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Authors: David Thompson

BOOK: Seed of Evil
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Chapter Seventeen

Nate King was adrift in dreamless sleep when the pounding woke him. He sat up with a start. Years ago hostiles had attacked his uncle’s cabin and slain his uncle, and it was a secret fear of his that one day hostiles might try to do the same to him and his loved ones. His hand went to the small table beside the bed, groping for his pistols.

The pounding continued.

“Go see who is at our door, husband,” Winona said sleepily, her body a vague outline in the dark of their bedroom.

“Better not be hostiles,” Nate muttered.

“I doubt they would knock.”

Nate got up and tugged on his buckskin britches. In his bare feet he padded out into the front room and over to the door.

“Who’s out there?”

“It’s me.”

“Louisa?” Nate quickly threw the bolt and opened the door. She was in a dress and shawl. “What are you doing here at this time of night?”

“May I come in?”

“Of course.” Nate sheepishly moved aside, then peered out. There was just her horse, a few yards away. He thought maybe his son’s cabin had been attacked. “Where’s Zach?”

“That’s what I came to talk to you about.” Louisa bit her lower lip. “I’m a little worried.”

Light flared. Winona, in the blue cotton robe Nate had ordered for her at Bent’s Fort, was lighting a lamp. “Have a seat,” she said in her calm manner, “and tell us what is the matter.”

Nate never ceased to marvel at how well she spoke English. Far better than he spoke Shoshone. She had a knack for languages. He had to struggle.

Louisa lowered the shawl from her head and wearily sank into a chair. “Thank you. I’m sorry to bother you so late.”

“Nonsense,” Winona said. “You’re family. Come to us any time you feel the need.”

“What she said,” Nate said.

“Would you like tea or coffee?” Winona asked.

“Tea would be nice.”

Winona turned toward the counter and glanced at Nate. “You can close the door now, husband, unless you would like the coyotes to join us.”

Nate shut it and threw the bolt. He tucked the pistol into his pants and moved to a chair. Since Lou wasn’t crying or acting upset, he figured the emergency wasn’t life-threatening, which was a relief. “What’s wrong?”

“Zach didn’t come home tonight.”

“Did he go off hunting?” Nate would go on overnight hunts sometimes, but he hated to be away from Winona. He hadn’t liked it any better when he was younger and gone for days at a time working his trap line. Shakespeare McNair always teased him about it, saying he was too sentimental.

“No,” Lou was saying. “He just went for a ride. I took it for granted that he’d be home for supper since he didn’t say he wouldn’t. He’s usually so considerate.”

“He gets that from his father,” Winona said.

Nate was flattered. “I didn’t think you noticed all the nice things I do.”

“How could I not when you always remind me?”

“I guess it’s silly of me to worry,” Louisa said. “But with the baby on the way, and all…”

“It’s perfectly understandable,” Winona said.

“And then there’s that stupid wolf.”

Both Nate and Winona said at the same time, “What?”

“He hasn’t brought the wolf over to show you? He thinks it’s the one he had as a pet years ago, Blaze.”

“I’ll be darned,” Nate said.

“Everywhere he goes, everything he does, that wolf is at his side. He’d even bring it into the bedroom at night, but I put my foot down.”

“Good for you,” Winona said. “Men must be reminded how to behave.”

“Hmmmmph,” Nate said.

“What does that mean?” Winona said.

“Just hmmmmph.”

Lou went on. “The wolf was with him when he rode off, and they never returned.”

“You don’t think this wolf would harm him?” Winona asked.

“It’s a wolf.”

“Wolves don’t attack people that often,” Nate said. He could recall only a few instances. In one, it had been the icy dead of winter and the wolves were starving. In another, a trapper had tried to catch a pair of wolf cubs and the mother had defended her young.

“All it would take is a bite to the neck,” Lou said. “And Zach is always hugging the thing and treating it like a lost friend.”

“If it’s Blaze, it is,” Nate said.

Winona finished filling the teapot with water from a bucket and moved to the stone fireplace. “Blaze and Stalking Coyote were fond of one another.” She often used Zach’s Shoshone name. “I doubt Blaze would harm him.”

“Even so,” Lou said, “I can’t help but worry. Zach would have told me if he aimed to stay out the whole night.”

Nate shrugged. “Maybe his horse went lame. Maybe he shot a big buck and couldn’t finish butchering it before dark. Maybe the wolf ran off and he’s looking for it.”

“I suppose it could be any of those things,” Lou said. “And if the wolf did run off, I hope he doesn’t find it. I don’t want a wolf in our cabin after the baby is born.”

“I never heard of a wolf eating a baby.”

Lou stared at him.

“Well, I haven’t.”

Winona was rekindling the fire. “If Stalking Coyote isn’t back by an hour after sunrise, we’ll go search for him.”


I
will search for him,” Nate said.

“Why just you?”

Louisa said, “I want to go, too.”

“That’s why,” Nate addressed his wife. “In her condition she shouldn’t do a lot of riding.”

“I am right here,” Lou said. “A few hours in the saddle won’t bother me.”

“No, my husband is right,” Winona said. “Zach might show up while we are gone. You should stay in case he does and I should stay in case you need me.”

“I’m perfectly fine, I tell you.”

“Zach isn’t the only hardhead,” Nate said.

“I just hope he’s all right,” Lou said. “There are so
many things that can happen to a person in the wilderness.”

“Yes,” Nate had to admit. “There are.”

The women thought they would be pursued, so they kept running, even when they were well out of sight of the trading post. Raven On The Ground in the lead, they went up the first hill and down the other side. They paused to look back and listen, each of them a shadowy shape in the darkness.

“Are they after us?” Lavender asked.

“Not yet,” Flute Girl said.

“But they will be,” Raven On The Ground declared, and ran on, her dress swishing against her legs.

“I wish we had our horses,” Lavender puffed.

So did Raven On The Ground. On horses they were safer from the beasts that prowled at night, the bears and mountain lions and others. The shriek of a big cat lent substance to her fear. Still, she ran.

When Raven On The Ground finally stopped, she had an ache in her side. Bending over, she gulped for breath. They had put three hills between them and the trading post, but it was nowhere near enough.

Lavender dropped to her knees. “I can’t run another step. I’m sorry.”

“We must,” Flute Girl said. She was breathing hard, her body stooped over. “I think the whites are waiting for daylight, and then they will give chase.” Looking around, she asked, “Where is Spotted Fawn?”

Only then did Raven On The Ground realize that she had not seen the youngest of them since they left the burning lodge. “She has to be here,” she said, and called Spotted Fawn’s name.

There was no answer.

“We left her?” Lavender said in shock.

“Everything was happening so fast,” Flute Girl said.

“That is no excuse.”

Raven On The Ground blamed herself for not noticing when Spotted Fawn let go of her. “The two of you keep going. I will find her.”

“Be sensible,” Flute Girl said. “If you go back, they will catch you.”

“I’ll be careful.”

“It will be better if we get away and get word to Long Hair,” Flute Girl said. “Let our warriors deal with the whites and bring Spotted Fawn back.”

Raven On The Ground started back, but Lavender grabbed her wrist.

“Please don’t.”

“She is my friend.”

“She is a friend to all of us,” Flute Girl said.

“Please,” Lavender pleaded.

With great reluctance, Raven On The Ground gave in. To keep from thinking about Spotted Fawn, she said, “We have rested long enough.”

On through the night they jogged while around them the wilds were alive with the roars and snarls of predators and the bleats and cries of prey.

Gnawing apprehension ate at Raven On The Ground. Not for herself, but for Spotted Fawn. There was no predicting what the whites would do to her in their anger. They had to know that if they harmed her, Crow warriors would swoop down on the trading post in overwhelming force. That would be the end of the whites. They would get what they deserved.

Geist and his bunch were not like Grizzly Killer,
Raven On the Ground reflected. They were vile men with no regard for anyone else. They were worse than the beasts that filled the night around her with so much noise. The beasts were only being true to their natures.

It occurred to Raven On The Ground that Geist and those with him were being true to theirs—and she was more worried than ever.

Chapter Eighteen

Toad’s father had been a doctor. He personally had never had any great love for the profession, although his father had always hoped that he would follow in his footsteps. Blood made Toad squeamish and he couldn’t stand even to chop the head off a chicken. Forget cutting into a human being. But he’d learned how to stitch people up, and Dryfus needed stitching, so he volunteered.

Berber brought Dryfus in and laid him on his back on the floor.

Toad carefully pulled at Dryfus’s shirt. Soaked with blood, the shirt had started to dry, and it clung to Dryfus like a second skin. Toad had Berber fetch hot water while he chose a small knife from the collection in a glass case and tested it by running the edge across his thumb. A thin red line welled. He found thread and a big sewing needle, the kind used to stitch canvas, and proceeded to stick the end of the thread through the eye of the needle and tie it.

Dryfus had his hand over the wound and was grimacing in pain. “The damn bitch!”

“You were lucky,” Toad said. The blade had glanced off a rib, sparing Dryfus from a fatal wound. The cut was deep, but he would live.

“I don’t feel lucky,” Dryfus rasped. “It hurts like hell.”

“You wouldn’t feel anything if you were dead.”

“Quit jabbering and stitch me up.”

The front door opened, and in strode Geist. Petrie was behind him. Geist went to the counter and pounded the top. “The building is a loss. By morning it will be cinders.”

“That’s too bad,” Toad said, although secretly he was delighted.

“Where is she?” Geist snapped at Berber.

“We put her in the storeroom. Gratt is keeping watch. She won’t get away like the others did.”

“No, she sure as hell won’t,” Geist declared. “Burning our building. Trying to kill Dryfus. Who do they think they are?”

“You were holding them against their will,” Toad said. “It’s stupid to blame them for trying to get away.”

Geist wheeled and came over. His face had an icy cast and his fists were balled. “Stupid, am I?”

“I didn’t mean you personally,” Toad said. “I meant stupid in general.”

Geist turned to Petrie. “Ever notice how their kind twists words to suit them?”

“They do it all the time.”

“My kind?” Toad asked.

“One of us is stupid and it’s not me.” In a blur Geist drew a pistol, gripped it by the barrel, and savagely clubbed Toad. Once, twice, a third time, and Toad buckled and would have fallen, except that he thrust an arm against a shelf for support.

“No more,” Toad said.

Geist raised the pistol to hit him again. “I’ve had my fill of you.”

Succor came from an unexpected source—Dryfus. “Kill him if you have to, but he was fixing to stitch me up and I sorely need to be stitched.”

Geist glanced down and then slowly let his arm
drop, his whole body shaking from the violence of his rage. “For you I’ll stop. But the next time he insults me we bury him and I run the mercantile myself.”

“Too bad,” Petrie said. “I’d have liked to see you bash his brains out.”

Toad fought off nausea and dizziness. “I rue the day we met,” he said.

Still glaring, Geist shoved the pistol under his belt. “I’d shut my mouth, if I were you. You’re this close to buying the farm.” He held a thumb and a finger a fraction apart. “Now then.” He turned to the others. “We have a bigger problem than Levi. The three who got away will make for their village. We have to stop them. They’re on foot, so they can’t move fast. I figure if we head out at first light, we can have them back here by the end of the day.”

“Are all of us going?” Berber asked.

“Use your damn head. Gratt will stay to make sure Levi behaves himself. In the meantime…” Geist hitched at his belt. “I’ll go have a talk with that little red fluff in the storeroom.”

“You won’t hurt her?” Toad said.

Geist put his hand on his pistol and made as if to jerk it. “Want a second helping?”

Toad shook his head and was racked by another wave of nausea. His stomach flip-flopped and he swallowed bile.

“I didn’t think so. Get to work on Dryfus and do a good job.” Geist turned toward the hall. Grinning, he made a smacking sound with his lips. “You know, boys, all this excitement has made me randy.”

Spotted Fawn had never been so afraid. She stood in a corner of the small room the whites had thrown
her in and fearfully watched the white man by the door. He was leaning back, his arms folded, and didn’t seem the least bit interested in her.

She should have run, Spotted Fawn told herself. When she lost hold of Raven On The Ground, she shouldn’t have stood there in the smoke wondering which way to go. She should have just run.

There was a thump on the door. The man leaning against it straightened and opened the door. Geist stormed in. He said something, and the other white man grinned and went out, closing the door behind him. Smiling, Geist came toward her.

Spotted Fawn backed up as far as she could go. She glanced left and right, but there was nothing but shelves piled with goods.

Geist began talking and gesturing.

It was the chattering of a squirrel to Spotted Fawn; she didn’t understand any of it. “Stay back,” she warned. “I will not let you hurt me.”

Geist’s eyes roved from her hair to her moccasins and back again.

Spotted Fawn’s breath caught in her throat. She had seen that kind of look before. Geist wasn’t there to hurt her. He had something else in mind. “Do not come near me. I do not want you.”

Geist reached out.

“No!” Spotted Fawn smacked his hand away. It seemed to amuse him. He reached out again and she smacked him harder. He was staring at her breasts. “You cannot do this,” she said, knowing full well he was going to, that there was no appeal she could make that would dissuade him.

Suddenly lunging, Geist wrapped his arms around her waist. He laughed and nuzzled her neck and stuck his wet tongue in her ear.

Spotted Fawn kneed him. He grunted and his grip slackened, but he didn’t let go. She kneed him again, but he shifted and caught the blow on his thigh. His eyes acquired a glitter that had nothing to do with his hunger for her. He growled some words and tried to press his mouth to hers.

Spotted Fawn fought. She pushed and kicked and struggled to break free, but he was much too strong. In desperation, she butted his face with her forehead. Wet drops spattered her face, and he stepped back, blood streaming from his nose. He bunched his fists.

Spotted Fawn tried to dart past him to the door. A punch to her belly sent her reeling. She slammed against a shelf but managed to stay on her feet.

Outside, there were yells. The door started to open, but Geist barked and it slammed shut again. He sneered at her, said something, then touched himself and advanced.

Spotted Fawn yearned for a knife. She grabbed a folded blanket and threw it at him, and he laughed. Backpedaling, she picked up a metal tin and threw that at him, too. He easily dodged. She retreated and bumped into more shelves. On one was an object with a wood handle and a head made of metal. She had no idea what it was. Standing so Geist couldn’t see, she grabbed the long handle in both hands.

“Stay away from me.”

Geist sneered and came on, blood on his mouth and chin. He spoke in a harsh tone.

Spotted Fawn pretended to cower, and just as his fingers touched her, she swung with all her might. He tried to duck, but he wasn’t quite quick enough and she clipped him across the top of his head. He
fell at her feet. She raised her weapon to strike him again, but he wasn’t moving.

Dropping to a knee, Spotted Fawn put down the thing with the long handle and helped herself to Geist’s knife. She hefted it, uncertain. It would do her little good against the other whites. There were too many. They would overpower her. She put the knife down and pulled his pistol. It was heavier than she had expected. She had never held one, but she had seen whites use them and knew that one of the secrets to firing it was to pull back the metal spike on top. She applied both her thumbs and the spike clicked.

Swallowing her fear, Spotted Fawn went to the door. She pressed her ear to it, but heard nothing. Cautiously, she worked the latch as she had seen the whites do. There was another click and it opened. She quickly stepped out.

Gratt and Berber were talking. Berber froze in astonishment, but Gratt started to take a step toward her.

Spotted Fawn pointed the pistol at him and he froze, too. “Stay where you are,” she commanded. They might not understand the exact words, but the tone was clear. Keeping her eyes on them, she backed down the hall. When she and her friends were exploring, they had discovered a back door into the trading post. She would use it and flee into the welcome sanctuary of the night.

Gratt yelled.

Probably telling her to stop, Spotted Fawn thought. She continued to retreat until her back bumped the door. Reaching behind her, she fumbled at the latch. Finally it moved and she pushed on the door and was outside.

Flooded with relief, Spotted Fawn whirled around and ran to the west. Although the flames had dwindled some, the other lodge still burned. She raced toward it, eager to reach the dark beyond.

The pounding of running feet behind her filled her ears.

Spotted Fawn glanced behind her. It was Petrie. She sought to raise the pistol, but he was so very, very quick. The stock of his rifle filled her vision and then she was on her back on the ground, in great pain. He raised his rifle to hit her again, but a shout stopped him. Petrie lowered it and stepped back.

Spotted Fawn tried to rise onto her elbows, but a boot caught her. The breath left her lungs, and she was nearly paralyzed by agony. Blinking, she stared up into the fiercely contorted features of the man known as Geist. He was holding his knife.

Geist bent and spit in her face.

Spotted Fawn wanted to defend herself, but her arms wouldn’t move as they should. His did, though. She saw his knife gleam in the light from the fire, gleam in an arc again and again and again, and she felt wet and warmth and an emptiness that knew no end.

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