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Long Winter Gone sotp-1

Page 25

by Terry C. Johnston


  Shaky, Tom rose to one elbow, his eyes reddened and gummy from whiskey and lack of sleep.

  Moylan stirred next. One by one they each poked their heads from their blankets like hibernating bears, hoary breath like ghostly halos dancing in the pale lamplight.

  “What the Sam Hill is that?” Cooke asked, half-corked still.

  “If I didn’t know better. I’d call it a baby’s cry,” Moylan replied, the sober one in the lot.

  “Sally Ann’s baby!” Tom cried.

  “She ain’t Sally Ann!” Cooke growled, flinging a limp arm at Tom.

  “Both of you hush!” Moylan barked, watching Custer push up from his stool, stepping over the bodies strewn across the tent floor, and stop at the door.

  “Monaseetah’s baby,” he whispered.

  As the wind sighed, the unmistakable wail of a newborn rang clear as a prairie starburst.

  Custer flung back the flaps, letting the night and wind and sleet batter him.

  The water stung his face, the ice slashing at his eyes.

  Another cry raised the hairs at the back of his neck.

  Tom gazed at his brother’s face, realizing Autie was weeping. For one of the few times in his life, Custer shed tears.

  “Monaseetah’s baby is here at last!”

  CHAPTER 21

  CUSTER made certain every last man of them fidgeted, cold and anxious as they waited in his tent.

  He had had Moylan summon his officers to an unexpected conference. His flair for the dramatic coupled with his trembling rage dictated he wait until they had gathered before making his grand entrance.

  Tearing the flaps apart, Custer yanked their attention to him as surely as if he had slapped them with the back of his hand. Pausing, he let each man suffer the silent, icy impact of his eyes. Fred Benteen stared at the rawhide quirt Custer slapped monotonously against a muddy boot.

  “Gentle-men.” Custer made it sound profane, something he was loath to speak. “As most of you are aware, yesterday, the twenty-third of January, a post express arrived from Camp Supply with mail from Fort Dodge, letters from home.”

  Custer paused. “Including some traitorous news for me!” he roared.

  From his tunic Custer wrenched a crumpled newspaper page. He shook it before their faces.

  “An old friend from my Michigan days sent me a copy of the St. Louis Democrat. Most of you get clippings and news items from your hometown papers, but my friend thought I should read an article written about me by a St. Louis man: a most scandalous story about our recent campaign against the Washita village of Black Kettle.”

  Custer’s eyes, now steel blue, sliced toward the officers, accusing every man. Some shifted from boot to boot. Others cleared throats or wiped hands across lips gone dry.

  Benteen swallowed hard. He watched Custer tense his jaws, struggling to control his anger.

  “This St. Louis journalist couldn’t know a bloody thing of our campaign! But the language he used says that it was written by someone who knew what went on—an officer of this regiment! That wording, the detail, these veiled implications—all of it means some officer of this regiment wrote this filth to ruin me!”

  “Read ’em some of it, Autie!” Tom Custer prodded, his own eyes scolding the others.

  Amused in a way, Benteen watched as the Custer family closed ranks.

  “Listen to these words a traitor uses,” Custer said. “Reviling me before the American public!”

  And now, to learn why the anxiously-looked for succor did not come, let us view the scene in the captured village, scarce two short miles away. Light skirmishing is going on all around. Savages on flying steeds, with shields and feathers gay, are circling everywhere, riding like devils incarnate. The troops are on all sides of the village, looking on and seizing every opportunity of picking off some of those daring riders with their carbines. But does no one think of the welfare of Maj. Elliott and party? It seems not. But, yes! a squadron of cavalry is in motion. They trot; they gallop. Now they charge! The cowardly redskins flee the coming shock and scatter here and there among the hills to scurry away. But it is the true line—will the cavalry keep it? No! No! They turn! Ah, ’tis only to intercept the wily foe. See! a gray troop goes on in the direction again. One more short mile and they will be saved. Oh, for a mother’s prayers!

  Will not some good angel prompt them? … There is no hope for that brave little band, the death doom is theirs, for the cavalry halt and rest their panting steeds …

  And now return with me to the village. Officers and soldiers are watching, resting, eating and sleeping. In an hour or so they will be refreshed, and then scour the hills and plains for their missing comrades. In a short time we shall be far from the scene of their daring dash, and night will have thrown her dark mantle over the scene. But surely some search will be made for our missing comrades. No, they are forgotten. Over them and the poor ponies the wolves will hold high carnival, and their howlings will be their only requiem.

  Custer let the officers suffer his fury in silence as he paced before them.

  “This tells the public that we didn’t do everything we could to rescue Elliott.” Tom was the first to speak, protective, even combative in defense of his older brother. “It says the Seventh gave up searching while Elliott was butchered. We didn’t know, dammit! Who was it? Which one of you gutless bastards wrote this—”

  “As surely as I’m standing here,” Custer interrupted, pushing Tom back a step, “I know this was penned by one of you. If I ever find out who’s guilty—” He slapped the rawhide quirt against his boot for emphasis, “why, I’ll give him a sound thrashing he’ll never forget!”

  His threat hung like stale cigar smoke in the silent tent. The silence was punctuated only by the slap of that quirt he drummed against his boot.

  Benteen took a step forward. “May I look at the paper?”

  Stunned and speechless, Custer shoved the article toward Benteen, like some loathsome thing contaminated with pox.

  For breathless moments, the captain scanned the page, listening as Custer’s breath rose and fell in labored wheezes. The Missourian handed the article back to Custer. He adjusted his holster, freeing the mule-ear from its brass stud, a gesture not lost on a single man in that tent. Least of all George Armstrong Custer. Benteen blinked anxiously, steeling himself for what might come, raking the tip of a pink tongue across his dry lips.

  “Colonel,” Benteen began, “you threatened a sound thrashing for the man who wrote that letter.” His eyes flicked to the rawhide quirt, returning dead-level with Custer’s. “Well, sir—be about it, and now. Appears I’m the author of that article you hold in your hand.”

  A dangerous electricity sparked between the two men. Tom Custer bolted, lunging at Benteen. His older brother restrained him, struggling to bridle his own anger.

  “You wrote this filth?” Custer spat.

  Benteen sensed every eye on his back. “No. I wrote a letter to a friend in St. Louis. He has contacts in the newspaper business … St. Louis, Chicago, even the New York Times.”

  As he watched the color drain from Custer’s face, Benteen straightened himself. “I had no idea my letter would ever wind up on the front page of any paper.”

  “You knew damned well it would—you goddamned, two-faced traitor!” Tom Custer shrieked. “Better you resign your commission. It’s unhealthy for you to stay on in this outfit, you lying bastard!”

  Having taken about all he could from the younger Custer, Benteen’s eyes snapped to Tom, eyes filled with white fire. “You’re going to make it unhealthy for me to stay on—you?”

  If his meaning was not clear enough, he slipped his hand beneath the mule-ear so it rested loosely on the butt of his pistol.

  “Benteen?” Custer said savagely. “You wrote this about me, about my regiment?”

  “I did.”

  “I had no idea,” Custer stammered, confused, not knowing what to say. “No idea any man would step forward to confess …”

 
; Benteen figured Custer had intended to use the article to bully them all, not expecting the real author to announce his guilt. He watched as Custer swallowed hard, his nostrils flaring above that bushy mustache, before his eyes climbed to Benteen’s again.

  “I’ll deal with you later, Benteen.” His face turned crimson as he struggled to maintain his composure.

  Those gritty words hung in the close, sweaty air as Custer shoved his officers aside and tore from the tent, disappearing as quickly as he had entered.

  “You frigging sunuvabitch!” Tom Custer flung his words at Benteen, restrained by two officers.

  “Your brother’s feelings are far less precious than a soldier’s life, Lieutenant. Don’t forget that—ever.” Benteen stepped forward. He wasn’t any taller than the younger Custer, but he loomed with the bulk of an ox over the whipcord-lean lieutenant from Michigan. “Damn Custer’s feelings, I say! Your brother can go off on a sulk and suck his thumb, for all I care! Lives are at stake here! His poor judgment is to blame—not that bloody letter I wrote.”

  “I understand you all too well, Captain. Mind you, he might forgive you someday. But I never will!”

  Benteen stood in the fury of Tom’s rage a moment longer before the lieutenant shoved past the Missourian, blasting from the tent. It was quiet enough to hear boots scraping on the hard ground or a nervous cough. Captain Samuel Robbins came beside Benteen.

  “You’ve tackled yourself a real handful there.”

  “I can handle either one of ’em,” Benteen growled.

  “A real hornet’s nest you’ve stirred up, old boy!” Myers snorted.

  “Figured on making some waves,” Benteen admitted. “Want to save some lives next time out.”

  “What’ll you do when Custer wants to deal with you later?” Thompson inquired.

  “I’m not afraid of him or his horsewhip. I’ll beat Custer at his own bully game. Before he can confront me in private, I’ll force his hand in public.”

  “Never advisable to bait that man,” Myers said.

  “He’s right,” George Yates agreed. “I staffed for him in the war. Let it blow over, by God. He’s hurt enough.”

  “Enough?” Benteen snapped, glaring at Yates. “You Monroe boys stick together, don’t you, Yates?” He glanced out the tent flaps. “I’ll fetch that reporter, Keim. Take him with me when I see Custer. We’ll have it out, once and for all. Keim’ll be my witness. Not like you, Yates—someone Custer can bluff and bully.”

  Benteen glared at them all. “I’ll break that arrogant bastard yet—see that never again does he send men off on suicidal attacks then refuses support to those soldiers in their tragic moment of struggle!”

  “Captain’s pardon,” Yates said, “but Custer’s not the sort to be cowed by anybody. He’ll never forget your insults.”

  “I bloody well hope he doesn’t!” Benteen shouted. “We’re talking about saving lives, stopping Custer from sending men to their deaths to further his career. Can’t any of you see that? When Custer will send any man to his death to further his hunger for promotion and glory, none of us matters anymore.”

  Benteen was certain none of them understood a thing he tried to say. At the tent flap he stopped, sickened with bile at the back of his throat. He sucked a deep breath of the cold to still the nausea. He wheeled on them, his passion bubbling, his voice thick with mockery. “Mankind’s just dust in the wind to him. Custer plans his glory and fame to last the eons. Who are we mere mortals to try stopping a man destined to etch his name across those stone walls of eternity itself?”

  Benteen jammed the cap down on his head and dove into the cold.

  * * *

  “Allow me one final sweep of the Territories, General!” Custer demanded, banging his fist on the table in Sheridan’s tent, scattering some coffee-stained maps. “By God, I’ll march south and west from here. You can’t deny me this! If I can’t be in Federal City for Grant’s inauguration—”

  “Neither one of us. There’s not enough time,” Sheridan said. “We haven’t finished our task here.”

  “So I’ll put our homebound march to good use before calling it quits on your campaign.”

  “Use the march for what, Custer?” Sheridan asked.

  “Find the most troublesome, bloodthirsty band—the Cheyenne Dog Soldiers under Medicine Arrow.”

  “Damn that red bastard!” As much as he hated to admit to preferring another man’s idea to his own, Sheridan had liked Custer’s proposal from the start. “Here’s to your success.” He held up the sterling silver hip flask that was never far from his side. “More then ever—may you find the Indians you’re so desperately seeking.”

  “Thank you for your continued faith in me, General.”

  “Truth of it is, Custer, I’m very pleased by the progress you’ve made this winter. If you concern yourself strictly with your job here you won’t find time to worry about the lives of a few miserable savages.”

  Sheridan waved a hand, silencing Custer as he continued. “Just the way you did things in the war. You pressed on, doing a soldier’s work. Do that now! Be a soldier before anything else!”

  Last night on the eve of his departure, Sheridan had grappled with the fear that his winter campaign had become a grand failure. So this morning the whiskey tasted better than breakfast, what with having to leave the Territories with much undone, called back to department headquarters and the desk that awaited him. Whiskey and cigars, better than the best breakfast salt pork and hardtack. For an old warhorse like Phil Sheridan, whiskey and cigars made a fighting man’s diet.

  Sheridan appraised Custer. “I’ve seen a handful of your kind before. Not only in the army, but in public life. You’re after the brass ring! Something no amount of money can buy—power.”

  “Sir, if I may—”

  “That’s no disgrace.” Sheridan lifted his hand. “Truth is, every great military commander hungers for power.”

  Custer sank to a leather trunk as soldiers loaded the wagons around he and Sheridan, a late February sun just poking its head over the hills.

  “Why the hell you think I sent Sully packing back east?” Sheridan watched Custer’s expression narrow.

  “That’s right,” Sheridan said. “You’re commander of the Seventh Cavalry. I ordered him back to Kansas.”

  “I never—”

  “’Course you never knew, Armstrong.” Sheridan sipped at the flask. “Got rid of that old pussy-footer so this campaign would be your show and your show only.”

  He waved the flask under Custer’s nose, a finger pointing. “Don’t frig this up, Custer! I can put you in the right place at the right time—like I did through the Shenandoah campaign. But I can’t fight your battles for you.”

  “I had no idea that’s what became of Colonel Sully.”

  “When I first got to Camp Supply, you two were arguing like yard dogs over who would lead the attack on the hostiles. The old slogger wanted me to ship you back, send you off to some other regiment. You believe that? By damned, you should’ve seen the look on his face when I told him he was the one packing!

  “The rest of the campaign’s in your hands alone, dear boy,” Sheridan finished. “I’ve sent Sully home to pound sand. So it’s yours to find the Indians. Do what you’ve always done best: Find the enemy and make him bleed.”

  Custer leapt to his feet. “By all means, General!”

  “Don’t dally with the chiefs. Those old bastards just waste your time. Show ’em how you made a name for yourself on the James and the Rappahannock! All those red sonsabitches understand is toughness anyway. They’ll sneer at your kindness as a mark of something weak and womanly.”

  “Yes, General.”

  “I ought to know, dammit. I strung up some of those Yakima bastards back in ’56 up in the Oregon country. The hostiles will remember you only for the pain you dealt them on the Washita. Not a goddamned soul—white or red-will remember you for any kindness you show an Indian. Not those two old Kiowa in the shadow of Fort Co
bb. And certainly not those Cheyenne running to save their miserable hides.”

  Sheridan sipped at the whiskey that warmed his gut as few things could. “Hell, history will treat you kindly only when you act in a decisive manner and strike with a firm hand! Damn those peacemakers in Washington City! Let them tend to their knitting while we get on being soldiers!”

  Sheridan wiped the back of his hand across his thin lips, stepping close to Custer. “Years from now you won’t find the name of one of those politicians in the schoolbooks, Custer. Only the generals and those like you—destined to ride a shooting star—will be cloaked in printer’s ink. So don’t be dismayed that the tribes have not come in! This only proves your greatest opportunity yet! Greater than the Shenandoah campaign.”

  “That would take some doing. General.”

  “Blast it, son! Don’t sit on your record. Make ’em stand up and take notice of you back east. The only way you’ll wear these goddamned stars again is with your butt in the saddle. Not resting on your laurels.”

  He slapped a gloved hand on Custer’s shoulder, leaning close to confide. “You teach a hound by rewarding it, don’t you? That’s what we tried with these savages at first. Reward them. It didn’t work, so now we punish them. Just the way you’d do with your hound. Reward doesn’t work! Sherman knows that. Even Grant’s come to the light. As sure as you’re sitting before me, you can be the instrument of our pacification on this frontier. The choice is yours. Will you obey not only that direction I give you, but what history demands of you? Dammit, some soldier’s name will be written in the annals of this western land, a name repeated over and over on the lips of every schoolboy down through all eternity. Will it be George Armstrong Custer?”

  On 2 March, Custer led the full command of his Seventh Cavalry and Nineteenth Kansas out of Fort Sill, bound for Fort Hays via Camp Supply. To garrison the new post Sheridan had erected deep in the heart of Indian Territory, he left behind a complement of the all-Negro Cavalry, those called “buffalo soldiers.”

  Winter still gripped the plains—cold, blustery weather battering the soldiers daily. Every man nursed frostbite—ears, noses, cheeks, fingers, or toes. For seven days Custer’s troops plodded west by south. Every morning his scouts stuffed a day’s supply of jerky and hardtack in their saddlebags before setting out on their dawn-to dusk march, fanning through the countryside ahead of the blue columns.

 

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