Savage Illusions
Page 13
Orange, yellow, and black-spotted, the painted lady butterflies were flying in groups of hundreds. They were known to travel more widely than most insects. Many spent the winters in Mexico, flying northward during the spring and summer.
After Jolena had one painted lady secured in a jar, she walked briskly along beneath the canopy of trees, her eyes darting around. The sunlight filtering through the trees overhead gave sharp definition and intense blackness to the shadows of the thickest, impenetrable part of the forest. She shuddered as she thought of the panther that had threatened her the other night.
She gasped when she discovered another butterfly that she knew would thrill her father. The colotis etrida, whose small, golden-tipped wings changed form according to the season. She could tell that this was the summer butterfly because of its stronger, blacker markings, which later would disappear entirely.
After securing one specimen, she continued the search and soon also had a jezebel butterfly housed in a jar. The day wore on and finally, exhausted from her labors, Jolena returned to the wagon. The calves of her legs and the small of her back were aching. She was soaked with perspiration, and the mist which had accompanied the setting sun was like a cool sponge on her face.
"I hope Two Ridges finds a place for a campsite soon," Kirk grumbled. "I've never seen you as driven as you were today. Lord, sis, I can imagine how tired you are. It seems that every bone in my body is aching."
"That's because of your lack of exercise," Jolena said, wiping her hands across her face, smoothing the fine mist from it. "You spend too much time with your books. You need to be outdoors. Father has spoiled you, Kirk, by hiring someone to do everything, instead of allowing you to do some of the work yourself."
"You are just as spoiled," Kirk said, his voice drawn.
"Perhaps so," Jolena said, shrugging. "But at least I take time to go for long walks. I love the forest that fringes our property in Saint Louis. Always when I've walked through it, I have felt so free, so at peace with myself. Sometimes I feel connected with the forest, as though I was meant to live there, instead of in a large mansion."
She said no more, for Kirk's heavy sigh told her that he wanted to hear no more conversation about her Indian heritage.
Her thoughts returned to Spotted Eagle. With him, surely she would be able to talk about anything, any time.
She frowned as she gazed into the darkening shadows of the forest. Soon night would cover everything with its cloak of darkness, and she could not help but be worried about Spotted Eagle and wonder where he might be, and if he was on his way back from his village.
Her gaze shifted. She stared at Two Ridges' back as he rode a few yards ahead of her wagon. A desolate feeling overcame her, wishing the back she was looking at was Spotted Eagle's.
Oh, when would he return? What if he did not return at all? What if she never ever saw him again?
If he did not return by the time the lepidopterists were finished with their search for the rare butterfly and were ready to board the riverboat back to Saint Louis, what then?
Would she be able to actually board the riverboat without seeing Spotted Eagle again?
She doubted it.
They rode on for a while longer, then Two Ridges drew a tight rein and stopped his horse. "We will make camp here," he said, turning his gaze to Jolena, then shifting it to Kirk.
Kirk nodded. He let his reins go slack, then jumped from the wagon. Before he could get around to help Jolena, she had already left the wagon, stretching and yawning. He gave her a lingering, silent stare, marveling at her endurance, then went to the back of the wagon and began unloading their equipment for the night.
Jolena yawned one more time. Then she stopped and listened, hearing a strange roaring and hissing through the trees. It sounded like water dropping by stages into a deep chasm.
Her sense of adventure and curiosity sent her walking through the forest until she came to a clearing that led upward. Lifting the hem of her skirt, she climbed higher and higher, then stopped when she came to a high point on a cliff from where she could see not only the waterfall a short distance away, but the river down below her as it flattened out and made a wide sweep around a bald granite hill before fingering out across the valley.
The water down below was smooth and glassy, and the broken river stretched into the distance like dull streams of silver.
The sunset was lighting the eastern hills, sending long sunbeams through the mist into the valley below.
Captured by the loveliness of the waterfall, Jolena gazed at it, sighing. Although the sun was fast lowering in the sky, the waterfall was still lit and it shimmered with myriad colors. The waterfall's spume rose far into the sky like a cloud of smoke from a forest fire, then descended to the earth as mist, keeping the vegetation at the top of the chasm dripping wet.
The sunset shining on the waterfall made rainbows, multiple and immense and so brilliant they seemed palpable. They moved with the light, fading and emerging and forming again at different angles and in different sizes, so that sometimes one could actually see where they began and ended.
Standing on the cliff, soaking up the beautiful tranquil setting, Jolena grew tense with excitement when a butterfly flew just past her nose.
''Lord, it's a nymphalid," she gasped. The nymphalid was steeped in Indian lore, and perhaps almost as rare as the euphaedra.
She continued to watch the butterfly as it seemed to change colors before her very eyes, a defense mechanism to protect the creature from predators such as herself.
The butterfly seemed to be teasing her as it brushed past her nose, then flew down as if it was going to land on her hand. Her heart racing, she looked desperately around her, suddenly realizing that her net and jars were back at the camp.
The butterfly landed on her arm, and Jolena held her breath as she watched it furl and unfurl its antennae, as though tasting her to see if she were a copper flower.
Jolena started moving one of her hands guardedly toward the butterfly. Just as she was about to place her fingers on either side of the butterfly's wings, the butterfly took flight again. Yet still it remained close at hand, teasingly brushing against Jolena's face or hair.
"I have to have it," Jolena whispered to herself.
Moving away from the edge of the cliff, her eyes never leaving the butterfly, Jolena's heart pounded as for a moment it seemed to be following her. As Jolena moved backward, so did the butterfly flutter forward.
Then the butterfly suddenly soared widely around in a half circle and moved back to hover over the very edge of the cliff. "Just you stay right there," Jolena whispered. "Don't move. Please, please don't move. Be there when I get back with my net." In her excitement and haste to get back to the ca
mp, Jolena almost tumbled down the steep embankment. After steadying herself, she moved with sure footing on down the hill, then broke into a mad rush through the forest. When she reached the campsite, where a fire had already been started, she went to her wagon and reached inside, quickly finding her net.
"The jar, Kirk!" she cried. "Get the jar and follow me!"
"Jolena, stop," Kirk shouted, not making any move to do as she said. "I'm not going anywhere. Nor should you. It will be dark soon."
Jolena turned on a heel and gave Kirk a frustrated stare. "Kirk, I've found a nymphalid," she cried. "Now come with me. I may be too late. It's probably already gone!"
Sighing, his shoulders slouched, Kirk grabbed the jar with its soaked cotton from the back of the wagon and began running after Jolena.
Two Ridges had been watching Jolena for some time. When he caught sight of the butterfly she was chasing into the forest, he frowned. He knew the lore of that butterfly. It was a butterfly shunned by the Blackfoot and all other tribes of Indians!
It meant bad luck to anyone who looked upon it!
He broke into a mad run. He had to stop Jolena. She should not be near the butterfly, much less catch it to carry with her for the rest of this expedition.
If she did, everyone would be in jeopardy! Winded, yet too filled with excitement to stop, Jolena rushed back up the steep hill, then sucked in a wild breath of relief when she got to the cliff and saw that the butterfly was still circling around at the very edge, as though it had waited for her.
Clutching the handle of her butterfly net, Jolena inched closer to the edge of the cliff. "I can't believe it," she said, giving Kirk a quick glance over her shoulder as he lagged far behind her. "Kirk, it's still here. Can you believe it? It's as though it waited for me."
"Don't get too close to the edge of the damn cliff," Kirk warned, wiping perspiration from his brow. "Watch it, now, Jolena. Don't go any closer!"
Jolena did not hear anything but the thunderous roar of the waterfall and the cry inside her to catch this butterfly for her father. She inched her way along the land now, but when she got to the edge of the cliff, where below her rapids were swirling, she stopped.
But the butterfly seemed to be teasing her again when it flew only a few inches away from where she could reach it.
Fearlessly, she leaned out, swinging her net in a desperate attempt to catch the butterfly, then screamed as she lost her footing and tumbled over the side of the cliff.
Kirk stopped in mid-step, his eyes wild. "Jolena," he whispered, his throat so suddenly dry he could scarcely breathe. "Jolena…"
Chapter Thirteen
Spotted Eagle had just arrived at the campsite when he saw Two Ridges enter the forest. When Spotted Eagle dismounted and discovered that neither Jolena nor Kirk were among those busying themselves around the fire he concluded that perhaps Two Ridges was following Jolena and her brother to protect them while they explored.
Spotted Eagle recalled the cliff nearby and his heart skipped a beat. Quickly securing his reins, he glanced toward the forest again, where he had last seen Two Ridges.
Then, without saying anything to anybody, he broke into a hard run. He felt slightly relieved when he finally reached the slope of land that would lead him up to the cliff. Jolena was nowhere in sight. Nor was her brother, or Two Ridges. Perhaps they had gone another way.
Suddenly an eagle rose into the air with a snake which soon dropped from its claws and escaped. Spotted Eagle felt that was a bad omen. The lowering sun, too, was painted with sun dogsa sure warning that danger was near!
Then a mind-shattering scream suddenly pierced the air, startling Spotted Eagle.
His insides grew cold when he heard Kirk shouting Jolena's name.
"Hai- yah!" Spotted Eagle cried in despair, knowing what had happened.
His woman!
Just as he had feared, she was in danger!
She might even now be dead, for he had heard but only her one scream and the shout of her brother.
Now everything was too quiet!
Almost blinded with fear, Spotted Eagle raced up the hill. When he reached the summit, his eyes shifted from Kirk to Two Ridges, who were standing, motionless, their eyes wide as they peered over the sides of the cliff.
Spotted Eagle's heart seemed to plummet to his feet, afraid now to look over the cliff, fearing that he would see nothing but the crash of the waterfall and the whirlpools below. If his woman had fallen into the river, she would not survive the fall, much less the powerful surges of the water.
His jaw tight, his throat dry, Spotted Eagle rushed to the edge of the cliff, roughly edging himself between Two Ridges and Kirk. When he gazed downward, silently praying to the fires of the sun that his woman had somehow lived through the fall, he gasped at what he saw.
" Wo- ka-hit, listen to my pleas," he prayed desperately to the fires of the sun. "Do not let my woman die."
He looked quickly up at the sky, from which he thought he heard a voice say, " A-wah-hehtake courage, my son." Then he fell to his knees and gazed wild-eyed down at his woman, who was only moments away from death's door.
"Jolena?" he said as he stared disbelievingly down at her where she clung desperately to a huge, mangled root of a tree that had grown out of the rock at the sides of the cliff.
"Save me," Jolena whispered. "Oh, Lord, Spotted Eagle, I can't… last much longer. My fingers. I… feel them weakening!"
Spotted Eagle flattened his stomach against the rock beneath him and scooted out as far as he could over the ledge without placing himself in danger of toppling over. He had to give his body enough leverage so that it could tolerate Jolena's weight, as well as his own, once he grabbed her hands to pull her up to safety.
He knew that he should ask the assistance of Two Ridges and Kirk, but they had already proved their cowardice too often to be able to depend on them for anything.
They had just stood there watching when they could have been working together to save her!
But now was not the time to condemn. Now was not the time to confront Kirk with his suspicion that he was the one who had paid White Mole to come to Spotted Eagle with lies about an ailing father!
It was the time to save his woman's life.
If she slipped away from him to her death, he felt as though he just might follow her.
Without her, he would be only half a man!
"Grab my hands, one at a time!" Spotted Eagle shouted, scooting out a little farther, as far as he possibly could, and reaching his hands out for Jolena.
"One… at… a… time, Jolena," he cautioned again.
Her heart pounding and dizzy from fear, Jolena took a deep breath, then quickly reached one hand up, relief rushing through her when Spotted Eagle grabbed her around the wrist.
Then just as quickly, she reached her other hand out to him and a grateful sob lodged in her throat as she smiled throug
h tearful eyes up at him.
"I am going to pull you up slowly," Spotted Eagle said throatily.
Spotted Eagle's heart was filled with gratitude that Old Man, the chief god of the Blackfoot, had heard his silent pleas and had answered them. He now knew, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that it was his and Jolena's destiny to be together, to share life as though one soul and one heartbeat.
Today was proof enough to him that they were meant for one another, for otherwise, she would have not been given back to him, as though a gift from the gods!