And so Chance sat down between Running Horse and Old Bear, near Sitting Bull, and when the pipe came to him, smoked, and passed it to his left, to Running Horse. The full ceremony of the pipe was performed only by Sitting Bull, Old Bear and certain of the older men in the circle. Chance did what he saw most of the others do, simply take a puff or two, acknowledging the council and their role in it, and passing the pipe on.
The smoking and the waiting took time, and Chance saw that few decisions would be likely to be reached in a state of anger or emotion. One had time to think, to settle oneself, to consider matters at some length before beginning to speak of them.
But before the talk began, an Indian, only a boy, came to the side of Old Bear. He said to him, very softly. “Come to your lodge.”
“There is council,” said Old Bear, angrily. Had the young no understanding, no manners in these days?
“Come to your lodge,” repeated the boy.
Grunting, Old Bear stood up and made his way back through the hunched figures of the Indians sitting in their blankets about the fire.
Vaguely Chance wondered what the matter was. He saw Running Horse apprehensively look after Old Bear.
The council at last, the first smoking done, began, and Chance, with his sparse knowledge of Sioux, struggled to follow the proceedings.
Chapter Twelve
Chance and Running Horse, after the council, made their way in silence back toward Running Horse’s cabin.
There had been anger at the rations not having been distributed, and some of the Indians had feared that this meant the soldiers would soon attack, to fill them, an inference which Sitting Bull, with his remarkable and unruffled common sense, tried to discourage. He could not, of course, foresee the events of the following morning.
The Indians themselves, on the whole, though they stood ready to fight if necessary, defending themselves, their chief and their families, were not yet inclined, to Chance’s relief, to put the matter of the rations on rifle muzzle terms.
There was a general suspicion that the white men had simply made another of their mistakes, or perhaps better, had done something stupid again, and might perhaps still be patiently reasoned with. There was, after all, the matter of the treaty, and treaties, now that the Indians were on reservations, seemed to be taken more seriously by the white people, more seriously at any rate than when the Indians had still held land the white people wanted.
Besides, how could the men come to collect the rations, even if men were to do this squaw’s work, when there was the Ghost Dance to be danced?
No, it could simply not be done. The agent in the administration building and the colonel at Fort Yates perhaps simply did not understand these things.
The Ghost Dance was holy.
Moreover, why should there be fighting now, when the Messiah was going to come in the spring and the ground was going to roll over the white men anyway, and over their stone lodges and their railroads and cannon, leaving not even their bones to puzzle the trampling, returning buffalo?
It would be foolish to fight now.
War, in any case, particularly after smoking, was a serious matter, not to be lightly decided upon, particularly in the winter, and with the buffalo gone.
And so it had been decided to send some braves to see the agent, and in the meantime to dance the Ghost Dance, keep the ponies at hand and the weapons loaded.
If the food did not come soon, of course, then the Indians must leave the reservation. Indian wives and children, like white wives and children, required food. There were many white ranchers within a day or two’s ride from the reservation, who raised thin herds of the white man’s spotted buffalo, and these white man’s buffalo would have to serve. No Hunkpapa family would starve while its man had an arrow for his bow or a bullet for his gun.
At Running Horse’s cabin an Indian, one of the two braves who had accompanied Drum, was waiting for them.
Chance’s hand went to the revolver in his belt.
“Come to the cabin of Old Bear,” said the man, and turned, leading the way.
Not understanding, Chance followed Running Horse and the other Indian.
Suddenly Running Horse broke into a run, not waiting, and ran to the door of Old Bear’s cabin. Chance, surprised, jogging behind, leaving the other Indian back.
At the door Running Horse did not knock but stood outside and called his name, to be given permission to enter. One does not beat on the side of a lodge.
There was a grunt from the inside and Running Horse, followed by Chance, and a few seconds later by the other Indian, entered the cabin.
Behind the fire, his back to the far wall, facing the door, in the position of the master of the lodge, sat Old Bear, his face utterly impassive.
He did not smoke.
Running Horse, visibly apprehensive, was sitting down, cross-legged, across the fire from Old Bear. He would not, of course, speak first. Chance, bewildered, sat down beside Running Horse. The other Indian sat down against the wall, by the door.
Looking about, Chance saw, in a corner of the cabin, among the goods and boxes, the sacks and robes and articles of Old Bear, a large, bulky shadow, an object wrapped in a blanket, and suddenly, with a start, he saw that it was the bent figure of a human being, motionless yet alive, the figure of a girl, kneeling on her heels, her arms folded under her, her head fallen forward, almost touching her knees.
No sound came from the concealed figure.
Outside he heard a voice. “I am Drum, the son of Kills-His-Horse.”
“Enter my lodge,” said Old Bear.
Drum scarcely looked at Chance, but seemed to be as puzzled as he himself was. Only Running Horse seemed visibly disturbed.
Drum’s hair now hung loose and wet over the back of a buckskin shirt. It had been cleaned with sand and water. The paint had been washed from his face, and undoubtedly the rest of his body. He still carried a long welt across his forehead from the encounter with Chance hours before. The young Indian wore buckskin leggings and a breechclout, and had wrapped about his waist a blanket, which he drew about his shoulders when he sat down opposite Old Bear. He had been accompanied by the other brave, the one who had protested to Sitting Bull about the fight between Drum and Chance, and this brave sat down next to his fellow near the door.
Kicking Bear was nowhere in sight, and Chance gathered that he had not been summoned.
Whatever was to take place was not a matter for medicine men. He himself was there merely by virtue of having been with Running Horse when Running Horse was called to the cabin. No one had told him to go away. Perhaps that would not have been courteous. Perhaps he should go away. But he was here now. He gathered that what was to transpire was really between Old Bear and the two young Indians, Drum and Running Horse.
Chance wondered why Old Bear had not lit a pipe and passed it around.
Neither Drum nor Running Horse, both of whom must have been aware of the figure in the corner of the cabin, gave any sign of having seen it.
For a long time Old Bear said nothing, and then he looked at Drum, and said, “You, Drum, wanted the white man to kill me at the place of scaffolds, so you could take my daughter to your lodge.”
Drum said nothing, but stared into the fire.
“You, Running Horse,” said Old Bear, “have worn your hair short. You have become too much like the white man.”
Running Horse dropped his head.
“But,” said Old Bear, “you have danced the Sun Dance.”
Running Horse looked up, gratefully.
“And you, Drum,” said Old Bear, “though you are young and sometimes you are bad and you do not understand many things, you are yet strong and brave, and it is not your fault that in you is the memory of the eagle feather you have never seen and should not hope to wear.”