Jolena knelt down beside Spotted Eagle and breathlessly waited for the medicine man. After a short while "he who leads the buffalo" was seen coming, riding his horse, shouting at the buffalo, bringing a large band after him.
Soon the buffalo were inside the lines. The people began to rise up behind them, shouting and waving their robes.
Now that she saw the buffalo close up, Jolena was too awestruck to participate. They were formidable and frightening looking animals when excited to resistancetheir long, shaggy manes hanging in great profusion over their necks and shoulders, often extending down to the ground. The cows were less ferocious, though not much less wild and frightful in their appearance.
The Blackfoot were not intimidated by the beasts, however, and soon the buffalo were jumping and tumbling over the steep precipice.
Jolena scrambled down the sides of the steep hill with the Blackfoot, and once they reached the pis-kun, the women and children ran up and showed themselves above its walls. By their cries they kept the buffalo that were still alive from pressing against the walls in an effort to escape.
As the surviving buffalo ran round and round within the enclosure, the warriors raised their bows and arrows.
Arrows began whizzing about Jolena, and the buffalo made loud, thundering sounds as one by one they fell to the ground, dead.
Although Jolena understood the meaning of a good Buffalo run, she was still appalled at the sight and was just about to turn her eyes away when Spotted Eagle fitted his elk-horn arrow to his bow and joined the others in the massacre. The butchering would be done in the pis-kun, and after this was over, the place would be cleaned out, and the heads and feet would be removed. Wolves, foxes, badgers, and other small carnivorous animals would visit the pis-kun and would soon make away with the entrails.
The Blackfoot would return home singing and carrying great loads of meat for the long winter ahead.
The wind blew even more fiercely now, making whining, whistling noises and whipping Jolena's hair around her face. Then something else blew against her face, momentarily blinding her.
With clawing fingers, she reached up and grabbed hold of a piece of paper that was fluttering against her face. When she saw what it was her heart did a flip-flop.
''It's a from one of my lost journals," she whispered, staring down at the paper on which her entries were smeared, yet still legible.
Her heart skipped a beat when another flew past her and was speared by a branch on a tree close beside her.
With wild, disbelieving eyes, she stood frozen to the ground as many more s flew past her in the wind.
"Lord," she whispered to herself, her heart hammering against her breast as she turned and peered down the long avenue of the valley that stretched out between other high buttes on each side of it. She knew that the scene of the accident had to be many miles away, yet the wind had plucked the s from her journal and was handing them to her today like a gift!
Jolena soon forgot the women who were now busy at work butchering the large animals. She even forgot about Spotted Eagle, who was now mingling with the other warriors, going from animal to animal to be sure they were dead before being butchered. Frantically, Jolena began running around, grabbing the s as they blew past her, gathering them into her arms, holding them as though they were pieces of precious gold. Then when she saw one of the pieces of cardboard fly by, on which she had pinned many of the butterflies that she had caught, she began chasing after it.
Spotted Eagle turned and saw what Jolena was doing. His heart skipped a beat when she began struggling and climbing up the steep hillside, intent on following the cardboard that he now also spied, as it seemed to be lifting as though by someone's hand, higher and higher, above Jolena's head, exactly as the nymphalid butterfly had done as it had teased her into danger.
Spotted Eagle's gaze shifted upward. He gasped, and his heart felt as though it had dropped to his feet when he saw one lone buffalo bull that had not followed the others over the cliff. It pranced about as though it sensed the slaughter that had occurred below him.
Spotted Eagle's gaze shifted back to Jolena, who was almost at the top of the butte, too stubborn to let the prized cardboard of butterflies get away from her. Once she got to the top and met the bull face on, she would be the one forced over the cliff to her death.
Spotted Eagle nervously notched one of his elk-horn arrows to the string of his bow and aimed, then cursed silently to himself when he found that the buffalo had moved out of eye range.
Yet Spotted Eagle could still hear the animal's loud, crazed bellows.
He could even see it in his mind's eye as it pawed angrily at the ground, fire in his eyes and rage in his heart! Jolena breathed heavily, and her fingers were stinging as she pulled herself farther up the side of the hill. She frowned when she could no longer see the flying cardboard, then her eyes opened wildly when once again it fluttered along the ground, just at the edge of the butte overhead.
"Damn," Jolena whispered beneath her breath. "But I shall have it. I lost it once. But not a second time. I must have something for Kirk to take home to father."
Determination moved her onward, knowing that she now only had to reach up and grab a root that was growing out from the side of the hill and she could pull herself up onto solid ground.
Spotted Eagle cupped a hand over his mouth and shouted for Jolena. He called her name over and over again, but she still did not hear.
His muscles corded, his jaw tight, Spotted Eagle slung his bow over his shoulder and started climbing the hillside. Being more skilled at climbing, he found himself close behind Jolena just as she pulled herself up and out of sight.
Jolena was so intent on what she was after that she had not noticed Spotted Eagle climbing after her. Nor did she pay any attention to the buffalo that was eyeing her with bloodshot eyes and flaring nostrils, a hoof digging grass up by the roots as it pawed over and over again into the ground.
Her heart thumping, Jolena bent to her knees and reached for the cardboard of butterflies. When she had it fina
lly within her fingers, she gazed down at the collection, heartbroken. Most of the butterflies were missing, and those that had survived were incomplete, only their bodies still pinned to the cardboard, or perhaps a wing or two, stripped of their colors.
"Oh, no," she whispered, slowly shaking her head back and forth. "Why didn't I realize it could be no more than this?"