before they grabbed the boy, tied him up, and hurried him back here to the general.”

“Means there must be Cheyenne in the country,” Seamus said.

“Damn if there ain’t a big bunch of ’em over on a branch of the Powder,” Frank went on. “But that youngster claimed he come from a small village of only some five or six lodges. He told Crook that his people would get afraid if he didn’t show up after he’d been out hunting—then they’d likely scamper off for Crazy Horse’s camp.”

“I’ll bet that got Crook’s attention!” Pourier said.

“Bloody well right,” Donegan agreed. “Crook’s been wanting to get eye to eye with Crazy Horse for the better part of a year now. Where’s Beaver Dam’s village, Frank?”

“Said it was up on the head of the Crazy Woman Fork.”

“He tell Crook where the Crazy Horse band was camped now?”

Grouard nodded. “A long ways off from here. Clear up on the Rosebud, near where we had our little fight with him in June.”

“That’ll be a goddamned long march—it will, it will,” Seamus muttered, stomping the deepening snow to shock some feeling back into a numbing foot. The cold was simply too much even for the double pair of socks he wore in the tall stovepipe boots he always bought two sizes too large. He feared he might lose some toes to the surgeon before this trip was over.

“So now Crook’s give out orders to all the units: moving northwest toward the mountains as soon as it’s light,” Frank explained. “He wants this expedition to come back with a worthy trophy.”

Big Bat cried, “Like Crazy Horse’s scalp!”

“The whole outfit’s moving in the morning?” Donegan asked.

“Yep, the whole shebang,” Grouard replied. “At least for now.”

“I figure Crook’ll break off Mackenzie soon enough—once he’s found the Crazy Horse village,” Seamus added as the wind seemed to stiffen and the snowfall thickened. “Damn,” he muttered again, stomping his feet. “Think I’ll go do what some of the others is doing, fellas: taking this last chance to write down a few words to send back to Fetterman with one of Teddy Egan’s couriers tomorrow. Too cold to sleep anyways.”

After midnight Crook sent off a Second Cavalry courier to race the ninety miles back to Fetterman with his wire to Sheridan:

Scouts returned to-day and reported that Cheyennes have crossed over to that other side of the Big Horn Mountains, and that Crazy Horse and his band are encamped on the Rosebud near where we had the fight with them last summer. We start out after his band to-morrow morning.

It was better that the two of them act as bold as they could. So Young Two Moon and Crow Necklace walked right along the string of horses on the picket lines, in among the soldiers and their tents as if they were two of the Indian scouts. Their bravado worked.

At the near edge of the camp a large fire blazed where many Shoshone and Arapaho scouts were busy cleaning weapons, drinking coffee, and playing several noisy games of “hand” on blankets and buffalo robes. There beside the fire a handful of their own people stood, singing Cheyenne war songs.

But they were not prisoners! Who were these Cheyenne in the soldier camp?

“I think that is Old Crow,” Crow Necklace whispered right against Young Two Moon’s ear. “And the other, he looks like a friend of my uncle’s—named Satchel.”

“I know of Satchel,” Young Two Moon replied, his gall rising. “Now I realize why these Tse- Tsehese are here. This Satchel is a relative of Bill Rowland at the White River Agency.”

“The white man married to one of our women?”

“Yes. That must be why they are here,” Young Two Moon replied. “Bill Rowland brought them here to find our camp in the mountains. To capture our ponies and take away our guns—just like the soldiers are doing at the White River Agency.”

“If these two are here with Bill Rowland,” Crow Necklace said sadly, “then there must surely be more of our people here with them.”

“I am ashamed for them,” Young Two Moon said, a sour ball of disappointment thick in his throat. “We have come to this: the white man making some of our relatives hunt down the rest of our people.”

After watching the singing and the games for a while, the pair moved on through the firelit darkness, walking below the soldier bivouac until they reached the camp where some Indians spoke a strange language.

“Who are these people?” Crow Necklace asked in a whisper.

For some time Young Two Moon stood and listened, studying the warriors who for the most part wore pieces of soldier uniforms. “I believe they must be the Ho-nehe-taneo-o, the Wolf People.”*

“Many, many winters have they have scouted for the soldiers.”

Looking about them in all directions, Young Two Moon grew frightened for the first time on this journey. The disappointment he had felt in finding Tse-Tsehese from the agency was now replaced by the beginning of fear for his people. He waited and did not lead Crow Necklace away from the camp of the Wolf People until the enemy had all gone to their war lodges made of blankets laid over bent willow branches, until the enemy’s fires burned low. In all that time of waiting his fear slowly boiled into hatred—until he decided they must do something to injure these ancient enemies.

When the whole camp had grown very quiet, Young Two Moon led his friend toward the enemy’s horses. They selected three of the nicest ponies the Wolf People had tied to a picket rope and cut them loose. Then the two started back across the length of the river bottom, skirting the camp to reach the spot where the other two scouts waited.

But in passing by the Arapaho camp, they found a fire still glowing cheerfully, around it a few Indians singing and eating, and a warrior frying cakes in a skillet. Beside the fire sat a large stack of cakes. The warm, luring fragrance was simply too much for Young Two Moon’s empty stomach. It growled at him not to walk on by.

“I must get me some of those cakes from that man,” he explained to Crow Necklace.

“I am hungry too. But what do we do with these horses?”

He thought a minute, trying to keep his stomach from speaking louder than his good sense. “We will let them go here. They should not wander far before we have eaten our fill.”

They released their stolen ponies, then walked boldly toward the fire. Just as they reached the light, two soldiers rode up and shouted to the Arapaho in English.

“Stop your singing and keep your eyes open!”

The soldiers rode off once the Arapaho fell silent. Grumbling, the Indians trudged off to their beds, disappearing within their makeshift war lodges. As the last Arapaho went to his blankets, the two Cheyenne scouts dashed in, scooping up a handful of the hot flour cakes, then cut loose three more ponies.

Crow Necklace claimed one, and Young Two Moon led the other two back to find their friends.

They found Hail and High Wolf curled up beneath their blankets, back to back—asleep. And discovered that their four Cheyenne ponies had wandered off.

“Hail, you come ride with me,” Young Two Moon said. “Jump up behind me. High Wolf can ride a horse, and so can Crow Necklace.”

They did their best to follow the tracks of the four horses and eventually found them, heading north by west, wending their way back home to the village.

Now they climbed onto the backs of their own war ponies, and leading their three captured animals, the four young scouts set off at a gallop into the cold and the dark.

They had news to tell Morning Star, Little Wolf, and the other chiefs.

The ve-ho-e soldiers were coming!

* 21 November 1876.

* Pawnee.

Chapter 22

22 November 1876

Вы читаете : The Dull Knife Battle, 1876
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