Wood Again Walked Down The Trail
With Capron And Disappeared, And One Of The Officers Informed Us That
The Scouts Had Seen The Outposts Of The Enemy.
It did not seem
reasonable that the Spaniards, who had failed to attack us when we
landed at Baiquiri, would oppose us until they could do so in force,
so, personally, I doubted that there were any Spaniards nearer than
Santiago.
But we tied our horses to the wire fence, and Capron's
troop knelt with carbines at the "Ready," peering into the bushes.
We must have waited there, while Wood reconnoitred, for over ten
minutes. Then he returned, and began deploying his troops out at
either side of the trail. Capron he sent on down the trail itself.
G Troop was ordered to beat into the bushes on the right, and K and A
were sent over the ridge on which we stood down into the hollow to
connect with General Young's column on the opposite side of the
valley. F and E Troops were deployed in skirmish-line on the other
side of the wire fence. Wood had discovered the enemy a few hundred
yards from where he expected to find him, and so far from being
"surprised," he had time, as I have just described, to get five of
his troops into position before a shot was fired. The firing, when
it came, started suddenly on our right. It sounded so close that -
still believing we were acting on a false alarm, and that there were
no Spaniards ahead of us - I guessed it was Capron's men firing at
random to disclose the enemy's position. I ran after G Troop under
Captain Llewellyn, and found them breaking their way through the
bushes in the direction from which the volleys came. It was like
forcing the walls of a maze. If each trooper had not kept in touch
with the man on either hand he would have been lost in the thicket.
At one moment the underbrush seemed swarming with our men, and the
next, except that you heard the twigs breaking, and heavy breathing
or a crash as a vine pulled some one down, there was not a sign of a
human being anywhere. In a few minutes we broke through into a
little open place in front of a dark curtain of vines, and the men
fell on one knee and began returning the fire that came from it.
The enemy's fire was exceedingly heavy, and his aim was excellent.
We saw nothing of the Spaniards, except a few on the ridge across the
valley. I happened to be the only one present with field glasses,
and when I discovered this force on the ridge, and had made sure, by
the cockades in their sombreros, that they were Spaniards and not
Cubans, I showed them to Roosevelt. He calculated they were five
hundred yards from us, and ordered the men to fire on them at that
range. Through the two hours of fighting that followed, although men
were falling all around us, the Spaniards on the ridge were the only
ones that many of us saw.
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