Author Elizabeth Lane
Book Excerpt
"Navajo Sunrise"
by Elizabeth Lane
Excerpt from "Navajo Sunrise"
Bosque Redondo, New Mexico
March, 1868
Miranda Howell hunched wearily on the seat of the U.S. Army buckboard, her slim
body bundled into the folds of her thick woolen cape. The cold spring wind stung
her cheeks and peppered her face with alkali dust. Two weeks from tomorrow would
be Easter Sunday, but nothing about this desolate sweep of country made her feel
like celebrating.
“I didn’t realize New Mexico would be so cold,” she murmured, her eyes scanning
the treeless horizon. “It’ll be dark soon. How much longer before we reach the
fort?”
“Not long. ’Bout an hour, I reckon.” The pimple-cheeked young corporal was one
of nine soldiers who’d drawn the duty of escorting the major’s daughter the
175-mile distance from Santa Fe to Fort Sumner. The other eight rode guard on
the wagon, four strung out in front and four bringing up the rear. Their rifles
lay across their saddles, loaded and ready. For coyotes, they’d told her,
exchanging furtive winks.
In the early hours of the journey, Miranda had made an effort to smile and be
pleasant with them. But after four long days of travel she was too tired to be
sociable. Her eyes stared across the desert landscape, which glowed like
brimstone in the light of the setting sun. A lone crow screeched harshly as it
passed overhead, then flapped down behind a clump of rocks, where, judging from
the odor, some ill-fated creature lay dead.
What could have possessed any sane group of men to build a fort in such a dreary
place? Miranda wondered. For that matter, what was she doing here? She could
have chosen to spend the holiday with Phillip’s parents on Cape Cod. Their
seashore estate would be beautiful this time of year, and they had made it clear
that, as their future daughter-in-law, she would be more than welcome. Why had
she chosen to spend the next two weeks a thousand miles from nowhere, with the
rough and taciturn father she scarcely knew?
“We ought to be seein’ Navajos afore long,” the young driver said. “They got
their diggins’ all over the flat.”
“Diggings? You mean to say they’re miners?” Miranda asked, trying to imagine
what might lie beneath such barren, lime-encrusted earth.
“Miners? Them Injuns?” The young driver snorted contemptuously. “Shucks, no.
They dig themselves holes in the ground to keep out of the weather—lessn’ they
can find some old hides or sheets of tin to put up for a shack. Why should the
lazy buggers mine or farm or even hunt when they can live on handouts from the
good old United States Government?”
“You mean, they have no houses? No means of employment?” Miranda asked,
horrified.
“Hell—” the young man swore, then broke off and began again. “’Scuse me, miss,
but they’s Navajos. An’ Navajos got their own ways of doin’ things. General
Carleton, afore he got his butt—’scuse me again, miss—afore he was dismissed
from runnin’ this place, he got the idea of havin’ ’em build big adobe apartment
houses like the Pueblos got. Right smart idea, if you ask me. But the Navajos,
they wouldn’t have none of it. Wanted to live apart in their own kind of houses,
little round huts they call hogans. Finally Carleton just threw up his hands and
told ’em to go ahead! But did they build any hogans? Did they build anything
a’tall? Look around you!”
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