FANNIN’S CAMP
When Ned made his startling announcement
he leaped down lightly from the wall.
“If you will look through the
loophole there,” he said to Colonel Ward, “you
will see a great force only a few hundred yards away.
The man on the large horse in front is General Urrea,
who commands them. He is one of Santa Anna’s
most trusted generals. His nephew, Captain Urrea,
led the cavalry who besieged us yesterday and last
night.”
Captain Ward looked, but the Mexicans
turned into the wood and were hidden from sight.
Then the belief became strong among the recruits that
Ned was mistaken. This was only a little force
that had come, and Ward and King shared their faith.
Ward, against Ned’s protest, sent King and thirteen
men out to scout.
Ned sadly watched them go. He
was one of the youngest present, but he was first
in experience, and he knew that he had seen aright.
General Urrea and the main army were certainly at
hand. But he deemed it wiser to say nothing more.
Instead, he resumed his place on the wall, and kept
sharp watch on the point where he thought the Mexican
force lay. King and his scouts were already out
of sight.
Ned suddenly heard the sound of shots,
and he saw puffs of smoke from the wood. Then
a great shout arose and Mexican cavalry dashed from
the edge of the forest. Some of the other watchers
thought the mission was about to be attacked, but
the horsemen bore down upon another point to the northward.
Ned divined instantly that they had discovered King
and his men and were surrounding them.
He leaped once more from the wall
and shouted the alarm to Ward.
“The men out there are surrounded,”
he cried. “They will have no chance without
help!”
Ward was brave enough, and his men,
though lacking skill, were brave enough, too.
At his command they threw open the gate of the mission
and rushed out to the relief of their comrades.
Ned was by the side of Ward, near the front.
As they appeared in the opening they heard a great
shouting, and a powerful detachment of cavalry galloped
toward their right, while an equally strong force
of infantry moved on their left. The recruits
were outnumbered at least five to one, but in such
a desperate situation they did not blench.
“Take good aim with your rifles,”
shouted Ward. And they did. A shower of
bullets cut gaps in the Mexican line, both horse and
foot. Many riderless horses galloped through
the ranks of the foe, adding to the confusion.
But the Mexican numbers were so great that they continued
to press the Texans. Young Urrea, his head in
thick bandages, was again with the cavalry, and animated
by more than one furious impulse he drove them on.
It became evident now even to the
rawest that the whole Mexican army was present.
It spread out to a great distance, and enfolded the
Texans on three sides, firing hundreds of muskets
and keeping up a great shouting, Ned’s keen
ear also detected other firing off to the right, and
he knew that it was King and his men making a hopeless
defence against overpowering numbers.
“We cannot reach King,” groaned Ward.
“We have no earthly chance of
doing so,” said Ned, “and I think, Colonel,
that your own force will have a hard fight to get back
inside the mission.”
The truth of Ned’s words was
soon evident to everyone. It was only the deadly
Texan rifles that kept the Mexican cavalry from galloping
over them and crushing them at once. The Mexican
fire itself, coming from muskets of shorter range,
did little damage. Yet the Texans were compelled
to load and pull trigger very fast, as they retreated
slowly upon the mission.
At last they reached the great door
and began to pass rapidly inside. Now the Mexicans
pressed closer, firing heavy volleys.
A score of the best Texan marksmen
whirled and sent their bullets at the pursuing Mexicans
with such good aim that a dozen saddles were emptied,
and the whole force reeled back. Then all the
Texans darted inside, and the great door was closed
and barricaded. Many of the men sank down, breathless
from their exertions, regardless of the Mexican bullets
that were pattering upon the church. Ward leaned
against the wall, and wiped the perspiration from
his face.
“My God!” he exclaimed. “What
has become of King?”
There was no answer. The Mexicans
ceased to fire and shout, and retreated toward the
wood. Ward was destined never to know what had
become of King and his men, but Ned soon learned the
terrible facts, and they only hardened him still further.
The thirteen had been compelled to surrender to overwhelming
numbers. Then they were immediately tied to trees
and killed, where their skeletons remained upright
until the Texans found them.
“You were right, Fulton,”
said Ward, after a long silence. “The Mexican
army was there, as we have plenty of evidence to show.”
He smiled sadly, as he wiped the smoke
and perspiration from his face. Ned did not reply,
but watched through a loophole. He had seen a
glint of bronze in the wood, and presently he saw
the Mexicans pushing a cannon from cover.
“They have artillery,”
he said to Ward. “See the gun. But
I don’t think it can damage our walls greatly.
They never did much with the cannon at the Alamo.
When they came too close there, we shot down all their
cannoneers, and we can do the same here.”
Ward chose the best sharpshooters,
posting them at the loopholes and on the walls.
They quickly slew the Mexicans who tried to man the
gun, and General Urrea was forced to withdraw it to
such a distance that its balls and shells had no effect
whatever upon the strong walls of the church.
There was another period of silence,
but the watchers in the old mission saw that much
movement was going on in the wood and presently they
beheld the result. The Mexican army charged directly
upon the church, carrying in its center men with heavy
bars of wood to be used in smashing in the door.
But they yielded once more to the rapid fire of the
Texan rifles, and did not succeed in reaching the building.
Those who bore the logs and bars dropped them, and
fled out of range.
A great cheer burst from the young
recruits. They thought victory complete already,
but Ned knew that the Mexicans would not abandon the
enterprise. General Urrea, after another futile
charge, repulsed in the same deadly manner, withdrew
some distance, but posted a strong line of sentinels
about the church.
Having much food and water the recruits
rejoiced again and thought themselves secure, but
Ned noticed a look of consternation on the face of
Ward, and he divined the cause.
“It must be the ammunition,
Colonel,” he said in a whisper.
“It is,” replied Ward.
“We have only three or four rounds left.
We could not possibly repel another attack.”
“Then,” said young Fulton,
“there is nothing to do but for us to slip out
at night, and try to cut our way through.”
“That is so,” said Ward.
“The Mexican general doubtless will not expect
any such move on our part, and we may get away.”
He said nothing of his plan to the
recruits until the darkness came, and then the state
of the powder horns and the bullet pouches was announced.
Most of the men had supposed that they alone were suffering
from the shortage, and something like despair came
over them when they found that they were practically
without weapons. They were more than willing to
leave the church, as soon as the night deepened, and
seek refuge over the prairie.
“You think that we can break through?”
said Ward to Ned.
“I have no doubt of it,”
replied Ned, “but in any event it seems to me,
Colonel, that we ought to try it. All the valor
and devotion of the men in the Alamo did not suffice
to save them. We cannot hold the place against
a determined assault.”
“That is undoubtedly true,”
said Ward, “and flushed by the success that
they have had elsewhere it seems likely to me that
the Mexicans will make such an attack very soon.”
“In any event,” said Ned,
“we are isolated here, cut off from Fannin,
and exposed to imminent destruction.”
“We start at midnight,” said Ward.
Ned climbed upon the walls, and examined
all the surrounding country. He saw lights in
the wood, and now and then he discerned the figures
of Mexican horsemen, riding in a circle about the
church, members of the patrol that had been left by
General Urrea. He did not think it a difficult
thing to cut through this patrol, but the Texans, in
their flight, must become disorganized to a certain
extent. Nevertheless it was the only alternative.
The men were drawn up at the appointed
time, and Ward told them briefly what they were to
do. They must keep as well together as possible,
and the plan was to make their way to Victoria, where
they expected to rejoin Fannin. They gave calabashes
of water and provisions to several men too badly wounded
to move, and left them to the mercy of the Mexicans,
a mercy that did not exist, as Urrea’s troops
massacred them the moment they entered the church.
Luckily it was a dark night, and Ned
believed that they had more than half a chance of
getting away. The great door was thrown silently
open, and, with a moving farewell to their wounded
and disabled comrades, they filed silently out, leaving
the door open behind them.
Then the column of nearly one hundred
and fifty men slipped away, every man treading softly.
They had chosen a course that lay directly away from
the Mexican army, but they did not expect to escape
without an alarm, and it came in five minutes.
A Mexican horseman, one of the patrol, saw the dark
file, fired a shot and gave an alarm. In an instant
all the sentinels were firing and shouting, and Urrea’s
army in the wood was awakening.
But the Texans now pressed forward
rapidly. Their rifles cracked, quickly cutting
a path through the patrol, and before Urrea could get
up his main force they were gone through the forest
and over the prairie.
Knowing that the whole country was
swarming with the Mexican forces, they chose a circuitous
course through forests and swamps and pressed on until
daylight. Some of the Mexicans on horseback followed
them for a while, but a dozen of the best Texan shots
were told off to halt them. When three or four
saddles were emptied the remainder of the Mexicans
disappeared and they pursued their flight in peace.
Morning found them in woods and thickets
by the banks of a little creek of clear water.
They drank from the stream, ate of their cold food,
and rested. Ned and some others left the wood
and scouted upon the prairie. They saw no human
being and returned to their own people, feeling sure
that they were safe from pursuit for the present.
Yet the Texans felt no exultation.
They had been compelled to retreat before the Mexicans,
and they could not forget King and his men, and those
whom they had left behind in the church. Ned,
in his heart, knowing the Mexicans so well, did not
believe that a single one of them had been saved.
They walked the whole day, making
for the town of Victoria, where they expected to meet
Fannin, and shortly before night they stopped in a
wood, footsore and exhausted. Again their camp
was pitched on the banks of a little creek and some
of the hunters shot two fine fat deer further up the
stream.
Seeking as much cheer as they could
they built fires, and roasted the deer. The spirits
of the young recruits rose. They would meet Fannin
to-morrow or the next day and they would avenge the
insult that the Mexicans had put upon them. They
were eager for a new action in which the odds should
not be so great against them, and they felt sure of
victory. Then, posting their sentinels, they slept
soundly.
But Ned did not feel so confident.
Toward morning he rose from his blankets. Yet
he saw nothing. The prairie was bare. There
was not a single sign of pursuit. He was surprised.
He believed that at least the younger Urrea with the
cavalry would follow.
Ned now surmised the plan that the
enemy had carried out. Instead of following the
Texans through the forests and swamps they had gone
straight to Victoria, knowing that the fugitives would
make for that point. Where Fannin was he could
not even guess, but it was certain that Ward and his
men were left practically without ammunition to defend
themselves as best they could against a horde of foes.
The hunted Texans sought the swamps
of the Guadalupe, where Mexican cavalry could not
follow them, but where they were soon overtaken by
skirmishers. Hope was now oozing from the raw
recruits. There seemed to be no place in the
world for them. Hunted here and there they never
found rest. But the most terrible fact of all
was the lack of ammunition. Only a single round
for every man was left, and they replied sparingly
to the Mexican skirmishers.
They lay now in miry woods, and on
the other side of them flowed the wide and yellow
river. The men sought, often in vain, for firm
spots on which they might rest. The food, like
the ammunition, was all gone, and they were famished
and weak. The scouts reported that the Mexicans
were increasing every hour.
It was obvious to Ned that Ward must
surrender. What could men without ammunition
do against many times their number, well armed?
He resolved that he would not be taken with them,
and shortly before day he pulled through the mud to
the edge of the Guadalupe. He undressed and made
his clothes and rifle into a bundle. He had been
very careful of his own ammunition, and he had a half
dozen rounds left, which he also tied into the bundle.
Then shoving a fallen log into the
water he bestrode it, holding his precious pack high
and dry. Paddling with one hand he was able to
direct the log in a diagonal course across the stream.
He toiled through another swamp on that shore, and,
coming out upon a little prairie, dressed again.
He looked back toward the swamp in
which the Texans lay, but he saw no lights and he
heard no sounds there. He knew that within a short
time they would be prisoners of the Mexicans.
Everything seemed to be working for the benefit of
Santa Anna. The indecision of the Texans and the
scattering of their forces enabled the Mexicans to
present overwhelming forces at all points. It
seemed to Ned that fortune, which had worked in their
favor until the capture of San Antonio, was now working
against them steadily and with overwhelming power.
He gathered himself together as best
he could, and began his journey southward. He
believed that Fannin would be at Goliad or near it.
Once more that feeling of vengeance hardened within
him. The tremendous impression of the Alamo had
not faded a particle, and now the incident of Ward,
Refugio and the swamps of the Guadalupe was cumulative.
Remembering what he had seen he did not believe that
a single one of Ward’s men would be spared when
they were taken as they surely would be. There
were humane men among the Mexicans, like Almonte, but
the ruthless policy of Santa Anna was to spare no
one, and Santa Anna held all the power.
He held on toward Goliad, passing
through alternate regions of forest and prairie, and
he maintained a fair pace until night. He had
not eaten since morning, and all his venison was gone,
but strangely enough he was not hungry. When
the darkness was coming he sat down in one of the
little groves so frequent in that region, and he was
conscious of a great weariness. His bones ached.
But it was not the ache that comes from exertion.
It seemed to go to the very marrow. It became
a pain rather than exhaustion.
He noticed that everything about him
appeared unreal. The trees and the earth itself
wavered. His head began to ache and his stomach
was weak. Had the finest of food been presented
to him he could not have eaten it. He had an
extraordinary feeling of depression and despair.
Ned knew what was the matter with
him. He was suffering either from overwhelming
nervous and physical exhaustion, or he had contracted
malaria in the swamps of the Guadalupe. Despite
every effort of the will, he began to shake with cold,
and he knew that a chill was coming. He had retained
his blankets, his frontiersman’s foresight not
deserting him, and now, knowing that he could not
continue his flight for the present, he sought the
deepest part of the thicket. He crept into a
place so dense that it would have been suited for an
animal’s den, and lying down there he wrapped
the blankets tightly about himself, his rifle and
his ammunition.
In spite of his clothing and the warm
blankets he grew colder and colder. His teeth
chattered and he shivered all over. He would not
have minded that so much, but his head ached with
great violence, and the least light hurt his eyes.
It seemed to him the culmination. Never had he
been more miserable, more lost of both body and soul.
The pain in his head was so violent that life was
scarcely worth the price.
He sank by and by into a stupor.
He was remotely conscious that he was lying in a thicket,
somewhere in boundless Texas, but it did not really
matter. Cougars or bears might come there to find
him, but he was too sick to raise a hand against them.
Besides, he did not care. A million Mexicans
might be beating up those thickets for him, and they
would be sure to find him. Well, what of it?
They would shoot him, and he would merely go at once
to some other planet, where he would be better off
than he was now.
It seems that fate reserves her severest
ordeals for the strong and the daring, as if she would
respond to the challenges they give. It seems
also that often she brings them through the test, as
if she likes the courage and enterprise that dare
her, the all-powerful, to combat. Ned’s
intense chill abated. He ceased to shake so violently,
and after a while he did not shake at all. Then
fever came. Intolerable heat flowed through every
vein, and his head was ready to burst. After a
while violent perspiration broke out all over him,
and then he became unconscious.
Ned lay all night in the thicket,
wrapped in the blankets, and breathing heavily.
Once or twice he half awoke, and remembered things
dimly, but these periods were very brief and he sank
back into stupor. When he awoke to stay awake
the day was far advanced, and he felt an overwhelming
lassitude. He slowly unwound himself from his
blankets and looked at his hand. It was uncommonly
white, and it seemed to him to be as weak as that
of a child.
He crept out of the thicket and rose
to his feet. He was attacked by dizziness and
clutched a bush for support. His head still ached,
though not with the violence of the night before,
but he was conscious that he had become a very weak
and poor specimen of the human being. Everything
seemed very far away, impossible to be reached.
He gathered strength enough to roll
up his blankets and shoulder his rifle. Then
he looked about a little. There was the same alternation
of woods and prairie, devoid of any human being.
He did not expect to see any Texans, unless, by chance,
Fannin came marching that way, but a detachment of
Mexican lancers might stumble upon him at any moment.
The thought, however, caused him no alarm. He
felt so much weakness and depression that the possibility
of capture or death could not add to it.
Young Fulton was not hungry,—the
chill and following fever had taken his appetite away
so thoroughly,—but he felt that he must
eat. He found some early berries in the thickets
and they restored his strength a little, but the fare
was so thin and unsubstantial that he decided to look
for game. He could never reach Fannin or anybody
else in his present reduced condition.
He saw a line of oaks, which he knew
indicated the presence of a water-course, probably
one of the shallow creeks, so numerous in Eastern
Texas, and he walked toward it, still dizzy and his
footsteps dragging. His head was yet aching,
and the sun, which was now out in full brightness,
made it worse, but he persisted, and, after an interminable
time, he reached the shade of the oaks, which, as he
surmised, lined both sides of a creek.
He drank of the water, rested a while,
and then began a search of the oaks. He was looking
for squirrels, which he knew abounded in these trees,
and, after much slow and painful walking, he shot a
fine fat one among the boughs. Then followed
the yet more mighty task of kindling a fire with sticks
and tinder, but just when he was completely exhausted,
and felt that he must fail, the spark leaped up, set
fire to the white ash that he had scraped with his
knife, and in a minute later a good fire was blazing.
He cooked the tenderest parts of the
squirrel and ate, still forcing his appetite.
Then he carefully put out the fire and went a mile
further up the creek. He felt stronger, but he
knew that he was not yet in any condition for a long
journey. He was most intent now upon guarding
against a return of the chill. It was not the
right time for one to be ill. Again he sought
a place in a thicket, like an animal going to its
den, and, wrapping himself tightly in the blankets,
lay down.
He watched with anxiety for the first
shiver of the dreaded chill. Once or twice imagination
made him feel sure that it had come, but it always
passed quickly. His body remained warm, and, while
he was still watching for the chill, he fell asleep,
and slept soundly all through the night.
The break of day aroused him.
He felt strong and well, and he was in a pleasant
glow, because he knew now that the chill would not
come. It had been due to overtaxed nerves, and
there was no malaria in his system.
He hunted again among the big trees
until he found a squirrel on one of the high boughs.
He fired at it and missed. He found another soon
and killed it at the first shot. But the miss
had been a grave matter. He had only four bullets
left. He took them out and looked at them, little
shining pellets of lead. His life depended upon
these four, and he must not miss again.
It took him an hour to start his fire,
and he ate only half of the squirrel, putting the
remainder into his bullet pouch for future needs.
Then, much invigorated, he resumed his vague journey.
But he was compelled very soon to go slowly and with
the utmost caution. There were even times when
he had to stop and hide. Mexican cavalry appeared
upon the prairies, first in small groups and then
in a detachment of about three hundred. Their
course and Ned’s was the same, and he knew then
that he was going in the right direction. Fannin
was surely somewhere ahead.
But it was most troublesome traveling
for Ned. If they saw him they could easily ride
him down, and what chance would he have with only four
bullets in his pouch? Or rather, what chance would
he have if the pouch contained a hundred?
The only thing that favored him was
the creek which ran in the way that he wanted to go.
He kept in the timber that lined its banks, and, so
long as he had this refuge, he felt comparatively safe,
since the Mexicans, obviously, were not looking for
him. Yet they often came perilously near.
Once, a large band rode down to the creek to water
their horses, when Ned was not fifty feet distant.
He instantly lay flat among some bushes, and did not
move. He could hear the horses blowing the water
back with their noses, as they drank.
When the horses were satisfied, the
cavalrymen turned and rode away, passing so near that
it seemed to him they had only to look down and see
him lying among the bushes. But they went on,
and, when they were out of sight, he rose and continued
his flight through the timber.
But this alternate fleeing and dodging
was most exhausting work, and before the day was very
old he decided that he would lie down in a thicket,
and postpone further flight until night. Just
when he had found such a place he heard the faint
sound of distant firing. He put his ear to the
earth, and then the crackle of rifles came more distinctly.
His ear, experienced now, told him that many men must
be engaged, and he was sure that Fannin and the Mexican
army had come into contact.
Young Fulton’s heart began to
throb. The dark vision of the Alamo came before
him again. All the hate that he felt for the Mexicans
flamed up. He must be there with Fannin, fighting
against the hordes of Santa Anna. He rose and
ran toward the firing. He saw from the crest of
a hillock a wide plain with timber on one side and
a creek on the other. The center of the plain
was a shallow valley, and there the firing was heavy.
Ned saw many flashes and puffs of
smoke, and presently he heard the thud of cannon.
Then he saw near him Mexican cavalry galloping through
the timber. He could not doubt any longer that
a battle was in progress. His excitement increased,
and he ran at full speed through the bushes and grass
into the plain, which he now saw took the shape of
a shallow saucer. The firing indicated that the
defensive force stood in the center of the saucer,
that is, in the lowest and worst place.
A terrible fear assailed young Fulton,
as he ran. Could it be possible that Fannin also
was caught in a trap, here on the open prairie, with
the Mexicans in vastly superior numbers on the high
ground around him? He remembered, too, that Fannin’s
men were raw recruits like those with Ward, and his
fear, which was not for himself, increased as he ran.
He noticed that there was no firing
from one segment of the ring in the saucer, and he
directed his course toward it. As soon as he saw
horses and men moving he threw up his hands and cried
loudly over and over again: “I’m
a friend! Do not shoot!” He saw a rifle
raised and aimed at him, but a hand struck it down.
A few minutes later he sprang breathless into the
camp, and friendly hands held him up as he was about
to pitch forward with exhaustion.
His breath and poise came back in
a few moments, and he looked about him. He had
made no mistake. He was with Fannin’s force,
and it was already pressed hard by Urrea’s army.
Even as he drew fresh, deep breaths he saw a heavy
mass of Mexican cavalry gallop from the wood, wheel
and form a line between Fannin and the creek, the only
place where the besieged force could obtain water.
“Who are you?” asked an officer, advancing
toward Ned.
Young Fulton instantly recognized Fannin.
“My name is Edward Fulton, you
will recall me, Colonel,” he replied. “I
was in the Alamo, but went out the day before it fell.
I was taken by the Mexicans, but escaped, fled across
the prairie, and was in the mission at Refugio when
some of your men under Colonel Ward came to the help
of King.”
“I have heard that the church
was abandoned, but where is Ward, and where are his
men?”
Ned hesitated and Fannin read the answer in his eyes.
“You cannot tell me so!” he exclaimed.
“I’m afraid that they
will all be taken,” said Ned. “They
had no ammunition when I slipped away, and the Mexicans
were following them. There was no possibility
of escape.”
Fannin paled. But he pressed
his lips firmly together for a moment and then said
to Ned:
“Keep this to yourself, will
you? Our troops are young and without experience.
It would discourage them too much.”
“Of course,” said Ned.
“But meanwhile I wish to fight with you.”
“There will be plenty of chance,”
said Fannin. “Hark to it!”
The sound of firing swelled on all
sides of them, and above it rose the triumphant shouts
of the Mexicans.