dangled uselessly.  White   didn’t  mention one detail  to  Pyle:   the girl
who had been    taken   hostage credited    White   with    protecting  her
and her brother.    “I  am  sure    they    intended    to  kill    all of  us, and only
Warden  White’s bravery saved   us,”    she said.
None    of  the convicts    managed to  get away.   They    believed    that    if
you touched a   prison  official,   especially  a   warden, it  was better, as
one of  them    remarked,   never   to  “come   back    because if  you do  you
are going   to  have    a   hard,   hard    time.”  And so  when    the authorities
caught  up  with    Boxcar  and the other   escapees,   Boxcar  shot    his two
companions,  then    put     a   bullet  in  his     own     forehead.   The     other
inmates prepared    to  kill    themselves  by  detonating  the dynamite,
but before  they    could   light   the fuse,   they    were    apprehended.    One
of  them    said,   “The    funny   part    is  that    when    we  got back    to  the
institution they    never   laid    a   hand    on  us. Warden  White   was a   hell
of  a   man.    He  left    strict  orders, ‘No hands   on  these   people, leave
them    alone.  Treat   them    just    like    the rest    of  the prisoners.’ ”   He
added,  “Otherwise  we’d    have    got our heads   broken  in.”
White   learned that    Rudensky    had been    recruited   to  assist  with
the escape  but had refused.    “He had begun   to  develop a   sense   of
responsibility,”    White   told    another writer. “He realized    that    I   had
been    fair    with    him and was sincerely   trying  to  help    him establish
himself as  a   member  of  ‘legitimate’    society.”   In  1944,   Rudensky
was released    on  parole  and had a   successful  career  as  an  author
and a   businessman.
When    White   had sufficiently    recovered,  he  took    over    as  warden
of   La  Tuna,   a   job     that    was     less    strenuous.  Pyle    wrote   of  the
shooting,    “The    experience  affected    Warden  White,  as  it  would
anyone. It  didn’t  make    him afraid, but it  made    him jumpy,  and
kind     of  haunted.”   Pyle    continued,  “I  don’t   see     how,    after   an
experience   like    that,   you     could   look    upon    any     convict     with
anything     but     hatred.     But     Warden  White   isn’t   that    way.    He  is
