At three o’clock the next morning
a long line of men slowly filed into the cottonwood
grove, being silently swallowed up by the dark.
Dismounting, they left their horses in the care of
three of their number and disappeared into the brush.
Ten minutes later forty of the force were distributed
along the edge of the grove fringing on the bank of
the river and twenty more minutes gave ample time
for a detachment of twenty to cross the stream and
find concealment in the edge of the woods which ran
from the river to where the corral made an effective
barrier on the south.
Eight crept down on the western side
of the camp and worked their way close to Mr. Trendley’s
cabin door, and the seven who followed this detachment
continued and took up their positions at the rear of
the corral, where, it was hoped, some of the rustlers
would endeavor to escape into the woods by working
their way through the cattle in the corral and then
scaling the stockade wall. These seven were from
the Three Triangle and the Double Arrow, and they
were positive that any such attempt would not be a
success from the view-point of the rustlers.
Two of those who awaited the pleasure
of Mr. Trendley crept forward, and a rope swished
through the air and settled over the stump which lay
most convenient on the other side of the cabin door.
Then the slack moved toward the woods, raised from
the ground as it grew taut and, with the stump for
its axis, swung toward the door, where it rubbed gently
against the rough logs. It was made of braided
horsehair, was half an inch in diameter and was stretched
eight inches above the ground.
As it touched the door, Lanky Smith,
Hopalong and Red stepped out of the shelter of the
woods and took up their positions behind the cabin,
Lanky behind the northeast corner where he would be
permitted to swing his right arm. In his gloved
right hand he held the carefully arranged coils of
a fifty-foot lariat, and should the chief of the rustlers
escape tripping he would have to avoid the cast of
the best roper in the southwest.
The two others took the northwest
corner and one of them leaned slightly forward and
gently twitched the tripping-rope. The man at
the other end felt the signal and whispered to a companion,
who quietly disappeared in the direction of the river
and shortly afterward the mournful cry of a whip-poor-will
dirged out on the early morning air. It had hardly
died away when the quiet was broken by one terrific
crash of rifles, and the two camp guards asleep at
the fire awoke in another world.
Mr. Trendley, sleeping unusually well
for the unjust, leaped from his bed to the middle
of the floor and alighted on his feet and wide awake.
Fearing that a plot was being consummated to deprive
him of his leadership, he grasped the Winchester which
leaned at the head of his bed and, tearing open the
door, crashed headlong to the earth. As he touched
the ground, two shadows sped out from the shelter of
the cabin wall and pounced upon him. Men who
can rope, throw and tie a wild steer in thirty seconds
flat do not waste time in trussing operations, and
before a minute had elapsed he was being carried into
the woods, bound and helpless. Lanky sighed,
threw the rope over one shoulder and departed after
his friends.
When Mr. Trendley came to his senses
he found himself bound to a tree in the grove near
the horses. A man sat on a stump not far from
him, three others were seated around a small fire
some distance to the north, and four others, one of
whom carried a rope, made their way into the brush.
He strained at his bonds, decided that the effort was
useless and watched the man on the stump, who struck
a match and lit a pipe. The prisoner watched
the light flicker up and go out and there was left
in his mind a picture that he could never forget.
The face which had been so cruelly, so grotesquely
revealed was that of Frenchy McAllister, and across
his knees lay a heavy caliber Winchester. A curse
escaped from the lips of the outlaw; the man on the
stump spat at a firefly and smiled.
From the south came the crack of rifles,
incessant and sharp. The reports rolled from
one end of the clearing to the other and seemed to
sweep in waves from the center of the line to the ends.
Faintly in the infrequent lulls in the firing came
an occasional report from the rear of the corral,
where some desperate rustler paid for his venture.
Buck went along the line and spoke
to the riflemen, and after some time had passed and
the light had become stronger, he collected the men
into groups of five and six. Taking one group
and watching it closely, it could be seen that there
was a world of meaning in this maneuver. One
man started firing at a particular window in an opposite
hut and then laid aside his empty gun and waited.
When the muzzle of his enemy’s gun came into
sight and lowered until it had nearly gained its sight
level, the rifles of the remainder of the group crashed
out in a volley and usually one of the bullets, at
least, found its intended billet. This volley
firing became universal among the besiegers and the
effect was marked.
Two men sprinted from the edge of
the woods near Mr. Trendley’s cabin and gained
the shelter of the storehouse, which soon broke out
in flames. The burning brands fell over the main
collection of huts, where there was much confusion
and swearing. The early hour at which the attack
had been delivered at first led the besieged to believe
that it was an Indian affair, but this impression
was soon corrected by the volley firing, which turned
hope into despair. It was no great matter to
fight Indians, that they had done many times and found
more or less enjoyment in it; but there was a vast
difference between brave and puncher, and the chances
of their salvation became very small. They surmised
that it was the work of the cow-men on whom they had
preyed and that vengeful punchers lay hidden behind
that death-fringe of green willow and hazel.
Red, assisted by his inseparable companion,
Hopalong, laboriously climbed up among the branches
of a black walnut and hooked one leg over a convenient
limb. Then he lowered his rope and drew up the
Winchester which his accommodating friend fastened
to it. Settling himself in a comfortable position
and sheltering his body somewhat by the tree, he shaded
his eyes by a hand and peered into the windows of the
distant cabins.
“How is she, Red?” Anxiously
inquired the man on the ground.
“Bully: want to come up?”
“Nope. I’m goin’
to catch yu when yu lets go,” replied Hopalong
with a grin.
“Which same I ain’t goin’
to,” responded the man in the tree.
He swung his rifle out over a forked
limb and let it settle in the crotch. Then he
slew his head around until he gained the bead he wished.
Five minutes passed before he caught sight of his man
and then he fired. Jerking out the empty shell
he smiled and called out to his friend: “One.”
Hopalong grinned and went off to tell
Buck to put all the men in trees.
Night came on and still the firing
continued. Then an explosion shook the woods.
The storehouse had blown up and a sky full of burning
timber fell on the cabins and soon three were half
consumed, their occupants dropping as they gained
the open air. One hundred paces makes fine pot-shooting,
as Deacon Rankin discovered when evacuation was the
choice necessary to avoid cremation. He never
moved after he touched the ground and Red called out:
“Two,” not knowing that his companion had
departed.
The morning of the next day found
a wearied and hopeless garrison, and shortly before
noon a soiled white shirt was flung from a window in
the nearest cabin. Buck ran along the line and
ordered the firing to cease and caused to be raised
an answering flag of truce. A full minute passed
and then the door slowly opened and a leg protruded,
more slowly followed by the rest of the man, and Cheyenne
Charley strode out to the bank of the river and sat
down. His example was followed by several others
and then an unexpected event occurred. Those in
the cabins who preferred to die fighting, angered
at this desertion, opened fire on their former comrades,
who barely escaped by rolling down the slightly inclined
bank into the river. Red fired again and laughed
to himself. Then the fugitives swam down the
river and landed under the guns of the last squad.
They were taken to the rear and, after being bound,
were placed under a guard. There were seven in
the party and they looked worn out.
When the huts were burning the fiercest
the uproar in the corral arose to such a pitch as
to drown all other sounds. There were left within
its walls a few hundred cattle whose brands had not
yet been blotted out, and these, maddened to frenzy
by the shooting and the flames, tore from one end
of the enclosure to the other, crashing against the
alternate walls with a noise which could be heard
far out on the plain. Scores were trampled to
death on each charge and finally the uproar subsided
in sheer want of cattle left with energy enough to
continue. When the corral was investigated the
next day there were found the bodies of four rustlers,
but recognition was impossible.
Several of the defenders were housed
in cabins having windows in the rear walls, which
the occupants considered fortunate. This opinion
was revised, however, after several had endeavored
to escape by these openings. The first thing
that occurred when a man put his head out was the
hum of a bullet, and in two cases the experimenters
lost all need of escape.
The volley firing had the desired
effect, and at dusk there remained only one cabin
from which came opposition. Such a fire was concentrated
on it that before an hour had passed the door fell
in and the firing ceased. There was a rush from
the side, and the Barred Horseshoe men who swarmed
through the cabins emerged without firing a shot.
The organization that had stirred up the Pecos Valley
ranches had ceased to exist.