“Give ’em over.”
King watched the man’s impassive face as he read over the three pages of handwritten documents.
Carr asked, “Sheridan’s returned to Laramie?”
“No, sir. He telegraphed these from Camp Robinson.”
The lieutenant colonel nodded, saying nothing more, then read over the dispatches one more time. When he looked up, he blinked, pursed his lips a long moment, then asked the courier, “You’ve been ordered to return, Private?”
“Yes, sir. As soon as I’ve delivered those to you, General.”
Carr saluted. “Back there a couple of miles, you passed a spring. Get that mount watered, then rest him an hour before you ride back. Is that understood, soldier?”
“Yes, General.”
“And—one other thing, Private. By God, keep your eyes moving all the time.”
The youngster grinned, cracking the sweat-plastered powder caking his face, swiping his hand across the sweat and grime on his chin. With a salute he turned and was pushing his mount back down the column.
“Gentlemen, we’ve had a small change in our plans.”
King asked, “We’re not going to unite with Crook, General Carr?”
“No. At least not for the time being, Lieutenant.”
King felt disappointment, curiosity mixed. “Where to?”
“We’re to continue on north along the Custer City Road, but once we hit the Powder River trail the war bands are reported using, instead of following it into their hunting grounds—we’re supposed to halt there and await further orders.”
“Further orders?” squealed Major Julius W. Mason nearby. “Are we ever going to get into this war or not?”
“I don’t know about you fellas,” Carr told them as he reined his mount around so its nose once more pointed north, “but something tells this old horse soldier that we might just bump into some action before we even join up with Crook.”
Then he pointed into the distance. “How far to that line of trees would you gauge, Mr. King?”
“Less than a mile, General.”
“Very good,” Carr replied. “Inform the company commanders we’re going to take a short rest there, and tell the officers I expect to have a conference with them in some of that shade up there.”
King raised his face into the heat of the noonday sun. The tender flesh along the inner sides of his thighs chafed with sweat, rubbed against the rough wool and unforgiving saddle tree of his McClellan until they felt as if they were on fire. “Yes, sir.”
“Damn right, King. If I know what you’re thinking. But trust me—it’s even hotter to an old soldier like me. Now, you ride on ahead and bring those two scouts in. I want their latest report on the ground ahead at the officers’ meeting.”
Minutes later Little Bat and Buffalo Chips were back in what shade the stubby, rustling cottonwoods offered, joining that ring of officers. Carr listened to what the halfbreed scout had to tell them about the country to the north, and what Indian sign the two of them had crossed since daybreak. The regiment’s commander didn’t take long in deciding his course of action.
“Major Stanton,” Carr said, addressing the department’s paymaster, “I’ve decided to send you ahead on our trail with a company in reconnaissance.”
“Which one, sir?” asked Captain Thaddeus Stanton, Sheridan’s own emissary riding with the Fifth.
“C. That’d be yours, Lieutenant Keyes.”
Edward L. Keyes straightened. “Yes, General.”
Stanton turned to Carr. “General, I’d like to request that you send King with me.”
Carr looked at his young adjutant. “Lieutenant? How’s that sound to a veteran Apache fighter like you?”
King grinned, glancing at Stanton. “By all means, sir!”
Stanton stood, dusting the back of his wool britches. “When do you want us to detach, General?”
Carr turned to Keyes. “When can you have C Troop ready, Lieutenant?”
“Half an hour, sir.”
“Make it fifteen minutes, Lieutenant.”
Keyes saluted and was gone, trotting off toward the horses tethered nearby.
Carr turned back to Stanton, but for a moment his eyes connected with King’s meaningfully. “I’m giving you Little Bat as guide. White will stay with me. Gentlemen, it is crucial that you reach the Cheyenne River as quickly as possible. Sheridan wired down from Red Cloud that the warrior bands are abandoning the agency en masse. I need you on the Cheyenne, and I need you there as fast as you can cover that ground.”
“Understood, General,” Stanton said, tapping the sawed-off blunderbuss of a rifle he carried on a sling looped over his left shoulder.
Minutes later, as King stood in a narrow patch of noonday shade tightening his cinch, Carr strode over. The lieutenant colonel spoke softly, almost fatherly.
“Lieutenant—I feel I must warn you: these Indians of the plains aren’t like those Apache we fought down in Arizona.”
“Yes, sir.”
“These are horse warriors. Nothing against the Apache, but those renegade Chiricahua could move faster on foot in those rugged mountains of theirs than a man on horseback.”
“How well I remember.”
“Yes, of course you do,” Carr replied, glancing at King’s shoulder. “But these Sioux and Cheyenne, Lieutenant—never underestimate them when they climb on the back of a pony. Watch yourself.”
King slipped the big curb bit back into his horse’s mouth. “I will, General.”
“See that Keyes doesn’t get rattled, either.”
“No, sir.”
“And by all means—keep the company together. If these horse warriors get the troops scattered in a running fight of it—they’ll eat you alive.”
Swallowing hard, the lieutenant saluted. “I’ll remember, sir.”
“Have at them, Mr. King. Have at them.”
Two hours later, having crossed one wide valley after another in that unforgiving country, reaching ridge after naked ridge, Baptiste Garnier finally signaled to halt the column of forty men. King, Stanton, and Keyes came forward on foot to see what the scout had discovered.
“That’s the first war trail of the campaign,” Thaddeus Stanton cheered, pulling his hat from his head to swipe a damp bandanna across his broad forehead.
“Lead on, Mr. Garnier,” Keyes ordered as the group got to their feet there above the troubled, flaky earth where more than a hundred unshod ponies had crossed the bare ground.
The tracks led straight down the valley. Heading north for the Mini Pusa, the Cheyenne River. C Troop rode on into the afternoon’s waning light. Every hour it seemed more and more small groups of Indian ponies joined up, uniting with the main band as it continued north.
While the sun settled off to their left, the lone company noticed a single column of signal smoke climbing into the clear summer sky far to the north in the direction of Pumpkin Buttes. In less than ten minutes another signal column rose off to the west.
“If that ain’t the damnedest luck,” Stanton growled. “Looks like they know we’re coming.”
“I don’t think it will do them a bit of good to try hitting us, Major,” King advised. He pointed off into the distance. “We’re in open country. Not a tree or bush to hide them sneaking in on us.”
“You’re right, Lieutenant,” the old workhorse replied. “Absolutely right. Besides—we’re not stopping until we’re at the Cheyenne, fellas.”
In the lengthening, indigo shadows of twilight, as the breezes stiffened and cooled, King caught sight of Little Bat five hundred yards in the lead, circling his horse to the left.
“Mr. King,” Stanton said, “go see what he’s found this time.”
Charles knelt alongside the scout over the newer tracks—even more warriors crossing the wide valley, their trail disappearing to the northwest. “How many more?” he asked.