Script created with Final Draft by Final Draft, Inc.

[ bottom ]

                                                               FADE IN:



               EXT. AMERICAN SOUTHWEST - DAY SPRING 1840

               A shallow stream meanders through a broad arid valley between 
               canyon walls. A hogan, an irrigated garden and a peach
               orchard lie along the stream. The trees are loaded with
               blossoms.

               All is quiet, serene, still.

               The clink of bridle hardware, creak of saddle leather, sound
               of horses hoofs on hard ground. 

               A troop of thirty mounted U.S. Army troopers ride into view,
               down an embankment toward the hogan.

               Troopers ride over the garden, trampling the vegetable
               plants. They rein in at the orchard, dismount, tie their
               reins to tree limbs.

               Twenty troopers remove rifles from saddle boots, take up
               defensive positions.

               Ten troopers remove axes from the packs of pack horses. They
               walk slowly toward trees. 

               The first trooper to reach a tree stops, braces himself,
               spits on his hands, swings an ax which bites into the trunk.
               Thunk!

               Suddenly: an explosion among the tethered horses. Another
               explosion near the bunched-up soldiers. The blast blows some
               soldiers off their feet.

               Pandemonium! Soldiers drop axes, run to their horses where
               they pull rifles from saddle buckets. They look around for
               the source of the explosions, rifles at the ready.

               A whistling sound and another explosion. Soldiers panic,
               untie reins, mount, gallop away in confusion.

               A lone Indian steps from behind an outcropping, points a
               shoulder-held weapon at the departing soldiers, fires. The
               projectile hits the ground behind the retreating troops and
               explodes.

               The shooter lowers the weapon, turns around, steps back
               behind the outcropping where two Indians sit beside small
               mortars. About twenty warriors sit casually on the ground
               nearby, holding rifles.



               EXT. AMERICAN WESTERN PLAINS - VALLEY - DAY

               A green valley, knee-high grass, nearby stream, distant
               mountains. A beautiful setting. A western idyll.

               A small log cabin at the base of a low hillside. A single
               plowed furrow runs from the foreground toward the cabin.

               A wagon with two oxen in harness. SETTLER, 30s, and WIFE,
               30s,  a boy, 9, and a girl, 7, sit on the driver's seat.
               Settler holds a four-foot switch. 

               The wagon is piled with furniture, bedding, clothing, tools,
               a plow, all they own.

               Four Indians stand near the wagon. They hold rifles. A fifth
               Indian nearby holds the reins of five horses.

               Settler is scared, but angry.

                                   SETTLER
                         I'll be back. This is my land. 

               HOWAHKAN, 60, replies calmly.

                                   HOWAHKAN
                         This is not your land. This is not
                         your country. Go. Find a good place
                         for your children.

               Howahkan pokes the near ox with his rifle barrel. The ox
               jerks. Settler glares at Howahkan.

               Wife grips Settler's arm. Tears streak her cheeks.

                                   WIFE
                         Please, David.

               Settler glares at Howahkan, angrily switches the oxen. The
               oxen move off slowly.



               EXT. AMERICAN WEST - VALLEY - DAY - CONTINUOUS

               Settler's cabin burns furiously. The same five Indians stand
               nearby, watch the fire. They turn, move toward their mounts.

               Suddenly: an army patrol of twenty horsemen bursts over the
               hill where Settler's wagon had disappeared. 

               The charging troops fire on the Indians.

               Two Indians are hit and fall. Howahkan mounts, pulls his
               rifle from its case, fires at the troops.
               The two remaining Indians try to mount, but their frightened
               horses buck and run away.

               One Indian slaps Howahkan's horse on the flank. The horse
               shies, gallops up the hill.

               The charging troopers are within thirty yards now. They hold
               swords aloft.

               The two Indians remaining pull hand grenades from their
               belts, throw them at the charging soldiers. 

               The grenades fall in front of the charging horses, explode,
               destroying two horses and riders. Other horses shy violently
               sideways, throwing some riders. 

               Other troopers ride the two Indians down, killing them with
               sword thrusts.



               EXT. A VILLAGE OF THE PEOPLE - MORNING

               First light. A dense wood on a knoll that looks out on a
               grassy down slope and a broad prairie below. 

               A force of about fifty U.S. Army troopers sit their horses in
               the deep shade of the wood.

               The troopers look down the slope to a Native American
               village, about two hundred yards distant.

               About thirty tipis are scattered along the banks of a stream
               which runs at the back of the village. Horses graze just
               across the stream. 

               A peaceful tableau.

               Four women and three men stand before the tipis, look toward
               the soldiers.

               LT. WORTH, 30, squeezes his mount with his knees and advances
               slowly from the wood into the open. He stares at the village,
               speaks softly.

                                   LT. WORTH
                         All right, sergeant.

               SERGEANT CLARK, 40, rides up beside Lt. Worth, turns his
               horse to face the wood.

                                   SERGEANT CLARK
                         Form up! Boot to boot!

               Troopers ride in good order from the wood, form a single
               line, boot to boot. 

               Sergeant Clark wheels his horse, faces front. The bugler
               rides up beside Sergeant Clark.

                                   SERGEANT CLARK (CONT'D)
                         Sir!

               The line of horses waves, reforms. The only sounds are the
               wind in the prairie grasses and the clinking of bridle
               fittings and the creak of saddles. 

               Lt. Worth draws his sword and comes to the carry, with the
               guard at the right hip and the blade against the shoulder. 

               He shouts.

                                   LT. WORTH
                         Draw swords!

               Sergeant Clark and the troopers draw their swords and come to
               the carry.

               The blades sparkle and wave gently as horses shift from side
               to side.

                                   LT. WORTH (CONT'D)
                         Bugler, sound forward march.

               The bugler blows Forward March.

               All walk their horses forward in boot-to-boot formation. Lt.
               Worth is followed by Sergeant Clark and the bugler, followed
               by the line of troopers.

               After about 20 paces, the bugler sounds Trot March. All trot
               their horses. All but the bugler raise their swords aloft.

               After about an additional 60 paces, the bugler sounds Gallop
               March. All kick their horses into a gallop, still maintaining
               the boot-to-boot alignment.

               After about an additional 80 paces, the bugler sounds Charge.  

               Lt. Worth lowers the tip of his sword, points it forward.

               The line of troopers sweeps down the slope toward the
               village, maintaining boot-to-boot formation.

               In the village, the four women run toward the horses. The
               three men walk casually toward tipis.



               EXT. A VILLAGE OF THE PEOPLE - DAY - CONTINUOUS

               The only movement in the village is from the four women who
               have waded the shallow stream and now try to put up a rope
               corral around the horse herd. 

               No other people are visible in the village.

               The charging line of troopers are within thirty yards of the
               village. 

               Suddenly: directly in the path of the charging troopers, a
               long line of spears springs from the ground, throwing off the
               grasses which had hidden them. 

               The stout spears, spaced two feet apart, are metal, six feet
               long. With their butt ends anchored in the ground, they point
               toward the charging troopers at a 45-degree angle. 

               Troopers shout in surprise, pull back frantically on the
               reins. The horses skid. Many are impaled, and their riders
               are thrown over their heads to be impaled or thrown to the
               ground. 

               About thirty warriors burst from tipis, fire on the soldiers
               with repeating rifles. Their shots hit soldiers who have been
               thrown by their horses and others who are still mounted.

               Soldiers still mounted pull unhorsed troopers up behind them
               and ride away at a gallop. Some are shot down by the
               villagers.



               EXT. ARMY BIVOUAC - NIGHT - CONTINUOUS

               Tents are arrayed in lines on each side of an open lane.
               Soldiers sit and lie around campfires. They eat beans, salt
               pork and hardtack from metal plates.

               At the end of the line of tents, Lt. Worth and Lt. MICHAEL
               Wagner, 25, stand. 

                                   LT. WORTH
                         I never saw anything like it. I've
                         seen 'em use wooden spears, like
                         willow, but those spears were
                         machined metal. And the setup had
                         springs.

                                   MICHAEL
                         What about the rifles? You're sure
                         they fired  more than once without
                         reloading?

                                   LT. WORTH
                         Yes. I'm sure of it.

                                   MICHAEL
                         I heard at the Point that they were
                         working on a repeater, but they
                         said it would be years before the
                         Army got them.

               Suddenly: the campground is light as day. Lt. Worth and
               Michael look up, see a brilliant flare high above that
               illuminates the camp.

               Soldiers jump up, look at the flare, dumbfounded, squint at
               the brilliance.

               Suddenly: from the darkness on one side of the campground,
               flaming arrows shoot high into the air, describe a high arc,
               fall into the campground. 

               Tents and wagons are hit and set afire. Some soldiers are
               hit. 

               Soldiers run, grab their rifles, aim toward the darkness. 

               They lower their rifles. All they see is darkness.

               The flare dims, drifts downward, burns out. The camp is dark
               but for the campfires and burning tents and wagons.

                                   LT. WORTH
                         What in hell is going on? Who the
                         hell are we fighting?



               EXT. ARMY BIVOUAC - DAY

               Tents are down, wagons packed. Teams stand idly, shifting in
               their harness. 

               Troopers mount, form up in a column of twos behind Lt. Worth
               and Michael. The column moves off. Three wagons pulled by
               mules move into line behind the troopers.



               EXT. HILLSIDE NEAR ARMY BIVOUAC - DAY - CONTINUOUS

               An Indian lies hidden behind a bush on the slope of a hill.
               He watches the column's departure.

               The Indian slides down the slope, out of view of the
               soldiers. He stands, opens a rawhide bag, takes out two
               signal flags.

               He faces toward a hill in the distance, takes a flag in each
               hand, waves them about, up, down, out, sending a message by
               semaphore. He drops his arms to his sides.

               In the distance, the Indian who had received the message
               holds two signal flags. He turns to face behind him. He
               relays the same message to another Indian on a distant hill.



               EXT. ARMY POST - COMMANDANT'S HOUSE - DAY

               A substantial frontier fort. Many buildings, barracks,
               warehouses, barns and corrals, shops, all built around a
               parade ground where the United States flag flies from a tall
               flagpole.

               On the shaded porch of a house that faces the parade, Lt.
               Worth, Michael and MAJOR BURKE, 50s, sit in rocking chairs.
               They hold drinks. 

                                   MICHAEL
                         These savages have stuff we've
                         never even heard of.

                                   LT. WORTH
                         They're certainly not getting it
                         from our traders. And the British
                         don't have it. So where are they
                         getting it?

                                   MAJOR BURKE
                         Maybe I'll ask them.

               Major Burke looks toward the parade. Lt. Worth and Michael
               turn and follow his gaze. They see a group of five Indians,
               four men and one woman, regally dressed, walking across the
               parade.

                                   MAJOR BURKE (CONT'D)
                         I'm meeting them this afternoon.
                         They want to talk.

                                   LT. WORTH
                         What do they want to talk about?

                                   MAJOR BURKE
                         We'll see.

                                   MICHAEL
                         Do they speak for The People?

               Major Burke frowns.

                                   MAJOR BURKE
                         You've been here two days. What do
                         you know about The People?

                                   MICHAEL
                         I understand it's a confederation
                         of some sort. Mostly the Plains
                         tribes, but with some communication
                         with other tribes.

                                   MAJOR BURKE
                         It's more than communication. It
                         seems the confederation includes
                         tribes from hundreds of miles from
                         here. It's damned unexpected.
                         Tribes have been fighting each
                         other for centuries. Now they have
                         decided that they have an enemy
                         more dangerous than the tribe next
                         door.

               Major Burke drinks from his glass. Lt. Worth takes a swallow
               from his glass. Lt. Worth turns to Michael.

                                   LT. WORTH
                         Do you know what they call us?

               Michael shakes his head.

                                   LT. WORTH (CONT'D)
                         Wasichus. The fat takers; the
                         greedy people, people that want it
                         all.

                                   MAJOR BURKE
                         Names are not important. What is
                         important is where in the hell are
                         they getting the stuff? We must
                         find the golden goose. And kill it.



               INT. ARMY POST - STORE - DAY

               A general store, stocking the goods that would appeal to 
               soldiers and occasional Indian visitors.

               Michael stands at a display table, looks at small pouches
               made of soft deerskin. 

               He looks up, sees KIMIMELA, 20, Sioux, 5'5"ish, pretty, two
               braids, standing across the goods table. She holds a small
               iron frying pan, examines it.

               Kimimela wears a cotton dress, embroidered in subdued colors,
               a fringed deerskin jacket, a silver necklace with turquoise
               stones.

               Michael is stunned, stares at her. She looks up, sees him,
               looks down. She puts the pan down, moves away. 

               She stops near the door where woolen scarves hang on the
               wall. She touches the scarves, feeling the material. She
               turns back, sees Michael still staring at her. 

               She walks to the door, exits.



               INT. ARMY POST - MEETING ROOM - DAY

               The room has a floor and walls of hand-hewn planks. It is
               bare of furniture and adornment, but for ten chairs and a
               rectangular table. 

               On one side, Howahkan and two other Indians sit in front, 
               and two others sit behind. One of those behind is Kimimela.

               The Indians are dressed in traditional clothing, mostly Sioux
               with a smattering of styles from other plains tribes. They
               wear trinkets from local and distant tribes. 

               They also are adorned with small metal disks attached to
               clothing and as pendants around their necks. The disks are
               engraved and colored.

               Facing the Indians, Major Burke and CAPTAIN JACKSON sit in
               chairs. Behind them, Lt. Worth and Michael sit in chairs.  

               Michael stares at Kimimela. She notices, looks toward the
               window.

                                   MAJOR BURKE
                         We are glad to see you here. We
                         will listen to what you have to
                         say.

               Howahkan sits upright, stiffly, in his chair.

                                   HOWAHKAN
                         I am Howahkan. I have lived in
                         these valleys and these hills sixty
                         winters. Now wasichus wish to come
                         to live where I live. Why is this?
                         I do not go to live in their
                         country.

                                   MAJOR BURKE
                         I understand what you say.

                                   HOWAHKAN
                         Now some wasichus have built cabins
                         and plowed the earth in the place
                         that we call the Valley of Plum
                         Trees.

                                   MAJOR BURKE
                         Yes, I know. I understand.

                                   HOWAHKAN
                         Then you will tell them they must
                         leave this valley?

               Major Burke holds up his hand.

                                   MAJOR BURKE
                         No, I cannot do that. The Great
                         Father in Washington says that
                         these people have a right to that
                         land. No Indians live there, and
                         you do not need the land.

                                   HOWAHKAN
                         Your Great Father in Washington has
                         no power here! The Great Spirit
                         gave this land to us to use and
                         pass to our children. The wasichus
                         must leave!

               Major Burke looks at the floor, then at the ceiling, then at
               Howahkan.

                                   MAJOR BURKE
                         I hear you, and I understand. We
                         will pay you to give us the valley.
                         We will pay ten bolts of cloth,
                         twenty fry pans and twenty skinning
                         knives.

               Howahkan frowns.

                                   HOWAHKAN
                         No! We cannot sell the land. We use
                         it. We do not own it.

               Lt. Worth and Michael look at each other. 

               Michael looks at Kimimela. She glares at him. He looks away.

                                   HOWAHKAN (CONT'D)
                         You will not tell them to leave?

                                   MAJOR BURKE
                         Howahkan. We want peace. We do not
                         want to fight The People. ... Where
                         do you get the repeating rifles and
                         the exploding weapons?

               Howahkan glares at Major Burke.

                                   HOWAHKAN
                         You will not tell them to leave?

               Beat.

               Howahkan stands. The other Indians stand. They stride to the
               door, exit.

               Just before reaching the door, Kimimela turns furtively,
               makes eye contact with Michael. Her countenance is soft,
               questioning.



               EXT. ARMY POST - COMMANDANT'S HOUSE - DAY

               Major Burke and Michael sit in rocking chairs on the covered
               porch. They hold drinks, stare at the parade ground.

                                   MAJOR BURKE
                         Two things. Related. We're on the
                         edge of some big trouble. If it
                         breaks before we find out where
                         they're getting the armaments, we
                         may not be able to hold out here.

                                   MICHAEL
                         Do you think they are finished
                         talking?

                                   MAJOR BURKE
                         That's the other thing. Old
                         Howahkan is not afraid of anything
                         or anybody. But I don't think he
                         wants war. Sometimes he rattles his
                         war gourd, and sometimes he is just
                         plain rational. You saw him storm
                         out of here yesterday.

                                   MICHAEL
                         Yes, sir. Looks bad.

                                   MAJOR BURKE
                         Yes, except he sent the woman and
                         her interpreter back this morning
                         to ask for someone to be sent to
                         his village. To stay there.
                         The way she describes it, he wants
                         nothing less than a United States
                         ambassador to The People. What do
                         you think of that?

                                   MICHAEL
                         The woman who was with him
                         yesterday?

                                   MAJOR BURKE
                         Yes.

                                   MICHAEL
                         Sounds interesting. Would
                         Washington buy it?

                                   MAJOR BURKE
                         I've sent word, with my
                         recommendation that we accept.

                                   MICHAEL
                         I hope we're here to receive the
                         reply.

                                   MAJOR BURKE
                         I'm not waiting. I'm sending
                         someone presently. You.

               Michael reacts, surprised.

                                   MICHAEL
                         Me? I'm no diplomat, sir.

                                   MAJOR BURKE
                         You better be a fast learner.
                         You're recently out of the Point.
                         You left there with high marks and
                         came here with top recommendations.
                         So you'll have friends if
                         Washington decides that we're nuts.

               Major Burke smiles, drinks from his glass. Michael frowns,
               stares at the parade.

                                   MAJOR BURKE (CONT'D)
                         I understand you speak a little
                         Sioux. That should impress old
                         Howahkan.
[ top ]

Script created with Final Draft by Final Draft, Inc.