Tall One crouched in the dusky shadows of the woods and gripped her bow. The distant song of a bird establishing nesting territory lilted pleasantly in some hidden glade.
The girl glanced continually around the half circle of her vision. Soon there would be shadowy figures of the enemy slipping among the trees. She strained to see, and could imagine movement in the thickets. Abruptly, she shook her head and became more alert to the actual situation. The nesting bird still sang undisturbed. There would be time to prepare, because they would be warned of any approach through the woods when the bird stopped his song.
Tall One looked across the intervening bramble of berry bushes at the hiding place of Antelope Woman. Her friend smiled and signed a question.
“Do you hear the bird?”
Tall One nodded. “It will be our scout,” she signed back.
She turned and relayed the information to Big Footed Woman, several paces to her left. The older woman had carefully arranged several heavy throwing sticks on the ground beside her.
Tall One was almost amused. Her mother’s skills with the sticks was well-known. There had been much laughter over the way her throwing stick had knocked a Head Splitter off the top of the barricade during the first attack.
Now, Tall One noticed for the first time, her mother had also laid out a stone war club. When the combat became too close for
throwing, Big Footed Woman would turn to the hand weapon. Tall One had seen her demonstrate skill with that instrument, as well.
She shuddered a little at the implications of this line of thought. The fighting would become close hand-to-hand conflict as their position of defense was overrun. Tall One would much prefer to use her bow and arrows at a distance. She had always been adept with the bow. As youngsters in the Rabbit Society, she and Antelope Woman had been as accomplished as any of the boys. Her friend could swim like a fish. Tall One herself had been proud of her ability to outrun most of the other children.
Strange, she mused, that her thoughts today would turn to her childhood. So much had happened, so many changes. The coming of the hair-faced stranger, feared at first by the People, but now one of them. Their leader and her own husband, in fact. She smiled to herself. It always gave her a warm, good feeling to think of Heads Off. He was a strong, yet gentle and tender man. It had been heartbreaking to see the Elk-dog band of the People weakening and rotting from within under his leadership. Worst of all, it had not been his fault, she loyally told herself. Under most chiefs, they would have been overrun long ago, possibly even at the time of the Great Battle, several seasons back.
Yes, he had given much to the People. The tribe now had had much food and many robes, with the change in hunting methods. They had become a respected force on the prairie since they learned to hunt with the elk-dog. How unfortunate that his own band, the one now called the Elk-dogs because of the great medicine of her husband, was to be the one to be lost. The other bands would continue to benefit for many lifetimes, but their own, the Elk-dogs, would be absent in the circle.
Tall One glanced up at the leafy arch over them. The massive oaks had dropped their brown leaves, and were well-garmented
with new growth. She had always liked the delicate colors of pink and pale green seen in the oaks at this time. In fact, this was one of her favorite moons of the year. She reveled in the warm south breezes, the damp earthy smell of the woods, and above all, the greening of the prairie. It was a good day.
“A good day to die …”—the phrase from the death song thrust itself intrusively at her. Tall One had many regrets at this turn of events. Ordinarily, to die in such a situation would be no disgrace, if it were done proudly and well. But there were so many things to think of.
Her small boys. If they were spared, they would be raised as Head Splitters. Eagle might be old enough to remember his proud heritage as one of the People, but Owl certainly could not.
As for herself, Tall One had decided that she would not be taken alive. It was tempting to imagine that she might, even though captive, be able secretly to teach the children of the People their true heritage. She had rejected this. It would be more fitting for the wife of a great chief to die fighting the enemy. Then the older of the children in captivity could remember and teach the others this proud bit of their history. She must not allow the enemy to boast that they had shamed the great Heads Off by making his woman a slave-wife.
Of course, they would pay dearly for her life, she thought. Both she and Antelope Woman were well supplied with arrows. When the infighting came too close, each had also a short buffalo spear. And even beyond that, the knife at her waist could be used with deadly skill.
If the signs of the medicine man were wrong, and she was to accompany her husband this day to the Land of Shadows, she intended to make it an event to be remembered among the People. She must see how many of the enemy she could start on the journey to their own shadow-land.
At the thought of the medicine man, she began to wonder again at the puzzling verdict he had pronounced. “The signs are good,” she had told her husband in parting. Tall One was not deluded into any false sense of optimism. Her reason told her that the situation was grim. Perhaps White Buffalo’s vision told him only that the signs were good for a day of honor.
Yes, that must be it, she decided. The Elk-dog band would go out in an honorable defeat that would be told and retold for many generations. The council fires of both the People and the enemy Head Splitters would hear the tale of valor countless times.
Satisfied as to the meaning of the medicine man’s prediction, Tall One settled back to wait. She was pleased, somehow. Now that she understood, she hoped that her own part in the honorable defeat would be deserving of a song. She must strike so many of the enemy that her own deeds would become legend. She counted her arrows again. It was her hope that each one would assist a Head Splitter on his shadowy journey.
Behind her in the camp, she dimly heard a drum establish a cadence. White Buffalo would be in his lodge, chanting a song and casting his medicine stones.
An elk-dog whinnied somewhere, and in the camp another answered. Then she began to hear, in the distance of the open prairie, the ragged sound that was designed to strike terror to the hearts of the defenders. At first it was an isolated staccato yip-yip-yip, then joined by others, the sound flowing together and gaining in strength and volume.
She could imagine the attacking warriors swinging to the backs of their elk-dogs. Almost, she could feel the coming tremble of the earth under the hundreds of pounding hooves. Her heart rose in her throat as she thought of her husband and his thin line of Elk-dog warriors bracing to meet the charge. She must be worthy of him.
Tall One gripped her bow tightly and peered expectantly through the shadows. A movement on the right caught her eye, and she turned to look at her friend. Antelope Woman was trying to attract her attention, pointing to the woods ahead.
“The bird has stopped singing,” she signed.