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    Dying Thunder


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      The author and publisher have provided this e-book to you for your personal use only. You may not make this e-book publicly available in any way. Copyright infringement is against the law. If you believe the copy of this e-book you are reading infringes on the author’s copyright, please notify the publisher at: us.macmillanusa.com/piracy.

      Contents

      Title Page

      Copyright Notice

      Dedication

      Maps

      Cast of Characters

      Prologue

      Chapter 1

      Chapter 2

      Chapter 3

      Chapter 4

      Chapter 5

      Chapter 6

      Chapter 7

      Chapter 8

      Chapter 9

      Chapter 10

      Chapter 11

      Chapter 12

      Chapter 13

      Chapter 14

      Chapter 15

      Chapter 16

      Chapter 17

      Chapter 18

      Chapter 19

      Chapter 20

      Chapter 21

      Chapter 22

      Chapter 23

      Chapter 24

      Chapter 25

      Chapter 26

      Chapter 27

      Chapter 28

      Chapter 29

      Chapter 30

      Chapter 31

      Chapter 32

      Chapter 33

      Chapter 34

      Chapter 35

      Chapter 36

      Chapter 37

      Chapter 38

      Chapter 39

      Chapter 40

      Chapter 41

      Chapter 42

      Epilogue

      The Plainsmen Series by Terry C. Johnston

      Critical Praise for Terry C. Johnston’s Plainsmen Series

      About the Author

      Copyright

      this novel is dedicated to

      Ed Benz,

      Director of the Hutchinson County Museum, who time and again helped make sense of the greatest Indian War on the southern plains

      Cast of Characters

      Seamus Donegan

      Civilians

      Rebecca Grover*

      Louis Abragon*

      Henry Lease

      Orlando A. “Brick” Bond

      John Fairchild

      John Miles—Cheyenne Agent at Darlington Agency

      Charley Armitage

      Jim Cator

      Fred Singer

      Prairie Dog Dave

      Joe Plummer

      Robert M. Wright

      Cheyenne Jack

      George Bellfield

      Richard Coke—Governor of Texas

      James Haworth—Kiowa/Comanche Agent

      J. Connell—Acting Agent, Anadarko

      William Shirley—government trader at Anadarko

      Jacob Sandford—wagon-master, Lyman wagon train

      James O’Neal—wagon-master, Mackenzie campaign

      Dr. J. J. Sturm

      Samantha Pike*

      Frank Brown

      A. C. “Charlie” Myers

      Mike McCabe

      Charley Rath

      Bob Cator

      Emanuel Dubbs

      Dirty Face Ed Jones

      Ned Sewell

      Anderson Moore

      Blue Billy

      Henry Lease

      Participants at Adobe Walls Fight

      James Langton

      Andy “Swede” Johnson

      Tom O’Keefe

      Hannah Olds

      Billy Ogg

      William Barclay “Bat” Masterson

      Hiram Watson

      James “Bermuda” Carlisle

      Fred Leonard

      Edward Trevor

      Charley Armitage

      Billy Tyler

      Mike McCabe

      “Frenchy”

      Jacob (Shorty) Scheidler

      George Eddy

      Sam Smith

      William Olds

      Billy Dixon

      Oscar Sheppard

      Mike Welch

      James McKinley

      James Hanrahan

      James Campbell

      Seth Hathaway

      “Dutch” Henry Born

      Billy “Old Man” Keeler

      Fred Myers

      Issac (Ike) Scheidler

      Juan

      Texas Rangers at Lost Valley Fight

      Major John B. Jones, Commanding, Texas Frontier Battalion

      Captain G. W. Stephens

      Ed Carnal

      George Moore

      Billy Glass

      Walter Robertson

      David Bailey

      Lieutenant Hiram Wilson

      Lee Corn

      Richard Wheeler

      William Lewis

      Mel Porter

      John Holmes

      Army

      General William T. Sherman

      General C. C. Augur

      Colonel John W. Davidson

      Lieutenant Colonel Thomas H. Neill

      Lieutenant Colonel George P. Buell

      Major T. M. Anderson

      Captain Eugene B. Beaumont

      Captain Tullis Tupper

      Captain Napoleon B. McLaughlin

      Captain Wyllys Lyman

      Captain Andrew Bennett

      Captain S. T. Norvell

      Lieutenant Frank West

      Lieutenant Granville Lewis

      Lieutenant William A. Thompson

      Lieutenant R. H. Pratt

      Sergeant Nicholas deArmond

      Sergeant Reuben Waller

      General Philip H. Sheridan

      Colonel Nelson A. Miles

      Colonel Ranald S. Mackenzie

      Major William R. Price

      Captain Peter Boehm

      Captain Louis H. Carpenter

      Captain T. A. Baldwin

      Captain Sebastian Gunther

      Captain William A. Rafferty

      Captain A. S. Keyes

      Lieutenant Frank Baldwin

      Lieutenant Henry Kingsbury

      Lieutenant H. W. Lawton

      Sergeant John B. Charlton

      Lone Tree Valley Massacre Civilians

      killed:

      Captain Oliver Frances Short

      Captain Abram Cutler

      Daniel Short

      James Shaw

      Allen Shaw

      Harry Jones

      John Keuchler

      survivors:

      Captain Luther A. Thrasher

      Harry Short

      S. B. Crist

      German Family Massacre

      John German

      Rebecca German

      Catherine German

      Joanna German

      Julia German

      Lydia German

      Stephen German

      Sophia German

      Adelaide German

      Soldiers at Buffalo Wallow Fight

      Sergeant Z. T. Woodall

      Private John Harrington

      Private Peter Rath

      Private George W. Smith

      Scouts and Interpreters

      Sharp Grover

      Amos Chapman

      Horace Jones

      William Schmalsle

      Henry W. Strong—Fort Richardson post guide

      Johnson (Lipan)

      Job (Tonkawa)

      Ben Clark

      Ira Wing

      Lem Wilson

      James Butler Hickok

      Henry (Tonkawa)

      Comanches

      Quanah Parker

      Tonarcy

      Paracoom (Bull Bear)

      Wild Horse

      Tabananica (Hears the Sunrise)

      He Bear

      Esa-Que (Wolf Tongue)

      Old Man Black Beard

      Horse Chief

      Sai-Yan (Rag Full of Holes)

      Cobay (Wild Mustang)

      Big Red Meat


      Cheevers

      Mow-way

      Isatai

      White Horse

      Ten Bears

      Timbo

      Horseback

      Quirts Quip

      Kiowas

      Lone Wolf

      Tauankia

      Mamay-day-te

      Mamanti (Swan)

      White Shield

      Dangerous Eagle

      Stumbling Bear

      Napawat

      Tsentonkee

      Loud Talker

      Yellow Wolf

      Poor Buffalo

      Red Otter

      Guitain

      Long Horn

      Big Bow

      Howling Wolf

      Big Tree

      Sun Boy

      White Cowbird

      Hunting Horse

      Lone Young Man

      Tehan—white captive

      Botalye

      Satanta

      Cheyenne

      Little Robe

      Sitting Medicine

      Whirlwind

      Red Moon

      Medicine Water

      Stone Eagle

      Old Man Otter Belt

      White Shield

      Hippy

      Buffalo Calf Woman (Mochi)

      Gray Eyes

      Cedar

      Long Back

      Black Horse

      Stone Calf

      White Shield

      Gray Beard

      White Horse

      Iron Shirt

      White Wolf

      Whirlwind

      Spots on the Feathers

      Elk Shoulder

      Yellow Horse

      Mad Wolf

      Red Eagle

      Wolf Robe

      Minimic

      Arapaho

      Yellow Horse

      Delaware

      Black Beaver

      * indicates a fictional character

      Prologue

      Moon of Deer Shedding Horns, 1873

      “There are only six of them, Quanah.”

      Quanah Parker nodded, still staring into the distance at the austere ocher and snow-covered ridges. The winter wind nuzzled his long, braided hair this way and that, gently clinking the silver conchos he had woven into that single, glossy queue that hung almost long enough to brush to the back of his war pony. The air was racy with the smell of late autumn’s decay.

      “You waited long enough to be sure there were no more inside?” Quanah asked the scout who had ridden back across the snow from the valley scooped out of the landscape southeast of where his Kwahadi warriors waited anxiously this bright, cold winter mid-morning.

      “Six.”

      “How many of the white man’s log lodges?”

      “Two. One in front, the other in back—beside it, a wood pen for his horses and two of the spotted buffalo.”

      Quanah turned his nose up at that. Spotted buffalo. The white man’s cattle. Docile and spineless. With less courage than even a buffalo cow. Good only for milking. And he wondered what the white man saw in milk anyway. If the Grandfather Above gave the milk to the spotted buffalo, why then did the white man drink it?

      If he was so fond of milk, why didn’t the white man suckle at the breasts of his wife?

      It was not as if Quanah had never tasted human milk. He had. Many times. For a moment now, here in the cold of this open land, with the brutal wind moaning out of the west like a death song upon the Llano Estacado, it was good to remember. At times he had thought about taking a second wife, but his first filled his life with all that he needed.

      Tonarcy satisfied him even more now than ever before. Mother to their three children, he recalled how her belly had grown swollen with that first child. Thought about how he still made love to her when she grew as big as an antelope doe. How she had never been shy about expressing her hunger for him … the warm softness of her fingers as they encircled his excited flesh, kneading him into a frenzy. How he would roll her over, bringing her up on her hands and knees, that ripe belly of hers and those swollen breasts suspended beneath her as he drove his hard flesh into the moistness of her own warm readiness.

      Quanah always answered her rising whimpers with his own growl of enthusiasm in the coupling, for none had ever satisfied him like she.

      And after he had exploded inside her, Quanah would suckle at first one, then the other of her warm breasts. It seemed Tonarcy was never without milk from the time of the birth of their first child. And it had always been a warm, sweet treat for Quanah—after making warm, sweet love to his wife. This drinking of her milk from her small, swollen breasts—something that often made him ready to mount her again. And her more than ready to receive him as well.

      He had never fully understood her appetite growing when it was he who suckled … yet had never questioned it either.

      Quanah shook his head, aware of the cold blast of winter air once more. Something that reminded him that he was not in his warm lodge, wrapped in the furry robes with her.

      Perhaps he needed her badly.

      He acknowledged that he had been away from their winter village for too long, perhaps. He was thinking on his wife and that sweet, warm and moist rutting he shared with Tonarcy when he should be thinking about those six white men down there in that valley less than two miles away.

      Many suns ago he had led a large hunting party away from their village to hunt buffalo. The Comanche were running low on dried meat. With a disappointing fall hunt, Quanah’s Kwahadi band were forced to venture out on the hunt much earlier this winter than they normally would have. More than a moon before, he and the warriors had killed a few white hide hunters they found south of the “dead line,” that place where the government’s treaty-talkers said the white buffalo hunters were not to cross.

      But more and more the Comanche, Kiowa and Cheyenne were discovering sign that the white man was venturing farther and farther south of the Arkansas River, come to the hunting ground guaranteed to the Indian as his own. A meaningless waste of time, this talking treaty with the white man, Quanah thought.

      Ever since the autumn when the old chiefs had signed that talking paper up on Medicine Lodge Creek six winters before, it seemed the white hunters were crossing south of the Arkansas in greater numbers, crossing south of the Cimarron too. And Quanah feared they would one day soon come to the Canadian River—what he rightly believed was the last stand for his people: that northern boundary of the great Staked Plain, the Llano Estacado of the ancient ones who had marched out of the land far away to the south with their gleaming metal heads, the ones who first brought the horse to the People of the plains.

      Besides those few hide hunters they found and killed more than a moon gone now, his scouts had also returned with news of a small group of soldiers marching northwest onto the Staked Plain. Quanah knew that killing the soldiers boded no good for his people. The army would only send more next time. Yet the yellowlegs never found the roaming warriors—instead the army’s Tonkawa guides sought out the Kwahadi villages filled with women and children and the old ones.

      Rarely were the young warriors punished by the white soldiers. It was their families who were made to suffer—losing lodges and blankets and robes, clothing and meat and weapons when they ran quickly to flee the white man and the Tonkawa trackers who led the soldiers to the valleys and canyons where the Kwahadi always camped to escape the cold winter winds or to find shade come the first days of the short-grass time.

      No, he had told his warriors. We are not going to kill these soldiers. Which had made them howl in angry disappointment.

      “But,” he had instructed them, “we will drive them out of Kwahadi land—by burning the prairie!”

      For miles in either direction along a north-south line, the horsemen set their firebrands to the tall prairie grass sapped dry by the arid autumn winds. The winter wind did the rest: whipping the sparks into a fury that forced the yellowlegs to turn about and flee to the east for their lives.*

      However, in the days that followed, his scouts solemnly reported finding no sign of the sold
    ier party. No charred wagon nor burned carcasses.

      From time to time this mystery had made Quanah shudder: to think that those white men had merely vanished into the cold air of the Staked Plain. But if they had, he argued with himself, where still would they find food for their animals?

      And besides, that great storm that had thundered down upon the plains, riding in on the bone-numbing breath of Winter Man, leaving behind tall snowdrifts and many hungry bellies, would surely have killed the white men so unprepared for such a blizzard.

      While he was certain that storm had killed the retreating soldiers, it had also driven the buffalo even farther south. The little ones in Quanah’s village cried with empty bellies. The women and old ones wailed as well. It was only the warriors who could not cry out in the pain of their gnawing hunger—for it remained up to them alone to go in search of meat to lift the specter of starvation from the Kwahadi.

      After many days of endless riding to the south, Quanah and his hunters found themselves near the southernmost reaches of the Staked Plain, without having seen any buffalo or antelope. It was as if Winter Man had wiped all before him with his great cleansing, cold breath.

      As the days of searching grew into many, they had come across a few old bulls partially buried in a coulee here, frozen in a snowdrift against a ridge there—no longer strong enough to march on with the rest. They were the few left to rot by the passing of the winter storm … like the white hide hunters left the thousands upon thousands to rot in the sun.

      Where had the rest of the herds gone? Farther and farther south still—to the land of the summer winds?

      If they had, they would likely not return until the short-grass time on the prairies, when the winds blew soft and the Grandfather Above once more told the great buffalo herds to nose around to the north in their great seasonal migrations.

      “You wish to attack these white men today?” asked the young warrior sitting beside the Kwahadi chief.

      He blinked, his reverie broken and brought back to the now. “Yes.” Quanah turned to his scout. “You tell me there is a hill looking down on the place where the white man built his log lodges?”

      The scout dropped quickly to the ground, his buffalo-hide winter moccasins scraping snow aside from a small circle. In the middle he formed up two frozen snowballs. Circling the snowballs on three sides, he mounded up some of the snow he had scraped aside.

      “Yes, Quanah,” he said, gazing up into the bright winter sun hung against a winter-pale sky behind his chief. “These are the white man’s two lodges. And these, are the hills.”

      “Where are we?”

      The scout pointed with the butt of his rifle.

      “It is good,” Quanah declared. “We will have the wind in our faces and the sun at our backs as we ride to the top of the hills.”

      After dividing his force of more than ten-times-ten warriors into four groups and instructing each in its role, Quanah led them away in silence, moving swiftly across the hard, frozen ground.

     


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