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For the rising of six suns now, the warriors had brought fear to the white men who laid the heavy iron tracks that carried the smoking horses. They had killed many of the workers and run off the rest who fled on their tiny machines that never strayed from the iron tracks. Then the young warriors set to work, bending rails and burning cross ties.

The real fun began two days later when a column of dark smoke appeared on the far horizon. The smoke kept shifting. Never staying in the same place on that bleak meeting of earth brown and sky blue.

Pawnee Killer stepped from the cross ties to the rail bed, and in so doing his moccasin brushed the great, heavy iron rail. It trembled, ever so slightly, but nonetheless trembled beneath his foot.

Cautiously, as one would approach a deadly snake, the Brule chief went to his knees, bending over the iron rail. Then gingerly laid his ear to it, as he would lay his ear on the ground to learn of the approach of enemies or buffalo. Many of the rest had halted their destruction, watching him in curious fascination.

“It hums!” he declared, grinning, raising his head.

Others now fell to their knees along both of the long rails, yelling for quiet, bickering, shoving for a place along the cross ties. Every one of them bent over, an ear on the rails.

They laughed and shouted their joy.

“The white man comes. It is his smoking horse that brings him!” shouted Pawnee Killer. “Let us welcome him!”

There were several white men on that train comprising a belching locomotive, wood tender, and a flatcar filled with armed white men. With a screech of brakes, a peculiar and new sound to Pawnee Killer’s ears, the hissing, smoking engine slowed atop its iron rails as the white men hollered out warning to one another, craning their necks from window holes in the smoking monster, spotting the torn-up tracks.

The great, heavy, belching iron horse did not slow soon enough.

It eased off its tracks like a huge, old herd bull, derailing into the burned cross timbers, striking the heated, bent rails with a loud, shrill scraping that raised the hairs on the back of Pawnee Killer’s neck. Then slowly, like that herd bull settling in a buffalo wallow, the engine sank off the edge of the roadbed and eased over as the white men scrambled off the flatbed car.

Pawnee Killer’s warriors swept into motion, and their own keening war cries rose to the hot, pale sky overhead.

The monstrous bulk of the engine lay on its side, hissing, spitting steam like winter’s gauze over a prairie river come the Moon of Seven Cold Nights. Inside the belly of the huge monster, a gurgling, roiling, spitting rumble belched and blew while the white men dug in behind the wreckage and made it known they had come to fight.

For better than two hours, Pawnee Killer’s warriors charged past the white men, burrowed like frightened field mice where the red-tailed hawks cannot get at them. A few of the warriors were winged, hit with a lucky shot when they did not drop on the far side of their ponies in time.

And when he called off the attack late that afternoon, Pawnee Killer did not even know if they had killed any of the white men who rode the iron monster now lying mute and motionless. As the war chief drew up and halted on a nearby hill, looking back this one last time, that steam engine now reminded him of some gelded stallion. Impotent and powerless.

Hopo!” he yelled to the others, who swirled around him, flush with victory, three carrying the scalps of the white men who did not make it to cover quickly enough at the beginning of the attack.

H’gun! H’gun!” they cheered him with the Lakota courage-word.

“It has been a good day—watching the smoking monster die!” he cried, shaking his bow at the end of his arm. “A good day for the white man to be reminded what will happen next time he follows the tracks of our people!”

The rains of April had come and gone as the central plains slipped into the warm days and cool nights of May.

And with them, Custer had led his eight companies into Fort Hays to resupply before he could even begin to consider resuming the chase of those hostile Cheyenne and Sioux who had so far successfully eluded him.

Upon their arrival at Hays, the word on every lip was talk of the destruction being made of the entire Smoky Hill Route. Stages attacked, a train derailed, and workers killed. Track crews had abandoned their roadbeds and were fleeing east to safety, demanding action from the army. The entire freight road to Denver City had been shut down. Nothing was moving, except the warrior bands who continued to harass the outlying forts.

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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

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