Wolf Mountain Moon (35 page)

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Authors: Terry C. Johnston

BOOK: Wolf Mountain Moon
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BY TELEGRAPH

Reported Indian Massacre.

WASHINGTON, December 22.—No information has been received in regard to the reported massacre of Major Randall and party, but it is thought the report may be true. Major Randall is with General Crook's command, and it is feared may have been sent on a mission to obtain scouts and ran into Crazy Horse's band, for which Crook has been looking for some time past.

CHICAGO, December 22.—The report that Major Randall and entire party has been massacred by the Indians in the Big Horn mountains is discredited at General Sheridan's headquarters. The report is discredited from the fact that Randall was at Fort Reno on the 14th of December, 400 miles from Fort Fetterman from which point the report should have been first received had there been any truth in it.

C
ould Seamus be with Randall?

Samantha looked down at her trembling hands, the way they made the newsprint rattle so.

The instant she started to read that news story about the reported massacre, Samantha remembered how often Seamus had talked about Major “Black Jack” Randall—Crook's chief of scouts.

Stifling a sob, she quickly glanced at the babe sleeping in his tiny bed made from a crate Elizabeth Burt had talked the post quartermaster out of—afraid she had awakened the child with her anguished cry. Holding her breath, a quaking hand over her mouth, Sam waited, watching the infant.

When she saw that the boy still slept, Samantha turned away, her mind racing with the horror of possibilities. Then her eyes darted aimlessly here and there over the room. And at last, on instinct alone, she literally dived onto the tiny rope-and-tick bed, plunging her hand beneath the overstuffed goose-down pillow.

Her fingers touched it, seized the pages, brought his letter out into the light.

Barely breathing, Samantha opened the folds. Her eyes danced over her husband's words. Did he mention riding off with Randall?

How her heart leaped into her throat, her breath suddenly stilled like river ice in her chest as the seconds stretched into moments … as she desperately searched for some clue to just what Seamus was doing in that country, some mention that he might possibly be with Black Jack Randall's company of scouts.

Valley of the Belle Fourche
Wyoming Terr.                 

My Dearest Heart—

It looks to be we'll be here awhile. Crook's waiting for supplies to come up from Fetterman. We were supposed to have them before now….

Her eyes searched farther down the page.

Don't fear that I'll grow bored here, Sam. Crook and Mackenzie will see to that. They've got scouts going out in this direction or the other all the time. Coming and going. And they plan on having me out too. While we are waiting here for rations and grain for the horses, the generals want to know what the Indians are doing. Where Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull are camped, or moving—

She bit down on her lip so hard to keep from crying out, Samantha was sure she made her flesh bleed. Scouts with General Crook's command may have run onto Crazy Horse's band!

“Dear blessed God,” she whispered prayerfully, then ran the tip of her tongue over her bleeding lip. “Holy Mary, Mother of God.”

Angrily she swiped at her eyes that darted over the words she realized she had memorized by now, reading his letter over and over again so many times the pencil scratches were all but rubbed off the cheap army paper.

So the Indian scouts are being sent north toward the Yellowstone, into the Powder River country. It's there the Indian scouts say Crazy Horse and his warriors have gone.

Closing her teary eyes, Samantha raised her face to the low ceiling Seamus always came close to scraping with the top of his head. Alone there in the quiet and the cold, she began to whisper her plea.

But in the midst of her prayer, as she stuttered to a stop mouthing the words, her heart reminded her of snatches of what he had told her in that letter.

So at least I have something to do from day to day…. Able to saddle up and ride out rather than hanging about camp. … I'd rather be out on the back of a good, strong horse that doesn't talk back. Where it's quiet enough to hear my own thoughts.

Where I can think about you. And our boy.

It will be light soon and time to go to work for the army. To mount up and ride out.

It gives my mind a lot of time to think, and my
heart a lot of time to ache, Sam. But we both know I have a job to do while I'm here. There aren't many things I have the talent to do. I am a simple man with big, clumsy hands and a half-slow brain, but I can do army work. If this is how God wills me to put the food on my family's table, to put the clothes on your backs and a roof over your heads, then so be it.

I will always do what God sets before me, to the best of my ability—for there are those who are counting on me to see my way through all the trouble and travail thrown down in my path, for there are those who are counting on me to make my way back home to them.

If for some reason the army keeps me here in this far north country longer than that—I vow to do all I can to be home shortly after the coming of the new year.

Keep me in your prayers, Sam. Hold our son close morning and night for me too. Oh, that I could wrap you both in my arms right now, it is so cold here. So very, very cold here. For the love of God, please pray for me—pray that God will hold me in his hand and deliver me to you soon.

“Dear God,” she whispered almost aloud. “Listen to every one of my prayers. Please listen to his too. And bring him back to us as soon as his work is done.”

And remember what I've always told you. That God watches over drunks, and fools, and poor army wretches like me…. Watch the skyline to the north. One day I'll be there, big as life, come home to hold you both again.

Until then hug yourselves for me. And tell my son that his father loves him more than breath itself. Know that I love and cherish you more, much, much more than I do my own life.

Samantha crumpled into the overstuffed pillow, trying her best to muffle her whimpering sobs. This not knowing, this simple matter of just plain enduring day after day…. Was she strong enough to be Seamus Donegan's wife?

She cried and cried and cried some more that afternoon and didn't realize until the baby's cries awoke her that she had cried herself to sleep.

Quickly she went to the child's tiny bed, swept the boy into her arms, and clutched him to her tightly, tears streaming down her cheeks.

“Dear God,” she whispered there as she cradled her child, “just as I am holding the son of Seamus Donegan in my hands, I pray you'll hold Seamus himself in yours.”

She worked quickly at the buttons on the front of her dress, pulling aside the linen bodice to free one breast. The boy took to it eagerly.

“Keep Seamus warm,” she whispered, laying her lips atop the child's warm, furry head. “Holy Mother, watch over your wayward child in the wilderness.”

BY TELEGRAPH

WASHINGTON

The Black Hills Committee.

WASHINGTON, December 26:—The president today sent to the senate a message enclosing the report of the proceedings of the commission appointed to treat with the Sioux Indians for the relinquishment of their right to the Black Hills. He calls special attention to the articles of agreement by the commission. Among the other advantages to be gained by them is the right of citizens to go into the country of which they have taken possession, from which they cannot be excluded; ordered printed and tabled.

No one knew how long it would take for the Sans Arc runner to reach the Sitting Bull camp.

Many suns ago Crazy Horse had asked for a volunteer, a man who could ride day and night, switching back and forth between three ponies, galloping north to find the Hunkpapa people. He was carrying Crazy Horse's request that Sitting Bull trade for ammunition with the Red River Slota north of
the Muddy Water River.
*
Trade for as many weapons as the Hunkpapa could get their hands on.

Then he asked Sitting Bull himself to bring the rifle cartridges to the Shifting Sands River,
†
where the Hunkpapa camp circle would rendezvous with the Crazy Horse people. And once more they would be strong enough to turn back, perhaps to wipe out, all
wasicu
soldiers—with enough bullets and guns, the
Titunwan
Lakota would never have to bow their heads in shame like those who had been driven back to the agencies.

Day after day Spotted Elk watched and waited for the runner to return with word that Sitting Bull was on his way, especially now that they knew the Bear Coat's soldiers were marching south toward the villages. With his slow wagons pulled by the plodding, lead-footed animals the white men were so fond of, it would take the Bear Coat many more days before his men were a threat to the women and children in the villages. Once the soldiers reached the ground Crazy Horse had selected for their battle, only then would the warriors ride out to engage them.

If the ammunition and guns arrived in time, then their war against the
wasicu
could go on, and they never would have to surrender, Spotted Elk realized. But if after he had delivered that precious cargo, Sitting Bull still desired to flee back across the Elk River, north beyond the Muddy Water River until he had crossed the Medicine Line into the Land of the Grandmother, then Crazy Horse would not try to stop the Hunkpapa visionary.

Then Crazy Horse would be on his own.

After the decoys left for the soldier post, the Horse ordered that the village move upstream from the mouth of Suicide Creek
#
to the sheltered mouth of Prairie Dog Creek, which flowed into the Buffalo Tongue from the west. With plenty of wood close at hand as well as a warm, seeping spring that did not freeze over even in the coldest weather, the camp raised their lodges, sent out small hunting parties of the younger boys, and kept wolves moving up and down the Buffalo
Tongue day after day—watching the Bear Coat's army advance through the deepening snow.

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