Return of Little Big Man (22 page)

Read Return of Little Big Man Online

Authors: Thomas Berger

BOOK: Return of Little Big Man
12.62Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

I generally kept out of Klaus’s way, for like everybody I have ever knowed who was hard to comprehend by reason of accent, speech impediment, or mouth wound, he loved to talk a lot. But this one evening after the boys was supposed to have gone to bed—though in my case, not being a German, I wasn’t strict about the exact schedule, so long as all lamps and candles was out, for safety from fire—I come down to have a smoke out front of the building, again for safety’s sake, for when sitting alone at the end of day with a pipe in my mouth I had acquired a tendency to nod, and a few times the lighted pipe had fell into my lap with a spray of sparks. After all, I was approaching the then substantial age of forty, which looking back was only a little more than a third of my life, but how was I to know that at the time?

So there I was, puffing away and watching the lightning bugs flash over the little patch of lawn that had finally took hold but had to be hand-watered frequently by the students, which seemed foolish to them because it wasn’t an edible crop and a near drought was always in progress thereabouts.

“Check,” says somebody in a harsh whisper behind me, and before turning I recognized it as my name as pronounced by Klaus Kappelhaus, which was useful because aside from the glowing bugs there wasn’t much light from the overcast sky and none from the dormitory behind him. (His version of my whole name was
Check Grobb.
)

“Just going in, Klaus,” says I, tapping out against an uplifted boot heel what remained of the tobacco embers.

“Check,” says Klaus, “iss any of your boyss shneeking into duh girlss’ side?” I am purposely making this easier to understand here than it was in reality. Believe me when I say each speech of his was a struggle for me.

“I don’t expect so, Klaus,” I tells him. “For not only do I keep my door open but I’m a real light sleeper.” And I adds, “Plus any such would have to go all the way downstairs past Charlevoix’s floor and then through yours, then get into the girls’ side without being detected by Bertha Wadleigh.” Who was the ground-floor guardian next door, and a hefty person who made even Klaus uncomfortable to be near, for she was husky enough to whip him in a fair fight.

“Check,” says Klaus, “duh girl got shits.”

I wondered why I had to hear that. “It ain’t like Mrs. Stevenson to cook bad food. It’s probably something they ate on their own, green apples maybe.”

“Check,” says Klaus, “she lets duh shits down from duh vindow.”

For a minute I still didn’t get it. Then: “You mean the girl drops tied-up sheets from a window?”

“Eggzackly! He climbs opp.”

“You seen him in the act?”

It was too dark to clearly see his expression, but I reckon he was shocked by the question. “No, I have not zeen dem fickling, and I don’t vantto!”

Klaus didn’t always get an American turn of speech and had therefore believed “act” meant more than my reference to climbing. I straightened him out on the matter and then asked if the sheets was lowered tonight.

“In duh beck.” He meant the back of the building, where he had just come from as I came out the front.

So we went through the ground-floor hallway and out the rear door. The night wasn’t any lighter back there, but with that trick of looking not directly at the object of your interest but rather just to the side of it, I could just make out a long twisted kind of rope made of knotted—they wasn’t sheets, which in fact the students were not given and, at least with my boys, wouldn’t of used even when the use was explained—blankets is what was tied end to end and hung from a window from the top floor boys’ quarters, dangling a couple feet from the ground. And over on the girls’ part, another such come down from a window on the second floor.

I had to get the young fellow, whoever he was, out of there before an alarm was raised that reached the Major, who was dead set against any kind of sexual activity for anybody and in the case of his students for all I knew would prescribe the firing squad. At the least he’d expel the offenders, who must then go home in shame, having disgraced their tribes in front of the whites. That’s sure how the Cheyenne would see it.

“I’ll shinny up,” I told Klaus. “God knows how long he’ll stay up there otherwise.” Before the climb, I squeezed a promise out of Klaus, which wasn’t easy on account of how he was about discipline, to let me handle the punishment of the miscreant my own way and not inform the Major or anybody else on the staff. I admit I made use of my boys’ rep for savagery, Klaus after all having fled the Old Country to avoid the warlike.

So I goes up the blanket-rope, which was the easiest part of this mission, and I clumb over the windowsill. By now my eyes was adjusted to the night and I could see some, dark as it was, but him I was looking for would of been easy to spot in any event, for he was grunting like a rutting animal. I won’t keep you in suspense any longer than I was, for I right away suspected it would be Wolf Coming Out, him having got his man and thus the admiration of them Indian girls, to which he was like a matinee idol would be for white maidens, and no male person can resist taking advantage of such an opportunity.

Now I go over to where he is covering the girl, who I can hardly discern, and in as low a voice as could be I announce myself and call him off.

But Wolf don’t stop what he’s about nor even change his rhythm, but just says, breathing quick, I should take as his gift any of the other girls in the room, for they all belong to the bravest warrior in the school, namely himself.

So I see strong measures are required, and I haul off and give him such a kick in his naked arse on that low cot that he goes sprawling across the girl, and then with a choke hold I drag him off and onto his feet, where he tries to wrestle, at which Cheyenne boys is pretty good, but they never understood the principle of fist-fighting, so it was easy enough to give him a right uppercut onto the glass jaw all Indians have (as opposed to their granite skulls), and he hits the floor dead to the world.

I pulled the makeshift rope up and inside, run it around his chest under the armpits, and tied it tight. Then I took off my belt and put it around his body to hold the wrists at hip-level, so his arms wouldn’t raise when he was lowered on the rope.

Then, using the leverage of the windowsill, I let him slowly down until he hung close to the ground, where Klaus could let him loose.

While I was occupied with this effort, my pants, too loose at the waist to stay up without a belt or galluses, began to move south, and when I straightened up and was preparing to slide down the rope now Wolf was clear, my trousers plunged to my ankles, right at the moment a delegation of female staff members entered the room, each carrying a lighted oil lamp and headed by the burly figure of Bertha Wadleigh. What happened was Dorothea Hupple, the staff monitor for this floor, had been woke up, behind a closed door, by the noise of Wolf’s rutting and, scared, had already went down to fetch the others before I arrived.

Now Wolf had been saved, but I was the one in trouble, all the more so because I never had no drawers on, owing to the fact that with the weather too hot for longjohns I hadn’t found the time yet to go into the drygoods shop in town and buy summer garments. I should of worn a Cheyenne-style breechcloth! So you can imagine what it looked like I had been up to, in that dormitory full of Indian girls, who had probably been awake all the time but only now begun to giggle and chatter.

Seeing me, Dorothea Hupple let out a scream and almost dropped her lamp, but big Bertha advanced on me like a mad bull, being about that size.

“Now, wait a minute,” I says, having pulled up my pants, “I can—”

But didn’t get no further before Bertha shifted her lamp to the left hand and slugged me in the jaw with her ham-sized right. I went down.

Standing over me, she glowers down in the lamplight. “Beastly little man! The Major will put you in prison for this.”

I roll-dodged the kick she sent my way with a big slippered foot, and quick got up before she could launch another, clutching the waist of my pants, which was threatening to fall again. She and them others was wearing what respectable women put on for bed in them days, which was no less modest or voluminous than the daytime garb, and they had dressing gowns on top of that, but aside from Bertha they all acted like I had caught
them
naked.

“Hold on,” I says to Bertha and included the rest. “This looks like what it isn’t.” But then I reflected that having gone to so much trouble to save Wolf, I could hardly implicate him now. “You just ask these girls if I touched any of them” was the best I could come up with, and it didn’t do much for my case, for Bertha allowed as how she had got there just in time to stop me from forcible rape.

That girl Wolf had been topping, who I got a look at finally, had pulled the skirt of her nightgown down and was pretending, alone in the room, to be fast asleep. I believe she was a Kiowa. Wolf wouldn’t have knowed a word of her language, but never had to.

Bertha says, “Dorothea, go run for the Major and tell him to bring his gun.”

“You want me shot?” I asks.

“You vile little runt,” Bertha says, thrusting her big square jaw my way, but I never thought about returning the punch, not wanting to break my hand. “You think this doesn’t matter, because they’re just Indian girls?”

I could of told her I once had a Cheyenne wife, and a baby what was half Indian blood, but when they’re that riled people don’t want to hear reasons why they shouldn’t be, so I never bothered. But I sure wasn’t going to wait around for more abuse, even if I was pretty certain the Major wouldn’t shoot me.

I straddled the windowsill and then went down that blanket-rope while holding my pants up with one hand and braking my descent with the other and my knees. I probably arrived at the ground before them ladies started downstairs.

Klaus was still there, along with a groggy Wolf Comes Out. I quickly explained to the former what had happened, and reclaimed my belt. I was in too much of a hurry to wait while Klaus reacted in his Dutch version of English, but got from Wolf a promise not to say anything about the evening’s events if asked, which he probably wouldn’t be.

“I’m sorry I had to hit you,” I told him. “I have to go now.”

Being an Indian, what he said in return was only “I hear you.” He knew if I wanted to say more, I would of done so. Since I didn’t, it wasn’t his place to bring it up.

I then departed that school in the dead of night, ending my term there under a cloud of disgrace. I tell you this: I wouldn’t have went away in that fashion, as if admitting my shame, but for one consideration. I would of stayed and defended myself, and without betraying Wolf Comes Out too, for I can be right inventive when the need arises, but I knew that one person would never believe a word of mine, and I don’t mean Bertha Wadleigh. I just couldn’t bear to face the disdain of Amanda Teasdale.

8. Buffalo Bill to the Rescue

N
OW I HAVE MADE
a little fun of Klaus Kappelhaus’s accent, but he was nice enough on my hasty escape from school to lend me such money as was in his pockets that night, which added to the small change in my own, was sufficient next morning to buy me a train ticket (I spent most of the night hiking to town) back to Dodge City, of which I had previously thought I seen my last, but at this time it was the only place where I had any connections, and I was out of a job and owned only the clothes I was wearing, though having reclaimed my belt at least my pants stayed up.

On reaching Dodge I went right to the Lone Star, where the evening’s entertainment was in full flower, if that’s the word, but I was real touched when Longhorn Lulu, one of the girls who was particular friends of mine, screams a greeting at me, climbing off some cowboy’s lap, where she was groping his all but unconscious person though for pocket-picking and not sexual reasons, and comes and gives me a great big hug.

“Jack, I be damn if it ain’t you. We heard the Indians got you, honey.”

I had a real warm feeling when I smelled the familiar cheap perfume from the harlots, mixed with the odors of even cheaper whiskey, worse cigars, and cowboy sweat, and tried to hear what she was saying amidst laughs and yells and hog-calling hollers and music from an orchestra which in time-honored style played the louder the less talented the musicians, for any good ones would of been over at the Comique or the Varieties. That the Lone Star, already going downhill when I had left some months before, was the nearest place I had to home might of been embarrassing, but not nearly so much as my last moments at the Indian school, so I was glad to be back and, throwing down a few on the house, getting the latest news, of which the first Lulu give me was that Belle, my other friend, sometimes called Squinty Belle from her habitual expression, and the one of the two which looked a lot older though wasn’t by much, had got married to some drummer, not the kind from a band but a commercial traveler who sold gewgaws, I don’t know what kind for neither did Lulu. When last heard from, the happy couple was in Denver, from where Belle had sent a hand-tinted postcard of a bouquet of flowers, much admired by Lulu, who claimed to be able to count at least a dozen colors, but with not much of a message: “We’re heer. Its reel hi. Yr pal, Bel.”

I returned the card to Lulu, who put it back under her clothes somewhere and from the same place out come a roll of money. “Say, Jack, I don’t want to hurt your feelings none, but you might find use for a dollar or so.”

“Do I look that down-and-out already?” I says, rubbing my day’s growth of whiskers. I was undoubtedly dirty from that latest train ride, from which I was still chewing the grit from them cinders blowing in. I was also hungry again. This train had stopped at eating times, but I never had enough cash left to buy aught but a cup of coffee and a hunk of stale dry bread at noon. I hastened to add, “But it’s real nice of you, Lulu, till I get my job back.” I accepted without looking what she give me, for she did it real private, our hands down at the side against the bar, so it wouldn’t look like I was a man being kept by a whore, which is as low as you can get.

Other books

Sacrifice by White, Wrath James
Infidelities by Kirsty Gunn
Job: A Comedy of Justice by Robert A Heinlein
The Portal (Novella) by S.E. Gilchrist
The Eden Inheritance by Janet Tanner
Christmas Lovers by Jan Springer
Edith and the Mysterious Stranger by Linda Weaver Clarke
Stay Up With Me by Tom Barbash