The same mighty blood coursed through young Jackrabbit, already coming of age. And in little Crane too. The one who looked more like her mother than any of the others. They both had this chance, both stood on the cusp of a changing world their father could not begin to fathom, dared not even attempt to imagine. His youngest two now belonged to their brother, and to each other. They were family—even without their mother and father. They were family.
“Children,” Scratch had said as he dropped to one knee on the snow in front of Magpie’s lodge and wrapped the youngest two into his arms, “you will go with your brother soon, and pray at the foot of the tree where he will lay your mother.”
“You will not be there to pray with us, Popo?” Jackrabbit asked.
“No, your brother is a man now. He will watch over you for me, instead of me, from this morning on,” he whispered, then hid his tears in their hair as he crushed both of the youngsters against him and kissed the tops of their heads.
Little Crane squirmed her way loose so she could peer up into her father’s lined and war-tracked face. Her tiny hand came to the long scar that coursed its way down from the outside corner of his left eye. She stroked it with such intense seriousness, and finally asked, “When will you come back to us?”
He smiled through the tears. “One day, I’ll see you both again, Crane. Just like you will see your mother again one day too. When what I have to do is finished … I will see you both again.”
The flesh between her eyes knitted up in confusion. “Where are you going?”
“I’m going to a place where I hope to put your mother’s spirit and mine to rest, little daughter.”
This time a suspicious Jackrabbit inquired, “How far away is that?”
Tousling the boy’s hair as he got to his feet and pulled those young ones against him, waving Hold the Fight and Magpie against him too, wrapping all four in his arms, Bass said, “I hope it is not too long a journey, children. When you go to the tree and pray at the foot of your mother’s body … ask the First Maker to be sure it is not too long a journey for your old father.”
One by one, he kissed them each, on the eyes, on the mouth too, touched their faces one last time, remembering the golden, shining moments of their squirming infancy and how they had brought such exquisite joy to their mother … then before the agony of this separation would delay him any longer, or he would decide against leaving them without both of their parents, Titus Bass suddenly spun and walked away from his four children—
Ahead of him now those five Blackfoot raiders yipped and cried at one another, repeatedly glancing back over their shoulders at the pair of horsemen who followed, closing the gap.
“You are not alone, old warrior!”
Titus turned and looked over his shoulder, surprised to find the face of the one who had called out to him from behind. Bear Who Sleeps urged his heaving pony up to the white man’s side. He smiled at the Crow. “Is your heart strong today?”
The warrior grinned and shook his old smoothbore. “It is a good day to die!”
That made him yip like a young warrior, the cold wind and lowering sky whipping tears from the corners of his eyes. Titus slapped his chest and cried out, “Nothing lives long but the rocks and the sky! All the rest of us must die!”
“A good day for this!” Slays bellowed on his other side. “A good day!”
“Goddamn right!” Titus roared to the heavens rumbling toward them, boiling with a storm right over their heads, blue sky turned black and heavy with winter’s fury, clouds beginning to hurl sharp lances of icy snow. “What a damned grand day it is to die!”
THIRTY-THREE
There comes an overwhelming peace when a man finally stands upon the ground where he is prepared to die.
When all things are suddenly made right in his world … and in the world beyond.
Those five Blackfoot yelled at one another as they reached the rolling, snowy bottom ground along the Judith River. Close enough were these enemies that Scratch could see how they sneered and maybe even cackled to find themselves pursued by only three Crow horsemen. So sure of their numbers and their strength that they could rein up at any moment, whirl around, and overwhelm these three puny pursuers. Especially since they were sure to see that two of them were old men. A pair of tired old warriors, and the five of them were clearly strong, vital, and in the flower of their youth.
It did not matter to him what the hell the Blackfoot thought, or what the devil they did when all eight of them got close enough to fight. He kept his wind-weeping eye on that Red Coat, seeing now how the man clutched his left arm low against his hip. Wounded by the shot Bass gave him in the village after the Blackfoot killed Waits, but not wounded near bad enough that his pony couldn’t lick it over this broken ground with the four others. No matter what those five warriors did when it came time for the close fighting, which way they turned or how they squared off against their pursuers, Titus vowed he would keep his eye on Red Coat, follow him to the death—and if Red Coat was the only one Bass could strangle this cold day … then all things would be made right in his world.
Scratch turned to Bear Who Sleeps. “The Red Coat is mine. He took my wife from me in camp.”
The young man nodded solemnly. “I know. That one is yours.” Then the Crow leaned forward slightly to peer around the white man and look directly at the Shoshone. “Friend,” he said, a word that surprised both Bass and Slays in the Night, “I will go after these enemies on the left: the Painted Robe and the Green-Stripe Blanket.”
Into a wild and feral smile, the Shoshone’s old, wrinkled face beamed with happiness. “It is good! This day I will kill the Yellow Paint Elkskin and Buffalo Horn Headdress! Keee-yiiii!”
It was clear to see that the Blackfoot were running the horses toward the edge of an icy slough where the dead and hollow stalks of seven-foot-tall reeds stood shuddering in the freezing wind, the bottoms of every bush and clump of willow already collecting a delicate white ringlet of snow—a tiny, hard, icy snow. Not the gentle whisper of dry, downy flakes that normally fell on these northern plains, but a deadly, wind-driven pelting of pain. The stolen horses began to scatter off the narrow path they had been taking, starting to turn this way and that as the snow-crusted meadow widened against the long, narrow borders of willow, alder, and skeletal cottonwood, trees that seemingly stood alone against the lowering blue-black bulk of the clouds.
This had always been a beautiful valley, he remembered as he spotted the first of the snow-dusted beaver lodges. The industrious creatures had turned this meadow into a home fit for several families of the flat-tails. But now they and their tiny kits were holed up inside the warmth of their domed mud-and-branch lodges, staying dry, on shelves that kept them out of the freezing water, until spring finally broke winter’s hold on this high and dangerous land once more in nature’s never-ending cycle of giving life back after all had been taken away with the coming of a deep and mighty cold. Yes, this had always been a beautiful place, he reminded himself.
A fitting place to see this through to the end.
The Blackfoot wouldn’t have much cover if they didn’t make it to the foothills of those mountains still miles and miles away. He heard the first muffled gunshot from off to their left and turned quickly. Couldn’t see any of the other raiders, nor the rest of the Crow pursuers. Another shot. The others must be drawing close enough to the raiders to bring things to a fight, he thought—but he kept his eye on Red Coat. And noticing how the gunshots unnerved some of the five enemies. No, these Blackfoot would not have much cover to hide in once they went afoot in this frozen swamp … but neither would their pursuers.