the manhunt.    Planes  were    flying  overhead.   The inmates ran into    a
farmhouse   and seized  an  eighteen-year-old   girl    and her younger
brother.    White   pleaded with    the prisoners,  saying, “I  know    you’re
going   to  kill    me. But don’t   kill    these   two—they    aren’t  in  it  at  all.”
Boxcar  and another inmate  went    to  look    for a   second  car,    taking
White   with    them.   At  one point,  White   could   see that    the girl    had
broken   free    and     was     running.    The     gang    seemed  ready   to  start
killing,    and White   grabbed the barrel  of  the gun being   held    by  one
of  his captors,    who yelled  at  Boxcar, “Shoot  him!    He’s    got my  gun.”
As  Boxcar  leveled his shotgun at  White’s chest,  only    inches  away,
White   lifted  his left    forearm to  shield  himself.    Then    he  heard   the
blast   and felt    the bullet  boring  through his arm,    through flesh   and
blood    and     bone,   the     buckshot    fragmenting,    some    pieces  going
through his arm and into    his chest.  Yet White   was standing.   It  was
like    a   miracle;    he  had been    shot    to  pieces, and yet he  was still
breathing   in  the cold    December    air,    and then    he  felt    the butt    of  the
rifle   smashing    into    his face    and he  crumbled,   all 225 pounds  of
him,    and fell    into    a   ditch,  bleeding    out and left    to  die.
Nearly   a   decade  later,  in  December    1939,   the     acclaimed
newspaper   reporter    Ernie   Pyle    stopped at  La  Tuna    prison, near    El
Paso,   Texas.  He  asked   to  meet    the warden  and was led in  to  see
Tom White,  who was then    nearly  sixty   years   old.    “White  asked   me
to   stay    for     lunch,”     Pyle    later   wrote.  “So     I   did,    and     we  sat     and
talked, and finally he  told    me  the story,  as  I   was hoping  all the
time    he  would.  The story   about   his left    arm.”
White   described   how,    after   being   shot    by  Boxcar, he  was found
in  the ditch   and rushed  to  the hospital.   For several days,   it  was
uncertain    whether     he  would   live,   and     doctors     contemplated
amputating  his arm.    But he  survived,   somehow,    and he  even    kept
his arm,     though  it  still   had     bullet  fragments   lodged  inside  and
