Two Knives nodded at her and at Dove Sings, and Dove Sings went to Bright Rainbow and draped an arm over the girl’s shoulders to comfort her.
“Fox Tail was a good son, too.”
Bright Rainbow looked up, her face gleaming wet. “Why did he have to die? It is not right.”
“Death comes to all of us, little one,” Dove Sings said. “We never know the day or the manner.”
“But why?”
“You might as well ask why does the sun shine during the day and the moon rise at night. Death just is.”
“I do not understand why it has to be.”
Two Knives said, “There are many things in life that we do not understand. If we dwell on them, we will be sad. The important thing is to live the best we can and be as happy as we can and let the rest take care of itself.”
Elk Running stopped pacing. “Listen!”
From the side of the lodge came a growl. The Devil Cat went on growling as it moved to the rear of the lodge and the growl faded.
“It has gone into the forest,” Elk Running guessed. “We should go after it.”
“You would not say that if you had seen it,” Two Knives told him. “It is not like a normal cat.”
They had enough firewood to last all night. They slept lying close to the flames, Dove Sings in Two Knives’s arms, Bright Rainbow in hers. In the distance wolves wailed and coyotes crooned and once a brown bear roared, but their valley was still.
Two Knives did not sleep well. He would doze and wake with a start and then doze off again. This made two nights he had not gotten much sleep. Toward dawn he sat up, stiff and as tired as when he had lain down, and eased clear of Dove Sings and over to the hide. He took the lance. Quietly, he untied the hide enough to look out. It was too dark yet to see anything. He retied the hide and went back and waited for the others to rouse.
They had not slept well either. Dove Sings had shadows under her eyes. Bright Rainbow’s eyes were red. Elk Running yawned and scratched and scowled at the world.
“I did not hear the cat all night, Father. It must be gone.”
“We will go see,” Two Knives said.
“Now?” Dove Sings said. “Why not wait until the sun is all the way up? That way it cannot take you by surprise.”
“It took Fox Tail by surprise,” Two Knives said, and was sorry he did when she flinched as if she had been struck. He strode to the flap. “I will go first.”
“Be careful,” Dove Sings said.
Chapter Six
In the gray light of predawn, the valley was serene and still save for writhing tendrils of mist.
Two Knives had slung his bow over his shoulder and was holding the lance as he edged around the lodge. Elk Running was behind him. Two Knives was careful to keep his back to the lodge and whispered to his son to do the same.
Two Knives stopped and probed the murky depths of the greenery for their adversary.
“Where is it?” Elk Running whispered.
Two Knives would like to think it was gone for good. But if the Devil Cat was like its tawny cousins, it had a territory it roamed. Which meant it would be back.
“Do you see it anywhere?”
“Not yet.”
“I want to kill it for what it did to Fox Tail. I want to skin it and hang the hide on our wall.”
To the east a golden glow was spreading across the sky. The stars were blinking out and being replaced by light blue.
Elk Running fidgeted. “How long will we stand here?”
“No longer,” Two Knives said. He believed the Devil Cat was gone, if only for a while. Hurrying inside, he imparted the news to his wife and daughter, ending with “We should go while we can.”
“Go where?” Dove Sings asked.
“We must leave the valley.”
All three of them stared at him as if they must have misheard.
“We have lived here since before Fox Tail was born,” Dove Sings said. “It is our home.”
“We must go far enough that the Devil Cat will not find us,” Two Knives said. “We can pack and be gone before the morning is done.” They did not have a lot of possessions.
“We are running away?” Elk Running said.
“We are.”
“It is wrong to run. This is our home, Father. And what of my brother? Did he die for nothing?”
“He died as a warning to us,” Two Knives said. “The Devil Cat is too smart and too strong for us to kill. Our only hope to live is to let it have the valley.”
“I do not like running.”
“You are young yet. When you have grown more you will see that running to live another day is better than dying.”
Dove Sings surprised him by saying, “I do not like running, either, husband. We should fight.”
“For this?” Two Knives said, and stepping to the wall of limbs and brush, he smacked it. “We can build another lodge.”
“I have many happy memories of our valley. We have been in peace here and our life has been good.”
“Until now.”
“I like it here, too,” Bright Rainbow said.
Two Knives was irritated with them. He was the father and husband and they should accede to his wisdom. “The valley is not worth our lives.”
“I think it is,” Elk Running said.
“You have not seen the Devil Cat as I have,” Two Knives told him. “You do now know what we face.”
“It is an animal, and animals can be killed.”
“So can we,” Two Knives argued, but it was apparent he was speaking for nothing. The three were determined to stay. “My heart is sad that you oppose me.”
“We do no such thing,” Dove Sings said. “We only want to fight where you want to run.”
“You think me a coward.”
Dove Sings came over and clasped his hand. “You always put us above all else. I love that about you. But you must not let it make you weak when you must be strong.”
Two Knives was stunned. She had never talked to him like this. “We fight and we might die.”
“I have lived long with you. I would die happy with you at my side.”
His head in a whirl, Two Knives sat by the fire. He needed to think. Every instinct he had warned against this folly. “Killing the Devil Cat will not be easy.”
“We could set a snare,” Elk Running said.
“We would need rope as thick as my arm.”
“A pit, then?” Dove Sings suggested.
“It would take us half a moon to dig one big enough and deep enough,” Two Knives noted.
Dove Sings hunkered beside him. “Here is an idea. We could go to the Shoshones and ask for help. Their leader, Touch the Clouds, has brought us deer meat.”
“Once,” Two Knives said. She made perfect sense, but a part of him balked at going to outsiders.
“What about Wolverine? He was nice. He would help.”
“I would not know where to find him.”
“How about that other white man? The one everyone says is a friend to all Indians. The one who took a Shoshone woman for his wife?”
“They call him Grizzly Killer,” Two Knives said. “We have never met him. What reason would he have to help us?”
“Then it is us alone.”
Elk Running said, “Three against one cat.”
“Four,” Bright Rainbow amended.
That made them smile. Dove Sings held her arms open and Bright Rainbow stepped into them and Dove Sings hugged her.
Elk Running patted his sister on the shoulder and said, “We would not forget you.”
Two Knives racked his mind for a means of slaying a creature nearly impossible to slay. Poison would work if he could get the cat to eat tainted meat. A shallow pit lined with sharp stakes wouldn’t kill it but might severely wound it and make it easy to track and finish off. So there were possibilities. The trick was to choose the best.