"I saw the rifle leveled, and realized that I was
going to be killed. Instinctively, I flinched to one side of the line of
the rifle. That saved my life. The ball entered the left side of my neck,
about three-quarters of an inch from the carotid artery and about half an
inch above the left clavicle, coming out through the left shoulder. I felt
no pain at the time, and, indeed, did not feel pain until the next day.
The shock of the shot knocked me down and numbed me, and I suppose I lay a
minute or two before I recovered sensation or knew anything about my
condition. It was supposed by all that I was killed, and, in a vague way,
I agreed that I must be killed; that my spirit was simply present
listening and seeing.
"Eaton had now got out of the wagon, and he started
to run towards the horses. Robinson and one or two others now turned and
pursued him, and I heard a shot or so. Robinson came back and I heard him
say, 'I have shot the ___ ___ ___ who drew a gun on me!'
"Then I heard the Hugoton men talking and declaring
that they must have the fifth man of our party, whom they had not yet
found. At this time, old man Haas and his sons came and stood near where I
was and saw me looking up. The former, seeing that I was not dead, asked
me where I had been shot. 'They have shot my arm off,' I answered him. At
this moment I heard the Hugoton men starting toward me, and I dropped back
and feigned death. Haas did not betray me. The Hugoton men now lit matches
and peered into the faces of their victims to see if they were dead. I
kept my eyes shut when the matches were held to my face, and held my
breath.
"They finally found Wilcox, I do not know just where,
but they stood him up within fifteen feet of where I was lying feigning
death. They asked Wilcox what he had been doing there, and he replied that
he had just been down on the Strip looking around.
"'That's a damned lie!' replied Robinson, the head
executioner. As he spoke, he raised his Winchester and fired. Wilcox fell,
and as he lay he moaned a little bit, as I heard:
"'Put the fellow out of his misery,' remarked
Robinson, carelessly. Some one then apparently fired a revolver shot and
Wilcox became silent.
"Some one came to me, took hold of my foot, and began
to pull me around to see whether I was dead. Robinson wanted it made sure.
Chamberlain, my executioner, said, 'He's dead; I gave him a center shot. I
don't need shoot a man twice at that distance.' Either Chamberlain or some
one else took me by the legs, dragged me about, and kicked me in the side,
leaving bruises which were visible for many days afterwards. I feigned
death so well that they did not shoot me again. They did shoot a second
time each of the others who lay near me. We found seven cartridges on the
ground near where the killing was done. Eaton was shot at a little
distance from us, and I do not know whether he was shot more than once or
not.
"The haymakers were now in trouble, and said that
they could not go on putting up their hay with the corpses lying around.
Robinson told them to hitch up and follow the Hugoton party away. They did
this, and after a while I was left lying there in the half-moonlight, with
the dead bodies of my friends for company.
"After the party had been gone about twenty minutes,
I found I could get on my feet, although I was very weak. At first, I went
and examined Wilcox, Cross, and Hubbard, and found they were quite dead.
Their belts and guns were gone. Then I went to get my horse. It was hard
for me to get into the saddle, and it has always seemed to me providential
that I could do so at all. My horse was very wild and difficult to mount
under ordinary circumstances. Now, it seemed to me that he knew my plight.
It is certain that at that time and afterwards he was perfectly quiet and
gentle, even when I laboriously tried to get into the saddle.
"At a little distance, there was a
buffalo
wallow, with some filthy water in it. I led my horse here, lay down in the
water, and drank a little of it. After that I rode about fifteen or
sixteen miles along a trail, not fully knowing where I was going. In the
morning, I met Constable Herman Cann, of Voorhees, who had been told by
the Haas party of the foregoing facts. Of course, we might expect a
Hugoton 'posse' at any time. As a matter of fact, the same crowd who did
the killing (fifteen of them, as I afterwards learned), after taking the
haymakers back toward the State of
Kansas,
returned on their hunt for one of
Short's
men, who they supposed was still in that locality. It was probably not
later than one or two o'clock in the morning when they found me gone.
“Our butchers now again sat down on the ground near
the bodies of their victims, and they seem to have enjoyed themselves.
There was talk that some beer bottles were emptied and left near the heads
of their victims as markers, but whether this was deliberately done I
cannot say.
"Constable Cann later hid me in the middle of a
cornfield. This, no doubt, saved my life, for the Hugoton scouts were soon
down there the next morning, having discovered that one of the victims had
come to life. Woodsdale had sent out two wagons with ice to bring in the
bodies of the dead men, but these Hugoton scouts met them and made them
ride through Hugoton, so that the assembled citizens of that town might
see the corpses. The county attorney, William O'Connor, made a speech,
demanding that Hugoton march on Woodsdale and kill Wood and
Ed Short.
"By this time, of course, all Woodsdale was also
under arms. My friends gathered from all over the countryside, a large
body of them, heavily armed. Mr. Cann, the constable, had tried to take me
to Liberal, but I could not stand the ride. I was then taken to the house
of a doctor in the settlement at LaFayette. On the second night after the
massacre I was taken to Woodsdale by about twenty of the Woodsdale boys,
who came after me. We arrived at Woodsdale about daybreak next morning. In
our night trip we could see the skyrocket signals used by the
Robinson-Cook gang.
"After my arrival at Woodsdale, it might have been
supposed that all the country was in a state of war, instead of living in
a time of modern civilization. Entrenchments were thrown up, rifle pits
were dug, and stands established for sharp-shooters. Guards were thrown
out all around the town, and mounted scouts continued to scour the
country. Hugoton, expecting that Woodsdale would make an organized attack
in retaliation, was quite as fully fortified in every way. Had there been
a determined leader, the bloodshed would have been much greater. Of
course, the result of this state of hostilities was that the governor sent
out the militia, and there were investigations, and, later on, arrests and
trials. The two towns literally fought each other to the death.
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