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Transcriber's Notes:

 1. The original version of this book used small-capitals for names
     in corespondence headings and closings, as well as in lists. In
     addition, a.m/p.m are now all in lower case.
 2. Text originally in italics is now delimited by an underscore, for
     example: _The text was italicized_.
 3. p. 159. To maintain margins, line 4 of the song was broken
     after "...you brutes,"
 4. In THE MYSTERY OF 'MAHBIN MILL, the original book does
     not contain a Chapter II.
 5. Acronymns and abbreviations used in "Plodder's Promotion."
     Sp. Fru. abbreviates "spiritus frumenti" (better known as whiskey).
     C. and G. E. is the acronym for "Camp and Garrison Equipage."
     R.Q.M. is the acronym for Regimental Quarter-Master."
 6.  "...account of their * on..." Transcriber assumes "actions" is the
     missing word. The sentence broke across two pages.

  [Illustration: MAJOR-GENERAL GEORGE CROOK, U. S. A.]




    CAMPAIGNING WITH CROOK
    AND STORIES OF ARMY LIFE

    BY

    CAPTAIN CHARLES KING, U.S.A.

    AUTHOR OF "BETWEEN THE LINES" "A WAR-TIME WOOING"
    ETC., ETC.

    ILLUSTRATED

    NEW YORK

    HARPER & BROTHERS, FRANKLIN SQUARE

    1890




Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1880, by

CHARLES KING,

In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.

Copyright, 1890, by Harper & Brothers.

_All rights reserved._




                     PREFACE.


Ten years ago, at the request of the editor of a paper at my old home,
these sketches of the Sioux Campaign of 1876 were written and, finding
favor with comrades to whom a few were sent, were published in pamphlet
form. Now, reinforced by certain other sketches which have since
appeared, they are given a new framework.

They were the first-fruits, so to speak, of a pen that has since been
seldom idle. They were rough sketches, to be sure, but no rougher than
the campaign; and in the early days of a divorce from associations that
were very dear, and of a return to surroundings once familiar, yet,
after twenty years of absence, so changed that a cat in a strange garret
could hardly have felt less at home, I laid their faint tribute of
respect and honor at the feet of the soldier who had been our commander
in the wild days in Arizona, our leader from the Platte to the
Yellowstone and our comrade in every hardship and privation--
Brigadier-General George Crook, United States Army.

Only enough of these pamphlets were printed to reach the few hundred
comrades who rode the grim circuit of "The Bad Lands" in that eventful
centennial year. The little edition was long ago exhausted. The years
that followed only served to strengthen the ties that bound me to the
revered commander of old cavalry days. Many a name recorded in these
pages no longer graces our muster-rolls. Mason, our soldier major,
gallant Emmet Crawford, brave old Munson, daring Philo Clark Rodgers
and Price, Egan and Dewees, Bache and Hunter, have been called from the
ranks in which they won such honor, and, only a few short months ago,
the leader whom they so faithfully served rejoined them on the farther
shore of the dark and silent river. The mountains and prairies over
which we marched and fought know no longer the war-cry of painted savage
or the din of thrilling combat. Herds of browsing cattle crowd the
lovely valleys through which we drove the buffalo. Peaceful homes and
smiling villages dot the broad Northwest where hardly a roof-tree was in
place when Crook essayed the task of subjugating the foeman to
settlement and civilization. Another star had been added to the one
awarded him for the campaign which left the fierce Apaches conquered and
disarmed. The highest grade in the army had been attained when, all too
soon, he was summoned to answer to his name, "beyond the veil."

Better pens than mine shall tell our people of his long years of brave
and faithful service in which this campaign of '76--so pregnant with
interest to us who rode the trail, and with result to a waiting
nation--was, after all, only an episode; but, just as in honor and in
loyalty, these faint pictures of the stirring scenes through which he
led us were inscribed to him at their birth, so now, with added honor
and in affectionate remembrance tenfold increased, is that humble
tribute renewed.

    Charles King,

    _Captain, U. S. A._




                     CONTENTS.


                                    PAGE

    CAMPAIGNING WITH CROOK . . . . .   1

    CAPTAIN SANTA CLAUS  . . . . . . 173

    THE MYSTERY OF 'MAHBIN MILL  . . 209

    PLODDER'S PROMOTION  . . . . . . 265




                 ILLUSTRATIONS.


    MAJOR-GENERAL GEORGE CROOK, U.S.A.  . . . . .  _Frontispiece._

    FORT FETTERMAN  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  _Facing  p. 44_

    SUPPLY CAMP, HEAD OF TONGUE RIVER   . . . . . . .   "       54

    CROOK'S COLUMN ON TONGUE RIVER  . . . . . . . . .   "       68

    A SICK SOLDIER ON A "TRAVOIS"   . . . . . . . . .   "      134

    DEADWOOD CITY, BLACK HILLS OF DAKOTA  . . . . . .   "      146

    "THE DANDY FIFTH"   . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   "      158

    "'COME, JACK,' SAID THE CAPTAIN, REASSURINGLY"  .   "      180

    "ONE MOMENT MORE, AND, MUFFLED IN RED
    SILK, HER BIGGEST LANTERN SWUNG GLOWING
    IN THE WINDOW"  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   "      206

    "CAPTAIN SANTA CLAUS" . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   "      208




          CAMPAIGNING WITH CROOK.




                     CHAPTER I.

         FORT HAYS AND THE START.


The disastrous battle on the Little Horn, which resulted in the
annihilation of General Custer and his five favorite companies of the
Seventh Cavalry, occurred on the 25th of June, 1876. On the 4th of that
month, we of the Fifth Cavalry were far to the south, scattered over the
boundless prairies of Kansas. Regimental headquarters and four companies
occupied the cosey quarters of Fort Hays, nearly midway between
Leavenworth and Denver, Missouri and the mountains, and Company "K," of
which I then was first lieutenant, had pitched its tents along the banks
of a winding fork of the Smoky Hill River, wondering why we had been
"routed out" from our snug barracks and stables at Fort Riley, and
ordered to proceed, "equipped for field service," to Hays City, by rail.
Ordinarily, Uncle Sam pays the costly railway fare for horsemen and
their steeds only when danger is imminent. The two posts were but a
week's easy march apart; not a hostile Indian had been seen or heard of
in all Kansas since the previous winter; General Pope, who commanded the
department, had won the hearts of the ladies and children of the
officers' families by predicting that there would be no separation from
husbands and fathers that summer at least; all the ladies had "joined,"
and, after our long sojourn in the wilds of Arizona, where but few among
them had been able to follow us, we were rejoicing in their presence and
luxuriating in the pretty homes ornamented and blessed by their dainty
handiwork. Some among their number had never before appeared in
garrison, and were taking their first lesson in frontier experience.
Some, too, had only been with us six short weeks, and did not dream that
the daily parades in which they took so much delight, the sweet music of
our band, the brilliant uniforms and dancing plumes that lent such color
and life to rapid drill or stately guard-mounting, were one and all but
part and parcel of the preparation for scenes more stirring, far less
welcome to such gentle eyes.

Fort Hays was joyous with mirth and music and merry laughter, for some
of the ladies of the regiment had brought with them from the distant
East younger sisters or friends, to whom army life on the plains was a
revelation, and in whose honor a large barrack-room had been transformed
into "the loveliest place in the world for a german," and Strauss's
sweetest music rose and fell in witching invitation after the evening
tattoo. Riding, driving, and hunting parties were of daily occurrence,
and more than one young fellow's heart seemed in desperate jeopardy when
the summons came.

The sun was setting in a cloudless sky as I reined in my horse in front
of General Carr's quarters and dismounted, to make my report of a three
days' hunt along the valley of the Saline for stampeded horses. The
band, in their neat summer dress, were grouped around the flagstaff,
while the strains of "Soldaten Lieder" thrilled through the soft evening
air, and, fairly carried away by the cadence of the sweet music, a party
of young ladies and officers had dropped their croquet mallets and were
waltzing upon the green carpet of the parade. Seated upon the verandas,
other ladies and older officers were smilingly watching the pretty
scene, and on the western side of the quadrangle the men in their white
stable frocks were just breaking ranks after marching up from the
never-neglected care of their horses. Half a dozen laughing children
were chasing one another in noisy glee, their bright sashes and dainty
dresses gleaming in the last rays of the golden orb. The general himself
was gazing thoughtfully at the distant line of willows that fringed the
banks of the stream, and holding an open newspaper in his hand as I
entered and made my report.

"Have you heard the news?" he asked me. "Schuyler has gone to join
General Crook as aide-de-camp. Got a telegram from him just after you
left on this scout, and started last night. It's my belief that Crook
will have a big campaign, and that we'll be sent for."

Ten minutes after, as the trumpets rang out the "retreat," and the last
echoes of the evening gun died away over the rolling prairie, we noted a
horseman coming at rapid gait along the dusty road from Hays City, as
the railway station was hopefully named. He disappeared among the
foliage in the creek bottom. The soft hush of twilight fell upon the
garrison, the band had gone away to supper, the bevy of sweet-faced
girls with their tireless escorts had gathered with a number of officers
and ladies in front of the general's quarters, where he and I were still
in conversation, when the horseman, a messenger from the telegraph
office, reappeared in our midst. "Despatch for you, general; thought
you'd better have it at once," was all he said, as he handed it to "the
chief," and, remounting, cantered away.

Carr opened the ugly brown envelope and took out, not one, but three
sheets of despatch paper, closely written, and began to read. Looking
around upon the assembled party, I noticed that conversation had ceased
and a dozen pair of eyes were eagerly scrutinizing the face of the
commanding officer. Anxious hearts were beating among those young wives
and mothers, and the sweet girl-faces had paled a little in sympathy
with the dread that shone all too plainly in the eyes of those who but
so recently had undergone long and painful separation from soldier
husbands. The general is a sphinx; he gives no sign. Slowly and
carefully he reads the three pages; then goes back and begins over
again. At last, slowly, thoughtfully he folds it, replaces the fateful
despatch in its envelope, and looks up expectant of question. His
officers, restrained by discipline, endeavor to appear unconcerned, and
say nothing. The ladies, either from dread of the tidings or awe of him,
_look_ volumes, but are silent. Human nature asserts itself, however,
and the man and the commander turns to me with, "Well, what did I tell
you?" And so we got our orders for the Sioux campaign of 1876.

To the officers, of course, it was an old story. There was not one of
our number who had not seen hard campaigning and sharp Indian fighting
before. But could we have had our choice, we would have preferred some
less abrupt announcement. Hardly a word was spoken as the group broke up
and the ladies sought their respective homes, but the bowed heads and
hidden faces of many betrayed the force of the blow.

The officers remained with General Carr to receive his instructions.
There was no time to lose, and the note of preparation sounded on the
spot. General Sheridan's orders directed four companies from Fort Hays
to proceed at once to Cheyenne by rail, and there await the coming of
the more distant companies--eight in all, to go on this, the first
alarm.

Companies "A," "B," "D," and "K" were designated to go; "E" to stay and
"take care of the shop." Those to go were commanded by married officers,
each of whom had to leave wife and family in garrison. "E" had a
bachelor captain, and a lieutenant whose better half was away in the
East, so the ladies of the regiment were ready to mob the general for
his selection; but there was wisdom in it. In ten minutes the news was
all over the post. A wild Celtic "Hurray, fellows, we're going for to
join Crook," was heard in the barracks, answered by shouts of approval
and delight from every Paddy in the command. Ours is a mixed array of
nationalities--Mulligan and Meiswinkel, Crapaud and John Bull, stand
shoulder to shoulder with Yanks from every portion of the country. In
four regiments only is exclusiveness as to race permitted by law. Only
darkies can join their ranks. Otherwise, there is a promiscuous
arrangement which, oddly enough, has many a recommendation. They balance
one another as it were--the phlegmatic Teuton and the fiery Celt,
mercurial Gaul and stolid Anglo-Saxon. Dashed and strongly tinctured
with the clear-headed individuality of the American, they make up a
company which for _personnel_ is admirably adapted to the wants of our
democratic service. The company of the Fifth Cavalry most strongly
flavored with Irish element in the ranks was commanded by Captain Emil
Adam, an old German soldier, whose broken English on drill was the
delight of his men. "The representative Paddy," as he calls himself,
Captain Nick Nolan, of the Tenth Cavalry, has an Ethiopian lieutenant (a
West-Pointer) and sixty of the very best darkies that ever stole
chickens. But wherever you meet them, the first to hurray at the chance
of a fight is the Pat, and no matter how gloomy or dismal the campaign,
if there be any fun to be extracted from its incidents, he is the man to
find it.

And so our Irishmen gave vent to their joy, and with whistling and
singing the men stowed away their helmets and full-dress uniforms, their
handsome belts and equipments, and lovingly reproduced the old Arizona
slouch hats and "thimble belts," and the next evening our Fort Hays
command, in two special trains, was speeding westward as fast as the
Kansas Pacific could carry us. The snow-capped peaks of the Rockies hove
in sight next day, and Denver turned out in full force to see us go
through. At evening on the 7th, we were camping on the broad prairie
near Cheyenne. Here Major Upham joined us with Company "I." A week after
we were off for Laramie. On the 22d, our companies were ordered straight
to the north to find the crossing of the broad Indian trail from the Red
Cloud and Spotted Tail reservations, by which hundreds of Indians were
known to be going to the support of Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse.

We were to hide in the valley of the South Cheyenne, near the base of
the Black Hills, and cut off the Indian supplies. Buffalo Bill had
joined us, his old comrades of the Sioux war of 1868-69; and though we
feared the Indians would be quick to detect our presence, and select
others of a dozen routes to the Powder River country, we hoped to be
able to nab a few.

On the 24th, we had begun our march at 6 a.m. from the Cardinal's Chair,
at the head of the Niobrara, and before noon had descended into the
valley of "Old Woman's Fork," of the South Cheyenne. We had with us two
half-breed Sioux scouts and an Indian boy, "Little Bat," who had long
been employed by the Fort Laramie officers as a reliable guide. Camping
at noon along the stream, I was approached by Major Stanton, who had
joined our column under instructions from General Sheridan, and informed
that he was going to push ahead of the column at once, as the scouts
reported recent Indian signs. It was necessary, he said, that he should
get to the Cheyenne as quickly as possible, and he wanted me to go as
commander of the escort. In half an hour we were in saddle again, Major
Stanton with his blunderbuss of a rifle, "Little Bat" in his
semi-civilized garb, Lieutenant Keyes with forty men of Company "C," and
myself. The general detained me a moment to convey some earnest
instructions, and to post me on certain points in Sioux warfare which
experience with Apaches was supposed to have dulled, and, with the
promise, "I'll follow on your trail to-morrow," waved his hand, and in
two minutes we were out of sight down the winding valley.

Three p.m. is early on a long June day. We rode swiftly, steadily, but
cautiously northward; the valley widened out to east and west; we made
numerous cut-offs among the bends of the stream, crossing low ridges, at
each one of which Bat, well to the front, would creep to the top, keenly
scrutinize all the country around, and signal "come on." At 5 o'clock he
suddenly halted and threw himself from his horse, and I cantered forward
to see what was up. We had struck our first trail of the campaign, and
the yielding soil was thick with pony tracks. Coming from the east, the
direction of the reservation, they led straight down the valley, and we
followed. Every now and then other tracks from the east joined those we
were on, and though at least four or five days old, they were of
interest. Half an hour before sunset, far off among the hills to the
northeast, a thin column of smoke shot up into the clear sky. Ten
minutes more another rose in the west. They were Sioux signals, and we
were discovered. But the country was open all around us; not a tree
except the cottonwoods along the narrow stream-bed, no fear of
ambuscade, and we must not halt until within sight of the Cheyenne
valley; so on we go. Just at twilight, Bat, five hundred yards in front,
circles his horse rapidly to the left, and again I join him. It is the
recent trail of a war-party of Sioux, crossing the valley, and
disappearing among the low hills to the northwest. They number fifty
warriors, and those whose tracks we have been following took the same
direction--the short cut towards the Big Horn mountains. Our march is
very cautious now--advance, flankers, and rear guard of old, tried
soldiers, well out; but on we jog through the gathering darkness, and at
nine p.m., as we ride over a ridge, Bat points out to me a long, low
line of deeper shade, winding six or seven miles away in the moonlight.
It is the timber along the Cheyenne, and now we may hunt for water and
give our tired horses rest and grass. The valley is broad; the water
lies only in scanty pools among the rocks in the stream-bed. There has
been no rain for a month, and there is not a blade of grass nearer than
the bluffs, a mile away. Our horses drink eagerly, and then in silence
we fill our canteens and move off towards the hills. Here I find a basin
about two hundred yards in diameter, in which we "half lariat" and
hobble our horses; dig holes in the ground, wherein, with sage brush
for fuel, we build little fires and boil our coffee, while Keyes and I
take a dozen of our men and post them around our bivouac at points
commanding every approach. No Indian can reach us unseen through that
moonlight. No Indian cares to attack at night, unless he has a "sure
thing;" and though from five different points we catch the blaze of
signal fires, we defy surprise, and with ready carbine by our side we
eat our crisp bacon, sip the welcome tin of steaming coffee, then light
our pipes and chat softly in the cool night air. Little we dream that
two hundred miles away Custer is making his night ride to death. Our
supports are only twenty-five miles away. We dread no attack in such
force that we cannot "stand off" until Carr can reach us, and, as I make
my rounds among the sentinels to see that all are vigilant, the words of
the Light Cavalryman's song are sounding in my ears:

      "The ring of a bridle, the stamp of a hoof,
        Stars above and the wind in the tree;
      A bush for a billet, a rock for a roof,
        Outpost duty's the duty for me.
      Listen! A stir in the valley below--
        The valley below is with riflemen crammed,
      Cov'ring the column and watching the foe;
        Trumpet-Major! Sound and be d----."

Bang! There's a shot from below, and the bivouac springs to life.




                     CHAPTER II.

          THE TRAIL AND THE CHASE.


A shot in the dead of night from an outpost in the heart of the Indian
country is something that soon ceases to be either exciting or of great
interest, but the first that is heard on the campaign makes the pulses
bound. Men sprang to their feet, horses pawed and snorted, and the
sergeant of the guard and myself made rapid time to the point from which
the alarm had come. There was the sentinel alone, unharmed, but
perturbed in spirit. To the question, somewhat sternly put, "Who fired
that shot?" he replies, with evident chagrin, "I did, sir; somethin' was
crawlin' right up that holler, an' I challenged an' he didn't answer,
an' I fired; but danged if I know what it was." Before there is time to
say a word of rebuke, plainly enough in the bright moonlight something
_does_ come crawling up out of a "hollow" two hundred yards
away--something of a yellow or reddish brown, on four legs, with a long,
smooth, sneaking shamble that carries the quadruped rapidly over the
ground, then changes to an ungainly lope, which takes him to a safe
distance in six seconds; and there the creature turns, squats on his
haunches, and coolly surveys us. Turning away in silent indignation, as
I get almost out of earshot it is some comfort to hear the sergeant's
pithy commentary, "Ye wall-eyed gutter-snipe, your grandmother would ha'
known that was nothin' but a cayote."

Then follows the inevitable volley of chaff with which the Paddy greets
every blunder on the part of his fellow-soldiers, and for a few minutes
the silent bivouac is rollicking with fun. That some recent attempt has
been made to instruct the troopers of Company "C" in the _finesse_ of
sentry duty is apparent from the shouted query, "Hi, Sullivan, if it was
_two_ cayotes would you advance the saynior or the junior wid the
countersign?" at which there is a roar, and Lieutenant Keyes visibly
blushes. In half an hour all is quiet again. Officers and men, we watch
turn and turn about during the night, undisturbed, save at 3 o'clock the
outlying sentries report that they distinctly heard the rapid beat of
many hoofs dying away towards the west.

We are astir at the first gray of dawn, rolling our blankets and
promptly saddling, for we must ride well down the Cheyenne and find the
Mini Pusa, the dry north fork, before breakfast can be attended to. No
stirring trumpet marks our reveille. We mount in silence, and like
shadowy spectres ride away northward in the broadening valley. The stars
are not yet paling in the west, but Bat's quick eye detects fresh
hoof-prints not two hours old in the springy soil of the hillside, half
a mile out from camp. Sure enough. They had prowled around us during the
night, longing for our scalps, but not daring to attack. Only a few
venturesome spies had galloped down to take observations, and had then
ridden away to join their brothers in arms, and plot our destruction. We
laughed as we shook our bridle-reins and jogged along, thinking how
confounded they would be when they caught sight of our main body, who,
with General Carr at their head, would be along by noon. A six-mile ride
brought us into the belt of cottonwoods and willows along the bed of the
stream, but the South Cheyenne had sunk out of sight. Broad reaches of
streaked and rippled sand wound through the timber, clearly showing
where, earlier in the season, a rapid, sweeping torrent had borne great
logs and heaps of brushwood upon its tawny breast; but it had dwindled
away to nothing, and our thirsty horses looked reproachfully at their
masters as, dismounting, we ploughed up the yielding sand, in hopes of
finding the needed water beneath. This is one of the dismal
peculiarities of the streams of the Far West. On the 1st of May we would
have found that valley barely fordable; on the 25th of June it was as
dry as a bone.

Mounting again, and scattering through the timber "down stream," a shout
from Major Stanton had the effect of the trumpet rally on skirmish
drill.

Our party came together with eager haste, and found him under a steep
bank, shaded by willows, his horse fetlock deep in what remained of a
once deep pool; and two or three at a time our chargers slaked their
thirst. It was poor water--warm, soapy, alkaline--but better than none
at all.

Just before noon we were clambering up the hills on the northeast of the
Mini Pusa. Our orders were to proceed with the utmost caution on nearing
the trail. General Sheridan had clearly indicated that it must cross the
valley of the South Cheyenne some distance west of the Beaver, and very
near its confluence with the Mini Pusa. Stanton and I, with our
field-glasses in hand, were toiling up through the yielding, sandy soil
with Little Bat; Lieutenant Keyes and the escort, leading their horses,
following. Once at the top of the ridge we felt sure of seeing the
country to the eastward, and hardly had Bat reached the crest and peered
cautiously over than he made a quick gesture which called the major and
myself to his side. He pointed to the southeast, and, sweeping our
glasses in that direction, we plainly saw the broad, beaten track. It
looked like a great highway, deserted and silent, and it led from the
thick timber in the Cheyenne valley straight to the southeast up the
distant slope, and disappeared over the dim, misty range of hills in the
direction of the Red Cloud and Spotted Tail reservations.

General Sheridan was right. Sitting in his distant office in Chicago, he
was so thoroughly informed that he could order out his cavalry to search
through a region hitherto known only to the Sioux, and tell them just
where they would find the highway by which the vast hordes of hostiles
under Sitting Bull were receiving daily reinforcements and welcome
supplies of ammunition from the agencies three and four hundred miles to
the southeast.

This was the traffic which General Carr and the Fifth Cavalry were
ordered to break up; and here, just at noon, our little band of three
officers and forty men, far in the advance, had struck the trail, as
General Sheridan predicted. Keeping horses and men well under cover, we
crept to a farther ridge, and from there our glasses commanded a grand
sweep of country: the valley of the South Cheyenne for fifty miles to
the southeastward, until the stream itself was lost in the tortuous
cañon of the Southern Black Hills; the great, towering range of the
Black Hills themselves forty miles to the eastward, and the lone peak
far to the northeast that the Sioux called (phonetically spelling)
Heengha Kahga. The earliest maps simplified that into "Inyan Kara," and
now the school-children of Deadwood talk glibly of the big hill that,
higher than Harney's or Custer's Peak, their geography terms the "Indian
Carry." Why can't we keep the original names?

Once thoroughly satisfied of our proximity to the trail, Major Stanton
directed the escort to retrace its steps to the thick timber along the
Mini Pusa, where it would be out of sight, while he and I, with our
powerful binoculars, kept watch upon the Indian highway. The afternoon
was hot and cloudless; not a breath of air stirred the clumps of
sage-bush, the only vegetation along the bluffs and slopes. The
atmosphere was dazzlingly clear, and objects were visible to us through
our glasses that we knew to be miles away. The signal smokes to the
west, and our front of the day before, had disappeared; not a living
thing was in sight. Our men and horses were hidden among the dense
cottonwoods a mile behind us, but, though invisible to us, we well knew
that trusty eyes were keeping watch for the first signal from the
hillside.

Three--four o'clock came, and not a soul had appeared upon the Indian
trail. Away over the intervening ridge to the rear we could see the
valley of Old Woman's Fork, down which we had come the day previous, and
our glasses detected, by an hour after noon, clouds of dust rising high
in air, harbingers of the march of General Carr and the main body. At
last the major closed his glasses with a disgusted snap and the remark,
"I don't believe there's an Indian stirring to-day."

Not in our sight--not within our hearing, perhaps. The blessed Sabbath
stillness falls on all within our ken; our steeds are blinking, our men
are drowsing in the leafy shades below. Only the rising dust, miles to
the southward, reveals the coming of comrade soldiery. Far to the
northwest, a single dark speck, floating against the blue of heaven,
attracts the lingering inspection of my field-glass. Eagle or buzzard, I
do not know. The slow, circling, stately flight in ascending spiral
carries him beyond our vision, but from his altitude the snow-capped
peaks of the Big Horn range are clearly visible, and on this still
Sabbath afternoon those mighty peaks are looking down upon a scene of
carnage, strife, and slaughter that, a week hence, told only by curt
official despatches, will thrill a continent with horror. Even as we
watch there on the slopes by the Mini Pusa, Stanton and I, grumbling at
our want of luck in not sighting an Indian, many a true and trusted
comrade, many an old cadet friend of boyish days, many a stalwart
soldier is biting the dust along the Little Horn, and the names of
Custer and his men are dropping from the muster-rolls. The heroes of a
still mightier struggle, the victors of an immortal defence of national
honor, are falling fast till all are gone, victims of a thankless
warfare.

No wonder the Indians have no time to bother with us. We bivouac in
undisturbed serenity that night, and join our regiment in the Cheyenne
valley at noon next day without so much as an adventure. That night
Company "I" is thrown forward to scout the trail, while the regiment
camps out of sight among the cottonwoods, and for the next week we
keenly watch the neighborhood, all the companies making thorough scouts
in each direction, but finding nothing of consequence. Small parties of
Indians are chased, but easily escape, and there isn't a doubt that the
reservation Indians know of our whereabouts, and so avoid us.

Late in the afternoon of July 1st, our new colonel, Wesley Merritt,
famous as a cavalry commander during the War of the Rebellion, arrives
and assumes the reins of government, relieving General Carr, who falls
back to second in command. We are all agog to see what will be our new
chief's first move. He is fresh from Sheridan's staff in Chicago, and is
doubtless primed with latest instructions and wishes of the
lieutenant-general. He is no stranger to us, nor we to him, and his
first move is characteristic. At dawn of day of the 2d, he marches us
four miles down stream to better grass and a point nearer the big trail;
sends Montgomery with his grays to scout over towards the Black Hills,
and Hayes and Bishop with Company "G" to lie along the trail itself--but
no Indian is sighted.

The sun is just rising on the morning of the 3d of July when my captain,
Mason, and I roll out of our blankets and set about the very simple
operations of a soldier's campaign toilet. The men are grooming their
horses; the tap of the curry-comb and the impatient pawing of hoofs is
music in the clear, crisp, bracing air. Our cook is just announcing
breakfast, and I am eagerly sniffing the aroma of coffee, when General
Merritt's orderly comes running through the trees. "Colonel Mason, the
general directs Company 'K' to get out as quickly as possible--Indians
coming up the valley!" "Saddle up, men! lively now!" is the order. We
jump into boots and spurs, whip the saddles from saplings and stumps,
rattle the bits between the teeth of our excited horses, sling carbines
over shoulder, poke fresh cartridges into revolver chambers, look well
to the broad horsehair "cinches," or girths. The men lead into line,
count fours, mount, and then, without a moment's pause, "Fours right,
trot," is the order, and Mason and I lead off at a spanking gait,
winding through the timber and suddenly shooting out upon the broad,
sandy surface of the dry stream-bed. There the first man we see is
Buffalo Bill, who swings his hat. "This way, colonel, this way," and
away we go on his tracks. "K" is a veteran company. Its soldiers are,
with few exceptions, on their second and third enlistments. Its captain
ranks all the line officers of the regiment, and admirably commanded it
during the war while the field officers were doing duty as generals of
volunteers. There is hardly a trace of nervousness even among the newest
comers, but this is the first chase of the campaign for us, and all are
eager and excited. Horses in rear struggle to rush to the front, and as
we sputter out of the sand and strike the grassy slopes beyond the
timber belt all break into a lope. Two or three scouts on a ridge five
hundred yards ahead are frantically signalling to us, and, bending to
the left again, we sweep around towards them, now at a gallop. Mason
sternly cautions some of the eager men who are pressing close behind us,
and, looking back, I see Sergeant Stauffer's bronzed face lighting up
with a grin I used to mark in the old Apache campaigns in Arizona, and
the veteran "Kelly" riding, as usual, all over his horse, but
desperately bent on being ahead when we reach the scene. Left hands
firmly grasp the already foaming reins, while throughout the column
carbines are "advanced" in the other.

"Here comes Company 'I,' fellers," is the muttered announcement from the
left and rear, and, glancing over my left shoulder, I see Kellogg with
his bays and Lieutenant Reilly swinging out along the slope to our left.
As we near the ridge and prepare to deploy, excitement is subdued but
intense--Buffalo Bill plunging along beside us on a strawberry roan,
sixteen hands high, gets a trifle of a lead, but we go tearing up the
crest in a compact body, reach it, rein up, amazed and disgusted--not an
Indian to be seen for two miles across the intervening "swale." Away to
the left, towards the Cheyenne, scouts are again excitedly beckoning,
and we move rapidly towards them, but slower now, for Mason will not
abuse his horses for a wild-goose chase. Ten minutes bring us thither.
Kellogg has joined forces with us, and the two companies are trotting in
parallel columns. Still no Indian; but the scouts are ahead down the
valley, and we follow for a brisk half-hour, and find ourselves plunging
through the timber ten miles east of camp. Another hour and we are
dashing along a high ridge parallel with the Black Hills, and there,
sure enough, are Indians, miles ahead, and streaking it for the Powder
River country as fast as their ponies can carry them. We have galloped
thirty miles in a big circle before catching sight of our chase, and our
horses are panting and wearied. Every now and then we pass pack-saddles
with fresh agency provisions, which they had dropped in their haste.
Once our scouts get near enough to exchange a shot or two, but at last
they fairly beat us out of sight, and we head for home, reach camp,
disgusted and empty-handed, about four p.m. Two "heavy weights" (Colonel
Leib's and Lieutenant Reilly's) horses drop dead under them, and the
first pursuit of the Fifth is over.




                    CHAPTER III.

     THE FIGHT ON THE WAR BONNET.


The chase of July 3d, besides killing two and using up a dozen horses,
rendered our further presence in the valley of the Cheyenne clearly
useless. No more Indians would be apt to come that way when they had the
undisturbed choice of several others. General Merritt was prompt to
accept the situation, and as prompt to act. Early the next morning, "K"
and "I," the two companies engaged in the dash of the day before, took
the direct back track up the valley of Old Woman's Fork, guarding the
chief and the wagons. General Carr, with companies "B," "G," and "M,"
marched eastward towards the Black Hills, while Major Upham, with "A,"
"C," and "D," struck out northwestward up the valley of the Mini Pusa.
Both commands were ordered to make a wide _détour_, scout the country
for forty-eight hours, and rejoin headquarters at the head of what was
then called Sage Creek. We of the centre column spent the glorious
Fourth in a dusty march, and followed it up on the 5th with another.

On the 6th, a courier was sent in to Fort Laramie, seventy miles away,
while the regiment camped along the stream to wait for orders. Towards
ten o'clock on the following morning, while the camp was principally
occupied in fighting flies, a party of the junior officers were
returning from a refreshing bath in a deep pool of the stream, when
Buffalo Bill came hurriedly towards them from the general's tent. His
handsome face wore a look of deep trouble, and he brought us to a halt
in stunned, awe-stricken silence with the announcement, "Custer and five
companies of the Seventh wiped out of existence. It's no rumor--General
Merritt's got the official despatch."

_Now_ we knew that before another fortnight the Fifth would be sent to
reinforce General Crook on the Big Horn. Any doubts as to whether a big
campaign was imminent were dispelled. Few words were spoken--the camp
was stilled in soldierly mourning. That night Lieutenant Hall rode in
with later news and letters. He had made the perilous trip from Laramie
alone, but confirmed the general impression that we would be speedily
ordered in to the line of the North Platte, to march by way of Fetterman
to Crook's support. On Wednesday, the 12th, our move began, no orders
having been received until the night before. Just what we were to do,
probably no one knew but Merritt; he didn't tell, and I never asked
questions. Evening found us camping near the Cardinal's Chair at the
head of the Niobrara, in a furious storm of thunder, lightning, and
rain, which lasted all night, and, wet to the skin, we were glad enough
to march off at daybreak on the 13th, and still more glad to camp again
that evening under the lee of friendly old Rawhide Peak.

We were now just one long day's march from Fort Laramie, and confidently
expected to make it on the following day. At reveille on the 14th,
however, a rumor ran through the camp that Merritt had received
despatches during the night indicating that there was a grand outbreak
among the Indians at the reservation. Of course we knew that they would
be vastly excited and encouraged by the intelligence of the Custer
massacre. Furthermore, it was well known that there were nearly a
thousand of the Cheyennes, the finest warriors and horsemen of the
plains, who as yet remained peaceably at the Red Cloud or Spotted Tail
Reservations along the White River, but they were eager for a pretext on
which to "jump," and now they might be expected to leave in a body at
any moment and take to the war-path. Our withdrawal from the Cheyenne
River left the favorite route again open, and the road to the Black
Hills was again traversed by trains of wagons and large parties of
whites on their way to the mines, a sight too tempting for their
covetous eyes. Major Jordan, commanding the post of Camp Robinson, had
hurriedly described the situation in a despatch to Merritt, and when
"Boots and saddles" sounded, and we rode into line, we saw the
quartermaster guiding his wagons back over the ridge we had crossed the
day before, and in a few minutes were following in their tracks. Away to
the east we marched that morning, and at noon were halted where the road
connecting Fort Laramie with the reservation crossed the Rawhide Creek.
Here Captain Adam with Company "C" left us and pushed forward to the
Niobrara Crossing, twenty-five miles nearer the Indian villages, while
the indefatigable Major Stanton, "our polemical paymaster," was hurried
off to Red Cloud, to look into the situation. The rest of us waited
further developments.

On Saturday, the 15th of July, just at noon, General Merritt received
the despatch from the Red Cloud Agency which decided the subsequent
movement of his command. It led to his first "lightning march" with his
new regiment; it impelled him to a move at once bold and brilliant. It
brought about an utter rout and discomfiture among the would-be allies
of Sitting Bull, and, while it won him the commendation of the
lieutenant-general, it delayed us a week in finally reaching Crook, and
there was some implied criticism in remarks afterwards made.

In a mere narrative article there is little scope for argument.
Merritt's information was from Major Stanton, substantially to the
effect that eight hundred Cheyenne warriors would leave the reservation
on Sunday morning, fully equipped for the war-path, and with the avowed
intention of joining the hostiles in the Big Horn country. To continue
on his march to Laramie, and let them go, would have been gross, if not
criminal, neglect. To follow by the direct road to the reservation,
sixty-five miles away, would have been simply to drive them out and
hasten their move. Manifestly there was but one thing to be done: to
throw himself across their path and capture or drive them back, and to
do this he must, relatively speaking, march over three sides of a
square while they were traversing the fourth, _and must do it
undiscovered_.

If Merritt hesitated ten minutes, his most intimate associates, his
staff, did not know it. Leaving a small guard with the wagon train, and
ordering Lieutenant Hall to catch up with us at night, the general and
seven companies swing into saddle, and at one o'clock are marching up
the Rawhide, _away_ from the reservation, and with no apparent purpose
of interfering in any project, howsoever diabolical, that aboriginal
fancy can suggest. We halt a brief half-hour under the Peak, fourteen
miles away, water our thirsty horses in the clear, running stream, then
remount, and, following our chief, lead away northwestward. By five p.m.
we are heading square to the north; at sunset we are descending into the
wide valley of the Niobrara, and just at ten p.m. we halt and unsaddle
under the tall buttes of the Running Water, close by our old camp at
Cardinal's Chair. Only thirty-five miles by the way we came, but horses
must eat to live, and we have nothing but the buffalo grass to offer
them. We post strong guards and pickets to prevent surprise, and scatter
our horses well out over the hillsides to pick up all they can. Captain
Hayes and I are detailed as officers of the guard and pickets for the
night, and take ourselves off accordingly. At midnight, Lieutenant Hall
arrives with his long wagon train. At three a.m., in the starlight,
Merritt arouses his men; coffee and bacon are hurriedly served; the
horses get a good breakfast of oats from the wagons, and at five a.m.
we are climbing out of the valley to the north. And now, _Messieurs les
Cheyennes_, we'll see who first will bivouac to-night upon the War
Bonnet. You are but twenty-eight miles from it; we are fifty to the
point where your great trail crosses the little stream. The Sioux, in
their picturesque nomenclature, called it after the gorgeous head-piece
of bead-work, plume and eagles' feathers, they wear in battle, the
prized War Bonnet. The frontiersman, scorning the poetic, considers that
he has fittingly, practically, anyway, translated it into Hat Creek, and
even for such a name as this, three insignificant creeks within a few
miles of one another claim precedence--and Indian and Horsehead creeks
are placidly willing to share it with them.

The sun rises over the broad lands of the Sioux to the eastward as we
leave the shadowy Niobrara behind. Merritt's swift-stepping gray at the
head of the column keeps us on our mettle to save our distance, and the
horses answer gamely to the pressing knees of their riders. At 10.15 we
sight the palisade fortifications of the infantry company which guards
the spring at the head of old Sage Creek, and Lieutenant Taylor eagerly
welcomes us. Here, officers, men, and horses take a hurried but
substantial lunch. We open fresh boxes of ammunition, and cram belts and
pockets until every man is loaded like a deep-sea diver, and fairly
bristles with deadly missiles. Then on we go. East-northeast over the
rolling, treeless prairie, and far to our right and rear runs the high,
rock-faced ridge that shuts out the cold north winds from the
reservation. The day is hot; we are following the Black Hills road, and
the dust rises in heavy clouds above us. But 'tis a long, long way to
the Indian crossing, and we _must_ be the first to reach it. At sunset a
winding belt of green in a distant depression marks the presence of a
stream. At eight p.m., silently under the stars, we glide in among the
timbers. At nine the seven companies are unsaddled and in bivouac close
under the bluffs, where a little plateau, around which the creek sweeps
in almost complete circle, forms excellent defensive lair, secure
against surprise. We have marched eighty-five miles in thirty-one hours,
and here we are, square in their front, ready and eager to dispute with
the Cheyennes their crossing on the morrow.

No fires are lighted, except a few tiny blazes in deep-dug holes, whence
no betraying flame may escape. Horses and men, we bivouac in a great
circle along the steep banks of a sluggish stream. The stars shine
brightly overhead, but in the timber the darkness is intense. Mason, my
captain, and I are just unstrapping our blankets and preparing for a
nap, when Lieutenant Forbush, then adjutant of the regiment, stumbles
over a fallen tree, and announces that Company "K" is detailed for guard
and picket. I had "been on" all the night before with Captain Hayes, and
would gladly have had a sound sleep before the morrow's work; but when
Mason, after reporting for orders to General Merritt, comes back and
tells me that I am to have command of the outposts to the southeast,
the direction from which the foe must come, there is compensation in the
supposed mistake in the roster.

We grope out in the darkness, and post our pickets in hollows and
depressions, where, should the bivouac be approached over the distant
ridges, they can best observe objects against the sky. The men are
tired; and, as they cannot walk post and keep awake, the utmost
vigilance is enjoined on non-commissioned officers. Hour after hour I
prowl around among the sentries, giving prompt answer to the muffled
challenge that greets me with unvarying watchfulness. At one o'clock
Colonel Mason and I, making the rounds together, come suddenly upon a
post down among the willows next the stream, and are not halted; but we
find the sentinel squatting under the bank, only visible in the
starlight, apparently dozing. Stealing upon him from behind, I seize his
carbine, and the man springs to his feet. Mason sternly rebukes him for
his negligence, and is disposed to order him under guard; but old
Sergeant Schreiber, who was never known to neglect a duty in his life,
declares that he and the sentry were in conversation, and watching
together some object across the stream not half a minute before we came
upon them. Everywhere else along our front we find the men alert and
watchful. At three o'clock the morning grows chilly, and the yelping of
the coyotes out over the prairie is incessant. My orders are to call the
General at half-past three; and, making my way through the slumbering
groups, I find him rolled in his blanket at the foot of a big
cottonwood, sleeping "with one eye open," for he is wide awake in an
instant, and I return to my outpost towards the southeast.

Outlined against the southern sky is a high ridge, some two miles away.
It sweeps around from our left front, where it is lost among the
undulations of the prairie. Square to the northeast, some twenty miles
distant, the southernmost masses of the Black Hills are tumbled up in
sharp relief against the dawn. A faint blush is stealing along the
Orient; the ridge line grows darker against the brightening sky; stars
overhead are paling, and the boughs of the cottonwoods murmur soft
response to the stir of the morning breeze. Objects near at hand no
longer baffle our tired eyes, and the faces of my comrades of the guard
look drawn and wan in the cold light. We are huddled along a slope which
did well enough for night watching; but, as the lay of the land becomes
more distinct, we discern, four hundred yards farther out to the
southeast, a little conical mound rising from a wave of prairie parallel
to our front but shutting off all sight of objects between it and the
distant range of heights, so I move my outpost quickly to the new
position, and there we find unobstructed view.

To our rear is the line of bluffs that marks the tortuous course of the
stream, and the timber itself is now becoming mistily visible in the
morning light. A faint wreath of fog creeps up from the stagnant water
where busy beavers have checked its flow, and from the southward not
even an Indian eye could tell that close under those bluffs seven
companies of veteran cavalry are crouching, ready for a spring.

Turning to the front again, I bring my glasses to bear on the distant
ridge, and sweep its face in search of moving objects. Off to the right
I can mark the trail down which we came the night before, but not a soul
is stirring. At half-past four our horses, saddled and bridled, are
cropping the bunches of buffalo grass in the "swale" behind us; the four
men of the picket are lying among them, lariat in hand. Corporal
Wilkinson and I, prone upon the hill-top, are eagerly scanning the
front, when he points quickly to the now plainly lighted ridge,
exclaiming:

"Look, lieutenant--there are Indians!"

Another minute, and two miles away we sight another group of five or six
mounted warriors. In ten minutes we have seen half a dozen different
parties popping up into plain sight, then rapidly scurrying back out of
view. At five o'clock they have appeared all along our front for a
distance of three miles, but they do not approach nearer. Their
movements puzzle me. We do not believe they have seen us. They make no
attempt at concealment from our side, but they keep peering over ridges
towards the west, and dodging behind slopes that hide them from that
direction.

General Merritt has been promptly notified of their appearance, and at
5.15 he and General Carr and two or three of the staff ride out under
cover of our position, and, dismounting, crawl up beside us and level
their glasses.

"What can they be after? What are they watching?" is the question. The
Black Hills road is off there somewhere, but no travel is possible just
now, and all trains are warned back at Taylor's camp. At half-past five
the mystery is solved. Four miles away to the southwest, to our right
front, the white covers of army wagons break upon our astonished view.
It must be our indefatigable Quartermaster Hall with our train, and he
has been marching all night to reach us. He is guarded by two companies
of stalwart infantry, but they are invisible. He has stowed them away in
wagons, and is probably only afraid that the Indians won't attack him.
Wagon after wagon, the white covers come gleaming into sight far over
the rolling prairie, and by this time the ridge is swarming with
war-parties of Cheyennes. Here you are, beggarly, treacherous rascals;
for years you have eaten of our bread, lived on our bounty. You are well
fed, well cared for; you, your pappooses and ponies are fat and
independent; but you have heard of the grand revel in blood, scalps, and
trophies of your brethren, the Sioux. It is no fight of yours. You have
no grievance, but the love of rapine and warfare is the ruling passion,
and you must take a hand against the Great Father, whom your treaty
binds you to obey and honor. And now you have stuffed your wallets with
his rations, your pouches with heavy loads of his best metallic
cartridges, all too confidingly supplied you by peace-loving agents, who
(for a consideration) wouldn't suspect you of warlike designs for any
consideration. You are only a day's march from the reservation; and
here, you think, are your first rich victims--a big train going to the
Black Hills unguarded. No wonder you circle your swift ponies to the
left in eager signals to your belated brethren to come on, come on. In
half an hour you'll have five hundred here, and the fate of those
teamsters and that train is sealed.

"Have the men had coffee?" asks General Merritt, after a leisurely
survey. "Yes, sir," is the adjutant's report. "Then let them saddle up
and close in mass under the bluffs," is the order, and General Carr goes
off to execute it.

The little hill on which we are lying is steep, almost precipitous on
its southern slope, washed away apparently by the torrent that in the
rainy season must come tearing down the long ravine directly ahead of
us; it leads down from the distant ridge and sweeps past us to our
right, where it is crossed by the very trail on which we marched in, and
along which, three miles away, the wagon train is now approaching. The
two come together like a V, and we are at its point, while between them
juts out a long spur of hills. The trail cannot be seen from the ravine,
and _vice versa_, while we on our point see both. At the head of the
ravine, a mile and a half away, a party of thirty or forty Indians are
scurrying about in eager and excited motion. "What in thunder are those
vagabonds fooling about?" says Buffalo Bill, who has joined us with Tait
and Chips, two of his pet assistants. Even while we speculate the
answer is plain. Riding towards us, away ahead of the wagon train, two
soldiers come loping along the trail. They bring despatches to the
command, no doubt, and, knowing us to be down here in the bottom
somewhere, have started ahead to reach us. They see no Indians; for it
is only from them and the train the wily foe is concealed, and all
unsuspicious of their danger they come jauntily ahead. Now is the
valiant red man's opportunity. Come on, Brothers Swift Bear, Two Bulls,
Bloody Hand; come on, ten or a dozen of you, my braves--there are only
two of the pale-faced dogs, and they shall feel the red man's vengeance
forthwith. Come on, come on! We'll dash down this ravine, a dozen of us,
and six to one we'll slay and scalp them without danger to ourselves;
and a hundred to one we will brag about it the rest of our natural
lives. Only a mile away come our couriers; only a mile and a half up the
ravine a murderous party of Cheyennes lash their excited ponies into
eager gallop, and down they come towards us.

"By Jove! general," says Buffalo Bill, sliding backwards down the hill,
"now's our chance. Let our party mount here out of sight, and we'll cut
those fellows off."

"Up with you, then!" is the answer. "Stay where you are, King. Watch
them till they are close under you; then give the word. Come down, every
other man of you!"

I am alone on the little mound. Glancing behind me, I see Cody, Tait,
and Chips, with five cavalrymen, eagerly bending forward in their
saddles, grasping carbine and rifle, every eye bent upon me in
breathless silence, watching for the signal. General Merritt and
Lieutenants Forbush and Pardee are crouching below me. Sergeant
Schreiber and Corporal Wilkinson, on all-fours, are half-way down the
northern slope. Not a horse or man of us visible to the Indians. Only my
hatless head and the double field-glass peer over the grassy mound. Half
a mile away are our couriers, now rapidly approaching. Now, my Indian
friends, what of you? Oh, what a stirring picture you make as once more
I fix my glasses on you! Here, nearly four years after, my pulses bound
as I recall the sight. Savage warfare was never more beautiful than in
you. On you come, your swift, agile ponies springing down the winding
ravine, the rising sun gleaming on your trailing war bonnets, on silver
armlets, necklace, gorget; on brilliant painted shield and beaded
legging; on naked body and beardless face, stained most vivid vermilion.
On you come, lance and rifle, pennon and feather glistening in the rare
morning light, swaying in the wild grace of your peerless horsemanship;
nearer, till I mark the very ornament on your leader's shield. And on,
too, all unsuspecting, come your helpless prey. I hold vengeance in my
hand, but not yet to let it go. Five seconds too soon, and you can wheel
about and escape us; one second too late, and my blue-coated couriers
are dead men. On you come, savage, hungry-eyed, merciless. Two miles
behind you are your scores of friends, eagerly, applaudingly watching
your exploit. But five hundred yards ahead of you, coolly, vengefully
awaiting you are your unseen foes, beating you at your own game, and you
are running slap into them. Nearer and nearer--your leader, a
gorgeous-looking fellow, on a bounding gray, signals "Close and follow."
Three hundred yards more, my buck, and (you fancy) your gleaming knives
will tear the scalps of our couriers. Twenty seconds, and you will dash
round that point with your war-whoop ringing in their ears. Ha! Lances,
is it? You don't want your shots heard back at the train. What will you
think of ours? "All ready, general?"

"All ready, King. Give the word when you like."

Not a man but myself knows how near they are. Two hundred yards now, and
I can hear the panting of their wiry steeds. A hundred and fifty! That's
right--close in, you beggars! Ten seconds more and you are on them! A
hundred and twenty-five yards--a hundred--ninety--

"_Now_, lads, in with you!"

Crash go the hoofs! There's a rush, a wild, ringing cheer; then bang,
bang, bang! and in a cloud of dust Cody and his men tumble in among
them. General Merritt springs up to my side, Corporal Wilkinson to his.
Cool as a cucumber, the Indian leader reins in his pony in sweeping
circle to the left, ducks on his neck as Wilkinson's bullet whistles by
his head; then _under_ his pony, and his return shot "zips" close by the
general's cheek. Then comes the cry, "Look to the front; look, look!"
and, swarming down the ridge as far as we can see, come dozens of
Indian warriors at top speed to the rescue. "Send up the first company!"
is Merritt's order as he springs into saddle, and, followed by his
adjutant, rides off to the left and front. I jump for my horse, and the
vagabond, excited by the shots and rush around us, plunges at his lariat
and breaks to the left. As I catch him, I see Buffalo Bill closing on a
superbly accoutred warrior. It is the work of a minute; the Indian has
fired and missed. Cody's bullet tears through the rider's leg, into his
pony's heart, and they tumble in confused heap on the prairie. The
Cheyenne struggles to his feet for another shot, but Cody's second
bullet crashes through his brain, and the young chief, Yellow Hand,
drops lifeless in his tracks.

Here comes my company, "K," trotting up from the bluffs, Colonel Mason
at their head, and I take my place in front of my platoon, as, sweeping
over the ridge, the field lies before us. Directly in front, a mile
away, the redskins are rushing down to join their comrades; and their
triumphant yells change to cries of warning as Company "K's" blue line
shoots up over the divide.

"Drive them, Mason, but look out for the main ridge," is the only order
we hear; and, without a word, shout, or shot, "K" goes squarely at the
foe. They fire wildly, wheeling about and backing off towards the hills;
but our men waste no shot, and we speed up the slope, spreading out
unconsciously in open order to right and left. Their bullets whistle
harmlessly over our heads, and some of our young men are eagerly
looking for permission to begin. Now the pursued have opened fire from
both our flanks, for we have spread them open in our rush; and, glancing
over my shoulder, it is glorious to see Montgomery's beautiful grays
sweeping to our right and rear, while Kellogg's men are coming "front
into line" at the gallop on our left. We gain the crest only to find the
Indians scattering like chaff before us, utterly confounded at their
unexpected encounter. Then comes the pursuit--a lively gallop over
rolling prairie, the Indians dropping blankets, rations, everything
weighty they could spare except their guns and ammunition. Right and
left, far and near, they scatter into small bands, and go tearing
homeward. Once within the limits of the reservation they are safe, and
we strain every nerve to catch them; but when the sun is high in the
heavens and noon has come, the Cheyennes are back under the sheltering
wing of the Indian Bureau, and not one of them can we lay hands on.

Baffled and astounded, for once in a lifetime beaten at their own game,
their project of joining Sitting Bull nipped in the bud, they mourn the
loss of three of their best braves slain in sudden attack, and of all
their provender and supplies lost in hurried flight. Weary enough we
reach the agency building at seven that evening, disappointed at having
bagged no greater game; but our chief is satisfied. Buffalo Bill is
radiant; his are the honors of the day; and the Fifth generally goes to
sleep on the ground, well content with the affair on the War Bonnet.




                    CHAPTER IV.

       THE MARCH TO THE BIG HORN.


Chasing the Cheyennes from the War Bonnet and Indian Creek to the
reservation, our seven companies had struck cross country, and until we
neared the high bluffs and ridges to the north of the agency, it was not
difficult for the wagons to follow us; but it was generally predicted
that Lieutenant Hall would never be able to get his train over the
ravines and "breaks" which he would encounter on the 18th, and the
command was congratulating itself on the prospect of a day's rest at Red
Cloud, when at noon, to our utter astonishment, the wagons hove in
sight. We had fasted since our four-o'clock breakfast on the previous
morning--were hungrily eying the Indian supplies in their plethoric
storehouses, and were just about negotiating with the infantry men of
Camp Robinson for the loan of rations and the wherewithal to cook the
same, when Hall rode in, _nonchalant_ as usual, and parked his train of
supplies amid shouts of welcome. General Merritt was unfeignedly glad to
see his quartermaster; he had received his orders to hasten in to Fort
Laramie and proceed to the reinforcement of General Crook, and every
moment was precious. We were allowed just two hours to prepare and
partake of an ample dinner, pack our traps and store them in the wagons
again, when "Boots and saddles" was echoed back from the white crags of
Dancer's Hill and Crow Butte, and at 2.30 we were winding up the
beautiful valley of the White River. Lieutenant Hall was left with his
train to give his teams and teamsters a needed rest, and ordered to
follow us at early evening.

All the morning the reservation Indians had come in flocks to have a
look at the soldiers who had outwitted them on the previous day.
Arrapahoe and Ogalalla, Minneconjou and Uncapapa, represented by dozens
of old chiefs and groups of curious and laughing squaws, hung about us
for hours--occasionally asking questions and invariably professing a
readiness to accept any trifle we might feel disposed to part with. To
beg is the one thing of which an Indian is never ashamed. In Arizona I
have known a lot of Apaches to hang around camp for an entire day, and
when they had coaxed us out of our last plug of tobacco, our only
remaining match, and our old clothes, instead of going home satisfied
they would turn to with reviving energy and beg for the things of all
others for which they had not the faintest use--soap and writing-paper.

In addition to all the "squaw men" and "blanket Indians" at the
reservation, there came to see us that day quite a number of Cheyennes,
our antagonists of the day before. Shrouded in their dark-blue blankets
and washed clean of their lurid war-paint, they were by no means
imposing. One and all they wanted to see Buffalo Bill, and wherever he
moved they followed him with awe-filled eyes. He wore the same dress in
which he had burst upon them in yesterday's fight, a Mexican costume of
black velvet, slashed with scarlet and trimmed with silver buttons and
lace--one of his theatrical garbs, in which he had done much execution
before the footlights in the States, and which now became of intensified
value. Bill had carefully preserved the beautiful war bonnet, shield and
decorations, as well as the arms of the young chieftain Yellow Hand,
whom he had slain in single combat, and that winter ('76 and '77) was
probably the most profitable of his theatrical career. The incidents of
the fight of the 17th and the death of Yellow Hand were dramatized for
him, and presented one of the most telling of the plays in which he
starred all over the East that season. He realized above all expenses
some $13,000 on that one alone, and I fancy that some of your readers
may have seen it. For a time it was his custom to display the trophies
of that fight in some prominent show-window during the day, and take
them away only in time for the performance at night. As an advertisement
it drew largely in the West, but when Bill reached the refinements of
the Middle States and the culture of New England he encountered a storm
of abuse from the press and the clergy which, while it induced him to
withdraw "the blood-stained trophies of his murderous and cowardly
deeds" from the show-windows, so stimulated public curiosity as to
materially augment his receipts.

It is in New England, the land of the Pequots and the Iroquois, that
the most violent partisans of the peace policy are to be found to-day.
There is method in their cultured mania, for the farther removed the
citizen finds himself from the Indian the better he likes him. Year
after year, with the westward march of civilization, the Indian has
found himself, in the poetic and allegorical language ascribed to him by
Cooper and others who never heard him use it, "thrust farther towards
the fiery bosom of the setting sun." Each state in turn has elbowed him
on towards the Mississippi, and by the time the struggling aborigine was
at the safe distance of two or three states away, was virtuously ready
to preach fierce denunciation of the people who simply did as it had
done. It is comical to-day to hear Mr. Conger, of Michigan, assailing
Mr. Belford, of Colorado, because the latter considers it time for the
Utes to move or become amenable to the laws of the land; and when we
look back and remember how the whole movement was inaugurated by the
Pilgrim Fathers, is it not edifying to read the Bostonian tirades
against the settlers--the pilgrims and pioneers of the Far West?

Our march to Laramie was without noteworthy incident. We reached the
North Platte on Friday afternoon, July 21, spent Saturday in busy
preparation, and early Sunday morning, six o'clock, the trumpets were
sounding "the General," the universal army signal to strike your tent
and march away. The white canvas was folded into the wagons, and in a
few moments more the column of horse was moving off on the
long-anticipated march to join General Crook. Captain Egan and
Lieutenant Allison of the Second Cavalry rode out from Laramie to wish
us godspeed. By eight the sun was scorching our backs and great clouds
of dust were rising under our horses' feet, and Laramie was left behind.
Many and many a weary march, many a week of privation and suffering,
many a stirring scene were we to encounter before once again the
hospitable old frontier fort would open its gates to receive us. At
half-past two we camped along the Platte at Bull Bend, and had a
refreshing bath in its rapid waters; at four a violent storm of wind and
rain bore down upon us, and beat upon our canvas during the night, but
morning broke all the better for marching. A cold drizzle is far
preferable to thick dust. We sped along briskly to the "La Bonté," and
from there hastened on to Fetterman, where the main command arrived at
noon on the 25th, the wagons and rear guard, of which I was in charge,
coming in two hours later, fording the Platte at once, and moving into
camp some distance up stream.

  [Illustration: FORT FETTERMAN.]

Fetterman was crowded with wagon trains, new horses, recruits, and
officers, all waiting to go forward to General Crook, north of the Big
Horn, and with the eight companies of the Fifth Cavalry as a nucleus,
General Merritt organized the array of "unattached" into a disciplined
force, brought chaos into prompt subjection, and at eight a.m. on the
26th started the whole mass on its northward march. Among those to meet
us here were our old Arizona comrades, Lieutenants Rodgers and Eaton,
who had hurried from detached service to catch us, and there were some
comical features in the reunion. They had escaped from Eastern cities
but the week previous, had made the journey by rail to Cheyenne and
Medicine Bow, and by stage or ambulance to Fetterman, were fresh and
trim and neat as though stepping out for parade. We had been marching
and scouting for six weeks through scorching dust and alkali, and with
untrimmed beards and begrimed attire were unrecognizable. Rodgers
positively refused to believe in the identity of a comrade whom he had
met at a german at Fort Hays, but forgot his scruples when he received
through that same officer the notification that he was promoted to the
command of Company "A," its captain having suddenly concluded to resign
a short time before.

Here, too, the future medical director of the expedition, Dr. Clements,
made his appearance, and joined for the campaign, and two officers of
the Fourth Infantry, whose companies were not included in General
Crook's field force, obtained authority to serve with the Fifth Cavalry.
And among those who cast their lot with us as volunteers, there came a
gallant sailor, a lieutenant of our navy, who, having leave of absence
from his department after long sea service, came out to spend a portion
thereof in hunting on the Plains, just as his cousin, Lieutenant
Rodgers, was hastening to join his regiment; and Jack Tar became a
cavalry man, to serve for three months or the war, and it wasn't a week
before Mr. Hunter had won the regard of every officer and man in the
Fifth, and the brevet of "Commodore," by which title he was universally
hailed throughout the long and dreary campaign that followed.

Two more companies of ours, "E" and "F," had been ordered to join us
also, but we were in a hurry, and they followed by forced marches. On
the night of the 28th we were encamped in pitchy darkness in a narrow
valley at the head-waters of the North Fork of the Mina Pusa. I was
aroused from sleep by the voice of Lieutenant Pardee, who was serving as
an aide-de-camp to General Merritt, and, rolling out of my blankets,
found the general and himself at our tent. They asked if we had heard
the distant sound of cavalry trumpets. The general thought he had, and
we all went out beyond the post of the sentinels upon the open prairie
to listen. It was time for Captains Price and Payne to reach us with
their companies, and the general thought that in the thick darkness they
had lost the trail and were signalling in hopes of a reply, and so we
pricked up our ears. The silence was as dense as the darkness; no sound
came from the slumbering camp; no light from the smouldering fire;
suddenly there floated through the night air, soft and clear, the faint
notes of the cavalry trumpet sounding "Officer's Call;" another minute
and it was answered by our chief trumpeter, and, guided by the calls, in
half an hour our comrades had joined us, and ten companies of the Fifth
Cavalry were camped together for the first time in years.

From that night "Officer's Call" grew to be the conventional signal by
which we of the Fifth were wont to herald our coming through the
darkness or distance to comrades who might be awaiting us. Last
September, when the Utes made their attack on Major Thornburgh's
command, your readers will doubtless remember that after that gallant
soldier's death the command of the besieged battalion devolved upon
Captain Payne, of the Fifth Cavalry. He and his company, who were the
first to employ the signal, have best reason to remember its subsequent
value, and I cannot do better than to repeat in his own words, my
classmate's description of the arrival of General Merritt and the
regiment after their famous dash of two hundred miles to the rescue. Of
his little battalion of three companies, fifty were lying wounded in the
hurriedly constructed rifle-pits, he and his surgeon were of the number,
and for six days the Indians had poured in a pitiless fire whenever hand
or head became visible. Hoping for the speedy coming of his colonel,
Payne tells us: "While lying in the trenches on the night of the 4th of
October, this incident came to mind. Believing it _just_ possible for
General Merritt to reach us next morning, and knowing that, if possible,
come he would, I directed one of my trumpeters to be on the alert for
the expected signal. And so it was; just as the first gray of the dawn
appeared, our listening ears caught the sound of "Officer's Call"
breaking the silence of the morning, and filling the valley with the
sweetest music we had ever heard. Joyously the reply rang out from our
corral, and the men rushing from the rifle-pits made the welkin ring
with their glad cheers."

First at the head-waters of the Mina Pusa, in July, '76; last in the
valley of the Milk River. Next? Far out in the cañons of Colorado,
utterly isolated from the world, snowed in, living we don't know how,
four companies of the Fifth Cavalry are waiting at the ruins of the
White River Agency the result of all this negotiation in Washington.
Merritt with the other companies, six in number, is wintering at Fort
Russell, on the line of the Union Pacific. More than probable is it that
the earliest spring will find him a second time making that
two-hundred-mile march to the Milk River, and once again the Rockies
will echo the stirring strains of "Officer's Call."

Saturday, the 29th of July, '76, broke like a morning in mid-Sahara. We
marched in glaring sun, through miles of dust, sage-brush, and alkali,
and followed it up on Sunday, the 30th, with just such another; no
shade, no grass, no water fit to swallow. We bivouacked along the Powder
River, a curdling stream the color of dirty chalk, and we gazed with
wistful, burning eyes at the grand peaks of the Big Horn, mantled with
glistening snow, only fifty miles away. Monday was another day of heat,
glare, and dust, with that tantalizing glory of ice and snow twenty
miles nearer. That night the wind started in from the west, and blew
down from those very peaks, fanning our fevered cheeks like blessed
wavelets from heaven, as indeed they were. We were gasping for air on
the banks of Crazy Woman's Fork, and would have suffocated but for that
glad relief.

Early next morning Merritt led us on again, marching through a rolling
country that became more and more varied and interesting with every
mile; we were edging in closer to the foot-hills of the mountains.
Several small herds of buffalo were sighted, and some few officers and
men were allowed to go with Cody in chase. At one p.m. we halted on
Clear Fork, a beautiful running stream deserving of its name, fresh from
the snow peaks on our left; had lunch and rested until five, when once
more we saddled up and pushed ahead; came suddenly upon Lake De Smet,
wild and picturesque, lying like a mirror in a deep basin of treeless
banks, and in a beautiful open glade, rich with abundant green grass and
watered by a clear, cold rivulet, we camped in the glorious starlight,
thanking Heaven we were out of the desert, and at last along the storied
range of the Big Horn.

Wednesday, August 2d, dawned bracing, clear, and beautiful. The glorious
sunshine beamed on lofty crags and pine-covered heights close at our
left hand, peered into dark ravine and rocky gorge, sparkled on the
swift-flowing stream, and on innumerable dew-drops over the glade. Men
and horses awoke to new life. A few miles ahead lay a lofty ridge, and
from that, said our guides, the valleys of the Tongue and its branches,
and the grand sweep of country towards the Rosebud on the north, and the
Big Horn River to the northwest, would be spread before us like a map.
Over that ridge, somewhere, lies Crook with his force, expectant of our
coming; over that ridge, beyond him, are or were ten thousand renegades
and hostile Indians, Sioux, and San Arcs, Cheyennes of the North (it was
the Southern Cheyennes we whipped back on the War Bonnet),
Minneconjous, Uncapapas (Sitting Bull's Own), Yanktonnais, and Brulés,
all banded together in one grand attempt to exterminate the white
intruders.

How I envied the advance that day the first glimpse over that divide!
But each company took its turn at head of column; and now that we were
fairly in among the fastnesses, where attack might be expected at any
moment, two companies were daily detailed to escort and guard the wagon
train, and Companies "A" and "K" were the unfortunates to-day. It was
mean duty. The road was not bad, but it wound up and down, over crests
and through deep ravines. We had to dismount and lend a helping hand
half the time. At seven we passed the palisaded ruins of old Fort Phil
Kearney, abandoned by "Peace Commission" order in '68; and just beyond
we halted and silently surveyed the ridge on which Captains Fetterman
and Brown, Lieutenant Grummond, and three companies of soldiers were
slowly slaughtered by Red Cloud and his surrounding thousands in
December, '66. We fancied the poor women and children in the fort,
listening and looking on in dumb, helpless horror; and then we thought
of Custer and his comrades lying yet unburied only a few miles farther
across that uplifted barrier in our front, and then we hurried on,
eagerly praying that it might be our fortune to avenge some of those
sacrificed lives; toiled up the long, long ascent, reached the lofty
crest, and halted again in sheer amaze. The whole landscape to the north
was black with smoke. East, as far as the Cheetish (Wolf) Mountains;
west, as far as the Little Horn, from every valley great masses of
surging, billowy clouds rolled up to swell the pall that overspread the
northern sky and hung low upon the dividing ridges towards the
Yellowstone. Here and there forked flames shot up through the heated
veil, and even at our distance we could almost hear their roar and
crackle. "Lo" had set the country afire to baffle his pursuers, and,
knowing of the coming of Crook's reinforcements, was now, in all
probability, scattering over the continent.

At eleven we passed an abandoned outpost of earthworks--thrown up,
probably, by a detached company guarding the road. At two we overtook
Merritt and the eight companies resting along a cool, limpid stream that
gave promise of trout; and here we camped for the night, and listened
eagerly to the news brought us by courier from General Crook. Scouts
were out hunting for the Indians, who had withdrawn their masses from
his immediate front, and he was only waiting our coming to launch out in
pursuit. We sleep that night restless and impatient of the
delay--morning comes all too slowly--but at four o'clock we are astir
and on the move to meet our brigadier, but couriers report him coming
down towards us along the main valley of the Tongue. We unsaddle and
wait till three in the afternoon, when again "the General" sounds, and
we march northwardly over the ridges towards the thick smoke. "Crook is
camping on Goose Creek," is the explanation, and we are to join him
there. At half-past five we catch glimpses of distant patrols and herds
of cavalry horses and quartermasters' mules on the sloping side-hills.
Presently horsemen come cantering out to meet us. Gray-haired, handsome,
soldierly as ever, the first to hail us is our old Arizona major, now
Lieutenant-Colonel Royall, of the Third Cavalry--with him a group of his
own and the Second Cavalry officers. But we are still moved onward. We
descend a long spur of foot-hill; plunge through a rapid mountain
torrent into dense timber on the other side, still guided by our
welcoming comrades; ride with dripping flanks through willow and
cottonwood into brilliant light beyond. There white tent and
wagon-covers gleam in every direction; rough, bearded men are shouting
greeting; and just ahead, on the trail, in worn shooting-jacket, slouch
felt hat, and soldier's boots, with ragged beard braided and tied with
tape, with twinkling eyes and half-shy, embarrassed manner, stands our
old Arizona friend and chieftain, the hardworking soldier we have come
all these many miles to join, looking as natural as when we last saw him
in the spurs of the Sierras. There is no mistaking the gladness of his
welcome. His face lights up with new light. He has a cordial word with
General Carr, who commands the leading battalion; then turns to me, and
with a grasp of the hand that fairly makes me wince, gives greeting for
which I'd make that march twice over.




                    CHAPTER V.

  THE ASSEMBLY OF THE B. H. AND Y.


Friday, the 4th of August, 1876, was a busy day in the camp of General
Crook. He had been waiting impatiently for the coming of the Fifth
Cavalry, in order that he might resume the offensive, and, to use his
own words, "finish the campaign in one crushing blow." The tragic
success of the Indians on the Little Big Horn, of June 25th, resulting
in the annihilation of Custer and five companies of the Seventh Cavalry,
compelled General Terry to fall back to the Yellowstone, where he set
about the reorganization of his command; and, safely intrenched in his
supply camp at the mouth of the Tongue River, he too had been awaiting
the arrival of reinforcements. General Miles, with his fine regiment,
the Fifth Infantry, was hurried up the Missouri from Fort Leavenworth,
and companies of the Twenty-second Infantry, from the Lakes, also
hastened to join him. They were stemming the muddy current of the great
river as fast as the light-draft steamers could carry them, while we
were marching up from Fetterman to join General Crook.

On the 4th of August, Terry's command, consisting of the remnant of the
Seventh Cavalry, one battalion of the Second Cavalry, the Fifth
Infantry (Miles), Seventh Infantry (Gibbon), a battalion of the
Twenty-second, and the Sixth Infantry garrison at Fort Buford,
threatened the hostiles on the side of the Yellowstone; while General
Crook, with the entire Third Cavalry, ten companies of the Fifth, and
four of the Second Cavalry, and an admirable infantry command,
consisting of detachments from the Fourth, Ninth, and Fourteenth
regiments, was preparing to advance upon them from the south. The two
armies were not more than one hundred and twenty-five miles apart, yet
communication between them was impossible. The intervening country
swarmed with warriors, six to eight thousand in number, completely
armed, equipped, supplied, and perfectly mounted. Crook had sallied
forth and fought them on the 17th of June, and found them altogether too
strong and dexterous, so he retired to Goose Creek once more; and here
he lay on the 25th of June, when Custer was making his attack and
meeting his fate--only fifty miles away, and not a soul of our command
had the faintest idea of what was going on.

Warily watching the two commands, the Indians lay uneasily between Crook
and Terry. Noting the approach of strong reinforcements to both, they
proceeded to get their women and children out of the way, sending them
eastward across Terry's front, and preparing to do likewise themselves
when the time came for them to start. On the 5th of August the two
armies moved towards each other. On the 10th they met; and one of the
most comical sights I ever witnessed was this meeting, and one of the
most unanswerable questions ever asked was, "Why, where on earth are the
Indians?"

  [Illustration: SUPPLY CAMP, HEAD OF TONGUE RIVER.]

However, August the 4th was a day of busy preparation. At ten a.m. the
regimental and battalion commanders met in council at General Crook's
headquarters, and by noon the result of their deliberations was
promulgated. From the reports of his scouts and allies, General Crook
had every reason to believe that he would find the mass of Indians
posted in strong force somewhere among the bluffs and uplands of the
Rosebud, two days' march away to the north. He had been unable to hear
from General Terry or to communicate with him. Lieutenant Sibley, of the
Second Cavalry, a young officer of great ability, and universally
conceded to be as full of cool courage as any man could well be, had
made a daring attempt to slip through with thirty picked men; but the
Indians detected him quick as a flash, and after a desperate fight he
managed to get back to the command with most of his men, but with the
loss of all his horses.

The organization of the command was announced at one p.m.: General Crook
to command in person, his faithful aide-de-camp, Bourke, to act as
adjutant-general, while his staff consisted of Lieutenant Schuyler,
Fifth Cavalry, junior aide-de-camp; Dr. B. A. Clements, medical
director, assisted by Drs. Hartsuff and Patzki; Major J. V. Furey, chief
quartermaster; Captain J. W. Bubb, chief commissary; Major George M.
Randall, chief of scouts and Indian allies; and the bloodthirsty
paymaster, our old friend Major Stanton, was the general utility man.

The cavalry was organized as a brigade, with General Merritt in
command--Lieutenants Forbush and Hall, Fifth Cavalry, Pardee and Young,
of the infantry, serving as staff. General Carr took command of the
Fifth Cavalry, with myself as adjutant; and for the first time the
promotions which had occurred in the regiment consequent upon the death
of General Custer were recognized in the assignments to command. The
commissions had not yet been received from Washington, but all knew the
advancement had been made. So my old captain, now become Major Mason,
turned over Company "K" to its new captain, Woodson, and was detailed to
command the Second Battalion of the Fifth Cavalry, consisting of
Companies "B," "D," "E," "F," and "K," while the First Battalion--
Companies "A," "C," "G," "I," and "M"--remained, as heretofore,
under the leadership of our fellow-citizen Major Upham.

The Third Cavalry was commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel Royall, under whom
also was the battalion of the Second Cavalry. Consequently, it was his
distinguished privilege to issue orders to four battalions, while his
senior officer and quondam commander, Lieutenant-Colonel Carr (brevet
major-general) had only two. This was a source of much good-natured
raillery and mutual chaffing on the part of these two veteran
campaigners, and it was Royall's ceaseless delight to come over and talk
to Carr about "my brigade," and to patronizingly question him about
"your a--detachment." In fact, I believe that Colonel Royall so far
considered his command a brigade organization that his senior major,
Colonel Evans, assumed command of the Third Cavalry as well as his own
battalion; but, as this was a matter outside of my own sphere of duties,
I cannot make an assertion.

The infantry was a command to be proud of, and Lieutenant-Colonel
Alexander Chambers was the man to appreciate it. Detachments from three
fine regiments gave him a full battalion of tough, wiry fellows, who had
footed it a thousand miles that summer, and we were all the better
prepared to march two thousand more.

With every expectation of finding our foes close at hand, General
Crook's orders were concise enough. As given to me by General Carr, and
recorded in my note-book, I transcribe them here: "All tents, camp
equipage, bedding, and baggage, except articles hereinafter specified,
to be stored in the wagons, and wagons turned over to care of chief
quartermaster by sunrise to-morrow. Each company to have their coffee
roasted and ground and turned over to the chief commissary at sunset
to-night. Wagons will be left here at camp. A pack-train of mules will
accompany each battalion on the march, for the protection of which the
battalion will be held responsible. The regiment will march at seven
a.m. to-morrow, 'prepared for action,' and company commanders will see
to it that each man carries with him on his person one hundred rounds
carbine ammunition and four days' rations, overcoat and one blanket on
the saddle. Fifty rounds additional per man will be packed on mules.
Four extra horses, not to be packed, will be led with each company.
Curry-combs and brushes will be left in wagons. _Special instructions
for action_: All officers and non-commissioned officers to take constant
pains to prevent wastage of ammunition."

That was all. From the general down to subalterns the officers started
with no more clothing than they had on and the overcoat and blanket
indicated in that order. Many, indeed, officers and men, thinking to be
back in a week, left overcoats behind, as superfluous in that bright
August weather. When I tell you it was ten weeks before we saw those
wagons again, meantime the weather having changed from summer sun to
mountain storm and sleet, and we having tramped some eight hundred
miles, you can fancy what a stylish appearance the Fifth
Cavalry--indeed, the whole expedition--presented as it marched into the
Black Hills the following September.

Saturday morning, the 5th of August, broke clear and cloudless, and at
the very peep of day the hillsides re-echoed to the stirring music of
our reveille. Cavalry trumpet, soft and mellow, replied to the deeper
tone of the infantry bugle. We of the Fifth tumbled up in prompt and
cheery response to the summons. Roll-call was quickly over. The horses
took their final grooming with coltish impatience, and devoured their
grain in blissful ignorance of the sufferings in store for them. The
officers gathered for the last time in two months around their
mess-chests and thankfully partook of a bountiful breakfast. Then "the
General" rang out from cavalry headquarters; down fell the snowy canvas
in every direction; wagon after wagon loaded up in the rapid style
acquired only in long campaigning, and trundled off to join the
quartermaster's corral. The long column of infantry crawled away
northward over the divide; half a dozen mounted scouts and rangers
cantered away upon their flanks; the busy packers drove up their herds
of braying mules, lashed boxes of hard-tack and sacks of bacon upon the
snugly-fitting "apparejo"--the only pack-saddle that ever proved a
complete success--and finally everything was ready for the start. The
bustling town of yesterday had disappeared, and only long rows of
saddles and bridles disposed upon the turf in front of each company
indicated the regimental position.

At General Carr's headquarters, among the willows close to the stream, a
white flag, with a centre square of red, is fluttering in the breeze. It
is one of the signal flags, but as the regimental standard had been left
with the band at Fort Hays, the general adopted this for the double
purpose of indicating his own position and of conveying messages to the
distant outposts. Yesterday afternoon a group of our Indian allies,
Crows and Shoshones, surrounded that flag with wondering interest from
the moment of its first appearance. Accustomed to the use of signals
themselves, they eagerly watch any improvement upon their system, and,
learning from Sergeant Center, our standard-bearer and signal sergeant,
that this was a "speaking flag," they hung around for hours to observe
its operation. The herds of the different companies were browsing on the
hillsides half a mile away, strong pickets being thrown out in their
front, and each herd guarded by a sergeant and party from its own
company. So General Carr, to give the Indians an idea of its use and at
the same time secure more room, directed the sergeant to "Flag those
Second Battalion herds to the other side of that ravine." So Center
signalled "Attention" to the outposts, to which they waved "22, 22, 22,
3," the signal for "All right, go ahead, we're ready," and then, with
the staring eyes of a score of swarthy warriors following his every
move, Center rapidly swung his flag to form the message: "General Carr
directs herds Second Battalion cross ravine." Speedily the grays of
Company "B" and the four bay herds of the other companies began the
movement, were slowly guided through the sorrels, blacks, and bays of
the First Battalion, and commenced the descent into the ravine. One herd
lagged a little behind, and the general, gazing at them through his
binocular, quickly divined the cause. "Confound that herd guard; tell
'em to take off those side-lines when they're moving, if it's only a
hundred yards." The message is sent as given, the side-lines whipped
off, the horses step freely to their new grazing-ground, Crow and
Shoshonee mutter guttural approbation and say that flag is "heap good
medicine."

Hours afterwards they are hunting about camp for old flour-sacks and the
like, and several towels, spread on the bushes at the bathing-place
below camp to dry in the sun, are missing.

Now, on this brilliant Saturday morning, as we wait expectant of the
signal "Boots and saddles," the cavalcade of our fierce allies comes
spattering and plunging through the stream. Grim old chieftains, with
knees hunched up on their ponies' withers, strapping young bucks
bedaubed in yellow paint and red, blanketted and busy squaws scurrying
around herding the spare ponies, driving the pack animals, "toting" the
young, doing all the work in fact. We have hired these hereditary
enemies of the Sioux as our savage auxiliaries, "regardless of expense,"
and now, as they ride along the line, and our irrepressible Mulligans
and Flahertys swarm to the fore intent on losing no opportunity for fun
and chaff, and the "big Indians" in the lead come grinning and nodding
salutations towards the group of officers at headquarters, a general
laugh breaks out, for nearly every warrior has decorated himself with a
miniature signal flag. Fluttering at the end of his "coup" stick or
stuck in his headgear, a small square of white towelling or flour-sack,
with a centre daub of red paint, is displayed to the breeze, and, under
his new ensign, Mr. Lo rides complacently along, convinced that he has
entered upon his campaign with "good medicine."

Half-past six. Still no signal to bring in the herds. But Merritt, Carr,
and Royall are born and bred cavalrymen, and well know the value of
every mouthful of the rich dew-laden grass before the march begins. We
are exchanging good-byes with the quartermasters and the unhappy
creatures who are to remain behind, adding our closing messages to the
letters we leave for dear ones in distant homes, when the cheery notes
ring out from brigade headquarters and are taken up, repeated along the
line by the regimental trumpeters. Far out on the slopes our horses
answer with eager hoof and neigh; with springy steps the men hasten out
to bridle their steeds, and, vaulting on their backs, ride in by
companies to the line. The bustle of saddling, the snap of buckle and
whip of cinch, succeeds, then "Lead into line" is heard from the
sergeant's lips. Officers ride slowly along their commands, carefully
scrutinizing each horse and man. Blanket, poncho, overcoat, side-line,
lariat, and picket-pin, canteen and haversack, each has its appropriate
place and must be in no other. Each trooper in turn displays his
"thimble belt" and extra pocket package, to show that he has the
prescribed one hundred rounds. The adjutant, riding along the line,
receives the report of each captain and transfers it to his note-book.
Away down the valley we see the Second and Third already in motion,
filing off around the bluffs. Then General Carr's chief trumpeter raises
his clarion to his lips. "Mount," rings out upon the air, and with the
sound twenty officers and five hundred and fifteen men swing into
saddle. Ten minutes more and we are winding across the divide towards
Prairie Dog Creek on the east. The Third and Second, a mile to our left,
are marching northeastward on the trail of the infantry. We fill our
lungs with deep draughts of the rare, bracing mountain breeze, take a
last glance at the grand crags and buttresses of rock to the southward,
then with faces eagerly set towards the rolling smoke-wreaths that mark
the track of the savage foe in the valley of the "Deje Agie," we close
our columns, shake free our bridle reins, and press steadily forward.
"Our wild campaign has begun."




                    CHAPTER VI.

        THE MEET ON THE ROSEBUD.


That General Crook's command, now designated as the "Big Horn and
Yellowstone Expedition," started upon its campaign in the best
possible spirits and under favoring skies, no one who saw us that
bright August morning could have doubted. Unhappily, there was no one
to see, no one to cheer or applaud, and, once having cut loose from
our wagons and their guards, there was not a soul to mark our
progress, unless it were some lurking scout in distant lair, who
trusted to his intimate knowledge of the country and to his pony's
fleetness to keep himself out of our clutches. Once fairly in the
valley of the Prairie Dog, we had a good look at our array. The Fifth
Cavalry in long column were bringing up the rear on this our first
day's march from Goose Creek; our packers and their lively little
mules jogging briskly along upon our right flank, while the space
between us and the rolling foot-hills on the left was thickly covered
with our Crow allies. The Shoshones were ahead somewhere, and we
proceeded to scrape acquaintance with these wild warriors of the far
northwest, whom we were now meeting for the first time. Organized in
1855, our regiment had seen its first Indian service on the broad
plains of Texas, and was thoroughly well known among the Comanches,
Kiowas, and Lipans when the great war of the rebellion broke out.
In those days, with Sidney Johnston, Robert E. Lee, Earl Van Dorn,
Kirby Smith, Fitz Hugh Lee, and a dozen others who became notorious
in the rebel army as its representative officers, our regiment had
been not inaptly styled "Jeff. Davis's Own." But it outgrew the
baleful title during the war, and has lost almost every trace of its
ante-bellum _personnel_. Two of its most distinguished captains of
to-day--Montgomery and "Jack" Hayes--it is true acquired their earliest
military experience in its ranks under those very officers. But, while
they are all the better as cavalrymen for that fact, they are none the
less determined in their loyalty, and both fought in many a wild charge
during the rebellion, defending their flag against the very men who had
taught them the use of their sabres. In that stern baptism of blood the
Fifth became regenerate, and after stirring service in the Army of the
Potomac during the war, and throughout the South during reconstruction
days, the regiment once more drifted out on the plains, was introduced
to the Cheyennes and Sioux in the winter of 1868-9, became very much at
home among the Apaches of Arizona from 1871 to 1875, and now we found
ourselves, after a long march across country from the Pacific slope,
scraping acquaintance with the redoubtable "Crows" of the Yellowstone
valley, the life-long enemies of the Sioux.

Riding "at ease," the men talk, laugh, and sing if they want to. All
that is required is that they shall not lounge in the saddle, and that
they keep accurately their distance, and ride at a steady walk. The
Crows are scattered along the entire length of our left flank, but a
band of some fifteen or twenty chiefs and headmen keep alongside the
headquarters party at the front of column. There rides General Carr with
his adjutant, the surgeon, the non-commissioned staff, and orderlies,
and, of course, the standard-bearer, who, as previously explained, has a
signal flag for this campaign, and it is this which attracts the
aborigine.

These Crows are fine-looking warriors, and fine horsemen too; but to see
them riding along at ease, their ponies apparently gliding over the
ground in their quick, cat-like walk, their position in the saddle seems
neither graceful nor secure. This knot on our left is full of the most
favorable specimens, and they all ride alike. Every man's blanket is so
disposed that it covers him from the back of his head, folds across his
breast, leaving the arms free play in a manner only an Indian can
accomplish, and then is tucked in about his thighs and knees so as to
give him complete protection. One or two younger bucks have discarded
their blankets for the day, and ride about in dingy calico shirts or old
cavalry jackets. One or two also appear in cavalry trousers instead of
the native breech-clout and legging. But the moment that Indian
dismounts you notice two points in which he is diametrically opposed to
the customs of his white brother: first, that he mounts and dismounts on
the right (off) side of his horse; second, that he carefully cuts out
and throws away that portion of a pair of trousers which with us is
regarded as indispensable. He rides hunched up in his saddle, with a
stirrup so short that his knees are way out to the front and bent in an
acute angle. The stirrup itself is something like the shoe of a lady's
side-saddle, and he thrusts his moccasined foot in full length. He
carries in his right hand a wooden handle a foot long, to which three or
four thongs of deerskin are attached, and with this scourge-like
implement he keeps up an incessant shower of light flaps upon his pony's
flank, rarely striking him heavily, and nothing will convince him that
under that system the pony will not cover more miles in a day at a walk
or lope than any horse in America. His horse equipments are of the most
primitive description--a light wooden frame-work or tree, with high,
narrow pommel and cantle, much shorter in the seat than ours, the whole
covered with hide, stitched with thongs and fastened on with a horsehair
girth, constitute his saddle. Any old piece of blanket or coffee-sack
answers for saddle cloth, and his bridle is the simplest thing in the
world, a single head-piece, a light snaffle bit, and a rein, sometimes
gayly ornamented, completes the arrangement. But at full speed the worst
horseman among them will dash up hill or down, through tortuous and
rocky stream-beds, everywhere that a goat would go, and he looks upon
our boldest rider as a poor specimen.

The Crows are affably disposed to-day, and we have no especial
difficulty in fraternizing. Plug tobacco will go a long way as a medium
of introduction anywhere west of the Missouri, and if you give one
Indian a piece as big as a postage-stamp, the whole tribe will come in
to claim acquaintance. A very pretty tobacco-pouch of Sioux manufacture
which hung always at the pommel of my saddle, and the heavily beaded
buckskin riding-breeches which I wore, seemed to attract their notice,
and one of them finally managed to communicate through a half-breed
interpreter a query as to whether I had killed the Sioux chief who had
owned them. Finding that I had never killed a Sioux in my life, the
disdainful warrior dropped me as no longer a desirable acquaintance; and
even the fact that the breeches were a valuable present from no less a
hero than Buffalo Bill failed to make a favorable impression. Following
him were a pair of bright-looking young squaws whose sole occupation in
life seemed to consist in ministering to the various wants of his sulky
chiefship. Riding astride, just as the men do, these ladies were equally
at home on pony-back, and they "herded" his spare "mounts" and drove his
pack animals with consummate skill. A tiny pappoose hung on the back of
one of them, and gazed over her shoulder with solemn, speculative eyes
at the long files of soldiers on their tall horses. At that tender age
it was in no way compromising his dignity to display an interest in what
was going on around him. Later in life he would lose caste as a warrior
if he ventured to display wonderment at sight of a flying-machine. For
several hours we rode side by side with our strange companions. We had
no hesitancy in watching them with eager curiosity, and they were as
intent on "picking up points" about us, only they did it furtively.

Gradually we were drawing nearer the swift "Deje Agie," as the Crows
call the Tongue River. The valley down which we were moving sank deeper
among the bold bluffs on either side. Something impeded the march of the
column ahead; the pack trains on our right were "doubling up," and every
mule, with that strict attention to business characteristic of the
species, had buried its nose in the rich buffalo grass, making up for
lost time. "Halt!" and "Dismount!" rang out from the trumpets. Every
trooper slips the heavy curb bit from his horse's mouth and leads him
right or left off the trail that he may profit by even a moment's rest
to crop the fresh bunches in which that herbage grows.

The morning has passed without notable incident. No alarm has come from
the scouts in front or flank. We are so far in rear to-day that we miss
our friends Cody and Chips, who hitherto were _our_ scouts and no one
else's. Now they are part and parcel of the squad attached to General
Crook's headquarters, of which Major Stanton is the putative chief. We
miss our fire-eater of a paymaster--the only one of his corps, I fancy,
who would rather undergo the privations of such a campaign and take
actual part in its engagements, than sit at a comfortable desk at home
and criticise its movements. At noon we come suddenly upon the rushing
Tongue, and fording, breast deep, cross to the northern shore. We emerge
at the very base of steep rocky heights, push round a ledge that shuts
out the northward prospect from our sight, find the river recoiling from
a palisade of rock on the east, and tearing back across our
path, ford it again and struggle along under the cliffs on its right
bank a few minutes, balancing ourselves, it almost seems, upon a trail
barely wide enough for one horseman. What a place for ambuscade or
surprise!

  [Illustration: CROOK'S COLUMN ON TONGUE RIVER.]

We can see no flankers or scouts, but feel confident that our general
has not shoved the nose of his column into such a trap without rigid
reconnoissance. So we push unconcernedly along. Once more the green,
foam-crested torrent sweeps across our line of march from the left, and
we ride in, our horses snorting and plunging over the slippery boulders
on the bottom, the eager waves dashing up about our knees. Once more we
wind around a projecting elbow of bluff, and as the head of our column,
which has halted to permit the companies to close up, straightens out in
motion again, we enter a beautiful glade. The river, beating in foam
against the high, precipitous rocks on the eastern bank, broke in tiny,
peaceful wavelets upon the grassy shores and slopes of the western side;
the great hills rolled away to the left; groves of timber sprang up in
our front, and through their leafy tops the white smoke of many a
camp-fire was curling; the horses of the Second and Third, strongly
guarded, were already moving out to graze on the foot-hills. An
aide-de-camp rides to General Carr with orders to "bivouac right here;
we march no further to-day." We ride left into line, unsaddle, and
detail our guards. Captain Payne, with Company "F," is assigned the duty
of protecting camp from surprise, and he and his men hasten off to
surrounding hill-tops and crests from which they can view the
approaches, and at two p.m. we proceed to make ourselves comfortable.
We have no huts and only one blanket apiece, but who cares? The August
sun is bright and cheery; the air is fresh and clear; the smoke rises,
mast-like, high in the skies until it meets the upland breeze that,
sweeping down from the Big Horn range behind us, has cleared away the
pall of smoke our Indian foes had but yesterday hung before our eyes,
and left the valley of the Tongue thus far green and undefiled. We have
come but twenty miles, are fresh and vigorous; but the advance reports
no signs yet, and Crook halts us so that we may have an early start
to-morrow.

We smoke our pipes and doze through the afternoon, stretched at length
under the shady trees, and at evening stroll around among the
camp-fires, calling on brother officers of other regiments whom we
haven't met before in years. But early enough we roll ourselves in our
blankets, and, with heads pillowed on turf or saddle, sleep undisturbed
till dawn.

August 6th breaks clear and cloudless. Long before the sun can peer in
upon us in our deep nook in the valley, we have had our dip in the cold
stream, and our steaming and hugely relished breakfast, stowed our
tinnikins and pannikins on the pack mules, and wait expectant of "Boots
and saddles!" Again the infantry lead the way, and not until seven do we
hear the welcome "Mount!" and follow in their tracks. By this time the
sun is pouring down upon us; by nine his rays are scorching, and the
dust rises in clouds from the crowded trail. The gorge grows deeper and
deeper, the bluffs bolder and more precipitous; we can see nothing but
precipice on either side, and, lashed and tormented, the Deje Agie winds
a tortuous course between. We cross it again and again--each time it
grows deeper and stronger. The trail is so crooked we never see more
than a quarter of a mile ahead. At noon we overtake the infantry,
phlegmatically stripping off shoes, stockings, and all garments "below
the belt," for the eleventh time since they left camp, preparatory to
another plunge through the stream; and a tall, red-headed Irishman
starts a laugh with his quizzical "Fellers, did e'er a one of yez iver
cross on a bridge?"

At two o'clock, after the thirteenth crossing since seven a.m., we again
receive orders to halt, unsaddle, and bivouac. Captain Leib and Company
"M" mount guard, and with twenty-two miles more to our credit, and with
the thick smoke of forest fires drifting overhead, we repeat the
performance of yesterday afternoon and night, and wonder when we are to
see those Indians.

Reveille and the dawn of the seventh come together. We wake stiff and
cold in the keen morning air, but thaw out rapidly under the genial
influence of the huge tins of coffee promptly supplied. At six we descry
the infantry and the pack trains clambering up the heights to the
northwest and disappearing from view over the timbered crests. At seven
we again mount and ride down stream a few hundred yards, then turn sharp
to the left and up a broad winding ravine along a beaten trail--buffalo
and Indian, of great antiquity. Mile after mile we push along up
grade--we of the Fifth well to the front to-day and in view of the
scouts and advance most of the time. The woods are thick along the
slopes, the grass that was rich and abundant in the valley of the Tongue
is becoming sparse. Up we go--the ascent seems interminable. Once in a
while we catch glimpses of smoke masses overhead and drifting across the
face of distant ridges. At last we see knots of horsemen gathering on a
high ridge a mile in front; half an hour's active climbing, mostly afoot
and leading our horses, brings us close under them. "Halt" is sounded,
and General Carr and I go up to join the party on the crest.

We pause on the very summit of the great divide between the Tongue and
the Rosebud, and far to south, north, and west the tumbling sea of
ravine and upland, valleys that dip out of sight, mountains that are
lost in fleecy clouds, all are spread before us. The view is glorious.
We look right down into the cañon of the Rosebud, yet it must be six to
eight miles away, and how far down we cannot judge. From every valley
north and west rolling clouds of smoke rise towards and blacken the
heavens. Somewhere over on those opposite bluffs General Crook had his
big fight with the Sioux on the 17th of June, but not a Sioux is in
sight.

It takes us three good hours to get down into the valley, and here we
receive in grim silence the orders to go into bivouac parallel to the
stream, facing west. The Indians have burned off every blade of grass
their ponies left undevoured along the narrow gorge, and for miles below
us the scouts report it even worse. "The whole Sioux nation has been in
camp hereabouts not two weeks ago," says one rugged frontiersman, "and
I've been nigh onto ten mile down stream and didn't reach the end of the
village." The ground is strewn with abandoned lodge-poles, and covered
with relics of Indian occupancy too unmistakable to be pleasant.

The Third and Second Cavalry file into position on the eastern bank
parallel with our line, and all the pickets go out at once--Captain
Hayes, with Company "G," covering our front.

The situation is romantic, but disagreeable. Some of us sleep rather
restlessly that night, and one and all welcome the dawn of the 8th. It
is more than chilly in the keen morning air, but we march northward in a
thick, smoky haze that utterly obscures the landscape. We can see but a
short fifty yards in any direction, and the deeper we ride into it the
thicker and more suffocating it becomes. Four or five miles down stream,
still riding through the lately occupied camps, we bump up against the
rear of the column ahead. An aide leads us off to the left, and informs
General Carr that there is good grazing in some little breaks and
ravines--to unsaddle and give the horses a chance while we wait for
reports from the scouts. Here we "loaf" through the entire day, when
suddenly the signal to saddle and mount startles us at six p.m., just as
we were thinking of going to sleep. We march very rapidly, six, seven,
ten miles, and then darkness sets in. Thicker darkness I never
encountered. Men pull out their pipes and whiff away at them till the
glow of their sparks looks like a long trail of tiny furnace fires, and
gives us a clue to follow. No one but an Indian who has lived among
these valleys all his life can be guiding us to-night. At nine o'clock
the men are singing darky melodies and Irish songs; and it is not until
10.30 that we file past bivouac fires lighted in a deep bend of the
stream, grope our way out to an invisible front, and, fairly hobbling
and half-lariating our horses, throw ourselves down by them to sleep.
Captain Rodgers is notified that he and Company "A" are "for guard;"
and, for a man who cannot or will not swear, Rodgers manages to express
his disgust appropriately.

A slight sprinkling of rain comes on at daybreak, and we see the
infantry hurrying off northward through the misty light. We soon follow
down the right bank, the Fifth Cavalry leading the column of horse.
Stanton tells us that a large body of Sioux are not more than four days
ahead--were here in force not four days ago. It is easy to see that we
are on the trail of an immense number of Indians--eight to ten
thousand--but we judge it to be a fortnight old. At 9.15 a cold, driving
rain sets in, and whirls in our faces as we march. At two p.m. we
bivouac again, and begin to growl at this will-o'-the-wisp business. The
night, for August, is bitter cold. Ice forms on the shallow pools close
to shore, and Captain Adam, who commands the guard, declares that the
thermometer was at zero at daybreak. "What thermometer?" is the
question. "Vell, any thermometer as was tam fool enough to get
here--_un'stand_?" is our veteran's characteristic reply, and it puts us
in better humor. Stiff and cold when we march at seven o'clock on the
10th, we have not long to suffer from that cause. A bright sun pours
down in recompense. We march five miles, halt, and graze awhile; then
push on again along a broad, beaten trail over which countless hordes of
ponies must have recently passed. Thick clouds of dust rise high above
the bluffs on either side; the valley opens out wide and rolling east
and west. Here the Indian flight has been so rapid that the work of
destruction is incomplete, and the grass is excellent in many a spot.
"The grandest country in the world for Indian and buffalo now," says
General Carr. "Two years hence it will be the grandest place for
cattle."

We of the Fifth are marching down the left or western bank of the
Rosebud to-day, somewhat independently as regards the rest of the
cavalry brigade, which, following the infantry, is away across the
valley, close under the slopes and hillsides towards the east. About
nine in the morning, while I am profiting by a ten-minute halt to jot in
my note-book some of the surrounding topographical features, my orderly
and myself climb to the top of the ridge on our left, from which a good
view of the country is to be had. Just here the valley runs northeast,
and we have been pursuing that general direction for the last day's
march; but right ahead, some two thousand yards, a tall bluff juts out
into the valley from the west. The river sweeps round its base in a
broad fringe of cottonwoods, and disappears from sight for six or eight
miles; then, over an intervening range, I see it again, away to the
north, making straight for what must be the valley of the Yellowstone.
Between that great bend of the river and the distant bluffs on the
eastern side, a broad plain, scorched and blistered by sun and Indian
fire, stretches away some two or three miles in width. This side of the
bend the slopes gradually near the stream, and the picture below me is a
very pretty one. Right under our ridge the Fifth Cavalry, in long
column, is just preparing to remount and move on. A mile away to the
eastward are our brethren of the Second and Third; a quarter of a mile
ahead of them, the compact battalion of infantry. Here and there groups
of horses, men, and a fluttering flag indicate the positions in march of
Generals Crook and Merritt. Half a mile in advance of all, those little
dots of horsemen are our scouts, while, anyhow and everywhere, in no
order whatsoever, our Crows and Shoshones are scattered along the column
on one flank, while the pack-mules kick up a thick dust on the other.
The cloud of dust, in fact, rises from the whole column, and extends way
back up the Rosebud, and even as I am wondering how far it can be seen,
my eye is attracted by just as thick a cloud around the point,
apparently coming up the valley. What the mischief can that be?

Answering our eager signals, General Carr comes hurriedly up the slope
and levels his glass. It is dust, sure enough, and lots of it. Nothing
but an immense concourse of four-footed animals could raise such a
cloud. "Forward!" is the order; "Indians or buffalo?" is the query.
"Ride over and report it to General Merritt," says my colonel to me. So
"Donnybrook" strikes a rapid lope, and we pick our way through the
cottonwoods, over the stream and up the low bank on the other side,
where the first thing that meets my eyes is a grand hullabaloo among the
Indians, our allies. They are whooping and yelling, throwing blankets
and superfluous clothing to the ground--stripping for a fight,
evidently--and darting to and fro in wild excitement. Beyond them the
troops are massing in close column behind some low bluffs, and, looking
back, I see the Fifth coming rapidly through the stream to join them.
Evidently my news is no news to General Merritt; but the message is
delivered all the same, and I get permission to gallop ahead towards the
scouts and see what's coming. I make for a bluff just on the edge of the
plain I have described, and, nearing it, can see farther and farther
around the great bend. Our scouts and Indians are dashing around in
circles, and cautiously approaching the turn. Another minute and I have
reached the bluff, and there get a grand view of the coming host.
Indians! I should say so--scores of them, darting about in equal
excitement to our own. But no Indians are they who keep in close column
along that fringe of trees; no Indians are they whose compact squadrons
are moving diagonally out across the broad plain, taking equal
intervals, then coming squarely towards us at a rapid trot. Then look!
Each company, as it comes forward, opens out like the fan of practised
coquette, and a sheaf of skirmishers is launched to the front.
Something in the snap and style of the whole movement stamps them at
once. There is no need of fluttering guidon and stirring trumpet-call to
identify them; I know the Seventh Cavalry at a glance, and swing my old
campaign hat in delighted welcome. Behind them are the solid regiments
of Miles and Gibbon, and long trains of wagons and supplies. It is
General Terry and his whole array, and our chiefs ride forward to greet
them. And then it is that the question is asked, in comical perplexity,
"Why, where on earth are the Indians?" Except our allies, none are in
sight. They have slipped away between us.




                    CHAPTER VII.

      AWAY TO THE YELLOWSTONE.


Never before, and never since, has the valley of the Rosebud beheld such
a gathering as was there to be seen on that brilliant 10th of August,
1876--brilliant, that is to say, as nature could make it, for in General
Crook's command, at least, there was nothing of embellishment. The war
of the Revolution, the huts of Valley Forge, never exhibited so sombre
an array of soldiery as we presented when General Terry and his brigade
confronted us at the great bend.

It may be said that we were surprised at the meeting, and it can be
established that they were astonished. Marching up the valley, General
Terry was in daily expectation of finding a mass of Indians in his
front. At latest accounts they were in strong force--in thousands, no
doubt--between him and General Crook's position at the base of the Big
Horn, and he commenced his aggressive move with every precaution, and
with supplies for a long and stirring campaign. He had with him a
complete wagon train, tents and equipage of every description. We had a
few days' bacon and hard-tack, coffee and sugar, and a whole arsenal of
ammunition on our mules, but not a tent, and only one blanket apiece. He
had artillery in the shape of a few light field-pieces, and was making
slow, cautious advances up the Rosebud at the rate of eight or ten miles
a day. He had not come upon a single recent Indian "sign," yet knew that
the country to the south must have been full of them within the
fortnight. So when his scouts reported an immense cloud of dust coming
down the valley above the bend, and his Indian allies began the same
absurd gyrations and uproar which we had observed in ours, he very
naturally supposed that a horde of hostiles was sweeping down to the
attack, and made his dispositions accordingly.

It was my good-fortune to be in our advance, and to witness the
beautiful deployment of the Seventh Cavalry over the plains in our
front, and it is hard to say which side would have whipped if we had not
discovered that neither was Sioux. A report gained credence later in the
day that Dr. Clements, Crook's medical director, said that it would be
Sioux-icidal to fight under the circumstances; but his friends believed
that this eruptiveness was due to professional disappointment at the
non-employment of himself and his able assistants, and the matter was
hushed up.

Pending the solution of the problem as to the whereabouts of our common
foe, the two brigades were ordered to camp at once, and make themselves
at home. The generals met and discussed the situation, the scouts made
hurried examination of the surrounding country, and the mystery was at
an end. Leaving the valley of the Rosebud at the very point where our
two commands had confronted each other on the 10th, a broad trail of
recent date led away eastward over the divide towards Tongue River. The
low hills were stamped into dust by the hoofs of countless ponies.
Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse, Spotted Eagle, and the hosts of different
kinds of wolves and bears and vultures in which their savage
nomenclature rejoices, had fairly given us the slip, and probably ten
thousand Indians of various ages and both sexes had swarmed across
Terry's long front on the Yellowstone, but beyond the range of his
scouts. That a large portion of them would attempt to cross the great
rivers farther to the east and escape towards the Canada line was
instantly divined, and a prompt man was needed to head a rush back to
and then down the Yellowstone to hold the stream and its crossings and
check the Indian flight, while our main body pursued along the trail. In
less than an hour General Miles had gone to the right about with his
regiment and the light guns, and was making long strides towards the
north. The world has since read of the tireless energy with which this
vigorous soldier has continued the work he commenced that day. Winter
and summer, from one end of the Yellowstone valley to the other, he has
persistently and most successfully hunted the hostiles, until his name
has become a synonym for dash and good luck. Two of his companies had
been stationed with us all the previous winter at Fort Riley, in Kansas,
and I was eager to get over to their camp to see them as soon as my
duties were through; but long before our horses were herded out on the
foot-hills, and I had seen Captain Montgomery and Company "B" posted as
our guards, a new column of dust was rising down the valley, and our
Fifth Infantry friends were gone.

The afternoon and evening were spent by the officers of the two commands
in pleasant reunion. We had nowhere to "receive" and no refreshments to
offer; so, by tacit agreement, Terry's people became the hosts, we the
guests, and it was fun to mark the contrast in our appearance. General
Terry, as became a brigadier, was attired in the handsome uniform of his
rank; his staff and his line officers, though looking eminently
serviceable, were all in neat regimentals, so that shoulder-straps were
to be seen in every direction. General Crook, as became an old
campaigner and frontiersman, was in a rough hunting rig, and in all his
staff and line there was not a complete suit of uniform. Left to our
fancy in the matter, we had fallen back upon our comfortable old Arizona
scouting-suits, and were attired in deerskin, buckskin, flannels, and
corduroy; but in the Fifth Cavalry, you could not have told officer from
private. It may have been suitable as regarded Indian campaigning, but
was undeniably slouchy and border-ruffianish. It needed some persuasion
to induce old and intimate friends to believe in our identity; and
General Terry's engineer officer and his commissary, who had been chosen
"chums" of mine in West Point days, roared with laughter at the
metamorphosis.

Their tents were brightly lighted and comfortably furnished. Even the
Seventh Cavalry were housed like Sybarites to our unaccustomed eyes.
"Great guns!" said our new major, almost exploding at a revelation so
preposterous. "Look at Reno's tent--he's got a Brussels carpet!" But
they made us cordially welcome, and were civilly unconscious of our
motley attire.

While the chieftains and their staffs discussed the plans for the
morrow, we unresponsible juniors contentedly accepted the situation, but
by nine p.m. it was known that at early dawn we of Crook's command were
to reload our pack-mules with rations from Terry's wagons and continue
the pursuit. Now it began to dawn upon us that we had seen the last of
our comforts--our wagons, tents, beds, and clothing--for an indefinite
period; and in Indian warfare particularly, is a stern chase a long
chase--unless you have the lead at start.

That night we were bivouacked in the thick underbrush along the Rosebud,
hugging the tortuous bends of the stream, and as much as possible
keeping our herds between our lines and the river. Suddenly the
stillness was broken by a snort of terror among the horses; then a rush
as of a mighty whirlwind, the crash of a thousand hoofs, a shot or two,
and the shouts of excited men, and the herds of Companies "A," "B," and
"M" disappeared in a twinkling. Seized by some sudden and unaccountable
panic, they had snapped their "side lines" like pack-thread, torn their
picket-pins from the loose, powdery soil, and with one wild dash had
cleared the company lines, and, tracked by the dying thunder of their
hoofs, were fleeing for dear life far to the westward. Officers and men
sprang to arms, anticipating attack from Indians. Many of the First
Battalion had been trampled and bruised in the stampede; but in a moment
a dozen experienced campaigners were in saddle and off in pursuit, and
towards morning, after miles of hard riding, the runaways were skilfully
"herded" back to camp. But the night's adventure cost us the services of
one of our very best officers, as Lieutenant Eaton's pistol was
accidentally discharged in the rush, and tore off a portion of the index
finger of his right hand.

The following morning, August 11th, was by General Crook's people, at
least, spent in drawing rations from the wagons of Terry's command. At
ten o'clock our pack-mules were again loaded up, and by eleven the Fifth
Cavalry were filing eastwardly out of the valley; marched rapidly on the
Indian trail, found the valley of the Tongue River only nine miles away
across a picturesque divide, descended into a thickly timbered bottom,
marched only a couple of miles down stream, and there received orders to
halt, bivouac again, and were told to wait for Terry's command to join
us. We moved into a dense grove of timber--lofty and corpulent old
cottonwoods. Company "D" (Sumner's) posted its guards and pickets, and
the rest of us became interested in the great quantity of Indian
pictures and hieroglyphics on the trees. We were camping on a favorite
"stamping-ground" of theirs, evidently, for the trees were barked in
every direction for some distance from the ground, and covered with
specimens of aboriginal art. Sketches of warriors scalping soldiers,
carrying off women on horseback, hunting buffalo, etc., but with the
perceptible preference for the stirring scenes of soldier fighting. That
had become more popular than ever since the Custer massacre. While
examining these specimens, I was attracted by a shout and the gathering
of a knot of soldiers around some fallen timber. Joining them, and
stepping over the low barrier of logs, I came upon the body of a white
man, unscalped, who had evidently made a desperate fight for life, as
the ground was covered with the shells of his cartridges; but a bullet
through the brain had finally laid him low, and his savage foeman had
left him as he fell, probably a year before we came upon the spot.

Towards sunset the clouds that had gathered all day, and sprinkled us
early in the afternoon, opened their flood-gates, and the rain came down
in torrents. We built Indian "wickyups" of saplings and elastic twigs,
threw ponchos and blankets over them, and crawled under; but 'twas no
use. Presently the whole country was flooded, and we built huge fires,
huddled around them in the squashy mud, and envied our horses, who
really seemed pleased at the change. General Terry and his cavalry and
infantry marched past our bivouac early in the evening, went on down
stream, and camped somewhere among the timber below. We got through the
night, I don't remember how, exactly; and my note-book is not very full
of detail of this and the next four days. We would have been wetter
still on the following morning--Saturday, the 12th--if we _could_ have
been, for it rained too hard to march, and we hugged our camp-fires
until one p.m., when it gave signs of letting up a little and we saddled
and marched away down the Tongue ten or eleven miles, by which time it
was nearly dark, raining harder than ever. General Carr and Mr. Barbour
Lathrop (the correspondent of the San Francisco _Call_, who had turned
out to be an old acquaintance of some older friends of mine, and whose
vivacity was unquenchable, even by such weather as this) made a double
wickyup under the only tree there was on the open plain on which we
camped for the night, and, seeing what looked to be a little bunch of
timber through the mist a few hundred yards away, I went to prospect for
a lodging; found it to be one of the numerous aërial sepulchres of the
Sioux, which we had been passing for the last four days--evidences that
Custer's dying fight was not so utterly one-sided, after all. But,
unattractive as this was for a mortal dwelling-place, its partial
shelter was already pre-empted, and, like hundreds of others, I made an
open night of it.

Sunday morning we pushed on again, wet and bedraggled. No hope of
catching the Sioux now, but we couldn't turn back. The valley was filled
with the parallel columns--Crook's and Terry's--cavalry and infantry
marching side by side. We made frequent halts in the mud and rain; and
during one of these I had a few moments' pleasant chat with General
Gibbon, who, as usual, had a host of reminiscences of the grand old Iron
Brigade to speak of, and many questions to ask of his Wisconsin
comrades. It was the one bright feature of an otherwise dismal day. At
4.30 p.m. the columns are halted for the night, and the cavalry lose not
a moment in hunting grass for their horses. Fortunately it is abundant
here, and of excellent quality; and this adds force to the argument that
the Indians must have scattered. The scouts still prate of big trails
ahead; but our horses are becoming weak for want of grain, our Indian
allies are holding big pow-wows every evening, the Crows still talk war
and extermination to the Sioux, but the Shoshones have never been so far
away from home in their lives, and begin to weaken. Several of them urge
additional reasons indicative of the fact that the ladies of the tribe
are not regarded by their lords as above suspicion in times of such
prolonged absence. That evening Captains Weir and McDougall, of the
Seventh Cavalry, spent an hour or so at our fire, and gave us a detailed
account of their actions [TN 5.] on the 25th, on the Little Big Horn.
They were with Reno on the bluffs, and had no definite knowledge of the
fate of Custer and his five companies until high noon on the 27th, when
relieved by General Gibbon. Then they rode at once to the field, and
came upon the remains of their comrades.

"It must have been a terrible sensation when you first caught sight of
them," said one of their listeners.

"Well, no," replied McDougall. "In fact, the first thought that seemed
to strike every man of us, and the first words spoken were, 'How white
they look!' We knew what to expect, of course; and they had lain there
stripped for nearly forty-eight hours."

That night the rain continued, and at daybreak on the 14th the Fifth
Cavalry got up and spent an hour or so in vain attempts at wringing the
wet from blanket and overcoat. By 7.15 we all moved northward again,
though I could see scouts far out on the low hills on our right flank.
For half an hour we of the Fifth marched side by side with the Seventh,
and our gaunt horses and ragged-looking riders made but a poor
appearance in such society. Nearing a ford of the Tongue River, we found
some little crowding and confusion. The heads of columns were
approaching the same point upon the bank, and we were just about hunting
for a new ford when the Seventh Cavalry made a rapid oblique, and Major
Reno doffed his straw hat to General Carr, with the intimation that we
had the "right of way"--a piece of courtesy which our commander did not
fail to acknowledge.

Another ford, from the left bank this time, and before us, coming in
from the east, is a valley bounded by low, rolling hills for a few
miles, but farther to the eastward we note that high bulwarks of rock
are thrown up against the sky. Into this valley we turn; the grass is
good, the water is all too plentiful; occasional fallen trees in the
stream promise fuel in abundance; but we look somewhat wistfully down
the Tongue, for not more than fifteen miles away rolls the Yellowstone.
And now once more, as the rain comes down in torrents, we unsaddle, turn
our horses out to graze, Kellogg and Company "I" are posted as guards,
and we wonder what is going to be done. Only noon, and only ten miles
have we come from last camp. Colonel Royall marches his "brigade"
farther up stream and follows our example, and then comes over to
exchange commiserations with General Carr. The veterans are neither of
them in best possible humor. A story is going the rounds about Royall
that does us all good, even in that dismal weather. A day or two before,
so it was told, Royall ordered one of his battalion commanders to "put
that battalion in camp on the other side of the river, facing east." A
prominent and well-known characteristic of the subordinate officer
referred to was a tendency to split hairs, discuss orders, and, in fine,
to make trouble where there was a ghost of a chance of so doing
unpunished. Presently the colonel saw that his instructions were not
being carried out, and, not being in a mood for indirect action, he put
spurs to his horse, dashed through the stream, and reined up alongside
the victim with, "Didn't I order you, sir, to put your battalion in camp
along the river--facing east?"

"Yes, sir; but this ain't a river. It's only a creek."

"Creek be d--d, sir! It's a river--a river from this time forth, _by
order_, sir. Now do as I tell you."

There was no further delay.

All that day and night we lay along Pumpkin Creek. "Squashy Creek" was
suggested as a name at once more descriptive and appropriate. The soil
was like sponge from the continuous rain. At daybreak it was still
raining, and we mounted and rode away eastward--Terry and Crook, cavalry
and infantry, pack-mules and all, over an unmistakable Indian trail that
soon left the Pumpkin, worked through the "malpais," and carried us
finally to the crest of a high, commanding ridge, from which we could
see the country in every direction for miles. The rain held up a
while--not long enough for us to get dry, but to admit of our looking
about and becoming convinced of the desolation of our surroundings. The
trail grew narrow and more tortuous, plunged down into a cañon ahead,
and as we left the crest I glanced back for a last view of the now
distant valley of the Tongue. What it might be in beautiful weather no
words of mine would accurately describe, because at such times I have
not seen it. What it is in rainy weather no words could describe. And
yet it was comfort compared to what was before us.

At noon we were gazing out over the broad valley of Powder River, the
Chakadee Wakpa of the Sioux. Below us the Mizpah, flowing from the
southwest, made junction with the broader stream, and we, guided by our
Indians, forded both above the confluence, and went on down the valley.
And so it was for two more days; rain, mud, wet, and cold. Rations were
soaked; and we, who had nothing but salt meat and hard-tack, began to
note symptoms of scurvy among the men. But we were pushing for supplies
now. The Indians had scattered up every valley to the eastward; their
pony-tracks led in myriads over the prairie slopes east of the Powder.
We could go no farther without sustenance of some kind, and so, on the
afternoon of Thursday, the 17th, we toiled down to the valley of the
Yellowstone and scattered in bivouac along its ugly, muddy banks. The
rain ceased for a while, but not a boat was in sight, no news from home,
no mail, no supplies--nothing but dirt and discomfort. We could only
submit to the inevitable, and wait.




                    CHAPTER VIII.

               AGAIN ON THE TRAIL.


Our first impressions of the Yellowstone, as seen from the mouth of the
Powder River, were dismal in the last degree; but it was an undoubted
case of "any port in a storm." General Terry's supply boat put in a
prompt appearance and we drew rations again on Friday and received
intimations that we might move at any moment. "Which way?" was the not
unnatural question, and "Don't know" the laconic yet comprehensive
answer.

The rain that had deluged us on the march down the valleys of the Tongue
and Powder had ceased from sheer exhaustion, and we strove to dry our
overcoats and blankets at big fires built in the timber. We had
signalized our meeting with Terry's command by a royal bonfire which lit
up the country by night and poured a huge column of smoke skywards by
day; but as it was contrary to orders, and a most vivid indication of
our position, Colonel Mason's battalion received a scathing rebuke for
carelessness, and Mason was mad enough to follow the lead of the
historic Army of Flanders. A most conscientious and faithful officer, it
seemed to sting him to the quick that any one of his companies should
have been guilty of such recklessness. So the day after we reached the
Yellowstone, and the horses of the regiments were all grazing out along
the prairie slopes south of camp, and revelling in the rich and
plentiful buffalo grass, while all officers and men not on guard were
resting along the banks of the stream, and growling at the vigorous gale
that swept down from the north and whirled the sand in one's eyes, there
came a sudden shout of fire, and Major Upham and I, who were trying to
make a "wickyup" that would exclude the wind, became aware of a column
of flame and smoke rolling up in the very centre of his battalion. In a
moment it became evident that the biggest kind of a prairie fire was
started. The men of Company "I" were hurrying their arms and equipments
to the windward side, and as one man the rest of the regiment came
running to the scene, swinging their saddle-blankets in air.

Fanned by the hurricane blowing at the time, the flames swept over the
ground with the force of a blast-furnace; tufts of burning grass were
driven before the great surging wave of fire, and, falling far out on
the prairie, became the nuclei of new conflagrations. Fire-call was
promptly sounded by the chief trumpeter, and repeated along the lines.
The distant herds were rapidly moved off to right and left, and hurried
in towards the river. The whole command that was in bivouac west of the
Powder River turned out to fight the common enemy; but in ten minutes,
in all the might of its furious strength, a grand conflagration was
sweeping southward towards the rolling hills, and consuming all before
it.

Like the great Chicago fire, it started from a cause trivial enough,
but, spreading out right and left, it soon had a front of over half a
mile, and not till it had run fully two miles to the south was it
finally checked. Captain Hayes and a party of old and experienced hands
"raced" it far out to the front, and, there setting fire to the grass,
extinguishing it from the south and forcing it back against the wind,
they succeeded after much hard work in burning off a number of large
areas in front of the advancing wall of flame, fought fire with fire,
and in two hours were masters of the situation. But most of our grass
was gone; and Saturday afternoon, at four o'clock, we of the Fifth
saddled and marched up the Yellowstone in search of fresh pasture. A
mile was all we had to go, and moving was no trouble to men who had
neither roof nor furniture.

We rode into line in the river bottom again. General Carr, with the
headquarters party, seized upon a huge log at least a yard in diameter
that lay close to the river brink; and with this as a backbone we built
such rude shelter as could be made with leaves, boughs, and a ragged
poncho or two, crawled in and made our beds upon the turf. General
Merritt and his staff found shelter in a little grove a few yards away,
and with the coming of Sunday morning all had enjoyed a good rest.

Meantime we learned that Buffalo Bill had ridden all alone down towards
the Glendive, bent on a scout to ascertain if the Indians were
attempting to cross the river. I did not envy him the peril of that
sixty-mile jaunt through the Bad Lands, but it was an old story to him.
We were to remain in camp to await his report. It seemed that nothing
definite had been ascertained as to the movements of the Indians; and
for five days we rested there on the Yellowstone, nothing of interest
transpiring, and nothing of especial pleasure.

General Carr, to keep us from rusting, ordered inspection and mounted
drills on Sunday and Monday morning; but then the rain came back, and
for forty-eight hours we were fairly afloat. It rained so hard Tuesday
and Wednesday nights that the men gave up all idea of sleep, built
great fires along the banks, and clustered round them for warmth.
Shelter there was none. Some of our officers and men, who had broken
down in the severity of the ordeal, were examined by the surgeons, and
those who were deemed too sick for service were ordered home on the
steamer _Far West_, which would take them by river as far as Bismarck.
Among them was Captain Goodloe, of the Twenty-second Infantry, who had
been prostrated by a paralytic stroke on the last day's march towards
the Yellowstone; and of our own regiment we were forced to part with
Lieutenant Eaton, whose severe hurt, received the night of the stampede
on the Rosebud, had proved disabling for campaign work. At this time,
too, some of our newspaper correspondents concluded that the chances of
a big fight were too small to justify their remaining longer with so
unlucky an expedition, and the representative of the San Francisco
_Call_, and an odd genius who had joined us at Fort Fetterman, and
speedily won the sobriquet of "Calamity Jim," concluded that their
services would be worth more in some other field.

A great loss to us was in Buffalo Bill, whose theatrical engagements
demanded his presence in the East early in the fall; and most
reluctantly he, too, was compelled to ask his release. He left his
"pardner," Jim White, with us to finish the campaign; and we little
thought that those two sworn friends were meeting for the last time on
earth when "Buffalo Chips" bade good-bye to Buffalo Bill.

Ten soldiers of the Fifth were pronounced incapacitated by the
examiners, and ordered to return. Among them was an elderly man who had
joined the regiment in June with a good character from the Fourth
Cavalry. The Custer massacre had so preyed upon his mind as to
temporarily destroy his intellect, or make it too keen for the wits of
the Medical Department. I believe that up to the last moment it was an
open question whether Caniff (for such was his name) was downright
insane or only shamming; but he carried his point, and got away from the
danger he dreaded. "But, Lord, sir," as the corporal in charge of the
detachment afterwards told me, "he was the sensiblest man you ever see
by the time we got past Bismarck." In fact, it would look as though that
Custer massacre had been responsible for the unmanning of just three
members of the Fifth Cavalry; and, to the ineffable disgust of the
veteran Company "K," two of them were privates in its ranks.

Our stay of six days on the Yellowstone presented no features of general
interest. A brace of trading-boats swept down with the current from the
markets of the Gallatin valley, and some of us were able to purchase, at
fabulous prices, new suits of underclothing and a quantity of potatoes
and onions, of which the men stood sadly in need. More supplies of grain
and rations arrived, and our horses had a few nibbles of oats, but not
enough to build up any of their lost strength. General Terry, from the
east side of the Powder, rode over one day to pay a visit to General
Crook; and the story goes that our brigadier was pointed out to him
squatted on a rock in the Yellowstone, and with that absorbed manner
which was his marked characteristic, and a disregard for "style" never
before equalled in the history of one of his rank, scrubbing away at his
hunting-shirt.

Thursday morning, August the 24th, chilled and soaked, we marched away
from the Yellowstone, and mostly on foot, leading our gaunt horses
through the thick mud of the slopes along the Powder, we toiled some ten
miles; then halted for the night. Then it cleared off, and night came on
in cloudless beauty, but sharply cold. Next morning we hung about our
fires long after our frugal breakfast, waiting for the signal to saddle
and march. Trumpet-calls were forbidden "until further orders"; and it
was divined that now, at least, we might hope to see the Indians who had
led us this exasperating chase. But it was long before we reached them,
and this narrative is running threadbare with dry detail. Let me
condense from my note-book the route and incidents of the march to Heart
River, where we finally gave up the chase:

"General Terry's cavalry--Seventh and Second--followed us on the march
of the 25th, after we had forded Powder River and started up the eastern
bank; camped again that night in the valley after long and muddy march.
At seven a.m. on the 26th we of Crook's army cut loose from any base,
and marched square to the east; and General Terry, with his entire
command, bade us farewell, and hurried back to the Yellowstone.
Couriers had reached him during the night with important information,
and he and his people were needed along the crossings of the great river
while we hunted the redskins over the prairies. The weather was lovely,
the country rolling and picturesque; but far and near the Indians had
burned away the grass. Camped on the west fork of O'Fallon's Creek. Game
abundant all around us, but no firing allowed."...

"_Sunday, 27th._--Marched seven a.m. at rear of column, north of east;
rolling country; no timber; little grass; crossed large branch of
O'Fallon's Creek at eleven a.m., where some pack-mules were stalled, but
finally got through. Bivouac one p.m. in dry east fork of same creek."...

"_Monday, 28th._--Day beautiful and cool; march rapid and pleasant along
the trail on which Terry and Custer came west in May and June. Country
beautifully bold and undulating, with fine grass everywhere. We halted
on Cabin Creek at 1.30 p.m.; and two hours after, over in the direction
of Beaver Creek to the northeast, two large smokes floated up into the
still air. Just at sunset there came on a thunder-storm, with rain,
hail, and vivid lightning--hailstones as big as acorns, and so
plentifully pelting that with great difficulty we restrained our horses
from stampede. The lightning kindled the prairie just in front of the
pickets, and the rain came only in time to save our grass. Of course, we
were drenched with rain and hammered with hail."

"_Tuesday, 29th._--Most beautiful day's march yet; morning lovely after
the storm. We move rapidly on trail of the infantry, and at ten o'clock
are astonished at seeing them massing in close column by division on the
southwest side of grassy slopes that loom up to a great height, and were
soon climbing the bluffs beyond them--an ascent of some five to six
hundred feet." ...

Here General Merritt gave the regiment a lesson which it richly
deserved. Fuel had been a little scarce on one or two recent occasions;
and some of the men, finding a few logs at the foot of the bluffs,
hoisted them on their tottering horses, and were clambering in this
fashion up the ascent, when the "Chief" caught sight of them. The
general is a man of great restraint at such a time, but, without the
employment of language either profane or profuse, he managed to convey
an intimation to some eighty acres of hillside, in less than five
seconds, that those logs should be dropped; and they were. Later in the
day he devoted a half-hour to the composition of a general order
expressive at once of his views on the matter which had excited his
wrath in the morning, and his intentions with reference to future
offenders. Winding up, as it did, with a scathing denunciation of this
"violation of the first principles" of a cavalryman's creed, we of the
Fifth felt sore for a week after; but it served us right, and the
offence did not occur again.

We found ourselves on the crest of a magnificent range, from which we
looked down into the beautiful valley of the Beaver to the east, and
southward over mile after mile of sharp, conical buttes that were
utterly unlike anything we had seen before. We had abundant water and
grass, and here we rested two days, while our scouts felt their way out
towards the Little Missouri.

Thursday, the 31st, with a cold norther blowing, we went down the Beaver
ten miles to the north, halted and conducted the bi-monthly muster
demanded by the regulations, and again the scouts swept over the country
in vain search of Indian signs, while we waited until late the following
afternoon for their reports, and then merely moved down the valley
another eight miles for the night. On the 2d we put in a good day's
work, marching rapidly and steadily until two p.m., still in the
beautiful wild valley of the Beaver, catching glimpses during the day of
the tall Sentinel Buttes off to our right. Next day we turned square to
the east again, jogging quickly along through hills and upland that grew
bolder and higher every hour; camped at head of Andrew's Creek; pushed
on again on the following morning (Monday, September 4th), cold and
shivering in another norther--by nine the rain pouring in torrents. As
we neared the Little Missouri the hills became higher, outcroppings of
coal were to be seen along every mile. Finally, we _débouched_ through a
long, deep, tortuous cañon into the Little Missouri itself, forded and
bivouacked in a fine grove of timber, where, the rain having ceased
again, and with fine, blazing fires in every direction, we spent a night
of comfort.

The Indians must be near at hand. The timber, the valley, the fords and
crossings, all indicate their recent presence. To-morrow's sun should
bring them before our eyes. At daybreak we are up and ready. The day is
drizzly, and the command don't seem to care a pin by this time. We are
becoming amphibious, and so long as the old cavalryman has a quid of
good tobacco to stow in his taciturn jaws he will jog along contentedly
for hours, though the rain descend in cataracts.

Our march leads us southeastward up the valley of Davis's Creek--a
valley that grows grandly beautiful as we near its head. We of the Fifth
are some distance from the head of column as we climb out upon the fine
plateau that here stretches for miles from the head of the creek towards
the streams that rise a day's march away and flow towards the Missouri.
Away in front we can see General Crook and his staff; far out beyond
them are tiny dots of horsemen, whom we know to be Stanton and the
scouts. Every now and then a deer darts into sight along the column, and
now permission is given to shoot; for we are over a hundred miles from
the nearest chance for supplies, and have only two days' rations left.
We are following those Indians to the bitter end.

Suddenly, away to the front, rapid shots are heard. A moment they sound
but a mile distant; in another moment they are dying out of hearing. We
prick up our ears and gather reins. Looking back, I see the long column
of bearded faces lighting up in eager expectation, but no order comes to
hasten our advance. We hear later that our scouts had succeeded in
getting near enough to exchange shots with a small war-party of Sioux;
but their ponies were fresh and fleet, our horses weak and jaded, and
there was no possibility of catching them.

Late that afternoon we halt at the head of Heart River. And now at last
it looks as though we are whipped without a fight. We not only have not
caught the Indians, but we have run out of rations. Only forty-eight
hours' full supplies are left, but a little recent economizing has
helped us to a spare day or so on half-rations. It is hard for us, but
hardest of all for the general, and it is plain that he is deeply
disappointed. But action is required, and at once. We can easily make
Fort Abraham Lincoln in four days; but, by doing so, we leave all the
great stretch of country to the south open to the hostiles, and the
Black Hills settlements defenceless. Just how long it will take us to
march to Deadwood cannot be predicted. It is due south by compass, but
over an unknown country. While the chief is deciding, we lie down in the
cold and wet and try to make ourselves comfortable. Those who are tired
of the campaign and hungry for a dinner predict that the morning will
find us striking for the Missouri posts; but those who have served long
with General Crook, and believe that there is a hostile Indian between
us and the Black Hills, roll into their blankets with the conviction
that we will have a fight out of this thing yet.

Many a horse has given out already, and dismounted men are plodding
along by the flank of column. We have been on half-rations for three
days, and are not a little ravenous in consequence, and our campaign
suits, which were shabby on the Rosebud, are rags and tatters now. As
Colonel Mason and I are "clubbing" our ponchos and blankets for the
night, I turn to my old captain, with whom it has been my good-fortune
to serve so long and still not to lose him on his promotion, and ask,
"Well, what do you think of it?" And Mason, who is an inveterate old
growler around garrison in the piping times of peace, and stanchest and
most loyal of subordinates in trying times in the field, answers as I
could have predicted: "We oughtn't to give up yet, on account of a
little roughing it; and _Crook's not the man to do it_."




                    CHAPTER IX.

      THE FIGHT OF THE REAR GUARD.


Ragged and almost starving, out of rations, out at elbows and every
other exposed angle, out of everything but pluck and ammunition, General
Crook gave up the pursuit of Sitting Bull at the head of Heart River.
The Indians had scattered in every direction. We had chased them a
month, and were no nearer than when we started. Their trail led in as
many different directions as there are degrees in the circle; they had
burned off the grass from the Yellowstone to the mountains, and our
horses were dropping by scores, starved and exhausted, every day we
marched. There was no help for it, and only one thing left to do. At
daybreak the next morning the orders came, "Make for the Black
Hills--due south by compass--seven days' march at least," and we headed
our dejected steeds accordingly and shambled off in search of supplies.

Through eleven days of pouring, pitiless rain we plodded on that
never-to-be-forgotten trip, and when at last we sighted Bare Butte and
halted, exhausted, at the swift-flowing current of the Belle Fourche,
three fourths of our cavalry, of the Second, Third, and Fifth regiments,
had made the last day's march afoot. One half our horses were broken
down for good, one fourth had fallen never to rise again, and dozens had
been eaten to keep us, their riders, alive.

Enlivening incidents were few enough, and--except one--of little
interest to Milwaukeeans. That one is at your service. On the night of
September 7th we were halted near the head-waters of Grand River. Here a
force of one hundred and fifty men of the Third Cavalry, with the
serviceable horses of that regiment, were pushed ahead under Major Anson
Mills, with orders to find the Black Hills, buy up all the supplies he
could in Deadwood, and then hurry back to meet us. Two days after, just
as we were breaking up our cheerless bivouac of the night, a courier
rode in with news that Mills was surrounded by the Indians twenty miles
south, and every officer and man of the Fifth Cavalry whose horse had
strength enough to trot pushed ahead to the rescue. Through mud, mist,
and rain we plunged along, and by half-past ten were exchanging
congratulations with Mills and shots with the redskins in as wealthy an
Indian village, for its size, as ever we had seen. Custer's guidons and
uniforms were the first things that met our eyes--trophies and evidence
at once of the part our foe had taken in the bloody battle of the Little
Big Horn. Mills had stumbled upon the village before day, made a
magnificent dash, and scattered the Indians to the neighboring heights,
Slim Buttes by name, and then hung on to his prize like a bull-dog, and
in the face of appalling odds, till we rode in to his assistance. That
afternoon, reinforced by swarms of warriors, they made a grand rally and
spirited attack, but 'twas no use. By that time we had some two thousand
to meet them, and the whole Sioux nation couldn't have whipped us. Some
four hundred ponies had been captured with the village, and many a fire
was lighted and many a suffering stomach gladdened with a welcome change
from horse-meat, tough and stringy, to rib roasts of pony, grass-fed,
sweet, and succulent. There is no such sauce as starvation.

Next morning, at break of day, General Crook, with the wounded, the
Indian prisoners, his sturdy infantry, and all the cavalry but one
battalion of the Fifth Regiment, pushed on for the south through the
same overhanging pall of dripping mist. They had to go. There wasn't a
hard-tack north of Deadwood, and men must eat to live.

The First Battalion of the Fifth he left to burn completely the village
with all its robes, furs, and Indian treasures, and to cover the
retreat.

As the last of the main column disappeared through the drizzle, with
Mason's skirmishers thrown well out upon their right flank, a light wind
swept upward the veil of smoke and mist, and the panorama became evident
to us and to the surrounding Indians at one and the same moment. There
was no time to take observations--down they came with a rush.

On a little knoll in the centre of the burning village a group of
horsemen has halted--General Carr, who commands the Fifth Cavalry, his
staff and orderlies--and the first remark as the fog raises falls from
the lips of the adjutant: "By Jove! Here's a Badger State benefit!"

All along the line the attack has commenced and the battalion is sharply
engaged--fighting afoot, their horses being already led away after the
main column, but within easy call. Our orders are to follow, but to
stand off the Indians. They are not wanted to accompany the march. It is
one thing to "stand off the Indians" and hold your ground--it is quite
another to stand him off and fall back. They are dashing about on their
nimble ponies, following up the line as it doggedly retires from ridge
to ridge, far outnumbering us, and all the time keeping up a rattling
fire and a volley of aboriginal remarks at our expense. "Lo" yells with
unaffected glee when his foe falls back, and it sometimes sounds not
unlike the "yi-i-i-ip" of the rebels in '63. Along our line there is a
business-like taciturnity, an occasional brief, ringing word of command
from some officer, or a half-repressed chuckle of delight as some
Patlander sees an Indian reel in his saddle, and turns to mutter to his
neighbor on the skirmish line that he'd "softened the wax in that boy's
ears." Occasionally, too, some man suddenly drops carbine, claps his
hand to leg, arm, or side, and with an odd mixture of perplexity and
pain in his face looks appealingly to the nearest officer. Our surgeon
is just bandaging a bullet hole for one such, but finds time to look up
and ask:

"Why Badger State benefit, King? I don't see the point."

"Just because there are six Wisconsin men right here on this slope," is
the answer, "and dozens more for aught I know."

Look at them if you will. I warrant no resident of the Cream City could
recognize his townsmen to-day. Remember, we've been hunting Sioux and
Cheyennes since May; haven't seen a shanty for three months, or a tent
for two; haven't had a change of raiment for eight weeks, or a shave for
ten; and, under those battered slouch hats and in that tattered dress,
small wonder that you fail to know the wearers. Right in our front,
half-way to the skirmish line, rides the major commanding the battalion;
a tall, solidly-built fellow, with twinkling blue eyes and a bronzed
face, barely visible under the mass of blond hair and beard over which
the rain is dripping. He is a Milwaukeean and a West-Pointer, a stanch
favorite, too; and to-day the whole rear guard is his command, and on
his shoulders rests the safety of our move. His is an ugly, trying duty,
but he meets it well. Just now he is keenly watching the left of his
line, and by a trick he has of hitching forward in his saddle when
things don't go exactly right, you see that something's coming. A quick
gesture calls up a young officer who is carelessly lounging on a
raw-boned sorrel that sniffs excitedly at the puffs of smoke floating
past his nose. Quick as the gesture the officer straightens in his
saddle, shifts a quid into his "off" cheek, and reins up beside his
commander. The major points to the left and front, and away goes the
subaltern at a sputtering gallop. Milwaukee is sending Fond du Lac to
make the left company "come down out of that." They have halted on a
rocky ridge from which they can gloriously pepper the would-be pursuers,
and they don't want to quit. The major is John J. Upham, the subaltern
is Lieutenant H. S. Bishop.

Square in front, striding down the opposite slope and up towards us come
the Company "G" skirmishers. A minute more and the ridge they have left
is swarming with Indians. "Halt!" rings out along the line, and quick as
thought the troopers face about, fling themselves _ventre à terre_ and
blaze away, scattering the Sioux like chaff.

There's a stalwart, bearded fellow commanding the right skirmishers of
the company, steadily noting the fire of his men. Never bending himself,
he moves from point to point cautioning such "new hands" as are
excitedly throwing away their shots. He is their first sergeant, a crack
soldier; Milwaukee, too--for in old days at Engelmann's school we knew
him as Johnny Goll. Listen to his captain, half a head taller and quite
as prominent and persistent a target, who is shaking a gauntleted fist
at his subordinate and shouting, "I've told you to keep down a dozen
times, sergeant; now, by God, I want you to do it." This makes the
nearest men grin. The others are too busy to hear it.

The scene is picturesque enough from our point of view. To the south,
two miles away by this time, Crook's long column is crawling snake-like
over the rolling sward. To the west the white crags and boulders of the
buttes shut off the view--we are fighting along at their very base.
Northward the country rises and falls in alternate grassy ridge and
ravine; not a tree in sight--only the low-hanging pall of smoke from the
burning village in the near distance; the slopes swarming with dusky
horsemen, dashing towards us, whooping, yelling, firing, and retiring,
always at speed, except where some practised marksman springs from his
pony and prone upon the ground draws bead at our chiefs. Between their
restless ranks and us is only the long, thin line of cavalry
skirmishers, slowly falling back face to the foe, and giving them gun
for gun. Eastward, as far as the eye can reach, the country rolls away
in billowy undulations, and--look! there comes a dash of Indians around
our right flank. See them sweeping along that ridge? Upham is on low
ground at this moment and they are beyond his view, but General Carr
sees the attempt to cut us off, and in a second the adjutant of the
regiment comes tearing to the line, fast as jaded horse can carry him. A
comprehensive gesture accomplishes at once the soldierly salute to the
major and points out the new danger. Kellogg's company swings into
saddle and fairly springs to the right to meet it.

In buckskin trousers, fringed and beaded, but much the worse for wear,
in ragged old hunting-shirt and shapeless hat, none but the initiated
would recognize Milwaukee, much less West Point, in that adjutant. But
he was marker of our Light Guard years before the war, and the first
member of its corps of drummer boys. He is just speeding a grim-looking
cavalryman, one of the headquarters orderlies, off with a despatch to
General Merritt, and that orderly is a Milwaukeean, too, and may have to
"run the gauntlet" getting that message through; but his face, what you
can see of it through grizzled hair and beard, looks unconcerned enough;
and under the weather-stained exterior he is known to be a faithful old
soldier--one who loves the rough life better than he did the desk in
_ante bellum_ days when he was clerking at Hathaway & Belden's. "Old
George," as the men call him, ran a train on the Watertown road, too,
once upon a time, but about the close of the war he drifted from the
volunteers into the regulars, and there he has stuck ever since.

But all this time Crook is marching away faster than we can back and
follow him. We have to keep those howling devils beyond range of the
main column, absorb their attention, pick up our wounded as we go, and
be ready to give the warriors a welcome when they charge.

Kellogg, with Company "I," has driven back the attempted turn of our
right, but the Indians keep up their harassing attack from the rear.
Time is precious, and Upham begins to think we are wasting it. Again the
adjutant has come to him from General Carr, and now is riding along the
line to the right, communicating some order to the officers, while
Lieutenant Bishop is doing the same on the left. Just as the skirmishers
cross the next ridge a few cool old shots from each company drop on
hands and knees, and, crawling back to the crest, open a rapid fire on
the pursuers, checking them. Covered by this the main line sweeps down
at a run, crosses the low, boggy ground between them, and toils up the
ridge on which we are stationed. Here they halt, face about, throw
themselves flat on their faces, and the major signals to the outlying
skirmishers to come in; they obey with a rush, and a minute after a mass
of Indians pops over the divide in pursuit. With a ringing hurrah of
exultation our line lets drive a volley, the astonished redskins wheel
about, those who can, lugging with them the dead or wounded who have
fallen, and scatter off under shelter.

"How's that, King?" says the major, with a grin. "Think they've had
enough?" Apparently they have, as none reappear except in distant
groups. Mount is the word. Ranks are formed, the men chat and laugh a
moment, as girths and stirrups are being rearranged, then silence and
attention as they break into column and jog off after Crook's distant
battalions.

The adjutant is jotting down the list of casualties in his note-book.
"What time is it, major?" "Eight o'clock," says Upham, wringing the wet
from his hat. "Eight o'clock here; church-time in Milwaukee."

Who would have thought it was Sunday?




                    CHAPTER X.

 "BUFFALO BILL" AND "BUFFALO CHIPS."


In all these years of campaigning, the Fifth Cavalry has had varied and
interesting experiences with a class of men of whom much has been
written, and whose names, to readers of the dime novel and _New York
Weekly_ style of literature, were familiar as household words; I mean
the "Scouts of the Prairie," as they have been christened. Many a
peace-loving citizen and thousands of our boys have been to see Buffalo
Bill's thrilling representations on the stage of the scenes of his life
of adventure. To such he needs no introduction, and throughout our
cavalry he is better known than any general except Crook.

A motley set they are as a class--these scouts; hard riding, hard
swearing, hard drinking ordinarily, and not all were of unimpeachable
veracity. But there was never a word of doubt or question in the Fifth
when Buffalo Bill came up for discussion. He was chief scout of the
regiment in Kansas and Nebraska in the campaign of 1868-69, when the
hostiles were so completely used up by General Carr. He remained with us
as chief scout until the regiment was ordered to Arizona to take its
turn at the Apaches in 1871, and nothing but his having a wife and
family prevented his going thither. Five years the regiment was kept
among the rocks and deserts of that marvellous land of cactus and
centipede; but when we came homeward across the continent and were
ordered up to Cheyenne to take a hand in the Sioux war of 1876, the
first addition to our ranks was Buffalo Bill himself. He was "starring
it" with his theatrical troupe in the far East, and read in the papers
that the Fifth was ordered to the support of General Crook. It was
Bill's benefit night at Wilmington, Delaware. He rushed through the
performance, paid off his company, took the midnight express, and four
days later sprang from the Union Pacific train at Cheyenne, and was
speedily exchanging greetings with an eager group of his old comrades,
reinstated as chief scout of the regiment.

Of his services during the campaign that followed, a dozen articles
might be written. One of his best plays is founded on the incidents of
our fight of the 17th of July with the Cheyenne Indians, on the War
Bonnet, for it was there he killed the warrior Yellow Hand, in as plucky
a single combat on both sides as is ever witnessed. The Fifth had a
genuine affection for Bill; he was a tried and true comrade--one who for
cool daring and judgment had no superior. He was a beautiful horseman,
an unrivalled shot, and as a scout unequalled. We had tried them
all--Hualpais and Tontos in Arizona; half-breeds on the great plains. We
had followed Custer's old guide, "California Joe," in Dakota; met
handsome Bill Hickox (Wild Bill) in the Black Hills; trailed for weeks
after Crook's favorite, Frank Gruard, all over the Big Horn and Powder
River country; hunted Nez Perces with Cosgrove and his Shoshones among
the Yellowstone mountains, and listened to "Captain Jack" Crawford's
yarns and rhymes in many a bivouac in the Northwest. They were all noted
men in their way, but Bill Cody was the paragon.

This time it is not my purpose to write of him, but, _for_ him, of
another whom I've not yet named. The last time we met, Cody and I, he
asked me to put in print a brief notice of a comrade who was very dear
to him, and it shall be done now.

James White was his name; a man little known east of the Missouri, but
on the Plains he was Buffalo Bill's shadow. I had met him for the first
time at McPherson station in the Platte valley, in 1871, when he came to
me with a horse, and the simple introduction that he was a friend of
Cody's. Long afterwards we found how true and stanch a friend, for when
Cody joined us at Cheyenne as chief scout he brought White with him as
assistant, and Bill's recommendation secured his immediate employment.

On many a long day's march after that White rode by my side along the
flanks of the column, and I got to know him well. A simpler-minded,
gentler frontiersman never lived. He was modesty and courtesy itself,
conspicuous mainly because of two or three unusual traits for his
class--he never drank, I never heard him swear, and no man ever heard
him lie.

For years he had been Cody's faithful follower--half servant, half
"pardner." He was Bill's "Fidus Achates;" Bill was his adoration. They
had been boys together, and the hero worship of extreme youth was simply
intensified in the man. He copied Bill's dress, his gait, his carriage,
his speech--everything he could copy; he let his long yellow hair fall
low upon his shoulders in wistful imitation of Bill's glossy brown
curls. He took more care of Bill's guns and horses than he did of his
own; and so, when he finally claimed, one night at Laramie, the right to
be known by some other title than simple Jim White--something
descriptive, as it were, of his attachment for Cody and life-long
devotion to his idol "Buffalo Bill," a grim quartermaster (Morton, of
the Ninth Infantry), dubbed him "Buffalo Chips," and the name was a
fixture.

Poor, honest-hearted "Chips"! His story was a brief one after that
episode. We launched out from Laramie on the 22d of June, and, through
all the vicissitudes of the campaign that followed, he was always near
the Fifth. On the Yellowstone Cody was compelled to bid us a reluctant
farewell. He had theatrical engagements to meet in the fall, and about
the end of August he started on General Terry's boat for Fort Buford and
the States. "Chips" remained in his capacity as scout, though he seemed
sorely to miss his "pardner."

It was just two weeks after that we struck the Sioux at Slim Buttes,
something of which I told you in a former chapter. You may remember that
the Fifth had ridden in haste to the relief of Major Mills, who had
surprised the Indians away in our front early Saturday morning, had
whipped them in panicky confusion out of their "tepees" into the
neighboring rocks, and then had to fight on the defensive against ugly
odds until we rode in to the rescue. As the head of our column jogged in
among the lodges, and General Carr directed us to keep on down to face
the bluffs to the south, Mills pointed to a ravine opening out into the
village, with the warning, "Look out for that gully; there are two or
three wounded Indians hidden in there, and they've knocked over some of
my men."

Everybody was too busy just then to pay much attention to two or three
wounded Indians in a hole. We were sure of getting them when wanted. So,
placing a couple of sentinels where they could warn stragglers away from
its front, we formed line along the south and west of the captured
village, and got everything ready to resist the attack we knew they
would soon make in full force.

General Crook had arrived on the scene, and, while we were waiting for
"Lo" to resume the offensive, some few scouts and packers started in to
have a little fun "rousting out them Injuns." Half a dozen soldiers got
permission to go over and join in while the rest of us were hungrily
hunting about for something to eat. The next thing, we heard a volley
from the ravine, and saw the scouts and packers scattering for cover.
One soldier held his ground--shot dead. Another moment, and it became
apparent that not one or two, but a dozen Indians were crouching
somewhere in that narrow gorge, and the move to get them out assumed
proportions. Lieutenant Clark, of General Crook's staff, sprang into the
entrance, carbine in hand, and a score of cavalrymen followed, while
the scouts and others went cautiously along either bank, peering warily
into the cave-like darkness at the head. A squad of newspaper
correspondents, led by that reckless Hibernian, Finerty, of the _Chicago
Times_, came tearing over, pencil in hand, all eagerness for items, just
as a second volley came from the concealed foe, and three more of their
assailants dropped, bleeding, in their tracks. Now our people were
fairly aroused, and officers and men by dozens hurried to the scene. The
misty air rang with shots, and the chances looked bad for those
redskins. Just at this moment, as I was running over from the western
side, I caught sight of "Chips" on the opposite crest. All alone, he was
cautiously making his way, on hands and knees, towards the head of the
ravine, where he could look down upon the Indians beneath. As yet he was
protected from their fire by the bank itself--his lean form distinctly
outlined against the eastern sky. He reached a stunted tree that grew on
the very edge of the gorge, and there he halted, brought his rifle close
under his shoulder, in readiness to aim, and then raised himself slowly
to his feet, lifted his head higher, higher, as he peered over. Suddenly
a quick, eager light shone in his face, a sharp movement of his rifle,
as though he were about to raise it to the shoulder, when, bang!--a puff
of white smoke floated up from the head of the ravine, "Chips" sprang
convulsively in the air, clasping his hands to his breast, and with one
startled, agonizing cry, "Oh, my God, boys!" plunged heavily forward, on
his face, down the slope--shot through the heart.

Two minutes more, what Indians were left alive were prisoners, and that
costly experiment at an end. That evening, after the repulse of the
grand attack of Roman Nose and Stabber's warriors, and, 'twas said,
hundreds of Crazy Horse's band, we buried poor "Chips," with our other
dead, in a deep ravine. Wild Bill, California Joe, and Cosgrove have
long since gone to their last account, but, among those who knew them,
no scout was more universally mourned than Buffalo Bill's devoted
friend, Jim White.




                    CHAPTER XI.

        THE "CHIEF" AND THE STAFF.


With the death of our scout, Jim White, that eventful afternoon on the
9th of September, 1876, the skulking Indians in the ravine seemed to
have fired their last shot. Several squaws were half dragged, half
pushed up the banks, and through them the hidden foe were at last
convinced that their lives would be spared if they would come out and
surrender. Pending the negotiations, General Crook himself, with two or
three staff officers, came upon the scene, and orders were given that
the prisoners should be brought to him.

The time was, in the martial history of our country, when
brigadier-generals were as plentiful as treasury-clerks--when our
streets were ablaze with brilliant buttons, double rows and grouped in
twos; when silver stars shone on many a shoulder, and every such
luminary was the centre of half a score of brilliant satellites, the
blue-and-gold aides-de-camp, adjutant-generals, etc., etc. But those
were the dashing days of the late civil war, when the traditions of 1812
and Mexico were still fresh in the military mind, and when we were half
disposed to consider it quite the thing for a general to bedeck himself
in all the splendor to be borrowed from plumes, epaulettes, and sashes,
and, followed by a curveting train of attendants, to gallop forth and
salute his opponent before opening the battle. They did it in 1812, and
"Old Fuss and Feathers," as many in the army called Winfield Scott,
would have pursued the same system in '47, but for the fact that bluff
Zachary Taylor--"Old Rough and Ready"--had taken the initiative, and
left all full-dress outfits east of the Rio Grande.

We do things in a still more practical style nowadays, and, when it
comes to fighting Indians, all that is ornamental in warfare has been
left to them. An Indian of the Sioux or Cheyenne tribe, when he goes
into battle, is as gorgeous a creature as vermilion pigment, plumed
war-bonnet, glittering necklace, armlets, bracelets, and painted shield
can make him. But here is a chance to see a full-fledged
brigadier-general of the United States Army and his brilliant staff in
action--date, September 9th, 1876; place, a muddy ravine in far-western
Dakota; campaign, the great Sioux war of that year. Now,
fellow-citizens, which is brigadier and which is private soldier in this
crowd? It has gathered in not unkindly curiosity around three squaws who
have just been brought into the presence of the "big white chief." You
are taxpayers--you contribute to the support of the brigadier and the
private alike. Presumably, therefore, having paid your money, you take
your pick. I see you will need assistance. Very well, then. This utterly
unpretending party--this undeniably shabby-looking man in a private
soldier's light-blue overcoat, standing ankle-deep in mud in a far-gone
pair of private soldier's boots, crowned with a most shocking bad hat,
is Brigadier-General George Crook, of the United States Army. He
commanded the Eighth Corps at Cedar Creek, and ever since the war closed
has been hustled about the great West, doing more hard service and
making less fuss about it than you suppose possible in the case of a
brigadier-general. He has spent the best days of his life, before and
since the war, in the exile of the frontier. He has fought all the
tribes on the western slope of the Rockies, and nearly all on the
eastern side. Pitt River Indians sent an arrow through him in 1857, and
since the day he took command against the Apaches in Arizona no white
man's scalp would bring the price his would, even in the most
impoverished tribe on the continent.

The rain is dripping from the ragged edge of his old white felt hat and
down over his untrimmed beard as he holds out his hand to greet, Indian
fashion, the first squaw whom the interpreter, Frank Gruard, is leading
forward. Poor, haggard, terrified old wretch, she recognizes the big
chief at once, and, springing forward, grasps his hand in both of hers,
while her eyes mutely implore protection. Never having seen in all her
life any reception but torture for prisoners, she cannot be made to
believe, for some minutes, that the white man does not war that way. The
other squaws come crowding after her, each eager to grasp the general's
hand, and then to insert therein the tiny fist of the pappoose hanging
in stolid wonderment on her back. One of the squaws, a young and really
handsome woman, is shot through the hand, but she holds it unconcernedly
before her, letting the blood drip to the ground while she listens to
the interpreter's explanation of the general's assurance of safety.

Standing by the general are two of his aides. West of the Missouri you
would not need introduction to him or them, for no men are better known;
but it is the rarest thing imaginable to see any one of the three
anywhere else. In point of style and attire, they are no better off than
their chief. Bourke, the senior aide and adjutant-general of the
expedition, is picturesquely gotten up in an old shooting-coat, an
indescribable pair of trousers, and a straw hat minus ribbon or binding,
a brim ragged as the edge of a saw, and a crown without a thatch. It was
midsummer, you recollect, when we started on this raid, and, while the
seasons have changed, our garments, perforce, remain the same, what
there is left of them.

Schuyler, the junior, is a trifle more "swell" in point of dress. His
hat has not quite so many holes; his hunting-shirt of brown canvas has
stood the wear and tear of the campaign somewhat better, and the lower
man is garbed in a material unsightly but indestructible. All three are
old campaigners in every part of the West. The third aide-de-camp we saw
in the previous article, down in the ravine itself, heading the attack
on the Indians. Clark is unquestionably the show-figure of the staff,
for his suit of Indian-tanned buckskin seems to defy the elements, and
he looks as handsome and jaunty as the day we met him on the
Yellowstone.

Meantime more Indians are being dragged out of their improvised
rifle-pits--warriors, squaws, and children. One of the latter is a
bright-eyed little miss of some four or five summers. She is absolutely
pretty, and looks so wet and cold and hungry that Bourke's big heart is
touched, and, lifting her from the ground, he starts off with her
towards where the Fifth Cavalry are bivouacked, and I go with them. The
little maiden suspects treachery--torture or death, no doubt--for with
all her savage strength she kicks, struggles, claws, and scratches at
the kindly, bearded face, scorns all the soothing protestations of her
captor, and finally, as we arrive at Bourke's camp-fire, actually tears
off that veteran straw hat, and Bourke, being a bachelor, hands his
prize over to me with the remark that, as a family man, I may have
better luck. Apparently I do not, but in a moment the adjutant-general
is busying himself at his haversack. He produces an almost forgotten
luxury--a solid hard-tack; spreads upon it a thick layer of wild-currant
jam, and hands it to the little termagant who is deafening me with
screams. "Take it, it's washtay, Wauwataycha;" and, sudden as sunburst
from April cloud, little Wauwataycha's white teeth gleamed in smiles an
instant, and then are buried in the sweet morsel. Her troubles are
forgotten, she wriggles out of my arms, squats contentedly in the mud
by the fire, finishes a square foot of hard-tack in less time than we
could masticate an inch, and smilingly looks up for more.

Poor little heathen! It wasn't the treatment she expected, and,
doubtless, more than ever, she thinks "white man heap fool," but she is
none the less happy. She will fill her own little stomach first, and
then go and tell the glad tidings to her sisters, cousins, and aunts,
and that white chief will have consequential damages to settle for
scores of relatives of the original claimant of his hospitality. Indian
logic in such matters is nothing if not peculiar. Lo argues, "You give
my pappoose something to eat--you my pappoose friend; now you give me,
or you my enemy."

Nothing but big luck will save Bourke's scanty supply of provender this
muddy, rainy afternoon.

We have captured a dozen or more rabid Indians who but half an hour ago
were strewing the hillside with our dead. Here's one grinning,
hand-shaking vagabond with one of Custer's corporals uniforms on his
back--doubtless that corporal's scalp is somewhere in the warrior's
possession, but he has the deep sagacity not to boast of it; and no man
in his sound senses wants to search the average Indian. They are our
prisoners. Were we theirs, by this time we would be nakedly ornamenting
a solid stake and broiling to a juicy death to the accompaniment of
their exultant howls. But fate ordains otherwise; we are good North
American citizens and must conciliate--so we pass them around with
smiling, pacific grasp of handcheery "How coolahs," and seat them by
the fire and bid them puff of our scanty store of tobacco, and eat of
our common stock of pony. But we leave a fair-sized guard with orders to
perforate the first redskin that tries to budge, while the rest of us
grab our carbines and hurry to our posts. Scattering shots are heard all
along and around our line--the trumpets of the cavalry ring out "To
arms!" the Fifth Cavalry follows with "Forward." It means business,
gentlemen, for here come Crazy Horse, Roman Nose, and scores, nay
hundreds, of these Dick Turpins of the Plains, bent on recapturing their
comrades. We must drop pen to meet them.




                     CHAPTER XII.

      THE COMBAT OF SLIM BUTTES.


It is a stirring sight that meets the eye as, scrambling up from the
shelter of the ravine in which we have been interviewing our captives,
we gain the hillside and look hurriedly around. The whole landscape is
alive with men and horses in excited motion. We are in a
half-amphitheatre of picturesque and towering bluffs. North, south, and
west they frown down upon us, their crests enveloped in eddying mist and
rain clouds, the sward at their base rolling towards us in successive
dips and ridges. Not three hundred yards away the nearest cliff tosses
skyward directly south of the centre of the village we have won, but to
the west and north they open out a good three-quarter mile away.

The village itself consists of some thirty lodges or tepees of the
largest and most ornate description known to Sioux architecture. The
prisoners say that the head man of the municipality was Roman Nose, and
that he and his band are but flankers of the great chieftain Crazy
Horse, whose whereabouts are vaguely indicated as "over there," which
may mean among the white crags of Slim Buttes, within rifle shot, or
miles away towards the Little Missouri. The tepees are nestled about in
three shallow ravines or "cooleys," as the Northern plainsmen sometimes
call them, which, uniting in the centre of the metropolis, form a little
valley through which their joint contributions trickle away in a muddy
streamlet. On a point at the confluence of the two smaller branches
stands a large lodge of painted skins, the residence no doubt of some
chief or influential citizen, for it is chuck-full of robes and furs and
plunder of every description. Here, not inside, for the domicile savors
of long and unventilated occupation, but outside in the mud, General
Carr has established the headquarters of the Fifth Cavalry. Its left is
bivouacked directly in front, facing south in the narrow ravine nearest
the tall white butte that stands like a sentinel against the stormy sky,
while the rest of the line sweeps around to the west, crossing the level
plateau between the two main ravines. Mason's battalion is holding this
front and uniting with the Second Cavalry battalion on our right.

Directly behind us rises a mound in the very centre of our position, and
here General Merritt, who commands the whole cavalry brigade, has
planted his flag. It overlooks the field. Below him to the north are the
lodges to which the wounded men have been brought, and where the
surgeons are now at work. Here, too, the compact battalion of the
infantry has stacked its arms and set about kicking the heavy mud off
its worn brogans. Somewhere over there also is the entire Third Cavalry,
but I have been too busy with other entertainments since we trotted in
at noon to find out much about them. To them belongs solely and entirely
the honor of the capture of the village in the first place--only a
hundred and fifty men at that. Their advance under Mills and Crawford,
Schwatka and poor Von Luettwitz (who pays for the honor with a leg the
surgeons have just lopped off) dashed in at daybreak while we were yet
twenty miles away, and since we got in to help them hold the prize all
hands have had their hands full.

Southeast of Merritt's central position a curling white smoke rising
from the main ravine through the moisture-laden air, and begriming the
folds of a red-and-blue headquarters flag, indicates where Crook himself
is to be found. The brigadier is no better off--cares to be no better
off than the private. He has not a rag of canvas to shelter his head.

Close in around the lines the lean, bony, leg-weary horses of the
cavalry are herded, each company by itself where best it can find
patches of the rich buffalo grass. No need to lariat those horses now.
For weeks past they have barely been able to stagger along, and the
morning's twenty-mile shuffle through the mud has utterly used them up.
Nevertheless, each herd is strongly guarded, for the Indians are lurking
all around us, eagerly watching every chance.

The scattering shots from the distant portion of our lines, that have
brought us scrambling up the hillside, wake the scene to the instant
life and excitement we note as we reach the first ridge. As adjutant, my
duties call me at once to General Carr's headquarters, whence half a
dozen officers who were gathered in conversation are scattering to their
companies. A shout from the hillside announces, "Indians firing into the
herds over in front of the Third Cavalry." Even as the hail is heard, a
rattling of small arms, the sharp, vicious "ping" of the carbine and the
deep "bang" of the longer-ranged rifle, sweeps along the western front.
Just as we expected, Crazy Horse has come to the rescue, with all his
available warriors. It is just half-past four o'clock by General Carr's
watch, and between this and sunset the matter must be settled. As yet we
can see nothing of it from our front, but every man seems to know what's
coming. "Sound to arms, Bradley," is General Carr's quiet order to our
chief trumpeter, and as the ringing notes resound along the ravines the
call is taken up from battalion to battalion. The men spring to ranks,
the herd guards are hurrying in their startled horses, and the old
chargers, scenting Indians and danger, toss their heads snorting in the
air and come trotting in to their eager masters. All but one herd--"Look
at the Grays," is the cry, for Montgomery's horses have burst into a
gallop, excited by the shouts and clamor, and there they go up the
slope, out to the front, and square into the fastness of the Indians.
Not yet! A dozen eager troopers, officers and men, have flung themselves
on their steeds, all without saddles, some without bridles, and are off
in chase. No need of their services, though. That dragoon corporal in
charge of the herd is a cool, practised hand--he _has_ to be to wear
chevrons in Montgomery's troop--and, dashing to the front, he half
leads, half turns the leaders over to the left, and in a great circling
sweep of five hundred yards has guided them back into the very midst of
their company. It is at once skilful and daring. No Indian could have
done it better, and Corporal Clanton is applauded then and mentioned in
General Carr's report thereafter.

Even as it is occurring, the hillsides in our own front bristle with the
savage warriors, too far off as yet for close shooting, but
threateningly near. Our horses must be kept under cover in the ravines,
and the lines thrown out to meet the foe, so "Forward" is sounded.
Upham's battalion scramble up the ridge in their front, and the fun
begins. All around the rocky amphitheatre the Indians come bobbing into
sight on their active ponies, darting from behind rocks and ledges,
appearing for a brief instant over the rise of open ground eight hundred
yards away, then as suddenly dipping out of sight into some intervening
"swale," or depression. The first thing, while the general's horse and
mine are being saddled, is to get the other animals into the ravine
under shelter, and while I'm at it, Bourke, the aide-de-camp we last
saw petting and feeding his baby-captive, comes rattling up the pebbly
stream-bed and rides out to the front with that marvellous wreck of a
straw hat flapping about his ears. He never hears the laughing hail of
"How did you leave your baby, John?" but is the first mounted officer I
see along the line.

      "Press where you see my old hat shine,
        Amid the ranks of war,
      And be your oriflamme to-day
        This tile from Omaha."

Macaulay barbarously paraphrased in the mud of Slim Buttes.

As the general swings into saddle and out to the front, the skirmish
line is spreading out like a fan, the men running nimbly forward up the
ridges. They are not well in hand, for they fire rapidly as they run.
The volleys sound like a second Spottsylvania, a grand success as a _feu
de joie_, but, as the colonel indignantly remarks, "They couldn't hit a
flock of barns at that distance, much less an Indian skipping about like
a flea," and orders are sent to stop the wild shooting. That there are
hundreds of Indians is plainly apparent from their rapid fire, but they
keep five or six hundred yards away behind the ridges, peppering at
every exposed point of our line. Upham's battalion is swinging around to
the west; Mason has pushed his five companies square out to the front
along the plateau, driving the Indians before him. To his right the
Second and Third Cavalry, fighting dismounted too, are making merry
music. And now, filing over the ridge, comes the long column of
infantry; and when they get to work with their "long toms" the Indians
will have to skip in earnest. The shrill voice of their gray-bearded old
chief sends his skirmishers rapidly out on Upham's left, and a minute
more the rocks are ringing with the deeper notes of his musketry.
Meantime I have counted at least two hundred and fifty Indian warriors
darting down from one single opening among the bluffs square in Mason's
front, and the wounded are drifting in from his line far more rapidly
than from other exposed points. The brunt of the attack coming along
that plateau falls on him and his five companies.

It is growing darker, and the flashes from our guns take a ruddier
tinge. The principal occupation of our officers, staff and line, has
been to move along among the men and prevent the waste of ammunition.
Every now and then some young redskin, ambitious of distinction, will
suddenly pop from behind a sheltering hummock and dash at the top of his
pony's speed along our front, but over three hundred yards away,
taunting and blackguarding us in shrill vernacular as he does so. Then
the whole brigade wants to let drive at him and squander ammunition at
the rate of five dollars a second on that one pestiferous vagabond.
"Hold your fire, men!" is the order. "Give them half a chance and some
of the painted humbugs will ride in closer."

By 5.30 the light is so uncertain that we, who are facing west along the
plateau, and have the grim buttresses of the Buttes in our front, can
barely distinguish the scudding forms of the Indians; but the flash of
their rifles is incessant, and now that they are forced back beyond the
possibility of harm to our centre, the orders are to lie down and stand
them off. These men crouching along the ridge are Company "F," of the
Fifth. They and their captain (Payne) you have heard more of in the Ute
campaign. One of them, a keen shot, has just succeeded in knocking an
Indian out of his saddle and capturing his pony, and even while his
comrades are shouting their congratulations, up comes Jack Finerty, who
seeks his items on the skirmish line, and uses pencil and carbine with
equal facility. Finerty wants the name of the man who killed that
Indian, and, learning from the eager voices of the men that it is
"Paddy" Nihil, he delightedly heads a new paragraph of his despatch
"Nihil Fit," shakes hands with his brother Patlander, and scurries off
to take a hand in the uproar on the left.

      "The war that for a space did fail
      Now trebly thundering swelled the gale."

Colonel Chambers, with his plucky infantrymen, has clambered up the
cliff on the south, changed front forward on his right--practically, not
tactically--and got in a flank fire along the very depressions in which
the Indians are settled. This is more than they can stand. The sun goes
down at Slim Buttes on hundreds of baffled and discomfited Sioux. They
have lost their village; lost three hundred tip-top ponies. A dozen of
their warriors and squaws are in our hands, and a dozen more are dead
and dying in the attempt to recapture them; and the big white chief
Crook has managed to gain all this with starving men and skeleton
horses.

Drawing in for the night, we post strong pickets well out in every
direction, but they are undisturbed. Now comes the summing-up of
casualties. The adjutants make the weary round of their regiments
through wind and rain, taking the reports of company commanders, and
then repairing to the surgeons to verify the lists. Two or three lodges
have been converted into field hospitals; and in one of these, among our
own wounded, two of the surgeons are turning their attention to a
captive--the warrior American Horse. He lies upon some muddy robes, with
the life-blood ebbing from a ghastly hole in his side. Dr. Clements
examines his savage patient tenderly, gently as he would a child; and,
though he sees that nothing can save life, he does all that art can
suggest. It is a painful task to both surgeon and subject. The latter
scorns chloroform, and mutters some order to a squaw crouching at his
feet. She glides silently from the tepee, and returns with a bit of hard
stick; this he thrusts between his teeth, and then, as the surgeons
work, and the sweat of agony breaks out upon his forehead, he bites deep
into the wood, but never groans nor shrinks. Before the dawn his fierce
spirit has taken its flight, and the squaws are crooning the death-chant
by his side.

Our own dead are fortunately few, and they are buried deep in the ravine
before we move southward in the morning--not only buried deep, but a
thousand horses, in column of twos, tramp over the new-made graves and
obliterate the trace. You think this is but poor respect to show to a
soldier's grave, no doubt; but then you don't know Indians, and cannot
be expected to know that as soon as we are gone the skulking rascals
will come prowling into the camp, hunting high and low for those graves,
and, if they find them, will dig up the bodies we would honor, secure
the scalps as trophies of their prowess, and then, after indescribable
hackings and mutilations, consign the poor remains to their four-footed
relatives, the prairie wolves.

Our wounded are many, and a hard time the patient fellows are having.
Such rude shelter as their comrades can improvise from the Indian tepees
we interpose between them and the dripping skies above. The rain-drops
sputter in the flickering watch-fires around their cheerless bivouac;
the night wind stirs the moaning pines upon the cliffs, and sweeps down
in chill discordance through creaking lodge-poles and flapping roof of
hide; the gaunt horses huddle close for warmth and shelter; the muffled
challenge of the outlying picket is answered by the yelp of skulking
coyote; and wet, cold, muddy, and, oh! so hungry, the victors hug their
drenched blankets about their ears, and, grasping their carbines,
pillowed on their saddles, sleep the sleep of the deserving.




                    CHAPTER XIII.

             A RACE FOR RATIONS.


The village of Slim Buttes destroyed, General Crook pushed ahead on his
southward march in search of the Black Hills and rations. All Sunday
morning Upham's battalion of the Fifth Cavalry covered the rear, and
fought back the savage attacks upon the column; but, once well away from
the smoking ruins, we were but little molested, and soon after noon
caught up with the rest of the regiment, and found the entire command
going into bivouac along a little stream flowing northward from an
opening among towering cliffs that were thrown like a barrier athwart
our line of march. It was cold, cheerless, rainy weather, but here we
found grass and water for our famished cattle; plenty of timber for our
fires, though we had not a thing to cook, but men and horses were weak
and chilled, and glad of a chance to rest.

Here Doctors Clements, Hartsuff, and Patzki, with their assistants, went
busily to work perfecting the improvised transportation for the wounded.
There was not an ambulance or a field-litter in the command. Two
officers--Bache, of the Fifth, and Von Luettwitz, of the Third
Cavalry--were utterly _hors du combat_, the latter having left his leg
at the fight on the previous day, and some twenty-five men, more or
less severely wounded, were unable either to walk or ride a horse.

Frontiersmen are quick to take lessons from the Indians, the most
practical of transportation masters. Saplings twelve feet in length were
cut (Indian lodge-poles were utilized); the slender ends of two of these
were lashed securely on either side of a spare pack-mule, the heavy ends
trailing along the ground, and fastened some three feet apart by
cross-bars. Canvas and blankets were stretched across the space between;
hereon one wounded man was laid, and what the Indians and plainsmen call
a _travois_ was complete. Over prairie or rockless road it does very
well, but for the severely wounded a far more comfortable litter was
devised. Two mules were lashed "fore and aft" between two longer
saplings; the intervening space was rudely but comfortably upholstered
with robes and blankets, and therein the invalid might ride for hours as
smoothly as in a palace car. Once, in the Arizona mountains, I was
carried an entire week in a similar contrivance, and never enjoyed
easier locomotion--so long as the mules behaved. But just here it may be
remarked that comfort which is in the faintest degree dependent upon the
uniform and steadfast serenity of the army mule is of most uncertain
tenure. Poor McKinstry, our wagon-master (who was killed in Payne's
fight with the Utes last September, and whose unflattering comparison
may have been provoked by unhappy experiences with the sex), used to
say: "Most mules could swap ends quicker'n a woman could change her
mind;" and it was by no means required that the mule should "swap ends"
to render the situation of the poor fellow in the _travois_ undesirable,
if, indeed, he was permitted to retain it.

  [Illustration: A SICK SOLDIER ON A "TRAVOIS."]

Sunday afternoon was spent in doing the little that could be done
towards making the wounded comfortable, and the manufacture of rude
leggins, moccasins, etc., from the skins captured from the Indians on
the previous day. Sharp lookouts were kept, but no enemy appeared.
Evidently the Sioux were more than satisfied that Crook was worse than a
badger in a barrel--a bad one to tackle.

Early on the morning of the 11th we climbed stiffly into saddle, and
pushed on after our chief. Our way for some two miles or more led up
grade through wooded bluffs and heights. A dense fog hung low upon the
landscape, and we could only follow blindly in the trail of our leaders.
It was part of my duty to record each day's progress, and to sketch in
my note-book the topography of the line of march. A compass was always
in the cuff of my gauntlet, and note-book in the breast of my
hunting-shirt, but for three or four days only the trail itself, with
streams we crossed and the heights within a mile or two of the flank,
had been jotted down. Nothing further could be seen. It rained eleven
days and nights without perceptible stop, and the whole country was
flooded--so far as the mist would let us judge.

But this wretched Monday morning, an hour out from bivouac, we came
upon a view I never shall forget. Riding along in the Fifth Cavalry
column--every man wrapped in his own thoughts, and wishing himself
wrapped in something warmer, all too cold and wet and dispirited to
talk--we were aroused by exclamations of surprise and wonder among the
troopers ahead. A moment more and we arrived in amaze at a veritable
jumping-off place, a sheer precipice, and I reined out to the right to
dismount and jot down the situation. We had been winding along up, up,
for over an hour, following some old Indian trail that seemed to lead to
the moon, and all of a sudden had come apparently to the end of the
world. General Crook, his staff and escort, the dismounted men and the
infantry battalion away ahead had turned sharp to the left, and could be
faintly seen winding off into cloud-land some three hundred feet below.
Directly in our front, to the south, rolling, eddying masses of fog were
the only visible features. We were standing on the brink of a vertical
cliff, its base lost in clouds far beneath. Here and there a faint
breeze tore rents through the misty veil, and we caught glimpses of a
treeless, shrubless plain beneath. Soon there came sturdier puffs of
air; the sun somewhere aloft was shining brightly. We could neither see
nor feel it--had begun to lose faith in its existence--but the clouds
yielded to its force, and, swayed by the rising wind, drew away upward.
Divested of the glow of colored fires, the glare of calcium light, the
shimmering, spangled radiance of the stage, the symphony of sweet
orchestra, we were treated to a transformation scene the like of which
I have never witnessed, and never want to see again.

The first curtain of fog uplifting, revealed rolling away five hundred
feet beneath a brown barren, that ghastly compound of spongy ashes,
yielding sand, and soilless, soulless earth, on which even greasewood
cannot grow, and sage-brush sickens and dies--the "_mauvaises terres_"
of the French missionaries and fur-traders--the curt "bad lands" of the
Plains vernacular, the meanest country under the sun. A second curtain,
rising farther away to the slow music of muttered profanity from the
audience, revealed only worse and more of it. The third curtain exposed
the same rolling barren miles to the southward. The fourth reached away
to the very horizon, and vouchsafed not a glimpse of the longed-for
Hills, nor a sign of the needed succor. Hope died from hungry eyes, and
strong men turned away with stifled groans.

One or two of us there were who knew that, long before we got sight of
the Black Hills, we must pass the Sioux landmark of "Deer's Ears"--twin
conical heights that could be seen for miles in every direction, and
even they were beyond range of my field-glasses. My poor horse, ugly,
raw-boned, starved, but faithful "Blatherskite," was it in wretched
premonition of your fate, I wonder, that you added your equine groan to
the human chorus? You and your partner, "Donnybrook," were ugly enough
when I picked you out of the quartermaster's herd at Fort Hays the night
we made our sudden start for the Sioux campaign. You had little to
recommend you beyond the facility with which you could rattle your heels
like shillalahs about the ribs of your companions--a trait which led to
your Celtic titles--but you never thought so poorly of your rider as to
suppose that, after you had worn yourselves down to skin and bone in
carrying him those bleak two thousand miles, he would help eat you; but
he did--and it seemed like cannibalism.

Well! The story of that day's march isn't worth the telling. We went
afoot, dragging pounds of mud with every step, and towing our wretched
steeds by the bridle-rein; envying the gaunt infantry, who had naught
but their rifles to carry, and could march two miles to our one. But
late that afternoon, with Deer's Ears close at hand at last, we sank
down along the banks of Owl Creek, the Heecha Wakpa of the Sioux; built
huge fires, scorched our ragged garments, gnawed at tough horse meat,
and wondered whether we really ever had tasted such luxuries as ham and
eggs or porter-house steak. All night we lay there in the rain; and at
dawn Upham's battalion, with such horses as were thought capable of
carrying a rider, were sent off down stream to the southeast on the
trail of some wandering Indians who had crossed our front. The rest of
us rolled our blankets and trudged out southward. It was Tuesday, the
12th of September, 1876--a day long to be remembered in the annals of
the officers and men of the Big Horn and Yellowstone expedition; a day
that can never be thoroughly described, even could it bear description;
a day when scores of our horses dropped exhausted on the trail--when
starving men toiled piteously along through thick clinging mud, or flung
themselves, weeping and worn out, upon the broad, flooded prairie.
Happily, we got out of the Bad Lands before noon; but one and all were
weak with hunger, and as we dragged through boggy stream-bed, men would
sink hopelessly in the mire and never try to rise of themselves;
_travois_ mules would plunge frantically in bog and quicksand, and pitch
the wounded screaming from their litters. I hate to recall it. Duties
kept me with the rear-guard, picking up and driving in stragglers. It
was seven a.m. when we marched from Owl Creek. It was after midnight
when Kellogg's rearmost files reached the bivouac along the Crow. The
night was pitchy dark, the rain was pitiless; half our horses were gone,
many of the men were scattered over the cheerless prairie far behind.
But relief was at hand; the Belle Fourche was only a few miles away;
beyond it lay the Black Hills and the stores of Crook City and Deadwood.
Commissary and couriers had been sent ahead to hurry back provisions; by
noon of the coming sun there would be abundance.

The morning came slowly enough. All night it had rained in torrents; no
gleam of sunlight came to gladden our eyes or thaw the stiffened limbs
of our soldiers. Crow Creek was running like a mill-race. A third of the
command had managed to cross it the evening before, but the rest had
halted upon the northern bank. Roll-call showed that many men had still
failed to catch up, and an examination of the ford revealed the fact
that, with precipitous banks above and below, and deep water rushing
over quicksands and treacherous bottom at the one available point, it
must be patched up in some manner before a crossing could be effected.
An orderly summoned me to the general's headquarters, and there I found
him as deep in the mud as the rest of us. He simply wanted me to go down
and put that ford into shape. "You will find Lieutenant Young there,"
said he, "and fifty men will report to you for duty." Lieutenant Young
was there sure enough, and some fifty men did report, but there were no
tools and the men were jaded; not more than ten or twelve could do a
stroke of work. We hewed down willows and saplings with our hunting
knives, brought huge bundles of these to the ford, waded in to the
waist, and anchored them as best we could to the yielding bottom; worked
like beavers until noon, and at last reported it practicable despite its
looks. General Crook and his staff mounted and rode to the brink, but
appearances were against us, and he plunged in to find a crossing for
himself. Vigorous spurring carried him through, though twice we thought
him down. But his horse scrambled up the opposite bank, the staff
followed, dripping, and the next horseman of the escort went under,
horse and all, and came sputtering to the surface at our shaky causeway,
reached it in safety and floundered ashore. Then all stuck to our
ford--the long column of cavalry, the wounded on their _travois_ and the
stragglers--and by two p.m. all were safely over. The Belle Fourche was
only five miles away, but it took two good hours to reach it. The stream
was broad, rapid, turbid, but the bottom solid as rock. Men clung to
horses' tails or the stirrups of their mounted comrades, and were towed
through, and then saddles were whipped off in a dense grove of timber,
fires glowed in every direction, herd guards drove the weary horses to
rich pastures among the slopes and hillsides south of the creek bottom,
and all unoccupied men swarmed out upon the nearest ridge to watch for
the coming wagons. Such a shout as went up when the cry was heard,
"Rations coming." Such a mob as gathered when the foremost wagon drove
in among the famished men. Guards were quickly stationed, but before
that could be done the boxes were fairly snatched from their owner and
their contents scattered through the surging crowd. Discipline for a
moment was forgotten, men fought like tigers for crackers and plugs of
tobacco. Officers ran to the scene and soon restored order, but I know
that three ginger-snaps I picked up from the mud under the horses' feet
and shared with Colonel Mason and Captain Woodson--the first bite of
bread we had tasted in three days--were the sweetest morsels we had
tasted in years.

By five p.m. wagon after wagon had driven in. Deadwood and Crook City
had rallied to the occasion. All they heard was that Crook's army had
reached the Belle Fourche, starving. Our commissary, Captain Bubb, had
bought, at owners' prices, all the bacon, flour, and coffee to be had.
Local dealers had loaded up with every eatable item in their
establishments. Company commanders secured everything the men could
need. Then prominent citizens came driving out with welcoming hands and
appreciated luxuries, and just as the sun went down Colonel Mason and I
were emptying tin cups of steaming coffee and for two mortal hours
eating flap-jacks as fast as the cook could turn them out. Then came the
blessed pipe of peace, warm, dry blankets, and the soundest sleep that
ever tired soldier enjoyed. Our troubles were forgotten.




                    CHAPTER XIV.

                THE BLACK HILLS.


It was on Wednesday evening that our good friends, the pioneers of
Deadwood and Crook City, reached us with their wagons, plethoric with
all manner of provender, and the next day, as though in congratulation,
the bright sunshine streamed in upon us, and so did rations. The only
hard-worked men were the cooks, and from before dawn to late at evening
not an hour's respite did they enjoy. Towards sundown we caught sight of
Upham's battalion, coming in from its weary scout down stream. They had
not seen an Indian, yet one poor fellow, Milner of Company "A," riding
half a mile ahead of them in eager pursuit of an antelope, was found ten
minutes after, stripped, scalped, and frightfully gashed and mutilated
with knives, stone dead, of course, though still warm. Pony tracks were
fresh in the springy sod all around him, but ponies and riders had
vanished. Pursuit was impossible. Upham had not a horse that could more
than stagger a few yards at a time. The maddest man about it was our
Sergeant-Major, Humme, an admirable shot and a man of superhuman nerve
and courage; yet only a few months ago you read how he, with Lieutenant
Weir, met a similar fate at the hands of the Utes. He fought a
half-score of them single-handed, and sent one of them to his final
account before he himself succumbed to the missiles they poured upon him
from their shelter in the rocks. A better soldier never lived, and there
was grim humor in the statement of the eleven surviving Ute warriors,
that they didn't want to fight Weir and Humme, but were obliged to kill
them in self-defence. Weir was shot dead before he really saw the
adversary, and those twelve unfortunate warriors, armed with their
repeaters, would undoubtedly have suffered severely at the hands of
Humme and his single shooter if they hadn't killed him too.

This is digressing, but it is so exquisitely characteristic of the
Indian Bureau's way of doing things that, now that the peace
commissioners have triumphantly announced that the attack on Thornburg's
command was all an accident, and have allowed the Indians to bully,
temporize, and hoodwink them into weeks of fruitless delay (the rascals
never meant to surrender the Meeker murderers so long as they had only
peace commissioners to deal with), and now that, after all, the army has
probably got to do over again what it started to do last October, and
could readily have accomplished long ere this had they not been hauled
off by the Bureau, the question naturally suggests itself, how often is
this sort of thing to be repeated? Year after year it has been done. A
small force of soldiers sent to punish a large band of Indian murderers
or marauders. The small band has been well-nigh annihilated in many
instances. Then the country wakes up, a large force concentrates at vast
expense, and the day of retribution has come, when, sure as shooting,
the Bureau has stepped in with restraining hand. No end of silk-hatted
functionaries have hurried out from Washington, shaken hands and smoked
a pipe with a score of big Indians; there has been a vast amount of
cheap oratory and buncombe talk about the Great Father and guileless red
men, at the end of which we are told to go back to camp and bury our
dead, and our late antagonists, laughing in their sleeves, link arms
with their aldermanic friends, are "dead-headed" off to Washington,
where they are lionized at the White House, and sent the rounds of the
great cities, and finally return to their reservations laden down with
new and improved rifles and ammunition, stove-pipe hats, and Saratoga
trunks, more than ever convinced that the one way to get what they want
out of Uncle Sam is to slap his face every spring and shake hands in the
fall. The apparent theory of the Bureau is that the soldier is made to
be killed, the Indian to be coddled.

However, deeply as my comrades and myself may feel on this subject, it
does not properly enter into a narrative article. Let us get back to
Upham's battalion, who reached us late on the afternoon of the
fourteenth, desperately tired and hungry. We lost no time in ministering
to their wants, though we still had no grain for our horses, but the men
made merry over abundant coffee, bacon and beans, and bread and
molasses, and were unspeakably happy.

That evening the general decided to send back to the crossings of the
swollen streams that had impeded our march on the 12th, and in which
many horses and mules and boxes of rifle ammunition had been lost.
Indians prowling along our trail would come upon that ammunition as the
stream subsided, and reap a rich harvest.

The detail fell upon the Fifth Cavalry. One officer and thirty men to
take the back track, dig up the boxes thirty miles away, and bring them
in. With every prospect of meeting hundreds of the Sioux following our
trail for abandoned horses, the duty promised to be trying and perilous,
and when the colonel received the orders from headquarters, and, turning
to me, said, "Detail a lieutenant," I looked at the roster with no
little interest. Of ten companies of the Fifth Cavalry present, each was
commanded by its captain, but subalterns were scarce, and with us such
duties were assigned in turn, and the officer "longest in" from scout or
detachment service was Lieutenant Keyes. So that young gentleman, being
hunted up and notified of his selection, girded up his loins and was
about ready to start alone on his perilous trip, when there came
swinging up to me an officer of infantry--an old West Point comrade who
had obtained permission to make the campaign with the Fifth Cavalry
and had been assigned to Company "I" for duty, but who was not
detailable, strictly speaking, for such service as Keyes's, from our
roster. "Look here, King, you haven't given me half a chance this last
month, and if I'm not to have this detail, I want to go with Keyes, as
subordinate, or anything; I don't care, only I want to go." The result
was that he did go, and when a few days since we read in the _Sentinel_
that Satterlee Plummer, a native of Wisconsin and a graduate of West
Point, had been reinstated in the army on the special recommendation of
General Crook, for gallantry in Indian campaign, I remembered this
instance of the Sioux war of 1876, and, looking back to my note-book,
there I found the record and result of their experience on the back
track--they brought in fourteen horses and all the ammunition without
losing a man.

  [Illustration: DEADWOOD CITY, BLACK HILLS OF DAKOTA.]

Now our whole attention was given to the recuperation of our horses--the
cavalryman's first thought. Each day we moved camp a few miles up the
lovely Whitewood valley, seeking fresh grass for the animals, and on
September 18th we marched through the little hamlet of Crook City, and
bivouacked again in a beautiful amphitheatre of the hills, called
Centennial Park. From here, dozens of the officers and men wandered off
to visit the mining gulches and settlements in the neighborhood, and
numbers were taken prisoners by the denizens of Deadwood and royally
entertained. General Crook and his staff, with a small escort, had left
us early on the morning of the 16th, to push ahead to Fort Laramie and
set about the organization of a force for immediate resumption of
business. This threw General Merritt in command of the expedition, and
meant that our horses should become the objects of the utmost thought
and care. Leaving Centennial Park on the 19th, we marched southward
through the Hills, and that afternoon came upon a pretty stream named,
as many another is throughout the Northwest, the Box Elder, and there we
met a train of wagons, guarded by spruce artillerymen fresh from their
casemates on the seaboard, who looked upon our rags with undisguised
astonishment, not unmixed with suspicion. But they were eagerly greeted,
and that night, for the first time in four long weeks, small measures of
oats and corn were dealt out to our emaciated animals. It was touching
to see how carefully and tenderly the rough-looking men spread the
precious morsels before their steeds, petting them the while, and
talking as fond nonsense to their faithful friends as ever mother
crooned to sleeping child. It was only a bite for the poor creatures,
and their eyes begged wistfully for more. We gave them two nights' rest,
and then, having consumed all the grass to be had, pushed on to Rapid
Creek, thence again to the southern limits of the Hills, passing through
many a mining camp or little town with a name suggestive of the wealth
and population of London. We found Custer City a deserted village--many
a store and dozens of houses utterly untenanted. No forage to be had for
love or money. Our horses could go no farther, so for weeks we lay along
French Creek, moving camp every day or two a mile or more for fresh
grass. It was dull work, but the men enjoyed it; they were revelling in
plenty to eat and no drills, and every evening would gather in crowds
around the camp-fires, listening to some favorite vocalist or
yarn-spinner. Once in a while letters began to reach us from anxious
ones at home, and make us long to see them; and yet no orders came, no
definite prospects of relief from our exile. At last, the second week in
October started us out on a welcome raid down the valley of the South
Cheyenne, but not an Indian was caught napping, and finally, on the 23d
of October, we were all concentrated in the vicinity of the Red Cloud
Agency to take part in the closing scene of the campaign and assist in
the disarming and unhorsing of all the reservation Indians.

General MacKenzie, with the Fourth Cavalry and a strong force of
artillery and infantry, was already there, and as we marched southward
to surround the Indian camps and villages from the direction of Hat
Creek our array was not unimposing, numerically. The infantry, with the
"weak-horsed" cavalry, moved along the prairie road. Colonel Royall's
command (Third Cavalry and Noyes's Battalion of the Second) was away
over to the eastward, and well advanced, so as to envelope the doomed
villages from that direction. We of the Fifth spread out over the
rolling plain to the west, and in this order all moved towards Red
Cloud, twenty odd miles away. It was prettily planned, but scores of
wary, savage eyes had watched all Crook's preparations at the agency.
The wily Indian was quick to divine that his arms and ponies were
threatened, and by noon we had the dismal news by courier that they had
stampeded in vast numbers. We enjoyed the further satisfaction of
sighting with our glasses the distant clouds of dust kicked up by their
scurrying ponies. A few hundred warriors, old men and "blanket Indians,"
surrendered to MacKenzie, but we of the Big Horn were empty-handed when
once more we met our brigadier upon the following day.




                    CHAPTER XV.

              DROPPED STITCHES.


Now that an unlooked-for interest has been developed in this enterprise
of the Sunday _Sentinel_, and that in accordance with the wishes of many
old comrades these sketches are reproduced in a little volume by
themselves, many and many an incident is recalled which deserves to be
noted, but which was omitted for fear of wearying the readers for whom
alone these stories of campaign life were originally intended, so that
in this closing and retrospective chapter there will be nothing of
lively interest, except to those already interested, and it can be
dropped right here.

Looking back over it all, more especially the toilsome march and
drenching bivouacs that followed the departure from Heart River, I
wonder how some men stood it as they did. Among our own officers in the
Fifth, one of our best and cheeriest comrades was Lieutenant Bache, "a
fellow of infinite jest," and one to whom many of us were greatly
attached. He was a martyr to acute rheumatism when he overtook us with
Captains Price and Payne, at the headquarters of the Mini Pusa. By the
time we met General Terry on the Rosebud, he was in such agonizing
helplessness as to be unable to ride a horse, and was ordered to the
Yellowstone and thence to Chicago for medical treatment; but while we
lay at the mouth of the Powder River he suddenly reappeared in our
midst, and, greatly benefited by the two weeks of rest and dry clothes
on the boat, he insisted that he was well enough to resume duty. The
surgeons shook their heads, but Bache carried his point with General
Crook, and was ordered to rejoin the regiment. Then came day after day
of pitiless, pouring rain, night after night unsheltered on the sodden
ground. A cast-iron constitution would have suffered; poor Bache broke
down, and, unable to move hand or foot, was lifted into a _travois_ and
dragged along. When we reached the Black Hills he was reduced to mere
skin and bone, hardly a vestige of him left beyond the inexhaustible
fund of grit and humor with which he was gifted. He reached Fort Dodge
at the close of the campaign, but it had been too much for him. The news
of his death was telegraphed by Captain Payne before we had fairly
unsaddled for the winter.

Though brother officers in the same regiment, so are our companies
scattered at times that before this campaign Bache and I had met but
once, and that was in Arizona. To-day the most vivid picture I have in
my mind of that trying march in which he figures is a duck-hunting
scene that I venture to say has never been equalled in the experience of
Eastern sportsmen. We had halted on the evening of September 7th, on the
dripping banks of one of the forks of the Grand River (Palanata Wakpa,
the Sioux call it, and a much better name it is), a muddy stream, not
half the width of our Menominee, but encased between precipitous banks,
and swirling in deep, dark pools. The grass was abundant, but not a
stick of timber could we find with which to build a fire. While I was
hunting for a few crumbs of hard-tack in my lean haversack, there came a
sudden sputter of pistol shots on the banks of the stream, and I saw
scores of men running, revolver in hand, to the scene. Joining them, I
found Bache reclining in his _travois_ and blazing away at some objects
in the pool below him. The surface of the water was alive with
blue-and-green-wing teal, and a regiment of ravenous men was opening
fire upon them with calibre-45 bullets. Only fancy it! The wary, gamy
bird we steal upon with such caution in our marshes at home, here on the
distant prairies, far from the busy haunts of men, so utterly untutored
by previous danger, or so utterly bewildered by the fusillade, that
hardly one took refuge in flight, while dozens of them, paddling,
ducking, diving about the stream, fell victims to the heavy revolver,
and, sprinkled with gunpowder for salt, were devoured almost raw by the
eager soldiery. "Great Cæsar's ghost," said Bache, as he crammed fresh
cartridges into the chambers of his Colt, "what would they say to this
on the Chesapeake?"

Another scene with Bache was at Slim Buttes. In order to prevent
indiscriminate pillage among the captured lodges of the Sioux, General
Crook had ordered the detail of guards to keep out the crowd of
curiosity-seekers. Bache was lying very stiff and sore near one of the
large tepees, and I had stopped to have a moment's chat with him, when
something came crawling out of a hole slashed in the side by the
occupants to facilitate their escape when Lieutenant Schwatka charged
the village that morning; something so unmistakably Indian that in a
second I had brought my revolver from its holster and to full cock. But
the figure straightened up in the dim twilight, and with calm
deliberation these words fell from its lips: "There ain't a thing worth
having in the whole d--d outfit."

Bache burst into amused laughter. "Well, my aboriginal friend, who in
thunder are you, anyhow? Your English is a credit to civilization."

It was "Ute John," one of the scouts who had joined us with the
Shoshones on the Big Horn, but who, unlike them, had concluded to stand
by us through the entire expedition. He was a tall, stalwart fellow,
picturesquely attired in an overcoat not unlike our present unsightly
ulster in shape, but made of a blanket which had been woven in imitation
of numerous rainbows. The storied coat of many colors worn by the
original Joseph was never more brilliant than this uncouth garment, and
about this time an effort was made to rechristen our sturdy ally, and
call him no longer monosyllabic and commonplace John, but Scriptural
Joseph. Subsequent developments in his career, however, brought about a
revulsion of feeling, as it was found that the fancied resemblance in
characteristics ended with the coat.

We had been accustomed in our dealings with the Indians who accompanied
us to resort to pantomime as a means of conversation. Some of our number
prided themselves on their mute fluency--none more so, perhaps, than our
genial friend Major Andy Burt, of the 9th Infantry, who would
"button-hole," so to speak, any Indian who happened along during his
unoccupied moments, and the two would soon be lost in a series of
gyrations and finger flippings that was a dark mystery to the rest of
the command; and when the major would turn triumphantly towards us with
his "He says it's all serene, fellows," we accepted the information as
gospel truth without asking what "it" was. Bache and I were not a little
astonished, therefore, at hearing Ute John launch forth into fluent
English, albeit strongly tinged with Plains vernacular.

The most tireless men in pursuit of Indian knowledge were the
correspondents of the papers. Frequent mention has already been made of
Mr. Finerty, of the _Chicago Times_, who was the gem of the lot, but the
_New York Times_ and _Herald_ were represented, as were leading journals
of other large cities. With one exception they proved excellent
campaigners, and welcome, indeed, genial associates; but the exception
was probably one of the most unhappy wretches on the face of the globe.
He had come out as a novice the year previous, and accompanied Colonel
Dodge's exploring expedition to the Black Hills, and before long
developed traits of character that made him somewhat of a nuisance. He
was wofully green, a desperate coward, but so zealous in the cause of
journalism that anything he fancied might interest the readers of the
paper of which he announced himself "commissioner" was sent on
irrespective of facts in the case. The officers found him taking notes
of their conversations, jotting down everything he saw and heard around
camp, caught him prying into matters that were in nature confidential,
and so one night they terrified him to the verge of dissolution by
preparations for defence and the announcement that the cooing and wooing
of an army of wood-doves were the death-chants of hundreds of squaws as
the warriors were stripping for the combat. Another time they primed him
into writing a four-column despatch descriptive of the "Camelquo," a
wonderful animal found only in the Black Hills, the offspring of the
Rocky Mountain elk and the Egyptian camel, the latter being some of the
animals introduced into Texas just before the war for transportation
purposes, who had, so Mr. D---- overheard, escaped from the rebels and
made their way to the Northern plains during the great rebellion, and
there had intermarried with the great elk, the native of the Hills. The
resultant "Camelquo," so D---- enthusiastically informed his paper, was
an animal of the stature of the giraffe, the antlers of the elk, the
humps of the camel, the fleetness and endurance of both parents, and the
unconquerable ferocity of the tiger. How D---- came to discover the sell
in time, my informant, Dr. McGillicuddy, did not remember, but to this
day the maps of the Black Hills bear commemoration of the incident, and
Camelquo Creek is almost as well known as Spring and Rapid. Many a rough
miner has asked since '75 how in Hades, or words to that effect, they
came to have such queer names for their streams in the Hills. Most of
them were named by Colonel Dodge's party, and there was rhyme or reason
in each, even for Amphibious Creek, which, said McGillicuddy, we so
named because it sank out of sight so often and came up smiling so
unexpectedly that it only seemed half land, half water.

On the campaign of '76, Mr. D---- again made his appearance as
commissioner, started with General Crook's staff, but ere long was
called upon to find new accommodations elsewhere. How it all came about
I never cared to know, but after unpleasant experiences with first one
set and then another, he gravitated eventually to the packers, who made
him do guard and herd duty. He pushed ahead with Major Mills's command,
and stumbled with them into the morning battle at Slim Buttes. This he
witnessed in a state of abject terror, and then, when the danger was
over, wrote a most scandalous account, accusing Major Mills of all
manner of misbehavior. His paper published it, but had to eat humble
pie, make a most complete apology, and, I think, dismiss its
correspondent. Camelquo Creek is the only existing trace of poor D----
of which we have any knowledge.

Once fairly in the Black Hills, and resting on the banks of French
Creek, we set to work to count up the losses of the campaign. In
horseflesh and equipments the gaps were appalling. Some companies in
the Fifth were very much reduced, and, of course, when the horse dropped
exhausted on the trail, there was no transportation for the saddle,
bridle, and "kit." It often happened that for days the soldier led his
horse along the flanks of the column or in the rear of the regiment,
striving hard to nurse his failing strength, hunting eagerly for every
little bunch of grass that might eke out his meagre subsistence. In all
the array of company losses there was one, and only one, shining
contrast--Montgomery, with Company "B," the Grays, calmly submitted a
clear "bill of health;" he had not lost a single horse, which was
marvellous in itself, but when "Monty" proceeded to state that every
Company "B" man had his saddle, bridle, nose bag, lariat, picket-pin,
side lines, etc., the thing was incomprehensible; that is, it seemed
incomprehensible, until the fact was taken into consideration that those
companies which bivouacked on either flank of the Grays woke each
morning to the realization of a predatory ability on the part of "them
d--d Company 'B' fellers" that rose superior to any defensive devices
they might invent. But Company "B" could not acquire gray horses at the
expense of the rest of the regiment, whatever it might have done in side
and other lines, and the fact that Captain "Monty" paraded every horse
with which he started is due to the unerring judgment and ceaseless
vigilance with which he noted every symptom of weakness in any and every
animal in his troop, and cared for it accordingly.

As a rule, our company commanders are not thorough horsemen, and too
little attention is devoted to the instruction of our cavalry officers
in the subject--but Montgomery is a noteworthy exception. I don't know
which class will be the more inclined to think me in error in the
following statement, but as a result of not a little observation it is
my opinion that, while the best riders in the cavalry service come from
West Point, the best horsemen are from the ranks.

But for our anxiety about our horses, the most enjoyable days of the
campaign were probably contained in the first two weeks of October. We
were the roughest-looking set of men on the face of the globe; but with
abundant rations and rousing big fires along the valley of French Creek,
with glad letters from home, and finally the arrival of our wagons with
the forgotten luxuries of tents and buffalo robes, we began taking a new
interest in life. The weather was superb, the sun brilliant, the air
keen and bracing, the nights frostily cold. Wonderful appetites we had
in those days, and after supper the men would gather in crowds around
the camp-fires and sing their songs and smoke their pipes in placid
contentment. The officers, too, had their reunions, though vocalists
were scarce among them, and the proportions of "youngsters" who keep the
fun alive was far too small. The year before, those irrepressible
humorists, Harrigan and Hart, of the New York stage, had sung at their
"Théâtre Comique" a witty but by no means flattering ditty, which they
called "The Regular Army, O." One of its verses, slightly modified to
suit the hearers, was particularly applicable to and popular in the
Fifth Cavalry, and their adjutant, when he could be made to sing "_pro
bono publico_," was always called upon for the song and sure of applause
at the close of this verse. It ran:

      "We were sent to Arizona, for to fight the Indians there;
      We were almost snatched bald-headed, but they didn't get our hair.
      We lay among the cañons and the dirty yellow mud,
      But we seldom saw an onion, or a turnip, or a spud,
      Till we were taken prisoners and brought forninst the chief;
      Says he, "We'll have an Irish stew"--the dirty Indian thief.
      On Price's telegraphic wire we slid to Mexico,
      And we blessed the day we skipped away from the Regular Army, O."

Now General Crook received his promotion to brigadier-generalship in
Arizona, after a stirring and victorious campaign with the Apaches, and
the Fifth Cavalry used to boast at times that his "star" was won for him
by them. Soldiers are quick to attach some expressive nickname to their
officers, but I never learned that our general had won this questionable
distinction until we joined him at Goose Creek, when we found that in
the command already there he was known as "Rosebud George."

In the hard times that followed there was no little growling among the
half-starving troopers, because the packers seemed to have sufficient to
eat when we were well-nigh destitute. So one night a fifth verse was
trolled out on the still evening air in a strongly Hibernian brogue, and
the listening ears of the Fifth were greeted with something like this:

      "But 'twas out upon the Yellowstone we had the d--dest time,
      Faix, we made the trip wid Rosebud George, six months without a dime.

  [Illustration: "THE DANDY FIFTH."

  (General Merritt and his Officers on the Sioux Campaign.)]

      Some eighteen hundred miles we went through hunger, mud, and rain,
      Wid backs all bare, and rations rare, no chance for grass or grain;
      Wid 'bunkies shtarvin' by our side, no rations was the rule;
      Shure 'twas ate your boots and saddles, you brutes,
      but feed the packer and mule.
      But you know full well that in your fights no soldier lad was slow,
      And it wasn't the packer that won ye a star in the Regular Army, O."

With full stomachs, however, came forgetfulness of suffering, and this
with other campaign lyrics was forgotten.

It seemed so good to rest in peace for day after day. General Merritt
with his staff, and Major Upham, had pitched their tents in the shelter
of a little rocky promontory that jutted out into the valley and was
crowned by a sparse growth of pines and cedars. One evening, as the full
moon shone down upon the assembled party over this ridge, a perfectly
defined cross appeared upon the very face of the luminary. Every one
noticed it, and one of the number, clambering to the summit, found
growing from a cleft in the rock a sturdy little leafless branch about
two feet in length, crossed by another and smaller twig; the cross was
perfect, and the effect in the moonlight something simply exquisite.
"Camp Faith" was thereupon selected as the name of cavalry headquarters.
Somebody wanted a name for the Fifth Cavalry camp, and, in recognition
of our present blissful and undisturbed existence, as compared with
recent vicissitudes, and mindful of the martial palace of Sans Souci at
Potsdam, a wildly imprudent subaltern suggested _Sans Sioux Ici_, but it
was greeted with merited contempt.

Of course all were eager for intimation of our next move. Occasional
despatches reached General Merritt, but not a hint could be extracted
from him. Rumors of a winter campaign were distressingly prevalent, and
the Fifth were beginning to look upon a prolonged stay in the Hills as a
certainty, when one day an aide-de-camp of the chief's came to me with
the request that I would make a map for him of the country between the
South Cheyenne and Red Cloud Agency, and let no one know what I was
doing. A week after he wanted another sketch of the same thing, and it
became evident, to me at least, that before very long we would be down
along the White River, looking after "Machpealota."

The campaign itself being virtually over, the recruits authorized by
special act of Congress to be enlisted for the cavalry regiments
actively engaged began to be heard of at the front, and one evening in
early October we learned that some four hundred heroes were on the march
from Fort Laramie to join the Fifth, and that the Third was to be
similarly reinforced. A hint as to the probable character of the new
levies was also in circulation. Twenty-five hundred men having been
suddenly and urgently needed, the recruiting officers were less
particular in their selections than would otherwise have been the case,
and from the purlieus of Philadelphia, Baltimore, and New York the scum
of the country was eagerly grasping this method of getting to the Black
Hills at Uncle Sam's expense. They were marching up to join us, under
the command of Captain Monahan, of the Third Cavalry, assisted by
Lieutenants Ward, Cherry, and Swift, "of Ours;" and on the 11th of
October General Merritt struck camp, the "B., H., and Y.," horse, foot,
and dragoon, bade farewell to French Creek, and, after an exhilarating
ride through a wildly beautiful and picturesque tract of the Hills, we
unsaddled, pitched our tents along Amphibious Creek, and that evening
the new levies arrived. Nobody cared particularly to see the recruits,
but the Fifth Cavalry turned out to a man to see the new horses; and
having called upon and extended a welcoming hand to the comrades joining
us for the first time, we made a dash for the quadrupeds. Before tattoo
that evening there was not one that had not been closely inspected and
squabbled over by the company commanders and their men, and the first
thing the next morning General Merritt ordered the distribution of
horses, "according to color," to companies.

It was revealed that an expedition somewhere was intended by his
directing the regimental adjutant to pick out the old soldiers among the
recruits, assign them to companies at once, and then issue orders to the
regiment to be in readiness to move at daybreak.

Never in my life have I seen such an array of vagabonds as that
battalion of four hundred "unassigned" when I got them into line on the
morning of the 12th of October and proceeded to "pick out the old
soldiers" as directed. That was a matter of no difficulty; they were
already acting as non-commissioned officers of the recruit companies,
but were not sixty all told, and more were needed. Stopping before a
sturdily built little fellow with a grizzled moustache and an
unmistakably soldierly carriage, the only promising-looking man left in
the three hundred who had "stood fast" when the order was given "men who
have served previous enlistments step to front," the adjutant
questioned:

"Haven't you served before?"

"Not in the regulars, sir."

"That man is lame, sir," interposed a sergeant.

"It is an old wound," says the man eagerly, "and it's only so once in
while. I can ride first-rate."

"What was your regiment?"

"Seventh Wisconsin, sir."

"What! Were you at Gainesville?"

"Yes, sir. Wounded there."

A knot of officers--Merritt, Mason, Sumner, and Montgomery--who fought
through the war with the Army of the Potomac, are standing there as the
adjutant turns.

"Sergeant, take this man to Company 'K' and fit him out--and--stop a
moment. Bring him to my tent to-night after supper. Gentlemen, that's an
Iron Brigade man."

That evening a Company "K" sergeant scratches the flap of the adjutant's
tent--you cannot knock when there is no door--and presents himself with
the recruit-veteran. The latter looks puzzled, but perfectly
self-possessed; answers without hesitation two or three rapidly
propounded questions as to names of his regimental officers in '62, and
then seems completely bewildered as the adjutant takes him cordially by
the hand and bids him welcome. However, it did not require many words to
explain the matter.

To return to those recruits. If the police force of our large Eastern
cities were at a loss to account for the disappearance of a thousand or
more of their "regular boarders," a flying trip to the Black Hills on
this 12th day of October, '76, would have satisfied them as to their
whereabouts. Where there were ten "good men and true" among the
new-comers, there were forty who came simply with the intention of
deserting when they got fairly into the Hills and within striking
distance of the mines, an intention most successfully carried out by a
large proportion of their number.

And then the names under which they enlisted! "What's your name?" said
the adjutant to the most unmistakable case of "Bowery Boy" in the front
rank.

"My name's Jackson Bewregard," is the reply, with the accompaniment of
hunching shoulders, projecting chin, overlapping under-lip, and sneering
nostril characteristic of Chatham Square in the palmy days of Mose.

"And yours?" to Mr. Bewregard's left file, a big rough of Hibernian
extraction.

"My name's Jooles Vern."

The adjutant glances at the muster-roll: "'No. 173--Jules Verne.' Ha!
yes. The party that wrote 'Around the World in Eighty Days.' Have we
many more of these eminent Frenchmen, sergeant?"

The sergeant grins under his great moustache. Possibly he is recalling a
fact which the adjutant has by no means forgotten, that ten years
before, when they were both in General Billy Graham's famous light
battery of the First Artillery, of which the adjutant was then second
lieutenant, the sergeant was then, too, a sergeant, but with a very
different name.

Friday, October 13th--ill-omened day of the week, ill-omened day of the
month--and we were to start on a scout down into the valley of the
Cheyenne. Perhaps three fourths of our number neither knew nor cared
what day it was; but, be that as it may, there was an utterly
unmistakable air of gloom about our move. The morning was raw and
dismal. "The General" sounded soon after nine, and the stirring notes
fell upon seemingly listless ears; no one seemed disposed to shout,
whistle, or sing, and just at ten o'clock, when we were all standing to
horse and ready to start, Major Sumner's company sent forth a mournful
little procession towards the new-made grave we had marked on the
hillside at the sharp bend of the creek, and with brief service, but sad
enough hearts, the body of a comrade who had died the night before was
lowered to its rest. The carbines rang out the parting volleys, and
Bradley's trumpet keened a wailing farewell. General Merritt and his
staff, coming suddenly upon us during the rites, silently dismounted and
uncovered until the clods rattled in upon the soldier's rude coffin, and
all was over. Then, signalling us to follow, the chief rode on, the
Fifth swung into saddle, and with perceptibly augmented ranks followed
in his tracks. A battalion of the Third Cavalry, under Colonel Van
Vliet, and a detachment of the Second, under Captain Peale, accompanied
us, while the infantry battalion, the rest of the cavalry, the
recruits, and the sick or disabled remained in camp under command of
Colonel Royall. Where were we going? What was expected? None knew behind
the silent horseman at the head of column; but a start on Friday, the
13th, to the mournful music of a funeral march, boded ill for success.
However, not to be harrowing, it is as well to state right here that ten
days from that date the scout was over, and, without having lost man or
horse, the Fifth rode serenely into Red Cloud Agency. So far as the
regiment was concerned that superstition was exploded.

The march down Amphibious Creek was grandly beautiful as to scenery. We
wound, snake-like, along the stream, gliding under towering,
pine-covered heights, or bold, rocky precipices. The valley opened out
wider as we neared the "sinks," and, finally, turning abruptly to the
right, we dismounted and led our horses over a lofty ridge, bare of
trees, and commanding a broad valley to the south, over which the road
stretched in long perspective till lost in dark Buffalo Gap, the only
exit through the precipitous and lofty range that hemmed in the plain
between us and the Cheyenne valley beyond. Here we encountered an
emigrant train slowly toiling up the southern slope and staring at us in
undisguised wonderment. Ten miles away we came once again "plump" upon
the boiling waters of the creek, where it reappeared after a twelve-mile
digression in the bowels of the earth. It was clear and fair when it
left us in the valley behind to take its plunge, and it met us again
with a more than troubled appearance and the worst kind of an odor.
Square in between the massive portals of the great gap we unsaddled at
sunset and encamped for the night.

In the scout which ensued down the valley of the South Cheyenne there
was absolutely nothing of sufficient interest to record in these pages.
Nor had we any luck in our participation in the "round-up" at the Indian
reservation on the 22d and 23d of October. Such warriors as had remained
near Camp Robinson meekly surrendered to General MacKenzie, and we had
nothing to do but pitch our tents side by side with the new-comers of
the Fourth Cavalry and wonder what was to come next. General Crook was
known to be in the garrison with his aides-de-camp, and we had not long
to wait. On the 24th of October our motley array received the welcome
order to go into winter-quarters, the Fifth Cavalry on the line of the
Union Pacific Railroad, and within another twenty-four hours we were _en
route_ for the comforts of civilization.

But, before we separated from the comrades with whom we had marched and
growled these many weary miles, our chief gave us his parting
benediction in the following words:




    "Headquarters Big Horn and Yellowstone Expedition,
    Camp Robinson, Neb., _October 24, 1876_.

    "_General Orders No. 8._

     "The time having arrived when the troops composing the Big Horn
     and Yellowstone Expedition are about to separate, the
     brigadier-general commanding addresses himself to the officers
     and men of the command to say:

     "In the campaign now closed he has been obliged to call upon
     you for much hard service and many sacrifices of personal
     comfort. At times you have been out of reach of your base of
     supplies; in most inclement weather you have marched without
     food and slept without shelter; in your engagements you
     have evinced a high order of discipline and courage; in your
     marches, wonderful powers of endurance; and in your
     deprivations and hardships, patience and fortitude.

    "Indian warfare is, of all warfare, the most dangerous, the most
    trying, and the most thankless. Not recognized by the high
    authority of the United States Senate as war, it still possesses
    for you the disadvantages of civilized warfare, with all the
    horrible accompaniments that barbarians can invent and
    savages execute. In it you are required to serve without the
    incentive to promotion or recognition; in truth, without favor or
    hope of reward.

    "The people of our sparsely settled frontier, in whose defence
    this war is waged, have but little influence with the powerful
    communities in the East; their representatives have little voice
    in our national councils, while your savage foes are not only
    the wards of the nation, supported in idleness, but objects of
    sympathy with large numbers of people otherwise well-informed
    and discerning.

    "You may, therefore, congratulate yourselves that, in the
    performance of your military duty, you have been on the side
    of the weak against the strong, and that the few people there
    are on the frontier will remember your efforts with gratitude.

    "If, in the future, it should transpire that the avenues[A] for
    recognition of distinguished services and gallant conduct are
    opened, those rendered in this campaign will be remembered.

           *       *       *       *       *

    "By Command of Brigadier-General Crook.

    (_Signed_) JOHN G. BOURKE,
    "_First Lieutenant Third Cavalry,
    A.D.C., and A.A.A. General._"

[A: The avenue was at last opened by the signature of the
President to the bill providing that brevet rank might be conferred on
officers for gallant conduct in Indian warfare, but it came just too
late. General Crook had barely time to express his gratification. He
died within the week that followed, and his list of officers recommended
or brevets for services rendered in this campaign died with him.]

To use the emphatic vernacular of the frontier, that parting order "just
filled the bill." It was as complete a summing-up of the disadvantages
of Indian campaigning as could well be written; it indicated plainly how
thoroughly our general had appreciated the sufferings of his men on that
hideous march from Heart River; it assured us of the sympathy he had
felt for one and all (though I doubt if ever a one of us suffered half
so much as he); and, finally, in tendering the thanks of our commander,
it conveyed the only reward we could possibly expect, for had he not
truly said that, of all warfare, Indian warfare is the most thankless?

Well, it was over with, so far as we were concerned, though brief was
our respite, and now came the closing scenes before the rising of the
morning's sun should see us split up into battalions or detachments,
and, with light feet and lighter hearts, marching away to the south.

All night long, at General Crook's headquarters, his tireless staff were
working away at orders and details of the move, and closing his report
to the lieutenant-general at Chicago; and here, too, my services were
kept in requisition preparing the map which was to accompany the written
report, so that, for us at least, there was no opportunity of sharing in
the parting festivities and bidding farewell to comrades, cavalry and
infantry, separating for the new posts and the duties of recuperation.

Our farewells were hurried, yet even now, how vividly I recall the faces
that crowded round headquarters that bright morning of the 25th.
Bronzed and bearded, rugged with the glow of health, or pallid from
wounds and illness, but all kindly and cordial. Then, too, the scenes of
our campaign seemed passing in review before me, and, dream-like, they
linger with me still. Glancing over these now completed pages, how
utterly meagre and unsatisfactory the record seems; how many an incident
have I failed to mention; how many a deed of bravery or self-denial is
left untold. I look back through the mists and rain into the dark depths
of that bloody ravine at Slim Buttes, and wonder how I could ever have
told the story of its assault and failed to speak of how our plucky
Milwaukee sergeant sprang down in the very face of the desperately
fighting Indians and picked up a wounded Third Cavalryman and carried
him on his back out of further harm's way; and of brave, noble-hearted
Munson, as true a soldier as ever commanded company, rushing in between
two fires to drag the terrified squaws from their peril; of Bache,
"swollen, puffed, and disfigured with rheumatism, conquering agony to
mount his horse and take part in the action;" of Rodgers, striding down
the slopes in front of his skirmish-line, his glorious voice ringing
above the clamor, laughing like a schoolboy at the well-meant efforts of
the Indian sharpshooters to pick him off; of General Carr, riding out to
the front on his conspicuous gray, and sitting calmly there to show the
men what wretched shots some Indians could be.

How could half the incidents be told when so little parade was made of
them at the time? Who knew the night of the stampede on the Rosebud
that Eaton was shot through the hand until he had spent an hour or
more completing his duties, riding as though nothing had happened? Who
knew, at the Rosebud battle, that Nickerson's exertions in the saddle
had reopened the old Gettysburg wound and well-nigh finished him? We
thought he looked white and wan when he rejoined us at Red Cloud, but
never divined the cause. From first to last throughout that march of
eight hundred miles, so varied in its scenes, but so utterly
changeless in discomfort, there was a spirit of uncomplaining
"take-it-as-a-matter-of-course" determination that amounted at times
among the men to positive heroism. Individual pluck was thoroughly
tested, and the instances of failure were few and far between.

Despite the fact that our engagements were indecisive at the time (and
Indian fights that fall short of annihilation on either side generally
are), the campaign had its full result. Sitting Bull's thousands were
scattered in confusion over the Northwest, he himself driven to a refuge
"across the line," his subordinates broken up into dejected bands that,
one after another, were beaten or starved into submission, and in the
following year General Crook's broad department, the grand ranges of the
Black Hills and Big Horn, the boundless prairies of Nebraska and
Wyoming, were as clear of hostile warriors as, two years before, they
were of settlers, and to-day the lovely valleys of the North, thanks to
his efforts, and the ceaseless vigilance of Generals Terry and Miles in
guarding the line, are the peaceful homes of hundreds of hardy
pioneers.




ROSTER OF OFFICERS

SERVING WITH THE FIFTH CAVALRY IN THE BIG HORN AND YELLOWSTONE
EXPEDITION OF 1876.

      _Colonel_ Wesley Merritt, Brevet Major-General.

      _Lieutenant-Colonel_ Eugene A. Carr, Brevet Major-General.

      _Major_ John J. Upham.

      _Major_ Julius W. Mason, Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel.

      _Captain_ Edward H. Leib, Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel.

      _Captain_ Samuel S. Sumner, Brevet Major.

      _Captain_ Emil Adam.

      _Captain_ Robert H. Montgomery.

      _Captain_ Sanford C. Kellogg, Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel.

      _Captain_ George F. Price.

      _Captain_ Edward M. Hayes.

      _Captain_ J. Scott Payne.

      _Captain_ Albert E. Woodson.

      _Captain_ Calbraith P. Rodgers.

      _First Lieutenant_ Bernard Reilly, Jr.

      _First Lieutenant_ Wm. C. Forbush, A.A.G. Cavalry Brigade.

      _First Lieutenant_ Charles King, Adjutant.

      _First Lieutenant_ William P. Hall, Quartermaster.

      _First Lieutenant_ Walter S. Schuyler, A.D.C. to General Crook.

      _Second Lieutenant_ Charles D. Parkhurst.

      _Second Lieutenant_ Charles H. Watts (until July, when disabled).

      _Second Lieutenant_ Edward W. Keyes.

      _Second Lieutenant_ Robert London.

      _Second Lieutenant_ George O. Eaton
              (until August 24th, disabled August 10th).

      _Second Lieutenant_ Hoel S. Bishop.

      _Lieutenant_ Wm. C. Hunter, U.S.N. ("Brevet Commodore").

      _Second Lieutenant_ Robt. H. Young, 4th Inf.,
              A.D.C. to General Merritt.

      _Second Lieutenant_ J. Hayden Pardee, 23d Inf.,
              A.D.C. to General Merritt.

      _Second Lieutenant_ Satterlee C. Plummer, 4th Inf., with Co. "I."

      _Acting Assistant Surgeon_ J. W. Powell.




           CAPTAIN SANTA CLAUS.


There was unusual commotion in the frontier mining town when the red
stage, snow-covered and storm-beaten, lurched up in front of the Bella
Union and began to disgorge passengers and mail. The crowd on the wooden
sidewalk was of that cosmopolitan type which rich and recently
discovered "leads" so surely attract--tough-looking miners;
devil-may-care cow-boys with rolling hat-brims and barbaric display of
deadly weapons; a choice coterie of gamblers with exaggerated suavity of
manners; several impassive Chinamen (very clean); several loafing
Indians (very dirty); a brace of spruce, clean-shaven, trim-built
soldiers from the garrison down the valley; and the inevitable squad of
"beats" with bleary eyes and wolfish faces infesting the doorways of the
saloons, sublimely trustful of a community that had long ceased to trust
them, and scenting eleemosynary possibilities in each new-comer.

But while the arrival of the stage was a source of perennial excitement
in the business centre of Argentopolis, the commotion on this occasion
was due to the tumultuous welcome given by a mob of school-children to a
tall, bronzed, fiercely moustached party the instant he stepped,
fur-clad, from the dark interior. Such an array of eager, joyous little
faces one seldom sees. Big boys and wee maidens, they threw themselves
upon him with shrill clamor and enthusiastic embraces, swarming about
his legs as, with twinkling eyes and genial greeting, he lifted the
little ones high in air and kissed their dimpled cheeks, and shook the
struggling boys heartily by the hand, and was pulled this way and that
way until eventually borne off in triumph towards the spickspan new
shop, with its glittering white front and alluring display of fruit,
pastry, and confectionery, all heralded forth under the grandiloquent
but delusive sign, "Bald Eagle Bakery."

Upon this tumultuous reception Argentopolis gazed for some moments in
wondering silence. When the transfer of the children and their willing
captive to a point some dozen yards away rendered conversation a
possibility, the spokesman of the sidewalk committee shifted his quid,
and formulated in frontier phrase the question which seemed uppermost in
the public mind:

"Who 'n thunder's that?"

"That?" said the soldier addressed. "That's Captain Ransom. It's good
times the kids'll be having now."

"B'long to your rigiment?"

"Yes; captain of 'B' troop. Been away on leave ever since we got here."

"Seems fond o' children," said the Argentopolitan, reflectively. "Got
any of his own?"

"Nary. He b'longs to the whole crowd. The 'B' company fellers'll be glad
he's back. They think as much of him as the kids do."

"Good officer, eh?"

"You bet; ain't no better in the cavalry."

At this unequivocal endorsement from expert authority the eyes of
Argentopolis again followed the big man in the fur overcoat. With three
or four youngsters tugging at each hand, and a dozen revolving
irregularly about him, he was striding across the street, keeping up a
running fire of chatter with his thronging satellites. Soldier he was
unquestionably. Tall, erect of carriage, broad of shoulder, deep of
chest, with a keen, quick glance from under his heavy brows. Eyes full
of light and fire, nose straight and prominent, a great moustache that
hid the curves of his handsome mouth and swept out across the square and
resolute jaws--a moustache that, like the wavy brown hair about the
temples, was tingeing with gray. Strong white teeth glistened through
the drooping thatch, and one or two merry dimples dotted his bronzed and
weather-beaten cheeks.

Over on the neighboring side street, from the steps of the schoolhouse,
other children surveyed the group, and with envious eyes and watering
mouths beheld the demolition of tarts and turnovers. Despite the keen
and searching cold of the mountain air, rare and still and brimming with
ozone as November days can ever find it, the school shoved its hands
deep in trousers pockets and stared with all its youthful might.

Even so blessed a half-hour must have its end, and as the warning bell
began to ring, and the Townies to shout that "reecess" was over, the
merry throng, spoil-laden, came pouring down the bakery steps, with
many admonitions to their big benefactor not to think of starting for
the fort until school was out and they could escort him home. Two or
three of the smallest still clung to him, explaining that only the big
ones had afternoon school; _they_ were all through; they had nothing to
do until the ambulance came to take them all at four o'clock; and the
captain became suddenly aware of two little people standing on the
sidewalk and regarding him wistfully. One was a sturdy boy of seven,
with frank blue eyes and chubby rounded cheeks--a picture of solid young
America despite the fact that his little fists were red and bare; his
knickerbockers, though well fitting, were worn and patched; and the
copper toes of his cheap, heavy boots were wearing suspiciously thin. He
stood protectingly by a little maiden, whose face was like those of Sir
Joshua Reynolds's seraphs--a face as pure an oval as ever sculptor
modelled or painter limned, with great, lustrous, long-lashed eyes and
delicate and dainty features, and all about it tumbled a wealth of
glistening golden hair, and all over it shone the look of childish
longing and almost piteous entreaty. One little mittened hand was
clasped in her brother's; the other, uncovered, hung by a finger in her
rosy mouth. She was warmly clad; her little cloak and hood were soft and
white and fleecy; her pigmy legs were cased in stout worsted, and her
feet in warm "arctics," and "mother's darling" was written in every
ornament of her dress.

Ransom, stowing away a handful of silver, came suddenly upon this silent
pair, and stopped short. Another instant and he had stooped, raised the
younger child in his strong hands, and with caressing tone accosted her:

"Why, little Snow-drop, who are you? What a little fairy you are!"

"She ain't one of us," piped up a youthful patrician, disdainfully.
"She's infantry. He's her brother, and they don't belong to the fort."

The boy's face flushed, and he looked reproachfully at the speaker, but
said no word. Ransom was gazing with singular intentness into the
downcast face of his little captive.

"Won't you tell me your name, little one?" he pleaded. "Why didn't you
come in and have some tarts and turnovers with the others? I've got to
run now and meet some other old fellows at the stage office. Here,
little man," he said, as he set her down, "take Snow-drop in for me, and
you two just eat all you can, and you pay for it for me." He held out a
bright half-dollar. Snow-drop's eyes glistened, and she looked eagerly
at her brother.

But the boy hung back. For an instant he hesitated, screwing his boot
toe into a convenient knot-hole as means of covering his embarrassment.
"Come, Jack," said the captain, reassuringly, touching him on the
shoulder. The little fellow shook his head.

"Why not, my boy?" pleaded Ransom. "Papa won't mind, when you tell him
it was old Uncle Hal. That's what they call me."

A lump rose in the youngster's throat. His head went lower.

"It--it's mamma wouldn't like it," he finally said; and just then, with
rush and sputter of hoofs, two officers came trotting around the corner,
threw themselves from their saddles, pounced upon their comrade, and
overwhelmed him with joyous greeting. Another minute and others arrived,
and between them all he was led away up the street. While some of the
children confidently followed, two remained behind--little Snow-drop,
refusing to be comforted, was applying the back of her mittened hand to
her weeping eyes, and turning a deaf ear to her manful brother, who was
vainly striving to explain matters.

"Maudie Carleton's crying because Phil wouldn't take the money and get
her some goodies," said little Jack Wilkins, in an opportune pause.

"Who did you say?" asked Ransom, turning suddenly, and looking
inquiringly at his friends. There was an instant of embarrassment. Then
one of the officers replied,

"Maud Carleton, Ransom. Those are poor Phil Carleton's little ones."

"Wait for me at the office, fellows; I'll be along in a minute," was the
response; and the captain went striding back to the Bald Eagle.

It was an old story in the cavalry. Very few there were who knew not
that Captain Ransom was a hard-hit man when Kate Perry--the beauty of
her father's regiment--came back from school, and with all the wealth of
her grace and loveliness and winning ways, refusing to see how she had
impressed one or two "solid" men of the garrison, fell rapturously in
love with Philip Carleton, the handsome, dashing scapegrace of the
subalterns. It was "hard lines" for old Colonel Perry; it would have
been misery to her devoted mother; but she was spared it all--the grass
had been growing for years over her distant grave.

  [Illustration: "'COME, JACK,' SAID THE CAPTAIN, REASSURINGLY."]

The wedding was a glitter of gold-lace, champagne glasses, and tears.
Every one wished her--and him--all happiness, but dreaded the future.
There was a year of bliss, and little Phil was born; another year when
she was much taken up with her baby boy, and the father much abroad--a
year of clouds and silence. Then came sudden call to the field, and one
night with reeling senses she read the despatch that told her he was
shot dead in battle with the Sioux. When little Maudie came there was no
father to receive her in his arms. The gray-haired colonel took the
widow and her children a few short years to his own roof; then he, too,
was called to his account, and with a widow's pension and the relic of
her father's savings the sorrowing woman moved from the garrison that
had so long been her home, and took up arms against her sea of troubles.
She need not have gone. All Fort Rains knew that there were officers who
would gladly have taken her and her beautiful children to their
fireside. But she was loyal, proud, high-spirited, and she could not
stay. All the roof her father had to leave her was the frame cottage at
the ranch he had bought and stocked, a mile below the fort. She was a
soldier's daughter, brave and resolute, she had her father's old
soldier-servant and his wife to help her, and she moved to the ranch,
and declared she would be dependent on no one. When first she had come
into that glorious valley, a girl of eighteen, a large force of cavalry
was encamped around the garrison in which her father's regiment of foot
was stationed, and Captain Harold Ransom became one of her most devoted
admirers, though nearly twice her age. Few men had much chance against
such a lover as Phil Carleton, buoyant, brilliant, gallant, the pride of
all the juniors in the infantry, the despair of many a prudent mother;
and when that engagement was announced, the cavalry were rather glad to
be ordered away, and to comfort themselves with the perilous
distractions of Indian fighting for three or four stirring years. But,
before they left, Ransom and others had bought much of the land on which
Argentopolis gleamed to-day. Perhaps it was the silver that came into
his hair as well as his pockets, but silver did not cause the lines that
crept under his kindly eyes and around the corners of the firm mouth. He
was rich, as army men go, but his heart was sorely wrenched. He went
abroad when the Indian campaigns were over, and rejoined while his
comrades were on the Pacific coast, and became the delight of the
children and the children's mothers. Captain Santa Claus they called him
at Walla Walla and Vancouver, where he was the life of those garrisons;
and while men honored and women waxed sentimental towards him, it was
the children who took possession of the tall soldier and made his house
their home, who trooped unbidden all over it at any hour of the day, and
made it the garrison play-ground when the rainy season set in and drove
them to cover.

And then, after their four years in the Columbia country, the regiment
crossed the big range, and, wonder of wonders, headquarters and six
troops, one of them Ransom's, were ordered to Fort Rains! He was again
on long leave when the change of station occurred, and the widow drew a
long breath. She found life very different, with her father's old
friends and hers removed. As the children grew in years their needs
increased. She sold the stock and much of the land of the Ranch, keeping
only the homestead and the patch around it, but she was glad to find
employment at the fort as teacher of the piano and singing. She played
well, but her voice was glorious, and had been carefully trained. The
news that he was coming had given her a shock. It was more than eight
years since she had seen him. It was more than five since she had
briefly answered the letter he wrote her on hearing of her husband's
death. It was so manly, sympathetic, and so full of something he knew
not how to express--a longing to shield her from want or care. She had
gently but firmly ended it all.

And yet--She was bitterly poor now. Handsomer than ever, said the
officers who knew her in the old days; still wearing her mourning, and
looking so tall and majestic in her rusting weeds. She was a woman whose
form and carriage would be noticeable anywhere--tall, slender, graceful,
with a certain slow, languorous ease of motion that charmed the senses.
Her face was exquisite in contour and feature--a pure type of blond,
blue-eyed, Saxon beauty, with great masses of shimmering golden-brown
hair. No wonder Ransom felt a thrill when he looked into Maudie's
eyes--the child was her mother in miniature. At twenty-seven, with all
her trials, Mrs. Carleton was a lovelier woman than in her maiden
radiance at eighteen. What she had gained in strength and character,
through her years of poverty and self-abnegation, God alone knew, and He
had been her comforter.

For nearly a year the garrison children had been going in to town for
school, an excellent teacher having been secured in the East, and Mrs.
Carleton eagerly embraced the chance of sending hers. She could no
longer afford a nurse to look after the wee one. She could not take her
on her daily round of lessons, and her infantry friends had gladly seen
to it that the little Carletons were carried to and fro with their own.
So, too, when the cavalry came had Colonel Cross assured her that the
ambulance should always come for them and bring them back to the post.
Everybody wanted to be kind to her, or said so at least; but the ladies
were all new and strange. She had never been the pet among them she was
in her own regiment. They had not known and loved her father, as had the
colonel. They had heard of handsome Phil Carleton, as who had not? but
they had heard of Hal Ransom's old-time devotion to her, and now he
would soon be back. Rich, growing gray, everybody's friend, the
children's idol--oh! what if she should set that widow's cap for him
now! The possibility was appalling.

And Christmas was coming, and the children had been weaving glowing
pictures of the bliss to be theirs because Captain Santa Claus was
homeward bound, and little Maud was listening with eager ears, and her
blue-eyed brother in silent longing. The boy was his mother's knight and
champion. She took him into her confidence and told him many of her
troubles, and time and again after Maudie was asleep the two were
rocking in the big arm-chair in front of the hearth, the little fellow
curled up in her lap, his arms around her neck, his ruddy cheek nestled
against hers, that looked so fragile and white by contrast. He knew how
hard a struggle mamma was having in keeping the wolf from the door, and
he was helping her--little hero that he was--wearing uncomplainingly the
patched knickerbockers and cowhide boots, bearing in soldier silence the
thoughtless jeers of his schoolmates, and taking comfort in the fact
that sensitive little Maud was always prettily dressed. She had been
petted from babyhood, for scarlet-fever had left her weak and nervous.

And so the coming of glad Christmas-tide was not to them the source of
boundless joy it seemed to others. For days Maud had been coming home
from school full of childish prattle about the lovely things the other
girls were going to have. Couldn't she have a real wax doll, with
"truly" eyes and hair, that could sing and say mamma; and a doll house,
with kitchen, and a real pump and stove in it, and dining-room and
parlor, and lots of lovely bedrooms up-stairs; and a doll carriage like
Mabel Vane's, with blue cushions, and white wheels and body, and
umbrella top? She was tired of her old dollies and her broken wagon. Why
didn't people ever give her such beautiful things? If she was very good,
and wrote to Santa Claus, wouldn't he bring her what she wanted so very,
very much? Poor Mrs. Carleton! Do our hearts ever ache over our own
troubles as they do over the longings of our little ones? She promised
Maud that Santa Claus should bring the very things she craved, and now
she knew not how to fulfil her pledge. Commissary and butcher bills were
still unpaid, and she so hated to ask even for what was due her! It is
such an old, homely, heart-worn story--that of Christmas yearnings that
must be unfulfilled! We lay down our cherished plans with a sigh of
resignation, but when baby eyes and baby lips are pleading, God forgive
us if we are not so humbly patient, if we accept our burden not without
a murmur, or yield not without a struggle!

She had other sore perplexities. She well knew she must meet Hal Ransom.
Two days had elapsed since Phil had told her of the reception accorded
him, and Maud had preferred her complaint against her brother for being
so mean to her in not taking the money and giving her a treat.

Heaven! how the widowed soul hugged her boy to her bosom that night, and
kissed and blessed and cried over him! Come what might, he should have a
Christmas worth remembering, for his remembrance of her! She had long
planned to send to Chicago for a handsome suit to replace the worn and
outgrown knickerbockers. It would have crushed her to think of her
boy's taking money from him, of all people, no matter what the Forties
did. Then came the question as to how she would meet him. Go to the fort
she had to every day, and meet they must. It was not that he would be
obtrusive; he was too thorough a gentleman for that, and her last letter
to him was such that he could not be. It was written in the ecstasy of
her bereavement, when she was hiding even from herself the faults and
neglects of the buried Philip to whom she had given her girlish love.
With lofty spirit she had told him she lived only to teach her children
to revere their father's memory, and that she could never think of
accepting aid from any one, though she thanked him for the delicacy and
thoughtfulness of his well-meant offer. She had asked herself many a
time in the last year whether, if it were to be done again, she could
find it in her heart to be quite so cold and repellent. She wondered if
he had ever heard that the last year of her handsome Philip's life had
been devoted more to other women than to her. She could not tolerate the
idea that he, above all, should suppose that between Philip and herself
all had not been blissful, and that she had been neglected not a little.
And yet--and yet was she unlike other women that just now her toilet
received rather more thought than usual, and that she wondered would he
find her faded--changed?

They met, as men and women whose hearts hold weightier secrets must
meet, with the ease and cordiality which their breeding demands. Scene
there was none; but she saw, and saw instantly, what she had vainly
striven to teach herself she was utterly indifferent to, that in his
eyes she was no more faded than his love in hers. She could have
scourged herself for the thrill of life and youth it gave her.

That night little Philip was hugged closer than ever. He had been
telling her how the captain was moving into his new quarters, and the
children trooped over there the moment they got back from school, and
would not ask them, because they were infantry, and Maud cried, and the
captain himself came out and took her in his arms and carried her, and
made him come too, and they all had nuts and raisins and apples, and the
captain was just as kind to them as though they were cavalry--"more too,
for he kept Maudie on his knee most of the time, and wanted us to stay,
but we had to go and meet mamma. And he said that was what made him
proud of me from the first, because I was so true to you, mamma," said
Phil. "I suppose because I wouldn't take his half-dollar."

She was silent a moment, pressing her lips to his cheek, and striving
hard to subdue the tears that rose to her eyes. She had something to ask
of her boy that was hard, very hard. Yet it had to be done.

"You were right, Philip. It would have hurt mamma more than words can
tell had you taken money from--from any one. We are very poor, but we
can be rich in one thing--independence. Mamma has not had much luck this
year. It seemed all to go with papa's old regiment. But we'll be brave
and patient, you and mamma, and say nothing to anybody about our
troubles. We'll pay what we owe as we go along. Won't we, Phil?"

"I wish I could help some way, mamma."

"You can, my soldier boy."

He looked up quickly and patted her cheek; then threw his arm around her
neck again. Something told him what it would have to be.

"Maudie is a baby who cannot realize our position. Philip is my brave
little knight and helper. It--it is so hard for mamma to say it, my boy,
but if we buy what she so longs for at Christmas, there will be nothing
left for the skates, and I know how you want them, and how many other
things you ought to have. You have helped mother so often, Phil. Can you
help her once more?"

For all answer he only clung to her the closer.

And now holiday week was near at hand. It was Friday, and school would
close that afternoon, and for two blessed, blissful weeks there would be
no session at all. Christmas Day would come on Tuesday, and the Forties
were running riot in the realms of anticipation. They hugged each other
and danced about the street when the express agent told them of the
packages that were coming almost every day for Captain Ransom, and the
little Townies, who were wont to protest they were glad their papas
weren't in the army, were beginning to show traitorous signs of
weakening. It was a sore test, if every regiment had its own Santa
Claus, as the Forties said.

And older heads were noting that for some time Captain Ransom drove not
so much townward, up the valley as down; and that there was a
well-defined sleigh track from the lower gate over to the Ranch.
Officers coming up from the stables were quick to note the new feature
in the wintry landscape, and to make quizzical comment thereon. Then, on
Sunday, the third in Advent, a heavy snow-storm came up during the
morning service, and the wind blew a "blizzard." It was only a few weeks
after the captain's arrival, but his handsome roans were well known in
the valley already, and the ladies looked at each other and nodded
significantly as they saw the team drawn up near the chapel door when
the congregation came shuddering out into the cold. Mrs. Colonel Cross,
who had a charming young sister visiting her for the holidays, and Mrs.
Vane, whose cousin Pansy had come over from her brother's station at
Fort Whittlesey, had both offered Ransom seats in their pews until he
chose his own; but he had chosen his own very promptly, and it was well
down the aisle opposite that to which Mrs. Carleton had humbly retired
after her father's death. As a consequence the higher families reached
the door only in time to see the captain bundling the widow and her
little ones in his costly robes, and driving away through the whirling
storm.

That night the wind died away; the snow fell heavily, and all the next
day it lay in silent, unruffled, unfurrowed beauty over the broad level
below the fort, and though the captain's sleigh went townward towards
evening, and the butcher's "bob" tore an ugly groove along the lower
edge, there was now no trail other than the foot-path along the
willow-fringed river-bank joining the garrison with the widow's gate.
When Friday came, and the plain was still unfurrowed, Fort Rains was
unanimous in its conclusion; Captain Ransom had offered himself again,
and been rejected.

The households of Vane and Potts, and the ladies, at least, at the
colonel's, breathed freer. Captain Ransom was invited to Christmas
dinner at all three places, and begged to be excused. He explained that
he purposed having all the children at his house from eight to ten for
general frolic that evening--and would not the ladies come over and see
the fun? Mrs. Vane and Pansy were for changing their dinner hour to five
o'clock, if thereby the captain could be secured, and Vane "sounded"
him, but without the hoped-for result. He would have to be at home, he
said. Mrs. Carleton was narrowly watched. Women who had been disposed to
treat her coldly could have hugged her now, if they could be sure she
had really refused the best catch in the cavalry, and left a chance for
some one else. But Mrs. Carleton gave no sign, and she was a woman they
dared not question. What staggered the theory of renewed offer and
rejection was the warmth and cordiality of manner with which they met in
public--and they met almost daily. There was something that seemed to
shatter the idea of rejection in the very smile she gave him, and in the
reverence of his manner towards her. Estrangement there certainly was
none, and yet he had been going over to the Ranch every day, and his
visits had suddenly ceased. Why? They scanned his face for indications;
but, as Mrs. Vane put it, "he always was an exasperating creature; you
could no more read him than you could a mummy."

Monday before Christmas had come, and Colonel Cross, trudging home from
his office about noon, caught sight of the tall and graceful figure of
Mrs. Carleton coming towards him along the walk. He was about to hail
her in his cheery style, when he saw that her head was bowed, and that
she was in evident distress. Even while he was wondering how to accost
her, she put him out of doubt. Her lips were twitching and her cheeks
were flushed; tears were starting in her eyes, but she strove hard to
command herself and speak calmly.

"You were so kind as to order the 'special' for me this morning,
colonel, but I shall not need it--I cannot go to town."

He knew well that something had gone wrong. Blunt, rugged old trooper
that he was, he had been her father's intimate in their cadet days, and
he wanted to befriend her. More than a little he suspected that hers was
not a path of roses among the ladies at Rains. In his presence they were
on guard over their tongues, but he had not been commanding officer of
several garrisons for nothing.

"Mrs. Carleton," he impetuously spoke, "something's amiss. Can't you
tell an old fellow like me, and let me--ah--settle things? Surely it is
something I can do."

She thanked him warmly. It was nothing in which he could be of service,
she declared, trying hard to smile--she was a little upset and could
not go to town. But he saw she had just come from Mrs. Vane's, and he
knew that estimable and virtuous woman thoroughly, and drew his
conclusions. Whatever was wrong, it was not unconnected with her
monitions or ministrations--of that he was confident. As for Mrs.
Carleton, she turned quickly from the fort and took her lonely, winding
way among the willows to her valley home, a heart-sick woman.

Counting her ways and means, she had found that to pay for the items she
had promised Maud and had ordered for her boy--the latter being the suit
sent "C. O. D." from Chicago--she would have to ask a favor of her
patrons at the fort. She had arranged with the proprietor of the big
variety store in town that he should set aside for her a certain
beautiful doll and one of the prettiest of the doll carriages, and that
she would come and get them on this very afternoon. To meet her bills
and these expenses, and that there might be no disappointment, she had
addressed to the parents of her few pupils a modest little note,
enclosing her bill, and asking as a kindness to her that it might be
paid by Saturday, the 22d. Courteous and prompt response had come from
all but two, and with the money thus obtained she had settled her little
household accounts. Mrs. Vane and Mrs. Potts, however, had vouchsafed no
reply, and it was to the mothers, not the fathers, her notes had been
addressed. On Monday morning, therefore, when she went to give Miss
Adèle her lesson, she ventured to ask for Mrs. Potts, and Mrs. Potts was
out--spending the day at Mrs. Vane's. So thither she went, and with
flushing cheeks and deep embarrassment inquired if the ladies had
received her notes. Mrs. Potts had, and was overcome, she said, with
dismay. She had totally forgotten, and thought it was next Saturday she
meant; and now the captain had gone to town, and there was no way she
could get at him. Then came Mrs. Vane's turn. Mrs. Vane, too, had
received her note, but she was not overcome. With much majesty of mien
she told the widow that she always paid her bills on the last day of the
quarter, and that her husband was so punctilious about it and so
methodical that she never asked him to depart from the rule. Mrs.
Carleton strove hard to keep down her pride and the surging impulse to
cry out against such heartless superiority of manner and management.
There was a tinge of reproach in the plea she forced herself to make for
her babies' sake. "You know there are no more lessons this term, Mrs.
Vane; my work is done; and I--so needed it for Christmas, or I would not
have asked." And she smiled piteously through the starting tears. Mrs.
Vane was sorry--very sorry. She could hardly ask her husband to depart
from his life-long practice, even if he were here--and he, too, had gone
to town.

Yes, everybody seemed to have gone or sent to town for Christmas
shopping. Her little ones were alone in having no one to buy for them.
Harold Ransom too was going, for she saw the handsome roans come dashing
up the drive, as she rose, with a burning sense of indignity, to take
her leave. She came upon Miss Pansy in the hallway, all hooded and
furred, and beaming with bliss at the prospect of a sleigh-ride to
town--behind the roans, no doubt. Never mind that now. Her heart was
full of only one thought--her babies. Where were now her long-cherished
schemes? All Fort Rains was blithe and jubilant over the coming
festivities; Maud was wild with anticipation; and she alone--she alone,
who had worked so hard and faithfully that her children might find joy
in their Christmas awaking--she alone had seen her hopes turn to ashes.
In her pride and her vehement determination to be "beholden" to no one,
she would seek no help in her trouble. She went home, asking only to be
alone, thankful that the children were spending the day with friends in
the garrison, and could not be there to see the misery in her eyes.

Full an hour she gave to her uncontrollable grief, locked in her room,
sobbing in utter prostration. Her eyes were still red and swollen; she
was weak, trembling, exhausted, when the sudden sound of hoof-beats
roused her. The blood flew to her cheeks. Despite her prohibition, then,
he was here. He had come again, and something told her he had fathomed
her trouble, and would not be denied. She heard the quick, firm tread
upon the steps, the imperative rat-tat-tat of the whip-handle on the
door. She could have called to her faithful slave Mrs. Malloy, the
"striker's" wife, who had known her from babyhood, and bidden her tell
the captain she must be excused, but it was too late. Bridget Malloy had
seen her face when she came home; had vainly striven to enter her room
and share her sorrow; had shrewdly suspected the cause of the trouble,
and through the key-hole had poured forth voluble Hibernian fealty and
proffers of every blessed cent of her savings, but only to be implored
to go away and let her have her cry in peace. Even had Mrs. Carleton
ordered her to deny her to the visitor, it is probable that Mrs. Malloy
would have obeyed--her own instincts.

"Sure it's glad I am to see the captain!" was her prompt greeting; "and
it was a black day that ever let ye go from her. Come right in, an' I'll
call her to ye. It's all broke up she is."

And so she had to come. There he stood in the little sanctuary where
Philip in photographed beauty beamed down upon her from over the mantel,
and Philip's rusting sword hung like that of Damocles by the fragile
thread of sentiment that bound her to the past. There he stood with such
a world of tenderness, yearning, sympathy, and suppressed and passionate
love in his dark eyes! She came in, almost backward, striving to hide
her swollen and disfigured face. He never strove to approach her. With
one hand on the mantel, he stood gazing sorrowfully at her. With one
hand on the door-knob, with averted face, she silently awaited his
words.

"I have disobeyed you, Kate, though I left my sleigh and came on Roscoe.
I have tried to accept what you said eight days ago, but no man on earth
who has heard what I have heard to-day could obey you longer. No.
Listen!" he urged, as she half turned, with silencing gesture. "I'm not
here to plead for myself, but--my heart is breaking to see you
suffering, and to think of your being subjected to such an outrage as
that of this morning. Of course I heard of it. I made them tell me. The
colonel had seen your distress, and told me you had abandoned the trip
to town. I found out the rest. Yes, Mrs. Carleton, if you so choose to
term it" (for she had turned with indignant query in her eyes), "I
_pried_ into your affairs. Do you think I can bear this, to know you are
in want--for want it must be, or you'd never have stooped to ask that
vulgar, purse-proud, patronizing woman for money? Do you think I can
live here and see you subjected to this? By Heaven! If nothing else will
move you, in Philip's name, in your children's name, let me lift this
burden from you. Send me across the continent if you like. I'll promise
to worry you no more, if that will buy your trust. I've lived and borne
my lot these eight or nine long years, and can bear it longer if need
be. What I can't bear, and won't bear, is your suffering from actual
_poverty_. Kate Carleton, won't you trust me?"

"How _can_ I be your debtor, Captain Ransom? Ask yourself--ask any
one--what would be said of me if I took one cent from you! I _do_ thank
you. I _am_ grateful for all you have done and would do. Oh, it is not
that I do not bless you every day and night for being so thoughtful for
me, so good to my little ones! It wasn't for myself I was so broken
to-day; it was for my--my babies. Oh, I--I _cannot_ tell you!"

And now she broke down utterly, weeping hysterically, uncontrollably. In
the abandonment of her grief she threw her arms upon the wooden casing
of the doorway, and bowed her head upon them. One instant he stood
there, his hands fiercely clinching, his broad chest heaving, his
bronzed, honest, earnest face working with his weight of emotion, and
then, with uncontrollable impulse, with one bound he leaped to her side,
seized her slender form in his arms, and clasped her to his breast. In
vain she struggled; in vain her startled eyes, filled with resolute
loyalty to the old faith, blazed at him through their mist of tears; he
held her close, as once again, despite her struggles and her forbidding
words, he poured forth his plea.

"You _can_ take it, you _must_ take it. For your own sake, for your
children's sake--even for his!--give me the right to protect and cherish
you. I--I don't ask your love. Ah, Kate, be merciful!" and then--fatal
inspiration!--but the face he loved was so--so near; he never would have
done it had he thought--it was only as utterly unconquerable an impulse
as his wild embrace; his lips were so tremulous with entreaty, with
love, sympathy, pleading, pity, passion, everything that impelled and
nothing that restrained, that with sudden sweep they fell upon her
flushed and tear-wet cheek, and ere he knew it he had kissed her.

There was no mistaking the wrath in her eyes now. She was free in an
instant, and bidding him begone. He begged hard for pardon, but to no
purpose. She would listen to nothing. Go he must--his presence was
insult. And he left her panting with indignation, a vengeance-hurling
goddess, a wild-eyed Juno, while he at full gallop went tearing through
the snow-drifts, recklessly, dolefully, yet determinedly, back to the
post. In half an hour he was whipping to town.

When sunset came, and the evening gun awakened the echoes of the
snow-shrouded valley, and the red disk went down behind the crested
bluffs far up the stream, a sleigh came out from the fort, and Captain
Vane, with curious mixture of cordiality and embarrassment, restored
Phil and Maud to the maternal roof, and begged to hand her the amount
due from him and from Captain Potts for family tuition. He had only
heard a--accidentally--a few minutes before, of her request. And wasn't
there something else he could do? Would she not go to town with him
to-morrow morning? She thanked him. She hardly knew what to do. Here was
the money at last, but it was Christmas eve now, and there was no time
to be lost, and town lay full six miles away. Perhaps she wished a
messenger now, suggested the captain--he would send in a mounted man
gladly. Knowing no other way to secure her treasures for her little
ones, she breathlessly accepted his offer, briefly explained the
situation, and told him how she longed to have the presents there, with
the trifles she had made for them, to greet their eyes with the coming
day. The messenger could go to the store and get the coveted doll and
carriage; there would surely be sleighs from the fort that would bring
them out for him, and he would find the box from Chicago at the express
office, and could pay the charges and sign the receipt on her written
order to the agent. It was arranged in a moment, and with reviving hope
she gave the children their tea and strove to get them early to bed.

Ten o'clock came. The little ones were at last asleep. She had filled
the stockings with such inexpensive but loving remembrances as she could
afford, and had tottered dangerously near the brink of another flood of
tears when Malloy and his wife came in, the one with a box of tools for
Phil, the other with a set of china for the doll-house. She had finally
bidden those faithful friends good-night, and, having arranged the few
gifts she had for the children, she threw over her shoulders a heavy
shawl and went to the gate to listen for the messenger's return.

It was a perfect night--clear, still, and sparkling. The moon shone
brightly upon the glistening mantle of snow, and tinged with silver the
pine crests across the stream. Westward, on a little rise, were the
twinkling lights of the fort. Far beyond, far up the narrowing valley,
other lights, dim and distant, marked the position of the town. She
could hear the faint, muffled sound of shots with which the benighted
but jubilant frontiersmen were hailing the coming of the sacred
anniversary, like some midwinter Fourth of July, with exuberant and
explosive hilarity. Then, nearer at hand, soft, sweet, and solemn, there
floated out over the valley the prolonged notes of the cavalry trumpet
sounding the signal "Lights out," the "good-night" of the garrison. Then
all the broad windows of the barracks were shrouded in sudden gloom;
only in the quarters of the officers, on the opposite side of the
parade, were the lights still twinkling. In one of them, nearest the
gate, high up aloft, and close under the gables, there gleamed a
brighter light than all the others. Even in the chilly air she felt the
flush of blood to her cheeks. That was Ransom's house. She well knew he
had chosen it, farthest from the quarters and stables of his troop,
simply because it was at the end of the row, overlooking the valley, and
nearest her. Two weeks since he had said to her that he could not rid
himself of the thought of her isolation. Though off the beaten track a
full three-quarter mile, and within long carbine-range of the sentries,
she was still far away, almost unprotected. Though Indians were no
longer to be feared, there were such things as tramps and blackguards in
the settlements. She laughed at his fears. She had lived there three
years, and never heard a sound at night other than the occasional howl
of a coyote and the distant watch-cry of the sentries. She had brave old
Malloy with his gun, and Bridget with her tongue and nails; she had
Philip's sword, her own brave spirit, and her boy: what had she to fear?

All the same, struggle against it though she would, it was sweet to hear
his anxious questioning. Even if unmolested by marauders, something
might go wrong--Maudie have croup, a kerosene lamp burst. She might need
help. Who knew? "I shall put a bright lamp and reflector in the little
round garret window every night as soon as I get home," he said, "and,
should you ever be in danger or need, throw a red handkerchief over your
biggest lantern, and show it at the top window. If the sentries don't
see it at once, fire Malloy's gun." She promised, laughingly, though
repudiating the possibility. She had told herself that Philip's spirit
was all the protection she needed; but the night landscape of the
valley, the night lights at the fort, had acquired of late an interest
they never knew before. She would have scourged herself had she
believed, she would have stormed at any one who suggested, that she went
to look for his light; but if ever it failed to be there, at ten or
eleven or later, she knew it. Whatever might be his evening occupation
at the fort--a dinner, a card-party, officers' school, "non-coms"
recitation--it was his habit on reaching home to go at once to the
garret and post his sentinel light. What would he not have given for an
answering signal?

And there was the light now. He was home, then, and, despite her anger
and his banishment, he was faithful. Christmas eve, and only ten, and he
was home and watching over her. She was still quivering with wrath at
him for that ravished kiss--at least she told herself she was, and had
told him a great deal more. Was it quite fair to drive him from her
home, as she had, when Phil was so fond of him and Maudie loved him so,
and he was so devoted to them? What could he be doing at home so early?
There was a party at the adjutant's, she knew. She had been obliged to
decline. She had three invitations for Christmas dinners, and had said
no to all, gratefully. There were many who wanted to be kind to her, but
she had only one dress she considered fit to wear, so, too, had little
Maud, and as for her brave boy Phil, he had nothing--unless the suit
from Chicago came in time. Without that he could not go to the captain's
Christmas-tree. Why did not the messenger return? She was becoming
feverishly anxious.

It was too cold to remain out-of-doors. She re-entered, and paced
fitfully up and down her little parlor. She went in and bent over her
sleeping children, and rearranged the coverlets with the noiseless touch
of the mother's hand; she leaned over and kissed them softly, and now
that her surcharged nature had had free vent, and the skies were cleared
by the morning's storm, she felt far gentler, happier. Her cry had done
her good. Her hopefulness was returning--but not the messenger. What
_could_ detain him? Where could he be? It was eleven, and long after,
when at last she sighted a shadowy horseman loping across the moonlit
plain, and slowly he dismounted at her gate and came to
her--empty-handed. He was a soldier of Vane's troop, and his tale was
doleful. He had been set upon in a saloon, robbed, and beaten. The money
was gone, he had brought back nothing but bruises. As consolation he
imparted the fact that 'twas too late to get the doll and carriage. The
last ones had been sold that evening, as she had not come to claim them.
Then he had stepped in to take a drink, because he was cold, and then
the catastrophe had occurred. True or false as might be the story, there
was no doubt of the veracity of that portion which referred to the
drink. Conscious that it was too late to do anything at this hour, she
simply dismissed him, bidding him go at once to the post, barred and
locked her door, and sat down, stunned and heartsick. This, then, was
the joyous Christmas for which she had worked so long and hard! She
raised her arms in one last appeal to Heaven; then threw herself upon
her knees beside her little ones, and buried her face in her quivering
hands. What would their early waking bring to them now but
disappointment? For half an hour she knelt there helpless, stunned. Then
lifted her head--startled.

Somebody was fumbling at the storm-door. With her heart in her throat,
she listened, incredulous, fearful, then convinced. The boards creaked
and snapped beneath a heavy, stealthy tread. She heard, beyond doubt, a
muttered question, a reply. There were two of them, then! All was
darkness in her parlor now, only the light burned in the children's
room. Her heart bounded, but she stole, despite trembling knees,
noiselessly into the parlor, stooped and peered through the slats, and,
sure as fate, two men, burly, muffled so that they were unrecognizable,
were bending down at the storm-house in front of her parlor door.
Quickly she rose, scurried through the parlor, up the stairs to the room
above the kitchen, where she rapped heavily at the door. "Malloy!
Malloy!" she cried. No answer but a snore and heavy breathing. She
rattled the knob and called again. This time with success.

"Who is't?" was the startled challenge.

"It is I--Mrs. Carleton! Quick, Malloy! Two men are trying to break in
at the front door."

She heard the bound with which the old soldier leaped to the floor. She
ran into the front room. One quick glance showed her Ransom's
signal-light blazing across the mile of snow. One moment more, and,
muffled in red silk, her biggest lantern swung glowing in the window.
Then down the stairs she hurried to her children, just as Malloy, with
his carbine, and Bridget, with a six-shooter, swept gallantly into
action. She heard his fierce summons, "Who shtands there?" and listened
breathlessly. No response. "Who's dhere, I say?" Dead silence. Not even
scurrying footsteps. She crept to the window and peered out. No one
near. She raised the sash, threw open a shutter, and gazed abroad. The
little piazza was deserted, unless both were hiding inside the
storm-house. No! See! Over among the willows by the stream there are
shadowy figures and a sleigh.

"They've gone, Malloy! They are up the river-bank with a sleigh!" she
called. And then she heard him furiously unbarring the parlor door
preparatory to a rush. She heard it swing open, an impetuous sally, a
collision, a crash, the clatter of a dropped carbine against the
surrounding wood-work, a complication of anathemas and objurgations from
the dark interior, and then a dialogue in choice Hibernian.

"Are ye hurted, Terence?"

"I am. Bad scran to the blagyards that left their thrunk behind 'em!"

Trunk! What trunk? She bore a light into the parlor, and revealed
Malloy, with rueful visage, doubled up over a big wooden box planted
squarely in the doorway. Robbers, indeed! Mrs. Bridget whisked him out
of the way, ran and closed the children's door, and in another moment
had lugged the big box into the parlor, and wrenched away the top. The
two women were on their knees before it in an instant.

First they dragged forth a great flat paper box, damp and cool and
moist, and this the widow opened tremblingly. A flat layer of white
cotton, dry; then paper; a flat layer of white cotton, moist; and then,
peep! Upon the fresh, green coils of smilax, rich with fragrance, sweet,
moist, dewy, exquisite, lay store upon store of the choicest
flowers--rose-buds and rose-blossoms in cream and yellow and pink and
crimson, carnations in white and red, heliotrope and hyacinth, and
fairest pansies, and modest little violets, and gorgeous tulips, even
great callas--the first flowers she had seen in years. Oh, Captain Santa
Claus! who taught you Christmas wooing? Where learned you such art as
this? Beneath the box was yet another, bearing the stamp of the great
Chicago firm, sealed, corded, just as he had got it from the agent that
evening--Phil's longed-for suit. She hugged it with delight, while tears
started to her dancing eyes. How good he was! How thoughtful for her and
for her little ones! There, beneath, was the very white doll-carriage,
blue lining, umbrella top, and all, wherein reposed a wondrous wax doll,
the like of which Maud had never dreamed. There was a tin kitchen, with
innumerable appendages. There was a glistening pair of club-skates of
finest steel and latest patent, the very thing that Phil so longed for,
and had so lovingly resigned. There were fur cap and gloves and boots
for him, and such an elegant shawl for Mrs. Malloy! He could send them
all he chose, and no offence. But to her--on her he could lavish only
flowers.

  [Illustration: "ONE MOMENT MORE, AND, MUFFLED IN RED SILK, HER BIGGEST
  LANTERN SWUNG GLOWING IN THE WINDOW."]

And then her Irish allies returned to their slumbers, and left her to
the rapture of arranging the new presents and the contemplation of her
flowers; and she was hugging the big pasteboard box and gloating over
her treasures when there was sudden noise without, a rush up the steps,
and before she could drop her possessions the door flew open, and in
came a wild-eyed, breathless captain of cavalry, gasping the apparently
unwarrantable query, "What's the matter?"

For an instant she stared at him in astonishment. Holding tight her
flowers, she gazed at his agitated face. "Nothing," she answered. "How
could anything be wrong when you have been so--so--" But words failed
her.

"Why! your red light's burning" he explained.

"I declare! I forgot all about it!"

Then another silence. He threw himself back in an arm-chair, breathing
hard, and trying to recover his composure.

"Do you mean--didn't you mean to signal for help?" he finally asked.

"Yes, I did"--an arch and mischievous smile now brightening her face.
"When I swung it I wanted you to come quick and drive--yourself away."

Then she put down her box, and stepped impulsively towards him, two
white hands outstretched, tears starting from her eyes, the color
surging to her lovely face--"Where can I find words to thank you,
Captain Santa Claus?"

He rose quickly, his face flushed and eager, his strong hands trembling.

"Shall I tell you?" he asked.

Her head was drooping now; her eyes could not meet the fervent love and
longing in his; her bosom heaved with every breath. She could only stand
and tremble when he seized her hands.

"Kate, will you take back what you said to-day?"

She stole one glance into his passionate, pleading eyes, and her head
drooped lower.

"_Can't_ you take it back, Kate?"

A moment's pause. At last the answer. "How can I, unless--unless you
take back what you--what caused it?"

       *       *       *       *       *

Never before had the little Carletons waked to such a radiant Christmas
morning. Never had the Forties known so royal a Christmas-tree. Never
before was "Uncle Hal's" so thronged with beaming faces and happy
hearts. But among all the little ones whom his love and thoughtfulness
had blessed there was no face that shone with bliss more radiant, with
joy more deep and perfect, than that of Captain Santa Claus.

  [Illustration: "CAPTAIN SANTA CLAUS."]




       THE MYSTERY OF 'MAHBIN MILL.




                      CHAPTER I.


Placid and homelike enough were all its surroundings, one would say. It
seemed the very last place to look for romance or mystery--the very last
place in the world to be confronted by a foul and savage crime. There
was not a shadow on the bright, breeze-ruffled mill-pond whereon the
ducks were splashing and quacking noisily. Not a willow drooped its
mourning branches over the sunny shallows above, or the foaming,
rushing, tumbling torrent below the dam. Not a tree with heavy,
spreading foliage stood guard between the sunshine and the shores.
Nothing but a few pert, sturdy young hickories fringed the banks, bolt
upright in the broad glare of the noon-tide, and proclaiming in their
very attitude their detestation of all that was vague, dark, or shadowy.
There were no beetling cliffs--no firs, no pines, no dark
hemlocks--nothing in the least suggestive of gloom or tragedy. The
valley lay broad and open. Cosy homesteads and cottages gleamed here and
there along the slopes, nestled in little groves of their own. Orchards,
a vineyard, many fields of waving, yellowing grain, broad pastures
dotted with drowsy sheep and drowsier, clover-fed cattle; bright green
patches every now and then where the sugar-maples huddled together in
rustling gossip; and smiling farms and winding, well-kept country roads
lay north and south. Westward, a few hundred yards, the gleaming bosom
of the island-dotted lake into which the mill-stream poured its swirling
waters; eastward, a short mile, the roofs and chimneys of the thriving
county town; and then, over towards the distant railway, a creamy spire,
with the sacred emblem of the cross glinting and shimmering in the
sunlight, peeped through the fringe of waving tree-tops. All was quiet,
rural beauty. All told of peace, life, contentment, and prosperity this
lovely July morning of the centennial year--all save the hush and awe
that hung about old 'Mahbin mill.

Over by the waste weir, with musical splash and laughter and faint
little clouds of spray, a tumbling sheet of water was disappearing into
the cool depths below; but here, in the broad, beaten roadway around the
worn threshold, was impressive silence. The busy whir and hum and
clatter was all stilled, though elsewhere this had been a bustling
Monday morn. Men spoke in low, awe-stricken whispers, and went on
tip-toe over the creaking floor within. Peace and contentment, life and
prosperity, flooding sunshine, laughing-water, merry-throated birds made
glad the scene around; but within was silence and mystery and death.
Here, prone on the flour-dusted floor of the old office lay all that was
mortal of gray-haired Sam Morrow, the miller, murdered by murder most
foul, as one and all could see; and young Dick Graham, his right-hand
man for years, had gone, gone no one knew whither.

In all its peaceful history, Nemahbin had known no such sight or
sensation as this. Thirty years had the old mill been the rallying-point
of the farmers, to the exclusion of the attractions of the tavern in the
little town. Morrow was a character--a man who read and remembered, a
man who took the papers and had an opinion, backed by good reasoning, of
public men and public affairs of the day. He grew to be an authority on
many and most subjects, but he never grew to be popular. Morrow had an
ugly temper when crossed, a lashing, venomous tongue when angered, and,
of late, there had been growing up among the farmers who drove thither
with their grain a suspicion that old Sam, in his grasping, money-loving
greed had become unscrupulous. In this there was rank injustice. Crabbed
and ill-tempered as the man had often been, surly and rough of speech as
he had become, there did not live a more rigidly honest man--his word
was his bond. His own dealings were beyond question, and six months
before his death no man within a thirty-mile radius of Nemahbin had ever
been heard to hint at such a thing as sharp practice at 'Mahbin mill.

He had not been a happy man. His home life had been far from sweet and
peaceful. Ten years ago his patient and devoted wife had died--worn out,
some neighbors were good enough to say, by his outbreaks of fury and his
cutting injustice. But he had loved her, loved her well, and he mourned
her bitterly. Two children she had left him: one a son, high-spirited,
impulsive, and wilful, between whom and his father there waged incessant
feud while he was at home, and between whom and that same father there
passed frequent letters of most loving description when the boy was
placed at boarding-school. Young Sam had been liberally provided for
when he went away, and his pocket-money was unstinted. The boy was not
vicious, but the restraints of school discipline seemed to tempt him
from one mad exploit to another, and, after two years of sorely tried
patience, the authorities of the school requested his withdrawal. Sam
was fifteen then, a bright, quick-witted fellow, a leader in all boyish
sports and mischief, and immensely popular among the farm folk around
Nemahbin. His chum and intimate friend from early boyhood had been Dick
Graham; like himself, an only son of an idolizing mother, but, unlike
himself, compelled to labor for her support. When young Sam had been
sent away to school after his mother's death, the old man was noticed on
several consecutive days hovering uncertainly about the little country
store where his boy's friend was working from morn till night doing hard
jobs and thankfully carrying home his scanty wages at the end of the
week. One day he blustered in on the "boss" with brief ceremony:

"Murphy," said he, "you work that boy too hard, and pay him too little.
If you don't double his wages, I will, and take him out to the mill to
boot." Murphy was vastly angered at the proceeding, and Murphy's
adherents voted around the fire that night that old Sam Morrow had no
business to be "spilin' the market for boys," and undermining other
folk's concerns in that way; but the miller stuck to his word; Murphy
would not agree, and at the end of the month Dick Graham moved out to
the mill, where his bright face, and cheery, alert ways, soon deepened
the interest old Sam felt in him for his own boy's sake. Then he moved
Mrs. Graham out there, and placed her and her boy in the cottage near
the mill-house, as his own home was termed. And then the minister of the
pretty church over towards the railway had come over to call on Mr.
Morrow--who was not of the fold--and to shake hands with him, and when
he went away he bent down and kissed pretty little Nellie--the miller's
only daughter, and his darling--and had asked that his own little girls
might come over to make her acquaintance and to gather pond lilies. All
this had happened ten years back, when Nellie was a blue-eyed,
sunny-haired child, and Sam was in his first turbulent year at school.

Little Nell had to go to her own school very soon. It lay across country
over where the minister lived, and many was the time in the rough spring
weather when Dick Graham had to carry her over the rushing brooks that
burst across the roadway from the deep-drifted slopes of snow. He was a
splendid, sturdy boy of fifteen then--manly, truthful, independent; and
loyally he strove to serve his benefactor in the clattering old mill,
and still more loyally he watched over the bonny child who seemed that
master's all in all.

Things went smoothly enough, in all conscience, a year or two. Dick
trudged off to evening school during the wintry season, and had found a
good friend in that same minister, who lent him books and helped him
along in his studies; but then Sam came home, virtually expelled from
school, and then began a series of domestic troubles between father and
son that brought sorrow and anxiety to all. Old Sam in his wrath would
taunt the boy with having disgraced him, and young Sam in his flush of
temper would threaten to quit his father's home for good and all. Dick
strove to reason with his friend, but the boy was sensitive and stung to
the quick. A kind word, a loving touch from his father would have melted
his heart in an instant. He would have gone back to school full of
apology and promises to amend; but his father's eyes were averted and
his tongue edged with fire. Sam swore it was of no use to try and be
patient. Then Dick went to the minister in his perplexity, and that
worthy gentleman came strolling over to the mill, and looking over the
ground, so to speak. His was a diplomatic mind, and it had reason to be.
It was easy to win the son's confidence. He, Dick, and Sam junior soon
formed a trio of fast friends, and before long another scheme was
broached; and, with some surly misgiving on old Morrow's part, Sam was
sent to another and larger school. It was the old man's hobby that his
boy should be well educated. But a plethora of pocket-money, said the
authorities of the first establishment, had been the cause of his
downfall, and now the old man sternly refused to give his son a cent.
All his expenses were to be met and paid, and the principal of the new
school was to give him a certain trifling sum on holidays. There was no
known trouble for a year as the result of this arrangement. The boy felt
that he had amends to make and so did his best. A widowed sister of old
Morrow had come to his home and taken charge of it and little Nell, and
there was another era of comparative peace.

But to young Sam the school life was far from bright. Stinted now where
he had formerly been indulged, he found himself forced into a position
greatly contrasted with the prominence and popularity he had enjoyed
among the youngsters of the year before. He was beginning to learn the
lesson that sooner or later saddens and often embitters the brightest
minds--the lesson that even here in free America money is the standard
of even personal value. It was not so with Western boys before the war.
Money was a thing well-nigh unknown to them, but the "flush" days
brought with them new ideas, and the ideas stuck fast long after the
flush days had gone. Sam Morrow found that he was no longer the pet of
the "best set." Money and reckless good-nature had won it for him in the
old school; good-nature unbacked by money was no help here at the new.
Sam said nothing to his father, but his letters to Dick became more
frequent. He stood to his work like a little man, and despite the sorrow
and loneliness of that year he came home the better for it all. He had
made excellent progress. His teacher had praised him; the minister put
him through his paces and extolled him; and old Morrow, proud and
pleased, wanted to unbend and send the boy back for his second year with
some substantial token of his pleasure; but stubborn pride on both
sides seemed to stand between father and son. Sam junior would ask
nothing, and the old man's reply to the minister's well-meant suggestion
was, "Well, if the boy wants money now let him come and say so." And
this Sam swore he would not do, and so it ended.

Next year there was a catastrophe. Sam was now a stalwart, handsome
young fellow of seventeen. "Ready to go to college," said his teachers.
One day old Morrow received a telegraphic despatch begging him to come
at once to the school. He went, and in four days was home again with Sam
and a broken heart. Small sums of money had been missed from time to
time by various pupils of the school. Suspicion had fastened on a sharp
boy who was believed to spend more money than he legitimately received.
A watch was kept, a search was made, and Sam Morrow was detected passing
at a store some of the marked money. Questioned as to where he got it,
he for the time declined to answer, until told that he was suspected of
the theft. He then confessed that it was part of a small sum Fielding,
the sharp boy aforementioned, paid him from time to time for translating
his Cæsar for him. Fielding promptly, and with much apparent
indignation, denied the story. Receiving such assistance and passing off
another boy's work as his own was an offence for which a pupil was
always severely punished. The case rested as a question of veracity
between the two boys, with the odds vastly in favor of Sam--for a few
hours only, pending further investigation, but that investigation was
fatal. At least twelve dollars of the missing money was found secreted
in Sam's books and clothing. He had furiously denied everything; he
protested in vain that he had no idea how it came there, but his lonely,
solitary ways were remembered, his habits of hanging about the
dormitories apparently at study when the boys were at play--and there
was no one to stand up for him. Old Morrow came, listened in crushed
silence, and took his boy home. Honest to the backbone himself, he was
sore stricken to think that his son should steal. He had heard first the
stories of the teachers and pupils before being ushered into the
presence of the accused. All hot impulse and fury, he had come upon his
lonely and friendless son, and when the poor fellow, bursting into tears
in his misery and excitement of the moment, had thrown his arms about
his father's neck, sobbing, "I have not done it, I am innocent," he had
sternly unclasped the pleading hands and ordered him to prepare at once
to go home with him. Sam seemed utterly stunned by his father's refusal
to hear a word. He was almost crazed with misery when he reached home.
The minister and Dick listened to his story and believed it. Old Sam
shut himself up; refused to see any one for some days, until Nellie's
tears and petitions secured a brief interview for the worthy churchman.
This time the latter was not diplomatic. He believed the boy wronged
from beginning to end. He told old Morrow in so many words that his
pride and stubbornness were sin and shame, and roused the old man to
such a pitch of wrath that he shrieked out his hope that the son who had
disgraced him might never come before his sight again--and he never
did. Sam Morrow heard the furious words. Pride came to his aid; and
never saying a word of farewell to the friends whom he knew would strive
to dissuade him, but clinging long to sweet twelve-year-old Nellie, and
sobbing as though his heart would break, Sam left his father's roof that
night. Five years had passed away, and not one word was ever heard from
him. The old man's curse had indeed come home to rest; his fading eyes
were never more to be blessed by the sight of his son.

But this was only half of his misery. The minister left the house with
his blood up; went forthwith to that school and was closeted some hours
with his old friend the principal. Sam's side of the story had an
intelligent advocate; a revulsion of feeling had set in; boys and men
both began to recall good points about Morrow that had not occurred to
them before, and queer things about that fellow Fielding. In less than a
month after Sam's disappearance there came a letter to old Morrow one
day which he read in gasping amaze, and then fell prone and senseless on
the floor of the very office where he lay now prone and dead. Sam's
story was true; Fielding had confessed even to having stolen the money
and hiding portions of it in Sam's property, to divert suspicion from
himself.

But now came a long illness in which old Morrow lay at death's door. He
raved for his boy. He cursed his own mad folly and injustice. He did
everything that could be suggested to bring the wanderer home again. The
story went into the papers. Advertisements were circulated through the
Western States. Even detectives were called upon, but to no purpose.
Sam never returned. The old man, bent and sorrowing, but with as fiery a
temper and an even more envenomed tongue, seemed to live only for
Nellie's sake and the hope of once more greeting his boy. Nellie herself
had spent some years at boarding-school and had grown into a lovely girl
of eighteen. Dick Graham was a fine, manly fellow, good to look at and
better to trust and tie to. "Too good a man to stay grubbing for old
Morrow at the mill," said the neighbors. "Far too valuable and
intelligent for the humble stipend that is paid him," said the minister.
"Old Morrow" had grown miserly and grasping, said Public Opinion--and it
was true. He had no confidant; he had no friends to whom he could open
his heart. In dumb sorrow he shrank from the world, ever looking with
haggard eyes for some trace of the lost boy whom his injustice and
cruelty had driven into exile. Nellie was his one comfort. He gloried in
her budding beauty, but he meant to make a lady of her, and even during
her school vacation she did not always come home. It was too lonely and
sad a spot for one so bright as she, said the old man, and he willingly
permitted her to visit school friends in their city homes, and went
month after month to see her--and bear to her, and the friends she
liked, huge and uncouth offerings of candy or flowers in his efforts to
show his appreciation of their interest in his precious child. Nellie
was a princess in his eyes, but others saw in her a somewhat spoiled and
over-petted beauty. That is--some others--most others. There was one
who worshipped her as even her father never dreamed of doing; one to
whom her faintest wish was law; one to whom her lightest word was
sacred, and to whom her smile, or the touch of her little hand meant
heaven. People wondered how Dick Graham could consent to hang on there
at 'Mahbin mill, "grubbing" for that grasping old Morrow like a slave.
Poor Dick! Slave he was, as many another had been, but not the miller's.
He could and would have broken with him three years before, when the
death of his invalid mother left the young fellow independent of all
claim--but he could not and would not break the tie that bound him to
'Mahbin and the dusty, dingy, red-shingled old mill. He idolized Nellie
Morrow, and she held his life in her hands.

She had learned to be very fond of Dick in the year that followed her
brother's disappearance. She had grown into his heart the year before
she went to school, and when she came home from her first vacation,
child though she was, she knew it and gloried in it. Each year added to
her maidenly graces, and to his thraldom, and the very winter that
preceded this centennial summer Dick had brought her home from a
sleighing-party one night fairly wild with joy and pride. In answer to
his impetuous and trembling words she had murmured to him that he was
dearer to her than anybody else could be, and he believed it, though
Miss Nellie had grave doubts in her own mind as to the truth of that
statement even when she made it. Still, it was very nice to have the
best-looking and smartest young man in and around 'Mahbin for her own,
when she was home, but he was not quite to be compared with the
exquisites she saw in the city streets, or the brothers of some of her
school friends. And there was one--oh! so romantic a fellow! whom she
met that very winter in Chicago when spending Thanksgiving holidays with
a schoolmate; a dark-eyed, splendid-looking man, tall, straight,
athletic, with bronzed features and such a strange history! He was much
older than these school-girls. He must have been thirty or thereabouts,
and was own cousin to her friend. He had been a soldier when very young;
had run away from home and fought in the great war, and had been a
wanderer almost ever since; had been to California and to sea, and--they
did not really know where else. Nellie was too young to notice that he
had not been cordially welcomed by the old people on his arrival at the
home of her friend. He had been wild and reckless, had "Cousin Harry,"
and papa did not like him, was the explanation of subsequent coldness
she could not help seeing. But to the girls he was perfect. He had so
mournful, mysterious, pathetic a manner. He was trying so hard to find
some steady employment--was so eager to settle down--and he soon became
so interested in Nellie, so devoted to her in fact, and the very day
they returned to school--how it came about she never knew exactly, his
sympathetic manner did it, perhaps,--she told him about her brother and
his utter disappearance, and then she wondered at the sudden eager light
in his eyes, the color that shot into his face through bronze and all,
and the unmistakable agitation with which he had asked the question,
"What was his name?" For an instant she believed he must have met Sam
and known him, but this he denied, denied even when he asked to see his
photograph.

Then "Cousin Harry" had been searching in his questions about Nellie,
her father, his age, his property, her prospects. It was easy enough to
extract all manner of information from her school-girl friend, and, when
Nellie went back to school, she had reason to believe there was
something very real in Mr. Henry Frost's decided interest in her.

She knew Dick loved her. She had given him every reason to hope that she
was growing to care for him; yet before the Christmas holidays she twice
had more reason to remember Harry Frost's devoted manner--and when she
started home for those very holidays he was on the train.

It was Christmas eve that sent Dick Graham home happier than he had ever
been in his life, but in one short week the happiness had fled. Mr.
Frost had taken up his abode at the little tavern in the village; had
acquired some strange influence over old Morrow, and was playing the
devoted to Nellie in a way she too plainly liked. Early in January she
went back to school, but Frost remained. He had indeed gained a powerful
influence over the lonely old man--no one knew how--for Morrow invited
the stranger to his house to stay awhile, and, before January was over,
the tall, dark-eyed, dark-haired, athletic man was occupying a desk in
the office of the old mill.

There was great speculation and conjecture and gossip all around
'Mahbin over this matter. The mill had been doing rather less business
than usual; no additional men were needed. The office required little
attention, for old Morrow had kept his own books and done his own
letter-writing for years. If a clerk were needed, why take in a stranger
whom nobody knew, they urged, when there was young Graham, whom
everybody liked and trusted? And yet, before spring had fairly set in,
old Morrow had turned over his bookkeeping and writing to this Mr.
Frost; and though the key of the little safe was never intrusted to any
hand but that of the master, and though there was one desk no one but
Morrow himself could open, Frost was soon as much at home in the mill as
though he had lived there a lifetime.

When the brief Easter holiday came an odd thing happened. Nellie Morrow
declined to go with any of her school-friends. She wrote that she wanted
to see dear old 'Mahbin again, and delightedly the miller brought her
home. It was a week of torment to poor Dick Graham; a holiday that
proved far from satisfactory to Morrow, for he saw with sudden start
that his bonny Nell was becoming vastly interested in Mr. Frost, whom he
was beginning to distrust.

When Frost had come to Nemahbin, in December, he had sought the old
miller, requested a confidential interview, told him, with all apparent
frankness, of his meeting with Nellie at the home of his uncle, near
Chicago, and of her telling him the sad story of Sam's disappearance.

"Mr. Morrow," said he, "I believe I met and knew your son on the
Pacific coast. What is more, I believe I can find him." The miller knew
that Frost's relations were people of high position, but did not know
that the man before him was very far from standing well in their esteem.
But he had been imposed upon more than once by people who sought to make
money from his eagerness to obtain any clue to the whereabouts of his
missing boy. He closely questioned Frost, and was speedily convinced
that there was no imposition here. He had known him, and known him well;
for, even in little tricks of speech and manner, Frost could describe
Sam to the life. The old man's first impulse was to take Frost with him
and start for the Pacific coast at once; but the latter pointed out to
him that the journey to mid Arizona was very long and expensive, and
that he had reason to believe Sam had left there and gone with miners to
Montana. He had friends and correspondents; he would write; he did
write, and showed Morrow the letters, and they went apparently to
Prescott, Arizona, but not for three months did answers come; and then
they were vague and indefinite, and meantime the old man's heart had
been torn with suspense and anxiety, and he rebelled at the restriction
placed upon him by Frost, that he should admit to nobody that they were
on the trail of his absent son--that Frost had known him well "in the
mines," as he said, though by another name. He disliked it still more
that there was so much of his own life while in the distant West of
which Frost gave varying accounts, and always avoided speaking; and now
it was plain that he was "making up" to Nellie; it was plain that she
was far from averse to the attentions of this handsome and distinguished
fellow, with his air of reserve and mystery; and it was plain that poor
Dick Graham was both miserable and suspicious. He had been set against
Frost from the very first.

Still there was a certain element with whom he had attained
popularity--the young men about the village, and especially those of the
large and thriving town over on the railway. He was a superb horseman,
and had ridden with grace and ease a horse that poor Dick had pronounced
utterly unmanageable. Then, one night during the Easter holidays, a
large party of the young people of Nemahbin had driven over to town to
attend the ball given by a local military organization. Nellie was the
belle on the occasion, and was coquetting promiscuously with the
officers and the members of the company, evidently to the annoyance of
that hitherto unrivalled Mr. Frost. Even gloomy Dick Graham found some
comfort in this, but his comfort gave way to dismay when, after a brief
and rather clumsily executed drill of his command, the captain had
suddenly turned over his sword to Mr. Frost, and the latter, as though
by previous arrangement, stepped forward, and, with all the ease of an
expert tactician and drill-master, and with stirring, martial voice and
bearing, put the company through one evolution after another with
surprising rapidity, and finally retired, the applauded and envied hero
of the occasion. Nellie had monopolized him the rest of the evening, and
all men held him in great esteem. Questioned as to his wonderful
proficiency, he laughingly answered, "Why, I soldiered through the last
two years of the war in the volunteers, and saw a good deal of the
regulars afterwards, out West--that is, I used to watch them with great
interest," and quickly changed the subject.

But Dick Graham's jealous eyes--and no eyes are so sharp as those whose
scrutiny is so whetted--marked that he had changed color, and that his
manner was nervous and embarrassed. From that day on he watched Frost
like a cat.

June came in with sunshine and roses, and a great centennial celebration
and exhibition in the far East, and a great convention for the
nomination of a president, and the country was so taken up with these
stirring events that, when June went out, precious little attention was
paid to an affair that, a year earlier or later, would have thrilled the
continent with horror. In one short, sharp, desperate struggle of a
quarter of an hour, Custer, the daring cavalry leader of the great
war--Custer, the yellow-haired, the brave, the dashing, the hero of
romance and fiction and soldierly story--Custer and his whole command
had been swept out of existence by an overwhelming force of Indians.

Nellie was home again, and Frost was now occupying a room in Sam
Morrow's little house. The old man had come to Dick but a short time
before her return, and, with something of his old kind and confidential
way, had said to him that Frost was to remain with them but a few weeks
longer, and that he was unwilling to have him under the same roof with
Nellie even during that little while. Morrow had begun to look on Frost
as a liar. He felt certain that he had known his lost boy, but doubted
now his pretensions as to his ability to find him. Indeed, Frost
admitted that he had lost the clue, and it was at this time that Morrow
at last told the minister of the matter. That he was being deceived in
more ways than one the old man was convinced, yet had nothing tangible
to work upon; but his worst suspicions had not really done justice to
the facts in the case. Morrow would have killed the man could he have
known the truth--that he knew well just where the missing son was to be
found, and would not tell--and that, virtually robbing the old miller of
one child, he had now well-nigh robbed him of the other. Between him and
Nellie letters had secretly passed, at regular intervals, ever since the
Christmas vacation. She was fascinated, yet she, too, distrusted. He
swore that he loved her--longed to make her his wife--yet forbade her
confessing to her father that such was the case. More than that, he had
cautioned her to look for an indifferent manner on his part on her
return. He explained that her father disliked him, and would send him
away instantly if their love were suspected. He even urged her to
encourage Dick Graham. He was playing a desperate game, indeed. He had
hoped to win the father's confidence with the daughter's love, and
secure his consent--and blessing--and fortune; but, as matters stood, he
knew that, though he might win Nellie, it would be in defiance of the
father's will, and that meant disinheritance and banishment for both.

By every art in his power he had striven, of late, to curry favor with
Graham, but without success. Dick was coldly civil, and would have been
thankful for an excuse at open rupture. He suspected Frost of having won
Nellie away from him, but could prove absolutely nothing. He believed
him to be a mere adventurer, and had urged the miller to write to those
connections of whom he had boasted--the Chicago relatives--and ascertain
his history; but Morrow had sternly silenced him with the information
that he knew it all--at least he knew enough. "Mr. Frost is here for a
purpose, and it is sufficient that I have brought him here," was the old
man's reply to further objections, and so poor Dick felt that nothing
more was to be said.

But with Nellie's return came a revival of hope. She was sweeter,
prettier than ever, and her manner to Dick was now as gentle, and even
confidential, as it had been careless and indifferent during the late
winter. She came home about the 15th of June, and for the fortnight that
followed it was Dick, not Mr. Frost, whom she seemed to favor. Graham
hardly dared believe the evidence of his senses, but was too blissful to
analyze matters. The old man, of late, had taken to spending some hours
in the evening down at his office in the mill, and Frost was generally
closeted there with him. Very surly and sad and irascible the miller had
grown. He was bitter and unjust to everybody. Several times he had
angrily reprimanded Graham in the presence of customers and mill-hands
for things that were entirely of Frost's doing. There had been errors
in the accounts, over which the farmers had growled not a little; and
one day, bursting from a group of men who had been calling his attention
to a matter of the kind, the old man stamped furiously into the office,
shut the door after him with a bang, and was heard to say, in loud and
angry tones, to some one, "Now the next time this happens, by God, you
go!"

A moment after, Dick Graham came from the office into the mill, and that
night it was told in Nemahbin that the old man had threatened to
discharge him. He and Graham seemed to get along very badly, and no man
could explain it.

But, gaining hope from Nellie's smiles, Dick was ready to bear up
against the old man's fit of rage. At heart, he knew the miller liked
and trusted him. There was much he could not fathom, but was content to
wait and watch. Meantime he kept his eye on Frost--noted how nervous and
ill at ease he was becoming, marked his labored attempts to win his
friendship, and withheld it the more guardedly.

One day, about a week after Nellie's return, business required that he
and Frost should go together to the neighboring town on the railway.
They were standing by the elevator on a side-track with a knot of young
men, when a train came rumbling in from the East, and as it drew up at
the station it was seen that the rear car was filled with soldiers.

"Hello!" shouted one of the party. "Let's go and have a look at the
regulars." Dick started with the rest, but suddenly stopped. An
indefinable sensation prompted him to look around for Frost, and Frost
was nowhere to be seen. Turning quickly back, he entered the open
doorway of the little warehouse, and there, in a dark corner, peering
through a knot-hole over towards the station, was his mysterious
companion. Dick approached him on tiptoe, and clapped him sharply on the
shoulder.

"Come, man! come and see the soldiers; some of your friends may be
there."

White as death was Frost's face as he turned with fearful start. Then,
seeing it was Graham, and suspecting it was a trick, he flushed crimson,
and angrily, though with trembling lips, replied,

"My friends! what do you mean? How the devil should I have friends among
them? Go yourself, if you want to see them, but leave me alone."

And Graham turned away, more than ever convinced that, in some way,
Frost's knowledge of soldiering was derived from personal experiences he
wished to conceal.

A week more, and he had another opportunity of testing it. Going to the
village for the mail, he found a group of men eagerly listening to one
of their number who was reading aloud the terrible details of the Custer
massacre. Graham heard it all in silence, got the mill mail, and walked
thoughtfully homeward. Old Morrow was seated with Nellie in the porch,
and Frost, hat in hand, was standing at the foot of the steps, looking
up at them as he spoke deferentially to the miller.

"Any news, Dick?" asked the miller, shortly.

"Terrible news, sir!" said Graham, eying Frost closely as he spoke.
"General Custer and his regiment, the Seventh Cavalry, were butchered by
the Indians a fortnight ago."

Frost fairly staggered. A wild light shot into his face; his hat fell
from his nerveless hand.

"I do not believe a word of it!" he gasped. "It's a lie! They never
could! Give me the paper," he demanded, hoarsely; but Graham coolly
avoided his attempt to seize it and handed the paper to Morrow. Eying
him closely, as Dick had done, the miller tore the wrapper with
provoking deliberation, and finally gave the contents to Frost. He had
partially recovered self-control by this time, but his hands shook like
palsy as he unfolded the paper.

"My God! it's true!--mainly true, at least," he gasped, while drops of
sweat started to his forehead. "All with him were killed. It has knocked
the breath out of me. I knew so many of them out there, you know."

"In Arizona?" asked Morrow.

"Ye-yes--Arizona!" he stammered. "It tells here what officers were
killed, but does not give the names of the men. I wish it did. I wish I
knew. They are the ones I saw most of." Then he stopped short, as though
he had said too much. And all the time both Morrow and Graham had never
ceased their rigid scrutiny, and he knew it. He hurriedly went away.



                     CHAPTER III


That night Nellie was fitful and constrained in manner. Dick went home
restless and unhappy. It was very late, but there was the light burning
brightly down at the office.

"Who are there?" he asked the lad who did odd jobs around the miller's
house, and who slept in Graham's cottage.

"Mr. Morrow and Frost. Gosh! how the old man has been cussin' him. He
cusses everybody round here now, don't he? I heerd down in the village
you was going to quit."

Graham made no reply, but turned gloomily into his own room.

Next morning Frost came to him looking very pale and nervous.

"Graham," he said, "I want to ask a great favor. I must go to Chicago,
and I want twenty dollars. Will you lend me that much? I will give it to
you again next week."

"Why do you come to me?" asked Graham, shortly.

"The old man and I are at loggerheads, and--I know he would not let me
have it. Once in Chicago, and I can get money, you shall have it--sure."

Graham hesitated. He had saved but little from the small stipend
allowed him, but a thought struck him that the surest way to get rid of
an objectionable acquaintance was to lend him money. It might keep Frost
from returning. Stepping to his worn old desk, he unlocked and opened
it, took from an inner compartment a small roll of bills, counted out
twenty dollars, and handed it to Frost without a word.

"You think you won't get this back, Graham, but you will," said the
latter, as he eagerly took it and went away. This was a Tuesday morning.
On the following Sunday Dick Graham was amazed to see Frost standing at
the miller's gate talking earnestly with Nellie, who dropped her head
and scurried into the house as she caught sight of his approaching form.

"Back, you see!" said Frost, holding out his hand, which Dick
unwillingly took. He had returned a new man. His clothes, that had begun
to grow shabby, were replaced by new ones of stylish cut and make; his
eyes were bright, his color high, his voice ringing and animated; his
manner was brisk and cheery, yet nervous.

"Have you seen Mr. Morrow?" was all Graham could find to say by the way
of welcome. "He is down at the mill, and wants you."

It had been a wretched five days for Dick. Twice he had surprised Nellie
in tears that she could not explain, and the old man had treated him
with gross injustice on several occasions. All his old fury of manner
had been redoubled. He openly accused Dick of having furnished money to
aid Frost in getting away when he knew him to be a cheat and an
impostor; knew that Frost had garbled the accounts and been stealing at
the mill, and in all probability he was no better than an accomplice.
Twice Dick's indignation and wrath had given way to angry retort, and
the story had gone far and wide around Nemahbin that the old man and the
young one were bitter enemies, and Dick had openly vowed he could stand
it no longer. Then Nellie, who had been coquetting with his hopes and
fears, had once again plunged him into the depths. He loved her blindly,
madly, poor fellow, and was bent as she willed, but the time had come
when he could brook his ills no longer; and that Sunday evening,
standing by the rushing stream down below the dam, and moodily throwing
stone after stone into the dark waters, Dick Graham had determined to
face his fate, and have the matter ended then and there.

He was to take her to the village for evening service. She and her aunt
quite frequently spent the night with friends in 'Mahbin in preference
to coming back to the mill through the darkness, and this bright July
day had turned to night, dark, cloudy, overcast, with heavy fog-wreaths
whirling through the cheerless air. The rain came pattering down as they
left the church, and hospitable friends urged their stay. Ten minutes
later Dick was standing in the bright light of a parlor, face to face
with the girl who had been his idol from boyhood until now. They were
alone. She saw in his face that the crisis had come, and was pale and
nervous as he was pale and determined, yet she strove to assume a light
and laughing manner.

"What is it, Dick? You have been solemn as an undertaker for a whole
week, and to-night you are like--I don't know what."

Quickly he seized her hands, and held them firmly against every effort
to draw them away. His heart beat like a hammer, his eyes were flaming
with the fire of his love, his lips quivered and twitched with the
intensity of his emotion.

"Nellie," he said, "I can stand it no longer! That man is back again; I
saw you with him to-day. I--oh!--time and again I have told you how I
loved you. It is more than love--it is worship, almost. It has been so
ever since you were a little girl and I carried you to school. You did
care for me--you know you did--until this fellow came here and made us
all wretched. Nellie, I will have an answer to-night. I will know if you
love me; tell me, tell me now." It was no longer an imploring prayer, it
was a demand.

Struggle though she might, she could not free herself. His eyes seemed
to burn into hers, and she shrank from their wild gaze as though they
stung to her very soul.

"Answer me," he said. "You told me you loved me last Christmas. Do you
love me now?"

"Oh, Dick, I--I didn't know. I could not tell," she gasped; "I thought I
loved you, but--"

"But now you know you love him, is it?" he almost hissed. "Do you know
what I think of him? He is a scoundrel, a man without home or name. He
has a history he dare not tell; he lies every time he answers a
question; he wants to marry you because you will be rich, but that's
all."

"You shall not speak of him so," she interrupted in wrath and
indignation. "He is a gentleman, and he does love me, and all you say of
him is false. I know he has been unhappy, unfortunate--"

"He has been more than that, I'll be bound," sneered Graham, all bitter,
jealous anger now. "He is a criminal of some kind--mark my words."

"How dare you?" she cried; "oh, how dare you? He would crush you if you
would dare speak so to him. I will never forgive you--never. I never
want to see or speak to you again--"

"What do you say?" he gasped, livid with pain and misery.

"I never want to see or speak to you again," she repeated, though her
eyes quailed before the dumb agony of his. For a moment there was dead
silence. Then with one long look in her paling face he said, slowly,
almost humbly:

"I take you at your word. Life has been hell to me here for a long time,
and you--you, whom I loved--have driven me from the only home I ever
had."

One instant more and he was gone, leaving her sobbing wildly, she hardly
knew why.

And early next morning came the fearful news that her father lay
murdered at the mill.

A week of intense excitement followed. Not only in Nemahbin was the
mysterious death of old Morrow the one subject of conversation, but all
through the surrounding counties people talked of nothing else. By
sunset of that beautiful Monday the news had spread far and wide; the
reporters of the city journals were already on the spot, and by Tuesday
night the verdict of the coroner's jury had gone forth and the officers
of the law were in search of the criminal, whose name flashed over the
humming wires from one ocean to another. Richard Graham stood accused of
the murder of his employer, and Richard Graham had gone, no one knew
whither.

But there were those who could not and would not believe it of him, and
foremost among them was the minister. The evidence against him was
mainly circumstantial; the principal accuser was Frost, and the chain of
circumstances that linked Graham with the crime were substantially as
follows:

The boy who worked around the mill-house and slept in the second story
of the Graham's cottage testified that about half an hour before sunset
Sunday evening he heard old Morrow "cussing and swearing" at somebody
down in the mill, while he was going out to drive the cows home; didn't
see who it was, but ten minutes afterwards as he came back he saw Graham
pitching stones into the stream down below the mill, "looking queer;"
called to him twice, but Graham did not answer; supposed he was mad at
the old man for cussing him so--they had had lots of trouble for a week;
heard the old man tell him he was going to get rid of him if he didn't
do different.

That night he (the witness) went out in the country a piece and did not
come home until half-past ten. It was all dark around the mill when he
got back. It had been raining, but the sky was brighter then, and as he
passed the south door he was surprised to see it open. The old man
generally locked it and went home early. He was just going to go and
shut it when a man came out. It "skeered" him because the old man had
given him fits for being out late and lying abed in the morning, so he
stopped short to wait until he got away. The man shut and locked the
door, and walked up the road ahead of him, and then he saw that it was
not the old man, but young Graham, and that Mr. Graham was going
straight up to the mill-house, so he cut across to the cottage and got
in soft as he could. Yes, it might have been eleven o'clock by that
time, and he did not want Mr. Frost, or Mr. Graham either, to know he
was out so late. It was all dark at the mill-house, and all dark at the
cottage, but Mr. Frost heard him and called him into his room and asked
for a dipper of water. Mr. Frost was in bed and asked him what time it
was, and said he had been asleep, but waked up with a headache; told him
he did not know the time; didn't want him to know it was so late, 'cause
he might tell the old man. Mr. Frost asked him where Dick was, and just
then they heard Dick coming up the front steps, and the witness went up
to his own room. Heard them talking down-stairs for a little while, but
could not understand what they were saying; did not listen particularly;
went to sleep, and slept a good while; was awakened by hearing some
noise in Dick's room, which was directly under his--sounded like
something glass being broken, but everything was quiet right off, and
he thought he might have dreamed it. Next thing he knowed it was
morning, and Mandy, the cook over at the mill-house, was calling to him
from the bottom of the stairs to get up right off--the master hadn't
come home all night, and there was people waitin' down at the mill.
Dick's room was open and the bed hadn't been slept on, and his clothes
and things were all thrown all round on the floor; it looked queer, she
said; he was gone, too; ran down as quick as he could dress and called
Mr. Frost, who was asleep in bed and did not wake easy; called him three
or four times and banged on the door, and at last opened it and called
him louder; then he woke up slowly and wanted to know the matter; told
him Mandy said Mr. Morrow had not been home and that Dick was not there,
and there was farmers with wheat at the mill. He said go and open the
mill and he would be down in a minute; told him that Dick had the key
and had locked the mill late last night; saw him do it. Mr. Frost jumped
right up in bed excited like and said, "You saw him do it! When, where
were you?" and so had to tell him about Dick's being there, coming out
of the mill late as nearly eleven o'clock. Then Mandy came back and said
she found the key hanging on the peg inside the hall-door, and witness
took it and went down and opened the south door. The office window-shade
was down and the office door on the east side was shut, and so it was
kinder dark, but he and the two men waiting there went right through the
mill into the office, and there they found the old man dead on the
floor, with lots of blood streaming from his head. It skeered him
awful, and they ran out. Then Mr. Frost came, and he was pale, and said,
"My God, what an awful thing!" and they sent right to 'Mahbin for Dr.
Green, and the mayor and constable; and that was all he knowed.

Doctor Green's testimony, divested of professional technicalities, was
to the effect that the miller had been killed at least six or eight
hours, and that death was the result of the gun-shot wound through the
head. The bullet was found imbedded in the skull at the back of the
head, and had entered under the left eye. The face was burned and
blackened by powder. No other wound or hurt was found upon the body. The
doctor had arrived at the mill about 6.45 a.m., accompanied by Mr.
Lowrie, the mayor of Nemahbin, an old friend of the deceased. When they
arrived, Mr. Frost was in charge of the premises, and stated that no one
had entered the office since the moment he had arrived at the spot.

Mr. Lowrie testified to coming with the doctor; being received by Mr.
Frost and ushered into the office. The deceased was then lying on his
face with his feet near the window. There was much blood on the floor,
and spattered on the legs of an office chair that stood close by the
head. No weapon of any kind was found in the office, and the object of
the murder was explained at a glance; the desk was rifled, the safe was
open, and while the papers therein were found undisturbed, the cash
drawer, in which it was known that the deceased generally kept a good
deal of money, was empty. Other testimony established the fact that he
had as much as five hundred dollars in the drawer on the previous
Saturday. In presence of the mayor, constable, Mr. Frost, and one or two
neighbors, the bullet had been cut out from behind by the doctor. It was
slightly flattened, and in shape, and in its exact weight as
subsequently determined, it corresponded exactly with those of a
"five-shooting" revolver of peculiar make known as "the Avenger." To Mr.
Lowrie's knowledge only two pistols of that kind were owned in that
neighborhood, and both had been bought by him two years before at a time
when there was a scare about mad dogs. One he still owned, and it was
now at home, locked up in his desk; the other was Richard Graham's, and
he had seen it in his possession less than a week ago.

Mr. Frost's testimony, given with much emotion and apparent reluctance,
was to this effect: His first knowledge of the murder was Monday morning
about six o'clock, when summoned to the mill by the tidings that Mr.
Morrow had not been home all night. Going to the east entrance, he found
the boy, Schaffer, and two young farmers, frightened and excited over
what they had seen in the office. He went in at once, followed by them,
and saw at a glance that murder had been done, though his first thought
was suicide. He merely turned the body enough to see that the wound was
in the face, and to satisfy himself and the others that no pistol was
near, and then, pointing to the fact that the safe and desk were both
open, he ordered everybody out and closed the door until the arrival of
the officials from Nemahbin.

Questioned as to his own movements the previous night, he said that
after supper, when Graham drove the ladies to town, he himself had gone
home and read an hour, but, feeling drowsy, had gone to bed, waking up
some hours later with a headache on hearing the boy coming in. The boy
said he didn't know the time, but it must have been eleven o'clock, and
just then Graham came up the steps and the boy went to his own room;
witness called out to him twice and got no answer, and at last, thinking
it queer that Graham did not go to bed, but kept moving briskly about,
he rose and went into the front room in his night-shirt, and found
Graham packing a big satchel he had, and rummaging through the clothes
on the pegs. Asked him what was the matter, and Graham hardly noticed
him--merely said he was going away awhile; could not help noticing how
queer and strange he looked, and how oddly he behaved; he was very pale,
and muttered to himself every now and then; asked him twice if he had
any reason for going, and when he would return, but only got evasive
answers and averted looks; knew that there had been ugly words between
the deceased and Graham very often during the month past, and that there
was an angry altercation between them down at the mill just before
supper-time; the deceased had told him that he was going to discharge
Graham; he was getting too insolent and rebellious to suit him; Graham
hardly ate anything at supper, and the old man did not come up to the
house until after they had driven off to church. That was the last he
saw of him alive--as he passed the cottage on his way to the
mill-house. Asked as to whether anything of unusual or suspicious nature
had occurred during the day or evening, Frost said that one thing struck
him as queer. Graham's revolver hung habitually at the head of his bed,
and when he concluded to go to bed that evening he went into Graham's
room to look at the clock and saw that his pistol was gone. It had been
there during the day, and he never knew him to carry it before. Asked if
he saw it in Graham's possession Sunday night, he replied that he saw it
sticking from the hip pocket of his trousers; that Graham had his coat
off and was washing his hands at the time. One other ugly circumstance
was noted: Graham had been burning a lot of papers and things in the
stove before being interrupted. When the stove was examined in the
morning some buttons were found, charred and partially destroyed in the
ashes, but they were clearly identified as the buttons of the canvas
overalls Graham wore around the mill--which were missing--and behind the
stove was found a fine cambric handkerchief that Graham only used when
he wore his best, or Sunday suit, which he had on all that day, and this
handkerchief was stained with blood.

Nellie Morrow was so fearfully agitated by the tragedy that her own
evidence was only drawn from her bit by bit. She confirmed the statement
of Dick's pallor and his silence all that evening, and then with
hysterical sobbing told of their quarrel after church and his leaving
her, as he said, never to return; but she protested that he had "never a
thing against father," and that he never, never could have harmed him.
All other obtainable evidence had the same general tendency, and despite
his years of sturdy probity and the excellence of his character, Dick
Graham had to bear the burden of the accumulation of evidence against
him. The absent always have the worst of it, and his flight had
confirmed the theories of many an unwilling mind. He was the murderer of
his former friend and benefactor.




                    CHAPTER IV.


A week passed, and with no tidings of him. Detectives had been scouring
the country in every direction. A man answering his description was
arrested in Chicago, and turned out to be somebody else. A dozen times
it was reported that now the sleuth-hounds of the law had run down their
victim, but the entire month of July passed away, and the community had
gradually settled down to the belief that Graham had made good his
escape and taken with him some five hundred dollars of his murdered
master's money.

Old Morrow had been duly and reverently buried. A younger brother from a
distant state came to the scene as executor of the will, in conjunction
with Mr. Lowrie, and under his management the mill resumed its functions
for the benefit of the estate. Except some legacies to this brother and
to the sister who had taken charge of Nellie and his household, old
Morrow had left his property, valued at over forty thousand dollars, to
be divided equally between his two children should Sam reappear; but if
proof of his death were obtained, his share was to go to Nellie.

A week after the funeral, acting on the advice of the minister and the
village doctor, Nellie's relatives sent her to Chicago. She had suffered
greatly in health, and was in a condition of nervous depression.
Whenever Dick's crime was mentioned in her presence, she would
vehemently assert her belief in his innocence, and then shudderingly
accuse herself, with piteous crying, of being the cause of all his
trouble, and perhaps of her father's death. Another thing. She who had
plainly shown herself fascinated by Mr. Frost's many graces and
attractions during the preceding winter, now refused to see him. He hung
around the house, full of respectful sympathy and lover-like interest,
but was visibly chagrined at her persistent avoidance. To the minister
she confessed that she had been greatly interested in Frost--perhaps a
little in love with him; he flattered and delighted her, and it made
Dick jealous. She didn't know how or why she so encouraged him, but she
had, and now she shrank from seeing him at all. Her deep affliction
would excuse it.

A week after she left for Chicago Mr. Frost concluded that he would go
thither himself. The new master needed no bookkeeper, he said, and Frost
was too fine a gentleman to do Dick's work around the mill. He was
neither invited to go nor to stay. He was allowed to go and come without
apparent let or hindrance, yet, before the train which bore him away
was well out of sight, a new farm-hand, who worked at odd jobs around a
neighboring place on the lake, suddenly entered the railway station,
wrote ten hurried words on a telegraph-blank, and handed it to the
operator, whereupon the operator gazed at him in quick surprise, then
whistled softly to himself, nodded appreciatively, and clicked away the
message, with the addition of a cabalistic "Rush," and Mr. Frost's train
was boarded at Milwaukee by a number of people who took no special note
of him, and by one man who never lost sight of him from that moment
until he locked his bedroom door behind him at night.

Then the minister received a call from the new farm-hand, who brought
with him a young man who worked on a place over near Eagle Prairie, a
railway station some distance off to the southwest. This young man had
spent Sunday calling on a sweetheart in 'Mahbin, and had started about
7.30 p.m. to walk to the large town seven miles away, where he would
take the cars homeward. He saw Nellie, her aunt, and a young man driving
into town, and by eight o'clock he himself was passing the mill. It was
just growing dark, so that he could not distinguish faces, but he saw
two men standing by the office--one short, stout, and elderly, the other
tall and slender and straight. The older man was talking furiously and
angrily; heard him say, "I told you an hour ago to keep away from me.
You have lied to me right along. You are a thief and a scoundrel, I
believe, and you are a damned coward and deserter--a deserter, by God!
and I've got the papers to prove it!"

What the tall man said he could not hear. He spoke low--seemed to be
arguing with the old man, begging him to be quiet, and they went into
the office. Then the young man walked on a few hundred yards, when it
came on to rain very hard, and he stopped and took shelter under a
little fishing-shed there was right at the edge of the lake. The rain
held up in fifteen minutes, and he started on again over the causeway,
"and hadn't more'n got a rod" when he heard what sounded like a
pistol-shot back at the mill. He stopped short and listened two minutes,
but heard nothing more, so went on and thought no more of it until he
heard of the murder--but that was not until a week after it happened,
when he came up from the farm to Eagle village and heard people talking
about it.

But with the first week in August came exciting news. Far to the
northwest across the Missouri, Dick Graham had been traced and followed
by a Wisconsin detective, who found him in the uniform of the regular
army, just marching off with his comrades to join General Terry's
forces, then in the field up the Yellowstone. In his possession was the
Avenger revolver and over one hundred dollars in greenbacks. On two
five-dollar bills there was a broad and ugly stain, which microscopic
examination proved to be blood. Graham appeared utterly stunned at the
arrest; expressed the greatest grief and horror at hearing of the murder
of Mr. Morrow, and professed his entire willingness to go back and stand
trial. The story of his "escape" to that distance was now easily told.
The detectives had speedily satisfied themselves he had got away on
none of the regular trains that week, but one bright fellow had learned
that four cars full of troops had passed west late that Sunday night,
and followed the clue. They had gone through to Bismarck--a tedious
journey in '76--and thither he followed. Thence the troops had gone by
boat up the Missouri, and he took the first opportunity that came--and
the next boat going up. At Fort Buford he "sighted" his man, told his
story to the commanding officer of the post, who sent for the officers
of the troops with whom poor Dick was serving. They promptly asserted
that their first knowledge of him was on the Monday they reached St.
Paul, when a sergeant brought him to them, saying he begged to be
allowed to enlist and go with them. He told a perfectly straight story;
said he was an orphan, unmarried, had been a miller, but was tired of
small wages, hard work, and no hopes of getting ahead, and had made up
his mind to get into the regulars. Was at the railway station at
midnight when the train was side-tracked to allow another to pass, and
appealed to the sergeant of the guard to take him along; said he would
pay his way until they could enlist him, and as he was a likely fellow
they were glad to have him. He had won everybody's respect in the short
time he was with them, and the whole command seemed thunderstruck to
hear of the allegations against him.

The detective and his prisoner were put on a boat going back to
Bismarck, and on that same boat, returning, wounded and furloughed, was
a sergeant of the Seventh Cavalry--a gallant fellow who had fought
under Benteen and McDougall on the bluffs of the Little Horn, after
Custer's command had been surrounded and slaughtered four miles farther
down stream. The sergeant kept to his room and bunk until they got to
Bismarck, but the detectives had a chance to see and talk with him--and
so had Graham.

It was an eventful day when the detective and his prisoner reached
Nemahbin. The minister was there to meet him, as was Mr. Lowrie, and the
entire male population of the neighborhood. There was no disorder or
turbulence. Dick was quietly escorted to a room in the constable's
house--they had no jail--and there that night he had a long conference
with the minister and other prominent citizens. The minister drove home
quite late--but very much later, along towards two in the morning, in
fact, he was at the railway station and received in his buggy the single
passenger who alighted from the night express.

Next day there was a gathering at the mayor's office--an apartment in
the municipal residence devoted to dining-room duty three times a day,
and opening into the kitchen on the one hand, into the hallway on
another, and into the village post-office on the third. Here sat Mr.
Lowrie, the doctor, the constable, other local celebrities, and one or
two distinguished importations from Milwaukee. Here was the minister,
looking singularly wide-awake, lively, and brisk for a man who had been
up all night; here, too, sat the farm-hand who sent the cabalistic
despatch when Frost went to Chicago, and the young man who heard the
conversation down at the mill that Sunday night; here, too, sat Dick,
looking pale but tranquil, and hither, too, presently came Mr. Frost,
looking ghastly pale and very far from tranquil. Dick looked squarely at
him as he entered, but Frost glanced rapidly about the room, eagerly
nodding to one man after another, but avoiding Dick entirely. Then
followed an impressive silence.

Outside, the August sun was streaming hotly down upon the heads of an
intensely curious and interested throng; inside there was for the moment
no sound but the humming of a thousand flies, or the nervous scraping of
a boot over the uncarpeted floor. Then the mayor whispered a few words
to the minister, who nodded to Mr. Morrow, the surviving brother, and
then Mr. Morrow stepped into the hallway leading to the mayor's parlor,
and presently reappeared at the doorway, and quietly said, "All right."

All eyes turned to glance at him at this moment, but, beyond his square,
squat figure, nothing in the darkened hallway was visible. Then the
mayor cleared his throat and began:

"By the consent of the proper authorities the prisoner, accused of the
murder of the late Samuel Morrow, has been brought here instead of to
the county town, for reasons that will appear hereafter. Graham, you
have desired to hear the evidence of Mr. Frost, one of the principal
witnesses against you at the time of the discovery of the murder. The
clerk will now read it."

And read it the clerk did, in monotonous singsong. Graham sat clinching
his fists and his teeth, and looking straight at Frost as the reading
was finished. The latter, uneasily shifting in his chair, still looked
anywhere else around the room.

"Do you wish to say anything, Graham?" asked the mayor, in answer to the
appeal in Dick's eyes.

"I do, sir. That statement is a lie almost from beginning to end. I had
no quarrel, no words with Mr. Morrow that Sunday evening--never spoke to
him at all. It was Frost himself who was with him at the mill before
supper. As to the rest of the evening I know nothing of what happened.
When I got home, and put up the horse and buggy, it must have been long
after ten. Then I found the east door of the mill was open, and went in
and found everything dark and quiet; came out and locked the door (but
never went into the office), and took the key up to the mill-house, and
hung it up on the hook in the hall. I supposed Mr. Morrow was asleep in
bed. Then I went home and burned some old letters and papers and packed
some things in my bag. I was going away for good--I've told the doctor
and the minister why--they know well enough--and I called Frost; he owed
me twenty dollars, and I needed it, and woke him up, if he was asleep,
and asked him for it, and the very money he gave me was in those
five-dollar bills. I never burned my overalls. I _did_ lose my
handkerchief somewhere about the house that night, and never missed it
until I was gone; and I never had my revolver until just before I took
my bag and started, and never knew until days afterwards--way up the
Northern Pacific--that one of the chambers was emptied. As for the
murder, I never heard of it until I was arrested."

"Mr. Frost," said the mayor, "you made no mention in your evidence of
paying money to the prisoner."

"Certainly not," said Frost, promptly, but his eyes glittered, and his
face was white as a sheet. "Nothing of the kind happened. That money
came direct from the mill safe."

"How do you know?"

"Well--of course--I don't know that; but it is my belief."

"Mr. Frost, there was no mention in your testimony of a violent
altercation between yourself and the late Mr. Morrow at the mill that
evening after Graham came in town with the ladies. Why did you omit
that?"

He was livid now, and the strong, white hands were twitching nervously.
All eyes were fastened upon him as he stood confronting the mayor, his
back towards the hallway, where, in grim silence, stood Mr. Morrow.

"I know of no such altercation," he stammered.

"Were you ever accused of being a deserter from the army?"

Every one saw the nervous start he gave, but, though haggard and wild,
he stuck to his false colors.

"Never, sir."

"That's a lie," said a deep voice out in the hall, and at the
unconventional interruption there was a general stir. Men leaned forward
and craned their necks to peer behind Mr. Morrow, who stood there
immovable.

"Order, gentlemen, if you please," said Mr. Lowrie.

"Then how and where did you know Sam Morrow, as you convinced his father
you did?"

"I?--out in Arizona, where I was mining."

"Why did you not fulfil your promise, as you said you could and would?"

"I couldn't. That was what made the old man down on me. I did believe
last winter I could find Sam and get him home, but I could not bear to
tell the old man he was killed with General Custer."

"That's another lie!" came from the hallway, and, brushing past Mr.
Morrow's squat figure, there strode into the room a tall, bronzed-faced,
soldierly fellow in the undress uniform of a sergeant of cavalry.

Men sprang to their feet and fairly shouted. Old Doctor Green threw his
arms about the soldier's neck in the excess of his joy. There was a rush
forward from the post-office doorway to greet him, a cry of "Sam
Morrow!" and then another cry--a yell--a scurry and crash at the kitchen
entrance. "Quick! Head him off! Catch him!" were the cries, and then
came a dash into the open air.

With a spring like that of a panther Frost had leaped into the unguarded
kitchen, thence to the fence beyond, and now was running like a deer
through the quiet village street towards the railway. A hundred men were
in pursuit in a moment, and in that open country there was no shelter
for skulking criminal, no lair in which he could hide till night. In
half an hour, exhausted, half dead with terror and despair, the
wretched man was dragged back, and now, limp and dejected, cowered in
the presence of his accusers.




                     CHAPTER V.


Sam Morrow told his story in a few words. He had served in the Seventh
Cavalry for five years under the name of Samuel Moore, and two years
before, while with his troop on the Yellowstone, the man calling himself
Frost was a sergeant in another company. He was only a short time in the
regiment, but his fine appearance, intelligence, and education led to
his speedy appointment as sergeant, and as Sergeant Farrand he had been
for a few months a popular and respected man; but as soon as they got
back to winter-quarters he turned out to be a gambler, then a swindler
and card-sharper. He lost the respect of both officers and men, got into
a gambling-scrape with some teamsters in Bismarck, was locked up by the
civil authorities, and, after a series of troubles of that description,
deserted the service in the Black Hills the summer of '75, taking three
horses with him, and that was the last seen of him until now. Sam had
been shot in the arm in the fight of the 25th of June, after the Indians
had butchered Custer's part of the regiment, and now, having served out
his time, was once more home, with an honorable discharge and a
certificate of high character from his officers.

In substantiation of Sam's story, Mr. Morrow exhibited two letters
which he had found among his brother's papers. They were from the
adjutant of the Seventh Cavalry, in reply, evidently, to inquiries which
old Morrow had instituted in May, and the second one contained a
description of Frost as the soldier Farrand, which tallied exactly.

"And now, Frost, what have you to say as to the murder?" was the next
question; and, cowering and abject, the wretch sat with bowed head and
trembling limbs, gasping, "I did not do it, I did not do it." But this
Nemahbin would believe no longer. There was a wild cry of "Hang him!"
from the excited crowd in the street, and then came a scene. Peaceful
and law-abiding as had been the community, it turned in almost savage
fury upon the scoundrel who had sought to charge his own crime upon an
innocent and long-respected citizen. A dozen resolute men leaped through
the post-office to the doorway of the inner room, but there they halted.
Between them and the cowering form of Frost stood the tall figure of Sam
Morrow, his eyes ablaze, his mouth set and stern, his left arm in a
sling, but in his right hand a levelled revolver.

"Back, every man of you!" he said. "He killed my father, but, by God, it
has got to be a fair trial!" Lowrie, the doctor, and the detective were
at his back, and Nemahbin hesitated, thought better of its mad impulse,
and retired. That night Frost lay behind the prison bars, accused of an
array of crimes, with cold-blooded murder as the climax, and Sam Morrow,
Dick Graham, and Nellie met once more at the old home.

In less than a month Frost's last hope had gone. Whether his pluck and
nerve had given out entirely, whether the rapid accumulation of damaging
evidence had made him fearful that even hanging would be too good for
him if all his past were "ferreted out," as now seemed likely, or
whether he hoped, by confession, to gain mercy, is not known; but,
before his trial, he made full admission of his guilt. He had come to
Nemahbin hoping to get such a hold on the old man by telling him he
could find Sam that he would be welcomed, and allowed to prosecute his
suit with Nellie, who was plainly fascinated. If he could gain her love
and her hand, he might settle down, be respectable on old Morrow's
money, and then, even if Sam did come home, he would not be apt to
expose the man his sister loved and married. But his efforts to convince
the old man that he was trying to find Sam, while all the time he was
doing all he knew how to keep him on the wrong track, were at constant
cross-purposes. The old man soon became suspicious of him, would advance
him no money, paid him a nominal sum for keeping books, etc., the first
three months he was there, then relieved him of that duty, and kept up
incessant cross-questioning. At last Frost found out that Graham
suspected him of being a deserter, and that the old man had got that
idea and also that his own boy was somewhere in the army. Then came the
news of the Custer massacre, and by that time he felt sure he could win
Nellie's hand if her father's consent could be gained; but Morrow was
all suspicion and eagerness, and Frost knew by his manner that he was
on the trail of his lost boy by means of letters--and these letters
would plainly betray him, who had deserted from Sam's own regiment. He
hurried to Chicago, and there--there he came upon that list of killed in
the battle of the Little Big Horn, and among the names was the one he
wanted to see, Sergeant Sam Moore. It decided him at once. He went to
his uncle, claiming that he was about to marry Nellie Morrow, got from
him a small supply of money, and came back determined to win her at
once. She was the old man's only child and sole heir. That very day
Morrow had told him that he had found him out, that in his absence he
had received letters proving him to be a scoundrel, and, giving him just
one chance to tell him where his lost boy was or to leave. Frost feared
to tell then, as he knew the miller would insist on proofs, and in some
way his own connection with the regiment would be known. That evening,
before tea, Morrow, in an angry interview, which Schaffer partially
overheard, told him he had proofs of his rascality--letters to settle
his case for good and all. Then he became desperate. Soon as Dick had
gone to town with the ladies he went to Graham's room, got the revolver,
and once more went to the mill, and found Morrow at the office door. It
was then almost dark. Then came the accusation of desertion, and, once
in the office, Morrow had called him by his soldier name, and Frost knew
"all was up." He must have those papers. He drew the revolver to
frighten the old man, and it went off, killing him instantly. He was
horror-stricken, but strove to collect himself. Flight would betray him
at once as the murderer. Why not make it a case of suicide--leave the
pistol by him? No--that would not do. It was Graham's--Ha! why not make
Graham the guilty one? Quickly he got the safe key from the old man's
pocket, unlocked and obtained the cash-drawer, with its five hundred
dollars in green-backs--opened the desk, and rummaged through the
letters till he found one from the headquarters of the Seventh Cavalry,
which gave a description of several men almost his height and general
appearance who had deserted. Among them he recognized his own and his
soldier name. With these he went to the cottage, leaving all dark at the
mill, burned the letter, hid portions of the money in Graham's mattress,
and was thinking, in terror, what to do next, when he heard voices on
the road. He dare not go out, and so wasted some time in the house. When
he heard Graham drive back with the buggy he hurriedly undressed and
went to bed. Then Schaffer came home and he called him in, that the boy
might say that he was in bed and undressed; but when Graham entered he
shammed sleep. Roused, at last, by Graham's demand for his money and the
news that he was going away, an idea occurred to him. Cutting a slit in
his finger with a razor, he let the blood fall on a couple of
five-dollar bills--smeared and quickly dried it--gave them to Graham
before he started, and as soon as he was gone went busily to work. Going
down to the mill as soon as satisfied that all was safe--Schaffer asleep
and Dick far on his way to the railroad--he found the east door locked.
Then he knew that Graham had been there; had locked the door and taken
the key to the hall of the mill-house, and of course had seen nothing of
the body. He got the key, obtained Graham's overalls from the mill,
burned them in the stove at the cottage--as he argued Dick could have
done had he bloodied them in the affray--and then in Graham's room had
found his cambric handkerchief. Once more he went down to the ghostly
mill, and dipped this into the blood of his victim; then locked the mill
door (he had locked the office door, leaving the key inside), put the
key back in the house, returned to the cottage, and to bed. He had woven
a chain for Graham that, added to the poor fellow's flight and his
previous disagreements, would fasten all suspicion on him as the
murderer. Then he thought of the money. He rose, bundled it loosely in
an old oyster-can, stole out in the gray light of approaching dawn, and
buried it in the loose sand down on the shore of the mill-pond, just
where all the cattle would go for water, and trample out all traces
within an hour; then once more he went back to bed, and to the
counterfeited sleep from which Schaffer had such difficulty in rousing
him. It was well planned--and when he heard the boy declare he had seen
Graham coming from the mill at 11 o'clock he thought it perfect.

But he had failed to cross one track--the bloody print of a slender,
city-made, shapely boot on the flour-dusted floor under the peg where
Graham's overalls generally hung. It was the only footprint in that
corner of the old mill, and Frost's was the only boot in all Nemahbin
that would fit it. Keen eyes had noted this even while the wiseacres of
the law were urging the pursuit of Graham; and then came the inexorable
watch on every move that Frost might make. Even without his confession,
the relentless search of the detectives would have run him down. And now
Dick Graham was free.

It wasn't such a mystery, after all. A greater one was being enacted
right here in the old mill-house, whither Nellie had hurriedly returned
on the telegraphic news of Sam's home-coming. She had sent Dick Graham
sorrowing to his fate only a month ago. She never wished to see him or
speak to him again. She had twined her girlish hero-worship around the
tall beauty of Mr. Frost, and seen it shrivel with aversion in a single
day. And now, surrounded by the halo of his sufferings, his self-imposed
exile, his years of patient, uncomplaining, unswerving devotion, here
was her brother's best friend, sharing with that brother the admiration
and homage of their little village circle; here was her true lover,
Dick, loving, forgiving, unreproaching, and yet unseeking, and one sweet
August night, calm and still and starlit, she stood at the very gate
where he had seen her parting with Frost that dread Sunday morning. And
now her little hand was trembling on his arm as he would have closed the
gate behind him. He felt the detaining pressure, and turned, gently as
ever:

"What is it, Nellie?"

"Dick, will you never forgive me for what I said--that night?"

One instant he could hardly speak--hardly breathe; but then, slowly,
with swimming eyes and quivering lips, soft and tremulous, she looked up
into his radiant face.

And now--eight years after--'Mahbin Mill hums and whirs more merrily
than ever. Dick Graham is master and manager, for Sam, with a
well-earned strap of gold-lace on each broad shoulder, has gone back to
the frontier life he learned to love in the old regiment. Frost
languished but a few months in his prison before death mercifully took
him away, and Nellie--Nellie is the happiest little woman around
Nemahbin for miles; only those two scamps, Sam and Dick, seven and five
years old respectively, keep her in a fidget and their father in a
chuckle with their pranks. They are always in mischief or the
mill-pond.




      PLODDER'S PROMOTION.


For five years the life of Second Lieutenant Plodder, of the --th Foot,
had been a burden to him. For more than five years Second Lieutenant
Plodder had been something of a burden to the --th Foot. In the dreary
monotone in which the psalm of life is sung, or was sung, in frontier
garrisons before the introduction of such wildly diverting exercises as
daily target practice, or measuring-distance drill, the one thing that
became universally detestable was the man with the perennial grievance,
and Mr. Plodder's grievance was slow promotion. There was nothing
exceptionally harrowing in his individual experience; dozens of other
fellows in his own and in other regiments were victims of the same
malady, but for some reason Mr. Plodder considered himself the especial
target of the slings and arrows of a fortune too outrageous for even a
downtrodden "dough-boy" to bear in silence, and the dreary burden of his
song--morn, noon, and night--was the number of years he had served, and
might yet have to serve, with never a bar to his strap of faded blue.

Entering the army as a volunteer in '61, he had emerged, after four
years of singularly uneventful soldiering, a lieutenant in the company
in which he started as private. Provost-guard duty and the like had
told but little on the aggregate of present for duty with his command,
and that sort of campaigning being congenial, Mr. Plodder concluded to
keep it up as a profession. A congressional friend got him a
second-lieutenancy at the close of the war, and the devil himself, said
Mr. Plodder, got him into that particular regiment. "I never saw such a
God-forsaken lot of healthy fellers in my life," he was wont to declare
over the second or third toddy at "the store" in the long wintry
evenings. "There ain't a man of 'em died in six years, and here I am
after nigh onto twelve years' consecutive service, and I ain't a first
lieutenant yit."

We youngsters, with our light hearts and lighter pockets, used to rather
enjoy getting old Plodder started, it must be confessed; and when
pin-pool or auction-pitch had palled in interest, and we would be
casting about for some time-killing device, and the word would come from
the window, scattering the group of oldsters, that Plodder was on his
way to the store, somebody would be apt to suggest a project for
"putting up a job on Grumpy," and it would be carried _nem. con._

"Heard the news, Plod?" some young reprobate would carelessly inquire
while banging the balls about the table.

"What news?" says Plodder.

"You're in for a file. They say old Cramps is going to die. He's off on
leave now."

"Who says so?" says Plodder, eying his interlocutor askance. He is
always suspicious of the youngsters.

"Fact, Plodder. Ask the major, if you don't believe me."

And before long Plodder would be sure to make his way into the inner
court --the _sanctum sanctorum_ of the store--sacred ordinarily to the
knot of old officers who liked to have their quiet game aloof from the
crash of pool-pins and the babel of voices in the main room, and there,
after more or less beating round the bush, he would inquire as to
whether the major had recently heard news of old Captain Cramps, and
what was the state of his health; returning then to the billiard-room
with wrath and vengeance in his eye, to upbraid his tormentor for
sending him off on such a cruel quest.

"Well, what did you go for?" would be the extent of his comfort. "I only
said Cramps was going to die, and it's my profound conviction he
will--some time or other."

And Plodder would groan in spirit, "It's all very well for you
youngsters, but just you wait till you've served as long as I have,
twelve years' consecutive service, by George! and if you don't wish
lineal promotion would come in, or the grass was growing green over
every man that ever opposed it, you can stop _my_ pay."

It got to be a serious matter at last. It was Plod's monomania. We used
to swear that Plod spent half his time moaning over the army register,
and that his eyes were never fixed upon the benevolent features of his
captain but that he was wondering whether apoplexy would not soon give
him the longed-for file. Every week or two there would come tidings of
deaths, dismissals, resignations, or retirements in some other corps or
regiment, and second lieutenant so-or-so would become first lieutenant
_vice_ somebody else, and on such occasions poor old Plod would suffer
the tortures of the damned. "There's that boy," he would say, "only two
years out of that national charity school up there on the Hudson, in
leading-strings, by George! when we fellers were fightin' and bleedin'
an--"

"Hello, Plod! I forgot you fought and bled in the provost-guard. Where
was it, old man? Take a nip and tell us about it," some one would
interpose, but Plodder would plunge ahead in the wild recitative of his
lament, and the floor would be his own.

Tuesday evenings always found him at the store. The post-trader's copy
of the _Army and Navy Journal_ arrived soon after retreat, and it was
one of the unwritten laws of the establishment that old Plod should have
first glimpse. There had been a time when he resorted to the quarters of
brother-officers and possessed himself of their copy, but his
concomitant custom of staying two or three hours and bemoaning his luck
had gradually been the means of barring him out, and, never having a
copy of his own (for Plodder was thrifty and "near"), he had settled
into the usurpation of first rights with "Mr. O'Bottle's" paper, and
there at the store he devoured the column of casualties with
disappointed eyes, and swallowed grief and toddy in "consecutive"
gulps.

It used to be asserted of Plodder that he was figuring for the Signal
Corps. He was at one time generally known as "Old Probabilities;"
indeed, it had been his nickname for several years. He was accused of
keeping a regular system of "indications" against the names of his
seniors in rank, and that godless young reprobate Trickett so far forgot
his reverence for rank as to prepare and put in circulation "Plodder's
Probabilities," a Signal Service burlesque that had the double effect of
alienating that gentleman's long-tried friendship and startling into
unnatural blasphemy the staid captains who figured in the bulletin.
Something in this wise it ran (and though poor fun at best, was better
than anything we had had since that wonderful day when "Mrs. _Captain_
O'Rorke av ye plaze" dropped that letter addressed to her friend "Mrs.
Captain Sullivan, O'Maher Barrix"):

     "PLODDER'S PROBABILITIES.

     "_For Captain Irvin._--Higher living together with lower
     exercise. Cloudy complexion, with temperament choleric veering
     to apoplectic. Impaired action followed by fatty degeneration
     of the heart.

     "_For Captains Prime and Chipsey._--Barometer threatening.
     Squalls domestic. Stocks lower. Putler and Soaker bills falling
     (due N.E., S., and W.) from all parts of the country.

     "_For Lieutenant Cole, R.Q.M._--Heft increasing. Nose and
     eyelids turgid. Frequent (d)rains, Sp. Fru. Heavy shortage C.
     and G. E., S. T. 187(-)X.

     "_Cautionary Signals_ for Burroughs, Calvin, and Waterman.
     Something sure to turn up."

We were hard up for fun in those days, and even this low order of wit
excited a high degree of hilarity. The maddest men were Prime, Chipsey,
and the R.Q.M., but their wrath was as nothing compared with the blaze
of indignation which illuminated the countenances of Mrs. Prime and Mrs.
Chipsey, next-door neighbors and bosom friends as feminine friendships
go. Each lady in this instance was ready to acknowledge the pertinence
of Mr. Trickett's diagnosis in the case of her neighbor's husband, and
confidentially to admit that there was even some justification for the
allegation of "squalls domestic" next door, but that anything of this
sort should be even hinted at in her own case, nothing but utter moral
depravity on the part of the perpetrator could account for it. Trickett
paid dear for his whistle, but for the time it seemed to hold Plodder in
check. The ruling passion soon cropped out again, however. Gray hairs
were beginning to sprinkle his scanty beard, and crow's-feet to grow
more deeply under his suspicious eyes. He never looked at a senior
without a semi-professional scrutiny of that senior's physical condition
as set forth in the clearness of his eye or skin. He never shook hands
without conveying the impression that he was reaching for a man's pulse.
If any old officer were mentioned as going off on "surgeon's
certificate" to visit the sea-shore, and the question should be asked,
"What's the matter with him?" the interrogated party invariably
responded, "Don't know. Ask Plodder."

It was not only in the regiment that Plodder became a notoriety. For one
eventful year of its history the --th Foot was stationed in close
proximity to department headquarters, and department headquarters became
speedily and intimately acquainted with Mr. Plodder. Having once made
his calls of ceremony upon the commanding general and his staff, it
became his custom to make frequent visits to the city, and, passing
beyond the established haunts where his comrades were wont to dispense
for creature comforts their scanty dimes, to spend some hours pottering
about the offices at headquarters. But for a month no one really
fathomed the object of his attentions. "Trying to get a soft detail in
town" was the theory hazarded by some of the youngsters, who were well
aware of his distaste for company duty; "Boning for aide-de-camp,"
suggested another. But not until the medical director one day
explosively alluded to him as "that ---- old vampire-bat," with an
uncomplimentary and profane adjective in place of the ----, and the
acting judge-advocate of the department impulsively asked if "that
infernal Mark Meddle couldn't be kept at home," did it begin to dawn on
us what old Plodder really was driving at. His theory being that army
casualties could be divided up pretty evenly between the Medical
Department and the Bureau of Military Justice as the expediting means,
he hoped by ingenious engineering of the conversation to pick up points
as to probabilities in the --th Foot, or to furnish such as might be
lacking.

In plain words, it transpired about this time that Plodder had taken to
haunting the office of the judge-advocate at hours when he could hope
for uninterrupted conversation with that officer, and one day, with
very ruffled demeanor, he was encountered making hurried exit therefrom,
pursued, said Mr. Trickett, by the toe of the judge-advocate's boot.
Indeed, Mr. Trickett was not far wrong. He and his now reconciled
captain were about calling upon the judge-advocate when Plodder burst
forth, and surely there was every symptom of a wrathful intent in the
attitude of the staff-officer whom they met at the door. It was a minute
or so before he could recover his composure, though he politely invited
them to enter and be seated. No explanation was vouchsafed as to what
had occurred, but Trickett and Prime came back to barracks full of
speculation and curiosity, told pretty much everybody what they had
seen, and, all being convinced that Plodder and the judge-advocate had
had some kind of a row, it was determined to draw Plodder out.
Consequently there was a gathering in the billiard-room that night, and
when Plodder entered, with visage of unusual gloom, he ought to have
been put on his guard by the unexpectedly prompt and cheery invites to
"take something" that greeted him. But Plodder had been taking several
somethings in the privacy of his quarters, and, being always ready to
partake at somebody else's expense, he was speedily primed into
talkative mood, and then the inquisition began.

"Saw you coming out of Park's office to-day," said Prime. "What was your
hurry?"

No answer for a moment, then a rather sulky growl, "I'd finished my
business, and thought you might want to see him."

"I? Lord, no! What should I want to see him for except socially?"

No answer.

"_Nice_ fellow, Park," said Trickett; "seems such a calm, self-poised
sort of man, you know."

"One of the most courteous men I ever met," said Waterman.

Then the others joined in with some kind of transparent adulation of the
official referred to, all keeping wary eyes on Plodder, who at last
burst forth,

"You all can think what you like. _My_ idea is, he's no gentleman."

Of course Plodder was assailed with instant demands to explain his
meaning. Everybody was amazed; but Plodder would only shake his head and
mutter that he knew what he was talking about. Nobody could tell _him_
what constituted a gentleman. Park wasn't one anyhow, and all hopes for
light upon that interview were for the moment dashed; but a day or two
more brought everything out in startling colors, when it was announced
that Lieutenant Calvin, who had been commanding a detachment "up the
country," was ordered to return and explain certain allegations that had
been brought to the notice of the regimental commander. Plodder's
cautionary signal had been hoisted to some purpose after all.

It seems that being cut off from congenial society, and having no
associates with whom to while away the weary hours of his detached
service, Lieutenant Calvin had sought solace in the flowing bowl, had
become involved in a quarrel with some rather hard cases among the
citizens, and in some mysterious way the matter had reached
headquarters. Calvin was on a sort of probation at the time, for his
conduct on some previous occasions had given great cause for complaint
to his colonel, and that officer had now received a note from
headquarters on the subject of Calvin's recent misdemeanor, and felt
himself called upon to investigate. This note had come three days before
the date of Plodder's last visit to town, and the colonel had
communicated its contents to no one but his adjutant, and yet it was
known throughout the garrison on the day after Plodder's visit that Mr.
Calvin was to be overhauled, and the colonel decided to inquire, among
other things, _how_ it became so speedily known.

"I would prefer to have some officer sent from elsewhere to relieve
him," he had said to the commanding general in presence of the
judge-advocate. "It will then create no talk or speculation at the
barracks before he comes."

"It is known there already," said the judge-advocate.

"Most extraordinary!" said the colonel. "I don't see how that could be
and I not know it." And, indeed, there were very few matters on which he
was not fully informed.

"It is so, nevertheless," said the staff-officer. "One of
your--a--subalterns--a gentleman with whom I have very slight
acquaintance, came to me to tell me about it, as he expressed it,
yesterday."

Then the colonel insisted upon hearing the whole story, and it came out.
It seems that after one or two somewhat embarrassed visits, Mr. Plodder
had succeeded in finding the judge-advocate alone on the previous
afternoon, had then drawn his chair close to that officer's desk, and,
very much to his surprise, had bent forward, and in confidential tone
had remarked, "Say, I want to tell you about Calvin," and before the
astonished judge-advocate could well interrupt him he had rushed through
a few hurried sentences descriptive of the affair in which Calvin was
involved, and looked up in very great astonishment when the
judge-advocate suddenly checked him.

"One moment, Mr. Plodder. I do not understand the object of this
narrative. Have you come to make an official complaint of Mr. Calvin's
conduct? I am not the person. Your colonel--"

"Oh, no, no. You don't understand," interrupted Mr. Plodder. "_I_ don't
want to appear in the matter at all; but you see I happen to know--"

"You don't mean to say that you have come to me to give confidential
information about an officer of your regiment?" burst in the
judge-advocate with growing wrath.

"I thought you ought to know," said Plodder, sulkily. "You have charge
of the court-martial business, and I s'pose charges are to be
preferred--"

"And you want to appear as a witness, do you? or do you mean to prefer
additional charges, or--what the devil do you mean?"

"No, _I'm_ not a witness," exclaimed Plodder, hastily. "I just thought
you ought to know about this, you see, and all you've got to do is to
write to so-and-so, and so-and-so. _They_ were there and saw it. Oh, no,
I don't want to appear at all."

"In plain words, then, Mr. Plodder, you came here as a tale-bearer, and
expect me to treat you like a gentleman," said the judge-advocate,
rising in wrath and indignation, while Mr. Plodder sat gazing at him in
pained surprise. "By G--gulp, sir, I did not suppose the uniform had got
so low as that. Go to your colonel, if you want to tattle, sir; don't
come to me. There's the door, Mr. Plodder; there's the door, sir." And
in utter amaze the gentleman of nigh on to twelve years' consecutive
service slipped out into the hall as ruefully ruffled in spirit as
though he had been kicked thither. It was there he encountered Prime and
Trickett, and it was in this shape that the interview was eventually
made known to the regiment, but not until some time after--not until the
grand evolution of a pet and long-projected scheme. Then it was that
this experience of Plodder's was told, with many unflattering comments;
and so it happened that not one grain of sympathy was felt for him in
the moment of his most supreme dejection--the crowning disappointment of
his life.

For the first time in his "years of consecutive service" Plodder
actually saw a first-lieutenancy within his grasp, and this is how the
matter stood.

Among a lot of desperately, hopelessly healthy and virtuous captains and
first-lieutenants there appeared the unfortunate Mr. Calvin, whose
record had been somewhat mottled in the past, and who was now in a very
precarious state. To get him out of the way would ordinarily secure for
Mr. Plodder only a step, for at this moment he stood third on the list
of second lieutenants; but here was a case of unusual combinations. The
senior second lieutenant was at that moment undergoing trial on charges
that must dismiss him from the service. There was no question as to his
guilt; indeed, he had hardly made any defence against the allegations.
But, even were he to be dismissed, how was that to help Plodder? Look at
the list:

    _Second Lieutenants --th Infantry._

    1. John B. Riggs (in arrest, undergoing trial).

    2. William H. Trainor, _regimental adjutant_.

    3. Pariah Plodder.

The army reader sees the scheme at a glance. With Riggs dismissed,
Trainor came to the head of the list, and was entitled to immediate
promotion to first lieutenant, "he being the adjutant." This, then, made
old Plodder senior second, and now--_now_, if he could only get Calvin
out, there were his bars. Under these circumstances, Plodder was not the
man to hesitate. Knowing Calvin's weakness, he had "kept an eye on him;"
had obtained, through some mysterious correspondent, details of his
proceedings at his post of isolation, and it was not long before it
began to be suspected that it was he who inspired the rumors that
appeared in the local papers, and so drew the attention of the
authorities to Calvin's offence.

Well, Calvin came in, had an interview with his colonel, who was stern
and non-committal. Calvin protested that his offence had been grievously
exaggerated. Britton, who took his place up the country, swore that the
best citizens up there came in to speak in high terms of Calvin. The men
with whom he had had the disturbance were rough characters, who had
purposely insulted him, and Britton said that he believed the whole
statement could be traced to one of the enlisted men, a bad fellow, whom
Calvin had disciplined. The man was known to be writing letters
frequently, and no one knew to whom they were sent. Calvin behaved well
around garrison, and the colonel was divided in his mind. He hated to
prefer charges he could not fully substantiate, and it was by no means
certain that the allegations against Calvin could be reliably supported,
although there was strong probability of their truth. Then it began to
be rumored about the post that the colonel was wavering, despite his
firm front against all Calvin's appeals, and that night Plodder was
observed to be in a high state of nervous excitement. He had a
confidential interview with one subaltern, and sought another with at
least one more, but was sternly and angrily rebuffed. "I cannot say what
the matter was," explained the offended youngster, "as he made me agree
to regard his offer, as he called it, confidential. But it lets me out
on Plodder, that's all."

The next day Plodder had a long talk with Calvin. The latter looked
infinitely depressed at its close, and went up to town by permission of
the colonel to see some legal friends. When night came he did not
return, as was understood to be the arrangement, and the adjutant,
driving up in the ambulance immediately after retreat, reappeared at
tattoo, escorting Calvin; and Calvin, perceptibly intoxicated, was
conducted to his quarters, and bidden there to abide in close arrest.

Two days more, and his unconditional resignation was forwarded
"approved" from regimental headquarters, and a few days later, sadly
bidding his comrades adieu, Calvin started homewards. "It was no use
trying to make a fight," he said. "Some fellow had been spying around up
the country, and had prejudiced the colonel, and he told me he meant to
bring up charges for the old matter. I could have stood up against them
separately, but not collectively; and I had no war record, no friends,
no influence. What was the use? Old Plodder gave me a check for four
hundred dollars, payable at the First National in Chicago. I'll go back
to railroading. Wish to God I'd never left it for soldiering, anyhow!"
And with that he was gone, to await at his home the acceptance of his
tendered resignation.

Now there was unexpected sympathy for Calvin in the regiment. He was a
plain man, of limited education, who had run an engine on one of
Tecumseh Sherman's vitally important railways in '64, and when his train
was attacked by Hood's horsemen he had fought like a hero, had been made
an officer in a regiment doing railway-guard duty, and at the end of the
war a lieutenant in the regular infantry. Being sociable, warm-hearted,
and weak, he had fallen into drinking ways, had spent his money fast,
and so had fallen from grace. He had long been unhappy and out of his
element in the service. Perhaps it was best that he should go back to
the old life, where drink was an impossibility.

But the wonder was, how could old Plodder bear to spend four hundred
dollars of his hoarded gains even for the coveted file? _That_ was not
answered until long afterwards, and really has no place in the immediate
_dénouement_ of this plot. It might come in handily elsewhere. He _had_
given Calvin four hundred dollars to resign at once, and perhaps the
colonel breathed freer at having the case decided for him. Now we were
all agog for the result. It depended, of course, upon Riggs's sentence.

Now Riggs was an anomaly. He had few friends in the regiment. He was a
shy, sensitive, retiring sort of fellow--a man who read a great deal,
was known to be very well informed, a man who rarely appeared at the
social gatherings at the store, never played cards or billiards, was
civil and courteous to the younger officers, but a little surly to the
seniors. He was disliked by most of the latter, and cordially hated by
his own captain. When they sat on courts together, Mr. Riggs invariably
carried the day in all discussions that came up. He knew more law than
any of them. Indeed, there seemed to be no point on which he had not
more information than all but two or three of his seniors, and he rather
delighted in drawing them out and exposing their ignorance. On the other
hand, in the thousand little ways in which superior officers can inflict
humiliation upon their juniors, his own and other captains made him feel
his dependent position, and poor Riggs, with all his knowledge, was a
very unhappy man. He had not a real friend, certainly not an intimate,
in the regiment; in fact, he incurred the hostility of many of the subs
at the very start by being transferred from an old regiment to near the
top of the list of this one when the consolidation took place in '71--a
transfer that drove Mr. Plodder nearly frantic at the time, and laid the
solid foundation of his undying hate. Riggs made no attempt to
conciliate anybody. He never mentioned his past life or services. No one
knew his war history, though it was known that he had served. No one
ever heard him refer to what he had seen or experienced. Yet the few
caustic comments with which he occasionally silenced Plodder's
reminiscences amid an explosion of laughter from the youngsters assured
every one that he knew whereof he spoke. He was sad, dreamy in
temperament; some said he took opium, all knew he took whiskey, and a
great deal of it, though never was he known to do or say an unseemly
thing under its influence. His face would flush and his speech sometimes
thicken, but for a long time that had been all. He was what was called a
steady drinker, and as an excuse, his wife (and she was a devoted little
woman) was wont to tell the ladies of the regiment who ventured to
allude to it that Mr. Riggs had a pulmonary difficulty, a bad cough, and
that his physicians had prescribed whiskey.

Cough he certainly had, and at times a very consumptive look, and as
time wore on he had grown moody and sullen. Then came an exciting period
in the history of the regiment. Several days and nights of sharp and
stirring service against rioters in the streets of the adjoining city.
Several days with irregular food and nights with irregular sleep, and
after forty-eight hours of such experience Lieutenant Riggs, suddenly
summoned at daybreak by his captain to command a guard to be sent to
some public buildings, plunged, stupidly drunk, into plain sight of
assembled officers and men, and was sent back to the garrison in
disgrace and close arrest. This was the offence for which he had just
been tried. There was no hope for him said the colonel and the officers
of the regiment. Dismissal short and sharp was the only prospect before
him. A presidential announcement had but recently been made that _that_
was the one thing not to be overlooked at an executive mansion where
dismayed diplomats were compelled to struggle through state dinners
unaided by the accustomed Château Yquem and Pommery Sec, and rushed away
chilled and alarmed to seek vinous aid for their offended stomachs.
Riggs was ruined, and must expect to go.

But the case had been tried before a general court of considerable rank,
and composed of officers from other posts and commands. Only one of the
--th Foot was on the detail. Admitting the facts alleged in the
specification, Mr. Riggs had called upon one or two officers, his
colonel and the major, for evidence as to his general character and
previous conduct, and they could say nothing of consequence against him,
and _did_ say much that was favorable. When they had retired Mr. Riggs
surprised the court by calling upon one of its own members, an old
surgeon, and subsequently upon another, a veteran lieutenant-colonel of
artillery.

"What in thunder could he have wanted of them?" was the amazed inquiry
down at the barracks that evening when it was there announced, and all
that was said in reply was, that they had known him during the war. Next
day some important documentary evidence was introduced, and then, asking
only twenty-four hours in which to write his defence, Mr. Riggs, in a
voice that trembled with emotion and with eyes that filled with tears he
strove in vain to dash away, proceeded to address the court. "My wife is
very ill, gentlemen, and her anxiety on my account has increased the
trouble. The order convening the court assigned the barracks as the
place of meeting, but it was changed, very properly, to suit the
convenience of the members who were in the city. As it is, I have to
leave there early in the morning, and be away from her all day. May I
ask, as a great favor, that you arrange to meet to-morrow at the old
place? I can then be near her in case--in case--" Here he stopped short,
and, covering his face with his hands, turned his back upon the court.

The solemn silence was broken by the voice of the old surgeon.

"I know Mrs. Riggs, and have known her for years; she is indeed very
much prostrated, and I have a note from Dr. Grant at the barracks
substantiating what Mr. Riggs says." The judge-advocate stepped out and
had a short consultation with the adjutant-general of the department in
his adjoining office, and when the court adjourned it adjourned to meet
at noon on the following day down at the barracks.

It was perhaps an hour after adjournment when the judge-advocate of the
court, accompanied by one of its members, started out to take a drive.
Passing the headquarters building where they had been in session during
the morning, they were surprised to see Lieutenant Riggs standing alone
at the doorway and gazing anxiously down the street.

"Why, I thought his wife was so sick, and supposed that he would be on
his way to barracks by this time," said the member.

"And I, too; I don't understand it," said the junior, who was driving.
"At least," he added, hesitatingly, "he may be waiting for the
ambulance. It's a six-mile drive, and no hackman will go there for less
than a small fortune."

There was silence for a moment as they trotted briskly along. Both the
judge-advocate and the member caught each other in the act of glancing
back towards the dim and lonely figure of Mr. Riggs, and in another
minute the younger officer pulled up his team.

"Major, you want to go back and see what's the matter?"

"Yes, and so do you. Hold up a minute; there's Coles now. He'll know
about the ambulance."

Reining in towards the sidewalk, the sauntering quartermaster was
hailed, and that somewhat bulky official stepped up to the side of their
stylish turn-out.

"Was the ambulance to take Riggs back to the post? He seems to be
waiting for something very anxiously," said the judge-advocate.

The quartermaster started. "Why, yes; I thought it had gone long ago,
and had stopped below here where I met it. Captain and Mrs. Breen and
one or two others were doing a little shopping, I reckon."

"Meantime poor Riggs is waiting to get back to his sick wife, and has
been waiting for an hour," said the legal adviser of the court, with an
impatient crack of the whip that startled his spirited grays as they
were whirled about and sent spinning up the street, leaving the dazed
quartermaster staring after them. At headquarters the team again
abruptly pulled up, and its driver called out, in cheery tones,

"Riggs, we are going out to barracks. Can we give you a lift? It may be
some time before that ambulance comes along."

"It was to have been here over an hour ago," said the infantryman,
slowly. "I don't know what's the matter, and I could not go in search of
it; my arrest limits me to this building when in town. I hate to trouble
you, yet I ought to have been home by this time."

"Jump in, jump in! We'll get you there in less than no time," exclaimed
both occupants. And, only too willing, Mr. Riggs "leaped aboard," and
they sped away for the outskirts of the city.

Passing a favorite restaurant, where officers and ladies were wont to
rendezvous when in town, they caught sight of the missing ambulance.

"Weren't you ordered to be at headquarters for Lieutenant Riggs at
three o'clock?" demanded the judge-advocate of the driver.

"Yes, sir," replied that party, glancing in nervous embarrassment over
his shoulder at somebody in the depths of the vehicle, "but--"

A forage-capped head appeared from behind the curtain; the benign
features of Captain Breen slowly hove in sight, and a smile of greeting
spread thereover as his eyes met those of the staff-officers.

"Oh, ah! Good-afternoon, colonel. How de do, Captain Park. Why--yes,
there was something said about going for Riggs when we got through--when
the ladies finished shopping, you know. I was just reading the evening
paper. If you are ready, Riggs, I--I'll hurry them out now," said the
captain, startled into civility to the subaltern on seeing the
distinguished company in which he drove.

"Thanks; we won't trouble you. Hup there!" said Captain Park, dryly and
energetically, as once more the grays dashed off at rapid trot, and in
half an hour Mr. Riggs was landed in front of his quarters in the
garrison.

He said very little as he stepped from the light road-wagon, but he
grasped the extended hands of the two officers, and looked up in their
faces with mute eloquence. The post surgeon happened along at the
moment, and Riggs turned eagerly towards him.

"A little easier, if anything," said the doctor, in answer to the look
of anxious inquiry. "Better, I think, than she has been for the last two
days. Your telegram cheered her a good deal."

"Excuse me now, will you, gentlemen?" said the lieutenant to his late
conductors. "You understand my haste, and will forgive my inhospitality
in not asking you in. You--you don't know how I thank you." And with
that he was gone.

"Doctor, what seems the matter with Mrs. Riggs?" asked the
judge-advocate, impetuously.

"Heart-trouble mainly. Any great anxiety tells right there. She was a
very sick woman yesterday. Won't you stop at my quarters?"

"Thanks, no. We were just out for a drive, and must get back."

Whether from motives of delicacy, or possibly from lack of curiosity,
very few of the older officers of the --th Foot were present in the
court-room when Mr. Riggs read his brief statement or defence on the
following day; but nothing could keep Plodder away. Among the group of
four or five junior officers his keen little eyes and eager face peered
out, ferret-like, glancing from member to member of the court as though
he sought to probe their inmost souls. Brief as it was, Riggs had
written an admirable little argument. He made no accusations, no
recriminations; indeed, he rather slightingly alluded to a portion of
the evidence which went to show that during the forty-eight hours
preceding his offence he had been kept almost continuously on duty night
and day, while the other company officer, his captain, slept almost as
continuously. He manfully admitted his guilt, he showed that never
before had he been accused of such an offence, and then, with brief
reference to the testimony of the surgeon and his old division
commander of war days, and the documentary evidence in their possession,
he threw himself upon the mercy of the court.

The youngsters could not repress a murmur of admiration as he closed.
Plodder with open mouth and staring eyes looked around the long,
littered table like a military Shylock imploring the fulfilment of his
bond. His eyes brightened as the judge-advocate slowly rose; he knew how
trenchant he could be, at least, and he had confidence that his response
would shatter the favorable impression left by Mr. Riggs's defence. It
was with an almost audible gasp of dismay that he heard the next words
that broke the silence of the court-room. The judge-advocate calmly
said, "The case is submitted without remark."

Not until Mr. Waterman had plucked him by the coat-sleeve and hoarsely
whispered, "Don't stand there like a stuck pig, you old idiot. Court's
cleared," could Mr. Plodder be made to understand that all outsiders
were required to withdraw that the court might proceed to its
deliberation. Even at the outer door he again stopped and looked back, a
half-formed project taking root in his bewildered brain, and again Mr.
Waterman unfeelingly interrupted him. "Come on, Plodder. D--n it all!
are you thinking of going in and haranguing the court yourself?" It was
in more than perturbation that Plodder finally sought his quarters and,
secure in his solitude, unlocked and uncorked his demijohn.

In another hour the court had adjourned and gone its way. Issuing from
the stuffy room over the colonel's office, the members had been met by
hospitable invitations to take luncheon here, there, and elsewhere about
the garrison, and the story of the documentary and war evidence having
got around by this time, there was much questioning as to its exact
nature, and much wonderment that it had not been heard of before. The
surgeon had testified to Mr. Riggs's having been twice severely wounded,
once at Shiloh, again at Chickamauga. The artillery colonel to his
having twice noticed admirable and gallant conduct in action, which he
had praised in orders. The documentary evidence went even further.
Evidently Riggs's stock was looking up. Of course no member of the court
could give the faintest hint of the action taken, and as they finally
drove away, and the officers after evening parade were discussing the
probable fate of the accused, the colonel quietly put a stop to
speculation by the remark made to the second in command, "He pleaded
guilty. They had to sentence him to dismissal. Now only the President
can save him. He has no influence, and the President has just said he
would not overlook such offences in future. That settles it in my mind."

That night, therefore, Mr. Plodder went to bed half full of comfort and
whiskey.

But it was noticed that the judge-advocate, Captain Park, had gone off
with the surgeon after the adjournment of court, and while the rest of
the garrison were at lunch he, with Dr. Grant, had appeared at Riggs's
door.

"She has begged to be allowed to see you," the doctor had explained,
"and what she needs is some little word of hope. _His_ hopefulness she
fears is only simulated for her sake." And nodding appreciatively in
response to the doctor's significant glance, Captain Park was shown into
the plainly furnished little parlor, where, reclining in a broad
sofa-chair, propped upon white pillows, white as her own wan face, was
the fragile form of the invalid. He had known her only slightly, but her
gentle, unassuming, sweet-tempered ways had often attracted his
attention, and her devotion to her husband was a matter that had excited
the somewhat envious remarks of Benedicts less favored. She held out her
thin white hand, and looked with glistening eyes up into the grave
bearded face that bent over her in courteous greeting and kindly
interest.

"I wanted to see you and thank you," she said in her gentle voice. "More
than once Mr. Riggs has spoken of your consideration and courtesy in all
this--this sad affair; but yesterday he was quite overcome. They did not
get back with the ambulance until nearly seven, and all that time he
would have been kept waiting, and I--"

"It was a pleasure to me to be of any service," he answered; "but I am
grieved to see you so prostrated, so ill. Do you know I--I think you are
worrying far too much?"

Eagerly she glanced up into his face. "Oh, Captain Park! I know you
cannot tell me the sentence; I know you cannot tell me anything they
have done, but I am so torn with doubt, so unhappy! Mr. Riggs seems so
friendless here. No one knows him, no one understands him. Last night he
almost broke down as he said that in a whole year yours was the only
voice he had heard that seemed to have a ring of friendship or sympathy.
His people have written to him to come home. They think he must be
dismissed, and have so written to him and to me. They urge me to come at
once and get the little home they offer in readiness, so that he can be
induced to come right there if the order is--is against us. I am ill,
but if need be I could go. I would be glad to think of having that
little haven for him in case he were crushed by this, but _ought_ I to
go? Ought I to leave him here alone? It will be full three weeks or a
month before we can hear from Washington, I suppose."

Still standing, he bent over her chair. "Shall I tell you what I think
you ought to do, at once?" he asked, almost smiling. "I believe I will,
anyway. It may be a very rude and impertinent thing to say, but it is my
belief that the best thing you can do is get well--get well right
away, and be ready, you and Mr. Riggs, to take Christmas dinner with us.
Mrs. Park will be back next week, and I know she will be delighted.
There! It is nearly a month away to be sure, but that will give you
abundant time. Meanwhile, of course you can't go home. Will you promise
me, Mrs. Riggs?" And the legal adviser held out his hand, gave her a
cordial grasp, and vanished before she could find one word in which to
thank him. When Mr. Riggs rejoined his wife she was sobbing like a
little child, and yet there was a world of hope and gladness in her
swollen eyes as she gazed up into his tired face and drew it down to her
lips.

As for Captain Park, it was observed of him that he whistled with
considerable cheeriness on his way back to town, and as he sat at his
desk that evening completing the record of the court. Some weeks
afterwards, in speaking of the requirement that no officer of a court
shall make known its sentence except to the reviewing authority, Captain
Park was heard to mutter, "Wonder if inviting a fellow to a Christmas
dinner would be revealing the sentence of a court?" and somebody present
replied, "How could it be?"

And yet Mrs. Riggs was gaining health and spirits with every day, and
Mr. Riggs, though still confined to the garrison in arrest, was serenely
enjoying life in her society.

Three weeks later a brace of orders arrived from the War Department, and
there was uproar and excitement among the youngsters in the --th Foot.
Full information of course preceded the official announcement, but the
very enlisted men grinned with delight when those orders were read on
parade, for the story of Plodder's speculation had reached the ranks,
where he was no favorite. Divested of their official forms the orders
were, first, publication of the proceedings of the court-martial before
which Lieutenant Riggs was arraigned and tried, and in accordance with
his plea was found guilty and sentenced to be dismissed the service. All
of which was approved; but, said the order, "in view of the earnest
recommendation signed by the entire court, and concurred in by the
commanding generals of the department and of the army, the president has
been pleased to remit the sentence, and Lieutenant Riggs will resume his
sword and return to duty."

Then came the second order from the A.G.O.:

     "PROMOTIONS AND APPOINTMENTS.

            *       *       *       *       *

     "--_th Infantry._

     "Second Lieutenant John B. Riggs to be first lieutenant, vice
     Calvin resigned. December 3, 187-.

     "Second Lieutenant William H. Trainor to be first lieutenant,
     he being the adjutant. December 3, 187-."

And Plodder's hoarded four hundred dollars had really purchased Riggs's
promotion. "Bless your generous heart, Plod!" burst out that
irrepressible scapegrace Trickett as the officers dispersed after
dismissal of parade. "Let me shake hands with you, old man. Now just
chip in another four hundred and buy me a file and I'll--" But the rest
was lost in the explosions of laughter, under cover of which poor
Plodder went raging to his quarters.

As for Riggs, he wore his bars for the first time at Park's Christmas
dinner, and he wears them yet, only he hates to be spoken of as
"Plodder's Promotion."

    THE END.




       *       *       *       *       *

By CAPT. CHARLES KING.

       *       *       *       *       *

    CAMPAIGNING WITH CROOK, AND STORIES OF
    ARMY LIFE. Post 8vo, Cloth, $1 25.

    A WAR-TIME WOOING. Illustrated by R. F. Zogbaum.
    pp. iv., 196. Post 8vo, Cloth, $1 00.

    BETWEEN THE LINES. A Story of the War. Illustrated
    by Gilbert Gaul. pp. iv., 312. Post 8vo, Cloth, $1 25.

In all of Captain King's stories the author holds to lofty ideals of
manhood and womanhood, and inculcates the lessons of honor, generosity,
courage, and self-control.--_Literary World_, Boston.

The vivacity and charm which signally distinguish Captain King's pen....
He occupies a position in American literature entirely his own.... His
is the literature of honest sentiment, pure and tender.--_N. Y. Press._

A romance by Captain King is always a pleasure, because he has so
complete a mastery of the subjects with which he deals.... Captain King
has few rivals in his domain.... The general tone of Captain King's
stories is highly commendable. The heroes are simple, frank, and
soldierly; the heroines are dignified and maidenly in the most
unconventional situations.--_Epoch_, N. Y.

All Captain King's stories are full of spirit and with the true ring
about them.--_Philadelphia Item._

Captain King's stories of army life are so brilliant and intense, they
have such a ring of true experience, and his characters are so lifelike
and vivid that the announcement of a new one is always received with
pleasure.--_New Haven Palladium._

Captain King is a delightful story-teller.--_Washington Post._

In the delineation of war scenes Captain King's style is crisp and
vigorous, inspiring in the breast of the reader a thrill of genuine
patriotic fervor.--_Boston Commonwealth._

Captain King is almost without a rival in the field he has chosen....
His style is at once vigorous and sentimental in the best sense of that
word, so that his novels are pleasing to young men as well as young
women.--_Pittsburgh Bulletin._

It is good to think that there is at least one man who believes that all
the spirit of romance and chivalry has not yet died out of the world,
and that there are as brave and honest hearts to-day as there were in
the days of knights and paladins.--_Philadelphia Record._

       *       *       *       *       *

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_Any of the above works sent by mail, postage prepaid, to any
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BOOTS AND SADDLES;

Or, Life in Dakota with General Custer. By
     Mrs. Elizabeth B. Custer. With Portrait of General Custer, pp.
     312. 12mo, Cloth, $1 50.


A book of adventure is interesting reading, especially when it is all
true, as is the case with "Boots and Saddles." *** She does not obtrude
the fact that sunshine and solace went with her to tent and fort, but it
inheres in her narrative none the less, and as a consequence "these
simple annals of our daily life," as she calls them, are never dull nor
uninteresting.--_Evangelist_, N. Y.

Mrs. Custer's book is in reality a bright and sunny sketch of the life
of her late husband, who fell at the battle of "Little Big Horn." ***
After the war, when General Custer was sent to the Indian frontier, his
wife was of the party, and she is able to give the minute story of her
husband's varied career, since she was almost always near the scene of
his adventures.--_Brooklyn Union._

We have no hesitation in saying that no better or more satisfactory life
of General Custer could have been written. Indeed, we may as well speak
the thought that is in us, and say plainly that we know of no
biographical work anywhere which we count better than this. *** Surely
the record of such experiences as these will be read with that keen
interest which attaches only to strenuous human doings; as surely we are
right in saying that such a story of truth and heroism as that here told
will take a deeper hold upon the popular mind and heart than any work of
fiction can. For the rest, the narrative is as vivacious and as lightly
and trippingly given as that of any novel. It is enriched in every
chapter with illustrative anecdotes and incidents, and here and there a
little life story of pathetic interest is told as an episode.--_N. Y.
Commercial Advertiser._

It is a plain, straightforward story of the author's life on the plains
of Dakota. Every member of a Western garrison will want to read this
book; every person in the East who is interested in Western life will
want to read it, too; and every girl or boy who has a healthy appetite
for adventure will be sure to get it. It is bound to have an army of
readers that few authors can expect.--_Philadelphia Press._

These annals of daily life in the army are simple, yet interesting, and
underneath all is discerned the love of a true woman ready for any
sacrifice. She touches on themes little canvassed by the civilian, and
makes a volume equally redolent of a loving devotion to an honored
husband, and attractive as a picture of necessary duty by the
soldier.--_Commonwealth_, Boston.

       *       *       *       *       *

Published by HARPER & BROTHERS, N. Y.

Harper & Brothers _will send the above work by mail, postage
prepaid, to any part of the United States or Canada, on receipt of the
price_.




BY W. D. HOWELLS.

THE SHADOW OF A DREAM. A Story. 12mo, Paper, 50
     cents; Cloth, $1 00.

A HAZARD OF NEW FORTUNES. Illustrated. 8vo, Paper, 75 cents; 12mo,
Cloth, 2 vols., $2 00.

     Never, certainly, has Mr. Howells written more brilliantly,
     more clearly, more firmly, or more attractively than in this
     instance.--_N. Y. Tribune._

     This new novel is distinguished by the possession in an unusual
     degree of all the familiar qualities of Mr. Howells's style.
     The humor of it, particularly, is abundant and
     delightful.--_Philadelphia Press._

MODERN ITALIAN POETS. Essays and Versions. With Portraits. 12mo, Half
Cloth, $2 00.

     Mr. Howells has in this work enriched American literature by a
     great deal of delicate, discriminating, candid, and sympathetic
     criticism. He has enabled the general public to obtain a
     knowledge of modern Italian poetry which they could have
     acquired in no other way.--_N. Y. Tribune._

ANNIE KILBURN. 12mo, Cloth, $1 50.

     Mr. Howells has certainly never given us in one novel so many
     portraits of intrinsic interest. Annie Kilburn herself is a
     masterpiece of quietly veracious art--the art which depends for
     its effect on unswerving fidelity to the truth of Nature.... It
     certainly seems to us the very best book that Mr. Howells has
     written.--_Spectator, London._

APRIL HOPES. 12mo, Cloth, $1 50.

     Mr. Howells never wrote a more bewitching book. It is useless
     to deny the rarity and worth of the skill that can report so
     perfectly and with such exquisite humor all the fugacious and
     manifold emotions of the modern maiden and her
     lover.--_Philadelphia Press._

THE MOUSE-TRAP, and Other Farces. 12mo, Cloth, $1 00.

     Mr. Howells's gift of lively appreciation of the humors that
     lie on the surface of conduct and conversation, and his skill
     in reproducing them in literary form, make him peculiarly
     successful in his attempts at graceful, delicately humorous
     dialogue.--_Boston Advertiser._

       *       *       *       *       *

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BY CONSTANCE F. WOOLSON.

    JUPITER LIGHTS. A Novel. 16mo, Cloth, $1 25.

    EAST ANGELS. A Novel. 16mo, Cloth, $1 25.

    ANNE. A Novel. Illustrated. 16mo, Cloth, $1 25.

    FOR THE MAJOR. A Novelette. 16mo, Cloth, $1 00.

    CASTLE NOWHERE. Lake Country Sketches. 16mo,
      Cloth, $1 00.

    RODMAN THE KEEPER. Southern Sketches. 16mo,
      Cloth, $1 00.

     Delightful touches justify those who see many points of analogy
     between Miss Woolson and George Eliot.--_N. Y. Times._

     For tenderness and purity of thought, for exquisitely delicate
     sketching of characters, Miss Woolson is unexcelled among
     writers of fiction.--_New Orleans Picayune._

     Characterization is Miss Woolson's forte. Her men and women are
     not mere puppets, but original, breathing, and finely
     contrasted creations.--_Chicago Tribune._

     Miss Woolson is one of the few novelists of the day who know
     how to make conversation, how to individualize the speakers,
     how to exclude rabid realism without falling into literary
     formality.--_N. Y. Tribune._

     Constance Fenimore Woolson may easily become the novelist
     laureate.--_Boston Globe._

     Miss Woolson has a graceful fancy, a ready wit, a polished
     style, and conspicuous dramatic power; while her skill in the
     development of a story is very remarkable.--_London Life._

     Miss Woolson never once follows the beaten track of the
     orthodox novelist, but strikes a new and richly loaded vein
     which, so far, is all her own; and thus we feel, on reading one
     of her works, a fresh sensation, and we put down the book with
     a sigh to think our pleasant task of reading it is finished.
     The author's lines must have fallen to her in very pleasant
     places; or she has, perhaps, within herself the wealth of
     womanly love and tenderness she pours so freely into all she
     writes. Such books as hers do much to elevate the moral tone of
     the day--a quality sadly wanting in novels of the
     time.--_Whitehall Review, London._

       *       *       *       *       *

    Published by HARPER & BROTHERS, New York.

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the United States, Canada, or Mexico, on receipt of the price._




BY CHARLES DUDLEY WARNER


A LITTLE JOURNEY IN THE WORLD. A Novel. pp. iv.,
     396. Post 8vo, Half Leather, $1 50.

STUDIES IN THE SOUTH AND WEST, with Comments on Canada. pp. iv., 484.
Post 8vo, Half Leather, $1 75.

     A witty, instructive book, as brilliant in its pictures as it
     is warm in its kindness; and we feel sure that it is with a
     patriotic impulse that we say that we shall be glad to learn
     that the number of its readers bears some proportion to its
     merits and its power for good.--_N. Y. Commercial Advertiser._

     Sketches made from studies of the country and the people upon
     the ground.... They are the opinions of a man and a scholar
     without prejudices, and only anxious to state the facts as they
     were.... When told in the pleasant and instructive way of Mr.
     Warner the studies are as delightful as they are
     instructive.--_Chicago Inter-Ocean._

     Perhaps the most accurate and graphic account of these portions
     of the country that has appeared, taken all in all.... It is a
     book most charming--a book that no American can fail to enjoy,
     appreciate, and highly prize.--_Boston Traveller._

THEIR PILGRIMAGE. Richly Illustrated by C. S. Reinhart. pp. viii., 364.
Post 8vo, Half Leather, $2 00.

     Mr. Warner's pen-pictures of the characters typical of each
     resort, of the manner of life followed at each, of the humor
     and absurdities peculiar to Saratoga, or Newport, or Bar
     Harbor, as the case may be, are as good-natured as they are
     clever. The satire, when there is any, is of the mildest, and
     the general tone is that of one glad to look on the brightest
     side of the cheerful, pleasure-seeking world with which he
     mingles.--_Christian Union_, N. Y.

     Mr. Reinhart's spirited and realistic illustrations are very
     attractive, and contribute to make an unusually handsome book.
     We have already commented upon the earlier chapters of the
     text; and the happy blending of travel and fiction which we
     looked forward to with confidence did, in fact, distinguish
     this story among the serials of the year.--_N. Y. Evening
     Post._

       *       *       *       *       *

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THE CAPTAIN OF THE JANIZARIES.

A Tale of the Times of Scanderbeg and the Fall of
    Constantinople. By James M. Ludlow, D.D., Litt.D. pp. iv., 404. 16mo,
    Cloth, $1 50.

     The author writes clearly and easily; his descriptions are often
     of much brilliancy, while the whole setting of the story is of
     that rich Oriental character which fires the fancy.--_Boston
     Courier._

     Strong in its central historical character, abounding in
     incident, rapid and stirring in action, animated and often
     brilliant in style.--_Christian Union_, N. Y.

     Something new and striking interests us in almost every
     chapter. The peasantry of the Balkans, the training and
     government of the Janizaries, the interior of Christian and
     Moslem camps, the horrors of raids and battles, the violence of
     the Sultan, the tricks of spies, the exploits of heroes, engage
     Mr. Ludlow's fluent pen.--_N. Y. Tribune._

     Dr. Ludlow's style is a constant reminder of Walter Scott, and
     the book is to retain a permanent place in
     literature.--_Observer, N. Y._

     An altogether admirable piece of work--picturesque, truthful,
     and dramatic.--_Newark Advertiser._

     A most romantic, enjoyable tale.... As affording views of inner
     life in the East as long ago as the middle of the fifteenth
     century, this tale ought to have a charm for many; but it is
     full enough of incident, wherever the theatre of its action
     might be found, to do this.--_Troy Press._

     The author has used his material with skill, weaving the facts
     of history into a story crowded with stirring incidents and
     unexpected situations, and a golden thread of love-making,
     under extreme difficulties, runs through the narrative to a
     happy issue.--_Examiner_, N. Y.

     One of the strongest and most fascinating historical novels of
     the last quarter of a century.--_Boston Pilot._

     A refreshing and remarkable production. There is here no
     wearisome soul-searching, and no minute analysis of the
     trivial, but a straightforward romance, written almost in the
     great manner of Scott. As a story, it is absorbingly
     interesting from first page to last. As a resuscitation of
     history, it has the accuracy without the pedantry of the works
     of German and other moderns. As a presentation of the physical
     aspects of the Balkan peninsula, it is very striking, and shows
     close familiarity with the regions described. As a study of the
     life and manner of the remote epoch with which it deals, it
     exhibits, without ostentation, a careful and minute research;
     and as a literary composition, it has more merits and fewer
     faults than most of the books written in this age of hurried
     production.--_Dial_, Chicago.

       *       *       *       *       *

    Published by HARPER & BROTHERS, New York.

    Harper & Brothers _will send the above work by mail, postage prepaid,
    to any part of the United States, Canada, or Mexico,
    on receipt of the price_.



BY LAFCADIO HEARN.

Two Years in the French West Indies. By Lafcadio Hearn. pp.517.
Copiously Illustrated. Post 8vo, Cloth, $2 00.

The Crime of Sylvestre Bonnard. By Anatole France. The Translation and
Introduction by Lafcadio Hearn. 8vo, Paper, 50 cents.

Chita: A Memory of Last Island. By Lafcadio Hearn. pp. vi., 204. Post
8vo, Cloth, Ornamental, $1 00.

     To such as are unfamiliar with Mr. Hearn's writings,"Chita"
     will be a revelation of how near language can approach the
     realistic power of actual painting. His very words seem to have
     color--his pages glow--his book is a kaleidoscope.--_N. Y. Mail
     and Express._

     A powerful story, rich in descriptive passages.... The tale is
     a tragic one, but it shows remarkable imaginative force, and is
     one that will not soon be forgotten by the reader.--_Saturday
     Evening Gazette_, Boston.

     Lafcadio Hearn's exquisite story.... A tale full of poetry and
     vivid description that nobody will want to miss.--_N. Y. Sun._

     A pathetic little tale, simple but deeply touching, and told
     with the beauty of phrasing and the deep and subtle sympathy of
     the poet.--_Chicago Times._

     There is no page--no paragraph even--but holds more of vital
     quality than would suffice to set up an ordinary volume.--_The
     Epoch_, N. Y.

     ... A wonderfully sustained effort in imaginative prose, full
     of the glamour and opulent color of the tropics and yet strong
     with the salt breath of the sea.--_San Francisco Chronicle._

     Mr. Hearn is a poet, and in "Chita" he has produced a prose
     poem of much beauty.... His style is tropical, full of glow and
     swift movement and vivid impressions, reflecting strong love
     and keen sympathetic observation of nature, picturesque and
     flexible, luxuriant in imagery, and marked by a delicate
     perception of effective values.--_N. Y. Tribune._

     In the too few pages of this wonderful little book tropical
     Nature finds a living voice and a speech by which she can make
     herself known. All the splendor of her skies and the terrors of
     her seas make to themselves a language. So living a book has
     scarcely been given to our generation.--_Boston Transcript._

       *       *       *       *       *

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BEN-HUR: A TALE OF THE CHRIST.


By Lew. Wallace. New Edition. pp. 552. 16mo,
     Cloth, $1 50.

     Anything so startling, new, and distinctive as the leading
     feature of this romance does not often appear in works of
     fiction.... Some of Mr. Wallace's writing is remarkable for its
     pathetic eloquence. The scenes described in the New Testament
     are rewritten with the power and skill of an accomplished
     master of style.--_N. Y. Times._

     Its real basis is a description of the life of the Jews and
     Romans at the beginning of the Christian era, and this is both
     forcible and brilliant.... We are carried through a surprising
     variety of scenes; we witness a sea-fight, a chariot-race, the
     internal economy of a Roman galley, domestic interiors at
     Antioch, at Jerusalem, and among the tribes of the desert;
     palaces, prisons, the haunts of dissipated Roman youth, the
     houses of pious families of Israel. There is plenty of exciting
     incident; everything is animated, vivid, and glowing.--_N. Y.
     Tribune._

     From the opening of the volume to the very close the reader's
     interest will be kept at the highest pitch, and the novel will
     be pronounced by all one of the greatest novels of the
     day.--_Boston Post._

     It is full of poetic beauty, as though born of an Eastern sage,
     and there is sufficient of Oriental customs, geography,
     nomenclature, etc., to greatly strengthen the
     semblance.--_Boston Commonwealth._

     "Ben-Hur" is interesting, and its characterization is fine and
     strong. Meanwhile it evinces careful study of the period in
     which the scene is laid, and will help those who read it with
     reasonable attention to realize the nature and conditions of
     Hebrew life in Jerusalem and Roman life at Antioch at the time
     of our Saviour's advent.--_Examiner_, N. Y.

     It is really Scripture history of Christ's time clothed
     gracefully and delicately in the flowing and loose drapery of
     modern fiction.... Few late works of fiction excel it in
     genuine ability and interest.--_N. Y. Graphic._

     One of the most remarkable and delightful books. It is as real
     and warm as life itself, and as attractive as the grandest and
     most heroic chapters of history.--_Indianapolis Journal._

     The book is one of unquestionable power, and will be read with
     unwonted interest by many readers who are weary of the
     conventional novel and romance.--_Boston Journal._


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    Published by HARPER & BROTHERS, New York.

_The above work sent by mail, postage prepaid, to any part of the United
States or Canada, on receipt of the price._