Turning slightly, Crook motioned for his adjutant to step forward. “I’ll have Lieutenant Schuyler read the orders of the march.”
Walter Schuyler, on detached service to Crook from the Fifth Cavalry, held out his sheaf of pages and began to speak. “The command will march at seven A.M., five August, eighteen and seventy-six, ‘prepared for action.’ Each man, officer, and enlisted, packer and civilian volunteer included, is to take along what is on his back and no more. He is allowed one overcoat and one blanket, along with an India-rubber poncho or one half of his shelter tent. No tents will be allowed but one, that provided for the surgeons in their care for what wounded the columns might suffer. Travois poles have been cut and will be brought along for use as litters in transporting our casualties. Four extra horses, not to be packed, will be led by each company. Currycombs and brushes will be left with the wagons.”
Schuyler stopped for a brief moment, his eyes flicking to the general, who only nodded slightly before the young lieutenant continued. “The command will be rationed from this point for fifteen days: half rations of bacon, sugar, coffee, and salt. Full days’ rations of hard bread. There will be no rations of vinegar, soap, pepper, etcetera. Four days’ rations will be carried on each mount, the remaining supplies to be distributed among the packmules. Only pint cups are to be carried by each man. Each mess is to provide one frying pan, one carving knife and fork, one large coffeepot, one large tin platter, one large and two small tin ladles, one sheet-iron mess pan, and all the necessary bags for transporting the sugar, coffee, bacon, and hard bread.”
The lieutenant raised his eyes and cleared his throat. During that pause Crook overheard the murmuring. Holding a hand in the air, the general quieted the grumbling assembly and Schuyler resumed his reading.
“Two hundred fifty rounds of ammunition is to be assigned to every man. One hundred of that will be carried on his person, and the rest distributed among the pack-mules. Lieutenant John W. Bubb will act as chief of commissariat, to work in conjunction with Mr. Moore, who is in command of our train of three hundred ninety-nine mules, which the packers will break down into five divisions, each led by a bell mare. Cavalry commanders are to see that each man in their units is equipped with lariat, sideline, and picket pin.”
With a hacking cough the lieutenant cleared his throat and continued. “In conclusion, each company is to turn over all surplus to Quartermaster Furey, who will be in charge of our train of one hundred sixty wagons and who is under orders once again to fort up his train in this vicinity, to here await our return.”
Schuyler shuffled to the last page and read on. “Reveille will sound at four A.M. At five o’clock the trumpeters will sound ‘The General,’ to strike tents. Special instructions for action: all officers and noncommissioned officers to take constant pains to prevent wastage of ammunition. Signed, George C. Crook, Brigadier General, Commanding, Big Horn and Yellowstone Expedition, Camp Cloud Peak, Forks of Goose Creek, Wyoming Territory.”
“Thank you, Lieutenant,” Crook said as he again stepped forward and Schuyler backed away into the large ring of officers. “Are there any questions?”
Captain Julius Mason raised his hand.
Crook pointed, saying, “Major Mason?”
“What do we plan to do for rations after the fourteen days is up, General?”
Crook slapped a twig against the side of his leg, then replied, “By that time we should reach the other commands on the Yellowstone. They’re supplied by steamer traffic. We’ll eat off General Terry’s Dakota column.”
There was some stifled laughter before Crook asked, “Is there any other concern?”
Waiting while the men jostled uneasily, looked around the ring at one another, some shuffling their feet anxiously, the general finally concluded, “All right, gentlemen. We are all more than eager to get under way. Use the rest of the day in making your preparations for the march. We’ll be under way at first light.”
Galé-force winds roared off the Big Horns through the expedition’s last night under canvas, leveling most of the tents. Weary men were jolted awake in the maelstrom, clambering to their feet, rubbing their eyes as they stood shivering beneath the force of the wind, struck silent by an awe-inspiring sight. In the foothills west of camp an eerie crimson glow lit the starry postmidnight sky. Stretching for more than a five-mile front along the hills, the leaping flames of fires started by a war party licked like gold tongues against the dark horizon.
“Sonsabitches!” Charlie White spat sourly, pulling his thin army blanket around his shoulders, the gale whipping at the brim of his hat.
“This wind’s gonna do a lot of their work for ’em tonight,” Seamus added, his eyes already smarting with the smoke easily carried aloft miles from the fires.
Here where the scouts had pitched their camp on the northern edge of the army’s bivouac, Donegan listened to the growing rush of wild things scurrying, leaping, lunging out of the darkness, racing through the camp and on to the safety of the prairie beyond. Every little creature seeking safety.
Few men got back to sleep before dawn’s bugle call. A miserable portent of things yet to come.
More Troops Coming
CHICAGO, July 25—Gen. McKenzie, with six companies of United States troops, has been ordered from the Indian territory to Red Cloud agency and vicinity, via Cheyenne and Laramie, to take the place of Gen. Merritt, who goes with the Fifth cavalry to join Crook.
Nearly 2,300 men marched away from Camp Cloud Peak that sunny Saturday morning: 1,500 cavalry, 450 infantry, in addition to Tom Moore’s packers and that Falstaffian assortment of white and Indian scouts.
Once again Crook was cutting himself loose from his supply line. They were leaving Major Furey’s train behind, where more than two hundred discharged soldiers waiting for escort south to Fetterman, along with teamsters and other unattached civilians, all well armed, would chain the wagon wheels together into a corral, putting the creek at their backs, then dig rifle pits inside their bulwarks and sit out the wait, keeping a watchful eye over more than a thousand horses and mules remaining under their care. With so many capable men left in Furey’s command, Crook did not need to deplete his strike force by leaving an escort behind when he marched the Big Horn and Yellowstone Expedition away toward the Tongue River.
“Lead into line!” came the command, echoed again and again as the dismounted troopers walked their horses into company formation for inspection.
Then the Fifth’s commander ordered, “Bugler—sound the mount!”
As the stirring notes floated over Goose Creek there at the peep of day, 20 officers and 515 soldiers swung into their saddles with a rattle and squeak of arms and bridle.
“Column of fours!” was the next call. “By the right— fooor-rad! March!”
Setting out in the rear of all the rest with Carr’s headquarters group, King, as regimental adjutant, raised himself in the stirrups to look ahead at the three columns already wending their way along Goose Creek. Troop by troop of the cavalry fell into line in the wake of those fourteen companies of seasoned infantry that had departed three hours earlier, just past four o’clock. Lieutenant Colonel Carr commanded ten troops of the Fifth, with Captain Henry E. Noyes leading five companies of the Second, and Major Andrew W. Evans riding at the head of ten troops of the Third. The ranks of both the Second and the Third contained some new men, seventy-six in all, troopers Merritt had picked up at either Laramie or Fetterman, bound for Crook’s camp to replace soldiers ending their terms of duty.
On the right flank rode the thirty-five Ute and two Bannock, with Captain George M. “Black Jack” Randall in the lead. Serving as the advance guard were Washakie’s two hundred. The handful of Crow that Gibbon had dispatched from the Yellowstone weeks before rode as a rear guard, covering the exposed flank of the Fifth Cavalry. All the allies wore white strips torn from Quartermaster Furey’s empty flour sacks. Having learned firsthand from the deadly confusion the Indian allies had caused his nervous troops at the Battle of the Rosebud, Crook ordered his brown-skinned auxiliaries to wear the long white flags tied above their scalp locks or in their warbonnets—somewhere easily visible by anxious soldiers in the heat and terror of battle.