In a few minutes our greetings were
over. Twing moved on, taking with him his squadron
of mounted men. I had made up my mind to take
the opposite road-the “back
track”. I was now in command of a force-my
own-and I felt keenly the necessity of doing
something to redeem my late folly. Clayley was
as anxious as myself.
“You do not need them any longer?”
said I to Ripley, a gallant young fellow, who commanded
the howitzer.
“No, Captain; I have thirty
artillerists here. It is strange if we can’t
keep the piece and manage it against ten times that
number of such heroes as we have seen over yonder.”
And he pointed to the flying enemy on the other side
of the barranca.
“What say you to going with us?”
“I should like it well; but
duty, my dear H.-duty! I must stay
by the gun.”
“Good-bye, then, comrade!
We have no time to lose-farewell!”
“Good-bye; and if you’re
whipped, fall back on me. I’ll keep the
piece here until you return, and there’ll be
a good load of grape ready for anybody that may be
in pursuit of you.”
The company had by this time formed
on the flank of the howitzer, and at the words “Forward!-quick
time!” started briskly across the hills.
In a few minutes we had reached the
point where the road trended for some distance along
the brow of the precipice. Here we halted a moment;
and taking Lincoln and Raoul, I crawled forward to
our former point of observation.
Our time spent at the battery had
been so short that, with the difficulty which the
enemy experienced in descending the cliff, the head
of their line had only now reached the bottom of the
barranca. They were running in twos and threes
towards the stream, which, near this point, impinged
upon the foot of the precipice. With a small
glass that I had obtained from Ripley I could see
their every movement. Some of them were without
arms-they had doubtless thrown them away-while
others still carried their muskets, and not a few were
laden with knapsacks, and heavy burdens too; the household
gods-perhaps stolen ones-of
their own camp. As they reached the green-sward,
dropping down in a constant stream, they rushed forward
to the water, scrambling into it in thirsty crowds,
and falling upon their knees to drink. Some of
them filled their canteens and went on.
“They intend to take the hills,”
thought I. I knew there was no water for miles in
that direction.
As I swept the glass round the bottom
of the cliff, I was struck with an object that stood
in a clump of palm-trees. It was a mule saddled,
and guarded by several soldiers more richly uniformed
than the masses who were struggling past them.
“They are waiting for some officer
of rank,” thought I. I moved the glass slowly
along the line of descending bodies, and upward against
the rocks to a small platform, nearly halfway up the
cliff. Several bright uniforms flashed upon
the lens. The platform was shaded with palms;
and I could see that this party had halted a moment
for the purpose (as I then conjectured) of allowing
the foremost fugitives to pioneer the wooded bottom.
I was right. As soon as these had crossed the
stream, and made some way in the jungle along its
banks, the former continued their descent; and now
I saw what caused my pulse to beat feverishly-
that one of these carried a dark object on his back.
An object?-a man-and that man
could be no other than the lame tyrant of Mexico.
I can scarcely describe my feelings
at this moment. The young hunter who sees noble
game-a bear, a panther, a buffalo-within
reach of his rifle for the first time, might feel
as I did. I hated this man, as all honest men
must and should hate a cowardly despot. During
our short campaign I had heard many a well-authenticated
story of his base villainy, and I believe at that
moment I would have willingly parted with my hand
to have brought him as near to me as he appeared under
the field of the telescope. I thought I could
even distinguish the lines, deep furrowed by guilt,
on his dark, malice-marked face; and, as I became
sure of the identity, I drew back my head, cautioning
my companions to do the same.
Now was the time for action, and,
putting up the glass, we crawled back to our comrades.
I had learned from Raoul that the dark line which
I had noticed before was, as I had conjectured, the
canon of a small arroyo, heavily timbered, and forming
a gap or pass that led to the Plan River. It
was five miles distant, instead of three. So
much the better, and with a quick, crouching gait
we were once more upon our way. I had told my
comrades enough to make some of them as eager as I.
Many of them would have given half a life for a shot
at game like that. Not a few of them remembered
they had lost a brother on the plains of Goliad, or
at the fortress of the Alamo.
The Rangers, moreover, had been chafing
“all day for a fight”, and now, so unexpectedly
led at something like it, they were just in the humour.
They moved as one man, and the five miles that lay
between us and the gorge were soon passed to the rear.
We reached it, I think, in about half an hour.
Considering the steep pass through which the enemy
must come, we knew there was a breathing-time, though
not long, for us; and during this I matured my plans,
part of which I had arranged upon the route.
A short survey of the ground convinced
us that it could not have been better fitted for an
ambuscade had we chosen it at our leisure. The
gorge or canon did not run directly up the cliff, but
in a zigzag line, so that a man at the top
could only alarm another coming up after him by shouting
or firing his piece. This was exactly what we
wanted, knowing that, although we might capture a
few of the foremost, those in the rear, being alarmed,
could easily take to the river bottom and make their
escape through the thickets. It was our design
to make our prisoners, if possible, without firing
a single shot; and this, under the circumstances,
we did not deem an impossible matter.
The pass was a dry arroyo, its banks
fringed with large pines and cotton-woods, matted
together by llianas and vines. Where the gorge
debouched into the uplands its banks were high and
naked, with here and there a few scattered palmettos
that grew up from huge hassocks of bunch-grass.
Behind each of these branches a rifleman
was stationed, forming a deployed line, with its concave
arc facing the embouchure of the gorge, and gradually
closing in, so that it ended in a clump of thick chaparral
upon the very verge of the precipice. At this
point, on each side of the path, were stationed half
a dozen men, in such a position as to be hidden from
any party passing upward, until it had cleared the
canon and its retreat was secured against. At
the opposite end of the elliptical deployment a stronger
party was stationed, Clayley in command and Raoul
to act as interpreter. Oakes and I took our places,
commanding the separate detachments on the brow.
Our arrangements occupied us only
a few minutes. I had to deal with men, many
of whom had “surrounded” buffaloes in a
somewhat similar manner; and it did not require much
tact to teach them a few modifications in the game.
In five minutes we were all in our places, waiting
anxiously and in perfect silence.
As yet not a murmur had reached us
from below, except the sighing of the wind through
the tall trees, and the “sough” of the
river as it tumbled away over its pebbly bed.
Now and then we heard a stray shot, or the quick,
sharp notes of a cavalry bugle; but these were far
off, and only told of the wild work that was still
going on along the road towards Encerro and Jalapa.
Not a word was spoken by us to each
other. The men who were deployed along the hill
lay hidden behind the hassocks of the palmettos, and
from our position not one of them was to be seen.
I must confess I felt strange emotions
at this moment-one of the most anxious
of my life; and although I felt no hate towards the
enemy-no desire to injure one of them,
excepting him of whom I have spoken-there
was something so wild, so thrilling, in the excitement
of thus entrapping man, the highest of all
animals, that I could not have foregone the inhuman
sport. I had no intention that it should be
inhuman. I well knew what would be their treatment
as prisoners of war; and I had given orders that not
a shot should be fired nor a blow struck, in case
they threw down their arms and yielded without resistance.
But for him-humanity had many a
score to settle with him; and at the time I did not
feel a very strong inclination to resist what would
be the Rangers’ desire on that question.
“Is not all our fine ambuscade
for nothing?” I said to myself, after a long
period of waiting, and no signs of an enemy.
I had begun to fancy as much, and
to suspect that the flying Mexicans had kept along
the river, when a sound like the humming of bees came
up the pass. Presently it grew louder, until
I could distinguish the voices of men. Our
hearts as yet beat louder than their voices.
Now the stones rattled, as, loosened from their sloping
beds, they rolled back and downwards.
“Guardaos, hombre!” (Look out,
man!) shouted one.
“Carrajo!” cried
another; “take care what you’re about!
I haven’t escaped the Yankee bullets to-day
to have my skull cloven in that fashion. Arriba!
arriba!”
“I say, Antonio-you’re sure
this road leads out above?”
“Quite sure, camarado.”
“And then on to Orizava?”
“On to Orizava-derecho, derecho”
(straight).
“But how far-hombre?”
“Oh! there are halting-places-pueblitos.”
“Vaya! I don’t
care how soon we reach them. I’m as hungry
as a famished coyote.”
“Carrai! the coyotes
of these parts won’t be hungry for some time.
Vaya!”
“Who knows whether they’ve killed `El
Cojo’?”
“`Catch a fox, kill a fox.’
No. He’s found some hole to creep through,
I warrant him.
“`El que mata un
ladrón
Tiene cien años de
perdón.’”
(He who kills a robber will receive
a hundred years of pardon for the offence.)
This was hailed with a sally by the
very men who, only one hour ago, were shouting themselves
hoarse with the cries of “Viva el general,
Viva Santa Anna!” And on they scrambled,
talking as before, one of them informing his comrades
with a laugh that if “los Tejanos” could
lay their hands upon “El Cojo”,
they, the Mexicans, would have to look out for a new
president.
They had now passed us. We were
looking at their backs. The first party contained
a string of fifteen or twenty, mostly soldiers of the
“raw battalions”-conscripts
who wore the white linen jackets and wide, sailor-looking
pantaloons of the volunteer.
Raw as these fellows were, either
from their position in the battle, or, more likely,
from a better knowledge of the country, they had been
able thus far to make their escape, when thousands
of their veteran companions had been captured.
But few of them were armed; they had thrown their
guns away in the hurry of flight.
At this moment we could distinguish the voice of Raoul:
“Alto! abajo las armas!” (Halt!
down with your arms!)
At this challenge we could see-for
they were still in sight-that some of the
Mexicans leaped clear up from the ground. One
or two looked back, as if with the intention of re-entering
the gorge, but a dozen muzzles met their gaze.
“Adelante! adelante!-somos
amigos.” (Forward!-we are friends),
I said to them in a half-whisper, fearing to alarm
their comrades in the rear, at the same time waving
them onward.
As on one side Clayley presented a
white flag, while on the other there was to be seen
a bunch of dark yawning tubes, the Mexicans were not
long in making their choice. In a minute they
had disappeared from our sight, preferring the companionship
of Clayley and Raoul, who would know how to dispose
of them in a proper manner.
We had scarcely got rid of these when
another string debouched up the glen, unsuspicious
as were their comrades of the fate that awaited them.
These were managed in a similar manner;
and another and another party, all of whom were obliged
to give up their arms and fling themselves to the
earth, as soon as they had reached the open ground
above.
This continued until I began to grow
fearful that we were making more prisoners than we
could safely hold, and on the knowledge of this fact
they might try to overpower us.
But the tempting prize had not yet
appeared. He could not be far distant, and,
allured by this prospect, I determined to hold out
a while longer.
A termination, however, to our wholesale
trapping was brought about by an unexpected event.
A party, consisting of some ten or fifteen men, many
of them officers, suddenly appeared, and marched boldly
out of the gorge.
As these struck the level ground we
could hear the “Alto!” of Raoul;
but instead of halting, as their companions had done,
several of them drew their swords and pistols and
rushed down the pass.
A volley from both sides stopped the
retreat of some; others escaped along the sides of
the cliff; and a few-not over half a dozen-
succeeded in entering the gorge. It was, of course,
beyond our power to follow them; and I ordered the
deployed line to close in around the prisoners already
taken, lest they should attempt to imitate their braver
comrades.
We had no fear of being assailed from
the ravine. Those who had gone down carried
a panic along with them that would secure us from that
danger. At the same time we knew that the tyrant
would now be alarmed and escape.
Several of the Rangers-souvenirs
of Santa Fe and San Jacinto- requested
my permission to go upon his “trail” and
pick him off.
This request, under the circumstances,
I could not grant, and we set about securing our prisoners.
Gun-slings and waist-belts were soon split into thongs,
and with these our captives were tied two and two,
forming in all a battalion of a hundred and fifteen
files-two hundred and thirty men.
With these, arranged in such a manner
as we could most conveniently guard them, we marched
triumphantly into the American camp.