Ned, at the suggestion of the Panther, mounted one of the horses and rode out on the plain a half mile to the south. Those keen eyes of his were becoming all the keener from life upon the vast rolling plains. But no matter how he searched the horizon he saw only a lonesome cactus or two shivering in the wind. When he returned with his report the redoubtable Panther said:
“Then we’ll just take our time. The pursuit’s goin’ to come, but since it ain’t in sight we’ll brace up these new friends of ours with hot coffee an’ vittles. I guess we’ve got coffee enough left for all.”
They lighted the fire anew and soon pleasant odors arose. The rescued prisoners ate and drank hungrily, and Mr. Roylston was able to limp a little. Now that Ned saw him in the full daylight he understood more clearly than ever that this was indeed a most uncommon man. The brow and eyes belonged to one who thought, planned and organized. He spoke little and made no complaint, but when he looked at Ned he said:
“You are young, my boy, to live among such dangers. Why do you not go north into the states where life is safe?”
“There are others as young as I, or younger, who have fought or will fight for Texas,” said Ned. “I belong here and I’ve got powerful friends. Two of them have saved my life more than once and are likely to do so again.”
He nodded toward Obed and the Panther, who were too far away to hear. Roylston smiled. The two men were in singular contrast, but each was striking in his way. Obed, of great height and very thin, but exceedingly strong, was like a steel lath. The Panther, huge in every aspect, reminded one, in his size and strength, of a buffalo bull.
“They are uncommon men, no doubt,” said Roylston. “And you expect to remain with them?”
“I’d never leave them while this war lasts! Not under any circumstances!”
Ned spoke with great energy, and again Roylston smiled, but he said no more.
“It’s time to start,” said the Panther.
Roylston again mounted one of the horses. Ned saw that it hurt his pride to have to ride, but he saw also that he would not complain when complaints availed nothing. He felt an increasing interest in a man who seemed to have perfect command over himself.
The boy, Will Allen, was fresh and strong again. His youthful frame had recovered completely from all hardships, and now that he was free, armed, and in the company of true friends his face glowed with pleasure and enthusiasm. He was tall and strong, and now he carried a good rifle with a pistol also in his belt. He and Ned walked side by side, and each rejoiced in the companionship of one of his own age.
“How long have you been with them?” asked Will, looking at Obed and the Panther.
“I was first with Obed away down in Mexico. We were prisoners together in the submarine dungeon of San Juan de Ulua. I’d never have escaped without him. And I’d never have escaped a lot more things without him, either. Then we met the Panther. He’s the greatest frontiersman in all the southwest, and we three somehow have become hooked together.”
Will looked at Ned a little enviously.
“What comrades you three must be!” he said. “I have nobody.”
“Are you going to fight for Texas?”
“I count on doing so.”
“Then why don’t you join us, and we three will turn into four?”
Will looked at Ned, and his eyes glistened.
“Do you mean that?” he asked.
“Do I mean it? I think I do. Ho, there, Panther! You and Obed, just a minute or two!”
The two turned back. Ned and Will were walking at the rear of the little company.
“I’ve asked Will to be one of us,” said Ned, “to join our band and to share our fortunes, good or bad.”
“Can he make all the signs, an’ has he rid the goat?” asked the Panther solemnly.
“Does he hereby swear never to tell any secret of ours to Mexican or Indian?” asked Obed. “Does he swear to obey all our laws and by-laws wherever he may be, and whenever he is put to the test?”
“He swears to everything,” replied Ned, “and I know that he is the kind to make a trusty comrade to the death.”
“Then you are declared this minute a member of our company in good standin’,” said the Panther to Will, “an’ with this grip I give you welcome.”
He crushed the boy’s hand in a mighty grasp that made him wince, and Obed followed with one that was almost equally severe. But the boy did not mind the physical pain. Instead, his soul was uplifted. He was now the chosen comrade of these three paladins, and he was no longer alone in the world. But he merely said:
“I’ll try to show myself worthy.”
They were compelled to stop at noon for rather a long rest, as walking was tiresome. Fields, who was a good scout, went back and looked for pursuers, but announced that he saw none, and, after an hour, they started again.
“I’m thinkin’,” said the Panther, “that Urrea has already organized the pursuit. Mebbe he has pow’ful glasses an’ kin see us when we can’t see him. He may mean to attack to-night. It’s a lucky thing for us that we can find timber now an’ then.”
“It’s likely that you’re right about to-night,” said Obed, “but there’s no night so dark that it doesn’t have its silver lining. I guess everybody in this little crowd is a good shot, unless maybe it’s Mr. Roylston, and as we have about three guns apiece we can make it mighty hot for any force that Urrea may bring against us.”
They began now to search for timber, looking especially for some clump of trees that also inclosed water. They did not anticipate any great difficulty in regard to the water, as the winter season and the heavy rains had filled the dry creek beds, and had sent torrents down the arroyos. Before dark they found a stream about a foot deep running over sand between banks seven or eight feet high toward the Rio Grande. A mile further on a small grove of myrtle oaks and pecans grew on its left bank, and there they made their camp.
Feeling that they must rely upon their valor and watchfulness, and not upon secrecy, they built a fire, and ate a good supper. Then they put out the fire and half of them remained on guard, the other half going to sleep, except Roylston, who sat with his back to a tree, his injured legs resting upon a bed of leaves which the boys had raked up for him. He had been riding Old Jack and the horse had seemed to take to him, but after the stop Ned himself had looked after his mount.
The boy allowed Old Jack to graze a while, and then he tethered him in the thickest of the woods just behind the sleeping man. He wished the horse to be as safe as possible in case bullets should be flying, and he could find no better place for him. But before going he stroked his nose and whispered in his ear.
“Good Old Jack! Brave fellow!” he said. “We are going to have troublous times, you and I, along with the others, but I think we are going to ride through them safely.”
The horse whinnied ever so softly, and nuzzled Ned’s arm. The understanding between them was complete. Then Ned left him, intending to take a position by the bank of the creek as he was on the early watch. On the way he passed Roylston, who regarded him attentively.
“I judge that your leader, Mr. Palmer, whom you generally call the Panther, is expecting an attack,” said the merchant.
“He’s the kind of man who tries to provide for everything,” replied Ned.
“Of course, then,” said Roylston, “he provides for the creek bed. The Mexican skirmishers can come up it and yet be protected by its banks.”
“That is so,” said the Panther, who had approached as he was speaking. “It’s the one place that we’ve got to watch most, an’ Ned an’ me are goin’ to sit there on the banks, always lookin’. I see that you’ve got the eye of a general, Mr. Roylston.”
The merchant smiled.
“I’m afraid I don’t count for much in battle,” he said, “and least of all hampered as I am now. But if the worst comes to the worst I can sit here with my back to this tree and shoot. If you will kindly give me a rifle and ammunition I shall be ready for the emergen
cy.”
“But it is your time to sleep, Mr. Roylston,” said the Panther.
“I don’t think I can sleep, and as I cannot I might as well be of use.”
The Panther brought him the rifle, powder and bullets, and Roylston, leaning against the tree, rifle across his knees, watched with bright eyes. Sentinels were placed at the edge of the grove, but the Panther and Ned, as arranged, were on the high bank overlooking the bed of the creek. Now and then they walked back and forth, meeting at intervals, but most of the time each kept to his own particular part of the ground.
Ned found an oak, blown down on the bank by some hurricane, and as there was a comfortable seat on a bough with the trunk as a rest for his back he remained there a long time. But his ease did not cause him to relax his vigilance. He was looking toward the north, and he could see two hundred yards or more up the creek bed to a point where it curved. The bed itself was about thirty feet wide, although the water did not have a width of more than ten feet.
Everything was now quite dry, as the wind had been blowing all day. But the breeze had died with the night, and the camp was so still that Ned could hear the faint trickle of the water over the sand. It was a fairnight, with a cold moon and cold stars looking down. The air was full of chill, and Ned began to walk up and down again in order to keep warm. He noticed Roylston still sitting with eyes wide open and the rifle across his lap.
As Ned came near in his walk the merchant turned his bright eyes upon him.
“I hear,” he said, “that you have seen Santa Anna.”
“More than once. Several times when I was a prisoner in Mexico, and again when I was recaptured.”
“What do you think of him?”
The gaze of the bright eyes fixed upon Ned became intense and concentrated.
“A great man! A wickedly great man!”
Roylston turned his look away, and interlaced his fingers thoughtfully.
“A good description, I think,” he said. “You have chosen your words well. A singular compound is this Mexican, a mixture of greatness, vanity and evil. I may talk to you more of him some day. But I tell you now that I am particularly desirous of not being carried a prisoner to him.”
He lifted the rifle, put its stock to his shoulder, and drew a bead.
“I think I could hit at forty or fifty yards in this good moonlight,” he said.
He replaced the rifle across his knees and sighed. Ned was curious, but he would not ask questions, and he walked back to his old position by the bank. Here he made himself easy, and kept his eyes on the deep trench that had been cut by the stream. The shadows were dark against the bank, but it seemed to him that they were darker than they had been before.
Ned’s blood turned a little colder, and his scalp tingled. He was startled but not afraid. He looked intently, and saw moving figures in the river bed, keeping close against the bank. He could not see faces, he could not even discern a clear outline of the figures, but he had no doubt that these were Urrea’s Mexicans. He waited only a moment longer to assure himself that the dark moving line was fact and not fancy. Then, aiming his rifle at the foremost shape, he fired. While the echo of the sharp crack was yet speeding across the plain he cried:
“Up, men! up! Urrea is here!”
A volley came from the creek bed, but in an instant the Panther, Obed, Will and Fields were by Ned’s side.
“Down on your faces,” cried the Panther, “an’ pot ’em as they run! So they thought to go aroun’ the grove, come down from the north an’ surprise us this way! Give it to ’em, boys!”
The rifles flashed and the dark line in the bed of the creek now broke into a huddle of flying forms. Three fell, but the rest ran, splashing through the sand and water, until they turned the curve and were protected from the deadly bullets. Then the Panther, calling to the others, rushed to the other side of the grove, where a second attack, led by Urrea in person, had been begun. Here men on horseback charged directly at the wood, but they were met by a fire which emptied more than one saddle.
Much of the charge was a blur to Ned, a medley of fire and smoke, of beating hoofs and of cries. But one thing he saw clearly and never forgot. It was the lame man with the thick white hair sitting with his back against a tree calmly firing a rifle at the Mexicans. Roylston had time for only two shots, but when he reloaded the second time he placed the rifle across his knees as before and smiled.
Most Mexican troops would have been content with a single charge, but these returned, encouraged by shouts and driven on by fierce commands. Ned saw a figure waving a sword. He believed it to be Urrea, and he fired, but he missed, and the next moment the horseman was lost in the shadows.
The second charge was beaten back like the first, and several skirmishers who tried to come anew down the bed of the creek were also put to flight. Two Mexicans got into the thickets and tried to stampede the horses, but the quickness of Obed and Fields defeated their aim. One of the Mexicans fell there, but the other escaped in the darkness.
When the second charge was driven back and the horses were quieted the Panther and Obed threshed up the woods, lest some Mexican musketeer should lie hidden there.
Nobody slept any more that night. Ned, Will and the Panther kept a sharp watch upon the bed of the creek, the moon and stars fortunately aiding them. But the Mexicans did not venture again by that perilous road, although toward morning they opened a scattering fire from the plain, many of their bullets whistling at random among the trees and thickets. Some of the Texans, crawling to the edge of the wood, replied, but they seemed to have little chance for a good shot, as the Mexicans lay behind a swell. The besiegers grew tired after a while and silence came again.
Three of the Texans had suffered slight wounds, but the Panther and Fields bound them up skillfully. It was still light enough for these tasks. Fields was particularly jubilant over their success, as he had a right to be. The day before he could look forward only to his own execution. Now he was free and victorious. Exultantly he hummed:
You’ve heard, I s’pose, of New Orleans,
It’s famed for youth and beauty;
There are girls of every hue, it seems,
From snowy white to sooty.
Now Packenham has made his brags,
If he that day was lucky,
He’d have the girls and cotton bags
In spite of Old Kentucky.
But Jackson, he was wide awake,
And was not scared at trifles,
For well he knew Kentucky’s boys,
With their death-dealing rifles.
He led them down to cypress swamp,
The ground was low and mucky;
There stood John Bull in martial pomp,
And here stood old Kentucky.
“Pretty good song, that of yours,” said the Panther approvingly. “Where did you get it?”
“From my father,” replied Fields. “He’s a Kentuckian, an’ he fit at New Orleans. He was always hummin’ that song, an’ it come back to me after we drove off the Mexicans. Struck me that it was right timely.”
Ned and Will, on their own initiative, had been drawing all the fallen logs that they could find and move to the edge of the wood, and having finished the task they came back to the bed of the creek. Roylston, the rifle across his knees, was sitting with his eyes closed, but he opened them as they approached. They were uncommonly large and bright eyes, and they expressed pleasure.
“It gratifies me to see that neither of you is hurt,” he said. “This has been a strange night for two who are as young as you are. And it is a strange night for me, too. I never before thought that I should be firing at any one with intent to kill. But events are often too powerful for us.”
He closed his eyes again.
“I am going to sleep a little, if I can,” he said.
But Ned and Will could not sleep. They went to Ned’s old position at the edge of the creek bed, and together watched the opening dawn. They saw the bright sun rise over the great plain
s, and the dew sparkle for a little while on the brown grass. The day was cold, but apparently it had come with peace. They saw nothing on the plain, although they had no doubt that the Mexicans were waiting just beyond the first swell. But Ned and Will discerned three dark objects lying on the sand up the bed of the creek, and they knew that they were the men who had fallen in the first rush. Ned was glad that he could not see their faces.
At the suggestion of the Panther they lighted fires and had warm food and coffee again, thus putting heart into all the defenders. Then the Panther chose Ned for a little scouting work on horseback. Ned found Old Jack seeking blades of grass within the limits allowed by his lariat. But when the horse saw his master he stretched out his head and neighed.
“I think I understand you,” said Ned. “Not enough food and no water. Well, I’ll see that you get both later, but just now we’re going on a little excursion.”
The Panther and Ned rode boldly out of the trees, and advanced a short distance upon the plain. Two or three shots were fired from a point behind the first swell, but the bullets fell far short.
“I counted on that,” said the Panther. “If a Mexican has a gun it’s mighty hard for him to keep from firing it. All we wanted to do was to uncover their position an’ we’ve done it. We’ll go back now, an’ wait fur them to make the first move.”
But they did not go just yet. A man on horseback waving a large white handkerchief appeared on the crest of the swell and rode toward them. It was Urrea.
“He knows that he can trust us, while we don’t know that we can trust him,” said the Panther, “so we’ll just wait here an’ see what he has to say.”
Urrea, looking fresh and spirited, came on with confidence and saluted in a light easy fashion. The two Americans did not return the salute, but waited gravely.
“We can be polite, even if we are enemies,” said Urrea, “so I say good morning to you both, former friends of mine.”
The Second Western Megapack Page 57