Five days later the women and children
from Warrior Gap, most of them bereaved, all of them
unnerved by the experiences of that awful day, arrived
at old Fort Frayne, escorted by a strong command of
infantry and all that was left of the cavalry troop
at the stockade. A sad procession it was as it
slowly forded the Platte and ascended the winding road
to the post, where sorrowing, sympathetic army women
met and ministered to them. With them, too, came
such of the wounded as could be moved, and at the
head of the little squad of horse rode Lieutenant Dean,
whom the post commander and several officers greeted
almost effusively.
Yet almost the first question was,
“Did you see any Indians?”
“Not one,” answered Dean.
“They seem to have drawn away from the Big Horn
road entirely. Why do you ask?” he added
anxiously.
“There were signal fires out
at Eagle Butte last night, and I’ve just had
a letter from old Folsom at the ranch on the Laramie.
He begs us to send a guard at once, and I haven’t
a horseman. There’s been the devil to pay
at young Folsom’s place.”
Dean’s face went a shade paler.
“What’s happened?” he asked.
“A dozen of his best horses
run off by Birdsall’s gang, probably to replace
those they lost in the flood, and Hal himself was shot
and left for dead in the hills. He’d have
died but for an Ogallalla girl and a couple of half-breeds
who had a hunting lodge out near the Peak. There
are letters for you at the office.”
There were two one from
Loomis, at Emory; one from Jessie, of all places in
the world, at Folsom’s ranch. This he read
first.
“We got here late night before
last, after such an exciting journey, Marshall
dear,” said she, “and I can’t begin
to tell you all the strange things that have
happened, for Mr. Folsom says the messenger must
start for Fort Frayne in twenty minutes. That
villain, Major Burleigh, who dared to speak ill
of you, turned out to be as bad as I ever said
he was. They haven’t caught him yet, but
they’ve got Captain Newhall. Mr. Folsom
and Mr. Loring did that caught him
in the backyard of our house, down by the gate, and
in some way Mrs. Fletcher induced him to come there,
for he had the key of the safe at the quartermaster’s
depot, and was going to get the money Major Burleigh
dared not take when he fled. I can’t understand
it at all, and Pappoose doesn’t like to talk
about it. But Mr. Folsom was robbed of lots
of money by Major Burleigh. Mrs. Fletcher
is mixed up in it in such a queer way, I can’t
explain how. She was nearly crazy when we
came away, and Mr. Folsom was so good and kind
to her, left a nurse with her, and made her stay at
the house, although she wanted to pack her things
and go to the hotel or the jail, she didn’t
care which; but he wouldn’t let her.
“And right in the midst of it
all Ned Lannion, who came with news before, galloped
in to tell how Halbert Folsom had been missing two
days and Mrs. Folsom was crazy with fear, so Mr.
Folsom left Lieutenant Loring to attend to all
the matters about the robbery and started at
once for the ranch, and Pappoose, of course, insisted
on going with him, and I would not be left behind.
And here we are. Now I can see the hills
where you had the fight and wore Elinor’s
picture, and it was right out there among them that
Halbert was found. Horse thieves had run
off his best horses the same gang
of murderers that, they say, planned to trap you and
that you outwitted. Oh! Marshall, was
ever a girl so proud of her brother! and
they shot Hal and he was found and taken care of by
some Indian people, tame ones, and one was a girl,
Lizette, who had fallen in love with him four
years ago. Wasn’t it romantic? And
she’s gone again, but Hal is safe here,
although Mrs. Folsom is more than half-crazy,
and now old Mr. Folsom is worried to death, and
says we must start back for home to-morrow. It’s
seventy-five miles and we don’t want to
go at all only I’m so eager to see
you, and I heard at least Mr. Loomis
told me you’d be back any day, and he has
your troop till you come, and he’s so fond of
you Oh, here’s Pappoose to say
this must go at once.”
The colonel sat watching the young
fellow as he read. “Bad news, Dean?”
he queried.
“Every kind of news, sir.
It’s all a whirl. The devil seems to have
broken loose in Wyoming. Let me skim through Loomis’
note.
“DEAR DEAN: In case the
letter sent yesterday passes you on the way,
I add a line to say that if ever I said a mean thing
about Loring when we were in the corps, I take
it back. I thought him a prig when we wore
the gray. He rather ‘held us under’
anyhow, being a class ahead, you know, but the
way he has panned out here and wiped up Wyoming
with the only men I ever knew that tried to wrong
you is simply wonderful. He’s nabbed three
of the Birdsall gang and is away now after Burleigh.
The news from Folsom’s ranch is more reassuring.
Hal was shot by horsethieves who were running off
stock, and was found and taken care of by friendly
Indians, but Mrs. Hal had an awful scare and
sent for the old man, who went, of course both
young ladies going with him. They were miles away
before we knew it at the fort. I tried to
pursuade old Pecksniff that he ought to let me
go with twenty troopers to guard the ranch and
scout the Laramie, and he threatened to put me in arrest.
Of all the double-dashed, pig-headed old idiots
he’s the worst. I don’t want
people at the ranch to be scared, but if the Sioux
only would make some demonstration this way that
would give me a chance. I’d try to
earn a little of the reputation that you’re winning,
old boy, and no man knows better how much you
deserve it than
“Your friend and
classmate, HANK L.”
“P. S. Loring
took ten of the troop into the Black Hills to beat
up Burleigh, but he
said if they struck Indian sign he meant to
make for Folsom’s
ranch. Now, if we could only meet there!”
The sun was well down at the west.
The day’s march had been long and tedious, as
only cavalry marches are when long wagon trains have
to be escorted. Dean had not yet fully recovered
strength, but anxiety lent him energy.
“If Mr. Folsom says there is
need of cavalry guard at the Laramie, it is because
he dreads an other Indian visit, colonel. I have
nine men in good shape. Our horses are fresh,
or will be after a few hours’ rest. May
I push on to-night?”
And to the young soldier’s surprise
the elder placed a trembling hand upon his shoulder
and looked him earnestly in the eyes. “Dean,
my boy, it’s my belief you cannot start too
soon. Do you know who Lizette is?”
“I’ve heard the story,”
said Marshall briefly. “She must have been
hovering about there for some time.”
“Yes, and now her people know
it, and it will rekindle their hatred. The moment
I heard of this I sent old Bat to watch the crossing
at La Bonte. Not an hour ago this came in by
the hand of his boy,” and the colonel held out
a scrap of paper. It a rude pictograph, a rough
sketch, map-like, of a winding river another
and smaller one separated from the first by a chain
of mountains. The larger one was decorated by
a flag-pole with stars and stripes at the top and
a figure with musket and bayonet at the bottom.
The smaller one by a little house, with smoke issuing
from the chimney, and a woman beside it. Above
all, its head over the mountains pointing toward the
house, its tail extending north of the bigger stream,
was a comet the “totem” or sign
of the Ogallalla lover of Lizette. The story
was told at a glance. Burning Star was already
south of the Platte and lurking in the mountains near
Folsom’s ranch.
That night, toward ten o’clock,
an anxious council was held. Halbert Folsom,
fevered by his severe wound, was lying half-unconscious
on his bed, his unhappy wife wandering aimlessly about
at times, wringing her hands and weeping, evidently
unbalanced by the terrors that had beset her of late
and the tidings of that awful Indian revenge along
the Big Horn. Silent, helpful, almost commanding,
Elinor spent the hours sometimes at her brother’s
bedside, then at that of her sister-in-law when the
poor creature could be induced to lie still a moment.
The burly little son and heir, long since sound asleep
in his cradle, was watched over by Jessie, whose heart
fluttered in dread she dare not say of what.
Twice that afternoon she had seen whispered conferences
between old Folsom and Lannion. She knew that
for some better reason than that he was overpersuaded
by Pappoose, Mr. Folsom had not carried out his project
of sending them back to Gate City. She saw that
he made frequent visits to the cellar and had changed
the arrangement of the air ports. She noted that
the few ranch hands hung about the premises all day,
their rifles ever within reach, and that often Mr.
Folsom took the glasses and searched the road to Frayne.
She saw that earth was being heaped up in places against
the ranch where the walls were thin or made of boarding.
She saw that water and provisions were being stored
in the cellar, and she knew that it could all mean
only one thing that the Indians were again
in force in the neighborhood, and that an Indian siege
was imminent.
And all this time Pappoose, though
very brave, was so still and so intent upon her duties.
Even when supper was served for the ranch people in
the kitchen that evening, as the sun went down, Jess
noted that two of the men kept constantly in saddle,
riding round the buildings and anxiously scanning
the open prairie on every side. There were only
six men, all told now, including Folsom (of course
not counting Hal, who was defenseless), altogether
too small a number to successfully protect so large
a knot of buildings against an insidious and powerful
foe, and even of these six there were two who seemed
so unstrung by tidings of the massacre as to be nearly
nerveless.
Darkness settled down upon the valley,
and, though calm and collected, Folsom seemed oppressed
by the deepest anxiety. Every now and then he
would step forth into the night and make a circuit
of the buildings, exchange a word in low tone with
some invisible guardian, for, heavily armed, the employes
were gathered at the main building, and the wife and
children of the chief herdsman were assigned to a room
under its roof. Particularly did Folsom pet and
encourage the dogs, two of them splendid mastiffs
in whom Hal took unusual pride. Then he would
return to his son’s bedside, bend anxiously
over him and lay a loving hand on Pappoose’s
lustrous hair. It must have been ten o’clock
and a night wind was rising, making the occasional
cry of the coyotes even more weird and querulous,
when they heard the sudden, fierce challenge of Trooper,
the keenest, finest of the mastiffs, and instantly
his bark was echoed by the rush and scurry of every
canine on the place. The men on the porch sprang
to their feet and Folsom hastened out to join them.
The dogs had charged in the darkness toward the northeast,
and somewhere out in that direction were now all furiously
barking. Aloft the skies were heavily clouded.
The moon was banked and not a glimmer of light shone
on earth or heaven. Suddenly, afar out over the
prairie, beyond where the dogs were challenging, there
was heard the sound of a pony’s neigh, an eager
appeal for welcome and shelter, and Folsom sprang confidently
forward, his powerful tones calling off the dogs.
They came back, growling, sniffing, only half-satisfied,
still bristling at the unseen visitor. “War
ponies never neigh,” said Folsom. “Who
are you, brothers friends?” he called,
in the Sioux tongue, and a faint voice answered from
the darkness, a pony came loping dimly into view,
almost running over him, and in another minute an
Indian girl, trembling with fear and exhaustion, had
toppled from the saddle and clasped the old trader’s
hand.
“Good God! Lizette,”
he cried, “you again? What is wrong?”
for her head was drooping, her knees giving way beneath
her, as the poor child whispered her answer:
“Sioux coming plenty braves!
Hide quick!”
And Folsom bore her in his arms within.