Chapter 1

October 1868

Marching west, the Fifth Cavalry halted at Fort Hays only long enough to pick up its new chief of scouts along with orders from General Philip H. Sheridan, Department Commander. Cody and Donegan crawled into their saddles that mid-autumn morning as the sun blinked a bloody eyelid over the far rim of the earth. Both suffered a hangover of the worst variety: all liquor and no breakfast.

Staring at a mess-tin filled with fried salt-pork swimming in some greasy gravy and two slabs of hardtack was not the sort of thing to inspire a man’s appetite after a hard night punishing the bottle.

William F. Cody was a hard-drinker of a youngster but, more than that, he was a hard-worker as well.

“I was born in Scott County, Iowa,” Bill explained to the Irishman as they rode ahead of the cavalry column. “Not long afterward, my folks moved to Kansas Territory. I grew into a lanky, muscular youth who earned his pay not only as a wagon-master and a herder for freight outfits, but as a rider for the Pony Express, racing mail between Missouri and California.”

“I’ve heard some about that time out here,” Donegan replied. “Dangerous work, it was?”

Cody smiled the youthful smile that belied his early honing of survival skills. “Man watched himself on the circuit, he didn’t have no truck with the Injuns. But some riders, it seemed, always had themselves trouble on certain parts of the trail.”

“You?”

The smile faded somewhat as he rubbed at some gummy sleep in a red eye. “Yeah. Time or two I had some trouble myself. But the express was over before it really got fun, Seamus. The coming of the telegraph put us off that road.”

“You’re on a different trail now. Still be fun.”

The smile was back. “Damn right, Irishman! Except this time—instead of trying to run away from the Indians—my job is to find ’em for the army.”

“What’d you do when you quit riding for the express?”

“Not long after, news come to Kansas that some prospectors made strikes in the Colorado Rockies, so I made my way into the mountains.”

“Two years back, was myself heading up the Montana Road to Alder Gulch.”

“Didn’t make it, Seamus?”

He wagged his head. “Maybe someday I’ll quit this roaming and decide to go back to scratching at the ground for them yellow rocks make a man crazy.”

“They will make you crazy. I lost my poke, and a sutler’s grubstake as well … digging at the goddamned ground, moving sand at the bottom of four streams. None of it worked.”

“You came on back to Kansas?”

He nodded. “It’s all I knew—what with the war going on back East.”

“Good you didn’t have no part in that madness, Bill.”

“While you were busy killing Johnnies and waving that big saber of yours around, I was living day to day, running two trap-lines.”

“It feed you?”

“Enough. Sold my furs to buy coffee and flour, some ammunition and an extra blanket when needed. Whiskey when there was a little something left over.”

“You’re the kind I figure made sure he had something left over for whiskey most of the time.”

They laughed together, but briefly. It was too painful for their throbbing heads.

“Man after my own heart, Seamus Donegan.”

“Then why the divil you talk me into going along with you on this campaign, Bill Cody? We sure as hell aren’t marching toward any whiskey taverns with these sojurs. I figure it’s that major’s job back there to keep us and his boys in blue as far away from whiskey as he can for the next few weeks.”

“It is. This first day’s the worst for me, Seamus. You know what it’s like since you been in the saddle on campaign before—with Sharp Grover and Forsyth’s men.”

“Sun pulls the whiskey right out of a man, it does. Be some time before we get a chance to soak in it again, though. So, tell me, how’d you get started with the army?”

“Come the spring of 1867, I’d grown tired of the hand-to-mouth of it, and figured there was better money to be made doing what I could do best for the railroad pushing rails through Kansas.”

“What do you do best?”

“Kill buffalo.”

“Good shot?”

“Good enough that I got me a contract with the K.P. to feed their workers in western Kansas.”

“How much the Kansas Pacific pay you?”

“Five hundred.”

“A month?” he asked, his voice rising in wonder.

“Yes,” he answered, his head bobbing. “Good pay—’cause I was good at bringing in the meat.”

“How old were you when you started?”

“Let’s see…” he replied, tapping a fingertip against the blond bantam-tuft of hair hung from his lower lip. “Started just a year ago—when I was twenty-one.”

“You’re just a child, Bill Cody!”

“You’re claiming to be an old man yourself, Seamus Donegan?”

“Aye,” he sighed. “Time enough left for two lads like us to get into all kinds of trouble, don’t you think?”

“Always time enough, Irishman.”

*   *   *

The Department Commander’s orders for the Fifth Cavalry were to proceed north from the Kansas Pacific tracks, to make their way in the direction of Prairie Dog Creek where, reports from Major George Forsyth’s civilian scouts had it, the Cheyenne Dog Soldiers who’d been causing havoc among the settlements were to be found. The ground they crossed was tracked with the sign of several large encampments, all more than a month old. But recent buffalo sign lay anywhere a man cared to look, or take a step.

That first night out of Hays on the Saline River, the Virginia-born junior major for the regiment, William B. Royall, ordered Cody out to do what he did best.

“All right, Major. I’ll get your men some buffalo. Why don’t you send along a wagon or two with me to bring in the meat.”

Royall, who had served in the Mexican War, snorted at the youth. “Surely you jest, son! I’m not in the habit of sending out my wagons until I know there is something to be hauled in, Cody.” He waved his hand, dismissing the scout. “Go kill yourself some buffalo first—then I’ll dispatch the wagons.”

Cody turned away, head wagging as he fumed, yet he did as he was told. That afternoon he dropped six buffalo before he returned to request the wagons.

At the next day’s camp, one march north to the South Fork of the Solomon River and very much in the midst of buffalo country, Major Royall again requested Cody bring in some meat for the soldiers.

“I learned my lesson last time, Major. I won’t ask for use of your precious wagons,” Cody replied, winking at Donegan as if he had something up his buckskin sleeve.

The pair of scouts loped over the hills, leaving the bustling encampment of soldiers to build their fires and boil their evening coffee.

“There,” Seamus said minutes later, pointing ahead at a herd of black-humped beasts.

“Good,” Cody replied with a grin. “Now we’ll take a half-dozen back for the major.”

Donegan began to drag the big Henry rifle from the saddle scabbard under his right leg when Cody’s hand reached out and stopped him.

“Hold it right there, Seamus. We won’t need the guns just yet.”

“Won’t? What the divil—”

“We’re gonna run ’em back.”

“Run ’em?”

“That major’s so damned proud of his wagons,” Cody snarled. “I figure I’ll take these buffalo right to the sonuvabitch. We’re gonna run ’em!”

Bursting from a stand of trees, Cody left Donegan at the base of the hill when he put heels to his horse. Whooping lustily, every bit as loud as Cody, the Irishman hammered his horse into a gallop. Side by side they raced into the midst of the small herd, scattering the buffalo until Cody pointed his Spencer carbine at a small bunch.

“There!” Cody shouted. “We got ’em headed in the right direction.”

“Camp?”

“Right on their doorstep!”

With all the bluster of a prairie thunderstorm, the two scouts kept the seven buffalo lumbering before them, retracing their steps back to outskirts of the camp of the Fifth Cavalry. Only then did Cody bring his carbine up, drawing alongside a young bull. He dropped the animal on the edge of the wagon-yard as the teamsters and troopers began hollering, some laughing as those in the path dove for cover. Horses and mules snorted, tearing panic-filled at their picket-pins, wide-eyed and screeching.

Donegan dropped a cow at the picket-line where the civilian herders and teamsters had just started their fires.

Cody brought the next one down, near the first company camp. The huge beast tumbled hide over horns into the captain’s wall-tent, tearing up its stakes and flattening the poles into kindling wood.

One by one the rest of the seven went down in quick succession, until the camp was a swirl of dust and cursing men, screaming horses and mad confusion. Cody and Donegan reined up, bringing their mounts around just as Major Royall appeared out of the haze of dust, the low sun slanting through it like a golden window curtain.

He was sputtering, gesturing wildly, standing there potbellied in his yellow-striped britches held up by galluses over his sweat-stained gray pullover. “What’s the meaning of this, Irishman?”

“It wasn’t his idea, Major,” Cody said, looking at Donegan. “Donegan just come along ’cause I needed another good shot.”

“Your idea—making a mess of our camp like this?”

He looked around, both wrists crossed casually atop his horn. “Didn’t mean to make a mess of things. Thought we’d just as well not cause you any problem with the wagons. Seems you don’t like sending wagons with me when I go out to hunt. So, I figured it might be a good idea to have these buffalo provide their own transportation back to your camp, Major Royall.”

“Why, you—I ought to put you in irons for this, Cody!”

“Major Royall, Cody and I only brought the buffalo to you,” Donegan said, edging up to prevent things from going to blows. “This way there’s no wear and tear on government property. And no use of government employees—them soldiers of yours—to provide meat for the camp.”

The much-scarred Royall eyed them both, grinding his palms on the front of his britches as if he itched to be at them both, then thinking better of it. “You got the meat here. Now be at it, Cody.”

“Can I get some of your boys to help me butcher our supper, Major?” Cody asked.

“Captain Sweatman!”

“Yessir,” replied the young officer, loping up.

“Get a few squads of your men to help these two,” Royall growled. A longtime veteran of the Indian country, serving from the days of the Dragoons, Royall commanded respect among his soldiers. On his forehead and cheek he wore scars of Confederate steel. Frustrated, he waved at the crowd gathered four and five deep. “Rest of you—get this damned camp picked up! You, there—get those animals quieted!”

Royall turned on his heel, forcing his way through the crowd. Renewed hurraws and laughter swallowed up the two hunters.

“The major won’t forget this, Bill,” Donegan whispered as they eased out of their saddles.

Cody stared after the man disappearing through the shove of bodies. “Hope he doesn’t, Seamus. I suppose I’ve grown to hate pompous officers ’bout as bad as you do.”

“I’ve heard barracks-talk about Royall. In ’sixty-two at the battle of Hanover Court House, he took six major saber wounds in hand-to-hand combat with the Johnnies. His unit was cut off, surrounded—but he and a few more cut their way out and made it back to their regiment.”

Cody chewed on it a moment. “Maybe I was having too much fun with the man, eh?”

“Not that fun ain’t good, Bill. Just … might not do to tempt the man this early in the campaign. He’s the sort who’s all spit and polish.”

“Goes by the book?”

“Old Dragoon veteran like him—it’s all he knows, Bill.”

*   *   *

The autumn wind rattled the buffalo hides against the lodgepoles, reminding Tall Bull that it was the middle of the Moon of Scarlet Plums. Soon enough his people could expect the first snow. Their raiding would be over for another season.

Yet, many of the head men of this large band of Cheyenne Dog Soldiers had decided not to go the way of the other villages and bands who were presently going into winter camp. The warriors had come here tonight to discuss their many victories, fine plunder, scalps, and a handful of prisoners taken during their raids along the Saline and Solomon rivers. Even more, the blood among the Dog Soldiers beat hot and strong for continuing the pressure on the white man. Many voices were raised in favor of denying the soldiers any rest come the time of snow.

Tall Bull was their hero, no mistaking that. He had survived the attack of Colorado Volunteers on the Sand Creek camp of Black Kettle four winters before. Last summer he had seen again firsthand the treachery of General Hancock when soldiers surrounded a Cheyenne camp under a promise of peaceful negotiations, then attacked and destroyed the village after the Indians had sneaked away in the night.

Any soldiers looked the same to Tall Bull. They were his enemy.

He took great pride that he and his warriors did not follow the main leaders of the Cheyenne who had made peace with the white man and the army. To Tall Bull’s camp had come some of the most hardened veterans of plains warfare. Not only Cheyenne Dog Soldiers who’d taken a vow to die with honor fighting the soldiers, but Arapahos and even some renegade Sioux under Pawnee Killer.

Theirs was a fighting band. Women and children readied at a moment’s notice to tear down lodges and be on the march, to suffer the privations of the warpath as much as their men. Young, green warriors the Dog Soldiers were not.

These were the proven. The elite. And many times the most cruel. Among the Cheyenne, they were the hotamintanio, a select warrior society with its own magical rituals and omens, prayers, songs and taboos.

These were the Cheyenne who vowed to clear their land of the white man for all time.

These were the Dog Soldiers of Tall Bull.