BEFORE THE DICTATOR
Ned’s feeling of exaltation
lasted. The long siege, the incessant danger
and excitement, and the wonderful way in which the
little band of Texans had kept a whole army at bay
had keyed him up to a pitch in which he was not himself,
in which he was something a little more than human.
Such extraordinary moments come to few people, and
his vivid, imaginative mind was thrilled to the utmost.
He was on the early watch, and he
mounted the wall of the church. The deep silence
which marked the beginning of the night still prevailed.
They had not heard any shots, and for that reason they
all felt that the messenger had got through with Travis’
last letter.
It was very dark that night and Ned
could not see the red flag on the tower of the church
of San Fernando. But he knew it was there, waving
a little in the soft wind which blew out of the southwest,
herald of spring. Nothing broke the silence.
After so much noise, it was ominous, oppressive, surcharged
with threats. Fewer lights than usual burned in
the town and in the Mexican camp. All this stillness
portended to Ned the coming storm, and he was right.
His was a short watch, and at 11 o’clock
he went off duty. It was silent and dark in the
convent yard, and he sought his usual place for sleep
in the hospital, where many of the Texans had been
compelled to go, not merely to sleep, but because
they were really ill, worn out by so many alarms,
so much fighting and so much watching. But they
were all now asleep, overpowered by exhaustion.
Ned crept into his own dark little corner, and he,
too, was soon asleep.
But he was awakened about four hours
later by some one pulling hard at his shoulder.
He opened his eyes, and stared sleepily. It was
Crockett bending over him, and, Bowie lying on his
sick bed ten feet away, had raised himself on his
elbow. The light was so faint that Ned could
scarcely see Crockett’s face, but it looked very
tense and eager.
“Get up, Ned! Get up!”
said Crockett, shaking him again. “There’s
great work for you to do!”
“Why, what is it?” exclaimed
the boy, springing to his feet.
“It’s your friends, Roylston,
an’ that man, the Panther, you’ve been
tellin’ me about,” replied Crockett in
quick tones. “While you were asleep a Mexican,
friendly to us, sneaked a message over the wall, sayin’
that Roylston, the Panther, an’ others were layin’
to the east with a big force not more’n twenty
miles away—not Fannin’s crowd, but
another one that’s come down from the north.
They don’t know whether we’re holdin’
out yet or not, an’ o’ course they don’t
want to risk destruction by tryin’ to cut through
the Mexican army to reach us when we ain’t here.
The Mexican dassent go out of San Antonio. He
won’t try it, ‘cause, as he says, it’s
sure death for him, an’ so somebody must go
to Roylston with the news that we’re still alive,
fightin’ an’ kickin’. Colonel
Travis has chose you, an’ you’ve got to
go. No, there’s no letter. You’re
just to tell Roylston by word of mouth to come on with
his men.”
The words came forth popping like
pistol shots. Ned was swept off his feet.
He did not have time to argue or ask questions.
Bowie also added a fresh impetus. “Go,
Ned, go at once!” he said. “You are
chosen for a great service. It’s an honor
to anybody!”
“A service of great danger,
requirin’ great skill,” said Crockett,
“but you can do it, Ned, you can do it.”
Ned flushed. This was, in truth,
a great trust. He might, indeed, bring the help
they needed so sorely.
“Here’s your rifle an’
other weapons an’ ammunition,” said Crockett.
“The night’s at its darkest an’ you
ain’t got any time to waste. Come on!”
So swift was Crockett that Ned was
ready almost before he knew it. The Tennesseean
never ceased hurrying him. But as he started,
Bowie called to him:
“Good-by, Ned!”
The boy turned back and offered his
hand. The Georgian shook it with unusual warmth,
and then lay back calmly on his blankets.
“Good-by, Ned,” he repeated,
“and if we don’t meet again I hope you’ll
forget the dark things in my life, and remember me
as one who was doing his best for Texas.”
“But we will meet again,”
said Ned. “The relieving force will be here
in two or three days and I’ll come with it.”
“Out with you!” said Crockett.
“That’s talk enough. What you want
to do now is to put on your invisible cap an’
your seven league boots an’ go like lightnin’
through the Mexican camp. Remember that you can
talk their lingo like a native, an’ don’t
forget, neither, to keep always about you a great
big piece of presence of mind that you can use on a
moment’s notice.”
Ned wore his serape and he carried
a pair of small, light but very warm blankets, strapped
in a pack on his back. His haversack contained
bread and dried beef, and, with his smaller weapons
in his belt, and his rifle over his shoulder, he was
equipped fully for a long and dangerous journey.
Crockett and the boy passed into the convent yard.
The soft wind from the southwest blew
upon their faces, and from the high wall of the church
a sentinel called: “All’s well!”
Ned felt an extraordinary shiver, a premonition, but
it passed, unexplained. He and Crockett went
into the main plaza and reached the lowest part of
the wall.
“Ought I to see Colonel Travis?”
asked Ned, as they were on the way.
“No, he asked me to see to it,
’cause there ain’t no time to waste.
It’s about three o’clock in the mornin’
now, an’ you’ve got to slip through in
two or three hours, ‘cause the light will be
showin’ then. Now, Ned, up with you an’
over.”
Ned climbed to the summit of the wall.
Beyond lay heavy darkness, and he neither saw nor
heard any human being. He looked back, and extended
his hand to Crockett as he had to Bowie.
“Good-by, Mr. Crockett,”
he said, “you’ve been very good to me.”
The great brown hand of the frontiersman
clasped his almost convulsively.
“Aye, Ned,” he said, “we’ve
cottoned to each other from the first. I haven’t
knowed you long, but you’ve been like a son to
me. Now go, an’ God speed you!”
Ned recalled afterward that he did
not say anything about Roylston’s relieving
force. What he thought of then was the deep feeling
in Crockett’s words.
“I’m coming back,”
he said, “and I hope to hunt buffalo with you
over the plains of a free Texas.”
“Go! go! Hurry, Ned!” said Crockett.
“Good-by,” said Ned, and he dropped lightly
to the ground.
He was outside the Alamo after eleven
days inside, that seemed in the retrospect almost
as many months. He flattened himself against the
wall, and stood there for a minute or two, looking
and listening. He thought he might hear Crockett
again inside, but evidently the Tennesseean had gone
back at once. In front of him was only the darkness,
pierced by a single light off toward the west.
Ned hesitated. It was hard for
him to leave the Alamo and the friends who had been
knitted to him by so many common dangers, yet his errand
was one of high importance—it might save
them all—and he must do it. Strengthening
his resolution he started across an open space, walking
lightly. As Crockett had truly said, with his
perfect knowledge of the language he might pass for
a Mexican. He had done so before, and he did
not doubt his ability to do so again.
He resolved to assume the character
of a Mexican scout, looking into the secrets of the
Alamo, and going back to report to Santa Anna.
As he advanced he heard voices and saw earthworks
from which the muzzles of four cannon protruded.
Behind the earthwork was a small fire, and he knew
that men would be sitting about it. He turned
aside, not wishing to come too much into the light,
but a soldier near the earthwork hailed him, and Ned,
according to his plan, replied briefly that he was
on his way to General Santa Anna in San Antonio.
But the man was talkative.
“What is your name?” he asked.
“Pedro Miguel Alvarado,” replied Ned on
the spur of the moment.
“Well, friend, it is a noble name, that of Alvarado.”
“But it is not a noble who bears
it. Though a descendant of the great Alvarado,
who fought by the side of the glorious and mighty
conquistador, Hernando Cortez, I am but a poor peasant
offering my life daily for bread in the army of General
Santa Anna.”
The man laughed.
“You are as well off as I am,”
he said. “But what of the wicked Texans?
Are they yet ready to surrender their throats to our
knives? The dogs hold us over long. It is
said that they number scarce two hundred within the
mission. Truly they fight hard, and well they
may, knowing that death only is at the end.”
Ned shuddered. The man seemed
to take it all so lightly. But he replied in
a firm voice:
“I learned little of them save
that they still fight. I took care not to put
myself before the muzzle of any of their rifles.”
The Mexican laughed again.
“A lad of wisdom, you,”
he said. “They are demons with their rifles.
When the great assault is made, many a good man will
speed to his long home before the Alamo is taken.”
So, they had already decided upon
the assault. The premonition within the Alamo
was not wrong. It occurred to Ned that he might
learn more, and he paused.
“Has it been finally settled?”
he asked. “We attack about three days from
now, do we not?”
“Earlier than that,” replied
the Mexican. “I know that the time has been
chosen, and I think it is to-morrow morning.”
Ned’s heart beat heavily.
To-morrow morning! Even if he got through, how
could he ever bring Roylston and the relief force in
time?
“I thank you,” he said,
“but I must hurry with my report.”
“Adios, Señor,” said the
man politely, and Ned repeated his “Adios”
in the same tone. Then he hurried forward, continually
turning in toward the east, hoping to find a passage
where the Mexican line was thinnest. But the
circle of the invaders was complete, and he saw that
he must rely upon his impersonation of a Mexican to
take him through.
He was in a fever of haste, knowing
now that the great assault was to come so soon, and
he made for a point between two smoldering camp fires
fifty or sixty yards apart. Boldness only would
now avail, and with the brim of his sombrero pulled
well down over his face he walked confidently forward,
coming fully within the light of the fire on his left.
A number of Mexican soldiers were
asleep around the fire, but at least a half dozen
men were awake. They called to Ned as he passed
and he responded readily, but Fortune, which had been
so kind to him for a long time, all at once turned
her back upon him. When he spoke, a man in officer’s
uniform who had been sitting by the fire rose quickly.
“Your name?” he cried.
“Pedro Miguel Alvarado,”
replied Ned instantly. At the same moment he
recognized Urrea.
“It is not so!” cried
Urrea. “You are one of the Texans, young
Fulton. I know your voice. Upon him, men!
Seize him!”
His action and the leap of the Mexicans
were so sudden that Ned did not have time to aim his
rifle. But he struck one a short-arm blow with
the butt of it that sent him down with a broken head,
and he snatched at his pistol as three or four others
threw themselves upon him. Ned was uncommonly
strong and agile, and he threw off two of the men,
but the others pressed him to the ground, until, at
Urrea’s command, his arms were bound and he
was allowed to rise.
Ned was in despair, not so much for
himself but because there was no longer a chance that
he could get through to Roylston. It was a deep
mortification, moreover, to be taken by Urrea.
But he faced the Mexican with an appearance of calmness.
“Well,” he said, “I am your prisoner.”
“You are,” said Urrea,
“and you might have passed, if I had not known
your voice. But I remind you that you come from
the Alamo. You see our flag, and you know its
meaning.”
The black eyes of the Mexican regarded
Ned malignantly. The boy knew that the soul of
Urrea was full of wicked triumph. The officer
could shoot him down at that moment, and be entirely
within orders. But Ned recalled the words of
Roylston. The merchant had told him to use his
name if he should ever fall again into the hands of
Santa Anna.
“I am your prisoner,”
he repeated, “and I demand to be taken before
General Santa Anna. Whatever your red flag may
mean, there are reasons why he will spare me.
Go with me and you will see.”
He spoke with such boldness and directness
that Urrea was impressed.
“I shall take you to the general,”
he said, “not because you demand it, but because
I think it well to do so. It is likely that he
will want to examine you, and I believe that in his
presence you will tell all you know. But it is
not yet 4 o’clock in the morning, and I cannot
awaken him now. You will stay here until after
daylight.”
“Very well,” said Ned,
trying to be calm as possible. “As you have
bound me I cannot walk, but if you’ll put me
on a blanket there by the fire I’ll sleep until
you want me.”
“We won’t deny you that comfort,”
replied Urrea grimly.
When Ned was stretched on his blanket
he was fairly easy so far as the body was concerned.
They had bound him securely, but not painfully.
His agony of mind, though, was great. Nevertheless
he fell asleep, and slept in a restless way for three
or four hours, until Urrea awoke him, and told him
they were going to Santa Anna.
It was a clear, crisp dawn and Ned
saw the town, the river, and the Alamo. There,
only a short distance away, stood the dark fortress,
from which he had slipped but a few hours before with
such high hopes. He even saw the figures of the
sentinels, moving slowly on the church walls, and
his heart grew heavy within him. He wished now
that he was back with the defenders. Even if
he should escape it would be too late. At Urrea’s
orders he was unbound.
“There is no danger of your
escaping now,” said the young Mexican.
“Several of my men are excellent marksmen, and
they will fire at the first step you take in flight.
And even should they miss, what chance do you think
you have here?”
He swept his right hand in a circle,
and, in the clear morning air, Ned saw batteries and
troops everywhere. He knew that the circle of
steel about the Alamo was complete. Perhaps he
would have failed in his errand even had he got by.
It would require an unusually strong force to cut
through an army as large as that of Santa Anna, and
he did not know where Roylston could have found it.
He started, as a sudden suspicion smote him.
He remembered Crockett’s hurried manner, and
his lack of explanation. But he put it aside.
It could not be true.
“I see that you look at the
Alamo,” said Urrea ironically. “Well,
the rebel flag is still there, but it will not remain
much longer. The trap is about ready to shut
down.”
Ned’s color rose.
“It may be so,” he said,
“but for every Texan who falls the price will
be five Mexicans.”
“But they will fall, nevertheless,”
said Urrea. “Here is food for you.
Eat, and I will take you to the general.”
They offered him Mexican food, but
he had no appetite, and he ate little. He stretched
and tensed his limbs in order to restore the full
flood of circulation, and announced that he was ready.
Urrea led the way, and Ned followed with a guard of
four men about him.
The boy had eyes and ears for everything
around him, but he looked most toward the Alamo.
He could not, at the distance, recognize the figures
on the wall, but all those men were his friends, and
his eyes filled with tears at their desperate case.
Out here with the Mexicans, where he could see all
their overwhelming force and their extensive preparations,
the chances of the Texans looked worse than they did
inside the Alamo.
They entered the town and passed through
the same streets, along which Ned had advanced with
the conquering army of the Texans a few months before.
Many evidences of the siege remained. There were
tunnels, wrecked houses and masses of stone and adobe.
The appearance of the young prisoner aroused the greatest
curiosity among both soldiers and people. He
heard often the word “Texano.” Women
frequently looked down at him from the flat roofs,
and some spoke in pity.
Ned was silent. He was resolved
not to ask Urrea any questions or to give him a chance
to show triumph. He noticed that they were advancing
toward the plaza, and then they turned into the Veramendi
house, which he had cause to remember so well.
“This was the home of the Vice-Governor,”
said Urrea, “and General Santa Anna is here.”
“I know the place,” said
Ned. “I am proud to have been one of the
Texans who took it on a former occasion.”
“We lost it then, but we have
it now and we’ll keep it,” said Urrea.
“My men will wait with you here in the courtyard,
and I’ll see if our illustrious general is ready
to receive you.”
Ned waited patiently. Urrea was
gone a full half hour, and, when he returned, he said:
“The general was at breakfast
with his staff. He had not quite finished, but
he is ready to receive you now.”
Then Urrea led the way into the Veramendi
house. Luxurious fittings had been put in, but
many of the rents and scars from the old combat were
yet visible. They entered the great dining room,
and, once more, Ned stood face to face with the most
glorious general, the most illustrious dictator, Don
Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna. But Ned alone stood.
The dictator sat at the head of the table, about which
were Castrillon, Sesma, Cos, Gaona, the Italian, Filisola
and others. It seemed to Ned that he had come
not only upon a breakfast but upon a conference as
well.
The soldiers who had guarded Ned stepped
back, Urrea stood by the wall, and the boy was left
to meet the fixed gaze of Santa Anna. The dictator
wore a splendid uniform, as usual. His face seemed
to Ned fuller and more flushed than when they had
last met in Mexico. The marks of dissipation
were there. Ned saw him slip a little silver box
from the pocket of his waistcoat and take from it
a pinch of a dark drug, which he ate. It was
opium, but the Mexican generals seemed to take no note
of it.
Santa Anna’s gaze was fixed
and piercing, as if he would shoot terror into the
soul of his enemy—a favorite device of his—but
Ned withstood it. Then Santa Anna, removing his
stare from his face, looked him slowly up and down.
The generals said nothing, waiting upon their leader,
who could give life or death as he chose. Ned
was sure that Santa Anna remembered him, and, in a
moment, he knew that he was right.
“It is young Fulton, who made
the daring and ingenious escape from our hospitality
in the capital,” he said, “and who also
departed in an unexpected manner from one of the submarine
dungeons of our castle of San Juan de Ulua. Fate
does not seem to reward your courage and enterprise
as they deserve, since you are in our hands again.”
The dictator laughed and his generals
laughed obediently also. Ned said nothing.
“I am informed by that most
meritorious young officer, Captain Urrea,” continued
Santa Anna, “that you were captured about three
o’clock this morning trying to escape from the
Alamo.”
“That is correct,” said Ned.
“Why were you running away in the dark?”
Ned flushed, but, knowing that it
was an unworthy and untruthful taunt, he remained
silent.
“You do not choose to answer,”
said Santa Anna, “but I tell you that you are
the rat fleeing from the sinking ship. Our cannon
have wrecked the interior of the Alamo. Half
of your men are dead, and the rest would gladly surrender
if I should give them the promise of life.”
“It is not true!” exclaimed
Ned with heat. “Despite all your fire the
defenders of the Alamo have lost but a few men.
You offer no quarter and they ask none. They
are ready to fight to the last.”
There was a murmur among the generals,
but Santa Anna raised his hand and they were silent
again.
“I cannot believe all that you
say,” he continued. “It is a boast.
The Texans are braggarts. To-morrow they die,
every one of them. But tell us the exact condition
of everything inside the Alamo, and perhaps I may
spare your life.”
Ned shut his teeth so hard that they
hurt. A deep flush surged into the dark face
of Santa Anna.
“You are stubborn. All
the Texans are stubborn. But I do not need any
information from you. I shall crush the Alamo,
as my fingers would smash an eggshell.”
“But your fingers will be pierced
deep,” Ned could not keep from replying.
“They will run blood.”
“Be that as it may,” said
Santa Anna, who, great in some things, was little
enough to taunt an enemy in his power, “you will
not live to see it. I am about to give orders
to have you shot within an hour.”
His lips wrinkled away from his white
teeth like those of a great cat about to spring, and
his cruel eyes contracted. Holding all the power
of Mexico in his hands he was indeed something to
be dreaded. The generals about the table never
spoke. But Ned remembered the words of Roylston.
“A great merchant named John
Roylston has been a good friend to me,” he said.
“He told me that if I should ever fall into your
hands I was to mention his name to you, and to say
that he considered my life of value.”
The expression of the dictator changed.
He frowned, and then regarded Ned intently, as if
he would read some secret that the boy was trying to
hide.
“And so you know John Roylston,”
he said at length, “and he wishes you to say
to me that your life is of value.”
Ned saw the truth at once. He
had a talisman and that talisman was the name of Roylston.
He did not know why it was so, but it was a wonderful
talisman nevertheless, because it was going to save
his life for the time being, at least. He glanced
at the generals, and he saw a look of curiosity on
the face of every one of them.
“I know Roylston,” said
Santa Anna slowly, “and there are some matters
between us. It may be to my advantage to spare
you for a while.”
Ned’s heart sprang up.
Life was sweet. Since he was to be spared for
a while it must mean ultimately exchange or escape.
Santa Anna, a reader of the human face, saw what was
in his mind.
“Be not too sanguine,”
he said, “because I have changed my mind once
it does not mean that you are to be free now or ever.
I shall keep you here, and you shall see your comrades
fall.”
A sudden smile, offspring of a quick
thought and satanic in its nature, passed over his
face.
“I will make you a spectator
of the defeat of the Texans,” he said. “A
great event needs a witness, and since you cannot be
a combatant you can serve in that capacity. We
attack at dawn to-morrow, and you shall miss nothing
of it.”
The wicked smile passed over his face
again. It had occurred to Ned, a student of history,
that the gladiatorial cruelty of the ancient Romans
had descended to the Spaniards instead of the Italians.
Now he was convinced that it was so.
“You shall be kept a prisoner
in one of our strongest houses,” said Santa
Anna, “and Captain Urrea, whose vigilance prevented
your escape, will keep guard over you. I fancy
it is a task that he does not hate.”
Santa Anna had also read the mind
of the young Mexican. Urrea smiled. He liked
this duty. He hated Ned and he, too, was not above
taunting a prisoner. He advanced, and put a hand
upon Ned’s shoulder, but the boy shook it off.
“Don’t touch me,”
said Ned. “I’ll follow without resistance.”
Santa Anna laughed.
“Let him have his way for the
present, Captain Urrea,” he said. “But
remember that it is due to your gentleness and mercy.
Adios, Señor Fulton, we meet again to-morrow morning,
and if you survive I shall report to Mr. Roylston
the manner in which you may bear yourself.”
“Good-day,” said Ned,
resolved not to be outdone, even in ironical courtesy.
“And now, Captain Urrea, if you will lead the
way, I’ll follow.”
Urrea and his soldiers took Ned from
the Veramendi house and across the street to a large
and strong stone building.
“You are fortunate,” said
Urrea, “to have escaped immediate death.
I do not know why the name of Roylston was so powerful
with our general, but I saw that it was.”
“It seemed to have its effect,” said Ned.
Urrea led the way to the flat roof
of the house, a space reached by a single narrow stairway.
“I shall leave you here with
two guards,” he said. “I shall give
them instructions to fire upon you at the slightest
attempt on your part to escape, but I fancy that you
will have sense enough not to make any such attempt.”
Urrea departed, but the two sentinels
sat by the entrance to the stairway, musket in hand.
He had not the faintest chance to get by them, and
knowing it he sat down on the low stone coping of the
roof. He wondered why Urrea had brought him there
instead of locking him up in a room. Perhaps
it was to mock him with the sight of freedom so near
and yet unattainable.
His gaze turned instinctively to the
Alamo like the magnet to the pole. There was
the fortress, gray and grim in the sunshine, with the
dim figures of the watchers on the walls. What
were they doing inside now? How were Crockett
and Bowie? His heart filled with grief that he
had failed them. But had he failed them?
Neither Urrea nor any other Mexican had spoken of
the approach of a relieving force under Roylston.
There was no sign that the Mexicans were sending any
part of their army to meet it.
The heavy thud of a great gun drew
his attention, and he saw the black smoke from the
discharge rising over the plain. A second, a third
and a fourth cannon shot were fired, but no answer
came from the walls of the Alamo. At length he
saw one of the men in the nearest battery to the Alamo
expose himself above the earthwork. There was
a flash from the wall of the church, a little puff
of smoke, and Ned saw the man fall as only dead men
fall. Perhaps it was Davy Crockett, the great
marksman, who had fired that shot. He liked to
think that it was so, and he rejoiced also at this
certain evidence that the little garrison was as dauntless
as ever. He watched the Alamo for nearly an hour,
and he saw that the firing was desultory. Not
more than a dozen cannon shots were fired during that
time, and only three or four rifles replied from the
Alamo. Toward noon the firing ceased entirely,
and Ned knew that this was in very fact and truth
the lull before the storm.
His attention wandered to his guards.
They were mere peons, but, although watchful, they
were taking their ease. Evidently they liked
their task. They were resting with the complete
relaxation of the body that only the Southern races
know. Both had lighted cigarritos, and were puffing
at them contentedly. It had been a long time since
Ned had seen such a picture of lazy ease.
“You like it here?” he said to the nearest.
The man took the cigarrito from his
mouth, emitted smoke from his nose and replied politely:
“It is better to be here lying
in the sun than out there on the grass with a Texan
bullet through one’s body. Is it not so,
Fernando?”
“Aye, it is so,” replied
his comrade. “I like not the Texan bullets.
I am glad to be here where they cannot reach me.
It is said that Satan sights their rifles for them,
because they do not miss. They will die hard
to-morrow. They will die like the bear in its
den, fighting the hunters, when our army is poured
upon them. That will be an end to all the Texans,
and we will go back to the warm south.”
“But are you sure,” asked
Ned, “that it will be an end of the Texans?
Not all the Texans are shut up in the Alamo.”
“What matters it?” replied
Fernando, lightly. “It may be delayed, but
the end will be the same. Nothing can resist the
great, the powerful, the most illustrious Santa Anna.
He is always able to dig graves for his enemies.”
The men talked further. Ned gathered
from them that the whole force of Santa Anna was now
present. Some of his officers wanted him to wait
for siege artillery of the heaviest caliber that would
batter down the walls of the Alamo, but the dictator
himself was impatient for the assault. It would
certainly take place the next morning.
“And why is the young señor
here?” asked Fernando. “The order
has been issued that no Texan shall be spared, and
do you not see the red flag waving there close by
us?”
Ned looked up. The red flag now
flaunted its folds very near to him. He could
not repress a shiver.
“I am here,” he replied,
“because some one who has power has told General
Santa Anna that I am not to be put to death.”
“It is well for you, then,”
said Fernando, “that you have a friend of such
weight. It is a pity to die when one is so young
and so straight and strong as you. Ah, my young
señor, the world is beautiful. Look how green
is the grass there by the river, and how the sun lies
like gold across it!”
Ned had noticed before the love of
beauty that the humblest peon sometimes had, and there
was a certain touch of brotherly feeling between him
and this man, his jailer.
“The world is beautiful,”
said the boy, “and I am willing to tell you
that I have no wish to leave it.”
“Nor I,” said Fernando.
“Why are the Texans so foolish as to oppose the
great Santa Anna, the most illustrious and powerful
of all generals and rulers? Did they not know
that he would come and crush them, every one?”
Ned did not reply. The peon,
in repose at least, had a gentle heart, and the boy
knew that Santa Anna was to him omnipotent and omniscient.
He turned his attention anew to the Alamo, that magnet
of his thoughts. It was standing quiet in the
sun now. The defiant flag of the defenders, upon
which they had embroidered the word “Texas,”
hung lazily from the staff.
The guards in the afternoon gave him
some food and a jug of water, and they also ate and
drank upon the roof. They were yet amply content
with their task and their position there. No
bullets could reach them. The sunshine was golden
and pleasant. They had established friendly relations
with the prisoner. He had not given them the slightest
trouble, and, before and about them, was spread the
theater upon which a mighty drama was passing, all
for them to see. What more could be asked by
two simple peasants of small wants?
Ned was glad that they let him remain
upon the roof. The Alamo drew his gaze with a
power that he could not break if he would. Since
he was no longer among the defenders he was eager
to see every detail in the vast drama that was now
unfolding.
But the afternoon passed in inaction.
The sun was brilliant and toward evening turned to
a deep, glowing red. It lighted up for the last
time the dim figures that stood on the walls of the
Alamo. Ned choked as he saw them there.
He felt the premonition.
Urrea came upon the roof shortly before
twilight. He was not sneering or ironical, and
Ned, who had no wish to quarrel at such a time, was
glad of it.
“As General Santa Anna told
you,” said Urrea, “the assault is to be
made in overwhelming force early in the morning.
It will succeed, of course. Nothing can prevent
it. Through the man Roylston, you have some claim
upon the general, but it may not be strong enough to
save you long. A service now might make his pardon
permanent.”
“What do you mean by a service now?”
“A few words as to the weaker
points of the Alamo, the best places for our troops
to attack. You cannot do anything for the defenders.
You cannot alter their fate in any particular, but
you might do something for yourself.”
Ned did not wish to appear dramatic.
He merely turned his back upon the young Mexican.
“Very well,” said Urrea,
“I made you the offer. It was for you to
accept it or not as you wish.”
He left him upon the roof, and Ned
saw the last rim of the red sun sink in the plain.
He saw the twilight come, and the Alamo fade into a
dim black bulk in the darkness. He thought once
that he heard a cry of a sentinel from its walls,
“All’s well,” but he knew that it
was only fancy. The distance was far too great.
Besides, all was not well.
When the darkness had fully come,
he descended with his two benevolent jailers to a
lower part of the house, where he was assigned to a
small room, with a single barred window and without
the possibility of escape. His guards, after
bringing him food and water, gave him a polite good
night and went outside. He knew that they would
remain on watch in the hall.
Ned could eat and drink but little.
Nor could he yet sleep. The night was far too
heavy upon him for slumber. Besides, it had brought
many noises, significant noises that he knew.
He heard the rumble of cannon wheels over the rough
pavements, and the shouts of men to the horses or
mules. He heard troops passing, now infantry,
and then cavalry, the hoofs of their horses grinding
upon the stones.
He pressed his face against the barred
window. He was eager to hear and yet more eager
to see. He caught glimpses only of horse and foot
as they passed, but he knew what all those sights
and sounds portended. In the night the steel
coil of the Mexicans was being drawn closer and closer
about the Alamo.
Brave and resolute, he was only a
boy after all. He felt deserted of all men.
He wanted to be back there with Crockett and Bowie
and Travis and the others. The water came into
his eyes, and unconsciously he pulled hard at the
iron bars.
He remained there a long time, listening
to the sounds. Once he heard a trumpet, and its
note in the night was singularly piercing. He
knew that it was a signal, probably for the moving
of a regiment still closer to the Alamo. But
there were no shots from either the Mexicans or the
mission. The night was clear with many stars.
After two or three hours at the window
Ned tried to sleep. There was a narrow bed against
the wall, and he lay upon it, full length, but he did
not even close his eyes. He became so restless
that at last he rose and went to the window again.
It must have been then past midnight. The noises
had ceased. Evidently the Mexicans had everything
ready. The wind blew cold upon his face, but
it brought him no news of what was passing without.
He went back to the bed, and by and
by he sank into a heavy slumber.