“Yes, I know all of that,” Kit Carson said, his voice sounding exhausted.
“And you also know the worth of my information today about Sage's stronghold,” Chief Four Fingers urged. “Forget the past transgressions of this Kiowa chief. This is today. Sage could be yours today. Is he not worth many times over one Kiowa chief and his few warriors?”
“Yes, it is true that you are worthless to me, except dead,” Kit grumbled. “But right now you
are
more valuable to me alive.” He leaned on his rifle, shaking his head at being forced into a decision that he did not like. But he had to put the women and children first.
“Tell me where Sage's stronghold is, and by God, I give my word that you can ride free,” Kit said, inhaling a deep breath. “But you'd best ride hard and get hidden again, for once I am through with Sage, I'll be looking for you. The next time nothing anyone says will keep me from finally avenging the death of my beautiful Indian bride. Now, damn it, Four Fingers, draw me a map in the sand, then get the hell out of my sight.”
Four Fingers knelt down beside Kit. He accepted a stick from a soldier and started drawing the directions to Sage's stronghold in the sand, then stopped, startled when Kit placed a firm hand on his wrist.
“You'd better be leading me to the right place,” Kit drawled threateningly. “If not, Four Fingers, you'll have hell to pay once my men and I catch up with you again.”
“Sage means nothing to me,” Four Fingers reassured. He jerked his wrist free and began drawing again. “Except dead.”
Once the map was completed and Kit Carson recognized the mountain, he was stunned. He had ridden past it many times. Not once had he seen the glint of a rifle barrel, or any sign of sentries on the cliffs, keeping watch. He looked suspiciously over at Four Fingers. “You are certain this is the mountain?” he questioned.
Four Fingers rose to his full height. He turned and pointed toward the purple haze of Sage's mountain in the distance. “Yonder, one half day's ride away, you will come to Sage's mountain,” he said sternly. “There you will find peach trees, many fields of crops, and grazing sheep in a canyon at the foot of Sage's mountain.” He turned to Kit. “Once there, it is up to you to decide how to reach Sage's stronghold. Chief Four Fingers can only do so much. Your pony soldiers must do the restâif you wish badly enough to take Sage prisoner.”
Kit Carson stepped back and allowed Four Fingers to walk away from him. He watched as the Kiowa chief mounted his horse, then rode away, his chin held high.
Kit hurriedly mounted and gave the orders to the soldiers. They rode long and hard, and when evening was drawing nigh, with its dark and brooding shadows across the land, Kit was finally at the base of the mountain.
Moving onward, Kit soon found the vast peach orchards, the fields, the grazing sheep. High above this valley was the true encampment of the Navaho.
Upon further investigation, Kit discovered it would be impossible to travel the paths that led so high up, into the Navaho camp, without being picked off one by one by the Navaho sentries. The straight cliff walls rose more than a thousand feet above the valley floor.
Kit studied his options and came to the conclusion that the only way to dislodge the Indians was to starve them out. He quickly decided to institute a “scorched earth” policy. He would burn the crops, destroy the orchards, and kill or capture the sheep.
As Kit saw it, it was not his business to kill the Navaho, but simply to move them. He would go about doing this in a way that would save the most lives. Instead of hunting down the Navaho any further, especially Sage, he would make them come to him.
He would make Sage give up his captives.
Kit turned to the soldiers. He raised his rifle in the air. “Go to work destroying, burning, and taking . . . !” he shouted.
Chapter 21
We vowed we would neverâno never forget,
And those vows at the time were consoling.
âM
RS
. C
RAWFORD
Â
Â
Leonida was washing the wooden dishes in a basin of water just outside her hogan door, glad that Pure Blossom had felt well enough to eat her morning meal. Leonida already had food cooking for the noon meal, having learned quickly that it was best to prepare meals early in the morning instead of during the heat of the day. On this mountaintop the sun was more intense, and even the brisk breezes were not able to alleviate the heat that it created.
“I will be in council with the elders the remainder of the morning,” Sage said as he stepped out of the hogan, attired only in his breechclout and moccasins. “Runner is at Adam's?”
Leonida turned to Sage, warming through and through with the remembrances of what they had shared throughout the entire night, it seemed.
“Yes,” she murmured, drying her hands on the tail end of her skirt. “He came home long enough to give me a big hug, then ran back to Adam's lean-to. Sally has changed. Not only is she allowing Runner in her lean-to but she also allows several other young Navaho braves. The braves are teaching Runner and Adam some games.”
She glanced up at the glaring sun, wiping a bead of perspiration from her brow with the back of her hand. “Those boys have the right idea,” she said, laughing softly. She gave Sage a teasing smile. “Perhaps I will join them in their fun and games instead of working so hard.”
Sage placed his hands at her waist and drew her against him and kissed her.
Leonida wrenched herself away from him, her face flooding with color as she looked guardedly from side to side. “Sage, not out here for everyone to see,” she murmured. She then looked up at him, slowly smiling. “I'm not saying I don't want you to kiss me. I would even invite you back inside our hoganâthat is, if you wish to postpone your council meeting until later.”
“Your suggestion is tempting,” Sage said, his eyes twinkling down into hers.
“Fire! Fire below!”
Those words, and the desperation in the voice of the Navaho sentry, sent spirals of chills up Leonida's spine.
She glanced quickly up at Sage, seeing fear in his eyes and knowing that the threat today was real, perhaps explosive.
Sage stiffened, knowing that fire was almost as bad an enemy as Chief Four Fingers, and now Kit Carson and his soldiers.
Fire could wipe out the entire crop of the Navaho. Fire could kill their sheep. Without those things his people could not survive.
Breaking away from Leonida, Sage met several of his warriors and ran with them through the village toward a cliff where they could look down upon the valley below. They saw wisps of smoke rising. Sage knew that the tall grass and brush surrounding the orchard, garden, and grazing pastures of the sheep were as dry as tinder, and a breeze was rising. In the freshening morning breeze, the whole valley could quickly become a raging bonfire.
Leonida broke into a mad run and caught up with Sage. “How could a fire get started?” she asked, breathless as she walked briskly to his side. “There has been no lightning. And it is midmorning. In the valley dew should still be on the grass.”
“An enemy would start the fire purposefully to ruin the Navaho,” Sage answered back, glaring down at Leonida. “There is only one enemy who knew where to set the fires. That is Four Fingers. I was wrong to allow him to escape my vengeance. Now he has gotten his, over the Navaho.”
“I feel responsible!” Leonida cried, finding it hard to keep up with Sage as he stamped on toward the cliff. “Four Fingers wouldn't have become this bitter with you had it not been for his interest in me. I wish that I had stayed hidden from him when he came to trade with you. I should have known to. The moment he looked at me I knew what to expect from him. I shouldn't have lingered so that his interest in me would not soar to such ungodly heights.”
Sage frowned at her. “Never blame yourself for what others do,” he growled. “Your heart and your intentions are pure.”
“I never meant anyone harm,” Leonida said softly. “Especially you.”
“Wait for me,” Runner cried, running after Leonida and Sage. “I want to see. Let me see.”
Sage's full attention was on the smoke billowing up past the cliff just ahead. He broke into a faster run as Leonida stopped and waited for Runner. Even though the child was almost too large for her to carry, she swept him into her arms.
A coldness seemed to seize Leonida's heart when she saw more dark billows of smoke rise into the sky from the valley below. In her mind's eye she was remembering the peach trees in the valley, and the rich pastures, and large fields of corn, beans, and squash.
She was recalling the animals, both goats and sheep alike, that had grazed on the abundance of spring-fed grasses in the valley. These animals were surely now either dead or captured by the enemy.
It sickened her when she came to stand at Sage's side and peered over the ledge at the devastation below.
Everything was on fire.
There was a stiff breeze blowing. The brush in the thicket was powder-dry, and as it burned it set the tall grass afire. Flames were leaping high, the breeze sweeping them straight into the midst of the thicket. Animals were scattering, and then Leonida saw something else.
Soldiers.
She gasped. Even from this high vantage point she could recognize Kit Carson among those who were still setting fires along the valley, while others were beginning to round up the animals, herding them away from the fire.
“Kit Carson,” Leonida gasped, her voice drawn. She looked quickly up at Sage. “Do you see? It's Kit Carson. It isn't Chief Four Fingers. Kit Carson found your stronghold.”
Sage was watching the destruction, his muscles tight, knowing that there was nothing that could be done to stop the devastation below. It had begun too quickly for his warriors to go down the steep sides and paths of the mountain to kill the white pony soldiers. He could tell that Kit Carson had methodically scouted both sides of the canyon and had stationed soldiers to cut off the escape of the Navaho from any side exits. He was not trying to keep his troops concealed but was letting the Navaho see what he was doing. He knew that the Navaho were too high up on the buttes to be able to shoot and kill the soldiers.
Sage knew that Kit Carson was not clever enough to have found the stronghold of the Navaho. He had been led there by someone who knew where it wasâand who hated Sage and his people. There was only one man: Chief Four Fingers.
Sage's hands tightened into fists at his sides, as he vowed revenge.
For now, there was only one thing to do. He would most definitely not bow down to defeat. He would go elsewhere and begin a new life.
Those who believed in him would follow. Those who did not would surrender to Kit Carson and allow themselves to be placed on a reservation where men became children again in their hearts, minds, and souls.
“Sage?” Leonida said, stepping closer to him. “Darling, you didn't answer me. What are we going to do?”
Sage turned to her, his eyes no less proud and confident than before he had seen the devastation below. “We are powerless against the fire,” he said. “But I know an escape route on the back side of the mountain. I know another canyon, untouched and undiscovered by the white man. I will take my people there. Kit Carson will not have informants this time to lead him to the Navaho. Only I know of this place. I have kept it a secret within my heart just in case of such a tragedy as today's.”
“Then you aren't devastated, darling, over this?” Leonida murmured, weaving her fingers through Runner's thick hair as he stared down at the fire below.
“What Kit Carson has done today is an act against all humanity, not just the Navaho,” Sage said, his jaw tightening even harder. “It is a coward's act that destroys food, animals, and land. He thinks this will force us out, to beg for mercy at his feet? He is wrong.
He
is the one who will be
forced
âforced to live with his decisions today. The Navaho will be elsewhere, planting new crops. Somehow we will also find sheep to fill the fertile valleys of our new home. It will take time, but it will be done. My people will never have cause to lose hope in their future. Not as long as I am there to chart it.”
Runner began coughing and rubbing his eyes. “I don't like the smoke,” he whined. “Take me away from here.”
Sage put an arm around Leonida's waist and led her away from the cliff. His warriors followed, their expressions drawn, some even looking as though they had lost not only crops and animals but also hope.
Leonida felt drawn to them as never before, wanting to be able to help them in their time of hardship and loss. But she couldn't find the words to say to them, and she thought perhaps that was best. Her skin was white. Those who were destroying the Navaho's crops and animals were white. The Navaho just might decide that she was at fault somehow, because of her presence in their village.
They might look to her as a bad omenâas bad luck.
As they entered the village, Leonida eased Runner from her arms and watched as he joined the silent group of children. Everyone had left their hogans, stopping to stand in a circle in the center of the village, around Sage and Leonida.
Leonida looked slowly around her, feeling out of place as the Navaho were standing so quietly, gazing only at Sage, looking desperately to their chief for guidance. She was glad when he once again placed a comforting arm around her waist, as though he sensed her uneasiness.
“My people, this is a day we shall look back upon with much anguish in our hearts,” Sage finally said, his voice booming above the silence of the crowd. “But it is not the end of the Navaho. It is a beginning. It is a new beginning for those who put trust in me. Those who feel as though we have failed and do not want to try any longerâthose who wish to surrender to the white man's waysâ
go
! Go to them. Those who don't wish to submit to the white man's ways
ever,
flee with me to a place far away, known only by me. Live in peace and harmony with me and my family there! Those who wish to surrender to the white pony soldiers, go now without looking back. Those who wish to travel with me, go to your hogans and pack up your belongings. But make the load light on your horses. It is a dangerous path down the back side of the mountain to get us free of the white men. Make haste. We leave soon.”
Leonida clung to Sage, scarcely breathing, as several of his people walked lifelessly away, their heads hung, toward the paths that led downward, to Kit Carson. It was apparent that they had given upâthat they did not believe that such a place as Sage had described existed.
She watched as others rushed into their hogans, readying themselves for this new land of promise.
“Pure Blossom,” Sage said, his tone worried. “I must find a way to travel with Pure Blossom so that she will be comfortable. The paths are narrow. It will be hard to travel with a travois. But that is the only way.”
Sage turned to Leonida and framed her face between his hands. “I vow to you, my wife, that this is only the beginning of our happiness,” he said. “No white man is going to win against Sage now or ever.”
He sealed the promise with a kiss.
Leonida clung to him, yet she was so afraid, she felt sick to her stomach.
When he drew away from her and they started walking toward their hogan, another thought came to Leonida. She grabbed his arm and stopped him. “Darling, what about the captives?” she asked. “Are they going with us, or are you going to set them free and allow them to join Kit Carson? You did promise their release.”
Sage glowered down at her. “Yes, I promised their release,” he said, his voice flat. “But that was before Kit Carson decided to destroy all that is precious to the Navaho. So now Sage will keep that which is precious to those soldiers who have set the fires and who have stolen the Navaho animals. The captives will accompany us down the back side of the mountain. Those who live through the dangerous ordeal may be released at a later date. Those who die, die . . .”
Leonida paled at the tone of his voice. Never had she heard it so filled with hatred. She thought it best to say nothing against his decision, for deep down inside herself she understood.
* * *
Kit Carson paced back and forth, his hands clasped behind him, and watched the flames roar through the tall grasses. He flinched when he heard the scream of another animal dying amid the fire; he had not been able to save them all, as he had planned. A Navaho sheepherder stood by, blackened by the smoke, his eyes dull and empty as he stared in space.
“Damn it, Sage,” Kit mumbled to himself, wiping beads of perspiration from his brow. “Why'd you force me to do this? Why?”
He stopped in his tracks when one of his soldiers began shouting, saying that some of the Navaho people had been seen on the paths, coming down from the mountain. It was obvious that they were surrendering.
Kit Carson mounted his horse and rode through the smoke and flames, up to the paths where there was clear passage. He maneuvered the steep, winding paths until he reached the first group of Navaho.
Swinging himself out of his saddle, nervously twining the reins around his fingers, he met the approach of the Navaho. “You are now my prisoners,” he said stiffly, nodding at one of the soldiers who had accompanied him up the mountainside to place ropes around each of their waists so that they could walk in single file the rest of the way down the mountain. The fire was abating. The smoke was thinning. By the time they reached the charred valley, the fire should be completely out.