"Your rifle will guard this warrior as he goes into the camp alone," he said to Double Runner. "If you soon see that there is no threat of a Cree ambush, come to me and help me with the white man. If he is alive, he will need nourishment quickly and a travois made for his return to our village. You will help Spotted Eagle do these things. Do you understand?" Double Runner nodded.
Spotted Eagle waited until he thought that his men should be in a wide circle around the abandoned camp, then crept out into the open, an arrow notched to his bow. With wary eyes, he kept a guarded look on all sides of him as he moved toward Kirk.
When he came closer to Kirk, he realized now how the Cree had gone about preparing their white captive for the stake. They had smoothed a cottonwood tree by taking off the bark and had painted it black. They had then stood Kirk against it and fastened him there with a great many ropes.
After they had Kirk secured enough so that he could not move, they had painted his face black.
Spotted Eagle could even now hear how the Cree renegades would have made a prayer, giving Kirk to the Sun.
And they had left him for the Sun, sky, moon and any animals that might happen along.
Spotted Eagle took the last step to stand in front of Kirk, shuddering at his appearance and the many small wounds that had been inflicted by the Cree women and children. Before he had lapsed into a deep sleep, he had suffered much at the hands of his abductors!
Thinking of Jolena waiting back at his village, Spotted Eagle hesitated to place a finger to the vein at Kirk's neck, fearing that he would discover that her white brother had not lived through the ordeal. But he had to know. Lifting his free hand to Kirk's blackened neck, Spotted Eagle sought for a pulse, for a moment fearing there was none.
Then he smiled and nodded, finally finding one, even though faint and slow.
Double Runner came to Spotted Eagle's side as his other warriors emerged from hiding, one by one. There seemed to be no Cree anywhere. As Cree war parties were wont to do, they had moved onward to wreak havoc elsewhere.
"Is he alive?" Double Runner asked, leaning close to Kirk studying him.
" Kyi. Barely," Spotted Eagle grumbled, laying his bow on the ground. He drew his huge knife from its sheath at his right side. "Lay your rifle aside, Double Runner. As I cut this man's ropes, you catch him."
Spotted Eagle gazed around at his other warriors. "A travois must be prepared," he ordered them. " Hai-yah! Quickly! We must not tempt fate by remaining here any longer than is required to prepare this man for traveling back to our village. Among us, we should have plenty of robes and skins for his bedding!"
Everyone scurried into action as Spotted Eagle moved his knife toward the first rope, then stopped with a start when Kirk slowly began lifting his head, his eyes soon finding Spotted Eagle's.
"Thank God," Kirk whispered raspily, his throat dry and parched. "I… wouldn't have lasted another hour. Thank you, Spotted Eagle. Thank… you." Kirk's head lowered again and his eyes closed. Spotted Eagle hurriedly cut the ropes and soon Kirk was free. Wounded and weak, he fell to the ground before Double Runner or Spotted Eagle could catch him.
Spotted Eagle slipped his knife back into its sheath and fell to his knees beside Kirk. He began rubbing his limbs in an effort to put life back into them.
Kirk slowly opened his eyes again. "You would do all of this for me?" he said in a raspy whisper.
"I do this for your sister," Spotted Eagle said, his voice drawn.
Spotted Eagle continued rubbing Kirk's limbs for a while longer, then lifted him up into his arms and carried him to a place where he had seen many sarvis berries. After laying Kirk down beside the bushes that were heavy-laden with fruit, he broke off great branches of it. He plucked a large, ripe berry from the branch and held it to Kirk's mouth.
"To get strength, eat," he said softly. "These will quench your thirst as well as your hunger."
Kirk choked on the first berry, then once his throat was reacquaint
ed with food and liquid, he ate them as quickly as Spotted Eagle could get them into his mouth.
Spotted Eagle broke off more branches full of the ripe berries and continued feeding them to Kirk until a travois was completed and attached by long poles behind his stallion, several knots in the rawhide thongs securing the travois poles to the horse's saddle. " Tsis-icome, white brother. We will leave now," Spotted Eagle said, once again lifting Kirk into his arms and carrying him to the travois. "Soon you will be with your sister again."
Spotted Eagle laid Kirk on a bed of pelts, then wrapped him securely with the hides of the medicine animal, the great bear.
Giving Kirk another lingering stare, seeing that he was asleep again, Spotted Eagle then swung himself into his saddle. With a raised hand, he gave the silent order to head back toward their village.
Double Runner rode on ahead of the others, his eyes ever watchful for an ambush, grateful to find the path quiet and peaceful for their return to their people.
Spotted Eagle rode in a soft lope, to make the ride as comfortable as possible for Jolena's brother as the poles of the travois bounced and jostled through tall grasses and along rock-strewn coulees. He had not taken the time to remove the black paint from Kirk's body, afraid that allowing time for that might give any passing war party the opportunity to attack.
Spotted Eagle was glad that he had not been forced to attack a Cree camp filled with women and children just to rescue a white man. Although the Cree were responsible for Two Ridges' death, Spotted Eagle could not blame them all for the act of one manLong Nose! Nor could he blame the others for what this particular band of renegades had chosen to do to Kirk. It was not for Spotted Eagle to know why they did any of these things, but always to guard against other attempts!
The morning came with a faint tint of pink to the sky as Spotted Eagle rode into his village. The sound of their horses drew the Blackfoot people from their tepees, Jolena among them as she clutched a blanket around her shoulders.
Jolena's eyes were wide and her pulse raced as she ran from her father's tepee, half stumbling in her eagerness to get to Spotted Eagle and the travois that he pulled behind his horse.