Monday afternoon, the sixteenth, the column sighted increasing numbers of buffalo and small herds of antelope north of their line of march. With every new mile they put behind them before sundown, William Jackson came to understand all the more why the Lakota were willing to fight to hold on to the rich bounty of these high Montana plains.
By nightfall he knew with a bedrock certainty that Otis’s officers were fooling themselves.
Not for a moment did he believe Sitting Bull would give up so easily—backing off, perhaps eventually coming in to talk with Miles at Tongue River.
Not for a moment did Jackson think Sitting Bull would stop anywhere short of driving the Bear Coat’s soldiers right out of the Yellowstone country.
Chapter 7
17 October 1876
FOREIGN
The War in Servia
LONDON, October 16.—The
“See there, Seamus Donegan,” post trader Collins retorted, stabbing a bony finger against the front page of Denver’s Rocky Mountain
The gray-eyed Irishman dragged the pipe from his mouth, regarding it as he blew a stream of smoke toward the ceiling, then took a sip of Collins’s heady coffee the sutler kept hot in a shiny pot atop that iron stove warming his trading post there at Fort Laramie.
“But don’t you see? At least there’s talk of peace in the world’s other wars,” Donegan reminded those men gathered there this early-winter morning.
They could only agree with him grudgingly.
Outside the air sparkled with hoar frost. Almost too cold to snow. But in there, squatting around the stove with their pipes and their tins of steaming coffee, these men—civilian and soldier alike—basked in the glow of male fellowship and camaraderie. This was exactly what Seamus had been seeking when he’d crept from the tiny upstairs room at the peep o’ day—leaving behind Sam and their son, both of them asleep: Sam’s head deep within the valley of a goose-down pillow, the babe still latched on to mother’s breast. It had been a long haul of it—both worried, frazzled mother and bawling child up and down for most all the night. Then as the first gray fingers of dawn began to creep out of the east, they both fell asleep at long last. And Seamus crept out, quietly pulled the door to, and creaked down the noisy stairs into the cold of that mid-October morning.
“I’ll bet their war is a big’un,” Collins continued enthusiastically as he pried open the stove door and tossed in some more split kindling. “All cannon and cavalry!”
Donegan gazed out the window frosted with the pattern of the coming cold, caressing the new Winchester repeater he had just purchased from Collins with an oiled rag. “Aye, and in the bloody meantime, trader—right here ours is just a nasty little war, ain’t it all? Nothing more’n a man here … a poor sojur there.”
THE INDIANS
News from Standing Rock.
ST. PAUL, October 16.—A
With the half-breed tracker riding at his side, Luther Sage Kelly probed east across Sunday Creek north of the Yellowstone, the river that had given him his nickname. Out of the eight-foot-high willows and icy bogs where the horses had slow going, yanking one hoof after another out of the sucking mud, they slowly clambered to higher ground. In that moonless darkness, Kelly knew the soldiers would be crossing farther upstream: where the banks were corduroyed for supply wagons from Glendive and the bottom wasn’t such a maze of sinkholes as it was here.
Miles’s infantry could afford to take the time to stay with the Tongue River Road right now—but Yellowstone Kelly could not. He had the colonel’s orders to feel ahead of the column: to see if the Indians might have made their crossing of the river; and, perhaps even more important, to find out just what the hell had happened to that supply train long overdue from Glendive Cantonment.
Otis’s wagons were long overdue. With rumors that the Sioux were closing on the south bank of the Yellowstone, in all likelihood intent on crossing to the north, it did not bode well for any supply train that might happen upon a massed war party. Luther, along with fellow scouts Victor Smith, an old friend, and half-breed Billy Cross, had accompanied Lieutenant Frank S. Hinkle and six soldiers on a dangerous scout to the upper reaches of the Tongue and Mizpah Creek, hoping to find the Indian encampment rumored to be in the area. They found nothing. Which could only mean the Sioux had to be farther to the east.
All the more worrisome, the party of Arikara trackers Kelly had sent out with William Jackson more than two days back hadn’t returned. Miles feared they had been discovered by a hostile war party and rubbed out.
So at two-thirty this cold Tuesday morning Miles had the entire Tongue River encampment up to receive fourteen days’ rations. Leaving behind two companies of the Twenty-second U.S. Infantry to protect their cantonment, in that first inky seep of dawn the colonel was ferrying his ordinance rifle and ten full companies of his Fifth Infantry to the north side of the Yellowstone. By eleven-thirty A.M. the other 10 scouts, 15 officers, and 434 soldiers formed up and moved into the cold gray light beneath the low clouds scudding along the Glendive Road.
“Not since the government’s operations against the Mormons in fifty-seven has the Fifth marched as a regiment,” Miles had said with undisguised pride earlier that morning as he’d stood on the north bank of the Yellowstone with Kelly, watching his men ferry over twelve at a time. Then the officer sighed, saying, “There’s trouble out there, and Otis is right in the thick of it. I can smell it.”
“We’ll find out soon enough, General,” Luther replied, slipping his boot into a stirrup. “We’ll be back when I’ve got something to report.”
This was to be Kelly’s twenty-eighth winter—born in the village of Geneva, right in the heart of the Finger Lake region of central New York State, long before made famous by the notorious Red Jacket of the Iroquois Confederation. Many were the times over the years that Luther would claim as an ancestor none other than Hannah Dustin, the courageous backwoods woman who’d been captured by hostiles and conveyed north through the formidable wilderness, eventually making her miraculous and daring escape during the French and Indian War.
He pulled his hat down now, nodding to Miles, and reined his horse around to the east, kicking it in the flanks.
A hell of a lot of water had passed beneath his boots since that day long ago when he had stood gape- mouthed, watching the line of young drummer boys—every last one of them decked out in patriotic bunting festooned with rosettes made from red, white, and blue cloth—marching at the vanguard of the column of volunteers who were stepping off to make war on the rebellious South. Because he was only fifteen when his mother finally consented to his enlistment near the end of the war, Luther had to lie to recruiters about his age.