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They camped that night on the open prairie, d.i.c.k and Albert sleeping in their blankets in the center of the savage group. It might have seemed to the ordinary observer that there was looseness and disorder about the camp, but d.i.c.k was experienced enough to know that all the Mendewahkantons were posted in the circle according to their clans, and that the delegates were distributed with them in places of honor.
d.i.c.k noticed, also, that no fires were built, and that the warriors had scrutinized the entire circle of the horizon with uncommon care. It could signify but one thing to him--white people, and perhaps white troops, were near. If so, he prayed that they were in sufficient force. He was awakened in the night by voices, and raising himself on his elbow he saw a group of men, at least a hundred in number, riding into the camp.
The latest arrivals were Sioux warriors, but of what tribe he could not tell. Yet it was always the Sioux who were coming, and it would have been obvious to the least observant that d.i.c.k's foreboding about a mighty movement was right. They were joined the next day by another detachment coming from the southwest, and rode on, full seven hundred warriors, every man armed with the white man's weapons, carbine or rifle and revolver.
"I pity any poor emigrants whom they may meet," thought d.i.c.k; but, fortunately, they met none. The swelling host continued its march a second day, a third, and a fourth through suns.h.i.+ny weather, increasing in warmth, and over country that changed but little. d.i.c.k and Albert saw Bright Sun only once or twice, but he had nothing to say to them. The others, too, maintained their impenetrable silence, although they never offered any ill treatment.
They were joined every day by bands of warriors, sometimes not more than two or three at a time, and again as many as twenty.
They came from all points of the compa.s.s, but, so far as d.i.c.k and Albert could see, little was said on their arrival. Everything was understood. They came as if in answer to a call, took their places without ado in the savage army, and rode silently on.
d.i.c.k saw a great will at work, and with it a great discipline. A master mind had provided for all things.
"Al," he said to his brother, "you and I are not in the plan at all. We've been out of the world two years, and we're just that many years behind."
"I know it's 1876," said Albert, with some confidence, but he added in confession: "I've no idea what month it is, although it must be somewhere near summer."
"About the beginning of June, I should think," said d.i.c.k.
An hour after this little talk the country became more hilly, and presently they saw trees and high bluffs to their right. Both boys understood the signs. They were approaching a river, and possibly their destination.
"I've a feeling," said d.i.c.k, "that we're going to stop now. The warriors look as if they were getting ready for a rest."
He was quickly confirmed in his opinion by the appearance of mounted Indians galloping to meet them. These warriors showed no signs of fatigue or a long march, and it was now obvious that a village was near.
The new band greeted the force of Bright Sun with joy, and the stern silence was relaxed. There was much chattering and laughing, much asking and answering of questions, and soon Indian women and Indian boys, with little bows and arrows, came over the bluffs, and joining the great mounted force, followed on its flanks.
d.i.c.k and Albert were on ponies near the head of the column, and their troubles and dangers were forgotten in their eager interest in what they were about to see. The feeling that a first step in a great plan was accomplished was in the air. They could see it in the cessation of the Sioux reserve and in the joyous manner of the warriors, as well as the women. Even the ponies picked up their heads, as if they, too, saw rest.
The procession wound round the base of a hill, and then each boy uttered a little gasp. Before them lay a valley, about a mile wide, down the center of which flowed a shallow yellow river fringed with trees and also with undergrowth, very dense in places. But it was neither the river nor trees that had drawn the little gasps from the two boys, it was an Indian village, or rather a great town, extending as far as they could see--and they saw far--on either side of the stream. There were hundreds and hundreds of lodges, and a vast scene of animated and varied life. Warriors, squaws, children, and dogs moved about; smoke rose from scores and scores of fires, and on gra.s.sy meadows grazed ponies, thousands in number.
"Why, I didn't think there was so big an Indian town in all the West!" exclaimed Albert.
"Nor did I," said d.i.c.k gravely, "and I'm thinking, Al, that it's gathered here for a purpose. It must be made up of all the Sioux tribes."
Albert nodded. He knew the thought in d.i.c.k's mind, and he believed it to be correct.
Chance so had it that Bright Sun at this moment rode near them and heard their words. d.i.c.k of late had surmised shrewdly that Bright Sun treated them well, not alone for the sake of their value as hostages, but for a reason personal to himself. He had been a.s.sociated long with white people in their schools, but he was at heart and in fact a great Sioux chief; he had felt the white man's a.s.sumption of racial superiority, and he would have these two with the white faces witness some great triumph that he intended to achieve over these same white people. This belief was growing on d.i.c.k, and it received more confirmation when Bright Sun said:
"You see that the Sioux nation has many warriors and is mighty."
"I see that it is so, Bright Sun," replied d.i.c.k frankly. "I did not know you were so numerous and so powerful; but bear in mind, Bright Sun, that no matter how many the Sioux may be, the white men are like the leaves of the tree--thousands, tens of thousands may fall, and yet only their own kin miss them."
But Bright Sun shook his head.
"What you say is true," he said, "because I have seen and I know; but they are not here. The mountains, the plains, the wilderness keep them back."
d.i.c.k forebore a retort, because he felt that he owed Bright Sun something, and the chief seemed to take it for granted that he was silenced by logic.
"This is the Little Big Horn River," Bright Sun said, "and you behold now in this village, which extends five miles on either side of it, the Seven Fireplaces of the Sioux. All tribes are gathered here."
"And it is you who have gathered them," said d.i.c.k. He was looking straight into Bright Sun's eyes as he spoke, and he saw the pupils of the Sioux expand, in fact dilate, with a sudden overwhelming sense of power and triumph. d.i.c.k knew he had guessed aright, but the Sioux replied with restraint:
"If I have had some small part in the doing of it, I feel proud."
With that he left them, and d.i.c.k and Albert rode on into the valley of the river, in whatsoever direction their bridleless horses might carry them, although that direction was bound to be the one in which rode the group surrounding them.
Some of the squaws and boys, who caught sight of d.i.c.k and Albert among the warriors, began to shout and jeer, but a chief sternly bade them to be silent, and they slunk away, to the great relief of the two lads, who had little relish for such attention.
They were full in the valley now, and on one side of them was thick undergrowth that spread to the edge of the river. A few hundred yards father the undergrowth ceased, sand taking its place. All the warriors turned their ponies abruptly away from one particular stretch of sand, and d.i.c.k understood.
"It's a quicksand, Al," he said; "it would suck up pony, rider, and all."
They left the quicksand behind and entered the village, pa.s.sing among the groups of lodges. Here they realized more fully than on the hills the great extent of the Indian town. Its inhabitants seemed a myriad to d.i.c.k and Albert, so long used to silence and the lack of numbers.
"How many warriors do you suppose this place could turn out, d.i.c.k?" asked Albert.
"Five thousand, but that's only a guess. It doesn't look much like our own valley, does it, Al?"
"No, it doesn't," replied Albert with emphasis; "and I can tell you, d.i.c.k, I wish I was back there right now. I believe that's the finest valley the sun ever shone on."
"But we had to leave sometime or other," said d.i.c.k, "and how could we tell that we were going to run into anything like this?
But it's surely a big change for us."
"The biggest in the world."
The group in which they rode continued along the river about two miles, and then stopped at a point where both valley and village were widest. A young warrior, speaking crude English, roughly bade them dismount, and gladly they sprang from the ponies.
Albert fell over when he struck the ground, his legs were cramped so much by the long ride, but the circulation was soon restored, and he and d.i.c.k went without resistance to the lodge that was pointed out to them as their temporary home and prison.
It was a small lodge of poles leaning toward a common center at the top, there lashed together firmly with rawhide, and the whole covered with skins. It contained only two rude mats, two bowls of Sioux pottery, and a drinking gourd, but it was welcome to d.i.c.k and Albert, who wanted rest and at the same time security from the fierce old squaws and the equally fierce young boys.
They were glad enough to lie a while on the rush mats and rub their tired limbs. When they were fully rested they became very hungry.
"I wonder if they mean to starve us to death?" said Albert.
A negative answer was given in about ten minutes by two old squaws who appeared, bearing food, some venison, and more particularly wa-nsa, a favorite dish with the Sioux, a compound made of buffalo meat and wild cherries, which, after being dried, are pounded separately until they are very fine; then the two are pounded together for quite a while, after which the whole is stored in bladders, somewhat after the fas.h.i.+on of the white man's sausage.
"This isn't bad at all," said Albert when he bit into his portion. "Now, if we only had something good to drink."
Neither of the old squaws understood his words, but one of them answered his wish, nevertheless. She brought cherry-bark tea in abundance, which both found greatly to their liking and they ate and drank with deep content. A mental cheer was added also to their physical good feeling.
"Thanks, madam," said Albert, when one of the old squaws refilled the little earthen bowl from which he drank the cherry-bark tea.
"You are indeed kind. I did not expect to meet with such hospitality."
The Indian woman did not understand his words, but anybody could understand the boy's ingratiating smile. She smiled back at him.
"Be careful, Al, old man," said d.i.c.k with the utmost gravity.
"These old Indian women adopt children sometimes, or perhaps she will want to marry you. In fact, I think the latter is more likely, and you can't help yourself."
"Don't, d.i.c.k, don't!" said Albert imploringly. "I am willing to pay a high price for hospitality, but not that."