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Asokoa was the beautiful daughter of a chief of one of the tribes of
the Blackfoot Confederacy. She was admired not only for her personal
attractions, but quite as much for her gentle disposition and winning
ways.
The Fish Eater's band had gone south to hunt the buffalo, and were
encamped on the bank of the muddy Missouri. These warriors were famous
for their prowess, and though they were occasionally attacked by the
Crow Indians, and had some of their horses stolen, they were not afraid
of their enemies. They were well equipped with guns and cartridges,
and felt that they could easily defeat any foe of equal numbers who
molested them.
It was during this hunting expedition that in a beautifully painted
buffalo-skin lodge an Indian babe was born. The women flocked to the
old chief's lodge when the medicine-woman announced that it had a new
occupant, but when they were told the baby was a girl they grieved.
The sad conditions of their own lives made them feel keenly for the
child who, if her life were spared, must bear the same burdens and
endure the same weary, monotonous existence of toil and misery as they.
The beauty of the babe as it grew, however, pleased them so much that
they forgot the sorrow of the future in the joy of the present. She
was fairer than the other babes in the camp, and this sent a thrill to
the hearts of the women. They loved the maidens who were fair, or
hated them when they grew jealous of their charms. The babe thrived
and grew lovelier day by day, its jet-black hair and eyes enhancing the
beauty and fairness of the face.
It was evening when the chief returned from his hunting expedition.
The mother had prepared the choice pieces of buffalo meat for his meal,
and waited anxiously for the moment when he should ask for the child;
but he entered silently and without any greeting, as was the Indian
custom. He was esteemed a great chief and had to maintain his dignity,
therefore could not condescend to notice his wife and children even
after a long absence.
Taking his accustomed seat opposite the lodge door, the food was placed
before him on the ground, and, as he lay half reclining he partook of
it heartily, but without betraying hunger or haste. After supper the
old men of the camp dropped in one by one to learn the success of his
expedition, and to talk over matters that were interesting to them all.
The little swinging hammock made of an old blanket thrown over two
ropes that were fastened to the lodge poles—the ends of the blanket so
placed inside that the weight of its occupant might hold it
down—contained the tiny stranger.
The babe was hidden snugly within a moss-bag. This moss-bag was richly
ornamented, and embroidered with beads and colored porcupine quills.
It was closed at the bottom, tapering to a point, and laced up after
the babe was placed in the soft moss with which it was lined. The bag
fitted closely about the head and neck, leaving only the face exposed.
When the mother is tired carrying her child she rests the moss-bag
upright against the wall, or hangs it up from the side of the lodge
with the babe in it. When she goes to visit friends at a distance she
rides on horseback in the same fashion as a man, and straps the
moss-bag with its occupant to the horn of the saddle or slings it over
her back. When she walks the invariable custom is to carry the babe on
her back, well up on the shoulders. Some of these mossbags are very
handsomely ornamented, the Indian mothers being as proud of them as the
fair daughters of the civilized race are of the tasteful, dainty
clothing of their children.
This particular moss-bag was very often filled with dry, soft moss,
that the child might be comfortable and happy in its dainty nest. On
the night of the chief's return it had been more than usually well
arranged and laid in the hammock.
The large pipe was prepared, the tobacco and kinni-kinnick brought out,
and after the chief had finished his meal the pipe was filled, lighted
and passed around from left to right. Each member of the company took
a few strong whiffs, some of the old men swallowing the last one and
expelling the smoke through their nostrils. The evening was passed in
animated conversation, the chief leading and the others listening
patiently, adding to the general interest by uttering a few words of
approval. When the conversation ended the guests retired quietly, and
the old chief, after taking a peep at the sleeping babe, turned on his
side and sought repose; but as he lay on his hard couch a smile of
satisfaction played on his features—the stern countenance of the
warrior had relaxed under the influence of an awakened love for the
little child.
The old man's heart had been steeled against sympathy and love; he had
lived for so many years in the midst of war and crime, and had
witnessed such acts of cruelty committed against his kindred by war
parties from other tribes, or marauding bands of white men, that his
heart was hardened. He seldom smiled; the joyous spirit of his youth
had departed, and left him old and sad.
When quite a youth he had resolved to devote his life to the service of
the gods, and for a long time he enjoyed the satisfaction of knowing he
was doing right. Then came a time of famine and sickness in the tribe,
during which the people died in great numbers and food was very scarce.
The people prayed, but no answer came to their prayers; then they
plunged into all sorts of wickedness, heedless of the evil that was
sure to follow.
After he was elected a chief he had been subjected to many jealousies
by those who had professed to be his dearest friends. He felt that
hypocrisy was rampant and friendship hollow. The gods were angry with
him, and they had leagued his friends and enemies in common warfare
against him. Naturally slow of speech, he grew still more reserved and
taciturn. He was, however, energetic in the discharge of the duties of
his office as chief, and thus maintained his influence over the people.
The quiet smile which now lingered on his features as he retired to
rest after he had looked upon the face of the child, betrayed that
there were depths of affection in his nature still untouched despite
the many years of pain, warfare and jealousy.
Nothing eventful occurred during the night. The morning sun rose
bright and glorious; an hour later the camp was all astir, busy with
the duties and occupations of the day. Amid the bustle around him the
chief lay still, taking needed rest after the toil of the expedition.
When he awoke late, his meal of buffalo meat and tea was set before
him. After he had eaten heartily, the visitors of the night before
returned to talk on matters affecting the camps and to relate the
various events that had occurred during his absence.
Time wore on; day after day was passed in the same dull routine. Now
and then the monotony was enlivened by the report of strange Indians
being in the vicinity and by the return of the young men from hunting
or horse-stealing expeditions. The babe in the old chief's lodge grew
and increased in beauty every day. They named her Asokoa, and the
toddling prattler answered readily when they spoke her name.
Asokoa's dress was a beautiful garment of soft antelope skin, made
after the fashion of a cape reaching nearly to her feet, fringed at the
edges and studded with several rows of bear's teeth and claws, so
sacred in the eyes of the Indians. Her moccasins were soft and
pliable, beautifully embroidered with dyed porcupine quills. A pair of
heavy shells hung from her ears, around her neck a string of bear's
claws, upon her wrists a number of bracelets made of rings of brass,
and smaller rings of the same bright metal covered her fingers between
the first and second joints. Her cheeks and the parting of her hair
were painted with vermilion, and the long black tresses of the child
were neatly combed and hung down her back.
Twelve years passed quickly amid the merry laughter and free out-door
life and sports of the camp, and the love and peace which dwelt in the
lodge of the old chief. Asokoa was still the pet of the lodge and the
pride of the old man's heart, but because of her sex she occupied an
inferior position and had to submit to the customs of the people.
Woman had not always been degraded, for in the early years of the
history of the Indians she had held equal rights with the men, those of
each sex performing their own duties and being honored by the other for
the possession of sterling qualities essentially their own. But the
circumstances of the Indians had changed, and with the change came a
gradual revolution of the old customs.
One day there came to the lodge of Asokoa's father an old man named
Running Deer, who was held in great esteem by the people as a warrior.
He would sit for hours smoking and recounting his many adventures, his
hairbreadth escapes from war parties of the Crows, Sioux and Gros
Ventres, the numerous scalp-locks he had taken and the horses he had
stolen. Although he repeated his stories frequently, the same respect
was shown and the same applause accorded as had greeted the first
recital.
Asokoa listened with the same attention as the others, and while she
admired the old man's courage and enthusiasm, thought no more of him
than any child of fourteen would of a man of sixty years of age. The
chief and Running Deer had several private conversations, which
invariably ended in some close bargain relative to camp affairs.
Two or three weeks passed and one day a young man rode up to the lodge
door and called out the chief's name. The latter rose and went out,
and after carefully examining the four young horses the young man had
brought, and being quite satisfied of their soundness, he bade him
drive them into his band.
The chief then returned to the lodge and the meal Asokoa had prepared
for him. He was restless and evidently troubled in mind. Occasionally
he would cast furtive glances about him, and seemed to be listening for
the approach of someone. His wives and children noted this uneasiness,
and remembered he had acted in the same manner when he had feared the
approach of a large war party of Assiniboines. They feared another
attack was threatened, but dare not ask any questions.
Presently the sound of horses approaching the lodge was heard, and
again the chief was called upon by name. He went out, but returned
immediately and told Asokoa there was a beautiful horse and saddle
waiting for her at the door. It was the gift of Running Deer, and he
had come to take her to his lodge, for she was now his wife and must
dwell with him for the future.
Asokoa turned pale, and startled by the suddenness of the announcement,
buried her face in her hands and wept. Then trembling from head to
foot with grief and anger, she gathered her clothes and ornaments
together and tore herself away from the home of her childhood where so
many happy days had been spent. She had admired Running Deer when he
visited her father's lodge, listened with interest to his adventures,
but how could she love him? She was still a child, only fourteen, and
she had been given in marriage without her knowledge to a man of sixty.
For the consideration of four horses she had been sold into slavery,
doomed to live secluded, to wait on the capricious humors of an old
man, to be one of the favored in his Indian harem.
It was the custom, and so it would be useless for her to speak a word
of protest. Mounting the horse she rode away quietly in the company of
her husband. After a ride of about three miles they reached the camp
and the lodge which was to be her home. The women came out to meet
her, and a few of her friends gathered around, but in silence she
unsaddled the horse, put a pair of hobbles on his fore-feet, carried
the saddle into the lodge, and took the place assigned to her beside
its master.
The lodge was a handsome one, capacious, and strongly built of buffalo
hides. It was ornamented on the outside with pictures painted in many
colors. Several scalp-locks which Running Deer had taken from the
heads of the enemies he had slain in battle, hung down the side. Three
other wives dwelt in the lodge, and Asokoa would be obliged to submit
to the rule of the one who was the queen.
A sumptuous feast was placed before her, but she could eat little, her
heart was too full. The girl felt that she had been wronged, yet that
there was no way of escaping her fate; custom was too strong to be
altered for her.
The previous wives of Running Deer were jealous of Asokoa and looked
upon her as an intruder, but they said nothing, showing their dislike
only by the sullen glances they cast at her as she flung herself down
on the couch of furs, and took the place reserved for her.
For several months Asokoa's lot was not altogether an unhappy one,
presenting, as it did, a pleasant contrast to the lives of many of the
other women in the camp. This was chiefly due to her own liveliness of
disposition, which enabled her to retain her self-respect by attending
carefully to her dress and keeping herself clean and neat. The women
in the camps after marriage generally become careless and untidy, and
in some instances filthy: but Asokoa had too much self-esteem to so
forget herself, and this pride stood her in good stead, helping her to
retain her dignity as a chief's daughter and meet successfully all the
cavils of the jealous ones in the camp. Quarrels were frequent among
the women, but as Asokoa took no part in these family brawls, she was
saved much sorrow and daily annoyances.
Running Deer was held in high respect by the young men of the tribe,
many of whom paid long visits to the camp to listen to the wondrous
tales he had to tell, and learn from him the ways of successful
warfare. Among the visitors who always received a cordial welcome was
Saotan, the gifted son of Eagle Rib, one of the most famous chiefs of
the tribe.
Saotan only desired to follow in his father's footsteps, and was glad
to seize every opportunity to obtain a knowledge of the military and
political affairs of his people. He was amiable and unassuming, tall
and dignified, and had already won the esteem of the older men. As he
grew older his prospects of promotion brightened. He had kept himself
free from the escapades of the younger men about him, some of whom
hated him for his reticence and apparent haughtiness of manner. He
paid little attention, however, to their sarcastic remarks, but
followed unmoved the path he had marked out for himself. As he
listened to the animated narrations of Running Deer he imbibed his
spirit of enthusiasm, and felt inspired to do and dare noble things for
his race.
During the long winter months, as the camp was moved from place to
place, Saotan spent much of his time with the old man, and Running Deer
became strongly attached to him. Asokoa was always with her husband,
and his tales assumed a new interest to her in the presence of Saotan;
and though she could not in words invite the young man to the lodge,
she encouraged him to come by greeting him always with a pleasant
smile. His visits relieved the tedium of her life and distracted her
from the annoyance caused by the constant quarrelling between the other
women.
The first months of her married life had passed, and Running Deer's
affection for his young bride had cooled. The degradation of her life
made her heart heavy, and robbed her cheek of the bloom of health.
Asokoa seldom paid a visit to her father's lodge, as it was now some
distance from Running Deer's camp. Indian women are not allowed to
travel alone or unaccompanied by their husbands. All unconscious that
she was doing more than pleasing her husband she grew to look forward
to Saotan's visits with increasing interest, and as he saw his presence
was welcome he came more frequently. Life seemed to recover its
brightness again, the charm of youth returned, and Asokoa felt for the
first time the power of love.
Saotan was soon drawn within the same influence, and the distance
between his father's lodge and Running Deer's seemed short indeed.
Saotan was in love, but dare not reveal it. The woods and valleys
might be full of enchantment, his dreams be of happiness and joy, his
waking hours full of light and life, yet they were also haunted by
anxious fears for the future. He left his food untasted, ceased to
visit the lodges of his young friends, and tried to restrain his steps
from turning toward Running Deer's lodge, but all in vain.
Important business affecting the tribe called her husband to attend
frequent gatherings of the chiefs in council, and Asokoa was left at
the lodge. The horses had to be looked after in his absence, and he
entrusted the duty to Saotan. Thus Asokoa and Saotan met more
frequently; from looks to words the transition was slight, and the
story of their love was told. Cruel custom forbade their making any
confession to the old man or seeking freedom from polygamous
relationship, and they trembled for the result of the discovery of
their passion.
A more than usually long and important meeting of the council, at which
a discussion on the question of war with the Gros Ventres had been
prolonged to a late hour, had detained Running Deer so late that he
accepted an invitation to remain the night at a friend's lodge. Early
the next morning he returned to his home rejoicing in the consciousness
of power. His voice had been heard and his arguments had prevailed at
the council, winning him a signal victory over the chiefs who had
opposed him.
As he entered the lodge an expression of evil satisfaction beamed from
the faces of his older wives. At first he took no notice, then
suddenly his heart was filled with foreboding. He looked and saw that
the place usually occupied by Asokoa was vacant. Inquiring the reason
of her absence, he learned that on the previous evening she had gone to
visit a woman in one of the adjoining lodges and had not returned.
Running Deer turned and went out, quiet, dignified and sullen,
determined to punish the delinquent for her unfaithfulness. Mounting
his horse, which stood where he had left it a few moments before, he
rode swiftly to the coulee where his band of horses were feeding, and
found his wife's among them. Asokoa must be ill or something serious
must have befallen her; her horse was still among the band, and she
could not have left the camps. He went hurriedly from lodge to lodge
making anxious inquiries, but could find no tidings of his missing
wife. Then widening his circle of search, he went from camp to camp,
yet found no trace of her until he reached the lodges of Eagle Rib.
Two horses had been taken from the chief's band, and Saotan had not
been seen since the previous day. Burning with indignation, his former
love changed to bitter hatred, and vowing vengeance on the young man
who had supplanted him in the affections of Asokoa, he strode to the
chief and demanded his daughter, but Eagle Rib could give him no
information of the whereabouts of the fugitive couple.
Several months had passed, and Running Deer's anger had cooled. He had
given up all search for the lost ones; he hated the names they bore,
and would not permit them to be mentioned in his presence. He had
apparently forgotten them when a messenger arrived to announce their
discovery among the Piegan tribe, one of the same confederacy as the
Bloods and Blackfeet.
Weary of exile and anxious to dwell once more among their own people in
their old home, Saotan and Asokoa had returned, preferring to risk the
punishment which might be inflicted for their wrong-doing. They sought
refuge in the lodge of Eagle Rib, where they hoped to be protected by
the influence of the chief. But law and custom is stronger than the
individual, and the demands of justice are more powerful among the
savage tribes than in any other organization or race of men. The chief
might retard the operations of the Indian laws, but he could not
overcome them.
Night had fallen upon the camp and the dwellers in the lodges were
retired to rest, when three men entered and seized Asokoa. A band of
men waited on horseback outside. These were the Black Soldiers, the
policemen of the camp, enrolled to maintain order and execute justice.
They had entered the camp so quietly that no one had heard their
approach.
Asokoa uttered no complaint or cry as they dragged her out, although in
times of pain or trouble the Indian women are generally loud in their
lamentations. Deceived by her quiet acquiescence, the men mounted her
on one of the horses and allowed her to ride behind them on the way to
the place of judgment. The night was dark, and as they passed a clump
of bushes Asokoa slid off the horse, and, crouching down in the shadows
till her guards were at some distance, fled back again to her
father-in-law's lodge. The Black Soldiers rode on, unsuspecting any
misfortune, and had almost reached their destination before they
discovered that the Indian beauty had eluded them. They returned at
once to recapture her, but as they once more entered the lodge and
demanded her of the chief, she stooped down and made her escape by
crawling under the leather flap of the lodge, which Eagle Rib had taken
the precaution to leave unfastened. Then she sped away in the darkness
until she was joined by Saotan, who mounted her on his horse, and
together they crossed the river, and by hard riding reached the shelter
of the home of a white friend before the early dawn broke.
Negotiations were entered into between Eagle Rib and Running Deer for
an amicable settlement of the matter. The angry husband had felt so
embittered against the woman who had never loved him that he had
himself sharpened the knife, determined to inflict the usual punishment
for unfaithfulness, that of cutting off the nose. Many instances of
such mutilation are in existence in the Indian camps.
The two old men talked the matter over fully, and at last a settlement
was agreed upon. Running Deer accepted five horses and a gun as
compensation, and Saotan and Asokoa were free to return once more and
live in peace among their own people. The days which followed the
return of the lovers were very happy ones. Love dwelt in the lodge
that was made beautiful by Asokoa; she lived for Saotan and adorned his
home with every ornament and device that love could suggest. On his
part, Saotan loved her so supremely that he never brought another woman
to his lodge to share his love or supplant her in his loving attentions.
A dark-eyed babe came to gladden their hearts, a beautiful boy who
Asokoa said should grow up and be like his father. They rejoiced
together in the possession of this treasure, and when a few months
later the destroying angel came and snatched their darling from their
arms they mourned together over their darkened home.
Saotan and Asokoa had dwelt in perfect happiness for three years when a
war expedition was organized to go southward and retaliate upon their
enemies for the depredations the tribe had suffered at their hands.
Two of these young men had been killed, and the desire was to kill
their enemies, that the young men's spirits might rest in the happy
spirit land.
The war party had chosen Saotan as their leader, and he was obliged to
bid Asokoa a reluctant farewell. The affectionate wife gazed long and
sadly after his retreating form as he rode away over the plains. They
were not going to wage open warfare, but secretly to return with scalps
as compensation for the loss of some of their own young men, and
Asokoa's heart was heavy with foreboding of evil.
At the expiration of two weeks the Indians in the camps looked for the
return of Saotan and his party. Four weeks had gone and there were no
tidings. Two young men were sent out to trace them and learn the cause
of delay. Meanwhile the sole topic of conversation in the lodges was
the long absence of Saotan. Various rumors were circulated, but the
truth concerning their fate could not be learned. Small parties of
Piegans, Blackfeet and Sarcees called at the camps, but none brought
any tidings of the missing men.
After many days of anxious waiting, the search party returned. Long
before they reached the camp the people descried them on the distant
hills, riding slowly, and their horses appearing to be tired out. The
people ran to meet them, the women anxious to hear what news they
brought. They listened for the songs of exultation, but alas! heard
only that wail of sorrow which strikes terror to the Indian woman's
heart.
The chiefs gathered in one of the lodges to listen to the story of the
young men. They had ridden five nights on their journey, searching
carefully for any trace of Saotan and his men. Not an Indian was to be
seen anywhere; the country appeared to be deserted, and they thought it
would be wise to return. A short consultation was held, and as they
walked their horses slowly they came to the bank of a small stream
where they noticed a branch was broken from a tree overhanging the
water. Searching more closely, they found marks of horses' feet, and
following the tracks, they came upon a spot where it was evident a
battle had been fought, for near at hand lay the skeletons of Saotan
and his men. The Indians who had slain them had taken their
scalp-locks, their arms and ornaments, and the buzzard, coyote and wolf
had stripped the bones; but there were enough fragments of clothing
scattered about to enable the young men to recognize that the remains
were those of Saotan and the party who had gone out so full of hope and
confidence so short a time before.
As the young men related their sorrowful tale, the chiefs' countenances
betokened the direst anger, and while they muttered and plotted
revenge, the women slipped away to carry the story of widowhood, pain
and degradation to Asokoa. Overwhelmed with grief for her loss, the
poor woman thought only that Saotan could never return to her again,
and did not realize that the medicine-women were already on their way
to perform the ceremonies of mourning for the dead.
These women laid their hands upon her, and in a few moments the long
black hair that had been her glory fell in masses to the ground. Her
neatly embroidered garments were then removed and the oldest and most
worn substituted; then, laying the bereaved woman's hand on a block of
wood, one of the medicine-women took a knife, and using a deer's-horn
scraper as a hammer, severed one of the fingers at the first joint.
Her legs were next denuded of the handsome leggings, and the flesh
gashed with a knife from the knees to the feet. The blood clotted as
it trickled down and was allowed to remain.
Asokoa submitted willingly to all these inflictions of pain and
mutilation; it was the custom, and she felt that she was only doing as
she should to prove the reality of her grief for the loss of her
husband by enduring it all without a murmur. A few of the old women
sat with her in the lodge as companions in her grief; then as the sun
sank in the western sky, Asokoa wandered out over the prairie, weeping
bitterly and uttering the wailing cry of bereavement, "Saotan, come
back to me! Saotan, come back to me!" But no voice replied, as the
wailing cadences floated on the evening air.
When the darkness fell, the mourner returned, the people evading
contact with her as she passed by the lodges. An hour or two of
sleeplessness spent in the lodge and the early dawn found her repeating
the same sad wail for the dead. The people mourned with her, but said
little; young and old hung their heads as she passed them. Some of the
women shed tears of sympathy and the men spoke often of the death of
Saotan the brave, and murmured vengeance on the enemy who had slain him.
The days of Asokoa's mourning were long, and at first there seemed
nothing left for her but death; but time, that healer of many wounds,
was here in the Indian camp as elsewhere. Asokoa was too handsome and
young, of too good birth and pleasant a disposition, to remain long
without a suitor. Sekimi, a dignified warrior, took her to his lodge
to be his wife, and for a long time was contented and happy with her
alone. He could not have had a better wife. Asokoa was devoted to her
home, and kept the lodge well and comfortable for husband.
Some months had passed when she noticed that Sekimi seemed to lose
interest in his home, to be dull and restless. Asokoa did not despair,
but sang her sweetest songs, cooked the daintiest morsels, prepared the
choicest meals, and endeavored by every means within her reach to wean
him from his melancholy and make him happy. Some burden rested heavily
on his heart and blinded him to all the winning ways of his faithful
and beautiful wife.
Sekimi rose early on one bright summer day, and after taking his
morning meal hastily went out. He turned his steps to where his band
of horses were feeding, and selecting three of the best, rode away.
Asokoa had a quiet day, no visitor coming to the lodge. When evening
closed in she heard the sound of horsemen riding toward the camp, and
as they drew near she heard the notes of a low, sweet song and readily
distinguished her husband's voice among the others. Sekimi was
returning happy; the burden laid upon his spirits was removed, and
Asokoa, fully content, hastened to prepare some special dainty for his
evening meal and be ready to welcome him.
In a short time the horses stopped at the lodge door, and the tones of
a woman chatting gaily made Asokoa's heart beat with apprehension.
Sekimi entered, and speaking haughtily, bade Asokoa set food before
them. Greater sorrow had never fallen upon Asokoa. Her love and pride
were hurt by the knowledge that she had been superseded by another;
love drew tears to her eyes, but pride forbade them to fall.
The days which followed the arrival of the new wife were a dull round
of drudgery and sorrow, but Asokoa went about her work in silence. She
was left much alone, and in time grew accustomed to her sad lot.
Always patient, she bore her trials with even greater patience and
submission than ever, but the handsome Indian woman was not so erect as
formerly and the glow of health had long fled from her cheeks. The old
women watched her sadly and tried to cheer her; the children clung to
her, and leaning against her knees as she sat beside the river,
listened to the tales she loved to tell them. As health failed, when
too weak to leave the lodge she would lie still for hours, suffering
but never complaining.
The long July and August days passed, and the cool air of autumn
brought some relief to the dying woman. The medicine-men beat their
drums and sang their songs for her with great energy, but Asokoa begged
them to cease; she wished only for quiet and peace.
The leaves were falling from the trees on the distant bluffs when the
end came. The old chief, the father who had looked with such love and
pride on the face of his child as it hung in the hammock, sat sorrowful
at the door of the lodge waiting for the approach of the death-angel.
As the sun sank behind the distant mountains, Asokoa raised her hand,
and pointing to some object which seemed to hold the fixed gaze of her
eyes, her lips moved. As if gathering her remaining strength for a
last effort, she cried, "Saotan!" and with the name of her best-loved
on her lips Asokoa's released spirit took its flight.
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