Not half an hour later, Clint found Winona Eaglefeather standing quietly on the edge of the Gilberts’ property where she kept a tepee with Dakota. The Gilberts had become good friends with Winona, as they had watched over Dakota when he first arrived in Boomer Town before Winona had arrived, looking for the boy.
She still had on the plainclothes dress she had worn to the service. When she came from the reservation, she wore Cheyenne dress, but many times in town she dressed in the manner of other Brave Rock women. It was late in the day, but after talking with Katrine he knew the news he carried could not wait until tomorrow.
“I’m glad you came to the service.” It didn’t feel like the right greeting, but Clint couldn’t find other words. “Lars spoke highly of you.”
“Your fun-e-ral—” she worked the new word carefully on her tongue “—is so strange to me.” When Winona had first come to Brave Rock, she could only communicate in English on the most basic level. Now, only three months later, the language came much more easily. That had a lot to do with the amount of time Lars had devoted to teaching her. Lars was an excellent instructor—already Clint had learned a great deal about the area and tracking from the Dane—but Clint knew their motivation to communicate went deeper than a grasp of English.
“Strange?” he inquired. A funeral for a living man was oddity enough, but since Winona could hardly have known that, Clint was curious about her reaction.
“Yes.” She circled one hand in the air, as if reaching for the right word. “So...quiet.”
He’d never had cause to see a Cheyenne funeral, but Lars had told him of the tribe’s colorful spiritual ceremonies. Solemn rows of folk in black couldn’t be further from costumes and fires and sacred dances. “I suppose it must look that way to you.”
“When the Cheyenne mourn their dead, we place a body up high to speed them to the Great Beyond. There is much wailing and crying. Singing and telling stories.”
“We tell stories—you heard Reverend Thornton tell a few about Lars as part of his message—but mostly to each other more than part of the ceremony.” Lije had indeed told several heartwarming tales of the help and support Lars had given people in Brave Rock. Clint had felt his soul warm to the fact that in three short months, this prairie settlement had become a true community. He and Lars were fighting to keep that community safe, and Lars’s own memorial bore truth as to why that was worth the current cost. “Lots of people stopped me in town or after the service and told me stories of Lars. People see it as a way to remember.”
“And headstones.” Her eyes squinted up in consideration of this unfamiliar custom. Brave Rock had no graveyard yet, but even Lije had mentioned they’d need one soon. “Reverend Thornton tells me your people put the bodies down in the ground.”
“That’s true, usually. Only there is no body to bury in this case.” He found his words ironic, given what he had come to say. Still, it wasn’t the kind of thing he could just blurt out.
“You wear black,” she went on, then motioned to her own dark clothes. “We wear red.” He noticed that the elaborate beaded decorations she always wore in her long black braids were a bright red today. Even in American garb, she managed to retain her Cheyenne identity. Maybe that was why Lars felt such a connection to the woman—she had a gift for moving between the two worlds of her life. Lars was little different; he seemed to slide with ease between his Danish heritage, his American future and his time spent learning hunting and tracking on the Cheyenne reservation. It’s what made him such a good role model for young Dakota. Half white, half Cheyenne, the boy was struggling with who he was and where he belonged since his mother had died and his father, prior to his death, had never even acknowledged the boy’s existence. The more Clint thought about it, the more Lars had in common with this aunt and her nephew. Clint would be glad to put an end to their mourning.
“We are so different,” she went on. “And yet death is sadness everywhere.” He did not need to see her wipe a tear from her eyes to know she mourned Lars deeply; it was clear in the tone of her simple words.
“Can we take a walk, Miss Winona? I need to talk to you about something important. Private. To do with Lars.”
She looked at him with curiosity, but turned as he gestured away from where Dakota sat working with some leather outside the tepee. “I have told you all I know. I do not know how I can help you, Sheriff Thornton.”
Clint made sure they were a safe distance before he turned to her. “I have not told you all I know.” He took a breath, fully aware he was bringing danger to Winona’s door but also aware that Katrine could not go on without more support. “Lars is not dead.”
Winona’s eyes, already dark and large, popped wide open. “I do not understand.”
“Lars is alive, but in hiding. He did not die in the fire, but we thought it best to make it look as if he had died. The men who set that fire were looking to kill him for something he had seen, and we didn’t want them trying again.”
“He lives?” she whispered. Her hand went to her chest, confirming Clint’s suspicions that Lars had come to mean much more to her than an English tutor.
“Yes. Only Katrine and I know this, but I fear it’s too much for her to bear alone.”
Winona’s eyes glanced over Clint’s shoulder back in the direction of the church where so many people had mourned just hours ago. “A great lie.”
“Yes, but a necessary one. And only for now. Lars’s life is worth saving at any cost.” After a moment he added, “I know you feel that way.” Lars had known the reasons Clint could pull her into this; she understood the cost, and her heart would make her willing to pay it.
She paused a telling moment before saying, “You speak the truth.”
“He needs supplies brought to him where he hides. And messages. I’ve told Katrine she can write to him but for her to visit is too dangerous. I suspect certain folks are watching her—folks who might aim to finish what they started.”
“Katrine is still in danger?”
“As I said, I believe her cabin was set on fire on purpose. To kill Lars. By the same people who have been setting other fires and doing other damage.” He paused a moment before adding, “Lars and I both believe we know who the Black Four are. I am trying to catch them even now, so that Lars can come home and everyone can be safe.”
“A heavy task.”
“One that is my job as sheriff. Only it makes it hard for me to help Lars. You, though, you slip in and out of town every day. And he is not far from the reservation.” Clint was used to telling folks what to do, to giving orders and planning strategies. It felt odd to be asking, pleading even, for assistance. “Will you help?”
The Cheyenne woman did not need time to consider the weight of his request. “I will do all I can. My people owe Gaurang much, they will be glad to help.”
Clint could never understand the complicated Cheyenne language which came so easily to Lars. How could an odd name like Gaurang be any simpler than Brinkerhoff? Still, he knew that was how the Cheyenne village referred to Lars, and the affection with which Winona spoke the name needed no translation.
“No one else must know, Miss Winona,” he warned. “No one. I feel bad even asking you to keep this secret. There are...dangers.”
“Life has many dangers, Sheriff, for red skin and for white.” Her own sister, Dakota’s mother, had died. Lars had told him many harrowing tales of the harsh life the Cheyenne community faced. Winona probably knew more of life’s darkness than many women in Brave Rock.
“Yes, but every person who knows Lars is alive makes it harder to keep him safe. I need you to promise no one else—in Brave Rock or your village—will know Lars lives. Can you do that?”
“You have my word. Where is he?”
Clint gave details of the place where Lars was tucked away, glad to discover she knew exactly the spot he described. Her people had taught Lars all he knew of hunting and tracking in these parts—of course she knew the countryside as well as the Dane. “It is a good spot,” she agreed, nodding her head. “Near water, far from eyes, good shelter.”
Clint found his eyes wandering up to the ridge where he knew Lars sat hiding today. What must go through a man’s mind knowing his friends and neighbors were just a mile or so away sitting at his funeral? The cost of this plan seemed to rise higher with every passing day, but still no other option presented itself. “I’m hoping he doesn’t have to hole up there long. I’ve a mind to bring the men who tried to kill him to justice as fast as I can.”
“Then I shall pray for just that,” she said, folding her hands in front of her with the serene grace her people always showed. “Your brother tells me God cares about all things—large and small—and this is a very large thing.”
“Whopping huge, Miss Winona.” Big enough to press down on Clint’s chest every waking moment. “I’m glad for your help. Miss Katrine will be, too.”
* * *
Winona Eaglefeather walked up to Katrine an hour after supper, and without a single word Katrine knew Clint had spoken with her. A glow of relief spread through Katrine’s chest that one more soul knew Lars was still among the living. “A hard day.” Winona took Katrine’s hand in both of hers. “But I have spoken with Sheriff Thornton to learn it is not as hard as I once thought.”
“Yes.” The reply was simple, but it held the full weight of the truth they now shared. So much had to be left unsaid, and yet Katrine felt a powerful urge to speak Lars’s name, to talk of him, as if the conversation could keep him tethered to the living.
“Shall we take a walk together and remember our friend?”
“I’d like that very much.” Katrine found her hand straying again to the pocket watch on its somber black ribbon. Grief—even pretended grief—was an exhausting business.
Winona led the way quietly toward the edge of the churchyard, walking toward the setting sun. “It is a good thing to watch the sun go down on a day of sadness.”
Katrine rubbed her sore neck. The sky was splashed with orange and purple tones, the relentless wind settling a bit as it did every dusk. Even before all this strife, dusk had become her favorite time of day. The birds, always so loud and combative during the day, seemed to ease into softer songs. Oklahoma’s continual buzzing torrent of insects died down as the sun set, but the dogs and wolves had not yet started in on their night howls. Sunrise often spoke of possibility, but sunset always spoke of peace. “I am glad to have this day finished.” Katrine sighed, feeling far too little of that peace. “It has felt twenty days long instead of just one.”
“Still, it is good to see such honor paid to your brother, yes?”
“Sheriff Thornton told me to look at it that way as well, but I couldn’t. All those tears. All that sadness. I know it is to keep Lars safe, but it feels so cruel.”
Winona nodded. “My people mourn him, too. He was kind to many of them. I will be glad when I can tell them Gaurang lives.”
“Gaurang?” Lars had never mentioned his Cheyenne name.
Winona offered a bit of a smile. “While we have words that are as long as your name—” here Winona offered a cumbersome pronunciation of Brinkerhoff to prove her point “—it is too hard on the tongue of many of my people. Gaurang is our word for Man of Fair Skin. It is better than the word for Corn Hair, which is what Dakota called Lars at first, don’t you think?”
Katrine welcomed the laugh that sprung up at the thought of Lars answering to that name. Lars had talked of how many of the Cheyenne found his flaxen, straw-straight hair odd, but Corn Hair? “Oh, I shall have to tease him with the name when I see him again.” She couldn’t help but add, “It feels so long until I will see him again.”
“He must miss you. He would know the pain this is causing many, and I am sure it weighs on him.”
Katrine looked at the woman’s dark eyes. She cared for Lars, it was clear. “When you see him, tell him I am going to be fine. We are all going to be fine.” She fingered the watch hanging from her neck. “Tell him we will have a grand party when he comes back from the dead.”
“His own Easter, yes?”
Well, of course it wasn’t quite like that, but Katrine had to smile at Winona’s grasp of the Christian faith. Easter had fallen just the day before the Land Rush, so it had barely received notice this year despite Pastor Thornton’s efforts to keep the holiday. “Lars has told you of Christ’s resurrection from the dead?”
“And Pastor Thornton. He has told me, as well. It is a powerful story.”
“It has all the power in the world to us.”
Winona folded her hands. She was a graceful, peaceful woman. Katrine couldn’t help but think the Cheyenne beauty had handled today with far more calm than she had even before learning the truth. “Your Christ also said ‘blessed are they who mourn,’ did he not?”
“He did.”
“Then many of your people and my people are blessed today.”
Katrine pulled in a deep breath of the cooling air. No matter how hot and dry the day, the evening always brought a welcome breeze. It had taken her a few days to make friends with darkness again—the horrors of that night clung fast to her memory—but she could welcome the end of this day in the peace of knowing the hardest part was behind her. “You are a very wise woman, Winona. Yes, we are very blessed today.” She took Winona’s hand in hers. “Thank you for your friendship. I’m glad you will be keeping Lars company.”
Winona returned her grasp with strong, weathered hands. “I am glad to know the sheriff is watching over you. He is a good man, as well. Strong and full of honor.”
Katrine couldn’t help but ask. “What name do your people give him?” For some reason, Katrine expected Winona to say something dark and serious, something like Face of Stone or Silent Guard. She couldn’t imagine even the Cheyenne children giving the somber sheriff a name as funny as Dakota’s initial choice of Corn Hair.
Winona’s face split into a broad smile. “We only call him the sheriff, the same as you.”
Katrine laughed. “Well, I think Corn Hair might have a thing or two to say about that!”
Winona’s eyes were soft and warm, but they settled down to a more serious gaze. “The sheriff saved your life. My people believe that binds you in many ways. More than just the friendship he shares with your brother.”
Katrine turned her gaze to the river, wrapping her shawl more tightly around her, even though the evening breeze was gentle. “He was doing his job, that’s all.” She almost winced at how false the words sounded.
“Did you feel close to death that night?”
Close to death. The phrase made Katrine shudder. “Far too much. The sound of the room coming down behind me—I do not know if that will ever leave my memory. When I felt the sheriff’s hands pull me, I...” She closed her eyes and clenched her teeth for a moment. “I am grateful to be alive.” She turned to look at Winona. “I want those men brought to justice. Whenever hiding Lars feels too difficult, I remember how much I want them brought to justice.”
“The Cheyenne believe a warrior who has faced death is stronger for it. You are stronger for this, and the sheriff has the strength of facing death many times.” She placed her hand over her chest. “The brave have strong hearts. My father always taught me that one strong heart knows another.” Her face took on a slight glow when she added, “I believe it is true.”
Katrine touched the woman’s shoulder. “You believe my brother’s heart is strong, don’t you?”
Winona nodded, but did not speak. Even without words, her eyes betrayed the affection she had for Lars. Katrine marveled, for a moment, how very different Lars and Winona were. She could not think of a culture further from the Danish world than the Cheyenne, and yet some things were never bound by country or language, were they? “Does he know?”
Winona only blushed and lowered her eyes. “We have not spoken of this.”
Yes, some things were universal across every people. “He speaks of you with warm words, Winona. I know that to be true. When all this is over, I will ask him how...how ‘strong’ his heart is, if you would like me to.”
“No!” Winona’s eyes grew wide and the hand that had been on her heart went up to cover her mouth. Katrine could only smile at her alarm, revealing as it was. “Such things come in their own time, do they not?”
“I couldn’t say,” Katrine offered. “But I will say nothing to Lars unless you ask me to.”
“We must bring him back from the dead first. Then, as my father would say, we will let the river flow where it wishes to go.”
What an astounding place the Oklahoma territories were that a Danish man thought to be dead could grow sweet on a Cheyenne woman who came to church. Some days it was easy to believe anything was possible out here on the frontier.