Obedient to his orders the Irish sergeant,
with a little squad at his heels, had kept straight
on. A few minutes later, rounding the bluff at
the gallop, eyes flashing over the field in front of
them, the party went racing out over the turf and
came in full view of the scene of the fight.
Five hundred yards further down stream was a deep bend
in the Laramie. Close to the water’s edge
two horses lay stretched upon the ground, stone dead.
Out on the open prairie lay an Indian pony still kicking
in his dying agony, and as the soldiers came sweeping
into view two men rose up from behind the low bank
of the stream and swung their hats Hal
Folsom and one of his hands safe, unwounded, yet with
a look in their gray faces that told of recent mortal
peril.
“We’re all right!
Go on after them. They’ve run off a dozen
of my best horses,” said Folsom, “and
I’m afraid they cut off Jake.”
“No! Jake reached the ranch
all right leastwise somebody did,”
said Shaughnessy. “That’s how we
got the news. They got somebody, or else they
were only bluffing when they waved that scalp.
How many were there?”
“At least a dozen too
many for you to tackle. Where’s the rest
of the troop?”
“Close at their heels.
The lieutenant led them right over the ridge.
Listen!”
Yes, far up in the foothills, faint
and clear, the sounds of the chase could now be heard.
Dean’s men were closing on the fleeing warriors,
for every little while the silence of the range was
broken by the crack of rifle or carbine. Shaughnessy’s
fellows began to fidget and look eagerly thither,
and he read their wish. “Two of you stay
with Mr. Folsom,” he said, “and the rest
come with me. There’s nothing we can do
here, is there? Sure, you’re not hit?”
“No, go on! Give ’em
hell and get back my horses. I’d go with
you, but they’ve killed what horses they couldn’t
drive. All safe at the ranch?”
Shaughnessy nodded as he spurred away.
“We’ll be gettin’ the lieutenant
a brevet for this,” said he, “if we can
only close up with those blackguards.”
And these were the words Folsom carried back with him,
as, mounting a willing trooper’s horse, he galloped
homeward to reassure his wife, thanking God for the
opportune coming of the little command, yet swearing
with close compressed lips at the ill-starred work
of the day. Thus far he had striven to keep from
her all knowledge of the threats of the Ogallallas,
although he knew she must have heard of them.
He had believed himself secure so far back from the
Platte. He had done everything in his power to
placate Red Cloud and the chiefs to convince
his former friends that he had never enticed poor Lizette,
as Baptiste had called the child, from her home and
people. They held he should never have left her,
though she had accused him of no wrong. Burning
Star, in his jealous rage, hated him, because he believed
that but for love of the paleface Lizette would have
listened to his wooing, and Folsom’s conscience
could not acquit him of having seen her preference
and of leading her on. He could not speak of her
to his wife without shame and remorse. He had
no idea what could have been her fate, for the poor
girl had disappeared from the face of the earth, and
now, at last, this day had proved to him the threats
of her lover and her brothers were not idle.
He had had so narrow a squeak for his life, so sharp
and sudden and hard a fight for it that, now that
the peril was over, his nerve began to give way, his
strong hands to tremble. Armed with breech-loaders,
he and his two friends had been able to stand off the
attacking party, killing two ponies, and emptying,
they felt sure, two saddles; but little by little
the Indians were working around their position, and
would have crawled upon them within an hour or two
but for Jake’s daring ride for help and the
blessed coming of the blue-coats in the nick of time.
Folsom swore he’d never forget their services
this day.
And as he cantered homeward he could
still hear the distant firing dying away in the mountains
to the north. “Give ’em hell, Dean!”
he muttered through his set teeth. “They’re
showing fight even when you’ve got ’em
on the run. I wonder what that means?”
Not until another day was he to know.
Late on the evening of the attack, while he was seated
with his wife by Jake’s bedside, half a dozen
troopers, two of them wounded and all with worn-out
horses, came drifting back to camp. Twice, said
they, had the fleeing Indians made a stand to cover
the slow retreat of one or two evidently sorely stricken,
but so closely were they pressed that at last they
had been forced to abandon one of their number, who
died, sending his last vengeful shot through the lieutenant’s
hunting shirt, yet only grazing the skin. Dean,
with most of the men, pushed on in pursuit, determined
never to desist so long as there was light, but these
who returned could not keep up.
Leaving the dead body of the young
brave where it lay among the rocks, they slowly journeyed
back to camp. No further tidings came, and at
daybreak Folsom, with two ranchmen and a trooper, rode
out on the trail to round up the horses the Indians
had been compelled to drop. Mrs. Hal clung sobbing
to him, unable to control her fears, but he chided
her gently and bade her see that Jake lacked no care
or comfort. The brave fellow was sore and feverish,
but in no great danger now. Five miles out in
the foothills they came upon the horses wandering placidly
back to the valley, but Folsom kept on. Four
miles further he and a single ranchman with him came
upon three troopers limping along afoot, their horses
killed in the running fight, and one of these, grateful
for a long pull at Folsom’s flask, turned back
and showed them the body of the fallen brave.
One look was enough for Hal and the comrade with him.
“Don’t let my wife know who
it was,” he had muttered to his friend.
“It would only make her more nervous.”
There lay Chaska, Lizette’s eldest brother,
and well Hal Folsom knew that death would never
go unavenged.
“If ever a time comes when I
can do you a good turn, lieutenant,” said he
that afternoon as, worn out with long hours of pursuit
and scout, the troop was encountered slowly marching
back to the Laramie, “I’ll do it if it
costs me the whole ranch.” But Dean smiled
and said they wouldn’t’ have missed that
chance even for the ranch. What a blessed piece
of luck it was that the commanding officer at Frayne
had bidden him take that route instead of the direct
road to Gate City! He had sent men riding in
to both posts on the Platte, with penciled lines telling
of the Indian raid and its results. Once well
covered by darkness the little band had easily escaped
their pursuers, and were now safe across the river
and well ahead of all possibility of successful pursuit.
But if anything were needed to prove the real temper
of the Sioux the authorities had it. Now was
the time to grapple that Ogallalla tribe and bring
it to terms before it could be reinforced by half
the young men in the villages of the northern plains.
The Platte, of course, would be patrolled by a strong
force of cavalry for some weeks to come, and no new
foray need be dreaded yet awhile. Red Cloud’s
people would “lay low” and watch the effect
of this exploit before attempting another. If
the White Father “got mad” and ordered
“heap soldiers” there to punish them,
then they must disavow all participation in the affair,
even though one of their best young braves was prominent
in the outrage, and had paid for the luxury with his
life even though Burning Star was trying
to hide the fresh scar of a rifle bullet along his
upper arm. Together Dean and Folsom rode back
to the ranch, and another night was spent there before
the troop was sufficiently rested to push on to Emory.
“Remember this, lieutenant,”
said Folsom again, as he pressed his hand at parting,
“there’s nothing too good for you and “C”
Troop at my home. If ever you need a friend you’ll
find one here.”
And the time was coming when Marshall
Dean would need all that he could muster.
Two days later still a
march away from Emory a courier overtook
him with a letter from his late post commander:
“Your vigorous pursuit and prompt, soldierly
action have added to the fine record already made and
merit hearty commendation.” The cordial
words brought sunshine to his heart. How proud
Jess would be, and mother! He had not had a word
from either for over a week. The latter, though
far from strong, was content at home in the loving
care of her sister, and in the hope that he would
soon obtain the leave of absence so long anticipated,
and, after Jess’s brief visit to Pappoose’s
new home, would come to gladden the eyes of kith and
kin, but mother’s most of all, bringing Jessie
with him. Little hope of leave of absence was
there now, and less was he the man to ask it with
such troubles looming up all along the line of frontier
posts to the north. But at least there would
be the joy of seeing Jess in a few days and showing
her his troop her and Pappoose. How
wonderfully that little schoolgirl must have grown
and developed! How beautiful a girl she must
now be if that photograph was no flatterer! By
the way, where was that photo? What had he done
with it? For the first time in four days he remembered
his picking it up when Mrs. Hal Folsom collapsed at
sight of Jake’s swooning. Down in the depths
of the side pocket of his heavy blue flannel hunting
shirt he found it, crumpled a bit, and all its lower
left-hand corner bent and blackened and crushed, Chaska’s
last shot that tore its way so close below the young
soldier’s bounding heart, just nipping and searing
the skin, had left its worst mark on that dainty carte
de visite. In that same pocket, too, was another
packet a letter which had been picked up
on the floor of the hut at Reno after Burleigh left one
for which the major had searched in vain, for it was
underneath a lot of newspapers. “You take
that after him,” said the cantonment commander,
as Dean followed with the troop next day, and little
dreamed what it contained.
That very day, in the heavy, old-fashioned
sleeping-cars of the Union Pacific, two young girls
were seated in their section on the northward side.
One, a dark-eyed, radiant beauty, gazed out over the
desolate slopes and far-reaching stretches of prairie
and distant lines of bald bluff, with delight in her
dancing eyes. The other, a winsome maid of nineteen,
looked on with mild wonderment, not unmixed with disappointment
she would gladly have hidden. To Elinor the scenes
of her childhood were dear and welcome; to Jessie
there was too much that was somber, too little that
was inviting. But presently, as the long train
rolled slowly to the platform of a rude wooden station
building, there came a sight at which the eyes of
both girls danced in eager interest a row
of “A” tents on the open prairie, a long
line of horses tethered to the picket ropes, groups
of stalwart, sunburned men in rough blue garb, a silken
guidon flapping by the tents of the officers.
It was one of half a dozen such camps of detached
troops they had been passing ever since breakfast
time the camps of isolated little commands
guarding the new railway on the climb to Cheyenne.
Papa, with one or two cronies, was playing “old
sledge” in the smoking compartment. At a
big station a few miles back two men in the uniform
of officers boarded the car, one of them burly, rotund,
and sallow. He was shown to the section just in
front of the girls, and at Pappoose he stared stared
long and hard, so that she bit her lip and turned
nervously away. The porter dusted the seat and
disposed of the hand luggage and hung about the new
arrivals in adulation. The burly man was evidently
a personage of importance, and his shoulder straps
indicated that he was a major of the general staff.
The other, who followed somewhat diffidently, was a
young lieutenant of infantry, whose trim frock-coat
snugly fitted his slender figure.
“Ah, sit down here, Mr. Mr.
Loomis,” said the major patronizingly. “So
you are going up to the Big Horn. Well, sir, I
hope we shall hear good accounts of you. There’s
a splendid field for officers of the right sort there and
opportunities for distinction every day.”
At sound of the staff officer’s
voice there roused up from the opposite section, where
he had been dozing over a paper, a man of middle age,
slim, athletic, with heavy mustache and imperial, just
beginning to turn gray, with deep-set eyes under bushy
brows, and a keen, shrewd face, rather deeply lined.
There was a look of dissipation there, a shade of
shabbiness about his clothes, a rakish cut to the entire
personality that had caused Folsom to glance distrustfully
at him more than once the previous afternoon, and
to meet with coldness the tentatives permissible
in fellow travelers. The stranger’s morning
had been lonesome. Now he held his newspaper
where it would partly shield his face, yet permit his
watching the officers across the aisle. And something
in his stealthy scrutiny attracted Pappoose.
“Yes,” continued the major,
“I have seen a great deal of that country, and
Mr. Dean, of whom you spoke, was attached to the troop
escorting our commission. He is hardly I
regret to have to say it er what
you imagine. We were, to put it mildly, much
disappointed in his conduct the day of our meeting
with the Sioux.”
A swift, surprised glance passed between
the girls, a pained look shot into the lieutenant’s
face, but before the major could go on the man across
the aisle arose and bent over him with extended hand.
“Ah, Burleigh, I thought I knew
the voice.” But the hand was not grasped.
The major was drawing back, his face growing yellow-white
with some strange dismay.
“You don’t seem sure of
my identity. Let me refresh your memory, Burleigh.
I am Captain Newhall. I see you need a drink,
major I’ll take one with you.”