CALLAGHEN
Behind
the rocks the Mohaves lay waiting--and in the sky, the buzzards.
Each was sure of their prey.
The four men lay in a flat place, and the sun was high. Two
days had passed without water, four days without food, and their
ammunition was down to its last few cartridges.
Before them was a peak they believed to be Eagle Mountain;
if so, there was a water hole up the draw to the right. Of this
they could not be sure, but they believed in it as a dying man
believes in God.
For three days they had thought of that water, longed for
it, dreamed wild dreams of it. The most gorgeous woman under heaven
would have been spurned by any of them for one swallow of water,
be it brackish, sulfurous, or whatever.
The patrol began as they always begin; in this case there
were six enlisted men and one officer. The officer was a proud,
honorable, and decent young man with his first command, his first
patrol into enemy country, where they had seen no enemies for
two whole days and nights.
A camping spot had been decreed, and when the Delaware advised
against it the lieutenant felt he could not permit his decision
to be questioned. A few miles farther along, the Delaware assured
him, there was a water hole and a defensible position. The young
Lieutenant hesitated, then decided to stay where they were.
They bedded down on level ground, in soft sand. The men slept
well, for they were tired. Callaghen was to stand watch the first
few hours, to be relieved by Private Baldwin.
Callaghen was wary. He was an experienced soldier, and he
did not like the feel of the night, and he had been watching the
Delaware. The Delaware had seemed uneasy, his head constantly
turning, his eyes busy.
The attack came with the first light. Their horses were stampeded,
one man was killed, another wounded.
Although the just awakening soldiers got off a few shots,
there was no indication they had hit anything. The Indians vanished
as they had come, fading into the sands like ghosts.
What followed was sheer hell. After waiting until the sun
was up, the lieutenant formed them into a column of twos and they
started out. The lieutenant walked beside Callaghen.
"Well, they got what they wanted," he commented, "but it is
good to rid of them."
"If we are."
"You do not think they have gone?"
"No, sir."
"Then why don't they attack?"
Callaghen shrugged. "It is not their way, sir. They are watching
us from out there, to see what we will do. They know this desert.
They know what is ahead and we do not. They can plan, but our
reaction must depend on circumstances."
"You are an educated man," the lieutenant said.
"Possibly. I have never been sure just what the term implies."
The lieutenant glanced at him, but was silent. They plodded
on through ankle-deep sand. The dust rose, covering their clothing,
their faces and hands. The heat was stifling and there were no
clouds.
At noon the lieutenant called a brief halt. They ate a little
jerked beef and a few pieces of hardtack, and took a swallow of
water.
"Sir? If the Lieutenant will permit?"
"What is it, Callaghen?"
"There's a long stretch of sand ahead, wide-open country.
Off on the right there are some rocks. I suggest that we take
shelter there until the sun goes down. I believe they plan to
surround us out in the open, where the sun can do their work for
them."
The idea appealed to the lieutenant, and he had ignored one
bit of advice to their cost. "All right," he said.
Their approach to the rocks was wary, but they arrived safely,
The bare rocks were dark red and black, with streaks of quartz
through them. It was an isolated cluster, not likely to be chosen
by Indians, who prefer a place that can be approached or left
under cover.
Once in the shade, the men sat down, took off their hats,
and put their heads back. The lieutenant started to take a drink,
then saw that the others did not do so. Reluctantly he put his
canteen down, for he could not permit them to think he had less
endurance than they had.
Callaghen watched the country around them, but the surrounding
sand showed nothing. The Delaware, a soft-walking man, came up
beside him. "He listened to you," he said. "I hope he will continue
to do so."
"Do you know where we are?"
"If that is Eagle Mountain, I do, and I am quite sure that
it is. The lieutenant was exploring, you know."
With the first coolness they started on. Occasionally the
soft sand gave way to harder surface, sometimes to scattered rocks
over a hard-packed sand-and-gravel floor. When an hour passed
and darkness was closing down on them, some began to straggle.
The lieutenant paused. "Close up now!" he said. He spoke quietly,
but his voice carried. "Keep it closed up."
Presently they took a ten-minute break. The stars appeared,
and they walked on, guided by them.
Wary of the rock walls now closing in, they made dry camp.
The Delaware scouted for water, but found now. They slept fitfully
through the night until the sky grew gray. Callaghen was the first
man awake, in time to see an Indian ghosting from one rock to
another.
He touched the lieutenant. "Sir," he said. "they are closing
in."
"We can march," the lieutenant said. "All right, men, let's
go."
They started, and no shots were fired Callaghen looked toward
the horizon. It was going to be a brutal day.
A mile . . . two miles. Ahead of them lay an apparently wide-open
area of sand and scattered brush. Every yard covered was to their
advantage, but the Mohaves were out there, and the Mohaves knew
how long it was since they had stopped at a waterhole.
The post, if such it could be called, was three days' ride
to the southeast. On foot, and under good conditions it was four
to five days, but without adequate water this might stretch from
another day to never.
When the attack came it was completely unexpected. It came
from a cluster of low rocks that seemed to offer no substantial
cover.
The first shot caught the lieutenant in the chest and he fell
to his knees coughing. Automatically every man dropped to one
knee and returned the fire.
There was no answering fire. The Mohaves had vanished.
Callaghen held a canteen to the lieutenant's lips, but he
brushed it away. "You will need that, Callaghen. You are in command
now."
He put a hand out to the Delaware. "I am sorry. I was wrong
not to listen to you."
Callaghen looked around slowly, studying terrain. There was
nothing he could do for the lieutenant. The bullet, of heavy caliber,
had gone in under his left arm and through his lungs, cutting
an artery in transit. He died quickly.
Callaghen now had the lieutenant's pistol and thirty-two rounds
of ammunition. He had also had taken his papers, money, and whatever
else was of value. These must be returned to the post, not only
so that the lieutenant's relatives might have them, but so the
Indians might not get them.
The sun appeared over the mountains, and already they could
feel its heat. He led the way, holding his stride to easy, measured
steps. There was no cover near them now, neither shelter for an
enemy nor for themselves.
Suddenly he saw two riders off to the left. He recognized
his own horse, and swore softly. On the other side were two more
riders, who made no attempt to draw closer. They did not fire,
and they remained well beyond shooting range.
At ten o'clock Callaghen stopped the men. It was in the middle
of a broad, open area, but they were ready to drop with weariness.
He nodded to their right. "See that bunch of rocks?" he said.
"We can make them by noon, and we can find shade there, enough
to sit out the day."
Nobody spoke. Their faces showed their extreme fatigue. Croker,
the wounded man, was bearing up well. Callaghen went to him. "Don't
worry," Croker said, "when you get there, I'll be with you."
After a few minutes Callaghen got them on their feet and started
on once more. He held his course straight ahead as if to bypass
the rocks, then when not more than two hundred yards from them
he suddenly flanked his men. "All right!" he said sharply. "On
the double!"
He knew they were ready to drop. He also knew that if the
Mohaves guessed his intentions they would ride to head him off.
They ran, and for men half-dead from heat, exhaustion, and
thirst, they ran well. Each man knew it was his own life that
was at stake, his own life for which he ran.
Shots rang out, a man stumbled, ran on, then fell. The Delaware
was about to stop but Callaghen waved him on. "Into the rocks!"
he commanded.
He dropped to one knee, aimed at a rider, and fired. The Mohave
pulled up sharply and swung his horse, hanging far over. The others
veered off, and he walked to the fallen man. It was Baldwin, and
he was dead.
Stripping him of his ammunition, rifle and almost empty canteen,
Callaghen straightened up and began to walk. The others were just
reaching the rocks, where there was shelter.
They had found a little shade. The Delaware had crossed to
the far side, taking up a half-shaded position from which he could
watch. Croker also had found a good firing position.
Sweat dripped down Callaghen's face. He put a fresh pebble
in his mouth, but it produced little saliva in his dry mouth.
If there was water near Eagle Mountain, as the Delaware believed,
they would wait there, refresh themselves, and then set out again.
Callaghen knew what he hoped the Indians did not know: that
there was no relief. There were no other soldiers to come looking
for them; and in all that vast wasteland of the Mohave Desert
there was no one from whom they could expect help.
At Camp Cady, when they had ridden out on their patrol--a
patrol that was expected to give them some knowledge of the country,
but no contact with the enemy--there was a captain and four enlisted
men.
One thing they had that Callaghen and the patrol's survivor's
did not have. They had water--plenty of water.
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