Their horses scrambled through the sand. Suddenly the last of the fog lifted, and the camp lay bright and clear before them. A man had just walked out of a tent and was stretching. The team had reached the wagon, and another man was bent over reaching for the trace chain.
Happy Jack let go with a wild cowboy yell and jumped his horse toward them, firing a shot, but he did not fire into the air, pulling down instead on the man with the cattle.
Charging and yelling, the three raced at the startled cattle, which took one look and broke into a wild run, right through camp.
The stretching man leaped aside as a wild longhorn lunged at him. The man tripped over a camp-chair and fell sprawling. Another man scrambled for a rifle. The man at the trace chain turned, surprised, and in that moment his team, harness and all, was gone!
The sleeping camp exploded into action. Men scrambled for their rifles. Others ran to escape the charging cattle. The teamster rushed after his running team, swearing.
The cattle, thoroughly frightened, stampeded through the camp and headed out across the salt meadow, eyes distended, horns bobbing!
Dal was the first at the grove, turning quickly to fire, keeping his shots away from the wagon.
A moment and it was over. Dust hung in the air; and men were rushing out with rifles while others were putting out the scattered fire. From the grove, they looked back.
“Anybody hurt?” Mac asked.
“That feller with the cows is hurt,” Happy Jack said grimly. “Figured there was no use wastin’ a bullet, so I fired right into him. Got him in the belly, an’ if you ask me he won’t be settin’ up for breakfast! Not this morning!”
They were a good hundred yards from the camp. “Let’s go,” Mac suggested. “They’ll be firing into this clump of trees, and we’re liable to get singed.”
Keeping the trees between them and the camp, they rode away, dropping down behind a row of sand dunes, low dunes but offering cover. A dozen of the cattle walked ahead of them, and Happy Jack chuckled. “Take ’em awhile to round up their beef, if they ever do. We shook ’em up some.”
“Won’t be so lucky again,” Dal said. “Now they’ll keep a closer watch.”
The country before them offered little cover, but there were low places and occasional clumps of trees. Mac glanced back but could see nothing but a few scattered cattle and horses.
They rode on, watching the country with care. It was not until they reached some willows along a creek that they pulled up. “Might’s well have some grub ourselves,” Happy Jack suggested. “It’ll take them most of an hour to get goin’.”
They gathered a few twigs and boiled coffee while chewing on beef jerky. “That’s a bad outfit,” Mac commented, “and we’d best not take them lightly. They’ll be hunting us.”
“They ain’t got too much time,” Jack said. “They’ve got that ship to meet. Least that’s what seems likely.”
Their fire left no smoke in the sky, and their cover, while light, was sufficient. They squatted on their heels drinking coffee and watching the country around. Dal’s muscles were stiff, and he moved with care because of his wound. Although he was almost well now, he had to be aware of his weakness.
The light fog that had drifted over the salt meadows and marshes before dawn had largely disappeared. The sun was bright, but the three men at the fire were tired. “Dal? You’d better catch yourself some shut-eye while there’s a chance.”
“Maybe you’re right.” Dal eased himself back on the grass and was almost instantly asleep.
“He caught a bad one,” Mac said. “Lost a lot of blood.”
“This here’s a bad time to be in a fight,” Jack grumbled. “Times are bad, there’s no market for beef, and with the armies comin’ home there’ll be three men for every job. If I had two-bits to buy seed I’d go to farmin’.”
“Two-bits wouldn’t get you very far.”
“It would buy a packet o’ seeds. It’s a start. Mac, I’m worried about those girls. That’s a mean outfit. Right now Ashford seems to be in control, but suppose he gets shot or whatever? Those girls wouldn’t have a chance.”
He removed his hat and wiped the sweat-band. “Mac, you better catch yourself twenty minutes or so. I’ll stand watch.”
“Well -” Mac stretched out, hat over his eyes, and Happy Jack refilled his cup and scanned the country around. From where they sat their fire was screened by the low place where they had camped and some tall reeds growing in the water, as well as by willows along the creek. Open country was all around them.
Three men against thirty? And two of them had too much conscience.
“Well,” Jack muttered, “that never bothered me much, not when there’s fightin’ to do.” A good prairie fire, now, would set them by the ears, but impossible because of the girls. Whatever he thought of must take them into consideration.
“That Kate now,” he muttered, “she’d always had a good head on her shoulders. If I could just get inside her head! She’s thinkin’ right now. She’s figurin’, but on what? What can she do?”
Not quite five miles away Kate Connery was watching the teamster bringing back the four-horse team from the brush, and she was thinking the same thing. There was little time. The Gulf Coast was right over there. She could smell the sea, and it needed no special awareness to understand that once aboard a ship they would have small chance to escape. What was to be done, if anything, must be done now.
“Dulcie,” she said, “pass the word along, and whisper when you do it. Tell them to be ready for anything. I don’t know what we will do, but it will have to happen soon.”
“The boys are out there,” Gretchen said hopefully.
“There are only three of them. At least that’s all we saw. What can they do?”
Sitting in the wagon they listened to the angry talk outside. “Was I Ashford,” somebody was saying, “I’d waste no time with the women. Nor tryin’ to trade for guns. I’d start movin’ toward Laredo, and I’d hit ever’ ranch in between. I’d steal every head of stock they’ve got, take their guns and whatever money they have, and drive right on into Mexico.
“Ol’ Maximilian would make us a deal for those cows, believe me. An’ meanwhile we’d have the women for ourselves.”
“Leave it to him. He’s smart. He knows what he’s doin’.”
“Maybe. An’ maybe he wants the women for hisself. Maybe he’ll sell us out an’ take off aboard that ship, or whatever. I don’t trust him. I don’t trust nobody.”
“Maybe you’re right, Frank. Maybe not. I don’t know about ships, and I can’t figure just what Ashford has in mind, but he’s got us this far.”
“Toward what?” Frank asked. There was no reply.
Kate peered out through a slit in the canvas. Some of the cattle had been gathered and some of the horses brought back, and Ashford came riding up. “All right,” he spoke quietly, “we’re moving out. I’ve put scouts out ahead of us, and flankers. We’ll get those Traven boys next time they show.”
The driver cracked his whip, and the teams leaned into their harness. The wagons moved. Riders, rifles in hand, moved out to the flanks. What could Dal and Mac do against so many? Their progress was slow. There were two wagons, one loaded with food supplies and loot, the other carrying the women. But the salt meadows, easy enough for horses, often had areas of deep sand. Coupled with the late start, they had made but four miles by noon.
Ashford rode up alongside the wagon, and Kate thought he was about to speak to her when a rider appeared. “Seen some tracks, Colonel. Three riders, headin’ off to the southwest.”
“West?” he was puzzled. “Why west?” Were they going for help? He knew nothing about Major Mac Traven, but Dal Traven he knew well, and Dal was a first-class fighting man, a daring rider and an expert with any kind of weapon.
The town of Refugio lay off to the west, and they might have friends there.
For a few minutes Ashford considered that, but finally came to the conclusion that by the time they returned with help – if they had, indeed, gone for help – he would be on the ship and away.
He had been a fool to hurry so. With the times what they were he could have recruited an army. So many men were returning home to ruined plantations, empty houses, and no possible way out of the economic trap created by the War’s end.
There were many men in the South who felt as he did, and just as many who were prepared for anything that promised three meals a day and a horse to ride. Ashford was well aware that some of the wilder groups of his men were for raiding all the way to the border and escaping across it with thousands of horses and all else they could steal.