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Great G.o.d in Heaven, this man he was sitting with--he'd had this man's daughter in his bed for six years. And now she was murdered. And already he was figuring how to replace her.
_Maybe I am as bad a man as Papa said I was._
_That's what Nicole meant by "All happens as G.o.d ordains." This was to punish me._
He took a drink to wash that thought away.
He winced when he came to the name Marchette Perrault on the list of dead. Maybe she had died trying to help Clarissa. Did Armand know yet?
Eli stood up. "Well, poor Clarissa. Poor little boys. It was a black day in our lives when Clarissa and me met up with you, Raoul de Marion."
The words tore at a wound that was fresh and bleeding.
"Look here, now, Eli. Don't you know that I feel as bad as you do?"
"No, I don't know that. Clarissa was all I had in the world. I kept hoping you'd find it in your heart to marry her, but you never treated her decent. Never cared enough for them kids to give them your name.
Your brother, he did more for that half-Injun son of his than you did for your two that was all white."
_All white they were, but half Puke_, Raoul thought, feeling his disdain for the man who stood slumped before him.
Puke, a good nickname for Greenglove's breed. Missouri puked up the worst of its people, and they landed in Illinois. Clarissa's b.r.e.a.s.t.s flattening and sagging, her shoulders round, her teeth stained by pipe smoke. So slatternly she'd gotten to be, he hardly cared to take her to bed. And Phil and Andy growing up with that same washed-out, weak-boned Greenglove look.
_How could I think that way about my own kids? What kind of a man am I?
And now they've been murdered, and I'm still despising them._
He had to quit this. He was torturing himself. Wasn't it bad enough? It was the G.o.dd.a.m.ned Indians he should be hating.
"We'll have our revenge, Eli. We'll kill a hundred Indians for each of ours who died."
"Like you murdered them three at Old Man's Creek. I warned you not to do that. That was what got Clarissa and her kids killed. I won't be helping you get your vengeance, Colonel Raoul de Marion. Because if I did stay around you, sooner or later I'd want blood for blood of mine that's been spilled."
Raoul felt a chill, facing Greenglove's implacable, dull-eyed hatred.
But he was d.a.m.ned if he'd back down before this human weed.
"You'll leave this company when your term of enlistment is up and not one d.a.m.ned day sooner. You're captain of the Smith County company."
Greenglove's mouth curled in a cold smile.
"By tomorrow there won't be any company. The Smith County boys heard about what happened at Victor. Most of them'll be quitting."
Raoul felt the heat rising in his neck and head.
"The h.e.l.l they will! My Smith County boys will want Indian blood just like I do. And just like you would if you hadn't taken a notion to blame Clarissa's death on me."
Auguste. The half-breed. Raoul felt his blood boiling as he saw the olive-skinned face mingling Pierre's features with Indian looks. The face he'd never stopped hating from the moment he first saw it. Auguste was dead. Eli, here, had shot him. His body was rotting away somewhere on the prairie behind them.
But the Indians of the British Band were alive--Auguste's people. They snuck up on Victoire, Raoul's home. Burned it to the ground. Tomahawked his woman. Chopped his children, his two boys, Andy and Phil, to pieces.
To pieces.
He saw that, for a moment, too vividly, and almost screamed. He grabbed the jug and burned the b.l.o.o.d.y picture out of his mind with a swallow.
Auguste's band, skulking around up the river somewhere.
Why, Auguste might have given them the idea. Told them all about Victoire and Victor. Lots of helpless women and children there. A rich trading post. A big white man's house to burn down.
_My uncle kicked me off the land_, Auguste might have said. _Avenge me.
Go kill his woman and his children and burn his house down. And while you're at it, kill every one of those white dogs in Smith County._
Sure, he probably put the idea in those devils' heads before he got shot.
It hadn't been enough to kill Auguste. Wasn't enough.
He had to kill off every last one of Black Hawk's Indians. Exterminate the whole band--bucks, squaws and papooses.
And he would shoot any s.h.i.+rker who refused to go with him.
Greenglove shrugged. "Go chase Injuns, then, if that's your heart's desire." Then he smiled in a knowing way Raoul found strangely disturbing. "But you'll maybe find a surprise waiting for you up there in Michigan Territory. Almost makes me want to stay with you, just so's I could see the look on your face."
Raoul felt a chill. Why the h.e.l.l was Greenglove grinning like that?
"d.a.m.n you, you can't just walk off, Eli! You took an oath. You signed up for another thirty days when your enlistment was up in May. I can have you shot for desertion."
"Go ahead. Shoot me yourself."
Eli slowly raised the tent flap and stood there a moment, turning to give Raoul one last, strange, unmirthful smile. Raoul eyed the pistol at Eli's belt. Most likely all primed and loaded. His own pistol, unloaded, was hanging from a tent pole behind him.
_If I went for my pistol, that'd give him an excuse to put a ball in me.
And he'd do it before I could even get a d.a.m.ned cap in place._
Eli gave Raoul one final nod, as if he knew what Raoul had been thinking, and let the tent flap fall behind him.
Raoul reached for the jug. It felt light in his hand, and he shook it.
Empty.
Everything. Empty, empty, empty!
He got up, weaving slightly, and walked to the opening of the tent.
"Armand!" he shouted.
_Oh my G.o.d, now I'll have to give Armand the news about Marchette._
Raoul awakened, sweating. One side of his tent was glowing white, the sun beating down on it; he had been sleeping in an oven. He sat up, and his vision went black and his head spun. He swung his feet, still in dirty gray stockings, over the side of his cot. He nearly stepped on Armand, who was lying flat on his back on the straw-covered floor, his beard fluttering as he snored through his open mouth.
Standing, Raoul saw Nicole's letter and the _Victor Visitor_ lying on his camp table beside a burned-down candle and four empty jugs. He remembered what had happened at Victor. He fell back onto his cot and pounded his fist on his chest, trying to numb the pain in his heart.