 CHAPTER 24 THE DEATH SONG OF THE SUE That was a gruesome night at Frayne. Just a tattoo the door leading to the little cell room had been thrown open, and the sergeant of the guard bait the prisoners come forth. All warriors of the Oglala band and foremost of their number was Eagle Wing, the battle leader. Recaptured by Crabb and his men after a desperate flight and fight for liberty, he had apparently been planning ever since a second essay even more desperate. In sullen silence he had passed his days, showing no sign of recognition of any face among his guards until the morning Kennedy appeared. All malice forgotten, now that his would-be slayer was a helpless prisoner, and therefore did the Irishman greet him jovially. That man would knife you if he had half a chance, said the sergeant. Watch out for him. You bet I'll watch out! said Kennedy, never dreaming that, despite all search and vigilance, Morrow had managed to obtain and hide a knife. In silence they had shuffled forth into the corridor, the heavy portals swung behind them, confining the other two. Another door opened into the guard room proper, where stood the big red hot stove, and where raided the two blacksmiths with the irons. Once in the guard room every window was barred, and members of the guard three deep blocked in eager curiosity the doorway leading to the outer air. In the corridor on one side stood three infantry soldiers with fixed bayonets, on the other facing them three others of the guard. Between them shuffled the Sioux wing leading. One glance at the waiting blacksmiths was enough. With the spring of a tiger he hurled himself, head foremost and bending low, straight at the open doorway, and split his way through the astonished guards like center rush at football, scattering them right and left, then darted round the corner of the guardhouse, agile as a cat. And there was Kennedy confronting him. One furious lunge he made with gleaming knife, then shot like an arrow straight for the southward bluff. It was bad judgment. He trusted to speed, to dim starlight, to bad aim perhaps, but the little Irishman dropped on one knee and the first bullet tore through the muscles of a stalwart arm. The second, better aimed, pierced the vitals. Then they were on him, men by the dozen in another instant, as he staggered and fell there, impotent and writhing. They bore him to the cell again. The hospital was too far, and Waller and his aides came speedily to do all that surgery could accomplish, but he cursed them back. He raved at Ray, who entered leading poor, sobbing little fawn-eyes, and demanded to be left alone with her. Waller went out to minister to Kennedy, bleeding fast, and the others looked to Ray for orders when the door was once more opened, and Blake entered with Nanette. By the general's order, said he in brief explanation, and in an instant she was on her knees beside the dying Sue. There and thus they left them. Waller said there was nothing to be done. The junior surgeon, Tracy, he whom she had so fascinated only those few weeks before, bent and whispered, Call me if you need, I shall remain within hearing. But there came no call. At taps the door was once more softly opened, and Tracy peered within. Fawn-eyes, rocking to and fro, was sobbing in an abandonment of grief. Nanette, face downward, lay prone upon a stilled and lifeless heart. Flint and his escort duly went their way, and spread their story as they camped at Laramie and the Chug. The general tarried another week at Frayne. There was still very much to keep him there, so not until he and Black Bill came down did we at other stations learn the facts. The general, as usual, had little to say. The Colonel talked for both. A woeful time it seems they had had with poor Nanette when at last it became necessary to take her away from her dead brave. She raged and even her pleading aunt. Defiant of them all, from the general down, and reckless of law or fact, she vowed it was all a conspiracy to murder Moreau in cold blood. They gave him the knife, she declared, although it later developed that she had tossed it through the open window. They had given him the chance to escape, the sight of Kennedy, who had striven to kill him twice before, and then of the blacksmiths, with their degrading shackles, all just to tempt him to make a dash for freedom, just as they had lured and murdered Crazy Horse. Crazy Horse, his brave kinsman, not ten years before, then had placed a dead shot on the path to life and liberty, a man who killed him in cold blood, as deliberately planned. These were her accusations, and that story took strong hold in certain circles in the Far East, where love of truth inspired its widespread publication, but not its contradiction when the facts became known, the same conditions obtained today in dealing with affairs across the sea. Nanette said many other things before her final breakdown, and Hay and his sorrowing wife found their load of care far heaviest, for the strain of Indian blood, now known to all, had steeled the soul of the girl against the people at Fort Frayne, men and women both, against none so vehemently as those who would have shown her sympathy, none so malignantly as those who had suffered for her sake. This was especially true of Field. In the mad hope of getting justice as she termed it for the dead, she had demanded speech of the general, and in presence of Blackbill and the Surgeon, he had given her a hearing. It proved fatal to her cause, for in her fury at what she termed the triumph of his foes, she lost all sense of right or reason, and declared that it was Field who had warned Stabber's band, and sent them fleeing to unite with Lame Wolf. Field, who took the traitors' horses and rode by night with Kennedy to warn them it was Webb's intention to surround the village at dawn and make prisoners of the men. It was Field, she said, who furnished the money Monroe needed to establish his claim to a gold mine in the Black Hills, the ownership of which would make them rich and repay Field a dozen times over. It was Field who sought to protect her kindred among the Sioux, in hopes, she said it boldly, of winning her. But the general had heard enough. The door was opened and Ray and Blake were ushered in. The former briefly told of the finding of her note in Field's room the night the agitent was so mysteriously missing. The note itself was held forth by the Inspector General, and she was asked if she cared to have it opened and read aloud. Her answer was that Field was a coward, a dastard, to betray a woman who had trusted him. Oh, he didn't, said Blake, dryly. It was just the other way. He couldn't be induced to open his head, so his friends took a hand. You got word of the outbreak through your Indian followers. You wrote to Field and sent the note by Pete, bidding him join you at that godless hour, telling him that you would provide the horses and that you must ride to Stabber's Camp to see Moreau for the last time, as he was going at once to the Black Hills. You made Field believe he was your half-brother instead of what he was. You brought Moreau back to the post and took something—I can't say what—down to him from Mr. Hayes, he waiting for you on the flats below the Trader's Corral. You should have worn your moccasins, as well as a divided skirt that night, instead of French-healed botines. The rest others can tell. The others were Kennedy and the recaptured half-recalcitrant Pete. The latter turned State's evidence. Kennedy told how he had wandered down into the flats after the few drinks that made him think scornful of Sue, of his encounter with Eagle Wing, his rescue by Field, and a girl who spoke Sue like a native. He thought it was little faunaise when he heard her speak, and until he heard this lady. Then he understood. He had been pledged to secrecy by the Lieutenant and never meant to tell a soul, but when he heard the lie the lady told about the Lieutenant, it ended any promise. Then Pete, an abject whining wretch, was ushered in, and his story, when dragged out by the roots, was worst of all. Poor Mrs. Haye, she had to hear it, for they sent for her. Somebody had to restrain Nanette. Pete said he had known Nanette long time, ever since baby. So had Cropod. Yes, and they had known Eagle Wing, Morrow always, knew his father and mother, knew Nanette's father and mother. But Blackbill interposed. No need to go into these particulars as substantiating Mrs. Haye and himself, said he. The lady knows perfectly well that I know all about her girlhood. So Pete returned to modern history. Eagle Wing, it seems, came riding often in from Stabber's Camp to see Nanette by night, and he was in heap trouble, always heap trouble, always want money. And one night she told Pete he must come with her, must never tell of it. She had money, she said, her own, in the trader's safe, but the door was too heavy. She couldn't open it, even though she had the key. She had opened the store by the back door, then came to him to help her with the rest. He pulled the safe door open, he said, and then she hunted and found two big letters, and took them to the house. And next night she opened the store again, and he pulled open the safe, and she put back the letters, and sent him to Mr. Field's back door with note, and then over to saddle Harney and Dan, and bring him out back way from Stable. Then later she told him Captain Blake had Eagle Wing's buckskin pouch and letters, and they must get them or somebody would hang Eagle Wing. And she kept them going, all time going, meeting messengers from the Sioux camps or carrying letters. She fixed everything for the Sioux to come and capture hay and the wagon, fixed everything even to nearly murdering the Sentry on number six. Pete and Spotted Horse, a young brave of Stabbersband, had compassed that attempted rescue. She would have had them kill the Sentry, if need be, and the reason they didn't get Wing away was that she couldn't wait until the Sentries had called off. They might even then have succeeded, only her pony broke away, and she clung to Eagle Wing's until he had to hit her to make her let go. The wild girl in a fury declared it false from end to end. The poor woman, weeping by her side, bowed her head and declared it doubtless true. Her story, Mrs. Hayes, was saddest of all. Her own father died when she was very, very young. He was a French-Canadian trader and traveler who had left them fairly well to do. Next to her Indian mother, Mrs. Hayes had loved no soul on earth as she had her pretty baby sister. The girls grew up together. The younger, petted and spoiled, fell in love with the handsome, reckless young French half-breed, Jean Le Fleur, against all warnings became his wife, and was soon bullied, beaten, and deserted. She lived but a little while, leaving to her more prosperous and level-headed sister, now wedded to Mr. Hayes, their baby daughter, also named Nanette. And by her, the worthy couple had done their very best. Perhaps it would have been wiser had they sent the child away from all association with the Sioux, but she had lived eight years on the Laramie in daily contact with them, sharing the Indian sports and games, loving their free life, and rebelling furiously when finally taken east. She was the real reason why her aunt spent so many months of each succeeding year away from her husband and the frontier. One of the girl's playmates was a magnificent young savage, a son of Crow Killer, the famous chief. The father was killed the day of Crazy Horse's fierce assault on the starving force of General Cook at Slim Buttes in seventy-six, and good, kind missionary people speedily saw promise in the lad, put him at school and strove to educate him the rest they knew. Sometimes at Eastern schools, sometimes with Buffalo Bill, but generally out of money and into mischief, Eagle Wing went from one year to another, and Nanette, foolishly permitted to meet him again in the East, had become infatuated. All that art and education, wealth, travel, and luxury combined could do was done to wean her from her passionate adoration of this superb young savage. There is no fiercer, more intense devotion than that the Sue girl gives the warrior who wins her love. She becomes his abject slave. She would labor, lie, steal, sin, suffer, die, gladly die for him, if only she believes herself loved in turn, and this did Nanette more than believe, and believing, slaved and studied between his irregular appearances that she might weadle more money from her aunt to lavish on her brave. When discovered meeting him in secret and by night, she was locked in her third-story room and thought secure until the day revealed her gone by way of the lightning rod. They had to resort to more stringent measures, but time and again she met him, undetected, until too late. And when at last her education was declared complete, she had amazed her aunt by expressing willingness to go to Fort Frane when the good woman thought the objectionable kinsman abroad with Buffalo Bill. Until too late Mrs. Hay knew nothing of his having been discharged and of his preceding them to the West. Then Nanette begged her for more money because he was in dreadful trouble. Had stabbed a police officer at Omaha, whose people, so Morro said, agreed not to prosecute him if one thousand dollars could be paid at once. Hay's patience had been exhausted. He had firmly refused to contribute another cent to settle Morro's scrapes, even though he was a distant kinsman of his wife, and they both were fond of his little sister's fawn eyes. It had never occurred to Mrs. Hay that Nan could steal from or plot against her benefactors, but that was before she dreamed that Nanette had become the Indian's wife. After that, anything might happen. If she could do that for love of Morro, said she, there was nothing she could not do. And it would seem there was little short of deliberate murder she had not done for her Sue Lover, who had rewarded her utter self-sacrifice by a savage blow with the revolver butt. Poor Nanette, sobbed Mrs. Hay, and poor Nanette said all fortfrain, there distressed of her, buried and forgotten, as she lay, refusing herself to everyone, starving herself in dull desperate misery in her lonely room. Even grim old black Bill, whom she had recognized at once, Bill who had been the first to confirm Blake's suspicions as to her identity, had pity and compassion for her. It's the way of the blood, said Blake. She is bred out of that bloody strain that haunted us in our familiar paths. She could do no different, said the general. Having fixed her love on him, it's the strain of the Sue. We call her conduct criminal. They call it sublime. And one night, while decision in Nanette's case was still pending, and still self-secluded, she hid within the trader's home, refusing speech with anyone but little fawn-eyes, a slaying party set out from Frayne for a spin by moonlight along the frozen plat. Wagon bodies had been set on runners and piled with hay. The young people from Officer's Row, with the proper allowance of matrons and elders, were stowed therein, and tucked in robes and furs, ester-dayed among them, gentle and responsive as ever, yet still very silent. Field, in his deep mourning, went nowhere. He seemed humiliated beyond words by his connection with this most painful affair. Even the general failed to cheer and reassure him. He blamed himself for everything, and shrank even from his friends. They saw the dim glow of the student lamp in his quarters, as they jingled cheerily away. They were coming homeward toward ten o'clock. The moon was shining brilliantly along the bold heights of the southern bank, and insensibly chat and laughter gradually ceased as they came again inside of the twinkling lights of Frayne, and glanced aloft at a new-maid scaffolding, standing black against the sky at the crest of Fetterman Bluff. Eagle-wing roosts high, said a thoughtless youngster. The general let them have their way to the last. What's that? he added, with sudden stop. The sleigh had suddenly been rained in. The driver, an Irish trooper, crossed himself. For, on the hush of the breathless winter night, the rose and fell, shrill, quavering, now high, now low, in mournful minor. A weird, desolate, despairing chant, the voice of a heart-broken woman, and one and all they knew at once it was Nanette, after the manner of her mother's people, alone on the lofty height, alone in the wintry wilderness, sobbing out her grief-song to the sleeping winds, mourning to the last her lost, her passionately loved, brave. Then, all of a sudden, it ceased. A black form started from under the scaffolding to the edge of the bluff. Then again, weird, wild, uncanny, a barbaric, almost savage strain burst from the lips of the girl. Mother of Heaven! cried the driver. Can no one stop that awful cane? It's her death-song she's singing. Two young officers sprang from the sleigh, but at the instant another cry arose. Another form, this one of horse and rider, appeared at the crest, silhouetted with the girls against the stars. They saw the rider leap from saddle almost within arm's length of the singer, saw her quickly turn as though for the first time aware of an intruder. Then the wailing-song went out in sudden scream of mingled wrath, hatred, and despair, and, like the Sue that she was at heart, the girl made one mad rush to reach the point of bluff where was a sheer descent of over eighty feet. A shriek of dread went up from the crowded sleigh, a cry of rejoicing as the intruder sprang and clasped her, preventing her reaching the precipice. But almost instantly followed a moan of anguish, for slipping at the crest, together, firmly linked, they came rolling, sliding, shooting down the steep incline of the frozen bluff, and brought up with the stunning force among the ice-blocks, logs, and driftwood at the base. They bore them swiftly homeward, feel senseless and sorely shaken, Nanette's fierce spirit slowly drifting away from the bruised and broken tenement held there, so pittingly in the arms of Esther Dade. Before the Christmas fires were lighted in the snowbound frontier fort, they had laid all that was mortal of the brave deluded girl in the little cemetery of Fort Frane, her solemn story closed on earth, forever. END OF CHAPTER XXIV Section 25 OF A DOORT OF THE TWO This is the LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are written public domain. For more information or to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org. Reading by Vera Anvil. A DOORT OF THE SHOOT by General Charles King. Apollo. L'Envoix. Nearly two years later, with the old regiments still serving on the storied plait. They were talking of her one moonlit evening and a fleck staff. The band, by this time a fixture at Frane, had been playing delightfully, and some of the girls in Young Galant had been bobbing on the race for under. A few new faces were there. Two faces, well known were missing, those of Esther Dade and Beverly Field. The latter had never been the same man, since the tragic events at fault so closely on the heels of the lay-move campaign. Wontead's lowly heel, injuries physical, or well nigh forgotten, but mentally he had been long a sufferer. For months of the death of Nippt, even when sufficiently restored to be on duty, he held trinketly aloof from post-society. Even but Blake and Ray were powerless to pull him out of his despondent. You seem to feel, indeed he said, so let his brief intent woman with a strange, fascinating girl had clouded his soldier name for all time. To these staunch friends and advisers, he frankly told the whole story, and they, in turn, had told it to a general, Sir Cologneau commanding the regiment, and to those whose opinions they most value. But Field could speak of it to none of us. Frankly, he admitted that from the moment he met their girl he felt under influence of a powerful fascination. Within 24 hours I was returned from the Laramie trip they were riding together, and during that ride she asked to be taken to Stabba's village, and there had talked long with their magnificent young Su. Later Field surprised her in tears, and then she told him a pitiful tale. Eagle Wing had been educated, she said, by her aunt and uncle. Was indeed their nephew and her own cousin. He had been wild and had given them much trouble, and her aunt was in bitter distress over his vagueness. It was the bleep with him that she, the net, had gone. More Hall had been taught mining and mineralogy, it seems, and to collect that he had located a most promising mine in the Black Hills. He could buy off every claim if he had a thousand dollars, and the mine might be worth millions. Hey, Pool pulled the story. Mrs. Hay could not persuade him. Then Paul became threatening. He would join the hostels, he swore, if his aunt would not help him. Indeed, and here Field's young face burned with shame. The net told him that she understood that he field was an only son who might inherit wealth in the days to come, and he could draw upon his father now for any reasonable sum. And within the week of his meeting, he was on the point of offering everything she needed, but that he disbelieved the Indian story. Then, one night, there came a note begging him to meet her at once. She had a dreadful message, she said, from Moral. The fellow had frequently been prowling about the traders during the dark hours, and now she was afraid of him. It must see him, and see him at once, even if she had to ride to Stafford's camp. Field's eyes were blinded, and he went. Hay's horses were ready beyond the corral, and she rode the stride on one of Hay's own saddles. They found Moral awaiting them at the fort, and there was a scene Field could not understand, or they spoke in their through-language. That night it was set, on tears at the Indian's obturacy. She owned that he was her own brother, not merely a cousin, and together they had all gone back to her frame. Moral was to wait on the flat until she could return to her house. She had been striving to get him to make certain promises. She said, contingent on her giving him something from her own means. Field said he'd remain straight up with her to the utmost, but she told him no woman, with soup like in her veins, ever deserted the brother or lover. And so she had returned with a packet, presumably of money, and there they found the Indian clean through of Kennedy. Kennedy was rescued in the nick of time, and pledged to silence. The Indian rode away triumphant. The net climbed back to her window, exhausted, apparently by her exertions, and Field started for his quarters, only to find the entire garrison's stuff. The rest they knew. Asked how she came to know of the money in that trader's safe, he said no secret had been made of it by either he or him. She had asked him, laughingly about his quarrel with Wilkins, and seemed deeply interested in all the details of Sabal's life. Either he or he, fortunately, could have made good by missing some, even had most of it not been found amongst ever splendour. Field had never seen her again until the night the general took him to confront her at the haze, and, all too late, had realised how completely she had endured and used him, in pride, honour, self-respect, had been sorely wounded, and even managed to let the general attach no blame to him, and that his name was no longer involved. He would have resigned his commission and quit the service, had it not been for those soldiers three, Webb, Lake and Ray. They made him see that, all the more because his father's death had left him independent, so must have quite a valuable property, he must stick to a sword and live down a possible stay. And stay hid it, refusing even the chance to go abroad the following spring, and devoting himself assiduously to his duties, although he drank from sati. They made him sometimes spend a quiet evening at razor blacks, where twice mistake was found. But that young lady was quick to see that her hostess had been scheming, as loving women will, and then, when he went hoping to see her, yet half afraid, she came no more, they could not cook her. The early spring had taken him forth on long campaign, then chewing full had taken her to a far distant east, for glant old day was breaking down, the doctors sent him on prolonged sick leave. There was fought frame and need as as it posed to Beverly field, and when it winter came, and with it the news that date had that little while to live, he took counsel with Ray, and the men's leave, not much of which was spent in the south. The old regimen was represented at the set, and saw them little ceremony when the devoted husband, father and fellow soldier, was laid at rest. Nor was fields a happier man when he rejoined from leave, and they all thought they knew why. Letters came, blackboarded, with as their superscription, sometimes, but only for Mrs. Blake, or Mrs. Ray. There was never one for field, and so a second summer came, and went, and the second September was ushered in, and in the flat of the full moon night, there was again music and dancing at fought frame, but not for field, not for as the date. They were all talking of net, daughter of the Tacotus, and as the daughter of the regimen, as they called her in her father's court, and the mail came late from Narmie, and letters were handed round instead to sound it, and Mrs. Blake, eagerly scanning a blackboarded page, was seen suddenly to run indoors, her eyes brimming over with tears. Later that night, Hogan tapped back fields front door, and arched with a left hand step over to Mrs. Ray's a minute, and he went. Read that, said Mrs. Ray, pointing to a paragraph on the third page of the blackboarded Missif, that had been too much for Mrs. Blake, and he read, Fiddle, as though has been my sweetest comfort, but now I must lose her too. Our means are so straightened, that she has made me see the necessity. Hard as it is, I must yield to her for the help that it may bring. She has been studying a year, and is to join the staff of train nurses at St. Luke's, the 1st of October. For a moment there was silence in the little army power. Fields hands were trembling, his face was felt with trouble. She knew he would speak his heart to her at last, and speak his it. All these months, that she has been studying, I've been begging and pleading. Mrs. Ray, you know what I went for last winter, all to no purpose. I'm going again now. If I have to say, a patient at St. Luke's, to coax her out of it. But not until Christmas came the welcome wire. Patient discharge, nurse find the accept, new engagement. Fini, end of envelope, and end of a door to others too, by General Charles King.