Long Winter Gone sotp-1

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Long Winter Gone sotp-1 Page 11

by Terry C. Johnston


  Custer seethed with rage. “You tell them I’m already married. I won’t be made the butt of their pagan hoax!”

  “Not a joke, General.”

  “Tell them I already have a—”

  “No difference to them Cheyenne. Monaseetah won’t fret being your left-hand wife.”

  “Left-hand?”

  “You already got a white woman for your right hand.”

  Custer calmed a little. “A ceremonial thing, is it?” He drew himself up, puffing his chest. “Given the formality of this woman as a conquering hero.”

  “Not just a ceremony to the Cheyenne, General. A real wedding. The young one’s your wife.”

  “My wife!”

  Romero listened to the nearby troopers snicker at the shriek in Custer’s voice.

  “You’re her husband. General—till you send her packing someday … back to the Cheyenne.”

  “I see. When we’ve completed this campaign, hmmm? A long, long winter gone from now.”

  “Hey, General!” Clark intruded, hurrying over. “Take a look yonder.” He waited for Custer’s attention to be ripped from Romero and the young captive. “Look up on the ridge … over there.”

  Custer followed the scout’s arm. Half-naked bodies bristled atop the hills to the south, southeast. Warriors on horseback, gathered in small, angry knots glaring down at the plundered Cheyehne village.

  “Some of the defeated warriors, Clark. The few fortunate enough to escape my net.”

  “You’re wrong, Custer.”

  “Care to tell me who those warriors are?”

  “They’re not Cheyenne. More like Arapaho. Some Kiowa. I figure for the next few miles downriver lay more camps than any of us ever counted on stumbling into. More warriors than we could fight in one day.”

  “By Judas’s judgment!” Custer laughed. “That bunch is up there to keep us from finishing our job.”

  “What job, General?”

  “Destroying the plunder … these lodges. And we’ll have to take care of the ponies.”

  “Dammit!” Clark’s eyes flashed. “Best you listen to your scouts, General.”

  “You boys are becoming nervous old women!” Custer chuckled as he turned away. His laughter drew cackling from the soldiers assigned to guard the captives.

  “General, you’ve gone and poked a huge nest of wasps here.” Clark glared at Custer’s broad back. “You hear me?”

  The general leapt aboard Dandy without another word.

  “General! Dammit! One day you’re bound to have to listen to your scouts! One day real soon!”

  Suddenly a detail of blue-tunics whipped their frenzied mounts down the north bank of the Washita and into the icy river without slowing. A handful of soldiers on foot momentarily turned on the bank to return fire into the timber before plunging into the water, terror written on every face.

  As the dozen scrambled up on the bank, Moylan whirled up, arriving on the scene beside Custer, both men’s horses sending sprays of muddy snow cascading over some of the drenched troopers.

  “Sergeant Johnson!” Custer called to the lead man.

  “Yessir, General!”

  “What in blazes goes here?” Custer demanded.

  “Had to abandon the coats and packs, sir.”

  “Abandon them?”

  “We was overrun! They rode down on us—”

  “Overrun by who?”

  “Warriors, sir! Found out where you left us off to guard the packs and coats—”

  “Precisely, Sergeant. Your detail was to guard that army property. Those of you who deserted your assigned posts could be subject to courts-martial for the loss of that government property … in addition to abandoning your posts.”

  A good portion of Sergeant Niles Johnson’s untried recruits murmured between themselves, angry and fearful. Johnson alone understood that George Armstrong Custer had never once retreated in his entire career.

  “I done it to save the men, sir. We was about to be overrun and I didn’t want to sacrifice my command. I knowed reinforcements was here to help us—”

  “Save the men? That’s not your department to decide, Sergeant.”

  “Sir. Respectfully … it weren’t coward—”

  “Begging your pardon, General,” Clark interrupted.

  “What is it, Clark? More valuable advice?”

  “Dammit, General! They ain’t all Cheyenne breathing down our necks! This little camp ain’t the only village in this valley. I savvy the sergeant’s men were chased off by the same bunch of Arapaho that came boiling after Godfrey’s blood. Maybe the same bunch jumped Major Elliott and his boys.”

  Custer stared into the trees across the Washita, then suddenly wheeled on his adjutant. “Moylan, have Benteen’s men go with Hard Rope to bring the pony herd across the river.”

  Clark shook his head. “What in devil’s dust do you want with them ponies?”

  “Their destruction, Mr.—”

  The unexpected roar of more carbine fire rumbled over the frightened shouts of panicked men from the north side of the river. The winter air split with Indian screeches and the sharp cracks of their rifles, just as Lieutenant James M. Bell bounced up from the riverbank on the hard seat of his army freight wagon.

  Wide-eyed, Bell hunched over like a bent old woman, whipping his team straight down the sharp incline into the crossing, splashing headlong into the river. On his heels rattled the rest of the noisy freighters, each one driven by grim-lipped, bug-eyed soldiers, every teamster jockeying to be the next wagon into the ford. With the clattering wagons galloped a double fistful of the regiment’s pack mules, bellering hell bent for election through the ranks with brass-lunged scree-haws and spraying rooster tails of icy water. One wagon lumbered over on its side to avoid a collision. It bounced a few yards across the rocky riverbottom on two wheels, then clattered back down on all four, the driver no longer clutching the reins but clinging to the seat instead.

  First up the slope into the village, Bell wheeled his wagon hard as he brought his wild-eyed animals under control and leaned all his weight back into the brake. The iron-rimmed wheel protested as loud as any of the screeching warriors at that moment making their colorful appearance on the north bank.

  “Lieutenant Bell!” Custer called.

  “Reporting, sir!” The older officer trotted up to the general, sloughing red mud over his boots.

  “Let’s have your report,” Custer yelled above the bursts of carbines fired at the screeching Indians on the north bank.

  “A while back I heard some rifle fire coming from the direction where we left Johnson with the packs and coats, sir!” He was breathless. “Took my drivers to assist the sergeant’s men.”

  “Go on.”

  “Figured we could help drive off the warriors. But there were more damned redskins around those packs and coats than I ever hope to see again in all my days!”

  “Tell me all of it.”

  “Headed the wagons ’round the hills and raced down to the crossing near the horse herd.”

  “The horse herd?” Custer’s voice rose an octave.

  “Yessir.”

  Custer waved his arms wildly. “By God’s back teeth, those red buggers won’t get their bloody hands on their horses!” Custer turned back to Bell. “Lieutenant, you’re to be commended for your quick and decisive action in the face of the enemy. I’ll see to it you receive a regimental commendation when we return to Fort Hays. Didn’t lose any men in the run?”

  “No, sir. All present and accounted for.”

  “Splendid! Have one of your men find Captain Thompson. I’ll have Thompson take a detachment back to find our property.”

  “Yessir!”

  “Very good, soldier.” Custer clapped his gloved hands together. “I’ve captured their village. Now it’s time for me to crush the spirit of those who escaped my noose.”

  CHAPTER 10

  WORK continued in earnest pulling Cheyenne property from the lodges. A count to record captured g
oods had started when shouts cracked the still air, floating across the river. Hard Rope and Romero led the first of the Cheyenne ponies into the Washita. The Seventh Cavalry had the Cheyenne herd.

  Benteen’s troops had driven off the warriors and recaptured the ponies. In a brief running fight, his two squads lost a few of the animals but took no casualties. Like milkweed down before a wind, the hostiles had scattered and fled. Then Hard Rope and Romero had showed Benteen’s men how to get that herd moving south onto the river trail.

  More than nine hundred prized Cheyenne stock splashed out of the Washita, up the south bank. The ponies burst into the captured village, nostrils flaring, tails held high, fresh dung dropped fragrant on the muddy snow.

  “Drive them into the meadow southeast of camp!”Custer shouted as Hard Rope cleared the top of the bank, riding among the herd leaders.

  “Some good-looking stock there, General.” Lieutenant Godfrey dismounted beside his commander.

  “I’m going to let each troop commander select a pony of his own. Then we’ll cut out a few to replace the mules we’ve lost. After that, Romero will see that the captives ride a pony back to Camp Supply.”

  “And the rest of ’em, General?”

  Custer turned to Godfrey. “The rest are yours.”

  “Mine?”

  “The herd is yours to destroy, Lieutenant.”

  A quarter-hour later the ponies grazed in the open meadow southeast of the Cheyenne camp. Custer called in the captain and lieutenant of each troop to make a selection after he gave his brother Tom first choice. When all officers had finished cutting out their chosen ponies, Custer signaled to his Cheyenne interpreter.

  “Romero, Lieutenant Godfrey’s men will assist you capturing mounts for the captives. When you have enough ponies for the women and children, take them back to camp. Tether them near Bell’s wagons.”

  It didn’t take long for the prisoners to show up at the edge of the herd, each woman carrying one or more rawhide or buffalo-hide hackamores rescued from the loot taken from the lodges for counting. What animals would be spared the coming slaughter were soon picketed near Lieutenant Bell’s wagons.

  “How do I handle this destruction for you, sir?” Godfrey’s mouth had gone dry. He watched Custer climb into the saddle.

  “Don’t waste a lot of our limited ammunition, Lieutenant but your four companies will have to shoot each one.”

  Godfrey nodded, turning to set his men to their grisly task.

  It wasn’t long before the soldiers discovered that Indian ponies didn’t take to the smell of white men. Again and again they darted away from the confining ring of soldiers, making it tough keeping the animals corralled when the firing began in earnest. Custer’s slaughter was under way.

  Overhead, the winter sun reached midsky, softening the snow into slush, turning the ground into red gumbo beneath the churning of so many hooves and boots. Some frustrated, cold troopers slipped and fell among the frightened, wild-eyed ponies, grumbling curses.

  With every boom of a Springfield in that muddy meadow, another Cheyenne pony dropped, its blood seeping into the Washita snows. The whole process took three entire companies more than an hour and a half.

  By the time the last frightened, snorting pony dropped to the slime of bloody snow, better than 875 animals lay dead. The earthy odor of their fresh dung was like a heady perfume on a cruel wind. Puffs of steam hissed from each bullet wound. The stench of blood and dung and death hung like an ache over the camp.

  With an unbridled fury the milling warriors watched the soldiers loot the village.

  Worse still, they could only watch as the slaughter of the prized Cheyenne herd took place. Ponies shot like so many white men’s cattle in a butcher pen. The warriors were helpless to stop the destruction. Deep in each red breast beat an agony at so great a loss of the plains warrior’s greatest possession.

  Black Kettle’s band was no more. The survivors would never recover from the loss of those hundreds of ponies that enabled them to continue their nomadic way of life. In less than one journey of the sun, this band of people had been rubbed from the breast of the Mother of All Things.

  “We must go on making war against the pony soldiers—fighting for those who cannot!” Arapaho chief Left Hand cried out in fury and dismay atop a tree-lined hill.

  “No!” shouted Skin-Head, another war chief, his shoulders slumping in defeat. “These soldiers have dealt us a vicious blow—we must learn from it. This is surely what happens when the pony soldiers hunt down the warriors who raid their white settlements. These pony soldiers slaughter old men, and call it battle. They capture women and children … if those helpless ones do not already lie dead in the snow beside the young men.”

  “Cowards speak of giving up! Are you a fool? Is your mind so small not to remember our fight in the snowy meadow this morning?” Left Hand asked. “Those pony soldiers fought with courage. They died like men. Not like these butchers!”

  Skin-Head agreed. “Look what crimes the white man commits now. Not only has he killed our people, he hungers to destroy our way of life!”

  “Keeyiii! Black Kettle could not fight an enemy who attacks and kills old people, who murders children and butchers ponies!”

  “Next they will burn Cheyenne homes.”

  Soldiers stacked most of the captured Indian goods in huge piles or displayed the items on blankets and robes between the lodges.

  Tom Custer stopped beside his brother and Lieutenant Moylan. Nearby, stood some of the civilian scouts and a handful of the Osage trackers.

  “Look at that plunder, Autie. I’m taking some of these weapons back with me.”

  “Help yourself, brother. Just make it quick.”

  “What’re you gonna do with the rest of it?”

  “Not going to leave it behind, Tom. Better grab what you want. Moylan, fetch me Captain Myers.”

  Myers rode up minutes later, saluted. “General?”

  “You’ll be in charge of the destruction of the camp. Tear down the lodges, Captain … put them to the torch—poles and all.”

  “All the lodges. Yes, General. Any further instructions?”

  “Myers, on second thought—”

  “Yes, sir?”

  “All the tepees … but that one.” He pointed to a lodge but a few months old, sewn from cowhides taken in a late-summer hunt. “I want that one taken down and the cover folded for travel. Strap every lodge pole to one of Bell’s wagons. Have Romero’s squaws help your men dismantle and pack it for transport.”

  “A souvenir, sir?”

  “You might say that.”

  “Want to save some robes, maybe some blankets to use in the lodge?”

  “No. We’ll burn everything here. Gad, the lice and vermin must be thick on it all.”

  Myers left to pass along instructions. Within minutes, the first of the Cheyenne lodges came down. Soldiers moved in and out of the tepees.

  Captain George Yates approached the commander, shaking a long sheet of foolscap on which he had been scribbling his tallies with the nub of a pencil he moistened on the end of his tongue. The handsome blond hometown Monroe officer cleared his throat nervously before beginning his report, his breath steaming like a halo round his bearded face. “We count two thousand one hundred and eighty-five blankets, five hundred seventy-three buffalo robes, and another three hundred sixty untanned hides. In addition, we captured two hundred forty-one saddles along with numerous lariats, bridles, and other tack used by the hostiles.”

  “What of the Cheyenne weapons?” Tom Custer asked.

  “Better than a hundred hatchets of various sizes. Along with thirty-five revolvers and forty-seven rifles. As near as we can estimate, we also captured two hundred fifty pounds of lead and better than five hundred thirty-five pounds of gunpowder. Some ninety bullet molds, along with over four thousand arrows and arrowheads, seventy-five spears, thirty-five bows and quivers, plus a dozen rawhide shields.”

  The commander turned to his scouts.
His bright blue eyes found the Mexican. “This camp could have taken care of itself had we failed to surprise them—wouldn’t you say, Romero?”

  “I suppose if you gave ’em the chance … might’ve been a different story to tell by the end of the day.”

  “Go on, George. What else?” Custer prompted.

  “Better than three hundred pounds of Indian tobacco was seized, sir. Along with that, we didn’t even try counting what must be thousands of pounds of dried buffalo meat they put up for the winter.”

  “No need to weigh it.”

  “Yes, sir,” Yates replied, eyes dropping to his list once more as it fluttered in a gusty breeze pungent with the acrid odors of smoke and burnt powder, heady with horse dung and aromatic red clay turning to muddy slop under a winter sun. “The next discovery is interesting, General. We captured some meal flour and other bags of provisions, all in burlap stamped ‘Department of the Interior.’”

  “So this tribe was at the Medicine Lodge treaty conference last year.”

  “I’d bet on it,” Romero replied.

  Yates continued. “Nearly all the Cheyenne’s clothing is in our possession. Those who escaped have only what they carried on their backs.”

  “That’s the way I planned it. Dawn’s the time to catch ’em napping, don’t you see? Does that conclude your report?”

  “Yes, General.”

  “Very good. Then go to Myers with my suggestion that he put all this captured matériel on those piles he’s making of the lodges. I suggest he pour some of the Cheyenne gunpowder over the lot of it. Have him see me when he’s ready to set it afire.”

  The tall, husky Yates saluted and was gone.

  In less than half an hour Custer’s chosen lodge was secured in a wagon for the return trip. Meanwhile, the remaining tepees had been gathered in mountains of buffalo robes and tanned hides, blankets and weapons, clothing and food. Everything was to be destroyed, save for those few ponies the prisoners would ride while leaving behind their winter home along the Washita.

  “Yates told me you wanted to see me,” Myers said when he arrived.

  Custer saluted the captain. “Torch it all!”

  Myers signaled his men. They tossed their flaming brands on each mountain of captured goods. The powder caught and flared. Some exploded, spraying showers of brilliant sparks over the scattering troopers. With the goading of a freshening breeze, the mountains burned like bright funeral pyres. The shivering troopers inched as close as they dared to warm their fronts while their backsides froze in a brutal wind. The troopers turned around and around, reveling in the warmth of the dancing flames. Over the trees and up the slopes of snow-whitened hills climbed a black, oily haze. Dark clouds reeking of destruction and death sent the warriors on the surrounding hillsides to keening in grief or angry fury.

 

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