Cry of the Wind (35 page)

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Authors: Sue Harrison

Tags: #Historical fiction, #Native American

BOOK: Cry of the Wind
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K’os looked hard at Red Leaf. The woman seemed frail, as though she had suddenly grown old. “They killed her,” K’os said. “With a knife. The same way she killed Ghaden’s mother. They say Sok himself did it.”

Chapter Thirty-nine

THE NEAR RIVER PEOPLE

T
HE SOUND CAME SO
gradually that at first Dii did not know what it was, but when the smell of salt came to her on the wind, then she realized it was the sea.

They topped a rise, and the land fell beneath them into a wide, flat expanse of wet mud, marked at the tide line by ridges of ice.

They were not a people of the sea. They understood rivers, wild at times and dangerous, but still confined by the land. The sea was too immense. Who among them knew the spirits that controlled it or the chants needed for protection? What would be considered an insult? How should a people act to show respect?

The women crowded close behind their men, clung to their children.

Dii shuddered at the sight of water spreading to the far horizon. Some storytellers said it curled up the curve of the sky in quest of the sun, to capture the warmth of its fire. But others said no. Why would the sea want to leave its bed? How would the fish live, the seals and whales?

Dii did not notice when the people’s awe first gave way to grumbling, but finally, as she took in the vast tide flats, she understood that her husband’s dreams had again been wrong. They had come to the end of the land, and there were still no caribou.

All eyes rested on Anaay, men and women watching. Dii felt as if she could not breathe. She waited for accusations to fly against him, waited and was surprised when they did not come. At first, Anaay seemed to shrink down inside himself, but then he filled his chest with air, puffed out his stomach and cried, “Again the Cousin Rivers have cursed us.”

But as he spoke, the men around him rudely turned their backs, motioned to their women, and in silence they left Anaay standing at the crest of the hill, Dii alone behind him.

THE FOUR RIVERS VILLAGE

It was night, three days after the hunters’ return, when K’os heard the scratching outside their lodge. She waited to see if Sand Fly would hear, but when the old woman did not call out, K’os spoke a welcome.

The inner doorflap was thrust aside, and from the corners of her eyes, K’os saw Tree Climber move toward his weapons. She held up one hand. “This man, I know him,” she said to Tree Climber, and gestured for the hunter to come into the lodge. “He is Near River, and his name is River Ice Dancer.”

River Ice Dancer held out his hands in greeting, palms up. He nodded at Sand Fly and Tree Climber, but did not seem interested in knowing their names. Instead he looked at K’os and said, “When I did not find you at the Cousin River winter village, I thought you might have come here, where your brother once lived.”

K’os smiled to herself. She had forgotten that during one of their times together she had told him about her brother.

“One of the women at the cooking fires told me you lived in this lodge.”

“You see she was right,” K’os said, trying to keep from laughing at his seriousness.

“I brought what I could,” he said. “My dog and furs and pelts, a tent. I cannot offer you a lodge, but I have enough caribou hides to make one.”

K’os studied him from narrowed eyes. Was he telling her the truth? Did he have lodge skins? When the caribou had overrun the Near River hunting camp, few men had been quick enough even to rescue their weapons. Where had he gotten his hides?

“You took enough caribou to have hides for a lodge?” she asked, and waved away Sand Fly, who was trying to offer River Ice Dancer a bowl of meat.

Sand Fly sat down with the bowl in her lap. K’os sucked in her cheeks to hide her smile when she saw River Ice Dancer’s eyes on the food. If he had come here to make a bride offer, let him make it. He could eat later.

“I took one caribou that day, and my father did also.”

“Better than most,” K’os said, and noticed that Sand Fly had begun picking meat from the bowl, licking the juices from her fingers. “But two hides are not enough for a lodge.”

“I went to the Cousins’s winter village looking for you,” he answered. “They had a few good hides in one of the caches. I took what I needed and a travois. In the night, I slipped away. I thought they would come after me, but they did not. Of course, they are only a village of old women. What could they do?”

“So the hunters have not yet returned,” K’os said, mumbling the words to herself. She straightened and looked into River Ice Dancer’s face. “And you have come to me for something? All I can offer is medicine.”

Sand Fly thrust out her hand to show a scar, neatly healed.

K’os hid her surprise. The scar was old, and she had given Sand Fly nothing for it. But it did not hurt to have an ally. Who could say when the words of an old woman might do some good?

“I have come to ask for you as wife,” River Ice Dancer said.

K’os opened her eyes wide, as though to show surprise. “I do not want to return to the Near River People,” she told him. “The women there will always see me as slave.”

“We will stay here,” River Ice Dancer answered foolishly, as though he had the power to make the Four Rivers People accept him as their own.

Tree Climber tottered to his feet, thrust a gnarled finger into River Ice Dancer’s face. “You think you are worthy of such a woman? You’re hardly a man. How do we know you can provide enough meat for her? Do you have a cache in this village, or some other, to keep her fed through the winter?”

“I have a pack of meat, a good dog and the caribou hides,” River Ice Dancer said.

“And where will you live? You think I have enough to feed you? Leave your caribou hides here, then go and hunt. Bring back meat so we can see that you are worthy of this village.”

River Ice Dancer stuck out his lower lip, pouting as though he were a child. K’os held her laughter in her throat. Did he think there was nothing to winning a wife? Of course, he had come a long way and was willing to leave his own village. But how foolish to give so much for the first woman who had welcomed him to her bed. She stood up and went to the boiling bag, filled a bowl with meat. Sand Fly offered River Ice Dancer the bowl in her hand, now half empty.

“He has come a long way, Aunt,” K’os said gently. “He is hungry.” She gave him the full bowl and also a bladder of water. “Eat,” she said. “Then we will talk about this.”

She sat and watched him, thought about his offer, considered sending him away to hunt as Tree Climber had suggested. When he returned, if she had decided she did not want him, she could put baneberries into his food. After he died, she could keep his caribou hides and the meat he managed to bring back. But perhaps it would be to her advantage to have a husband. She tilted her head, studied him. He was not a handsome boy; his lips were too large, his nose misshapen. He was strong, though, and she had enjoyed his fumbling attempts to please her.

River Ice Dancer looked up from his food, smiled at her. K’os lowered her eyes slowly, as though she were a girl being courted for the first time.

Perhaps River Ice Dancer would be a good husband, she thought. And if not, then there were many ways a husband could die.

THE NEAR RIVER PEOPLE

Dii reached into the food pack. Many Words had given Anaay the hindquarters of a fresh-killed hare, and Dii had wrapped it in a well-scraped piece of hide and tucked it at the top of her pack, but it had slipped down the side. She was tired enough to want to leave it there, but knew she should get it out before it became soft and seeped through its wrap to foul the dried meat she carried.

She had set her tent on high ground, layered spruce branches then grass mats over the frozen earth, but as she pushed her arm into the pack, her foot slid between two mats and slipped on the spruce branches. She fell against the pack and the sides split open.

She pulled the hare out, clenched her teeth against angry words. They were a long way from their winter village; no use in cursing a pack she still needed. She skewered the hare on a sharpened willow branch and propped it into place over the fire she had started just outside the lean-to.

She took meat from the carrying pack until the side was loose enough for her to relace the awl holes, then she dragged the pack to the side of the fire where it was bright enough for her to work.

Anaay came to her tent after she had finished repairing the pack. He spoke curtly to her, criticized the taste of the meat when he ate, but Dii ignored him. She was setting the last rawhide packet into the top of the carrying pack when she realized it was the medicine K’os had given her for Anaay. Dii had nearly forgotten it during all the problems of the hunting camp.

What had K’os said? It would help Anaay give Dii a son.

She had intended to wait until they were back at the winter village to use it, but she had thought they would return long before now. She lived with the hardships of being Anaay’s wife. Why not have something to give her joy? Perhaps, if she bore Anaay a child, he would be a better husband. She opened the packet. It was filled with a powder, light green, nearly white. She mixed some into a cup of water, pushed the cup into the fire coals and waited until the water was hot. Then she poured the mixture into a clean cup and gave it to Anaay.

“A tea to strengthen you,” she told him.

He took a sip. “Cranberry?” he asked.

“It is something we Cousin women know,” she said, and wished K’os had told her what plant the powder was from. “Something for hunters.”

Anaay narrowed his eyes and held the cup out to her. “You drink,” he said.

She considered telling him that K’os had given it to her and that it would strengthen his seed, but why chance that Anaay would see her gesture as an insult? Better to drink some herself and assure him the medicine was harmless.

“It is usually only for men, hunters,” Dii said, but she lifted the cup to her lips without hesitation.

Anaay grabbed it from her before she could drink and swallowed down the rest. “Why curse it, then?” he said with a smirk.

THE COUSIN RIVER PEOPLE

Sok sat beside Snow-in-her-hair, stroked her forehead with a strip of hide wrung out in cold water. She was hot to his touch, and in just three days her milk had dried up. Carries Much now ate at Willow Leaf’s breast.

Snow opened her eyes and looked at him, mumbled that she must find Yaa. He told her again that Yaa was all right, that she was strong enough to leave her bed, had even come once to sit with them.

Snow gasped for breath as she did each time she spoke, and Sok’s chest also ached, as though he, too, fought to breathe.

Aqamdax and Twisted Stalk had heated strips of caribou hide layered with spruce pitch and packed them over her chest. They had forced marsh marigold tea and lungwort down Snow’s throat, had rubbed her back and neck with caribou leaves, but nothing seemed to help. Sok lowered his head to his arms, closed his eyes only for a moment. How long since he had slept?

Dreams hovered close, and though his eyes were closed, he saw Star walking toward them. She was better, Chakliux had told him, but Sok hadn’t known she was able to leave her bed.

“You are well?” Sok called to her.

She looked at him and smiled, but did not answer.

“I am glad you could come,” he said.

Still she did not speak. He watched her as she knelt beside Snow-in-her-hair, as she leaned close. Sok thought she had some secret to whisper, but then she opened her mouth wide, set it over Snow’s mouth, sucked in as though to draw the breath from Snow’s body.

Sok cried out and jumped to his feet, but Star was gone. A wind cut in from the open side of the lean-to, brought a cloud of smoke from the fire. It settled into his throat, made him cough. He went outside and drew the night’s cold deep into his chest. The camp was dark except for hearth coals.

“A dream,” he whispered, and went back to his wife.

“She is awake,” Twisted Stalk told Chakliux. Chakliux was so deep into his thoughts that the old woman had to repeat her words before he understood what she had said.

“Your wife is awake. You should go to her. She asks for you.”

“She’s awake?”

“She asks for you.”

He followed Twisted Stalk from the center of the camp to his tent. Aqamdax was at the entrance, had stayed each night with Star, catching what sleep she could during the day.

“She is hungry,” Aqamdax said.

Chakliux ducked into the tent. Star’s eyes were open, her face pale but no longer fevered.

“Twisted Stalk said you are better.”

“I’m well now,” she told him. “Tired, though,” she said. She clasped his hands, pulled them down to her belly. The baby moved.

Chapter Forty

THE NEAR RIVER PEOPLE

ANAAY FINISHED THE MEDICINE,
then narrowed his eyes. “A woman should always go first to her husband’s tent,” he said to Dii. “I should not have had to come here to eat.”

But what could she say? She had lingered in her own tent because she did not want to hear his complaints, did not want to chance that he would take his anger out on her.

“I was coming,” she finally told him, “but the food was not ready. You know the hare is from Many Words?” Perhaps the surprise that Many Words had brought a gift of meat would calm Anaay’s anger.

Anaay grunted, grabbed his walking stick and began to push himself to his feet. Dii’s heart quickened, and she stood also. Better to give herself some chance to run, though in the darkness, she would not go far. She preferred her husband’s walking stick to whatever night spirits lurked this close to the cold and ice of the North Sea.

But when he was almost to his feet, he slumped suddenly, clasped his belly and groaned. Dii waited, wondering if he was using some ploy to get her close so she could not run from his anger, but he loosed his clasp on the stick, collapsed to the floor mats and tucked himself into a ball.

“What have you done to me, Wife?” he rasped out, his words thick, harsh.

“Nothing. I did nothing,” Dii said, fear pulling her denial into a child’s voice.

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