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Mountain Majesty 8
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Among the mighty mountain peaks of the great untamed Pacific Northwest, a man and a woman could dare to dream big dreams. Such a pair were frontiersman Cleve Bennett and his Cheyenne warrior wife, Second Son. Together they saw nature’s majesty as few have ever seen it before or since. And; together they also saw – and were victims of – the savage brutality of man. Now a renegade band of fierce Chipewyans are looking for a new region to settle—and for potential slaves. Suddenly Second Son and her child Billy-Wolf must wage a desperate struggle for freedom and survival in the densely forested northland, where even Cleve may not be able to find them. But in their devotion to each other this frontier family will battle the worst of the forbidding wilds, and any tribe that threatens them in …
THE SAVAGE LAND
“Killdeer is a major talent who has turned his attention to this oft-ignored but glorious era in the early Far West.”
Terry C. Johnston, author of Dance on the Wind
Mountain Majesty 8
THE SAVAGE LAND
By David L. Robbins writing as John Killdeer
First published by Bantam Books in 1995
Copyright 1995 by Siegel and Siegel Ltd
This electronic edition published March 2022
Names, characters and incidents in this book are fictional, and any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons living or dead is purely coincidental.
You may not copy, store, distribute, transmit, reproduce or otherwise make available this publication (or any part of it) in any form, or by means (electronic, digital, optical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorized act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.
This is a Piccadilly Publishing Book / Text © Piccadilly Publishing
Published by Arrangement with the Author’s Agent.
Series editor: Mike Stotter
Visit www.piccadillypublishing.org to read more about our books
Chapter One
THE FOREST LAY dark and dank under the mantle of spreading twilight. Shadows lengthened rapidly as a pair of warriors wound down from the high country toward a verdant valley, their heavy burden slung between them on a long pole.
The pair were Chipewyans. Both were dressed in finely crafted shirts, pants, and moccasins made from the tanned hides of caribou. Both were armed with knives and bows. Since they needed their hands free to carry the big black-tailed buck they had slain less than an hour ago, their bows had been unslung and slipped into their quivers.
In the lead tramped the older of the pair. Streaks of gray flecked his otherwise raven hair. His back was to his companion, or the younger warrior would have noticed the darting glances he gave the surrounding forest from time to time.
It was deathly still on that mountain slope. No breeze blew. No animals cried out. Silent ranks of spruce trees and pines hemmed them in on both sides.
Neither of them had spoken for some time when the younger warrior commented, “Mattonabee will be pleased. He was not very happy yesterday when we came back empty-handed.”
“It is not easy finding game in a new land. A hunter must learn where the animals like to drink, where they lay up during the day.” The gray-haired warrior sighed. “I would take Mattonabee more seriously if he were to do more hunting himself. He spends too much time warming his backside by the fire to suit me.”
The younger warrior regarded the other’s broad back. “You must be careful not to repeat those thoughts in the hearing of others, Father. If word should get back to him, he would be very angry.”
“I am not afraid of Mattonabee, son.”
“You should be. His medicine is very powerful.”
The father glanced over a shoulder. “If he is as mighty as you claim, why was he not able to stop the Cree from driving us from our land?”
The son had no answer. He shifted the pole to relieve a cramp and thought of the delicious meal he would savor that night. Since his arrow had finished off the buck, it was his right to pick the part of the animal he wanted when it was butchered, and he would pick the stomach. His wife would cook it, contents and all, adding shredded fat and the heart and lungs chopped into small pieces for flavoring. His mouth watered at the prospect and his stomach rumbled, reminding him of his gnawing hunger. Neither he nor his father had eaten since dawn.
A game trail offered a means of going faster. The father noted the tracks of deer and elk and bear. This country, he reflected, was ripe with wildlife. He did not see why they had to move on soon. In his opinion they had fled far enough.
The sudden squawk of a jay drew the father up short. He stared in the direction the sound had come from, deep into the murky woods, his weathered brow knit.
“What is the matter?” the son asked. “It was just a bird.”
“Something startled it.”
“A lynx or a bobcat, perhaps.”
“Perhaps.”
But the father doubted it very much. He went on, faster than before. The uneasy feeling that had overtaken him some time ago grew stronger with every stride. A less experienced woodsman might have blamed the feeling on raw nerves, or on fatigue or hunger, or any number of things. But the father knew better.
There had been telltale clues, such as the faint snap of a twig heard not once but twice. There had been the soft rustle of a thicket at the limits of his vision. Now there had been the cry of the jay. Taken singly, they meant little. Taken together, they meant trouble.
Of even more importance than all of those signs was the certainty the father had that they were being watched. He could not say how he knew. He could not point to a definite cause, and say this or that was to blame. He just knew.
The son had been paying close attention to his father since they stopped. For the first time he realized that something was amiss. His father’s posture, his father’s gait, they all pointed to it. He surveyed the forest but saw no reason for alarm.
Gradually the sky grew ever darker. The shadows blended into a solid black background broken by vague shapes. Far below, the lush valley beckoned. Near its center flickered pinpoints of light, the campfires of their people.
The father wished they were there already. It was his own fault for having insisted that they push on after the buck when he had known they could not possibly kill it and reach the village before nightfall. At the time, though, it had seemed the right thing to do. The band badly needed food. Too many of them had been going to bed with empty bellies.
Presently the two hunters emerged from the dense trees onto a wide shelf covered with high grass. Halfway across, the father raised a hand to signal a halt. “We will rest,” he announced, grunting as he slowly lowered his end of the buck.
They had not stopped since the sun was straight overhead, so the son did not object. But he did wonder why his father had picked this particular moment to do so if they were in danger.
In fact, the older warrior had a very good reason. No foe, man or beast, could now approach them without being seen. They also had a clear view of the timberline and the forest on the slope below. If anything moved, they would spot it right away.
The father rested his right hand on the antler hilt of his copper knife. He cocked his head and strained his ears but heard nothing out of the ordinary.
The son did the same. He tried not to show his worry, but he had an idea why his father was disturbed. Much earlier that day they had come on fresh grizzly sign, and to his way of thinking that meant they were probably being stalked by one of the massive monsters. Next to polar bears, grizzlies we
re the most formidable creatures alive. He sincerely hoped he was wrong.
As time went by and no menace showed itself, the father began to doubt his instincts. He was human, after all. He could make mistakes. If there were something out there, he mused, it should have given its presence away.
The father was bending to grab the pole when a low, ominous growl rumbled from the brush bordering the shelf. Instantly both warriors pulled their birch bows and strung them with their babiche strings. Each man notched an arrow tipped with a sharp stone point.
“Do you think it is a grizzly?” the son whispered anxiously.
The father had no idea. It might be a bear. It might be a mountain lion. Whichever, they were at a distinct disadvantage. In the dark they could not see as well as it could. They would have to wait until the beast was almost on top of them before they resorted to their bows. So their first arrows must not miss. Should they fail to strike a vital organ, the animal would be on them before they could fire again.
The growl was repeated. This time the father pinpointed the exact spot, about sixty feet away under towering firs. He peered intently into the night without result.
“It must be after the buck,” the son guessed. “The scent of blood drew it to us.”
“True,” the father agreed, “but we will not leave the deer behind if we can help it.” He refused to abandon their kill when so many were depending on that meat to get them through another day.
“What are we to do, then?” asked the son. “We cannot carry the buck and shoot our bows at the same time.”
The father had no ready answer. Fire would scare the beast off, but they dared not lower their guard to gather kindling. Nor would it be wise for them to try to sneak up on the creature. The senses of animals were twice as sharp as any human’s.
The father saw his son lift his bow and start to pull back the string. “What do you think you are doing?”
“It might run off if we fire a few arrows into the brush.”
“And what if one of your shafts should wound it? Do you remember that time your cousin was out hunting caribou and put an arrow into a great brown bear by mistake?”
The son promptly lowered his weapon. Yes, he most certainly did remember. The enraged bear had shot out of a thicket and attacked their hunting party before any of them quite knew what had happened. His cousin had lost an arm, later bleeding to death. Another man had his skull caved in by a single swipe of an immense paw. The son would not like to see that happen again.
“We will wait,” the father proposed. He figured that eventually the creature would tire of lingering and wander elsewhere in search of easier prey, or else its hunger would drive it into the open, where they would have a shot at it.
It was hard, though, to stand there in the open, exposed and vulnerable, while a fierce snarling beast prowled so close at hand. The father could understand why his son kept glancing at the trail that led down into the valley.
There was a loud crack, as of a branch being broken. The animal moved to the south, making no attempt to employ stealth. Brush crackled, grass was trampled underfoot.
The son moved nearer to the father. “What is it doing?” he whispered. “Getting ready to charge?”
“I do not know,” the older warrior confessed. This animal was not acting like any he had ever encountered. Mountain lions were usually much more secretive; a man never knew one was nearby until it pounced. Grizzlies would bluff on occasion to scare humans from their territory, but their bluff consisted of pretending to charge and then turning away at the very last instant. They did not shadow men for half a day. They did not lurk in undergrowth and growl on and on.
Moments later the forest fell silent again. The father held his breath and listened but did not hear so much as a leaf stir. When enough time had gone by, he allowed himself to relax and said, “We will go quickly. Once we reach the open valley, we will be safe.”
They replaced the arrows in their quivers but slung the bows over their shoulders. Each of them hoisted an end of the pole, and without delay they hurried down the game trail.
Towering trees hemmed them in, trees so tall that the stars were blotted out. It was as if they were hastening through a narrow tunnel, their moccasins making little noise on the thick carpet of pine needles underfoot.
The father glanced back often. He would rather bring up the rear since that was where the beast would in all likelihood appear, if it showed itself at all, but he did not ask his son to switch places. It would do no good. His son would refuse. Like him, his son was a proud man who would resent any notion that he could not hold his own.
A sharp bend loomed before them. The father slowed to go around it and nearly clipped a pine with the pole. Firming his grip, he jogged on at a steady pace. The surrounding woods were eerily quiet. No owls or other night birds punctuated the darkness with their cries. No wolves howled. No coyotes yipped. It was as if all the wild creatures had gone elsewhere or were in hiding.
A long, straight stretch opened in front of them. The father went faster, his son’s heavy breathing assuring him that all was well. They traveled hundreds of feet and were almost to another turn when the father glimpsed movement in the vegetation bordering the turn. Immediately he halted.
The son, taken unawares, tripped over his own feet and nearly fell. He had to hold fast to the pole to keep his balance. “Why did you do that?” he demanded.
“Something is up there,” the father said, pointing. He let his end of the pole drop with a thud so he could notch another arrow to his bow. “I will go see what it is. You stay here.”
“No,” the son said, and would have argued the point except at that exact moment a wavering howl erupted from the gloomy pines near the turn.
It was a howl unlike any either man had ever heard. It was a howl unlike any ever uttered by wolf or coyote. It rose as high as the keening wind on a stormy night, then sank as low as the death groan of a dying man. It never held the same note for more than a few seconds, undulating up and down the scale of sound. At times the howl was almost musical, at times it was the raspy growl of an enraged beast. It went on and on, finally ending as abruptly as it had begun.
Father and son faced one another. In unison they blurted the name that terrified every member of their tribe like no other could: “Windigo!”
Stark fear came over both warriors. They moved shoulder to shoulder. The younger man quaked, making no attempt to hide his panic. It took every ounce of his will to keep his teeth from chattering as he asked plaintively, “What do we do?”
“We run,” said the father. “Go around that bend and do not stop for anything. If the creature comes after you, shoot it.” So saying, he gave his son a shove and the startled youth bounded off in great leaps like a frightened deer. The father followed on his son’s heels, his gaze glued to the forest.
A piercing shriek rent the air. It was akin to the caterwauling of a cougar and the feral challenge of a wolverine combined in a single horrifying cry. It made the skin of both men break out in goose bumps.
The son came to within a dozen feet of the bend. He thought that he saw a hint of motion. Without waiting to be sure, he let his shaft fly. Whether he hit the Evil One or not, he could not say. The next moment he was around the turn and fleeing for his life, running as he had never run before. He did not think to look back. He did not think to check on his father. Legs pumping, arms flailing, he raced on and on. His lungs ached terribly. His legs were lanced by pain. Still, he sped into the night, unwilling to stop for fear the devourer of men would get him. Only when at long length the son burst from the forest onto the valley floor did he come to a lurching halt and turn.
His father was nowhere to be seen.
The son gaped. He started back into the woods, then froze as a high-pitched scream wavered down from above, a scream of sheer terror, a scream that he knew issued from his father’s throat and would be the last sound he ever heard his father utter. It tapered to
a gurgling whine, then stopped.
In its place the wind picked up, whispering through the treetops, sighing sadly as if at the loss of a valued life.
Shocked to his core, the son waited in vain for some sign that his father was all right. He knew it was hopeless. He knew what had happened. But he stood and stared dumbly into the darkness until the sliver of moon was high in the sky. At which point he turned and shuffled like one dead toward the village, saying over and over again that one word.
“Windigo. Windigo. Windigo ...”
Chapter Two
SECOND SON CREPT to the top of a rise and flattened. She raised her head slowly so as not to draw attention to herself. Below the ridge on which she lay glistened a winding stream, and beside it in a clearing on the other side grazed her quarry.
For the past two hours the warrior woman of the Burning Heart Band of the Tsistsistas had been doing her utmost to get within arrow range of a small herd of animals unique to her experience.
From the banks of the mighty Mississippi to the limitless expanse of the Great Water her husband called the Pacific Ocean, Second Son had hunted practically every animal alive at one time or another for their supper pot. But never in her wide-flung travels had she tried to bring down the kind she was now after.
Cleve liked to refer to them as “billy goats with jackrabbit legs.” Trappers out of Fort Hall simply called them mountain goats. In the language of the Tsistsistas there was no word for them, so Second Son had taken to thinking of them as Little Horns. Although White Ghosts would fit just as well.
They were incredible animals. Their favorite haunts were the lofty spires and rocky peaks no other creatures visited except for high-soaring eagles and hawks. Shaggy hair as white as driven snow covered their bodies and made them easy to spot from a distance. But spotting them and getting close enough to shoot one were two different things.
Only when mountain goats descended from the airy heights did a hunter have a chance. Second Son had been keeping her eyes on this herd for many weeks. Off and on she had visited the area, noting their habits, memorizing their daily routine. As with any hunter worthy of the name, she knew that she must know her prey as well as she knew herself to have any hope of success.