登陆注册
38536200000093

第93章

I HAD before this spent days among the Indians, on voyages of discovery, as conqueror, as negotiator for food, exchanging blue beads for corn and turkeys. Other Englishmen had been with me.

Knowing those with whom we dealt for sly and fierce heathen, friends to-day, to-morrow deadly foes, we kept our muskets ready and our eyes and ears open, and, what with the danger and the novelty and the bold wild life, managed to extract some merriment as well as profit from these visits. It was different now.

Day after day I ate my heart out in that cursed village. The feasting and the hunting and the triumph, the wild songs and wilder dances, the fantastic mummeries, the sudden rages, the sudden laughter, the great fires with their rings of painted warriors, the sleepless sentinels, the wide marshes that could not be crossed by night, the leaves that rustled so loudly beneath the lightest footfall, the monotonous days, the endless nights when I thought of her grief, of her peril, maybe, - it was an evil dream, and for my own pleasure I could not wake too soon.

Should we ever wake? Should we not sink from that dream without pause into a deeper sleep whence there would be no waking? It was a question that I asked myself each morning, half looking to find another hollow between the hills before the night should fall. The night fell, and there was no change in the dream.

I will allow that the dark Emperor to whom we were so much beholden gave us courteous keeping. The best of the hunt was ours, the noblest fish, the most delicate roots. The skins beneath which we slept were fine and soft; the women waited upon us, and the old men and warriors held with us much stately converse, sitting beneath the budding trees with the blue tobacco smoke curling above our heads. We were alive and sound of limb, well treated and with the promise of release; we might have waited, seeing that wait we must, in some measure of content. We did not so. There was a horror in the air. From the marshes that were growing green, from the sluggish river, from the rotting leaves and cold black earth and naked forest, it rose like an exhalation. We knew not what it was, but we breathed it in, and it went to the marrow of our bones.

Opechancanough we rarely saw, though we were bestowed so near to him that his sentinels served for ours. Like some god, he kept within his lodge with the winding passage, and the hanging mats between him and the world without. At other times, issuing from that retirement, he would stride away into the forest. Picked men went with him, and they were gone for hours; but when they returned they bore no trophies, brute or human. What they did we could not guess. We might have had much comfort in Nantauquas, but the morning after our arrival in this village the Emperor sent him upon an embassy to the Rappahannocks, and when for the fourth time the forest stood black against the sunset he had not returned. If escape had been possible, we would not have awaited the doubtful fulfillment of that promise made to us below the Uttamussac temples. But the vigilance of the Indians never slept; they watched us like hawks, night and day. And the dry leaves underfoot would not hold their peace, and there were the marshes to cross and the river.

Thus four days dragged themselves by, and in the early morning of the fifth, when we came from our wigwam, it was to find Nantauquas sitting by the fire, magnificent in the paint and trappings of the ambassador, motionless as a piece of bronze, and apparently quite unmindful of the admiring glances of the women who knelt about the fire preparing our breakfast. When he saw us he rose and came to meet us, and I embraced him, I was so glad to see him. "The Rappahannocks feasted me long," he said. "I was afraid that Captain Percy would be gone to Jamestown before I was back upon the Pamunkey."

"Shall I ever see Jamestown again, Nantauquas?" I demanded. "I have my doubts."

He looked me full in the eyes, and there was no doubting the candor of his own. "You go with the next sunrise," he answered.

"Opechancanough has given me his word."

"I am glad to hear it," I said. "Why have we been kept at all? Why did he not free us five days agone?"

He shook his head. "I do not know. Opechancanough has many thoughts which he shares with no man. But now he will send you with presents for the Governor, and with messages of his love to the white men. There will be a great feast to-day, and to-night the young men and maidens will dance before you. Then in the morning you will go."

"Will you not come with us?" I asked. "You are ever welcome amongst us, Nantauquas, both for your sister's sake and for your own. Rolfe will rejoice to have you with him again; he ever grudgeth you to the forest."

He shook his head again. "Nantauquas, the son of Powhatan, hath had much talk with himself lately," he said simply. "The white men's ways have seemed very good to him, and the God of the white men he knows to be greater than Okee, and to be good and tender; not like Okee, who sucks the blood of the children. He remembers Matoax, too, and how she loved and cared for the white men and would weep when danger threatened them. And Rolfe is his brother and his teacher. But Opechancanough is his king, and the red men are his people, and the forest is his home. If, because he loved Rolfe, and because the ways of the white men seemed to him better than his own ways, he forgot these things, he did wrong, and the One over All frowns upon him. Now he has come back to his home again, to the forest and the hunting and the warpath, to his king and his people. He will be again the panther crouching upon the bough" -

"Above the white men?"

He gazed at me in silence, a shadow upon his face. "Above the Monacans," he answered slowly. "Why did Captain Percy say 'above the white men'? Opechancanough and the English have buried the hatchet forever, and the smoke of the peace pipe will never fade from the air. Nantauquas meant 'above the Monacans or the Long House dogs.' "

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 诡路谜踪

    诡路谜踪

    爷爷去世后,收拾他的遗物时,无意中发现了一些旧照片,照片上的人竟然出现在了我们三代人的中学生活里。这引起了我强烈的好奇心,沿着神秘文字这一线索,涉足河南老君山的密林中,踏上了昆仑山脉的布达拉峰,在哪里发现了同样的神秘文字,也找到了让人不敢现象的史前文物。探寻的过程中,我发现了我们刘氏家族守护了几千年的秘密,除了长生,家族世代的长子长孙还守护着一个有关人类的起源和终结的秘密。原来,国家早在十几年前就秘密成立了寻找史前文明的小组,他们在探寻过程中,发现了一个又一个让人难以置信的秘密。
  • 卿与日月

    卿与日月

    浮华三千,吾爱有三,日月与卿;日为朝,月为暮,卿为朝朝暮暮。钟璃升天成仙,带领众弟子在商业大"杀”四方,取得了一项又一项成绩,却不知一个接一个的圈套等着他和她……
  • 灵铠

    灵铠

    前世惊艳的武学高手;后世罕见的千古废人!运命的捉弄,灵魂的重生,是福是祸,孰能知晓!一个八系灵力并存的异世里,每一个人的灵魂都有着自己的归属,能在这八系灵力中找到自己的灵魂属性,而他却找不到属于自己灵魂属性……无意间的踏出的一小步,打开了一个前所未有的大门,在生与死的边缘游走,慢慢探求着属于自己的路途,最后成就一代传说,达到了众人都无法匹及的高度……………………………………实力等级:灵徒、灵生、灵者、灵士、灵师、灵宗、灵尊、灵王、灵帝、灵圣
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 贤者之裔

    贤者之裔

    莱茵国突然爆发了一场席卷全国的“BloodVirus”(血疫病毒)。所有的绿茵国民,无一幸免都感染上了“BloodVirus”,而凡是感染上“BloodVirus”的人,会分不同阶段的,逐渐变成只知道嗜血的怪物。在这种情况下,绿茵国一片混乱,经过国际联盟判定,绿茵国已经失去了国家主权,将由天王星国际联盟派遣军队与科学家接管绿茵国的一切,并且全力帮助绿茵国解决血疫病毒的危机。国际联盟派遣的军队与科学家组成统治机构SER,开始接管绿茵国的一切,于是,在经历了病毒爆发初期的混乱后的绿茵国,迎来了一种畸形的和平。在这种畸形的统治下,各种不稳定的因素逐渐诞生。
  • 末世沧澜

    末世沧澜

    大灾变,丧尸如潮,黑暗席卷大地,暗世界入侵倒计时开始,一位少年于黑暗崛起,修炼无极混沌决,逆袭再逆袭,一己之力对抗无边黑暗,杀丧尸,斩群魔,我命不由天。身是光明,投入黑暗,十死无生,轰轰烈烈,最后只求问心无愧,只落得一个问心无愧。
  • 这部书有毒

    这部书有毒

    扑街漫画家仙宇意外猝死,穿越到平行世界的倒霉蛋身上新书:《我有交易抽奖系统》:身具交易抽奖系统,从此踏上人生巅峰。交易价值十万,奖励一次抽奖机会...恭喜抽到葵花宝典。易武久:就不能来一点正常的东西么?
  • 青梅太悍,竹马太猛

    青梅太悍,竹马太猛

    这是一个女流氓耍流氓最后反被流氓的故事。当年,六岁的宋芷心仗着自己城墙般厚的脸皮,作死地去调戏看似小白实则大灰狼的夏意,极致蹂躏了夏少爷精致的脸蛋之后,本着拍拍屁股走人的不负责态度,继续她的流氓事业,熟料那厮就是个阴毒的变态,她调戏一人,他就加倍调戏回她。这可怎么得了,想她宋芷心在江湖上横行霸道多年,从来没吃过亏,当然,这主要依赖她那个极为对她极宠并护短的爷爷,没人敢戏弄她,如今竟然屡屡受挫,不行,她要远离这个死变态,继续她的宏图伟业,但,事实证明,理想很丰满,现实很骨感。于是,在某个夜黑风高的夜晚,夏大少对她流氓时,宋小妞悲苦望天:“我靠,一失足成千古恨啊”。
  • 我在北京读博士

    我在北京读博士

    年事已高,重回校园,替女同事问候青春,替孩子们问候理想!真人写实,校园连载,陪我再读一次大学!