Painfully, Stops in a Hurry turned, his face gone pale with horror. “These are … are our people.”
“Our p-people?”
To the rising despair of the young hunters, it was indeed their own people—their own families, their own relatives and friends who had been driven into this winter wilderness with little but those green horsehides frozen on their backs. The young men rushed back to the coulee, leaped atop their ponies, and kicked them into a lope.
When the hunters were still a long way off, the women started trilling their tongues in warning. At first the warriors escorting the sad procession hurried forward on cold, stiffened limbs—prepared to meet the attack. But in a few moments they realized the young horsemen had not come to attack them. The older warriors, the chiefs, began to call out.
And the young hunters answered to their names, quickly searching among the many for their loved ones and relatives. Women began to cry and old men began to weep. And it made Wooden Leg cry too, for here he looked over the three Old-Man Chiefs. And thanked
While they might have no lodges and few weapons, while they no longer owned the finest in clothing and an ample supply of winter meat—the
“The soldiers and Wolf People came to our camp in the Red Canyon,” the story was told to the young hunters in a gush of words and tears, both happy and sad.
“We were camped far up Powder River near where you left us,” said another.
“Our women and children had to run away with only a few small packs.”
Wooden Leg nodded bitterly with remembrance, then said, “Just as we did last winter far down on the Powder River.”*
“This time the soldiers and their Indian scouts made sure they burned all our lodges and most of our horses were stolen. Many of our men, women, and children have been killed in the fight. Others have died of their battle wounds or have starved or frozen on our journey here.”
And a woman shrieked, “One of my sisters and her boy were captured with two other women by the Wolf People!”
“Where are you going?” Wooden Leg asked.
Little Wolf looked away into the distance a moment, then back into the young warrior’s face. “We are going there.” He pointed north. “Down the Tongue River … to find the Hunkpatila people.”
“Here,” Wooden Leg replied as the other hunters came forward, “take our horses for those who cannot walk. We will cross the ice with you and go down the river until we find Crazy Horse. Last winter when the soldiers drove us out into the snow and cold, Crazy Horse welcomed us … welcomed us as if we were his brothers.”
Headqrs. Mil. Div. of the Mo.
Chicago, Dec. 1, 1876
Gen. W. T. Sherman
Washington:
The following telegram from General Crook, dated Crazy Woman’s Fork, Wyoming Territory, November 28th, has just been received:
(signed) P. H. Sheridan
Lieutenant General
Before reaching General Mackenzie, I learned of the Indians’ retreat, and that he was returning with his command; so I countermanded the foot troops to this place. I sent you Mackenzie’s report of his operations against the Cheyennes. I cannot commend too highly his brilliant achievements and the great gallantry of the troops of his command. This will be a terrible blow to the hostiles, as those Cheyennes were not only the bravest warriors, but have been the head and front of most all the raids and deviltry committed in this part of the country.
(signed) George Crook
Brigadier General, U.S.A.
Commanding
The day before had been a damned forgettable Thanksgiving, Seamus brooded that next morning, the first of December. What with the burials of those dead soldiers, and the presence of that lone pine box Crook would have Lieutenant O. L. Wieting of the Twenty-third Infantry deliver by rail to McKinney’s family back in Memphis, Tennessee. For the rest of the afternoon details of the Fourth Cavalry rode teams of horses back and forth over the mass grave, and that evening the men started fires over the site in hopes of betraying that sacred ground to both the enemy and any four-legged predators roaming this wilderness.
Donegan could not remember ever seeing Mackenzie nearly as melancholy. The colonel marched to the grave site with Crook and Dodge at the head of the procession, but while the others sang the hymns and bowed their heads in prayer, Mackenzie only stared into the distance, transfixed on the clouds mantled across the snowy mountains. The man looked numb, almost unaware of events around him, his face a mask to some private torment and despair.
Perhaps Mackenzie was dwelling on the same dark thoughts that tormented Donegan: more soldiers buried in more unmarked graves, those final resting places abandoned to the ages.
Come the end of this month a full decade will have passed, he thought that next morning as he huddled beside a grease-wood fire and clutched his hands around a steamy tin of coffee. Ten full years since we buried Fetterman’s dead inside Carringtons stockade.*
Ten long, long years of scooping holes out of this bloody wilderness where dead soldiers can sleep alone and forgotten for all of eternity.
That Friday, the first of December, a horse fell beneath a Fourth Cavalry sergeant, rolling over on the soldier, crushing him so that he died in agony within minutes, his lungs filling up with blood as he thrashed on the snow in the midst of his friends helpless to save him.
A quiet and somber camp again that night as Crook grew restive and anxious, awaiting Luther North and the Pawnee he had sent north to pick up the Cheyenne trail, hoping it would eventually lead him to Crazy Horse. Just past nightfall word began to circulate that they were to be ready to march back to Reno Cantonment at dawn.
On top of the twenty-eight miles of icy, windblown, snow-drifted prairie the command put behind them before reaching the north bank of the Powder that second day of December, the continued and extreme cold was taking the last bit of starch out of the horses. The temperature continued to slide down ever more rapidly as the sky cleared.
Early that Saturday evening two Cheyenne scouts came in from the Red Cloud Agency. To Crook they reported having learned that the Sioux war chief Lame Deer and a sizable war party was on its way from the Belle Fourche for the Little Powder.
Into the night wild speculation coursed its way through the column. Was it too much to hope that Crook would move them back to Fetterman and Laramie to retire the expedition? Or—as some of the senior officers hinted—could the general really be contemplating another march to the Belle Fourche and the Black Hills in hopes of snagging himself another victory by cutting off Lame Deer’s band?
The last of Mackenzie’s command did not dismount on the banks of the Powder until well after dark, not eating until nine o’clock—for the first time since breakfast. And Furey’s wagon train did not roll in until shortly after midnight.
At dawn on the third orders came down for the cavalry to mount fifty of the best men from each company on fifty of their strongest horses and be prepared to move out by nine. That Sunday morning chief medical officer Joseph R. Gibson turned over his wounded to Marshall W. Wood and some of his five surgeons, who would begin