[The Texan Scouts by Joseph A. Altsheler]@TWC D-Link bookThe Texan Scouts CHAPTER XV 14/44
When they reached Refugio they found there Captain King with less than thirty men who had been sent by Fannin, as Jackson had said, to bring away the people. Ned was taken at once to King, who had gathered his men in the little plaza.
He saw that the soldiers were not Texans, that is, men who had long lived in Texas, but fresh recruits from the United States, wholly unfamiliar with border ways and border methods of fighting.
The town itself was an old Mexican settlement with an ancient stone church or mission, after the fashion of the Alamo, only smaller. "You say that you were in the Alamo, and that all the defenders have fallen except you ?" said the Captain, looking curiously at Ned. "Yes," replied the boy. "And that the Mexican force dispatched against the Eastern settlements is much nearer than was supposed ?" "Yes," replied Ned, "and as proof of my words there it is now." He had suddenly caught the gleam of lances in a wood a little distance to the west of the town, and he knew that the Mexican cavalry, riding ahead of the main army, was at hand.
It was a large force, too, one with which the little band of recruits could not possibly cope in the open. Captain King seemed dazed, but Ned, glancing at the church, remembered the Alamo.
Every Spanish church or mission was more or less of a fortress, and he exclaimed: "The church, Captain, the church! We can hold it against the cavalry!" "Good!" cried the Captain.
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