A portion of this post was published earlier, "Found By The Cheyenne."
---
The next day they came across
buffalo; Pony and Baker gave chase.
It was the lieutenant’s first hunt from horseback and he had difficulty
closing with the herd. The panicked mass of buffalo spooked his horse, which
shied whenever an animal in the herd swerved or stumbled or kicked up a
clod. Baker kept up as best he could for
five miles, firing his rifle and every round in his pistol but unable to
bring down a single animal. In the end
he dismounted from his exhausted horse and watched the buffalo fade into the distance, enthralled
by the waves of dust and thunder.
Pony killed a young cow and that
evening the three of them dined on roast and ribs. Pony and the Indian squatted on their
haunches, smacking and chewing, the juices running down their chins as they
ate. When they finished they wiped their
hands in their hair and lit pipes and broke out a jug. Each took a swallow and Pony moved over to
where Baker sat apart and offered him a drink.
The lieutenant shook his head, tossed rib bones into the sage. Catcher said something to Pony in Cheyenne .
Well? said Baker.
Well what? said Pony.
I’d like to know what he said.
Pony squatted next to Baker.
He thinks you’re in a snit about them
white men we shot.
I’ve seen men killed before.
You’re a soldier. That’s your business, aint it?
Duty, Mister Rogers. That’s how I prefer to think of it.
Well.
It’s your opinion I don’t have the
sand for this, isn’t it?
What I think aint important.
Nevertheless…
Look, the Indian reckons you’re angry
ye didn’t get to shoot anyone.
And you, Mister Rogers? What do you think?
Pony took a long pull on the jug, wiped
his mouth on his sleeve. A drop
glistened in his sparse moustache.
They meant to do us harm. Sufficient reason to kill any man.
Any man? You mean every man. You killed all of them.
And what would your formulation
be? Ask em to supper?
They might have known something. Might have seen the Indians we’re after.
Then what, lieutenant? Fare-thee-well
and each on his way?
It doesn’t bother you in the least,
does it?
Lieutenant, I intend to discover if
the girl is alive and then collect the reward.
Whoever tries to prevent that is against me.
Ah yes. The money.
We finally get to it.
Not finally, lieutenant. First.
That, Mister Rogers, is what divides
us. You and I. I believe the money is not your first
concern, it’s your only concern. Nothing
else matters.
Pony shrugged. The child’s predicament is none of my doing.
Baker shook his head, looked away, to
the west. The sky was clear,
incandescent, the sun just touching the horizon. It was unusually warm for September, and
insects still hovered above the sage - their wings glowing, everything rimmed
in gold.
Pony leaned forward.
Lieutenant, ye don’t approve of
me. I don’t give a good goddamn. But I’ll say this: If it helps, feel free to take whatever time
is left to count the cost. I’ll leave
that to ye. As for myself…
He tapped his pipe on the toe of his
boot and stood.
…I intend to stay alive, he said, and
walked away.
They rode on, the Indian flanking
twenty, thirty rods out to either side.
Periodically he dropped back, scanning the back trail. After two days they abandoned the Big Sandy
and cut southwest, finding no mark of man’s passing until they came upon a
scattering of mule bones, bleached and crazed.
Alongside a pelvic arch lay a dried, cracked leather pannier, empty,
with a bullet hole in it. Next to it a
bible, half-buried in the sand, its cover weathered and rotting, the remaining
pages melded, nearly transparent. It was
open to the book of Revelations, with a verse, barely legible, underlined in
ink - And in her was found the blood of prophets, and of saints, and of all that
were slain upon the earth.
The following morning, out of the pre-dawn gloom came nine of them, flattened against their ponies, quirting with
bows and clubs like jockeys. They had cut the trail of Pony, Lt. Baker and Catcher
two days before.
Miners, they thought. Wandering
the country as if they were lost, even with an Indian to guide them.
A thousand yards out, Catcher saw
them. Then Pony. They checked the loads in their weapons and
gathered the horses in a nearby dry wash, the Indian holding picket ropes while
Pony turned packs to form breastworks.
Then he leaned over Baker and shook his shoulder.
Wake up lieutenant, he said. We got company for breakfast.
Pony turned and said something to
Catcher in Cheyenne .
What? said Baker.
Get up lieutenant. We been found.
Baker blinked sleep from his
eyes. He looked at Pony, who knelt and
levered a round into the chamber of his rifle, brought the weapon to his
shoulder and slowly, casually, cocked the hammer, took aim. Baker’s eyes widened. Five hundred yards. Faint cries now, like migrating geese. Baker flipped onto his belly, fumbled with
his carbine.
The Spencer’s report rang in his ears, and Baker saw the lead
pony tumble, its rider hurtling forward, disappearing into the sage. Pony levered another round, cocked the
hammer, aimed.
Boom.
The acrid smoke obscured the
lieutenant’s vision. When it cleared, he
saw the attackers had spread out; another pony was down. Its rider staggered to his feet,
weaponless. They were four hundred yards
away. Baker checked his weapon.
Are they Cheyennes ? asked Baker.
The horses, lieutenant, said Pony.
What?
Aim for the horses.
Pony fired again; a third mount and
rider went down, cartwheeling. Three
hundred yards. Suddenly the riders
reined up and turned their horses in circles, shouting as they sawed the
animals around, taunting the camp to fight.
Baker shouldered his trapdoor carbine, but Pony reached over and grabbed
the barrel.
See what happens, he said.
Two of the unhorsed warriors doubled
up with other riders, the third limped through the sage, cradling an injured
arm. The marksmanship was unexpected,
and now the warriors wheeled and rode back in the direction they came, at a
trot, their small rawhide shields flashing in the morning light.
They’ve had enough, said Baker,
rising.
But the warriors were not quitting,
nor did Pony and Catcher believe they would.
Instead, the attackers rode out of rifle range and dismounted in the
sage to build a fire and smoke their pipes.
The three without horses sulked; one rocked back and forth, grimacing
from the pain of a broken arm. From behind
their packs Baker and Pony could see only the tops of their heads above the
sage, a thin vein of smoke twisting upward from their fire.
What are they up to? asked Baker.
Pony glanced back at Catcher, who
shook his head.
Nothin at the back door. Maybe they’re all in front of us, Pony said.
Think they’ll come at us again? asked
Baker.
Pony shrugged. They know we’ve got good long guns.
He looked at Baker.
If they try us, aim for the
ponies. We come out here to trade, not
shoot.
They mean to kill us if they can,
said Baker.
Pony turned back to watch the
warriors.
Cheyennes’re a clannish bunch. They’re all family and everbody else is a
stranger.
Again he looked at Baker.
Shootin the family is impolite. Just aim for the horses.
They watched the Indians for a
quarter-hour. They could see the
Cheyenne gesturing with weapons, animated in discussion.
How long do you think they’ll take?
asked Baker.
Until they decide, said Pony, who
turned and shouted something to Catcher in Cheyenne .
Catcher waved.
Pony rose. He propped his rifle against a pack and
pulled his pistol, checked the loads. He
stuck it back in his belt.
I’ll try to talk to them, he
said. If it goes wrong, I’ll be back on
the double-quick.
He looked at Baker.
The ponies, lieutenant.
Baker nodded. Pony turned and walked into the sage, his
knuckles skimming the tops of the plants as he moved. Far to the west cotton
boll clouds flattened and merged and grew dark, and a sudden wind fanned Pony’s
gritty hair like flames as he walked. A
change in weather was coming and even the sky seemed anxious, as if the earth
itself presaged a reckoning.