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A chill came over Auguste at his own thought. He recalled Owl Carver's warning against trying to turn the power of the spirits against any other human being. Terrible consequences lay in store for the shaman who did so.
_I'm probably going to be hanged as it is. What else can happen to me?_
Auguste heard Raoul's voice from somewhere behind him, among the spectators. "Hey, Bennett! Aren't you going to say anything? What's this got to do with the mongrel?"
"Order!" Cooper rapped on his table with a carpenter's mallet.
Bennett stood up a little uncertainly. "If it please your honor, I called Mr. Perrault to testify about what happened at Old Man's Creek. I don't see why counsel for the defense is bringing up this other incident."
"All right, Your Honor," said Ford. "I have no more questions for this baby killer." Auguste saw sudden pallor in the part of Armand's face not covered by his beard.
"Objection!" shouted Bennett.
Ford looked pained. "What in Heaven's name is wrong with calling a spade a spade?"
Cooper said, "Well, try to keep your language a little more elevated, Mr. Ford."
"Certainly, Your Honor. I have no more questions for this infanticide."
As Ford turned away to sit down, Auguste saw a quick little smile crease Judge Cooper's face, then disappear. He began to feel hope stirring in a heart that had been heavy ever since he came to Victor. This trial would not be conducted according to Lynch's law.
But he still burned with hatred for Armand Perrault. He turned to watch Perrault go back to his seat.
And his skin tingled. Just past the gaunt-faced Lieutenant Davis, Nancy was sitting, only two rows of chairs away. Her deep blue eyes widened as she looked at him. Her smile was, as Cooper's had been, just a brief shadow, but her face flushed, and she shook her head almost imperceptibly.
Auguste understood. As Ford had said, if Nancy were to testify in his behalf, people must never know what they had been to each other. All their hatred for red men would come boiling up, and they would hang him for having intercourse with a white woman, if for nothing else. He nodded ever so slightly, tore his eyes away from hers.
Woodrow was sitting beside Nancy, holding her hand. He had no need to hide his feelings, and gave Auguste a big grin. Auguste smiled back at him, but at the sight of Woodrow, longing for Eagle Feather was a knife in his heart.
_I don't even know whether Eagle Feather is alive._
And grief for poor little Floating Lily crushed him.
There were Frank and Nicole sitting together, with one of their smaller children--Patrick, Auguste thought--squirming on Nicole's lap. The sight of the baby made him want to weep.
There were Elysee and Guichard, two old men sitting side by side.
Grandpapa had a home of his own now, he'd told Auguste while visiting him, a small frame house on a hillside north of town, also built by Frank. And a young doctor named Surrey who had just moved into the county looked in on Elysee regularly.
_Good that they have a new doctor here._
Too bad, though, Gram Medill had died. Of an infection, Auguste had heard, that she'd refused to let Dr. Surrey treat.
Auguste saw many more spectators whom he did not recognize, people who stared back at him with hostility or--at best--curiosity.
A handsome young woman wearing a black bonnet and a black dress caught his eye. There was a strange intensity in her look, but her mouth was drawn tight, and he could not tell whether she felt hatred or sympathy for him. Then he remembered who she was--Pamela Russell, widow of the town clerk whose brains had been dashed out by a Sauk war club during the attack on Victor. Nicole, on one of her visits to the village hall, had described Russell's death to him and told him how Pamela had insisted on touching off the cannon that broke the war party's attack.
_She will probably want to be the one to put the rope around my neck._
The prosecutor called Levi Pope to the stand. The shambling backwoodsman held his c.o.o.nskin cap in his hand as he approached the witness chair.
This was the first time Auguste could remember seeing him without a rifle. Its absence made him look strange.
Bennett led Levi Pope through an account of Old Man's Creek. Then Thomas Ford rose to question him.
"All right, Levi. When the three Indians, including Auguste, came into your camp with the peace flag, how'd you know it was treachery?"
Levi frowned and shook his head. "Well, when we seen that the woods was full of Injuns."
"Now, we've heard many times during this trial that 'the woods was full of Injuns.' How many Indians did you see?"
"'Twasn't me that saw them. It was the scouts Colonel Raoul sent out."
"So you didn't see any sign yourself that the Indians were trying to lead you into some kind of trap?"
"Well--no, sir."
"And when you rode into the forest on the north side of Old Man's Creek, did you see any Indians?"
"No, sir. They must of all run off by that time."
"When did you first meet up with Indians?"
"Oh, we rode maybe an hour up along the river. It was full dark then, and they come down off a hill in front of us, a-yelling and screaming."
"A frontal attack, then. If the Indians were planning to ambush you, what did they gain by sending three men into your camp claiming they wanted to talk surrender?"
Levi Pope's face seemed to elongate as he contemplated Ford's question.
"I don't rightly know."
"Do you think the Indians are stupid, Mr. Pope?"
"Well, they was stupid to start this war." Levi grinned at Ford, looking pleased with himself. Auguste heard some appreciative chuckles from the spectators. He turned and saw Levi Pope's wife, a skinny, pale woman, frowning at her husband as if his testimony made her angry.
Ford nodded and held off on making his reply while he paced the open s.p.a.ce before the judge's table and let his calm gaze travel over all the spectators and jurymen. He waited until the hall was quiet.
"Maybe the Indians thought it was a stupid war, too, Mr. Pope. Maybe that is the real reason Black Hawk sent those three braves to your camp."
"Objection," called Bennett. "Mr. Ford is just speculating."
Ford said, "Your Honor, the claim by Colonel de Marion and others that the Indian attempt to make peace, in which Auguste de Marion partic.i.p.ated, was some kind of dastardly trick is, itself, merely speculation."
Judge Cooper grunted. "Well, let's stick to what people know, not what they think they know."
"Fine with me, Your Honor," said Ford, "as long as the prosecution is held to the same standard."
Auguste's belly tightened as he heard Ford speak sharply to the judge.
He'd seen some hope in Cooper. He didn't want him antagonized. Then he slumped, letting his manacled hands dangle. What difference? He didn't have a chance anyway.
Ford went back to his seat, smiling grimly at Auguste, and Levi Pope, looking somewhat puzzled, slouched back to his place among the spectators. Judge Cooper declared that proceedings were over for the day and that the defense would call its witnesses tomorrow.