As the entrance flap was lifted, Jolena saw an elderly lady with waist-length gray hair and wrinkled face, burdened down with a beautiful cowhide decorated with elaborate drawings.
"These are for the daughter of Brown Elk," One Who Walks With A Limp said, as she smiled a toothless smile up at Jolena. "The lodge poles, back rests, and inner lining for the tepee lies where you will build your tepee."
Jolena stepped from the lodge and took the burden from the slight, elderly lady. "Thank you so much for doing this for me in the absence of my mother," she murmured. "It is something I shall never forget."
One Who Walks With A Limp nodded and bowed her head humbly, then slowly lifted it and gazed at Brown Elk as he placed a gentle hand on her shoulder. "It is with much joy that I made this for your daughter,'' she murmured. "It was good to be singled out for such an honor. Thank you, Brown Elk. It is as though I was a young girl again, making my own lodge, for my own man. It was good… feeling young again."
Brown Elk drew the woman into his arms and gave her a generous hug. "You will always be young in your heart, and in my eyes," he said.
When he eased her from his arms, she turned and walked away, limping heavily with each step.
Moon Flower moved quickly to Jolena's side and helped relieve her of some of the burden by taking one end of the cowhide into her own arms. "Let us go and build the tepee so that the dowry can be soon placed there," she said, giving Brown Elk a laughing smile.
Jolena raised an eyebrow, still not knowing exactly what this talk of a dowry was all about. "Yes, let's," she said, laughingly walking away with Moon Flower, clumsily sharing the hide as they half stumbled along across the stamped-down ground of the village.
As he watched Jolena and Moon Flower, Brown Elk smiled and folded his arms across his chest.
Spotted Eagle watched from his tepee as Jolena and Moon Flower stepped into the center of the village and began erecting the lodge.
Then his gaze shifted as he looked over at Brown Elk, wondering what the dowry might amount to, for he wanted to send over to his father-in-law's lodge twice the number of gifts his bride's father would pay his son-in-law.
Chapter Thirty-Three
Jolena had tried to sleep but found it impossible, so she'd spent the night preparing the special meal for Spotted Eagle, with Moon Flower giving her hints in cooking the sorts of meats that Jolena was not familiar with. The morning sun was now splashing its golden light down the smokehole, and Jolena's father's dwelling smelled pleasant with fragrances of the best of foods taken from his food supply, some choice berry pemmican, and the tongue and "boss ribs" of the buffalo, said to be the most desired parts by the Blackfoot warriors.
"I see that my daughter is ready to take her offerings to the man who will soon be her husband," Brown Elk said, as he came to the fire, yawning and stretching. He gave Moon Flower a pleasant smile and nod, then continued talking to Jolena. "Spotted Eagle surely has not ever had such a feast as that which will be placed before him today."
Jolena turned from her preparations and gave her father a bright smile. "I've never been so excited," she said, giving her father a hearty hug. "Will I actually become Spotted Eagle's wife today? It isn't just one of my dreams?"
"If this is a dream, it is a good one, is it not?" Brown Elk said, chuckling as he eased Jolena from his arms. He reached a hand to her brow and smoothed some loose locks of her hair back in place.
"Oh, yes," Jolena said, clasping her hands together behind her. "It is all so wonderful. But it is real, and so much better because it is."
"The lodge you prepared for my son-in-law is handsome," Brown Elk said, sitting down on a couch cushioned with soft pelts. "You have placed your wedding attire in it already?"
"Yes, father," Jolena murmured, watching as Moon Flower devotedly ladled Brown Elk a large bowl of buffalo stew. "I am now ready to take the meal to Spotted Eagle. Do you think he will be awake?"
Brown Elk accepted the bowl of stew and a spoon, then gave Jolena an amused smile. "Will he be awake?" he said. "Daughter, I doubt he slept a wink all
night."
Jolena nervously brushed her fingers through her hair, then noticed some stains on her skirt that had splashed there while she was cooking. She turned anxiously to Moon Flower. "Perhaps I'd best take a bath in the river and change clothes first," she said.
"Your bath should be taken just before you change into your wedding attire," Moon Flower softly suggested. "You will then smell fresh and clean like the river for your husband when you go to him later, after you move your tepee beyond the village, close to the outer fringes of the forest, where you can have privacy from prying hearts and listening ears."
"I must move the tepee after having taken so long to erect it?" Jolena asked, her eyebrows raised in puzzlement. "I have even gone many times through the night to add wood to the fire, so that the tepee would be warm and cozy when Spotted Eagle went inside. I wanted everything to be perfect. Why must I change it?"
"Moving into the middle of the circle is considered an honor," Moon Flower explained. "Only important people build the marriage lodge in the center of the village. Next to his father, Spotted Eagle is the most important person in this village. He will one day be chief. You have erected a wonderful lodge for him to show off to his people. And there are other reasons for the lodge which you will discover through the day."
Jolena had felt that her efforts with the marriage tepee had been wasted. But now she understood.
"Your warrior should not be made to wait much longer for the meal his woman has prepared for him," Brown Elk reminded her. "Go to him, Jolena. Accompany her there, Moon Flower. Fill both your arms with platters of food for this man who will soon be a husband."
Jolena nodded. Her heart hammered inside her chest as she placed her many offerings of food into a basket. After Moon Flower had her own basket filled, Jolena and Moon Flower left the tepee. They stepped out into a glorious morning of cool, soft breezes, a clear, blue sky, and the songs of birds as they began awakening in the forest beyond.
Jolena walked beside Moon Flower with a proudly lifted chin, racing heart, and trembling fingers, feeling many knowing eyes on her. She could hear the hushed buzzing of voices as everyone pushed closer to observe the first stages of the wedding ceremony. Jolena could feel a hot blush rise to her cheeks as more and more people pressed closer, the children giggling.
Doing her best to ignore her audience, Jolena set her eyes on Spotted Eagle's tepee. She felt her heart do a flip-flop when she noticed that the entrance flap was open, held back by a young brave.