Mike and one of his cowhands, Rico Sandoval, entered the battlefield from the north. They followed the same route used by Chief Big Foot and his Miniconjou five days earlier. The remnants of the recent snowstorm clung to the wind-blown grassland along Wounded Knee Creek. Here and there, splotches of dark crimson ice decorated the ground where blood had pooled and frozen. Viewed from the rise of a hill, these seemed to Mike like strange, dark winter flowers trying to push through the icy crust. Beyond, he could see twenty or so scavengers, civilians and soldiers, scampering about, retrieving their pathetic trophies.
The cowmen eased their mounts down the hill and onto the flats where the Indian camp had been. Mule-drawn wagons creaked and rumbled past, loaded with the rigid bodies of Big Foot’s people. Men, women and children, left for dead during the three-day snowstorm, were frozen in the grotesque postures of their violent death.
They sat their mounts while the morbid caravan passed. Their horses stamped and snorted, clearly bothered. Mike pulled at his short goatee in contemplation, while Rico shook his head and whispered, “Madre de Dios!”
“Do you figure a horse can scent blood when it be froze?” Mike asked.
“I don’ know, Señor Mike. But my horse, he knows when things ain’t right.”
“Your horse must be pretty smart, ‘cause things ain’t right. These poor folk called this down on themselves. Got the whole territory up in arms. And for what, I ask you? All that dancin’ weren’t gonna bring back the buffalo, nor send white folk packin’ for the east. Damn their eyes! ’Tis a crime, a bleedin’ crime!”
A rider in a fur cap and a sheepskin coat rode down on them from a nearby hill. Reining up, he eyed them impatiently. “If you’re lookin’ for the boss, that’s Dawson. He’s up yonder at the pit.” He pointed in the direction of the hill to which the wagons were headed.
Mike nodded and raised a hand in greeting. “Thanks, but we’re just passin’ through. Goin’ to Pine Ridge.”
The young man winced in embarrassment. “Sorry, I figured you was contract hands, come late to the job. I’m Eb Jones, scout for the Eighth Cavalry.”
“We’re after sellin’ beef to Uncle Whiskers,” Mike said. Got a herd up on the Bad River. We would’ve been here sooner but for the storm.”
A sudden blast of frigid air hit them like a body blow, threatening to send their wide-brimmed hats rolling across the winterscape. Mike quickly clasped his John B. upon his crown with one hand. “Did they kill ‘em all?” he asked.
“Mostly. Four Hotchkiss cannon swept the camp like a spring-tooth harrow. Then they worked the ravine over yonder where the Injuns run for cover.” Jones indicated a weed-filled ditch immediately west of the Indian camp. “Lasted close to three hours. Somewheres near two hundred bodies, I reckon. Course, the freeze got ‘em that weren’t dead outright. It ain’t a pretty sight.”
Mike touched the brim of his hat. “Guess we’ll get on. So long, Jones.” He turned his mount and said, “Come on, Rico. Let’s take a look-see.”
They rode up the hillside past another wagonload of misfortunate ones. What they saw on reaching the pit was worse than Mike imagined. The contract laborers were unloading the wagons by pitching the rigid corpses into a long trench about five feet deep. Some of the bodies were naked. Workmen down in the trench tucked small children and infants into gaps in the heap as one might chink a cabin wall. A crowd of locals and bluecoats loitered about watching the proceedings.
Another body, a boy maybe ten years old, landed in the trench. His expression of distress was captured in frozen testimony to his final minutes. The workers picked up his awkwardly twisted body with gloved hands. He’d been shot in the back. Suddenly, Mike felt the gorge rising within him. His vision went bright. It was as if the light of a locomotive’s headlamp had blinded him. Everything was blurry. His heart raced, and he felt sure he was about to pass out. “Rico, let’s get out of here quick,” he said urgently, but quietly. Sightlessly gripping the horn of his saddle with both hands, he spurred his mare, and Rico led the way down to the Pine Ridge Road.