Warrior Gap | Page 7

Charles King
prairie,
were individual troopers riding as lookouts, while far to the front, full
six hundred yards, three or four others, spreading over the front on each
side of the twisting trail, moved rapidly from crest to crest, always
carefully scanning the country ahead before riding up to the summit.
And now, as Dean's eyes turned from his charges to look along the sky
line to the east, he saw sudden sign of excitement and commotion at the
front. A sergeant, riding with two troopers midway between him and
those foremost scouts, was eagerly signaling to him with his
broad-brimmed hat. Three of the black dots along the gently rising
slope far ahead had leaped from their mounts and were slowly crawling
forward, while one of them, his horse turned adrift and contentedly
nibbling at the buffalo grass, was surely signaling that there was
mischief ahead.
In an instant the lieutenant was galloping out to the front, cautioning
the driver to come on slowly. Presently he overhauled the sergeant and
bade him follow, and together the four men darted on up the gradual
incline until within ten yards of where the leaders' horses were placidly
grazing. There they threw themselves from saddle; one of the men took
the reins of the four horses while Dean and the other two, unslinging
carbine and crouching low, went hurriedly on up the slope until they
came within a few yards of the nearest scout.
"Indians!" he called to them as soon as they were within earshot. "But
they don't seem to be on lookout for us at all. They're fooling with
some buffalo over here."
Crawling to the crest, leaving his hat behind, Dean peered over into the

swale beyond and this was what he saw.
Half a mile away to the east the low, concave sweep of the prairie was
cut by the jagged banks and curves of a watercourse which drained the
melting snows in earlier spring. Along the further bank a dozen buffalo
were placidly grazing, unconscious of the fact that in the shallow, dry
ravine itself half a dozen young Indians--Sioux, apparently--were
lurking, awaiting the nearer coming of the herd, whose leaders, at least,
were gradually approaching the edge. Away down to the northeast,
toward the distant Powder River, the shallow stream bed trended, and,
following the pointing finger of the scout who crawled to his side,
Dean gazed and saw a confused mass of slowly moving objects,
betrayed for miles by the light cloud of dust that hovered over them,
covering many an acre of the prairie, stretching far away down the vale.
Even before he could unsling his field glass and gaze, his plains-craft
told him what was slowly, steadily approaching, as though to cross his
front--an Indian village, a big one, on the move to the mountains,
bound perhaps for the famous racecourse of the Sioux, a grand
amphitheater in the southern hills.
And even as they gazed, two tiny jets of flame and smoke shot from the
ravine edge there below them, and before the dull reports could reach
their ears the foremost bison dropped on his knees and then rolled over
on the sod; and then came the order, at sound of which, back among the
halted troopers, every carbine leaped from its socket.
CHAPTER III.
Down along the building railway in the valley or the Platte there had
been two years of frequent encounter with small bands of Indians.
Down along the Smoky Hill, in Kansas, the Cheyennes were ever
giving trouble. Even around Laramie and Frayne, on the North Platte,
settlers and soldiers had been murdered, as well as one or two officers,
caught alone out hunting, and the Indians were, of course, the
perpetrators. Nevertheless, it had been the policy of the leaders of the
Northern Sioux to avoid any meeting in force and to deny the
complicity of their people in the crimes committed. Supply trains to

Reno, Kearney and C. F. Smith, the Big Horn posts of the Bozeman
Trail went to and fro with guards of only moderate size. Officers had
taken their wives and children to these far-away stations. The stockades
were filled with soldiers' families. Big bands of Indians roamed the
lovely valleys of the Piney, the Tongue, and Rosebud, near at hand, and
rode into full view of the wary sentries at the stockades, yet made no
hostile demonstration. Officers and men went far up the rocky cañons
of the hills in search of fish or game, and came back unmolested.
Escorts reported that they sometimes marched all day long side by side
with hunting bands of Sioux, a mile away; and often little parties,
squaws and boys and young men, would ride confidently over and beg
for sugar, coffee, hardtack--anything, and ride off with their plunder in
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