He had been in regular telegraphic contact with General Sherman, who rarely failed to express his ongoing consternation at the massacre on the Great Salt Prairie while he kept Fort Sill's commander up to date on every appreciable shift in the political winds of Washington.
The president still clung to a policy of pacification, but the General of the Army was certain that adjustments were sure to come. The Quaker plan, for all its scope and sincerity, was not yielding significant results, and fruitless projects supported by public monies were something no politician, no matter how highly placed, could suffer for long.
Colonel Mackenzie, glad as he was for the biweekly wires, did not have to be told from afar that the assimilation initiative was not working. The proof was in front of his face.
On balance, he had a high regard for Lawrie Tatum. The little Quaker possessed boundless determination and had consistently attacked his impossible task with the zeal of a terrier unearthing a bone. His honesty was as sincere as his faith, and Colonel Mackenzie could find no fault with all that he had created from virtually nothing. He had erected a school and recruited a Quaker teacher for Indian children, built stockpens to hold the government-issue beeves, had systemized a line of trade for the goods offered by the post sutler, and was even conducting daily classes in the art of agriculture.
But Lawrie Tatum's naivete could be annoying, and it regularly occurred to Colonel Mackenzie that the shiny-domed, arm-waving little man cut a ludicrous figure. It was as if the agent had mounted a grand party to which no one came. School attendance fluctuated between zero and four or five. Agriculture classes were often canceled because no one showed up, and most of the aborigines who frequented the subtler's store rarely had anything to trade, but merely loitered in the shade of the porch, trolling for handouts.
Like a wilderness doctor on rounds, Lawrie Tatum rode his mule in a daily circuit of camps scattered through the vicinity, doing his best to indoctrinate and minister to the tiny fraction of wild people who had taken the white man's holy road.
But despair nagged at him, and it required the Quaker's entire reservoir of faith to continue. There were no leaders among the enrollees, who were comprised of the aged or infirm, the opportunistic, and, in some cases, the feebleminded. Those who had answered his call were merely stragglers. Even Lawrie Tatum knew that his efforts would be fruitless so long as the core of the Comanche and Kiowa nations ran free.
The first tremor of change arrived at the end of summer, when Colonel Mackenzie was promoted to the rank of brigadier general. At the same time he had been summoned east for the broad purpose of "consultation." Though he could not know the exact nature of his summons, during the long trip to Washington he became convinced that the military was about to assume a more active role in the affairs of the wild tribes.
General Mackenzie spent a week in the capitol. His evenings were exhaustive gauntlets of social gatherings which did not provide much leisure. The parties and charity functions he attended were packed with military brass, and General Mackenzie, who had never grasped political life or its intrigues, felt uncomfortable in the top-heavy presence of his masterful fellow generals.
He was even more out of place in the company of women. Perhaps because he had been brought up in a houseful of aunts who had raised him as if he were a little girl, as an adult he ran from anything having to do with the female sex.
For years he had worried that his lifelong bachelorhood would be an impediment to promotion, but now that he had the stars on his shoulders, he was confident that no amount of whispered asides or late-night pillow talk between man and wife-or mistress-could take them away.
The peace of mind his generalship afforded him brought with it a clarity, and despite the memories of so many old wounds, he found his powers of concentration at full capacity during the many important policy meetings he attended during the day.
The round of conferences reached a crescendo on the last full day of his stay, when, in a party that included General Sherman, his number two, General Sheridan, and four other men of field rank, he met with the president.
At first General Mackenzie was lulled into believing the meeting was of no particular importance. The president and his generals behaved more like old acquaintances than they did men of stature. They bantered among themselves for a time, and even when they got down to business, the agenda seemed to provoke no urgency. Gradually, however, it dawned on the new general that any interview with the commander in chief must, despite the collegial atmosphere, be paramount.
He listened keenly as General Sherman laid out the state of affairs on the frontier and was taken aback when the General of the Army suddenly turned in his direction and announced, "General Mackenzie, provide the president with a firsthand account, if you please."
A bolt of panic surged through the new general, and in the second or two it took to subside, Mackenzie's athletic mind formed a plan. He would be clear, succinct, and objective. And he would not try to hide his deformity. If the stumps started their odd clicking, as they most likely would, he reasoned that it would be best if the president not only heard them but saw them as well.
Thus General Mackenzie placed his forearms on the tabletop, taking care to fully expose both hands, and began a concise report of his experiences in the field. He prefaced his remarks about the activities of the Quaker agents with a brief declaration of the high respect he held them in before outlining the miserable results of their struggle. He related his observations on the massacre of the corn train and a few other examples of outrage that had recently come to his attention. He concluded with a short but dramatic account of the fight at Adobe Walls.
When the stumps on his hand first began their disconcerting syncopation, the president dropped his eyes to the source of the sound. Mackenzie had paused long enough to provide the commander in chief's gaze a graceful exit, and from that point on, the odd disfigurement ceased to be disruptive.
The president, who had listened attentively, sat back in his chair and glanced into space before fixing the new general with his smallish eyes.
"What do you think of those buffalo-hunters?" he asked flatly.
Again Mackenzie was taken aback.
"As a race, sir?"
Everyone laughed, and the president was still chortling as he said, "I can only imagine what they're like as a race — a bad dream!"
The generals laughed until their eyes ran, and when the guffawing had finally dwindled into snorts and chuckles the glassy-eyed president looked at Mackenzie again.
"I mean, what do you think of them being there?"
"Well, I believe it's unlawful, sir."
"Are you doing anything to uphold the law?"
"In my opinion, sir it's impossible to enforce the legislation."
"How can that be? "
"Sir, the buffalo trade is popular and lucrative. It's something like a gold rush. Every prominent restaurant in this city has buffalo tongue on its menu."
"That's right," the president agreed, "and it costs an arm and a leg.”
The room was silent as the president rubbed his eyes with both hands.
"Well," he said, dropping his hands, "the army is convinced that the peace policy is a failure."
"On most accounts, sir," Sherman answered.
The president rose out of his chair, signaling closure. "Come up with an alternative and we'll schedule another meeting."
"We have an alternative, sir."
The president stood for a moment longer before descending again to his high-backed chair.
"Let's hear it, then."
"Actually, sir," Sherman explained, "it's more a variation than it is an alternative."
"All right, all right."