The Lone Ranger 7-8
Dynamite Entertainment
Ande Parks, writer
Esteve Polls, artist
Most people can tell you the basic origin of the Lone Ranger: He's the sole surviving member of a posse ambushed by the outlaws they were tracking. Those are the basics even if one doesn't know some of the details like the outlaws, the Butch Cavendish Gang, ambushed the Texas Rangers at a place called Bryant's Gap or that the Lone Ranger's mask -- first a device to hide his true identity, John Reid, from the Cavendish Gang as he hunted them down and later to make him a symbol for justice, more than just a man -- was cut from the vest of his brother, one of the Rangers killed in the ambush. Other details might change from time to time with different tellings; for instance, sometimes John Reid was deputized as a Ranger specifically for this fated posse and other times he was a full-time Ranger before the posse. Even Silver has a definite origin.
As far as I know, however, there is no definitive origin for Tonto.
I have heard bits and pieces of a background for Tonto, but when such details are included, they sometimes contradict what might have been revealed in other places. That makes me think such details are the invention of specific writers trying to rectify Tonto's lack of a background. Even the specific tribe to which Tonto belongs is often ignored or contradictory from other sources when included. I know several times in movies and television programs, the Lone Ranger and Tonto are shown coming in contact with Apaches, but that doesn't mean Tonto is an Apache. I have heard or read at least two tales that refer to Tonto as Potawatomi, and that is how Wikipedia lists his heritage.
These two issues of Dynamite's The Lone Ranger are the first installments of an arc titled "Native Ground" that attempts to give this version of Tonto a background. The very few scenes that take place in the comic's current continuity show the Lone Ranger carrying the gravely wounded Tonto in a wagon. Tonto was beaten, stabbed and shot in the last arc, "Hard Country." The Ranger is taking Tonto home at his request as only Tonto's own people would be able to save his life at this point, if such a feat is even possible. The Ranger is stopped by several warriors on the edge of Ute lands until he explains the situation. Then they grudgingly agree to escort the pair to their chief and let him decide their fate.
The bulk of the story pages deal with events from several years in the past. Tonto is not the chief or anything, but it is clear he is a respected warrior within the tribe. That means he also has his detractors among his fellows. In this incarnation, Tonto has a wife, Chakwaima, and a young son, Tacome, maybe 3 or 4 years old. His extended family also includes Chakwaima's mother and a young brave named Kahnaka. Kahnaka is old enough to have already gone through a vision quest and is considered a man in the eyes of his tribe, but is still quite young and inexperienced. The youth's father is dead, no mother is mentioned, and Tonto has "adopted" the young man, giving him counsel, guidance and, when needed, protection.
Nobody is trying to make the case that American Indians had an idyllic existence during the progressive expansion of white settlers across the country, but Tonto's tribe is depicted as being content and happy. Of course, that means that tragedy must soon strike, as Tonto surely would not abandon a still living wife and child to traipse around the frontier dispensing justice.
This was a great glimpse of an earlier time in Tonto's life. I feel for the character that it could not last.
No comments:
Post a Comment