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At first she felt no answering movement. He seemed only half alive. She wondered if he knew she was here. Then his head dropped to her shoulder.
She felt the weight of his body yielding to her.
She put her other arm around him. She held him as if he were her child.
In spite of his sorrow and her own, it was a great happiness to hold him like this.
He sighed and wiped his face with his hand. She stroked his cheek, brus.h.i.+ng away the tears.
She wanted to talk to him, but waited for him to speak first.
"There is nothing I can do," he said. "I must go with Star Arrow, my father."
She studied his face as he stared off into the forest. She could see now the features of his father in him. There had always been something odd about his eyes, but she had never been quite able to decide what it was.
Now she saw that they were rounder than most people's. They were shaped like his father's. His nose was thin and bony, with a high arch, and sharp at the end, like the beak of a bird. His eyebrows were thick, black and straight across. His chin was pointed. She loved the strangeness of his face.
She said, "When it gets dark we could go back to the village and fill our canoes with food and blankets and tools and weapons. There will be feasting tonight for Star Arrow. Everyone will sleep soundly after that.
We could cross the Great River tonight, and tomorrow we could be far away."
He stared at her. "But I do not _want_ to leave my people."
She had not thought that far ahead, about what it would be like to be away from Owl Carver, Iron Knife, Sun Woman, her sisters, her mother, all the others. Yes, it would be a great loss. But she could stand the pain, she thought, if she were beside White Bear.
"But we would have each other. Would it not hurt you less if you had me with you?"
He did not answer at once, and that made her feel as if a rough hand had squeezed her heart. But then he smiled at her, and she felt better.
"Yes, if I could share my life with you, the pain of leaving Saukenuk would be less." Then his face darkened. "But we could not live on our own. A man or a woman cut off from their tribe can no more be happy than a flower after it is picked can continue to grow. And I would have dishonored the promise I made with the sacred tobacco. The spirits would turn their backs on me. My mother and Owl Carver say that if I go with Star Arrow, I may learn things that would help our people."
She was thunderstruck to realize that he actually wanted to go with Star Arrow. Then what was all this weeping for?
He did not care for her as much as she did for him. That made her angry.
She pushed herself a little apart from him.
"I see that I have been a fool to chase after you, just as my mother said. It means more to you to go and live with the pale eyes than it does to have Redbird as your woman."
His eyes widened. "We have never before today spoken of this, you and I."
"Did we have to speak?" She felt herself getting angrier and angrier.
"Why do you think I went looking for you when you went on your vision quest? Why do you think I followed you from the village today? And why did I say I would go with you across the Great River? Yes, I did want to be your woman. But you do not want me. You want to go away with this pale eyes father of yours, and maybe you want to take a pale eyes woman for yourself."
His mouth as well as his eyes opened up in amazement. "I have never even seen a pale eyes woman. How could I want one? I do want Redbird to be my woman. And I weep at leaving Saukenuk because I must leave you."
Again she reached out to him, putting her hands on his arms. "I would rather be cast out of our tribe than lose you."
He shook his head. "We do not have to lose our people or each other. It was part of the promise sealed with sacred tobacco that I am to come back. If we ran away now, Earthmaker would be angry with us."
She moved closer to him. She had seen Earthmaker in dreams. He was taller than the tallest tree, and he carried a great war club with a ball-shaped rock at the end of it and looked much like Black Hawk, with a long black lock of hair coiling down from the top of a shaved head.
"I wish I could meet and talk with the spirits, as you have," she said.
"Sometimes I think I do meet them, in dreams."
"It can be dangerous to meet with the spirits," he said. His eyes seemed to be looking into the distance. He had seen so many things she had not.
It was unfair, she thought sadly.
She had gone out to him in the bitter cold when the world was an endless white waste. She might have frozen to death. She might have been punished by drowning in the icy river. She had risked almost as much as he had.
"I do not say that I am as strong as White Bear, or as worthy to speak with the spirits," she said. "I only wish I had a chance to."
He took her hands in his and looked deep into her eyes.
"The real danger of a shaman's vision is not to the body."
"What is the real danger?"
"I did not want to come back."
She felt a cold wind blowing across her neck, as if spirits had quietly entered this grove with them and were standing about them, listening to them, judging them.
"It is so wondrous," he said in a voice so low she had to strain to hear it over the wind whispering in the tree branches. "You are there with them. The White Bear, the Turtle. You see them, talk to them. You see the Tree of Life, the crystal lodge of the Turtle and the spirits of all living things. Why would anyone want to return?"
Redbird s.h.i.+vered. But she still envied him.
"Your hands are cold," White Bear said, and he put his arm around her and drew her close to nestle on his chest. She slid her hands under the leather vest he wore and felt the smooth warmth of his skin and the firmness of his muscles. How powerful his arms were around her. She thanked Earthmaker that White Bear had found the inner strength to return from that other land.
A new thought occurred to her. "What if you find that the land of the pale eyes holds you fast? Then you will never come back to me, and to the Sauk you will be dead."
He smiled gently and patted her shoulder. She pulled herself closer to him.
"Can the land of the pale eyes, altogether without spirits, hold me, when the spirits themselves could not?"
"I do not think so."
"Can the land of the pale eyes hold me, when Redbird is not in it? _I_ do not think so."
Her body seemed to be melting. She wanted to flow together with White Bear as the Rock River flowed into the Great River.
His arms tightened around her. Then he raised his hand to brush the fringe of hair that fell over her forehead.
She moved against him until her cheek touched his. Slowly she slid one side of her face against his, then the other side. A hunger filled her.
It was almost as if she wanted to devour White Bear, but all she could do was touch his smooth cheek with her fingertips.
His nostrils flared and his lips parted and she could hear his breathing. His hands were roaming over her body, awakening powerful feelings wherever he touched her, making her want more.
How did they come to be lying down? They must have moved without realizing it. She could see, feel and think only of White Bear. Her head was pillowed on his arm and her face was pressed against his. With his free hand he caressed her, seeking her flesh under her jacket and skirt.
His hand became bolder, plucking at the laces that held her clothing together, baring places that only a husband should look at as he was looking now. And touching those places, sending ripples of delight all through her.
And she wanted him to do that. She felt no shame or fear, only happiness. She let him do whatever he wanted. She helped him. She moved her hands also, to touch more of him. Her hand found the oak branch that he had been holding just before she sat down with him. She put the branch aside and let her fingers feel the hardness pus.h.i.+ng against his loincloth; he was ready to come into her in the way that Sun Woman had explained.
She could still stop him if she wanted to. She knew him and trusted that he would not do anything she did not want.