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Synopsis
DREAMS OF FREEDOM It was a stroke of sheer luck that saved the newborn's life. Kidnapped as she traveled from New York to Delaware, Rebecca Morton had been forced to become a slave to the Cayuga chief's pregnant wife. Now, suddenly hailed throughout the land as a great healer, Rebecca lived for one dream: her freedom. TRAPPED BY DESIRE Night Wind, the warrior who crept into his enemy's camp under cloak of darkness, was driven by one thought: to save his brother. As he carried the woman they called "White Medicine Woman" bound and blindfolded into the wilderness, she was his only hope. She would become his only desire...
Release date: July 1, 2013
Publisher: eClassics
Print pages: 302
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Heaven's Fire
Candace McCarthy
Hoo-oo-oooo!
Night Wind smiled with grim satisfaction. Deer-That-Runs and Raven Feather had successfully killed the two Cayuga guards. The time had come for Night Wind to enter his enemy’s village and kidnap the White Medicine Woman. He crept toward the compound entrance.
The air was crisp with the cold of late autumn, but Night Wind didn’t feel the chill as he slipped past the gate into the Iroquois Cayuga village. There was barely enough moonlight to see, but the Lenape warrior preferred the darkness. If one of the Cayuga woke and spied him moving about the yard, Night Wind would be strung up and tortured until he was dead. The risks in entering his enemy’s compound were high, but a young boy’s life depended on Night Wind’s success. He was determined to succeed at all costs.
The Indian paused several feet from the gate. Staying near the fence, he studied the circle of longhouses. The structures were huge, built of spaced vertical wooden poles covered with bark. The buildings housed up to twenty families, depending on their size, and differed greatly from the single-family wigwams of the Lenni Lenape.
Which one held the woman healer? Night Wind wondered, his gaze narrowing on the nearest longhouse. He would need all of his warrior’s skills to steal her from the Cayuga. He would have to tread on silent feet past many matrons, many warriors. His only weapons were his ability to fight and the knife tucked into his breechcloth.
Tales of the woman’s powers had traveled far ... to the village of his people, the Lenni Lenape, to a land that was as green as this region by the great lake but not nearly as cold. The braves of his village had to hunt far now for their furs, far into the land of the Iroquois. It was on the last trip into the enemy’s territory that Night Wind had heard of the White Medicine Woman.
The woman had brought a dead child back to life. She possessed magical healing powers that could cure the most terrible of diseases. Night Wind’s half brother, Red Fox, was sick, and no one in his village had been able to help him, not even the shaman. Night Wind was determined to bring back the woman healer to cure Red Fox.
A rustle in the treetops outside the stockade startled Night Wind, and he pulled his knife from his breechcloth, his muscles coiled in readiness. Flattening himself against the fence, he forced himself to breathe slowly. He would kill any man who interfered. But nothing moved in the yard.
His senses alert for danger, the Lenape brave padded across the yard to the first of the large Iroquois longhouses. He carefully lifted the deer hide that curtained the doorway and peered inside. Night Wind saw a storage room filled with furs, food, and tools. Beyond the room, family cubicles lined the main section of the longhouse. Glowing embers were all that remained of the Cayuga’s cooking fires.
A dog suddenly appeared from the nearest cubicle, stretching and sniffing the air. Night Wind eased down the deer hide, moving away from the entrance quickly before the animal could detect his presence. The dog whined, but then became silent.
The woman healer would have a special house, Night Wind decided. Such magical powers would be revered and rewarded with private quarters in which to work her magic.
Night Wind spied a small thatched structure outside the circle of longhouses, and he thought she must be there, in a place of her own, a hut that could have been built for the shaman—or the village sachem.
He moved toward the hut, tensing when a dog inside the nearest longhouse whimpered, and a second mongrel growled low in answer. To Night Wind’s relief, the animals soon quieted.
With his knife in hand, Night Wind continued toward the hut’s entrance. Raising the fur flap, he slipped inside and paused just inside the door until his gaze adjusted to the dark interior.
The Lenape warrior smiled. The figure lying on the sleeping mat was covered by furs, but he could tell it was a woman. The White Medicine Woman, he thought. He could see the outline of her form, the sweep of long hair across the animal hide covering.
Night Wind moved in to take her until he saw the dog lying at her feet. He froze, his mind gauging the size and danger of the animal. His left hand went to the pouch strapped to his legging and extracted a piece of dried venison.
The dog woke and rose, instantly detecting his presence. With his left hand extended with the offering of meat and his right hand firm about his knife handle, Night Wind called to the animal softly. As he lured the dog away from his master, the brave silently offered a prayer to the Great Spirit that the woman wouldn’t awaken and bring the entire Iroquois tribe down on him. The dog growled low, but inched closer, pausing to sniff the air, before edging toward the man.
The woman murmured and shifted in her sleep. The dog arched its back, baring its teeth. Night Wind’s heart raced until the woman settled down again.
“Mah! Take it.” The Indian held out the meat, waving it temptingly before the dog. The animal stared at the meat and then eyed the man, edging nearer, whining in recognition of food, before moving back as if unsure whether to take Night Wind’s offering.
The animal followed Night Wind as the Indian lured it outside the hut. The man stopped, crouched low, and waited until the animal started to eat the meat. Then, with a swift swipe of his knife, Night Wind took the dog’s life. He killed it cleanly, instantly, before carrying the bleeding animal to the rear of the hut. The brave was sorry to have to kill it, but there was nothing else he could have done. The mongrel would have alerted the Cayuga of his presence.
Night Wind set down the animal and returned to the hut. Once inside, he put away his knife. Then, he crept toward the woman on the sleeping mat.
A hand clamped over Rebecca Morton’s mouth, startling her awake. She screamed, but the only sound that escaped her was a muffled squeak which was effectively stifled when the man changed his hold. An Indian brave, she thought, her blood cold with fear. He was strong and smelled of bear grease. She struggled.
His grip tightened and was painful. She was on her stomach, pressed into the sleeping mat, her face turned to the side away from her assailant. Her teeth had cut the inside of her mouth, and she tasted blood.
Panic seized her, and Rebecca fought him to rise, but he was too powerful. Still, she continued to fight him.
“Ku-les’ta! Chitkwe’se,” a deep, guttural voice hissed in her ear. “Ala ’pi!”
At the strange Indian tongue, Rebecca renewed her struggles. The brave grabbed a handful of her hair and jerked her head back. She inhaled sharply at the pain; tears filled her eyes as he continued to hold her.
“Ku-les’ta! Do not fight, and I will not harm you.”
Shocked by his English, she froze.
His voice softened, but was no less menacing. “I will let you go, but if you cry out, I will kill you with my K’-sheeg-an.”
The Indian shifted, and a knife was suddenly there for her to see. He held it before her gaze, allowing her a moment to comprehend his message.
“You will be silent?” he asked.
Rebecca tried to nod, but couldn’t. After a few seconds, the Indian shifted his hands, releasing his hold on her hair and across her mouth, and she was able to move her head.
“Kihalaalit,” he said. “Good.”
She wanted to turn around, to see exactly who held her, but although he’d released her hair and mouth, he continued to press her firmly against the mat, belly down, face turned away.
“Who are you?” she asked softly; she didn’t want to anger him. “What do you want?”
He gave a muffled exclamation of displeasure, and Rebecca’s heart raced with new fear.
“I am Tipaakke Shaakha. In your language, my name is Night Wind.”
Rebecca stiffened as he leaned in close until she could feel his warm breath on her neck. She had the impression that he was a large man, taller and more muscular than any of the Cayuga. Her blood froze with fear.
“You are not Cayuga,” she said in a shaky whisper.
He hesitated. “I am Lenni Lenape. The Cayuga are Iroquois. They are our enemy.”
Her mind raced with what he’d told her. How did the Indian get into the village? she wondered. What had happened to the Iroquois guards? And where was her dog? A frisson of apprehension ran down her spine as she remembered the animal who had lain beside her. “The dog—what have you done to it?”
“Chitkwe’se.” His angry tone told her that he’d lost patience with her questions.
Rebecca felt her breath slam painfully within her chest, for she could guess what had happened to the Iroquois guards ... and her dog ...
“You killed it, didn’t you? You killed a helpless animal!”
“You would have me die instead?” The English language fell easily but uncomfortably from his lips.
“Yes!” she gasped, feeling chilled. “The dog was one of God’s poor creatures. You didn’t have to murder it!”
What kind of man would do such a thing? she wondered.
A blood-thirsty, half-crazed savage!
Rebecca swallowed hard. She had seen much since her capture by the Cayuga. She’d seen men killed for simply being English. She’d seen white women tortured for refusing to obey. But she’d finally come to understand the Iroquois tribe. The Cayuga protected what they owned and killed only if they felt threatened. She knew nothing of the Lenape, but what she’d learned from the Iroquois. What she’d heard hadn’t been pleasant.
Poor dog, she thought. The creature had been guarding her while she’d slept and had paid dearly for doing so.
Tears filled Rebecca’s eyes as she remembered the dog’s big eyes and wagging tail. Anger welled up inside, making her reckless.
“Murdering savage!” She started to struggle in earnest, bucking off the mat, kicking her feet. “Killing a helpless animal!” she cried, not bothering to soften her voice. “Are you going to kill me, too? Is that why you’ve come here?”
“Chitkwe’se.” Night Wind clamped his hand back over her mouth, hissing with fury when she nipped his finger as he struggled to get a good hold.
When she continued to fight him, the Indian grabbed hold of her hair again, jerking her head up from the sleeping mat. “Do you wish to die, white woman?” He held his knife to her throat.
She gasped and was immediately still.
“Do you?” he growled.
She couldn’t answer. The blade of his knife had pricked her skin, and she felt a drop of her own blood trickle down her neck. Never had she felt so terrified, not even when she’d first been taken by the Iroquois.
Night Wind was exasperated. Why wouldn’t the woman stay quiet? Why did she go on so about a dead dog?
She whimpered deep in her throat and he pulled on her hair to silence her. The medicine woman was a continued threat to Night Wind. “You must be quiet!” he commanded harshly.
He removed his knife from her throat and shifted to sit on her back. Without conscious thought, he lowered his weight onto her back to hold her while he tied her hands. He heard the sudden whoosh of air as her breath left her lungs, and was startled when her body slumped, lifeless, onto the mat.
He touched her neck, felt the throbbing there, and sighed with relief. The White Medicine Woman wasn’t dead; she was out cold.
Night Wind slung her unconscious form over his shoulder and quickly exited the hut. He hurried toward the gate, anxious to escape now that he had his captive.
He understood her anger about the dog, but he’d killed the animal because it had been necessary. A barking dog would have meant his death.
The woman was foolish. She must understand why he did this; she must know what the Iroquois did to their captured enemy.
Deer-That-Runs and Raven Feather waited for him outside the gate. Night Wind nodded at the two men, raising his burden to show their success, and the braves grinned.
The three fled into the forest. Deer-That-Runs went first, Night Wind followed next, with Raven Feather in the rear to watch for Iroquois.
They traveled far without stopping. Night Wind easily kept pace with his two friends, never faltering with his burden, for he was used to hunting and carrying big deer the same way.
The woman woke up after a time and started to fight him. Night Wind stopped, warned her to be still, and threatened to drop her if she didn’t. Within seconds, she was dead weight again.
The Lenape braves ran through the forest. Night Wind would call a halt when it was time to stop. He would go as far as his strength allowed him, far enough away from the Iroquois to rest without worry.
The time came two hours later. The brave stopped, signaling to Deer-That-Runs that they would rest briefly. Night Wind set his burden on the ground and asked Deer-That-Runs to blindfold and tie her up. While Deer-That-Runs did this, Night Wind and Raven Feather scouted the area for a more secluded spot.
Raven Feather called out. He’d found a clearing, sheltered by fallen trees, rocks, and tall brush. Deer-That-Runs carried the woman to the sheltered forest clearing and then the braves took turns sleeping for a time.
Rebecca woke up to find herself seated on the damp ground, blindfolded, her wrists and ankles tied. She was even more frightened by the fact that she couldn’t see to judge the extent of danger she was in. She had no idea where she was or how far from the Iroquois village they’d traveled, but she guessed they had come a long way.
I must have fainted. She was freezing although she’d worn her Cayuga clothing to sleep in, because the nights were getting colder. Her cape-like garment adequately covered her from neck to waist, including her arms, and her deerskin skirt was long, reaching nearly to her ankles. But, she had no leggings beneath the skirt, no moccasins on her feet, and her toes and legs felt frozen in the chill of the bitter night.
Rebecca tried to move her feet up under her for warmth, but her ankle bonds were too tight. She was sure she was going to freeze to death.
“I’m cold!” she exclaimed. “Can anyone hear me? I’m cold!”
She heard a movement directly behind her, and she spun toward the sound. “Who’s there?” No one spoke, and she felt a trickle of alarm that grew rapidly toward hysteria. “Night Wind?”
There was no answer.
“Talk to me!” she cried. She could barely hear for the thundering of her heart beat. “I know you’re there. If you’re not Night Wind, then who are you?”
A long spat of unintelligible babble rent the quiet, and Rebecca shielded herself with her arms. It wasn’t Night Wind. Whoever it was; he sounded fierce—and furious. She tensed as she heard him approach. Something fell across her legs, and she cried out with fright, until she realized that the brave had draped a fur over her. The Indian had understood that she was cold.
“Thank you.” The tension left her at the man’s kindness. Dare she try to communicate with him? “Do you speak English?” she said. If only her hands were free! She wanted to see her captors. How else would she find out how many Indians she’d have to escape? Her skin prickled.
A crunching noise signaled another’s approach. “Deer-That-Runs speaks no English, Medicine Woman. He sees you are cold; he gives you bear skin.”
“Night Wind?” she asked. She felt strange. She’d guessed who it was before he’d spoken.
“Kihiila. It is Night Wind.” He was silent for a moment. “You are warmer?”
“Yes, yes, I am,” she said, but she couldn’t stop her body’s trembling.
She heard him squat down beside her and felt him adjust the fur, tucking the animal hide about her legs. The scent of him was strong and pleasant, a strange combination of odors, of pine and the forest and the wind.
“You will be warm soon,” he said, and she heard him start to rise.
She reached out and grabbed his arm, afraid he would leave. “Why did you kidnap me?” Her bound wrists burned.
He didn’t answer.
“Please ... won’t you take off my blindfold so that I can see you?”
“No,” the brave said, breaking away from her hold. He rose to his feet. “We leave soon. If you see, you will run.”
“I won’t run,” she said, her voice rising on a note of desperation. “Where would I go? I don’t know where I am!” Rebecca strained forward and tried to stand, but failed. “Please—it’s so dark. Will you take off the blindfold if I promise not to run away?”
“I do not trust a white man’s word.”
“But I’m a woman.”
The silence that followed was charged with a strange tension. “I know this,” he said, “but I will not take off blindfold. Not yet. Soon, when we near Lenape village.”
“Why did you capture me?” she cried. “I deserve to know!”
“You are the White Medicine Woman.”
Rebecca sighed with impatience. “I’m no medicine woman.”
“You saved Cayuga boy-child. Now you must save Lenape brave—Red Fox. My brother.”
Oh dear Lord! Rebecca thought. The man believes I’m a healer!
“What’s wrong with your brother?”
“He is sick. The shaman can’t heal him. You will know what is wrong, and you will save him.”
I’m going to die, she thought. They’ll find out I have no powers, and they’ll kill me as surely as my toes get numb when it’s cold.
She’d have to escape at the first opportunity. Somehow she would convince them to take off her blindfold and the leather straps binding her hands and feet, and she would sneak away ... or die trying.
Rebecca shivered. Death. Was that to be her fate? To die at the hands of the Lenape?
She’d been so close to freedom! What cruel trick of fate had snatched her out of the hands of the Iroquois to place her here? Tomorrow she was to have been adopted into the Cayuga tribe. As a new daughter of the Iroquois, she would have been free to leave the village, to come or go as she wished. Then she could have continued her journey to the Delaware Colony!
She had waited weeks, months, for the opportunity to escape the Cayuga. She’d been journeying to her aunt’s in the Delaware Colony when the Iroquois had abducted her, her and the family of four who had been with her.
It was important that she leave soon. She’d been summoned by her sick aunt months ago. Her mother’s sister had a child who needed to be looked after. Aunt Veronica was dying, and Rebecca was to see that the child was well cared for. What if Aunt Veronica was already dead? Where was cousin Elizabeth? Rebecca hated to think of the child helpless and all alone.
Curse Night Wind, Rebecca thought. Curse the savage for ruining all of her plans! She had been so close to being free, and now she was a captive of the Lenni Lenape.
They continued on their journey after only a brief period of rest. Night Wind had removed Rebecca’s blindfold and ankle bonds. Yet he still watched her like a hawk as if he expected her to run at any moment. He’d given her moccasins for her feet and allowed her to keep Deer-That-Runs’ fur for warmth. Her words of gratitude died on her lips when she realized that his actions weren’t out of kindness. He simply didn’t want to carry her again.
Now, as her feet became sore and her body tired, Rebecca regretted asking to be untied. She’d been nauseous being carried over the Indian’s shoulder, but at least her limbs and feet had been spared this torture.
Night Wind was in a hurry to get to his village. Rebecca knew it was concern for his brother that kept the Lenape warrior to a grueling pace. She, on the other hand, was far from anxious to get to the Lenape compound. Once there, she’d be expected to cure a dying brave ... without medical skills or knowledge. If she failed, she was sure she would be put to death. Rebecca prayed that the opportunity presented itself for her to escape ... or be rescued by the Cayuga. At least with the Cayuga, she had a chance for freedom.
They traveled single file. Deer-That-Runs was in the lead, before Rebecca, while Night Wind came next with Raven Feather in the rear.
As she walked carefully through the forest brush, Rebecca experienced a prickle of awareness of the man directly behind her. The savage who’d held his knife to her throat and threatened to kill her if she didn’t cooperate.
She’d had little chance to study him since he’d removed her blindfold. She’d noted the obvious differences in appearance between the Lenape and the Cayuga. These Lenape braves wore their hair long, unlike some of the Cayuga, whose heads were plucked of hair except for little tufts that adorned their crowns. Others of the Iroquois tribe wore their hair in war crests that reminded Rebecca of the comb on a rooster’s head.
The two things that had immediately struck Rebecca about Night Wind was his dark, glistening gaze and his build. Each time their eyes met, little bumps rose along her arms and neck. She could feel that piercing gaze on her back as she tried to keep pace with Deer-That-Runs.
She was wrong about his size. He wasn’t as overwhelming as she’d thought. His form cut a powerful figure, a figure that was no less impressive for his lack of height. She hoped that Night Wind had no idea how he affected her.
“Yun,” Night Wind said. “We stop here.”
Rebecca halted and sunk gratefully to the ground. Night Wind and Raven Feather approached from behind and joined Deer-That-Runs where the brave stood waiting for his leader’s command. The three Indians conversed rapidly in their tongue. Rebecca glanced up, saw the intensity of their expressions, and wondered what they were talking about.
There was a hint of soft brightening in the November sky. Dawn would soon be upon them. Would they continue to travel by the light of day? Was that what they were trying to decide?
Night Wind came to Rebecca’s side and untied her wrists. He offered her a hand. “Come.”
She studied his long fingers before her gaze traveled the length of his fringed leggings, moving upward over his covered thighs to his breechcloth and the knife tucked into the leather ties at his waist. He wore a cape made of deerskin, which covered his chest and draped one shoulder. His right shoulder was bare, but he seemed oblivious to the cold.
His friends wore fringed hunting jackets made of animal skin, which Rebecca thought might be otter. Instead of leggings, they had tall moccasins that covered their legs to mid-thigh. All three wore earrings of beaded shells threaded on strings of leather. Savages, she thought.
“Come,” Night Wind repeated, sounding impatient. Her gaze encountered his ebony stare. Something in his eyes frightened her. “We move to a clearing behind those trees,” he said. “There.” He gestured off the trail toward a dense thicket of evergreens. “It will be safe for healer kou een. To sleep. Tomorrow we go quickly. Red Fox is waiting.”
Without a word, Rebecca grabbed the Indian’s hand and he assisted her to her feet. Her heart thumped hard as she stood upright, within inches of his lean, lithe form. She saw his eyes flame as he gazed at her. Her body flushed with heat in sudden physical awareness of him.
“Thank you,” she said in a shaky voice. Rebecca backed away from his disturbing presence. Her breathing became constricted as she walked away and sensed his continued study of her.
“You are warm?” he asked from directly behind her.
She gasped, for she hadn’t heard him follow. Rebecca swallowed and faced him, silently willing the cadence of both her heart and her breathing to resume a steady pace.
“I’m fine, thank you,” she said. Hot, she thought. Why do I feel so hot?
She gestured toward her feet. “Thank you for giving me the moccasins.”
He gave her a slight smile. “Deer-That-Runs makes fine moccasins. Making moccasins is women’s work, but he likes it. You must thank him.” He paused, and his expression was serious again. The slight sign of good humor was gone. “We did not think you would sleep in your lenhoksi’na.”
“No,” she said. She didn’t usually sleep with her moccasins. Her gaze went to the Indian who had made her footwear. He had gathered sticks and twigs for a fire and was carrying them to the hidden clearing. Night Wind was right; the embroidered moccasins were finer than any she’d ever seen among the Cayuga.
“Deer-That-Runs,” she said, “is he a relative of yours?” Neither of the two braves had spoken to her. Had Night Wind forbidden them to make conversation with her?
Night Wind frowned. “Relative?”
She nodded. “Is he your brother? Your cousin?”
His brow cleared. “Deer-That-Runs is of the Wolf Clan. I am of the Wolf Clan. In that way, we are brothers. We do not have the same mother. In that way, you English would believe we are not brothers.”
Rebecca inclined her head. She understood about clan ties from her life with the Iroquois. Deer-That-Runs was considered family to Night Wind because they were of the same clan. Was the line of clan descent determined by the mother as it was with the Cayuga? She asked Night Wind and was told that the descent in the Lenape tribe was like the Iroquois, determined by the women. She wondered what else about the two tribes might be the same?
She searched for Raven Feather and found the brave several yards away with his bow drawn, his alert gaze sweeping the forest. The Indian was hunting for something for them to eat. “Raven Feather—is he also of the Wolf clan?”
Night Wind studied Raven Feather. “Raven Feather is of the Pele’. The Turkey Clan. He is of different clan, but he is Nee-tees.”
“He is your friend.”
“Kihiila,” he said with a nod.
Rebecca thought quickly about what she’d learned. The bond between the three braves would make her chances of escape more difficult. Each Indian was committed to bringing her to their village. Red Fox as Night Wind’s brother would be of the same clan as Deer-That-Runs, therefore, Deer-That-Runs would consider the ill brave his brother. As a good friend of Night Wind, Raven Feather’s l. . .
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