't guess he liked the odds. By ambushing you, he was going to be sure that you died, instead of him."
She leaned closer to him. "That's how it happened, isn't it?" she softly cried. "He was going to kill you and accidentally got in the way of the Cree's arrow? He would have never stopped the arrow on purpose. He would have allowed the Cree to kill you to keep from having to do it himself."
"You are right," Spotted Eagle acknowledged, releasing her hands. He leaned over the fire and stacked more wood onto the flames. "Two Ridges did not know of the Cree's presence. When Two Ridges raised his knife to kill me, the Cree's arrow is what stopped him from taking my life."