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"This." He gestured to the open medicine bag that lay where he and Eagle Feather had been sitting. "He must have taken some bits of mushroom while we were looking up at the eagles."
Terror cascaded over her. "What will it do to him?"
Owl Carver emptied the gray sc.r.a.ps into his hand and then poured them back into the bag. "What a foolish old man I am, leaving that bag open right next to him."
Eagle Feather had gone on a spirit journey. And her own sensitivity to the other world told her that he was _meant_ to. She felt for him the fear she had felt for White Bear in that long-ago Moon of Ice.
"No," said Redbird sadly. "You were not foolish. It was Earthmaker's way. He sent those eagles to take our eyes away from the medicine bag."
With infinite care, so as not to disturb him, Redbird carried Eagle Feather into the lean-to, resting his head on the blanket roll that held everything she had been able to carry.
"I will stay with you until Eagle Feather comes back," said Owl Carver.
Redbird picked up Floating Lily and held her tightly.
As the sun crossed above the lake, they sat watching the small, still body. Redbird could barely see Eagle Feather's narrow chest rise and fall in the shadowy lean-to. There were moments when she was sure he was dead.
Sunset had turned the small lake to a sheet of beaten gold when Eagle Feather sat up suddenly, his eyes wide.
"The Bad Axe!" he shrieked. It was the voice of a child struggling with a nightmare.
"Eagle Feather!" Redbird cried.
Owl Carver put his hand on her knee. "Be quiet."
"The Bad Axe!" Eagle Feather called out again, staring at something no one else could see. "The Great River runs red!" His eyes closed and he fell back.
Redbird felt as if she were s.h.i.+vering in a blizzard. Eagle Feather's words seemed to open a doorway of second sight in her own mind, disclosing a horrifying vision of bodies drifting in red-tinged water.
She heard a sound behind her. Suddenly terrified, she whirled. In the birch forest she saw a man riding toward them on a gray pony. The beat of hooves sounded hollow among the trees.
Feeling on the edge of madness, she let out a scream. She had wanted so much for White Bear to come to her that way, that she thought for a moment it was he. Like White Bear's, his head was unshaved, his hair long.
But as he came closer through the white tree trunks, a hand raised in greeting, she saw he was not White Bear. His full head of hair had a brave's feathers tied into it. A Winnebago. She saw a second rider behind him. An attack? But they were approaching slowly, their hands empty.
The Winnebago dismounted and led his pony till he was standing over them.
He wore four red and white feathers, one hanging from each silver earring, two tied into his hair. A leader of warriors. Heart pounding, she moved protectively closer to the lean-to where Eagle Feather lay.
Owl Carver slowly got to his feet. She glanced at him, and when she saw how grim his face was, her own terror increased.
Another Winnebago rode out of the woods, dismounted and stood beside his companion.
The first man turned to take something from his saddle.
Scooping Floating Lily up in her arms, Redbird leaped up to give the alarm. The brave held out a restraining hand.
"Wait! We are two only, and we come to talk peace." The man spoke Sauk.
He faced her, smiling tentatively, and held up a beautiful calumet, its red pipestone bowl gleaming in the sunset, its polished hickory stem as long as a man's arm.
Owl Carver drew himself up in all his white-haired shaman's majesty.
"Who are you?"
"I am called Wave," said the man holding the calumet. "This is He Who Lights the Water. He does not speak Sauk."
Redbird glanced down into the lean-to, to make sure Eagle Feather was all right.
"Who is in the lean-to?" Wave asked a little suspiciously as He Who Lights the Water stepped forward to look in.
"My grandson," said Owl Carver. "He is sick."
"Many of you must be sick. And hungry," said Wave. "Time your leaders took pity on the women and children and ended this war."
More Sauk men and women were coming over now to see the newcomers. The two Winnebago were men of courage, Redbird thought, coming alone as they had into a camp of fifty or more desperate people.
Redbird's mother came to stand beside Owl Carver. She asked what was wrong with Eagle Feather, and Owl Carver explained in a whisper.
"Children will eat anything they can get their hands on," Wind Bends Gra.s.s scolded. "Now he will probably grow up to be a madman." Redbird held back a shriek of rage.
Black Hawk and the Winnebago Prophet strode through the gathering crowd to face the newcomers. Black Hawk carried under one arm one of those heavy paper bundles captured at Old Man's Creek. He glanced at Redbird, and she thought she saw reproach in his eyes, even though he had said he forgave her for her part in Yellow Hair's and Woodrow's escape.
Flying Cloud addressed Wave in a strange tongue.
"This Winnebago brave is the son of my sister," said the Prophet pompously in Sauk.
_Does he think that means we are saved?_ Redbird wondered, sick of the Winnebago Prophet forever claiming that victory awaited just a little farther along the trail, when it was so clear that the trail led only to death.
Wave said in Sauk, "My father is a Sauk who married into the Winnebago.
So I come to you as one joined with you by blood. We were sent by the chief of our band, Falcon."
"How did you find us?" Black Hawk asked.
"One of our hunters was pa.s.sing this way and saw your camp. He was afraid to come near you, but he told me. I have been looking for you for many days."
Wolf Paw, his face so deeply lined that he looked as old as his father, came to stand beside Black Hawk. "Do you have news of our people who were trying to cross the Great River?" he asked. He touched the silver coin that hung around his neck, as if for luck.
Dread flowed cold through Redbird's arms and legs.
_Now we will know._
Wave and He Who Lights the Water looked at each other for a long, silent moment.
"What has happened?" Black Hawk pressed them.
"The long knives caught up with them," said Wave. "Most of the people were hiding on an island in the Great River. The long knives had a smoke boat that fired a thunder gun at the island and killed many people. Then the long knives landed on the island and killed nearly all that were left."
Redbird reeled, stunned.
_Sun Woman! My second mother! Iron Knife! Oh, no! O Earthmaker, let it not be so._