TO THE LAST MAN
Ned awoke after a feverish night,
when there was yet but a strip of gray in the east.
It was Sunday morning, but he had lost count of time,
and did not know it. He had not undressed at
all when he lay down, and now he stood by the window,
seeking to see and hear. But the light was yet
dim and the sounds were few. Nevertheless the
great pulse in his throat began to leap. The
attack was at hand.
The door of the room was unlocked
and the two peons who had guarded him upon the roof
came for him. Ned saw in the half gloom that they
were very grave of countenance.
“We are to take you to the noble
Captain Urrea, who is waiting for you,” said
Fernando.
“Very well,” said Ned.
“I am ready. You have been kind to me, and
I hope that we shall meet again after to-day.”
Both men shook their heads.
“We fear that is not to be,” said Fernando.
They found Urrea and another young
officer waiting at the door of the house. Urrea
was in his best uniform and his eyes were very bright.
He was no coward, and Ned knew that the gleam was
in anticipation of the coming attack.
“The time is at hand,”
he said, “and it will be your wonderful fortune
to see how Mexico strikes down her foe.”
His voice, pitched high, showed excitement,
and a sense of the dramatic. Ned said nothing,
and his own pulses began to leap again. The strip
of gray in the east was broadening, and he now saw
that the whole town was awake, although it was not
yet full daylight. Santa Anna had been at work
in the night, while he lay in that feverish sleep.
He heard everywhere now the sound of voices, the clank
of arms and the beat of horses’ hoofs.
The flat roofs were crowded with the Mexican people.
Ned saw Mexican women there in their dresses of bright
colors, like Roman women in the Colosseum, awaiting
the battle of the gladiators. The atmosphere
was surcharged with excitement, and the sense of coming
triumph.
Ned’s breath seemed to choke
in his throat and his heart beat painfully. Once
more he wished with all his soul that he was with his
friends, that he was in the Alamo. He belonged
with them there, and he would rather face death with
those familiar faces around him than be here, safe
perhaps, but only a looker-on. It was with him
now a matter of the emotions, and not of reasoned
intellect. Once more he looked toward the old
mission, and saw the dim outline of the buildings,
with the dominating walls of the church. He could
not see whether anyone watched on the walls, but he
knew that the sentinels were there. Perhaps Crockett,
himself, stood among them now, looking at the great
Mexican coil of steel that was wrapping itself tighter
and tighter around the Alamo. Despite himself,
Ned uttered a sigh.
“What is the matter with you?”
asked Urrea, sharply. “Are you already
weeping for the conquered?”
“You know that I am not,”
replied Ned. “You need not believe me, but
I regret that I am not in the Alamo with my friends.”
“It’s an idle wish,”
said Urrea, “but I am taking you now to General
Santa Anna. Then I leave, and I go there!
Look, the horsemen!”
He extended his hand, and Ned saw
his eyes kindling. The Mexican cavalry were filing
out in the dim dawn, troop after troop, the early light
falling across the blades of the lances, spurs and
bridles jingling. All rode well, and they made
a thrilling picture, as they rode steadily on, curving
about the old fortress.
“I shall soon be with them,”
said Urrea in a tone of pride. “We shall
see that not a single one of your Texans escapes from
the Alamo.”
Ned felt that choking in his throat
again, but he deemed it wiser to keep silent.
They were going toward the main plaza now, and he saw
masses of troops gathered in the streets. These
men were generally silent, and he noticed that their
faces expressed no elation. He divined at once
that they were intended for the assault, and they had
no cause for joy. They knew that they must face
the deadly Texan rifles.
Urrea led the way to a fortified battery
standing in front of the main plaza. A brilliant
group stood behind an earthen wall, and Ned saw Santa
Anna among them.
“I have brought the prisoner,” said Urrea,
saluting.
“Very good,” replied the
dictator, “and now, Captain Urrea, you can join
your command. You have served me well, and you
shall have your share in the glory of this day.”
Urrea flushed with pride at the compliment,
and bowed low. Then he hurried away to join the
horse. Santa Anna turned his attention.
“I have brought you here at
this moment,” he said, “to give you a last
chance. It is not due to any mercy for you, a
rebel, but it is because you have been so long in
the Alamo that you must know it well. Point out
to us its weakest places, and you shall be free.
You shall go north in safety. I promise it here,
in the presence of my generals.”
“I have nothing to tell,” replied Ned.
“Are you sure?”
“Absolutely sure.”
“Then it merely means a little
more effusion of blood. You may stay with us
and see the result.”
All the ancient, inherited cruelty
now shone in Santa Anna’s eyes. It was
the strange satanic streak in him that made him keep
his captive there in order that he might see the fall
of his own comrades. A half dozen guards stood
near the person of the dictator, and he said to them:
“If the prisoner seeks to leave us, shoot him
at once.”
The manner of Santa Anna was arrogant
to the last degree, but Ned was glad to stay.
He was eager to see the great panorama which was about
to be unrolled before him. He was completely
absorbed in the Alamo, and he utterly forgot himself.
Black specks were dancing before his eyes, and the
blood was pounding in his ears, but he took no notice
of such things.
The gray bar in the east broadened.
A thin streak of shining silver cut through it, and
touched for a moment the town, the river, the army
and the Alamo. Ned leaned against an edge of
the earthwork, and breathed heavily and painfully.
He had not known that his heart could beat so hard.
The same portentous silence prevailed
everywhere. The men and women on the roofs of
the houses were absolutely still. The cavalry,
their line now drawn completely about the mission,
were motionless. Ned, straining his eyes toward
the Alamo, could see nothing there. Suddenly he
put up his hand and wiped his forehead. His fingers
came away wet. His blood prickled in his veins
like salt. He became impatient, angry. If
the mine was ready, why did they not set the match?
Such waiting was the pitch of cruelty.
“Cos, my brother,” said
Santa Anna to the swart general, “take your
command. It was here that the Texan rebels humiliated
you, and it is here that you shall have full vengeance.”
Cos saluted, and strode away.
He was to lead one of the attacking columns.
“Colonel Duque,” said
Santa Anna to another officer, “you are one of
the bravest of the brave. You are to direct the
attack on the northern wall, and may quick success
go with you.”
Duque glowed at the compliment, and
he, too, strode away to the head of his column.
“Colonel Romero,” said
Santa Anna, “the third column is yours, and the
fourth is yours, Colonel Morales. Take your places
and, at the signal agreed, the four columns will charge
with all their strength. Let us see which will
be the first in the Alamo.”
The two colonels saluted as the others
had done, and joined their columns.
The bar of gray in the east was still
broadening, but the sun itself did not yet show.
The walls of the Alamo were still dim, and Ned could
not see whether any figures were there. Santa
Anna had put a pair of powerful glasses to his eyes,
but when he took them down he said nothing of what
he had seen.
“Are all the columns provided?”
he said to General Sesma, who stood beside him.
“They have everything,”
replied Sesma, “crowbars, axes, scaling ladders.
Sir, they cannot fail!”
“No, they cannot,” said
Santa Anna exultantly. “These Texan rebels
fight like demons, but we have now a net through which
they cannot break. General Gaona, see that the
bands are ready and direct them to play the Deguelo
when the signal for the charge is given.”
Ned shivered again. The “Deguelo”
meant the “cutting-of-throats,” and it,
too, was to be the signal of no quarter. He remembered
the red flag, and he looked up. It hung, as ever,
on the tower of the church of San Fernando, and its
scarlet folds moved slowly in the light morning breeze.
General Gaona returned.
“The bands are ready, general,”
he said, “and when the signal is given they
will play the air that you have chosen.”
A Mexican, trumpet in hand, was standing
near. Santa Anna turned and said to him the single
word:
“Blow!”
The man lifted the trumpet to his
lips, and blew a long note that swelled to its fullest
pitch, then died away in a soft echo.
It was the signal. A tremendous
cry burst from the vast ring of the thousands, and
it was taken up by the shrill voices of the women on
the flat roofs of the houses. The great circle
of cavalrymen shook their lances and sabers until
they glittered.
When the last echo of the trumpet’s
dying note was gone the bands began to play with their
utmost vigor the murderous tune that Santa Anna had
chosen. Then four columns of picked Mexican troops,
three thousand strong, rushed toward the Alamo.
Santa Anna and the generals around him were tremendously
excited. Their manner made no impression upon
Ned then, but he recalled the fact afterward.
The boy became quickly unconscious
of everything except the charge of the Mexicans and
the Alamo. He no longer remembered that he was
a prisoner. He no longer remembered anything
about himself. The cruel throb of that murderous
tune, the Deguelo, beat upon the drums of his ears,
and mingled with it came the sound of the charging
Mexicans, the beat of their feet, the clank of their
arms, and the shouts of their officers.
Whatever may be said of the herded
masses of the Mexican troops, the Mexican officers
were full of courage. They were always in advance,
waving their swords and shouting to their men to come
on. Another silver gleam flashed through the
gray light of the early morning, ran along the edges
of swords and lances, and lingered for a moment over
the dark walls of the Alamo.
No sound came from the mission, not
a shot, not a cry. Were they asleep? Was
it possible that every man, overpowered by fatigue,
had fallen into slumber at such a moment? Could
such as Crockett and Bowie and Travis be blind to
their danger? Such painful questions raced through
Ned’s mind. He felt a chill run down his
spine. Yet his breath was like fire to his lips.
“Nothing will stop them!”
cried Santa Anna. “The Texans cower before
such a splendid force! They will lay down their
arms!”
Ned felt his body growing colder and
colder, and there was a strange tingling at the roots
of the hair. Now the people upon the roofs were
shouting their utmost, and the voices of many women
united in one shrill, piercing cry. But he never
turned to look at them. His eyes were always
on the charging host which converged so fast upon the
Alamo.
The trumpet blew another signal, and
there was a crash so loud that it made Ned jump.
All the Mexican batteries had fired at once over the
heads of their own troops at the Alamo. While
the gunners reloaded the smoke of the discharge drifted
away and the Alamo still stood silent. But over
it yet hung a banner on which was written in great
letters the word, “Texas.”
The Mexican troops were coming close
now. The bands playing the Deguelo swelled to
greater volume and the ground shook again as the Mexican
artillery fired its second volley. When the smoke
drifted away again the Alamo itself suddenly burst
into flame. The Texan cannon at close range poured
their shot and shell into the dense ranks of the Mexicans.
But piercing through the heavy thud of the cannon
came the shriller and more deadly crackle of the rifles.
The Texans were there, every one of them, on the walls.
He might have known it. Nothing on earth could
catch them asleep, nor could anything on earth or
under it frighten them into laying down their arms.
Ned began to shout, but only hoarse
cries came from a dry throat through dry lips.
The great pulses in his throat were leaping again,
and he was saying: “The Texans! The
Texans! Oh, the brave Texans!”
But nobody heard him. Santa Anna,
Filisola, Castrillon, Tolsa, Gaona and the other generals
were leaning against the earthwork, absorbed in the
tremendous spectacle that was passing before them.
The soldiers who were to guard the prisoner forgot
him and they, too, were engrossed in the terrible
and thrilling panorama of war. Ned might have
walked away, no one noticing, but he, too, had but
one thought, and that was the Alamo.
He saw the Mexican columns shiver
when the first volley was poured upon them from the
walls. In a single glance aside he beheld the
exultant look on the faces of Santa Anna and his generals
die away, and he suddenly became conscious that the
shrill shouting on the flat roofs of the houses had
ceased. But the Mexican cannon still poured a
cloud of shot and shell over the heads of their men
at the Alamo, and the troops went on.
Ned, keen of ear and so intent that
he missed nothing, could now separate the two fires.
The crackle of the rifles which came from the Alamo
dominated. Rapid, steady, incessant, it beat heavily
upon the hearing and nerves. Pyramids and spires
of smoke arose, drifted and arose again. In the
intervals he saw the walls of the church a sheet of
flame, and he saw the Mexicans falling by dozens and
scores upon the plain. He knew that at the short
range the Texan rifles never missed, and that the
hail of their bullets was cutting through the Mexican
ranks like a fire through dry grass.
“God, how they fight!”
he heard one of the generals—he never knew
which—exclaim.
Then he saw the officers rushing about,
shouting to the men, striking them with the flats
of their swords and urging them on. The Mexican
army responded to the appeal, lifted itself up and
continued its rush. The fire from the Alamo seemed
to Ned to increase. The fortress was a living
flame. He had not thought that men could fire
so fast, but they had three or four rifles apiece.
The silence which had replaced the
shrill shouting in the town continued. All the
crash was now in front of them, and where they stood
the sound of the human voice would carry. In a
dim far-away manner Ned heard the guards talking to
one another. Their words showed uneasiness.
It was not the swift triumphal rush into the Alamo
that they had expected. Great swaths had been
cut through the Mexican army. Santa Anna paled
more than once when he saw his men falling so fast.
“They cannot recoil! They cannot!”
he cried.
But they did. The column led
by Colonel Duque, a brave man, was now at the northern
wall, and the men were rushing forward with the crowbars,
axes and scaling ladders. The Texan rifles, never
more deadly, sent down a storm of bullets upon them.
A score of men fell all at once. Among them was
Duque, wounded terribly. The whole column broke
and reeled away, carrying Duque with them.
Ned saw the face of Santa Anna turn
purple with rage. He struck the earthwork furiously
with the flat of his sword.
“Go! Go!” he cried
to Gaona and Tolsa. “Rally them! See
that they do not run!”
The two generals sprang from the battery
and rushed to their task. The Mexican cannon
had ceased firing, for fear of shooting down their
own men, and the smoke was drifting away from the
field. The morning was also growing much lighter.
The gray dawn had turned to silver, and the sun’s
red rim was just showing above the eastern horizon.
The Texan cannon were silent, too.
The rifles were now doing all the work. The volume
of their fire never diminished. Ned saw the field
covered with slain, and many wounded were drifting
back to the shelter of the earthworks and the town.
Duque’s column was rallied,
but the column on the east and the column on the west
were also driven back, and Santa Anna rushed messenger
after messenger, hurrying up fresh men, still driving
the whole Mexican army against the Alamo. He
shouted orders incessantly, although he remained safe
within the shelter of the battery.
Ned felt an immense joy. He had
seen the attack beaten off at three points. A
force of twenty to one had been compelled to recoil.
His heart swelled with pride in those friends of his.
But they were so few in number! Even now the
Mexican masses were reforming. The officers were
among them, driving them forward with threats and blows.
The great ring of Mexican cavalry, intended to keep
any of the Texans from escaping, also closed in, driving
their own infantry forward to the assault.
Ned’s heart sank as the whole
Mexican army, gathering now at the northern or lower
wall, rushed straight at the barrier. But the
deadly fire of the rifles flashed from it, and their
front line went down. Again they recoiled, and
again the cavalry closed in, holding them to the task.
There was a pause of a few moments.
The town had been silent for a long time, and the
Mexican soldiers themselves ceased to shout. Clouds
of smoke eddied and drifted about the buildings.
The light of the morning, first gray, then silver,
turned to gold. The sun, now high above the earth’s
rim, poured down a flood of rays.
Everything stood out sharp and clear.
Ned saw the buildings of the Alamo dark against the
sun, and he saw men on the walls. He saw the Mexican
columns pressed together in one great force, and he
even saw the still faces of many who lay silent on
the plain.
He knew that the Mexicans were about
to charge again, and his feeling of exultation passed.
He no longer had hope that the defenders of the Alamo
could beat back so many. He thought again how
few, how very few, were the Texans.
The silence endured but a moment or
two. Then the Mexicans rushed forward in a mighty
mass at the low northern wall, the front lines firing
as they went. Flame burst from the wall, and Ned
heard once more the deadly crackle of the Texan rifles.
The ground was littered by the trail of the Mexican
fallen, but, driven by their officers, they went on.
Ned saw them reach the wall and plant
the scaling ladders, many of them. Scores of
men swarmed up the ladders and over the wall.
A heavy division forced its way into the redoubt through
the sallyport, and as Ned saw he uttered a deep gasp.
He knew that the Alamo was doomed. And the Mexicans
knew it, too. The shrill screaming of the women
began again from the flat roofs of the houses, and
shouts burst from the army also.
“We have them! We have
them!” cried Santa Anna, exultant and excited.
Sheets of flame still burst from the
Alamo, and the rifles still poured bullets on the
swarming Mexican forces, but the breach had been made.
The Mexicans went over the low wall in an unbroken
stream, and they crowded through the sallyport by
hundreds. They were inside now, rushing with
the overwhelming weight of twenty to one upon the little
garrison. They seized the Texan guns, cutting
down the gunners with lances and sabers, and they
turned the captured cannon upon the defenders.
Some of the buildings inside the walls
were of adobe, and they were soon shattered by the
cannon balls. The Texans, covered with smoke and
dust and the sweat of battle, were forced back by
the press of numbers into the convent yard, and then
into the church and hospital. Here the cannon
and rifles in hundreds were turned upon them, but they
still fought. Often, with no time to reload their
rifles, they clubbed them, and drove back the Mexican
rush.
The Alamo was a huge volcano of fire
and smoke, of shouting and death. Those who looked
on became silent again, appalled at the sights and
sounds. The smoke rose far above the mission,
and caught by a light wind drifted away to the east.
The Mexican generals brought up fresh forces and drove
them at the fortress. A heavy column, attacking
on the south side, where no defenders were now left,
poured over a stockade and crowded into the mission.
The circle of cavalry about the Alamo again drew closer,
lest any Texan should escape. But it was a useless
precaution. None sought flight.
In very truth, the last hope of the
Alamo was gone, and perhaps there was none among the
defenders who did not know it. There were a few
wild and desperate characters of the border, whom
nothing in life became so much as their manner of
leaving it. In the culminating moment of the
great tragedy they bore themselves as well as the best.
Travis, the commander, and Bonham
stood in the long room of the hospital with a little
group around them, most of them wounded, the faces
of all black with powder smoke. But they fought
on. Whenever a Mexican appeared at the door an
unerring rifle bullet struck him down. Fifty fell
at that single spot before the rifles, yet they succeeded
in dragging up a cannon, thrust its muzzle in at the
door and fired it twice loaded with grape shot into
the room.
The Texans were cut down by the shower
of missiles, and the whole place was filled with smoke.
Then the Mexicans rushed in and the few Texans who
had survived the grape shot fell fighting to the last
with their clubbed rifles. Here lay Travis of
the white soul and beside him fell the brave Bonham,
who had gone out for help, and who had returned to
die with his comrades. The Texans who had defended
the room against so many were only fifteen in number,
and they were all silent now. Now the whole attack
converged on the church, the strongest part of the
Alamo, where the Texans were making their last stand.
The place was seething with fire and smoke, but above
it still floated the banner upon which was written
in great letters the word, “Texas.”
The Mexicans, pressing forward in
dense masses, poured in cannon balls and musket balls
at every opening. Half the Texans were gone, but
the others never ceased to fire with their rifles.
Within that raging inferno they could hardly see one
another for the smoke, but they were all animated
by the same purpose, to fight to the death and to carry
as many of their foes with them as they could.
Evans, who had commanded the cannon,
rushed for the magazine to blow up the building.
They had agreed that if all hope were lost he should
do so, but he was killed on his way by a bullet, and
the others went on with the combat.
Near the entrance to the church stood
a great figure swinging a clubbed rifle. His
raccoon skin cap was lost, and his eyes burned like
coals of fire in his swarthy face. It was Crockett,
gone mad with battle, and the Mexicans who pressed
in recoiled before the deadly sweep of the clubbed
rifle. Some were awed by the terrific figure,
dripping blood, and wholly unconscious of danger.
“Forward!” cried a Mexican
officer, and one of his men went down with a shattered
skull. The others shrank back again, but a new
figure pressed into the ring. It was that of
the younger Urrea. At the last moment he had
left the cavalry and joined in the assault.
“Don’t come within reach
of his blows!” he cried. “Shoot him!
Shoot him!”
He snatched a double-barreled pistol
from his own belt and fired twice straight at Crockett’s
breast. The great Tennesseean staggered, dropped
his rifle and the flame died from his eyes. With
a howl of triumph his foes rushed upon him, plunged
their swords and bayonets into his body, and he fell
dead with a heap of the Mexican slain about him.
A bullet whistled past Urrea’s
face and killed a man beyond him. He sprang back.
Bowie, still suffering severe injuries from a fall
from a platform, was lying on a cot in the arched
room to the left of the entrance. Unable to walk,
he had received at his request two pistols, and now
he was firing them as fast as he could pull the triggers
and reload.
“Shoot him! Shoot him at once!” cried
Urrea.
His own pistol was empty now, but
a dozen musket balls were fired into the room.
Bowie, hit twice, nevertheless raised himself upon
his elbow, aimed a pistol with a clear eye and a steady
hand, and pulled the trigger. A Mexican fell,
shot through the heart, but another volley of musket
balls was discharged at the Georgian. Struck in
both head and heart he suddenly straightened out and
lay still upon the cot. Thus died the famous
Bowie.
Mrs. Dickinson and her baby had been
hidden in the arched room on the other side for protection.
The Mexicans killed a Texan named Walters at the entrance,
and, wild with ferocity, raised his body upon a half
dozen bayonets while the blood ran down in a dreadful
stream upon those who held it aloft.
Urrea rushed into the room and found
the cowering woman and her baby. The Mexicans
followed, and were about to slay them, too, when a
gallant figure rushed between. It was the brave
and humane Almonte. Sword in hand, he faced the
savage horde. He uttered words that made Urrea
turn dark with shame and leave the room. The
soldiers were glad to follow.
At the far end of the church a few
Texans were left, still fighting with clubbed rifles.
The Mexicans drew back a little, raised their muskets
and fired an immense shattering volley. When the
smoke cleared away not a single Texan was standing,
and then the troops rushed in with sword and bayonet.
It was nine o’clock in the morning,
and the Alamo had fallen. The defenders were
less than nine score, and they had died to the last
man. A messenger rushed away at once to Santa
Anna with the news of the triumph, and he came from
the shelter, glorying, exulting and crying that he
had destroyed the Texans.
Ned followed the dictator. He
never knew exactly why, because many of those moments
were dim, like the scenes of a dream, and there was
so much noise, excitement and confusion that no one
paid any attention to him. But an overwhelming
power drew him on to the Alamo, and he rushed in with
the Mexican spectators.
Ned passed through the sallyport and
he reeled back aghast for a moment. The Mexican
dead, not yet picked up, were strewn everywhere.
They had fallen in scores. The lighter buildings
were smashed by cannon balls and shells. The
earth was gulleyed and torn. The smoke from so
much firing drifted about in banks and clouds, and
it gave forth the pungent odor of burned gunpowder.
The boy knew not only that the Alamo
had fallen, but that all of its defenders had fallen
with it. The knowledge was instinctive. He
had been with those men almost to the last day of
the siege, and he had understood their spirit.
He was not noticed in the crush.
Santa Anna and the generals were running into the
church, and he followed them. Here he saw the
Texan dead, and he saw also a curious crowd standing
around a fallen form. He pressed into the ring
and his heart gave a great throb of grief.
It was Crockett, lying upon his back,
his body pierced by many wounds. Ned had known
that he would find him thus, but the shock, nevertheless,
was terrible. Yet Crockett’s countenance
was calm. He bore no wounds in the face, and
he lay almost as if he had died in his bed. It
seemed to Ned even in his grief that no more fitting
death could have come to the old hero.
Then, following another crowd, he
saw Bowie, also lying peacefully in death upon his
cot. He felt the same grief for him that he had
felt for Crockett, but it soon passed in both cases.
A strange mood of exaltation took its place.
They had died as one might wish to die, since death
must come to all. It was glorious that these
defenders of the Alamo, comrades of his, should have
fallen to the last man. The full splendor of their
achievement suddenly burst in a dazzling vision before
him. Texans who furnished such valor could not
be conquered. Santa Anna might have twenty to
one or fifty to one or a hundred to one, in the end
it would not matter.
The mood endured. He looked upon
the dead faces of Travis and Bonham also, and he was
not shaken. He saw others, dozens and dozens whom
he knew, and the faces of all of them seemed peaceful
to him. The shouting and cheering and vast chatter
of the Mexicans did not disturb him. His mood
was so high that all these things passed as nothing.
Ned made no attempt to escape.
He knew that while he might go about almost as he
chose in this crowd of soldiers, now disorganized,
the ring of cavalry beyond would hold him. The
thought of escape, however, was but little in his
mind just then. He was absorbed in the great tomb
of the Alamo. Here, despite the recent work of
the cannon, all things looked familiar. He could
mark the very spots where he had stood and talked
with Crockett or Bowie. He knew how the story
of the immortal defence would spread like fire throughout
Texas and beyond. When he should tell how he
had seen the faces of the heroes, every heart must
leap.
He wandered back to the church, where
the curious still crowded. Many people from the
town, influential Mexicans, wished to see the terrible
Texans, who yet lay as they had fallen. Some spoke
scornful words, but most regarded them with awe.
Ned looked at Crockett for the second time, and a
hand touched him on the shoulder. It was Urrea.
“Where are your Texans now?” he asked.
“They are gone,” replied
Ned, “but they will never be forgotten.”
And then he added in a flash of anger. “Five
or six times as many Mexicans have gone with them.”
“It is true,” said the
young Mexican thoughtfully. “They fought
like cornered mountain wolves. We admit it.
And this one, Crockett you call him, was perhaps the
most terrible of them all. He swung his clubbed
rifle so fiercely that none dared come within its reach.
I slew him.”
“You?” exclaimed Ned.
“Yes, I! Why should I not?
I fired two pistol bullets into him and he fell.”
He spoke with a certain pride.
Ned said nothing, but he pressed his teeth together
savagely and his heart swelled with hate of the sleek
and triumphant Urrea.
“General Santa Anna, engrossed
in much more important matters, has doubtless forgotten
you,” continued the Mexican, “but I will
see that you do not escape. Why he spares you
I know not, but it is his wish.”
He called to two soldiers, whom he
detailed to follow Ned and see that he made no attempt
to escape. The boy was yet so deeply absorbed
in the Alamo that no room was left in his mind for
anything else. Nor did he care to talk further
with Urrea, who he knew was not above aiming a shaft
or two at an enemy in his power. He remained in
the crowd until Santa Anna ordered that all but the
troops be cleared from the Alamo.
Then, at the order of the dictator,
the bodies of the Texans were taken without.
A number of them were spread upon the ground, and were
covered with a thick layer of dry wood and brush.
Then more bodies of men and heaps of dry wood were
spread in alternate layers until the funeral pile
was complete.
Young Urrea set the torch, while the
Mexican army and population looked on. The dry
wood flamed up rapidly and the whole was soon a pyramid
of fire and smoke. Ned was not shocked at this
end, even of the bodies of brave men. He recalled
the stories of ancient heroes, the bodies of whom
had been consumed on just such pyres as this, and he
was willing that his comrades should go to join Hercules,
Hector, Achilles and the rest.
The flames roared and devoured the
great pyramid, which sank lower, and at last Ned turned
away. His mood of exaltation was passing.
No one could remain keyed to that pitch many hours.
Overwhelming grief and despair came in its place.
His mind raged against everything, against the cruelty
of Santa Anna, who had hoisted the red flag of no quarter,
against fate, that had allowed so many brave men to
perish, and against the overwhelming numbers that
the Mexicans could always bring against the Texans.
He walked gloomily toward the town,
the two soldiers who had been detailed as guards following
close behind him. He looked back, saw the sinking
blaze of the funeral pyre, shuddered and walked on.
San Antonio de Bexar was rejoicing.
Most of its people, Mexican to the core, shared in
the triumph of Santa Anna. The terrible Texans
were gone, annihilated, and Santa Anna was irresistible.
The conquest of Texas was easy now. No, it was
achieved already. They had the dictator’s
own word for it that the rest was a mere matter of
gathering up the fragments.
Some of the graver and more kindly
Mexican officers thought of their own losses.
The brave and humane Almonte walked through the courts
and buildings of the Alamo, and his face blanched
when he reckoned their losses. A thousand men
killed or wounded was a great price to pay for the
nine score Texans who were sped. But no such thoughts
troubled Santa Anna. All the vainglory of his
nature was aflame. They were decorating the town
with all the flags and banners and streamers they could
find, and he knew that it was for him. At night
they would illuminate in his honor. He stretched
out his arm toward the north and west, and murmured
that it was all his. He would be the ruler of
an empire half the size of Europe. The scattered
and miserable Texans could set no bounds to his ambition.
He had proved it.
He would waste no more time in that
empty land of prairies and plains. He sent glowing
dispatches about his victory to the City of Mexico
and announced that he would soon come. His subordinates
would destroy the wandering bands of Texans.
Then he did another thing that appealed to his vanity.
He wrote a proclamation to the Texans announcing the
fall of the Alamo, and directing them to submit at
once, on pain of death, to his authority. He
called for Mrs. Dickinson, the young wife, now widow,
whom the gallantry of Almonte had saved from massacre
in the Alamo. He directed her to take his threat
to the Texans at Gonzales, and she willingly accepted.
Mounting a horse and alone save for the baby in her
arms, she rode away from San Antonio, shuddering at
the sight of the Mexicans, and passed out upon the
desolate and dangerous prairies.
The dictator was so absorbed in his
triumph and his plans for his greater glory that for
the time he forgot all about Ned Fulton, his youthful
prisoner, who had crossed the stream and who was now
in the town, attended by the two peons whom Urrea
had detailed as his guards. But Ned had come
out of his daze, and his mind was as keen and alert
as ever. The effects of the great shock of horror
remained. His was not a bitter nature, but he
could not help feeling an intense hatred of the Mexicans.
He was on the battle line, and he saw what they were
doing. He resolved that now was his time to escape,
and in the great turmoil caused by the excitement
and rejoicing in San Antonio he did not believe that
it would be difficult.
He carefully cultivated the good graces
of the two soldiers who were guarding him. He
bought for them mescal and other fiery drinks which
were now being sold in view of the coming festival.
Their good nature increased and also their desire
to get rid of a task that had been imposed upon them.
Why should they guard a boy when everybody else was
getting ready to be merry?
They went toward the Main Plaza, and
came to the Zambrano Row, where the Texans had fought
their way when they took San Antonio months before.
Ned looked up at the buildings. They were still
dismantled. Great holes were in the walls and
the empty windows were like blind eyes. He saw
at once that their former inhabitants had not yet
returned to them, and here he believed was his chance.
When they stood beside the first house
he called the attention of his guards to some Mexican
women who were decorating a doorway across the street.
When they looked he darted into the first of the houses
in the Zambrano Row. He entered a large room
and at the corner saw a stairway. He knew this
place. He had been here in the siege of San Antonio
by the Texans, and now he had the advantage over his
guards, who were probably strangers.
He rushed for the staircase and, just
as he reached the top, one of the guards, who had
followed as soon as they noticed the flight of the
prisoner, fired his musket. The discharge roared
in the room, but the bullet struck the wall fully
a foot away from the target. Ned was on the second
floor, and out of range the next moment. He knew
that the soldiers would follow him, and he passed
through the great hole, broken by the Texans, into
the next house.
Here he paused to listen, and he heard
the two soldiers muttering and breathing heavily.
The distaste which they already felt for their task
had become a deep disgust. Why should they be
deprived of their part in the festival to follow up
a prisoner? What did a single captive amount
to, anyhow? Even if he escaped now the great,
the illustrious Santa Anna, whose eyes saw all things,
would capture him later on when he swept all the scattered
Texans into his basket.
Ned went from house to house through
the holes broken in the party walls, and occasionally
he heard his pursuers slouching along and grumbling.
At the fourth house he slipped out upon the roof, and
lay flat near the stone coping.
He knew that if the soldiers came
upon the roof they would find him, but he relied upon
the mescal and their lack of zeal. He heard them
once tramping about in the room below him, and then
he heard them no more.
Ned remained all the rest of the afternoon
upon the roof, not daring to leave his cramped position
against the coping. He felt absolutely safe there
from observation, Mexicans would not be prowling through
dismantled and abandoned houses at such a time.
Now and then gay shouts came from the streets below.
The Mexicans of Bexar were disturbed little by the
great numbers of their people who had fallen at the
Alamo. The dead were from the far valleys of
Mexico, and were strangers.
Ned afterward thought that he must
have slept a little toward twilight, but he was never
sure of it. He saw the sun set, and the gray and
silent Alamo sink away into the darkness. Then
he slipped from the roof, anxious to be away before
the town was illuminated. He had no difficulty
at all in passing unnoticed through the streets, and
he made his way straight for the Alamo.
He was reckoning very shrewdly now.
He knew that the superstitious Mexicans would avoid
the mission at night as a place thronged with ghosts,
and that Santa Anna would not need to post any guard
within those walls. He would pass through the
inclosures, then over the lower barriers by which
the Mexicans had entered, and thence into the darkness
beyond.
It seemed to him the best road to
escape, and he had another object also in entering
the Alamo. The defenders had had three or four
rifles apiece, and he was convinced that somewhere
in the rooms he would find a good one, with sufficient
ammunition.
It was with shudders that he entered
the Alamo, and the shudders came again when he looked
about the bloodstained courts and rooms, lately the
scene of such terrible strife, but now so silent.
In a recess of the church which had been used as a
little storage place by himself and Crockett he found
an excellent rifle of the long-barreled Western pattern,
a large horn of powder and a pouch full of bullets.
There was also a supply of dried beef, which he took,
too.
Now he felt himself a man again.
He would find the Texans and then they would seek
vengeance for the Alamo. He crossed the Main Plaza,
dropped over the low wall and quickly disappeared
in the dusk.