For a long moment Walter S. Schuyler was speechless as he picked up the bow case and quiver filled with iron-tipped arrows, as well as a saddle cover of beaded buckskin, a pair of beaded moccasins, and a war shield ringed with eagle feathers.
“General Crook,” Cosgrove said with finality and a salute as his horse pranced backward of a sudden. “Till we meet on another war trail, on another battlefield.”
Crook, Schuyler, Pollock, and the rest saluted as the two old Confederates snapped their arms down, reined right in silence, and kicked their ponies into a lope. At the end of the long, colorful line of Shoshone they signaled with their arms only, and as one all the warriors heeled smartly into a column of twos, their unshod ponies kicking up clods of icy snow, feathers bristling and scalp locks flying on the cold breeze as they climbed the far slope, crested the top, and began to fade into the distance.
Donegan somberly watched the old friends slowly disappear in the cold, sunlit distance of that snow-caked land, those brave men hurrying southwest toward the Wind River Mountains, sensing the remorse at that parting of men who have together borne the terrifying weight of battle and utter hardship.
For the rest of the morning while the command was packing up, the Irishman found his throat all but clogged with a sour ball of sentiment, his eyes close to betraying him as he thought on all those years he had watched friends fall in battles, or perhaps just as painful, watched friends ride off—perhaps never again to gallop stirrup to stirrup into the jaws of death.
“I figure you ought to know what the general’s up to with this march, Johnny,” Seamus declared later that day as he brought his horse into line beside Lieutenant Bourke’s shortly after the column moved out up the Dry Fork of the Powder, headed south by east.
“Hell, this is as much a mystery to me as any man,” Bourke replied with a shrug.
“Crook ain’t said a thing to you where we’re going or for why?”
With a shake of his head the lieutenant answered, “Only thing I know is that the general conferred with Mackenzie about making this march.”
Seamus’s eyes narrowed. “Mackenzie?”
“That’s right. I was there when the two of them studied the general’s maps.”
“Looking for what?”
“Where best to make the crossing of that country between the Little Powder and the Belle Fourche.”
“By the saints! That’s back to that god-bleeming desert country we crossed last September!”
Nodding, Bourke replied, “About sixty miles worth of desert crossing, Seamus.”
“No wood, no graze, and damn well no water to speak of!”
“Sixty miles of it,” the lieutenant said. “But both Crook and Mackenzie figure the gamble is worth the test.”
“To save some days?”
“Exactly. About ten days by the looks of things on the maps.”
“Crook wants Crazy Horse even more’n I ever dreamed he could hunger to get his hands around that red savage’s throat.”
That day they put twenty miles under them before stopping for the night at Buffalo Springs on the Dry Fork. Then Crook kept them there—in camp and in the dark—for both the fourth and the fifth. As did many of the men during that interminable wait, Seamus wrote his loved ones.
Finally on the morning of the sixth Crook moved them out again, marching only seven miles in the wind-driven snow, where they found little water—what there was proved to be muddy and loaded with alkali salts—as well as finding they had no firewood. The command had all but emptied the wagons of forage for their animals, and there was little hope of any reaching Mackenzie’s men from the south anytime soon, what with the severity of the recent storms likely blocking rail shipments to Medicine Bow Gap, the same horrid weather blocking wagon shipments from there north to Fort Fetterman on the North Platte.
The men huddled together as best they could through the night, suffering greatly, as did their horses, while winter continued to pummel the high plains. Just before dawn the surgeons reported that the mercury in their thermometers hovered at thirty below zero. Hundreds of men reported cases of frostbitten fingers, toes, noses, and ears at sick call upon awaking.
They packed up in light marching order in a severe snowstorm that morning of the seventh, ordered to make ready for the fifteen-mile march north by east that would take them to the Belle Fourche. Off in the shimmering, icy distance to the south stood the hulking monoliths of the Pumpkin Buttes, orange and ocher against the newly fallen snow. Only the leafless branches of cottonwood and willow marked each frozen water course winding its way down to the Belle Fourche. Few if any birds were seen roosting along the line of march, while far overhead the great longnecks honked, these last to hurry south in great undulating vees. For as far as the eye could see, the land lay beneath a solid sheet of white—more desolate, bare, and destitute of life than ever Seamus could have imagined it.