
A cold, star‑studded night hangs over the remote Cascades, where the silhouette of Mount Baker watches a strange, flickering fire break the darkness. From the shadows emerge a circle of Indigenous figures, their simple cedar skirts rustling as they chant and beat drum‑like instruments around a gruesome pyre. The air is thick with resin smoke, the crackle of burning wood, and an unsettling melody that feels both ritualistic and foreign to any European ear.
Through the eyes of a lone observer, the scene unfolds into a haunting tableau of loss and allegiance. A widowed woman, surrounded by several husbands, stands at the heart of the ceremony, her presence hinting at complex customs and uneasy alliances among the tribes. As the flames rise, questions of loyalty, survival, and the encroaching world of outsiders begin to surface, promising a tale that delves deep into the final days of a people whose way of life teeters on the brink.
Language
fr
Duration
~6 hours (353K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Rénald Lévesque
Release date
2006-03-20
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1828–1879
A restless 19th-century French writer, journalist, and librarian, he turned exile, travel, and politics into adventure-filled fiction. His books often drew on life in North America, blending popular storytelling with a strong taste for history and frontier drama.
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