From the hundreds of throats erupted war cries that rumbled across the river valley, causing a thousand birds to take wing from the nearby trees. In that instant thousands of hooves hammered the dry, flaky earth as the entire line burst into ragged motion. The noise of the charge fell deafening on Tall One’s ears. Never before had he heard anything like this: the hammering of the hooves like a hailstorm on a buffalo-hide lodge; the keening voices like the crying of a deadly wind.
Around him several of the horsemen went down as their ponies stumbled across a prairie-dog town. Horses cried out with the pain of broken legs, riders screeching as the rest careened over them in the new light shredded with streamers of gray dust.
Still the hundreds rode down on the earth lodges, gathering speed as they brought terror and death for the
But they had failed. Isatai’s prophecies had simply not come true: the white men were not asleep in their beds; the bullets from their big buffalo-killing guns did not turn to water; the shaman’s medicine did not protect warriors from dying at the hands of the
To the voices of the many Tall One added his own, crying out in rage as the first charge was turned back. Crying out in frustration at the failure of the famous Comanche wheel that flew in a fury around the earth lodges, hoping to grind down the enemy as it had for so many raiding seasons. Around and around they had circled in a tight red noose of screaming warriors, while the white man knocked horsemen from the backs of their ponies, even spilling many of the animals into the dusty meadow.
“Isatai lied to us!” shouted Antelope as he reined up beside Tall One at the far edge of the meadow where more and more of the warriors milled about, confused, frightened, and ultimately sucking on their deepest rage. Leaving their ponies and the Comanche wheel behind, more and more warriors chose to sprint forward on foot and fight behind the
There was a moment when it seemed the gray-eyed war chief was the only one of them still mounted. Alone he charged one of the earth lodges. But his pony too was thrown, shot by the powerful medicine of those big buffalo guns. Their bravest—this war chief—made to crawl for his life, forced to seek cover behind a stack of buffalo hides, slaughtered by the white man.
As the sun climbed ever higher toward its summer zenith, the battle became a long-distance waiting game. Out in the meadow after they had killed all the
Over and over he wished it did not. Hoping he could shut out what became more and more familiar—shut out what he wished was not a language he remembered. His eyes smarting, Tall One had grown angry with himself for crying. So instead he made himself angry at the
It had been so long since he had thought of her—remembering now the curve of her sunburned cheeks, the pretty nose beneath the shade of that bonnet brim as they worked up the weeds in the field.
Tall One gazed down at the soil where he knelt, the ground gone dry and thirsty. He scooped up a handful, allowing it to run through his fingers as the big bullets sang through the super-heated summer air of that meadow. And he remembered a time he had planted row upon row of seed in ground rich and dark, soil made fertile with the embrace of sun and the blessing of rain, where the old mules dragged the single-shovel plow behind them, turning the soil over in black, steamy curls where little Zeke would trundle behind, struggling beneath the huge shoulder bag filled with seed.
Zeke. He hadn’t remembered his brother’s name in … many seasons. And now these