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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #65954 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65954)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of General Crook and the Fighting
-Apaches, by Edwin L. Sabin
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: General Crook and the Fighting Apaches
- Treating Also of the Part Borne by Jimmie Dunn in the Days,
- 1871-1876
-
-Author: Edwin L. Sabin
-
-Illustrator: Charles H. Stephens
-
-Release Date: July 29, 2021 [eBook #65954]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Donald Cummings and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from
- images generously made available by The Internet
- Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GENERAL CROOK AND THE
-FIGHTING APACHES ***
-
-
-
-
-
- GENERAL CROOK AND THE
- FIGHTING APACHES
-
-
- FIFTH IMPRESSION
-
-
-
-
-_The American Trail Blazers_
-
-“THE STORY GRIPS AND THE HISTORY STICKS”
-
-
-These books present in the form of vivid and fascinating fiction, the
-early and adventurous phases of American history. Each volume deals
-with the life and adventures of one of the great men who made that
-history, or with some one great event in which, perhaps, several heroic
-characters were involved. The stories, though based upon accurate
-historical fact, are rich in color, full of dramatic action, and appeal
-to the imagination of the red-blooded man or boy.
-
-Each volume illustrated in color and black and white.
-
- INTO MEXICO WITH GENERAL SCOTT
- LOST WITH LIEUTENANT PIKE
- GENERAL CROOK AND THE FIGHTING APACHES
- OPENING THE WEST WITH LEWIS AND CLARK
- WITH CARSON AND FRÉMONT
- DANIEL BOONE: BACKWOODSMAN
- BUFFALO BILL AND THE OVERLAND TRAIL
- CAPTAIN JOHN SMITH
- DAVID CROCKETT: SCOUT
- ON THE PLAINS WITH CUSTER
- GOLD SEEKERS OF ’49
- WITH SAM HOUSTON IN TEXAS
- WITH GEORGE WASHINGTON INTO THE WILDERNESS
- IN THE RANKS OF OLD HICKORY
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: “GET DOWN, GET DOWN!” THEY ORDERED, FURIOUSLY, IN
-APACHE]
-
-
-
-
- GENERAL CROOK
- AND THE
- FIGHTING APACHES
-
- TREATING ALSO OF THE PART BORNE BY JIMMIE DUNN IN THE
- DAYS, 1871–1886, WHEN WITH SOLDIERS AND PACK-TRAINS AND
- INDIAN SCOUTS, BUT EMPLOYING THE STRONGER WEAPONS OF
- KINDNESS, FIRMNESS AND HONESTY, THE GRAY FOX WORKED
- HARD TO THE END THAT THE WHITE MEN AND THE RED MEN IN
- THE SOUTHWEST AS IN THE NORTHWEST MIGHT BETTER UNDERSTAND
- ONE ANOTHER
-
- BY
-
- EDWIN L. SABIN
-
- AUTHOR OF “OPENING THE WEST WITH LEWIS AND CLARK,”
- “BUFFALO BILL AND THE OVERLAND TRAIL,” ETC.
-
-
- _WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY CHARLES H. STEPHENS
- PORTRAIT AND A MAP_
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- PHILADELPHIA & LONDON
- J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1918, BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
-
-
- PRINTED IN UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
-
-
-
-
- TO THE
-
- TYPICAL AMERICAN SOLDIER
-
- WHOSE MOTTO, LIKE GENERAL CROOK’S, IS BRAVERY,
- EFFICIENCY, AND “JUSTICE TO ALL”
-
-
-
-
- “Then General Crook came; he, at least, had
- never lied to us. His words gave the people
- hope. He died. Their hope died again. Despair
- came again.”
-
- _Chief Red Cloud of the Sioux_
-
-
-
-
-FOREWORD
-
-
-“It should not be expected that an Indian who has lived as a
-barbarian all his life will become an angel the moment he comes on
-a reservation and promises to behave himself, or that he has that
-strict sense of honor which a person should have who has had the
-advantage of civilization all his life, and the benefit of a moral
-training and character which has been transmitted to him through a
-long line of ancestors. It requires constant watching and knowledge
-of their character to keep them from going wrong. They are children
-in ignorance, not in innocence. I do not wish to be understood as in
-the least palliating their crimes, but I wish to say a word to stem
-the torrent of invective and abuse which has almost universally been
-indulged in against the whole Apache race.... Greed and avarice on the
-part of the whites――in other words, the almighty dollar――is at the
-bottom of nine-tenths of all our Indian trouble.”
-
- GENERAL GEORGE CROOK
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- I. JIMMIE DUNN IS BADLY FOOLED 21
- II. JIMMIE LEARNS TO BE APACHE 34
- III. THE RED-HEAD TURNS UP 43
- IV. THE CANVAS SUIT MAN 53
- V. JIMMIE REPORTS FOR DUTY 65
- VI. THE PEACE COMMISSION TRIES 77
- VII. JIMMIE TAKES A LESSON 85
- VIII. THE ONE-ARMED GENERAL TRIES 98
- IX. THE HORRID DEED OF CHUNTZ 113
- X. ON THE TRAIL WITH THE PACK-TRAIN 119
- XI. IN THE STRONGHOLD OF COCHISE 129
- XII. GENERAL CROOK RIDES AGAIN 140
- XIII. HUNTING THE YAVAPAI 152
- XIV. THE BATTLE OF THE CAVE 165
- XV. JIMMIE IS A VETERAN 178
- XVI. THE GENERAL PLANS WELL 185
- XVII. BAD WORK AFOOT 194
- XVIII. “CLUKE” GOES AWAY 203
- XIX. JIMMIE SENDS THE ALARM 211
- XX. THE GRAY FOX RETURNS 221
- XXI. TO THE STRONGHOLD OF GERONIMO 228
- XXII. WAR OR PEACE? 237
- XXIII. GERONIMO PLAYS SMART 246
- XXIV. PACK-MASTER JIMMIE MEETS A SURPRISE 254
- XXV. ON THE JOB WITH CAPTAIN CRAWFORD 262
- XXVI. FOES OR FRIENDS? 273
- XXVII. THE WORST ENEMY OF ALL 286
- XXVIII. THE END OF THE TRAIL 298
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- “Get Down, Get Down!” They Ordered, Furiously, in Apache
- _Frontispiece_
-
- General George Crook 13
-
- Had the First Volley Killed Anybody? Didn’t Look So 61
-
- It was the Piercing-eyed Geronimo! 131
-
- Hurrah! It was Nan-ta-je 179
-
- “Why Don’t You Speak to Me and Look with a Pleasant Face?” 290
-
-
- MAP
-
- Apache Arizona 21
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: GENERAL GEORGE CROOK
-
-From “On the Border with Crook.” By Captain John G. Bourke.
-
-By Courtesy of Charles Scribner’s Sons.]
-
-
-
-
-MAJOR-GENERAL GEORGE CROOK
-
-
-Called by the Indians the “Gray Fox,” because of his weather worn
-canvas suit and his skillful methods. Admired by them also as “a common
-man who makes war like a big chief.” He first organized the army
-pack-mule trains, and employed Indians to fight Indians. He was noted
-for his dislike of “show,” his strict honesty, his incessant hard work,
-his great endurance, and his knowledge of Western animals and Indian
-ways.
-
-Born near Dayton, Ohio, September 8, 1828.
-
-Graduates from West Point Military Academy, 1852, No. 38 in his class.
-Assigned as second lieutenant, Fourth Infantry, and stationed in Idaho.
-
-First lieutenant, March, 1856.
-
-Captain, May, 1861. Meanwhile has been wounded by an arrow during
-campaigns against the Indians in Oregon and Washington.
-
-Appointed Colonel of the Thirty-sixth Ohio Volunteer Infantry,
-September, 1861, and drills it so thoroughly that it is styled the
-“Thirty-sixth Regulars.”
-
-Brevetted major in the regular service, May, 1862, for gallantry at the
-battle of Lewisburg, West Virginia, where he was wounded.
-
-Brigadier general of Volunteers, September, 1862.
-
-Brevetted lieutenant-colonel in the regular service, September, 1862,
-for gallantry at the battle of Antietam, Maryland.
-
-Brevetted colonel, October, 1863, for gallantry at the battle of
-Farmington, Tennessee.
-
-Commands the Army of West Virginia, August and September, 1864.
-
-Major-general of Volunteers, October, 1864.
-
-Double brevet of brigadier-general and major-general in the regular
-service, March, 1865, for gallantry in the Shenandoah Valley campaign.
-
-Commands the cavalry of the Army of the Potomac, spring of 1865.
-
-Commands Department of West Virginia, 1865.
-
-Assigned as major of the Third U. S. Infantry, July, 1866, and
-stationed in Northern California.
-
-Lieutenant-colonel, Twenty-third U. S. Infantry, July, 1866, to command
-in the Boise district, Idaho, where he makes a reputation as an Indian
-campaigner against the Warm Springs Shoshones or Snakes of Oregon.
-
-Appointed to command the Military Department of the Columbia (the State
-of Oregon and the Territories of Idaho and Washington), July, 1868.
-
-Transferred to California, 1870.
-
-Appointed to command of the new Department of Arizona, June, 1871.
-
-By reason of his success with the Apaches of Arizona, is promoted from
-lieutenant-colonel to brigadier-general, October, 1873.
-
-Transferred to command the Department of the Platte, with headquarters
-at Omaha, March, 1875.
-
-Campaigns, with pack-trains and Indian scouts, against the Sioux and
-Cheyennes of the plains, 1875–1878; subdues them and thereafter devotes
-his available time to hunting and exploration.
-
-In 1882 is reassigned to the Department of Arizona, where the Apaches
-are unruly again.
-
-Fails to succeed in holding Geronimo, the Apache war leader; is
-relieved at his own request, April, 1886, and reassigned to the command
-of the Department of the Platte.
-
-Appointed major-general, April, 1888, and assigned to the command of
-the Military Division of the Missouri, with headquarters in Chicago.
-
-Dies March 21, 1890, in his sixty-second year, at Chicago. Interred
-with high honors at Oakland, Maryland, pending the transfer of the
-remains, soon thereafter, to the National Cemetery at Arlington,
-Virginia.
-
-
-
-
-MAJOR-GEN. OLIVER OTIS HOWARD
-
-
-A man distinguished for his deep religious spirit and his benevolence,
-as well for his bravery upon the field of battle and his friendship
-with the Indians.
-
-Born at Leeds, Maine, November 8, 1830.
-
-Graduates at Bowdoin College, Maine, 1850.
-
-Graduates at West Point Military Academy, 1854, No. 4 in his class.
-Assigned as second lieutenant of ordnance at Watervliet Arsenal.
-
-Assigned to command of the Kennebec Arsenal, 1855.
-
-In 1856 transferred to Watervliet again.
-
-December, 1856, ordered to the Seminole Indian campaign in Florida.
-
-First lieutenant and chief of ordnance, Department of Florida, 1857.
-
-Assistant professor of mathematics at West Point, 1857–1861.
-
-Expected to resign from the army to enter the ministry, but in June,
-1861, accepts the colonelcy of the Third Maine Volunteer Infantry.
-
-Commands a brigade at the battle of Bull Run.
-
-Brigadier-general of Volunteers, September, 1861.
-
-Loses his right arm, from two wounds, at the battle of Fair Oaks,
-Virginia, June, 1862.
-
-Major-general of Volunteers, November, 1862.
-
-Commands an army division at the battles of Antietam and Fredericksburg.
-
-Commands an army corps at the battles of Chancellorsville, Gettysburg,
-Lookout Mountain, Missionary Ridge, Chattanooga, and elsewhere, and has
-the right wing in Sherman’s march to the sea.
-
-Thanked by Congress, January, 1864, for services at Gettysburg.
-
-Brigadier-general in the regular army, December, 1864.
-
-Brevetted major-general in the regular army, March, 1865, for gallantry.
-
-Chief of the Freedman’s Bureau, at Washington, for the education and
-care of the negroes and refugees, 1865–1874.
-
-Sent by President Grant to New Mexico and Arizona, as special peace
-commissioner to treat with the Indians, 1872, and wins the trust and
-love of the various tribes.
-
-Assigned to the command of the Department of the Columbia, August, 1874.
-
-Campaigns against the Nez Percés of Chief Joseph, 1877.
-
-Campaigns against the Bannocks and Pai-Utes, 1878.
-
-Superintendent of West Point Military Academy, 1880–1882.
-
-Commands the Department of the Platte, 1882–1886.
-
-Major-general, March, 1886, and appointed to the command of the
-Division of the Pacific.
-
-Awarded medal of honor, by Congress, March, 1893, for distinguished
-bravery in the battle of Fair Oaks, where he lost his arm.
-
-As commander of the Department of the East is retired, November, 1894.
-
-Devotes his energies to religious and philanthropic work, and dies at
-Burlington, Vermont, October 26, 1909, aged seventy-nine.
-
-
-
-
-THE APACHE INDIANS
-
-
-A large collection of Indian tribes inhabiting the Southwest. They
-first are mentioned in 1598 by the early Spanish explorers in New
-Mexico.
-
-The name “Apache” is derived from the Zuni word “Apachu,” meaning
-“enemy.” Their own name was “Tinde (Tinneh)” and “Dine (Dinde),”
-meaning “men” or “the people.”
-
-They always were bitter enemies to the Spanish and Mexicans, who
-offered high rewards in money for Apache scalps, and enslaved captives.
-They were not openly hostile to the Americans until, in 1857, a Mexican
-teamster employed by the United States party surveying the Mexican
-boundary line shot an Apache warrior without just cause. The survey
-commissioner offered thirty dollars in payment, which was refused, and
-the Apaches declared war.
-
-In 1861 Cochise, chief of the Chiricahuas, who had been friendly, was
-confined, on a false charge, by Lieutenant Bascom of the army, at the
-army camp at Apache Pass, Arizona. He cut his way to freedom. His
-brother and five others were hanged by the Americans. Cochise hanged
-a white man, in return, declared war, and almost captured the stage
-station where the troops were fortified.
-
-Beginning with the Civil War, the Apaches ravaged all southern Arizona
-and the stage line in New Mexico also. Terrible tortures were committed
-upon settlers and travelers.
-
-In 1863 Mangas Coloradas (Red Sleeves), an old Mimbreño chief related
-by marriage to Cochise, was treacherously imprisoned and killed by
-soldiers, at Fort McLane, New Mexico.
-
-Thenceforth the Apaches and whites in Arizona had little common ground
-except that of “no quarter.” There was constant fighting.
-
-In March, 1871, a number of Arivaipa Apaches gathered peacefully under
-the protection of Camp Grant are killed, captured or put to flight by a
-vengeful party of Americans, Mexicans and Papago Indians from Tucson.
-
-In the fall of 1871 the Government peace commission tries to adjust
-the differences between the white people and the red. The Apaches are
-offered reservations and guaranteed kind treatment. They have little
-faith in the words.
-
-The Apaches, with the exception of the White Mountain in Arizona and
-the Warm Spring in New Mexico, and some smaller bands, decline to
-gather upon reservations. In 1872 General O. O. Howard arrives as
-special peace commissioner, and by his talks and actions wins the trust
-of the Indians. The reservation idea seems a success. Cochise and
-his Chiricahuas agree to remain in their own country of the Dragoon
-Mountains, southern Arizona.
-
-In the winter of 1872–73 General George Crook proceeds against the
-outlaw Apaches of Arizona, especially the Tontos and the Apache-Mohaves
-or Yavapais. His cavalry, infantry, pack-trains and enlisted Indian
-scouts trail them down and subdue them.
-
-General Crook’s plans to make the Indians self-supporting on their
-reservations appear to have brought peace to Arizona.
-
-In 1874 the control of the reservations passes from the War Department
-to the Indian Bureau. Reservations given to the Indians “forever,” by
-the President, are reduced or abolished, and various tribes are removed
-against their protests. Agents prove dishonest, the Indians are not
-encouraged to work, and are robbed of their rations.
-
-The Chiricahuas are generally peaceful, although Mexico complains that
-stock is being stolen and run across the border into the reservation.
-Chief Cochise, who has kept his word with General Howard, dies in 1874.
-Taza his son succeeds him, as leader of the Chiricahua peace party,
-until his death in 1876.
-
-In April, 1876, whiskey is sold to some Chiricahuas, at a stage station
-on the reservation. A fight ensues, and killings occur. The great
-majority of the Chiricahuas refuse to join in any outbreak.
-
-In June, 1876, it is recommended by the governor of Arizona that all
-the Chiricahuas be removed to the San Carlos reservation. They do not
-wish to go, but the majority follow Taza there. Chiefs Juh, Geronimo,
-and others escape.
-
-The policy of the Indian Bureau contemplates putting all the Apaches
-together upon the San Carlos reservation. The White Mountain Apaches,
-who have voluntarily lived upon the White Mountain reservation, their
-home land, adjacent, and have supplied the government with scouts,
-decline to go to the low country. When forced, they drift back again,
-and finally are allowed to stay.
-
-In 1877 the Warm Spring Apaches and the Geronimo Chiricahuas who had
-taken refuge there are ordered from the Warm Spring reservation in New
-Mexico to San Carlos. Some escape; the remainder escape a little later.
-Thereafter, Chief Victorio and his Warm Springs are constantly on the
-war-path, out of Mexico.
-
-In January, 1880, Chiefs Juh and Geronimo of the Chiricahuas agree to
-stay upon the San Carlos reservation. In August Victorio is killed by
-Mexican troops.
-
-In September, 1881, Juh and Nah-che (a son of Cochise and a lieutenant
-of Geronimo), break from the reservation, for Mexico.
-
-In April, 1882, Geronimo and Loco of the Chiricahuas follow.
-
-General Crook is now recalled to the command in Arizona. He talks with
-the Apaches on the reservations, finds a marked state of mistrust and
-misunderstanding, and places his troops to guard the border against the
-outlaws.
-
-In March, 1883, Chato, or Flat-nose, a young captain of Geronimo’s
-band, with twenty-six men breaks through, raids up into New Mexico and
-Arizona, and murders settlers. With forty cavalry, about two hundred
-Apache scouts, and pack-trains, Crook overhauls the Chiricahuas in
-the wild Sierra Madre Mountains of Mexico two hundred miles south of
-the boundary, and persuades the whole band to return peaceably to the
-reservation.
-
-The Chiricahuas are placed under the control of General Crook, and he
-locates them upon good land on the White Mountain reservation. Both
-reservations are policed by the army. The Apaches seem to be content,
-under the Crook plan that they shall work for an independent living. In
-1884 they raise over four thousand tons of produce. There have been no
-outbreaks.
-
-In February, 1885, disagreements arise between the War Department and
-the Interior Department, of which the Indian Bureau is a function.
-General Crook’s powers are interfered with by civil interests at
-Washington and in Arizona, liquor is being permitted upon the
-reservations and the Indians grow uneasy.
-
-In May, 1885, after a controversy with the agent over the right to
-dig an irrigating ditch, and having obtained a supply of liquor, one
-hundred and twenty-four men, women and children under Geronimo and
-Nah-che, his lieutenant, escape again into Mexico. During their raids
-they kill seventy-three whites and a number of Apache scouts.
-
-General Crook secures an international agreement that United States
-troops may operate in Mexico, and Mexican troops in the United States,
-and sends a column on the trail of Geronimo.
-
-In March, 1886, Geronimo signifies that he desires to talk. The general
-meets him, Chihuahua and other chiefs, and they accept the terms of
-two years’ imprisonment, with the privilege of the company of their
-families.
-
-On the march north a vicious white man by the name of Tribollet
-supplies whiskey to the Chiricahuas, at ten dollars (silver) a gallon,
-alarms them with lies by himself and his unscrupulous associates.
-Geronimo and Nah-che, with twenty men, thirteen women and two children,
-disappear. Chihuahua and eighty others remain.
-
-The general’s action in making terms with the Chiricahuas, and in not
-so guarding them that they would be forced to remain, is indirectly
-censured by General Sheridan, commanding the army. Crook explains that
-no other methods on his part would have met with any success, under
-the circumstances, and asks to be relieved from the command of the
-department.
-
-In April, 1886, General Nelson A. Miles takes the command in Arizona.
-He increases the number of heliostat signal stations, discharges the
-reservation-Apache scouts (whom he suspects of treachery), employs a
-few trailers from other tribes, and by a very energetic campaign which
-permits Geronimo no rest, in September induces his surrender upon only
-the conditions that his life shall be spared and that he shall be
-removed from Arizona.
-
-Without delay the Geronimo and Nah-che remnant of hostiles, and all the
-Chiricahua and Warm Spring Apaches, four hundred in number, at the Fort
-Apache (White Mountain) reservation, are removed, whether friendly or
-not, to Florida. This is deemed the only practicable measure of freeing
-the Southwest from the menace of Apache outbreaks. The expenses of the
-Department of Arizona are lessened by $1,000,000 a year.
-
-The climate of Florida is unfavorable to the Apaches. Geronimo
-complains that he and Nah-che had understood that their families
-were to accompany them. Many of the Apaches die from disease and
-homesickness.
-
-In May, 1888, the Apaches are removed from Florida to Mt. Vernon
-barracks, Alabama; and in October, 1894, as prisoners of war to Fort
-Sill Military Reservation, Indian Territory (now Oklahoma).
-
-The principal reservations of the Arizona Apaches are the Fort Apache
-and the San Carlos, each containing between two and three thousand
-Indians. There are still over two hundred of the Chiricahuas and Warm
-Springs at Fort Sill, Oklahoma. Geronimo died February 17, 1909, at
-Fort Sill. Nah-che succeeded him as chief.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: APACHE ARIZONA
-
-and the principal places in General Crook’s time]
-
-
-
-
-GENERAL CROOK AND THE FIGHTING APACHES
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-JIMMIE DUNN IS BADLY FOOLED
-
-
-“Tinkle, tinkle,” placidly sounded the bell of the old bell-wether,
-to prove that he and the other sheep were grazing near at hand in the
-stiff brush.
-
-“All right,” thought Jimmie Dunn, whose business it was to keep tab on
-the whereabouts of that bell.
-
-For this was a simmering hot summer afternoon of the year 1870, far,
-far down in southern Arizona Territory; and here on a hill-slope of
-the Pete Kitchen big ranch about half-way between Tucson town and
-the Mexican line Jimmie was lying upon his back under a spreading
-crooked-branched mesquite tree, lazily herding the ranch sheep.
-
-The Kitchen ranch really was not Jimmie’s home. He lived with his uncle
-Joe Felmer (not really his uncle, either), who was the blacksmith for
-Camp Grant, the United States army post ninety miles northward, or
-fifty-five miles the other side of Tucson.
-
-But the region close around Camp Grant was a sandy pocket famous for
-fever and ague as well as for other disagreeable features, such as
-scorpions, tarantulas, ugly Gila monsters (thick, black, poisonous
-lizards), heat and sand-storms; so that Joe had sent Jimmie down to
-their friend Pete Kitchen, on a vacation.
-
-Everybody, American, Mexican and Indian, in southern Arizona, knew the
-Pete Kitchen ranch. It was noted for its battles with the Apaches who,
-passing back and forth on their raids out of the mountains of Arizona
-and Mexico both, were likely to plunder and kill, at any time. Sturdy
-Pete had not been driven away yet, and did not propose to be driven
-away.
-
-Jimmie himself was pretty well used to Apaches. They prowled about Camp
-Grant, and attacked people on the road from Tucson, and frequently the
-soldiers rode out after them. Joe Felmer had married an Apache woman,
-who was now dead; he spoke Apache and Jimmie had picked up a number of
-the words; but there were plenty of unfriendly Apaches who every little
-while ran off with Joe’s mules or filled his hogs with arrows.
-
-On his back under the mesquite tree Jimmie was not thinking of Apaches.
-He was idly surveying the country――at the same time having an ear
-open to the musical tinkle of the bell-wether, who told him where the
-sheep were straying. And a delightful, dreamy outlook this was, over
-all those quiet miles of mountain and desert Arizona which only the
-Southern stage-line traversed, and which, so thinly settled by white
-people, the roving Apache Indians claimed as their own.
-
-In his loose cotton shirt and ragged cotton trousers Jimmie felt very
-comfortable. Presently his eyes closed, his head drooped, and he nodded
-off, for forty or so winks.
-
-He dozed, he was certain, not more than five minutes; or perhaps ten.
-Then he awakened with a sudden start. Something had told him to awaken.
-He sat up and looked to see that the sheep were all right. He could not
-see one animal, but he heard the tinkle, tinkle. He twisted about to
-find the old bell-wether――and he gazed full into the grinning face of
-an Apache boy!
-
-The Apache boy, who appeared to be fourteen or fifteen years old,
-was not more than five yards from him――standing there beside a giant
-cactus, naked except for a red cloth band about his forehead, and a
-whitish cotton girdle about his middle, with the broad ends hanging
-down before and behind, and regular Apache moccasins reaching like
-leggins half way up his thighs for protection against the brush:
-standing there, grinning, in his left hand a bow, in his right the
-wether’s bell!
-
-_He had been tinkling that bell!_ And a smart trick this was, too: to
-sneak up on the wether, get the bell, and ring it to fool the herder
-while other Apaches drove away the sheep!
-
-For an instant Jimmie stared perfectly paralyzed with astonishment. He
-could not believe his eyes. Instead of a staid old tame sheep, here
-was a mischievous young wild Apache! Then, trying to utter a shout,
-up he sprang, to run. On the moment he heard a sharp swish, the noose
-of an Apache’s rawhide rope whipped about his shoulders, and right in
-mid-step he was jerked backward so violently, head over heels, that he
-had no time or breath for yelling a word.
-
-Barely had he landed topsy turvy in the brush when a heavy body rushed
-for him, a supple dark hand was clapped firmly over his mouth, and
-hauled upright he was half dragged, half carried, through the mesquites
-and the cactuses and around the slope of the hill.
-
-Now he was flung, limp and dazed, aboard a pony, his captor mounted
-into the saddle behind him, and away they tore, while the brush beneath
-reeled by under Jimmie’s swimming eyes.
-
-This was a fast ride until the sheep were overtaken. There they
-were, almost the whole flock, being forced hotly onward by Apaches
-afoot and ahorse, with other Apaches guarding the flanks. It looked
-like a war party returning with plunder from Mexico. The bands about
-the foreheads, the round rawhide helmets that some wore, the thigh
-moccasins, the guns, bows, lances and clubs, proved that they were a
-war party; and they had a lot of loose horses and mules besides the
-Pete Kitchen sheep.
-
-Jimmie sighted another captive――a Mexican boy, older than he, fastened
-upon a yellow mule led by an Apache horseman.
-
-A broad-shouldered, finely built Indian wearing an Apache helmet with
-feathers sticking up from it, and riding a white horse, evidently was
-the chief in command.
-
-The grip of the Apache who held Jimmie had slackened. Jimmie managed
-to squirm ’round enough to look up into the Apache’s face. In return
-he got a grin, and two or three Apache words that said: “Good boy. No
-fear.” These were common words with the “tame” Apaches who sometimes
-came into Camp Grant or to Joe Felmer’s little ranch near by, so Jimmie
-understood.
-
-The country grew rougher and wilder and higher. By the sun Jimmie knew
-that the course was generally eastward, and he guessed that these were
-Chiricahua Apaches.
-
-The Apache Indians, as almost anybody in Arizona could say off-hand,
-were divided into the Chiricahuas and the Pinals and the Arivaipas
-and the Coyotes and the White Mountains and the Apache-Mohaves and
-the Apache-Yumas and the Tontos and the Mogollons, and the Warm
-Spring Apaches and the Mimbres (of New Mexico), and the Jicarillas
-(Heek-ah-ree-yahs) or Basket Apaches, who never came into Arizona; and
-so forth.
-
-The Tontos and Pinals, who were outlaws, and the Chiricahuas
-(Chee-ree-cah-wahs), who were hard, thorough fighters, seemed to give
-the most trouble. The Chiricahuas lived in the mountains of southern
-Arizona and of northern Mexico.
-
-The pines and cedars of the higher country were reached before dusk.
-Not a tenth of the sheep had come this far. The most of them had been
-left to die from heat and exhaustion. Now having passed through another
-of their favorite narrow canyons, the Apaches halted, at dark, to camp
-beside a trickle of water in a rocky little basin surrounded by crags
-and timber.
-
-This night Jimmie was forced to lie between two Apache warriors, the
-one who had captured him, and a comrade; and he fitted so closely that
-if he moved he would waken them. It was an uncomfortable bed, there
-under a thin dirty strip of blanket, limited by those greasy, warm
-bodies, and he was afraid to stir. But he was so tired that he slept,
-anyway.
-
-Very early in the morning the camp roused again. Apaches when on a raid
-or when pursued were supposed to travel on only one meal a day and with
-only three hours’ rest out of the twenty-four. So now on and on and on,
-through all kinds of rough country they hastened, at steady gait and
-speaking rarely――Jimmie riding a bareback horse.
-
-In late afternoon they halted on the rim of a valley so deep and wide
-that it was veiled in bluish-purple haze. On a rocky point three of the
-Apaches started a fire of dried grass, and sent up a smoke signal by
-heaping pitchy pine cones upon the blaze.
-
-Chewing twigs and sucking pebbles to keep their mouths wet, the
-Apaches, talking together and watching, waited, until a long distance
-across the valley, whose brushy sides were thickly grown with the
-mescal, or century plant cactuses, blooming in round stalks twenty feet
-tall, a smoke column answered.
-
-The Apaches tending to their own fire fed more pine cones to it, and
-two of them rapidly clapped a saddle-blanket on and off the smoke, and
-broke it into puffs. The smoke column across the valley puffed in reply.
-
-The Apache boy who had played bell-wether pressed to Jimmie’s horse.
-
-“Chi-cowah,” he said, pointing. That was Apache for “My home.”
-
-Now the party appeared satisfied. They scattered their fire, and struck
-down into a narrow trail that crossed the bottom of the valley. A
-peculiar sweetish smell hung in the misted air. This, Jimmie guessed,
-was from the steaming pits wherein the hearts of the mescal, or century
-plants, were being roasted.
-
-They glimpsed several squaws and children gathering foodstuff in the
-brush. As they filed through a little draw or rocky pass they were
-hailed loudly by an Apache sentinel posted above. He could not be seen,
-but the chief replied. The pass opened into a grassy flat concealed by
-the usual high crags and timbered ridges. Here was the Apache camp or
-rancheria (ran-cher-ee-ah), located along a willow-bordered creek.
-
-Fifty or sixty of the Apache brush huts or jacals were sprinkled all
-up and down the flat, and as soon as the party entered, a tremendous
-chorus of welcome sounded. Women shrieked, children screamed, dogs
-barked and mules brayed. Right into the center of the camp marched the
-party, and stopped.
-
-A circle of staring women and children, and a few men, surrounded.
-Other squaws bustled to take the horses and mules from the dismounting
-warriors. Jimmie was told to get off. Feeling lonesome and miserable,
-he saw close in front of him a boy who did not seem to be Indian at
-all, for he had fiery red hair and brick-red freckles and only one eye,
-which was blue!
-
-Yes――a red-headed, one-eyed, blue-eyed boy, rather runty, in only
-a whitish cotton girdle, and moccasins. Evidently he dressed that
-way――or undressed that way――all the time, for his body and limbs were
-burned darker than his face.
-
-Jimmie was not granted much space for staring back into that one
-blue eye. He was slapped upon the shoulder, “Aqui (Here)!” grunted
-the chief, in Spanish, and strode on through the circle. So Jimmie
-followed, hobbling at best speed.
-
-The chief went straight to a scrub-oak tree, with a hut beneath it, and
-an Apache sitting in the shade of it, on a deer hide before the hut. By
-the manner with which Jimmie’s Apache spoke to the sitting Apache, who
-did not rise, it was plain to be seen that the sitting Apache was the
-principal chief, and that Jimmie’s Apache was maybe only a captain.
-
-They talked for a moment in Apache, too fast for Jimmie to understand.
-Then the sitting chief, who had been eying Jimmie sharply, addressed
-him in simple Mexican-Spanish easy to catch.
-
-He was not at all a bad-looking Apache. In fact, he was about the
-finest Apache that Jimmie had ever met: a broad-chested six-footer,
-like the captain chief, but large eyed and kindly faced and dignified.
-
-“What is your name?”
-
-“James Dunn.”
-
-“No Mexicano?”
-
-“Americano,” corrected Jimmie proudly.
-
-“Your father Pete Keetchen?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“Where you live?”
-
-“Camp Grant.”
-
-“With soldiers?”
-
-Jimmie reflected an instant. If he said “With Joe Felmer,” then
-the chief would surely hold him as a great prize, for Joe Felmer,
-Government scout as well as post blacksmith, was an important enemy.
-So――――
-
-“Sometimes,” asserted Jimmie, which was true.
-
-“Why on Keetchen rancho?”
-
-“Tend to sheep.” And Jimmie blushed when he recalled that he had been a
-great sheep-herder!
-
-“Pete Keetchen your father?”
-
-“No!” repeated Jimmie. “No father, no mother.”
-
-The head chief and the captain chief gazed at him as though they would
-read his very thoughts. The captain chief had such piercing dark eyes
-that they bored clear through. But he was a sure-enough Apache, with
-straight black hair and dark chocolate skin, darker even than ordinary.
-
-’Twas to be imagined that neither of the chiefs believed Jimmie’s
-statements. They still suspected that he belonged to Pete Kitchen.
-
-The head chief spoke abruptly.
-
-“You ’Pache now. Ugashé (U-gah-shay)――go!”
-
-Jimmie knew that he was dismissed, and he turned away. He was faint in
-the stomach and weak in the knees, and he had no place in particular to
-go, until he saw the Mexican boy captive sitting in the sun, with his
-feet under him and his shanks high. Jimmie seized upon the opportunity
-to talk with him, at last.
-
-“What is your name?” he asked, squatting beside him. All Americans in
-southern Arizona could speak some Spanish; Mexican-Spanish was as
-common as English.
-
-“Maria Jilda Grijalba (Maree-ah Heel-dah Gree-hal-bah).”
-
-“Where did you live?”
-
-“In Sonora” (which was in Mexico). “Where did you live?”
-
-“Camp Grant――American fort, Arizona.”
-
-“How far?”
-
-Jimmie shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“Do not know.”
-
-“You do not live on the rancho?”
-
-“For little while.”
-
-“You have father, mother?”
-
-“No. Apaches kill them.”
-
-“My father, mother, brothers, sisters, all killed,” lamented Maria,
-weeping. “Alas! All killed, by Apaches.”
-
-“We run off, pretty soon?” proposed Jimmie.
-
-“No!” opposed Maria, in much alarm. “Must stay. Be Apaches. They not
-let us run off. Big country. Get lost and die. Get caught and be
-killed.”
-
-But Jimmie had made up his mind that he was not going to be an Apache;
-he would escape if he could. Or maybe he would be rescued.
-
-However, here came the captain chief, and the bell-wether Apache boy,
-and the strange red-headed boy with the one blue eye.
-
-“Ugashé!” roughly ordered the captain chief, of Maria. Poor Maria
-obediently arose and shuffled away.
-
-The captain spoke to Jimmie, and smiled. He, also was a fine-looking
-Apache: almost six feet tall and straight and sinewy, with square face
-and thin, determined lips, and those extraordinary sharp eyes.
-
-Jimmie stood up.
-
-“Chi-kis-n,” said the captain, and nodded aside at the bell-wether boy.
-
-“Chi-kis-n” was Apache for “my brother.” The Apache boy grinned and
-held out his hand.
-
-“Chi-kis-n,” he greeted.
-
-The red-headed, one-eyed boy explained in Spanish.
-
-“Your name Boy-who-falls-asleep, his name Nah-che. But you must call
-him chi-kis-n――my brother.”
-
-“Muchos gratias (Many thanks),” answered Jimmie, shaking hands with
-Nah-che. Nah-che was a stocky, round-faced boy, and Jimmie liked him in
-spite of that trick with the sheep bell.
-
-“The chief’s name is Go-yath-lay,” continued the red-headed boy. “He is
-war-captain of the Chiricahua. Nah-che is son of Cochise, head chief.”
-
-The war captain, who had been listening intently, trying to understand
-the words, nodded, and spoke again in Apache.
-
-“Your chi-kis-n will show you,” translated the red-headed boy, who knew
-Spanish and Apache both.
-
-“Aqui (Here),” bade Nah-che: and Jimmie followed him to one of those
-regulation Apache jacals――a low round-topped hut made from willow
-branches stuck in a circle and bent over to fasten together, with
-pieces of deer hide and cow hide laid to cover the framework of the
-sides, and flat bundles of brush to thatch the roof. The jacals
-resembled dirty white bowls bottom-up. Each had a little opening, as a
-door to be entered only by stooping half double.
-
-Before the hut an Apache woman in a loose cotton waist worn outside a
-draggled calico skirt was busy cooking. She stirred the contents of an
-iron kettle, set upon a bed of coals in a small shallow pit. She threw
-back her long, coarse black hair and scanned Jimmie curiously while
-Nah-che spoke a few words to her.
-
-Then repeating the title “chi-kis-n” Nah-che strolled away. The woman
-smiled broadly at Jimmie, took him by the arm, and talking to him led
-him inside the hut. The earth had been dug out, there, so that they
-might stand, in the middle, and not strike their heads on the ceiling.
-
-The woman made Jimmie remove his trousers and shoes; and leaving him
-his ragged shirt tossed to him a pair of old moccasins.
-
-Again out-doors, she gave him a mess of the stew, in a gourd bowl. The
-stew was corn and beans cooked together, and was very good indeed, to a
-hungry boy.
-
-“Go,” she signed. “Come back at night.”
-
-Here in the open, Jimmie felt rather odd, with nothing on but his shirt
-and moccasins. Still, most of the boys and girls of his age, in the
-village, had even less on. They were brown, though, and he was white,
-which seemed to make a difference.
-
-Some of the boys were playing at what appeared to be hide-and-seek
-amidst the brush and trees and rocks; others were shooting with bows
-and arrows. The little girls had dolls, of rags, and stuffed, painted
-buckskin. They all viewed him out of their sparkling black eyes, and
-the girls giggled the same as white girls.
-
-Jimmie’s squaw shoved him from behind.
-
-“U-ga-shé!” she ordered. “Go!”
-
-After all, thought Jimmie, if he had to live here for a while, he might
-better pretend to enjoy himself, until he got a good chance to escape.
-So he boldly joined in the game of hide-and-seek. At first everybody
-there let him alone. But he chased around, with the others, his shirt
-flapping, and soon he was one of the “gang” and was being shouted at in
-Apache.
-
-The one-eyed boy and Nah-che and several others of that age stayed by
-themselves, playing a game with raw-hide cards, and talking. They were
-too old for foolishness.
-
-This night Jimmie slept in the squaw’s hut. There was a feast and
-dance, judging by the noise that he heard when awake. Nah-che came in
-late. In the morning the red-headed boy went away on foot with three
-Apaches who evidently had been visitors at the village; and as he
-did not return during the day, he probably belonged somewhere else,
-himself.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-JIMMIE LEARNS TO BE APACHE
-
-
-These were the principal band of the Cho-kon-en Apaches who were
-called Chiricahua (“Great Mountain”) Apaches because of the Chiricahua
-Mountains amidst which they lived. But Cho-kon-en was their own name.
-
-The pleasant-faced Cochise was the head chief. He was about fifty-five
-years old. The captain Go-yath-lay or “One-who-yawns” was the war
-chief. He was forty years old. The Mexicans whom he had fought had
-given him the name Geronimo (Her-_on_-i-mo), which is Spanish for
-Jerome.
-
-There were other bands of Chiricahuas, under other chiefs――Na-na
-and Chihuahua (Chi-wah-wah) and Loco, and so forth. Na-na was the
-oldest of all; he was nearly eighty, and had been wounded many times
-in battle――yes, as many as fifteen times. Chihuahua was stout and
-good-natured. Loco was thin and quite bow-legged.
-
-In the Sierra Madre Mountains of Mexico, which were the south end of
-the Chiricahua Range, were the Nedni Apaches, under old Chief Juh, or
-“Whoa.” Chief Cochise and Chief Juh frequently went to war together
-against the Mexicans.
-
-Northeastward, or in western New Mexico lived the Chi-hen-ne――the
-Ojo Caliente (Oho Cal-i-en-te) or Warm Spring Apaches, under Chief
-Victorio. With Chief Victorio’s people the Cochise people had long been
-as brothers.
-
-The woman who had charge of Jimmie was Nah-da-ste. She was a sister of
-Geronimo. Her husband had been killed in battle with the Mexicans. The
-warrior who had captured Jimmie was Geronimo’s younger brother Porico,
-or “White Horse.”
-
-Nah-che, Jimmie’s chi-kis-n, was the youngest son of Chief Cochise.
-Geronimo the war chief liked him very much. His name meant “meddlesome,”
-for he had been a mischievous baby. In about three years, or when he was
-seventeen, if he had proved himself worthy in the hunt and on the long
-trail, he would be admitted into the councils as a warrior.
-
-The same with another boy, Chato. He was called Chato, or “Flat-nose,”
-because he had been kicked in the face by a mule.
-
-Taza, Nah-che’s elder brother, already was a warrior and would be
-head chief, probably, after Cochise his father died. But that was not
-certain; head chiefs were elected and not born.
-
-As for the red-headed, one-eyed blue-eyed boy――――
-
-“His name is Red-head,” said Nah-che. “He is not one of us. He is part
-Mexican and part American. He was captured a long time ago by some of
-our men, but he lives with the White Mountains now, in the north. The
-White Mountains are at peace, on their land where the new American fort
-is being built.”
-
-Jimmie rapidly learned Apache, although many of the Chiricahuas spoke
-Spanish. He soon had lost his shirt, and went about with only a rag
-around his waist. Everybody in the Cochise camp was kind to him. He
-was an Apache boy, now. The Apaches never whipped their children, nor
-punished them in any way except by scolding.
-
-The little children were made to help in the fields where corn and
-squash and beans and melons were raised; and went with their mothers
-to gather seeds and berries and acorns and mescal――for the Apaches ate
-curious things.
-
-The girls played with dolls, and at housekeeping and tended to the
-babies, of which there were many. The boys of nine and ten, Jimmie’s
-age, and over, worked some, but they were encouraged to use the bow and
-arrow, and throw the lance, and practice at war and at the hunt, so as
-to train them as warriors and to strengthen their muscles.
-
-The war game was the best sport. Some of the boys pretended to be
-Mexicans. The others remained Apaches. The “Mexicans” were given a
-head-start, into the brush and timber, and the “Apaches” set out to
-find their trail and to surprise them.
-
-Although the “Mexicans” did everything they might think of, to conceal
-their tracks and to get away, they always were discovered. Then by
-running and sneaking and crawling flat with grass and cactus tied to
-their heads the “Apaches” proceeded to ambush the “Mexicans.” Then the
-“Apaches” yelled and shot fast with light arrows, and the “Mexicans”
-were killed or captured.
-
-Turkeys were caught by running after them up hill and down until they
-were so tired that they could not fly, and were killed by a blow from a
-club on the neck. Rabbits were chased, too, and surrounded by a circle
-of boys armed with bows and clubs; and they, too, were killed.
-
-All these sports made the Apache boys fleet of foot and quick of eye
-and arm, and very strong in lungs and legs.
-
-The Apaches had curious customs as well as curious food.
-
-“You must never ask a Tinneh (‘Tinneh’ was the Apache’s own title; it
-meant ‘man’) his name,” explained Nah-che. “Only somebody else may
-speak it. If he spoke it, he would have bad luck.”
-
-And――――
-
-“You must never speak of the bear or the mule or the snake or the
-lightning unless you say Ostin Shosh (Old Man Bear), or Ostin Mule or
-Ostin Snake or Ostin lightning. It is not well to talk about them or
-the owl. They are medicine.”
-
-And――――
-
-“After you are married you must not look upon the face of your wife’s
-mother. You must avoid meeting her or speaking to her. You must hide
-your face or turn your back, or you will be disrespectful.”
-
-And――――
-
-“You must not eat fish meat, or the meat of the pig. They are bad.”
-
-And――――
-
-“When anyone dies we give away everything of his that we don’t burn. If
-that was not done, then there might be persons of bad hearts who would
-wish a relative to die so that they would get his property.”
-
-And――――
-
-“When I go on the trail as a warrior, for the first four times I must
-not touch my lips to water. I must drink through a hollow reed, or I
-will spoil the luck of the whole party. And I must not scratch my head
-with my fingers. I must use a scratch stick.”
-
-War parties went out frequently, sometimes under Geronimo, sometimes
-under Cochise also. The warriors marched on foot, as a rule, because
-then they could climb and hide better. On foot an Apache could travel
-forty to seventy-five miles at a stretch, which was as much as a horse
-could do. No white man could equal an Apache, in covering rough country
-and desert country.
-
-The parties were sent out mainly against the Mexicans of Mexico, to
-get plunder, although the Chiricahuas had no love for the Americans,
-either, Nah-che explained again.
-
-He was sitting, pulling the hairs from his chin and cheeks with a pair
-of bone tweezers. It was unmanly for a warrior to have any hair on
-his face, and Nah-che expected to be a warrior after he had made four
-war-trails. Four was the lucky number, with the Apaches.
-
-“We hate the Mexicans. They are bad,” said Nah-che. “They kill our
-women and children, and pay for scalps. With the Americans it is like
-this:
-
-“When they first came into our country we were friendly to them. We
-saw that they were different from the Mexicans, and they had been at
-war with the Mexicans, too. They shot one of us, and offered to pay
-a little something, which was not punishment enough. Still we did
-not stay at war with them. Cochise made a camp near the American
-wagon-road at Apache Pass, where Camp Bowie is now, and traded, and
-sold wood. One time a Mexican woman and her baby were stolen by some
-bad Indians from an American, and the Chiricahua were asked to return
-them. We did not have them, or know anything about them, but Cochise
-and Mangas Coloradas of the Mimbreño Apaches and some other chiefs went
-with a white flag to meet a young American war chief at Apache Pass,
-and talk.
-
-“When they got there the American chief surrounded them with his
-soldiers and told them that they would be kept shut in a tent until
-they sent and got the baby and woman. They decided they would rather be
-killed than be kept prisoners. So they drew their knives, and Cochise
-cut a hole through the back of the tent, and there was a fight. Several
-were killed. But Cochise and Mangas Coloradas escaped. Cochise was
-wounded in the knee by a gun knife (bayonet). The Americans hung his
-brother and five others, by the neck, and Cochise hung an American by
-the neck; and he and Mangas Coloradas called all their warriors and
-nearly captured the Americans. The young American captain had acted
-very foolish.
-
-“After two or three years Mangas Coloradas (this was Spanish for ‘Red
-Sleeves’) grew tired of fighting. He was badly wounded, and he sent
-word that he would like to treat for peace. The Americans told him to
-come in with his people. Cochise had married his sister, and we and the
-Mimbreños often helped each other, and now Cochise advised him not
-to trust the word of the Americans. But Mangas Coloradas went to an
-American fort in New Mexico.
-
-“Then they seized him and put him into a little house with only one
-window, high up. The soldiers scowled at him; so that when he was put
-into the little house he said to himself: ‘This is my end. I shall
-never again hunt through the valleys and mountains of my people.’ And
-that was so. This night while he was asleep somebody from outside threw
-a big rock down on his chest――or else a soldier guard punched him with
-a hot knife on the end of a gun. We do not know. Anyway, he was much
-frightened. He ran about, trying to climb out and fight with his hands
-and then the soldiers shot him many times, and he died.
-
-“Now you see that the Chiricahua cannot be friends with the Americans
-any more than with the Mexicans, and it is so with other Tinneh. The
-Warm Springs are friendly, because Chief Victorio thinks that is wise;
-and the Sierra Blanca (White Mountains) have agreed not to fight. But
-they have not lost chiefs and brothers like we have.”
-
-This was the way the Chiricahua Apaches thought. But of course there
-were two sides to the quarrel. Joe Felmer and Pete Kitchen and other
-pioneers had claimed that old Mangas Coloradas had been a regular
-bandit who never intended to stay at peace. He had tortured and killed
-men and women and children, and was determined to drive all the
-Americans out of the country. Once he had been captured by miners and
-tied up and whipped, which had made him worse.
-
-He had lived to be seventy years old, and although even Pete Kitchen
-did not wholly approve of the manner with which he had been disposed
-of, it was a great relief to have him out of the way. Maybe he might
-have been educated to stay at peace, and maybe not.
-
-But now that the Chiricahuas hated the Americans and Mexicans both,
-Jimmie saw little chance of escape.
-
-Maria the Mexican boy had settled down to be an Apache. All his folks
-had been killed, and he said that he might as well live with the
-Apaches. He had plenty to eat and little to do; and he thought that he
-would marry an Apache girl, when he was old enough, and stay Apache.
-
-The Red-head boy who lived with the White Mountain Apaches came in once
-or twice, to visit, while out hunting or just scouting around. He could
-not speak English. His father had been Irish and his mother Mexican,
-and Spanish had been the only language used in his home. Since the
-Apaches had captured him eight or nine years ago he had learned Apache,
-too.
-
-“Are you going to stay Apache, Red-head?” asked Jimmie.
-
-“Yes,” answered Red-head, in Apache. “I’ll stay with the White
-Mountains, but I don’t like the Chiricahua. It is no use for them to
-fight the Americans. Besides, they killed my father and mother. Are you
-going to be a Chiricahua, Boy-who-sleeps?”
-
-Jimmie shook his head.
-
-“No. I am American. I don’t want to be anything but American. I’m a
-white boy.”
-
-“That is good,” approved Red-head. He was a snappy, energetic boy,
-built low to the ground, and with his red hair and freckled face and
-one bright blue eye looked very nervy. “I like the Americans. Some day
-I’ll be a scout with the American soldiers. The White Mountain Apaches
-are good Apaches. Chief Pedro is wise. He knows that it is no use to
-fight the Americans. It is better to live at peace with them, and raise
-corn, and hunt, and be given food and clothes. That is easier than
-fighting and starving and losing warriors. The Americans are too many,
-and are well armed. The Chiricahua have bad hearts and will all be
-killed. You ought to leave them.”
-
-“I can’t,” replied Jimmie. “I don’t know where to go.”
-
-“Well,” said Red-head, winking with his one shrewd blue eye, “wait and
-maybe I’ll help you. But don’t tell anybody about my talk with you.”
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-THE RED-HEAD TURNS UP
-
-
-Jimmie had been with the Cochise Chiricahuas about a year, as he
-reckoned, because winter (and not a cold winter) had passed, and the
-yuccas, or Spanish-bayonet cactuses, and the mescal, or century plant
-cactuses, were again in bloom with their tall, stately plumes of white,
-which indicated May.
-
-All this time nobody had come looking for him, and he did not know what
-was going on outside――at Pete Kitchen’s or at Tucson or at Camp Grant
-or at Joe Felmer’s, or anywhere.
-
-All the news was Apache news; gossip about hunting and raids, and
-cowardly Mexicans and stupid Americans.
-
-Camps had been changed frequently, for the Chiricahuas did not remain
-long in any one spot. He had not seen Red-head in several months.
-According to Nah-che the soldiers were getting more numerous, and
-were fighting all the Apaches――the Chiricahuas and the Tontos and the
-Yavapais or Apache-Mohaves and the Mogollons: all who would not settle
-down at peace like the White Mountains and the Warm Springs.
-
-Part of the winter had been spent in Mexico, but just now the camp
-had been located again amidst the Chiricahua Mountains. Most of the
-warriors were out on a big raid, under Cochise and Geronimo. They had
-not taken any of the older boys. By this it looked as though they were
-going into American country, where they might meet the soldiers.
-
-Nah-che admitted as much. He said that report had come of a killing
-of friendly Apaches at Camp Grant, so it was useless to trust the
-White-eyes (as the Americans were called); they were the enemies of the
-Apaches, and Cochise had gone to kill all the Mexicans and Americans
-that he could find, down there.
-
-Jimmie felt anxious. He well knew how cunning and bold the Cochise
-Chiricahuas were. They had plenty of arms, including guns that they
-had captured. They were particularly eager to kill a young American
-war-captain who had been leading soldiers upon their trail.
-
-“Was he a new young war-captain?”
-
-“No, he was an old young war-captain――a horse chief. He had killed
-Apaches out of Tucson and Camp Grant both.”
-
-As Nah-che would not talk any more about him, Jimmie might only guess.
-But all the young officers in the First and the Third Cavalry at Camp
-Grant had been brave.
-
-The Cochise and Geronimo party were gone more than half a moon before
-word arrived from them. Then, one morning, two runners or messengers,
-Porico (“White Horse”), who was Geronimo’s brother, and Hal-zay, who
-was a half-brother to Nah-che, appeared. They had traveled hard and
-were tired, but they brought exciting news.
-
-The Chiricahuas had ambushed twenty American soldiers and scouts at the
-Bear Springs in the Mestinez (Mustang) Mountains only a day’s march
-east from Tucson; had killed six of them, maybe more, and had driven
-the rest back clear into Camp Crittenden, southeast of Tucson; would
-have surrounded and killed them, too, had they not fought so skillfully.
-
-A few Chiricahuas had been killed, but among the first to fall, of the
-Americans, was the young horse chief who had given the Chiricahuas so
-much trouble. They had taken his clothes and other trophies, and had
-easily escaped to the Sierra Madre Mountains of Mexico.
-
-Cochise was going to stay there for a time, until the soldiers quit
-trying to trail him. Then he would come north.
-
-The old squaws in the rancheria immediately lay flat upon their
-stomachs and screeched and wailed, mourning the warriors who had
-fallen. This was Apache custom. But the camp on the whole was happy and
-Jimmie was the only truly sad member. He was not an Apache; he was an
-American, even though he did not look much like a white boy, now, save
-for his eyes and hair.
-
-The camp was moved, to guard against a surprise from the soldiers of
-the American forts. After another half a moon the war party came in and
-were given a great welcome. They had eaten most of the captured cavalry
-horses, but they brought some of the other plunder. Taza was wearing
-the flannel shirt of the young officer.
-
-He was very proud of it. It was a blue shirt, with the straps of a
-first lieutenant sewed upon the shoulders. Jimmie recognized these,
-because he knew army uniforms. The shirt was passed about. Inside the
-neck had been stitched a little tag, bearing the letters “H. B. C.”
-printed on it.
-
-Oh! This was Lieutenant Cushing’s shirt, then! His initials were H.
-B. C., for Howard B. Cushing; and he was a first lieutenant, and he
-had commanded lots of detachments out of Camp Grant, against the
-Apaches. He was a terrific fighter, too, and one of the very best
-officers on a trail. Jimmie remembered him well. All southern Arizona
-knew of Lieutenant Howard B. Cushing of the Third Cavalry. He had
-served through the Civil War; one of his brothers had been killed at
-Gettysburg and another, as a lieutenant in the navy, had blown up the
-Confederate iron-clad Albemarle by poking it with a bomb attached to a
-long pole.
-
-This Lieutenant Cushing of the Third Cavalry was just as brave. The
-Apaches had had good reason to fear him. No wonder they rejoiced, now
-that they had ambushed him and wiped him out.
-
-Nah-che saw Jimmie gulp in his throat. Nah-che had keen eyes.
-
-“You know him?” asked Nah-che.
-
-“Friend,” answered Jimmie, turning away.
-
-“He was a brave captain,” volunteered Nah-che. “He fought hard. But in
-war brave men die.”
-
-Jimmie longed for the Red-head to take him away; or for soldiers or
-scouts to attack the camp and rescue him.
-
-The killing of Lieutenant Cushing encouraged the Chiricahuas. Cochise
-had talks with Chiefs Loco and Chihuahua, and with Chief Nana who was
-with a Warm Spring band and helping the Chiricahuas. Parties were
-being sent out constantly; some of the captains took their families,
-Maria was traded to Chief Nana, and soon the main Chiricahua camp was
-much smaller.
-
-One day Nah-che, who had been away with Geronimo, came hurrying in with
-orders for the camp to be moved again.
-
-“There are soldiers marching this way,” he reported, breathless, and
-big with his news. “They struck us when we were eating, in the medicine
-springs valley near the Sierra Bonita. We were bringing meat up from
-Mexico, but we left it. We have seen signal fires telling us of other
-soldiers. Geronimo says to go at once to the next place-we-know-of.”
-
-Instantly the camp was all confusion. The old men shouted, the women
-ran around screeching and gathering their household things, children
-scampered and screamed, dogs yelped. The frameworks of the huts were
-set afire, and leaving in the smoke the Chiricahuas hustled out for
-other quarters.
-
-They made a queer procession. The old men stoutly hobbled by aid of
-long staffs or “walking-sticks”; the women were laden with huge bundles
-slung to their backs by means of straps about their foreheads, and with
-babies tucked into their shawls or bound in wicker cradles; ponies
-had been packed with baskets; the smaller children rode atop, but the
-strong boys and girls walked. Jimmie and the boys of his age were not
-obliged to carry anything.
-
-Through canyon and across valley, into brush and timber, up slope
-and down, they toiled, led by old Cha-dah, who was the camp tatah
-or chief. Every so often the tatah and the other old men in advance
-halted, and stuck their staffs into the ground, and waited. Here
-everybody rested, for a brief space. By this system many miles were
-covered before camp was established, at evening, and all might eat and
-sleep.
-
-Jimmie, lying wrapped in a piece of blanket near Nah-che, under a
-pine tree, was awakened in the night by a hand firmly pressed upon
-his forehead. The pressure warned him not to stir, so he only stared
-up――and in the star-lighted dimness he saw the one bright eye of
-Red-head beaming down from close above him.
-
-Red-head was squatting, waiting. Now he removed his hand slowly, and
-beckoned with his finger, and silently backed away.
-
-This was enough for Jimmie. What Red-head was doing here, on a sudden,
-after a long absence, he did not delay to reason out, but began
-cautiously to slip from his blanketing.
-
-First he drew away, crouched; then on hands and knees; then, stooping,
-and carefully setting foot before foot, testing the ground lest a twig
-snap. From tree to tree he stole, until he was beyond the camp――and on
-a sudden, again, Red-head arose right in front of him.
-
-That was good! Now he followed behind the Red-head’s soundless course,
-swiftly, straight away, until Red-head stopped.
-
-“Do you want to escape?” asked Red-head. He carried a bow and quiver,
-and wore only a cloth about his middle, and moccasins.
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“If you’ll travel fast, I’ll take you,” said Red-head. “Soldiers are
-coming. If we don’t find them you can go to Chief Pedro of the White
-Mountains. The Chiricahua never visit there, because of the fort.”
-
-“Bueno (Good),” approved Jimmie.
-
-Red-head set out at a trot and rapid walk, but Jimmie kept right in his
-wake. Jimmie’s legs were as strong as those of Red-head; his training
-in the Apache games stood by him. On and on and on they hastened,
-without a word, through the night, amidst timber, and across open
-flats, and down cactus hills and up again.
-
-Red-head seemed to know what he was about, but Jimmie of course was
-completely lost. Not until the dusk had thinned and the eastern sky was
-pink did Red-head halt, at a spring which had made the ground mushy in
-a little hollow among rocks and cedars.
-
-“Drink, eat, rest,” he said. He grinned with his freckled face, his
-long red hair was damp with sweat. “You did well, Boy-who-sleeps. One
-more travel and they cannot catch us. Wait.”
-
-He fitted an arrow to his bow-string and stepped aside, hunting. Jimmie
-flung himself down, drank, and lay flat, resting. The sky was pink as
-far as over-head, he might glimpse Red-head moving silently among the
-cedars; saw him shoot an arrow; and presently Red-head returned with
-two rabbits.
-
-They started a fire by twirling a pointed stick set upon a flat piece
-of wood until the dust smoked; then they blew upon the dust and some
-bark tinder until there was a glow. Then they cooked the rabbits over
-dry cedar that made no smoke.
-
-First by the stars and later by the pink east Jimmie knew that they
-had been traveling toward the north. Now Red-head explained. Some of
-his talk was Apache and some was Spanish-Mexican. He used whichever
-language came the easier.
-
-“We will not go straight to Camp Apache in the country where the White
-Mountains are,” he said. “It is better that we go round-about. If
-the Chiricahua see that we are going to Camp Apache that might make
-trouble. They would say that the White Mountains stole you, and some
-time they might capture _me_. Now if they try to follow us, we will
-fool them.
-
-“I will tell you about the soldiers. There is a new American
-comandante. He has come to Tucson, to fight the bad Indians. He
-is leading out a great lot of horse soldiers and white scouts and
-tame-Indian scouts――Navahos and Papagos and Yaquis and Apaches,
-too――and wagons and pack-mules. He has been at Camp Bowie, and he is
-marching north to Camp Apache, but he may not stay. The White Mountains
-have heard this from runners. The runners say that he is a wonderful
-comandante, who knows everything but asks many questions. Shall we try
-to find him, Boy-who-sleeps? I think that now is a good chance, while
-the Chiricahua are hiding.”
-
-“I don’t want to live with the Chiricahuas,” asserted Jimmie. “I hate
-them. They kill my friends. I’m not an Indian. I’m white.”
-
-“I don’t know whether I’m American or Mexican or Indian,” grinned
-Red-head. “I can be anything. What is your American name, Boy-who-sleeps?
-I will call you by it. We will quit being Apache.”
-
-“James MacGregor Dunn, but everybody called me Jimmie.”
-
-“Inju (good),” grunted Red-head, in Apache. “I am called Micky Free by
-the soldiers at Camp Apache. You shall call me Micky, and I shall call
-you Cheemie.”
-
-“How did you lose your eye, Micky?”
-
-“By a deer. Three or four years ago I shot a deer with an arrow, and
-knocked him down. I thought I had killed him, but when I ran and
-grabbed his head he fought me and struck me with his horn in the eye.
-Old Miguel has only one eye, too. He lost that in battle.”
-
-“Who is old Miguel?”
-
-“He is a White Mountain chief. There are Miguel and Pedro and old
-Es-ki-tis-tsla and Pi-to-ne. They are for peace.”
-
-“Inju,” grunted Jimmie.
-
-While they rested and ate and drank, Micky kept a sharp look-out. Every
-now and again he mounted upon a rocky ledge and lay there, peering.
-
-“I see smokes,” he said, coming down the last time. “I do not think
-they are meant for us. The Chiricahua are signaling to each other. But
-we had better go on, Cheemie, to a cave I know of. We will sleep.”
-
-Yes, there were smokes, far back on their trail: smokes that signaled
-“enemies.” This was well, because with enemies around, the Chiricahuas
-would not risk following the trail of a boy. So that noon Jimmie and
-Micky slept in Micky’s cave, which was concealed high up in the side
-of a canyon. They entered it from above. From the mouth they might see
-a long distance.
-
-“In two days we shall cross the Tonto country,” remarked Micky. “That
-is where we turn east for Camp Apache and the White Mountains. We will
-have to be very careful again. The Tonto are bad people. They are
-outlaws. When an Apache gets bad, he joins the Tonto.”
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-THE CANVAS SUIT MAN
-
-
-The country was steadily growing wilder, with much large timber. For
-two days Micky had been leading on and on. The Chiricahuas did not
-seem to be pursuing, and Jimmie was certain that he had escaped from
-them. He wished that he might have said good-by to good Nah-da-ste, who
-had taken care of him; and to his friends Nah-che and Chato, and some
-others; but of course that had not been possible. They might have known
-that he could not stay being an Apache.
-
-Now on this the third day from the cave Micky suddenly stopped short
-and examined an object beside him. They had been following just below a
-gravelly ridge, so as to be out of sight. Yuccas and bunchy grass grew
-here, and a few cedars, and the sun was warm.
-
-“Tonto sign,” spoke Micky, pointing.
-
-It was a band of dried grass knotted around a yucca leaf. Only eyes
-like those of Micky would have seen it; but Micky saw everything.
-
-“How do you know, Micky?”
-
-“Because I know,” answered Micky. “That is the way the Tonto tie their
-grass. A White Mountain would have tied different, and so would a
-Chiricahua or a Pinal. And the same with piling stones or writing signs
-on rocks or bark. It means a Tonto war party has passed here, and tells
-other Tonto to follow. See――there is the trail.”
-
-“Shall we hide, Micky?”
-
-“No. The trail was made early this morning. It is an old trail. See,
-Cheemie? You have lived with the Chiricahua and you ought to know.
-There is a broken twig, where it was stepped on, and the leaves are
-wilted. The sap is done flowing. I think we’d better follow and see
-where those Tonto are going, so we won’t run into them.”
-
-The trail proceeded up the gravelly ridge, where moccasin prints were
-plain, and over, and through among cedars of a flat mesa; and suddenly
-Jimmie fairly gasped for breath. They had come out upon the edge of a
-great, broad, deep valley lying like a green basin; it was so deep that
-the trees in it looked like shrubs, and the farther edge was veiled in
-purple mist.
-
-“Tonto home,” said Micky. “Down in there the Tonto live, where they
-can hide. Up here is Mogollon country. It is all a flat mountain top,
-on the Sierra Mogollon. We shall see many big pine trees soon. When we
-find where this Tonto trail goes we had better turn back.”
-
-The trail skirted the dizzy edge; then it veered inland, and was joined
-by another trail, and presently the joined trails made straight into
-a tremendous forest. The trees were all pines; they stood up tall and
-stately, and under them the ground was clean, except for the needles
-and the low grass and flowers. Throughout the long aisles flecked by
-the sun not a thing moved. It was a silent forest.
-
-Micky and Jimmie trotted fast, their eyes upon the trail, or searching
-ahead. Now it was past noon. Once in a while the view opened into
-the great Tonto Basin; and again there was only the timber, with the
-serried trunks extending on every side. In such a forest, and when
-gazing into such a basin, a boy felt small.
-
-About an hour or an hour and a half after noon Micky, who was just
-before, stopped short once more――stopped so quickly that he stood with
-one foot uplifted. He signed “Come,” and Jimmie came on.
-
-“Horse tracks now, Cheemie. American horses. Mules, too. American
-soldiers.”
-
-This was a larger trail; the pine needles were imprinted with many
-hoof marks. The horses had been ridden four abreast――yes, five and six
-abreast, so that the trail lay broadly. They were shod horses, which
-meant cavalry horses, because the Apache horses were not shod, save
-with buckskin boots in cactus country. No Apaches rode four or five
-abreast, anyway. The mule prints were smaller and rounder; and the
-prints cut deeper, showing that the mules had been laden: pack-mules.
-
-Hah! Micky studied the new trail. The Tontos, too, had paused and
-studied it.
-
-“These are some of the soldiers I spoke of, I think,” finally declared
-Micky. “They have been at Camp Apache, maybe. Anyhow, they are going
-away from it. Maybe the Tonto will attack them. What do you say to do,
-Cheemie? My heart tells me we have gone far enough. Shall we turn back,
-for Camp Apache?”
-
-“I’d rather try to find the soldiers, Micky.”
-
-“I will take you to Camp Apache. There are soldiers at Camp Apache; and
-the White Mountains will be good to you if the soldiers don’t want you.
-We will all be chi-kis-n to you.”
-
-“Are you afraid of these soldiers, Micky?”
-
-“No; but I am afraid of the Tonto. Besides, I live with Chief Pedro’s
-people on the reservation near Camp Apache. I have no business off in
-this other direction.”
-
-“I have, though,” answered Jimmie. “I live at Camp Grant. Maybe these
-soldiers are marching back to Camp Grant, or Tucson, and they’ll take
-me there.”
-
-“Well,” replied Micky, “I will follow with you, Cheemie.” His one blue
-eye danced. “If there is a fight, I would like to see it. I would
-like to see those Tonto whipped. But don’t expect me to stay with the
-soldiers, Cheemie. That might make me trouble. Come on, but we must be
-very careful, or the Tonto will kill us, too.”
-
-After having surveyed the soldiers’ trail the Tontos had continued on
-beside it, and between it and the edge of the basin. But Micky crossed
-the soldiers’ trail and hurried away from it. He seemed much excited by
-the prospect of a fight, for he set such a pace that Jimmie half ran.
-Evidently he was going to circuit out and back again, to cut the trail
-farther ahead.
-
-Jimmie kept his ears sharp pricked for soldier sounds――voices, or the
-creak of saddle-leathers, or the tinkle of pack-mule bells; and also
-for the shooting of guns: but all was silence. Twice Micky and he
-struck the trail again. It wended right along, among the trees, and it
-was getting fresher. Indeed, the soldiers could not be far ahead, now.
-No Tonto trail had been cut; therefore the Tontos were still on the
-other side of the soldiers’ trail.
-
-The sun had sunk toward some high purplish ridges away yonder, bounding
-the basin in the west, and evening was near. The third time that Micky
-led in, to cut the trail, he and Jimmie got clear to the edge of the
-great basin without coming to any trail at all. For the last hundred
-yards they had crawled, with bunches of weeds tied to their heads, lest
-the Tontos should be in waiting, but nothing had happened.
-
-The big pines extended to the edge of the basin, and along the edge
-were large boulders, scattered among the trees here. Some of them were
-the size of a hut. They lay in twos and threes, as if dropped by a
-blast.
-
-Micky, with Jimmie close behind, wormed from the trees for two boulders
-that touched. They touched at an angle, so that they left a space,
-within which two boys might crouch, on the ground, and see out by
-peeping through the cracks, or by standing up.
-
-“We have come far enough, Cheemie,” whispered Micky. “It is a good
-place to stay, till the Tonto and the soldiers pass. And if they do
-not fight I am going back to my White Mountains. But I want to see the
-fight. Are you thirsty, Cheemie? You’ll have to drink a stone.”
-
-He picked up a round pebble and put it into his mouth. Jimmie did the
-same. A pebble in the mouth made the mouth wet.
-
-“Listen!” bade Jimmie. “I hear tinkle!”
-
-“Yes; pack-mules. The soldiers are coming. You can go with them,
-Cheemie, but you must not say one word about me. Promise.”
-
-“All right, Micky.”
-
-The bells of the pack-mules were yet a long way off. Micky, with the
-weeds still bound on his head, cautiously rose, to peer over the two
-boulders――and down he dropped.
-
-“S-s-s! Tonto!” he whispered.
-
-He began to poke out his head, gradually, around a corner of the rock
-on his side. Jimmie gently wriggled, crawling flat, until he was under
-an over-hang on his side, and might see straight before, with his head
-just raised from the ground. Right up over the edge of the mighty basin
-figures were popping, and scuttling for the timber: a file of them,
-Apaches!
-
-They crossed not more than thirty yards away. They were naked of body
-and limbs, their hair was black and long and straggly, they were daubed
-with deer blood and mescal juice, they carried strung bows and quivers,
-they were the fiercest, most hideous Apaches that Jimmie had ever seen.
-
-The low sun shone full against them, showing them plainly. They
-scarcely glanced aside as they hurried; and if they did chance to note
-Micky’s head or Jimmie’s head, they thought them to be two motionless
-tufts of weed, like other tufts growing here and there.
-
-Tontos! Jimmie counted seventeen, all springing out of the depths of
-the earth as suddenly as jacks-in-the-box, darting across, and in among
-the pines. Then there were two more, who dropped among the rocks under
-the trees.
-
-After the last had passed and vanished, Micky kicked Jimmie’s leg,
-and Jimmie drew back to face him behind the boulders. Micky’s blue
-eye fairly sparkled; even his freckles glowed, he was so excited. He
-certainly loved danger. He was not American enough to say “Hurrah!” but
-he looked it!
-
-“The Tonto are ready,” he whispered. “We’ll see the fight. Good! Quick!
-The soldiers are coming.”
-
-He crawled around the boulders, craned and peered, crept swiftly, with
-Jimmie in his tracks, to a better place, and wormed his way until they
-both might lie in a warm niche half filled with washed-in soil and
-screened with brush. From here they could see much better into the
-timber beyond the cross trail of the Tontos.
-
-Jimmie felt a wild desire to warn the soldiers of the ambush by the
-Tontos; but the Tontos were cutting him off and he had no time for
-making a circuit. No, none at all. The soldiers were in sight――the
-head of their column had appeared, riding on, up an aisle through the
-towering pines, a short way back from the edge of the basin.
-
-The first, by themselves, were five, riding leisurely almost knee to
-knee, and apparently enjoying the scenery. Their voices might be heard,
-as they chatted. One, a small, sun-dried man, wore an old slouch hat
-and grayish flannel shirt and dark trousers and cowhide boots. He
-was Tom Moore, a government packer. Jimmie knew him――had seen him at
-Camp Grant and in Tucson. Hah! And three were officers, in cavalry
-fatigue――there was Lieutenant John Bourke, of Camp Grant! Yes, sir! And
-Lieutenant William Ross! And another. But the man in the middle, on a
-mule, Jimmie did not know at all.
-
-If he was riding there he ought to be an officer, but he seemed to be
-wearing a brown canvas suit, a sort of brown canvas round-brimmed hat,
-and carried a shot-gun across the pommel of his saddle, the muzzle of
-course pointing ahead. Perhaps he was some sportsman from the East, on
-a hunting trip, with the cavalry.
-
-Micky lay perfectly still, intent to see with his one eye what would
-happen, but Jimmie trembled. His soldier friends were riding into an
-ambush and evidently had no suspicion of danger. Neither did their
-horses. The timber, with the sunshine streaming through the long
-aisles, stretched fragrant and peaceful. The air was so quiet that the
-riders’ voices, the occasional blowing of the horses, the scuff of
-hoofs and the creak of saddles, could be heard plainly.
-
-The cavalry column itself was to be seen, behind, a short distance,
-winding on among the trees, and the tinkle of the pack bells sounded,
-again. Jimmie caught his breath. Micky was tense, beside him. The
-advance squad apparently had reached the Tontos――were within short
-bow-shot, anyway. Why didn’t――――? Ah, look out!
-
-“Twang! Whiz!” “Twang-twang! Whiz-whiz!” “Twang-twang-twang!” And
-“Whiz! Thud! Thud-thud!” The Tontos were whooping and screeching and
-shooting; their daubed faces and flying hair and naked bodies could be
-glimpsed gyrating among the trees; their arrows whizzed and glanced
-and hummed and thudded, to the twanging of the bows. They were mainly
-behind the advance squad, trying to stampede the cavalry column. Up
-half-rose Jimmie, up half-rose Micky, the better to see. Had the first
-volley killed anybody? Didn’t look so, for not one of the squad was
-in sight; the animals were rearing and snorting, but every rider had
-instantly plunged from the saddle and dived for a tree, gun in one hand
-and reins in the other.
-
-[Illustration: HAD THE FIRST VOLLEY KILLED ANYBODY? DIDN’T LOOK SO]
-
-That had been quick and smart work. Lieutenant Bourke and Lieutenant
-Ross and Tom Moore were no fools; and that sinewy man in the canvas
-suit was no fool, either.
-
-“Inju! Bueno! (Good! Good!)” chattered Micky, in Apache and Spanish
-both. “Huh! Tonto run already! Cowards!”
-
-“Hurrah! There come the other soldiers!” babbled Jimmie.
-
-The carbines were banging, as the first troop began to fight――officers
-shouted, the man in the canvas suit jumped out, yelled orders and
-pointed, and leveled his shot-gun――“Bang!” The first troop, dismounted
-to the notes of a bugle, deployed on, firing, another troop was
-spurring in at a gallop――and the Tontos were scampering off through the
-timber.
-
-Jimmie was just about to spring upright, glad, when Micky nudged him
-hard, in warning. Not all the Tontos had gone. The two who had dropped
-into ambush among the rocks at the timber edge had been cut off by
-the cavalry, and were now running back, and dancing and dodging, their
-heads turned.
-
-“Don’t shoot them!” shouted the canvas suit man, in a loud voice. “We
-have them!”
-
-He was running, too――and his officers――and the foremost of the
-men――from tree to tree, after them, to surround them at the edge of
-the basin. The two Tontos had crouched, again, behind a large boulder.
-Jimmie might have tossed a stone and struck them; they were close in
-front of him and Micky, and fully exposed, against the boulder. But the
-soldiers had formed a half circle, hemming them in against the basin’s
-edge. Up straightened the two Tontos, behind their rock, drew their
-bows to the arrows’ heads, and stood, at bay, aiming now here, now
-there, threatening their enemies.
-
-“Don’t shoot them!” the canvas suit man kept shouting. “Take them
-alive.” And he called to the Tontos: “Friends! Friends!”
-
-However, the two Tontos would have none of _that_. They stood braced,
-with bended bows, glaring from tangled hair, as defiant and menacing
-as a coiled rattle-snake. On a sudden――“Twang!”――they had loosed
-their arrows, and with a single backward spring and another bound
-had disappeared over the edge! Evidently they preferred death to
-capture――they certainly had killed themselves, for the basin looked to
-be a sheer drop of over a thousand feet.
-
-Out bolted Jimmie and ran, the better to see. Forward ran the canvas
-suit man and his officers and the soldiers. And there were the two
-Tontos, alive and running, themselves. They were leaping and bounding
-like rabbits, from rock to rock and landing-place to landing-place of
-the merest trail zigzagging them almost straight up and down! that must
-have been the trail which all the Tontos had climbed.
-
-For a moment everybody was too astonished to shoot. Then――“Bang!” The
-canvas suit man had thrown his gun to his shoulder, lightning-quick,
-and aimed and pulled trigger.
-
-The second of the two Tontos leaped aside, one arm fell limp, and was
-dyed red. But he did not slacken. Now “Bang! Bang! Bang-bang!” The
-soldiers and the officers also shot as fast as they could, so that even
-the basin echoed. They were excited, and shooting down-hill, the Tontos
-were leaping and dodging and looked very small, not much larger than
-coyotes; and as far as anybody might see, not a bullet touched them.
-
-Pretty soon they had plunged into the brush and scrub-oak chaparral
-almost at the bottom of the precipice; they had got away.
-
-Jimmie drew a long breath. In the excitement he had forgotten all about
-himself. Now he came to, and discovered that he was standing out here,
-alone, on a curve of the basin rim; and that the soldiers, the nearest
-only a few paces away, holding their smoking carbines were surveying
-him keenly. Some had begun to steal around, to head him off.
-
-Naturally they took him for an Apache.
-
-The canvas suit man had seen as quickly as any of the soldiers.
-
-“No cuidado, muchacho! Ven’ aqui! (Don’t be afraid, boy! Come here!),”
-he called, in Spanish, to Jimmie. And added, in English, to the
-soldiers: “Bring that boy in.”
-
-Jimmie did not wait to be brought in. He raised his hand in the “peace
-sign,” and ran forward, crying:
-
-“I’m not Apache. I’m American. I’m Jimmie Dunn, Lieutenant Bourke!
-Hello, Tom Moore! Don’t you know me?”
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-JIMMIE REPORTS FOR DUTY
-
-
-“Well, for goodness’ sake!”
-
-Bronzed Lieutenant Bourke stared: runty Packer Tom Moore gaped amidst
-his wrinkles; everybody stood stock-still, amazed. Jimmie’s shrill
-announcement, as he ran in, created a sensation.
-
-Now Lieutenant Bourke hastened to him; so did Tom Moore; so did
-Lieutenant Ross: all the officers and men within hearing pressed around
-him.
-
-“By gracious, boy, we thought you were a bleached-out Tonto!” exclaimed
-Tom.
-
-“What are you doing here?” demanded Lieutenant Bourke. “Pete Kitchen
-said the Chiricahuas had you.”
-
-“They did,” answered Jimmie, so glad to speak English again. He found
-the words a little stiff on his tongue, but he had not forgotten. “I
-ran away.”
-
-“Those were Tontos, weren’t they? How came you among the Tontos?”
-
-“I wasn’t among ’em. They didn’t have me.”
-
-“Are you here alone?”
-
-Huh! Jimmie looked around an instant; he was so happy that he was
-a-tremble. He did not sight Micky; the soldiers were covering the very
-spot where he and Micky had been hiding, but Micky was not with them.
-He had mysteriously vanished. Jimmie had promised not to betray him,
-and must keep his word.
-
-“Yes, sir.” So far as he knew now, that was true.
-
-“How long have you been traveling?”
-
-“Nearly a week, I guess.”
-
-“Well if that ain’t the limit!” exploded weazened Tom Moore.
-
-“You’d better report to the general, Jimmie,” bade Lieutenant Bourke
-kindly. “General George Crook――that man in the canvas suit. He’s our
-department commander now, so don’t omit to salute him. Come along.”
-
-Scanned by curious eyes, Jimmie followed First Lieutenant John Bourke
-to where the man in the canvas suit was standing expectant, his
-shot-gun at an order.
-
-The lieutenant saluted, and Jimmie saluted. That was regulations.
-
-“This boy is Jimmie Dunn, sir,” reported the lieutenant. “He was taken
-by the Chiricahuas about a year ago, while herding sheep on the Kitchen
-ranch south of Tucson. He says that he has run away from them, and,”
-added the lieutenant, with a quizzical laugh, “he doesn’t want to go
-back.”
-
-Jimmie stood at attention, while General Crook eyed him. This, then,
-was the new “comandante” of whom Micky had spoken. He was a straight,
-square-shouldered, active-looking man, as strong on his feet as any
-Apache. Yes, he was of a tall, muscular build like Geronimo. He was of
-light complexion, with sandy hair and thin sandy moustache, and high
-forehead, and from between two very keen, gray-blue eyes a large sharp
-nose jutted down to a firm mouth set over a longish, firm chin. He
-needed shaving. The hands upon his shot-gun were brown and sinewy.
-
-Now he queried abruptly, military fashion but not gruff; merely as
-though he required a short direct answer.
-
-“What band of Chiricahua?”
-
-“Cochise’s band.”
-
-“Where are they now?”
-
-“I don’t know, sir. They’re traveling around.”
-
-“Where were they when you left them?”
-
-“They were in the north part of the Chiricahua Mountains, I think. They
-were moving to a new camp, because of the soldiers.”
-
-“Hah! Was Cochise there?”
-
-“No, sir. He was out and so was Geronimo. It was just the old men and
-the squaws. Most of the chiefs were in Mexico, on raids.”
-
-“Who is Geronimo?”
-
-“He’s Go-yath-lay, the war chief.”
-
-“How long ago did you run away?”
-
-“Five days, I think.”
-
-“How did you happen to get up here? Did the Tonto have you?”
-
-“No, sir. I was trying to go to Camp Apache.”
-
-“You answer like a soldier, boy. Are you a soldier’s son?”
-
-“No, sir. My mother and father were killed by the Apaches, but I lived
-with Joe Felmer. He’s post blacksmith for Camp Grant.”
-
-“Lieutenant Ross and Moore and I have seen him there often, general,”
-put in Lieutenant Bourke. “He calls Joe Felmer uncle, but they’re not
-relations, as I understand.”
-
-“No, sir; we’re not,” said Jimmie. “Joe is mighty good to me, though.”
-
-“Did the Chiricahua treat you well?” asked the general.
-
-“Yes, sir; but I don’t like them.”
-
-“Why not?” And General Crook slightly smiled. When he smiled his face
-was kind and fatherly.
-
-“Because they wanted to make me an Apache, so I’d help them kill
-Americans and Mexicans and steal cattle. They torture people. And they
-killed Lieutenant Cushing, too!”
-
-“How do you know that?” sharply queried the general.
-
-“They did, didn’t they, sir? I saw his shirt. Taza was wearing it.”
-
-“Hum!” mused the general. “Could you guide us to the Cochise camp, do
-you think?”
-
-“N-no, sir,” faltered Jimmie. “You see, they have their own names for
-places, and sometimes I was in Mexico and sometimes I was in Arizona,
-and I got all mixed up.”
-
-“I see,” admitted the general. “You say you were trying to reach Camp
-Apache. Don’t you know that this is a long way west of Camp Apache? How
-did you happen to be off here?”
-
-“Yes, sir; I know it,” replied Jimmie. “The Chiricahua might think I
-was starting for Camp Apache, so I tried to fool them. Then I saw the
-Tonto trail, and then I saw the soldiers’ trail, and I was hurrying
-to catch you as soon as the Tonto did, when the Tonto jumped out of
-the basin, and I couldn’t do anything but hide and watch. I knew the
-soldiers would whip ’em, though. Did――did anybody get killed?”
-
-“No,” said the general grimly. “That will do,” he continued. “We’ve
-been at Camp Apache, and can’t take you back there; but we may be able
-to send you down to Camp Grant. Turn him over to Mr. Moore, if you
-please, lieutenant, and see that he’s outfitted more like a white boy
-and less like an Indian.”
-
-“Yes, sir.” Lieutenant Bourke saluted; Jimmie rigidly saluted. “Come
-with me, Jimmie.” And they looked up Tom Moore.
-
-There were two troops of cavalry and twenty pack-mules. Tom Moore was
-busy, just now, attending to the pack-train; and having been left with
-him Jimmie might gaze about and listen.
-
-None of the soldiers had even been wounded, but those Tontos certainly
-had shot hard. The general and party were examining a pine-trunk into
-which a Tonto arrow had buried itself clear to the feathers! In several
-other tree trunks there were arrows that could not be pulled out. As
-far as might be discovered, no Tontos had been wounded, except the one
-shot by the general. It had been a sharp skirmish, nevertheless.
-
-Micky Free had disappeared. Not a trace of him was noted. Jimmie
-loyally said not a word about him, and did not see him again for some
-months.
-
-“All right,” presently spoke Tom Moore. “Now, boy, you can ride behind
-me, on my hoss, and I’ll fix you out after we get to camp. Haven’t time
-here.”
-
-For the sun was setting in a range of mountains across the big basin;
-the basin itself was growing dark, while the high plateau was still
-bathed in the last rays; and the general had given the order to march
-and make a camping-place.
-
-With Jimmie behind his saddle, Tom rode in the advance party. This was
-composed of the general, and Lieutenant Bourke his aide, Captain Brent
-and Lieutenant Ross and Guide Archie MacIntosh. Mr. MacIntosh was a
-new man from the Hudson’s Bay country of the Far North――a fine scout
-but not yet acquainted with this part of Arizona. In fact, even Tom
-Moore had never been through here. So Tom was acting as pack-master and
-assistant guide, both.
-
-At camp that evening Jimmie was awarded an old flannel shirt and pair
-of cotton trousers. The shirt belonged to Lieutenant Ross; the trousers
-belonged to “Chileno John,” one of the packers. The suit didn’t fit
-very well, but Jimmie now felt more like a white boy again.
-
-Because he was in charge of Tom Moore, his place was with the packers.
-They were a merry set, around their fires after supper: Charley Hopkins
-and old Jack Long, of Tucson; and “Hank ’n Yank”――who were Hank Hewitt
-and Yank Bartlett; and “Long” Jim Cook (who had a brother “Short” Jim
-Cook); and Jim O’Neill, and “Chileno John,” and José de Leon, and
-Lauriano Gomez who sang Spanish songs; and others. They looked rather
-rough and they talked rather rough――but such stories they had to tell,
-of their adventures in California and Arizona and Mexico, and up in
-British Columbia!
-
-The soldiers strolled over, to sit and listen and swap yarns. The
-general and officers listened, too, now and then, and laughed.
-Altogether it was a much more pleasant camp than a Chiricahua rancheria.
-
-According to soldiers’ and packers’ talk this General George Crook had
-made a hit. He had suddenly arrived, last June, in Tucson by stage from
-San Francisco, to take command of the new Department of Arizona. His
-regular rank was lieutenant-colonel in the Twenty-third Infantry, but
-as he had been brevetted or given honorary rank of major-general for
-gallant service in the Civil War, he of course was called “General.”
-
-Up in the far Northwest, where he had commanded the Department of the
-Columbia, he had done such good work against the Shoshones or Snakes
-that the Government had now sent him down to see what he could do with
-the Apaches.
-
-He had set right to work. “A powerful active sort of man,” he was,
-declared Tom Moore. After having questioned all the post commanders and
-many scouts, about the trails and other conditions, he had started out
-from Tucson with five companies of cavalry and a company of scouts,
-both white and red, and a great pack-train, to make a big circle of
-some six hundred miles: east one hundred and ten miles to Camp Bowie
-at Apache Pass in the Chiricahua Mountains, thence north two hundred
-miles across the mountains to Camp Apache and the White Mountain
-reservation, thence west two hundred and fifty or three hundred miles
-to Fort Whipple at the town of Prescott, which was the department
-headquarters.
-
-Lieutenant Bourke’s Troop F of the Third Cavalry it was which had
-surprised the Geronimo and Nah-che band and made them leave their meat;
-and there had been other skirmishes. At Camp Apache the general had
-talked to the White Mountain Apaches.
-
-“That man,” asserted Tom Moore, “he cert’inly knows Injun. He said
-he’d nothin’ against the ’Paches; he wasn’t out to war on ’em, but
-to get ’em to live peaceably. They could see for themselves that the
-white people were crowdin’ into the country, and that pretty soon there
-wouldn’t be enough game to live on. So the ’Pache’d better decide to
-settle down and go to farmin’ on the land that was given him. He’d be
-protected from his enemies, and wouldn’t need to steal. The ’Paches who
-came in peaceful wouldn’t be punished; they’d be treated same as white
-people; but the bad ones who hung out would make trouble for the good
-ones, and he’d expect the good ’Paches to help him run down the bad
-’Paches. That sounded like sense, and Pedro and the rest of ’em agreed.”
-
-“He’s shorely got some pecul’ar idees,” commented old Jack Long. “For
-one thing, he says an’ Injun’s as good as a white man an’ some white
-men are wuss’n Injuns, ’cause they know better. But I reckon when he
-says ‘peace’ he means peace, an’ when he says ‘fight’ he means fight.
-He wanted mightily to ketch those two Tonto an’ talk with ’em――an’
-when they threw arrers at him an’ skadoodled, blamed if he didn’t up
-an’ shoot ’em himself! Got the olive-branch in one hand an’ sword in
-t’other, _he_ has.”
-
-However, with only these two companies of cavalry and a small
-pack-train the general was now on his way to Fort Whipple, there to
-wait and plan; for when with all his force he had arrived at Camp
-Apache, he had received dispatches from the War Department directing
-him to quit until the Government Peace Commission had tried.
-
-This Peace Commission had been formed in 1867, for the purpose of
-seeing that the Indians were being honestly treated, and of persuading
-them to live upon reservations. President U. S. Grant was much in favor
-of such a scheme. The Indians of Arizona never had been talked with,
-so the President was sending a Mr. Vincent Colyer, a patriotic and
-large-hearted New Yorker, to represent the Commission in the Southwest.
-
-“That thar peace plan may work with some o’ those Eastern Injuns, but
-’twon’t work with ’Paches,” grumbled old Jack Long. “They got too much
-country to travel ’round in, an’ war is meat an’ drink to ’em. They
-ain’t been licked yet, an’ till they’re licked they’ll think the whites
-are ’fraid of ’em. They won’t understand civilian peace talk, by a
-stranger. Some big white chief ought to do the talkin’. An’ now the
-soldiers an’ settlers got to sit back an’ be perlite, so’s not to stir
-up trouble, an’ Gin’ral Crook can’t make his words good an’ go get the
-bad lots. ’Pache’ll see ’tain’t any use to stay on a reservation if he
-can have more fun in the hills.”
-
-Jimmie rather believed, himself, that Mr. Colyer or any stranger from
-the East, who was not used to Indians, would have hard times “catching”
-the Chiricahuas.
-
-During the next few days General Crook proved to be a most remarkable
-man indeed. At first sight, nobody would take him for a general in the
-United States army. He wore no uniform――just a plain canvas suit; he
-rode a mule, and he preferred a shot-gun to a rifle. He was not above
-talking to anybody, as he chose. Only when you saw how straight and
-decisive he was, would you suspect him to be a soldier and an officer.
-
-Nothing was too small for him to notice, and nothing too hard for him
-to do. He could talk in the sign language and he could read a trail.
-He could speak Snake and Spanish and some Apache; and he knew almost
-as much about Arizona as Tom Moore or Jack Long did. He was up in the
-morning, even by two o’clock, as soon as the cooks. All day, as he
-rode in the advance, he constantly asked the names of trees and bushes
-and flowers, and mountains and streams――and he never forgot. He was a
-tremendous hunter, and could stuff the beasts and birds that he killed,
-and he had studied wild animals until he could tell many curious things
-about them. He liked to explore by himself, with gun and fishing-rod,
-and never was lost. He drank only cold water――no tea or coffee. He
-could do without drinking at all, and without eating, either. In fact,
-Tom Moore and Archie MacIntosh agreed, he could “out-Injun the Injuns”!
-
-The pack-train was his particular hobby.
-
-“He fetched a lot o’ notions down from Idyho an’ Californy,”
-explained old Jack, with wag of head; “an’ by jinks, he began to tear
-things loose as soon as he struck Tooson. Nothin’s too good for the
-pack-train. Consequence is, now we’ve got critters an’ men who’ll go
-anywhar a dog’ll go, an’ be fresh for an’ arly start next mornin’. He’s
-sort o’ pack-train daddy, I reckon.”
-
-Jimmie did not ride clear through to Fort Whipple at Prescott. At Camp
-Verde, the post fifty miles this side of Whipple, the general sent off
-dispatches for some of the posts south, and told Jimmie that this was a
-good chance to reach Camp Grant, where he belonged.
-
-“But if you do fight the Apaches, can I help?” ventured Jimmie.
-
-He loved the bronzed, lean, untiring, wise General Crook, so brief
-of speech, so kind in manner, so fatherly and yet so soldierly; who
-quickly learned whatever he didn’t happen to know already, and who
-somehow got things done without any loud orders.
-
-“I didn’t come in here to fight them,” smiled the general. “I came in
-to make peace. But those who won’t make peace and keep it, I’ll fight
-very hard――they may depend on that also. I promised the White Mountain
-Apaches that I’d protect the good Indians and punish the bad ones; and
-the only way to control Indians is to do exactly what you promise to
-do. Now we’ll all have to wait until Mr. Colyer of the Peace Commission
-has tried. He’ll give them an opportunity to gather upon reservations
-and learn to support themselves without murdering and stealing. A
-great deal of the fighting between the Indians and the whites has been
-unnecessary, because there are white men who don’t believe in good
-Indians. You go to your friends at Camp Grant. Learn all you can about
-pack-mules and soldier duties, too, and don’t forget Apache. I haven’t
-any doubt that some day you can help the Government very much.”
-
-When at last Jimmie was delivered at Camp Grant, and set out for Joe
-Felmer’s little ranch, above, to surprise Joe, he met him coming in,
-mule back. As a result, Joe opened his whiskered mouth widely, and
-almost fell off his mule: for here was Jimmie Dunn, who had been
-captured by the Apaches in mid-summer of 1870, and now it was the close
-of August, 1871.
-
-“Hello, black-beard white man,” greeted Jimmie, in his best Apache.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-THE PEACE COMMISSION TRIES
-
-
-“Wall, ’xpec’ you want to hear all the news yourself,” proposed “Uncle”
-Joe, that evening, at the ranch, after Jimmie had told his own story in
-every detail.
-
-“Yes, if you please,” answered Jimmie.
-
-“Wall,” mused Joe Felmer, stroking his shaggy full beard, “lemme see.
-‘Six-toed’ Hutton’s been kicked in the jaw by a mule, an’ he’s like
-to go under. The kick busted his heart, same time it busted his jaw,
-’cause he ought to’ve known better than to get in the way.”
-
-“Six-toed” Hutton’s real name was Oscar Hutton. He had six toes on
-either foot, and was one of the bravest scouts at Camp Grant. To be
-killed by a mule kick did indeed seem an untimely end for a scout.
-
-“’Paches have been awful bad all ’long the line,” continued Joe.
-“Chiricahuas an’ Tontos an’ Pinals been raidin’ the stage road out o’
-Tucson, both ways. Forty-seven whites an’ Mexicans have been killed
-down thar’bouts, an’ ten thousand dollars’ wuth o’ property burned
-or stolen. Up ’round Prescott the Hualpais an’ Apache-Mohaves have
-corraled the mail rider an’ run ranchers an’ miners off. An’ a passel
-o’ blamed rascals lit out with an old mule from my very pasture――three
-of ’em at once on her back, in broad day!”
-
-The recollection of this evidently made “Uncle” Joe very angry again.
-He paused to mumble.
-
-“Thar’s a band o’ Es-kim-en-zin’s Pinals an’ Arivaipas farmin’ on the
-creek ’bout a mile from Grant,” he resumed. “Gathered thar ag’in after
-that massacre last spring, when those whites an’ Mexicans an’ Papagos
-from Tucson way came up an’ wiped out ’most their women an’ old men an’
-stole their children. Yessir, killed over seventy squaws an’ only eight
-bucks, some of ’em while asleep, an’ carried off thirty children. Sold
-’em ’mongst the Mexicans an’ Papagos, they did. Now I hear tell that
-the Government’s sendin’ what it calls a ‘peace commissioner,’ from New
-Yawk, to fetch in other ’Paches an’ feed ’em an’ treat ’em nice. Wall,
-reckon he’ll have his hands full.”
-
-Although Joe and others, soldiers and civilians both, at Camp Grant,
-insisted that there could be no good excuse for attacking Indians who
-had surrendered themselves, the Tucson papers and people declared that
-these very Pinals and Arivaipas had recently been murdering Americans
-and Mexicans, and stealing stock, and deserved Indian punishment
-instead of white protection. It would teach the Apaches a lesson.
-
-Of course, when one’s father and mother and brothers and sisters have
-been tortured and killed only because they were white, it is hard to
-feel at all kindly toward the race that did it. Jimmie knew how that
-was. White persons’ clothing――the clothing of the very ones who had
-been murdered――was found in the Pinal and Arivaipa camp. Still, for the
-white people to act like Indians, set a bad example, if the Indians
-were to be shown that the white way of living was the better way.
-
-The Camp Grant massacre aroused a great cry in the East. The East sided
-with the Apaches. But when he had arrived, Commissioner Colyer seemed
-to be going about with very odd notions. He was reported as thinking
-that the Apaches were only a poor ignorant race, who had been robbed of
-their lands and forced into war by the whites, and that they ought to
-be met with kindness alone. Then they would be peaceable. The Tucson
-_Citizen_ asserted that he advised the Arizona people to avoid trouble
-by getting out of the Indians’ way. And the _Citizen_ and the Prescott
-_Miner_ published hot, sarcastic articles about him and the Peace
-Policy. The Apaches were being referred to as “Colyer’s babes” and
-“Colyer’s pets.”
-
-“What’s that?” growled Joe. “Thinks the Chiricahuas an’ Tontos don’t
-know any better’n to hang folks up by their heels over a slow fire,
-does he? An’ that we ought to call off the troops an’ get off our
-ranches, so we won’t be irritatin’ the Injuns? Then they’d come in
-of themselves, to be civilized! Jest why the ’Paches who can live by
-fightin’ an’ stealin’ as they please will want to live by ploughin’,
-I’d like to hear. This is part o’ the United States, an’ the white
-people are jest as much entitled to protection as the ’Paches are.”
-
-Camp Grant was a four- or five-company post located here in a desert
-basin where the valley of the Arivaipa Creek, from the east, and of the
-San Pedro River, from the south, joined. The San Pedro was supposed
-to flow on north, for a few miles, to the Gila River; but it and the
-Arivaipa were only dry sand-beds during the greater part of the year.
-
-Camp Grant was not a pretty place; it was only a hollow square of clay
-or log huts and ragged tents, shaded in front by brush porches or
-_ramadas_.
-
-Against it beat the sand-storms in the spring and the blazing sun
-throughout nine months of the year――temperature, one hundred and twenty
-in the shade! The giant cactuses, instead of trees, were many and extra
-large――and so were the rattle-snakes, scorpions and centipedes. And the
-Apache had always been extra bold.
-
-One never might foresee what was about to occur, at Camp Grant. On some
-days it would be perfectly quiet, with only the sentries walking their
-hot beats, and the tame Indians squatting out of the sun; and again
-there would be a sudden running to and fro, and away would trot the
-cavalry, to rescue (if possible) a wagon train, and pursue the hostiles.
-
-In a few days, at best, but likely enough not until after a week or
-more, back the troopers would come, maybe with wounded, maybe with
-prisoners, but in any case all fagged out, both men and horses.
-
-Joe Felmer’s little ranch lay three miles south, up the San Pedro. As
-Joe was post blacksmith, and also sold ranch stuff to the quartermaster,
-Jimmie felt as though he belonged to the post, himself. He knew all
-the officers, and old Sergeants Warfield and John Mott, and others of
-the men; and “Six-toed,” and Antonio Besias the former Mexican captive
-of the Apaches, and Concepcion Equierre the half-Apache interpreter,
-and old Santos the short-legged Arivaipa ex-chief who was Chief
-Es-kim-en-zin’s father-in-law; and many more.
-
-When he had left, last year, Grant had been occupied by some of the
-First and the Third Cavalry; but they had been transferred, Lieutenant
-Cushing’s and Lieutenant Bourke’s Troop K of the Third had been sent
-down to Camp Lowell near Tucson, and now the Fifth Cavalry was here.
-
-It was in October when Commissioner Colyer, on his rounds, appeared at
-Camp Grant. Jimmie was lucky enough to drive down there, with Joe and
-a wagon-load of pumpkins, just in time to be present at some of the
-“doings.”
-
-Mr. Colyer had arrived in a six-mule army ambulance (a black, covered
-spring wagon with high driver’s seat, and two bench-like seats inside,
-facing each other), escorted by a squad of cavalry from Fort Whipple,
-under Lieutenant Ross.
-
-He was a square-set, benevolent-looking gentleman, in dusty black
-broadcloth, and white shirt and broad black hat. Attended by Colonel F.
-W. Crittenden, the post commander, and by other officers, he had been
-talking, through Concepcion the interpreter, to the tame Apaches at the
-post, and he was about to go out to Chief Es-kim-en-zin’s rancheria,
-where the surrendered Pinals and Arivaipas were farming.
-
-“They are the same people who were so barbarously attacked last spring,
-I understand,” he remarked.
-
-“Yes, sir,” replied Lieutenant Royal Whitman.
-
-“You were in charge of the post then, were you not?”
-
-“I was. But before I could reach their camp the deed had been done. I
-think you will see by my report upon the matter, to the Department,
-how I feel about it. It was a thorough outrage, and the members of the
-attacking party ought to be arrested, tried and punished.”
-
-“Quite true,” uttered Mr. Colyer. “A shocking state of affairs exists
-through the whole Territory. All the Indians with whom I have talked
-declare that they would gladly gather upon reservations, accept the
-Government’s aid, and live at peace with mankind, if the soldiery and
-white citizens would only cease hunting them down. Some of the bands
-are so frightened and timid that they won’t confer even with me, their
-friend. I’ve tried in vain to meet Chief Cochise, of the Chiricahuas.
-You can see, my brothers,” he continued, addressing the group of
-soldiers and scouts and tame Apaches, “what an injustice has been done
-these simple savages. Our duty is not to punish them for defending
-their homes, but to gain their good-will by patience and kindness,
-until they are won to the benefits of civilization. That is why the
-President and the Society of Friends have delegated me to visit among
-you, and bring this bad feeling between the white men and the red men
-to an end.”
-
-“‘Simple savages,’ are they?” afterwards commented Joe. “If thar’s
-anybody smarter’n an Apache in sizin’ things up, I’ve yet to find him.
-At present this hyar Quaker strikes me as bein’ ’bout the simplest
-pusson in Arizony. The ’Paches can understand straight talk, like that
-Gen’ral Crook gave ’em, an’ they can understand war; but they don’t
-understand coaxin’. When you coax a ’Pache he laughs in his insides an’
-reckons he’ll do as he pleases as long as he can. Once you coax him,
-then he thinks you’re ’fraid of him, ’cause that’s Injun way.”
-
-Mr. Colyer was driven out to the Chief Es-kim-en-zin camp, where he
-talked with old Santos and the chief, and others of the Pinals and
-Arivaipas. He informed them that the Great White Father at Washington
-would see to it that they were no longer ill-treated by the white men.
-All the Apaches might come in and live on the lands that the Government
-was giving them. They should have plenty to eat, and the white men who
-interfered should be punished.
-
-When he returned to the post he acted much satisfied. He arranged to
-have a regular reservation set off, and said that an agent and teacher
-would be appointed, by the Society of Friends. Soon he left, with his
-escort, to continue his tour.
-
-While nobody might doubt that Mr. Colyer was a very good and honest
-man, nobody put much faith in his methods. After having fought and
-raided all summer, many of the wild Apaches would be only too willing
-to be fed and protected upon the reservations, all winter.
-
-Now the Indians of Arizona seemed to be provided for――except that
-Commissioner Colyer had not been able to find any Chiricahuas. He had
-sent word to them, but they had hidden from him. And when in western
-New Mexico he had stopped at the Cañada Alamosa, or Cottonwood Canyon,
-where Chief Victorio’s friendly Mimbres and Warm Spring Apaches were
-living, the most of them had run from his soldier escort. They liked
-their Cottonwood Canyon, and feared that they were to be removed.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-JIMMIE TAKES A LESSON
-
-
-“Micky Free!”
-
-Jimmie almost shouted it, he was so astonished. He was again at the
-post, on an errand for Joe Felmer, after Commissioner Colyer had been
-gone about a week; and who should come trotting across the hot gravelly
-parade ground but Micky Free himself, in single file with two strange
-Indians!
-
-Micky’s one quick eye sighted Jimmie, standing agape, and he fell out
-of line and pattered over, grinning.
-
-“How do you do, Boy-who-sleeps?” he said, in Apache.
-
-“How do you do, Red-head?” answered Jimmie. “I am glad to see you.”
-
-Micky wore a loose, whitish cotton shirt with its tails outside ragged
-cotton trousers, and on his feet Apache moccasins. A white cloth band
-was around his red head, his one blue eye beamed alertly, and his
-freckled face was streaked with perspiration and dust. All that he
-carried was an Apache fiddle made from a bent rib of a yucca, strung
-with deer sinews.
-
-The two Indians with him were stripped to breech-clout aprons, and
-moccasins, and red flannel head-bands; one of them had rawhide shield
-and long lance, the other, bow and quiver. They had continued on and
-now had been stopped before the adjutant’s office by the orderly.
-
-“Let us sit down and talk, Cheemie,” laughed Micky.
-
-So he and Jimmie squatted.
-
-“What are you doing, Micky?”
-
-“I have come over from Camp Apache with two White Mountain runners.
-They bring messages from that fort to this one. We came through in one
-day and two nights. It is more than one hundred miles. Have you heard
-the news, Cheemie?”
-
-“What news, Micky?”
-
-“Cochise says he wants peace. He has gone on the Ojo Caliente (Warm
-Spring) place, in the Cañada Alamosa, where Chief Victorio is.”
-
-“How do you know?” exclaimed Jimmie. This was great news.
-
-“I got it from Maria Jilda, the Mexican who was captured when you were
-captured. He came up to Camp Apache from the Apache Pass where Camp
-Bowie is. He escaped from the Chiricahua, and now he is an interpreter
-at Camp Bowie. Yes, Cheemie; Cochise and Geronimo and all that band
-have gone to live with their brothers the Warm Springs and the
-Mimbreños at the Cañada Alamosa on the Rio Grande River in New Mexico.
-But,” added Micky, wisely, “they will not stay.”
-
-“Don’t they want peace?” queried Jimmie. “Did they listen to the words
-of the white peace man?”
-
-“That white peace man in the black clothes?” demanded Micky scornfully.
-“No. The Apaches laugh at that white peace man. It is easy to lie to
-him. The wild Apache think he promises so much because the Americans
-are afraid of them. The Cochise people are hungry and winter is near
-and the soldiers have been fighting them hard. They hear that Victorio
-is being fed and has plenty of clothes and guns. They can rest there
-until they are ready to take the trail again. What are you doing,
-Cheemie? Do you like the new American general? I saw him shoot that
-Tonto. He is a good shot. Afterwards I found the Tonto. He was dead.
-Then I went to the White Mountains, at Camp Apache.”
-
-“I am living with Joe Felmer, on his ranch. He is a scout, and he works
-at the post, too,” informed Jimmie. “The general sent me home, but
-he told me to learn all the soldier ways I could, and not to forget
-Apache talk. If I’m not old enough to be a scout, I can help with the
-pack-trains.”
-
-“I shall be a scout,” nodded Micky. “That is why I have come out with
-the runners: to learn the country. He is a great general, that man
-Crook. Chief Pedro and old Miguel liked his talk. It is true that if
-some of the Apaches stay bad, the good Apaches will suffer by it. They
-will be watched closely and cannot do things they would do if all the
-Apaches were trusted. So Chief Pedro and the White Mountains will
-help the new general who talks straight. It is this way, Cheemie――I
-have heard Pedro and old Miguel and Pi-to-ne and all, say so: As long
-as there are any wild Chiricahua and Tonto, there will be trouble
-between the red men and the white men, in Arizona. We must kill the
-bad Apaches. Then the good Apaches can live at peace and get rich. In
-the spring the new general must begin to fight, because by then the
-Chiricahua will be rested up.”
-
-The two Apache runners or dispatch-bearers came back from the
-adjutant’s office. Their names, as told by Micky, were Alchisé
-(Alchisay) and Nah-kay-do-klunni. They both were Sierra Blanca――White
-Mountain Apaches. They and Micky were taken by Antonio Besias the
-interpreter to be given coffee and bread; and as there was nothing more
-to be said, Jimmie went about his own business. He knew that he would
-see Micky Free again, somewhere. Micky was that kind.
-
-Although Chief Cochise and War-Captain Geronimo had moved with their
-band of Chiricahuas upon the Cottonwood Canyon reservation near Fort
-Craig in southwestern New Mexico, and Commissioner Colyer had been so
-confident that all _his_ Indians were about to gather upon _their_
-reservations, the white people of Arizona had no faith in this peace
-policy.
-
-Almost every copy of the Tucson _Citizen_ and the Prescott _Miner_
-received by Joe Felmer or at Camp Grant contained accounts of Apache
-attacks upon settlers and miners and soldiers, by the Tontos and the
-Apache-Mohaves, and the Chiricahuas raiding up from Mexico.
-
-The _Miner_ published a list of three hundred Americans and Mexicans
-who had been killed by the Apaches from 1864 to the present time,
-October 14, 1871.
-
-Toward the end of November the worst news yet, arrived. A band of
-“Colyer’s babes,” thought to be Apache-Mohaves, had attacked the stage
-near Wickenburg, south of Prescott, and murdered the driver and five
-passengers. Three of these passengers were members of the Government
-surveying expedition which, under Lieutenant George Wheeler, of the
-U. S. Engineers, had been exploring through Nevada and Arizona,
-getting facts upon the mines and the country. The name of one was
-Fred Loring――a well-educated, especially fine young surveyor, from
-Washington.
-
-This attack, said the papers, ought to convince the Government that the
-Apaches of Arizona were far from “civilized.” These very Indians had
-been living “peaceably” upon one of Commissioner Colyer’s tracts, where
-they were protected.
-
-Lieutenant Wheeler and his main party commanded by Lieutenant David
-A. Lyle of the Second Artillery, with an escort of the Third Cavalry
-(Company I), supplied by the Department of California, rode into Camp
-Grant only a few days after the word of the Wickenburg Massacre had
-been received.
-
-They were on their way from Camp Apache to Tucson; had been exploring
-since the middle of May, and were pretty well worn out. They had found
-many of the Indians met to be rude and insolent, but――――
-
-“No, they never attacked us,” said Lieutenant Lyle. “And now, to think
-that they’ve killed poor Loring, when he was all through and was going
-home! He had his hair cut very short, on his road out, and laughed when
-he claimed that the Apaches would never be able to take _his_ scalp.”
-
-“One drop of that fine young man’s blood was worth more to the United
-States than the whole Apache race is,” declared Lieutenant Wheeler. “In
-my opinion, the peace policy of forbidding a military campaign that
-shall drive the Apaches in upon the reservations is encouraging them
-to commit such outrages. The Indian question in Arizona will never be
-settled until the campaigns of an energetic officer shall thoroughly
-whip and subdue them.”
-
-“And Crook’s that man,” asserted Chief Packer Tom Moore, who was over
-from Fort Whipple, on a trip around to inspect pack-train outfits.
-“We’ve had other gen’rals in Arizony. Some of ’em did too much――took
-ev’ry scalp they could ketch. Some of ’em did too little――reg’lar
-coffee-coolers. But this Gen’ral Crook, gentlemen, he’s goin’ to know
-for himself whether a ’Pache’s good or bad. The good ones he’ll treat
-square, and the bad ones he’ll trail down till he has their tongues
-hangin’ out. Now he’s just lyin’ low, till the Government’s got plumb
-sick o’ these ‘Colyer’s babes,’ and he has orders. If I don’t miss
-my guess, next spring the Arizony hills’ll be full o’ soldiers and
-pack-trains, and tame ’Paches fightin’ wild ’Paches, and Crook bossin’
-us all from the saddle.”
-
-Tom Moore and others from Fort Whipple brought word that General
-Crook kept very active. He seemed to have no idea of resting. He was
-constantly traveling, by mule and buck-board wagon, over the roads and
-trails of northern Arizona, learning them as he had learned the trails
-of southern Arizona. Usually he traveled with only Lieutenant Bourke,
-who was his aide-de-camp, and a cook and a packer, for he did not wish
-to use officers and men who should be ready for scouting expeditions.
-He issued orders that the pack-train outfits should be prepared at
-top notch. It was plain to be seen that he expected to go upon a hard
-campaign as soon as the Peace Policy had been tried and had failed.
-
-Jimmie decided that his best chance of taking the trail with this
-active General Crook lay with the pack-trains; even a boy might be
-useful in the pack-trains; he could catch mules and pull on ropes and
-help the cook――and if he spoke Apache, like Jimmie did, and knew lots
-of Apache tricks, he might be valuable as an interpreter, sometimes.
-Besides, Joe Felmer was a scout and a horse-shoer both, and he surely
-would be ordered out. Jimmie intended not to be left at home.
-
-Luckily, he had plenty of opportunity this fall and winter to learn
-pack-train wrinkles. For the practice that it gave the men, as well as
-because it was the better method, the general distributed the supplies
-to all the posts by means of pack-mules.
-
-Before he had assumed command, the supplies out of Tucson and Prescott
-had been hauled largely by wagons in charge of “bull whackers” and
-“mule skinners,” and operated by civilian contractors, who made
-freighting their business. Of course, pack-mules had been necessary,
-too, with scouting columns and between out-of-the-way posts; and the
-miners, and the Mexican merchants and traders from Sonora of Mexico,
-employed pack-mules.
-
-But in his campaigns against the Indians, in Idaho and Oregon and
-Northern California, the general had depended entirely upon pack-mule
-trains, which kept right up with the marches, no matter how rough the
-country, and were always on hand. According to the say of old Jack
-Long, “he had got pack-mule wise.” He had persuaded the War Department
-to buy three full pack-trains from their civilian owners who had hired
-them out to the Government; and these he had brought to Arizona with
-him.
-
-“He’s the daddy o’ the army mule, I reckon,” again declared Jack. “Yes,
-siree! Those thar mules ain’t nary sore-backed Sonora rats, an’ they
-ain’t bags o’ bones so high up you have to use a ladder to put a pack
-on with. They’re picked stock; an’ every other mule’s got to measure up
-to same standard. Gosh durn it, I b’lieve the gin’ral thinks as much of
-his mules as he does of his men! He looks as close arter glanders as he
-does arter measles!”
-
-However, the general looked after the men pretty close, too. The
-packers themselves had to measure up to standard. Those who were
-drunken, or lazy, or cruel to the mules, were discharged, and better
-men enlisted. Henceforward the pack-train service was to be known as
-“Pack Transportation, Q. M. D. (Quartermaster’s Department), U. S.
-Army,” and to belong to it would be an honor.
-
-Yes, a responsibility, also; for as old Jack explained: “When you get
-up in the mountings ’mongst the ’Paches, an’ you’re out o’ ammunition
-an’ the pack-train’s got busted somewhars in the next county, then
-what’s your scalp wuth? Nothin’!”
-
-Jimmie might think himself lucky in having old Jack Long at Camp Grant,
-to give him pointers. Joe Felmer was a scout and rancher; he did not
-claim to be an expert mule packer. But old Jack had been a Forty-niner
-in California, and had mined and packed all through California and
-Oregon and Idaho and Nevada and Arizona. So he knew a great deal.
-
-Jack had had two wives, one a Modoc squaw and one a white woman; and
-once he had “struck it rich,” in California, and had been almost a
-millionaire until he had spent his money. Lately he had been living in
-Tucson, freighting and prospecting. There he had “j’ined Gin’ral Crook
-ag’in the ’Paches.”
-
-Now Chief Packer Tom Moore had appointed him to be a pack-master. The
-chief packer had charge of all the pack-trains, and each pack-train was
-in charge of its pack-master.
-
-“Want to j’ine the pack trains, do ye?” queried old Jack, of Jimmie.
-“Wall, if you’re goin’ to l’arn, you oughter l’arn right, an’ some day
-mebbe you’ll be in the Fust-class Packer ratin’. Mebbe you’ll get to
-be as big a man as I am. ’Tain’t all in throwin’ the diamond; anybody
-can l’arn to throw the diamond hitch. But you got to know the why an’
-wharfore o’ things. Come along to the corral an’ I’ll show ye.”
-
-So Jimmie gladly followed Jack to the post mule-corral.
-
-“Hey, thar, _amigo_ (friend)!” summoned old Jack, to Chileno John, who
-was at work among the mules. “_Ven’ aqui_ (Come here). Fetch out one o’
-yore bell sharps. Hyar’s a _muchacho_ (boy) who wants to l’arn to be an
-_arriero_ (muleteer).”
-
-Smiling broadly, swarthy Chileno John (who was supposed to have
-worked in the mines of Chile) led aside a sedate, round-bellied,
-mouse-colored mule, and lugged the pack material for her into position.
-
-“That thar,” said Jack, “is a bell sharp. If you don’t know what a
-bell sharp is, I’ll tell ye. A bell sharp is a pack-mule that’s been
-eddicated into mule sense, so she keeps her place in line, an’ doesn’t
-stray on herd, an’ comes in to her own feed canvas at feedin’ time.
-When she ain’t a ‘bell sharp’ she’s a pesky ‘shave-tail.’ As long as a
-mule hasn’t got sense an’ is alluz rampagin’ an’ makin’ trouble we jest
-natter’ly roach her mane an’ keep her tail trimmed to about six ha’rs
-on the end so’s to pick her out of a bunch at fust sight. Same way,”
-grumbled old Jack, “’mongst these hyar army officers. That thar sprig
-young Left’nant Stewart, fresh out o’ West Point, who doesn’t know
-any better yet’n to climb a cactus tree, he’s a ‘shave tail’; but old
-Cap Tommy Byrne, up ’mongst the Hualpais near the Canyon, he’s a sure
-’nough ‘bell sharp’ who knows when to come in to his feed.”
-
-Jimmie had not seen Captain Thomas Byrne, a grizzled Civil War veteran
-who, reports stated, was regarded as a “father” by the Hualpai Indians
-on the Beale Springs reservation near the Grand Canyon. But he felt
-pretty well acquainted with Second Lieutenant Reid T. Stewart, the
-slim-waisted, boyish, eager young officer who had graduated from the
-Military Academy only last June and had been assigned to the Fifth
-Cavalry in Arizona. He was stationed down at Camp Lowell, Tucson, and
-Jimmie had got acquainted with him there and here at Grant, also. He
-might be a “shave tail,” yet, according to Jack, but he was much more
-pleasant than some of those crusty old “bell sharps.”
-
-“What’s General Crook, then?” queried Jimmie, to get Jack’s opinion.
-
-“The gin’ral. See hyar, me son,” reproved Jack severely: “no levity.
-The gin’ral’s the old bell hoss o’ the hull outfit. Wall,” continued
-Jack, “fust, one of us blinds the critter with a bandage o’ sackin’ or
-with one o’ those leather contraptions the gin’ral’s interduced, so
-she’ll stand. Then havin’ got all the riggin’ to hand, we lay on this
-sweat-cloth, for which proper name is _suadera_, an’ a saddle-blanket
-or two for more paddin’, ’less we have a reg’lar _corona_, the same
-bein’ the blankets an’ the _suadera_ stitched together. Then atop that
-we fold the bed blanket that we got to sleep under at camp. Then we
-h’ist on the _aparejo_――this-a-way, easy――an’ settle it, an’ pass the
-_grupera_ back.”
-
-The _aparejo_ (ah-pah-ray-ho) was the pack-saddle――a long, broad
-mattress of canvas stuffed with hay, and stiffened with ribs of willow
-stems running up and down, in either half. It was broken in the middle,
-so that it would fit over the mule’s back.
-
-The _grupera_ (gru-pay-rah) was the crupper――a broad canvas and leather
-band that extended in a loop around the mule’s haunches under her tail,
-so that the _aparejo_ could not slip forward.
-
-“Then we lay the _aparejo cincha_ so to hang acrost the middle, pass
-the ring end under her belly, connect up with the _latigo_ strap and
-all together draw tighter’n sin so’s to hold the aparejo in place.”
-
-The _aparejo cincha_ was another canvas band, like a woven saddle-cinch.
-It was long enough to reach across under the mule’s belly. One end
-terminated in a ring and the other end in a leather strap, the _latigo_;
-and by connecting the ring and strap the cincha was drawn tight.
-
-“You have omitted to explain this, Señor Jack,” reminded Chileno John,
-resting a sinewy brown hand upon the pack-saddle or aparejo; and he
-lifted the flap that hung down on either side.
-
-“That thar soldier hammer?” grunted Jack. “Wall, me son, every aparejo
-has a duck kivver attached to its middle, so’s to protect it from bein’
-cut by the ropes――an’ from weather, too. It’s got a wooden brace sewed
-in leather ’crost each end, yuh understan’, to stiffen it whar the
-cincha lays, so’s it won’t wrinkle ag’in the mule’s hide.”
-
-“_Sobre-en-jalmas_ is the correct name, muchacho,” said Chileno John,
-to Jimmie, with some dignity――for Chileno John took great pride in
-the Spanish language. “It is a very old name, descended to us from
-the ancient Moors of Spain. Sobre-en-jalmas――cover for harness. The
-first two words are Spanish, and the last word is Arabian. But these
-Americanos――――!” And Chileno John shrugged his shoulders. “They do not
-know.”
-
-“Wall, ‘soldier hammer,’ ‘sovrin hammer,’ or ‘Sullivan hammer,’ it’s
-all the same,” grunted old Jack. “Plain ‘aparejo cover’ is good
-enough.” And thus he disposed of the historic sobre-en-jalmas, which,
-pronounced rapidly sobr’-’n-halma did indeed sound like some kind of
-a ‘hammer.’ “After the pack saddle, ’long with its sovrin hammer, is
-cinched on, then we h’ist on the packs an’ sling ’em an’ fasten ’em
-with the diamond hitch,” he resumed. “But as we haven’t got nary packs,
-the fust lesson stops right hyar, me son. Now you remember what I’m
-tellin’ you, l’arn mules and pack-ways, an’ jump when you’re spoken to,
-so you won’t be a drag tail.”
-
-“What’s a ‘drag tail,’ Jack?”
-
-“A drag tail, me son, is wuss’n a shave tail. A drag tail is a durned
-lazy mule who’s alluz hangin’ back on the trail, an’ a no-’count packer
-who’s alluz late on his job. Savvy?”
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-THE ONE-ARMED GENERAL TRIES
-
-
-“Hey! Cochise is out again!”
-
-It was a spring day of this next year, 1872, and in the ranch yard
-on the Joe Felmer place Jimmie and his assistant, little Francisco
-Vasquez, were practicing pack-train.
-
-Jimmie was the pack-master, little Francisco (a Mexican boy) was
-arriero or muleteer; the train was composed of Shosh (Bear), a big
-black shepherd dog, Pete, a yellow hound dog, and Two-bits, just dog.
-
-Shosh already had learned to carry a pack and pack-rigging, dog size.
-He was a real “bell sharp.” Two-bits was still an unruly “shave tail,”
-and the yellow Pete was so lazy that he ranked as only a “drag tail.”
-But they furnished good practice for Jimmie.
-
-Now Joe, returning from a trip down to Tucson, brought startling news.
-Cochise was “out” again! Even little Francisco looked alarmed.
-
-“Are all the Chiricahua out, Joe?”
-
-“Cochise an’ Geronimo an’ nigh two hundred more of ’em. That pesky
-Colyer man on his way back to the States got the Government to move all
-the ’Paches from whar they were comf’table in the Warm Spring country
-to another part o’ the New Mexico country called the Tularosa; an’,
-by jinks, Cochise said he wouldn’t go――an’ he didn’t go! He took his
-Chiricahua an’ lit out for his old stampin’-ground in Arizony. So the
-word’s been passed to watch for trouble.”
-
-Joe stalked on, muttering, to carry some purchases into the house.
-Jimmie the pack-master and little Francisco the arriero dismissed
-their pack-train and quit for the day. The knowledge that Cochise and
-Geronimo and their shifty Chiricahuas had left the Cañada Alamosa
-reservation, where they had been staying with Chief Victorio’s Warm
-Spring band, and had joined the fighting Chiricahuas who had stayed
-“wild,” cast a shadow upon foolery.
-
-“Will the great General Crook march against them now?” asked Francisco,
-his black eyes round and large.
-
-“Who knows?” responded Jimmie, in Spanish. “There’s a new peace man
-coming from Washington. Then if the Chiricahua will not listen to
-peace, they will hear war. Bueno!”
-
-“Bueno (Good)!” piped Francisco. “Will you take me, Jeem?”
-
-“Perhaps, chico mio (my little one),” grandly promised Jimmie.
-
-To Francisco, Jimmie was an important person, who had lived with the
-Cochise Chiricahuas, and called the chief’s son “chi-kis-n” or brother,
-and spoke Apache, and soon was going to be a real arriero or else a
-scout, with the American soldiers.
-
-Aside from a few scouting expeditions, the winter at Camp Grant had
-been quiet. The agency for the Arivaipas and Pinals was in operation,
-at the mouth of the Arivaipa Canyon about a mile east; a Mr. Ed Jacobs
-was the agent.
-
-Nevertheless, Chief Es-kim-en-zin’s people were still afraid; they had
-not forgotten the attack by the Tucson crowd. They came in around the
-agency buildings every day, but every evening they went back up into
-the canyon, where they might defend themselves.
-
-The Peace Policy and the visit by Commissioner Colyer had not proved
-an entire success. A great many Indians were still out. The Arizona
-newspapers insisted that as long as General Crook was forbidden to
-drive the outlaw Indians from their hiding-places, the bad hearts who
-were simply using the reservations would feel that they might do as
-they pleased, also.
-
-There had been attacks upon ranches and mines and stage stations in
-south and north both; the legislature had called upon Congress for
-better protection to Arizona; and General Crook was all ready. He was
-only waiting.
-
-“I think that the Apache is painted in darker colors than he deserves,
-and that his villainies arise more from a misconception of facts than
-from his being worse than other Indians,” had reported the general,
-after studying the situation. And he had added: “I am satisfied that a
-sharp, active campaign against him would not only make him one of the
-best Indians in the country, but it would also save millions of dollars
-to the Treasury, and the lives of many innocent whites and Indians.”
-
-The Indians on the reservations were complaining of food and slack
-treatment; in New Mexico Chief Victorio of the Warm Springs and Chief
-Cochise of the Chiricahuas had refused to be changed from the Cañada
-Alamosa; so the Government was sending out another peace commissioner.
-Brevet Major-General O. O. Howard, to try to satisfy everybody.
-
-He was to make especial effort to talk with Cochise, who so far
-had declined to talk at all. Cochise and Geronimo had claimed that
-they were willing to live with Chief Victorio on the Warm Spring
-reservation, but they had run away from Mr. Colyer, in fear of the
-soldiers. They rarely went near the army post, there, Fort Craig, and
-orders had been given that the soldiery should leave them alone, so
-that they would continue peaceful and contented, among the Warm Springs.
-
-The President had hoped that Cochise would talk with General Howard,
-who was a great chief like himself. Now Cochise was “out” again!
-
-“As far as I can savvy the trouble, that Colyer man has spilled the
-soup,” complained Joe, this evening after his return from Tucson. “Some
-o’ these agencies are located in awful pore places, not fitted for the
-Injuns at all――like that Date Creek reservation whar the Apache-Mohaves
-are herded. But that Cañada Alamosa of the Ojo Caliente (Warm Spring)
-country jest suited old Victorio, an’ Cochise, too, an’ they weren’t
-doin’ any harm.
-
-“Now ’long comes Colyer, an’ he says to the Government: ‘The settlers
-’round the Cañada Alamosa don’t like to have the Injuns thar. It’s
-good cattle ground, an’ they want it for themselves. So to avoid hard
-feelin’s I recommend we move the Injuns all up yonder to the Tularosa
-country, which nobody wants!’
-
-“Natur’ly, bein’ as the same Injuns had been promised the Cañada
-Alamosa if they’d live on it, an’ thar’s plenty other land for the
-settlers, they see no good reason for swappin’. They say that up at the
-Tularosa the weather an’ land an’ water are as bad for Injuns as for
-white men, an’ it’s ghost country. I tell ye,” concluded Joe, “when you
-make an agreement with an Injun you got to stand by it, or he’ll never
-believe in you ag’in. You can’t fool him, or he’ll fool _you_! I’m
-curyus to see what kind of a man this Gen’ral Howard is.”
-
-Jimmie, too, was “curyrus” to see this General O. O. Howard, who was
-visiting the peaceful Yumas and Pimas in western Arizona and was
-expected, any day, at Tucson. His next stop probably would be Camp
-Grant itself, so that he might talk with the Pinals and Arivaipas.
-
-Veteran Sergeant Warfield, who had served under the general in the
-Union Army, at Antietam and Gettysburg and in other big battles, said
-that he was a great man, had commanded as high as thirty thousand
-soldiers, in the field; had lost his right arm, by two wounds, at the
-battle of Fair Oaks; was a hard fighter and was very religious――knew
-the Bible by heart and almost had resigned from the army to go into
-“preaching.”
-
-“But let me tell you this,” added the grizzled sergeant, to Jimmie:
-“Arizony’ll find out that General Howard’s a man who’ll see that right
-is done to both white and red. He’s got a heap of sense, and he’s as
-square as a piece of hard-tack.”
-
-“A great American soldier chief is coming to talk with the Arivaipa,”
-informed Jimmie, to old Santos, at the reservation.
-
-“What does he want?” demanded Santos, in Apache.
-
-“He wants to make peace with all the Indians.”
-
-“What good is peace?” retorted Santos. “The Arivaipa asked for peace,
-and the white people and the Papagos killed our women and stole our
-children. We are still at peace, but none of our women and children
-have come back, and we are hungry. We would have done better to fight
-like the Chiricahua and the Tonto.”
-
-In a few days, or early in May, General Howard did indeed appear at
-Camp Grant. He was traveling in a six-mule army ambulance, with an
-escort of cavalry from post to post. Colonel Crittenden and staff rode
-out a short distance to meet him. The four companies of Fifth Cavalry
-and Twenty-third Infantry were drawn up, to receive him; their worn
-uniforms brushed and every button and buckle polished.
-
-General Howard certainly looked like a fine, soldierly officer. He was
-as tall as, and rather heavier than General Crook; with full brown
-beard and handsome, lion-like countenance; in dusty campaign hat, and
-double-breasted blue coat with two rows of brass buttons down the
-front, and shoulder-straps bearing the single star each of a brigadier
-general (which was his regular rank), and with an empty right sleeve
-pinned to his sword belt.
-
-“Yep, I jedge he’s all right,” announced the ambulance driver, to an
-inquiring group of soldiers and scouts, after the parade had been
-dismissed. The driver was a lean, lank, exceedingly solemn man who
-could not be induced to smile. “Only thing I have against him is his
-callin’ me ‘Dismal Jeems’――him an’ his aide Cap’n Wilkinson. I dunno
-why. All the way over from Fort Yumy I’ve tried my best to cheer ’em
-up. I told ’em about every massacree along the hull road; told ’em
-we were liable to be scalped, any mile; told ’em all the cheerfulest
-things I could think of. But somehow I didn’t make a hit. The gen’ral’s
-powerful pious, too――holdin’ prayer-meetin’ on Sunday an’ readin’ his
-Bible whenever he has a chance.
-
-“But the Yumas an’ Pimas cottoned to him, an’ down at Tucson the people
-liked him fust-rate. The Pimas an’ Papagos have promised to come in to
-a council with the Arivaipas here next week, an’ the Mexicans who have
-the Arivaipa kids have promised to fetch ’em, an’ I s’pose when we all
-get together thar’ll be a grand killin’ match. But I’m a cheerful man
-an’ alluz aim to look on the bright side o’ things.”
-
-With that, “Dismal Jeems” drew a more melancholy face than before,
-sighed heavily, and slouched away to rub down his sweaty mules.
-
-General Howard was not here to stay long, this time. He spent most of
-one day at the agency; then he left for Fort Whipple, to confer with
-General Crook. But he was coming back; he had set May 21 as the date
-for the big peace council.
-
-“What do you think of the soldier chief, Santos?” asked Jimmie. Old
-Santos, ex-chief, usually was to be found sitting in the sun, on the
-bench in front of the agency store. He did not live in the hills with
-Es-kim-en-zin.
-
-“The soldier chief is a good man. He pointed to the sky and said: ‘I
-have a Father up there. So have you. There is only one Father. Your
-Father and my Father are the same. So you and I are brothers.’ That
-was a wise speech. We shook hands, and we are brothers. I am glad. His
-words tell me that he is a wise chief, and his sleeve tells me that he
-is a great warrior. Now I trust him, because he thinks as I do.”
-
-The council was held at the mouth of the Arivaipa Canyon, exactly as
-General Howard had planned.
-
-From their agency one hundred miles west, on the Gila River, the Pimas
-came on time――twenty of them, with their teacher, the Reverend Mr.
-Cook, and their interpreter, named Louis.
-
-From their agency at Camp Verde, fifty miles west, some Tontos came;
-and some Apache-Mohaves, from their agency at Date Creek, southwest of
-Prescott; and a company of Papagos, from their homes south of Tucson.
-
-From Tucson itself there came a large delegation of Americans and
-Mexicans, headed by Governor A. P. K. Safford and the district
-attorney. Many of the Mexicans were women, bringing the Arivaipa and
-Pinal children whom they had adopted after the massacre.
-
-The Pimas and the Papagos had long been enemies of the Apaches, so they
-stayed together. The Tontos and the Apache-Mohaves had been enemies
-of everybody, so they stayed together. The Mexicans had been enemies
-of the Tontos and the Apache-Mohaves and the Arivaipas and Pinals, so
-they stayed together. The Americans――the Tucson citizens and the scouts
-and ranchers――were ready to back up the guard of soldiers, in case of
-trouble. But General Howard’s purpose was to make peace between all the
-peoples of the Southwest.
-
-“Will there be a fight, you think, Jeem?” inquired little Francisco.
-He and Jimmie had ridden over early on one of the ranch mules, to see
-and hear whatever might happen. “The Arivaipa will fight to get their
-children, and the Pima will fight the Tonto, and the soldiers will
-shoot; won’t they, Jeem?”
-
-“Who knows?” replied Jimmie. “No, they won’t!” he quickly added. “It is
-all right, chico. Here comes General Howard. And see who is with him!
-That is General Crook! Hooray!”
-
-“Hooray!” echoed Francisco, who always tried to do what Jimmie did.
-
-For with its six mules at a gallop, and with General Howard upon the
-seat beside “Dismal Jeems,” the army ambulance had swung into the
-pretty green valley along the Arivaipa Creek. Behind the ambulance
-followed, in the road, a cavalcade of officers on horses and mules. The
-first two were Colonel Crittenden of Camp Grant, and a sinewy, powerful
-man, in a brown canvas suit, on a mule. General Crook himself!
-
-He had come over with General Howard from Fort Whipple. So had
-Lieutenant Bourke, and Lieutenant Ross, and Lieutenant George Bacon of
-the First Cavalry, and others of Jimmie’s old-time officer friends.
-
-General Howard and party climbed out of the ambulance; the other
-officers left their mounts with the orderlies; and all crossed to the
-stools and benches reserved for the “chiefs,” on the sod in the center
-of the waiting circle.
-
-“No Es-kim-en-zin yet,” whispered little Francisco. “They stay away. I
-am afraid, Jeem.”
-
-That was true. Only old short-legged Santos and a handful of decrepid
-men and squaws were here; Chief Es-kim-en-zin and his warriors had not
-appeared. General Howard and General Crook and Colonel Crittenden sat,
-waiting. So did the governor and the district attorney. So did the Pima
-and Papago and Apache-Mohave chiefs. Everybody waited. Agent Jacobs
-plainly was worried, but it would not do to show any sign of impatience.
-
-“Dismal Jeems,” the ambulance driver from Fort Yuma, circulated about,
-wagging his head and prophesying that nobody would leave the spot
-alive! Yes, a cheerful man was “Dismal Jeems.”
-
-In about an hour, there was a sudden murmur of interest. From the mouth
-of the Arivaipa Canyon emerged Chief Es-kim-en-zin, leading his band of
-Arivaipas and Pinals. They were in their best paint, and advanced with
-much dignity to the place assigned to them. Now the circle was complete.
-
-For fifteen minutes no one spoke. General Howard evidently understood
-that it was not proper to hurry a council. Presently he arose, and
-through Concepcion Equierre the interpreter, who spoke English as well
-as he did Spanish and Apache, invited the Arivaipa-Pinals to make a
-talk.
-
-Es-kim-en-zin was first. He made a very poor talk, because he
-stammered, but he spoke thoroughly in earnest, and so did others of his
-band. They wanted their children back again.
-
-The Mexicans who now had the children were invited to reply. They said
-that the children were being well brought up, as Christians; they loved
-them and did not wish to return them to Indian life.
-
-The governor and the district attorney spoke. They said that it was
-better for Arizona and for the children to have the children brought up
-in civilization. The district attorney added that most of the children
-were orphans, and that therefore the Territory of Arizona was their
-guardian. Their own people were unable to bring them up properly.
-
-Es-kim-en-zin and his old men answered that it was true that many
-mothers and fathers had been killed; but the Arivaipa people wept for
-the little boys and girls who had been stolen from them, and would work
-hard to take good care of the children of their race.
-
-All the speeches in English and Apache were translated into Apache and
-English by Concepcion Equierre, the agency interpreter; and again into
-Spanish so that the Mexicans and the Papagos and Pimas might understand
-what was going on.
-
-That evening the Es-kim-en-zin Arivaipa-Pinals went back, six miles, up
-into their canyon. The other delegations camped in the valley bottom
-around the agency.
-
-Jimmie and Francisco, on their mule, rode home with Joe Felmer.
-
-“It’s goin’ to be nip an’ tuck,” asserted Joe. “As I understand,
-Gen’ral Crook he agrees with the gov’ner an’ deestrict attorney that
-the children are better off as they’re livin’ now. It may mean less
-Injuns to fight, later. On the other hand, I heard that teacher-man
-Cook talkin’ with his Pimas; an’ seems as though the Pimas, who are
-’most like white folks an’ hate the ’Paches, too, sorter think the
-kids ought to be given back to their own kin. The Papagos’ll be ag’in
-it, ’cause they helped steal the children, an’ have used ’em. The
-Tontos an’ Yavapais, bein’ ’Paches, will feel like the Arivaipas do.
-But I have a notion Gen’ral Howard’ll find a way, so everybody’ll be
-satisfied.”
-
-It was not until the third day of the council that General Howard found
-the way. Meanwhile both parties were growing angry. Chief Es-kim-en-zin
-announced that he could see no good in so many long talks. The general
-spent the second night among the camps, and slept on the ground there.
-In the morning he made his final speech.
-
-“The good Mr. Cook, of the Pimas, agrees with me that the children
-ought to be returned to their own people,” he said. “Some of them are
-being brought up as slaves and servants, and they all were carried off
-by force, which is not right. But the district attorney from Tucson,
-and the governor, and other honest persons, think differently, and
-I should listen to their words, also. So we will take the matter to
-Washington. I will appeal to my chief, who is the Secretary of the
-Interior; and the district attorney may appeal to his chief, who is the
-Attorney General of the United States. And these chiefs will appeal to
-President Grant, who is the greatest chief of all.
-
-“While the President is deciding, the children shall stay here at the
-agency with a good Christian white woman whom I have engaged. They will
-be well cared for, at government expense. Their relatives and friends
-from the Arivaipas may visit them often, and their Mexican friends may
-visit them often; and our Great Father at Washington shall say who may
-keep them.”
-
-A cheer started, but the district attorney sprang to his feet.
-
-“We wish to keep the children until the President decides. We will
-guarantee to do whatever he directs.”
-
-“No guarantee is needed, from either side,” severely answered General
-Howard. “Here is General Crook. With his army and his authority he will
-see to it that justice is done exactly as I have outlined!”
-
-“Good!”
-
-“Bueno, bueno!”
-
-“Inju!”
-
-The word was repeated in a perfect storm of languages. The gathering
-was all excitement and relief. Everybody seemed to approve of what the
-general had said; that is, everybody except the district attorney and a
-few scouts and ranchers who did not believe in yielding peace terms to
-any Apaches whatsoever.
-
-The Arivaipa-Pinals and the Papagos and the Pimas and the Apache-Mohaves
-and the Tontos hugged one another; some of the Mexicans hugged some of
-the Indians; General Crook and the officers laughed. It was a happy
-solution of a serious problem.
-
-“Kinder like a love-feast, after all, warn’t it!” remarked Joe Felmer.
-“Huh! Wall, I reckon the gen’ral knows how the President’ll decide.”
-
-Probably General Howard did, for in due time the children were given
-over to the Es-kim-en-zin band, by orders from Washington, and
-Es-kim-en-zin always remained at peace.
-
-Amidst the hurly-burly of excitement Jimmie found himself close to
-General Crook, who was talking earnestly with Joe Felmer and old Jack
-Long. That was his style; he did not go much on red tape, but spoke
-direct to officers and enlisted men alike.
-
-Here in his travel-stained canvas suit without any mark of rank on it,
-he scarcely would be taken, again, for a general commanding all the big
-Territory of Arizona. He was thinner than when Jimmie had last seen
-him, before; his face was lined, and he looked as though he had been
-working hard, and worrying too.
-
-His eyes, glancing aside, fell upon Jimmie, and recognized him. To
-the beck of the general’s finger Jimmie stepped forward and stood at
-attention.
-
-“This is your boy, is he, Felmer?” The general seemed to remember
-everything.
-
-“Yessir, that’s what I call him.”
-
-“He’s wearing rather more clothes than when I first met him,” commented
-the general drily. “What are you going to make of him?”
-
-“Wall, he’s ondecided ’twixt scout an’ packer,” drawled Joe. “He’s a
-leetle small yet, but he’s growin’.”
-
-“Yes, an’ he’ll have plenty time to grow while we’re all standin’
-’round waitin’ on the Government’s Arizony pets to come in to their
-feed canvas when they’re called!” grumbled old Jack. “He’s liable to
-die of old age, if he ain’t sculped fust.”
-
-“Tut, tut!” sharply reproved the general. “General Howard’s doing good
-work. He’s the right man. But this is not saying that there won’t be
-use for the army. As for you, my boy,” he continued, to Jimmie, “keep
-on learning to the best of your ability, so that you’ll be ready for
-whatever comes.”
-
-“Yes, sir,” promised Jimmie.
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-THE HORRID DEED OF CHUNTZ
-
-
-General Crook had ridden back to Fort Whipple, on his mule “Apache,”
-and General Howard had left in the ambulance driven by “Dismal Jeems,”
-for Camp Apache and the White Mountain reservation.
-
-He had another good scheme. He was collecting Indians from among the
-tribes, to take them with him to Washington and the Great White Father,
-that they might understand how many and powerful the white people were.
-
-Old Santos had agreed to go, for the Arivaipas. The Pimas were sending
-their teacher, the Reverend Mr. Cook, and Louis the interpreter,
-and the young chief Antonito. The Papagos were sending their chief,
-Ascencion. The Date Creek Apache-Mohaves or Yavapais were sending
-Charlie and José.
-
-Concepcion Equierre went from the Arivaipa agency, to translate Apache.
-
-The general expected to get some of the Sierra Blanca or White Mountain
-Apaches, at the Camp Apache reservation; and to invite the Chiricahuas,
-also. He arrived safely at Camp Apache, and there added to his party
-Chiefs Miguel of the one eye, Pedro and Es-ki-tis-tsla; but he failed
-to find any Chiricahuas.
-
-So he proceeded by wagon and mule, without them.
-
-“I’d shorely like to see those Injuns’ faces when the hull party
-strikes the railroad at Santy Fee!” chuckled Jack Long. “They’ll think
-the Old Nick is to tow ’em with his tail up.”
-
-For Santa Fe of New Mexico Territory was the nearest point east of Camp
-Grant reached by a railroad.
-
-“What does a railroad look like, Jeem?” queried little Francisco,
-hearing the talk.
-
-Jimmie himself had not seen a railroad for several years, but he
-remembered, and he tried to explain.
-
-“It’s two lines of iron, like wagon-wheel tracks, reaching miles and
-miles, chico,” he said. “And on them roll fine wagons, joined together
-and filled with people, and drawn by a――did you ever hear about boats,
-chico? Those boats that sail up and down the Colorado River, and make a
-big noise?”
-
-Francisco eagerly nodded.
-
-“My father has a brother who saw one.”
-
-“Well, the thing that hauls the wagons is a steamboat on land. It runs
-without horses; and it runs so fast that it could go from here to
-Tucson, fifty-five miles, in two hours.”
-
-Francisco crossed himself.
-
-“I would be afraid, Jeem,” he quavered.
-
-Poor little Francisco! He was to meet a sad fate.
-
-But, first, June and July passed quietly at Camp Grant. From Fort
-Whipple General Crook continued to keep scouting detachments and
-pack-trains moving. The various posts were strengthened by troops and
-supplies. The greater portion of the Fifth Cavalry was in Arizona, with
-some troops of the First Cavalry, and part of the Twelfth Infantry and
-of the Twenty-third Infantry――the general’s regiment. The Twenty-first
-Infantry and most of the Third Cavalry had gone out.
-
-The general was getting ready. According to the officers of the Fifth
-Cavalry and the Twenty-third Infantry at Camp Grant, the President
-had resolved that if the Peace Policy in Arizona did not persuade the
-Indians to settle down within a year, General Crook should be ordered
-to take matters over.
-
-The year would be up this September.
-
-Then, in August, things “broke wide open,” as Joe Felmer expressed it.
-
-General Crook just escaped being assassinated by the Yavapais at Date
-Creek, where he had gone for a talk. He had angered them by arresting
-several of them for the murder of Engineer Loring and others, in the
-Wickenburg stage massacre. He had been told that they were planning to
-kill him, but he went anyway.
-
-They did try to shoot him, in the council. Lieutenant Ross knocked up
-the arm of the Indian who fired first, there was an all-round tussle,
-Hank Hewitt the packer seized one Indian by both ears and broke his
-head against a rock, a part of the Yavapais were killed or imprisoned,
-and the rest fought their way into the mountains.
-
-The Tonto Basin Apaches――Tontos and Yavapais both――were attacking
-ranches and mines south of Prescott. Their worst chiefs were Chuntz,
-and Delt-che (Delt-shay) or Red Ant (the Yavapais were known as Red Ant
-people), and Cha-li-pun, the Buckskin-colored Hat.
-
-And on the road only thirty miles south of Tucson the Chiricahuas
-killed gallant young Lieutenant Reid Stewart, the “shave tail” who had
-been out of West Point two months, and Corporal Black, while the two
-were riding in a buck-board wagon up from Fort Crittenden, for Tucson.
-
-“An’ I hear now they’ve got Bob Whitney, at last,” one day reported Joe
-Felmer, on return from Tucson. “Yep; shot out his brains while he an’
-Cap’n Gerald Russell o’ the Third were waterin’ their hosses in the
-place called Cochise’s Stronghold of the Dragoon Mountains, between
-Tucson an’ Bowie.”
-
-Bob Whitney had been known as the handsomest guide and scout in Arizona.
-
-“Anyhow,” pursued Joe, “this sort o’ thing won’t hang over, long. They
-told me at Lowell (Camp Lowell, near Tucson, he meant) that orders have
-been received from headquarters to be ready to take the trail on short
-notice, an’ that the old man (who was General Crook) is puttin’ on his
-war-paint and havin’ that mule ’Pache, o’ his, re-shod, four squar’.”
-
-At the instant, while Joe was speaking in the ranch yard, a sudden high
-chorus of shrill grief sounded, down the road to Camp Grant. Up the
-course of the sandy San Pedro Valley wended a slow little procession,
-of men and women afoot and on mules.
-
-The grief immediately spread to the ranch, where the Mexican women
-began to run wildly, and shriek, and tear their hair. Mrs. Vasquez, who
-was Francisco’s mother, rushed by, to meet the procession.
-
-“Mi niño! Ay, mi niño!” she wailed. “My little boy! Oh, my little boy!”
-
-How did she know? Joe Felmer gaped, puzzled; and a cold fear seized
-Jimmie’s thumping heart.
-
-Upon the seat of a two-wheeled, creaking cart in the midst of the
-procession Francisco’s father, Domingo Vasquez, was sitting and holding
-in his arms something wrapped in a blanket. He held it very tightly.
-
-Yes, it was poor little Francisco, killed by an Apache lance-thrust.
-Joe Felmer scarcely could get the story, amid all that shrieking and
-confusion; but finally he and Jimmie learned from Domingo what had
-happened.
-
-“I take him with me in my cart to Camp Grant this morning,” said
-Domingo, in Mexican-Spanish, “while I cut wood along the Arivaipa, for
-the fort. He visits with people I know, and I do not see him. When I
-go to the fort to get him and come home, he is not there. They say he
-has left to find me. We hunt a long time, and we call, and he does
-not answer. And then, next, they tell me he is found, and I see them
-bringing him. Just a little way off the trail up the Arivaipa from the
-fort somebody had found him, behind a cactus there; and he was dead by
-an Apache lance. Why should anybody kill my little boy――my niño, my
-muchachito!――my little Francisco who never harmed?”
-
-Why, indeed? Francisco was only a gay, innocent little Mexican boy,
-alone, and too young to be an enemy. The murder had been done at a turn
-of the trail within rifle-shot from the fort. A party of Chief Chuntz’s
-Tontos and Yavapais had been sneaking around the post and the agency,
-pretending that they were ready to come in. Old Santos insisted that
-the murderer was a Chuntz warrior, if not Chuntz himself.
-
-Santos was home again, after his trip east with General Howard. He was
-filled with admiration of the ways of the white people. The general
-had given him a New Testament, which he could not read, of course, but
-which he placed under his head, every night, when he slept.
-
-“Chuntz is bad,” sympathized Santos, to Jimmie. “He is bad and so are
-his men. All those Tonto and Yavapai are bad at heart. To kill a boy
-is not Christian. The only way to make those Tonto and Yavapai good is
-to hunt them down. Cluke, the man with the brown clothes, must go out
-after them, and after the Chiricahua, too. I have told the Arivaipa
-what I have seen among the white men. The white men are many and very
-rich, and we will live like them if they do not try to make us believe
-that the earth is round. General Howard started to tell me that the
-earth is round, but I answered that he and I are too great chiefs, to
-be such fools as that!”
-
-Little Francisco was laid away at the ranch. For some time Jimmie felt
-sad and lonely. Francisco had been his chum. The end was cruel and
-horrible.
-
-So he was mighty glad when Joe sent him out with old Jack Long, to help
-take a pack-train and bunch of cavalry horses clear to Camp Bowie, by
-way of Tucson.
-
-“An’, b’gosh, you’d better hustle back,” warned Joe. “That Chuntz is
-a-goin’ to be made to pay for his boy killin’, as soon as thar’s snow
-on the peaks. The old man’s only waitin’ till winter sets in.”
-
-It seemed high time that something was done. In the past twelve months
-of Peace Policy over forty Americans and Mexicans of Arizona had been
-killed by the Apaches, sixteen wounded, and five hundred and fifty
-cattle stolen.
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-ON THE TRAIL WITH THE PACK-TRAIN
-
-
-John Cahill, the new blacksmith at Grant, went; but Joe had been
-appointed a scout, and stayed at home.
-
-Tucson, only fifty-five miles south, was easily made in two days, for
-the loose horses and the Grant pack-mules traveled light. But Camp
-Bowie, at the Apache Pass in the Chiricahua Mountains, was one hundred
-and ten miles east from Tucson and Camp Lowell. That meant a real march
-with thirty loaded mules, and a hundred remount cavalry horses, and the
-cavalry escort commanded by Lieutenant Jacob Almy, and a riding-mule
-for each man of the pack-train.
-
-The packs were chiefly ammunition. Each mule carried three hundred
-pounds.
-
-“We’ll jest see what we can do, boys,” said Jack. “Regulations try to
-make us think that a hundred and seventy pounds is all a mule’ll stand;
-but the gin’ral knows more’n ary regulations issued by those folks
-at Washington. I wouldn’t insult a good sound mule by puttin’ only a
-hundred seventy on his back――not if he’s packed right. Pack him right,
-so the load slings even, an’ he’ll carry his two hundred fifty an’
-three hundred pounds at five miles an hour for twenty-five an’ thirty
-miles a day, week in an’ week out.”
-
-Old Jack was the pack-master or patron (pa-_trone_). Frank Monach was
-assistant pack-master, or cargador (car-ga-_dore_). “Slim Shorty” was
-cook or cencero (cen-_say_-ro). Frank Cahill was blacksmith. The
-packers or arrieros were Jim O’Neill, “Chileno John,” “Long Jim” Cook
-(six feet eight), Charley Hopkins, Sam Wisser the Pennsylvania German,
-and Lauriano Gomez who sang Spanish songs.
-
-The pack-train was called an atajo (ah-tah-ho); the packs were
-“cargoes,” and the pack-saddles or aparejos, and such stuff, composed
-the “riggings.”
-
-Pack-train service had a language all its own. Yes, and an army train
-as organized under General Crook had a discipline all its own, too, as
-Jimmie soon found out.
-
-The trail from Tucson to Bowie was the main Southern overland stage
-road between the Rio Grande River in New Mexico and San Diego of the
-Pacific. Therefore the traveling up hill and down was good.
-
-It was Jimmie’s business to help herd the mules, in the evening and the
-early morning, while the regular herders were eating; and to come in
-and rouse the cook, at daybreak, and get him wood and water, if needed.
-
-In half an hour after the cook was up, the men were wakened. While they
-were folding their blankets (which were the pack-blankets) and taking
-the canvas coverings off the “riggings” and “cargoes,” Jimmie brought
-in the herd.
-
-This was not difficult, because when he started the wise old bell
-leader, all the mules followed; and so well had they been trained that
-except for a few “shave tails” they took their own places, in a sort of
-company front, each facing his pile of “rigging.” Every mule had his
-own, individual “rigging,” adjusted to fit him perfectly.
-
-The packers saddled their riding mules, and ate breakfast. After
-breakfast they put the “riggings” and “cargoes” on the pack-mules.
-
-They worked in pairs, and each pair attended to ten mules. A full
-pack-train was composed of fifty mules; ten mules were assigned to a
-troop or company of soldiers. The thirty mules in this train of Patron
-Jack called for six packers.
-
-Jimmie helped “Slim Shorty” the cook pack his kitchen stuff; and Jimmie
-and the cook and John Cahill the blacksmith watched the loaded mules,
-especially any “shave tails,” so that they should not ramble away or
-try to lie down.
-
-The packers worked like lightning, uttering scarcely a word except
-signal words, for it was against regulations to talk much. The schedule
-of breaking camp or “unparking” a train was as follows: Twenty minutes
-for before-breakfast work, fifteen minutes for breakfast, twenty
-minutes for putting on the “riggings,” twenty minutes for putting on
-the “cargoes”; total, one hour and a quarter.
-
-But “Chileno John” and Jim O’Neill, who were the prize pair of packers,
-in an exhibition feat loaded their ten mules complete (“riggings” and
-packs and all) in ten minutes!
-
-The moment that the train was ready, Patron Jack, who had been eying
-closely, called “Bell!” and “Slim Shorty” the cook rode the white bell
-mare out upon the trail; in single file the pack-mules――“bell sharps”
-and “shave tails” and slow “drag tails”――stepped after, usually of
-their own accord.
-
-The cavalry escort took the advance. Patron Jack and “Slim Shorty” led
-the pack-train. The packers rode, one beside every fifth mule. Frank
-Monach the assistant pack-master or “cargador” brought up the rear,
-with John Cahill the blacksmith, whose business it was to look out for
-dropped shoes and sore hoofs.
-
-Jimmie rode behind, too. The long file of swaying, plodding mules,
-under the canvas-covered packs, made a fascinating sight. So did the
-sturdy packers or “arrieros,” in their broad hats and suspenders and
-flannel shirts, and trousers tucked into heavy boots.
-
-Jack aimed to start out by sun-up at the latest, so as to finish the
-twenty-five or thirty miles at one stretch before mid-day heat and
-dust. This was only a moderate march, in fairly level country. In rough
-mountain country, fifteen miles a day, at a go-as-you-can gait, would
-be enough.
-
-To unload and make camp was called “parking.” The “riggings” and
-“cargoes” were laid out in two neat parallel lines, and covered. Jack
-and Frank Monach examined the mules, for sore backs caused by badly
-fitting aparejos. The “bell” was hobbled and turned to pasture and the
-mules followed.
-
-“Riggings” were repaired, if necessary, and scraped clean of sweat and
-dirt. The pack-blankets were opened, to air for sleeping blankets; from
-their war-bags, or canvas clothing sacks, the men took out what stuff
-they required.
-
-But the pack-mules were the main thought. Nothing in the way of petting
-and fancy trappings was too good for a pack-mule. Each mule had its
-name, and knew that name. Nobody was permitted to strike a mule or
-abuse it in any manner.
-
-“You can abuse a dog an’ he’ll forgive you,” said old Jack. “But you
-mistreat a mule, an’ he’ll never forget. You can change yore clothes,
-but you can’t change yore smell――not to a mule!”
-
-The bell horse or “cencero” (which is the Spanish for “bell”) had
-the easiest time of any of the pack-train animals. It wasn’t packed.
-All that the “bell” had to do was to tinkle along and set the pace,
-while carrying the cook. The “bell” ought to be white, because mules
-were supposed to be especially fond of white; the “bell” ought to be
-a horse, because mules respected a horse more than they did another
-mule; and if “he” was a white mare, as in this train, then so much the
-better, because mules loved white mares.
-
-The cook rode the “bell,” and therefore was nicknamed “cencero,”
-himself.
-
-Patron Jack expected to make Camp Bowie in five days easy, which would
-bring the pack-train and the cavalry through in good condition. The
-first two nights out, the mules were herded, to graze; but on the third
-day the road crossed the Dragoon Mountains by way of Dragoon Pass.
-This night the mules were tied along a stretched picket-rope, for the
-Dragoon Mountains were Chiricahua country, and contained Cochise’s
-Stronghold.
-
-“He’s off yonder at this very minute, an’ mebbe lookin’ for us,”
-declared Cargador Frank Monach. “I’ll bet a cooky those hills south’ard
-are plumb full o’ Chiricahua.”
-
-“That’s where they killed pore Bob Whitney, all right enough,” mused
-Jim O’Neill. “Down at Dragoon Springs, in the Stronghold. Yes, an’
-many another man has left his scalp there. That range westward is the
-Whetstones, or Mustangs, where they got Cushing; and on west of the
-Whetstones is Davidson’s Canyon south of Tucson, where Lieutenant
-Stewart and Corporal Black went under. By ginger, a fellow doesn’t look
-out on a very pleasant view, from up here!”
-
-From the open Dragoon Pass of the stage road the Dragoon Mountains,
-low and rolling but very rough, with much brush and stunted timber,
-extended southward to the Mexican line; and separated from them by
-yellow deserts, west and east and north rose other low ranges――all
-chosen hiding-places of the fierce Chiricahuas.
-
-“Anyhow,” remarked Jack Long, with a sly wink, “we got a young
-chi-kis-n o’ theirs hyar――reg’lar member o’ the Cochise fam’ly――to talk
-for us; an’ if ary Chiricahua appear we’ll send him in to ’em.”
-
-Jimmie grinned and scratched his head; whether Cochise and Geronimo
-would wait and listen to him, he wasn’t certain. But he’d rather like
-to see Nah-che and Nah-da-ste, and explain why he had run away.
-
-The stage and the mail riders had been attacked in this very pass.
-However, nothing alarming happened, to-night. And the probable reason
-why, they learned the next day.
-
-Dragoon Pass was about half-way between Tucson and Bowie, so that Bowie
-now lay some fifty miles east. The Chiricahua Mountains and their
-Apache Pass might be seen, in the eastern horizon.
-
-The Chiricahuas had been so bad during the last two months that the
-stage road was being little traveled. And when, in the morning, on the
-way down from the pass a cloud of dust was sighted before, everybody
-stared, suspicious.
-
-Horsemen! Injuns? No, cavalry! Good! A scouting detachment from Bowie,
-as like as not; or from Crittenden or Lowell, behind. Lieutenant Almy
-met them first, and both parties stopped, to talk. Patron Jack, at the
-head of the pack-train, spread his two arms as signal for “Halt!” and
-he trotted on, to join.
-
-There was a lengthy confab.
-
-“Wall, wonder what’s up?” drawled Frank Monach. “Reckon I’d better go
-an’ see.”
-
-“Send the boy, an’ save yore mule,” suggested Blacksmith John Cahill.
-“He’s fairly itchin’ to sit in.”
-
-So Jimmie somewhat importantly trotted forward, too, up the long line
-of dozing, switching pack-mules, to bring back news if he heard any.
-
-The party of riders from the east were several officers, and three or
-four booted, flannel-shirted, whiskered civilians, wearing heavy Colt’s
-six-shooters and carrying rifles. Yes, and somebody else――a young
-Mexican, dark enough to be an Apache, clad in broad-brimmed black hat,
-dirty cotton shirt, old trousers and moccasins.
-
-Jimmie knew him in two looks. Maria Jilda Grijalba! That same Maria who
-had been a captive in the Cochise camp, and who, Micky Free had said,
-had escaped after Jimmie had escaped.
-
-Jimmie gladly rode straight to him.
-
-“Buenos dias, Maria (Good day, Maria).”
-
-“Buenos dias, amigo (friend),” responded Maria, and they shook hands
-heartily.
-
-“I heard you had escaped from the Apaches. What are you doing here?”
-
-“I have come out from Camp Bowie with these officers,” answered Maria.
-“I work for the fort now. I am a scout and interpreter. We are going to
-talk with Cochise, at the Dragoon Springs.”
-
-“What, amigo!”
-
-“Yes,” nodded Maria. “General Howard, the great man with the one arm,
-is there, with Cochise, waiting. He has come from Washington again,
-and has found Cochise. He has been in the Cochise camp for six days.
-They have made peace. There will be a Chiricahua reservation, and
-now General Howard has sent for the comandante at Bowie, so that the
-comandante and Cochise shall know each other, and there will be no
-mistake.”
-
-Maria spoke in Spanish except when an Apache word seemed handier.
-Jimmie understood. It was a great convenience to speak in two
-languages, at once. As for Jimmie, he knew three languages.
-
-“Would you like to go?” asked Maria. “You come with me, and we will see
-Cochise, and Geronimo and Nah-che and all of them.”
-
-“I’d like to go, but I don’t believe I can, Maria,” faltered Jimmie.
-“I’ve got to stay with the atajo.”
-
-“Are you an arriero? Who is your patron?” inquired Maria. “I will ask
-him.”
-
-But Patron Jack Long already had the matter on his tongue.
-
-“Hyar’s a muchacho (boy) you can have, if you want him, cap’n,” Jack
-was saying to the cavalry captain. “He lived with old Cochise a while
-in these very diggin’s. Speaks ’Pache, an’ consider’ble Mex. Reckon we
-can spar’ him from the pack outfit, if you’ll fetch him back to Bowie
-’fore we leave thar.”
-
-“Does he speak English, though?” demanded the captain. “I’ve got a
-guide with me――Maria, there――who speaks Mexican and Apache.”
-
-“Does he savvy Americano? Sure he does, bein’ that his name’s Jimmie
-Dunn, an’ his folks were both ’Mericans ’fore the ’Paches got ’em, an’
-he’s been brung up by Joe Felmer at Grant. Speak American? Speaks it
-better’n I do, ’cause he had schoolin’ back East.”
-
-“All right. I’ll take him, and much obliged to you,” said the captain.
-“Lived with Cochise, did he? How was that?”
-
-“’Cause he couldn’t help it. Thar warn’t any ‘how’ to it, ’cept the
-‘how’ o’ stayin’ close an’ playin’ possum till he had a chance to skip
-out. The Chiricahua jumped him an’ some o’ Pete Kitchen’s sheep south
-o’ Tucson a couple o’ year ago, an’ tuk him along same time they tuk
-yore Mexican. That Maria Jilda an’ him were captives together. He’s
-chi-kis-n to Nah-che, old Cochise’s son. But he’s plumb American ag’in,
-now. If you meet up with any ’Paches an’ want to talk with ’em, he’ll
-interpret for you.”
-
-“Hah!” exclaimed the cavalry captain, eying Jimmie, as did the other
-men. “He’ll do finely, then. Come with us, boy. We’ll return you to
-your outfit to-morrow. Let’s go on, gentlemen.”
-
-“Wall, I don’t wish you any hard luck――or that Gin’ral Howard, either,”
-called Jack, after――for Jack said whatever he chose. “But ’cordin’ to
-my notion the peacefulest kind o’ Chiricahua is a dead Chiricahua, an’
-you can tell Cochise Jack Long says so. Hey, Jimmie!” continued Jack.
-“You tell yore chi-kis-n to tell his dad thar’s a gent in a canvas
-suit, up at Whipple, who’s comin’ down hyar pronto (quick) with a
-double-bar’l ‘peace policy’ guaranteed to turn wild ’Paches into tame
-ones.”
-
-They left Lieutenant Almy’s little detachment starting onward, and old
-Jack grumbling as he signaled his pack train to “march.”
-
-
-
-
-XI
-
-IN THE STRONGHOLD OF COCHISE
-
-
-Riding on beside Maria, Jimmie learned more about General Howard and
-the Chiricahuas.
-
-The general had returned as far as the Warm Spring reservation in New
-Mexico, with Pedro and Miguel and Santos and the other delegates to
-Washington. Then he had engaged two Warm Spring guides――young Chie, son
-of Mangas Coloradas, and Ponce, son of another of Cochise’s old-time
-friends; and with them, and Captain Sladen his aide, and Tom Jeffords,
-a red-haired, red-bearded American trader whom the Chiricahuas never
-harmed, he had proceeded right on west, into the mountains, to find
-Cochise.
-
-The rest of his party he had dismissed, to wait for word from him, at
-Bowie.
-
-It had been anxious waiting, for who might foretell what Cochise would
-do? But suddenly, one day, the general had appeared again, at Bowie,
-with only Chie as companion. He had met Cochise, in the Stronghold; had
-talked with him, as man to man; and now he was here, in order that the
-word should be sent out all along the line: “The Cochise Chiricahuas
-have promised peace. Do not interfere with them.”
-
-With that, he had immediately returned to the Stronghold; and now
-Captain S. S. Sumner, commanding Camp Bowie, and several of his
-officers and a few civilians, were outward bound, to be present at the
-council.
-
-“Do you think that the Chiricahua have quit forever, Maria?” asked
-Jimmie, as they jogged along.
-
-“Maybe yes, maybe no,” replied Maria, shrugging his shoulders. “If they
-might believe all Americans like they believe that one-armed man――but
-who knows? Anyway, he is not afraid, and he speaks truth. What kind of
-a man is that other general, the comandante named Crook?”
-
-“They can believe him, too,” asserted Jimmie. “He’s a fighting general,
-and a peace general, both. He’ll carry war to those Apaches that stay
-bad. He’s ready now to move against the Tonto.”
-
-“Good,” grunted Maria.
-
-The abandoned stage station of Dragoon Springs, on the west slope
-of Dragoon Pass, had been appointed as the council place. No
-Chiricahuas and no token of any council were sighted here; but a
-stout, broad-shouldered officer with black hair and heavy “shoe-brush”
-moustache met the Captain Sumner party in the road.
-
-He was Captain Sladen, General Howard’s aide. He said that the
-Chiricahuas had seen soldiers in the road, this very morning; therefore
-Cochise insisted that the council be held off at one side, where the
-Chiricahuas might protect themselves.
-
-Guided by Captain Sladen on a narrow saddle trail running south, the
-party rode a mile or two, through a rolling park of grass and oaks
-and mountain mahogany――and then here came General Howard and his
-Chiricahuas!
-
-Haw, haw! Even the sober Maria laughed. The general was aboard
-a mule, and behind his saddle sat a painted, naked Chiricahua,
-holding fast with both arms around the general’s waist! It was the
-piercing-eyed Geronimo!
-
-[Illustration: IT WAS THE PIERCING-EYED GERONIMO!]
-
-That was a great position for a brevet major-general of the United
-States army; but it looked “friendly”!
-
-A large cavalcade of warriors painted and weaponed pranced on every
-side. They left a little space about a red-painted horseman who stayed
-near the general.
-
-“Cochise,” said Maria. “I see Taza, too; and Nah-che.”
-
-The Chiricahuas uttered a loud whoop. At signs from the red-painted
-horseman they spread right and left along the opposite edge of this
-park. When the Bowie party and Captain Sladen arrived, General Howard
-and the Cochise company were waiting.
-
-“D’yuh notice?” remarked Jack May, one of the men who had been sent to
-Bowie by the general. “Ev’ry bronc’ (‘broncho’ was a name for the wild
-Chiricahuas) is stationed where he can dive into that little canyon an’
-be out o’ sight in a jiffy. Those fellows are smart.”
-
-Cochise had daubed all his face with vermilion. He seemed tense
-and excited. His large black eyes darted to and fro, searching for
-treachery. His hair was graying, Jimmie observed; he had grown much
-older.
-
-Taza was here. And in the background, Chato and Nah-che. Jimmie signed
-to Nah-che, and Nah-che responded, but he did not dare to come over,
-yet.
-
-The council was begun at once, with General Howard and officers, and
-Cochise and his captains, sitting in the middle of the circle.
-
-A tall red-bearded man, who was Tom Jeffords the trader, did the
-interpreting.
-
-“The Great White Father has sent me to make peace between the
-Chiricahua and the Americans,” said General Howard.
-
-“Nobody wants peace more than I do,” answered Cochise. “I have done
-no harm since I came from the Cañada Alamosa. My horses are few, and
-I am very poor. Once we were a large people. We lived well, at peace
-with everybody except the Mexicans. But one day the soldiers seized my
-best friend and killed him when he was in prison. Right there at Apache
-Pass other soldiers hung up my brother, after they had attacked me when
-I had surrendered. So I have fought the Americans and the Mexicans,
-but the Chiricahua are getting less every day. Why shut us up on a
-reservation? We will keep the peace, but we wish to go around free, the
-same as other people.”
-
-“That cannot be,” kindly explained the general. “Some bad white men
-might fire on you, or some of your wild young men might fire at the
-white men. Then the peace would be broken. The Great White Father, who
-is President Grant, will agree that you live at the Cañada Alamosa.
-That is a fine country, and you liked it.”
-
-“We would be there now if the white people had not driven us off,”
-answered Cochise. “They might drive us off again, and I will not go to
-the Tularosa. The Apaches there get sick, and die. Give me Apache Pass.
-That is my home. I will protect all the trails. I will see that nobody
-is harmed by any Indians. But my people will not go back to the Cañada
-Alamosa. They are afraid. They would not be allowed to stay there.”
-
-“Then,” said the general, “we will give you this country right here. We
-cannot give you Apache Pass. We will fix the boundaries at once. Does
-that suit you?”
-
-“Yes,” declared Cochise, pleased, “that is good. We will keep my
-Stronghold, and the country around, of the Dragoon Mountains and the
-Sulphur Springs Valley.”
-
-“It is settled,” agreed the general. “I have full authority to say so.
-This shall be your country forever, if you keep the peace. See, I place
-this stone upon the mesa.” He moved a rock. “Now, as long as this stone
-lasts, so long shall last the peace between the Chiricahua and the
-Americans. You may have your friend Tom Jeffords for agent.”
-
-“That is good,” repeated Cochise. “Staglito (Red Beard) is our friend.”
-
-“You must send for all your Chiricahua to come in. Tell them that when
-they are off the traveled roads they must show a white flag of peace,
-so that there will be no mistakes. When they are on a traveled road
-they must meet other people without any running or fear, as the white
-people do.”
-
-“That is good,” approved Cochise. “The stone lies on the mesa. The
-white people and the Chiricahua will drink of the same water and eat of
-the same bread, and be at peace.”
-
-Now there was a shaking of hands all around, and the general and
-Captain Sumner and Tom Jeffords proceeded to arrange with Cochise and
-Geronimo the boundaries of the Chiricahua reservation.
-
-“Let us talk with Nah-che,” proposed Jimmie, to Maria. There had been
-no call for them in the interpreting, and now was their chance to look
-up Nah-che.
-
-“Chi-kis-n,” greeted Jimmie, extending his hand to grasp Nah-che’s.
-
-“Welcome, chi-kis-n,” replied Nah-che, as they shook.
-
-Nah-che had grown into almost a warrior.
-
-“How is Nah-da-ste?”
-
-“She is not here. The women and children are in another place, till the
-chiefs know whether it is peace or war.”
-
-“It is peace, chi-kis-n.”
-
-“I think so,” answered Nah-che frankly. “The Chiricahua wish peace.
-They will keep their promise if the white people will keep theirs. As
-long as Staglito stays with us, there will be no trouble, because he
-understands us. All these wars between the Americans and the Apaches
-come because they do not understand each other. I think if there were
-more one-armed soldier-captains there would be fewer wars. That other
-soldier-captain, Cluke, is honest, too, we hear. Why doesn’t he come to
-see us?”
-
-“He is getting ready to fight those Indians who are bad,” said Jimmie.
-“He was told to wait until the one-armed general had offered the
-Chiricahua peace. Now he will go to war against the Tonto and the
-Yavapai, who have refused peace.”
-
-Taza joined them, and shook hands. He was carrying a beautiful
-breech-loading rifle――an officer’s rifle. Eying it curiously, Jimmie
-suddenly recognized it. It had been the rifle of stripling Lieutenant
-Reid Stewart, the dandy “shave tail”――it was the only one of its
-kind――engraved so fancifully; that is, Jimmie had seen the lieutenant
-with it, at Camp Grant; and now Taza had it!
-
-Taza must have noticed Jimmie stiffen and choke, for he said, in
-Spanish:
-
-“_No trieste, hermano_ (Do not feel badly, brother).” And in Apache,
-“We all do things in war that we would not do in peace.”
-
-Nevertheless, on the way to Camp Bowie, after the council, Jimmie could
-not forget the sign of Lieutenant Reid’s rifle, in the Chiricahua camp.
-He was such a young officer, to have been killed so soon, without
-having had a chance to defend himself. And Cochise had declared that
-his people had done no harm since leaving the Cañada Alamosa!
-
-But then, that was Indian way. And Apaches had been killed, too, by the
-white men. War was a cruel game.
-
-General Howard did not return to Camp Bowie. He had gone the other way,
-to Tucson, with his party and his ambulance. From Tucson he was going
-to San Francisco, to report to General Schofield; and from there he
-was going to Washington.
-
-He certainly had accomplished a great work, only――――
-
-“Will the peace last as long as the stone, do you think, Maria?” asked
-Jimmie.
-
-“The white people will break the stone, amigo mio,” said Maria. “Some
-day they will break the stone, because they want the land where it
-lies. Then there will be war again, and you and I will fight Nah-che.
-But Cochise spoke straight. The Chiricahua in Arizona are tired. Did
-you hear about the joke on the one-armed general?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“Nyle-chie-zie, who is Cochise’s brother-in-law, wanted to trade two
-of his young wives to the general for the general’s four wagon-mules.
-The general said he already had a wife. But the girls said that made no
-difference; they would all get along together nicely. If the general
-had not explained that the laws of the Americans forbade him to have
-more than one wife at a time, he might have been in much trouble, I
-think.”
-
-“Yes, many wives at once are a trouble,” asserted Ponce, who, with
-Chie, was returning to the Warm Spring bands. “The soldier-captain saw
-Cochise’s hand. That is why he refused the two girls!”
-
-“What was the matter with Cochise’s hand?” queried Jimmie.
-
-They all were talking in Apache.
-
-“Those two big holes in it are where one of his wives bit him. He was
-afraid he would be sick, so he burned the places.”
-
-“The one-armed soldier-captain is very wise,” laughed Chie. “He does
-not wish to lose the only hand he has.”
-
-“But it is true that white people are allowed only one wife at a time,”
-insisted Jimmie. However, Ponce and Chie did not act as though they
-believed this.
-
-Camp Bowie was reached early the next morning. It was a small army
-post, about the size of Grant, composed of log and adobe buildings set
-in a clearing on a hill in the middle of the celebrated Apache Pass
-over the Chiricahua Mountains that extended on southward into Mexico.
-The pass was long and rolling, between high brushy, thinly timbered
-slopes. Bowie commanded the stage road both ways for two or three miles.
-
-This had been Cochise’s favorite resort, in former days. At the east
-end of the pass was where his brother had been hanged, after the fracas
-eleven years ago, or in 1861. There had been no Camp Bowie, then; only
-the stage station.
-
-But Bowie was established the next year, 1862――the same year as Camp
-Grant――and like Camp Grant, since that time it had been trailing
-Apaches almost every day. What with the attacks on the stages, east and
-west, and on livestock, and what with the vengeful ambushing of the
-soldiers themselves, by the Chiricahuas, anybody stationed at Bowie
-was certain to have plenty of excitement. Why, the graveyard there was
-enough to give one the shudders. It was a famous graveyard.
-
-Before inspecting the graveyard, Jimmie reported to Jack Long. Jack
-and the pack train were here. So was Lieutenant Almy, being entertained
-by brother officers of the Fifth and Third Cavalry.
-
-“So it’s sure ’nough peace, is it?” commented Patron Jack, after he had
-heard the story of everything that had occurred near Dragoon Springs.
-“All right. Gin’ral Howard means well, like as not. But did you tell
-old Cochise what I said? No? Humph! One thing’s sartin, anyhow: if
-he was put on trial before a jury o’ Arizony people, they’d vote
-yewnanimous to hang him an’ half his band. Yes, sir-ee.”
-
-“You bet yuh,” chimed in Slim Shorty, the cencero.
-
-And, as a matter of fact, when the general arrived at Tucson, the
-newspaper and people there talked just as Jack talked. They said that
-Cochise should be punished, instead of being granted a reservation, and
-his Stronghold, for his own. Nevertheless, Cochise stayed there, true
-to his word, until he died, in 1874; and Taza also kept from war, until
-in 1876 he died. But with Geronimo and Nah-che matters went different,
-just as Maria prophesied.
-
-“Now I will show you the graveyard, amigo,” proffered Maria, when
-Jimmie had been dismissed from duty, by old Jack.
-
-The graveyard really was about the only thing of consequence to see,
-at Bowie. It was the largest graveyard at any of the army posts in
-Arizona. The many wooden slabs, marking the resting-place of soldier
-and traveler, read much alike, except for the names.
-
-“Killed by the Apaches.” “At the Hands of the Apaches.” “Victim of the
-Apaches.” “Met his Death by Apaches.” “Of Wounds Inflicted by the
-Apaches.” And so forth, and so forth.
-
-Maria seemed to be proud of this collection, but it was too melancholy
-for Jimmie. He was very glad when, on a sudden, a series of loud whoops
-attracted his attention. A short, brick-topped, familiar figure in
-old shirt outside of old trousers, was beckoning to him, on the way
-from the parade ground. A trumpet was blowing “Boots and Saddles,”
-cavalrymen were running to the stables, and packers were hustling at
-the post mule-corral.
-
-So Jimmie legged back, to find out what was up. Micky Free, the
-red-head, met him, and grinned delightedly, his one blue eye sparkling.
-Micky had started a moustache, red like his hair. He showed hard travel.
-
-“Hello, Cheemie. Your patron says for you to come quick, if you want to
-go to Camp Apache.”
-
-“When did you get in, Micky?” panted Jimmie, as they trotted on
-together.
-
-“Just now. Alchisé (Al-chi-say) and I bring dispatches. The canvas suit
-general is at Camp Apache, and everybody is to join him there, to go
-against the Tonto.”
-
-
-
-
-XII
-
-GENERAL CROOK RIDES AGAIN
-
-
-“That’s right,” Patron Jack was urging, among the fast working men.
-“Move yore feet, hombres, or the cavalry’ll beat you. The old man’s up
-yonder, waitin’ on his mule, with both bar’ls loaded. Mebbe it’s peace
-in the south but it’s war in the north.” And to Jimmie: “Say, muchacho!
-Thar’s livelier things’n graveyards. We’re goin’ after Chuntz an’ the
-rest o’ those boy murderers. So you jump an’ help the cook.”
-
-Alchisé and Micky Free had brought orders from General Crook at Camp
-Apache to Lieutenant Almy to join him there at once with all the
-cavalry and pack-mules that could be spared from Camp Bowie.
-
-Of course, the orders had not explained why; but the busy-minded Micky
-asserted that everybody at Apache knew why: they knew why, because the
-Sierra Blanca or White Mountains had been asked to send their young men
-with the soldiers and help to drive the bad Tontos and Apache-Mohaves
-out of the Tonto Basin. These Tontos and Yavapais were making trouble
-between the white men and the red.
-
-The pack-train was ready first. In an hour the cavalry were ready, and
-the column moved out of Bowie, for Camp Apache, two hundred miles by
-trail north across the mountains.
-
-Maria had to stay behind, at Bowie.
-
-“Good-by, amigos,” he bade, to Jimmie and Micky. “Some day we will go
-together against the Chiricahua, with your Crook.”
-
-There were fifty cavalry, mainly of the Fifth Regiment, and some fifty
-pack-mules which carried only supplies for the march. Micky and Alchisé
-led by the best trail, so that the trip was made in five days.
-
-Now Jimmie had an opportunity to see the famous Camp Apache, in the
-grassy, well timbered and well watered Sierra Blanca or White Mountains
-of northeastern Arizona. By reason of the fine hunting and fishing, and
-scenery and climate, it was considered to be the prize army post of the
-Southwest.
-
-It had been located in 1870, and was at first called Camp Ord, and Camp
-Thomas. The Chiricahuas had sneered at the White Mountain Apaches, who
-had permitted a soldier fort to be established among them. But Chiefs
-Pedro and Miguel and Pi-to-ne and all had continued to live just west
-of the post, and to remain tame Indians. In this they were wise.
-
-With the twelve hundred tame Indians, and the many soldiers, some
-infantry but the majority cavalry, Camp Apache proved to be a stirring
-place. General Crook had arrived, with his escort; clear from Fort
-Whipple, two hundred and fifty miles west. He had traveled fast,
-breaking camp by four o’clock every morning, and now he was hustling
-matters so that he might set out for Camp Grant, to the southwest, and
-organize an expedition from there.
-
-Lieutenant Bourke was at work enlisting the White Mountain young men.
-Most of the White Mountains were very anxious to take the war-path
-against the bothersome outlaw Tontos and Yavapais. Alchisé enlisted,
-so did Na-kay-do-klunni, so did a sub-chief named Es-qui-nos-quiz-n or
-Big Mouth, so did Nan-ta-je (Nan-tah-hay), a Coyotero; so did nearly
-one hundred others.
-
-Micky knew every one of them. But his band was the Chief Pedro band.
-
-“Are you coming, Micky?” eagerly asked Jimmie.
-
-“Maybe. I will wait and see, Cheemie, until I can tell where there’ll
-be the best fighting.”
-
-“We’ll catch the Tonto, won’t we, Micky?”
-
-“Oh, yes,” assured Micky. “That Cluke is cunning. All the way over he
-saw that the water of the high places was frozen; winter has come and
-the Tonto and Yavapai will be staying home. They cannot move their
-rancherias, easy. I will go to Camp Grant with you, anyway,” added
-Micky. “But don’t say so, to other people. I am not an Apache. I will
-do as I please.”
-
-General Crook did not delay an instant at Camp Apache after he had
-turned his orders into action. Upon the second morning after the
-arrival of the reinforcements from Camp Bowie he started, with cavalry
-and pack-mules and those White Mountain scouts who were ready, for Camp
-Grant.
-
-He directed that the rest of the Apache scouts were to follow, in three
-days. They would find many other Indians at Camp Grant, who would try
-to be braver than the Sierra Blanca.
-
-“My young men will show how the White Mountains can fight,” had
-answered old Pedro.
-
-General Crook was in a great hurry.
-
-“Yuh see,” explained Patron Jack, to the men who were astonished by
-being roused out at two in the morning and led on without a halt until
-late afternoon, “the old man’s promised to meet a lot more chiefs at
-Grant, besides those Sierra Blancas, an’ he knows he’s got to keep his
-word. If you don’t keep yore word with Injuns, they call you a liar.”
-
-The distance by trail from Apache to Grant was a little more than one
-hundred miles――but each mile, as Cargador Frank Monach put it, meant
-one mile up, two miles down, and one mile across! Alchisé and Archie
-MacIntosh the Hudson Bay trapper, were the guides. Micky Free had not
-appeared, at the start; and when Jimmie, disappointed, inquired about
-him of Alchisé, Alchisé claimed to know nothing about Micky. He only
-shrugged his shoulders, and grunted:
-
-“Maybe come, maybe stay. Who can tell?”
-
-The second day’s march was terrific, into canyons and out again;
-and when darkness fell the column was still struggling to find a
-camping-place. The mules and the cavalry horses had all they could do
-to keep their feet amidst the brush and rocks; the general rode from
-head to rear, encouraging, and looking after men and mules――he sought
-no rest, for himself, and everybody worked like a demon. But Alchisé
-and Archie MacIntosh, in trying a short cut, had missed the trail.
-
-Jimmie was toiling and urging with the rest, in the depths of a
-star-canopied black canyon, when he heard a laugh, close at his ear,
-and a voice that said, in Apache:
-
-“Why do you work so hard, Boy-who-sleeps? Are you afraid the Tonto will
-get away?”
-
-It was Micky Free, bareback on a mule. He could scarcely be seen, but
-Jimmie recognized his speech.
-
-“Where did _you_ come from?” demanded Jimmie crossly.
-
-“Oh, I am here,” laughed Micky. “I know all this country very well. I
-told you I was going to Camp Grant.”
-
-“Then you’d better get to work,” retorted Jimmie. “I haven’t any time
-to talk.”
-
-“No, I didn’t come to work; I came to fight the Tonto,” laughed Micky.
-“But the rest of you had better work, or I’ll be the only one to get to
-Camp Grant.”
-
-Amidst the hurly-burly of stumbling mules and perspiring packers Jimmie
-lost him, and did not sight him again until long after sunrise the
-next morning, when at last the command was out of the canyons and the
-wearied pack-train followed the cavalry into camp.
-
-Micky was already there, ahead, squatting beside Alchisé. He arose and
-came back to where Jimmie was helping Slim Shorty, the cook.
-
-“Alchisé says there will be some good fights, Cheemie,” remarked Micky.
-“Now I want you to take me to your general, so that he will know who I
-am.”
-
-“Aw, pshaw, Micky!” protested Jimmie. And in Apache: “I can’t. I’m
-busy. The general wants to eat and sleep, and so do I.”
-
-“Who is this one-eye?” asked Slim Shorty. “Where’s he from an’ what’s
-his trouble?”
-
-“His name’s Micky Free. He was with the Pedro band and helped me get
-away from the Chiricahua. He asks me to take him to the general.”
-
-“What! Tell him to chase himself. ’Tain’t any time for payin’ social
-visits,” growled Slim Shorty. “It’s grub time an’ sleep time, an’
-you’re workin’ for me. Savvy that?” Slim Shorty was cross, like
-everyone else. Twenty-six hours straight had they been climbing and
-threshing about.
-
-“Here comes your general now,” prompted Micky. “He doesn’t eat or
-sleep. You can take me to him when he passes, Cheemie.”
-
-Sure enough, General Crook, on the faithful mule “Apache,” was ambling
-slowly from group to group, through the camp; in his stained canvas
-suit, his shot gun across his saddle! He seemed to be on a tour of
-inspection, with particular regard for the pack-mules.
-
-As he passed, the men stiffened to their feet, and stood at attention.
-He dropped a word here and there, and halted briefly at Slim Shorty’s
-fire. Slim stood at attention, so did Jimmie, but Micky only waited,
-red-headed, lightly clad, grinning amiably.
-
-“Feed your men well, cook,” bade the general. “They’ve earned double
-rations. I see you’ve got a good supply of beans. That’s right. Always
-set your beans to cook the night before, and they’ll be much more
-wholesome.”
-
-“Yes, sir,” answered Slim Shorty. “But these hyar beans won’t be done
-till noon. There warn’t any ‘night before,’ this last trip. Got plenty
-bread, bacon an’ coffee, though.”
-
-“Oh, in that case――――,” smiled the general. His face was a little
-drawn, but he didn’t look especially tired, and neither did Apache.
-“How are you, my lad?” he queried, of Jimmie, and his eyes fell upon
-Micky. “Who’s this? I didn’t know he was with the column. I’ve seen him
-at Camp Apache. His name is Micky Free.”
-
-“Yes, sir,” answered Jimmie. “He lives with Chief Pedro’s band of
-Sierra Blanca. He helped me get away from the Chiricahua camp, that
-time.”
-
-“He’s not Apache?”
-
-“No, sir. He’s half Mexican and half Irish.”
-
-“What’s he doing here? Is he enlisted with the scouts?”
-
-“I don’t think so, sir,” faltered Jimmie. “Not with the Apache scouts.
-He isn’t Indian. He followed us. He asked me to tell you that he wants
-to fight the Tonto, though.”
-
-“Well, well. That’s all right, but I haven’t time to tend to that now,
-my boy,” replied the general. “I’m going after some breakfast. Let him
-report to Lieutenant Bourke. Bourke has charge of the scouts. When we
-get to Grant we’ll give him a chance to fight.” And the general rode
-on. He kept going, until he disappeared around a shoulder in some low
-ground. He did not return for two hours, and then he brought back a
-load of reed birds, for the officers’ mess. What a man!
-
-“What did he say?” inquired Micky, who spoke no English, of Jimmie.
-
-“He said to have you report to Lieutenant Bourke, and when we got to
-Grant you would be shown fighting.”
-
-“That is good,” approved Micky. “I don’t care anything about your
-Lieutenant Bourke, but the general has promised me fighting and I like
-him. I will go to Grant, and then we will chase the Tonto with the
-general, Cheemie; you and I.”
-
-So saying, Micky strolled away, to eat with Alchisé. Throughout the
-remainder of the march to Camp Grant he did about as he pleased:
-sometimes he rode in advance, with Alchisé and Archie MacIntosh; and
-sometimes he rode with Jimmie, at the rear; and sometimes he vanished,
-to explore on his own hook. But he always turned up at meal times!
-
-With his ragged clothes, and his red head and his smudgy reddish upper
-lip and his one bright blue eye, Micky was a privileged character.
-
-Camp Grant was reached exactly on time, and for the next three days of
-this first week in November it was a busy place. Dispatch bearers came
-and went; Chief Packer Tom Moore was here, from Whipple; one hundred
-White Mountain scouts arrived, under Chief Es-qui-nos-quiz-n or Big
-Mouth; Pima and Maricopa chiefs were waiting, to talk with “Cluke” and
-find out what he wanted; word came that the Hualpais were ready, for
-they also hated the Apaches, as the Pimas and Maricopas did. But Chief
-Es-kim-en-zin refused to let any of his young men enlist; the Arivaipas
-had friends among the outlaw Pinals who ranged near the Tonto Basin.
-
-Every officer and enlisted man and pack-mule that could be spared
-from the various posts, and every Indian who could be trusted off the
-reservations, was called into service. Jimmie felt certain that he
-ought to be included; he had done his level best, on the trip around by
-Bowie and Apache――nobody had worked harder. So he anxiously consulted
-Joe Felmer.
-
-“Wall, you see it’s this way,” said Joe: “I’m goin’ as scout――Archie
-MacIntosh, Tony Besias, an’ me, ’long with the Major Brown column. That
-keeps us in advance, an’ ’twon’t be any place for a boy. This is war.
-So you stick ’round old Jack; he’ll boss the pack-train, an’ I happen
-to know that he thinks purty well o’ you. He says you tended strictly
-to bus’ness, an’ obeyed orders.”
-
-Jimmie looked up Patron Jack.
-
-“Shore thing, muchacho,” answered Jack. “I told you I’d make a
-fust-class packer of you, an’ I will. You fetch yore war-bag an’ fall
-in ready to help the cook’ an’ by the time we’re out o’ the Tonto Basin
-with old Chuntz’s scalp mebbe you’ll get a second-class ratin’.”
-
-Hurrah! It was only proper, too, for Chief Chuntz had murdered little
-Francisco, and had not little Francisco been his, Jimmie’s, partner?
-Everybody at Grant was particularly eager to kill or capture Chuntz.
-
-“To-morrow we start,” remarked Micky. “Where is the Gray Fox, Cheemie?”
-
-“Who is that, Micky?”
-
-“Cluke. He is the Gray Fox, because of his smartness and his dirt-color
-clothes. All the Indians are calling him the Gray Fox. Where is he?”
-
-“I don’t know. He is visiting other forts, getting the soldiers ready.”
-
-And that was true. General Crook was leaving nothing at loose ends, but
-instead of issuing his orders from headquarters, was overseeing the
-details in person. He never tired.
-
-“I would rather follow him on the war trail,” continued Micky. “But if
-he is not here I shall go with Big Mouth and Nan-ta-je and Lieutenant
-Bourke, and you. It will mean fighting. We will find the Tonto and
-Yavapai. That I know.”
-
-“How do you know, Micky?” asked Jimmie curiously――for Micky spoke
-assuredly.
-
-“I know it from Nan-ta-je. Why he knows I cannot tell you now, but
-you will see.” And with that, the mysterious red-headed Micky became
-Indian, and refused to utter another word on the subject.
-
-As far as Jimmie could learn from Joe Felmer and Jack Long and the talk
-at the post, the plan for the campaign was as follows:
-
-The troops and scouts at Camp Apache, under Major George M. Randall, of
-the Twenty-third Infantry, were to work in toward the Tonto Basin from
-the east. The Camp Grant column, under Brevet Major W. H. Brown, were
-to work up from the south. From the far northwest, at Camp Hualpai,
-Colonel Julius W. Mason (who had roundly threshed the Apache-Mohaves
-that had conspired to assassinate General Crook at Date Creek, last
-summer) was to march down with his Fifth Cavalry and some Hualpais.
-From Date Creek to the southwest Captain George F. Price, of the Fifth
-Cavalry, should come on; and from the west the Fort Whipple column,
-under Major Alexander MacGregor, of the First Cavalry, and the Camp
-Verde First Cavalry under Colonel C. C. C. Carr, and the Camp McDowell
-Fifth Cavalry and Pimas and Maricopas under Captain “Jimmie” Burns,
-were to complete the circle.
-
-They all were to clean the country as they advanced, and close in on
-the Tonto Basin.
-
-Just before the Camp Grant column started, the general’s final orders
-were read to all the soldiers and scouts, in line. It was to be a
-fight to a finish. The Indians who would not surrender must be pursued
-until killed or captured. Women and children should not be harmed,
-if possible. Prisoners were to be well treated. Men prisoners should
-be enlisted as scouts, when they were willing to serve; and full use
-should be made of them, to discover the hiding-places of the other wild
-Apaches. And――――
-
-“The general commanding the Department wishes to state that no excuse
-will be accepted for leaving a trail. If the horses become unfit
-for service, the enemy must be followed on foot. He expects that no
-sacrifice shall be left untried by officers and men, to make the
-campaign short, sharp and decisive.”
-
-Antonio Besias the interpreter and guide translated the orders for the
-Apache scouts. At his first opportunity, Micky asked Jimmie to repeat
-them. Nan-ta-je also listened attentively. He grunted satisfaction.
-
-“That is good,” commented Micky. “It is straight talk. We will find
-what we are looking for.”
-
-The Major Brown column out of Camp Grant consisted of Companies L and
-M of the Fifth Cavalry, commanded by Captain Alfred B. Taylor and
-Lieutenant Jacob Almy, Lieutenant (Brevet Major) William J. Ross, of
-the Twenty-first Infantry, who had won honors in the Civil War, and
-Lieutenant John G. Bourke, of the Third Cavalry, who had been General
-Crook’s aide-de-camp. They were all good fighting men. Then there
-were thirty Sierra Blanca Apache scouts――Chief Big Mouth, Alchisé who
-was called Alchisay, Nan-ta-je whom the soldiers nicknamed “Joe,”
-Na-kay-do-klun-ni who was nicknamed “Bobby Do-klinny,” and the others,
-managed by Joe Felmer, Archie MacIntosh and Antonio Besias. Then there
-was the pack-train of fifty mules, in charge of Pack-Master Jack Long
-and Assistant Frank Monach, and ten such first-class packers as Jim
-O’Neill, Chileno John, “Long Jim” Cook and “Short Jim” Cook, Manuel
-Lopez, old Sam Wisser the German, with Slim Shorty as cook and John
-Cahill as blacksmith――men tried and true. Then there was Mr. James
-Daily, General Crook’s brother-in-law who had come out to Whipple
-last spring with his sister Mrs. Crook, and was “seeing the country”
-with the cavalry; and Micky Free, who might be counted as a sort of
-“detached” scout.
-
-Altogether, Jimmie felt convinced, this was the best column in
-the field. As Patron Jack asserted, it could “lick its weight in
-wild-cats.”
-
-
-
-
-XIII
-
-HUNTING THE YAVAPAI
-
-
-“Now Apache catch Apache,” announced Micky.
-
-It was a sharply chill evening, December 27, this 1872, and under a
-clouded sky the whole Major Brown command were encamped together in the
-little canyon of Cottonwood Creek, about seventy-five miles northwest
-of Camp Grant.
-
-Not far west rose the long, high plateau of the Mazatzal or Four Peaks
-Range, through which the Salt River cut a deep, crooked trail toward
-Camp MacDowell on the other side.
-
-But the seventy-five miles was only a small portion of the distance
-that had been covered. The Major Brown column out of Grant had been
-marching north, west, south, and north again, for more than a month;
-sometimes in cactus and sunshine, sometimes in snow and storm, ever
-trying to corral the Chuntz and Delt-che outlaws.
-
-These were hard to find. In this rough canyon country they had made
-their homes for years and years. They knew every inch of it. Only the
-Sierra Blanca scouts, who were afoot, in silent moccasins, and kept
-a day’s march ahead, had had any luck. Twice they had struck small
-rancherias; and they had killed four or five warriors.
-
-Micky hunted with the scouts, daytimes; and each night, when in camp,
-he had great stories to tell. It all was a lark, to Micky the red-head.
-He had captured a rifle, in one of the Chuntz jacals or huts, and now
-was very happy. He seemed rather to pity Jimmie, who was held to the
-plodding, scrambling pack-train, at the rear.
-
-Still, duty was duty, and business was business; and the pack-train was
-as important as the soldiers or the scouts. Without the pack-train,
-then the expedition needs must quit or starve――and what would General
-Crook say?
-
-On Christmas Day forty men of Company G, Fifth Cavalry, commanded by
-Captain “Jimmie” Burns and Lieutenant Earl D. Thomas, with pack-train
-and almost one hundred Pima Indian scouts, all from Camp MacDowell, had
-joined.
-
-They’d had some luck. On the top of the Four Peaks they had surprised
-a Yavapai rancheria (one of Delt-che’s, they thought), had killed six
-Indians and captured a squaw and a little boy. They had brought the boy
-along, because he could kill quail with stones and with bow and arrow.
-His new name was “Mike.”
-
-Only Nan-ta-je could understand much that Mike said. The Yavapai
-language was different from straight Apache. And why Nan-ta-je
-understood Yavapai, Jimmie presently found out.
-
-This evening of December 27, two days after the Captain Burns column
-had been met, something evidently was up. Patron Jack had received
-orders from Major Brown to park his mules in close, along a picket
-line, “in a place easy of defence.” That was one hint.
-
-“‘Find heap Injuns, poco tiempo (in little while),’ those scouts keep
-sayin’, do they?” grumbled Jack. “Humph! Looks like ‘heap Injuns’
-might be goin’ to find _us_, mebbe!”
-
-And now as Jimmie, having finished his duties for the evening, made way
-through the early dusk to look up Micky and listen to the stories of
-the scouts, he noted that Major Brown and the six officers and Chief
-Guide Archie MacIntosh were in a group around a little fire, talking
-low with one another.
-
-The soldiers, wrapped in their cavalry overcoats, huddled also, in
-messes, smoking and joking. They might have been waiting for the time
-to roll in their blankets, but somehow they all seemed to be waiting
-for something else.
-
-A little apart from the cavalry camp was the scouts’ camp; Chief Big
-Mouth’s White Mountains in one place, the Pimas in another. The Apaches
-certainly knew how to make themselves comfortable. They stuffed their
-moccasins with dry grass, to keep their feet warmer, and slept two or
-three together in snug beds among the rocks.
-
-This evening they were having an especially good time. They were
-roasting and eating pieces of a mule that had died from poison. Micky
-was squatting and tearing at a chunk, like the rest of them, near one
-of their little fires.
-
-With greasy mouth he grinned amiably as Jimmie approached to squat
-beside him.
-
-“Come and eat, Boy-who-sleeps,” he greeted, in Apache.
-
-“I have eaten. I am full,” explained Jimmie. Poisoned mule was rather
-more than he could stomach, although when with the Chiricahuas he had
-eaten almost anything.
-
-“It is well to be full,” said Micky, chewing hard. “We may not eat
-again for a long time.”
-
-“Why, Red-head?”
-
-“Because,” asserted Micky, changing to Mexican-Spanish, “now Apache
-catch Apache. We start soon. If you want to go, you had better be
-getting ready.”
-
-“Where are they? How do you know?” demanded Jimmie.
-
-Micky swallowed a large mouthful of mule meat, and held his chunk in
-the coals again, with a sharpened stick.
-
-“I know,” he said. “Soon all the soldiers will know, so I will tell
-you what I could not tell you before. Cluke knew, when we left Camp
-Grant. He had talked with Bocon (which was Spanish for Big Mouth), and
-with Nan-ta-je. Major Brown knew, too. But it has been a secret. We are
-here to fight Delt-che’s Yavapai where they have hidden in the Four
-Peaks above the Salt River. Nan-ta-je was brought up, there, when he
-was a boy. It is a big cave, in the face of the canyon made by the Salt
-River. It is reached by a secret trail from above. Nan-ta-je knows the
-trail. He told Bocon and Bocon told the Gray Fox, and they arranged,
-at Camp Grant. First we were to chase Chuntz, who had killed your
-Francisco. That has been done, and he has got away. Now we will follow
-Nan-ta-je to the cave of the Delt-che people.”
-
-“How far, Micky?” breathlessly asked Jimmie.
-
-Micky proceeded to gnaw his meat chunk, hot though it was.
-
-“A night’s march, over the mountains along the Salt River. We start as
-soon as a bright star rises over the hills in the east. The soldiers
-must leave their horses, and all wear moccasins, to make no noise, and
-must get there before daylight. If we are discovered on the trail,
-we will be killed, every one of us. Nobody can escape, then. That is
-what Bocon and Nan-ta-je say, and they know. It will be a fine fight,
-anyway. The Yavapai will be in their cave, behind a rock wall across
-its mouth, and we will be on a flat place outside, in front; and those
-who fall off will land, in the river, far below. Yes. That is why I
-came, to see. You must run off from your pack-mules and be there, too,
-Cheemie.”
-
-“No, I won’t run off, but I’ll ask, you bet!” exclaimed Jimmie, jumping
-up.
-
-“Inju (good)!” grunted Micky, gulping fast, to finish his chunk. “You
-and I will stay with the White Mountains. They will fight. But I don’t
-think much of these Pimas. Whenever one is killed, the rest stop
-fighting and make medicine.”
-
-Jimmie hustled back. He was all on fire to go. It sounded as though it
-was to be a fight that a fellow would hate to miss.
-
-A change had come over the camp. The cavalry detachments were astir.
-The non-commissioned officers were passing among the squads, inspecting
-equipment; in the glow of the fires the men were donning moccasins,
-overhauling their stubby fifty-calibre Springfield carbines, and
-stuffing their cartridge-belts, worn outside their blue overcoats,
-with the brass cartridges distributed from the green ammunition-boxes
-lugged by the pack-train.
-
-The officers’ council had broken up; the captains and lieutenants were
-with their companies; Archie MacIntosh and Joe Felmer strode briskly
-through, for the scouts. Jimmie seized upon Joe.
-
-“Joe! Can I go? I want to go!”
-
-“Whar?”
-
-“To see the fight at the cave!”
-
-“What cave? How do you know about any cave? You must have been with
-that pesky Micky Free ag’in. Wall, you keep yore mouth shut about a
-cave. No, I don’t say you can go. You aren’t under my orders. You’re
-with the pack outfit. Don’t bother me.”
-
-And away hastened Joe, following Archie. Away hastened Jimmie,
-likewise, to find Jack Long.
-
-All the cavalry horses had been tied to a picket rope, near the mules,
-against the canyon side. The riggings and the packs were being piled as
-a breastwork――the task had been almost completed――old Jack and Frank
-Monach and Jim O’Neill and Blacksmith John Cahill and even Slim Shorty
-were standing armed and ready――evidently the packers were to join the
-cavalrymen――hurrah, the pack men were to be in the fight!
-
-“Say, whar you been?” accused Jack. “Now you stay――――”
-
-“Oh, Jack, can I go? I want to go, Jack! Please can I go?” pleaded
-Jimmie.
-
-“Seems to me you’re alluz wantin’ to ‘go’ some’ers,” growled Jack. “You
-ask Joe Felmer. He’s yore gardeen.”
-
-“I did ask him and he said I wasn’t with him, I was with the pack
-outfit; and the pack outfit’s going, isn’t it?” argued Jimmie.
-
-“Best part of it,” admitted Jack. “Orders from the major are for every
-able-bodied man to march out, an’ for those who can’t climb to guard
-the animals an’ packs, hyar. Dunno which’ll be the dangerouser place,
-in case the Injuns try a stampede.”
-
-“Oh, let him go; he’s earned it, I reckon,” spoke up “Long Jim” Cook
-gruffly. “He can stick beside o’ me. (Long Jim being six feet eight!)
-Then all the bullets’ll fly so high he won’t even feel the wind of ’em.”
-
-“I’ll be up in front with Micky Free. Micky and I can scout as well as
-any Apache,” panted Jimmie. “We won’t be hurt.” He turned, to make off
-again, but Jack sternly halted him.
-
-“You do as the rest do, then: put on a blanket-roll an’ stick in some
-grub, an’ change yore feet into moccasins.”
-
-That took only a few moments, for a boy in a hurry. Slim Shorty the
-cook good-naturedly supplied the moccasins; the blanket-roll was made
-up in a jiffy, around a wad of bread and cold meat, and was slung over
-Jimmie’s left shoulder――――
-
-“If ’twasn’t Micky Free I wouldn’t let you go,” warned Jack. “But
-nothin’ yet invented can harm _him_, so if you jest hang onto his
-shirt-tail he’ll take you through!”
-
-This time Jimmie got away, but none too soon, for the soldier column
-was forming, to low commands. The fires had died down, darkness had
-closed in, and he scurried fast, through the gloom. The scouts were
-bunched――Apaches together, and Pimas together――standing, wrapped in
-their blankets, waiting. Beyond them, somebody struck a match. The
-flame lighted the face of Nan-ta-je and of Major Brown, who was looking
-at his watch.
-
-Jimmie, pausing and peering, felt a hand on his arm and heard Micky’s
-voice, under breath. Micky could see in the dark.
-
-“Inju. Star nearly up. Before sun is up, big fight.”
-
-Nan-ta-je’s star must have appeared at that very moment, for Major
-Brown struck another match, to show his hand raised as signal, he and
-Nan-ta-je moved forward, the scouts moved, pressing in the wake of
-Archie MacIntosh, and Joe, and Tony Besias, there were gruff orders,
-half whispers, from the sergeants, to the soldiers; and amidst soft
-shuffle of moccasins the whole long column followed the lead of the
-major and Nan-ta-je, presently up out of the little canyon, for the
-high mesa or table-land above.
-
-Whew, but the December night was growing cold! The clouds had broken,
-the stars were very bright, faintly illumining the dark winding column,
-and the frosty breaths wafting from it. Scarce a sound, except the
-scuff of the moccasins, could be heard. The United States cavalry in
-Arizona did not carry sabers when scouting for Apaches; and to-night
-even the canteens had been stowed in the blanket rolls, lest they
-jingle.
-
-According to the north star the course was westerly. Nan-ta-je and the
-major led at a rapid pace, to keep the men warm. Jimmie stuck close by
-Micky. He had no fear of not being able to hold his own. He trotted
-loose-kneed, toeing in, head up, breathing through his nose, Apache way.
-
-Trudge, trudge, scuff, scuff, hour after hour, as seemed, westward
-across the high, rough mesa where the snow lay in patches and the Four
-Peaks of the Mazatzal rose close on the right. To the left was the
-canyon of the Salt River.
-
-The Apache scouts forged ahead of the cavalry. Along after midnight,
-from a little rise sign was seen away off, before. Lights! Major Brown
-and Nan-ta-je had halted.
-
-“Come! Quick!” hissed Micky, he and Jimmie trotting faster.
-“Camp-fires. Maybe Yavapai.”
-
-“Column, halt! Lie down, men,” sounded the low gruff order, behind.
-
-Down flopped everybody, except Archie MacIntosh and Joe Felmer, and
-half a dozen of the scouts with them, who continued on rapidly. Micky
-slipped after, like a shadow; he did not intend to miss anything.
-
-Jimmie had dropped in the van of the other scouts, near to the major
-and Nan-ta-je. They and Chief Big Mouth and Bobby Do-klinny were
-crouched under a blanket.
-
-“Nan-ta-je step in track. Think it man track,” grunted, in Apache, the
-Indian beside Jimmie. Queer how the Apaches seemed to know everything!
-And Nan-ta-je had merely felt the track, through his moccasin sole!
-
-Under the blanket the major――or somebody――struck another match. Just
-the faint crackle told. The little group examined the track, there was
-short muttering; then the crouchers relaxed and quit, and waited. Big
-Mouth crept back.
-
-“Shosh (Bear),” he informed.
-
-Nan-ta-je had been fooled, but a bear track is very much like a
-moccasin track.
-
-Nobody spoke again. If anyone even coughed, from the cold air, he did
-so with his mouth pressed against his blanket. Jimmie shivered with the
-cold and the excitement.
-
-Now here came Archie and Joe and their squad, trotting back from their
-reconnoitering. Archie reported to Major Brown and Nan-ta-je.
-
-“Yavapai fires,” whispered Micky, sinking beside Jimmie. “Pony herd,
-too. Four wickyups. No Yavapai. Left wickyups and ponies, little while
-ago. Maybe go to tell Delt-che.”
-
-That looked bad.
-
-“Huh!” grunted a White Mountain. “We go to surprise Yavapai. If Yavapai
-know and surprise us, we all get killed, says Nan-ta-je.”
-
-“What ponies?” asked somebody, of Micky.
-
-“Pima and undah (white-man) ponies. Traveled far. Feet worn out.”
-
-In their cavalry capes Captain Taylor and Lieutenant Bourke stole
-forward, stooping. They had been sent for to consult with Major Brown,
-Archie MacIntosh, and Nan-ta-je and Chief Big Mouth. Pretty soon they
-went back. The march was resumed, toward the fires. The column had
-spread out, ready to defend itself, but the White Mountain scouts kept
-ahead. Chief Owl Ears’ Pimas were behind with the Captain Burns company.
-
-The fires were still glowing at the Yavapai camp on the top of the
-mesa, in a hollow where there were grass and water for the stolen
-ponies. But save for the snorts of the ponies, all was silence. The
-march had been made cautiously, and now the air had thinned; in the
-east the sky had lightened. Morning was at hand.
-
-“Yavapai cave near,” whispered Micky. The word had been passed along,
-somehow. The march was halted again. Teeth chattered.
-
-Next, Lieutenant Ross continued, with Archie and Joe and Nan-ta-je, a
-dozen cavalrymen and the packers Jack Long, Jim O’Neill, Long Jim Cook,
-Frank Monach, Slim Shorty――dead shots all, and fine Indian fighters.
-Nan-ta-je led.
-
-Captain Burns and Lieutenant Thomas, with their cavalrymen and most
-of the Pimas, branched off on the back trail of the pony herd, to the
-southeast. More Yavapai might be coming, from that direction, with
-other booty.
-
-The remainder of the column followed Lieutenant Ross. The White
-Mountains had dropped their blankets about their waists, as if clearing
-for action. Their faces were set alert, their nostrils flared, they
-were straining every sense, to detect more “sign.” Micky pointed
-downward; underfoot was a regular trail, disclosed in the gray light.
-
-Their carbines and rifles at a trail, the Lieutenant Ross detachment,
-led by Nan-ta-je, with Archie and Joe at his heels, had dipped out of
-sight, as if over an edge. The last one of them disappeared. The faint
-roar of rapid waters sounded.
-
-“Canyon of Salt River there,” whispered Micky. “Yavapai cave, too.”
-
-The crack of the canyon began to open――across were the opposite walls.
-Cold mist was floating up. The trail conducted to the canyon, and down.
-Major Brown and Captain Taylor and Lieutenant Bourke, with Tony Besias
-the interpreter, Chief Big Mouth and others went forward to peer in. As
-the column bunched, everybody tried to peer in. Micky craned forward,
-with the scouts――he and Alchisé and Bobby Do-klinny; Jimmie edged on;
-they all might look over the rim, for the officers were as curious as
-the rest.
-
-The roar of the waters rose louder. The river was far down, hundreds
-of feet, at the bottom of a long crooked gorge with precipice walls.
-Icicles hung from the crags. The trail entered, here, and clinging to
-the niches and wearing away the sod of the few flat spots snaked at a
-diagonal until, descending, it rounded a shoulder one hundred yards
-below the rim, where the mists were wreathing.
-
-It was as steep as the trail down which those Tontos had scampered,
-into the Tonto Basin! Nobody was on it. The Ross party had gone.
-
-“Mescal,” whispered Micky, sniffing. All the scouts were sniffing. A
-sweetish scent was in the air, as if welling from below.
-
-Apache mescal pits! Wood smoke, too! Smell it?
-
-“Huh! Rancheria there,” grunted Bobby Do-klinny. “Close to Delt-che,
-now. Where Nan-ta-je?”
-
-Then――――
-
-“Bang-g-g-g-g-g!”
-
-The noise, echoing through the canyon depths and striking the faces
-gazing in, fairly deafened. It sounded like a regiment, but it was only
-a volley by the Lieutenant Ross party, unseen.
-
-The little handful of advance guard had found the Yavapai!
-
-
-
-
-XIV
-
-THE BATTLE OF THE CAVE
-
-
-The suddenness of the tremendous outburst paralyzed even Micky. As the
-echoes rumbled and jarred, Jimmie’s heart beat in his ears. The hard,
-quick voice of Major Brown broke in.
-
-“Good heavens! What’s all that? Bourke, take the first forty
-men――doesn’t matter who――support Ross as quick as you can, and wait for
-the rest of the command. I’ll join you in short order. Hold your fire,
-if possible, till I arrive. Tell Ross the same.”
-
-“Yes, sir,” and the strong, active figure of Lieutenant Bourke sprang
-to the trail. “Sergeant Turpin! Here!” Top Sergeant James Turpin was
-the nearest to him. “Count off forty men, as they come, white or red,
-and follow me. Quick, now!”
-
-Chief Big Mouth yelped at his men in Apache; tossed away his blanket.
-
-“Soldier-captain want men to fight Yavapai. Don’t let white men beat
-you!”
-
-There was a rush for the trail. Soldiers and Indians both were eager.
-Sergeant Turpin had hard work. Jimmie saw no chance――――
-
-“Sh! Come!” hissed Micky, at him.
-
-Micky had slipped over the edge. Only his red head could be seen. His
-feet were on a narrow ledge that, extending along, just held him.
-Below, the canyon wall of stunted brush and rough gray rock and frozen
-trickles fell sharply away, clear down to the cold river, a thousand
-feet! It was a dizzy sight.
-
-Clutching his rifle, planted as a brace to steady him while he half
-kneeled, Micky twisted enough to beckon with his free hand.
-
-“Come on. Leave your blanket.”
-
-Micky’s blanket lay where he had peeled it. Without a thought of
-hesitation Jimmie doffed his own roll, and squirming flat fumbled,
-feet first, for the ledge; found it, and carefully lowered his body,
-backward. Ticklish work, that was, for a fellow in a hurry――although
-Micky apparently had done it as nimbly as a squirrel.
-
-“Inju!” approved Micky, when Jimmie was safely settled. “Now wait.”
-
-If anybody above had noticed, nobody took time to object. What with the
-soldiers and scouts so eager to pass Sergeant Turpin’s count, and what
-with the rear guard hastening up, and what with everybody preparing
-weapons and clothing and re-forming for the prospective fight, there
-were few thoughts upon the whereabouts of two such items as wild Micky
-Free and his partner Jimmie Dunn. Micky was the kind who usually got a
-front seat.
-
-Now they too crouched here out of sight upon the narrow shelf. Scarcely
-yet had the echoes of the thunderous volley died away. Listen!
-Shrill, distant whoops and yells of defiance, also from below! But
-there sounded a brisk command, above――the fast shuffle of feet and
-the rolling of pebbles――and down the slanting trail that cut along
-the sheer wall plunged, sliding and striding, the support company,
-Lieutenant Bourke first, Chief Big Mouth next, and their file of men,
-white and red mingled in a fast jumble, close pursuing, every carbine
-and rifle ready for business.
-
-Micky poised, crouching tense. Just as the tail of the little
-procession swung past, slipping and steadying again he darted forward
-on the shelf. Jimmie imitated. They scuttled so fast that they either
-must keep going or tumble off. The shelf pinched out before it cut
-the trail, but Micky never paused; he leaped, and landed like a goat,
-on a smaller shelf, a mere piece of out-sticking rock; that gave him
-purchase for another leap which took him to the trail; and turning
-instantly he ran down.
-
-Jimmie had no time for thought. What Micky could do, he could do――he
-_had to_! He, too, leaped; barely touched the next rock with one
-moccasin; sprang on, desperately, across space, brushing the wall;
-landed on the edge of the trail, slipped, recovered (Whew!), and
-gaining balance sped after Micky.
-
-The trail descended, narrow and broken and icy in spots, at a steep
-angle. Anybody who lost his footing on it would be a “goner”――he’d not
-stop until, having bounced and rolled and hurtled, he was a fragment of
-shattered bone and flesh in the roaring river below. It was a regular
-Apache trail.
-
-But Micky was running. The Lieutenant Bourke file were at a trot, and
-already half-way to the turn around the shoulder. So Jimmie ran.
-
-Micky caught the tail of the file before it rounded the shoulder, and
-slackened to keep pace with it. Jimmie caught Micky just as the tail,
-who was John Cahill the blacksmith, was disappearing like the lash end
-of a dragged whip――but he did not go much farther.
-
-The file were scattering like frightened quail, to a chorus of Apache
-yells, and the clatter and swish of arrows, and a rapidly barked
-command. Micky dived for the shelter of a jagged boulder, and Jimmie
-followed suit. They all had arrived.
-
-It was a broad shelf two hundred yards long, about half-way between the
-bottom of the precipice and the top, and littered with boulders. On
-right and left, behind the boulders, were the Ross men, their carbine
-barrels pointing steadily at a high rock wall about in the middle of
-the shelf, a little way out from the face of the precipice. Behind this
-rock wall――which was ten feet high and built up smooth――was a large
-opening: the Yavapai cave!
-
-All the air resounded with whoops and screeches, and bow twang, and now
-and then a gun-shot, coming from the cave. The Yavapais were inside.
-Several might be glimpsed, between the end of the rock wall and the
-mouth of the cave, darting about. They dragged a body or two back, out
-of sight. The Ross volley had killed some of them.
-
-“Big fight!” panted Micky. “Good. We are in time.”
-
-“Hey! What in thunder are you doin’ down hyar?” scolded Joe Felmer,
-from behind the next boulder――he and John Cahill together. “You want to
-lose yore scalps?”
-
-Micky only grinned impudently, and with an Apache yell answered the
-Yavapais. The White Mountains were replying with taunt to taunt. Jimmie
-said not a word. He may have done wrong, but here he was.
-
-“Wall, you stay mighty close,” ordered Joe. “This’ll be no picnic.”
-
-“What have you done, Black Beard?” called Chief Big Mouth, who was near.
-
-“The pony thieves were dancing their deeds in the mouth of the cave.
-Before they saw us we killed six of them.”
-
-“Bueno,” grunted the fierce Big Mouth.
-
-Lying low, Lieutenant Ross and Lieutenant Bourke and Nan-ta-je were
-consulting together. Presently orders were passed from man to man,
-on this side; and by ones and twos and threes the soldiers and
-scouts spread out, in the gray dawn, selecting other positions here,
-or bending, went scurrying across, against the shelter of the cave
-rampart, to reinforce the other flank, while the carbines of their
-fellows kept the Yavapais from shooting at them.
-
-Listen, again! Amidst the cries of the enraged Yavapais there rose
-the clink of carbine butt and shuffle of moccasins from marching men,
-again. Major Brown was bringing down the rest of the troops. But Micky
-had focussed his attention upon something else. The roving one eye of
-his never missed a single point.
-
-“Yavapai!” he uttered excitedly, half rising and pointing, and up he
-jerked his rifle.
-
-“Hooh!” exclaimed Big Mouth, craning.
-
-John Cahill was the quickest. Away beyond, down the beetling canyon
-wall, on an out-jutting rock there, stood a naked Indian with long
-black hair. He whooped triumphantly. He had escaped, somehow, from the
-cave――he was almost to the bottom and in a moment more――――
-
-“Bang!”
-
-Blacksmith Cahill’s carbine had spoken even while Big Mouth and Joe and
-Micky were taking aim.
-
-“Thut!” That was the bullet striking flesh. Off from the rock was swept
-the Indian, and disappeared. Whether or not he had been killed, nobody
-knew; but his body was found later, by some squaws.
-
-“He will take no word to other Yavapai, I think,” pronounced Micky. “If
-other Yavapai come and catch us here, then we are dead, too.”
-
-The Major Brown soldiers were pelting in, breathless from the slippery
-trail. Hither-thither they deployed, sneaking among the rocks and
-darting across the face of the cave-mouth wall. Now a Pima of the
-Bourke men stood up, daring the Yavapais while he peered for a
-shot into the cave. A puff of smoke belched from a niche atop the
-rampart――“Bang!”――and down he wilted, into a crumpled heap without
-motion.
-
-The Yavapais yelled louder――their “kill” yell. The Pimas and White
-Mountains yelled back. The soldiers were not doing much shooting, yet.
-Their officers were arranging them. Very soon the arrangement had
-settled into this:
-
-There was one line of crouching scouts and soldiers behind the many
-boulders (which sometimes touched one another) not far in front of
-the cave-mouth wall and on either flank as the ends curved in. These
-were skirmishers. Back of them, clear along the edge of the immensely
-broad shelf and extending around the ends of the shelf, and even among
-the crags of the precipice, was a second line, in reserve, also behind
-rocks, to cover the first line. Some of the rocks were low, some high;
-they formed all kinds of shelter, from which one might shoot over and
-around corners and through chinks. The Micky-Jimmie boulder, down from
-the foot of the trail, in the second line, was about the size of a
-roll-top office-desk; and squatting they might peep across the ragged
-surface of it and see the whole length of the big shelf.
-
-From either side Joe Felmer and Big Mouth wriggled in toward them, to
-shoot between their rocks and this.
-
-“Steady! Hold your fire till orders,” warned Sergeant Turpin and others.
-
-For Antonio Besias the interpreter was speaking. He half rose, from
-along the second line, and called in Apache.
-
-“You must all come out!” he shouted. “The soldier-captain has many men
-and many guns. He has found you, and you cannot get away. He does not
-wish to kill you, but he will kill you unless you lay down your guns
-and come out.”
-
-Back behind his rock ducked Antonio, just in time to dodge a dozen
-arrows, not to say several bullets. What a storm of hoots and shrieks
-had drowned his voice!
-
-“We are not afraid!” were retorting the cave warriors. “Yah yah! We are
-not afraid,” they jeered, in Apache and Spanish. “It is you who will
-die, you white men and you traitor moccasin-stealers who rob women.” To
-accuse an Apache of stealing moccasins from squaws was the bitterest of
-insults. “You will not live to see the sun rise. Our people are coming
-up from below, and you will be fed to the buzzards. Yah!”
-
-Nan-ta-je tried, in Apache and Mohave jargon both. But he, too, had to
-duck, before he had finished telling them to send out their women and
-children, anyway.
-
-“We are not fighting those,” he said. “We fight only men. The
-soldier-captain will wait until you send out your women and children.
-They will not be harmed. It is not right――――” and his words were lost
-in another burst of furious, insolent clamor.
-
-Major Brown’s trumpeter orderly sounded: “Commence firing.” The high
-strains lilted gaily from canyon wall to canyon wall, and back again.
-
-“Take it easy, boys,” cautioned Sergeant Turpin, near the Jimmy squad.
-“Let the front line do the work, but if you see a head, hit it. But
-watch out for the women and children.”
-
-The Yavapai warriors, behind their high rock rampart, taller than they
-were, had difficulty in seeing out. Occasionally a head seemed to be
-cautiously poked up, under an old hat, and the men of the front rank
-promptly banged away at it.
-
-Micky, squirming for a rest, leveled his battered rifle across the
-top of the boulder, took aim with his one eye――“Bang!” Instantly an
-answering shot so shrewdly scraped the boulder top that the stinging
-rock splinters filled not only Micky’s one eye but both eyes of the
-intently peering Jimmie.
-
-“Fool Red-head, you; why you shoot?” scolded Big Mouth. “Squaw hold up
-hat on stick, you shoot at that, man shoot at _you_!”
-
-This trick did not deceive the soldiers long. The Yavapais quit it, and
-from behind their wall began to send arrows by scores high into the
-air, so that, curving downward, they might land among the rocks where
-the soldiers and scouts lay.
-
-Major Brown met this with a similar scheme. Nan-ta-je and Archie
-MacIntosh wriggled forward, as rapidly as snakes, among the rocks, from
-back line to front line, taking a message to soldiers and scouts. The
-word was passed, for suddenly all the line elevated the carbines and
-rifles a little higher and shot fast.
-
-Long Jim Cook and Alchisé and Lieutenant Ross and the others in sight
-were grabbing the cartridges spread by the handful beside them, and
-using them as rapidly as triggers might be pulled. From the whole wide
-cave floated dust; here and there the edges melted away.
-
-“Hi! That’s the stuff!” muttered Joe. “Shoot into the cave an’ let the
-bullets glance. That’ll fetch ’em.”
-
-Now squaws and children were crying with pain and fright. The glancing,
-re-bounding bullets favored nobody. The warriors howled furiously.
-The lead was finding them, behind their wall. Worse, it was wounding
-their wives and babies. So they stood up, to face it and try to divert
-it――stop it, if possible.
-
-Their scowling faces and naked or ragged-shirted shoulders might be
-seen, above the breastworks, amidst the smoke and dust. They, too,
-shot rapidly, point-blank, into the rocks before――and the squaws’ and
-children’s arms were glimpsed, handing up to them loaded guns.
-
-At the far end of the wall was a strange, wild figure――their medicine
-man! Yes, because he wore a large head-dress of painted feathers and
-a painted, beaded buckskin shirt hung with strings and shells, which
-should protect him and his people from the bullets. He was fighting,
-too!
-
-Twice Joe Felmer drew bead on him and shot; only to mutter:
-
-“I can’t tech that feller.”
-
-“No. He is big medicine,” reproved Chief Bocon. “You had better save
-your bullets, Black Beard.”
-
-“Cease firing!” shrilled the bugle. And on a sudden there was nothing
-doing, and almost a complete silence, except for crying children, until
-Antonio Besias called again, in Spanish.
-
-“You have fought well, but you can see that you have no chance. The
-soldier-captain says for you to come out. Or if you are so foolish as
-not to come out, send to us your women and children, that they may not
-be hurt.”
-
-The Yavapais did not answer. They had disappeared from the wall. Maybe
-they were consulting together, about the peace summons. Everybody
-waited expectantly. Jimmie, trembling with the excitement and the
-horror of the fight, hoped that the people in the cave would now
-surrender.
-
-Ah, what was that? More defiance? The Yavapais were chanting――a high,
-wild chorus, men and squaws both――and the shuffle and thud of a dance
-could be heard.
-
-“Hooh! They make ready to charge,” grunted Chief Big Mouth. “They sing
-their death song. We must shoot straight, Black Beard.”
-
-“Look out! It is the death song! They will charge!” were warning
-Nan-ta-je, Bobby Do-klinny, Alchisé, and the other scouts, in Apache
-and Spanish; and the soldiers repeated.
-
-“Good!” pronounced Micky, his blue eye snapping. “It will be a fight
-man to man. That is no fun, to shoot into a cave.”
-
-The chant welled higher and stronger, and all the canyon echoed again.
-Would they never come?
-
-The front or skirmish line had shifted to their knees, guns at
-shoulders――Lieutenant Ross had drawn his revolver.
-
-“Steady, lads,” was cautioning Sergeant Turpin and his non-coms, to
-this rear line. “Hold your places.”
-
-“Here they come!”
-
-A great cheer rang, for like jacks-in-the-box the Yavapai warriors had
-appeared――some twenty or thirty of them――all together leaping atop
-their rampart――strong, muscular, bronze-skinned fighters, bristling
-quivers of reed arrows upon their left shoulders, strung bows in one
-hand, rifles in the other, their eyes gleaming blackly, their raven
-hair flung back, their painted faces scowling. They emptied their guns
-in a crashing volley, and proceeded to ply their bows while the squaws
-handed up fresh guns. The skirmish line of scouts and soldiers swept
-the wall――the smoke eddied and hung――and out from the farther end of
-the wall bolted a little bevy of other warriors, to break through for
-freedom.
-
-Up from their rocks jumped the skirmish line, and ran to head them
-off. Long Jim Cook, Alchisé, Bobby Do-klinny, Nan-ta-je, Slim Shorty,
-Lieutenant Ross, with his revolver――they all ran, shooting and yelling.
-
-They were too many for the Yavapais. The top of the wall had been
-cleaned――and back through the opening at the end hustled, pell-mell,
-the escaping warriors, dragging cripples, but leaving, in the open
-space there, half a dozen crimsoned, motionless forms.
-
-The firing died away. The face of the cave precipice was beginning to
-glow with sunlight. What next, now?
-
-“Yavapai!” yelped Micky, springing up.
-
-“Hooh!” exclaimed Big Mouth.
-
-Micky had leveled his rifle――it missed fire. Now twenty paces before
-their rock was standing, on another rock, a tall Apache-Mohave. How he
-had sneaked this far, nobody might say. He must have run out from the
-near end of the rampart, while everybody was watching the far end. The
-smoke was very thick.
-
-He did not know that there were two lines of enemy, and he had paused
-a moment to whoop his triumph at having passed the first line. How
-foolish! In a twinkle a score of carbines and rifles were focussed on
-him――John Cahill aimed, Joe Felmer aimed, Big Mouth aimed――they could
-not miss.
-
-He was a fine, brave warrior――and he saw, too late.
-
-“Soldados (Soldiers)!” he shrieked.
-
-“Crash!” The guns all shot together; the bullets fairly lifted him and
-drove him topsy-turvy, riddled through and through from head to waist.
-
-“Crowed a leetle soon, that feller,” commented Joe.
-
-
-
-
-XV
-
-JIMMIE IS A VETERAN
-
-
-The December sun was high and warm, flooding the broad rock-strewn
-terrace half-way between river and sky, but the battle was still
-going on. Now that the Yavapais had found out they could not break to
-freedom, the second soldier line had been advanced, with a dash, to
-join the first. As fast as it could be loaded and fired, every gun was
-speeding bullet after bullet into the cave, filling it with a very
-hailstorm of glancing, crisscrossing lead.
-
-The cave was broad, and seemed to be shallow; and how anybody in there
-could be alive was a mystery. But alive some of those Apache-Mohaves
-were, for above the deafening staccato of a hundred carbines rose the
-death chant and the shrieks and wails and groans and curses.
-
-There was no token of surrender. It was a fight to the death. Cleverly
-shielded in a niche at his end of the rampart the medicine-man, barely
-seen through the smoke and dust, was shooting as before, helped by the
-squaws who handed up guns to him; he certainly wore a charmed shirt.
-Now and again a warrior bobbed up, fired blindly, and bobbed down.
-
-Micky had long ago used the last of his cartridges. Like Jimmie, he
-might only lie and watch.
-
-“I told you there would be a good fight!” he shouted, in Jimmie’s ear.
-“This is the end of these Delt-che people. They fight like wolves in a
-pen, but it is no use.”
-
-“Look!” shouted back Jimmie, pointing.
-
-An Apache-Mohave boy――he was naked and chubby and could not have been
-more than three or four years old――had run out, around the cave wall,
-into the open space in front; and there he stood, sucking his thumb,
-and scowling at the Americanos as if he wanted the noise stopped. Over
-he keeled, struck by a chance bullet (for nobody would have shot at
-_him_); but he was not dead――he lay and kicked and howled, and all the
-firing ceased as if by magic.
-
-From the soldiers’ line somebody darted forward. Hurrah!
-
-It was Nan-ta-je. He reached the little boy, grabbed him and at one
-jump was behind a rock again.
-
-[Illustration: HURRAH! IT WAS NAN-TA-JE]
-
-“Hurrah for Joe! Bully for Joe!” Even the Yavapais might have
-cheered――but Nan-ta-je had been just in time. Scarcely had the uproar
-of banging guns and howling warriors and shrieking squaws and wailing
-children been renewed, when down from above rushed a tremendous
-boulder, bursting like a bomb-shell upon the wall itself.
-
-“Hooh!” ejaculated Micky, astonished.
-
-The firing slackened, everybody outside looked up. On the very top of
-the canyon, right over the cave mouth, were many figures――soldiers――and
-Indians! Outlined against the sky, they appeared curiously small.
-
-“By the great horn spoon, thar’s Burns!” exclaimed Joe Felmer.
-
-Surely! Jimmie had forgotten about the Captain Burns and Lieutenant
-Thomas company, but here they were, soldiers and Pimas, crowding the
-rim of the cliff, and gazing over as far as they dared. They had
-returned from following the pony trail, and had heard the shooting.
-Several of the soldiers were hanging part way――waist far, that is――from
-the edge, and held in place by other soldiers behind them were aiming
-their revolvers. The cliff slanted back, above the cave, so that
-persons above might see its threshold, and the rampart before――and, of
-course, see the warriors between the two.
-
-But that rock! Here came another! Watch out――soldiers had rolled a
-second great boulder to the rim――they gave it a final shove, and
-bounding, ploughing, hurtling, it brought an avalanche down the face
-of the precipice and landing truly in the mouth of the cave burst
-thunderously into a hundred pieces.
-
-A third boulder followed immediately. Then two at once. The soldiers
-and scouts below were cheering and shouting and shooting again, but
-the crashing of the boulders was louder. The dust they made was denser
-than the powder smoke――the mouth of the cave could not be seen. But
-somewhere in that veil were the wretched Yavapais. Jimmie felt sick.
-
-Even the death chant had ceased, across there. Anyway, it could not be
-heard amidst the other uproar. The Captain Burns men worked hard. The
-rampart was being crushed and buried. The Major Brown men were standing
-up while they fired; they were so excited. Jimmie and Micky were
-standing.
-
-“Down, down with you!” bawled sergeant and corporal. “Wait till the
-chargin’ order!”
-
-The fight continued, but it was becoming a very one-sided fight.
-Bombarded by the rock artillery from above, and by the carbines from in
-front, and held by the cave wall behind, the Apache-Mohaves were being
-literally wiped out of existence. They were replying not at all; their
-brave medicine-man had disappeared amidst the murk――the occasional
-rifts showed him no longer.
-
-Still, it was dangerous, here in front of the cave, for the bursting
-boulders, piling up in the entrance and shattering the rampart there,
-sent their fragments flying like pieces of shell, causing the soldiers
-to duck and laugh as they plied their cartridges.
-
-Now the trumpet sounded――“Cease firing!” The shots died away as Major
-Brown, standing, waved his arm at the Captain Burns company, on the rim
-of the precipice over the cave, to signal them to stop rolling down
-their boulders.
-
-“Prepare to charge!” the orders were repeated, along the line below.
-The sun was high, marking noon. The battle had been going on for at
-least five hours!
-
-“Prepare to charge!” Up sprang the line, and at the instant down
-bounded the last of the boulders, which the officers above had been
-unable to withhold. It gave one final tremendous jump, and landed well
-out in front of the cave――“Boom!” Something struck Jimmie――yes, a piece
-of it caught him as he blindly dodged――and whirling him around knocked
-him head over heels.
-
-He tried to pick himself up, and a fierce pain stabbed him in the right
-leg, making him dizzy. He propped on one arm, among the rocks, while
-his eyes cleared a little. Already the line was running and scrambling
-forward, soldiers and scouts both; nobody now might pause to tend to
-_him_. He stared, blinking weakly. What would happen? Were the Yavapais
-away back in the cave, somewhere, and where they were waiting, to
-defend it?
-
-There was Micky, scooting about; and Nan-ta-je, and Joe, and Jack Long,
-and Captain Taylor and Lieutenant Bourke, their carbines and revolvers
-poised, as they advanced at double-quick. Right up to the top of the
-huge pile of shattered rocks climbed the first man――Corporal Thomas
-Hanlon, he――and glared in; jumped down, out of sight, and over and
-around poured the others. But not a shot was fired. Evidently all the
-Yavapais were dead. Oh!
-
-With that, Jimmie sighed, everything swam before him, and he must have
-fainted, because the next that he knew, Joe Felmer was sopping his face
-from a canteen, and Micky was squatting beside, grinning.
-
-From the cave sounded the hum of voices; the soldiers and scouts were
-still busy there. The Burns soldiers and Pimas had come down.
-
-“Hyar! You lie quiet,” ordered Joe. “You got a busted leg, I reckon,
-an’ you don’t want to see inside that cave, anyhow. Wish I hadn’t,
-myself.”
-
-“Are they all dead, Joe?” quavered Jimmie, helplessly. Wow, how that
-leg hurt! But it had been bound up, after a fashion, probably by Joe.
-
-“Ev’ry buck, includin’ the medicine man. Plumb shot through, or
-smashed; lots of ’em both. Some squaws an’ kids left,” grunted Joe.
-“It’s what you might call a massacree. Now, you stay hyar, till
-we’re ready to move ye. I’m needed yonder. Micky can nuss ye; both
-o’ ye ought to be back with the pack-train――’tain’t no place for
-boys――’speshully for one who can’t dodge rocks.”
-
-Muttering, Joe (who really was kind-hearted) trudged away.
-
-“Ah, I told you it would be a great fight, Boy-who-sleeps,” grinned
-Micky Free, as he squatted. “Black Beard is angry, because you are the
-only one of us wounded; but you will be a warrior, now.”
-
-“Were you in the cave, Red-head?” asked Jimmie, also in Apache.
-
-“Yes. It is very red. All the Yavapai warriors are dead. The medicine
-chief is dead, under a rock. One old man was partly alive, and he died
-soon. Some squaws and children hid behind large flat rocks, and under
-dead people. They will be captives. You will see them. Delt-che is not
-there; but he has lost his best warriors, and he never will make a good
-fight again. I am glad we came, Cheemie.”
-
-“What are the Pimas doing, Red-head?” asked Jimmie. For the Pimas, with
-Chief Owl Ears in the center, were sitting in a bunch and wailing.
-
-“Oh, those Pimas!” scoffed Micky. “They make medicine. They no good
-any more. They find their Pima who was killed, and now their medicine
-tells them they must not fight again till after they have mourned him
-by singing and bathing and not eating. That will take several days. But
-Apaches wait till they get home. I do not think much of the foolish
-Pimas. And the Maricopas are the same. All no good――stop fighting and
-make medicine. Huh!”
-
-The soldiers and scouts worked fast, cleaning out the cave. The squaws
-and children were placed under guard, the White Mountains and Pimas
-were given whatever stuff――mescal, dried meat, skins, bows, arrows,
-lances, guns, and so forth――that they could carry; the remaining
-supplies (a great quantity) were piled up and set on fire.
-
-Joe and Slim Shorty the cook came hurrying back, with a litter
-contrived from two lances and a deer hide slung between.
-
-“Got to get out o’ this place,” explained Joe. “Squaw says some other
-squaws went down below, jest before the fight, to the mescal pits;
-they’ll carry warnin’ to ’nother rancheria yonder an’ we’ll have the
-hull caboodle on our backs if we don’t act fast. Easy, now, while we
-put you in.”
-
-Major Brown was in a hurry to climb up into the open and unite with
-the pack-train. The long column ascended the winding trail. There were
-eighteen captives――women and children, several of them wounded. Below,
-in front of the cave the fire burned fiercely, consuming the supplies
-and the many bodies heaped upon. Over seventy of the outlaws had been
-killed. Some were left where they had fallen, in the cave.
-
-After this no Indian would venture inside that cave. The skeletons of
-the Delt-che people bleached, undisturbed for years.
-
-
-
-
-XVI
-
-THE GENERAL PLANS WELL
-
-
-The campaign against the outlaw Yavapais, Tontos and Apache-Yumas was
-by no means over, merely on account of the cave fight. But it was over,
-for Jimmie.
-
-Out went the troops and White Mountain scouts, again, this time from
-Camp MacDowell. Jack Long came into the hospital there, just before the
-start, and bade Jimmie good-by.
-
-“You’ll be a fust-class packer yet, muchacho,” encouraged old Jack.
-“Yessir; ’bout one more trip an’ I’ll promote ye. You might ask the
-doctor to stretch yore legs a trifle, while he has you in hand. Some
-day you’re liable to be a reg’lar patron, but that’ll be after my day.
-I’ve a notion I’m due to peter out, what with these hyar up-hill,
-down-hill, blow hot, blow cold meanderin’s, chasin’ ’Paches with
-pack-mules.”
-
-“Aren’t you feeling well, Jack?”
-
-“Not extra pert, son. Yuh see, I’m kind o’ old. But I’ll stick as long
-as I can. So ‘adios,’ an’ be good to yoreself.”
-
-This was the last time that Jimmie saw old Jack. He died on the trail,
-away over at the San Carlos River toward the White Mountain country,
-and was buried there under some beautiful trees.
-
-The general also paid Jimmie a visit in the MacDowell hospital.
-
-“Well, my boy, how are you getting along?” he greeted, gazing down with
-his peculiar grave smile.
-
-“All right, thank you, sir,” asserted Jimmie, whose leg nevertheless
-pained like sixty.
-
-“The pack-mules returned in fine shape――fine shape,” abruptly spoke the
-general. “Not a sore back, or a sore hoof. That’s the way mules ought
-to be handled, always.”
-
-Located here thirty miles east of present Phoenix, Arizona, Camp
-MacDowell was not an unpleasing post at all. The Salt River, flowing
-west, was a few miles below; and scarce a mile east the Verde or Green
-River rippled down to join it. Hazy against the eastern horizon rose
-the Four Peaks of the Mazatzal, in whose southern face had occurred the
-cave battle.
-
-The post buildings were thick adobe, with shingle or clay roofs; there
-were cottonwood trees, for shade; and through the post ran a wide
-acequia or irrigating ditch.
-
-During all of January, February and March, in the new year 1873, the
-hunt for the outlaws continued. In bitter weather they were chased
-from hiding-place to hiding-place amidst the mountains, and given no
-rest. Then, on the seventh or eighth of April, Hank Hewitt and a party
-of the MacDowell packers appeared at the post. They were thin and
-weather-worn: long-haired, long-whiskered, and grimy with smoke and
-bacon-grease.
-
-According to Hank great work had been done. Chief Chalipun――or “Charley
-Pan,” as they called him――had sent word that he would come into Camp
-Verde and treat with the general for peace. Already three hundred
-other Yavapais and Hualpais had surrendered at Camp Grant.
-
-Naturally, Jimmie was eager to get up to Verde, meet Joe, and the rest,
-and report for active duty. He had thrown aside his crutch; the only
-thing that bothered him now was a limp, and an occasional twinge when
-he twisted his leg.
-
-So he gladly rode north with Hank and others, by the military road up
-the Verde River for Camp Verde, ninety miles.
-
-He was just in time. The general was here; the last of the scouting
-parties, under Lieutenant Almy and Lieutenant Bourke, had arrived from
-the Tonto Basin; Chief Big Mouth, Alchisé, Nan-ta-je, Bobby Do-klinny,
-and Micky Free were here, with the triumphant White Mountains; and
-Chief Chalipun himself had brought in three hundred more Yavapais, for
-the peace talk.
-
-The happy Crook men all looked as tough as had Hank Hewitt’s squad. The
-majority of them wore canvas suits, like the general’s; and the suits,
-and the faces, and the hair and whiskers, told a tale of many smoky
-campfires and hard marches.
-
-“Hey!” Joe greeted. “That doc. stretched one leg more’n he did the
-other! Old Jack said he’d left orders to have ’em both stretched alike.”
-
-Poor old Jack! But Jimmie laughed bravely, and he and Joe shook
-hands. Micky Free pattered across in his ragged moccasins, grinning.
-His brick-red hair hung upon his shoulders, his red moustache had
-increased, his one blue eye danced in his freckled tanned face.
-
-“How, Cheemie!” he hailed. “You’re all right? Good! A three-legged deer
-runs faster than a four-legged deer. You did not miss much. We had no
-fights like the cave fight.”
-
-There was not much time for hobnobbing. Chalipun was anxious to talk
-with the general, and the general was anxious to settle matters with
-Chalipun; and everybody wished to hear the confab. On this, the sixth
-day of April, 1873, the talk occurred.
-
-The general sat in a chair on the porch of the post headquarters. With
-him were Captain and Brevet Colonel J. J. Coppinger, Twenty-third
-Infantry, who commanded Camp Verde, a number of aides, and spare,
-black-whiskered Antonio Besias, the Apache-speaking Mexican
-interpreter; and Nan-ta-je.
-
-The general also had grown whiskers. A sandy full beard it was, rather
-thin on the chin but bunching thickly down from the cheeks.
-
-“Tell Chalipun I am ready to hear what he has to say,” directed the
-general, to Antonio.
-
-Chief Chalipun, his black snaky hair cut square across the forehead and
-confined by a band of red flannel, stood straight and spoke with fierce
-energy.
-
-“My people are done fighting the white people,” he said in good
-Spanish. “We have come in because we want to be at peace. The Gray Fox
-has too many cartridges of copper, and we have very few. We can fight
-the Americans alone, but now our brothers are fighting against us, too,
-and we do not know what to do. We cannot sleep at night, for fear of
-being surrounded. We cannot hunt, because there are always soldiers
-within sound of our guns. We cannot cook mescal, because the smoke and
-the smell of our fires bring the soldiers to us. We cannot live in the
-valleys; the valleys are full of soldiers. And when we hide in the snow
-of the mountains, our Apache brothers follow us, with soldiers. We have
-no place to go; our men and women and children are dying. We want to be
-at peace with the whites, and be told what to do.”
-
-“I have heard what Chalipun has said,” answered General Crook――Antonio
-Besias translating, sentence by sentence, into Spanish. “It is good. I
-will take him by the hand. If he keeps his promise to live at peace and
-stop killing people, I will be the best friend he has ever had. If any
-of his people have died, that was their own fault. I sent messages to
-them, asking them to come in. When they refused, I had no way to do but
-to fight them and kill them.
-
-“The Yavapai have said that the white people began the war. It is no
-use now to talk about who began the war. There are bad men among all
-peoples. There are bad Americans, and bad Mexicans, and bad Apaches.
-The thing to do now is to forget this, and to make a peace that will
-last forever. It must be a peace not only between the red men and the
-white men, but also between the red men themselves. There must be no
-more fighting and stealing.
-
-“The red men in Arizona shall live by the white man’s laws; they
-shall be treated exactly as the white men are treated, and shall
-not be punished unjustly. If they think that they are being treated
-unjustly, they must tell the soldier-captain who has charge of their
-reservation, and he will do right by them. They must remain where they
-are put, as long as there are any bad Indians out in the mountains to
-make trouble. They must not cut off the noses of their wives, as a
-punishment. They shall have their own soldiers, to arrest drunkards
-and thieves and other bad persons. They shall be allowed to work and
-earn a living, like the white men. And the sooner they go to work, the
-better, because when a man has nothing to do, he is liable to get into
-mischief.”
-
-With that, the general advanced and shook hands with Chalipun. The
-assembled Yavapais seemed satisfied.
-
-“It was a good talk,” agreed Jimmie and Micky.
-
-“Where do you live now, Cheemie?” asked Micky, as the council broke up.
-“There is no old Camp Grant, and there will be no Apaches to watch, at
-the mouth of the Arivaipa.”
-
-That was true. Old Camp Grant had been abandoned, and a new Camp Grant
-established by the general, in a better country about fifty miles
-southeast, half-way to Camp Bowie. The Arivaipas and Pinals, and the
-Yavapais and Hualpais who had surrendered first, were being removed to
-the new San Carlos reservation, over toward Camp Apache.
-
-“Joe has his ranch, though,” reminded Jimmie.
-
-“Yes; but he has no post to sell to. You come to the White Mountain
-country, and we will talk Apache and hunt and go to war together.”
-
-“The war is almost done, Micky. A big peace is being made.”
-
-“No,” declared Micky, with a shake of his red head and a thoughtful
-squint of his blue eye. “Chuntz is still out, and Delt-che is still
-out, Naqui-naquis of the Tonto is still out. The Chiricahua have no
-police, no soldiers, no anything over them; they do as they please.
-This is not fair, the White Mountains think. Did you know that Major
-Brown and Lieutenant Bourke have been to see Cochise?”
-
-“No!”
-
-“Yes,” asserted Micky. “They were sent down there by Cluke, before the
-last scout. Cluke has had orders to let the Chiricahua alone, but he
-wanted to get a talk with Cochise. Cochise is for peace, because he is
-living where he chose to live. Maybe, though, his young men will grow
-tired of one spot; then who will stop them, says Alchisé?”
-
-“The general will,” assured Jimmie.
-
-“Cluke will try hard,” wisely assented Micky. “He will follow them――his
-trail has only one end. But you cannot turn Apaches into white men all
-at once. I look to see more fighting.”
-
-In April Delt-che the Red Ant made one last vengeful raid. But the
-troops and scouts were hot after him. Major George M. Randall of Camp
-Apache did the final work, this time. In the night of April 21 he
-and his men climbed on hands and knees up the steep slope of Diamond
-Peak in the Tonto Basin. Here, on the top of the Yavapais’ “medicine
-mountain” they surprised the Delt-che band at dawn and drove them over
-the edges of the precipice.
-
-Delt-che and his surviving people were brought into the reservation at
-Camp Verde.
-
-At the various posts there was read, to the troops on parade, a message
-from Division Headquarters:
-
- GENERAL ORDERS NO. 7
- HEADQUARTERS MILITARY DIVISION OF THE PACIFIC,
- San Francisco, Cal., April 28, 1873.
-
- To Brevet Major-General George Crook, commanding the Department
- of Arizona, and to his gallant troops, for the extraordinary
- service that they have rendered in the late campaign against
- the Apache Indians, the Division Commander extends his thanks
- and his congratulations upon their brilliant successes. They
- have merited the gratitude of the nation. There is now occasion
- for hope that the well-deserved chastisement inflicted upon the
- Apaches may give peace to the people of Arizona.
-
- By order of Major-General Schofield.
-
-General Crook also issued congratulations, in General Orders No. 14,
-Department of Arizona:
-
- The operations of the troops in this Department in the late
- campaigns against the Apaches entitle them to a reputation
- second to none in the annals of Indian warfare. In the face of
- obstacles heretofore considered insurmountable, encountering
- rigorous cold in the mountains, followed in quick succession by
- the intense heat and arid waste of the desert; not infrequently
- at dire extremities for want of water to quench their prolonged
- thirst; and when their animals were stricken by pestilence or
- the country became too rough to be traversed by them, they left
- them, and, carrying on their own backs such meager supplies
- as they might, they persistently followed on, and, plunging
- unexpectedly into chosen positions in lava-beds, caves and
- canyons, they have outwitted and beaten the wildest of foes,
- with slight loss comparatively to themselves, and finally
- closed an Indian war that has been waged since the days of
- Cortez.
-
-Jimmie heard the orders read at Fort Whipple, where he was herding
-horses for the quartermaster’s department. A scourge of epizootic had
-played havoc with the army animals, and much of the cavalry required
-remounting. The new horses were driven to Whipple from Los Angeles and
-San Diego of California, in bunches of several hundred at a time, to
-be divided among the posts.
-
-This was rather a poky job, but if the war had ended, a fellow needs
-must do something.
-
-Joe Felmer had decided to quit scouting and ranching, and try
-prospecting. So he had headed for Tucson.
-
-The two thousand Yavapais, Tontos and Apache-Yumas at Camp Verde
-were content. Everybody working, with worn-out tools they had dug an
-irrigating ditch five miles long, to water fifty-seven acres of land,
-and were putting in crops. The general had promised them that they
-should be paid money, the same as white people, for whatever they
-raised to sell, and they believed him.
-
-From Camp Apache and the San Carlos agency there came encouraging
-reports. In the south the Chiricahuas were quiet. Mexico complained
-that stock was being stolen and run across the line into the Chiricahua
-reservation; but Agent “Staglito” or Red-beard, who was Tom Jeffords,
-declared that this was done by the Chief Whoa outlaws in Mexico.
-
-Arizona did indeed seem at peace, for the first time in three hundred
-years.
-
-
-
-
-XVII
-
-BAD WORK AFOOT
-
-
-“Lieutenant Almy is killed! Almy’s been murdered!”
-
-“What! Where?”
-
-“At San Carlos! An Injun shot him. There’s been an uprising.”
-
-The word sped rapidly through Fort Whipple. It was a noon of the first
-week in June, and Jimmie had ridden in to dinner just on time to see a
-courier dash across the parade-ground for the adjutant’s office.
-
-Chief of Scouts Al Sieber appeared, walking fast. The men made a rush
-for him.
-
-“What’s that, Al? Almy killed?”
-
-Al spoke tersely.
-
-“Yes. At San Carlos. Chan-dezi (Long-ear) shot him. Chuntz was in it,
-too; he and Cli-bic-li (Tied Horse) and Cochinay. The Chuntz gang have
-been hanging ’round the agency, and sneaking in at night for food
-and to make mischief. The Tonto and Yavapai had hatched a scheme to
-kill the agency whites, this month, and take to the hills. But they
-got hold of some whiskey on the reservation, and broke too soon. The
-agency police started in to arrest the chiefs. Long-ear tried to lance
-Agent Larrabee. Yomas, a friendly, knocked the lance aside. There was
-a mob. Almy undertook to do the arresting himself. Went in among them
-alone――bravest act I ever heard of. Long-ear shot him dead and made a
-getaway, with Chuntz and Cochinay. That was May 27.”
-
-“Does it mean a little scout, Al?” they hopefully queried.
-
-“No, I think not, boys. The hostiles probably won’t leave the Gila
-Canyon, there, and the troops and the police can corral them. But the
-general’s going over.” Al saw Jimmie, and beckoned him apart. “Are you
-fit for a trip to Apache?”
-
-“Yes, Mr. Sieber.”
-
-“That’s good. Joe Felmer asked me to keep an eye on you, whenever I was
-around, and I’ve been thinking that it’s a little dull for a boy of
-your calibre to be herding horses all the time. Well, the general and
-some of the rest of us are starting for Apache in the morning, to look
-into this fracas. They need horses, over there. The quartermaster’s
-a good friend of mine, and I’ll just drop a hint that now might be a
-proper time to send a bunch in, and you with it. That’ll help you to
-learn the country. You’ll be forgetting how to speak Apache if you stay
-here talking horse.”
-
-“I’d like to go mighty well, Mr. Sieber,” Jimmie admitted.
-
-“All right. Micky Free’ll be glad to see you. He asks about you every
-time I run across him.”
-
-Mr. Sieber hastened on. A fine man, was Al Sieber. He spoke Spanish
-and considerable Apache; had lived among the White Mountains at Camp
-Apache, and was a great favorite with Chief Pedro, there. “Man of
-Iron,” the White Mountains called him.
-
-He was of powerful build, and stern-looking; apt to be of few words,
-right to the point; but he had a kind heart. He was now acting chief of
-scouts, from Whipple and Camp Verde.
-
-Lieutenant Jacob Almy dead――murdered? That was shocking news. Everybody
-liked First Lieutenant Jacob Almy, of the Fifth Cavalry. Since he had
-been put in charge of the Indians at San Carlos, by his gentle but
-firmly just methods he had made many friends among them, also.
-
-General Crook was energetic, as usual. He set out early the next
-morning, on “Apache” his mule, with a small escort including Lieutenant
-Bourke his chief aide, and Al Sieber. Jimmie and a Mexican herder
-accompanied, driving the bunch of remount horses.
-
-The loose horses traveled well. The trip of two hundred and fifty miles
-through the roughest country in Arizona was accomplished in ten days.
-
-There had not been much talk on the way over. The general acted
-grimly determined, and in a hurry. Camp Apache was found saddened and
-expectant.
-
-Having turned his horses over to the post quartermaster, Jimmie
-saw Micky waiting for him, beside the corral here back of the
-parade-ground. Micky was sitting a spotted pony, and smiling broadly.
-He certainly had the knack of always being on hand.
-
-“Hello, Boy-who-sleeps. Have you come over to fight?” greeted Micky.
-
-“Has there been a fight yet, Micky?”
-
-“Only a little one, when those Chuntz men ran away. But we are ready.”
-
-“Where is Chuntz?”
-
-“He and Long-ear and Cochinay are hiding in the canyon of the Gila.
-Tied Horse has been arrested. If we go after those others there will be
-good fighting. The canyon is deep and long and full of caves. Would you
-like another cave fight, Cheemie?”
-
-“I’d like to get Chuntz and Long-ear,” vowed Jimmie.
-
-“So would I. Come on. Pretty soon Sibi the Iron Man will talk with old
-Pedro, and you and I will want to hear what they say. Sibi can talk
-Apache, but he cannot talk as fast as Pedro, or as you and I. We will
-help.”
-
-The general was in confab at the post headquarters with Major Randall
-and Al. There were fifteen hundred Pinals, Arivaipas, Yavapais, and
-Tontos at San Carlos――many of them now very restless under guard.
-Nobody might foretell just what was about to happen.
-
-Soon after Jimmie had begun a sort of a reunion with Alchisé and
-Nan-ta-je and Bobby Do-klinny and others, at the Camp Apache agency
-building, Mr. Sieber came riding by.
-
-“Jimmie,” he summoned, with crook of finger, “you ride along with me. I
-may have use for you. Bring Free, if you want to.”
-
-“I’m going for a talk with Pedro,” he continued, in Spanish, so that
-Micky might understand. Micky knew no English. “If he talks too fast
-for me, I want one of you to explain. And the same way if I speak with
-words that he doesn’t know.”
-
-“We will talk for you, Sibi,” answered Micky.
-
-Old Chief Pedro of the White Mountain Apaches was, as everybody said,
-the wisest, most sensible chief among the tame Indians. They found him
-at home, sitting upon a blanket in the shade of a tree near his house.
-Since he had come back from Washington he had put up a board shanty,
-to live in instead of a brush wickyup. He was still wearing a white
-shirt――which was white no longer.
-
-In spite of the soiled ragged shirt, a splendid old Indian he looked to
-be.
-
-“You are well come, Sibi,” he remarked. “Sit down and we will talk. But
-who is this boy with one leg shorter than the other? I do not know him.”
-
-“He is a friend of mine, and of Micky Free,” replied Al. “He was
-captured by Geronimo, and lived with Cochise and Geronimo. He was a
-soldier at the cave fight when the Yavapai were destroyed. He is a
-brave boy. The leg was made short by a wound. We may speak freely
-before him.”
-
-“That is good,” answered Pedro. “I know you, and I know this wild
-Red-head. Now I know this other. I remember who he is. What have you
-come to say, Sibi? Did Cluke send you?”
-
-They all sat down: Al beside Pedro, but Jimmie and Micky a little way
-apart from them, as was correct when in the company of chiefs.
-
-“The Gray Fox is talking with Major Randall,” said Al. “That was bad
-work at San Carlos, Pedro. You are a wise chief, and you know Apaches.
-General Crook wishes to do what is right by all the Apaches. He wishes
-peace, so that we may all live together and prosper. No one prospers
-long in war. What is the best course to follow with these bad Indians?
-Can they be made good?”
-
-“Let us talk in Mexican, Sibi,” spoke Chief Pedro. “And if you or I
-use words that are not understood, the Red-head or maybe the short-leg
-boy will explain. This talk must be very clear. Now, there is no way
-to make those bad Apaches good, except to kill them. The bad Indians
-do not know what I know; they have not been to the cities of the Great
-White Father and seen how powerful he is. I will give Cluke one hundred
-and fifty of my warriors, smart fighters all. Let Cluke send them into
-the Gila Canyon. The Gray Fox is brave, and his white soldiers are
-brave, but the Chuntz people will go where his soldiers cannot follow;
-this is summer, and they know every spot in the canyon, and will hide.
-
-“But my Apaches will find them, and kill some of them. Then my men
-will come home, and rest a while, and go out and kill more. By winter
-time there will be fewer of the mean Apaches; and if they do not all
-die during the winter, in the spring we will kill the rest of them.
-But if Cluke waits till winter, before that time the bad Indians will
-have made much more trouble at San Carlos, and perhaps among my White
-Mountains, and perhaps among the Chiricahua.”
-
-“I will think on what you have said,” responded Al.
-
-“It will be no use to send you or any other person into the canyon, to
-spend words on those people,” proceeded Pedro. “They will burn him, and
-will send back an old woman to tell Cluke to give them more of his
-men, to burn. Now I am done, Man of Iron. I cannot read from paper, but
-I can look at the actions of a bad Indian, and can read how he feels
-and what he will do.”
-
-“Humph!” mused Al, as with Jimmie and Micky he rode away. “I believe
-old Pedro is right.”
-
-The next afternoon the general held a talk at the San Carlos agency
-with Es-kim-en-zin, of the Arivaipas, and with those Tonto and Yavapai
-chiefs who had not joined Chuntz.
-
-The San Carlos agency was seventy miles southwest from Camp Apache,
-where the San Carlos River emptied into the Gila. This San Carlos
-reservation was really an addition to the southern boundary of the
-White Mountain reservation. It was sixty miles wide and extended clear
-to the New Mexico line, one hundred and twenty miles. The eastern half
-was rough and mountainous, but the western half, along the Gila River,
-was flatter and more open――especially around the agency, where the
-Indians were supposed to live.
-
-The majority of the Apaches did not like it. They said that it was low,
-hot and unhealthful.
-
-“I am sorry to hear that there are bad hearts at work among you,” spoke
-the general. Concepcion Equierre translated. “They have deceived you
-into believing that the white people might be killed, and that the
-Apaches might be free to rob and murder again. Now the innocent have
-suffered. Lieutenant Almy, one of your best friends, has been killed,
-and you all are prevented from going about on hunts and visits.
-
-“I want you all to live as free as the white men. I do not expect you
-to stop being red men. I want your women to gather mescal and seeds and
-roots, and your men to hunt deer and turkeys without fear; for these
-things are good to eat. But you cannot do this without fear, when there
-is war.
-
-“Now about these Chuntz and Long-ear bad men. I have thousands of
-soldiers, and many Apache scouts, and they are enough to give the bad
-Apaches no rest. But I want you to punish your own bad people. You must
-send out your own warriors, and keep sending them out until Chuntz
-and Long-ear and Cochinay are killed or captured, and their people
-surrender. It is not right that a few bad men should work so much harm
-to everybody. I hope that you will consider what I have said. I am
-done.”
-
-All that summer of 1873 and into the next summer the San Carlos and
-White Mountain police, assisted by cavalry and infantry detachments
-patrolling the hills, harassed the outlaws. Wherever the Chuntz
-people moved, in the Canyon of the Gila, the reservation Apaches were
-ferreting them out.
-
-Some of the outlaws sent in word that they were ready to surrender.
-They were told that they might come in if they brought Chuntz, Long-ear
-and Cochinay. Finally the outlaws were hunting their chiefs.
-
-Cochinay was killed on May 26, 1874; Long-ear was killed on June 12;
-Chuntz the villain was killed on July 25. A whole sackful of heads was
-spilled by the Apache police upon the ground in front of Major John B.
-Babcock’s headquarters, at San Carlos, to prove that “peace” was being
-made!
-
-Over at Verde, Delt-che had broken out and had been killed, in July.
-
-So by mid-summer of 1874 the bad-hearted chiefs seemed all out of the
-way, at last. Old Cochise, also, had died, in June, on the Chiricahua
-reservation, and Taza was the head chief. He could be depended upon,
-for peace.
-
-Meanwhile Jimmie was helping to run the first telegraph lines in
-Arizona, connecting military post with military post. He stayed in
-telegraph work some years――during which a number of things happened.
-
-
-
-
-XVIII
-
-“CLUKE” GOES AWAY
-
-
-The general’s plans had apparently worked out all right, when for no
-especial reason, as far as Arizona could understand, the management of
-the reservations was changed from the Military Department of Arizona to
-the civilian agents appointed by the Indian Bureau at Washington. The
-soldiers were to be retained only as guards and not as instructors.
-
-The Indian Bureau started in to move the Apaches about. That had been
-tried two years before, when in New Mexico Chief Victorio’s Warm Spring
-Apaches had been ordered from the Cañada Alamosa to the hated Tularosa
-tract. But General Howard had obtained from the President permission
-for them to live again at their beloved Cottonwood Canyon.
-
-In the summer of 1874 it was reported that the Camp Verde Indians were
-to be taken over to the San Carlos reservation. The Camp Verde lands
-were desired by the white people.
-
-General Crook had much opposed this scheme. He was powerless, but he
-sent a protest to the War Department, saying:
-
- There are now on the Verde reservation about fifteen hundred
- Indians; they have been among the worst in Arizona; but if the
- Government keeps its promise to them that it shall be their
- home for all time, there will be no difficulty in keeping
- them at peace, and engaged in peaceful pursuits. I sincerely
- hope that the interests that are now at work to deprive these
- Indians of this reservation will be defeated; but if they
- succeed, the responsibility of turning these fifteen hundred
- Apaches loose upon the settlers of Arizona should rest where it
- belongs.
-
-All that winter of 1874–1875 the general (who had given his word) and
-Chief Chalipun strove against the threatened change to the San Carlos
-reservation. But it was of no avail.
-
-In the spring of 1875 the general had been transferred to the
-Department of the Platte, with headquarters at Omaha, Nebraska. He had
-pacified the Snakes in the Northwest and the Apaches in the Southwest;
-now he was needed to subdue the bold-riding Sioux and Cheyennes of the
-great northern plains.
-
-He took with him Lieutenant John G. Bourke, chief of staff, and other
-officers whom Jimmie so well knew. Tom Moore, chief packer, was to
-follow with the best of the pack-trains. The Third Cavalry already was
-in the north; and the Fifth Cavalry was soon to go.
-
-“Cluke has been sent away. The Apaches have lost their best friend,”
-mourned Chief Chalipun; and submitted to being removed. So the Yavapais
-and the Apache-Yumas at Camp Verde left their ditch and fields, and
-went to a strange region――that of San Carlos.
-
-Young Second Lieutenant George O. Eaton, of the Fifth Cavalry, was the
-only man whom they would trust, to take them over. Even at that, on the
-way they had a fight among themselves, and eighteen were killed and
-fifty wounded.
-
-The White Mountains were moved, next, down to the San Carlos. Their
-reservation was to be closed.
-
-Whatever the reasons of the Indian Bureau, Chiefs Pedro, Pi-to-ne and
-others objected bitterly.
-
-“These are our lands,” asserted Chief Pedro. “They were promised to
-us by the great one-armed soldier-captain, Howard. When I went to
-Washington, our White Father there told me again that if we were good,
-these should be our lands forever. We have been good. We have done
-as we were asked to do. We have raised more crops than all the other
-Apaches put together. We have helped the soldiers fight our brothers.
-We are contented here. But we are mountain Indians and we cannot live
-down there in the low country where the water is bad and the air is
-hot. The Pinals and the Arivaipas are not friendly to us, and the
-Yavapai ways are not our ways.”
-
-Finally eighteen hundred of them were herded down to the San Carlos.
-Some hid out, and after a time many stole back from the San Carlos. The
-soldiers at Camp Apache permitted them to stay.
-
-The next year, 1876, the Chiricahua reservation was broken up. It
-had no soldiers and no Indian police, and was too near the border.
-Whiskey-sellers and outlaw Apaches sneaked in, but Taza said that if
-the American government would help him he could keep the bad people out.
-
-“Why does Washington punish good people on account of bad people?” he
-asked, when told that the Chiricahuas must go.
-
-At last, with about three hundred of his Chiricahuas, he went to the
-San Carlos. Geronimo agreed to go, too; but he and Chief Whoa, who
-had come in from Mexico, and old Nana, and Nah-che, and four hundred
-others, ran off into Mexico.
-
-The next spring they returned to visit Victorio’s Warm Spring band at
-the Cottonwood Canyon reservation. Because of this, Chiefs Victorio and
-Geronimo were arrested, and all the Indians were started, under guard,
-for the San Carlos.
-
-On the way Chief Victorio escaped, with forty warriors. After this he
-made war on the Americans until he was killed in 1880. He claimed that
-he had done no wrong, and that he never could trust the Americans again.
-
-“The policy of concentration,” was what the Indian Bureau called its
-scheme to place all the Apaches upon the San Carlos reservation. “A
-policy of concentrated trouble,” Al Sieber said.
-
-And that proved true.
-
-Soon the San Carlos reservation contained about five thousand Indians,
-good and bad; some working, some lazy. There were Yavapais, Tontos,
-Coyotes, Apache-Yumas, Chiricahuas, Pinals, Arivaipas, Sierra Blanca
-(White Mountains), and even a few Hualpais. They had different habits.
-The Indian Bureau seemed to think that one Apache was just like another
-Apache, but General Crook had known better.
-
-Whiskey was being smuggled in or manufactured; white miners and
-ranchers and prospectors were trespassing, and large sections of the
-reservation had been lopped off for other uses; the agents were accused
-of selling the Indians’ supplies outside, instead of distributing them
-properly or storing them; the Indians quarreled among themselves, and
-even some of the White Mountains had revolted.
-
-So in the early morning of April, 1882, Jimmie Dunn, riding telegraph
-line up along the Gila River from Camp Thomas, had plenty to think
-about. Jimmie was a young man, now, with a limp (an honorable limp) but
-with a good hard head.
-
-Camp Thomas had been established just at the southeast corner of the
-San Carlos reservation, or thirty-two miles up the Gila from the agency
-quarters. Jimmie’s business as line-man was to ride between Thomas and
-the second Camp Grant, and to see that the line was in order.
-
-There was still constant trouble at San Carlos. The Apaches there
-had no faith in the Government. The good ones saw little reason in
-remaining good. Their only reward had been San Carlos, and they hated
-San Carlos. The Chiricahuas especially were restive. A long time ago
-Taza had died, while in Washington trying to talk for his people.
-Geronimo was head chief, and Nah-che was his partner in everything.
-
-Parties frequently broke away from the reservation, for Mexico. At this
-very moment Chief Whoa and Nah-che were out again, with a band. They
-had fled to join old Nana, who at almost ninety years was living wild!
-
-Geronimo and two hundred of his Chiricahuas, and Loco and the Warm
-Spring Apaches, were at the San Carlos, but likely enough they would
-run away, too, whenever they took the notion. They despised the Taza
-people as “squaws” and cowards; the other Indians, in turn, despised
-them as trouble-makers.
-
-General Crook was in the north. He had conquered the Sioux and the
-Cheyennes, and was busy keeping them at peace.
-
-General O. B. Willcox, of the Twelfth Infantry, commanded in Arizona.
-The Sixth Cavalry had replaced the Fifth Cavalry. But there were not
-enough soldiers, most of the white interpreters and scouts had been
-discharged, and the Apache police were supposed to maintain order upon
-the reservation.
-
-The military telegraph had connected all the army posts. There was a
-civil telegraph, also――for the railroad had arrived.
-
-The Southern Pacific Railroad crossed the southern part of the
-Territory, about by the old stage route. Through the northern part
-of the Territory the Atlantic & Pacific Railroad was crossing the
-great Mogollon Plateau, where General Crook had broken a trail in the
-campaign of ten years ago.
-
-The telegraph line had puzzled the Apaches very much, as “big
-medicine.” They called it “pesh-bi-yal-ti”――“the talking wire.” But
-they were learning to interfere with it by cutting it, and inserting a
-little piece of rubber. Then the wire quit “talking.”
-
-A sharp eye was required to see such a break, which usually was near
-a pole or tree up which the Indians had shinned. Jimmie had the eye.
-Also, he was not afraid. He was accustomed to the country, and to the
-Apaches.
-
-Sometimes he saw parties of them. If they were running away, they
-were in too much of a hurry to stop. If they were hunting, they were
-friendly. However, the run-aways did not cross hereabouts. They took
-another route, further east, along the New Mexico western border.
-
-As a rule, Jimmie rode with a partner; but to-day his partner was ill.
-Jimmie felt capable of repairing any break by himself, whether the
-Indians had made it, or whether the limb of a tree had fallen. The line
-had to be ridden, anyway.
-
-The military road was very quiet. It stretched on, up hill and down,
-through timber and open parks, with the Gila River on the left, and far
-on the right, or the south, the dark Pinaleno Mountains, beyond which
-lay Camp Grant. Pretty soon the telegraph line would head down there.
-He would ride on until he met another rider, coming from Grant.
-
-The San Carlos reservation was behind, to the northwest, on the other
-side of the Gila; and away in the north, beyond a high ridge, was the
-White Mountain reservation, with old Camp Apache that was now Fort
-Apache.
-
-He was about ten miles out of Camp Thomas, and jogging easily. The only
-moving things that he had sighted were rabbits and squirrels, and once
-or twice a deer. But now when from a rise he looked across the Gila, he
-saw, in the distance to the north, a great cloud of dust.
-
-That froze him. It appeared mighty suspicious. Many people, and horses
-or cattle, would stir up such a dust. In that case, Indians! This was
-not white man’s country.
-
-If they were Indians, they were moving very fast, and striking east,
-like run-aways from San Carlos. Or was it cavalry, riding hard? But if
-it was cavalry, that meant Indians, too.
-
-Well, he’d soon find out. The Gila, running bank full, was some
-distance below; the country beyond, approached by the dust, was open
-and rolling. He had a fine view. So sitting his horse, Jimmie whipped
-off his field-glasses and leveled them. Ash Flats sprang into the
-field; and here surged the brown dust, and under it, into the clear of
-a little swale, streamed a mass of hastily scurrying figures.
-
-Indians, sure!
-
-
-
-
-XIX
-
-JIMMIE SENDS THE ALARM
-
-
-First there were fifteen or twenty mounted warriors, as an advance
-guard. Then there followed about one hundred and fifty other warriors,
-all with rifles, and stripped and painted to fight. Then there trooped
-and jostled a large procession of squaws and children, mostly afoot,
-herding a tremendous bunch of loose horses and mules, and packing camp
-stuff.
-
-There must have been five hundred squaws and children, and six or seven
-thousand animals, not counting dogs! A small guard of warriors were
-riding the rear flanks of the march. It certainly was a big outbreak of
-the San Carlos Chiricahuas, and they were hot-footing for Mexico!
-
-Whew! Where were the police and the soldiers, then? Jimmie swept the
-landscape for sign of them, and saw nothing. He clapped his glasses
-closed. His eyes leaped to the nearest telegraph pole. His duty was
-clear. He ought to send word at once to Camp Thomas.
-
-Just as he was about to swing down, tie his horse, and climb the pole,
-he sighted, with a last glance of his eye, four Indians swimming the
-river below, with their ponies. Either he had been seen, or else they
-were coming to cut the wire. Maybe both.
-
-Already the foremost was urging his pony up out of the water’s edge,
-to the bank on this side. Of course they had seen him, as he sat! But
-he still had a chance to race back, to the fort, and give the alarm.
-No; that would lose an hour, or more. Likely enough the wire from San
-Carlos to the fort had been cut; at the rate that those Chiricahuas
-were traveling, every minute was precious if they were to be headed off.
-
-He ought to climb the pole and tap the wire. If he could not raise
-Thomas in the one direction, he might raise Grant, in the other. But
-he’d have to work fast. Lives were at stake, for no settler could stop
-those bronc’s.
-
-Jimmie resolutely tumbled off his horse, in a jiffy strapped on his
-climbing irons, left his horse, and his rifle in scabbard (a rifle
-would be of no use up there), and ran for the pole. And this was
-a brave act, for he might easily have run, horseback, in another
-direction――back to Camp Thomas, or to hide in the farther timber until
-the Indians had gone after cutting the wire.
-
-At top speed he shinned up the pole, and digging in, rapidly unshipped
-his line-man’s little sending kit, in order to break in on the wire and
-call the Camp Thomas operator. He did not dare to watch the movements
-of those four Indians.
-
-No doubt the four were coming full tilt, up from the river and through
-the brush; but if he tried to watch them he would be nervous and make
-false motions. The thing for him to do was to clamp on to that line,
-and _get there first_. That required swift, sure work, and all his
-attention. So he endeavored not to think of the four Indians.
-
-Never had he felt so high in the air, and so much exposed. Almost any
-other pole would have been better, but none had been as near and
-convenient. He made a splendid mark, like a hawk roosting in a dead
-tree.
-
-“Ping!” A bullet! They were shooting at him! “Pung!” That was the
-report, following. “Whing!” “Pung!” But he must not mind the warning.
-He needed only a minute more. As he worked rapidly his fingers seemed
-all thumbs. He did not dare to take his eyes off them. “Thud-bang!” The
-bullet shook the pole, and the report was so close that the shooter
-could not be far away. He heard shrill yells, somewhere below――――
-
-“Whack-bang!” A heavy hammer fell on the top of his shoulder, and well
-nigh knocked him from his perch. He clung desperately, wrapping himself
-tighter――his shoulder stung and was oddly warm――but it was his left
-shoulder, he was on the wire at last, and was sending with his right
-hand.
-
-“D,” “D,” “D,” he called Camp Thomas.
-
-There was thud of hoofs below, a chorus of angry yells――“Whish-bang!” a
-bullet fanned his cheek――“Ping-bang!” another cut a large sliver from
-the pole close to his neck――“D,” “D,” “D,” he kept calling, even while
-he glanced aside.
-
-The four Indians were into the road and tearing for him, rifles leveled
-upward――he saw smoke, heard the bullets――but the Thomas operator had
-answered.
-
-“I――I D,” “I――I D.”
-
-Now for the ten seconds’ grace!
-
-“Injuns out. Big band――――”
-
-Camp Thomas broke.
-
-“Repeat. Who are you?”
-
-“Too nervous. Steady, boy,” cautioned Jimmie, to himself. He was not an
-expert operator, anyway. But this was a crisis.
-
-He hastily started to repeat. The four Indians were right at the foot
-of the pole, yelling at him.
-
-“Get down, get down!” they ordered, furiously, in Apache. He gazed
-full into their upturned, painted faces――and into the muzzles of their
-rifles; and he grinned sickly and continued to send.
-
-“Injuns out. Big band. Sig., Dunn. Injuns out. Big Band. Sig., Dunn.
-Injuns out. Big band. Sig., Dunn.”
-
-Would Camp Thomas never O. K.? Would those muzzles below never belch
-their balls and rip him and hurl him headlong?
-
-“No tiras (Don’t shoot)!” suddenly yelped one of the voices, from one
-of the painted faces.
-
-Nah-che! And Chato (Flat-nose), too! The muzzles were lowered――the
-scowling Chato’s last of all.
-
-“Come down, chi-kis-n,” ordered Nah-che.
-
-But Jimmie only shook his head, while he worked his key.
-
-“Come down or we shoot you down,” blared Flat-nose; and he drew a
-deadly bead.
-
-But Thomas had broken in at last.
-
-“O. K. Where?” ticked Camp Thomas.
-
-“Ash Flats. Head east. Bronc’s and squaws.”
-
-“O. K. Get off wire,” answered Camp Thomas.
-
-“Bang!” sounded Chato’s rifle, and Jimmie’s little instrument flew
-into fragments. But Jimmie cared not, now. He went sliding painfully
-down; landed right in the midst of the four Indians, staggered――two of
-them were afoot, waiting for him――they sprang at him, and wrenched his
-revolver from its holster. They acted as though they were going to kill
-him, or take him along, when Nah-che interfered.
-
-“No!” he ordered, while Chato scowled. But Nah-che was obeyed, because
-he was a grown warrior and son of Cochise. “What were you doing,
-chi-kis-n?” he demanded.
-
-“I talked with Camp Thomas,” answered Jimmie, defiantly.
-
-“What did you say?”
-
-“I said that the Chiricahua were running away.”
-
-The three other Indians murmured angrily. The two young bucks besides
-Nah-che and Chato Jimmie did not know. He had not seen Nah-che and
-Chato for several years, either. They had grown. Chato was ugly,
-because of his flattened nose, but Nah-che was supple and handsome.
-
-“No matter,” said Nah-che, to his companions. “This is my brother.
-He did right. He is brave. He shall not be harmed. Give him his gun
-and let him alone. We are not afraid of the soldiers.” He addressed
-Jimmie. “Yes, chi-kis-n, we are running away――all the Warm Springs and
-Chiricahua except the Taza band. There are many of us, and we know
-there are not enough soldiers in Arizona to stop us. We can whip the
-Camp Thomas soldiers first, and whip the rest as they come. Geronimo is
-with us, and Loco, and one hundred warriors who belong to Juh and me.”
-
-“Why are you running away, chi-kis-n?” asked Jimmie. “I thought you and
-Juh were already run away. People said you were in Mexico.”
-
-“We were,” replied Nah-che. “We live in Mexico. That is the only place
-for us. Nana is there, too; and Chihuahua. Now Juh and I have come up
-to help Geronimo and Loco get away.” He began to talk hotly. “Why do we
-all run away? That is a foolish question. We will not be moved around
-so, and put in sickly places among Indians who don’t like us. We would
-have stayed at our home in the Dragoon Mountains, and have been happy.
-A few of us drank whiskey sold us by bad white men, and we all were
-blamed. The San Carlos is not a good place. The White Mountains tell
-false stories about us, the agents steal our rations from us and we go
-hungry. The white traders would rather sell things to us, and cheat us.
-So Juh and I ran away. Now there is talk that the white men want all
-the San Carlos country, because of mines, and that the Apaches will be
-taken away, many miles, to a strange land. Geronimo says he has been
-told to come to Camp Thomas, for a talk――and if he goes there, he will
-be put in prison again; maybe killed, like Mangas Coloradas was killed.
-We would rather die on the warpath than die in prison or in a strange
-land. So we all, the Chiricahua and the Warm Springs, except Taza’s
-squaw-people, will live in the Mexican mountains. There we can lead
-our own life. The Mexicans dare not fight us, we have plenty guns and
-plenty food, the American soldiers cannot cross the line, to follow
-us.”
-
-“Don’t you fool yourself,” retorted Jimmie. “Crook will come, and he
-will go anywhere.”
-
-“Cluke is a good man. If he had stayed, maybe there would be peace
-instead of war,” responded Nah-che. “There has been one other good man,
-at San Carlos. He was the soldier-captain Chaffee. Why does the White
-Father at Washington let us be cheated, like children, by dishonest
-agents? Why does he listen to bad tongues, that say we must not stay
-where we were promised we might stay? But good-by, chi-kis-n. Now there
-is war between us. The Chiricahua are never coming back to be cheated
-again. You have been chi-kis-n; but you are American and I am Apache,
-so when we meet in war, look out for yourself. It will be man to man.
-We are no longer boys.”
-
-Nah-che wheeled his pony. With a whoop, away they four tore,
-flourishing their guns.
-
-Jimmie gazed after only for a moment. Then he was aware that all his
-left shoulder and arm were red and paining. The bullet had slashed a
-furrow an inch deep through the muscles of the upper arm, but the blood
-was clotting and he did not pause to tie a bandage on.
-
-He unstrapped his climbing irons, kicked them off as he stooped to pick
-up his revolver, and hobbled for his horse; mounted and raced for Camp
-Thomas.
-
-Camp Thomas had only two reduced companies of the Sixth Cavalry.
-When he got there, the two companies were drawn up in column of twos
-in front of the adjutant’s office, as if ready to start out. Micky
-Free was here, with a party of White Mountain and Tonto scouts. The
-telegraph instrument was clicking rapidly.
-
-“Hello, Cheemie!” intercepted Micky, gaily, in his Spanish. “You been
-fighting, what?”
-
-“Not much,” panted Jimmie, pulling short. “When do you start?”
-
-“Pretty soon, when the talking wire is done. They are telling what you
-said, to the other posts. You did good work, Cheemie. The wire from San
-Carlos is cut, but Tom Horn (he was a white scout and packer at San
-Carlos) brought more news by horse, and Sibi has been here. Now they
-are out, spying on the trail, and we will follow. It has been a big
-outbreak.”
-
-“Were you there, Micky?”
-
-“No; but I heard it, and the agency Indians have signaled, and Tom Horn
-was there. All the Chief Loco Warm Springs and the Geronimo Chiricahua
-have gone. They number seven hundred. The trouble was this. You know
-Stirling?”
-
-Jimmie nodded. Mr. Stirling was chief of the agency police. These were
-not scouts, but Indians appointed by the agent as policemen.
-
-“Some days ago Stirling tried to arrest a Chiricahua who had been
-making whiskey. The Chiricahua ran and Stirling missed him and hit a
-squaw. That turned the Chiricahua bad, although Stirling said he was
-sorry. They have been getting bad anyway, because there is talk that
-all the Indians are to be moved far away, so that the Americans can dig
-coal on the reservation. Last night Juh and Nah-che sent in word that
-they were near, waiting to help Loco and Geronimo. This morning the
-Chiricahua and Warm Springs began to pack up, and Stirling and Navajo
-Bill, a policeman, charged them alone, to break them up. The Chiricahua
-had been waiting for this. They shot Stirling one hundred times at
-once, and a squaw cut off his head and it was kicked about like a ball.
-He was a very brave man, that Stirling. Navajo Bill wasn’t hurt, but
-another policeman was killed, and one Chiricahua. Now the Warm Springs
-and Chiricahua are out――and I think they will keep right on going.”
-
-“Yes,” answered Jimmie soberly. “I met Nah-che. He came while I was
-talking on the wire. He says that all the soldiers in Arizona cannot
-stop them.”
-
-“That is true,” agreed Micky. “They have two hundred fine warriors,
-and better guns than the soldiers’ guns. They nearly all have those
-guns that shoot sixteen times, and lots of ammunition. The soldiers are
-scattered, and before we get together, and the New Mexico soldiers get
-together, Geronimo will be into Mexico. What was Nah-che doing on this
-side the river? The squaws and children cannot cross, with the horses.
-It is too high.”
-
-“I think Nah-che brought a party over to drive me away or kill me. He
-had Chato with him, and two others. But he made them quit shooting at
-me. We are chi-kis-n.”
-
-“That won’t count again,” warned Micky. “So watch out, next time. This
-is war, and long war. Now you’d better get your arm fixed, Cheemie. The
-Loco and Geronimo band will have to keep on, up the river, until they
-can cross. They will strike south, near New Mexico, until they cross
-the border. There are no soldiers, ahead in that country, to stop them;
-and they wouldn’t care if there were. But we’re to meet Sibi and follow
-and fight as well as we can, under the ugly long-nosed man.”
-
-That was Lieutenant George Gatewood, of the Sixth Cavalry, at Thomas.
-He came in a hurry out of the adjutant’s office.
-
-“All ready,” he barked, to the junior lieutenant, his second in
-command, and swung into the saddle.
-
-“’Ten-_shun_! Column――march! Trot!”
-
-The bugle sounded briskly, and away they went, in long column, the
-red and white guidons flapping, Micky and his scouts galloping to the
-advance.
-
-Jimmie proceeded to have his arm bandaged, and to talk with the
-operator. Then he reported at headquarters, but he had little to tell
-that was not already known. He felt, though, that he had done his duty.
-
-While his shoulder was healing, the troops of Arizona and New Mexico
-struck the hostiles several times, down at the border, but did not turn
-them.
-
-
-
-
-XX
-
-THE GRAY FOX RETURNS
-
-
-“Crook is coming back! General Crook is coming back!”
-
-That was the word at Camp Thomas, in this the early summer of 1882, a
-couple of months after the Geronimo outbreak.
-
-The Third Cavalry already had arrived from its northern plains
-campaigns, and the Sixth was being stationed over in New Mexico. But
-the Sixth had done well, and the best news was that which bore the name
-of Crook. He had been ordered from the Department of the Platte to the
-Department of Arizona, again.
-
-“Now we shall see the Chiricahua grow tired,” laughed Micky Free, when
-Jimmie met him. “Sibi is glad; the White Mountains are glad; everybody
-will be glad, except Whoa and Geronimo. Are you going to help fight,
-Cheemie, instead of riding all the time along the talking wire?”
-
-“You bet I am, Micky,” declared Jimmie. “Hope Tom Moore’s coming, too.
-I reckon if my leg won’t let me scout I can join the pack-train.”
-
-General Crook wasted no time. Scarcely had he announced himself at Fort
-Whipple, ere he was bound for San Carlos and Fort Apache, to straighten
-out these affairs first.
-
-Jimmie rode over to the fort with a party from Thomas, to learn the
-latest. The general was there, with Lieutenant Bourke, now a captain.
-Wearing an ancient, smoked and scorched corduroy suit he had arrived on
-the same “Apache,” his mule. He looked rather older than when he had
-left, back in 1875. The campaigning in winter up north had been tough.
-But he acted as energetic as ever.
-
-He held a council with the dissatisfied White Mountains.
-
-“I want to have all that you say here go down on paper,” he addressed.
-“What goes down on paper never lies. A man’s memory may fail him,
-but the paper does not forget. I want to know from you all that has
-happened since I went away, to bring about this trouble between you and
-the white men. I want you to tell the truth without fear, and in few
-words.”
-
-Old Pedro had listened attentively to the general through an
-ear-trumpet, for Pedro had grown quite deaf. He answered.
-
-“When you were here, if you said a thing we knew that it was true. We
-cannot understand why you left us. The people who have come among us
-talk in one way and act in another. And I remember the other officers,
-too, who treated us kindly. I used to be happy; now I am all the time
-thinking and crying, and I say: ‘Where is old Colonel John Green, and
-Randall, and those other good men?’”
-
-Alchisé spoke.
-
-“When you left us, there were no bad Indians out. Everything was peace.
-But I think that all the good men must have been taken from us and
-only bad ones sent in. We did not mind having no rations, for we had
-learned to take care of ourselves. Then one day we were ordered to give
-up our fields and go down to the hot land of San Carlos to live. I have
-tried hard to help the whites, and they have put me in the guard-house.
-Where did you go? Why doesn’t Major Randall come back? Where is my
-friend Randall, the captain with the big moustache that he always
-pulled?”
-
-The general was very patient with all who wished to talk. Then he took
-a pack-train and rode into the depths of the Black Canyon, where a
-number of the Apaches lived because they feared arrest.
-
-The Apaches here, also, claimed that they had been mistreated. They had
-set a spy to watch the agent at San Carlos, and had caught him selling
-their rations. Then they had sent a man to tell the agent that he must
-not do this, and the man had been kept in jail for six months without
-any trial. They said that they had been getting only one cup of flour
-every seven days. One shoulder of a little cow had to last twenty
-persons for a week.
-
-It was another long story, and the general promised that he would help
-them.
-
-“I think there will be peace at Fort Apache and at the San Carlos,”
-Micky asserted, as he and Jimmie rode back after the council was over.
-“And if the Chiricahua will stay in Mexico and kill only Mexicans, you
-and I will have no fun, because the Gray Fox cannot make war in Mexico.”
-
-“Maybe the Chiricahua will stay there.”
-
-“No. After a time the young men will get tired of killing and robbing
-Mexicans, which is easy. They will want to win honor by robbing the
-Americans――and then, we shall see.”
-
-At Camp Thomas Jimmie met the general face to face while crossing the
-parade-ground. He had small hopes that the general would remember him
-when he saluted――but something in the general’s keen, inquiring eye
-made him halt and stand expectantly.
-
-“Well, my man,” blurted the general. “I seem to know your face.”
-
-“Yes, sir. I’m Jimmie Dunn.”
-
-“I remember. You still limp a little, I see. What are you doing now?”
-
-“I’m a telegraph line-man, sir.”
-
-“That’s good. You had a talk with Nah-che, when he was on his way out,
-last spring, didn’t you? Do you think he can be persuaded to come in
-peaceably?”
-
-“He might if he knew you were back, sir. But he said the Chiricahua
-hadn’t been treated well――they were out to stay.”
-
-“The Apaches have grievances. The worst of the outlaws are better than
-the whites who have been robbing them.”
-
-The general was about to stride on, when Jimmie hastily spoke.
-
-“But if you go against the Chiricahua, I’d like to go too, sir.”
-
-“That will be a hard and maybe a long chase,” gravely said the general.
-“Probably into the Mexican mountains, with picked men. You can help by
-sticking to your present business. The telegraph and the railroad are
-very necessary.”
-
-Jimmie, thinking it over afterward, almost decided likewise. His leg
-bothered him, and his shoulder was still tender. Chasing Geronimo
-through the Mexican mountains, with a leader who never rested, required
-nerve and strength both.
-
-The general tried to hold a conference with the Geronimo runaways. From
-the border he sent a party of Apache scouts under Alchisé across, for a
-few miles, but they found no traces of the Chiricahuas.
-
-Two Chiricahua squaws were captured while returning to San Carlos.
-They said that the Geronimo band had a strong hiding-place deep in the
-Sierra Madre Mountains several days’ travel below the border; were
-living off the Mexicans, and knew that the American soldiers could not
-come down there.
-
-General Crook assigned Captain Emmet Crawford of the Third Cavalry (a
-broad-shouldered six-footer) to the military station at San Carlos,
-obtained permission from the Indian Bureau for the White Mountains to
-live upon the high, cooler lands near Fort Apache and to plant crops
-there, and from headquarters at Fort Whipple issued an order that said:
-
- Officers and soldiers serving in this department are reminded
- that one of the fundamental principles of the military
- character is justice to all――Indians as well as white men――and
- that a disregard of this principle is likely to bring about
- hostilities, and cause the death of the very persons they are
- sent here to protect. In all their dealings with the Indians,
- officers must be careful not only to observe the strictest
- fidelity, but to make no promises not in their power to carry
- out; ...
-
-As long as the Chiricahuas stayed out of the United States, there
-was not much more to be done. The Apaches on the reservations seemed
-content again; the border was being patrolled by one hundred and fifty
-Apache scouts, in the hope of catching the trail of any outlaws who
-might venture up; the telegraph was kept in fine working order, and the
-troops at the posts were given constant practice marches.
-
-This fall and winter no word came from Geronimo. But in March (which
-was the year 1883) the expected news broke――and bad news it was.
-
-Jimmie chanced to be in the telegraph office at Thomas when the message
-came. He took it off the wire as fast as the operator did. It was from
-Bowie, in the south.
-
-“Band of hostiles crossed line raiding north through Whetstone
-Mountains. Heading west for New Mexico probably. More.”
-
-“Where’s that adjutant?” barked the operator, tearing off his sheet.
-“Things are hummin’. Gee whizz, isn’t that man ever around when he’s
-needed?”
-
-But the adjutant of course got the message at once.
-
-“More” came thick and fast, from all directions. The Chiricahuas
-numbered only twenty-six warriors. They were under Chato, the
-Flat-nose. They had dodged the patrol, outwitted all the troops and
-volunteers, the telegraph and railroad did not stop them; on a circle
-of eight hundred miles, traveling at seventy-five miles a day they
-swung through Arizona and southwestern New Mexico, stealing fresh
-horses whenever needed, and killing miners and settlers.
-
-“Picked men for the pursuit,” were the orders from the general at
-Whipple. This appeared to leave Jimmie, with his lame leg, out of scout
-service. Well, he might do some good in his regular job, anyway. But
-the last news was the worst news of all.
-
-Near Silver City, southwestern New Mexico, a horrible act was committed
-by the Chato band. They overtook Judge H. C. McComas, driving on the
-main road with his wife and little boy, Charley; they tortured and
-killed the two grown-ups, and carried off Charley, aged six years.
-
-This made soldiers and settlers alike furious. Jimmie could stand the
-strain no longer. He had been captured, once, himself. He threw aside
-his line-man position and rode over to Fort Apache, to find Frank
-Monach, pack-master.
-
-“I want a job, Frank.”
-
-“Thought you had one.”
-
-“I had, but I’ve left. I’m too lame for scout work; I can pack, though.
-How about it?”
-
-“Well,” drawled Frank, sizing him up, “the old man’s partic’lar. The
-pack outfits have got to be the kind that’ll keep agoin’. We’re due to
-follow those bronc’s till we get that boy back, even if we travel clear
-to the City of Mexico.”
-
-“I know. That’s why I’m here,” retorted Jimmie. “I can pack and sit a
-mule.”
-
-“All right. Old Jack Long’s watchin’ you, I reckon. He took a lot o’
-stock in you. You’re hired. So get your war-bag an’ fall in.”
-
-
-
-
-XXI
-
-TO THE STRONGHOLD OF GERONIMO
-
-
-“Fight to a finish, or a surrender, b’gosh,” announced Frank, to-day.
-“Chiricahuas can take their choice. But the old man’s goin’ after ’em.
-We’ll have no murderin’ an’ boy-stealin’ in this department. Everybody,
-man an’ mule, is ordered to meet him at Willcox, pronto (quick). So
-this outfit’ll hit the high places in the mornin’.”
-
-Jimmie and the other packers at San Carlos, where they had been waiting
-prepared, gave a cheer. It was now the first week in April. The killing
-of Judge McComas and Mrs. McComas, and the stealing of little Charley,
-had occurred on March 28. Chato had escaped into Mexico again, having
-lost only one warrior, except――――
-
-“Did you hear tell thar’s a Chiricahua buck been fetched in who claims
-he broke from the Chato bunch ’cause he wants peace?” queried Long Jim
-Cook.
-
-“No. Where is he?”
-
-“In the guard-house. They got him locked up till the old man talks with
-him. His name is ‘Peaches,’ or somethin’ like that.”
-
-“Mebbe he brings some sort o’ word from Geronimo. You know the old man
-sent one of those squaws that he captured, back down, last fall, to
-tell the Geronimo band they’d better change their minds.”
-
-Jimmie asked Micky Free.
-
-“He is not a Chiricahua,” said Micky. “He is a White Mountain, but he
-married two Chiricahua squaws, so he had to live with the Chiricahua.
-His name is Pa-na-yo-tish-n (Coyote-saw-him). He does not like the
-Chiricahua, now. They are living in the mountains five days’ travel
-from Arizona. They have plenty wood, plenty water, plenty grass,
-plenty meat, and kill plenty Mexican soldiers with rocks because they
-must save cartridges. That is why Chato made his raid up north: to
-get cartridges. Pa-na-yo-tish-n ran away. He says he does not want to
-fight, and there are others who do not want to fight, but they are
-afraid of Geronimo. He knows the trail to Geronimo, and will lead the
-general straight. Then maybe we talk, maybe we fight. It will be a good
-fight, Cheemie. Geronimo has seventy men, and fifty big boys who can
-fight like men. Yes, if they have powder, and do not get starved, and
-the talk is bad, we will see much fun. I think that even the packers
-will better watch out sharp.”
-
-Micky Free always had hopes. He was a regular fire-eater.
-
-The cavalry from Fort Apache, and the pack-train, and about one hundred
-Apache scouts from the San Carlos and the White Mountain reservations
-marched across country to Willcox. Pa-na-yo-tish-n (whom the soldiers
-and packers called “Peaches”) was taken along, as a prisoner, in
-handcuffs.
-
-Willcox, the nearest station on the Southern Pacific Railroad, just
-west of Railroad Pass over the Chiricahua Mountains, was overflowing.
-
-The Camp Thomas troops had arrived; so had those from Fort Bowie,
-to the southeast. By train other troops, and horses and mules, and
-ammunition and supplies of all kinds were pouring in. The general and
-his staff were here. So were Charley Hopkins and “Short Jim” Cook and
-others of the old-time packers; and Archie MacIntosh and Al Sieber, the
-chief scouts; and Antonio Besias the interpreter; yes, and Maria Jilda.
-
-It was a great reunion of Crook men.
-
-Reports said that the United States and Mexico had arranged to
-pursue Indians into each other’s territory, but the United States
-troops were not to cross the boundary before May 1. In order to make
-certain that this was understood, the general traveled by the Mexican
-Central Railroad into the northern Mexican States and talked with the
-commanding officers there.
-
-When he returned he talked again with “Peaches.” “Peaches” stuck to his
-story, and when the general directed that the irons be removed from
-him, “Peaches” said that he was willing to wear them until it was shown
-that he had spoken only the truth. But the irons were taken off anyway,
-because Alchisé and other scouts engaged to watch him very closely.
-
-On April 22 there was a parade, and inspection of the whole outfit.
-That night the Apache scouts held a big war-dance which lasted until
-morning. They and Micky (who had danced as hard as anybody) were still
-hot and excited when the column was formed for the advance.
-
-The scouts, and pack-mules, and a line of rumbling army wagons, and
-portions of seven companies of the Third and Sixth Cavalry, marched
-from the railroad to the boundary at San Bernardino Springs in
-southeastern Arizona, one hundred miles by the wagon trail.
-
-Stalwart Captain Emmet Crawford brought in one hundred more Apache
-scouts from San Carlos. There were war-dances and medicine ceremonies
-each night. Alchisé and others told the general that their medicine
-was showing up very strong; the Chiricahuas would surely be found and
-killed or captured.
-
-“That is so,” asserted Micky, who believed in the medicine.
-
-Six of the cavalry troops were to be left here at the border, to guard
-it and the wagons with the extra supplies.
-
-“Adios, amigo,” bade Maria, to Jimmie. “You will have good luck. The
-medicine says so, and Pa-na-yo-tish-n will lead Crook straight. But it
-will be a long march, maybe two hundred miles.”
-
-“Aren’t you going, Maria?”
-
-“No. I stay, because I know all this country.”
-
-It did not look like a very great force, after all, which at sunrise
-of May 1, this 1883, crossed the border to find Geronimo. There were
-more Indians than soldiers――one hundred and ninety-three of them, White
-Mountains, Tontos, Yavapais, Apache-Yumas and some of the Taza friendly
-Chiricahuas.
-
-Captain Crawford, of the Third Cavalry, commanded them. He had as his
-assistants Lieutenant George Gatewood and Lieutenant W. W. Forsythe, of
-the Sixth, and Lieutenant James O. Mackay, of the Third.
-
-The forty cavalrymen of the Sixth (less than half a company) were
-commanded by Major Adna R. Chaffee and Lieutenant Frank West.
-
-The general’s staff was Captain Bourke, and Lieutenant G. J. Febiger
-of the Engineers. Doctor Andrews was surgeon. Archie MacIntosh and Al
-Sieber were chief scouts. Micky, and old Severiano the Mexican who had
-been brought up by the Apaches, and Packer Sam Bowman were interpreters.
-
-The pack-masters of the five pack-trains were Frank Monach, Charley
-Hopkins, of Tucson, “Long Jim” Cook and “Short Jim” Cook, and George
-Stanfield.
-
-“One blanket and forty rounds of ammunition to each man,” were the
-orders. The mules carried additional ammunition and sixty days’ rations
-of hard-tack, coffee and bacon. Everybody was well armed with the
-Springfield forty-fives, and Colt’s revolvers; even the packers had
-carbines and pistols.
-
-Plainly enough, the general was outward bound on business!
-
-“U-ga-shé (U-gah-shay)!” barked Lieutenant Gatewood, at the scouts.
-And away they went, afoot, in their red head-bands and flapping shirts
-and leggin-moccasins, across the boundary, with Alchisé and “Peaches”
-in the lead, as guides. They all spread out in a broad front, to cover
-the country. Their officers rode just behind, with Archie MacIntosh and
-Sieber the Iron Man.
-
-The general and aides and cavalry escort followed. Then there ambled
-the long files of pack-trains――Frank Monach’s first. A guard of the
-cavalry closed the rear.
-
-The “good-by” and “good luck” cheers of the border guard died in
-the distance. The march to “get” Geronimo, Nah-che and the other
-Chiricahuas had actually begun.
-
-At first about twenty-five miles a day were covered. But the country
-grew rougher and hotter. Only two or three of the Mexican villages were
-inhabited; many others were deserted and in ruins, on account of the
-Chiricahuas. The brush along the streams was thick, the flowers were
-large and bright. High, bluish mountains loomed on right and left and
-before.
-
-It was fine Apache country, all right――and “Peaches” was leading
-straight into it, for within a few days fresh moccasin tracks might be
-seen frequently.
-
-“To-morrow for the Sierra Madre,” said Frank Monach, in camp on the
-night of May 7. “Then we’ll be hangin’ on by our toe-nails. What I’d
-like to know is, whether Geronimo’ll wait for us or whether he’ll keep
-a-goin’ himself.”
-
-The huge jumble of the Sierra Madre range frowned directly before.
-It certainly appeared mighty rough. No white men had yet ventured to
-penetrate far into the Sierra Madre; but the general was determined, as
-Al Sieber said, “to open it up.”
-
-He was so anxious, that this night the march had continued until after
-eleven o’clock, and camp had been made without fires, in the bottom of
-a deep canyon. So dark it was that even the mules lost their places.
-
-The climb of the first flanks of the Sierra Madre was begun at
-daylight. The trail that led out of the canyon was littered with
-plunder――torn letters, Mexican dresses, scattered flour, and beef
-carcasses. It was so steep that several of the mules fell off, and
-landed one hundred feet below, in a canyon. But they were not hurt.
-
-The Chiricahua sign became more plentiful. “Peaches” said that
-Geronimo’s real stronghold was still several days’ march before,
-but that this was as far as the Mexican soldiers ever had got. The
-Chiricahuas had ambushed them and driven them back.
-
-To-night everybody except the scouts was very tired. Jimmie ached from
-head to foot; the job of forcing the mules on was the hardest work of
-all.
-
-“Come, Cheemie,” invited Micky. “You come with me and you will see big
-medicine made.”
-
-Jimmie groaned, and hobbled after Micky Free.
-
-What with chasing deer and turkeys and rabbits, to eat, and hunting the
-Chiricahuas, the scouts had been having a great time. They had never
-been too tired to dance and yarn; to-night their medicine-men were to
-find the Chiricahuas for them.
-
-The officers messed with the packers and scouts; it was all one family.
-The general and Captain Bourke had joined the Monach mess, where
-Alchisé and other principal scouts ate, too. So the general and the
-captain were admitted to the circle of the medicine-making.
-
-The chief medicine-man lay in a trance while the lesser medicine-men
-squatted around him and sang. Soon he thumped his chest and spoke,
-telling his dream.
-
-“Keet,” the Apache boy who carried the medicine things and was in
-training for a medicine-man, himself, translated for the general and
-Captain Bourke.
-
-“What did he say?” asked the captain. “The general wishes to know.”
-
-“He say: ‘Me can’t see ’um Chilicahua yet. Bimeby me see ’um. Me ketch
-’um, me kill ’um. Me no ketch ’um, me no kill ’um. Chilicahua see me,
-me no get ’um. No see me, me ketch ’um. Me see ’um little bit now.
-Mebbe so six day me ketch ’um; mebbe so two day. Tomollow me send
-twenty-fibe men to hunt ’um tlail. Mebbe so tomollow see ’um more. Me
-ketch ’um hoss, me ketch ’um mool, me ketch ’um cow. Ketch Chilicahua
-pretty soon, bimeby. Kill ’um heap, an’ ketch ’um squaw.’”
-
-That impressed the scouts. They were sure of success.
-
-The signs grew fresher and fresher, and the trail worse and worse.
-But abandoned rancherias were found――and they had not been abandoned
-long, either! The eager scouts fairly ran hither-thither, searching
-and signaling; the cavalry-men toiled afoot, leading their horses; and
-the pack-mules, urged on by Jimmie and the other packers, coughed and
-slipped and sweat, and six of them rolled a thousand feet and were
-dashed to pieces.
-
-But the general showed no token of quitting. He was after Geronimo.
-
-Now it was the night of May 10. In the morning Captain Crawford and his
-scouts were going ahead, by themselves. Alchisé had insisted that this
-was the only way to do. He complained to the general that the soldiers
-and the pack-trains were too slow, to catch the Chiricahuas.
-
-Frank Monach came into camp from a reconnoiter with a few of the
-soldiers and the huskier packers. Jimmie could not go. His leg was
-rather bad.
-
-“B’gosh, we found where a passel o’ Mexicans had been wiped out with
-rocks an’ arrows an’ lances,” announced Frank. “Over yonder in the
-foothills. They must have come in from the other side.”
-
-This night the scouts were very busy, making medicine and mending
-moccasins and preparing meat and bread.
-
-“Medicine man say ‘Kill ’um heap Chilicahua, three day from tomollow,’”
-declared young “Keet,” proud of his English words.
-
-Early in the morning one hundred and fifty of the scouts, with Captain
-Crawford and Lieutenant Gatewood and Lieutenant Mackay, Archie
-MacIntosh, Al Sieber, and Micky and Severiano and Sam Bowman, hastened
-ahead.
-
-They were to fight and to surround, and try to hold the Chiricahuas
-until the soldiers arrived. The dismounted cavalry and the pack-trains
-followed at best speed, again into the heart of the high country.
-
-
-
-
-XXII
-
-WAR OR PEACE?
-
-
-During the next few days Captain Crawford sent back several notes, to
-say that by the signs he was likely to strike the Chiricahuas at any
-moment. The pursuit was closing in. Maybe the medicine-men were right.
-They had prophesied “Three days from to-morrow,” which would be May 14.
-
-But May 14 passed without especial event. Then, at one o’clock noon of
-May 15, in a little box canyon there was sudden excitement among the
-cavalry ahead of the Monach pack-train. Jimmie, first in line at one
-side behind the “bell,” saw the Indian runner dart down the slope, into
-the trail, and hand a note to the general.
-
-The general read it. Lieutenant Febiger hastened back to Major Chaffee,
-and instantly the trumpet pealed “Mount!” Into their saddles vaulted
-the troopers. Down to the pack-trains galloped Lieutenant West.
-
-“Close up your outfits!” he shouted. “Be prepared for action.
-Crawford’s scouts have struck the hostiles.”
-
-“Hooray!” That was good news. Afterwards it was learned that the
-foremost scouts had discovered some Chiricahuas in a canyon, had fired
-upon two men and a woman, and had frightened the rest away. The runner
-had brought the note six miles across the mountains in less than an
-hour.
-
-“Listen to that!” yelped Martin, the cook, from the “bell.”
-
-Distant rifle-shots sounded faintly. It was a battle! Captain
-Crawford’s scouts and the Chiricahuas were fighting!
-
-The reports welled faster. Every ear was keen set. Major Chaffee’s
-cavalry had quickened pace, each trooper erect in his saddle; the
-pack-mules were being forced more compactly, ready for corralling
-should the cavalry leave; the general, in the advance with his aides,
-clearly was impatient for the country to open out and the battle-field
-be sighted.
-
-“Bet they got away, dog-gone it!” yelled back Cook Martin. For
-presently the firing dwindled to spatters, and ceased. Shucks!
-
-“Anyhow, the old man’ll keep agoin’,” voiced the packer behind Jimmie.
-“There’s a nice moon for huntin’ Injuns, an’ we can live on what those
-bronc’s are throwin’ away!”
-
-So it was plod, plod, up and down, and down and up. The troopers
-dismounted, to lead their horses.
-
-Toward dusk a great smoke was to be seen several miles away, on a high
-mountain-side. The pack-train guessed that a Chiricahua rancheria was
-being cleaned up.
-
-The horizon over there flared into red, and while supper was being
-eaten, in camp under a glorious full moon, here came Captain Crawford
-and his scouts at last, both afoot and ahorse. They brought also
-forty-seven horses loaded with plunder, and five prisoners――two boys,
-two girls, and a woman.
-
-Alchisé acted rather disgusted, but Micky Free was joyful.
-
-“Hello, Cheemie,” he greeted, as he and others of the scouts squatted
-near the camp-fires, to eat again. “We had good fun. It was Chato’s and
-Bonito’s rancherias. Alchisé and Sibi are mad because we shot too soon,
-and the Chiricahua ran off. We killed nine and captured those five. We
-didn’t catch any more. The country was very rough, and they hid. But we
-set the rancherias on fire. There were thirty houses. And to-morrow we
-get more Chiricahua.”
-
-“Wasn’t the little white boy there, Micky?”
-
-“Yes, he was there, the squaw says. His name Carlos (Charles); six
-years old. He was with some old squaws and they ran off with him. But
-she says she can find them in two days. Loco and Chihuahua want to come
-back to the reservation; maybe Geronimo and Chato and Nah-che; Whoa
-still thinks bad.”
-
-“Where is Geronimo?” asked Frank Monach, in Spanish.
-
-“Nearly all the Chiricahua men are down in the south, hunting Mexicans.
-They will be surprised when they know the Cluke men have found where
-they live, and that Pa-na-yo-tish-n had led us so straight. We now are
-inside and they are outside. Inju!”
-
-Everybody was much disappointed that little Charley McComas had
-disappeared. If some of the younger scouts had not shot first without
-orders the rancherias might have been surrounded and Charley rescued.
-
-However, the captured squaw seemed to be certain that she could find
-the older squaws who had him. Early in the morning she was sent away,
-with one of the boy prisoners and two days’ rations. She promised she
-would tell the Chiricahuas it was no use to fight.
-
-This was a cold, rainy day, which made the waiting disagreeable.
-At night ice formed. In the morning a smoke signal was seen. The
-general ordered that it be answered. “Peaches” guided to a better
-camping-place, where there were grass and running water.
-
-Another smoke signal was sent up, but only a few squaws and children
-came in. The squaws said that some other squaws had Charley McComas.
-One of the women was the sister of Chief Chihuahua (or Bonito). She
-stated that all the Chihuahua band would surrender as soon as her
-brother could get them together.
-
-“The idee of the gen’ral is, not to do any more fightin’, if he can
-help it, till that white kid is fetched along,” explained Martin, the
-cook for the Monach pack-train and officers’ mess. “That’s what Cap’n
-Bourke says. You see, the leetle fellow’s with the Chihuahua band.”
-
-The next day Chihuahua (Bonito) himself came boldly in, to say that he
-would surrender his people as soon as he could get word to them all.
-They were tired of fighting and hiding.
-
-“That is good,” answered the general. “I have soldiers and scouts
-enough to fight the Chiricahuas as long as they wish to fight. Those I
-do not kill or capture I will drive into the Mexican soldiers who are
-coming up from the south.”
-
-“I speak only for my own band,” answered Chihuahua. “They will make
-peace, but I do not know what Geronimo and Whoa will do. If you will
-let me take two of my young men and go out again, I can hurry my people
-in faster.”
-
-“They must bring the white boy.”
-
-“I will tell them so,” said Chihuahua.
-
-Chihuahua did good work, for the Chiricahuas kept gathering until there
-were one hundred and twenty-one in camp. But they had not brought
-Charley McComas, and none of the Geronimo men had turned up.
-
-Then, at eight o’clock in the morning, a tremendous outburst of shouts
-and screeches sounded from some high cliffs above the camp. More
-Apaches were jumping about among the rocks there, as if much astonished.
-
-“Geronimo!” exclaimed Micky, running.
-
-The camp sprang to arms.
-
-“What is the matter?” were yelling the Chiricahuas above, to the
-Chiricahuas below.
-
-“The white war-captain has us. We fight no more,” called the
-Chiricahuas who had surrendered. “It is no use. Our own people fight
-against us.”
-
-Two old squaws clambered half-way down.
-
-“Ask the white war-captain if we will be hurt?” they screamed.
-
-The general sent out Micky and Scout To-klani (Plenty Water) and one of
-the Chihuahua Chiricahuas. To-klani’s sisters belonged to the Chihuahua
-band, and the Chiricahuas all knew him.
-
-“The white war-captain says that he does not care whether you surrender
-or not,” announced To-klani. “Chihuahua has surrendered. We are only
-waiting till the rest of his people and the little white boy come in.
-If you come you will not be harmed, but if you do not come you will be
-killed.”
-
-This set the Chiricahuas on the cliff to thinking. Evidently now that
-they had found their best camping-place occupied, and so many of the
-other Chiricahuas surrendered, they did not know quite what to do.
-As Frank Monach remarked: “That’s a heap joke. Expect we look mighty
-comfortable, at our little love-feast.”
-
-Within about an hour, the Apaches came down. It was Geronimo, all
-right――he, and Nah-che, and Chato, and thirty-three warriors. They all
-carried the latest model repeating rifles, and the best nickle-plated
-revolvers, and they stared about very uneasily.
-
-They began to ask questions of the scouts; Nah-che sighted Jimmie, and
-sidled over to him.
-
-“Chi-kis-n,” he said.
-
-“Chi-kis-n,” replied Jimmie.
-
-“The last time I saw you I talked straight,” proceeded Nah-che. “Now I
-ask you to talk straight, for we are men. I want to know how you came
-in here, with so many soldiers and Apaches and mules, while we were out
-hunting the Mexicans. What does Cluke intend to do?”
-
-“We came in easily, because the White Mountain who was one of Chato’s
-men showed us the road. But the Gray Fox would have brought us anyway.
-The American soldiers can hunt Apaches in Mexico, and the Mexican
-soldiers can hunt Apaches in the United States. That is arranged.
-If Geronimo will not surrender, let him try to fight. The other
-Chiricahuas are going back to the reservation. Geronimo will not last
-long. His own people are against him, and he cannot hide any more in
-Mexico.”
-
-“That sounds bad,” uttered Nah-che; and he walked away very downcast.
-
-The general was saying the same thing, and other things, to Geronimo.
-
-“You should have had more sense than to leave because of a few
-troubles,” he scolded severely. “There is always some trouble in a big
-camp of Indians. I want to know what those troubles were, so that I may
-correct them. I shall not talk long with you; you must make up your
-mind for peace or war. You can see for yourself that I am not afraid of
-you. I have come in here, where you thought I could not come, and I am
-not even taking your arms from you. You are free to stay or go. If you
-decide to stay and march with the other Chiricahua to the San Carlos,
-you will not be harmed.
-
-“You have done things for which you ought to be arrested; but if you
-will promise to behave yourself and work, I will see to it that you are
-placed wherever you choose, on the reservation. I will make soldiers
-of your own men, to keep peace in your camp. The ugly long-nosed man
-(who was Lieutenant Gatewood) shall select them, and he will be your
-officer. He will see to it that you get whatever you are entitled to
-get.
-
-“But if you do not go back with me, then it will be war. I will cover
-all this country with soldiers and scouts, and the Mexicans and the
-Americans and the scouts will hunt you down without stopping. Now I
-have spoken. I ask you to leave me and to think this over, and talk
-with your men. Then you must tell me what you have decided, for I do
-not want there to be any misunderstanding.”
-
-The council broke up. Geronimo appeared rather downcast, too. The rest
-of the day he and his people kept by themselves. Even Nah-che did not
-come over again. It was an anxious period, for the Geronimo band were
-able to put up a hard fight still, and the camp was full of Chiricahuas.
-
-“What do you think Geronimo will do, Micky?” asked Jimmie.
-
-“He is a smart man, and likes to talk,” answered Micky. “He is a
-war-captain. But when he sees that he is talking alone, he will quit.
-Cluke’s words stung him, for no chief likes to be talked at like
-that. I looked for a fight right away, and so did Sibi. There was no
-fight――it would have been a good fight, though, with so many Chiricahua
-all around us. Now I think that if Geronimo is still here, in the
-morning, it means peace.”
-
-Everybody――soldiers, scouts and packers――slept with one eye and one ear
-open, this night. But in the morning Geronimo asked the general for
-another talk. It seemed as though the decision had been made.
-
-“I have thought deeply, and have talked with my people,” said Geronimo.
-“We were not well treated at San Carlos, but if you will be good to
-us we will do as you tell us to do. The white man does not see as the
-Apache sees, and yet you have made me feel that I have done wrong. I
-will go with you to the San Carlos. But first I ask you to order me to
-send out for the rest of my people. They are much scattered, and they
-have many ponies and cattle which belong to them; but if they see only
-signals they will think them to be signals set by your scouts, to fool
-them. And if I go away and leave them, then the Mexicans will kill
-them.”
-
-“You must try to find the white boy,” reminded the general.
-
-“I will do exactly as you say,” replied Geronimo.
-
-“Is it peace, chi-kis-n?” inquired Jimmie, of Nah-che.
-
-“It is peace,” answered Nah-che; but he did not smile.
-
-“Hooray!” cheered Long Jim Cook. “That was a tall bluff on the
-gen’ral’s part, I reckon; but it worked. For a while we were in a bad
-box, with the camp runnin’ over with Chiricahua, an’ thirty or forty
-fightin’ bronc’s up on those cliffs, ready to rake us. I wouldn’t trust
-all these scouts, in a pinch, either. They’ve got too many kin, in the
-hostiles.”
-
-“D’you suppose Geronimo has somethin’ up his sleeve, still?” proposed
-Martin the cook, to Frank Monach. “He acts awful agreeable.”
-
-
-
-
-XXIII
-
-GERONIMO PLAYS SMART
-
-
-“To-morrow we go home,” declared Micky Free, to Jimmie and Nah-che.
-They three had been messing together, as old friends.
-
-It was the afternoon of May 23. Two days had passed since Geronimo
-had decided upon peace. He had kept his word, for the Chiricahuas had
-continued to come in――crippled old Nana himself had arrived this very
-morning――all the chiefs and captains were here except Juh, and Juh, or
-Whoa, need not be expected. He and his band of one man and two squaws
-had gone farther south.
-
-Even Ka-e-ten-na (The Looking-glass), who was a young war-captain
-of the Mexican Chiricahuas, part of Whoa’s people, had come in. Now
-rations were being issued by Lieutenant Gatewood to two hundred and
-fifty extra persons, including a dozen Mexicans――forlorn women and
-children whom the Chiricahuas had brought with them. But, alas――――
-
-“Don’t we wait for Charley McComas?” demanded Jimmie.
-
-“The white boy?” And Micky shook his red head. “No. It is too late. He
-is lost. If we wait longer, there will be no food. Too many people eat.”
-
-“Doesn’t Chato know where he is?”
-
-“Chato says not,” answered Nah-che. “He was left with the women. We
-have asked the women. They say that on the first day, when Chato’s
-rancheria was attacked, the little white boy ran into the bushes.
-Nobody has seen him again. He did not come out. Then there were rains
-that washed his trail. It was eight days ago, and we think he is dead.”
-
-The general had questioned the Chiricahuas closely. They all stuck
-to the one story, and seemed to be speaking the truth. Six-year-old
-Charley probably had been so frightened that he had run until exhausted
-and lost in the dense brush. No trace of him was ever discovered.
-
-When the general finally issued the order that camp should be broken in
-the morning, and the start made for San Carlos, Geronimo was smiling
-and ready. He asked only that the first marches be slow, so that the
-Chiricahuas who were still out might catch up. There seemed to be no
-end of those Chiricahuas who were still “out.”
-
-“We expect you to protect us from the Mexican soldiers,” said Geronimo.
-“My old men and women who are coming cannot fight.”
-
-“I will protect you,” promised the general.
-
-This appeared to make Geronimo happy and satisfied.
-
-However, in the morning a sudden delay occurred. The pack-trains were
-loaded and waiting, the cavalry had formed, all the Chiricahuas were
-herded together, the scouts were on the flanks, but the general had
-sent for Geronimo――was talking earnestly to him.
-
-Presently Archie MacIntosh came trotting back, ahorse, as if with an
-eye to seeing that everything was closed up.
-
-“What’s the trouble ahead, Archie?” hailed Frank.
-
-Archie grinned from his sun-burned face, and paused.
-
-“Just been discovered we’re about a hundred bucks shy. They disappeared
-between sunset and sunrise. Looks as though that old rascal of a
-Geronimo had put one over on us.”
-
-“Hi! I said he had somethin’ up his sleeve,” chuckled Long Jim Cook.
-“Where they gone? After plunder, I bet you!”
-
-“Of course,” declared Archie. “And the general’s raising Cain. He says
-to Geronimo: ‘Those bucks of yours are riding south to steal horses and
-cattle from the Mexicans.’ And Geronimo, he just smiles and says: ‘Oh,
-they wouldn’t rob anybody. They’re looking for some of our own horses
-and cattle that we’ve left.’ And the general says: ‘I won’t allow you
-to take any stolen stock across the border. I’d be court-martialed for
-it.’ And Geronimo says: ‘Don’t bother with that. All those Mexicans
-are good for, is to grow horses and cattle for the Apaches. We will
-ride on slowly. But if there is any trouble with the Mexicans, you have
-promised to protect us. Besides, it will be several days before my men
-come to join us.’ So the general, he’s regularly up a stump.”
-
-And that was true. For the time being the wily Geronimo had outwitted
-him. Without doubt most of the able-bodied warriors had ridden away for
-the purpose of making one last raid, and returning to the reservation,
-rich!
-
-The march north was begun. The procession stretched for more than a
-mile――the old men and old women, the wounded, and the little children
-riding upon ponies, the women afoot packing great bundles, and many
-carrying cottonwood boughs to shield their heads from the fierce sun.
-
-Soon the Chiricahuas numbered three hundred, the majority women and old
-men and children. The herd of horses and cattle steadily grew. Near the
-border a dozen warriors caught up, at night; they brought fifty horses.
-But at the camp across the border the warriors, driving herds of stock,
-joined in streams, and the general found that he had three hundred and
-sixty-three Chiricahuas and over one thousand horses and mules and cows
-bearing Mexican brands!
-
-“Every one of those must be turned back into Mexico,” he ordered.
-
-“No,” replied Geronimo. “They belong to us. We bring them, so that we
-can go to farming, as you ask us to do. Who cares what a lot of howling
-Mexicans say?”
-
-Mexicans, lawyers and angry ranchers claiming horses and cows were
-threatening to sue the United States, and General Crook, for helping to
-steal Mexican stock. But many of the brands had been changed over, and
-there were disputes without end, the Mexicans and the Chiricahuas both
-claiming all the cattle.
-
-So the only way out of the muddle was, to drive the stock to San
-Carlos, and sell it, and send the money to the United States treasury.
-Then the Mexicans who could prove their claims should be paid.
-
-This did not please Geronimo.
-
-“The Chiricahua will not understand, and they will not forget,” said
-Maria Jilda, who was at the border camp. “You will chase Geronimo and
-Nah-che again, Jeemie.”
-
-“Well, I shorely hope not,” quoth Frank Monach. “Hope we get a chance
-to rest up, anyhow. The general and Sieber look about tuckered.”
-
-And that was so. After five hundred miles of travel through the
-roughest of mountain country, in heat and cold and dry and wet, even
-General Crook seemed to be worn out.
-
-He kept his word with the Chiricahuas. Geronimo and the other chiefs
-were permitted to choose their own lands, and settled with their
-people, five hundred and twelve in number, south of Fort Apache. It was
-a fine country, too, on the head-waters of Turkey Creek.
-
-The general obtained orders from Washington that all the Chiricahuas
-should be placed under his control. This was thought by Arizona to be
-a very good plan, because the Chiricahuas, like the other Apaches, had
-much faith in “Cluke.”
-
-As the governor said, in an annual message to the legislature: “The
-Indians know General Crook and his methods, and respect both.”
-
-Jimmie stuck at Fort Bowie. He had been appointed pack-master, there,
-and this was quite a job for a boy scarcely twenty-one years old. But
-he felt as though he had grown up in the service; and old Jack Long
-had started him off well.
-
-Captain Crawford was in military charge of the San Carlos reservation.
-Micky Free was over there, too, as a sergeant of the Indian police.
-Lieutenant Gatewood was stationed in the Chiricahua camp at Turkey
-Creek, just as the general had promised. Maria Jilda took up a ranch;
-he said that he was tired of scouting and interpreting. Al Sieber, as
-chief of scouts, divided his time between San Carlos and Fort Apache;
-and where Archie MacIntosh went, Jimmie did not know.
-
-But there was no opportunity for being lonesome at Fort Bowie.
-Pack-train duties kept a fellow hopping, if he tried to have a crack
-outfit――and the only outfits tolerated by the quarter-master’s
-department under General Crook were crack ones. Supplies had to be
-packed in from the railroad, fifteen miles, and there were scoutings
-and practice marches.
-
-For the remainder of 1883 everything seemed to be quiet. Reports stated
-that Geronimo and all the Chiricahuas were farming and doing famously,
-and that the White Mountains, on the other side of Fort Apache, were
-getting rich by selling their barley and hay to the post and to the
-towns.
-
-Then, as the months of 1884 rolled by, troubles appeared on the
-surface. The military and the Indian Bureau employes did not agree. The
-military officers, like Captain Crawford and Lieutenant Gatewood, had
-charge of the Chiricahua prisoners, but the Indian agent had charge of
-the other Indians. The military was obliged to keep order at San Carlos
-and the Fort Apache reservation, both, but the Indian agent had the
-authority to direct the farming. The Chiricahuas had been encouraged by
-General Crook to mingle with the peaceful White Mountains, and all the
-Indians preferred the soldiers to the civilians.
-
-The White Mountains and Chiricahuas complained that they were not
-getting their rightful amount of meat from the agent. The man sent out
-to see, reported that they were getting everything.
-
-Captain Crawford did not agree with the report. The Indian Bureau asked
-that he be removed. He demanded a court-martial. The court-martial
-found that he was honest and correct; and that the Apaches, instead
-of getting one thousand cows, had been assigned only six hundred
-poor ones, with the promise that the rest should be delivered “when
-required.”
-
-But Captain Crawford was powerless in the matter, and the Apaches could
-not understand why there should be two fathers over them.
-
-In May young chief Ka-e-ten-na went “bad.” He was the Mexican Apache
-chief who had surrendered; now he made ready to run away, with a band
-of other restless Chiricahuas, into Mexico again.
-
-General Crook was at West Point, to address the graduating class there.
-However, Ka-e-ten-na was arrested by his own people, and was tried
-the same as a white man, and sentenced to be “shut up till he learned
-sense.” He was sent to the United States military prison on Alcatraz
-Island, in San Francisco Bay, for a year; and this proved a very
-good plan, the same as the cases of Santos and Pedro and old Miguel;
-because after he had seen how powerful the Americans were and what a
-great city they had, he was cured of wishing to live wild.
-
-“He is only one, though,” said Micky Free, this fall, while at Bowie on
-a scouting trip with Tom Horn who was Al Sieber’s right-hand man. “Sibi
-thinks that all the Chiricahua would better be sent to prison. So does
-Tom. They have had a talk with Geronimo, and the only way to do is to
-send all the Chiricahua out of Arizona, quick.”
-
-
-
-
-XXIV
-
-PACK-MASTER JIMMIE MEETS A SURPRISE
-
-
-“Will there be trouble again, Micky?”
-
-“Of course,” laughed Micky scornfully. “Everybody in Arizona knows
-that. You see it yourself, Cheemie. You read the talking papers. The
-talking papers of Mexico say that the Chiricahua from Arizona are
-sneaking down there and stealing cattle. That is true. Even Gatewood is
-getting afraid. He is losing Chiricahua all the time; they go somewhere
-and his counts are always different. I think he will move to Fort
-Apache. It is only twelve miles, and he will be safer.
-
-“The Geronimo Chiricahua see that the San Carlos Apaches and the White
-Mountains are unhappy, with two fathers bossing them. So they trade
-their goods for whiskey and guns. Sibi went to Geronimo and asked him
-what he was planning to do. Geronimo said: ‘It is no use to lie to
-you, Sibi. You read my thoughts. The truth is this: When my men came
-up with Cluke from Mexico they expected to go back every little while,
-to get horses and cows. There is no harm in stealing cattle from those
-Mexicans. Besides, Cluke took away the cattle that we first brought up.
-If my men are not allowed to do that, they would rather live in Mexico
-and act as they please. It is only my talk that holds them, and some
-day they won’t listen.’
-
-“To hear Geronimo pretend peace talk would make a mule laugh,”
-concluded Micky. “Now because Cluke is in Washington we have come down
-here with Tom Horn, and Sibi who has a lame leg is coming in a wagon.
-They will talk with Bourke. Sibi says to capture all the Chiricahua and
-send them far away. That will end war. But I guess it won’t be done.”
-
-Captain Bourke――who had been promoted to major――was at Bowie, waiting
-for the general to return from Washington. The general had gone to
-Washington in the hopes of getting more authority to deal with the
-Apaches.
-
-He did not succeed. All this fall and winter of 1884 the War Department
-and the Interior Department could not agree upon the control of the
-reservations.
-
-The officers at San Carlos staked out an irrigating ditch for the
-Apaches to dig, and the agent declined to permit the digging. The
-Indians believed nobody. Captain Crawford asked to be transferred to
-his regiment, the Third Cavalry, and Captain F. E. Pierce, of the First
-Infantry, was assigned to the military charge of San Carlos. He had
-lost an eye in the Civil War.
-
-In February of 1885 Major-General John Pope, who commanded the Military
-Division of the Pacific, from San Francisco announced, to Washington:
-
- If General Crook’s authority over the Indians at San Carlos be
- curtailed or modified in any way, there are certain to follow
- very serious results, if not a renewal of Indian wars and
- depredations in Arizona.
-
-Consequently, with matters at sixes and sevens, the outlook at Fort
-Bowie was very gloomy.
-
-In the middle of May Jimmie rode down toward the border, to see how
-some of the pack-mules in pasture upon a ranch were getting along.
-There was likely to be need of them soon, for the Indians certainly
-were going to break out.
-
-It was an all-day ride. The pasture was in some bottoms among the
-hills, where there was good water and grass; so he cooked his own
-supper and prepared to sleep out, beneath the stars.
-
-He was just about to turn in, under his blanket, when he heard Chiquito
-snort. Chiquito was his horse, picketed out to graze. The snort might
-mean mountain lion, Mexican leopard, wolf, deer, or――――!
-
-“What is it, Chiquito?”
-
-Chiquito’s head was up, his ears pricked, he was staring into the
-south. He knew a heap, Chiquito did.
-
-Jimmie gazed, too, in the same direction. And there, far to the
-southwest, across the Mexican line, he saw a red gleam on a high hill.
-A signal fire, sure: Indian signal!
-
-Jimmie scrambled to his feet and stood peering intent. Presently the
-gleam was broken――and then repeated. Indians down there were signalling
-for other Indians to answer. That was plain. Even Chiquito had known.
-He was Indian wise.
-
-Jimmie swept the dark horizon again and again, to catch the answer, but
-none appeared. His view from the camp was not very good; but he must
-find out what was going on; accordingly he snatched up his blanket and
-ran through the brush to the crest of the slope above him.
-
-Here he found the right spot, and squatted, with his blanket wrapped
-around him, to wait. He did not dare to build a fire, lest it be seen.
-
-This was a long, cold wait.
-
-The fire in the southwest flared regularly at intervals of about an
-hour. “Answer,” it kept saying. “Answer.” Jimmie eyed the north as well
-as the south――and at midnight the expected happened. The signal in the
-south had been answered, for it suddenly broke into a message.
-
-There were one long flash and several shorter ones. Then, quickly
-following, two flashes, and an interval, and two more.
-
-As anybody ought to know, this spelled: “All right. We will wait two
-days.”
-
-The fire died. That was the end. Jimmie jumped to a conclusion. There
-had been only the one fire in the south; so the answer had come from
-the north, and he had somehow missed it. But the Indians in Mexico had
-signalled to some Indians in Arizona, and were to wait two days!
-
-The Chiricahuas had arranged to run away! Probably they already were
-out, making for Mexico, to join runaways already there. Whew! Great
-Scott!
-
-Well, all that he could do was to wait until daylight, and then make
-for Bowie. And the sooner the better, because he was right in the track
-of runaways.
-
-He went down to his camp, and got a half night’s sleep. In the morning
-he did not wait to gather his mules; he saddled Chiquito at daylight
-and struck out by the shortest way.
-
-The country all seemed peaceful. Who might have foretold that he would
-bump right into the hostiles? But that is precisely what happened. He
-was loping up a shallow draw fringed by rocks and stunted pines――had
-been riding two hours――when as he rounded a shoulder, on a sudden here
-there came at headlong gallop a dozen steers.
-
-He wheeled Chiquito to one side, quick; barely had time to get out of
-their way――didn’t have time to get out of the way of the three young
-bucks chasing them full tilt; and before he could spur Chiquito up the
-flank of the draw, for cover, he was a “goner.”
-
-With a yell and with guns leveled the three bronc’s had charged him; a
-bullet sang by his ear; and he raised his hand for a talk. They arrived
-instantly, reined short, around him. He didn’t know them, and they
-appeared not to know him.
-
-“Chi-kis-n,” he attempted. But they only scowled and talked among
-themselves in Apache.
-
-“Shall we kill him here?”
-
-“That is best.”
-
-“Stick him with your lance.”
-
-“You talk foolish,” retorted Jimmie boldly, in good Apache. “There’s no
-sense in killing me. You’ll only get in trouble by it. Take me to your
-chief.”
-
-“Who are you, that speaks Apache?”
-
-“Never you mind who I am,” retorted Jimmie. “You take me to your chief.
-If he says kill me, all right. But you’d better wait till he does say
-so. You’re only warriors.”
-
-“Where are the rest of your party, white man?”
-
-“I’m alone.”
-
-“What is your business?”
-
-“I herd mules.”
-
-“Where are you going?”
-
-“To Fort Bowie.”
-
-“We ought to kill him. He will tell on us if we let him go,” said one,
-aside.
-
-“No. We’ll have to take him back,” said the oldest boy. “There is
-plenty of time to kill him later.”
-
-They snatched his rifle and revolver from the holsters, and on either
-side and behind jostling him along, drove him up the draw. For the next
-five minutes Jimmie figured that his chances were about one in one
-hundred.
-
-They rounded the turn; and here, in a little hollow, was a group of
-twelve or fifteen men and women kneeling over two cow carcasses, and
-butchering them. Several of the figures looked to see who was coming.
-One of them was Nah-che. Jimmie’s heart beat less rapidly. His chances
-were increased.
-
-However, Nah-che, standing erect, was not at all pleased to see him.
-
-“Why are you in here?” demanded Nah-che.
-
-“I came down from Bowie to look at some mules. Now I was going back to
-Bowie.”
-
-“Did you know that some of us are off the reservation?”
-
-“Yes. I saw a signal fire last night, in Mexico, and I read what it
-said.”
-
-“What did it say?”
-
-“It said that they would wait two days.”
-
-“That is right,” replied Nah-che. “I am sorry we met you, chi-kis-n,
-because now you will be killed.”
-
-“That may be so. But why do you kill me, chi-kis-n?” challenged Jimmie.
-“I have done you no harm.”
-
-“No; we fought against each other, but that was understood. If you will
-promise me not to say a word about us at Fort Bowie I will let you go.”
-
-“You know very well that I would not be a man if I gave any such
-promise,” retorted Jimmie. “I shall not lie to you.”
-
-“If white men never lied to us, then everything would be all right,”
-said Nah-che. “They do lie to us, so you must die. I am sorry, but――――”
-
-“No! No!” One of the squaws had rushed up. She was Nah-da-ste! “This is
-the Boy-who-sleeps. I remember him well. He has slept in my lodge and
-eaten my food. I won’t have him killed. You had better let him go. He
-cannot harm us.”
-
-“No. Fort Bowie is a long way off,” reminded Jimmie. “Besides, if you
-are off the reservation, that is known by this time.”
-
-“Maybe not. We cut the talking wire,” answered Nah-che. “But it is true
-that Fort Bowie is a long way off. Anyway,” he added, “I don’t want to
-kill you, and I cannot argue with women. You can go, chi-kis-n. By the
-time you tell what you know, we shall be far in the other direction. So
-go as fast as you please, but keep going straight, for you might not
-find a chi-kis-n among other Chiricahua.”
-
-“Good,” grunted Jimmie, as his rifle and revolver were passed to him.
-“I ask one word. Tell me why you are leaving the Fort Apache country. I
-wish the truth.”
-
-“Everybody but Cluke is our enemy. We are lied about. Even Chato tell
-lies on us, and gives us a bad name, because he hates Geronimo. If we
-stay we will be locked up. That is what is said. Now go, for I will
-talk no more.”
-
-Jimmie took the hint, and spurred away. He knew better than even to
-look back.
-
-
-
-
-XXV
-
-ON THE JOB WITH CAPTAIN CRAWFORD
-
-
-One hundred and twenty Chiricahuas under Geronimo, Chihuahua, old Nana
-and Nah-che were the ones who had run away. Chato had persuaded the
-three hundred other Chiricahuas to stay. He did not approve of Geronimo
-and Nah-che, or of further war.
-
-The outbreak had occurred on the night of May 17. The Chiricahuas had
-left in parties of twenty or so, to meet again across the border.
-Lieutenant Britton Davis, of the Third Cavalry, had been in charge at
-the reservation. As soon as he had discovered the loss, he had tried
-to telegraph General Crook; but the “talking wires” had been damaged.
-Before the message got through, the Chiricahuas were beyond the
-railroad, with a clear field ahead.
-
-Nah-che had spoken truly when he said to Jimmie that they ran away
-because they feared being locked up. They knew that they were
-watched. And in defiance of the general’s complaints that liquor was
-manufactured upon the reservation, they had obtained a quantity of it
-and drunk it――which of course made them liable to punishment.
-
-The general came over to the reservation too late; but flying columns
-had been sent out at once, from Apache and Thomas and Grant and Bowie.
-Two hundred scouts from all the reservation bands were enlisted for six
-months. Chato himself volunteered.
-
-The columns dispatched were mainly for the purpose of keeping the
-Chiricahuas away from the border until it might be patrolled, and the
-principal band located by either the American or the Mexican troops.
-
-Meanwhile as a crack pack-master Jimmie was decidedly busy at Fort
-Bowie. Bowie had waxed to a bustling supply depot, and was likely to be
-headquarters field base.
-
-Tom Moore, who had been up north in the Department of the Platte, was
-sent for by the general to be chief packer again in the Department of
-Arizona. He brought down from Cheyenne, Wyoming, the best of the Platte
-pack-mules, and was given a great welcome at Bowie by Jimmie and the
-other “old-timers.”
-
-The country was being scoured for good mules. These had to be broken,
-some of them, and distributed. Troops were pouring in, until the
-general had at his disposal forty companies of infantry and the same of
-cavalry.
-
-He was planning surely. He directed that heliograph stations, for
-the purpose of telegraphing by mirrored sun-flashes, be established
-upon hill-tops all along on both sides of the border. Then he went to
-Washington, to get a better agreement with Mexico regarding a joint
-campaign against the Apaches.
-
-There was a brief period of quiet, except for hard work that kept
-Jimmie, as well as others, on the move. The final break came about the
-middle of October.
-
-Jimmie saw the heliostat flashes which spread the news. He was riding
-back to Bowie from a long trip down to a supply camp at the border.
-Chancing to turn his head, when only a little way out from the camp,
-he caught the flash of a message from a station in the south.
-
-The regulation Morse dots and dashes (long and short flashes) were used
-by the stations. Now he paused, to read. The station was at least ten
-miles distant. The air was very clear, and his eyes were good eyes.
-
-What was that? No practice message, this, or ordinary routine. The
-first word――even the first three letters――stiffened him intent.
-
- “H-o-s-t-i-l-e b-a-n-d h-e-a-d-g (heading) n-o-r-t-h f-o-r
- D-r-a-g-o-o-n c-o-u-n-t-r-y. Q-u-i-c-k.” Signed.
-
-Hah! “Wake up, Chiquito! Gwan with you!” The message read like
-business, and stirring business. Evidently the Chiricahuas were getting
-bold. But it did not seem possible that with all these troops, and the
-railroad, and the telegraph, and the helio stations, and the armed and
-watchful settlers, a raid could amount to much.
-
-The helio stations were twenty or twenty-five miles apart. A message
-had been sent from Nacori, in the mountains of northern Mexico, two
-hundred miles to Fort Bowie, in an hour. But so fast moved this band
-of raiders, and so cleverly they chose their trail, that by the time
-Jimmie arrived at Bowie they not only had crossed the line but had
-disappeared somewhere in Arizona!
-
-Already the troops were in motion, trying to close in and head the
-raiders off. It was reported that there were eleven warriors. They
-were not even sighted again, until, suddenly, they struck the White
-Mountain reservation itself――surprised a camp of the White Mountains,
-killed twelve and carried away six women and children.
-
-That, then, had been the object of the raid: to take revenge upon the
-reservation Apaches for sending scouts against the Chiricahuas!
-
-The White Mountains succeeded in killing one raider, during the fight.
-He was Hal-zay, Nah-che’s half-brother. They cut off his head, for a
-trophy. But the ten others completed their bold circuit, and in spite
-of soldiers, settlers, telegraph, heliostat and railroad escaped back
-into Mexico.
-
-“I never would have believed it!” declared Chief Packer Tom Moore, to
-Jimmie at Bowie. “It beats the Dutch! The general’s got every waterhole
-covered, and every pass watched. Anyhow, now there’s a fresh trail, for
-back-tracking on, where they came up by the shortest way. Crawford and
-Cap’n Davis are going right down after the bacon, to stay till they get
-Geronimo or his scalp. I’ve picked you for assistant chief packer with
-one of ’em. Which do you say? Chances are even. You’re the boss.”
-
-“Guess I’ll throw in with Crawford, Tom, if you put it up to me,”
-promptly said Jimmie. Assistant chief packer! Wow!
-
-Captain Crawford and Captain Wirt Davis were both good men, but as Tom
-Horn, acting chief of scouts, had remarked: “Crawford’s my style of
-fighter: the go-get-’em kind with a wolf jaw!”
-
-“You’d better be makin’ up your best trains, then,” counseled Tom,
-to Jimmie. “Three, I reckon. Crawford won’t wait on sore backs or
-sore feet; and he’d rather bust every man and every mule and go on by
-himself, than let Davis outdo him.”
-
-When Captain Crawford arrived with his column at Bowie, from Fort
-Apache, on November 15, Jimmie the assistant chief packer was ready for
-him. The Captain Wirt Davis column was to be composed of cavalry and
-scouts both; but Captain Crawford was taking only scouts.
-
-These were one hundred Chiricahuas, White Mountains and Warm Springs,
-from the Fort Apache reservation; but mainly Chiricahuas, with Chato
-as their chief, and Ka-e-ten-na the traveler included. Micky Free was
-going with the San Carlos scouts and Captain Davis. Captain Crawford
-had selected so many Chiricahuas because his goal was the Sierra Madre
-Range again, and the Chiricahuas knew all that country well.
-
-The scouts formed two companies, under command of First Lieutenant
-Marion P. Maus, of the First Infantry, and a gallant young “shave
-tail,” Second Lieutenant William Ewen Shipp, of the Tenth Cavalry, only
-two years out of West Point.
-
-Another “shave tail,” Second Lieutenant Sam Faison, of the First
-Infantry, who had graduated in the same class with Lieutenant Shipp,
-was the adjutant, quarter-master and commissary, all three. Dr. T. B.
-Davis was the surgeon, Concepcion was the interpreter. Al Sieber, the
-old war-horse, was retained to look after the reservations, but Tom
-Horn was to be chief of scouts and had proved first-class.
-
-Altogether, it was an honor to be in pack service with such an
-expedition, especially as Captain Crawford had volunteered for the
-Sierra Madre trip because it was the more dangerous of the two.
-
-Lieutenant-General Phil Sheridan, commander of the United States Army,
-had come out to Bowie from Washington, to see the columns off. He and
-General Crook inspected the whole outfit, in a parade at the fort.
-
-“Well,” reported Chief of Scouts Horn, after a conference in General
-Crook’s quarters, “this is the idea: The general says we’re to go down
-into Mexico and stay six months, if necessary, and when we strike a
-trail we’re to follow it as long as it shows a single moccasin track or
-pony track. Savvy? When we’ve killed all the bucks who don’t surrender,
-and corralled all the women and children, we can come up home with our
-batch. Then he’ll tell ’em what’ll happen next.”
-
-The march veered west through the Dragoon Mountains, in the hope of
-striking the up trail and following it down. But heavy rains had washed
-out the signs, so the course was continued straight south, for the
-Sierra Madre country again. The Chiricahuas were bound to be there, if
-at any place.
-
-Throughout the month of December the pack-train job was the same tough
-job as that when General Crook led on, in 1883: up hill, down hill,
-sliding, scrambling, falling, barking shins and bruising hoofs and
-feet, amidst terrific canyons, thorny brush, sharp rocks, towering
-cliffs, sun and rain, heat and cold. Tom Horn scouted far ahead with
-a few picked scouts; the captain and his lieutenants and the plucky
-doctor, and old Concepcion, rode keenly with the eager main body;
-and Jimmie, assistant chief packer in place of Tom Moore, hustled his
-toiling pack-trains of fifty mules each, so as to bring them into camp
-on time every evening.
-
-Now it was the first week in January. There was only one pack-train.
-Captain Crawford had ordered that the two others be sent back to the
-border, two hundred miles, with Lieutenant Faison, the commissary and
-quarter-master, for supplies. So Jimmie had detached the trains of
-“Chileno John” and Sam Wisser. He had stayed.
-
-Chief Scout Horn had been gone two weeks; but he kept runners out with
-news from him. He had discovered fresh sign: Indian and cattle trails;
-cattle carcasses; and a recent camp. Ka-e-ten-na and Chato had just
-come in. They brought word for Captain Crawford to push on, and join
-the advance. Tom would be waiting――he knew that the Chiricahuas were
-yonder before him.
-
-The captain sent for Jimmie.
-
-“We must reduce our packs again,” he said, “for a forced march. You
-will pack four of your strongest mules with twelve days’ rations for
-eighty men. The personal outfit will be cut down to one blanket for
-each man. Take the shoes off the mules, to avoid noise. The rest of the
-outfit will be left here, under guard of those men who are unable to
-travel. Which of your packers have you in mind, to go on?”
-
-“Jimmie Dunn, captain,” smiled Jimmie.
-
-“It’s afoot, you know――and probably night marches. Will your leg stand
-it?”
-
-“Will we strike the hostiles, captain?”
-
-“Sure.”
-
-“That’s all my leg needs, to lengthen it out, then,” laughed Jimmie.
-
-He felt that he was as fit as Captain Crawford. The captain looked
-badly. So did the doctor; and old Concepcion the interpreter was about
-done.
-
-The scouts seemed unusually solemn, as if the report by Chato and
-Ka-e-ten-na had much impressed them. They proceeded to make medicine.
-In the light of a small fire old No-wa-ze-ta the medicine man unrolled
-the strip of sacred buckskin that he carried; one by one the scouts
-kneeled before him; he mumbled over them and held the sacred buckskin
-to their lips. After that they held a council.
-
-“Some of the soldiers chiefs at Bowie say maybe your Chiricahua will
-not fight,” said Jimmie, sitting beside Chato, in a blanket, and
-watching. “They say maybe you will pretend to fight, but all the time
-you will be sending word to Geronimo to keep away.”
-
-“That is not true,” declared Chato. “We will fight. We are ready.”
-
-About midnight camp was broken. Through the cold and the darkness Chato
-and Ka-e-ten-na guided. Each officer and man was in moccasins and
-packed his own blanket. Jimmie drove the four mules.
-
-About noon the signs mentioned by Tom Horn were found: a trail, and the
-bodies of butchered cattle. That evening Ka-e-ten-na pointed ahead.
-
-“Espinosa del Diablo,” he said. “Maybe we cross. Very bad country.”
-
-Espinosa del Diablo was Spanish for Devil’s Backbone――a high mass of
-jagged ridges.
-
-Early in the morning two more of Tom Horn’s scouts came in. The light
-of Indian camp-fires had been sighted, reflected in the sky, and Chief
-Scout Horn urged the captain to hurry.
-
-The command made a short march, rested until late afternoon, and
-started on again, to march by night. The country steadily grew worse,
-with deep, dark canyons, steep rocky hills, heavy brush, and a river
-which was constantly being forded. Moccasins were soaked and soon cut
-to bits.
-
-From now on, the camps were not ordered until midnight. Only small
-fires of dry wood were permitted; and under one thin blanket apiece
-nobody was able to sleep, before the sun rose. In fact, it was as
-miserable a time as Jimmie ever had experienced.
-
-More messages arrived from Tom Horn. He had located the Chiricahuas――had
-smelled the mescal steam, had seen the fires. “Hurry!” he bade. He had
-only two scouts with him.
-
-Captain Crawford lengthened the marches, to all night and half-day
-stretches. Some of the Apache scouts, tough as they were, began to
-straggle and limp. Doctor Davis and old Concepcion could barely hobble.
-
-At sunset of January 9, “Dutchy,” another of the Horn scouts, appeared.
-Dutchy said that the Chiricahua camp was but twelve miles away. He
-and Tom and the other scout had reconnoitered it――had witnessed the
-Chiricahuas moving about, herding their horses. They did not suspect
-that any enemies were near.
-
-Tom and the other scout had no blankets, and nothing to eat but a
-little meat――the three of them had had nothing else for ten days; now
-he, Dutchy, was to bring the captain on at once, while the two watched
-the Chiricahua camp.
-
-Hurrah! The news put vim into the command. The end of the marches was
-at hand. Evidently Geronimo had no idea he could be found away in here.
-
-Captain Crawford issued rapid orders.
-
-“Twenty minutes’ halt. No fires. Let the men eat bread and raw bacon.
-Examine arms carefully. Pack-mules to remain here, with the packer,
-Doctor Davis and the interpreter. All available men to be ready for a
-night march, and attack at daylight.”
-
-That was hard luck for Jimmie――but Doctor Davis and Concepcion were
-completely exhausted, and somebody had to stay with the mules, to move
-them on in a jiffy when sent for.
-
-In precisely twenty minutes the command set out, guided by Dutchy. It
-had been the first halt in six hours! As in the twilight they clambered
-up a rocky, narrow trail, Jimmie saw that Lieutenant Maus was helping
-Captain Crawford. Even at that, the captain was obliged to pause, once
-or twice, and lean upon his carbine. He used his carbine as a staff.
-
-“His indomitable will is all that keeps the captain going,” remarked
-Doctor Davis.
-
-“Muy hombre (Much man),” groaned old Concepcion.
-
-The darkness closed in quickly. It was a bitter cold night. Concepcion
-and the mules moaned, the doctor’s teeth chattered, and wrapped in his
-single blanket Jimmie shivered. The brush stirred with the stealthy
-tread of prowling animals, a leopard shrieked, at intervals, and the
-still air stung.
-
-With the first grayness Jimmie was up, to unlimber, and listen. The
-attack upon the Chiricahua camp was due. The moments dragged. The
-doctor and Concepcion seemed to have dropped asleep at last, but they,
-also, shivered in their uneasy slumber. This was the coldest period of
-the night――just at dawn.
-
-
-
-
-XXVI
-
-FOES OR FRIENDS?
-
-
-Gradually the shadows upon the rocks and timber paled; and then,
-suddenly――hark!
-
-Rifle-shots! A spatter――a volley――more and faster, rolling and
-echoing among the crags! The attack had been made. Throwing aside
-their blankets, up sprang the doctor and Concepcion, bewildered and
-staggering, but awake.
-
-“Fighting!” exclaimed the doctor. “They’ve struck the hostiles! Good!”
-
-“Much shooting, much shooting,” stammered old Concepcion.
-
-For fifteen minutes the rapid firing continued. It lessened, to
-dropping, scattered shots, and in about an hour ceased altogether. The
-sun rose.
-
-“What’ll we do now?” demanded the doctor, of Jimmie. “Crawford’s licked
-them, don’t you think?”
-
-“Sounded like it, doctor. But we’d better be watching sharp. Some of
-the bronc’s are liable to come this way.”
-
-There was another period of anxious waiting. They took turns doing
-look-out duty from a high rock. With Concepcion’s aid, Jimmie packed
-the mules. About ten o’clock he could stand the suspense no longer.
-
-“If we moved on we probably would meet the word from the captain, and
-get there all the sooner with the packs, doctor,” he proposed.
-
-“All right. But Concepcion and I can’t move fast.”
-
-They toiled on, following the trail. At noon they met Dutchy.
-
-“The soldier-captain says to come, with mules and medicine-man and
-Concepcion.”
-
-“Did you whip the Chiricahua?” queried Jimmie.
-
-“Yes. We ran them like turkeys. Capture everything――many horses.
-Chiricahua get away, but they send word they will talk to-morrow.”
-
-The doctor, who had been outstepped by Jimmie and the mules, limped
-eagerly in, with poor old Concepcion in his wake.
-
-“What’s the news? Have they got Geronimo?”
-
-“Not yet; but they captured the camp. We’re to come on at once, doctor.”
-
-“How far? Any of our men hurt?”
-
-Jimmie asked Dutchy.
-
-“Ten miles. Only Chiricahua hurt.”
-
-“I’ve got to rest,” panted the doctor. “Go ahead with your mules. We’ll
-follow. Any danger?”
-
-“No danger,” said Dutchy, answering Jimmie. “Chiricahua hide till
-to-morrow.”
-
-Dutchy plainly was in a great hurry to get back――probably to share in
-the plunder. Jimmie left the doctor and Concepcion to come as best they
-could, and again hustled his mules to keep up with Dutchy. But that
-proved impossible. The trail was a corker! How in the world Captain
-Crawford and men ever had traveled it in the darkness was a wonder.
-
-Dutchy disappeared. Only the trail remained, as guide. It dipped
-into canyons, and wound over rocks and steep ridges. Jimmie wheezed
-and puffed and sweat. He was empty from chin to knees, his legs were
-leaden, he ached in every muscle. His mules repeatedly halted, and
-stood heaving and straddled. But he pushed on. The captain had sent for
-the packs, and orders were orders.
-
-The sun set. He had been half a day covering these few miles! A damp
-fog was descending, cloaking the mountains. If he missed the trail――――!
-No! Good! He saw camp-fire light, glowing on the low clouds. At last,
-in the gathering dark, he labored into the camp, to report.
-
-Everybody there was asleep, utterly worn out. Jimmie peered about, and
-wakened Chato and got a small chunk of pony meat from him; unpacked his
-mules and went to sleep himself, in defiance of the cold rain that was
-falling. He had done his stint. The doctor and Concepcion hardly could
-arrive before morning.
-
-It seemed to him that he scarcely had closed his throbbing eyes ere
-he was aroused by excited cries and loud shouts. But he had slept,
-for dawn was here――a wet, foggy dawn. Amidst the fog the scouts were
-yelling shrilly; upon every side men were jumping up, grabbing guns,
-and staring into the mist before.
-
-“Look out! Somebody comes! Many come!” were shouting the scouts.
-
-Tom Horn was up; so was Lieutenant Maus, and Lieutenant Shipp. From
-where he lay exhausted, by his fire, Captain Crawford directed the
-defense.
-
-“Be careful! They may be some of Captain Davis’s men,” he warned.
-“Don’t fire on them till you see who it is.”
-
-“Wait for me to tell you, before you begin shooting,” repeated Tom
-Horn, to the scouts.
-
-He started to climb higher, for a better view. Lieutenant Maus and
-Lieutenant Shipp were running to right and left, to take command of
-their companies. Down below, beyond a little basin, forms were dimly
-visible. They acted like soldiers.
-
-On a sudden there was a resounding crash――the red flare of a volley
-lighted the fog, and a storm of bullets pelted the camp. Jimmie,
-wriggling for cover, leveled his gun, for the scouts were replying.
-
-“Follow me, valientes (braves),” clearly called a voice, in good
-Spanish, from the basin in front; and a line of figures moved swiftly
-forward.
-
-“Wait! Wait! Cease that firing! Stop your scouts, Horn!” shouted
-Captain Crawford, on his feet. “It’s a mistake. Those are Mexicans!”
-
-And so they were.
-
-Captain Crawford leaped upon a rock, to wave a white handkerchief, in
-signal, and call.
-
-“No tiras! Amigos, amigos! Americanos! (Don’t fire! Friends, friends!
-Americans!),” chimed in Lieutenant Maus, who spoke Spanish.
-
-He ran down, into the open. The captain followed him. Under the lifting
-mist they met four of the Mexicans. One was a strapping big officer,
-evidently the commander; another was a slender young lieutenant; the
-two others were officers, also. The line of men behind them had
-halted, and stood uneasily. They looked like a wild lot, too.
-
-Chief of Scouts Horn advanced. Lieutenant Maus talked earnestly with
-the big officer, and interpreted to Captain Crawford. Tom Horn joined
-them, to assist.
-
-On either side of Jimmie the scouts were poking their heads above the
-rocks, and cramming fresh cartridges into their Springfields. The
-carbine breech-locks snapped briskly.
-
-“Mexicanos!” hissed Chato, with avid face. “Kill them all.”
-
-“You and I will kill that big man, first,” answered Ka-e-ten-na.
-
-“See!” bade Dutchy.
-
-A file of other Mexican soldiers were sneaking through a ravine, to
-flank the camp.
-
-Lieutenant Maus had seen; he pointed, and protested to the big officer.
-
-“Watch those Mexicans, Shipp!” shouted the captain.
-
-“No tiras, no tiras!” again appealed Lieutenant Maus, this time to the
-scouts.
-
-“No tiras!” boomed the big officer, as if in much alarm.
-
-“Bang!” From the Mexicans at the rear sounded a single shot. Instantly
-the group in the basin scattered, each man for his own place. The
-Mexican line came on at a trot, firing, loading and firing. Tom Horn
-was left for a moment alone, as the captain and the lieutenant scurried
-for the rocks.
-
-“The captain, is killed!” shrieked Chato, at him. “Come back!” He and
-Ka-e-ten-na fired together, and the big Mexican officer, running, threw
-up his arm, and hurling his rifle far, plunged headlong.
-
-“Give it to ’em,” yelled Tom, running also.
-
-“Whang-g-g-g!” Everybody shot. The slender Mexican lieutenant fell
-riddled. He had been hit thirteen times! The two other Mexicans were
-behind a tree; the scouts’ bullets cut the tree almost down and the
-twain crumpled in a heap. The whole Mexican line melted into sprawled
-figures, some lax and motionless, some squirming for safety.
-
-Lieutenant Maus arrived, panting.
-
-“Head off those fellows on the right,” he rasped, to Lieutenant Shipp.
-Away darted stripling Shipp, to prevent the flank attack.
-
-“Crawford’s dead――shot in the brain!” gasped the lieutenant to Jimmie.
-“He’s yonder, behind a rock. Horn’s shot in the arm. Those are Mexican
-irregulars. What are they up to? But they began it.”
-
-The scouts were still firing rapidly on every moving form. The Mexicans
-were now hard to see.
-
-“Give me orders to send out my men into the trees and rocks and we will
-kill every Mexican!” shouted Chato, to Tom Horn.
-
-“Don’t waste bullets,” cautioned Tom, in Apache. “Be careful. We are
-many miles from more.”
-
-“We will use the Mexicans’ guns,” retorted Chato.
-
-“Give me the dead captain’s gun and belt and I will help you kill
-Mexicans,” spoke a new voice. “Make me your prisoner and tell me to
-fight.”
-
-It was old Nana the Chiricahua chief. He had somehow tottered in, from
-the rear――he was ninety years of age and lame from a broken hip.
-
-“I fight the Americans no more,” he cackled. “But I will fight the
-Mexicans any time. And so will all my people.”
-
-He nodded backward; they looked, and there were many more of the
-Chiricahua hostiles, at a short distance, peering and waiting. Geronimo
-mounted upon a boulder and yelled across.
-
-“If you are fighting the Mexicans, tell us what to do.”
-
-That was an odd situation. If the Chiricahuas had attacked the camp
-from the one side and the Mexicans from the other――――!
-
-The Mexicans called, where they were concealed.
-
-“Send somebody to talk with us.”
-
-Lieutenant Maus and Tom Horn advanced again. Four of the Mexicans met
-them half-way. One of the Mexicans was crying. His brother was the
-slender young lieutenant who had been riddled.
-
-Lieutenant Maus returned and talked with Lieutenant Shipp. The
-Mexicans claimed that they had made a mistake. They had lost all their
-officers――among them Major Corredor, who was the big man, and, they
-declared, “the bravest man that ever lived.” They asked permission to
-remove their dead.
-
-Lieutenant Maus accompanied each body into the Mexican lines. The
-Mexicans seemed to be afraid of the scouts.
-
-Now noon was at hand, but instead of withdrawing, the Mexicans had
-taken a strong position that threatened the camp. Many of them were
-Tarahumari Indians, a Mexican tribe hostile to all Americans and
-Apaches.
-
-The camp was short of food and ammunition. Several of the scouts had
-been wounded, one of them severely. Tom Horn’s arm hung useless.
-Captain Crawford lay underneath a blanket, with a bandanna handkerchief
-spread over his face. A piece of his forehead and a portion of his
-brain had been shot out, but he still breathed.
-
-Jimmie at last reported his arrival to Lieutenant Shipp.
-
-“Yes, I’ve seen you,” answered the lieutenant. “You did well, but,”
-he frankly added, “we’re all in a bad fix. If there’s war between the
-United States and Mexico, our pack-trains are likely to be captured;
-and while we’re fighting our way north, carrying Captain Crawford,
-there’ll be nothing to prevent the scouts from joining the other
-Chiricahuas and all together making off to do as they please. Where’s
-the doctor? Lieutenant Maus has been asking for him.”
-
-Doctor Davis and Concepcion came in, agog to know what had occurred.
-They had heard the firing, again, and had hidden until it had stopped.
-
-The doctor attended to the captain, and reported that he could not live
-long. The other wounded were patched up. The Mexicans needed a doctor,
-and he went over to them, as was his duty.
-
-He was gone some time. On his return he said that the Mexicans had many
-killed and wounded, but that he had been badly treated, with scowls
-and insulting language.
-
-Some of the Geronimo Chiricahuas were in sight, waiting. The officers
-did not think it advisable to hold a council with them until the
-Mexicans had been disposed of. Only old Nana was still tottering about,
-cackling among the scouts. He was harmless.
-
-“Give us the orders, and we will clean the earth of those Mexicans,”
-implored Chato and Ka-e-ten-na, of Tom Horn. “Then we will all have
-plenty of pinole (which was meal) and bullets.”
-
-Another cold, rainy night settled down early. Lieutenant Maus directed
-that camp be broken at daylight, for the march north. Captain Crawford
-should be moved at once, and the pack-train that had been left must be
-protected. After that, the Chiricahuas who did not surrender would be
-hunted again.
-
-In the morning, while a litter of reeds from the river was being made,
-for carrying the captain, old Concepcion, who had been rounding up some
-ponies, called that the Mexicans had him and demanded a talk with the
-commanding officer.
-
-Lieutenant Maus again met a squad. They led him aside, behind some
-rocks, as if to get shelter from the rain――and presently a Mexican
-brought a note from him. The note stated that he, too, was a prisoner,
-until he could show papers to prove that he had permission to “invade”
-Mexico. The Mexicans insisted also upon a supply of food, and mules for
-their wounded.
-
-Lieutenant Shipp and Chief Scout Horn conferred together. The Mexican
-messenger was told to get four or five men and return for the mules
-and rations. Lieutenant Shipp slipped around with his company of
-scouts, to a position where he might pour a deadly fire into the
-Mexican lines. When the five Mexicans returned to the camp, for the
-mules and rations, they were suddenly ringed about with carbine muzzles.
-
-“Now,” spoke Chief Scout Horn, “you call to your comrades. Tell them
-that if our lieutenant is not released immediately, you will all be
-killed!”
-
-“Hi!” cackled old Nana. “That is good. Yes, you will be killed. But we
-will not kill you quick. We will shoot you in many places, first.”
-
-Carbine hammers clicked. Young Lieutenant Shipp’s scouts were crouched
-and aiming, ready. All the scouts were yelling, while the five
-Mexicans, calling piteously, pleaded that the lieutenant be released.
-
-That, as Tom Horn said, “ended the row.” Here came the lieutenant,
-angry but safe. The five prisoners were allowed to scuttle back.
-
-“They’re an ugly lot,” announced the lieutenant. “They have over thirty
-dead and a dozen wounded. Concepcion is still held. I’ve agreed to let
-them have six mules in exchange, so they can pull out.”
-
-The mules were Mexican mules, but the lieutenant required a receipt for
-them, and the Mexican government paid the value of them to the United
-States.
-
-The Mexicans finally withdrew. Scouts were sent out, on their trail, to
-watch them to a safe distance. The next morning, January 13, camp was
-broken.
-
-Captain Crawford was living, but unconscious. Four of the scouts
-carried him in the litter. The trail was too rough and narrow for
-any other method. The Geronimo Chiricahuas had disappeared, but they
-stayed near. This evening Geronimo sent an old squaw into the new camp.
-He requested the talk that had been agreed upon for the day when the
-Mexicans had interrupted.
-
-In the morning Lieutenant Maus took Tom Horn, Ka-e-ten-na, Dutchy, and
-two or three other scouts, and, all unarmed, met Geronimo in council.
-
-“Why did you come down in here, where I thought white men could not
-come?” demanded Geronimo, direct.
-
-“I came down to capture or destroy you and your band,” answered the
-weary Lieutenant Maus, just as direct.
-
-“I see you speak the truth,” replied Geronimo. He shook hands, sent a
-long talk, of various complaints, to “Cluke,” and engaged to meet the
-general at the border when the March moon was full.
-
-“Do you think he will do it, Chato?” queried Jimmie.
-
-“Yes. Ka-e-ten-na has told him what a big people the Americans are.
-Besides, Geronimo is sending in old Nana, and some women. Chihuahua
-wants to come in. Juh has been killed by the Mexicans. Pretty soon
-Geronimo will have no one left.”
-
-Nana arrived, again, and Geronimo’s wife, and one of Nah-che’s wives,
-and another Chiricahua, and several children. Lieutenant Maus divided
-his few rations with the Geronimo band, and proceeded. Matters looked
-better.
-
-But that was a long, sorrowful march, carrying Captain Crawford through
-the three hundred miles of mountains and rain. He lived, unconscious,
-for five days――he had an “indomitable will,” as had said Doctor Davis.
-Without having spoken a word he died on January 17. Of course there was
-no thought of leaving him behind, in the wilds, so his body was still
-carried on, in the litter.
-
-He was buried at the little Mexican town of Nacori, near the border,
-until he might be reburied in the United States. The mayor of the town
-promised to have the grave guarded.
-
-The news of the expedition was telegraphed by helio to Bowie. Scout
-runners already had been dispatched ahead.
-
-Almost the first person encountered by Jimmie, when he rode stiffly
-into Bowie, on the third of February, was Micky the Red-head, as lively
-as ever, after his own long trip with the Captain Davis column.
-
-“Where is Geronimo, Cheemie?” hailed Micky.
-
-“He will come.”
-
-“Well, if he doesn’t, we will go get him,” asserted Micky. “We will
-bring him back little by little. You look as though you had been a long
-way, Cheemie.”
-
-“More than a thousand miles,” laughed Jimmie. And he felt it.
-
-“That’s enough for _you_,” declared Chief Packer Tom Moore, when Jimmie
-reported. “You stick around, now, and take things easy.”
-
-The post was still talking of Captain Crawford’s one march of eighteen
-hours with only the twenty minutes’ halt; and of his tragic death, at
-the end, when he had won his goal.
-
-Lieutenant Maus, with Lieutenant Faison and Lieutenant Shipp, Tom Horn
-and the scouts, was ordered back below the border, to camp until the
-Chiricahuas signalled for the talk.
-
-Jimmie was laid up with his leg, for several weeks. And at Bowie the
-general waited impatiently for the news from the lieutenant’s camp.
-
-
-
-
-XXVII
-
-THE WORST ENEMY OF ALL
-
-
-The last week of March had opened. The moon was near the full. Tom
-Moore, walking briskly, caught Jimmie bossing the repairs on some
-aparejos, out at the Bowie mule sheds.
-
-“Word’s come,” rapped Tom. “I’m to take a pack-train down to Maus
-to-morrow, and the general will follow.”
-
-“Is Geronimo there, Tom?”
-
-“I don’t know; but he’s promised to be there in four days. Anyhow,
-we’re to pack a lot of rations; and looks like we’re to feed some
-Injuns and fetch ’em back. Do you want to go ’long and see the finish?”
-
-“Sure thing, Tom.”
-
-“Bueno! I thought you would, but I can use somebody else if you’re not
-fit. All right, then. We’ll pull out at eight o’clock.”
-
-The Lieutenant Maus command had been camped one hundred miles south of
-Bowie, or ten miles below the border. But Geronimo had refused to meet
-the general there, and had appointed the Cañon de los Embudos (Funnels
-Canyon), twelve miles below the border and twenty miles west, where the
-country was rougher.
-
-Alchisé, Ka-e-ten-na, and Tony Besias and another official interpreter
-went with the pack outfit. There were two old Chiricahua squaws, also,
-from the bunch who had been taken prisoners at the Geronimo rancheria
-last January. They, and Alchisé and Ka-e-ten-na were counted upon to
-spread “good talk” among the Chiricahuas. Mayor Strauss, of Tucson,
-who had been at Bowie discussing affairs with the general, joined by
-special permission.
-
-The general overhauled the pack-train on the second day out. He and
-his staff, including Major Bourke and Captain C. S. Roberts, of the
-Judge-Advocate Department, were in an ambulance. Captain Roberts had
-brought his ten-year-old son, Charley, who was seeing army life in the
-Southwest; and there was an escort of scouts, with the inevitable Micky
-as scout sergeant.
-
-Before the Lieutenant Maus camp was reached, the company had grown
-larger. Two photographers named Fly and Chase had joined; and a
-Mexican, José Maria Yaskes, who had lived with the Chiricahuas; and
-several ranchers and cow-boys.
-
-“All want to see Geronimo――but I guess the Gray Fox wants to see him
-worst of anybody,” laughed Micky.
-
-On the morning of March 25 Alchisé and Ka-e-ten-na sent up a smoke
-signal, to tell the camp and Geronimo that the general was near.
-Lieutenant Shipp, Chato and two others rode out to guide the detachment
-in.
-
-The Maus camp was well located, upon a mesa commanding water and grass,
-in the canyon. Geronimo’s camp was just as strongly located, a half
-mile away――on the top of a lava cone surrounded by bristly gulches.
-
-The packers already in camp thought that there would be no trouble.
-Geronimo had been over every day, to ask when the general was expected
-for the talk; Chihuahua had sent word that he was prepared to surrender
-at any time, and do exactly as the general told him to do.
-
-“Chihuahua will leave Geronimo; Nana has left Geronimo; soon he will
-have nobody,” Chato repeated. “Geronimo and Chihuahua are living
-separate now. Nana is too old to run any more.”
-
-After the general had lunched, there was sudden exclaiming and
-pointing. A large party of Chiricahuas were descending from their cone.
-
-“Geronimo!”
-
-“Here comes the old rascal!”
-
-The Chiricahuas rode on, up the canyon, and Chief of Scouts Horn met
-them. He returned, and reported.
-
-“Geronimo says he will talk with the general.”
-
-Still, Geronimo did not enter the camp. He halted a short distance
-out, amid some white-barked sycamores and shaggy cottonwoods, near the
-river. The general and officers advanced, to hold the talk, and a crowd
-followed, eager to hear.
-
-There were the general, Lieutenant Maus, Lieutenant Shipp and
-Lieutenant Faison; Surgeon Davis (who had recovered from his hard
-trip); Captain Roberts and young Charley Roberts; Major Bourke; Chief
-Packer Tom Moore, ex-Assistant Jimmie, Pack-masters H. W. Daly and
-Harvey Carlisle, Packers Shaw and Foster; Mayor Strauss, of Tucson;
-Photographers Fly and Chase; Tony Besias, old Concepcion, José Maria
-Yaskes, and other interpreters; Chief Scout Tom Horn, Sergeant Micky
-Free, Alchisé, Ka-e-ten-na, Chato, and others of the scout companies;
-and even a little boy named Howell who had traveled along from a ranch
-thirty miles away.
-
-Chihuahua was here, smiling and good-natured. So was Nah-che――not
-smiling, but on the contrary looking grim and anxious. Jimmie saw
-Porico, or White Horse, Geronimo’s brother. No squaws had come over,
-and only a few of the warriors sat together; the majority were
-scattered, well armed, wearing two cartridge-belts, and prepared to
-fight and flee, if an attempt were made to seize them.
-
-Everybody except the general, Chihuahua and Micky appeared to be rather
-on edge. And no wonder. After all these months of worry and work,
-growing old chasing Geronimo on the heart-breaking trails, was this the
-end at last? Jimmie suddenly felt old, himself. How far had he trailed
-the fighting Apaches? Two thousand miles, at least!
-
-“Ka-e-ten-na says the Chiricahua will shoot if we try to hold
-Geronimo,” whispered Micky. “They made Maus promise that the Gray Fox
-would bring no soldiers down. That is bad.”
-
-“But the scouts will fight.”
-
-“Yes, they will fight,” nodded Micky.
-
-Geronimo was speaking, as he sat twisting a strand of buckskin in his
-nervous hands.
-
-“Everybody on the reservation was unfriendly to me. Chato and Micky
-Free stirred up trouble against me; they lied about me to the
-soldier-captain Davis, and he spread the lies. The papers told bad
-stories on me. They said that I ought to be arrested and hung up. I
-don’t want any more of that talk. Why don’t you speak to me and look
-with a pleasant face? What is the matter, that you don’t smile on me?
-Why did you give orders to have me put in prison? I had tried to do
-right. Remember that I sent you word I would come from a long distance
-to speak with you here, and you see me now. If I thought bad or had
-done bad, I would not have come.”
-
-[Illustration: “WHY DON’T YOU SPEAK TO ME AND LOOK WITH A PLEASANT
-FACE?”]
-
-General Crook made no bones about answering.
-
-“I gave no orders to have you arrested. If you left the reservation
-because you were afraid, why did you sneak all over the country killing
-innocent people and stealing horses? Your story is all bosh. You sent
-up your people to kill Chato and Lieutenant Davis. Everything that you
-did on the reservation is known. There is no use in your trying to
-talk nonsense. I am no child. You promised me in the Sierra Madre that
-the peace should last, and you have lied. How do I know but that you
-are lying now, when you say you want peace? Have I ever lied to you?
-You must make up your mind either to surrender or to stay out on the
-warpath. If you stay out, I will keep after you and kill every one of
-you if it takes fifty years. I have said all I have to say. You had
-better think, to-night, and let me know in the morning.”
-
-The perspiration had burst out upon Geronimo’s face and hands. He would
-have said more, but the general arose, as signal that the talk was at
-an end. Only the two photographers were happy; they had taken a number
-of excellent pictures.
-
-This evening and night the two camps remained apart. In the Maus
-camp there was a great deal of discussion. Nobody might yet foresee
-what the Chiricahuas under Geronimo would do.
-
-“A thousand troops couldn’t get those bronc’s, where they’re located,”
-asserted Tom Moore. “They’d scatter like quail and be off into Mexico,
-at first sign of trouble. Anyhow, Maus agreed not to attack ’em, and
-while the general mightn’t have made any such agreement himself, he’s
-bound to stick by it.”
-
-“You and I will go over in the morning, Cheemie,” said Micky. “We will
-see for ourselves.”
-
-So they did. Major Bourke, Mayor Strauss, of Tucson, Pack-master
-Carlisle and others likewise went. It was indeed a strong position,
-well up among broken lava, with every jacal or hut defended by a cactus
-fence. A number of jagged rifts had to be crossed, and there were
-ravines leading away.
-
-No army officer, Major Bourke alleged, could have chosen a better
-situation or made more of it.
-
-Geronimo and his warriors were in council, and could not be approached.
-None of the Chiricahuas would talk; even Nah-da-ste declined to speak
-to Jimmie, but hid her face.
-
-Young Charley Roberts was the only visitor who could attract attention.
-The little girls followed him around, giggling, and passing compliments
-upon him. It reminded Jimmie of the time, long ago, when he had been
-giggled at in a Chiricahua camp.
-
-Nothing happened this day. Matters looked bad. In the morning Alchisé
-and Ka-e-ten-na came into camp. They had been spending their time in
-the Geronimo camp, to spread peace talk. Ka-e-ten-na was to tell the
-Chiricahuas of the sights that he had seen in San Francisco.
-
-They brought word from Chihuahua that whether Geronimo decided to
-surrender, or not, he himself would appear with all his band at noon,
-and do as “Cluke” said to do.
-
-At noon Chihuahua appeared. Geronimo and Nah-che and old Nana were with
-him. Geronimo’s face was blackened, as sign of mourning. The general
-talked with them, again, at the same place as before.
-
-“I am glad to see you, Cluke,” said Chihuahua. “I am now in your hands.
-You may do as you please with me. I am going over to stay with you in
-your camp.”
-
-“What have you decided?” asked the general, of Geronimo.
-
-“My people are afraid to go with you, for fear they will be punished.
-They do not want to be punished. We will go with you if we are allowed
-to live as before.”
-
-“That is all nonsense,” retorted the general. “I do not trust you any
-more. If you go with me, you must understand that you all will be put
-in the guard-house until Washington tells me what to do with you.”
-
-“How long will we be kept prisoners?”
-
-“You will be sent away, like Ka-e-ten-na was. That cured Ka-e-ten-na
-and made him good. It will make you good, because it will change your
-hearts. You say that lies are told about you on the reservation. If you
-are sent away, there will be no lies.”
-
-“How long will we be sent away?”
-
-“Maybe one year, maybe two years. You may take your families with you.
-Only Nana shall stay; he is too old to make trouble.”
-
-Geronimo shifted uneasily, and gazed appealingly around.
-
-“I will talk no more,” stated the general. “To-morrow morning I shall
-go back to Fort Bowie. If you decide to stay away, you will not be safe
-anywhere in Mexico. You cannot hide from me. This you already know.”
-
-“We will march to Fort Bowie, and there you may send us away, as
-you say,” spoke Geronimo desperately. “But we must march freely, by
-ourselves. I cannot make my men give up their guns, until they are in
-the fort where you will protect them. There are bad people along the
-way who would kill us. Your young soldier-captains might not be able
-to control their scouts, and the scouts would kill us. I want you to
-promise that we shall not be made prisoners until we arrive at Fort
-Bowie. Otherwise, I cannot persuade my men, and there will be war.”
-
-The general eyed him fixedly.
-
-“It is agreed,” he said.
-
-Geronimo was much relieved, and shook hands with him.
-
-“Geronimo speaks the truth,” declared Ka-e-ten-na, that evening. “If
-the general had not agreed, there would have been war. The Chiricahua
-were ready to fight and run away. But they would rather be put in
-prison a little while, and see such things as I have seen.”
-
-Orders were given to be prepared to move in the morning. The general
-was going on ahead, to Bowie, and get instructions from General
-Sheridan at Washington; Lieutenant Maus was to follow, with the
-Chiricahuas.
-
-That night there seemed to be a wild time in the Geronimo camp, half
-a mile distant. Gun shots could be heard, and shrill whoops. During
-breakfast in the morning there were many rumors. Jimmie got the truth
-from Micky.
-
-“Much whiskey in the Chiricahua camp,” said Micky, with shrug of
-shoulders. “Ranch man send it in, and sell at one dollar a gallon.
-Geronimo drunk, many others drunk.”
-
-The general, when he rode by, looked worried. But he had to reach the
-telegraph at Fort Bowie as quickly as possible. It was understood that
-he had ordered Lieutenant Maus to destroy all the whiskey that could be
-found, and to hasten on with the Chiricahuas.
-
-So the camp was broken, and moved on the back trail, with directions
-to halt at ten miles, and wait. The lieutenant stayed behind with
-Concepcion the interpreter, to wait for the Geronimo camp to move.
-
-In the afternoon he arrived at the halting place. The Chiricahuas were
-following, but Geronimo had told him not to hang around or he might be
-killed by some of the drunken warriors.
-
-Chihuahua sent for Chief of Scouts Horn, and asked that he and all his
-band be put under guard.
-
-“I don’t like that, Cheemie,” uttered Micky. “When Chihuahua does such
-a thing, he sees ahead. He is afraid of what will happen if his people
-get the whiskey, too.”
-
-Geronimo made camp again about half a mile away, as before, and in a
-strong position. Everybody was ordered to keep away from it, so as to
-avoid trouble; but the lieutenant took Ka-e-ten-na and rode over.
-
-When they returned, Ka-e-ten-na reported that Geronimo was still drunk,
-and he and another chief were riding around on one mule; and that
-Nah-che had shot his wife.
-
-Now the ranch which had supplied the whiskey was near. Lieutenant Shipp
-took a detail over, to search the ranch and destroy the liquor.
-
-Tom Moore, the old frontiersman, swore vigorously.
-
-“It’s sure a dog-gone shame that for a few dirty dollars any man will
-throw the whole country open again to an Injun war. For that’s what it
-means, if those Chiricahuas lose their heads. When whiskey gets in, the
-brains go out.”
-
-Concepcion said that the whiskey seller had been filling the
-Chiricahuas with lies also: he had told them that they were to be
-killed as soon as they reached Bowie. He did this, so that they would
-stay out and he might sell them more whiskey.
-
-However, the night quieted the Chiricahuas in their camp. The
-lieutenant sent over, once, to investigate. The warriors were said to
-be sleeping.
-
-But in the morning, which was March 29, while Jimmie was pulling
-on his boots before breakfast, he saw the lieutenant dash away,
-with Ka-e-ten-na, in the direction of Geronimo’s camp. In about an
-hour they returned. The lieutenant stopped here where Tom Moore was
-overseeing the unpacking of the pack-trains, for the day’s march. He
-looked oddly haggard, but spoke with a hard, quick accent.
-
-“Geronimo, Nah-che and twenty men and thirteen women are gone. I’ll
-require a pack-train and several of your best men, to follow them with.
-You can report to Shipp. Faison will go on to Bowie.”
-
-Tom’s jaw dropped, and for a moment he acted as if too full for
-utterance. This, then, was the outcome of all those other bitter
-pursuits――poor Captain Crawford’s death――the general’s painstaking
-methods!
-
-“That dog-gone liquor!” he growled.
-
-Jimmie sprang forward, and saluted the lieutenant.
-
-“I’d like to go with the packs, sir.”
-
-“You would? Why? You’ve been once, and you know what it means?”
-
-“Well, I’d like to try again, sir. I won’t get enough till Geronimo
-gets enough.”
-
-The lieutenant’s face lighted up.
-
-“If that’s your spirit, there’s no man I’d rather have with me. So you
-and Moore settle it between you.”
-
-And he galloped on.
-
-“Gosh, but this will break the general all up,” muttered Tom. “All
-right,” he added. “You get your outfit together and go along with Maus.”
-
-Chihuahua, Nana, and sixty or seventy others of the Chiricahuas
-still remained. Lieutenant Faison was to take them on, up to Bowie.
-Lieutenant Maus and Lieutenant Shipp, with a company of the scouts and
-Jimmie’s pack-train, set out in the opposite direction.
-
-But it was no use. Geronimo had been thoroughly frightened by the
-stories told him. Now his party traveled afoot, over country where
-horses and mules could not travel. In three days the trails had split
-and had become impossible, and the scouts had to give up.
-
-So the command turned back. When they arrived at Bowie on April 3, this
-1886, they learned that General Crook was no longer the commander in
-Arizona!
-
-
-
-
-XXVIII
-
-THE END OF THE TRAIL
-
-
-That was a stunning blow to the Crook men. The general had been
-relieved of his command on April 2, at his own request.
-
-As far as might be learned by the rank and file, and the pack service,
-the President had not approved of the terms upon which Geronimo had
-surrendered; but by this time Geronimo had fled again. Then the
-dispatches from General Sheridan, commanding the Army, to General
-Crook, had somewhat questioned the wisdom of the general’s methods
-in depending upon the scouts, and suggested that he now make no more
-campaigns for a while, but try to protect the border with his troops.
-
-The general had replied that he still believed his methods were the
-best, under the conditions; that he had been using the troops, to
-protect the border; and that it had been impossible to hold Geronimo as
-a prisoner and not break the promise given him.
-
-To attack Geronimo in camp had likewise been impossible of success.
-
-“It may be, however, that I am too much wedded to my own views in this
-matter,” the general was said to have added, “and as I have spent
-nearly eight years of the hardest work of my life in this department, I
-respectfully request that I may now be relieved from its command.”
-
-The Apache medicine-men at Fort Bowie made more medicine, and insisted
-that if Ka-e-ten-na and other runners were sent after Geronimo, as soon
-as the whiskey left him he would keep his word and come in peaceably.
-
-This was not done, because Brigadier General Nelson A. Miles, of the
-Fifth Infantry, commanding at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, had been
-directed to take command of the Department of Arizona. This of course
-meant new methods, and a shake-up all ’round.
-
-Not knowing exactly what was ahead, Jimmie left the pack service and
-became a railroad telegraph operator.
-
-At any rate, General Crook had not failed. Eighty of the Chiricahuas,
-including Chihuahua and Nana, had been brought in. Only Geronimo and
-Nah-che and their twenty men and boys and thirteen women, were out. And
-the Mangas squad of six men, who had not been with Geronimo for almost
-a year.
-
-General Miles arrived at Fort Bowie on April 12. He immediately
-organized things for a campaign with the regular troops. The War
-Department did not favor trusting in the scouts as fighters――especially
-in the scouts from the White Mountain and Chiricahua friendlies.
-
-The General Crook scouts had been discharged, and so were many of the
-interpreters. Tom Horn left. Yes, there was a decided shake-up.
-
-But the new general seemed to be a good man, all right, and the Arizona
-newspapers put much faith in him. He extended the heliograph service,
-until a perfect network of stations had been established; and he
-injected fresh vim into the officers.
-
-Suspecting that they were to get no terms at all, now, and to show
-that they despised the soldiers, Geronimo and Nah-che went thoroughly
-bad. Perhaps General Crook’s methods might have been better; perhaps
-not; but toward the last of April Geronimo and Nah-che led their few
-warriors straight up past Tucson itself; the troops had not been able
-to protect the border, and Nah-che penetrated clear to Fort Apache.
-
-They lost only one man. He was a deserter, and volunteered to follow
-them, as “Peaches” had. The troops did heroic work. Lieutenant Lloyd
-Brett, of the Second Cavalry, marched twenty-six hours without a halt;
-his troopers were forced to drink their own blood, to quench thirst.
-
-Captain Henry W. Lawton, of the Fourth Cavalry, and Captain Leonard
-Wood, assistant surgeon in the army, were selected to push the pursuit
-through Mexico, with a picked command of the Eighth Infantry and Fourth
-and Tenth Cavalry. Surgeon Wood was instructed to see if the men could
-not outdo even the Apaches.
-
-Tom Horn went in charge of some Tonto and Yuma trailers. The Lawton and
-Wood column made terrific marches; altogether, fourteen hundred miles.
-On July 13, three hundred miles into Mexico they surprised the Geronimo
-and Nah-che camp, as Captain Crawford had surprised it, the January
-before.
-
-Nah-che had been wounded; he and Geronimo and their band barely
-escaped. They sent word to a Mexican woman (the wife of the interpreter
-José Maria Yaskes) that they desired to surrender.
-
-It was a Crook man, after all――Lieutenant George Gatewood――who
-performed the bravest act; and a General Crook method that clinched the
-surrender. From Fort Apache the lieutenant, under orders by General
-Miles, traveled down with only Kah-yee-ta, the deserter, and Martinez,
-another Chiricahua, to find the hostile camp and talk with Geronimo.
-This was done. Lieutenant Gatewood’s life hung by a hair; but his talk
-had effect, for in the morning Geronimo, Nah-che, and their warriors
-surrendered to Captain Lawton.
-
-Lieutenant Gatewood had been instructed to offer them no terms
-whatsoever, except that their lives would be spared; the captain
-offered the same terms.
-
-Geronimo agreed to march along with the column, just as before. He and
-his men were still very suspicious, but he sent Porico up to General
-Miles as a pledge of good faith.
-
-The general met him at the border, on September 3. Geronimo did
-not know that while he had been out, all the Chiricahuas upon the
-reservation――Chato, Ka-e-ten-na, and all――had been moved, and were
-started for Florida.
-
-“This,” as Tom Moore explained to Jimmie, “took the sap out of him.
-He had no base of trouble, any more. Nah-che hadn’t come in with him,
-but he sent out after him, and the whole band――what there was left
-of them――were packed aboard the cars on September 8, and now they’re
-on their way, too. Let’s see――this is 1886. How long have you known
-Geronimo, anyhow?”
-
-“Sixteen years,” said Jimmie.
-
-“Well, you’ll never see him again.”
-
-And Jimmie never did.
-
-He never saw General Crook again, either. The general had resumed
-command of the Department of the Platte; and as major-general was
-assigned to the command of the Division of the Missouri, with
-headquarters in Chicago.
-
-But he was not forgotten in Arizona. The Indians at the San Carlos and
-the Fort Apache reservations continued to hold him in their hearts.
-Jimmie happened to be at Fort Apache, on business, when in the spring
-of 1890 the news of the general’s death was received.
-
-The old men and women, and all the White Mountain scouts, “sat down
-in a great circle, let down their hair, bent their heads forward upon
-their bosoms, and wept and wailed like children.” And in the far north
-the Sioux also lamented the passing of their conqueror but friend, the
-Gray Fox.
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes:
-
- ――Text in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).
-
- ――Obvious printer’s, punctuation and spelling inaccuracies were
- silently corrected.
-
- ――Archaic and variable spelling has been preserved.
-
- ――Variations in hyphenation and compound words have been preserved.
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of General Crook and the Fighting Apaches, by Edwin L. Sabin</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: General Crook and the Fighting Apaches</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>Treating Also of the Part Borne by Jimmie Dunn in the Days, 1871-1876</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Edwin L. Sabin</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Illustrator: Charles H. Stephens</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: July 29, 2021 [eBook #65954]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Donald Cummings and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GENERAL CROOK AND THE FIGHTING APACHES ***</div>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="cover">
- <img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="cover" title="cover" />
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="noi halftitle">GENERAL CROOK AND THE<br />
-FIGHTING APACHES</p>
-
-<p class="p4 noic subtitle">FIFTH IMPRESSION</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="noi adtitle"><i>The American Trail Blazers</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noic">“THE STORY GRIPS AND THE HISTORY STICKS”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 noi">These books present in the form of vivid and fascinating
-fiction, the early and adventurous phases of American
-history. Each volume deals with the life and adventures
-of one of the great men who made that history, or with
-some one great event in which, perhaps, several heroic
-characters were involved. The stories, though based upon
-accurate historical fact, are rich in color, full of dramatic
-action, and appeal to the imagination of the red-blooded
-man or boy.</p>
-
-<p class="noic">Each volume illustrated in color and black and white.</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li class="lsthang">INTO MEXICO WITH GENERAL SCOTT</li>
-
-<li class="lsthang">LOST WITH LIEUTENANT PIKE</li>
-
-<li class="lsthang">GENERAL CROOK AND THE FIGHTING APACHES</li>
-
-<li class="lsthang">OPENING THE WEST WITH LEWIS AND CLARK</li>
-
-<li class="lsthang">WITH CARSON AND FRÉMONT</li>
-
-<li class="lsthang">DANIEL BOONE: BACKWOODSMAN</li>
-
-<li class="lsthang">BUFFALO BILL AND THE OVERLAND TRAIL</li>
-
-<li class="lsthang">CAPTAIN JOHN SMITH</li>
-
-<li class="lsthang">DAVID CROCKETT: SCOUT</li>
-
-<li class="lsthang">ON THE PLAINS WITH CUSTER</li>
-
-<li class="lsthang">GOLD SEEKERS OF ’49</li>
-
-<li class="lsthang">WITH SAM HOUSTON IN TEXAS</li>
-
-<li class="lsthang">WITH GEORGE WASHINGTON INTO THE WILDERNESS</li>
-
-<li class="lsthang">IN THE RANKS OF OLD HICKORY</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_frontis">
- <img src="images/i_frontis.jpg" alt="" title="" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p class="noic"><a href="#Page_214">“GET DOWN, GET DOWN!” THEY ORDERED,
-FURIOUSLY, IN APACHE</a></p>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<h1>GENERAL CROOK<br />
-<small>AND THE</small><br />
-FIGHTING APACHES</h1>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="noi">TREATING ALSO OF THE PART BORNE BY JIMMIE DUNN IN THE
-DAYS, 1871–1886, WHEN WITH SOLDIERS AND PACK-TRAINS AND
-INDIAN SCOUTS, BUT EMPLOYING THE STRONGER WEAPONS OF
-KINDNESS, FIRMNESS AND HONESTY, THE GRAY FOX WORKED
-HARD TO THE END THAT THE WHITE MEN AND THE RED MEN IN
-THE SOUTHWEST AS IN THE NORTHWEST MIGHT BETTER UNDERSTAND
-ONE ANOTHER</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p2 noic">BY<br />
-<span class="noi author">EDWIN L. SABIN</span></p>
-
-<p class="noi works">AUTHOR OF “OPENING THE WEST WITH LEWIS AND CLARK,”<br />
-“BUFFALO BILL AND THE OVERLAND TRAIL,” ETC.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 noic"><i>WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY CHARLES H. STEPHENS<br />
-PORTRAIT AND A MAP</i></p>
-
-<div class="pad2">
-<div class="logocenter" id="logo">
- <img src="images/logo.jpg" alt="logo" title="logo" />
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noic">PHILADELPHIA &amp; LONDON</p>
-
-<p class="noi adauthor">J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="noic">COPYRIGHT, 1918, BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY</p>
-
-<p class="p6 noic">PRINTED IN UNITED STATES OF AMERICA</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="noic">TO THE</p>
-
-<p class="noi author">TYPICAL AMERICAN SOLDIER</p>
-
-<p class="noi works">WHOSE MOTTO, LIKE GENERAL CROOK’S, IS BRAVERY,<br />
-EFFICIENCY, AND “JUSTICE TO ALL”</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="noi">“Then General Crook came; he, at least,
-had never lied to us. His words gave
-the people hope. He died. Their
-hope died again. Despair came again.”</p>
-
-<p class="right"><i>Chief Red Cloud of the Sioux</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="FOREWORD">FOREWORD</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“It should not be expected that an Indian who has
-lived as a barbarian all his life will become an angel
-the moment he comes on a reservation and promises
-to behave himself, or that he has that strict sense of
-honor which a person should have who has had the
-advantage of civilization all his life, and the benefit of a
-moral training and character which has been transmitted
-to him through a long line of ancestors. It requires
-constant watching and knowledge of their character to
-keep them from going wrong. They are children in
-ignorance, not in innocence. I do not wish to be
-understood as in the least palliating their crimes, but
-I wish to say a word to stem the torrent of invective
-and abuse which has almost universally been indulged
-in against the whole Apache race.... Greed and
-avarice on the part of the whites—in other words,
-the almighty dollar—is at the bottom of nine-tenths
-of all our Indian trouble.”</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">General George Crook</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents">
-<col style="width: 15%;" />
-<col style="width: 70%;" />
-<col style="width: 15%;" />
-<tr>
- <th class="smfontr">CHAPTER</th>
- <th class="tdl"></th>
- <th class="smfontr">PAGE</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">I.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#I">Jimmie Dunn is Badly Fooled</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">21</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">II.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#II">Jimmie Learns to be Apache</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">34</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">III.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#III">The Red-Head Turns up</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">43</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">IV.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#IV">The Canvas Suit Man</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">53</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">V.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#V">Jimmie Reports for Duty</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">65</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">VI.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#VI">The Peace Commission Tries</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">77</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">VII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#VII">Jimmie Takes a Lesson</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">85</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">VIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#VIII">The One-Armed General Tries</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">98</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">IX.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#IX">The Horrid Deed of Chuntz</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">113</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">X.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#X">On the Trail With the Pack-Train</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">119</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XI.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XI">In the Stronghold of Cochise</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">129</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XII">General Crook Rides Again</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">140</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XIII">Hunting the Yavapai</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">152</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XIV.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XIV">The Battle of the Cave</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">165</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XV.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XV">Jimmie is a Veteran</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">178</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XVI.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XVI">The General Plans Well</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">185</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XVII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XVII">Bad Work Afoot</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">194</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XVIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XVIII">“Cluke” Goes Away</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">203</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XIX.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XIX">Jimmie Sends the Alarm</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">211</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XX.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XX">The Gray Fox Returns</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">221</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXI.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XXI">To the Stronghold of Geronimo</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">228</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XXII">War or Peace?</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">237</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XXIII">Geronimo Plays Smart</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">246</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXIV.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XXIV">Pack-Master Jimmie Meets a Surprise</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">254</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXV.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XXV">On the Job With Captain Crawford</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">262</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXVI.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XXVI">Foes or Friends?</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">273</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXVII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XXVII">The Worst Enemy of All</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">286</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXVIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XXVIII">The End of the Trail</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">298</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="ILLUSTRATIONS">ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" summary="Illustrations">
-<col style="width: 90%;" />
-<col style="width: 10%;" />
-<tr>
- <th> </th>
- <th class="smfontr">PAGE</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl lsthang"><a href="#i_frontis">“Get Down, Get Down!” They Ordered,
-Furiously, in Apache</a><span class="flright">      <i>Frontispiece</i></span></td>
- <td class="tdrb"> </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl lsthang"><a href="#i_013">General George Crook</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">13</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl lsthang"><a href="#i_061">Had the First Volley Killed Anybody? Didn’t Look So</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">61</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl lsthang"><a href="#i_131">It was the Piercing-eyed Geronimo!</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">131</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl lsthang"><a href="#i_179">Hurrah! It was Nan-ta-je</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">179</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl lsthang"><a href="#i_290">“Why Don’t You Speak to Me and Look with a Pleasant
-Face?”</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">290</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc author" colspan="2">MAP</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl lsthang"><a href="#i_021map">Apache Arizona</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">21</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_013">
- <img src="images/i_013.jpg" alt="" title="" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p class="noic"><a href="#Page_13">GENERAL GEORGE CROOK</a><br />
-From “On the Border with Crook.” By Captain John G. Bourke.<br />
-By Courtesy of Charles Scribner’s Sons.</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CROOK"><a href="#i_013">MAJOR-GENERAL GEORGE CROOK</a></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="hang">Called by the Indians the “Gray Fox,” because of his weather
-worn canvas suit and his skillful methods. Admired by them
-also as “a common man who makes war like a big chief.”
-He first organized the army pack-mule trains, and employed
-Indians to fight Indians. He was noted for his dislike of
-“show,” his strict honesty, his incessant hard work, his
-great endurance, and his knowledge of Western animals
-and Indian ways.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Born near Dayton, Ohio, September 8, 1828.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Graduates from West Point Military Academy, 1852, No. 38
-in his class. Assigned as second lieutenant, Fourth Infantry,
-and stationed in Idaho.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">First lieutenant, March, 1856.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Captain, May, 1861. Meanwhile has been wounded by an arrow
-during campaigns against the Indians in Oregon and
-Washington.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Appointed Colonel of the Thirty-sixth Ohio Volunteer Infantry,
-September, 1861, and drills it so thoroughly that it is styled
-the “Thirty-sixth Regulars.”</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Brevetted major in the regular service, May, 1862, for gallantry
-at the battle of Lewisburg, West Virginia, where he was
-wounded.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Brigadier general of Volunteers, September, 1862.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Brevetted lieutenant-colonel in the regular service, September,
-1862, for gallantry at the battle of Antietam, Maryland.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Brevetted colonel, October, 1863, for gallantry at the battle of
-Farmington, Tennessee.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Commands the Army of West Virginia, August and September,
-1864.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Major-general of Volunteers, October, 1864.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Double brevet of brigadier-general and major-general in the
-regular service, March, 1865, for gallantry in the Shenandoah
-Valley campaign.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Commands the cavalry of the Army of the Potomac, spring
-of 1865.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Commands Department of West Virginia, 1865.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Assigned as major of the Third U. S. Infantry, July, 1866, and
-stationed in Northern California.</p>
-
-<p class="hang"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span></p>
-
-<p class="hang">Lieutenant-colonel, Twenty-third U. S. Infantry, July, 1866, to
-command in the Boise district, Idaho, where he makes a
-reputation as an Indian campaigner against the Warm Springs
-Shoshones or Snakes of Oregon.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Appointed to command the Military Department of the Columbia
-(the State of Oregon and the Territories of Idaho and
-Washington), July, 1868.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Transferred to California, 1870.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Appointed to command of the new Department of Arizona,
-June, 1871.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">By reason of his success with the Apaches of Arizona, is promoted
-from lieutenant-colonel to brigadier-general, October,
-1873.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Transferred to command the Department of the Platte, with
-headquarters at Omaha, March, 1875.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Campaigns, with pack-trains and Indian scouts, against the
-Sioux and Cheyennes of the plains, 1875–1878; subdues
-them and thereafter devotes his available time to hunting and
-exploration.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">In 1882 is reassigned to the Department of Arizona, where the
-Apaches are unruly again.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Fails to succeed in holding Geronimo, the Apache war leader; is
-relieved at his own request, April, 1886, and reassigned to the
-command of the Department of the Platte.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Appointed major-general, April, 1888, and assigned to the command
-of the Military Division of the Missouri, with headquarters
-in Chicago.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Dies March 21, 1890, in his sixty-second year, at Chicago. Interred
-with high honors at Oakland, Maryland, pending the
-transfer of the remains, soon thereafter, to the National
-Cemetery at Arlington, Virginia.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="HOWARD">MAJOR-GEN. OLIVER OTIS HOWARD</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="hang">A man distinguished for his deep religious spirit and his benevolence,
-as well for his bravery upon the field of battle
-and his friendship with the Indians.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Born at Leeds, Maine, November 8, 1830.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Graduates at Bowdoin College, Maine, 1850.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Graduates at West Point Military Academy, 1854, No. 4 in his
-class. Assigned as second lieutenant of ordnance at Watervliet
-Arsenal.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Assigned to command of the Kennebec Arsenal, 1855.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">In 1856 transferred to Watervliet again.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">December, 1856, ordered to the Seminole Indian campaign in
-Florida.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">First lieutenant and chief of ordnance, Department of Florida,
-1857.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Assistant professor of mathematics at West Point, 1857–1861.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Expected to resign from the army to enter the ministry, but in
-June, 1861, accepts the colonelcy of the Third Maine Volunteer
-Infantry.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Commands a brigade at the battle of Bull Run.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Brigadier-general of Volunteers, September, 1861.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Loses his right arm, from two wounds, at the battle of Fair Oaks,
-Virginia, June, 1862.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Major-general of Volunteers, November, 1862.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Commands an army division at the battles of Antietam and
-Fredericksburg.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Commands an army corps at the battles of Chancellorsville,
-Gettysburg, Lookout Mountain, Missionary Ridge, Chattanooga,
-and elsewhere, and has the right wing in Sherman’s
-march to the sea.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Thanked by Congress, January, 1864, for services at Gettysburg.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Brigadier-general in the regular army, December, 1864.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Brevetted major-general in the regular army, March, 1865, for
-gallantry.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Chief of the Freedman’s Bureau, at Washington, for the education
-and care of the negroes and refugees, 1865–1874.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Sent by President Grant to New Mexico and Arizona, as special
-peace commissioner to treat with the Indians, 1872, and
-wins the trust and love of the various tribes.</p>
-
-<p class="hang"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span></p>
-
-<p class="hang">Assigned to the command of the Department of the Columbia,
-August, 1874.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Campaigns against the Nez Percés of Chief Joseph, 1877.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Campaigns against the Bannocks and Pai-Utes, 1878.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Superintendent of West Point Military Academy, 1880–1882.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Commands the Department of the Platte, 1882–1886.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Major-general, March, 1886, and appointed to the command of the
-Division of the Pacific.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Awarded medal of honor, by Congress, March, 1893, for distinguished
-bravery in the battle of Fair Oaks, where he lost his
-arm.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">As commander of the Department of the East is retired, November,
-1894.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Devotes his energies to religious and philanthropic work, and dies
-at Burlington, Vermont, October 26, 1909, aged seventy-nine.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APACHE">THE APACHE INDIANS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="hang">A large collection of Indian tribes inhabiting the Southwest.
-They first are mentioned in 1598 by the early Spanish explorers
-in New Mexico.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">The name “Apache” is derived from the Zuni word “Apachu,”
-meaning “enemy.” Their own name was “Tinde (Tinneh)”
-and “Dine (Dinde),” meaning “men” or “the people.”</p>
-
-<p class="hang">They always were bitter enemies to the Spanish and Mexicans,
-who offered high rewards in money for Apache scalps, and
-enslaved captives. They were not openly hostile to the
-Americans until, in 1857, a Mexican teamster employed by
-the United States party surveying the Mexican boundary
-line shot an Apache warrior without just cause. The survey
-commissioner offered thirty dollars in payment, which was
-refused, and the Apaches declared war.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">In 1861 Cochise, chief of the Chiricahuas, who had been friendly,
-was confined, on a false charge, by Lieutenant Bascom of
-the army, at the army camp at Apache Pass, Arizona. He
-cut his way to freedom. His brother and five others were
-hanged by the Americans. Cochise hanged a white man, in
-return, declared war, and almost captured the stage station
-where the troops were fortified.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Beginning with the Civil War, the Apaches ravaged all southern
-Arizona and the stage line in New Mexico also. Terrible
-tortures were committed upon settlers and travelers.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">In 1863 Mangas Coloradas (Red Sleeves), an old Mimbreño
-chief related by marriage to Cochise, was treacherously imprisoned
-and killed by soldiers, at Fort McLane, New Mexico.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Thenceforth the Apaches and whites in Arizona had little common
-ground except that of “no quarter.” There was constant
-fighting.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">In March, 1871, a number of Arivaipa Apaches gathered peacefully
-under the protection of Camp Grant are killed, captured
-or put to flight by a vengeful party of Americans,
-Mexicans and Papago Indians from Tucson.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">In the fall of 1871 the Government peace commission tries to
-adjust the differences between the white people and the
-red. The Apaches are offered reservations and guaranteed
-kind treatment. They have little faith in the words.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">The Apaches, with the exception of the White Mountain in
-Arizona and the Warm Spring in New Mexico, and some<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span>
-smaller bands, decline to gather upon reservations. In 1872
-General O. O. Howard arrives as special peace commissioner,
-and by his talks and actions wins the trust of the Indians.
-The reservation idea seems a success. Cochise and his
-Chiricahuas agree to remain in their own country of the
-Dragoon Mountains, southern Arizona.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">In the winter of 1872–73 General George Crook proceeds against
-the outlaw Apaches of Arizona, especially the Tontos and
-the Apache-Mohaves or Yavapais. His cavalry, infantry,
-pack-trains and enlisted Indian scouts trail them down and
-subdue them.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">General Crook’s plans to make the Indians self-supporting on
-their reservations appear to have brought peace to Arizona.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">In 1874 the control of the reservations passes from the War
-Department to the Indian Bureau. Reservations given to the
-Indians “forever,” by the President, are reduced or abolished,
-and various tribes are removed against their protests. Agents
-prove dishonest, the Indians are not encouraged to work,
-and are robbed of their rations.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">The Chiricahuas are generally peaceful, although Mexico complains
-that stock is being stolen and run across the border
-into the reservation. Chief Cochise, who has kept his word
-with General Howard, dies in 1874. Taza his son succeeds
-him, as leader of the Chiricahua peace party, until his death
-in 1876.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">In April, 1876, whiskey is sold to some Chiricahuas, at a stage
-station on the reservation. A fight ensues, and killings
-occur. The great majority of the Chiricahuas refuse to join
-in any outbreak.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">In June, 1876, it is recommended by the governor of Arizona
-that all the Chiricahuas be removed to the San Carlos reservation.
-They do not wish to go, but the majority follow Taza
-there. Chiefs Juh, Geronimo, and others escape.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">The policy of the Indian Bureau contemplates putting all the
-Apaches together upon the San Carlos reservation. The
-White Mountain Apaches, who have voluntarily lived upon
-the White Mountain reservation, their home land, adjacent,
-and have supplied the government with scouts, decline to
-go to the low country. When forced, they drift back again,
-and finally are allowed to stay.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">In 1877 the Warm Spring Apaches and the Geronimo Chiricahuas
-who had taken refuge there are ordered from the Warm
-Spring reservation in New Mexico to San Carlos. Some
-escape; the remainder escape a little later. Thereafter, Chief
-Victorio and his Warm Springs are constantly on the war-path,
-out of Mexico.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span></p>
-
-<p class="hang">In January, 1880, Chiefs Juh and Geronimo of the Chiricahuas
-agree to stay upon the San Carlos reservation. In August
-Victorio is killed by Mexican troops.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">In September, 1881, Juh and Nah-che (a son of Cochise and a
-lieutenant of Geronimo), break from the reservation, for
-Mexico.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">In April, 1882, Geronimo and Loco of the Chiricahuas follow.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">General Crook is now recalled to the command in Arizona. He
-talks with the Apaches on the reservations, finds a marked
-state of mistrust and misunderstanding, and places his troops
-to guard the border against the outlaws.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">In March, 1883, Chato, or Flat-nose, a young captain of Geronimo’s
-band, with twenty-six men breaks through, raids up
-into New Mexico and Arizona, and murders settlers. With
-forty cavalry, about two hundred Apache scouts, and pack-trains,
-Crook overhauls the Chiricahuas in the wild Sierra
-Madre Mountains of Mexico two hundred miles south of the
-boundary, and persuades the whole band to return peaceably
-to the reservation.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">The Chiricahuas are placed under the control of General Crook,
-and he locates them upon good land on the White Mountain
-reservation. Both reservations are policed by the army.
-The Apaches seem to be content, under the Crook plan that
-they shall work for an independent living. In 1884 they raise
-over four thousand tons of produce. There have been no
-outbreaks.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">In February, 1885, disagreements arise between the War Department
-and the Interior Department, of which the Indian Bureau
-is a function. General Crook’s powers are interfered
-with by civil interests at Washington and in Arizona,
-liquor is being permitted upon the reservations and the
-Indians grow uneasy.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">In May, 1885, after a controversy with the agent over the right
-to dig an irrigating ditch, and having obtained a supply of
-liquor, one hundred and twenty-four men, women and children
-under Geronimo and Nah-che, his lieutenant, escape again into
-Mexico. During their raids they kill seventy-three whites and
-a number of Apache scouts.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">General Crook secures an international agreement that United
-States troops may operate in Mexico, and Mexican troops
-in the United States, and sends a column on the trail of
-Geronimo.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">In March, 1886, Geronimo signifies that he desires to talk. The
-general meets him, Chihuahua and other chiefs, and they accept
-the terms of two years’ imprisonment, with the privilege
-of the company of their families.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span></p>
-
-<p class="hang">On the march north a vicious white man by the name of Tribollet
-supplies whiskey to the Chiricahuas, at ten dollars (silver)
-a gallon, alarms them with lies by himself and his unscrupulous
-associates. Geronimo and Nah-che, with twenty men,
-thirteen women and two children, disappear. Chihuahua and
-eighty others remain.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">The general’s action in making terms with the Chiricahuas, and
-in not so guarding them that they would be forced to remain,
-is indirectly censured by General Sheridan, commanding the
-army. Crook explains that no other methods on his part
-would have met with any success, under the circumstances,
-and asks to be relieved from the command of the department.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">In April, 1886, General Nelson A. Miles takes the command in
-Arizona. He increases the number of heliostat signal stations,
-discharges the reservation-Apache scouts (whom he
-suspects of treachery), employs a few trailers from other
-tribes, and by a very energetic campaign which permits
-Geronimo no rest, in September induces his surrender upon
-only the conditions that his life shall be spared and that
-he shall be removed from Arizona.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Without delay the Geronimo and Nah-che remnant of hostiles,
-and all the Chiricahua and Warm Spring Apaches, four
-hundred in number, at the Fort Apache (White Mountain)
-reservation, are removed, whether friendly or not, to Florida.
-This is deemed the only practicable measure of freeing the
-Southwest from the menace of Apache outbreaks. The
-expenses of the Department of Arizona are lessened by
-$1,000,000 a year.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">The climate of Florida is unfavorable to the Apaches. Geronimo
-complains that he and Nah-che had understood that their
-families were to accompany them. Many of the Apaches
-die from disease and homesickness.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">In May, 1888, the Apaches are removed from Florida to Mt.
-Vernon barracks, Alabama; and in October, 1894, as prisoners
-of war to Fort Sill Military Reservation, Indian
-Territory (now Oklahoma).</p>
-
-<p class="hang">The principal reservations of the Arizona Apaches are the Fort
-Apache and the San Carlos, each containing between two
-and three thousand Indians. There are still over two hundred
-of the Chiricahuas and Warm Springs at Fort Sill,
-Oklahoma. Geronimo died February 17, 1909, at Fort Sill.
-Nah-che succeeded him as chief.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_021map">
- <img src="images/i_021map.jpg" alt="" title="" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p class="noic">APACHE ARIZONA<br />
-and the principal places in General Crook’s time</p>
- <div class="noic x-ebookmaker-drop">
- [<a id="i_021maplrg" href="images/i_021maplrg.jpg" rel="nofollow">
- click here for high resolution map</a>]
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span></p>
-
-<p class="noi title">GENERAL CROOK AND<br />
-THE FIGHTING APACHES</p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="I">I<br />
-<small>JIMMIE DUNN IS BADLY FOOLED</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“Tinkle, tinkle,” placidly sounded the bell of the
-old bell-wether, to prove that he and the other sheep
-were grazing near at hand in the stiff brush.</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” thought Jimmie Dunn, whose business
-it was to keep tab on the whereabouts of that bell.</p>
-
-<p>For this was a simmering hot summer afternoon
-of the year 1870, far, far down in southern Arizona
-Territory; and here on a hill-slope of the Pete Kitchen
-big ranch about half-way between Tucson town and
-the Mexican line Jimmie was lying upon his back under
-a spreading crooked-branched mesquite tree, lazily
-herding the ranch sheep.</p>
-
-<p>The Kitchen ranch really was not Jimmie’s home.
-He lived with his uncle Joe Felmer (not really his
-uncle, either), who was the blacksmith for Camp
-Grant, the United States army post ninety miles northward,
-or fifty-five miles the other side of Tucson.</p>
-
-<p>But the region close around Camp Grant was a
-sandy pocket famous for fever and ague as well as
-for other disagreeable features, such as scorpions, tarantulas,
-ugly Gila monsters (thick, black, poisonous lizards),
-heat and sand-storms; so that Joe had sent<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span>
-Jimmie down to their friend Pete Kitchen, on a
-vacation.</p>
-
-<p>Everybody, American, Mexican and Indian, in
-southern Arizona, knew the Pete Kitchen ranch. It
-was noted for its battles with the Apaches who, passing
-back and forth on their raids out of the mountains of
-Arizona and Mexico both, were likely to plunder and
-kill, at any time. Sturdy Pete had not been driven
-away yet, and did not propose to be driven away.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie himself was pretty well used to Apaches.
-They prowled about Camp Grant, and attacked people
-on the road from Tucson, and frequently the soldiers
-rode out after them. Joe Felmer had married an
-Apache woman, who was now dead; he spoke Apache
-and Jimmie had picked up a number of the words; but
-there were plenty of unfriendly Apaches who every
-little while ran off with Joe’s mules or filled his hogs
-with arrows.</p>
-
-<p>On his back under the mesquite tree Jimmie was
-not thinking of Apaches. He was idly surveying the
-country—at the same time having an ear open to the
-musical tinkle of the bell-wether, who told him where
-the sheep were straying. And a delightful, dreamy
-outlook this was, over all those quiet miles of mountain
-and desert Arizona which only the Southern stage-line
-traversed, and which, so thinly settled by white people,
-the roving Apache Indians claimed as their own.</p>
-
-<p>In his loose cotton shirt and ragged cotton trousers
-Jimmie felt very comfortable. Presently his eyes
-closed, his head drooped, and he nodded off, for forty
-or so winks.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span></p>
-
-<p>He dozed, he was certain, not more than five minutes;
-or perhaps ten. Then he awakened with a sudden
-start. Something had told him to awaken. He
-sat up and looked to see that the sheep were all right.
-He could not see one animal, but he heard the tinkle,
-tinkle. He twisted about to find the old bell-wether—and
-he gazed full into the grinning face of an Apache
-boy!</p>
-
-<p>The Apache boy, who appeared to be fourteen or
-fifteen years old, was not more than five yards from
-him—standing there beside a giant cactus, naked except
-for a red cloth band about his forehead, and a
-whitish cotton girdle about his middle, with the broad
-ends hanging down before and behind, and regular
-Apache moccasins reaching like leggins half way up
-his thighs for protection against the brush: standing
-there, grinning, in his left hand a bow, in his right
-the wether’s bell!</p>
-
-<p><em>He had been tinkling that bell!</em> And a smart trick
-this was, too: to sneak up on the wether, get the bell,
-and ring it to fool the herder while other Apaches drove
-away the sheep!</p>
-
-<p>For an instant Jimmie stared perfectly paralyzed
-with astonishment. He could not believe his eyes.
-Instead of a staid old tame sheep, here was a mischievous
-young wild Apache! Then, trying to utter a shout,
-up he sprang, to run. On the moment he heard a
-sharp swish, the noose of an Apache’s rawhide rope
-whipped about his shoulders, and right in mid-step he
-was jerked backward so violently, head over heels,
-that he had no time or breath for yelling a word.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span></p>
-
-<p>Barely had he landed topsy turvy in the brush when
-a heavy body rushed for him, a supple dark hand was
-clapped firmly over his mouth, and hauled upright he
-was half dragged, half carried, through the mesquites
-and the cactuses and around the slope of the hill.</p>
-
-<p>Now he was flung, limp and dazed, aboard a pony,
-his captor mounted into the saddle behind him, and
-away they tore, while the brush beneath reeled by under
-Jimmie’s swimming eyes.</p>
-
-<p>This was a fast ride until the sheep were overtaken.
-There they were, almost the whole flock, being
-forced hotly onward by Apaches afoot and ahorse,
-with other Apaches guarding the flanks. It looked like
-a war party returning with plunder from Mexico. The
-bands about the foreheads, the round rawhide helmets
-that some wore, the thigh moccasins, the guns, bows,
-lances and clubs, proved that they were a war party;
-and they had a lot of loose horses and mules besides
-the Pete Kitchen sheep.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie sighted another captive—a Mexican boy,
-older than he, fastened upon a yellow mule led by an
-Apache horseman.</p>
-
-<p>A broad-shouldered, finely built Indian wearing an
-Apache helmet with feathers sticking up from it, and
-riding a white horse, evidently was the chief in
-command.</p>
-
-<p>The grip of the Apache who held Jimmie had
-slackened. Jimmie managed to squirm ’round enough
-to look up into the Apache’s face. In return he got a
-grin, and two or three Apache words that said: “Good
-boy. No fear.” These were common words with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span>
-the “tame” Apaches who sometimes came into Camp
-Grant or to Joe Felmer’s little ranch near by, so Jimmie
-understood.</p>
-
-<p>The country grew rougher and wilder and higher.
-By the sun Jimmie knew that the course was generally
-eastward, and he guessed that these were Chiricahua
-Apaches.</p>
-
-<p>The Apache Indians, as almost anybody in Arizona
-could say off-hand, were divided into the Chiricahuas
-and the Pinals and the Arivaipas and the Coyotes and
-the White Mountains and the Apache-Mohaves and the
-Apache-Yumas and the Tontos and the Mogollons, and
-the Warm Spring Apaches and the Mimbres (of New
-Mexico), and the Jicarillas (Heek-ah-ree-yahs) or
-Basket Apaches, who never came into Arizona; and so
-forth.</p>
-
-<p>The Tontos and Pinals, who were outlaws, and the
-Chiricahuas (Chee-ree-cah-wahs), who were hard,
-thorough fighters, seemed to give the most trouble.
-The Chiricahuas lived in the mountains of southern
-Arizona and of northern Mexico.</p>
-
-<p>The pines and cedars of the higher country were
-reached before dusk. Not a tenth of the sheep had
-come this far. The most of them had been left to die
-from heat and exhaustion. Now having passed
-through another of their favorite narrow canyons, the
-Apaches halted, at dark, to camp beside a trickle of
-water in a rocky little basin surrounded by crags and
-timber.</p>
-
-<p>This night Jimmie was forced to lie between two
-Apache warriors, the one who had captured him, and
-a comrade; and he fitted so closely that if he moved<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span>
-he would waken them. It was an uncomfortable bed,
-there under a thin dirty strip of blanket, limited by
-those greasy, warm bodies, and he was afraid to stir.
-But he was so tired that he slept, anyway.</p>
-
-<p>Very early in the morning the camp roused again.
-Apaches when on a raid or when pursued were supposed
-to travel on only one meal a day and with only
-three hours’ rest out of the twenty-four. So now
-on and on and on, through all kinds of rough country
-they hastened, at steady gait and speaking rarely—Jimmie
-riding a bareback horse.</p>
-
-<p>In late afternoon they halted on the rim of a valley
-so deep and wide that it was veiled in bluish-purple
-haze. On a rocky point three of the Apaches started
-a fire of dried grass, and sent up a smoke signal by
-heaping pitchy pine cones upon the blaze.</p>
-
-<p>Chewing twigs and sucking pebbles to keep their
-mouths wet, the Apaches, talking together and watching,
-waited, until a long distance across the valley,
-whose brushy sides were thickly grown with the mescal,
-or century plant cactuses, blooming in round stalks
-twenty feet tall, a smoke column answered.</p>
-
-<p>The Apaches tending to their own fire fed more
-pine cones to it, and two of them rapidly clapped a
-saddle-blanket on and off the smoke, and broke it into
-puffs. The smoke column across the valley puffed in
-reply.</p>
-
-<p>The Apache boy who had played bell-wether pressed
-to Jimmie’s horse.</p>
-
-<p>“Chi-cowah,” he said, pointing. That was Apache
-for “My home.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span></p>
-
-<p>Now the party appeared satisfied. They scattered
-their fire, and struck down into a narrow trail that
-crossed the bottom of the valley. A peculiar sweetish
-smell hung in the misted air. This, Jimmie guessed,
-was from the steaming pits wherein the hearts of the
-mescal, or century plants, were being roasted.</p>
-
-<p>They glimpsed several squaws and children gathering
-foodstuff in the brush. As they filed through a
-little draw or rocky pass they were hailed loudly by
-an Apache sentinel posted above. He could not be
-seen, but the chief replied. The pass opened into a
-grassy flat concealed by the usual high crags and timbered
-ridges. Here was the Apache camp or rancheria
-(ran-cher-ee-ah), located along a willow-bordered
-creek.</p>
-
-<p>Fifty or sixty of the Apache brush huts or jacals
-were sprinkled all up and down the flat, and as soon
-as the party entered, a tremendous chorus of welcome
-sounded. Women shrieked, children screamed, dogs
-barked and mules brayed. Right into the center of the
-camp marched the party, and stopped.</p>
-
-<p>A circle of staring women and children, and a few
-men, surrounded. Other squaws bustled to take the
-horses and mules from the dismounting warriors.
-Jimmie was told to get off. Feeling lonesome and
-miserable, he saw close in front of him a boy who did
-not seem to be Indian at all, for he had fiery red
-hair and brick-red freckles and only one eye, which
-was blue!</p>
-
-<p>Yes—a red-headed, one-eyed, blue-eyed boy, rather
-runty, in only a whitish cotton girdle, and moccasins.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span>
-Evidently he dressed that way—or undressed that way—all
-the time, for his body and limbs were burned
-darker than his face.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie was not granted much space for staring
-back into that one blue eye. He was slapped upon the
-shoulder, “Aqui (Here)!” grunted the chief, in Spanish,
-and strode on through the circle. So Jimmie followed,
-hobbling at best speed.</p>
-
-<p>The chief went straight to a scrub-oak tree, with a
-hut beneath it, and an Apache sitting in the shade of
-it, on a deer hide before the hut. By the manner with
-which Jimmie’s Apache spoke to the sitting Apache,
-who did not rise, it was plain to be seen that the sitting
-Apache was the principal chief, and that Jimmie’s
-Apache was maybe only a captain.</p>
-
-<p>They talked for a moment in Apache, too fast for
-Jimmie to understand. Then the sitting chief, who
-had been eying Jimmie sharply, addressed him in simple
-Mexican-Spanish easy to catch.</p>
-
-<p>He was not at all a bad-looking Apache. In fact,
-he was about the finest Apache that Jimmie had ever
-met: a broad-chested six-footer, like the captain chief,
-but large eyed and kindly faced and dignified.</p>
-
-<p>“What is your name?”</p>
-
-<p>“James Dunn.”</p>
-
-<p>“No Mexicano?”</p>
-
-<p>“Americano,” corrected Jimmie proudly.</p>
-
-<p>“Your father Pete Keetchen?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where you live?”</p>
-
-<p>“Camp Grant.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span></p>
-
-<p>“With soldiers?”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie reflected an instant. If he said “With Joe
-Felmer,” then the chief would surely hold him as a
-great prize, for Joe Felmer, Government scout as well
-as post blacksmith, was an important enemy. So——</p>
-
-<p>“Sometimes,” asserted Jimmie, which was true.</p>
-
-<p>“Why on Keetchen rancho?”</p>
-
-<p>“Tend to sheep.” And Jimmie blushed when he
-recalled that he had been a great sheep-herder!</p>
-
-<p>“Pete Keetchen your father?”</p>
-
-<p>“No!” repeated Jimmie. “No father, no
-mother.”</p>
-
-<p>The head chief and the captain chief gazed at him
-as though they would read his very thoughts. The
-captain chief had such piercing dark eyes that they
-bored clear through. But he was a sure-enough Apache,
-with straight black hair and dark chocolate skin, darker
-even than ordinary.</p>
-
-<p>’Twas to be imagined that neither of the chiefs believed
-Jimmie’s statements. They still suspected that
-he belonged to Pete Kitchen.</p>
-
-<p>The head chief spoke abruptly.</p>
-
-<p>“You ’Pache now. Ugashé (U-gah-shay)—go!”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie knew that he was dismissed, and he turned
-away. He was faint in the stomach and weak in the
-knees, and he had no place in particular to go, until
-he saw the Mexican boy captive sitting in the sun,
-with his feet under him and his shanks high. Jimmie
-seized upon the opportunity to talk with him, at last.</p>
-
-<p>“What is your name?” he asked, squatting beside
-him. All Americans in southern Arizona could speak<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span>
-some Spanish; Mexican-Spanish was as common as
-English.</p>
-
-<p>“Maria Jilda Grijalba (Maree-ah Heel-dah Gree-hal-bah).”</p>
-
-<p>“Where did you live?”</p>
-
-<p>“In Sonora” (which was in Mexico). “Where
-did you live?”</p>
-
-<p>“Camp Grant—American fort, Arizona.”</p>
-
-<p>“How far?”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>“Do not know.”</p>
-
-<p>“You do not live on the rancho?”</p>
-
-<p>“For little while.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have father, mother?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. Apaches kill them.”</p>
-
-<p>“My father, mother, brothers, sisters, all killed,”
-lamented Maria, weeping. “Alas! All killed, by
-Apaches.”</p>
-
-<p>“We run off, pretty soon?” proposed Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>“No!” opposed Maria, in much alarm. “Must
-stay. Be Apaches. They not let us run off. Big
-country. Get lost and die. Get caught and be killed.”</p>
-
-<p>But Jimmie had made up his mind that he was not
-going to be an Apache; he would escape if he could.
-Or maybe he would be rescued.</p>
-
-<p>However, here came the captain chief, and the bell-wether
-Apache boy, and the strange red-headed boy
-with the one blue eye.</p>
-
-<p>“Ugashé!” roughly ordered the captain chief,
-of Maria. Poor Maria obediently arose and shuffled
-away.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span></p>
-
-<p>The captain spoke to Jimmie, and smiled. He,
-also was a fine-looking Apache: almost six feet tall
-and straight and sinewy, with square face and thin,
-determined lips, and those extraordinary sharp eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie stood up.</p>
-
-<p>“Chi-kis-n,” said the captain, and nodded aside at
-the bell-wether boy.</p>
-
-<p>“Chi-kis-n” was Apache for “my brother.” The
-Apache boy grinned and held out his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Chi-kis-n,” he greeted.</p>
-
-<p>The red-headed, one-eyed boy explained in Spanish.</p>
-
-<p>“Your name Boy-who-falls-asleep, his name Nah-che.
-But you must call him chi-kis-n—my brother.”</p>
-
-<p>“Muchos gratias (Many thanks),” answered
-Jimmie, shaking hands with Nah-che. Nah-che was
-a stocky, round-faced boy, and Jimmie liked him in
-spite of that trick with the sheep bell.</p>
-
-<p>“The chief’s name is Go-yath-lay,” continued the
-red-headed boy. “He is war-captain of the Chiricahua.
-Nah-che is son of Cochise, head chief.”</p>
-
-<p>The war captain, who had been listening intently,
-trying to understand the words, nodded, and spoke
-again in Apache.</p>
-
-<p>“Your chi-kis-n will show you,” translated the red-headed
-boy, who knew Spanish and Apache both.</p>
-
-<p>“Aqui (Here),” bade Nah-che: and Jimmie followed
-him to one of those regulation Apache jacals—a
-low round-topped hut made from willow branches stuck
-in a circle and bent over to fasten together, with pieces
-of deer hide and cow hide laid to cover the framework
-of the sides, and flat bundles of brush to thatch<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span>
-the roof. The jacals resembled dirty white bowls
-bottom-up. Each had a little opening, as a door to be
-entered only by stooping half double.</p>
-
-<p>Before the hut an Apache woman in a loose cotton
-waist worn outside a draggled calico skirt was busy
-cooking. She stirred the contents of an iron kettle, set
-upon a bed of coals in a small shallow pit. She threw
-back her long, coarse black hair and scanned Jimmie
-curiously while Nah-che spoke a few words to her.</p>
-
-<p>Then repeating the title “chi-kis-n” Nah-che strolled
-away. The woman smiled broadly at Jimmie, took
-him by the arm, and talking to him led him inside the
-hut. The earth had been dug out, there, so that they
-might stand, in the middle, and not strike their heads
-on the ceiling.</p>
-
-<p>The woman made Jimmie remove his trousers and
-shoes; and leaving him his ragged shirt tossed to him
-a pair of old moccasins.</p>
-
-<p>Again out-doors, she gave him a mess of the stew,
-in a gourd bowl. The stew was corn and beans cooked
-together, and was very good indeed, to a hungry boy.</p>
-
-<p>“Go,” she signed. “Come back at night.”</p>
-
-<p>Here in the open, Jimmie felt rather odd, with nothing
-on but his shirt and moccasins. Still, most of the
-boys and girls of his age, in the village, had even less on.
-They were brown, though, and he was white, which
-seemed to make a difference.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the boys were playing at what appeared
-to be hide-and-seek amidst the brush and trees and
-rocks; others were shooting with bows and arrows.
-The little girls had dolls, of rags, and stuffed, painted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span>
-buckskin. They all viewed him out of their sparkling
-black eyes, and the girls giggled the same as white girls.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie’s squaw shoved him from behind.</p>
-
-<p>“U-ga-shé!” she ordered. “Go!”</p>
-
-<p>After all, thought Jimmie, if he had to live here
-for a while, he might better pretend to enjoy himself,
-until he got a good chance to escape. So he boldly
-joined in the game of hide-and-seek. At first everybody
-there let him alone. But he chased around, with
-the others, his shirt flapping, and soon he was one of
-the “gang” and was being shouted at in Apache.</p>
-
-<p>The one-eyed boy and Nah-che and several others
-of that age stayed by themselves, playing a game with
-raw-hide cards, and talking. They were too old for
-foolishness.</p>
-
-<p>This night Jimmie slept in the squaw’s hut. There
-was a feast and dance, judging by the noise that he
-heard when awake. Nah-che came in late. In the
-morning the red-headed boy went away on foot with
-three Apaches who evidently had been visitors at the
-village; and as he did not return during the day, he
-probably belonged somewhere else, himself.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="II">II<br />
-<small>JIMMIE LEARNS TO BE APACHE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>These were the principal band of the Cho-kon-en
-Apaches who were called Chiricahua (“Great Mountain”)
-Apaches because of the Chiricahua Mountains
-amidst which they lived. But Cho-kon-en was their
-own name.</p>
-
-<p>The pleasant-faced Cochise was the head chief.
-He was about fifty-five years old. The captain Go-yath-lay
-or “One-who-yawns” was the war chief.
-He was forty years old. The Mexicans whom he
-had fought had given him the name Geronimo (Her-<em>on</em>-i-mo),
-which is Spanish for Jerome.</p>
-
-<p>There were other bands of Chiricahuas, under other
-chiefs—Na-na and Chihuahua (Chi-wah-wah) and
-Loco, and so forth. Na-na was the oldest of all; he
-was nearly eighty, and had been wounded many times
-in battle—yes, as many as fifteen times. Chihuahua
-was stout and good-natured. Loco was thin and quite
-bow-legged.</p>
-
-<p>In the Sierra Madre Mountains of Mexico, which
-were the south end of the Chiricahua Range, were the
-Nedni Apaches, under old Chief Juh, or “Whoa.”
-Chief Cochise and Chief Juh frequently went to war
-together against the Mexicans.</p>
-
-<p>Northeastward, or in western New Mexico lived
-the Chi-hen-ne—the Ojo Caliente (Oho Cal-i-en-te) or
-Warm Spring Apaches, under Chief Victorio. With
-Chief Victorio’s people the Cochise people had long
-been as brothers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span></p>
-
-<p>The woman who had charge of Jimmie was Nah-da-ste.
-She was a sister of Geronimo. Her husband
-had been killed in battle with the Mexicans. The
-warrior who had captured Jimmie was Geronimo’s
-younger brother Porico, or “White Horse.”</p>
-
-<p>Nah-che, Jimmie’s chi-kis-n, was the youngest son
-of Chief Cochise. Geronimo the war chief liked him
-very much. His name meant “meddlesome,” for he
-had been a mischievous baby. In about three years, or
-when he was seventeen, if he had proved himself
-worthy in the hunt and on the long trail, he would
-be admitted into the councils as a warrior.</p>
-
-<p>The same with another boy, Chato. He was called
-Chato, or “Flat-nose,” because he had been kicked
-in the face by a mule.</p>
-
-<p>Taza, Nah-che’s elder brother, already was a warrior
-and would be head chief, probably, after Cochise
-his father died. But that was not certain; head chiefs
-were elected and not born.</p>
-
-<p>As for the red-headed, one-eyed blue-eyed boy——</p>
-
-<p>“His name is Red-head,” said Nah-che. “He is
-not one of us. He is part Mexican and part American.
-He was captured a long time ago by some of our men,
-but he lives with the White Mountains now, in the
-north. The White Mountains are at peace, on their
-land where the new American fort is being built.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie rapidly learned Apache, although many of
-the Chiricahuas spoke Spanish. He soon had lost his
-shirt, and went about with only a rag around his waist.
-Everybody in the Cochise camp was kind to him. He
-was an Apache boy, now. The Apaches never whipped<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span>
-their children, nor punished them in any way except
-by scolding.</p>
-
-<p>The little children were made to help in the fields
-where corn and squash and beans and melons were
-raised; and went with their mothers to gather seeds
-and berries and acorns and mescal—for the Apaches
-ate curious things.</p>
-
-<p>The girls played with dolls, and at housekeeping
-and tended to the babies, of which there were many.
-The boys of nine and ten, Jimmie’s age, and over,
-worked some, but they were encouraged to use the bow
-and arrow, and throw the lance, and practice at war
-and at the hunt, so as to train them as warriors and
-to strengthen their muscles.</p>
-
-<p>The war game was the best sport. Some of the
-boys pretended to be Mexicans. The others remained
-Apaches. The “Mexicans” were given a head-start,
-into the brush and timber, and the “Apaches” set
-out to find their trail and to surprise them.</p>
-
-<p>Although the “Mexicans” did everything they
-might think of, to conceal their tracks and to get away,
-they always were discovered. Then by running and
-sneaking and crawling flat with grass and cactus tied
-to their heads the “Apaches” proceeded to ambush the
-“Mexicans.” Then the “Apaches” yelled and shot
-fast with light arrows, and the “Mexicans” were
-killed or captured.</p>
-
-<p>Turkeys were caught by running after them up hill
-and down until they were so tired that they could not
-fly, and were killed by a blow from a club on the neck.
-Rabbits were chased, too, and surrounded by a circle<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span>
-of boys armed with bows and clubs; and they, too,
-were killed.</p>
-
-<p>All these sports made the Apache boys fleet of foot
-and quick of eye and arm, and very strong in lungs and
-legs.</p>
-
-<p>The Apaches had curious customs as well as curious
-food.</p>
-
-<p>“You must never ask a Tinneh (‘Tinneh’ was the
-Apache’s own title; it meant ‘man’) his name,” explained
-Nah-che. “Only somebody else may speak it.
-If he spoke it, he would have bad luck.”</p>
-
-<p>And——</p>
-
-<p>“You must never speak of the bear or the mule or
-the snake or the lightning unless you say Ostin Shosh
-(Old Man Bear), or Ostin Mule or Ostin Snake or
-Ostin lightning. It is not well to talk about them
-or the owl. They are medicine.”</p>
-
-<p>And——</p>
-
-<p>“After you are married you must not look upon
-the face of your wife’s mother. You must avoid meeting
-her or speaking to her. You must hide your face
-or turn your back, or you will be disrespectful.”</p>
-
-<p>And——</p>
-
-<p>“You must not eat fish meat, or the meat of the
-pig. They are bad.”</p>
-
-<p>And——</p>
-
-<p>“When anyone dies we give away everything of his
-that we don’t burn. If that was not done, then there
-might be persons of bad hearts who would wish a
-relative to die so that they would get his property.”</p>
-
-<p>And——</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span></p>
-
-<p>“When I go on the trail as a warrior, for the first
-four times I must not touch my lips to water. I must
-drink through a hollow reed, or I will spoil the luck of
-the whole party. And I must not scratch my head
-with my fingers. I must use a scratch stick.”</p>
-
-<p>War parties went out frequently, sometimes under
-Geronimo, sometimes under Cochise also. The warriors
-marched on foot, as a rule, because then they
-could climb and hide better. On foot an Apache could
-travel forty to seventy-five miles at a stretch, which
-was as much as a horse could do. No white man could
-equal an Apache, in covering rough country and desert
-country.</p>
-
-<p>The parties were sent out mainly against the Mexicans
-of Mexico, to get plunder, although the Chiricahuas
-had no love for the Americans, either, Nah-che
-explained again.</p>
-
-<p>He was sitting, pulling the hairs from his chin and
-cheeks with a pair of bone tweezers. It was unmanly
-for a warrior to have any hair on his face, and Nah-che
-expected to be a warrior after he had made four war-trails.
-Four was the lucky number, with the Apaches.</p>
-
-<p>“We hate the Mexicans. They are bad,” said
-Nah-che. “They kill our women and children, and
-pay for scalps. With the Americans it is like this:</p>
-
-<p>“When they first came into our country we were
-friendly to them. We saw that they were different
-from the Mexicans, and they had been at war with the
-Mexicans, too. They shot one of us, and offered to
-pay a little something, which was not punishment
-enough. Still we did not stay at war with them.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span>
-Cochise made a camp near the American wagon-road
-at Apache Pass, where Camp Bowie is now, and traded,
-and sold wood. One time a Mexican woman and her
-baby were stolen by some bad Indians from an American,
-and the Chiricahua were asked to return them.
-We did not have them, or know anything about them,
-but Cochise and Mangas Coloradas of the Mimbreño
-Apaches and some other chiefs went with a white flag
-to meet a young American war chief at Apache Pass,
-and talk.</p>
-
-<p>“When they got there the American chief surrounded
-them with his soldiers and told them that they
-would be kept shut in a tent until they sent and got
-the baby and woman. They decided they would rather
-be killed than be kept prisoners. So they drew their
-knives, and Cochise cut a hole through the back of the
-tent, and there was a fight. Several were killed. But
-Cochise and Mangas Coloradas escaped. Cochise was
-wounded in the knee by a gun knife (bayonet). The
-Americans hung his brother and five others, by the
-neck, and Cochise hung an American by the neck;
-and he and Mangas Coloradas called all their warriors
-and nearly captured the Americans. The young American
-captain had acted very foolish.</p>
-
-<p>“After two or three years Mangas Coloradas (this
-was Spanish for ‘Red Sleeves’) grew tired of
-fighting. He was badly wounded, and he sent word
-that he would like to treat for peace. The Americans
-told him to come in with his people. Cochise had
-married his sister, and we and the Mimbreños often
-helped each other, and now Cochise advised him not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span>
-to trust the word of the Americans. But Mangas
-Coloradas went to an American fort in New Mexico.</p>
-
-<p>“Then they seized him and put him into a little
-house with only one window, high up. The soldiers
-scowled at him; so that when he was put into the little
-house he said to himself: ‘This is my end. I shall
-never again hunt through the valleys and mountains of
-my people.’ And that was so. This night while he
-was asleep somebody from outside threw a big rock
-down on his chest—or else a soldier guard punched
-him with a hot knife on the end of a gun. We do
-not know. Anyway, he was much frightened. He ran
-about, trying to climb out and fight with his hands
-and then the soldiers shot him many times, and he died.</p>
-
-<p>“Now you see that the Chiricahua cannot be friends
-with the Americans any more than with the Mexicans,
-and it is so with other Tinneh. The Warm Springs
-are friendly, because Chief Victorio thinks that is wise;
-and the Sierra Blanca (White Mountains) have agreed
-not to fight. But they have not lost chiefs and brothers
-like we have.”</p>
-
-<p>This was the way the Chiricahua Apaches thought.
-But of course there were two sides to the quarrel.
-Joe Felmer and Pete Kitchen and other pioneers had
-claimed that old Mangas Coloradas had been a regular
-bandit who never intended to stay at peace. He had
-tortured and killed men and women and children, and
-was determined to drive all the Americans out of the
-country. Once he had been captured by miners and
-tied up and whipped, which had made him worse.</p>
-
-<p>He had lived to be seventy years old, and although<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span>
-even Pete Kitchen did not wholly approve of the manner
-with which he had been disposed of, it was a great
-relief to have him out of the way. Maybe he might
-have been educated to stay at peace, and maybe not.</p>
-
-<p>But now that the Chiricahuas hated the Americans
-and Mexicans both, Jimmie saw little chance of escape.</p>
-
-<p>Maria the Mexican boy had settled down to be an
-Apache. All his folks had been killed, and he said
-that he might as well live with the Apaches. He had
-plenty to eat and little to do; and he thought that he
-would marry an Apache girl, when he was old enough,
-and stay Apache.</p>
-
-<p>The Red-head boy who lived with the White Mountain
-Apaches came in once or twice, to visit, while
-out hunting or just scouting around. He could not
-speak English. His father had been Irish and his
-mother Mexican, and Spanish had been the only language
-used in his home. Since the Apaches had captured
-him eight or nine years ago he had learned
-Apache, too.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you going to stay Apache, Red-head?” asked
-Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” answered Red-head, in Apache. “I’ll stay
-with the White Mountains, but I don’t like the Chiricahua.
-It is no use for them to fight the Americans.
-Besides, they killed my father and mother. Are you
-going to be a Chiricahua, Boy-who-sleeps?”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“No. I am American. I don’t want to be anything
-but American. I’m a white boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is good,” approved Red-head. He was a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span>
-snappy, energetic boy, built low to the ground, and
-with his red hair and freckled face and one bright
-blue eye looked very nervy. “I like the Americans.
-Some day I’ll be a scout with the American soldiers.
-The White Mountain Apaches are good Apaches.
-Chief Pedro is wise. He knows that it is no use to fight
-the Americans. It is better to live at peace with them,
-and raise corn, and hunt, and be given food and clothes.
-That is easier than fighting and starving and losing
-warriors. The Americans are too many, and are well
-armed. The Chiricahua have bad hearts and will all
-be killed. You ought to leave them.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t,” replied Jimmie. “I don’t know where
-to go.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Red-head, winking with his one
-shrewd blue eye, “wait and maybe I’ll help you. But
-don’t tell anybody about my talk with you.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="III">III<br />
-<small>THE RED-HEAD TURNS UP</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Jimmie had been with the Cochise Chiricahuas
-about a year, as he reckoned, because winter (and not a
-cold winter) had passed, and the yuccas, or Spanish-bayonet
-cactuses, and the mescal, or century plant cactuses,
-were again in bloom with their tall, stately plumes
-of white, which indicated May.</p>
-
-<p>All this time nobody had come looking for him,
-and he did not know what was going on outside—at
-Pete Kitchen’s or at Tucson or at Camp Grant or at
-Joe Felmer’s, or anywhere.</p>
-
-<p>All the news was Apache news; gossip about hunting
-and raids, and cowardly Mexicans and stupid
-Americans.</p>
-
-<p>Camps had been changed frequently, for the Chiricahuas
-did not remain long in any one spot. He had
-not seen Red-head in several months. According to
-Nah-che the soldiers were getting more numerous, and
-were fighting all the Apaches—the Chiricahuas and the
-Tontos and the Yavapais or Apache-Mohaves and the
-Mogollons: all who would not settle down at peace
-like the White Mountains and the Warm Springs.</p>
-
-<p>Part of the winter had been spent in Mexico, but
-just now the camp had been located again amidst the
-Chiricahua Mountains. Most of the warriors were out
-on a big raid, under Cochise and Geronimo. They had
-not taken any of the older boys. By this it looked as
-though they were going into American country, where
-they might meet the soldiers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span></p>
-
-<p>Nah-che admitted as much. He said that report
-had come of a killing of friendly Apaches at Camp
-Grant, so it was useless to trust the White-eyes (as the
-Americans were called); they were the enemies of the
-Apaches, and Cochise had gone to kill all the Mexicans
-and Americans that he could find, down there.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie felt anxious. He well knew how cunning
-and bold the Cochise Chiricahuas were. They had
-plenty of arms, including guns that they had captured.
-They were particularly eager to kill a young American
-war-captain who had been leading soldiers upon their
-trail.</p>
-
-<p>“Was he a new young war-captain?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, he was an old young war-captain—a horse
-chief. He had killed Apaches out of Tucson and Camp
-Grant both.”</p>
-
-<p>As Nah-che would not talk any more about him,
-Jimmie might only guess. But all the young officers in
-the First and the Third Cavalry at Camp Grant had
-been brave.</p>
-
-<p>The Cochise and Geronimo party were gone more
-than half a moon before word arrived from them.
-Then, one morning, two runners or messengers, Porico
-(“White Horse”), who was Geronimo’s brother, and
-Hal-zay, who was a half-brother to Nah-che, appeared.
-They had traveled hard and were tired, but they
-brought exciting news.</p>
-
-<p>The Chiricahuas had ambushed twenty American
-soldiers and scouts at the Bear Springs in the Mestinez
-(Mustang) Mountains only a day’s march east from
-Tucson; had killed six of them, maybe more, and had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span>
-driven the rest back clear into Camp Crittenden, southeast
-of Tucson; would have surrounded and killed
-them, too, had they not fought so skillfully.</p>
-
-<p>A few Chiricahuas had been killed, but among the
-first to fall, of the Americans, was the young horse
-chief who had given the Chiricahuas so much trouble.
-They had taken his clothes and other trophies, and
-had easily escaped to the Sierra Madre Mountains of
-Mexico.</p>
-
-<p>Cochise was going to stay there for a time, until the
-soldiers quit trying to trail him. Then he would come
-north.</p>
-
-<p>The old squaws in the rancheria immediately lay
-flat upon their stomachs and screeched and wailed,
-mourning the warriors who had fallen. This was
-Apache custom. But the camp on the whole was happy
-and Jimmie was the only truly sad member. He was
-not an Apache; he was an American, even though he
-did not look much like a white boy, now, save for his
-eyes and hair.</p>
-
-<p>The camp was moved, to guard against a surprise
-from the soldiers of the American forts. After another
-half a moon the war party came in and were given
-a great welcome. They had eaten most of the captured
-cavalry horses, but they brought some of the
-other plunder. Taza was wearing the flannel shirt of
-the young officer.</p>
-
-<p>He was very proud of it. It was a blue shirt, with
-the straps of a first lieutenant sewed upon the shoulders.
-Jimmie recognized these, because he knew army uniforms.
-The shirt was passed about. Inside the neck<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span>
-had been stitched a little tag, bearing the letters “H.
-B. C.” printed on it.</p>
-
-<p>Oh! This was Lieutenant Cushing’s shirt, then!
-His initials were H. B. C., for Howard B. Cushing; and
-he was a first lieutenant, and he had commanded lots
-of detachments out of Camp Grant, against the
-Apaches. He was a terrific fighter, too, and one of
-the very best officers on a trail. Jimmie remembered
-him well. All southern Arizona knew of Lieutenant
-Howard B. Cushing of the Third Cavalry. He had
-served through the Civil War; one of his brothers had
-been killed at Gettysburg and another, as a lieutenant
-in the navy, had blown up the Confederate iron-clad
-Albemarle by poking it with a bomb attached to a long
-pole.</p>
-
-<p>This Lieutenant Cushing of the Third Cavalry was
-just as brave. The Apaches had had good reason to
-fear him. No wonder they rejoiced, now that they
-had ambushed him and wiped him out.</p>
-
-<p>Nah-che saw Jimmie gulp in his throat. Nah-che
-had keen eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“You know him?” asked Nah-che.</p>
-
-<p>“Friend,” answered Jimmie, turning away.</p>
-
-<p>“He was a brave captain,” volunteered Nah-che.
-“He fought hard. But in war brave men die.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie longed for the Red-head to take him away;
-or for soldiers or scouts to attack the camp and rescue
-him.</p>
-
-<p>The killing of Lieutenant Cushing encouraged the
-Chiricahuas. Cochise had talks with Chiefs Loco and
-Chihuahua, and with Chief Nana who was with a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span>
-Warm Spring band and helping the Chiricahuas. Parties
-were being sent out constantly; some of the captains
-took their families, Maria was traded to Chief Nana,
-and soon the main Chiricahua camp was much smaller.</p>
-
-<p>One day Nah-che, who had been away with Geronimo,
-came hurrying in with orders for the camp to be
-moved again.</p>
-
-<p>“There are soldiers marching this way,” he reported,
-breathless, and big with his news. “They
-struck us when we were eating, in the medicine springs
-valley near the Sierra Bonita. We were bringing meat
-up from Mexico, but we left it. We have seen signal
-fires telling us of other soldiers. Geronimo says to go
-at once to the next place-we-know-of.”</p>
-
-<p>Instantly the camp was all confusion. The old
-men shouted, the women ran around screeching and
-gathering their household things, children scampered
-and screamed, dogs yelped. The frameworks of the
-huts were set afire, and leaving in the smoke the Chiricahuas
-hustled out for other quarters.</p>
-
-<p>They made a queer procession. The old men
-stoutly hobbled by aid of long staffs or “walking-sticks”;
-the women were laden with huge bundles slung
-to their backs by means of straps about their foreheads,
-and with babies tucked into their shawls or bound
-in wicker cradles; ponies had been packed with baskets;
-the smaller children rode atop, but the strong boys
-and girls walked. Jimmie and the boys of his age were
-not obliged to carry anything.</p>
-
-<p>Through canyon and across valley, into brush and
-timber, up slope and down, they toiled, led by old<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span>
-Cha-dah, who was the camp tatah or chief. Every
-so often the tatah and the other old men in advance
-halted, and stuck their staffs into the ground, and
-waited. Here everybody rested, for a brief space.
-By this system many miles were covered before camp
-was established, at evening, and all might eat and
-sleep.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie, lying wrapped in a piece of blanket near
-Nah-che, under a pine tree, was awakened in the night
-by a hand firmly pressed upon his forehead. The
-pressure warned him not to stir, so he only stared up—and
-in the star-lighted dimness he saw the one bright
-eye of Red-head beaming down from close above him.</p>
-
-<p>Red-head was squatting, waiting. Now he removed
-his hand slowly, and beckoned with his finger,
-and silently backed away.</p>
-
-<p>This was enough for Jimmie. What Red-head
-was doing here, on a sudden, after a long absence, he
-did not delay to reason out, but began cautiously to
-slip from his blanketing.</p>
-
-<p>First he drew away, crouched; then on hands and
-knees; then, stooping, and carefully setting foot before
-foot, testing the ground lest a twig snap. From tree to
-tree he stole, until he was beyond the camp—and on a
-sudden, again, Red-head arose right in front of him.</p>
-
-<p>That was good! Now he followed behind the Red-head’s
-soundless course, swiftly, straight away, until
-Red-head stopped.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you want to escape?” asked Red-head. He
-carried a bow and quiver, and wore only a cloth about
-his middle, and moccasins.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you’ll travel fast, I’ll take you,” said Red-head.
-“Soldiers are coming. If we don’t find them
-you can go to Chief Pedro of the White Mountains.
-The Chiricahua never visit there, because of the fort.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bueno (Good),” approved Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>Red-head set out at a trot and rapid walk, but Jimmie
-kept right in his wake. Jimmie’s legs were as
-strong as those of Red-head; his training in the Apache
-games stood by him. On and on and on they hastened,
-without a word, through the night, amidst timber, and
-across open flats, and down cactus hills and up again.</p>
-
-<p>Red-head seemed to know what he was about, but
-Jimmie of course was completely lost. Not until the
-dusk had thinned and the eastern sky was pink did
-Red-head halt, at a spring which had made the ground
-mushy in a little hollow among rocks and cedars.</p>
-
-<p>“Drink, eat, rest,” he said. He grinned with
-his freckled face, his long red hair was damp with
-sweat. “You did well, Boy-who-sleeps. One more
-travel and they cannot catch us. Wait.”</p>
-
-<p>He fitted an arrow to his bow-string and stepped
-aside, hunting. Jimmie flung himself down, drank, and
-lay flat, resting. The sky was pink as far as over-head,
-he might glimpse Red-head moving silently among the
-cedars; saw him shoot an arrow; and presently Red-head
-returned with two rabbits.</p>
-
-<p>They started a fire by twirling a pointed stick set
-upon a flat piece of wood until the dust smoked; then
-they blew upon the dust and some bark tinder until
-there was a glow. Then they cooked the rabbits over
-dry cedar that made no smoke.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span></p>
-
-<p>First by the stars and later by the pink east Jimmie
-knew that they had been traveling toward the north.
-Now Red-head explained. Some of his talk was
-Apache and some was Spanish-Mexican. He used
-whichever language came the easier.</p>
-
-<p>“We will not go straight to Camp Apache in the
-country where the White Mountains are,” he said. “It
-is better that we go round-about. If the Chiricahua
-see that we are going to Camp Apache that might make
-trouble. They would say that the White Mountains
-stole you, and some time they might capture <em>me</em>. Now
-if they try to follow us, we will fool them.</p>
-
-<p>“I will tell you about the soldiers. There is a new
-American comandante. He has come to Tucson, to
-fight the bad Indians. He is leading out a great lot
-of horse soldiers and white scouts and tame-Indian
-scouts—Navahos and Papagos and Yaquis and
-Apaches, too—and wagons and pack-mules. He has
-been at Camp Bowie, and he is marching north to
-Camp Apache, but he may not stay. The White Mountains
-have heard this from runners. The runners say
-that he is a wonderful comandante, who knows everything
-but asks many questions. Shall we try to find
-him, Boy-who-sleeps? I think that now is a good
-chance, while the Chiricahua are hiding.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want to live with the Chiricahuas,”
-asserted Jimmie. “I hate them. They kill my
-friends. I’m not an Indian. I’m white.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know whether I’m American or Mexican
-or Indian,” grinned Red-head. “I can be anything.
-What is your American name, Boy-who-sleeps? I will
-call you by it. We will quit being Apache.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span></p>
-
-<p>“James MacGregor Dunn, but everybody called
-me Jimmie.”</p>
-
-<p>“Inju (good),” grunted Red-head, in Apache.
-“I am called Micky Free by the soldiers at Camp
-Apache. You shall call me Micky, and I shall call you
-Cheemie.”</p>
-
-<p>“How did you lose your eye, Micky?”</p>
-
-<p>“By a deer. Three or four years ago I shot a deer
-with an arrow, and knocked him down. I thought I
-had killed him, but when I ran and grabbed his head
-he fought me and struck me with his horn in the eye.
-Old Miguel has only one eye, too. He lost that in
-battle.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who is old Miguel?”</p>
-
-<p>“He is a White Mountain chief. There are Miguel
-and Pedro and old Es-ki-tis-tsla and Pi-to-ne. They
-are for peace.”</p>
-
-<p>“Inju,” grunted Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>While they rested and ate and drank, Micky kept
-a sharp look-out. Every now and again he mounted
-upon a rocky ledge and lay there, peering.</p>
-
-<p>“I see smokes,” he said, coming down the last
-time. “I do not think they are meant for us. The
-Chiricahua are signaling to each other. But we had
-better go on, Cheemie, to a cave I know of. We will
-sleep.”</p>
-
-<p>Yes, there were smokes, far back on their trail:
-smokes that signaled “enemies.” This was well, because
-with enemies around, the Chiricahuas would not
-risk following the trail of a boy. So that noon Jimmie
-and Micky slept in Micky’s cave, which was concealed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span>
-high up in the side of a canyon. They entered it from
-above. From the mouth they might see a long distance.</p>
-
-<p>“In two days we shall cross the Tonto country,”
-remarked Micky. “That is where we turn east for
-Camp Apache and the White Mountains. We will have
-to be very careful again. The Tonto are bad people.
-They are outlaws. When an Apache gets bad, he
-joins the Tonto.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="IV">IV<br />
-<small>THE CANVAS SUIT MAN</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The country was steadily growing wilder, with
-much large timber. For two days Micky had been
-leading on and on. The Chiricahuas did not seem to
-be pursuing, and Jimmie was certain that he had escaped
-from them. He wished that he might have said
-good-by to good Nah-da-ste, who had taken care of
-him; and to his friends Nah-che and Chato, and some
-others; but of course that had not been possible. They
-might have known that he could not stay being an
-Apache.</p>
-
-<p>Now on this the third day from the cave Micky
-suddenly stopped short and examined an object beside
-him. They had been following just below a gravelly
-ridge, so as to be out of sight. Yuccas and bunchy grass
-grew here, and a few cedars, and the sun was warm.</p>
-
-<p>“Tonto sign,” spoke Micky, pointing.</p>
-
-<p>It was a band of dried grass knotted around a yucca
-leaf. Only eyes like those of Micky would have seen
-it; but Micky saw everything.</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know, Micky?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because I know,” answered Micky. “That is the
-way the Tonto tie their grass. A White Mountain
-would have tied different, and so would a Chiricahua
-or a Pinal. And the same with piling stones or writing
-signs on rocks or bark. It means a Tonto war party
-has passed here, and tells other Tonto to follow. See—there
-is the trail.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Shall we hide, Micky?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. The trail was made early this morning. It
-is an old trail. See, Cheemie? You have lived with
-the Chiricahua and you ought to know. There is a
-broken twig, where it was stepped on, and the leaves
-are wilted. The sap is done flowing. I think we’d better
-follow and see where those Tonto are going, so
-we won’t run into them.”</p>
-
-<p>The trail proceeded up the gravelly ridge, where
-moccasin prints were plain, and over, and through
-among cedars of a flat mesa; and suddenly Jimmie
-fairly gasped for breath. They had come out upon the
-edge of a great, broad, deep valley lying like a green
-basin; it was so deep that the trees in it looked like
-shrubs, and the farther edge was veiled in purple mist.</p>
-
-<p>“Tonto home,” said Micky. “Down in there the
-Tonto live, where they can hide. Up here is Mogollon
-country. It is all a flat mountain top, on the Sierra
-Mogollon. We shall see many big pine trees soon.
-When we find where this Tonto trail goes we had better
-turn back.”</p>
-
-<p>The trail skirted the dizzy edge; then it veered inland,
-and was joined by another trail, and presently the
-joined trails made straight into a tremendous forest.
-The trees were all pines; they stood up tall and stately,
-and under them the ground was clean, except for the
-needles and the low grass and flowers. Throughout the
-long aisles flecked by the sun not a thing moved. It
-was a silent forest.</p>
-
-<p>Micky and Jimmie trotted fast, their eyes upon the
-trail, or searching ahead. Now it was past noon.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span>
-Once in a while the view opened into the great Tonto
-Basin; and again there was only the timber, with the
-serried trunks extending on every side. In such a
-forest, and when gazing into such a basin, a boy felt
-small.</p>
-
-<p>About an hour or an hour and a half after noon
-Micky, who was just before, stopped short once more—stopped
-so quickly that he stood with one foot uplifted.
-He signed “Come,” and Jimmie came on.</p>
-
-<p>“Horse tracks now, Cheemie. American horses.
-Mules, too. American soldiers.”</p>
-
-<p>This was a larger trail; the pine needles were imprinted
-with many hoof marks. The horses had been
-ridden four abreast—yes, five and six abreast, so that
-the trail lay broadly. They were shod horses, which
-meant cavalry horses, because the Apache horses were
-not shod, save with buckskin boots in cactus country.
-No Apaches rode four or five abreast, anyway. The
-mule prints were smaller and rounder; and the prints
-cut deeper, showing that the mules had been laden:
-pack-mules.</p>
-
-<p>Hah! Micky studied the new trail. The Tontos,
-too, had paused and studied it.</p>
-
-<p>“These are some of the soldiers I spoke of, I
-think,” finally declared Micky. “They have been at
-Camp Apache, maybe. Anyhow, they are going away
-from it. Maybe the Tonto will attack them. What
-do you say to do, Cheemie? My heart tells me we have
-gone far enough. Shall we turn back, for Camp
-Apache?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d rather try to find the soldiers, Micky.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I will take you to Camp Apache. There are soldiers
-at Camp Apache; and the White Mountains will
-be good to you if the soldiers don’t want you. We
-will all be chi-kis-n to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you afraid of these soldiers, Micky?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; but I am afraid of the Tonto. Besides, I live
-with Chief Pedro’s people on the reservation near Camp
-Apache. I have no business off in this other direction.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have, though,” answered Jimmie. “I live at
-Camp Grant. Maybe these soldiers are marching back
-to Camp Grant, or Tucson, and they’ll take me there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” replied Micky, “I will follow with you,
-Cheemie.” His one blue eye danced. “If there is a
-fight, I would like to see it. I would like to see those
-Tonto whipped. But don’t expect me to stay with the
-soldiers, Cheemie. That might make me trouble.
-Come on, but we must be very careful, or the Tonto
-will kill us, too.”</p>
-
-<p>After having surveyed the soldiers’ trail the Tontos
-had continued on beside it, and between it and the edge
-of the basin. But Micky crossed the soldiers’ trail and
-hurried away from it. He seemed much excited by the
-prospect of a fight, for he set such a pace that Jimmie
-half ran. Evidently he was going to circuit out and
-back again, to cut the trail farther ahead.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie kept his ears sharp pricked for soldier
-sounds—voices, or the creak of saddle-leathers, or the
-tinkle of pack-mule bells; and also for the shooting of
-guns: but all was silence. Twice Micky and he struck
-the trail again. It wended right along, among the
-trees, and it was getting fresher. Indeed, the soldiers<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span>
-could not be far ahead, now. No Tonto trail had been
-cut; therefore the Tontos were still on the other side
-of the soldiers’ trail.</p>
-
-<p>The sun had sunk toward some high purplish ridges
-away yonder, bounding the basin in the west, and
-evening was near. The third time that Micky led in, to
-cut the trail, he and Jimmie got clear to the edge of the
-great basin without coming to any trail at all. For
-the last hundred yards they had crawled, with bunches
-of weeds tied to their heads, lest the Tontos should be
-in waiting, but nothing had happened.</p>
-
-<p>The big pines extended to the edge of the basin,
-and along the edge were large boulders, scattered among
-the trees here. Some of them were the size of a hut.
-They lay in twos and threes, as if dropped by a blast.</p>
-
-<p>Micky, with Jimmie close behind, wormed from
-the trees for two boulders that touched. They touched
-at an angle, so that they left a space, within which
-two boys might crouch, on the ground, and see out by
-peeping through the cracks, or by standing up.</p>
-
-<p>“We have come far enough, Cheemie,” whispered
-Micky. “It is a good place to stay, till the Tonto
-and the soldiers pass. And if they do not fight I am
-going back to my White Mountains. But I want to see
-the fight. Are you thirsty, Cheemie? You’ll have to
-drink a stone.”</p>
-
-<p>He picked up a round pebble and put it into his
-mouth. Jimmie did the same. A pebble in the mouth
-made the mouth wet.</p>
-
-<p>“Listen!” bade Jimmie. “I hear tinkle!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; pack-mules. The soldiers are coming. You<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span>
-can go with them, Cheemie, but you must not say one
-word about me. Promise.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, Micky.”</p>
-
-<p>The bells of the pack-mules were yet a long way
-off. Micky, with the weeds still bound on his head,
-cautiously rose, to peer over the two boulders—and
-down he dropped.</p>
-
-<p>“S-s-s! Tonto!” he whispered.</p>
-
-<p>He began to poke out his head, gradually, around
-a corner of the rock on his side. Jimmie gently wriggled,
-crawling flat, until he was under an over-hang
-on his side, and might see straight before, with his head
-just raised from the ground. Right up over the edge
-of the mighty basin figures were popping, and scuttling
-for the timber: a file of them, Apaches!</p>
-
-<p>They crossed not more than thirty yards away.
-They were naked of body and limbs, their hair was
-black and long and straggly, they were daubed with
-deer blood and mescal juice, they carried strung bows
-and quivers, they were the fiercest, most hideous
-Apaches that Jimmie had ever seen.</p>
-
-<p>The low sun shone full against them, showing them
-plainly. They scarcely glanced aside as they hurried;
-and if they did chance to note Micky’s head or Jimmie’s
-head, they thought them to be two motionless tufts of
-weed, like other tufts growing here and there.</p>
-
-<p>Tontos! Jimmie counted seventeen, all springing
-out of the depths of the earth as suddenly as jacks-in-the-box,
-darting across, and in among the pines.
-Then there were two more, who dropped among the
-rocks under the trees.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span></p>
-
-<p>After the last had passed and vanished, Micky
-kicked Jimmie’s leg, and Jimmie drew back to face
-him behind the boulders. Micky’s blue eye fairly
-sparkled; even his freckles glowed, he was so excited.
-He certainly loved danger. He was not American
-enough to say “Hurrah!” but he looked it!</p>
-
-<p>“The Tonto are ready,” he whispered. “We’ll
-see the fight. Good! Quick! The soldiers are
-coming.”</p>
-
-<p>He crawled around the boulders, craned and peered,
-crept swiftly, with Jimmie in his tracks, to a better
-place, and wormed his way until they both might lie
-in a warm niche half filled with washed-in soil and
-screened with brush. From here they could see much
-better into the timber beyond the cross trail of the
-Tontos.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie felt a wild desire to warn the soldiers of the
-ambush by the Tontos; but the Tontos were cutting
-him off and he had no time for making a circuit. No,
-none at all. The soldiers were in sight—the head of
-their column had appeared, riding on, up an aisle
-through the towering pines, a short way back from the
-edge of the basin.</p>
-
-<p>The first, by themselves, were five, riding leisurely
-almost knee to knee, and apparently enjoying the scenery.
-Their voices might be heard, as they chatted.
-One, a small, sun-dried man, wore an old slouch hat
-and grayish flannel shirt and dark trousers and cowhide
-boots. He was Tom Moore, a government packer.
-Jimmie knew him—had seen him at Camp Grant and
-in Tucson. Hah! And three were officers, in cavalry<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span>
-fatigue—there was Lieutenant John Bourke, of Camp
-Grant! Yes, sir! And Lieutenant William Ross! And
-another. But the man in the middle, on a mule, Jimmie
-did not know at all.</p>
-
-<p>If he was riding there he ought to be an officer, but
-he seemed to be wearing a brown canvas suit, a sort of
-brown canvas round-brimmed hat, and carried a shot-gun
-across the pommel of his saddle, the muzzle of
-course pointing ahead. Perhaps he was some sportsman
-from the East, on a hunting trip, with the cavalry.</p>
-
-<p>Micky lay perfectly still, intent to see with his one
-eye what would happen, but Jimmie trembled. His
-soldier friends were riding into an ambush and evidently
-had no suspicion of danger. Neither did their
-horses. The timber, with the sunshine streaming
-through the long aisles, stretched fragrant and peaceful.
-The air was so quiet that the riders’ voices, the
-occasional blowing of the horses, the scuff of hoofs
-and the creak of saddles, could be heard plainly.</p>
-
-<p>The cavalry column itself was to be seen, behind,
-a short distance, winding on among the trees, and the
-tinkle of the pack bells sounded, again. Jimmie caught
-his breath. Micky was tense, beside him. The advance
-squad apparently had reached the Tontos—were
-within short bow-shot, anyway. Why didn’t——?
-Ah, look out!</p>
-
-<p>“Twang! Whiz!” “Twang-twang! Whiz-whiz!”
-“Twang-twang-twang!” And “Whiz! Thud!
-Thud-thud!” The Tontos were whooping and screeching
-and shooting; their daubed faces and flying hair
-and naked bodies could be glimpsed gyrating among the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span>
-trees; their arrows whizzed and glanced and hummed
-and thudded, to the twanging of the bows. They were
-mainly behind the advance squad, trying to stampede
-the cavalry column. Up half-rose Jimmie, up half-rose
-Micky, the better to see. <a href="#i_061">Had the first volley killed
-anybody? Didn’t look so</a>, for not one of the squad
-was in sight; the animals were rearing and snorting,
-but every rider had instantly plunged from the saddle
-and dived for a tree, gun in one hand and reins in the
-other.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_061">
- <img src="images/i_061.jpg" alt="" title="" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p class="noic"><a href="#Page_61">HAD THE FIRST VOLLEY KILLED ANYBODY? DIDN’T LOOK SO</a></p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>That had been quick and smart work. Lieutenant
-Bourke and Lieutenant Ross and Tom Moore were
-no fools; and that sinewy man in the canvas suit was
-no fool, either.</p>
-
-<p>“Inju! Bueno! (Good! Good!)” chattered Micky,
-in Apache and Spanish both. “Huh! Tonto run
-already! Cowards!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hurrah! There come the other soldiers!” babbled
-Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>The carbines were banging, as the first troop began
-to fight—officers shouted, the man in the canvas suit
-jumped out, yelled orders and pointed, and leveled his
-shot-gun—“Bang!” The first troop, dismounted to
-the notes of a bugle, deployed on, firing, another troop
-was spurring in at a gallop—and the Tontos were scampering
-off through the timber.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie was just about to spring upright, glad, when
-Micky nudged him hard, in warning. Not all the
-Tontos had gone. The two who had dropped into ambush
-among the rocks at the timber edge had been cut<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span>
-off by the cavalry, and were now running back, and
-dancing and dodging, their heads turned.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t shoot them!” shouted the canvas suit man,
-in a loud voice. “We have them!”</p>
-
-<p>He was running, too—and his officers—and the
-foremost of the men—from tree to tree, after them,
-to surround them at the edge of the basin. The two
-Tontos had crouched, again, behind a large boulder.
-Jimmie might have tossed a stone and struck them;
-they were close in front of him and Micky, and fully
-exposed, against the boulder. But the soldiers had
-formed a half circle, hemming them in against the
-basin’s edge. Up straightened the two Tontos, behind
-their rock, drew their bows to the arrows’ heads, and
-stood, at bay, aiming now here, now there, threatening
-their enemies.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t shoot them!” the canvas suit man kept
-shouting. “Take them alive.” And he called to the
-Tontos: “Friends! Friends!”</p>
-
-<p>However, the two Tontos would have none of <em>that</em>.
-They stood braced, with bended bows, glaring from
-tangled hair, as defiant and menacing as a coiled rattle-snake.
-On a sudden—“Twang!”—they had loosed
-their arrows, and with a single backward spring and
-another bound had disappeared over the edge! Evidently
-they preferred death to capture—they certainly
-had killed themselves, for the basin looked to be a sheer
-drop of over a thousand feet.</p>
-
-<p>Out bolted Jimmie and ran, the better to see. Forward
-ran the canvas suit man and his officers and the
-soldiers. And there were the two Tontos, alive and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span>
-running, themselves. They were leaping and bounding
-like rabbits, from rock to rock and landing-place to
-landing-place of the merest trail zigzagging them
-almost straight up and down! that must have been the
-trail which all the Tontos had climbed.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment everybody was too astonished to
-shoot. Then—“Bang!” The canvas suit man had
-thrown his gun to his shoulder, lightning-quick, and
-aimed and pulled trigger.</p>
-
-<p>The second of the two Tontos leaped aside, one arm
-fell limp, and was dyed red. But he did not slacken.
-Now “Bang! Bang! Bang-bang!” The soldiers and
-the officers also shot as fast as they could, so that even
-the basin echoed. They were excited, and shooting
-down-hill, the Tontos were leaping and dodging and
-looked very small, not much larger than coyotes; and
-as far as anybody might see, not a bullet touched them.</p>
-
-<p>Pretty soon they had plunged into the brush and
-scrub-oak chaparral almost at the bottom of the precipice;
-they had got away.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie drew a long breath. In the excitement
-he had forgotten all about himself. Now he came to,
-and discovered that he was standing out here, alone,
-on a curve of the basin rim; and that the soldiers, the
-nearest only a few paces away, holding their smoking
-carbines were surveying him keenly. Some had begun
-to steal around, to head him off.</p>
-
-<p>Naturally they took him for an Apache.</p>
-
-<p>The canvas suit man had seen as quickly as any of
-the soldiers.</p>
-
-<p>“No cuidado, muchacho! Ven’ aqui! (Don’t be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span>
-afraid, boy! Come here!),” he called, in Spanish, to
-Jimmie. And added, in English, to the soldiers:
-“Bring that boy in.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie did not wait to be brought in. He raised his
-hand in the “peace sign,” and ran forward, crying:</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not Apache. I’m American. I’m Jimmie
-Dunn, Lieutenant Bourke! Hello, Tom Moore! Don’t
-you know me?”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="V">V<br />
-<small>JIMMIE REPORTS FOR DUTY</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“Well, for goodness’ sake!”</p>
-
-<p>Bronzed Lieutenant Bourke stared: runty Packer
-Tom Moore gaped amidst his wrinkles; everybody
-stood stock-still, amazed. Jimmie’s shrill announcement,
-as he ran in, created a sensation.</p>
-
-<p>Now Lieutenant Bourke hastened to him; so did
-Tom Moore; so did Lieutenant Ross: all the officers and
-men within hearing pressed around him.</p>
-
-<p>“By gracious, boy, we thought you were a bleached-out
-Tonto!” exclaimed Tom.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you doing here?” demanded Lieutenant
-Bourke. “Pete Kitchen said the Chiricahuas had
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“They did,” answered Jimmie, so glad to speak
-English again. He found the words a little stiff on his
-tongue, but he had not forgotten. “I ran away.”</p>
-
-<p>“Those were Tontos, weren’t they? How came
-you among the Tontos?”</p>
-
-<p>“I wasn’t among ’em. They didn’t have me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you here alone?”</p>
-
-<p>Huh! Jimmie looked around an instant; he was so
-happy that he was a-tremble. He did not sight Micky;
-the soldiers were covering the very spot where he and
-Micky had been hiding, but Micky was not with them.
-He had mysteriously vanished. Jimmie had promised
-not to betray him, and must keep his word.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir.” So far as he knew now, that was true.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span></p>
-
-<p>“How long have you been traveling?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nearly a week, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well if that ain’t the limit!” exploded weazened
-Tom Moore.</p>
-
-<p>“You’d better report to the general, Jimmie,” bade
-Lieutenant Bourke kindly. “General George Crook—that
-man in the canvas suit. He’s our department
-commander now, so don’t omit to salute him. Come
-along.”</p>
-
-<p>Scanned by curious eyes, Jimmie followed First
-Lieutenant John Bourke to where the man in the canvas
-suit was standing expectant, his shot-gun at an order.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant saluted, and Jimmie saluted. That
-was regulations.</p>
-
-<p>“This boy is Jimmie Dunn, sir,” reported the lieutenant.
-“He was taken by the Chiricahuas about a
-year ago, while herding sheep on the Kitchen ranch
-south of Tucson. He says that he has run away from
-them, and,” added the lieutenant, with a quizzical
-laugh, “he doesn’t want to go back.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie stood at attention, while General Crook eyed
-him. This, then, was the new “comandante” of
-whom Micky had spoken. He was a straight, square-shouldered,
-active-looking man, as strong on his feet
-as any Apache. Yes, he was of a tall, muscular build
-like Geronimo. He was of light complexion, with
-sandy hair and thin sandy moustache, and high forehead,
-and from between two very keen, gray-blue eyes
-a large sharp nose jutted down to a firm mouth set over
-a longish, firm chin. He needed shaving. The hands
-upon his shot-gun were brown and sinewy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span></p>
-
-<p>Now he queried abruptly, military fashion but not
-gruff; merely as though he required a short direct
-answer.</p>
-
-<p>“What band of Chiricahua?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cochise’s band.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where are they now?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know, sir. They’re traveling around.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where were they when you left them?”</p>
-
-<p>“They were in the north part of the Chiricahua
-Mountains, I think. They were moving to a new
-camp, because of the soldiers.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hah! Was Cochise there?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir. He was out and so was Geronimo. It
-was just the old men and the squaws. Most of the
-chiefs were in Mexico, on raids.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who is Geronimo?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s Go-yath-lay, the war chief.”</p>
-
-<p>“How long ago did you run away?”</p>
-
-<p>“Five days, I think.”</p>
-
-<p>“How did you happen to get up here? Did the
-Tonto have you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir. I was trying to go to Camp Apache.”</p>
-
-<p>“You answer like a soldier, boy. Are you a soldier’s
-son?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir. My mother and father were killed by
-the Apaches, but I lived with Joe Felmer. He’s post
-blacksmith for Camp Grant.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lieutenant Ross and Moore and I have seen him
-there often, general,” put in Lieutenant Bourke. “He
-calls Joe Felmer uncle, but they’re not relations, as I
-understand.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span></p>
-
-<p>“No, sir; we’re not,” said Jimmie. “Joe is mighty
-good to me, though.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did the Chiricahua treat you well?” asked the
-general.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir; but I don’t like them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?” And General Crook slightly smiled.
-When he smiled his face was kind and fatherly.</p>
-
-<p>“Because they wanted to make me an Apache, so
-I’d help them kill Americans and Mexicans and steal
-cattle. They torture people. And they killed Lieutenant
-Cushing, too!”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know that?” sharply queried the
-general.</p>
-
-<p>“They did, didn’t they, sir? I saw his shirt. Taza
-was wearing it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hum!” mused the general. “Could you guide
-us to the Cochise camp, do you think?”</p>
-
-<p>“N-no, sir,” faltered Jimmie. “You see, they
-have their own names for places, and sometimes I was
-in Mexico and sometimes I was in Arizona, and I got
-all mixed up.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see,” admitted the general. “You say you were
-trying to reach Camp Apache. Don’t you know that
-this is a long way west of Camp Apache? How did
-you happen to be off here?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir; I know it,” replied Jimmie. “The
-Chiricahua might think I was starting for Camp
-Apache, so I tried to fool them. Then I saw the Tonto
-trail, and then I saw the soldiers’ trail, and I was
-hurrying to catch you as soon as the Tonto did, when
-the Tonto jumped out of the basin, and I couldn’t do<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span>
-anything but hide and watch. I knew the soldiers
-would whip ’em, though. Did—did anybody get
-killed?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said the general grimly. “That will do,”
-he continued. “We’ve been at Camp Apache, and
-can’t take you back there; but we may be able to send
-you down to Camp Grant. Turn him over to Mr.
-Moore, if you please, lieutenant, and see that he’s outfitted
-more like a white boy and less like an Indian.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir.” Lieutenant Bourke saluted; Jimmie
-rigidly saluted. “Come with me, Jimmie.” And they
-looked up Tom Moore.</p>
-
-<p>There were two troops of cavalry and twenty pack-mules.
-Tom Moore was busy, just now, attending to
-the pack-train; and having been left with him Jimmie
-might gaze about and listen.</p>
-
-<p>None of the soldiers had even been wounded, but
-those Tontos certainly had shot hard. The general
-and party were examining a pine-trunk into which a
-Tonto arrow had buried itself clear to the feathers!
-In several other tree trunks there were arrows that
-could not be pulled out. As far as might be discovered,
-no Tontos had been wounded, except the one shot
-by the general. It had been a sharp skirmish, nevertheless.</p>
-
-<p>Micky Free had disappeared. Not a trace of him
-was noted. Jimmie loyally said not a word about him,
-and did not see him again for some months.</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” presently spoke Tom Moore. “Now,
-boy, you can ride behind me, on my hoss, and I’ll fix you
-out after we get to camp. Haven’t time here.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span></p>
-
-<p>For the sun was setting in a range of mountains
-across the big basin; the basin itself was growing dark,
-while the high plateau was still bathed in the last rays;
-and the general had given the order to march and make
-a camping-place.</p>
-
-<p>With Jimmie behind his saddle, Tom rode in the
-advance party. This was composed of the general,
-and Lieutenant Bourke his aide, Captain Brent and
-Lieutenant Ross and Guide Archie MacIntosh. Mr.
-MacIntosh was a new man from the Hudson’s Bay
-country of the Far North—a fine scout but not yet
-acquainted with this part of Arizona. In fact, even
-Tom Moore had never been through here. So Tom
-was acting as pack-master and assistant guide, both.</p>
-
-<p>At camp that evening Jimmie was awarded an old
-flannel shirt and pair of cotton trousers. The shirt
-belonged to Lieutenant Ross; the trousers belonged to
-“Chileno John,” one of the packers. The suit didn’t
-fit very well, but Jimmie now felt more like a white
-boy again.</p>
-
-<p>Because he was in charge of Tom Moore, his place
-was with the packers. They were a merry set, around
-their fires after supper: Charley Hopkins and old Jack
-Long, of Tucson; and “Hank ’n Yank”—who were
-Hank Hewitt and Yank Bartlett; and “Long” Jim
-Cook (who had a brother “Short” Jim Cook); and
-Jim O’Neill, and “Chileno John,” and José de Leon,
-and Lauriano Gomez who sang Spanish songs; and
-others. They looked rather rough and they talked
-rather rough—but such stories they had to tell, of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span>
-their adventures in California and Arizona and Mexico,
-and up in British Columbia!</p>
-
-<p>The soldiers strolled over, to sit and listen and swap
-yarns. The general and officers listened, too, now and
-then, and laughed. Altogether it was a much more
-pleasant camp than a Chiricahua rancheria.</p>
-
-<p>According to soldiers’ and packers’ talk this General
-George Crook had made a hit. He had suddenly
-arrived, last June, in Tucson by stage from San Francisco,
-to take command of the new Department of
-Arizona. His regular rank was lieutenant-colonel in
-the Twenty-third Infantry, but as he had been brevetted
-or given honorary rank of major-general for gallant
-service in the Civil War, he of course was called
-“General.”</p>
-
-<p>Up in the far Northwest, where he had commanded
-the Department of the Columbia, he had done such good
-work against the Shoshones or Snakes that the Government
-had now sent him down to see what he could
-do with the Apaches.</p>
-
-<p>He had set right to work. “A powerful active
-sort of man,” he was, declared Tom Moore. After
-having questioned all the post commanders and many
-scouts, about the trails and other conditions, he had
-started out from Tucson with five companies of cavalry
-and a company of scouts, both white and red, and a
-great pack-train, to make a big circle of some six hundred
-miles: east one hundred and ten miles to Camp
-Bowie at Apache Pass in the Chiricahua Mountains,
-thence north two hundred miles across the mountains
-to Camp Apache and the White Mountain reservation,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span>
-thence west two hundred and fifty or three hundred
-miles to Fort Whipple at the town of Prescott, which
-was the department headquarters.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Bourke’s Troop F of the Third Cavalry
-it was which had surprised the Geronimo and Nah-che
-band and made them leave their meat; and there had
-been other skirmishes. At Camp Apache the general
-had talked to the White Mountain Apaches.</p>
-
-<p>“That man,” asserted Tom Moore, “he cert’inly
-knows Injun. He said he’d nothin’ against the ’Paches;
-he wasn’t out to war on ’em, but to get ’em to live
-peaceably. They could see for themselves that the
-white people were crowdin’ into the country, and that
-pretty soon there wouldn’t be enough game to live on.
-So the ’Pache’d better decide to settle down and go
-to farmin’ on the land that was given him. He’d be
-protected from his enemies, and wouldn’t need to steal.
-The ’Paches who came in peaceful wouldn’t be punished;
-they’d be treated same as white people; but the
-bad ones who hung out would make trouble for the
-good ones, and he’d expect the good ’Paches to help
-him run down the bad ’Paches. That sounded like
-sense, and Pedro and the rest of ’em agreed.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s shorely got some pecul’ar idees,” commented
-old Jack Long. “For one thing, he says an’
-Injun’s as good as a white man an’ some white men
-are wuss’n Injuns, ’cause they know better. But I
-reckon when he says ‘peace’ he means peace, an’ when
-he says ‘fight’ he means fight. He wanted mightily
-to ketch those two Tonto an’ talk with ’em—an’ when
-they threw arrers at him an’ skadoodled, blamed if he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span>
-didn’t up an’ shoot ’em himself! Got the olive-branch
-in one hand an’ sword in t’other, <em>he</em> has.”</p>
-
-<p>However, with only these two companies of cavalry
-and a small pack-train the general was now on his way
-to Fort Whipple, there to wait and plan; for when
-with all his force he had arrived at Camp Apache, he
-had received dispatches from the War Department
-directing him to quit until the Government Peace Commission
-had tried.</p>
-
-<p>This Peace Commission had been formed in 1867,
-for the purpose of seeing that the Indians were being
-honestly treated, and of persuading them to live upon
-reservations. President U. S. Grant was much in
-favor of such a scheme. The Indians of Arizona never
-had been talked with, so the President was sending
-a Mr. Vincent Colyer, a patriotic and large-hearted
-New Yorker, to represent the Commission in the
-Southwest.</p>
-
-<p>“That thar peace plan may work with some o’ those
-Eastern Injuns, but ’twon’t work with ’Paches,” grumbled
-old Jack Long. “They got too much country
-to travel ’round in, an’ war is meat an’ drink to ’em.
-They ain’t been licked yet, an’ till they’re licked they’ll
-think the whites are ’fraid of ’em. They won’t understand
-civilian peace talk, by a stranger. Some big
-white chief ought to do the talkin’. An’ now the
-soldiers an’ settlers got to sit back an’ be perlite, so’s
-not to stir up trouble, an’ Gin’ral Crook can’t make
-his words good an’ go get the bad lots. ’Pache’ll see
-’tain’t any use to stay on a reservation if he can have
-more fun in the hills.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span></p>
-
-<p>Jimmie rather believed, himself, that Mr. Colyer or
-any stranger from the East, who was not used to
-Indians, would have hard times “catching” the
-Chiricahuas.</p>
-
-<p>During the next few days General Crook proved
-to be a most remarkable man indeed. At first sight,
-nobody would take him for a general in the United
-States army. He wore no uniform—just a plain canvas
-suit; he rode a mule, and he preferred a shot-gun
-to a rifle. He was not above talking to anybody, as he
-chose. Only when you saw how straight and decisive
-he was, would you suspect him to be a soldier and
-an officer.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing was too small for him to notice, and nothing
-too hard for him to do. He could talk in the sign
-language and he could read a trail. He could speak
-Snake and Spanish and some Apache; and he knew
-almost as much about Arizona as Tom Moore or Jack
-Long did. He was up in the morning, even by two
-o’clock, as soon as the cooks. All day, as he rode in
-the advance, he constantly asked the names of trees and
-bushes and flowers, and mountains and streams—and
-he never forgot. He was a tremendous hunter, and
-could stuff the beasts and birds that he killed, and he
-had studied wild animals until he could tell many
-curious things about them. He liked to explore by
-himself, with gun and fishing-rod, and never was lost.
-He drank only cold water—no tea or coffee. He could
-do without drinking at all, and without eating, either.
-In fact, Tom Moore and Archie MacIntosh agreed, he
-could “out-Injun the Injuns”!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span></p>
-
-<p>The pack-train was his particular hobby.</p>
-
-<p>“He fetched a lot o’ notions down from Idyho an’
-Californy,” explained old Jack, with wag of head; “an’
-by jinks, he began to tear things loose as soon as he
-struck Tooson. Nothin’s too good for the pack-train.
-Consequence is, now we’ve got critters an’ men who’ll
-go anywhar a dog’ll go, an’ be fresh for an’ arly start
-next mornin’. He’s sort o’ pack-train daddy, I reckon.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie did not ride clear through to Fort Whipple
-at Prescott. At Camp Verde, the post fifty miles this
-side of Whipple, the general sent off dispatches for
-some of the posts south, and told Jimmie that this was
-a good chance to reach Camp Grant, where he belonged.</p>
-
-<p>“But if you do fight the Apaches, can I help?”
-ventured Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>He loved the bronzed, lean, untiring, wise General
-Crook, so brief of speech, so kind in manner, so fatherly
-and yet so soldierly; who quickly learned whatever he
-didn’t happen to know already, and who somehow got
-things done without any loud orders.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t come in here to fight them,” smiled the
-general. “I came in to make peace. But those who
-won’t make peace and keep it, I’ll fight very hard—they
-may depend on that also. I promised the White
-Mountain Apaches that I’d protect the good Indians
-and punish the bad ones; and the only way to control
-Indians is to do exactly what you promise to do. Now
-we’ll all have to wait until Mr. Colyer of the Peace
-Commission has tried. He’ll give them an opportunity
-to gather upon reservations and learn to support
-themselves without murdering and stealing. A great<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span>
-deal of the fighting between the Indians and the whites
-has been unnecessary, because there are white men
-who don’t believe in good Indians. You go to your
-friends at Camp Grant. Learn all you can about pack-mules
-and soldier duties, too, and don’t forget Apache.
-I haven’t any doubt that some day you can help the
-Government very much.”</p>
-
-<p>When at last Jimmie was delivered at Camp Grant,
-and set out for Joe Felmer’s little ranch, above, to surprise
-Joe, he met him coming in, mule back. As a
-result, Joe opened his whiskered mouth widely, and
-almost fell off his mule: for here was Jimmie Dunn,
-who had been captured by the Apaches in mid-summer
-of 1870, and now it was the close of August, 1871.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, black-beard white man,” greeted Jimmie, in
-his best Apache.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="VI">VI<br />
-<small>THE PEACE COMMISSION TRIES</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“Wall, ’xpec’ you want to hear all the news yourself,”
-proposed “Uncle” Joe, that evening, at the
-ranch, after Jimmie had told his own story in every
-detail.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, if you please,” answered Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>“Wall,” mused Joe Felmer, stroking his shaggy
-full beard, “lemme see. ‘Six-toed’ Hutton’s been
-kicked in the jaw by a mule, an’ he’s like to go under.
-The kick busted his heart, same time it busted his jaw,
-’cause he ought to’ve known better than to get in the
-way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Six-toed” Hutton’s real name was Oscar Hutton.
-He had six toes on either foot, and was one of the
-bravest scouts at Camp Grant. To be killed by a mule
-kick did indeed seem an untimely end for a scout.</p>
-
-<p>“’Paches have been awful bad all ’long the line,”
-continued Joe. “Chiricahuas an’ Tontos an’ Pinals
-been raidin’ the stage road out o’ Tucson, both ways.
-Forty-seven whites an’ Mexicans have been killed down
-thar’bouts, an’ ten thousand dollars’ wuth o’ property
-burned or stolen. Up ’round Prescott the Hualpais an’
-Apache-Mohaves have corraled the mail rider an’ run
-ranchers an’ miners off. An’ a passel o’ blamed rascals
-lit out with an old mule from my very pasture—three of
-’em at once on her back, in broad day!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span></p>
-
-<p>The recollection of this evidently made “Uncle”
-Joe very angry again. He paused to mumble.</p>
-
-<p>“Thar’s a band o’ Es-kim-en-zin’s Pinals an’ Arivaipas
-farmin’ on the creek ’bout a mile from Grant,”
-he resumed. “Gathered thar ag’in after that massacre
-last spring, when those whites an’ Mexicans an’ Papagos
-from Tucson way came up an’ wiped out ’most
-their women an’ old men an’ stole their children.
-Yessir, killed over seventy squaws an’ only eight bucks,
-some of ’em while asleep, an’ carried off thirty children.
-Sold ’em ’mongst the Mexicans an’ Papagos, they did.
-Now I hear tell that the Government’s sendin’ what it
-calls a ‘peace commissioner,’ from New Yawk, to
-fetch in other ’Paches an’ feed ’em an’ treat ’em nice.
-Wall, reckon he’ll have his hands full.”</p>
-
-<p>Although Joe and others, soldiers and civilians both,
-at Camp Grant, insisted that there could be no good
-excuse for attacking Indians who had surrendered
-themselves, the Tucson papers and people declared that
-these very Pinals and Arivaipas had recently been
-murdering Americans and Mexicans, and stealing stock,
-and deserved Indian punishment instead of white protection.
-It would teach the Apaches a lesson.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, when one’s father and mother and
-brothers and sisters have been tortured and killed only
-because they were white, it is hard to feel at all kindly
-toward the race that did it. Jimmie knew how that
-was. White persons’ clothing—the clothing of the
-very ones who had been murdered—was found in the
-Pinal and Arivaipa camp. Still, for the white people
-to act like Indians, set a bad example, if the Indians<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span>
-were to be shown that the white way of living was the
-better way.</p>
-
-<p>The Camp Grant massacre aroused a great cry in
-the East. The East sided with the Apaches. But
-when he had arrived, Commissioner Colyer seemed to
-be going about with very odd notions. He was reported
-as thinking that the Apaches were only a poor
-ignorant race, who had been robbed of their lands
-and forced into war by the whites, and that they ought
-to be met with kindness alone. Then they would be
-peaceable. The Tucson <cite>Citizen</cite> asserted that he advised
-the Arizona people to avoid trouble by getting
-out of the Indians’ way. And the <cite>Citizen</cite> and the Prescott
-<cite>Miner</cite> published hot, sarcastic articles about him
-and the Peace Policy. The Apaches were being referred
-to as “Colyer’s babes” and “Colyer’s pets.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that?” growled Joe. “Thinks the Chiricahuas
-an’ Tontos don’t know any better’n to hang
-folks up by their heels over a slow fire, does he? An’
-that we ought to call off the troops an’ get off our
-ranches, so we won’t be irritatin’ the Injuns? Then
-they’d come in of themselves, to be civilized! Jest why
-the ’Paches who can live by fightin’ an’ stealin’ as they
-please will want to live by ploughin’, I’d like to hear.
-This is part o’ the United States, an’ the white people
-are jest as much entitled to protection as the ’Paches
-are.”</p>
-
-<p>Camp Grant was a four- or five-company post
-located here in a desert basin where the valley of the
-Arivaipa Creek, from the east, and of the San Pedro
-River, from the south, joined. The San Pedro was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span>
-supposed to flow on north, for a few miles, to the
-Gila River; but it and the Arivaipa were only dry sand-beds
-during the greater part of the year.</p>
-
-<p>Camp Grant was not a pretty place; it was only a
-hollow square of clay or log huts and ragged tents,
-shaded in front by brush porches or <i lang="es" xml:lang="es">ramadas</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Against it beat the sand-storms in the spring and
-the blazing sun throughout nine months of the year—temperature,
-one hundred and twenty in the shade!
-The giant cactuses, instead of trees, were many and
-extra large—and so were the rattle-snakes, scorpions
-and centipedes. And the Apache had always been
-extra bold.</p>
-
-<p>One never might foresee what was about to occur,
-at Camp Grant. On some days it would be perfectly
-quiet, with only the sentries walking their hot beats,
-and the tame Indians squatting out of the sun; and
-again there would be a sudden running to and fro,
-and away would trot the cavalry, to rescue (if possible)
-a wagon train, and pursue the hostiles.</p>
-
-<p>In a few days, at best, but likely enough not until
-after a week or more, back the troopers would come,
-maybe with wounded, maybe with prisoners, but in any
-case all fagged out, both men and horses.</p>
-
-<p>Joe Felmer’s little ranch lay three miles south,
-up the San Pedro. As Joe was post blacksmith, and
-also sold ranch stuff to the quartermaster, Jimmie felt
-as though he belonged to the post, himself. He knew
-all the officers, and old Sergeants Warfield and John
-Mott, and others of the men; and “Six-toed,” and
-Antonio Besias the former Mexican captive of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span>
-Apaches, and Concepcion Equierre the half-Apache
-interpreter, and old Santos the short-legged Arivaipa
-ex-chief who was Chief Es-kim-en-zin’s father-in-law;
-and many more.</p>
-
-<p>When he had left, last year, Grant had been occupied
-by some of the First and the Third Cavalry; but
-they had been transferred, Lieutenant Cushing’s and
-Lieutenant Bourke’s Troop K of the Third had been
-sent down to Camp Lowell near Tucson, and now the
-Fifth Cavalry was here.</p>
-
-<p>It was in October when Commissioner Colyer, on
-his rounds, appeared at Camp Grant. Jimmie was
-lucky enough to drive down there, with Joe and a
-wagon-load of pumpkins, just in time to be present
-at some of the “doings.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Colyer had arrived in a six-mule army ambulance
-(a black, covered spring wagon with high driver’s
-seat, and two bench-like seats inside, facing each other),
-escorted by a squad of cavalry from Fort Whipple,
-under Lieutenant Ross.</p>
-
-<p>He was a square-set, benevolent-looking gentleman,
-in dusty black broadcloth, and white shirt and broad
-black hat. Attended by Colonel F. W. Crittenden, the
-post commander, and by other officers, he had been
-talking, through Concepcion the interpreter, to the tame
-Apaches at the post, and he was about to go out to
-Chief Es-kim-en-zin’s rancheria, where the surrendered
-Pinals and Arivaipas were farming.</p>
-
-<p>“They are the same people who were so barbarously
-attacked last spring, I understand,” he remarked.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” replied Lieutenant Royal Whitman.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You were in charge of the post then, were you
-not?”</p>
-
-<p>“I was. But before I could reach their camp the
-deed had been done. I think you will see by my report
-upon the matter, to the Department, how I feel about
-it. It was a thorough outrage, and the members of the
-attacking party ought to be arrested, tried and
-punished.”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite true,” uttered Mr. Colyer. “A shocking
-state of affairs exists through the whole Territory. All
-the Indians with whom I have talked declare that they
-would gladly gather upon reservations, accept the Government’s
-aid, and live at peace with mankind, if the
-soldiery and white citizens would only cease hunting
-them down. Some of the bands are so frightened and
-timid that they won’t confer even with me, their friend.
-I’ve tried in vain to meet Chief Cochise, of the Chiricahuas.
-You can see, my brothers,” he continued, addressing
-the group of soldiers and scouts and tame
-Apaches, “what an injustice has been done these simple
-savages. Our duty is not to punish them for defending
-their homes, but to gain their good-will by patience
-and kindness, until they are won to the benefits of
-civilization. That is why the President and the Society
-of Friends have delegated me to visit among you, and
-bring this bad feeling between the white men and the
-red men to an end.”</p>
-
-<p>“‘Simple savages,’ are they?” afterwards commented
-Joe. “If thar’s anybody smarter’n an Apache
-in sizin’ things up, I’ve yet to find him. At present
-this hyar Quaker strikes me as bein’ ’bout the simplest<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span>
-pusson in Arizony. The ’Paches can understand
-straight talk, like that Gen’ral Crook gave ’em, an’
-they can understand war; but they don’t understand
-coaxin’. When you coax a ’Pache he laughs in his
-insides an’ reckons he’ll do as he pleases as long as
-he can. Once you coax him, then he thinks you’re
-’fraid of him, ’cause that’s Injun way.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Colyer was driven out to the Chief Es-kim-en-zin
-camp, where he talked with old Santos and the
-chief, and others of the Pinals and Arivaipas. He
-informed them that the Great White Father at Washington
-would see to it that they were no longer ill-treated
-by the white men. All the Apaches might come
-in and live on the lands that the Government was giving
-them. They should have plenty to eat, and the white
-men who interfered should be punished.</p>
-
-<p>When he returned to the post he acted much satisfied.
-He arranged to have a regular reservation set
-off, and said that an agent and teacher would be appointed,
-by the Society of Friends. Soon he left, with
-his escort, to continue his tour.</p>
-
-<p>While nobody might doubt that Mr. Colyer was a
-very good and honest man, nobody put much faith
-in his methods. After having fought and raided all
-summer, many of the wild Apaches would be only too
-willing to be fed and protected upon the reservations,
-all winter.</p>
-
-<p>Now the Indians of Arizona seemed to be provided
-for—except that Commissioner Colyer had not been
-able to find any Chiricahuas. He had sent word to
-them, but they had hidden from him. And when in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span>
-western New Mexico he had stopped at the Cañada
-Alamosa, or Cottonwood Canyon, where Chief Victorio’s
-friendly Mimbres and Warm Spring Apaches
-were living, the most of them had run from his soldier
-escort. They liked their Cottonwood Canyon, and
-feared that they were to be removed.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="VII">VII<br />
-<small>JIMMIE TAKES A LESSON</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“Micky Free!”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie almost shouted it, he was so astonished.
-He was again at the post, on an errand for Joe Felmer,
-after Commissioner Colyer had been gone about a
-week; and who should come trotting across the hot
-gravelly parade ground but Micky Free himself, in
-single file with two strange Indians!</p>
-
-<p>Micky’s one quick eye sighted Jimmie, standing
-agape, and he fell out of line and pattered over,
-grinning.</p>
-
-<p>“How do you do, Boy-who-sleeps?” he said, in
-Apache.</p>
-
-<p>“How do you do, Red-head?” answered Jimmie.
-“I am glad to see you.”</p>
-
-<p>Micky wore a loose, whitish cotton shirt with its
-tails outside ragged cotton trousers, and on his feet
-Apache moccasins. A white cloth band was around
-his red head, his one blue eye beamed alertly, and his
-freckled face was streaked with perspiration and dust.
-All that he carried was an Apache fiddle made from
-a bent rib of a yucca, strung with deer sinews.</p>
-
-<p>The two Indians with him were stripped to breech-clout
-aprons, and moccasins, and red flannel head-bands;
-one of them had rawhide shield and long lance,
-the other, bow and quiver. They had continued on and
-now had been stopped before the adjutant’s office by
-the orderly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Let us sit down and talk, Cheemie,” laughed
-Micky.</p>
-
-<p>So he and Jimmie squatted.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you doing, Micky?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have come over from Camp Apache with two
-White Mountain runners. They bring messages from
-that fort to this one. We came through in one day
-and two nights. It is more than one hundred miles.
-Have you heard the news, Cheemie?”</p>
-
-<p>“What news, Micky?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cochise says he wants peace. He has gone on
-the Ojo Caliente (Warm Spring) place, in the Cañada
-Alamosa, where Chief Victorio is.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know?” exclaimed Jimmie. This
-was great news.</p>
-
-<p>“I got it from Maria Jilda, the Mexican who was
-captured when you were captured. He came up to
-Camp Apache from the Apache Pass where Camp
-Bowie is. He escaped from the Chiricahua, and now
-he is an interpreter at Camp Bowie. Yes, Cheemie;
-Cochise and Geronimo and all that band have gone to
-live with their brothers the Warm Springs and the
-Mimbreños at the Cañada Alamosa on the Rio Grande
-River in New Mexico. But,” added Micky, wisely,
-“they will not stay.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t they want peace?” queried Jimmie. “Did
-they listen to the words of the white peace man?”</p>
-
-<p>“That white peace man in the black clothes?”
-demanded Micky scornfully. “No. The Apaches
-laugh at that white peace man. It is easy to lie to
-him. The wild Apache think he promises so much<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span>
-because the Americans are afraid of them. The
-Cochise people are hungry and winter is near and the
-soldiers have been fighting them hard. They hear that
-Victorio is being fed and has plenty of clothes and
-guns. They can rest there until they are ready to
-take the trail again. What are you doing, Cheemie?
-Do you like the new American general? I saw him
-shoot that Tonto. He is a good shot. Afterwards
-I found the Tonto. He was dead. Then I went to the
-White Mountains, at Camp Apache.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am living with Joe Felmer, on his ranch. He
-is a scout, and he works at the post, too,” informed
-Jimmie. “The general sent me home, but he told me
-to learn all the soldier ways I could, and not to forget
-Apache talk. If I’m not old enough to be a scout, I
-can help with the pack-trains.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall be a scout,” nodded Micky. “That is why
-I have come out with the runners: to learn the country.
-He is a great general, that man Crook. Chief Pedro
-and old Miguel liked his talk. It is true that if some
-of the Apaches stay bad, the good Apaches will suffer by
-it. They will be watched closely and cannot do things
-they would do if all the Apaches were trusted. So
-Chief Pedro and the White Mountains will help the
-new general who talks straight. It is this way,
-Cheemie—I have heard Pedro and old Miguel and
-Pi-to-ne and all, say so: As long as there are any
-wild Chiricahua and Tonto, there will be trouble between
-the red men and the white men, in Arizona.
-We must kill the bad Apaches. Then the good
-Apaches can live at peace and get rich. In the spring<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span>
-the new general must begin to fight, because by then
-the Chiricahua will be rested up.”</p>
-
-<p>The two Apache runners or dispatch-bearers came
-back from the adjutant’s office. Their names, as told
-by Micky, were Alchisé (Alchisay) and Nah-kay-do-klunni.
-They both were Sierra Blanca—White Mountain
-Apaches. They and Micky were taken by Antonio
-Besias the interpreter to be given coffee and bread;
-and as there was nothing more to be said, Jimmie went
-about his own business. He knew that he would see
-Micky Free again, somewhere. Micky was that kind.</p>
-
-<p>Although Chief Cochise and War-Captain Geronimo
-had moved with their band of Chiricahuas upon
-the Cottonwood Canyon reservation near Fort Craig
-in southwestern New Mexico, and Commissioner Colyer
-had been so confident that all <em>his</em> Indians were about
-to gather upon <em>their</em> reservations, the white people of
-Arizona had no faith in this peace policy.</p>
-
-<p>Almost every copy of the Tucson <cite>Citizen</cite> and the
-Prescott <cite>Miner</cite> received by Joe Felmer or at Camp
-Grant contained accounts of Apache attacks upon settlers
-and miners and soldiers, by the Tontos and the
-Apache-Mohaves, and the Chiricahuas raiding up from
-Mexico.</p>
-
-<p>The <cite>Miner</cite> published a list of three hundred Americans
-and Mexicans who had been killed by the Apaches
-from 1864 to the present time, October 14, 1871.</p>
-
-<p>Toward the end of November the worst news yet,
-arrived. A band of “Colyer’s babes,” thought to be
-Apache-Mohaves, had attacked the stage near Wickenburg,
-south of Prescott, and murdered the driver and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span>
-five passengers. Three of these passengers were members
-of the Government surveying expedition which,
-under Lieutenant George Wheeler, of the U. S. Engineers,
-had been exploring through Nevada and Arizona,
-getting facts upon the mines and the country.
-The name of one was Fred Loring—a well-educated,
-especially fine young surveyor, from Washington.</p>
-
-<p>This attack, said the papers, ought to convince
-the Government that the Apaches of Arizona were
-far from “civilized.” These very Indians had been
-living “peaceably” upon one of Commissioner Colyer’s
-tracts, where they were protected.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Wheeler and his main party commanded
-by Lieutenant David A. Lyle of the Second Artillery,
-with an escort of the Third Cavalry (Company I), supplied
-by the Department of California, rode into Camp
-Grant only a few days after the word of the Wickenburg
-Massacre had been received.</p>
-
-<p>They were on their way from Camp Apache to
-Tucson; had been exploring since the middle of May,
-and were pretty well worn out. They had found many
-of the Indians met to be rude and insolent, but——</p>
-
-<p>“No, they never attacked us,” said Lieutenant Lyle.
-“And now, to think that they’ve killed poor Loring,
-when he was all through and was going home! He
-had his hair cut very short, on his road out, and laughed
-when he claimed that the Apaches would never be able
-to take <em>his</em> scalp.”</p>
-
-<p>“One drop of that fine young man’s blood was
-worth more to the United States than the whole Apache
-race is,” declared Lieutenant Wheeler. “In my opinion,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span>
-the peace policy of forbidding a military campaign
-that shall drive the Apaches in upon the reservations is
-encouraging them to commit such outrages. The Indian
-question in Arizona will never be settled until the
-campaigns of an energetic officer shall thoroughly whip
-and subdue them.”</p>
-
-<p>“And Crook’s that man,” asserted Chief Packer
-Tom Moore, who was over from Fort Whipple, on a
-trip around to inspect pack-train outfits. “We’ve had
-other gen’rals in Arizony. Some of ’em did too much—took
-ev’ry scalp they could ketch. Some of ’em did too
-little—reg’lar coffee-coolers. But this Gen’ral Crook,
-gentlemen, he’s goin’ to know for himself whether a
-’Pache’s good or bad. The good ones he’ll treat square,
-and the bad ones he’ll trail down till he has their
-tongues hangin’ out. Now he’s just lyin’ low, till
-the Government’s got plumb sick o’ these ‘Colyer’s
-babes,’ and he has orders. If I don’t miss my guess,
-next spring the Arizony hills’ll be full o’ soldiers and
-pack-trains, and tame ’Paches fightin’ wild ’Paches, and
-Crook bossin’ us all from the saddle.”</p>
-
-<p>Tom Moore and others from Fort Whipple brought
-word that General Crook kept very active. He seemed
-to have no idea of resting. He was constantly traveling,
-by mule and buck-board wagon, over the roads
-and trails of northern Arizona, learning them as he
-had learned the trails of southern Arizona. Usually
-he traveled with only Lieutenant Bourke, who was his
-aide-de-camp, and a cook and a packer, for he did not
-wish to use officers and men who should be ready for
-scouting expeditions. He issued orders that the pack-train<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span>
-outfits should be prepared at top notch. It was
-plain to be seen that he expected to go upon a hard campaign
-as soon as the Peace Policy had been tried and
-had failed.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie decided that his best chance of taking the
-trail with this active General Crook lay with the pack-trains;
-even a boy might be useful in the pack-trains;
-he could catch mules and pull on ropes and help the cook—and
-if he spoke Apache, like Jimmie did, and knew
-lots of Apache tricks, he might be valuable as an interpreter,
-sometimes. Besides, Joe Felmer was a scout
-and a horse-shoer both, and he surely would be ordered
-out. Jimmie intended not to be left at home.</p>
-
-<p>Luckily, he had plenty of opportunity this fall and
-winter to learn pack-train wrinkles. For the practice
-that it gave the men, as well as because it was the better
-method, the general distributed the supplies to all the
-posts by means of pack-mules.</p>
-
-<p>Before he had assumed command, the supplies out
-of Tucson and Prescott had been hauled largely by
-wagons in charge of “bull whackers” and “mule
-skinners,” and operated by civilian contractors, who
-made freighting their business. Of course, pack-mules
-had been necessary, too, with scouting columns and
-between out-of-the-way posts; and the miners, and the
-Mexican merchants and traders from Sonora of
-Mexico, employed pack-mules.</p>
-
-<p>But in his campaigns against the Indians, in Idaho
-and Oregon and Northern California, the general had
-depended entirely upon pack-mule trains, which kept
-right up with the marches, no matter how rough the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span>
-country, and were always on hand. According to the
-say of old Jack Long, “he had got pack-mule wise.” He
-had persuaded the War Department to buy three full
-pack-trains from their civilian owners who had hired
-them out to the Government; and these he had brought
-to Arizona with him.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s the daddy o’ the army mule, I reckon,”
-again declared Jack. “Yes, siree! Those thar mules
-ain’t nary sore-backed Sonora rats, an’ they ain’t
-bags o’ bones so high up you have to use a ladder to
-put a pack on with. They’re picked stock; an’ every
-other mule’s got to measure up to same standard.
-Gosh durn it, I b’lieve the gin’ral thinks as much of
-his mules as he does of his men! He looks as close
-arter glanders as he does arter measles!”</p>
-
-<p>However, the general looked after the men pretty
-close, too. The packers themselves had to measure up
-to standard. Those who were drunken, or lazy, or
-cruel to the mules, were discharged, and better men
-enlisted. Henceforward the pack-train service was to
-be known as “Pack Transportation, Q. M. D. (Quartermaster’s
-Department), U. S. Army,” and to belong
-to it would be an honor.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, a responsibility, also; for as old Jack explained:
-“When you get up in the mountings ’mongst
-the ’Paches, an’ you’re out o’ ammunition an’ the pack-train’s
-got busted somewhars in the next county, then
-what’s your scalp wuth? Nothin’!”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie might think himself lucky in having old
-Jack Long at Camp Grant, to give him pointers. Joe
-Felmer was a scout and rancher; he did not claim to be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span>
-an expert mule packer. But old Jack had been a
-Forty-niner in California, and had mined and packed
-all through California and Oregon and Idaho and
-Nevada and Arizona. So he knew a great deal.</p>
-
-<p>Jack had had two wives, one a Modoc squaw and
-one a white woman; and once he had “struck it rich,”
-in California, and had been almost a millionaire until
-he had spent his money. Lately he had been living in
-Tucson, freighting and prospecting. There he had
-“j’ined Gin’ral Crook ag’in the ’Paches.”</p>
-
-<p>Now Chief Packer Tom Moore had appointed him
-to be a pack-master. The chief packer had charge
-of all the pack-trains, and each pack-train was in
-charge of its pack-master.</p>
-
-<p>“Want to j’ine the pack trains, do ye?” queried
-old Jack, of Jimmie. “Wall, if you’re goin’ to l’arn,
-you oughter l’arn right, an’ some day mebbe you’ll
-be in the Fust-class Packer ratin’. Mebbe you’ll get
-to be as big a man as I am. ’Tain’t all in throwin’
-the diamond; anybody can l’arn to throw the diamond
-hitch. But you got to know the why an’ wharfore
-o’ things. Come along to the corral an’ I’ll show ye.”</p>
-
-<p>So Jimmie gladly followed Jack to the post mule-corral.</p>
-
-<p>“Hey, thar, <i lang="es" xml:lang="es">amigo</i> (friend)!” summoned old Jack,
-to Chileno John, who was at work among the mules.
-“<i lang="es" xml:lang="es">Ven’ aqui</i> (Come here). Fetch out one o’ yore
-bell sharps. Hyar’s a <i lang="es" xml:lang="es">muchacho</i> (boy) who wants to
-l’arn to be an <i lang="es" xml:lang="es">arriero</i> (muleteer).”</p>
-
-<p>Smiling broadly, swarthy Chileno John (who was
-supposed to have worked in the mines of Chile) led<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span>
-aside a sedate, round-bellied, mouse-colored mule, and
-lugged the pack material for her into position.</p>
-
-<p>“That thar,” said Jack, “is a bell sharp. If you
-don’t know what a bell sharp is, I’ll tell ye. A bell
-sharp is a pack-mule that’s been eddicated into mule
-sense, so she keeps her place in line, an’ doesn’t stray
-on herd, an’ comes in to her own feed canvas at feedin’
-time. When she ain’t a ‘bell sharp’ she’s a pesky
-‘shave-tail.’ As long as a mule hasn’t got sense an’ is
-alluz rampagin’ an’ makin’ trouble we jest natter’ly
-roach her mane an’ keep her tail trimmed to about six
-ha’rs on the end so’s to pick her out of a bunch at
-fust sight. Same way,” grumbled old Jack, “’mongst
-these hyar army officers. That thar sprig young
-Left’nant Stewart, fresh out o’ West Point, who
-doesn’t know any better yet’n to climb a cactus tree, he’s
-a ‘shave tail’; but old Cap Tommy Byrne, up ’mongst
-the Hualpais near the Canyon, he’s a sure ’nough ‘bell
-sharp’ who knows when to come in to his feed.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie had not seen Captain Thomas Byrne, a
-grizzled Civil War veteran who, reports stated, was
-regarded as a “father” by the Hualpai Indians on the
-Beale Springs reservation near the Grand Canyon.
-But he felt pretty well acquainted with Second Lieutenant
-Reid T. Stewart, the slim-waisted, boyish, eager
-young officer who had graduated from the Military
-Academy only last June and had been assigned to the
-Fifth Cavalry in Arizona. He was stationed down at
-Camp Lowell, Tucson, and Jimmie had got acquainted
-with him there and here at Grant, also. He might be
-a “shave tail,” yet, according to Jack, but he was much<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span>
-more pleasant than some of those crusty old “bell
-sharps.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s General Crook, then?” queried Jimmie,
-to get Jack’s opinion.</p>
-
-<p>“The gin’ral. See hyar, me son,” reproved Jack
-severely: “no levity. The gin’ral’s the old bell hoss
-o’ the hull outfit. Wall,” continued Jack, “fust, one
-of us blinds the critter with a bandage o’ sackin’ or
-with one o’ those leather contraptions the gin’ral’s
-interduced, so she’ll stand. Then havin’ got all the
-riggin’ to hand, we lay on this sweat-cloth, for which
-proper name is <i lang="es" xml:lang="es">suadera</i>, an’ a saddle-blanket or two
-for more paddin’, ’less we have a reg’lar <i lang="es" xml:lang="es">corona</i>, the
-same bein’ the blankets an’ the <i lang="es" xml:lang="es">suadera</i> stitched together.
-Then atop that we fold the bed blanket that
-we got to sleep under at camp. Then we h’ist on the
-<i lang="es" xml:lang="es">aparejo</i>—this-a-way, easy—an’ settle it, an’ pass the
-<i lang="es" xml:lang="es">grupera</i> back.”</p>
-
-<p>The <i lang="es" xml:lang="es">aparejo</i> (ah-pah-ray-ho) was the pack-saddle—a
-long, broad mattress of canvas stuffed with hay,
-and stiffened with ribs of willow stems running up and
-down, in either half. It was broken in the middle, so
-that it would fit over the mule’s back.</p>
-
-<p>The <i lang="es" xml:lang="es">grupera</i> (gru-pay-rah) was the crupper—a
-broad canvas and leather band that extended in a loop
-around the mule’s haunches under her tail, so that the
-<i lang="es" xml:lang="es">aparejo</i> could not slip forward.</p>
-
-<p>“Then we lay the <i lang="es" xml:lang="es">aparejo cincha</i> so to hang acrost
-the middle, pass the ring end under her belly, connect
-up with the <i lang="es" xml:lang="es">latigo</i> strap and all together draw tighter’n
-sin so’s to hold the aparejo in place.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span></p>
-
-<p>The <i lang="es" xml:lang="es">aparejo cincha</i> was another canvas band, like
-a woven saddle-cinch. It was long enough to reach
-across under the mule’s belly. One end terminated in
-a ring and the other end in a leather strap, the <i lang="es" xml:lang="es">latigo</i>;
-and by connecting the ring and strap the cincha was
-drawn tight.</p>
-
-<p>“You have omitted to explain this, Señor Jack,”
-reminded Chileno John, resting a sinewy brown hand
-upon the pack-saddle or aparejo; and he lifted the flap
-that hung down on either side.</p>
-
-<p>“That thar soldier hammer?” grunted Jack.
-“Wall, me son, every aparejo has a duck kivver
-attached to its middle, so’s to protect it from bein’
-cut by the ropes—an’ from weather, too. It’s got a
-wooden brace sewed in leather ’crost each end, yuh
-understan’, to stiffen it whar the cincha lays, so’s it
-won’t wrinkle ag’in the mule’s hide.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="es" xml:lang="es">Sobre-en-jalmas</i> is the correct name, muchacho,”
-said Chileno John, to Jimmie, with some dignity—for
-Chileno John took great pride in the Spanish language.
-“It is a very old name, descended to us from
-the ancient Moors of Spain. Sobre-en-jalmas—cover
-for harness. The first two words are Spanish, and the
-last word is Arabian. But these Americanos——!”
-And Chileno John shrugged his shoulders. “They do
-not know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wall, ‘soldier hammer,’ ‘sovrin hammer,’ or
-‘Sullivan hammer,’ it’s all the same,” grunted old
-Jack. “Plain ‘aparejo cover’ is good enough.” And
-thus he disposed of the historic sobre-en-jalmas, which,
-pronounced rapidly sobr’-’n-halma did indeed sound<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span>
-like some kind of a ‘hammer.’ “After the pack
-saddle, ’long with its sovrin hammer, is cinched on,
-then we h’ist on the packs an’ sling ’em an’ fasten ’em
-with the diamond hitch,” he resumed. “But as we
-haven’t got nary packs, the fust lesson stops right hyar,
-me son. Now you remember what I’m tellin’ you,
-l’arn mules and pack-ways, an’ jump when you’re spoken
-to, so you won’t be a drag tail.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s a ‘drag tail,’ Jack?”</p>
-
-<p>“A drag tail, me son, is wuss’n a shave tail. A
-drag tail is a durned lazy mule who’s alluz hangin’ back
-on the trail, an’ a no-’count packer who’s alluz late
-on his job. Savvy?”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="VIII">VIII<br />
-<small>THE ONE-ARMED GENERAL TRIES</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“Hey! Cochise is out again!”</p>
-
-<p>It was a spring day of this next year, 1872, and in
-the ranch yard on the Joe Felmer place Jimmie and
-his assistant, little Francisco Vasquez, were practicing
-pack-train.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie was the pack-master, little Francisco (a
-Mexican boy) was arriero or muleteer; the train was
-composed of Shosh (Bear), a big black shepherd dog,
-Pete, a yellow hound dog, and Two-bits, just dog.</p>
-
-<p>Shosh already had learned to carry a pack and pack-rigging,
-dog size. He was a real “bell sharp.” Two-bits
-was still an unruly “shave tail,” and the yellow
-Pete was so lazy that he ranked as only a “drag tail.”
-But they furnished good practice for Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>Now Joe, returning from a trip down to Tucson,
-brought startling news. Cochise was “out” again!
-Even little Francisco looked alarmed.</p>
-
-<p>“Are all the Chiricahua out, Joe?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cochise an’ Geronimo an’ nigh two hundred
-more of ’em. That pesky Colyer man on his way back
-to the States got the Government to move all the
-’Paches from whar they were comf’table in the Warm
-Spring country to another part o’ the New Mexico
-country called the Tularosa; an’, by jinks, Cochise said
-he wouldn’t go—an’ he didn’t go! He took his Chiricahua
-an’ lit out for his old stampin’-ground in Arizony.
-So the word’s been passed to watch for trouble.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span></p>
-
-<p>Joe stalked on, muttering, to carry some purchases
-into the house. Jimmie the pack-master and little
-Francisco the arriero dismissed their pack-train and
-quit for the day. The knowledge that Cochise and
-Geronimo and their shifty Chiricahuas had left the
-Cañada Alamosa reservation, where they had been
-staying with Chief Victorio’s Warm Spring band, and
-had joined the fighting Chiricahuas who had stayed
-“wild,” cast a shadow upon foolery.</p>
-
-<p>“Will the great General Crook march against them
-now?” asked Francisco, his black eyes round and large.</p>
-
-<p>“Who knows?” responded Jimmie, in Spanish.
-“There’s a new peace man coming from Washington.
-Then if the Chiricahua will not listen to peace, they
-will hear war. Bueno!”</p>
-
-<p>“Bueno (Good)!” piped Francisco. “Will you
-take me, Jeem?”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps, chico mio (my little one),” grandly
-promised Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>To Francisco, Jimmie was an important person,
-who had lived with the Cochise Chiricahuas, and called
-the chief’s son “chi-kis-n” or brother, and spoke
-Apache, and soon was going to be a real arriero or
-else a scout, with the American soldiers.</p>
-
-<p>Aside from a few scouting expeditions, the winter
-at Camp Grant had been quiet. The agency for the
-Arivaipas and Pinals was in operation, at the mouth
-of the Arivaipa Canyon about a mile east; a Mr. Ed
-Jacobs was the agent.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, Chief Es-kim-en-zin’s people were
-still afraid; they had not forgotten the attack by the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span>
-Tucson crowd. They came in around the agency
-buildings every day, but every evening they went back
-up into the canyon, where they might defend
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p>The Peace Policy and the visit by Commissioner
-Colyer had not proved an entire success. A great
-many Indians were still out. The Arizona newspapers
-insisted that as long as General Crook was forbidden
-to drive the outlaw Indians from their hiding-places,
-the bad hearts who were simply using the reservations
-would feel that they might do as they pleased, also.</p>
-
-<p>There had been attacks upon ranches and mines and
-stage stations in south and north both; the legislature
-had called upon Congress for better protection to Arizona;
-and General Crook was all ready. He was only
-waiting.</p>
-
-<p>“I think that the Apache is painted in darker
-colors than he deserves, and that his villainies arise
-more from a misconception of facts than from his being
-worse than other Indians,” had reported the general,
-after studying the situation. And he had added: “I
-am satisfied that a sharp, active campaign against him
-would not only make him one of the best Indians in
-the country, but it would also save millions of dollars
-to the Treasury, and the lives of many innocent whites
-and Indians.”</p>
-
-<p>The Indians on the reservations were complaining
-of food and slack treatment; in New Mexico Chief
-Victorio of the Warm Springs and Chief Cochise of
-the Chiricahuas had refused to be changed from the
-Cañada Alamosa; so the Government was sending out<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span>
-another peace commissioner. Brevet Major-General
-O. O. Howard, to try to satisfy everybody.</p>
-
-<p>He was to make especial effort to talk with Cochise,
-who so far had declined to talk at all. Cochise and
-Geronimo had claimed that they were willing to live
-with Chief Victorio on the Warm Spring reservation,
-but they had run away from Mr. Colyer, in fear of the
-soldiers. They rarely went near the army post, there,
-Fort Craig, and orders had been given that the soldiery
-should leave them alone, so that they would continue
-peaceful and contented, among the Warm Springs.</p>
-
-<p>The President had hoped that Cochise would talk
-with General Howard, who was a great chief like himself.
-Now Cochise was “out” again!</p>
-
-<p>“As far as I can savvy the trouble, that Colyer man
-has spilled the soup,” complained Joe, this evening
-after his return from Tucson. “Some o’ these agencies
-are located in awful pore places, not fitted for the
-Injuns at all—like that Date Creek reservation whar
-the Apache-Mohaves are herded. But that Cañada
-Alamosa of the Ojo Caliente (Warm Spring) country
-jest suited old Victorio, an’ Cochise, too, an’ they
-weren’t doin’ any harm.</p>
-
-<p>“Now ’long comes Colyer, an’ he says to the Government:
-‘The settlers ’round the Cañada Alamosa
-don’t like to have the Injuns thar. It’s good cattle
-ground, an’ they want it for themselves. So to avoid
-hard feelin’s I recommend we move the Injuns all up
-yonder to the Tularosa country, which nobody wants!’</p>
-
-<p>“Natur’ly, bein’ as the same Injuns had been promised
-the Cañada Alamosa if they’d live on it, an’ thar’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span>
-plenty other land for the settlers, they see no good
-reason for swappin’. They say that up at the Tularosa
-the weather an’ land an’ water are as bad for Injuns
-as for white men, an’ it’s ghost country. I tell ye,”
-concluded Joe, “when you make an agreement with an
-Injun you got to stand by it, or he’ll never believe
-in you ag’in. You can’t fool him, or he’ll fool <em>you</em>!
-I’m curyus to see what kind of a man this Gen’ral
-Howard is.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie, too, was “curyrus” to see this General
-O. O. Howard, who was visiting the peaceful Yumas
-and Pimas in western Arizona and was expected, any
-day, at Tucson. His next stop probably would be
-Camp Grant itself, so that he might talk with the
-Pinals and Arivaipas.</p>
-
-<p>Veteran Sergeant Warfield, who had served under
-the general in the Union Army, at Antietam and
-Gettysburg and in other big battles, said that he was
-a great man, had commanded as high as thirty thousand
-soldiers, in the field; had lost his right arm, by
-two wounds, at the battle of Fair Oaks; was a hard
-fighter and was very religious—knew the Bible by
-heart and almost had resigned from the army to go into
-“preaching.”</p>
-
-<p>“But let me tell you this,” added the grizzled sergeant,
-to Jimmie: “Arizony’ll find out that General
-Howard’s a man who’ll see that right is done to both
-white and red. He’s got a heap of sense, and he’s as
-square as a piece of hard-tack.”</p>
-
-<p>“A great American soldier chief is coming to talk
-with the Arivaipa,” informed Jimmie, to old Santos,
-at the reservation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What does he want?” demanded Santos, in
-Apache.</p>
-
-<p>“He wants to make peace with all the Indians.”</p>
-
-<p>“What good is peace?” retorted Santos. “The
-Arivaipa asked for peace, and the white people and
-the Papagos killed our women and stole our children.
-We are still at peace, but none of our women and
-children have come back, and we are hungry. We
-would have done better to fight like the Chiricahua
-and the Tonto.”</p>
-
-<p>In a few days, or early in May, General Howard
-did indeed appear at Camp Grant. He was traveling
-in a six-mule army ambulance, with an escort of cavalry
-from post to post. Colonel Crittenden and staff
-rode out a short distance to meet him. The four companies
-of Fifth Cavalry and Twenty-third Infantry
-were drawn up, to receive him; their worn uniforms
-brushed and every button and buckle polished.</p>
-
-<p>General Howard certainly looked like a fine, soldierly
-officer. He was as tall as, and rather heavier
-than General Crook; with full brown beard and handsome,
-lion-like countenance; in dusty campaign hat, and
-double-breasted blue coat with two rows of brass buttons
-down the front, and shoulder-straps bearing the
-single star each of a brigadier general (which was his
-regular rank), and with an empty right sleeve pinned
-to his sword belt.</p>
-
-<p>“Yep, I jedge he’s all right,” announced the ambulance
-driver, to an inquiring group of soldiers and
-scouts, after the parade had been dismissed. The
-driver was a lean, lank, exceedingly solemn man who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span>
-could not be induced to smile. “Only thing I have
-against him is his callin’ me ‘Dismal Jeems’—him an’
-his aide Cap’n Wilkinson. I dunno why. All the way
-over from Fort Yumy I’ve tried my best to cheer ’em
-up. I told ’em about every massacree along the hull
-road; told ’em we were liable to be scalped, any mile;
-told ’em all the cheerfulest things I could think of.
-But somehow I didn’t make a hit. The gen’ral’s
-powerful pious, too—holdin’ prayer-meetin’ on Sunday
-an’ readin’ his Bible whenever he has a chance.</p>
-
-<p>“But the Yumas an’ Pimas cottoned to him, an’
-down at Tucson the people liked him fust-rate. The
-Pimas an’ Papagos have promised to come in to a
-council with the Arivaipas here next week, an’ the
-Mexicans who have the Arivaipa kids have promised
-to fetch ’em, an’ I s’pose when we all get together thar’ll
-be a grand killin’ match. But I’m a cheerful man an’
-alluz aim to look on the bright side o’ things.”</p>
-
-<p>With that, “Dismal Jeems” drew a more melancholy
-face than before, sighed heavily, and slouched
-away to rub down his sweaty mules.</p>
-
-<p>General Howard was not here to stay long, this
-time. He spent most of one day at the agency; then
-he left for Fort Whipple, to confer with General
-Crook. But he was coming back; he had set May 21
-as the date for the big peace council.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you think of the soldier chief, Santos?”
-asked Jimmie. Old Santos, ex-chief, usually was to
-be found sitting in the sun, on the bench in front of the
-agency store. He did not live in the hills with
-Es-kim-en-zin.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The soldier chief is a good man. He pointed
-to the sky and said: ‘I have a Father up there. So
-have you. There is only one Father. Your Father and
-my Father are the same. So you and I are brothers.’
-That was a wise speech. We shook hands, and we are
-brothers. I am glad. His words tell me that he is a
-wise chief, and his sleeve tells me that he is a great
-warrior. Now I trust him, because he thinks as I do.”</p>
-
-<p>The council was held at the mouth of the Arivaipa
-Canyon, exactly as General Howard had planned.</p>
-
-<p>From their agency one hundred miles west, on the
-Gila River, the Pimas came on time—twenty of them,
-with their teacher, the Reverend Mr. Cook, and their
-interpreter, named Louis.</p>
-
-<p>From their agency at Camp Verde, fifty miles west,
-some Tontos came; and some Apache-Mohaves, from
-their agency at Date Creek, southwest of Prescott;
-and a company of Papagos, from their homes south of
-Tucson.</p>
-
-<p>From Tucson itself there came a large delegation of
-Americans and Mexicans, headed by Governor A. P. K.
-Safford and the district attorney. Many of the Mexicans
-were women, bringing the Arivaipa and Pinal
-children whom they had adopted after the massacre.</p>
-
-<p>The Pimas and the Papagos had long been enemies
-of the Apaches, so they stayed together. The Tontos
-and the Apache-Mohaves had been enemies of everybody,
-so they stayed together. The Mexicans had been
-enemies of the Tontos and the Apache-Mohaves and
-the Arivaipas and Pinals, so they stayed together.
-The Americans—the Tucson citizens and the scouts and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span>
-ranchers—were ready to back up the guard of soldiers,
-in case of trouble. But General Howard’s purpose
-was to make peace between all the peoples of the
-Southwest.</p>
-
-<p>“Will there be a fight, you think, Jeem?” inquired
-little Francisco. He and Jimmie had ridden
-over early on one of the ranch mules, to see and hear
-whatever might happen. “The Arivaipa will fight
-to get their children, and the Pima will fight the Tonto,
-and the soldiers will shoot; won’t they, Jeem?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who knows?” replied Jimmie. “No, they
-won’t!” he quickly added. “It is all right, chico.
-Here comes General Howard. And see who is with
-him! That is General Crook! Hooray!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hooray!” echoed Francisco, who always tried
-to do what Jimmie did.</p>
-
-<p>For with its six mules at a gallop, and with General
-Howard upon the seat beside “Dismal Jeems,” the
-army ambulance had swung into the pretty green valley
-along the Arivaipa Creek. Behind the ambulance followed,
-in the road, a cavalcade of officers on horses
-and mules. The first two were Colonel Crittenden
-of Camp Grant, and a sinewy, powerful man, in a
-brown canvas suit, on a mule. General Crook
-himself!</p>
-
-<p>He had come over with General Howard from Fort
-Whipple. So had Lieutenant Bourke, and Lieutenant
-Ross, and Lieutenant George Bacon of the First Cavalry,
-and others of Jimmie’s old-time officer friends.</p>
-
-<p>General Howard and party climbed out of the ambulance;
-the other officers left their mounts with the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span>
-orderlies; and all crossed to the stools and benches reserved
-for the “chiefs,” on the sod in the center of
-the waiting circle.</p>
-
-<p>“No Es-kim-en-zin yet,” whispered little Francisco.
-“They stay away. I am afraid, Jeem.”</p>
-
-<p>That was true. Only old short-legged Santos and
-a handful of decrepid men and squaws were here;
-Chief Es-kim-en-zin and his warriors had not appeared.
-General Howard and General Crook and
-Colonel Crittenden sat, waiting. So did the governor
-and the district attorney. So did the Pima and Papago
-and Apache-Mohave chiefs. Everybody waited.
-Agent Jacobs plainly was worried, but it would not do
-to show any sign of impatience.</p>
-
-<p>“Dismal Jeems,” the ambulance driver from Fort
-Yuma, circulated about, wagging his head and prophesying
-that nobody would leave the spot alive! Yes, a
-cheerful man was “Dismal Jeems.”</p>
-
-<p>In about an hour, there was a sudden murmur of
-interest. From the mouth of the Arivaipa Canyon
-emerged Chief Es-kim-en-zin, leading his band of
-Arivaipas and Pinals. They were in their best paint,
-and advanced with much dignity to the place assigned
-to them. Now the circle was complete.</p>
-
-<p>For fifteen minutes no one spoke. General Howard
-evidently understood that it was not proper to
-hurry a council. Presently he arose, and through
-Concepcion Equierre the interpreter, who spoke English
-as well as he did Spanish and Apache, invited the
-Arivaipa-Pinals to make a talk.</p>
-
-<p>Es-kim-en-zin was first. He made a very poor<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[108]</span>
-talk, because he stammered, but he spoke thoroughly
-in earnest, and so did others of his band. They
-wanted their children back again.</p>
-
-<p>The Mexicans who now had the children were invited
-to reply. They said that the children were being
-well brought up, as Christians; they loved them and
-did not wish to return them to Indian life.</p>
-
-<p>The governor and the district attorney spoke. They
-said that it was better for Arizona and for the children
-to have the children brought up in civilization. The
-district attorney added that most of the children were
-orphans, and that therefore the Territory of Arizona
-was their guardian. Their own people were unable
-to bring them up properly.</p>
-
-<p>Es-kim-en-zin and his old men answered that it
-was true that many mothers and fathers had been
-killed; but the Arivaipa people wept for the little boys
-and girls who had been stolen from them, and would
-work hard to take good care of the children of their
-race.</p>
-
-<p>All the speeches in English and Apache were translated
-into Apache and English by Concepcion Equierre,
-the agency interpreter; and again into Spanish so that
-the Mexicans and the Papagos and Pimas might understand
-what was going on.</p>
-
-<p>That evening the Es-kim-en-zin Arivaipa-Pinals
-went back, six miles, up into their canyon. The other
-delegations camped in the valley bottom around the
-agency.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie and Francisco, on their mule, rode home
-with Joe Felmer.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span></p>
-
-<p>“It’s goin’ to be nip an’ tuck,” asserted Joe. “As
-I understand, Gen’ral Crook he agrees with the gov’ner
-an’ deestrict attorney that the children are better off as
-they’re livin’ now. It may mean less Injuns to fight,
-later. On the other hand, I heard that teacher-man
-Cook talkin’ with his Pimas; an’ seems as though the
-Pimas, who are ’most like white folks an’ hate the
-’Paches, too, sorter think the kids ought to be given
-back to their own kin. The Papagos’ll be ag’in it,
-’cause they helped steal the children, an’ have used ’em.
-The Tontos an’ Yavapais, bein’ ’Paches, will feel like
-the Arivaipas do. But I have a notion Gen’ral
-Howard’ll find a way, so everybody’ll be satisfied.”</p>
-
-<p>It was not until the third day of the council that
-General Howard found the way. Meanwhile both
-parties were growing angry. Chief Es-kim-en-zin announced
-that he could see no good in so many long talks.
-The general spent the second night among the camps,
-and slept on the ground there. In the morning he
-made his final speech.</p>
-
-<p>“The good Mr. Cook, of the Pimas, agrees with
-me that the children ought to be returned to their own
-people,” he said. “Some of them are being brought
-up as slaves and servants, and they all were carried
-off by force, which is not right. But the district
-attorney from Tucson, and the governor, and other
-honest persons, think differently, and I should listen to
-their words, also. So we will take the matter to
-Washington. I will appeal to my chief, who is the
-Secretary of the Interior; and the district attorney
-may appeal to his chief, who is the Attorney General<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span>
-of the United States. And these chiefs will appeal
-to President Grant, who is the greatest chief of all.</p>
-
-<p>“While the President is deciding, the children shall
-stay here at the agency with a good Christian white
-woman whom I have engaged. They will be well
-cared for, at government expense. Their relatives
-and friends from the Arivaipas may visit them often,
-and their Mexican friends may visit them often; and
-our Great Father at Washington shall say who may
-keep them.”</p>
-
-<p>A cheer started, but the district attorney sprang
-to his feet.</p>
-
-<p>“We wish to keep the children until the President
-decides. We will guarantee to do whatever he directs.”</p>
-
-<p>“No guarantee is needed, from either side,”
-severely answered General Howard. “Here is General
-Crook. With his army and his authority he will
-see to it that justice is done exactly as I have outlined!”</p>
-
-<p>“Good!”</p>
-
-<p>“Bueno, bueno!”</p>
-
-<p>“Inju!”</p>
-
-<p>The word was repeated in a perfect storm of
-languages. The gathering was all excitement and
-relief. Everybody seemed to approve of what the
-general had said; that is, everybody except the district
-attorney and a few scouts and ranchers who did not
-believe in yielding peace terms to any Apaches
-whatsoever.</p>
-
-<p>The Arivaipa-Pinals and the Papagos and the
-Pimas and the Apache-Mohaves and the Tontos hugged
-one another; some of the Mexicans hugged some of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span>
-Indians; General Crook and the officers laughed. It
-was a happy solution of a serious problem.</p>
-
-<p>“Kinder like a love-feast, after all, warn’t it!”
-remarked Joe Felmer. “Huh! Wall, I reckon the
-gen’ral knows how the President’ll decide.”</p>
-
-<p>Probably General Howard did, for in due time the
-children were given over to the Es-kim-en-zin band,
-by orders from Washington, and Es-kim-en-zin always
-remained at peace.</p>
-
-<p>Amidst the hurly-burly of excitement Jimmie found
-himself close to General Crook, who was talking earnestly
-with Joe Felmer and old Jack Long. That was
-his style; he did not go much on red tape, but spoke
-direct to officers and enlisted men alike.</p>
-
-<p>Here in his travel-stained canvas suit without any
-mark of rank on it, he scarcely would be taken, again,
-for a general commanding all the big Territory of
-Arizona. He was thinner than when Jimmie had last
-seen him, before; his face was lined, and he looked
-as though he had been working hard, and worrying too.</p>
-
-<p>His eyes, glancing aside, fell upon Jimmie, and
-recognized him. To the beck of the general’s finger
-Jimmie stepped forward and stood at attention.</p>
-
-<p>“This is your boy, is he, Felmer?” The general
-seemed to remember everything.</p>
-
-<p>“Yessir, that’s what I call him.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s wearing rather more clothes than when I
-first met him,” commented the general drily. “What
-are you going to make of him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Wall, he’s ondecided ’twixt scout an’ packer,”
-drawled Joe. “He’s a leetle small yet, but he’s
-growin’.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes, an’ he’ll have plenty time to grow while
-we’re all standin’ ’round waitin’ on the Government’s
-Arizony pets to come in to their feed canvas when
-they’re called!” grumbled old Jack. “He’s liable to
-die of old age, if he ain’t sculped fust.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tut, tut!” sharply reproved the general. “General
-Howard’s doing good work. He’s the right man.
-But this is not saying that there won’t be use for the
-army. As for you, my boy,” he continued, to Jimmie,
-“keep on learning to the best of your ability, so that
-you’ll be ready for whatever comes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” promised Jimmie.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="IX">IX<br />
-<small>THE HORRID DEED OF CHUNTZ</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>General Crook had ridden back to Fort Whipple,
-on his mule “Apache,” and General Howard had left
-in the ambulance driven by “Dismal Jeems,” for Camp
-Apache and the White Mountain reservation.</p>
-
-<p>He had another good scheme. He was collecting
-Indians from among the tribes, to take them with him
-to Washington and the Great White Father, that they
-might understand how many and powerful the white
-people were.</p>
-
-<p>Old Santos had agreed to go, for the Arivaipas.
-The Pimas were sending their teacher, the Reverend
-Mr. Cook, and Louis the interpreter, and the young
-chief Antonito. The Papagos were sending their
-chief, Ascencion. The Date Creek Apache-Mohaves
-or Yavapais were sending Charlie and José.</p>
-
-<p>Concepcion Equierre went from the Arivaipa
-agency, to translate Apache.</p>
-
-<p>The general expected to get some of the Sierra
-Blanca or White Mountain Apaches, at the Camp
-Apache reservation; and to invite the Chiricahuas, also.
-He arrived safely at Camp Apache, and there added to
-his party Chiefs Miguel of the one eye, Pedro and
-Es-ki-tis-tsla; but he failed to find any Chiricahuas.</p>
-
-<p>So he proceeded by wagon and mule, without them.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d shorely like to see those Injuns’ faces when
-the hull party strikes the railroad at Santy Fee!”
-chuckled Jack Long. “They’ll think the Old Nick
-is to tow ’em with his tail up.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span></p>
-
-<p>For Santa Fe of New Mexico Territory was the
-nearest point east of Camp Grant reached by a railroad.</p>
-
-<p>“What does a railroad look like, Jeem?” queried
-little Francisco, hearing the talk.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie himself had not seen a railroad for several
-years, but he remembered, and he tried to explain.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s two lines of iron, like wagon-wheel tracks,
-reaching miles and miles, chico,” he said. “And on
-them roll fine wagons, joined together and filled with
-people, and drawn by a—did you ever hear about
-boats, chico? Those boats that sail up and down the
-Colorado River, and make a big noise?”</p>
-
-<p>Francisco eagerly nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“My father has a brother who saw one.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, the thing that hauls the wagons is a steamboat
-on land. It runs without horses; and it runs so
-fast that it could go from here to Tucson, fifty-five
-miles, in two hours.”</p>
-
-<p>Francisco crossed himself.</p>
-
-<p>“I would be afraid, Jeem,” he quavered.</p>
-
-<p>Poor little Francisco! He was to meet a sad fate.</p>
-
-<p>But, first, June and July passed quietly at Camp
-Grant. From Fort Whipple General Crook continued
-to keep scouting detachments and pack-trains moving.
-The various posts were strengthened by troops and
-supplies. The greater portion of the Fifth Cavalry
-was in Arizona, with some troops of the First Cavalry,
-and part of the Twelfth Infantry and of the Twenty-third
-Infantry—the general’s regiment. The Twenty-first
-Infantry and most of the Third Cavalry had gone
-out.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span></p>
-
-<p>The general was getting ready. According to the
-officers of the Fifth Cavalry and the Twenty-third
-Infantry at Camp Grant, the President had resolved
-that if the Peace Policy in Arizona did not persuade
-the Indians to settle down within a year, General
-Crook should be ordered to take matters over.</p>
-
-<p>The year would be up this September.</p>
-
-<p>Then, in August, things “broke wide open,” as
-Joe Felmer expressed it.</p>
-
-<p>General Crook just escaped being assassinated by
-the Yavapais at Date Creek, where he had gone for a
-talk. He had angered them by arresting several of
-them for the murder of Engineer Loring and others,
-in the Wickenburg stage massacre. He had been told
-that they were planning to kill him, but he went anyway.</p>
-
-<p>They did try to shoot him, in the council. Lieutenant
-Ross knocked up the arm of the Indian who fired
-first, there was an all-round tussle, Hank Hewitt the
-packer seized one Indian by both ears and broke his
-head against a rock, a part of the Yavapais were killed
-or imprisoned, and the rest fought their way into the
-mountains.</p>
-
-<p>The Tonto Basin Apaches—Tontos and Yavapais
-both—were attacking ranches and mines south of Prescott.
-Their worst chiefs were Chuntz, and Delt-che
-(Delt-shay) or Red Ant (the Yavapais were known
-as Red Ant people), and Cha-li-pun, the Buckskin-colored
-Hat.</p>
-
-<p>And on the road only thirty miles south of Tucson
-the Chiricahuas killed gallant young Lieutenant Reid
-Stewart, the “shave tail” who had been out of West<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span>
-Point two months, and Corporal Black, while the two
-were riding in a buck-board wagon up from Fort
-Crittenden, for Tucson.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ I hear now they’ve got Bob Whitney, at
-last,” one day reported Joe Felmer, on return from
-Tucson. “Yep; shot out his brains while he an’
-Cap’n Gerald Russell o’ the Third were waterin’ their
-hosses in the place called Cochise’s Stronghold of the
-Dragoon Mountains, between Tucson an’ Bowie.”</p>
-
-<p>Bob Whitney had been known as the handsomest
-guide and scout in Arizona.</p>
-
-<p>“Anyhow,” pursued Joe, “this sort o’ thing won’t
-hang over, long. They told me at Lowell (Camp
-Lowell, near Tucson, he meant) that orders have been
-received from headquarters to be ready to take the
-trail on short notice, an’ that the old man (who was
-General Crook) is puttin’ on his war-paint and havin’
-that mule ’Pache, o’ his, re-shod, four squar’.”</p>
-
-<p>At the instant, while Joe was speaking in the ranch
-yard, a sudden high chorus of shrill grief sounded,
-down the road to Camp Grant. Up the course of the
-sandy San Pedro Valley wended a slow little procession,
-of men and women afoot and on mules.</p>
-
-<p>The grief immediately spread to the ranch, where
-the Mexican women began to run wildly, and shriek,
-and tear their hair. Mrs. Vasquez, who was Francisco’s
-mother, rushed by, to meet the procession.</p>
-
-<p>“Mi niño! Ay, mi niño!” she wailed. “My
-little boy! Oh, my little boy!”</p>
-
-<p>How did she know? Joe Felmer gaped, puzzled;
-and a cold fear seized Jimmie’s thumping heart.</p>
-
-<p>Upon the seat of a two-wheeled, creaking cart in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span>
-the midst of the procession Francisco’s father,
-Domingo Vasquez, was sitting and holding in his arms
-something wrapped in a blanket. He held it very
-tightly.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, it was poor little Francisco, killed by an
-Apache lance-thrust. Joe Felmer scarcely could get
-the story, amid all that shrieking and confusion; but
-finally he and Jimmie learned from Domingo what had
-happened.</p>
-
-<p>“I take him with me in my cart to Camp Grant
-this morning,” said Domingo, in Mexican-Spanish,
-“while I cut wood along the Arivaipa, for the fort.
-He visits with people I know, and I do not see him.
-When I go to the fort to get him and come home, he
-is not there. They say he has left to find me. We
-hunt a long time, and we call, and he does not answer.
-And then, next, they tell me he is found, and I see them
-bringing him. Just a little way off the trail up the Arivaipa
-from the fort somebody had found him, behind
-a cactus there; and he was dead by an Apache lance.
-Why should anybody kill my little boy—my niño, my
-muchachito!—my little Francisco who never harmed?”</p>
-
-<p>Why, indeed? Francisco was only a gay, innocent
-little Mexican boy, alone, and too young to be an enemy.
-The murder had been done at a turn of the trail within
-rifle-shot from the fort. A party of Chief Chuntz’s
-Tontos and Yavapais had been sneaking around the
-post and the agency, pretending that they were ready
-to come in. Old Santos insisted that the murderer
-was a Chuntz warrior, if not Chuntz himself.</p>
-
-<p>Santos was home again, after his trip east with
-General Howard. He was filled with admiration of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span>
-the ways of the white people. The general had given
-him a New Testament, which he could not read, of
-course, but which he placed under his head, every night,
-when he slept.</p>
-
-<p>“Chuntz is bad,” sympathized Santos, to Jimmie.
-“He is bad and so are his men. All those Tonto and
-Yavapai are bad at heart. To kill a boy is not Christian.
-The only way to make those Tonto and Yavapai
-good is to hunt them down. Cluke, the man with the
-brown clothes, must go out after them, and after the
-Chiricahua, too. I have told the Arivaipa what I
-have seen among the white men. The white men
-are many and very rich, and we will live like them if
-they do not try to make us believe that the earth is
-round. General Howard started to tell me that the
-earth is round, but I answered that he and I are too
-great chiefs, to be such fools as that!”</p>
-
-<p>Little Francisco was laid away at the ranch. For
-some time Jimmie felt sad and lonely. Francisco had
-been his chum. The end was cruel and horrible.</p>
-
-<p>So he was mighty glad when Joe sent him out with
-old Jack Long, to help take a pack-train and bunch of
-cavalry horses clear to Camp Bowie, by way of Tucson.</p>
-
-<p>“An’, b’gosh, you’d better hustle back,” warned
-Joe. “That Chuntz is a-goin’ to be made to pay for
-his boy killin’, as soon as thar’s snow on the peaks.
-The old man’s only waitin’ till winter sets in.”</p>
-
-<p>It seemed high time that something was done. In
-the past twelve months of Peace Policy over forty
-Americans and Mexicans of Arizona had been killed
-by the Apaches, sixteen wounded, and five hundred and
-fifty cattle stolen.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="X">X<br />
-<small>ON THE TRAIL WITH THE PACK-TRAIN</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>John Cahill, the new blacksmith at Grant, went;
-but Joe had been appointed a scout, and stayed at home.</p>
-
-<p>Tucson, only fifty-five miles south, was easily made
-in two days, for the loose horses and the Grant pack-mules
-traveled light. But Camp Bowie, at the Apache
-Pass in the Chiricahua Mountains, was one hundred
-and ten miles east from Tucson and Camp Lowell.
-That meant a real march with thirty loaded mules, and
-a hundred remount cavalry horses, and the cavalry
-escort commanded by Lieutenant Jacob Almy, and a
-riding-mule for each man of the pack-train.</p>
-
-<p>The packs were chiefly ammunition. Each mule
-carried three hundred pounds.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll jest see what we can do, boys,” said Jack.
-“Regulations try to make us think that a hundred and
-seventy pounds is all a mule’ll stand; but the gin’ral
-knows more’n ary regulations issued by those folks at
-Washington. I wouldn’t insult a good sound mule by
-puttin’ only a hundred seventy on his back—not if he’s
-packed right. Pack him right, so the load slings even,
-an’ he’ll carry his two hundred fifty an’ three hundred
-pounds at five miles an hour for twenty-five an’ thirty
-miles a day, week in an’ week out.”</p>
-
-<p>Old Jack was the pack-master or patron (pa-<em>trone</em>).
-Frank Monach was assistant pack-master, or cargador
-(car-ga-<em>dore</em>). “Slim Shorty” was cook or cencero<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[120]</span>
-(cen-<em>say</em>-ro). Frank Cahill was blacksmith. The
-packers or arrieros were Jim O’Neill, “Chileno John,”
-“Long Jim” Cook (six feet eight), Charley Hopkins,
-Sam Wisser the Pennsylvania German, and Lauriano
-Gomez who sang Spanish songs.</p>
-
-<p>The pack-train was called an atajo (ah-tah-ho); the
-packs were “cargoes,” and the pack-saddles or aparejos,
-and such stuff, composed the “riggings.”</p>
-
-<p>Pack-train service had a language all its own. Yes,
-and an army train as organized under General Crook
-had a discipline all its own, too, as Jimmie soon found
-out.</p>
-
-<p>The trail from Tucson to Bowie was the main
-Southern overland stage road between the Rio Grande
-River in New Mexico and San Diego of the Pacific.
-Therefore the traveling up hill and down was good.</p>
-
-<p>It was Jimmie’s business to help herd the mules, in
-the evening and the early morning, while the regular
-herders were eating; and to come in and rouse the
-cook, at daybreak, and get him wood and water, if
-needed.</p>
-
-<p>In half an hour after the cook was up, the men
-were wakened. While they were folding their blankets
-(which were the pack-blankets) and taking the canvas
-coverings off the “riggings” and “cargoes,” Jimmie
-brought in the herd.</p>
-
-<p>This was not difficult, because when he started the
-wise old bell leader, all the mules followed; and so
-well had they been trained that except for a few “shave
-tails” they took their own places, in a sort of company
-front, each facing his pile of “rigging.” Every mule<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[121]</span>
-had his own, individual “rigging,” adjusted to fit him
-perfectly.</p>
-
-<p>The packers saddled their riding mules, and ate
-breakfast. After breakfast they put the “riggings”
-and “cargoes” on the pack-mules.</p>
-
-<p>They worked in pairs, and each pair attended to
-ten mules. A full pack-train was composed of fifty
-mules; ten mules were assigned to a troop or company
-of soldiers. The thirty mules in this train of Patron
-Jack called for six packers.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie helped “Slim Shorty” the cook pack his
-kitchen stuff; and Jimmie and the cook and John
-Cahill the blacksmith watched the loaded mules, especially
-any “shave tails,” so that they should not ramble
-away or try to lie down.</p>
-
-<p>The packers worked like lightning, uttering scarcely
-a word except signal words, for it was against regulations
-to talk much. The schedule of breaking camp
-or “unparking” a train was as follows: Twenty minutes
-for before-breakfast work, fifteen minutes for
-breakfast, twenty minutes for putting on the “riggings,”
-twenty minutes for putting on the “cargoes”;
-total, one hour and a quarter.</p>
-
-<p>But “Chileno John” and Jim O’Neill, who were
-the prize pair of packers, in an exhibition feat loaded
-their ten mules complete (“riggings” and packs and
-all) in ten minutes!</p>
-
-<p>The moment that the train was ready, Patron Jack,
-who had been eying closely, called “Bell!” and “Slim
-Shorty” the cook rode the white bell mare out upon the
-trail; in single file the pack-mules—“bell sharps” and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122"></a>[122]</span>
-“shave tails” and slow “drag tails”—stepped after,
-usually of their own accord.</p>
-
-<p>The cavalry escort took the advance. Patron Jack
-and “Slim Shorty” led the pack-train. The packers
-rode, one beside every fifth mule. Frank Monach
-the assistant pack-master or “cargador” brought up
-the rear, with John Cahill the blacksmith, whose business
-it was to look out for dropped shoes and sore
-hoofs.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie rode behind, too. The long file of swaying,
-plodding mules, under the canvas-covered packs, made
-a fascinating sight. So did the sturdy packers or
-“arrieros,” in their broad hats and suspenders and
-flannel shirts, and trousers tucked into heavy boots.</p>
-
-<p>Jack aimed to start out by sun-up at the latest, so
-as to finish the twenty-five or thirty miles at one stretch
-before mid-day heat and dust. This was only a moderate
-march, in fairly level country. In rough mountain
-country, fifteen miles a day, at a go-as-you-can
-gait, would be enough.</p>
-
-<p>To unload and make camp was called “parking.”
-The “riggings” and “cargoes” were laid out in two
-neat parallel lines, and covered. Jack and Frank
-Monach examined the mules, for sore backs caused
-by badly fitting aparejos. The “bell” was hobbled
-and turned to pasture and the mules followed.</p>
-
-<p>“Riggings” were repaired, if necessary, and
-scraped clean of sweat and dirt. The pack-blankets
-were opened, to air for sleeping blankets; from their
-war-bags, or canvas clothing sacks, the men took out
-what stuff they required.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[123]</span></p>
-
-<p>But the pack-mules were the main thought. Nothing
-in the way of petting and fancy trappings was too
-good for a pack-mule. Each mule had its name, and
-knew that name. Nobody was permitted to strike a
-mule or abuse it in any manner.</p>
-
-<p>“You can abuse a dog an’ he’ll forgive you,” said
-old Jack. “But you mistreat a mule, an’ he’ll never
-forget. You can change yore clothes, but you can’t
-change yore smell—not to a mule!”</p>
-
-<p>The bell horse or “cencero” (which is the Spanish
-for “bell”) had the easiest time of any of the pack-train
-animals. It wasn’t packed. All that the “bell”
-had to do was to tinkle along and set the pace, while
-carrying the cook. The “bell” ought to be white,
-because mules were supposed to be especially fond of
-white; the “bell” ought to be a horse, because mules
-respected a horse more than they did another mule;
-and if “he” was a white mare, as in this train, then
-so much the better, because mules loved white mares.</p>
-
-<p>The cook rode the “bell,” and therefore was nicknamed
-“cencero,” himself.</p>
-
-<p>Patron Jack expected to make Camp Bowie in five
-days easy, which would bring the pack-train and the
-cavalry through in good condition. The first two
-nights out, the mules were herded, to graze; but on the
-third day the road crossed the Dragoon Mountains by
-way of Dragoon Pass. This night the mules were tied
-along a stretched picket-rope, for the Dragoon Mountains
-were Chiricahua country, and contained Cochise’s
-Stronghold.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s off yonder at this very minute, an’ mebbe<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124"></a>[124]</span>
-lookin’ for us,” declared Cargador Frank Monach.
-“I’ll bet a cooky those hills south’ard are plumb full o’
-Chiricahua.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s where they killed pore Bob Whitney, all
-right enough,” mused Jim O’Neill. “Down at Dragoon
-Springs, in the Stronghold. Yes, an’ many another
-man has left his scalp there. That range westward
-is the Whetstones, or Mustangs, where they got
-Cushing; and on west of the Whetstones is Davidson’s
-Canyon south of Tucson, where Lieutenant Stewart
-and Corporal Black went under. By ginger, a fellow
-doesn’t look out on a very pleasant view, from up
-here!”</p>
-
-<p>From the open Dragoon Pass of the stage road the
-Dragoon Mountains, low and rolling but very rough,
-with much brush and stunted timber, extended southward
-to the Mexican line; and separated from them
-by yellow deserts, west and east and north rose other
-low ranges—all chosen hiding-places of the fierce
-Chiricahuas.</p>
-
-<p>“Anyhow,” remarked Jack Long, with a sly wink,
-“we got a young chi-kis-n o’ theirs hyar—reg’lar member
-o’ the Cochise fam’ly—to talk for us; an’ if ary
-Chiricahua appear we’ll send him in to ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie grinned and scratched his head; whether
-Cochise and Geronimo would wait and listen to him,
-he wasn’t certain. But he’d rather like to see Nah-che
-and Nah-da-ste, and explain why he had run away.</p>
-
-<p>The stage and the mail riders had been attacked in
-this very pass. However, nothing alarming happened,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[125]</span>
-to-night. And the probable reason why, they learned
-the next day.</p>
-
-<p>Dragoon Pass was about half-way between Tucson
-and Bowie, so that Bowie now lay some fifty miles east.
-The Chiricahua Mountains and their Apache Pass
-might be seen, in the eastern horizon.</p>
-
-<p>The Chiricahuas had been so bad during the last
-two months that the stage road was being little traveled.
-And when, in the morning, on the way down
-from the pass a cloud of dust was sighted before, everybody
-stared, suspicious.</p>
-
-<p>Horsemen! Injuns? No, cavalry! Good! A
-scouting detachment from Bowie, as like as not; or
-from Crittenden or Lowell, behind. Lieutenant Almy
-met them first, and both parties stopped, to talk.
-Patron Jack, at the head of the pack-train, spread
-his two arms as signal for “Halt!” and he trotted on,
-to join.</p>
-
-<p>There was a lengthy confab.</p>
-
-<p>“Wall, wonder what’s up?” drawled Frank Monach.
-“Reckon I’d better go an’ see.”</p>
-
-<p>“Send the boy, an’ save yore mule,” suggested
-Blacksmith John Cahill. “He’s fairly itchin’ to sit
-in.”</p>
-
-<p>So Jimmie somewhat importantly trotted forward,
-too, up the long line of dozing, switching pack-mules,
-to bring back news if he heard any.</p>
-
-<p>The party of riders from the east were several officers,
-and three or four booted, flannel-shirted, whiskered
-civilians, wearing heavy Colt’s six-shooters and
-carrying rifles. Yes, and somebody else—a young<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126"></a>[126]</span>
-Mexican, dark enough to be an Apache, clad in broad-brimmed
-black hat, dirty cotton shirt, old trousers and
-moccasins.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie knew him in two looks. Maria Jilda
-Grijalba! That same Maria who had been a captive
-in the Cochise camp, and who, Micky Free had said,
-had escaped after Jimmie had escaped.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie gladly rode straight to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Buenos dias, Maria (Good day, Maria).”</p>
-
-<p>“Buenos dias, amigo (friend),” responded Maria,
-and they shook hands heartily.</p>
-
-<p>“I heard you had escaped from the Apaches. What
-are you doing here?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have come out from Camp Bowie with these
-officers,” answered Maria. “I work for the fort now.
-I am a scout and interpreter. We are going to talk
-with Cochise, at the Dragoon Springs.”</p>
-
-<p>“What, amigo!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” nodded Maria. “General Howard, the
-great man with the one arm, is there, with Cochise,
-waiting. He has come from Washington again, and
-has found Cochise. He has been in the Cochise camp
-for six days. They have made peace. There will be
-a Chiricahua reservation, and now General Howard
-has sent for the comandante at Bowie, so that the
-comandante and Cochise shall know each other, and
-there will be no mistake.”</p>
-
-<p>Maria spoke in Spanish except when an Apache
-word seemed handier. Jimmie understood. It was a
-great convenience to speak in two languages, at once.
-As for Jimmie, he knew three languages.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[127]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Would you like to go?” asked Maria. “You
-come with me, and we will see Cochise, and Geronimo
-and Nah-che and all of them.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d like to go, but I don’t believe I can, Maria,”
-faltered Jimmie. “I’ve got to stay with the atajo.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you an arriero? Who is your patron?”
-inquired Maria. “I will ask him.”</p>
-
-<p>But Patron Jack Long already had the matter on
-his tongue.</p>
-
-<p>“Hyar’s a muchacho (boy) you can have, if you
-want him, cap’n,” Jack was saying to the cavalry
-captain. “He lived with old Cochise a while in these
-very diggin’s. Speaks ’Pache, an’ consider’ble Mex.
-Reckon we can spar’ him from the pack outfit, if you’ll
-fetch him back to Bowie ’fore we leave thar.”</p>
-
-<p>“Does he speak English, though?” demanded the
-captain. “I’ve got a guide with me—Maria, there—who
-speaks Mexican and Apache.”</p>
-
-<p>“Does he savvy Americano? Sure he does, bein’
-that his name’s Jimmie Dunn, an’ his folks were both
-’Mericans ’fore the ’Paches got ’em, an’ he’s been
-brung up by Joe Felmer at Grant. Speak American?
-Speaks it better’n I do, ’cause he had schoolin’ back
-East.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right. I’ll take him, and much obliged to
-you,” said the captain. “Lived with Cochise, did he?
-How was that?”</p>
-
-<p>“’Cause he couldn’t help it. Thar warn’t any
-‘how’ to it, ’cept the ‘how’ o’ stayin’ close an’
-playin’ possum till he had a chance to skip out. The
-Chiricahua jumped him an’ some o’ Pete Kitchen’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[128]</span>
-sheep south o’ Tucson a couple o’ year ago, an’ tuk
-him along same time they tuk yore Mexican. That
-Maria Jilda an’ him were captives together. He’s
-chi-kis-n to Nah-che, old Cochise’s son. But he’s
-plumb American ag’in, now. If you meet up with any
-’Paches an’ want to talk with ’em, he’ll interpret for
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hah!” exclaimed the cavalry captain, eying Jimmie,
-as did the other men. “He’ll do finely, then.
-Come with us, boy. We’ll return you to your outfit
-to-morrow. Let’s go on, gentlemen.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wall, I don’t wish you any hard luck—or that
-Gin’ral Howard, either,” called Jack, after—for Jack
-said whatever he chose. “But ’cordin’ to my notion
-the peacefulest kind o’ Chiricahua is a dead Chiricahua,
-an’ you can tell Cochise Jack Long says so. Hey,
-Jimmie!” continued Jack. “You tell yore chi-kis-n
-to tell his dad thar’s a gent in a canvas suit, up at
-Whipple, who’s comin’ down hyar pronto (quick)
-with a double-bar’l ‘peace policy’ guaranteed to turn
-wild ’Paches into tame ones.”</p>
-
-<p>They left Lieutenant Almy’s little detachment starting
-onward, and old Jack grumbling as he signaled his
-pack train to “march.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[129]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XI">XI<br />
-<small>IN THE STRONGHOLD OF COCHISE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Riding on beside Maria, Jimmie learned more
-about General Howard and the Chiricahuas.</p>
-
-<p>The general had returned as far as the Warm
-Spring reservation in New Mexico, with Pedro and
-Miguel and Santos and the other delegates to Washington.
-Then he had engaged two Warm Spring
-guides—young Chie, son of Mangas Coloradas, and
-Ponce, son of another of Cochise’s old-time friends;
-and with them, and Captain Sladen his aide, and Tom
-Jeffords, a red-haired, red-bearded American trader
-whom the Chiricahuas never harmed, he had proceeded
-right on west, into the mountains, to find Cochise.</p>
-
-<p>The rest of his party he had dismissed, to wait for
-word from him, at Bowie.</p>
-
-<p>It had been anxious waiting, for who might foretell
-what Cochise would do? But suddenly, one day, the
-general had appeared again, at Bowie, with only Chie
-as companion. He had met Cochise, in the Stronghold;
-had talked with him, as man to man; and now he
-was here, in order that the word should be sent out all
-along the line: “The Cochise Chiricahuas have promised
-peace. Do not interfere with them.”</p>
-
-<p>With that, he had immediately returned to the
-Stronghold; and now Captain S. S. Sumner, commanding
-Camp Bowie, and several of his officers and a
-few civilians, were outward bound, to be present at the
-council.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[130]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Do you think that the Chiricahua have quit forever,
-Maria?” asked Jimmie, as they jogged along.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe yes, maybe no,” replied Maria, shrugging
-his shoulders. “If they might believe all Americans
-like they believe that one-armed man—but who knows?
-Anyway, he is not afraid, and he speaks truth. What
-kind of a man is that other general, the comandante
-named Crook?”</p>
-
-<p>“They can believe him, too,” asserted Jimmie.
-“He’s a fighting general, and a peace general, both.
-He’ll carry war to those Apaches that stay bad. He’s
-ready now to move against the Tonto.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good,” grunted Maria.</p>
-
-<p>The abandoned stage station of Dragoon Springs,
-on the west slope of Dragoon Pass, had been appointed
-as the council place. No Chiricahuas and no token
-of any council were sighted here; but a stout, broad-shouldered
-officer with black hair and heavy “shoe-brush”
-moustache met the Captain Sumner party in
-the road.</p>
-
-<p>He was Captain Sladen, General Howard’s aide.
-He said that the Chiricahuas had seen soldiers in the
-road, this very morning; therefore Cochise insisted that
-the council be held off at one side, where the Chiricahuas
-might protect themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Guided by Captain Sladen on a narrow saddle trail
-running south, the party rode a mile or two, through
-a rolling park of grass and oaks and mountain mahogany—and
-then here came General Howard and his
-Chiricahuas!</p>
-
-<p>Haw, haw! Even the sober Maria laughed. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[131]</span>
-general was aboard a mule, and behind his saddle sat a
-painted, naked Chiricahua, holding fast with both arms
-around the general’s waist! <a href="#i_131">It was the piercing-eyed
-Geronimo!</a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_131">
- <img src="images/i_131.jpg" alt="" title="" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p class="noic"><a href="#Page_131">IT WAS THE PIERCING-EYED GERONIMO!</a></p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>That was a great position for a brevet major-general
-of the United States army; but it looked
-“friendly”!</p>
-
-<p>A large cavalcade of warriors painted and
-weaponed pranced on every side. They left a little
-space about a red-painted horseman who stayed near
-the general.</p>
-
-<p>“Cochise,” said Maria. “I see Taza, too; and
-Nah-che.”</p>
-
-<p>The Chiricahuas uttered a loud whoop. At signs
-from the red-painted horseman they spread right and
-left along the opposite edge of this park. When the
-Bowie party and Captain Sladen arrived, General
-Howard and the Cochise company were waiting.</p>
-
-<p>“D’yuh notice?” remarked Jack May, one of the
-men who had been sent to Bowie by the general.
-“Ev’ry bronc’ (‘broncho’ was a name for the wild
-Chiricahuas) is stationed where he can dive into that
-little canyon an’ be out o’ sight in a jiffy. Those fellows
-are smart.”</p>
-
-<p>Cochise had daubed all his face with vermilion.
-He seemed tense and excited. His large black eyes
-darted to and fro, searching for treachery. His hair
-was graying, Jimmie observed; he had grown much
-older.</p>
-
-<p>Taza was here. And in the background, Chato<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[132]</span>
-and Nah-che. Jimmie signed to Nah-che, and Nah-che
-responded, but he did not dare to come over, yet.</p>
-
-<p>The council was begun at once, with General
-Howard and officers, and Cochise and his captains, sitting
-in the middle of the circle.</p>
-
-<p>A tall red-bearded man, who was Tom Jeffords the
-trader, did the interpreting.</p>
-
-<p>“The Great White Father has sent me to make
-peace between the Chiricahua and the Americans,”
-said General Howard.</p>
-
-<p>“Nobody wants peace more than I do,” answered
-Cochise. “I have done no harm since I came from
-the Cañada Alamosa. My horses are few, and I am
-very poor. Once we were a large people. We lived
-well, at peace with everybody except the Mexicans. But
-one day the soldiers seized my best friend and killed
-him when he was in prison. Right there at Apache
-Pass other soldiers hung up my brother, after they
-had attacked me when I had surrendered. So I have
-fought the Americans and the Mexicans, but the Chiricahua
-are getting less every day. Why shut us up on
-a reservation? We will keep the peace, but we wish
-to go around free, the same as other people.”</p>
-
-<p>“That cannot be,” kindly explained the general.
-“Some bad white men might fire on you, or some of
-your wild young men might fire at the white men.
-Then the peace would be broken. The Great White
-Father, who is President Grant, will agree that you live
-at the Cañada Alamosa. That is a fine country, and
-you liked it.”</p>
-
-<p>“We would be there now if the white people had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[133]</span>
-not driven us off,” answered Cochise. “They might
-drive us off again, and I will not go to the Tularosa.
-The Apaches there get sick, and die. Give me Apache
-Pass. That is my home. I will protect all the trails.
-I will see that nobody is harmed by any Indians. But
-my people will not go back to the Cañada Alamosa.
-They are afraid. They would not be allowed to stay
-there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then,” said the general, “we will give you this
-country right here. We cannot give you Apache Pass.
-We will fix the boundaries at once. Does that suit
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” declared Cochise, pleased, “that is good.
-We will keep my Stronghold, and the country around,
-of the Dragoon Mountains and the Sulphur Springs
-Valley.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is settled,” agreed the general. “I have full
-authority to say so. This shall be your country forever,
-if you keep the peace. See, I place this stone
-upon the mesa.” He moved a rock. “Now, as long
-as this stone lasts, so long shall last the peace between
-the Chiricahua and the Americans. You may have
-your friend Tom Jeffords for agent.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is good,” repeated Cochise. “Staglito
-(Red Beard) is our friend.”</p>
-
-<p>“You must send for all your Chiricahua to come
-in. Tell them that when they are off the traveled roads
-they must show a white flag of peace, so that there will
-be no mistakes. When they are on a traveled road
-they must meet other people without any running or
-fear, as the white people do.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[134]</span></p>
-
-<p>“That is good,” approved Cochise. “The stone
-lies on the mesa. The white people and the Chiricahua
-will drink of the same water and eat of the
-same bread, and be at peace.”</p>
-
-<p>Now there was a shaking of hands all around,
-and the general and Captain Sumner and Tom Jeffords
-proceeded to arrange with Cochise and Geronimo the
-boundaries of the Chiricahua reservation.</p>
-
-<p>“Let us talk with Nah-che,” proposed Jimmie, to
-Maria. There had been no call for them in the interpreting,
-and now was their chance to look up Nah-che.</p>
-
-<p>“Chi-kis-n,” greeted Jimmie, extending his hand
-to grasp Nah-che’s.</p>
-
-<p>“Welcome, chi-kis-n,” replied Nah-che, as they
-shook.</p>
-
-<p>Nah-che had grown into almost a warrior.</p>
-
-<p>“How is Nah-da-ste?”</p>
-
-<p>“She is not here. The women and children are
-in another place, till the chiefs know whether it is peace
-or war.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is peace, chi-kis-n.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think so,” answered Nah-che frankly. “The
-Chiricahua wish peace. They will keep their promise
-if the white people will keep theirs. As long as Staglito
-stays with us, there will be no trouble, because he
-understands us. All these wars between the Americans
-and the Apaches come because they do not understand
-each other. I think if there were more one-armed
-soldier-captains there would be fewer wars.
-That other soldier-captain, Cluke, is honest, too, we
-hear. Why doesn’t he come to see us?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[135]</span></p>
-
-<p>“He is getting ready to fight those Indians who
-are bad,” said Jimmie. “He was told to wait until the
-one-armed general had offered the Chiricahua peace.
-Now he will go to war against the Tonto and the
-Yavapai, who have refused peace.”</p>
-
-<p>Taza joined them, and shook hands. He was
-carrying a beautiful breech-loading rifle—an officer’s
-rifle. Eying it curiously, Jimmie suddenly recognized
-it. It had been the rifle of stripling Lieutenant Reid
-Stewart, the dandy “shave tail”—it was the only one
-of its kind—engraved so fancifully; that is, Jimmie had
-seen the lieutenant with it, at Camp Grant; and now
-Taza had it!</p>
-
-<p>Taza must have noticed Jimmie stiffen and choke,
-for he said, in Spanish:</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="es" xml:lang="es">No trieste, hermano</i> (Do not feel badly,
-brother).” And in Apache, “We all do things in war
-that we would not do in peace.”</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, on the way to Camp Bowie, after the
-council, Jimmie could not forget the sign of Lieutenant
-Reid’s rifle, in the Chiricahua camp. He was such
-a young officer, to have been killed so soon, without
-having had a chance to defend himself. And Cochise
-had declared that his people had done no harm since
-leaving the Cañada Alamosa!</p>
-
-<p>But then, that was Indian way. And Apaches had
-been killed, too, by the white men. War was a cruel
-game.</p>
-
-<p>General Howard did not return to Camp Bowie.
-He had gone the other way, to Tucson, with his party
-and his ambulance. From Tucson he was going to San<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[136]</span>
-Francisco, to report to General Schofield; and from
-there he was going to Washington.</p>
-
-<p>He certainly had accomplished a great work,
-only——</p>
-
-<p>“Will the peace last as long as the stone, do you
-think, Maria?” asked Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>“The white people will break the stone, amigo
-mio,” said Maria. “Some day they will break the
-stone, because they want the land where it lies. Then
-there will be war again, and you and I will fight
-Nah-che. But Cochise spoke straight. The Chiricahua
-in Arizona are tired. Did you hear about the
-joke on the one-armed general?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nyle-chie-zie, who is Cochise’s brother-in-law,
-wanted to trade two of his young wives to the general
-for the general’s four wagon-mules. The general said
-he already had a wife. But the girls said that made
-no difference; they would all get along together nicely.
-If the general had not explained that the laws of the
-Americans forbade him to have more than one wife
-at a time, he might have been in much trouble, I think.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, many wives at once are a trouble,” asserted
-Ponce, who, with Chie, was returning to the Warm
-Spring bands. “The soldier-captain saw Cochise’s
-hand. That is why he refused the two girls!”</p>
-
-<p>“What was the matter with Cochise’s hand?”
-queried Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>They all were talking in Apache.</p>
-
-<p>“Those two big holes in it are where one of his
-wives bit him. He was afraid he would be sick, so
-he burned the places.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137"></a>[137]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The one-armed soldier-captain is very wise,”
-laughed Chie. “He does not wish to lose the only
-hand he has.”</p>
-
-<p>“But it is true that white people are allowed only
-one wife at a time,” insisted Jimmie. However, Ponce
-and Chie did not act as though they believed this.</p>
-
-<p>Camp Bowie was reached early the next morning.
-It was a small army post, about the size of Grant, composed
-of log and adobe buildings set in a clearing on a
-hill in the middle of the celebrated Apache Pass over
-the Chiricahua Mountains that extended on southward
-into Mexico. The pass was long and rolling,
-between high brushy, thinly timbered slopes. Bowie
-commanded the stage road both ways for two or three
-miles.</p>
-
-<p>This had been Cochise’s favorite resort, in former
-days. At the east end of the pass was where his
-brother had been hanged, after the fracas eleven years
-ago, or in 1861. There had been no Camp Bowie,
-then; only the stage station.</p>
-
-<p>But Bowie was established the next year, 1862—the
-same year as Camp Grant—and like Camp Grant,
-since that time it had been trailing Apaches almost
-every day. What with the attacks on the stages, east
-and west, and on livestock, and what with the vengeful
-ambushing of the soldiers themselves, by the Chiricahuas,
-anybody stationed at Bowie was certain to
-have plenty of excitement. Why, the graveyard there
-was enough to give one the shudders. It was a famous
-graveyard.</p>
-
-<p>Before inspecting the graveyard, Jimmie reported<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[138]</span>
-to Jack Long. Jack and the pack train were here.
-So was Lieutenant Almy, being entertained by brother
-officers of the Fifth and Third Cavalry.</p>
-
-<p>“So it’s sure ’nough peace, is it?” commented
-Patron Jack, after he had heard the story of everything
-that had occurred near Dragoon Springs. “All
-right. Gin’ral Howard means well, like as not. But
-did you tell old Cochise what I said? No? Humph!
-One thing’s sartin, anyhow: if he was put on trial before
-a jury o’ Arizony people, they’d vote yewnanimous
-to hang him an’ half his band. Yes, sir-ee.”</p>
-
-<p>“You bet yuh,” chimed in Slim Shorty, the cencero.</p>
-
-<p>And, as a matter of fact, when the general arrived
-at Tucson, the newspaper and people there talked just
-as Jack talked. They said that Cochise should be
-punished, instead of being granted a reservation, and
-his Stronghold, for his own. Nevertheless, Cochise
-stayed there, true to his word, until he died, in 1874;
-and Taza also kept from war, until in 1876 he died.
-But with Geronimo and Nah-che matters went different,
-just as Maria prophesied.</p>
-
-<p>“Now I will show you the graveyard, amigo,”
-proffered Maria, when Jimmie had been dismissed from
-duty, by old Jack.</p>
-
-<p>The graveyard really was about the only thing of
-consequence to see, at Bowie. It was the largest graveyard
-at any of the army posts in Arizona. The many
-wooden slabs, marking the resting-place of soldier
-and traveler, read much alike, except for the names.</p>
-
-<p>“Killed by the Apaches.” “At the Hands of the
-Apaches.” “Victim of the Apaches.” “Met his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139"></a>[139]</span>
-Death by Apaches.” “Of Wounds Inflicted by the
-Apaches.” And so forth, and so forth.</p>
-
-<p>Maria seemed to be proud of this collection, but
-it was too melancholy for Jimmie. He was very glad
-when, on a sudden, a series of loud whoops attracted
-his attention. A short, brick-topped, familiar figure in
-old shirt outside of old trousers, was beckoning to
-him, on the way from the parade ground. A trumpet
-was blowing “Boots and Saddles,” cavalrymen were
-running to the stables, and packers were hustling at
-the post mule-corral.</p>
-
-<p>So Jimmie legged back, to find out what was up.
-Micky Free, the red-head, met him, and grinned delightedly,
-his one blue eye sparkling. Micky had
-started a moustache, red like his hair. He showed
-hard travel.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, Cheemie. Your patron says for you to
-come quick, if you want to go to Camp Apache.”</p>
-
-<p>“When did you get in, Micky?” panted Jimmie,
-as they trotted on together.</p>
-
-<p>“Just now. Alchisé (Al-chi-say) and I bring dispatches.
-The canvas suit general is at Camp Apache,
-and everybody is to join him there, to go against the
-Tonto.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140"></a>[140]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XII">XII<br />
-<small>GENERAL CROOK RIDES AGAIN</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“That’s right,” Patron Jack was urging, among
-the fast working men. “Move yore feet, hombres, or
-the cavalry’ll beat you. The old man’s up yonder,
-waitin’ on his mule, with both bar’ls loaded. Mebbe
-it’s peace in the south but it’s war in the north.” And
-to Jimmie: “Say, muchacho! Thar’s livelier things’n
-graveyards. We’re goin’ after Chuntz an’ the rest o’
-those boy murderers. So you jump an’ help the cook.”</p>
-
-<p>Alchisé and Micky Free had brought orders from
-General Crook at Camp Apache to Lieutenant Almy
-to join him there at once with all the cavalry and
-pack-mules that could be spared from Camp Bowie.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, the orders had not explained why; but
-the busy-minded Micky asserted that everybody at
-Apache knew why: they knew why, because the Sierra
-Blanca or White Mountains had been asked to send
-their young men with the soldiers and help to drive
-the bad Tontos and Apache-Mohaves out of the Tonto
-Basin. These Tontos and Yavapais were making
-trouble between the white men and the red.</p>
-
-<p>The pack-train was ready first. In an hour the
-cavalry were ready, and the column moved out of
-Bowie, for Camp Apache, two hundred miles by trail
-north across the mountains.</p>
-
-<p>Maria had to stay behind, at Bowie.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-by, amigos,” he bade, to Jimmie and Micky.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141"></a>[141]</span>
-“Some day we will go together against the Chiricahua,
-with your Crook.”</p>
-
-<p>There were fifty cavalry, mainly of the Fifth Regiment,
-and some fifty pack-mules which carried only
-supplies for the march. Micky and Alchisé led by
-the best trail, so that the trip was made in five days.</p>
-
-<p>Now Jimmie had an opportunity to see the famous
-Camp Apache, in the grassy, well timbered and well
-watered Sierra Blanca or White Mountains of northeastern
-Arizona. By reason of the fine hunting and
-fishing, and scenery and climate, it was considered to
-be the prize army post of the Southwest.</p>
-
-<p>It had been located in 1870, and was at first called
-Camp Ord, and Camp Thomas. The Chiricahuas had
-sneered at the White Mountain Apaches, who had permitted
-a soldier fort to be established among them.
-But Chiefs Pedro and Miguel and Pi-to-ne and all had
-continued to live just west of the post, and to remain
-tame Indians. In this they were wise.</p>
-
-<p>With the twelve hundred tame Indians, and the
-many soldiers, some infantry but the majority cavalry,
-Camp Apache proved to be a stirring place. General
-Crook had arrived, with his escort; clear from Fort
-Whipple, two hundred and fifty miles west. He had
-traveled fast, breaking camp by four o’clock every
-morning, and now he was hustling matters so that he
-might set out for Camp Grant, to the southwest, and
-organize an expedition from there.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Bourke was at work enlisting the White
-Mountain young men. Most of the White Mountains
-were very anxious to take the war-path against the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142"></a>[142]</span>
-bothersome outlaw Tontos and Yavapais. Alchisé enlisted,
-so did Na-kay-do-klunni, so did a sub-chief
-named Es-qui-nos-quiz-n or Big Mouth, so did Nan-ta-je
-(Nan-tah-hay), a Coyotero; so did nearly one
-hundred others.</p>
-
-<p>Micky knew every one of them. But his band was
-the Chief Pedro band.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you coming, Micky?” eagerly asked Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe. I will wait and see, Cheemie, until I
-can tell where there’ll be the best fighting.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll catch the Tonto, won’t we, Micky?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes,” assured Micky. “That Cluke is cunning.
-All the way over he saw that the water of the
-high places was frozen; winter has come and the Tonto
-and Yavapai will be staying home. They cannot move
-their rancherias, easy. I will go to Camp Grant with
-you, anyway,” added Micky. “But don’t say so, to
-other people. I am not an Apache. I will do as I
-please.”</p>
-
-<p>General Crook did not delay an instant at Camp
-Apache after he had turned his orders into action.
-Upon the second morning after the arrival of the reinforcements
-from Camp Bowie he started, with cavalry
-and pack-mules and those White Mountain scouts who
-were ready, for Camp Grant.</p>
-
-<p>He directed that the rest of the Apache scouts were
-to follow, in three days. They would find many other
-Indians at Camp Grant, who would try to be braver
-than the Sierra Blanca.</p>
-
-<p>“My young men will show how the White Mountains
-can fight,” had answered old Pedro.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143"></a>[143]</span></p>
-
-<p>General Crook was in a great hurry.</p>
-
-<p>“Yuh see,” explained Patron Jack, to the men
-who were astonished by being roused out at two in the
-morning and led on without a halt until late afternoon,
-“the old man’s promised to meet a lot more chiefs at
-Grant, besides those Sierra Blancas, an’ he knows he’s
-got to keep his word. If you don’t keep yore word
-with Injuns, they call you a liar.”</p>
-
-<p>The distance by trail from Apache to Grant was a
-little more than one hundred miles—but each mile, as
-Cargador Frank Monach put it, meant one mile up, two
-miles down, and one mile across! Alchisé and Archie
-MacIntosh the Hudson Bay trapper, were the guides.
-Micky Free had not appeared, at the start; and when
-Jimmie, disappointed, inquired about him of Alchisé,
-Alchisé claimed to know nothing about Micky. He
-only shrugged his shoulders, and grunted:</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe come, maybe stay. Who can tell?”</p>
-
-<p>The second day’s march was terrific, into canyons
-and out again; and when darkness fell the column was
-still struggling to find a camping-place. The mules
-and the cavalry horses had all they could do to keep
-their feet amidst the brush and rocks; the general rode
-from head to rear, encouraging, and looking after men
-and mules—he sought no rest, for himself, and everybody
-worked like a demon. But Alchisé and Archie
-MacIntosh, in trying a short cut, had missed the trail.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie was toiling and urging with the rest, in the
-depths of a star-canopied black canyon, when he heard
-a laugh, close at his ear, and a voice that said, in
-Apache:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144"></a>[144]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Why do you work so hard, Boy-who-sleeps? Are
-you afraid the Tonto will get away?”</p>
-
-<p>It was Micky Free, bareback on a mule. He could
-scarcely be seen, but Jimmie recognized his speech.</p>
-
-<p>“Where did <em>you</em> come from?” demanded Jimmie
-crossly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I am here,” laughed Micky. “I know all
-this country very well. I told you I was going to
-Camp Grant.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you’d better get to work,” retorted Jimmie.
-“I haven’t any time to talk.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I didn’t come to work; I came to fight the
-Tonto,” laughed Micky. “But the rest of you had
-better work, or I’ll be the only one to get to Camp
-Grant.”</p>
-
-<p>Amidst the hurly-burly of stumbling mules and
-perspiring packers Jimmie lost him, and did not sight
-him again until long after sunrise the next morning,
-when at last the command was out of the canyons and
-the wearied pack-train followed the cavalry into camp.</p>
-
-<p>Micky was already there, ahead, squatting beside
-Alchisé. He arose and came back to where Jimmie
-was helping Slim Shorty, the cook.</p>
-
-<p>“Alchisé says there will be some good fights,
-Cheemie,” remarked Micky. “Now I want you to
-take me to your general, so that he will know who
-I am.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aw, pshaw, Micky!” protested Jimmie. And in
-Apache: “I can’t. I’m busy. The general wants to
-eat and sleep, and so do I.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who is this one-eye?” asked Slim Shorty.
-“Where’s he from an’ what’s his trouble?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145"></a>[145]</span></p>
-
-<p>“His name’s Micky Free. He was with the Pedro
-band and helped me get away from the Chiricahua.
-He asks me to take him to the general.”</p>
-
-<p>“What! Tell him to chase himself. ’Tain’t any
-time for payin’ social visits,” growled Slim Shorty.
-“It’s grub time an’ sleep time, an’ you’re workin’ for
-me. Savvy that?” Slim Shorty was cross, like
-everyone else. Twenty-six hours straight had they
-been climbing and threshing about.</p>
-
-<p>“Here comes your general now,” prompted Micky.
-“He doesn’t eat or sleep. You can take me to him
-when he passes, Cheemie.”</p>
-
-<p>Sure enough, General Crook, on the faithful mule
-“Apache,” was ambling slowly from group to group,
-through the camp; in his stained canvas suit, his shot
-gun across his saddle! He seemed to be on a tour of
-inspection, with particular regard for the pack-mules.</p>
-
-<p>As he passed, the men stiffened to their feet, and
-stood at attention. He dropped a word here and there,
-and halted briefly at Slim Shorty’s fire. Slim stood at
-attention, so did Jimmie, but Micky only waited, red-headed,
-lightly clad, grinning amiably.</p>
-
-<p>“Feed your men well, cook,” bade the general.
-“They’ve earned double rations. I see you’ve got a
-good supply of beans. That’s right. Always set your
-beans to cook the night before, and they’ll be much more
-wholesome.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” answered Slim Shorty. “But these
-hyar beans won’t be done till noon. There warn’t any
-‘night before,’ this last trip. Got plenty bread, bacon
-an’ coffee, though.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146"></a>[146]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, in that case——,” smiled the general. His
-face was a little drawn, but he didn’t look especially
-tired, and neither did Apache. “How are you, my
-lad?” he queried, of Jimmie, and his eyes fell upon
-Micky. “Who’s this? I didn’t know he was with
-the column. I’ve seen him at Camp Apache. His
-name is Micky Free.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” answered Jimmie. “He lives with
-Chief Pedro’s band of Sierra Blanca. He helped me
-get away from the Chiricahua camp, that time.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s not Apache?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir. He’s half Mexican and half Irish.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s he doing here? Is he enlisted with the
-scouts?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think so, sir,” faltered Jimmie. “Not
-with the Apache scouts. He isn’t Indian. He followed
-us. He asked me to tell you that he wants to
-fight the Tonto, though.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well. That’s all right, but I haven’t time
-to tend to that now, my boy,” replied the general.
-“I’m going after some breakfast. Let him report to
-Lieutenant Bourke. Bourke has charge of the scouts.
-When we get to Grant we’ll give him a chance to fight.”
-And the general rode on. He kept going, until he disappeared
-around a shoulder in some low ground. He
-did not return for two hours, and then he brought back
-a load of reed birds, for the officers’ mess. What a
-man!</p>
-
-<p>“What did he say?” inquired Micky, who spoke
-no English, of Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>“He said to have you report to Lieutenant Bourke,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147"></a>[147]</span>
-and when we got to Grant you would be shown
-fighting.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is good,” approved Micky. “I don’t care
-anything about your Lieutenant Bourke, but the general
-has promised me fighting and I like him. I will go
-to Grant, and then we will chase the Tonto with the
-general, Cheemie; you and I.”</p>
-
-<p>So saying, Micky strolled away, to eat with Alchisé.
-Throughout the remainder of the march to Camp Grant
-he did about as he pleased: sometimes he rode in advance,
-with Alchisé and Archie MacIntosh; and sometimes
-he rode with Jimmie, at the rear; and sometimes
-he vanished, to explore on his own hook. But he
-always turned up at meal times!</p>
-
-<p>With his ragged clothes, and his red head and his
-smudgy reddish upper lip and his one bright blue eye,
-Micky was a privileged character.</p>
-
-<p>Camp Grant was reached exactly on time, and for
-the next three days of this first week in November it
-was a busy place. Dispatch bearers came and went;
-Chief Packer Tom Moore was here, from Whipple;
-one hundred White Mountain scouts arrived, under
-Chief Es-qui-nos-quiz-n or Big Mouth; Pima and
-Maricopa chiefs were waiting, to talk with “Cluke”
-and find out what he wanted; word came that the Hualpais
-were ready, for they also hated the Apaches, as
-the Pimas and Maricopas did. But Chief Es-kim-en-zin
-refused to let any of his young men enlist; the
-Arivaipas had friends among the outlaw Pinals who
-ranged near the Tonto Basin.</p>
-
-<p>Every officer and enlisted man and pack-mule that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148"></a>[148]</span>
-could be spared from the various posts, and every
-Indian who could be trusted off the reservations, was
-called into service. Jimmie felt certain that he ought
-to be included; he had done his level best, on the trip
-around by Bowie and Apache—nobody had worked
-harder. So he anxiously consulted Joe Felmer.</p>
-
-<p>“Wall, you see it’s this way,” said Joe: “I’m goin’
-as scout—Archie MacIntosh, Tony Besias, an’ me,
-’long with the Major Brown column. That keeps us
-in advance, an’ ’twon’t be any place for a boy. This
-is war. So you stick ’round old Jack; he’ll boss the
-pack-train, an’ I happen to know that he thinks purty
-well o’ you. He says you tended strictly to bus’ness,
-an’ obeyed orders.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie looked up Patron Jack.</p>
-
-<p>“Shore thing, muchacho,” answered Jack. “I
-told you I’d make a fust-class packer of you, an’ I will.
-You fetch yore war-bag an’ fall in ready to help the
-cook’ an’ by the time we’re out o’ the Tonto Basin with
-old Chuntz’s scalp mebbe you’ll get a second-class
-ratin’.”</p>
-
-<p>Hurrah! It was only proper, too, for Chief Chuntz
-had murdered little Francisco, and had not little Francisco
-been his, Jimmie’s, partner? Everybody at Grant
-was particularly eager to kill or capture Chuntz.</p>
-
-<p>“To-morrow we start,” remarked Micky. “Where
-is the Gray Fox, Cheemie?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who is that, Micky?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cluke. He is the Gray Fox, because of his
-smartness and his dirt-color clothes. All the Indians
-are calling him the Gray Fox. Where is he?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149"></a>[149]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. He is visiting other forts, getting
-the soldiers ready.”</p>
-
-<p>And that was true. General Crook was leaving
-nothing at loose ends, but instead of issuing his orders
-from headquarters, was overseeing the details in person.
-He never tired.</p>
-
-<p>“I would rather follow him on the war trail,”
-continued Micky. “But if he is not here I shall go
-with Big Mouth and Nan-ta-je and Lieutenant Bourke,
-and you. It will mean fighting. We will find the
-Tonto and Yavapai. That I know.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know, Micky?” asked Jimmie curiously—for
-Micky spoke assuredly.</p>
-
-<p>“I know it from Nan-ta-je. Why he knows I
-cannot tell you now, but you will see.” And with that,
-the mysterious red-headed Micky became Indian, and
-refused to utter another word on the subject.</p>
-
-<p>As far as Jimmie could learn from Joe Felmer and
-Jack Long and the talk at the post, the plan for the
-campaign was as follows:</p>
-
-<p>The troops and scouts at Camp Apache, under Major
-George M. Randall, of the Twenty-third Infantry,
-were to work in toward the Tonto Basin from the east.
-The Camp Grant column, under Brevet Major W. H.
-Brown, were to work up from the south. From the
-far northwest, at Camp Hualpai, Colonel Julius W.
-Mason (who had roundly threshed the Apache-Mohaves
-that had conspired to assassinate General
-Crook at Date Creek, last summer) was to march
-down with his Fifth Cavalry and some Hualpais.
-From Date Creek to the southwest Captain George F.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150"></a>[150]</span>
-Price, of the Fifth Cavalry, should come on; and from
-the west the Fort Whipple column, under Major Alexander
-MacGregor, of the First Cavalry, and the Camp
-Verde First Cavalry under Colonel C. C. C. Carr, and
-the Camp McDowell Fifth Cavalry and Pimas and
-Maricopas under Captain “Jimmie” Burns, were to
-complete the circle.</p>
-
-<p>They all were to clean the country as they advanced,
-and close in on the Tonto Basin.</p>
-
-<p>Just before the Camp Grant column started, the
-general’s final orders were read to all the soldiers and
-scouts, in line. It was to be a fight to a finish. The
-Indians who would not surrender must be pursued
-until killed or captured. Women and children should
-not be harmed, if possible. Prisoners were to be well
-treated. Men prisoners should be enlisted as scouts,
-when they were willing to serve; and full use should be
-made of them, to discover the hiding-places of the other
-wild Apaches. And——</p>
-
-<p>“The general commanding the Department wishes
-to state that no excuse will be accepted for leaving a
-trail. If the horses become unfit for service, the enemy
-must be followed on foot. He expects that no sacrifice
-shall be left untried by officers and men, to make the
-campaign short, sharp and decisive.”</p>
-
-<p>Antonio Besias the interpreter and guide translated
-the orders for the Apache scouts. At his first opportunity,
-Micky asked Jimmie to repeat them. Nan-ta-je
-also listened attentively. He grunted satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>“That is good,” commented Micky. “It is straight
-talk. We will find what we are looking for.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151"></a>[151]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Major Brown column out of Camp Grant consisted
-of Companies L and M of the Fifth Cavalry,
-commanded by Captain Alfred B. Taylor and Lieutenant
-Jacob Almy, Lieutenant (Brevet Major) William
-J. Ross, of the Twenty-first Infantry, who had won
-honors in the Civil War, and Lieutenant John G.
-Bourke, of the Third Cavalry, who had been General
-Crook’s aide-de-camp. They were all good fighting
-men. Then there were thirty Sierra Blanca Apache
-scouts—Chief Big Mouth, Alchisé who was called
-Alchisay, Nan-ta-je whom the soldiers nicknamed
-“Joe,” Na-kay-do-klun-ni who was nicknamed “Bobby
-Do-klinny,” and the others, managed by Joe Felmer,
-Archie MacIntosh and Antonio Besias. Then there
-was the pack-train of fifty mules, in charge of Pack-Master
-Jack Long and Assistant Frank Monach, and
-ten such first-class packers as Jim O’Neill, Chileno
-John, “Long Jim” Cook and “Short Jim” Cook,
-Manuel Lopez, old Sam Wisser the German, with Slim
-Shorty as cook and John Cahill as blacksmith—men
-tried and true. Then there was Mr. James Daily, General
-Crook’s brother-in-law who had come out to Whipple
-last spring with his sister Mrs. Crook, and was
-“seeing the country” with the cavalry; and Micky
-Free, who might be counted as a sort of “detached”
-scout.</p>
-
-<p>Altogether, Jimmie felt convinced, this was the best
-column in the field. As Patron Jack asserted, it could
-“lick its weight in wild-cats.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152"></a>[152]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XIII">XIII<br />
-<small>HUNTING THE YAVAPAI</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“Now Apache catch Apache,” announced Micky.</p>
-
-<p>It was a sharply chill evening, December 27, this
-1872, and under a clouded sky the whole Major Brown
-command were encamped together in the little canyon
-of Cottonwood Creek, about seventy-five miles northwest
-of Camp Grant.</p>
-
-<p>Not far west rose the long, high plateau of the
-Mazatzal or Four Peaks Range, through which the Salt
-River cut a deep, crooked trail toward Camp MacDowell
-on the other side.</p>
-
-<p>But the seventy-five miles was only a small portion
-of the distance that had been covered. The Major
-Brown column out of Grant had been marching north,
-west, south, and north again, for more than a month;
-sometimes in cactus and sunshine, sometimes in snow
-and storm, ever trying to corral the Chuntz and Delt-che
-outlaws.</p>
-
-<p>These were hard to find. In this rough canyon
-country they had made their homes for years and
-years. They knew every inch of it. Only the Sierra
-Blanca scouts, who were afoot, in silent moccasins,
-and kept a day’s march ahead, had had any luck. Twice
-they had struck small rancherias; and they had killed
-four or five warriors.</p>
-
-<p>Micky hunted with the scouts, daytimes; and each
-night, when in camp, he had great stories to tell. It
-all was a lark, to Micky the red-head. He had captured<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153"></a>[153]</span>
-a rifle, in one of the Chuntz jacals or huts, and
-now was very happy. He seemed rather to pity
-Jimmie, who was held to the plodding, scrambling
-pack-train, at the rear.</p>
-
-<p>Still, duty was duty, and business was business; and
-the pack-train was as important as the soldiers or the
-scouts. Without the pack-train, then the expedition
-needs must quit or starve—and what would General
-Crook say?</p>
-
-<p>On Christmas Day forty men of Company G, Fifth
-Cavalry, commanded by Captain “Jimmie” Burns and
-Lieutenant Earl D. Thomas, with pack-train and almost
-one hundred Pima Indian scouts, all from Camp MacDowell,
-had joined.</p>
-
-<p>They’d had some luck. On the top of the Four
-Peaks they had surprised a Yavapai rancheria (one of
-Delt-che’s, they thought), had killed six Indians and
-captured a squaw and a little boy. They had brought
-the boy along, because he could kill quail with stones
-and with bow and arrow. His new name was “Mike.”</p>
-
-<p>Only Nan-ta-je could understand much that Mike
-said. The Yavapai language was different from
-straight Apache. And why Nan-ta-je understood
-Yavapai, Jimmie presently found out.</p>
-
-<p>This evening of December 27, two days after the
-Captain Burns column had been met, something evidently
-was up. Patron Jack had received orders from
-Major Brown to park his mules in close, along a picket
-line, “in a place easy of defence.” That was one hint.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Find heap Injuns, poco tiempo (in little
-while),’ those scouts keep sayin’, do they?” grumbled<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154"></a>[154]</span>
-Jack. “Humph! Looks like ‘heap Injuns’ might
-be goin’ to find <em>us</em>, mebbe!”</p>
-
-<p>And now as Jimmie, having finished his duties for
-the evening, made way through the early dusk to look
-up Micky and listen to the stories of the scouts, he
-noted that Major Brown and the six officers and Chief
-Guide Archie MacIntosh were in a group around a
-little fire, talking low with one another.</p>
-
-<p>The soldiers, wrapped in their cavalry overcoats,
-huddled also, in messes, smoking and joking. They
-might have been waiting for the time to roll in their
-blankets, but somehow they all seemed to be waiting
-for something else.</p>
-
-<p>A little apart from the cavalry camp was the scouts’
-camp; Chief Big Mouth’s White Mountains in one
-place, the Pimas in another. The Apaches certainly
-knew how to make themselves comfortable. They
-stuffed their moccasins with dry grass, to keep their
-feet warmer, and slept two or three together in snug
-beds among the rocks.</p>
-
-<p>This evening they were having an especially good
-time. They were roasting and eating pieces of a mule
-that had died from poison. Micky was squatting and
-tearing at a chunk, like the rest of them, near one of
-their little fires.</p>
-
-<p>With greasy mouth he grinned amiably as Jimmie
-approached to squat beside him.</p>
-
-<p>“Come and eat, Boy-who-sleeps,” he greeted, in
-Apache.</p>
-
-<p>“I have eaten. I am full,” explained Jimmie.
-Poisoned mule was rather more than he could stomach,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[155]</span>
-although when with the Chiricahuas he had eaten
-almost anything.</p>
-
-<p>“It is well to be full,” said Micky, chewing hard.
-“We may not eat again for a long time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Red-head?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because,” asserted Micky, changing to Mexican-Spanish,
-“now Apache catch Apache. We start soon.
-If you want to go, you had better be getting ready.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where are they? How do you know?” demanded
-Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>Micky swallowed a large mouthful of mule meat,
-and held his chunk in the coals again, with a sharpened
-stick.</p>
-
-<p>“I know,” he said. “Soon all the soldiers will
-know, so I will tell you what I could not tell you before.
-Cluke knew, when we left Camp Grant. He had talked
-with Bocon (which was Spanish for Big Mouth), and
-with Nan-ta-je. Major Brown knew, too. But it
-has been a secret. We are here to fight Delt-che’s
-Yavapai where they have hidden in the Four Peaks
-above the Salt River. Nan-ta-je was brought up,
-there, when he was a boy. It is a big cave, in the face
-of the canyon made by the Salt River. It is reached
-by a secret trail from above. Nan-ta-je knows the
-trail. He told Bocon and Bocon told the Gray Fox,
-and they arranged, at Camp Grant. First we were
-to chase Chuntz, who had killed your Francisco. That
-has been done, and he has got away. Now we will
-follow Nan-ta-je to the cave of the Delt-che people.”</p>
-
-<p>“How far, Micky?” breathlessly asked Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>Micky proceeded to gnaw his meat chunk, hot
-though it was.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[156]</span></p>
-
-<p>“A night’s march, over the mountains along the
-Salt River. We start as soon as a bright star rises
-over the hills in the east. The soldiers must leave
-their horses, and all wear moccasins, to make no noise,
-and must get there before daylight. If we are discovered
-on the trail, we will be killed, every one of us.
-Nobody can escape, then. That is what Bocon and
-Nan-ta-je say, and they know. It will be a fine fight,
-anyway. The Yavapai will be in their cave, behind
-a rock wall across its mouth, and we will be on a flat
-place outside, in front; and those who fall off will land,
-in the river, far below. Yes. That is why I came,
-to see. You must run off from your pack-mules and
-be there, too, Cheemie.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I won’t run off, but I’ll ask, you bet!” exclaimed
-Jimmie, jumping up.</p>
-
-<p>“Inju (good)!” grunted Micky, gulping fast, to
-finish his chunk. “You and I will stay with the White
-Mountains. They will fight. But I don’t think much
-of these Pimas. Whenever one is killed, the rest stop
-fighting and make medicine.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie hustled back. He was all on fire to go. It
-sounded as though it was to be a fight that a fellow
-would hate to miss.</p>
-
-<p>A change had come over the camp. The cavalry
-detachments were astir. The non-commissioned officers
-were passing among the squads, inspecting equipment;
-in the glow of the fires the men were donning
-moccasins, overhauling their stubby fifty-calibre
-Springfield carbines, and stuffing their cartridge-belts,
-worn outside their blue overcoats, with the brass cartridges<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157"></a>[157]</span>
-distributed from the green ammunition-boxes
-lugged by the pack-train.</p>
-
-<p>The officers’ council had broken up; the captains and
-lieutenants were with their companies; Archie MacIntosh
-and Joe Felmer strode briskly through, for the
-scouts. Jimmie seized upon Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“Joe! Can I go? I want to go!”</p>
-
-<p>“Whar?”</p>
-
-<p>“To see the fight at the cave!”</p>
-
-<p>“What cave? How do you know about any cave?
-You must have been with that pesky Micky Free ag’in.
-Wall, you keep yore mouth shut about a cave. No, I
-don’t say you can go. You aren’t under my orders.
-You’re with the pack outfit. Don’t bother me.”</p>
-
-<p>And away hastened Joe, following Archie. Away
-hastened Jimmie, likewise, to find Jack Long.</p>
-
-<p>All the cavalry horses had been tied to a picket
-rope, near the mules, against the canyon side. The
-riggings and the packs were being piled as a breastwork—the
-task had been almost completed—old Jack
-and Frank Monach and Jim O’Neill and Blacksmith
-John Cahill and even Slim Shorty were standing armed
-and ready—evidently the packers were to join the
-cavalrymen—hurrah, the pack men were to be in the
-fight!</p>
-
-<p>“Say, whar you been?” accused Jack. “Now you
-stay——”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Jack, can I go? I want to go, Jack! Please
-can I go?” pleaded Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>“Seems to me you’re alluz wantin’ to ‘go’
-some’ers,” growled Jack. “You ask Joe Felmer.
-He’s yore gardeen.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158"></a>[158]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I did ask him and he said I wasn’t with him, I
-was with the pack outfit; and the pack outfit’s going,
-isn’t it?” argued Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>“Best part of it,” admitted Jack. “Orders from
-the major are for every able-bodied man to march out,
-an’ for those who can’t climb to guard the animals an’
-packs, hyar. Dunno which’ll be the dangerouser place,
-in case the Injuns try a stampede.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, let him go; he’s earned it, I reckon,” spoke
-up “Long Jim” Cook gruffly. “He can stick beside
-o’ me. (Long Jim being six feet eight!) Then all
-the bullets’ll fly so high he won’t even feel the wind
-of ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll be up in front with Micky Free. Micky and
-I can scout as well as any Apache,” panted Jimmie.
-“We won’t be hurt.” He turned, to make off again,
-but Jack sternly halted him.</p>
-
-<p>“You do as the rest do, then: put on a blanket-roll
-an’ stick in some grub, an’ change yore feet into
-moccasins.”</p>
-
-<p>That took only a few moments, for a boy in a hurry.
-Slim Shorty the cook good-naturedly supplied the moccasins;
-the blanket-roll was made up in a jiffy, around
-a wad of bread and cold meat, and was slung over
-Jimmie’s left shoulder——</p>
-
-<p>“If ’twasn’t Micky Free I wouldn’t let you go,”
-warned Jack. “But nothin’ yet invented can harm
-<em>him</em>, so if you jest hang onto his shirt-tail he’ll take
-you through!”</p>
-
-<p>This time Jimmie got away, but none too soon, for
-the soldier column was forming, to low commands.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159"></a>[159]</span>
-The fires had died down, darkness had closed in, and
-he scurried fast, through the gloom. The scouts were
-bunched—Apaches together, and Pimas together—standing,
-wrapped in their blankets, waiting. Beyond
-them, somebody struck a match. The flame lighted
-the face of Nan-ta-je and of Major Brown, who was
-looking at his watch.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie, pausing and peering, felt a hand on his
-arm and heard Micky’s voice, under breath. Micky
-could see in the dark.</p>
-
-<p>“Inju. Star nearly up. Before sun is up, big
-fight.”</p>
-
-<p>Nan-ta-je’s star must have appeared at that very
-moment, for Major Brown struck another match, to
-show his hand raised as signal, he and Nan-ta-je moved
-forward, the scouts moved, pressing in the wake of
-Archie MacIntosh, and Joe, and Tony Besias, there
-were gruff orders, half whispers, from the sergeants,
-to the soldiers; and amidst soft shuffle of moccasins
-the whole long column followed the lead of the major
-and Nan-ta-je, presently up out of the little canyon,
-for the high mesa or table-land above.</p>
-
-<p>Whew, but the December night was growing cold!
-The clouds had broken, the stars were very bright,
-faintly illumining the dark winding column, and the
-frosty breaths wafting from it. Scarce a sound, except
-the scuff of the moccasins, could be heard. The
-United States cavalry in Arizona did not carry sabers
-when scouting for Apaches; and to-night even the canteens
-had been stowed in the blanket rolls, lest they
-jingle.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160"></a>[160]</span></p>
-
-<p>According to the north star the course was westerly.
-Nan-ta-je and the major led at a rapid pace, to
-keep the men warm. Jimmie stuck close by Micky.
-He had no fear of not being able to hold his own.
-He trotted loose-kneed, toeing in, head up, breathing
-through his nose, Apache way.</p>
-
-<p>Trudge, trudge, scuff, scuff, hour after hour, as
-seemed, westward across the high, rough mesa where
-the snow lay in patches and the Four Peaks of the
-Mazatzal rose close on the right. To the left was
-the canyon of the Salt River.</p>
-
-<p>The Apache scouts forged ahead of the cavalry.
-Along after midnight, from a little rise sign was seen
-away off, before. Lights! Major Brown and Nan-ta-je
-had halted.</p>
-
-<p>“Come! Quick!” hissed Micky, he and Jimmie
-trotting faster. “Camp-fires. Maybe Yavapai.”</p>
-
-<p>“Column, halt! Lie down, men,” sounded the
-low gruff order, behind.</p>
-
-<p>Down flopped everybody, except Archie MacIntosh
-and Joe Felmer, and half a dozen of the scouts with
-them, who continued on rapidly. Micky slipped after,
-like a shadow; he did not intend to miss anything.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie had dropped in the van of the other scouts,
-near to the major and Nan-ta-je. They and Chief
-Big Mouth and Bobby Do-klinny were crouched under
-a blanket.</p>
-
-<p>“Nan-ta-je step in track. Think it man track,”
-grunted, in Apache, the Indian beside Jimmie. Queer
-how the Apaches seemed to know everything! And
-Nan-ta-je had merely felt the track, through his moccasin
-sole!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[161]</span></p>
-
-<p>Under the blanket the major—or somebody—struck
-another match. Just the faint crackle told. The little
-group examined the track, there was short muttering;
-then the crouchers relaxed and quit, and waited. Big
-Mouth crept back.</p>
-
-<p>“Shosh (Bear),” he informed.</p>
-
-<p>Nan-ta-je had been fooled, but a bear track is very
-much like a moccasin track.</p>
-
-<p>Nobody spoke again. If anyone even coughed,
-from the cold air, he did so with his mouth pressed
-against his blanket. Jimmie shivered with the cold
-and the excitement.</p>
-
-<p>Now here came Archie and Joe and their squad,
-trotting back from their reconnoitering. Archie reported
-to Major Brown and Nan-ta-je.</p>
-
-<p>“Yavapai fires,” whispered Micky, sinking beside
-Jimmie. “Pony herd, too. Four wickyups. No
-Yavapai. Left wickyups and ponies, little while ago.
-Maybe go to tell Delt-che.”</p>
-
-<p>That looked bad.</p>
-
-<p>“Huh!” grunted a White Mountain. “We go to
-surprise Yavapai. If Yavapai know and surprise us,
-we all get killed, says Nan-ta-je.”</p>
-
-<p>“What ponies?” asked somebody, of Micky.</p>
-
-<p>“Pima and undah (white-man) ponies. Traveled
-far. Feet worn out.”</p>
-
-<p>In their cavalry capes Captain Taylor and Lieutenant
-Bourke stole forward, stooping. They had been
-sent for to consult with Major Brown, Archie MacIntosh,
-and Nan-ta-je and Chief Big Mouth. Pretty
-soon they went back. The march was resumed, toward<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162"></a>[162]</span>
-the fires. The column had spread out, ready to defend
-itself, but the White Mountain scouts kept ahead.
-Chief Owl Ears’ Pimas were behind with the Captain
-Burns company.</p>
-
-<p>The fires were still glowing at the Yavapai camp
-on the top of the mesa, in a hollow where there were
-grass and water for the stolen ponies. But save for
-the snorts of the ponies, all was silence. The march
-had been made cautiously, and now the air had thinned;
-in the east the sky had lightened. Morning was at
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Yavapai cave near,” whispered Micky. The
-word had been passed along, somehow. The march
-was halted again. Teeth chattered.</p>
-
-<p>Next, Lieutenant Ross continued, with Archie and
-Joe and Nan-ta-je, a dozen cavalrymen and the packers
-Jack Long, Jim O’Neill, Long Jim Cook, Frank Monach,
-Slim Shorty—dead shots all, and fine Indian fighters.
-Nan-ta-je led.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Burns and Lieutenant Thomas, with their
-cavalrymen and most of the Pimas, branched off on
-the back trail of the pony herd, to the southeast. More
-Yavapai might be coming, from that direction, with
-other booty.</p>
-
-<p>The remainder of the column followed Lieutenant
-Ross. The White Mountains had dropped their
-blankets about their waists, as if clearing for action.
-Their faces were set alert, their nostrils flared, they
-were straining every sense, to detect more “sign.”
-Micky pointed downward; underfoot was a regular
-trail, disclosed in the gray light.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[163]</span></p>
-
-<p>Their carbines and rifles at a trail, the Lieutenant
-Ross detachment, led by Nan-ta-je, with Archie and
-Joe at his heels, had dipped out of sight, as if over an
-edge. The last one of them disappeared. The faint
-roar of rapid waters sounded.</p>
-
-<p>“Canyon of Salt River there,” whispered Micky.
-“Yavapai cave, too.”</p>
-
-<p>The crack of the canyon began to open—across
-were the opposite walls. Cold mist was floating up.
-The trail conducted to the canyon, and down. Major
-Brown and Captain Taylor and Lieutenant Bourke,
-with Tony Besias the interpreter, Chief Big Mouth
-and others went forward to peer in. As the column
-bunched, everybody tried to peer in. Micky craned
-forward, with the scouts—he and Alchisé and Bobby
-Do-klinny; Jimmie edged on; they all might look over
-the rim, for the officers were as curious as the rest.</p>
-
-<p>The roar of the waters rose louder. The river was
-far down, hundreds of feet, at the bottom of a long
-crooked gorge with precipice walls. Icicles hung from
-the crags. The trail entered, here, and clinging to
-the niches and wearing away the sod of the few flat
-spots snaked at a diagonal until, descending, it rounded
-a shoulder one hundred yards below the rim, where
-the mists were wreathing.</p>
-
-<p>It was as steep as the trail down which those Tontos
-had scampered, into the Tonto Basin! Nobody was on
-it. The Ross party had gone.</p>
-
-<p>“Mescal,” whispered Micky, sniffing. All the
-scouts were sniffing. A sweetish scent was in the air,
-as if welling from below.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[164]</span></p>
-
-<p>Apache mescal pits! Wood smoke, too! Smell it?</p>
-
-<p>“Huh! Rancheria there,” grunted Bobby
-Do-klinny. “Close to Delt-che, now. Where
-Nan-ta-je?”</p>
-
-<p>Then——</p>
-
-<p>“Bang-g-g-g-g-g!”</p>
-
-<p>The noise, echoing through the canyon depths and
-striking the faces gazing in, fairly deafened. It
-sounded like a regiment, but it was only a volley by the
-Lieutenant Ross party, unseen.</p>
-
-<p>The little handful of advance guard had found the
-Yavapai!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[165]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XIV">XIV<br />
-<small>THE BATTLE OF THE CAVE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The suddenness of the tremendous outburst
-paralyzed even Micky. As the echoes rumbled and
-jarred, Jimmie’s heart beat in his ears. The hard,
-quick voice of Major Brown broke in.</p>
-
-<p>“Good heavens! What’s all that? Bourke, take
-the first forty men—doesn’t matter who—support Ross
-as quick as you can, and wait for the rest of the command.
-I’ll join you in short order. Hold your fire, if
-possible, till I arrive. Tell Ross the same.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” and the strong, active figure of Lieutenant
-Bourke sprang to the trail. “Sergeant Turpin!
-Here!” Top Sergeant James Turpin was the nearest
-to him. “Count off forty men, as they come, white
-or red, and follow me. Quick, now!”</p>
-
-<p>Chief Big Mouth yelped at his men in Apache;
-tossed away his blanket.</p>
-
-<p>“Soldier-captain want men to fight Yavapai. Don’t
-let white men beat you!”</p>
-
-<p>There was a rush for the trail. Soldiers and Indians
-both were eager. Sergeant Turpin had hard
-work. Jimmie saw no chance——</p>
-
-<p>“Sh! Come!” hissed Micky, at him.</p>
-
-<p>Micky had slipped over the edge. Only his red
-head could be seen. His feet were on a narrow ledge
-that, extending along, just held him. Below, the canyon
-wall of stunted brush and rough gray rock and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[166]</span>
-frozen trickles fell sharply away, clear down to the
-cold river, a thousand feet! It was a dizzy sight.</p>
-
-<p>Clutching his rifle, planted as a brace to steady him
-while he half kneeled, Micky twisted enough to beckon
-with his free hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on. Leave your blanket.”</p>
-
-<p>Micky’s blanket lay where he had peeled it. Without
-a thought of hesitation Jimmie doffed his own roll,
-and squirming flat fumbled, feet first, for the ledge;
-found it, and carefully lowered his body, backward.
-Ticklish work, that was, for a fellow in a hurry—although
-Micky apparently had done it as nimbly as a
-squirrel.</p>
-
-<p>“Inju!” approved Micky, when Jimmie was safely
-settled. “Now wait.”</p>
-
-<p>If anybody above had noticed, nobody took time to
-object. What with the soldiers and scouts so eager
-to pass Sergeant Turpin’s count, and what with the
-rear guard hastening up, and what with everybody preparing
-weapons and clothing and re-forming for the
-prospective fight, there were few thoughts upon the
-whereabouts of two such items as wild Micky Free
-and his partner Jimmie Dunn. Micky was the kind
-who usually got a front seat.</p>
-
-<p>Now they too crouched here out of sight upon the
-narrow shelf. Scarcely yet had the echoes of the
-thunderous volley died away. Listen! Shrill, distant
-whoops and yells of defiance, also from below! But
-there sounded a brisk command, above—the fast shuffle
-of feet and the rolling of pebbles—and down the slanting
-trail that cut along the sheer wall plunged, sliding<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167"></a>[167]</span>
-and striding, the support company, Lieutenant Bourke
-first, Chief Big Mouth next, and their file of men, white
-and red mingled in a fast jumble, close pursuing, every
-carbine and rifle ready for business.</p>
-
-<p>Micky poised, crouching tense. Just as the tail
-of the little procession swung past, slipping and steadying
-again he darted forward on the shelf. Jimmie
-imitated. They scuttled so fast that they either must
-keep going or tumble off. The shelf pinched out before
-it cut the trail, but Micky never paused; he leaped, and
-landed like a goat, on a smaller shelf, a mere piece of
-out-sticking rock; that gave him purchase for another
-leap which took him to the trail; and turning instantly
-he ran down.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie had no time for thought. What Micky
-could do, he could do—he <em>had to</em>! He, too, leaped;
-barely touched the next rock with one moccasin; sprang
-on, desperately, across space, brushing the wall; landed
-on the edge of the trail, slipped, recovered (Whew!),
-and gaining balance sped after Micky.</p>
-
-<p>The trail descended, narrow and broken and icy in
-spots, at a steep angle. Anybody who lost his footing
-on it would be a “goner”—he’d not stop until, having
-bounced and rolled and hurtled, he was a fragment of
-shattered bone and flesh in the roaring river below.
-It was a regular Apache trail.</p>
-
-<p>But Micky was running. The Lieutenant Bourke
-file were at a trot, and already half-way to the turn
-around the shoulder. So Jimmie ran.</p>
-
-<p>Micky caught the tail of the file before it rounded
-the shoulder, and slackened to keep pace with it.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[168]</span>
-Jimmie caught Micky just as the tail, who was John
-Cahill the blacksmith, was disappearing like the lash
-end of a dragged whip—but he did not go much
-farther.</p>
-
-<p>The file were scattering like frightened quail, to a
-chorus of Apache yells, and the clatter and swish of
-arrows, and a rapidly barked command. Micky dived
-for the shelter of a jagged boulder, and Jimmie followed
-suit. They all had arrived.</p>
-
-<p>It was a broad shelf two hundred yards long, about
-half-way between the bottom of the precipice and the
-top, and littered with boulders. On right and left,
-behind the boulders, were the Ross men, their carbine
-barrels pointing steadily at a high rock wall about in
-the middle of the shelf, a little way out from the face
-of the precipice. Behind this rock wall—which was ten
-feet high and built up smooth—was a large opening:
-the Yavapai cave!</p>
-
-<p>All the air resounded with whoops and screeches,
-and bow twang, and now and then a gun-shot, coming
-from the cave. The Yavapais were inside. Several
-might be glimpsed, between the end of the rock wall
-and the mouth of the cave, darting about. They
-dragged a body or two back, out of sight. The Ross
-volley had killed some of them.</p>
-
-<p>“Big fight!” panted Micky. “Good. We are in
-time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hey! What in thunder are you doin’ down
-hyar?” scolded Joe Felmer, from behind the next
-boulder—he and John Cahill together. “You want to
-lose yore scalps?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[169]</span></p>
-
-<p>Micky only grinned impudently, and with an Apache
-yell answered the Yavapais. The White Mountains
-were replying with taunt to taunt. Jimmie said not a
-word. He may have done wrong, but here he was.</p>
-
-<p>“Wall, you stay mighty close,” ordered Joe.
-“This’ll be no picnic.”</p>
-
-<p>“What have you done, Black Beard?” called Chief
-Big Mouth, who was near.</p>
-
-<p>“The pony thieves were dancing their deeds in the
-mouth of the cave. Before they saw us we killed six
-of them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bueno,” grunted the fierce Big Mouth.</p>
-
-<p>Lying low, Lieutenant Ross and Lieutenant Bourke
-and Nan-ta-je were consulting together. Presently
-orders were passed from man to man, on this side; and
-by ones and twos and threes the soldiers and scouts
-spread out, in the gray dawn, selecting other positions
-here, or bending, went scurrying across, against the
-shelter of the cave rampart, to reinforce the other flank,
-while the carbines of their fellows kept the Yavapais
-from shooting at them.</p>
-
-<p>Listen, again! Amidst the cries of the enraged
-Yavapais there rose the clink of carbine butt and shuffle
-of moccasins from marching men, again. Major
-Brown was bringing down the rest of the troops. But
-Micky had focussed his attention upon something else.
-The roving one eye of his never missed a single point.</p>
-
-<p>“Yavapai!” he uttered excitedly, half rising and
-pointing, and up he jerked his rifle.</p>
-
-<p>“Hooh!” exclaimed Big Mouth, craning.</p>
-
-<p>John Cahill was the quickest. Away beyond, down<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[170]</span>
-the beetling canyon wall, on an out-jutting rock there,
-stood a naked Indian with long black hair. He
-whooped triumphantly. He had escaped, somehow,
-from the cave—he was almost to the bottom and in a
-moment more——</p>
-
-<p>“Bang!”</p>
-
-<p>Blacksmith Cahill’s carbine had spoken even while
-Big Mouth and Joe and Micky were taking aim.</p>
-
-<p>“Thut!” That was the bullet striking flesh. Off
-from the rock was swept the Indian, and disappeared.
-Whether or not he had been killed, nobody knew; but
-his body was found later, by some squaws.</p>
-
-<p>“He will take no word to other Yavapai, I think,”
-pronounced Micky. “If other Yavapai come and
-catch us here, then we are dead, too.”</p>
-
-<p>The Major Brown soldiers were pelting in, breathless
-from the slippery trail. Hither-thither they deployed,
-sneaking among the rocks and darting across
-the face of the cave-mouth wall. Now a Pima of the
-Bourke men stood up, daring the Yavapais while he
-peered for a shot into the cave. A puff of smoke
-belched from a niche atop the rampart—“Bang!”—and
-down he wilted, into a crumpled heap without
-motion.</p>
-
-<p>The Yavapais yelled louder—their “kill” yell.
-The Pimas and White Mountains yelled back.
-The soldiers were not doing much shooting, yet. Their
-officers were arranging them. Very soon the arrangement
-had settled into this:</p>
-
-<p>There was one line of crouching scouts and soldiers
-behind the many boulders (which sometimes touched<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171"></a>[171]</span>
-one another) not far in front of the cave-mouth wall
-and on either flank as the ends curved in. These were
-skirmishers. Back of them, clear along the edge of
-the immensely broad shelf and extending around the
-ends of the shelf, and even among the crags of the
-precipice, was a second line, in reserve, also behind
-rocks, to cover the first line. Some of the rocks were
-low, some high; they formed all kinds of shelter, from
-which one might shoot over and around corners and
-through chinks. The Micky-Jimmie boulder, down
-from the foot of the trail, in the second line, was about
-the size of a roll-top office-desk; and squatting they
-might peep across the ragged surface of it and see the
-whole length of the big shelf.</p>
-
-<p>From either side Joe Felmer and Big Mouth wriggled
-in toward them, to shoot between their rocks and
-this.</p>
-
-<p>“Steady! Hold your fire till orders,” warned
-Sergeant Turpin and others.</p>
-
-<p>For Antonio Besias the interpreter was speaking.
-He half rose, from along the second line, and called
-in Apache.</p>
-
-<p>“You must all come out!” he shouted. “The
-soldier-captain has many men and many guns. He has
-found you, and you cannot get away. He does not
-wish to kill you, but he will kill you unless you lay
-down your guns and come out.”</p>
-
-<p>Back behind his rock ducked Antonio, just in time
-to dodge a dozen arrows, not to say several bullets.
-What a storm of hoots and shrieks had drowned his
-voice!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172"></a>[172]</span></p>
-
-<p>“We are not afraid!” were retorting the cave warriors.
-“Yah yah! We are not afraid,” they jeered,
-in Apache and Spanish. “It is you who will die, you
-white men and you traitor moccasin-stealers who rob
-women.” To accuse an Apache of stealing moccasins
-from squaws was the bitterest of insults. “You will
-not live to see the sun rise. Our people are coming
-up from below, and you will be fed to the buzzards.
-Yah!”</p>
-
-<p>Nan-ta-je tried, in Apache and Mohave jargon both.
-But he, too, had to duck, before he had finished telling
-them to send out their women and children, anyway.</p>
-
-<p>“We are not fighting those,” he said. “We fight
-only men. The soldier-captain will wait until you
-send out your women and children. They will not be
-harmed. It is not right——” and his words were lost
-in another burst of furious, insolent clamor.</p>
-
-<p>Major Brown’s trumpeter orderly sounded: “Commence
-firing.” The high strains lilted gaily from canyon
-wall to canyon wall, and back again.</p>
-
-<p>“Take it easy, boys,” cautioned Sergeant Turpin,
-near the Jimmy squad. “Let the front line do the
-work, but if you see a head, hit it. But watch out for
-the women and children.”</p>
-
-<p>The Yavapai warriors, behind their high rock
-rampart, taller than they were, had difficulty in seeing
-out. Occasionally a head seemed to be cautiously
-poked up, under an old hat, and the men of the front
-rank promptly banged away at it.</p>
-
-<p>Micky, squirming for a rest, leveled his battered
-rifle across the top of the boulder, took aim with his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[173]</span>
-one eye—“Bang!” Instantly an answering shot so
-shrewdly scraped the boulder top that the stinging rock
-splinters filled not only Micky’s one eye but both eyes
-of the intently peering Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>“Fool Red-head, you; why you shoot?” scolded
-Big Mouth. “Squaw hold up hat on stick, you shoot
-at that, man shoot at <em>you</em>!”</p>
-
-<p>This trick did not deceive the soldiers long. The
-Yavapais quit it, and from behind their wall began to
-send arrows by scores high into the air, so that, curving
-downward, they might land among the rocks where
-the soldiers and scouts lay.</p>
-
-<p>Major Brown met this with a similar scheme.
-Nan-ta-je and Archie MacIntosh wriggled forward, as
-rapidly as snakes, among the rocks, from back line to
-front line, taking a message to soldiers and scouts.
-The word was passed, for suddenly all the line elevated
-the carbines and rifles a little higher and shot fast.</p>
-
-<p>Long Jim Cook and Alchisé and Lieutenant Ross
-and the others in sight were grabbing the cartridges
-spread by the handful beside them, and using them as
-rapidly as triggers might be pulled. From the whole
-wide cave floated dust; here and there the edges melted
-away.</p>
-
-<p>“Hi! That’s the stuff!” muttered Joe. “Shoot
-into the cave an’ let the bullets glance. That’ll fetch
-’em.”</p>
-
-<p>Now squaws and children were crying with pain
-and fright. The glancing, re-bounding bullets favored
-nobody. The warriors howled furiously. The lead
-was finding them, behind their wall. Worse, it was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174"></a>[174]</span>
-wounding their wives and babies. So they stood up,
-to face it and try to divert it—stop it, if possible.</p>
-
-<p>Their scowling faces and naked or ragged-shirted
-shoulders might be seen, above the breastworks, amidst
-the smoke and dust. They, too, shot rapidly, point-blank,
-into the rocks before—and the squaws’ and children’s
-arms were glimpsed, handing up to them loaded
-guns.</p>
-
-<p>At the far end of the wall was a strange, wild figure—their
-medicine man! Yes, because he wore a large
-head-dress of painted feathers and a painted, beaded
-buckskin shirt hung with strings and shells, which
-should protect him and his people from the bullets.
-He was fighting, too!</p>
-
-<p>Twice Joe Felmer drew bead on him and shot; only
-to mutter:</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t tech that feller.”</p>
-
-<p>“No. He is big medicine,” reproved Chief Bocon.
-“You had better save your bullets, Black Beard.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cease firing!” shrilled the bugle. And on a sudden
-there was nothing doing, and almost a complete
-silence, except for crying children, until Antonio Besias
-called again, in Spanish.</p>
-
-<p>“You have fought well, but you can see that you
-have no chance. The soldier-captain says for you to
-come out. Or if you are so foolish as not to come out,
-send to us your women and children, that they may
-not be hurt.”</p>
-
-<p>The Yavapais did not answer. They had disappeared
-from the wall. Maybe they were consulting
-together, about the peace summons. Everybody waited<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[175]</span>
-expectantly. Jimmie, trembling with the excitement
-and the horror of the fight, hoped that the people in
-the cave would now surrender.</p>
-
-<p>Ah, what was that? More defiance? The Yavapais
-were chanting—a high, wild chorus, men and
-squaws both—and the shuffle and thud of a dance could
-be heard.</p>
-
-<p>“Hooh! They make ready to charge,” grunted
-Chief Big Mouth. “They sing their death song. We
-must shoot straight, Black Beard.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look out! It is the death song! They will
-charge!” were warning Nan-ta-je, Bobby Do-klinny,
-Alchisé, and the other scouts, in Apache and Spanish;
-and the soldiers repeated.</p>
-
-<p>“Good!” pronounced Micky, his blue eye snapping.
-“It will be a fight man to man. That is no
-fun, to shoot into a cave.”</p>
-
-<p>The chant welled higher and stronger, and all the
-canyon echoed again. Would they never come?</p>
-
-<p>The front or skirmish line had shifted to their
-knees, guns at shoulders—Lieutenant Ross had drawn
-his revolver.</p>
-
-<p>“Steady, lads,” was cautioning Sergeant Turpin
-and his non-coms, to this rear line. “Hold your
-places.”</p>
-
-<p>“Here they come!”</p>
-
-<p>A great cheer rang, for like jacks-in-the-box the
-Yavapai warriors had appeared—some twenty or thirty
-of them—all together leaping atop their rampart—strong,
-muscular, bronze-skinned fighters, bristling
-quivers of reed arrows upon their left shoulders, strung<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[176]</span>
-bows in one hand, rifles in the other, their eyes gleaming
-blackly, their raven hair flung back, their painted
-faces scowling. They emptied their guns in a crashing
-volley, and proceeded to ply their bows while the squaws
-handed up fresh guns. The skirmish line of scouts
-and soldiers swept the wall—the smoke eddied and
-hung—and out from the farther end of the wall bolted
-a little bevy of other warriors, to break through for
-freedom.</p>
-
-<p>Up from their rocks jumped the skirmish line, and
-ran to head them off. Long Jim Cook, Alchisé, Bobby
-Do-klinny, Nan-ta-je, Slim Shorty, Lieutenant Ross,
-with his revolver—they all ran, shooting and yelling.</p>
-
-<p>They were too many for the Yavapais. The top
-of the wall had been cleaned—and back through the
-opening at the end hustled, pell-mell, the escaping warriors,
-dragging cripples, but leaving, in the open space
-there, half a dozen crimsoned, motionless forms.</p>
-
-<p>The firing died away. The face of the cave precipice
-was beginning to glow with sunlight. What next,
-now?</p>
-
-<p>“Yavapai!” yelped Micky, springing up.</p>
-
-<p>“Hooh!” exclaimed Big Mouth.</p>
-
-<p>Micky had leveled his rifle—it missed fire. Now
-twenty paces before their rock was standing, on another
-rock, a tall Apache-Mohave. How he had
-sneaked this far, nobody might say. He must have
-run out from the near end of the rampart, while everybody
-was watching the far end. The smoke was very
-thick.</p>
-
-<p>He did not know that there were two lines of enemy,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[177]</span>
-and he had paused a moment to whoop his triumph at
-having passed the first line. How foolish! In a
-twinkle a score of carbines and rifles were focussed on
-him—John Cahill aimed, Joe Felmer aimed, Big
-Mouth aimed—they could not miss.</p>
-
-<p>He was a fine, brave warrior—and he saw, too late.</p>
-
-<p>“Soldados (Soldiers)!” he shrieked.</p>
-
-<p>“Crash!” The guns all shot together; the bullets
-fairly lifted him and drove him topsy-turvy, riddled
-through and through from head to waist.</p>
-
-<p>“Crowed a leetle soon, that feller,” commented Joe.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[178]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XV">XV<br />
-<small>JIMMIE IS A VETERAN</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The December sun was high and warm, flooding
-the broad rock-strewn terrace half-way between river
-and sky, but the battle was still going on. Now that
-the Yavapais had found out they could not break to
-freedom, the second soldier line had been advanced,
-with a dash, to join the first. As fast as it could
-be loaded and fired, every gun was speeding bullet
-after bullet into the cave, filling it with a very hailstorm
-of glancing, crisscrossing lead.</p>
-
-<p>The cave was broad, and seemed to be shallow; and
-how anybody in there could be alive was a mystery.
-But alive some of those Apache-Mohaves were, for
-above the deafening staccato of a hundred carbines
-rose the death chant and the shrieks and wails and
-groans and curses.</p>
-
-<p>There was no token of surrender. It was a fight
-to the death. Cleverly shielded in a niche at his end
-of the rampart the medicine-man, barely seen through
-the smoke and dust, was shooting as before, helped by
-the squaws who handed up guns to him; he certainly
-wore a charmed shirt. Now and again a warrior
-bobbed up, fired blindly, and bobbed down.</p>
-
-<p>Micky had long ago used the last of his cartridges.
-Like Jimmie, he might only lie and watch.</p>
-
-<p>“I told you there would be a good fight!” he
-shouted, in Jimmie’s ear. “This is the end of these
-Delt-che people. They fight like wolves in a pen, but
-it is no use.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[179]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Look!” shouted back Jimmie, pointing.</p>
-
-<p>An Apache-Mohave boy—he was naked and chubby
-and could not have been more than three or four years
-old—had run out, around the cave wall, into the open
-space in front; and there he stood, sucking his thumb,
-and scowling at the Americanos as if he wanted the
-noise stopped. Over he keeled, struck by a chance bullet
-(for nobody would have shot at <em>him</em>); but he was
-not dead—he lay and kicked and howled, and all the
-firing ceased as if by magic.</p>
-
-<p>From the soldiers’ line somebody darted forward.
-<a href="#i_179">Hurrah!</a></p>
-
-<p><a href="#i_179">It was Nan-ta-je.</a> He reached the little boy,
-grabbed him and at one jump was behind a rock again.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_179">
- <img src="images/i_179.jpg" alt="" title="" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p class="noic"><a href="#Page_179">HURRAH! IT WAS NAN-TA-JE</a></p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Hurrah for Joe! Bully for Joe!” Even the
-Yavapais might have cheered—but Nan-ta-je had been
-just in time. Scarcely had the uproar of banging guns
-and howling warriors and shrieking squaws and wailing
-children been renewed, when down from above rushed
-a tremendous boulder, bursting like a bomb-shell upon
-the wall itself.</p>
-
-<p>“Hooh!” ejaculated Micky, astonished.</p>
-
-<p>The firing slackened, everybody outside looked up.
-On the very top of the canyon, right over the cave
-mouth, were many figures—soldiers—and Indians!
-Outlined against the sky, they appeared curiously small.</p>
-
-<p>“By the great horn spoon, thar’s Burns!” exclaimed
-Joe Felmer.</p>
-
-<p>Surely! Jimmie had forgotten about the Captain
-Burns and Lieutenant Thomas company, but here they
-were, soldiers and Pimas, crowding the rim of the cliff,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[180]</span>
-and gazing over as far as they dared. They had returned
-from following the pony trail, and had heard
-the shooting. Several of the soldiers were hanging
-part way—waist far, that is—from the edge, and held
-in place by other soldiers behind them were aiming
-their revolvers. The cliff slanted back, above the cave,
-so that persons above might see its threshold, and the
-rampart before—and, of course, see the warriors
-between the two.</p>
-
-<p>But that rock! Here came another! Watch out—soldiers
-had rolled a second great boulder to the rim—they
-gave it a final shove, and bounding, ploughing,
-hurtling, it brought an avalanche down the face of the
-precipice and landing truly in the mouth of the cave
-burst thunderously into a hundred pieces.</p>
-
-<p>A third boulder followed immediately. Then two
-at once. The soldiers and scouts below were cheering
-and shouting and shooting again, but the crashing of
-the boulders was louder. The dust they made was
-denser than the powder smoke—the mouth of the cave
-could not be seen. But somewhere in that veil were
-the wretched Yavapais. Jimmie felt sick.</p>
-
-<p>Even the death chant had ceased, across there.
-Anyway, it could not be heard amidst the other uproar.
-The Captain Burns men worked hard. The rampart
-was being crushed and buried. The Major Brown men
-were standing up while they fired; they were so excited.
-Jimmie and Micky were standing.</p>
-
-<p>“Down, down with you!” bawled sergeant and corporal.
-“Wait till the chargin’ order!”</p>
-
-<p>The fight continued, but it was becoming a very<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181"></a>[181]</span>
-one-sided fight. Bombarded by the rock artillery from
-above, and by the carbines from in front, and held by
-the cave wall behind, the Apache-Mohaves were being
-literally wiped out of existence. They were replying
-not at all; their brave medicine-man had disappeared
-amidst the murk—the occasional rifts showed him no
-longer.</p>
-
-<p>Still, it was dangerous, here in front of the cave,
-for the bursting boulders, piling up in the entrance and
-shattering the rampart there, sent their fragments flying
-like pieces of shell, causing the soldiers to duck and
-laugh as they plied their cartridges.</p>
-
-<p>Now the trumpet sounded—“Cease firing!” The
-shots died away as Major Brown, standing, waved his
-arm at the Captain Burns company, on the rim of the
-precipice over the cave, to signal them to stop rolling
-down their boulders.</p>
-
-<p>“Prepare to charge!” the orders were repeated,
-along the line below. The sun was high, marking noon.
-The battle had been going on for at least five hours!</p>
-
-<p>“Prepare to charge!” Up sprang the line, and
-at the instant down bounded the last of the boulders,
-which the officers above had been unable to withhold.
-It gave one final tremendous jump, and landed well out
-in front of the cave—“Boom!” Something struck
-Jimmie—yes, a piece of it caught him as he blindly
-dodged—and whirling him around knocked him head
-over heels.</p>
-
-<p>He tried to pick himself up, and a fierce pain stabbed
-him in the right leg, making him dizzy. He propped
-on one arm, among the rocks, while his eyes cleared a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[182]</span>
-little. Already the line was running and scrambling
-forward, soldiers and scouts both; nobody now might
-pause to tend to <em>him</em>. He stared, blinking weakly.
-What would happen? Were the Yavapais away back
-in the cave, somewhere, and where they were waiting, to
-defend it?</p>
-
-<p>There was Micky, scooting about; and Nan-ta-je,
-and Joe, and Jack Long, and Captain Taylor and Lieutenant
-Bourke, their carbines and revolvers poised, as
-they advanced at double-quick. Right up to the top of
-the huge pile of shattered rocks climbed the first man—Corporal
-Thomas Hanlon, he—and glared in; jumped
-down, out of sight, and over and around poured the
-others. But not a shot was fired. Evidently all the
-Yavapais were dead. Oh!</p>
-
-<p>With that, Jimmie sighed, everything swam before
-him, and he must have fainted, because the next that
-he knew, Joe Felmer was sopping his face from a canteen,
-and Micky was squatting beside, grinning.</p>
-
-<p>From the cave sounded the hum of voices; the soldiers
-and scouts were still busy there. The Burns
-soldiers and Pimas had come down.</p>
-
-<p>“Hyar! You lie quiet,” ordered Joe. “You got
-a busted leg, I reckon, an’ you don’t want to see inside
-that cave, anyhow. Wish I hadn’t, myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are they all dead, Joe?” quavered Jimmie, helplessly.
-Wow, how that leg hurt! But it had been
-bound up, after a fashion, probably by Joe.</p>
-
-<p>“Ev’ry buck, includin’ the medicine man. Plumb
-shot through, or smashed; lots of ’em both. Some
-squaws an’ kids left,” grunted Joe. “It’s what you<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[183]</span>
-might call a massacree. Now, you stay hyar, till we’re
-ready to move ye. I’m needed yonder. Micky can
-nuss ye; both o’ ye ought to be back with the pack-train—’tain’t
-no place for boys—’speshully for one
-who can’t dodge rocks.”</p>
-
-<p>Muttering, Joe (who really was kind-hearted)
-trudged away.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, I told you it would be a great fight, Boy-who-sleeps,”
-grinned Micky Free, as he squatted. “Black
-Beard is angry, because you are the only one of us
-wounded; but you will be a warrior, now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Were you in the cave, Red-head?” asked Jimmie,
-also in Apache.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. It is very red. All the Yavapai warriors
-are dead. The medicine chief is dead, under a rock.
-One old man was partly alive, and he died soon. Some
-squaws and children hid behind large flat rocks, and
-under dead people. They will be captives. You will
-see them. Delt-che is not there; but he has lost his
-best warriors, and he never will make a good fight
-again. I am glad we came, Cheemie.”</p>
-
-<p>“What are the Pimas doing, Red-head?” asked
-Jimmie. For the Pimas, with Chief Owl Ears in the
-center, were sitting in a bunch and wailing.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, those Pimas!” scoffed Micky. “They make
-medicine. They no good any more. They find their
-Pima who was killed, and now their medicine tells
-them they must not fight again till after they have
-mourned him by singing and bathing and not eating.
-That will take several days. But Apaches wait till they
-get home. I do not think much of the foolish Pimas.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[184]</span>
-And the Maricopas are the same. All no good—stop
-fighting and make medicine. Huh!”</p>
-
-<p>The soldiers and scouts worked fast, cleaning out
-the cave. The squaws and children were placed under
-guard, the White Mountains and Pimas were given
-whatever stuff—mescal, dried meat, skins, bows,
-arrows, lances, guns, and so forth—that they could
-carry; the remaining supplies (a great quantity) were
-piled up and set on fire.</p>
-
-<p>Joe and Slim Shorty the cook came hurrying back,
-with a litter contrived from two lances and a deer hide
-slung between.</p>
-
-<p>“Got to get out o’ this place,” explained Joe.
-“Squaw says some other squaws went down below, jest
-before the fight, to the mescal pits; they’ll carry warnin’
-to ’nother rancheria yonder an’ we’ll have the hull
-caboodle on our backs if we don’t act fast. Easy, now,
-while we put you in.”</p>
-
-<p>Major Brown was in a hurry to climb up into the
-open and unite with the pack-train. The long column
-ascended the winding trail. There were eighteen captives—women
-and children, several of them wounded.
-Below, in front of the cave the fire burned fiercely,
-consuming the supplies and the many bodies heaped
-upon. Over seventy of the outlaws had been killed.
-Some were left where they had fallen, in the cave.</p>
-
-<p>After this no Indian would venture inside that cave.
-The skeletons of the Delt-che people bleached, undisturbed
-for years.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[185]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XVI">XVI<br />
-<small>THE GENERAL PLANS WELL</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The campaign against the outlaw Yavapais, Tontos
-and Apache-Yumas was by no means over, merely
-on account of the cave fight. But it was over, for
-Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>Out went the troops and White Mountain scouts,
-again, this time from Camp MacDowell. Jack Long
-came into the hospital there, just before the start, and
-bade Jimmie good-by.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll be a fust-class packer yet, muchacho,”
-encouraged old Jack. “Yessir; ’bout one more trip an’
-I’ll promote ye. You might ask the doctor to stretch
-yore legs a trifle, while he has you in hand. Some day
-you’re liable to be a reg’lar patron, but that’ll be after
-my day. I’ve a notion I’m due to peter out, what with
-these hyar up-hill, down-hill, blow hot, blow cold meanderin’s,
-chasin’ ’Paches with pack-mules.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aren’t you feeling well, Jack?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not extra pert, son. Yuh see, I’m kind o’ old.
-But I’ll stick as long as I can. So ‘adios,’ an’ be good
-to yoreself.”</p>
-
-<p>This was the last time that Jimmie saw old Jack.
-He died on the trail, away over at the San Carlos River
-toward the White Mountain country, and was buried
-there under some beautiful trees.</p>
-
-<p>The general also paid Jimmie a visit in the MacDowell
-hospital.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[186]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, my boy, how are you getting along?” he
-greeted, gazing down with his peculiar grave smile.</p>
-
-<p>“All right, thank you, sir,” asserted Jimmie, whose
-leg nevertheless pained like sixty.</p>
-
-<p>“The pack-mules returned in fine shape—fine
-shape,” abruptly spoke the general. “Not a sore back,
-or a sore hoof. That’s the way mules ought to be
-handled, always.”</p>
-
-<p>Located here thirty miles east of present Phoenix,
-Arizona, Camp MacDowell was not an unpleasing post
-at all. The Salt River, flowing west, was a few miles
-below; and scarce a mile east the Verde or Green River
-rippled down to join it. Hazy against the eastern horizon
-rose the Four Peaks of the Mazatzal, in whose
-southern face had occurred the cave battle.</p>
-
-<p>The post buildings were thick adobe, with shingle
-or clay roofs; there were cottonwood trees, for shade;
-and through the post ran a wide acequia or irrigating
-ditch.</p>
-
-<p>During all of January, February and March, in the
-new year 1873, the hunt for the outlaws continued.
-In bitter weather they were chased from hiding-place
-to hiding-place amidst the mountains, and given no rest.
-Then, on the seventh or eighth of April, Hank Hewitt
-and a party of the MacDowell packers appeared at the
-post. They were thin and weather-worn: long-haired,
-long-whiskered, and grimy with smoke and bacon-grease.</p>
-
-<p>According to Hank great work had been done.
-Chief Chalipun—or “Charley Pan,” as they called him—had
-sent word that he would come into Camp Verde<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[187]</span>
-and treat with the general for peace. Already three
-hundred other Yavapais and Hualpais had surrendered
-at Camp Grant.</p>
-
-<p>Naturally, Jimmie was eager to get up to Verde,
-meet Joe, and the rest, and report for active duty. He
-had thrown aside his crutch; the only thing that bothered
-him now was a limp, and an occasional twinge
-when he twisted his leg.</p>
-
-<p>So he gladly rode north with Hank and others, by
-the military road up the Verde River for Camp
-Verde, ninety miles.</p>
-
-<p>He was just in time. The general was here; the
-last of the scouting parties, under Lieutenant Almy and
-Lieutenant Bourke, had arrived from the Tonto Basin;
-Chief Big Mouth, Alchisé, Nan-ta-je, Bobby Do-klinny,
-and Micky Free were here, with the triumphant White
-Mountains; and Chief Chalipun himself had brought in
-three hundred more Yavapais, for the peace talk.</p>
-
-<p>The happy Crook men all looked as tough as had
-Hank Hewitt’s squad. The majority of them wore
-canvas suits, like the general’s; and the suits, and the
-faces, and the hair and whiskers, told a tale of many
-smoky campfires and hard marches.</p>
-
-<p>“Hey!” Joe greeted. “That doc. stretched one
-leg more’n he did the other! Old Jack said he’d left
-orders to have ’em both stretched alike.”</p>
-
-<p>Poor old Jack! But Jimmie laughed bravely, and
-he and Joe shook hands. Micky Free pattered across
-in his ragged moccasins, grinning. His brick-red hair
-hung upon his shoulders, his red moustache had increased,
-his one blue eye danced in his freckled tanned
-face.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[188]</span></p>
-
-<p>“How, Cheemie!” he hailed. “You’re all right?
-Good! A three-legged deer runs faster than a four-legged
-deer. You did not miss much. We had no
-fights like the cave fight.”</p>
-
-<p>There was not much time for hobnobbing. Chalipun
-was anxious to talk with the general, and the general
-was anxious to settle matters with Chalipun; and
-everybody wished to hear the confab. On this, the
-sixth day of April, 1873, the talk occurred.</p>
-
-<p>The general sat in a chair on the porch of the post
-headquarters. With him were Captain and Brevet
-Colonel J. J. Coppinger, Twenty-third Infantry, who
-commanded Camp Verde, a number of aides, and spare,
-black-whiskered Antonio Besias, the Apache-speaking
-Mexican interpreter; and Nan-ta-je.</p>
-
-<p>The general also had grown whiskers. A sandy
-full beard it was, rather thin on the chin but bunching
-thickly down from the cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell Chalipun I am ready to hear what he has to
-say,” directed the general, to Antonio.</p>
-
-<p>Chief Chalipun, his black snaky hair cut square
-across the forehead and confined by a band of red
-flannel, stood straight and spoke with fierce energy.</p>
-
-<p>“My people are done fighting the white people,”
-he said in good Spanish. “We have come in because
-we want to be at peace. The Gray Fox has too many
-cartridges of copper, and we have very few. We can
-fight the Americans alone, but now our brothers are
-fighting against us, too, and we do not know what to
-do. We cannot sleep at night, for fear of being surrounded.
-We cannot hunt, because there are always<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[189]</span>
-soldiers within sound of our guns. We cannot cook
-mescal, because the smoke and the smell of our fires
-bring the soldiers to us. We cannot live in the valleys;
-the valleys are full of soldiers. And when we
-hide in the snow of the mountains, our Apache brothers
-follow us, with soldiers. We have no place to go; our
-men and women and children are dying. We want to
-be at peace with the whites, and be told what to do.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have heard what Chalipun has said,” answered
-General Crook—Antonio Besias translating, sentence
-by sentence, into Spanish. “It is good. I will take
-him by the hand. If he keeps his promise to live at
-peace and stop killing people, I will be the best friend
-he has ever had. If any of his people have died, that
-was their own fault. I sent messages to them, asking
-them to come in. When they refused, I had no way to
-do but to fight them and kill them.</p>
-
-<p>“The Yavapai have said that the white people
-began the war. It is no use now to talk about who
-began the war. There are bad men among all peoples.
-There are bad Americans, and bad Mexicans, and bad
-Apaches. The thing to do now is to forget this, and
-to make a peace that will last forever. It must be a
-peace not only between the red men and the white men,
-but also between the red men themselves. There must
-be no more fighting and stealing.</p>
-
-<p>“The red men in Arizona shall live by the white
-man’s laws; they shall be treated exactly as the white
-men are treated, and shall not be punished unjustly.
-If they think that they are being treated unjustly, they
-must tell the soldier-captain who has charge of their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[190]</span>
-reservation, and he will do right by them. They must
-remain where they are put, as long as there are any bad
-Indians out in the mountains to make trouble. They
-must not cut off the noses of their wives, as a punishment.
-They shall have their own soldiers, to arrest
-drunkards and thieves and other bad persons. They
-shall be allowed to work and earn a living, like the
-white men. And the sooner they go to work, the
-better, because when a man has nothing to do, he is
-liable to get into mischief.”</p>
-
-<p>With that, the general advanced and shook hands
-with Chalipun. The assembled Yavapais seemed
-satisfied.</p>
-
-<p>“It was a good talk,” agreed Jimmie and Micky.</p>
-
-<p>“Where do you live now, Cheemie?” asked Micky,
-as the council broke up. “There is no old Camp
-Grant, and there will be no Apaches to watch, at the
-mouth of the Arivaipa.”</p>
-
-<p>That was true. Old Camp Grant had been abandoned,
-and a new Camp Grant established by the general,
-in a better country about fifty miles southeast,
-half-way to Camp Bowie. The Arivaipas and Pinals,
-and the Yavapais and Hualpais who had surrendered
-first, were being removed to the new San Carlos reservation,
-over toward Camp Apache.</p>
-
-<p>“Joe has his ranch, though,” reminded Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; but he has no post to sell to. You come
-to the White Mountain country, and we will talk
-Apache and hunt and go to war together.”</p>
-
-<p>“The war is almost done, Micky. A big peace is
-being made.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[191]</span></p>
-
-<p>“No,” declared Micky, with a shake of his red
-head and a thoughtful squint of his blue eye. “Chuntz
-is still out, and Delt-che is still out, Naqui-naquis of
-the Tonto is still out. The Chiricahua have no police,
-no soldiers, no anything over them; they do as they
-please. This is not fair, the White Mountains think.
-Did you know that Major Brown and Lieutenant
-Bourke have been to see Cochise?”</p>
-
-<p>“No!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” asserted Micky. “They were sent down
-there by Cluke, before the last scout. Cluke has had
-orders to let the Chiricahua alone, but he wanted to
-get a talk with Cochise. Cochise is for peace, because
-he is living where he chose to live. Maybe, though,
-his young men will grow tired of one spot; then who
-will stop them, says Alchisé?”</p>
-
-<p>“The general will,” assured Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>“Cluke will try hard,” wisely assented Micky.
-“He will follow them—his trail has only one end.
-But you cannot turn Apaches into white men all at
-once. I look to see more fighting.”</p>
-
-<p>In April Delt-che the Red Ant made one last vengeful
-raid. But the troops and scouts were hot after
-him. Major George M. Randall of Camp Apache did
-the final work, this time. In the night of April 21 he
-and his men climbed on hands and knees up the steep
-slope of Diamond Peak in the Tonto Basin. Here, on
-the top of the Yavapais’ “medicine mountain” they
-surprised the Delt-che band at dawn and drove them
-over the edges of the precipice.</p>
-
-<p>Delt-che and his surviving people were brought into
-the reservation at Camp Verde.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[192]</span></p>
-
-<p>At the various posts there was read, to the troops
-on parade, a message from Division Headquarters:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="noic"><span class="smcap">General Orders No. 7</span></p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Headquarters Military Division of the Pacific</span>,<br />
-San Francisco, Cal., April 28, 1873.</p>
-
-<p>To Brevet Major-General George Crook, commanding the
-Department of Arizona, and to his gallant troops, for the extraordinary
-service that they have rendered in the late campaign
-against the Apache Indians, the Division Commander extends
-his thanks and his congratulations upon their brilliant successes.
-They have merited the gratitude of the nation. There is now
-occasion for hope that the well-deserved chastisement inflicted
-upon the Apaches may give peace to the people of Arizona.</p>
-
-<p class="right">By order of Major-General Schofield.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>General Crook also issued congratulations, in General
-Orders No. 14, Department of Arizona:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The operations of the troops in this Department in the late
-campaigns against the Apaches entitle them to a reputation
-second to none in the annals of Indian warfare. In the face
-of obstacles heretofore considered insurmountable, encountering
-rigorous cold in the mountains, followed in quick succession by
-the intense heat and arid waste of the desert; not infrequently
-at dire extremities for want of water to quench their prolonged
-thirst; and when their animals were stricken by pestilence or the
-country became too rough to be traversed by them, they left them,
-and, carrying on their own backs such meager supplies as they
-might, they persistently followed on, and, plunging unexpectedly
-into chosen positions in lava-beds, caves and canyons, they have
-outwitted and beaten the wildest of foes, with slight loss comparatively
-to themselves, and finally closed an Indian war that
-has been waged since the days of Cortez.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Jimmie heard the orders read at Fort Whipple,
-where he was herding horses for the quartermaster’s
-department. A scourge of epizootic had played havoc
-with the army animals, and much of the cavalry required
-remounting. The new horses were driven to
-Whipple from Los Angeles and San Diego of California,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[193]</span>
-in bunches of several hundred at a time, to be
-divided among the posts.</p>
-
-<p>This was rather a poky job, but if the war had
-ended, a fellow needs must do something.</p>
-
-<p>Joe Felmer had decided to quit scouting and ranching,
-and try prospecting. So he had headed for
-Tucson.</p>
-
-<p>The two thousand Yavapais, Tontos and Apache-Yumas
-at Camp Verde were content. Everybody
-working, with worn-out tools they had dug an irrigating
-ditch five miles long, to water fifty-seven acres of
-land, and were putting in crops. The general had
-promised them that they should be paid money, the
-same as white people, for whatever they raised to sell,
-and they believed him.</p>
-
-<p>From Camp Apache and the San Carlos agency
-there came encouraging reports. In the south the
-Chiricahuas were quiet. Mexico complained that stock
-was being stolen and run across the line into the Chiricahua
-reservation; but Agent “Staglito” or Red-beard,
-who was Tom Jeffords, declared that this was
-done by the Chief Whoa outlaws in Mexico.</p>
-
-<p>Arizona did indeed seem at peace, for the first time
-in three hundred years.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194"></a>[194]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XVII">XVII<br />
-<small>BAD WORK AFOOT</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“Lieutenant Almy is killed! Almy’s been
-murdered!”</p>
-
-<p>“What! Where?”</p>
-
-<p>“At San Carlos! An Injun shot him. There’s
-been an uprising.”</p>
-
-<p>The word sped rapidly through Fort Whipple. It
-was a noon of the first week in June, and Jimmie had
-ridden in to dinner just on time to see a courier dash
-across the parade-ground for the adjutant’s office.</p>
-
-<p>Chief of Scouts Al Sieber appeared, walking fast.
-The men made a rush for him.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that, Al? Almy killed?”</p>
-
-<p>Al spoke tersely.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. At San Carlos. Chan-dezi (Long-ear)
-shot him. Chuntz was in it, too; he and Cli-bic-li
-(Tied Horse) and Cochinay. The Chuntz gang have
-been hanging ’round the agency, and sneaking in at
-night for food and to make mischief. The Tonto and
-Yavapai had hatched a scheme to kill the agency whites,
-this month, and take to the hills. But they got hold
-of some whiskey on the reservation, and broke too
-soon. The agency police started in to arrest the
-chiefs. Long-ear tried to lance Agent Larrabee.
-Yomas, a friendly, knocked the lance aside. There
-was a mob. Almy undertook to do the arresting himself.
-Went in among them alone—bravest act I ever
-heard of. Long-ear shot him dead and made a getaway,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195"></a>[195]</span>
-with Chuntz and Cochinay. That was May 27.”</p>
-
-<p>“Does it mean a little scout, Al?” they hopefully
-queried.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I think not, boys. The hostiles probably
-won’t leave the Gila Canyon, there, and the troops and
-the police can corral them. But the general’s going
-over.” Al saw Jimmie, and beckoned him apart.
-“Are you fit for a trip to Apache?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Mr. Sieber.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s good. Joe Felmer asked me to keep an
-eye on you, whenever I was around, and I’ve been
-thinking that it’s a little dull for a boy of your calibre
-to be herding horses all the time. Well, the general
-and some of the rest of us are starting for Apache in
-the morning, to look into this fracas. They need
-horses, over there. The quartermaster’s a good friend
-of mine, and I’ll just drop a hint that now might be
-a proper time to send a bunch in, and you with it.
-That’ll help you to learn the country. You’ll be forgetting
-how to speak Apache if you stay here talking
-horse.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d like to go mighty well, Mr. Sieber,” Jimmie
-admitted.</p>
-
-<p>“All right. Micky Free’ll be glad to see you.
-He asks about you every time I run across him.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Sieber hastened on. A fine man, was Al
-Sieber. He spoke Spanish and considerable Apache;
-had lived among the White Mountains at Camp
-Apache, and was a great favorite with Chief Pedro,
-there. “Man of Iron,” the White Mountains called
-him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[196]</span></p>
-
-<p>He was of powerful build, and stern-looking; apt
-to be of few words, right to the point; but he had a
-kind heart. He was now acting chief of scouts, from
-Whipple and Camp Verde.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Jacob Almy dead—murdered? That
-was shocking news. Everybody liked First Lieutenant
-Jacob Almy, of the Fifth Cavalry. Since he had been
-put in charge of the Indians at San Carlos, by his
-gentle but firmly just methods he had made many
-friends among them, also.</p>
-
-<p>General Crook was energetic, as usual. He set out
-early the next morning, on “Apache” his mule, with a
-small escort including Lieutenant Bourke his chief
-aide, and Al Sieber. Jimmie and a Mexican herder
-accompanied, driving the bunch of remount horses.</p>
-
-<p>The loose horses traveled well. The trip of two
-hundred and fifty miles through the roughest country
-in Arizona was accomplished in ten days.</p>
-
-<p>There had not been much talk on the way over.
-The general acted grimly determined, and in a hurry.
-Camp Apache was found saddened and expectant.</p>
-
-<p>Having turned his horses over to the post quartermaster,
-Jimmie saw Micky waiting for him, beside
-the corral here back of the parade-ground. Micky was
-sitting a spotted pony, and smiling broadly. He certainly
-had the knack of always being on hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, Boy-who-sleeps. Have you come over to
-fight?” greeted Micky.</p>
-
-<p>“Has there been a fight yet, Micky?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only a little one, when those Chuntz men ran
-away. But we are ready.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197"></a>[197]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Where is Chuntz?”</p>
-
-<p>“He and Long-ear and Cochinay are hiding in the
-canyon of the Gila. Tied Horse has been arrested.
-If we go after those others there will be good fighting.
-The canyon is deep and long and full of caves. Would
-you like another cave fight, Cheemie?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d like to get Chuntz and Long-ear,” vowed
-Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>“So would I. Come on. Pretty soon Sibi the
-Iron Man will talk with old Pedro, and you and I will
-want to hear what they say. Sibi can talk Apache,
-but he cannot talk as fast as Pedro, or as you and I.
-We will help.”</p>
-
-<p>The general was in confab at the post headquarters
-with Major Randall and Al. There were fifteen hundred
-Pinals, Arivaipas, Yavapais, and Tontos at San
-Carlos—many of them now very restless under guard.
-Nobody might foretell just what was about to happen.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after Jimmie had begun a sort of a reunion
-with Alchisé and Nan-ta-je and Bobby Do-klinny and
-others, at the Camp Apache agency building, Mr. Sieber
-came riding by.</p>
-
-<p>“Jimmie,” he summoned, with crook of finger,
-“you ride along with me. I may have use for you.
-Bring Free, if you want to.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going for a talk with Pedro,” he continued,
-in Spanish, so that Micky might understand. Micky
-knew no English. “If he talks too fast for me, I want
-one of you to explain. And the same way if I speak
-with words that he doesn’t know.”</p>
-
-<p>“We will talk for you, Sibi,” answered Micky.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198"></a>[198]</span></p>
-
-<p>Old Chief Pedro of the White Mountain Apaches
-was, as everybody said, the wisest, most sensible chief
-among the tame Indians. They found him at home,
-sitting upon a blanket in the shade of a tree near his
-house. Since he had come back from Washington he
-had put up a board shanty, to live in instead of a brush
-wickyup. He was still wearing a white shirt—which
-was white no longer.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of the soiled ragged shirt, a splendid old
-Indian he looked to be.</p>
-
-<p>“You are well come, Sibi,” he remarked. “Sit
-down and we will talk. But who is this boy with one
-leg shorter than the other? I do not know him.”</p>
-
-<p>“He is a friend of mine, and of Micky Free,”
-replied Al. “He was captured by Geronimo, and lived
-with Cochise and Geronimo. He was a soldier at the
-cave fight when the Yavapai were destroyed. He is a
-brave boy. The leg was made short by a wound. We
-may speak freely before him.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is good,” answered Pedro. “I know you,
-and I know this wild Red-head. Now I know this
-other. I remember who he is. What have you come
-to say, Sibi? Did Cluke send you?”</p>
-
-<p>They all sat down: Al beside Pedro, but Jimmie
-and Micky a little way apart from them, as was correct
-when in the company of chiefs.</p>
-
-<p>“The Gray Fox is talking with Major Randall,”
-said Al. “That was bad work at San Carlos, Pedro.
-You are a wise chief, and you know Apaches. General
-Crook wishes to do what is right by all the Apaches.
-He wishes peace, so that we may all live together and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199"></a>[199]</span>
-prosper. No one prospers long in war. What is the
-best course to follow with these bad Indians? Can
-they be made good?”</p>
-
-<p>“Let us talk in Mexican, Sibi,” spoke Chief Pedro.
-“And if you or I use words that are not understood,
-the Red-head or maybe the short-leg boy will explain.
-This talk must be very clear. Now, there is no way
-to make those bad Apaches good, except to kill them.
-The bad Indians do not know what I know; they have
-not been to the cities of the Great White Father and
-seen how powerful he is. I will give Cluke one hundred
-and fifty of my warriors, smart fighters all. Let
-Cluke send them into the Gila Canyon. The Gray Fox
-is brave, and his white soldiers are brave, but the
-Chuntz people will go where his soldiers cannot follow;
-this is summer, and they know every spot in the canyon,
-and will hide.</p>
-
-<p>“But my Apaches will find them, and kill some of
-them. Then my men will come home, and rest a
-while, and go out and kill more. By winter time there
-will be fewer of the mean Apaches; and if they do not
-all die during the winter, in the spring we will kill the
-rest of them. But if Cluke waits till winter, before
-that time the bad Indians will have made much more
-trouble at San Carlos, and perhaps among my White
-Mountains, and perhaps among the Chiricahua.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will think on what you have said,” responded Al.</p>
-
-<p>“It will be no use to send you or any other person
-into the canyon, to spend words on those people,” proceeded
-Pedro. “They will burn him, and will send
-back an old woman to tell Cluke to give them more<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200"></a>[200]</span>
-of his men, to burn. Now I am done, Man of Iron.
-I cannot read from paper, but I can look at the actions
-of a bad Indian, and can read how he feels and what
-he will do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Humph!” mused Al, as with Jimmie and Micky
-he rode away. “I believe old Pedro is right.”</p>
-
-<p>The next afternoon the general held a talk at the
-San Carlos agency with Es-kim-en-zin, of the Arivaipas,
-and with those Tonto and Yavapai chiefs who had
-not joined Chuntz.</p>
-
-<p>The San Carlos agency was seventy miles southwest
-from Camp Apache, where the San Carlos River
-emptied into the Gila. This San Carlos reservation
-was really an addition to the southern boundary of the
-White Mountain reservation. It was sixty miles wide
-and extended clear to the New Mexico line, one hundred
-and twenty miles. The eastern half was rough
-and mountainous, but the western half, along the Gila
-River, was flatter and more open—especially around
-the agency, where the Indians were supposed to live.</p>
-
-<p>The majority of the Apaches did not like it. They
-said that it was low, hot and unhealthful.</p>
-
-<p>“I am sorry to hear that there are bad hearts at
-work among you,” spoke the general. Concepcion
-Equierre translated. “They have deceived you into
-believing that the white people might be killed, and
-that the Apaches might be free to rob and murder
-again. Now the innocent have suffered. Lieutenant
-Almy, one of your best friends, has been killed, and
-you all are prevented from going about on hunts and
-visits.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201"></a>[201]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I want you all to live as free as the white men.
-I do not expect you to stop being red men. I want
-your women to gather mescal and seeds and roots, and
-your men to hunt deer and turkeys without fear; for
-these things are good to eat. But you cannot do this
-without fear, when there is war.</p>
-
-<p>“Now about these Chuntz and Long-ear bad men.
-I have thousands of soldiers, and many Apache scouts,
-and they are enough to give the bad Apaches no rest.
-But I want you to punish your own bad people. You
-must send out your own warriors, and keep sending
-them out until Chuntz and Long-ear and Cochinay are
-killed or captured, and their people surrender. It is
-not right that a few bad men should work so much
-harm to everybody. I hope that you will consider
-what I have said. I am done.”</p>
-
-<p>All that summer of 1873 and into the next summer
-the San Carlos and White Mountain police, assisted
-by cavalry and infantry detachments patrolling the
-hills, harassed the outlaws. Wherever the Chuntz
-people moved, in the Canyon of the Gila, the reservation
-Apaches were ferreting them out.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the outlaws sent in word that they were
-ready to surrender. They were told that they might
-come in if they brought Chuntz, Long-ear and Cochinay.
-Finally the outlaws were hunting their chiefs.</p>
-
-<p>Cochinay was killed on May 26, 1874; Long-ear
-was killed on June 12; Chuntz the villain was killed
-on July 25. A whole sackful of heads was spilled by
-the Apache police upon the ground in front of Major
-John B. Babcock’s headquarters, at San Carlos, to
-prove that “peace” was being made!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202"></a>[202]</span></p>
-
-<p>Over at Verde, Delt-che had broken out and had
-been killed, in July.</p>
-
-<p>So by mid-summer of 1874 the bad-hearted chiefs
-seemed all out of the way, at last. Old Cochise, also,
-had died, in June, on the Chiricahua reservation, and
-Taza was the head chief. He could be depended upon,
-for peace.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Jimmie was helping to run the first
-telegraph lines in Arizona, connecting military post
-with military post. He stayed in telegraph work some
-years—during which a number of things happened.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203"></a>[203]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XVIII">XVIII<br />
-<small>“CLUKE” GOES AWAY</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The general’s plans had apparently worked out all
-right, when for no especial reason, as far as Arizona
-could understand, the management of the reservations
-was changed from the Military Department of Arizona
-to the civilian agents appointed by the Indian Bureau
-at Washington. The soldiers were to be retained only
-as guards and not as instructors.</p>
-
-<p>The Indian Bureau started in to move the Apaches
-about. That had been tried two years before, when
-in New Mexico Chief Victorio’s Warm Spring
-Apaches had been ordered from the Cañada Alamosa
-to the hated Tularosa tract. But General Howard had
-obtained from the President permission for them to
-live again at their beloved Cottonwood Canyon.</p>
-
-<p>In the summer of 1874 it was reported that the
-Camp Verde Indians were to be taken over to the San
-Carlos reservation. The Camp Verde lands were desired
-by the white people.</p>
-
-<p>General Crook had much opposed this scheme. He
-was powerless, but he sent a protest to the War Department,
-saying:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>There are now on the Verde reservation about fifteen hundred
-Indians; they have been among the worst in Arizona; but
-if the Government keeps its promise to them that it shall be their
-home for all time, there will be no difficulty in keeping them at
-peace, and engaged in peaceful pursuits. I sincerely hope that
-the interests that are now at work to deprive these Indians of
-this reservation will be defeated; but if they succeed, the responsibility<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204"></a>[204]</span>
-of turning these fifteen hundred Apaches loose upon the
-settlers of Arizona should rest where it belongs.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>All that winter of 1874–1875 the general (who had
-given his word) and Chief Chalipun strove against the
-threatened change to the San Carlos reservation. But
-it was of no avail.</p>
-
-<p>In the spring of 1875 the general had been transferred
-to the Department of the Platte, with headquarters
-at Omaha, Nebraska. He had pacified the
-Snakes in the Northwest and the Apaches in the Southwest;
-now he was needed to subdue the bold-riding
-Sioux and Cheyennes of the great northern plains.</p>
-
-<p>He took with him Lieutenant John G. Bourke, chief
-of staff, and other officers whom Jimmie so well knew.
-Tom Moore, chief packer, was to follow with the best
-of the pack-trains. The Third Cavalry already was in
-the north; and the Fifth Cavalry was soon to go.</p>
-
-<p>“Cluke has been sent away. The Apaches have
-lost their best friend,” mourned Chief Chalipun; and
-submitted to being removed. So the Yavapais and the
-Apache-Yumas at Camp Verde left their ditch and
-fields, and went to a strange region—that of San Carlos.</p>
-
-<p>Young Second Lieutenant George O. Eaton, of the
-Fifth Cavalry, was the only man whom they would
-trust, to take them over. Even at that, on the way
-they had a fight among themselves, and eighteen were
-killed and fifty wounded.</p>
-
-<p>The White Mountains were moved, next, down to
-the San Carlos. Their reservation was to be closed.</p>
-
-<p>Whatever the reasons of the Indian Bureau, Chiefs
-Pedro, Pi-to-ne and others objected bitterly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205"></a>[205]</span></p>
-
-<p>“These are our lands,” asserted Chief Pedro.
-“They were promised to us by the great one-armed
-soldier-captain, Howard. When I went to Washington,
-our White Father there told me again that if we
-were good, these should be our lands forever. We
-have been good. We have done as we were asked to
-do. We have raised more crops than all the other
-Apaches put together. We have helped the soldiers
-fight our brothers. We are contented here. But we
-are mountain Indians and we cannot live down there
-in the low country where the water is bad and the air
-is hot. The Pinals and the Arivaipas are not friendly
-to us, and the Yavapai ways are not our ways.”</p>
-
-<p>Finally eighteen hundred of them were herded
-down to the San Carlos. Some hid out, and after a
-time many stole back from the San Carlos. The soldiers
-at Camp Apache permitted them to stay.</p>
-
-<p>The next year, 1876, the Chiricahua reservation
-was broken up. It had no soldiers and no Indian
-police, and was too near the border. Whiskey-sellers
-and outlaw Apaches sneaked in, but Taza said that if
-the American government would help him he could
-keep the bad people out.</p>
-
-<p>“Why does Washington punish good people on
-account of bad people?” he asked, when told that the
-Chiricahuas must go.</p>
-
-<p>At last, with about three hundred of his Chiricahuas,
-he went to the San Carlos. Geronimo agreed
-to go, too; but he and Chief Whoa, who had come in
-from Mexico, and old Nana, and Nah-che, and four
-hundred others, ran off into Mexico.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206"></a>[206]</span></p>
-
-<p>The next spring they returned to visit Victorio’s
-Warm Spring band at the Cottonwood Canyon reservation.
-Because of this, Chiefs Victorio and Geronimo
-were arrested, and all the Indians were started, under
-guard, for the San Carlos.</p>
-
-<p>On the way Chief Victorio escaped, with forty warriors.
-After this he made war on the Americans until
-he was killed in 1880. He claimed that he had done
-no wrong, and that he never could trust the Americans
-again.</p>
-
-<p>“The policy of concentration,” was what the Indian
-Bureau called its scheme to place all the Apaches upon
-the San Carlos reservation. “A policy of concentrated
-trouble,” Al Sieber said.</p>
-
-<p>And that proved true.</p>
-
-<p>Soon the San Carlos reservation contained about
-five thousand Indians, good and bad; some working,
-some lazy. There were Yavapais, Tontos, Coyotes,
-Apache-Yumas, Chiricahuas, Pinals, Arivaipas, Sierra
-Blanca (White Mountains), and even a few Hualpais.
-They had different habits. The Indian Bureau seemed
-to think that one Apache was just like another Apache,
-but General Crook had known better.</p>
-
-<p>Whiskey was being smuggled in or manufactured;
-white miners and ranchers and prospectors were trespassing,
-and large sections of the reservation had been
-lopped off for other uses; the agents were accused of
-selling the Indians’ supplies outside, instead of distributing
-them properly or storing them; the Indians
-quarreled among themselves, and even some of the
-White Mountains had revolted.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207"></a>[207]</span></p>
-
-<p>So in the early morning of April, 1882, Jimmie
-Dunn, riding telegraph line up along the Gila River
-from Camp Thomas, had plenty to think about. Jimmie
-was a young man, now, with a limp (an honorable
-limp) but with a good hard head.</p>
-
-<p>Camp Thomas had been established just at the
-southeast corner of the San Carlos reservation, or
-thirty-two miles up the Gila from the agency quarters.
-Jimmie’s business as line-man was to ride between
-Thomas and the second Camp Grant, and to see that
-the line was in order.</p>
-
-<p>There was still constant trouble at San Carlos.
-The Apaches there had no faith in the Government.
-The good ones saw little reason in remaining good.
-Their only reward had been San Carlos, and they hated
-San Carlos. The Chiricahuas especially were restive.
-A long time ago Taza had died, while in Washington
-trying to talk for his people. Geronimo was head
-chief, and Nah-che was his partner in everything.</p>
-
-<p>Parties frequently broke away from the reservation,
-for Mexico. At this very moment Chief Whoa and
-Nah-che were out again, with a band. They had fled
-to join old Nana, who at almost ninety years was living
-wild!</p>
-
-<p>Geronimo and two hundred of his Chiricahuas, and
-Loco and the Warm Spring Apaches, were at the San
-Carlos, but likely enough they would run away, too,
-whenever they took the notion. They despised the
-Taza people as “squaws” and cowards; the other
-Indians, in turn, despised them as trouble-makers.</p>
-
-<p>General Crook was in the north. He had conquered<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208"></a>[208]</span>
-the Sioux and the Cheyennes, and was busy
-keeping them at peace.</p>
-
-<p>General O. B. Willcox, of the Twelfth Infantry,
-commanded in Arizona. The Sixth Cavalry had replaced
-the Fifth Cavalry. But there were not enough
-soldiers, most of the white interpreters and scouts had
-been discharged, and the Apache police were supposed
-to maintain order upon the reservation.</p>
-
-<p>The military telegraph had connected all the army
-posts. There was a civil telegraph, also—for the railroad
-had arrived.</p>
-
-<p>The Southern Pacific Railroad crossed the southern
-part of the Territory, about by the old stage route.
-Through the northern part of the Territory the Atlantic
-&amp; Pacific Railroad was crossing the great Mogollon
-Plateau, where General Crook had broken a trail in
-the campaign of ten years ago.</p>
-
-<p>The telegraph line had puzzled the Apaches very
-much, as “big medicine.” They called it “pesh-bi-yal-ti”—“the
-talking wire.” But they were learning
-to interfere with it by cutting it, and inserting a little
-piece of rubber. Then the wire quit “talking.”</p>
-
-<p>A sharp eye was required to see such a break, which
-usually was near a pole or tree up which the Indians
-had shinned. Jimmie had the eye. Also, he was not
-afraid. He was accustomed to the country, and to
-the Apaches.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes he saw parties of them. If they were
-running away, they were in too much of a hurry to
-stop. If they were hunting, they were friendly.
-However, the run-aways did not cross hereabouts.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209"></a>[209]</span>
-They took another route, further east, along the New
-Mexico western border.</p>
-
-<p>As a rule, Jimmie rode with a partner; but to-day
-his partner was ill. Jimmie felt capable of repairing
-any break by himself, whether the Indians had made
-it, or whether the limb of a tree had fallen. The line
-had to be ridden, anyway.</p>
-
-<p>The military road was very quiet. It stretched on,
-up hill and down, through timber and open parks, with
-the Gila River on the left, and far on the right, or the
-south, the dark Pinaleno Mountains, beyond which
-lay Camp Grant. Pretty soon the telegraph line would
-head down there. He would ride on until he met another
-rider, coming from Grant.</p>
-
-<p>The San Carlos reservation was behind, to the
-northwest, on the other side of the Gila; and away in
-the north, beyond a high ridge, was the White Mountain
-reservation, with old Camp Apache that was now
-Fort Apache.</p>
-
-<p>He was about ten miles out of Camp Thomas, and
-jogging easily. The only moving things that he had
-sighted were rabbits and squirrels, and once or twice
-a deer. But now when from a rise he looked across
-the Gila, he saw, in the distance to the north, a great
-cloud of dust.</p>
-
-<p>That froze him. It appeared mighty suspicious.
-Many people, and horses or cattle, would stir up such a
-dust. In that case, Indians! This was not white
-man’s country.</p>
-
-<p>If they were Indians, they were moving very fast,
-and striking east, like run-aways from San Carlos. Or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210"></a>[210]</span>
-was it cavalry, riding hard? But if it was cavalry, that
-meant Indians, too.</p>
-
-<p>Well, he’d soon find out. The Gila, running bank
-full, was some distance below; the country beyond,
-approached by the dust, was open and rolling. He had
-a fine view. So sitting his horse, Jimmie whipped off
-his field-glasses and leveled them. Ash Flats sprang
-into the field; and here surged the brown dust, and
-under it, into the clear of a little swale, streamed a mass
-of hastily scurrying figures.</p>
-
-<p>Indians, sure!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211"></a>[211]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XIX">XIX<br />
-<small>JIMMIE SENDS THE ALARM</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>First there were fifteen or twenty mounted warriors,
-as an advance guard. Then there followed about
-one hundred and fifty other warriors, all with rifles,
-and stripped and painted to fight. Then there trooped
-and jostled a large procession of squaws and children,
-mostly afoot, herding a tremendous bunch of loose
-horses and mules, and packing camp stuff.</p>
-
-<p>There must have been five hundred squaws and
-children, and six or seven thousand animals, not counting
-dogs! A small guard of warriors were riding the
-rear flanks of the march. It certainly was a big outbreak
-of the San Carlos Chiricahuas, and they were
-hot-footing for Mexico!</p>
-
-<p>Whew! Where were the police and the soldiers,
-then? Jimmie swept the landscape for sign of them,
-and saw nothing. He clapped his glasses closed. His
-eyes leaped to the nearest telegraph pole. His duty
-was clear. He ought to send word at once to Camp
-Thomas.</p>
-
-<p>Just as he was about to swing down, tie his horse,
-and climb the pole, he sighted, with a last glance of
-his eye, four Indians swimming the river below, with
-their ponies. Either he had been seen, or else they
-were coming to cut the wire. Maybe both.</p>
-
-<p>Already the foremost was urging his pony up out
-of the water’s edge, to the bank on this side. Of course
-they had seen him, as he sat! But he still had a chance<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212"></a>[212]</span>
-to race back, to the fort, and give the alarm. No;
-that would lose an hour, or more. Likely enough the
-wire from San Carlos to the fort had been cut; at the
-rate that those Chiricahuas were traveling, every minute
-was precious if they were to be headed off.</p>
-
-<p>He ought to climb the pole and tap the wire. If
-he could not raise Thomas in the one direction, he
-might raise Grant, in the other. But he’d have to work
-fast. Lives were at stake, for no settler could stop
-those bronc’s.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie resolutely tumbled off his horse, in a jiffy
-strapped on his climbing irons, left his horse, and his
-rifle in scabbard (a rifle would be of no use up there),
-and ran for the pole. And this was a brave act, for
-he might easily have run, horseback, in another direction—back
-to Camp Thomas, or to hide in the farther
-timber until the Indians had gone after cutting the wire.</p>
-
-<p>At top speed he shinned up the pole, and digging in,
-rapidly unshipped his line-man’s little sending kit, in
-order to break in on the wire and call the Camp Thomas
-operator. He did not dare to watch the movements of
-those four Indians.</p>
-
-<p>No doubt the four were coming full tilt, up from
-the river and through the brush; but if he tried to
-watch them he would be nervous and make false
-motions. The thing for him to do was to clamp on to
-that line, and <em>get there first</em>. That required swift, sure
-work, and all his attention. So he endeavored not to
-think of the four Indians.</p>
-
-<p>Never had he felt so high in the air, and so much
-exposed. Almost any other pole would have been<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213"></a>[213]</span>
-better, but none had been as near and convenient. He
-made a splendid mark, like a hawk roosting in a dead
-tree.</p>
-
-<p>“Ping!” A bullet! They were shooting at him!
-“Pung!” That was the report, following. “Whing!”
-“Pung!” But he must not mind the warning. He
-needed only a minute more. As he worked rapidly
-his fingers seemed all thumbs. He did not dare to take
-his eyes off them. “Thud-bang!” The bullet shook
-the pole, and the report was so close that the shooter
-could not be far away. He heard shrill yells, somewhere
-below——</p>
-
-<p>“Whack-bang!” A heavy hammer fell on the top
-of his shoulder, and well nigh knocked him from his
-perch. He clung desperately, wrapping himself
-tighter—his shoulder stung and was oddly warm—but
-it was his left shoulder, he was on the wire at
-last, and was sending with his right hand.</p>
-
-<p>“D,” “D,” “D,” he called Camp Thomas.</p>
-
-<p>There was thud of hoofs below, a chorus of angry
-yells—“Whish-bang!” a bullet fanned his cheek—“Ping-bang!”
-another cut a large sliver from the pole
-close to his neck—“D,” “D,” “D,” he kept calling,
-even while he glanced aside.</p>
-
-<p>The four Indians were into the road and tearing
-for him, rifles leveled upward—he saw smoke, heard
-the bullets—but the Thomas operator had answered.</p>
-
-<p>“I—I D,” “I—I D.”</p>
-
-<p>Now for the ten seconds’ grace!</p>
-
-<p>“Injuns out. Big band——”</p>
-
-<p>Camp Thomas broke.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214"></a>[214]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Repeat. Who are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Too nervous. Steady, boy,” cautioned Jimmie, to
-himself. He was not an expert operator, anyway.
-But this was a crisis.</p>
-
-<p>He hastily started to repeat. The four Indians
-were right at the foot of the pole, yelling at him.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#i_frontis">“Get down, get down!” they ordered, furiously,
-in Apache.</a> He gazed full into their upturned, painted
-faces—and into the muzzles of their rifles; and he
-grinned sickly and continued to send.</p>
-
-<p>“Injuns out. Big band. Sig., Dunn. Injuns out.
-Big Band. Sig., Dunn. Injuns out. Big band. Sig.,
-Dunn.”</p>
-
-<p>Would Camp Thomas never O. K.? Would those
-muzzles below never belch their balls and rip him and
-hurl him headlong?</p>
-
-<p>“No tiras (Don’t shoot)!” suddenly yelped one
-of the voices, from one of the painted faces.</p>
-
-<p>Nah-che! And Chato (Flat-nose), too! The muzzles
-were lowered—the scowling Chato’s last of all.</p>
-
-<p>“Come down, chi-kis-n,” ordered Nah-che.</p>
-
-<p>But Jimmie only shook his head, while he worked
-his key.</p>
-
-<p>“Come down or we shoot you down,” blared Flat-nose;
-and he drew a deadly bead.</p>
-
-<p>But Thomas had broken in at last.</p>
-
-<p>“O. K. Where?” ticked Camp Thomas.</p>
-
-<p>“Ash Flats. Head east. Bronc’s and squaws.”</p>
-
-<p>“O. K. Get off wire,” answered Camp Thomas.</p>
-
-<p>“Bang!” sounded Chato’s rifle, and Jimmie’s little
-instrument flew into fragments. But Jimmie cared<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215"></a>[215]</span>
-not, now. He went sliding painfully down; landed
-right in the midst of the four Indians, staggered—two
-of them were afoot, waiting for him—they sprang at
-him, and wrenched his revolver from its holster. They
-acted as though they were going to kill him, or take
-him along, when Nah-che interfered.</p>
-
-<p>“No!” he ordered, while Chato scowled. But
-Nah-che was obeyed, because he was a grown warrior
-and son of Cochise. “What were you doing, chi-kis-n?”
-he demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“I talked with Camp Thomas,” answered Jimmie,
-defiantly.</p>
-
-<p>“What did you say?”</p>
-
-<p>“I said that the Chiricahua were running away.”</p>
-
-<p>The three other Indians murmured angrily. The
-two young bucks besides Nah-che and Chato Jimmie
-did not know. He had not seen Nah-che and Chato
-for several years, either. They had grown. Chato
-was ugly, because of his flattened nose, but Nah-che
-was supple and handsome.</p>
-
-<p>“No matter,” said Nah-che, to his companions.
-“This is my brother. He did right. He is brave.
-He shall not be harmed. Give him his gun and let him
-alone. We are not afraid of the soldiers.” He addressed
-Jimmie. “Yes, chi-kis-n, we are running
-away—all the Warm Springs and Chiricahua except
-the Taza band. There are many of us, and we know
-there are not enough soldiers in Arizona to stop us.
-We can whip the Camp Thomas soldiers first, and whip
-the rest as they come. Geronimo is with us, and Loco,
-and one hundred warriors who belong to Juh and me.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216"></a>[216]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Why are you running away, chi-kis-n?” asked
-Jimmie. “I thought you and Juh were already run
-away. People said you were in Mexico.”</p>
-
-<p>“We were,” replied Nah-che. “We live in Mexico.
-That is the only place for us. Nana is there, too;
-and Chihuahua. Now Juh and I have come up to help
-Geronimo and Loco get away.” He began to talk
-hotly. “Why do we all run away? That is a foolish
-question. We will not be moved around so, and put in
-sickly places among Indians who don’t like us. We
-would have stayed at our home in the Dragoon Mountains,
-and have been happy. A few of us drank
-whiskey sold us by bad white men, and we all were
-blamed. The San Carlos is not a good place. The
-White Mountains tell false stories about us, the agents
-steal our rations from us and we go hungry. The
-white traders would rather sell things to us, and cheat
-us. So Juh and I ran away. Now there is talk that
-the white men want all the San Carlos country, because
-of mines, and that the Apaches will be taken
-away, many miles, to a strange land. Geronimo says
-he has been told to come to Camp Thomas, for a talk—and
-if he goes there, he will be put in prison again;
-maybe killed, like Mangas Coloradas was killed. We
-would rather die on the warpath than die in prison or
-in a strange land. So we all, the Chiricahua and the
-Warm Springs, except Taza’s squaw-people, will live
-in the Mexican mountains. There we can lead our own
-life. The Mexicans dare not fight us, we have plenty
-guns and plenty food, the American soldiers cannot
-cross the line, to follow us.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217"></a>[217]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you fool yourself,” retorted Jimmie.
-“Crook will come, and he will go anywhere.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cluke is a good man. If he had stayed, maybe
-there would be peace instead of war,” responded
-Nah-che. “There has been one other good man, at
-San Carlos. He was the soldier-captain Chaffee.
-Why does the White Father at Washington let us be
-cheated, like children, by dishonest agents? Why does
-he listen to bad tongues, that say we must not stay
-where we were promised we might stay? But good-by,
-chi-kis-n. Now there is war between us. The Chiricahua
-are never coming back to be cheated again. You
-have been chi-kis-n; but you are American and I am
-Apache, so when we meet in war, look out for yourself.
-It will be man to man. We are no longer boys.”</p>
-
-<p>Nah-che wheeled his pony. With a whoop, away
-they four tore, flourishing their guns.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie gazed after only for a moment. Then he
-was aware that all his left shoulder and arm were
-red and paining. The bullet had slashed a furrow
-an inch deep through the muscles of the upper arm, but
-the blood was clotting and he did not pause to tie a
-bandage on.</p>
-
-<p>He unstrapped his climbing irons, kicked them off
-as he stooped to pick up his revolver, and hobbled for
-his horse; mounted and raced for Camp Thomas.</p>
-
-<p>Camp Thomas had only two reduced companies of
-the Sixth Cavalry. When he got there, the two
-companies were drawn up in column of twos in front
-of the adjutant’s office, as if ready to start out. Micky
-Free was here, with a party of White Mountain and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218"></a>[218]</span>
-Tonto scouts. The telegraph instrument was clicking
-rapidly.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, Cheemie!” intercepted Micky, gaily, in
-his Spanish. “You been fighting, what?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not much,” panted Jimmie, pulling short.
-“When do you start?”</p>
-
-<p>“Pretty soon, when the talking wire is done.
-They are telling what you said, to the other posts. You
-did good work, Cheemie. The wire from San Carlos is
-cut, but Tom Horn (he was a white scout and packer
-at San Carlos) brought more news by horse, and Sibi
-has been here. Now they are out, spying on the trail,
-and we will follow. It has been a big outbreak.”</p>
-
-<p>“Were you there, Micky?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; but I heard it, and the agency Indians have
-signaled, and Tom Horn was there. All the Chief
-Loco Warm Springs and the Geronimo Chiricahua
-have gone. They number seven hundred. The trouble
-was this. You know Stirling?”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie nodded. Mr. Stirling was chief of the
-agency police. These were not scouts, but Indians
-appointed by the agent as policemen.</p>
-
-<p>“Some days ago Stirling tried to arrest a Chiricahua
-who had been making whiskey. The Chiricahua
-ran and Stirling missed him and hit a squaw. That
-turned the Chiricahua bad, although Stirling said he
-was sorry. They have been getting bad anyway, because
-there is talk that all the Indians are to be moved
-far away, so that the Americans can dig coal on the
-reservation. Last night Juh and Nah-che sent in word
-that they were near, waiting to help Loco and Geronimo.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219"></a>[219]</span>
-This morning the Chiricahua and Warm Springs
-began to pack up, and Stirling and Navajo Bill, a policeman,
-charged them alone, to break them up. The
-Chiricahua had been waiting for this. They shot Stirling
-one hundred times at once, and a squaw cut off his
-head and it was kicked about like a ball. He was a
-very brave man, that Stirling. Navajo Bill wasn’t
-hurt, but another policeman was killed, and one Chiricahua.
-Now the Warm Springs and Chiricahua are
-out—and I think they will keep right on going.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” answered Jimmie soberly. “I met
-Nah-che. He came while I was talking on the wire.
-He says that all the soldiers in Arizona cannot stop
-them.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is true,” agreed Micky. “They have two
-hundred fine warriors, and better guns than the soldiers’
-guns. They nearly all have those guns that
-shoot sixteen times, and lots of ammunition. The
-soldiers are scattered, and before we get together, and
-the New Mexico soldiers get together, Geronimo will
-be into Mexico. What was Nah-che doing on this side
-the river? The squaws and children cannot cross,
-with the horses. It is too high.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think Nah-che brought a party over to drive me
-away or kill me. He had Chato with him, and two
-others. But he made them quit shooting at me. We
-are chi-kis-n.”</p>
-
-<p>“That won’t count again,” warned Micky. “So
-watch out, next time. This is war, and long war.
-Now you’d better get your arm fixed, Cheemie. The
-Loco and Geronimo band will have to keep on, up the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220"></a>[220]</span>
-river, until they can cross. They will strike south,
-near New Mexico, until they cross the border. There
-are no soldiers, ahead in that country, to stop them;
-and they wouldn’t care if there were. But we’re to
-meet Sibi and follow and fight as well as we can, under
-the ugly long-nosed man.”</p>
-
-<p>That was Lieutenant George Gatewood, of the
-Sixth Cavalry, at Thomas. He came in a hurry out
-of the adjutant’s office.</p>
-
-<p>“All ready,” he barked, to the junior lieutenant, his
-second in command, and swung into the saddle.</p>
-
-<p>“’Ten-<em>shun</em>! Column—march! Trot!”</p>
-
-<p>The bugle sounded briskly, and away they went, in
-long column, the red and white guidons flapping, Micky
-and his scouts galloping to the advance.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie proceeded to have his arm bandaged, and
-to talk with the operator. Then he reported at headquarters,
-but he had little to tell that was not already
-known. He felt, though, that he had done his duty.</p>
-
-<p>While his shoulder was healing, the troops of
-Arizona and New Mexico struck the hostiles several
-times, down at the border, but did not turn them.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221"></a>[221]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XX">XX<br />
-<small>THE GRAY FOX RETURNS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“Crook is coming back! General Crook is coming
-back!”</p>
-
-<p>That was the word at Camp Thomas, in this the
-early summer of 1882, a couple of months after the
-Geronimo outbreak.</p>
-
-<p>The Third Cavalry already had arrived from its
-northern plains campaigns, and the Sixth was being
-stationed over in New Mexico. But the Sixth had
-done well, and the best news was that which bore the
-name of Crook. He had been ordered from the Department
-of the Platte to the Department of Arizona,
-again.</p>
-
-<p>“Now we shall see the Chiricahua grow tired,”
-laughed Micky Free, when Jimmie met him. “Sibi
-is glad; the White Mountains are glad; everybody will
-be glad, except Whoa and Geronimo. Are you going
-to help fight, Cheemie, instead of riding all the time
-along the talking wire?”</p>
-
-<p>“You bet I am, Micky,” declared Jimmie. “Hope
-Tom Moore’s coming, too. I reckon if my leg won’t
-let me scout I can join the pack-train.”</p>
-
-<p>General Crook wasted no time. Scarcely had he
-announced himself at Fort Whipple, ere he was bound
-for San Carlos and Fort Apache, to straighten out
-these affairs first.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie rode over to the fort with a party from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222"></a>[222]</span>
-Thomas, to learn the latest. The general was there,
-with Lieutenant Bourke, now a captain. Wearing an
-ancient, smoked and scorched corduroy suit he had
-arrived on the same “Apache,” his mule. He looked
-rather older than when he had left, back in 1875.
-The campaigning in winter up north had been tough.
-But he acted as energetic as ever.</p>
-
-<p>He held a council with the dissatisfied White
-Mountains.</p>
-
-<p>“I want to have all that you say here go down
-on paper,” he addressed. “What goes down on paper
-never lies. A man’s memory may fail him, but the
-paper does not forget. I want to know from you all
-that has happened since I went away, to bring about
-this trouble between you and the white men. I want
-you to tell the truth without fear, and in few words.”</p>
-
-<p>Old Pedro had listened attentively to the general
-through an ear-trumpet, for Pedro had grown quite
-deaf. He answered.</p>
-
-<p>“When you were here, if you said a thing we knew
-that it was true. We cannot understand why you left
-us. The people who have come among us talk in one
-way and act in another. And I remember the other
-officers, too, who treated us kindly. I used to be
-happy; now I am all the time thinking and crying, and
-I say: ‘Where is old Colonel John Green, and Randall,
-and those other good men?’”</p>
-
-<p>Alchisé spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“When you left us, there were no bad Indians
-out. Everything was peace. But I think that all the
-good men must have been taken from us and only<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223"></a>[223]</span>
-bad ones sent in. We did not mind having no rations,
-for we had learned to take care of ourselves. Then
-one day we were ordered to give up our fields and go
-down to the hot land of San Carlos to live. I have
-tried hard to help the whites, and they have put me
-in the guard-house. Where did you go? Why doesn’t
-Major Randall come back? Where is my friend Randall,
-the captain with the big moustache that he always
-pulled?”</p>
-
-<p>The general was very patient with all who wished
-to talk. Then he took a pack-train and rode into the
-depths of the Black Canyon, where a number of the
-Apaches lived because they feared arrest.</p>
-
-<p>The Apaches here, also, claimed that they had been
-mistreated. They had set a spy to watch the agent
-at San Carlos, and had caught him selling their rations.
-Then they had sent a man to tell the agent that he must
-not do this, and the man had been kept in jail for six
-months without any trial. They said that they had
-been getting only one cup of flour every seven days.
-One shoulder of a little cow had to last twenty persons
-for a week.</p>
-
-<p>It was another long story, and the general promised
-that he would help them.</p>
-
-<p>“I think there will be peace at Fort Apache and
-at the San Carlos,” Micky asserted, as he and Jimmie
-rode back after the council was over. “And if the
-Chiricahua will stay in Mexico and kill only Mexicans,
-you and I will have no fun, because the Gray Fox
-cannot make war in Mexico.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe the Chiricahua will stay there.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224"></a>[224]</span></p>
-
-<p>“No. After a time the young men will get tired
-of killing and robbing Mexicans, which is easy. They
-will want to win honor by robbing the Americans—and
-then, we shall see.”</p>
-
-<p>At Camp Thomas Jimmie met the general face to
-face while crossing the parade-ground. He had small
-hopes that the general would remember him when he
-saluted—but something in the general’s keen, inquiring
-eye made him halt and stand expectantly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, my man,” blurted the general. “I seem to
-know your face.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir. I’m Jimmie Dunn.”</p>
-
-<p>“I remember. You still limp a little, I see. What
-are you doing now?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m a telegraph line-man, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s good. You had a talk with Nah-che, when
-he was on his way out, last spring, didn’t you? Do
-you think he can be persuaded to come in peaceably?”</p>
-
-<p>“He might if he knew you were back, sir. But he
-said the Chiricahua hadn’t been treated well—they were
-out to stay.”</p>
-
-<p>“The Apaches have grievances. The worst of the
-outlaws are better than the whites who have been
-robbing them.”</p>
-
-<p>The general was about to stride on, when Jimmie
-hastily spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“But if you go against the Chiricahua, I’d like
-to go too, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“That will be a hard and maybe a long chase,”
-gravely said the general. “Probably into the Mexican
-mountains, with picked men. You can help by sticking<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225"></a>[225]</span>
-to your present business. The telegraph and the railroad
-are very necessary.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie, thinking it over afterward, almost decided
-likewise. His leg bothered him, and his shoulder was
-still tender. Chasing Geronimo through the Mexican
-mountains, with a leader who never rested, required
-nerve and strength both.</p>
-
-<p>The general tried to hold a conference with the
-Geronimo runaways. From the border he sent a party
-of Apache scouts under Alchisé across, for a few miles,
-but they found no traces of the Chiricahuas.</p>
-
-<p>Two Chiricahua squaws were captured while returning
-to San Carlos. They said that the Geronimo
-band had a strong hiding-place deep in the Sierra
-Madre Mountains several days’ travel below the border;
-were living off the Mexicans, and knew that the
-American soldiers could not come down there.</p>
-
-<p>General Crook assigned Captain Emmet Crawford
-of the Third Cavalry (a broad-shouldered six-footer)
-to the military station at San Carlos, obtained permission
-from the Indian Bureau for the White Mountains
-to live upon the high, cooler lands near Fort Apache
-and to plant crops there, and from headquarters at
-Fort Whipple issued an order that said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Officers and soldiers serving in this department are reminded
-that one of the fundamental principles of the military character
-is justice to all—Indians as well as white men—and that a disregard
-of this principle is likely to bring about hostilities, and
-cause the death of the very persons they are sent here to protect.
-In all their dealings with the Indians, officers must be careful
-not only to observe the strictest fidelity, but to make no promises
-not in their power to carry out; ...</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226"></a>[226]</span></p>
-
-<p>As long as the Chiricahuas stayed out of the United
-States, there was not much more to be done. The
-Apaches on the reservations seemed content again;
-the border was being patrolled by one hundred and
-fifty Apache scouts, in the hope of catching the trail
-of any outlaws who might venture up; the telegraph
-was kept in fine working order, and the troops at the
-posts were given constant practice marches.</p>
-
-<p>This fall and winter no word came from Geronimo.
-But in March (which was the year 1883) the expected
-news broke—and bad news it was.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie chanced to be in the telegraph office at
-Thomas when the message came. He took it off the
-wire as fast as the operator did. It was from Bowie,
-in the south.</p>
-
-<p>“Band of hostiles crossed line raiding north
-through Whetstone Mountains. Heading west for
-New Mexico probably. More.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s that adjutant?” barked the operator,
-tearing off his sheet. “Things are hummin’. Gee
-whizz, isn’t that man ever around when he’s needed?”</p>
-
-<p>But the adjutant of course got the message at once.</p>
-
-<p>“More” came thick and fast, from all directions.
-The Chiricahuas numbered only twenty-six warriors.
-They were under Chato, the Flat-nose. They had
-dodged the patrol, outwitted all the troops and volunteers,
-the telegraph and railroad did not stop them; on
-a circle of eight hundred miles, traveling at seventy-five
-miles a day they swung through Arizona and
-southwestern New Mexico, stealing fresh horses whenever
-needed, and killing miners and settlers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227"></a>[227]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Picked men for the pursuit,” were the orders from
-the general at Whipple. This appeared to leave
-Jimmie, with his lame leg, out of scout service. Well,
-he might do some good in his regular job, anyway.
-But the last news was the worst news of all.</p>
-
-<p>Near Silver City, southwestern New Mexico, a
-horrible act was committed by the Chato band. They
-overtook Judge H. C. McComas, driving on the main
-road with his wife and little boy, Charley; they tortured
-and killed the two grown-ups, and carried off
-Charley, aged six years.</p>
-
-<p>This made soldiers and settlers alike furious.
-Jimmie could stand the strain no longer. He had
-been captured, once, himself. He threw aside his line-man
-position and rode over to Fort Apache, to find
-Frank Monach, pack-master.</p>
-
-<p>“I want a job, Frank.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thought you had one.”</p>
-
-<p>“I had, but I’ve left. I’m too lame for scout
-work; I can pack, though. How about it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” drawled Frank, sizing him up, “the old
-man’s partic’lar. The pack outfits have got to be the
-kind that’ll keep agoin’. We’re due to follow those
-bronc’s till we get that boy back, even if we travel clear
-to the City of Mexico.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know. That’s why I’m here,” retorted Jimmie.
-“I can pack and sit a mule.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right. Old Jack Long’s watchin’ you, I
-reckon. He took a lot o’ stock in you. You’re hired.
-So get your war-bag an’ fall in.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228"></a>[228]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXI">XXI<br />
-<small>TO THE STRONGHOLD OF GERONIMO</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“Fight to a finish, or a surrender, b’gosh,” announced
-Frank, to-day. “Chiricahuas can take their
-choice. But the old man’s goin’ after ’em. We’ll
-have no murderin’ an’ boy-stealin’ in this department.
-Everybody, man an’ mule, is ordered to meet him at
-Willcox, pronto (quick). So this outfit’ll hit the high
-places in the mornin’.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie and the other packers at San Carlos, where
-they had been waiting prepared, gave a cheer. It was
-now the first week in April. The killing of Judge
-McComas and Mrs. McComas, and the stealing of little
-Charley, had occurred on March 28. Chato had
-escaped into Mexico again, having lost only one
-warrior, except——</p>
-
-<p>“Did you hear tell thar’s a Chiricahua buck been
-fetched in who claims he broke from the Chato bunch
-’cause he wants peace?” queried Long Jim Cook.</p>
-
-<p>“No. Where is he?”</p>
-
-<p>“In the guard-house. They got him locked up
-till the old man talks with him. His name is
-‘Peaches,’ or somethin’ like that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mebbe he brings some sort o’ word from Geronimo.
-You know the old man sent one of those squaws
-that he captured, back down, last fall, to tell the
-Geronimo band they’d better change their minds.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie asked Micky Free.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229"></a>[229]</span></p>
-
-<p>“He is not a Chiricahua,” said Micky. “He is a
-White Mountain, but he married two Chiricahua
-squaws, so he had to live with the Chiricahua. His
-name is Pa-na-yo-tish-n (Coyote-saw-him). He does
-not like the Chiricahua, now. They are living in the
-mountains five days’ travel from Arizona. They have
-plenty wood, plenty water, plenty grass, plenty meat,
-and kill plenty Mexican soldiers with rocks because they
-must save cartridges. That is why Chato made his
-raid up north: to get cartridges. Pa-na-yo-tish-n ran
-away. He says he does not want to fight, and there are
-others who do not want to fight, but they are afraid
-of Geronimo. He knows the trail to Geronimo, and
-will lead the general straight. Then maybe we talk,
-maybe we fight. It will be a good fight, Cheemie.
-Geronimo has seventy men, and fifty big boys who can
-fight like men. Yes, if they have powder, and do not
-get starved, and the talk is bad, we will see much fun.
-I think that even the packers will better watch out
-sharp.”</p>
-
-<p>Micky Free always had hopes. He was a regular
-fire-eater.</p>
-
-<p>The cavalry from Fort Apache, and the pack-train,
-and about one hundred Apache scouts from the San
-Carlos and the White Mountain reservations marched
-across country to Willcox. Pa-na-yo-tish-n (whom
-the soldiers and packers called “Peaches”) was taken
-along, as a prisoner, in handcuffs.</p>
-
-<p>Willcox, the nearest station on the Southern Pacific
-Railroad, just west of Railroad Pass over the Chiricahua
-Mountains, was overflowing.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230"></a>[230]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Camp Thomas troops had arrived; so had those
-from Fort Bowie, to the southeast. By train other
-troops, and horses and mules, and ammunition and
-supplies of all kinds were pouring in. The general
-and his staff were here. So were Charley Hopkins and
-“Short Jim” Cook and others of the old-time packers;
-and Archie MacIntosh and Al Sieber, the chief scouts;
-and Antonio Besias the interpreter; yes, and Maria
-Jilda.</p>
-
-<p>It was a great reunion of Crook men.</p>
-
-<p>Reports said that the United States and Mexico
-had arranged to pursue Indians into each other’s territory,
-but the United States troops were not to cross
-the boundary before May 1. In order to make certain
-that this was understood, the general traveled by
-the Mexican Central Railroad into the northern Mexican
-States and talked with the commanding officers
-there.</p>
-
-<p>When he returned he talked again with “Peaches.”
-“Peaches” stuck to his story, and when the general
-directed that the irons be removed from him,
-“Peaches” said that he was willing to wear them until
-it was shown that he had spoken only the truth. But
-the irons were taken off anyway, because Alchisé and
-other scouts engaged to watch him very closely.</p>
-
-<p>On April 22 there was a parade, and inspection of
-the whole outfit. That night the Apache scouts held
-a big war-dance which lasted until morning. They and
-Micky (who had danced as hard as anybody) were still
-hot and excited when the column was formed for the
-advance.</p>
-
-<p>The scouts, and pack-mules, and a line of rumbling<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231"></a>[231]</span>
-army wagons, and portions of seven companies of the
-Third and Sixth Cavalry, marched from the railroad
-to the boundary at San Bernardino Springs in southeastern
-Arizona, one hundred miles by the wagon trail.</p>
-
-<p>Stalwart Captain Emmet Crawford brought in one
-hundred more Apache scouts from San Carlos. There
-were war-dances and medicine ceremonies each night.
-Alchisé and others told the general that their medicine
-was showing up very strong; the Chiricahuas would
-surely be found and killed or captured.</p>
-
-<p>“That is so,” asserted Micky, who believed in the
-medicine.</p>
-
-<p>Six of the cavalry troops were to be left here at
-the border, to guard it and the wagons with the extra
-supplies.</p>
-
-<p>“Adios, amigo,” bade Maria, to Jimmie. “You
-will have good luck. The medicine says so, and Pa-na-yo-tish-n
-will lead Crook straight. But it will be a
-long march, maybe two hundred miles.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aren’t you going, Maria?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. I stay, because I know all this country.”</p>
-
-<p>It did not look like a very great force, after all,
-which at sunrise of May 1, this 1883, crossed the border
-to find Geronimo. There were more Indians than soldiers—one
-hundred and ninety-three of them, White
-Mountains, Tontos, Yavapais, Apache-Yumas and
-some of the Taza friendly Chiricahuas.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Crawford, of the Third Cavalry, commanded
-them. He had as his assistants Lieutenant
-George Gatewood and Lieutenant W. W. Forsythe, of
-the Sixth, and Lieutenant James O. Mackay, of the
-Third.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232"></a>[232]</span></p>
-
-<p>The forty cavalrymen of the Sixth (less than half
-a company) were commanded by Major Adna R.
-Chaffee and Lieutenant Frank West.</p>
-
-<p>The general’s staff was Captain Bourke, and Lieutenant
-G. J. Febiger of the Engineers. Doctor
-Andrews was surgeon. Archie MacIntosh and Al
-Sieber were chief scouts. Micky, and old Severiano
-the Mexican who had been brought up by the Apaches,
-and Packer Sam Bowman were interpreters.</p>
-
-<p>The pack-masters of the five pack-trains were
-Frank Monach, Charley Hopkins, of Tucson, “Long
-Jim” Cook and “Short Jim” Cook, and George
-Stanfield.</p>
-
-<p>“One blanket and forty rounds of ammunition to
-each man,” were the orders. The mules carried additional
-ammunition and sixty days’ rations of hard-tack,
-coffee and bacon. Everybody was well armed with the
-Springfield forty-fives, and Colt’s revolvers; even the
-packers had carbines and pistols.</p>
-
-<p>Plainly enough, the general was outward bound on
-business!</p>
-
-<p>“U-ga-shé (U-gah-shay)!” barked Lieutenant
-Gatewood, at the scouts. And away they went, afoot,
-in their red head-bands and flapping shirts and leggin-moccasins,
-across the boundary, with Alchisé and
-“Peaches” in the lead, as guides. They all spread
-out in a broad front, to cover the country. Their officers
-rode just behind, with Archie MacIntosh and
-Sieber the Iron Man.</p>
-
-<p>The general and aides and cavalry escort followed.
-Then there ambled the long files of pack-trains—Frank<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233"></a>[233]</span>
-Monach’s first. A guard of the cavalry closed
-the rear.</p>
-
-<p>The “good-by” and “good luck” cheers of the
-border guard died in the distance. The march to
-“get” Geronimo, Nah-che and the other Chiricahuas
-had actually begun.</p>
-
-<p>At first about twenty-five miles a day were covered.
-But the country grew rougher and hotter. Only two or
-three of the Mexican villages were inhabited; many
-others were deserted and in ruins, on account of the
-Chiricahuas. The brush along the streams was thick,
-the flowers were large and bright. High, bluish mountains
-loomed on right and left and before.</p>
-
-<p>It was fine Apache country, all right—and
-“Peaches” was leading straight into it, for within
-a few days fresh moccasin tracks might be seen
-frequently.</p>
-
-<p>“To-morrow for the Sierra Madre,” said Frank
-Monach, in camp on the night of May 7. “Then
-we’ll be hangin’ on by our toe-nails. What I’d like to
-know is, whether Geronimo’ll wait for us or whether
-he’ll keep a-goin’ himself.”</p>
-
-<p>The huge jumble of the Sierra Madre range
-frowned directly before. It certainly appeared mighty
-rough. No white men had yet ventured to penetrate
-far into the Sierra Madre; but the general was determined,
-as Al Sieber said, “to open it up.”</p>
-
-<p>He was so anxious, that this night the march had
-continued until after eleven o’clock, and camp had
-been made without fires, in the bottom of a deep canyon.
-So dark it was that even the mules lost their places.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234"></a>[234]</span></p>
-
-<p>The climb of the first flanks of the Sierra Madre
-was begun at daylight. The trail that led out of the
-canyon was littered with plunder—torn letters, Mexican
-dresses, scattered flour, and beef carcasses. It was
-so steep that several of the mules fell off, and landed
-one hundred feet below, in a canyon. But they were
-not hurt.</p>
-
-<p>The Chiricahua sign became more plentiful.
-“Peaches” said that Geronimo’s real stronghold was
-still several days’ march before, but that this was as
-far as the Mexican soldiers ever had got. The Chiricahuas
-had ambushed them and driven them back.</p>
-
-<p>To-night everybody except the scouts was very
-tired. Jimmie ached from head to foot; the job of
-forcing the mules on was the hardest work of all.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, Cheemie,” invited Micky. “You come
-with me and you will see big medicine made.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie groaned, and hobbled after Micky Free.</p>
-
-<p>What with chasing deer and turkeys and rabbits,
-to eat, and hunting the Chiricahuas, the scouts had been
-having a great time. They had never been too tired to
-dance and yarn; to-night their medicine-men were to
-find the Chiricahuas for them.</p>
-
-<p>The officers messed with the packers and scouts;
-it was all one family. The general and Captain Bourke
-had joined the Monach mess, where Alchisé and other
-principal scouts ate, too. So the general and the captain
-were admitted to the circle of the medicine-making.</p>
-
-<p>The chief medicine-man lay in a trance while the
-lesser medicine-men squatted around him and sang.
-Soon he thumped his chest and spoke, telling his dream.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235"></a>[235]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Keet,” the Apache boy who carried the medicine
-things and was in training for a medicine-man, himself,
-translated for the general and Captain Bourke.</p>
-
-<p>“What did he say?” asked the captain. “The
-general wishes to know.”</p>
-
-<p>“He say: ‘Me can’t see ’um Chilicahua yet.
-Bimeby me see ’um. Me ketch ’um, me kill ’um. Me
-no ketch ’um, me no kill ’um. Chilicahua see me, me
-no get ’um. No see me, me ketch ’um. Me see ’um
-little bit now. Mebbe so six day me ketch ’um; mebbe
-so two day. Tomollow me send twenty-fibe men to
-hunt ’um tlail. Mebbe so tomollow see ’um more. Me
-ketch ’um hoss, me ketch ’um mool, me ketch ’um cow.
-Ketch Chilicahua pretty soon, bimeby. Kill ’um heap,
-an’ ketch ’um squaw.’”</p>
-
-<p>That impressed the scouts. They were sure of
-success.</p>
-
-<p>The signs grew fresher and fresher, and the trail
-worse and worse. But abandoned rancherias were
-found—and they had not been abandoned long, either!
-The eager scouts fairly ran hither-thither, searching
-and signaling; the cavalry-men toiled afoot, leading
-their horses; and the pack-mules, urged on by Jimmie
-and the other packers, coughed and slipped and sweat,
-and six of them rolled a thousand feet and were dashed
-to pieces.</p>
-
-<p>But the general showed no token of quitting. He
-was after Geronimo.</p>
-
-<p>Now it was the night of May 10. In the morning
-Captain Crawford and his scouts were going ahead,
-by themselves. Alchisé had insisted that this was the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236"></a>[236]</span>
-only way to do. He complained to the general that the
-soldiers and the pack-trains were too slow, to catch
-the Chiricahuas.</p>
-
-<p>Frank Monach came into camp from a reconnoiter
-with a few of the soldiers and the huskier packers.
-Jimmie could not go. His leg was rather bad.</p>
-
-<p>“B’gosh, we found where a passel o’ Mexicans
-had been wiped out with rocks an’ arrows an’ lances,”
-announced Frank. “Over yonder in the foothills.
-They must have come in from the other side.”</p>
-
-<p>This night the scouts were very busy, making
-medicine and mending moccasins and preparing meat
-and bread.</p>
-
-<p>“Medicine man say ‘Kill ’um heap Chilicahua,
-three day from tomollow,’” declared young “Keet,”
-proud of his English words.</p>
-
-<p>Early in the morning one hundred and fifty of the
-scouts, with Captain Crawford and Lieutenant Gatewood
-and Lieutenant Mackay, Archie MacIntosh, Al
-Sieber, and Micky and Severiano and Sam Bowman,
-hastened ahead.</p>
-
-<p>They were to fight and to surround, and try to
-hold the Chiricahuas until the soldiers arrived. The
-dismounted cavalry and the pack-trains followed at
-best speed, again into the heart of the high country.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237"></a>[237]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXII">XXII<br />
-<small>WAR OR PEACE?</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>During the next few days Captain Crawford sent
-back several notes, to say that by the signs he was
-likely to strike the Chiricahuas at any moment. The
-pursuit was closing in. Maybe the medicine-men were
-right. They had prophesied “Three days from to-morrow,”
-which would be May 14.</p>
-
-<p>But May 14 passed without especial event. Then,
-at one o’clock noon of May 15, in a little box canyon
-there was sudden excitement among the cavalry ahead
-of the Monach pack-train. Jimmie, first in line at one
-side behind the “bell,” saw the Indian runner dart
-down the slope, into the trail, and hand a note to the
-general.</p>
-
-<p>The general read it. Lieutenant Febiger hastened
-back to Major Chaffee, and instantly the trumpet
-pealed “Mount!” Into their saddles vaulted the
-troopers. Down to the pack-trains galloped Lieutenant
-West.</p>
-
-<p>“Close up your outfits!” he shouted. “Be prepared
-for action. Crawford’s scouts have struck the
-hostiles.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hooray!” That was good news. Afterwards
-it was learned that the foremost scouts had discovered
-some Chiricahuas in a canyon, had fired upon two men
-and a woman, and had frightened the rest away. The
-runner had brought the note six miles across the mountains
-in less than an hour.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238"></a>[238]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Listen to that!” yelped Martin, the cook, from
-the “bell.”</p>
-
-<p>Distant rifle-shots sounded faintly. It was a
-battle! Captain Crawford’s scouts and the Chiricahuas
-were fighting!</p>
-
-<p>The reports welled faster. Every ear was keen set.
-Major Chaffee’s cavalry had quickened pace, each
-trooper erect in his saddle; the pack-mules were being
-forced more compactly, ready for corralling should the
-cavalry leave; the general, in the advance with his
-aides, clearly was impatient for the country to open
-out and the battle-field be sighted.</p>
-
-<p>“Bet they got away, dog-gone it!” yelled back
-Cook Martin. For presently the firing dwindled to
-spatters, and ceased. Shucks!</p>
-
-<p>“Anyhow, the old man’ll keep agoin’,” voiced the
-packer behind Jimmie. “There’s a nice moon for
-huntin’ Injuns, an’ we can live on what those bronc’s
-are throwin’ away!”</p>
-
-<p>So it was plod, plod, up and down, and down and
-up. The troopers dismounted, to lead their horses.</p>
-
-<p>Toward dusk a great smoke was to be seen several
-miles away, on a high mountain-side. The pack-train
-guessed that a Chiricahua rancheria was being
-cleaned up.</p>
-
-<p>The horizon over there flared into red, and while
-supper was being eaten, in camp under a glorious full
-moon, here came Captain Crawford and his scouts at
-last, both afoot and ahorse. They brought also
-forty-seven horses loaded with plunder, and five prisoners—two
-boys, two girls, and a woman.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239"></a>[239]</span></p>
-
-<p>Alchisé acted rather disgusted, but Micky Free was
-joyful.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, Cheemie,” he greeted, as he and others
-of the scouts squatted near the camp-fires, to eat again.
-“We had good fun. It was Chato’s and Bonito’s
-rancherias. Alchisé and Sibi are mad because we shot
-too soon, and the Chiricahua ran off. We killed nine
-and captured those five. We didn’t catch any more.
-The country was very rough, and they hid. But we set
-the rancherias on fire. There were thirty houses. And
-to-morrow we get more Chiricahua.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wasn’t the little white boy there, Micky?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, he was there, the squaw says. His name
-Carlos (Charles); six years old. He was with some
-old squaws and they ran off with him. But she says
-she can find them in two days. Loco and Chihuahua
-want to come back to the reservation; maybe Geronimo
-and Chato and Nah-che; Whoa still thinks bad.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where is Geronimo?” asked Frank Monach, in
-Spanish.</p>
-
-<p>“Nearly all the Chiricahua men are down in the
-south, hunting Mexicans. They will be surprised when
-they know the Cluke men have found where they live,
-and that Pa-na-yo-tish-n had led us so straight. We
-now are inside and they are outside. Inju!”</p>
-
-<p>Everybody was much disappointed that little
-Charley McComas had disappeared. If some of the
-younger scouts had not shot first without orders the
-rancherias might have been surrounded and Charley
-rescued.</p>
-
-<p>However, the captured squaw seemed to be certain<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240"></a>[240]</span>
-that she could find the older squaws who had him.
-Early in the morning she was sent away, with one of
-the boy prisoners and two days’ rations. She promised
-she would tell the Chiricahuas it was no use to fight.</p>
-
-<p>This was a cold, rainy day, which made the waiting
-disagreeable. At night ice formed. In the morning a
-smoke signal was seen. The general ordered that it be
-answered. “Peaches” guided to a better camping-place,
-where there were grass and running water.</p>
-
-<p>Another smoke signal was sent up, but only a few
-squaws and children came in. The squaws said that
-some other squaws had Charley McComas. One of
-the women was the sister of Chief Chihuahua (or
-Bonito). She stated that all the Chihuahua band
-would surrender as soon as her brother could get them
-together.</p>
-
-<p>“The idee of the gen’ral is, not to do any more
-fightin’, if he can help it, till that white kid is fetched
-along,” explained Martin, the cook for the Monach
-pack-train and officers’ mess. “That’s what Cap’n
-Bourke says. You see, the leetle fellow’s with the
-Chihuahua band.”</p>
-
-<p>The next day Chihuahua (Bonito) himself came
-boldly in, to say that he would surrender his people
-as soon as he could get word to them all. They were
-tired of fighting and hiding.</p>
-
-<p>“That is good,” answered the general. “I have
-soldiers and scouts enough to fight the Chiricahuas as
-long as they wish to fight. Those I do not kill or
-capture I will drive into the Mexican soldiers who
-are coming up from the south.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241"></a>[241]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I speak only for my own band,” answered Chihuahua.
-“They will make peace, but I do not know
-what Geronimo and Whoa will do. If you will let
-me take two of my young men and go out again, I can
-hurry my people in faster.”</p>
-
-<p>“They must bring the white boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will tell them so,” said Chihuahua.</p>
-
-<p>Chihuahua did good work, for the Chiricahuas
-kept gathering until there were one hundred and
-twenty-one in camp. But they had not brought
-Charley McComas, and none of the Geronimo men
-had turned up.</p>
-
-<p>Then, at eight o’clock in the morning, a tremendous
-outburst of shouts and screeches sounded from
-some high cliffs above the camp. More Apaches were
-jumping about among the rocks there, as if much
-astonished.</p>
-
-<p>“Geronimo!” exclaimed Micky, running.</p>
-
-<p>The camp sprang to arms.</p>
-
-<p>“What is the matter?” were yelling the Chiricahuas
-above, to the Chiricahuas below.</p>
-
-<p>“The white war-captain has us. We fight no
-more,” called the Chiricahuas who had surrendered.
-“It is no use. Our own people fight against us.”</p>
-
-<p>Two old squaws clambered half-way down.</p>
-
-<p>“Ask the white war-captain if we will be hurt?”
-they screamed.</p>
-
-<p>The general sent out Micky and Scout To-klani
-(Plenty Water) and one of the Chihuahua Chiricahuas.
-To-klani’s sisters belonged to the Chihuahua band, and
-the Chiricahuas all knew him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242"></a>[242]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The white war-captain says that he does not care
-whether you surrender or not,” announced To-klani.
-“Chihuahua has surrendered. We are only waiting
-till the rest of his people and the little white boy come
-in. If you come you will not be harmed, but if you do
-not come you will be killed.”</p>
-
-<p>This set the Chiricahuas on the cliff to thinking.
-Evidently now that they had found their best camping-place
-occupied, and so many of the other Chiricahuas
-surrendered, they did not know quite what to do. As
-Frank Monach remarked: “That’s a heap joke. Expect
-we look mighty comfortable, at our little love-feast.”</p>
-
-<p>Within about an hour, the Apaches came down.
-It was Geronimo, all right—he, and Nah-che, and
-Chato, and thirty-three warriors. They all carried
-the latest model repeating rifles, and the best nickle-plated
-revolvers, and they stared about very uneasily.</p>
-
-<p>They began to ask questions of the scouts; Nah-che
-sighted Jimmie, and sidled over to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Chi-kis-n,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Chi-kis-n,” replied Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>“The last time I saw you I talked straight,” proceeded
-Nah-che. “Now I ask you to talk straight, for
-we are men. I want to know how you came in here,
-with so many soldiers and Apaches and mules, while
-we were out hunting the Mexicans. What does Cluke
-intend to do?”</p>
-
-<p>“We came in easily, because the White Mountain
-who was one of Chato’s men showed us the road. But
-the Gray Fox would have brought us anyway. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243"></a>[243]</span>
-American soldiers can hunt Apaches in Mexico, and the
-Mexican soldiers can hunt Apaches in the United
-States. That is arranged. If Geronimo will not surrender,
-let him try to fight. The other Chiricahuas
-are going back to the reservation. Geronimo will not
-last long. His own people are against him, and he cannot
-hide any more in Mexico.”</p>
-
-<p>“That sounds bad,” uttered Nah-che; and he
-walked away very downcast.</p>
-
-<p>The general was saying the same thing, and other
-things, to Geronimo.</p>
-
-<p>“You should have had more sense than to leave
-because of a few troubles,” he scolded severely. “There
-is always some trouble in a big camp of Indians. I
-want to know what those troubles were, so that I may
-correct them. I shall not talk long with you; you
-must make up your mind for peace or war. You can
-see for yourself that I am not afraid of you. I have
-come in here, where you thought I could not come, and
-I am not even taking your arms from you. You are
-free to stay or go. If you decide to stay and march
-with the other Chiricahua to the San Carlos, you will
-not be harmed.</p>
-
-<p>“You have done things for which you ought to be
-arrested; but if you will promise to behave yourself
-and work, I will see to it that you are placed wherever
-you choose, on the reservation. I will make soldiers
-of your own men, to keep peace in your camp. The
-ugly long-nosed man (who was Lieutenant Gatewood)
-shall select them, and he will be your officer. He will
-see to it that you get whatever you are entitled to get.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244"></a>[244]</span></p>
-
-<p>“But if you do not go back with me, then it will be
-war. I will cover all this country with soldiers and
-scouts, and the Mexicans and the Americans and the
-scouts will hunt you down without stopping. Now I
-have spoken. I ask you to leave me and to think this
-over, and talk with your men. Then you must tell
-me what you have decided, for I do not want there to
-be any misunderstanding.”</p>
-
-<p>The council broke up. Geronimo appeared rather
-downcast, too. The rest of the day he and his people
-kept by themselves. Even Nah-che did not come over
-again. It was an anxious period, for the Geronimo
-band were able to put up a hard fight still, and the
-camp was full of Chiricahuas.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you think Geronimo will do, Micky?”
-asked Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>“He is a smart man, and likes to talk,” answered
-Micky. “He is a war-captain. But when he sees that
-he is talking alone, he will quit. Cluke’s words stung
-him, for no chief likes to be talked at like that. I
-looked for a fight right away, and so did Sibi. There
-was no fight—it would have been a good fight, though,
-with so many Chiricahua all around us. Now I think
-that if Geronimo is still here, in the morning, it means
-peace.”</p>
-
-<p>Everybody—soldiers, scouts and packers—slept
-with one eye and one ear open, this night. But in the
-morning Geronimo asked the general for another talk.
-It seemed as though the decision had been made.</p>
-
-<p>“I have thought deeply, and have talked with my
-people,” said Geronimo. “We were not well treated<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245"></a>[245]</span>
-at San Carlos, but if you will be good to us we will
-do as you tell us to do. The white man does not see
-as the Apache sees, and yet you have made me feel
-that I have done wrong. I will go with you to the San
-Carlos. But first I ask you to order me to send out
-for the rest of my people. They are much scattered,
-and they have many ponies and cattle which belong to
-them; but if they see only signals they will think them
-to be signals set by your scouts, to fool them. And if
-I go away and leave them, then the Mexicans will kill
-them.”</p>
-
-<p>“You must try to find the white boy,” reminded the
-general.</p>
-
-<p>“I will do exactly as you say,” replied Geronimo.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it peace, chi-kis-n?” inquired Jimmie, of
-Nah-che.</p>
-
-<p>“It is peace,” answered Nah-che; but he did not
-smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Hooray!” cheered Long Jim Cook. “That was
-a tall bluff on the gen’ral’s part, I reckon; but it worked.
-For a while we were in a bad box, with the camp
-runnin’ over with Chiricahua, an’ thirty or forty fightin’
-bronc’s up on those cliffs, ready to rake us. I wouldn’t
-trust all these scouts, in a pinch, either. They’ve got
-too many kin, in the hostiles.”</p>
-
-<p>“D’you suppose Geronimo has somethin’ up his
-sleeve, still?” proposed Martin the cook, to Frank
-Monach. “He acts awful agreeable.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246"></a>[246]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXIII">XXIII<br />
-<small>GERONIMO PLAYS SMART</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“To-morrow we go home,” declared Micky Free,
-to Jimmie and Nah-che. They three had been messing
-together, as old friends.</p>
-
-<p>It was the afternoon of May 23. Two days had
-passed since Geronimo had decided upon peace. He
-had kept his word, for the Chiricahuas had continued
-to come in—crippled old Nana himself had arrived
-this very morning—all the chiefs and captains were
-here except Juh, and Juh, or Whoa, need not be expected.
-He and his band of one man and two squaws
-had gone farther south.</p>
-
-<p>Even Ka-e-ten-na (The Looking-glass), who was a
-young war-captain of the Mexican Chiricahuas, part
-of Whoa’s people, had come in. Now rations were
-being issued by Lieutenant Gatewood to two hundred
-and fifty extra persons, including a dozen Mexicans—forlorn
-women and children whom the Chiricahuas had
-brought with them. But, alas——</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t we wait for Charley McComas?” demanded
-Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>“The white boy?” And Micky shook his red
-head. “No. It is too late. He is lost. If we wait
-longer, there will be no food. Too many people eat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Doesn’t Chato know where he is?”</p>
-
-<p>“Chato says not,” answered Nah-che. “He was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247"></a>[247]</span>
-left with the women. We have asked the women.
-They say that on the first day, when Chato’s rancheria
-was attacked, the little white boy ran into the bushes.
-Nobody has seen him again. He did not come out.
-Then there were rains that washed his trail. It was
-eight days ago, and we think he is dead.”</p>
-
-<p>The general had questioned the Chiricahuas closely.
-They all stuck to the one story, and seemed to be speaking
-the truth. Six-year-old Charley probably had been
-so frightened that he had run until exhausted and lost
-in the dense brush. No trace of him was ever
-discovered.</p>
-
-<p>When the general finally issued the order that camp
-should be broken in the morning, and the start made
-for San Carlos, Geronimo was smiling and ready. He
-asked only that the first marches be slow, so that the
-Chiricahuas who were still out might catch up. There
-seemed to be no end of those Chiricahuas who were
-still “out.”</p>
-
-<p>“We expect you to protect us from the Mexican
-soldiers,” said Geronimo. “My old men and women
-who are coming cannot fight.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will protect you,” promised the general.</p>
-
-<p>This appeared to make Geronimo happy and
-satisfied.</p>
-
-<p>However, in the morning a sudden delay occurred.
-The pack-trains were loaded and waiting, the cavalry
-had formed, all the Chiricahuas were herded together,
-the scouts were on the flanks, but the general had sent
-for Geronimo—was talking earnestly to him.</p>
-
-<p>Presently Archie MacIntosh came trotting back,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248"></a>[248]</span>
-ahorse, as if with an eye to seeing that everything was
-closed up.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the trouble ahead, Archie?” hailed
-Frank.</p>
-
-<p>Archie grinned from his sun-burned face, and
-paused.</p>
-
-<p>“Just been discovered we’re about a hundred bucks
-shy. They disappeared between sunset and sunrise.
-Looks as though that old rascal of a Geronimo had
-put one over on us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hi! I said he had somethin’ up his sleeve,”
-chuckled Long Jim Cook. “Where they gone? After
-plunder, I bet you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” declared Archie. “And the general’s
-raising Cain. He says to Geronimo: ‘Those bucks of
-yours are riding south to steal horses and cattle from
-the Mexicans.’ And Geronimo, he just smiles and
-says: ‘Oh, they wouldn’t rob anybody. They’re looking
-for some of our own horses and cattle that we’ve
-left.’ And the general says: ‘I won’t allow you to
-take any stolen stock across the border. I’d be court-martialed
-for it.’ And Geronimo says: ‘Don’t bother
-with that. All those Mexicans are good for, is to
-grow horses and cattle for the Apaches. We will ride
-on slowly. But if there is any trouble with the Mexicans,
-you have promised to protect us. Besides, it
-will be several days before my men come to join us.’
-So the general, he’s regularly up a stump.”</p>
-
-<p>And that was true. For the time being the wily
-Geronimo had outwitted him. Without doubt most
-of the able-bodied warriors had ridden away for the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249"></a>[249]</span>
-purpose of making one last raid, and returning to the
-reservation, rich!</p>
-
-<p>The march north was begun. The procession
-stretched for more than a mile—the old men and old
-women, the wounded, and the little children riding
-upon ponies, the women afoot packing great bundles,
-and many carrying cottonwood boughs to shield their
-heads from the fierce sun.</p>
-
-<p>Soon the Chiricahuas numbered three hundred, the
-majority women and old men and children. The herd
-of horses and cattle steadily grew. Near the border
-a dozen warriors caught up, at night; they brought
-fifty horses. But at the camp across the border the
-warriors, driving herds of stock, joined in streams,
-and the general found that he had three hundred and
-sixty-three Chiricahuas and over one thousand horses
-and mules and cows bearing Mexican brands!</p>
-
-<p>“Every one of those must be turned back into
-Mexico,” he ordered.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” replied Geronimo. “They belong to us.
-We bring them, so that we can go to farming, as you
-ask us to do. Who cares what a lot of howling
-Mexicans say?”</p>
-
-<p>Mexicans, lawyers and angry ranchers claiming
-horses and cows were threatening to sue the United
-States, and General Crook, for helping to steal Mexican
-stock. But many of the brands had been changed
-over, and there were disputes without end, the Mexicans
-and the Chiricahuas both claiming all the cattle.</p>
-
-<p>So the only way out of the muddle was, to drive the
-stock to San Carlos, and sell it, and send the money<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250"></a>[250]</span>
-to the United States treasury. Then the Mexicans
-who could prove their claims should be paid.</p>
-
-<p>This did not please Geronimo.</p>
-
-<p>“The Chiricahua will not understand, and they
-will not forget,” said Maria Jilda, who was at the
-border camp. “You will chase Geronimo and Nah-che
-again, Jeemie.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I shorely hope not,” quoth Frank Monach.
-“Hope we get a chance to rest up, anyhow. The general
-and Sieber look about tuckered.”</p>
-
-<p>And that was so. After five hundred miles of
-travel through the roughest of mountain country, in
-heat and cold and dry and wet, even General Crook
-seemed to be worn out.</p>
-
-<p>He kept his word with the Chiricahuas. Geronimo
-and the other chiefs were permitted to choose their
-own lands, and settled with their people, five hundred
-and twelve in number, south of Fort Apache. It was
-a fine country, too, on the head-waters of Turkey
-Creek.</p>
-
-<p>The general obtained orders from Washington that
-all the Chiricahuas should be placed under his control.
-This was thought by Arizona to be a very good plan,
-because the Chiricahuas, like the other Apaches, had
-much faith in “Cluke.”</p>
-
-<p>As the governor said, in an annual message to the
-legislature: “The Indians know General Crook and
-his methods, and respect both.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie stuck at Fort Bowie. He had been appointed
-pack-master, there, and this was quite a job
-for a boy scarcely twenty-one years old. But he felt<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251"></a>[251]</span>
-as though he had grown up in the service; and old
-Jack Long had started him off well.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Crawford was in military charge of the
-San Carlos reservation. Micky Free was over there,
-too, as a sergeant of the Indian police. Lieutenant
-Gatewood was stationed in the Chiricahua camp at
-Turkey Creek, just as the general had promised. Maria
-Jilda took up a ranch; he said that he was tired of
-scouting and interpreting. Al Sieber, as chief of
-scouts, divided his time between San Carlos and Fort
-Apache; and where Archie MacIntosh went, Jimmie
-did not know.</p>
-
-<p>But there was no opportunity for being lonesome
-at Fort Bowie. Pack-train duties kept a fellow hopping,
-if he tried to have a crack outfit—and the only
-outfits tolerated by the quarter-master’s department
-under General Crook were crack ones. Supplies had to
-be packed in from the railroad, fifteen miles, and there
-were scoutings and practice marches.</p>
-
-<p>For the remainder of 1883 everything seemed to be
-quiet. Reports stated that Geronimo and all the Chiricahuas
-were farming and doing famously, and that
-the White Mountains, on the other side of Fort Apache,
-were getting rich by selling their barley and hay to
-the post and to the towns.</p>
-
-<p>Then, as the months of 1884 rolled by, troubles
-appeared on the surface. The military and the Indian
-Bureau employes did not agree. The military officers,
-like Captain Crawford and Lieutenant Gatewood, had
-charge of the Chiricahua prisoners, but the Indian agent
-had charge of the other Indians. The military was
-obliged to keep order at San Carlos and the Fort Apache<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252"></a>[252]</span>
-reservation, both, but the Indian agent had the authority
-to direct the farming. The Chiricahuas had been
-encouraged by General Crook to mingle with the peaceful
-White Mountains, and all the Indians preferred the
-soldiers to the civilians.</p>
-
-<p>The White Mountains and Chiricahuas complained
-that they were not getting their rightful amount of
-meat from the agent. The man sent out to see, reported
-that they were getting everything.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Crawford did not agree with the report.
-The Indian Bureau asked that he be removed. He demanded
-a court-martial. The court-martial found that
-he was honest and correct; and that the Apaches, instead
-of getting one thousand cows, had been assigned
-only six hundred poor ones, with the promise that the
-rest should be delivered “when required.”</p>
-
-<p>But Captain Crawford was powerless in the matter,
-and the Apaches could not understand why there should
-be two fathers over them.</p>
-
-<p>In May young chief Ka-e-ten-na went “bad.” He
-was the Mexican Apache chief who had surrendered;
-now he made ready to run away, with a band of other
-restless Chiricahuas, into Mexico again.</p>
-
-<p>General Crook was at West Point, to address the
-graduating class there. However, Ka-e-ten-na was
-arrested by his own people, and was tried the same as a
-white man, and sentenced to be “shut up till he learned
-sense.” He was sent to the United States military
-prison on Alcatraz Island, in San Francisco Bay, for
-a year; and this proved a very good plan, the same as
-the cases of Santos and Pedro and old Miguel; because<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253"></a>[253]</span>
-after he had seen how powerful the Americans were
-and what a great city they had, he was cured of wishing
-to live wild.</p>
-
-<p>“He is only one, though,” said Micky Free, this
-fall, while at Bowie on a scouting trip with Tom Horn
-who was Al Sieber’s right-hand man. “Sibi thinks
-that all the Chiricahua would better be sent to prison.
-So does Tom. They have had a talk with Geronimo,
-and the only way to do is to send all the Chiricahua out
-of Arizona, quick.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254"></a>[254]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXIV">XXIV<br />
-<small>PACK-MASTER JIMMIE MEETS A SURPRISE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“Will there be trouble again, Micky?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” laughed Micky scornfully. “Everybody
-in Arizona knows that. You see it yourself,
-Cheemie. You read the talking papers. The talking
-papers of Mexico say that the Chiricahua from Arizona
-are sneaking down there and stealing cattle. That is
-true. Even Gatewood is getting afraid. He is losing
-Chiricahua all the time; they go somewhere and his
-counts are always different. I think he will move to
-Fort Apache. It is only twelve miles, and he will be
-safer.</p>
-
-<p>“The Geronimo Chiricahua see that the San Carlos
-Apaches and the White Mountains are unhappy, with
-two fathers bossing them. So they trade their goods
-for whiskey and guns. Sibi went to Geronimo and
-asked him what he was planning to do. Geronimo
-said: ‘It is no use to lie to you, Sibi. You read my
-thoughts. The truth is this: When my men came up
-with Cluke from Mexico they expected to go back every
-little while, to get horses and cows. There is no harm
-in stealing cattle from those Mexicans. Besides, Cluke
-took away the cattle that we first brought up. If my
-men are not allowed to do that, they would rather live
-in Mexico and act as they please. It is only my talk
-that holds them, and some day they won’t listen.’</p>
-
-<p>“To hear Geronimo pretend peace talk would make<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255"></a>[255]</span>
-a mule laugh,” concluded Micky. “Now because Cluke
-is in Washington we have come down here with Tom
-Horn, and Sibi who has a lame leg is coming in a
-wagon. They will talk with Bourke. Sibi says to
-capture all the Chiricahua and send them far away.
-That will end war. But I guess it won’t be done.”</p>
-
-<p>Captain Bourke—who had been promoted to major—was
-at Bowie, waiting for the general to return from
-Washington. The general had gone to Washington in
-the hopes of getting more authority to deal with the
-Apaches.</p>
-
-<p>He did not succeed. All this fall and winter of
-1884 the War Department and the Interior Department
-could not agree upon the control of the
-reservations.</p>
-
-<p>The officers at San Carlos staked out an irrigating
-ditch for the Apaches to dig, and the agent declined
-to permit the digging. The Indians believed nobody.
-Captain Crawford asked to be transferred to his regiment,
-the Third Cavalry, and Captain F. E. Pierce, of
-the First Infantry, was assigned to the military charge
-of San Carlos. He had lost an eye in the Civil War.</p>
-
-<p>In February of 1885 Major-General John Pope,
-who commanded the Military Division of the Pacific,
-from San Francisco announced, to Washington:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>If General Crook’s authority over the Indians at San
-Carlos be curtailed or modified in any way, there are certain
-to follow very serious results, if not a renewal of Indian wars
-and depredations in Arizona.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Consequently, with matters at sixes and sevens, the
-outlook at Fort Bowie was very gloomy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256"></a>[256]</span></p>
-
-<p>In the middle of May Jimmie rode down toward
-the border, to see how some of the pack-mules in
-pasture upon a ranch were getting along. There was
-likely to be need of them soon, for the Indians certainly
-were going to break out.</p>
-
-<p>It was an all-day ride. The pasture was in some
-bottoms among the hills, where there was good water
-and grass; so he cooked his own supper and prepared
-to sleep out, beneath the stars.</p>
-
-<p>He was just about to turn in, under his blanket,
-when he heard Chiquito snort. Chiquito was his horse,
-picketed out to graze. The snort might mean mountain
-lion, Mexican leopard, wolf, deer, or——!</p>
-
-<p>“What is it, Chiquito?”</p>
-
-<p>Chiquito’s head was up, his ears pricked, he was
-staring into the south. He knew a heap, Chiquito did.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie gazed, too, in the same direction. And
-there, far to the southwest, across the Mexican line,
-he saw a red gleam on a high hill. A signal fire, sure:
-Indian signal!</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie scrambled to his feet and stood peering
-intent. Presently the gleam was broken—and then
-repeated. Indians down there were signalling for other
-Indians to answer. That was plain. Even Chiquito
-had known. He was Indian wise.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie swept the dark horizon again and again,
-to catch the answer, but none appeared. His view
-from the camp was not very good; but he must find
-out what was going on; accordingly he snatched up
-his blanket and ran through the brush to the crest of
-the slope above him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257"></a>[257]</span></p>
-
-<p>Here he found the right spot, and squatted, with
-his blanket wrapped around him, to wait. He did not
-dare to build a fire, lest it be seen.</p>
-
-<p>This was a long, cold wait.</p>
-
-<p>The fire in the southwest flared regularly at intervals
-of about an hour. “Answer,” it kept saying.
-“Answer.” Jimmie eyed the north as well as the south—and
-at midnight the expected happened. The signal
-in the south had been answered, for it suddenly broke
-into a message.</p>
-
-<p>There were one long flash and several shorter ones.
-Then, quickly following, two flashes, and an interval,
-and two more.</p>
-
-<p>As anybody ought to know, this spelled: “All right.
-We will wait two days.”</p>
-
-<p>The fire died. That was the end. Jimmie jumped
-to a conclusion. There had been only the one fire in
-the south; so the answer had come from the north,
-and he had somehow missed it. But the Indians in
-Mexico had signalled to some Indians in Arizona, and
-were to wait two days!</p>
-
-<p>The Chiricahuas had arranged to run away! Probably
-they already were out, making for Mexico, to join
-runaways already there. Whew! Great Scott!</p>
-
-<p>Well, all that he could do was to wait until daylight,
-and then make for Bowie. And the sooner the
-better, because he was right in the track of runaways.</p>
-
-<p>He went down to his camp, and got a half night’s
-sleep. In the morning he did not wait to gather his
-mules; he saddled Chiquito at daylight and struck out
-by the shortest way.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258"></a>[258]</span></p>
-
-<p>The country all seemed peaceful. Who might have
-foretold that he would bump right into the hostiles?
-But that is precisely what happened. He was loping
-up a shallow draw fringed by rocks and stunted pines—had
-been riding two hours—when as he rounded a
-shoulder, on a sudden here there came at headlong
-gallop a dozen steers.</p>
-
-<p>He wheeled Chiquito to one side, quick; barely had
-time to get out of their way—didn’t have time to get
-out of the way of the three young bucks chasing them
-full tilt; and before he could spur Chiquito up the
-flank of the draw, for cover, he was a “goner.”</p>
-
-<p>With a yell and with guns leveled the three bronc’s
-had charged him; a bullet sang by his ear; and he raised
-his hand for a talk. They arrived instantly, reined
-short, around him. He didn’t know them, and they
-appeared not to know him.</p>
-
-<p>“Chi-kis-n,” he attempted. But they only scowled
-and talked among themselves in Apache.</p>
-
-<p>“Shall we kill him here?”</p>
-
-<p>“That is best.”</p>
-
-<p>“Stick him with your lance.”</p>
-
-<p>“You talk foolish,” retorted Jimmie boldly, in
-good Apache. “There’s no sense in killing me. You’ll
-only get in trouble by it. Take me to your chief.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who are you, that speaks Apache?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never you mind who I am,” retorted Jimmie.
-“You take me to your chief. If he says kill me, all
-right. But you’d better wait till he does say so. You’re
-only warriors.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where are the rest of your party, white man?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259"></a>[259]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I’m alone.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is your business?”</p>
-
-<p>“I herd mules.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where are you going?”</p>
-
-<p>“To Fort Bowie.”</p>
-
-<p>“We ought to kill him. He will tell on us if we
-let him go,” said one, aside.</p>
-
-<p>“No. We’ll have to take him back,” said the
-oldest boy. “There is plenty of time to kill him later.”</p>
-
-<p>They snatched his rifle and revolver from the holsters,
-and on either side and behind jostling him along,
-drove him up the draw. For the next five minutes
-Jimmie figured that his chances were about one in one
-hundred.</p>
-
-<p>They rounded the turn; and here, in a little hollow,
-was a group of twelve or fifteen men and women kneeling
-over two cow carcasses, and butchering them. Several
-of the figures looked to see who was coming. One
-of them was Nah-che. Jimmie’s heart beat less rapidly.
-His chances were increased.</p>
-
-<p>However, Nah-che, standing erect, was not at all
-pleased to see him.</p>
-
-<p>“Why are you in here?” demanded Nah-che.</p>
-
-<p>“I came down from Bowie to look at some mules.
-Now I was going back to Bowie.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you know that some of us are off the reservation?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I saw a signal fire last night, in Mexico,
-and I read what it said.”</p>
-
-<p>“What did it say?”</p>
-
-<p>“It said that they would wait two days.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260"></a>[260]</span></p>
-
-<p>“That is right,” replied Nah-che. “I am sorry
-we met you, chi-kis-n, because now you will be killed.”</p>
-
-<p>“That may be so. But why do you kill me, chi-kis-n?”
-challenged Jimmie. “I have done you no
-harm.”</p>
-
-<p>“No; we fought against each other, but that was
-understood. If you will promise me not to say a word
-about us at Fort Bowie I will let you go.”</p>
-
-<p>“You know very well that I would not be a man
-if I gave any such promise,” retorted Jimmie. “I shall
-not lie to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“If white men never lied to us, then everything
-would be all right,” said Nah-che. “They do lie to us,
-so you must die. I am sorry, but——”</p>
-
-<p>“No! No!” One of the squaws had rushed up.
-She was Nah-da-ste! “This is the Boy-who-sleeps.
-I remember him well. He has slept in my lodge and
-eaten my food. I won’t have him killed. You had
-better let him go. He cannot harm us.”</p>
-
-<p>“No. Fort Bowie is a long way off,” reminded
-Jimmie. “Besides, if you are off the reservation, that
-is known by this time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe not. We cut the talking wire,” answered
-Nah-che. “But it is true that Fort Bowie is a long
-way off. Anyway,” he added, “I don’t want to kill
-you, and I cannot argue with women. You can go,
-chi-kis-n. By the time you tell what you know, we
-shall be far in the other direction. So go as fast as
-you please, but keep going straight, for you might not
-find a chi-kis-n among other Chiricahua.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good,” grunted Jimmie, as his rifle and revolver<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261"></a>[261]</span>
-were passed to him. “I ask one word. Tell me why
-you are leaving the Fort Apache country. I wish the
-truth.”</p>
-
-<p>“Everybody but Cluke is our enemy. We are lied
-about. Even Chato tell lies on us, and gives us a bad
-name, because he hates Geronimo. If we stay we will
-be locked up. That is what is said. Now go, for I
-will talk no more.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie took the hint, and spurred away. He knew
-better than even to look back.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262"></a>[262]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXV">XXV<br />
-<small>ON THE JOB WITH CAPTAIN CRAWFORD</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>One hundred and twenty Chiricahuas under
-Geronimo, Chihuahua, old Nana and Nah-che were the
-ones who had run away. Chato had persuaded the
-three hundred other Chiricahuas to stay. He did not
-approve of Geronimo and Nah-che, or of further war.</p>
-
-<p>The outbreak had occurred on the night of May 17.
-The Chiricahuas had left in parties of twenty or so, to
-meet again across the border. Lieutenant Britton
-Davis, of the Third Cavalry, had been in charge at the
-reservation. As soon as he had discovered the loss,
-he had tried to telegraph General Crook; but the “talking
-wires” had been damaged. Before the message
-got through, the Chiricahuas were beyond the railroad,
-with a clear field ahead.</p>
-
-<p>Nah-che had spoken truly when he said to Jimmie
-that they ran away because they feared being locked up.
-They knew that they were watched. And in defiance
-of the general’s complaints that liquor was manufactured
-upon the reservation, they had obtained a quantity
-of it and drunk it—which of course made them
-liable to punishment.</p>
-
-<p>The general came over to the reservation too late;
-but flying columns had been sent out at once, from
-Apache and Thomas and Grant and Bowie. Two hundred
-scouts from all the reservation bands were enlisted
-for six months. Chato himself volunteered.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263"></a>[263]</span></p>
-
-<p>The columns dispatched were mainly for the purpose
-of keeping the Chiricahuas away from the border
-until it might be patrolled, and the principal band
-located by either the American or the Mexican troops.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile as a crack pack-master Jimmie was decidedly
-busy at Fort Bowie. Bowie had waxed to a
-bustling supply depot, and was likely to be headquarters
-field base.</p>
-
-<p>Tom Moore, who had been up north in the Department
-of the Platte, was sent for by the general to be
-chief packer again in the Department of Arizona. He
-brought down from Cheyenne, Wyoming, the best of
-the Platte pack-mules, and was given a great welcome
-at Bowie by Jimmie and the other “old-timers.”</p>
-
-<p>The country was being scoured for good mules.
-These had to be broken, some of them, and distributed.
-Troops were pouring in, until the general had at his
-disposal forty companies of infantry and the same of
-cavalry.</p>
-
-<p>He was planning surely. He directed that heliograph
-stations, for the purpose of telegraphing by mirrored
-sun-flashes, be established upon hill-tops all along
-on both sides of the border. Then he went to Washington,
-to get a better agreement with Mexico regarding
-a joint campaign against the Apaches.</p>
-
-<p>There was a brief period of quiet, except for hard
-work that kept Jimmie, as well as others, on the move.
-The final break came about the middle of October.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie saw the heliostat flashes which spread the
-news. He was riding back to Bowie from a long trip
-down to a supply camp at the border. Chancing to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264"></a>[264]</span>
-turn his head, when only a little way out from the
-camp, he caught the flash of a message from a station
-in the south.</p>
-
-<p>The regulation Morse dots and dashes (long and
-short flashes) were used by the stations. Now he
-paused, to read. The station was at least ten miles
-distant. The air was very clear, and his eyes were
-good eyes.</p>
-
-<p>What was that? No practice message, this, or ordinary
-routine. The first word—even the first three
-letters—stiffened him intent.</p>
-
-<p>“H-o-s-t-i-l-e b-a-n-d h-e-a-d-g (heading) n-o-r-t-h
-f-o-r D-r-a-g-o-o-n c-o-u-n-t-r-y. Q-u-i-c-k.” Signed.</p>
-
-<p>Hah! “Wake up, Chiquito! Gwan with you!”
-The message read like business, and stirring business.
-Evidently the Chiricahuas were getting bold. But it
-did not seem possible that with all these troops, and
-the railroad, and the telegraph, and the helio stations,
-and the armed and watchful settlers, a raid could
-amount to much.</p>
-
-<p>The helio stations were twenty or twenty-five miles
-apart. A message had been sent from Nacori, in the
-mountains of northern Mexico, two hundred miles to
-Fort Bowie, in an hour. But so fast moved this band
-of raiders, and so cleverly they chose their trail, that
-by the time Jimmie arrived at Bowie they not only had
-crossed the line but had disappeared somewhere in
-Arizona!</p>
-
-<p>Already the troops were in motion, trying to close
-in and head the raiders off. It was reported that there
-were eleven warriors. They were not even sighted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265"></a>[265]</span>
-again, until, suddenly, they struck the White Mountain
-reservation itself—surprised a camp of the White
-Mountains, killed twelve and carried away six women
-and children.</p>
-
-<p>That, then, had been the object of the raid: to take
-revenge upon the reservation Apaches for sending
-scouts against the Chiricahuas!</p>
-
-<p>The White Mountains succeeded in killing one
-raider, during the fight. He was Hal-zay, Nah-che’s
-half-brother. They cut off his head, for a trophy. But
-the ten others completed their bold circuit, and in spite
-of soldiers, settlers, telegraph, heliostat and railroad
-escaped back into Mexico.</p>
-
-<p>“I never would have believed it!” declared Chief
-Packer Tom Moore, to Jimmie at Bowie. “It beats
-the Dutch! The general’s got every waterhole covered,
-and every pass watched. Anyhow, now there’s a fresh
-trail, for back-tracking on, where they came up by the
-shortest way. Crawford and Cap’n Davis are going
-right down after the bacon, to stay till they get Geronimo
-or his scalp. I’ve picked you for assistant chief
-packer with one of ’em. Which do you say? Chances
-are even. You’re the boss.”</p>
-
-<p>“Guess I’ll throw in with Crawford, Tom, if you
-put it up to me,” promptly said Jimmie. Assistant
-chief packer! Wow!</p>
-
-<p>Captain Crawford and Captain Wirt Davis were
-both good men, but as Tom Horn, acting chief of scouts,
-had remarked: “Crawford’s my style of fighter: the
-go-get-’em kind with a wolf jaw!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’d better be makin’ up your best trains, then,”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266"></a>[266]</span>
-counseled Tom, to Jimmie. “Three, I reckon. Crawford
-won’t wait on sore backs or sore feet; and he’d
-rather bust every man and every mule and go on by
-himself, than let Davis outdo him.”</p>
-
-<p>When Captain Crawford arrived with his column
-at Bowie, from Fort Apache, on November 15, Jimmie
-the assistant chief packer was ready for him. The
-Captain Wirt Davis column was to be composed of
-cavalry and scouts both; but Captain Crawford was
-taking only scouts.</p>
-
-<p>These were one hundred Chiricahuas, White Mountains
-and Warm Springs, from the Fort Apache reservation;
-but mainly Chiricahuas, with Chato as their
-chief, and Ka-e-ten-na the traveler included. Micky
-Free was going with the San Carlos scouts and Captain
-Davis. Captain Crawford had selected so many Chiricahuas
-because his goal was the Sierra Madre Range
-again, and the Chiricahuas knew all that country well.</p>
-
-<p>The scouts formed two companies, under command
-of First Lieutenant Marion P. Maus, of the First Infantry,
-and a gallant young “shave tail,” Second Lieutenant
-William Ewen Shipp, of the Tenth Cavalry, only
-two years out of West Point.</p>
-
-<p>Another “shave tail,” Second Lieutenant Sam
-Faison, of the First Infantry, who had graduated in the
-same class with Lieutenant Shipp, was the adjutant,
-quarter-master and commissary, all three. Dr. T. B.
-Davis was the surgeon, Concepcion was the interpreter.
-Al Sieber, the old war-horse, was retained to look after
-the reservations, but Tom Horn was to be chief of
-scouts and had proved first-class.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267"></a>[267]</span></p>
-
-<p>Altogether, it was an honor to be in pack service
-with such an expedition, especially as Captain Crawford
-had volunteered for the Sierra Madre trip because it
-was the more dangerous of the two.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant-General Phil Sheridan, commander of
-the United States Army, had come out to Bowie from
-Washington, to see the columns off. He and General
-Crook inspected the whole outfit, in a parade at the fort.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” reported Chief of Scouts Horn, after a
-conference in General Crook’s quarters, “this is the
-idea: The general says we’re to go down into Mexico
-and stay six months, if necessary, and when we strike
-a trail we’re to follow it as long as it shows a single
-moccasin track or pony track. Savvy? When we’ve
-killed all the bucks who don’t surrender, and corralled
-all the women and children, we can come up home with
-our batch. Then he’ll tell ’em what’ll happen next.”</p>
-
-<p>The march veered west through the Dragoon Mountains,
-in the hope of striking the up trail and following
-it down. But heavy rains had washed out the signs,
-so the course was continued straight south, for the
-Sierra Madre country again. The Chiricahuas were
-bound to be there, if at any place.</p>
-
-<p>Throughout the month of December the pack-train
-job was the same tough job as that when General Crook
-led on, in 1883: up hill, down hill, sliding, scrambling,
-falling, barking shins and bruising hoofs and feet,
-amidst terrific canyons, thorny brush, sharp rocks,
-towering cliffs, sun and rain, heat and cold. Tom Horn
-scouted far ahead with a few picked scouts; the captain
-and his lieutenants and the plucky doctor, and old Concepcion,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268"></a>[268]</span>
-rode keenly with the eager main body; and
-Jimmie, assistant chief packer in place of Tom Moore,
-hustled his toiling pack-trains of fifty mules each, so as
-to bring them into camp on time every evening.</p>
-
-<p>Now it was the first week in January. There was
-only one pack-train. Captain Crawford had ordered
-that the two others be sent back to the border, two
-hundred miles, with Lieutenant Faison, the commissary
-and quarter-master, for supplies. So Jimmie had
-detached the trains of “Chileno John” and Sam
-Wisser. He had stayed.</p>
-
-<p>Chief Scout Horn had been gone two weeks; but
-he kept runners out with news from him. He had
-discovered fresh sign: Indian and cattle trails; cattle
-carcasses; and a recent camp. Ka-e-ten-na and Chato
-had just come in. They brought word for Captain
-Crawford to push on, and join the advance. Tom
-would be waiting—he knew that the Chiricahuas were
-yonder before him.</p>
-
-<p>The captain sent for Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>“We must reduce our packs again,” he said, “for
-a forced march. You will pack four of your strongest
-mules with twelve days’ rations for eighty men. The
-personal outfit will be cut down to one blanket for each
-man. Take the shoes off the mules, to avoid noise.
-The rest of the outfit will be left here, under guard
-of those men who are unable to travel. Which of your
-packers have you in mind, to go on?”</p>
-
-<p>“Jimmie Dunn, captain,” smiled Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s afoot, you know—and probably night
-marches. Will your leg stand it?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269"></a>[269]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Will we strike the hostiles, captain?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all my leg needs, to lengthen it out, then,”
-laughed Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>He felt that he was as fit as Captain Crawford.
-The captain looked badly. So did the doctor; and old
-Concepcion the interpreter was about done.</p>
-
-<p>The scouts seemed unusually solemn, as if the report
-by Chato and Ka-e-ten-na had much impressed them.
-They proceeded to make medicine. In the light of a
-small fire old No-wa-ze-ta the medicine man unrolled
-the strip of sacred buckskin that he carried; one by
-one the scouts kneeled before him; he mumbled over
-them and held the sacred buckskin to their lips. After
-that they held a council.</p>
-
-<p>“Some of the soldiers chiefs at Bowie say maybe
-your Chiricahua will not fight,” said Jimmie, sitting
-beside Chato, in a blanket, and watching. “They say
-maybe you will pretend to fight, but all the time you
-will be sending word to Geronimo to keep away.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is not true,” declared Chato. “We will
-fight. We are ready.”</p>
-
-<p>About midnight camp was broken. Through the
-cold and the darkness Chato and Ka-e-ten-na guided.
-Each officer and man was in moccasins and packed his
-own blanket. Jimmie drove the four mules.</p>
-
-<p>About noon the signs mentioned by Tom Horn were
-found: a trail, and the bodies of butchered cattle. That
-evening Ka-e-ten-na pointed ahead.</p>
-
-<p>“Espinosa del Diablo,” he said. “Maybe we cross.
-Very bad country.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270"></a>[270]</span></p>
-
-<p>Espinosa del Diablo was Spanish for Devil’s Backbone—a
-high mass of jagged ridges.</p>
-
-<p>Early in the morning two more of Tom Horn’s
-scouts came in. The light of Indian camp-fires had
-been sighted, reflected in the sky, and Chief Scout Horn
-urged the captain to hurry.</p>
-
-<p>The command made a short march, rested until
-late afternoon, and started on again, to march by night.
-The country steadily grew worse, with deep, dark canyons,
-steep rocky hills, heavy brush, and a river which
-was constantly being forded. Moccasins were soaked
-and soon cut to bits.</p>
-
-<p>From now on, the camps were not ordered until
-midnight. Only small fires of dry wood were permitted;
-and under one thin blanket apiece nobody was
-able to sleep, before the sun rose. In fact, it was as
-miserable a time as Jimmie ever had experienced.</p>
-
-<p>More messages arrived from Tom Horn. He had
-located the Chiricahuas—had smelled the mescal steam,
-had seen the fires. “Hurry!” he bade. He had only
-two scouts with him.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Crawford lengthened the marches, to all
-night and half-day stretches. Some of the Apache
-scouts, tough as they were, began to straggle and
-limp. Doctor Davis and old Concepcion could barely
-hobble.</p>
-
-<p>At sunset of January 9, “Dutchy,” another of the
-Horn scouts, appeared. Dutchy said that the Chiricahua
-camp was but twelve miles away. He and Tom
-and the other scout had reconnoitered it—had witnessed
-the Chiricahuas moving about, herding their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271"></a>[271]</span>
-horses. They did not suspect that any enemies were
-near.</p>
-
-<p>Tom and the other scout had no blankets, and nothing
-to eat but a little meat—the three of them had had
-nothing else for ten days; now he, Dutchy, was to
-bring the captain on at once, while the two watched the
-Chiricahua camp.</p>
-
-<p>Hurrah! The news put vim into the command.
-The end of the marches was at hand. Evidently
-Geronimo had no idea he could be found away in here.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Crawford issued rapid orders.</p>
-
-<p>“Twenty minutes’ halt. No fires. Let the men
-eat bread and raw bacon. Examine arms carefully.
-Pack-mules to remain here, with the packer, Doctor
-Davis and the interpreter. All available men to be
-ready for a night march, and attack at daylight.”</p>
-
-<p>That was hard luck for Jimmie—but Doctor Davis
-and Concepcion were completely exhausted, and somebody
-had to stay with the mules, to move them on in a
-jiffy when sent for.</p>
-
-<p>In precisely twenty minutes the command set out,
-guided by Dutchy. It had been the first halt in six
-hours! As in the twilight they clambered up a rocky,
-narrow trail, Jimmie saw that Lieutenant Maus was
-helping Captain Crawford. Even at that, the captain
-was obliged to pause, once or twice, and lean upon his
-carbine. He used his carbine as a staff.</p>
-
-<p>“His indomitable will is all that keeps the captain
-going,” remarked Doctor Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“Muy hombre (Much man),” groaned old Concepcion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272"></a>[272]</span></p>
-
-<p>The darkness closed in quickly. It was a bitter
-cold night. Concepcion and the mules moaned, the
-doctor’s teeth chattered, and wrapped in his single
-blanket Jimmie shivered. The brush stirred with the
-stealthy tread of prowling animals, a leopard shrieked,
-at intervals, and the still air stung.</p>
-
-<p>With the first grayness Jimmie was up, to unlimber,
-and listen. The attack upon the Chiricahua camp
-was due. The moments dragged. The doctor and
-Concepcion seemed to have dropped asleep at last, but
-they, also, shivered in their uneasy slumber. This was
-the coldest period of the night—just at dawn.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273"></a>[273]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXVI">XXVI<br />
-<small>FOES OR FRIENDS?</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Gradually the shadows upon the rocks and timber
-paled; and then, suddenly—hark!</p>
-
-<p>Rifle-shots! A spatter—a volley—more and faster,
-rolling and echoing among the crags! The attack
-had been made. Throwing aside their blankets, up
-sprang the doctor and Concepcion, bewildered and
-staggering, but awake.</p>
-
-<p>“Fighting!” exclaimed the doctor. “They’ve
-struck the hostiles! Good!”</p>
-
-<p>“Much shooting, much shooting,” stammered old
-Concepcion.</p>
-
-<p>For fifteen minutes the rapid firing continued. It
-lessened, to dropping, scattered shots, and in about an
-hour ceased altogether. The sun rose.</p>
-
-<p>“What’ll we do now?” demanded the doctor, of
-Jimmie. “Crawford’s licked them, don’t you think?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sounded like it, doctor. But we’d better be
-watching sharp. Some of the bronc’s are liable to come
-this way.”</p>
-
-<p>There was another period of anxious waiting.
-They took turns doing look-out duty from a high rock.
-With Concepcion’s aid, Jimmie packed the mules.
-About ten o’clock he could stand the suspense no longer.</p>
-
-<p>“If we moved on we probably would meet the
-word from the captain, and get there all the sooner
-with the packs, doctor,” he proposed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274"></a>[274]</span></p>
-
-<p>“All right. But Concepcion and I can’t move
-fast.”</p>
-
-<p>They toiled on, following the trail. At noon they
-met Dutchy.</p>
-
-<p>“The soldier-captain says to come, with mules and
-medicine-man and Concepcion.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you whip the Chiricahua?” queried Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. We ran them like turkeys. Capture
-everything—many horses. Chiricahua get away, but
-they send word they will talk to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>The doctor, who had been outstepped by Jimmie
-and the mules, limped eagerly in, with poor old Concepcion
-in his wake.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the news? Have they got Geronimo?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not yet; but they captured the camp. We’re to
-come on at once, doctor.”</p>
-
-<p>“How far? Any of our men hurt?”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie asked Dutchy.</p>
-
-<p>“Ten miles. Only Chiricahua hurt.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got to rest,” panted the doctor. “Go ahead
-with your mules. We’ll follow. Any danger?”</p>
-
-<p>“No danger,” said Dutchy, answering Jimmie.
-“Chiricahua hide till to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>Dutchy plainly was in a great hurry to get back—probably
-to share in the plunder. Jimmie left the
-doctor and Concepcion to come as best they could, and
-again hustled his mules to keep up with Dutchy. But
-that proved impossible. The trail was a corker! How
-in the world Captain Crawford and men ever had traveled
-it in the darkness was a wonder.</p>
-
-<p>Dutchy disappeared. Only the trail remained, as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275"></a>[275]</span>
-guide. It dipped into canyons, and wound over rocks
-and steep ridges. Jimmie wheezed and puffed and
-sweat. He was empty from chin to knees, his legs were
-leaden, he ached in every muscle. His mules repeatedly
-halted, and stood heaving and straddled. But he
-pushed on. The captain had sent for the packs, and
-orders were orders.</p>
-
-<p>The sun set. He had been half a day covering
-these few miles! A damp fog was descending, cloaking
-the mountains. If he missed the trail——! No!
-Good! He saw camp-fire light, glowing on the low
-clouds. At last, in the gathering dark, he labored into
-the camp, to report.</p>
-
-<p>Everybody there was asleep, utterly worn out.
-Jimmie peered about, and wakened Chato and got a
-small chunk of pony meat from him; unpacked his
-mules and went to sleep himself, in defiance of the
-cold rain that was falling. He had done his stint.
-The doctor and Concepcion hardly could arrive before
-morning.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed to him that he scarcely had closed his
-throbbing eyes ere he was aroused by excited cries and
-loud shouts. But he had slept, for dawn was here—a
-wet, foggy dawn. Amidst the fog the scouts were
-yelling shrilly; upon every side men were jumping up,
-grabbing guns, and staring into the mist before.</p>
-
-<p>“Look out! Somebody comes! Many come!”
-were shouting the scouts.</p>
-
-<p>Tom Horn was up; so was Lieutenant Maus, and
-Lieutenant Shipp. From where he lay exhausted, by
-his fire, Captain Crawford directed the defense.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276"></a>[276]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Be careful! They may be some of Captain
-Davis’s men,” he warned. “Don’t fire on them till
-you see who it is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wait for me to tell you, before you begin shooting,”
-repeated Tom Horn, to the scouts.</p>
-
-<p>He started to climb higher, for a better view.
-Lieutenant Maus and Lieutenant Shipp were running
-to right and left, to take command of their companies.
-Down below, beyond a little basin, forms were dimly
-visible. They acted like soldiers.</p>
-
-<p>On a sudden there was a resounding crash—the red
-flare of a volley lighted the fog, and a storm of bullets
-pelted the camp. Jimmie, wriggling for cover, leveled
-his gun, for the scouts were replying.</p>
-
-<p>“Follow me, valientes (braves),” clearly called
-a voice, in good Spanish, from the basin in front; and
-a line of figures moved swiftly forward.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait! Wait! Cease that firing! Stop your
-scouts, Horn!” shouted Captain Crawford, on his feet.
-“It’s a mistake. Those are Mexicans!”</p>
-
-<p>And so they were.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Crawford leaped upon a rock, to wave a
-white handkerchief, in signal, and call.</p>
-
-<p>“No tiras! Amigos, amigos! Americanos!
-(Don’t fire! Friends, friends! Americans!),” chimed
-in Lieutenant Maus, who spoke Spanish.</p>
-
-<p>He ran down, into the open. The captain followed
-him. Under the lifting mist they met four of the
-Mexicans. One was a strapping big officer, evidently
-the commander; another was a slender young lieutenant;
-the two others were officers, also. The line of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277"></a>[277]</span>
-men behind them had halted, and stood uneasily. They
-looked like a wild lot, too.</p>
-
-<p>Chief of Scouts Horn advanced. Lieutenant Maus
-talked earnestly with the big officer, and interpreted
-to Captain Crawford. Tom Horn joined them, to
-assist.</p>
-
-<p>On either side of Jimmie the scouts were poking
-their heads above the rocks, and cramming fresh cartridges
-into their Springfields. The carbine breech-locks
-snapped briskly.</p>
-
-<p>“Mexicanos!” hissed Chato, with avid face.
-“Kill them all.”</p>
-
-<p>“You and I will kill that big man, first,” answered
-Ka-e-ten-na.</p>
-
-<p>“See!” bade Dutchy.</p>
-
-<p>A file of other Mexican soldiers were sneaking
-through a ravine, to flank the camp.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Maus had seen; he pointed, and protested
-to the big officer.</p>
-
-<p>“Watch those Mexicans, Shipp!” shouted the
-captain.</p>
-
-<p>“No tiras, no tiras!” again appealed Lieutenant
-Maus, this time to the scouts.</p>
-
-<p>“No tiras!” boomed the big officer, as if in much
-alarm.</p>
-
-<p>“Bang!” From the Mexicans at the rear sounded
-a single shot. Instantly the group in the basin scattered,
-each man for his own place. The Mexican line
-came on at a trot, firing, loading and firing. Tom
-Horn was left for a moment alone, as the captain and
-the lieutenant scurried for the rocks.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_278"></a>[278]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The captain, is killed!” shrieked Chato, at him.
-“Come back!” He and Ka-e-ten-na fired together,
-and the big Mexican officer, running, threw up his
-arm, and hurling his rifle far, plunged headlong.</p>
-
-<p>“Give it to ’em,” yelled Tom, running also.</p>
-
-<p>“Whang-g-g-g!” Everybody shot. The slender
-Mexican lieutenant fell riddled. He had been hit thirteen
-times! The two other Mexicans were behind a
-tree; the scouts’ bullets cut the tree almost down and
-the twain crumpled in a heap. The whole Mexican line
-melted into sprawled figures, some lax and motionless,
-some squirming for safety.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Maus arrived, panting.</p>
-
-<p>“Head off those fellows on the right,” he rasped,
-to Lieutenant Shipp. Away darted stripling Shipp, to
-prevent the flank attack.</p>
-
-<p>“Crawford’s dead—shot in the brain!” gasped
-the lieutenant to Jimmie. “He’s yonder, behind a
-rock. Horn’s shot in the arm. Those are Mexican irregulars.
-What are they up to? But they began it.”</p>
-
-<p>The scouts were still firing rapidly on every moving
-form. The Mexicans were now hard to see.</p>
-
-<p>“Give me orders to send out my men into the trees
-and rocks and we will kill every Mexican!” shouted
-Chato, to Tom Horn.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t waste bullets,” cautioned Tom, in Apache.
-“Be careful. We are many miles from more.”</p>
-
-<p>“We will use the Mexicans’ guns,” retorted Chato.</p>
-
-<p>“Give me the dead captain’s gun and belt and I
-will help you kill Mexicans,” spoke a new voice.
-“Make me your prisoner and tell me to fight.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_279"></a>[279]</span></p>
-
-<p>It was old Nana the Chiricahua chief. He had
-somehow tottered in, from the rear—he was ninety
-years of age and lame from a broken hip.</p>
-
-<p>“I fight the Americans no more,” he cackled. “But
-I will fight the Mexicans any time. And so will all
-my people.”</p>
-
-<p>He nodded backward; they looked, and there were
-many more of the Chiricahua hostiles, at a short distance,
-peering and waiting. Geronimo mounted upon
-a boulder and yelled across.</p>
-
-<p>“If you are fighting the Mexicans, tell us what
-to do.”</p>
-
-<p>That was an odd situation. If the Chiricahuas
-had attacked the camp from the one side and the
-Mexicans from the other——!</p>
-
-<p>The Mexicans called, where they were concealed.</p>
-
-<p>“Send somebody to talk with us.”</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Maus and Tom Horn advanced again.
-Four of the Mexicans met them half-way. One of the
-Mexicans was crying. His brother was the slender
-young lieutenant who had been riddled.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Maus returned and talked with Lieutenant
-Shipp. The Mexicans claimed that they had made
-a mistake. They had lost all their officers—among
-them Major Corredor, who was the big man, and, they
-declared, “the bravest man that ever lived.” They
-asked permission to remove their dead.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Maus accompanied each body into the
-Mexican lines. The Mexicans seemed to be afraid
-of the scouts.</p>
-
-<p>Now noon was at hand, but instead of withdrawing,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_280"></a>[280]</span>
-the Mexicans had taken a strong position that threatened
-the camp. Many of them were Tarahumari Indians,
-a Mexican tribe hostile to all Americans and
-Apaches.</p>
-
-<p>The camp was short of food and ammunition.
-Several of the scouts had been wounded, one of them
-severely. Tom Horn’s arm hung useless. Captain
-Crawford lay underneath a blanket, with a bandanna
-handkerchief spread over his face. A piece of his
-forehead and a portion of his brain had been shot out,
-but he still breathed.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie at last reported his arrival to Lieutenant
-Shipp.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I’ve seen you,” answered the lieutenant.
-“You did well, but,” he frankly added, “we’re all in
-a bad fix. If there’s war between the United States
-and Mexico, our pack-trains are likely to be captured;
-and while we’re fighting our way north, carrying Captain
-Crawford, there’ll be nothing to prevent the scouts
-from joining the other Chiricahuas and all together
-making off to do as they please. Where’s the doctor?
-Lieutenant Maus has been asking for him.”</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Davis and Concepcion came in, agog to
-know what had occurred. They had heard the firing,
-again, and had hidden until it had stopped.</p>
-
-<p>The doctor attended to the captain, and reported
-that he could not live long. The other wounded were
-patched up. The Mexicans needed a doctor, and he
-went over to them, as was his duty.</p>
-
-<p>He was gone some time. On his return he said that
-the Mexicans had many killed and wounded, but that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_281"></a>[281]</span>
-he had been badly treated, with scowls and insulting
-language.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the Geronimo Chiricahuas were in sight,
-waiting. The officers did not think it advisable to hold
-a council with them until the Mexicans had been disposed
-of. Only old Nana was still tottering about,
-cackling among the scouts. He was harmless.</p>
-
-<p>“Give us the orders, and we will clean the earth
-of those Mexicans,” implored Chato and Ka-e-ten-na,
-of Tom Horn. “Then we will all have plenty of
-pinole (which was meal) and bullets.”</p>
-
-<p>Another cold, rainy night settled down early.
-Lieutenant Maus directed that camp be broken at daylight,
-for the march north. Captain Crawford should
-be moved at once, and the pack-train that had been left
-must be protected. After that, the Chiricahuas who
-did not surrender would be hunted again.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning, while a litter of reeds from the
-river was being made, for carrying the captain, old
-Concepcion, who had been rounding up some ponies,
-called that the Mexicans had him and demanded a talk
-with the commanding officer.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Maus again met a squad. They led
-him aside, behind some rocks, as if to get shelter from
-the rain—and presently a Mexican brought a note from
-him. The note stated that he, too, was a prisoner, until
-he could show papers to prove that he had permission
-to “invade” Mexico. The Mexicans insisted also
-upon a supply of food, and mules for their wounded.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Shipp and Chief Scout Horn conferred
-together. The Mexican messenger was told to get<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_282"></a>[282]</span>
-four or five men and return for the mules and rations.
-Lieutenant Shipp slipped around with his company of
-scouts, to a position where he might pour a deadly
-fire into the Mexican lines. When the five Mexicans
-returned to the camp, for the mules and rations, they
-were suddenly ringed about with carbine muzzles.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” spoke Chief Scout Horn, “you call to
-your comrades. Tell them that if our lieutenant is not
-released immediately, you will all be killed!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hi!” cackled old Nana. “That is good. Yes,
-you will be killed. But we will not kill you quick.
-We will shoot you in many places, first.”</p>
-
-<p>Carbine hammers clicked. Young Lieutenant
-Shipp’s scouts were crouched and aiming, ready. All
-the scouts were yelling, while the five Mexicans, calling
-piteously, pleaded that the lieutenant be released.</p>
-
-<p>That, as Tom Horn said, “ended the row.” Here
-came the lieutenant, angry but safe. The five prisoners
-were allowed to scuttle back.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re an ugly lot,” announced the lieutenant.
-“They have over thirty dead and a dozen wounded.
-Concepcion is still held. I’ve agreed to let them have
-six mules in exchange, so they can pull out.”</p>
-
-<p>The mules were Mexican mules, but the lieutenant
-required a receipt for them, and the Mexican government
-paid the value of them to the United States.</p>
-
-<p>The Mexicans finally withdrew. Scouts were sent
-out, on their trail, to watch them to a safe distance.
-The next morning, January 13, camp was broken.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Crawford was living, but unconscious.
-Four of the scouts carried him in the litter. The trail<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_283"></a>[283]</span>
-was too rough and narrow for any other method.
-The Geronimo Chiricahuas had disappeared, but they
-stayed near. This evening Geronimo sent an old squaw
-into the new camp. He requested the talk that had
-been agreed upon for the day when the Mexicans had
-interrupted.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning Lieutenant Maus took Tom Horn,
-Ka-e-ten-na, Dutchy, and two or three other scouts,
-and, all unarmed, met Geronimo in council.</p>
-
-<p>“Why did you come down in here, where I thought
-white men could not come?” demanded Geronimo,
-direct.</p>
-
-<p>“I came down to capture or destroy you and your
-band,” answered the weary Lieutenant Maus, just as
-direct.</p>
-
-<p>“I see you speak the truth,” replied Geronimo. He
-shook hands, sent a long talk, of various complaints,
-to “Cluke,” and engaged to meet the general at the
-border when the March moon was full.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think he will do it, Chato?” queried
-Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Ka-e-ten-na has told him what a big people
-the Americans are. Besides, Geronimo is sending in
-old Nana, and some women. Chihuahua wants to
-come in. Juh has been killed by the Mexicans. Pretty
-soon Geronimo will have no one left.”</p>
-
-<p>Nana arrived, again, and Geronimo’s wife, and one
-of Nah-che’s wives, and another Chiricahua, and several
-children. Lieutenant Maus divided his few
-rations with the Geronimo band, and proceeded. Matters
-looked better.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_284"></a>[284]</span></p>
-
-<p>But that was a long, sorrowful march, carrying
-Captain Crawford through the three hundred miles of
-mountains and rain. He lived, unconscious, for five
-days—he had an “indomitable will,” as had said Doctor
-Davis. Without having spoken a word he died on
-January 17. Of course there was no thought of leaving
-him behind, in the wilds, so his body was still
-carried on, in the litter.</p>
-
-<p>He was buried at the little Mexican town of Nacori,
-near the border, until he might be reburied in the
-United States. The mayor of the town promised to
-have the grave guarded.</p>
-
-<p>The news of the expedition was telegraphed by
-helio to Bowie. Scout runners already had been dispatched
-ahead.</p>
-
-<p>Almost the first person encountered by Jimmie,
-when he rode stiffly into Bowie, on the third of February,
-was Micky the Red-head, as lively as ever, after
-his own long trip with the Captain Davis column.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is Geronimo, Cheemie?” hailed Micky.</p>
-
-<p>“He will come.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if he doesn’t, we will go get him,” asserted
-Micky. “We will bring him back little by little. You
-look as though you had been a long way, Cheemie.”</p>
-
-<p>“More than a thousand miles,” laughed Jimmie.
-And he felt it.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s enough for <em>you</em>,” declared Chief Packer
-Tom Moore, when Jimmie reported. “You stick
-around, now, and take things easy.”</p>
-
-<p>The post was still talking of Captain Crawford’s
-one march of eighteen hours with only the twenty minutes’<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_285"></a>[285]</span>
-halt; and of his tragic death, at the end, when
-he had won his goal.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Maus, with Lieutenant Faison and Lieutenant
-Shipp, Tom Horn and the scouts, was ordered
-back below the border, to camp until the Chiricahuas
-signalled for the talk.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie was laid up with his leg, for several weeks.
-And at Bowie the general waited impatiently for the
-news from the lieutenant’s camp.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_286"></a>[286]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXVII">XXVII<br />
-<small>THE WORST ENEMY OF ALL</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The last week of March had opened. The moon
-was near the full. Tom Moore, walking briskly, caught
-Jimmie bossing the repairs on some aparejos, out at the
-Bowie mule sheds.</p>
-
-<p>“Word’s come,” rapped Tom. “I’m to take a
-pack-train down to Maus to-morrow, and the general
-will follow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is Geronimo there, Tom?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know; but he’s promised to be there in
-four days. Anyhow, we’re to pack a lot of rations;
-and looks like we’re to feed some Injuns and fetch ’em
-back. Do you want to go ’long and see the finish?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure thing, Tom.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bueno! I thought you would, but I can use somebody
-else if you’re not fit. All right, then. We’ll pull
-out at eight o’clock.”</p>
-
-<p>The Lieutenant Maus command had been camped
-one hundred miles south of Bowie, or ten miles below
-the border. But Geronimo had refused to meet the general
-there, and had appointed the Cañon de los Embudos
-(Funnels Canyon), twelve miles below the border
-and twenty miles west, where the country was rougher.</p>
-
-<p>Alchisé, Ka-e-ten-na, and Tony Besias and another
-official interpreter went with the pack outfit. There
-were two old Chiricahua squaws, also, from the bunch
-who had been taken prisoners at the Geronimo rancheria<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_287"></a>[287]</span>
-last January. They, and Alchisé and Ka-e-ten-na were
-counted upon to spread “good talk” among the Chiricahuas.
-Mayor Strauss, of Tucson, who had been at
-Bowie discussing affairs with the general, joined by
-special permission.</p>
-
-<p>The general overhauled the pack-train on the second
-day out. He and his staff, including Major Bourke
-and Captain C. S. Roberts, of the Judge-Advocate Department,
-were in an ambulance. Captain Roberts had
-brought his ten-year-old son, Charley, who was seeing
-army life in the Southwest; and there was an escort
-of scouts, with the inevitable Micky as scout sergeant.</p>
-
-<p>Before the Lieutenant Maus camp was reached, the
-company had grown larger. Two photographers
-named Fly and Chase had joined; and a Mexican, José
-Maria Yaskes, who had lived with the Chiricahuas; and
-several ranchers and cow-boys.</p>
-
-<p>“All want to see Geronimo—but I guess the Gray
-Fox wants to see him worst of anybody,” laughed
-Micky.</p>
-
-<p>On the morning of March 25 Alchisé and Ka-e-ten-na
-sent up a smoke signal, to tell the camp and
-Geronimo that the general was near. Lieutenant
-Shipp, Chato and two others rode out to guide the
-detachment in.</p>
-
-<p>The Maus camp was well located, upon a mesa commanding
-water and grass, in the canyon. Geronimo’s
-camp was just as strongly located, a half mile away—on
-the top of a lava cone surrounded by bristly gulches.</p>
-
-<p>The packers already in camp thought that there
-would be no trouble. Geronimo had been over every<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_288"></a>[288]</span>
-day, to ask when the general was expected for the
-talk; Chihuahua had sent word that he was prepared
-to surrender at any time, and do exactly as the general
-told him to do.</p>
-
-<p>“Chihuahua will leave Geronimo; Nana has left
-Geronimo; soon he will have nobody,” Chato repeated.
-“Geronimo and Chihuahua are living separate now.
-Nana is too old to run any more.”</p>
-
-<p>After the general had lunched, there was sudden
-exclaiming and pointing. A large party of Chiricahuas
-were descending from their cone.</p>
-
-<p>“Geronimo!”</p>
-
-<p>“Here comes the old rascal!”</p>
-
-<p>The Chiricahuas rode on, up the canyon, and Chief
-of Scouts Horn met them. He returned, and reported.</p>
-
-<p>“Geronimo says he will talk with the general.”</p>
-
-<p>Still, Geronimo did not enter the camp. He halted
-a short distance out, amid some white-barked sycamores
-and shaggy cottonwoods, near the river. The
-general and officers advanced, to hold the talk, and a
-crowd followed, eager to hear.</p>
-
-<p>There were the general, Lieutenant Maus, Lieutenant
-Shipp and Lieutenant Faison; Surgeon Davis (who
-had recovered from his hard trip); Captain Roberts
-and young Charley Roberts; Major Bourke; Chief
-Packer Tom Moore, ex-Assistant Jimmie, Pack-masters
-H. W. Daly and Harvey Carlisle, Packers Shaw and
-Foster; Mayor Strauss, of Tucson; Photographers Fly
-and Chase; Tony Besias, old Concepcion, José Maria
-Yaskes, and other interpreters; Chief Scout Tom Horn,
-Sergeant Micky Free, Alchisé, Ka-e-ten-na, Chato, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_289"></a>[289]</span>
-others of the scout companies; and even a little boy
-named Howell who had traveled along from a ranch
-thirty miles away.</p>
-
-<p>Chihuahua was here, smiling and good-natured.
-So was Nah-che—not smiling, but on the contrary
-looking grim and anxious. Jimmie saw Porico, or
-White Horse, Geronimo’s brother. No squaws had
-come over, and only a few of the warriors sat together;
-the majority were scattered, well armed, wearing two
-cartridge-belts, and prepared to fight and flee, if an
-attempt were made to seize them.</p>
-
-<p>Everybody except the general, Chihuahua and
-Micky appeared to be rather on edge. And no wonder.
-After all these months of worry and work, growing
-old chasing Geronimo on the heart-breaking trails,
-was this the end at last? Jimmie suddenly felt old,
-himself. How far had he trailed the fighting Apaches?
-Two thousand miles, at least!</p>
-
-<p>“Ka-e-ten-na says the Chiricahua will shoot if we
-try to hold Geronimo,” whispered Micky. “They
-made Maus promise that the Gray Fox would bring no
-soldiers down. That is bad.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the scouts will fight.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, they will fight,” nodded Micky.</p>
-
-<p>Geronimo was speaking, as he sat twisting a strand
-of buckskin in his nervous hands.</p>
-
-<p>“Everybody on the reservation was unfriendly to
-me. Chato and Micky Free stirred up trouble against
-me; they lied about me to the soldier-captain Davis, and
-he spread the lies. The papers told bad stories on me.
-They said that I ought to be arrested and hung up.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_290"></a>[290]</span>
-I don’t want any more of that talk. <a href="#i_290">Why don’t you
-speak to me and look with a pleasant face?</a> What is
-the matter, that you don’t smile on me? Why did you
-give orders to have me put in prison? I had tried
-to do right. Remember that I sent you word I would
-come from a long distance to speak with you here, and
-you see me now. If I thought bad or had done bad,
-I would not have come.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_290">
- <img src="images/i_290.jpg" alt="" title="" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p class="noic"><a href="#Page_290">“WHY DON’T YOU SPEAK TO ME AND LOOK WITH A PLEASANT FACE?”</a></p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>General Crook made no bones about answering.</p>
-
-<p>“I gave no orders to have you arrested. If you
-left the reservation because you were afraid, why did
-you sneak all over the country killing innocent people
-and stealing horses? Your story is all bosh. You sent
-up your people to kill Chato and Lieutenant Davis.
-Everything that you did on the reservation is known.
-There is no use in your trying to talk nonsense. I am
-no child. You promised me in the Sierra Madre that
-the peace should last, and you have lied. How do I
-know but that you are lying now, when you say you
-want peace? Have I ever lied to you? You must
-make up your mind either to surrender or to stay out on
-the warpath. If you stay out, I will keep after you and
-kill every one of you if it takes fifty years. I have
-said all I have to say. You had better think, to-night,
-and let me know in the morning.”</p>
-
-<p>The perspiration had burst out upon Geronimo’s
-face and hands. He would have said more, but the
-general arose, as signal that the talk was at an end.
-Only the two photographers were happy; they had taken
-a number of excellent pictures.</p>
-
-<p>This evening and night the two camps remained<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_291"></a>[291]</span>
-apart. In the Maus camp there was a great deal of discussion.
-Nobody might yet foresee what the Chiricahuas
-under Geronimo would do.</p>
-
-<p>“A thousand troops couldn’t get those bronc’s,
-where they’re located,” asserted Tom Moore. “They’d
-scatter like quail and be off into Mexico, at first sign of
-trouble. Anyhow, Maus agreed not to attack ’em, and
-while the general mightn’t have made any such agreement
-himself, he’s bound to stick by it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You and I will go over in the morning, Cheemie,”
-said Micky. “We will see for ourselves.”</p>
-
-<p>So they did. Major Bourke, Mayor Strauss, of
-Tucson, Pack-master Carlisle and others likewise went.
-It was indeed a strong position, well up among broken
-lava, with every jacal or hut defended by a cactus fence.
-A number of jagged rifts had to be crossed, and there
-were ravines leading away.</p>
-
-<p>No army officer, Major Bourke alleged, could have
-chosen a better situation or made more of it.</p>
-
-<p>Geronimo and his warriors were in council, and
-could not be approached. None of the Chiricahuas
-would talk; even Nah-da-ste declined to speak to Jimmie,
-but hid her face.</p>
-
-<p>Young Charley Roberts was the only visitor who
-could attract attention. The little girls followed him
-around, giggling, and passing compliments upon him.
-It reminded Jimmie of the time, long ago, when he had
-been giggled at in a Chiricahua camp.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing happened this day. Matters looked bad.
-In the morning Alchisé and Ka-e-ten-na came into
-camp. They had been spending their time in the Geronimo<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_292"></a>[292]</span>
-camp, to spread peace talk. Ka-e-ten-na was to
-tell the Chiricahuas of the sights that he had seen in
-San Francisco.</p>
-
-<p>They brought word from Chihuahua that whether
-Geronimo decided to surrender, or not, he himself
-would appear with all his band at noon, and do as
-“Cluke” said to do.</p>
-
-<p>At noon Chihuahua appeared. Geronimo and Nah-che
-and old Nana were with him. Geronimo’s face
-was blackened, as sign of mourning. The general
-talked with them, again, at the same place as before.</p>
-
-<p>“I am glad to see you, Cluke,” said Chihuahua.
-“I am now in your hands. You may do as you please
-with me. I am going over to stay with you in your
-camp.”</p>
-
-<p>“What have you decided?” asked the general, of
-Geronimo.</p>
-
-<p>“My people are afraid to go with you, for fear
-they will be punished. They do not want to be punished.
-We will go with you if we are allowed to
-live as before.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is all nonsense,” retorted the general. “I do
-not trust you any more. If you go with me, you must
-understand that you all will be put in the guard-house
-until Washington tells me what to do with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“How long will we be kept prisoners?”</p>
-
-<p>“You will be sent away, like Ka-e-ten-na was.
-That cured Ka-e-ten-na and made him good. It will
-make you good, because it will change your hearts. You
-say that lies are told about you on the reservation. If
-you are sent away, there will be no lies.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_293"></a>[293]</span></p>
-
-<p>“How long will we be sent away?”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe one year, maybe two years. You may
-take your families with you. Only Nana shall stay; he
-is too old to make trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>Geronimo shifted uneasily, and gazed appealingly
-around.</p>
-
-<p>“I will talk no more,” stated the general. “To-morrow
-morning I shall go back to Fort Bowie. If
-you decide to stay away, you will not be safe anywhere
-in Mexico. You cannot hide from me. This you
-already know.”</p>
-
-<p>“We will march to Fort Bowie, and there you may
-send us away, as you say,” spoke Geronimo desperately.
-“But we must march freely, by ourselves. I
-cannot make my men give up their guns, until they are
-in the fort where you will protect them. There are
-bad people along the way who would kill us. Your
-young soldier-captains might not be able to control
-their scouts, and the scouts would kill us. I want you
-to promise that we shall not be made prisoners until
-we arrive at Fort Bowie. Otherwise, I cannot persuade
-my men, and there will be war.”</p>
-
-<p>The general eyed him fixedly.</p>
-
-<p>“It is agreed,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>Geronimo was much relieved, and shook hands
-with him.</p>
-
-<p>“Geronimo speaks the truth,” declared Ka-e-ten-na,
-that evening. “If the general had not agreed, there
-would have been war. The Chiricahua were ready to
-fight and run away. But they would rather be put in
-prison a little while, and see such things as I have seen.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_294"></a>[294]</span></p>
-
-<p>Orders were given to be prepared to move in the
-morning. The general was going on ahead, to Bowie,
-and get instructions from General Sheridan at Washington;
-Lieutenant Maus was to follow, with the
-Chiricahuas.</p>
-
-<p>That night there seemed to be a wild time in the
-Geronimo camp, half a mile distant. Gun shots could
-be heard, and shrill whoops. During breakfast in the
-morning there were many rumors. Jimmie got the
-truth from Micky.</p>
-
-<p>“Much whiskey in the Chiricahua camp,” said
-Micky, with shrug of shoulders. “Ranch man send it
-in, and sell at one dollar a gallon. Geronimo drunk,
-many others drunk.”</p>
-
-<p>The general, when he rode by, looked worried.
-But he had to reach the telegraph at Fort Bowie as
-quickly as possible. It was understood that he had
-ordered Lieutenant Maus to destroy all the whiskey that
-could be found, and to hasten on with the Chiricahuas.</p>
-
-<p>So the camp was broken, and moved on the back
-trail, with directions to halt at ten miles, and wait.
-The lieutenant stayed behind with Concepcion the interpreter,
-to wait for the Geronimo camp to move.</p>
-
-<p>In the afternoon he arrived at the halting place.
-The Chiricahuas were following, but Geronimo had
-told him not to hang around or he might be killed by
-some of the drunken warriors.</p>
-
-<p>Chihuahua sent for Chief of Scouts Horn, and
-asked that he and all his band be put under guard.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t like that, Cheemie,” uttered Micky.
-“When Chihuahua does such a thing, he sees ahead.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_295"></a>[295]</span>
-He is afraid of what will happen if his people get the
-whiskey, too.”</p>
-
-<p>Geronimo made camp again about half a mile away,
-as before, and in a strong position. Everybody was
-ordered to keep away from it, so as to avoid trouble;
-but the lieutenant took Ka-e-ten-na and rode over.</p>
-
-<p>When they returned, Ka-e-ten-na reported that
-Geronimo was still drunk, and he and another chief
-were riding around on one mule; and that Nah-che
-had shot his wife.</p>
-
-<p>Now the ranch which had supplied the whiskey
-was near. Lieutenant Shipp took a detail over, to
-search the ranch and destroy the liquor.</p>
-
-<p>Tom Moore, the old frontiersman, swore vigorously.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s sure a dog-gone shame that for a few dirty
-dollars any man will throw the whole country open
-again to an Injun war. For that’s what it means, if
-those Chiricahuas lose their heads. When whiskey
-gets in, the brains go out.”</p>
-
-<p>Concepcion said that the whiskey seller had been
-filling the Chiricahuas with lies also: he had told them
-that they were to be killed as soon as they reached
-Bowie. He did this, so that they would stay out and
-he might sell them more whiskey.</p>
-
-<p>However, the night quieted the Chiricahuas in their
-camp. The lieutenant sent over, once, to investigate.
-The warriors were said to be sleeping.</p>
-
-<p>But in the morning, which was March 29, while
-Jimmie was pulling on his boots before breakfast, he
-saw the lieutenant dash away, with Ka-e-ten-na, in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_296"></a>[296]</span>
-direction of Geronimo’s camp. In about an hour they
-returned. The lieutenant stopped here where Tom
-Moore was overseeing the unpacking of the pack-trains,
-for the day’s march. He looked oddly haggard, but
-spoke with a hard, quick accent.</p>
-
-<p>“Geronimo, Nah-che and twenty men and thirteen
-women are gone. I’ll require a pack-train and several
-of your best men, to follow them with. You can report
-to Shipp. Faison will go on to Bowie.”</p>
-
-<p>Tom’s jaw dropped, and for a moment he acted
-as if too full for utterance. This, then, was the outcome
-of all those other bitter pursuits—poor Captain
-Crawford’s death—the general’s painstaking methods!</p>
-
-<p>“That dog-gone liquor!” he growled.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie sprang forward, and saluted the lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d like to go with the packs, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“You would? Why? You’ve been once, and you
-know what it means?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’d like to try again, sir. I won’t get
-enough till Geronimo gets enough.”</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant’s face lighted up.</p>
-
-<p>“If that’s your spirit, there’s no man I’d rather
-have with me. So you and Moore settle it between
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>And he galloped on.</p>
-
-<p>“Gosh, but this will break the general all up,”
-muttered Tom. “All right,” he added. “You get
-your outfit together and go along with Maus.”</p>
-
-<p>Chihuahua, Nana, and sixty or seventy others of
-the Chiricahuas still remained. Lieutenant Faison was
-to take them on, up to Bowie. Lieutenant Maus and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_297"></a>[297]</span>
-Lieutenant Shipp, with a company of the scouts and
-Jimmie’s pack-train, set out in the opposite direction.</p>
-
-<p>But it was no use. Geronimo had been thoroughly
-frightened by the stories told him. Now his party
-traveled afoot, over country where horses and mules
-could not travel. In three days the trails had split and
-had become impossible, and the scouts had to give up.</p>
-
-<p>So the command turned back. When they arrived
-at Bowie on April 3, this 1886, they learned that General
-Crook was no longer the commander in Arizona!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_298"></a>[298]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXVIII">XXVIII<br />
-<small>THE END OF THE TRAIL</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>That was a stunning blow to the Crook men.
-The general had been relieved of his command on
-April 2, at his own request.</p>
-
-<p>As far as might be learned by the rank and file,
-and the pack service, the President had not approved
-of the terms upon which Geronimo had surrendered;
-but by this time Geronimo had fled again. Then the
-dispatches from General Sheridan, commanding the
-Army, to General Crook, had somewhat questioned the
-wisdom of the general’s methods in depending upon
-the scouts, and suggested that he now make no more
-campaigns for a while, but try to protect the border
-with his troops.</p>
-
-<p>The general had replied that he still believed his
-methods were the best, under the conditions; that he
-had been using the troops, to protect the border; and
-that it had been impossible to hold Geronimo as a
-prisoner and not break the promise given him.</p>
-
-<p>To attack Geronimo in camp had likewise been impossible
-of success.</p>
-
-<p>“It may be, however, that I am too much wedded
-to my own views in this matter,” the general was said
-to have added, “and as I have spent nearly eight years
-of the hardest work of my life in this department, I
-respectfully request that I may now be relieved from its
-command.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_299"></a>[299]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Apache medicine-men at Fort Bowie made
-more medicine, and insisted that if Ka-e-ten-na and
-other runners were sent after Geronimo, as soon as
-the whiskey left him he would keep his word and
-come in peaceably.</p>
-
-<p>This was not done, because Brigadier General
-Nelson A. Miles, of the Fifth Infantry, commanding
-at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, had been directed to
-take command of the Department of Arizona. This
-of course meant new methods, and a shake-up all
-’round.</p>
-
-<p>Not knowing exactly what was ahead, Jimmie left
-the pack service and became a railroad telegraph
-operator.</p>
-
-<p>At any rate, General Crook had not failed. Eighty
-of the Chiricahuas, including Chihuahua and Nana,
-had been brought in. Only Geronimo and Nah-che
-and their twenty men and boys and thirteen women,
-were out. And the Mangas squad of six men, who
-had not been with Geronimo for almost a year.</p>
-
-<p>General Miles arrived at Fort Bowie on April 12.
-He immediately organized things for a campaign with
-the regular troops. The War Department did not
-favor trusting in the scouts as fighters—especially in
-the scouts from the White Mountain and Chiricahua
-friendlies.</p>
-
-<p>The General Crook scouts had been discharged,
-and so were many of the interpreters. Tom Horn left.
-Yes, there was a decided shake-up.</p>
-
-<p>But the new general seemed to be a good man, all
-right, and the Arizona newspapers put much faith in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_300"></a>[300]</span>
-him. He extended the heliograph service, until a
-perfect network of stations had been established; and
-he injected fresh vim into the officers.</p>
-
-<p>Suspecting that they were to get no terms at all,
-now, and to show that they despised the soldiers, Geronimo
-and Nah-che went thoroughly bad. Perhaps
-General Crook’s methods might have been better; perhaps
-not; but toward the last of April Geronimo and
-Nah-che led their few warriors straight up past Tucson
-itself; the troops had not been able to protect the
-border, and Nah-che penetrated clear to Fort Apache.</p>
-
-<p>They lost only one man. He was a deserter, and
-volunteered to follow them, as “Peaches” had. The
-troops did heroic work. Lieutenant Lloyd Brett, of the
-Second Cavalry, marched twenty-six hours without a
-halt; his troopers were forced to drink their own
-blood, to quench thirst.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Henry W. Lawton, of the Fourth Cavalry,
-and Captain Leonard Wood, assistant surgeon in the
-army, were selected to push the pursuit through Mexico,
-with a picked command of the Eighth Infantry and
-Fourth and Tenth Cavalry. Surgeon Wood was instructed
-to see if the men could not outdo even the
-Apaches.</p>
-
-<p>Tom Horn went in charge of some Tonto and
-Yuma trailers. The Lawton and Wood column made
-terrific marches; altogether, fourteen hundred miles.
-On July 13, three hundred miles into Mexico they surprised
-the Geronimo and Nah-che camp, as Captain
-Crawford had surprised it, the January before.</p>
-
-<p>Nah-che had been wounded; he and Geronimo and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_301"></a>[301]</span>
-their band barely escaped. They sent word to a Mexican
-woman (the wife of the interpreter José Maria
-Yaskes) that they desired to surrender.</p>
-
-<p>It was a Crook man, after all—Lieutenant George
-Gatewood—who performed the bravest act; and a
-General Crook method that clinched the surrender.
-From Fort Apache the lieutenant, under orders by
-General Miles, traveled down with only Kah-yee-ta, the
-deserter, and Martinez, another Chiricahua, to find the
-hostile camp and talk with Geronimo. This was done.
-Lieutenant Gatewood’s life hung by a hair; but his
-talk had effect, for in the morning Geronimo, Nah-che,
-and their warriors surrendered to Captain Lawton.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Gatewood had been instructed to offer
-them no terms whatsoever, except that their lives would
-be spared; the captain offered the same terms.</p>
-
-<p>Geronimo agreed to march along with the column,
-just as before. He and his men were still very suspicious,
-but he sent Porico up to General Miles as a
-pledge of good faith.</p>
-
-<p>The general met him at the border, on September 3.
-Geronimo did not know that while he had been out, all
-the Chiricahuas upon the reservation—Chato, Ka-e-ten-na,
-and all—had been moved, and were started for
-Florida.</p>
-
-<p>“This,” as Tom Moore explained to Jimmie, “took
-the sap out of him. He had no base of trouble, any
-more. Nah-che hadn’t come in with him, but he sent
-out after him, and the whole band—what there was left
-of them—were packed aboard the cars on September 8,
-and now they’re on their way, too. Let’s see—this is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_302"></a>[302]</span>
-1886. How long have you known Geronimo,
-anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sixteen years,” said Jimmie.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you’ll never see him again.”</p>
-
-<p>And Jimmie never did.</p>
-
-<p>He never saw General Crook again, either. The
-general had resumed command of the Department of
-the Platte; and as major-general was assigned to the
-command of the Division of the Missouri, with headquarters
-in Chicago.</p>
-
-<p>But he was not forgotten in Arizona. The Indians
-at the San Carlos and the Fort Apache reservations
-continued to hold him in their hearts. Jimmie happened
-to be at Fort Apache, on business, when in the
-spring of 1890 the news of the general’s death was
-received.</p>
-
-<p>The old men and women, and all the White Mountain
-scouts, “sat down in a great circle, let down their
-hair, bent their heads forward upon their bosoms, and
-wept and wailed like children.” And in the far north
-the Sioux also lamented the passing of their conqueror
-but friend, the Gray Fox.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="tnote">
-<p class="noi tntitle">Transcriber’s Notes:</p>
-
-<p class="smfont">Obvious printer’s, punctuation and spelling inaccuracies were
- silently corrected.</p>
-
-<p class="smfont">Archaic and variable spelling has been preserved.</p>
-
-<p class="smfont">Variations in hyphenation and compound words have been preserved.</p>
-</div>
-
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