Randa was carrying rocks, too. She set hers down and waited as he brought his over.
“Those are good ones. Where did you get them?”
“Off a ways,” Chickory said, with a jerk of his thumb.
“Are there more? I’ll go with you and bring some back.”
“There aren’t any more.”
“You’re lyin’,” Randa said.
If there was one thing Chickory hated it was to be called a liar—even when he was lying. “What makes you say that?”
“I know you. I know how you talk when you lie. Why won’t you tell me where you got them?”
Chickory hesitated. He would love to tell someone and his sister was pretty good at keeping a secret. “If I do, you have to give me your word you won’t say a word to anybody.”
“You have it,” Randa said.
Chickory gave his account, ending with, “That hill is crawlin’ with them. You want to come, you have to be careful.”
“You need to go tell Mr. King.”
“No. Ma will find out, and you know what she’ll do.”
“You have to,” Randa insisted. “Remember that hunt? This could be what Mr. King was lookin’ for.” She pointed. “There he is right there. Go over and tell him or I’ll do it myself.”
Chickory bit off a sharp reply. He was mad. He’d trusted her and she’d betrayed him. Now he wouldn’t get to go watch the snakes whenever he wanted.
“Do it. Now.”
“Just because you are older than me…” Chickory wheeled and walked over to where Nate King and Shakespeare McNair were working on the fireplace. “I brought some rocks,” he announced.
Without looking up Nate said, “We need a lot. Keep looking.”
“Yes, sir.” Chickory stayed where he was.
“Anything else?” McNair asked.
“I just want to thank you both for bein’ so kind to us, and all. If there is ever somethin’ I can do for you, let me know.”
Nate raised his head and chuckled. “You can find more rocks.”
Chickory nodded and walked back to his sister. “There. I told him. He said he’d go have a look later, after he’s done with the cabin.”
“You did the right thing,” Randa said. “I’m proud of you.”
Chapter Thirteen
The fireplace took four days to build. It took so long because they had to bring the clay they used for the mortar from a quarter of a mile away.
The men did the digging and piled the clay on a travois; Winona and Blue Water Woman took turns riding the horse that pulled it. They mixed the clay with water and dirt and laid the stones and once the mix dried it was as hard as the stones themselves.
The front door posed a problem. They had no boards or planks. They didn’t have a sawmill to make them either. The alternatives were to split logs and spend tedious hours planing and smoothing or go all the way to Bent’s Fort. Shakespeare struck on a temporary solution. They would get boards at Bent’s on their regular supply trek. In the meantime, the Worths had to make do with Shakespeare’s bedroom door. He took it off its hinges and brought it over and hung it himself. While it was wide enough it wasn’t quite long enough; there was a gap of two inches at the top. When Emala asked why Shakespeare didn’t leave the gap at the bottom, he smiled and said, “So every bug in creation can crawl inside and make itself at home?”
“Lordy, no, I wouldn’t like that,” Emala agreed. “A gap at the top is fine by me.”
“We can’t thank you enough for the use of your door,” Samuel said.
“When we go to Bent’s we’ll have a door made that will fit proper,” Shakespeare promised. “That should be in three weeks or so.”
Samuel patted the wall and beamed. “Our new home,” he said proudly. “Our very own by-God new home.”
“Don’t take the Lord’s name in vain,” Emala said. “He saw us safe all the way here. The least you can do is show respect.”
“I am as thankful as I can be,” Samuel replied. He turned to Shakespeare and shook his hand and then to Nate and shook his. “I don’t have the words to say how much this means.”
“What are friends for?” Nate said.
“That’s just it,” Samuel said, and looked away and coughed. “I ain’t never had friends like you two. Not in all my born days.”
Shakespeare launched into a quote. “I do profess to be no less than I seem; to serve him truly that will put me in trust; to love him that is honest; to converse with him that is wise and says little; to fear judgment; to fight when I cannot chose, and to eat no fish.”
“He’s saying he was happy to be of service,” Nate translated.
“What was that about fish?” Emala asked. “Don’t you ever eat it?”
“Personally I like fish now and then so long as it doesn’t taste too fishy.”
“How can fish not taste like fish?”
“You have to excuse him,” Nate said. “He often has no idea what he is talking about.”
Shakespeare snorted.
“May I tell you two gentlemen something?” Samuel said earnestly. “There are times when I have no notion of what you are talkin’ about.”
Winona and Blue Water Woman joined them, and Winona said, “Guess what, husband?”
“You want to take me home and ravish me.”
Emala squealed in delight and exclaimed, “Mr. King! The things that come out of your mouth. You are a caution.”
“He thinks he is,” Winona said. “But no, that is not it. We have decided to have a…what do you whites call it?” She puckered her brow. “Now I remember. A housewarming. All of us will bring food tomorrow afternoon to celebrate building the new cabin and to welcome the Worths to our valley. How does that sound?”
“I have ale I’ll bring,” Shakespeare offered.
“So long as you don’t drink too much,” Blue Water Woman said. “Remember how you become when you have had more than one.”
“Remind me.”
“You become frisky.”
“Me?”
“Very frisky.”
Emala squealed once more. “I swear. You folks talk as if you just fell in love.”
Shakespeare clasped Blue Water Woman’s hand and sank to one knee. “But soft, what light through yonder window breaks? It is the east, and Juliet is the sun. Arise, fair sun, and kill the envious moon, who is already sick and pale with grief, that thou, her maid, art far more fair than she.”
“Do you see what I must put up with?” Blue Water Woman said.
“O speak again, bright angel!”
“I think he’s adorable,” Emala gushed.
Blue Water Woman patted the top of McNair’s head. “You do not have to live with him day in and day out.”
“Ouch,” Shakespeare said.
Nate chuckled and walked toward the lake. Halfway there he acquired a shapely shadow.
“Leaving without your horse?” Winona asked.
Nate held up his encrusted hands. “I need to wash up and then we can go.”
“Any regrets about inviting the Worths to our valley?”
“Why would you ask a thing like that? They’re good people. They’ll make good neighbors.”
“I remember you saying once that this valley was ours and ours alone. Yet you allowed the Nansusequas to stay and now you have allowed the Worths to move here, too.” Winona rose onto the tips of her toes and kissed him on his chin. “You would make a fine sosoni.”
“I thought I already was. Your people adopted me into the tribe years ago.”
“I stand corrected,” Winona said, taking his arm. “You are right, though. They are good people. I hope the next family will be just as good.”
“Next?” Nate said, and stopped. “Whoa there, silly goose. The Worths are the last. There will be no more after them.” He’d never intended for anyone other than his family and Shakespeare and Blue Water Woman to settle there. It was to be their haven, their sanctuary, so far into the mountains that they would never be intrude
d upon.
“So you say,” Winona teased.
“Straight tongue,” Nate said. “From here on out, no one comes through that pass without my say-so.”
“What will you do? Put up a sign?”
Nate hadn’t thought of that but now that he did, he said, “I’ll have one up by the end of the week. A warning to trespassers to keep out, that this valley is spoken for.”
“It is a big valley.”
Indeed it was. Nate scanned the sun-washed lofty mountains, the ranks of emerald forest, the expanse of blue lake dotted by meandering waterfowl. “A hundred homesteaders could live here comfortably.”
“But you will not let them.”
“I will not.”
“I don’t know, husband,” Winona said uncertainly. “I foresee trouble for us down the road, as you whites would say.”
“We’ll cross that bridge when we come to it, as us whites would say,” Nate retorted. Sliding his arms around her waist, he kissed her on the forehead. “We have a right to protect our own and this valley is ours. We found it. We claimed it. We settled it. If I could, I would register our claim with the government so that it was legal, but I can’t because there is no government. Out here it’s every man, or woman, for him- or herself.”
“White ways have long puzzled me,” Winona confessed. “Your people think of land differently from my people. We do not own it in the way whites like to. In our eyes the land is for everyone to use.”
“Not to whites and not this valley,” Nate stressed. “I grant you we look at it differently. But I can’t let folks come waltzing in here as they please or pretty soon we’ll have a whole settlement and be up to our armpits in people and rules and laws and I won’t have that. Civilization ends at the Mississippi River. I, for one, am glad it does.”
Winona nodded. She had heard all this before. “How far are you willing to go to keep this valley ours?”
“As far as I need to.”
“You would kill to keep people out?”
Nate shrugged. “Like I said, dear heart, we’ll cross that bridge when we come to it.”
“You are being evasive.”
“I’m being honest. No, I don’t want to kill. But I will keep this valley ours no matter what it takes.”
“There is much more wilderness, you know,” Winona mentioned. “Many thousands of your miles. Enough for everyone.”
Nate placed his chin on the top of her head and gazed at a pair of geese out on the lake. “I wish you were right. But you don’t know my people like I do. They are never happy with what they have. They always have to have more. They’ve pushed from the Atlantic to the Mississippi and have so overrun the land that it won’t be long before they push past it. It will be like a dam bursting. Whites will spill across the prairie and into these mountains until there will barely be breathing space.”
“You exaggerate, surely.”
Nate drew back and looked into her eyes. “I wish I did. I wish I could make you see. Trust me on this. A time will come, maybe in our lifetimes, when my people will want all this land for their own.”
“And what of my people? What of the other tribes?”
“My people will do to them as they did to the tribes back East. They’ll exterminate them or make them live where the tribes do not want to live.”
Winona did not hide how troubled she was. “You have rarely been wrong about anything, but I hope you are wrong about this. For if what you say is true, blood will be spilled.”
“There will be blood,” Nate agreed. He hugged her close and she clasped him tighter and they stood a while with the sun warm on their faces and the breeze in their hair and a robin warbling in the woods.
That night Nate lay on his back in their bed with Winona’s cheek on his chest and was unable to get to sleep. He was troubled by their talk. He had a feeling, a sense he could not account for, of trouble looming on their horizon. He tried to blame it on nerves, but he knew better. Life was what it was, at times peaceful and wonderful and at times violent and savage. They could ward off the ugly aspects but they couldn’t hold those aspects at bay indefinitely. Life wouldn’t let them. When people least expected, life slammed them to the ground and ripped at them with claws of strife and misery.
There was a passage in the Bible that Nate had always liked, about how God sent his rain on the just and the unjust. Which was as it should be, Nate supposed, but not much comfort to those being rained on. Because it wasn’t just rain. It was death and disease and hurt and slaughter and the many sorrows the human soul had to endure.
Nate stared at the ceiling. If he lived to be a hundred, he doubted he would savvy why people had to suffer. The best he could do was protect his family so they suffered as little as possible.
With that in mind, he dozed off.
The next morning dawned clear. The lake was a brilliant blue in a world of lush green. Nate dipped their bucket in to fill it and saw fish swim by. When he got back to the cabin Winona was busy making food for the get-together.
Everyone had agreed to meet at the Worth cabin shortly after the sun was at its zenith. The food would be set out, and they would talk and play games and have fun until late into the night. Nate was looking forward to it. So when he stepped outside shortly before noon and saw the western sky, he scowled.
A dark cloud bank blotted out the horizon, a thunderhead rent by flashes of lightning. As yet it was too distant to hear the thunder. But in a while it would be upon them. He went back in and informed his wife.
“I hope it passes over quickly,” Winona said.
So did Nate. Otherwise it would spoil their plans. He went back out and made sure the corral gate was secure and brought in all his tools so they wouldn’t get wet and rust. As he was carrying his ax in he heard the first far-off rumble and smelled moisture in the air. It wouldn’t be long.
The first drops were big and cold. They hit like gunshots on the roof. The wind picked up and churned the surface of the lake with wavelets. Lightning crashed and thunder boomed, and the dark sky opened up and unleashed a deluge. The rain fell in sheets. It was so heavy that Nate, standing at his window, couldn’t see the chicken coop or the woodshed only a dozen yards out.
Winona came to his side and peered into the torrent. “Please do not last long,” she said to the heavens.
A cannonade of thunder shook their cabin. Evelyn came out of her room and took one look and said, “This better not keep me from seeing Dega.”
“Oh?” Nate said.
Evelyn blushed.
The storm lasted more than an hour. It rained so hard that at its peak the ground was inches deep in water. Gradually the downpour tapered to a sprinkle and ended entirely. The sky turned from black to gray and then to blue. In its wake it left pools and puddles and mud and muck.
Nate was still at the window, Winona at the counter placing a pie she had baked in a basket. “It’s a mess out there,” he said. “I should go tell everyone to hold off a couple of hours. Give things time to dry out.”
Evelyn jumped up from a chair by the table. “Let me, Pa. I’m tired of being cooped up.”
“Is that the only reason?”
Evelyn blushed again. “Of course.”
“You’ll have to ride careful. The ground is slippery.”
“I will. Don’t worry,” Evelyn said. “Nothing will happen.”
Chapter Fourteen
During the height of the storm the rain cascaded into the gulley as water over a waterfall. The gully quickly filled. It often did when rain was heavy. Usually it rose to a gap near the bottom and was channeled out and over the adjacent ground before the bottom was covered. This time the rain came down so hard and so fast that the level rose more swiftly than it ever had, and the gap wasn’t wide enough for the water to drain out before it covered the gully from end to end.
The rain kept on falling and the level kept on rising and the water reached the cleft and flowed in and down. It poured into the underground chamber like water down a f
unnel. It drenched the enormous mass of serpents and the mass writhed to life, annoyed. Like strands of unraveling thread, the multitude uncoiled and unwound and swarmed up the cleft. Not by scores or by hundreds but by the thousands. So many filled the cleft that they temporarily stopped the water. In a living torrent of their own they flowed out of the cleft and up and out of the gully onto the ground above. They didn’t stop there. The battering rain, the wet and the cold, were not to their liking. In sinuous clusters they fanned out, crawling every which way, anxious in their instinct to escape the wet.
But there was no escape. The rain was so heavy that the ground couldn’t absorb it all. The snakes crawled in water inches deep, and they didn’t like that. Some crawled faster and farther than they had ever gone, to all points of the compass. Those that fled to the west vanished into the trees. The rest spread out along the lakeshore, living currents of reptilian flesh.
The rain went on and on and the snakes crawled and crawled until finally the black clouds drifted east, the lightning and thunder dwindled and the rain became a mist that soon ended.
In many places the water was still inches deep, with scattered pools and countless puddles.
Nearly everywhere, the water moved as if alive.
Evelyn King couldn’t saddle her horse fast enough. She was eager to be on her errand. She would give her father’s message to the Worths and her brother and his wife and then ride on to the Nansusequa lodge and give the message to them, and get to see Dega.
As Evelyn smoothed the saddle blanket she thought of the night before when she snuck out to see him. A warm tingle spread through her tummy. His kisses were like sweet honey. Strange that a girl would think that of a boy, but there it was.
Evelyn swung her saddle on and bent to the cinch. She had chosen a sorrel she was fond of. It had a gentle disposition and never gave her a lick of trouble. The bridle was already on so when she lowered the stirrup all she had to do was swing up and jab her heels and she was away. She was wearing a light blue dress she had made herself and shoes she bought in St. Louis. The shoes were a bit too tight, but they were the fanciest she owned and she wanted to look especially pretty for the get-together, and for Dega.
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