Child of the Dead (7 page)

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Authors: Don Coldsmith

BOOK: Child of the Dead
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“This is not going well,” mumbled Beaver Track. “We have no pack saddle. How can we travel with meat?”

Singing Wolf was beginning to feel the same way. Meat, not cared for properly, would begin to spoil quickly on a day like this. Usually the women supervised the butchering and processing, while the men helped with the heavier parts. Just now, the two found themselves clumsy at the unfamiliar work.

“Let us take our mother some of the better parts. We can wrap the meat in part of the hide,” suggested Beaver Track.

That plan was quickly accomplished. They removed a large, irregular piece of the skin and spread it on the grass, flesh side up. On this, they began to place choice cuts … the tongue, loin, part of the liver, and strips from the haunch that would cure easily by drying.

“We cannot handle much more,” said Beaver Track finally. He glanced at the sun.

Neither mentioned it, hut the day was passing. They would not overtake the band until nightfall. They tied the clumsy bundle to the saddle of Wolf’s horse, and he rode the bay bareback, retracing their path to the camp of their mother.

“I did not need anything!!” she flared angrily. “You should be taking care of your own families! Go now!”

She had heard the distant shot, and was concerned for a little while. Yet, since there was only one, she had reasoned correctly what had occurred. She was not surprised when her sons returned with the gift of meat. Her face softened.

“Still,” she said, “it was a good thought. No, do not come any closer. I will pick it up after you leave. Just drop it there.”

The two untied the bundle and lifted it to the ground. Wolf adjusted the saddle, mounted, and picked up the rein of the bay.


Aiee
, Mother,” he said. “You might have stolen a better horse!”

Running Deer smiled inwardly. She well understood that remark. The gaits of the bay were quite uncomfortable, as she well knew. She appreciated her son’s wry humor. Maybe, even, it was an attempt to tell her that he understood. But she did not want to show weakness. She swallowed hard and tried to sound stern as she spoke.

“It was a good thought, to bring the meat,” she repeated, “though we did not need it. Maybe you were raised well, after all. Now go. You have far to travel.”

The two men did not speak until they reached the buffalo kill. They stopped and dismounted. Buzzards were gathering overhead, circling warily high above before descending. On a knoll a little distance away, a coyote sat, watching.

“Beaver,” said Singing Wolf, “I cannot ride that pack horse all the way to the night camp. Maybe we can each carry a bundle of meat, tied to our saddles.”

His brother nodded. “Maybe. Would it keep, on a day this hot?”

“Maybe not.” Spoiled meat could be dangerous.

“Wolf, I am made to think we have done all we can. Our wives will be worried about us. Let us hurry on.”

Singing Wolf thought about it for a little while, then turned to look at the distant coyote.

“Grandfather,” he mused, “the rest belongs to you. Share with your winged brothers up there!”

Wolf referred to an old Creation story. Coyote had agreed to steal fire from Sun Boy’s torch as it slipped over Earth’s rim to the other side. As he ran with the burning brand in his mouth, the flames fanned backward with the wind of his passing, scorching his flanks and marking the race of all his descendants. He gave the fire to Man, and by their previous agreement, is to receive the leavings from every kill.

The brothers remounted and hurried on. The bay pack horse led well, but even so, shadows were springing up from low spots in the rolling prairie, to creep across the earth, growing as they went.

The trail was plain, even after darkness was nearly complete. Faint starlight was sufficient to reveal the broad pathway made by hundreds of hooves and hundreds of lodge poles whose butt ends had scored long scratches in the prairie sod.

The Seven Hunters had hardly begun to circle around the Real-star, however, before they saw the twinkling fires of the night camp. No one seemed to have sought the sleeping robes yet. A curious crowd came out to meet them, and it was apparent that there were many rumors. Singing Wolf saw Quick Otter among the others.

“Here, Uncle,” he said, handing the rein to the old warrior. “Your pack horse. Our mother had borrowed it”

“Where is your mother, Wolf?” Otter asked. “Is there trouble?”

The young holy man drew a deep breath. It might as well be told now.

“Our mother,” he began, clearly and loudly enough for all to hear, “will not be rejoining us. She wished to stay with the child at the Camp of the Dead.”

There was an excited murmur.

“But will she not die, too?”

“Maybe.” He could say no more, and they turned away to care for the horses.

It required only a little while to strip saddles and bridles and release the tired animals. They shuffled off toward the herd, and the men turned toward their families. From the camp came the wail of the Mourning Song. It sounded to Wolf like the voice of his wife, Rain. This was not going to be easy. Should one be mourned who is not yet dead? But then, how would they know
when
to mourn, otherwise?

A half day’s travel away, Running Deer settled down for her first night with the dead. She did appreciate the fresh meat, and now regretted having spoken so harshly to her sons. But there had been no other way. She had to make them leave her, did she not? They would have loitered around, endangering themselves, and in the end it would have done no good. No, better this way.

Gray Mouse was awake now, staring at her in wonder from large dark eyes. The child actually looked somewhat better. She had taken a few bites of raw liver, a known effective treatment for anyone with questionable health and stamina. Then a little broiled meat … Deer wondered what the child had been eating, and for how long. In hand signs, she tried to inquire.

“Dried meat. There is plenty,” the child signed, pointing.

“At your lodge?”

The girl nodded. “At any lodge. There was no one to eat it.”

The old woman thought about that for a moment. Tomorrow, she would explore the abandoned camp. There might be many things that would be useful to the two of them.

As long as there were two of them, anyway. That might not be long. She wondered how long before she would start to see the first signs of the disease in herself. And what would they be? No matter, she would know soon enough …

“How long have you been alone?” Running Deer signed.

The little girl shrugged, and her eyes filled with tears.

“Three, four sleeps, maybe.”

The heart of Running Deer overflowed with pity for this child. Several long nights in the darkness, with the dead bodies everywhere … her own parents …
aiee
, how had the girl survived at all? Even Deer, an old woman, was uneasy in the area where so many spirits had recently crossed over. She shivered a little, tossed a few sticks on the fire, and then turned to spread her arms.

“Come, little Mouse,” she paused to sign. “You are not alone now.”

Somehow
, she noticed, as she enfolded the thin body in her arms,
I am not alone, either
.

Close on the heels of this warm feeling, though, came another.

I will lose her soon, now when I have just found her
.

Running Deer was afraid that another such loss would be more than she could bear. But then, she would follow soon, anyway. No matter …

8

T
he following morning was the first opportunity to really investigate the Camp of the Dead. Even knowing the situation, Running Deer was not prepared for the horrors that she encountered. Little Gray Mouse clung tightly to her hand. She had wished to leave the child outside the village while she explored, but Gray Mouse would not have it so.

“You will leave me!” the little girl protested in hand signs, tears streaming.

“No, no, child! Well … come along,” she beckoned.
Though I do not like what we will see
, Deer added, to herself.

The People had been aware of dead bodies in the camp, but had not investigated in much detail because of fear of the spirits that might cause the dreaded
poch
.

“Do not touch anything,” Running Deer signed. Instantly, she recognized how ridiculous that advice was. The girl had already been struck down by the
poch
. How could she be further harmed?

Slowly, they walked through the camp. The air was still, and the fetid odor of death hung over everything. Bodies were beginning to bloat.

We must leave this area
, thought Running Deer.
It is not good for a child
… Or for herself either, she realized. She tried to choke back her nausea as a slight
stirring of air brought a heavier scent of rotting human flesh.

She must remember her purpose here … finish her salvage and get out. Weapons … she took a bow in its case from the pole before the lodge of a warrior who would not need it again. Arrows, from the same weapon stand.

Walking among the lodges, Deer looked into the doorways. Most were empty, but some contained corpses in various stages of decay.
An ax would be useful
, she thought. She saw one, a shiny metal throwing ax, in the belt of a young warrior who lay on his willow backrest … He
will need it on the Other Side
, she told herself. That was better than admitting that she could not bear to take it from the dead warrior’s belt. She would look for another …

It was not long before she found one not in the possession of the dead. That was added to her plunder, along with a good steel knife and a small skinning knife that was better than her own. There was some guilt in taking the possessions of the dead, but after all, they could not use them here. She finally solved her dilemma with a short prayer to the spirits of the former owners.

“I will bring them to you when I cross over,” she promised. She wondered if she had become a little crazy.

What else now? Food!
Gray Mouse had told her that there was plenty.

“Where is the food?” she signed.

“There … and there …” The girl quickly pointed to several lodges. “That lodge is mine,” she added.

Running Deer approached the lodge, and stooped to peer inside. She pulled back the hanging doorskin … a little different in shape than those of the People … Two bodies, a young man and woman, on beds of robes opposite the door. And the powerful, ever-present smell of death and decay.

“There is nothing here,” she signed. “Your mother and father have crossed over. Let us go.”

Gently, she allowed the doorskin to fall back in place. Then she drew it aside again and reached inside. She had seen a child’s doll, just to the right of the door-way.
She drew it out … It was made of sticks, dressed in soft-tanned buckskin. Facial features were painted on the round head, made of the same material. A smiling face …

A faint odor of death clung faintly to the doll, but sunshine and fresh air would help that. She glanced at the girl, who was looking at the ground near her feet and sobbing quietly. Running Deer touched the small shoulder to attract the child’s attention, and held out the doll.

“Is this yours?” she signed.

A new rush of tears burst forth. Gray Mouse gathered the doll to her in a two-arm embrace that enfolded also the knees of the older woman. Running Deer patted the girl’s head.

“Now, now,” she crooned in her own tongue.

The girl could not understand the words, but the language of grief and of sympathy is universal, is it not?

“Come, child,” she said. “We must leave this place.”

Running Deer investigated several of the better-kept lodges for food, choosing those which held no corpses. In a short while she had assembled as much dried meat as she thought she could carry. A small amount of pemmican … She would have liked to carry more pemmican, especially from one large dwelling that seemed especially well managed. The wife or wives of that lodge had been skilled in food preparation. The pemmican, stored in casings of buffalo intestine, seemed of high quality. Not only pounded dried meat, but an assortment of berries had been kneaded into the mixture with melted tallow. The maker of that supply had been a woman who understood fine foods.

Running Deer sighed with regret. The weather was hot, and would be hotter. The pemmican would not keep well, because the tallow would become rancid. Although it would be a treat, it would not keep like the crisp strips of dried meat … She must plan for the future.
As if there will be a future
, she thought wryly.

She compromised at last, taking a few links of pemmican and all the dried meat they could carry. She bundled it into a bright-striped blanket from the same lodge, the clean one, adding a sack of dried corn.

She remembered Singing Wolf’s warnings, that the
evil spirits of the
poch
cling to objects, but that was certainly a good blanket, practically new. Maybe she could cleanse it. A scrubbing in the stream with yucca suds, exposure to healing rays from Sun Boy’s torch.

Just now, she must escape from this place. Physically and emotionally, it was beginning to weigh heavily on her. More than she could bear for much longer. Even now, each time she took a deep breath, she could tell that the death-smell had saturated her own lungs. It would take some time … If she
had
time …

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