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"Is there any here," asked Mahipyasapa, "who would accept these slaves?"

No one spoke.

"Give them to the women," said a man.

"Give them to the women!" cried several of the man.

"Please, Master," cried she who had been Bloketu, suddenly, turning and throwing herslef to her shoulder, and then to her belly, before Cuwignaka. She kissed his moccasins fervently, lying bound on her belly before him. "Please, Master," she begged, weeping, "please accept me as a slave!"

Iwoso threw herself on her belly, on the rock, before Hci. "I am a slave!" she wept. "Please, Master, do not let them give me to the women!" Her tears flowed copiously, staining the rock and his moccasins. Her body trembled. Her small wrists moved helplessly behind her, confined in their tight thongs. Her lips pressed again and again to his moccasins, covering them with pleading, desperate kisses. "I beg you, Master!" she wept. "Please, please accept me as a slave!"

He crouched down, and turned her to her side, that she might look up at him. "You said you would rather die than to be my slave." he said.

"I lied," she said. "I lied! I am a slave! You may punish me for such things!"

"I often wondered," said Hci, "if you might not have been a slave."

"You see now it is true, Master!" she said.

He regarded her.

"But not only am I a slave," she said. "I am your slave!"

"My slave?" he asked.

"For years," she said, "I have known that I was your slve. Surely, too, you, when you looked upon me, must have known that you were my master!"

Hci said nothing.

"These things were confirmed at the post," she said, "when you taught me my sex, and your power!"

Hci regarded her, not speaking. His face was expressionless.

"I ask only," she said, "the opportunity to prove to you that I am worthy of being owned."

He stood up, his arms crossed. He was lean and strong, in the breechclout.

"Give them to the women!" cried a man.

"Give them to the women!" cried men.

"No," said Cuwignaka.

The men were suddenly silent, startled.

"I accept this woman," he said, indicating she who had been Bloketu, "as my slave."

She who had been Bloketu laid her cheek on the rock beside his moccasins, shuddering.

"Give that one to the women!" cried a man, indicating she who had been Iwoso.

"No," said Hci, his arms folded, surveing the men. "She is my slave."

"So be it," said Mahpiyasapa. "The matter is done." He, then, and the others, began to disperse.

Iwoso lay shuddering at Hci's feet, helpless.

"You are Cespu," said Cuwignaka to she who had been Bluketu.

"Yes, my Master," she said. In Kaiila, the word 'cespu' means "wart."

"You are Cesli," said Hci to she who had been Iwoso.

"Yes, my master," she said, named. The word 'cesli' in Kaiila means "dung," that of either men or animals. Among the Kaiila such names as Cespu and Cesli are not uncommon for slaves.

I looked about. Cuwignaka and Cespu, and Hci and Cesli, and I, were alone at the trail summit. I decided that perhpas it was time to take my leave, as well.

Cuwignaka, gently, was untying the ankles of Cespu.

"A slave begs boon," said Cesli to Hci.

"Yes," asked Hci.

"Please untie my ankles, Master," she said.

"Why?" he asked.

"That I may serve my master," she said.

I withdrew from the summit of the trail and, in a few moments, stood high on the escarpment, looking over the plains. The horizons in the Barrens are vast and beautiful.

I looked down, once again, to where the barricade had been previously place. There, near the trail's summit, about a hundred feet to my right and a few feet below me, on the ascendant, sloping, exposed surface of the trail, the cliff on one side, the wall on the other, slaves were in the arms of their masters.

I looked again then on the breadth of the Barrens, surveying them from the height of Council Rock, returning thereafter to my lodge.

Chapter 51

THE FLEER BRING A VISITOR TO CAMP

"They found it on the prairie," said a man, "the Fleer did. They have brought it here."

Two stout ropes were on its neck, each slung to the saddle of a kaiila, on its opposite sides. Men with lances rode behind it. The creature was weak, and had been much bled. Its upper body was almost covered with ropes, binding its arms tightly to its sides. A heavy branch, about eighteen inches long and three inches thick, had been thrust between its jaws, and its jaws tied shut about it. The claws had been torn out of its feet.

"What is it?" asked a man.

"It is one of those who were with the Yellow Knives," said a man, "those defeated on the trail."

This was the Kur I had come to think of as the eight Kur. It had been apparently separated from its companions at the time of the massacre of the wagon train and the fight between the soldiers and the savages. I had met it once before, when it had returned to the field to feed. It was that Kur which had been threatening the Waniyanpi, and whose attack I had frustrated. As we had not been similarly armed, it alone, afoot, and I with Grunt, he with an armed crossbow, and as it had not rushed upon me, I had not contested its withdrawl from the field. Such had seemed in accordance with codes to which I had once subscrived, codes which I had never forgotten. I had later learned from he who was then Pumpkin, then one of the Waniyanpi, that nine bodies of beasts had been found on the field. These had not been nuried by had been dragged away, into the fields, by the red savages. Thus I had been unable at the time to determine whether or not Kog and Sardak had been among the Kur survivors of the attack. There had been seventeen wagons with the mercenary column which I had conjectured had contained one Kur apiece, given the irritability and territoriality of such beasts. Subracting the nine beasts which had been slain in the fighting, probably mostly by Fleer, who seemed to have less apprehension concerning their appearance than several of the other tribes, I had arrived at a probable figure of eight Kur survivors.

When Cuwignaka and I had spied on the victory celebration of the Yellow Knives and soldiers at the summer camp we had counted only seven Kurii there, including Kog and Sardak. The eighth Kur, then, as I thought of him, seemed clearly to have been separated from his fellows. I had conjectured that he had perhaps perished on the prairie. Now, however, he had paparenly been taken by Fleer, and within the general vicinity. This was, I suspected, no accident. He had probably been following the warriors, conjecturing perhaps that the movements of such large numbers of men might have to do, in one way or another, with the projects of his peers, with whom, doubtless, he had hoped to resume contact.

"What shall we do with him?" asked a man. "The Fleer do not want him. Too, some Fleer are uneasy concerning the killing of such a creature."

"Tell them," I said, "to take him to the lodge of the dark guest."

The man then turned to the Fleer. He pointed to the Kur, and then, with a sweeping guesture, indicated a direction. He then crossed the index fingers of his right and left hand, like lodged poles. He then lifted his head and opened his mouth, as though baring fangs, and lifted a the same time his right hand, the fingers crooked like claws, in a threatening gesture.

The Fleer in charge of the captive nodded and, with a movement of his hand, indicated that his companions, the Kur in their charge, should follow him.

My eyes and those of the Kur met. He, too, I think, recalled our previous encounter.

He was then, shuffling in the dust with bloody feet, from which the claws had been extracted, bound helplessly, dragged on ropes and prodded with the butts of lances, conducted toward the lodge of Zarendargar.

Chapter 52

A BOON

"Take up your sword, I beg you," said Alfred. He had already seized up his sword from the low, flat rock in the midst of the encircling savages. Kaiila, Dust Legs, Fleer and Sleen. I looked at the sword, lying on the rock. I had little taste for what must be done.