Army Letters from an Officers Wife, 1871-1888 | Page 5

Frances M.A. Roe
see how tractable the Indians
can make their ponies with only that one rein.

The storekeeper told us that those Indians were Utes, and were greatly
excited because they had just heard there was a small party of
Cheyennes down the river two or three miles. The Utes and Cheyennes
are bitter enemies. He said that the Utes were very cross--ready for the
blood of Indian or white man--therefore he had permitted them to do
about as they pleased while in the store, particularly as we were there,
and he saw that we were frightened. That young man did not know that
his own swarthy face was a greenish white all the time those Indians
were in the store! Not one penny did they pay for the things they
carried off. Only two years ago the entire Ute nation was on the
warpath, killing every white person they came across, and one must
have much faith in Indians to believe that their "change of heart" has
been so complete that these Utes have learned to love the white man in
so short a time.
No! There was hatred in their eyes as they approached us in that store,
and there was restrained murder in the hand that pushed Mrs. Phillips
and me over. They were all hideous--with streaks of red or green paint
on their faces that made them look like fiends. Their hair was roped
with strips of bright-colored stuff, and hung down on each side of their
shoulders in front, and on the crown of each black head was a small,
tightly plaited lock, ornamented at the top with a feather, a piece of tin,
or something fantastic. These were their scalp locks. They wore
blankets over dirty old shirts, and of course had on long, trouserlike
leggings of skin and moccasins. They were not tall, but rather short and
stocky. The odor of those skins, and of the Indians themselves, in that
stuffy little shop, I expect to smell the rest of my life!
We heard this morning that those very savages rode out on the plains in
a roundabout way, so as to get in advance of the Cheyennes, and then
had hidden themselves on the top of a bluff overlooking the trail they
knew the Cheyennes to be following, and had fired upon them as they
passed below, killing two and wounding a number of others. You can
see how treacherous these Indians are, and how very far from noble is
their method of warfare! They are so disappointing, too--so wholly
unlike Cooper's red men.
We were glad enough to get in the ambulance and start on our way to
the post, but alas! our troubles were not over. The mules must have felt
the excitement in the air, for as soon as their heads were turned toward

home they proceeded to run away with us. We had the four little mules
that are the special pets of the quartermaster, and are known throughout
the garrison as the "shaved-tails," because the hair on their tails is kept
closely cut down to the very tips, where it is left in a square brush of
three or four inches. They are perfectly matched--coal-black all over,
except their little noses, and are quite small. They are full of mischief,
and full of wisdom, too, even for government mules, and when one
says, "Let's take a sprint," the others always agree--about that there is
never the slightest hesitation.
Therefore, when we first heard the scraping of the brake, and saw that
the driver was pulling and sawing at the tough mouths with all his
strength, no one was surprised, but we said that we wished they had
waited until after we had crossed the Arkansas River. But we got over
the narrow bridge without meeting more than one man, who climbed
over the railing and seemed less anxious to meet us than we were to
meet him. As soon as we got on the road again, those mules, with
preliminary kicks and shakes of their big heads, began to demonstrate
how fast they could go. We had the best driver at the post, and the road
was good and without sharp turns, but the ambulance was high and
swayed, and the pace was too fast for comfort.
The little mules ran and ran, and we held ourselves on our seats the best
we could, expecting to be tipped over any minute. When we reached
the post they made a wonderful turn and took us safely to the
government corral, where they stopped, just when they got ready. One
leader looked around at us and commenced to bray, but the driver was
in no mood for such insolence, and jerked the poor thing almost down.
Three tired, disheveled women walked from the
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