Bowen proved to be a fairly good cook,
and I ventured to ask people to dinner in our little
hall dining-room, a veritable box of a place.
One day, feeling particularly ambitious to have my
dinner a success, I made a bold attempt at oyster
patties. With the confidence of youth and inexperience,
I made the pastry, and it was a success; I took a can
of Baltimore oysters, and did them up in a fashion
that astonished myself, and when, after the soup,
each guest was served with a hot oyster patty, one
of the cavalry officers fairly gasped. “Oyster
patty, if I’m alive! Where on earth Bless
my stars! And this at Camp Apache!”
“And by Holy Jerusalem! they
are good, too,” claimed Captain Reilly, and
turning to Bowen, he said: “Bowen, did you
make these?”
Bowen straightened himself up to his
six foot two, clapped his heels together, and came
to “attention,” looked straight to the
front, and replied: “Yes, sir.”
I thought I heard Captain Reilly say
in an undertone to his neighbor, “The hell he
did,” but I was not sure.
At that season, we got excellent wild
turkeys there, and good Southdown mutton, and one
could not complain of such living.
But I could never get accustomed to
the wretched small space of one room and a hall; for
the kitchen, being detached, could scarcely be counted
in. I had been born and brought up in a spacious
house, with plenty of bedrooms, closets, and an immense
old-time garret. The forlorn makeshifts for closets,
and the absence of all conveniences, annoyed me and
added much to the difficulties of my situation.
Added to this, I soon discovered that my husband had
a penchant for buying and collecting things which
seemed utterly worthless to me, and only added to the
number of articles to be handled and packed away.
I begged him to refrain, and to remember that he was
married, and that we had not the money to spend in
such ways. He really did try to improve, and denied
himself the taking of many an alluring share in raffles
for old saddles, pistols, guns, and cow-boy’s
stuff, which were always being held at the cutler’s
store.
But an auction of condemned hospital
stores was too much for him, and he came in triumphantly
one day, bringing a box of antiquated dentist’s
instruments in his hand.
“Good gracious!” I cried,
“what can you ever do with those forceps?”
“Oh! they are splendid,”
he said, “and they will come in mighty handy
some time.”
I saw that he loved tools and instruments,
and I reflected, why not? There are lots of things
I have a passion for, and love, just as he loves those
things and I shall never say any more about it.
“Only,” I added, aloud, “do not
expect me to pack up such trash when we come to move;
you will have to look out for it yourself.”
So with that spiteful remark from
me, the episode of the forceps was ended, for the
time at least.
As the winter came on, the isolation
of the place had a rather depressing effect upon us
all. The officers were engaged in their various
duties: drill, courts-martial, instruction, and
other military occupations. They found some diversion
at “the store,” where the ranchmen assembled
and told frontier stories and played exciting games
of poker. Jack’s duties as commissary officer
kept him much away from me, and I was very lonely.
The mail was brought in twice a week
by a soldier on horseback. When he failed to
come in at the usual time, much anxiety was manifested,
and I learned that only a short time before, one of
the mail-carriers had been killed by Indians and the
mail destroyed. I did not wonder that on mail-day
everybody came out in front of the quarters and asked:
“Is the mail-carrier in?” And nothing
much was done or thought of on that day, until we
saw him come jogging in, the mail-bag tied behind his
saddle. Our letters were from two to three weeks
old. The eastern mail came via Santa Fe to the
terminus of the railroad, and then by stage; for in
1874, the railroads did not extend very far into the
Southwest. At a certain point on the old New
Mexico road, our man met the San Carlos carrier, and
received the mail for Apache.
“I do not understand,”
I said, “how any soldier can be found to take
such a dangerous detail.”
“Why so?” said Jack. “They
like it.”
“I should think that when they
got into those canons and narrow defiles, they would
think of the horrible fate of their predecessor,”
said I.
“Perhaps they do,” he
answered; “but a soldier is always glad to get
a detail that gives him a change from the routine
of post life.”
I was getting to learn about the indomitable
pluck of our soldiers. They did not seem to be
afraid of anything. At Camp Apache my opinion
of the American soldier was formed, and it has never
changed. In the long march across the Territory,
they had cared for my wants and performed uncomplainingly
for me services usually rendered by women. Those
were before the days of lineal promotion. Officers
remained with their regiments for many years.
A feeling of regimental prestige held officers and
men together. I began to share that feeling.
I knew the names of the men in the company, and not
one but was ready to do a service for the “Lieutenant’s
wife.” “K” had long been a bachelor
company; and now a young woman had joined it.
I was a person to be pampered and cared for, and they
knew besides that I was not long in the army.
During that winter I received many
a wild turkey and other nice things for the table,
from the men of the company. I learned to know
and to thoroughly respect the enlisted man of the
American army.
And now into the varied kaleidoscope
of my army life stepped the Indian Agent. And
of all unkempt, unshorn, disagreeable-looking personages
who had ever stepped foot into our quarters, this
was the worst.
“Heaven save us from a Government
which appoints such men as that to watch over and
deal with Indians,” cried I, as he left the house.
“Is it possible that his position here demands
social recognition?” I added.
“Hush!” said the second
lieutenant of K company. “It’s the
Interior Department that appoints the Indian Agents,
and besides,” he added, “it’s not
good taste on your part, Martha, to abuse the Government
which gives us our bread and butter.”
“Well, you can say what you
like, and preach policy all you wish, no Government
on earth can compel me to associate with such men as
those!” With that assertion, I left the room,
to prevent farther argument.
And I will here add that in my experience
on the frontier, which extended over a long period,
it was never my good fortune to meet with an Indian
Agent who impressed me as being the right sort of a
man to deal with those children of nature, for Indians
are like children, and their intuitions are keen.
They know and appreciate honesty and fair dealing,
and they know a gentleman when they meet one.
The winter came on apace, but the
weather was mild and pleasant. One day some officers
came in and said we must go over to the “Ravine”
that evening, where the Indians were going to have
a rare sort of a dance.
There was no one to say to me:
“Do not go,” and, as we welcomed any little
excitement which would relieve the monotony of our
lives, we cast aside all doubts of the advisability
of my going. So, after dinner, we joined the
others, and sallied forth into the darkness of an Arizona
night. We crossed the large parade-ground, and
picked our way over a rough and pathless country,
lighted only by the stars above.
Arriving at the edge of the ravine,
what a scene was before us! We looked down into
a natural amphitheatre, in which blazed great fires;
hordes of wild Apaches darted about, while others sat
on logs beating their tomtoms.
I was afraid, and held back, but the
rest of the party descended into the ravine, and,
leaning on a good strong arm, I followed. We all
sat down on the great trunk of a fallen tree, and
soon the dancers came into the arena.
They were entirely naked, except for
the loin-cloth; their bodies were painted, and from
their elbows and knees stood out bunches of feathers,
giving them the appearance of huge flying creatures;
jingling things were attached to their necks and arms.
Upon their heads were large frames, made to resemble
the branching horns of an elk, and as they danced,
and bowed their heads, the horns lent them the appearance
of some unknown animal, and added greatly to their
height. Their feathers waved, their jingles shook,
and their painted bodies twisted and turned in the
light of the great fire, which roared and leaped on
high. At one moment they were birds, at another
animals, at the next they were demons.
The noise of the tomtoms and the harsh
shouts of the Indians grew wilder and wilder.
It was weird and terrifying. Then came a pause;
the arena was cleared, and with much solemnity two
wicked-looking creatures came out and performed a
sort of shadow dance, brandishing knives as they glided
through the intricate figures.
It was a fascinating but unearthly
scene, and the setting completed the illusion.
Fright deprived me of the power of thought, but in
a sort of subconscious way I felt that Orpheus must
have witnessed just such mad revels when he went down
into Pluto’s regions. Suddenly the shouts
became war whoops, the demons brandished their knives
madly, and nodded their branching horns; the tomtoms
were beaten with a dreadful din, and terror seized
my heart. What if they be treacherous, and had
lured our small party down into this ravine for an
ambush! The thing could well be, I thought.
I saw uneasiness in the faces of the other women, and
by mutual consent we got up and slowly took our departure.
I barely had strength to climb up the steep side of
the hollow. I was thankful to escape from its
horrors.
Scarce three months after that some
of the same band of Indians fired into the garrison
and fled to the mountains. I remarked to Jack,
that I thought we were very imprudent to go to see
that dance, and he said he supposed we were.
But I had never regarded life in such a light way as
he seemed to.
Women usually like to talk over their
trials and their wonderful adventures, and that is
why I am writing this, I suppose. Men simply
will not talk about such things.
The cavalry beauty seemed to look
at this frontier life philosophically what
she really thought about it, I never knew. Mrs.
Bailey was so much occupied by the care of her young
child and various out-door amusements, that she did
not, apparently, think much about things that happened
around us. At all events, she never seemed inclined
to talk about them. There was no one else to talk
to; the soil was strange, and the atmosphere a foreign
one to me; life did not seem to be taken seriously
out there, as it was back in New England, where they
always loved to sit down and talk things over.
I was downright lonesome for my mother and sisters.
I could not go out very much at that
time, so I occupied myself a good deal with needle-work.
One evening we heard firing across
the canon. Jack caught up his sword, buckling
on his belt as he went out. “Injuns fighting
on the other side of the river,” some soldier
reported. Finding that it did not concern us,
Jack said, “Come out into the back yard, Martha,
and look over the stockade, and I think you can see
across the river.” So I hurried out to
the stockade, but Jack, seeing that I was not tall
enough, picked up an empty box that stood under the
window of the room belonging to the Doctor, when,
thud! fell something out onto the ground, and rolled
away. I started involuntarily. It was dark
in the yard. I stood stock still. “What
was that?” I whispered.
“Nothing but an old Edam cheese,”
said this true-hearted soldier of mine. I knew
it was not a cheese, but said no more. I stood
up on the box, watched the firing like a man, and
went quietly back into the quarters. After retiring,
I said, “You might just a swell tell me now,
you will have to sooner or later, what was in the box it
had a dreadful sound, as it rolled away on the ground.”
“Well,” said he, “if
you must know, it was an Injun’s head that the
Doctor had saved, to take to Washington with him.
It had a sort of a malformed skull or jaw-bone or
something. But he left it behind I
guess it got a leetle to old for him to carry,”
he laughed. “Somebody told me there was
a head in the yard, but I forgot all about it.
Lucky thing you didn’t see it, wasn’t
it? I suppose you’d been scared well,
I must tell the fatigue party to-morrow to take it
away. Now don’t let me forget it,”
and this soldier of many battles fell into the peaceful
slumber which comes to those who know not fear.
The next day I overheard him telling
Major Worth what had happened, and adding that he
would roast that Doctor if he ever came back.
I was seeing the rugged side of life, indeed, and
getting accustomed to shocks.
Now the cavalry beauty gave a dinner.
It was lovely; but in the midst of it, we perceived
a sort of confusion of moccasined footsteps outside
the dining-room. My nerves were, by this time,
always on the alert. I glanced through the large
door opening out into the hall, and saw a group of
Indian scouts; they laid a coffee-sack down by the
corner fire-place, near the front door. The commanding
officer left the table hastily; the portiere was drawn.
I had heard tales of atrocious cruelties
committed by a band of Indians who had escaped from
the reservation and were ravaging the country around.
I had heard how they maimed poor sheep and cut off
the legs of cattle at the first joint, leaving them
to die; how they tortured women, and burned their
husbands and children before their eyes; I had heard
also that the Indian scouts were out after them, with
orders to bring them in, dead or alive.
The next day I learned that the ringleader’s
head was in the bag that I had seen, and that the
others had surrendered and returned. The scouts
were Apaches in the pay of the Government, and I always
heard that, as long as they were serving as scouts,
they showed themselves loyal and would hunt down their
nearest relative.
Major Worth got tired of the monotony
of a bachelor’s life at Camp Apache and decided
to give a dance in his quarters, and invite the chiefs.
I think the other officers did not wholly approve of
it, although they felt friendly enough towards them,
as long as they were not causing disturbances.
But to meet the savage Apache on a basis of social
equality, in an officer’s quarters, and to dance
in a quadrille with him! Well, the limit of all
things had been reached!
However, Major Worth, who was actually
suffering from the ennui of frontier life in winter,
and in time of peace, determined to carry out his
project, so he had his quarters, which were quite spacious,
cleared and decorated with evergreen boughs.
From his company, he secured some men who could play
the banjo and guitar, and all the officers and their
wives, and the chiefs with their harems, came
to this novel fête. A quadrille was formed, in
which the chiefs danced opposite the officers.
The squaws sat around, as they were too shy to
dance. These chiefs were painted, and wore only
their necklaces and the customary loin-cloth, throwing
their blankets about their shoulders when they had
finished dancing. I noticed again Chief Diablo’s
great good looks.
Conversation was carried on principally
by signs and nods, and through the interpreter (a
white man named Cooley). Besides, the officers
had picked up many short phrases of the harsh and
gutteral Apache tongue.
Diablo was charmed with the young,
handsome wife of one of the officers, and asked her
husband how many ponies he would take for her, and
Pedro asked Major Worth, if all those white squaws
belonged to him.
The party passed off pleasantly enough,
and was not especially subversive to discipline, although
I believe it was not repeated.
Afterwards, long afterwards, when
we were stationed at David’s Island, New York
Harbor, and Major Worth was no longer a bachelor, but
a dignified married man and had gained his star in
the Spanish War, we used to meet occasionally down
by the barge office or taking a Fenster-promenade
on Broadway, and we would always stand awhile and chat
over the old days at Camp Apache in ’74.
Never mind how pressing our mutual engagements were,
we could never forego the pleasure of talking over
those wild days and contrasting them with our then
present surroundings. “Shall you ever forget
my party?” he said, the last time we met.