“Where is he?” the girl gasped, swinging to the big man.
“Who, Lon?” he replied. “Gone back down there a ways to see what the Yankees make of it.”
“But they might catch him!” she protested.
“It’d take more’n any bunch of web-footed Yankee scaly-backs to do that, ma’am,” drawled the man with complete confidence. “He learned the game from the Comanche.”
Satisfied, at least partially, the girl turned her attention back to the beach. Some of the sailors were examining the bodies, two more had raised the girl’s first victim to his feet and were supporting him. Another of the party handed something which the girl could not see to the midshipman. For a moment the young warrant officer stood looking at the object, the sailor between him and the watchers on the slope. Then he swung to stare up in their direction. The girl caught her breath, wondering if her younger rescuer had failed to justify his companion’s confidence. Then the midshipman gave an order and his men returned to the boat carrying the injured man along with them.
“They’re going,” breathed the girl, watching the launch withdraw into the darkness.
“Figured they’d not stick around to look for us.” replied the big man.
Landing on the Mexican coast in such a manner might be construed as an armed invasion; or at best be regarded as an intrusion against the other country’s territorial rights. To be caught doing so by the authorities would bring about a bitter exchange of diplomatic letters, if nothing worse. So the sloop’s captain had probably ordered his subordinate only to go beyond the beach if certain he could make a speedy capture. Seeing no chance of doing so, the midshipman wisely decided to return to his ship. While they took the Mexican along for questioning, the act could later be excused on the grounds that he needed medical attention.
For five minutes after the launch departed, the man and girl remained silent. Then he turned to face her and she could see his teeth glinting white in a grin as he spoke.
“Now we’ve time, I’d best introduce myself, ma’am. Sergeant Sam Ysabel, Mosby’s Raiders. Boy’s my son, Loncey Dalton.”
“I’m pleased to meet you, sergeant,” the girl answered and spoke genuinely, not in the formal conventional reply. “My name is Boyd—”
“Boyd!” said the youngster, materializing at her side as soundlessly as he had disappeared. “Belle Boyd—the Rebel Spy?”
Although the voice gave the girl a nasty fright, she restrained herself beyond the one startled gasp.
“I’m Belle Boyd,” she conceded, a faint smile playing on her lips. “And they do call me the Rebel Spy, I’ve been told.”
“This’s surely a privilege and honor, ma’am,” Ysabel stated and his voice held a ring of truth. “Mind you, I should’ve figured who you be as soon as I saw the way you handled that scum down there.”
“Lordy lord!” grinned his son. “I’ve never seed a feller so all-fired took back as when that short-growed pelado 1 laid hands on your head and the hair all come off in it.”
Respect and admiration showed in both her companions’ voices. While pleased with it, the two men’s attitude did not entirely surprise the girl. Through the war years supporters of the South had much for which to praise and honor Belle Boyd’s name.
Born of a rich Southern family, Belle grew up in a slightly different manner than many of her contemporaries. While receiving instruction in the normal womanly virtues and subjects, her education extended beyond those bounds. Possibly to make up for being unable to have a son, her father taught her many boyish skills. Being something of a tomboy, Belle became an accomplished rider—astride as well as on the formal side-saddle—skilled with pistol, shotgun, rifle or sword and very competent at savate, the combined foot and fist boxing of the French Creoles.
Probably the skills would have been put aside and forgotten had it not been for the coming of the War. Shortly before the attack on Fort Sumpter occurred, a drunken rabble of Union supporters raided the Boyd plantation. Before the family’s ‘downtrodden and persecuted’ slaves drove off the mob, Belle’s father and mother lay dead and the girl was wounded outside the blazing mansion. Nursed back to health by the Negroes, Belle learned of the declaration of war and sought for a way to take her part. Her parents’ murder left a bitter hatred for Yankees that could not be healed by sitting passively at home—not that her home remained. So she eagerly accepted the invitation of her cousin, Rose Greenhow, to help organize a spy ring for the Confederate States.
At first there had been considerable opposition to Southern ladies sullying their hands with such a dirty business as spying, but successes and the needs of the times gained their acceptance. While Rose concentrated on gathering information, Belle took a far more active part. Often in the early days she made long, hard rides through enemy territory to deliver messages and won the acclaim of old General Stonewall Jackson himself. More important missions followed, while Pinkerton and his U.S. Secret Service fumed, raged impotently and hunted Belle. Despite all efforts to capture her. Belle retained her liberty and struck shrewd, hard blows for the South.
Standing in the darkness, Belle tried to study the two men who had saved her life and would be working with her on the mission that lay ahead. She knew little about them except that the Gray Ghost, Colonel John Singleton Mosby, claimed them to be the, best men available for her aids.
Sam Ysabel belonged to that hardy brotherhood of adventurers who pushed into Texas and helped open up that great State. Objecting to the taxes levied by distant Washington on the import of Mexican goods, he became a smuggler running contraband across the Rio Grande. Then War came and he joined Mosby’s Raiders, to be returned to Texas for the purpose of resuming his old business when the Yankees took Brownsville. Many a cargo of goods brought in through the blockade and landed at Matamoros found its way to Texas, then on to the Deep South, by Ysabel’s efforts.
While none of the trio guessed it, young Loncey Dalton Ysabel was to achieve a legendary status equal to the Rebel Spy’s in the years following the War. 2 Left motherless at birth, the boy grew up among the people of his maternal grandfather. His mother had been the daughter of Long Walker, war chief of the Pehnane Comanche and his French Creole pairaivo, head wife.
With Ysabel away on man’s business, the boy was raised as a Comanche and taught all those things a Pehnane brave-heart must know. 3 Under skilled tuition, he learned to ride any horse ever foaled, and get more out of it than could any white man. Ability with weapons, always a prime subject, took a prominent part in his schooling. While good with his old Dragoon Colt, he relied mostly on his bowie knife for close range work and called upon the services of a deadly accurate Mississippi rifle when dealing with distant enemies. In the use of both he could claim a mastery equal to the best in Mosby’s Raiders. Few white men matched his ability in the matter of silent movement, locating hidden foes or hiding undetected where such seemed an impossibility.
All in all the Ysabel Kid—as white folks knew him— would prove as great an asset to Belle’s mission as he might have to a raiding party of the Wasps, Quick-Stingers, Raiders, all three of which names had been given by Texans to the Pehnane.
Although interested in her companions and grateful to them for saving her from the Mexicans, Belle wondered why she found herself in the position of needing to be saved. However, knowing how little regard for discipline and orders such men usually possessed, she hesitated to ask a question that might mar their relationship. Almost as if reading her thoughts, Ysabel launched into an explanation.
“Right sorry about not being on hand when you landed, ma’am,” he said. “We come down and got the fire started ready. Then Lon allowed he heard something, so me ’n’ him went back to keep the hosses quiet. Didn’t want no French patrol sneaking up and asking fool questions. We left Miguel, one of our boys, to tend to the fire. He warn’t there when you landed?”
“Those men told me they killed him,” Belle replied.
“The bastards—Sorry, ma’am. Only Mig’d been with us a fair time. They must’ve been slick to get up close enough without him hearing. Time we figured whoever the boy heard’d gone by, you’d landed and the fuss started.”
“You came in time,” Belle stated, satisfied with the explanation. Then she looked at the Kid. “What did the Yankee sailors make of it?”
“Figured us to be Mexican smugglers tangling with deserters, from what they said,” he replied. “That wig of your’n sure got ’em puzzled, though.”
“Damn that wig!” Belle snapped. “I knew I should never have left it.”
“Too late for worrying now, ma’am,” Ysabel pointed out. “Go fetch the hosses up, boy. We’d best get going.”
“But your friend—” Belle protested, looking back towards the darkness around the fire.
“He’s dead, ma’am. Scum like that don’t take prisoners—except maybe in a pretty gal’s case and they kill her when they’ve done. Sooner we pull out, the happier I’ll be. Those shots could’ve been heard by more’n the Yankees.”
“Then we’ll get going,” Belle agreed, turning back to find that the Kid had made another of his silent, eerie departures.
Soon he returned, leading four horses. All were fine animals, but one of them more than the others caught the eye. A big, magnificent white stallion, it looked almost as wild and dangerous as the youngster it followed; leading might be too strong a word in its case, for it walked free behind the Kid.
“Don’t go near nor touch that white, Miss Boyd,” warned Ysabel, following the direction of the girl’s gaze. “My grulla’s bad enough, but I do swear that damned white’s part grizzly b’ar crossed with snapping turtle. Not that I need tell you anything about hosses.”
“He looks that way,” Belle smiled, accepting the tribute to her equestrian knowledge. “Which horse shall I take?”
“The bay. T’other’s ole Mig’s. We didn’t bring but him along. Figured the less who knowed what brought us down here the better.”
“I agree,” the girl said, then a thought struck her. “But you don’t know why I’m here, do you?”
“No, ma’am,” Ysabel admitted. “We’ll put those boxes of your’n on the pack hoss and move out.”
“Aren’t you interested in why we’re here?” she asked.
“Sure I am. Only I figure you can tell us just as easy while we’re riding as do it here.”
Loading Belle’s trunks on to the horse took little time as they had been designed to fit the official C.S.A. pack saddle used by the Ysabels. While the men attended to the loading. Belle approached and gained the confidence of the horse allocated to her. Although a powerful mount capable of speed and endurance, it would not be easy to handle. So she counted the time well spent. Swinging into the low-horned, double girthed saddle—experience had taught her that the Texans rarely used the word cinch—she felt the horse move restlessly beneath her. However long experience and a knack with animals enabled her to control her mount, then gain its confidence. As long as she did not commit any blunder of riding or management, she expected no trouble with the bay.
“Lead the way, sergeant,” she said, glancing to where her escort were swinging astride their horses. “Head towards Matamoros and I’ll tell you our assignment as we ride.”
However the chance did not come immediately. Deciding that they must put some distance between themselves and the bay, Ysabel urged his party on at a fast trot. Not until they had covered two miles and were riding along a path through heavily wooded country did he slow down.
“Nobody’s following,” he said. “Do you want to camp here for the night, or push on, ma’am?”
“Push on,” she replied. “I must go to see our consul in Matamoros as soon as I possibly can. Do you know his house?”
“Sure,” Ysabel agreed. “And so do the Yankees. Unless you have to go there, I’d say stay long and far away.”
“I have to report to him,” Belle insisted. “He’ll be in a muck-sweat to know whether I’ve arrived or not.”
“That figures,” the Kid remarked.
“Not for my sake, I assure you,” smiled the girl. “But for those trunks. There’s fifteen thousand dollars in them.”
“Is there that much money in the whole world, ap’?” asked the Kid.
“I’d say just a mite more,” Ysabel replied. “You’re taking one helluva chance telling a couple of border rough-necks like us that, ma’am.”
“Not if all Captain Fog told me about you is true, sergeant.”
“You know Captain Dusty Fog, ma’am?” Ysabel said.
“We’ve been on two missions together,” 4 she replied. “He spoke highly of the part you played in averting the Indian war those two Yankee soft-shells planned to start in Texas.” 5
“He’s quite a feller, that Cap’n Fog,” drawled the Kid. “I’d sure like to meet up with him.”
Almost a year later the Kid found his chance to meet Captain Dustine Edward Marsden Fog, 6 rated one of the South’s three top cavalry raiders and eventually gaining acclaim in other fighting fields.
Ysabel put off more discussion on the matter of Captain Dusty Fog. Satisfied that the girl trusted him, or she would never have given the information about the trunk’s contents, he got straight down to business.
“That’s a whole heap of money, ma’am,” he said. “What’s it for?”
“Have you heard of a General Klatwitter?” she asked.
“Is he one of our’n, or their’n?” the Kid inquired.
“Neither,” Belle replied. “He’s French. At least, he’s nominally French. His command is made up of mercenaries from most of Continental Europe. He’s at the town of Nava, do you know it?”
“Sure,” Ysabel confirmed. “It’s in Coahuila Territory, maybe ten-fifteen miles in from the Rio Grande below Piedras Negras and Eagle Pass.”
“That’s correct. We have to reach him with the money as quickly as possible. Can you do it?”
“Five to eight days’ ride, depending on you and the kind of trouble we run into on the way.”
“The Yankee Secret Service don’t know this yet,” Belle objected.
“I wasn’t figuring on them,” Ysabel assured her. “We’ll have to stay close to the river most of the way and that’s mighty rough country. The French and the Mexicans’re apt to start shooting first and ask who you are a long second. Then there’re deserters from both sides that’ve come across the river. They’re living as best they can and aren’t choosey on where they get their pickings. Top of them, there’s the usual run of border thieves, white and Mexican. No, ma’am. I count the Yankee Secret Service least of our worries.”
“We must get through,” Belle told him.
“What’d be so all-fired important about a French general, Miss Belle?” the Kid put in. “There’s some’d say we’ve got more’n enough of our own without worrying about the French.”
“Few of our generals can throw an extra thousand men into the field right now,” Belle pointed out.
“And this Klack-wicker hombre can?” asked Ysabel.
“So he claims. A full regiment of cavalry, armed, trained and loyal to whoever feeds and pays them,” Belle replied. “And with a battery of horse artillery to boot.”
“That’s a tolerable good bargain, all for fifteen thousand dollars,” Ysabel commented. “Unless there’s more to it.”
“What’s he fixing to do, ma’am?” the Kid went on. “Come down with us and help Rip Ford take Brownsville back from the Yankees?”
“No. He will march west, cross the Rio Grande into New Mexico, attack La Mesilla and continue north up the Sante Fe trail.”
“A thousand men can’t take New Mexico,” Ysabel objected. “Ole General Sibley couldn’t do it with at least twice that many.”
“And they was most of ’em Texans,” his son continued.
“General Klatwitter won’t try to take it. His objective is merely to raid, do as much damage and grab what loot he can, forcing the Yankees to divert troops badly needed elsewhere to stop him.”
“Why’d we need to pay a frog-eater good money to do that, ma’am?” the Kid demanded. “We could send some of our own fellers—”
“We don’t have any men to spare.” the girl replied simply. “The War is going badly for us and every available man is needed right where he is. But the Yankees aren’t in any better shape. Meeting a new attack will force them to withdraw troops from their field commands, they’ve no reserves worth mentioning.”
“From Arkansas?” asked Ysabel.
“In the first place, probably,” Belle agreed. “But that’s one battle front the Yankees daren’t weaken to any great extent.”
Which figured to anybody who understood the situation. Under General Ole Devil Hardin, the small Confederate Army of Arkansas held back a superior numbered Yankee force on the banks of the Ouachita River. Given a significant reduction in his enemy’s strength, he might even start to push them out of the Toothpick State. Should that happen, it would boost the flagging spirits of the Confederate States armies meeting defeat in the East and encourage them to stand firm.
“And if they can hang on in the East, even without pushing the Yankees back, it will have an effect,” Belle went on after explaining the previous points. “Up North there’s a growing feeling among the ordinary folks that the War should never have been started and ought to be ended speedily. They’re seeing wounded brought back by the train-load, hearing almost daily of kin or friends killed. If their armies can be halted, with the appearance of the War dragging on, the civilian population will start bringing pressure on their Government to make peace.”
“Will our Government have sense enough to take it, should the Yankees make it?” asked the Kid, in a voice which showed a complete lack of faith in Governmental intelligence.
“If the terms are acceptable, which they will be. I can’t see them refusing,” Belle replied. “It’s accept, or go down in defeat, Lon—uh—Kid—”
“Could say either ‘Lon’ or ‘Kid’, ma’am,” the youngster grinned. “I get called both of ’em—or worse.”
“Mostly worse and allus deserved,” Ysabel growled. “You allow this here frog general’ll do it, ma’am?”
“Of course. The fifteen thousand is only an advance payment, to be made if I am satisfied he can carry out his end of the bargain. I also have a bank draft for a further thirty-five thousand dollars, payable only after the successful completion of his share of the business.”
“Now I don’t allow to be smart, like the fellers who dreamed up this fancy twirl-me-round,” drawled the big man. “So I was wondering what’s to stop this here general just taking the money, standing us again a wall and shooting us, then soldiering on for France. Fifteen thousand’d go a long ways, further when that’s all he need do to get it.”
“A series of letters and other proof will be placed in the hands of the French as soon as it becomes apparent that he doesn’t mean to fulfill his part of the bargain,” Belle answered. “The people who produced this scheme are playing for high stakes, sergeant. They won’t hesitate to do it.”
“Would I be out of line in asking who’s behind it, Miss Belle?” the Kid said, guessing from her tone that the Confederate Government had not formulated the scheme even if they approved of it.
“A group of British businessmen; mill owners growing desperate for cotton. They know that if the South loses, the cotton-growing industry will be wrecked for years and with it goes their source of income. It was they who contacted Klatwitter before he left Europe, made the plans and provided the money to put it through. He received orders to sail before payment could be made. So the businessmen put the delivery of the payment in our Government’s hands and they passed it on to us.”
“May Ka-Dih reward ’em for their kindness to a poor lil quarter-Injun boy,” drawled the Kid. “I allus did want to die young.”
“Ka-Dih’s the Comanche Great Spirit, Miss Boyd,” Ysabel explained. “I sure hope he’s watching over us. There’s been some trouble and the French put a curfew on in Matamoros. We’ll not get through to the consul’s house tonight.”
“Then what do we do?” she asked.
“Stop with friends just outside town and move in tomorrow morning,” Ysabel replied. “It’s the only way.”