The bridge, he saw now, did not cross the river, but followed it. He looked up. The trail of stars ended at the one star in the sky that, as Owl Carver had pointed out to him, remained fixed when all the other stars danced around it. And therefore it was called the Council Fire Star.
The little lights twinkled all around him, like flocks of bright birds, and his heart was full of happiness. It was all so beautiful, he wanted to sing.
And he did sing, the only song he knew that seemed right for this moment, the Song of Creation.
"Earthmaker, you fill the world with life.
You put life in earth and sky and water.
I do not know what you are, Earthmaker, But you are in me and everything that lives.
Always you have dwelt in life, Always you will dwell so."
He sang and danced and the White Bear rose up on its hind legs and strode heavily along beside him.
The light from the Council Fire Star grew brighter and seemed to dispel the blackness of the sky around it. The star grew until it was a sphere of cold fire that filled the sky.
He heard a roaring sound and saw that from the bottom of the shining globe water was pouring. The water gave off a light of its own. His eye followed its plunge. He was far, far above the earth now. The Great River was a shiny black ribbon, barely visible, winding over the earth.
Straight as a spear the water from the Council Fire Star was falling down to the place where the Great River began its winding course.
He exulted. Already he had learned a secret no other Sauk knew, unless it be Owl Carver himself--the true source of the Great River.
He saw a square, dark opening in the glowing surface of the star. The path led to it. Still walking on its hind legs, the White Bear pressed inexorably on toward that doorway, and Gray Cloud walked beside it.
The colors of the rainbow shimmered in the light from the star, and it pulsed faintly like a beating heart. When he thought of what a mighty spirit must dwell in this magnificent lodge--perhaps Earthmaker himself--Gray Cloud"s heart was once again full of fear.
He trembled and his steps slowed. He could not come face to face with such a being. It would be like staring into the sun. His eyes would be burned out of his head. He felt himself weakening.
The star-studded surface under his feet shook a little. He took a step and it quivered under his footfall. The White Bear was ahead of him now, leaving him out here alone among the stars, high above the earth on a bridge that was beginning to fall apart.
He looked back over the way he had come.
There was no bridge behind him.
Nothing but a blackness. He screamed, waved his arms, staggered.
He started to run forward after the Bear, his only protector, and his feet were sinking _into_ the bridge. The Bear and the doorway and the Council Fire Star itself seemed farther and farther away.
He fell to his hands and knees, afraid to stand any more.
But what was the fear trying to tell him?
It was right that Gray Cloud should be afraid, meeting a spirit so much more powerful than himself. And now he must trust that the spirit would not hurt him.
With that thought, he felt the bridge growing more solid under his hands. He pushed himself back to his feet.
He was standing before the doorway. All above him and to the sides stretched the curving, shimmering, many-colored surface of the Council Fire Star.
He did not see the White Bear. It must have gone into the star. He took a deep breath, and taking his fear with him, he plunged through the doorway.
For a moment light blinded him. The air was full of a fluttering and a rustling.
His eyes grew used to the light and he saw that he stood at the edge of a pool full of fish swimming in circles.
They were not fish, he knew, but fish spirits. The spirits of trout and salmon and ba.s.s and walleye and sunfish and pike, all the fish of lakes and streams that fed his people.
Full of fear of what else he might see, Gray Cloud raised his eyes.
He saw a Turtle.
The Turtle was frightfully big. He was on the other side of the rushing pool, but still he loomed over Gray Cloud, his head high in the air. His front feet rested on a blue-white block of ice. Behind him rose a mountain of ice crystals. The wrinkles around his eyes and mouth told Gray Cloud he was immeasurably old.
"Gray Cloud," the Turtle said. "You are welcome here." His voice was deep as thunder.
Gray Cloud fell again to his hands and knees.
"Do not be afraid, Gray Cloud," said the rumbling voice.
He looked up again and saw kindness in the enormous, heavy-lidded yellow eyes. The exposed belly of the Turtle was the pale green of spring leaves. On his bone-encased chest a bright drop of water formed, like a dewdrop or a teardrop, but big as a man"s head. After a moment it fell and splashed into the pool. Gray Cloud looked into the bottom of the pool and saw the blackness of a deep pit in its center. He realized that it must be from this pool that the stream of water poured down into the Great River. And the drops of water falling from the Turtle fed the pool. The true source of the Great River was the Turtle spirit"s heart.
Owl Carver had told him of the Turtle. After Earthmaker he was the oldest and most powerful spirit. He had helped to create the world and to keep it alive.
Scarcely able to believe that he was actually looking upon the Turtle, Gray Cloud lifted his gaze and saw that all manner of beasts and birds occupied the ledges on the ice-crystal mountain. All creation was here.
Trees--maple, ash, elm, oak, hickory, birch, pine and spruce--cl.u.s.tered on the mountainside, roots somehow drawing nourishment from the ice.
He said, "Father, I thank you for letting me come here."
Instead of answering him, the huge reptilian head swung to one side. He followed the gaze of the yellow eye.
A man was standing near the Turtle"s head on one of the ledges. He was tall and thin. His eyes were round and blue, his face white. A pale eyes! What would a pale eyes be doing here in the lodge of the Turtle?
The man had long black hair streaked with gray, tied at the back of his head. His thin figure was dressed in a blue coat, pinched at the waist by a black leather belt with a sword and a pistol hanging from it. His white trousers were tucked into shiny black boots that came up to his calves. Seeing the sword, Gray Cloud thought this man must be one of the long knives, the dreaded pale eyes warriors.
The man was looking at Gray Cloud. His face was narrow, with deep lines.
All the pale eyes Gray Cloud had seen had hairy faces--thick mustaches growing under their noses, and sometimes beards that spread out over their chests--but this man"s face was clean. His nose was large and hooked like a hawk"s beak. Gray Cloud saw that the man was weeping.
Tears were running down his creased cheeks as he stared at Gray Cloud.
The look in those blue eyes, Gray Cloud realized, was not sadness, but love.
Returning the man"s gaze, Gray Cloud felt a warmth in his own chest like the heat suddenly rising from a fire that has taken hold.
"I have brought you to hear a warning," said the Turtle, his voice shaking Gray Cloud"s very bones. "You must carry my words back to my children, the Sauk and Fox." As the Turtle spoke, another huge drop splashed into the pool, to add itself to the Great River.
"Evil days are coming for my children."
Gray Cloud quailed, thinking that he did not want to bring that back to his people. But perhaps there was some good word he could tell them.
"How may we escape this evil, Father Turtle?" he asked.
"This evil is from the pale eyes."
At this, Gray Cloud turned to stare at the pale eyes man, who looked sad now, even sombre. Who was this man, and why was he here?