An expert tracker, he peered at the tall grass, the moon's glow revealing which route had been taken by his friend and his copper princess.
His eyes continuing to follow the trail of crushed grass, he traveled a far distance, then gasped when he found the body of the panther, two arrows piercing its side.
He knelt close to the panther and examined the arrows.
"Spotted Eagle's," he hissed.
His jaw tight and his heart thundering, he again followed the trail, stopping with a start when just up ahead, in a clearing, he saw two nude figures intertwined on the ground.
His throat went immediately dry and his heart seemed to tumble to his feet, knowing who the lovers were without taking another step.
"I am too late," Two Ridges whispered angrily to himself. "But I still will not give her up. She will be mine. Soon. It cannot be any other way. Even if friends become fast enemies, this woman will be my wife!"
When Spotted Eagle wove his fingers through Jolena's dark hair and drew her lips to his again and kissed her, Two Ridges bitterly turned his eyes away, his hands circled into tight fists at his sides.
"You will be sorry," he said, his voice level and filled with venom.
Chapter Ten
Jolena was deliriously, deliciously in love for the first time in her life. Yet she felt bashfully awkward in the presence of Spotted Eagle now that she had given herself to him. Whenever he looked at her from his powerful stallion as he rode beside her and Kirk's wagon, a sensual thrill attacked her insides.
r /> She could not help but feel somewhat ashamed for what her heart had led her to do beneath the mystical spill of the moonlight. Yet deep down, where her desires and wants were molded, she knew that she would allow it again. She was even eager for her next tryst with the man she loved. Just thinking about it made her warm all over.
Jolena avoided her brother's occasional questioning glances, thinking that surely he saw the difference in his sister today by the way her eyes shone and her lips curved into a smile filled with secret, wondrous thoughts.
As now, as she sat straight-backed on the uncomfortable wooden seat of the covered wagon, she could feel two sets of eyes on her from each side of her. Without even looking at her brother and at the man she loved, she knew that their eyes were filled with a keen possession.
Not allowing herself to even conjure up the possibility of her brother and lover clashing over who possessed whom, Jolena smiled softly and kept her eyes straight ahead. The wind whipped her long black hair back from her shoulders, and her clean, fresh blouse, which she had put on after her brief bath in the river this morning, clung to her breasts as the wind pressed against the cotton fabric.
As the wagons began traveling on a path that had been cut out of a towering forest, the wind was silenced. Everything in the forest was still in the moist heat of mid-morning, as if every leaf of every tree was breathing slowly in the moist air, tasting its fragrance.
Thin shafts of sunlight fell in criss-cross patterns between the gently rising tree-trunks. Some trees were gigantic. Some were small. Some were round and smooth, others gnarled and coarse, some rotting and ready to drop.
It was living so intensely, this forest, that Jolena felt as though she dared not breathe loudly or give signs of her animal restlessness. All around her, saplings, shrubs, flowers, and grasses rushed to close the hole that had been torn in the fabric of the forest roof. Slender growths stretched upward. The soil burst with irrepressible vegetation, and masses of parasitic foliage were entwined with the glorious blossoms of creepers, laced and bound and interwoven with interminable tangles of vines.
The air hummed with flying creatures, with birds as bright as butterflies, startling Jolena into thinking that finally she was going to find the elusive, rare butterfly.
She watched more intensely for any signs of butterflies as the sunlight streamed through many tints of green overhead onto the black masses of moldering wood and leaves beneath the trees.
But still there were no signs of butterflies, and when this stretch of forest was left behind and they were traveling over a more rocky terrain, where neither trees nor grass grew, Jolena settled down, sighing resolutely, now worrying more about the sun that was beating down upon her, scorching her as if a heated iron were being held only inches away from her flesh. She fanned herself with one of her hands, while with the other she gripped the seat of the wagon, the journey having become slow and rough as the wheels of the wagon rolled and bumped over the rocks.
Out of the corner of her eye, Jolena saw Spotted Eagle dismount, then begin traveling on foot, his horse's reins held limply in his fingers as his steed fell back away from him at a much slower gait.
Jolena shifted her gaze and watched Spotted Eagle as he walked tall and proud beside the wagon, so close she could reach out and touch him if she wished to.
But she dared not touch him, for it might start a chain reaction of feelings tumbling through herfeelings she could not act on until privacy was once again granted to her and her handsome warrior lover.
She smiled to herself, finding it hard to believe that her life had changed so drastically since she left Saint Louis. She had hoped for many things as she traveled up the long stretch of the Missouri, but never had she imagined that she would find love, and that she would be taught the true meaning of being a woman while locked within her lover's powerful embrace.
Her midnight dream had come true, she thought. Now if only the other thing that she had prayed upon the stars for each night would happenthen she would feel fulfilled. She would be whole. As long as she never knew her true father and people, she was only half a person.
It was not fair, having been cheated of a lifetime of being with her people and being loved by her true father.
But now she had hopes that even this would soon change. If she could find the courage to ask Spotted Eagle the important questions that were burning within her heart, perhaps then she would not have to search any further for answers!
As Spotted Eagle walked quietly beside the wagon where his woman was so close he could reach out and touch her if he so desired, he was lost in memories of the moments he had spent alone with her. Soon he would tell her many things that would thrill her heart. He was proud that he would be the one to put back together the pieces of her life that had been wrenched apart all those years ago when the white people had taken her from her beloved mother. Once he revealed this truth to Jolena, she would be Blackfoot instead of living the pretense of being white.
His heart leapt when, up ahead, a fox emerged from the forest. When the fox crossed Spotted Eagle's path from left to right, Spotted Eagle smiled, knowing that meant good luck.