Austin College. The most important factor (after cost, of course) is which school will give you the support you need. Pre-med is brutal, and some students find the small classes and direct professor contact of an LAC to be crucial. In fact, if you can make it through your required pre-med courses (and earn top grades, of course), a small school like Austin C. should work to help you get accepted to medical school (so that the college can boast about its students’ acceptance rate to med school).
It is important, as others have noted, to also consider which school is best if med school doesn’t happen. The ground is littered with the bones of once hopeful pre-med students. One HS friend of mine switched to pre-law. My roommate in college switched and applied to dental schools.