GATLING WOULD HAVE outdistanced the mounted militiamen if a bullet fired from far behind hadn’t killed his horse. The animal screamed and dropped and Gatling went flying over its head and came down hard on his shoulder, and if there had been rocks instead of soft ground and thick prairie grass he would have been killed or badly injured. His shoulder felt as if it had been struck full force with an ax handle, but he didn’t think anything was broken. He crawled behind the dead horse—there was no other cover—and loosened the leather thong behind the hammer of the long-barreled, single action Colt .45. He checked the loads, eared back the hammer, and waited for them to come.
His Winchester .44-40 was pinned to the ground by hundreds of pounds of dead horse, with no way to get at it. The militiamen would be expecting fast, accurate rifle fire, so they’d be cagey at first. No surer way to get killed than to ride full tilt at a man in cover armed with a good repeating rifle he knew how to use. His ammunition belt sagged with rifle bullets, but that wouldn’t do him any good. The rifle he couldn’t get to was a fine weapon, with a smooth lever action and a rear sight, and the long barrel made it more accurate than the carbine.
There were eight militiamen, and they rode up and dismounted out of rifle range and took cover in a shallow dip in the prairie. Using his binoculars, he saw them crawl up to the rim of the hollow, their rifles pushed out ahead of them. They were armed with British Army Lee-Medford rifles, good enough for military hardware except the bolt action had a tendency to be stiff.
They opened fire, but the range was long; a few bullets sang over Gatling’s head or plowed into dead horseflesh; the other bullets didn’t even come close. Gatling, however, knew their shooting would improve when they got closer and took their time. He didn’t shoot back because a revolver was useless at that range, and the moment they heard the sound of the Colt they would know he wasn’t armed with a rifle. Six loads in the .45 were all the pistol bullets he had left. He had used up his .45 shells fighting his way out of the botched ambush and in the running fight that had followed. The militiamen’s horses were farm animals, strong rather than fast, and he was ranging far ahead when the long shot killed his horse.
They kept up a heavy fire, but so far they hadn’t tried to circle around and shoot at him from behind. Gatling thought that was sensible. The dip in the prairie was the only cover they had; for miles in every direction the grassland looked as flat as a floor. Gatling knew the eight men out there were afraid of his rifle, and he hoped they’d go on being afraid for as long as possible. But he knew they would attack sooner or later. They were sure to try something.
The firing stopped, and he glassed their position without seeing anything. Obviously they were deciding what to do. Gatling knew he had killed their sergeant during the poorly planned ambush—the man had had stripes on his dark green uniform—so there would be arguments.
Minutes dragged by and nothing happened. Flat behind the dead horse, Gatling knew the charge would be murder, not gun-running, if they took him alive. He had killed two militiamen fighting his way out of the ambush, so he would be tried by a military court and shot.
It was March and it was bitterly cold; the sky was blackened by rolling cloud formations. Colonel Pritchett, head of the Maxim Company in New York, had sent him to Saskatchewan to deliver a large shipment of weapons to the métis, mixed-blood rebels led by Louis Riel, a former schoolteacher and current fanatic. The métis—hunters and trappers and farmers—had lived in Saskatchewan for many years and considered it their land, though they didn’t legally own it. Their claim hadn’t been challenged as long as the old Hudson’s Bay Company had owned Saskatchewan and adjoining territory. Now the Canadian Government owned it, and shortly after it took possession, the surveyors, engineers, road-builders, and officeholders moved in. The Hudson’s Bay Company had allowed the métis to live as free as the wind; the British Canadians had more “enlightened” ideas. Seeing their way of life threatened, the métis were now in open rebellion ...
The firing started again, and this time it was heavier than before. They were firing as fast as they could work the bolts of their rifles. Gatling raised the binoculars and saw two mounted men riding out of different ends of the hollow. Rifle fire became even heavier as the two men galloped forward, keeping away from the hail of lead the others laid down between them. Gatling kept his head down, but knew he’d have to shoot back or they’d ride over him.
They came recklessly, and maybe they thought he was unconscious or dead. The shooting stopped and they were riding at him from two sides, yelling as some men did when they were angry or afraid. Both men carried handguns because it was next to impossible to use a bolt-action rifle on the back of a galloping horse. They fired three or four shots and kept coming. The hoofs of their heavy mounts shook the ground and they were still yelling.
Gatling raised up and shot them out of the saddle. It took two bullets to kill the man on the left. As he fell his boot got tangled in the stirrup and he was dragged for about fifty yards until his body rolled away from the running horse. Three rounds were left in the Colt, and six militiamen.
Heavy fire came from their position. He had killed two men, but the sound of the handgun had given him away. Now they knew they didn’t have to face rifle fire; if he had a rifle, he would have used it. Suddenly the firing stopped and through the binoculars he saw them crawling out of the hollow and into the grass. It was hard to see them in the tall, waving prairie grass. The men he killed had dropped their pistols, but it would take too long to find them, if he found them. He stayed where he was. Now and then he caught a glimpse of a dark shape in the grass; that was when a man was too big to effectively hide himself; the others he couldn’t see at all. Nothing he could do but wait for them to get close enough to charge his position.
If he had been close to a belt of trees he would have made a run for it. But they would probably have brought him down with concentrated fire. The militia—farmers, blacksmiths, storekeepers, and the like—called up for emergency duty, were generally poor shots, but all it took was one bullet to kill or wound a man. And if they failed to kill him with rifle fire, they would mount up and ride him down, no matter how fast he ran. Still and all, if there had been thick timber to run to, he would have risked it.
He reached into the pocket of his lined canvas coat and took out the 40-shot .32-caliber pistol with the “horseshoe” magazine. That was what they called it, but it wasn’t shaped like a horseshoe; the magazine was a perfect half circle of metal; one end of it fitted into a slot below the muzzle, the other was inserted into the pistol in front of the firing pin. Pressure from a spring pushed the rounds forward. The first round was released by thumbing back the hammer. After the first round was chambered, the shooter could fire as fast as he liked. For once, Gatling was about to use a weapon he hadn’t test-fired.
Colonel Pritchett had given him the unusual weapon just before he’d taken a hansom cab to Grand Central Depot. “No time to see if it works,” the colonel had said. “You have to be on the train with the guns. Take it along. The men who invented it, two brothers, swear it works, but I doubt if Mr. Maxim will buy the patent from them. These two brothers have produced a small number of ‘horseshoe’ pistols, as they call them. Midwestern drollery. They sent this one to me. Test it when you can, but don’t let your life depend on it ...”
Gatling thumbed back the hammer and felt the first round click into the chamber. So far, so good. It might not work at all; inventors sent Pritchett weapons that could hardly be believed. But it was all he had to work with after he fired the last three rounds of .45 ammunition. The .32-caliber bullets in the “horseshoe” pistol weren’t man-stoppers, but it would make a difference if he could get off forty shots. The colonel said the spent shells were ejected up and forward.
It started to rain hard. The wind-driven downpour flattened the grass in seconds. Yelling like wild men, the six militia troopers sprang to their feet and charged, firing their rifles as they ran. But bolt-action rifles were best used from a stationary position, and if they had knelt down and fired in the British manner, they would have had a better chance of killing him. Just the same, one bullet tore through the crown of his hat, another burned the side of the neck.
Two men were out in front of the others; he killed them with three shots. He pulled the “horseshoe” pistol from his belt and thumbed the first round into the chamber. The .32-caliber bullet made a sharp, cracking sound in contrast to the boom-boom of the heavy military rifles. A man staggered and went down but got up again. Gatling fired fast and the odd pistol worked perfectly. It fired so fast he didn’t know how much ammunition he was using up. The pistol was an autoloader with a short hammer action and he was literally spraying them with lead. Three of them were down with bullets in many parts of their bodies. There was no more yelling; they were too surprised to yell. Gatling was just as surprised as they were.
He kept shooting until the firing pin clicked on empty. He didn’t have a spare magazine, but there was no need for it. All six men lay still, dead or dying. The wind blew away the gunpowder smoke and fumes. The barrel of the “horseshoe” pistol was hot and he put it in his pocket after it cooled a bit. He would have to find .32-caliber ammunition for the weapon Colonel Pritchett didn’t like and hadn’t tested. It had saved his life.
He shot the wounded men in the head with their own rifles, then he collected the rifles and roped them together. Using a militia horse and a rope he rolled over the dead horse so he could get at his rifle. He pulled his saddle loose and put it on the militia horse. The dark sky was low and the rain hadn’t let up. He looked at the dead men sprawled in the sodden grass. Sure as hell, this was a desolate place to die. There was nothing personal in the killing of these eight men. He had nothing against them, even though many militiamen were brutal Indian- and half-breed-haters who fought as much for loot as they did for their country.
He stripped the bandoliers from the bodies, tied the roped rifles to another horse, and headed back to the métis.