“This one is your friend, White Bull?” the chief asked when all were seated.
“No, he is my guest.”
“How is he your guest?” a very old man demanded from the far side of the fire.
“He came to my lodge,” White Bull answered. “Therefore, he is my guest.”
Sitting Bull looked at the intruder. “What is your name?”
“Johnny Bruguier.”
Even though he said his white-man name, and spoke it in English, it caused the chiefs and advisers to mutter among themselves … for the intruder must surely have understood Sitting Bull’s question spoken in Lakota.
The Bull asked, “You speak our language too?”
“Yes. It is the language of my mother.”
With a nod Sitting Bull replied, “This is why you speak our tongue as good as a Sioux.”
“I am a Sioux,” Johnny replied.
“You are a half-blood,” growled another old man across the fire. “You are neither white, nor Indian. So you are not a Lakota. This one is like the Grabber! You remember him, Sitting Bull—the Grabber who leads the soldiers down on our villages.”
One Horn pointed his finger angrily at Bruguier. “I say we kill this one!”
There arose an instant and loud agreement from many of those squeezed together at the lodgepoles, pressing in a great circle surrounding the Bull’s conference. The chief regarded White Bull’s guest, then stared at the small fire, considering. Again he regarded the intruder once more while the crowd fell to utter silence.
“Well,” Sitting Bull finally said in a loud voice filled with an awesome command all by itself, “if you are going to kill this man, then kill him. But if you are not—then give him a drink of water. Give him something to eat. And give him a pipe of peace to smoke with us.”
So it was that from the crowd immediately appeared a canteen that was passed hand-to-hand to Johnny. Bruguier pulled the cork chain from the tin container wrapped in wool and stamped with the initials U S. A bowl of dried meat was set before him, and Sitting Bull motioned for him to eat as the chief went about putting the redstone bowl onto his short pipe stem and loaded it with tobacco.
“Do you have a Lakota name?”
“My mother had no brothers to name me at Standing Rock, and my father’s people are white from far to the north. I have no Lakota name.”
Sitting Bull smiled and his eyes flashed over at White Bull. “This guest of yours, what shall we name him, nephew?”
For a moment the middle-aged warrior studied Johnny, then motioned for him to stand, there beside the fire, for all to see. Only then did he turn back to Sitting Bull. “Do you see what I will name him?”
“The way this half-blood dresses?”
White Bull nodded. “Look at his big leggings.”
A smile crept over Sitting Bull’s face as he stuffed a twist of dried grass into the flames to light his pipe. “Yes—this is good. Half-blood, you are now called Big Leggings.”
Bruguier had gazed down at his wide, floppy batwing chaps and saw how appropriate the name was. Johnny smiled. White Bull motioned for him to sit and eat.
Bruguier settled again, repeating his new name in Lakota. “Big Leggings.”
Now this morning in the cold of early autumn Johnny again thought back fondly on that first day among these people, as a guest welcomed in White Bull’s and Sitting Bull’s lodges. Their welcome had helped to drive away most of his fear of the white man’s strangling rope. As the days became weeks, and the weeks became months, Johnny Bruguier thought less and less on what he had left behind in the white man’s mining settlements. Too, he thought less and less in the white man’s tongue.
Earlier this autumn Bruguier had taken up arms against the soldiers when Three Stars Crook had attacked American Horse’s band of Miniconjou camped on Rabbit Lip Creek at the Slim Buttes. No matter that there were more soldiers than warriors from the surrounding villages, Three Stars had retreated, run away to the south, fleeing Lakota land.
Many believed there would be peace now as the Lakota wandered north by west, back toward the Elk River while the air turned cold and the first snows lanced out of the sky. Winter was coming, and they must hunt the buffalo once more to make meat in preparation for the time of great cold. The herds were gathering north of the Elk River.
But so were the soldiers, scouts had reported.
Sitting Bull vowed his people would stay out of the way of the soldiers if they could. But in this same camp Gall still mourned the loss of his wives and children at the fight along the Greasy Grass. In a flux of rage the fierce war chief said the soldiers would drive the buffalo away and make it a very hard winter for their people. He wanted to lead the warriors down on the soldiers soon and drive them off the Elk River for good.
Still, Sitting Bull said they would wait. And see how the hunting went. So far they had not had much success. Which made for a restless anger growing among the people.
That cold morning a day after they had crossed to the north side of the Elk River, Johnny was one of the few in camp awake to hear the distant call shouted by the scouts returning from the hills.
“Soldiers!”
Bruguier swept up his big blanket coat and mittens, pulling that big floppy hat down on his head, and jabbed his way out of White Bull’s lodge into the cold autumn air.
“Soldier wagons!” came the cry as the scouts swept into camp.
Already men were bursting from their lodges, weapons in hand, singing out to one another in excitement and blood oaths.
“Soldier wagons in the valley beyond the eastern hills! Many mules! Food, blankets, and guns!”
Then Gall was among them, raising his soldier carbine high overhead, shrieking that now was the time to finish what the white man had started.
“Come! Let us make war again!” he cried.
They answered him with hundreds of throats.
“Come!” Gall bellowed for all to hear. “Let us finish what we started on the Greasy Grass!”
* Yellowstone River, Montana Territory.
† On the Cheyenne River, Dakota Territory.
* The Moreau River, Dakota Territory.
Chapter 3
11 October 1876
“We’re ready to roll, Captain,” said the lieutenant, who sported a thick and jaunty mustache as he saluted his superior officer.
They both sat on horseback at the head of a jagged column of ninety-four wagons that fall morning as the horizon to the east was only then beginning to pale. Light enough to make out the rutted road to Tongue River.
“Very good, Lieutenant,” Charles W. Miner replied to the battalion adjutant. “Let’s be off.”
First Lieutenant Oskaloosa M. Smith reined about and raised an arm in the air, shouting out his order. “For-rad … harch!”
In a pair of long columns of twos and stretched down either side of the wagon train, four companies of foot soldiers set off under the bellowed echoes of their noncoms. Civilian teamsters slapped long lengths of well-soaped leather down onto the backs of those six-mule teams harnessed to these wagons filled to the gunnels with freight bound away for the army’s cantonment at the mouth of the Tongue River. It was there Colonel Nelson A. Miles’s Fifth Infantry had been throwing up log huts against the coming of what boded to be a very severe and hoary high plains winter.
Ever since August, in fact … when General Alfred H. Terry had turned Miles back to the Yellowstone with his regiment—there to build a winter cantonment under the orders specified by Lieutenant General Philip H. Sheridan. There to prevent the hostiles of Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse from crossing the Yellowstone, from there having a straight shot of it into Canada. Very plainly the colonel chomped at the bit to be the one who would turn back the Sioux, perhaps even to capture the very chiefs who had mauled and butchered Custer’s regiment.