“By God—if they want war, I’m here to give it to them!” Hancock snapped. “Now go do what the hell I’m paying you for, Hickok.”
By the time Hickok returned to the advance of the march, the situation had soured. He rode up to Sweete and the rest where the scouts had halted on a low hillock.
“Damn,” Hickok muttered.
“They aim to make a fight of it,” Sweete said, nodding toward the hundreds of warriors who had spread out across a broad front before the scouts and advance guard.
Feathers stirred on the chill spring breeze. The tails of every war pony had been tied up with red trade cloth or strips of rawhide. Shields clung to every arm, a bow, rifle, or carbine held at the ready by the jeering, taunting warriors who urged the white men on.
“Fat’s in the fire now, boys,” Milner said, then spit some tobacco juice into the dust. “I reckon we ought’n go on down there and palaver with ’em afore ol’ Thunderbutt gets up here to stir things with his big stick.”
“Not a bad idea, Joe,” Hickok replied. “C’mon. You and Shad come with me.”
“We showing guns?” Sweete asked.
“By damn if we ain’t,” Milner said. “It’s the only thing these red bastards understand—is gunpower.”
The trio inched off that low hillock into the rolling lowland where the long cordon of warriors waited on their restive ponies. As the white men halted midway between the two lines, a score of the young warriors grew more than verbal. They raced their ponies back and forth along the Indian line, taunting, shaking their weapons in the air.
“Damn if they don’t want war every bit as much as Hancock’s itching for it,” Hickok muttered. He straightened in the saddle. “All right, Shad. Tell their chiefs we want to parley a bit.”
Sweete handed his rifle over to California Joe, now second in command of the scouts behind Hickok. Shad then held his hands up to begin signing as he spoke in the Shahiyena tongue. The white men wanted some delegates to come forward onto neutral ground for a parley, he said. For a few moments, a half dozen of the warriors conferred among themselves a hundred yards away. Then they too inched forward, ordering the rest to remain behind.
“We don’t want no trouble,” Hickok reminded Milner as Joe shifted uneasily on his saddle after tossing the Spencer carbine back to Sweete.
“These bastards won’t mind taking our scalps,” Joe muttered. “Don’t trust ’em a bit.”
“And right you are,” Shad whispered as the chiefs drew near. “Let’s smile and act hospitable, boys. And keep your finger on your triggers.”
The warriors came to a halt twenty feet away, ponies pawing at the new grass flowering across the prairie. The breeze rustled feathers and fringe and the edges of blankets in that great silence beneath the cornflower blue sky while everyone waited for something to happen, someone to speak. A pony snorted. One of the warriors coughed.
“Shad, tell ’em what we want.”
“What is it we want?”
“Hancock wants to talk with the chiefs.”
Sweete once more spoke and signed—telling them the soldier chief wanted to talk with the mighty chiefs of the Lakota and Shahiyena bands.
One of the warriors snorted, loudly. He spit on the ground.
“Who’s that?” Hickok asked quietly.
“Think he’s called Pawnee Killer. Brule chief. Bad sonofabitch if it is.”
“Heard tell of him,” Milner added. “He’s a mean one what don’t know a lick of common sense.”
Sweete spoke after one of the half dozen had signed.
“They’re asking us something, Hickok. Why we brought along the soldiers—both walk-a-heaps and pony soldiers—if all that we mean to do is talk.”
Hickok shifted in his saddle. “I figure he’s got us there. A fair question, but I don’t know what to tell him.” He glanced over his shoulder, his eyes scanning the countryside behind them for sign of Hancock’s columns.
“I know what to say,” Milner growled.
“I won’t have you starting anything here, Joe,” Hickok snapped.
Sweete watched all the dark, lidded eyes concentrating on the two arguing white men. Behind the delegates, the rest of the warriors were surging, their ponies racing up and down the long line strung horizon to horizon— galloping the ponies about in short sprints to get their second wind.
“We better tell them something … and now,” Shad muttered. “Or our butts may be in the soup.”
He inched his horse forward a few yards, away from Hickok and Milner. Then he began signing.
Two of the delegates glanced at one another, then one moved his hands slowly.
Shad straightened in the saddle, slowly moving his Spencer carbine across his lap before his hands went back to signing.
The entire half dozen warriors stirred at that.
Shad knew he could not let his eyes betray him. Never that. Instead, he let his eyes continue resting on the dark-skinned speaker.
When his hands finished, they went to grip the carbine, quietly moving it off his lap, held over the horse’s head.
At that moment, a trio of warriors showed up from the east, appearing over the hills to Sweete’s right. They were shouting, waving pieces of blanket overhead. What they said Shad was not able to pick up, only that it was Cheyenne, and not Sioux. The half dozen delegates stirred uneasily. Pawnee Killer savagely wrenched his pony around and tore off toward the long line of warriors.
“Get ready to make your stand,” Milner hissed.
“Not yet, we don’t,” Sweete warned. “I think they’ve spotted the soldiers getting close.”
The big warrior glared at the white men a moment, then signed for Sweete.
“You are Shahiyena,” Shad spoke the words in Cheyenne.
“I am,” the big one answered. “You speak our tongue.”
“Your name is Roman Nose?”
The war chief did not answer at first, only staring at the white tracker with less disdain now.
“I am Roman Nose.”
“You are known as a great warrior, a brave leader of your men,” Sweete replied. “I cannot believe a warrior of your stature would find honor in wiping out three white men so outnumbered by your own.”
Roman Nose smiled, reluctantly at first, then broadly. “What is your name?”
“Shad Sweete.”
“Sh-h-a-a-d Sweet-t-t,” he mimicked the words with emphasis on the hard consonants. “I will remember you. As a brave man, and one who talks straight.”
“Let’s get,” Hickok was ordering in a low voice, as calm as he could make it.
Sweete glanced at the heaving, roiling line of warriors, every one of them in turmoil now that the soldiers drew near the villages.
“Tell your soldiers to stop where they are,” Roman Nose ordered.
“They will not,” Sweete replied above the clamor of snorting ponies and clattering weapons, the shouts and jeers of warriors surging, throbbing across the prairie. “They have come to talk with you of peace … or war.”
“The soldiers must not come any closer to our villages,” Roman Nose demanded. “They frighten the women and little ones. Frighten the old ones.”
