A Federal cavalry column of a hundred men makes its slow way
back to its post in Kansas City, now but two more miles to northward. From the high branches of the cedar woods to either side of
the road ahead come the risible callings of crows.
The days have been long and sultry and every man of them rides
slumped and haggard, exhausted by lack of sleep and the constant
tension of watching for ambush. Now, drawn so close to Kansas
City, they put aside their fears and snug their carbines into their saddle scabbards and give themselves over to reveries of the good times
to come later this night in the bagnios and saloons.
The guerrillas burst out of the cedars like the very avatar of
nightmare, shivering the air with a rising chorus of rebel yells, shattering the afternoon with a rage of revolverfire. The Yankee horses
plunge and veer, their riders slinging blood, pitching from saddles.
Most of the Federals panic, lash their mounts to a gallop in the other
direction with no purpose in this world save escape, deaf to the shrill
commands of their captain to stand and fight.
The captain sees a beardless bushwhacker bearing on him with
his reins in his teeth and revolvers in each hand—and then feels the
world tip sideways and goes facedown into the dirt without knowing
it or anything else evermore.
An hour later a Federal force from Kansas City will find fortythree of their fellows littering this portion of prairie, many of them
already made eyeless by the crows. In the captain’s mouth they find a
note: “Todd did this. Remember Jim Vaughn.”
“I’m glad you’re here, Billy.”
He slapped her lightly on the behind. “You think you know
everything.”
As it happened, the several members of the Westport Sewing Circle
who’d succumbed to Federal threats of imprisonment and told the
Yankees about the Vaughn girls had also revealed the names of other
members of the club, including those of the Anderson sisters. When
asked where the Anderson girls might be, the informers said they
didn’t know. All they knew about them was that they had once lived
with relatives called Parchman on a farm by Brushy Creek just off
the Blue River.
They were in the kitchen and readying dinner, Jenny fetching water
from the creek. Mary was still darkeyed from hard weeping for
Jimmy Vaughn, and Josephine was trying to cheer her with funny
rhymes she’d heard Bill and Jim tell. Mary managed a small smile at
the first innocuous few, but when Josie began intoning, “There was a
bad girl from the city, who on a poor farm boy took pity; so for only
a dime and a bit of her time, she let him have fun with—” She broke
in, “Josie—don’t you dare!” but was grinning in spite of herself.
Then from out in front of the house Jenny screamed.
Josephine streaked across the room and grabbed up her Navy
from a chair and raced for the front door, Mary already there and
Jenny now hollering, “Let go! Let me
Bill and Jim were breaking horses at the corrals, the bushwhackers
who’d brought the mustangs—Lionel Ward, Hi Guess, Frank James
and Buster Parr—sitting on the rail and watching, when the pistolshot sounded from the house. Bill dropped the hackamore he’d been
about to put on a dappled gray Jim was holding steady, and the
brothers vaulted the corral rail and ran to their horses. The six of
them set off for the house at a gallop with revolvers in hand, following the narrow serpentine trail, branches and shrubs slapping at
them as they went, the horses’ hooves throwing clods.
They pounded into the farmyard and spotted the mounted Federals making their way along the fence-bordered lane leading to the
main trail. There were six of them, and three rode double behind an
Anderson girl. The Yanks saw them coming and reined around with
pistols drawn. Those holding the girls as shields formed up across
the narrow lane in front of their comrades and the guerrillas drew up
a dozen yards from them. A sergeant was clutching Jenny to his
chest, and she shrilled,
“Let them loose!” Bill Anderson said. “Do it
When they returned to the Parchman farm they found it untorched,
so eager had the Yankees been to make away with the girls. While
the others swiftly gathered the remaining stores of food and packed
them into their saddle wallets, Bill went to his sisters’ loft and looked
on their beds and trinkets and clothes and he nearly howled in his
outrage. He spied Josie’s black silk ribbon on the rude plank dressing
table. He put it in his pocket and left everything else where it lay.
The others were remounted and waiting.
Two days later they added another pair to their band—Dock and
Johnny Rupe—brothers met over a dinner table where they’d been
invited to sit down by a family of secessionists known to Buster Parr.
Buster had not seen the Rupes in eight months, and in that time the
brothers, sixteen and seventeen, had gained their growth. Their
mother knew she could keep them from the war no longer. But the
boys would have to ride double on the family’s old mare until they
could get proper mounts.
The following afternoon they ambushed a militia patrol of seven
men on the Blue River road west of Raytown. But the Unionists
fought desperately, and the guerrillas were obliged to kill them all.
“That’s gonna be the problem with getting prisoners,” Frank
James said. “They figure we’ll kill them anyway, so why surrender?”
They were crossing the Blue River near Little Santa Fe, all of them
wearing Federal blue, when they were almost ambushed by Dick
Yeager’s bunch. Dick recognized the Andersons just in time to check
his boys, then came out of the trees and hallooed them. It took Bill
and Jim a moment to recognize him too—most of the right side of his
mustache was gone and the bared portion of lip showed a raw scar.
He told them it had been shot off a few weeks earlier in a fight with
redlegs in Cass County. “Closest shave I ever had,” he said, showing
big yellow teeth.
When Bill explained his plan to trade prisoners for his sisters,
Yeager offered to help him, and the two bands, thirty men strong, set
out to hunt for Yankees.
They fell on a camp of militia scouts just west of the Little Blue,
killing two and capturing three. The following day they sat their
horses in the silent shadows of a willow thicket hard by a rippling
creek and watched a militia patrol coming down the road. When the
soldiers drew abreast of them, they charged out of the trees, rebelyelling and shooting, and they had to laugh at the looks on the militiamen’s faces. Most of the soldiers fled for their lives, and the others
went down—except for a handful who threw up their hands and surrendered, but in their excitement the bushwhackers killed some of
them too. They dispatched the militia wounded, took the uniforms
off the dead, tied the six new prisoners to their saddles and hastened
away with them, leaving behind a few wounded horses and a dozen
naked dead men staring blindly at the descending crows under a pale
and unpitying sun.