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Authors: D Jordan Redhawk

Tiopa Ki Lakota (10 page)

BOOK: Tiopa Ki Lakota
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, Anpo."

Smiling and shaking her head, the teenager said, "I doubt I would get from here to the ponies without you on my heels." Despite pride at being asked and joy that her friend would want to accompany her, a silvery-cold trickle of fear lodged in her heart.
I will see my future.

Taking her response as an affirmative, Wanbli Zi smiled happily and ushered the two warriors into the council lodge to speak with the elders.

 

In the early morning darkness, Anpo dressed in her finest. It was said that how a warrior looked was an indication of how much he was loved. And, despite the one obvious difference between herself and the other warriors in camp, her sister and mother had outfitted her well over the years.

The tops of her moccasins were white and painstaking detail had been paid to the red sun symbols painted on them. Her buckskin leggings were their natural tan color with the exception of the fringe on the outer legs. Again, these were painted white with designs in red and yellow - the lightning, the sun and the buffalo alternated down each side. Her leather shirt was yellow and the same white strip of designs ran down the front from each shoulder to the hem. On her upper arms were strips of leather, painted yellow and contrasting with her dark skin.

Waniyetu Gi peered at her closely as her eldest daughter combed Anpo's hair until it glowed. Clucking disapprovingly, she said, "Your breechclout is old. I have another for you." And she moved to one side of the
ti ikceya
and rummaged among some leathers and furs.

Finished working on her sister's hair, Hca Wanahca pulled the sides back to tie up and out of her face. She then affixed a small eagle quill hanging down and a larger quill painted yellow sticking up.

Anpo watched her mother return with an expanse of white leather.

"This was to be yours after you killed the
tatanka ska
but I will give it to you now," Waniyetu Gi said with a smile. She gently laid the skin in her daughter's hands.

The teenager looked at it in awe.
She has such faith in me!
"Thank you,
ina

! It is perfect!" She stood and immediately pulled off the current buckskin she was wearing, replacing it with practiced hands as her family prudently looked away.

"You look very handsome," Hca commented with a smile as she rose to her feet, her sister turned around like a proud male pheasant.

"And I have
you
to thank for it,
cuwekala

," Anpo grinned back. She embraced her sibling and then turned to their mother. "And you,
ina
."

Waniyetu Gi smiled and accepted the hug from her taller and stronger child. And then she pulled away, pushing Anpo towards the
tiopa

. "Now, go. Nupa is waiting."

The teenager ducked her head and kissed her mother on the cheek before scooping up her weapons and leaving the lodge. She could hear the older woman grumbling good-naturedly as she stepped out into the cool morning air.

Four men stood nearby with the ponies - her father, Nupa Olowan and his father, Wi Sape, and the shaman. She approached, adjusting her pouch and knife.

Inyan Ceye

stepped forward with a bundle of fur. "Here is the invitation for the chief of their camp. You will enter and speak to no one until you are spoken to at their council fire. Go right to their council and nowhere else. Give the chief our invitation and wait there until tomorrow. He will give you his answer for you to return here in the morning." He handed the bundle to Nupa who obediently tied it to his saddle.

"Ready?" Nupa asked with a grin, handing her pony's reins to Anpo.

"
Ohan
!"

Wanbli Zi smiled at his daughter's enthusiasm. "Remember. Leave camp and go south for a time. You will come across a large pine tree, split in two. From there, go west. The camp's cookfires will guide you the rest of the way. You should be there when the sun is high."

The young warriors nodded in understanding and hopped onto their steeds. There was a final word of good bye before they heeled their ponies and fairly flew out the eastern entrance. The elders watched them go before quietly returning to their lodges.

Once out of sight of camp, the two slowed their ponies to a trot, pacing them. Anpo handed her friend a piece of dried meat that her mother had packed them.

"You look nice," Nupa commented. "Is that breechclout new?"

The teenager nodded. "
Ina
gave it to me. She was going to wait until I killed the
tatanka

ska

, but chose to gift it this morning."

The young man nodded. "It is an unusual color. It suits you."

"Hca called me 'handsome'," Anpo said with a wry snort.

Not seeing the humor, her friend looked at her with new eyes. With a slow, grudging respect, he nodded. "You
are
handsome,
tanksi

." He paused in thought, his dark brow furrowed.

They cantered along a few feet before the teenager finally asked, "What?"

Nupa shrugged. "It is just.... My next words would have been 'You will make some woman a fine man'." He shook his head. "But, you are
not
a man. You are a
wikoskalaka

."

Frowning, Anpo asked, "What of it?" She readjusted herself in her saddle and shrugged. "It has been this way all my life."

"But don't you want...?"

"What? To join with a man?" She snorted at his nod, shaking her own dark head in the negative. "Whatever for? I can hunt better than most men. I have learned how to scout and fight better than most men. Besides, I do not think a man would have me."

"
Tanksi
..."

"
Hiya

,
tiblo

! You know it is true!" They traveled a few more minutes, both deep in thought. "Would
you
have me?" Anpo finally asked.

Her friend sat straighter in his saddle. "I would."

The teenager burst out in laughter at the stoic, tragic face he held. "But, I would not have
you
,
tiblo
!" And she heeled her pony, causing it to rear up and shoot away.

The young warrior was only a second behind her, putting away his feelings of relief and dismay to race after his best friend.

 

"But, what will you do,
tanksi

? You will have no children to care for you when you are an elder."

The teenager sighed and rolled her eyes. Nupa just would not let the subject go. No matter how often she cajoled, teased and changed the subject, it was always brought back to this.

The pair had already made it to the split pine and had been working their way west through the rolling plains. There were no stops for meals, eating on the backs of their ponies. They'd only stopped once, at a creek for their steeds to drink. The sun was nearing its zenith, an indication they'd not much farther to go.

"You know as well as I,
tiblo

. I will adopt. Then I will have a son to teach." Seeing her friend's scowl, it finally occurred to her what his concern was. "You are worried that I will have no man? No one to sleep with?"

"I am worried that you will have no
woman
," he conceded. At her outright guffaw, he bristled. "Do you know how to cook for yourself? Tan hides? Sew? Do all the things your mother and sister do for you?"

"So, you suggest I find a woman who will share my robes?" Anpo couldn't help herself, she chuckled joyously at the thought.

It took a few minutes of scowling at his friend before the humor finally invaded Nupa's good senses. Soon, he was laughing as she.

"
Tiblo
!" she finally exclaimed when she'd controlled her laughter. "I will wait for you to marry Hca and move in with
you
!"

Snorting at the absurdity, the young man said, "
Hau

! You will be my second woman then!"

This, of course, sent the pair into further giggles as they rode along. Soon, smoke from many campfires could be seen in the distance. They stopped long enough to go over themselves and their ponies, straightening clothing and dusting off leathers. Nupa pulled out the bundle that had been given to them by the shaman.

"Are you ready?" he asked.

Anpo nodded. "
Ohan
,
tiblo
. Let's you and I be welcomed."

The two rode for the camp of
Wicasa Waziya Mani

, circling round until they reached the eastern entrance. Several warriors around the camp had already heard their approach and were standing ready with weapons at hand. Women and children hovered nearby, the young ones excitedly moving around to get a better view of the newcomers.

As they entered the main clearing, there was a flash of yellow at one
ti

ikceya

and Anpo frowned, a vague familiarness tickling her mind. She pulled her pony up short and spun around, searching for the color and finding nothing but warriors beginning to take umbrage at this break from custom.

Nupa had stopped as well, alert to something causing his best friend consternation. Unable to see anything, he edged his own steed closer and caught her eye.

The intense look of warning from the young man brought Anpo back to her senses. They were unable to speak until they had been received by the chief of this camp. She nodded in slight irritation and they proceeded to the largest lodge.

Upon their arrival, the two jumped off their ponies. Nupa opened the fur given him by their shaman. Nestled inside were three items - a medicine bundle created for this meeting, a small pouch of willow bark and an invitation wand with intricate designs stained on its wood. As it was Anpo who had been initially asked to volunteer for this trip, the young man handed her the wand, holding the other items still cradled in the fur.

Several old men had arrived from various points around the camp. One by one, they made their way into the oversized
ti ikceya
. A boy stepped forward and took their horses and a young warrior, younger than Anpo, held the
tiopa
covering aside for the visitors to enter.

It took a few moments for their eyes to adjust to the darker interior but, as expected, the honored place to the left of the chief was open for them to sit. Anpo settled down, her friend beside her.

She looked about the fire, noting many faces that were familiar. She'd seen most of these men at the summer and winter camps, when all the Lakota gathered together. While she was probably just one of the many, many young warriors in the world, these were the leaders of the people. Anpo nodded respectively towards the chief and held out the invitation wand.

Wicasa Waziya Mani, the chief of this camp, was a young man. His hair was still dark and his body hale. With powerful grace, he accepted the wand, nodding in return to the pair of young warriors. This was followed by the medicine bundle and willow bark.

The chief smiled as he showed all the elders present the invitation. He thanked the young warriors and introductions were made all around. "So, you have found
tatanka

?" he asked in a deep voice. "Is he near?"

"
Ohan
,
wicahcala

" the teenager answered with the proper feminine response. This caused a rustle through the
ti ikceya
as all became aware of exactly who they had in their council lodge. All knew of the
wikoskalaka

who acted as
koskalaka

. Anpo ignored it, having dealt with the surprise many times over the last few years. "He is a day's ride away from here, half a day from our own camp. Our chief, Wagmiza Wagna, asks that your camp join ours in a hunt four days from now."

Mani nodded, his dark eyes intent on the young warrior. "Please, be welcome in the camp. You will be guest at a feast and the elders will council on your invitation."

Anpo and Nupa nodded and made known their thanks before rising and leaving the lodge. Once outside, they found their ponies had already been led away to this camp's herd. Their gear had been placed in front of a
ti

ikceya

nearby, the lodge they'd be sleeping in that night.

"Why did you stop when you and I arrived?" the young man asked as they sauntered to the lodge, all eyes of the camp upon them.

Anpo shrugged. "I do not know. I thought I saw something. I was trying to find it again."

They arrived at the
ti ikceya
and pulled their sleeping robes out. In a matter of moments the pair were reclining in front of the firepit, watching the remainder of the camp as they went about their business.

Nupa pulled a waterbag from his belongings and took a long draw. Handing it to his friend, he continued his questioning. "What was it you saw?"

"It is hard to explain,
tiblo

," the teenager sighed, taking the waterbag and drinking deeply. She wiped her mouth and sealed it, settling the bag between them. "I am not sure if I saw something or felt it."

The young man nodded solemnly. "I understand. It is the same with my visions - I see it, but I do not. It is very confusing at times."

"
Ohan

!" Anpo exclaimed, sitting forward and peering into the flames. "
That
was how it felt! Like my vision!"

BOOK: Tiopa Ki Lakota
12.09Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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