Apache Protectors: Running Wolf

Chapter Twenty-Five.

The other women looked to her and then to Running Wolf.

"No," he said. "He may not let you return. I will go."

"They will kill you," she said, absolutely certain that her brother would shoot a lone Sioux warrior on sight.

What should she do?

"Together," she said. "All of us."



The women straightened their dresses and smoothed their blunt-cut hair as best they could.

"You must help me keep Running Wolf safe," she said. She did not receive the rousing chorus of affirmation for which she had hoped. In fact, they stared sullen and silent. Clearly they did not share her sentiment toward their guide.

She looked from one to the next. It was Snake who finally spoke.

"He was there when we were taken four years ago, and while he did not visit our lodge, he did not try to see we were adopted. He and all the others except Spotted Fawn and Pretty Cloud treated us as enemy. Why should we do otherwise?"

"Because he will be my husband."

Little Deer gasped and Snake choked. Wren stared in mute astonishment.

"Your father will not allow it," said Snake.

Raven tended to agree with her. Her father had lost a brother to the Sioux and her uncle had lost his scalp. It might be on the war shirt of any of the older warriors of Running Wolf"s tribe. Her father had taken them to the lake that was past the point they had ever ventured before. Had he done so to escape the whites and their new fort or to provoke the Sioux?

Was their presence here no small skirmish but a well-planned invasion?

Raven looked from her brother, far across the prairie, to the women. "You all may go. I ask no more of you."

Little Deer stepped forward. "We would have all died screaming if Raven had not made a bargain for our lives. She was willing to die for us and all she asks is that we help spare this man"s life."

"This enemy," said Snake.

"It is so," said Little Deer. "And I will do this and anything else she asks. She is our leader by our election. She was safe until we asked for her help. Spotted Fawn would have adopted her. She could have lived in his lodge and been a second wife. Who will say this is not so?"

None of them spoke.

Raven saddled Song and Running Wolf drew on his shirt and took up his shield. Raven knew her brother would recall the symbol of the wolf emblazoned upon it.

Together they rode slowly toward the party of five Crow warriors. She saw that her brother rode an unfamiliar mount, a small chestnut stallion with a wedge-shaped head and powerful hindquarters. His favorite warhorse, Hail, still lived within the Sioux herd. Had they traded with the other tribes for these, stolen them in raids or captured wild horses? As she drew nearer she recognized her brother"s companions. There was Little Badger, shirtless as usual, and beside him rode Turns Too Slowly, his long braids reaching his waist and his forelock carefully roached and waxed so it stood up like a deer-tail headpiece. Raven felt the welling of joy at seeing them again. And there was Feeding Elk, Broken Saddle and Young Bear.

Her happiness was dampened by the growing unease, for surely they had recognized her horse. With her hair cut and her loss of weight, she did not know how much she had changed, but she thought she saw the moment her brother was sure it was her because his neck, stretched to its limit as he stared across the open s.p.a.ce between them, shortened as he moved from standing in his stirrups to seated upon his saddle. He tossed his lance a few inches, changing the grip in preparation to throw.

"Get behind me," ordered Running Wolf.

At almost the same moment, her brother"s order reached her.

"Move away from him, Snow Raven."

She did not move behind or away. She nudged Song so that she stood before Running Wolf.

"You embarra.s.s me," he called. "Let us meet as men."

"No. I have seen how men meet." To her brother she called, "I am well and we come in peace. Will you give this man safe pa.s.sage to our father?"

"I will not stop him," said her brother.

Raven let her shoulders relax slightly. She glanced back to see that Running Wolf still held his shield at the ready. When she looked back to her brother she noted he still held his spear ready to throw. Raven stopped her horse. The women who had chosen her to lead them continued on until they were standing before the warriors of the Low River tribe. They told their tribe names and begged for help. They said that Snow Raven had helped them escape the Sioux snakes.

Raven heard Snake say that the warrior was Running Wolf, war chief of the Sioux, and that the dying chief had made him promise to bring them home.

The men seemed confused by this, judging from the nervous dancing of their horses.

Bright Arrow called to her again. "Is he holding you?"

"No."

"Then, come to us."

"No."

He motioned for her to come.

"Safe pa.s.sage to our father for us both. Promise."

In answer he threw his lance so that it stuck into the ground between them, vibrating with the force of the throw.

"Come, then," said Bright Arrow.

There was little choice. Raven nudged her horse forward and Running Wolf proceeded at her side.

"Why didn"t you let me kill him?" said Bright Arrow.

"When we get home, I will tell you."

The other women returned to their camp to strike the lodges and pack their belongings. Young Bear accompanied them and seemed to be taking a special interest in Little Deer. Raven sat between her brother and Running Wolf, upon her horse, Song.

In all the times she imagined this reunion, it was never so cold or so tense.

She began to fear that Running Wolf was right. Her people would not accept a Sioux warrior in their midst any more than the Sioux would accept a Crow maiden for their war chief"s wife.

For better or worse, the camp of the Low River tribe was only a short ride through thickening pine. Raven knew this place and recalled the river where they had camped many times when the south wind gave way to the west wind.

Feeding Elk rode ahead and so her entire village was there to greet them. But there was no drum to announce them, or cheering or dancing. All stood and stared as Raven returned to her people.

Only one woman stepped forward to meet her. She was crooked and her hair was as white as a summer cloud, but she opened her thin arms to her grandchild.

"Welcome home, Little Warrior."

Raven slipped off her horse and rushed to her grandmother"s embrace. The skin drooped from Truthful Woman"s arms, but her grip was strong, and Raven was so happy that she was alive and here.

"Now it feels like home," she whispered.

When her grandmother released her, Raven saw her father approach. She smiled and then realized that her father looked past her. She turned to see Running Wolf had dismounted and now stood with the rein of his stallion in one hand and his shield lowered to his opposite side.

"Take him," said her father, Six Elks.

"No," she said, but it was too late. Running Wolf was surrounded. He did not fight as they took him to the ground and pinned him there.

Raven grasped her father"s arm.

"He brought me home. Father, he kept me alive."

He ignored her. "Tie him."

She left her father and tried to reach Running Wolf as he was yanked upright with his arms bound. But her brother swept her over his shoulder. She yelled and kicked, but they marched Running Wolf away. Once he was gone, her brother dropped her back to the ground and followed the young warriors.

Her father spoke to Truthful Woman. "Talk to the others and report to me all that has happened."

Raven watched her grandmother turn to Little Deer, Wren and Snake, now carrying Stork safely in his cradle board. She welcomed them and motioned them to follow her. All of the women in her tribe trailed away after them, leaving her alone with her father, two of the elders and Thunder Buffalo, their medicine man.

"Father, you must listen to me," Raven said.

"I will. Come to my lodge."

She listened to the men shout.

"No! You will tell them not to hurt him."

"The last I checked, I was still chief here."

"Please, Father. They will kill him."

Her father said nothing to this but she recognized the look of hatred in his eyes.

"He did not kill Iron Heart," she said, speaking her uncle"s name aloud.

Her father looked shocked. "You do not speak his name."

"Will you stop them?"

Her father looked away.

"Then, I will stop them." Raven ducked inside the lodge of her father to find her bow and quiver hanging on their usual peg, as if awaiting her return. She grabbed them both and set off at a run.

When she reached the warriors, it was to find them lowering Running Wolf"s feet onto a bed of hot coals.

She shrieked and shot a warning arrow into their midst. The men scattered and Running Wolf, arms and legs tightly bound, rolled away. She used the iron tip of one arrow to slice through the bonds at his wrists before the young men in her tribe regrouped and closed in.

She pointed a finger at her brother. Then she aimed the arrow at him. "You promised him safe pa.s.sage."

"Yes. Safe pa.s.sage to the village, and he has arrived safely. My promise is done."

She renotched the arrow and drew back the bowstring, readying death for any foolish enough to approach.

"Look what they have done to her," said Bright Arrow. "They have made her lose her mind as well as her hair so that she protects a snake."

"She cannot shoot us all," said Feeding Elk.

She aimed the arrow at him. "But I can kill you."

"You would kill one of your own people over this man?" asked Turns Too Slowly.

"I would kill all of you for this man," she said.

"She is one of them," said Young Bear.

"I am not."

"Rush her," said Bright Arrow. "She won"t do it."

They closed in and she realized that Bright Arrow was right. She couldn"t do it. She released the tension on the bow, gradually bringing it back to rest. Then she tossed the bow aside, keeping hold of the metal-tipped arrow.

"He is right," she said. "But I will do this." She lifted the sharpened point and pressed it to her throat, feeling the point puncture the skin at her neck.

"No!" said Bright Arrow, lifting a hand to halt the others.

"Step back and leave us," she ordered.

Feeding Elk moved closer. "Do not be foolish, Little Warrior. There is no need to fuss."

She pressed harder and the arrow drew more blood. She felt it, hot and sticky, as it rolled down her neck.

Someone grasped her wrist and dragged the arrow from her throat. She turned to see it was Running Wolf. He looked at her with regret.

"You above all others," he said.

The next instant they were on them, dragging them down and apart. She reached for Running Wolf and missed.

Chapter Twenty-Five.

"Let them up."

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