the core.
Big Leggings had turned against his mother’s people and agreed to help lead the Bear Coat on Sitting Bull’s trail.
“The half-breed says he has not turned against you, Uncle,” declared White Bull, his arm still aching from the bullet wound suffered at Cedar Creek. “Big Leggings tells the agency Indians that he is only helping the Bear Coat so he can talk you into surrendering.”
“Why should he want me to surrender?”
White Bull scoffed, “Because Big Leggings thinks it is a good thing for our people.”
He stared at the fire a long, long time, watching blue flames lick along the dry cottonwood limbs.
Finally the Bull spoke. “Sometimes I am not always right.”
“What is not right now?”
“People,” he replied morosely. “I get fooled by people.”
“The
With a sad, mirthless grin, Sitting Bull shook his head. “No—I always expect the worst from a white man, always expect that he will not tell me the truth … and I have never been disappointed.”
White Bull leaned closer, asking, “If not the
“No. By the half-breeds. The ones who have their Lakota blood fighting their
Leaning back, White Bull nodded. “You saved his life that snowy day long ago.”
“I thought I did right, even when he ran away from the Hunkpapa and made a home among the Crazy Horse people.”
White Bull nodded. “His
“Yes, I saw him with the soldiers at the Narrow Buttes,”* Sitting Bull admitted. “And now … another half-breed I trusted has turned his back on me.”
White Bull took his good arm to draw a thumb across his throat. “You could have killed both of them.”
“Yes,” Sitting Bull replied, his eyes lit with a cold fire. “One day I may still have the chance to do just that.”
So it was that while part of the Bear Coat’s army marched west and the others marched south by west up the valley of Big Dry Creek chasing nothing more than a planted rumor, Sitting Bull turned about and led his hundred-plus lodges all the farther to the east, on past the soldier stockade at Wolf Point, still farther downriver to the mouth of the Redwater, which flowed into the
As the weather began to warm again, the thick ice in the
Hadn’t he warned them after the great victory at the Greasy Grass? Warned them not to touch the soldier spoils? But like children, his people had not listened to the words of the Great Mystery. So for some moons now they were being scattered and driven across the prairie before the winds. First they had been harried east to the Narrow Buttes, where the soldiers had found one of the villages and killed American Horse.
Then they had fled north to the valley of the Elk River*—where the Bear Coat had found them, decided to fight instead of talk, and the
Now the army was marching for another winter. And Sitting Bull was sure the Bear Coat would keep on marching after his people until he had taken them across the Medicine Line† into the Land of the Grandmother.#
There was little choice but to run.
Now there could be no doubt that
Given his orders by Miles at Fort Peck before the colonel had departed with the lion’s share of the regiment, Luther S. Kelly and three others—Jim Woods, Billy Cross, and the old mountain man John Johnston—headed down the south bank of the river to search for any Sioux villages that might be in the neighborhood, coming in off the trail to join up with Sitting Bull. After all, the Hunkpapa were reportedly fleeing west, away from the army.
As soon as Miles had locked up his agreement with the half-breed named Bruguier, Kelly and the rest recrossed the softening ice on the frozen Missouri on the nineteenth and started east to look for Sioux. A day later Captain Simon Snyder started up the Big Dry with his four-company battalion.
The fat gray clouds that rolled in on the nineteenth began dropping snow before dawn on the twentieth. Accumulating rapidly, it soon obliterated any hope of finding old trails leading in to the Fort Peck country. On they slogged for more than fifty miles following the twists and turns of the Missouri until they reached a point opposite the old trapping post of Wolf Point. It was there Kelly’s men smelled a faint hint of smoke on the cold wind, searched cautiously for the cause. Down among the trees along the south bank they discovered a cottonwood stump still smoldering, the snow melted away for some distance all around. There were enough foot-and hoof- prints, as well as cooking fires to account for as many as four lodges of Sioux. Where they had gone in the last day or so, Kelly’s scouts had no way of knowing.
The snow had done well to cover the Indians’ trail but was tapering off now to nothing more than a few random flakes. Frustrated, Kelly turned to gaze across the river. Firelight glowed red-orange against the low- hanging cloud bellies—a sure sign there was life within the Wolf Point stockade.
“Jim, you and the rest make us a fire. I’ll see who’s to home and be back shortly,” Kelly said as he stuffed an ice-caked buffalo-hide moccasin back into the stirrup and raised himself to his saddle.
With the temperatures moderating over the last few days, the river’s ice was beginning to soften enough that it proved to be some tricky business making that crossing any time of the day—much less here at sunset. Luther urged his mount onto the ice, whereupon the animal immediately fought the bit, struggling against its rider.
After those first few steps it was clear to Kelly that the top layer of the ice had thawed during the warmth of the afternoon, leaving behind huge puddles of water and slushy ice scum that extended all the way to the far shore. Better to go afoot, Kelly figured—to be out of the saddle if the horse took its own head, or the ice splintered below them. Freeing his lariat from the saddle, Luther tied a crude hackamore around the mount’s head and muzzle, then set out for the north bank on foot, tugging on the lead rope.
Man and horse waded cautiously through the water and slush, picking their way through the deepening twilight. Every place he found the ice beneath his moccasins too spongy, Kelly turned back and made a slow, looping detour until he was once again walking on something a little more solid. It was growing dark by the time they reached the north bank and finally stood on firm footing among the bare, frost-coated branches of cottonwood and willow.
From the pair of white traders operating inside the crude stockade Kelly got some coffee and learned that three families had crossed the river that morning, scampering to the north because of word the army was marching along the south bank of the Missouri. It was black as the pits of hell by the time Kelly again stood on the bank, attempting to measure his chances of making it back across in the dark. A lot harder, he thought, to see the thin patches of soft ice without any moonlight to speak of. But, on the other hand, the ice might thaw all the more by morning—making a crossing even more difficult.
In the end the scout convinced himself that the cold nighttime temperatures would harden the spongy ice and improve his odds come first light. Besides, he decided as he turned back to the stockade, it would be good to share the evening with the two new faces, their Assiniboine wives and half-breed children, to hear new stories and to talk