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The moon was behind the man who held her, shadowing his face, but she could make out the glitter of piercing eyes, a stern mouth with strong lips under his brown fur turban.
"Where are you going?" Wolf Paw's fingers hurt her arm.
No words came to her. Frantically, she tried to think of some excuse for walking out so late on a night like this. He could have her killed, she thought, and terror made her feel like sinking into the snow.
But then she remembered some of the lore Sun Woman had taught her.
"My father sent me--to look for a certain herb whose power is greatest when the moon is full."
He barked disdainfully. "Gathering herbs when the snow is up to your knees?"
"It grows under the snow."
He brought his face so close to hers that his black eyes seemed to fill the world.
"You cannot lie to me, Redbird. I see what you are doing. You are going to _him_."
"No, no, I am looking for herbs."
"What is _this_?" With his free hand he tore away the blanket roll she had tied to her back and threw it into the snow. "And _this_?" He jerked on the water skin so hard that the strap broke, and he threw that down, too.
"Do you need those things to help you find herbs?" he shouted.
Trembling from head to foot, she felt herself starting to cry. She hated herself for showing such weakness in front of Wolf Paw. If she was to die, she wanted to be strong.
To her surprise, the sense that she was being watched from a distance came back again. There was someone else out here in the frozen darkness besides herself and Wolf Paw.
"It is death to interfere with a spirit quest," Wolf Paw growled. "The shaman's daughter of all people should know better than to break a holy law."
Her fear made her feel as cold, as breathless, as if she were already plunged into black, freezing water, swept along, an enormous weight of ice between her and the air.
"I have done nothing."
"You meant to. That is as bad."
She saw the hunting knife at Wolf Paw's belt. She could make a grab for it, try to stab him.
No, he was one of the tribe's mightiest braves. He would be too quick and strong for her. And, at least, up to now she had done no harm to anyone but herself. To try to murder the son of the war leader would be a great crime.
His grip on her arm still cruelly tight, he gestured back behind him toward the snow-covered camp. "Think of your mother's weeping over what I caught you doing. Your father, his heart torn in his chest. But he, the shaman, would have to say that you must be killed."
Hopelessness crushed her. Now she would never be able to help Gray Cloud. He was going to die. And she was caught by Wolf Paw and would be dishonored before the whole tribe and then killed.
She hung her head.
"But it is true, Redbird, you have done nothing," Wolf Paw said more softly. "I am the only one who knows that you were about to break the law."
_Sun Woman knows. But Wolf Paw will never learn that from me._
"I do not want you to die, Redbird," said the low voice from the figure towering over her.
She looked up at him. Was he going to be merciful?
He said, "It makes me angry that you throw your life away for that fatherless pale eyes boy. To wed the son of Black Hawk would bring you honor."
She understood now. He was going to offer to spare her life, if she would marry him and give up Gray Cloud. He did not understand that she would rather be dead twice over than spend her life mourning Gray Cloud and married to Wolf Paw.
She was about to tell him so when she heard a rumble, almost like thunder, from the trees nearer the camp. With much whinnying and cracking of shrubbery, all the band's horses burst out of the woods and ran, floundering and kicking up clouds of snow, out on the prairie.
"Be still," Wolf Paw cautioned in a low voice, "until we see what frightened them." He stood with his head high, listening.
Whatever it was, she was grateful that it had taken Wolf Paw's mind off her.
She heard a cras.h.i.+ng in the forest, branches breaking, snow crunching.
Something large was coming toward them.
She turned. Through the trees she saw a bulky, hunched figure. It seemed to be a large animal, but it was walking on its hind legs. It came forward slowly, a step at a time. Its forelimbs swung at its sides. It was a little taller than a man.
It looked very much like a bear. A new fear, greater than the fear of what Wolf Paw might do, a.s.sailed her.
A bear in coldest winter, when all of that people withdrew to their dens and slept? Once in a while, she had heard, a very hungry bear would awaken and forage for food and then go back to sleep again. Such a bear would kill anything it met. She tensed herself to run, though she knew she could never outrun a hungry bear.
The shambling tread of the bear, or whatever it was, had brought it closer, and she saw that it was all white, glittering in the moonlight like a snowdrift.
She glanced at Wolf Paw and saw his eyes glisten as they widened. The look on his shadowed face was one she never thought to see on him--fear.
He sucked in a shuddering breath. The hand that had held her arm suddenly released her.
No wonder Wolf Paw was afraid. This was a white bear, a spirit bear. Its eyes, reflecting the moonlight, seemed to glow.
Wolf Paw uttered a terrified, inarticulate cry. She turned to see him racing over the snow. Were she not so frightened herself, she might have laughed to see how his knees flew up, first one, then the other, as white clouds sprayed from his snowshoes. Strong as he was, he could never outrun a bear. Especially not this bear.
As for herself, she was surely doomed. She thought, _May this be a better death than drowning under the ice_.
And she turned to face the spirit bear.
3
Claw Marks
The white bear was out of the forest now. Redbird had seen bears run, and she knew it could cover the distance that separated them in a few bounds.
It did not seem to be looking at her, and she wondered if it saw her. It sparkled in the moonlight. Its breath came in huge frosty clouds, obscuring its head. Did spirit bears breathe?
She looked around again to see where Wolf Paw was. He had become a small, dark spot against the white at the edge of the village. His snowshoes had carried him far quickly. She, too, would have run, if she could run like Wolf Paw.