THE RANSOM OF DON RAMON MORA
On the southern slope of the main
tableland which divides the waters of the Nueces and
Rio Grande rivers in Texas, lies the old Spanish land
grant of “Agua Dulce,” and the rancho by
that name. Twice within the space of fifteen
years was an appeal to the sword taken over the ownership
of the territory between these rivers. Sparsely
settled by the descendants of the original grantees,
with an occasional American ranchman, it is to-day
much the same as when the treaty of peace gave it
to the stronger republic.
This frontier on the south has undergone
few changes in the last half century, and no improvements
have been made. Here the smuggler against both
governments finds an inviting field. The bandit
and the robber feel equally at home under either flag.
Revolutionists hatch their plots against the powers
that be; sedition takes on life and finds adherents
eager to bear arms and apply the torch.
Within a dozen years of the close
of the century just past, this territory was infested
by a band of robbers, whose boldness has had few equals
in the history of American brigandage. The Bedouins
of the Orient justify their freebooting by accounting
it a religious duty, looking upon every one against
their faith as an Infidel, and therefore common property.
These bandits could offer no such excuse, for they
plundered people of their own faith and blood.
They were Mexicans, a hybrid mixture of Spanish atrocity
and Indian cruelty. They numbered from ten to
twenty, and for several months terrorized the Mexican
inhabitants on both sides of the river. On the
American side they were particular never to molest
any one except those of their own nationality.
These they robbed with impunity, nor did their victims
dare to complain to the authorities, so thoroughly
were they terrified and coerced.
The last and most daring act of these
marauders was the kidnapping of Don Ramon Mora, owner
of the princely grant of Agua Dulce. Thousands
of cattle and horses ranged over the vast acres of
his ranch, and he was reputed to be a wealthy man.
No one ever enjoyed the hospitality of Agua Dulce
but went his way with an increased regard for its owner
and his estimable Castilian family. The rancho
lay back from the river probably sixty miles, and
was on the border of the chaparral, which was the
rendezvous of the robbers. Don Ramon had a pleasant
home in one of the river towns. One June he and
his family had gone to the ranch, intending to spend
a few weeks there. He had notified cattle-buyers
of this vacation, and had invited them to visit him
there either on business or pleasure.
One evening an unknown vaquero rode
up to the rancho and asked for Don Ramon. That
gentleman presenting himself, the stranger made known
his errand: a certain firm of well-known drovers,
friends of the ranchero, were encamped for the night
at a ranchita some ten miles distant. They regretted
that they could not visit him, but they would be pleased
to see him. They gave as an excuse for not calling
that they were driving quite a herd of cattle, and
the corrals at this little ranch were unsafe for the
number they had, so that they were compelled to hold
outside or night-herd. This very plausible story
was accepted without question by Don Ramon, who well
understood the handling of herds. Inviting the
messenger to some refreshment, he ordered his horse
saddled and made preparation to return with this pseudo
vaquero. Telling his family that he would be
gone for the night, he rode away with the stranger.
There were several thickety groves,
extending from the main chaparral out for considerable
distance on the prairie, but not of as rank a growth
as on the alluvial river bottoms. These thickets
were composed of thorny underbrush, frequently as
large as fruit trees and of a density which made them
impenetrable, except by those thoroughly familiar
with the few established trails. The road from
Agua Dulce to the ranchita was plain and well known,
yet passing through several arms of the main body
of the chaparral. Don Ramon and his guide reached
one of these thickets after nightfall. Suddenly
they were surrounded by a dozen horsemen, who, with
oaths and jests, told him that he was their prisoner.
Relieving Don Ramon of his firearms and other valuables,
one of the bandits took the bridle off his horse, and
putting a rope around the animal’s neck, the
band turned towards the river with their captive.
Near morning they went into one of their many retreats
in the chaparral, fettering their prisoner. What
the feelings of Don Ramon Mora were that night is
not for pen to picture, for they must have been indescribable.
The following day the leader of these
bandits held several conversations with him, asking
in regard to his family, his children in particular,
their names, number, and ages. When evening came
they set out once more southward, crossing the Rio
Grande during the night at an unused ford. The
next morning found them well inland on the Mexican
side, and encamped in one of their many chaparral rendezvous.
Here they spent several days, sometimes, however, only
a few of the band being present. The density
of the thickets on the first and second bottoms of
this river, extending back inland often fifty miles,
made this camp and refuge almost inaccessible.
The country furnished their main subsistence; fresh
meat was always at hand, while their comrades, scouting
the river towns, supplied such comforts as were lacking.
Don Ramon’s appeals to his captors
to know his offense and what his punishment was to
be were laughed at until he had been their prisoner
a week. One night several of the party returned,
awoke him out of a friendly sleep, and he was notified
that their chief would join them by daybreak, and
then he would know what his offense had been.
When this personage made his appearance, he ordered
Don Ramon released from his fetters. Every one
in camp showed obeisance to him. After holding
a general conversation with his followers, he approached
Don Ramon, the band forming a circle about the prisoner
and their chief.
“Don Ramon Mora,” he began,
with mock courtesy, “doubtless you consider
yourself an innocent and abused person. In that
you are wrong. Your offense is a political one.
Your family for three generations have opposed the
freedom of Mexico. When our people were conquered
and control was given to the French, it was through
the treachery of such men as you. Treason is
unpardonable, Señor Mora. It is useless to enumerate
your crimes against human liberty. Living as
you do under a friendly government, you have incited
the ignorant to revolution and revolt against the
native rulers. Secret agents of our common country
have shadowed you for years. It is useless to
deny your guilt. Your execution, therefore, will
be secret, in order that your co-workers in infamy
shall not take alarm, but may meet a similar fate.”
Turning to one of the party who had
acted as leader at the time of his capture, he gave
these instructions: “Be in no hurry to execute
these orders. Death is far too light a sentence
to fit his crime. He is beyond a full measure
of justice.” There was a chorus of “bravos”
when the bandit chief finished this trumped-up charge.
As he turned from the prisoner, Don Ramon pleadingly
begged, “Only take me before an established
court that I may prove my innocence.”
“No! sentence has been passed
upon you. If you hope for mercy, it must come
from there,” and the chief pointed heavenward.
One of the band led out the arch-chief’s horse,
and with a parting instruction to “conceal his
grave carefully,” he rode away with but a single
attendant.
As they led Don Ramon back to his
blanket and replaced the fetters, his cup of sorrow
was full to overflowing. Oddly enough the leader,
since sentence of death had been pronounced upon his
victim, was the only one of the band who showed any
kindness. The others were brutal in their jeers
and taunts. Some remarks burned into his sensitive
nature as vitriol burns into metal. The bandit
leader alone offered little kindnesses.
Two days later, the acting chief ordered
the irons taken from the captive’s feet, and
the two men, with but a single attendant, who kept
a respectful distance, started out for a stroll.
The bandit chief expressed his regret at the sad duty
which had been allotted him, and assured Don Ramon
that he would gladly make his time as long as was
permissible.
“I thank you for your kindness,”
said Don Ramon, “but is there no chance to be
given me to prove the falsity of these charges?
Am I condemned to die without a hearing?”
“There is no hope from that source.”
“Is there any hope from any source?”
“Scarcely,” replied the
leader, “and still, if we could satisfy those
in authority over us that you had been executed as
ordered, and if my men could be bribed to certify
the fact if necessary, and if you pledge us to quit
the country forever, who would know to the contrary?
True, our lives would be in jeopardy, and it would
mean death to you if you betrayed us.”
“Is this possible?” asked Don Ramon excitedly.
“The color of gold makes a good many things
possible.”
“I would gladly give all I possess
in the world for one hour’s peace in the presence
of my family, even if in the next my soul was summoned
to the bar of God. True, in lands and cattle I
am wealthy, but the money at my command is limited,
though I wish it were otherwise.”
“It is a fortunate thing that
you are a man of means. Say nothing to your guards,
and I will have a talk this very night with two men
whom I can trust, and we will see what can be done
for you. Come, señor, don’t despair, for
I feel there is some hope,” concluded the bandit.
The family of Don Ramon were uneasy
but not alarmed by his failure to return to them the
day following his departure. After two days had
passed, during which no word had come from him, his
wife sent an old servant to see if he was still at
the ranchita. There the man learned that his
master had not been seen, nor had there been any drovers
there recently. Under the promise of secrecy,
the servant was further informed that, on the very
day that Don Ramon had left his home, a band of robbers
had driven into a corral at a ranch in the monte
a remudo of ranch horses, and, asking no one’s
consent, had proceeded to change their mounts, leaving
their own tired horses. This they did at noonday,
without so much as a hand raised in protest, so terrified
were the people of the ranch.
On the servant’s return to Agua
Dulce, the alarm and grief of the family were pitiful,
as was their helplessness. When darkness set in
Señora Mora sent a letter by a peon to an old family
friend at his home on the river. The next night
three men, for mutual protection, brought back a reply.
From it these plausible deductions were made:—
That Don Ramon had been kidnapped
for a ransom; that these bandits no doubt were desperate
men who would let nothing interfere with their plans;
that to notify the authorities and ask for help might
end in his murder; and that if kidnapped for a ransom,
overtures for his redemption would be made in due
time. As he was entirely at the mercy of his
captors, they must look for hope only from that source.
If reward was their motive, he was worth more living
than dead. This was the only consolation deduced.
The letter concluded by advising them to meet any
overture in strict confidence. As only money would
be acceptable in such a case, the friend pledged all
his means in behalf of Don Ramon should it be needed.
These were anxious days and weary
nights for this innocent family. The father,
no doubt, would welcome death itself in preference
to the rack on which he was kept by his captors.
Time is not considered valuable in warm climates,
and two weary days were allowed to pass before any
conversation was renewed with Don Ramon.
Then once more the chief had the fetters
removed from his victim’s ankles, with the customary
guard within call. He explained that many of
the men were away, and it would be several days yet
before he could know if the outlook for his release
was favorable. From what he had been able to
learn so far, at least fifty thousand dollars would
be necessary to satisfy the band, which numbered twenty,
five of whom were spies. They were poor men,
he further explained, many of them had families, and
if they accepted money in a case like this, self-banishment
was the only safe course, as the political society
to which they belonged would place a price on their
heads if they were detected.
“The sum mentioned is a large
one,” commented Don Ramon, “but it is
nothing to the mental anguish that I suffer daily.
If I had time and freedom, the money might be raised.
But as it is, it is doubtful if I could command one
fifth of it.”
“You have a son,” said
the chief, “a young man of twenty. Could
he not as well as yourself raise this amount?
A letter could be placed in his hands stating that
a political society had sentenced you to death, and
that your life was only spared from day to day by the
sufferance of your captors. Ask him to raise
this sum, tell him it would mean freedom and restoration
to your family. Could he not do this as well
as you?”
“If time were given him, possibly.
Can I send him such a letter?” pleaded Don Ramon,
brightening with the hope of this new opportunity.
“It would be impossible at present.
The consent of all interested must first be gained.
Our responsibility then becomes greater than yours.
No false step must be taken. To-morrow is the
soonest that we can get a hearing with all. There
must be no dissenters to the plan or it fails, and
then—well, the execution has been delayed
long enough.”
Thus the days wore on.
The absence of the band, except for
the few who guarded the prisoner, was policy on their
part. They were receiving the news from the river
villages daily, where the friends of Don Ramon discussed
his absence in whispers. Their system of espionage
was as careful as their methods were cruel and heartless.
They even got reports from the ranch that not a member
of the family had ventured away since its master’s
capture. The local authorities were inactive.
The bandits would play their cards for a high ransom.
Early one morning after a troubled
night’s rest, Don Ramon was awakened by the
arrival of the robbers, several of whom were boisterously
drunk. It was only with curses and drawn arms
that the chief prevented these men from committing
outrages on their helpless captive.
After coffee was served, the chief
unfolded his plot to them, with Don Ramon as a listener
to the proceedings. Addressing them, he said that
the prisoner’s offense was not one against them
or theirs; that at best they were but the hirelings
of others; that they were poorly paid, and that it
had become sickening to him to do the bloody work
for others. Don Ramon Mora had gold at his command,
enough to give each more in a day than they could
hope to receive for years of this inhuman servitude.
He could possibly pay to each two thousand dollars
for his freedom, guaranteeing them his gratitude, and
pledging to refrain from any prosecution. Would
they accept this offer or refuse it? As many
as were in favor of granting his life would deposit
in his hat a leaf from the mesquite; those opposed,
a leaf from the wild cane which surrounded their camp.
The vote asked for was watched by
the prisoner as only a man could watch whose life
hung in the balance. There were eight cane leaves
to seven of the mesquite. The chief flew into
a rage, cursed his followers for murderers for refusing
to let the life blood run in this man, who had never
done one of them an injury. He called them cowards
for attacking the helpless, even accusing them of lack
of respect for their chief’s wishes. The
majority hung their heads like whipped curs.
When he had finished his harangue, one of their number
held up his hand to beg the privilege of speaking.
“Yes, defend your dastardly
act if you can,” said the chief.
“Capitan,” said the man,
making obeisance and tapping his breast, “there
is an oath recorded here, in memory of a father who
was hanged by the French for no other crime save that
he was a patriot to the land of his birth. And
you ask me to violate my vow! To the wind with
your sympathy! To the gallows with our enemies!”
There was a chorus of “bravos” and shouts
of “Vivi el Mejico,” as the majority congratulated
the speaker.
When the chief led the prisoner back
to his blanket, he spoke hopefully to Don Ramon, explaining
that it was the mescal the men had drunk which made
them so unreasonable and defiant. Promising to
reason with them when they were more sober, he left
Don Ramon with his solitary guard. The chief
then returned to the band, where he received the congratulations
of his partners in crime on his mock sympathy.
It was agreed that the majority should be won over
at the next council, which they would hold that evening.
The chief returned to his prisoner
during the day, and expressed a hope that by evening,
when his followers would be perfectly sober, they
would listen to reason. He doubted, however, if
the sum first named would satisfy them, and insisted
that he be authorized to offer more. To this
latter proposition Don Ramon made answer, “I
am helpless to promise you anything, but if you will
only place me in correspondence with my son, all I
possess, everything that can be hypothecated shall
go to satisfy your demands. Only let it be soon,
for this suspense is killing me.”
An hour before dark the band was once
more summoned together, with Don Ramon in their midst.
The chief asked the majority if they had any compromise
to offer to his proposition of the morning, and received
a negative answer. “Then,” said he,
“remember that a trusting wife and eight children,
the eldest a lad of twenty, the youngest a toddling
tot of a girl, claim a husband and a father’s
love at the hands of the prisoner here. Are you
such base ingrates that you can show no mercy, not
even to the innocent?”
The majority were abashed, and one
by one fell back in the distance. Finally a middle-aged
man came forward and said, “Give us five thousand
dollars in gold apiece, the money to be in hand, and
the prisoner may have his liberty, all other conditions
made in the morning to be binding.”
“Your answer to that, Don Ramon?” asked
the chief.
“I have promised my all.
I ask nothing but life. I may have friends who
will assist. Give me an opportunity to see what
can be done.”
“You shall have it,” replied
the chief, “and on its success depends your
liberty or the consequences.”
Going amongst the band, he ordered
them to meet again in three days at one of their rendezvous
near Agua Dulce; to go by twos, visit the river towns
on the way, to pick up all items of interest, and
particularly to watch for any movement of the authorities.
Retaining two of his companions to
act as guards, the others saddled their horses and
dispersed by various routes. The chief waited
until the moon was well up, then abandoned their camp
of the last ten days and set out towards Agua Dulce.
To show his friendship for his victim, he removed
all irons, but did not give freedom to Don Ramon’s
horse, which was led, as before.
It was after midnight when they recrossed
the river to the American side, using a ford known
to but a few smugglers. When day broke they were
well inland and secure in the chaparral. Another
night’s travel, and they were encamped in the
place agreed upon. Reports which the members
of the band brought to the chief showed that the authorities
had made no movement as yet, so evidently this outrage
had never been properly reported.
Don Ramon was now furnished paper
and pencil, and he addressed a letter to his son and
family. The contents can easily be imagined.
It concluded with an appeal to secrecy, and an order
to observe in confidence and honor any compact made,
as his life and liberty depended on it. When
this missive had passed the scrutiny of the bandits,
it was dispatched by one of their number to Señora
Mora. It was just two weeks since Don Ramon’s
disappearance, a fortnight of untold anguish and uncertainty
to his family.
The messenger reached Agua Dulce an
hour before midnight, and seeing a light in the house,
warned the inmates of his presence by the usual “Ave
Maria,” a friendly salutation invoking the blessings
of the saints on all within hearing. Supposing
that some friend had a word for them, the son went
outside, meeting the messenger.
“Are you the son of Don Ramon Mora?” asked
the bandit.
“I am,” replied the young man; “won’t
you dismount?”
“No. I bear a letter to
you from your father. One moment, señor!
I have within call half a dozen men. Give no alarm.
Read his instructions to you. I shall expect
an answer in half an hour. The letter, señor.”
The son hastened into the house to
read his father’s communication. The bandit
kept a strict watch over the premises to see that no
demonstration was made against him. When the half
hour was nearly up, the son came forward and tendered
the answer. Passing the compliments of the moment,
the man rode away as airily as though the question
were of hearts instead of life. The reply was
first read by Don Ramon, then turned over to the chief.
It would require a second letter, which was to be
called for in four days. Things were now nearing
the danger point. They must be doubly vigilant;
so all but the chief and two guards scattered out
and watched every movement. Two or three towns
on the river were to have special care. Friends
of the family lived in these towns. They must
be watched. The officers of the law were the
most to be feared. Every bit of conversation overheard
was carefully noted, with its effects and bearing.
At the appointed time, another messenger
was sent to the ranch, but only a part of the band
returned to know the result. The sum which the
son reported at his command was very disappointing.
It would not satisfy the leaders, and there would
be nothing for the others. It was out of the
question to consider it. The chief cursed himself
for letting his sympathy get the better of him.
Why had he not listened to the majority and been true
to an accepted duty? He called himself a woman
for having acted as he had—a man unfit to
be trusted.
Don Ramon heard these self-reproaches
of the chief with a heavy heart, and when opportunity
occurred, he pleaded for one more chance. He
had many friends. There had not been time enough
to see them all. His lands and cattle had not
been hypothecated. Give him one more chance.
Have mercy.
“I was a fool,” said the
chief, “to listen to a condemned man’s
hopes, but having gone so far I might as well be hung
for a sheep as a lamb.” Turning to Don
Ramon, he said, “Write your son that if twice
the sum named in his letter is not forthcoming within
a week, it will be too late.”
The chief now became very surly, often
declaring that the case was hopeless; that the money
could never be raised. He taunted his captive
with the fact that he had always considered himself
above his neighbors, and that now he could not command
means enough to purchase the silence and friendship
of a score of beggars! His former kindness changed
to cruelty at every opportunity; and he took delight
in hurling his venom on his helpless victim.
Dispatching the letter, he ordered
the band to scatter as before, appointing a meeting
place a number of days hence. After the return
of the messenger, he broke camp in the middle of the
night, not forgetting to add other indignities to
the heavy irons already on his victim. During
the ensuing time they traveled the greater portion
of each night. To the prisoner’s questions
as to where they were he received only insulting replies.
His inquiries served only to suggest other cruelties.
One night they set out unusually early, the chief
saying that they would recross the river before morning,
so that if the ransom was not satisfactory, the execution
might take place at once. On this night the victim
was blindfolded. After many hours of riding—it
was nearly morning when they halted—the
bandage was removed from his eyes, and he was asked
if he knew the place.
“Yes, it is Agua Dulce.”
The moon shone over its white stone
buildings, quietly sleeping in the still hours of
the night, as over the white, silent slabs of a country
churchyard. Not a sound could be heard from any
living thing. They dismounted and gagged their
prisoner. Tying their horses at a respectable
distance, they led their victim toward his home.
Don Ramon was a small man, and could offer no resistance
to his captors. They cautioned him that the slightest
resistance would mean death, while compliance to their
wishes carried a hope of life.
Cautiously and with a stealthy step,
they advanced like the thieves they were, their victim
in the iron grasp of two strong guards, while a rope
with a running noose around his neck, in the hands
of the chief, made their gag doubly effective.
A garden wall ran within a few feet of the rear of
the house, and behind it they crouched. The only
sound was the labored breathing of their prisoner.
Hark! the cry of a child is heard within the house.
Oh, God! it is his child, his baby girl. Listen!
The ear of the mother has heard it, and her soothing
voice has reached his anxious ear. His wife—the
mother of his children—is now bending over
their baby’s crib. The muscles of Don Ramon’s
arms turn to iron. His eyes flash defiance at
the grinning fiends who exult at his misery.
The running noose tightens on his neck, and he gasps
for breath. As they lead him back to his horse,
his brain seems on fire; he questions his own sanity,
even the mercy of Heaven.
When the sun arose that morning, they
were far away in one of the impenetrable thickets
in which the country abounded. Since his capture
Don Ramon had suffered, but never as now. Death
would have been preferable, not that life had no claims
upon him, but that he no longer had hopes of liberty.
The uncertainty was unbearable. The bandits exercised
caution enough to keep all means of self-destruction
out of his reach. Hardened as they were, they
noticed that their last racking of the prisoner had
benumbed even hope.
Sleep alone was kind to him, though
he usually awoke to find his dreams a mockery.
That night the answer to the second demand would arrive.
A number of the band came in during the day and brought
the rumor that the governor of the State had been notified
of their high-handed actions. It was thought
that a company of Texas Rangers would be ordered to
the Rio Grande. This meant action, and soon.
When the reply came from the son of Don Ramon, he
was notified to have the money ready at a certain
abandoned ranchita, though the amount, now increased,
was not as large as was expected. It required
two days longer for the delivery, which was to be
made at midnight, and to be accompanied by not over
two messengers.
At this juncture, a squad of ten Texas
Rangers disembarked at the nearest point on the railroad
to this river village. The emergency appeal,
which had finally reached the governor’s ear,
was acted upon promptly, and though the men seemed
very few in number, they were tried, experienced,
fearless Rangers, from the crack company of the State.
There was no waste of time after leaving the train.
The little command set out apparently for the river
home of Don Ramon, distant nearly a hundred miles.
After darkness had set in, the captain of the squad
cut his already small command in two, sending a lieutenant
with four men to proceed by way of Agua Dulce ranch,
the remainder continuing on to the river. The
captain refused them even pack horse or blanket, allowing
them only their arms. He instructed them to call
themselves cowboys, and in case they met any Mexicans,
to make inquiries for a well-known American ranch
which was located in the chaparral. With a few
simple instructions from his superior, the lieutenant
and squad rode away into the darkness of a June night.
It was in reality the dark hour before
dawn when they reached Agua Dulce. As secretly
as possible the lieutenant aroused Don Ramon’s
wife and sought an interview with her. Speaking
Spanish fluently, he explained his errand and her
duty to put him in possession of all the facts in
the case. Bewildered, as any gentlewoman would
be under the circumstances, she reluctantly told the
main facts. This officer treated Señora Mora
with every courtesy, and was eventually rewarded when
she requested him and his men to remain her guests
until her son should return, which would be before
noon. She explained that he would bring a large
sum of money with him, which was to be the ransom price
of her husband, and which was to be paid over at midnight
within twenty miles of Agua Dulce. This information
was food and raiment to the Ranger.
The señora of Agua Dulce sent a servant
to secrete the Ranger’s horses in a near-by
pasture, and with saddles hidden inside the house,
before the people of the ranch or the sun arose, five
Rangers were sleeping under the roof of the Casa
primero.
It was late in the day when the lieutenant
awoke to find Don Ramon, Jr., ready to welcome and
join in furnishing any details unknown to his mother.
The commercial instincts of the young man sided with
the Rangers, but the mother—thank God!—knew
no such impulses and thought of nothing save the return
of her husband, the father of her brood. The
officer considered only duty—being an unknown
quantity to him. He assured his hostess that
if she would confide in them, her husband would be
returned to her with all dispatch. Concealing
such things as he considered advisable from both mother
and son, he outlined his plans. At the appointed
time and place the money should be paid over and the
compact adhered to to the letter. He reserved
to himself and company, however, to furnish any red
light necessary.
An hour after dark, a messenger, Don
Ramon, Jr., and five Rangers set out to fulfill all
contracts pending and understood. The abandoned
ranchita in the monte—the meeting
point—had been at one time a stone house
of some pretensions, where had formerly lived its builder,
a wealthy, eccentric recluse. It had in previous
years, however, been burned, so that now only crumbling
walls remained, a gloomy, isolated, though picturesque
ruin, standing in an opening several acres in extent,
while trails, once in use, led to and from it.
When the party arrived within two
miles of the meeting point, an hour in advance of
the appointed time, a halt was called. Under the
direction of the lieutenant, the son and his companion
were to proceed by an old trail, forsaking the regular
pathway leading from Agua Dulce to the old ranch.
The Ranger squad tied their horses and followed a
respectful distance behind, near enough, however, to
hear in case any guards might halt them. They
were carefully cautioned not even to let Don Ramon,
if he were present, know that rescue from another quarter
was at hand. When the two sighted the ruin they
noticed a dim light within the walls. Then, without
a single challenge, they dashed up to the old house,
amid a clatter of hoofs, and shouts of welcome from
the bandits.
The messengers were unarmed, and once
inside the house were made prisoners, ironed, and
ordered into a corner, where crouched Don Ramon Mora,
now enfeebled by mental racking and physical abuse.
The meeting of father and son will be spared the reader,
yet in the young man’s heart was a hope that
he dared not communicate.
The night was warm. A fire flickered
in the old fireplace, and around its circle gathered
nine bandits to count and gloat over the blood money
of their victim, as a miser might over his bags of
gold. The bottle passed freely round the circle,
and with toast and taunt and jeer the counting of
the money was progressing. Suddenly, and with
as little warning as if they had dropped down from
among the stars, five Texas Rangers sprang through
windows and doors, and without a word a flood of fire
frothed from the mouths of ten six-shooters, hurling
death into the circle about the fire. There was
no cessation of the rain of lead until every gun was
emptied, when the men sprang back, each to his window
or door, where a carbine, carefully left, awaited
his hand to complete the work of death. In the
few moments that elapsed, the smoke arose and the
fire burned afresh, revealing the accuracy of their
aim. As they reëntered to review their work, two
of the bandits were found alive and untouched, having
thrown themselves in a corner amid the confusion of
smoke in the onslaught. Thus they were spared
the fate of the others, though the ghastly sight of
seven of their number, translated from life into death,
met their terrorized gaze. Human blood streamed
across the once peaceful hearth, while brains bespattered
life-sized figures in bas-relief of the Virgin Mary
and Christ Child which adorned the broad columns on
either side of the ample fireplace. In the throes
of death, one bandit had floundered about until his
hand rested in the fire, producing a sickening smell
from the burning flesh.
As Don Ramon was released, he stood
for a few moments half dazed, looking in bewilderment
at the awful spectacle before him. Then as the
truth gradually dawned upon him,—that this
sacrifice of blood meant liberty to himself,—he
fell upon his knees among the still warm bodies of
his tormentors, his face raised to the Virgin in exultation
of joy and thanksgiving.