Boy. It was enough.
And yet the broken feather from the bundle had once meant something to him.
“WASA LLAMO!” screamed the leader, unsheathing a curved hunting knife. It gleamed in the afternoon light of the bright sky. It was an old thing, a weapon from Before.
The leader turned to his troops, muttering something. The semicircle withdrew. It was just the leader now, facing the Boy.
The Boy tried to remember the words of the Possum Hunters. Words he could use to identify himself.
What was friend?
What was Boy?
How would he describe himself?
He remembered the children being warned to be careful of the bears that prowled the deep woods. “Oso,” he’d heard their mothers calling. Beware the oso. And the Possum Hunters, the men, had called themselves cazadores.
“Oso Cazadore,” said the Boy in the quiet of the high mountain pass.
Silence followed.
The Boy watched the troop exchange glances, muttering, pointing at the bearskin.
The leader, his face like a dark cloud, shouted a long stream of words at the Boy, their meanings lost.
Until the last word.
The Boy heard the last word clearly.
“Chinese!”
As though it were an accusation.
An indictment.
Then the leader shouted it again in the still silence and pointed over his shoulder toward the west.
“Oso Cazadore,” said the Boy again.
The leader laughed, spitting angrily as he did so.
Another string of words most of which the Boy did not understand and finally the word the children of the Possum Hunters had used when calling each other liars.
Pick the biggest one, Boy. When you’re surrounded, pick the biggest one and take him out. It’ll make the rest think twice.
The leader was the biggest.
The Boy dismounted.
Horse could take care of himself.
The Boy pointed toward the leader with his tomahawk.
The leader crouched low, drawing the blade between them, waving it back and forth.
Holding the Tomahawk back, ready to strike, the Boy circled to the right, feeling his left leg drag as it always did after he had ridden Horse for long periods of time.
Get to work, lazy leg! Be ready.
The leader came in at once, feinting toward the Boy’s midsection, and at the same time dancing backward to circle.
The Boy moved his tomahawk forward, acting as though he might strike where the leader should have been. Sensing this, the leader flipped the knife and caught it in his grip, ready to slam it down on the unprotected back he knew would be exposed if the Boy struck with his full force at the feint. Instead the Boy shifted backward, willing the weak left leg to move quickly. Once he was planted, he raised the checked tomahawk once more and slammed it down through the wrist of the leader as the man tried to regain his balance from stabbing through thin air.
What the Boy lacked in power and strength in his left side was made up for in the powerful right arm that had done all the heavy work of his hard life. Like a machine from Before, the tricep and bicep drove the axe down through skin and bone and skin again within the moment that the eye shifts its gaze.
The leader planted his feet, intending to reverse the knife with just an adjustment of grip and then swing wickedly to disembowel his opponent. He’d do it again as he’d done many times before.
But his hand was gone.
His mouth, once pulling for air like a great bellows, now hung open and slack. The leader dropped to his knees, his other hand moving to the spouting bloody stump.
For a brief moment, he stared at his hand as though this was something the leader had just imagined and not something that had really happened. His eyes, his world, gray at the edges of his vision, remained on the severed hand.
At then he was gone from this world as the tomahawk slammed into his skull with a dull crunch.
There was a clarity that came to the Boy in the moment after combat, a knowledge the Boy had that all his days would be as such: days of bone, blood, and struggle. The blue sky and winters would come and go, but all his days would be of such struggles.
Finally, in the last moment of such thinking, he wondered, what did cities ever know that he never would? Their mysteries would be beyond him. Without Sergeant Presley he would become like one of these savage men the Sergeant had warned him of. And one day, like the body of the man in the dirt and rock at his feet, such would be his end.
20
IN