The Shirt On His Back (34 page)

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Authors: Barbara Hambly

BOOK: The Shirt On His Back
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Three of the
newcomer riders - rifles held pointed at the fugitives - trotted in close, in
what could have been either an encirclement or a protective ring. January
noticed the sun design worked in quills on one man's leggings, the line of
triangles painted on another's sleeve.

'They's Crows,'
said Manitou softly.

Hannibal
whispered, 'Is that good or bad?' He was loading both rifles with a speed born
of desperation, chalk white and breathing like a broken steamboat-engine. The
nearest Indian watched him, rifle leveled, but showed no signs of using it.

'Depends,'
answered Manitou. 'You can talk to some Crows, the ones that ain't from a band
that's at war with the white man. But they know my brother's Silent Wolf. An'
just about every tribe in the mountains is at war with the Blackfeet.'

About half of
the Omaha were down; the rest gathered in a group, Iron Heart talking furiously
with the leader of the Crows. A Crow warrior rounded up the horses of the dead.
Three others went systematically from one fallen warrior to the next, counting
coup - striking them with hooked and decorated medicine-sticks - then scalping
the bodies where they lay in the pine straw. The smell of blood was overwhelming.
Another warrior jerked Bodenschatz to his feet and thrust him into the group of
white captives with such force that he stumbled. Manitou caught his arm to
steady him, and Bodenschatz jerked free, lips skinned back from his teeth like
an animal about to bite.

'Don't think you
can get your savages to do your dirty work for you!' he snarled in German. 'I
swear to you on the grave of my sister - my sister whom you murdered—'

'You're not one
to talk,' broke in January, in the same language, 'about getting savages to do
dirty work, Boden. That seems to be the way you play the game as well.'

Instead of
answering, Bodenschatz - whom January still found it hard to think of as
anything but the good-natured Charro Morales - whipped a knife from his belt
and threw himself on Manitou, who caught his wrist easily - he was some eight
inches taller and outweighed the man by a good fifty pounds. One of the Crows
on guard over them shouted something, and January wrenched the knife from
Bodenschatz's hand. The Crow rode over, and January immediately flung the
weapon on the ground before him, then fished in the merchant's coat pocket and
brought out a pistol, which he held out immediately by the barrel, so that the
warrior could take it.

'Nigger dog!'
Bodenschatz almost spit the words at him, clutching his bleeding arm. 'You
think they'll let you go free?'

'Just making
sure that if shooting starts, it'll be coming from in front of me, and not
behind.'

The leader of
the Crows rode over to them, a thickset, powerful warrior on a black horse
painted with white handprints. Striking his chest, he said, 'Lost.' Dark eyes
moved from January to Manitou, then on to Bodenschatz. 'Do you ride bound, do
you ride free?'

Bodenschatz
stabbed at Manitou with a finger. 'This man murdered my sister and murdered my
father. Are the Crow women, to regard so little the right of a man to
vengeance?'

As if his enemy
had not spoken, Manitou answered, 'I will ride free.' He took his rifle from
Hannibal - carefully handling it by the barrel - and held it out to the Crow
warrior who came up with a horse on a lead rein.

In the end none
of them were bound. Lost - the leader of the Crow war party - separated them
along the line of warriors, and as the party filed through the darkness into
the deeper mountains, January was well aware that the riders on either side of
him had their rifles trained on him. Iron Heart - similarly guarded - rode
next to Lost, and in the thin moonlight January saw the Omaha speaking in sign to
the war chief as they rode, pointing back to Bodenschatz, to Manitou, to the
west where the rendezvous lay, and sometimes back to the south, where the bones
of his people rotted along the banks of the Platte.

Halfway up a
steep coulee another party of Crow joined them, and by the time they reached
the Crow village, strung out along a substantial creek between the hills,
January guessed there were some two hundred warriors surrounding them. This
was, he thought, the unknown band whose identity had caused so much speculation
at the rendezvous. He knew there'd been a bet on it at Seaholly's. It was small
comfort to know that he could now win it.

It was
relatively early in the night, and little 'squaw fires' glowed in front of many
of the lodges. In others, the blaze had been built inside, and a low,
honey-gold radiance shone through the translucent skins. Camp dogs and camp
children boiled out from among the tipis, the dogs noisy, the children pointing
excitedly at the black white man.

In front of a
lodge in the midst of the camp, Lost signed them to dismount. An older man -
heavy-built like Lost, and with the same mouth and chin - emerged, his shirt
flecked with row upon row of elk teeth, from which eagle feathers and ermine
tails dangled. Lost said, 'Walks Before Sunrise,' and Manitou murmured:

'He's big
medicine.'

A moment later
two other men ducked through the low entry, one of them - hands bound behind
him and looking considerably the worse for wear - Abishag Shaw. The other - a
deeply tanned white man in a trader's well-cut frock-coat and riding boots -
studied the captives appraisingly and said, 'You'll be

Wildman -
January - Bodenschatz - Sefton . . . M'am,' he added, touching his hat brim to
Veinte-y-Cinco. 'Iron Heart—' His glance shifted to the Omaha war chief. 'I'm
Asa Goodpastor. And I've been hearin' some very strange things.'

'I am here on
sufferance Goodpastor raised his hand against Bodenschatz's angry tirade as
they entered the lodge - 'like the rest of you. Walks Before got word that you
-' he nodded to Iron Heart - 'and your men attacked white men just outside the
rendezvous camp two nights ago.'

'We aided this
man,' said Iron Heart, with a cold glance across at Bodenschatz, 'in his hunt
for the man who killed his father and his sister. We promised to help him
fulfill the vow of his vengeance, if he would help me fulfill the vow of mine.
This promise he did not fulfill, nor will he, I think. Yet this is not through
his own doing. These -' Iron Heart gestured to Shaw, January and their
companions, who had seated themselves beside the small central fire-pit -
'followed him from the white man's country because, in the course of his
pursuit, he killed the brother of Tall Chief. If he would accomplish his
vengeance, they must be stopped in theirs.'

'Ain't you
forgettin' one tiny detail,' put in Shaw, rubbing the weals on his wrists where
January had untied the thongs that bound him, 'havin' to do with you plannin'
to murder every man jack an' woman at the rendezvous with the poison this man's
father was bringin' out for you?'

'They poison
themselves,' sneered Iron Heart. 'I do not pour it down their throats.'

And this is not
your affair, Medicine Lynx,' spoke up Walks Before Sunrise, with a sharp look
at Goodpastor. 'Many tribes hate the white men. If they choose to kill them
without honor, either for themselves or for their enemies, this is nothing to
me.'

'My people died
without honor,' retorted the Omaha chief, stung by the imputation of cowardice.
'Why do I need any? Had this man -' he jerked his head toward Wildman, who had
sat through the whole of the discussion beside the fire in silence, his head in
his hands - 'not killed the old white father, I would have had my vengeance.'

'Did you kill
them?' Goodpastor turned to Wildman. 'This man's father, an' his sister?'

'I killed his
sister.' Manitou raised his face from his palms, looked across the fire with
ravaged eyes. 'I got no memory of doing so, because of my madness—'

'Your madness
that conveniently convinced your judges not to hang you!'

'So you were
tried?'

'Judges heard my
case, yes. And put me in a madhouse. I didn't kill his father.'

Bodenschatz
opened his mouth to shout a refutation of this, but January cut him off
quietly: 'No. You did that yourself, didn't you, Bodenschatz?'

Iron Heart's
eyes widened in shocked rage. '
What?'

'It's a lie,'
shouted Bodenschatz. 'Can't you see he'll say anything? I never killed the Shaw
boy. The Blackfeet did that—'

'The Blackfeet
woulda kept his scalp, not thrown it away in the hollow of a tree,' retorted
Shaw softly. 'You killed him 'cause he woulda kept you from your revenge—'

'The same way
that you killed your own father,' pointed out January quietly, 'because with a
broken leg, he would have kept you from pursuing the man you sought. The man
for whom you left your wife, and your children—'

'
He
is a monster
!’

'You
are a monster,' replied January. 'Manitou Wildman was born as he is. You made
yourself - yourself.'

'That
Bodenschatz's face worked with the effort to remain normal - 'is a damned lie.'
His glance cut to Iron Heart. 'It is a lie.'

Iron Heart said
softly, 'Prove it.' And there was something in the tilt of his head, the sudden
flex of his nearly-hairless brows, that made January wonder if he had not
suspected this before. 'Words are cheap, Winter Moon. White men's words most of
all.'

January sighed.
'I wish everyone would stop calling me a white man. Send the woman back to the
rendezvous camp.'

Veinte-y-Cinco
looked up, dark eyes wide with shock and hope.

'Keep a guard on
her, if you will,' he added as both Iron Heart and Walks Before Sunrise began
to protest. 'Will you do this?'

He saw her hand
close hard on Hannibal's, the two of them sitting side-by-side near Manitou on
the other side of the fire, without speaking. She started to stammer something
and stopped, the whole of her heart in her face, as if the marrow of her bones
cried her daughter's name.

And though he
spoke to Walks Before Sunrise, January's eyes held hers. 'Great Chief, have one
of your men go into the camp and bring out to her Moccasin Woman, the old
mother of the Delawares. She knows Veinte-y-Cinco well, and Veinte-y-Cinco will
speak for us. Promise Moccasin Woman safe passage here to this camp and safe
passage back. Veinte- y-Cinco,' he added softly, 'we trust you with all of our
lives. For if you cry out, or escape, or rouse the camp, or bring any attack
against the Crow here, you know we will all of us be killed before we can be
freed.'

The woman took a
sip of breath, let it out, her eyes going to Hannibal, and then to Shaw, who
had favored her, January knew, above the other girls at Seaholly's, despite the
fact that at thirty-six she had half a decade over him in age, and despite her
skinniness and two missing teeth. She looked at the doorway - the two Crow
guards sitting outside in the firelight of the camp - and then at Bodenschatz.

'Did he really
kill that poor old man?' she asked softly. 'His own papa?'

'Schlampn
bitch, you'd believe any man who paid you—'

Her mouth
twisted. Her gaze returned to January. 'I'll go,' she said quietly. 'And I'll
return with Moccasin Woman, without rousing the camp.'

'Thank you. Tell
Moccasin Woman that we know that she found the old man in the woods and took
the last of his clothing, not only the shirt that he wore, but also the shirt
that had been torn up to bind his ribs. Tell her to bring those things back
here, if she would. Tell her that our lives hang on her doing this. Tell her
also - or the warrior who goes with you,' he added, with a glance at Walks
Before Sunrise, 'to bring the camp chest from Bodenschatz's tent - Charro
Morales's tent - unopened.'

The trader's
face turned ghastly in the low firelight, brows standing out suddenly dark. 'Of
all the impudent—'

'Veritas odium
parit:
said Hannibal and added, to January, still in Latin, 'You're
sure it's Moccasin Woman?'

'She's the one
who gave Pia the old man's cravat. And who else in the camp,' he added, 'would
have carried him back into his shelter and carved the sign of the cross above
his head, to bless him as he lay? Of all the people in the camp,' he went on in
English, 'I don't really think it could be anyone else.'

'Well, Maestro,'
said Shaw, after Iron Heart and Bodenschatz had left the tent under guard, and
Walks Before had likewise bid them good night, 'I purely hope you're right.' He
got to his feet and limped heavily - a makeshift, bloodied bandage showed where
an arrow had gone through his thigh - to lower the skin across the lodge
entrance, against the growing chill of the night. "Cause it seems to come
down to: who is Walks Before gonna trust? An' if it ain't us, I do not see a
good outcome for anyone in this tent.'

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