“Him all-time
carry box—take pictures. Him no warrior.”
For two weeks I absorbed “material” at every pore, careless of other
duties, thinking only of this world, avid for the truth, yet selecting
my facts as every artist must, until, at last, measurably content I
announced my intention to return to the railway. “We have tickets to
Seattle,” I said to Stouch, “and we must make use of them.”
“I'm sorry to have you go,” he replied, “but if you must go I'll
send Wolf Voice with you as far as Custer.”
We had no real need of a guide but I was glad to have Wolf Voice
riding with me, for I had grown to like him and welcomed any
opportunity for conversing with him. He was one of the few full-bloods
who could speak English well enough to enjoy a joke.
As we were passing his little cabin, just at the edge of the Agency,
he said, “Wait, I get you somesing.”
In a few moments he returned, carrying a long eagle feather in his
hand. This he handed to me, saying, “My little boy—him dead. Him carry
in dance dis fedder. You my friend. You take him.”
Major Stouch had told me of this boy, a handsome little fellow of
only five years of age, who used to join most soberly and cunningly
with the men in their ceremonial dances; and so when Wolf Voice said,
“I give you dis fedder—you my friend. You Indian's friend,” I was
deeply moved.
“Wolf Voice, I shall keep this as a sign, a sign that we are
friends.”
He pointed toward a woman crouching over a fire in the corral, “You
see him—my wife? Him cry—all time cry since him son die. Him no sleep
in house. Sleep all time in tepee. Me no sleep in house. Spirit come,
cry, woo-oo-oo in chimney. My boy spirit come,—cry—me 'fraid!
My heart very sore.”
The bronze face of the big man was quivering with emotion as he
spoke, and not knowing what to say to comfort him I pretended to haste.
“Let us go. You can tell me about it while we ride.”
As we set forth he recovered his smile, for he was naturally of a
cheerful disposition, and in our long, leisurely journey I obtained
many curious glimpses into his psychology—the psychology of the red
man. He led us to certain shrines or “medicine” rocks and his remarks
concerning the offerings of cartridges, calico, tobacco and food which
we found deposited beside a twisted piece of lava on the side of a low
hill were most revealing.
“Wolf Voice, do you believe the dead come back to get these
presents,” I asked.
“No,” he soberly replied. “Spirit no eat tobacco, spirit eat spirit
of tobacco.”
His reply was essentially Oriental in its philosophy. It was the
essence of the offering, the invisible part which was taken
by the invisible dead.
Many other of his remarks were almost equally revelatory. “White
soldier heap fool,” he said. “Stand up in rows to be shot at. Injun
fight running—in bush—behind trees.”
We stopped again at The Half-Way Ranch, and the manner in which the
cattlemen treated Wolf Voice angered me. He was much more admirable
than they, and yet they would not allow him to sleep in the house.
He rode all the way back to Fort Custer with us and when we parted I
said, “Wolf Voice, I hope we meet again,” and I meant it. His spirit is
in all that I have since written of the red men. He, Two Moon, American
Horse, and Porcupine were of incalculable value to me in composing
The Captain of the Gray Horse Troop, which was based upon this
little war.
From Billings we went almost directly to the Flat Head Reservation.
We had heard that a herd of buffalo was to be seen in its native
pastures just west of Flat Head Lake and as I put more value on seeing
that herd than upon any other “sight” in the state of Montana, we made
it our next objective.
Outfitting at Jocko we rode across the divide to the St. Ignacio
Mission. Less wild than the Cheyenne reservation the Flat Head country
was much more beautiful, and we were entirely happy in our camp beside
the rushing stream which came down from the Jocko Lakes.
“Yes, there is such a herd,” the trader said. “It is owned by Michel
Pablo and consists of about two hundred, old and young. They can be
reached by riding straight north for some twenty miles and then turning
to the west. You will have to hunt them, however; they are not in a
corral. They are feeding just as they used to do.
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