“Damn me for a yack,” Fargo said out loud, and jammed his hat back on. He sighed and went to stand. Only then did he notice that the Ovaro was looking at something behind him.
It occurred to Fargo that he had made two blunders, not one. He started to turn but froze when the sharp tip of a knife jabbed him between the shoulder blades.
“Move and I kill you.”
8
Fargo moved anyway; he turned his head in surprise. First, that someone had snuck up on him without him hearing. Second, that the “someone” holding a knife to his back was female.
She had raven hair and ink for eyes, fine full lips, and a bosom that strained against a doeskin dress. Her hourglass figure would be the envy of any woman, white or red. She was as gorgeous a female as Fargo ever set eyes on, and that was saying a lot. She was also Sioux.
There was nothing gorgeous about the steel blade she had gouged against Fargo’s back. Just as there was nothing friendly about the hard glint in her dark eyes.
“Your name must be Sweet Flower.”
The woman jerked back as if he had slapped her. She saw his smile and those full lips started to curl but she caught herself and jabbed him with the knife, harder than before.
“You speak the Lakota tongue.”
“I am a friend to your people. My heart is one with Four Horns. He sits high in the councils of the Miniconjou.”
“I am an Oglala,” the young woman said, and frowned. “I do not want you to talk. I must decide what to do with you.”
Fargo kept on smiling. “I know what I would like to do.” To make sure she got the point, he roved his gaze from the crown of her lustrous hair to the tips of her moccasin-clad feet, with pauses where needed.
“You are too bold.”
“How should I call you?” Fargo asked.
“Sweet Flower will do.”
Fargo chuckled and started to turn but the knife convinced him not to. “You can take that away. I would never hurt anyone so lovely.”
“You are much too bold. I should call for help. Warriors would come and then we would see how bold you are.”
Fargo noticed that she didn’t holler. “Your village is near?”
“Yes.”
Something told Fargo she was lying. “I will let you go back, pretty Sweet Flower, and I will be on my way.”
“You will let me?” she said, and raised the knife a few inches. “You are my captive. I am not yours.”
“You are a beautiful dove and a dove should never be in a cage.” Fargo winked, and moved. A twist of his body, a flick of his hand, and the deed was done; he held the knife and her hand was empty.
Sweet Flower gasped and poised for flight.
“Here.” Fargo reversed his grip and placed the hilt in her palm. “I told you I would never harm you.”
Her confusion was obvious. She looked at the knife and she looked at him and then she moved a few yards away and squatted. “I do not know what to think about you.”
“I am your friend if you want me to be.” Fargo knelt, cupped water, and sipped. He deliberately ignored her. When he was done drinking he took off his hat and splashed water on his neck and face.
“Does your hair itch?”
Fargo reached up and scratched his head. “No. Does yours?”
Lilting laughter rippled from her silken throat. “Not there,” Sweet Flower said, and rubbed her chin. “The hair on your face. My people do not have hair there. Our warriors are not as hairy as you whites.”
“Not all white men have a lot of hair,” Fargo enlightened her.
“Do white women like those who do? I do not know if I would like it.”
“For some white women, hair is all they think about,” Fargo said with a straight face. “Others like their men as smooth as a baby’s bottom.”
Sweet Flower laughed again. “Why do you keep doing that?”
“What? Growing hair?”
“You should be a Heyoka. You are funny.”
Fargo was familiar with the contraries, who did everything backward. To whites it seemed silly if not downright stupid. But to the Lakotas, the Heyokas were their clowns, men and women who brought laughter and delight into their lives. “I thank you for the compliment.”
“Tell me about yourself.” Fargo kept it short. His Indian name, some of the places he had been, some of the tribes he had lived with or fought against.
“You have been to the land of the Comanches? I have heard of them from my grandfather. He says that when they ride a horse, the horse and the Comanche are one.”
“He speaks with a straight tongue.”
“Tell me. Of all the tribes you have known, who are the best fighters?”
Fargo didn’t hesitate. Nearly every tribe took pride in the fighting prowess of its warriors. But there was one that, in his estimation, was head and shoulders above the rest when it came to killing their enemies. “The Apaches.”
“I have heard of them too. The People of the Woods, they call themselves. Are they truly so fierce?”
“To kill without being killed is the law they live by. Were there ten thousand of them, they would have all the land from the Muddy River to the western sea.”
“Are they handsome?”
“They are short and heavy and as hairy as bears,” Fargo exaggerated. “They itch a lot and are always scratching.” He was rewarded with more merriment.
“You talk with two tongues now. I have been told Apache men are handsome. Not as handsome as Lakota men. But a woman would not complain if she were taken by them.”
“Only a female would say a thing like that.” Fargo leaned back. He should be on his way to warn the senator. But it would help to know exactly how near her people were.
“You are fond of women. I can tell. I see the hunger in your eyes when you look at me.”
“Any man would look at you with hunger,” Fargo piled on the praise. “You must have a husband. Lakota men would not let such beauty be wasted.”
“I lived in the lodge of Left Handed Buffalo for a winter but he was not nice to me. He tried to give me away but I went back to live with my mother and father.” Sweet Flower paused. “Do you have a woman?”
“Not in the past, not now, not ever,” Fargo declared. He caught movement off in the trees and stiffened but it was only her pony, tied to a tree and grazing. “What if your people come along? Will you get in trouble talking to me?”
She answered without thinking. “They do not know where I am. I wanted to go for a ride and my horse brought me here. She must have smelled the water.”
“So it is just the two of us.” Fargo pushed his hat back, and grinned.
“Much, much too bold.” Sweet Flower stood. “I must go. But if you were to be here tomorrow I would come and talk to you again.”
“I will try.” Fargo was half serious. He would very much like the pleasure of her company, but not just to talk. He watched her sway off and reflected that when it came to jiggling deliciously, women everywhere were the same. With a sigh he climbed on the Ovaro.
About two hours of daylight were left. Fargo rode hard but warily. He saw no Sioux, and it was with relief that he came within sight of camp, and a crackling fire.
“Where have you been?” Senator Keever demanded the moment Fargo came to a stop. “Mr. Owen about had me convinced the savages had caught you and scalped you.”
“They almost did,” Fargo acknowledged. Wearily dismounting, he began to strip the Ovaro.
Most of the others gathered around.
“I’m glad you’re back safe,” Rebecca said.
Gerty scrunched up her face. “I’m not. I wanted the Indians to get you and scalp you so you can’t be mean to me anymore.”
“Gertrude! That’s no way to talk.”
“Oh, hush,” Keever snapped at his wife. “She’s only speaking her mind. He’s a grown man. He can take it.”