RANGERING
No State in the Union was ever called
upon to meet and deal with the criminal element as
was Texas. She was border territory upon her
admission to the sisterhood of States.
An area equal to four ordinary States,
and a climate that permitted of outdoor life the year
round, made it a desirable rendezvous for criminals.
The sparsely settled condition of the country, the
flow of immigration being light until the seventies,
was an important factor. The fugitives from justice
of the older States with a common impulse turned toward
this empire of isolation. Europe contributed her
quota, more particularly from the south, bringing
with them the Mafia and vendetta. Once it was
the Ultima Thule of the criminal western world.
From the man who came for not building a church to
the one who had taken human life, the catalogue of
crime was fully represented.
Humorous writers tell us that it was
a breach of good manners to ask a man his name, or
what State he was from, or to examine the brand on
his horse very particularly. It can be safely
said that there was a great amount of truth mingled
with the humor. Some of these fugitives from
justice became good citizens, but the majority sooner
or later took up former callings.
Along with this criminal immigration
came the sturdy settler, the man intent on building
a home and establishing a fireside. Usually following
lines of longitude, he came from other Southern States.
He also brought with him the fortitude of the pioneer
that reclaims the wilderness and meets any emergency
that confronts him. To meet and deal with this
criminal element as a matter of necessity soon became
an important consideration. His only team of horses
was frequently stolen. His cattle ran off their
range, their ear-marks altered and brands changed.
Frequently it was a band of neighbors, together in
a posse, who followed and brought to bay the marauders.
It was an unlucky moment for a horse-thief when he
was caught in possession of another man’s horse.
The impromptu court of emergency had no sentiment
in regard to passing sentence of death. It was
a question of guilt, and when that was established,
Judge Lynch passed sentence.
As the State advanced, the authorities
enlisted small companies of men called Rangers.
The citizens’ posse soon gave way to this organized
service. The companies, few in number at first,
were gradually increased until the State had over
a dozen companies in the field. These companies
numbered anywhere from ten to sixty men. It can
be said with no discredit to the State that there
were never half enough companies of men for the work
before them.
There was a frontier on the south
and west of over two thousand miles to be guarded.
A fair specimen of the large things in that State was
a shoe-string congressional district, over eleven
hundred miles long. To the Ranger, then, is all
credit due for guarding this western frontier against
the Indians and making life and the possession of property
a possibility. On the south was to be met the
bandit, the smuggler, and every grade of criminal
known to the code.
A generation had come and gone before
the Ranger’s work was fairly done. The
emergency demanded brave men. They were ready.
Not necessarily born to the soil, as a boy the guardian
of the frontier was expert in the use of firearms,
and in the saddle a tireless rider. As trailers
many of them were equal to hounds. In the use
of that arbiter of the frontier, the six-shooter,
they were artists. As a class, never before or
since have their equals in the use of that arm come
forward to question this statement.
The average criminal, while familiar
with firearms, was as badly handicapped as woman would
be against man. The Ranger had no equal.
The emergency that produced him no longer existing,
he will never have a successor. Any attempt to
copy the original would be hopeless imitation.
He was shot at at short range oftener than he received
his monthly wage. He admired the criminal that
would fight, and despised one that would surrender
on demand. He would nurse back to life a dead-game
man whom his own shot had brought to earth, and give
a coward the chance to run any time if he so desired.
He was compelled to lead a life in
the open and often descend to the level of the criminal.
He had few elements in his makeup, and but a single
purpose; but that one purpose—to rid the
State of crime—he executed with a vengeance.
He was poorly paid for the service rendered.
Frequently there was no appropriation with which to
pay him; then he lived by rewards and the friendship
of ranchmen.
The Ranger always had a fresh horse
at his command,—no one thought of refusing
him this. Rust-proof, rugged, and tireless, he
gave the State protection for life and property.
The emergency had produced the man.
“Here, take my glass and throw
down on that grove of timber yonder, and notice if
there is any sign of animal life to be seen,”
said Sergeant “Smoky” C——,
addressing “Ramrod,” a private in Company
X of the Texas Rangers. The sergeant and the
four men had been out on special duty, and now we
had halted after an all night’s ride looking
for shade and water,—the latter especially.
We had two prisoners, (horse-thieves), some extra
saddle stock, and three pack mules.
It was an hour after sun-up.
We had just come out of the foothills, where the Brazos
has its source, and before us lay the plains, dusty
and arid. This grove of green timber held out
a hope that within it might be found what we wanted.
Eyesight is as variable as men, but Ramrod’s
was known to be reliable for five miles with the naked
eye, and ten with the aid of a good glass. He
dismounted at the sergeant’s request, and focused
the glass on this oasis, and after sweeping the field
for a minute or so, remarked languidly, “There
must be water there. I can see a band of antelope
grazing out from the grove. Hold your mules!
Something is raising a dust over to the south.
Good! It’s cattle coming to the water.”
While he was covering the field with
his glass, two of the boys were threatening with eternal
punishment the pack mules, which showed an energetic
determination to lie down and dislodge their packs
by rolling.
“Cut your observations short
as possible there, Ramrod, or there will be re-packing
to do. Mula, you hybrid son of your father, don’t
you dare to lie down!”
But Ramrod’s observations were
cut short at sight of the cattle, and we pushed out
for the grove, about seven miles distant. As we
rode this short hour’s ride, numerous small bands
of antelope were startled, and in turn stood and gazed
at us in bewilderment.
“I’m not tasty,”
said Sergeant Smoky, “but I would give the preference
this morning to a breakfast of a well-roasted side
of ribs of a nice yearling venison over the salt hoss
that the Lone Star State furnishes this service.
Have we no hunters with us?”
“Let me try,” begged a
little man we called “Cushion-foot.”
What his real name was none of us knew. The books,
of course, would show some name, and then you were
entitled to a guess. He was as quiet as a mouse,
as reliable as he was quiet, and as noiseless in his
movements as a snake. One of the boys went with
him, making quite a detour from our course, but always
remaining in sight. About two miles out from
the grove, we sighted a small band of five or six antelope,
who soon took fright and ran to the nearest elevation.
Here they made a stand about half a mile distant.
We signaled to our hunters, who soon spotted them
and dismounted. We could see Cushion sneaking
through the short grass like a coyote, “Conajo”
leading the horses, well hidden between them.
We held the antelopes’ attention by riding around
in a circle, flagging them. Several times Cushion
lay flat, and we thought he was going to risk a long
shot. Then he would crawl forward like a cat,
but finally came to his knee. We saw the little
puff, the band squatted, jumping to one side far enough
to show one of their number down and struggling in
the throes of death.
“Good long shot, little man,”
said the sergeant, “and you may have the choice
of cuts, just so I get a rib.”
We saw Conajo mount and ride up on
a gallop, but we held our course for the grove.
We were busy making camp when the two rode in with
a fine two-year-old buck across the pommel of Cushion’s
saddle. They had only disemboweled him, but Conajo
had the heart as a trophy of the accuracy of the shot,
though Cushion hadn’t a word to say. It
was a splendid heart shot. Conajo took it over
and showed it to the two Mexican prisoners. It
was an object lesson to them. One said to the
other, “Es un buen tirador.”
We put the prisoners to roasting the
ribs, and making themselves useful in general.
One man guarded them at their work, while all the
others attended to the hobbling and other camp duties.
It proved to be a delightful camp.
We aimed to stay until sunset, the days being sultry
and hot. Our appetites were equal to the breakfast,
and it was a good one.
“To do justice to an occasion
like this,” said Smoky as he squatted down with
about four ribs in his hand, “a man by rights
ought to have at least three fingers of good liquor
under his belt. But then we can’t have
all the luxuries of life in the far West; sure to be
something lacking.”
“I never hear a man hanker for
liquor,” said Conajo, as he poured out a tin
cup of coffee, “but I think of an incident my
father used to tell us boys at home. He was sheriff
in Kentucky before we moved to Texas. Was sheriff
in the same county for twelve years. Counties
are very irregular back in the old States. Some
look like a Mexican brand. One of the rankest,
rabid political admirers my father had lived away
out on a spur of this county. He lived good thirty
miles from the county seat. Didn’t come
to town over twice a year, but he always stopped,
generally over night, at our house. My father
wouldn’t have it any other way. Talk about
thieves being chummy; why, these two we have here
couldn’t hold a candle to that man and my father.
I can see them parting just as distinctly as though
it was yesterday. He would always abuse my father
for not coming to see him. ‘Sam,’
he would say,—my father’s name was
Sam,—’Sam, why on earth is it that
you never come to see me? I’ve heard of
you within ten miles of my plantation, and you have
never shown your face to us once. Do you think
we can’t entertain you? Why, Sam, I’ve
known you since you weren’t big enough to lead
a hound dog. I’ve known you since you weren’t
knee to a grasshopper.’
“‘Let me have a word,’
my father would put in, for he was very mild in speaking;
’let me have a word, Joe. I hope you don’t
think for a moment that I wouldn’t like to visit
you; now do you?’
“’No, I don’t think
so, Sam, but you don’t come. That’s
why I’m complaining. You never have come
in the whole ten years you’ve been sheriff,
and you know that we have voted for you to a man, in
our neck of the woods.’ My father felt
this last remark, though I think he never realized
its gravity before, but he took him by one hand, and
laying the other on his shoulder said, ’Joe,
if I have slighted you in the past, I’m glad
you have called my attention to it. Now, let me
tell you the first time that my business takes me within
ten miles of your place I’ll make it a point
to reach your house and stay all night, and longer
if I can.’
“‘That’s all I ask,
Sam,’ was his only reply. Now I’ve
learned lots of the ways of the world since then.
I’ve seen people pleasant to each other, and
behind their backs the tune changed. But I want
to say to you fellows that those two old boys were
not throwing off on each other—not a little
bit. They meant every word and meant it deep.
It was months afterwards, and father had been gone
for a week when he came home. He told us about
his visit to Joe Evans. It was winter time, and
mother and us boys were sitting around the old fireplace
in the evening. ‘I never saw him so embarrassed
before in my life,’ said father. ’I
did ride out of my way, but I was glad of the chance.
Men like Joe Evans are getting scarce.’
He nodded to us boys. ’It was nearly dark
when I rode up to his gate. He recognized me and
came down to the gate to meet me. “Howdy,
Sam,” was all he said. There was a troubled
expression in his face, though he looked well enough,
but he couldn’t simply look me in the face.
Just kept his eye on the ground. He motioned
for a nigger boy and said to him, “Take his horse.”
He started to lead the way up the path, when I stopped
him. “Look here, Joe,” I said to
him. “Now, if there’s anything wrong,
anything likely to happen in the family, I can just
as well drop back on the pike and stay all night with
some of the neighbors. You know I’m acquainted
all around here.” He turned in the path,
and there was the most painful look in his face I
ever saw as he spoke: “Hell, no, Sam, there’s
nothing wrong. We’ve got plenty to eat,
plenty of beds, no end of horse-feed, but by G——,
Sam, there isn’t a drop of whiskey on the place!”’
“You see it was hoss and cabello,
and Joe seemed to think the hoss on him was an unpardonable
offense. Salt? You’ll find it in an
empty one-spoon baking-powder can over there.
In those panniers that belong to that big sorrel mule.
Look at Mexico over there burying his fangs in the
venison, will you?”
Ramrod was on guard, but he was so
hungry himself that he was good enough to let the
prisoners eat at the same time, although he kept them
at a respectable distance. He was old in the service,
and had gotten his name under a baptism of fire.
He was watching a pass once for smugglers at a point
called Emigrant Gap. This was long before he
had come to the present company. At length the
man he was waiting for came along. Ramrod went
after him at close quarters, but the fellow was game
and drew his gun. When the smoke cleared away,
Ramrod had brought down his horse and winged his man
right and left. The smuggler was not far behind
on the shoot, for Ramrod’s coat and hat showed
he was calling for him. The captain was joshing
the prisoner about his poor shooting when Ramrod brought
him into camp and they were dressing his wounds.
“Well,” said the fellow, “I tried
to hard enough, but I couldn’t find him.
He’s built like a ramrod.”
After breakfast was over we smoked
and yarned. It would be two-hour guards for the
day, keeping an eye on the prisoners and stock, only
one man required; so we would all get plenty of sleep.
Conajo had the first guard after breakfast. “I
remember once,” said Sergeant Smoky, as he crushed
a pipe of twist with the heel of his hand, “we
were camped out on the ‘Sunset’ railway.
I was a corporal at the time. There came a message
one day to our captain, to send a man up West on that
line to take charge of a murderer. The result
was, I was sent by the first train to this point.
When I arrived I found that an Irishman had killed
a Chinaman. It was on the railroad, at a bridge
construction camp, that the fracas took place.
There were something like a hundred employees at the
camp, and they ran their own boarding-tent. They
had a Chinese cook at this camp; in fact, quite a
number of Chinese were employed at common labor on
the road.
“Some cavalryman, it was thought,
in passing up and down from Fort Stockton to points
on the river, had lost his sabre, and one of this
bridge gang had found it. When it was brought
into camp no one would have the old corn-cutter; but
this Irishman took a shine to it, having once been
a soldier himself. The result was, it was presented
to him. He ground it up like a machette, and
took great pride in giving exhibitions with it.
He was an old man now, the storekeeper for the iron
supplies, a kind of trusty job. The old sabre
renewed his youth to a certain extent, for he used
it in self-defense shortly afterwards. This Erin-go-bragh—his
name was McKay, I think—was in the habit
now and then of stealing a pie from the cook, and taking
it into his own tent and eating it there. The
Chink kept missing his pies, and got a helper to spy
out the offender. The result was they caught
the old man red-handed in the act. The Chink armed
himself with the biggest butcher-knife he had and
went on the warpath. He found the old fellow
sitting in his storeroom contentedly eating the pie.
The old man had his eyes on the cook, and saw the
knife just in time to jump behind some kegs of nuts
and bolts. The Chink followed him with murder
in his eye, and as the old man ran out of the tent
he picked up the old sabre. Once clear of the
tent he turned and faced him, made only one pass,
and cut his head off as though he were beheading a
chicken. They hadn’t yet buried the Chinaman
when I got there. I’m willing to testify
it was an artistic job. They turned the old man
over to me, and I took him down to the next station,
where an old alcalde lived,—Roy Bean by
name. This old judge was known as ’Law
west of the Pecos,’ as he generally construed
the law to suit his own opinion of the offense.
He wasn’t even strong on testimony. He was
a ranchman at this time, so when I presented my prisoner
he only said, ’Killed a Chinese, did he?
Well, I ain’t got time to try the case to-day.
Cattle suffering for water, and three windmills out
of repair. Bring him back in the morning.’
I took the old man back to the hotel, and we had a
jolly good time together that day. I never put
a string on him, only locked the door, but we slept
together. The next morning I took him before
the alcalde. Bean held court in an outhouse, the
prisoner seated on a bale of flint hides. Bean
was not only judge but prosecutor, as well as counsel
for the defense. ’Killed a Chinaman, did
you?’
“‘I did, yer Honor,’ was the prisoner’s
reply.
“I suggested to the court that
the prisoner be informed of his rights, that he need
not plead guilty unless he so desired.
“‘That makes no difference
here,’ said the court. ’Gentlemen,
I’m busy this morning. I’ve got to
raise the piping out of a two-hundred-foot well to-day,—something
the matter with the valve at the bottom. I’ll
just glance over the law a moment.’
“He rummaged over a book or
two for a few moments and then said, ’Here,
I reckon this is near enough. I find in the revised
statute before me, in the killing of a nigger the
offending party was fined five dollars. A Chinaman
ought to be half as good as a nigger. Stand up
and receive your sentence. What’s your name?’
“‘Jerry McKay, your Honor.’
“Just then the court noticed
one of the vaqueros belonging to the ranch standing
in the door, hat in hand, and he called to him in
Spanish, ‘Have my horse ready, I’ll be
through here just in a minute.’
“‘McKay,’ said the
court as he gave him a withering look, ’I’ll
fine you two dollars and a half and costs. Officer,
take charge of the prisoner until it’s paid!’
It took about ten dollars to cover everything, which
I paid, McKay returning it when he reached his camp.
Whoever named that alcalde ‘Law west of the Pecos’
knew his man.”
“I’ll bet a twist of dog,”
said Ramrod, “that prisoner with the black whiskers
sabes English. Did you notice him paying strict
attention to Smoky’s little talk? He reminds
me of a fellow that crouched behind his horse at the
fight we had on the head of the Arroyo Colorado and
plugged me in the shoulder. What, you never heard
of it? That’s so, Cushion hasn’t
been with us but a few months. Well, it was in
’82, down on the river, about fifty miles northwest
of Brownsville. Word came in one day that a big
band of horse-thieves were sweeping the country of
every horse they could gather. There was a number
of the old Cortina’s gang known to be still
on the rustle. When this report came, it found
eleven men in camp. We lost little time saddling
up, only taking five days’ rations with us,
for they were certain to recross the river before
that time in case we failed to intercept them.
Every Mexican in the country was terrorized. All
they could tell us was that there was plenty of ladrones
and lots of horses, ‘muchos’ being the
qualifying word as to the number of either.
“It was night before we came
to their trail, and to our surprise they were heading
inland, to the north. They must have had a contract
to supply the Mexican army with cavalry horses.
They were simply sweeping the country, taking nothing
but gentle stock. These they bucked in strings,
and led. That made easy trailing, as each string
left a distinct trail. The moon was splendid
that night, and we trailed as easily as though it
had been day. We didn’t halt all night long
on either trail, pegging along at a steady gait, that
would carry us inland some distance before morning.
Our scouts aroused every ranch within miles that we
passed on the way, only to have reports exaggerated
as usual. One thing we did learn that night, and
that was that the robbers were led by a white man.
He was described in the superlatives that the Spanish
language possesses abundantly; everything from the
horse he rode to the solid braid on his sombrero was
described in the same strain. But that kind of
prize was the kind we were looking for.
“On the head of the Arroyo Colorado
there is a broken country interspersed with glades
and large openings. We felt very sure that the
robbers would make camp somewhere in that country.
When day broke the freshness of the trail surprised
and pleased us. They couldn’t be far away.
Before an hour passed, we noticed a smoke cloud hanging
low in the morning air about a mile ahead. We
dismounted and securely tied our horses and pack stock.
Every man took all the cartridges he could use, and
was itching for the chance to use them. We left
the trail, and to conceal ourselves took to the brush
or dry arroyos as a protection against alarming the
quarry. They were a quarter of a mile off when
we first sighted them. We began to think the reports
were right, for there seemed no end of horses, and
at least twenty-five men. By dropping back we
could gain one of those dry arroyos which would bring
us within one hundred yards of their camp. A young
fellow by the name of Rusou, a crack shot, was acting
captain in the absence of our officers. As we
backed into the arroyo he said to us, ’If there’s
a white man there, leave him to me.’ We
were all satisfied that he would be cared for properly
at Rusou’s hands, and silence gave consent.
“Opposite the camp we wormed
out of the arroyo like a skirmish line, hugging the
ground for the one remaining little knoll between the
robbers and ourselves. I was within a few feet
of Rusou as we sighted the camp about seventy-five
yards distant. We were trying to make out a man
that was asleep, at least he had his hat over his face,
lying on a blanket with his head in a saddle.
We concluded he was a white man, if there was one.
Our survey of their camp was cut short by two shots
fired at us by two pickets of theirs posted to our
left about one hundred yards. No one was hit,
but the sleeping man jumped to his feet with a six-shooter
in each hand. I heard Rusou say to himself, ’You’re
too late, my friend.’ His carbine spoke,
and the fellow fell forward, firing both guns into
the ground at his feet as he went down.
“Then the stuff was off and
she opened up in earnest. They fought all right.
I was on my knee pumping lead for dear life, and as
I threw my carbine down to refill the magazine, a
bullet struck it in the heel of the magazine with
sufficient force to knock me backward. I thought
I was hit for an instant, but it passed away in a
moment. When I tried to work the lever I saw
that my carbine was ruined. I called to the boys
to notice a fellow with black whiskers who was shooting
from behind his horse. He would shoot over and
under alternately. I thought he was shooting
at me. I threw down my carbine and drew my six-shooter.
Just then I got a plug in the shoulder, and things
got dizzy and dark. It caught me an inch above
the nipple, ranging upward,—shooting from
under, you see. But some of the boys must have
noticed him, for he decorated the scene badly leaded,
when it was over. I was unconscious for a few
minutes, and when I came around the fight had ended.
“During the few brief moments
that I was knocked out, our boys had closed in on
them and mixed it with them at short range. The
thieves took to such horses as they could lay their
hands on, and one fellow went no farther. A six-shooter
halted him at fifty yards. The boys rounded up
over a hundred horses, each one with a fiber grass
halter on, besides killing over twenty wounded ones
to put them out of their misery.
“It was a nasty fight.
Two of our own boys were killed and three were wounded.
But then you ought to have seen the other fellows;
we took no prisoners that day. Nine men lay dead.
Horses were dead and dying all around, and the wounded
ones were crying in agony.
“This white man proved to be
a typical dandy, a queer leader for such a gang.
He was dressed in buckskin throughout, while his sombrero
was as fine as money could buy. You can know
it was a fine one, for it was sold for company prize
money, and brought three hundred and fifty dollars.
He had nearly four thousand dollars on his person and
in his saddle. A belt which we found on him had
eleven hundred in bills and six hundred in good old
yellow gold. The silver in the saddle was mixed,
Mexican and American about equally.
“He had as fine a gold watch
in his pocket as you ever saw, while his firearms
and saddle were beauties. He was a dandy all right,
and a fine-looking man, over six feet tall, with swarthy
complexion and hair like a raven’s wing.
He was too nice a man for the company he was in.
We looked the ‘Black Book’ over afterward
for any description of him. At that time there
were over four thousand criminals and outlaws described
in it, but there was no description that would fit
him. For this reason we supposed that he must
live far in the interior of Mexico.
“Our saddle stock was brought
up, and our wounded were bandaged as best they could
be. My wound was the worst, so they concluded
to send me back. One of the boys went with me,
and we made a fifty-mile ride before we got medical
attention. While I was in the hospital I got my
divvy of the prize money, something over four hundred
dollars.”
When Ramrod had finished his narrative,
he was compelled to submit to a cross-examination
at the hands of Cushion-foot, for he delighted in
a skirmish. All his questions being satisfactorily
answered, Cushion-foot drew up his saddle alongside
of where Ramrod lay stretched on a blanket, and seated
himself. This was a signal to the rest of us
that he had a story, so we drew near, for he spoke
so low that you must be near to hear him. His
years on the frontier were rich in experience, though
he seldom referred to them.
Addressing himself to Ramrod, he began:
“You might live amongst these border Mexicans
all your life and think you knew them; but every day
you live you’ll see new features about them.
You can’t calculate on them with any certainty.
What they ought to do by any system of reasoning they
never do. They will steal an article and then
give it away. You’ve heard the expression
‘robbing Peter to pay Paul.’ Well,
my brother played the rôle of Paul once himself.
It was out in Arizona at a place called Las Palomas.
He was a stripling of a boy, but could palaver Spanish
in a manner that would make a Mexican ashamed of his
ancestry. He was about eighteen at this time and
was working in a store. One morning as he stepped
outside the store, where he slept, he noticed quite
a commotion over around the custom-house. He noticed
that the town was full of strangers, as he crossed
over toward the crowd. He was suddenly halted
and searched by a group of strange men. Fortunately
he had no arms on him, and his ability to talk to them,
together with his boyish looks, ingratiated him in
their favor, and they simply made him their prisoner.
Just at that moment an alcalde rode up to the group
about him, and was ordered to halt. He saw at
a glance they were revolutionists, and whirling his
mount attempted to escape, when one of them shot him
from his horse. The young fellow then saw what
he was into.
“They called themselves Timochis.
They belonged in Mexico, and a year or so before they
refused to pay taxes that the Mexican government levied
on them, and rebelled. Their own government sent
soldiers after them, resulting in about eight hundred
soldiers being killed, when they dispersed into small
bands, one of which was paying Las Palomas a social
call that morning. Along the Rio Grande it is
only a short step at best from revolution to robbery,
and either calling has its variations.
“Well, they took my brother
with them to act as spokesman in looting the town.
The custom-house was a desired prize, and when my brother
interpreted their desires to the collector, he consented
to open the safe, as life had charms for him, even
in Arizona. Uncle Sam’s strong-box yielded
up over a thousand dobes. They turned their attention
to the few small stores of the town, looting them of
the money and goods as they went. There was quite
a large store kept by a Frenchman, who refused to
open, when he realized that the Timochi was honoring
the town with his presence. They put the boy in
the front and ordered him to call on the Frenchman
to open up. He said afterward that he put in
a word for himself, telling him not to do any shooting
through the door. After some persuasion the store
was opened and proved to be quite a prize. Then
they turned their attention to the store where the
boy worked. He unlocked it and waved them in.
He went into the cellar and brought up half a dozen
bottles of imported French Cognac, and invited the
chief bandit and his followers to be good enough to
join him. In the mean time they had piled up on
the counters such things as they wanted. They
made no money demand on him, the chief asking him
to set a price on the things they were taking.
He made a hasty inventory of the goods and gave the
chief the figures, about one hundred and ten dollars.
The chief opened a sack that they had taken from the
custom-house and paid the bill with a flourish.
“The chief then said that he
had a favor to ask: that my brother should cheer
for the revolutionists, to identify him as a friend.
That was easy, so he mounted the counter and gave
three cheers of ’Viva los Timochis!’ He
got down off the counter, took the bandit by the arm,
and led him to the rear, where with glasses in the
air they drank to ‘Viva los Timochis!’
again. Then the chief and his men withdrew and
recrossed the river. It was the best day’s
trade he had had in a long time. Now, here comes
in the native. While the boy did everything from
compulsion and policy, the native element looked upon
him with suspicion. The owners of the store,
knowing that this suspicion existed, advised him to
leave, and he did.”
The two prisoners were sleeping soundly.
Sleep comes easily to tired men, and soon all but
the solitary guard were wrapped in sleep, to fight
anew in rangers’ dreams scathless battles!
* * * *
*
There was not lacking the pathetic
shade in the redemption of this State from crime and
lawlessness. In the village burying-ground of
Round Rock, Texas, is a simple headstone devoid of
any lettering save the name “Sam Bass.”
His long career of crime and lawlessness would fill
a good-sized volume. He met his death at the hands
of Texas Rangers. Years afterward a woman, with
all the delicacy of her sex, and knowing the odium
that was attached to his career, came to this town
from her home in the North and sought out his grave.
As only a woman can, when some strong tie of affection
binds, this woman went to work to mark the last resting-place
of the wayward man. Concealing her own identity,
she performed these sacred rites, clothing in mystery
her relation to the criminal. The people of the
village would not have withheld their services in
well-meant friendship, but she shrank from them, being
a stranger.
A year passed, and she came again.
This time she brought the stone which marks his last
resting-place. The chivalry of this generous
people was aroused in admiration of a woman that would
defy the calumny attached to an outlaw. While
she would have shrunk from kindness, had she been
permitted, such devotion could not go unchallenged.
So she disclosed her identity.
She was his sister.
Bass was Northern born, and this sister
was the wife of a respectable practicing physician
in Indiana. Womanlike, her love for a wayward
brother followed him beyond his disgraceful end.
With her own hands she performed an act that has few
equals, as a testimony of love and affection for her
own.
For many years afterward she came
annually, her timidity having worn away after the
generous reception accorded her at the hands of a
hospitable people.