Against a Crooked Sky
By Eleanor Lamb and Douglas Stewart
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About this ebook
The Indians had taken his sister. Sam set out to find her with only a drunken trapper to guide him through the wilderness. It was a journey that would challenge all the boy's courage and endurance. And at its end, Sam would face the ultimate test of love.
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Against a Crooked Sky - Eleanor Lamb
CHAPTER ONE
I remember like it was yesterday how those five Indians came riding out of nowhere right up to our cabin in the Black Ridge country. It was in the early 1850s, and I was only eleven, but I remember well how it all happened.
Pa was in Fort Williams buying planting seed, and Ma had just left with Milt Adams to see what she could do for his wife, Jenny. Ma was the best doctor in the homestead country, and when Milt came charging in with his team in a lather, all excited for fear Jenny had the cholera, Ma got her black bag from the shelf and went with him. But not before she gave me strict orders to mind Charlotte and not be up to my usual pranks.
It was like Ma knew without anyone telling her that down by the swimming hole in the pasture, a bit earlier, I’d stole Charlotte’s clothes and put them on my pet calf for a joke. Callie looked right cute in my sister’s pantaloons and her hair ribbon tied on one ear. Charlotte was some upset, but she couldn’t do anything but holler since she was swimming in her birthday clothes. She threatened to tell Pa when he came home, but she didn’t know then she had little chance of ever seeing Pa again.
I remember standing on the porch watching Ma and Milt pull away from the cabin. When they were out of sight, I got a tight feeling in my chest, wondering what would become of Ma if she got the cholera from Jenny. I turned to Charlotte, who was inspecting her pantaloons.
Don’t think you’re gettin’ away with what you did, Sam Isaac Sutter,
she said, reminding me again.
You’ll get your just dues when Pa gets home.
What about Ma?
I asked, ignoring her. Won’t she git the cholera, too?
Maybe,
she said.
When she didn’t show much concern, I looked at her, startled.
But she’ll die!
You don’t think that would stop her from goin’, do you? Ma wouldn’t take a thought to her own life if she could help to save Jenny’s.
But that don’t make sense,
I complained, … Ma dyin’ to save Jenny.
She ain’t gonna die,
she said as she went inside.
I follered her in. Well, she could!
There’s more to it than that, Sam, and a lot you don’t understand. If a person’s everything he should be, he won’t be thinkin’ of himself first … even if it means dyin’.
I thought my sister had gone plumb crazy. Where’d ya ever git that idea?
She motioned to the Bible on the sideboard. Right under your nose, silly … The Holy Scriptures.
I snorted and went to get a loaf of bread from the cupboard, where Ma always kept it in a big lard can.
That’s right,
insisted Charlotte. It says right there in the bible … you can’t have any greater love than to give your life for a friend.
I pondered what she’d said for a minute while I got a knife from the cupboard drawer and sliced me some bread, then I said, I don’t know anybody I’d die for.
She went to the sideboard, picked up the Bible, and stood by the window, thumbing through it. My sister was near sixteen and sure enough pretty, but when she talked about things in that book, her face lit up like a candle in the dark. I put some elderberry jam on my bread and took a bite. Would you die for me, Charlotte?
Startled, she gazed at me for a bit. I’d die for anyone in our family, Sam,
she said. Then her eyes took on a teasing look. And I’m sorry to say … that includes you.
I grinned at her, knowing by the way she said it, she wasn’t mad at me anymore for what I’d done down by the swimming hole. Then, all at once, I saw her stiffen as something caught her eye outside of the window. I could tell what she saw scared the scriptures right out of her.
Sam!
she gasped out. Come and look! Quick!
I hurried over, and what she was looking at made my knees go weak as water.
Injuns!
I gasped.
Charlotte didn’t say anything but just stared like she was in some kind of trance.
I ain’t never seen no Injuns like them before!
I exclaimed as I gaped beside Charlotte.
The only clothes they had on was some sort of loincloth made of real fancy material. They had bracelets on their arms and funny-looking moccasins that were cut out at the toes and laced up their legs with a fringe on top. The leader wore a gold headband that glinted in the sun. He put me in mind of a noble prince riding out of the past with his knights of old. They rode right toward our cabin, looking straight ahead, and I couldn’t get my eyes unglued from them.
Charlotte!
I finally gasped, … what’ll we do?
Dropping the Bible into her pocket, she backed away from the window and rushed over to the door, sliding the heavy bolt across it. I looked at her, then at the Indians, too scared to move. She jerked the heavy table from its place over the large braided rug covering the trapdoor that led into the root cellar.
Sam!
she yelled.
I finally got my legs working, but not before I took one last look at the Indians. They were almost to the cabin, and Charlotte was struggling with the trapdoor.
Sam! Get over here and help!
I got there in a hurry, and with both of us tugging on it, we finally got it open enough for charlotte to get through to the narrow stairway beneath. She held the door for me, but before climbing in, I had to take one last look, certain I’d see an Indian’s face staring through the window.
Sam!
Charlotte’s voice brought me scurrying through the opening. Then she dropped the door. The cellar was so black I could hardly find my way to the bottom of the stairs. We crouched in the corner, our eyes glued to the little slivers of light that leaked through the cracks around the trapdoor.
It was the first time we’d ever had to hide from anybody, and we didn’t know what to expect. About that time, the cabin door rattled like a keg of horseshoes rolling down a hill. My heart pushed up in my throat until I thought it would strangle me.
Charlotte!
I gasped, what if they find the trapdoor?
The door rattled again, much louder this time, then all was quiet. A big pine pole supported the floor of the cabin, and my sister grabbed a small coil of rope that hung on it and tied the trapdoor to the pole. We listened but couldn’t hear a sound.
Maybe they’ve gone,
I whispered.
You can bet they haven’t,
said Charlotte.
Then I had an awful thought. They’ll git Callie!
I said.
Hush!
But I don’t want them—
A loud crash from above cut me off as they broke the cabin window.
Oh! … they’re comin’ in!
I gasped.
Charlotte’s hand clamped over my mouth. Will you be still!
The floor creaked overhead as footsteps moved across it.
They’ll scalp us for sure!
I whimpered. I wish Pa’d come home.
Charlotte shook me good. Hush up, Sam. You start bawling—
The trapdoor jerking up and down cut her off, and my stomach turned inside out. From the slivers of light coming from above, I saw Charlotte’s face turn the color of Ma’s bread dough. She put her arm around me close to her as we huddled there in the dark. I could feel her body trembling against mine, and we watched in terror as the rope on the pole began to slip.
Come on!
she said, leaping to her feet. We’ve got to use the tunnel! It’s our only chance!
She didn’t have to tell me twice, and we felt our way to the corner of the cellar. The walls were crawly with cobwebs and spiders and all kinds of bugs, but we scraped them away from the door that was almost completely hidden. Charlotte slid the bolt back and tried to pull the door open. It was swelled up from the dampness of the cellar, and the hinges were rusted. It wouldn’t budge. I looked up at the trapdoor and almost hollered when I saw the eyes of an Indian brave peering down into the cellar. I felt Charlotte freeze and suck in her breath.
Please, God,
she whispered, we need your help. We’ve got to get out of here!
We tugged some more, then all at once, the door flew open just like someone had lambasted it from the other side. I scrambled into the small, crawly tunnel. I had to wiggle and squirm to move along and wondered if Charlotte could make it since she was bigger than me. I wasn’t long getting to the light at the other end, but I was careful about poking my head out. I could almost feel an Indian’s tomahawk splitting my skull. After seeing it was safe, I climbed out with Charlotte right after me. Any other time I’d have died laughing at her, she was so covered with dirt and trash. If she’d have known her hair was full of cobwebs and bugs, she’d have screeched her head off.
She grabbed my hand, and we sneaked through the low bushes that lined the yard until we came to the haystack. We kept that between us and the cabin as we headed for the corral. Then I spotted Callie! She was lying asleep in the shade, and I pulled up short. Charlotte gave me a hard jerk.
Come on!
she scolded me.
But they’ll git her for sure!
We can’t be worryin’ about that calf!
We could take her with us,
I argued.
On Gray Back? Don’t be silly. He’ll have trouble enough carryin’ both of us.
I felt like a big rock had been tied to my heart. I loved Callie. Pad had given her to me for my very own after a mountain lion had killed her ma, and I wasn’t about to leave her for no Indians. I kept pulling back, but Charlotte dragged me along the pole fence to the corral where our horse, Gray Back, stood like he was waiting for us. Charlotte took the bridle from the gate and put it on him. She swung up on his back, and all