Part 14 (1/2)
A gust of hot wind sighed through the dreary tree. The branches s.h.i.+fted with sullen movements. But, as she ceased speaking, a brown object bounded through the rustling leaves and lay on the gra.s.s before them, gazing upward with ghastly mirth.
Lamont started back with white face, and crossed himself hurriedly. But Menotah only laughed. 'The Wind Spirit is throwing skulls at us. But why are you frightened?'
He pointed at the symbol of death. 'It is a bad omen,' he said huskily.
'It means approaching evil.'
'To me?' asked Menotah, astounded at this fresh wisdom.
'Or to me--perhaps to both.'
She smiled and shook her small head. 'Ah! but you are wrong; I should only despise a G.o.d, who could only warn me by rolling a skull at my feet. My heart has always been happy; I know the G.o.d would never harm me.'
'Trouble comes to all at some time in life.'
'No, not to all; never to me. I have been born that I may laugh and be happy. I must not try to teach you. Yet, when you have made something with your own hands that you think beautiful, you could never destroy it, unless you were mad. You would feel you were cutting away a part of your life. So the G.o.d could never destroy my happiness. For he would have to spoil the work of his own making; and the G.o.d is never mad.'
She picked up the skull and ran her bright eyes over the mouldering symbol. Then, as she perceived, high up on the bony forehead, a small, rounded fissure, she gave a sad little cry of recognition.
'This is the skull of a white man. But his story was a very sad one.'
'Who was he?' cried Lamont, in surprise.
'I never saw him alive. But when he lay dead, I washed the dry blood from his face. That was eight years ago, when I was very young. See!
here is the place where the bullet pa.s.sed.'
'Who was he?' repeated Lamont, in lower tones.
'He came from the Spirits' pa.s.sing place.[2] His name was Sinclair.'
'Sinclair!' he muttered to himself. 'Pshaw! it's the commonest name of the Province.' Then to the girl, 'Who shot him?'
'He had an enemy who was a coward. He tracked him down through the forest as you would follow a moose. One evening Sinclair was resting and smoking his pipe. Then this other man crept up and shot him through the bushes.'
Lamont moistened his lips. 'Did he escape?'
Menotah shook her head gladly. 'They caught him, and the warriors tied him to a tree, then shot at him with arrows. Some day I will show you that tree. But he was a coward. He cried for mercy when the women tied his arms.'
'But he was only doing his duty,' argued Lamont, with his careless air.
'You say that vengeance is necessary.'
'But I would never steal upon my enemy and shoot him down. That is the act of a man who fears to fight. I would meet him face to face. Perhaps Sinclair had never done this man an injury after all.' Then she laughed in her happy manner, and set the skull carefully in the cleft of a stunted kanikanik bush. She turned to him and laid a small hand on his arm. 'You would not act as he did,' she said.
He looked at the little fingers curved upon his coat sleeve. Then he placed his hand over and held them. 'Then you do not think me a coward?'
'You!' she said slowly. 'No, you are a brave man, who would fight until death for any you loved.'
'For you?' he said, bending his head to the soft, waving tresses.
'And even after death; your soul would protect me.'
He drew a little back and laughed scornfully. 'Do you believe in such a thing?'