THE NEWS OF THE FALL
Five days before the fall of the Alamo
a little group of men began to gather at the village
of Washington, on the Brazos river in Texas. The
name of the little town indicated well whence its people
had come. All the houses were new, mostly of
unpainted wood, and they contained some of the furniture
of necessity, none of luxury. The first and most
important article was the rifle which the Texans never
needed more than they did now.
But this new and little Washington
was seething with excitement and suspense, and its
population was now more than triple the normal.
News had come that the Alamo was beleaguered by a
force many times as numerous as its defenders, and
that Crockett, Bowie, Travis and other famous men
were inside. They had heard also that Santa Anna
had hoisted the red flag of no quarter, and that Texans
everywhere, if taken, would be slaughtered as traitors.
The people of Washington had full cause for their
excitement and suspense.
The little town also had the unique
distinction of being a capital for a day or two.
The Texans felt, with the news that Santa Anna had
enveloped the Alamo, that they must take decisive
action. They believed that the Mexicans had broken
every promise to the Texans. They knew that not
only their liberty and property, but their lives,
also, were in peril. Despite the great disparity
of numbers it must be a fight to the death between
Texas and Mexico. The Texans were now gathering
at Washington.
One man who inspired courage wherever
he went had come already. Sam Houston had ridden
into town, calm, confident and talking only of victory.
He was dressed with a neatness and care unusual on
the border, wearing a fine black suit, while his face
was shaded by the wide brim of a white sombrero.
The famous scouts, “Deaf” Smith and Henry
Karnes, and young Zavala, whom Ned had known in Mexico,
were there also.
Fifty-eight delegates representing
Texas gathered in the largest room of a frame building.
“Deaf” Smith and Henry Karnes came in and
sat with their rifles across their knees. While
some of the delegates were talking Houston signaled
to the two, and they went outside.
“What do you hear from the Alamo, Smith?”
asked Houston.
“Travis has fought off all the
attacks of the Mexicans,” replied the great
borderer, “but when Santa Anna brings up his
whole force an’ makes a resolute assault it’s
bound to go under. The mission is too big an’
scattered to be held by Travis an’ his men against
forty or fifty times their number.”
“I fear so. I fear so,”
said Houston sadly, “and we can’t get together
enough men for its relief. All this quarreling
and temporizing are our ruin. Heavens, what a
time for disagreements!”
“There couldn’t be a worse
time, general,” said Henry Karnes. “Me
an’ ‘Deaf’ would like mighty well
to march to the Alamo. A lot of our friends are
in there an’ I reckon we’ve seen them for
the last time.”
The fine face of Houston grew dark with melancholy.
“Have you been anywhere near San Antonio?”
he asked Smith.
“Not nearer than thirty miles,”
replied Smith, “but over at Goliad I saw a force
under Colonel Fannin that was gettin’ ready to
start to the relief of Travis. With it were some
friends of mine. There was Palmer, him they call
the Panther, the biggest and strongest man in Texas;
Obed White, a New Englander, an’ a boy, Will
Allen. I’ve knowed ’em well for some
time, and there was another that belonged to their
little band. But he’s in the Alamo now,
an’ they was wild to rescue him.”
“Do you think Fannin will get through?”
asked Houston.
“I don’t,” replied
Smith decidedly, “an’ if he did it would
just mean the loss of more good men for us. What
do you think about it, Hank?”
“The same that you do,” replied Karnes.
Houston pondered over their words
a long time. He knew that they were thoroughly
acquainted with Texas and the temper of its people,
and he relied greatly on their judgment. When
he went back in the room which was used as a convention
hall Smith and Karnes remained outside.
Smith sat down on the grass, lighted
a pipe and began to smoke deliberately. Karnes
also sat down on the grass, lighted his own pipe and
smoked with equal deliberation. Each man rested
his rifle across his knees.
“Looks bad,” said Smith.
“Powerful bad.”
“Almighty bad.”
“Talkin’s no good when the enemy’s
shootin’.”
“Reckon there’s nothin’
left for us but this,” tapping the barrel of
his rifle significantly.
“Only tool that’s left for us to use.”
“Reckon we’ll soon have as many chances
as we want to use it, an’ more.”
“Reckon you’re Almighty right.”
“An’ we’ll be there every time.”
The two men reached over and shook
hands deliberately. Houston by and by came out
again, and saw them sitting there smoking, two images
of patience and quiet.
“Boys,” he said, “you’re not
taking much part in the proceedings.”
“Not much, just yet, Colonel
Sam,” replied Smith, “but we’re waitin’.
I reckon that to-morrow you’ll declare Texas
free an’ independent, a great an’ good
republic. An’ as there ain’t sixty
of you to declare it, mebbe you’ll need the
help of some fellows like Hank an’ me to make
them resolutions come true.”
“We will,” said Houston, “and we
know that we can rely upon you.”
He was about to pass on, but he changed
his mind and sat down with the men. Houston was
a singular character. He had been governor of
an important state, and he had lived as a savage among
savages. He could adapt himself to any company.
“Boys,” he said, “you
know a merchant, John Roylston, who has headquarters
in New Orleans, and also offices in St. Louis and
Cincinnati?”
“We do,” said Smith, “an’
we’ve seen him, too, more than once. He’s
been in these parts not so long ago.”
“He’s in New Orleans now,”
said Houston. “He’s the biggest trader
along the coast. Has dealings with Santa Anna
himself, but he’s a friend of Texas, a powerful
one. Boys, I’ve in my pocket now an order
from him good for a hundred thousand dollars.
It’s to be spent buying arms and ammunition
for us. And when the time comes there’s
more coming from the same place. We’ve
got friends, but keep this to yourselves.”
He walked on and the two took a long
and meditative pull at their pipes.
“I reckon Roylston may not shoot
as straight as we can,” said Smith, “but
mebbe at as long range as New Orleans he can do more
harm to the Mexicans than we can.”
“Looks like it. I ain’t
much of a hand at money, but I like the looks of that
man Roylston, an’ I reckon the more rifles and
the more ammunition we have the fewer Mexicans will
be left.”
The two scouts, having smoked as long
as they wished, went to their quarters and slept soundly
through the night. But Houston and the leading
Texans with him hardly slept at all. There was
but one course to choose, and they were fully aware
of its gravity, Houston perhaps more so than the rest,
as he had seen more of the world. They worked
nearly all night in the bare room, and when Houston
sought his room he was exhausted.
Houston’s room was a bare little
place, lighted by a tallow candle, and although it
was not long until day he sat there a while before
lying down. A man of wide experience, he alone,
with the exception of Roylston, knew how desperate
was the situation of the Texans. In truth, it
was the money of Roylston sent from New Orleans that
had caused him to hazard the chance. He knew,
too, that, in time, more help would arrive from the
same source, and he believed there would be a chance
against the Mexicans, a fighting chance, it is true,
but men who were willing to die for a cause seldom
failed to win. He blew out the candle, got in
bed and slept soundly.
“Deaf” Smith and Henry
Karnes were up early—they seldom slept late—and
saw the sun rise out of the prairie. They were
in a house which had a small porch, looking toward
the Brazos. After breakfast they lighted their
cob pipes again, smoked and meditated.
“Reckon somethin’ was
done by our leadin’ statesmen last night,”
said Smith.
“Reckon there was,” said Karnes.
“Reckon I can guess what it was.”
“Reckon I can, too.”
“Reckon I’ll wait to hear it offish-ul-ly
before I speak.”
“Reckon I will, too. Lots of time wasted
talkin’.”
“Reckon you’re right.”
They sat in silence for a full two
hours. They smoked the first hour, and they passed
the second in their chairs without moving. They
had mastered the borderer’s art of doing nothing
thoroughly, when nothing was to be done. Then
a man came upon the porch and spoke to them. His
name was Burnet, David G. Burnet.
“Good mornin’. How is the new republic?”
said “Deaf” Smith.
“So you know,” said Burnet.
“We don’t know, but we’ve
guessed, Hank an’ me. We saw things as they
was comin’.”
“I reckon, too,” said Karnes, “that
we ain’t a part of Mexico any more.”
“No, we’re a free an’
independent republic. It was so decided last
night, and we’ve got nothing more to do now but
to whip a nation of eight millions, the fifty thousand
of us.”
“Well,” said Smith philosophically,
“it’s a tough job, but it might be did.
I’ve heard tell that them old Greeks whipped
the Persians when the odds were powerful high against
them.”
“That is true,” said Burnet,
“and we can at least try. We give the reason
for declaring our independence. We assert to the
world that the Mexican republic has become a military
despotism, that our agents carrying petitions have
been thrown in dungeons in the City of Mexico, that
we have been ordered to give up the arms necessary
for our defence against the savages, and that we have
been deprived of every right guaranteed to us when
we settled here.”
“We’re glad it’s
done, although we knew it would be done,” said
Smith. “We ain’t much on talkin’,
Mr. President, Hank an’ me, but we can shoot
pretty straight, an’ we’re at your call.”
“I know that, God bless you
both,” said Burnet. “The talking is
over. It’s rifles that we need and plenty
of them. Now I’ve to see Houston.
We’re to talk over ways and means.”
He hurried away, and the two, settling
back into their chairs on the porch, relighted their
pipes and smoked calmly.
“Reckon there’ll be nothin’
doin’ for a day or two, Hank,” said Smith.
“Reckon not, but we’ll
have to be doin’ a powerful lot later, or be
hoofin’ it for the tall timber a thousand miles
north.”
“You always was full of sense,
Hank. Now there goes Sam Houston. Queer
stories about his leavin’ Tennessee and his life
in the Indian Territory.”
“That’s so, but he’s
an honest man, looks far ahead, an’ ‘tween
you an’ me, ‘Deaf,’ it’s a
thousand to one that he’s to lead us in the war.”
“Reckon you’re guessin’ good.”
Houston, who had just awakened and
dressed, was walking across the grass and weeds to
meet Burnet. Not even he, when he looked at the
tiny village and the wilderness spreading about it,
foresaw how mighty a state was to rise from beginnings
so humble and so small. He and Burnet went back
into the convention hall, and he wrote a fiery appeal
to the people. He said that the Alamo was beleaguered
and “the citizens of Texas must rally to the
aid of our army or it will perish.”
Smith and Karnes remained while the
convention continued its work. They did little
ostensibly but smoke their cob pipes, but they observed
everything and thought deeply. On Sunday morning,
five days after the men had gathered at Washington,
as they stood at the edge of the little town they
saw a man galloping over the prairie. Neither
spoke, but watched him for a while, as the unknown
came on, lashing a tired horse.
“’Pears to be in a hurry,” said
Smith.
“An’ to be in a hurry
generally means somethin’ in these parts,”
said Karnes.
“I’m makin’ ’a guess.”
“So am I, an’ yours is the same as mine.
He comes from the Alamo.”
Others now saw the man, and there
was a rush toward him. His horse fell at the
edge of the town, but the rider sprang to his feet
and came toward the group, which included both Houston
and Burnet. He was a wild figure, face and clothing
covered with dust. But he recognized Houston
and turned to him at once.
“You’re General Houston,
and I’m from the Alamo,” he said.
“I bring a message from Colonel Travis.”
There was a sudden and heavy intake
of breath in the whole group.
“Then the Alamo has not fallen?” said
Houston.
“Not when I left, but that was three days ago.
Here is the letter.”
It was the last letter of Travis,
concluding with the words: “God and Texas;
victory or death.” But when the messenger
put the letter into the hands of Houston the Alamo
had fallen two hours before.
The letter was laid before the convention,
and the excitement was great and irrepressible.
The feelings of these stern men were moved deeply.
Many wished to adjourn at once and march to the relief
of the Alamo, but the eloquence of Houston, who had
been reelected Commander-in-chief, prevailed against
the suggestion. Then, with two or three men, he
departed for Gonzales to raise a force, while the others
elected Burnet President of the new Texas, and departed
for Harrisburg on Buffalo Bayou.
“Deaf” Smith and Henry
Karnes did not go just then with Houston. They
were scouts, hunters and rough riders, and they could
do as they pleased. They notified General Sam
Houston, commander-in-chief of the Texan armies, that
they would come on later, and he was content.
When the Texan government and the
Texan army, numbering combined about a hundred men,
followed by most of the population, numbering fifty
or sixty more, filed off for Gonzales, the two sat
once more on the same porch, smoking their cob pipes.
They were not ordinary men. They were not ordinary
scouts and borderers. One from the north and one
from the south, they were much alike in their mental
processes, their faculties of keen observation and
deep reasoning. Both were now stirred to the
core, but neither showed a trace of it on his face.
They watched the little file pass away over the prairie
until it was lost to sight behind the swells, and
then Smith spoke:
“I reckon you an’ me, Hank, will ride
toward the Alamo.”
“I reckon we will, Deaf, and that right away.”
Inside of five minutes they were on
the road, armed and provisioned, the best two borderers,
with the single exception of the Panther, in all the
southwest. They were mounted on powerful mustangs,
which, with proper handling and judicious rests, could
go on forever. But they pushed them a little
that afternoon, stopped for two hours after sundown,
and then went on again. They crossed the Colorado
River in the night, swimming their horses, and about
a mile further on stopped in dense chaparral.
They tethered the mustangs near them, and spread out
their blankets.
“If anything comes the horses will wake us,”
said Smith.
“I reckon they will,” said Karnes.
Both were fast asleep in a few minutes,
but they awoke shortly after sunrise. They made
a frugal breakfast, while the mustangs had cropped
short grass in the night. Both horses and men,
as tough and wiry as they ever become, were again
as fresh as the dawn, and, with not more than a dozen
words spoken, the two mounted and rode anew on their
quest. Always chary of speech, they became almost
silence itself as they drew nearer to San Antonio
de Bexar. In the heart of each was a knowledge
of the great tragedy, not surmise, but the certainty
that acute intelligence deduces from facts.
They rode on until, by a simultaneous
impulse, the two reined their horses back into a cypress
thicket and waited. They had seen three horsemen
on the sky line, coming, in the main, in their direction.
Their trained eyes noticed at once that the strangers
were of varying figure. The foremost, even at
the distance, seemed to be gigantic, the second was
very long and thin, and the third was normal.
Smith and Karnes watched them a little while, and
then Karnes spoke in words of true conviction.
“It would be hard, Deaf, for
even a bad eye to mistake the foremost.”
“Right you are, Hank. You
might comb Texas with a fine-tooth comb an’
you’d never rake out such another.”
“If that ain’t Mart Palmer,
the Ring Tailed Panther, I’ll go straight to
Santa Anna an’ ask him to shoot me as a fool.”
“You won’t have to go to Santa Anna.”
Smith rode from the covert, put his
curved hand to his mouth, and uttered a long piercing
cry. The three horsemen stopped at once, and the
giant in the lead gave back the signal in the same
fashion. Then the two little parties rode rapidly
toward each other. While they were yet fifty
yards apart they uttered words of hail and good fellowship,
and when they met they shook hands with the friendship
that has been sealed by common hardships and dangers.
“You’re goin’ toward the Alamo?”
said Smith.
“Yes,” replied the Panther.
“We started that way several days ago, but we’ve
been delayed. We had a brush with one little party
of Mexicans, and we had to dodge another that was
too big for us. I take it that you ride for the
same place.”
“We do. Were you with Fannin?”
The dark face of the Panther grew darker.
“We were,” he replied.
“He started to the relief of the Alamo, but the
ammunition wagon broke down, an’ they couldn’t
get the cannon across the San Antonio River.
So me an’ Obed White an’ Will Allen here
have come on alone.”
“News for news,” said
Smith dryly. “Texas has just been made a
free an’ independent republic, an’ Sam
Houston has been made commander-in-chief of all its
mighty armies, horse, foot an’ cannon. We
saw all them things done back there at Washington
settlement, an’ we, bein’ a part of the
army, are ridin’ to the relief of the Alamo.”
“We j’in you, then,”
said the Panther, “an’ Texas raises two
armies of the strength of three an’ two to one
of five. Oh, if only all the Texans had come
what a roarin’ an’ rippin’ an’
t’arin’ and chawin’ there would
have been when we struck Santa Anna’s army, no
matter how big it might be.”
“But they didn’t come,”
said Smith grimly, “an’ as far as I know
we five are all the Texans that are ridin’ toward
San Antonio de Bexar an’ the Alamo.”
“But bein’ only five won’t
keep us from ridin’ on,” said the Panther.
“And things are not always as
bad as they look,” said Obed White, after he
had heard of the messenger who had come to Houston
and Unmet. “It’s never too late to
hope.”
The five rode fast the remainder of
the day. They passed through a silent and desolate
land. They saw a few cabins, but every one was
abandoned. The deep sense of tragedy was over
them all, even over young Will Allen. They rarely
spoke, and they rode along in silence, save for the
beat of their horses’ hoofs. Shortly before
night they met a lone buffalo hunter whom the Panther
knew.
“Have you been close to San
Antonio, Simpson?” asked the Panther, after
the greeting.
“I’ve been three or four
days hangin’ ‘roun’ the neighborhood,”
replied the hunter. “I came down from the
northwest when I heard that Santa Anna was advancing
an’ once I thought I’d make a break an’
try to get into the Alamo, but the Mexican lines was
drawed too thick an’ close.”
“Have you heard anything about
the men inside?” asked the Panther eagerly.
“Not a thing. But I’ve
noticed this. A mornin’ an’ evenin’
gun was fired from the fortress every day until yesterday,
Sunday, an’ since then—nothin’.”
The silence in the little band was
as ominous as the silence of the morning and evening
gun. Simpson shook his head sadly.
“Boys,” he said, “I’m
goin’ to ride for Gonzales an’ join Houston.
I don’t think it’s any use for me to be
hangin’ aroun’ San Antonio de Bexar any
longer. I wish you luck in whatever you’re
tryin’ to do.”
He rode away, but the five friends
continued their course toward the Alamo, without hope
now, but resolved to see for themselves. Deep
in the night, which fortunately for their purpose
was dark, heavy clouds shutting out the moon and stars,
they approached San Antonio from the east. They
saw lights, which they knew were those of the town,
but there was darkness only where they knew the Alamo
stood.
They tethered their horses in some
bushes and crept closer, until they could see the
dim bulk of the Alamo. No light shone there.
They listened long and intently, but not a single
sound came from the great hecatomb. Again they
crept nearer. There were no Mexican guards anywhere.
A little further and they stood by the low northern
wall.
“Boys,” said the Panther,
“I can’t stand it any longer. Queer
feelin’s are runnin’ all over me.
No, I’m goin’ to take the risk, if there
is any, all alone. You wait for me here, an’
if I don’t come back in an hour then you can
hunt for me.”
The Panther climbed over the wall
and disappeared. The others remained in the deepest
shadow waiting and silent. They were oppressed
by the heavy gloom that hung over the Alamo.
It was terrifying to young Will Allen, not the terror
that is caused by the fear of men, but the terror
that comes from some tragic mystery that is more than
half guessed.
Nearly an hour passed, when a great
figure leaped lightly from the wall and joined them.
The swarthy face of the Panther was as white as chalk,
and he was shivering.
“Boys,” he whispered,
“I’ve seen what I never want to see ag’in.
I’ve seen red, red everywhere. I’ve
been through the rooms of the Alamo, an’ they’re
red, splashed with the red blood of men. The water
in the ditch was stained with red, an’ the earth
all about was soaked with it. Somethin’
awful must have happened in the Alamo. There must
have been a terrible fight, an’ I’m thinkin’
that most of our fellows must have died before it
was took. But it’s give me the creeps, boys,
an’ I think we’d better get away.”
“We can’t leave any too
quick to please me,” said Will Alien. “I’m
seeing ghosts all the time.”
“Now that we know for sure the
Alamo has fallen,” said Smith, “nothin’
is to be gained by stayin’ here. It’s
for Sam Houston to lead us to revenge, and the more
men he has the better. I vote we ride for Gonzales.”
“Seein’ what we can see
as we go,” said Karnes. “The more
information we can pick up on the way about the march
of the Mexicans the better it will be for Houston.”
“No doubt of that,” said
the Panther. “When we go to roarin’
an’ rippin’ an’ t’arin’
we must know what we’re about. But come
on, boys, all that red in the Alamo gives me conniption
fits.”
They rode toward the east for a long
time until they thought they were beyond the reach
of Mexican skirmishing parties, and then they slept
in a cypress thicket, Smith and Karnes standing guard
by turns. As everybody needed rest they did not
resume their journey the next day until nearly noon,
and they spent most of the afternoon watching for
Mexican scouts, although they saw none. They had
a full rest that night and the next day they rode
slowly toward Gonzales.
About the middle of the afternoon,
as they reached the crest of a swell, Will Allen uttered
an exclamation, and pointed toward the eastern horizon.
There they saw a single figure on horseback, and another
walking beside it. The afternoon sun was very
bright, casting a glow over the distant figures, and,
shading their eyes with their hands, they gazed at
them a long time.
“It’s a woman that’s
ridin’,” said Smith at last, “an’
she’s carryin’ some sort of a bundle before
her.”
“You’re shorely right,
Deaf,” said Karnes, “an’ I think
the one walkin’ is a black fellow. Looks
like it from here.”
“I’m your way of thinkin’,”
said the Panther, “an’ the woman on the
horse is American, or I’m mightily fooled in
my guess. S’pose we ride ahead faster an’
see for shore.”
They increased the speed of their
mustangs to a gallop and rapidly overhauled the little
party. They saw the woman trying to urge her horse
to greater speed. But the poor beast, evidently
exhausted, made no response. The woman, turning
in the saddle, looked back at her pursuers.
“By all that’s wonderful!”
exclaimed Obed White, “the bundle that she’s
carrying is a baby!”
“It’s so,” said
Smith, “an’ you can see well enough now
that she’s one of our own people. We must
show her that she’s got nothin’ to fear
from us.”
He shouted through his arched hands
in tremendous tones that they were Texans and friends.
The woman stopped, and as they galloped up she would
have fallen from her horse had not Obed White promptly
seized her and, dismounting, lifted her and the baby
tenderly to the ground. The colored boy who had
been walking stood by and did not say anything aloud,
but muttered rapidly: “Thank the Lord!
Thank the Lord!”
Three of the five were veteran hunters,
but they had never before found such a singular party
on the prairie. The woman sat down on the ground,
still holding the baby tightly in her arms, and shivered
all over. The Texans regarded her in pitying
silence for a few minutes, and then Obed White said
in gentle tones:
“We are friends, ready to take
you to safety. Tell us who you are.”
“I am Mrs. Dickinson,” she replied.
“Deaf” Smith looked startled.
“There was a Lieutenant Dickinson in the Alamo,”
he said.
“I am his wife,” she replied, “and
this is our child.”
“And where is——”
Smith stopped suddenly, knowing what the answer must
be.
“He is dead,” she replied. “He
fell in the defence of the Alamo.”
“Might he not be among the prisoners?”
suggested Obed White gently.
“Prisoners!” she replied.
“There were no prisoners. They fought to
the last. Every man who was in the Alamo died
in its defence.”
The five stared at her in amazement, and for a little
while none spoke.
“Do you mean to say,”
asked Obed White, “that none of the Texans survived
the fall of the Alamo?”
“None,” she replied.
“How do you know?”
Her pale face filled with color.
It seemed that she, too, at that moment felt some
of the glow that the fall of the Alamo was to suffuse
through Texas.
“Because I saw,” she replied.
“I was in one of the arched rooms of the church,
where they made the last stand. I saw Crockett
fall and I saw the death of Bowie, too. I saw
Santa Anna exult, but many, many Mexicans fell also.
It was a terrible struggle. I shall see it again
every day of my life, even if I live to be a hundred.”
She covered her face with her hands,
as if she would cut out the sight of that last inferno
in the church. The others were silent, stunned
for the time.
“All gone,” said Obed
White, at last. “When the news is spread
that every man stood firm to the last I think it will
light such a fire in Texas that Santa Anna and all
his armies cannot put it out.”
“Did you see a boy called Ned
Fulton in the Alamo, a tall, handsome fellow with
brown hair and gray eyes?” asked Obed White.
“Often,” replied Mrs.
Dickinson. “He was with Crockett and Bowie
a great deal.”
“And none escaped?” said Will Allen.
“Not one,” she repeated,
“I did not see him in the church in the final
assault. He doubtless fell in the hospital or
in the convent yard. Ah, he was a friend of yours!
I am sorry.”
“Yes, he was a friend of ours,”
said the Panther. “He was more than that
to me. I loved that boy like a son, an’
me an’ my comrades here mean to see that the
Mexicans pay a high price for his death. An’
may I ask, ma’am, how you come to be here?”
She told him how Santa Anna had provided
her with the horse, and had sent her alone with the
proclamation to the Texans. At the Salado Creek
she had come upon the negro servant of Travis, who
had escaped from San Antonio, and he was helping her
on the way.
“An’ now, ma’am,”
said “Deaf” Smith, “we’ll guard
you the rest of the way to Gonzales.”
The two little groups, now fused into
one, resumed their journey over the prairie.