It was only a matter of time now.
Through that morning Shad and the Pawnee scouts came across two of the Cheyenne campsites, in addition to the camp he had watched Tall Bull’s people setting up the night before. In a matter of grueling, sand-slogging miles, Major Carr’s Fifth Cavalry had eaten up the Dog Soldiers’ lead by three days. It was there at the site of the enemy’s last camp that the regimental commander halted, ordering the entire outfit prepared for any eventuality from here on out. As well, Carr sent back a half dozen of the Pawnee trackers and two soldiers to bring in with all possible speed the supply train due down from Fort McPherson.
As the sun grew all the hotter and the men sat sweating beside Frenchman’s Fork, Shad watched a discussion on the command’s readiness turn into a petty argument as tempers flared, embroiling both Carr and Major Frank North. While the civilian did all that he could to urge keeping the column on the move to catch the enemy before the Cheyenne reached the South Platte, Carr steadfastly clung to his need to resupply his command before coming in contact with that enemy.
“But if you’re suggesting that I have no other choice, Major North—then I’ll order a forced march with two battalions. The rest I’ll leave behind to await the supply train.”
“We’ve got to move now, General. That village finds out we’re back here,” the younger Luther North grumbled, “they’ll bolt on us. And we’ll be left with nothing but feathers—instead of capturing the whole goose.”
After grappling with his dilemma, Carr finally decided. To the North brothers and his officers he explained, “This is simply a gamble I have to take. I can’t push ahead recklessly, what with the certainty that I will scatter that village full of bloody-eyed warriors to the four winds … and have them bump into my supply train out there, somewhere, rolling in here with an inadequate escort.”
“You fail to put this command on the march right now, you might be missing the greatest opportunity of your career,” Frank North grumbled.
“Yeah,” brother Luther agreed. “General, what do you think Custer would do if he had that village of red bastards within reach?”
Such transparent goading clearly angered the distinguished Civil War veteran. Carr was bristling as he finally squared his jaw and glared back at the two North brothers. Shad admired the soldier all the more as the soldier’s words came out clipped and even, but with the ring of a hammer on a cold anvil.
“Major, and Captain—I’ll note your exception for the record of this campaign. Know this now, so that you do not find yourselves attempting to bait me in the future. Eugene Carr will let others rush in for the glory: George Armstrong Custer and those like him. And while this regiment is under my command, our rear guard and all civilian teamsters in my employ will be protected. I’ll not have their deaths on my conscience for the sake of personal glory. By Jupiter—there won’t be a single Major Joel Elliott abandoned by the Fifth Cavalry!”
Shad watched Carr stomp away, his adjutant hurrying behind in the major’s wake.
“He’s still saddle-raw over last winter’s campaign,” Cody said quietly as he stopped beside Sweete.
“I heard your outfit came up empty-handed.”
Cody nodded. “Busting snow, saving Penrose’s brunettes, starving ourselves and killing our horses in a prairie blizzard—while all the glory for Sheridan’s campaign went to Sheridan’s favorite fair-haired boy.”
“Custer?”
“He jumped a small village on the Washita, ran off the warriors, and captured some squaws. Then turned tail and skedaddled—as I hear the tale of it—leaving Major Elliott and eighteen men to get chewed up by the warriors from the villages camped farther upstream.”
Sweete said, “If I found Carr was the kind of commander what left any of his own behind—then I’d be the first nigger to pull up my picket pin and leave this campaign to the rest of you.”
Cody nodded. “Likely, I’d be pulling out with you. But Carr ain’t a Custer.”
After making camp and waiting for his supply train to come in from McPherson, Carr ordered the fires extinguished before dark, suggesting the men get what rest they could.
Two hours past midnight on the morning of 11 July, he had them up in the gray, waning light of moonset. No fires were lit. No coffee was brewed. Only the cold leavings of last night’s supper and a daily ration of hard-bread were allowed as the men saddled and counted cartridges. By four A.M. the major had his column moving out in light marching order.
This was to be the day Major Eugene Carr’s Fifth U.S. Cavalry hoped to chip away the last shreds of Tall Bull’s lead.
Theirs had been a gallant, courageous effort already: more than 150 miles covered in the past four days of endless, torturous march—driven to the point of utter exhaustion by the man who had stared, and stared some more at those tiny boot prints in the sand days back.
Once again Shad stood amazed at the hardiness of these youngsters as they grumbled back and forth through the darkness, at least until they were ordered to horse. Once in the saddle and moving out beneath the last of that summer starshine, the column fell silent. No sound but the squeak of prairie-dried leather, the chink of bit and crupper, the slap of carbine On a sling against a McClellan saddle: horse soldiers about their deadly business of bringing war to the Dog Soldiers who had for too long cut a bloody swath through the far-flung settlements of white families staking out new lives for themselves on the ancient buffalo feeding grounds.
The red man was in his time of the yellow leaf. And the soldier was come to hurry the final day.
By the time the night weakened its grip on this high prairie, holding morning in temporary abeyance above this tableland in far-eastern Colorado Territory, the Pawnee rode back to the head of the column to report that they feared the Cheyenne were breaking up into three bands. North delivered the bitter news to Carr, gloating a bit as he did.
“Thank you, Major—but Bill Cody already surmised as much.”
A gray cloud passed over Frank North’s face. “With your permission, General: I’m suggesting you put out a reconnaissance in force, in three parties.”
Carr turned to his young scout. “Mr. Cody here believes the Cheyenne will be regrouping before going into camp.”
“They’re breaking up—and you’re going to let them slip right through your fingers, General!” North said, his voice cracking in anxiety.
Can glanced at Cody, perhaps experiencing some self-doubt. “How can you … how can we be so sure the Cheyenne won’t escape?”
Cody’s eyes flicked at Sweete.
“Go ’head, Bill. Tell the general what you and me talked about early this morning.”
Cody squared his shoulders. “General, Mr. Sweete and me figure Tall Bull is a cagey old bastard—just splitting up to throw you off his track. We’ll bet the farm that village already knows your pony soldiers are hot on their trail.”
A look of panic crossed the major’s face. “Then you’re agreeing that the village is splitting up.”
The young scout shook his head emphatically. “Even if he is splitting up the village to throw you off, in the end Tall Bull’s still in the same boat we are.”
Carr’s brow bunched in confusion. “Which is?”
“His people gotta have water.”
“And that means something to us?”
With a nod Cody answered, “They’ll have to regroup by the time they reach the Platte.”
“The South Platte?” Carr inquired, gazing into the glimmering, sunburned distance. “That means we’ve penetrated Colorado Territory.”
“That’s right, General,” Shad spoke up. “It’s time you pushed this outfit, dragged the last these men and animals can give.”
“Bound where, Mr. Sweete?”
But Cody piped up, “For the platte, General.”
“You get your outfit there first,” Shad emphasized. “Have your men between the river and that village when it re-forms and comes up for water.”
“And if we don’t
get there before Tall Bull does?” Carr asked.
Sweete shook his head. “Those Dog Soldiers will get their families across the Platte and you’ll be eating their dust from here all the way to the Laramie Plains.”
“We miss ’em at the river, General,” Cody pleaded his case. “We’ll never catch ’em.”
“I take exception with these two, General Carr,” Frank North broke in. “What’s to guarantee that village is moving toward the Platte? No, General—I say if you don’t follow all three of those trails, you’ll lose everything this campaign was sent out here to do.”
Carr contemplated his dilemma, looking from Sweete to Cody, then to North, and finally peered over his men and animals behind him, that long, dark ribbon stretched out across the fawn-colored terrain, sweltering beneath the same sun that he had hoped would bring him the destruction of Tall Bull’s Dog Soldiers.
“All right—Cody’s and Sweete’s advice to the contrary, I’ve decided to divide the command into three wings here. Captain, you and your brother will take Captain Cushing along with most of your Pawnee to scout the middle trail heading due north. Major Royall?”
William B. Royall saluted smartly. “General?”
“Major—you will command half our unit. Companies E, G, and H. Take Cody along with some of North’s Pawnee to scout the right-hand trail leading off to the northeast. There, onto that open land yonder.”
Royall nodded, clearly showing his happiness at being freed for the chase with half the regiment. “I assume, General, that you’re going to lead the third wing yourself?”
“I am. Direct command of companies A, C, and D. Mr. Sweete, you’ll ride with me. Sergeant Wallace will follow with four of the companies. In addition, six of the Pawnee are to be assigned to Mr. Sweete here. If for nothing else, the trackers can now serve to communicate between our separate wings. I’ll hold M Company in reserve, to remain some distance to the rear with the supply train.”
By the time the sun rose blood-red on that day, portending even greater heat than in days already suffered, Major Eugene Carr had completed his division of nearly three hundred officers and soldiers, including civilian and Pawnee scouts.
Less than an hour later, after traveling at as fast a clip as the weary mounts could stand, Carr had to admit that the trail sign was irrefutable.
“I can see now that the Cheyenne are moving toward the river,” Carr said quietly to the old plainsman beside him. “Just as you and Cody said they were.”
“You can still flank ’em if you push now, General,” Shad replied.
Carr nodded. Then stood for a few moments in the stirrups, squinting into the distance. “If my command can flank them from the northeast—getting the entire outfit between them and the river—then we will have them bottled up.”
“Then it won’t make no matter if you find Tall Bull in camp, or on the move already this morning.”
“Which would you prefer, Mr. Sweete?”
“On the move, General.”
“Why?”
“You surprise those Dog Soldiers in camp—the men gonna fight like hornets while the women and old ones skedaddle in retreat. Your men will get no quarter from that bunch if you catch ’em hunkered down in camp.”
“But if we surprise them on the march?”
“The whole bunch will be at a gallop from the first shot—covered by the warriors just long enough to make an escape, scattering as they go.”
“If choices are mine to make, Mr. Sweete—I choose to make a fight of it: like Custer had for himself on the Washita. For these men who have obeyed my orders and endured such hardship in the last few days—I want my chance to make a fight of it for the glory of the Fifth.” Carr’s eyes narrowed on the gray-headed scout. “By damn—we must catch Tall Bull in camp.”
At the edge of the earth, the sun had gone from blood-red to orange, then bubbled to a pale yellow before it now hung ash-white against the immense pale-blue dome overhead. Already the air in Shad’s face carried all the heat of a blacksmith’s bellows.
“If you figure your boys are ready and got some fight left in ’em, General,” Shad said, swiping his big black bandanna across his dripping face, “then let’s go seize this day!”
21
Moon of Cherries Blackening 1869
“YOUR FACE IS masked with the worry of an old man, my friend,” Porcupine said.
“This camping place—I do not like it,” High-Backed Bull grumbled. With a hand he swept a gesture across their village in the narrow valley beside the springs.
Their next march would take Tall Bull’s camp of Dog Soldiers to the Buffalo Dropping River itself, that river which the white men called the Platte. From there they would cross and turn directly north for the high plains where the white man’s Medicine Road had cut deep ruts in the flesh of the earth. Beyond those plains only a matter of but a few days’ marches stood their sacred Bear Butte. There Tall Bull and White Horse and Porcupine would renew the flagging spirits of their warriors. They would refresh their vows and perhaps hold a sun dance. Once there, the fighting bands would have little worry of being followed by the soldier columns.
But until then Bull would worry. The soldiers were back there. Coming slowly, slowly. But coming all the same.
“Why here?” Bull asked Porcupine. “Why did Tall Bull have us stop here beside this spring?”
Porcupine shrugged. “This is the place our people have camped across many summers. At least once each year—so we know this country well. Besides, the water is good here.”
“But why stop for so long?”
“The old ones gave their approval. They told Tall Bull it was safe to camp here, safe to rest the village.”
“The rattle-talkers see no need of caution?” Bull asked, incredulous. “No need to keep on moving with the pony soldiers coming behind us?”
“No. They consulted their medicine and recommended some rest for the village. It is not so bad, Bull—not with the way we have had to drive the animals and people for far too many suns. They deserve a chance to rest, to make repairs, before we are pushed on again.”
“We will be pushed, Porcupine—the pony soldiers will push us!”
The older warrior tried a halfhearted chuckle. “You worry so for a young man. Leave that to the old ones.”
“Leave the worry to the old ones, who talk only to their stuffed owls and dried badger entrails?” Bull suddenly stood, staring down in the new sunlight at Porcupine. “It seems I can trust only to one thing anymore. To my weapons, to the sharpness of my scalping knife—to the quickness of my pony and the strength of my arms to continue making war on the white man.”
“You must relax, young one,” Porcupine answered soothingly. “I think you see the one who fathered you in the face of every white man. He—”
“I know he comes soon. He leads pony soldiers. For many winters he has betrayed my mother’s people by leading soldiers to the camps of the innocent. I know he comes, soon.”
“He is old now, Bull. Gone are his days of fighting—”
“We must move on!” Bull interrupted. Then a light crossed his face, his eyes growing wide in abrupt, exquisite excitement. “Or—we can lay a trap for the white men. To draw their soldiers in and destroy them.” He lunged for Porcupine, gripping the bewildered war chief’s shoulders. “Say yes—that we can lure the white men into a trap!”
Porcupine shook his head. “This is a place of rest, decided upon by the chiefs.”
Bull yanked his hands from the older warrior, feeling sickened to his stomach, doubt rattling around inside his belly the way stream-washed pebbles clattered around inside a stiffened buffalo-scrotum rattle. “You have gone soft on me while I was not looking, Porcupine.”
“The medicine men have said—”
“What they say does not change a thing. The soldiers are still behind us.”
“We are far ahead of them—and they have been moving so slowly. You saw for yourself when we have attacked—”
“Th
is bunch of pony soldiers—they will not stop. They will keep coming, and coming. They want Tall Bull’s woman back. They want the other one too. These soldiers will not stop until they have destroyed us. Those women that Tall Bull and White Horse will not release, they will be our undoing.”
Porcupine put an arm around Bull’s shoulders, attempting to calm his young friend in some way. “The soldiers are too far behind us to attack. But if they do find us before we have crossed the river, Tall Bull has made a vow that will please your heart.”
“What is this vow of his?”
“Tall Bull has sworn that if the soldiers come—he will see that his white concubine is the first to die.”
• • •
“We must be damned close if you and your trackers have spotted Tall Bull’s pony herd,” Major Carr said evenly to the old plainsman, who had just brought him the momentous news, although the major’s eyes had become animated as they peered into the distance. Then he dragged the steamy wool slouch hat from his brow and wiped a damp kerchief across his retreating hairline.
“I figure it’s time we brought in them other two wings, Major,” Shad Sweete advised.
He nodded. “Very good. Go ahead and get one of your trackers over to Major Royall’s unit. Bring Cody back. I want him to take these six Pawnee and ride ahead to find out if that is the herd … if they can see the village—or some sign of just where I’ll contact the enemy.”
Cody rode in, received his orders, then immediately pointed his big buckskin northwest, leading six Pawnee off among the hills in the direction he believed he would find the camp.
Time dragged itself out in the steamy heat of the plains as the horses and mules grew restless, deprived of water, restive for grazing. For what seemed like hours in the growing heat beneath the rising sun, they waited. Then—
“There!” Carr called out, pointing.
Sweete twisted in the saddle to find Cody headed back in at an easy lope. He wore his characteristic irrepressible grin.
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