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On north from the four columns of Pumpkin Buttes, the pebbled bottom of the murky Powder River became a welcome sight that fourteenth day of August, after Connor’s soldiers had crossed so much dry country north of the North Platte. But while the general had his troops making camp on the level benchland between the sharp bluffs and the river, right where he would soon order Colonel J. H. Kidd and his 250 men to begin building his Fort Connor, Jonah Hook followed Sweete downstream.

Two miles from the soldier camp, the scout stopped, listening, eyes scanning the river bluffs. “Look there, Jonah. And remember it well.”

“What you want me to see?”

“Those circles, all over—where the dried grass been trompled down.”

“Who?” Then he caught himself. “Injuns.”

“Lodge circles, son. A fire pit in every one. And each circle likely means three warriors of fighting age. You remember that too.”

“Those little brush shelters there by the riverbank. That for the children to play in?”

“Hell, no,” he said, smiling, some of the nervous watchfulness gone from him. “Those the places where the young warriors sleep when they’re too old to stay with their families, but don’t have a squaw of their own yet. They lay brush and blankets over the top of those wickiups to keep out the rain.”

“How many warriors was here, Shad?”

He wagged his head. “More’n that little Irishman can cut his way through in a day—if they decide to ride down on us.”

Two days later, Jonah heard his name called and turned to find Sweete riding up to him, leading a second horse through the scattering of tents.

“C’mon, Jonah!” he huffed. “We’re going scouting.”

He didn’t need a second invitation. Hook took the reins and climbed aboard. “Where to?”

“Riding out with some of North’s Pawnee. North by west. See if we can scare up some sign.”

The Pawnee trackers were not long in doing just that.

By midmorning, they came across a fresh trail of some two dozen hostiles, including at least one pony dragging a travois. The Pawnee immediately grew excited. They halted and milled about a moment, talking excitedly among themselves, then dropped to the ground to tie up the tails of their ponies. Each one prepared himself for the coming fight by performing his personal medicine.

Hook watched, wide-eyed, as most stripped off their army tunics. Others adorned themselves, smearing paint on face and chest, tying feathers in hair and the manes of their ponies. When all was ready, the group leapt atop their ponies and rode on with a single wild cheer.

That cry sent a chill of anticipation down the Confederate’s spine, like a ghost from Platte Bridge Station.

Yet for the next four hours as they dogged that enemy trail, the entire Pawnee battalion led by Major Frank North fell eerily quiet.

“They’re moving fast,” Sweete whispered to Jonah.

“We’re gonna have to move faster, aren’t we?” He watched Shad nod. “Who are they, this bunch?”

“Can’t tell for sure. But my money would lay on them being Cheyenne. If I know any tribe, it’s the Shahiyena.”

“Shahiyena,” he said the word, rolling it around on his tongue the way a man would a quid of chew. “They’re the bunch you said killed Lieutenant Collins at the bridge.”

“Had to been. Sioux liked the man. Cheyenne still carrying a mean heart for what happened down on the Little Dried River last winter. They ain’t giving no quarter to no white man—and they ain’t expecting none either, Jonah.”

He wasn’t sure if it was the late-summer heat, or if it was the pinched look of determination on Shad’s face, but Hook sensed a rumble of apprehension troubling his bowels. He caught himself gazing about at the other riders, Pawnee all except for North and Sweete and himself, hoping these Indians would know how best to fight other Indians when the time came.

Trouble was, Jonah wasn’t reassured. It was one thing to march out to fight Indians with a group of soldiers around you and a mountain howitzer backing you up—not that it was anything like the heavy field artillery both sides battered one another with at Corinth and on up at Brice’s Crossroads. And it was an entirely different matter when you were riding out with Indians to fight Indians.

“You stay close,” Shad whispered, his great hand gripping Jonah’s arm in a sudden lock, then releasing the hold. “We’re going to a gallop, son.”

The words were barely out of the scout’s mouth when the trackers hammered their ponies into a run behind North and his Pawnee sergeant. Hook figured they had decided to eat up ground faster, chew away at the hostiles’ lead.

Steadily up, then down, the swales of the rough, rolling land bordering Powder River, the Pawnee tenaciously clung to the trail as the sun eased down behind Cloud Peak in the faraway Big Horns. Twilight came over the high land, and with it North halted his Pawnee. The trackers had a quick, animated discussion with their white commander. Sweete came back to find Jonah sitting in a small patch of grass, where he was watching their two horses graze.

“North’s sending about half of his bunch back.”

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Все книги серии Jonas Hook

Cry of the Hawk
Cry of the Hawk

Forced to serve as a Yankee after his capture at Pea Ridge, Confederate soldier Jonah Hook returns from the war to find his Missouri farm in shambles.From Publishers WeeklySet primarily on the high plains during the 1860s, this novel has the epic sweep of the frontier built into it. Unfortunately, Johnston (the Sons of the Plains trilogy) relies too much on a facile and overfamiliar style. Add to this the overly graphic descriptions of violence, and readers will recognize a genre that seems especially popular these days: the sensational western. The novel opens in the year 1908, with a newspaper reporter Nate Deidecker seeking out Jonah Hook, an aged scout, Indian fighter and buffalo hunter. Deidecker has been writing up firsthand accounts of the Old West and intends to add Hook's to his series. Hook readily agrees, and the narrative moves from its frame to its main canvas. Alas, Hook's story is also conveyed in the third person, thus depriving the reader of the storytelling aspect which, supposedly, Deidecker is privileged to hear. The plot concerns Hook's search for his family--abducted by a marauding band of Mormons--after he serves a tour of duty as a "galvanized" Union soldier (a captured Confederate who joined the Union Army to serve on the frontier). As we follow Hook's bloody adventures, however, the kidnapping becomes almost submerged and is only partially, and all too quickly, resolved in the end. Perhaps Johnston is planning a sequel; certainly the unsatisfying conclusion seems to point in that direction. 

Терри Конрад Джонстон

Вестерн, про индейцев

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