35
Custer was convinced that no Indian would ever stand and fight. He felt that given the slightest chance to cut and run, the Indian would do just that. Custer was fully aware that he had to have a mighty victory to carry on his military career, for he was disliked intensely by many, which now included the President of the United States, Grant. Custer had taken along with him, against orders from Sherman, a friend of his, a civilian reporter, Mark Kellogg of the New York Herald. Kellogg was to chronicle Custer's victory against the Indians. It was a story he would never get to write.
On the morning of the 23rd, Custer started the march at about five o'clock in the morning, and he set a tough pace. The day turned hot and dry.
“Look,” Jamie said to Lonesome Charley. He pointed to the ground, rutted by the lodgepoles dragged by Indian horses. “I've seen hundreds of those.”
“Yeah,” Lonesome Charley agreed. “They's so many Injuns the grass has been et right down to the roots by their ponies. I'm tellin' you, Ol' Hoss, we're ridin' right straight into hell.”
The men rode on, and became more dismayed by the signs left by the Indians.
“This is not a series of camps we've been seeing,” Jamie said. “It's one damn huge camp.”
“You be right,” Lonesome Charley said. “Biggest damn Injun camp I ever saw. Hell, Ol' Hoss, it must stretch for
miles!”
“Maybe twelve or fifteen thousand Indians,” Jamie mused.
“Sweet Baby Jesus!” Lonesome Charley breathed in awe.
“Nonsense!” Custer said, after hearing Jamie's report. “Puff and piffle. What you're implying is that the Indians have banded together, probably under one leader.” He shook his head. “That has never happened and is not happening now.” He dismissed Jamie with a wave of his hand.
Jamie resisted an impulse to deck the man. Angered at the man's stubborn resistance to the truth, Jamie wheeled around and left the tent without another word.
“Well, ol' son, you tried,” Mitch Bouyer said to Jamie over coffee. “Up yonder a ways, I found a place where I figure the Indians held a sun dance. That tells me someone, a chief probably, had a vision of a great victory for the Indians. If that's so, there ain't gonna be no holdin' 'em back.”
“The Northern Cheyenne is in here, too,” Lonesome Charley said. “I wish I could get close enough to their camp to see if they're gonna do the Suicide Warrior's dance. That would really tell me somethin'.”
32
Mitch Bouyer smiled. “If the Northern Cheyenne is in on this, that means Custer is gonna be fightin' some of his relatives, in a manner of speakin', that is.”
The men chuckled. It was an open secret that Custer had a Cheyenne mistress, a very comely maiden named Me-o-tzi.
Jamie looked far off into the distance. “The valley of the Little Big Horn,” he finally said. “Near the bluffs. That's where they'll be.”
“Good water and graze,” Lonesome Charley said. “Yep. That's where we'll find them.”
“And God help us when we do,” Mitch said softly.
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May 24, 1876
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Custer had set a brutal pace that day, the column traveling just over thirty miles through very rough terrain before Custer called a halt. The troopers were as tired as their horses, which were exhausted.
When the Crow scouts Custer had sent out returned early that evening, Custer made several of the decisions that would ultimately cost him his life . . . and those decisions went against direct orders he had received from the commanding general of the campaign. (1) He ordered his men to prepare for a night march. (2) He was so far advanced past any point where Terry might believe him to be, he was miles out of position. (3) He was going to launch a surprise attack alone and thus claim the victory as his own.
Custer did not know that Sioux scouts were watching his troopers' every move. The only surprise would be Custer's. And that would not last long.
The column moved out just before midnight, the men cussing, the horses whinnying, kicking, and biting. The men were running into each other in the thick, choking dust, and the mules were braying to high heaven.
“This is a surprise attack?” Jamie said to Lonesome Charley.
“We're gonna be the only ones surprised,” the scout said, and then added with a dour smile, “Surprised if we wake up in Heaven instead of hell.”
Jamie chuckled. “You afraid of dying, Charley?”
“No. But I ain't 'specially lookin' forward to it neither.”
They marched for ten long miles before Custer called a halt for rest and water and food. At seven the next morning, they were back in the saddle and put ten more miles behind them.
Ahead of the column, on the eastern side of the Little Bighorn, on bluffs some one hundred feet high, just at dawn, Lieutenant Varnum and several scouts had just awakened from a short nap. They were stunned by what they saw: on a plain, some miles away, they could just make out huge herds of horsesâthousands and thousands of horses.
“Dear God in Heaven,” Varnum said, as much a prayer as an utterance.
He immediately sent word back to Custer.
Custer was awake and waiting word from Varnum. He had dressed casually that morning: a blue flannel shirt, buckskin britches tucked into high boots. He wore a white hat and carried two pistols. Custer mounted up on Vic and rode through the camp, giving orders to his officers.
They were on the march moments later.
By the time Custer reached Varnum's observation post, the day had turned scorchingly hot, and the sky was hazy. Custer was unable to see the thousands of horses (some place the number at twenty thousand), or the Indian encampment.
“It's the biggest Indian camp I ever seen,” Bouyer had told him.
Custer smiled. He did not care how big the Indian camp was. Only that it was there. And only that it was his. His moment of glory was at hand.
He mounted up and waved his cavalry forward, toward the Little Big Horn.
When Custer reached Ash Creek (later changed to Reno Creek), he halted the regiment.
It was blisteringly hot at noon on June 26, 1876.
Custer began dividing his command. He ordered one full company and squads of men from others to stay and guard the slow-moving pack train. He ordered Captain Frederick Benteen to take three companies and scout the area south of the valley.
Benteen smiled, thinking: Keeping me well out of the fight, eh, George. How typical of you.
Benteen mounted up and rode off.
Custer ordered Major Marcus Reno to take three companies of men and strike the Indian camp at the southern end. Custer told him that he, Custer, would take five companies and support Reno.
Reno and his men rode off.
“Go with him, Colonel MacCallister,” Custer said to Jamie, using Jamie's old rank.
Jamie nodded and swung in behind Reno's column. He whoaed Sundown for a moment to lift a hand in farewell to Lonesome Charley Reynolds and Mitch Bouyer. They both waved their farewells to Jamie.
Each man in the regiment of the 7th Cavalry carried one hundred and twenty-five rounds of ammunition. Custer left behind with the pack train some twenty-five thousand rounds of rifle and pistol ammunition.
Custer swung into the saddle and headed out, but he did not ride after Reno. Instead, he turned downstream, riding parallel to the river. His officers exchanged glances, wondering what in the hell he was doing.
As they drew ever closer to the massive Indian village, Mitch Bouyer said, “If we go in there, we won't come out.”
Custer gave him a sharp look. “Are you afraid, Mr. Bouyer? Have you turned coward on me?”
Mitch spat on the ground and refused to dignify that with a reply. So far as is known, that was the last exchange between Lt. Colonel George Armstrong Custer and scout Mitch Bouyer . . . at least on this earth. Although it is strongly suspected that just before Custer and his men were overwhelmed on a piece of ground that some would call Last Stand Hill, Bouyer gave Custer a thorough cussing; surely he was not alone in doing that.
Bloody Knife looked up at the sun and said goodbye to it, using sign language.
Jamie rode to the head of the column and said to Major Reno, “Custer's turned away from us.”
“What!”
“He's heading downstream.”
Reno considered the situation, cussed for a moment, then shrugged his shoulders. “We have our orders, Mr. MacCallister. We must follow them.”
“Indeed we must,” Jamie replied.
Lt. Varnum and most of the scouts rode up to join Reno's column.
“What the hell? . . .” Reno exclaimed.
“Bouyer sent us to join you,” one of the scouts said. “He said there is no point in all of us dying this day.”
“The man has uncommon good sense,” Jamie muttered. “But I wonder why he didn't save himself?”
Reno heard Jamie's comments but chose not to reply to them. He twisted in the saddle and looked back at the column, doing some quick arithmetic. He had about one hundred and thirty-five officers and men, and some fifteen or sixteen scouts.
Then, faintly, he heard the first shots of the day being fired.
“We're in it now,” Reno muttered, not knowing that the shots were not coming from Custer's men attacking the Indians, but from Indians attacking Custer from ambush.
“Let's water our horses up ahead,” Jamie suggested, pointing to the river. “And ourselves,” he added. “We might not get another chance.”
Horses watered and canteens filled, Reno and his men forded the river and regrouped on the other side, the Indian village about three miles away. Reno positioned his men in the classic cavalry line and lifted his arm. “Charge!” he shouted, and the long blue line galloped forward.
The village Reno and his pitifully small detachment were attacking was a Hunkpapa village, under the leadership of Chief Gall. The Indians started shouting as the cavalry charge became evident, and Crazy Horse, in another village, heard the shouting and leaped onto his pony, racing toward the sound of yelling and gunfire.
“Fall back, fall back to me!” Crazy Horse yelled from his pony. “Let them come on!”
The Indians began running back toward the village.
Reno saw the movement and picked up immediately on what the Indians were doing. He halted the charge.
“It's a trap!” he shouted. “Don't fall for it.”
Reno ordered his men to dismount; every fourth man would hold four horses, and the others would form a skirmish line. He had already lost some men; others had become scattered as their horses had panicked and tossed them to the ground. Some riders (many of whom were ill-trained new recruits) could not control their animals and could do little more than try to stay in the saddle until the horse wore itself out.
Reno had about eighty-five men left, including the scouts. He had no idea where Custer was. One end of the skirmish line was in the timber. The men were standing about eight feet apart, weapons at the ready.
Reno's charge was halted, and thus, technically, he had disobeyed Custer's orders. But had he gone on into the village, he and his men would have been slaughtered within seconds. It was a tough field decision to call, but Major Reno was right in making it.
“The woods!” Jamie called, and Reno nodded his head in agreement, having already made up his mind to take to the woods for better cover.
Now, all any man could do was think of survival.
Reno looked around for Custer. But he had no way of knowing that Custer was miles away, across the river, attacking the village.
“Goddammit!” Reno cussed.
Some of the newer men were wildly firing their rifles, even though the enemy was far out of range.
“Cease fire!” Reno yelled. “Goddammit, cease firing!”
As yet, Jamie had not fired a shot. There was nothing for him to shoot at.
Lonesome Charley Reynolds unexpectedly galloped into the fray, jumping from his horse. “Howdy,” he said to Jamie.
“Did you just happen by?” Jamie asked with a smile.
“I didn't have no choice in the matter, Ol' Hoss,” the scout replied calmly. “We're nearly surrounded. And them Injuns is almighty angered.”
“Do you blame them?”
“Cain't say as I do. You got any ideas, Ol' Hoss?”
“Get the hell out of here.”
Lonesome Charley pointed to the bluffs. “That's the onliest way we might take.”
Reno had already spotted that, and he ordered a retreat across the river and to the bluffs. It was a bad move, for the opposite bank was nearly ten feet high in spots, too high for a tired horse to make it up.
Reno turned to Bloody Knife just in time to witness through horrified eyes the scout taking a heavy caliber bullet in the center of his forehead. It blew his head apart, and Bloody Knife's prediction came to be: he had seen his last sunset. Reno's face and chest were splattered with the scout's blood and brains. For a few moments, Major Marcus Reno lost control of his emotions and was unable to function as a commanding officer.
Yelling, Reno put the spurs to his horse and galloped out of the timber, his men right behind him.
Reno would be condemned for leaving his wounded behind, but actually, he had no choice in the matterânone whatsoever. Had Reno stayed just one more minute in the timber, he and what was left of his command would have been wiped out to the last man, for he was facing a force of Indians that outnumbered him some twenty to one, and growing.
They galloped for about three-quarters of a mile, following the river, then began to ford the river, the Indians right behind them, so close they were pulling soldiers off their horses and smashing their brains out with war axes. The river turned red with blood.