Brothers of the Buffalo: A Novel of the Red River War

Brothers of the Buffalo: A Novel of the Red River War

by Joseph Bruchac
Brothers of the Buffalo: A Novel of the Red River War

Brothers of the Buffalo: A Novel of the Red River War

by Joseph Bruchac

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Overview

A captivating and historical story of two young men on opposing sides of war.  In 1874, the U.S. Army sent troops to subdue and move the Native Americans of the southern plains to reservations. Brothers of the Buffalo follows Private Washington Vance Jr., an African-American calvaryman, and Wolf, a Cheyenne warrior, during the brief and brutal war that followed. Filled with action and suspense from both sides of the battle, this is a tale of conflict and unlikely friendship in the Wild West. 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781938486937
Publisher: Fulcrum Publishing
Publication date: 03/15/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 392
File size: 12 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.
Age Range: 12 Years

About the Author

Joseph Bruchac is an internationally acclaimed Native American storyteller and writer who has authored more than 70 books of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry for adults and children. His writings have appeared in more than 500 publications, including National Geographic, Parabola, and Smithsonian. He is the author of the novels Dawn Land and Long River and is the coauthor of the Keepers of the Earth series. He lives in Greenfield Center, New York.

Read an Excerpt

Brothers of the Buffalo

A Novel of the Red River War


By Joseph Brushac

Fulcrum Publishing

Copyright © 2016 BLD[Joseph Bruchac
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-938486-93-7



CHAPTER 1

GET ON THE TRAIN


St. Louis, Missouri March 4, 1872

Dear Mother,

I hope all is well with you and Pegatha. I am well. I have finished my training and I was told that I did well. Now I am about to go by train from St. Louis to my post. I have seen so much of this great country already. It is a fine thing to be a free man and a soldier. I think you would be proud of how fine I look in my uniform of the 10th Cavalry. I am in D Company.

I hope this letter is being read to you by either Pegatha or Preacher Williams. I hope that he will help you write a letter in reply to me. I am eager to hear from you and to know that you are doing well. You will soon receive some money from my pay.

Give my love to Pegatha and tell her that her brother expects her to do well and apply herself at the new school for colored children.

I send you my love and my good wishes.

Your devoted son, Washington Vance


Even out here, Wash thought, looks like there's still no safe place to be a colored man.

Standing with forty other new cavalrymen on the platform in St. Louis, he and the other black recruits for the 10th were being given a taste of what sort of respect they might expect where they were going.

'"Once you boys get on my train, you better mind your manners, assuming you ever learned any," the middle-aged white conductor with the big belly said.

From his eastern accent and the way he limped, it seemed likely he'd fought on the side of the North — just like some of the black men he looked down on from the ladder he'd climbed to address them. But there was no sympathy in his sneering voice.

"Now you better make sure you do not move about at all. You hear me. You stay in your own car. Unless you want to get your thick woolly heads broke."

As if we hadn't all figured that out already, Wash thought.

It would have been impossible not to notice the looks he and the others had gotten as they neared the tracks. Despite the fact they wore US Army uniforms, the mean-looking white men had given them the sort of squint-eyed stares that showed they'd as soon shoot a colored man as spit on him. They'd glared at Wash like he was lower than the dirt caked on their boots.

A surprising number of them were former Confederates. It didn't take much guesswork on anyone's part to know that. Some of them were actually still wearing parts of their sessesh uniforms. That was part of the quick education Wash was getting about what life might be like on the far side of the mighty Mississippi River. It looked as if there would be no shortage of unreconstructed rebels, rough-edged men ready to make a new life in the West and bringing their animosity toward the entire negro race with them.

I would bet a dollar against a dime, he thought, that few of you rebs boys have ever read Shakespeare like my daddy and me. I wonder just how many of you can even write your own names.

Then, out of the corner of his eye, Wash noticed something. One of those Southern gentlemen, a skinny white man with a full-face beard who was eyeing him from the window of the car just behind the one they were boarding, appeared sort of familiar.

Now where have I seen him before?

The thought tugged at Wash so much that he just stood there as the train started to move.

"Don't you be looking back at them, brother," a voice with a thick Mississippi Delta sound to it said from above him. "You just be asking for more trouble than a man can load into a wagon. Get on the train."

Wash tried to turn his gaze down at the ground, cussing himself for being so foolish.

Look a bad man in the eye, you asking to die.

But a bell had been rung in his head by something about that cadaverous white man. Maybe it was those eyes of his, as black and beady and full of death as a rattlesnake's. Or the way he was holding the gold chain that hung across his vest, as if he was about to pull out a watch and check the time.

One foot on the step, his hand grasping the rail by the door, Wash was frozen. He couldn't move, even as that skinny ex-rebel stood up and leaned even closer to the window and Wash saw that he had let go of the watch chain and now was reaching for the ivory-handled pistol in the holster hung across his chest.

A big brown hand wrapped itself around Wash's arm and yanked him up off the platform and in through the door. A smiling, good-looking face that was as brown as fertile soil and about as round as a ball was thrust down in front of him.

"Charley Smith is my name," the soldier who had hoisted him up said, "and fighting Indians is to be my game. Now you tell me who you be. That ways I can notify your next of kin if you goes agitating any more mean white men."

Wash looked up at him. Charley Smith's head was a full foot above his. The big man had lifted up his solid hundred and fifty pounds into the car with no more effort than pulling a carrot out of sandy soil.

This Charley Smith looks to be the sort of fellow to have by your side in a ruckus. If only to hide behind like an oak tree once the shooting starts, Wash thought.

He lifted up his right hand. "Washington. Washington Vance Jr."

"Aw right," Charley Smith said, making Wash's sizable hand disappear into his bear-sized paw. "You play cards? Throw dice?"

"Some."

"Aw right," Charley Smith said, slapping him so hard on the shoulder that it made Wash's teeth rattle. "You and me, we are going to be fast friends."

The young Cheyenne man sat up quickly. With his right hand he grabbed for the rifle that was never far from his side. He looked around inside the lodge. In his dream he had been shouting loudly. But no one else seemed to be awake.

Did I just shout? The light of the full moon came in the open door, showing him the sleeping forms of his mother and little sister.

No. If I had shouted outside my dream, they would have wakened. Their sleep is always as light as mine. That is why we are still alive.

He wiped his hand across his forehead. It came away wet with sweat, but not from the heat of the windless night, the heat that had led his mother to prop open the lodge flap to allow the air to come in and cool them.

The dream had brought the sweat to his brow. If it was a dream.

A dream, yes.

But only a fool would ignore it, would turn away from what was seen or heard in a dream.

He lifted the rifle, moved slowly to the door of the lodge, and paused. Then he looked outside. All he could see in the moonlight were the other lodges of his people.

We should be safe here. We are no longer alone out on the prairie. This is a quiet night. It is not filled with the barking of dogs and gunshots and the shouts of white men and the screams of wounded horses. There are no smells of smoke and blood.

He let out a slow breath. They were safe. They were at the Cheyenne and Arapaho Agency, under the protection of Friend Darlington. All of their Wutapio band were here. All those still living. All those remaining of the people who had followed the peace road of his grandfather Moketevato.

He stepped outside. The black horse tethered in front of the lodge next to theirs turned to look at him. It was the horse belonging to Dirty Face, his best friend. The horse turned to look at him, moonlight glittering in its eyes. It shook its head and nickered softly. Wolf sighed. He leaned back against the lodge and slid down into a sitting position.

There is nothing to fear in this night.

But his heart would not stop pounding. Another sound was still echoing in his mind. That sound had been an awful scream, a scream so long and loud that it could have come from no human or animal throat.

Then he remembered. But the memory brought him no peace. He had first heard that terrible, voiceless howl when he was still small and eager. He had been out hunting with his second father, Pawnee Killer. Pawnee Killer had still walked then among the living. Pawnee Killer had been by his side when that sound tore the air like a knife cutting through the wall of a lodge.

Wolf had been frightened. He had started to turn and run, but Pawnee Killer had grasped him by the arm. "Wait," he had said in his kind voice.

Wolf had looked up at his second father. There was a smile on Pawnee Killer's face. But that smile was sad.

"What was that?" Wolf had whispered. "It is a monster? Will it chase after us? Will it eat us?"

He had been very young. Not a grown man of fifteen winters. That was why he had asked such questions. But he had been old enough to know that he should ask in a whisper. He had been old enough to have learned the important lesson that every child of the Striped Arrow People needed to remember. That lesson was to be quiet when danger is near.

Pawnee Killer had made the sign for yes. It is danger. Then he had made the sign for no. He beckoned for Wolf to follow him.

They crawled to the top of the hill in front of them. The terrible scream had come from the other side. They looked over the top. There they saw the strangest thing Wolf had ever seen. A road made of stones and logs had been laid across the land. On top of that road rested two metal bars. Those bars were so long, they had no beginning or end. On top of the metal bars was the monster he had heard. It was as black and shiny as a beetle. It was so huge that it made the men who rode on its back look like ants. Its front end was on fire! Then, as more smoke billowed up from it, it screamed again.

Pawnee Killer held his arm to keep him from fleeing.

"Be calm, Following Wolf. It cannot chase us," Pawnee Killer whispered. "See. It is stuck to those rails. But it is still a monster. It has cut our buffalo herds in half. It brings men who kill our sacred animals. If we cannot stop them, our world will end."

Following Wolf looked out at the quiet village around him. It was beautiful, so quiet in the moonlight. But there was no quiet in his mind. There was a lump in his stomach. It was as tight as a knot in a horsehair rope.

My dream has warned me. Something bad is coming.


Great-Grampa Hausaman, he was a prince. A real African prince. That is what my daddy told me. When Great-Grampa came into town, they would shout out his name, dancing and playing the drums and singing praise songs.

Here he comes, he is the lion.
When he roars, the enemies do tremble.
Here he comes, he is the elephant.
When he steps on the ground, that ground shakes.

He would ride a fine horse, all black with silver reins and gold on the saddle. He had traveled all the way to Araby, visited the sacred places there and come back. That made him what Daddy called a hajee, a man who had made the big pilgrimage to Mecca. He was not a tall man. He was short, as we black Vances are today. But no man's heart can be measured by his height. In his hand he carried a big iron sword, blade as wide as a man's hand, sharp enough to cut a hair in half down the middle. When he raised that sword, they all called out his honor name, all the people.

Daddy, he never said what that honor name was. When they took Great-Grampa Hausaman captive, put him in chains, walked him down to the coast to the castle of El Mina, he left his name behind. Left it strong in Africa. Left it for his people, even if his body was taken. He just called himself Hausaman from that day on.

It was his enemies who took him, Daddy said. They were men jealous of him because the people loved him so much. They ambushed him as he rode his fine horse on his way to meet with the prince of another town. They jumped out into the road, pointed their guns at him, and told him to stop. He rode through them, cut down three of them with his sword before they shot his horse and threw a net over him and caught him. Then they sold him to the slavers. My, my. Think of that. Men as black as my great-grampa, selling their own people to the white men.

That slave ship was about as close to hell as a man can get on earth. I heard that not just from my daddy telling Great-Grampa's tale, but from older slaves whose parents came across the wide ocean that way. But Great-Grampa Hausaman was tough as leather. Not being as big as many of the others, he was able to get by on less food and water. He was also not about to surrender to despair like so many did who just quit, just gave up and died.

According to Daddy, old Great-Grampa stated that life is a gift from the Great God of all. So we need to hold onto it as best we can and not just throw it away. My, my, Daddy said, he was a strong one. He was strong enough to help others as much as he could, keeping up their spirits, singing to them and the like. Even shared his food so as to keep some of the weaker ones living.

He also was a magic man, sort of like Moses in the Bible. He was slow to use that power. But when the captain of that slave ship went to whip him for no reason at all, Great-Grampa lifted up his chin and pointed his finger at that captain. Then he said in African, "You whip me, you never use that arm again."

The captain took just one cut with that whip. Then his face drained of blood and he clutched his arm and dropped that lash. They carried the captain back to his cabin. He'd had some sort of stroke. The right side of his body just stopped working.

From then on, those white men on the ship, they gave Great-Grampa Hausaman a wide berth. They started to feed him and the other slaves better, too. That story about him being magic got around fast. When the time came to sell him at the auction block in Richmond, at first not one white man dared to bid for him. They saw the look in his eye. They knew that a man like that, they either had to respect him or kill him. None of them wanted to waste their good money on such a slave.

Finally, he was bought by Master Vance's old Gran-daddy who, being an educated man, found Great-Grampa Hausaman interesting. Old Master Vance even gave thought, Daddy said, to sending Great-Grampa back to Africa, except Great-Grampa turned out to be too valuable a worker, seeing as how he knew so much about farming. Great-Grampa Hausaman had owned his own big farm back in Africa, a whole lot bigger than the Vances' plantation. Also, once he found a wife here in Virginia, he decided to make his life here. He even said the red earth here made him think of home.

This is part of Africa now, he said. He had decided himself not to spread his wings and fly back home with his magic.

They never needed an overseer as long as Great-Grampa Hausaman was alive. Folks just did their work well enough with no whippings at all. Of course, things changed some after old Master Vance and Great-Grampa Hausaman both passed on. That old African prince's life just became a story people told. That power he had was never passed on to any of us who come after him. Except for the power of his story, which now that I think on it, is considerable.

CHAPTER 2

CAMP SUPPLY


Camp Supply, Indian Territory March 15, 1872


Dear Mother,

I hope all is well with you and my little sister, Pegatha. I have not yet heard from you. However, I have been told that it may take some weeks for mail to arrive from the South. So I am eagerly awaiting news from you. I hope that the crops you planted have done well. I hope Pegatha is in school and studying hard.

As for me, I am well. I am at my post. It is called Camp Supply. It is not a large army post, but it is a good place and I am learning how to be a proper cavalryman. I have also made a new friend. His name is Charles Smith. He is from Mississippi and a new private like myself. We are fast friends. There is also another man who I think will be a good friend. He is named Joshua Hopkins and he is a Virginia boy like myself. He has already been in the 10th Cavalry for a year and so I am learning from him. The three of us are now "bunkies," which is the term used in the 10th to describe best friends.

It is quiet here. You do not have to worry about me. I have not seen even one hostile. And if we did see any hostiles, you can rest assured that our Company D would be equal to the task of fighting them.

That is all I have to say for now. I hope to hear from you soon. Give my love to my little sister, who has probably grown taller than her brother in the months I have been gone. Ho ho.

Your loving and obedient son, Washington Vance

"My, my." Charley Smith swung his big hand in a half circle to encompass the military camp they were approaching that was to be their new home. "Camp Supply sure enough ain't much to write home about, is it?"

Wash nodded. Hard to argue with something as obvious as that. What they saw of the main buildings of the camp as they passed the enlisted men's canvas tents set up outside — carefully segregated, with one area for the colored soldiers and another for the whites — was little more than a series of dirt-floored log cabins linked together by porches on either side, making the structure a big rectangle. The only doors in those cabins opened into the center of the rectangle.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Brothers of the Buffalo by Joseph Brushac. Copyright © 2016 BLD[Joseph Bruchac. Excerpted by permission of Fulcrum Publishing.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

1. ON THE TRAIN,
2. CAMP SUPPLY,
3. POLISHING BOOTS,
4. CHOOSING MOUNTS,
5. OLD LANDRIEU,
6. FIRST PATROL,
7. THE WASHITA,
8. PRACTICE,
9. HORSE THIEVES,
10. ONE GOOD SHOT,
11. TRADE,
12. INDIAN FIGHTING,
13. RAIDERS,
14. SHOWDOWN,
15. LOOKING FOR PEACE,
16. I WAS HUNGRY,
17. UNEXPECTED NEWS,
18. QUANAH'S SUN DANCE,
19. RIDING WEST,
20. NEWS,
21. MEDICINE,
22. ARMY SHALL FOLLOW,
23. MEDICINE WATER'S WORST,
24. DEATH SONG,
25. HOOFPRINTS,
26. ON THE CLIFF,
27. CALLING OUT NAMES,
28. THE FAT HITS THE FIRE,
29. FORT MARION,
30. NEW ARRIVALS,
31. BIBLIOGRAPHY,
32. ABOUT THE AUTHOR,

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