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Authors: Terry C. Johnston

Ride the Moon Down (55 page)

BOOK: Ride the Moon Down
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Then Scratch looked down at the shaft piercing the meat of his right arm and settled back into the snow with a grunt. As Stiff Arm came to a stop to stand over him with that dripping scalp in one hand, Bass grumbled, “Hold the end of the arrow. No—your hand must be near my arm.”

With the warrior bracing one end of the shaft, Titus seized the other end of the bloody arrow, gripping it where
the cherrywood shaft protruded from the arm. He took a breath, held it in his lungs, and snapped downward with a loud crack.

“Pull!” he cried as the breath gushed from his mouth with a hot pain.

The younger man yanked the fletched end of the arrow through the white man’s arm.

It took a moment, but the wound’s fiery river subsided to the point where Titus dared to flex his wrist gently, slowly bend his fingers. Lucky that the shaft hadn’t cut anything but meat, he thought, relieved that everything still worked.

“We must see to Strikes-in-Camp,” he suggested as Stiff Arm helped him to his feet.

But Strikes-in-Camp held out his arm, gesturing for them to halt where they were as he himself took another step backward.

Both of them stopped, bewildered. Titus asked, “Just give me my—”

“This one,” Strikes-in-Camp interrupted as he pointed to the dead man lying at his feet, “you will see he has the disfiguring sickness. The other one too,” and he kicked the second Blackfoot’s body.

While Stiff Arm released Bass’s wrist and inched backward in trepidation, Scratch tried to make sense of this shocking news.

“You don’t know if they’re sick—”

“Both of them touched me,” the warrior argued. “This one who held me from behind, he rubbed his face against mine as we struggled—”

Bass swallowed, getting to his feet as he gripped that right forearm. “Let me see him.”

Now the tall Crow fell silent for a long moment, then said, “You white men, is it true you cannot get the disfiguring sickness?”

He had only doubt. “I have heard some white men become sick—but they do not die.”

“Like the Indian always dies?”

“It will not kill me,” Titus explained, taking a step toward the warrior. “Let me see the Blackfoot.”

Strikes-in-Camp took three steps to the side, away from the two bodies. Bass walked over, propping the wounded arm across his chest, then knelt beside the first body. The enemy’s sallow face was just beginning to erupt with angry red pustules. Not so bad, he thought. Perhaps the Crow had little to fear.

He knelt over the second dead warrior who lay on his belly. Turning him over with a toe, Bass jerked back the instant he got a look at the man’s face.

“He was already a dead man,” Strikes-in-Camp said woefully.

“Yes,” Bass replied, gazing down into that face of death—a ghastly, oozing death mask worn by a man with a day, perhaps little more, left to live.

“Stiff Arm, you must return to the village,” the tall warrior instructed. “Tell them what happened here. Bring men with you to see to our dead.”

“Y-you will stay here with the bodies until we return?” Stiff Arm asked.

He shook his head sadly. “No. I cannot be here when the others return. You tell them I have gone somewhere to think about the death that is coming to me.”

“Where?”

Strikes-in-Camp peered at Bass. “Perhaps I should go to see my sister and her children once more before I die.”

“That … that might kill them,” Bass warned. “Just as it would kill your own wife and children to be close to them.”

“Yes,” he admitted quietly. “I cannot be with any of my family while I die.”

“They would grow sick too—”

“Then I will have to die alone,” the warrior said.

“No,” Bass argued. “No man should die alone. We can go to my camp. We can make a shelter for you near ours, where you can be close enough to see your sister, but not so close you will make her sick. And I will care for you when you no longer can care for yourself.”

“That will be the hardest of all for me,” Strikes-in-Camp admitted. “A man unable to take care of himself.”

“I will tell your wife where to find you,” announced Stiff Arm.

“But no others,” Strikes-in-Camp ordered. “No one else must come … so there can be no chance of our people all dying.”

“Where is your camp?” Stiff Arm asked the trapper.

Bass turned, pointing at the hills to the northwest. “Half a day’s ride from this place.”

“Then it is a long day’s ride from our village,” Stiff Arm said. “I will bring them so they can look at you one last time.”

Strikes-in-Camp drew himself up and took a long, rattling sigh. “Bring them quickly, Stiff Arm. I want them to see me with my own face … not this face of a horrible death. Just look upon this one, the face of our enemy. That is no way for my family to remember me.”

She could hear her daughter whimpering. Magpie sobbed in their Crow tongue, softly muttering a few words at a time.

But it was difficult for Waits-by-the-Water to hear what the girl was saying somewhere behind her on another pony. The attackers had knotted a wide band of thick blanket material around her head, blinding her eyes, covering her ears with the heavy dark-blue wool.

“Water, Mother,” Magpie said. “Tell them to give us water.”

Then she heard a loud slap, immediately followed by her daughter’s shrill wail.

“Magpie—be quiet,” she chastised the child. “Be strong and do not do anything to make them hurt you.”

Just as she had to remind herself. Be strong.

Waits licked at her puffy, cracked lip, tasting the blood again. It reminded her that she had put up a fight before they subdued her. From the corner of her eye she had seen the stick swinging at her; then it all went black. When she awoke, there were at least four of them, more—all around her. One was on his knees between her legs, pulling his breechclout aside, pulling out his manhood.

She had screamed at what they were about to do.
Someone slapped her hard with a flat hand. That’s when she tasted the first blood. In the background Magpie was shrieking. She could see her daughter being held back by one of the warriors who had a handful of the girl’s hair. Magpie would be forced to watch what was about to happen to her mother.

Suddenly, as the warrior rocked himself forward between her thighs, another attacker raced up on a horse—shouting, barking angrily at the rest. The warrior between her legs snapped back at the man on the pony—both of them speaking in a tongue she did not understand. Then those who had gathered around her to shame Waits-by-the-Water started to inch back, cowed by the anger of the one on the pony.

That’s the moment she bolted to her feet and lunged for Magpie, hoping the two of them could make it to the thick timber, where it might be hard for the enemy to follow them—

But the one on the horse wheeled his pony, stabbed his heels into its ribs, and caught up to her just before she reached the warrior yanking her daughter about by the hair. She heard the sound more than felt the impact.

Waits stumbled, tripped, and went to her knees near Magpie’s feet. Blinking to clear the brilliant shooting stars, Waits turned slightly when she heard the pony snort. That’s when she saw the rider swinging the bow again. It cracked against her cheek and across the temple.

She did not awaken until now, finding her wrists bound together and lashed to the pommel of the saddle she could feel with her fingertips. Around her ankles they had wrapped more bands of rawhide, tying her feet together beneath the pony’s belly. Why were they stealing her and her daughter? Who wanted the two of them alive—

Then she remembered, and her heart sank.

“Magpie,” she said, her puffy lip and swollen tongue making it difficult, “where is Flea?”

“Safe,” the girl whispered.

“One of these attackers stole him too?”

The girl was a long time in answering. “N-no.”

Magpie must have known how that news would stab
her mother. Waits reminded herself to keep her voice quiet. In little more than a whisper, she asked, “Not with us?”

“No.”

Her greatest fear was realized—to lose another loved one. Especially her husband or a child. The tears began to gush, her nose running as she fought down the thoughts of doing something that would make these attackers kill her, just kill her now that they had murdered her son.

“They killed … killed your brother?”

“No—”

“W-where then?” Her heart wanted to believe. “Is he alive?”

“Yes.”

Her heart leaped. “Magpie—you must tell me now—”

“Safe.”

“Later, you will tell me where your brother is.”

Ti-tuzz wouldn’t know where to find them, could not know what had happened to them. And her husband surely wouldn’t realize what had become of Flea. The boy wasn’t with their attackers, yet he was safe….

How she prayed that her daughter wasn’t lying to her only to make her feel better. Oh, how she prayed that Flea was still alive.

“Waits-by-the-Water!” Scratch called out as he led Samantha and Strikes-in-Camp off the hillside toward his camp.

He wanted to give them warning that they were approaching, so that she could gather the children, keeping a safe distance from her brother. Bass realized how the suddenness of seeing Strikes-in-Camp, after the man had prevented them from entering the Crow camp for so long, would likely cause Waits to rush headlong to embrace her brother.

But that could not be.

“Waits-by-the-Water!” he cried again.

Simply could not be, since he dared not think of her becoming sick … dying horribly, in pain, doubled over with a fever, the flesh on her face pocked with scabrous
pustules. Eyes sunken, lifeless even before a merciful death took her—

Through that last copse of trees he saw the camp.

Everything scattered. What wasn’t broken appeared to be torn, ripped, destroyed.

Their shelters toppled, canvas slashed. A sour ball collected in the pit of him.

“Where is she?” the warrior asked in a low voice as he came to a halt beside the trapper, his eyes looking over the ruin.

“Something happened … I don’t know—” Then he suddenly kicked out of the saddle and landed on the snow.

He was on his knees, studying the prints—ponies and moccasins.

“Here. Look,” he said to the warrior, motioning him down from his pony. “Tell me these are not Blackfoot.”

Joining the white man on the snow, Strikes-in-Camp studied the tracks, peered off to the northwest. Then looked at Scratch’s face. “Blackfoot.”

“Not just the warriors who attacked you?” It was starting to sink in. “More?”

The warrior stood. “Perhaps all belong to a large war party who came to Absaroka to make war on us.”

“And the warriors who attacked your hunting party when you …” Bass paused, his eyes narrowing, wanting to select his words carefully. “When your hunting party was on its way back to the village?”

“Only part of the raiders.”

“How many?” Bass demanded of the warrior.

“No more than ten here. Maybe less.”

He watched the Crow stand, follow the tracks to the far side of the camp where he stopped, gazing off through the trees. Bass joined him.

“Ten horses left here with riders on them, going in that direction. They took the rest of your ponies with them.”

Bass whirled, peered through the lodgepole at his makeshift rope corral. “Damn,” he sighed. “The rest of my ponies.”

“Only ten ponies have riders.”

After a moment of studying the hoofprints, Scratch stood. “I count only ten too. No matter: I will chop them off like limbs from the trunk of a tree—one branch at a time … to kill one each time they stop or make camp. When I have chopped off a few limbs, then I will attack the rest.”

“I am going with you.”

“But you are going to …”

“I am not sick yet,” Strikes-in-Camp protested.

“No,” the white man argued, wagging his head. “I can’t chance taking you along with me. When you do grow sick—too sick to ride—then you will be like a heavy stone that I must drag along as I chase the enemy.”

He watched how his words slapped the proud warrior. In his heart Bass struggled with the thorny dilemma.

“Strikes-in-Camp, you would force me to choose between staying to help you while you are dying a terrible death,” Scratch explained, “or leaving you behind to die all alone, when I ride off to find your sister and our children.”

“Your children, yes,” Strikes-in-Camp repeated bravely. “I am not sick now, Ti-tuzz. If we delay—then I just grow sicker each day I can be following the enemy.”

“Stay here and wait for Stiff Arm,” Scratch said, turning to place a hand on the warrior’s shoulder. “When he brings your family here, you can have him return to your village and bring a war party along behind me—”

“That would be the hope of a fool’s hen,” the warrior scoffed, shrugging the white man’s hand from his shoulder. “You want me to believe that they would have a chance of catching up to you when it won’t be until tomorrow evening before they reach here? Then Stiff Arm would need another day to return to the village, a third day to get back here again … they will be at least three days behind you—”

“I don’t have time to argue with you. I must leave now,” Bass interrupted sternly, wheeling around. He was bitter, angry—wanting only to find his family and draw the blood of those who took the loved ones from him. For now, all he could do was wound with his words. “I cannot
wait on those who kept my wife from rejoining her people. Nor can I take a sick man who will be dying along with me.”

“Do you have any more guns?”

Titus stopped, slowly turned back to gaze at the warrior. “I left some for your sister to protect herself, our children. But the enemy probably—”

“Find them, white man.”

“Yes,” he said. It made a lot of sense. “I will need every gun I can carry when I catch up to those Blackfoot.”

“We will need every gun.”

“Fm not taking you!” Bass roared, remembering how twice he had told Josiah Paddock he wasn’t coming along on a journey into danger.

“No. This is not yours to decide,” the warrior said evenly. “I am a man. And a man chooses how he wishes to live. How he will die. She is my sister. Her children are my relations. Your family is my family, white man. Your people have killed the tribes along the Missouri with this sickness. Then your people sent their sickness into the Blackfoot nation … and now your people have killed me too—”

BOOK: Ride the Moon Down
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