Red and his seven Mimbres squatted in the yard with a clay pot of ochre paint; with bowls of atole, the flour gruel they would eat as their last meal before battle; with small leather sacks of hod-dentin, the magic powder that would protect them from bullets; with cigars and tulapai, the corn-beer, and chants that reminded them they were the Shis-Inday, the invincible Apache…the chosen ones. Those not chosen for this-another twenty in Red's band-were in the thicket behind the house, up on the escarpment and watching the back trails. (Sundeen would have to come straight at them up the barranca, and not pull any sneaky tricks.)
Bren unloaded and reloaded his .44 Russians and his fancy Merwin & Hulberts and shoved a seven-cartridge tube into the stock of his polished Spencer…ready for war, brimming over with it, telling Moon how Sooy Smith had dug in to make a stand at Ivey's Farm against Barteau who had taken over for Tyree Bell, see, when Tyree Bell had become sick…confusing but, to Moon, a good sound; it matched the excitement he felt.
Maurice Dumas spent some time inside the smoke-blackened house with Kate, helping her as she baked about a dozen loaves of bread, but most of the time looking out the window at the Apaches and the Mexican farmers, at Moon and Early out by the adobe wall.
It was exciting and it was scary, too. Maurice wondered if he was the only one who felt it. Everyone else seemed so calm, or resigned. He said to Kate, “The thing is, they don't have to do this.”
“Yes, they do,” Kate said. “They believe they do, which is the same thing.”
“Twenty-two,” Maurice said, “against however many Sundeen brings. Probably twice as many.”
“Twenty-three,” Kate said, finished with the bread, loading a Henry now with .44's.
“You're gonna take part in this?”
“It's my house too,” Kate said.
In a little while Moon sent Maurice Dumas down to White Tanks to tell Sundeen he could come any time he wanted.
2
Someone had brought the Capt. Brendan Early dodger, “…wanted for the killing of P.Sundeen,” and showed it around. Sundeen read it and shook his head, pretending to be amused, but did not think it was funny. The news reporters at White Tanks quoted him as saying, “I hope there is money on that son of a-'s head, for I am sure as-going to collect it.”
Yes, the news reporters had finally come to the field, brought by the message Maurice Dumas had left displayed in the hotel lobby: Come to White Tanks for final showdown, Rincon Mountains War. Scheduled to begin around noon today! Bren Early's idea. (“Why do you want all them?” Maurice had asked him. Bren's answer: “The more people there are who sympathize with our fight against the giant company, the more likely the company is to back off.” Now it was our fight.)
When Maurice came down the mountain to White Tanks and saw the crowd, he couldn't believe it. Riders, wagons, buggies, Indians, a few women, little kids playing on the fence around the stock pen-there must have been two hundred people or more. When he reached the agency buildings and began sorting everybody out, Maurice found that maybe half were spectators, gawkers, and the rest were in the pay of Sundeen…something like a hundred armed men!
Had Bren Early counted on that many opposing them? Not by half, Maurice recalled. Perhaps forty men at the most.
But one hundred-all hard-eyed cutthroats in a variety of getups: derbies, straws, sombreros, dusty business suits and batwing chaps…shotguns, rifles, six-shooters, all were armed with at least two guns; they stood about talking, drinking whiskey, checking and fooling with their weapons…talking in loud, confident voices and finding, it seemed, a great deal to laugh about.
My God.
C.S. Fly was not present. Maurice learned the famed photographer had declined the invitation, saying he had pictures enough for a fools' gallery as is. However there were others-among them A. Frank Randall of Willcox and someone representing Beuhman & Hartwell of Tucson-busy taking pictures of Sundeen, groups of his cutthroats holding rifles and revolvers, and some of the White Tanks reservation Indians who posed, not having any idea what was going on.
Maurice had to push through a crowd on the porch of the agency office to get to Sundeen inside, sitting with his boots propped up on Moon's desk and telling the news reporters his riders would “bite shallow” else they would eat those people up in two minutes. Maurice waited for Sundeen to notice him, then said, “They're ready for you.”
Sundeen eyed him. “How many people's he got?”
“I'm not at liberty to say.”
“At liberty,” Sundeen said, drawing up out of the swivel chair. “You little squirt, I'll free your soul for you.”
“About twenty,” Maurice said.
He turned and walked out. Should he have told?
Did he have a choice?
The least he could do was ride back up there and tell how many Sundeen had. God-and watch their faces drop.
The photographer from Beuhman & Hartwell caught him outside on the steps and said, “If you're going back up, I'm going with you.” Then Bill Wells of the St. Louis paper and several other reporters said they were going too. Then a man Maurice had never seen before came up and said, “Maurice, I've been looking for you. I'll be in your debt if you'll present me to Dana Moon and Captain Early.”
Maurice was certain he had never seen the man before this. For how could he have forgotten him? The gleaming store teeth and waxed guardsman mustache twirled to dagger points-
“Colonel Billy Washington, at your service, Maurice.”
– the pure-white Stetson, the tailored buckskin coat with white fringe, the black polished boots with gold tassels in front-
“You've heard of me, have you?”
“Yes sir, I certainly have,” Maurice said. God, all this happening at once. “I just have never seen you in person before.”
“Well, you see me now,” Colonel Washington said.
3
Bo Catlett rode up out of the barranca and crossed the open ground to the wall. He said to the people standing behind it, “They on the way.”
“How many?” asked Bren.
“Say a hundred, give or take.” Bo Catlett rode into the yard before stepping down, pulled his carbine from the boot and slapped his mount toward the smell of feed and water over in the corral.
“Five to one,” Bren said, sounding pleased.
Kate looked at him, her Henry resting on the wall. Moon gazed down the slope, past the open ground to the trough of the barranca. He could see figures now, a line of tiny dark specks coming up the switchback trail, through the field of saguaro.
Bren raised the field glasses hanging from his neck and studied the enemy approaching. “Straggling…close it up there!”
Moon looked at his Apaches. They looked at him, faces painted now with streaks of ochre. He turned to look at the Mexicans lining the walclass="underline" Eladio with his sword and green sash among the farmers in white cotton.
“Tell 'em to get ready,” Bren said, field glasses at his face.
“You don't have to stay,” Moon said in Spanish. “No one is asked to fight one hundred men.”
The Indians and the Mexicans remained at the wall, looking from Moon to the slope. They saw another of the colored men now, Thomas Jefferson, coming across the open ground and through the gate space in the wall.
“They dismounting, like to come as skirmishers.”
Bren lowered his glasses and called out, “Come on! Take your medicine like little men!…Christ, what're they fooling around down there for?”
Moon said to Bo Catlett, “They'd do better to stay mounted and run at us.”
“Man never soldiered,” Bo said. “Can see he don't know doodly shit what he's doing.”