That night Nacoochee steals away from her father's log house to meet with Sautee, under the giant white oak, now known as
the Sautee Oak. By this time, they are helplessly and hopelessly in love. The rest of Sautee's party counsels against this
madness. No good could possibly come of this flagrant violation of their truce. If Wahoo, the girl's father, learned of this
meeting, all would be doomed. But, then, as now, teenagers feel they must defy the "Establishment." "Run, if you must,"
Sautee tells his followers, "but, I remain here with Nacoochee. Together we will make Wahoo understand. This must be the first step to a lasting peace between our two nations."
The young lovers then flee to nearby Yonah Mountain. There in a secret cave known only to Nacoochee they spend a few idyllic days. They have their love. They have each other. But, destiny calls to a larger purpose, peace between two great tribes. To this end, out they come to face Wahoo. With such a just and lofty purpose, how could they not succeed?
Wahoo is a great Chief and has wisdom to handle all problems but this time, when compassion and understanding are most needed, he is blinded by hate and chagrin that his beloved Nacoochee would choose a Chickasaw to himself. He ordered Sautee thrown from the high cliffs of Yonah Mountain, while Nacoochee is forced to look on. Life without her Sautee holds no promise. Nacoochee tears away from the restraining hands of her father and she, too, leaps from the high cliff.
There at the foot of the cliff the young lovers are joined again. Though clinically dead, they do not surrender to death . . . not just yet. They find fierce strength in their love. They drag their broken bodies together. Then, locked in final embrace, they die.
This is how Wahoo finds them. Too late, a flash of understanding comes over him. Too late, he is aware of the greatness of love. Too late, the lost opportunity for a lasting peace with the Chickasaws. Wahoo is now overcome with remorse. He has the two bodies, still locked in death, laid to rest on the banks of the Chattahoochee River, there to remain for eternity, in a burial mound that still stands at the junction of Georgia Highway 17 and Georgia Highway 75.
So that the lesson to be learned from this tragedy may never be forgotten, he renames the two valleys where first the young lovers met, one for Sautee and the other Nacoochee.
The Cherokees considered themselves to be a superior race, as indeed they were. Handsome, tall and intelligent, they even had an alphabet, the first in America. They were not nomads; they built log

