well, go get him and bring him back,” Harris said.
Garon walked down to the edge of the river and stood there for a moment until the mule had drunk its fill. Then he led the animal back up to the others, tying him off just as several Indians rode up.
“Well, Cut Nose, you made it, I see,” Harris said.
“You have guns?”
Harris chuckled. “You ain’t much for the small talk, are you? Yeah, I have guns.”
“Let me see guns.”
Harris walked over to the pack mule, opened the canvas pouch, pulled out one of the lever-action rifles, and handed it to Cut Nose.
Cut Nose jacked the lever down and back up, then lifted the rifle to his shoulder. He sighted down the barrel and pulled the trigger. The hammer fell on an empty chamber.
“Does gun work?” he asked.
“Hell, yes, it works. Why would you ask that?”
“Some white men have sold guns which do not work. They take out—” He put his finger down in the chamber to show what he meant.
“Don’t worry, the firing pins are still there,” Harris said. He handed Cut Nose a single bullet, and the Indian put it in the chamber. Once again, he cocked the rifle, aimed, and pulled the trigger. This time he was rewarded with a loud bang as the weapon fired.
“Hoolah!” he shouted, thrusting the rifle high over head.
“You like?” Harris asked.
“I buy. I buy all you have.” He pointed toward the pack mules.
“I have one hundred rifles,” Harris said. “At twenty dollars a rifle, that’s two thousand dollars. Just like we said.”
“I have white man’s gold,” Cut Nose said. He nodded to one of the other Indians, who handed a cloth bag to Harris. Looking inside, Harris saw several gold double-eagle twenty-dollar pieces. Quickly, he counted one hundred of them.
“All right, Cut Nose, the rifles are yours,” Harris said.
The Indians began emptying the packs until they had taken all the rifles.
“Can you get more guns?” Cut Nose asked.
“I don’t know, it isn’t easy.”
“I need many, many guns,” Cut Nose said.
One of the other Indians said something, and Cut Nose nodded.
“I want gun that shoots many times,” Cut Nose said.
“These are all repeating rifles, every one of them,” Harris said. “They all shoot many times.”
“No. Big gun, many barrels, shoot very fast, many times.” Cut Nose made the motion of turning a crank.
“Damn!” Harris said. “A Gatling gun? Are you talking about a Gatling gun?”
“Yes.”
“I don’t know, Cut Nose. Something like that is going to be very hard to get. And if I can get it, I would have to charge you a lot of money.”
“Many Indians are coming together at the place of Greasy Grass,” Cut Nose said. “We have left the place, the reservation, where the white men say we must stay. The long knives do not like that we have left and soon, I think, they will come to tell us we must go back. But we will not go back. When they come, we will fight them. Gun that shoots many times very fast will give us much medicine. I think the Long Knives will not be able to make us go back to the place where they say we must stay.”
“Yeah, a Gatling gun will give you a lot of medicine all right,” Harris said.
“You get for me?” Cut Nose asked.
“You have more money?”
“We have much money,” Cut Nose said.
Smiling, Harris nodded. “Yeah,” he said. “I’ll get a Gatling gun for you.”
April 10, 1876
Ft. Junction, Colorado Territory
“If you don’t mind my saying so, Colonel, you cut quite a fine figure in army blue,” Major Adrian Brisbane said. Brisbane was Falcon’s executive officer.
“The last uniform I wore was gray,” Falcon answered.
“Well, I wouldn’t worry about it, Colonel. Eventually, everyone sees the error of their ways,” Brisbane, who had served in the Union Army, replied with a laugh.
“I don’t denounce my service with the Confederacy, Major,” Falcon replied. “Nor do I hold any animosity for those who served for the North. My brother wore blue.”
“There were good men in blue and gray,” Brisbane said. “I just thank God that the madness is over.”
Falcon picked up some papers that were on the desk and glanced through them.
“What is this about missing rifles?” Falcon asked. “Do we have weapons missing from our arsenal?”
“Well, if you mean have we had rifles disappear from our armory, the answer is no,” Brisbane replied. “But they are missing, in that they were supposedly shipped to us, but have never arrived.”
“What have you done to locate them?”
“We’ve telegraphed messages back to Jefferson Barracks in St. Louis, asking for an accounting of them. According to Jefferson Barracks, the rifles were sent out in early January. We also have a report that they passed through Ft. Leavenworth, but we have not been able to track them beyond that.”
There was a knock on the door and when Falcon looked up, he saw the Regimental Sergeant Major.
Falcon had asked Sean O’Leary to act as his sergeant major. O’Leary, who was old enough to be Falcon’s father, was one of the first to settle in MacCallister Valley in 1845, having come to America from Ireland to escape the Great Potato Famine.
“Yes, Sergeant Major O’Leary, what is it?” Falcon asked.
“Sure an’ the mail just come in, Colonel, m’ lad,” the sergeant major said. “And there is a letter for you from himself the governor.”
“Thanks,” Falcon said, taking the proffered envelope. Inside, there were two pages. The first page was from the governor.
Office of Governor
Territory of Colorado
April 5, 1876
Lt. Col. Falcon MacCallister
Colorado Home Guard Cmnd’g
Colonel, enclosed is a letter from Sec’y of War Taft.
Please respond accordingly.
John Routt
Governor
Falcon put that letter aside, then looked at the second page.
United States Department of War
Washington, D.C.
March 30, 1875
Governor John Routt
Dear Governor Routt:
In order that the Colorado Home Guard receives due recognition and validation from the Department of War, it is requested that the commanding officer present himself to this office soonest.
Once he reports to me I will, after a short interview and with the constitutional authorityvested in my by my office, enter his commission into the rolls of U.S. Army officers.
Alphonso Taft
Secretary of War
“Well, it would appear that I am to go Washington,” Falcon said after he read the letter.
“Aye,