THE trees had leafed
sixteen times since Tsiltairst opened her eyes in her mother’s tepee. In
her full rounded form was the sprightliness of a young antelope that
dances in the sunshine when the grass is green and tender. In her face
was the freshness of a morning when the prairie flowers bloom and
breathe their sweetest perfume. Her eyes were those of the fawn, her
hair the veil of midnight. When she opened her full red lips and spoke,
there was music of the rill which laughs its way among the flowers on
the hillside.
Red Scar was gaunt and
wrinkled and ugly, and had two wives. He was a warrior unafraid, and in
other days was good to look upon until his face became a target in a
fight with soldiers, when a bullet struck the end of his nose, plowed a
furrow across his cheek, and left a trail easy to read. Under the stress
of excitement the scar would turn a deep crimson colour, hence his name.
Red Scar’s visits to the
lodge of Tsilta’s father were frequent and prolonged and he always lost
in the gambling, for he saw nothing but Tsilta. He made many raids on
the herds of the Cheyennes and therefore was rich.
One day the maiden saw
him of the red scar point her father to a herd of fifty ponies. Her
father wagged his forefingers across each other, and her heart sank. She
knew she was given to ugly Red Scar in exchange for the ponies.
Zepkhoeete was young and
handsome and brave. Tsilta had danced many times with him. The hug of
his arms was strength and his touch made glad her heart. In him was
enough.
When Tsilta passed his
lodge, with hair veiling her face, Zepkhoeete understood she was no
longer his for the winning. But the young warrior told her in strong
words what he would do. That very night there would be two swift horses
under the big tree at the crossing of the river. And then away—and away!
With lightness of step
and brightness of eye, Tsilta returned to her father’s lodge.
When she looked into the
face of Red Scar she shrank back as from an old lean coyote and would
have fled. But he caught her by the wrist and in a voice like a bear’s
growl, said:
“My wife.”
She turned an appealing
face to her father, but he nodded and said simply:
“His wife.”
Obediently she followed
Red Scar to his new tepee, passing his old, weather-stained lodge before
the door of which sat his two hag-like wives. They turned their faces
from the passers..
Inside the new lodge he
had erected for her Tsilta crouched down at the farthest side, like a
wounded deer shrinking from the hateful fanged wolf.
At night Red Scar made a
peyote feast for his friends. He ate so many of the spirit buttons that
he slept a long time, and his lodge was empty for the whole night.
He awoke to find Tsilta
sitting meekly by the fire.
Zepkhoeete had not been
seen in the camp since the going down of the sun.
When Red Scar sat down to
gamble, one of the men looked at him slyly and said,
“Red Scar has a wife.”
The bullet’s trail became
a flame, but the wrinkled lips made no reply.
A company of young
bullies passed by. One of them in a voice filled with ridicule, cried,
“Red Scar has a wife.”
In answer there was a
glittering of the eyes, a flare of the scar, and that was all.
After dark, when all was
still in the camp, there came the call of a whippoorwill in the brush.
Red Scar saw his new wife
raise her head with a quick start
Again and again there was
the call.
The tall, gaunt man rose,
seized a rawhide lariat, clutched her arms and bound them behind her
back.
“Red Scar has a wife,” he
snarled in her ear, his face like the western stormcloud when the sun is
letting.
When he had bound her
feet together, he made the lariat fast to a lodge-pole overhead. Then,
buckling his knife to his side, he lay down to sleep.
The night walked on.
There was silence save for a sound like the breeze in the bushes near
where Tsilta lay against the wall. Outside there came again and again
the call of the whippoorwill, plaintively insistent.
Roused by a slight noise
at the doorway of the lodge, Red Scar crept like a shadow across the
floor. A moment he listened, then hurled back the flap and leaped
outside.
There was the sound of
scuffling feet, a blow, a low gurgling, then quiet.
The jealous husband
returned to the fireside, threw on a handful of bark and sat down.
The wife lay with her
face to the wall. As the light grew stronger she saw a tiny stream of
red creeping under the edge of the lodge, and slowly making its way
toward her face. A foot from her eyes it formed a little pool.
The sun had walked up
above the treetops when the husband and wife stepped outside the tepee,
she following, as do all obedient wives. The blanket about the man’s
tall form hid his marred visage and reached to his moccasined feet. The
face of his wife was veiled by her long black hair.
The whole camp was astir,
for a big thing was to be done that day.
Red Scar strode on up the
rise with long, purposeful steps. Behind, in a straggling procession,
came men, women and children. On the summit of the hill the man halted
and faced the slight girlish figure. About them gathered the expectant
people in a circle.
Red Scar let fall his
blanket. A knife glittered in his hand. He took one step toward the
shrinking girl. The women shot glances of approval at one another, then
drew their blankets more tightly around their faces. The man stood
straight as the arrow in its quiver, his great chest drinking in big
gulps of the morning air, the scar on his face a prairie fire on a
distant slope when the ground is wet with rain. Tsilta stood as does the
bruised flower wilting under the fierce glance of the summer sun.
“Tsilta!"
The voice of Red Scar was
harsh, guttural, vulturelike. It grated upon the perfumed breeze of the
morning.
“Tsilta, is it
forgotten—the law of the Kiowas? The wife whose feet walk in the crooked
trail, what she shall suffer? One of two things shall she suffer. She
shall die by the hand of her husband. He may cut her nose from her face.
Choose!”
The girl stood like an
image of stone. The man seized her dishevelled hair and raised it from
her face. Her soft eyes looked unflinchingly into his own. From the
proud lips there came no sound. The knife glinted close to her face.
“No, not that! Let Tsilta
die!”
The quavering, plaintive
voice had in it the shudder of autumn winds when the leaves are falling.
She could not, she would not live to bear always the badge of
dishonoured wifehood, undeserved as it was. The gibes and sneers of the
women would be worse than death.
Red Scar thrust his knife
into its scabbard and drew his bow from its panther-skin cover. Placing
one end upon the ground, his knee in the middle, by a dexterous movement
he slipped the noose of the string into the notch; then, with
well-accustomed hand, fixed a barbed arrow to the string.
The sun was flooding hill
and valley with rare radiance; but darkness was upon the faces of the
women who looked upon the maiden. A flock of crows wheeled down among
the trees near the river, and their cawing was the funeral chant of
Tsilta. The mockingbird’s song from the thicket was the taunting voice
of dying hopes. A butterfly, like a piece of a rainbow that had slid off
the edge of a cloud, floated gently between the fierce-faced, relentless
man and the defenceless girl
Red Scar thrust his left
foot forward, the muscles of his right arm swelling into ridges as he
drew the arrow to the head.
Came a clatter of hoofs
and the flash of a horseman.
Red Scar was hurled
backward to the earth.
There was a shout of
triumph from the rider as Tsilta was swept from the ground by his
circling arm —and they were gone.
“Zepkhoeete!” shouted a
hundred voices as the daring horseman whirled away. On and on, across
flower-decked prairie and grassgrown rise and through wooded streams
they sped.
On a high hill the young
warrior halted and faced the back trail. In the distance were two
oncoming horsemen. He dropped his precious burden to her feet.
“Tsilta will wait here,”
he said, the battlelight gleaming in his handsome face as he strung up
his bow.
In the lead of the
rapidly approaching horsemen rode a tall gaunt figure with a blood-coloured
scar on his face.
Straight toward him rode
Zepkhoeete.
As they met the young
warrior's horse swerved to the right. As they passed there was the twang
of a bowstring.
Red Scar’s horse reared
and plunged headlong to the trail-edge where he lay with an arrow
sticking in his side.
Zepkhoeete rode back to
the waiting one. Placing one foot upon his she sprang lightly up behind
him, and again they sped onward, the remaining pursuer nearer than
before.
In a brushlined ravine
Zepkhoeete whirled out of the trail and waited.
Through the bushes the
fast-riding warrior came. As he drew abreast, there was the well-timed
music of a bowstring. From the horse’s side came a spurt of blood and he
floundered among the bushes.
With a merry whoop that
echoed among the canyons, the young warrior with the maiden at his back
rushed on.
Night came, and they were
alone in a wooded dell where a bubbling spring refreshed them. The tired
horse cropped the tender grass. The stars kept watch.
“One sleep, and then
Zepkhoeete will go back and fight,” he whispered, as they sat with his
one robe around both their bodies.
“But Red Scar is
strong—cunning- He has had much fighting- If—if—he should kill
Zepkhoeete-”
The young brave laughed
scornfully at her fears.
“Zepkhoeete is a man. How
won he his name! What did he when the scarfaced one would have driven
his arrow through the body of Tsilta? Back must Zepkhoeete go. To all
the men must he prove his right to call Tsilta wife.”
The day was yet young
when a man and woman on a single horse halted before the lodge of
Setayte, chief of the Kiowas.
“By the law of the Kiowas,
Zepkhoeete asks fairness in fight with Red Scar,” said the man.
“It shall not be
broken—the law of the Kiowas,” answered the great chief.
There was the beating of
the council drum. The warriors quickly assembled. The aged Medicine Man
rose and made known the law of the Kiowas touching the case of Red Scar
and Zepkhoeete:
Should a warrior steal
another’s wife and remain away one sleep—a White Night sleep—and then
return, he would not have lost his warrior’s place nor right—the right
of a fight to the death with the offended husband. But—should he not
return, or should he kill one who pursued him, or should he be caught,
he should be looked upon as an outlaw and therefore worthy of death,
which he must suffer as a criminal.
“Zepkhoeete stands ready
to meet in mortal combat Him, the aggrieved Red Scar,” the speaker went
on. “Red Scar must fight if he would stay a member of the tribe. To stay
without a fight Red Scar must cease to be a warrior. He must fight to
the death!.
“Now,” commanded Setayte,
when the Medicine Man had finished, “let the warriors meet in fight.
A prolonged “ho-oo-o-oo-oh!”
from every throat announced the universal approval.
It was Red Scar’s right
to choose the weapons. He well knew the skill that had given the younger
man the name Big Bow, so he chose the knife.
That fight lingers yet in
the memory of the Kiowas, and the prowess of one of the combatants is
still sung by the campfires and at the feasts.
The men faced each other,
stripped to the skin save for a bit of buckskin about their loins.
Red Scar seemed to have
the advantage in brawn and weight. His muscles gathered in hard bunches
and stood out in ridges with every movement of his seasoned body.
Zepkhoeete was the
superior in strength and agility. He stood still as a sapling.
The people gathered in a
big circle about them.
Tsilta was seated upon a
robe beside the aged Medicine Man. Her alert eyes, quick-heaving bosom
and expectant attitude told the tale of her deep concern.
The scar flamed out the
deadly hatred in his heart as its owner fastened his piercing eyes upon
the face of his youthful antagonist, who stood in easy attitude waiting
for the word.
A knife was handed to
each one.
Red Scar took his with a
savage grab, and the fight was on.
Zepkhoeete went with a
rush, but halted just out of reach of the other’s knife, as it swept in
a circle towards him.
Again the young warrior
approached, this time carefully, inch by inch, body crouching, every
nerve and sense alert. Almost within reach of his tall foe he halted and
gave a backward spring—none too soon. The other stood in his tracks.
Zepkhoeete must go to
him. He did go, this time erect, feinting, sidestepping and dancing
away, elusive as a shadow. The gleaming knife of Red Scar played in
circles and thrusts above and around face and body but it never touched
the agile youth, who twisted, ducked and glided in and out, now leaping
high into the air, now backward and again forward, almost within the
embrace of his enemy, always his taunting face not far from the
glistening weapon.
Red Scar, with great
self-restraint, waited for the favourable opportunity for one good
thrust. Not for a moment did he take his gleaming gaze from the face of
the youth.
“A stiff-legged buffalo
is Red Scar,” laughed the young warrior tauntingly, as he straightened
up out of reach. “He stands in the place his blood shall make red.”
There was no reply.
“He fights not well in
the daytime. He stuck a knife into his best friend’s back. He crept out
into the darkness to do it. He is a coyote.”
Still no reply from the
grim warrior.
The supple youth lurched
back just in time to avoid a vicious stab as Red Scar took one quick
advancing step.
Then Zepkhoeete thrust
out his face while a sneering smile played over it, and hurled the
deadliest insult known to a Kiowa warrior:
“Red Scar is a woman,
he-”
He did not finish the
sentence.
He of the marred visage
bounded forward. There was a swish of his knife which the other narrowly
escaped. But before he could recover, the fingers of Zepkhoeete closed
upon his throat, the leg of Zepkhoeete met his in a grapevine twist, and
with a thud on the ground Red Scar lay upon his back with eyes starting
from their sockets as he gasped for breath. The knife of Zepkhoeete was
poised for the home thrust. It hung for a moment as an eagle hangs
before it swoops upon its prey.
“If Red Scar say he is a
woman, Red Scar may live"' hissed the voice of the victor.
Came no reply from the
fallen man.
“Let Red Scar say he has
the heart of a woman, Red Scar shall live,” repeated the triumphant
youth as he planted his foot upon the heaving breast of the vanquished
warrior.
The reply came guttural
and firm:
“Red Scar is a man. He
can die.”
Zepkhoeete lifted away
his foot. Admiration mingled with his smile of triumph. He threw away
his knife and beckoned to Tsilta, who went directly to him. He took her
by the hand and drew her to the centre of the circle. Then he turned
defiantly to the assembled warriors.
“Men of the Kiowas,” he
said, “this woman has not violated her wifehood. She is true. For three
winters I have planned she should kindle the fire in my lodge. Red Scar
had ponies. He gave them to her father. Her father gave her to Red Scar.
I have kept the law of the Kiowas. I have spoken no word to her to shame
a Kiowa warrior. I love her. Dare any one of you say she shall not be my
wife? Let him who dares, step out I meet him here and now with the
knife.”
He paused for the answer.
A shout of applause burst from the men. He strode toward his lodge.
Tsilta with light step
followed, her black hair floating like a soft cloud behind her. At the
door she turned in time to see Red Scar leap upon a horse and dash madly
across the prairie.
Red Scar never returned. |