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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #50899 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50899)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mam' Linda, by Will N. Harben
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Mam' Linda
-
-Author: Will N. Harben
-
-Illustrator: F. B. Masters
-
-Release Date: January 11, 2016 [EBook #50899]
-Last Updated: March 12, 2018
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MAM' LINDA ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-MAM' LINDA
-
-By Will N. Harben
-
-Illustrated by F. B. Masters
-
-1907
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-[Illustration: 9017]
-
-N the rear of the long store, at a round table under a hanging-lamp with
-a tin shade, four young men sat playing poker. The floor of that portion
-of the room was raised several feet higher than that of the front, and
-between the two short flights of steps was the inclining door leading
-to the cellar, which was damp and dark and used only for the storage of
-salt, syrup, sugar, hardware, and general rubbish.
-
-Near the front door the store-keeper, James Blackburn, a portly, bearded
-man of forty-five, sat chatting with Carson Dwight, a young lawyer of
-the town.
-
-“I don't want any of you boys to think that I'm complaining,” the elder
-man was saying. “I've been young myself; in fact, as you know, I go the
-gaits too, considering that I'm tied down by a family and have a
-living to make. I love to have the gang around--I _swear_ I do, though
-sometimes I declare it looks like this old shebang is more of a place of
-amusement than a business house in good standing.”
-
-“Oh, I know we hang around here too much,” Carson Dwight replied; “and
-you ought to kick us out, the last one of us.”
-
-“Oh, it isn't so bad at night like this, when trade's over, but it
-is sort o' embarrassing during the day. Why, what do you think? A
-Bradstreet commercial reporter was in the other day to get a statement
-of my standing, and while he was here Keith Gordon--look at him now,
-the scamp! holding his cards over his head; that's a bluff. I'll bet he
-hasn't got a ten-spot. While that agent was here Keith and a lot more of
-your gang were back there on the platform dancing a hoe-down. The
-dust was so thick you couldn't see the windows. The reporter looked
-surprised, but he didn't say anything. I told him I thought I'd be able
-to pay for all I bought in market, and that I had no idea how much I was
-worth. I haven't invoiced my stock in ten years. When I run low I manage
-to replenish somehow, and so it goes on from year to year.”
-
-“Well, I am going to talk to the boys,” Dwight said. “They are taking
-advantage of your goodnature. The whole truth is they consider you one
-of them, Jim. Marrying didn't change you. You are as full of devilment
-as any of the rest, and they know it, and love to hang around you.”
-
-“Well, I reckon that's a fact,” Blackburn answered, “and I believe
-I'd rather you wouldn't mention it. I think a sight of the gang, and
-I wouldn't hurt their feelings for the world. After all, what does
-it matter? Life is short, and if Trundle & Hodgson are getting more
-mountain custom than I am, I'll bet I get the biggest slice of life.
-They'll die rich, but, like as not, friendless. By-the-way, I see your
-partner coming across the street. I forgot to tell you; he was looking
-for you a few minutes ago. You had a streak of luck when you joined
-issues with him; Bill Gamer's a rough sort o' chap, but he is by all
-odds the brainiest lawyer in Georgia to-day.”
-
-At this juncture a man of medium stature, with a massive head crowned by
-a shock of reddish hair, a smooth-shaven, freckled face, and small feet
-and hands stood in the doorway. He wore a long black broadcloth coat,
-a waistcoat of the same material, and baggy gray trousers. The exposed
-portion of his shirt-front and the lapels of his coat were stained by
-tobacco juice.
-
-“I've been up to the den, over to the Club, and the Lord only knows
-where else looking for you,” he said to his partner, as he advanced,
-leaned against a showcase on the counter, and stretched out his arms
-behind him.
-
-“Work for us, eh?” Carson smiled.
-
-“No; since when have you ever done a lick after dark?” was the dry
-reply. “I've come to give you a piece of advice, and I'm glad Blackburn
-is here to join me. The truth is, Dan Willis is in town. He is full and
-loaded for bear. He's down at the wagon-yard with a gang of his mountain
-pals. Some meddling person--no doubt your beautiful political opponent
-Wiggin--has told him what you said about the part he took in the mob
-that raided! negro town.”
-
-“Well, he doesn't deny it, does he?” Dwight asked, his eyes flashing.
-
-“I don't know whether he does or not,” said Gamer. “But I know he's the
-most reckless and dangerous man in the county, and when he is drunk he
-will halt at nothing. I thought I'd advise you to avoid him.”
-
-“Avoid him? You mean to say”--Dwight stood up in his anger--“that I, a
-free-born American citizen, must sneak around in my own home to avoid
-a man that puts on a white mask and sheet and with fifty others like
-himself steals into town and nearly thrashes the life out of a lot of
-banjo-picking negroes? Most of them were good-for-nothing, lazy scamps,
-but they were born that way, and there was one in the bunch that I know
-was harmless. Oh yes, I got mad about it, and I talked plainly, I know,
-but I couldn't help it.”
-
-“You _could_ have helped it,” Gamer said, testily; “and you ought to
-have protected your own interests better than to give Wiggin such a
-strong pull over you. If you are elected it will be by the aid of that
-very mob and their kin and friends. We may be able to smooth it all
-over, but if you have an open row with Dan Willis to-night, the cause of
-it will spread like wildfire, and bum votes for you in wads and bunches.
-Good God, man, the idea of giving Wiggin a torch like that to wave in
-the face of your constituency--you, a _town_ man, standing up for the
-black criminal brutes that are plotting to pull down the white race! I
-say that's the way Wiggin and Dan Willis would interpret your platform.”
-
-“I can't help it,” Dwight repeated, more calmly, though his voice
-shook with suppressed feeling as he went on. “If I lose all I hope for
-politically--and this seems like the best chance I'll ever have to get
-to the legislature--I'll stand by my convictions. We must have law
-and order among ourselves if we expect to teach such things to poor,
-half-witted black people. I was mad that night. You know that I love the
-South. Its blood is my blood. Three of my mother's brothers and two of
-my father's died fighting for the 'Lost Cause,' and my father was under
-fire from the beginning of the war to the end. In fact, it is my love
-for the South, and all that is good and pure and noble in it, that made
-my blood boil that night. I saw a part of it you didn't see.”
-
-“What was that?” Garner asked.
-
-“It was a clear moonlight night,” Dwight went on. “I was sitting at the
-window of my room at home, looking out over Major Warren's yard, when
-the first screams and shouts came from the negro quarter. I suspected
-what it was, for I'd heard of the threats the mountaineers had made
-against that part of town, but I wasn't prepared for what I actually
-saw. The cottage of old Uncle Lewis and Mammy Linda is just behind the
-Major's house, you know, and in plain view of my window. I saw the
-old pair come to the door and run out into the yard, and then I heard
-Linda's voice. 'It's my child!' she screamed. 'They are killing him!'
-Uncle Lewis tried to quiet her, but she stood there wringing her hands
-and sobbing and praying. The Major raised the window of his room and
-looked out, and I heard him ask what was wrong. Uncle Lewis tried to
-explain, but his voice could not be heard above his wife's cries. A few
-minutes later Pete came running down the street. They had let him
-go. His clothes were torn to strips and his back was livid with great
-whelks. He had no sooner reached the old folks than he keeled over in a
-faint. The Major came down, and he and I bent over the boy and finally
-restored him to consciousness. Major Warren was the maddest man I ever
-saw, and a mob a hundred strong couldn't have touched the negro and left
-him alive.”
-
-“I know, that was all bad enough,” Garner admitted, “but antagonizing
-those men now won't better the matter and may do you more political
-damage than you'll get over in a lifetime. You can't be a politician
-and a preacher both; they don't go together. You can't dispute that
-the negro quarter of this town was a disgrace to a civilized community
-before the White Caps raided it. Look at it now. There never was such a
-change. It is as quiet as a Philadelphia graveyard.”
-
-“It's the way they went about it that made me mad,” Carson Dwight
-retorted. “Besides, I know that boy. He is as harmless as a kitten, and
-he only hung around those dives because he loved to sing and dance with
-the rest. I _did_ get mad; I'm mad yet. My people never lashed their
-slaves when they were in bondage; why should I stand by and see them
-beaten now by men who never owned negroes and never loved or understood
-them? Before the war a white man would stand up and protect his slaves;
-why shouldn't he now take up for at least the most faithful of their
-descendants?”
-
-“That's it,” Blackburn spoke up, admiringly. “You are a chip off of the
-old block, Carson. Your daddy would have shot any man who tried to whip
-one of his negroes. You can't help the way you feel; but I agree with
-Bill here, you can't get the support of mountain people if you don't, at
-least, _pretend_ to see things their way.”,
-
-“Well, I can't see _this_ thing their way,” fumed Dwight; “and I'm not
-going to try. When I saw that old black man and woman that awful night
-with their very heart-strings torn and bleeding, and remembered
-that they had been kind to my mother when she was at the point of
-death--sitting by her bedside all night long as patiently as blocks of
-stone, and shedding tears of joy at the break of day when the doctor
-said the crisis had passed--when I think of that and admit that I
-stand by with folded hands and see their only child beaten till he
-is insensible, my blood boils with utter shame. It has burned a great
-lesson into my brain, and that is that we have got to have law and order
-among ourselves if we expect to keep the good opinion of the world at
-large.”
-
-“I understand Pete would have got off much easier if he hadn't fought
-them like a tiger,” said Blackburn. “They say--”
-
-“And why _shouldn't_ he have fought?” Carson asked, quickly. “The nearer
-the brute creation a man is the more he'll fight. A tame dog will fight
-if you drive him into a corner and strike him hard enough.”
-
-“Well, you busted up our game,” joined in Keith Gordon, who had left
-the table in the rear and now came forward, accompanied by another young
-man, Wade Tingle, the editor of the _Headlight_. “Wade and I both agree,
-Carson, that you've got to handle Dan Willis cautiously. We are backing
-you tooth and toe-nail in this campaign, but you'll tie our hands if you
-antagonize the mountain element. Wiggin knows that, and he is working it
-for all it's worth.”
-
-“That's right, old man,” the editor joined in, earnestly. “I may as well
-be plain with you. I'm making a big issue out of my support of you, but
-if you make the country people mad they will stop taking my paper. I
-can't live without their patronage, and I simply can't back you if you
-don't stick to _me_.”
-
-“I wasn't raising a row,” the young candidate said. “But Garner came to
-me just now, actually advising me to avoid that dirty scoundrel. I won't
-dodge any blustering bully who is going about threatening what he will
-do to me when he meets me face to face. I want your support, but I can't
-buy it that way.”
-
-“Well,” Garner said, grimly, more to the others than to his partner,
-“there will be a row right here inside of ten minutes. I see that now.
-Willis has heard certain things Carson has said about the part he took
-in that raid, and he is looking for trouble. Carson isn't in the mood to
-take back anything, and a fool can see how it will end.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-[Illustration: 9025]
-
-EITH GORDON and Tingle motioned to Garner, and the three stepped out on
-the sidewalk leaving Blackburn and the candidate together. The street
-was quite deserted. Only a few of the ramshackle street lights were
-burning, though the night was cloudy, the location of the stores,
-barbershop, hotel, and post-office being indicated by the oblong patches
-of light on the ground in front of them.
-
-“You'll never be able to move him,” Keith Gordon said, stroking his
-blond mustache nervously. “The truth is, he's terribly worked up over
-it. Between us three, boys, Carson never loved but one woman in his
-life, and she's Helen Warren. Mam' Linda is her old nurse, and Carson
-knows when she comes home and hears of Pete's trouble it is going to
-hurt her awfully. Helen has a good, kind heart, and she loves Linda as
-if they were the same flesh and blood. If Carson meets Willis to-night
-he'll kill him or get killed. Say, boys, he's too fine a fellow for that
-sort of thing right on the eve of his election. What the devil can we
-do?”
-
-“Oh, I see; there's a woman at the bottom of it,” Garner said,
-cynically. “I'm not surprised at the way he's acting now, but I thought
-that case was over with. Why, I heard she was engaged to a man down
-where she's visiting.”
-
-“She really may be,” Gordon admitted, “but Carson is ready to fight
-her battles, anyway. I honestly think she turned him down when he was
-rolling so high with her brother, just before his death a year ago, but
-that didn't alter his feelings towards her.”
-
-Garner grunted as he thrust his hand deep into his breast-pocket for
-his plug of tobacco and began to twist off a corner of it. “The most
-maddening thing on earth,” he said, “is to have a close friend who is a
-darned fool. I'm tired of the whole business. Old Dwight is out of all
-patience with Carson for the reckless way he has been living, but the
-old man is really carried away with pride over the boy's political
-chances. He had that sort of ambition himself in his early life, and he
-likes to see his son go in for it. He was powerfully tickled the
-other day when I told him Carson was going in on the biggest wave of
-popularity that ever bore a human chip, but he will cuss a blue streak
-when the returns come in, for I tell you, boys, if Carson has a row with
-Dan Willis to-night over this negro business, it will knock him higher
-than a kite.”
-
-“Do you know whether Carson has anything to shoot with?” Tingle asked,
-thoughtfully.
-
-“Oh yes, I saw the bulge of it under his coat just now,” Garner
-answered, still angrily, “and if the two come together it will be
-raining lead for a while in the old town.”
-
-“I was just thinking about his sick mother,” Keith Gordon remarked.
-“My sister told me the other day that Mrs. Dwight was in such a low
-condition that any sudden shock would be apt to kill her. A thing like
-this would upset her terribly--that is, if there is really any shooting.
-Don't you suppose if we were to remind Carson of her condition that he
-might agree to go home?”
-
-“No, you don't know him as well as I do,” Garner said, firmly. “It would
-only make him madder. The more reasons we give him for avoiding Willis
-the more stubborn he'll be. I guess we'll have to let him sit there and
-make a target of himself.”
-
-Just then a tall mountaineer, under a broad-brimmed soft hat, wearing a
-cotton checked shirt and jean trousers passed through the light of
-the entrance to the hotel near by and slouched through the intervening
-darkness towards them.
-
-“It's Pole Baker,” said Keith. “He's a rough-and-ready supporter of
-Carson's. Say, hold on, Pole!”
-
-“Hold on yourself; what's up?” the mountaineer asked, with a laugh.
-“Plottin' agin the whites?”
-
-“We want to ask you if you've seen Dan Willis to-night,” Garner
-questioned.
-
-“Have I?” Baker grunted. “That's exactly why I'm lookin' fer you town
-dudes instead o' goin' on out home where I belong. I'm as sober as an
-empty keg, but I git charged with bein' in the Darley calaboose every
-time I don't answer the old lady's roll-call at bed-time. You bet Willis
-is loaded fer bear, and he's got some bad men with him down at the
-wagon-yard. Wiggin has filled 'em up with a lot o' stuff about what
-Carson said concernin' the White Cap raid t'other night. I thought I'd
-sorter put you fellers on, so you could keep our man out o' the way
-till their liquor wears off. Besides, I'm here to tell you, Bill Garner,
-that's a nasty card Wiggin's set afloat in the mountains. He says a
-regular gang of blue-bloods has been organized here to take up fer town
-coons agin the pore whites in the country. We might crush such a report
-in time, you know, but we'll never kill it if thar's a fight over it
-to-night.”
-
-“That's the trouble,” the others said, in a breath.
-
-“Wait one minute--you stay right here,” Baker said, and he went and
-stood in front of the store door and looked in for a moment; then he
-came back. “I thought maybe he'd let us all talk sense to 'im, but you
-can't put reason into a man like that any easier than you can dip up
-melted butter with a hot awl. I can't see any chance unless you fellers
-will leave it entirely to me.”
-
-“Leave it to you?” Garner exclaimed. “What could you do?”
-
-“I don't know whether I could do a blessed thing or not, boys, but the
-dam thing is so desperate that I'm willin' to try. You see, I never talk
-my politics--if I do, I talk it on t'other side to see what I kin pick
-up to advantage. The truth is, I think them skunks consider me a Wiggin
-man, and I'd like to git a whack at 'em. Maybe I can git 'em to leave
-town. Abe Johnson is the leader of 'em, and he never gets too drunk to
-have some natural caution.”
-
-“Well, it certainly couldn't do any harm for you to try, Pole,” said
-Tingle.
-
-“Well, I'll go down to the wagon-yard and see if they are still hanging
-about.”
-
-As he approached the place in question, which was an open space about
-one hundred yards square surrounded by a high fence, at the lower end
-of the main street, Pole stood in the broad gateway and surveyed the
-numerous camp-fires which gleamed out from the darkness. He finally
-descried a group of men around a fire between two white-hooded wagons
-to the wheels of which were haltered several horses. As Pole advanced
-towards them, paying cheerful greetings to various men and women around
-the different fires he had to pass, he recognized Dan Willis, Abe
-Johnson, and several others.
-
-A quart whiskey flask, nearly empty, stood on the ground in the light
-of the fire round which the men were seated. As he approached they
-all looked up and nodded and muttered careless greetings. It seemed to
-suggest a movement on the part of Dan Willis, a tall man of thirty-five
-or thirty-six years of age, who wore long, matted hair and had bushy
-eyebrows and a sweeping mustache, for, taking up the flask, he rose
-and dropped it into his coat-pocket and spoke to the two men who sat on
-either side of Abe Johnson.
-
-“Come on,” he growled, “I want to talk to you. I don't care whether you
-join us or not, Abe.”
-
-“Well, I'm out of it,” replied Johnson. “I've talked to you fellows till
-I'm sick. You are too darned full to have any sense.”
-
-Willis and the two men walked off together and stood behind one of the
-wagons. Their voices, muffled by the effects of whiskey, came back to
-the ears of the remaining two.
-
-“Goin' out home to-night, Abe?” Baker asked, carelessly.
-
-“I want to, but I don't like to leave that damned fool here in the
-condition he's in. He'll either commit murder or git his blasted head
-shot off.”
-
-“That's exactly what _I_ was thinking about,” said Pole, sitting down
-on the ground carelessly and drawing his knees up in the embrace of his
-strong arms. “Look here, Abe, me'n you hain't to say quite as intimate
-as own brothers born of the same mammy, but I hain't got nothin' agin
-you of a personal nature.”
-
-“Oh, I reckon that's all right,” the other said, stroking his round,
-smooth-shaven face with a dogged sweep of his brawny hand. “That's all
-right, Pole.”
-
-“Well, my family knowed yore family long through the war,” Abe. “My
-daddy was with yourn at the front, an' our mothers swapped sugar an'
-coffee in them hard times, an', Abe, I'm here to tell you I sorter
-hate to see an unsuspectin' neighbor like you walk blind into serious
-trouble, great big trouble, Abe--trouble of the sort that would make a
-man's wife an' childern lie awake many and many a night.”
-
-“What the hell you mean?” Johnson asked, picking up his ears.
-
-“Why, it's this here devilment that's brewin' betwixt Dan an' Carson
-Dwight.”
-
-[Illustration: 0031]
-
-“Well, what's that got to do with _me?_” Johnson asked, in surly
-surprise.
-
-“Well, it's jest this, Abe,” Pole leaned back till his feet rose from
-the ground, and he twisted his neck as his eyes followed the three men
-who, with their heads close together, had moved a little farther away.
-“Maybe you don't know it, Abe, but I used to be in the government
-revenue service, and in one way and another that's neither here nor
-there I sometimes drop onto underground information, an' I want to give
-you a valuable tip. I want to start you to thinkin'. You'll admit, I
-reckon, that if them two men meet to-night thar will be apt to be blood
-shed.”
-
-Johnson stared over the camp-fire sullenly. “If Carson Dwight hain't had
-the sense to git out o' town thar will be, an' plenty of it,” he said,
-with a dry chuckle.
-
-“Well, thar's the difficulty,” said Pole. “He hain't left town, an'
-what's wuss than that, his friends hain't been able to budge 'im from his
-seat in Blackburn's store, whar Dan couldn't miss 'im ef he was stalkin'
-about blindfolded. He's heard threats, and he's as mad a man as ever
-pulled hair.”
-
-“Well, what the devil--”
-
-“Hold on, Abe. Now, I'll tell you whar _you_ come in. My underground
-information is that the Grand Jury is hard at work to git the facts
-about that White Cap raid. The whole thing--name of leader and members
-of the gang has been kept close so far, but--”
-
-“Well”--the half-defiant look in the face of Johnson gave way to one of
-growing alarm--“well!” he repeated, but went no further.
-
-“It's this way, Abe--an' I'm here as a friend, I reckon. You know as
-well as I do that if thar is blood shed to-night it will git into court,
-and a lots about the White Cap raid, and matters even further back, will
-be pulled into the light.”
-
-Pole's words had made a marked impression on the man to whom they had
-been so adroitly directed. Johnson leaned forward nervously. “So you
-think--” But he hung fire again.
-
-“Huh, I think you'd better git Dan Willis out o' this town, Abe, an'
-inside o' five minutes, ef you can do it.”
-
-Johnson drew a breath of evident relief. “I can do it, Pole, and I'll
-act by your advice,” he said. “Thar's only one thing on earth that would
-turn Dan towards home, but I happen to know what that is. He's b'ilin'
-hot, but he ain't any more anxious to stir up the Grand Jury than some
-of the rest of us. I'll go talk to 'im.”
-
-As Johnson moved away, Pole Baker rose and slouched off in the darkness
-in the direction of the straggling lights along the main street. At the
-gate he paused and waited, his eyes on the wagons and camp-fire he had
-just left. Presently he noticed something and chuckled. The horses, with
-clanking trace-chains, passed between him and the fire--they were being
-led round to be hitched to the wagons. Pole chuckled again. “I'm not
-sech a dern fool as I look,” he said, “Well, I had to lie some and act
-a part that sorter went agin the grain, but my scheme worked. If I
-ever git to hell I reckon it will be through tryin' to do right--in the
-main.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-[Illustration: 9035]
-
-HE wide avenue which ran north and south and cut the town of Darley
-into halves held the best and oldest residences. One side of the street
-caught the full rays of the morning sun and the other the slanting red
-beams of the afternoon. For so small a town, it was a well-graded and
-well-kept thoroughfare. Strips of grass lay like ribbons between the
-sidewalks and the roadway, and at the triangular spaces created by
-the intersection of certain streets there were rusty iron fences built
-primarily to protect diminutive fountains which had long since ceased to
-play. In one of these little parks, in the heart of the town, as it
-was in the hearts of the inhabitants, stood a monument erected to “The
-Confederate Dead,” a well-modelled, life-size figure of a Southern
-private wrought in stone in faraway Italy. Had it been correctly placed
-on its pedestal?--that was the question anxiously asked by reverent
-passers-by, for the cloaked and knapsacked figure, which time was
-turning gray, stood with its back to the enemy's country.
-
-“Yes, it is right,” some would say, “for the soldier is represented as
-being on night picket-duty in Northern territory, and his thoughts and
-eyes are with his dear ones at home and the country he is defending.”
-
-Henry Dwight, the wealthy sire of the aggressive young man with whom the
-foregoing chapters have principally dealt, lived in one of the moss and
-ivy grown houses on the eastern side of the avenue. It was a red brick
-structure two and a half stories high, with a colonial veranda, and had
-a square, white-windowed cupola as the apex of the slanting roof. There
-was a semicircular drive, which entered the grounds at one corner in the
-front and swept gracefully past the door. The central and smaller
-front gate, for the use of pedestrians, with its imitation stone posts,
-spanned by a white crescent, was reached from the house by a
-gravelled walk bordered by boxwood. On the right and left were rustic
-summerhouses, grape arbors and parterres containing roses and other
-flowers, all of which were well cared for by an old colored gardener.
-
-Henry Dwight was a grain and cotton merchant, money-lender, and the
-president and chief stockholder of the Darley Cotton Mills, whose great
-brick buildings and cottages for employés stood a mile or so to the
-west of the town. This morning, having written his daily letters, he was
-strolling in his grounds smoking a cigar. To any one who knew him well
-it would have been plain that his mind was disturbed.
-
-Adjoining the Dwight homestead there was another ancestral house equally
-as spacious and stand-. ing in quite as extensive, if more neglected,
-grounds. It was here that Major Warren lived, and it happened that he,
-too, was on his lawn just beyond the ramshackle intervening fence, the
-gate of which had fallen from its hinges and been taken away.
-
-The Major was a short, slight old gentleman, quite a contrast to the
-John Bull type of his lusty, side-whiskered neighbor. He wore a dingy
-brown wig, and as he pottered about, raising a rose from the earth with
-his gold-headed ebony stick, or stooped to uproot an encroaching weed,
-his furtive glance was often levelled on old Dwight.
-
-“I declare I really might as well,” he muttered, undecidedly. “What's
-the use making up your mind to a thing and letting it go for no sensible
-reason. He's taking a wrong view of it. I can tell that by the way he
-puffs at his cigar. Yes, I'll do it.”
-
-The Major passed through the gateway and slowly drew near his
-preoccupied neighbor.
-
-“Good-morning, Henry,” he said, as Dwight looked up. “If I'm any judge
-of your twists and turns, you are not yet in a thoroughly good-humor.”
-
-“Good-humor? No, sir, I'm _not_ in a good-humor. How could I be when
-that young scamp, the only heir to my name and effects--”
-
-Dwight's spleen rose and choked out his words, and, red in the face, he
-stood panting, unable to go further.
-
-“Well, it seems to me, while he's not _my_ son,” the Major began, “that
-you are--are--well, rather overbearing--I might say unforgiving. He's
-been sowing wild oats, but, really, if I am any judge of young men, he
-is on a fair road to--to genuine manhood.”
-
-“Road to nothing,” spluttered Dwight. “I gave him that big farm to
-see what he could do in its management. Never expected him to work a
-lick--just wanted to see if he could keep it on a paying basis, but it
-was an investment of dead capital. Then he took up the law. He did a
-little better at that along with Bill Garner to lean on, but that never
-amounted to anything worth mentioning. Then he went into politics.”
-
-“And I heard you say yourself, Henry,” the Major ventured, gently,
-“that you believed he was actually cut out for a future statesman.”
-
-“Yes, and like the fool that I was I hoped for it. I was so glad to see
-him really interested in politics that I laid awake at night thinking
-of his success. I heard of his popularity on every hand. Men came to me,
-and women, too, telling me they loved him and were going to work for
-him against that jack-leg lawyer Wiggin, and put him into office with
-a majority that would ring all over the State; and they meant it, I
-reckon. But what did he do? In his stubborn, bull-headed way he abused
-those mountain men who took the law into their hands for the public
-good, and turned hundreds of them against him; and all for a nigger--a
-lazy, trifling nigger boy!”
-
-“Well, you see,” Major Warren began, lamely, “Carson and I saw Pete the
-night he was whipped so severely and we took pity on him. They played
-together when they were boys, as boys all over the South do, you know,
-and then he saw Mam' Linda break down over it and saw old Lewis crying
-for the first time in the old man's life. I was mad, Henry, myself, and
-you would have been if you had been there. I could have fought the men
-who did it, so I understand how Carson felt, and when he made the remark
-Wiggin is using to such deadly injury to his prospects my heart warmed
-to the boy. If he doesn't succeed as a politician it will be because he
-is too genuine for a tricky career of that sort. His friends are trying
-to get him to make some statement that will reinstate him with the
-mountain people who sympathized with the White Caps, but he simply won't
-do it.”
-
-“Won't do it! I reckon not!” Dwight blurted out. “Didn't the young idiot
-wait in Blackburn's store for Dan Willis to come and shoot the top of
-his head off? He sat there till past midnight, and wouldn't move an inch
-till actual proof was brought to him that Willis had left town. Oh,
-I'm no fool! I know a thing or two. I've watched him and your daughter
-together. That's at the bottom of it. She sat down on him before she
-went off to Augusta, but her refusal didn't alter him. He knows Helen
-thinks a lot of her old negro mammy, and in her absence he simply took
-up her cause and is fighting mad about it--so mad that he is blind to
-his political ruin. That's what a man will do for a woman. They say
-she's about to become engaged down there. I hope she is, and that Carson
-will have pride enough when he hears of it to let another man do her
-fighting, and one with nothing to lose by it.”
-
-“She hasn't written me a thing about any engagement,” the Major
-answered, with some animation; “but my sister highly approves of the
-match and writes that it may come about. Mr. Sanders is a well-to-do,
-honorable man of good birth and education: Helen never seemed to get
-over her brother's sad death. She loved poor Albert more than she ever
-did me or any one else.”
-
-“And I always thought that it was Carson's association with your son in
-his dissipation that turned Helen against him. For all I know, she may
-have thought Carson actually led Albert on and was partly the cause of
-his sad end.”
-
-“She may have looked at it that way,” the Major said, musingly. They had
-now reached the porch in the rear of the house and they went together
-into the wide hall. A colored maid with a red bandanna tied like a
-turban round her head was dusting the walnut railing of the stairs.
-Passing through the hall, the old gentlemen turned into the library,
-a great square room with wide windows and tall, gilt-framed pier-glass
-mirrors.
-
-“Yes, I'm sure that's what turned her against him,” Dwight continued,
-“and that is where, between you and Helen, I get mixed up. Why do you
-always take up for the scamp? It looks to me like you'd resent the way
-he acted with your son after the boy's terrible end.”
-
-“There is a good deal more in the matter, Henry, than I ever told you
-about.” Major Warren's voice faltered. “To be plain, that is my secret
-trouble. I reckon if Helen was to discover the actual truth--_all of
-it_--she would never feel the same towards me. I think maybe I ought to
-tell you. It certainly will explain why I am so much interested in your
-boy.” They sat down, the owner of the house in a reclining-chair at an
-oblong, carved mahogany table covered with books and papers, the visitor
-on a lounge near by.
-
-“Well, it always has seemed odd to me,” old Dwight said. “I couldn't
-exactly believe you wanted to bring him and Helen together, after your
-experience with that sort of man under your own roof.”
-
-“It is this way,” said the Major, awkwardly. “To begin with, I am sure,
-from all I've picked up, that it was not your son that was leading
-mine on to dissipation, but just the other way. He's dead and gone, but
-Albert was always ready for a prank of any sort. Henry, I want to talk
-to you about it because it seems to me you are in the same position in
-regard to Carson that I was in regard to my poor boy, and I've prayed
-a thousand times for pardon for what I did in anger and haste. Henry,
-listen to me. If ever a man made a vital mistake I did, and I'll bear
-the weight of it to my grave. You know how I worried over. Albert's
-drinking and his general conduct. Time after time he made promises that
-he would turn over a new leaf only to break them. Well, it was on the
-last trip--the fatal one to New York, where he had gone and thrown away
-so much money. I wrote him a severe letter, and in answer to it I got a
-pathetic one, saying he was sick and tired of the way he was doing and
-begging me to try him once more and send him money to pay his way home.
-It was the same old sort of promise and I didn't have faith in him. I
-was unfair, unjust to my only son. I wrote and refused, telling him that
-I could not trust him any more. Hell inspired that letter, Henry--the
-devil whispered to me that I'd been indulgent to the poor boy's injury.
-Then came the news. When he was found dead in a small room on the top
-floor of that squalid hotel--dead by his own hand--my letter lay open
-beside him.”
-
-“Well, well, you couldn't help it!” Dwight said, most awkwardly, and he
-crossed his short, fat legs anew and reached for an open box of cigars.
-“You were trying to do your duty as you saw it, and to the best of your
-ability.”
-
-“Yes, but my method, Henry, resulted in misery and grief to me and Helen
-that can never be cured. You see, it is because of that awful mistake
-that I take such an interest in Carson. I love him because Albert loved
-him, and because sometimes it seems to me that you are most too quick
-to condemn him. Oh, he's different! Carson has changed wonderfully since
-Albert died. He doesn't drink to excess now, and Garner says he has quit
-playing cards, having only one aim, and that to win this political
-race--to win it to please you, Henry.”
-
-“Win it!” Dwight sniffed. “He's already as dead as a salt mackerel--laid
-out stiff and stark by his own bull-headed stupidity. I've always talked
-down drinking and card-playing, but I have known some men to succeed in
-life who had such habits in moderation; but you nor I nor no one else
-ever saw a blockhead succeed at anything. I tell you he'll never make
-a successful politician. Wiggin will beat the hind sights off of him.
-Wiggin is simply making capital of the fool's inability to control his
-temper and sympathies. Wiggin would have let that mob thrash his own
-father and mother rather than antagonize them and lose their votes. He
-knows Carson comes of fighting stock, and he will continue to egg Dan
-Willis and others on, knowing that every resentful word from Carson will
-make enemies for him by the score.”
-
-“Oh, I can see that, too!” the Major sighed; “but, to save me, I can't
-help admiring the boy. He thinks the White Caps did wrong that night
-and he simply can't pretend otherwise. It is the principle of the thing,
-Henry. He is an unusual sort of candidate, and his stand may ruin his
-chances, but I--I glory in his firmness. I must say g me to try him once
-more and send him money to pay his way home. It was the same old sort of
-promise and I didn't have faith in him. I was unfair, unjust to my only
-son. I wrote and refused, telling him that I could not trust him any
-more. Hell inspired that letter, Henry--the devil whispered to me that
-I'd been indulgent to the poor boy's injury. Then came the news. When he
-was found dead in a small room on the top floor of that squalid hotel--
-dead by his own hand--my letter lay open beside him.”
-
-“Well, well, you couldn't help it!” Dwight said, most awkwardly, and he
-crossed his short, fat legs anew and reached for an open box of cigars.
-“You were trying to do your duty as you saw it, and to the best of your
-ability.”
-
-“Yes, but my method, Henry, resulted in misery and grief to me and Helen
-that can never be cured. You see, it is because of that awful mistake
-that I take such an interest in Carson. I love him because Albert loved
-him, and because sometimes it seems to me that you are most too quick to
-condemn him. Oh, he's different! Carson has changed wonderfully since
-Albert died. He doesn't drink to excess now, and Garner says he has quit
-playing cards, having only one aim, and that to win this political race-
--to win it to please you, Henry.”
-
-“Win it!” Dwight sniffed. “He's already as dead as a salt mackerel--laid
-out stiff and stark by his own bull-headed stupidity. I've always talked
-down drinking and card-playing, but I have known some men to succeed in
-life who had such habits in moderation; but you nor I nor no one else
-ever saw a blockhead succeed at anything. I tell you he'll never make a
-successful politician. Wiggin will beat the hind sights off of him.
-Wiggin is simply making capital of the fool's inability to control his
-temper and sympathies. Wiggin would have let that mob thrash his own
-father and mother rather than antagonize them and lose their votes. He
-knows Carson comes of fighting stock, and he will continue to egg Dan
-Willis and others on, knowing that every resentful word from Carson will
-make enemies for him by the score.”
-
-“Oh, I can see that, too!” the Major sighed; “but, to save me, I can't
-help admiring the boy. He thinks the White Caps did wrong that night and
-he simply can't pretend otherwise. It is the principle of the thing,
-Henry. He is an unusual sort of candidate, and his stand may ruin his
-chances, but I--I glory in his firmness. I must say that.”
-
-“Oh yes, that's the trouble with you sentimental people,” Dwight fumed.
-“Between you and the boy's doting mother, the Lord only knows where
-he'll land. I've overlooked a lot in him in the hope that he'd put this
-election through, but I shall let him go his own way now. It has come
-to a pretty pass if I have to see my son beaten to the dust by a man of
-Wiggin's stamp because of that long-legged negro boy of yours who would
-have been better long ago if he had been soundly thrashed.”
-
-When his visitor had gone Dwight dropped his unfinished cigar into the
-grate and went slowly upstairs to his wife's room. At a small-paned
-window overlooking the flower-garden, on a couch supported in a
-reclining position by several puffy pillows, was Mrs. Dwight. She was
-well past middle-age and of extremely delicate physique. Her hair was
-snowy white, her skin thin to transparency, her veins full and blue.
-
-“That was Major Warren, wasn't it?” she asked, in a soft, sweet voice,
-as she put down the magazine she had been reading.
-
-“Yes,” Dwight answered, as he went to a little desk in one corner of the
-room and took a paper from a pigeon-hole and put it into his pocket.
-
-“How did he happen to come over so early?” the lady pursued.
-
-“Because he wanted to, I reckon,” Dwight started out, impatiently, and
-then a note of caution came into his voice as he remembered the warning
-of the family physician against causing the patient even the slightest
-worry. “Warren hasn't a blessed thing to do, you know, from mom till
-night. So when he strikes a busy man he is apt to hang on to him and
-talk in his long-winded way about any subject that takes possession of
-his brain. He's great on showing men how to manage their own affairs. It
-takes an idle man to do that. If that man hadn't had money left to him
-he would now be begging his bread from door to door.”
-
-“Somehow I fancied it was about Carson,” Mrs. Dwight sighed.
-
-“There you go!” her husband said, with as much grace of evasion as lay
-in his sturdy compound. “Lying there from day to day, you seem to have
-contracted Warren's complaint. You think nobody can drop in even for a
-minute without coming about your boy--your boy! Some day, if you live
-long enough, you may discover that the universe was not created solely
-for your son, nor made just to revolve around him either.”
-
-“Yes, I suppose I _do_ worry about Carson a great deal,” the invalid
-admitted; “but you haven't told me right out that the Major was _not_
-speaking of him.”
-
-The old man's face was the playground of conflcting impulses. He grew
-red with anger and his lips trembled on the very verge of an outburst,
-but he controlled himself. In fact, his irritability calmed down as he
-suddenly saw a loop-hole through which to escape her questioning.
-
-“The truth is,” he said, “Warren was talking about Albert's death. He
-talked quite a while about it. He almost broke down.”
-
-“Well, I'm so worried about Carson's campaign that I imagine all sorts
-of trouble,” Mrs. Dwight sighed. “I lay awake nearly all of last night
-thinking about one little thing. When he was in his room dressing the
-other day, I heard something fall to the floor. Hilda had taken him some
-hot water for shaving, and when she came back she told me he had dropped
-his revolver out of his pocket. You know till then I had had no idea he
-carried one, and while it may be necessary at times, the idea is very
-disagreeable.”
-
-“You needn't let _that_ bother you,” Dwight said, as he took his hat to
-go down to his office at his warehouse. “Nearly all the young men carry
-them because they think it looks smart. Most of them would run like a
-scared dog if they saw one pointed at them even in fun.”
-
-“Well, I hope my boy will never have any use for one,” the invalid said.
-“He is not of a quarrelsome nature. It takes a good deal to make him
-angry, but when he gets so he is not easily controlled.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-[Illustration: 9046]
-
-HE young men in Carson Dwight's set had an odd sort of lounging-place.
-It was Keith Gordon's room above his father's bank in an old building
-which had withstood the shot and shell of the Civil War. “The Den,” as
-it was called by its numerous hap-hazard occupants, was reached from
-the street on the outside by a narrow flight of worm-eaten and rickety
-stairs and a perilous little balcony or passage that clung to the
-brick wall, twenty feet from the ground, along the full length of the
-building. It was here in one of the four beds that Keith slept, when
-there was room for him. After a big dance or a match game of baseball,
-when there were impecunious visitors from neighboring towns left over
-for various and sundry reasons, Keith had to seek the sanctimonious
-solitude of his father's home or go to the hotel.
-
-The den was about twenty-five feet square. It was not as luxurious as
-such bachelor quarters went in Augusta, Savannah, or even Atlanta,
-but it answered the purpose of “the gang” which made use of it. Keith
-frankly declared that he had overhauled and replenished it for the last
-time. He said that it was absolutely impossible to keep washbasins and
-pitchers, when they were hurled out of the windows for pure amusement of
-men who didn't care whether they washed or not. As for the laundry bill,
-he happened to know that it was larger than that of the Johnston House
-or the boarding department of the Darley Female College. He said, too,
-that he had warned the gang for the last time that the room would be
-closed if any more clog-dancing were indulged in. He said his father
-complained that the plastering was dropping down on his desk below,
-and sensible men ought to know that a thing like that could not go on
-forever.
-
-The rules concerning the payment for drinks were certainly lax. No
-accounts were kept of any man's indebtedness. Any member of the gang was
-at liberty to stow away a flask of any size in the bureau or wash-stand
-drawer, or under the mattresses or pillows of his or anybody else's bed,
-where Skelt, the negro who swept the room, and loved stimulants could
-not find it.
-
-Bill Garner, as brainy as he was, while he was always welcome at his
-father's house in the country, a mile from town, seemed to love the
-company of this noisy set. Through the day it was said of him that he
-could read and saturate himself with more law than any man in the State,
-but at night his recreation was a cheap cigar, his old bulging carpet
-slippers, a cosey chair in Keith's room, and--who would think it?--the
-most thrilling Indian dime novel on the market. He could quote the
-French, German, Italian, and Spanish classics by the page in a strange
-musical accent he had acquired without the aid of a master or any sort
-of intercourse with native foreigners. He knew and loved all things
-pertaining to great literature--said he had a natural ear for Wagner's
-music, had comprehended Edwin Booth's finest work, knew a good picture
-when he saw it; and yet he had to have his dime novel. In it he found
-mental rest and relaxation that was supplied by nothing else. His
-bedfellow was Bob Smith, the genial, dapper, ever daintily clad clerk at
-the Johnston House. Garner said he liked to sleep with Bob because Bob
-never--sleeping or waking--took anything out of him mentally. Besides
-dressing to perfection, Bob played rag-time on the guitar and sang the
-favorite coon songs of the day. His duties at the hotel were far from
-arduous, and so the gang usually looked to him to arrange dances and
-collect toll for expenses. And Bob was not without his actual monetary
-value, as the proprietor of the hotel had long since discovered, for
-when Bob arranged a dance it meant that various socially inclined
-drummers of good birth and standing would, at a hint or a telegram from
-the clerk, “lay over” at Darley for one night anyway.
-
-If Bob had any quality that disturbed the surface of his uniform
-equanimity it was his excessive pride in Carson Dwight's friendship.
-He interlarded his talk with what Carson had said or done, and Carson's
-candidacy for the Legislature had become his paramount ambition. Indeed,
-it may as well be stated that the rest of the gang had espoused Dwight's
-political cause with equal enthusiasm.
-
-It was the Sunday morning following the night Pole Baker had prevented
-the meeting between Dwight and Dan Willis, and most of the habitual
-loungers were present waiting for Skelt to black their boots, and
-deploring the turn of affairs which looked so bad for their favorite.
-Wade Tingle was shaving at one of the windows before a mirror in a
-cracked mahogany frame, when they all recognized Carson's step on the
-balcony and a moment later Dwight stood in the doorway.
-
-“Hello, boys, how goes it?” he asked.
-
-“Oh, right side up, old man,” Tingle replied, as he began to rub the
-lather into his face with his hand to soften his week-old beard before
-shaving. “How's the race?”
-
-“It's all right, I guess,” Dwight said, wearily, as he came in and sat
-down in a vacant chair against the wall. “How goes it in the mountains?
-I understand you've been over there.”
-
-“Yes, trying to rake in some ads, stir up my local correspondents,
-and take subscriptions. As to your progress, old man, I'm sorry to say
-Wiggin's given it a sort of black eye. There was a meeting of farmers
-over in the tenth, at Miller's Spring. I was blamed sorry you were
-not there. Wiggin made a speech. It was a corker--viewed as campaign
-material solely. That chap's failed at the law, but he's the sharpest,
-most unprincipled manipulator of men's emotions I ever ran across. He
-showed you up as Sam Jones does the ring-tailed monster of the cloven
-foot.”
-
-“What Carson said about the Willis and Johnson mob was his theme, of
-course?” said Garner, above the dog-eared pages of his thriller.
-
-“That and ten thousand things Carson never dreamed of,” returned Tingle.
-“Here's the way it went. The meeting was held under a bush-arbor to
-keep the sun off, and the farmers had their wives and children out for
-a picnic. A long-faced parson led in prayer, some of the old maids piped
-up with a song that would have ripped slits in your musical tympanum,
-Garner, and then a raw-boned ploughman in a hickory shirt and one
-gallus introduced the guest of honor. How they could have overlooked the
-editor-in-chief and proprietor of the greatest agricultural weekly in
-north Georgia and picked out that skunk was a riddle to me.”
-
-“Well, what did he say?” Garner asked, as sharply as if he were
-cross-examining a non-committal witness of importance.
-
-“What did he say?” Tingle laughed, as he wiped the lather from his face
-with a ragged towel and stood with it in his hand. “He began by saying
-that he had gone into the race to win, and that he was going to the
-Legislature as sure as the sun was on its way down in this country and
-on its way up in China. He said it was a scientific certainty, as easily
-demonstrated as two and two make four. Those hardy, horny-handed men
-before him that day were not going to the polls and vote for a town dude
-who parted his hair in the middle, wore spike-toed shoes that glittered
-like a new dash-board, and was the ringleader of the rowdiest set of
-young card-players and whiskey-drinkers that ever blackened the morals
-of a mining-camp. He said that about the gang, boys, and I didn't have a
-thing to shoot with. In fact, I had to sit there and take in more.”
-
-“What did he say about his _platform?_” Garner asked, with a heavy
-frown; “that's what I want to get at. You never can hurt a politician
-by circulating the report that he drinks--that's what half of 'em vote
-for.”
-
-“Oh, his platform seemed to be chiefly that he was out to save the
-common people from the eternal disgrace of voting for a man like Dwight.
-He certainly piled it on thick and heavy. It would have made Carson's
-own mother slink away in shame. Carson, Wiggin said, had loved niggers
-since he was knee high to a duck, and had always contended that a negro
-owned by the aristocracy of the South was ahead of the white, razor-back
-stock in the mountains who had never had that advantage. Carson was up
-in arms against the White Caps that had come to Darley and whipped those
-lazy coons, and was going to prosecute every man in the bunch to the
-full extent of the United States law. If he got into the Legislature he
-intended to pass laws to make it a penitentiary offence for a white man
-to shove a black buck off the sidewalk. 'But he's not going to take his
-seat in the Capitol of Georgia,' Wiggins said, with a yell--'if Carson
-Dwight went to Atlanta it would _not_ be on a free pass.' And, boys,
-that crowd yelled till the dry leaves overhead clapped an encore. The
-men yelled and the women and children yelled.”
-
-“He's a contemptible puppy!” Dwight said, angrily.
-
-“Yes, but he's a slick politician among men of that sort,” said Tingle.
-“He certainly knows how to talk and stir up strife.”
-
-“And I suppose you sat there like a bump on a log, and listened to all
-that without opening your mouth!” Keith Gordon spoke up from his bed,
-where he lay in his bath-robe smoking over the remains of the breakfast
-Skelt had brought from the hotel on a big black tray.
-
-“Well, I _did_--get up,” Tingle answered, with a manly flush.
-
-“Oh, you _did!_” Garner leaned forward with interest.
-
-“Well, I'm glad you happened to be on hand, for your paper has
-considerable influence over there.”
-
-“Yes, I got up. I waved my hands up and down like a buzzard rising,
-to keep the crowd still till I could think of something to say; but,
-Carson, old man, you know what an idiot I used to be in college debates.
-I could get through fairly well on anything they would let me write down
-and read off, but it was the impromptu thing that always rattled me.
-I was as mad as hell when I rose, but all those staring eyes calmed me
-wonderfully. I reckon I stood there fully half a minute swallowing--”
-
-“You damned fool!” Garner exclaimed, in high disgust.
-
-“Yes, that's exactly what I was,” Tingle admitted. “I stood there
-gasping like a catfish enjoying his first excursion in open air. It was
-deathly still. I've heard it said that dying men notice the smallest
-things about them. I remember I saw the horses and mules haltered
-out under the trees with their hay and fodder under their noses--the
-dinner-baskets all in a cluster at the spring guarded by a negro woman.
-Then what do you think? Old Jeff Condon spoke up.
-
-“'Lead us in prayer, brother,' he said, in reverential tones, and since
-I was born I never heard so much laughing.”
-
-“You certainly _did_ play into Wiggin's hands,” growled the disgruntled
-Garner. “That's exactly what a glib-tongued skunk like him would want.”
-
-“Well, it gave me a minute to try to get my wind, anyway,” said Tingle,
-still red in the face, “but I wasn't equal to a mob of baseball rooters
-like that. I started in to deny some of Wiggin's charges when another
-smart Alec spoke up and said: 'Hold on! tell us about the time you and
-your candidate started home from a ball at Catoosa Springs in a buggy,
-and were so drunk that the horse took you to the house of a man who used
-to own him sixteen miles from where you wanted to go. Of course, you
-all know, boys, that was a big exaggeration, but I had no idea it was
-generally known. Anyway, I thought the crowd would laugh their heads
-off. I reckon it was the way I looked. I felt as if every man, woman,
-and child there had mashed a bad egg on me and was chuckling over their
-marksmanship. I ended up by getting mad, and I saw by Wiggin's grin that
-he liked that. I managed to say a few things in denial, and then Wiggin
-got up and roasted me and my paper to a turn. He said that in supporting
-Dwight editorially the _Headlight_ was giving sanction to Dwight's ideas
-in favor of the negro and against honest white people, and that every
-man there who had any family or State pride ought to stop taking
-the dirty sheet; and, bless your life, some of them did cancel their
-subscriptions when they met me after the speaking; but I'm going to
-keep on mailing it, anyway. It will be like sending free tracts to the
-heathen, but it may bear fruit.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-[Illustration: 9054]
-
-ALF an hour later all the young men had left the room except Garner
-and Dwight. Garner still wore the frown brought to his broad brow by
-Tingle's recital.
-
-“I've set my heart on putting this thing through,” he said; “and while
-it looks kind of shaky, I haven't lost all hope yet. Of course, your
-reckless remarks about the White Caps have considerably damaged us in
-the mountains, but we may live it down. It may die a natural death if
-you and Dan Willis don't meet and plug away at each other and set the
-talk afloat again. I reckon he'll keep out of your way when he's sober,
-anyway.”
-
-“I am not running after him,” Carson returned. “I simply said what I
-thought and Wiggin made the most of it.”
-
-Garner was silent for several minutes, then he folded his dime novel and
-bent it across his knee, and when he finally spoke Dwight thought he
-had never seen a graver look on the strong face. He had seen it full
-of emotional tears when Garner was at the height of earnest appeal to a
-jury in a murder case; he had seen it dark with the fury of unjust legal
-defeat, but now there was a strange feminine whiteness at the corners of
-the big facile mouth, a queer twitching of the lips.
-
-“I've made up my mind to tell you a secret,” he said, falteringly. “I've
-come near it several times and backed out. It's a subject I don't know
-how to handle. It's about a woman, Carson. You know I'm not a ladies'
-man. I don't call on women; I don't take them buggy-riding; I don't
-dance with them, or even know how to fire soft things at them like you
-and Keith, but I've had my experience.”
-
-“It certainly is a surprise to me,” Dwight said, sympathetically, and
-then in the shadow of Garner's seriousness he found himself unable to
-make further comment.
-
-“I reckon you'll lose all respect for me for thinking there was a ghost
-of a chance in that particular quarter,” Garner pursued, without meeting
-his companion's eye. “But, Carson, my boy, there is a certain woman
-that every man who knows her has loved or is still loving. Keith's crazy
-about her, though he has given up all hope as I did long ago, and even
-poor Bob Smith thinks he's in luck if she will only listen to one of his
-new songs or let him do her some favor. We all love her, Carson, because
-she is so sweet and kind to us--”
-
-“You mean--” Dwight interrupted, impulsively, and then lapsed into
-silence, an awkward flush rising to his brow.
-
-“Yes, I mean Helen Warren, old man. As I say, I had never thought of a
-woman that way in my life. We were thrown together once at a house-party
-at Hilburn's farm--well, I simply went daft. She never refused to
-walk with me when I asked her, and seemed specially interested in my
-profession. I didn't know it at the time, but I have since discovered
-that she has that sweet way with every man, rich or poor, married or
-single. Well, to make a long story short, I proposed to her. The whole
-thing is stamped on my brain as with a branding-iron. We had taken a
-long walk that morning and were seated under a big beech-tree near a
-spring. She kept asking about my profession, her face beaming, and it
-all went to my head. I knew that I was the ugliest man in the State,
-that I had no style about me, and knew nothing about being nice to women
-of her sort; but her interest in everything pertaining to the law made
-me think, you know, that she admired that kind of thing. I went wild. As
-I told her how I felt I actually cried. Think of it--I was silly enough
-to blubber like a baby! I can't describe what happened. She was shocked
-and pained beyond description. She had never dreamed that I felt that
-way. I ended by asking her to try to forget it all, and we had a long,
-awful walk to the house.”
-
-“That _was_ tough,” Carson Dwight said, a queer expression on his face.
-
-“Well, I've told it to you for a special reason,” Garner said, with a
-big, trembling sigh. “Carson, I am a close observer, and I afterwards
-made up my mind that I knew why she had led me on to talk so much about
-the law and my work in particular.”
-
-“Oh, you found that out!” Carson said, almost absently.
-
-“Yes, my boy, it was about the time you and I were thinking of going in
-together. It was all on your account.”
-
-Carson stared straight at Garner. “_My_ account? Oh no!”
-
-“Yes, on your account. I've kept it from you all this time. I'm your
-friend now in full--to the very bone, but at that time I felt too sore
-to tell you. I'd lost all I cared for on earth, but I simply had too
-much of primitive man left in me to let you know how well you stood. My
-God, Carson, about that time I used to sit at my desk behind some old
-book pretending to read, but just looking at you as you sat at work
-wondering how it would feel to have what was yours. Then I watched you
-both together; you seemed actually made for each other, an ideal couple.
-Then came your--she refused you.”
-
-“I know, I know, but why talk about it, Garner?” Carson had risen and
-stood in the doorway in the rays of the morning sun. There was silence
-for a moment. The church bells were ringing and negroes and whites were
-passing along the street below.
-
-“It may be good for me to speak of it and be done with it, or it may
-not,” said Garner; “but this is what I was coming to. I've said it was
-a long time before I could tell you that she was once--I don't know how
-she is now, but she was at one time in love with you.”
-
-“Oh no, no, she was never that!” Dwight said. “We were great friends,
-but she never cared that much for me or for any one.”
-
-“Well, it was a long time before I could say what I thought about
-that, and I have only just now taken another step in self-renunciation.
-Carson, I can now say that you didn't have a fair deal, and that I have
-reached a point in which I want to see you get it. I think I know why
-she refused you.”
-
-“You do?” Dwight said, pale and excited, as he came away from the door
-and leaned heavily against the wall near his friend.
-
-“Yes, it was this way. I've studied it all out. She loved Albert as few
-women love their brothers, and his grim end was an almost unbearable
-shock. After his death, you know it leaked out that you had been
-Albert's constant companion through his dissipation, almost, in fact, up
-to the very end. She couldn't reconcile herself to your part, innocent
-as it was, in the tragedy, and it simply killed the feeling she had for
-you. I suppose it is natural to a character as strong as hers.”
-
-“I've always feared that--that was the reason,” said Dwight,
-falteringly, as he went back to the door and looked out. There was a
-droop of utter dejection on him and his face seemed to have aged.
-“Garner,” he said, suddenly, “there is no use denying anything. You have
-admitted your love for her, why should I deny mine? I never cared for
-any other woman and I never shall.”
-
-“That's right, but you didn't get a fair deal, all the same,” said
-Garner. “She's never looked for any sort of justification in your
-conduct; her poor brother's death stands like a draped wall between you,
-but I know you were not as black as you were painted. Carson, all the
-time you were keeping pace with Albert Warren you were blind to the gulf
-ahead of him and were simply glorying in his friendship--_because he was
-her brother_. Ah, I know that feeling!”
-
-Carson was silent, while Garner's gray eyes rested on him for a moment
-full of conviction, and then he nodded. “Yes, I think that was it. It
-was my ruination, but I could not get away from the fascination of
-his companionship. He fairly worshipped her and used to talk of her
-constantly when we were together, and he--he sometimes told me things
-she kept back. He knew how I felt. I told him. Through him I seemed to
-be closer to her. But when the news came that he was dead, and when
-I met her at the funeral at the church, and caught her eye, I saw her
-shrink back in abhorrence. She wouldn't go out with me ever again after
-that, and was never exactly the same.”
-
-“That was two years ago, my boy,” Garner said, significantly, “and your
-character has changed. You are a better, firmer man. In fact, it seems
-to me that your change dates from Albert Warren's death. But now I'm
-coming to the thing that prompted me to say all this. I met Major Warren
-in the post-office this morning. He was greatly excited. Carson, she
-has just written him that she is coming home for a long stay and the old
-gentleman is simply wild with delight.”
-
-“Oh, she's coming, then!” Dwight exclaimed, in surprise.
-
-“Yes, and Keith and Bob and the rest of her adorers will go crazy over
-the news and want to celebrate it. I didn't tell them. I wanted you to
-know it first. There is one other thing. You know you can't tell whether
-there is anything in an idle report, but the gossips say she has perhaps
-met her fate down there. I've even heard his name--one Earle Sanders, a
-well-to-do cotton merchant of good standing in the business world. But
-I'll never believe she's engaged to him till the cards are out.”
-
-“I really think it may be true,” Carson Dwight said, a firm, set
-expression about his lips. “I've heard of him. He's a man of fine
-character and intellect. Yes, it may be true, Garner.”
-
-“Well,” and Garner drew himself up and folded his arms, “if it should
-happen to be so, Carson, there would be only one thing to do, and that
-would be to grin and bear it.”
-
-“Yes, that would be the only thing,” Dwight made answer. “She has a
-right to happiness, and it would have been wrong for her to have tied
-herself to me, when I was what I was, and when I am still as great a
-failure as I am.”
-
-He turned suddenly out onto the passage, and Garner heard his resounding
-tread as he walked away.
-
-“Poor old chap,” Garner mused, as he leaned forward and looked at the
-threadbare toes of his slippers, “if he weathers this storm he'll make
-a man right--if not, he'll go down with the great majority, the motley
-throng meant for God only knows what purpose.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-[Illustration: 9061]
-
-HE Warren homestead was in a turmoil of excitement over Helen's return.
-The ex-slaves of the family for miles around had assembled to celebrate
-the occasion in quite the ante-bellum fashion. The men and grown boys
-sat about the front lawn and on the steps of the long veranda and talked
-of the day Helen was born, of her childhood, of her beauty and numerous
-conquests, away from them, and of the bare possibility of her deigning
-to accept the hand of some one of her powerful and wealthy suitors.
-
-In her own chamber, a great square room with many windows, Helen, tall,
-graceful, with light-brown eyes and almost golden hair, was receiving
-the women and girls. She had brought a present suitable for each of
-them, as they knew she would, and the general rejoicing was equal to
-that of an old-time Georgia Christmas.
-
-“You are all here,” Helen smiled, as she looked about the room, “except
-Mam' Linda. Is she not well?”
-
-“Yessum, she's well as common,” Jennie, a yellow house-maid, said, “as
-well as she been since Pete had dat scrimmage wid de White Caps. Missie,
-you gwine notice er gre't change in Mam' Lindy. Since dat turrible
-night, while she seem strong in de body, she looks powerful weak in
-de face en sperit. Unc' Lewis is worried about 'er. She des set in er
-cottage do' en rock back an' fo'th all day long. You done heard 'bout dat
-lambastin', 'ain't you, Missie?”
-
-“Yes, my father wrote me about it,” Helen replied, an expression of
-sympathetic pain on her well-featured face, “but he didn't tell me that
-mammy was taking it so hard.”
-
-“He was tryin' ter keep you fum worryin',” Jennie said, observantly.
-“Marster knowed how much sto' you set by yo' old mammy. He was de
-maddest man you ever laid eyes on dat night, but he couldn't do nothin',
-fer it was all over, en dem white trash done skedaddle back whar dey
-come fum.”.
-
-“And was Pete so much to blame?” Helen asked, her voice shaking.
-
-“Blame fer de company he been keepin', Missie--dat's all; but what you
-gwine ter do wid er strappin' young nigger growin' up? It des like it
-was in de old day fo' de war. De niggers had to have deir places ter
-meet an' cut up shines. Dey been done too much of it at Ike Bowen's. De
-white folks dat lived round dar couldn't sleep at night. It was one long
-shindig or a fist-cuff scrap fum supper till daylight.”
-
-“Well, I wish Mam' Linda would come to see me,” Helen said. “I'm anxious
-about her. If she isn't here soon I'll go to her.”
-
-“She's comin' right on, Missie,” another negro girl said, “but she tol'
-Unc' Lewis she was gwine ter wait till we all cleared out. She say you
-her baby, en she ain't gwine ter be bothered wid so many, when she see
-you de fust time after so long.”
-
-“That's exactly like her,” Helen smiled. “Well, you all must go now,
-and, Jennie, tell her I am dying to see her.”
-
-The room was soon cleared of its chattering and laughing throng, and
-Linda, supported by her husband, a stalwart mulatto, came from her
-cottage behind the house and went up to Helen's room. She was short,
-rather portly, about half white, and for that reason had a remarkably
-intelligent face which bore the marks of a strong character. Entering
-the room, after sharply enjoining her husband to wait for her in the
-hall, she went straight up to Helen and laid her hand on the young
-lady's head.
-
-“So I got my baby back once mo',” she said, tenderly.
-
-“Yes, I couldn't stay away, Mammy,” Helen said, with an indulgent smile.
-“After all, home is the sweetest place on earth--but you mustn't stand
-up; get a chair.”
-
-The old woman obeyed, slowly placing the chair near that of her mistress
-and sitting down. “I'm glad you got back, honey,” she said. “I loves all
-my white folks, but you is my baby, en I never could talk to de rest of
-um lak I kin ter you. Oh, honey, yo' old mammy has had lots en lots er
-trouble!”
-
-“I know, Mammy, father wrote me about it, and I've heard more since I
-got here. I know how you love Pete.”
-
-Linda folded her arms on her breast and leaned forward till her elbows
-rested on her knees. Helen saw a wave of emotion shake her whole body
-as she straightened up and faced her with eyes that seemed melting in
-grief. “Honey,” she said, “folks said when de law come en give we all
-freedom dat de good day was at hand. It was ter be a time er plenty en
-joy fer black folks; but, honey, never while I was er slave did I had
-ter suffer what I'm goin' thoo now. In de old time marster looked after
-us; de lash never was laid on de back er one o' his niggers. No white
-pusson never dared to hit one of us, en yit now in dis day er glorious
-freedom, er whole gang of um come in de dead er night en tied my child
-wid ropes en tuck turn about lashin' 'im. Honey, sometimes I think dey
-ain't no Gawd fer a pusson wid one single streak er black blood in 'im.
-Ef dey is er Gawd fer sech es me, why do He let me pass thoo what been
-put on me? I heard dat boy's cryin' half er mile, honey, en stood in de
-flo' er my house en couldn't move, listenin' en listenin' ter his
-screams en dat lash failin' on 'im. Den dey let 'im loose en he come
-runnin' erlong de street ter find me--ter find his mammy, honey--his
-mammy who couldn't do nothin' fer 'im. En dar right at my feet he fell
-over in er faint. I thought he was dead en never would open his eyes
-ergin.”
-
-“And I wasn't here to comfort you!” Helen said, in a tearful tone of
-self-reproach. “You were alone through it all.”
-
-“No, I wasn't, honey. Thank de Lawd, dar is some er de right kind er
-white folks left. Marse Carson Dwight heard it all fum his room en come
-over. He raised Pete up en tuck 'im in an' laid 'im on de baid. He tuck 'im
-up in his arms, honey, young marster did, en set to work to bring 'im to.
-An' after de po' boy was easy en ersleep en de doctor gone off, Marse
-Carson come ter me en tuck my hand. 'Mam' Lindy,' he said, es pale as ef
-he'd been sick er long time, 'dis night's work has give me some'n' ter
-think erbout. De best white men in de Souf won't stan' fer dis. Sech
-things cayn't go on forever. Ef I go to de Legislature I'll see dat dey
-gwine ter pass laws ter pertect you faithful old folks.”
-
-“Carson said that?” Helen's voice was husky, her glance averted.
-
-“Yes, en he was dead in earnest, honey; he wasn't des talkin' ter
-comfort me. I know, kase I done hear suppen else dat happened since
-den.”
-
-“What was that?” Helen asked.
-
-“Why, dey say dat Marse Carson went straight down-town en tried ter find
-somebody dat was in de mob. He heard Dan Willis was among 'em--you know
-who he is, honey. He's er bad, desp'rate moonshine man. Well, Marse
-Carson spoke his mind about 'im, an' dared 'im out in de open. Unc'
-Lewis said Mr. Garner an' all Marse Carson's friends tried to stop
- 'im, kase it would go dead agin 'im in his 'lection, but Marse Carson
-wouldn't take back er word, en was so mad he couldn't hold in. En dat
-another hard thing to bear, honey,” Linda went on. “Des think, Marse
-Carson cayn't even try to help er po' old woman lak me widout ruinin'
-his own chances.”
-
-“Is it as serious as that?” Helen asked, with deep concern.
-
-“Yes, honey, he never kin win his race lessen he act diffunt. Dey say
-dat man Wiggin is laughin' fit ter kill hisse'f over de way he got de
-upper hold. I told Marse Carson des t'other day he mustn't do dat way,
-but he laughed in my face in de sweet way he always did have. 'Ef dey
-vote ergin me fer dat, Mam' Lindy,' he say, 'deir votes won't be worth
-much.' Marse Carson is sho got high principle, honey. His pa think he
-ain't worth much, but _he's_ all right. You mark my words, he's gwine
-ter make a gre't big man--he gwine ter do dat kase he's got er tender
-heart in 'im, an ain't afeard of anything dat walk on de yeath. He may
-lose dis one 'lection, but he'll not stop. I know young white men, thoo
-en thoo, en I never y it seen er better one.”
-
-[Illustration: 0067]
-
-“Have you--have you seen him recently?” Helen asked, surprised at the
-catch in her voice.
-
-“Oh yes, honey,” the old woman said, plaintively; “seem lak he know how
-I'm sufferin', en he been comin' over often en talkin' ter me'n Lewis.
-Seem lak he's so sad, honey, here late. Ain't you seed 'im yit, honey?”
-
-“No, he hasn't been over,” Helen replied, rather awkwardly. “He will
-come, though; he and I are good friends.”
-
-“You gwine find 'im changed er lot, honey,” the old woman said. “Do you
-know, I don't believe he ever got over Marse Albert's death. He warn't
-ter blame 'bout dat, honey, dough I do believe he feel dat way. Seem lak
-we never kin fetch up Marse Albert's name widout Marse Carson git sad.
-One night here late when Lewis was talkin' 'bout when yo' pa went off
-en fetched young master home, Marse Carson hung his head en say: 'Mam'
-Lindy, I wish dat time could be go over ergin. I would act so diffunt.
-I never seed whar all dem scrapes was leadin' to. But it learned me a
-lesson, Mam' Lindy.'”
-
-“That's it,” Helen said, bitterly, as if to herself; “he survived. He
-has profited by the calamity, but my poor, dear brother--” She went no
-further, for her voice broke and her eyes filled with tears.
-
-“Don't think erbout dat, honey,” old Linda said, consolingly. “You got
-yo' one great trouble lak I has, but you is at home wid we all now, en
-you must not be sad.”
-
-“I don't intend to be, Mammy,” Helen said, wiping her eyes on her
-handkerchief. “We are going to try to do something to keep Pete out of
-trouble. Father thinks it is his associates that are to blame. We must
-try in future to keep him away from bad company.”
-
-“Dat what I want ter do, honey,” the old woman said, “en ef I des had
-somewhar ter send 'im so he could be away fum dis town I'd be powerful
-glad.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-[Illustration: 9070]
-
-Helen anticipated, the young ladies of the town, her most intimate
-friends and former school-mates, came in a body that afternoon to see
-her. The reception formally opened in the great parlor down-stairs,
-but it was not many minutes before they all found themselves in Helen's
-chamber fluttering about and chattering like doves in their spring
-plumage.
-
-“There's no use putting it off longer,” Ida Tarpley, Helen's cousin,
-laughed; “they are all bent on seeing your _things_, and they will
-simply spend the night here if you don't get them out.”
-
-“Oh, I think that would look so vain and silly in me,” Helen protested,
-her color rising. “I don't like to exhibit my wardrobe as if I were a
-dressmaker, or a society woman who is hard up and trying to dispose of
-them.”
-
-“The idea of your not doing it, dear,” Mary King, a little blonde, said,
-“when not one of us has seen a decent dress or hat since the summer
-visitors went away last fall.”
-
-“Leave it to me,” Ida Tarpley laughed. “You girls get off the bed. I
-want something to lay them on. If it were only evening I'd make her
-put on that gown she wore at the Governor's ball. You remember what the
-_Constitution's_ society reporter said about it. He said it was a poet's
-dream. If I ever get one it will be _in_ a dream. You must really wear
-it to your dance, Helen.”
-
-“_My_ dance?” Helen said, in surprise.
-
-“Oh, I hope I'm not telling secrets,” Ida said; “but I met Keith Gordon
-and Bob Smith in town as I came on. They had a list and were taking
-subscriptions from all the young men. They had already enough put down
-to buy a house and lot. They say they are going to give you the swellest
-dance that was eyer heard of. Bob said that it simply had to surpass
-anything you'd been to in Augusta or Atlanta. Expense is not to be
-considered. The finest band in Chattanooga has already been engaged;
-the refreshments are to be brought from there by a caterer and a dozen
-expert waiters. A carload of flowers have been ordered. It is to open
-with a grand march.” Ida swung her hands and body comically to and fro
-as if in the cake walk, and bowed low. “Nobody is to be allowed to dance
-with you who hasn't an evening suit on, and _then_ only once. They are
-all crazy about you, Helen. I never could understand it. I've tried to
-copy the look you have in the eyes hundreds of times, but it won't have
-the slightest effect.”
-
-“There's only one explanation of it,” Miss Wimberley, another girl,
-remarked; “it is simply because she really likes them all.”
-
-“Well, I really do, as for that,” Helen said; “and I think it is awfully
-nice of them to give me such a dance. It's enough to turn a girl's head.
-Well, if Ida really is going to pull out my things, I'll go down-stairs
-and make you a lemonade.”
-
-Later in the afternoon the young ladies had all gone except Ida Tarpley,
-who lingered with Helen on the veranda.
-
-“I'm glad the girls didn't have the bad taste to embarrass you by
-questioning you about Mr. Sanders,” Ida said. “Of course, it is all over
-town. Uncle spoke of the possibility of it to some one and that put
-it afloat. I'm anxious to see him, Helen. I know he must be
-nice--everything, in fact, that a man ought to be, for you always had
-high ideals.”
-
-Helen flushed almost angrily, and she drew herself erect and stood quite
-rigid, looking at her cousin.
-
-“Ida,” she said, “I don't like what you have just said.”
-
-“Oh, dearest, I'm sorry, but I thought--”
-
-“That's the trouble about a small town,” Helen went on. “People take
-such liberties with you, and about the most delicate things. Down in
-Augusta my friends never would think of saying I was actually engaged
-to a man till it was announced. But here at home it is in every mouth
-before they have even seen the gentleman in question.”
-
-“But you really have been receiving constant attentions from Mr. Sanders
-for more than a year, haven't you, dear?” Miss Tarpley asked, blandly.
-
-“Yes, but what of that?” Helen retorted. “He and I are splendid friends.
-He has been very kind and thoughtful of my comfort, and I like him. He
-is noble, sincere, and good. He extended the sweetest sympathy to me
-when I went down there under my great grief, and I never can forget it,
-but, nevertheless, Ida, I have not promised to marry him.”
-
-“Oh, I see, it is not actually settled yet,” Miss Tarpley said. “Well,
-I'm glad. I'm very, very glad.”
-
-“You are glad?” Helen said, wonderingly.
-
-“Yes, I am. I'm glad because I don't want you to go away off down there
-and marry a stranger to us. I really hope something will break it up. I
-know Mr. Sanders must be awfully fond of you--any man would be who had
-a ghost of a chance of winning you--and I know your aunt has been doing
-all in her power to bring the match about--but I understand you, dear,
-and I am afraid you would not be happy.”
-
-“Why do you say that so--so positively?” Helen asked, coldly.
-
-“Because,” Ida said, impulsively, “I don't believe a girl of your
-disposition ever could love in the right way more than once, and--”
-
-“And what?” Helen demanded, her proud lips compressed, her eyes flashing
-defiantly.
-
-“Well, I may be wrong, dear,” Miss Tarpley went on, “but if you were not
-actually in love before you went to Augusta, you were very near it.”
-
-“How absurd!” Helen exclaimed, with a little angry toss of her head.
-
-“Do you remember the night our set drove out to the Henderson party? I
-went with Mr. Garner and Carson Dwight took you? Oh, Helen, I met you
-and Carson walking together in the moonlight that evening under the
-apple-trees in the old meadow, and if ever a pair of human beings really
-loved each other you two must have done so that night. I saw it in his
-happy, triumphant face, and in the fact, Helen dear, that you allowed
-him to be with you so much, when you knew other admirers were waiting to
-see you.”
-
-Helen looked down; her face was clouded over, her proud lip twitched.
-
-“Ida,” she said, tremulously, “I don't want you ever again to mention
-Carson Dwight's name to me in--in that way. You have no right to.”
-
-“Yes, I have,” Ida protested, firmly. “I have the right as a loyal
-friend to the best, most suffering, and noblest young man I ever knew. I
-read you like a book, dear. You really cared very, very much for Carson
-once, but after your great loss you never thought the same of him
-again.”
-
-“No, nor I never shall,” Helen said, firmly. “I admire him and shall
-treat him as a good friend when we meet, but that will be the end of it.
-Whether I cared for him or not, as girls care for young men, is neither
-here nor there. It is over with.”
-
-“And all simply because he was a little wild at the time your poor
-brother--”
-
-“Stop!” Helen said; “don't argue the matter. I can only now associate
-him with the darkest hour of my life. I'm tempted to tell you something,
-Ida,” and Helen bowed her head for a moment, and then went on in an
-unsteady voice. “When my poor brother's trunk was brought home, it was
-my duty to put the things it contained in order. There I found some
-letters to him, and one dated only two days before Albert's death was
-from--from Carson Dwight. I read only a portion of it, but it revealed a
-page in poor Albert's life that I had never read--never dreamed could be
-possible.”
-
-“But Carson,” Ida Tarpley exclaimed; “what did _he_ have to do with
-that?”
-
-Helen swallowed the lump in her throat, and with a cold, steely gleam in
-her eyes she said, bitterly: “He could have held out his hand with the
-superior strength you think he has and drawn the poor boy back from the
-brink, but he didn't. The words he wrote about it were light, flippant,
-and heartless. He treated the whole awful situation as a joke, as if--as
-if he _himself_ were familiar with such unmentionable things.”
-
-“Ah, I begin to understand it all now!” Ida sighed. “That letter,
-coupled with Cousin Albert's awful death, was such a terrible shock that
-you cannot feel the same towards Carson. But oh, Helen, you would pity
-him if you knew him now as I do. He has never altered in his feelings
-towards you. In fact, it seems to me that he loves you even more deeply
-than ever. And, dear, if you had seen his patient efforts to make a
-better man of himself you'd not harbor such thoughts against him. You
-will understand Carson some day, but it may then be too late. I don't
-believe a woman ever has a real sweetheart but once. You may marry the
-man your aunt wants you to take, but your heart will some day turn back
-to the other. You will remember, too, and bitterly, that you condemned
-him for a youthful fault which you ought to have pardoned.”
-
-“Do you think so, Ida?” Helen asked, her soft, brown eyes averted.
-
-“Yes, and you'll remember, too, that while his other friends were trying
-to help him stick to his resolutions you turned against him. He's going
-to make a great and good man, Helen. I've known that for some time. He
-is having his troubles, but even they will help him to be stronger
-in the end. His greatest trial is going on right now, while folks are
-saying that you are going to marry another man. Pshaw! you may say what
-you like about Mr. Sanders' good qualities, but I know I shall not
-like him,” concluded Ida, with a smile, as she turned to go. “He is a
-usurper, and I'm dead against him.”
-
-Helen remained on the veranda after her cousin had left till the
-twilight gathered about her. She was about to go in, as it was near
-tea-time, when she heard a grumbling voice down the street and saw old
-Uncle Lewis returning from town, driving his son, the troublesome Peter,
-before him.
-
-“You go right thoo dat gate on back ter dat house, you black imp er
-'straction!” he thundered, “er I'll tek er boa'd en lambast de life
-out'n you. Here it is night-time en you ain't chop no stove-wood fer
-de big house kitchen, en been lyin' roun' dem cotton wagons raisin' mo'
-rows wid dem mountain white men.”
-
-“What's the matter, Uncle Lewis?” Helen asked, as the boy sulkily passed
-round the corner of the house and the old man, out of breath, paused at
-the steps.
-
-“Oh, Missy, you don't know what me'n' Mam' Lindy got to bear up under. We
-don't know how ter manage dat boy. Lindy right now is out'n 'er head
-wid worry. Buck Black come tol' us 'bout an hour ago dat Pete en some mo'
-triflin' niggers was down at de warehouse sassin' some mountain white
-men. Buck heard Pete say dat Johnson en his gang couldn't whip him ergin
-dout gittin' in trouble, en dey was in er inch of er big row when de
-marshal busted it up. Buck ain't no fool, fer a black man, Missy, en
-he told me'n' Lindy ef we don't manage ter git Pete out'n de company he
-keeps dat dem white men will sho string 'im up.”
-
-“Yes, something has to be done, that's plain,” said Helen,
-sympathetically. “I know Mam' Linda must be worrying, and I'll go down
-to see her this evening. It doesn't seem to me that a town like this is
-best for a boy like Pete. I'll speak to father about it, Uncle Lewis. It
-won't do to have Mammy bothered like this. It will kill her. She is not
-strong enough to stand it.”
-
-“Oh, Missy,” the old man said, “I wish you would try ter do some'n'.
-Me'n' Lindy is sho at de end er our rope.”
-
-“Well, I promise you I'll do all I can, Uncle Lewis,” Helen said, and,
-much relieved, the old negro trudged homeward.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-[Illustration: 9078]
-
-LOCAL institution in which “the gang” was more or less interested was
-known as the “Darley Club.” It occupied the entire upper floor of
-a considerable building on the main street, and had been organized,
-primarily, by the older married men of the town to give the young men of
-the best families a better meeting-place than the bar-rooms and offices
-of the hotels. At first the older men looked in occasionally to see that
-the rather rigid rules of the institution were being kept. But men of
-middle-age and past, who have comfortable firesides, are not fond of
-the noisy gatherings of their original prototypes, and the Club was
-soon left to the management of the permanent president, Mr. Wade Tingle,
-editor of the _Headlight_.
-
-Wade endeavored, to the best of his genial nature, to enforce all rules,
-collect all dues, and impose all fines, but he wasn't really the man for
-the place. He accepted what cash was handed to him, trying to remember
-the names of the payers and amounts as he wrote his editorials,
-political notes, and social gossip, ending up at the end of each month
-with no money at all to pay the rent or the wages of the negro factotum.
-However, there was always an outlet from this embarrassment, for
-Wade had only to draw a long face as he met some of the well-to-do
-stay-at-homes and say that “club expenses were somehow running short,”
- and without question the shortage was made up. Wade had tried to be
-officially stern, too, on occasion. Once when Keith Gordon had violated
-what Wade termed club discipline, not to say club etiquette, Wade
-threatened to be severe. But it happened to be a point upon which there
-was a division of opinion, and Keith also belonged to “the gang.” It had
-happened this way: Keith had a certain corner in the Club reading-room
-where he was wont to write his letters of an evening, and coming down
-after supper one night he discovered that the attendant had locked the
-door and gone off to supper. Keith was justly angry. He stood at the
-door for a few minutes, and then, being something of an athlete, he
-stepped back, made a run the width of the sidewalk, and broke the lock,
-left the door hanging on a single hinge, and went up and calmly wrote
-his letters. As has been intimated, Wade took a serious view of this
-violation of club dignity, his main contention being that Keith ought
-to have the lock repaired and the hinge replaced. However, Keith just
-as firmly stood on his rights, his contention being that a member of the
-Club in good standing could not be withheld from his rights by the mere
-carelessness of a negro or a twenty-five cent cast-iron lock. So it was
-that, in commemoration of the incident, the door remained without the
-lock and hinge for many a day.
-
-It was in this building that the grand ball in honor of Helen Warren's
-home-coming was to be given. During the entire preceding day Bob Smith
-and Keith Gordon worked like happy slaves. The floor had been roughened
-by roller-skating, and a carpenter with plane and sand-paper was
-smoothing it, Bob giving it its finishing touch by whittling sperm
-candles over it and rubbing in the shavings with the soles of his shoes
-as he pirouetted about, his right arm curved around an imaginary waist.
-The billiard-tables were pushed back against the wall, the ladies'
-dressing-rooms thoroughly scoured and put in order, and the lamps
-cleaned and trimmed. Keith had brought down from his home some
-fine oil-paintings, and these were hung appropriately. But Keith's
-_chef-d'ouvre_ of arrangement and decoration was a happy inspiration,
-and he was enjoining it on the initiated ones to keep it as a surprise
-for Helen. He had once heard her say that her favorite flower was the
-wild daisy, and as they were now in bloom, and grew in profusion in the
-fields around the town, Keith had ordered several wagon-loads of them
-gathered, and now the walls of the ballroom were fairly covered with
-them. Graceful festoons of the flowers hung from the ceiling, draped
-the doorways, and rose in beautiful mounds on the white-clothed
-refreshment-tables.
-
-As a special favor he admitted Carson Dwight in at the carefully guarded
-door at dusk on the evening of the ball, first drawing down the blinds
-and lighting the candles and lamps that his chum might have the full
-benefit of the scene as it would strike Helen on her arrival.
-
-“Isn't that simply superb?” he asked. “Do you reckon they gave her
-anything prettier while she was down there? I don't believe it, Carson.
-I think this is the dandiest room a girl ever tripped a toe in.”
-
-“Yes, it's all right,” Dwight said, admiringly. “It is really great, and
-she will appreciate it keenly. She is that way.”
-
-“I think so myself,” said Keith. “I've been nervous all day, though, old
-man. I've been watching every train.”
-
-“Afraid the band wouldn't come?” asked Dwight.
-
-“No, those coons can be depended on; they will be down in full force
-with the best figure-caller in the South. No, I was afraid, though, that
-Helen might have written to that Augusta chump, and that he would come
-up. That certainly would give the thing cold feet.”
-
-“Ah!” Carson exclaimed; “I see.”
-
-“The dear girl wouldn't rub it in on us to that extent, old man,” Keith
-said. “I know it now. She really may be engaged to him, and she may not,
-but she knows how we feel, and it's bully of her not to invite him. It
-would really have been a wet blanket to the whole business. We'd have
-to treat him decently, as a visitor, you know, but I'd rather have taken
-castor-oil for my part of it. All the gang except you were over to see
-her Sunday afternoon; why didn't you go?”
-
-“Oh, you know I live only next door, with an open gate between, and
-I thought I'd better give my place to you fellows who don't have my
-opportunity. I've already seen her. In fact, she ran over to see my
-mother yesterday.”
-
-The ball was in full swing when Carson arrived that night. The street in
-front of the club was crowded with carriages, buggies, and livery-stable
-“hacks.” The introductory grand march was in progress, and when Carson
-went to the improvised dressing-room in charge of Skelt to check his
-hat he found Garner standing before a mirror tugging at the lapels of an
-evening coat and trying to adjust a necktie which kept climbing higher
-than it should. Darley was just at the point in its post-bellum struggle
-where evening dress for men was a thing more of the luxurious past than
-the stern present, and Dwight readily saw that his partner had persuaded
-himself for once to don borrowed plumage.
-
-“What's the matter?” Carson asked, as he thrust his hat-check into the
-pocket of his immaculate white waistcoat.
-
-“Oh, the damn thing don't fit!” said Garner, in high disgust. “I know
-now that my father has a hump, or did have when he ordered this suit for
-his wedding-trip. The tailor who designed this _costeem de swaray_ tried
-to help him out, but he has transferred the hump to me by other means
-than heredity. Look how the back of it sticks out from my neck!”
-
-“That's because you twist your body to see it in the glass,” said
-Carson, consolingly. “It's not so bad when you stand straight.”
-
-“It's a case of not seeing others as they see you, eh?” Garner said,
-better satisfied. “I haven't taken a chew of tobacco to-night. I
-wouldn't splotch this shirt for the world. I couldn't spit farther than
-an inch with this collar on, anyway. She's holding the reel for me. I
-can't dance anything else, but I can go through that pretty well if I
-get at the end and watch the others. You'd better hurry up and see
-her card. There is a swell gang coming on the ten-o'clock train from
-Atlanta, and they all know her.”
-
-It was during the interval following the third number on the programme
-that Carson met Helen promenading with Keith and offered her his arm.
-
-“Oh, isn't it simply superb?” she said, when Keith had bowed
-himself away and they had joined the other strollers round the big,
-flower-perfumed room. “Carson, really I actually cried for joy just now
-in the dressing-room. I declare I never want to go away from home again.
-I'll never have such devoted friends as these.”
-
-“It is nice of you to look at it that way, Helen,” he said, “after the
-gay time you have had in Augusta and other cities.”
-
-“At least it is honest and sincere here at home,” she answered,
-“while down there it is--well, full of strife, social competition, and
-jealousies. I really; got homesick and simply had to come back.”
-
-“We are simply delighted to have you again,” he said, almost fearing to
-look upon her, for in her exquisite evening gown and the proud poise of
-her head she seemed more beautiful and imperious, and farther removed
-from his hopes than he had thought her even in the darkest hours of her
-first refusal to condone his fatal offence.
-
-She was looking straight into his eyes with a thoughtful, questioning
-stare, when she said: “They all seem the same, Carson, except you. Bob
-Smith, Keith, and even Mr. Garner are just like I left them, but somehow
-you are altered. You look so much older, so much more serious. Is it
-politics that is weighing you down--making you worry?”
-
-“Well,” he laughed, evasively, “politics is not exactly the easiest game
-in the world, and the bare fear that I may not succeed, after all, is
-enough to make a fellow of my temperament worry. It seems to be my last
-throw of the dice, Helen. My father will lose all faith in me if this
-does not go through.”
-
-“Yes, I know it is serious,” the girl said. “Keith and Mr. Garner
-have talked to me about it. They say they have never seen you so much
-absorbed in anything before. You really must win, Carson--you simply
-must!”
-
-“But this is no time to talk over sordid politics,” he said, with a
-smile. “This is your party and it must be made delightful.”
-
-“Oh, I have my worries, too,” she said, gravely. “I felt a queer twinge
-of conscience to-night when all the servants came to see me before I
-left home. They were all so happy except Mam' Linda. She tried to act
-like the rest, but, Carson, her trouble about that worthless boy is
-actually killing the dear old woman. She has her pride, too, and it
-has been wounded to the quick. She was always proud of the fact that my
-father never had whipped one of his slaves. I've heard her boast of it a
-hundred times; and now that she no longer belongs to us in reality, and
-her only child was beaten so cruelly, she simply can't get over it.”
-
-“I knew she felt that way,” Dwight said, sympathetically.
-
-Helen's hand tightened unconsciously on his arm as they were passing
-by the corner containing the orchestra. “Do you know,” she said, “Mam'
-Linda told me that of all the people who had been to see her since
-then that you had been the kindest, most thoughtful, the most helpful?
-Carson, that was very, very sweet of you.”
-
-“I was only electioneering,” he said, with a flush. “I was after Uncle
-Lewis's vote and Mam' Linda's influence.”
-
-“No, you were not,” Helen declared. “It was pure, unadulterated
-unselfishness on your part. You were sorry for her and for Uncle Lewis
-and even Pete, who certainly needed punishment of some sort for the way
-he's been conducting himself. Yes, it was only your good heart. I know
-that, for several persons have told me you have even gone so far as to
-let the affair hamper you in your political career. Oh, I know all about
-what your opponent is saying, and I know mountain people well enough to
-know you have given him a powerful weapon. They are terribly wrought
-up over the race troubles, and it would be easy enough for them to
-misunderstand your exact feeling. Oh, Carson, you must not let even Mam'
-Linda's trouble stand between you and your high aim. Taking up her cause
-will perhaps not do a bit of good, for no one person can solve so vital
-a problem as that is, and your agitation of it may wreck your last
-hope.”
-
-“I've promised to keep my mouth shut, if Dan Willis and men of his
-sort will not stay right at my heels with their threats. My campaign
-managers--the gang, who hold a daily caucus at the den and lay down
-my rules of conduct--have exacted that much from me on the penalty of
-letting me go by the board if I disobey.”
-
-“The dear boys!” Helen exclaimed. “I like every one of them, they are so
-loyal to you. The close friendship of you all for one another is simply
-beautiful.”
-
-“Coming back to the inevitable Pete,” Dwight remarked, a few minutes
-later. “I've been watching him since he was whipped, and I know he is in
-great danger of getting even more deeply into trouble. He has a stupidly
-resentful disposition, as many of his race have, and he is going around
-making surly threats about Johnson, Wiggin, and others. If he keeps that
-up and they get hold of it he will certainly get into serious trouble.”
-
-“My father was speaking of that to-night,” Helen said. “And he was
-thinking if there were any way of getting the boy away from his idle
-town associates that it might prevent trouble and ease Mam' Linda's
-mind.”
-
-“I was thinking of that the other day when I saw Uncle Lewis searching
-for him among the idle negroes,” said Carson; “and I have an idea.”
-
-“Oh, you have? What is it?” Helen asked, eagerly.
-
-“Why, Pete always has seemed to like me and take my advice, and as there
-is, plenty of work on my farm for such a hand as he is I could give him
-a good place and wages over there where he'd be practically removed from
-his present associates.”
-
-“Splendid, splendid!” Helen cried; “and will you do it?”
-
-“Why, certainly, and right away,” Carson answered. “If you will have
-Mam' Linda send him down to me in the morning I'll give him some
-instructions and a good sharp talk, and I'll make my overseer at the
-farm put him to work.”
-
-“Oh, it is splendid!” Helen declared. “It will be such good news for
-Mam' Linda. She'd rather have him work for you than any one in the
-world.”
-
-“There comes Wade to claim his dance,” Dwight said, suddenly; “and I
-must be off.”
-
-“Where are you going?” she asked, almost regretfully.
-
-“To the office to work on political business--dozens and dozens of
-letters to answer. Then I'm coming back for my waltz with you. I
-sha'n't fail.” And as he put on his hat and threaded his way through the
-whirling mass of dancers down to the street, he recalled with something
-of a shock that not once in their talk had he even _thought_ of his
-rival. He slowed up in the darkness and leaned against a wall. There
-was a strange sinking of his heart as he faced the grim reality that
-stretched out drearily before him. She was, no doubt, to be the wife of
-another man. He had lost her. She was not for him, though there in
-the glare of the ballroom, amid the sensuous strains of music, in the
-perfume of the flowers dying in her service, she had seemed as close to
-him in heart, soul, and sympathy as the night he and she--
-
-He had reached his office, a little one-story brick building in the row
-of lawyers' offices on the side street leading from the post-office to
-the courthouse, and he unlocked the door and went in and lighted the
-little murky lamp on his desk and pulled down a package of unanswered
-letters.
-
-Yes, he must work--work with that awful pain in his breast, the dry,
-tightening sensation in his throat, the maddening vision of her dazzling
-beauty and grace and sweetness before him. He dipped his pen, drew the
-paper towards him, and began to write: “My dear Sir,--In receiving the
-cordial assurances of your support in the campaign before me, I desire
-to thank you most heartily and to--”
-
-He laid the pen down and leaned back. “I can't do it, at least not
-to-night,” he said. “Not while she is there looking like that and with
-my waltz to come, and yet it must be done. I've lost her, and I am only
-making it harder to bear. Yes, I must work--work!”
-
-The pen went into the ink again. On the still night air came the strains
-of music, the mellow, sing-song voice of the figure-caller in the
-“square” dance, the whir and patter of many feet.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-[Illustration: 9089]
-
-EAVING Carson Dwight, Wade Tingle, and Bob Smith chatting about the ball
-in the den the next morning, Garner went to the office, bit off a chew
-of tobacco, and plunged into work with a vigor which indicated that
-he was almost ashamed of his departure from his beaten track into the
-unusual fields of social gayety. He still wore the upright collar and
-white necktie of the night before, but the hitherto carefully guarded
-expanse of shirt-front was already in imminent danger of losing all that
-had once recommended it as a presentable garment.
-
-With his small hand well spread over the page of the book he was
-consulting, he had become oblivious to his surroundings when suddenly a
-man stood in the doorway. He was tall and gaunt and wore a broad-brimmed
-hat, a cotton checked shirt, jean trousers supported by a raw-hide belt,
-and a pair of tall boots which, as he stood fiercely eying Garner, he
-angrily lashed with his riding-whip. It was Dan Willis. His face was
-slightly flushed from drink, and his eyes had the glare even his best
-friends had learned to tear and tried to avoid.
-
-“Whar's that that dude pardner o' yourn?” he asked.
-
-“Oh, you mean Dwight!” Garner had had too much experience in the
-handling of men to change countenance over any sudden turn of affairs,
-either for or against his interests, and he had, also, acquired
-admirable skill in most effective temporizing. “Why, let me see, Dan,”
- he went on, after he had paused for fully a moment, carefully inspected
-the lines he was reading, frowned as if not quite satisfied therewith,
-and then slowly turned down a leaf. “Let me think. Oh, you want to see
-Carson! Sit down; take a chair.”
-
-“I don't want to set down!” Willis thundered. “I want to see that damned
-dude, and I want to see him right off.”
-
-“Oh, that's it!” said Garner. “You are in a _hurry!_” And then, from the
-rigid setting of his jaw, it was plain that the lawyer had decided on
-the best mode of handling the specimen glowering down upon him. “Oh yes,
-I remember now, Willis, that you were loaded up a few nights ago looking
-for that chap. Now, advice is cheap--that is, the sort I'm going to give
-you. Under ordinary circumstances I'd charge a fee for it. My advice to
-you is to straddle that horse of yours and get out of this town. You are
-looking for trouble--great, big, far-reaching trouble.”
-
-“You hit the nail that pop, Bill Garner,” the mountaineer snorted. “I'm
-expectin' to git trouble, or _give_ trouble, an' I hain't goin' to lose
-time nuther. This settlement was due several days ago, but got put off.”
-
-“Look here, Willis”--Garner stood up facing him--“you may not be a fool,
-but you are acting powerfully like one. You are letting that measly
-little candidate for the legislature make a cat's-paw of you. That's
-what you're doing. He knows, if he can get up a shooting-scrap between
-you and my pardner over that negro-whipping business, it will turn a few
-mountain votes his way. If you get shot, Wiggin will have more charges
-to make; and if Carson was to get the worst of it, the boy would be
-clean out of the skunk's way. You and Wiggin are both in bad business.”
-
-“Well, that's _my_ lookout!” the mountaineer growled, beside himself in
-rage. “Carson Dwight said I was with Johnson the night the gang came in
-and whipped them coons, and--”
-
-“Well, you _were_,” said Garner, as suddenly as if he were browbeating a
-witness. “What's the use to lie about it?”
-
-“Lie--you say I--?”
-
-“I said I didn't _want_ you to lie about it,” said Garner, calmly. “I
-know half the mob, and respect most of them. I have an idea that some of
-my own kinsfolk was along that night. They thought they were doing right
-and acting in the best interests of the community. That's neither here
-nor there. The men that were licked were negroes, and most of them bad
-ones at that, but when a big, strapping man of your stamp comes with
-blood in his eye and a hunk of metal on his hip, looking for the son
-of an old Confederate soldier, who is a Democratic candidate for the
-legislature, and a good all-round white citizen, why, I say that is the
-time to call a halt, and to call it out loud! I happen to know a few of
-the grand jury, and if there is trouble of a serious nature in this town
-to-day, I can personally testify to enough deliberation in your voice
-and eye this morning to jerk your neck out of joint.”
-
-“What the hell do I care for you or your law?” Dan Willis snorted. “It's
-what that damned dude said about _me_ that he's got to swallow, and if
-he's in this town I'll find him. A fellow told me if he wasn't here he'd
-be in Keith Gordon's room. I don't know whar that is, but I kin find
-out.” Turning abruptly, Willis strode out into the street again.
-
-“The devil certainly is to pay now,” Garner said, with his deepest frown
-as he closed the law-book, thrust it back into its dusty niche in his
-bookcase, and put on his hat. “Carson is still up there with those boys,
-and that fellow may find him any minute. Carson won't take back a thing.
-He's as mad about the business as Willis is. I wonder if I can possibly
-manage to keep them apart.”
-
-On his way to the den he met Pole Baker standing on the corner of the
-street by a load of wood, which Pole had brought in to sell. Hurriedly,
-Garner explained the situation, ending by asking the farmer if he could
-see any way of getting Willis out of town.
-
-“I couldn't work him myself,” Baker said, “fer the dern skunk hain't any
-more use fer me than I have fer him, but I reckon I kin put some of his
-pals onto the job.”
-
-“Well, go ahead, Pole,” Garner urged. “I'll run up to the room and try
-to detain Carson. For all you do, don't let Willis come up there.”
-
-Garner found the young men still in the den chatting about the ball and
-Carson's campaign.
-
-Wade Tingle sat at the table with several sheets of paper before him,
-upon which, in a big, reporter's hand, he had been writing a glowing
-account of “the greatest social event” in the history of the town.
-
-“I've got a corking write-up, Bill,” he said, enthusiastically. “I've
-just been reading it to the gang. It is immense. Miss Helen sent me a
-full memorandum of what the girls wore, and, for a green hand, I think I
-have dressed 'em up all right.”
-
-“The only criticism I made on it, Garner,” spoke up Keith from his bed
-in the corner, where he lay fully dressed, “is that Wade has ended all
-of Helen's descriptions by adding, 'and diamonds.' I'll swear I'm
-no critic of style in writing, but that eternal 'and diamonds, and
-diamonds, and diamonds,' at the end of every paragraph, sounds so
-monotonous that it gets funny. He even had Miss Sally Ware's plain black
-outfit tipped off with 'and diamonds.'”
-
-“Well, I look at it this way, Bill,” Wade said, earnestly, as Garner sat
-down, “Of course, the girls who had them on would not like to see them
-left out, for they are nice things to have, and, on the other hand,
-those who were short in that direction would feel sorter out of it.”
-
-“I think if he had just written 'jewels' once in awhile,” Keith said,
-“it would sound all right, and leave something to the imagination.”
-
-“That might help,” Garner said, his troubled glance on Carson's rather
-grave face; “but see that you don't write it 'jewelry.'”
-
-“Well, I'll accept the amendment,” Wade said, as he began to scratch
-his manuscript and rewrite.
-
-Carson Dwight stood up. “Did you leave the office open?” he asked
-Garner. “I've got to shape up that Holcolm deed and consult the
-records.”
-
-“Let it go for a while. I want to look it over first,” Garner said,
-rather suddenly. “Sit down. I want to talk to you about the--the race.
-You've got a ticklish proposition before you, old boy, and I'd like to
-see you put it through.”
-
-“Hear, hear!” cried Keith, sitting up on the edge of his bed. “Balls and
-what girls wear belong to the regular run of life, but when the chief
-of the gang is about to be beaten by a scoundrel who will hesitate at
-nothing, it's time to be wide awake.”
-
-“That's it,” said Garner, his brow ruffled, his ear open to sounds
-without, his uneasy eyes on the group around him. And for several
-minutes he held them where they sat, listening to his wise and observant
-views of the matter in hand. Suddenly, while he was in the midst of a
-remark, a foot-fall sounded on the long passage without. It was heavy,
-loud, and striding. Garner paused, rose, went to the bureau, and from
-the top drawer took out a revolver he always kept either there or in his
-desk at the office. There was a firm whiteness about his lips which was
-new to his friends.
-
-“Carson,” he said, “have you got your gun?” and he stood staring at the
-doorway.
-
-A shadow fell on the floor; a man entered. It was Pole Baker, and he
-looked around him in surprise, his inquiring stare on Garner's unwonted
-mien and revolver.
-
-“Oh, it's you!” Garner exclaimed. “Ah, I thought--”
-
-“Yes, I come to tell you that--” Baker hesitated, as if uncertain
-whether he was betraying confidence, and then catching Garner's warning
-glance, he said, non-committally: “Say, Bill, that feller you and me was
-talkin' about has jest gone home. I reckon you won't get yore money out
-of him to-day.”
-
-“Oh, well, it was a small matter, anyway, Pole,” Garner said, in a tone
-of appreciative relief, as he put the revolver back in the drawer and
-closed it. “I'll mention it to him the next time he's in town.”
-
-“Say, what was the matter with you just now, Garner?” Wade Tingle asked
-over the top of his manuscript. “I thought you were going to ask Carson
-to fight a duel.”
-
-But with his hand on Dwight's arm Garner was moving to the door. “Come
-on, lot's get to work,” he said, with a deep breath and a grateful side
-glance at Baker.
-
-In front of the office one of Carson's farm wagons drawn by a pair of
-mules was standing. Tom Hill-yer, Carson's overseer and general manager,
-sat on the seat, and behind him stood Pete Warren, ready for his stay in
-the country.
-
-“Miss Helen's made quick work of it, I see,” Carson remarked. “She's
-determined to get that rascal out of temptation.”
-
-“You ought to give him a sharp talking to,” said Garner. “He's got
-entirely too much lip for his own good. Skelt told me this morning that
-if Pete doesn't dry up some of that gang will hang him before he is a
-month older. He doesn't know any better, and means nothing by it, but he
-has already made open threats against Johnson and Willis. You understand
-those men well enough to know that in such times as these a negro can't
-do that with impunity.”
-
-“I agree with you, and I'll stop and speak to him now.”
-
-When Carson came in and sat down at his desk, a few moments later,
-Garner looked across at him and smiled.
-
-“You certainly let him off easy,” he said. “I could have thrown a
-Christmas turkey down the scamp's throat through that grin of his. I saw
-you run your hand in your pocket and knew he was bleeding you.”
-
-“Oh, well, I reckon I'm a failure at that sort of thing,” Dwight
-admitted, with a sheepish smile. “I started in by saying that he must
-not be so foolhardy as to make open threats against any of those men,
-and he said: 'Looky here, Marse Carson, dem white rapscallions cut
-gashes in my body deep enough ter plant corn in, an' I ain't gwine ter
-love 'em fer it. _You_ wouldn't, you know you wouldn't.'”
-
-“And he had you there,” Garner said, grimly. “Well, they may say what
-they please up North about our great problem, but nothing but time and
-the good Lord can solve it. You and I can tell that negro to keep his
-mouth shut from sunup till sun-down, but I happen to know that he had a
-remote white ancestor that was the proudest, hardest fighter that ever
-swung a sword. Some of the rampant agitators say that deportation is
-the only solution. Huh! if you deported a lot of full-blood blacks along
-with such chaps as this one, it would be only a short time before the
-yellow ones would have the rest in bondage, and so history would be
-going backward instead of forward. I guess it's going forward right now
-if we only had the patience to see it that way.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-[Illustration: 9098]
-
-|NE beautiful morning near the first of June, as Carson was strolling on
-the upper veranda at home, waiting for the breakfast-bell, Keith Gordon
-came by on his horse on his way to town.
-
-“Heard the news?” he called out, as he reined in at the gate and leaned
-on the neck of his mount.
-
-“No; what's up?” Carson asked, and as he spoke he saw Helen Warren
-emerge from the front door of her father's house and step down among the
-dew-wet rose-bushes that bordered the brick walk.
-
-“Horrible enough in all reason,” Keith replied. “There's been a
-cold-blooded murder over near your farm. Abe Johnson, who led that mob,
-you know, and his wife were killed by some negro with an axe. The whole
-country is up in arms and crazy with excitement.”
-
-“Wait, I'll come right down,” Carson said, and he disappeared into
-the house. And when he came out a moment later he found Helen on the
-sidewalk talking to Keith, and from her grave face he knew she had
-overheard what had been said.
-
-“Isn't it awful?” she said to Carson, as he came out at the gate. “Of
-course, it is the continuation of the trouble here in town.”
-
-“How do they know a negro did it?” Carson asked, obeying the natural
-tendency of a lawyer to get at the facts.
-
-“It seems,” answered Gordon, “that Mrs. Johnson lived barely long enough
-after the neighbors got there to say that it was done by a mulatto, as
-well as she could see in the darkness. In their fury, the people are
-roughly handling every yellow negro in the neighborhood. They say the
-darkies are all hiding out in the woods and mountains.”
-
-Then the conversation paused, for old Uncle Lewis, who was at work with
-a pair of garden-sheafs behind some rose-bushes close by, uttered a
-groan and, wide-eyed and startled, came towards them.
-
-“It's awful, awful, awful!” they heard him say. “Oh, my Gawd, have
-mercy!”
-
-“Why, Uncle Lewis, what's the matter?” Helen asked, in sudden concern
-and wonder over his manner and tone.
-
-“Oh, missy, missy!” he groaned, as he shook his head despondently. “My
-boy over dar 'mongst 'em right now. Oh, my Lawd! I know what dem white
-folks gwine ter say fust thing, kase Pete didn't had no mo' sense 'an
-ter--”
-
-“Stop, Lewis!” Carson said, sharply. “Don't be the first to implicate
-your own son in a matter as serious as this is.”
-
-“I ain't, marster!” the old man groaned, “but I know dem white folks
-done it 'fo' dis.”
-
-“I'm afraid you are right, Lewis,” Keith said, sympathetically. “He may
-be absolutely innocent, but, since his trouble with that mob, Pete has
-really talked too much. Well, I must be going.”
-
-As Keith was riding away, old Lewis, muttering softly to himself and
-groaning, turned towards the house.
-
-“Where are you going?” Helen called out, as she still lingered beside
-Carson.
-
-“I'm gwine try to keep Linda fum hearin' it right now,” he said. “Ef
-Pete git in it, missy, it gwine ter kill yo' old mammy.”
-
-“I'm afraid it will,” Helen said. “Do what you can, Uncle Lewis. I'll
-be down to see her in a moment.” As the old man tottered away, Helen
-looked up and caught Carson's troubled glance.
-
-“I wish I were a man,” she said.
-
-“Why?” he inquired.
-
-“Because I'd take a strong stand here in the South for law and order
-at any cost. We have a good example in this very thing of what our
-condition means. Pete may be innocent, and no doubt is, for I don't
-believe he would do a thing like that no matter what the provocation,
-and yet he hasn't any sort of chance to prove it.”
-
-“You are right,” Carson said. “At such a time they would lynch him, if
-for nothing else than that he had dared to threaten the murdered man.”
-
-“Poor, poor old mammy!” sighed Helen. “Oh, it is awful to think of what
-she will suffer if--if--Carson, do you really think Pete is in actual
-danger?” Dwight hesitated for a moment, and then he met her stare
-frankly.
-
-“We may as well face the truth and be done with it,” he said. “No negro
-will be safe over there now, and Pete, I am sorry to say, least of all.”
-
-“If he is guilty he may run away,” she said, shortsightedly.
-
-“If he's guilty we don't _want_ him to get away,” Carson said, firmly.
-“But I really don't think he had anything to do with it.”
-
-Helen sighed. They had stepped back to the open gate, and there they
-paused side by side. “How discouraging life is!” she said. “Carson, in
-planning to get Pete over there, you and I were acting on our purest,
-noblest impulses, and yet the outcome of our efforts may be the gravest
-disaster.”
-
-“Yes, it seems that way,” he responded, gloomily; “but we must try to
-look on the bright side and hope for the best.”
-
-On parting with Helen, Carson went into the big, old-fashioned
-dining-room, and after hurriedly drinking a cup of coffee he went down
-to his office. Along the main thoroughfare, on the street comers, and in
-front of the stores he found little groups of men with grave faces, all
-discussing the tragedy. More than once in passing he heard Pete's name
-mentioned, and for fear of being questioned as to what he thought about
-it he hurried on. Garner was an early riser, and he found him at his
-desk writing letters.
-
-“Well, from all accounts,” Garner said, “your man Friday seems to be in
-a ticklish place over there, innocent or not--that is, if he hasn't had
-the sense to skip out.”
-
-“Somehow, I don't think Pete is guilty,” Carson said, as he sank into
-his big chair. “He's not that stamp of negro.”
-
-“Well, I haven't made up my mind on that score,” the other remarked. “Up
-to the time he left here he seemed really harmless enough, but we don't
-know what may have taken place since then between him and Johnson. Funny
-we didn't think of the danger of sticking match to tinder like that. I
-admit I was in favor of sending him. Miss Helen was so pleased over it,
-too. I met her the other day at the post-office and she was telling me,
-with absolute delight, that Pete was doing well over there, working like
-an old-time cornfield darky, and behaving himself. Now, I suppose, she
-will be terribly upset.”
-
-Carson sighed. “We blame the mountain people, in times of excitement,
-for acting rashly, and yet right here in this quiet town half the
-citizens have already made up their minds that Pete committed the crime.
-Think of it, Garner!”
-
-“Well, you see, it's pretty hard to imagine who _else_ did it,” Garner
-declared.
-
-“I don't agree with you,” disputed Carson, warmly; “when there are half
-a dozen negroes who were whipped just as Pete was and who have
-horrible characters. There's Sam Dudlow, the worst negro I ever saw,
-an ex-convict, and as full of devilment as an egg is of meat. I saw his
-scowling face the next day after he was whipped, and I never want to see
-it again. I'd hate to meet him in the dark, unarmed. He wasn't making
-open threats, as Pete was, but I'll bet he would have handled Johnson
-or Willis roughly if he had met either of them alone and got the
-advantage.”
-
-“Well, we are not trying the case,” Garner said, dryly; “if we are,
-I don't know where the fees are to come from. Getting money out of an
-imaginary case is too much like a lawyer's first year under the shadow
-of his shingle.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-[Illustration: 9103]
-
-IMMEDIATELY on parting with Carson, Helen went down to Linda's cottage.
-Lewis was leaning over the little, low fence talking to a negro, who
-walked on as she drew near.
-
-“Where is Mam' Linda?” she asked, guardedly. “In de house, missy,” Lewis
-answered, pulling off his old slouch hat and wadding it tightly in his
-fingers. “She 'ain't heard nothin' yit. Jim was des tellin' me er whole
-string er talk folks was havin' down on de street; but I told 'im not
-to let 'er hear it. Oh, missy, it gwine ter kill 'er. She cayn't stan' it.
-Des no longer 'n las' night she was settin' in dat do' talkin' 'bout
-how happy she was to hear Pete was doin' so well over on Marse Carson's
-place. She said she never would forget young marster's kindness to er
-old nigger'oman, en now”--the old man spread out his hands in apathetic
-gesture before him--“now you see what it come to!”
-
-“But nothing serious has really happened to Pete yet,” Helen had started
-to say, when the old man stopped her.
-
-“Hush, honey, she comin'!”
-
-There was a sound of a footstep in the cottage. Linda appeared in
-the doorway, and with a clouded face and disturbed manner invited her
-mistress into the cottage, placing a chair for the young lady, and
-dusting the bottom of it with her apron.
-
-“How do you feel this morning, mammy?” Helen asked, as she sat down.
-
-“I'm well emough in my _body_, honey”--the old woman's face was
-averted--“but dat ain't all ter a pusson in dis life. Ef des my body
-was all I had, I wouldn't be so bad off, but it's my _mind_, honey. I'm
-worried 'bout dat boy ergin. I had bad dreams las' night, en thoo 'em
-all he seemed ter be in some trouble. Den when I woke dis mawnin' en
-tried ter think 'twas only des er dream, I ain't satisfied wid de way all
-of um act. Lewis look quar out'n de eyes, en everybody dat pass erlong
-hatter stop en lead Lewis off down de fence ter talk. I ain't no fool,
-honey! I notice things when dey ain't natcherl. Den here you come 'fo'
-yo' breakfust-time. I've watched you, chile, sence you was in de cradle
-en know every bat er yo' sweet eyes. Oh, honey”--Linda suddenly sat down
-and covered her face with her hands, pressing them firmly in--“honey,”
- she muttered, “suppen's done gone wrong. I've knowed it all dis mawnin'
-en I'm actually afeard ter ax youall ter tell me. I--can't think of but
-one thing, I'm so muddled up, en dat is dat my boy done thowed up his
-work en gone away off somers wid bad company; en yit, honey”---she
-now rocked herself back and forth as if in torture and finished with a
-steady stare into Helen's face--“dat cayn't be it. Dat ain't bad ernough
-ter mek Lewis act like he is, en--en--well, honey, you might es well
-come out wid it. I've had trouble, en I kin have mo'.”
-
-Helen sat pale and undecided, unable to formulate any adequate plan of
-procedure. At this juncture Lewis leaned in the doorway, and, as his
-wife's back was towards him, he could not see her face.
-
-“I want ter step down-town er minute, Lindy,” he said. “I'll be right
-back. I des want ter go ter de sto'. We're out er coffee, en--”
-
-Linda suddenly turned her dark, agonized face upon him. “You are not
-goin' till you tell me what is gone wrong wid my child,” she said.
-“What de matter wid Pete, Lewis?”
-
-The old man's surprised glance wavered between his Wife's face and
-Helen's. “Why, Lindy, who say--” he feebly began.
-
-But she stopped him with a gesture at once impatient and full of fear.
-“Tell me!” she said, firmly--“tell me!”
-
-Lewis shambled into the cottage and stood over her, a magnificent
-specimen of the manhood of his race. Helen's eyes were blinded by tears
-she could hot restrain.
-
-“'Tain't tiothiri', Lindy, 'pon my word 'tain't nothin' but dis,” he
-said, gently. “Dar's been trouble over near Marse Carson's farm, but not
-one soul is done say Pete was in it--_not one soul_.”
-
-“What sort o' trouble?” Linda pursued.
-
-“Er man en his wife was killed over dar in baid last night.”
-
-“What man en woman?” Linda asked, her mouth falling open in suspense,
-her thick lip hanging.
-
-“Abe Johnson en his wife.”
-
-Linda leaned forward, her hands locked like things of iron between her
-knees. “Who done it, Lewis?--who killed um?” she gasped.
-
-“Nobody knows dat yit, Lindy. Mrs. Johnson lived er little while after
-de neighbors come, en she said it was er--she said it was er yaller
-nigger, en--en--” He went no further, being at the end of his diplomacy,
-and simply stood before her helplessly twisting his hat in his hands.
-The room was very still. Helen wondered if her own heart had stopped
-beating, so tense and strained was her emotion. Linda sat bent forward
-for a moment; they saw her raise her hands to her head, press them there
-convulsively, and then she groaned.
-
-“Miz Johnson say it was a yaller nigger!” she moaned. “Oh, my Gawd!”
-
-“Yes, but what dat, 'oman?” Lewis demanded in assumed sharpness of tone.
-“Dar's oodlin's en oodlin's er yaller niggers over dar.”
-
-“Dey ain't none of 'em been whipped by de daid man, 'cepin' my boy.”
- Linda was now staring straight at him. “None of 'em never made no
-threats but Pete. Dey'll kill 'im--” She shuddered and her voice
-fell away into a prolonged sob. “You hear me? Dey'll hang my po' baby
-boy--hang 'im--_hang_ 'im!”
-
-Linda suddenly rose to her full height and stood glowering upon them,
-her face dark and full of passion and grief combined. She raised her
-hands and held them straight upward.
-
-“I want ter curse Gawd!” she cried. “You hear me? I ain't done nothin'
-ter deserve dis here thing I've been er patient slave of white folks, en
-my mammy an' daddy was 'fo' me. I've acted right en done my duty ter dem
-what owned me, en--en now I face dis. I hear my onliest child beggin'
-fer um to spare 'im en listen ter 'im. I hear 'im beggin' ter see his
-old mammy 'fo' dey kill 'im. I see 'em drag-gin' 'im off wid er rope
-roun'--” With a shriek the woman fell face downward on the floor. As if
-under the influence of a terrible nightmare, Helen bent over her. She
-was insensible. Without a word, Lewis lifted her in his arms and bore
-her to a bed in the corner.
-
-“Dis gwine ter kill yo' old mammy, honey,” he gulped. “She ain't never
-gwine ter git up fum under it--never in dis world.”
-
-But Helen, with womanly presence of mind, had dampened her handkerchief
-in some water and was gently stroking the dark face with it. After a
-moment Linda drew a deep, lingering breath and opened her eyes.
-
-“Lewis,” was her first thought, “go try en find out all you kin. I'm
-gwine lie here en pray Gawd ter be merciful. I said I'd curse 'Im, but
-I won't. He my mainstay. I _got_ ter trust 'Im. Ef He fail me I'm lost.
-Oh, honey, yo' old mammy never axed you many favors; stay here wid 'er en
-pray--pray wid all yo' might ter let dis cup pass. Oh, Gawd, don't
-let 'em!--_don't_ let 'em! De po' boy didn't do it. He wouldn't harm a
-kitten. He talked too much, case he was smartin' under his whippin', but
-dat was all!”
-
-Motioning to Lewis to leave them alone, Helen sat down on the edge of
-the bed and put her arm round Linda's shoulders, but the old woman rose
-and went to the door and closed it, then she came back and stood by
-Helen in the half-darkness that now filled the room.
-
-“I want you ter git down here by my baid en pray fer me, honey,” she
-said. “Seem ter me lak de Lawd always have listen ter white folks mo'
-den de black, anyway, en I want you ter beg 'Im ter spare po' li'l'
-foolish Pete des dis time--_des dis once_.” Kneeling by the bed, Helen
-covered her wet face with her hands. Linda knelt beside her, and Helen
-prayed aloud, her clear, sweet voice ringing through the still room.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-[Illustration: 9109]
-
-N Carson Dwight's farm, as the place was not particularly well kept,
-the negro hands lived in dismantled log-cabins scattered here and there
-about the fields, or in the edge of the woods surrounding the place. In
-one of these, at the overseer's suggestion, Pete had installed himself,
-his household effects consisting only of a straw mattress thrown on the
-puncheon floor and a few cooking utensils for use over the big fireplace
-of the mud-and-log chimney.
-
-Here he was sleeping on the night of the tragedy which had stirred the
-country-side into a white heat of race hatred. He had spent the first
-half of the night at a negro dance, two miles away, at a farm, and
-was much elated by finding that he had attracted marked attention and
-feminine favor, which was due to the fact that he was looked upon by the
-country blacks as something out of the usual run--a town darky with a
-glib tongue and many other accomplishments, and a negro, too, as Pete
-assured them, who stood high in the favor of his master, whose name
-carried weight wherever it was mentioned.
-
-Shortly after dawn Pete was still sleeping soundly, as was his habit
-after a night of pleasure, when his door was rudely shaken.
-
-“Pete Warren! Pete Warren!” a voice called out sharply. “Wake up in dar;
-wake up, I tell you!”
-
-There was no response--no sound came from within the cabin except the
-deep respiration of the sleeper. The door was shaken again, and then,
-as it was not locked, and slightly ajar, the little old negro man on the
-outside pushed the shutter open and entered, stalking across the floor
-to where Pete lay.
-
-“Wake up here, you fool!” he said, as he bent and shook Pete roughly.
-“Wake up, ef you know what good fer you.”
-
-Pete turned over; his snoring broke into little gasps. He opened his
-eyes, stared inquiringly for an instant, and then his eyelids began to
-close drowsily.
-
-“Looky here!” He was roughly handled again by the black hand on his
-shoulder. “You young fool, you dance all night till you cayn't keep yo'
-eyes open in de day-time, but ef you don't git er move on you en light
-out er dis cabin you'll dance yo' last jig wid nothin' under yo' feet
-but wind. It'll be er game er frog in de middle en you be de frog.”
-
-“What dat?--what dat you givin' me, Uncle Richmond?” Pete was now awake
-and sitting bolt upright on the mattress.
-
-“Huh, I come ter tell you, boy, dat you 'bout ter git in trouble, en,
-fer all I know, de biggest you ever had in all yo' bo'n days.”
-
-“Huh, you say I is, Uncle Richmond?” Pete exclaimed, incredulously.
-“What wrong wid me?”
-
-The old man stepped back till he could look through the cabin door over
-the fields upon which the first streaks of daylight were falling in
-grayish, misty splotches.
-
-“Pete,” he said, “somebody done slip in Abe Johnson's house en brain him
-en his wife wid er axe.”
-
-“Huh, you don't say!” Pete stared in sleepy astonishment. “When dat
-happen, Uncle Richmond?”
-
-“Las' night, er towards mawnin',” the old man said. “Ham Black come
-en toi' me. He say we better all hide out; it gwine ter be de
-biggestm 'cite-ment ever heard of in dese mountains; but, Pete, _you_ de
-main one ter look out--you, you!”
-
-“Me! Huh, what you say dat fer, Uncle Rich'?”
-
-“'Ca'se dey gwine ter look fer you de fus one, Pete. You sho is been
-talkin' too much out yo' mouf 'bout dat whippin' Johnson done give you
-en Sam Dudlow, en de res' um in town dat night. Ham tol' me ter come
-warn you ter hide out, en dat quick. Ham say he know in reason you
-didn't do it, 'ca'se, he say, yo' bark is wuss'n yo' bite. Ham say he
-bet 'twas done by some nigger dat didn't talk so much. Ham say he mighty
-nigh sho Sam Dudlow done it, 'ca'se Sam met Abe Johnson in de big road
-yisterday en Johnson cussed 'im en lashed at 'im wid er whip. Ham say
-dat nigger come on ter de sto' lookin' lak er devil in men's clothes.
-But he didn't say nothin' even den. Look lak he was des lyin' low bidin'
-his time.”
-
-Pete got up and began to dress himself with the unimaginative disregard
-for danger that is characteristic of his race.
-
-“I bet, myse'f, Sam done it,” he said, reflectively.
-
-“He's er bad yaller nigger, Uncle Richmond, en ever since Johnson en Dan
-Willis larruped we-all, he's been sulkin' en growlin'. But es you say,
-Uncle Rich', he didn't talk out open. He lay low.”
-
-“Dat don't mek no diffunce, boy,” the old black man went on, earnestly;
-“you git out'n here in er hurry en mek er break fer dem woods. Even den
-I doubt ef dat gwine ter save yo' skin, 'ca'se Dan Willis got er pair er
-blood-hounds dat kin smell nigger tracks thoo er ten-inch snow.”
-
-“Huh, I say, Uncle Richmond, you don't know me,” Pete said. “You don't
-know me, ef you 'low I'm gwine ter run fum dese white men. I 'ain't
-been nigh dat Abe Johnson's house--not even cross his line er fence. I
-promised Marse Carson Dwight not ter go nigh 'im, en--en I promised 'im
-ter let up on my gab out here, en I done dat, too. No, suh, Unc' Rich',
-you git somebody else ter run yo' foot-race. I'm gwine ter cook my
-breakfust lak I always do en den go out ter my sprouts dat hatter be
-grubbed. I got my task ter do, rain er shine.”
-
-“Look here, boy,” the old man's blue-black eyes gleamed as he stared at
-Pete. “I know yo' mammy en daddy, en I like um. Dey good black folks er
-de ol' stripe, en always was friendly ter me, en I don't like ter see
-you in dis mess. I tell you, I'm er old man. I know how white men act
-in er case like dis--dey don't have one bit er pity er reason. Dey will
-kill you sho. Dey'd er been here 'fo' dis, but dey gittin' together.
-Listen! Hear dem hawns en yellin'?--dat at Wilson's sto'. Dey will be
-here soon. I don't want ter stan' here en argue wid you. I 'ain't had
-nothin' ter do wid it, but dey would saddle some of it onto me ef dey
-found out I come here ter warn you. Hurry up, boy.”
-
-“I ain't gwine ter do it, Uncle Rich',” Pete declared, firmly, and with
-a grave face. “You are er old man, but you ain't givin' me good advice.
-Ef I run, dey would say I was guilty sho', en den, es you say, de dogs
-could track me down, anyway.”
-
-The boy's logic seemed unassailable. The piercing, beadlike eyes of the
-old man flickered. “Well,” he said, “I done all I could. I'm gwine move
-on. Even now, dey may know I come here at dis early time, en mix me
-up in it. Good-bye. I hope fer Mammy Lindy's sake dat dey will let you
-off--I do sho.”
-
-Left alone, Pete went out to the edge of the wood behind his cabin and
-gathered up some sticks, leaves, and pieces of bark that had fallen from
-the decaying boughs of the trees, and brought them into the cabin and
-deposited them on the broad stone hearth. Then he uncovered the coals
-he had the night before buried in the ashes, and made a fire for the
-preparation of his simple breakfast. He had a sharp sense of animal
-hunger, which was due to his long walk to and from the dance and the
-fact that he was bodily sound and vigorous. He took as much fresh-ground
-corn-meal as his hands would hold from a tow bag in a corner of the room
-and put it into a tin pan. To this he added a cup of water and a bit of
-salt, stirring it with his hand till it was well mixed. He then deftly
-formed it into a pone, and, wrapping it in a clean husk of corn, he
-deposited it in the hot ashes, covering it well with live coals. Then he
-made his coffee, being careful that the water in the pot did not rise
-as high as the point near the spout where the vessel leaked. Next he
-unwrapped a strip of “streak o' lean streak o' fat” bacon, and with
-his pocket-knife sliced some of it into a frying-pan already hot. These
-things accomplished, he had only to wait a few minutes for the heat to
-do its work, and he stepped back and stood in the doorway.
-
-Far across the meadow, now under the slanting rays of the sun, he saw
-old Uncle Richmond, bowlegged and short, waddling along through the dewy
-grass and weeds, his head bowed, his long arms swinging at his sides.
-
-“Huh!” was Pete's slow comment, “so somebody done already settled Abe
-Johnson's hash. I know in reason it was Sam Dudlow, en I reckon ef dat
-rampacious gang er white men lays hands on 'im--ef dey lays hands on
- 'im--” He was recalling certain details of the recent riots in Atlanta,
-and an unconscious shudder passed over him. “Well,” he continued to
-reflect, “Abe Johnson was a hard man on black folks, but his wife was
-er downright good 'oman. Ever'body say she was, en she _was_. It was a
-gre't pity ter kill her dat way, but I reckon Sam was afeard she'd
-tell it on 'im en had ter kill um bofe. Yes, Miz Johnson was er good
-'oman--good ter niggers. She fed lots of 'em behind dat man's back, en
-wished 'em well; en now, po', po' 'oman!”
-
-Pete went back to the fireplace and with the blade of his knife turned
-the curling white and brown strips of bacon, and with the toe of his
-coarse, worn shoe pushed fresher coals against his coffee-pot. Then for
-a moment he stood gravely looking at the fire.
-
-“Well,” he mused, with a shrugging of his shoulders. “I wish des _one
-thing_, I wish Marse Carson was here. He wouldn't let 'em tech me. He's
-de best en smartest lawyer in Georgia, en he would tell 'em what er lot
-er fools dey was ter say I done it, when I was right dar'n my baid. My!
-dat bacon smell good! I wish I had er few fresh hen aigs ter drap in dat
-brown grease. Huh! it make my mouf water.”
-
-There was no table in the room, and so when he had taken up his
-breakfast he sat down on the floor and ate it with supreme relish.
-Through all the meal, however, in spite of the arguments he was mentally
-producing, there were far under the crust of his being certain elemental
-promptings towards fear and self-preservation.
-
-“Well, dar's one thing,” he mused. “Marse Hillyer done laid me out my
-task ter do in de old fiel' en I ain't ergoin' to shirk it, 'ca'se Marse
-Carson gwine ter ax 'im, when he go in town, how I'm gittin' on, en I
-wants er good repo't. No, I ain't goin' ter shirk it, ef all de dogs en
-white men in de county come yelpin' on de hunt for Sam Dudlow.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-[Illustration: 9116]
-
-IS breakfast over, Pete shouldered his grubbing-hoe, an implement shaped
-like an adze, and made his way through the dewy undergrowth of the wood
-to an open field an eighth of a mile from his cabin. There he set to
-work on what was considered by farmers the hardest labor connected with
-the cultivation of the soil. It consisted of partly digging and partly
-pulling out by the roots the stout young bushes which infested the
-neglected old fields.
-
-Pete was hard at work in the corner of a ten-rail worm-fence, when,
-hearing a sound in the wood, which sloped down from a rocky hill
-quite near him, he saw a farmer, who lived in the neighborhood, pause
-suddenly, even in a startled manner, and stare steadily at him.
-
-“Oh!” Pete heard him exclaim; “why, you are Carson Dwight's new man,
-ain't you, from Darley?”
-
-“Yes, suh, dat me,” the negro replied. “Mr. Hillyer, de overseer fer
-my boss, set me on dis yer job. I want ter clean it up ter de branch by
-Sadday.”
-
-“Huh!” The man approached nearer, eying the negro closely from head to
-foot, his glance resting longer on Pete's hip-pocket than anywhere else.
-“Huh! I heard down at the store just now that you'd left--throwed up
-your job, I mean--an' gone clean off.”
-
-“No, I hain't throwed up no job,” the negro said, his slow intelligence
-groping for the possible cause of such a report. “I been right here
-since my boss sent me over, en I'm gwine stay lessen he sen' fer me
-ter tek care o' his hosses in town. I reckon you heard er Marse Carson
-Dwight's fine drivin' stock.” The farmer pulled his long brown beard,
-his eyes still on Pete's face; it was as if he had not caught the boy's
-last remark.
-
-“They said down at the store that you left last night, after--that you
-went off last night. A man said he seed you at the nigger blow-out on
-Hilton's farm about one o'clock, and that after it was over you turned
-towards--I don't know--I'm just tellin' you what they said down at the
-store.”
-
-“I _was_ at dat shindig,” Pete said. “I walked fum here dar en back
-ergin.”
-
-“Huh, well”--the farmer's face took on a shrewd expression--“I must
-move on. I'm lookin' fer a brown cow with a white tail, an' blaze on 'er
-face.” As the man disappeared in the wood, Pete was conscious of a
-sense of vague uneasiness which somehow seemed to be a sort of augmented
-recurrence of the feeling left by the warning of his early visitor.
-
-“Dat white man certainly act curi's,” Pete mused, as he leaned on
-the handle of his hoe and stared at the spot where the farmer had
-disappeared in the woods. “I'll bet my hat he been thinkin', lak Uncle
-Rich' said dey would, dat I had er hand in dat bloody business. Po'
-Miz Johnson--I reckon dey layin' 'er out now. She certney was good. I
-remember how she tol' me at de spring de day I come here ter try en be a
-good, steady boy en not mek dem white men pounce on me ergin. Po' 'oman!
-Seem lak er gre't pity. I reckon Abe Johnson got what was comin' ter
- 'im, but it look lak even Sam Dudlow wouldn't er struck dat good'oman
-down. Maybe he thought he had ter--maybe she cornered 'im; but I dunno;
-he's er tough nigger--de toughest I ever run ercross, en I've seed er
-lots um.”
-
-Pete leaned on the fence, wiped his perspiring brow with his bare hand,
-snapped his fingers like a whip to rid them of the drops of sweat, and
-allowed his thoughts to merge into the darker view of the situation. He
-was really not much afraid. Under grave danger, a negro has not so great
-a concern over death as a white man, because he is not endowed with
-sufficient intelligence to grasp its full import, and yet to-day Pete
-was feeling unusual qualms of unrest.
-
-“Dar's one thing sho,” he finally concluded; “dat white man looked
-powerful funny when he seed me, en he said he heard I'd run off. I'll
-bet my hat he's makin' a bee-line fer dat sto' ter tell 'em whar I is
-right now. I wish one thing. I wish Marse Carson was here; he'd sen' 'em
- 'bout deir business mighty quick.”
-
-With a shrug of indecision, the boy set to work. His back happened to be
-turned towards the store, barely visible over the swelling ground in the
-distance, and so he failed to note the rapid approach across the meadow
-of two men till they were close upon him. One was Jeff Braider, the
-sheriff of the county, a stalwart man of forty, in high top-boots, a
-leather belt holding a-long revolver, a broad-brimmed hat, and coarse
-gray suit; his companion was a hastily deputized citizen armed with a
-double-barrelled shot-gun.
-
-“Put down that hoe, Pete!” the sheriff commanded, sharply, as the negro
-turned with it in his hand. “Put it down, I say! Drop it!”
-
-“What I gwine put it down for?” the negro asked, in characteristic tone.
-“Huh! I got ter do my work.”
-
-“Drop it, and don't begin to give me your jaw,” the sheriff said.
-“You've got to come on with us. You are under arrest.”
-
-“What you 'rest me fer?” Pete asked, still doggedly.
-
-“You are accused of killing the Johnsons last night, and if you didn't
-do it, I'm here to say you are in the tightest hole an innocent man ever
-got in. King and I are going to do our level best to put you in safety
-in the Gilmore jail so you can be tried fairly by law, but we've got to
-get a move on us. The whole section is up in arms, and we'll have hard
-work dodging 'em. Come on. I won't rope you, but if you start to run
-we'll shoot you down like a rabbit, so don't try that on.”
-
-“My Gawd, Mr. Braider, I didn't kill dem folks!” Pete said, pleadingly.
-“I don't know a thing about it.”
-
-“Well, whether you did or not, they say you threatened to do it, and
-your life won't be worth a hill of beans if you stay here. The only
-thing to do is to get you to the Gilmore jail. We may make it through
-the mountains if we are careful, but we've got to git horses. We can
-borrow some from Jabe Parsons down the road, if he hasn't gone crazy
-like all the rest. Come on.”
-
-“I tell you, Mr. Braider, I don't know er thing 'bout dis,” Pete said;
-“but it looks ter me lak mebby Sam Dudlow--”
-
-“Don't make any statement to me,” the officer said, humanely enough in
-his rough way. “You are accused of a dirty job, Pete, and it will take
-a dang good lawyer to save you from the halter, even if we save you from
-this mob; but talkin' to me won't do no good. Me'n King here couldn't
-protect you from them men if they once saw you. I tell you, young man,
-all hell has broke loose. For twenty miles around no black skin will
-be safe, much less yours. Innocent or guilty, you've certainly shot off
-your mouth. Come on.”
-
-Without further protest, Pete dropped his hoe and went with them.
-Doggedly, and with an overpowering and surly sense of injury, he
-slouched along between the two men.
-
-A quarter of a mile down a narrow, private road, which was traversed
-without meeting any one, they came to Parsons' farm-house, a one-story
-frame building with a porch in front, and a roof that sloped back to
-a crude lean-to shed in the rear. A wagon stood under the spreading
-branches of a big beech, and near by a bent-tongued harrow, weighted
-down by a heap of stones, a chicken-coop, an old beehive, and a
-ramshackle buggy. No one was in sight. No living thing stirred about the
-place, save the turkeys and ducks and a solitary peacock strutting
-about in the front yard, where rows of half-buried stones from the
-mountain-sides formed the jagged borders of a gravel walk from the fence
-to the steps.
-
-The sheriff drew the gate open and, according to rural etiquette,
-hallooed lustily. After a pause the sound of some one moving in the
-house reached their ears. A window-curtain was drawn aside, and later a
-woman stood in the doorway and advanced wonderingly to the edge of the
-porch. She was portly, red of complexion, about middle-aged, and dressed
-in checked gingham, the predominating color of which was blue.
-
-“Well, I'll be switched!” she ejaculated; “what do you-uns want?”
-
-“Want to see Jabe, Mrs. Parsons; is he about?”
-
-“He's over in his hay-field, or was a minute ago. What you want with
-him?”
-
-“We've got to borrow some hosses,” the sheriff answered. “We want
-three--one fer each. We're goin' to try to dodge them blood-thirsty
-mobs, Mrs. Parsons, an' put this feller in jail, whar he'll be safe.”
-
-“_That_ boy?” The woman came down the steps, rolling her sleeves up.
-“Why, that boy didn't kill them folks. I know that boy, he's the son of
-old Mammy Linda and Uncle Lewis Warren. Now, look here, Jeff Braider,
-don't you and Bill King go and make eternal fools o' yourselves. That
-boy didn't no more do that nasty work than I did. It ain't _in_ 'im. He
-hain't that look. I know niggers as well as you or anybody else.”
-
-“No, I _didn't_ do it, Mrs. Parsons,” the prisoner affirmed. “I didn't!
-I didn't!”
-
-“I know you didn't,” said the woman. “Wasn't I standin' here in the door
-this mornin' and saw him git up an' go out to git his wood and cook his
-breakfast? Then I seed 'im shoulder his grubbin'-hoe and go to the field
-to work. You officers may think you know it all, but no nigger ain't
-agoin' to stay around like that after killin' a man an' woman in cold
-blood. The nigger that did that job was some scamp that's fur from the
-spot by this time, and not a boy fetched up among good white folks like
-this one was, with the best old mammy and daddy that ever had kinky
-heads.”
-
-“But witnesses say he threatened Abe Johnson a month ago,” argued
-Braider. “I have to do my duty, Mrs. Parsons. There never would be any
-justice if we overlooked a thing as pointed as that is.”
-
-“Threatened 'im?” the woman cried; “well, what does that prove? A nigger
-will talk back an' act surly on his death-bed if he's mad. That's all
-the way they have of defendin' theirselves. If Pete hadn't talked some
-after the lashin' he got from them men, thar'd 'a' been some'n' wrong
-with him. Now, you let 'im loose. As shore as you start off with that
-boy, he'll be lynched. The fact that you've got 'im in tow will be all
-them crazy men want. You couldn't get two miles in any direction from
-here without bein' stopped; they are as thick as fleas on all sides, an'
-every road is under watch.”
-
-“I'm sorry I can't take yore advice, Mrs. Parsons,” Braider said, almost
-out of patience. “I've got my duty to perform, an' I know what it is a
-sight better than you do.”
-
-“If you start off with that boy his blood will be on yore head,” the
-woman said, firmly. “Left alone, and advised to hide opt till this
-excitement is over, he might stand a chance to save his neck; but with
-you--why, you mought as well stand still and yell to that crazy gang to
-come on.”
-
-“Well, we've got to git horses to go on with, and yours are the
-nearest.”
-
-“Huh! you won't ride no harmless nigger to the scaffold on _my_ stock,”
- the woman said, sharply. “I know whar my duty lies. A woman with a
-thimbleful of brains don't have to listen to a long string of testimony
-to know a murderer when she sees one; that boy's as harmless as a baby
-and you are trying your level best to have him mobbed.”
-
-“Well, right is on my side, and I can take the horses if I see fit in
-the furtherance of law an' order,” said Braider. “If Jabe was here he'd
-tell me to go ahead, an' so I'll have to do it anyway. Bill, you stay
-here on guard an' I'll bridle the horses an' lead 'em out.”
-
-A queer look, half of anger, half of definite purpose, settled on the
-strong, rugged face of the woman, as she saw the sheriff stalk off to
-the barn-yard gate, enter it, and let it close after him.
-
-“Bill King,” she said, drawing nearer the man left in charge of the
-bewildered prisoner, who now for the first time under the words of his
-defender had sensed his real danger--“Bill King, you hain't agoin' to
-lead that poor boy right to his death this way--you don't look like that
-sort of a man.” She suddenly swept her furtive eyes over the barn-yard,
-evidently noting that the sheriff was now in the stable. “No, you
-hain't--for I hain't agoin' to _let_ you!” And suddenly, without warning
-even to the slightest change of facial expression, she grasped the end
-of the shot-gun the man held, and whirled him round Like a top.
-
-“Run, boy!” she cried. “Run for the woods, and God be with you!” For an
-instant Pete stood as if rooted to the spot, and then, as swift of foot
-as a young Indian, he turned and darted through the gate and round the
-farm-house, leaving the woman and King struggling for the possession of
-the gun. It fell to the ground, but she grasped King around the waist
-and clung to him with the tenacity of a bull-dog.
-
-“Good God, Mrs. Parsons,” he panted, writhing in her grasp, “let me
-loose!”
-
-There was a smothered oath from the barn-yard, and, revolver in hand,
-the sheriff ran out.
-
-“What the hell!--which way did he go?” he gasped.
-
-But King, still in the tight embrace of his assailant, seemed too badly
-upset to reply. And it was not till Braider had torn her locked hands
-loose that King could stammer out, “Round the house--into the woods!”
-
-“An' we couldn't catch 'im to save us from--” Braider said. “Madam, I'll
-handle you for this! I'll push this case against you to the full limit
-of the law!”
-
-“You'll do nothin' of the kind,” the woman said, “unless you want to
-make yourself the laughin'-stock of the whole community. In doin' what
-I done I acted fer all the good women of this country; an' when you
-run ag'in we'll beat you at the polls. Law an' order's one thing,
-but officers helpin' mobs do their dirty work is another. If the boy
-deserves a trial he deserves it, but he'd not 'a' stood one chance in
-ten million in your charge, _an' you know it_.”
-
-At this juncture a man emerged from the close-growing bushes across the
-road, a look of astonishment on his face. It was Jabe Parsons. “What's
-wrong here?” he cried, excitedly.
-
-“Oh, nothin' much,” Braider answered, with a white sneer of fury. “We
-stopped here with Pete Warren to borrow your horses to git 'im over the
-mountain to the Gilmore jail, an' your good woman grabbed Bill's gun
-while I was in the stable an' deliberately turned the nigger loose.”
-
-“Great God! what's the matter with you?” Parsons thundered at his wife,
-who, red-faced and defiant, stood rubbing a small bruised spot on her
-wrist.
-
-“Nothin's the matter with me,” she retorted, “except I've got more sense
-than you men have. I know that boy didn't kill them folks, an' I didn't
-intend to see you-all lynch 'im.”
-
-“Well, I know he did!” Parsons yelled. “But he'll be caught before
-night, anyway. He can't hide in them woods from hounds like they've got
-down the road.”
-
-“Your wife 'lowed he'd be safer in the woods than in the Gilmore jail,”
- Braider said, with another sneer.
-
-“Well, he _would_. As for that,” Parsons retorted, “if you think that
-army headed by the dead woman's daddy an' brothers would halt at a puny
-bird-cage like that jail, you don't know mountain men. They'd smash the
-damn thing like an egg-shell. I reckon a sheriff has to _pretend_ to act
-fer the law, whether he earns his salary or not. Well, I'll go down the
-road an' tell 'em whar to look. Thar'll be a picnic som 'er's nigh here
-in a powerful short while. We've got men enough to surround that whole
-mountain.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-[Illustration: 9127]
-
-HE following night was a cloudless, moonlit one, and restlessly and
-heart-sore Helen walked the upper floor of the veranda, her eyes
-constantly bent on the street leading past Dwight's on to the centre of
-the town. The greater part of the day she had spent with Linda, trying
-to pacify her and rouse the hope that Pete would not be implicated in
-the trouble in the mountains. Helen had gone down to Carson's office
-about noon, feeling vaguely that he could advise her better than any one
-else in the grave situation. She had found Garner seated at his desk,
-bent over a law-book, a studious expression on his face. Seeing her in
-the doorway, he sprang up gallantly and proffered a rickety chair, from
-which he had hastily dumped a pile of old newspapers.
-
-“Is Carson in?” she asked, sitting down.
-
-“Oh no, he's gone over to the farm,” Garner said. “I couldn't hold him
-here after he heard of the trouble. You see, Miss Helen, he thinks,
-from a few things picked up, that Pete is likely to be suspected and be
-roughly handled, and, you know, as he was partly the cause of the boy's
-going there, he naturally would feel--”
-
-“I was the _real_ cause of it,” the girl broke in, with a sigh and a
-troubled face. “We both thought it was for the best, and if it results
-in Pete's death I shall never forgive myself.”
-
-“Oh, I wouldn't look at it that way,” Garner said. “You were both acting
-for what you thought was right. As I say, I tried my best to keep Carson
-from going over there to-day, but he would go. We almost had an open
-rupture over it. You see, Miss Helen, I have set my head on seeing him
-in the legislature, and he is eternally doing things that kill votes.
-There is not a thing in the category of political offences as fatal as
-this very thing. He's already taken Pete's part and abused the men
-who whipped him, and now that the boy is suspected of retaliating and
-killing the Johnsons, why, the people will--well, I wouldn't be one bit
-surprised to see them jump on Carson himself. Men infuriated like that
-haven't any more sense than mad dogs, and they won't stand for a white
-man opposing them. But, of course, you know why Carson is acting so
-recklessly.”
-
-“I do? What do you mean, Mr. Garner?”
-
-The lawyer smiled, wiped his facile mouth with his small white hand, and
-said, teasingly: “Why, you are at the bottom of it. Carson wants to save
-the boy simply because you are indirectly interested in him. That's the
-whole thing in a nutshell. He's been as mad as a wet hen ever since they
-whipped Pete, because he was the son of your old mammy, and now that the
-boy's in actual peril Carson has gone clean daft. Well, it's reported
-among the gossips about town that you turned him down, Miss Helen--like
-you did some of the balance of us presumptuous chaps that didn't know
-enough to keep our hearts where they belonged--but you sat on the best
-man in the bunch when you did it. It's me that's doing this talking.”
-
-Helen sat silent and pale for a moment, unable to formulate a reply to
-his outspoken remark. Presently she said, evasively: “Then you think
-both of them are in actual danger?”
-
-“Well, Pete hasn't one chance in a million,” Garner said, gently. “There
-is no use trying to hide that fact; and if Carson should happen to run
-across Dan Willis--well, one or the other would have to drop. Carson
-is in a dangerous mood. He believes as firmly in Pete's innocence as he
-does in his own, and if Dan Willis dared to threaten him, as he's likely
-to do when they meet, why, Carson would defend himself.”
-
-Helen drew her veil down over her eyes and Garner could see that she was
-quivering from head to foot.
-
-“Oh, it's awful--awful!” he heard her say, softly. Then she rose and
-moved to the open door, where she stood as if undecided what step to
-take. “Is there no way to get any--any news?” she asked, tremulously.
-
-“None now,” he told her. “In times of excitement over in the mountains,
-few people come into town; they all want to stay at home and see it
-through.”
-
-She stepped out on the sidewalk, and he followed her, gallantly holding
-his hat in his hand. Scarcely a soul was in sight. The town seemed
-deserted.
-
-“Madam, rumor,” Garner said, with a smile, “reports that your friend Mr.
-Sanders, from Augusta, is coming up for a visit.”
-
-“Yes, I had a letter from him this morning,” Helen said, in a dignified
-tone. “My father must have spoken of it. It will be Mr. Sanders' first
-visit to Darley, and he will find us terribly upset. If I knew how to
-reach him I'd ask him to wait a few days till this uncertainty is
-over, but he is on his way here--is, in fact, stopping somewhere in
-Atlanta--and intends to come on up to-morrow or the next day. Does--does
-Carson--has he heard of Mr. Sanders' coming?”
-
-“Oh yes, it was sprung on him this morning for a deadly purpose,” Garner
-said, with a significant smile. “The whole gang--Keith, Wade, and Bob
-Smith--were in here trying to keep him from going to the farm. They had
-tried everything they could think of to stop him, and as a last resort
-set in to teasing. Keith told him Sanders would sit in the parlor
-and say sweet things to you while Carson was trying to liberate the
-ex-slaves of your family at the risk of bone and sinew. Keith
-said Carson was showing the finest proof of fidelity that was ever
-given--fidelity to _the man in the parlor_.”
-
-“Keith ought to have been ashamed of himself,” Helen said, with her
-first show of vexation. “And what did Carson say?”
-
-“The poor chap took it all in a good-humor,” Garner said. “In fact, he
-was so much wrought up over Pete's predicament that he hardly heard what
-they were saying.”
-
-“You really think Carson is in danger, too?” Helen continued, after a
-moment's silence.
-
-“If he meets Dan Willis, yes,” said Garner. “If he opposes the mob,
-yes again. Dan Willis has already succeeded in creating a lot of
-unpopularity for him in that quarter, and the mere sight of Carson at
-such a time would be like a torch to a dry hay-stack.”
-
-So Helen had gone home and spent the afternoon and evening in real
-torture of suspense, and now, as she walked the veranda floor alone with
-a realization of the grim possibilities of the case drawn sharply before
-her mental vision, she was all but praying aloud for Carson's safe
-return, and anxiously keeping her gaze on the moonlit street below.
-Suddenly her attention was drawn to the walk in front of the Dwight
-house. Some one was walking back and forth in a nervous manner, the
-intermittent flare of a cigar flashing out above the shrubbery like the
-glow of a lightning-bug. Could it be--had Carson returned and entered
-by the less frequently used gate in the rear? For several minutes she
-watched the figure as it strode back and forth with never-ceasing tread,
-and then, fairly consumed with the desire to set her doubts at rest, she
-went down into the garden at the side of the house, softly approached
-the open gate between the two homesteads, and called out: “Carson, is
-that you?”
-
-The figure paused and turned, the fire of the cigar described a red
-half-circle against the dark background, but no one spoke. Then, as she
-waited at the gate, her heart in her mouth, the smoker came towards her.
-It was old Henry Dwight. He wore no hat nor coat, the night being warm,
-and one of his fat thumbs was under his broad suspender.
-
-“No, it's not him, Miss Helen,” he said, rather gruffly. “He hasn't got
-back yet. I've had my hands full since supper. My wife is in a bad way.
-She has been worrying awfully since twelve o'clock, when Carson didn't
-turn up to dinner as usual. She's guessed what he went to the farm for,
-and she's as badly upset as old Linda is over that trifling Pete. I
-thought I had enough trouble before the war over _my_ niggers, but here,
-forty years later, _yours_ are upsetting things even worse. I only wish
-the men that fought to free the black scamps had some part of the burden
-to bear.”
-
-“It really is awful,” Helen responded; “and so Mrs. Dwight is upset by
-it?”
-
-“Oh yes, we had the doctor to come, and he gave some slight dose or
-other, but he said the main thing was to get Carson back and let
-her know for sure that he was safe and sound. I sent a man out there
-lickety-split on the fastest horse I have, and he ought to have got back
-two hours ago. That's what I'm out here for. I know she's not going to
-let me rest till her mind is at ease.”
-
-“Do you really think any actual harm could have come to Carson?” Helen
-inquired, anxiously.
-
-“It could come to anybody who has the knack my boy has for eternally
-rubbing folks the wrong way,” the old man retorted from the depths of
-his irritation; “but, Lord, my young lady, _you_ are at the bottom of
-it!”
-
-“I? Oh, Mr. Dwight, don't say that!” Helen pleaded.
-
-“Well, I'm only telling you the _truth_,” said Dwight, throwing his
-cigar away and putting, both thumbs under his suspenders. “You know that
-as well as I do. He sees how you are bothered about your old mammy, and
-he has simply taken up your cause. It's just what I'd 'a' done at his
-age. I reckon I'd 'a' fought till I dropped in my tracks for a girl
-I--but from all accounts you and Carson couldn't agree, or rather _you_
-couldn't. He seems to be agreeing now and staking his life and political
-chances on it. Well, I don't blame him. It never run in the Dwight
-blood to love more than once, an' then it was always for the pick of the
-flock. Well, you are the pick in this town, an' I wouldn't feel like he
-was my boy if he stepped down and out as easy as some do these days. I
-met him on his way to the farm and tried to shame him out of the trip.
-I joined the others in teasing him about that Augusta fellow, who can
-do his courting by long-distance methods in an easy seat at his
-writing-desk, while up-country chaps are doing the rough work for
-nothing, but it didn't feaze 'im. He tossed his stubborn head, got
-pretty red in the face, and said he was trying to help old Linda and
-Lewis out, and that he know well enough you didn't care a cent for him.”
-
-Helen had grown hot and cold by turns, and she now found herself unable
-to make any adequate response to such personal allusions.
-
-“Huh, I see I got you teased, too!” Dwight said, with a short, staccato
-laugh. “Oh, well, you mustn't mind me. I'll go in and see if my wife is
-asleep, and if she is I'll go to bed myself.”
-
-Helen, deeply depressed, and beset with many conflicting emotions,
-turned back to the veranda, and, instead of going up to her room, she
-reclined in a hammock stretched between two of the huge, fluted columns.
-She had been there perhaps half an hour when her heart almost stopped
-pulsating as she caught, the dull beat of horses' hoofs up the street.
-Rising, she saw a horseman rein in at the gate at Dwight's. It was
-Carson; she knew that by the way he dismounted and threw the rein over
-the gate-post.
-
-“Carson!” she called out. “Oh, Carson, I want to see you!”
-
-He heard, and came along the sidewalk to meet her at the gate where
-she now stood. What had come over him? There was an utter droop of
-despondent weariness upon him, and then as he drew near she saw that his
-face was pale and haggard. For a moment he stood, his hand on the gate
-she was holding open, and only stared.
-
-“Oh, what has happened?” she cried. “I've been waiting for you. We
-haven't heard a word.”
-
-In a tired, husky voice, for he had made many a speech through the
-day, he told her of Pete's escape. “He's still hiding somewhere in the
-mountains,” he said.
-
-“Oh, then he may get away after all!” she cried.
-
-Dwight said nothing, seeming to avoid her great, staring, anxious eyes.
-She laid her hand almost unconsciously on his arm.
-
-“Don't you think he has a chance, Carson?” she repeated--“a bare
-chance?”
-
-“The whole mountain is surrounded, and they are beating the woods,
-covering every inch of the ground,” he said. “It is now only a question
-of time. They will wait till daybreak, and then continue till they have
-found him. How is Mam' Linda?”
-
-“Nearly dead,” Helen answered, under her breath.
-
-“And my mother?” he said.
-
-“She is only worried,” Helen told him. “Your father thinks she will be
-all right as soon as she is assured of your return.”
-
-“Only worried? Why, he sent me word she was nearly dead,” Carson said,
-with a feeble flare of indignation. “I wanted to stay, to be there to
-make one final effort to convince them, but when the message reached me,
-and things were at a standstill anyway, I came home, and now, even if I
-started back to-night, I'd likely be too late. He tricked me--my father
-tricked me!”
-
-“And you yourself? Did you meet that--Dan Willis?” Helen asked. He
-stared at her hesitatingly for an instant, and then said: “I happened
-not to. He was very active in the chase and seemed always to be
-somewhere else. He killed all my efforts.” Carson leaned heavily against
-the white paling fence as he continued. “As soon as I'd talk a crowd
-of men into my way of thinking, he'd come along and fire them with fury
-again. He told them I was only making a grandstand play for the negro
-vote, and they swallowed it. They swallowed it and jeered and hissed me
-as I went along. Garner is right. I've killed every chance I ever had
-with those people. But I don't care.”
-
-Helen sighed. “Oh, Carson, you did it all because--because I felt as I
-did about Pete. I know that was it.”
-
-He made no denial as he stood awkwardly avoiding her eyes.
-
-“I shall never, never forgive myself,” she said, in pained accents. “Mr.
-Garner and all your friends say that your election was the one thing you
-held desirable, the one thing that would--would thoroughly reinstate you
-in your father's confidence, and yet I--I--oh, Carson I _did_ want you
-to win! I wanted it--wanted it--wanted it!”
-
-“Oh, well, don't bother about that,” he said, and she saw that he was
-trying to hide his own disappointment. “I admit I started into this
-because--because I knew how keenly you felt for Linda, but to-day,
-Helen, as I rode from mad throng to mad throng of those good men with
-their dishevelled hair and bloodshot eyes, their very souls bent to
-that trail, that pitiful trail of revenge, I began to feel that I was
-fighting for a great principle, a principle that you had planted within
-me. I gloried in it for its own sake, and because it had its birth in
-your sweet sympathy and love for the unfortunate. I could never have
-experienced it but for you.”
-
-“But you failed,” Helen almost sobbed. “You failed.”
-
-“Yes, utterly. What I've done amounted to nothing more than irritating
-them. Those men, many of whom I love and admire, were wounded to their
-hearts, and I was only keeping their sores open with my fine-spun
-theories of human justice. They will learn their lesson slowly, but
-_they will learn it_. When they have caught and lynched poor, stupid
-Pete, they may learn later that he was innocent, and then they will
-realize what I was trying to keep them from doing. They will be friendly
-to me then, but Wiggin will be in office.”
-
-“Yes, my father thinks this thing is going to defeat you.” Helen sighed.
-“And, Carson, it's killing me to think that I am the prime cause of it.
-If I'd had a man's head I'd have known that your effort could accomplish
-nothing, and I'd have been like Mr. Garner and the others, and asked
-you not to mix up in it; but I couldn't help myself. Mam' Linda has your
-name on her lips with every breath. She thinks the sun rises and sets in
-you, and that you only have to give an order to have it obeyed.”
-
-“That's the pity of it,” Carson said, with a sigh.
-
-At this juncture there was the sound of a window-sash sliding upward,
-and old Dwight put out his head.
-
-“Come on in!” he called out. “Your mother is awake and absolutely
-refuses to believe you haven't a dozen bullet-holes in you.”
-
-“All right, father, I'm coming,” Carson said, and impulsively he held
-out his hand and clasped Helen's in a steady, sympathetic pressure.
-
-“Now, you go to bed, little girl,” he said, more tenderly than he
-realized. In fact, it was a term he had used only once before, long
-before her brother's death. “Pardon me,” he pleaded; “I didn't know what
-I was saying. I--I was worried over seeing you look so tired, and--and I
-spoke without thinking.”
-
-“You can say it whenever you wish, Carson,” she said. “As if I could get
-angry at you after--after--” But she did not finish, for with her hand
-still warmly clasping his fingers, she was listening to a distant sound.
-It was a restless human tread on a resounding floor.
-
-“It's Mam' Linda,” Helen said. “She walks like that night and day.
-I must go to her and--tell her you are back, but oh, how _can_ I?
-Good-night, Carson. Ill never forget what you have done--never!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-[Illustration: 9139]
-
-FTER an almost sleepless night, spent for the greater part in despondent
-reflections over his failure in the things to which he had directed
-his hopes and energies, Carson rose about seven o'clock, went into his
-mother's room to ask how she had rested through the night, and then
-descended, to breakfast. It was eight o'clock when he arrived at the
-office. Garner was there in a cloud of dust, sweeping a pile of torn
-papers into the already filled fireplace.
-
-“I'm going to touch a match to this the first rainy day--if I think of
-it,” he said. “It's liable to set the roof on fire when it's dry as it
-is now.”
-
-“Any news from the mountains?” Carson asked, as he sat down at his desk.
-
-“Yes; Pole Baker was in here just now.” Garner leaned his broom-handle
-against the mantel-piece, and stood critically eying his partner's worn
-face and dejected mien. “He said the mob, or mobs, for there are twenty
-factions of them, had certainly hemmed Pete in. He was hiding somewhere
-on Elk Knob, and they hadn't then located him. Pole left there long
-before day and said they had already set in afresh. I reckon it will be
-over soon. He told me to keep you here if I had to swear out a writ of
-dangerous lunacy against you. He says you have not only killed your own
-political chances, but that you couldn't save the boy if you were the
-daddy of every man in the chase. They've smelled blood and they want to
-taste it.”
-
-“You needn't worry about me,” Carson said, dejectedly. “I realize how
-helpless I was yesterday, and am still. There was only one thing that
-might have been done if we had acted quickly, and that was to telegraph
-the Governor for troops.”
-
-“But you wouldn't sanction that; you know you wouldn't,” said Garner.
-“You know every mother's son of those white men is acting according to
-the purest dictates of his inner soul. They think they are right. They
-believe in law, and while I am a member of the bar, by Heaven! I say
-to you that our whole legal system is rotten to the core. Politics will
-clear a criminal at the drop of a hat. A dozen voters can jerk a man
-from life imprisonment to the streets of this town by a single telegram.
-No, you know those sturdy men over there think they are right, and you
-would not be the cause of armed men shooting them down like rabbits in a
-fence corner.”
-
-“No, they think they are right,” Carson said. “And they were my friends
-till this came up. Any mail?”
-
-“I haven't been to the post-office. I wish you'd go. You need exercise;
-you are off color--you are as yellow as a new saddle. Drop this thing.
-The Lord Himself can't make water run up-hill. Quit thinking about it.”
-
-Carson went out into the quiet street and walked along to the
-post-office. At the intersection of the streets near the Johnston
-House, on any ordinary day, a dozen drays and hacks in the care of
-negro drivers would have been seen, and on the drays and about the hacks
-stood, as a rule, many idle negro men and boys; but this morning the
-spot was significantly vacant. At the negro barber-shop, kept by Buck
-Black, a mulatto of marked dignity and intelligence for one of his race,
-only the black barbers might be seen, and they were not lounging about
-the door, but stood at their chairs, their faces grave, their tongues
-unusually silent. They might be asking themselves questions as to the
-possible extent of the fires of race-hatred just now raging--if the
-capture and death of Pete Warren would quench the conflagration, or
-if it would roll on towards them like the licking flames of a burning
-prairie--they might, I say, ask _themselves_ such questions, but to the
-patrons of their trade they kept discreet silence. And no white man who
-went near them that day would ask them what they believed or what they
-felt, for the blacks are not a people who give much thought even to
-their own social problems. They had leaned for many generations upon
-white guidance, and, with childlike, hereditary instinct, they were
-leaning still.
-
-Finding no letters of importance in the little glass-faced and numbered
-box at the post-office, Carson, sick at heart and utterly discouraged,
-went up to the Club. Here, idly knocking the balls about on a
-billiard-table, a cigar in his mouth, was Keith Gordon.
-
-“Want to play a game of pool?” he asked.
-
-“Not this morning, old man,” Carson answered.
-
-“Well, I don't either,” said Keith. “I went to the bank and tried to add
-up some figures for the old man, but my thinker wouldn't work. It's out
-of whack. That blasted nigger Pete is the prime cause of my being upset.
-I came by Major Warren's this morning. Sister feels awfully sorry
-for Mam' Linda, and asked me to take her a jar of jelly. You know old
-colored people love little attentions like that from white people, when
-they are sick or in trouble. Well”--Keith held up his hands, the palms
-outward--“I don't want any more in mine. I've been to death-bed scenes,
-funerals, wrecks on railroads, and all sorts of horrors, but that was
-simply too much. It simply beggars description--to see that old woman
-bowed there in her door like a dumb brute with its tongue tied to a
-stake. It made me ashamed of myself, though, for not at least trying
-to do something. I glory in you, old man. You failed, but you _tried_.
-By-the-way, that's the only comfort Mam' Linda has had--the only thing.
-Helen was there, the dear girl--and to think her visit home has to be
-like this!--she was there trying to soothe the old woman, but nothing
-that was said could produce anything but that awful groaning of hers
-till Lewis said something about your going over there yesterday, and
-that stirred her up. She rose in her chair and walked to the gate and
-folded her big arms across her breast.
-
-“'I thank God young marster felt fer me dat way,' she said. 'He's
-de best young man on de face o' de earth. I'll go down ter my grave
-blessing 'im fer dis. He's got er _soul_ in 'im. He knows how old Mammy
-Lindy feels en he was tryin' ter help her, God bless 'im! He couldn't do
-nothin', but he tried--he tried, dough everybody was holdin' 'im back en
-sayin' it would spile his 'lection. Well, if it _do_ harm 'im, it will
-show dat Gawd done turn ergin white en black bofe.' I came away,” Keith
-finished, after a pause, in which Carson said nothing. “I couldn't stand
-it. Helen was crying like a child, her face wet with tears, and she
-wasn't trying to hide it. I was looking for some one to come every
-minute with the final news, and I didn't want to face that. Good God,
-old man, what are we coming to? Historians, Northern ones, seem to think
-the days of slavery were benighted, but God knows such things as this
-never happened then. Now, did it?”
-
-“No; it's terrible,” Carson agreed, and he stepped to a window and
-looked out over the roofs of the near-by stores to the wagon-yard
-beyond.
-
-“Well, the great and only, the truly accepted one,” Keith went on, in
-a lighter tone, “the man who did us all up brown, Mr. Earle Sanders, of
-Augusta, has unwittingly chosen a gloomy date for his visit. He's here,
-installed in the bridal-chamber of the Hotel de Johnston. Helen got a
-note from him just as I was leaving. On my soul, old man--maybe it's
-because I want to see it that way--but, really, it didn't seem to me
-that she looked exactly elated, you know, like I imagined she would,
-from the way the local gossips pile it on. You know, the idea struck me
-that maybe she is not _really engaged_, after all.”
-
-“She is worried; she is not herself to-day,” Carson said, coldly, though
-in truth his blood was surging hotly through his veins. It had come
-at last. The man who was to rob him of all he cared for in life was at
-hand. Turning from Keith, he pretended to be looking over some of
-the dog-eared magazines in the reading-room, and then feeling an
-overwhelming desire to be alone with the dull pain in his breast, he
-waved a careless signal to Keith and went down to the street. In front
-of the hotel stood a pair of sleek, restive bays harnessed to a new
-top-buggy. They were held by the owner of the best livery-stable in the
-town, a rough ex-mountaineer.
-
-“Say, Carson,” the man called out, proudly, “you'll have to git up early
-in the morning to produce a better yoke of thorough-breds than these.
-Never been driven over these roads before. I didn't intend to let 'em
-out fer public use right now, but a big, rich fellow from Augusta is
-here sparkin', and he wanted the best I had and wouldn't touch anything
-else. Money wasn't any object. He turned up his nose at all my other
-stock. Gee! look at them trim legs and thighs--a dead match as two
-black-eyed peas.”
-
-“Yes, they are all right.” Carson walked on and went into Blackburn's
-store, for no other reason than that he wanted to avoid meeting people
-and discussing the trouble Pete Warren was in, or hearing further
-comments on the stranger's visit. He might have chosen a better retreat,
-however, for in a group at the window nearest the hotel he found
-Blackburn, Garner, Bob Smith, and Wade Tingle, all peering stealthily
-out through the dingy glass at the team Carson had just inspected.
-
-“He'll be out in a minute,” Wade was saying, in an undertone. “Quit
-pushing me, Bob! They say he's got dead loads of money.”
-
-“You bet he has,” Bob declared; “he had a wad of it in big bills large
-enough to stuff a sofa-pillow with. Ike, the porter, who trucked his
-trunk up, said he got a dollar tip. The head waiter is expecting to buy
-a farm after he leaves. Gee! there he comes! Say, Garner, _you_ ought to
-know; is that a brandy-and-soda complexion?”
-
-“No, he doesn't drink a drop,” answered Garner. “Well, he looks all
-right, as well as I can see through this immaculate window with my eyes
-full of spiderwebs. My, what clothes! Say, Bob, is that style of derby
-the thing now? It looks like an inverted milk-bucket. Come here, Carson,
-and take a peep at the conqueror. If Keith were here we'd have a
-quomm. By George, there's Keith now! He's watching at the window of the
-barber-shop. Call him over, Blackburn. Let's have him here; we need more
-pall-bearers.”
-
-“Seems to me you boys are the corpses,” Blackburn jested. “I'd be
-ashamed to let a clothing-store dummy like that beat me to the tank.”
-
-Carson had heard enough. In his mood and frame of mind their open
-frivolity cut him to the quick. Going out, unnoticed by the others, he
-went to his office. In the little, dusty consultation-room in the rear
-there was an old leather couch. On this he threw himself. There had been
-moments in his life when he had worn the crown of misery, notably the day
-Albert Warren was buried, when, on approaching Helen to offer her his
-sympathies, she had turned from him with a shudder. That had been a
-gloomy hour, but _this_--he covered his face with his hands and lay
-still. On that day a faint hope had vaguely fluttered within him--a hope
-of reformation; a hope of making a worthy place for himself in life
-and of ultimately winning her favor and forgiveness. But now it was all
-over. He had actually seen with his own eyes the man who was to be her
-husband. He was sure now that the report was true. The visit at such a
-grave crisis confirmed all that had been said. Helen had telegraphed him
-of her trouble, and Sanders had made all haste to reach her side.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-[Illustration: 9147]
-
-EHIND the dashing bays the newcomer drove down to Warren's. On the
-seat beside him sat a negro boy sent from the livery-stable to hold the
-horses. Sanders was dressed in the height of fashion, was young, of the
-blond type, and considered handsome. A better figure no man need have
-desired. The people living in the Warren neighborhood, who peered
-curiously out of windows, not having Dwight's affairs at heart, indulged
-in small wonder over the report that Helen was about to accept such a
-specimen of city manhood in preference to Carson or any of “the home
-boys.”
-
-Alighting at the front gate, Sanders went to the door and rang. He was
-admitted by a colored maid and shown into the quaint old parlor with its
-tall, gilt-framed, pier-glass mirrors and carved mahogany furniture.
-The wide front, lace-curtained windows, which opened on a level with
-the veranda floor, let in a cooling breeze which was most agreeable in
-contrast to the beating heat out-of-doors.
-
-He had only a few minutes to wait, for Helen had just returned from
-a visit to Linda's cottage and was in the library across the hall.
-He heard her coming and stood up, flushing expectantly, an eager
-light flashing in his eyes.
-
-“I am taking you by surprise,” he said, as he grasped her extended hand
-and held it for an instant.
-
-“Well, you know you told me when I left,” Helen said, “that it would
-be impossible for you to get away from business till after the first of
-next month, so I naturally supposed--”
-
-“The trouble was”--he laughed as he stood courteously waiting for her to
-sit before doing so himself--“the trouble was that I didn't know myself
-then as I do now. I thought I could wait like any sensible man of my
-age, but I simply couldn't, Helen. After you left, the town was simply
-unbearable. I seemed not to want to go anywhere but to the places to
-which we went together, and there I suffered a regular agony of the
-blues. The truth is, I'm killing two birds with one stone. We were about
-to send our lawyer to Chattanooga to settle up a legal matter there, and
-I persuaded my partner to let me do it. So you see, after all, I shall
-not be wholly idle. I can run up there from here and back, I believe, in
-the same day.”
-
-“Yes, it is not far,” Helen answered. “We often go up there to do
-shopping.”
-
-“I'm going to confess something else,” Sanders said, flushing slightly.
-“Helen, you may not forgive me for it, but I've been uneasy.”
-
-“Uneasy?” Helen leaned as far back in her chair as she could, for he had
-bent forward till his wide, hungry eyes were close to hers.
-
-“Yes, I've fought the feeling every day and night since you left. At
-times my very common-sense would seem to conquer and I'd feel a little
-better about it, but it would only be a short time till I'd be down in
-the dregs again.”
-
-“Why, what is the matter?” Helen asked, half fearfully.
-
-“It was your letters, Helen,” he said, his handsome face very grave as
-he leaned towards her.
-
-“My letters? Why, I wrote as often--even often-er--than I promised,” the
-girl said.
-
-“Oh, don't think me over-exacting,” Sanders implored her with eyes and
-voice. “I know you did all you agreed to do, but somehow--well, you
-know you seemed so much like one of us down there that I had become
-accustomed to thinking of you as almost belonging to Augusta; but your
-letters showed how very dear Darley and its people are to you, and I was
-obliged to--well, face the grim fact that we have a strong rival here in
-the mountains.”
-
-“I thought you knew that I adore my old home,” she said, simply.
-
-“Oh yes, I know--most people do--but, Helen, the letter you wrote about
-the dance your friends--your 'boys,' as you used to call them--gave you
-at that quaint club, why, it is simply a piece of literature. I've read
-it over and over time after time.”
-
-“Oh, I only wrote as I felt, out of a full heart,” the girl said.
-“When you meet them, and know them as I do, you will not wonder at my
-fidelity--at my enthusiasm over that particular tribute.”
-
-Sanders laughed. “Well, I suppose I am simply jealous--jealous not alone
-for myself, but for Augusta. Why, you can't imagine how you are missed.
-A party of the old crowd went around to your aunt's as usual the
-Wednesday following your departure, but we were so blue we could hardly
-talk to one another. Helen, the spirit of our old gatherings was gone.
-Your aunt actually cried, and your uncle really drank too much brandy
-and soda.”
-
-“Well, you mustn't think I don't miss them all,” Helen said, deeply
-touched. “I think of them every day. It was only that I had been away
-so long that it was glorious to get back home--to my real home again. I
-love it down there; it is beautiful; you were all so lovely to me, but
-this here is different.”
-
-“That's what I felt in reading your letters,” Sanders said. “A tone of
-restful content and happiness was in every line you wrote. Somehow,
-I wanted you, in my selfish heart, to be homesick for us so that you
-would”--the visitor drew a deep breath--“be all the more likely to--to
-consent to live there, you know, _some day_, permanently.” Helen made
-no reply, and Sanders, flushing deeply, wisely turned the subject, as he
-rose and went to a window and drew the curtain aside.
-
-“Do you see those horses?” he asked, with a smile. “I brought them
-thinking I might prevail on you to take a drive with me this morning. I
-have set my heart on seeing some of the country around the town, and I
-want to do it with you. I hope you can go.”
-
-“Oh, not to-day! I couldn't think of it to-day!” Helen cried,
-impulsively.
-
-“Not to-day?” he said, crestfallen.
-
-“No. Haven't you heard about Mam' Linda's awful trouble?”
-
-“Oh, that is _her_ son!” Sanders said. “I heard something of it at the
-hotel. I see. She really must be troubled.”
-
-“It is a wonder it hasn't killed her,” Helen answered. “I have never
-seen a human being under such frightful torture.”
-
-“And can nothing be done?” Sanders asked. “I'd really like to be of
-use--to help, you know, in _some_ way.”
-
-“There is nothing to be done--nothing that _can_ be done,” Helen said.
-“She knows that, and is simply waiting for the end.”
-
-“It's too bad,” Sanders remarked, awkwardly. “Might I go to see her?”
-
-“I think you'd better not,” said the girl. “I don't believe she would
-care to see any but very old friends. I used to think I could comfort
-her, but even I fail now. She is insensible to anything but that
-one haunting horror. She has tried a dozen times to go over to the
-mountains, but my father and Uncle Lewis have prevented it. That mob,
-angry as they are, might really kill her, for she would fight for her
-young like a tigress, and people wrought up like those are mad enough to
-do anything.”
-
-“And some people think the negro may not really be guilty, do they not?”
- Sanders asked.
-
-“I am sure he is not,” Helen sighed. “I feel it; I know it.”
-
-There was the sound of a closing gate, and Helen looked out.
-
-“It is my father,” she said. “Perhaps he has heard something.”
-
-Leaving her guest, she went out to the steps. “Whose turn-out?” the
-Major asked, with admiring curiosity, indicating the horses and buggy.
-
-“Mr. Sanders has come,” she said, simply. “He's in the parlor. Is there
-any news?”
-
-“Nothing.” The old man removed his hat and wiped his perspiring brow.
-“Nothing except that Carson Dwight has gone over there on a fast horse.
-Linda sent him a message, begging him to make one more effort, and he
-went. All his friends tried to stop him, but he dashed out of town like
-a madman. He won't accomplish a thing, and it may cost him his life,
-but he's the right sort, daughter. He's got a heart in him as big as
-all out-of-doors. Blackburn told him Dan Willis was over there, a raging
-demon in human shape, but it only made Carson the more determined. His
-father saw him and ordered him back, and was speechless with fury when
-Carson simply waved his hand and rode on. Go back to the parlor. I'll
-join you in a minute.”
-
-“Have you heard anything?” Sanders asked, as Helen re-entered the room
-and stood white and distraught before him.
-
-She hesitated, her shifting glance on the floor, and then she stared at
-him almost as one in a dream. “He has heard nothing except--except that
-Carson Dwight has gone over there. He has gone. Mam' Linda begged him to
-make one other effort and he couldn't resist her. She--she was good to
-his mother and to him when he was a child, and he feels grateful. She
-thinks he is the only one that can help. She told me last night that she
-believed in him as she once believed in God. He can do nothing, but he
-knew it would comfort her for him to try.”
-
-“This Mr. Dwight is one of your--your old friends, is he not?”
-
-Sanders' face was the playground of conflicting emotions as he stood
-staring at her.
-
-“Yes,” Helen answered; “one of my best and truest.”
-
-“He has undertaken a dangerous thing, has he not?” Sanders managed to
-say.
-
-“Dangerous?” Helen shuddered. “He has an enemy there who is now
-seeking his life. They are sure to meet. They have already quarrelled,
-and--_about this very thing_.”
-
-She sat down in the chair she had just left and Sanders stood near her.
-There was a voice in the hall. It was the Major ordering a servant to
-bring in mint julep, and the next moment he was in the parlor hospitably
-introducing himself to the visitor.
-
-Seeing her opportunity, Helen rose and left them together. She went up
-to her room, with heavy, dragging footsteps, and stood at the window
-overlooking the Dwight garden and lawn.
-
-Carson knew that Sanders was in town, she told herself, in gloomy
-self-reproach. He knew his rival was with her, and right now as the poor
-boy was speeding on to--his death, he thought Sanders was making love to
-her. Helen bit her quivering lip and clinched her fingers. “Poor boy!”
- she thought, almost with a sob, “he deserves better treatment than
-that.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-[Illustration: 9154]
-
-N his escape from the sheriff and his deputy, Pete Warren ran with the
-speed of a deer-hound through the near-by woods. Thinking his pursuers
-were close behind him, he did not stop even to listen to their
-footsteps. Through dell and fen, up hill and down, over rocks and
-through tangled undergrowth he forged his way, his tongue lolling from
-the corner of his gaping mouth. The thorns and briers had tom gashes in
-his cheeks, neck, and hands, and left his clothing in strips. The wild
-glare of a hunted beast was in his eyes. The land was gradually sloping
-upward. He was getting upon the mountain. For a moment the distraught
-creature paused, bent his ear to listen and try to decide, rationally,
-calmly, which was the better plan, to hide in the caverns and craggy
-recesses of the frowning heights above or speed onward over more level
-ground. For a moment the drumlike pounding of his heart was all
-the sound he heard, and then the blast of a hunter's horn broke
-the stillness, not two hundred yards away, and was thrown back in
-reverberating echoes from the mountain-side. This was followed by
-a far-off answering shout, the report of a signal-gun, and then the
-mellow, terrifying baying of blood-hounds fell upon his ears. Pete stood
-erect, his knees quivering. No thought of prayer passed through his
-brain. Prayer, to his mind, was only a series of empty vocal sounds
-heard chiefly in churches where black men and women stood or knelt in
-their best clothes, and certainly not for emergencies like this, where
-granite heavens were closing upon stony earth and he was caught between.
-
-Suddenly bending lower, and fresher for the second wind he had got,
-he sped onward again, choosing the valley rather than the steeper
-mountain-side. Shouts, gun reports, horn-blasts, and the baying of the
-hounds now followed him. Presently he came to a clear mountain creek
-about twenty feet wide and not deeper anywhere than his waist, and in
-many places barely covering the slimy brown stones over which it flowed.
-Here, as if by inspiration, came the remembrance of some story he had
-heard about a pursued negro managing to elude the scent of blood-hounds
-by taking to water, and into the icy stream Pete plunged, and, slipping,
-stumbling, falling, he made his way onward.
-
-But his reason told him this slow method really would not benefit him,
-for his pursuers would soon catch up and see him from the banks. He had
-waded up the stream about a quarter of a mile, when he came to a spot
-where the stout branches of a sturdy leaning beech hung down within his
-reach. The idea which came to him was worthy of a white man's brain,
-for, pulling on the bough and finding it firm, he decided upon the
-original plan of getting out of the water there, where his trail would
-be lost to sight or scent, and climbing into the dense foliage above.
-His pursuers might not think to look upward at exactly that spot, and
-the hounds, bent on catching the scent from the ground where he landed,
-would speed onward, farther and farther away. At all events it was worth
-the trial.
-
-With quivering hands he drew the bough down till its leaves sank under
-the water. It bore his weight well and from it he climbed to the
-massive trunk and higher upward, till, in a fork of the tree, he rested,
-noticing, with a throb of relief, that the bough had righted itself and
-hung as before above the surface of the stream. On came the dogs; he
-could not hear them now, for, intent upon their work, they made no
-sound, but the hoarse, maddened voices of men under their guidance
-reached his ears. The swish through the undergrowth, the patter, as of
-rain on dry leaves, as their claws hurled the ground behind them, the
-snuffing and sneezing--_that was the hounds_. Closer and closer Pete
-hugged the tree, hardly breathing, fearing now that the water dripping
-from his clothing or the bruised leaves of the bough might betray his
-presence. But the hounds, one on either side of the stream, their noses
-to the earth, dashed on. Pete caught only a gleam of their sleek, dim
-coats and they were gone. Behind them, panting, followed a dozen men.
-In his fear of being seen, Pete dared not even look at their inflamed
-faces. With closed eyes pressed against his wet coat-sleeve, he clung to
-his place, a hunted thing, neither fish, fowl, nor beast, and yet, like
-them all, a creature of the wilderness, endowed with the instinct of
-self-preservation.
-
-“They will run 'im down!” he heard a man say. “Them dogs never have
-failed. The black devil thought he'd throw 'em off by taking to water.
-He didn't know we had one for each bank.”
-
-On ran the men, the sound of their progress becoming less and less
-audible as they receded. Was he safe now? Pete's slow intelligence
-answered no. He was still fully alive to his danger. He might stay there
-for awhile, but not for long. Already, perhaps owing to his desperate
-running, he had an almost maddening thirst, a thirst which the sheer
-sight of the cool stream so near tantalized. Should he descend, satisfy
-his desire, and attempt to regain his place of hiding? No, for he might
-not seclude himself so successfully the next time. Then, with his face
-resting on his arm, he began to feel drowsy. Twisting his body about,
-he finally found himself in a position in which he could recline
-still close to the tree and rest a little, though his feet and legs,
-surcharged with blood, were painfully weighted downward. The forest
-about him was very quiet. Some bluebirds above his head were singing
-merrily. A gray squirrel with a fuzzy tail was perched inquiringly
-on the brown bough of a near-by pine. Pete reclined thus for several
-minutes, and then the objects about him appeared to be in a blur. The
-far off shouts, horn-blasts, and gun reports beat less insistently on
-his tired brain, and then he found himself playing with a kitten--the
-queerest, most amusing kitten--in the sunlight in front of his mother's
-door.
-
-He must have slept for hours, for when he opened his eyes the sun was
-sinking behind the top of a distant hill. He tried to draw his aching
-legs up higher and felt stinging pricks of pain from his hips to his
-toes, as his blood leaped into circulation again. After several efforts
-he succeeded in standing on the bough. To his pangs of thirst were now
-added those of hunger. For hours he stood thus. He saw the light of day
-die out, first on the landscape and later from the clear sky. Now,
-he told himself, under cover of night, he would escape, but something
-happened to prevent the attempt. Through the darkness he saw the
-flitting lights off many pine torches. They passed to and fro under
-the trees, sometimes quite near him, and as far as he could see up the
-mountain-sides they flickered like the sinister night-eyes of his doom.
-He stood till he felt as if he could do so no longer, and then he got
-down on the bough as before, and after hours of conscious hunger and
-thirst and cramping pains he slept again. Thus he passed that night, and
-when the golden rays of sunlight came piercing the gray mountain mists
-and flooding the landscape with its warm glory, Pete Warren, hearing the
-voices of sleepless revenge, now more numerous and harsh and packed with
-hate--hearing them on all sides from far and near--dared not stir. He
-remained perched in his leafy nook like some half-knowing, primeval
-thing, avoiding the flint-tipped arrows of the high-cheeked,
-straight-haired men lurking beneath.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-[Illustration: 9159]
-
-ARSON DWIGHT remained two days in the vicinity of his farm waiting
-gloomily for the discovery and arrest of Pete Warren, his sole
-hope being that at the last grewsome moment he might prevail on the
-distraught man-hunters to listen to a final appeal for law and order.
-He was forced, however, to return to Darley, feeling sure, as did
-the others, that Pete was hiding in some undiscovered place in the
-mountains, or shrewd and deft enough to avoid the approach of man or
-hound. But it would not be for long, the hunters told themselves, for
-the entire spot was surrounded and well guarded and they would starve
-him out.
-
-“The gang” breathed more freely when they saw Carson appear in the
-doorway of the den on the night of his return, and learned that through
-some miracle he had failed to meet Dan Willis, though not one of them
-was favorably impressed by the outward appearance of their leader. His
-eyes, in their darkened sockets, gleamed like despondent fires; on his
-tanned cheeks hectic flushes had appeared and his hands quivered as if
-from nervous exhaustion. Not a man among them dared reproach him for the
-further and futile political mistake he had made. He was a ruined man,
-and yet they admired him the more as they looked down on him, begrimed
-with the dregs of his failure. Garner's opinion, to himself expressed,
-was that Dwight was a failure only on the surface, but that it was the
-surface which counted everywhere except in heaven, and there no one knew
-what sort of coin would be current. Garner loved him. He loved him for
-his hopeless fidelity to Helen, for his firm-jawed clinging to a mere
-principle, such as trying to keep an old negro woman who had faith in
-him from breaking her heart, for his risking death itself to obtain full
-justice-for the black boy who was his servant. Yes, Garner mused,
-Carson certainly deserved a better deal all round, but deserving a thing
-according to the highest ethics, and getting it according to the lowest
-were different.
-
-I The following night there was a queer, secret meeting of negroes in
-the town. Stealthily they left their cabins and ramshackle homes, and
-one by one they glided through the darkest streets and alleys to the
-house of one Neb Wynn, a man who had acquired his physical being and
-crudely unique personality from the confluence of three distinct streams
-of blood--the white, the Cherokee Indian, and the negro. He owned and
-drove a dray on the streets of the town, and being economical he had
-accumulated enough means to build the two-story frame (not yet painted)
-house in which he lived. The lower floor was used as a negro restaurant,
-which Neb's wife managed, the upper was devoted to the family bedroom, a
-guest-chamber for any one who wished to spend the night, and a fair-sized
-“hall,” with windows on the street, which was rented to colored people
-for any purpose, such as dances, lodge meetings or church sociables.
-
-It was in this room, where no light burned, that the negroes assembled.
-Indeed, no sort of illumination was used below, and when a negro who had
-been secretly summoned reached the spot, he assured himself that no
-one was in sight, and then he approached the restaurant door on tiptoe,
-rapped twice with his knuckles, paused a moment, and then rapped three
-times. Thereupon Neb, with his ear to the key-hole on the inside,
-cautiously opened the door and drew the applicant within, and, closing
-the shutter softly, asked, “What is the password?”
-
-“Mercy,” was the whispered reply.
-
-“What's the countersign?”
-
-“Peace an' good-will to all men. Thy will be done. Amen.”
-
-“All right, I know you,” Neb would say. “Go up ter de hall en set down,
-but mind you, don't speak _one_ word!”
-
-And thus they gathered--the men who were considered the most substantial
-colored citizens of the town. About ten o'clock Neb crept cautiously up
-the narrow stairs, entered the room, and sat down.
-
-“We are all here,” he announced. “Brother Hard-castle, I'm done wid my
-part. I ain't no public speaker; I'll leave de rest ter you.”
-
-A figure in one of the comers rose. He was the leading negro minister
-of the place. He cleared his throat and then said: “I would open with
-prayer, but to pray we ought to stand or kneel, and either thing would
-make too much disturbance. We can only ask God in our hearts, brothers,
-to be with us here in the darkness, and help lead us out of our trouble;
-help us to decide if we can, singly or in a body, what course to pursue
-in the grave matter that faces our race. We are being sorely tried,
-tried almost past endurance, but the God of the white man is the God of
-the black. Through a dark skin the light of a pure heart shines as far
-in an appeal for help towards the throne of Heaven as through a white.
-I'm not prepared to make a speech. I can't. I am too full of sorrow and
-alarm. I have just left the mother of the accused boy and the sight of
-her suffering has upset me. I have no harsh words, either, for the white
-men of this town. Every self-respecting colored citizen has nothing but
-words of praise for the good white men of the South, and in my heart, I
-can't much blame the men of the mountains who are bent on revenge, for
-the crime perpetrated by one of our race was horrible enough to justify
-their rage. It is only that we want to see full justice done and the
-absolutely innocent protected. I have been talking to Brother Black
-to-day, and I feel--”
-
-He broke off, for a hiss of warning as low as the rattle of a hidden
-snake escaped Neb Wynn's lips. On the brick sidewalk below the steps
-of some solitary passer-by rang crisply on the still night air. It died
-away in the distance and again all was quiet.
-
-“Now you kin go on,” Neb said. “We des got to be careful, gen'men. Ef a
-meetin' lak dis was knowed ter be on tap de last one of us would be in
-trouble, en dey would pull my house down fust. You all know dat.”
-
-“You are certainly right,” the preacher resumed. “I was only going to
-call on Brother Black to say something in a line with the-talk I had
-with him today. He's got the right idea.”
-
-“I'm not a speaker,” Buck Black began, as he stood up. “A man who runs
-a barber-shop don't have any too much time ter read and study, but I've
-giv' dis subject a lot o' thought fust an' last. I almost giv' up after
-dat big trouble in Atlanta; I 'lowed dar wasn't no way out of we-alls'
-plight, but I think diffunt now. A _white_ man made me see it. I read
-some'n' yesterday in the biggest paper in dis State. It was written by
-de editor an' er big owner in it. Gen'men, it was de fust thing I've
-seed dat seemed ter me ter come fum on high as straight as a bolt of
-lightnin'. Brother black men, dat editor said dat de white race had
-tried de whip-lash, de rope, en de firebrand fer forty years en de
-situation was still as bad as ever. He said de question never would be
-plumb settled till de superior race extend a kind, helpful hand ter
-de ignorant black an' lead 'im out er his darkness en sin en crime.
-Gen'men, dem words went thoo en thoo me. I knowed dat man myself, when
-I lived in Atlanta; I've seed his honest face en know he meant what he
-said. He said it was time ter blaze er new trail, er trail dat hain't
-been blazed befo'--er trail of love en forgiveness en pity, er trail
-de Lord Jesus Christ would blaze ef he was here in de midst o' dis
-struggle.”
-
-“Dat so, dat so!” Neb Wynn exclaimed, in a rasping whisper. “Gawd know
-dat de trufe.”
-
-“An' I'm here ter-night,” Buck Black continued, “ter say ter you all dat
-I'm ready ter join fo'ces wid white men like dat. De old time white man
-was de darky's best friend; he owned 'im, but he helped 'im. In de old
-slave days black crimes lak our race is guilty of ter-day was never
-heard of--never nowhar! Dar's er young white man here in dis town, too,
-dat I love,” Black continued, after a pause. “I needn't mention his
-name; I bound you it is writ on every heart in dis room. You all know
-what he did yesterday an' day befo'--in spite er all de argument en
-persuasions of his friends dat is backin' 'im in politics, he went out
-dar ter de mountains in de thick o' it. I got it straight. I seed er man
-fum dar yesterday, en he said Marse Carson Dwight was out 'mongst dem men
-pleadin' wid 'em ter turn Pete over ter him en de law. He promised ter
-give er bond dat was big enough ter wipe out all he owned on earth, ef
-dey'd only spare de boy's life en give 'im a trial. Dey say Dan Willis
-wanted ter shoot 'im, but Willis's own friends wouldn't let 'im git nigh
- 'im. I was in my shop last night when he come in town an' axed me ter
-shave 'im up so he could go home en pacify his mother. She was sick en
-anxious about him. He got in my chair. Gen'men, I used ter brag beca'se
-I shaved General John B. Gordon once, when he was up here speakin', but
-fum now on my boast will be shavin' Marse Carson Dwight. He got in de
-chair an' laid back so tired he looked lak er dyin' man. He was all
-spattered fum head ter foot wid mud dat he'd walked an' rid thoo. I was
-so sorry fer 'im I could hardly do my work. I was cryin' half de time,
-dough he didn't see it, 'ca'se he jes layed dar wid his eyes closed.
-Hate de white race lak some say we do?” Black's voice rose higher and
-quivered. “No, suh, I'll never hate de race dat fetched dat white man in
-dis world. When he got out de chair de fus thing he ax was ef I'd heard
-how Mam' Lindy was. I told 'im she was pretty bad off, worried in her
-mind lak she was; den he turn fum de glass whar he was tyin' his necktie
-wid shaky fingers en said: 'I thought I might fetch 'er some hope, Buck,
-but I done give up. Ef I only had Pete in my charge safe in er good
-reliable jail I could free 'im, fer I don't believe he killed dem
-folks.'”
-
-Buck Black paused. It was plain that his hearers were much affected,
-though no sound at all escaped them. The speaker was about to resume,
-when he was prevented by a sharp rapping on the stair below.
-
-“Hush!” Neb Wynn commanded, in a warning whisper. He crept on tiptoe
-across the carpetless room, out into the hallway, and leaned over the
-baluster.
-
-“Who dat?” he asked, in a calm, raised voice.
-
-“It's me, Neb. I want ter see you. Come down!”
-
-“It's my wife>” Neb informed the breathless room. “Sounds lak she's
-scared 'bout some'n'. Don't say er word till I git back. Mind, you folks
-got ter be careful ter-night.”
-
-He descended the creaking stairs to the landing below. They caught the
-low mumbling of his voice intermingled with the perturbed tones of his
-wife, and then he crept back to them, strangely silent they thought, for
-after he had resumed his seat against the wall in the dark human circle,
-they heard only his heavy breathing. Fully five minutes passed, and
-then he sighed as if throwing something off his mind, some weight of
-perplexing indecision.
-
-“Well, go on wid what you was sayin', Brother Black,” he said. “I reckon
-our meetin' won't be 'sturbed.”
-
-“I almost got to what I was coming to,” Buck Black continued, rising
-and leaning momentously on the back of his chair. “I was leadin' up to
-a gre't surprise, gen'men. I'm goin' to tell you faithful friends a
-secret, a secret which, ef it was out dat we knowed it, might hang us
-all. So far it rests wid des me an' a black 'oman dat kin be trusted, my
-wife. Gen'men, I know whar Pete Warren is. I kin lay my hands on 'im any
-time. He's right here in dis town ter-night.”
-
-A subdued burst of surprise rose from the dark room, then all was still,
-so still that the speaker's grasp of his chair gave forth a harsh,
-rasping sound.
-
-“Yes, my wife seed 'im in de ol' lumber-yard back o' our house, en he
-was sech er sight ter look at dat she mighty nigh went out'n 'er senses.
-He was all cut in de face, en his clothes en shoes was des hangin' ter
- 'im by strings, en his eyes was 'most poppin' out'n his head. He was
-starvin' ter death--hadn't had a bite t' eat since he run off. When she
-seed 'im it was about a hour by sun, en he begged 'er to fetch 'im some
-victuals. Gen'men, he was so hungry dat she say he licked her han's lak
-er dog, en cried en tuck on powerful. She come home en told me, en ax me
-what ter do. Gen'men, 'fo' God on high I want ter do my duty ter my
-race en also to de white, but I couldn't see any safe way ter meddle.
-De white folks, some of 'em, anyway, say dat we aid en encourage
-crimes 'mongst our people, en while my heart was bleedin' fer dat boy en
-his folks, I couldn't underhanded he'p 'im widout goin' ter de men in
-power accordin' ter law.”
-
-“And you did right,” spoke up the minister. “As much as I pity the boy,
-I would have acted as you have done. He is accused of murder and is an
-escaped prisoner. To decide that he was innocent and help him escape is
-exactly what we are blaming his pursuers for doing--taking the law into
-hands not sanctioned by authority. There is only one thing that can
-decide the matter, and that is the decision of a judge and jury.”
-
-“Dat's exactly de way I looked at it,” said Black, “en so I tol' my wife
-not ter go nigh 'im ergin. I knowed dis meetin' was up fer ter-night, en
-I des thought I'd fetch it here en lay it 'fo' you all en take er vote
-on it.”
-
-“A good idea,” said the minister from his chair. “And, brethren, it
-seems to me we, as a body of representative negroes of this town, have
-now a golden opportunity to prove our actual sincerity to the white
-race. As you say, Brother Black, we have been accused of remaining
-inactive when a criminal was being pursued for crimes against the white
-people. If we can agree on it to a unit, and can turn the prisoner over
-now that all efforts of the whites to apprehend him have failed, our act
-will be flashed all round the civilized world and give the lie to the
-charge in question. Do you think, Brother Black, that Pete Warren is
-still hiding near your house?”
-
-“Yes, I do,” answered the barber. “He would be afeard ter leave dat
-place, en I reckon he's waitin' dar now fer my wife ter fetch 'im
-some'n' ter eat.”
-
-“Well, then, all we've got to do is to see if we can thoroughly agree on
-the plan proposed. I suppose one of the first things, if we do agree to
-turn him over to the law, is to consult with Mr. Carson Dwight and see
-if he can devise a way of acting with perfect safety to the prisoner and
-all concerned. If he can, our duty is clear.”
-
-“Yes, he's de man, God knows dat,” Black said, enthusiastically. “He
-won't let us run no risk.”
-
-“Well, then,” said the minister, who had the floor, “let us put it to
-a vote. Of course, it must be unanimous. We can't act on a thing as
-dangerous as this without a thorough agreement. Now, you have all
-heard the plan proposed. Those in favor make it known by standing up as
-quietly as you possibly can, so that I may count you.”
-
-Very quietly, for so many acting in concert, men on all sides of the
-hall stood up. The minister then began to grope round the room, touching
-with his hands the standing voters.
-
-“Who's this?” he suddenly exclaimed, when he reached Neb Wynn's chair
-and lowered his hands to the drayman, who was the only one not standing.
-“It's me,” Neb answered; “me, dat's who--_me!_”
-
-“Oh!” There was an astonished pause.
-
-“Yes, it's me. I ain't votin' yo' way,” Neb said. “You all kin act fer
-yo'selves. I know what I'm about.”
-
-“But what's de matter wid you?” Buck Black demanded, rather sharply.
-“All dis time you been de most anxious one ter do some'n', en now when
-we got er chance ter act wid judgment en caution, all in a body, en, as
-Brother Hardcastle say, ter de honor of ou' race, why you up en--”
-
-“Hold on, des keep yo' shirt on!” said Neb, in a queer, tremulous voice.
-“Gen'men, I ain't placed des zactly de same es you-all is. I don't want
-ter tek de whole 'sponsibility on my shoulders, en I don't intend to.”
-
-“You are not taking it all on your shoulders, brother,” said the
-minister, calmly; “we are acting in a body.”
-
-“No, it's all on _me_,” Neb said. “You said, Buck Black, dat Pete was in
-de lumber-yard 'hind yo' house. He ain't. You might search ever' stack o'
-planks en ever' dry-kiln dar, but you wouldn't fin' 'im. He's a cousin
-er my wife's, en me'n dat boy was good, true friends, en so he come
-here des now, when you heard my wife call me, an' th'owed hisse'f on my
-mercy. He's out at my stable now, up in de hay-loft, waitin' fer me ter
-fetch 'im suppin ter eat, as soon as you all go off. My wife say he's
-de most pitiful thing dat God ever made, en, gen'men, I'm sorry fer 'im.
-Law or no law, I'm sorry _fer_ 'im. It's all well enough fer you ter set
-here in yo' good clothes wid good meals er victuals inside o' you, en
-know you got er good safe baid ter go ter--it's all well enough fer you
-ter vote on what is ter be done, but ef you _do_ vote fer it en clap
- 'im 'hind de bars en he's hung--hung by de neck till he's as stiff es a
-bone, you'll be helpin' ter do it. Law is one thing when it's law, it's
-another thing when it ain't fit ter spit on. You all talk _jestice,
-jestice_, en you think it would be er powerful fine thing ter prove ter
-de worl' how honest you all is by handin' dat po' yaller dog over to de
-law. Put yo'selves in Pete's shoes an' you wouldn't be so easy ter vote
-yo'selves 'hind de bars. You'd say de bird in de han' is wuth three in
-de bush, en you'd stay away firm de white man's court-house. De white
-men say deirselves dat dar ain't no jestice, en dey's right. Carson
-Dwight is er good lawyer, en he'd fight till he drapped in his tracks,
-but de State solicitor would rake up enough agin Pete Warren to keep de
-jury's blood b'ilin'. Whar'd dey git a jury but fum de ranks o' de very
-men dat's chasin' Pete lak er rabbit now? Whar'd dey git a jury dat ud
-believe in his innocence when dey kin prove dat he done threatened de
-daid man? No whar in dis State. No innocent nigger's ever been hung,
-hein? No innocent nigger's in de chain gang, hein? Huh, dey as thick dar
-es fleas.”
-
-When Neb had ceased speaking not a voice broke the stillness of the room
-for several minutes, then the minister said, with a deep-drawn breath:
-“Well, there is really no harm in looking at all sides of the question.
-The very view you have taken, Brother Wynn, may be the one that
-has really kept colored people from being more active in the legal
-punishment of their race. But it seems to me that it would only be fair,
-since you say Pete Warren is near, for him to be told of the situation
-and left to decide for himself.”
-
-“I'm willin' ter do dat, God knows,” said Neb, “en ef y'all say so, I'll
-fetch 'im here en you kin splain it ter 'im.”
-
-“I'm sure that will be best,” said Hardcastle. “Hurry up. To save time,
-you might bring his food here--that is, if your wife has not taken it to
-him.”
-
-“No, she was afeard ter go out dar. I'll mek 'er fetch it up here while
-I go after him. It may tek time, fer he may be afeard to come in. But ef
-I tell 'im de grub's here, I bound you he'll come a-hustlin'.”
-
-They heard Neb's voice below giving instructions to his wife, and then
-the outer door in the rear was opened and closed. Presently a step was
-heard on the stair, and they held their breaths expectantly, but it was
-only Neb's wife with a tray of food. Gropingly she placed it on a little
-table, which she softly dragged from a corner into the centre of the
-room, and without a word retired. A door below creaked on its hinges;
-steps shambling and unsteady resounded hollowly from the floor beneath,
-and Neb's urgent, pacific voice rose to the tense ears of the listeners,
-“Come on; don't be a baby, Pete!” they heard Neb say. “Dey all yo'
-friends en want ter he'p you out 'n yo' trouble ef dey kin.”
-
-“Whar dat meat? whar it? oh, God! whar it?” It was the voice of the
-pursued boy, and it had a queer, uncanny sound that all but struck
-terror to the hearts of the listeners.
-
-“She lef' it up dar whar dey all is,” Neb said; “come on! I'll give it
-to you!”
-
-That seemed to settle the matter, for the clambering steps drew nearer;
-and then two figures slightly denser than the darkness came into the
-room.
-
-“Wait; let me git you er chair,” Neb said.
-
-“Whar it? whar it? my God! whar dat meat?” Pete cried, in a harsh,
-rasping voice.
-
-“Whar'd she put it?” Neb asked. “Hanged ef I know.”
-
-“On the table,” said Hardcastle.
-
-Neb reached out for the tray and had barely touched it, when Pete sprang
-at him with a sound like the snarl of an angry dog. The tray fell with a
-crash to the floor and the food with it.
-
-“There!” Neb exclaimed; “you did it.”
-
-Then the spectators witnessed a pitiful, even repulsive scene, for the
-boy was on the floor, a big bone of ham in his clutch. For a moment
-nothing was heard except the snuffling, gulping, crunching sound that
-issued from Pete's nose, mouth, and jaws. Then a noise was heard below.
-It was a sharp rapping on the outer door.
-
-“Sh!” Neb hissed, warmingly; but there was no cessation of the ravenous
-eating of the starving negro. Neb cautiously looked out of the window,
-allowing only his head to protrude over the windowsill. “Who dar?” he
-called out.
-
-“Me, Neb; Jim Lincum,” answered the negro below. “You told me ef I heard
-any news over my way ter let you know.”
-
-“Oh yes,” said Neb.
-
-“Folks think Pete done lef de woods, Neb. De mob done scattered ter hunt
-all round de country. A gang of 'em was headed dis way at sundown.”
-
-“Oh, dat so?” Neb said; “well we done gone ter baid, Jim, or I'd open de
-do' en let you have er place ter sleep.”
-
-“Don't want no place ter sleep, Neb,” was the answer, in a half-humorous
-tone. “Don't want ter sleep nowhar 'cep' on my laigs sech times as dese.
-Er crowd er white men tried ter nab me while I was in my cotton-patch
-at work dis mawnin' but I made myse'f scarce. Dey hot en heavy after
-Sam Dudlow; some think he had er hand in de killin'. Dey cayn't find dat
-nigger, dough.”
-
-“Well, good-night, Jim. I got ter git some rest,” and Neb drew his head
-back and lowered the window-sash.
-
-“Jim's all right,” he said, “but I couldn't tek 'im in here. Dem men may
-'a' been followin' 'im on de sly.”
-
-He advanced to the middle of the room and stood over the crouching
-figure still noisily eating on the floor.
-
-“Pete, Brother Hardcastle got suppin ter 'pose ter you, en we 'ain't got
-any too much time. We goin' ter tell you 'bout it an leave it ter you.
-One thing certain, you ain't safe hidin' out like you is, en nobody
-ain't safe dat he'ps hide you, so I say suppin got ter be done in yo'
-case.”
-
-“I want y'all ter sen' fer Marse Carson,” Pete mumbled, between his
-gulps. “He kin fix me ef anybody kin.”
-
-“That's what we were about to propose, Pete,” said the preacher. “You
-see--”
-
-“Sh!” It was Neb's warning hiss again. All was silence in the room; even
-Pete paused to listen. It was the low drone of human voices, and many
-in number, immediately below. A light from a suddenly exposed lantern
-flashed 'on the walls. Neb approached the window, but afraid even
-cautiously to raise the sash, he stood breathless. Then through his
-closed teeth came the words: “We are caught; gen'men, we in fer it
-certain en sho! Dey done tracked us down!”
-
-There was a loud rapping on the door below, a stifled scream from Neb's
-wife at the foot of the stairs, and then a sharp, commanding voice
-sounded outside.
-
-“Open up, Neb Wynn!” it said. “We are onto your game. Some devilment is
-in the wind and we are going to know what it is.”
-
-Neb suddenly and boldly threw up the sash and looked out. “All right,
-gen'men, don't bre'k my new lock. I'll be down dar in er minute.” Then
-quickly turning to Pete, he bent and drew him up. “Mak' er bre'k fer dat
-winder back dar, slide down de shed-roof, en run fer yo' life. Run!”
-
-There was a great clatter of chairs and feet in the group of men, a
-crashing of a thin window-sash in the rear, a heavy, thumping sound on a
-roof outside, and a loud shout from lusty throats below.
-
-“There he goes! Catch 'im! Head 'im off! Shoot 'im!”
-
-Then darkness, chaos, and terror reigned.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-[Illustration: 9175]
-
-HILE these things were being enacted, Sanders, who had taken supper at
-Warren's, and Helen sat on the front veranda in the moonlight. Scarcely
-any other topic than Mam' Linda's trouble had been broached between
-them, though the ardent visitor had made many futile efforts to draw
-the girl's thought into more cheerful channels. It was shortly after ten
-o'clock, and Sanders was about to take his leave, when old Lewis emerged
-from the shadows of the house and was shambling along the walk towards
-the gate leading into the Dwight grounds, when Helen called out to him:
-“Where are you going, Uncle Lewis?”
-
-He doffed his old slouch hat and stood bare and, bald, his smooth pate
-gleaming in the moonlight.
-
-“I started over ter see Marse Carson, missy,” he said, in a low, husky
-voice. “I knows good en well dat he can't do a thing, but Linda's been
-beggin' me ever since she seed him en Mr. Garner drive up at de back
-gate. She thinks maybe dey l'arnt suppin 'bout Pete. I knows dey hain't,
-honey, 'ca'se dey ud 'a' been over 'fo' dis. Dar he is on de veranda
-now--oh, Marse Carson! Kin I see you er minute, suh?”
-
-“Yes, I'll be right down, Lewis,” Carson answered, leaning over the
-railing.
-
-As he came out of the house and approached across the grass, Sanders and
-Helen went to meet him. He bowed to Helen and nodded coldly to Sanders,
-to whom he had barely been introduced, and then with a furrowed brow he
-stood and listened as the old man humbly made his wants known.
-
-“I'm sorry to say I haven't heard a thing, Uncle Lewis,” he said. “I'd
-have been right over to see Mam' Linda if I had. So far as I can see,
-everything is just the same.”
-
-“Oh, young marster, I don't know what I'm ergoin' ter do,” the old negro
-groaned. “I don't see how Linda's gwine ter pass thoo another night.
-She's burnin' at de stake, Marse Carson, but thoo it all she blesses
-you, suh, fer tryin' so hard. My Gawd, dar she come now; she couldn't
-wait.”
-
-He hastened across the grass to where the old woman stood, and caught
-hold of her arm.
-
-“Whar Marse Carson? Whar young marster?” Linda cried, and then, catching
-sight of the trio, she tottered unaided towards them.
-
-“Oh, young marster, I can't stan' it; I des _can't!_” she groaned,
-as she caught Dwight's hand and clung to it. “I am a mother ef I _am_
-black, an' dat my onliest child. My onliest child, young marster, en de
-po' boy is 'way over in dem mountains starvin' ter death wid dem men
-en dogs on his track. Oh, young marster, ol' Mammy Lindy is cert'nly
-crushed. Ef I could see Pete in his coffin I could put up wid it, but
-dis here--dis here”--she struck her great breast with her hand--“dis
-awful pain! I can't stan' it--I des can't!”
-
-Carson lowered his head. There was a look of profound and tortured
-sympathy on his strong face. Garner came out of the house smoking a
-cigar and strolled across the grass towards them, but observing the
-situation he paused at a flowering rose-bush and stood looking down the
-moonlit street towards the court-house and grounds dimly outlined in the
-distance. Garner had never been considered very emotional; no one had
-ever detected any indications of surprise or sorrow in his face. He
-simply stood there to-night avoiding contact with the inevitable. As a
-criminal lawyer he had been obliged to inure himself to exhibitions
-of mental suffering as a physician inures himself to the presence of
-physical pain, and yet had Garner been questioned on the matter, he
-would have admitted that he admired Carson Dwight for the abundant
-possession of the very qualities he lacked. He positively envied his
-friend to-night. There was something almost transcendental in the
-heart-wrung homage the old woman was paying Carson. There was something
-else in the fact that the wonderful tribute to courage and manliness
-was being paid there without reservation or stint before the (and Garner
-chuckled) very eyes of the woman who had rejected Carson's love, and in
-the very presence of the masculine incongruity (as Garner viewed him)
-by her side. All the display of emotion, _per se_, had no claims on
-Garner's interest, but the sheer, magnificent play of it, and its
-palpable clutch on things of the past and possible events of the future,
-held him as would the unfolding evidence in an important law case.
-
-“But oh, young marster,” old Linda was saying; “thoo it all you been
-my stay en comfort; not even God's been as good ter me as you have; you
-tried ter he'p po' ol' Lindy, but de Lawd on high done deserted her. Dar
-ain't no just, reasonable God dat will treat er po' old black 'oman es
-I'm treated, honey. In slavery en out I've done de best--de very best
-I could fer white en black, en now as I stan' here, after er long life,
-wid my feet in de grave, I don't deserve ter be punished wid dis slow
-fire. Go ter de white 'omen er dis here big Newnited States en ax' 'em
-how dey would feel in my fix. Ef de mothers in dis worl' could see me
-ter-night en read down in my heart, er river of tears would flow fer me.
-Dat so, en' yet de God I've prayed ter-night en mornin', in slavery
-en out, has turned His back on me. I've prayed, young marster, till my
-throat is sore, till now I hain't got no strength nor faith lef' in me,
-en--well, here I stand. You all see me.” Without a word, his face
-wrung with pain, Carson clasped her hand, and bowing to Helen and her
-companion he moved away and joined Garner.
-
-“It was high time you were getting out of that,” Garner said, as he
-pulled at his cigar and drew his friend back towards the house. “You
-can do nothing, and letting Linda run on that way only works her up to
-greater excitement. But say, old man, what's the matter with you?”
-
-Carson was white, and the arm Garner had taken was trembling.
-
-“I don't know, Garner, but I simply can't stand anything like that,”
- Dwight said, his eyes on the group they had left. “It actually makes me
-sick. I--I can't stand it. Good-night, Garner; if you won't sleep here
-with me, I'll turn in. I--I--”
-
-“Hush! what's that?” Garner interrupted, his ear bent towards the centre
-of the town.
-
-It was a loud and increasing outcry from the direction of Neb Wynn's
-house. Several reports of revolvers were heard, and screams and shouts:
-“Head 'im off! Shoot 'im! There he goes!”
-
-“Great God!” Garner cried, excitedly; “do you suppose it is--”
-
-He did not finish, for Carson had raised his hand to check him and stood
-staring through the moonlight in the direction from which the sounds
-were coming. There were now audible the rapid and heavy foot-falls of
-many runners. On they came, the sound increasing as they drew nearer.
-They were only a few blocks distant now. Carson cast a hurried glance
-towards the Warren house. There, leaning on the fence, supported by
-Helen and Lewis, stood Linda, silent, motionless, open-mouthed. Sanders
-stood alone, not far away. On came the rushing throng. They were turning
-the nearest corner. Somebody, or something, was in the lead. Was it a
-man, an animal, a mad dog, a----
-
-On it came forming the point of a human triangle. It was a man, but a
-man doubled to the earth by. fatigue and weakness, a man who ran as
-if on the point of sprawling at every desperate leap forward. His hard
-breathing now fell on Carson's ears.
-
-“It's Pete!” he said, simply.
-
-Garner laid a firm hand on his friend's arm.
-
-“Now's the time for you to have common-sense,” he said. “Remember, you
-have lost all you care for by this thing--don't throw your very life
-into the damned mess. By God, you _sha'n't!_ I'll--”
-
-“Oh, Marse Carson, it's Pete!” It was Linda's voice, and it rang out
-high, shrill, and pleading above the roar and din. “Save 'im! Save 'im!”
-
-Dwight wrenched his arm from the tense clutch of Garner and dashed
-through the gate, and was out in the street just as the negro reached
-him and stretched out his arms in breathless appeal and fell sprawling
-at his feet. The fugitive remained there on his knees, his hands
-clutching the young man's legs, while the mob gathered round.
-
-“He's the one!” a hoarse voice exclaimed. “Kill 'im! Burn the black
-fiend!”
-
-Standing pinioned to the ground by Pete's terrified clutch, Carson
-raised his hands above his head. “Stop! Stop! Stop!” he kept crying, as
-the crowd swayed him back and forth in their effort to lay hold of the
-fugitive who was clinging to his master with the desperate clutch of a
-drowning man.
-
-“Stop! Listen!” Carson kept shouting, till those nearest him became
-calmer, and forming a determined ring, pressed the outer ones back.
-
-“Well, listen!” these nearest cried. “See what he's got to say. It's
-Carson Dwight. Listen! He won't take up for him; he's a white man. He
-won't defend a black devil that--”
-
-“I believe this boy is innocent!” Carson's voice rang out, “and I plead
-with you as men and fellow-citizens to give me a chance to prove it to
-your fullest satisfaction. I'll stake my life on what I say. Some of you
-know me, and will believe me when I say I'll put up every cent I have,
-everything I hold dear on earth, if you will only give me the chance.”
-
-A fierce cry of opposition rose in the outskirts of the throng, and
-it passed from lip to lip till the storm was at its height again. Then
-Garner did what surprised Carson as much as anything he had ever seen
-from that man of mystery.
-
-“Stop! Listen!” Garner thundered, in tones of such command that they
-seemed to sweep all other sounds out of the tumult. “Let's hear what
-he's got to say. It can do no harm! Listen, boys!”
-
-The trick worked. Not three men in the excited mob associated the voice
-or personality with the friend and partner of the man demanding
-their attention. The tumult subsided; it fell away till only the low,
-whimpering groans of the frightened fugitive were heard. There was
-a granite mounting-block on the edge of the sidewalk, and feeling it
-behind him: Carson stood upon it, his hands on the woolly pate of the
-negro still crouching at his feet. As he did so, his swift glance took
-in many things about him: he saw Linda at the fence, her head bowed
-upon her arms as if to shut out from her sight the awful scene; near her
-stood Lewis, Helen, and Sanders, their expectant gaze upon him; at the
-window of his mother's room he saw the invalid clearly outlined against
-the lamplight behind her. Never had Carson Dwight put so much of his
-young, sympathetic soul into words. His eloquence streamed from him like
-a swollen torrent of logic. On the still night air his voice rose clear,
-firm, confident. It was no call to them to be merciful to the boy's
-mother bowed there like a thing cut from stone, for passion like theirs
-would have been inflamed by such advice, considering that the fugitive
-was charged with having slain a woman. But it was a calm call to
-patriotism. Carson Dwight plead with them to let their temperate action
-that night say to all the world that the day of unbridled lawlessness
-in the fair Southland was at an end. Law and order on the part of itself
-was the South's only solution of the problem laid like another unjust
-burden on a sorely tried and suffering people.
-
-“Good, good! That's the stuff!” It was the raised voice of the adroit
-Garner, under his broad-brimmed hat in the edge of the crowd. “Listen,
-neighbors; let him go on!”
-
-There was a fluttering suggestion of acquiescence in the stillness that
-followed Garner's words. But other obstacles were to arise. A clatter of
-galloping horses was heard round the corner on the nearest side street,
-and three men, evidently mountaineers, rode madly up. They reined in
-their panting, snorting mounts.
-
-“What's the matter?” one of them asked, with an oath. “What are you
-waiting for? That's the damned black devil.”
-
-“They are waiting, like reasonable human beings, to give this man a
-chance to establish his innocence,” Carson cried, firmly.
-
-“They are, damn you, are they?” the same voice retorted. There was a
-pause; the horseman raised his arm; a revolver gleamed in the moonlight;
-there was a flash and a report. The crowd saw Carson Dwight suddenly
-lean to one side and raise his hands to the side of his head.
-
-[Illustration: 0183]
-
-“My God, he's shot!” Garner called out. “Who fired that gun?”
-
-For an instant horrified silence reigned; Carson still stood pressing
-his hands to his temple.
-
-No one spoke; the three restive horses were rearing and prancing about
-in excitement. Garner made his way through the crowd, elbowing them
-right and left, till he stood near the fugitive and his defender.
-
-“A good white man has been shot,” he cried out--“shot by a man on one of
-those horses. Be calm. This is a serious business.”
-
-But Carson, with his left hand pressed to his temple, now stood erect.
-
-“Yes, some coward back there shot me,” he said, boldly, “but I don't
-think I am seriously wounded. He may fire on me again, as a dirty coward
-will do on a defenceless man, but as I stand here daring him to try it
-again I plead with you, my friends, to let me put this boy into jail.
-Many of you know me, and know I'll keep my word when I promise to move
-heaven and earth to give him a fair and just trial for the crime of
-which he is accused.”
-
-“Bully for you, Dwight! My God, he's got grit!” a voice cried. “Let him
-have his way, boys. The sheriff is back there. Heigh, Jeff Braider, come
-to the front! You are wanted!”
-
-“Is the sheriff back there?” Carson asked, calmly, in the strange
-silence that had suddenly fallen.
-
-“Yes, here I am.” Braider was threading his way towards him through
-the crowd. “I was trying to spot the man that fired that shot, but he's
-gone.”
-
-“You bet he's gone!” cried one of the two remaining horsemen, and,
-accompanied by the other, he turned and, they galloped away. This seemed
-a final signal to the crowd to acquiesce in the plan proposed, and they
-stood voiceless and still, their rage strangely spent, while Braider
-took the limp and cowering prisoner by the arm and drew him down from
-the block. Pete, only half comprehending, was whimpering piteously and
-clinging to Dwight.
-
-“It's all right, Pete,” Carson said. “Come on, we'll lock you up in the
-jail where you'll be safe.” Between Carson and the sheriff, followed
-by Garner, Pete was the centre of the jostling throng as they moved off
-towards the jail.
-
-“What dey gwine ter do, honey?” old Linda asked, finding her voice for
-the first time, as she leaned towards her young mistress.
-
-“Put him in jail where he'll be safe,” Helen said. “It's all over now,
-mammy.”
-
-“Thank God, thank God!” Linda cried, fervently. “I knowed Marse Carson
-wouldn't let 'em kill my boy--I knowed it--I knowed it!”
-
-“But didn't somebody say Marse Carson was shot, honey?” old Lewis asked.
-“Seem ter me like I done heard--”
-
-Pale and motionless, Helen stood staring after the departing crowd, now
-almost out of view. Carson Dwight's thrilling words still rang in her
-ears. He had torn her very heart from her breast and held it in his
-hands while speaking. He had stood there like a God among mere men,
-pleading as she would have pleaded for that simple human life, and they
-had listened; they had been swept from their mad purpose by the fearless
-sincerity and conviction of his young soul. They had shot at him while
-he stood a target for their uncurbed passion, and even then he had dared
-to taunt them with cowardice as he continued his appeal.
-
-“Daughter, daughter!” her father on the upper floor of the veranda was
-calling down to her.
-
-“What is it, father?” she asked.
-
-“Do you know if Carson was hurt?” the Major asked, anxiously. “You know
-he said he wasn't, but it would be like him to pretend so, even if he
-were wounded. It may be only the excitement that is keeping him up, and
-the poor boy may be seriously injured.”
-
-“Oh, father, do you think--?” Helen's heart sank; a sensation like
-nausea came over her, and she reeled and almost fell. Sanders, a queer,
-white look on his face, caught hold of her arm and supported her to a
-seat on the veranda. She raised her eyes to the face of her escort as
-she sank into a chair. “Do you think--did he look like he was wounded?”
-
-“I could not make out,” Sanders answered, solicitously, and yet his lip
-was drawn tight and he stood quite erect. “I--I thought he was at first,
-but later when he continued to speak I fancied I was mistaken.”
-
-“He put his hands to his temple,” Helen said, “and almost fell. I saw
-him steady himself, and then he really seemed stunned for a moment.”
-
-Sanders was silent. “I remember her aunt said,” he reflected, in grim
-misery, his brows drawn together, “that she once had a sweetheart up
-here. _Is this the man?_”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-[Illustration: 9188]
-
-EN minutes later, while they still sat on the veranda waiting for
-Carson's return, they saw Dr. Stone, the Dwights' family physician,
-alight from his horse at the hitching-post nearby.
-
-“I wonder what that means?” the Major asked. “He must have been sent for
-on Carson's account and thinks he is at home. Speak to him, Lewis.”
-
-Hearing his name called, Dr. Stone approached, his medicine-case in
-hand.
-
-“Were you looking for Carson?” Major Warren asked.
-
-“Why, no,” answered the doctor, in surprise; “they said Mrs. Dwight was
-badly shocked. Was Carson really hurt?”
-
-“We were trying to find out,” said the Major. “He went on to the jail
-with the sheriff, determined to see Pete protected.”
-
-There was a sound of an opening door and old Dwight came out to the
-fence, hatless, coatless, and pale. “Come right in, doctor,” he said,
-grimly. “There's no time to lose.”
-
-“Is it as bad as that?” Stone asked.
-
-“She's dying, if I'm any judge,” was the answer. “She was standing at
-the window and heard that pistol-shot and saw Carson was hit. She fell
-flat on the floor. We've done everything, but she's still unconscious.”
-
-The two men went hastily into the room where Mrs. Dwight lay, and they
-were barely out of sight when Helen noticed some one rapidly approaching
-from the direction of the jail. It was Keith Gordon, and as he entered
-the gate he laid his hand on Linda's shoulder and said, cheerily, “Don't
-worry now; Pete is safe and the mob is dispersing.”
-
-“But Carson,” Major Warren asked; “was he hurt?”
-
-“We don't exactly know yet.” Keith was now at Helen's side, looking into
-her wide-open, anxious eyes. “He wouldn't stop a second to be examined.
-He was afraid something might occur to alter the temper of the mob and
-wasn't going to run any risks. The crowd, fortunately for Pete, was made
-up mostly of towns-people. One man from the mountains, a blood relative
-of the Johnsons, could have kindled the blaze again with a word, and
-Carson knew it. He was more worried about his mother than anything else.
-She was at the window and he saw her fall; he urged me to hurry back to
-tell her he was all right. I'll go in.”
-
-But he was detained by the sound of voices down the street. It was
-a group of half a dozen men, and in their midst was Carson Dwight,
-violently protesting against being supported.
-
-“I tell you I'm all right!” Helen heard him saying. “I'm not a baby,
-Garner; let me alone!”
-
-“But you are bleeding like a stuck pig,” Garner said. “Your handkerchief
-is literally soaked. And look at your shirt!”
-
-“It's only skin-deep,” Carson cried. “I was stunned for a moment when it
-hit me, that's all.” Helen, followed by her father and Sanders, advanced
-hurriedly to meet the approaching group. They gave way as she drew near,
-and she and Dwight faced each other.
-
-“The doctor is in the house, Carson,” she said, tenderly; “go in and let
-him examine your wound.”
-
-“It's only a scratch, Helen, I give you my word,” he laughed, lightly.
-“I never saw such a squeamish set of men in my life. Even stolid old
-Bill Garner has had seven duck fits at the sight of my red handkerchief.
-How's my mother?”
-
-Helen's eyes fell. “Your father says he is afraid it is quite serious,”
- she said. “The doctor is with her; she was unconscious.”
-
-They saw Carson wince; his face became suddenly rigid. He sighed. “It
-may not be so well after all. Pete is safe for awhile, but if she--if
-my mother were to--” He went no further, simply staring blankly into
-Helen's face. Suddenly she put her hand up to his blood-stained
-temple and gently drew aside the matted hair. Their eyes met and clung
-together.
-
-“You must let Dr. Stone dress this at once,” she said, more gently,
-Sanders thought, than he had ever heard a woman speak in all his life.
-He turned aside; there was something in the contact of the two that at
-once maddened him and drew him down to despair. He had dared to hope
-that she would consent to become his wife, and yet the man to whom she
-was so gently ministering had once been her lover. Yes, that was the
-man. He was sure of it now. Dwight's attitude, tone of voice, and glance
-of the eye were evidence enough. Besides, Sanders asked himself, where
-was the living man who could know Helen Warren and not be her slave
-forever afterwards?
-
-“Well, I'll go right in,” Carson said, gloomily. He and Keith and Garner
-were passing through the gate when Linda called to him as she came
-hastily forward, but Keith and Garner were talking and Carson did not
-hear the old woman's voice. Helen met her and paused. “Let him alone
-to-night, mammy,” she said, almost bitterly, it seemed to Sanders, who
-was peering into new depths of her character. “_Your_ boy is safe, but
-Carson is wounded--_wounded_, I tell you, and his mother may be dying.
-Let him alone for to-night, anyway.”
-
-“All right, honey,” the old woman said; “but I'm gwine ter stay here
-till de doctor comes out en ax 'im how dey bofe is. My heart is full
-ter-night, honey. Seem 'most like God done listen ter my prayers after
-all.”
-
-Sanders lingered with the pale, deeply distraught young lady on the
-veranda till Keith came out of the house, passed through the gate, and
-strode across the grass towards them.
-
-“They are both all right, thank God!” he announced. “The doctor says
-Mrs. Dwight has had a frightful shock but will pull through. Carson was
-right; his wound was only a scratch caused by the grazing bullet. But
-God knows it was a close call, and I think there is but one man in the
-State low enough to have fired the shot.”
-
-When Keith and Sanders had left her, Helen went with dragging, listless
-feet up the stairs to her room.
-
-Lighting her lamp, she stood looking at her image in the mirror on her
-bureau. How strangely drawn and grave her features appeared! It seemed
-to her that she looked older and more serious than she had ever looked
-in her life.
-
-Dropping her glance to her hands, she noted something that sent a
-thrill through her from head to foot. It was a purple smudge left on her
-fingers by their contact with Carson Dwight's wound. Stepping across
-to her wash-stand, she poured some water into the basin, and was on the
-point of removing the stain when she paused and impulsively raised it
-towards her lips. She stopped again, and stood with her hand poised in
-mid-air. Then a thought flashed into her brain. She was recalling the
-contents of the fatal letter of Carson's to her poor brother; the hot
-blood surged over her. She shuddered, dipped her hands, and began to
-lave them in the cooling water. Carson was noble; he was brave; he had a
-great and beautiful soul, and yet he had written that letter to her
-dead brother. Yes, she had openly encouraged Sanders, and she must be
-honorable. At any rate, he was a good, clean man and his happiness was
-at stake. Yes, she supposed she would finally marry him. She would marry
-him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-[Illustration: 9193]
-
-ARSON was slightly weakened by the loss of blood and the unusual tax on
-his strength, and yet, wearing a strip of sticking-plaster as the
-only sign of his wound, he was at the office betimes the next morning,
-anxious to make an early start into the arrangements for a hurried
-preliminary trial of his client. Garner, as, was that worthy's habit
-when kept up late at night, was still asleep in the den when Helen
-called.
-
-Carson was at his desk, bending over a law-book, his pipe in his mouth,
-when, looking up, he saw her standing in the doorway and rose instantly,
-a flush of gratification on his face.
-
-“I've come to see you about poor Pete,” she began, her pale face taking
-on color as if from the heat of his own. “I know it's early, but I
-couldn't wait. Mam' Linda was in my room this morning at the break of
-day, sitting by my bed rocking back and forth and moaning.”
-
-“She's uneasy, of course,” Carson said. “That's only natural of a mother
-placed as she is.”
-
-“Oh yes,” Helen answered, with a sigh. “She was thoroughly happy last
-night over his rescue, but now you see she's got something else to worry
-about. She now wonders if he will be allowed a fair trial.”
-
-“The boy must have that,” Carson said, and then his face clouded over
-and he held himself more erect as he glanced past her out at the door.
-“Is Mr. Sanders--did he come with you? You see, I met him on the way to
-your house as I came down.”
-
-“Yes, he's there talking over the trouble with my father,” Helen made
-rather awkward answer. “He came in to breakfast, but--but I wasn't at
-the table. I was with Mam' Linda.” And thereupon Helen blushed more
-deeply over the reflection that these last words might sound like
-intentional and even presumptuous balm to the sensitiveness of a
-rejected suitor.
-
-“I was afraid he might be waiting on the outside,” Carson said,
-awkwardly. “I want to show hospitality to a stranger in town, you know,
-but somehow I can't exactly do my full duty in his case.”
-
-“You are not expected to,” and Helen had tripped again, as her fresh
-color proved. “I mean, Carson--” But she could go no further.
-
-“Well, I am unequal to it, anyway,” Carson replied, with tightening lips
-and a steady, honest stare. “I don't dislike him personally. I hold no
-actual grudge against him. From all I've heard of him he is worthy of
-any woman's love and deepest respect. I'm simply off the committee of
-entertainment during his stay.”
-
-“I--I--didn't come down to talk about Mr. Sanders,” Helen found herself
-saying, as the shortest road from the trying subject. “It seems to me
-you ought to hate me. I have, I know, through my concern over Pete,
-caused you endless trouble and loss of political influence. Last night
-you did what no other man would or could have done. Oh, it was so brave,
-so noble, so glorious! I laid awake nearly all night thinking about it.
-Your wonderful speech rang over and over in my ears. I was too excited
-to cry while it was actually going on, but I shed tears of joy when I
-thought it all over afterwards.”
-
-“Oh, that wasn't anything!” Dwight said, forcing a light tone, though
-his flush had died out. “I knew you and Linda wanted the boy saved, and
-it wasn't anything. I ran no risk. It was only fun--a game of football
-with a human pigskin snatched here and there by a frenzied mob of
-players. When it fell of its own accord at my feet, and I had laid hands
-on it, I would have put it over the line or died trying, especially when
-you and Sanders--who has beaten me in a grander game--stood looking on.
-Oh, I'm only natural! I wanted to win because--first, because it was
-your wish, and--because _that man was there._”
-
-Helen's glance fell to the ragged carpet which, clogged with the dried
-mud of a recent rain, stretched from her feet to the door. Then she
-looked helplessly round the room at the dusty, open bookshelves,
-Garner's disreputable desk strewn with pamphlets, printed forms of notes
-and mortgages, cigar-stubs, and old letters. Her eyes rested longer on
-the dingy, small-paned windows to which the cobwebs clung.
-
-“You always bring up his name,” she said, almost resentfully. “Is it
-really quite fair to him?”
-
-“No, it isn't,” he admitted, quickly. “And from this moment that sort of
-banter is at an end. Now, what can I do for you? You came to speak about
-Pete.”
-
-She hesitated for a moment. It was almost as if, after all she had said,
-that if the subject was to be dropped, hers, not his, should be the
-final word.
-
-“I came to tell you that Mam' Linda and I have just left the jail. She
-was so wrought up and weak that I made Uncle Lewis take her home in a
-buggy. He says she didn't close her eyes all last night and this morning
-refused to touch her breakfast. Then the sight of Pete in his awful
-condition completely unnerved her. Did you get a good look at him last
-night, Carson--I mean in the light?”
-
-“No.” Dwight shrugged his broad shoulders. “But he looked bad enough as
-it was.”
-
-“The sight made me ill,” Helen said. “The jailer let us go into the
-narrow passage and we saw him through the bars of the cell. I would
-never have known him in the world. His clothing was all in shreds and
-his face and arms were gashed and tom, his feet bare and bleeding. Poor
-mammy simply stood peering through at him and crying, 'My boy, my baby,
-my baby!' Carson, I firmly believe he is innocent.”
-
-“So do I,” Dwight made prompt answer. “That is, I am reasonably sure of
-it. I shall know _positively_ when I talk to him to-day.”
-
-“Then you will secure his liberty, won't you?” Helen asked, eagerly. “I
-promised mammy I'd talk to you and bring her a report of what you said.”
-
-“I am going to do everything in my power,” Dwight said; “but I don't
-want to raise false hopes only to disappoint you and Linda all the more
-later.”
-
-“Oh, Carson, tell me what you mean. You don't seem sure of the outcome.”
-
-“You must try to look-at the thing bravely, Helen,” Dwight said, firmly.
-“There is more in it than an inexperienced girl like you could imagine.
-I think we can arrange for a trial to-morrow, but it seems often that it
-is while such trials are in progress that the people become most wrought
-up; and then, you know, to-day and to-night must pass, and--” He broke
-off, avoiding her earnest stare of inquiry.
-
-“Go on, Carson, you can trust me, if I _am_ only a girl.”
-
-“To tell you the truth,” Dwight complied, “it is the next twenty-four
-hours that I dread most. That mob last night, it seems, was made up
-for the most part of men here in town, workers in the factories and
-iron-foundries--many of whom know me personally and have faith in my
-promises. If it were left with them I'd have little to fear, but it is
-the immediate neighbors of the dead man and woman, the members of the
-gang of White Caps who whipped Pete and feel themselves personally
-affronted by what they believe to be his crime--they are the men, Helen,
-from whom I fear trouble.”
-
-Helen was pale and her hands trembled, though she strove bravely to be
-calm.
-
-“You still fear that they may rise and
-come--and--take--him--out--of--jail? Oh!” She clasped her hands tightly
-and stood facing him, a look of terror growing in her beautiful
-eyes. “And can't something be done? Mr. Sanders spoke this morning of
-telegraphing the Governor to send troops to guard the jail.”
-
-“Ah, that's it!” said Carson, grimly. “But who is to take that
-responsibility on himself. I can't, Helen. It might be the gravest, most
-horrible mistake a man ever made, one that would haunt him to his very
-grave. The Governor, not understanding the pulse of the people here,
-might take the word of some one on the spot. Garner and I know him
-pretty well. We've been of political service to him personally, and he
-would do all he could if we telegraphed him, but--we couldn't do it. By
-the stroke of our pen we might make orphans of the children of scores of
-honest white men, and widows of their wives, for the bayonets and shot
-of a regiment of soldiers would not deter such men from what they regard
-as sacred duty to their families and homes. If the Governor's troops
-did military duty, they would have to hew down human beings like wheat
-before a scythe. The very sight of their uniforms would be like a red
-rag to a mad bull. It would be a calamity such as has never taken
-place in the State. I can't have a hand in that, Helen, and not another
-thinking man in the South would. I love the men of the mountains
-too well. They are turning against me politically because we differ
-somewhat, but I simply can't see them shot like rabbits in a net. Pete
-is, after all, only _one_--they are many, and they are conscientiously
-acting according to their lights. The machinery of modern law moves too
-slowly for them. They have seen crime triumphant too often to trust to
-any verdict other than that reached from their own reasoning.”
-
-“I see; I see!” Helen cried, her face blanched. “I don't blame you,
-Carson, but poor mammy; what can I say to her?”
-
-“Do your best to pacify and encourage her,” Dwight answered, “and we'll
-hope for the best.”
-
-He stood in the doorway and watched her as she walked off down the
-little street. “Poor, dear girl!” he mused. “I had to tell her the
-truth. She's too brave and strong to be treated like a child.”
-
-He turned back to his desk and sat down. There was a deep frown on his
-face. “I came within an inch of losing my grip on myself,” his thoughts
-ran on. “Another moment and I'd have let her know how I am suffering.
-She must never know that--never!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-[Illustration: 9200]
-
-ALF an hour later Garner came in. He walked about the room, a half smile
-on his face, sniffing the air as if with unctuous delight, casting now
-and then an amused glance at his inattentive partner.
-
-“What do you mean? What are you up to now?” Carson asked, slightly
-irritated over having his thoughts disturbed.
-
-“She's been here,” Garner answered. “She told me so just now, and I want
-to inhale the heavenly perfume she left in this disreputable hole. Good
-Lord, you don't mean that you let her see those rotten slippers of mine!
-If you'd been half a friend you'd have kicked them out of sight, but you
-didn't care; you've got on a clean collar and necktie, and that plaster
-on your alabaster brow would admit you to the highest realm of the
-elect--provided the door-keeper was a woman and knew how you got your
-ticket. Huh! I really don't know what will become of me if I associate
-with you much longer. Your conduct last night upset me. I turned in to
-bed about two o'clock. Bob Smith was doing night-work at the hotel, and
-he came in and had to be told the whole thing; and he'd no sooner got
-to bed than Keith came in, and Bob had to hear _his_ version. I had
-a corking dime novel, but it was too tame after the racket you went
-through. The _Red Avenger_ I was trying to get interested in couldn't
-hold a candle, even in his bareback ride strapped to a wild mustang in a
-mad dash across a burning prairie, to your horse-block rescue act. What
-_you_ did was _new_, and I was _there_. The burning prairie business has
-been overdone and the love interest in the _Red Avenger_ was weak, while
-yours--_well!_”
-
-Garner sat down in his creaking revolving-chair and thrust his thumbs
-into the arm-holes of his vest.
-
-“Mine?” Carson said, coldly. “I don't exactly see your point.”
-
-“Well, the love business was there all the same,” Garner laughed,
-significantly; “for, thrilling as it all was, I had an eye to that. I
-couldn't keep from wondering how I'd have felt if I'd been in your place
-and had your chances.”
-
-“_My_ chances!” Dwight frowned. It was plain that he did not like
-Garner's bold encroachments on his natural reserve.
-
-“Yes, your chances, dang you!” Garner retorted, with a laugh. “Do you
-know, my boy, that as a psychological proposition, the biggest, most
-earnest, most credulous-looking ass on earth is the man who comes to
-a strange town to do his courting and has nothing to do but that one
-thing, at stated hours through the day or evening, while everybody
-around him is going about attending to business. I've watched that
-fellow hanging around the office of the hotel, kicking his heels
-together to kill time between visits, and in spite of all I've heard
-about his stability and moral worth I can't respect him. Hang it, if I
-were in his place and wanted to spend a week here, I'd peddle cigars on
-the street--I'd certainly have _something_ to occupy my spare time. But
-I'll be flamdoodled if you didn't give him something to think about last
-night. Of all things, it strikes me, that could make a man like that
-sick--sick as a dog at the very stomach of his hopes--would be to see a
-former sweetheart of his fair charmer standing under shot and shell in
-front of her ancestral mansion protecting her servants from a howling
-mob like that, and later to see the defender, with the step of a David
-with a sling, come traipsing back victorious in her cause, all gummed up
-with blood and fighting still like hell to keep his friends from choking
-him to death in sheer admiration. She and Sanders may be engaged, but
-I'll be dadblamed if I wouldn't be worried if I were in his place.”
-
-“I wish you would let up, Garner,” Dwight said, almost angrily. “I know
-you mean well, but you don't understand the situation, and I have told
-you before that I don't like to talk about it.”
-
-“I _did_ want to tell you how it was rubbed in on him this morning,”
- Garner said, only half apologetically, “and if you don't care, I'll
-finish.”
-
-Carson said nothing. Spots of red were on his cheeks, and with a teasing
-smile Garner went on: “I had stopped to speak to her on the corner just
-now, when the Major and his Highness from Augusta joined us. The old
-man was simply bursting with enthusiasm over what you accomplished last
-night. According to the Major, you were the highest type of Southerner
-since George Washington, and the obtuse old chap kept turning to Sanders
-for his confirmation of each and every statement. Sanders was doing it
-with slow nods and inarticulate grunts, about as readily as a seasick
-passenger specifies items for his dinner, while Helen stood there
-blushing like a red rose. Well,” Garner concluded, as he kicked off one
-of his untied shoes to put on a slipper, “it may be cold comfort to you,
-viewed under the search-light of all the gossip in the air, but your
-blond rival is so jealous that the green juice of it is oozing from the
-pores of his skin.”
-
-“It isn't fair to him to look at it as you are,” Dwight said. “Under the
-same circumstances he could have taken my place.”
-
-“Under the same circumstances, yes,” Garner grinned. “But it is
-circumstances that make things what they are in this world, and I tell
-you that fellow needs circumstances worse than any man I ever saw. He
-is worried. I stopped and watched him as he walked on with her, and I
-declare it looked to me like he kicked himself under his long coat at
-every step. Say, look! Isn't that Pole Baker across the street? The
-fellow behind the gray horse. Yes, that's who it is. I'll call him. He
-may have news from the mountains.”
-
-Answering the summons, Baker led his horse across the street to where
-the two friends stood waiting on the edge of the pavement.
-
-“Have they heard of the arrest over there, Pole?” Garner asked.
-
-“Yes,” the farmer drawled out. “I was at George Wilson's store this
-morning, where a big gang was waiting for food supplies from their
-homes. Dan Willis fetched the report--by-the-way, fellows, just between
-us three, I'll bet he was the skunk that fired that shot. I'm pretty
-sure of it, from what I've picked up from some of his pals.”
-
-“But what are they going to do?” Carson asked, anxiously.
-
-“That's exactly what I come in town to tell you,” answered the
-mountaineer. “They are taking entirely a new tack. A report has leaked
-out that Sam Dudlow was seen prowling about Johnson's just 'fore dark
-the night of the murder, and they are dead on his track. They are
-concentrating their forces to catch him, and, since Pete Warren is safe
-in jail, they say they are going to let 'im stay thar awhile anyway.”
-
-“Good!” Garner cried, rubbing his hands together. “We've got two
-chances, now, my boy--to prove Pete innocent at court or by their
-catching the right man. In my opinion, Dudlow is the coon that did the
-Job, and I believe he did it alone. Pete is too chicken-hearted and
-he's been too well brought up. Now let's get to work. You go talk to the
-prisoner, Carson, and put him through that honeyfugling third degree
-of yours. He'll confess if he did it, and if he did, may the Lord have
-mercy on his soul! I won't help defend him.”
-
-“That's whar I stand,” Pole Baker said. “It's enough trouble savin'
-_innocent_ niggers these days without bothering over the guilty. Shyster
-lawyers tryin' to protect the bad ones for a little fee is at the bottom
-of all this lawlessness anyway.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-[Illustration: 9205]
-
-S the prisoner's counsel, Carson had no difficulty in seeing him. At the
-outer door of the red brick structure, with its slate roof and dormer
-windows, Dwight met Burt Barrett, the jailer, a tall though strong young
-man, who had once lived in the mountains and had been a moonshiner, and
-was noted for his grim courage in any emergency.
-
-“I understand the trial is set for to-morrow,” he remarked, as he opened
-the outer door which led into a hallway at the end of which was the
-portion of the house in which he lived with his wife and children.
-
-“Yes,” Carson replied; “the judge has telegraphed that he will come
-without fail.”
-
-The jailer shrugged his shoulders and laughed. “I feel a sight better
-over it than I did last night. I understand that the mob is going to let
-us alone till they can catch Sam Dudlow; if they lay hands on that scamp
-they certainly will barbecue 'im alive. As for Pete, I can't make up my
-mind about him; he's a trifling nigger and no mistake. He's got a good,
-old-time mammy and daddy, and none of Major Warren's niggers have
-ever been in the chain-gang, but this boy has talked a lot and been in
-powerful bad company. If you can keep him out of the clutch of the mob
-you may save his neck, but you've got a job before you.”
-
-“I want to ask what you think about putting a guard round the jail,”
- Carson said, when they were at the foot of the stairs leading to the
-cells on the floor above.
-
-“As far as I'm concerned, I hope you won't have it done,” said Barrett.
-“To save your neck, you couldn't summon men that wouldn't be prejudiced
-agin the nigger, an' if the report went out that we had put a force
-on at the jail it would only make the mob madder, and make them act
-quicker. A hundred armed citizens wouldn't stop a lynching gang--not
-a shot would be fired by white men at white men, so what would be the
-use?”
-
-“That's what the sheriff thinks exactly, Burt,” Carson replied. “I
-presume the only thing to do is to treat the arrest as usual. I'm doing
-all I can to assure the people that there is to be a fair and speedy
-trial.”
-
-They had reached the top of the stairs and were near Pete's cell, when
-the jailer turned and asked, in an undertone, “Are you armed?”
-
-“Why, no,” Carson said, in surprise.
-
-“Good Lord! I wouldn't advise you to go inside the cell then. I've known
-niggers to kill their best friends when they are desperate.”
-
-“I'm not afraid of this one,” Dwight laughed. “I must get inside. I want
-to know the whole truth, and I can't talk to him through the grating. Is
-he in the cell on the right?”
-
-“No, the first on the left; it's the only doublebarred one in the jail.”
-
-In one corner of the fairly “well lighted room stood a veritable cage,
-the sides, top and bottom consisting of heavy steel lattice-work. As the
-jailer was unlocking the massive door, Carson peered through one of the
-squares and a most pitiful sight met his eye, for at the sound of the
-key in the lock Pete, in his tatters and gashed and swollen face, had
-crouched down on his dingy blanket and remained there quaking in terror.
-
-“Get up!” the jailer ordered, in a not unkindly tone; “it's Carson
-Dwight to see you.”
-
-At this the negro's face lighted up, his eyes blazed in the sudden flare
-of relief, and he rose quickly. “Oh, Marse Carson, I was afeared--”
-
-“Lock us in,” Dwight said to the jailer; “when I'm through I'll call
-you.”
-
-“All right, you know him better than I do,” Barrett said. “I'll wait
-below.”
-
-“Pete,” Carson said, gently, when they were alone, “your mother says she
-wants me to defend you under the charge brought against you. Do you wish
-it, too?”
-
-“Yasser, Marse Carson; but, Marse Carson, I don't know no mo' about
-dat thing dan you do. 'Fo' God, Marse Carson, I'm telling you de trufe.
-Lawsy, Marse Carson, you kin git me out o' here ef you'll des tell 'em
-ter let me go. Dey all know you, Marse Carson, en dey know none er yo'
-kind er black folks ain't er gwine ter do er nasty thing lak dat. Look
-how dey did las' night! Shucks! dey wouldn't er lef' enough o' my haar
-fer er hummin'-bird's nest, ef I hadn't got ter you in de nick er time.
-Dat pack er howlin' rapscallions was tryin' ter tear me ter mince-meat
-when you fired off dat big speech en made 'em all feel lak crawlin' in
-holes. You tell 'em, Marse Carson--you tell de jailer ter le' me out.
-Dat man know you ain't no fool; he know you is de biggest lawyer in de
-Souf. Ain't I heard old marster say you gwine up, en up, en up, till you
-set in de jedge's seat in de cote? Las' night, when you 'gun on 'em,
-en let out dat way, I knowed I was safe, but I don't see what yo'-all
-waitin' fer; I want ter go home ter mammy, Marse Carson. Look lak she
-been sick, en she cried en tuck on here, en so did young miss. Marse
-Carson, _what's de matter wid me?_ What I done? I ain't er bad nigger.
-Unc' Richmond, on de farm, toi' me 'twas' ca'se I made threats ergin dat
-white man 'ca'se he whipped me. I did talk er lot, Marse Carson, but I
-never meant no harm. I was des er li'l mad, en--”
-
-“Stop, Pete!” There was a crude wooden stool in the cell and Carson sat
-down on it. His heart was overflowing with pity for the simple, trusting
-creature before him as he went on gently and yet firmly: “You don't
-realize it, Pete, but you are in the most dangerous position you were
-ever in. I am powerless to release you. You'll have to be taken to court
-and seriously tried by law for the crime of which you are charged. Pete,
-I'm going to defend you, but I can't do a thing for you unless you tell
-me the whole truth. If you did this thing you must tell me--_me_, do you
-understand. We are alone. No one can hear you, and if you confess it to
-me it will go no further. Do you understand?”
-
-Dwight's glance was fixed on the floor. To this point he had steeled
-himself against a too impulsive faith in the negro's words that he might
-logically satisfy himself beyond any doubt as to the innocence or guilt
-of his client. There was silence. He dared not look into the gashed
-face before him, dreading to read what might be written there by the
-quivering hand of self-condemnation. The sheer length of the ensuing
-pause sent cold darts of fear through him. He waited another moment,
-then raised his eyes to the staring ones fixed upon him. To his
-astonishment they were full of tears; the great, heavy lip of the negro
-was quivering like that of a weeping child.
-
-“Why, Marse _Carson!_” he sobbed; “my God, I thought you knowed I didn't
-do it! When you tol' 'em all las' night dat I wasn't de right one, I
-thought you meant it. I never once thought you--_you_ was gwine ter turn
-ergin me.”
-
-Carson restrained himself by an effort as he went on, still calmly, with
-the penetrating insistency of grim justice itself.
-
-“Then do you know anything about it?” he asked;--“_anything at all?_”
-
-“Nothing I could swear to, Marse Carson,” Pete replied, wiping his eyes
-on his torn and sleeveless arm.
-
-“Do you suspect anybody, Pete?”
-
-“Yasser, I do, Marse Carson. Somehow, I b'lieve dat Sam Dudlow done
-it. I b'lieve it 'ca'se folks say he's run off; en what he run off fer
-lessen he's de one? Oh, Marse Carson, I 'lowed I was havin' er hard
-'nough time lak it is, but ef _you_ gwine jine de rest uv um en--”
-
-“Stop; think!” Carson went on, almost sternly, so eager was he to get
-vital facts bearing on the situation. “I want to know, Pete, why you
-think Sam Dudlow killed the Johnsons. Have you any other reason except
-that he has left?”
-
-Pete hesitated a moment, then he answered: “I think he de one, Marse
-Carson, 'ca'se one day while me'n him en some more niggers was loadin'
-cotton at yo' pa's warehouse, some un was guyin' me 'bout de stripes
-Johnson en Willis lef' on my back, en I was--I was shootin' off my mouf.
-I didn't mean er thing, Marse Carson, but I was talkin' too much, en Sam
-come ter me, he did, en said: 'Yo' er fool, nigger; yo' sort never gits
-even fer er thing lak dat. It's de kind dat lay low en do de wuk right.'
-En, Marse Carson, w'en I hear dem folks was daid I des laid it ter Sam,
-in my mind.”
-
-“Pete,” Dwight said, as he rose to leave, “I firmly believe you are
-innocent.”
-
-“Thank God, Marse Carson! I thought you'd b'lieve me. Now, w'en you
-gwine let me out?”
-
-“I can't tell that, Pete,” Dwight answered, as cheerfully as possible.
-“You need a suit of clothes. I'll send you one right away.”
-
-“One er yo's, Marse Carson?” The gashed face actually glowed with the
-delight of a child over a new toy.
-
-“I was going to order a new one,” Carson answered. “I'd ruther have one
-er yo's ef you got one you thoo with,” Pete said, eagerly. “Dar ain't
-none in dis town lak dem you git fum New York. Is you quit wearin' dat
-brown checked one you got last spring?”
-
-“Oh yes, you can have that, Pete, if you wish, and I'll send you some
-shoes and other things.”
-
-“My God! will yer, boss? Lawd, won't I cut er shine at chu'ch next
-Sunday! Say, Marse Carson, you ain't gwine ter let um keep me in here
-over Sunday, is you?”
-
-“I'll do the best I can for you, Pete,” the young man said, and when
-the jailer had opened the door he descended the stairs with a heavy,
-despondent tread.
-
-“Poor, poor devil!” he said to himself. “He's not any more responsible
-than a baby. And yet our laws hold him, in his benighted ignorance, more
-tightly, more mercilessly than they do the highest in the land.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-[Illustration: 9212]
-
-ESPITE the news Pole Baker had brought to town regarding the disposition
-of the mountaineers to let justice take its formal trend in the case
-of the negro already arrested, as the day wore on towards its close
-the whole town took on an air of vague excitement. Men who now lived at
-Darley, but had been former residents of the country, and were supposed
-to know the temper and character of the aggrieved people, shook their
-heads and smiled grimly when the subject of Pete's coming trial was
-mentioned. “Huh!” said one of these men, who kept a small grocery
-store on the main street, “that nigger'll never see the door of the
-court-house.”
-
-And that opinion grew and seemed to saturate the very garment of
-approaching night. The negroes at work in various ways about the
-business portion of the town left their posts early, and with no comment
-to the whites or even to their own kind, they betook themselves to their
-homes--or elsewhere. The negroes who had held the interrupted meeting at
-Neb Wynn's house had been all that day less in evidence than any of the
-others. The attempt to stimulate law and order, to meet the white race
-on common ground, had been crudely and yet sincerely made. They had done
-all they could within their restricted limitations; it now behooved them
-personally to avoid the probable overflow of the coming crisis.
-Their meeting in secret, they feared, was not understood. The present
-prisoner, in fact, had to all appearances, at least, been knowingly
-harbored by them. To explain would be easy enough; convincing an
-infuriated, race-mad mob of their friendly, helpful intentions would be
-impossible. Hence it was that long-headed, now silent-tongued, Neb Wynn
-locked up his domicile, and with his wife and children stole through the
-darkest streets and alleys to the house of a citizen who had owned his
-father.
-
-“Marse George,” he said. “I want you ter take me 'n my folks in fer
-ter-night.”
-
-“All right, Neb,” the white man answered; “we've got plenty of room. Go
-round to the kitchen and get your suppers. I didn't know it was as bad
-as that, but it may be well to be on the safe side.”
-
-Just after dark Carson went home to supper. As he drew near the front
-gate he noticed that the Warren house was lighted both in the upper and
-lower portions and that a group of persons were standing on the veranda.
-He noticed the towering form of old Lewis and the bowed, bandanna-clad
-head of Linda, and with them, evidently offering consolation, stood
-Helen, the Major, Sanders, and Keith Gordon.
-
-Carson was entering the gate when Keith through the twilight recognized
-him and signalled him to wait. And leaving the others Keith came over to
-him.
-
-“I must see you, Carson,” he said, in a voice that had never sounded so
-grave. “Can we go in? If Mam' Linda sees you she'll be after you. She's
-terribly upset.”
-
-“Come into the library,” Carson said. “I see it's lighted. We'll not be
-disturbed there.”
-
-Inside the big, square room, with its simple furnishings and drab tints,
-Carson sank, weary from his nervous strain and loss of sleep, into an
-easy-chair and motioned his friend to take another, but Keith, nervously
-twirling his hat in his hands, continued to stand.
-
-“It's awful, old man, simply awful!” he said. “I've been there since
-sundown trying to pacify that old man and woman, but what was the use?”
-
-“Then she's afraid--” Carson began.
-
-“Afraid? Good God! how could she help it? The negro preacher and his
-wife came to her and Lewis and frankly tried to prepare them for the
-worst. Uncle Lewis is speechless, and Linda is past the tear-shedding
-stage. Hand in hand the old pair simply pace the floor like goaded
-brutes with human hearts and souls bound up in them. Then Helen--the
-poor, dear girl! Isn't this a beautiful homecoming for her? I feel like
-fighting, and yet there's nothing to hit but empty, heartless air. I
-don't care if you know it, Carson.” Keith sank into a chair and leaned
-forward, his eyes glistening with the condensed dew of tense emotion. “I
-don't deny it. Helen is the only girl I ever cared for. She's treated
-me very kindly ever since she discovered my feeling, and given me to
-understand in the sweetest way the utter hopelessness of my case, but I
-still feel the same. I thought I was growing out of it, but seeing her
-sorrow to-day has shown me what she is to me--and what she always will
-be. I'll love her all my life, Carson. She's suffering terribly over
-this. She loves her old mammy as much as if they were the same flesh and
-blood. Oh, it was pitiful, simply pitiful! Helen was trying to pacify
-her just now, and the old woman suddenly laid her hand on her breast and
-cried out: 'Don't talk ter me, honey child, I nursed bofe you en Pete on
-dis here breast, an' dat boy's _me_--my own self, heart en soul, en ef
-God let's dem men hang 'im ter-night, I'll curse 'Im ter my grave.'”
-
-“Poor old woman!” Carson sighed. “If it has to come to her, it would be
-better to have it over with. It would have been better if I had stood
-back last night and let them have their way.”
-
-“Oh no,” protested Keith; “that's Linda's sole comfort. She hardly draws
-a breath that doesn't utter your name. She still believes that her only
-hope rests in you. She says you'll yet think of something--that you'll
-yet do something to prevent the thing. She cries that out every now
-and then. Oh, Carson, I don't amount to anything, but before God I can
-truthfully say that I'd give my life to have Linda talk that way about
-me--before Helen.”
-
-Carson groaned, his tense hands were locked like prongs of steel in
-front of him, his face was deathly pale. “You wouldn't like any sort of
-talk or idle compliments if you were bound hand and foot as I am,” he
-said. “It's mockery. It's vinegar rubbed into my wounds. It's hell!”
-
-He tore himself from his chair and began to stride about the room like
-a restless tiger in a cage. His walk took him into the hall utterly
-forgetful of the presence of his friend. There a colored maid came to
-him and said, “Your mother wants you, sir.”
-
-He stared at the girl blankly for a moment, then he seemed to pull
-himself together. “Has my mother heard--?”
-
-“No, sir, your father told us not to excite her.”
-
-“All right, I'll go up,” Carson said. “Tell Mr. Gordon, in the library,
-to wait for me.”
-
-“I was wondering if you had come,” the invalid said, as he bent over her
-bed, took her hand, and kissed her. “I presume you have been very busy
-all day over Pete's case?”
-
-“Yes, very busy, mother dear.”
-
-“And is it all right now? Your father tells me the trial is set for
-to-morrow. Oh, Carson, I'm very proud of you. I heard your speech last
-night, and it seemed to lift me to the very throne of God. Oh, you are
-right, you are right! It is our duty to love and sympathize with those
-poor creatures. They are still children in the cradles of their past
-slavery. They can't act for themselves. Their crimes are due chiefly to
-the lack of the guiding hands they once had. Oh, my son, your father
-is angry with you for spoiling your political chances by such a radical
-stand, but even if you lose the race by it, I shall be all the prouder
-of you, for you have shown that you won't sell yourself. I wish I could
-go to the courthouse to-morrow, but the doctor won't let me. He says I
-mustn't have another shock like that last night, when I heard that shot,
-saw you reel, and thought you were killed. Son, are you listening?”
-
-“Why, yes, mother. I--” His mind was really elsewhere. He had dropped
-her hand, and was standing with furrowed brow and tightly drawn lips in
-the shadow thrown by the lamp on a table near by and the high posts of
-the old-fashioned bedstead.
-
-“I thought you seemed to be thinking of something else,” said the
-invalid, plaintively.
-
-“I really was troubled about leaving Keith downstairs by himself,”
- Carson said. “Perhaps I'd better run down now, mother.”
-
-“Oh yes, I didn't know he was there. Ask him to supper.”
-
-“All right, mother,” and he left the room with a slow step, finding
-Gordon on the veranda below fitfully puffing at a cigar as he walked to
-and fro.
-
-“Helen called me to the fence just now,” Keith said. “She's all broken
-to pieces. She is relying solely on you now. She sent you a message.”
-
-“Me?”
-
-“Yes, with the tears streaming down her cheeks she simply said, 'Tell
-Carson that I am praying that he will think of some way to avert this
-disaster.”
-
-“She said that!” Carson turned and stared through the gathering shadows
-towards the jail. There was a moment's pause, then he asked, in a tone
-that was harsh, crisp, and rasping: “Keith, could you get together
-to-night fifteen men who would stick to me through personal friendship
-and help me arrive at some decision as to--to what is best?”
-
-“Twenty, Carson--twenty who would risk their lives at a word from you.”
-
-“They might have to sacrifice--”
-
-“That wouldn't make a bit of difference; I know the ones you can depend
-on. You've got genuine friends, the truest and bravest a man ever had.”
-
-“Then have as many as you can get to meet me at Blackburn's store at
-nine o'clock. We may accomplish nothing, but I want to talk to them.
-God knows it is the only chance. No, I can't explain now. There is not
-a moment to lose. Tell Blackburn to keep the doors shut and let them
-assemble in the rear as secretly and quietly as possible.”
-
-“All right, Carson. I'll have the men there.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.
-
-[Illustration: 9219]
-
-HEN Carson reached the front door of Blackburn's store about nine
-o'clock that evening, he found it closed. For a moment he stood under
-the Crude wooden shed that roofed the sidewalk and looked up and down
-the deserted street. It was a dark night, and from the aspect of the
-heavy, troubled clouds high winds seemed in abeyance beyond the hills
-to the west. He was wondering how he had best make his presence known
-to his friends within the store, when he heard a soft whistle, and Keith
-Gordon, the flaring disk of a cigar lighting his expectant face, stepped
-out of a dark doorway.
-
-“I've been waiting for you,” he said, in a cautious undertone. “They are
-getting impatient. You see, they thought you'd be here earlier.”
-
-“I couldn't get away while my mother was awake,” Carson said. “Dr. Stone
-was there and warned me not to leave at night. She can't stand any
-more excitement. So I had to stay with her. I read to her till she fell
-asleep. Who's here?”
-
-“The gang and fully fifteen other trusty fellows--you'll see them on the
-inside, every man of them with a gun. At the last moment I heard Pole
-Baker was down at the wagon-yard, and I nabbed him.”
-
-“Good; I'm glad you did. Now let's go in.”
-
-“Not yet, old man,” Keith objected. “Blackburn gave special orders not
-to open the door if any person was in sight. Let's walk to the corner
-and look around.”
-
-They went to the old bank building on the corner, and stood at the foot
-of the stairs leading up to the den. No one was in sight. Across the
-numerous tracks of the switch-yard hard by there was a steam flouring
-mill which ground day and night, and the steady puffing of the engine
-beat monotonously on their ears. In a red flare of light they saw the
-shadowy form of the engineer stoking the fire.
-
-“Now the way is clear,” said Keith; “we can go in, but I want to prepare
-you for a disappointment, old man.”
-
-Carson stared through the darkness as arm in arm they moved back to the
-store. “You mean--”
-
-“I'll tell you, Carson. The meeting of these fellows to-night is a big
-proof of the--the wonderful esteem in which they hold you. No other man
-could have got them together at such a time; but, all the same, they are
-not going to allow you to--you see, Carson, they have had time to
-talk it over in there, and have unanimously agreed that to make any
-opposition by force would be worse than folly. Pole Baker brought
-some reliable news, reliable and terrible. Why, he told us just
-now--however, wait. He will tell you about it.”
-
-Giving a rap on the door that was recognized within, they were admitted
-by Blackburn, who stood back in the shadow and quickly closed the
-shutter and locked it again. In the uncertain light of a lamp with a
-murky chimney, on the platform in the rear, seated on boxes, nail kegs,
-chairs, table, and desk, Dwight beheld a motley gathering of his friends
-and supporters. Kirk Fitzpatrick, the brawny, black-handed tinner, who
-had a jest for every moment, was there; Wilson, the shoemaker; Tobe
-Hassler, the German baker; Tom Wayland, the good-hearted drug clerk,
-whose hair was as red as blood; Bob Smith, Wade Tingle, and, nestled
-close to the lamp, and looking like a hunchback, crouched Garner, so
-deep in a newspaper that he was utterly deaf and blind to sounds and
-things around him. Besides those mentioned, there were several other
-ardent friends of the candidate.
-
-“Well, here you are at last,” Garner cried, throwing down his paper. “If
-I hadn't had something to read I'd have been asleep. I don't know any
-more than a rabbit what you intend to propose, but whatever it is, we
-are late enough about it.”
-
-Hurriedly Carson explained the cause of his delay and took the chair
-which the tinner, with the air of a proud inferior, was pushing towards
-him. As he sat down and the lamplight fell athwart his careworn face,
-the group was overwhelmed with sympathy and a strange, far-reaching
-respect they could hardly understand. To-night they were, more than
-usual, under the spell of that inner force which had bound them one and
-all to him and which, they felt, nothing but dishonor could break. And
-yet there they sat so grimly banded together against him that he felt it
-in their very attitudes.
-
-“The truth is”--Garner broke the awkward pause--“we presume you got us
-together to-night to offer open opposition--in case, of course, that the
-mob means harm to your client. That seems the only thing a body of men
-can do. But, my dear boy, there are two sides to this question. For
-reasons of your own, chief among which is a most beautiful principle to
-see the humblest stamp of man get justice--for these reasons you call on
-your friends to stand to you, and they will stand, I reckon, to the end,
-but it's for you, Carson, to act reasonably and think as readily of the
-interests of all of us as for those of the unfortunate prisoner. To
-meet that mob by opposition to-night would--well, ask Pole Baker for the
-latest news. When you have heard what he knows to be true, I am sure you
-will see the utter futility of any movement whatsoever.”
-
-All eyes were now turned on the gaunt mountaineer, who was sitting on an
-inverted nail keg whittling to a fine point a bit of wood which now and
-then he thrust automatically between his white front teeth.
-
-“Well, Carson,” he began, in drawling tones, “I lowed you-uns would want
-to know just how the land lays, and as I had a sort of underground way
-of gettin' at first-hand facts, I raked in all the information I could
-an' come on to town. I'd heard about how low your mother was, an' easy
-upset by excitement, an' so I didn't go up to your house. I met Keith,
-an' he told me I could see you at this meetin', an' so I waited. Carson,
-the jig is certainly up with that coon. No power under high heaven
-could save his neck. The report that was circulated this morning, was
-deliberately sent out to throw the authorities off their guard. Only
-about thirty men are still on Sam Dudlow's trail--the rest, hundreds and
-hundreds, in bunches an' factions, each faction totin' a flag to show
-whar they hail from, an' all dressed in white sheets, is headed this
-way.”
-
-“Do you mean right at this moment?” Carson asked, as he started to rise.
-
-Pole motioned to him to sit down.
-
-“They won't be here till about twelve o'clock,” he said. “They've passed
-the word about amongst 'em, and agreed to meet, so that all factions can
-take part, at the old Sandsome place, two miles out on the Springtown
-road. They will start from there at half-past eleven on the march for
-the jail. It will be after twelve before they get here. Pete's got that
-long to make his peace, but no longer. And right here, Carson, before I
-stop, I want to say that thar ain't a man in this State I'd do a favor
-for quicker than I would for you, but many of us here to-night are
-family men, and while that nigger may, as you think, be innocent, still
-his life is just one life, while--well”--Baker snapped his dry fingers
-with a click that was as sharp as the cocking of a revolver--“I wouldn't
-give _that_ for our lives if we opposed them men. They are as mad
-as wounded wild-cats. They believe he done it; they know on reliable
-testimony that he said he'd kill Johnson; an' they want his blood. Five
-hundred such as we are wouldn't halt 'em a minute. I want to help, but
-I'm tied hand an' foot.”
-
-There was silence after Pole's voice died away. Then Garner rapped on
-the table with his small hand and tossed back the long, thick hair from
-his massive brow.
-
-“You may as well know the truth, Carson,” he said, calmly. “We put it to
-a vote just before you came, and we all agreed that we would--well, try
-to bring you round to some sort of resignation; try to get you to throw
-it off your mind and stop worrying.”
-
-To their surprise Carson took up the lamp and rose. “Wait a moment,”
- he said, and with the lamp in hand he crossed the elevated part of
-the floor and went down the steps into the cellar. They were left in
-darkness for a moment, the rays of the lamp flashing now only on the
-front wall and door of the long building.
-
-“Huh, there ain't anybody hiding there!” Blackburn cautiously called
-out. “I looked through the full length of it, turned over every box
-and barrel, before you came. I wasn't going to run any risk of having a
-stray tramp in a caucus like this.”
-
-There was some fixed quality in Dwight's drawn face as he emerged,
-carrying the lamp before him, ascended the steps, and again took his
-place at the table.
-
-“You thought somebody might be hiding there,” the store-keeper said;
-“but I was careful to--”
-
-“No, it wasn't that,” Carson said. “I was wondering--I was trying to
-think--”
-
-He paused as if submerged in thought, and Garner turned upon him
-almost sternly. He had never before used quite such a harsh tone to his
-partner.
-
-“You've gone far enough, Carson,” he said. “There are limits even to the
-deepest friendship. You can't ask your best friends to make their wives
-widows and their children orphans in a blind effort to save the neck of
-one miserable negro, even if he's as innocent as the angels in heaven.
-As for yourself, your heroism has almost led you into a cesspool of
-reckless absurdity. You have let that old man and woman up there, and
-Miss--that old man and woman, _anyway_--work on your sympathies till you
-have lost your usual judgment. I'm your friend and--”
-
-“Stop! Wait!” Carson stood up, his hands on the edge of the table, the
-lamp beneath him throwing his mobile face into the shadow of his firm,
-massive jaw. “Stop!” he repeated. “You say you have given up. Boys,
-I can't. I tell you I _can't_. I simply can't let them kill that boy.
-Every nerve in my body, every pulsation of my soul screams out against
-it. I have set my heart on averting this horror. Ten years ago I could
-have gone to my bed and slept peacefully, as many good citizens of this
-town will to-night, under the knowledge that the verdict of mob law was
-to be executed, but in the handling of this case I've had a new birth.
-There is no God in heaven if--I say if--He has not made it _possible_
-for the mind and will of man to prevent this horror. There must be a
-way; there _is_ a way, and if I could put my ideas into your brains
-to-night--my faith and confidence into your souls--we'd prevent this
-calamity and set an example for our fellows to follow in future.”
-
-“Your ideas into our brains!” Garner said, in a tone of amused
-resentment. “Well, I like that, Carson; but if you can see a ghost of a
-chance to save that boy's neck with safety to our own, I'd like to have
-you plug it through my skull, if you have to do it with a steel drill.
-At present I'm the senior member of the firm of Garner & Dwight, but
-I'll take second place hereafter, if you can do what you are aiming at.”
-
-“I don't mean to reflect on your intelligences,” Dwight went on,
-passionately, his voice rising higher, “but I _do_ see a way, and I am
-praying God at this moment to make you see it as I do and be willing to
-help me carry it out.”
-
-“Blaze away, old hoss,” Pole Baker piped up from his seat on the nail
-keg. “I'm not a nigger-lover by a long shot, but somehow, seeing how you
-feel about this particular one an' his connections, I'm as anxious to
-save 'im as if I owned 'im in the good old day an' his sort was fetchin'
-two thousand apiece. You go ahead. I feel kind o' sneakin', anyway, for
-votin' agin you while you was up thar nursin' yore sick mammy. By gum!
-you give me the end of a log I kin tote, an' I'll do it or break my
-back.”
-
-“I want it understood, Carson,” said Wade Tingle at this juncture, “that
-I was only voting against our trying to stop that mob by force, and, to
-do myself justice, I was voting in the interests of the family men here
-to-night. God knows, if you can see any _other_ possible way--”
-
-“We have no time to lose,” Carson said. “If we are to accomplish
-anything we must be about it. Gentlemen, what I may propose may, in a
-way, be asking you to make a sacrifice almost as great as that of open
-resistance. I am going to ask you, law-abiding citizens that you are, to
-break the law, as you understand it, but not law as the best wisdom of
-man intended it to be. This section is in a state of open lawlessness.
-The law I'm going to ask you to break is already broken. The highest
-court might hold that we would be no better, in _fact_, than the army of
-law-breakers headed this way with the foam of race hatred on their
-lips, its insane blaze in their eyes that till recently beamed only in
-gentleness and human love. But I'm going to ask you to chose between
-two evils--to let an everlasting injustice be done at the hand of a hate
-that will drown in tears of regret in time to come, or the lesser evil
-of breaking an already broken law. You are all good citizens, and I
-tremble and blush over my audacity in asking you to do what you have
-never in any form done before.”
-
-Carson paused. Wondering silence fell on the group. Upon each face
-struggled evidences of an almost painful desire to grasp his meaning.
-That it was momentous no man there doubted. Even the ever equable Garner
-was shaken from, his habitual stoic attitude, and with his delicate
-fingers rigidly supporting his great head he stared open-mouthed at the
-speaker.
-
-“Well, well, what is it?” he presently asked.
-
-“There is only one chance I see,” and Dwight stood erect, his arms
-folded, and stepped back so that the light of the lamp fell full upon
-his tense features. The patch of sticking plaster stood out from his
-pale skin, giving his perspiring brow an uncanny look. “There is only
-one thing to do, my friends, and without your help I stand powerless.
-I suggest that we form ourselves into a supposed mob of disguised men,
-that we go ahead of the others to the jail, and actually _force Burt
-Barrett to turn the prisoner over to us_.”
-
-“Great God!” Garner, stood up, and leaned on the table. “_Then_
-what--what would you do? Good Lord!”
-
-Carson pointed steadily to the cellar-door and swallowed the lump of
-excitement in his throat. “I would, unseen by any one, if possible,
-bring him here and imprison him, in that cellar, guarded by us only
-till--till such a time as we could safely deliver him to a court of
-justice.”
-
-“By God, you _are_ a wheel-hoss!” burst from Pole Baker's lips. “That's
-as easy as failin' off a log.”
-
-“Do you mean to make Burt Barrett believe we are--are actually bent on
-lynching the negro?” demanded Keith Gordon, new-born enthusiasm bubbling
-from his eyes and voice.
-
-“Yes, that would be the only way,” said Carson. “Barrett is a sworn
-officer of the law, and his position is his livelihood. Even if we could
-persuade him to join us, it wouldn't be fair to him, for he would
-be shouldering more responsibility than we would. The only way is to
-thoroughly disguise ourselves and compel him to give in as he will be
-compelled by the others if we don't act first. I know he would not fire
-upon us.”
-
-“It looks to me like a dandy idea,” spoke up Blackburn. “As for me I
-want to reward originality by doing the thing if possible. As for that
-cellar, it's as strong as an ancient fortress anyway and, Carson, Pete
-would not try to escape if you ordered him not to. As for disguises, I
-can lend you all the bleached sheeting you want. I got in a fresh bale
-of it yesterday. I could cut it into ten-yard pieces which would not
-hurt the sale of it. Remnants fetch a better price than regular stuff
-anyway. Boys, let's vote on it. All in favor stand up.”
-
-There was a clatter of shoes and rattling of chairs, boxes, kegs and
-other articles which had been used for seats. It was an immediate and
-unanimous tribute to the sway Carson Dwight's personality had long
-held over them. They stood by him to a man. Even Garner suddenly, and
-strangely for his crusty individuality, relegated himself to the rank of
-a common private under the obvious leader.
-
-“Hold on, boys!” exclaimed one not so easily relegated to any position
-not full of action, and Pole Baker was heard in a further proposal. “So
-far the arrangements are good and sound but you-uns haven't looked far
-enough ahead. When we git to the jail thar's got to be some darned fine
-talkin' of exactly the right sort, or Burt Barrett will smell a mouse
-and refuse our demands. In a case like this silence is a sight more
-powerful than a lot o' gab. Now, I propose to have one man, and one man
-_only_ to do the talking.”
-
-“Yes, and you are the man,” said Carson. “You must do it.”
-
-“Well, I'm willin',” agreed Baker. “The truth is, folks say I'm good at
-just that sort o' devilment, an' I'd sort o' like the job.”
-
-“You are the very man,” Carson said, with a smile.
-
-“You bet he is,” agreed Blackburn. “Now come down in the store an' let
-me rig you spooks up. We haven't any too much time to lose.”
-
-“Thar's another thing you-uns don't seem to have calculated on,” said
-Baker, as Blackburn was leading them down to the dry-goods counter.
-“It may take time to quiet public excitement, even if we put this thing
-through to-night. You propose to let the impression go out that thar was
-a lynchin'. How will you keep 'em from thinkin' it's a fake unless they
-see some'n' hangin' to a tree-limb in the mornin'? If they thought we'd
-put up a job on 'em, they would nose around till they was onto the whole
-business, an' then thar would be the devil to pay.”
-
-“You are right about that,” said Garner. “If we could convince the big
-mob that Pete has been lynched in some secret way or place, by some
-other party, who don't want to be known in the matter, the excitement
-would die down in a day or so.”
-
-“A bang-up good idea!” was Pole's ultimatum. “Leave it to me and I'll
-study up some way to put it to Burt--by gum! How about tellin' 'im that,
-for reasons of our own, we intend to hide the body whar the niggers
-can't git at it to give it decent burial? I really believe that would go
-down.”
-
-“Splendid, splendid!” said Garner. “Work that fine enough, Pole, and it
-will give us more time for everything.”
-
-“Well, I can work it all right if I am to do the talkin',” Pole said, as
-he reached out for his portion of the sheeting.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-
-[Illustration: 9231]
-
-IFTEEN minutes later a spectral group in all truth filed out through the
-rear door of the store and paused for further orders in the shadow
-of the wall of the adjoining bank building. The sky was still darkly
-overcast and a drizzle as fine as mist was in the air.
-
-With Carson and Pole in the lead, the party marched grimly two and two,
-a weird sight even to themselves. Straight down the alley behind the
-stores along the railway they moved, keeping step like trained military
-men. Pole, for visual effect, carried a coil of new hemp rope, and he
-swung it about in his white, winglike clutch with the ease of a cow-boy,
-as he gutturally gave orders as to turns and tentative pauses. Now and
-then he would leave the others standing and stride ahead through the
-darkness and signal them to come on up. In this way they progressed with
-many a halt, and many a cautious détour to avoid the light that steadily
-gleamed through some cottage window or chink in a door or some watchman
-at his post at some mill or factory, till finally they reached the
-grounds surrounding the court-house and jail.
-
-“I don't know how soft-hearted you are, Carson,” Baker whispered in the
-young man's ear, “but thar's one thing a man full of feelin' like you
-seem to be ought to be ready to guard against.”
-
-“What is that, Pole?”
-
-“Why, you know, if we git the poor devil out he'll be sure he's done
-for, an' he'll be apt to raise an' awful row, beggin' an' prayin' an'
-no tellin' what else. But for all you do, don't open yore mouth. Let 'im
-bear it--tough as it will be--till we kin git to a safe place. Thar'll
-be folks listenin' in the houses along the way to the store, an' ef you
-was to speak one kind word the truth might leak out. To all appearances
-we are lynchers of the most rabid brand.”
-
-“I understand that, Pole,” said Carson. “I won't interfere with your
-work.”
-
-“Don't call it _my_ work,” said Baker, admiringly. “I've been through
-a sight of secret things in my time, but I never heard of a scheme as
-slick an' deep-laid as this. If she goes through safe I'll put you at
-the top of my list. It looks like it will work, but a body never kin
-tell. Burt Barrett is the next hill to climb. I don't know him well
-enough to foresee what stand he'll take. Boys, have yore guns ready, an'
-when I order you to take aim, you do it as if you intend to make a hole
-in whatever is in front of you. Our bluff is the biggest that ever was
-thought of, but it has to go. Now, come on!”
-
-Through the open gateway they marched across the public lawn covered
-with fresh green grass to the jail near by. A dog chained in a kennel
-behind the house waked and snarled, but he did not bark. There was a
-little porch at the entrance to the building, and along this the ghostly
-band silently arranged themselves.
-
-“Hello in thar, Burt Barrett!” Pole suddenly cried out, in sharp, stern
-tones, and there was a pause. Then from the darkness within came the
-sound of some one striking a match. A flickering light flared up in the
-room on the right of the entrance; then the voice of a woman was heard.
-
-“Burt, what is it?” she asked, in a startled tone.
-
-“I don't know; I'll see,” a coarser voice made answer. Another pause and
-a door on the inside was opened, then the heavier outer one, and Burt
-Barrett, half dressed, stood staring at the grewsome assemblage before
-him.
-
-[Illustration: 0233]
-
-“We've come after that damned nigger,” said Baker, succinctly, his
-tone so low in his throat that even an intimate friend would not have
-recognized it, and as he spoke he raised his coil of rope and tapped the
-floor of the porch.
-
-Barrett, as many a brave man would have done in his place, stood
-helplessly bewildered. Presently he drew himself together and said,
-firmly: “Gentlemen, I'm a sworn officer of the law. I've got a duty to
-perform and I'm going to do it.” And thereupon they saw the barrel of a
-revolver which the jailer held in his hand. In the awful stillness that
-engulfed his words the click of its hammer, as the weapon was cocked,
-sounded sharp and distinct.
-
-“Too bad, but he's goin' to act ugly, boys,” Pole said, with grim
-finality. “He is a white man _in looks_, but he's j'ined forces with
-the black devils that are bent on rulin' our land. Steady, take aim!
-If thar's less'n twenty holes in his carcass when he's examined in the
-mornin' it will stand for some member's eternal disgrace. Aim careful!”
-
-There was a startled scream at the half-open window of the bedroom on
-the right and the jailer's wife thrust out her head.
-
-“Don't shoot 'im!” she screamed. “Don't! Give 'em the keys, Burt. Are
-you a fool?”
-
-“He certainly looks it,” was Baker's comment, in a tone of well-assumed
-only half-bridled rage. “Give 'im ten seconds to drap them keys, boys.
-I'll count. When I say ten blaze away, an' let a yawnin' hell take 'im.”
-
-“Gentlemen, I--”
-
-“Burt! Burt! what do you mean?” the woman cried again. “Are you plumb
-crazy?”
-
-“One!” counted Pole--“two!--three--”
-
-“I want to do what's right,” the jailer temporized. “Of course, I'm
-overpowered, and if--”
-
-“Five!--six!” went on Pole, his voice ringing out clear and piercing.
-
-There was a jingling of steel. The spectators, peering through ragged
-eye-holes in their white caps, saw the bunch of keys as it emerged from
-Barrett's pocket and fell to the doorstep.
-
-“Gentlemen, you may live to be sorry for this night's work,” he said.
-
-“What do you care what we're sorry for,” Pole said, grimly, “just so you
-ain't turned into a two-legged sifter? Now”--as he stooped to pick up
-the keys--“you git back in thar to yore wife an' children. We
-simply mean business an' know what we are about. An' look here, Burt
-Barrett”--Pole nudged Carson, who stood close to him--“thar'll be
-another gang here in a few minutes on the same business. You kin tell
- 'em we beat 'em to the hitchin'-post, an', moreover, you kin tell 'em
-that we said that when we settle this nigger's hash them nor nobody else
-will ever be able to find hair or hide of 'im. A buryin' to the general
-run o' niggers is their greatest joy an' pride, but they'll never cut up
-high jinks over this one.”
-
-“Good, by Heaven!” Garner chuckled, as he recalled Pole's diplomatic
-suggestion at the store.
-
-Without another word of protest the jailer receded into the house,
-leaving the door open, and, led by Pole, the others entered the hallway
-with a firm tread and mounted the stairs to the floor above. All was
-still here, and so dark that Baker lighted a bit of candle and held it
-over his head. Knowing the cell in which Pete was confined, Carson led
-them to its door. As they paused there and Pole was fumbling with-the
-keys, a low, stifled scream escaped from the prisoner, and then, in the
-dim, checkered light thrown by the candle through the bars, they saw the
-negro standing close against the farthest grating. Pole had found the
-right key and opened the door.
-
-“It's all up with you, Pete Warren,” he said; “you needn't make a row.
-You've got to take your medicine. Come on.”
-
-“Oh, my God, my God!” cried the negro, as with great, glaring eyes he
-gazed upon them. “I never done it. I never done it. Don't kill me!”
-
-“Bring 'im on, boys!” Pole produced an artificial oath with difficulty,
-for he really was deeply moved. “Bring 'im on!”
-
-Two of the spectres seized Pete's hands just as his quaking knees bent
-under him and he was falling down. He started to pull back, and then,
-evidently realizing the utter futility of resisting such an overwhelming
-force, he allowed himself to be led through the door of the cell and
-down the stairs into the yard.
-
-“I never done it, before God I never done it!” he went on, sobbing like
-a child. “Don't kill me, white folks. Gi' me one chance. Tek me ter
-Marse Carson Dwight; he'll tell you I ain't de man.”
-
-“He'll tell us a lot!” growled Baker, with another of his mechanical
-oaths. “Dry up!”
-
-“Oh, my God have mercy!” For the first time Pete noticed the coil of
-rope and the sight of it redoubled his terror. On his knees he sank,
-trying to cover his eyes with his imprisoned hands, and quivering like
-an aspen. Hardly knowing what he was doing, Carson Dwight impulsively
-bent over him, but before he had opened his lips the watchful Baker had
-roughly drawn him back.
-
-“Don't, for God's sake!” the mountaineer whispered, warningly, and
-he pointed across the street to the houses near by. Indeed, as if to
-sanction his precaution, a window-sash in the upper story of the nearest
-house was raised, and a pale, white-haired man looked out. It was the
-leading Methodist preacher of the place. For one moment he stared down
-on them, as if struck dumb by the terror of the scene.
-
-“In the name of Christ, our Lord, our Saviour, be merciful, neighbors,”
- he said, in a voice that shook. “Don't commit this crime against
-yourselves and the community you live in. Spare him! In the name of God,
-hand him back to the protection of the law.”
-
-“The law be hanged, parson,” Pole retorted, as part of his rare rôle.
-“We are looking after that; thar hain't no law in this country that's
-wuth a hill o' beans.”
-
-“Be merciful--give the man a chance for his life,” the preacher
-repeated. “Many think he is innocent!”
-
-Hearing that plea in his behalf, Pete screamed out and tried to extend
-his hands supplicatingly towards his defender, but under Baker's
-insistent orders he was dragged, now struggling more desperately,
-farther down the street.
-
-“Ah, Pole, tell the poor--” Keith Gordon began, when the mountaineer
-sharply commanded: “Dry up! You are disobeyin' orders. Hurry up; bring
- 'im on. That other gang may hear this racket, and then--come on, I tell
-you! You violate my leadership and I'll have you court-martialled.”
-
-In some fashion or other they moved on down the street, now taking a
-more direct way to the store in the fear that they might be met by the
-expected lynchers and foiled in their purpose. They had traversed the
-entire length of the street leading from the court-house to the bank
-building, and were about to turn the corner to reach the rear door of
-the store, when, in a qualm of fresh despair, Pete's knees actually gave
-way beneath him and he sank limply to the sidewalk.
-
-“Lord, I reckon we'll have to tote 'im!” Pole said.
-
-“Pick 'im up, boys, and be quick about it. This is a ticklish spot. Let
-one person see us and the game will be up.”
-
-Pete clearly misunderstood this, and seeing in the words a hint that
-help or protection was not far away, he suddenly opened his mouth and
-began to scream.
-
-As quick as a flash Carson, who was immediately behind him, clapped his
-hand over his lips and said, “Hush, for God's sake, Pete, we are your
-friends!”
-
-With his mouth still closed by the hand upon it, the negro could only
-stare into Carson's mask too terrified to grasp more than that he had
-heard a kindly voice.
-
-“Hush, Pete, not a word! We are trying to save you,” and Carson removed
-his hand.
-
-“Who dat? Oh, my God, who dat talkin'?” Pete gasped.
-
-“Carson Dwight,” said the young man. “Now hush, and hurry.”
-
-“Thank God it you, Marse Carson--oh, Marse Carson, Marse Carson, you
-ain't gwine ter let um kill me!”
-
-“No, you are safe, Pete.”
-
-In a rush they now bore him round the corner, and then pausing at the
-door of the store, to be certain that no extraneous eye was on them,
-they waited breathlessly for an order from their leader.
-
-“All right, in you go!” presently came from Pole's deep voice, in a
-great breath of relief. “Open the door, quick!”
-
-The shutter creaked and swung back into the black void of the store,
-and the throng pressed inward. The door was closed. The darkness was
-profound.
-
-“Wait; listen!” Pole cautioned. “Thar might be somebody on the sidewalk
-at the front.”
-
-“Oh, my God, Marse Carson, is you here?” came from the quaking negro.
-
-“Sh!” and Pole imposed silence. For a moment they stood so still that
-only the rapid panting of the negro was audible.
-
-“All right, we are safe,” Baker said. “But, gosh! it was a close shave!
-Strike a light an' let's try to ease up this feller. I hated to be
-rough, but somebody had to do it.”
-
-“Yes, it had to be,” said Dwight. “Pete, you are with friends. Strike a
-light, Blackburn, the poor boy is scared out of his wits.”
-
-“Oh, Marse Carson, what dis mean? what you-all gwine ter do ter me?”
-
-Blackburn had groped to the lamp on the table and was scratching a match
-and applying the flame to the wick. The yellow light flashed out, and a
-strange sight met the bewildered gaze of the negro as kindly faces
-and familiar forms gradually emerged from the sheeting. Near him stood
-Dwight, and grasping his hand, Pete clung to it desperately.
-
-“Oh, Marse Carson, what dey gwine ter do ter me?”
-
-“Nothing, Pete, you are all right now,” Carson said, as tenderly as if
-he were speaking to a hurt child. “The mob was coming and we had to do
-what we did to save you.” He explained the plan of keeping him hidden in
-the cellar for a few days, and asked Pete if he would consent to it.
-
-“I'll do anything you say, Marse Carson,” the negro answered. “You know
-what's best fer me.”
-
-“I've got an old mattress here,” Blackburn spoke up; “boys, let's get it
-into the cellar. It will make him comfortable.”
-
-And with no sense of the incongruity of their act, considering that as
-the sons of ex-slave-holders they had never in their lives waited upon
-a negro, Wade Tingle and Keith Gordon drew the dusty mattress from a
-dry-goods box in the corner of the room and bore the cumbersome thing
-through the cellar doorway into the cob webbed darkness beneath.
-Blackburn followed with a candle, indicating the best-ventilated spot
-for its placement. Thither Carson led his still benumbed client, who
-would move only at his bidding, and then like a jerky automaton.
-
-“You won't be afraid to stay here, will you, Pete?” he asked.
-
-The negro stared round him at the encroaching shadows in childlike
-perturbation.
-
-“You gwine ter lock me in, Marse Carson?” he asked.
-
-Carson explained that in a sense he was still a prisoner, but a prisoner
-in the hands of friends--friends who had pledged themselves to see that
-justice was done him. The negro slowly lowered himself to the mattress
-and stretched out his legs on the stone pavement. An utter droop of
-despair seemed to settle on him. From the depths of his wide-open eyes
-came a stare of dejection complete.
-
-“Den I _hain't_ free?” he said.
-
-“No, not wholly, Pete,” Carson returned; “not quite yet.”
-
-“Dry up down thar. Listen!” It was Baker's voice in a guarded tone as he
-stood in the cellar doorway.
-
-The group around the negro held its breath. The grinding of footsteps on
-the floor over their heads ceased. Then from the outside came the steady
-tramp of many feet on the brick sidewalk, the clatter of horses' hoofs
-in the street.
-
-“Sh! Blow out the light,” Carson said, and Blackburn extinguished it.
-Profound darkness and stillness filled the long room. Like an army,
-still voiceless and grimly determined, the human current flowed
-jailward. It must have numbered several hundred, judged by the time it
-took to pass. The sound was dying out in the distance when Carson, the
-last to leave Pete, crept from the cellar, locked the door, and joined
-the others in the darkness above.
-
-“That mob would hang every man of us if they caught on to our trick,”
- said Baker, with a queer, exultant chuckle.
-
-Carson moved past him towards the front door.
-
-“Where you goin'?” Pole asked, sharply.
-
-“I want to see how the land lies on the outside,” answered Carson.
-
-“You'll be crazy if you go,” said Blackburn, and the others pressed
-round Dwight and anxiously joined in the protest.
-
-“No, I must go,” Dwight firmly persisted. “We ought to find out exactly
-what that crowd thinks to-night, so we'll know what to depend on. If
-they think a lynching took place they will go home satisfied; if not,
-as Pole says, they may suspect us, and the most godless riot that ever
-blackened human history may take place here in this town.”
-
-“He's right,” declared the mountaineer. “Somebody ought to go. I really
-think I'm the man, by rights, an'--”
-
-“No, I want to satisfy myself,” was Dwight's ultimatum. “Stay here till
-I come back.”
-
-Blackburn accompanied him to the front door, cautiously looked out, and
-then let him pass through.
-
-“Knock when you get back--no, here, take the key to the back door and
-let yourself in. So far, so good, my boy, but this is absolutely the
-most ticklish job we ever tackled. But I'm with you. I glory in your
-spunk.”
-
-There was a swelling murmuring, like the onward sweep of a storm from
-the direction of the courthouse. Voices growing louder and increasing in
-volume reached their ears.
-
-“Wait for me. Keep the lights out for all you do,” Dwight said, and off
-he strode in the darkness.
-
-In the gloom and stillness of the store the others waited his return,
-hardly daring to raise their voices above a whisper. He was gone nearly
-an hour, and then they heard the key softly turned in the lock and
-presently he stood in their midst.
-
-“They've about dispersed,” he said, in a tone of intense fatigue. “They
-lay it to the Hillbend faction, who had some disagreement with them
-to-day. They seem satisfied.”
-
-“Gentlemen”--it was Garner's voice from his chair at the table--“there's
-one thing that must be regarded as sacred by us to-night, and that is
-the _absolute_ secrecy of this thing.”
-
-“Good Lord, you don't think any of us would be fool enough to talk
-about it!” exclaimed Blackburn, in an almost startled tone over the bare
-suggestion. “If I thought there was a man here who would blab this to a
-living soul, I'd--”
-
-“Well, I only wanted to impress that on you all,” said Garner. “To
-all intents and purposes we are law-breakers, and I'm a member of the
-Georgia bar. Where are you going, Carson?”
-
-“Down to speak to Pete,” answered Dwight. “I want to try to pacify him.”
-
-When he came back a moment later he said: “I've promised to stay here
-till daylight. Nothing else will satisfy him; he's broken all to pieces,
-crying like a nervous woman. As soon as I agreed to stay he quieted
-down.”
-
-“Well, I'll keep you company,” said Keith. “I can sleep like a top on
-one of the counters.”
-
-“Hold on, there is something else,” Carson said, as they were moving to
-the rear door. “You know the news will go out in the morning that Pete
-was taken off somewhere and actually lynched. This will be a terrible
-blow to his parents, and I want permission from you all to let those
-two, at least, know that--”
-
-“No!” Garner cried, firmly, even fiercely, as he turned and struck the
-counter near him with his open hand. “There you go with your eternal
-sentiment! I tell you this is a grave happening tonight--grave for us
-and still graver for Pete. Once let that mob find out that they were
-tricked and they will hang our man or burn this town in the effort.”
-
-“I understand that well enough,” admitted Dwight, “but the Lord knows we
-could trust his own flesh and blood when they have so much at stake.”
-
-“I am not willing to _risk_ it, if you are,” said Garner, crisply,
-glancing round at the others for their sanction. “It will be an awful
-thing for them to hear the current report in the morning, but they'd
-better stand it for a few days than to spoil the whole thing. A negro
-is a negro, and if Lewis and Linda knew the truth they would be Shouting
-instead of weeping and the rest of the darkies would suspect the truth.”
-
-“That's a fact,” Blackburn put in, reluctantly. “Negroes are quick
-to get at the bottom of things, and with no dead body in sight to
-substantiate a lynching story they would smell a mouse and hunt for it
-till they found it. No, Carson, _real_ weeping right now from the mammy
-and daddy will help us out more than anything else. Yes, they will have
-to bear it; they will be all the happier in the end.”
-
-“I suppose you are right,” Dwight gave in. “But it's certainly tough.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-
-[Illustration: 9247]
-
-T was just at the break of day the following morning. Major Warren, who
-had not retired until late the night before in his perturbed state of
-mind over the calamity which hovered in the air, was sleeping lightly,
-when he was awakened by the almost noiseless presence of some one in his
-room. Sitting up in bed he stared through the half darkness at a form
-which towered straight and still between him and the open window through
-which the first touches of the new day were stealing. “Who's there?” he
-demanded, sharply.
-
-“It's me, Marse William--Lewis.”
-
-“Oh, you!” The Major put his feet down to the rug at the side of
-his bed, still not fully awake. “Well, is it time to get up?
-Anything--wrong? Oh, I remember now--Pete!”
-
-A groan from the great chest of the negro set the air to vibrating, but
-he said nothing, and the old gentleman saw the bald pate suddenly sink.
-
-“Oh, Lewis, I hope--” Major Warren paused, unable to continue, so vast
-and grewsome were the fears his servant's attitude had inspired. The old
-negro took a step or two forward and then said: “Oh, marster, dey done
-tuck 'im out las' night--dey tuck my po' boy--” A great sob rose in old
-Lewis's breast and burst on his lips.
-
-“Really, you don't mean it--you can't, after--”
-
-“Yasser, yasser; he daid, marster. Pete done gone! Dey killed 'im las'
-night, Marse William.”
-
-“But--but how do you know?”
-
-“I des dis minute seed Jake Tobines; he slipped up ter my house en
-called me out. Jake lives back 'hind de jail, Marse William, en when de
-mob come him en his wife heard de racket en slipped out in de co'n-patch
-ter hide. He seed de gang, marster, wid his own eyes, en heard um ax fer
-de boy. At fus Marse Barrett refused ter give 'im up, but dey ordered
-fire on 'im en he let um have de keys. Jake seed um fetch Pete out, en
-heard 'im beggin' um ter spar' his life, but dey drug 'im off.”
-
-There was silence broken only by the old negro's sobs and the smothered
-effort he was making to restrain his emotion.
-
-“And mammy,” the Major began, presently; “has she heard?”
-
-“Not yit, marster, but she is awake--she been awake all night long--on
-her knees prayin' most er de time fer mercy--she was awake when Jake
-come en she knowed I went out ter speak ter 'im, en when I come back
-in de house, marster, she went in de kitchen. I know what she done dat
-fur--she didn't want ter know, suh, fer certain, ef I'd heard bad news
-or not. I wanted ter let 'er know, but I was afeared ter tell 'er, en come
-away. I loves my wife, marster--I--I loves her mo' now dat Pete's gone
-dan ever befo'. I loves 'er mo' since she been had ter suffer dis way,
-en, marster, dis gwine ter kill 'er. It gwine ter kill Lindy, Marse
-William.”
-
-“What's the matter, father?” It was Helen Warren's voice, and with a
-look of growing terror on her face she stood peering through the open
-doorway. The Major ejaculated a hurried and broken explanation, and with
-little, intermittent gasps of horror the young lady advanced to the old
-negro.
-
-“Does Mam' Linda know?” she asked, her face ghastly and set in
-sculptural rigidity.
-
-“Not yet, missy, not yet--it gwine ter kill yo' ol' mammy, child.”
-
-“Yes, it may,” Helen said, an odd, alien quality of resignation in her
-voice. “I suppose I'd better go and break it to her. Father, Pete was
-innocent, absolutely innocent. Carson Dwight assured me of it. He was
-innocent, and yet--oh!”
-
-With a shudder she turned back to her room across the hall. In the
-stillness the sound of the match she struck to light her lamp was
-raspingly audible. Without another word, and wringing the extended hand
-of his wordless master, Lewis crept down the stairs and out into the
-pale light of early morning. Like an old tree fiercely beaten by a
-storm, he leaned towards the earth. He looked about him absently for a
-moment, and then sat down on the edge of the veranda floor and lowered
-his head to his brown, sinewy hands.
-
-A negro woman with a milk-pail on her arm came up the walk from the
-gate and started round the house to the kitchen door, but seeing him
-she stopped and leaned over him. “Is what Jake done say de trufe?” she
-asked.
-
-“Yassum, yassum, it done over, Mary Lou--done over,” Lewis said, looking
-up at her from his blearing eyes; “but ef you see Lindy don't let on ter
-her yit. Young miss gwine ter tell 'er fust.”
-
-“Oh, my Lawd, it done over, den!” the woman said, shudderingly; “it
-gwine ter go hard with Mam' Lindy, Unc' Lewis.”
-
-“It gwine ter _kill_ 'er, Mary Lou; she won't live dis week out. I know
- 'er. She had ernough dis life wid all she been thoo fur 'erself en her
-white folks, in bondage en out, en' dis gwine ter settle 'er. I don't
-blame 'er. I'm done thoo myse'f. Ef de Lawd had spar' my child, I
-wouldn't er ax mo', but, Mary Lou, I hope I ain't gwine ter stay long.
-I'll hear dat po' boy beggin' fer mercy every minute while I live, en
-what I want mo' of it fur? Shucks! no, I'm raidy--en, 'fo' God, I wish
-dey had er tuck us all three at once. Dat ud 'a' been some comfort, but
-fer Pete ter be by hisse'f beggin' um ter spar' 'im--all by hisse'f, en
-me 'n his mammy--”
-
-The old man's head went down and his body shook with sobs. The woman
-looked at him a moment, and then, wiping her eyes on her apron, she went
-on her way.
-
-A few minutes later, just as the red sun was rising in a clear sky and
-turning the night's moisture into dazzling gems on the grass and leaves
-of trees and shrubbery, like the beneficent smile of God upon a pleasing
-world, Helen descended the stairs. She had the sweet, pale face of a
-suffering nun as she paused, looked down on the old servant, and caught
-his piteous and yet grateful, upturned glance.
-
-“I'm going to her now, Uncle Lewis,” she said. “I want to be the first
-to tell her.”
-
-“Yes, you mus' be de one,” Lewis sighed, as he rose stiffly; “you de
-onliest one.”
-
-He shambled along in her wake, his old hat, out of respect for her
-presence, grasped in his tense hand. As they drew near the little
-sagging gate at the cottage there was a sound of moving feet within,
-and Linda stood in the doorway shading her eyes from the rays of the sun
-with her fat hand. To the end of her life Helen had the memory of the
-old woman's face stamped on her brain. It was a yellow mask, which might
-have belonged to a dead as well as a living creature, behind which the
-lights of hope and shadows of despair were vying with each other for
-supremacy. In no thing pertaining to the situation did the pathos so
-piteously lie as in the fact that Linda was deliberately playing a
-part--fiercely acting a rôle that would fit itself to that for which the
-agony of her soul was pleading. She was trying to smile away the shadows
-her inward fears, her racial intuition were casting on her face.
-
-“Mighty early fer you ter come, honey,” she said; “but I reckon you is
-worried 'bout yo' ol' mammy.”
-
-“Yes, it's early for me to be up,” Helen said, avoiding the wavering
-glance that seemed in reality to be avoiding the revelation of hers.
-“But I saw Uncle Lewis and thought I'd come back with him.”
-
-“You hain't had yo' breakfast yit, honey, I know,” said Linda, reaching
-for a chair half-heartedly and placing it for her young mistress, and
-then her eyes fell on her husband's bareheaded, bowed attitude as he
-stood at the gate, and something in it, through her sense of sight, gave
-her a deadening blow. For an instant she almost reeled; she drew a deep
-breath, a breath that swelled out her great, motherly bosom, then with
-her hands hanging limply at her side, she stood in front of Helen. For
-a moment she did not speak, and then, with her face on fire, her great,
-somnolent eyes ablaze, she suddenly bent down and put her hands on
-Helen's knees and said: “Looky here, honey, I've been afraid of it all
-night long, an' I've fit it off an' fit it off, an' I got up dis mawnin'
-fightin' it off, but ef you come here so early 'ca'se--ef you come here
-ter tell me dat my child--ef you come here--ef you come here--gre't God
-on high, it ain't so! it cayn't be dat way! Look me in de eyes, honey,
-I'm raidy en waitin' fer you ter give it de lie.”
-
-For one moment she glared at Helen as the girl sat white and quivering,
-her glance on the floor, and then she uttered a piercing scream like
-that of a frightened beast, and grasping the hand of her husband, who
-was now by her side, she pointed a finger of stone at Helen. “Look!
-Look, Lewis; my Gawd, she _ain't lookin' at me!_ Look at me, honey
-chile; look at me! D' you hear me say--” She stood firmly for an instant
-and then she reeled into her husband's arms.
-
-“She daid; whut I tol you? Missy, yo' ol' mammy daid,” and lifting his
-wife in his arms he bore her to the bed in the corner of the room. “Yes,
-she done daid,” he groaned, as he straightened up.
-
-“No, she's only fainted,” said Helen; “bring me the camphor, quick!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII.
-
-[Illustration: 9253]
-
-HAT morning at the usual hour the store-keepers opened their dingy
-houses in the main street and placed along the narrow brick sidewalks
-the dusty, stock-worn samples of their wares. The clerks and porters as
-they swept the floors would pause to discuss the happening of the
-night just gone. Old Uncle Lewis and Mammy Linda Warren's boy had been
-summarily dealt with, that was all. The longer word just used had of
-late years become a part of the narrowest vocabulary, suggesting to
-crude minds many meanings not thought of by lexicographers, not the
-least of which was something pertaining to justice far-reaching, grim,
-and unfailing in these days of bribery and graft. Only a few of the more
-analytical and philosophical ventured to ask themselves if, after
-all, the boy might have been innocent. If they put the question to the
-average citizen it was tossed off with a shrug and a “Well, what's the
-difference? It's such talk as he was guilty of that is at the bottom of
-all the black crimes throughout the South.” Such venom as Pete's was
-the very muscle of the black claws that were everywhere reaching out for
-helpless white throats. Dead? Yes, he was dead. What of it? How else was
-the black, constantly increasing torrent to be dammed?
-
-And yet by ten o'clock that morning even these tongues were silenced,
-for news strange and startling began to steal in from the mountains. The
-party who had been in pursuit of the desperado Sam Dudlow had overtaken
-him--found him hiding in a bam, covered with hay. He was unarmed and
-made no resistance, laughing as if the whole thing were a joke. He
-frankly told them that he would have given himself up earlier, but he
-had hoped to live long enough to get even with the other leader of the
-mob that had whipped him at Darley, a certain Dan Willis. He confessed
-in detail exactly how he had murdered the Johnsons and that he had done
-it alone. Pete Warren was in no way implicated in it. The lynchers, to
-get the whole truth, threatened him; they tortured him; they tied him
-to a tree and piled pine fagots about him, but he still stuck to his
-statement, and when they had mercifully riddled him with bullets, just
-as his clothing was igniting, they left him hanging by the road-side, a
-grewsome scarecrow as a warning to his kind, and, led by Jabe Parsons,
-they made all haste to reach the faction on Pete Warren's track to tell
-them that the boy was innocent.
-
-Jabe Parsons, carrying a load on his mind, remembering his wife's
-valiant stand in behalf of the younger accused, rode faster than his
-tired fellows, and near his own farm met the lynchers returning from
-Darley. “Too late,” they told him, in response to his news, the Hillbend
-boys had done away with the Darley jailbird and mysteriously hidden the
-body to inspire fear among the negroes.
-
-At Darley consternation swept the place as story after story of Aunt
-Linda's prostration passed from house to house. “Poor, faithful old
-woman! Poor old Uncle Lewis!” was heard on every side.
-
-About half-past ten o'clock Helen, accompanied by Sanders, came
-down-town. At the door of Carson's office they parted and Helen came
-in. Carson happened to be alone. He rose suddenly from his seat and came
-towards her, shocked by the sight of her wan face and dejected mien.
-
-“Why, Helen!” he cried, “surely you don't think--” and then he checked
-himself as he hastened to get a chair for her.
-
-“I've just left mammy,” she began, in a voice that was husky with
-emotion. “Oh, Carson, you can't imagine it! It is simply heart-rending,
-awful! She is lying there at death's door staring up at the ceiling,
-simply benumbed.”
-
-Carson sat down at his desk and leaned his head on his hand. Could he
-keep back the truth under such pressure? It was at this juncture that
-Garner came in. Casting a hurried glance at the two, and seeing Helen's
-grief-stricken attitude, he simply bowed.
-
-“Excuse me, Miss Helen, just a moment,” he said. “Carson, I left a paper
-in your pigeon-hole,” and as he bent and extracted a blank envelope from
-the desk he whispered, warningly: “Remember, not one word of this! Don't
-forget the agreement! Not a soul is to know!” And putting the envelope
-into his pocket he went out of the room, casting back from the threshold
-a warning, almost threatening glance.
-
-“I've been with her since sunup,” Helen went on.
-
-“She fainted at first, and when she came to--oh, Carson, you love her
-as I do, and it would have broken your heart to have heard her! Oh, such
-pitiful wailing and begging God to put her out of pain!”
-
-“Awful, awful!” Dwight said; “but, Helen--” Again he checked himself.
-Before his mind's eye rose the faces of the faithful group who had stood
-by him the night before. He had pledged himself to them to keep the
-thing secret, and no matter what his own faith in Helen's discretion
-was he had no right, even under stress of her grief, to betray what had
-occurred. No, he couldn't enlighten her--not just then, at all events.
-
-“I was there when Uncle Lewis came in to tell her that proof had come
-of Pete's absolute innocence,” Helen went on, “but instead of comforting
-her it seemed to drive her the more frantic. She--but I simply can't
-describe it, and I won't try. You will be glad to know, Carson, that the
-only thing in the shape of comfort she has had was your brave efforts in
-her behalf. Over and over she called your name. Carson, she used to pray
-to God; she never mentions Him now. You, and you alone, represent all
-that is good and self-sacrificing to her. She sent me to you. That's why
-I am here.”
-
-“She sent you?” Carson was avoiding her eyes, fearful that she might
-read in his own a hint of the burning thing he was trying to withhold.
-
-“Yes, you see the report has reached her about what the lynchers said
-in regard to hiding Pete's body. You know how superstitious the negroes
-are, and she is simply crazy to recover the--the remains. She wants to
-bury her boy, Carson, and she refuses to believe that some one can't
-find him and bring him home. She seems to think you can.”
-
-“She wants me to--” He went no further.
-
-“If it is possible, Carson. The whole thing is so awful that it has
-driven me nearly wild. You will know, perhaps, if anything can be done,
-but, of course, if it is wholly out of the question--”
-
-“Helen”--in his desperation he had formulated a plan--“there is
-something that you ought to know. You have every right to know it, and
-yet I'm bound in honor not to let it out to any one. Last night,” he
-went on, modestly, “in the hope of formulating some plan to avert
-the coming trouble, I asked Keith to get a number of my best friends
-together. We met at Blackburn's store. No positive, sworn vows were
-made. It was only the sacred understanding between men that the matter
-was to be held inviolate, owing to the personal interests of every
-man who had committed himself. You see, they came at my suggestion, as
-friends of mine true and loyal, and it seems to me that I'd have a moral
-right, even now, to take another into the body--another whom I trust as
-thoroughly and wholly as any one of them. Do you understand, Helen?”
-
-“No, I'm in the dark, Carson,” she said, with a feeble smile.
-
-“You see, I want to speak freely to you,” he continued. “I want to
-tell you some things you ought to know, and yet I am not free to do so
-unless--unless you will tacitly join us. Helen, do you understand?
-Are you willing to become one of us so far as absolute secrecy is
-concerned?”
-
-“I am willing to do anything you'd advise, Carson,” the girl replied,
-groping for his possible meaning through the cloud of mystery his queer
-words had thrown around him. “If something took place that I ought to
-know, and you are willing to confide it to me, I assure you I can be
-trusted. I'd die rather than betray it.”
-
-“Then, as one of us, I'll tell you,” Carson said, impressively. “Helen,
-Pete, is not dead.”
-
-“Not dead?” She stared at him incredulously from her great, beautiful
-eyes. Slowly her white hand went out till it rested on his, and remained
-there, quivering.
-
-“No, he's alive and so far in safe keeping, free from harm at present,
-anyway.”
-
-Her fingers tightened on his hand, her sweet, appealing face drew nearer
-to his; she took a deep breath. “Oh, Carson, don't say that unless you
-are _quite_ sure.”
-
-“I am absolutely sure,” he said; and then, as they sat, her hand still
-lingering unconsciously on his, he explained it all, leaving the part he
-had taken out of the recital as much as possible, and giving the chief
-credit to his supporters. She sat spellbound, her sympathetic soul
-melting and flowing into the warm current of his own while he talked as
-it seemed to her no human being had ever talked before.
-
-When he had concluded she drew away her hand and sat erect, her bosom
-heaving, her eyes glistening.
-
-“Oh, Carson,” she cried; “I never was so happy in my life! It actually
-pains me.” She pressed her hand to her breast. “Mammy will be so--but
-you say she must not--must not yet--”
-
-“That's the trouble,” Dwight said, regretfully.
-
-“I'm sure I could put her and Lewis on their guard so that they
-would act with discretion, but Blackburn and Garner--in fact, all the
-rest--are afraid to risk them, just now anyway. You see, they
-think Linda and Lewis might betray it in their emotions--their very
-happiness--and so undo everything we have accomplished.”
-
-“Surely, now that the report of Sam Dudlow's confession has gone out,
-they would let Pete alone,” Helen said.
-
-“I wouldn't like to risk it quite yet,” said Dwight. “Right now, while
-they are under the impression that an innocent negro has been lynched,
-they seem inclined to quiet down, but once let the news go out that a
-few town men, through trickery, had freed the prisoner, and they would
-rise more furious than ever. No, we must be careful. And, Helen, you
-must remember your promise. Don't let even your sympathy for Linda draw
-it out of you.”
-
-“I can keep it, and I really shall,” Helen said.
-
-“But you must release me as soon as you possibly can.”
-
-“I'll do that,” he promised, as she rose to go.
-
-“I'll keep it,” she repeated, when she had reached the door; “but to do
-so I'll have to stay away from mammy. The sight of her agony would wring
-it from me.”
-
-“Then don't go near her till I see you,” Dwight cautioned her. “I'll
-meet all the others to-day and put the matter before them. Perhaps they
-may give in on that point.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX
-
-[Illustration: 9260]
-
-T the corner of the street Helen encountered Sanders, who was waiting
-for her. At the sight of him standing on the edge of the sidewalk,
-impatiently tapping the toe of his neatly shod foot with the ferrule of
-his tightly rolled silk umbrella, she experienced a shock which would
-have eluded analysis. He had been so completely out of her thoughts, and
-her present mood was of such an entrancing nature that she felt a desire
-to indulge it undisturbed. The bare thought of the platitudes she would
-have to exchange with any one ignorant of her dazzling discovery was
-unpleasant. After all, what was it about Sanders that vaguely incited
-her growing disapproval? This morning could it possibly be his very
-faultlessness of attire, his spick-and-span air of ownership in her body
-and soul because of their undefined understanding as to his suit, or was
-it because--because he had, although through no fault of his own, taken
-no part in the thing which today, for Helen, somehow, held more weight
-than all other earthly happenings? Indeed, fate was not using the Darley
-visitor kindly. He was unwittingly like a healthy soldier on a furlough
-making himself useful in the drawing-room while news of victory was
-pouring in from his comrades at the front.
-
-“You see I waited for you,” he said, gracefully raising his hat; “but,
-Helen, what has happened? Why, what is the matter?”
-
-“Nothing,” she said; “nothing at all.”
-
-“But,” he went on, frowning in perplexity as he suited his step to hers,
-“I never saw any one in my life change so suddenly. Why, when you went
-into that office you were simply a picture of despair, but now you look
-as if you were bursting with happiness. Your face is flushed, your eyes
-are fairly dancing. Helen, if I thought--”
-
-He paused, his own color rising, a deeper frown darkening his brow.
-
-“If you thought what?” she asked, with a little irritation.
-
-“Oh”--he knocked a stone out of his way with his umbrella--“what's the
-use denying it! I'm simply jealous. I'm only a natural human being, and
-I suppose I'm jealous.”
-
-“You have no cause to be,” she said, and then she bit her lip with
-vexation at the slip of the tongue. Why should she defend herself to
-him? She had never said she loved him. She had not yet consented to
-marry him. Besides, she was in no mood to gratify his vanity. She wanted
-simply to be alone with the boundless delight she was allowed to share
-with no one but--Carson--Carson!--the one who had, for _her sake_, made
-the sharing of it possible.
-
-“Well, I am uneasy, and I can't help it,” Sanders went on, gloomily.
-“How can I help it? You left me so sad and depressed that you had hardly
-a word for me, and after seeing this Mr. Dwight you come out looking--do
-you know,” he broke off, “that you were there alone with that fellow
-nearly an hour?”
-
-“Oh no, it couldn't have been so long,” she said, further irritated by
-his open defence of what he erroneously considered his rights.
-
-“But it was, for I timed you,” Sanders affirmed. “Heaven knows I counted
-the actual minutes. There is a lot about this whole thing I don't like,
-but I hardly know what it is.”
-
-“You are not only jealous but suspicious,” Helen said, sharply. “Those
-are things I don't like in any man.”
-
-“I've offended you, but I didn't mean to,” Sanders said, with a sudden
-turn towards precaution. “You'll forgive me, won't you, Helen?”
-
-“Oh yes, it's all right.” She had suddenly softened. “Really, I am sorry
-you feel hurt. Don't think any more about it. I have a reason which I
-can't explain for feeling rather cheerful just now.” They had reached
-the next street corner and she patised. “I want to go by Cousin Ida's.
-She lives down this way.”
-
-“And you'd rather I didn't go along?”
-
-“I have something particular to say to her.”
-
-“Oh, I see. Then may I come as usual this afternoon?”
-
-Her wavering, half-repentant glance fell. “Not this afternoon,” she
-said. “I ought to be with mammy. Couldn't you call this evening?”
-
-“It will seem a long time to wait in this dreary place, with nothing
-to occupy me,” he said; “but I shall be well repaid. So I may come this
-evening?”
-
-“Oh yes, I shall expect you then,” and Helen turned and left him.
-
-In the front garden of the Tarpley house she found her cousin watering
-the flowers. Observing Helen at the gate, Miss Tarpley hastily put down
-the tin sprinkling-pot and hurried to her.
-
-“I was just going up to see mammy,” Ida said. “I know I can be of no use
-and yet I wanted to try. Oh, the poor thing must be suffering terribly!
-She had enough to bear as it was, but that last night--oh!”
-
-“Yes--yes,” Helen said. “It is hard on her.”
-
-Ida Tarpley rested her two hands on the tops of the white palings of the
-fence and stared inquiringly into Helen's face.
-
-“Why do you say it in that tone?” she asked; “and with that queer,
-almost smiling look in your eyes? Why, I expected to see you prostrated,
-and--well, I don't think--I actually don't think I ever saw you looking
-better in my life. What's happened, Helen?”
-
-“Oh, nothing.” Helen was now making a strong effort to disguise her
-feelings, and she succeeded to some extent, for Miss Tarpley's thoughts
-took another trend.
-
-“And poor, dear Carson,” she said, sympathetically. “The news must have
-nearly killed him. He came by here last night making all haste to get
-down-town, as he said, to see if something couldn't be done. He was
-terribly wrought up, and I never saw such a look of determination on a
-human face. 'Something _has_ to be done,' he said; 'something _must_ be
-done! The boy is innocent and shall not die like a dog. It would kill
-his mother, and she is a good, faithful old woman. No, he shall not
-die!' And with those words he hurried on. Oh, Helen, that is sad,
-too. It is sad to see as noble a young spirit as he has fail in such a
-laudable undertaking. Think of how he stood up before that surging mob
-and let them shoot at him while he shouted defiance in their teeth,
-till they cowered down and slunk away! Think of a triumph like that, and
-then, after all, to meet with such galling defeat as overtook him last
-night! When I heard of the lynching I actually cried. I think I felt
-for him as much as I did for Mam' Linda. Poor, dear boy! You know why he
-wanted to do it so much--you know that as well as I do.”
-
-“Why he wanted to do it!” Helen echoed, almost hungry for the sweet
-confirmation of Dwight's fidelity to her cause.
-
-“Yes, you know--you know that his whole young soul was set on it because
-it was your wish, because you were so troubled over it. I've seen that
-in his eyes ever since the matter came up. I saw it there last night,
-and it seemed to me that his very heart was burning up within him. Oh,
-I get mad at you--to think you'd let that Augusta man, even if you do
-intend some day to marry him--that you'd let him be here at such a time,
-as if Carson hadn't enough to bear without that. Ah, Helen, no other
-human being will ever love you as Carson Dwight does--never, never while
-the sun shines.”
-
-With a misleading smile of denial on her face Helen turned homeward. He
-loved her--Carson Dwight--_that man_ of all men--still loved her. Her
-body felt imponderable as she strode blithely on her way. In her
-hands she carried a human life--the life of the poor boy Carson had so
-wonderfully struggled for and intrusted to her keeping. To his mother
-and father Pete was dead, but to her and Carson, her first sweetheart,
-he still lived. The secret was theirs to hold between their throbbing
-hearts. Old Linda's grief was but a dream. Helen and Carson could draw
-aside the black curtain and tell her to look and see the truth.
-
-Standing with bowed head at the front gate when she arrived home, she
-saw old Uncle Lewis, his bald pate bared to the sunshine.
-
-“Mam' Lindy axin' 'bout you, missy,” he said, pitifully. “She say you
-went down-town ter see Marse Carson, en she seem mighty nigh crazy ter
-know ef you found whar de--de body er de po' boy is at. Dat all she's
-beggin' en pleadin' fer now, missy, en ef dem white mens refuse it, de
-Lawd only know what she gwine ter do.”
-
-Helen gazed at him helplessly. Her whole young being was wrung with the
-desire to let him know the truth, and yet how could she tell him what
-had been revealed to her in such strict confidence?
-
-“I'll go see mammy now,” she said. “I've no news yet, Uncle Lewis--no
-news that I can give you. I'm looking for Carson to come up soon.”
-
-As she neared the cottage the motley group of negroes, serious-faced men
-and women, bland-eyed persons in their teens, and half-clad children,
-around the door intuitively and respectfully drew aside and she
-entered the cottage unaccompanied and unannounced. Linda was not in the
-sitting-room, where she expected to find her, and so, wonderingly, Helen
-turned into the kitchen adjoining. Here the general aspect of things
-added to her growing surprise, for the old woman had drawn close the
-curtains of the little, small-paned windows, and before a small fire in
-the chimney she sat prone on the ash-covered hearth. That alone might
-not have been so surprising, but Linda had covered her body with several
-old tow sacks upon which she had plentifully sprinkled ashes. The
-grayish powder was in her short hair, on her face and bare arms, and
-filled her lap. There was one thing in the world that the old woman
-prized above all else--a big, leather-bound family Bible which she had
-owned since she first learned to read under the instruction of Helen's
-mother, and this, also ash-covered, lay open by her side.
-
-“Is I gwine ter bury my chile?” she demanded, as she glared up at her
-mistress. “What young marster say? Is I, or is I never ter lay eyes on
- 'im ergin? Is I de only nigger mother dat ever lived on dis yeth, bound
-er free, dat cayn't have dat much? Tell me. Ef dey gwine ter le' me see
- 'im Marse Carson ud know it. What he say?”
-
-Rendered fairly speechless by the predicament she was in, Helen could
-only stand staring helplessly. Presently, however, she bent, and lifting
-the Bible from the floor she laid it on the table. With her massive
-elbows on her knees, her fat hands over her face and almost touching the
-flames, Linda rocked back and forth.
-
-“Dey ain't no God!” she cried; “ef dey is one He's es black es de back
-er dat chimbley. Dat book is er lie. Dey ain't no love en mercy anywhars
-dis side de blinkin', grinnin' stars. Don't tell me er nigger's prayers
-is answered. Didn't I pray las' night till my tongue was swelled in my
-mouf fer um ter spare my boy? En what in de name er all created was de
-answer? When de day broke wid de same sun shinin' dat was shinin' when
-he laid de fus time on my breas', de news was fetch me dat my baby chile
-was dragged out wid er rope rounst his neck, prayin' ter men whilst I
-was prayin' ter God. Look lak dat enough, hein? But no, nex' come de
-news dat ef he'd er lived one short hour longer dey might er let 'im go
-'ca'se dey foun' de right one. Look lak dat enough, too, hein? But nex'
-come de word, en de las' message: innocent or no, right one or wrong
-one, my chile wasn't goin' ter have a common bury in'-place--not even
-in de Potter's Fiel' dis book tell erbout so big. Don't talk ter me! Ef
-prayers fum niggers is answered mine was heard in hell, en old Scratch
-en all his imps er darkness was managin' it. Don't come near me! I might
-lay han's on you. I ain't myself. I heard er low trash white man say
-once dat niggers was des baboons. I may be one, en er wild one fer all
-I know--oh, honey, don't pay no 'tention ter me. Yo' ol' mammy is bein'
-burnt at de stake en she ain't 'sponsible. She love you, honey--she love
-you even in 'er gre't trouble.”
-
-“I understand, mammy,” and Helen put her arms around the old woman's
-neck. An almost overpowering impulse had risen in her to tell the old
-sufferer the truth, but thinking that some of the negroes might be
-listening, and remembering her promise, she restrained herself.
-
-“I'm going to write a note to Carson to come up at once,” she said.
-“He'll have something to tell you, mammy.”
-
-And passing the negroes about the door she went to the house, and
-hastening into the library she wrote and forwarded by a servant the
-following note:
-
-_“Dear Carson,--Come at once, and come prepared to tell her. I can't
-stand it any longer. Do, do come._
-
-_“Helen.”_
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX
-
-[Illustration: 9269]
-
-ALF an hour later Helen, waiting at the front gate, saw a horse and
-buggy turn the corner down the street. She recognized it as belonging
-to Keith Gordon. Indeed, Keith was driving, and with him was Carson
-Dwight.
-
-Helen's heart bounded, a vast weight of incalculable responsibility
-seemed to lift itself from her. She unlatched the gate and swung it
-open.
-
-“Oh, I thought you'd never come!” she smiled, as he sprang out and
-advanced to her. “I would have broken my oath of allegiance to the clan
-if you had waited a moment longer.”
-
-“I might have known you couldn't keep it,” Dwight laughed. “Mam' Linda
-would have drawn it out of you just as you did out of me.”
-
-“But are you going to tell her?” Helen asked, just as Keith, who had
-stepped aside to fasten his horse, came up.
-
-“Yes,” Carson answered. “Keith and I made a lightning trip around and
-finally persuaded all the others. Invariably they would shake their
-heads, and then we'd simply tell them you wished it, and that settled
-it. They all seem flattered by the idea that you are a member.”
-
-“But say, Miss Helen,” Keith put in, gravely, “we really must guard
-against Lewis and Linda's giving it away. It is a most serious business,
-and, our own interests aside, the boy's life depends on it.”
-
-“Well, we must get them away from the cottage,” said Helen. “They are
-now literally surrounded by curious negroes.”
-
-“Can't we have them up here in the parlor?” Carson asked. “Your father
-is down-town; we saw him as we came up.”
-
-“Yes, that's a good idea,” Helen responded, eagerly. “The servants are
-all at the cottage; we'll make them stay there and have Uncle Lewis and
-Mam' Linda here.”
-
-“Suppose I run down and give the message,” proposed Keith, and he was
-off with the speed of a ball-player on a home-run.
-
-“Do you think there is any real danger to Mam' Linda's health in letting
-her know it suddenly?” Carson asked, thoughtfully.
-
-“We must try to reveal it gradually,” Helen said, after reflecting for
-a moment. “There's no telling. They say great joy often kills as quickly
-as great sorrow. Oh, Carson, isn't it glorious to be able to do this?
-Don't you feel happy in the consciousness that it was your great,
-sympathetic heart that inspired this miracle, your wonderful brain and
-energy and courage that actually put it through?”
-
-“Not through yet,” he laughed, depreciatingly, as his blood flowed hotly
-into his cheeks. “It would be just my luck right now to have this thing
-turn smack dab against us. We are not out of the woods yet, Helen, by
-long odds. The rage of that mob is only sleeping, and I have enemies,
-political and otherwise, who would stir it to white heat at a moment's
-notice if they once got an inkling of the truth.” He snapped his
-fingers. “I wouldn't give that for Pete's life if they discover our
-trick. Pole Baker had just come in town when Keith and I left. He said
-the Hillbend people were earnestly denying all knowledge of any lynching
-or of the whereabouts of Pete's body, and that some people were
-already asking queer questions. So, you see, if on top of that growing
-suspicion, old Lewis and Linda begin to dance a hoe-down of joy instead
-of weeping and wailing--well, you see, that's the way it stands.”
-
-“Oh, then, perhaps we'd better not tell them, after all,” Helen said,
-crestfallen. “They are suffering awfully, but they would rather bear it
-for awhile than to be the cause of Pete's death.”
-
-“No,” Carson smiled; “from the way you wrote, I know you have had about
-as much as you can stand, and we simply must try to make them comprehend
-the full gravity of the matter.”
-
-At this juncture Keith came up panting from his run and joined them.
-“Great Heavens!” he cried, lifting his hands, the palms outward. “I
-never saw such a sight. I can stand some things, but I'm not equal to
-torture of that kind.”
-
-“Are they coming?” Carson asked.
-
-“Yes, there's Lewis now. Of course, I couldn't give them a hint of the
-truth down there in that swarm of negroes, and so my message that you
-wanted to see them here only seemed to key them up higher.”
-
-Carson turned to Lewis, who, hat in hand, his black face set in stony
-rigidity, had paused near by and stood waiting respectfully to be spoken
-to.
-
-“Uncle Lewis,” he said, “we've got good news for you and Linda, but
-a great deal depends on its being kept secret. I must exact a sacred
-promise of you not to betray to a living soul by word of mouth or act
-what I am going to tell you. Will you promise, Lewis?”
-
-The old man leaned totteringly forward till his gaunt fingers closed
-upon one of the palings of the fence; his eyes blinked in their deep
-cavities. He made an effort to speak, but his voice hung in his mouth.
-Then he coughed, cleared his throat, and slid one of his ill-shod feet
-backward, as he always did in bowing, and said, falteringly: “God on
-high know, young marster, dat I'd keep my word wid you. Old Unc' Lewis
-would keep his word wid you ef dey was burnin' 'im at de stake. You been
-de bes' friend me 'n Mam' Lindy ever had, young marster. You been de
-kind er friend dat _is_ er friend. When you tried so hard t'other night
-ter save my boy fum dem men even when dey was shootin' at you en tryin'
-ter drag you down--oh, young marster, I wish you'd try me. I want ter
-show you how I feel down here in my heart. Dem folks is done had deir
-way; my boy is daid, but God know it makes it easier ter give 'im up ter
-have er young, high-minded white man lak you--”
-
-“Stop, here's Mam' Linda,” Carson said. “Don't tell her now, Lewis; wait
-till we are inside the house; but Pete is alive and safe.”
-
-The old man's eyes opened wide in an almost deathlike stare, and he
-leaned heavily against the fence.
-
-“Oh, young marster,” he gasped, “you don't mean--you sholy can't
-mean--”
-
-“Hush! not a word.” Carson cautioned him with uplifted hand, and they
-all looked at old Linda as she came slowly across the grass. A shudder
-of horror passed over Dwight at the change in her. The distorted,
-swollen face was that of a dead person, only faintly vitalized by some
-mechanical force. The great, always mysterious depths of her eyes were
-glowing with bestial fires. For a moment she paused near them and stood
-glaring with incongruous defiance as if nothing in mortal shape could
-mean aught but ill towards her.
-
-“Carson has something--something very important to tell you, dear
-mammy,” Helen said, “but we must go inside.”
-
-“He ain't got nothin' ter tell me dat I don't know,” Linda muttered,
-“lessen it is whar dey done put my chile's body. Ef you know dat, young
-marster--ef--”
-
-But old Lewis had moved to her side, his face ablaze. He laid his hand
-forcibly on her shoulder. “Hush, 'oman!” he cried. “In de name er
-God, shet yo' mouf en listen ter young marster--listen ter 'im Linda,
-honey--hurry up--hurry up in de house!”
-
-“Yes, bring her in here,” Carson said, with a cautious glance around,
-and he and Helen and Keith moved along the walk while Linda suffered
-herself, more like an automaton than a human being, to be half dragged,
-half led up the steps and into the parlor. Keith, who had vaguely put
-her in the category of the physically ill, placed an easy-chair for her,
-but from force of habit, while in the presence of her superiors, the
-old woman refused to sit. She and Lewis stood side by side while Carson
-carefully closed the door and came back.
-
-“We've got some very, very good news for you, Mam' Linda,” said he; “but
-you must not speak of it to a soul. Linda, the men who took Pete from
-jail did not kill him. He is still alive and safe, so far, from harm.”
-
-To the surprise of them all, Linda only stared blankly at the tremulous
-speaker. It was her husband who, full of fire and new-found happiness,
-now leaned over her. “Didn't you hear young marster?” he gulped; “didn't
-you hear 'im say we-all's boy was erlive?--_erlive_, honey?”
-
-With an arm of iron Linda pushed him back and stood before Carson.
-
-“You come tell me dat?” she cried, her great breast tumultuously
-heaving. “Young marster, 'fo' God I done had enough. Don't tell me dat
-now, en den come say it's er big mistake after you find out de trufe.”
-
-“Pete's all right, Linda,” Carson said, reassuringly. “Keith and Helen
-will tell you about it.”
-
-With an appealing look in her eyes Linda extended a detaining hand
-towards him, but he had gone to the door and was cautiously looking out,
-his attention being drawn to the sound of footsteps in the hall. It was
-two negro maids just entering the house, having left half a dozen other
-negroes on the walk in front. Going out into the hall, Carson commanded
-the maids and the loiterers to go away, and the astonished blacks, with
-many a curious, backward glance, made haste to do his bidding. A heavy
-frown was on his face and he shrugged his broad shoulders as he took
-his place on the veranda to guard the parlor door. “It's a ticklish
-business,” he mused; “if we are not very careful these negroes will drop
-on to the truth in no time.”
-
-He had dismissed the idlers in the nick of time, for there was a sudden,
-joyous scream from Linda, a chorus of warning voices. The full import of
-the good news was only just breaking upon the stunned consciousness of
-the old sufferer. Screams and sobs, mingled with hysterical laughter,
-fell upon Carson's ears, through all of which rang the persistent drone
-of Keith Gordon's manly voice in gentle admonition. The door of the
-parlor opened and old Lewis came forth, his black face streaming with
-tears. Going to Carson he attempted to speak, but, unable to utter a
-word, he grasped the young man's hand, and pressing it to his lips he
-staggered away. A few minutes later Keith came out doggedly trying to
-divest his boyish features of a certain glorified expression that had
-settled on them.
-
-“Good God!” he smiled grimly, as he fished a cigar from the pocket of
-his waistcoat, “I'm glad that's over. It struck her like a tornado. I'm
-glad I'm not in your shoes. She'll literally fall on your neck. Good
-Lord! I've heard people say negroes haven't any gratitude--Linda's
-burning up with it. You are her God, old man. She knows what you did,
-and she knows, too, that we opposed you to the last minute.”
-
-“You told her, of course,” Carson said, reprovingly.
-
-“I had to. She was trying to dump it all on me as the only member of
-the gang present. I told her, the whole thing was born in your brain and
-braced up by your backbone. Oh yes, I told her how we fought your
-plan and with what determination you stuck to it in the face of all
-opposition. No, the rest of us don't deserve any credit. We'd have
-squelched you if we could. Well, I simply wasn't cut out for heroic
-things. The easy road has always been mine to any destination, but I
-reckon nothing worth much was ever picked up by chance.”
-
-The two friends had gone down to the gate and Keith was unhitching
-his horse, when Helen came out on the veranda, and seeing Carson she
-hastened to him.
-
-“She's up in my room,” she explained. “I'm going to keep her there
-for the rest of the day anyway. I'm glad now that we took so much
-precaution. She admits that we were right about that. She says if
-she had known Pete was safe she might have failed to keep it from
-the others. But she is going to help us guard the secret now. But oh,
-Carson, she is already begging to be allowed to see Pete. It's pitiful.
-There are moments even now when she even seems to doubt his safety, and
-it is all I can do to convince her. She is begging to see you, too. Oh,
-Carson, when you told me about it why did you leave out the part you
-took? Keith told us all about your fight against such odds, and how you
-sat up all night at the store to keep the poor boy company.”
-
-“Keith was with me,” Carson said, flushing, deeply. “Well, we've got
-Pete bottled up where he is safe for the present, but there is no
-telling when suspicion may be directed to us.”
-
-“We are going to win; I feel it!” said Helen, fervidly. “Don't forget
-that I'm a member of the clan. I'm proud of the honor,” and pressing his
-hand warmly she hurried back to the house.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXI
-
-[Illustration: 9278]
-
-N his way to Blackburn's store the next morning to inquire about the
-prisoner, Carson met Garner coming out of the barber-shop, where he had
-just been shaved.
-
-“Any news?” Carson asked, in a guarded voice, though they were really
-out of earshot of any one.
-
-“No actual _news_,” Garner replied, stroking his thickly powdered chin;
-“but I don't like the lay of the land.”
-
-“What's up now?” Dwight asked.
-
-“I don't know that there is anything wrong yet; but, my boy,
-discovery--discovery grim and threatening is in the very air about us.”
-
-“What makes you think so, Garner?” They paused on the street crossing
-leading over to Blackbum's store.
-
-“Oh, it's all due to old Linda and Lewis,” Garner said, in a tone of
-conviction. “You know I was dead against letting them know Pete was
-alive.”
-
-“You think we made a mistake in that, then?” Carson said. “Well, the
-pressure was simply too strong, and I had to give way under it. But why
-do you think it was a bad move?”
-
-“From the way it's turning out,” said Garner. “While Buck Black was
-shaving me just now he remarked that his wife had seen Uncle Lewis and
-Linda and that she thought they were acting very peculiarly. I asked him
-in as off-hand and careless a manner as I could what he meant, and he
-said that his wife didn't think they acted exactly as if they had
-just lost their only child. Buck said it looked like they were only
-pretending to be brokenhearted. I thought the best way to discourage him
-was to be silent, and so I closed my eyes and he went on with his work.
-Presently, however, he said bluntly, 'Look here, Colonel Garner'--Buck
-always calls me colonel--'where do you think they put that boy?' He had
-me there, you know, and I felt ashamed of myself. The idea of as good a
-lawyer as there is in this end of the State actually wiggling under the
-eye and tongue of a coon as black as the ace of spades! Finally I told
-him that, as well as I could gather, the Hillbend faction had put Pete
-out of the way, and were keeping it a secret to intimidate the negroes
-through their natural superstition. And what do you reckon Buck said.
-Huh, he'd make a good detective! He said he'd had his eye on the most
-rampant of the Hillbend men and that they didn't look like they'd
-lynched anything as big as a mouse. In fact, he thought they were on the
-lookout for a good opportunity in that line.”
-
-“It certainly looks shaky,” Carson admitted, as they moved on to the
-store, where Blackburn stood waiting for them just inside the doorway.
-
-“How did Pete pass the night?” Carson asked, his brow still clouded by
-the discouraging observations of his partner.
-
-“Oh, all right,” Blackburn made reply. “Bob and Wade slept here on
-the counters. They say he snored like a saw-mill. They could hear him
-through the floor. Boys, I hate to dash cold water in your faces, but I
-never felt as shaky in my life.”
-
-“What's the matter with _you?_” Garner asked, with an uneasy laugh.
-
-“I'm afraid a storm is rising in an unexpected quarter,” said the
-store-keeper, furtively glancing up and down the street, and then
-leading them farther back into the store.
-
-“Which quarter is that?” Carson asked, anxiously.
-
-“The sheriff is acting odd--mighty odd,” said Blackburn.
-
-“Good Lord! you don't think Braider's really on our trail do you?”
- Garner cried, in genuine alarm.
-
-“Well, you two can make out what it means yourselves,” and Blackburn
-pulled at his short chin whiskers doggedly. “It was only about half an
-hour ago--Braider's drinking some, and was, perhaps, on that account a
-little more communicative--he came in here, his face as red as a pickled
-beet, and smelling like a bunghole in a whiskey-barrel, and leaned
-against the counter on the dry-goods side.
-
-“'I'm the legally elected sheriff of this county, ain't I?' he said, in
-his maudlin way, and I told him he was by a big majority.
-
-“'Well,' he said, after looking down at the floor for a minute, 'I'll
-bet you boys think I'm a dem slack wad of an officer.'
-
-“I didn't know what the devil he was driving at, and so I simply kept
-my mouth shut, but you bet your life I had my ears open, for there was
-something in his eye that I didn't like, and then when he said '_you
-boys_' in that tone I began to think he might be on to the work we did
-the other night.”
-
-“Well, what next?” Carson asked, sharply. “Well, he just leaned on the
-counter, about to slide down every minute,” Blackburn went on, “and
-then he began to laugh in a silly sort of way and said, 'Them _Hillbend_
-fellers are a slick article, ain't they?' Of course I didn't know what
-to say,” said the store-keeper, “for he had his eyes on me and was
-grinning to beat the Dutch, and that is the kind of cross-examination I
-fail at. Finally, however, I managed to say that the Hillbend folks had
-beaten the others to the jail, anyway, and he broke out into another
-knowing laugh. 'The Hillbend gang didn't have as fur to go,' he said.
-'Oh, they are a slick article, an' they've got a slick young leader.'”
-
-“What else?” asked Carson, who looked very grave and stood with his lips
-pressed together.
-
-“Nothing else,” Blackburn answered. “Just then Wiggin, your boon
-companion and bosom friend, stopped at the door and called him.”
-
-“Good Lord, _and with Wiggin!_” Garner exclaimed. “Our cake is dough,
-and it's good and wet.”
-
-“Yes, he's a Wiggin man!” said Blackburn. “I've known he was pulling
-against Carson for some time. It seems like Braider sized up the
-situation, and decided if he was going to be re-elected himself he'd
-better pool issues with the strongest man, and he picked that skunk as
-the winner. I went to the door and watched them. They went off, arm in
-arm, towards the court-house.”
-
-“Braider is evidently on to us,” Carson decided, grimly; “and the truth
-is, he holds us in the palm of his hand. If he should insist on carrying
-out the law, and rearresting Pete and putting him back in jail, Dan
-Willis would see that he didn't stay there long, and Wiggin would swear
-out a warrant against us as the greatest law-breakers unhung.”
-
-“Oh yes, the whole thing certainly looks shaky,” admitted Blackburn.
-
-“I tell you one thing, Carson,” Garner observed, grimly, “there are no
-two ways about it, we are going to lose our client and your election
-just as sure as we stand here.”
-
-“I don't intend to give up yet,” Dwight said, his lip twitching
-nervously and a fierce look of determination dawning in his eyes. “We've
-accomplished too much so far to fail ignominiously. Boys, I'd give
-everything I have to ward this thing off from old Aunt Linda. She's
-certainly borne enough.”
-
-The two lawyers went to their office, avoiding the numerous groups of
-men about the stores who seemed occupied with the different phases
-of the ever-present topic. They seated themselves at their desks, and
-Garner was soon at work. But there was nothing for Carson to do, and
-he sat gloomily staring through the open doorway out into the sunshine.
-Presently he saw Braider across the street and called Garner's attention
-to him. Then to their surprise the sheriff turned suddenly and came
-directly towards them.
-
-“Gee, here he comes!” Garner exclaimed; “he may want to pump us. Keep
-a sharp eye on him, Carson. He may really not know anything actually
-incriminating, after all. Watch him like a hawk!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXII.
-
-[Illustration: 9285]
-
-HE young men pretended to be deeply absorbed over their work when the
-stalwart officer loomed up in the doorway, his broad-brimmed hat well
-back on his head, the flush of intoxicants in his tanned face, his step
-unsteady.
-
-“I hope I won't disturb you, gentlemen,” he said; “but you are two men
-that I want to talk to--I might say talk to as a brother.”
-
-“Come in, come in, Braider,” Carson said; “take that chair.”
-
-[Illustration: 0283]
-
-As Braider moved with uncertain step to a chair, tilted it to one side
-to divest it of its burden of books, newspapers, and old briefs and
-other defunct legal documents, Garner with a wary look in his eye fished
-a solitary cigar from his pocket--the one he had reserved for a mid-day
-smoke--and prof-ered it.
-
-“Have a cigar,” he said, “and make yourself comfortable.”
-
-The sheriff took the cigar as absent-mindedly as he would, in his
-condition, have received a large banknote, and held it too tightly for
-its preservation in his big red hand.
-
-“Yes, I want to talk to you boys, and I want to say a whole lot that I
-hope won't go any further. I've always meant well by you two, and hoped
-fer your success both in the law--and politics.”
-
-Garner cast an amused glance, in spite of the gravity of the situation,
-at his partner, and then said, quite evenly, “We know that, Braider--we
-always _have_ known it.”
-
-“Well, as I say, I want to _talk_ to you. I've heard that an honest
-confession is good for the soul, if not for the pocket, and I'm here to
-make one, as honest as I kin spit it out.”
-
-“Oh, that's it?” said Garner, and with a wary look of curiosity on his
-face he sat waiting.
-
-“Yes, and I want to begin back at the first and sort o' lead up. It's
-hard to keep a fellow's political leaning hid, Carson, and I reckon
-you may have heard that I had some notion of casting my luck in with
-Wiggin.”
-
-“After he began circulating those tales about me, yes,” Carson said,
-with a touch of severity; “not before, Braider--at least not when I
-worked as I did the last time for your own election.”
-
-“You are plumb right,” the sheriff said, readily enough. “I flopped over
-sudden, I'll acknowledge; but that's neither here nor there.” He paused
-for a moment and the lawyers exchanged steady glances.
-
-“He may want to make a bargain with us,” Garner's eyes seemed to say,
-but Carson's mind had grasped other and more dire possibilities as he
-recalled Blackburn's remark of a few minutes before. In fact all those
-assurances of good-will might mean naught else than that the sheriff--at
-the instigation of Wiggin and others--had come actually to arrest him as
-the leader of the men who had intimidated the county jailer and
-stolen away the State's prisoner. The thought seemed to be borne
-telepathically to Garner, for that worthy all at once sat more rigidly,
-more aggressively defiant in his chair, and the pen he was chewing
-was suspended before his lips. This beating about the bush, in serious
-things, at least, was not Garner's method.
-
-“Well, well, Braider,” he said, with a change of tone and manner, “tell
-us right out what you want. The day is passing and we've got lots to
-do.”
-
-“All right, all right,” agreed the intoxicated man; “here goes. Boys,
-what I'm going to say is a sort of per-personal matter. You've both
-treated me like a respectable citizen and officer of the law, and I've
-taken it just as if I fully deserved the honor. But Jeff Braider ain't
-no hypocrite, if he _is_ a politician and hobnobs with that sort of
-riffraff. Boys, always, away down at the bottom of everything I ever did
-tackle in this life, has been the memory of my old mother's teachings,
-and I've tried my level best, as a man, to live up to 'em. I don't know
-as I ever come nigh committing crime--as I regard it--till here lately.
-Crime, they tell me, stalks about in a good many disguises. The crime
-I'm talking about had two faces to it. You could look at it one way
-and it would seem all right, and then from another side it would look
-powerful bad. Well, I first saw this thing the night the mob raided
-Neb Wynn's shanty and run Pete Warren out and chased him to your house,
-Carson. You may not want to look me in the eye ag'in, my boy, when I
-tell you, but I could have come to your aid a sight quicker that night
-than I did if I hadn't been loaded down with so many fears of injury
-to myself. As I saw that big mob rushing like a mad river after that
-nigger, I said to myself, I did, that no human power or authority could
-save 'im anyway, and that if I stood up before the crowd and tried to
-quiet them, that--well, if I wasn't shot dead in my tracks I'd kill
-myself politically, and so I waited in the edge of the crowd, hiding
-like a sneak-thief, till--till you did the work, and then I stepped up
-as big as life and pretended that I'd just arrived.”
-
-“Oh!” Garner exclaimed, and he stared at the bowed head of the officer
-with a look of wonder in his eyes; and it was a look of hope, too,
-for surely no human being of exactly _this_ stamp would take unfair
-advantage of any one.
-
-“That was the _first_ time,” Braider gulped, as he went on, his glance
-now directed solely to Carson. “My boy, I went to bed that night, after
-we jailed that nigger, feeling meaner than an egg-sucking dog looks when
-he's caught in the act. If there is anything on earth that will shame a
-man it is to see another display more moral and physical courage than he
-does, and you did enough of both that night to show me where I stood. It
-was a new thing to me, and it made me mad. I was a good soldier in the
-war--I wear a Confederate veteran's badge that was pinned onto my coat
-in public by the | beautiful daughter of a dead comrade--but being shot
-at in a bunch ain't the same as being the _only_ target, and I showed my
-limit.”
-
-“Oh, you are exaggerating the whole thing,” Carson said, with a flush of
-embarrassment.
-
-“No I ain't, Carson Dwight,” Braider said, feelingly, and he took out
-his red cotton handkerchief and wiped his eyes. “You showed me that
-night the difference between bravery, so-called, and the genuine thing.
-I reckon bravery for personal gain is a weak imitation of bravery that
-acts just out of human pity as yours did that night. Well, that ain't
-all. The next day I was put to a worse test than ever. It was noised
-about, you know, that a bigger mob than the first was rising. I stayed
-out of the centre of town as much as I could, for everywhere I went
-folks would look at me as if they thought I'd surely do something to
-protect the prisoner, and at home my wife was whimpering around all day,
-saying she was sure Pete was innocent, or enough so to deserve a trial,
-if not for himself for the sake of his mammy and daddy. But what was
-such a wavering thing as I was to do? I took it that seventy-five per
-cent, of the men who had backed me with their ballot in my election was
-bent on lynching the prisoner, and if I opposed them they would consider
-me a traitor. On the other hand, I was up against this: if I did put
-up a feeble sort of opposition and gave in easy under pressure, the
-conservative men, like some we have here in town, would say I didn't
-mean business or I'd have actually opened fire on the mob. You see,
-boys, I wasn't man enough to take a stand either way, and though I well
-knew what was coming, I went about lying like a dog--lying in my throat,
-telling everybody that the indications showed that the excitement had
-quieted down. I went home that night and told my wife all was serene,
-and I drank about a quart of rye whiskey to keep me from thinking about
-the business and went to bed, but my conscience, I reckon, was stronger
-than my whiskey, for I rolled and tumbled all night. It seemed to me
-that I was, with my own hands, tying the rope around that pore nigger's
-neck. There I lay, a sworn officer of the law, flat on my back with
-not enough moral courage in my miserable carcass to have killed a gnat.
-Carson, if I saw you once before my eyes that long night, I saw you
-five hundred times. Your speech rang over and over in my ears. I saw you
-stand there when a ball had already grazed your brow and defy them to
-shoot again. I saw that poor black boy clinging to your knees, and
-knew that the light of Heaven had shone on you, while I lay in the hot
-darkness of the bottomless pit.”
-
-“God, you do put it strong!” Garner exclaimed.
-
-“I'm not putting it half strong enough,” the sheriff went on. “I don't
-deserve to hold office even in a community half run by mob law. But I
-ain't through. I ain't through yet. I got up early that awful morning,
-and went out to feed my hogs at a pen that stands on a back street, and
-there a woman milking a cow told me that it was over Pete Warren was
-done for--guilty or not, he was done for. I went in the house and tried
-to gulp down my breakfast, faced by my wife, who wouldn't speak to me,
-and showed in other ways what she thought about the whole thing. She was
-eternally sighing and going on about old Mammy Lindy and her feelings. I
-first went to the jail, and there I was told that two mobs had come, the
-first the Hillbend crowd, who did the work, and the bigger mob that got
-there too late.”
-
-Braider's voice had grown husky and he coughed. Garner stole a searching
-glance of inquiry at Carson, but Dwight, his face suffused with a warm
-look of pity for the speaker, was steadily staring through the open
-door.
-
-“I ain't done yet, God knows I ain't,” the sheriff gulped. “That morning
-I felt meaner than any convict that ever wore ball and chain. If I'd
-been tried and found guilty of stabbing a woman in the back I don't
-believe I could have felt less like a man. I tried to throw it all off
-by thinking that I couldn't have done any good anyway, but it wouldn't
-work. Carson, you and your plucky stand for the maintenance of law was
-before me, and you wasn't paid for the work while I was. Huh! do you
-remember seeing me as you came out of Blackburn's store that morning,
-with your hair all tousled up and your eyes looking red and bloodshot?”
-
-“Yes, I remember seeing you,” said Dwight. “I would have stopped to
-speak to you but--but I was in a hurry to get home.”
-
-“Well, you may have heard that I used to be a sort of a one-horse
-detective,” Braider went on, “and I had acquired a habit of looking
-for the explanation of nearly every unusual thing I saw, and--well,
-you coming out of that store before it was opened for trade, while the
-shutters in the front was still closed, struck me as odd. Then again,
-remembering your big interest in Pete's case, somehow, it didn't seem to
-me--meeting you sudden that way--that you looked quite as downhearted
-as I expected. In fact, I thought you appeared sort o' satisfied over
-something.”
-
-“Oh!” Garner exclaimed, all at once suspecting Braider of a gigantic
-ruse to entrap them. “You thought he looked chipper, did you? Well, I
-must say he looked exactly the other way to me when I first saw him that
-day.”
-
-“Well, it started me to wondering, anyway,” went on the sheriff,
-ignoring Garner's interruption, “and I set to work to watch. I hung
-about the restaurant across the street, smoking a cigar and keeping my
-eyes on that store. After awhile I saw Bob Smith go in the store and
-then Wade Tingle. Then I saw a big tray of grub covered with a white
-cloth sent from the Johnston House, and Bob Smith come to the door and
-took it in, sending the coon that fetched it back to the hotel. Well,
-I waited a minute or two and then sauntered, careless-like, across and
-went in. I chatted awhile with Bob and Wade, noticing, I remember, that
-for a newspaper man Wade seemed powerful indifferent about gathering
-items about what had happened, and that Blackburn was busy folding up
-a tangled lot of short pieces of white sheeting. All this time I was
-looking about to see where that waiter full of grub had gone. Not a
-sign of it was in sight, but in a lull in the talk I heard the clink of
-crockery somewhere below me, and I caught on. Boys, I'm here to tell you
-that never did a condemned soul feel as I felt. I went out in the open
-air praying, actually praying, that what I suspected might be true. I
-started for the jail and on the way met Burt Barrett. I asked him for
-particulars, and when he said that the Hillbend mob had left word that
-nobody need even look for the remains of the boy my heart gave a big
-jump in the same way as it had when that clip and saucer collided in
-that cellar. I asked Burt if he noticed which way the mob tuck the
-prisoner, and he said down towards town. I asked him if it wasn't odd
-for Hillbend folks to go that way to hang a man, and he agreed that it
-was. Well, to make a long story short, I was on to your gigantic ruse,
-and God above knows what a load it took off of me. You had saved me,
-Carson--you had saved me from toting that crime to my grave. I knew
-you were the ringleader, for I didn't know anybody else who would have
-thought of such a plan. You are a sight younger man than I am, but you
-stuck to principle, while I shirked principle, duty, and everything
-else. Doing all that was hurting your political chances, and you knew
-it, but you stuck to what was right all the same.”
-
-“Yes, he certainly has queered his political chances,” Garner said,
-grimly, with a look of wonder in his eye over the sheriff's frank
-confession. “But you, I think you said, were a Wiggin man,” he finished.
-
-“Well, Wiggin and some others _think_ I am yet,” said Braider; “and
-I reckon I was till this thing come up; but, boys, I guess I've got
-a little smidgin of good left in me, for somehow Wiggin has turned my
-stomach. But I hain't got to what I was leading up to. Neither one of
-you hain't admitted that there is a nigger in that wood-pile yet, and I
-don't blame you for keeping it to yourselves. That is your business,
-but the time has come when Jeff Braider's got to do the right thing or
-plunge deeper into hellishness, and he's had a taste of what it means
-and don't want no more of it. I may lose all I've got by it. Wiggin and
-his gang may beat me to a cold finish next election, but from now on I'm
-on the other side.”
-
-“Good,” said Garner; “that's the way to talk. Was that what you were
-leading up to, Braider?”
-
-“Not altogether,” and the sheriff rose and stood over Carson, resting
-his hand on the young man's shoulder to steady himself. “My boy, I've
-come to tell you that the damnedest, blackest plot agin you that ever
-was laid has been hatched out.”
-
-“What is that, Braider?” Carson asked, calmly enough under the
-circumstances.
-
-“Wiggin and his gang have found out that a trick was played night before
-last. The Hillbend men convinced them that they didn't lynch anybody,
-and the Wiggin crowd smelt around until they dropped on to the thing.
-The only fact they are short on is where the boy is hid. They think he
-is in the house of one of the negro preachers. Wiggin come to me, not
-half an hour ago, and considering me one of his stand-bys, he told me
-all about it. The scheme is for me to arrest Pete and jail 'im on the
-charge of murder and then to arrest you fer being the ringleader of a
-jail-breaking gang, who preaches law and order in public for political
-gain and breaks both in secret.”
-
-“And what do they think will become of Pete?” Carson asked, a touch of
-supreme bitterness in his tone.
-
-“Wiggin didn't say; but I know what would happen to him. The seeds of
-bloody riot are being strewn broadcast by the handful. They've been to
-every member of the crowd that lynched Sam Dudlow and warned them, on
-their lives, not to repeat the statement that Dudlow had said Pete was
-innocent. They told the lynchers that you two lawyers were on the hunt
-for men who had heard the confession and intend to use that as evidence
-against them.”
-
-“Ah, that _is_ slick, slick!” Garner muttered.
-
-“Slick as double-distilled goose-grease,” said Braider. “The lynchers
-are denying to friend or foe that Dudlow said a word, and the news is
-spreading like wildfire that Pete was Dudlow's accomplice, and that you,
-Carson, are trying, with a gang of town dudes, to carry your point by
-main, bull-headed force.”
-
-“I see, I see.” Carson had risen and with a deep frown on his face stood
-leaning against the top of his desk. He extended his hand to the officer
-and said, “I appreciate your telling me all this, Braider, more than I
-can say.”
-
-“What's the good of my telling you if the news doesn't benefit you?”
- the sheriff asked. “Carson, I want to see you win. I ain't half a man
-myself, but I've got two little boys just starting to grow up, and I
-wish they could be like you--a two-legged bull-dog that clamps his teeth
-on what's right and won't let loose. Carson, you've got a chance--a bare
-chance--to get your man out alive.”
-
-“What's that?” Dwight asked, eagerly.
-
-“Why, let me hold the mob in check by promising to arrest Pete, and
-you get some trusty feller to take him in a buggy to-night through the
-country to Chattanooga. It would be a ticklish trip, and you want a man
-that won't get scared at his shadow, for on every road out of Darley,
-men will be on the lookout, but if you once got him there he would be
-absolutely safe, for no mob would go out of the State to do work of that
-sort. Getting a good man is the main thing.”
-
-“I'll do it myself,” Dwight said, firmly. “You?” Garner cried. “That's
-absurd!”
-
-“I'm the only one who _could_ do it,” Carson declared, “for Pete would
-not go with any one else.”
-
-“I really believe you are right,” Garner agreed, reluctantly; “but it is
-a nasty undertaking after all you've been through.”
-
-“By gum!” exclaimed Braider, extending his hand to Dwight. “I hope you
-will do it. I want to see you complete a darn good all-round job.” >
-“Well, you _are_ an officer of the law,” Garner observed, with amusement
-written all over his rugged face, “asking a man to steal your own
-prisoner.”
-
-“What else can I do that's at all decent?” Braider asked. “Besides,
-do you fellows know that there never has been any written warrant for
-Pete's arrest. I started to jail him without any, and old Mrs. Parsons
-turned him loose. The only time he was put in jail was by Carson
-himself. By George! as I look at it, Carson, you have every right to
-take him out of jail, by any hook or crook, since you was responsible
-for him being there instead of hanging to a limb of a tree. I tell
-you, my boy, there ain't any law on earth that can touch you. Nobody is
-prepared to testify against Pete, and if you will get him to Chattanooga
-and keep him there for a while he can come back here a free man.”
-
-“I have friends there who will look after him,” Dwight said. “I'll start
-with him to-night.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIII.
-
-[Illustration: 9297]
-
-HAT afternoon Keith Gordon went to Warren's to tell Helen of Carson's
-plan for the removal of Pete. She received him in the big parlor, and he
-found her seated at one of the wide windows which, in summer-time, was
-used as a doorway to the veranda.
-
-“I met the conquering hero, Mr. Sanders, on my way down,” he said,
-lightly. “I presume he has been here as usual.”
-
-“He only called to say good-bye,” Helen answered, a little coldly.
-
-“Oh, that _is_ news,” Keith pursued, in the same tone. “Rather sudden,
-isn't it?”
-
-“No, his affairs would not permit a longer visit,” said Helen. “But you
-didn't come to talk of him; it was something about Pete.”
-
-She sat very still and rigid while he went into detail as to the whole
-situation, and when he had finished she rested her chin in her white
-hand, and he saw her breast rise and fall tremulously.
-
-“There is danger attached to the trip,” she said, without looking at
-him. “I know it, Keith, by the way you talk.”
-
-He deliberated for an instant, then acknowledged: “Yes, there is, and
-to my way of thinking, Helen, there is a great deal. Wade and I tried to
-get him to consent to some other plan, but he wouldn't hear to it.
-He's so anxious to put it through all right that he won't trust to any
-substitute, and he won't let any one else go along, either. He thinks it
-would attract too much attention.”
-
-“In what particular way does the danger lie?” Helen faltered, and Keith
-saw her pass her hand over her mouth as if to reprimand her lips for
-their unsteadiness.
-
-“I'd tell you there wasn't any at all, as Carson would have me do,”
- Keith declared; “but when a fellow has the courage of an army of men, I
-believe in his getting the full credit for it. You want to know and
-I'm going to tell you. He's been through ticklish places enough in this
-business, but going over that lonely road to-night, when a thousand
-furious men may be on the lookout for him, is the worst thing he has
-tackled. It wouldn't be so very dangerous to a man who would throw up
-his hands if accosted, but, Helen, if you could have seen Carson's face
-when he was telling us about it, you would know that he will actually
-die rather than see Pete taken. He's reckless of late, anyway.”
-
-“Reckless!” Helen echoed, and this time she gave Keith a full, almost
-pleading stare.
-
-“Oh yes, you know he's reckless. He's been so ever since Mr. Sanders
-came. It looks to me like--well, I reckon a man can understand another
-better than a woman can, but it looks to me like Carson is doing the
-whole thing because you feel so worried about it.”
-
-“You certainly wrong him there,” Helen declared.
-
-“He is doing it simply because it is right.”
-
-“Oh, of course he thinks it's _right,_” Keith returned, with a boyish
-smile; “he thinks everything _you_ want is right.”
-
-When Keith had gone Helen went at once to Linda's cottage to tell her
-the news, putting it in as hopeful a light as possible, and not touching
-upon the danger of the journey. But the old woman had a very penetrating
-mind, and she stood in the doorway with a deeply furrowed brow for
-several minutes without saying anything, then her observation only added
-to Helen's burden of anxiety.
-
-“Chile,” she said, “ol' Lindy don't like de way dat looks one bit.
-You say young marster got ter steal off in de dead o' night, en dat he
-cayn't even let me see my boy once 'fo' he go. Suppin up, honey--suppin
-up! De danger ain't over yit. Honey, I know what it is,” Linda groaned;
-“dem white folks is rising ergin.”
-
-“Well, even if that is the reason”--Helen felt the chill hand of fear
-grasp her heart at the admission--“even if that is it, Carson will
-get him away safely.”
-
-“Ef he _kin_, honey, ef he _kin!_” Linda moaned.
-
-“'God been behind 'im all thoo so fur, but I seed de time when de Lawd
-Hisse'f seem ter turn His back on folks tryin' ter do dey level best.”
-
-Leaving Linda muttering and moaning in the cottage doorway, the girl
-went with a despondent step back to the big empty house and wandered
-aimlessly about the various rooms.
-
-As night came on and her father returned from town, she met him on the
-veranda and gave him a kiss of greeting, but she soon discovered that
-he had heard nothing. In fact, he was one of the many who still believed
-that Pete had been lynched, the vague whisperings to the contrary not
-having reached his old ears. She sat with him at the tea-table, and then
-went up to her room and lighted her lamp on her bureau. As she did so
-she looked at her reflection in the mirror and started at the sight of
-her grave features. Then a flash from her wrist caught her eye. It was
-the big diamond of a beautiful bracelet which Sanders had given her,
-and as she looked at it she shuddered. Was she superstitious? She hardly
-knew, and yet a strange idea took possession of her brain. Would her
-unspoken prayers for Carson Dwight's safety in his perilous expedition
-be answered while she wore that gift from another man, after she had
-spurned Carson's great and lasting love, and allowed the poor boy to
-think that she had given herself heart and soul to this stranger? She
-hesitated only a moment, and opening a jewel box she unclasped the
-bracelet and put it away. Then with a certain lightness of heart she
-went to the window overlooking the grounds of the Dwight homestead
-and stood there staring out in the hope of seeing Carson. But he was
-evidently not at home, for no lights were visible except a dim one in
-the invalid's room and one in old Dwight's chamber adjoining.
-
-At ten o'clock Helen disrobed herself still with that awful sense of
-impending tragedy hovering over her. The oil in her lamp was almost out,
-and for this reason only she extinguished the flame, else she would
-have kept it burning through the night to dissipate the material shadows
-which seemed to accentuate those of her spirit. She heard the old
-grandfather clock on the stair-landing below solemnly strike ten, then
-the monotonous tick-tack as the great pendulum swung to and fro. Sleep
-was out of the question. A few minutes before eleven she heard a soft
-foot-fall on the walk in the front garden, and going out on the veranda
-she looked down.
-
-The bowed form of a woman was moving restlessly back and forth from the
-steps to the gate.
-
-“Is that you, mammy?” Helen asked, softly.
-
-The handkerchiefed head was lifted and Linda looked up.
-
-“Yes, it's me, honey. I can't sleep. What de use? Kin er mother sleep
-when her chile is comin' in de worl'? No, you know she can't; neither
-kin she close 'er eyes when she's afeared dat same chile is gwine out of
-it. I'm afeared, honey. I'm afeared ter-night wuss dan all. Seem lak
-de evil sperits des been playin' wid us all erlong--makin' us think we
-gwine ter come thoo, so't will hit us harder w'en it do strack de blow.
-You go on back ter yo' baid, honey. You catch yo' death er cold. I'm
-gwine home right now.”
-
-Helen saw the old woman disappear round the corner of the house, but
-she remained on the veranda. The clock was striking eleven, and she
-was about to go in, when she heard the dull beat of hoofs on the
-carriage-drive of the Dwight place, and through the half moonlight she
-saw a pair of horses, Carson's best, harnessed to a buggy and driven
-by their owner slowly and cautiously going towards the big gate. Dwight
-himself got down to open it. She heard his low commands to the spirited
-animals as he led them forward by the bit, and then he stepped back to
-close and latch the gate. She had an overpowering impulse to call out to
-him; but would it be wise? His evident precaution was to keep his mother
-from knowing of his departure, and Helen's voice might attract the
-attention of the invalid and seriously hamper him in his undertaking.
-With her hands pressed to her breast she saw him get into the buggy,
-heard his calm voice as he spoke to the horses, and then he was off--off
-to do his duty--and _hers_. She went back to her room and laid down,
-haunted by the weird thought that she would never see him again. Then,
-all at once, she had a flash of memory which sent the hot blood of
-shame from her heart to her brain, and she sat up, staring through the
-darkness. _That_ was the man against whom she had steeled her heart for
-his conduct, his youthful indiscretions with her unfortunate brother.
-Was Carson Dwight to go forever unpardoned--unpardoned by such as _she_
-while _that_ sort of soul held suffering sway within him?
-
-The hours of the long night dragged by and another day began. Keith came
-up after breakfast and related the particulars of Carson's departure.
-Graphically he recounted how the gang had robed the ill-starred Pete in
-grotesque woman's attire and seen him and Carson safely in the buggy,
-but that was all that could be told or foretold. As for Keith, he and
-all the rest were trying to look on the bright side, and they would
-succeed better but for the long face Pole Baker had drawn when he came
-into town early that morning and heard of the expedition.
-
-“So he was uneasy?” Helen said, in perturbation.
-
-Keith hesitated for a moment and then answered: “Yes, to tell you the
-truth, Helen, it almost staggered him. He is a good-natured, long-headed
-chap, and he lost his temper. He cursed us all out for a silly, stupid
-set for allowing Carson to take such a risk. Finally we drew out of him
-what he feared. He said the particular road Carson took to reach the
-State line was actually alive with men, who had been keyed up to the
-highest tension by Wiggin and his followers. Pole said they had their
-eye on that road particularly because it was the most direct way to
-Chattanooga, and that Carson wouldn't have one chance in five hundred
-of passing unmolested. He said the idea of fooling men of that stamp by
-putting Pete in a woman's dress in the company of Carson, of all human
-beings, was the work of insane men.”
-
-“It really was dangerous!” said Helen, pale to the lips.
-
-“Well, we meant it for the best”--Keith defended himself and his
-friends--“we didn't know the road was a particularly dangerous one. In
-fact, Pole didn't learn it himself until several hours after Carson had
-left. I really believe he'd have helped us do what we did if he had been
-with us last night. We did the best we could; besides, Carson was going
-to have his way. Every protest we made was swept off with that winning
-laugh of his. In spite of the gravity of the thing, he kept us roaring.
-I have never seen him in better spirits. He was bowing and scraping
-before that veiled and hooded darky as if he were the grandest lady in
-the land. He even insisted on handing Pete into the buggy and protecting
-his long skirt from the dusty wheel. We never realized what we had done
-till he was gone and we all gathered in the store and talked it over.
-Blackburn, I reckon, being the oldest, was the bluest. He almost cried.
-Helen, I've seen popular men in my life, but I never saw one with so
-many friends as Carson. He's an odd combination. His friends love him
-extravagantly and his enemies hate him to the limit.”
-
-Late that afternoon, unable to wait longer for news of Carson, Helen
-went down to his office. Garner was in, and she surprised a look of
-firmly grounded uneasiness on his strong face. For a moment it was as if
-he intended to make some equivocal reply to her inquiry, but threw aside
-the impulse as unworthy of her courage and intelligence.
-
-“To be candid,” he said, as he stood stroking his chin, which bristled
-with open disregard for appearances under stress of more important
-things--“to tell you the whole truth, Miss Helen, I don't like the lay
-of the land.” Then he told her that the sheriff had just informed him
-of the whispered rumor that a body of men had met Carson Dwight and his
-charge near the State line about three o'clock in the morning. What had
-taken place the sheriff didn't know, beyond the fact that the men had
-disbanded and returned to their homes all gravely uncommunicative. What
-it meant no one but the participants knew. To face the facts, it looked
-very much as if harm had really come to one, if not to both, of the two.
-The mob had evidently been wrought to a high pitch of resentment for
-the trick Carson had played in stealing the prisoner from jail, and this
-second attempt to get him away may have enraged his enemies to outright
-violence against him, especially as Dwight was a fighting man and very
-hot-headed when roused.
-
-Unable to discuss the matter in her depressed frame of mind, Helen left
-him and went home. The whole story being now out, she found her father
-warmly excited and disposed to talk about it in all its phases, the
-earliest as well as the latest, but she had no heart for it, and after
-urging the Major not to speak of it to Linda she went supperless to her
-room.
-
-Two hours passed. The dusk had given way to the deeper darkness of
-evening. The moon had not yet risen and the starlight from a partly
-clouded sky was not sufficiently luminous to aid the vision in reaching
-any considerable distance, and yet from one of the rear windows of her
-room, where she stood morosely contemplative, she could see the vague
-outlines of Linda's cottage. It was while she was looking at the doorway
-of the little domicile, which stood out above the shrubbery of the rear
-garden as if dimly lighted from a candle within, that she saw something
-which caused her heart to suddenly bound. It was the live coal of a
-cigar, and the smoker seemed to be leaving the cottage, passing through
-the little gateway, and entering her father's grounds. What more natural
-than for Carson, if he had returned safely, to go at once to the mother
-of the boy with the news? Helen almost held her breath. She would soon
-be reasonably sure, for if it were Carson he would take a diagonal
-direction to reach the gateway to the Dwight homestead. Was it Carson,
-or--could it be her father? Her heart sank over the last surmise, and
-then it bounded again, for the coal of fire, fitfully flaring, was
-moving in the direction prayed for. Down the stairs Helen glided
-noiselessly, lest the Major hear her, and yet rapidly. When she reached
-the front veranda and descended the steps to the grass of the lawn she
-was just in time to see the red disk passing through the gateway
-to Dwight's. No form was visible, and yet she called out firmly and
-clearly: “Carson! Carson!” The coal of fire paused, described a curve,
-and she bounded towards it.
-
-“Did you call me?” Carson Dwight asked, in a voice so low from
-hoarseness that it hardly reached her ears.
-
-“Yes, wait!” she panted. “Oh, you've gotten back!”
-
-They now stood face to face.
-
-“Oh yes,” he laughed, with a gesture towards his throat of apology for
-his hoarseness; “did you think I was off for good?”
-
-“No, but I was afraid”--she was shocked by the pallor of his usually
-ruddy face, the many evidences of fatigue upon him, the nervous way
-he stood holding his hat and cigar--“I was afraid you had met with
-disaster.”
-
-“But why did you feel that way?” he asked, reassuringly.
-
-“Oh, from what Keith said in general, and Mr. Garner, too. They declared
-the road you took was full of desperadoes, and--”
-
-“I might have known they would exaggerate the whole business,” Carson
-said, with a smile. “Why, I've just come from Mam' Linda's. I went to
-tell her that Pete is all right and as sound as a dollar. He's in the
-charge of good, reliable friends of mine up there, and wholly out
-of danger. In fact, he's as happy as a lark. When I left him he was
-surrounded by a gang of as trifling scamps as himself bragging about his
-numerous escapes and--he's generous--my importance in the community we
-live in. Well, he's certainly been _important_ enough lately.”
-
-“But did you not meet with--with any opposition at all?” Helen went on,
-insistently.
-
-“Oh, well”--he hesitated, struck a match, and applied it to his already
-lighted cigar--“we lost our way, for one thing. You see, I was a little
-afraid to carry a light, and it was hard to make out the different
-sign-boards, and, all in all, it was a slow trip, but we got through all
-right. And hungry! Gee whiz! We struck a restaurant in the outskirts of
-Chattanooga about sunup, and while that fellow was cooking us some steak
-and making coffee we could have eaten him alive. If Mam' Linda
-could have seen her boy eat she would have no fears as to his bodily
-condition.”
-
-“But didn't you meet some men who stopped you?” Helen asked, staring
-steadily into his eyes.
-
-He blinked, flicked the ashes from his cigar, and said: “Yes, we did,
-and they were really on the war-path, but they seemed very reasonable,
-and when I had talked to them and explained the matter from our
-stand-point--why, they--they let us go.”
-
-They had gone into the grounds and were near the main walk when the gate
-was opened and a man came striding towards them. It was Jeff Braider.
-
-“Oh, I've been looking for you everywhere, Carson,” he cried, warmly,
-shaking Dwight's hand. “I heard you'd got back, but I wanted to see you
-with my own eyes. Lord, Lord, my boy, if I'd known the awful trouble I
-was getting you into I'd never have let you take that road. I've just
-heard the whole story. For genuine pluck and endurance you certainly
-take the rag off the bush. Why, nine hundred and ninety-nine men out of
-a thousand would have given up the game, but you, you young bull-dog--”
-
-“Carson, Carson! are you down there?” It was a man's voice from an upper
-window.
-
-“Yes, father, what is it?”
-
-“Your mother wants to see you right now. She's waked up and is worrying.
-Come on in.”
-
-“You'll both excuse me for just a moment, I know,” Carson said, as if
-glad of the interruption. “I'll be back presently. I haven't seen my
-mother since I returned, and she is very nervous and easily excited.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIV
-
-[Illustration: 9309]
-
-O you are the only lady member of the secret gang that stole my
-prisoner!” the sheriff said, laughingly. “The boys told me all about
-it.”
-
-“I wasn't taken in till they had done all the work,” Helen smiled. “I
-was only an honorary addition, elected more to keep my mouth shut than
-for any other service I could perform.”
-
-“Oh, _that_ was it!” Braider laughed. “Well, they certainly put the
-thing through. I've mixed up in a lot of hair-raising scrapes in my
-time, but that kidnapping business was the brightest idea ever sprung
-from a man's head. This fellow Dwight is a corker. Did he tell you what
-he went through last night?”
-
-“Not a thing,” replied Helen; “the truth is, I have an idea he was
-trying to mislead me.”
-
-“Well, he certainly was if he didn't tell you he had the hardest fight
-for his life and that nigger's that ever a man made. You noticed how
-hoarse he was, didn't you? That is due to it. The poor chap was up all
-last night and drove the biggest part of to-day. I'll bet, strong as he
-is, he's as limber as a dish-rag.”
-
-“Then he really had trouble?” Helen breathed, heavily.
-
-“Trouble! And he didn't mention it to you? Young men in this day and
-time certainly play their cards peculiar. When I was on the carpet we
-boys had a way of making the most to women folks of everything we did,
-and it was generally the loudest talker that won the game. But here I
-find this 'town dude,' as the country people call his sort, actually
-trying to make you think he went to Chattanooga last night in a Pullman
-car. Good Lord, it gives me the all-overs to think of it! I heard all
-about it. I met a man who was along, and he told me the whole thing from
-start to finish.”
-
-“What was it?” Helen asked, breathlessly.
-
-“Why,” answered Braider, casting a glance towards Dwight's as if fearful
-of being overheard, “I didn't know it, but somehow the mob had got wind
-of what Carson intended to do, and, bless you, they were waiting for him
-near the State line primed and cocked. The boy's enemies had fixed him.
-They had worked the mob up to the highest pitch of fury with all sorts
-of tales against Pete. They had produced men who had really heard the
-nigger threaten to harm Johnson, and they themselves testified that
-Carson was saving the nigger only to capture black voters as their
-friend and benefactor. The mob was mad as Tucker at him for tricking
-them the other night, and they certainly had it in for him.”
-
-“They were mad at Carson _personally_, then?” Helen said.
-
-“_Were_ they? They were ready to drink his blood. They halted the buggy,
-took them both out, and tied them.”
-
-“Tied Car--” Helen's voice died away, and she stood staring at Braider
-unable to speak.
-
-“Yes, they tied them both and led them off into the woods. They then
-fastened Pete to a stump and piled sticks and brush around him and told
-Carson they were going to make him see them burn the boy alive and when
-that was done they intended to silence his tongue by shooting him dead
-in his tracks.”
-
-Helen covered her face with her hands and stifled a groan.
-
-“His power of gab saved him, Miss Helen,” Braider went on. “It saved
-them both. It wasn't any begging, either; that wouldn't have gone with
-that sort of gang. With his hands and feet tied he began to talk--that's
-what ails his throat now--and the man that confessed it to me said such
-rapid fire of words and argument never before rolled from human lips. He
-told them he knew they would kill him; that they were a merciless band
-of desperadoes; but he was going to fire some truths at them that they
-would remember after he was gone, I'm no talker, Miss Helen. I can't
-possibly repeat what the man told me. He said at first Carson couldn't
-get their attention, but after awhile, when they were getting ready to
-apply the match, something in Dwight's voice caught their ear and they
-paused. He talked and talked, until a man behind him, in open defiance,
-cut the cords that held his hands. Later another cut his feet loose, and
-then Carson walked boldly up to Pete and stood beside him, and although
-a growl of fury was still in the air he kept talking. The man that told
-me about it said Carson first picked up one of the sticks around the
-prisoner and hurled it from him to emphasize something he said, then
-another and another, until the mob saw him kicking the sticks away and
-roaring out an offer to fight the whole bunch single-handed. Gee whiz!
-I'd have given ten years of my life to have heard it. He hadn't a thing
-to say in favor of Pete's general character; he said the boy was an
-idle, fun-loving, shiftless fellow, but he was innocent of the crime
-charged against him and he should not die like a dog. He spoke of the
-fine characters of Pete's mother and father and of the old woman's
-grief, and then, Miss Helen, he said something about _you_, and the man
-that told me about it said that one thing did more to soften and quell
-the crowd than anything else.”
-
-“He said something about _me?_” Helen cried. “Me?”
-
-“Yes; no names was mentioned, but they knew who he meant,” Braider went
-on. “Carson spoke of your family and of the close bond of human sympathy
-between it and all the blacks that had once belonged to your folks,
-and said that the daughter of that house, the most beautiful womanly
-character that had ever blessed the South, was praying at that moment
-for the safety of the prisoner, and if they carried out their plans she
-would shed tears of sorrow. 'Your intentions are good,' Carson said.
-'You are all sincere men acting, as you see it, in the interests of the
-women of the South. Listen to this gentlewoman's prayer uttered through
-my mouth to-night for mercy and human justice.'
-
-“It fairly swept them off their feet, Miss Helen. The man that told me
-about it said he never saw a more thoroughly shamed lot of men in his
-life; he said they released Pete and led the horses around and stood
-like mile-posts with nothing to say as Carson drove away. The man that
-told me said he'd bet ninety per cent, of the gang would vote for Dwight
-this fall. But I must be going; if that young buck knew I'd been telling
-you all this he'd give _me_ a tongue-lashing, and I don't want any of
-his sort in mine.”
-
-Helen waited for about ten minutes alone on the grass--waited for
-Carson. When he finally came out and hurried towards her, he found her
-with her handkerchief pressed over her eyes.
-
-“Why, what is the matter, Helen?” he asked, in sudden concern.
-
-She remained silent for a moment, and then with glistening eyes she
-looked up at him as he stood pale and disturbed, the plaster still
-marking his wound and gleaming in the starlight.
-
-“Why didn't you tell me?” she asked, laying her hand tenderly on his
-arm, her voice holding cadences of ineffable sweetness.
-
-“Oh, Braider's been talking to you, I see!” Dwight said, with a frown of
-displeasure.
-
-“Why, didn't you tell me, Carson?” she repeated, putting her disengaged
-hand on his arm and raising her appealing face till it was close to his.
-
-He shrugged his shoulders, still frowning, and then said, flushing under
-her urgent gaze: “Because, Helen, you've already seen and heard too much
-of this awful stuff. It really is not fit for a gentle, sensitive girl
-like you.”
-
-“Oh, Carson,” she cried, her suffused face held even closer to his, “you
-are the dearest, sweetest boy in the world!” and she turned and left
-him, left him alone there in his fatigue, alone under the starlight to
-fight as he had never fought before the deathless yearning for her.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXV.
-
-[Illustration: 9315]
-
-WO weeks went by. Great changes had come over the temper of the
-insurgent mountain people. They had gradually come to accept the rescue
-of Pete Warren as a chance bit of real justice that was as admirable as
-it was unusual and heroic. A sufficient number of men had come forward
-and testified to Sam Dudlow's ante-mortem confession to exculpate
-Carson's client, and some who had a leaning towards Dwight's cause
-politically were hinting, on occasion, that surely a man who would take
-such a plucky stand for the rights of a humble negro would not be a mere
-figure-head in the legislature of the State. At all events, there was
-one man who ground his teeth in secret rage over the subtle turn of
-affairs, and that man was Wiggin. He still busied himself sowing the
-seditious seed of race hatred wherever he found receptive soil, but,
-unfortunately for his cause, in many places where unbridled fury had
-once ploughed the ground a sort of frost had fallen. Most men whose
-passions are unduly wrought undergo a certain sort of relapse, and
-Wiggin found many who were not so much interested in their support of
-him as formerly when an open and defiant enemy was to be defeated.
-
-Wiggin was puzzled more about Jeff Braider than any one of his former
-supporters. Braider was too good a politician to admit that he had in
-any way aided Carson Dwight by a betrayal of the plot against him,
-for that was exactly the sort of thing Wiggin could hold out to his
-constituents as the act of a man disloyal to his official post,
-for, guilty or innocent, the prisoner should have been held, as any
-law-abiding citizen would admit. As to Pete's guilt Wiggin's opinion
-was unchanged, and he made no bones of saying so; he believed, so he
-declared, that Pete was Dudlow's accomplice, and the dastardly manner of
-his release was a shame and a disgrace to any white man's community.
-
-As for Jeff Braider, he was in such high feather over the success of his
-swerving towards the right in the nick of time that he refrained from
-drink and wore better clothing. He liked the situation. He felt, now,
-that he could serve his country, his God, and himself with a clear
-conscience, for Carson Dwight looked like a winner and they had agreed
-to work together.
-
-Helen Warren, after her impulsive leaning towards her first sweetheart
-that night in the garden, had permitted herself to undergo the keenest
-suffering which was due to her strangely unsettled mind. Was she
-strictly honest? she asked herself. She had openly encouraged a good man
-to hope that she would finally become his wife, and the letters she was
-receiving from him daily were of the tenderest, most appealing nature,
-showing that Sanders' love for her and faith in her fair dealing were
-too deeply grounded to be easily uprooted. Besides, as he perhaps had
-the right to do, the Augusta man had spoken of his hopes to his mother
-and sister, and those sympathetic ladies had written Helen adroit
-letters which all but plainly alluded to the “understanding” as being
-the forerunner of a most welcome family event.
-
-Many times had the poor girl seated herself to respond to these
-communications, and found herself absolutely unequal to the performance
-in the delicate spirit that the occasion demanded. The window of her
-room, at which her writing-desk stood, looked out over the garden at
-Dwight's, and the very spot where she had left Carson that memorable
-night was in open view. How could she throw herself into anything, yes
-_anything_ pertaining to her compact with Sanders while the ever-present
-thrill and ecstasy of that moment was permeating her? What had it really
-meant--that ecstatic yearning to kiss the lips so close to hers, the
-lips which had quivered in dumb adoration and despair as he strove to
-keep from her ken the suffering he had undergone in her service?
-
-One day she rebelled against the painful, almost morbid, state of
-indecision that was on her and firmly decided that there was but one
-honorable course to pursue and that was in every way to be true to her
-tacit promise to the absent suitor, and in a spasm of resolution she
-was about to set herself to the correspondence just mentioned when Mam'
-Linda was announced. The old woman had just returned from a visit to
-Chattanooga to see her son and in addition to news of his well-being she
-had many other things to say. The letters would have to wait, Helen told
-herself, and her old nurse was admitted. Linda remained two hours, and
-Helen sat the while in a veritable dream as the old woman gave Pete's
-version of Carson Dwight's conduct before the mob on the lonely mountain
-road. And when Linda had gone, Helen turned to her desk. There lay the
-white sheets fluttering in the summer breeze, mutely beckoning her back
-to stem reality. Helen stared at them and then with a little cry of pain
-she lowered her head to her folded arms and wept--not for Sanders in
-his complacent, epistolary hopefulness, but for the one who had bravely
-borne more than his burden of pain, and upon whom she had resolved to
-put still more. Helen told herself that it would not be the first time
-_ideal_ happiness had not been a factor in a sensible marriage. The time
-would come, in her life, as it had in the lives of so many other women,
-when she would look back on her present feeling for Carson, and wonder
-how she ever could have fancied--but, no, that would be unfair to him,
-to his wealth of spirituality, to his gentleness, his courage to--to
-Carson _just as he was_, to Carson who must always, always be the same,
-different from all living men. Yes, he was to go out of her life. Out
-of her life--how strange! and yet it would be so, for she would be the
-_wife_ of----
-
-She shuddered and sat staring at the floor.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVI.
-
-[Illustration: 9319]
-
-IGGIN was no insignificant opponent; he held weapons as powerful as fire
-applied to inflammable material. The papers were filled with accounts
-of race rioting in all parts of the South, and in his speeches on
-the stump, through the length and breadth of the county, he kept his
-particular version of the bloody happenings well before his hearers.
-
-“This is a white man's country,” was the key-note of all his hot
-tirades, “and the white man is bound to rule.” He accomplished
-one master-stroke. There was to be a considerable gathering of the
-Confederate, veterans at an annual picnic at Shell Valley, a few miles
-from Springtown, and by no mean diplomacy Wiggin had, by shrewdly
-ingratiating himself into the good graces of the committee of
-arrangements, managed to have himself invited as the only orator of the
-occasion. He meant to make it the greatest day of the campaign, and in
-some respects, as will be seen he did.
-
-The farmers came from all parts of the county in their best attire, in
-their best turnouts, from plain, springless road-wagons to glittering
-buggies. The wood which stretched on all sides from the spring was
-filled with vehicles, horses, mules, and even oxen.
-
-The grizzled veterans, battered as much by post-bellum hardship and
-toil as by war, came with their wives, sons, and daughters, and brought
-baskets to the rich contents of which any man was welcome. A crude
-platform had been erected near the spring under the shadiest trees, and
-upon this the speaker of the day was to hold forth. Behind the little
-impromptu table holding a glass pitcher of water and a tumbler, erected
-for Wiggin's special benefit, were a number of benches made of undressed
-boards. And to these seats the wives and daughters of the leading
-citizens were invited.
-
-Jabe Parsons, being a man of importance as a land-owner and an old
-soldier, was instructed on his arrival in his rickety buggy to escort
-his wife, who was gorgeously arrayed in a new green-and-red checked
-gingham gown with a sunbonnet to match, to the front seat on the
-platform, and he obeyed with a sort of ploughman's swagger that
-indicated his pride in the possession of a wife so widely known and
-respected. Indeed, no woman who had arrived--and she had come later
-than the rest--had caused such a ripple of comment. Always liked for
-her firmness in any stand she took in matters of church or social life,
-since her Amazonian rescue of Pete Warren from the very halter of death
-she was even more popular. The women of the county had not given much
-thought to the actual guilt or innocence of the boy, but they wanted
-Mrs. Parsons--as a specimen of their undervalued sex--to be right in
-that instance, as she had always been about every other matter upon
-which she had stood flat-footed, and so they all but cheered her on this
-first public appearance after conduct which 'had been so widely talked
-about.
-
-Really, if Wiggin could have had the reception Mrs. Parsons received
-from beaming eyes and faces he would have felt that his star, which had
-been rather below the horizon than above of late, had become a fixed
-ornament in the political heavens. But Wiggin gave no thought to her,
-and there's where he made a mistake. Women were beneath the notice
-of serious men, Wiggin thought, except as a means of controlling a
-husband's vote, and there he made another mistake. It would have been
-well for him if he could have noticed the fires of contempt in Mrs.
-Parsons' eyes as he made his way through the crowd, bowing right
-and left, and took his seat in the only chair on the platform, and
-proceeded, of course, to take a drink of water.
-
-A country parson, while the multitude sat upon the grass, crude benches,
-buggy-cushions, or heaps of pine needles, opened the ceremonies with a
-long-winded prayer, composed of selections from all the prayers he knew
-by rote and ending with something resembling a benediction. Then a young
-lady was asked to recite a dramatic poem relating to the “Lost Cause,”
- and she did it with such telling effect that the gray heads of the
-old soldiers sank to their chests, and, in memory of camp-fire,
-battle-field, and comrades left in unmarked graves, the tears flowed
-down furrowed cheeks and strong forms were shaken by sobs.
-
-It was into this holy silence that the unmoved, preoccupied Wiggin rose
-to cast his burning brand. Through curtains of tears he laid his fuse to
-hidden magazines of powder.
-
-“I believe in getting right down to business,” he began, in a crisp,
-rasping voice that reached well to the outskirts of the crowd. “There's
-nothing today that is as important to you, fellow-citizens, as the
-correct use of the ballot. I am a candidate for your votes. I mean to
-represent you in the next legislature, and I don't intend to be foiled
-by the tricks, lies, and underhand work of a gang of stuck-up town men
-who laugh at your honest appearance and homely ways. God knows you are
-the salt of the earth, and when I hear men of that stamp making fun of
-you behind your backs it makes me mad. My father was a mountain farmer,
-and when men throw dirt on folks of your sort they throw it into the
-tenderest recesses of my being and it smarts like salt in a fresh cut.”
-
-There was applause from a group in the edge of the crowd led by long,
-tall Dan Willis, and it spread uncertainly to other parts of the
-gathering.
-
-“Hit 'em, blast 'em, hit 'em, Wiggin,” a man near Willis shouted; “hit
- 'em!”
-
-“You bet I'll hit 'em, brother,” Wiggin panted, as he rolled up his
-coat-sleeve and pulled down his rumpled cuff. “That's what I'm here for.
-I'm here, by the holy stars, to show you people a few things which have
-been overlooked. I intend to go into the history of this case. I want
-you all to look back a few weeks. A gang of worthless negroes in Darley
-became so bad and openly defiant in their rowdyism that they were
-literally running the town. Whenever they would be hauled up before the
-mayor for disgraceful conduct some old slave-holder, who used to own
-them or their daddies, would come up and pay their fine and they'd be
-turned loose again. The black scamps became so spoiled that whenever
-country people would come in town they would laugh at them, imitate
-their talk, call them po' white trash, and push them off the sidewalks.
-Some of you mountain men stood it, God bless your Caucasian bones, just
-as long as human endurance would let you, and then you formed a secret
-gang that went into Darley one night and pulled their dives and gave
-them a lashing on their bare backs that brought about a reform. As every
-Darley man will tell you, it purified the very air. The negroes were put
-to work, and they didn't hover like swarms of buzzards round the public
-square. All of which showed plainly that the cowhide was the only
-corrective that the niggers knew about or cared a cent for. Trying them
-in a mayor's court was elevating them to the level of a white man, and
-they liked it.”
-
-“You bet!” cried out Dan Willis, and a laugh went round which spurred
-Wiggin to further flights of vituperation.
-
-“Now to my next step in this history,” he thundered. “In that gang of
-soundly thrashed scamps there were two who were chums, as I could prove
-by sworn testimony. Those black fiends refused to submit passively. They
-skulked around making sullen threats and trying to incite race riot.
-Failing in this, what did they do? One of them, being hand in glove with
-Carson Dwight, who says he's going to beat me in this election, applied
-to him for a job and was sent out to Dwight's farm near to that of
-Abe Johnson, who is thought--by some--to have been the leader of the
-thrashing delegation. That nigger, Pete Warren, was promptly joined by
-his black pal, and Johnson and his wife, one of the best women in this
-State, were foully murdered in the dead hours of the night as they lay
-sleeping in their beds. Who did it? _I_ know who did it. _You_ know
-who did it. Fellow-citizens, those two niggers, with their backs still
-smarting and their tongues still wagging, were the devils who did the
-deed.”
-
-Low muttering was heard throughout the crowd as men turned to one
-another to make comment on the statement. In its incipiency it meant
-no more, perhaps, than that reason, hard driven by rising emotion,
-was honestly striving to keep the equitable poise which had recently
-governed it, but it sounded to the thoughtless, inflammable element like
-sullen, swelling acquiescence to the bitter charges, and they took it
-up. Wiggin paused, drank from the tumbler, and watched his flashing fuse
-in its sinuous course through the assemblage.
-
-Mrs. Parsons was near the edge of the platform, and Pole Baker, rising
-from the grass near by, where he had been coolly whittling a stick,
-stealthily approached her.
-
-“Great goodness, Mrs. Parsons,” he whispered in her ear, “that skunk is
-cutting a wide swath to-day, sure! He could git up a lynching-bee right
-here in five minutes if he had any sort of material. The only thing of
-the right color is that old woman selling ginger-cakes and cider at the
-spring. Don't you think I'd better slip down and tell her to go home?”
-
-“It might save the old thing's neck,” Mrs. Parsons answered, in the same
-half-amused spirit. “If he keeps on I don't think I'll be able to hold
-my seat. Why don't you say something?”
-
-“Me? Oh, I ain't no public speaker, Mrs. Parsons. That oily gab of
-Wiggin's would twist me into a hundred knots, and Carson Dwight would
-cuss me out for making matters worse. I never feel like talking unless
-I'm drunk, and then I'm tongue-tied.”
-
-“Well, I don't git drunk and I don't git tongue-tied!” grunted Mrs.
-Parsons; “and I tell you, Pole, if that fool keeps on I'll either talk
-or bust.”
-
-“Well, don't bust--we need women like you right now,” Baker smiled. “But
-the truth is, if some'n' ain't done for our side this thing will sweep
-Carson Dwight clean out of the field.”
-
-“Yes, because men are born fools,” retorted the woman. “Look at their
-faces, the last one of them right now is mad enough to lynch a nigger
-baby, and a _gal_ baby at that.”
-
-With a laugh, Pole went back to his seat on the grass for Wiggin was
-thundering again.
-
-“What happened _next!_” he demanded, bending over his table, a hand on
-each end of it, his keen, alert eyes sweeping like twin search-lights
-into the deeps of the countenances turned to him. “Why, just this and
-nothing more. Knowing that the jack-leg lawyers of that measly town
-would clog the wheels of justice for their puny fees, and hold those
-fiends over for other hellishness, some of you rose and took the law
-into your own hands. You jerked one to glory as quick as you laid hands
-on him, and part of you were hard on the track of his mate, when my
-honorable opponent, not wanting to lose the fee he was to get for
-pulling the case through, met the mob and managed, by a lot of
-grand-stand playing and solemn promises to see that the negro was
-legally tried, to put him in jail.
-
-“Those promises he kept like the honorable gentleman he is,” Wiggin
-snorted, tossing back his hair in white rage and rolling up his sleeves
-again. “You know how he kept his word to the public. He organized a
-secret band of his dirty associates in town, dressed 'em up like White
-Caps, and they went to the jail and took the nigger out. Then they
-hid him in a cellar of a store where you all buy supplies, out of the
-goodness of your patriotic souls, and later sent him in a new suit of
-clothes to Chattanooga, where he is now engaged in the same sort of life
-that he was here, an idle, good-for-nothing, lazy tramp, who says he's
-as good as any white man that ever wore shoe-leather and no doubt thinks
-he will some day marry a white woman.”
-
-The rising storm burst, and Wiggin stood above it calmly viewing it in
-all its subdued and open fury. Shouts of rage rent the air. Men with
-blanched faces, men with gleaming eyes, rose from their seats, as if
-a call to their manhood for instantaneous action had been sounded, and
-walked about muttering threats, grinding their teeth, and clinching
-their brawny hands.
-
-“Ah, ha!” Wiggin bellowed; “I see you catch my idea. But I'm not
-through. Just wait!”
-
-He paused to drink again, and Pole Baker, with a grave look in his
-honest eye approached the sculpturesque shape of Mrs. Parsons and nudged
-her.
-
-“Did you ever in yore life?” he said; but staring him in the eyes
-steadily, the woman seemed not to hear what he was saying. Her lower lip
-was twitching and there was an expression of settled determination in
-her eyes. Baker, wondering, moved back to his place, for Wiggin had
-levelled his guns again.
-
-“And the man that was at the head of it, what is he doing right now? Why
-he's leaning back in his rocking-chair in his law-office drawing a fat
-pension from his rich old daddy, taking in big fees for such legal work
-as that, and fairly splitting his sides laughing at you folks, who he
-calls a lot of sap-headed hillbillies, fit only for hopping clods and
-feeding hogs on swill and pussley weeds. Oh, that was a picnic--that
-trick he and those town rowdies put up on you! It was a gentle rebuke to
-you, and when he gets to the legislature he says he--”
-
-“Legislature be damned!” Dan Willis roared, and the crowd took up his
-cry.
-
-“Oh yes, _you'll_ vote him in,” Wiggin went on, with a vast air of mock
-depression and reproach; “you think you won't now, but when he gets up
-and tells his side of it with a forced tear or two, your women folks
-will say, 'Poor boy!' and tell you what to do at the polls.”
-
-Comprehensive applause greeted the speaker as he sat down. Hats were
-thrown in the air and Dan Willis organized and gave three resounding
-cheers.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVII.
-
-[Illustration: 9328]
-
-F the audience was surprised at what next happened, what may be said of
-the astounded candidate when he saw the powerful form of Mrs. Parsons
-rise from her seat near him and calmly stride with the tread of an angry
-man to the speaker's stand and take off her curtained bonnet and begin
-to wave it up and down to indicate that she wanted them to keep their
-places?
-
-“I never made a speech in my life,” she gulped--“that is, not outside of
-an experience meetin'. But, people, ef this ain't an experience meeting
-I never went to one. Ef the Lord God had told me Hisse'f in a blazonin'
-voice from heaven that any human bein' could take such a swivelled-up,
-contemptible shape as the man that's yelled at you like a sick calf
-to-day, I never would have believed it. I've got a right to be heard.
-I couldn't set still. It would give me St. Vitus's dance to try it
-ten minutes longer. I've got a right to talk, because, friends and
-neighbors, this contemptible creature has, in a roundabout way, accused
-_me_ of law-breaking, an'--”
-
-“Why, madam!” Wiggin gasped, as he half rose and stared around in utter
-bewilderment. “I don't even _know_ you! I never laid eyes on you before
-this minute--”
-
-“Well, take a good look at me now!” Mrs. Parsons hurled at him, “for I'm
-the woman that helped Pete Warren git away from the sheriff, when your
-sort were after the poor, silly nigger to lynch him for a crime he
-had nothin' to do with. If you are right in all your empty tirade this
-morning, I'm a woman unfit for the community I live in, and if I have
-to share that honor with a man of your stamp, I'll lynch myself on the
-first tree I come to.”
-
-She turned from the astounded, suddenly crestfallen speaker to the
-open-mouthed audience.
-
-“Listen to me, men, women, and children!” she thundered, in a voice that
-was as steady and clear in resonance as a bell. “If there was ever a
-crafty, spider-like politician on earth you have listened to him spout
-to-day. He's picked out the one big sore-spot in your kind natures and
-he's punched it, and jabbed it, and lacerated it with every sort of
-thorn he could stick into it, till he gained his aim in makin' you
-one and all so blind with rage at the black race that you are about to
-overlook the good in yore own.
-
-“There are two sides to this matter, and you would be pore excuses for
-men if you jest looked at one side of it. Carson Dwight is the other
-candidate, and I don't know but one thing agin his character, and that
-is that he ever allowed his name to be put up along with this
-man's. It's a funny sort of race, anyway--run by a greyhound and a
-jack-rabbit.”
-
-A ripple of amusement passed over many faces, and there were several
-open laughs over Wiggin's evident discomfiture. He started to rise, but
-voices from all parts of the gathering cried out: “Sit down, Wiggin! Sit
-down, it ain't yore time!”
-
-“No, it _hain't_ his time,” said Mrs. Parsons, unrolling her bonnet
-like a switchman's flag and waving it to and fro. “I started to tell
-you about Carson Dwight. He can't help bein' born in a rich family any
-more'n I could in a pore one, but I'm here to tell you that since I had
-the moral backbone to aid that nigger to git away I've thanked God a
-thousand times that I did that much to help genuine justice along. I
-could listen to forty million men like this candidate expound his views
-and it wouldn't alter me one smidgen in the belief that Carson Dwight
-has acted only as a true Christian would. He knew that nigger. He had
-known him, I'm told, from childhood up. He knew the sort of black stock
-the boy sprung from, an' the white family he was trained in, an' he
-simply didn't believe he was guilty of that crime. Believing that, thar
-wasn't but one honest thing for him to do, and that was to fight for the
-pore thing's rights. He knew that most of the racket agin the boy was
-got up by t'other candidate, and he set about to save the pore, beggin'
-darky's neck from the halter or his body from the burning brush-heap.
-Did he do it at a sacrifice? Huh, answer me that! Where did you ever see
-another politician on the eve of his election that would take up such a'
-issue as that, infuriating nearly every person who had promised to vote
-for him? Where will you find a young man with enough stamina to stand on
-a horse-block over the heads of hundreds of howling demons, and with one
-wound from a pistol on his brow, darin' 'em to shoot ag'in and holdin'
-on like a bull-dog to the pore cowerin' wreck at his feet?”
-
-There was applause, slight at first, but increasing. There were,
-too, under Mrs. Parson's eye many softening faces, and into them she
-continued to throw her heart-felt appeal.
-
-“You've been told this morning that Carson Dwight makes fun of us
-country people. I'll admit I saw him do it once, but it was _only_ once.
-He made fun of a mountain chap over at Darley one circus day. The fellow
-had insulted a nice country gal, and Carson Dwight made a _lot_ of fun
-of him. He hammered the dirty scamp's face till it looked like a ripe
-tomato that the rats had been gnawin'.”
-
-At this point there was laughter loud and prolonged.
-
-“Now, listen,” the speaker went on. “I want you to hear something, and I
-don't want you ever to forget it. I got it straight from a truthful man
-who was there. The night you mountain men gathered from all sides like
-the rising of the dead on Judgment Day, and got ready to march to Darley
-to take that boy out of jail, the news reached Carson Dwight just an
-hour or so before the appointed time. He got a few friends together
-and told them if they cared for him to make one more effort to stop the
-trouble.
-
-“Gentlemen, to some extent they was like you. They wasn't--I'm
-told--much interested in the fate of that nigger, one way or another,
-and so they sat thar in judgment over Carson Dwight, and tried to argue
- 'im down. I'm told by a respectable man who was thar” (and here Pole
-Baker lowered his head till his eyes were out of sight and continued to
-whittle his stick) “that nothin' feazed 'im. Pity was in his big, boyish
-heart, and it looked out of his eyes and clogged up his voice. They told
-him it meant ruination to all his political hopes, and that it would
-turn his daddy against him for good and all. But he said he didn't care.
-They held out agin him a long time, and then one thing he said won 'em
-over--one thing. Kin you imagine what that was, friends and neighbors?
-It was this: Carson Dwight said he loved you mountain men with all his
-heart; he said no better or braver blood ever flowed in human veins than
-yours; he said he knew you _thought_ you was right, but that you hadn't
-had the chance to discover what he had found out, and that was that
-Pete Warren was innocent and as harmless as a baby, and that--now,
-listen!--that he knew the time would come when you'd be convinced of the
-truth and carry regret for your haste to your graves. 'It is because,'
-he told them, 'I want to save men that I love from remorse and sorrow
-that I am in for this thing!' Fellow-citizens, that shot went home.
-Those worthless 'town dudes,' as they was called just now, saved you
-from committing a crime against yourselves an' God on high. Did any
-human bein' ever see a better illustration than that of the duty of
-enlightened folks to-day--the duty of them who, with divine sight, see
-great truths--to lead others in the right direction? As God Almighty
-smiles over you to-day in this broad sunlight, that gang in that store,
-headed by a new Joseph, was an' are the truest and best friends you ever
-had.”
-
-There was no open applause, but Mrs. Parsons saw something in the
-melting faces before her that was infinitely more encouraging, and
-after a moment's pause, and leaning slightly on the table, she went on:
-“Before I set down, I want to say one word about this big race question,
-anyway. I'm just a plain woman, but I read papers an' I've thought about
-it a lot. We hear some white folks say that the education the niggers
-are now gettin' is the prime cause of so much crime amongst the
-blacks--they say this in spite of the fact that it is always the
-uneducated niggers that commit the rascality. No, my friends, it ain't
-education that's the cause, it is _the lack_ of it. Education ain't just
-what is learnt in school-books. It is anything that makes folks higher
-an' better. Before the war niggers was better educated, for they had the
-education that come from bein' close to the white race an' profitin' by
-the'r example. After slavery was abolished the poor, simple numskulls,
-great, overgrown, fun-lovin' children, was turned loose without advice
-or guidin' hand, an' the worst part of 'em went downhill. Slavery was
-education, and I'll bet the Lord had a hand in it, for it has lifted
-a race from the jungles of Africa to a civilized land full of free
-schools. So I say, teach 'em the difference between right an' wrong, an'
-then let 'em work out their own salvation.
-
-“Who in the name of common-sense is to do this if it ain't you of the
-superior race? _But!_ wait a minute, think! How can you possibly teach
- 'em what law an' order is without knowin' a little about it yourselves?
-How can you learn a nigger what justice means when he sees his brother,
-son, or father, shot dead in his tracks or hung, like a scare-crow to
-the limb of a tree because some lower grade black man a hundred miles
-off has committed a dastardly deed? No sensible white man ever thought
-of puttin' the two races on equality. The duty of the white blood is
-always to keep ahead of the black, and it will. This candidate openly
-declares that the time is coming when the negroes will overpower the
-whites. A man that has as poor an opinion of his own race as that ought
-to be kicked out of it. Now I can't vote, but I want every woman in
-this crowd that believes I know what I'm talkin' about to see that her
-brother, father, or husband votes for a member of the legislature that
-knows what law an' order means, an' not for a red-handed anarchist who
-would lay this country in ruins to gain his own puny aims. That's all
-I've got to say.”
-
-When she had finished there was still no applause. They had learned that
-it was unseemly to make a demonstration at church, when deeply moved by
-a sermon, and they had heard something to-day that had lifted them as
-high under her sway as they had sunken low under Wiggin's. The formal
-part of the exercises was over, and they proceeded to spread out the
-contents of their baskets. Wiggin, after his successful ascent, had
-fallen with something like a thud. He saw Mrs. Parsons helped from the
-platform by her proudly flushing husband and instantly surrounded by
-people anxious to offer congratulations. Wiggin shuddered for he stood
-quite alone. Those who were in sympathy with him seemed afraid to
-openly signify it. Even Dan Willis lurked back under the trees, his face
-flushed with liquor and inward rage.
-
-Pole Baker, however, was more thoughtful of the candidate's comfort.
-With a queer twinkle of amusement in his eyes, and polishing, with the
-dexterity of a carver of cherry-stones, his little stick, he approached
-the candidate.
-
-“Say, Wiggin,” he drawled out, “I want to ax you a question.”
-
-“All right, Baker, what is it?” the candidate asked, absent-mindedly.
-
-“Don't you remember tellin' me,” Pole began, “that you never had in all
-yore life met a man that made better an' truer predictions about things
-to come than I did?”
-
-“Yes, I think so, Baker--yes, I remember now,” answered Wiggin. “You do
-seem to have a head that way. Some men have more than others, a sort of
-foresight or intuition.”
-
-Pole chuckled. “You remember I said Teddy Rusefelt would whip the socks
-off of Parker. I'm a Democrat an' always will be, but I kin see things
-that are goin' to be agin me as plain as them I'm prayin' for. Well, you
-remember I was called a traitor jest beca'se I told what was comin', but
-I hit the nail on the head, didn't I?”
-
-“Yes, you did,” admitted the downcast candidate.
-
-“An' I was right about the majority Towns would git for the State
-senate, Mayhew for solicitor, an' Tim Bloodgood for the last
-legislature.”
-
-“Yes, you were, I remember that,” said Wiggin.
-
-“I hit it on the Governor's race to a gnat's heel, too, didn't I?” Pole
-pursued, his keen eyes fixed on those of the man before him.
-
-“Yes, you did,” admitted Wiggin; “you really seem to have remarkable
-foresight.”
-
-“Well, then,” said Baker, “I've got a prediction to make about your race
-agin Carson Dwight.”
-
-“Oh, you have!” exclaimed Wiggin, now all attention.
-
-“Yes, and this time I'd bet my two arms and the first joint of my right
-leg agin a pinch o' snuff that Carson'll beat you worse than a man was
-ever whipped in his life.”
-
-“You think so, Baker?” Wiggin was trying to sneer.
-
-“I don't think anything about it; I _know_ it,” said Pole.
-
-Wiggin stared at the ground a moment aimlessly, then he said,
-doggedly, and yet with an evident desire for information at any sort of
-fountain-head: “What makes you think I'm beat, Baker?”
-
-“Because you've showed you hain't no politician, an' you've got a born
-one to beat. For one thing, you've stirred up a hornet's nest. Women,
-when they set the'r heads agin a'body, are devils in petticoats, an' the
-one that presided this mornin' has got more influence than forty
-men. Before you are a day older every man who has a wife, mother, or
-sweetheart will be afraid to speak to you in broad daylight. Then ag'in,
-no candidate ever won a race on a platform of pure hate an' revenge. You
-made that crowd as mad as hell just now, while you was belchin' out that
-stuff, but as soon as Sister Parsons showed 'em what a friend of the'rs
-Dwight was they melted to him like thin snow after a rain.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVIII.
-
-[Illustration: 9337]
-
-NE morning, three days later, Pole Baker slouched down the street from
-the wagon-yard and went into Garner & Dwight's office, finding Garner at
-his desk. The mountaineer looked cautiously about the room and asked, in
-a guarded tone: “Is Carson anywhars about?”
-
-“Not down yet,” Garner said. “His mother was not so well last night, and
-it may be that he had to sit up with her and has overslept himself.”
-
-“Well, I'm glad he ain't here,” Baker said, “for I want to speak to you
-about him sorter in private.”
-
-“Anything gone wrong?” Garner asked, looking up curiously.
-
-“Well, not yet, Bill, but I believe in takin' the bull by the horns
-before he takes you in the stomach. I've been powerful afeared for some
-time that Carson and Dan Willis would run together, and I dread it now
-more than ever. In the first place, I don't like the look in Carson's
-eye. He knows that devil has been on his track, and it has worked him up
-powerful; besides, Willis is more rampant than ever.”
-
-“What's gone wrong with him?” Garner inquired, uneasily.
-
-“Well, for a while, you know, he was full of hope that Wiggin was goin'
-to beat Carson, and that sorter satisfied him, but now that Wiggin is
-losin' ground, Dan don't see revenge that way. Besides, since old Sister
-Parsons made that rip-roarin' speech respectable folks are turnin' the'r
-backs on Wiggin and all his backers. The gal Willis was to marry has
-throwed 'im clean over, an' the preacher at Hill Crest just as good as
-called his name out in meetin' in talkin' of the open lawlessness that
-is spreadin' over the land. Oh, Willis is mad--he's got all hell in 'im,
-an' he's makin' more threats agin Dwight. Now, to-morrow is Friday, an'
-the next day is Saturday, an' on Saturday Dan Willis is comin' in town.
-I got that straight. Wiggin is a snake in the grass, and he's constantly
-naggin' Dan about his row with Carson, and it will take slick work on
-our part to prevent serious trouble. Wiggin wouldn't care. If the two
-met he'd profit either way, for if Carson was killed he'd have the field
-to himself, an' if Carson killed Willis the boy'd have to stand trial
-for his life, an' a man wouldn't run much of a political race with a
-charge of bloody murder hangin' over 'im.”
-
-“True--true as Gospel!” Garner frowned; “but what plan had you in mind,
-Pole--I mean what plan to obviate trouble?”
-
-“Why, you see,” the mountaineer replied, “I 'lowed you might be able
-to trump up some business excuse for gittin' Carson out o' town next
-Saturday.”
-
-“Well, I think I can,” Garner cried, his eyes brightening. “The truth
-is, I was to go myself over to see old man Purdy, the other side of
-Springtown> to take his deposition in an important matter, but I can
-pretend to be tied here and foist it onto Carson.”
-
-“Good; that's the stuff!” Pole said, with a smile of satisfaction. “But
-for the love of mercy don't let Dwight dream what's in the wind or he'd
-die rather than budge an inch.”
-
-So it was that Carson the following Friday afternoon made his
-preparations for a ride on horseback through the country, his plan being
-to spend the night at the little hotel at Springtown and ride on to
-Purdy's farm the next morning after breakfast, and return to
-Darley Saturday evening shortly after dark. His horse stood at the
-hitching-rack in front of the office, and, ready for his journey, he was
-going out when Garner called him back.
-
-“Are you armed, my boy?” Garner questioned.
-
-“Not now, old man,” Dwight said. “I've carried that two pounds of cold
-metal on my hip till I got tired of it and left it in my room. If I
-can't live in a community without being a walking arsenal I'll leave the
-country.”
-
-“You'd better make an exception of to-day, anyhow,” Garner said,
-reaching down into the drawer of his desk. “Here, take my gun.”
-
-“Well, I might accidentally need it,” Dwight said, thoughtfully, as he
-took the weapon and put it into his pocket.
-
-As he was unfastening his horse, Dr. Stone crossed the street from the
-opposite sidewalk and approached him.
-
-“Where are you off to this time?” the old man asked.
-
-Carson explained as he tightened the girth of his saddle and pulled the
-blanket into place.
-
-“Well, I'd get back as soon as I could well manage it,” the physician
-said, his eyes on the ground. Carson started and looked grave.
-
-“Why, doctor, you are not afraid--”
-
-“Oh, she's doing very well, my boy, but--well, there is no use keeping
-back anything from anybody as much concerned as you are. The truth is,
-she's very low. I think we can pull her through all right, with care and
-attention, but I feel that I ought to warn you and lecture you a little,
-too. You see, as I've often said, she is a woman who suffers mightily
-from worry and excitement of any kind, and your adventures of late have
-not had the best effect on her health. I hope it's all over and that you
-will settle down to something more steady. Her life really is in your
-hands more than mine, for if you should have any more trouble of a
-serious nature it would simply kill her. I only mention this,”
- the doctor continued, laying his hand on the young man's arm half
-apologetically, “because there is some little talk going round that you
-and Dan Willis haven't quite settled your differences yet. If I were in
-your place, Carson, I'd take a good deal from that man before I'd have
-trouble with him right now, considering the critical condition your
-mother is in. A shooting-scrape on top of all the rest, even if you
-got-the best of it, would simply send that good woman to her grave.”
-
-“Then we won't have any shooting-scrape!” Carson said, his voice
-quivering. “You can depend on that, doctor.”
-
-The road Dwight took as the most direct way to his destination
-really passed within two miles of the home of Dan Willis, and yet the
-likelihood of his meeting the desperado never once crossed Carson's
-mind. In this, however, he was to meet with surprise. He had got well
-into the mountains, and, full of hope as to his campaign, was heartily
-enjoying a slow ride on his ambling horse through a narrow, shaded road,
-after leaving the heat of the open thoroughfare, when far ahead of him
-he saw a horseman at the side of the way pinning with his pocket-knife
-to the smooth bark of a sycamore-tree a white envelope. The distance was
-at first too great for Dwight to recognize the rider, though his object
-and occupation were soon evident, for suddenly wheeling on his rather
-skittish mount the man drew back about twenty paces from the tree, drew
-a revolver and began to fire at the target, sending one shot after the
-other, as rapidly as he could rein and spur his frightened animal to
-an approved distance and steadiness, until his weapon was empty. The
-marksman, evidently a mountaineer, as indicated by his wide-brimmed soft
-hat and easy gray shirt, thrust his hand into his trousers-pocket and
-took out sufficient cartridges for another round, and was thumbing them
-dexterously into their places when Carson drew near enough to recognize
-him.
-
-A thrill, a sort of shock, certainly not due even to subconscious fear,
-passed over Dwight, and he almost drew upon his rein. Then a hot flush
-of shame rose in him and tingled through every nerve in his body, as
-he wondered if for one instant he could have feared the presence of any
-living man, armed or unarmed, and running his hand behind him to be sure
-that his own revolver was in place, and with his head well up he rode
-even more briskly forward. He had no thought of caution. The sharp
-warning Dr. Stone had given him so recently never entered his brain.
-That was the man who, on several occasions, had threatened to kill him,
-and who, Carson firmly believed, had once tried it. That there was to be
-grim trouble he did not doubt. Averting it after the manner of a coward
-was not thought of.
-
-When the two riders were about a hundred yards apart, Dan Willis,
-hearing the fall of horses' hoofs, looked up suddenly. There was
-no mistaking the evolution of his facial expression from startled
-bewilderment to that of angry, bestial satisfaction. Uttering an
-unctuous grunt of delight, and with his revolver swinging easily against
-his brawny thigh, by the aid of his tense left hand the mountaineer drew
-his horse squarely into the very middle of the narrow road and there
-essayed to check him. The animal, quivering with excitement from
-the shots just fired over his head, was still restive and swerved
-tremblingly from side to side, but with prodding spur and fierce
-command Willis managed to keep him in the attitude of open opposition to
-Carson's passage, which was, as things go in the mountains, a threat not
-to be misunderstood.
-
-Carson Dwight read the action well, and his blood boiled.
-
-“Halt thar!” Dan Willis suddenly called out, in a sharp, fierce tone,
-and as he spoke he raised his revolver till the hand holding it rested
-on the high pommel of his saddle.
-
-“Why should I halt?” almost to his surprise rang clearly from Dwight's
-lips. “This is a public road!”
-
-[Illustration: 0343]
-
-“Not for _yore_ sort,” was hurled back. “It's entirely too narrow for
-a gentleman an' a dog to pass on. _I'm_ goin' to pass, but I'll walk my
-hoss over yore body. I've been praying for this chance, an' God or Hell,
-one or t'other, sent it to me. Some folks say you've got grit. I've my
-doubts about it, for you are the hardest man to meet I ever wanted to
-settle with, but if you've got any sand in yore gizzard you've got a
-chance to spill some of it now.”
-
-“I don't want to have trouble with you,” Dwight controlled himself
-enough to say. “Bloodshed is not in my line.”
-
-“But you've _got_ to fight!” Willis roared. “If you don't I'll ride up
-to you an' spit in yore damned, sneakin' face.”
-
-“Well, I hardly think you'll do that,” said Carson, his rage
-overwhelming him. “But before we go into this thing tell me, for my
-own satisfaction if you are the one who tried to kill me the night Pete
-Warren was jailed.”
-
-“You bet I was, and damned sorry I missed.” Willis's revolver was
-raised. The sharp click of the hammer sounded like the snapping of a
-metallic twig. Then alive but to one thought, and that of alert and
-instantaneous self-preservation, Dwight quickly drew his weapon. With
-his teeth ground together, his breath coming fast, he took as careful
-aim as was possible at the shifting horseman, conscious of the advantage
-his antagonist had over him in the calmness of his own mount. He saw
-a puff of smoke before Willis's eyes, heard the sharp report of the
-mountaineer's revolver, and wondered if the ball had lodged in his body.
-
-“I am fully justified,” something within him seemed to say as he pressed
-the trigger of his revolver. His hand had never been more steady, his
-aim never better, and yet the smile and taunting laugh of Willis proved
-to him that he had missed. The eyes of his assailant gleamed like those
-of an infuriated beast as he tried to steady his rearing and plunging
-horse to shoot again. Once more he fired, but the shot went wild, and
-with a snort of fear his horse broke from the road and plunged madly
-into the bushes bordering the way. Carson could just see Willis's head
-and shoulders above a thick growth of wild vines and at these he aimed
-steadily and fired. Had he won? he asked himself. There was a smothered
-report from Willis's revolver, as if it were fired by an inert finger.
-The mountaineer's head sank out of sight. What did it mean? Carson
-wondered, and with his weapon still cocked and poised he grimly waited.
-It was only for an instant, for the frightened horse plunged out into
-the open again. Willis was still in the saddle, but what was it about
-him that seemed so queer? He was evidently making an effort to guide
-his horse, but the hand holding his revolver hung helplessly against his
-thigh; his left shoulder was sinking. Then Carson caught sight of his
-face, a frightful, blood-packed mask distorted past recognition, that of
-a dying man--a horrible, never-to-be-forgotten grimace. The horses
-bore the antagonists closer together; their eyes met in a direct stare.
-Willis's body was rocking like a mechanical thing on a pivot.
-
-“You forced me to do it!” Carson Dwight said, his great soul rising to
-heights of pity and dismay never reached before. “God knows I did not
-want to shoot you. Dan, I never have had anything against you. I would
-have avoided this if I could.”
-
-The stare of the wounded man flickered. With a moan of pain he bent to
-the neck of his horse and remained there a moment, and then, dropping
-his revolver and resting both quivering hands on the pommel of his
-saddle, he drew himself partially erect. His eyes were rolling upward,
-his purple lips moved as if to speak, but his vocal organs seemed to
-have lost their power. Holding to his pommel with his left hand, he
-raised his right and partially extended it towards Dwight, but he
-had not the strength to sustain its weight, and with another moan, a
-frothing at the mouth, Dan Willis toppled from his horse and went to the
-ground, the animal breaking away in alarm and running down the road.
-
-Quickly dismounting, Carson bent over the dying man. “Dan, were you
-offering me your hand?” he asked, tenderly. But there was no response.
-The mountaineer was dead. There he lay, a pint whiskey flask nearly
-empty of its contents protruding from his shirt.
-
-Carson looked up and about him. The sky had never seemed clearer, the
-forest never so beautifully lush and green, so full of sylvan recesses
-and the gladsome songs of birds. Higher and more majestic never had the
-mountains seemed to tower into God's infinite blue. And yet here at his
-feet lay the remains of one who had been created in the image of his
-Maker, as lifeless as the clod from which he had sprung. All _this_--and
-Carson's horse nibbling with bitted mouth the short grass which grew
-about. There were no fires of satisfied revenge at which the spiritually
-chilled young man could warm himself. Regret steeped in the vat of
-remorse filled his young soul. Seating himself at the side of the
-road, he remained there a long time calmly laying his plans. Of course,
-knowing the law as he knew it, he would give himself up to the sheriff.
-Then with a start and a shock of horror he thought of his mother. Dr.
-Stone's warning now loomed up before him as if written in letters
-of fire. Yes, this--this, of all things, would kill her! Knowing her
-nature, nothing that could happen to him would be more fatal. Not even
-his own death by violence would hold such terrors for her sensitive,
-imaginative temperament, which exaggerated every ill or evil that beset
-his path. After all, he grimly asked himself, which way did his real
-duty lie? Obedience to the law he reverenced demanded that he throw
-himself upon its slow and creaking routine, and yet was there not a
-higher tribunal? By what right should the legal machinery of his or any
-other country require the life of a stricken woman that the majesty of
-its forms might be upheld and the justice or injustice to an outlaw who
-had persistently hounded him be formally passed upon?
-
-No, he told himself, the right to protect his mother was _his_--it was
-even more, as he saw it, it was his first duty. And yet if he kept his
-own counsel, he asked himself, his legal mind now active, what were the
-chances of escape from accusation? Noticing the target still pinned
-to the trunk of the tree with the dead man's pocket-knife, the shots
-showing on the bark and paper, and the sprawling attitude of the corpse
-with the wound over the region of the heart, he asked himself, with
-faintly rising hope, what more natural than to assume that death had
-resulted from accident? What more reasonable than the theory that on his
-frightened horse Dan Willis had accidentally directed his shot upon
-his own body? What better evidence that he was not at himself than the
-almost empty flask in his shirt? Yes, Carson Dwight decided, it was his
-duty to wait at least to see further before taking a step which
-would result in even deeper tragedy. Besides, he knew he was morally
-guiltless. His conscience was clear; there was consolation in that at
-all events. But now what must he do? To go on to Springtown by that road
-was out of the question, for only a mile or so farther on was a store
-and a few farm-houses, and it would be known there that he had passed
-the fatal spot. So, remounting, he rode slowly back towards Darley, now
-earnestly, and even craftily, hoping that he would meet no one. He was
-successful, for he reached the main road, which was longer, not so well
-graded, and a more sparsely settled thoroughfare to his destination.
-
-He had lost time, and he now put his horse into a brisk canter and sped
-onward with a queer blending of emotions. The thought of possibly
-saving his mother from a terrible shock buoyed him up while the grewsome
-happening put a weight upon him he had never borne before.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIX
-
-[Illustration: 9350]
-
-T was after dark when he finally reached Springtown and rode through the
-quiet little street to the only hotel in the village kept by a certain
-Tom Wyman, whom Dwight knew. Dismounting, he turned his tired horse
-over to a negro porter and went into the room which was used at once
-as parlor and office. A dog-eared account-book lay open on a table,
-and here, at the request of the cordial Wyman, a short, portly man with
-sandy hair and mustache, Carson registered his name.
-
-“You are out electioneering, I know,” the proprietor smiled, agreeably,
-as he rubbed his fat hands together. “Well, you are going to run like a
-scared dog. I hear your name everywhere. It looked as black as Egyptian
-darkness for you once, but you are gaining ground. No man ever had a
-better campaign document than the speech Jabe Parsons' wife made. Gee
-whiz! it was a stem-winder; it set folks to laughin' at Wiggin, and that
-was the worst thing that ever happened to him. Jabe Parsons is for you
-now, though he headed one wing of the mob agin your pet darky. You see,
-Jabe wants to prove that his wife was right in the way she first felt
-about the matter, and he's a strong man.”
-
-As if in a dream, so far into the background had even his contest been
-thrust by the tragedy, Carson heard himself as if from the mouth of
-another explaining that it was legal business that had brought him
-thither, and calmly asking the best road from the village to Purdy's
-farm, whither he intended to go the following morning after breakfast.
-
-A few minutes later the supper bell was rung by a negro, who carried it
-with deafening clangor through the main hall and round the house, and
-two or three drummers, of the small-trade class, a village storekeeper,
-and a stock-drover or two clattered in on the uncarpeted floor to the
-dining-room, and with more noise drew out their chairs and sat down. It
-happened that Carson knew none of them, and so he sat silent through the
-meal. Usually of robust appetite, to-night all inclination to physical
-nourishment had deserted him. Try as he would to fasten his mind upon
-more cheerful things, the view of Dan Willis's body stretched upon the
-ground, the ghastly features struggling in the throes of death, came
-again and again before his eyes with tenacious persistency. Morbidly, he
-asked himself if that state of mind would continue always. The disaster
-really had crept upon him through no deliberate fault of his. In fact,
-he could trace its very beginning to his determination to turn over
-a new leaf and make a better man of himself--to that and to a natural
-inborn pity for a persecuted creature, and yet here was he, his hands
-stained red, unable by any stoicism or philosophy to rid himself of a
-gloom as deep as the void of space. Genuine man that he was, he pitied
-the giant who had fallen before him. His mind, trained to logical
-reasoning in most matters, told him that he was more than justified in
-what he had done; but then, if so, to what was due this strange shock
-to his whole being--this restless sense of boundless debt to something
-never met before, the ominous flapping of wings in a new darkness around
-him?
-
-After supper, to kill time until the hour of retiring, Carson declined
-the proffered cigar of his host, and to avoid the--to him--empty chatter
-of the others, now assembled on the little porch, he strolled down the
-street. Here groups of men sat in front of the stores in the dim
-light thrown from murky lamps within, but it happened that he was not
-recognized by any of them though there were several gaunt forms he knew,
-and he passed on, walking feverishly. On and on he strode till he
-had covered more than a mile and suddenly came upon a little church
-surrounded by a graveyard. He leaned upon the rotten fence and looked
-over at the mounds marked by white marble slabs in some cases, plain,
-unlettered natural stones in others, and some unmarked by any sort of
-monument, but having little white palings around them.
-
-Carson Dwight shuddered and turned his face back towards the village as
-he asked himself if this might be the resting-place of the man he had
-slain. Life to him had been so bounteous, despite all the trials he
-had encountered, that to think that he had by his own hand, even under
-gravest provocation, deprived a human being of its privileges gave him
-pain akin to nothing he had ever felt before.
-
-Reaching his room in the hotel, which was at the head of the stairs
-in the front part of the house, his first impulse was to lock his
-door--why, he could not have explained. It was not fear; what was it?
-With a defiant smile he left it unfastened and proceeded to undress
-himself. As he threw himself on his bed he became conscious of the
-impulse to say his prayers. What a queer thing! It had been years since
-he had actually knelt in prayer, and yet tonight he wanted to do so. A
-strange, hot, rebellious mood came over him a few minutes later as
-he lay staring at the disk on the sky-blue ceiling cast by the
-lamp-chimney. He felt like crying out to the infinite powers in tones of
-demand to lift the weird, stifling pall that was pressing down on him.
-
-The words his father had spoken in a rage when the old gentleman had
-first seen the wound on his forehead after Pete Warren's rescue now came
-to him with startling force: “All this for a trifling negro! Have you
-lost your senses?”
-
-What, Carson asked himself, would his father say to this deeper
-step--this headlong plunge into misfortune as the outcome of the cause
-he had espoused?
-
-Carson could not sleep, and fancying that if his light were out he might
-do so, he rose and extinguished it and went back to bed. But he was
-still restless. The hours dragged by. It was after twelve o'clock, when
-on the still night air came the steady beat of a horse's hoofs in the
-distance, growing louder and louder, till with a cry of “Woah!” the
-animal was reined in at the hotel door, and the stentorian voice of the
-rider called out: “Hello! hello in thar!”
-
-There was a pause, but no response. The landlord was evidently a sound
-sleeper.
-
-“Hello! hello!” Again the call rang jarringly through the empty hall
-below and up the stairway.
-
-Carson sat erect, put his feet on the floor, and stood out in the
-centre of the room. He told himself that it was an officer of the law
-in pursuit of him. How silly to have imagined that such a thing could
-remain hidden! And his mother! Yes, it would kill her! Poor, poor,
-gentle, frail woman! He had tried to obviate the blow, resorting to
-deception, to actual flight; he had submerged himself in the mire of
-criminal secrecy, according to the letter of the law, that he might
-shield her, and for what purpose? Yes, the blow would kill her. Dr.
-Stone had plainly said so.
-
-He went to the window and looked out. At the gate below he saw a man on
-a horse, and heard him muttering impatiently.
-
-“Hello in Thar!” The cry was accompanied by an oath. “Are you-uns plumb
-deaf? What do you keep a tavern fur, anyhow?”
-
-There was a sound in the room below of some one getting out of bed, and
-then a drowsy voice cried: “Who's there?” It was the landlord.
-
-“Me, Jim Purvines. Let me in, Tom. I've got to have a bed an' a stall
-fer my nag. I'm completely fagged out.”
-
-“All right, all right. I'll join you in a minute. Where in the thunder
-have you been, Jim?”
-
-“To the inquest. They made me serve. Samson called a jury right off so
-they could move the body home. The dead man's mammy didn't want it to
-lie thar all night.”
-
-“Good Lord! Jury? Dead man? Why, what's happened, Jim?”
-
-“Oh, come off! You don't mean you hain't heard the news?” The rider had
-dismounted and was leading his horse through the gate to the steps on
-which the landlord now stood. “Why, Tom, Dan Willis has gone to his last
-accountin'. The Webb children, out pickin' huckleberries, come across
-his remains on the Treadwell road a mile t'other side o' Wilks's store.
-At first it was thought he'd met his death by bein' throwed from his
-colt, fer somebody seed it loose with saddle an' bridle on, but when we
-examined the body we found a bullet-hole over the heart.”
-
-“Good Lord! Who done it, Jim?”
-
-Carson's heart was in his mouth; his breath was held; there was a pause
-which seemed without end.
-
-“Done it hisself, Tom. The jury had no difficulty comin' to that
-decision from ample evidence. He'd tuck his pocket-knife an' stuck up an
-envelope with his name on it agin a tree, an', half drunk, as we judged
-from his flask, he was shootin' at it over the head of a young colt that
-hain't been broke a month. Dan must have had the devil in 'im, an' was
-determined to train the animal to stand under fire, fer we seed whar the
-dirt was pawed up powerful all around. We calculated that the colt got
-to buckin' an' to keep from bein' throwed off Dan turned his gun the
-wrong way. Anyhow, he's no more.”
-
-“Yes, an' I reckon a body ought to respect the dead, good or bad,”
- said the landlord; “but there won't be a river of tears shed, Jim. That
-fellow was a living threat to law and order.”
-
-“Yes, I have heard that he was the chap that shot Carson Dwight the
-night he saved that nigger from the mob.”
-
-“Sh! He's up-stairs now,” The landlord lowered his voice.
-
-“You don't say! Sort o' out of his beat, ain't he?”
-
-“I don't know--on his way to Purdy's. Go on in; I'll attend to your
-horse and come back and find you a place to bunk.”
-
-Carson sank back on his bed. A sense of vast, almost soothing relief was
-on him. His mother was saved. The verdict that had been rendered would
-forever bury the facts. Now, he told himself, he could sleep with his
-mind at rest. And yet--
-
-He heard the new-corner ascend the stairs with heavy, shambling tread
-and enter the room adjoining his own. Through a crack between the floor
-and the thin partition he saw a pencil of candle-light and heard the
-grinding of boot-soles on the floor as the man undressed. Then the light
-went out, the bed-slats creaked, and all was still.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XL
-
-[Illustration: 9357]
-
-WIGHT reached Darley the following evening shortly after dusk, and rode
-straight through the central portion of the town and past his office.
-All day long he had debated with himself whether it would be wise to
-take Garner into his confidence, and at last had decided that it would
-do no good, and only cause his sympathetic partner to worry needlessly,
-since Garner nor no one else could point out any better course than
-the one to which, perforce, he had committed himself. Carson now
-comprehended his insistent morbidness. It was not fear; it was not a
-guilty conscience; it was only the galling shackles of unwonted and
-hateful secrecy, the vague and far-reaching sense of uncertainty, the
-knowledge of being, before the law (which was no respecter of persons,
-circumstances, or sentiment), as guilty of murder as any other untried
-violator of peace and order.
-
-On the way down the street to his home he met Dr. Stone, who was also
-riding, and reined in.
-
-“My mother--how is she, doctor?” he asked. “I've been away since I saw
-you yesterday.”
-
-“You'll really be surprised when you see her,” the old man smiled.
-“She's tip-top! I never saw such a change for the better in all my
-experience. She had old Linda in her room when I was there about noon,
-and they were laughing and cracking jokes at a great rate. She'll pull
-through now, my boy. I tried to get her to tell me what had happened,
-but she threw me off with the joke that she had changed doctors and
-was taking another fellow's medicine on the sly, and then she and Linda
-laughed together. I believe the old negro knew what she meant. I'll
-tell you one thing, Carson, if I wasn't afraid of hurting your pride I'd
-congratulate you on what happened to that chap Willis. Really, if that
-thing hadn't taken place you and he would have had trouble. Some think
-he was getting ready for you when he was shooting at that target.”
-
-“Perhaps so, doctor,” Carson said, glad that the dusk veiled his face
-from the old man's sight. “Well, I'll go on.”
-
-At the carriage gate at home he found old Lewis standing ready to take
-his horse.
-
-“Hello!” Carson said, with a joke that was foreign to his mood; “when
-did Major Warren discharge you?”
-
-“Hain't discharge me yit, young marster,” Lewis smiled, in delight, as
-he opened the gate and reached out for the bridle. “I knowed you'd be
-along soon, en so I waited fer you. Marse Carson, Linda powerful anxious
-ter see you. She settin' on yo'-all's veranda-step now; she been axin'
-is you got back all evenin'. Dar she come now, young marster. I'll put
-up yo' horse.”
-
-“All right, Uncle Lewis,” and Dwight, seeing the old woman shambling
-towards him, went across the lawn and met her.
-
-“Oh, young marster, I been waitin' fer you,” she said. “I got some'n'
-ter ax you, suh.”
-
-“What is it?” he asked: “If it is anything I can do I'll be glad to help
-you.”
-
-“I don't like ter bother you, young marster,” Linda said, plaintively;
-“but somehow it don't seem lak anybody know what ter do. I went ter
-young miss, en she said fer me ter see you--dat you was de onliest one
-ter decide. Marse Carson, of course you done heard dat man Willis done
-killed hisse'f, ain't you?”
-
-“Oh yes, Mam' Linda--oh yes!” Dwight said, his voice holding an odd,
-submerged quality.
-
-“Well, young marster, you see, me'n Lewis thought dat, bein' as dat man
-was de ringleader, en de only one left on de rampage after my boy, dat,
-now he's daid, I might sen' ter Chattanoogy fer Pete en let 'im come on
-home.”
-
-“Why, I thought he was doing well up there?” Carson said again, in a
-tone which to himself sounded as expressionless as if spoken only from
-the lips.
-
-“Dat so; dat so, too,” Linda sighed; “but, Marse Carson, he de onliest
-child I got en I wants 'im wid me. I wants 'im whar I kin see 'im en try
-ter 'fluence 'im ter do what's right. In er big place lak Chattanoogy
-he may git in mo' trouble, en--” She went no further, her voice growing
-tremulous and finally failing.
-
-“Well, send for him, by all means,” Dwight said. “He'll be all right
-here. We'll find something for him to do.”
-
-“En, en--dar won't be no mo' trouble?” Linda faltered.
-
-“None in the world now, mammy,” he replied. “The people all over the
-country are thoroughly satisfied that he's innocent. No one will even
-appear against him. He is all right now.”
-
-Tears welled up in Linda's eyes and she wiped them off on her apron.
-“Thank God, young marster; one time I thought I never would want ter
-live another minute, en yit right now--right now I'm de happiest woman
-in de whole world, en you done it, young marster. You stood up fer er
-po' old nigger 'oman when de world was turn agin 'er, en God on high
-know I bless you. I bless you in every prayer I sen' up.”
-
-He turned from her as she stood wiping her eyes and went on to his
-mother's room, finding her, to his delight, sitting up in an easy-chair
-near the table on which stood a lamp and a book she had been reading.
-
-“Did you see Linda?” Mrs. Dwight asked, as he kissed her tenderly and
-stood, still with that everpresent alien weight at his heart, stroking
-her soft cheek. He nodded and smiled.
-
-“And did you tell her--did you decide that Pete could come back?”
-
-He nodded and smiled again. “She seems to think I'm running the
-country.”
-
-“As far as her interests are concerned, you _have_ been,” the invalid
-said, proudly. “Oh, Carson, you know somehow it has happened that I
-never knew Linda so well as some of our own slaves, but since this thing
-came up I have thoroughly enjoyed having her come to see me. I keep her
-here hours, at a time. Do you know why?”
-
-He shook his head. “Not unless it is because she has such a strong
-individuality and is so original.”
-
-“No, that isn't it--it is simply, my boy, because she worships the very
-ground you walk on, and I love to hear her express it in the thousands
-of indirect ways she has. Oh, Carson, I'm simply foolish--_foolish_
-about you! I have never been able to tell you how I felt about your
-heroic conduct. I was afraid to. I gloried in it, but your constant
-danger tied my tongue--I was afraid you'd take more risks. I've got a
-secret to tell you.”
-
-“To tell me?” he said, still stroking her cheek. “Yes; Dr. Stone, seeing
-that I was so much better this morning tried to worm it out of me, but
-I wouldn't tell him the cause. Carson, for a long time I have harbored
-a gnawing, secret fear. It was with me night and day. I knew it was
-dragging me down, keeping me from proper sleep and proper nourishment,
-but I couldn't rid myself of it till this morning.”
-
-“What was it, mother?” he asked, unable to see her drift.
-
-“The fear, my boy, that you and that Dan Willis would meet face to face
-has for a long time been a constant nightmare to me. I had picked up in
-various ways, sometimes from remarks let fall by your father or one of
-the servants, more about your differences with that man than you were
-aware of. I tried to keep you from knowing how I felt, but it was
-secretly dragging me to my grave.”
-
-“And now, mother?” he asked, an almost hopeful light breaking far away
-on his clouded horizon.
-
-“Oh, it may be an awful sin, for I'm told Willis had a mother”--Mrs.
-Dwight sighed--“but when the news came to-day that he had accidentally
-killed himself I became a new woman. He was the one thing I dreaded
-above all else, for, Carson, if he had not shot himself you and he would
-have met and one of you would have fallen. Oh, I'm so happy. I'm going
-to get well now, my boy. You will see me out on the lawn in a day or
-two.”
-
-His eyes were on the floor at her feet. Why he gave so much of his
-mental burden to mere utterance he could not have explained, but he
-said: “And even if we _had_ met, mother, and he had tried to shoot
-me, and--and I, in self-defence you know, had been forced to kill
-him--really forced--I suppose even that situation would have--disturbed
-you?”
-
-“Oh, don't, don't talk of that!” Mrs. Dwight cried. “I don't think it
-is right to think of unpleasant things when one is happy. God did it,
-Carson. God did it to save you.”
-
-“All right, mother, I was only thinking--”
-
-“Well, think of pleasanter things,” Airs. Dwight interrupted him.
-“Helen's been over to see me rather oftener of late. We frequently sit
-and chat together. It makes me feel young again. She is very free with
-me about herself--that is, about everything except her affair with Mr.
-Sanders.”
-
-“She doesn't talk of that much, then?” he ventured, tentatively.
-
-“She won't talk about it at all,” said the invalid; “and that's what
-seems so queer about it. A woman can see deeper into a woman's heart
-than a man can, and I've been wondering over Helen. Sometimes I almost
-think--” Mrs. Dwight seemed lost in thought and unconscious of the fact
-that she had ceased speaking.
-
-“You were saying, mother,” he reminded her, eagerly, “that you almost
-thought--”
-
-“Why, it seems to me, Carson, that any natural girl ought to be so
-full of her engagement to the man she is to marry that she would
-really _love_ to talk about it. Really it seems to me that Helen may
-be questioning her heart in this matter, but she'll end by marrying Mr.
-Sanders. It looks as if she has pledged herself in some way or other,
-and she is the very soul of honor.”
-
-“Oh yes, she is all that,” Dwight said, in an effort at lightness. “Now,
-good-night, mother.”
-
-Much fatigued from his journey and the mental strain upon him, he
-went up to his room. Throwing off his coat, the night being warm to
-oppressiveness, he lighted a cigar and sat in the wide-open window. What
-a strange, tempestuous life was his! How like a mere bauble of soul and
-flesh was he buffeted between highest heaven and lowest earth! And for
-what purpose was he created in the vast scheme of endless solar systems?
-
-From the row of negro cabins and cottages below, across the dewy grass
-and shrubbery, on the flower-perfumed air came sounds of unrestrained
-merriment. Some negro in a cottage near Linda's was playing a
-mouth-organ to the accompaniment of a sweetly twanging guitar. There was
-a rhythmic clapping of hands, the musical, drumlike thumping of feet
-on resounding boards, snatches of happy songs, clear, untrammelled,
-childlike laughter.
-
-They--and naught else--had brought him his burden. That complete justice
-might be meted out to such as they, he had dipped his hands into the
-warm blood of his own race, and was an outlaw bearing an honored name,
-stalking forth, pure of heart, and yet masked and draped with deceit,
-among his own kind. And for what ultimate good? Alas! he was denied
-even the solace of a look into futurity. And yet--born in advance of his
-time, as the Son of God was born ahead of His--there was yet something
-in him which--while he shrank from the depth and bitterness of _his_
-cup--lifted him, in his unmated loneliness, in his blindness, to far-off
-light--high above the material world. There to suffer, there to endure,
-and yet--there.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLI.
-
-[Illustration: 9365]
-
-T was the day following the burial of the body of Dan Willis. Old man
-Purdy, whom Carson had gone to see, was at Dilk's cross-roads store
-with a basket of fresh eggs, which he had brought to exchange for their
-market value in coffee. Several other farmers were seated about the
-store on nail-kegs and soap-boxes whittling sticks and chewing tobacco,
-their slow tongues busy with the details of the recent death and
-interment.
-
-Old Purdy was speaking of how the children had discovered the body, and
-remarked that it would have been found several hours sooner if Carson
-Dwight had only taken the shorter road that day to Springtown instead of
-the longer.
-
-“Why, Dwight come from Darley, didn't he?” asked Dilk, as he wrote
-down the number of eggs he had counted on a piece of brown paper on the
-counter and waited before continuing.
-
-“Why, yes,” Purdy made answer; “he told me, as we were goin' through the
-work he had to do at my house, that he had gone to Springtown an' stayed
-all that night an' then rid on to me.”
-
-The store-keeper's hands hovered over the basket for an instant, then
-they rested on its edge. “Well, I can't make out what under the sun
-Dwight went so far out o' his way for. It's fully five mile farther, and
-the road is so rough and washed out that it's mighty nigh out of use.”
-
-“Well, that does look kind o' funny, come to think of it,” admitted
-Purdy, as he gazed into the bland faces around him. “I never thought of
-it before, but it certainly looks odd, to say the least.”
-
-“Of course thar may not be a thing _in_ it,” said Dilk, in a guarded
-tone, “but it _does_ all seem strange, especially after we've heard so
-much talk about the threats passin' betwixt them very two men. I mean,
-you see, neighbors, that it sort o' looks, providential that--that Dan
-met with the accident before Dwight an' him come together over here.
-That's what I mean.”
-
-All heads nodded gravely, all minds were busy, each in its own
-individual way, and stirred by something more exciting than the mere
-accidental death of Willis or the formality of his burial.
-
-There was a rather prolonged silence broken only by the click of the
-eggs which Dilk was counting into a new tin dish-pan. When he had
-finished he weighed out the coffee and emptied it into the white,
-smoothly ironed poke Purdy's wife had sent along for that purpose. Then
-he looked straight into Purdy's eyes.
-
-“Did you notice--if thar ain't no harm in axin'--whether Dwight
-seemed--well, anyways upset or--or bothered while he was at your house?”
-
-“Well, _I_ didn't,” replied the farmer; “but my wife was in the room
-while he was doin' the writin' that had to be done, an' I remember now
-she axed me after he left ef he was a drinkin' man. I told her no,
-I didn't think he was _now_, though he used to be sorter wild, an' I
-wanted to know why she axed me. She said she never had seed anybody's
-hands shake like his did while he held the pen, an' that he had a quar
-look about the eyes like he'd lost a power o' sleep.”
-
-“Was--was anything said in his presence about Willis's death that
-you remember of?” the storekeeper pursued, with the skill of a legal
-crossexaminer, while the listeners stared, their cuds of tobacco
-compressed between their grinders.
-
-Purdy's face had grown rigid, almost as that of an important witness on
-the stand in court. “I can't just remember,” he said. “There was so much
-talk about it on all sides that day. Oh yes--now I recall that--well,
-you see we was all at my house, eager for news, and it struck me, you
-know, as if Dwight wasn't as anxious to talk as the rest--in fact, it
-looked like he sorter wanted to change the subject.”
-
-“Oh!” The exclamation was breathed simultaneously from several mouths.
-
-“Of course, neighbors,” Purdy began, in alarm, “don't understand me for
-one minute to--” But he broke off, for Dilk had something else to
-observe.
-
-“Them two men was at dagger's-p'ints, I've heard,” he declared. “Friends
-on both sides was movin' heaven an' earth to keep 'em apart. Now if
-Dwight _did_ take that long, roundabout road from Darley to Springtown,
-why, they didn't meet. But ef Dwight went the way he always _has_ tuck,
-an' I've seed 'im out this way often enough, why--” Dilk raised his
-hands and held them poised significantly in mid-air.
-
-“But the coroner's jury found,” said Purdy, “that Willis was shootin' at
-a target he'd stuck up on a tree with his own knife, an' that his young
-hoss was skittish, an'--”
-
-“All the better proof of bad blood betwixt 'em,” burst from a farmer on
-a nail-keg. “The truth is, some hold now that Willis was out practising
-so he could wing that particular game. The only thing I see agin what
-you-uns seem to think is that it's been kept quiet. Dwight is a lawyer
-an' knows the law, an' he wouldn't cover a thing like that up when
-all he'd have to do would be to establish proof that it was done in
-self-defence an' git his walking-papers.”
-
-“Thar you are!” Dilk said, in a voice that rang with conviction; “but
-suppose _one_ thing--suppose this. Suppose the provocation wasn't
-exactly strong enough to quite justify killing. Suppose Dwight, made
-mad by all he'd heard, drawed an' fired without due warning, and suppose
-while he was thar in that quiet spot he had time to think it all over
-and decided that he'd stand a better chance of escape by not bein' known
-in the matter. A body never can tell. You kin bet your boots if Dwight
-_did_ kill 'im an' hid the fact, he had ample legal reasons fer not
-wantin' to be mixed up in it.”
-
-The seed was sown, and upon soil well suited to rapid germination and
-growth. By the next day the noxious weed had its head well above the
-ground, and, like the crab-grass the farmers knew to be so tenaciously
-prolific, it was spreading rapidly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLII.
-
-[Illustration: 9369]
-
-WEEK went by. Helen Warren had been sitting that warm afternoon in
-the big bay-window of the parlor. A cooling breeze fanned the old lace
-curtains inward, bringing the perfume of the the garden and now and then
-revealing a wealth of color on the rose-bushes near by. She had just
-read an appealing letter from Sanders in which he had expressed himself
-as having been so disturbed by her refusal to assure him positively of
-what his ultimate fate was to be that he had permitted himself to worry
-considerably. So greatly concerned, indeed, was he that he had confided
-in his mother, who, he wrote, had made matters worse by asking him
-flatly if he was absolutely sure that he was loved in the one and only
-way a man should be loved by the woman he was hoping to win for his
-wife.
-
-He was writing all this to Helen in a straightforward, manly way,
-putting her sharply on her honor, as it were, and she, poor girl, was
-worried in her turn. Leaving her chair, she went to the piano and seated
-herself and began to play. She was thus occupied when Ida Tarpley came
-in suddenly and unannounced, as she felt privileged to do at any time.
-
-“Well, tell me,” the visitor smiled, “what's the matter with your
-playing? Why, you used to have a good, even touch, but as I came up
-the walk I declare I thought it was some one tuning the piano. You were
-dropping enough notes to fill a waste-paper basket.”
-
-“Oh, I'm not in the mood for it, I presume!” Helen said, checking a
-sigh.
-
-“I understand.” Miss Tarpley gently pushed back Helen's hair and kissed
-her brow. “You can't deny it; you were thinking about Carson Dwight and
-all his troubles.”
-
-Helen flushed and dropped her glance to her lap, then she rose from the
-piano and the two girls moved hand in hand to the window. “The truth
-is,” Helen admitted, “that I have been wondering if anything has gone
-wrong with him--any bad news or indications about his election.”
-
-“He can't be worrying about the election,” Ida said, confidently. “Mr.
-Garner comes to see me often and confides in me rather freely, and he
-says the people are flocking back to Carson in swarms and droves. They
-understand him now and admire him for the courageous stand he took.”
-
-“Well, something is wrong with him,” Helen declared, eying her cousin
-sadly. “Mam' Linda never makes a mistake; she knows him through and
-through. She went to thank him last night for getting a position for
-Pete to work regularly at the flouring mill, and she came back really
-depressed and shaking her head.
-
-“'Suppin certain sho gone wrong wid young mars-ter, honey,' she said.
-'He ain't never been lak dis before; he ain't _hisse'f_, I tell you!
-He's yaller an' shaky an' look quar out'n de eyes.'”
-
-“Oh!” and Miss Tarpley sank into one of the chairs in the window. “I'm
-almost sorry you mentioned that, for now I'll worry. I've always had his
-cause at heart, and now--Helen, I'm afraid something very, very serious
-is hanging over him.
-
-[Illustration: 0371]
-
-I'm not hinting at anything that might come out of his disappointment
-over your affair with Mr. Sanders, either. It seems to me he accepted
-that as inevitable and is making the best of it, but it is something
-else.”
-
-“Something else!” Helen repeated. “Oh, Ida, how horribly you talk! Do
-you mean--is it possible that he was more seriously wounded that night
-than he has let us know?”
-
-“No, it's not that. I don't know what it is. In fact, Mr. Garner says--”
-
-“What does he say, Ida?” Helen threw into the gap left by her cousin's
-failure to proceed, and stood staring.
-
-“Well, you know it is easy sometimes to tell when one is not revealing
-everything, and I felt that way about Mr. Garner when he called night
-before last. In the first place, though he tried to do it in a casual
-sort of way, he kept talking of Carson all the time. It was almost as
-if he had come to see if I would confirm some secret fear of his, for
-he seemed to get near it several times and then backed out. Once he went
-further than he intended, for he said, as if it were a slip of the
-lip, when we were speculating on the possible cause of Carson's
-depression--he said, 'There is _one_ thing, Miss Ida, that I fear, and I
-fear it so much that I dare not even mention it to myself.'”
-
-“Oh!” exclaimed Helen, and she leaned on the back of her chair; “what
-could he have meant?”
-
-“I don't know; Mr. Garner wouldn't explain; in fact, he seemed rather
-upset by his unintentional remark. He laughed awkwardly and changed the
-subject, and never alluded to Carson again while he stayed. As he was
-getting his hat in the hall, I followed him and tried to pin him down
-to some sort of explanation, and then he made an effort to throw me off.
-'Oh,' he said, 'you know Carson is terribly blue about losing Helen, and
-it has, of course, caused him to care less about his election, but he'll
-come around in time.' I told Mr. Garner then that I was sure he had
-meant something else. I was looking straight at him and saw his
-glance fall, but that was all I got out of him. Something is wrong,
-Helen--something very, very serious.”
-
-“Have you seen Carson lately, Ida?” Helen asked, with rigid lips.
-
-“Not to speak to him; he seems to avoid me, but as I sat in the window
-of my room yesterday afternoon I saw him go by. He didn't see me, but
-I saw his face in repose, and oh, cousin, it wrung my heart. He really
-must have some great secret trouble, and it hurts me to feel that I
-can't help him bear it. He used to confide in me, but he seems to shun
-me now, and that, too, in itself, is queer.”
-
-“It is not about his mother, either,” Helen sighed, “for her health has
-been improving lately.” And as Miss Tarpley was leaving she accompanied
-her, gloomily to the door.
-
-The twilight fell softly, and as Helen sat in the hammock on the veranda
-her father came in at the gate and up the walk. She rose to greet him
-with her customary kiss, and taking his arm they began to stroll back
-and forth along the veranda. She was hoping that he would speak of
-Carson Dwight, but he didn't, and she was forced to mention him herself,
-which she did rather stiffly in her effort to make it appear as merely
-casual.
-
-“Ida was saying this afternoon that Carson is not looking well--or,
-rather, that he seems to be worried,” she faltered out, and then she
-hung on to the Major's arm and waited.
-
-“Oh, I don't know,” the old gentleman said, reflectively. “I went into
-his office this afternoon to get a blank check, and found him at his
-desk with a pile of letters from his supporters all over the county.
-Well, I acknowledge I wondered why he should have so little enthusiasm
-when the thing is going his way like the woods afire, and his crusty old
-father fairly chuckling with pride and delight; but what's the use of
-talking to you! You know if he is blue there is only _one_ reason for
-it.”
-
-“Only one reason!” Helen echoed, faintly.
-
-“Yes, how could the poor boy be happy--thoroughly, so I mean--when the
-whole town can talk of nothing else but the grandeur of your approaching
-marriage. Mrs. Snodgrass has started the report that your aunt is to
-give you a ten-thousand-dollar trousseau and that Sanders is to load
-you down with family jewels. Mrs. Snod says we are going to have such a
-crowd here at the house that the verandas will be enclosed in canvas
-and the tables be set barbecue fashion on the lawn, and that the family
-servants and all their unlynched descendants are to be brought from the
-four quarters of the earth to wait on the multitude in the old style.
-You needn't bother; that's what ails Carson. He's got plenty of pride,
-and that sort of talk will hurt any man.” But Helen was unconvinced.
-After supper she sat alone on the veranda, her father being occupied
-with the evening papers in the library. What could Garner have meant by
-his remark to Ida? With a heavy heart and her hands tightly clasped
-in her lap, Helen sat trying to fathom the mystery, for that there was
-mystery she had no doubt.
-
-She went back to the first days of her return home. When she had
-arrived her heart--the queer, inconsistent thing which was now so deeply
-concerned with Carson Dwight's affairs--had been coldly steeled against
-him. The next salient event of that gladsome period was the ball in
-her honor of which all else had faded into the background except that
-memorable talk with Carson and his promise to remove Pete from the
-temptations of living in town. The boy had gone, then the real trouble
-had begun. Carson had rescued him from a violent death before her very
-eyes. That speech of his was never to be forgotten. It had roused her
-as she had never been roused by human eloquence. With a throb of terror,
-she heard the report of the pistol fired by Dan Willis, his
-avowed enemy--Dan Willis upon whom a just Providence had
-visited--visited--visited--She sat staring at the ground, her beautiful
-eyes growing larger, her hands clutching each other like clamps of
-vitalized steel.
-
-“Oh!” she cried. “No, no! not that--not that!” It was an accident. The
-coroner and his jury had said so. But how strange! No one had mentioned
-it, and yet it had happened on the very day Carson had ridden along the
-fatal road to reach Springtown. She knew the way well. She herself
-had driven over it twice with Carson, and had heard him say it was the
-nearest and best road, and that he would _never take any other_.
-
-Ah, yes, _that_ was the explanation--_that_ was what Garner feared.
-_That_ was the terrible fatality which the shrewd lawyer, knowing its
-full gravity, had hardly dared mention even to himself. Carson Dwight,
-her hero, had killed a man!
-
-Helen rose like a mechanical thing, and with dragging feet went up the
-stairs to her room. Before her open window--the window looking out upon
-the Dwight lawn and garden--she sat in the still darkness, now praying
-that Carson might appear as he sometimes did. If she saw him, should
-she go to him? Yes, for the pain, the cold clutch on her heart of the
-discovery was like the throes of death. She told herself that she had
-been the primal cause of this as of all his suffering. In the blind
-desire to oblige her, he had wrecked his every hope. He had lost all
-and yet was uncomplaining. Indeed, he was trying to hide his misfortune,
-bearing it alone, like the man he was.
-
-She heard her father closing the library windows to prepare for bed. His
-steps rang hollowly as he came out into the hall below and called up to
-her: “Daughter, are you asleep?”
-
-A reply hung in her dry throat. She feared to trust her voice to
-utterance. She heard the Major mutter, as if to himself, “Well,
-good-night, daughter,” and then his footsteps died out. Again she was
-alone with her grim discovery.
-
-The town clock had just struck ten when she saw the red coal of a
-cigar on the Dwight lawn quite near the gate leading into her father's
-grounds. It was he. She knew it by the fitful flaring of the cigar.
-Noiselessly she glided down the stairs, softly she turned the big brass
-key in the massive lock and went out and sped, light of foot, across the
-dewy grass. As she approached him Dwight was standing with his back to
-her, his arms folded.
-
-“Carson!” she called, huskily, and he turned with a start and a stare of
-wonder through the gloom.
-
-“Oh,” he said, “it's you,” and doffing his hat he came through the
-gateway and stood by her. “It's time, young lady, that you were asleep,
-isn't it?”
-
-She saw through his effort at lightness of manner.
-
-“I noticed your cigar and wanted to speak to you,” she said, in a voice
-that sounded tense and even harsh. It rose almost in a squeak and
-died in her tight throat. Something in his wan face and shifting eyes,
-noticeable even in the darkness, confirmed her in the conviction that
-she had divined his secret.
-
-“You wanted to see me,” he said; “I've had so many things to think about
-lately, in this beastly political business, you know, that I'm sadly
-behind in my social duties.”
-
-“I--I've been thinking about you all evening,” she said, lamely.
-“Somehow, I felt as if I simply must see you and talk to you.”
-
-“How good of you!” he cried. “I don't deserve it, though--at such a
-time, anyway. It is generally conceded that it is a woman's duty, placed
-as you are, to think of only one thing and one individual. In this case
-the man is the luckiest one in God's universe. He's well-to-do, has
-scores of admiring, influential friends, and is to marry the grandest,
-sweetest woman on earth. If that isn't enough to make a man happy,
-why--”
-
-“Stop; don't speak that way!” Helen commanded. “I can't stand it. I
-simply can't stand it, Carson!”
-
-He stared at her inquiringly for a moment, as she stood with her face
-averted, and then he heaved a big sigh as he gently, almost reverently,
-touched her sleeve to direct her glance upon himself.
-
-“What is it, Helen?” he said, softly, a wealth of tenderness in his
-shaking voice. “What's gone wrong? Don't tell me _you_ are unhappy.
-Things have gone crooked with me of late--I--I mean that my father has
-been displeased, till quite recently at least, and I have not been in
-the best mood; but I have been sustained by the thought that you, at
-least, were happy. If I thought you were not, I don't know what I would
-do.”
-
-“How can I be happy when you--when you--” Her voice dwindled away into
-nothingness, and she could only face him with all her agony and despair
-burning in her great, melting eyes.
-
-“When I what, Helen?” he asked, gropingly. “Surely you are not troubled
-about _me_, now that my political horizon is so bright that my opponent
-can't look at it without smoked glasses. Oh, I'm all right. Ask
-Garner--ask your father--ask Braider--ask anybody.”
-
-“I was not thinking of your _election_,” she found voice, to say. “Oh,
-Carson, _do_ have faith in me! I crave it; I long for it; I yearn for
-it. I want to help you. I want to stand by you and suffer with you. You
-can trust me. You tried me once--you remember--and I stood the test.
-Before God, I'll never breathe it to a soul. Oh”--stopping him by
-raising her despairing hand--“don't try to deceive me because I'm a
-girl. The uncertainty is killing me. I'll not close my eyes to-night.
-The truth will be easier borne because I'll be bearing it--_with you_.”
-
-“Oh, Helen, can it be possible that you--” He had spoken impulsively and
-essayed to check himself, but now, pale as a corpse, he stood before her
-not knowing what to do or say. He opened his mouth as if to speak, and
-then with a helpless shrug of his shoulders he lapsed into silence, a
-droop of utter despondency upon him. She was now sure she was right,
-and a shaft she had never met before entered her heart and remained
-there--remained there to strengthen her, good woman that she was, as
-such things have strengthened women of all periods. She laid her firm
-hand upon his arm in a pressure meant to comfort him, and with the
-purity of a sorrowing angel she said: “I know the truth, dear Carson,
-and if you don't show me a way to get you out from under it--you who did
-it all for my sake--if you don't I shall die. I can't stand it.”
-
-He stood convicted before her. With bowed head he remained silent for a
-moment, then he said, almost with a groan: “To think, on top of it all,
-that you must know--_you!_ I was bearing it all right, but now you--you
-poor, gentle, delicate girl--you have to be dragged into this as you
-have been dragged into every miserable thing that ever happened to
-me. It began with your brother's death--I helped stain that memory for
-you--now this--this unspeakable thing!”
-
-“You did it wholly in self-defence,” she said. “You _had_ to do it. He
-forced it on you.”
-
-“Yes, yes--he or fate, the imps of Satan or the elemental passion born
-in me. Flight, open flight lay before me, but that would have been the
-death of self-respect--so it came about.”
-
-“And you kept it on account of your mother?” she went on, insistently,
-her agonized face close to his.
-
-“Yes, of course. It would kill her, Helen, and I would be doing it
-deliberately, for I know what the consequences would be. I must be my
-own tribunal. I have no right to take still another life that legal
-curiosity may be gratified. But till I am proven innocent I am a
-murderer--that's what hurts. I am offering myself to my fellow-men as
-a maker of laws, and yet am deliberately defying those made by my
-predecessors.”
-
-“Your mother must never know,” Helen said, firmly. “No one shall but you
-and I, Carson. We'll bear it together.” She took his hand and held it
-tightly for a moment, then pressing it tenderly against her cold cheek,
-she lowered her head and left him--left him there under the vague
-starlight, the soulful fragrance of her soothing personality upon him,
-causing him to forget his peril, his grief, and his far-reaching sorrow,
-and to draw close to his aching breast her heavenly sympathy and undying
-fidelity.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLIII.
-
-[Illustration: 9382]
-
-NE morning, a week later, Pole Baker slouched down the street from the
-wagon-yard, and, peering into the law-office of Garner & Dwight, he
-stood undecided on the deserted street, his hands thrust deep into
-the pockets of his baggy trousers. He took another surreptitious look.
-Garner was at his desk, his great brow wrinkled as with concentrated
-thought, his coarse hair awry, his coat off and shirt-sleeves rolled up
-to his elbows, his fingers stained with ink. Glancing up at this moment,
-he caught the farmer's eye and nodded: “Hello!” he said, cordially;
-“come in. How's our young colt running out your way?”
-
-“Like a shot out of a straight-barrelled gun,” Baker retorted. “He's the
-most popular man in the county. He had a slow start, in all that nigger
-mess, but he's all right now.”
-
-“So you think he'll be elected?” Garner said, as Pole sat down in a
-chair near his desk and began to twirl his long, gnarled fingers.
-
-“Well, I didn't say _that_, exactly,” the farmer answered.
-
-“But you said--” In his perplexity the lawyer could only stare.
-
-“I reckon thar are lots of things in this life that kin keep fellows out
-of offices besides the men runnin' agin 'em,” Baker said, significantly.
-
-The eyes of the two men met in a long, steady stare; each was trying to
-read the other. But Garner was too shrewd a lawyer to be pumped even
-by a trusted friend, and he simply leaned back and took up his pen. “Oh
-yes, of course,” he observed, “a good many slips betwixt the cup and the
-lip.”
-
-Silence fell between the two men. Baker broke it suddenly and with his
-customary frankness. “Look here, Bill Garner,” he said. “That young
-feller's yore partner an' friend, but I've got his interests at heart
-myself, an' it don't do no harm sometimes fer two men to talk over what
-concerns a friend to both. I come in town to talk to _somebody_, an' it
-looks like you are the man.”
-
-“Oh, that's it,” Garner said. “Well, out with it, Baker.”
-
-Pole thrust his right hand into his pocket and took out a splinter of
-soft pine and his knife. Then, with the toe of his heavy shoe, he drew
-a wooden, sawdust-filled cuspidor towards him and over it he prepared to
-whittle.
-
-“I want to talk to you about Carson,” he said. “It ain't none o' my
-business, Bill, but I believe he's in great big trouble.”
-
-“You do, eh?” and Garner seemed to throw caution to the winds as he
-leaned forward, his great, facile mouth open. “Well, Pole?”
-
-“Gossip--talk under cover from one mouth to another,” the mountaineer
-drawled out, “is the most dangerous thing, next to a bucket o' powder in
-a cook-stove that you are goin' to bake in, of anything I know of.
-Gossip has got hold of Dwight, Bill, an' it's tangled itself all about
-him. Ef some'n' ain't done to choke it off it will git him down as shore
-as a blacksnake kin swallow a toad after he's kivered it with slime.”
-
-“You mean--” But Garner seemed to think better of his inclination
-towards subterfuge and broke off.
-
-“I mean about the way Dan Willis met his death,” Pole said, to the
-point. “I'm no fool an' you ain't, at least you wouldn't be ef you was
-paid by some client to git at the facts. Folks are ready to swear Carson
-was seed the day that thing happened on that road inside of a mile o'
-whar Willis was found. You know what time Carson left here that day; it
-was sometime after dinner, an' the hotel man at Spring-town says he got
-thar an' registered after dark. He says, too, that Carson looked nervous
-an' upset an' seemed more anxious to avoid folks than the general run of
-vote-hunters. Then--then, oh, well, what's the use o' beatin' about the
-bush? You know an' I know that Carson hain't been actin' like himself
-since then. It's all we can do to git 'im interested in his own
-popularity, an' that shows some'n' is wrong--dead wrong. An' it looks
-to me like it is a matter that ought to be attended to. Killin' a man is
-serious enough in the eyes of the law without covering it up till it's
-jerked out of you by the State solicitor.”
-
-“So you think the two men met?” Garner said, now quite as if he were
-inquiring into the legal status of any ordinary case.
-
-“That's my judgment,” answered Pole. “And if I'm right, then it seems to
-me that Carson an' his friends ought to take action before--”
-
-“Before what?” Garner prompted, almost eagerly. “Before the grand jury
-takes it up, as you know they will have to with all this commotion goin'
-the rounds.”
-
-“Yes, Carson ought to act--concerned in it or not,” said Garner. “If
-something isn't done right away, it might be sprung on him on the very
-eve of his election and actually ruin him.”
-
-“I'm worried, an' I don't deny it,” said the mountaineer. “You see,
-Bill, Carson's a lawyer, and he knows whether he had a good case of
-self-defence or not, an' shirking investigation this way looks powerful
-like--”
-
-“Like he was himself the--aggressor,” interpolated Garner, with a frown.
-
-“Yes, like that,” said Baker. “Of course we know Willis was houndin' the
-boy and making threats, but Carson's hot-headed, as hot-headed as they
-make 'em, an' maybe he flared up at the first sight of Willis an' blazed
-away at 'im. I don't see no other reason for him lyin' so low about it.”
-
-“I'm glad you came to me,” Garner said. “I'll admit I've been fearing
-the thing, Pole. It will be a delicate matter to broach, but I'm going
-to talk to him about it. As you say, the longer it remains like it is
-the more serious it becomes. Good Lord! if he _did_ kill Willis--if he
-_did_ kill him, it would take sharp work to clear him of the charge of
-murder after the silly way he has acted about it. Why, dang it, it's
-almost an admission of guilt!”
-
-Baker had barely left the office when Carson came in, nodded to his
-partner, and sat down at his desk and began in an absent-minded way
-to cut open some letters that were waiting for him. Unobserved Garner
-watched him from behind the worn book he was holding up to his face.
-Hardened lawyer that he was, Garner's heart melted with pity as he noted
-the dark splotches under the young man's eyes, the pathetic droop of
-his shoulders, the evidences in every facial line of the grim inward
-struggle that was going on in the brave, supersensitive soul. Garner put
-down his book and went into the little consultation-room in the rear and
-stood at the window which looked out upon a small patch of corn in an
-adjoining lot.
-
-“He did it!” he said, grimly. “Yes, he did it. Poor chap!”
-
-The task before him was the hardest Garner had ever faced. He could have
-discussed, to the finest points of detail, such a case for a client, but
-Carson--the strange, winning personality over which he had marvelled
-so often--was different. He was the most courageous, the most
-self-sacrificing, the most keenly suffering human being Garner had ever
-known, and the most sensitively honorable. How was it possible, even
-indirectly, to allude to so grave a charge against such a man? And yet,
-Garner reflected, pessimistically, the best of men sometimes reach a
-point at which their high moral and spiritual tension, under one crucial
-test or another, breaks. Why should it not be so in Carson Dwight's
-case.
-
-Garner went back to his desk, sat down, and turned his revolving-chair
-till he faced Carson's profile. “Look here, old chap,” he said. “I've
-got something of a very unpleasant nature to say to you, and it's a
-pretty hard thing to do, considering my keen regard for you.”
-
-Dwight glanced up from the letter he held before him. He read Garner's
-face in a steady stare for a moment, and then said, with a sigh, as he
-laid the letter down: “I see you've heard it. Well, I knew it would get
-out. I've seen it coming for several days.”
-
-“I began to guess it a week or so back,” Garner went on, outwardly calm;
-“but this morning in talking to Pole Baker I became convinced of it.
-It is a grim sort of thing, my boy, but you must not despair. You've
-surmounted more obstacles than any young fellow I know, and I believe
-you will eventually come through this. Though you must acknowledge that
-it would have been far wiser to have given yourself up at once.”
-
-“I couldn't do it,” Carson responded, gloomily. “I thought of it.
-I started on my way to Braider, really, but finally decided that it
-wouldn't do.”
-
-“Good God! was it as bad as that?” Garner exclaimed. “I've been hoping
-against hope that you could--”
-
-“It couldn't be worse.” Carson lowered his head till it rested on his
-hand. His face went out of Garner's view. “It's going to kill her,
-Garner. She can't stand it. Dr. Stone told me that another shock would
-kill her.”
-
-“You mean--my Lord! you mean your _mother?_ You--you”--Garner leaned
-forward, his face working, his eyes gleaming--“you mean that you did
-not report it because of her condition? Great God! why didn't I think of
-that?”
-
-“Why, certainly.” Carson looked round. “Did you think it was because--”
-
-“I thought it was because you had--had killed him in--well, in a manner
-you feared would not be adjudged wholly justifiable. I never dreamed of
-the _real_ reason. I see it all now,” and Garner rose from his chair and
-with his lips twitching he laid his hand on Dwight's back. “I understand
-perfectly, and I admire you more than I can say. Now, tell me all about
-it.”
-
-For an hour the two friends sat talking together. Calmly Carson went
-into detail as to the happening, and when he had finished Garner said:
-“You've got a good case, but you can easily see that it is grievously
-hampered by your concealment of the facts so long. To make a jury see
-exactly how you felt about your mother's reception of the thing may be
-hard, for the average man is not by nature quite so finely strung as
-that, but we must _make_ them see it. Dr. Stone's testimony as to his
-advice to you will help. But, by all means, we must make the advance
-ourselves as soon as possible--before a charge is brought against you
-by the grand jury.” v “But”--and Dwight groaned aloud--“my mother simply
-cannot go through it, Garner. I know her. It will kill her.”
-
-“She simply must bear it,” Garner said, gloomily. “We must find a way
-to brace her up to the ordeal. I have it. All my hopes are based on our
-making such a clear statement before Squire Felton, with the testimony
-of several witnesses as to Willis's threats against you, that he will
-throw it out of court. I can see the squire to-day and have a hearing
-set for to-morrow. We'll make quick work of it. I'll also see your
-father and--”
-
-“My father!” Carson exclaimed, despondently.
-
-“Yes, I'll see him and explain the whole thing. I think I can get him to
-keep the matter from reaching your mother till after the hearing. She is
-still confined to her room, and surely your father can manage that part
-of it.”
-
-“Yes,” Carson replied, gloomily; “and he will do all he can, though it's
-going to be a terrible blow to him. But--if--if the justice court should
-bind me over, and I should have to go to jail to await trial, then my
-mother--”
-
-“Don't think about her now!” Garner said, testily. “Let's work for a
-prompt dismissal and not look on the dark side till we have to. I'll run
-down and talk to your father at once, before the rumor reaches him and
-drives him crazy. I tell you it's in the very air; I've felt it for
-several days.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLIV.
-
-[Illustration: 9390]
-
-N his office in one corner of his great grain and cotton warehouse, at a
-dusty, littered desk before a murky, cobweb-bed window, Garner found
-old Dwight, his lap full of telegraphic reports, his head submerged in a
-morning paper containing the market and crop news in general. Outside of
-the thin-walled office heavy iron trucks, in the grasp of brawny black
-men, rattled and rumbled over the heavy floor and across weighty skids
-into open cars in the rear. There was the creaking sound of the big hand
-elevators engaged in hoisting and lowering bales, barrels, bags, and
-casks, the mellow sing-song of the light-hearted negroes as they toiled,
-blissfully ignorant of the profound gloom which had fallen on the
-defender of their rights.
-
-“I came to see you on an important matter concerning Carson,” Garner
-began, as he leaned over the old man's desk.
-
-Dwight lowered his paper, shrugged his shoulders, and sniffed.
-
-“Campaign funds, I reckon,” he said. “Well, I've been looking for some
-such demand. In fact, I've been astonished that you fellows haven't
-been after me sooner. I'll do anything but buy whiskey to give away. I'm
-against that custom.”
-
-“It wasn't _that_,” said Garner, who, usually plain-spoken, shrank from
-beating about the bush even in so delicate a matter. “The truth is,
-Carson is in a little trouble, Mr. Dwight.”
-
-“Trouble?” the merchant said, bluntly. “Will you kindly show me when
-he's ever been out of it? Since the day he was born it's been scrape
-after scrape. By all possessed, Billy, when he wasn't a year old I had
-to spend fifty dollars to encase all the chimneys in with iron grating
-to keep him from crawling into the fire. He's walked or stumbled into
-every fire that was made since then. When he was only twelve a man out
-at the farm fell in a well and nothing would do Carson but that he must
-go down after him. He did it, fastened the only available rope about the
-man and sent him to the top, and when they lowered it to Carson he was
-so nearly drowned that he could hardly sit in the loop. If I had a list
-of the scrapes that boy went through at home and at college I'd sell it
-to some blood-and-thunder novel writer. It would make his fortune. Well,
-what is it now?”
-
-“Carson is in very serious trouble I'm afraid, Mr. Dwight,” Garner said,
-as he took a chair and sat down. “You will have to prepare yourself for
-a pretty sharp shock. He couldn't help it. It was pushed on him to
-such an extent that there was no other way out of it and retain his
-self-respect. Mr. Dwight, you, of course, heard of Dan Willis's death?”
-
-“Yes, and thought that now that he was under the sod Carson would
-surely--”
-
-“The death was not an accident, Mr. Dwight,”
-
-Garner interrupted, and his eyes rested steadily on the old man's face.
-
-“You mean that Willis killed himself--that he--”
-
-“I mean that he _forced_ Carson to kill him, Mr. Dwight.”
-
-The old merchant's face was working as if in the throes of death; he
-leaned forward, his eyes wide in growing horror.
-
-“Don't, don't say that, Billy; take it back!” he gasped. “Anything but
-that--anything else under God's shining sun.”
-
-“You must try to be calm,” Garner said, gently. “It can't be helped.
-After all, the poor boy was forced to do it to save his life.”
-
-Old Dwight lowered his face to his hands and groaned. The negro at the
-head of the gang of truckmen approached and leaned in the doorway. He
-had come to ask some directions about the work, but with widening eyes
-he stood staring. Garner peremptorily waved him away, and, rising, he
-laid his hand on Dwight's shoulder.
-
-“Don't take it so hard!” he said, soothingly. “Remember, there is a lot
-to do, and that's what I came to see you about.”
-
-Old Dwight raised his blearing eyes, which, in his pallid face now
-looked bloodshot, and stammered out: “What is there to do? What does it
-mean? How was it kept till now? Was he trying to hide it?”
-
-“Yes”--Garner nodded--“the poor boy has been bearing it in secret. He
-was afraid the news of it would seriously injure his mother.”
-
-“And it will!” Dwight groaned. “She will never bear it in the world.
-She is as frail as a flower. His conduct has brought her within a
-hair's-breadth of the grave more than once, and nothing under high
-heaven could save her from this. It's awful, awful!”
-
-“I know it's bad, but we've got to save him, Mr. Dwight. You can't have
-your own son--”
-
-“Have him _what?_” Dwight rose, swaying from side to side, and stood
-facing the lawyer.
-
-“Well, you can't have him sent to jail for murder; you can't have
-him--found guilty and publicly executed. The law is a ticklish business.
-Absolutely innocent men have been hanged time after time. I tell you
-this concealment of the thing, and Carson's hot fury at Willis and
-the remarks he has made here and there about him--the fact that he was
-armed--that there were no witnesses to the duel--that he allowed the
-erroneous verdict of the coroner's jury to go on record--all these
-things, with a scoundrel like Wiggin in the background at deadly work to
-thwart us and pull Carson out of his track, are very, very serious. It
-is the most serious job I ever tackled in the courts, but I'm going to
-put it through or, as God is my judge, Mr. Dwight, I'll throw up the
-law.”
-
-Tears were now flowing freely from the old merchant's eyes and,
-unhindered, dripped from his face to the ground. Taking Garner's hand
-he grasped it firmly, and as he wrung it he sobbed: “Save my boy, Billy,
-and I'll never let you want for means as long as you live. He's all I've
-got, and I'm prouder of him than I ever let folks know. I've made a lot
-of fuss over some things he's done, but through it all I was proud of
-him, proud of him because he saw deeper into right than I did. Even this
-nigger question--I talked against that a lot, because I thought it
-would pull him down, but when I heard how he got you all together in
-Blackburn's store that night and persuaded you to save old Linda's
-boy--when I learned of that and heard the old woman's cries of joy, and
-saw the far-reaching effects of what Carson was standing for, I was so
-proud and thankful that I sneaked off to my room and cried--cried like a
-child; and now upon it all, as his reward, comes this thing. Oh, Billy,
-save him! Don't crush the poor boy's spirit. I've always wanted to aid
-you in some substantial way for your interest in him, and I'm going to
-do it this time.”
-
-“I hope we can squash the thing in justice court in the morning, Mr.
-Dwight,” Garner said, confidently. “The chief thing is for you to keep
-it all from your wife until then, anyway. I can't do a thing with Carson
-till his mind is at ease over her. He worships the ground she walks on,
-Mr. Dwight, and if it hadn't been for that he would have been out of
-this trouble long ago, for I'm sure a plain statement of the matter
-immediately after it happened would have cleared him without any
-trouble. In his desire to spare his mother he has complicated the case,
-that's all.”
-
-“Oh, I can keep it from his mother that long easy enough,” said Dwight.
-“I'll go home now and see to it. Pull my boy through this, Billy. If you
-have to draw on me for every cent I've got, pull him through. I'm going
-to treat him different in the future-. If he can get out of this I
-believe he will be elected and make a great man.”
-
-An hour later Garner hurried back to the office.
-
-“Everything is in fine shape!” he chuckled, as he threw off his coat
-and fell to work at his desk. “Squire Felton has fixed the hearing for
-to-morrow morning at eleven and Pole Baker has gone on the fastest horse
-in the livery-stable to secure witnesses for our side. He says he can
-find them galore in the mountains, and your father is as solid as a
-stone wall. He fell all in a tumble at first, but braced up, said some
-beautiful things about you, and went home to see that your mother's ears
-are closed.
-
-“I saw the sheriff, too. What do you think? When I told him the facts,
-and said that you were ready to give yourself up, he almost cried.
-Braider's a trump. He said that the law gave him the right to let you go
-on your own recognizance, and that before he'd arrest you and put you in
-a common jail he'd have his arms and legs cut off. He said, knowing
-your heart as he knew it, he'd let you go all the way to Canada without
-stopping you, and that if you were bound over on this charge he'd throw
-up his job rather than arrest you. He told me he'd been looking for
-it--that he got wind of it two days ago, and would have been in to see
-you about it if he hadn't been afraid you'd misunderstand his coming
-at such a time. He put a flea in my ear, too. He said we must beware of
-Wiggin. He has an idea that Wiggin has been on to this for sometime and
-may have a dangerous dagger up his sleeve. The district-attorney is out
-of town to-day but will be back to-night. He's as straight as a die and
-will act fair. I will see him the first thing in the morning. Now, you
-brace up. Leave everything to me. You are as good a lawyer as I am, but
-you are too nervous and worried about your mother to act on your best
-judgment.”
-
-At this juncture the colored gardener from Dwight's came in with a note
-directed to Garner. Garner opened it and read it while Carson stood
-looking on. It ran: _“Dear Billy,--Everything is all right at this end,
-and will remain so, at least till after the hearing to-morrow. I enclose
-my check for ten thousand dollars as a retaining fee. I always intended
-to give you a little start, and I hope this will help you materially.
-Save my boy. Save him, Billy. For God's sake pull him through; don't let
-this thing crush his spirit. He's got a great and a useful future before
-him if only we can pull him through this.”_
-
-Carson read the note through a blur and turned away. He was standing
-alone in the dreary little consultation-room a few minutes later, when
-Garner came to him, old Dwight's check fluttering in his hands.
-
-“Your dad's the right sort,” he said, his eyes gleaming with the infant
-fires of avarice. “One only has to know how to understand him. The
-size of this check is out of all reason, but if I can do what he wishes
-to-morrow, I'll not only accept it, but I'll put it to a glorious use.
-Carson, there is a young woman in this town whom I'll ask to marry me,
-and I'll buy a home with this to start life on.”
-
-“Ida Tarpley?” said Carson.
-
-“She's the one,” Garner said, with a bare touch of rising color. “I
-think she would take me, from a little remark she dropped, and it was
-through you that I found her.”
-
-“Through me?” Dwight said.
-
-“Yes, it was in talking of your ups and downs that I first saw into
-her wonderfully sweet and sympathetic nature. Carson, if you get your
-walking-papers in the morning, I won't wait ten minutes before I pop
-the question. The lack of means was the only thing that kept me from
-proposing the last time I saw her.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLV.
-
-[Illustration: 0398]
-
-HE next morning when Garner reached the office, he found Carson
-surrounded by “the gang,” Blackburn was just leaving, his mild eyes
-fixed gloomily on the sidewalk, and Wade Tingle, Keith Gordon, and Bob
-Smith sat about the office with long-drawn, stoical faces.
-
-“I was just telling Carson that it will be a walkover in court this
-morning,” Wade was saying, comfortingly, as Garner sat down at his desk,
-his great brow clouded. “Don't you think so, Garner?”
-
-“Well, I'll tell you _one_ thing, boys,” Garner answered, irritably,
-“it's too important a matter to make light over, and I want you fellows
-to clear out so we can get to work. I've got to talk to Carson, and I
-can't do it with so many here. I'm not accustomed to thinking with a
-crowd around.”
-
-“You bet we'll skedaddle, then, old man,” said Keith; “but we'll be at
-the--the hearing.”
-
-When they had gone droopingly out, Carson came from the window at which
-he had been standing and looked Garner over, noting with surprise that
-the lower parts of the legs of his partner's trousers were dusty and his
-boots unpolished. The shirt Garner wore had sleeves that were too long
-for his arms, and a pair of soiled cuffs covered more than half of
-the small hands. His standing collar had become crumpled, and his
-ever-present black silk necktie, with its unshapely bow and brown,
-frayed edges, had slipped out of place. His hair was awry, his whole
-manner nervous and excitable.
-
-“Keith says you didn't sleep at the den last night,” Dwight said,
-tentatively. “Did you go out to your father's?”
-
-Garner seemed to hesitate for an instant, then he crossed his dusty legs
-and began to draw upon and tie more firmly the loose strings of his worn
-and cracked patent-leather shoes.
-
-“Look here, Carson,” he said, when he had fumblingly tied the last knot,
-“you are too strong and brave a man to be treated in the wishy-washy
-way a woman's treated. Besides, you'll have to know the truth sooner or
-later, anyway, and you may as well be prepared for it.”
-
-“Something gone wrong?” Dwight asked, calmly.
-
-“Worse than I dreamed was possible,” Garner said. “I thought we'd have
-comparatively smooth sailing, but--well, it's your danged luck! Pole
-Baker come in this morning about two o'clock. I'd taken a room at
-the hotel to get away from those chattering boys so I could think. I
-couldn't sleep, and was trying to get myself straight with a dime novel
-that wouldn't hold my attention, when Pole came and found me. Carson,
-that rascal Wiggin is the blackest devil that ever walked the earth in
-human shape.”
-
-“He's been at work,” said Carson, calmly.
-
-“You'd think so,” said Garner. “Pole says wherever he went, expecting to
-lay hands on good witnesses who had heard Willis make threats, he found
-that Wiggin had got there first and put up a tale that closed their
-mouths like clams.”
-
-“I see,” said Dwight. “He frightened them off.”
-
-“I should think he did. He put them on their guard, telling them,
-without hinting at any trouble of yours, that if they had a call to
-court, of any sort whatsoever, to get out of it, as it would only be a
-trick on our part to implicate them in the lynching business.”
-
-“So we have no witnesses,” said Dwight.
-
-“Not even a photograph of one!” replied Garner, bitterly. “I sent Pole
-right out again, tired as he was, in another direction. He had a faint
-idea that he might persuade Willis's mother to testify, though I told
-him he was on a wild-goose chase, for not one mother in ten thousand
-would turn over a hand to aid a man who--a man under just such
-circumstances. Then I got a horse--”
-
-“At that time of night?” Carson cried.
-
-“What was the difference? I couldn't sleep, anyway, and the cool night
-air made me feel better, but I failed. The men I saw admitted that they
-had heard Dan talk some, but they couldn't recall any absolute threats.
-When I got back to town it was eight o'clock. I ate a snack at the
-restaurant and then hurried off to see the district-attorney. Mayhew is
-a good man, Carson, and a fair man. I think he is the most honest and
-conscientious solicitor we've ever had. But right there I saw the track
-of your guardian angel. As early as it was, Wiggin had been there before
-me. Mayhew wouldn't admit that he had, but I knew it from his reserved
-manner. Why, I expected to see the solicitor take the whole thing
-lightly, you know, considering your standing at the bar and your family
-name, but I found him--well, entirely too serious about it. He really
-talked as if it were the gravest thing that had ever happened. I saw
-that he was badly prejudiced, and I tried to disabuse his mind of some
-hidden impressions, but he wouldn't talk much. All at once, however,
-he looked me in the face and asked me how on earth any sensible man,
-familiar with the law, could keep a thing like that concealed as long
-as you did. I told him, in as plausible and direct a way as I could, how
-you felt in regard to your mother's condition. He listened attentively,
-then he shrugged his shoulders and said: 'Why, Garner, Dr. Stone told
-my wife the other day that Mrs. Dwight was improving rapidly. Surely she
-wasn't as bad off as all that.' My Lord! I was set back so badly that I
-hardly knew what to say. He went on then to tell me that folks through
-the country had been saying that towns-people always managed to avoid
-the law by some hook or crook, or influence, or money, and that he was
-not going to subject himself to public criticism even in the case of a
-man as popular as you are.”
-
-“That was Wiggin's work!” Carson said, his lips pressed tightly together
-as he turned back to the window.
-
-“Yes, that's his method. He's the trickiest scamp unhung. Of course,
-he can't hope to see you actually convicted of this thing, but he does
-evidently think he can have you bound over to trial at the next term of
-court, and beat you at the polls in the mean time. He thinks with his
-negro incendiary speeches to rouse the lowest element, and the charges
-that you've murdered one of your own race to inflame the prejudices of
-others, that he can snow you under good and deep. But we've got to
-make the best of it. There is no shirking or postponing of this hearing
-to-day. Even if the very--the very worst comes,” Garner finished,
-slowly, as if shrinking from the words he was uttering, “we can give any
-bonds the court may demand.”
-
-“But”--and Dwight turned from the window and stood before his
-friend--“what if they refuse to take bonds at all and I have to go to
-jail?”
-
-“What do you want to cross a bridge like that for?” Garner demanded,
-plainly angered by the sheer possibility in question.
-
-Dwight leaned over Garner and put his hand on the dusty shoulder.
-“_That_ would kill my mother, old man!”
-
-“Do you think so, Carson?” Garner was deeply moved.
-
-“I know it, Garner, and her blood would be on my head.”
-
-“Well, we must _win!_” Garner said, and a look of firm determination
-came into his eyes; “that is all there is about it. We must win. Eternal
-truth and justice are on our side. We must win.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLVI.
-
-[Illustration: 0403]
-
-HE big, square court-room was filled to overflowing when at the last
-moment Carson and Garner arrived. Just inside the door they found old
-Dwight standing, his battered silk hat in his hand, and with an air of
-unwonted humility upon him, patiently awaiting their coming.
-
-“Is everything all right?” he anxiously whispered to Garner, as he
-reached out and caught his son's hand and held on to it.
-
-“Yes, all right, Mr. Dwight,” Garner replied; “and is--is your wife--”
-
-“Yes, we are safe on that score,” the old man said, encouragingly, to
-Carson. “I only slipped away for a minute. I won't wait here, but will
-hurry back and stand guard. God bless you, my boy.” When Dwight had
-turned towards the door and was moving away, Carson glanced over the
-crowded room. All eyes were fixed, it seemed to him, anxiously and
-sympathetically on his face. As he passed through the central aisle
-to reach the railed-in enclosure where, at his elevated desk, the
-magistrate sat, gravely consulting with the State solicitor, Carson's
-mind was gloomily active with the numerous instances in which, to
-his knowledge, innocent men had been convicted by the complication
-of circumstantial evidence, in a chair which Braider was solicitously
-placing near that of Garner, the young man's glance again swept the big
-room. On the last row of benches sat Linda, Uncle Lewis, and Pete in
-the company of other negro friends of his. Their fixed and awed facial
-expressions added to his gloom. Near the railing sat “the gang”--Gordon,
-Tingle, and Bob Smith--their faces long-drawn. Behind them sat Helen and
-her father, with Ida Tarpley. Catching Helen's anxious glance, Carson
-tried to smile lightly as he responded to her bow, but there was
-something in his act which seemed to him to be empty pretence and rather
-unworthy of one in his position. Guilty or innocent in the eyes of the
-law, he told himself he was there to rid his character of the
-gravest charge that could be made against a human being, and from the
-indications, as seen by the shrewd Garner, he was not likely to leave
-the room a free man. He shuddered as he grimly pictured Braider--the
-feeling, sympathetic Braider--coming to him there before all those eyes
-and formally placing him under arrest at the order of the court. He sank
-to the lowest ebb of despair as he pictured his mother's hearing of
-the news. Almost in a daze Carson sat dumb and blind to the formal
-proceedings. Like a child, he felt a soothing comfort in the knowledge
-that he was leaning on such a skilled friend as that of the hardened
-young lawyer at his side, and yet for the first time in his life he was
-pitying himself. Things had really gone hard with him. He had tried his
-best to do the right thing of late, but fate had at last overpowered
-him. He was losing faith in the impulses which had led him, blind under
-the blaze of youthful enthusiasm, to that seat here under the cold,
-accusing eye of the law.
-
-He was drawn out of his lethargy by the clear, ringing, confident voice
-of the solicitor. It was a strong, an utterly heartless speech, “the
-gang” thought. Duty to the State and public protection was its key-note.
-Personally, Mayhew had nothing but the kindliest feeling and strongest
-admiration for the defendant. He belonged to one of the best and oldest
-families in the South, and was a man of undaunted courage and remarkable
-brains. But with all that, Mayhew believed, as he tugged at his heavy
-mustache and stared with confident eyes at the magistrate, he could show
-that lurking under the creditable and refined exterior of the defendant
-was a keenly vindictive nature--a nature that was maddened beyond
-forbearance by opposition. The solicitor promised to show by competent
-witnesses, when the matter was brought to trial, that Carson Dwight
-believed--mark the word _believed_--without an iota of proof, that Dan
-Willis had fired upon him in the mob that was attempting to lynch Pete
-Warren. Believing this, your honor, I say, with no sort of proof, I
-think the State will have no trouble in establishing the fact
-that Dwight had sufficient _motive_ for what was done, and that he
-deliberately and with aforethought went armed with no other intent than
-to kill Willis. Furthermore, Mayhew could show, he declared, that Dwight
-had carefully concealed the deed, letting it go out to the world that
-the finding of the coroner's jury was correct, and making no statement
-to the contrary till he was driven to it by the encroachments of
-verifiable rumor and the certainty of adverse action by the grand jury.
-That being the status of the case, the solicitor could only urge upon
-the court its duty to hold Carson Dwight on the charge of murder in the
-first degree.
-
-Deep in his slough of depression, Dwight, looking over the breathless
-audience, noticed the serious faces he knew and loved. Helen was deathly
-pale, and her father sat with bowed head, fingering his gold-headed
-ebony cane. Keith Gordon's face was as full of reproach for what the
-solicitor had said as that of a grief-stricken woman. Wade Tingle sat
-flushed with rebellious anger, and Bob Smith, not grasping the full
-import of the high-sounding words, stared from under his neatly
-plastered hair like a wondering child at a funeral. It was Mam' Linda's
-almost savage glare that more firmly fixed Carson's wandering glance.
-She sat there, her visage full of half-savage passion, her large lip
-hanging low and quivering, her breast heaving, her eyes gleaming.
-
-Carson had not the heart to follow Garner's weak and inadequate plea as
-the lawyer stood, his small hands clutched and bloodless behind him. He
-had not been able, he said, to reach the witnesses he had expected to
-produce, who would swear that Dan Willis, time after time, had pursued
-the defendant and made threats against his life, but he felt that a calm
-statement of Carson Dwight's would be believed, and that--
-
-Here there was a commotion in the room. The bailiff at the door was
-talking loudly to some one. The magistrate rapped vigorously for order,
-and in the pause that ensued Pole Baker came striding down the aisle,
-leading a little woman wearing a black cotton sun-bonnet and dress of
-the same material. Leaving her standing, Baker approached Garner and
-whispered in his ear. Then, with a suddenly kindling face, the lawyer
-turned and whispered to the woman. A moment later he drew himself up to
-his full height and said, in a clear, confident voice that reached all
-parts of the room: “Your honor, I have a witness here that I want to
-have sworn.”
-
-The district-attorney stood up and stared curiously at the woman. “If
-I'm not mistaken that's Dan Willis's mother,” he said, with a smile.
-“She is a witness I'm looking for myself.”
-
-“Well, you are welcome to what she'll testify,” Garner dryly retorted.
-
-A moment later the little woman was on the stand, holding her bonnet in
-her hand, her small, wizened face as colorless as parchment, her black
-hair brushed as smoothly as patent leather down over her brow and tied in
-a small, tight knot behind her head.
-
-“Now, Mrs. Willis,” Garner went on, casting a significant glance at
-Carson, who was gazing at him in growing wonder, “just tell the court
-in your own way what happened at your house the day your son met his
-death.”
-
-The room was very still when she began in a low, quivering voice which,
-gradually steadied itself as she continued.
-
-“Well,” she said, “Mr. Wiggin come to the fence while we-all was eatin'
-our breakfast, an' called Danny out an' they had a talk near the
-cow-lot. I don't know what was said, but I was sorry they got together
-for Mr. Wiggin always upset Danny an' started 'im to drinkin' and
-rantin' agin Mr. Dwight here in town.”
-
-She paused a moment, and then Garner, leaning easily on the back of his
-chair, said, encouragingly: “All right, Mrs. Willis, you are doing very
-well. Now, just go ahead and tell the court all that took place to the
-best of your recollection.”
-
-“Well, thar wasn't much to recollect that happened right thar _at
-home_,” the witness went on, plaintively; “of course, the shootin' tuck
-place about a mile from thar on the--”
-
-“Pardon me, Mrs. Willis,” Garner interrupted. “You are getting the cart
-before the horse. I want you to tell his honor how your son acted when
-he came into the house after his talk with Mr. Wiggin.”
-
-“Why, when Danny fust come in, Mr. Garner, he went to the bureau drawyer
-and tuck out his revolver an' loaded it thar before us, cussin' at every
-breath agin Mr. Dwight. I tried to calm 'im down, an' so did my brother
-George, but he was as nigh crazy as I ever saw any human bein' in my
-life. He said he was goin' straight to Darley an' kill Carson Dwight, if
-he had to go to his daddy's house an' drag 'im out of his bed. He said
-he'd tried it once an' slipped up, but that if he missed again he'd kill
-hisse'f in disgust.”
-
-“I see, I see,” Garner said, in the pause that ensued. He stroked his
-smooth chin with his tapering fingers and opened and shut his mouth,
-and he kept his eyes on the ceiling as if the witness had made the most
-ordinary sort of statement. He leaned again on the back of his chair,
-and then lowering his glance to the face of the witness, he asked: “Did
-you gather from Dan's talk that morning, Mrs. Willis, when it was that
-he made the _first_ attempt on the life of Carson Dwight?”
-
-“Well, I don't know as I did _then_,” the woman answered; “but he told
-us about it the day after he fired the shot.”
-
-“Oh, he did!” Garner's face was still a study of guileless indifference,
-and he stroked his chin again, his eyes now on the floor, his arms
-folded across his breast. “What day was that, Mrs. Willis?”
-
-“Why, the day after Mr. Dwight kept the mob from hangin' old Lindy
-Warren's boy.”
-
-Profound astonishment was now visible on every countenance except that
-of Garner. “I never knew positively before _who_ fired that shot,” he
-said, carelessly, “though, of course, I had an idea who did it. So Dan
-admitted that?”
-
-“Yes, he told us about that, and about tryin' to git at Mr. Dwight
-several other times.”
-
-“I reckon you are satisfied in your own mind that if Mr. Dwight hadn't
-defended himself Dan would have killed him?” Garner pursued, adroitly.
-
-“I know he would, Mr. Garner, an' when I heard the report that Danny had
-shot hisse'f by accident, while he was practisin' with his pistol, I
-was reconciled to it. I didn't think Mr. Dwight was to blame. I always
-thought he was doin' the best he could, an' that politics caused the bad
-blood. I always liked 'im, to tell the truth. I'd heard that he was a
-friend to the pore an' humble, even to pore old niggers, an' somehow
-I felt relieved when I heard he'd escaped my boy. I knowed Danny meant
-murder an' that no good could come of it. I'd a sight ruther know a
-child of mine was dead an' in the hands of his Maker than tied up in
-jail waitin' to be publicly hung in the end. No, it is better like it
-is, though if I may be allowed to say so, I can't for the life of me,
-understand what you-all have got Mr. Dwight hauled up here like this,
-when his mother is in sech a delicate condition. Good Lord, he hain't
-done nothin' to be tried for!”
-
-“That will do, Mrs. Willis,” Garner was heard to say, his voice harshly
-stirring the emotion-packed stillness of the room; “that will do, unless
-my brother Mayhew wants to ask you some questions.”
-
-“The State has no case, your honor,” Mayhew said, with a sickly smile.
-“The truth is, I think we've all been imbibing too freely of politics.
-I confess I've listened to Wiggin myself. It looks like, failing to get
-Dan Willis to kill Dwight, he's set about trying to have it done by law.
-Your honor, the State is out of the case.”
-
-There was a pause of astonishment and then the truth burst upon the
-audience. Realizing that Carson Dwight was more than a free man,
-vindicated, restored to them, “the gang” rose as a man and yelled. Led
-by Pole Baker and the enthusiastic Braider, they pressed around him,
-climbing over the railing and crushing chairs to splinters. Then, amid
-the shouts and glad tears of the spectators, the most popular man in the
-county was raised perforce upon the stout shoulders of Baker and Braider
-and borne down the aisle towards the door.
-
-Above the heads of all, Carson, flushed with confusion, glanced over the
-room. Immediately in front of him stood Helen. She was looking straight
-and eagerly at him, her face aglow, her eyes filled with tears. She
-paused with her father just outside the door, and as “the gang” bore
-their struggling and protesting hero past, she raised her hand to him.
-Blushing in fresh embarrassment, he took it, only to have it torn from
-him the next instant.
-
-“Let me down, Pole!” he cried.
-
-“No, sir, we don't let you down!” Pole shouted. “We've got it in for
-you. We are goin' to lynch you!”
-
-The crowd, appreciating the joke, thereupon raised the queerest cry that
-ever burst from breasts surcharged with joy.
-
-“Lynch him!” they yelled. “Lynch him!”
-
-Half an hour afterwards Carson went home. His father was at the fence
-looking for him. He had heard the news and his old face was beaming with
-joy as he opened the gate for his son and took him into his arms.
-
-“How's mother?” was Carson's first inquiry.
-
-“She's all right and she knows, too?”
-
-“She knows!” Carson exclaimed, aghast.
-
-“Yes, old Mrs. Parsons was the first to bring me the news, and she
-assured me she could impart it to your mother in such a way as not to
-shock her at all.”
-
-“And you let her?” Carson said, anxiously.
-
-“Yes, and she did the slickest piece of work I ever heard of. I knew she
-was considered a wonderful woman, but she's the smoothest article I ever
-met. I laughed till I cried. I was in the mood for laughing, anyway.
-Mrs. Parsons began by adroitly working your mother up to such a pitch
-of fury against Willis for his nagging pursuit of you that your mother
-could have shot him herself, and then, in an off-hand way, Mrs. Parsons
-led on to the meeting between you. Willis had his gun in your face, and
-was about to pull the trigger, when your pistol went off and saved
-your life. She went on to say that Dan's mother had just been to the
-court-house testifying that her son had tried to murder you, and that
-she didn't blame you in the slightest. I declare, Mrs. Parsons actually
-made it appear that Willis was on trial instead of you. Anyway, it's all
-right. We've got nothing to fear now.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLVII.
-
-
-[Illustration: 9413]
-
-IX weeks later the election came off.
-
-It was no “walk-over” for Carson. Wiggin seemed only more desperately
-spurred on by every exposition of his underhand chicanery. He died
-hard. He fought with his nose in the mire, but, throwing honor to
-the winds, he fought. Carson Dwight's stand on the negro question was
-Wiggin's strongest weapon. It was a torch with which the candidate could
-inflame the breasts of a certain class of men at a moment's notice.
-He was a crude but powerful speaker, and wherever he went he left
-smouldering or raging fires. Pledged to him were the lowest order of
-men, and they fought for him and worked for him like bandits in the
-dark. Over these men he wielded a sword of fear. Carson Dwight's
-intention in getting to the legislature was to make laws against
-lynching, and every man who had ever protected his home and fireside by
-summary justice to the black brutes would be ferreted out and imprisoned
-for life. But Dwight's more gentle and saner reasoning, backed by his
-heroic conduct of the past, held sway. He was elected. He was not only
-elected, but, as the exponent of a new issue, the news of his election
-was telegraphed all over the South. He had written some articles for
-Wade Tingle's paper which had been widely copied and commented on, and
-his political course was watched by many conservative thinkers, who
-prophesied a remarkable career for him. He was a fearless man, with
-a new voice, who had taken a radical stand based on humanitarian and
-Christian principles. Family history was simply repeating itself. His
-ancestors had stood for the humane treatment of the slaves thrust
-upon them by circumstances, and he, in the same hereditary spirit,
-was standing for kind, just treatment of those ex-slaves and their
-descendants. No man who knew him would have accused him of believing in
-the social equality of the races any more than they would earlier have
-brought the same charge against his ancestors.
-
-On the night the returns were brought in and it was known that he had
-triumphed, “the gang” had arranged a big pine torch-light procession,
-and it passed with its blaze and din through every street of the town.
-Carson was at home when they lined themselves, in all their tooting of
-horns, beating of drums, and general clatter, along the front fence. The
-town brass-band did its best, and every sort of transparency that the
-inventive mind of Wade Tingle could devise was borne, as if by the smoke
-and heat of the torches themselves, above the long procession.
-
-Garner separated himself from the throng, and, clad in a new and costly
-suit of clothes, a tribute to his engagement to Miss Tarpley--a fine
-black frock-coat, broadcloth trousers, and a silk hat--he made his way
-into the house and up the stairs to the veranda above, where Carson and
-his mother and father were standing.
-
-“The boys want a speech,” he said to Carson, “and you've got to give
-them the best in your shop. By George, they deserve it.” Carson was
-demurring, but his mother pressed him to comply, and Garner, with his
-stateliest strut, his coat buttoned so tightly at the waist that, the
-tails spread out as if inviting him to sit down, and his hat held on
-a level with his left shoulder, advanced to the balustrade, and in
-his happiest mood introduced the man who, he declared, was the
-broadest-minded, the most conscientious and fearless candidate that
-ever trod the boards of a political platform. They were to receive the
-expression of gratitude and appreciation of a man whose name was written
-upon every heart present. Garner had the distinguished honor and pride
-to introduce his law partner and close friend, the Hon. Carson Dwight.
-
-Carson never spoke better in his life. What he said was from a boyish
-heart overflowing with content and good-will. When he had finished Mrs.
-Dwight rose from her chair and proudly stood by his side. The cheers at
-her appearance rent the air. Then Garner pushed old Dwight forward from
-the shadow of a column where he was standing, and as the old gentleman
-awkwardly bowed his greeting, the cheers broke out afresh. Bob Smith,
-who was a sort of drum-major, with a ribbon-wound walking-cane for a
-baton, struck up, “For he's a jolly good fellow,” and as the crowd
-sang it to the spluttering and jangling accompaniment of the band the
-procession moved down the street.
-
-At this juncture Major Warren came up to offer his congratulations.
-Carson was standing a few minutes later talking to Garner. He was trying
-to hear what his partner was saying in his bubbling and enthusiastic
-way about his engagement to Miss Tarpley, but he found it difficult to
-listen, for the conversation between his mother and Major Warren had
-fixed his attention.
-
-“I tried to get her to come over to hear the speech, but she wouldn't,”
- the Major was saying. “I can't make her out here lately, Mrs. Dwight.
-She used to be so different in anything concerning Carson. She is now
-actually hiding behind the vines on the veranda.”
-
-“Perhaps she is so much in love with Mr. Sanders that she--”
-
-“That's the very point,” the Major broke in. “She won't talk about
-Sanders, and she--well, really, I think the two have quit writing to
-each other.”
-
-“Perhaps she--oh, do you think, Major, that--” Carson heard no more; his
-father had come forward and was talking to Garner.
-
-Carson slipped away. He glided down the stairs and out at the door on
-the side next to Warren's and rapidly strode across the grass. Passing
-through the little gateway, he reached the veranda and the vines
-concealing the spot where the hammock was hanging. He saw no one at
-first and heard no sound. Then he called out: “Helen!”
-
-“What is it?” a timid, even startled voice from the vines answered, and
-Helen looked out.
-
-“Why didn't you come over with your father?” Carson asked. “He said he
-wanted you to, but you preferred to stay here.”
-
-“I _did_ want to congratulate you,” Helen, said, as he came up the steps
-and they stood face to face. “I'm so happy over it, Carson, that really
-I was afraid I'd show it too much.”
-
-“I'm glad you feel that way,” he said, awkwardly. “It was a hard fight,
-and I thought several times I was beaten.”
-
-“What did you ever touch that wasn't hard?” she said, with a sweet,
-reminiscent laugh.
-
-They were silent for a moment and then he said: “I'm not quite satisfied
-with your reason for not coming over with your father just now--really,
-you see, it is in a line with your actions for the last six weeks.
-Helen, you actually have avoided me.”
-
-“On the contrary,” she said, “you have made it a point to stay away from
-me.”
-
-“Well,” he sighed, “considering, you know, Sanders and his claims, I
-really thought I'd better keep my place.”
-
-“Oh!” Helen exclaimed, and then she sank deeper into the vines.
-
-For one instant he stood trembling before her, and then he asked,
-boldly: “Helen, tell me, are you engaged to him?”
-
-She made no answer for a moment, and then in the moonlight he saw her
-flushed face against the vines and caught an almost startled glance from
-her wonderful eyes. She looked straight at him.
-
-“No, I'm not, and I never have been,” she said.
-
-“You never have been?” he repeated. “Oh, Helen--” But he went no
-further. For a moment he hung fire, then he said: “Don't you care for
-him, Helen? Are you and I good enough friends for me to dare to ask
-that?”
-
-“I thought once that I might love him, in time” she faltered; “but when
-I came home and found--and found how deeply I had misunderstood and
-wronged you, I--I--” She broke off, her face buried in the leaves of the
-vines.
-
-“Oh, Helen!” he cried; “do you realize what you are saying to me? You
-know my whole life is wrapped up in you. Don't raise my hopes to-night
-unless there is at least some chance of my winning. If there is one
-little chance, I'll struggle for it all the rest of my life.”
-
-“Do you remember,” she asked, looking at him, one side of her flushed
-face pressed against the vines--“do you remember the night you told me
-in the garden about that awful trouble of yours, and I promised to bear
-it with you?”
-
-“Yes,” he said, wonderingly.
-
-“Well,” she went on, “I went straight to my room after I left you and
-wrote to Mr. Sanders. I told him exactly how I felt. I simply couldn't
-keep up a correspondence with him after--Carson, I knew that night when
-I left you there in your gloom and sorrow that I loved you with all
-my soul and body. Oh, Carson, when I heard your voice in your glorious
-speech just now, and knew that you have loved me all this time, I was so
-glad that I cried. I'm the happiest, proudest girl on earth.”
-
-And as they stood hand in hand, too joyful for utterance, the glow of
-his triumph lit the sky and the din and clatter, the song and shouts of
-those who loved him were borne to him on the breeze.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mam' Linda, by Will N. Harben
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Mam' Linda
-
-Author: Will N. Harben
-
-Illustrator: F. B. Masters
-
-Release Date: January 11, 2016 [EBook #50899]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MAM' LINDA ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-MAM' LINDA
-
-By Will N. Harben
-
-Illustrated by F. B. Masters
-
-1907
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-[Illustration: 9017]
-
-N the rear of the long store, at a round table under a hanging-lamp with
-a tin shade, four young men sat playing poker. The floor of that portion
-of the room was raised several feet higher than that of the front, and
-between the two short flights of steps was the inclining door leading
-to the cellar, which was damp and dark and used only for the storage of
-salt, syrup, sugar, hardware, and general rubbish.
-
-Near the front door the store-keeper, James Blackburn, a portly, bearded
-man of forty-five, sat chatting with Carson Dwight, a young lawyer of
-the town.
-
-"I don't want any of you boys to think that I'm complaining," the elder
-man was saying. "I've been young myself; in fact, as you know, I go the
-gaits too, considering that I'm tied down by a family and have a
-living to make. I love to have the gang around--I _swear_ I do, though
-sometimes I declare it looks like this old shebang is more of a place of
-amusement than a business house in good standing."
-
-"Oh, I know we hang around here too much," Carson Dwight replied; "and
-you ought to kick us out, the last one of us."
-
-"Oh, it isn't so bad at night like this, when trade's over, but it
-is sort o' embarrassing during the day. Why, what do you think? A
-Bradstreet commercial reporter was in the other day to get a statement
-of my standing, and while he was here Keith Gordon--look at him now,
-the scamp! holding his cards over his head; that's a bluff. I'll bet he
-hasn't got a ten-spot. While that agent was here Keith and a lot more of
-your gang were back there on the platform dancing a hoe-down. The
-dust was so thick you couldn't see the windows. The reporter looked
-surprised, but he didn't say anything. I told him I thought I'd be able
-to pay for all I bought in market, and that I had no idea how much I was
-worth. I haven't invoiced my stock in ten years. When I run low I manage
-to replenish somehow, and so it goes on from year to year."
-
-"Well, I am going to talk to the boys," Dwight said. "They are taking
-advantage of your goodnature. The whole truth is they consider you one
-of them, Jim. Marrying didn't change you. You are as full of devilment
-as any of the rest, and they know it, and love to hang around you."
-
-"Well, I reckon that's a fact," Blackburn answered, "and I believe
-I'd rather you wouldn't mention it. I think a sight of the gang, and
-I wouldn't hurt their feelings for the world. After all, what does
-it matter? Life is short, and if Trundle & Hodgson are getting more
-mountain custom than I am, I'll bet I get the biggest slice of life.
-They'll die rich, but, like as not, friendless. By-the-way, I see your
-partner coming across the street. I forgot to tell you; he was looking
-for you a few minutes ago. You had a streak of luck when you joined
-issues with him; Bill Gamer's a rough sort o' chap, but he is by all
-odds the brainiest lawyer in Georgia to-day."
-
-At this juncture a man of medium stature, with a massive head crowned by
-a shock of reddish hair, a smooth-shaven, freckled face, and small feet
-and hands stood in the doorway. He wore a long black broadcloth coat,
-a waistcoat of the same material, and baggy gray trousers. The exposed
-portion of his shirt-front and the lapels of his coat were stained by
-tobacco juice.
-
-"I've been up to the den, over to the Club, and the Lord only knows
-where else looking for you," he said to his partner, as he advanced,
-leaned against a showcase on the counter, and stretched out his arms
-behind him.
-
-"Work for us, eh?" Carson smiled.
-
-"No; since when have you ever done a lick after dark?" was the dry
-reply. "I've come to give you a piece of advice, and I'm glad Blackburn
-is here to join me. The truth is, Dan Willis is in town. He is full and
-loaded for bear. He's down at the wagon-yard with a gang of his mountain
-pals. Some meddling person--no doubt your beautiful political opponent
-Wiggin--has told him what you said about the part he took in the mob
-that raided! negro town."
-
-"Well, he doesn't deny it, does he?" Dwight asked, his eyes flashing.
-
-"I don't know whether he does or not," said Gamer. "But I know he's the
-most reckless and dangerous man in the county, and when he is drunk he
-will halt at nothing. I thought I'd advise you to avoid him."
-
-"Avoid him? You mean to say"--Dwight stood up in his anger--"that I, a
-free-born American citizen, must sneak around in my own home to avoid
-a man that puts on a white mask and sheet and with fifty others like
-himself steals into town and nearly thrashes the life out of a lot of
-banjo-picking negroes? Most of them were good-for-nothing, lazy scamps,
-but they were born that way, and there was one in the bunch that I know
-was harmless. Oh yes, I got mad about it, and I talked plainly, I know,
-but I couldn't help it."
-
-"You _could_ have helped it," Gamer said, testily; "and you ought to
-have protected your own interests better than to give Wiggin such a
-strong pull over you. If you are elected it will be by the aid of that
-very mob and their kin and friends. We may be able to smooth it all
-over, but if you have an open row with Dan Willis to-night, the cause of
-it will spread like wildfire, and bum votes for you in wads and bunches.
-Good God, man, the idea of giving Wiggin a torch like that to wave in
-the face of your constituency--you, a _town_ man, standing up for the
-black criminal brutes that are plotting to pull down the white race! I
-say that's the way Wiggin and Dan Willis would interpret your platform."
-
-"I can't help it," Dwight repeated, more calmly, though his voice
-shook with suppressed feeling as he went on. "If I lose all I hope for
-politically--and this seems like the best chance I'll ever have to get
-to the legislature--I'll stand by my convictions. We must have law
-and order among ourselves if we expect to teach such things to poor,
-half-witted black people. I was mad that night. You know that I love the
-South. Its blood is my blood. Three of my mother's brothers and two of
-my father's died fighting for the 'Lost Cause,' and my father was under
-fire from the beginning of the war to the end. In fact, it is my love
-for the South, and all that is good and pure and noble in it, that made
-my blood boil that night. I saw a part of it you didn't see."
-
-"What was that?" Garner asked.
-
-"It was a clear moonlight night," Dwight went on. "I was sitting at the
-window of my room at home, looking out over Major Warren's yard, when
-the first screams and shouts came from the negro quarter. I suspected
-what it was, for I'd heard of the threats the mountaineers had made
-against that part of town, but I wasn't prepared for what I actually
-saw. The cottage of old Uncle Lewis and Mammy Linda is just behind the
-Major's house, you know, and in plain view of my window. I saw the
-old pair come to the door and run out into the yard, and then I heard
-Linda's voice. 'It's my child!' she screamed. 'They are killing him!'
-Uncle Lewis tried to quiet her, but she stood there wringing her hands
-and sobbing and praying. The Major raised the window of his room and
-looked out, and I heard him ask what was wrong. Uncle Lewis tried to
-explain, but his voice could not be heard above his wife's cries. A few
-minutes later Pete came running down the street. They had let him
-go. His clothes were torn to strips and his back was livid with great
-whelks. He had no sooner reached the old folks than he keeled over in a
-faint. The Major came down, and he and I bent over the boy and finally
-restored him to consciousness. Major Warren was the maddest man I ever
-saw, and a mob a hundred strong couldn't have touched the negro and left
-him alive."
-
-"I know, that was all bad enough," Garner admitted, "but antagonizing
-those men now won't better the matter and may do you more political
-damage than you'll get over in a lifetime. You can't be a politician
-and a preacher both; they don't go together. You can't dispute that
-the negro quarter of this town was a disgrace to a civilized community
-before the White Caps raided it. Look at it now. There never was such a
-change. It is as quiet as a Philadelphia graveyard."
-
-"It's the way they went about it that made me mad," Carson Dwight
-retorted. "Besides, I know that boy. He is as harmless as a kitten, and
-he only hung around those dives because he loved to sing and dance with
-the rest. I _did_ get mad; I'm mad yet. My people never lashed their
-slaves when they were in bondage; why should I stand by and see them
-beaten now by men who never owned negroes and never loved or understood
-them? Before the war a white man would stand up and protect his slaves;
-why shouldn't he now take up for at least the most faithful of their
-descendants?"
-
-"That's it," Blackburn spoke up, admiringly. "You are a chip off of the
-old block, Carson. Your daddy would have shot any man who tried to whip
-one of his negroes. You can't help the way you feel; but I agree with
-Bill here, you can't get the support of mountain people if you don't, at
-least, _pretend_ to see things their way.",
-
-"Well, I can't see _this_ thing their way," fumed Dwight; "and I'm not
-going to try. When I saw that old black man and woman that awful night
-with their very heart-strings torn and bleeding, and remembered
-that they had been kind to my mother when she was at the point of
-death--sitting by her bedside all night long as patiently as blocks of
-stone, and shedding tears of joy at the break of day when the doctor
-said the crisis had passed--when I think of that and admit that I
-stand by with folded hands and see their only child beaten till he
-is insensible, my blood boils with utter shame. It has burned a great
-lesson into my brain, and that is that we have got to have law and order
-among ourselves if we expect to keep the good opinion of the world at
-large."
-
-"I understand Pete would have got off much easier if he hadn't fought
-them like a tiger," said Blackburn. "They say--"
-
-"And why _shouldn't_ he have fought?" Carson asked, quickly. "The nearer
-the brute creation a man is the more he'll fight. A tame dog will fight
-if you drive him into a corner and strike him hard enough."
-
-"Well, you busted up our game," joined in Keith Gordon, who had left
-the table in the rear and now came forward, accompanied by another young
-man, Wade Tingle, the editor of the _Headlight_. "Wade and I both agree,
-Carson, that you've got to handle Dan Willis cautiously. We are backing
-you tooth and toe-nail in this campaign, but you'll tie our hands if you
-antagonize the mountain element. Wiggin knows that, and he is working it
-for all it's worth."
-
-"That's right, old man," the editor joined in, earnestly. "I may as well
-be plain with you. I'm making a big issue out of my support of you, but
-if you make the country people mad they will stop taking my paper. I
-can't live without their patronage, and I simply can't back you if you
-don't stick to _me_."
-
-"I wasn't raising a row," the young candidate said. "But Garner came to
-me just now, actually advising me to avoid that dirty scoundrel. I won't
-dodge any blustering bully who is going about threatening what he will
-do to me when he meets me face to face. I want your support, but I can't
-buy it that way."
-
-"Well," Garner said, grimly, more to the others than to his partner,
-"there will be a row right here inside of ten minutes. I see that now.
-Willis has heard certain things Carson has said about the part he took
-in that raid, and he is looking for trouble. Carson isn't in the mood to
-take back anything, and a fool can see how it will end."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-[Illustration: 9025]
-
-EITH GORDON and Tingle motioned to Garner, and the three stepped out on
-the sidewalk leaving Blackburn and the candidate together. The street
-was quite deserted. Only a few of the ramshackle street lights were
-burning, though the night was cloudy, the location of the stores,
-barbershop, hotel, and post-office being indicated by the oblong patches
-of light on the ground in front of them.
-
-"You'll never be able to move him," Keith Gordon said, stroking his
-blond mustache nervously. "The truth is, he's terribly worked up over
-it. Between us three, boys, Carson never loved but one woman in his
-life, and she's Helen Warren. Mam' Linda is her old nurse, and Carson
-knows when she comes home and hears of Pete's trouble it is going to
-hurt her awfully. Helen has a good, kind heart, and she loves Linda as
-if they were the same flesh and blood. If Carson meets Willis to-night
-he'll kill him or get killed. Say, boys, he's too fine a fellow for that
-sort of thing right on the eve of his election. What the devil can we
-do?"
-
-"Oh, I see; there's a woman at the bottom of it," Garner said,
-cynically. "I'm not surprised at the way he's acting now, but I thought
-that case was over with. Why, I heard she was engaged to a man down
-where she's visiting."
-
-"She really may be," Gordon admitted, "but Carson is ready to fight
-her battles, anyway. I honestly think she turned him down when he was
-rolling so high with her brother, just before his death a year ago, but
-that didn't alter his feelings towards her."
-
-Garner grunted as he thrust his hand deep into his breast-pocket for
-his plug of tobacco and began to twist off a corner of it. "The most
-maddening thing on earth," he said, "is to have a close friend who is a
-darned fool. I'm tired of the whole business. Old Dwight is out of all
-patience with Carson for the reckless way he has been living, but the
-old man is really carried away with pride over the boy's political
-chances. He had that sort of ambition himself in his early life, and he
-likes to see his son go in for it. He was powerfully tickled the
-other day when I told him Carson was going in on the biggest wave of
-popularity that ever bore a human chip, but he will cuss a blue streak
-when the returns come in, for I tell you, boys, if Carson has a row with
-Dan Willis to-night over this negro business, it will knock him higher
-than a kite."
-
-"Do you know whether Carson has anything to shoot with?" Tingle asked,
-thoughtfully.
-
-"Oh yes, I saw the bulge of it under his coat just now," Garner
-answered, still angrily, "and if the two come together it will be
-raining lead for a while in the old town."
-
-"I was just thinking about his sick mother," Keith Gordon remarked.
-"My sister told me the other day that Mrs. Dwight was in such a low
-condition that any sudden shock would be apt to kill her. A thing like
-this would upset her terribly--that is, if there is really any shooting.
-Don't you suppose if we were to remind Carson of her condition that he
-might agree to go home?"
-
-"No, you don't know him as well as I do," Garner said, firmly. "It would
-only make him madder. The more reasons we give him for avoiding Willis
-the more stubborn he'll be. I guess we'll have to let him sit there and
-make a target of himself."
-
-Just then a tall mountaineer, under a broad-brimmed soft hat, wearing a
-cotton checked shirt and jean trousers passed through the light of
-the entrance to the hotel near by and slouched through the intervening
-darkness towards them.
-
-"It's Pole Baker," said Keith. "He's a rough-and-ready supporter of
-Carson's. Say, hold on, Pole!"
-
-"Hold on yourself; what's up?" the mountaineer asked, with a laugh.
-"Plottin' agin the whites?"
-
-"We want to ask you if you've seen Dan Willis to-night," Garner
-questioned.
-
-"Have I?" Baker grunted. "That's exactly why I'm lookin' fer you town
-dudes instead o' goin' on out home where I belong. I'm as sober as an
-empty keg, but I git charged with bein' in the Darley calaboose every
-time I don't answer the old lady's roll-call at bed-time. You bet Willis
-is loaded fer bear, and he's got some bad men with him down at the
-wagon-yard. Wiggin has filled 'em up with a lot o' stuff about what
-Carson said concernin' the White Cap raid t'other night. I thought I'd
-sorter put you fellers on, so you could keep our man out o' the way
-till their liquor wears off. Besides, I'm here to tell you, Bill Garner,
-that's a nasty card Wiggin's set afloat in the mountains. He says a
-regular gang of blue-bloods has been organized here to take up fer town
-coons agin the pore whites in the country. We might crush such a report
-in time, you know, but we'll never kill it if thar's a fight over it
-to-night."
-
-"That's the trouble," the others said, in a breath.
-
-"Wait one minute--you stay right here," Baker said, and he went and
-stood in front of the store door and looked in for a moment; then he
-came back. "I thought maybe he'd let us all talk sense to 'im, but you
-can't put reason into a man like that any easier than you can dip up
-melted butter with a hot awl. I can't see any chance unless you fellers
-will leave it entirely to me."
-
-"Leave it to you?" Garner exclaimed. "What could you do?"
-
-"I don't know whether I could do a blessed thing or not, boys, but the
-dam thing is so desperate that I'm willin' to try. You see, I never talk
-my politics--if I do, I talk it on t'other side to see what I kin pick
-up to advantage. The truth is, I think them skunks consider me a Wiggin
-man, and I'd like to git a whack at 'em. Maybe I can git 'em to leave
-town. Abe Johnson is the leader of 'em, and he never gets too drunk to
-have some natural caution."
-
-"Well, it certainly couldn't do any harm for you to try, Pole," said
-Tingle.
-
-"Well, I'll go down to the wagon-yard and see if they are still hanging
-about."
-
-As he approached the place in question, which was an open space about
-one hundred yards square surrounded by a high fence, at the lower end
-of the main street, Pole stood in the broad gateway and surveyed the
-numerous camp-fires which gleamed out from the darkness. He finally
-descried a group of men around a fire between two white-hooded wagons
-to the wheels of which were haltered several horses. As Pole advanced
-towards them, paying cheerful greetings to various men and women around
-the different fires he had to pass, he recognized Dan Willis, Abe
-Johnson, and several others.
-
-A quart whiskey flask, nearly empty, stood on the ground in the light
-of the fire round which the men were seated. As he approached they
-all looked up and nodded and muttered careless greetings. It seemed to
-suggest a movement on the part of Dan Willis, a tall man of thirty-five
-or thirty-six years of age, who wore long, matted hair and had bushy
-eyebrows and a sweeping mustache, for, taking up the flask, he rose
-and dropped it into his coat-pocket and spoke to the two men who sat on
-either side of Abe Johnson.
-
-"Come on," he growled, "I want to talk to you. I don't care whether you
-join us or not, Abe."
-
-"Well, I'm out of it," replied Johnson. "I've talked to you fellows till
-I'm sick. You are too darned full to have any sense."
-
-Willis and the two men walked off together and stood behind one of the
-wagons. Their voices, muffled by the effects of whiskey, came back to
-the ears of the remaining two.
-
-"Goin' out home to-night, Abe?" Baker asked, carelessly.
-
-"I want to, but I don't like to leave that damned fool here in the
-condition he's in. He'll either commit murder or git his blasted head
-shot off."
-
-"That's exactly what _I_ was thinking about," said Pole, sitting down
-on the ground carelessly and drawing his knees up in the embrace of his
-strong arms. "Look here, Abe, me'n you hain't to say quite as intimate
-as own brothers born of the same mammy, but I hain't got nothin' agin
-you of a personal nature."
-
-"Oh, I reckon that's all right," the other said, stroking his round,
-smooth-shaven face with a dogged sweep of his brawny hand. "That's all
-right, Pole."
-
-"Well, my family knowed yore family long through the war," Abe. "My
-daddy was with yourn at the front, an' our mothers swapped sugar an'
-coffee in them hard times, an', Abe, I'm here to tell you I sorter
-hate to see an unsuspectin' neighbor like you walk blind into serious
-trouble, great big trouble, Abe--trouble of the sort that would make a
-man's wife an' childern lie awake many and many a night."
-
-"What the hell you mean?" Johnson asked, picking up his ears.
-
-"Why, it's this here devilment that's brewin' betwixt Dan an' Carson
-Dwight."
-
-[Illustration: 0031]
-
-"Well, what's that got to do with _me?_" Johnson asked, in surly
-surprise.
-
-"Well, it's jest this, Abe," Pole leaned back till his feet rose from
-the ground, and he twisted his neck as his eyes followed the three men
-who, with their heads close together, had moved a little farther away.
-"Maybe you don't know it, Abe, but I used to be in the government
-revenue service, and in one way and another that's neither here nor
-there I sometimes drop onto underground information, an' I want to give
-you a valuable tip. I want to start you to thinkin'. You'll admit, I
-reckon, that if them two men meet to-night thar will be apt to be blood
-shed."
-
-Johnson stared over the camp-fire sullenly. "If Carson Dwight hain't had
-the sense to git out o' town thar will be, an' plenty of it," he said,
-with a dry chuckle.
-
-"Well, thar's the difficulty," said Pole. "He hain't left town, an'
-what's wuss than that, his friends hain't been able to budge 'im from his
-seat in Blackburn's store, whar Dan couldn't miss 'im ef he was stalkin'
-about blindfolded. He's heard threats, and he's as mad a man as ever
-pulled hair."
-
-"Well, what the devil--"
-
-"Hold on, Abe. Now, I'll tell you whar _you_ come in. My underground
-information is that the Grand Jury is hard at work to git the facts
-about that White Cap raid. The whole thing--name of leader and members
-of the gang has been kept close so far, but--"
-
-"Well"--the half-defiant look in the face of Johnson gave way to one of
-growing alarm--"well!" he repeated, but went no further.
-
-"It's this way, Abe--an' I'm here as a friend, I reckon. You know as
-well as I do that if thar is blood shed to-night it will git into court,
-and a lots about the White Cap raid, and matters even further back, will
-be pulled into the light."
-
-Pole's words had made a marked impression on the man to whom they had
-been so adroitly directed. Johnson leaned forward nervously. "So you
-think--" But he hung fire again.
-
-"Huh, I think you'd better git Dan Willis out o' this town, Abe, an'
-inside o' five minutes, ef you can do it."
-
-Johnson drew a breath of evident relief. "I can do it, Pole, and I'll
-act by your advice," he said. "Thar's only one thing on earth that would
-turn Dan towards home, but I happen to know what that is. He's b'ilin'
-hot, but he ain't any more anxious to stir up the Grand Jury than some
-of the rest of us. I'll go talk to 'im."
-
-As Johnson moved away, Pole Baker rose and slouched off in the darkness
-in the direction of the straggling lights along the main street. At the
-gate he paused and waited, his eyes on the wagons and camp-fire he had
-just left. Presently he noticed something and chuckled. The horses, with
-clanking trace-chains, passed between him and the fire--they were being
-led round to be hitched to the wagons. Pole chuckled again. "I'm not
-sech a dern fool as I look," he said, "Well, I had to lie some and act
-a part that sorter went agin the grain, but my scheme worked. If I
-ever git to hell I reckon it will be through tryin' to do right--in the
-main."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-[Illustration: 9035]
-
-HE wide avenue which ran north and south and cut the town of Darley
-into halves held the best and oldest residences. One side of the street
-caught the full rays of the morning sun and the other the slanting red
-beams of the afternoon. For so small a town, it was a well-graded and
-well-kept thoroughfare. Strips of grass lay like ribbons between the
-sidewalks and the roadway, and at the triangular spaces created by
-the intersection of certain streets there were rusty iron fences built
-primarily to protect diminutive fountains which had long since ceased to
-play. In one of these little parks, in the heart of the town, as it
-was in the hearts of the inhabitants, stood a monument erected to "The
-Confederate Dead," a well-modelled, life-size figure of a Southern
-private wrought in stone in faraway Italy. Had it been correctly placed
-on its pedestal?--that was the question anxiously asked by reverent
-passers-by, for the cloaked and knapsacked figure, which time was
-turning gray, stood with its back to the enemy's country.
-
-"Yes, it is right," some would say, "for the soldier is represented as
-being on night picket-duty in Northern territory, and his thoughts and
-eyes are with his dear ones at home and the country he is defending."
-
-Henry Dwight, the wealthy sire of the aggressive young man with whom the
-foregoing chapters have principally dealt, lived in one of the moss and
-ivy grown houses on the eastern side of the avenue. It was a red brick
-structure two and a half stories high, with a colonial veranda, and had
-a square, white-windowed cupola as the apex of the slanting roof. There
-was a semicircular drive, which entered the grounds at one corner in the
-front and swept gracefully past the door. The central and smaller
-front gate, for the use of pedestrians, with its imitation stone posts,
-spanned by a white crescent, was reached from the house by a
-gravelled walk bordered by boxwood. On the right and left were rustic
-summerhouses, grape arbors and parterres containing roses and other
-flowers, all of which were well cared for by an old colored gardener.
-
-Henry Dwight was a grain and cotton merchant, money-lender, and the
-president and chief stockholder of the Darley Cotton Mills, whose great
-brick buildings and cottages for employs stood a mile or so to the
-west of the town. This morning, having written his daily letters, he was
-strolling in his grounds smoking a cigar. To any one who knew him well
-it would have been plain that his mind was disturbed.
-
-Adjoining the Dwight homestead there was another ancestral house equally
-as spacious and stand-. ing in quite as extensive, if more neglected,
-grounds. It was here that Major Warren lived, and it happened that he,
-too, was on his lawn just beyond the ramshackle intervening fence, the
-gate of which had fallen from its hinges and been taken away.
-
-The Major was a short, slight old gentleman, quite a contrast to the
-John Bull type of his lusty, side-whiskered neighbor. He wore a dingy
-brown wig, and as he pottered about, raising a rose from the earth with
-his gold-headed ebony stick, or stooped to uproot an encroaching weed,
-his furtive glance was often levelled on old Dwight.
-
-"I declare I really might as well," he muttered, undecidedly. "What's
-the use making up your mind to a thing and letting it go for no sensible
-reason. He's taking a wrong view of it. I can tell that by the way he
-puffs at his cigar. Yes, I'll do it."
-
-The Major passed through the gateway and slowly drew near his
-preoccupied neighbor.
-
-"Good-morning, Henry," he said, as Dwight looked up. "If I'm any judge
-of your twists and turns, you are not yet in a thoroughly good-humor."
-
-"Good-humor? No, sir, I'm _not_ in a good-humor. How could I be when
-that young scamp, the only heir to my name and effects--"
-
-Dwight's spleen rose and choked out his words, and, red in the face, he
-stood panting, unable to go further.
-
-"Well, it seems to me, while he's not _my_ son," the Major began, "that
-you are--are--well, rather overbearing--I might say unforgiving. He's
-been sowing wild oats, but, really, if I am any judge of young men, he
-is on a fair road to--to genuine manhood."
-
-"Road to nothing," spluttered Dwight. "I gave him that big farm to
-see what he could do in its management. Never expected him to work a
-lick--just wanted to see if he could keep it on a paying basis, but it
-was an investment of dead capital. Then he took up the law. He did a
-little better at that along with Bill Garner to lean on, but that never
-amounted to anything worth mentioning. Then he went into politics."
-
-"And I heard you say yourself, Henry," the Major ventured, gently,
-"that you believed he was actually cut out for a future statesman."
-
-"Yes, and like the fool that I was I hoped for it. I was so glad to see
-him really interested in politics that I laid awake at night thinking
-of his success. I heard of his popularity on every hand. Men came to me,
-and women, too, telling me they loved him and were going to work for
-him against that jack-leg lawyer Wiggin, and put him into office with
-a majority that would ring all over the State; and they meant it, I
-reckon. But what did he do? In his stubborn, bull-headed way he abused
-those mountain men who took the law into their hands for the public
-good, and turned hundreds of them against him; and all for a nigger--a
-lazy, trifling nigger boy!"
-
-"Well, you see," Major Warren began, lamely, "Carson and I saw Pete the
-night he was whipped so severely and we took pity on him. They played
-together when they were boys, as boys all over the South do, you know,
-and then he saw Mam' Linda break down over it and saw old Lewis crying
-for the first time in the old man's life. I was mad, Henry, myself, and
-you would have been if you had been there. I could have fought the men
-who did it, so I understand how Carson felt, and when he made the remark
-Wiggin is using to such deadly injury to his prospects my heart warmed
-to the boy. If he doesn't succeed as a politician it will be because he
-is too genuine for a tricky career of that sort. His friends are trying
-to get him to make some statement that will reinstate him with the
-mountain people who sympathized with the White Caps, but he simply won't
-do it."
-
-"Won't do it! I reckon not!" Dwight blurted out. "Didn't the young idiot
-wait in Blackburn's store for Dan Willis to come and shoot the top of
-his head off? He sat there till past midnight, and wouldn't move an inch
-till actual proof was brought to him that Willis had left town. Oh,
-I'm no fool! I know a thing or two. I've watched him and your daughter
-together. That's at the bottom of it. She sat down on him before she
-went off to Augusta, but her refusal didn't alter him. He knows Helen
-thinks a lot of her old negro mammy, and in her absence he simply took
-up her cause and is fighting mad about it--so mad that he is blind to
-his political ruin. That's what a man will do for a woman. They say
-she's about to become engaged down there. I hope she is, and that Carson
-will have pride enough when he hears of it to let another man do her
-fighting, and one with nothing to lose by it."
-
-"She hasn't written me a thing about any engagement," the Major
-answered, with some animation; "but my sister highly approves of the
-match and writes that it may come about. Mr. Sanders is a well-to-do,
-honorable man of good birth and education: Helen never seemed to get
-over her brother's sad death. She loved poor Albert more than she ever
-did me or any one else."
-
-"And I always thought that it was Carson's association with your son in
-his dissipation that turned Helen against him. For all I know, she may
-have thought Carson actually led Albert on and was partly the cause of
-his sad end."
-
-"She may have looked at it that way," the Major said, musingly. They had
-now reached the porch in the rear of the house and they went together
-into the wide hall. A colored maid with a red bandanna tied like a
-turban round her head was dusting the walnut railing of the stairs.
-Passing through the hall, the old gentlemen turned into the library,
-a great square room with wide windows and tall, gilt-framed pier-glass
-mirrors.
-
-"Yes, I'm sure that's what turned her against him," Dwight continued,
-"and that is where, between you and Helen, I get mixed up. Why do you
-always take up for the scamp? It looks to me like you'd resent the way
-he acted with your son after the boy's terrible end."
-
-"There is a good deal more in the matter, Henry, than I ever told you
-about." Major Warren's voice faltered. "To be plain, that is my secret
-trouble. I reckon if Helen was to discover the actual truth--_all of
-it_--she would never feel the same towards me. I think maybe I ought to
-tell you. It certainly will explain why I am so much interested in your
-boy." They sat down, the owner of the house in a reclining-chair at an
-oblong, carved mahogany table covered with books and papers, the visitor
-on a lounge near by.
-
-"Well, it always has seemed odd to me," old Dwight said. "I couldn't
-exactly believe you wanted to bring him and Helen together, after your
-experience with that sort of man under your own roof."
-
-"It is this way," said the Major, awkwardly. "To begin with, I am sure,
-from all I've picked up, that it was not your son that was leading
-mine on to dissipation, but just the other way. He's dead and gone, but
-Albert was always ready for a prank of any sort. Henry, I want to talk
-to you about it because it seems to me you are in the same position in
-regard to Carson that I was in regard to my poor boy, and I've prayed
-a thousand times for pardon for what I did in anger and haste. Henry,
-listen to me. If ever a man made a vital mistake I did, and I'll bear
-the weight of it to my grave. You know how I worried over. Albert's
-drinking and his general conduct. Time after time he made promises that
-he would turn over a new leaf only to break them. Well, it was on the
-last trip--the fatal one to New York, where he had gone and thrown away
-so much money. I wrote him a severe letter, and in answer to it I got a
-pathetic one, saying he was sick and tired of the way he was doing and
-begging me to try him once more and send him money to pay his way home.
-It was the same old sort of promise and I didn't have faith in him. I
-was unfair, unjust to my only son. I wrote and refused, telling him that
-I could not trust him any more. Hell inspired that letter, Henry--the
-devil whispered to me that I'd been indulgent to the poor boy's injury.
-Then came the news. When he was found dead in a small room on the top
-floor of that squalid hotel--dead by his own hand--my letter lay open
-beside him."
-
-"Well, well, you couldn't help it!" Dwight said, most awkwardly, and he
-crossed his short, fat legs anew and reached for an open box of cigars.
-"You were trying to do your duty as you saw it, and to the best of your
-ability."
-
-"Yes, but my method, Henry, resulted in misery and grief to me and Helen
-that can never be cured. You see, it is because of that awful mistake
-that I take such an interest in Carson. I love him because Albert loved
-him, and because sometimes it seems to me that you are most too quick
-to condemn him. Oh, he's different! Carson has changed wonderfully since
-Albert died. He doesn't drink to excess now, and Garner says he has quit
-playing cards, having only one aim, and that to win this political
-race--to win it to please you, Henry."
-
-"Win it!" Dwight sniffed. "He's already as dead as a salt mackerel--laid
-out stiff and stark by his own bull-headed stupidity. I've always talked
-down drinking and card-playing, but I have known some men to succeed in
-life who had such habits in moderation; but you nor I nor no one else
-ever saw a blockhead succeed at anything. I tell you he'll never make
-a successful politician. Wiggin will beat the hind sights off of him.
-Wiggin is simply making capital of the fool's inability to control his
-temper and sympathies. Wiggin would have let that mob thrash his own
-father and mother rather than antagonize them and lose their votes. He
-knows Carson comes of fighting stock, and he will continue to egg Dan
-Willis and others on, knowing that every resentful word from Carson will
-make enemies for him by the score."
-
-"Oh, I can see that, too!" the Major sighed; "but, to save me, I can't
-help admiring the boy. He thinks the White Caps did wrong that night
-and he simply can't pretend otherwise. It is the principle of the thing,
-Henry. He is an unusual sort of candidate, and his stand may ruin his
-chances, but I--I glory in his firmness. I must say g me to try him once
-more and send him money to pay his way home. It was the same old sort of
-promise and I didn't have faith in him. I was unfair, unjust to my only
-son. I wrote and refused, telling him that I could not trust him any
-more. Hell inspired that letter, Henry--the devil whispered to me that
-I'd been indulgent to the poor boy's injury. Then came the news. When he
-was found dead in a small room on the top floor of that squalid hotel--
-dead by his own hand--my letter lay open beside him."
-
-"Well, well, you couldn't help it!" Dwight said, most awkwardly, and he
-crossed his short, fat legs anew and reached for an open box of cigars.
-"You were trying to do your duty as you saw it, and to the best of your
-ability."
-
-"Yes, but my method, Henry, resulted in misery and grief to me and Helen
-that can never be cured. You see, it is because of that awful mistake
-that I take such an interest in Carson. I love him because Albert loved
-him, and because sometimes it seems to me that you are most too quick to
-condemn him. Oh, he's different! Carson has changed wonderfully since
-Albert died. He doesn't drink to excess now, and Garner says he has quit
-playing cards, having only one aim, and that to win this political race-
--to win it to please you, Henry."
-
-"Win it!" Dwight sniffed. "He's already as dead as a salt mackerel--laid
-out stiff and stark by his own bull-headed stupidity. I've always talked
-down drinking and card-playing, but I have known some men to succeed in
-life who had such habits in moderation; but you nor I nor no one else
-ever saw a blockhead succeed at anything. I tell you he'll never make a
-successful politician. Wiggin will beat the hind sights off of him.
-Wiggin is simply making capital of the fool's inability to control his
-temper and sympathies. Wiggin would have let that mob thrash his own
-father and mother rather than antagonize them and lose their votes. He
-knows Carson comes of fighting stock, and he will continue to egg Dan
-Willis and others on, knowing that every resentful word from Carson will
-make enemies for him by the score."
-
-"Oh, I can see that, too!" the Major sighed; "but, to save me, I can't
-help admiring the boy. He thinks the White Caps did wrong that night and
-he simply can't pretend otherwise. It is the principle of the thing,
-Henry. He is an unusual sort of candidate, and his stand may ruin his
-chances, but I--I glory in his firmness. I must say that."
-
-"Oh yes, that's the trouble with you sentimental people," Dwight fumed.
-"Between you and the boy's doting mother, the Lord only knows where
-he'll land. I've overlooked a lot in him in the hope that he'd put this
-election through, but I shall let him go his own way now. It has come
-to a pretty pass if I have to see my son beaten to the dust by a man of
-Wiggin's stamp because of that long-legged negro boy of yours who would
-have been better long ago if he had been soundly thrashed."
-
-When his visitor had gone Dwight dropped his unfinished cigar into the
-grate and went slowly upstairs to his wife's room. At a small-paned
-window overlooking the flower-garden, on a couch supported in a
-reclining position by several puffy pillows, was Mrs. Dwight. She was
-well past middle-age and of extremely delicate physique. Her hair was
-snowy white, her skin thin to transparency, her veins full and blue.
-
-"That was Major Warren, wasn't it?" she asked, in a soft, sweet voice,
-as she put down the magazine she had been reading.
-
-"Yes," Dwight answered, as he went to a little desk in one corner of the
-room and took a paper from a pigeon-hole and put it into his pocket.
-
-"How did he happen to come over so early?" the lady pursued.
-
-"Because he wanted to, I reckon," Dwight started out, impatiently, and
-then a note of caution came into his voice as he remembered the warning
-of the family physician against causing the patient even the slightest
-worry. "Warren hasn't a blessed thing to do, you know, from mom till
-night. So when he strikes a busy man he is apt to hang on to him and
-talk in his long-winded way about any subject that takes possession of
-his brain. He's great on showing men how to manage their own affairs. It
-takes an idle man to do that. If that man hadn't had money left to him
-he would now be begging his bread from door to door."
-
-"Somehow I fancied it was about Carson," Mrs. Dwight sighed.
-
-"There you go!" her husband said, with as much grace of evasion as lay
-in his sturdy compound. "Lying there from day to day, you seem to have
-contracted Warren's complaint. You think nobody can drop in even for a
-minute without coming about your boy--your boy! Some day, if you live
-long enough, you may discover that the universe was not created solely
-for your son, nor made just to revolve around him either."
-
-"Yes, I suppose I _do_ worry about Carson a great deal," the invalid
-admitted; "but you haven't told me right out that the Major was _not_
-speaking of him."
-
-The old man's face was the playground of conflcting impulses. He grew
-red with anger and his lips trembled on the very verge of an outburst,
-but he controlled himself. In fact, his irritability calmed down as he
-suddenly saw a loop-hole through which to escape her questioning.
-
-"The truth is," he said, "Warren was talking about Albert's death. He
-talked quite a while about it. He almost broke down."
-
-"Well, I'm so worried about Carson's campaign that I imagine all sorts
-of trouble," Mrs. Dwight sighed. "I lay awake nearly all of last night
-thinking about one little thing. When he was in his room dressing the
-other day, I heard something fall to the floor. Hilda had taken him some
-hot water for shaving, and when she came back she told me he had dropped
-his revolver out of his pocket. You know till then I had had no idea he
-carried one, and while it may be necessary at times, the idea is very
-disagreeable."
-
-"You needn't let _that_ bother you," Dwight said, as he took his hat to
-go down to his office at his warehouse. "Nearly all the young men carry
-them because they think it looks smart. Most of them would run like a
-scared dog if they saw one pointed at them even in fun."
-
-"Well, I hope my boy will never have any use for one," the invalid said.
-"He is not of a quarrelsome nature. It takes a good deal to make him
-angry, but when he gets so he is not easily controlled."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-[Illustration: 9046]
-
-HE young men in Carson Dwight's set had an odd sort of lounging-place.
-It was Keith Gordon's room above his father's bank in an old building
-which had withstood the shot and shell of the Civil War. "The Den," as
-it was called by its numerous hap-hazard occupants, was reached from
-the street on the outside by a narrow flight of worm-eaten and rickety
-stairs and a perilous little balcony or passage that clung to the
-brick wall, twenty feet from the ground, along the full length of the
-building. It was here in one of the four beds that Keith slept, when
-there was room for him. After a big dance or a match game of baseball,
-when there were impecunious visitors from neighboring towns left over
-for various and sundry reasons, Keith had to seek the sanctimonious
-solitude of his father's home or go to the hotel.
-
-The den was about twenty-five feet square. It was not as luxurious as
-such bachelor quarters went in Augusta, Savannah, or even Atlanta,
-but it answered the purpose of "the gang" which made use of it. Keith
-frankly declared that he had overhauled and replenished it for the last
-time. He said that it was absolutely impossible to keep washbasins and
-pitchers, when they were hurled out of the windows for pure amusement of
-men who didn't care whether they washed or not. As for the laundry bill,
-he happened to know that it was larger than that of the Johnston House
-or the boarding department of the Darley Female College. He said, too,
-that he had warned the gang for the last time that the room would be
-closed if any more clog-dancing were indulged in. He said his father
-complained that the plastering was dropping down on his desk below,
-and sensible men ought to know that a thing like that could not go on
-forever.
-
-The rules concerning the payment for drinks were certainly lax. No
-accounts were kept of any man's indebtedness. Any member of the gang was
-at liberty to stow away a flask of any size in the bureau or wash-stand
-drawer, or under the mattresses or pillows of his or anybody else's bed,
-where Skelt, the negro who swept the room, and loved stimulants could
-not find it.
-
-Bill Garner, as brainy as he was, while he was always welcome at his
-father's house in the country, a mile from town, seemed to love the
-company of this noisy set. Through the day it was said of him that he
-could read and saturate himself with more law than any man in the State,
-but at night his recreation was a cheap cigar, his old bulging carpet
-slippers, a cosey chair in Keith's room, and--who would think it?--the
-most thrilling Indian dime novel on the market. He could quote the
-French, German, Italian, and Spanish classics by the page in a strange
-musical accent he had acquired without the aid of a master or any sort
-of intercourse with native foreigners. He knew and loved all things
-pertaining to great literature--said he had a natural ear for Wagner's
-music, had comprehended Edwin Booth's finest work, knew a good picture
-when he saw it; and yet he had to have his dime novel. In it he found
-mental rest and relaxation that was supplied by nothing else. His
-bedfellow was Bob Smith, the genial, dapper, ever daintily clad clerk at
-the Johnston House. Garner said he liked to sleep with Bob because Bob
-never--sleeping or waking--took anything out of him mentally. Besides
-dressing to perfection, Bob played rag-time on the guitar and sang the
-favorite coon songs of the day. His duties at the hotel were far from
-arduous, and so the gang usually looked to him to arrange dances and
-collect toll for expenses. And Bob was not without his actual monetary
-value, as the proprietor of the hotel had long since discovered, for
-when Bob arranged a dance it meant that various socially inclined
-drummers of good birth and standing would, at a hint or a telegram from
-the clerk, "lay over" at Darley for one night anyway.
-
-If Bob had any quality that disturbed the surface of his uniform
-equanimity it was his excessive pride in Carson Dwight's friendship.
-He interlarded his talk with what Carson had said or done, and Carson's
-candidacy for the Legislature had become his paramount ambition. Indeed,
-it may as well be stated that the rest of the gang had espoused Dwight's
-political cause with equal enthusiasm.
-
-It was the Sunday morning following the night Pole Baker had prevented
-the meeting between Dwight and Dan Willis, and most of the habitual
-loungers were present waiting for Skelt to black their boots, and
-deploring the turn of affairs which looked so bad for their favorite.
-Wade Tingle was shaving at one of the windows before a mirror in a
-cracked mahogany frame, when they all recognized Carson's step on the
-balcony and a moment later Dwight stood in the doorway.
-
-"Hello, boys, how goes it?" he asked.
-
-"Oh, right side up, old man," Tingle replied, as he began to rub the
-lather into his face with his hand to soften his week-old beard before
-shaving. "How's the race?"
-
-"It's all right, I guess," Dwight said, wearily, as he came in and sat
-down in a vacant chair against the wall. "How goes it in the mountains?
-I understand you've been over there."
-
-"Yes, trying to rake in some ads, stir up my local correspondents,
-and take subscriptions. As to your progress, old man, I'm sorry to say
-Wiggin's given it a sort of black eye. There was a meeting of farmers
-over in the tenth, at Miller's Spring. I was blamed sorry you were
-not there. Wiggin made a speech. It was a corker--viewed as campaign
-material solely. That chap's failed at the law, but he's the sharpest,
-most unprincipled manipulator of men's emotions I ever ran across. He
-showed you up as Sam Jones does the ring-tailed monster of the cloven
-foot."
-
-"What Carson said about the Willis and Johnson mob was his theme, of
-course?" said Garner, above the dog-eared pages of his thriller.
-
-"That and ten thousand things Carson never dreamed of," returned Tingle.
-"Here's the way it went. The meeting was held under a bush-arbor to
-keep the sun off, and the farmers had their wives and children out for
-a picnic. A long-faced parson led in prayer, some of the old maids piped
-up with a song that would have ripped slits in your musical tympanum,
-Garner, and then a raw-boned ploughman in a hickory shirt and one
-gallus introduced the guest of honor. How they could have overlooked the
-editor-in-chief and proprietor of the greatest agricultural weekly in
-north Georgia and picked out that skunk was a riddle to me."
-
-"Well, what did he say?" Garner asked, as sharply as if he were
-cross-examining a non-committal witness of importance.
-
-"What did he say?" Tingle laughed, as he wiped the lather from his face
-with a ragged towel and stood with it in his hand. "He began by saying
-that he had gone into the race to win, and that he was going to the
-Legislature as sure as the sun was on its way down in this country and
-on its way up in China. He said it was a scientific certainty, as easily
-demonstrated as two and two make four. Those hardy, horny-handed men
-before him that day were not going to the polls and vote for a town dude
-who parted his hair in the middle, wore spike-toed shoes that glittered
-like a new dash-board, and was the ringleader of the rowdiest set of
-young card-players and whiskey-drinkers that ever blackened the morals
-of a mining-camp. He said that about the gang, boys, and I didn't have a
-thing to shoot with. In fact, I had to sit there and take in more."
-
-"What did he say about his _platform?_" Garner asked, with a heavy
-frown; "that's what I want to get at. You never can hurt a politician
-by circulating the report that he drinks--that's what half of 'em vote
-for."
-
-"Oh, his platform seemed to be chiefly that he was out to save the
-common people from the eternal disgrace of voting for a man like Dwight.
-He certainly piled it on thick and heavy. It would have made Carson's
-own mother slink away in shame. Carson, Wiggin said, had loved niggers
-since he was knee high to a duck, and had always contended that a negro
-owned by the aristocracy of the South was ahead of the white, razor-back
-stock in the mountains who had never had that advantage. Carson was up
-in arms against the White Caps that had come to Darley and whipped those
-lazy coons, and was going to prosecute every man in the bunch to the
-full extent of the United States law. If he got into the Legislature he
-intended to pass laws to make it a penitentiary offence for a white man
-to shove a black buck off the sidewalk. 'But he's not going to take his
-seat in the Capitol of Georgia,' Wiggins said, with a yell--'if Carson
-Dwight went to Atlanta it would _not_ be on a free pass.' And, boys,
-that crowd yelled till the dry leaves overhead clapped an encore. The
-men yelled and the women and children yelled."
-
-"He's a contemptible puppy!" Dwight said, angrily.
-
-"Yes, but he's a slick politician among men of that sort," said Tingle.
-"He certainly knows how to talk and stir up strife."
-
-"And I suppose you sat there like a bump on a log, and listened to all
-that without opening your mouth!" Keith Gordon spoke up from his bed,
-where he lay in his bath-robe smoking over the remains of the breakfast
-Skelt had brought from the hotel on a big black tray.
-
-"Well, I _did_--get up," Tingle answered, with a manly flush.
-
-"Oh, you _did!_" Garner leaned forward with interest.
-
-"Well, I'm glad you happened to be on hand, for your paper has
-considerable influence over there."
-
-"Yes, I got up. I waved my hands up and down like a buzzard rising,
-to keep the crowd still till I could think of something to say; but,
-Carson, old man, you know what an idiot I used to be in college debates.
-I could get through fairly well on anything they would let me write down
-and read off, but it was the impromptu thing that always rattled me.
-I was as mad as hell when I rose, but all those staring eyes calmed me
-wonderfully. I reckon I stood there fully half a minute swallowing--"
-
-"You damned fool!" Garner exclaimed, in high disgust.
-
-"Yes, that's exactly what I was," Tingle admitted. "I stood there
-gasping like a catfish enjoying his first excursion in open air. It was
-deathly still. I've heard it said that dying men notice the smallest
-things about them. I remember I saw the horses and mules haltered
-out under the trees with their hay and fodder under their noses--the
-dinner-baskets all in a cluster at the spring guarded by a negro woman.
-Then what do you think? Old Jeff Condon spoke up.
-
-"'Lead us in prayer, brother,' he said, in reverential tones, and since
-I was born I never heard so much laughing."
-
-"You certainly _did_ play into Wiggin's hands," growled the disgruntled
-Garner. "That's exactly what a glib-tongued skunk like him would want."
-
-"Well, it gave me a minute to try to get my wind, anyway," said Tingle,
-still red in the face, "but I wasn't equal to a mob of baseball rooters
-like that. I started in to deny some of Wiggin's charges when another
-smart Alec spoke up and said: 'Hold on! tell us about the time you and
-your candidate started home from a ball at Catoosa Springs in a buggy,
-and were so drunk that the horse took you to the house of a man who used
-to own him sixteen miles from where you wanted to go. Of course, you
-all know, boys, that was a big exaggeration, but I had no idea it was
-generally known. Anyway, I thought the crowd would laugh their heads
-off. I reckon it was the way I looked. I felt as if every man, woman,
-and child there had mashed a bad egg on me and was chuckling over their
-marksmanship. I ended up by getting mad, and I saw by Wiggin's grin that
-he liked that. I managed to say a few things in denial, and then Wiggin
-got up and roasted me and my paper to a turn. He said that in supporting
-Dwight editorially the _Headlight_ was giving sanction to Dwight's ideas
-in favor of the negro and against honest white people, and that every
-man there who had any family or State pride ought to stop taking
-the dirty sheet; and, bless your life, some of them did cancel their
-subscriptions when they met me after the speaking; but I'm going to
-keep on mailing it, anyway. It will be like sending free tracts to the
-heathen, but it may bear fruit."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-[Illustration: 9054]
-
-ALF an hour later all the young men had left the room except Garner
-and Dwight. Garner still wore the frown brought to his broad brow by
-Tingle's recital.
-
-"I've set my heart on putting this thing through," he said; "and while
-it looks kind of shaky, I haven't lost all hope yet. Of course, your
-reckless remarks about the White Caps have considerably damaged us in
-the mountains, but we may live it down. It may die a natural death if
-you and Dan Willis don't meet and plug away at each other and set the
-talk afloat again. I reckon he'll keep out of your way when he's sober,
-anyway."
-
-"I am not running after him," Carson returned. "I simply said what I
-thought and Wiggin made the most of it."
-
-Garner was silent for several minutes, then he folded his dime novel and
-bent it across his knee, and when he finally spoke Dwight thought he
-had never seen a graver look on the strong face. He had seen it full
-of emotional tears when Garner was at the height of earnest appeal to a
-jury in a murder case; he had seen it dark with the fury of unjust legal
-defeat, but now there was a strange feminine whiteness at the corners of
-the big facile mouth, a queer twitching of the lips.
-
-"I've made up my mind to tell you a secret," he said, falteringly. "I've
-come near it several times and backed out. It's a subject I don't know
-how to handle. It's about a woman, Carson. You know I'm not a ladies'
-man. I don't call on women; I don't take them buggy-riding; I don't
-dance with them, or even know how to fire soft things at them like you
-and Keith, but I've had my experience."
-
-"It certainly is a surprise to me," Dwight said, sympathetically, and
-then in the shadow of Garner's seriousness he found himself unable to
-make further comment.
-
-"I reckon you'll lose all respect for me for thinking there was a ghost
-of a chance in that particular quarter," Garner pursued, without meeting
-his companion's eye. "But, Carson, my boy, there is a certain woman
-that every man who knows her has loved or is still loving. Keith's crazy
-about her, though he has given up all hope as I did long ago, and even
-poor Bob Smith thinks he's in luck if she will only listen to one of his
-new songs or let him do her some favor. We all love her, Carson, because
-she is so sweet and kind to us--"
-
-"You mean--" Dwight interrupted, impulsively, and then lapsed into
-silence, an awkward flush rising to his brow.
-
-"Yes, I mean Helen Warren, old man. As I say, I had never thought of a
-woman that way in my life. We were thrown together once at a house-party
-at Hilburn's farm--well, I simply went daft. She never refused to
-walk with me when I asked her, and seemed specially interested in my
-profession. I didn't know it at the time, but I have since discovered
-that she has that sweet way with every man, rich or poor, married or
-single. Well, to make a long story short, I proposed to her. The whole
-thing is stamped on my brain as with a branding-iron. We had taken a
-long walk that morning and were seated under a big beech-tree near a
-spring. She kept asking about my profession, her face beaming, and it
-all went to my head. I knew that I was the ugliest man in the State,
-that I had no style about me, and knew nothing about being nice to women
-of her sort; but her interest in everything pertaining to the law made
-me think, you know, that she admired that kind of thing. I went wild. As
-I told her how I felt I actually cried. Think of it--I was silly enough
-to blubber like a baby! I can't describe what happened. She was shocked
-and pained beyond description. She had never dreamed that I felt that
-way. I ended by asking her to try to forget it all, and we had a long,
-awful walk to the house."
-
-"That _was_ tough," Carson Dwight said, a queer expression on his face.
-
-"Well, I've told it to you for a special reason," Garner said, with a
-big, trembling sigh. "Carson, I am a close observer, and I afterwards
-made up my mind that I knew why she had led me on to talk so much about
-the law and my work in particular."
-
-"Oh, you found that out!" Carson said, almost absently.
-
-"Yes, my boy, it was about the time you and I were thinking of going in
-together. It was all on your account."
-
-Carson stared straight at Garner. "_My_ account? Oh no!"
-
-"Yes, on your account. I've kept it from you all this time. I'm your
-friend now in full--to the very bone, but at that time I felt too sore
-to tell you. I'd lost all I cared for on earth, but I simply had too
-much of primitive man left in me to let you know how well you stood. My
-God, Carson, about that time I used to sit at my desk behind some old
-book pretending to read, but just looking at you as you sat at work
-wondering how it would feel to have what was yours. Then I watched you
-both together; you seemed actually made for each other, an ideal couple.
-Then came your--she refused you."
-
-"I know, I know, but why talk about it, Garner?" Carson had risen and
-stood in the doorway in the rays of the morning sun. There was silence
-for a moment. The church bells were ringing and negroes and whites were
-passing along the street below.
-
-"It may be good for me to speak of it and be done with it, or it may
-not," said Garner; "but this is what I was coming to. I've said it was
-a long time before I could tell you that she was once--I don't know how
-she is now, but she was at one time in love with you."
-
-"Oh no, no, she was never that!" Dwight said. "We were great friends,
-but she never cared that much for me or for any one."
-
-"Well, it was a long time before I could say what I thought about
-that, and I have only just now taken another step in self-renunciation.
-Carson, I can now say that you didn't have a fair deal, and that I have
-reached a point in which I want to see you get it. I think I know why
-she refused you."
-
-"You do?" Dwight said, pale and excited, as he came away from the door
-and leaned heavily against the wall near his friend.
-
-"Yes, it was this way. I've studied it all out. She loved Albert as few
-women love their brothers, and his grim end was an almost unbearable
-shock. After his death, you know it leaked out that you had been
-Albert's constant companion through his dissipation, almost, in fact, up
-to the very end. She couldn't reconcile herself to your part, innocent
-as it was, in the tragedy, and it simply killed the feeling she had for
-you. I suppose it is natural to a character as strong as hers."
-
-"I've always feared that--that was the reason," said Dwight,
-falteringly, as he went back to the door and looked out. There was a
-droop of utter dejection on him and his face seemed to have aged.
-"Garner," he said, suddenly, "there is no use denying anything. You have
-admitted your love for her, why should I deny mine? I never cared for
-any other woman and I never shall."
-
-"That's right, but you didn't get a fair deal, all the same," said
-Garner. "She's never looked for any sort of justification in your
-conduct; her poor brother's death stands like a draped wall between you,
-but I know you were not as black as you were painted. Carson, all the
-time you were keeping pace with Albert Warren you were blind to the gulf
-ahead of him and were simply glorying in his friendship--_because he was
-her brother_. Ah, I know that feeling!"
-
-Carson was silent, while Garner's gray eyes rested on him for a moment
-full of conviction, and then he nodded. "Yes, I think that was it. It
-was my ruination, but I could not get away from the fascination of
-his companionship. He fairly worshipped her and used to talk of her
-constantly when we were together, and he--he sometimes told me things
-she kept back. He knew how I felt. I told him. Through him I seemed to
-be closer to her. But when the news came that he was dead, and when
-I met her at the funeral at the church, and caught her eye, I saw her
-shrink back in abhorrence. She wouldn't go out with me ever again after
-that, and was never exactly the same."
-
-"That was two years ago, my boy," Garner said, significantly, "and your
-character has changed. You are a better, firmer man. In fact, it seems
-to me that your change dates from Albert Warren's death. But now I'm
-coming to the thing that prompted me to say all this. I met Major Warren
-in the post-office this morning. He was greatly excited. Carson, she
-has just written him that she is coming home for a long stay and the old
-gentleman is simply wild with delight."
-
-"Oh, she's coming, then!" Dwight exclaimed, in surprise.
-
-"Yes, and Keith and Bob and the rest of her adorers will go crazy over
-the news and want to celebrate it. I didn't tell them. I wanted you to
-know it first. There is one other thing. You know you can't tell whether
-there is anything in an idle report, but the gossips say she has perhaps
-met her fate down there. I've even heard his name--one Earle Sanders, a
-well-to-do cotton merchant of good standing in the business world. But
-I'll never believe she's engaged to him till the cards are out."
-
-"I really think it may be true," Carson Dwight said, a firm, set
-expression about his lips. "I've heard of him. He's a man of fine
-character and intellect. Yes, it may be true, Garner."
-
-"Well," and Garner drew himself up and folded his arms, "if it should
-happen to be so, Carson, there would be only one thing to do, and that
-would be to grin and bear it."
-
-"Yes, that would be the only thing," Dwight made answer. "She has a
-right to happiness, and it would have been wrong for her to have tied
-herself to me, when I was what I was, and when I am still as great a
-failure as I am."
-
-He turned suddenly out onto the passage, and Garner heard his resounding
-tread as he walked away.
-
-"Poor old chap," Garner mused, as he leaned forward and looked at the
-threadbare toes of his slippers, "if he weathers this storm he'll make
-a man right--if not, he'll go down with the great majority, the motley
-throng meant for God only knows what purpose."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-[Illustration: 9061]
-
-HE Warren homestead was in a turmoil of excitement over Helen's return.
-The ex-slaves of the family for miles around had assembled to celebrate
-the occasion in quite the ante-bellum fashion. The men and grown boys
-sat about the front lawn and on the steps of the long veranda and talked
-of the day Helen was born, of her childhood, of her beauty and numerous
-conquests, away from them, and of the bare possibility of her deigning
-to accept the hand of some one of her powerful and wealthy suitors.
-
-In her own chamber, a great square room with many windows, Helen, tall,
-graceful, with light-brown eyes and almost golden hair, was receiving
-the women and girls. She had brought a present suitable for each of
-them, as they knew she would, and the general rejoicing was equal to
-that of an old-time Georgia Christmas.
-
-"You are all here," Helen smiled, as she looked about the room, "except
-Mam' Linda. Is she not well?"
-
-"Yessum, she's well as common," Jennie, a yellow house-maid, said, "as
-well as she been since Pete had dat scrimmage wid de White Caps. Missie,
-you gwine notice er gre't change in Mam' Lindy. Since dat turrible
-night, while she seem strong in de body, she looks powerful weak in
-de face en sperit. Unc' Lewis is worried about 'er. She des set in er
-cottage do' en rock back an' fo'th all day long. You done heard 'bout dat
-lambastin', 'ain't you, Missie?"
-
-"Yes, my father wrote me about it," Helen replied, an expression of
-sympathetic pain on her well-featured face, "but he didn't tell me that
-mammy was taking it so hard."
-
-"He was tryin' ter keep you fum worryin'," Jennie said, observantly.
-"Marster knowed how much sto' you set by yo' old mammy. He was de
-maddest man you ever laid eyes on dat night, but he couldn't do nothin',
-fer it was all over, en dem white trash done skedaddle back whar dey
-come fum.".
-
-"And was Pete so much to blame?" Helen asked, her voice shaking.
-
-"Blame fer de company he been keepin', Missie--dat's all; but what you
-gwine ter do wid er strappin' young nigger growin' up? It des like it
-was in de old day fo' de war. De niggers had to have deir places ter
-meet an' cut up shines. Dey been done too much of it at Ike Bowen's. De
-white folks dat lived round dar couldn't sleep at night. It was one long
-shindig or a fist-cuff scrap fum supper till daylight."
-
-"Well, I wish Mam' Linda would come to see me," Helen said. "I'm anxious
-about her. If she isn't here soon I'll go to her."
-
-"She's comin' right on, Missie," another negro girl said, "but she tol'
-Unc' Lewis she was gwine ter wait till we all cleared out. She say you
-her baby, en she ain't gwine ter be bothered wid so many, when she see
-you de fust time after so long."
-
-"That's exactly like her," Helen smiled. "Well, you all must go now,
-and, Jennie, tell her I am dying to see her."
-
-The room was soon cleared of its chattering and laughing throng, and
-Linda, supported by her husband, a stalwart mulatto, came from her
-cottage behind the house and went up to Helen's room. She was short,
-rather portly, about half white, and for that reason had a remarkably
-intelligent face which bore the marks of a strong character. Entering
-the room, after sharply enjoining her husband to wait for her in the
-hall, she went straight up to Helen and laid her hand on the young
-lady's head.
-
-"So I got my baby back once mo'," she said, tenderly.
-
-"Yes, I couldn't stay away, Mammy," Helen said, with an indulgent smile.
-"After all, home is the sweetest place on earth--but you mustn't stand
-up; get a chair."
-
-The old woman obeyed, slowly placing the chair near that of her mistress
-and sitting down. "I'm glad you got back, honey," she said. "I loves all
-my white folks, but you is my baby, en I never could talk to de rest of
-um lak I kin ter you. Oh, honey, yo' old mammy has had lots en lots er
-trouble!"
-
-"I know, Mammy, father wrote me about it, and I've heard more since I
-got here. I know how you love Pete."
-
-Linda folded her arms on her breast and leaned forward till her elbows
-rested on her knees. Helen saw a wave of emotion shake her whole body
-as she straightened up and faced her with eyes that seemed melting in
-grief. "Honey," she said, "folks said when de law come en give we all
-freedom dat de good day was at hand. It was ter be a time er plenty en
-joy fer black folks; but, honey, never while I was er slave did I had
-ter suffer what I'm goin' thoo now. In de old time marster looked after
-us; de lash never was laid on de back er one o' his niggers. No white
-pusson never dared to hit one of us, en yit now in dis day er glorious
-freedom, er whole gang of um come in de dead er night en tied my child
-wid ropes en tuck turn about lashin' 'im. Honey, sometimes I think dey
-ain't no Gawd fer a pusson wid one single streak er black blood in 'im.
-Ef dey is er Gawd fer sech es me, why do He let me pass thoo what been
-put on me? I heard dat boy's cryin' half er mile, honey, en stood in de
-flo' er my house en couldn't move, listenin' en listenin' ter his
-screams en dat lash failin' on 'im. Den dey let 'im loose en he come
-runnin' erlong de street ter find me--ter find his mammy, honey--his
-mammy who couldn't do nothin' fer 'im. En dar right at my feet he fell
-over in er faint. I thought he was dead en never would open his eyes
-ergin."
-
-"And I wasn't here to comfort you!" Helen said, in a tearful tone of
-self-reproach. "You were alone through it all."
-
-"No, I wasn't, honey. Thank de Lawd, dar is some er de right kind er
-white folks left. Marse Carson Dwight heard it all fum his room en come
-over. He raised Pete up en tuck 'im in an' laid 'im on de baid. He tuck 'im
-up in his arms, honey, young marster did, en set to work to bring 'im to.
-An' after de po' boy was easy en ersleep en de doctor gone off, Marse
-Carson come ter me en tuck my hand. 'Mam' Lindy,' he said, es pale as ef
-he'd been sick er long time, 'dis night's work has give me some'n' ter
-think erbout. De best white men in de Souf won't stan' fer dis. Sech
-things cayn't go on forever. Ef I go to de Legislature I'll see dat dey
-gwine ter pass laws ter pertect you faithful old folks."
-
-"Carson said that?" Helen's voice was husky, her glance averted.
-
-"Yes, en he was dead in earnest, honey; he wasn't des talkin' ter
-comfort me. I know, kase I done hear suppen else dat happened since
-den."
-
-"What was that?" Helen asked.
-
-"Why, dey say dat Marse Carson went straight down-town en tried ter find
-somebody dat was in de mob. He heard Dan Willis was among 'em--you know
-who he is, honey. He's er bad, desp'rate moonshine man. Well, Marse
-Carson spoke his mind about 'im, an' dared 'im out in de open. Unc'
-Lewis said Mr. Garner an' all Marse Carson's friends tried to stop
- 'im, kase it would go dead agin 'im in his 'lection, but Marse Carson
-wouldn't take back er word, en was so mad he couldn't hold in. En dat
-another hard thing to bear, honey," Linda went on. "Des think, Marse
-Carson cayn't even try to help er po' old woman lak me widout ruinin'
-his own chances."
-
-"Is it as serious as that?" Helen asked, with deep concern.
-
-"Yes, honey, he never kin win his race lessen he act diffunt. Dey say
-dat man Wiggin is laughin' fit ter kill hisse'f over de way he got de
-upper hold. I told Marse Carson des t'other day he mustn't do dat way,
-but he laughed in my face in de sweet way he always did have. 'Ef dey
-vote ergin me fer dat, Mam' Lindy,' he say, 'deir votes won't be worth
-much.' Marse Carson is sho got high principle, honey. His pa think he
-ain't worth much, but _he's_ all right. You mark my words, he's gwine
-ter make a gre't big man--he gwine ter do dat kase he's got er tender
-heart in 'im, an ain't afeard of anything dat walk on de yeath. He may
-lose dis one 'lection, but he'll not stop. I know young white men, thoo
-en thoo, en I never y it seen er better one."
-
-[Illustration: 0067]
-
-"Have you--have you seen him recently?" Helen asked, surprised at the
-catch in her voice.
-
-"Oh yes, honey," the old woman said, plaintively; "seem lak he know how
-I'm sufferin', en he been comin' over often en talkin' ter me'n Lewis.
-Seem lak he's so sad, honey, here late. Ain't you seed 'im yit, honey?"
-
-"No, he hasn't been over," Helen replied, rather awkwardly. "He will
-come, though; he and I are good friends."
-
-"You gwine find 'im changed er lot, honey," the old woman said. "Do you
-know, I don't believe he ever got over Marse Albert's death. He warn't
-ter blame 'bout dat, honey, dough I do believe he feel dat way. Seem lak
-we never kin fetch up Marse Albert's name widout Marse Carson git sad.
-One night here late when Lewis was talkin' 'bout when yo' pa went off
-en fetched young master home, Marse Carson hung his head en say: 'Mam'
-Lindy, I wish dat time could be go over ergin. I would act so diffunt.
-I never seed whar all dem scrapes was leadin' to. But it learned me a
-lesson, Mam' Lindy.'"
-
-"That's it," Helen said, bitterly, as if to herself; "he survived. He
-has profited by the calamity, but my poor, dear brother--" She went no
-further, for her voice broke and her eyes filled with tears.
-
-"Don't think erbout dat, honey," old Linda said, consolingly. "You got
-yo' one great trouble lak I has, but you is at home wid we all now, en
-you must not be sad."
-
-"I don't intend to be, Mammy," Helen said, wiping her eyes on her
-handkerchief. "We are going to try to do something to keep Pete out of
-trouble. Father thinks it is his associates that are to blame. We must
-try in future to keep him away from bad company."
-
-"Dat what I want ter do, honey," the old woman said, "en ef I des had
-somewhar ter send 'im so he could be away fum dis town I'd be powerful
-glad."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-[Illustration: 9070]
-
-Helen anticipated, the young ladies of the town, her most intimate
-friends and former school-mates, came in a body that afternoon to see
-her. The reception formally opened in the great parlor down-stairs,
-but it was not many minutes before they all found themselves in Helen's
-chamber fluttering about and chattering like doves in their spring
-plumage.
-
-"There's no use putting it off longer," Ida Tarpley, Helen's cousin,
-laughed; "they are all bent on seeing your _things_, and they will
-simply spend the night here if you don't get them out."
-
-"Oh, I think that would look so vain and silly in me," Helen protested,
-her color rising. "I don't like to exhibit my wardrobe as if I were a
-dressmaker, or a society woman who is hard up and trying to dispose of
-them."
-
-"The idea of your not doing it, dear," Mary King, a little blonde, said,
-"when not one of us has seen a decent dress or hat since the summer
-visitors went away last fall."
-
-"Leave it to me," Ida Tarpley laughed. "You girls get off the bed. I
-want something to lay them on. If it were only evening I'd make her
-put on that gown she wore at the Governor's ball. You remember what the
-_Constitution's_ society reporter said about it. He said it was a poet's
-dream. If I ever get one it will be _in_ a dream. You must really wear
-it to your dance, Helen."
-
-"_My_ dance?" Helen said, in surprise.
-
-"Oh, I hope I'm not telling secrets," Ida said; "but I met Keith Gordon
-and Bob Smith in town as I came on. They had a list and were taking
-subscriptions from all the young men. They had already enough put down
-to buy a house and lot. They say they are going to give you the swellest
-dance that was eyer heard of. Bob said that it simply had to surpass
-anything you'd been to in Augusta or Atlanta. Expense is not to be
-considered. The finest band in Chattanooga has already been engaged;
-the refreshments are to be brought from there by a caterer and a dozen
-expert waiters. A carload of flowers have been ordered. It is to open
-with a grand march." Ida swung her hands and body comically to and fro
-as if in the cake walk, and bowed low. "Nobody is to be allowed to dance
-with you who hasn't an evening suit on, and _then_ only once. They are
-all crazy about you, Helen. I never could understand it. I've tried to
-copy the look you have in the eyes hundreds of times, but it won't have
-the slightest effect."
-
-"There's only one explanation of it," Miss Wimberley, another girl,
-remarked; "it is simply because she really likes them all."
-
-"Well, I really do, as for that," Helen said; "and I think it is awfully
-nice of them to give me such a dance. It's enough to turn a girl's head.
-Well, if Ida really is going to pull out my things, I'll go down-stairs
-and make you a lemonade."
-
-Later in the afternoon the young ladies had all gone except Ida Tarpley,
-who lingered with Helen on the veranda.
-
-"I'm glad the girls didn't have the bad taste to embarrass you by
-questioning you about Mr. Sanders," Ida said. "Of course, it is all over
-town. Uncle spoke of the possibility of it to some one and that put
-it afloat. I'm anxious to see him, Helen. I know he must be
-nice--everything, in fact, that a man ought to be, for you always had
-high ideals."
-
-Helen flushed almost angrily, and she drew herself erect and stood quite
-rigid, looking at her cousin.
-
-"Ida," she said, "I don't like what you have just said."
-
-"Oh, dearest, I'm sorry, but I thought--"
-
-"That's the trouble about a small town," Helen went on. "People take
-such liberties with you, and about the most delicate things. Down in
-Augusta my friends never would think of saying I was actually engaged
-to a man till it was announced. But here at home it is in every mouth
-before they have even seen the gentleman in question."
-
-"But you really have been receiving constant attentions from Mr. Sanders
-for more than a year, haven't you, dear?" Miss Tarpley asked, blandly.
-
-"Yes, but what of that?" Helen retorted. "He and I are splendid friends.
-He has been very kind and thoughtful of my comfort, and I like him. He
-is noble, sincere, and good. He extended the sweetest sympathy to me
-when I went down there under my great grief, and I never can forget it,
-but, nevertheless, Ida, I have not promised to marry him."
-
-"Oh, I see, it is not actually settled yet," Miss Tarpley said. "Well,
-I'm glad. I'm very, very glad."
-
-"You are glad?" Helen said, wonderingly.
-
-"Yes, I am. I'm glad because I don't want you to go away off down there
-and marry a stranger to us. I really hope something will break it up. I
-know Mr. Sanders must be awfully fond of you--any man would be who had
-a ghost of a chance of winning you--and I know your aunt has been doing
-all in her power to bring the match about--but I understand you, dear,
-and I am afraid you would not be happy."
-
-"Why do you say that so--so positively?" Helen asked, coldly.
-
-"Because," Ida said, impulsively, "I don't believe a girl of your
-disposition ever could love in the right way more than once, and--"
-
-"And what?" Helen demanded, her proud lips compressed, her eyes flashing
-defiantly.
-
-"Well, I may be wrong, dear," Miss Tarpley went on, "but if you were not
-actually in love before you went to Augusta, you were very near it."
-
-"How absurd!" Helen exclaimed, with a little angry toss of her head.
-
-"Do you remember the night our set drove out to the Henderson party? I
-went with Mr. Garner and Carson Dwight took you? Oh, Helen, I met you
-and Carson walking together in the moonlight that evening under the
-apple-trees in the old meadow, and if ever a pair of human beings really
-loved each other you two must have done so that night. I saw it in his
-happy, triumphant face, and in the fact, Helen dear, that you allowed
-him to be with you so much, when you knew other admirers were waiting to
-see you."
-
-Helen looked down; her face was clouded over, her proud lip twitched.
-
-"Ida," she said, tremulously, "I don't want you ever again to mention
-Carson Dwight's name to me in--in that way. You have no right to."
-
-"Yes, I have," Ida protested, firmly. "I have the right as a loyal
-friend to the best, most suffering, and noblest young man I ever knew. I
-read you like a book, dear. You really cared very, very much for Carson
-once, but after your great loss you never thought the same of him
-again."
-
-"No, nor I never shall," Helen said, firmly. "I admire him and shall
-treat him as a good friend when we meet, but that will be the end of it.
-Whether I cared for him or not, as girls care for young men, is neither
-here nor there. It is over with."
-
-"And all simply because he was a little wild at the time your poor
-brother--"
-
-"Stop!" Helen said; "don't argue the matter. I can only now associate
-him with the darkest hour of my life. I'm tempted to tell you something,
-Ida," and Helen bowed her head for a moment, and then went on in an
-unsteady voice. "When my poor brother's trunk was brought home, it was
-my duty to put the things it contained in order. There I found some
-letters to him, and one dated only two days before Albert's death was
-from--from Carson Dwight. I read only a portion of it, but it revealed a
-page in poor Albert's life that I had never read--never dreamed could be
-possible."
-
-"But Carson," Ida Tarpley exclaimed; "what did _he_ have to do with
-that?"
-
-Helen swallowed the lump in her throat, and with a cold, steely gleam in
-her eyes she said, bitterly: "He could have held out his hand with the
-superior strength you think he has and drawn the poor boy back from the
-brink, but he didn't. The words he wrote about it were light, flippant,
-and heartless. He treated the whole awful situation as a joke, as if--as
-if he _himself_ were familiar with such unmentionable things."
-
-"Ah, I begin to understand it all now!" Ida sighed. "That letter,
-coupled with Cousin Albert's awful death, was such a terrible shock that
-you cannot feel the same towards Carson. But oh, Helen, you would pity
-him if you knew him now as I do. He has never altered in his feelings
-towards you. In fact, it seems to me that he loves you even more deeply
-than ever. And, dear, if you had seen his patient efforts to make a
-better man of himself you'd not harbor such thoughts against him. You
-will understand Carson some day, but it may then be too late. I don't
-believe a woman ever has a real sweetheart but once. You may marry the
-man your aunt wants you to take, but your heart will some day turn back
-to the other. You will remember, too, and bitterly, that you condemned
-him for a youthful fault which you ought to have pardoned."
-
-"Do you think so, Ida?" Helen asked, her soft, brown eyes averted.
-
-"Yes, and you'll remember, too, that while his other friends were trying
-to help him stick to his resolutions you turned against him. He's going
-to make a great and good man, Helen. I've known that for some time. He
-is having his troubles, but even they will help him to be stronger
-in the end. His greatest trial is going on right now, while folks are
-saying that you are going to marry another man. Pshaw! you may say what
-you like about Mr. Sanders' good qualities, but I know I shall not
-like him," concluded Ida, with a smile, as she turned to go. "He is a
-usurper, and I'm dead against him."
-
-Helen remained on the veranda after her cousin had left till the
-twilight gathered about her. She was about to go in, as it was near
-tea-time, when she heard a grumbling voice down the street and saw old
-Uncle Lewis returning from town, driving his son, the troublesome Peter,
-before him.
-
-"You go right thoo dat gate on back ter dat house, you black imp er
-'straction!" he thundered, "er I'll tek er boa'd en lambast de life
-out'n you. Here it is night-time en you ain't chop no stove-wood fer
-de big house kitchen, en been lyin' roun' dem cotton wagons raisin' mo'
-rows wid dem mountain white men."
-
-"What's the matter, Uncle Lewis?" Helen asked, as the boy sulkily passed
-round the corner of the house and the old man, out of breath, paused at
-the steps.
-
-"Oh, Missy, you don't know what me'n' Mam' Lindy got to bear up under. We
-don't know how ter manage dat boy. Lindy right now is out'n 'er head
-wid worry. Buck Black come tol' us 'bout an hour ago dat Pete en some mo'
-triflin' niggers was down at de warehouse sassin' some mountain white
-men. Buck heard Pete say dat Johnson en his gang couldn't whip him ergin
-dout gittin' in trouble, en dey was in er inch of er big row when de
-marshal busted it up. Buck ain't no fool, fer a black man, Missy, en
-he told me'n' Lindy ef we don't manage ter git Pete out'n de company he
-keeps dat dem white men will sho string 'im up."
-
-"Yes, something has to be done, that's plain," said Helen,
-sympathetically. "I know Mam' Linda must be worrying, and I'll go down
-to see her this evening. It doesn't seem to me that a town like this is
-best for a boy like Pete. I'll speak to father about it, Uncle Lewis. It
-won't do to have Mammy bothered like this. It will kill her. She is not
-strong enough to stand it."
-
-"Oh, Missy," the old man said, "I wish you would try ter do some'n'.
-Me'n' Lindy is sho at de end er our rope."
-
-"Well, I promise you I'll do all I can, Uncle Lewis," Helen said, and,
-much relieved, the old negro trudged homeward.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-[Illustration: 9078]
-
-LOCAL institution in which "the gang" was more or less interested was
-known as the "Darley Club." It occupied the entire upper floor of
-a considerable building on the main street, and had been organized,
-primarily, by the older married men of the town to give the young men of
-the best families a better meeting-place than the bar-rooms and offices
-of the hotels. At first the older men looked in occasionally to see that
-the rather rigid rules of the institution were being kept. But men of
-middle-age and past, who have comfortable firesides, are not fond of
-the noisy gatherings of their original prototypes, and the Club was
-soon left to the management of the permanent president, Mr. Wade Tingle,
-editor of the _Headlight_.
-
-Wade endeavored, to the best of his genial nature, to enforce all rules,
-collect all dues, and impose all fines, but he wasn't really the man for
-the place. He accepted what cash was handed to him, trying to remember
-the names of the payers and amounts as he wrote his editorials,
-political notes, and social gossip, ending up at the end of each month
-with no money at all to pay the rent or the wages of the negro factotum.
-However, there was always an outlet from this embarrassment, for
-Wade had only to draw a long face as he met some of the well-to-do
-stay-at-homes and say that "club expenses were somehow running short,"
-and without question the shortage was made up. Wade had tried to be
-officially stern, too, on occasion. Once when Keith Gordon had violated
-what Wade termed club discipline, not to say club etiquette, Wade
-threatened to be severe. But it happened to be a point upon which there
-was a division of opinion, and Keith also belonged to "the gang." It had
-happened this way: Keith had a certain corner in the Club reading-room
-where he was wont to write his letters of an evening, and coming down
-after supper one night he discovered that the attendant had locked the
-door and gone off to supper. Keith was justly angry. He stood at the
-door for a few minutes, and then, being something of an athlete, he
-stepped back, made a run the width of the sidewalk, and broke the lock,
-left the door hanging on a single hinge, and went up and calmly wrote
-his letters. As has been intimated, Wade took a serious view of this
-violation of club dignity, his main contention being that Keith ought
-to have the lock repaired and the hinge replaced. However, Keith just
-as firmly stood on his rights, his contention being that a member of the
-Club in good standing could not be withheld from his rights by the mere
-carelessness of a negro or a twenty-five cent cast-iron lock. So it was
-that, in commemoration of the incident, the door remained without the
-lock and hinge for many a day.
-
-It was in this building that the grand ball in honor of Helen Warren's
-home-coming was to be given. During the entire preceding day Bob Smith
-and Keith Gordon worked like happy slaves. The floor had been roughened
-by roller-skating, and a carpenter with plane and sand-paper was
-smoothing it, Bob giving it its finishing touch by whittling sperm
-candles over it and rubbing in the shavings with the soles of his shoes
-as he pirouetted about, his right arm curved around an imaginary waist.
-The billiard-tables were pushed back against the wall, the ladies'
-dressing-rooms thoroughly scoured and put in order, and the lamps
-cleaned and trimmed. Keith had brought down from his home some
-fine oil-paintings, and these were hung appropriately. But Keith's
-_chef-d'ouvre_ of arrangement and decoration was a happy inspiration,
-and he was enjoining it on the initiated ones to keep it as a surprise
-for Helen. He had once heard her say that her favorite flower was the
-wild daisy, and as they were now in bloom, and grew in profusion in the
-fields around the town, Keith had ordered several wagon-loads of them
-gathered, and now the walls of the ballroom were fairly covered with
-them. Graceful festoons of the flowers hung from the ceiling, draped
-the doorways, and rose in beautiful mounds on the white-clothed
-refreshment-tables.
-
-As a special favor he admitted Carson Dwight in at the carefully guarded
-door at dusk on the evening of the ball, first drawing down the blinds
-and lighting the candles and lamps that his chum might have the full
-benefit of the scene as it would strike Helen on her arrival.
-
-"Isn't that simply superb?" he asked. "Do you reckon they gave her
-anything prettier while she was down there? I don't believe it, Carson.
-I think this is the dandiest room a girl ever tripped a toe in."
-
-"Yes, it's all right," Dwight said, admiringly. "It is really great, and
-she will appreciate it keenly. She is that way."
-
-"I think so myself," said Keith. "I've been nervous all day, though, old
-man. I've been watching every train."
-
-"Afraid the band wouldn't come?" asked Dwight.
-
-"No, those coons can be depended on; they will be down in full force
-with the best figure-caller in the South. No, I was afraid, though, that
-Helen might have written to that Augusta chump, and that he would come
-up. That certainly would give the thing cold feet."
-
-"Ah!" Carson exclaimed; "I see."
-
-"The dear girl wouldn't rub it in on us to that extent, old man," Keith
-said. "I know it now. She really may be engaged to him, and she may not,
-but she knows how we feel, and it's bully of her not to invite him. It
-would really have been a wet blanket to the whole business. We'd have
-to treat him decently, as a visitor, you know, but I'd rather have taken
-castor-oil for my part of it. All the gang except you were over to see
-her Sunday afternoon; why didn't you go?"
-
-"Oh, you know I live only next door, with an open gate between, and
-I thought I'd better give my place to you fellows who don't have my
-opportunity. I've already seen her. In fact, she ran over to see my
-mother yesterday."
-
-The ball was in full swing when Carson arrived that night. The street in
-front of the club was crowded with carriages, buggies, and livery-stable
-"hacks." The introductory grand march was in progress, and when Carson
-went to the improvised dressing-room in charge of Skelt to check his
-hat he found Garner standing before a mirror tugging at the lapels of an
-evening coat and trying to adjust a necktie which kept climbing higher
-than it should. Darley was just at the point in its post-bellum struggle
-where evening dress for men was a thing more of the luxurious past than
-the stern present, and Dwight readily saw that his partner had persuaded
-himself for once to don borrowed plumage.
-
-"What's the matter?" Carson asked, as he thrust his hat-check into the
-pocket of his immaculate white waistcoat.
-
-"Oh, the damn thing don't fit!" said Garner, in high disgust. "I know
-now that my father has a hump, or did have when he ordered this suit for
-his wedding-trip. The tailor who designed this _costeem de swaray_ tried
-to help him out, but he has transferred the hump to me by other means
-than heredity. Look how the back of it sticks out from my neck!"
-
-"That's because you twist your body to see it in the glass," said
-Carson, consolingly. "It's not so bad when you stand straight."
-
-"It's a case of not seeing others as they see you, eh?" Garner said,
-better satisfied. "I haven't taken a chew of tobacco to-night. I
-wouldn't splotch this shirt for the world. I couldn't spit farther than
-an inch with this collar on, anyway. She's holding the reel for me. I
-can't dance anything else, but I can go through that pretty well if I
-get at the end and watch the others. You'd better hurry up and see
-her card. There is a swell gang coming on the ten-o'clock train from
-Atlanta, and they all know her."
-
-It was during the interval following the third number on the programme
-that Carson met Helen promenading with Keith and offered her his arm.
-
-"Oh, isn't it simply superb?" she said, when Keith had bowed
-himself away and they had joined the other strollers round the big,
-flower-perfumed room. "Carson, really I actually cried for joy just now
-in the dressing-room. I declare I never want to go away from home again.
-I'll never have such devoted friends as these."
-
-"It is nice of you to look at it that way, Helen," he said, "after the
-gay time you have had in Augusta and other cities."
-
-"At least it is honest and sincere here at home," she answered,
-"while down there it is--well, full of strife, social competition, and
-jealousies. I really; got homesick and simply had to come back."
-
-"We are simply delighted to have you again," he said, almost fearing to
-look upon her, for in her exquisite evening gown and the proud poise of
-her head she seemed more beautiful and imperious, and farther removed
-from his hopes than he had thought her even in the darkest hours of her
-first refusal to condone his fatal offence.
-
-She was looking straight into his eyes with a thoughtful, questioning
-stare, when she said: "They all seem the same, Carson, except you. Bob
-Smith, Keith, and even Mr. Garner are just like I left them, but somehow
-you are altered. You look so much older, so much more serious. Is it
-politics that is weighing you down--making you worry?"
-
-"Well," he laughed, evasively, "politics is not exactly the easiest game
-in the world, and the bare fear that I may not succeed, after all, is
-enough to make a fellow of my temperament worry. It seems to be my last
-throw of the dice, Helen. My father will lose all faith in me if this
-does not go through."
-
-"Yes, I know it is serious," the girl said. "Keith and Mr. Garner
-have talked to me about it. They say they have never seen you so much
-absorbed in anything before. You really must win, Carson--you simply
-must!"
-
-"But this is no time to talk over sordid politics," he said, with a
-smile. "This is your party and it must be made delightful."
-
-"Oh, I have my worries, too," she said, gravely. "I felt a queer twinge
-of conscience to-night when all the servants came to see me before I
-left home. They were all so happy except Mam' Linda. She tried to act
-like the rest, but, Carson, her trouble about that worthless boy is
-actually killing the dear old woman. She has her pride, too, and it
-has been wounded to the quick. She was always proud of the fact that my
-father never had whipped one of his slaves. I've heard her boast of it a
-hundred times; and now that she no longer belongs to us in reality, and
-her only child was beaten so cruelly, she simply can't get over it."
-
-"I knew she felt that way," Dwight said, sympathetically.
-
-Helen's hand tightened unconsciously on his arm as they were passing
-by the corner containing the orchestra. "Do you know," she said, "Mam'
-Linda told me that of all the people who had been to see her since
-then that you had been the kindest, most thoughtful, the most helpful?
-Carson, that was very, very sweet of you."
-
-"I was only electioneering," he said, with a flush. "I was after Uncle
-Lewis's vote and Mam' Linda's influence."
-
-"No, you were not," Helen declared. "It was pure, unadulterated
-unselfishness on your part. You were sorry for her and for Uncle Lewis
-and even Pete, who certainly needed punishment of some sort for the way
-he's been conducting himself. Yes, it was only your good heart. I know
-that, for several persons have told me you have even gone so far as to
-let the affair hamper you in your political career. Oh, I know all about
-what your opponent is saying, and I know mountain people well enough to
-know you have given him a powerful weapon. They are terribly wrought
-up over the race troubles, and it would be easy enough for them to
-misunderstand your exact feeling. Oh, Carson, you must not let even Mam'
-Linda's trouble stand between you and your high aim. Taking up her cause
-will perhaps not do a bit of good, for no one person can solve so vital
-a problem as that is, and your agitation of it may wreck your last
-hope."
-
-"I've promised to keep my mouth shut, if Dan Willis and men of his
-sort will not stay right at my heels with their threats. My campaign
-managers--the gang, who hold a daily caucus at the den and lay down
-my rules of conduct--have exacted that much from me on the penalty of
-letting me go by the board if I disobey."
-
-"The dear boys!" Helen exclaimed. "I like every one of them, they are so
-loyal to you. The close friendship of you all for one another is simply
-beautiful."
-
-"Coming back to the inevitable Pete," Dwight remarked, a few minutes
-later. "I've been watching him since he was whipped, and I know he is in
-great danger of getting even more deeply into trouble. He has a stupidly
-resentful disposition, as many of his race have, and he is going around
-making surly threats about Johnson, Wiggin, and others. If he keeps that
-up and they get hold of it he will certainly get into serious trouble."
-
-"My father was speaking of that to-night," Helen said. "And he was
-thinking if there were any way of getting the boy away from his idle
-town associates that it might prevent trouble and ease Mam' Linda's
-mind."
-
-"I was thinking of that the other day when I saw Uncle Lewis searching
-for him among the idle negroes," said Carson; "and I have an idea."
-
-"Oh, you have? What is it?" Helen asked, eagerly.
-
-"Why, Pete always has seemed to like me and take my advice, and as there
-is, plenty of work on my farm for such a hand as he is I could give him
-a good place and wages over there where he'd be practically removed from
-his present associates."
-
-"Splendid, splendid!" Helen cried; "and will you do it?"
-
-"Why, certainly, and right away," Carson answered. "If you will have
-Mam' Linda send him down to me in the morning I'll give him some
-instructions and a good sharp talk, and I'll make my overseer at the
-farm put him to work."
-
-"Oh, it is splendid!" Helen declared. "It will be such good news for
-Mam' Linda. She'd rather have him work for you than any one in the
-world."
-
-"There comes Wade to claim his dance," Dwight said, suddenly; "and I
-must be off."
-
-"Where are you going?" she asked, almost regretfully.
-
-"To the office to work on political business--dozens and dozens of
-letters to answer. Then I'm coming back for my waltz with you. I
-sha'n't fail." And as he put on his hat and threaded his way through the
-whirling mass of dancers down to the street, he recalled with something
-of a shock that not once in their talk had he even _thought_ of his
-rival. He slowed up in the darkness and leaned against a wall. There
-was a strange sinking of his heart as he faced the grim reality that
-stretched out drearily before him. She was, no doubt, to be the wife of
-another man. He had lost her. She was not for him, though there in
-the glare of the ballroom, amid the sensuous strains of music, in the
-perfume of the flowers dying in her service, she had seemed as close to
-him in heart, soul, and sympathy as the night he and she--
-
-He had reached his office, a little one-story brick building in the row
-of lawyers' offices on the side street leading from the post-office to
-the courthouse, and he unlocked the door and went in and lighted the
-little murky lamp on his desk and pulled down a package of unanswered
-letters.
-
-Yes, he must work--work with that awful pain in his breast, the dry,
-tightening sensation in his throat, the maddening vision of her dazzling
-beauty and grace and sweetness before him. He dipped his pen, drew the
-paper towards him, and began to write: "My dear Sir,--In receiving the
-cordial assurances of your support in the campaign before me, I desire
-to thank you most heartily and to--"
-
-He laid the pen down and leaned back. "I can't do it, at least not
-to-night," he said. "Not while she is there looking like that and with
-my waltz to come, and yet it must be done. I've lost her, and I am only
-making it harder to bear. Yes, I must work--work!"
-
-The pen went into the ink again. On the still night air came the strains
-of music, the mellow, sing-song voice of the figure-caller in the
-"square" dance, the whir and patter of many feet.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-[Illustration: 9089]
-
-EAVING Carson Dwight, Wade Tingle, and Bob Smith chatting about the ball
-in the den the next morning, Garner went to the office, bit off a chew
-of tobacco, and plunged into work with a vigor which indicated that
-he was almost ashamed of his departure from his beaten track into the
-unusual fields of social gayety. He still wore the upright collar and
-white necktie of the night before, but the hitherto carefully guarded
-expanse of shirt-front was already in imminent danger of losing all that
-had once recommended it as a presentable garment.
-
-With his small hand well spread over the page of the book he was
-consulting, he had become oblivious to his surroundings when suddenly a
-man stood in the doorway. He was tall and gaunt and wore a broad-brimmed
-hat, a cotton checked shirt, jean trousers supported by a raw-hide belt,
-and a pair of tall boots which, as he stood fiercely eying Garner, he
-angrily lashed with his riding-whip. It was Dan Willis. His face was
-slightly flushed from drink, and his eyes had the glare even his best
-friends had learned to tear and tried to avoid.
-
-"Whar's that that dude pardner o' yourn?" he asked.
-
-"Oh, you mean Dwight!" Garner had had too much experience in the
-handling of men to change countenance over any sudden turn of affairs,
-either for or against his interests, and he had, also, acquired
-admirable skill in most effective temporizing. "Why, let me see, Dan,"
-he went on, after he had paused for fully a moment, carefully inspected
-the lines he was reading, frowned as if not quite satisfied therewith,
-and then slowly turned down a leaf. "Let me think. Oh, you want to see
-Carson! Sit down; take a chair."
-
-"I don't want to set down!" Willis thundered. "I want to see that damned
-dude, and I want to see him right off."
-
-"Oh, that's it!" said Garner. "You are in a _hurry!_" And then, from the
-rigid setting of his jaw, it was plain that the lawyer had decided on
-the best mode of handling the specimen glowering down upon him. "Oh yes,
-I remember now, Willis, that you were loaded up a few nights ago looking
-for that chap. Now, advice is cheap--that is, the sort I'm going to give
-you. Under ordinary circumstances I'd charge a fee for it. My advice to
-you is to straddle that horse of yours and get out of this town. You are
-looking for trouble--great, big, far-reaching trouble."
-
-"You hit the nail that pop, Bill Garner," the mountaineer snorted. "I'm
-expectin' to git trouble, or _give_ trouble, an' I hain't goin' to lose
-time nuther. This settlement was due several days ago, but got put off."
-
-"Look here, Willis"--Garner stood up facing him--"you may not be a fool,
-but you are acting powerfully like one. You are letting that measly
-little candidate for the legislature make a cat's-paw of you. That's
-what you're doing. He knows, if he can get up a shooting-scrap between
-you and my pardner over that negro-whipping business, it will turn a few
-mountain votes his way. If you get shot, Wiggin will have more charges
-to make; and if Carson was to get the worst of it, the boy would be
-clean out of the skunk's way. You and Wiggin are both in bad business."
-
-"Well, that's _my_ lookout!" the mountaineer growled, beside himself in
-rage. "Carson Dwight said I was with Johnson the night the gang came in
-and whipped them coons, and--"
-
-"Well, you _were_," said Garner, as suddenly as if he were browbeating a
-witness. "What's the use to lie about it?"
-
-"Lie--you say I--?"
-
-"I said I didn't _want_ you to lie about it," said Garner, calmly. "I
-know half the mob, and respect most of them. I have an idea that some of
-my own kinsfolk was along that night. They thought they were doing right
-and acting in the best interests of the community. That's neither here
-nor there. The men that were licked were negroes, and most of them bad
-ones at that, but when a big, strapping man of your stamp comes with
-blood in his eye and a hunk of metal on his hip, looking for the son
-of an old Confederate soldier, who is a Democratic candidate for the
-legislature, and a good all-round white citizen, why, I say that is the
-time to call a halt, and to call it out loud! I happen to know a few of
-the grand jury, and if there is trouble of a serious nature in this town
-to-day, I can personally testify to enough deliberation in your voice
-and eye this morning to jerk your neck out of joint."
-
-"What the hell do I care for you or your law?" Dan Willis snorted. "It's
-what that damned dude said about _me_ that he's got to swallow, and if
-he's in this town I'll find him. A fellow told me if he wasn't here he'd
-be in Keith Gordon's room. I don't know whar that is, but I kin find
-out." Turning abruptly, Willis strode out into the street again.
-
-"The devil certainly is to pay now," Garner said, with his deepest frown
-as he closed the law-book, thrust it back into its dusty niche in his
-bookcase, and put on his hat. "Carson is still up there with those boys,
-and that fellow may find him any minute. Carson won't take back a thing.
-He's as mad about the business as Willis is. I wonder if I can possibly
-manage to keep them apart."
-
-On his way to the den he met Pole Baker standing on the corner of the
-street by a load of wood, which Pole had brought in to sell. Hurriedly,
-Garner explained the situation, ending by asking the farmer if he could
-see any way of getting Willis out of town.
-
-"I couldn't work him myself," Baker said, "fer the dern skunk hain't any
-more use fer me than I have fer him, but I reckon I kin put some of his
-pals onto the job."
-
-"Well, go ahead, Pole," Garner urged. "I'll run up to the room and try
-to detain Carson. For all you do, don't let Willis come up there."
-
-Garner found the young men still in the den chatting about the ball and
-Carson's campaign.
-
-Wade Tingle sat at the table with several sheets of paper before him,
-upon which, in a big, reporter's hand, he had been writing a glowing
-account of "the greatest social event" in the history of the town.
-
-"I've got a corking write-up, Bill," he said, enthusiastically. "I've
-just been reading it to the gang. It is immense. Miss Helen sent me a
-full memorandum of what the girls wore, and, for a green hand, I think I
-have dressed 'em up all right."
-
-"The only criticism I made on it, Garner," spoke up Keith from his bed
-in the corner, where he lay fully dressed, "is that Wade has ended all
-of Helen's descriptions by adding, 'and diamonds.' I'll swear I'm
-no critic of style in writing, but that eternal 'and diamonds, and
-diamonds, and diamonds,' at the end of every paragraph, sounds so
-monotonous that it gets funny. He even had Miss Sally Ware's plain black
-outfit tipped off with 'and diamonds.'"
-
-"Well, I look at it this way, Bill," Wade said, earnestly, as Garner sat
-down, "Of course, the girls who had them on would not like to see them
-left out, for they are nice things to have, and, on the other hand,
-those who were short in that direction would feel sorter out of it."
-
-"I think if he had just written 'jewels' once in awhile," Keith said,
-"it would sound all right, and leave something to the imagination."
-
-"That might help," Garner said, his troubled glance on Carson's rather
-grave face; "but see that you don't write it 'jewelry.'"
-
-"Well, I'll accept the amendment," Wade said, as he began to scratch
-his manuscript and rewrite.
-
-Carson Dwight stood up. "Did you leave the office open?" he asked
-Garner. "I've got to shape up that Holcolm deed and consult the
-records."
-
-"Let it go for a while. I want to look it over first," Garner said,
-rather suddenly. "Sit down. I want to talk to you about the--the race.
-You've got a ticklish proposition before you, old boy, and I'd like to
-see you put it through."
-
-"Hear, hear!" cried Keith, sitting up on the edge of his bed. "Balls and
-what girls wear belong to the regular run of life, but when the chief
-of the gang is about to be beaten by a scoundrel who will hesitate at
-nothing, it's time to be wide awake."
-
-"That's it," said Garner, his brow ruffled, his ear open to sounds
-without, his uneasy eyes on the group around him. And for several
-minutes he held them where they sat, listening to his wise and observant
-views of the matter in hand. Suddenly, while he was in the midst of a
-remark, a foot-fall sounded on the long passage without. It was heavy,
-loud, and striding. Garner paused, rose, went to the bureau, and from
-the top drawer took out a revolver he always kept either there or in his
-desk at the office. There was a firm whiteness about his lips which was
-new to his friends.
-
-"Carson," he said, "have you got your gun?" and he stood staring at the
-doorway.
-
-A shadow fell on the floor; a man entered. It was Pole Baker, and he
-looked around him in surprise, his inquiring stare on Garner's unwonted
-mien and revolver.
-
-"Oh, it's you!" Garner exclaimed. "Ah, I thought--"
-
-"Yes, I come to tell you that--" Baker hesitated, as if uncertain
-whether he was betraying confidence, and then catching Garner's warning
-glance, he said, non-committally: "Say, Bill, that feller you and me was
-talkin' about has jest gone home. I reckon you won't get yore money out
-of him to-day."
-
-"Oh, well, it was a small matter, anyway, Pole," Garner said, in a tone
-of appreciative relief, as he put the revolver back in the drawer and
-closed it. "I'll mention it to him the next time he's in town."
-
-"Say, what was the matter with you just now, Garner?" Wade Tingle asked
-over the top of his manuscript. "I thought you were going to ask Carson
-to fight a duel."
-
-But with his hand on Dwight's arm Garner was moving to the door. "Come
-on, lot's get to work," he said, with a deep breath and a grateful side
-glance at Baker.
-
-In front of the office one of Carson's farm wagons drawn by a pair of
-mules was standing. Tom Hill-yer, Carson's overseer and general manager,
-sat on the seat, and behind him stood Pete Warren, ready for his stay in
-the country.
-
-"Miss Helen's made quick work of it, I see," Carson remarked. "She's
-determined to get that rascal out of temptation."
-
-"You ought to give him a sharp talking to," said Garner. "He's got
-entirely too much lip for his own good. Skelt told me this morning that
-if Pete doesn't dry up some of that gang will hang him before he is a
-month older. He doesn't know any better, and means nothing by it, but he
-has already made open threats against Johnson and Willis. You understand
-those men well enough to know that in such times as these a negro can't
-do that with impunity."
-
-"I agree with you, and I'll stop and speak to him now."
-
-When Carson came in and sat down at his desk, a few moments later,
-Garner looked across at him and smiled.
-
-"You certainly let him off easy," he said. "I could have thrown a
-Christmas turkey down the scamp's throat through that grin of his. I saw
-you run your hand in your pocket and knew he was bleeding you."
-
-"Oh, well, I reckon I'm a failure at that sort of thing," Dwight
-admitted, with a sheepish smile. "I started in by saying that he must
-not be so foolhardy as to make open threats against any of those men,
-and he said: 'Looky here, Marse Carson, dem white rapscallions cut
-gashes in my body deep enough ter plant corn in, an' I ain't gwine ter
-love 'em fer it. _You_ wouldn't, you know you wouldn't.'"
-
-"And he had you there," Garner said, grimly. "Well, they may say what
-they please up North about our great problem, but nothing but time and
-the good Lord can solve it. You and I can tell that negro to keep his
-mouth shut from sunup till sun-down, but I happen to know that he had a
-remote white ancestor that was the proudest, hardest fighter that ever
-swung a sword. Some of the rampant agitators say that deportation is
-the only solution. Huh! if you deported a lot of full-blood blacks along
-with such chaps as this one, it would be only a short time before the
-yellow ones would have the rest in bondage, and so history would be
-going backward instead of forward. I guess it's going forward right now
-if we only had the patience to see it that way."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-[Illustration: 9098]
-
-|NE beautiful morning near the first of June, as Carson was strolling on
-the upper veranda at home, waiting for the breakfast-bell, Keith Gordon
-came by on his horse on his way to town.
-
-"Heard the news?" he called out, as he reined in at the gate and leaned
-on the neck of his mount.
-
-"No; what's up?" Carson asked, and as he spoke he saw Helen Warren
-emerge from the front door of her father's house and step down among the
-dew-wet rose-bushes that bordered the brick walk.
-
-"Horrible enough in all reason," Keith replied. "There's been a
-cold-blooded murder over near your farm. Abe Johnson, who led that mob,
-you know, and his wife were killed by some negro with an axe. The whole
-country is up in arms and crazy with excitement."
-
-"Wait, I'll come right down," Carson said, and he disappeared into
-the house. And when he came out a moment later he found Helen on the
-sidewalk talking to Keith, and from her grave face he knew she had
-overheard what had been said.
-
-"Isn't it awful?" she said to Carson, as he came out at the gate. "Of
-course, it is the continuation of the trouble here in town."
-
-"How do they know a negro did it?" Carson asked, obeying the natural
-tendency of a lawyer to get at the facts.
-
-"It seems," answered Gordon, "that Mrs. Johnson lived barely long enough
-after the neighbors got there to say that it was done by a mulatto, as
-well as she could see in the darkness. In their fury, the people are
-roughly handling every yellow negro in the neighborhood. They say the
-darkies are all hiding out in the woods and mountains."
-
-Then the conversation paused, for old Uncle Lewis, who was at work with
-a pair of garden-sheafs behind some rose-bushes close by, uttered a
-groan and, wide-eyed and startled, came towards them.
-
-"It's awful, awful, awful!" they heard him say. "Oh, my Gawd, have
-mercy!"
-
-"Why, Uncle Lewis, what's the matter?" Helen asked, in sudden concern
-and wonder over his manner and tone.
-
-"Oh, missy, missy!" he groaned, as he shook his head despondently. "My
-boy over dar 'mongst 'em right now. Oh, my Lawd! I know what dem white
-folks gwine ter say fust thing, kase Pete didn't had no mo' sense 'an
-ter--"
-
-"Stop, Lewis!" Carson said, sharply. "Don't be the first to implicate
-your own son in a matter as serious as this is."
-
-"I ain't, marster!" the old man groaned, "but I know dem white folks
-done it 'fo' dis."
-
-"I'm afraid you are right, Lewis," Keith said, sympathetically. "He may
-be absolutely innocent, but, since his trouble with that mob, Pete has
-really talked too much. Well, I must be going."
-
-As Keith was riding away, old Lewis, muttering softly to himself and
-groaning, turned towards the house.
-
-"Where are you going?" Helen called out, as she still lingered beside
-Carson.
-
-"I'm gwine try to keep Linda fum hearin' it right now," he said. "Ef
-Pete git in it, missy, it gwine ter kill yo' old mammy."
-
-"I'm afraid it will," Helen said. "Do what you can, Uncle Lewis. I'll
-be down to see her in a moment." As the old man tottered away, Helen
-looked up and caught Carson's troubled glance.
-
-"I wish I were a man," she said.
-
-"Why?" he inquired.
-
-"Because I'd take a strong stand here in the South for law and order
-at any cost. We have a good example in this very thing of what our
-condition means. Pete may be innocent, and no doubt is, for I don't
-believe he would do a thing like that no matter what the provocation,
-and yet he hasn't any sort of chance to prove it."
-
-"You are right," Carson said. "At such a time they would lynch him, if
-for nothing else than that he had dared to threaten the murdered man."
-
-"Poor, poor old mammy!" sighed Helen. "Oh, it is awful to think of what
-she will suffer if--if--Carson, do you really think Pete is in actual
-danger?" Dwight hesitated for a moment, and then he met her stare
-frankly.
-
-"We may as well face the truth and be done with it," he said. "No negro
-will be safe over there now, and Pete, I am sorry to say, least of all."
-
-"If he is guilty he may run away," she said, shortsightedly.
-
-"If he's guilty we don't _want_ him to get away," Carson said, firmly.
-"But I really don't think he had anything to do with it."
-
-Helen sighed. They had stepped back to the open gate, and there they
-paused side by side. "How discouraging life is!" she said. "Carson, in
-planning to get Pete over there, you and I were acting on our purest,
-noblest impulses, and yet the outcome of our efforts may be the gravest
-disaster."
-
-"Yes, it seems that way," he responded, gloomily; "but we must try to
-look on the bright side and hope for the best."
-
-On parting with Helen, Carson went into the big, old-fashioned
-dining-room, and after hurriedly drinking a cup of coffee he went down
-to his office. Along the main thoroughfare, on the street comers, and in
-front of the stores he found little groups of men with grave faces, all
-discussing the tragedy. More than once in passing he heard Pete's name
-mentioned, and for fear of being questioned as to what he thought about
-it he hurried on. Garner was an early riser, and he found him at his
-desk writing letters.
-
-"Well, from all accounts," Garner said, "your man Friday seems to be in
-a ticklish place over there, innocent or not--that is, if he hasn't had
-the sense to skip out."
-
-"Somehow, I don't think Pete is guilty," Carson said, as he sank into
-his big chair. "He's not that stamp of negro."
-
-"Well, I haven't made up my mind on that score," the other remarked. "Up
-to the time he left here he seemed really harmless enough, but we don't
-know what may have taken place since then between him and Johnson. Funny
-we didn't think of the danger of sticking match to tinder like that. I
-admit I was in favor of sending him. Miss Helen was so pleased over it,
-too. I met her the other day at the post-office and she was telling me,
-with absolute delight, that Pete was doing well over there, working like
-an old-time cornfield darky, and behaving himself. Now, I suppose, she
-will be terribly upset."
-
-Carson sighed. "We blame the mountain people, in times of excitement,
-for acting rashly, and yet right here in this quiet town half the
-citizens have already made up their minds that Pete committed the crime.
-Think of it, Garner!"
-
-"Well, you see, it's pretty hard to imagine who _else_ did it," Garner
-declared.
-
-"I don't agree with you," disputed Carson, warmly; "when there are half
-a dozen negroes who were whipped just as Pete was and who have
-horrible characters. There's Sam Dudlow, the worst negro I ever saw,
-an ex-convict, and as full of devilment as an egg is of meat. I saw his
-scowling face the next day after he was whipped, and I never want to see
-it again. I'd hate to meet him in the dark, unarmed. He wasn't making
-open threats, as Pete was, but I'll bet he would have handled Johnson
-or Willis roughly if he had met either of them alone and got the
-advantage."
-
-"Well, we are not trying the case," Garner said, dryly; "if we are,
-I don't know where the fees are to come from. Getting money out of an
-imaginary case is too much like a lawyer's first year under the shadow
-of his shingle."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-[Illustration: 9103]
-
-IMMEDIATELY on parting with Carson, Helen went down to Linda's cottage.
-Lewis was leaning over the little, low fence talking to a negro, who
-walked on as she drew near.
-
-"Where is Mam' Linda?" she asked, guardedly. "In de house, missy," Lewis
-answered, pulling off his old slouch hat and wadding it tightly in his
-fingers. "She 'ain't heard nothin' yit. Jim was des tellin' me er whole
-string er talk folks was havin' down on de street; but I told 'im not
-to let 'er hear it. Oh, missy, it gwine ter kill 'er. She cayn't stan' it.
-Des no longer 'n las' night she was settin' in dat do' talkin' 'bout
-how happy she was to hear Pete was doin' so well over on Marse Carson's
-place. She said she never would forget young marster's kindness to er
-old nigger'oman, en now"--the old man spread out his hands in apathetic
-gesture before him--"now you see what it come to!"
-
-"But nothing serious has really happened to Pete yet," Helen had started
-to say, when the old man stopped her.
-
-"Hush, honey, she comin'!"
-
-There was a sound of a footstep in the cottage. Linda appeared in
-the doorway, and with a clouded face and disturbed manner invited her
-mistress into the cottage, placing a chair for the young lady, and
-dusting the bottom of it with her apron.
-
-"How do you feel this morning, mammy?" Helen asked, as she sat down.
-
-"I'm well emough in my _body_, honey"--the old woman's face was
-averted--"but dat ain't all ter a pusson in dis life. Ef des my body
-was all I had, I wouldn't be so bad off, but it's my _mind_, honey. I'm
-worried 'bout dat boy ergin. I had bad dreams las' night, en thoo 'em
-all he seemed ter be in some trouble. Den when I woke dis mawnin' en
-tried ter think 'twas only des er dream, I ain't satisfied wid de way all
-of um act. Lewis look quar out'n de eyes, en everybody dat pass erlong
-hatter stop en lead Lewis off down de fence ter talk. I ain't no fool,
-honey! I notice things when dey ain't natcherl. Den here you come 'fo'
-yo' breakfust-time. I've watched you, chile, sence you was in de cradle
-en know every bat er yo' sweet eyes. Oh, honey"--Linda suddenly sat down
-and covered her face with her hands, pressing them firmly in--"honey,"
-she muttered, "suppen's done gone wrong. I've knowed it all dis mawnin'
-en I'm actually afeard ter ax youall ter tell me. I--can't think of but
-one thing, I'm so muddled up, en dat is dat my boy done thowed up his
-work en gone away off somers wid bad company; en yit, honey"---she
-now rocked herself back and forth as if in torture and finished with a
-steady stare into Helen's face--"dat cayn't be it. Dat ain't bad ernough
-ter mek Lewis act like he is, en--en--well, honey, you might es well
-come out wid it. I've had trouble, en I kin have mo'."
-
-Helen sat pale and undecided, unable to formulate any adequate plan of
-procedure. At this juncture Lewis leaned in the doorway, and, as his
-wife's back was towards him, he could not see her face.
-
-"I want ter step down-town er minute, Lindy," he said. "I'll be right
-back. I des want ter go ter de sto'. We're out er coffee, en--"
-
-Linda suddenly turned her dark, agonized face upon him. "You are not
-goin' till you tell me what is gone wrong wid my child," she said.
-"What de matter wid Pete, Lewis?"
-
-The old man's surprised glance wavered between his Wife's face and
-Helen's. "Why, Lindy, who say--" he feebly began.
-
-But she stopped him with a gesture at once impatient and full of fear.
-"Tell me!" she said, firmly--"tell me!"
-
-Lewis shambled into the cottage and stood over her, a magnificent
-specimen of the manhood of his race. Helen's eyes were blinded by tears
-she could hot restrain.
-
-"'Tain't tiothiri', Lindy, 'pon my word 'tain't nothin' but dis," he
-said, gently. "Dar's been trouble over near Marse Carson's farm, but not
-one soul is done say Pete was in it--_not one soul_."
-
-"What sort o' trouble?" Linda pursued.
-
-"Er man en his wife was killed over dar in baid last night."
-
-"What man en woman?" Linda asked, her mouth falling open in suspense,
-her thick lip hanging.
-
-"Abe Johnson en his wife."
-
-Linda leaned forward, her hands locked like things of iron between her
-knees. "Who done it, Lewis?--who killed um?" she gasped.
-
-"Nobody knows dat yit, Lindy. Mrs. Johnson lived er little while after
-de neighbors come, en she said it was er--she said it was er yaller
-nigger, en--en--" He went no further, being at the end of his diplomacy,
-and simply stood before her helplessly twisting his hat in his hands.
-The room was very still. Helen wondered if her own heart had stopped
-beating, so tense and strained was her emotion. Linda sat bent forward
-for a moment; they saw her raise her hands to her head, press them there
-convulsively, and then she groaned.
-
-"Miz Johnson say it was a yaller nigger!" she moaned. "Oh, my Gawd!"
-
-"Yes, but what dat, 'oman?" Lewis demanded in assumed sharpness of tone.
-"Dar's oodlin's en oodlin's er yaller niggers over dar."
-
-"Dey ain't none of 'em been whipped by de daid man, 'cepin' my boy."
-Linda was now staring straight at him. "None of 'em never made no
-threats but Pete. Dey'll kill 'im--" She shuddered and her voice
-fell away into a prolonged sob. "You hear me? Dey'll hang my po' baby
-boy--hang 'im--_hang_ 'im!"
-
-Linda suddenly rose to her full height and stood glowering upon them,
-her face dark and full of passion and grief combined. She raised her
-hands and held them straight upward.
-
-"I want ter curse Gawd!" she cried. "You hear me? I ain't done nothin'
-ter deserve dis here thing I've been er patient slave of white folks, en
-my mammy an' daddy was 'fo' me. I've acted right en done my duty ter dem
-what owned me, en--en now I face dis. I hear my onliest child beggin'
-fer um to spare 'im en listen ter 'im. I hear 'im beggin' ter see his
-old mammy 'fo' dey kill 'im. I see 'em drag-gin' 'im off wid er rope
-roun'--" With a shriek the woman fell face downward on the floor. As if
-under the influence of a terrible nightmare, Helen bent over her. She
-was insensible. Without a word, Lewis lifted her in his arms and bore
-her to a bed in the corner.
-
-"Dis gwine ter kill yo' old mammy, honey," he gulped. "She ain't never
-gwine ter git up fum under it--never in dis world."
-
-But Helen, with womanly presence of mind, had dampened her handkerchief
-in some water and was gently stroking the dark face with it. After a
-moment Linda drew a deep, lingering breath and opened her eyes.
-
-"Lewis," was her first thought, "go try en find out all you kin. I'm
-gwine lie here en pray Gawd ter be merciful. I said I'd curse 'Im, but
-I won't. He my mainstay. I _got_ ter trust 'Im. Ef He fail me I'm lost.
-Oh, honey, yo' old mammy never axed you many favors; stay here wid 'er en
-pray--pray wid all yo' might ter let dis cup pass. Oh, Gawd, don't
-let 'em!--_don't_ let 'em! De po' boy didn't do it. He wouldn't harm a
-kitten. He talked too much, case he was smartin' under his whippin', but
-dat was all!"
-
-Motioning to Lewis to leave them alone, Helen sat down on the edge of
-the bed and put her arm round Linda's shoulders, but the old woman rose
-and went to the door and closed it, then she came back and stood by
-Helen in the half-darkness that now filled the room.
-
-"I want you ter git down here by my baid en pray fer me, honey," she
-said. "Seem ter me lak de Lawd always have listen ter white folks mo'
-den de black, anyway, en I want you ter beg 'Im ter spare po' li'l'
-foolish Pete des dis time--_des dis once_." Kneeling by the bed, Helen
-covered her wet face with her hands. Linda knelt beside her, and Helen
-prayed aloud, her clear, sweet voice ringing through the still room.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-[Illustration: 9109]
-
-N Carson Dwight's farm, as the place was not particularly well kept,
-the negro hands lived in dismantled log-cabins scattered here and there
-about the fields, or in the edge of the woods surrounding the place. In
-one of these, at the overseer's suggestion, Pete had installed himself,
-his household effects consisting only of a straw mattress thrown on the
-puncheon floor and a few cooking utensils for use over the big fireplace
-of the mud-and-log chimney.
-
-Here he was sleeping on the night of the tragedy which had stirred the
-country-side into a white heat of race hatred. He had spent the first
-half of the night at a negro dance, two miles away, at a farm, and
-was much elated by finding that he had attracted marked attention and
-feminine favor, which was due to the fact that he was looked upon by the
-country blacks as something out of the usual run--a town darky with a
-glib tongue and many other accomplishments, and a negro, too, as Pete
-assured them, who stood high in the favor of his master, whose name
-carried weight wherever it was mentioned.
-
-Shortly after dawn Pete was still sleeping soundly, as was his habit
-after a night of pleasure, when his door was rudely shaken.
-
-"Pete Warren! Pete Warren!" a voice called out sharply. "Wake up in dar;
-wake up, I tell you!"
-
-There was no response--no sound came from within the cabin except the
-deep respiration of the sleeper. The door was shaken again, and then,
-as it was not locked, and slightly ajar, the little old negro man on the
-outside pushed the shutter open and entered, stalking across the floor
-to where Pete lay.
-
-"Wake up here, you fool!" he said, as he bent and shook Pete roughly.
-"Wake up, ef you know what good fer you."
-
-Pete turned over; his snoring broke into little gasps. He opened his
-eyes, stared inquiringly for an instant, and then his eyelids began to
-close drowsily.
-
-"Looky here!" He was roughly handled again by the black hand on his
-shoulder. "You young fool, you dance all night till you cayn't keep yo'
-eyes open in de day-time, but ef you don't git er move on you en light
-out er dis cabin you'll dance yo' last jig wid nothin' under yo' feet
-but wind. It'll be er game er frog in de middle en you be de frog."
-
-"What dat?--what dat you givin' me, Uncle Richmond?" Pete was now awake
-and sitting bolt upright on the mattress.
-
-"Huh, I come ter tell you, boy, dat you 'bout ter git in trouble, en,
-fer all I know, de biggest you ever had in all yo' bo'n days."
-
-"Huh, you say I is, Uncle Richmond?" Pete exclaimed, incredulously.
-"What wrong wid me?"
-
-The old man stepped back till he could look through the cabin door over
-the fields upon which the first streaks of daylight were falling in
-grayish, misty splotches.
-
-"Pete," he said, "somebody done slip in Abe Johnson's house en brain him
-en his wife wid er axe."
-
-"Huh, you don't say!" Pete stared in sleepy astonishment. "When dat
-happen, Uncle Richmond?"
-
-"Las' night, er towards mawnin'," the old man said. "Ham Black come
-en toi' me. He say we better all hide out; it gwine ter be de
-biggestm 'cite-ment ever heard of in dese mountains; but, Pete, _you_ de
-main one ter look out--you, you!"
-
-"Me! Huh, what you say dat fer, Uncle Rich'?"
-
-"'Ca'se dey gwine ter look fer you de fus one, Pete. You sho is been
-talkin' too much out yo' mouf 'bout dat whippin' Johnson done give you
-en Sam Dudlow, en de res' um in town dat night. Ham tol' me ter come
-warn you ter hide out, en dat quick. Ham say he know in reason you
-didn't do it, 'ca'se, he say, yo' bark is wuss'n yo' bite. Ham say he
-bet 'twas done by some nigger dat didn't talk so much. Ham say he mighty
-nigh sho Sam Dudlow done it, 'ca'se Sam met Abe Johnson in de big road
-yisterday en Johnson cussed 'im en lashed at 'im wid er whip. Ham say
-dat nigger come on ter de sto' lookin' lak er devil in men's clothes.
-But he didn't say nothin' even den. Look lak he was des lyin' low bidin'
-his time."
-
-Pete got up and began to dress himself with the unimaginative disregard
-for danger that is characteristic of his race.
-
-"I bet, myse'f, Sam done it," he said, reflectively.
-
-"He's er bad yaller nigger, Uncle Richmond, en ever since Johnson en Dan
-Willis larruped we-all, he's been sulkin' en growlin'. But es you say,
-Uncle Rich', he didn't talk out open. He lay low."
-
-"Dat don't mek no diffunce, boy," the old black man went on, earnestly;
-"you git out'n here in er hurry en mek er break fer dem woods. Even den
-I doubt ef dat gwine ter save yo' skin,'ca'se Dan Willis got er pair er
-blood-hounds dat kin smell nigger tracks thoo er ten-inch snow."
-
-"Huh, I say, Uncle Richmond, you don't know me," Pete said. "You don't
-know me, ef you 'low I'm gwine ter run fum dese white men. I 'ain't
-been nigh dat Abe Johnson's house--not even cross his line er fence. I
-promised Marse Carson Dwight not ter go nigh 'im, en--en I promised 'im
-ter let up on my gab out here, en I done dat, too. No, suh, Unc' Rich',
-you git somebody else ter run yo' foot-race. I'm gwine ter cook my
-breakfust lak I always do en den go out ter my sprouts dat hatter be
-grubbed. I got my task ter do, rain er shine."
-
-"Look here, boy," the old man's blue-black eyes gleamed as he stared at
-Pete. "I know yo' mammy en daddy, en I like um. Dey good black folks er
-de ol' stripe, en always was friendly ter me, en I don't like ter see
-you in dis mess. I tell you, I'm er old man. I know how white men act
-in er case like dis--dey don't have one bit er pity er reason. Dey will
-kill you sho. Dey'd er been here 'fo' dis, but dey gittin' together.
-Listen! Hear dem hawns en yellin'?--dat at Wilson's sto'. Dey will be
-here soon. I don't want ter stan' here en argue wid you. I 'ain't had
-nothin' ter do wid it, but dey would saddle some of it onto me ef dey
-found out I come here ter warn you. Hurry up, boy."
-
-"I ain't gwine ter do it, Uncle Rich'," Pete declared, firmly, and with
-a grave face. "You are er old man, but you ain't givin' me good advice.
-Ef I run, dey would say I was guilty sho', en den, es you say, de dogs
-could track me down, anyway."
-
-The boy's logic seemed unassailable. The piercing, beadlike eyes of the
-old man flickered. "Well," he said, "I done all I could. I'm gwine move
-on. Even now, dey may know I come here at dis early time, en mix me
-up in it. Good-bye. I hope fer Mammy Lindy's sake dat dey will let you
-off--I do sho."
-
-Left alone, Pete went out to the edge of the wood behind his cabin and
-gathered up some sticks, leaves, and pieces of bark that had fallen from
-the decaying boughs of the trees, and brought them into the cabin and
-deposited them on the broad stone hearth. Then he uncovered the coals
-he had the night before buried in the ashes, and made a fire for the
-preparation of his simple breakfast. He had a sharp sense of animal
-hunger, which was due to his long walk to and from the dance and the
-fact that he was bodily sound and vigorous. He took as much fresh-ground
-corn-meal as his hands would hold from a tow bag in a corner of the room
-and put it into a tin pan. To this he added a cup of water and a bit of
-salt, stirring it with his hand till it was well mixed. He then deftly
-formed it into a pone, and, wrapping it in a clean husk of corn, he
-deposited it in the hot ashes, covering it well with live coals. Then he
-made his coffee, being careful that the water in the pot did not rise
-as high as the point near the spout where the vessel leaked. Next he
-unwrapped a strip of "streak o' lean streak o' fat" bacon, and with
-his pocket-knife sliced some of it into a frying-pan already hot. These
-things accomplished, he had only to wait a few minutes for the heat to
-do its work, and he stepped back and stood in the doorway.
-
-Far across the meadow, now under the slanting rays of the sun, he saw
-old Uncle Richmond, bowlegged and short, waddling along through the dewy
-grass and weeds, his head bowed, his long arms swinging at his sides.
-
-"Huh!" was Pete's slow comment, "so somebody done already settled Abe
-Johnson's hash. I know in reason it was Sam Dudlow, en I reckon ef dat
-rampacious gang er white men lays hands on 'im--ef dey lays hands on
- 'im--" He was recalling certain details of the recent riots in Atlanta,
-and an unconscious shudder passed over him. "Well," he continued to
-reflect, "Abe Johnson was a hard man on black folks, but his wife was
-er downright good 'oman. Ever'body say she was, en she _was_. It was a
-gre't pity ter kill her dat way, but I reckon Sam was afeard she'd
-tell it on 'im en had ter kill um bofe. Yes, Miz Johnson was er good
-'oman--good ter niggers. She fed lots of 'em behind dat man's back, en
-wished 'em well; en now, po', po' 'oman!"
-
-Pete went back to the fireplace and with the blade of his knife turned
-the curling white and brown strips of bacon, and with the toe of his
-coarse, worn shoe pushed fresher coals against his coffee-pot. Then for
-a moment he stood gravely looking at the fire.
-
-"Well," he mused, with a shrugging of his shoulders. "I wish des _one
-thing_, I wish Marse Carson was here. He wouldn't let 'em tech me. He's
-de best en smartest lawyer in Georgia, en he would tell 'em what er lot
-er fools dey was ter say I done it, when I was right dar'n my baid. My!
-dat bacon smell good! I wish I had er few fresh hen aigs ter drap in dat
-brown grease. Huh! it make my mouf water."
-
-There was no table in the room, and so when he had taken up his
-breakfast he sat down on the floor and ate it with supreme relish.
-Through all the meal, however, in spite of the arguments he was mentally
-producing, there were far under the crust of his being certain elemental
-promptings towards fear and self-preservation.
-
-"Well, dar's one thing," he mused. "Marse Hillyer done laid me out my
-task ter do in de old fiel' en I ain't ergoin' to shirk it,'ca'se Marse
-Carson gwine ter ax 'im, when he go in town, how I'm gittin' on, en I
-wants er good repo't. No, I ain't goin' ter shirk it, ef all de dogs en
-white men in de county come yelpin' on de hunt for Sam Dudlow."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-[Illustration: 9116]
-
-IS breakfast over, Pete shouldered his grubbing-hoe, an implement shaped
-like an adze, and made his way through the dewy undergrowth of the wood
-to an open field an eighth of a mile from his cabin. There he set to
-work on what was considered by farmers the hardest labor connected with
-the cultivation of the soil. It consisted of partly digging and partly
-pulling out by the roots the stout young bushes which infested the
-neglected old fields.
-
-Pete was hard at work in the corner of a ten-rail worm-fence, when,
-hearing a sound in the wood, which sloped down from a rocky hill
-quite near him, he saw a farmer, who lived in the neighborhood, pause
-suddenly, even in a startled manner, and stare steadily at him.
-
-"Oh!" Pete heard him exclaim; "why, you are Carson Dwight's new man,
-ain't you, from Darley?"
-
-"Yes, suh, dat me," the negro replied. "Mr. Hillyer, de overseer fer
-my boss, set me on dis yer job. I want ter clean it up ter de branch by
-Sadday."
-
-"Huh!" The man approached nearer, eying the negro closely from head to
-foot, his glance resting longer on Pete's hip-pocket than anywhere else.
-"Huh! I heard down at the store just now that you'd left--throwed up
-your job, I mean--an' gone clean off."
-
-"No, I hain't throwed up no job," the negro said, his slow intelligence
-groping for the possible cause of such a report. "I been right here
-since my boss sent me over, en I'm gwine stay lessen he sen' fer me
-ter tek care o' his hosses in town. I reckon you heard er Marse Carson
-Dwight's fine drivin' stock." The farmer pulled his long brown beard,
-his eyes still on Pete's face; it was as if he had not caught the boy's
-last remark.
-
-"They said down at the store that you left last night, after--that you
-went off last night. A man said he seed you at the nigger blow-out on
-Hilton's farm about one o'clock, and that after it was over you turned
-towards--I don't know--I'm just tellin' you what they said down at the
-store."
-
-"I _was_ at dat shindig," Pete said. "I walked fum here dar en back
-ergin."
-
-"Huh, well"--the farmer's face took on a shrewd expression--"I must
-move on. I'm lookin' fer a brown cow with a white tail, an' blaze on 'er
-face." As the man disappeared in the wood, Pete was conscious of a
-sense of vague uneasiness which somehow seemed to be a sort of augmented
-recurrence of the feeling left by the warning of his early visitor.
-
-"Dat white man certainly act curi's," Pete mused, as he leaned on
-the handle of his hoe and stared at the spot where the farmer had
-disappeared in the woods. "I'll bet my hat he been thinkin', lak Uncle
-Rich' said dey would, dat I had er hand in dat bloody business. Po'
-Miz Johnson--I reckon dey layin' 'er out now. She certney was good. I
-remember how she tol' me at de spring de day I come here ter try en be a
-good, steady boy en not mek dem white men pounce on me ergin. Po' 'oman!
-Seem lak er gre't pity. I reckon Abe Johnson got what was comin' ter
- 'im, but it look lak even Sam Dudlow wouldn't er struck dat good'oman
-down. Maybe he thought he had ter--maybe she cornered 'im; but I dunno;
-he's er tough nigger--de toughest I ever run ercross, en I've seed er
-lots um."
-
-Pete leaned on the fence, wiped his perspiring brow with his bare hand,
-snapped his fingers like a whip to rid them of the drops of sweat, and
-allowed his thoughts to merge into the darker view of the situation. He
-was really not much afraid. Under grave danger, a negro has not so great
-a concern over death as a white man, because he is not endowed with
-sufficient intelligence to grasp its full import, and yet to-day Pete
-was feeling unusual qualms of unrest.
-
-"Dar's one thing sho," he finally concluded; "dat white man looked
-powerful funny when he seed me, en he said he heard I'd run off. I'll
-bet my hat he's makin' a bee-line fer dat sto' ter tell 'em whar I is
-right now. I wish one thing. I wish Marse Carson was here; he'd sen' 'em
- 'bout deir business mighty quick."
-
-With a shrug of indecision, the boy set to work. His back happened to be
-turned towards the store, barely visible over the swelling ground in the
-distance, and so he failed to note the rapid approach across the meadow
-of two men till they were close upon him. One was Jeff Braider, the
-sheriff of the county, a stalwart man of forty, in high top-boots, a
-leather belt holding a-long revolver, a broad-brimmed hat, and coarse
-gray suit; his companion was a hastily deputized citizen armed with a
-double-barrelled shot-gun.
-
-"Put down that hoe, Pete!" the sheriff commanded, sharply, as the negro
-turned with it in his hand. "Put it down, I say! Drop it!"
-
-"What I gwine put it down for?" the negro asked, in characteristic tone.
-"Huh! I got ter do my work."
-
-"Drop it, and don't begin to give me your jaw," the sheriff said.
-"You've got to come on with us. You are under arrest."
-
-"What you 'rest me fer?" Pete asked, still doggedly.
-
-"You are accused of killing the Johnsons last night, and if you didn't
-do it, I'm here to say you are in the tightest hole an innocent man ever
-got in. King and I are going to do our level best to put you in safety
-in the Gilmore jail so you can be tried fairly by law, but we've got to
-get a move on us. The whole section is up in arms, and we'll have hard
-work dodging 'em. Come on. I won't rope you, but if you start to run
-we'll shoot you down like a rabbit, so don't try that on."
-
-"My Gawd, Mr. Braider, I didn't kill dem folks!" Pete said, pleadingly.
-"I don't know a thing about it."
-
-"Well, whether you did or not, they say you threatened to do it, and
-your life won't be worth a hill of beans if you stay here. The only
-thing to do is to get you to the Gilmore jail. We may make it through
-the mountains if we are careful, but we've got to git horses. We can
-borrow some from Jabe Parsons down the road, if he hasn't gone crazy
-like all the rest. Come on."
-
-"I tell you, Mr. Braider, I don't know er thing 'bout dis," Pete said;
-"but it looks ter me lak mebby Sam Dudlow--"
-
-"Don't make any statement to me," the officer said, humanely enough in
-his rough way. "You are accused of a dirty job, Pete, and it will take
-a dang good lawyer to save you from the halter, even if we save you from
-this mob; but talkin' to me won't do no good. Me'n King here couldn't
-protect you from them men if they once saw you. I tell you, young man,
-all hell has broke loose. For twenty miles around no black skin will
-be safe, much less yours. Innocent or guilty, you've certainly shot off
-your mouth. Come on."
-
-Without further protest, Pete dropped his hoe and went with them.
-Doggedly, and with an overpowering and surly sense of injury, he
-slouched along between the two men.
-
-A quarter of a mile down a narrow, private road, which was traversed
-without meeting any one, they came to Parsons' farm-house, a one-story
-frame building with a porch in front, and a roof that sloped back to
-a crude lean-to shed in the rear. A wagon stood under the spreading
-branches of a big beech, and near by a bent-tongued harrow, weighted
-down by a heap of stones, a chicken-coop, an old beehive, and a
-ramshackle buggy. No one was in sight. No living thing stirred about the
-place, save the turkeys and ducks and a solitary peacock strutting
-about in the front yard, where rows of half-buried stones from the
-mountain-sides formed the jagged borders of a gravel walk from the fence
-to the steps.
-
-The sheriff drew the gate open and, according to rural etiquette,
-hallooed lustily. After a pause the sound of some one moving in the
-house reached their ears. A window-curtain was drawn aside, and later a
-woman stood in the doorway and advanced wonderingly to the edge of the
-porch. She was portly, red of complexion, about middle-aged, and dressed
-in checked gingham, the predominating color of which was blue.
-
-"Well, I'll be switched!" she ejaculated; "what do you-uns want?"
-
-"Want to see Jabe, Mrs. Parsons; is he about?"
-
-"He's over in his hay-field, or was a minute ago. What you want with
-him?"
-
-"We've got to borrow some hosses," the sheriff answered. "We want
-three--one fer each. We're goin' to try to dodge them blood-thirsty
-mobs, Mrs. Parsons, an' put this feller in jail, whar he'll be safe."
-
-"_That_ boy?" The woman came down the steps, rolling her sleeves up.
-"Why, that boy didn't kill them folks. I know that boy, he's the son of
-old Mammy Linda and Uncle Lewis Warren. Now, look here, Jeff Braider,
-don't you and Bill King go and make eternal fools o' yourselves. That
-boy didn't no more do that nasty work than I did. It ain't _in_ 'im. He
-hain't that look. I know niggers as well as you or anybody else."
-
-"No, I _didn't_ do it, Mrs. Parsons," the prisoner affirmed. "I didn't!
-I didn't!"
-
-"I know you didn't," said the woman. "Wasn't I standin' here in the door
-this mornin' and saw him git up an' go out to git his wood and cook his
-breakfast? Then I seed 'im shoulder his grubbin'-hoe and go to the field
-to work. You officers may think you know it all, but no nigger ain't
-agoin' to stay around like that after killin' a man an' woman in cold
-blood. The nigger that did that job was some scamp that's fur from the
-spot by this time, and not a boy fetched up among good white folks like
-this one was, with the best old mammy and daddy that ever had kinky
-heads."
-
-"But witnesses say he threatened Abe Johnson a month ago," argued
-Braider. "I have to do my duty, Mrs. Parsons. There never would be any
-justice if we overlooked a thing as pointed as that is."
-
-"Threatened 'im?" the woman cried; "well, what does that prove? A nigger
-will talk back an' act surly on his death-bed if he's mad. That's all
-the way they have of defendin' theirselves. If Pete hadn't talked some
-after the lashin' he got from them men, thar'd 'a' been some'n' wrong
-with him. Now, you let 'im loose. As shore as you start off with that
-boy, he'll be lynched. The fact that you've got 'im in tow will be all
-them crazy men want. You couldn't get two miles in any direction from
-here without bein' stopped; they are as thick as fleas on all sides, an'
-every road is under watch."
-
-"I'm sorry I can't take yore advice, Mrs. Parsons," Braider said, almost
-out of patience. "I've got my duty to perform, an' I know what it is a
-sight better than you do."
-
-"If you start off with that boy his blood will be on yore head," the
-woman said, firmly. "Left alone, and advised to hide opt till this
-excitement is over, he might stand a chance to save his neck; but with
-you--why, you mought as well stand still and yell to that crazy gang to
-come on."
-
-"Well, we've got to git horses to go on with, and yours are the
-nearest."
-
-"Huh! you won't ride no harmless nigger to the scaffold on _my_ stock,"
-the woman said, sharply. "I know whar my duty lies. A woman with a
-thimbleful of brains don't have to listen to a long string of testimony
-to know a murderer when she sees one; that boy's as harmless as a baby
-and you are trying your level best to have him mobbed."
-
-"Well, right is on my side, and I can take the horses if I see fit in
-the furtherance of law an' order," said Braider. "If Jabe was here he'd
-tell me to go ahead, an' so I'll have to do it anyway. Bill, you stay
-here on guard an' I'll bridle the horses an' lead 'em out."
-
-A queer look, half of anger, half of definite purpose, settled on the
-strong, rugged face of the woman, as she saw the sheriff stalk off to
-the barn-yard gate, enter it, and let it close after him.
-
-"Bill King," she said, drawing nearer the man left in charge of the
-bewildered prisoner, who now for the first time under the words of his
-defender had sensed his real danger--"Bill King, you hain't agoin' to
-lead that poor boy right to his death this way--you don't look like that
-sort of a man." She suddenly swept her furtive eyes over the barn-yard,
-evidently noting that the sheriff was now in the stable. "No, you
-hain't--for I hain't agoin' to _let_ you!" And suddenly, without warning
-even to the slightest change of facial expression, she grasped the end
-of the shot-gun the man held, and whirled him round Like a top.
-
-"Run, boy!" she cried. "Run for the woods, and God be with you!" For an
-instant Pete stood as if rooted to the spot, and then, as swift of foot
-as a young Indian, he turned and darted through the gate and round the
-farm-house, leaving the woman and King struggling for the possession of
-the gun. It fell to the ground, but she grasped King around the waist
-and clung to him with the tenacity of a bull-dog.
-
-"Good God, Mrs. Parsons," he panted, writhing in her grasp, "let me
-loose!"
-
-There was a smothered oath from the barn-yard, and, revolver in hand,
-the sheriff ran out.
-
-"What the hell!--which way did he go?" he gasped.
-
-But King, still in the tight embrace of his assailant, seemed too badly
-upset to reply. And it was not till Braider had torn her locked hands
-loose that King could stammer out, "Round the house--into the woods!"
-
-"An' we couldn't catch 'im to save us from--" Braider said. "Madam, I'll
-handle you for this! I'll push this case against you to the full limit
-of the law!"
-
-"You'll do nothin' of the kind," the woman said, "unless you want to
-make yourself the laughin'-stock of the whole community. In doin' what
-I done I acted fer all the good women of this country; an' when you
-run ag'in we'll beat you at the polls. Law an' order's one thing,
-but officers helpin' mobs do their dirty work is another. If the boy
-deserves a trial he deserves it, but he'd not 'a' stood one chance in
-ten million in your charge, _an' you know it_."
-
-At this juncture a man emerged from the close-growing bushes across the
-road, a look of astonishment on his face. It was Jabe Parsons. "What's
-wrong here?" he cried, excitedly.
-
-"Oh, nothin' much," Braider answered, with a white sneer of fury. "We
-stopped here with Pete Warren to borrow your horses to git 'im over the
-mountain to the Gilmore jail, an' your good woman grabbed Bill's gun
-while I was in the stable an' deliberately turned the nigger loose."
-
-"Great God! what's the matter with you?" Parsons thundered at his wife,
-who, red-faced and defiant, stood rubbing a small bruised spot on her
-wrist.
-
-"Nothin's the matter with me," she retorted, "except I've got more sense
-than you men have. I know that boy didn't kill them folks, an' I didn't
-intend to see you-all lynch 'im."
-
-"Well, I know he did!" Parsons yelled. "But he'll be caught before
-night, anyway. He can't hide in them woods from hounds like they've got
-down the road."
-
-"Your wife 'lowed he'd be safer in the woods than in the Gilmore jail,"
-Braider said, with another sneer.
-
-"Well, he _would_. As for that," Parsons retorted, "if you think that
-army headed by the dead woman's daddy an' brothers would halt at a puny
-bird-cage like that jail, you don't know mountain men. They'd smash the
-damn thing like an egg-shell. I reckon a sheriff has to _pretend_ to act
-fer the law, whether he earns his salary or not. Well, I'll go down the
-road an' tell 'em whar to look. Thar'll be a picnic som 'er's nigh here
-in a powerful short while. We've got men enough to surround that whole
-mountain."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-[Illustration: 9127]
-
-HE following night was a cloudless, moonlit one, and restlessly and
-heart-sore Helen walked the upper floor of the veranda, her eyes
-constantly bent on the street leading past Dwight's on to the centre of
-the town. The greater part of the day she had spent with Linda, trying
-to pacify her and rouse the hope that Pete would not be implicated in
-the trouble in the mountains. Helen had gone down to Carson's office
-about noon, feeling vaguely that he could advise her better than any one
-else in the grave situation. She had found Garner seated at his desk,
-bent over a law-book, a studious expression on his face. Seeing her in
-the doorway, he sprang up gallantly and proffered a rickety chair, from
-which he had hastily dumped a pile of old newspapers.
-
-"Is Carson in?" she asked, sitting down.
-
-"Oh no, he's gone over to the farm," Garner said. "I couldn't hold him
-here after he heard of the trouble. You see, Miss Helen, he thinks,
-from a few things picked up, that Pete is likely to be suspected and be
-roughly handled, and, you know, as he was partly the cause of the boy's
-going there, he naturally would feel--"
-
-"I was the _real_ cause of it," the girl broke in, with a sigh and a
-troubled face. "We both thought it was for the best, and if it results
-in Pete's death I shall never forgive myself."
-
-"Oh, I wouldn't look at it that way," Garner said. "You were both acting
-for what you thought was right. As I say, I tried my best to keep Carson
-from going over there to-day, but he would go. We almost had an open
-rupture over it. You see, Miss Helen, I have set my head on seeing him
-in the legislature, and he is eternally doing things that kill votes.
-There is not a thing in the category of political offences as fatal as
-this very thing. He's already taken Pete's part and abused the men
-who whipped him, and now that the boy is suspected of retaliating and
-killing the Johnsons, why, the people will--well, I wouldn't be one bit
-surprised to see them jump on Carson himself. Men infuriated like that
-haven't any more sense than mad dogs, and they won't stand for a white
-man opposing them. But, of course, you know why Carson is acting so
-recklessly."
-
-"I do? What do you mean, Mr. Garner?"
-
-The lawyer smiled, wiped his facile mouth with his small white hand, and
-said, teasingly: "Why, you are at the bottom of it. Carson wants to save
-the boy simply because you are indirectly interested in him. That's the
-whole thing in a nutshell. He's been as mad as a wet hen ever since they
-whipped Pete, because he was the son of your old mammy, and now that the
-boy's in actual peril Carson has gone clean daft. Well, it's reported
-among the gossips about town that you turned him down, Miss Helen--like
-you did some of the balance of us presumptuous chaps that didn't know
-enough to keep our hearts where they belonged--but you sat on the best
-man in the bunch when you did it. It's me that's doing this talking."
-
-Helen sat silent and pale for a moment, unable to formulate a reply to
-his outspoken remark. Presently she said, evasively: "Then you think
-both of them are in actual danger?"
-
-"Well, Pete hasn't one chance in a million," Garner said, gently. "There
-is no use trying to hide that fact; and if Carson should happen to run
-across Dan Willis--well, one or the other would have to drop. Carson
-is in a dangerous mood. He believes as firmly in Pete's innocence as he
-does in his own, and if Dan Willis dared to threaten him, as he's likely
-to do when they meet, why, Carson would defend himself."
-
-Helen drew her veil down over her eyes and Garner could see that she was
-quivering from head to foot.
-
-"Oh, it's awful--awful!" he heard her say, softly. Then she rose and
-moved to the open door, where she stood as if undecided what step to
-take. "Is there no way to get any--any news?" she asked, tremulously.
-
-"None now," he told her. "In times of excitement over in the mountains,
-few people come into town; they all want to stay at home and see it
-through."
-
-She stepped out on the sidewalk, and he followed her, gallantly holding
-his hat in his hand. Scarcely a soul was in sight. The town seemed
-deserted.
-
-"Madam, rumor," Garner said, with a smile, "reports that your friend Mr.
-Sanders, from Augusta, is coming up for a visit."
-
-"Yes, I had a letter from him this morning," Helen said, in a dignified
-tone. "My father must have spoken of it. It will be Mr. Sanders' first
-visit to Darley, and he will find us terribly upset. If I knew how to
-reach him I'd ask him to wait a few days till this uncertainty is
-over, but he is on his way here--is, in fact, stopping somewhere in
-Atlanta--and intends to come on up to-morrow or the next day. Does--does
-Carson--has he heard of Mr. Sanders' coming?"
-
-"Oh yes, it was sprung on him this morning for a deadly purpose," Garner
-said, with a significant smile. "The whole gang--Keith, Wade, and Bob
-Smith--were in here trying to keep him from going to the farm. They had
-tried everything they could think of to stop him, and as a last resort
-set in to teasing. Keith told him Sanders would sit in the parlor
-and say sweet things to you while Carson was trying to liberate the
-ex-slaves of your family at the risk of bone and sinew. Keith
-said Carson was showing the finest proof of fidelity that was ever
-given--fidelity to _the man in the parlor_."
-
-"Keith ought to have been ashamed of himself," Helen said, with her
-first show of vexation. "And what did Carson say?"
-
-"The poor chap took it all in a good-humor," Garner said. "In fact, he
-was so much wrought up over Pete's predicament that he hardly heard what
-they were saying."
-
-"You really think Carson is in danger, too?" Helen continued, after a
-moment's silence.
-
-"If he meets Dan Willis, yes," said Garner. "If he opposes the mob,
-yes again. Dan Willis has already succeeded in creating a lot of
-unpopularity for him in that quarter, and the mere sight of Carson at
-such a time would be like a torch to a dry hay-stack."
-
-So Helen had gone home and spent the afternoon and evening in real
-torture of suspense, and now, as she walked the veranda floor alone with
-a realization of the grim possibilities of the case drawn sharply before
-her mental vision, she was all but praying aloud for Carson's safe
-return, and anxiously keeping her gaze on the moonlit street below.
-Suddenly her attention was drawn to the walk in front of the Dwight
-house. Some one was walking back and forth in a nervous manner, the
-intermittent flare of a cigar flashing out above the shrubbery like the
-glow of a lightning-bug. Could it be--had Carson returned and entered
-by the less frequently used gate in the rear? For several minutes she
-watched the figure as it strode back and forth with never-ceasing tread,
-and then, fairly consumed with the desire to set her doubts at rest, she
-went down into the garden at the side of the house, softly approached
-the open gate between the two homesteads, and called out: "Carson, is
-that you?"
-
-The figure paused and turned, the fire of the cigar described a red
-half-circle against the dark background, but no one spoke. Then, as she
-waited at the gate, her heart in her mouth, the smoker came towards her.
-It was old Henry Dwight. He wore no hat nor coat, the night being warm,
-and one of his fat thumbs was under his broad suspender.
-
-"No, it's not him, Miss Helen," he said, rather gruffly. "He hasn't got
-back yet. I've had my hands full since supper. My wife is in a bad way.
-She has been worrying awfully since twelve o'clock, when Carson didn't
-turn up to dinner as usual. She's guessed what he went to the farm for,
-and she's as badly upset as old Linda is over that trifling Pete. I
-thought I had enough trouble before the war over _my_ niggers, but here,
-forty years later, _yours_ are upsetting things even worse. I only wish
-the men that fought to free the black scamps had some part of the burden
-to bear."
-
-"It really is awful," Helen responded; "and so Mrs. Dwight is upset by
-it?"
-
-"Oh yes, we had the doctor to come, and he gave some slight dose or
-other, but he said the main thing was to get Carson back and let
-her know for sure that he was safe and sound. I sent a man out there
-lickety-split on the fastest horse I have, and he ought to have got back
-two hours ago. That's what I'm out here for. I know she's not going to
-let me rest till her mind is at ease."
-
-"Do you really think any actual harm could have come to Carson?" Helen
-inquired, anxiously.
-
-"It could come to anybody who has the knack my boy has for eternally
-rubbing folks the wrong way," the old man retorted from the depths of
-his irritation; "but, Lord, my young lady, _you_ are at the bottom of
-it!"
-
-"I? Oh, Mr. Dwight, don't say that!" Helen pleaded.
-
-"Well, I'm only telling you the _truth_," said Dwight, throwing his
-cigar away and putting, both thumbs under his suspenders. "You know that
-as well as I do. He sees how you are bothered about your old mammy, and
-he has simply taken up your cause. It's just what I'd 'a' done at his
-age. I reckon I'd 'a' fought till I dropped in my tracks for a girl
-I--but from all accounts you and Carson couldn't agree, or rather _you_
-couldn't. He seems to be agreeing now and staking his life and political
-chances on it. Well, I don't blame him. It never run in the Dwight
-blood to love more than once, an' then it was always for the pick of the
-flock. Well, you are the pick in this town, an' I wouldn't feel like he
-was my boy if he stepped down and out as easy as some do these days. I
-met him on his way to the farm and tried to shame him out of the trip.
-I joined the others in teasing him about that Augusta fellow, who can
-do his courting by long-distance methods in an easy seat at his
-writing-desk, while up-country chaps are doing the rough work for
-nothing, but it didn't feaze 'im. He tossed his stubborn head, got
-pretty red in the face, and said he was trying to help old Linda and
-Lewis out, and that he know well enough you didn't care a cent for him."
-
-Helen had grown hot and cold by turns, and she now found herself unable
-to make any adequate response to such personal allusions.
-
-"Huh, I see I got you teased, too!" Dwight said, with a short, staccato
-laugh. "Oh, well, you mustn't mind me. I'll go in and see if my wife is
-asleep, and if she is I'll go to bed myself."
-
-Helen, deeply depressed, and beset with many conflicting emotions,
-turned back to the veranda, and, instead of going up to her room, she
-reclined in a hammock stretched between two of the huge, fluted columns.
-She had been there perhaps half an hour when her heart almost stopped
-pulsating as she caught, the dull beat of horses' hoofs up the street.
-Rising, she saw a horseman rein in at the gate at Dwight's. It was
-Carson; she knew that by the way he dismounted and threw the rein over
-the gate-post.
-
-"Carson!" she called out. "Oh, Carson, I want to see you!"
-
-He heard, and came along the sidewalk to meet her at the gate where
-she now stood. What had come over him? There was an utter droop of
-despondent weariness upon him, and then as he drew near she saw that his
-face was pale and haggard. For a moment he stood, his hand on the gate
-she was holding open, and only stared.
-
-"Oh, what has happened?" she cried. "I've been waiting for you. We
-haven't heard a word."
-
-In a tired, husky voice, for he had made many a speech through the
-day, he told her of Pete's escape. "He's still hiding somewhere in the
-mountains," he said.
-
-"Oh, then he may get away after all!" she cried.
-
-Dwight said nothing, seeming to avoid her great, staring, anxious eyes.
-She laid her hand almost unconsciously on his arm.
-
-"Don't you think he has a chance, Carson?" she repeated--"a bare
-chance?"
-
-"The whole mountain is surrounded, and they are beating the woods,
-covering every inch of the ground," he said. "It is now only a question
-of time. They will wait till daybreak, and then continue till they have
-found him. How is Mam' Linda?"
-
-"Nearly dead," Helen answered, under her breath.
-
-"And my mother?" he said.
-
-"She is only worried," Helen told him. "Your father thinks she will be
-all right as soon as she is assured of your return."
-
-"Only worried? Why, he sent me word she was nearly dead," Carson said,
-with a feeble flare of indignation. "I wanted to stay, to be there to
-make one final effort to convince them, but when the message reached me,
-and things were at a standstill anyway, I came home, and now, even if I
-started back to-night, I'd likely be too late. He tricked me--my father
-tricked me!"
-
-"And you yourself? Did you meet that--Dan Willis?" Helen asked. He
-stared at her hesitatingly for an instant, and then said: "I happened
-not to. He was very active in the chase and seemed always to be
-somewhere else. He killed all my efforts." Carson leaned heavily against
-the white paling fence as he continued. "As soon as I'd talk a crowd
-of men into my way of thinking, he'd come along and fire them with fury
-again. He told them I was only making a grandstand play for the negro
-vote, and they swallowed it. They swallowed it and jeered and hissed me
-as I went along. Garner is right. I've killed every chance I ever had
-with those people. But I don't care."
-
-Helen sighed. "Oh, Carson, you did it all because--because I felt as I
-did about Pete. I know that was it."
-
-He made no denial as he stood awkwardly avoiding her eyes.
-
-"I shall never, never forgive myself," she said, in pained accents. "Mr.
-Garner and all your friends say that your election was the one thing you
-held desirable, the one thing that would--would thoroughly reinstate you
-in your father's confidence, and yet I--I--oh, Carson I _did_ want you
-to win! I wanted it--wanted it--wanted it!"
-
-"Oh, well, don't bother about that," he said, and she saw that he was
-trying to hide his own disappointment. "I admit I started into this
-because--because I knew how keenly you felt for Linda, but to-day,
-Helen, as I rode from mad throng to mad throng of those good men with
-their dishevelled hair and bloodshot eyes, their very souls bent to
-that trail, that pitiful trail of revenge, I began to feel that I was
-fighting for a great principle, a principle that you had planted within
-me. I gloried in it for its own sake, and because it had its birth in
-your sweet sympathy and love for the unfortunate. I could never have
-experienced it but for you."
-
-"But you failed," Helen almost sobbed. "You failed."
-
-"Yes, utterly. What I've done amounted to nothing more than irritating
-them. Those men, many of whom I love and admire, were wounded to their
-hearts, and I was only keeping their sores open with my fine-spun
-theories of human justice. They will learn their lesson slowly, but
-_they will learn it_. When they have caught and lynched poor, stupid
-Pete, they may learn later that he was innocent, and then they will
-realize what I was trying to keep them from doing. They will be friendly
-to me then, but Wiggin will be in office."
-
-"Yes, my father thinks this thing is going to defeat you." Helen sighed.
-"And, Carson, it's killing me to think that I am the prime cause of it.
-If I'd had a man's head I'd have known that your effort could accomplish
-nothing, and I'd have been like Mr. Garner and the others, and asked
-you not to mix up in it; but I couldn't help myself. Mam' Linda has your
-name on her lips with every breath. She thinks the sun rises and sets in
-you, and that you only have to give an order to have it obeyed."
-
-"That's the pity of it," Carson said, with a sigh.
-
-At this juncture there was the sound of a window-sash sliding upward,
-and old Dwight put out his head.
-
-"Come on in!" he called out. "Your mother is awake and absolutely
-refuses to believe you haven't a dozen bullet-holes in you."
-
-"All right, father, I'm coming," Carson said, and impulsively he held
-out his hand and clasped Helen's in a steady, sympathetic pressure.
-
-"Now, you go to bed, little girl," he said, more tenderly than he
-realized. In fact, it was a term he had used only once before, long
-before her brother's death. "Pardon me," he pleaded; "I didn't know what
-I was saying. I--I was worried over seeing you look so tired, and--and I
-spoke without thinking."
-
-"You can say it whenever you wish, Carson," she said. "As if I could get
-angry at you after--after--" But she did not finish, for with her hand
-still warmly clasping his fingers, she was listening to a distant sound.
-It was a restless human tread on a resounding floor.
-
-"It's Mam' Linda," Helen said. "She walks like that night and day.
-I must go to her and--tell her you are back, but oh, how _can_ I?
-Good-night, Carson. Ill never forget what you have done--never!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-[Illustration: 9139]
-
-FTER an almost sleepless night, spent for the greater part in despondent
-reflections over his failure in the things to which he had directed
-his hopes and energies, Carson rose about seven o'clock, went into his
-mother's room to ask how she had rested through the night, and then
-descended, to breakfast. It was eight o'clock when he arrived at the
-office. Garner was there in a cloud of dust, sweeping a pile of torn
-papers into the already filled fireplace.
-
-"I'm going to touch a match to this the first rainy day--if I think of
-it," he said. "It's liable to set the roof on fire when it's dry as it
-is now."
-
-"Any news from the mountains?" Carson asked, as he sat down at his desk.
-
-"Yes; Pole Baker was in here just now." Garner leaned his broom-handle
-against the mantel-piece, and stood critically eying his partner's worn
-face and dejected mien. "He said the mob, or mobs, for there are twenty
-factions of them, had certainly hemmed Pete in. He was hiding somewhere
-on Elk Knob, and they hadn't then located him. Pole left there long
-before day and said they had already set in afresh. I reckon it will be
-over soon. He told me to keep you here if I had to swear out a writ of
-dangerous lunacy against you. He says you have not only killed your own
-political chances, but that you couldn't save the boy if you were the
-daddy of every man in the chase. They've smelled blood and they want to
-taste it."
-
-"You needn't worry about me," Carson said, dejectedly. "I realize how
-helpless I was yesterday, and am still. There was only one thing that
-might have been done if we had acted quickly, and that was to telegraph
-the Governor for troops."
-
-"But you wouldn't sanction that; you know you wouldn't," said Garner.
-"You know every mother's son of those white men is acting according to
-the purest dictates of his inner soul. They think they are right. They
-believe in law, and while I am a member of the bar, by Heaven! I say
-to you that our whole legal system is rotten to the core. Politics will
-clear a criminal at the drop of a hat. A dozen voters can jerk a man
-from life imprisonment to the streets of this town by a single telegram.
-No, you know those sturdy men over there think they are right, and you
-would not be the cause of armed men shooting them down like rabbits in a
-fence corner."
-
-"No, they think they are right," Carson said. "And they were my friends
-till this came up. Any mail?"
-
-"I haven't been to the post-office. I wish you'd go. You need exercise;
-you are off color--you are as yellow as a new saddle. Drop this thing.
-The Lord Himself can't make water run up-hill. Quit thinking about it."
-
-Carson went out into the quiet street and walked along to the
-post-office. At the intersection of the streets near the Johnston
-House, on any ordinary day, a dozen drays and hacks in the care of
-negro drivers would have been seen, and on the drays and about the hacks
-stood, as a rule, many idle negro men and boys; but this morning the
-spot was significantly vacant. At the negro barber-shop, kept by Buck
-Black, a mulatto of marked dignity and intelligence for one of his race,
-only the black barbers might be seen, and they were not lounging about
-the door, but stood at their chairs, their faces grave, their tongues
-unusually silent. They might be asking themselves questions as to the
-possible extent of the fires of race-hatred just now raging--if the
-capture and death of Pete Warren would quench the conflagration, or
-if it would roll on towards them like the licking flames of a burning
-prairie--they might, I say, ask _themselves_ such questions, but to the
-patrons of their trade they kept discreet silence. And no white man who
-went near them that day would ask them what they believed or what they
-felt, for the blacks are not a people who give much thought even to
-their own social problems. They had leaned for many generations upon
-white guidance, and, with childlike, hereditary instinct, they were
-leaning still.
-
-Finding no letters of importance in the little glass-faced and numbered
-box at the post-office, Carson, sick at heart and utterly discouraged,
-went up to the Club. Here, idly knocking the balls about on a
-billiard-table, a cigar in his mouth, was Keith Gordon.
-
-"Want to play a game of pool?" he asked.
-
-"Not this morning, old man," Carson answered.
-
-"Well, I don't either," said Keith. "I went to the bank and tried to add
-up some figures for the old man, but my thinker wouldn't work. It's out
-of whack. That blasted nigger Pete is the prime cause of my being upset.
-I came by Major Warren's this morning. Sister feels awfully sorry
-for Mam' Linda, and asked me to take her a jar of jelly. You know old
-colored people love little attentions like that from white people, when
-they are sick or in trouble. Well"--Keith held up his hands, the palms
-outward--"I don't want any more in mine. I've been to death-bed scenes,
-funerals, wrecks on railroads, and all sorts of horrors, but that was
-simply too much. It simply beggars description--to see that old woman
-bowed there in her door like a dumb brute with its tongue tied to a
-stake. It made me ashamed of myself, though, for not at least trying
-to do something. I glory in you, old man. You failed, but you _tried_.
-By-the-way, that's the only comfort Mam' Linda has had--the only thing.
-Helen was there, the dear girl--and to think her visit home has to be
-like this!--she was there trying to soothe the old woman, but nothing
-that was said could produce anything but that awful groaning of hers
-till Lewis said something about your going over there yesterday, and
-that stirred her up. She rose in her chair and walked to the gate and
-folded her big arms across her breast.
-
-"'I thank God young marster felt fer me dat way,' she said. 'He's
-de best young man on de face o' de earth. I'll go down ter my grave
-blessing 'im fer dis. He's got er _soul_ in 'im. He knows how old Mammy
-Lindy feels en he was tryin' ter help her, God bless 'im! He couldn't do
-nothin', but he tried--he tried, dough everybody was holdin' 'im back en
-sayin' it would spile his 'lection. Well, if it _do_ harm 'im, it will
-show dat Gawd done turn ergin white en black bofe.' I came away," Keith
-finished, after a pause, in which Carson said nothing. "I couldn't stand
-it. Helen was crying like a child, her face wet with tears, and she
-wasn't trying to hide it. I was looking for some one to come every
-minute with the final news, and I didn't want to face that. Good God,
-old man, what are we coming to? Historians, Northern ones, seem to think
-the days of slavery were benighted, but God knows such things as this
-never happened then. Now, did it?"
-
-"No; it's terrible," Carson agreed, and he stepped to a window and
-looked out over the roofs of the near-by stores to the wagon-yard
-beyond.
-
-"Well, the great and only, the truly accepted one," Keith went on, in
-a lighter tone, "the man who did us all up brown, Mr. Earle Sanders, of
-Augusta, has unwittingly chosen a gloomy date for his visit. He's here,
-installed in the bridal-chamber of the Hotel de Johnston. Helen got a
-note from him just as I was leaving. On my soul, old man--maybe it's
-because I want to see it that way--but, really, it didn't seem to me
-that she looked exactly elated, you know, like I imagined she would,
-from the way the local gossips pile it on. You know, the idea struck me
-that maybe she is not _really engaged_, after all."
-
-"She is worried; she is not herself to-day," Carson said, coldly, though
-in truth his blood was surging hotly through his veins. It had come
-at last. The man who was to rob him of all he cared for in life was at
-hand. Turning from Keith, he pretended to be looking over some of
-the dog-eared magazines in the reading-room, and then feeling an
-overwhelming desire to be alone with the dull pain in his breast, he
-waved a careless signal to Keith and went down to the street. In front
-of the hotel stood a pair of sleek, restive bays harnessed to a new
-top-buggy. They were held by the owner of the best livery-stable in the
-town, a rough ex-mountaineer.
-
-"Say, Carson," the man called out, proudly, "you'll have to git up early
-in the morning to produce a better yoke of thorough-breds than these.
-Never been driven over these roads before. I didn't intend to let 'em
-out fer public use right now, but a big, rich fellow from Augusta is
-here sparkin', and he wanted the best I had and wouldn't touch anything
-else. Money wasn't any object. He turned up his nose at all my other
-stock. Gee! look at them trim legs and thighs--a dead match as two
-black-eyed peas."
-
-"Yes, they are all right." Carson walked on and went into Blackburn's
-store, for no other reason than that he wanted to avoid meeting people
-and discussing the trouble Pete Warren was in, or hearing further
-comments on the stranger's visit. He might have chosen a better retreat,
-however, for in a group at the window nearest the hotel he found
-Blackburn, Garner, Bob Smith, and Wade Tingle, all peering stealthily
-out through the dingy glass at the team Carson had just inspected.
-
-"He'll be out in a minute," Wade was saying, in an undertone. "Quit
-pushing me, Bob! They say he's got dead loads of money."
-
-"You bet he has," Bob declared; "he had a wad of it in big bills large
-enough to stuff a sofa-pillow with. Ike, the porter, who trucked his
-trunk up, said he got a dollar tip. The head waiter is expecting to buy
-a farm after he leaves. Gee! there he comes! Say, Garner, _you_ ought to
-know; is that a brandy-and-soda complexion?"
-
-"No, he doesn't drink a drop," answered Garner. "Well, he looks all
-right, as well as I can see through this immaculate window with my eyes
-full of spiderwebs. My, what clothes! Say, Bob, is that style of derby
-the thing now? It looks like an inverted milk-bucket. Come here, Carson,
-and take a peep at the conqueror. If Keith were here we'd have a
-quomm. By George, there's Keith now! He's watching at the window of the
-barber-shop. Call him over, Blackburn. Let's have him here; we need more
-pall-bearers."
-
-"Seems to me you boys are the corpses," Blackburn jested. "I'd be
-ashamed to let a clothing-store dummy like that beat me to the tank."
-
-Carson had heard enough. In his mood and frame of mind their open
-frivolity cut him to the quick. Going out, unnoticed by the others, he
-went to his office. In the little, dusty consultation-room in the rear
-there was an old leather couch. On this he threw himself. There had been
-moments in his life when he had worn the crown of misery, notably the day
-Albert Warren was buried, when, on approaching Helen to offer her his
-sympathies, she had turned from him with a shudder. That had been a
-gloomy hour, but _this_--he covered his face with his hands and lay
-still. On that day a faint hope had vaguely fluttered within him--a hope
-of reformation; a hope of making a worthy place for himself in life
-and of ultimately winning her favor and forgiveness. But now it was all
-over. He had actually seen with his own eyes the man who was to be her
-husband. He was sure now that the report was true. The visit at such a
-grave crisis confirmed all that had been said. Helen had telegraphed him
-of her trouble, and Sanders had made all haste to reach her side.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-[Illustration: 9147]
-
-EHIND the dashing bays the newcomer drove down to Warren's. On the
-seat beside him sat a negro boy sent from the livery-stable to hold the
-horses. Sanders was dressed in the height of fashion, was young, of the
-blond type, and considered handsome. A better figure no man need have
-desired. The people living in the Warren neighborhood, who peered
-curiously out of windows, not having Dwight's affairs at heart, indulged
-in small wonder over the report that Helen was about to accept such a
-specimen of city manhood in preference to Carson or any of "the home
-boys."
-
-Alighting at the front gate, Sanders went to the door and rang. He was
-admitted by a colored maid and shown into the quaint old parlor with its
-tall, gilt-framed, pier-glass mirrors and carved mahogany furniture.
-The wide front, lace-curtained windows, which opened on a level with
-the veranda floor, let in a cooling breeze which was most agreeable in
-contrast to the beating heat out-of-doors.
-
-He had only a few minutes to wait, for Helen had just returned from
-a visit to Linda's cottage and was in the library across the hall.
-He heard her coming and stood up, flushing expectantly, an eager
-light flashing in his eyes.
-
-"I am taking you by surprise," he said, as he grasped her extended hand
-and held it for an instant.
-
-"Well, you know you told me when I left," Helen said, "that it would
-be impossible for you to get away from business till after the first of
-next month, so I naturally supposed--"
-
-"The trouble was"--he laughed as he stood courteously waiting for her to
-sit before doing so himself--"the trouble was that I didn't know myself
-then as I do now. I thought I could wait like any sensible man of my
-age, but I simply couldn't, Helen. After you left, the town was simply
-unbearable. I seemed not to want to go anywhere but to the places to
-which we went together, and there I suffered a regular agony of the
-blues. The truth is, I'm killing two birds with one stone. We were about
-to send our lawyer to Chattanooga to settle up a legal matter there, and
-I persuaded my partner to let me do it. So you see, after all, I shall
-not be wholly idle. I can run up there from here and back, I believe, in
-the same day."
-
-"Yes, it is not far," Helen answered. "We often go up there to do
-shopping."
-
-"I'm going to confess something else," Sanders said, flushing slightly.
-"Helen, you may not forgive me for it, but I've been uneasy."
-
-"Uneasy?" Helen leaned as far back in her chair as she could, for he had
-bent forward till his wide, hungry eyes were close to hers.
-
-"Yes, I've fought the feeling every day and night since you left. At
-times my very common-sense would seem to conquer and I'd feel a little
-better about it, but it would only be a short time till I'd be down in
-the dregs again."
-
-"Why, what is the matter?" Helen asked, half fearfully.
-
-"It was your letters, Helen," he said, his handsome face very grave as
-he leaned towards her.
-
-"My letters? Why, I wrote as often--even often-er--than I promised," the
-girl said.
-
-"Oh, don't think me over-exacting," Sanders implored her with eyes and
-voice. "I know you did all you agreed to do, but somehow--well, you
-know you seemed so much like one of us down there that I had become
-accustomed to thinking of you as almost belonging to Augusta; but your
-letters showed how very dear Darley and its people are to you, and I was
-obliged to--well, face the grim fact that we have a strong rival here in
-the mountains."
-
-"I thought you knew that I adore my old home," she said, simply.
-
-"Oh yes, I know--most people do--but, Helen, the letter you wrote about
-the dance your friends--your 'boys,' as you used to call them--gave you
-at that quaint club, why, it is simply a piece of literature. I've read
-it over and over time after time."
-
-"Oh, I only wrote as I felt, out of a full heart," the girl said.
-"When you meet them, and know them as I do, you will not wonder at my
-fidelity--at my enthusiasm over that particular tribute."
-
-Sanders laughed. "Well, I suppose I am simply jealous--jealous not alone
-for myself, but for Augusta. Why, you can't imagine how you are missed.
-A party of the old crowd went around to your aunt's as usual the
-Wednesday following your departure, but we were so blue we could hardly
-talk to one another. Helen, the spirit of our old gatherings was gone.
-Your aunt actually cried, and your uncle really drank too much brandy
-and soda."
-
-"Well, you mustn't think I don't miss them all," Helen said, deeply
-touched. "I think of them every day. It was only that I had been away
-so long that it was glorious to get back home--to my real home again. I
-love it down there; it is beautiful; you were all so lovely to me, but
-this here is different."
-
-"That's what I felt in reading your letters," Sanders said. "A tone of
-restful content and happiness was in every line you wrote. Somehow,
-I wanted you, in my selfish heart, to be homesick for us so that you
-would"--the visitor drew a deep breath--"be all the more likely to--to
-consent to live there, you know, _some day_, permanently." Helen made
-no reply, and Sanders, flushing deeply, wisely turned the subject, as he
-rose and went to a window and drew the curtain aside.
-
-"Do you see those horses?" he asked, with a smile. "I brought them
-thinking I might prevail on you to take a drive with me this morning. I
-have set my heart on seeing some of the country around the town, and I
-want to do it with you. I hope you can go."
-
-"Oh, not to-day! I couldn't think of it to-day!" Helen cried,
-impulsively.
-
-"Not to-day?" he said, crestfallen.
-
-"No. Haven't you heard about Mam' Linda's awful trouble?"
-
-"Oh, that is _her_ son!" Sanders said. "I heard something of it at the
-hotel. I see. She really must be troubled."
-
-"It is a wonder it hasn't killed her," Helen answered. "I have never
-seen a human being under such frightful torture."
-
-"And can nothing be done?" Sanders asked. "I'd really like to be of
-use--to help, you know, in _some_ way."
-
-"There is nothing to be done--nothing that _can_ be done," Helen said.
-"She knows that, and is simply waiting for the end."
-
-"It's too bad," Sanders remarked, awkwardly. "Might I go to see her?"
-
-"I think you'd better not," said the girl. "I don't believe she would
-care to see any but very old friends. I used to think I could comfort
-her, but even I fail now. She is insensible to anything but that
-one haunting horror. She has tried a dozen times to go over to the
-mountains, but my father and Uncle Lewis have prevented it. That mob,
-angry as they are, might really kill her, for she would fight for her
-young like a tigress, and people wrought up like those are mad enough to
-do anything."
-
-"And some people think the negro may not really be guilty, do they not?"
-Sanders asked.
-
-"I am sure he is not," Helen sighed. "I feel it; I know it."
-
-There was the sound of a closing gate, and Helen looked out.
-
-"It is my father," she said. "Perhaps he has heard something."
-
-Leaving her guest, she went out to the steps. "Whose turn-out?" the
-Major asked, with admiring curiosity, indicating the horses and buggy.
-
-"Mr. Sanders has come," she said, simply. "He's in the parlor. Is there
-any news?"
-
-"Nothing." The old man removed his hat and wiped his perspiring brow.
-"Nothing except that Carson Dwight has gone over there on a fast horse.
-Linda sent him a message, begging him to make one more effort, and he
-went. All his friends tried to stop him, but he dashed out of town like
-a madman. He won't accomplish a thing, and it may cost him his life,
-but he's the right sort, daughter. He's got a heart in him as big as
-all out-of-doors. Blackburn told him Dan Willis was over there, a raging
-demon in human shape, but it only made Carson the more determined. His
-father saw him and ordered him back, and was speechless with fury when
-Carson simply waved his hand and rode on. Go back to the parlor. I'll
-join you in a minute."
-
-"Have you heard anything?" Sanders asked, as Helen re-entered the room
-and stood white and distraught before him.
-
-She hesitated, her shifting glance on the floor, and then she stared at
-him almost as one in a dream. "He has heard nothing except--except that
-Carson Dwight has gone over there. He has gone. Mam' Linda begged him to
-make one other effort and he couldn't resist her. She--she was good to
-his mother and to him when he was a child, and he feels grateful. She
-thinks he is the only one that can help. She told me last night that she
-believed in him as she once believed in God. He can do nothing, but he
-knew it would comfort her for him to try."
-
-"This Mr. Dwight is one of your--your old friends, is he not?"
-
-Sanders' face was the playground of conflicting emotions as he stood
-staring at her.
-
-"Yes," Helen answered; "one of my best and truest."
-
-"He has undertaken a dangerous thing, has he not?" Sanders managed to
-say.
-
-"Dangerous?" Helen shuddered. "He has an enemy there who is now
-seeking his life. They are sure to meet. They have already quarrelled,
-and--_about this very thing_."
-
-She sat down in the chair she had just left and Sanders stood near her.
-There was a voice in the hall. It was the Major ordering a servant to
-bring in mint julep, and the next moment he was in the parlor hospitably
-introducing himself to the visitor.
-
-Seeing her opportunity, Helen rose and left them together. She went up
-to her room, with heavy, dragging footsteps, and stood at the window
-overlooking the Dwight garden and lawn.
-
-Carson knew that Sanders was in town, she told herself, in gloomy
-self-reproach. He knew his rival was with her, and right now as the poor
-boy was speeding on to--his death, he thought Sanders was making love to
-her. Helen bit her quivering lip and clinched her fingers. "Poor boy!"
-she thought, almost with a sob, "he deserves better treatment than
-that."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-[Illustration: 9154]
-
-N his escape from the sheriff and his deputy, Pete Warren ran with the
-speed of a deer-hound through the near-by woods. Thinking his pursuers
-were close behind him, he did not stop even to listen to their
-footsteps. Through dell and fen, up hill and down, over rocks and
-through tangled undergrowth he forged his way, his tongue lolling from
-the corner of his gaping mouth. The thorns and briers had tom gashes in
-his cheeks, neck, and hands, and left his clothing in strips. The wild
-glare of a hunted beast was in his eyes. The land was gradually sloping
-upward. He was getting upon the mountain. For a moment the distraught
-creature paused, bent his ear to listen and try to decide, rationally,
-calmly, which was the better plan, to hide in the caverns and craggy
-recesses of the frowning heights above or speed onward over more level
-ground. For a moment the drumlike pounding of his heart was all
-the sound he heard, and then the blast of a hunter's horn broke
-the stillness, not two hundred yards away, and was thrown back in
-reverberating echoes from the mountain-side. This was followed by
-a far-off answering shout, the report of a signal-gun, and then the
-mellow, terrifying baying of blood-hounds fell upon his ears. Pete stood
-erect, his knees quivering. No thought of prayer passed through his
-brain. Prayer, to his mind, was only a series of empty vocal sounds
-heard chiefly in churches where black men and women stood or knelt in
-their best clothes, and certainly not for emergencies like this, where
-granite heavens were closing upon stony earth and he was caught between.
-
-Suddenly bending lower, and fresher for the second wind he had got,
-he sped onward again, choosing the valley rather than the steeper
-mountain-side. Shouts, gun reports, horn-blasts, and the baying of the
-hounds now followed him. Presently he came to a clear mountain creek
-about twenty feet wide and not deeper anywhere than his waist, and in
-many places barely covering the slimy brown stones over which it flowed.
-Here, as if by inspiration, came the remembrance of some story he had
-heard about a pursued negro managing to elude the scent of blood-hounds
-by taking to water, and into the icy stream Pete plunged, and, slipping,
-stumbling, falling, he made his way onward.
-
-But his reason told him this slow method really would not benefit him,
-for his pursuers would soon catch up and see him from the banks. He had
-waded up the stream about a quarter of a mile, when he came to a spot
-where the stout branches of a sturdy leaning beech hung down within his
-reach. The idea which came to him was worthy of a white man's brain,
-for, pulling on the bough and finding it firm, he decided upon the
-original plan of getting out of the water there, where his trail would
-be lost to sight or scent, and climbing into the dense foliage above.
-His pursuers might not think to look upward at exactly that spot, and
-the hounds, bent on catching the scent from the ground where he landed,
-would speed onward, farther and farther away. At all events it was worth
-the trial.
-
-With quivering hands he drew the bough down till its leaves sank under
-the water. It bore his weight well and from it he climbed to the
-massive trunk and higher upward, till, in a fork of the tree, he rested,
-noticing, with a throb of relief, that the bough had righted itself and
-hung as before above the surface of the stream. On came the dogs; he
-could not hear them now, for, intent upon their work, they made no
-sound, but the hoarse, maddened voices of men under their guidance
-reached his ears. The swish through the undergrowth, the patter, as of
-rain on dry leaves, as their claws hurled the ground behind them, the
-snuffing and sneezing--_that was the hounds_. Closer and closer Pete
-hugged the tree, hardly breathing, fearing now that the water dripping
-from his clothing or the bruised leaves of the bough might betray his
-presence. But the hounds, one on either side of the stream, their noses
-to the earth, dashed on. Pete caught only a gleam of their sleek, dim
-coats and they were gone. Behind them, panting, followed a dozen men.
-In his fear of being seen, Pete dared not even look at their inflamed
-faces. With closed eyes pressed against his wet coat-sleeve, he clung to
-his place, a hunted thing, neither fish, fowl, nor beast, and yet, like
-them all, a creature of the wilderness, endowed with the instinct of
-self-preservation.
-
-"They will run 'im down!" he heard a man say. "Them dogs never have
-failed. The black devil thought he'd throw 'em off by taking to water.
-He didn't know we had one for each bank."
-
-On ran the men, the sound of their progress becoming less and less
-audible as they receded. Was he safe now? Pete's slow intelligence
-answered no. He was still fully alive to his danger. He might stay there
-for awhile, but not for long. Already, perhaps owing to his desperate
-running, he had an almost maddening thirst, a thirst which the sheer
-sight of the cool stream so near tantalized. Should he descend, satisfy
-his desire, and attempt to regain his place of hiding? No, for he might
-not seclude himself so successfully the next time. Then, with his face
-resting on his arm, he began to feel drowsy. Twisting his body about,
-he finally found himself in a position in which he could recline
-still close to the tree and rest a little, though his feet and legs,
-surcharged with blood, were painfully weighted downward. The forest
-about him was very quiet. Some bluebirds above his head were singing
-merrily. A gray squirrel with a fuzzy tail was perched inquiringly
-on the brown bough of a near-by pine. Pete reclined thus for several
-minutes, and then the objects about him appeared to be in a blur. The
-far off shouts, horn-blasts, and gun reports beat less insistently on
-his tired brain, and then he found himself playing with a kitten--the
-queerest, most amusing kitten--in the sunlight in front of his mother's
-door.
-
-He must have slept for hours, for when he opened his eyes the sun was
-sinking behind the top of a distant hill. He tried to draw his aching
-legs up higher and felt stinging pricks of pain from his hips to his
-toes, as his blood leaped into circulation again. After several efforts
-he succeeded in standing on the bough. To his pangs of thirst were now
-added those of hunger. For hours he stood thus. He saw the light of day
-die out, first on the landscape and later from the clear sky. Now,
-he told himself, under cover of night, he would escape, but something
-happened to prevent the attempt. Through the darkness he saw the
-flitting lights off many pine torches. They passed to and fro under
-the trees, sometimes quite near him, and as far as he could see up the
-mountain-sides they flickered like the sinister night-eyes of his doom.
-He stood till he felt as if he could do so no longer, and then he got
-down on the bough as before, and after hours of conscious hunger and
-thirst and cramping pains he slept again. Thus he passed that night, and
-when the golden rays of sunlight came piercing the gray mountain mists
-and flooding the landscape with its warm glory, Pete Warren, hearing the
-voices of sleepless revenge, now more numerous and harsh and packed with
-hate--hearing them on all sides from far and near--dared not stir. He
-remained perched in his leafy nook like some half-knowing, primeval
-thing, avoiding the flint-tipped arrows of the high-cheeked,
-straight-haired men lurking beneath.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-[Illustration: 9159]
-
-ARSON DWIGHT remained two days in the vicinity of his farm waiting
-gloomily for the discovery and arrest of Pete Warren, his sole
-hope being that at the last grewsome moment he might prevail on the
-distraught man-hunters to listen to a final appeal for law and order.
-He was forced, however, to return to Darley, feeling sure, as did
-the others, that Pete was hiding in some undiscovered place in the
-mountains, or shrewd and deft enough to avoid the approach of man or
-hound. But it would not be for long, the hunters told themselves, for
-the entire spot was surrounded and well guarded and they would starve
-him out.
-
-"The gang" breathed more freely when they saw Carson appear in the
-doorway of the den on the night of his return, and learned that through
-some miracle he had failed to meet Dan Willis, though not one of them
-was favorably impressed by the outward appearance of their leader. His
-eyes, in their darkened sockets, gleamed like despondent fires; on his
-tanned cheeks hectic flushes had appeared and his hands quivered as if
-from nervous exhaustion. Not a man among them dared reproach him for the
-further and futile political mistake he had made. He was a ruined man,
-and yet they admired him the more as they looked down on him, begrimed
-with the dregs of his failure. Garner's opinion, to himself expressed,
-was that Dwight was a failure only on the surface, but that it was the
-surface which counted everywhere except in heaven, and there no one knew
-what sort of coin would be current. Garner loved him. He loved him for
-his hopeless fidelity to Helen, for his firm-jawed clinging to a mere
-principle, such as trying to keep an old negro woman who had faith in
-him from breaking her heart, for his risking death itself to obtain full
-justice-for the black boy who was his servant. Yes, Garner mused,
-Carson certainly deserved a better deal all round, but deserving a thing
-according to the highest ethics, and getting it according to the lowest
-were different.
-
-I The following night there was a queer, secret meeting of negroes in
-the town. Stealthily they left their cabins and ramshackle homes, and
-one by one they glided through the darkest streets and alleys to the
-house of one Neb Wynn, a man who had acquired his physical being and
-crudely unique personality from the confluence of three distinct streams
-of blood--the white, the Cherokee Indian, and the negro. He owned and
-drove a dray on the streets of the town, and being economical he had
-accumulated enough means to build the two-story frame (not yet painted)
-house in which he lived. The lower floor was used as a negro restaurant,
-which Neb's wife managed, the upper was devoted to the family bedroom, a
-guest-chamber for any one who wished to spend the night, and a fair-sized
-"hall," with windows on the street, which was rented to colored people
-for any purpose, such as dances, lodge meetings or church sociables.
-
-It was in this room, where no light burned, that the negroes assembled.
-Indeed, no sort of illumination was used below, and when a negro who had
-been secretly summoned reached the spot, he assured himself that no
-one was in sight, and then he approached the restaurant door on tiptoe,
-rapped twice with his knuckles, paused a moment, and then rapped three
-times. Thereupon Neb, with his ear to the key-hole on the inside,
-cautiously opened the door and drew the applicant within, and, closing
-the shutter softly, asked, "What is the password?"
-
-"Mercy," was the whispered reply.
-
-"What's the countersign?"
-
-"Peace an' good-will to all men. Thy will be done. Amen."
-
-"All right, I know you," Neb would say. "Go up ter de hall en set down,
-but mind you, don't speak _one_ word!"
-
-And thus they gathered--the men who were considered the most substantial
-colored citizens of the town. About ten o'clock Neb crept cautiously up
-the narrow stairs, entered the room, and sat down.
-
-"We are all here," he announced. "Brother Hard-castle, I'm done wid my
-part. I ain't no public speaker; I'll leave de rest ter you."
-
-A figure in one of the comers rose. He was the leading negro minister
-of the place. He cleared his throat and then said: "I would open with
-prayer, but to pray we ought to stand or kneel, and either thing would
-make too much disturbance. We can only ask God in our hearts, brothers,
-to be with us here in the darkness, and help lead us out of our trouble;
-help us to decide if we can, singly or in a body, what course to pursue
-in the grave matter that faces our race. We are being sorely tried,
-tried almost past endurance, but the God of the white man is the God of
-the black. Through a dark skin the light of a pure heart shines as far
-in an appeal for help towards the throne of Heaven as through a white.
-I'm not prepared to make a speech. I can't. I am too full of sorrow and
-alarm. I have just left the mother of the accused boy and the sight of
-her suffering has upset me. I have no harsh words, either, for the white
-men of this town. Every self-respecting colored citizen has nothing but
-words of praise for the good white men of the South, and in my heart, I
-can't much blame the men of the mountains who are bent on revenge, for
-the crime perpetrated by one of our race was horrible enough to justify
-their rage. It is only that we want to see full justice done and the
-absolutely innocent protected. I have been talking to Brother Black
-to-day, and I feel--"
-
-He broke off, for a hiss of warning as low as the rattle of a hidden
-snake escaped Neb Wynn's lips. On the brick sidewalk below the steps
-of some solitary passer-by rang crisply on the still night air. It died
-away in the distance and again all was quiet.
-
-"Now you kin go on," Neb said. "We des got to be careful, gen'men. Ef a
-meetin' lak dis was knowed ter be on tap de last one of us would be in
-trouble, en dey would pull my house down fust. You all know dat."
-
-"You are certainly right," the preacher resumed. "I was only going to
-call on Brother Black to say something in a line with the-talk I had
-with him today. He's got the right idea."
-
-"I'm not a speaker," Buck Black began, as he stood up. "A man who runs
-a barber-shop don't have any too much time ter read and study, but I've
-giv' dis subject a lot o' thought fust an' last. I almost giv' up after
-dat big trouble in Atlanta; I 'lowed dar wasn't no way out of we-alls'
-plight, but I think diffunt now. A _white_ man made me see it. I read
-some'n' yesterday in the biggest paper in dis State. It was written by
-de editor an' er big owner in it. Gen'men, it was de fust thing I've
-seed dat seemed ter me ter come fum on high as straight as a bolt of
-lightnin'. Brother black men, dat editor said dat de white race had
-tried de whip-lash, de rope, en de firebrand fer forty years en de
-situation was still as bad as ever. He said de question never would be
-plumb settled till de superior race extend a kind, helpful hand ter
-de ignorant black an' lead 'im out er his darkness en sin en crime.
-Gen'men, dem words went thoo en thoo me. I knowed dat man myself, when
-I lived in Atlanta; I've seed his honest face en know he meant what he
-said. He said it was time ter blaze er new trail, er trail dat hain't
-been blazed befo'--er trail of love en forgiveness en pity, er trail
-de Lord Jesus Christ would blaze ef he was here in de midst o' dis
-struggle."
-
-"Dat so, dat so!" Neb Wynn exclaimed, in a rasping whisper. "Gawd know
-dat de trufe."
-
-"An' I'm here ter-night," Buck Black continued, "ter say ter you all dat
-I'm ready ter join fo'ces wid white men like dat. De old time white man
-was de darky's best friend; he owned 'im, but he helped 'im. In de old
-slave days black crimes lak our race is guilty of ter-day was never
-heard of--never nowhar! Dar's er young white man here in dis town, too,
-dat I love," Black continued, after a pause. "I needn't mention his
-name; I bound you it is writ on every heart in dis room. You all know
-what he did yesterday an' day befo'--in spite er all de argument en
-persuasions of his friends dat is backin' 'im in politics, he went out
-dar ter de mountains in de thick o' it. I got it straight. I seed er man
-fum dar yesterday, en he said Marse Carson Dwight was out 'mongst dem men
-pleadin' wid 'em ter turn Pete over ter him en de law. He promised ter
-give er bond dat was big enough ter wipe out all he owned on earth, ef
-dey'd only spare de boy's life en give 'im a trial. Dey say Dan Willis
-wanted ter shoot 'im, but Willis's own friends wouldn't let 'im git nigh
- 'im. I was in my shop last night when he come in town an' axed me ter
-shave 'im up so he could go home en pacify his mother. She was sick en
-anxious about him. He got in my chair. Gen'men, I used ter brag beca'se
-I shaved General John B. Gordon once, when he was up here speakin', but
-fum now on my boast will be shavin' Marse Carson Dwight. He got in de
-chair an' laid back so tired he looked lak er dyin' man. He was all
-spattered fum head ter foot wid mud dat he'd walked an' rid thoo. I was
-so sorry fer 'im I could hardly do my work. I was cryin' half de time,
-dough he didn't see it,'ca'se he jes layed dar wid his eyes closed.
-Hate de white race lak some say we do?" Black's voice rose higher and
-quivered. "No, suh, I'll never hate de race dat fetched dat white man in
-dis world. When he got out de chair de fus thing he ax was ef I'd heard
-how Mam' Lindy was. I told 'im she was pretty bad off, worried in her
-mind lak she was; den he turn fum de glass whar he was tyin' his necktie
-wid shaky fingers en said: 'I thought I might fetch 'er some hope, Buck,
-but I done give up. Ef I only had Pete in my charge safe in er good
-reliable jail I could free 'im, fer I don't believe he killed dem
-folks.'"
-
-Buck Black paused. It was plain that his hearers were much affected,
-though no sound at all escaped them. The speaker was about to resume,
-when he was prevented by a sharp rapping on the stair below.
-
-"Hush!" Neb Wynn commanded, in a warning whisper. He crept on tiptoe
-across the carpetless room, out into the hallway, and leaned over the
-baluster.
-
-"Who dat?" he asked, in a calm, raised voice.
-
-"It's me, Neb. I want ter see you. Come down!"
-
-"It's my wife>" Neb informed the breathless room. "Sounds lak she's
-scared 'bout some'n'. Don't say er word till I git back. Mind, you folks
-got ter be careful ter-night."
-
-He descended the creaking stairs to the landing below. They caught the
-low mumbling of his voice intermingled with the perturbed tones of his
-wife, and then he crept back to them, strangely silent they thought, for
-after he had resumed his seat against the wall in the dark human circle,
-they heard only his heavy breathing. Fully five minutes passed, and
-then he sighed as if throwing something off his mind, some weight of
-perplexing indecision.
-
-"Well, go on wid what you was sayin', Brother Black," he said. "I reckon
-our meetin' won't be 'sturbed."
-
-"I almost got to what I was coming to," Buck Black continued, rising
-and leaning momentously on the back of his chair. "I was leadin' up to
-a gre't surprise, gen'men. I'm goin' to tell you faithful friends a
-secret, a secret which, ef it was out dat we knowed it, might hang us
-all. So far it rests wid des me an' a black 'oman dat kin be trusted, my
-wife. Gen'men, I know whar Pete Warren is. I kin lay my hands on 'im any
-time. He's right here in dis town ter-night."
-
-A subdued burst of surprise rose from the dark room, then all was still,
-so still that the speaker's grasp of his chair gave forth a harsh,
-rasping sound.
-
-"Yes, my wife seed 'im in de ol' lumber-yard back o' our house, en he
-was sech er sight ter look at dat she mighty nigh went out'n 'er senses.
-He was all cut in de face, en his clothes en shoes was des hangin' ter
- 'im by strings, en his eyes was 'most poppin' out'n his head. He was
-starvin' ter death--hadn't had a bite t' eat since he run off. When she
-seed 'im it was about a hour by sun, en he begged 'er to fetch 'im some
-victuals. Gen'men, he was so hungry dat she say he licked her han's lak
-er dog, en cried en tuck on powerful. She come home en told me, en ax me
-what ter do. Gen'men, 'fo' God on high I want ter do my duty ter my
-race en also to de white, but I couldn't see any safe way ter meddle.
-De white folks, some of 'em, anyway, say dat we aid en encourage
-crimes 'mongst our people, en while my heart was bleedin' fer dat boy en
-his folks, I couldn't underhanded he'p 'im widout goin' ter de men in
-power accordin' ter law."
-
-"And you did right," spoke up the minister. "As much as I pity the boy,
-I would have acted as you have done. He is accused of murder and is an
-escaped prisoner. To decide that he was innocent and help him escape is
-exactly what we are blaming his pursuers for doing--taking the law into
-hands not sanctioned by authority. There is only one thing that can
-decide the matter, and that is the decision of a judge and jury."
-
-"Dat's exactly de way I looked at it," said Black, "en so I tol' my wife
-not ter go nigh 'im ergin. I knowed dis meetin' was up fer ter-night, en
-I des thought I'd fetch it here en lay it 'fo' you all en take er vote
-on it."
-
-"A good idea," said the minister from his chair. "And, brethren, it
-seems to me we, as a body of representative negroes of this town, have
-now a golden opportunity to prove our actual sincerity to the white
-race. As you say, Brother Black, we have been accused of remaining
-inactive when a criminal was being pursued for crimes against the white
-people. If we can agree on it to a unit, and can turn the prisoner over
-now that all efforts of the whites to apprehend him have failed, our act
-will be flashed all round the civilized world and give the lie to the
-charge in question. Do you think, Brother Black, that Pete Warren is
-still hiding near your house?"
-
-"Yes, I do," answered the barber. "He would be afeard ter leave dat
-place, en I reckon he's waitin' dar now fer my wife ter fetch 'im
-some'n' ter eat."
-
-"Well, then, all we've got to do is to see if we can thoroughly agree on
-the plan proposed. I suppose one of the first things, if we do agree to
-turn him over to the law, is to consult with Mr. Carson Dwight and see
-if he can devise a way of acting with perfect safety to the prisoner and
-all concerned. If he can, our duty is clear."
-
-"Yes, he's de man, God knows dat," Black said, enthusiastically. "He
-won't let us run no risk."
-
-"Well, then," said the minister, who had the floor, "let us put it to
-a vote. Of course, it must be unanimous. We can't act on a thing as
-dangerous as this without a thorough agreement. Now, you have all
-heard the plan proposed. Those in favor make it known by standing up as
-quietly as you possibly can, so that I may count you."
-
-Very quietly, for so many acting in concert, men on all sides of the
-hall stood up. The minister then began to grope round the room, touching
-with his hands the standing voters.
-
-"Who's this?" he suddenly exclaimed, when he reached Neb Wynn's chair
-and lowered his hands to the drayman, who was the only one not standing.
-"It's me," Neb answered; "me, dat's who--_me!_"
-
-"Oh!" There was an astonished pause.
-
-"Yes, it's me. I ain't votin' yo' way," Neb said. "You all kin act fer
-yo'selves. I know what I'm about."
-
-"But what's de matter wid you?" Buck Black demanded, rather sharply.
-"All dis time you been de most anxious one ter do some'n', en now when
-we got er chance ter act wid judgment en caution, all in a body, en, as
-Brother Hardcastle say, ter de honor of ou' race, why you up en--"
-
-"Hold on, des keep yo' shirt on!" said Neb, in a queer, tremulous voice.
-"Gen'men, I ain't placed des zactly de same es you-all is. I don't want
-ter tek de whole 'sponsibility on my shoulders, en I don't intend to."
-
-"You are not taking it all on your shoulders, brother," said the
-minister, calmly; "we are acting in a body."
-
-"No, it's all on _me_," Neb said. "You said, Buck Black, dat Pete was in
-de lumber-yard 'hind yo' house. He ain't. You might search ever' stack o'
-planks en ever' dry-kiln dar, but you wouldn't fin' 'im. He's a cousin
-er my wife's, en me'n dat boy was good, true friends, en so he come
-here des now, when you heard my wife call me, an' th'owed hisse'f on my
-mercy. He's out at my stable now, up in de hay-loft, waitin' fer me ter
-fetch 'im suppin ter eat, as soon as you all go off. My wife say he's
-de most pitiful thing dat God ever made, en, gen'men, I'm sorry fer 'im.
-Law or no law, I'm sorry _fer_ 'im. It's all well enough fer you ter set
-here in yo' good clothes wid good meals er victuals inside o' you, en
-know you got er good safe baid ter go ter--it's all well enough fer you
-ter vote on what is ter be done, but ef you _do_ vote fer it en clap
- 'im 'hind de bars en he's hung--hung by de neck till he's as stiff es a
-bone, you'll be helpin' ter do it. Law is one thing when it's law, it's
-another thing when it ain't fit ter spit on. You all talk _jestice,
-jestice_, en you think it would be er powerful fine thing ter prove ter
-de worl' how honest you all is by handin' dat po' yaller dog over to de
-law. Put yo'selves in Pete's shoes an' you wouldn't be so easy ter vote
-yo'selves 'hind de bars. You'd say de bird in de han' is wuth three in
-de bush, en you'd stay away firm de white man's court-house. De white
-men say deirselves dat dar ain't no jestice, en dey's right. Carson
-Dwight is er good lawyer, en he'd fight till he drapped in his tracks,
-but de State solicitor would rake up enough agin Pete Warren to keep de
-jury's blood b'ilin'. Whar'd dey git a jury but fum de ranks o' de very
-men dat's chasin' Pete lak er rabbit now? Whar'd dey git a jury dat ud
-believe in his innocence when dey kin prove dat he done threatened de
-daid man? No whar in dis State. No innocent nigger's ever been hung,
-hein? No innocent nigger's in de chain gang, hein? Huh, dey as thick dar
-es fleas."
-
-When Neb had ceased speaking not a voice broke the stillness of the room
-for several minutes, then the minister said, with a deep-drawn breath:
-"Well, there is really no harm in looking at all sides of the question.
-The very view you have taken, Brother Wynn, may be the one that
-has really kept colored people from being more active in the legal
-punishment of their race. But it seems to me that it would only be fair,
-since you say Pete Warren is near, for him to be told of the situation
-and left to decide for himself."
-
-"I'm willin' ter do dat, God knows," said Neb, "en ef y'all say so, I'll
-fetch 'im here en you kin splain it ter 'im."
-
-"I'm sure that will be best," said Hardcastle. "Hurry up. To save time,
-you might bring his food here--that is, if your wife has not taken it to
-him."
-
-"No, she was afeard ter go out dar. I'll mek 'er fetch it up here while
-I go after him. It may tek time, fer he may be afeard to come in. But ef
-I tell 'im de grub's here, I bound you he'll come a-hustlin'."
-
-They heard Neb's voice below giving instructions to his wife, and then
-the outer door in the rear was opened and closed. Presently a step was
-heard on the stair, and they held their breaths expectantly, but it was
-only Neb's wife with a tray of food. Gropingly she placed it on a little
-table, which she softly dragged from a corner into the centre of the
-room, and without a word retired. A door below creaked on its hinges;
-steps shambling and unsteady resounded hollowly from the floor beneath,
-and Neb's urgent, pacific voice rose to the tense ears of the listeners,
-"Come on; don't be a baby, Pete!" they heard Neb say. "Dey all yo'
-friends en want ter he'p you out 'n yo' trouble ef dey kin."
-
-"Whar dat meat? whar it? oh, God! whar it?" It was the voice of the
-pursued boy, and it had a queer, uncanny sound that all but struck
-terror to the hearts of the listeners.
-
-"She lef' it up dar whar dey all is," Neb said; "come on! I'll give it
-to you!"
-
-That seemed to settle the matter, for the clambering steps drew nearer;
-and then two figures slightly denser than the darkness came into the
-room.
-
-"Wait; let me git you er chair," Neb said.
-
-"Whar it? whar it? my God! whar dat meat?" Pete cried, in a harsh,
-rasping voice.
-
-"Whar'd she put it?" Neb asked. "Hanged ef I know."
-
-"On the table," said Hardcastle.
-
-Neb reached out for the tray and had barely touched it, when Pete sprang
-at him with a sound like the snarl of an angry dog. The tray fell with a
-crash to the floor and the food with it.
-
-"There!" Neb exclaimed; "you did it."
-
-Then the spectators witnessed a pitiful, even repulsive scene, for the
-boy was on the floor, a big bone of ham in his clutch. For a moment
-nothing was heard except the snuffling, gulping, crunching sound that
-issued from Pete's nose, mouth, and jaws. Then a noise was heard below.
-It was a sharp rapping on the outer door.
-
-"Sh!" Neb hissed, warmingly; but there was no cessation of the ravenous
-eating of the starving negro. Neb cautiously looked out of the window,
-allowing only his head to protrude over the windowsill. "Who dar?" he
-called out.
-
-"Me, Neb; Jim Lincum," answered the negro below. "You told me ef I heard
-any news over my way ter let you know."
-
-"Oh yes," said Neb.
-
-"Folks think Pete done lef de woods, Neb. De mob done scattered ter hunt
-all round de country. A gang of 'em was headed dis way at sundown."
-
-"Oh, dat so?" Neb said; "well we done gone ter baid, Jim, or I'd open de
-do' en let you have er place ter sleep."
-
-"Don't want no place ter sleep, Neb," was the answer, in a half-humorous
-tone. "Don't want ter sleep nowhar 'cep' on my laigs sech times as dese.
-Er crowd er white men tried ter nab me while I was in my cotton-patch
-at work dis mawnin' but I made myse'f scarce. Dey hot en heavy after
-Sam Dudlow; some think he had er hand in de killin'. Dey cayn't find dat
-nigger, dough."
-
-"Well, good-night, Jim. I got ter git some rest," and Neb drew his head
-back and lowered the window-sash.
-
-"Jim's all right," he said, "but I couldn't tek 'im in here. Dem men may
-'a' been followin' 'im on de sly."
-
-He advanced to the middle of the room and stood over the crouching
-figure still noisily eating on the floor.
-
-"Pete, Brother Hardcastle got suppin ter 'pose ter you, en we 'ain't got
-any too much time. We goin' ter tell you 'bout it an leave it ter you.
-One thing certain, you ain't safe hidin' out like you is, en nobody
-ain't safe dat he'ps hide you, so I say suppin got ter be done in yo'
-case."
-
-"I want y'all ter sen' fer Marse Carson," Pete mumbled, between his
-gulps. "He kin fix me ef anybody kin."
-
-"That's what we were about to propose, Pete," said the preacher. "You
-see--"
-
-"Sh!" It was Neb's warning hiss again. All was silence in the room; even
-Pete paused to listen. It was the low drone of human voices, and many
-in number, immediately below. A light from a suddenly exposed lantern
-flashed 'on the walls. Neb approached the window, but afraid even
-cautiously to raise the sash, he stood breathless. Then through his
-closed teeth came the words: "We are caught; gen'men, we in fer it
-certain en sho! Dey done tracked us down!"
-
-There was a loud rapping on the door below, a stifled scream from Neb's
-wife at the foot of the stairs, and then a sharp, commanding voice
-sounded outside.
-
-"Open up, Neb Wynn!" it said. "We are onto your game. Some devilment is
-in the wind and we are going to know what it is."
-
-Neb suddenly and boldly threw up the sash and looked out. "All right,
-gen'men, don't bre'k my new lock. I'll be down dar in er minute." Then
-quickly turning to Pete, he bent and drew him up. "Mak' er bre'k fer dat
-winder back dar, slide down de shed-roof, en run fer yo' life. Run!"
-
-There was a great clatter of chairs and feet in the group of men, a
-crashing of a thin window-sash in the rear, a heavy, thumping sound on a
-roof outside, and a loud shout from lusty throats below.
-
-"There he goes! Catch 'im! Head 'im off! Shoot 'im!"
-
-Then darkness, chaos, and terror reigned.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-[Illustration: 9175]
-
-HILE these things were being enacted, Sanders, who had taken supper at
-Warren's, and Helen sat on the front veranda in the moonlight. Scarcely
-any other topic than Mam' Linda's trouble had been broached between
-them, though the ardent visitor had made many futile efforts to draw
-the girl's thought into more cheerful channels. It was shortly after ten
-o'clock, and Sanders was about to take his leave, when old Lewis emerged
-from the shadows of the house and was shambling along the walk towards
-the gate leading into the Dwight grounds, when Helen called out to him:
-"Where are you going, Uncle Lewis?"
-
-He doffed his old slouch hat and stood bare and, bald, his smooth pate
-gleaming in the moonlight.
-
-"I started over ter see Marse Carson, missy," he said, in a low, husky
-voice. "I knows good en well dat he can't do a thing, but Linda's been
-beggin' me ever since she seed him en Mr. Garner drive up at de back
-gate. She thinks maybe dey l'arnt suppin 'bout Pete. I knows dey hain't,
-honey,'ca'se dey ud 'a' been over 'fo' dis. Dar he is on de veranda
-now--oh, Marse Carson! Kin I see you er minute, suh?"
-
-"Yes, I'll be right down, Lewis," Carson answered, leaning over the
-railing.
-
-As he came out of the house and approached across the grass, Sanders and
-Helen went to meet him. He bowed to Helen and nodded coldly to Sanders,
-to whom he had barely been introduced, and then with a furrowed brow he
-stood and listened as the old man humbly made his wants known.
-
-"I'm sorry to say I haven't heard a thing, Uncle Lewis," he said. "I'd
-have been right over to see Mam' Linda if I had. So far as I can see,
-everything is just the same."
-
-"Oh, young marster, I don't know what I'm ergoin' ter do," the old negro
-groaned. "I don't see how Linda's gwine ter pass thoo another night.
-She's burnin' at de stake, Marse Carson, but thoo it all she blesses
-you, suh, fer tryin' so hard. My Gawd, dar she come now; she couldn't
-wait."
-
-He hastened across the grass to where the old woman stood, and caught
-hold of her arm.
-
-"Whar Marse Carson? Whar young marster?" Linda cried, and then, catching
-sight of the trio, she tottered unaided towards them.
-
-"Oh, young marster, I can't stan' it; I des _can't!_" she groaned,
-as she caught Dwight's hand and clung to it. "I am a mother ef I _am_
-black, an' dat my onliest child. My onliest child, young marster, en de
-po' boy is 'way over in dem mountains starvin' ter death wid dem men
-en dogs on his track. Oh, young marster, ol' Mammy Lindy is cert'nly
-crushed. Ef I could see Pete in his coffin I could put up wid it, but
-dis here--dis here"--she struck her great breast with her hand--"dis
-awful pain! I can't stan' it--I des can't!"
-
-Carson lowered his head. There was a look of profound and tortured
-sympathy on his strong face. Garner came out of the house smoking a
-cigar and strolled across the grass towards them, but observing the
-situation he paused at a flowering rose-bush and stood looking down the
-moonlit street towards the court-house and grounds dimly outlined in the
-distance. Garner had never been considered very emotional; no one had
-ever detected any indications of surprise or sorrow in his face. He
-simply stood there to-night avoiding contact with the inevitable. As a
-criminal lawyer he had been obliged to inure himself to exhibitions
-of mental suffering as a physician inures himself to the presence of
-physical pain, and yet had Garner been questioned on the matter, he
-would have admitted that he admired Carson Dwight for the abundant
-possession of the very qualities he lacked. He positively envied his
-friend to-night. There was something almost transcendental in the
-heart-wrung homage the old woman was paying Carson. There was something
-else in the fact that the wonderful tribute to courage and manliness
-was being paid there without reservation or stint before the (and Garner
-chuckled) very eyes of the woman who had rejected Carson's love, and in
-the very presence of the masculine incongruity (as Garner viewed him)
-by her side. All the display of emotion, _per se_, had no claims on
-Garner's interest, but the sheer, magnificent play of it, and its
-palpable clutch on things of the past and possible events of the future,
-held him as would the unfolding evidence in an important law case.
-
-"But oh, young marster," old Linda was saying; "thoo it all you been
-my stay en comfort; not even God's been as good ter me as you have; you
-tried ter he'p po' ol' Lindy, but de Lawd on high done deserted her. Dar
-ain't no just, reasonable God dat will treat er po' old black 'oman es
-I'm treated, honey. In slavery en out I've done de best--de very best
-I could fer white en black, en now as I stan' here, after er long life,
-wid my feet in de grave, I don't deserve ter be punished wid dis slow
-fire. Go ter de white 'omen er dis here big Newnited States en ax' 'em
-how dey would feel in my fix. Ef de mothers in dis worl' could see me
-ter-night en read down in my heart, er river of tears would flow fer me.
-Dat so, en' yet de God I've prayed ter-night en mornin', in slavery
-en out, has turned His back on me. I've prayed, young marster, till my
-throat is sore, till now I hain't got no strength nor faith lef' in me,
-en--well, here I stand. You all see me." Without a word, his face
-wrung with pain, Carson clasped her hand, and bowing to Helen and her
-companion he moved away and joined Garner.
-
-"It was high time you were getting out of that," Garner said, as he
-pulled at his cigar and drew his friend back towards the house. "You
-can do nothing, and letting Linda run on that way only works her up to
-greater excitement. But say, old man, what's the matter with you?"
-
-Carson was white, and the arm Garner had taken was trembling.
-
-"I don't know, Garner, but I simply can't stand anything like that,"
-Dwight said, his eyes on the group they had left. "It actually makes me
-sick. I--I can't stand it. Good-night, Garner; if you won't sleep here
-with me, I'll turn in. I--I--"
-
-"Hush! what's that?" Garner interrupted, his ear bent towards the centre
-of the town.
-
-It was a loud and increasing outcry from the direction of Neb Wynn's
-house. Several reports of revolvers were heard, and screams and shouts:
-"Head 'im off! Shoot 'im! There he goes!"
-
-"Great God!" Garner cried, excitedly; "do you suppose it is--"
-
-He did not finish, for Carson had raised his hand to check him and stood
-staring through the moonlight in the direction from which the sounds
-were coming. There were now audible the rapid and heavy foot-falls of
-many runners. On they came, the sound increasing as they drew nearer.
-They were only a few blocks distant now. Carson cast a hurried glance
-towards the Warren house. There, leaning on the fence, supported by
-Helen and Lewis, stood Linda, silent, motionless, open-mouthed. Sanders
-stood alone, not far away. On came the rushing throng. They were turning
-the nearest corner. Somebody, or something, was in the lead. Was it a
-man, an animal, a mad dog, a----
-
-On it came forming the point of a human triangle. It was a man, but a
-man doubled to the earth by. fatigue and weakness, a man who ran as
-if on the point of sprawling at every desperate leap forward. His hard
-breathing now fell on Carson's ears.
-
-"It's Pete!" he said, simply.
-
-Garner laid a firm hand on his friend's arm.
-
-"Now's the time for you to have common-sense," he said. "Remember, you
-have lost all you care for by this thing--don't throw your very life
-into the damned mess. By God, you _sha'n't!_ I'll--"
-
-"Oh, Marse Carson, it's Pete!" It was Linda's voice, and it rang out
-high, shrill, and pleading above the roar and din. "Save 'im! Save 'im!"
-
-Dwight wrenched his arm from the tense clutch of Garner and dashed
-through the gate, and was out in the street just as the negro reached
-him and stretched out his arms in breathless appeal and fell sprawling
-at his feet. The fugitive remained there on his knees, his hands
-clutching the young man's legs, while the mob gathered round.
-
-"He's the one!" a hoarse voice exclaimed. "Kill 'im! Burn the black
-fiend!"
-
-Standing pinioned to the ground by Pete's terrified clutch, Carson
-raised his hands above his head. "Stop! Stop! Stop!" he kept crying, as
-the crowd swayed him back and forth in their effort to lay hold of the
-fugitive who was clinging to his master with the desperate clutch of a
-drowning man.
-
-"Stop! Listen!" Carson kept shouting, till those nearest him became
-calmer, and forming a determined ring, pressed the outer ones back.
-
-"Well, listen!" these nearest cried. "See what he's got to say. It's
-Carson Dwight. Listen! He won't take up for him; he's a white man. He
-won't defend a black devil that--"
-
-"I believe this boy is innocent!" Carson's voice rang out, "and I plead
-with you as men and fellow-citizens to give me a chance to prove it to
-your fullest satisfaction. I'll stake my life on what I say. Some of you
-know me, and will believe me when I say I'll put up every cent I have,
-everything I hold dear on earth, if you will only give me the chance."
-
-A fierce cry of opposition rose in the outskirts of the throng, and
-it passed from lip to lip till the storm was at its height again. Then
-Garner did what surprised Carson as much as anything he had ever seen
-from that man of mystery.
-
-"Stop! Listen!" Garner thundered, in tones of such command that they
-seemed to sweep all other sounds out of the tumult. "Let's hear what
-he's got to say. It can do no harm! Listen, boys!"
-
-The trick worked. Not three men in the excited mob associated the voice
-or personality with the friend and partner of the man demanding
-their attention. The tumult subsided; it fell away till only the low,
-whimpering groans of the frightened fugitive were heard. There was
-a granite mounting-block on the edge of the sidewalk, and feeling it
-behind him: Carson stood upon it, his hands on the woolly pate of the
-negro still crouching at his feet. As he did so, his swift glance took
-in many things about him: he saw Linda at the fence, her head bowed
-upon her arms as if to shut out from her sight the awful scene; near her
-stood Lewis, Helen, and Sanders, their expectant gaze upon him; at the
-window of his mother's room he saw the invalid clearly outlined against
-the lamplight behind her. Never had Carson Dwight put so much of his
-young, sympathetic soul into words. His eloquence streamed from him like
-a swollen torrent of logic. On the still night air his voice rose clear,
-firm, confident. It was no call to them to be merciful to the boy's
-mother bowed there like a thing cut from stone, for passion like theirs
-would have been inflamed by such advice, considering that the fugitive
-was charged with having slain a woman. But it was a calm call to
-patriotism. Carson Dwight plead with them to let their temperate action
-that night say to all the world that the day of unbridled lawlessness
-in the fair Southland was at an end. Law and order on the part of itself
-was the South's only solution of the problem laid like another unjust
-burden on a sorely tried and suffering people.
-
-"Good, good! That's the stuff!" It was the raised voice of the adroit
-Garner, under his broad-brimmed hat in the edge of the crowd. "Listen,
-neighbors; let him go on!"
-
-There was a fluttering suggestion of acquiescence in the stillness that
-followed Garner's words. But other obstacles were to arise. A clatter of
-galloping horses was heard round the corner on the nearest side street,
-and three men, evidently mountaineers, rode madly up. They reined in
-their panting, snorting mounts.
-
-"What's the matter?" one of them asked, with an oath. "What are you
-waiting for? That's the damned black devil."
-
-"They are waiting, like reasonable human beings, to give this man a
-chance to establish his innocence," Carson cried, firmly.
-
-"They are, damn you, are they?" the same voice retorted. There was a
-pause; the horseman raised his arm; a revolver gleamed in the moonlight;
-there was a flash and a report. The crowd saw Carson Dwight suddenly
-lean to one side and raise his hands to the side of his head.
-
-[Illustration: 0183]
-
-"My God, he's shot!" Garner called out. "Who fired that gun?"
-
-For an instant horrified silence reigned; Carson still stood pressing
-his hands to his temple.
-
-No one spoke; the three restive horses were rearing and prancing about
-in excitement. Garner made his way through the crowd, elbowing them
-right and left, till he stood near the fugitive and his defender.
-
-"A good white man has been shot," he cried out--"shot by a man on one of
-those horses. Be calm. This is a serious business."
-
-But Carson, with his left hand pressed to his temple, now stood erect.
-
-"Yes, some coward back there shot me," he said, boldly, "but I don't
-think I am seriously wounded. He may fire on me again, as a dirty coward
-will do on a defenceless man, but as I stand here daring him to try it
-again I plead with you, my friends, to let me put this boy into jail.
-Many of you know me, and know I'll keep my word when I promise to move
-heaven and earth to give him a fair and just trial for the crime of
-which he is accused."
-
-"Bully for you, Dwight! My God, he's got grit!" a voice cried. "Let him
-have his way, boys. The sheriff is back there. Heigh, Jeff Braider, come
-to the front! You are wanted!"
-
-"Is the sheriff back there?" Carson asked, calmly, in the strange
-silence that had suddenly fallen.
-
-"Yes, here I am." Braider was threading his way towards him through
-the crowd. "I was trying to spot the man that fired that shot, but he's
-gone."
-
-"You bet he's gone!" cried one of the two remaining horsemen, and,
-accompanied by the other, he turned and, they galloped away. This seemed
-a final signal to the crowd to acquiesce in the plan proposed, and they
-stood voiceless and still, their rage strangely spent, while Braider
-took the limp and cowering prisoner by the arm and drew him down from
-the block. Pete, only half comprehending, was whimpering piteously and
-clinging to Dwight.
-
-"It's all right, Pete," Carson said. "Come on, we'll lock you up in the
-jail where you'll be safe." Between Carson and the sheriff, followed
-by Garner, Pete was the centre of the jostling throng as they moved off
-towards the jail.
-
-"What dey gwine ter do, honey?" old Linda asked, finding her voice for
-the first time, as she leaned towards her young mistress.
-
-"Put him in jail where he'll be safe," Helen said. "It's all over now,
-mammy."
-
-"Thank God, thank God!" Linda cried, fervently. "I knowed Marse Carson
-wouldn't let 'em kill my boy--I knowed it--I knowed it!"
-
-"But didn't somebody say Marse Carson was shot, honey?" old Lewis asked.
-"Seem ter me like I done heard--"
-
-Pale and motionless, Helen stood staring after the departing crowd, now
-almost out of view. Carson Dwight's thrilling words still rang in her
-ears. He had torn her very heart from her breast and held it in his
-hands while speaking. He had stood there like a God among mere men,
-pleading as she would have pleaded for that simple human life, and they
-had listened; they had been swept from their mad purpose by the fearless
-sincerity and conviction of his young soul. They had shot at him while
-he stood a target for their uncurbed passion, and even then he had dared
-to taunt them with cowardice as he continued his appeal.
-
-"Daughter, daughter!" her father on the upper floor of the veranda was
-calling down to her.
-
-"What is it, father?" she asked.
-
-"Do you know if Carson was hurt?" the Major asked, anxiously. "You know
-he said he wasn't, but it would be like him to pretend so, even if he
-were wounded. It may be only the excitement that is keeping him up, and
-the poor boy may be seriously injured."
-
-"Oh, father, do you think--?" Helen's heart sank; a sensation like
-nausea came over her, and she reeled and almost fell. Sanders, a queer,
-white look on his face, caught hold of her arm and supported her to a
-seat on the veranda. She raised her eyes to the face of her escort as
-she sank into a chair. "Do you think--did he look like he was wounded?"
-
-"I could not make out," Sanders answered, solicitously, and yet his lip
-was drawn tight and he stood quite erect. "I--I thought he was at first,
-but later when he continued to speak I fancied I was mistaken."
-
-"He put his hands to his temple," Helen said, "and almost fell. I saw
-him steady himself, and then he really seemed stunned for a moment."
-
-Sanders was silent. "I remember her aunt said," he reflected, in grim
-misery, his brows drawn together, "that she once had a sweetheart up
-here. _Is this the man?_"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-[Illustration: 9188]
-
-EN minutes later, while they still sat on the veranda waiting for
-Carson's return, they saw Dr. Stone, the Dwights' family physician,
-alight from his horse at the hitching-post nearby.
-
-"I wonder what that means?" the Major asked. "He must have been sent for
-on Carson's account and thinks he is at home. Speak to him, Lewis."
-
-Hearing his name called, Dr. Stone approached, his medicine-case in
-hand.
-
-"Were you looking for Carson?" Major Warren asked.
-
-"Why, no," answered the doctor, in surprise; "they said Mrs. Dwight was
-badly shocked. Was Carson really hurt?"
-
-"We were trying to find out," said the Major. "He went on to the jail
-with the sheriff, determined to see Pete protected."
-
-There was a sound of an opening door and old Dwight came out to the
-fence, hatless, coatless, and pale. "Come right in, doctor," he said,
-grimly. "There's no time to lose."
-
-"Is it as bad as that?" Stone asked.
-
-"She's dying, if I'm any judge," was the answer. "She was standing at
-the window and heard that pistol-shot and saw Carson was hit. She fell
-flat on the floor. We've done everything, but she's still unconscious."
-
-The two men went hastily into the room where Mrs. Dwight lay, and they
-were barely out of sight when Helen noticed some one rapidly approaching
-from the direction of the jail. It was Keith Gordon, and as he entered
-the gate he laid his hand on Linda's shoulder and said, cheerily, "Don't
-worry now; Pete is safe and the mob is dispersing."
-
-"But Carson," Major Warren asked; "was he hurt?"
-
-"We don't exactly know yet." Keith was now at Helen's side, looking into
-her wide-open, anxious eyes. "He wouldn't stop a second to be examined.
-He was afraid something might occur to alter the temper of the mob and
-wasn't going to run any risks. The crowd, fortunately for Pete, was made
-up mostly of towns-people. One man from the mountains, a blood relative
-of the Johnsons, could have kindled the blaze again with a word, and
-Carson knew it. He was more worried about his mother than anything else.
-She was at the window and he saw her fall; he urged me to hurry back to
-tell her he was all right. I'll go in."
-
-But he was detained by the sound of voices down the street. It was
-a group of half a dozen men, and in their midst was Carson Dwight,
-violently protesting against being supported.
-
-"I tell you I'm all right!" Helen heard him saying. "I'm not a baby,
-Garner; let me alone!"
-
-"But you are bleeding like a stuck pig," Garner said. "Your handkerchief
-is literally soaked. And look at your shirt!"
-
-"It's only skin-deep," Carson cried. "I was stunned for a moment when it
-hit me, that's all." Helen, followed by her father and Sanders, advanced
-hurriedly to meet the approaching group. They gave way as she drew near,
-and she and Dwight faced each other.
-
-"The doctor is in the house, Carson," she said, tenderly; "go in and let
-him examine your wound."
-
-"It's only a scratch, Helen, I give you my word," he laughed, lightly.
-"I never saw such a squeamish set of men in my life. Even stolid old
-Bill Garner has had seven duck fits at the sight of my red handkerchief.
-How's my mother?"
-
-Helen's eyes fell. "Your father says he is afraid it is quite serious,"
-she said. "The doctor is with her; she was unconscious."
-
-They saw Carson wince; his face became suddenly rigid. He sighed. "It
-may not be so well after all. Pete is safe for awhile, but if she--if
-my mother were to--" He went no further, simply staring blankly into
-Helen's face. Suddenly she put her hand up to his blood-stained
-temple and gently drew aside the matted hair. Their eyes met and clung
-together.
-
-"You must let Dr. Stone dress this at once," she said, more gently,
-Sanders thought, than he had ever heard a woman speak in all his life.
-He turned aside; there was something in the contact of the two that at
-once maddened him and drew him down to despair. He had dared to hope
-that she would consent to become his wife, and yet the man to whom she
-was so gently ministering had once been her lover. Yes, that was the
-man. He was sure of it now. Dwight's attitude, tone of voice, and glance
-of the eye were evidence enough. Besides, Sanders asked himself, where
-was the living man who could know Helen Warren and not be her slave
-forever afterwards?
-
-"Well, I'll go right in," Carson said, gloomily. He and Keith and Garner
-were passing through the gate when Linda called to him as she came
-hastily forward, but Keith and Garner were talking and Carson did not
-hear the old woman's voice. Helen met her and paused. "Let him alone
-to-night, mammy," she said, almost bitterly, it seemed to Sanders, who
-was peering into new depths of her character. "_Your_ boy is safe, but
-Carson is wounded--_wounded_, I tell you, and his mother may be dying.
-Let him alone for to-night, anyway."
-
-"All right, honey," the old woman said; "but I'm gwine ter stay here
-till de doctor comes out en ax 'im how dey bofe is. My heart is full
-ter-night, honey. Seem 'most like God done listen ter my prayers after
-all."
-
-Sanders lingered with the pale, deeply distraught young lady on the
-veranda till Keith came out of the house, passed through the gate, and
-strode across the grass towards them.
-
-"They are both all right, thank God!" he announced. "The doctor says
-Mrs. Dwight has had a frightful shock but will pull through. Carson was
-right; his wound was only a scratch caused by the grazing bullet. But
-God knows it was a close call, and I think there is but one man in the
-State low enough to have fired the shot."
-
-When Keith and Sanders had left her, Helen went with dragging, listless
-feet up the stairs to her room.
-
-Lighting her lamp, she stood looking at her image in the mirror on her
-bureau. How strangely drawn and grave her features appeared! It seemed
-to her that she looked older and more serious than she had ever looked
-in her life.
-
-Dropping her glance to her hands, she noted something that sent a
-thrill through her from head to foot. It was a purple smudge left on her
-fingers by their contact with Carson Dwight's wound. Stepping across
-to her wash-stand, she poured some water into the basin, and was on the
-point of removing the stain when she paused and impulsively raised it
-towards her lips. She stopped again, and stood with her hand poised in
-mid-air. Then a thought flashed into her brain. She was recalling the
-contents of the fatal letter of Carson's to her poor brother; the hot
-blood surged over her. She shuddered, dipped her hands, and began to
-lave them in the cooling water. Carson was noble; he was brave; he had a
-great and beautiful soul, and yet he had written that letter to her
-dead brother. Yes, she had openly encouraged Sanders, and she must be
-honorable. At any rate, he was a good, clean man and his happiness was
-at stake. Yes, she supposed she would finally marry him. She would marry
-him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-[Illustration: 9193]
-
-ARSON was slightly weakened by the loss of blood and the unusual tax on
-his strength, and yet, wearing a strip of sticking-plaster as the
-only sign of his wound, he was at the office betimes the next morning,
-anxious to make an early start into the arrangements for a hurried
-preliminary trial of his client. Garner, as, was that worthy's habit
-when kept up late at night, was still asleep in the den when Helen
-called.
-
-Carson was at his desk, bending over a law-book, his pipe in his mouth,
-when, looking up, he saw her standing in the doorway and rose instantly,
-a flush of gratification on his face.
-
-"I've come to see you about poor Pete," she began, her pale face taking
-on color as if from the heat of his own. "I know it's early, but I
-couldn't wait. Mam' Linda was in my room this morning at the break of
-day, sitting by my bed rocking back and forth and moaning."
-
-"She's uneasy, of course," Carson said. "That's only natural of a mother
-placed as she is."
-
-"Oh yes," Helen answered, with a sigh. "She was thoroughly happy last
-night over his rescue, but now you see she's got something else to worry
-about. She now wonders if he will be allowed a fair trial."
-
-"The boy must have that," Carson said, and then his face clouded over
-and he held himself more erect as he glanced past her out at the door.
-"Is Mr. Sanders--did he come with you? You see, I met him on the way to
-your house as I came down."
-
-"Yes, he's there talking over the trouble with my father," Helen made
-rather awkward answer. "He came in to breakfast, but--but I wasn't at
-the table. I was with Mam' Linda." And thereupon Helen blushed more
-deeply over the reflection that these last words might sound like
-intentional and even presumptuous balm to the sensitiveness of a
-rejected suitor.
-
-"I was afraid he might be waiting on the outside," Carson said,
-awkwardly. "I want to show hospitality to a stranger in town, you know,
-but somehow I can't exactly do my full duty in his case."
-
-"You are not expected to," and Helen had tripped again, as her fresh
-color proved. "I mean, Carson--" But she could go no further.
-
-"Well, I am unequal to it, anyway," Carson replied, with tightening lips
-and a steady, honest stare. "I don't dislike him personally. I hold no
-actual grudge against him. From all I've heard of him he is worthy of
-any woman's love and deepest respect. I'm simply off the committee of
-entertainment during his stay."
-
-"I--I--didn't come down to talk about Mr. Sanders," Helen found herself
-saying, as the shortest road from the trying subject. "It seems to me
-you ought to hate me. I have, I know, through my concern over Pete,
-caused you endless trouble and loss of political influence. Last night
-you did what no other man would or could have done. Oh, it was so brave,
-so noble, so glorious! I laid awake nearly all night thinking about it.
-Your wonderful speech rang over and over in my ears. I was too excited
-to cry while it was actually going on, but I shed tears of joy when I
-thought it all over afterwards."
-
-"Oh, that wasn't anything!" Dwight said, forcing a light tone, though
-his flush had died out. "I knew you and Linda wanted the boy saved, and
-it wasn't anything. I ran no risk. It was only fun--a game of football
-with a human pigskin snatched here and there by a frenzied mob of
-players. When it fell of its own accord at my feet, and I had laid hands
-on it, I would have put it over the line or died trying, especially when
-you and Sanders--who has beaten me in a grander game--stood looking on.
-Oh, I'm only natural! I wanted to win because--first, because it was
-your wish, and--because _that man was there._"
-
-Helen's glance fell to the ragged carpet which, clogged with the dried
-mud of a recent rain, stretched from her feet to the door. Then she
-looked helplessly round the room at the dusty, open bookshelves,
-Garner's disreputable desk strewn with pamphlets, printed forms of notes
-and mortgages, cigar-stubs, and old letters. Her eyes rested longer on
-the dingy, small-paned windows to which the cobwebs clung.
-
-"You always bring up his name," she said, almost resentfully. "Is it
-really quite fair to him?"
-
-"No, it isn't," he admitted, quickly. "And from this moment that sort of
-banter is at an end. Now, what can I do for you? You came to speak about
-Pete."
-
-She hesitated for a moment. It was almost as if, after all she had said,
-that if the subject was to be dropped, hers, not his, should be the
-final word.
-
-"I came to tell you that Mam' Linda and I have just left the jail. She
-was so wrought up and weak that I made Uncle Lewis take her home in a
-buggy. He says she didn't close her eyes all last night and this morning
-refused to touch her breakfast. Then the sight of Pete in his awful
-condition completely unnerved her. Did you get a good look at him last
-night, Carson--I mean in the light?"
-
-"No." Dwight shrugged his broad shoulders. "But he looked bad enough as
-it was."
-
-"The sight made me ill," Helen said. "The jailer let us go into the
-narrow passage and we saw him through the bars of the cell. I would
-never have known him in the world. His clothing was all in shreds and
-his face and arms were gashed and tom, his feet bare and bleeding. Poor
-mammy simply stood peering through at him and crying, 'My boy, my baby,
-my baby!' Carson, I firmly believe he is innocent."
-
-"So do I," Dwight made prompt answer. "That is, I am reasonably sure of
-it. I shall know _positively_ when I talk to him to-day."
-
-"Then you will secure his liberty, won't you?" Helen asked, eagerly. "I
-promised mammy I'd talk to you and bring her a report of what you said."
-
-"I am going to do everything in my power," Dwight said; "but I don't
-want to raise false hopes only to disappoint you and Linda all the more
-later."
-
-"Oh, Carson, tell me what you mean. You don't seem sure of the outcome."
-
-"You must try to look-at the thing bravely, Helen," Dwight said, firmly.
-"There is more in it than an inexperienced girl like you could imagine.
-I think we can arrange for a trial to-morrow, but it seems often that it
-is while such trials are in progress that the people become most wrought
-up; and then, you know, to-day and to-night must pass, and--" He broke
-off, avoiding her earnest stare of inquiry.
-
-"Go on, Carson, you can trust me, if I _am_ only a girl."
-
-"To tell you the truth," Dwight complied, "it is the next twenty-four
-hours that I dread most. That mob last night, it seems, was made up
-for the most part of men here in town, workers in the factories and
-iron-foundries--many of whom know me personally and have faith in my
-promises. If it were left with them I'd have little to fear, but it is
-the immediate neighbors of the dead man and woman, the members of the
-gang of White Caps who whipped Pete and feel themselves personally
-affronted by what they believe to be his crime--they are the men, Helen,
-from whom I fear trouble."
-
-Helen was pale and her hands trembled, though she strove bravely to be
-calm.
-
-"You still fear that they may rise and
-come--and--take--him--out--of--jail? Oh!" She clasped her hands tightly
-and stood facing him, a look of terror growing in her beautiful
-eyes. "And can't something be done? Mr. Sanders spoke this morning of
-telegraphing the Governor to send troops to guard the jail."
-
-"Ah, that's it!" said Carson, grimly. "But who is to take that
-responsibility on himself. I can't, Helen. It might be the gravest, most
-horrible mistake a man ever made, one that would haunt him to his very
-grave. The Governor, not understanding the pulse of the people here,
-might take the word of some one on the spot. Garner and I know him
-pretty well. We've been of political service to him personally, and he
-would do all he could if we telegraphed him, but--we couldn't do it. By
-the stroke of our pen we might make orphans of the children of scores of
-honest white men, and widows of their wives, for the bayonets and shot
-of a regiment of soldiers would not deter such men from what they regard
-as sacred duty to their families and homes. If the Governor's troops
-did military duty, they would have to hew down human beings like wheat
-before a scythe. The very sight of their uniforms would be like a red
-rag to a mad bull. It would be a calamity such as has never taken
-place in the State. I can't have a hand in that, Helen, and not another
-thinking man in the South would. I love the men of the mountains
-too well. They are turning against me politically because we differ
-somewhat, but I simply can't see them shot like rabbits in a net. Pete
-is, after all, only _one_--they are many, and they are conscientiously
-acting according to their lights. The machinery of modern law moves too
-slowly for them. They have seen crime triumphant too often to trust to
-any verdict other than that reached from their own reasoning."
-
-"I see; I see!" Helen cried, her face blanched. "I don't blame you,
-Carson, but poor mammy; what can I say to her?"
-
-"Do your best to pacify and encourage her," Dwight answered, "and we'll
-hope for the best."
-
-He stood in the doorway and watched her as she walked off down the
-little street. "Poor, dear girl!" he mused. "I had to tell her the
-truth. She's too brave and strong to be treated like a child."
-
-He turned back to his desk and sat down. There was a deep frown on his
-face. "I came within an inch of losing my grip on myself," his thoughts
-ran on. "Another moment and I'd have let her know how I am suffering.
-She must never know that--never!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-[Illustration: 9200]
-
-ALF an hour later Garner came in. He walked about the room, a half smile
-on his face, sniffing the air as if with unctuous delight, casting now
-and then an amused glance at his inattentive partner.
-
-"What do you mean? What are you up to now?" Carson asked, slightly
-irritated over having his thoughts disturbed.
-
-"She's been here," Garner answered. "She told me so just now, and I want
-to inhale the heavenly perfume she left in this disreputable hole. Good
-Lord, you don't mean that you let her see those rotten slippers of mine!
-If you'd been half a friend you'd have kicked them out of sight, but you
-didn't care; you've got on a clean collar and necktie, and that plaster
-on your alabaster brow would admit you to the highest realm of the
-elect--provided the door-keeper was a woman and knew how you got your
-ticket. Huh! I really don't know what will become of me if I associate
-with you much longer. Your conduct last night upset me. I turned in to
-bed about two o'clock. Bob Smith was doing night-work at the hotel, and
-he came in and had to be told the whole thing; and he'd no sooner got
-to bed than Keith came in, and Bob had to hear _his_ version. I had
-a corking dime novel, but it was too tame after the racket you went
-through. The _Red Avenger_ I was trying to get interested in couldn't
-hold a candle, even in his bareback ride strapped to a wild mustang in a
-mad dash across a burning prairie, to your horse-block rescue act. What
-_you_ did was _new_, and I was _there_. The burning prairie business has
-been overdone and the love interest in the _Red Avenger_ was weak, while
-yours--_well!_"
-
-Garner sat down in his creaking revolving-chair and thrust his thumbs
-into the arm-holes of his vest.
-
-"Mine?" Carson said, coldly. "I don't exactly see your point."
-
-"Well, the love business was there all the same," Garner laughed,
-significantly; "for, thrilling as it all was, I had an eye to that. I
-couldn't keep from wondering how I'd have felt if I'd been in your place
-and had your chances."
-
-"_My_ chances!" Dwight frowned. It was plain that he did not like
-Garner's bold encroachments on his natural reserve.
-
-"Yes, your chances, dang you!" Garner retorted, with a laugh. "Do you
-know, my boy, that as a psychological proposition, the biggest, most
-earnest, most credulous-looking ass on earth is the man who comes to
-a strange town to do his courting and has nothing to do but that one
-thing, at stated hours through the day or evening, while everybody
-around him is going about attending to business. I've watched that
-fellow hanging around the office of the hotel, kicking his heels
-together to kill time between visits, and in spite of all I've heard
-about his stability and moral worth I can't respect him. Hang it, if I
-were in his place and wanted to spend a week here, I'd peddle cigars on
-the street--I'd certainly have _something_ to occupy my spare time. But
-I'll be flamdoodled if you didn't give him something to think about last
-night. Of all things, it strikes me, that could make a man like that
-sick--sick as a dog at the very stomach of his hopes--would be to see a
-former sweetheart of his fair charmer standing under shot and shell in
-front of her ancestral mansion protecting her servants from a howling
-mob like that, and later to see the defender, with the step of a David
-with a sling, come traipsing back victorious in her cause, all gummed up
-with blood and fighting still like hell to keep his friends from choking
-him to death in sheer admiration. She and Sanders may be engaged, but
-I'll be dadblamed if I wouldn't be worried if I were in his place."
-
-"I wish you would let up, Garner," Dwight said, almost angrily. "I know
-you mean well, but you don't understand the situation, and I have told
-you before that I don't like to talk about it."
-
-"I _did_ want to tell you how it was rubbed in on him this morning,"
-Garner said, only half apologetically, "and if you don't care, I'll
-finish."
-
-Carson said nothing. Spots of red were on his cheeks, and with a teasing
-smile Garner went on: "I had stopped to speak to her on the corner just
-now, when the Major and his Highness from Augusta joined us. The old
-man was simply bursting with enthusiasm over what you accomplished last
-night. According to the Major, you were the highest type of Southerner
-since George Washington, and the obtuse old chap kept turning to Sanders
-for his confirmation of each and every statement. Sanders was doing it
-with slow nods and inarticulate grunts, about as readily as a seasick
-passenger specifies items for his dinner, while Helen stood there
-blushing like a red rose. Well," Garner concluded, as he kicked off one
-of his untied shoes to put on a slipper, "it may be cold comfort to you,
-viewed under the search-light of all the gossip in the air, but your
-blond rival is so jealous that the green juice of it is oozing from the
-pores of his skin."
-
-"It isn't fair to him to look at it as you are," Dwight said. "Under the
-same circumstances he could have taken my place."
-
-"Under the same circumstances, yes," Garner grinned. "But it is
-circumstances that make things what they are in this world, and I tell
-you that fellow needs circumstances worse than any man I ever saw. He
-is worried. I stopped and watched him as he walked on with her, and I
-declare it looked to me like he kicked himself under his long coat at
-every step. Say, look! Isn't that Pole Baker across the street? The
-fellow behind the gray horse. Yes, that's who it is. I'll call him. He
-may have news from the mountains."
-
-Answering the summons, Baker led his horse across the street to where
-the two friends stood waiting on the edge of the pavement.
-
-"Have they heard of the arrest over there, Pole?" Garner asked.
-
-"Yes," the farmer drawled out. "I was at George Wilson's store this
-morning, where a big gang was waiting for food supplies from their
-homes. Dan Willis fetched the report--by-the-way, fellows, just between
-us three, I'll bet he was the skunk that fired that shot. I'm pretty
-sure of it, from what I've picked up from some of his pals."
-
-"But what are they going to do?" Carson asked, anxiously.
-
-"That's exactly what I come in town to tell you," answered the
-mountaineer. "They are taking entirely a new tack. A report has leaked
-out that Sam Dudlow was seen prowling about Johnson's just 'fore dark
-the night of the murder, and they are dead on his track. They are
-concentrating their forces to catch him, and, since Pete Warren is safe
-in jail, they say they are going to let 'im stay thar awhile anyway."
-
-"Good!" Garner cried, rubbing his hands together. "We've got two
-chances, now, my boy--to prove Pete innocent at court or by their
-catching the right man. In my opinion, Dudlow is the coon that did the
-Job, and I believe he did it alone. Pete is too chicken-hearted and
-he's been too well brought up. Now let's get to work. You go talk to the
-prisoner, Carson, and put him through that honeyfugling third degree
-of yours. He'll confess if he did it, and if he did, may the Lord have
-mercy on his soul! I won't help defend him."
-
-"That's whar I stand," Pole Baker said. "It's enough trouble savin'
-_innocent_ niggers these days without bothering over the guilty. Shyster
-lawyers tryin' to protect the bad ones for a little fee is at the bottom
-of all this lawlessness anyway."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-[Illustration: 9205]
-
-S the prisoner's counsel, Carson had no difficulty in seeing him. At the
-outer door of the red brick structure, with its slate roof and dormer
-windows, Dwight met Burt Barrett, the jailer, a tall though strong young
-man, who had once lived in the mountains and had been a moonshiner, and
-was noted for his grim courage in any emergency.
-
-"I understand the trial is set for to-morrow," he remarked, as he opened
-the outer door which led into a hallway at the end of which was the
-portion of the house in which he lived with his wife and children.
-
-"Yes," Carson replied; "the judge has telegraphed that he will come
-without fail."
-
-The jailer shrugged his shoulders and laughed. "I feel a sight better
-over it than I did last night. I understand that the mob is going to let
-us alone till they can catch Sam Dudlow; if they lay hands on that scamp
-they certainly will barbecue 'im alive. As for Pete, I can't make up my
-mind about him; he's a trifling nigger and no mistake. He's got a good,
-old-time mammy and daddy, and none of Major Warren's niggers have
-ever been in the chain-gang, but this boy has talked a lot and been in
-powerful bad company. If you can keep him out of the clutch of the mob
-you may save his neck, but you've got a job before you."
-
-"I want to ask what you think about putting a guard round the jail,"
-Carson said, when they were at the foot of the stairs leading to the
-cells on the floor above.
-
-"As far as I'm concerned, I hope you won't have it done," said Barrett.
-"To save your neck, you couldn't summon men that wouldn't be prejudiced
-agin the nigger, an' if the report went out that we had put a force
-on at the jail it would only make the mob madder, and make them act
-quicker. A hundred armed citizens wouldn't stop a lynching gang--not
-a shot would be fired by white men at white men, so what would be the
-use?"
-
-"That's what the sheriff thinks exactly, Burt," Carson replied. "I
-presume the only thing to do is to treat the arrest as usual. I'm doing
-all I can to assure the people that there is to be a fair and speedy
-trial."
-
-They had reached the top of the stairs and were near Pete's cell, when
-the jailer turned and asked, in an undertone, "Are you armed?"
-
-"Why, no," Carson said, in surprise.
-
-"Good Lord! I wouldn't advise you to go inside the cell then. I've known
-niggers to kill their best friends when they are desperate."
-
-"I'm not afraid of this one," Dwight laughed. "I must get inside. I want
-to know the whole truth, and I can't talk to him through the grating. Is
-he in the cell on the right?"
-
-"No, the first on the left; it's the only doublebarred one in the jail."
-
-In one corner of the fairly "well lighted room stood a veritable cage,
-the sides, top and bottom consisting of heavy steel lattice-work. As the
-jailer was unlocking the massive door, Carson peered through one of the
-squares and a most pitiful sight met his eye, for at the sound of the
-key in the lock Pete, in his tatters and gashed and swollen face, had
-crouched down on his dingy blanket and remained there quaking in terror.
-
-"Get up!" the jailer ordered, in a not unkindly tone; "it's Carson
-Dwight to see you."
-
-At this the negro's face lighted up, his eyes blazed in the sudden flare
-of relief, and he rose quickly. "Oh, Marse Carson, I was afeared--"
-
-"Lock us in," Dwight said to the jailer; "when I'm through I'll call
-you."
-
-"All right, you know him better than I do," Barrett said. "I'll wait
-below."
-
-"Pete," Carson said, gently, when they were alone, "your mother says she
-wants me to defend you under the charge brought against you. Do you wish
-it, too?"
-
-"Yasser, Marse Carson; but, Marse Carson, I don't know no mo' about
-dat thing dan you do. 'Fo' God, Marse Carson, I'm telling you de trufe.
-Lawsy, Marse Carson, you kin git me out o' here ef you'll des tell 'em
-ter let me go. Dey all know you, Marse Carson, en dey know none er yo'
-kind er black folks ain't er gwine ter do er nasty thing lak dat. Look
-how dey did las' night! Shucks! dey wouldn't er lef' enough o' my haar
-fer er hummin'-bird's nest, ef I hadn't got ter you in de nick er time.
-Dat pack er howlin' rapscallions was tryin' ter tear me ter mince-meat
-when you fired off dat big speech en made 'em all feel lak crawlin' in
-holes. You tell 'em, Marse Carson--you tell de jailer ter le' me out.
-Dat man know you ain't no fool; he know you is de biggest lawyer in de
-Souf. Ain't I heard old marster say you gwine up, en up, en up, till you
-set in de jedge's seat in de cote? Las' night, when you 'gun on 'em,
-en let out dat way, I knowed I was safe, but I don't see what yo'-all
-waitin' fer; I want ter go home ter mammy, Marse Carson. Look lak she
-been sick, en she cried en tuck on here, en so did young miss. Marse
-Carson, _what's de matter wid me?_ What I done? I ain't er bad nigger.
-Unc' Richmond, on de farm, toi' me 'twas' ca'se I made threats ergin dat
-white man 'ca'se he whipped me. I did talk er lot, Marse Carson, but I
-never meant no harm. I was des er li'l mad, en--"
-
-"Stop, Pete!" There was a crude wooden stool in the cell and Carson sat
-down on it. His heart was overflowing with pity for the simple, trusting
-creature before him as he went on gently and yet firmly: "You don't
-realize it, Pete, but you are in the most dangerous position you were
-ever in. I am powerless to release you. You'll have to be taken to court
-and seriously tried by law for the crime of which you are charged. Pete,
-I'm going to defend you, but I can't do a thing for you unless you tell
-me the whole truth. If you did this thing you must tell me--_me_, do you
-understand. We are alone. No one can hear you, and if you confess it to
-me it will go no further. Do you understand?"
-
-Dwight's glance was fixed on the floor. To this point he had steeled
-himself against a too impulsive faith in the negro's words that he might
-logically satisfy himself beyond any doubt as to the innocence or guilt
-of his client. There was silence. He dared not look into the gashed
-face before him, dreading to read what might be written there by the
-quivering hand of self-condemnation. The sheer length of the ensuing
-pause sent cold darts of fear through him. He waited another moment,
-then raised his eyes to the staring ones fixed upon him. To his
-astonishment they were full of tears; the great, heavy lip of the negro
-was quivering like that of a weeping child.
-
-"Why, Marse _Carson!_" he sobbed; "my God, I thought you knowed I didn't
-do it! When you tol' 'em all las' night dat I wasn't de right one, I
-thought you meant it. I never once thought you--_you_ was gwine ter turn
-ergin me."
-
-Carson restrained himself by an effort as he went on, still calmly, with
-the penetrating insistency of grim justice itself.
-
-"Then do you know anything about it?" he asked;--"_anything at all?_"
-
-"Nothing I could swear to, Marse Carson," Pete replied, wiping his eyes
-on his torn and sleeveless arm.
-
-"Do you suspect anybody, Pete?"
-
-"Yasser, I do, Marse Carson. Somehow, I b'lieve dat Sam Dudlow done
-it. I b'lieve it 'ca'se folks say he's run off; en what he run off fer
-lessen he's de one? Oh, Marse Carson, I 'lowed I was havin' er hard
-'nough time lak it is, but ef _you_ gwine jine de rest uv um en--"
-
-"Stop; think!" Carson went on, almost sternly, so eager was he to get
-vital facts bearing on the situation. "I want to know, Pete, why you
-think Sam Dudlow killed the Johnsons. Have you any other reason except
-that he has left?"
-
-Pete hesitated a moment, then he answered: "I think he de one, Marse
-Carson, 'ca'se one day while me'n him en some more niggers was loadin'
-cotton at yo' pa's warehouse, some un was guyin' me 'bout de stripes
-Johnson en Willis lef' on my back, en I was--I was shootin' off my mouf.
-I didn't mean er thing, Marse Carson, but I was talkin' too much, en Sam
-come ter me, he did, en said: 'Yo' er fool, nigger; yo' sort never gits
-even fer er thing lak dat. It's de kind dat lay low en do de wuk right.'
-En, Marse Carson, w'en I hear dem folks was daid I des laid it ter Sam,
-in my mind."
-
-"Pete," Dwight said, as he rose to leave, "I firmly believe you are
-innocent."
-
-"Thank God, Marse Carson! I thought you'd b'lieve me. Now, w'en you
-gwine let me out?"
-
-"I can't tell that, Pete," Dwight answered, as cheerfully as possible.
-"You need a suit of clothes. I'll send you one right away."
-
-"One er yo's, Marse Carson?" The gashed face actually glowed with the
-delight of a child over a new toy.
-
-"I was going to order a new one," Carson answered. "I'd ruther have one
-er yo's ef you got one you thoo with," Pete said, eagerly. "Dar ain't
-none in dis town lak dem you git fum New York. Is you quit wearin' dat
-brown checked one you got last spring?"
-
-"Oh yes, you can have that, Pete, if you wish, and I'll send you some
-shoes and other things."
-
-"My God! will yer, boss? Lawd, won't I cut er shine at chu'ch next
-Sunday! Say, Marse Carson, you ain't gwine ter let um keep me in here
-over Sunday, is you?"
-
-"I'll do the best I can for you, Pete," the young man said, and when
-the jailer had opened the door he descended the stairs with a heavy,
-despondent tread.
-
-"Poor, poor devil!" he said to himself. "He's not any more responsible
-than a baby. And yet our laws hold him, in his benighted ignorance, more
-tightly, more mercilessly than they do the highest in the land."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-[Illustration: 9212]
-
-ESPITE the news Pole Baker had brought to town regarding the disposition
-of the mountaineers to let justice take its formal trend in the case
-of the negro already arrested, as the day wore on towards its close
-the whole town took on an air of vague excitement. Men who now lived at
-Darley, but had been former residents of the country, and were supposed
-to know the temper and character of the aggrieved people, shook their
-heads and smiled grimly when the subject of Pete's coming trial was
-mentioned. "Huh!" said one of these men, who kept a small grocery
-store on the main street, "that nigger'll never see the door of the
-court-house."
-
-And that opinion grew and seemed to saturate the very garment of
-approaching night. The negroes at work in various ways about the
-business portion of the town left their posts early, and with no comment
-to the whites or even to their own kind, they betook themselves to their
-homes--or elsewhere. The negroes who had held the interrupted meeting at
-Neb Wynn's house had been all that day less in evidence than any of the
-others. The attempt to stimulate law and order, to meet the white race
-on common ground, had been crudely and yet sincerely made. They had done
-all they could within their restricted limitations; it now behooved them
-personally to avoid the probable overflow of the coming crisis.
-Their meeting in secret, they feared, was not understood. The present
-prisoner, in fact, had to all appearances, at least, been knowingly
-harbored by them. To explain would be easy enough; convincing an
-infuriated, race-mad mob of their friendly, helpful intentions would be
-impossible. Hence it was that long-headed, now silent-tongued, Neb Wynn
-locked up his domicile, and with his wife and children stole through the
-darkest streets and alleys to the house of a citizen who had owned his
-father.
-
-"Marse George," he said. "I want you ter take me 'n my folks in fer
-ter-night."
-
-"All right, Neb," the white man answered; "we've got plenty of room. Go
-round to the kitchen and get your suppers. I didn't know it was as bad
-as that, but it may be well to be on the safe side."
-
-Just after dark Carson went home to supper. As he drew near the front
-gate he noticed that the Warren house was lighted both in the upper and
-lower portions and that a group of persons were standing on the veranda.
-He noticed the towering form of old Lewis and the bowed, bandanna-clad
-head of Linda, and with them, evidently offering consolation, stood
-Helen, the Major, Sanders, and Keith Gordon.
-
-Carson was entering the gate when Keith through the twilight recognized
-him and signalled him to wait. And leaving the others Keith came over to
-him.
-
-"I must see you, Carson," he said, in a voice that had never sounded so
-grave. "Can we go in? If Mam' Linda sees you she'll be after you. She's
-terribly upset."
-
-"Come into the library," Carson said. "I see it's lighted. We'll not be
-disturbed there."
-
-Inside the big, square room, with its simple furnishings and drab tints,
-Carson sank, weary from his nervous strain and loss of sleep, into an
-easy-chair and motioned his friend to take another, but Keith, nervously
-twirling his hat in his hands, continued to stand.
-
-"It's awful, old man, simply awful!" he said. "I've been there since
-sundown trying to pacify that old man and woman, but what was the use?"
-
-"Then she's afraid--" Carson began.
-
-"Afraid? Good God! how could she help it? The negro preacher and his
-wife came to her and Lewis and frankly tried to prepare them for the
-worst. Uncle Lewis is speechless, and Linda is past the tear-shedding
-stage. Hand in hand the old pair simply pace the floor like goaded
-brutes with human hearts and souls bound up in them. Then Helen--the
-poor, dear girl! Isn't this a beautiful homecoming for her? I feel like
-fighting, and yet there's nothing to hit but empty, heartless air. I
-don't care if you know it, Carson." Keith sank into a chair and leaned
-forward, his eyes glistening with the condensed dew of tense emotion. "I
-don't deny it. Helen is the only girl I ever cared for. She's treated
-me very kindly ever since she discovered my feeling, and given me to
-understand in the sweetest way the utter hopelessness of my case, but I
-still feel the same. I thought I was growing out of it, but seeing her
-sorrow to-day has shown me what she is to me--and what she always will
-be. I'll love her all my life, Carson. She's suffering terribly over
-this. She loves her old mammy as much as if they were the same flesh and
-blood. Oh, it was pitiful, simply pitiful! Helen was trying to pacify
-her just now, and the old woman suddenly laid her hand on her breast and
-cried out: 'Don't talk ter me, honey child, I nursed bofe you en Pete on
-dis here breast, an' dat boy's _me_--my own self, heart en soul, en ef
-God let's dem men hang 'im ter-night, I'll curse 'Im ter my grave.'"
-
-"Poor old woman!" Carson sighed. "If it has to come to her, it would be
-better to have it over with. It would have been better if I had stood
-back last night and let them have their way."
-
-"Oh no," protested Keith; "that's Linda's sole comfort. She hardly draws
-a breath that doesn't utter your name. She still believes that her only
-hope rests in you. She says you'll yet think of something--that you'll
-yet do something to prevent the thing. She cries that out every now
-and then. Oh, Carson, I don't amount to anything, but before God I can
-truthfully say that I'd give my life to have Linda talk that way about
-me--before Helen."
-
-Carson groaned, his tense hands were locked like prongs of steel in
-front of him, his face was deathly pale. "You wouldn't like any sort of
-talk or idle compliments if you were bound hand and foot as I am," he
-said. "It's mockery. It's vinegar rubbed into my wounds. It's hell!"
-
-He tore himself from his chair and began to stride about the room like
-a restless tiger in a cage. His walk took him into the hall utterly
-forgetful of the presence of his friend. There a colored maid came to
-him and said, "Your mother wants you, sir."
-
-He stared at the girl blankly for a moment, then he seemed to pull
-himself together. "Has my mother heard--?"
-
-"No, sir, your father told us not to excite her."
-
-"All right, I'll go up," Carson said. "Tell Mr. Gordon, in the library,
-to wait for me."
-
-"I was wondering if you had come," the invalid said, as he bent over her
-bed, took her hand, and kissed her. "I presume you have been very busy
-all day over Pete's case?"
-
-"Yes, very busy, mother dear."
-
-"And is it all right now? Your father tells me the trial is set for
-to-morrow. Oh, Carson, I'm very proud of you. I heard your speech last
-night, and it seemed to lift me to the very throne of God. Oh, you are
-right, you are right! It is our duty to love and sympathize with those
-poor creatures. They are still children in the cradles of their past
-slavery. They can't act for themselves. Their crimes are due chiefly to
-the lack of the guiding hands they once had. Oh, my son, your father
-is angry with you for spoiling your political chances by such a radical
-stand, but even if you lose the race by it, I shall be all the prouder
-of you, for you have shown that you won't sell yourself. I wish I could
-go to the courthouse to-morrow, but the doctor won't let me. He says I
-mustn't have another shock like that last night, when I heard that shot,
-saw you reel, and thought you were killed. Son, are you listening?"
-
-"Why, yes, mother. I--" His mind was really elsewhere. He had dropped
-her hand, and was standing with furrowed brow and tightly drawn lips in
-the shadow thrown by the lamp on a table near by and the high posts of
-the old-fashioned bedstead.
-
-"I thought you seemed to be thinking of something else," said the
-invalid, plaintively.
-
-"I really was troubled about leaving Keith downstairs by himself,"
-Carson said. "Perhaps I'd better run down now, mother."
-
-"Oh yes, I didn't know he was there. Ask him to supper."
-
-"All right, mother," and he left the room with a slow step, finding
-Gordon on the veranda below fitfully puffing at a cigar as he walked to
-and fro.
-
-"Helen called me to the fence just now," Keith said. "She's all broken
-to pieces. She is relying solely on you now. She sent you a message."
-
-"Me?"
-
-"Yes, with the tears streaming down her cheeks she simply said, 'Tell
-Carson that I am praying that he will think of some way to avert this
-disaster."
-
-"She said that!" Carson turned and stared through the gathering shadows
-towards the jail. There was a moment's pause, then he asked, in a tone
-that was harsh, crisp, and rasping: "Keith, could you get together
-to-night fifteen men who would stick to me through personal friendship
-and help me arrive at some decision as to--to what is best?"
-
-"Twenty, Carson--twenty who would risk their lives at a word from you."
-
-"They might have to sacrifice--"
-
-"That wouldn't make a bit of difference; I know the ones you can depend
-on. You've got genuine friends, the truest and bravest a man ever had."
-
-"Then have as many as you can get to meet me at Blackburn's store at
-nine o'clock. We may accomplish nothing, but I want to talk to them.
-God knows it is the only chance. No, I can't explain now. There is not
-a moment to lose. Tell Blackburn to keep the doors shut and let them
-assemble in the rear as secretly and quietly as possible."
-
-"All right, Carson. I'll have the men there."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.
-
-[Illustration: 9219]
-
-HEN Carson reached the front door of Blackburn's store about nine
-o'clock that evening, he found it closed. For a moment he stood under
-the Crude wooden shed that roofed the sidewalk and looked up and down
-the deserted street. It was a dark night, and from the aspect of the
-heavy, troubled clouds high winds seemed in abeyance beyond the hills
-to the west. He was wondering how he had best make his presence known
-to his friends within the store, when he heard a soft whistle, and Keith
-Gordon, the flaring disk of a cigar lighting his expectant face, stepped
-out of a dark doorway.
-
-"I've been waiting for you," he said, in a cautious undertone. "They are
-getting impatient. You see, they thought you'd be here earlier."
-
-"I couldn't get away while my mother was awake," Carson said. "Dr. Stone
-was there and warned me not to leave at night. She can't stand any
-more excitement. So I had to stay with her. I read to her till she fell
-asleep. Who's here?"
-
-"The gang and fully fifteen other trusty fellows--you'll see them on the
-inside, every man of them with a gun. At the last moment I heard Pole
-Baker was down at the wagon-yard, and I nabbed him."
-
-"Good; I'm glad you did. Now let's go in."
-
-"Not yet, old man," Keith objected. "Blackburn gave special orders not
-to open the door if any person was in sight. Let's walk to the corner
-and look around."
-
-They went to the old bank building on the corner, and stood at the foot
-of the stairs leading up to the den. No one was in sight. Across the
-numerous tracks of the switch-yard hard by there was a steam flouring
-mill which ground day and night, and the steady puffing of the engine
-beat monotonously on their ears. In a red flare of light they saw the
-shadowy form of the engineer stoking the fire.
-
-"Now the way is clear," said Keith; "we can go in, but I want to prepare
-you for a disappointment, old man."
-
-Carson stared through the darkness as arm in arm they moved back to the
-store. "You mean--"
-
-"I'll tell you, Carson. The meeting of these fellows to-night is a big
-proof of the--the wonderful esteem in which they hold you. No other man
-could have got them together at such a time; but, all the same, they are
-not going to allow you to--you see, Carson, they have had time to
-talk it over in there, and have unanimously agreed that to make any
-opposition by force would be worse than folly. Pole Baker brought
-some reliable news, reliable and terrible. Why, he told us just
-now--however, wait. He will tell you about it."
-
-Giving a rap on the door that was recognized within, they were admitted
-by Blackburn, who stood back in the shadow and quickly closed the
-shutter and locked it again. In the uncertain light of a lamp with a
-murky chimney, on the platform in the rear, seated on boxes, nail kegs,
-chairs, table, and desk, Dwight beheld a motley gathering of his friends
-and supporters. Kirk Fitzpatrick, the brawny, black-handed tinner, who
-had a jest for every moment, was there; Wilson, the shoemaker; Tobe
-Hassler, the German baker; Tom Wayland, the good-hearted drug clerk,
-whose hair was as red as blood; Bob Smith, Wade Tingle, and, nestled
-close to the lamp, and looking like a hunchback, crouched Garner, so
-deep in a newspaper that he was utterly deaf and blind to sounds and
-things around him. Besides those mentioned, there were several other
-ardent friends of the candidate.
-
-"Well, here you are at last," Garner cried, throwing down his paper. "If
-I hadn't had something to read I'd have been asleep. I don't know any
-more than a rabbit what you intend to propose, but whatever it is, we
-are late enough about it."
-
-Hurriedly Carson explained the cause of his delay and took the chair
-which the tinner, with the air of a proud inferior, was pushing towards
-him. As he sat down and the lamplight fell athwart his careworn face,
-the group was overwhelmed with sympathy and a strange, far-reaching
-respect they could hardly understand. To-night they were, more than
-usual, under the spell of that inner force which had bound them one and
-all to him and which, they felt, nothing but dishonor could break. And
-yet there they sat so grimly banded together against him that he felt it
-in their very attitudes.
-
-"The truth is"--Garner broke the awkward pause--"we presume you got us
-together to-night to offer open opposition--in case, of course, that the
-mob means harm to your client. That seems the only thing a body of men
-can do. But, my dear boy, there are two sides to this question. For
-reasons of your own, chief among which is a most beautiful principle to
-see the humblest stamp of man get justice--for these reasons you call on
-your friends to stand to you, and they will stand, I reckon, to the end,
-but it's for you, Carson, to act reasonably and think as readily of the
-interests of all of us as for those of the unfortunate prisoner. To
-meet that mob by opposition to-night would--well, ask Pole Baker for the
-latest news. When you have heard what he knows to be true, I am sure you
-will see the utter futility of any movement whatsoever."
-
-All eyes were now turned on the gaunt mountaineer, who was sitting on an
-inverted nail keg whittling to a fine point a bit of wood which now and
-then he thrust automatically between his white front teeth.
-
-"Well, Carson," he began, in drawling tones, "I lowed you-uns would want
-to know just how the land lays, and as I had a sort of underground way
-of gettin' at first-hand facts, I raked in all the information I could
-an' come on to town. I'd heard about how low your mother was, an' easy
-upset by excitement, an' so I didn't go up to your house. I met Keith,
-an' he told me I could see you at this meetin', an' so I waited. Carson,
-the jig is certainly up with that coon. No power under high heaven
-could save his neck. The report that was circulated this morning, was
-deliberately sent out to throw the authorities off their guard. Only
-about thirty men are still on Sam Dudlow's trail--the rest, hundreds and
-hundreds, in bunches an' factions, each faction totin' a flag to show
-whar they hail from, an' all dressed in white sheets, is headed this
-way."
-
-"Do you mean right at this moment?" Carson asked, as he started to rise.
-
-Pole motioned to him to sit down.
-
-"They won't be here till about twelve o'clock," he said. "They've passed
-the word about amongst 'em, and agreed to meet, so that all factions can
-take part, at the old Sandsome place, two miles out on the Springtown
-road. They will start from there at half-past eleven on the march for
-the jail. It will be after twelve before they get here. Pete's got that
-long to make his peace, but no longer. And right here, Carson, before I
-stop, I want to say that thar ain't a man in this State I'd do a favor
-for quicker than I would for you, but many of us here to-night are
-family men, and while that nigger may, as you think, be innocent, still
-his life is just one life, while--well"--Baker snapped his dry fingers
-with a click that was as sharp as the cocking of a revolver--"I wouldn't
-give _that_ for our lives if we opposed them men. They are as mad
-as wounded wild-cats. They believe he done it; they know on reliable
-testimony that he said he'd kill Johnson; an' they want his blood. Five
-hundred such as we are wouldn't halt 'em a minute. I want to help, but
-I'm tied hand an' foot."
-
-There was silence after Pole's voice died away. Then Garner rapped on
-the table with his small hand and tossed back the long, thick hair from
-his massive brow.
-
-"You may as well know the truth, Carson," he said, calmly. "We put it to
-a vote just before you came, and we all agreed that we would--well, try
-to bring you round to some sort of resignation; try to get you to throw
-it off your mind and stop worrying."
-
-To their surprise Carson took up the lamp and rose. "Wait a moment,"
-he said, and with the lamp in hand he crossed the elevated part of
-the floor and went down the steps into the cellar. They were left in
-darkness for a moment, the rays of the lamp flashing now only on the
-front wall and door of the long building.
-
-"Huh, there ain't anybody hiding there!" Blackburn cautiously called
-out. "I looked through the full length of it, turned over every box
-and barrel, before you came. I wasn't going to run any risk of having a
-stray tramp in a caucus like this."
-
-There was some fixed quality in Dwight's drawn face as he emerged,
-carrying the lamp before him, ascended the steps, and again took his
-place at the table.
-
-"You thought somebody might be hiding there," the store-keeper said;
-"but I was careful to--"
-
-"No, it wasn't that," Carson said. "I was wondering--I was trying to
-think--"
-
-He paused as if submerged in thought, and Garner turned upon him
-almost sternly. He had never before used quite such a harsh tone to his
-partner.
-
-"You've gone far enough, Carson," he said. "There are limits even to the
-deepest friendship. You can't ask your best friends to make their wives
-widows and their children orphans in a blind effort to save the neck of
-one miserable negro, even if he's as innocent as the angels in heaven.
-As for yourself, your heroism has almost led you into a cesspool of
-reckless absurdity. You have let that old man and woman up there, and
-Miss--that old man and woman, _anyway_--work on your sympathies till you
-have lost your usual judgment. I'm your friend and--"
-
-"Stop! Wait!" Carson stood up, his hands on the edge of the table, the
-lamp beneath him throwing his mobile face into the shadow of his firm,
-massive jaw. "Stop!" he repeated. "You say you have given up. Boys,
-I can't. I tell you I _can't_. I simply can't let them kill that boy.
-Every nerve in my body, every pulsation of my soul screams out against
-it. I have set my heart on averting this horror. Ten years ago I could
-have gone to my bed and slept peacefully, as many good citizens of this
-town will to-night, under the knowledge that the verdict of mob law was
-to be executed, but in the handling of this case I've had a new birth.
-There is no God in heaven if--I say if--He has not made it _possible_
-for the mind and will of man to prevent this horror. There must be a
-way; there _is_ a way, and if I could put my ideas into your brains
-to-night--my faith and confidence into your souls--we'd prevent this
-calamity and set an example for our fellows to follow in future."
-
-"Your ideas into our brains!" Garner said, in a tone of amused
-resentment. "Well, I like that, Carson; but if you can see a ghost of a
-chance to save that boy's neck with safety to our own, I'd like to have
-you plug it through my skull, if you have to do it with a steel drill.
-At present I'm the senior member of the firm of Garner & Dwight, but
-I'll take second place hereafter, if you can do what you are aiming at."
-
-"I don't mean to reflect on your intelligences," Dwight went on,
-passionately, his voice rising higher, "but I _do_ see a way, and I am
-praying God at this moment to make you see it as I do and be willing to
-help me carry it out."
-
-"Blaze away, old hoss," Pole Baker piped up from his seat on the nail
-keg. "I'm not a nigger-lover by a long shot, but somehow, seeing how you
-feel about this particular one an' his connections, I'm as anxious to
-save 'im as if I owned 'im in the good old day an' his sort was fetchin'
-two thousand apiece. You go ahead. I feel kind o' sneakin', anyway, for
-votin' agin you while you was up thar nursin' yore sick mammy. By gum!
-you give me the end of a log I kin tote, an' I'll do it or break my
-back."
-
-"I want it understood, Carson," said Wade Tingle at this juncture, "that
-I was only voting against our trying to stop that mob by force, and, to
-do myself justice, I was voting in the interests of the family men here
-to-night. God knows, if you can see any _other_ possible way--"
-
-"We have no time to lose," Carson said. "If we are to accomplish
-anything we must be about it. Gentlemen, what I may propose may, in a
-way, be asking you to make a sacrifice almost as great as that of open
-resistance. I am going to ask you, law-abiding citizens that you are, to
-break the law, as you understand it, but not law as the best wisdom of
-man intended it to be. This section is in a state of open lawlessness.
-The law I'm going to ask you to break is already broken. The highest
-court might hold that we would be no better, in _fact_, than the army of
-law-breakers headed this way with the foam of race hatred on their
-lips, its insane blaze in their eyes that till recently beamed only in
-gentleness and human love. But I'm going to ask you to chose between
-two evils--to let an everlasting injustice be done at the hand of a hate
-that will drown in tears of regret in time to come, or the lesser evil
-of breaking an already broken law. You are all good citizens, and I
-tremble and blush over my audacity in asking you to do what you have
-never in any form done before."
-
-Carson paused. Wondering silence fell on the group. Upon each face
-struggled evidences of an almost painful desire to grasp his meaning.
-That it was momentous no man there doubted. Even the ever equable Garner
-was shaken from, his habitual stoic attitude, and with his delicate
-fingers rigidly supporting his great head he stared open-mouthed at the
-speaker.
-
-"Well, well, what is it?" he presently asked.
-
-"There is only one chance I see," and Dwight stood erect, his arms
-folded, and stepped back so that the light of the lamp fell full upon
-his tense features. The patch of sticking plaster stood out from his
-pale skin, giving his perspiring brow an uncanny look. "There is only
-one thing to do, my friends, and without your help I stand powerless.
-I suggest that we form ourselves into a supposed mob of disguised men,
-that we go ahead of the others to the jail, and actually _force Burt
-Barrett to turn the prisoner over to us_."
-
-"Great God!" Garner, stood up, and leaned on the table. "_Then_
-what--what would you do? Good Lord!"
-
-Carson pointed steadily to the cellar-door and swallowed the lump of
-excitement in his throat. "I would, unseen by any one, if possible,
-bring him here and imprison him, in that cellar, guarded by us only
-till--till such a time as we could safely deliver him to a court of
-justice."
-
-"By God, you _are_ a wheel-hoss!" burst from Pole Baker's lips. "That's
-as easy as failin' off a log."
-
-"Do you mean to make Burt Barrett believe we are--are actually bent on
-lynching the negro?" demanded Keith Gordon, new-born enthusiasm bubbling
-from his eyes and voice.
-
-"Yes, that would be the only way," said Carson. "Barrett is a sworn
-officer of the law, and his position is his livelihood. Even if we could
-persuade him to join us, it wouldn't be fair to him, for he would
-be shouldering more responsibility than we would. The only way is to
-thoroughly disguise ourselves and compel him to give in as he will be
-compelled by the others if we don't act first. I know he would not fire
-upon us."
-
-"It looks to me like a dandy idea," spoke up Blackburn. "As for me I
-want to reward originality by doing the thing if possible. As for that
-cellar, it's as strong as an ancient fortress anyway and, Carson, Pete
-would not try to escape if you ordered him not to. As for disguises, I
-can lend you all the bleached sheeting you want. I got in a fresh bale
-of it yesterday. I could cut it into ten-yard pieces which would not
-hurt the sale of it. Remnants fetch a better price than regular stuff
-anyway. Boys, let's vote on it. All in favor stand up."
-
-There was a clatter of shoes and rattling of chairs, boxes, kegs and
-other articles which had been used for seats. It was an immediate and
-unanimous tribute to the sway Carson Dwight's personality had long
-held over them. They stood by him to a man. Even Garner suddenly, and
-strangely for his crusty individuality, relegated himself to the rank of
-a common private under the obvious leader.
-
-"Hold on, boys!" exclaimed one not so easily relegated to any position
-not full of action, and Pole Baker was heard in a further proposal. "So
-far the arrangements are good and sound but you-uns haven't looked far
-enough ahead. When we git to the jail thar's got to be some darned fine
-talkin' of exactly the right sort, or Burt Barrett will smell a mouse
-and refuse our demands. In a case like this silence is a sight more
-powerful than a lot o' gab. Now, I propose to have one man, and one man
-_only_ to do the talking."
-
-"Yes, and you are the man," said Carson. "You must do it."
-
-"Well, I'm willin'," agreed Baker. "The truth is, folks say I'm good at
-just that sort o' devilment, an' I'd sort o' like the job."
-
-"You are the very man," Carson said, with a smile.
-
-"You bet he is," agreed Blackburn. "Now come down in the store an' let
-me rig you spooks up. We haven't any too much time to lose."
-
-"Thar's another thing you-uns don't seem to have calculated on," said
-Baker, as Blackburn was leading them down to the dry-goods counter.
-"It may take time to quiet public excitement, even if we put this thing
-through to-night. You propose to let the impression go out that thar was
-a lynchin'. How will you keep 'em from thinkin' it's a fake unless they
-see some'n' hangin' to a tree-limb in the mornin'? If they thought we'd
-put up a job on 'em, they would nose around till they was onto the whole
-business, an' then thar would be the devil to pay."
-
-"You are right about that," said Garner. "If we could convince the big
-mob that Pete has been lynched in some secret way or place, by some
-other party, who don't want to be known in the matter, the excitement
-would die down in a day or so."
-
-"A bang-up good idea!" was Pole's ultimatum. "Leave it to me and I'll
-study up some way to put it to Burt--by gum! How about tellin' 'im that,
-for reasons of our own, we intend to hide the body whar the niggers
-can't git at it to give it decent burial? I really believe that would go
-down."
-
-"Splendid, splendid!" said Garner. "Work that fine enough, Pole, and it
-will give us more time for everything."
-
-"Well, I can work it all right if I am to do the talkin'," Pole said, as
-he reached out for his portion of the sheeting.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-
-[Illustration: 9231]
-
-IFTEEN minutes later a spectral group in all truth filed out through the
-rear door of the store and paused for further orders in the shadow
-of the wall of the adjoining bank building. The sky was still darkly
-overcast and a drizzle as fine as mist was in the air.
-
-With Carson and Pole in the lead, the party marched grimly two and two,
-a weird sight even to themselves. Straight down the alley behind the
-stores along the railway they moved, keeping step like trained military
-men. Pole, for visual effect, carried a coil of new hemp rope, and he
-swung it about in his white, winglike clutch with the ease of a cow-boy,
-as he gutturally gave orders as to turns and tentative pauses. Now and
-then he would leave the others standing and stride ahead through the
-darkness and signal them to come on up. In this way they progressed with
-many a halt, and many a cautious dtour to avoid the light that steadily
-gleamed through some cottage window or chink in a door or some watchman
-at his post at some mill or factory, till finally they reached the
-grounds surrounding the court-house and jail.
-
-"I don't know how soft-hearted you are, Carson," Baker whispered in the
-young man's ear, "but thar's one thing a man full of feelin' like you
-seem to be ought to be ready to guard against."
-
-"What is that, Pole?"
-
-"Why, you know, if we git the poor devil out he'll be sure he's done
-for, an' he'll be apt to raise an' awful row, beggin' an' prayin' an'
-no tellin' what else. But for all you do, don't open yore mouth. Let 'im
-bear it--tough as it will be--till we kin git to a safe place. Thar'll
-be folks listenin' in the houses along the way to the store, an' ef you
-was to speak one kind word the truth might leak out. To all appearances
-we are lynchers of the most rabid brand."
-
-"I understand that, Pole," said Carson. "I won't interfere with your
-work."
-
-"Don't call it _my_ work," said Baker, admiringly. "I've been through
-a sight of secret things in my time, but I never heard of a scheme as
-slick an' deep-laid as this. If she goes through safe I'll put you at
-the top of my list. It looks like it will work, but a body never kin
-tell. Burt Barrett is the next hill to climb. I don't know him well
-enough to foresee what stand he'll take. Boys, have yore guns ready, an'
-when I order you to take aim, you do it as if you intend to make a hole
-in whatever is in front of you. Our bluff is the biggest that ever was
-thought of, but it has to go. Now, come on!"
-
-Through the open gateway they marched across the public lawn covered
-with fresh green grass to the jail near by. A dog chained in a kennel
-behind the house waked and snarled, but he did not bark. There was a
-little porch at the entrance to the building, and along this the ghostly
-band silently arranged themselves.
-
-"Hello in thar, Burt Barrett!" Pole suddenly cried out, in sharp, stern
-tones, and there was a pause. Then from the darkness within came the
-sound of some one striking a match. A flickering light flared up in the
-room on the right of the entrance; then the voice of a woman was heard.
-
-"Burt, what is it?" she asked, in a startled tone.
-
-"I don't know; I'll see," a coarser voice made answer. Another pause and
-a door on the inside was opened, then the heavier outer one, and Burt
-Barrett, half dressed, stood staring at the grewsome assemblage before
-him.
-
-[Illustration: 0233]
-
-"We've come after that damned nigger," said Baker, succinctly, his
-tone so low in his throat that even an intimate friend would not have
-recognized it, and as he spoke he raised his coil of rope and tapped the
-floor of the porch.
-
-Barrett, as many a brave man would have done in his place, stood
-helplessly bewildered. Presently he drew himself together and said,
-firmly: "Gentlemen, I'm a sworn officer of the law. I've got a duty to
-perform and I'm going to do it." And thereupon they saw the barrel of a
-revolver which the jailer held in his hand. In the awful stillness that
-engulfed his words the click of its hammer, as the weapon was cocked,
-sounded sharp and distinct.
-
-"Too bad, but he's goin' to act ugly, boys," Pole said, with grim
-finality. "He is a white man _in looks_, but he's j'ined forces with
-the black devils that are bent on rulin' our land. Steady, take aim!
-If thar's less'n twenty holes in his carcass when he's examined in the
-mornin' it will stand for some member's eternal disgrace. Aim careful!"
-
-There was a startled scream at the half-open window of the bedroom on
-the right and the jailer's wife thrust out her head.
-
-"Don't shoot 'im!" she screamed. "Don't! Give 'em the keys, Burt. Are
-you a fool?"
-
-"He certainly looks it," was Baker's comment, in a tone of well-assumed
-only half-bridled rage. "Give 'im ten seconds to drap them keys, boys.
-I'll count. When I say ten blaze away, an' let a yawnin' hell take 'im."
-
-"Gentlemen, I--"
-
-"Burt! Burt! what do you mean?" the woman cried again. "Are you plumb
-crazy?"
-
-"One!" counted Pole--"two!--three--"
-
-"I want to do what's right," the jailer temporized. "Of course, I'm
-overpowered, and if--"
-
-"Five!--six!" went on Pole, his voice ringing out clear and piercing.
-
-There was a jingling of steel. The spectators, peering through ragged
-eye-holes in their white caps, saw the bunch of keys as it emerged from
-Barrett's pocket and fell to the doorstep.
-
-"Gentlemen, you may live to be sorry for this night's work," he said.
-
-"What do you care what we're sorry for," Pole said, grimly, "just so you
-ain't turned into a two-legged sifter? Now"--as he stooped to pick up
-the keys--"you git back in thar to yore wife an' children. We
-simply mean business an' know what we are about. An' look here, Burt
-Barrett"--Pole nudged Carson, who stood close to him--"thar'll be
-another gang here in a few minutes on the same business. You kin tell
- 'em we beat 'em to the hitchin'-post, an', moreover, you kin tell 'em
-that we said that when we settle this nigger's hash them nor nobody else
-will ever be able to find hair or hide of 'im. A buryin' to the general
-run o' niggers is their greatest joy an' pride, but they'll never cut up
-high jinks over this one."
-
-"Good, by Heaven!" Garner chuckled, as he recalled Pole's diplomatic
-suggestion at the store.
-
-Without another word of protest the jailer receded into the house,
-leaving the door open, and, led by Pole, the others entered the hallway
-with a firm tread and mounted the stairs to the floor above. All was
-still here, and so dark that Baker lighted a bit of candle and held it
-over his head. Knowing the cell in which Pete was confined, Carson led
-them to its door. As they paused there and Pole was fumbling with-the
-keys, a low, stifled scream escaped from the prisoner, and then, in the
-dim, checkered light thrown by the candle through the bars, they saw the
-negro standing close against the farthest grating. Pole had found the
-right key and opened the door.
-
-"It's all up with you, Pete Warren," he said; "you needn't make a row.
-You've got to take your medicine. Come on."
-
-"Oh, my God, my God!" cried the negro, as with great, glaring eyes he
-gazed upon them. "I never done it. I never done it. Don't kill me!"
-
-"Bring 'im on, boys!" Pole produced an artificial oath with difficulty,
-for he really was deeply moved. "Bring 'im on!"
-
-Two of the spectres seized Pete's hands just as his quaking knees bent
-under him and he was falling down. He started to pull back, and then,
-evidently realizing the utter futility of resisting such an overwhelming
-force, he allowed himself to be led through the door of the cell and
-down the stairs into the yard.
-
-"I never done it, before God I never done it!" he went on, sobbing like
-a child. "Don't kill me, white folks. Gi' me one chance. Tek me ter
-Marse Carson Dwight; he'll tell you I ain't de man."
-
-"He'll tell us a lot!" growled Baker, with another of his mechanical
-oaths. "Dry up!"
-
-"Oh, my God have mercy!" For the first time Pete noticed the coil of
-rope and the sight of it redoubled his terror. On his knees he sank,
-trying to cover his eyes with his imprisoned hands, and quivering like
-an aspen. Hardly knowing what he was doing, Carson Dwight impulsively
-bent over him, but before he had opened his lips the watchful Baker had
-roughly drawn him back.
-
-"Don't, for God's sake!" the mountaineer whispered, warningly, and
-he pointed across the street to the houses near by. Indeed, as if to
-sanction his precaution, a window-sash in the upper story of the nearest
-house was raised, and a pale, white-haired man looked out. It was the
-leading Methodist preacher of the place. For one moment he stared down
-on them, as if struck dumb by the terror of the scene.
-
-"In the name of Christ, our Lord, our Saviour, be merciful, neighbors,"
-he said, in a voice that shook. "Don't commit this crime against
-yourselves and the community you live in. Spare him! In the name of God,
-hand him back to the protection of the law."
-
-"The law be hanged, parson," Pole retorted, as part of his rare rle.
-"We are looking after that; thar hain't no law in this country that's
-wuth a hill o' beans."
-
-"Be merciful--give the man a chance for his life," the preacher
-repeated. "Many think he is innocent!"
-
-Hearing that plea in his behalf, Pete screamed out and tried to extend
-his hands supplicatingly towards his defender, but under Baker's
-insistent orders he was dragged, now struggling more desperately,
-farther down the street.
-
-"Ah, Pole, tell the poor--" Keith Gordon began, when the mountaineer
-sharply commanded: "Dry up! You are disobeyin' orders. Hurry up; bring
- 'im on. That other gang may hear this racket, and then--come on, I tell
-you! You violate my leadership and I'll have you court-martialled."
-
-In some fashion or other they moved on down the street, now taking a
-more direct way to the store in the fear that they might be met by the
-expected lynchers and foiled in their purpose. They had traversed the
-entire length of the street leading from the court-house to the bank
-building, and were about to turn the corner to reach the rear door of
-the store, when, in a qualm of fresh despair, Pete's knees actually gave
-way beneath him and he sank limply to the sidewalk.
-
-"Lord, I reckon we'll have to tote 'im!" Pole said.
-
-"Pick 'im up, boys, and be quick about it. This is a ticklish spot. Let
-one person see us and the game will be up."
-
-Pete clearly misunderstood this, and seeing in the words a hint that
-help or protection was not far away, he suddenly opened his mouth and
-began to scream.
-
-As quick as a flash Carson, who was immediately behind him, clapped his
-hand over his lips and said, "Hush, for God's sake, Pete, we are your
-friends!"
-
-With his mouth still closed by the hand upon it, the negro could only
-stare into Carson's mask too terrified to grasp more than that he had
-heard a kindly voice.
-
-"Hush, Pete, not a word! We are trying to save you," and Carson removed
-his hand.
-
-"Who dat? Oh, my God, who dat talkin'?" Pete gasped.
-
-"Carson Dwight," said the young man. "Now hush, and hurry."
-
-"Thank God it you, Marse Carson--oh, Marse Carson, Marse Carson, you
-ain't gwine ter let um kill me!"
-
-"No, you are safe, Pete."
-
-In a rush they now bore him round the corner, and then pausing at the
-door of the store, to be certain that no extraneous eye was on them,
-they waited breathlessly for an order from their leader.
-
-"All right, in you go!" presently came from Pole's deep voice, in a
-great breath of relief. "Open the door, quick!"
-
-The shutter creaked and swung back into the black void of the store,
-and the throng pressed inward. The door was closed. The darkness was
-profound.
-
-"Wait; listen!" Pole cautioned. "Thar might be somebody on the sidewalk
-at the front."
-
-"Oh, my God, Marse Carson, is you here?" came from the quaking negro.
-
-"Sh!" and Pole imposed silence. For a moment they stood so still that
-only the rapid panting of the negro was audible.
-
-"All right, we are safe," Baker said. "But, gosh! it was a close shave!
-Strike a light an' let's try to ease up this feller. I hated to be
-rough, but somebody had to do it."
-
-"Yes, it had to be," said Dwight. "Pete, you are with friends. Strike a
-light, Blackburn, the poor boy is scared out of his wits."
-
-"Oh, Marse Carson, what dis mean? what you-all gwine ter do ter me?"
-
-Blackburn had groped to the lamp on the table and was scratching a match
-and applying the flame to the wick. The yellow light flashed out, and a
-strange sight met the bewildered gaze of the negro as kindly faces
-and familiar forms gradually emerged from the sheeting. Near him stood
-Dwight, and grasping his hand, Pete clung to it desperately.
-
-"Oh, Marse Carson, what dey gwine ter do ter me?"
-
-"Nothing, Pete, you are all right now," Carson said, as tenderly as if
-he were speaking to a hurt child. "The mob was coming and we had to do
-what we did to save you." He explained the plan of keeping him hidden in
-the cellar for a few days, and asked Pete if he would consent to it.
-
-"I'll do anything you say, Marse Carson," the negro answered. "You know
-what's best fer me."
-
-"I've got an old mattress here," Blackburn spoke up; "boys, let's get it
-into the cellar. It will make him comfortable."
-
-And with no sense of the incongruity of their act, considering that as
-the sons of ex-slave-holders they had never in their lives waited upon
-a negro, Wade Tingle and Keith Gordon drew the dusty mattress from a
-dry-goods box in the corner of the room and bore the cumbersome thing
-through the cellar doorway into the cob webbed darkness beneath.
-Blackburn followed with a candle, indicating the best-ventilated spot
-for its placement. Thither Carson led his still benumbed client, who
-would move only at his bidding, and then like a jerky automaton.
-
-"You won't be afraid to stay here, will you, Pete?" he asked.
-
-The negro stared round him at the encroaching shadows in childlike
-perturbation.
-
-"You gwine ter lock me in, Marse Carson?" he asked.
-
-Carson explained that in a sense he was still a prisoner, but a prisoner
-in the hands of friends--friends who had pledged themselves to see that
-justice was done him. The negro slowly lowered himself to the mattress
-and stretched out his legs on the stone pavement. An utter droop of
-despair seemed to settle on him. From the depths of his wide-open eyes
-came a stare of dejection complete.
-
-"Den I _hain't_ free?" he said.
-
-"No, not wholly, Pete," Carson returned; "not quite yet."
-
-"Dry up down thar. Listen!" It was Baker's voice in a guarded tone as he
-stood in the cellar doorway.
-
-The group around the negro held its breath. The grinding of footsteps on
-the floor over their heads ceased. Then from the outside came the steady
-tramp of many feet on the brick sidewalk, the clatter of horses' hoofs
-in the street.
-
-"Sh! Blow out the light," Carson said, and Blackburn extinguished it.
-Profound darkness and stillness filled the long room. Like an army,
-still voiceless and grimly determined, the human current flowed
-jailward. It must have numbered several hundred, judged by the time it
-took to pass. The sound was dying out in the distance when Carson, the
-last to leave Pete, crept from the cellar, locked the door, and joined
-the others in the darkness above.
-
-"That mob would hang every man of us if they caught on to our trick,"
-said Baker, with a queer, exultant chuckle.
-
-Carson moved past him towards the front door.
-
-"Where you goin'?" Pole asked, sharply.
-
-"I want to see how the land lies on the outside," answered Carson.
-
-"You'll be crazy if you go," said Blackburn, and the others pressed
-round Dwight and anxiously joined in the protest.
-
-"No, I must go," Dwight firmly persisted. "We ought to find out exactly
-what that crowd thinks to-night, so we'll know what to depend on. If
-they think a lynching took place they will go home satisfied; if not,
-as Pole says, they may suspect us, and the most godless riot that ever
-blackened human history may take place here in this town."
-
-"He's right," declared the mountaineer. "Somebody ought to go. I really
-think I'm the man, by rights, an'--"
-
-"No, I want to satisfy myself," was Dwight's ultimatum. "Stay here till
-I come back."
-
-Blackburn accompanied him to the front door, cautiously looked out, and
-then let him pass through.
-
-"Knock when you get back--no, here, take the key to the back door and
-let yourself in. So far, so good, my boy, but this is absolutely the
-most ticklish job we ever tackled. But I'm with you. I glory in your
-spunk."
-
-There was a swelling murmuring, like the onward sweep of a storm from
-the direction of the courthouse. Voices growing louder and increasing in
-volume reached their ears.
-
-"Wait for me. Keep the lights out for all you do," Dwight said, and off
-he strode in the darkness.
-
-In the gloom and stillness of the store the others waited his return,
-hardly daring to raise their voices above a whisper. He was gone nearly
-an hour, and then they heard the key softly turned in the lock and
-presently he stood in their midst.
-
-"They've about dispersed," he said, in a tone of intense fatigue. "They
-lay it to the Hillbend faction, who had some disagreement with them
-to-day. They seem satisfied."
-
-"Gentlemen"--it was Garner's voice from his chair at the table--"there's
-one thing that must be regarded as sacred by us to-night, and that is
-the _absolute_ secrecy of this thing."
-
-"Good Lord, you don't think any of us would be fool enough to talk
-about it!" exclaimed Blackburn, in an almost startled tone over the bare
-suggestion. "If I thought there was a man here who would blab this to a
-living soul, I'd--"
-
-"Well, I only wanted to impress that on you all," said Garner. "To
-all intents and purposes we are law-breakers, and I'm a member of the
-Georgia bar. Where are you going, Carson?"
-
-"Down to speak to Pete," answered Dwight. "I want to try to pacify him."
-
-When he came back a moment later he said: "I've promised to stay here
-till daylight. Nothing else will satisfy him; he's broken all to pieces,
-crying like a nervous woman. As soon as I agreed to stay he quieted
-down."
-
-"Well, I'll keep you company," said Keith. "I can sleep like a top on
-one of the counters."
-
-"Hold on, there is something else," Carson said, as they were moving to
-the rear door. "You know the news will go out in the morning that Pete
-was taken off somewhere and actually lynched. This will be a terrible
-blow to his parents, and I want permission from you all to let those
-two, at least, know that--"
-
-"No!" Garner cried, firmly, even fiercely, as he turned and struck the
-counter near him with his open hand. "There you go with your eternal
-sentiment! I tell you this is a grave happening tonight--grave for us
-and still graver for Pete. Once let that mob find out that they were
-tricked and they will hang our man or burn this town in the effort."
-
-"I understand that well enough," admitted Dwight, "but the Lord knows we
-could trust his own flesh and blood when they have so much at stake."
-
-"I am not willing to _risk_ it, if you are," said Garner, crisply,
-glancing round at the others for their sanction. "It will be an awful
-thing for them to hear the current report in the morning, but they'd
-better stand it for a few days than to spoil the whole thing. A negro
-is a negro, and if Lewis and Linda knew the truth they would be Shouting
-instead of weeping and the rest of the darkies would suspect the truth."
-
-"That's a fact," Blackburn put in, reluctantly. "Negroes are quick
-to get at the bottom of things, and with no dead body in sight to
-substantiate a lynching story they would smell a mouse and hunt for it
-till they found it. No, Carson, _real_ weeping right now from the mammy
-and daddy will help us out more than anything else. Yes, they will have
-to bear it; they will be all the happier in the end."
-
-"I suppose you are right," Dwight gave in. "But it's certainly tough."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-
-[Illustration: 9247]
-
-T was just at the break of day the following morning. Major Warren, who
-had not retired until late the night before in his perturbed state of
-mind over the calamity which hovered in the air, was sleeping lightly,
-when he was awakened by the almost noiseless presence of some one in his
-room. Sitting up in bed he stared through the half darkness at a form
-which towered straight and still between him and the open window through
-which the first touches of the new day were stealing. "Who's there?" he
-demanded, sharply.
-
-"It's me, Marse William--Lewis."
-
-"Oh, you!" The Major put his feet down to the rug at the side of
-his bed, still not fully awake. "Well, is it time to get up?
-Anything--wrong? Oh, I remember now--Pete!"
-
-A groan from the great chest of the negro set the air to vibrating, but
-he said nothing, and the old gentleman saw the bald pate suddenly sink.
-
-"Oh, Lewis, I hope--" Major Warren paused, unable to continue, so vast
-and grewsome were the fears his servant's attitude had inspired. The old
-negro took a step or two forward and then said: "Oh, marster, dey done
-tuck 'im out las' night--dey tuck my po' boy--" A great sob rose in old
-Lewis's breast and burst on his lips.
-
-"Really, you don't mean it--you can't, after--"
-
-"Yasser, yasser; he daid, marster. Pete done gone! Dey killed 'im las'
-night, Marse William."
-
-"But--but how do you know?"
-
-"I des dis minute seed Jake Tobines; he slipped up ter my house en
-called me out. Jake lives back 'hind de jail, Marse William, en when de
-mob come him en his wife heard de racket en slipped out in de co'n-patch
-ter hide. He seed de gang, marster, wid his own eyes, en heard um ax fer
-de boy. At fus Marse Barrett refused ter give 'im up, but dey ordered
-fire on 'im en he let um have de keys. Jake seed um fetch Pete out, en
-heard 'im beggin' um ter spar' his life, but dey drug 'im off."
-
-There was silence broken only by the old negro's sobs and the smothered
-effort he was making to restrain his emotion.
-
-"And mammy," the Major began, presently; "has she heard?"
-
-"Not yit, marster, but she is awake--she been awake all night long--on
-her knees prayin' most er de time fer mercy--she was awake when Jake
-come en she knowed I went out ter speak ter 'im, en when I come back
-in de house, marster, she went in de kitchen. I know what she done dat
-fur--she didn't want ter know, suh, fer certain, ef I'd heard bad news
-or not. I wanted ter let 'er know, but I was afeared ter tell 'er, en come
-away. I loves my wife, marster--I--I loves her mo' now dat Pete's gone
-dan ever befo'. I loves 'er mo' since she been had ter suffer dis way,
-en, marster, dis gwine ter kill 'er. It gwine ter kill Lindy, Marse
-William."
-
-"What's the matter, father?" It was Helen Warren's voice, and with a
-look of growing terror on her face she stood peering through the open
-doorway. The Major ejaculated a hurried and broken explanation, and with
-little, intermittent gasps of horror the young lady advanced to the old
-negro.
-
-"Does Mam' Linda know?" she asked, her face ghastly and set in
-sculptural rigidity.
-
-"Not yet, missy, not yet--it gwine ter kill yo' ol' mammy, child."
-
-"Yes, it may," Helen said, an odd, alien quality of resignation in her
-voice. "I suppose I'd better go and break it to her. Father, Pete was
-innocent, absolutely innocent. Carson Dwight assured me of it. He was
-innocent, and yet--oh!"
-
-With a shudder she turned back to her room across the hall. In the
-stillness the sound of the match she struck to light her lamp was
-raspingly audible. Without another word, and wringing the extended hand
-of his wordless master, Lewis crept down the stairs and out into the
-pale light of early morning. Like an old tree fiercely beaten by a
-storm, he leaned towards the earth. He looked about him absently for a
-moment, and then sat down on the edge of the veranda floor and lowered
-his head to his brown, sinewy hands.
-
-A negro woman with a milk-pail on her arm came up the walk from the
-gate and started round the house to the kitchen door, but seeing him
-she stopped and leaned over him. "Is what Jake done say de trufe?" she
-asked.
-
-"Yassum, yassum, it done over, Mary Lou--done over," Lewis said, looking
-up at her from his blearing eyes; "but ef you see Lindy don't let on ter
-her yit. Young miss gwine ter tell 'er fust."
-
-"Oh, my Lawd, it done over, den!" the woman said, shudderingly; "it
-gwine ter go hard with Mam' Lindy, Unc' Lewis."
-
-"It gwine ter _kill_ 'er, Mary Lou; she won't live dis week out. I know
- 'er. She had ernough dis life wid all she been thoo fur 'erself en her
-white folks, in bondage en out, en' dis gwine ter settle 'er. I don't
-blame 'er. I'm done thoo myse'f. Ef de Lawd had spar' my child, I
-wouldn't er ax mo', but, Mary Lou, I hope I ain't gwine ter stay long.
-I'll hear dat po' boy beggin' fer mercy every minute while I live, en
-what I want mo' of it fur? Shucks! no, I'm raidy--en, 'fo' God, I wish
-dey had er tuck us all three at once. Dat ud 'a' been some comfort, but
-fer Pete ter be by hisse'f beggin' um ter spar' 'im--all by hisse'f, en
-me 'n his mammy--"
-
-The old man's head went down and his body shook with sobs. The woman
-looked at him a moment, and then, wiping her eyes on her apron, she went
-on her way.
-
-A few minutes later, just as the red sun was rising in a clear sky and
-turning the night's moisture into dazzling gems on the grass and leaves
-of trees and shrubbery, like the beneficent smile of God upon a pleasing
-world, Helen descended the stairs. She had the sweet, pale face of a
-suffering nun as she paused, looked down on the old servant, and caught
-his piteous and yet grateful, upturned glance.
-
-"I'm going to her now, Uncle Lewis," she said. "I want to be the first
-to tell her."
-
-"Yes, you mus' be de one," Lewis sighed, as he rose stiffly; "you de
-onliest one."
-
-He shambled along in her wake, his old hat, out of respect for her
-presence, grasped in his tense hand. As they drew near the little
-sagging gate at the cottage there was a sound of moving feet within,
-and Linda stood in the doorway shading her eyes from the rays of the sun
-with her fat hand. To the end of her life Helen had the memory of the
-old woman's face stamped on her brain. It was a yellow mask, which might
-have belonged to a dead as well as a living creature, behind which the
-lights of hope and shadows of despair were vying with each other for
-supremacy. In no thing pertaining to the situation did the pathos so
-piteously lie as in the fact that Linda was deliberately playing a
-part--fiercely acting a rle that would fit itself to that for which the
-agony of her soul was pleading. She was trying to smile away the shadows
-her inward fears, her racial intuition were casting on her face.
-
-"Mighty early fer you ter come, honey," she said; "but I reckon you is
-worried 'bout yo' ol' mammy."
-
-"Yes, it's early for me to be up," Helen said, avoiding the wavering
-glance that seemed in reality to be avoiding the revelation of hers.
-"But I saw Uncle Lewis and thought I'd come back with him."
-
-"You hain't had yo' breakfast yit, honey, I know," said Linda, reaching
-for a chair half-heartedly and placing it for her young mistress, and
-then her eyes fell on her husband's bareheaded, bowed attitude as he
-stood at the gate, and something in it, through her sense of sight, gave
-her a deadening blow. For an instant she almost reeled; she drew a deep
-breath, a breath that swelled out her great, motherly bosom, then with
-her hands hanging limply at her side, she stood in front of Helen. For
-a moment she did not speak, and then, with her face on fire, her great,
-somnolent eyes ablaze, she suddenly bent down and put her hands on
-Helen's knees and said: "Looky here, honey, I've been afraid of it all
-night long, an' I've fit it off an' fit it off, an' I got up dis mawnin'
-fightin' it off, but ef you come here so early 'ca'se--ef you come here
-ter tell me dat my child--ef you come here--ef you come here--gre't God
-on high, it ain't so! it cayn't be dat way! Look me in de eyes, honey,
-I'm raidy en waitin' fer you ter give it de lie."
-
-For one moment she glared at Helen as the girl sat white and quivering,
-her glance on the floor, and then she uttered a piercing scream like
-that of a frightened beast, and grasping the hand of her husband, who
-was now by her side, she pointed a finger of stone at Helen. "Look!
-Look, Lewis; my Gawd, she _ain't lookin' at me!_ Look at me, honey
-chile; look at me! D' you hear me say--" She stood firmly for an instant
-and then she reeled into her husband's arms.
-
-"She daid; whut I tol you? Missy, yo' ol' mammy daid," and lifting his
-wife in his arms he bore her to the bed in the corner of the room. "Yes,
-she done daid," he groaned, as he straightened up.
-
-"No, she's only fainted," said Helen; "bring me the camphor, quick!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII.
-
-[Illustration: 9253]
-
-HAT morning at the usual hour the store-keepers opened their dingy
-houses in the main street and placed along the narrow brick sidewalks
-the dusty, stock-worn samples of their wares. The clerks and porters as
-they swept the floors would pause to discuss the happening of the
-night just gone. Old Uncle Lewis and Mammy Linda Warren's boy had been
-summarily dealt with, that was all. The longer word just used had of
-late years become a part of the narrowest vocabulary, suggesting to
-crude minds many meanings not thought of by lexicographers, not the
-least of which was something pertaining to justice far-reaching, grim,
-and unfailing in these days of bribery and graft. Only a few of the more
-analytical and philosophical ventured to ask themselves if, after
-all, the boy might have been innocent. If they put the question to the
-average citizen it was tossed off with a shrug and a "Well, what's the
-difference? It's such talk as he was guilty of that is at the bottom of
-all the black crimes throughout the South." Such venom as Pete's was
-the very muscle of the black claws that were everywhere reaching out for
-helpless white throats. Dead? Yes, he was dead. What of it? How else was
-the black, constantly increasing torrent to be dammed?
-
-And yet by ten o'clock that morning even these tongues were silenced,
-for news strange and startling began to steal in from the mountains. The
-party who had been in pursuit of the desperado Sam Dudlow had overtaken
-him--found him hiding in a bam, covered with hay. He was unarmed and
-made no resistance, laughing as if the whole thing were a joke. He
-frankly told them that he would have given himself up earlier, but he
-had hoped to live long enough to get even with the other leader of the
-mob that had whipped him at Darley, a certain Dan Willis. He confessed
-in detail exactly how he had murdered the Johnsons and that he had done
-it alone. Pete Warren was in no way implicated in it. The lynchers, to
-get the whole truth, threatened him; they tortured him; they tied him
-to a tree and piled pine fagots about him, but he still stuck to his
-statement, and when they had mercifully riddled him with bullets, just
-as his clothing was igniting, they left him hanging by the road-side, a
-grewsome scarecrow as a warning to his kind, and, led by Jabe Parsons,
-they made all haste to reach the faction on Pete Warren's track to tell
-them that the boy was innocent.
-
-Jabe Parsons, carrying a load on his mind, remembering his wife's
-valiant stand in behalf of the younger accused, rode faster than his
-tired fellows, and near his own farm met the lynchers returning from
-Darley. "Too late," they told him, in response to his news, the Hillbend
-boys had done away with the Darley jailbird and mysteriously hidden the
-body to inspire fear among the negroes.
-
-At Darley consternation swept the place as story after story of Aunt
-Linda's prostration passed from house to house. "Poor, faithful old
-woman! Poor old Uncle Lewis!" was heard on every side.
-
-About half-past ten o'clock Helen, accompanied by Sanders, came
-down-town. At the door of Carson's office they parted and Helen came
-in. Carson happened to be alone. He rose suddenly from his seat and came
-towards her, shocked by the sight of her wan face and dejected mien.
-
-"Why, Helen!" he cried, "surely you don't think--" and then he checked
-himself as he hastened to get a chair for her.
-
-"I've just left mammy," she began, in a voice that was husky with
-emotion. "Oh, Carson, you can't imagine it! It is simply heart-rending,
-awful! She is lying there at death's door staring up at the ceiling,
-simply benumbed."
-
-Carson sat down at his desk and leaned his head on his hand. Could he
-keep back the truth under such pressure? It was at this juncture that
-Garner came in. Casting a hurried glance at the two, and seeing Helen's
-grief-stricken attitude, he simply bowed.
-
-"Excuse me, Miss Helen, just a moment," he said. "Carson, I left a paper
-in your pigeon-hole," and as he bent and extracted a blank envelope from
-the desk he whispered, warningly: "Remember, not one word of this! Don't
-forget the agreement! Not a soul is to know!" And putting the envelope
-into his pocket he went out of the room, casting back from the threshold
-a warning, almost threatening glance.
-
-"I've been with her since sunup," Helen went on.
-
-"She fainted at first, and when she came to--oh, Carson, you love her
-as I do, and it would have broken your heart to have heard her! Oh, such
-pitiful wailing and begging God to put her out of pain!"
-
-"Awful, awful!" Dwight said; "but, Helen--" Again he checked himself.
-Before his mind's eye rose the faces of the faithful group who had stood
-by him the night before. He had pledged himself to them to keep the
-thing secret, and no matter what his own faith in Helen's discretion
-was he had no right, even under stress of her grief, to betray what had
-occurred. No, he couldn't enlighten her--not just then, at all events.
-
-"I was there when Uncle Lewis came in to tell her that proof had come
-of Pete's absolute innocence," Helen went on, "but instead of comforting
-her it seemed to drive her the more frantic. She--but I simply can't
-describe it, and I won't try. You will be glad to know, Carson, that the
-only thing in the shape of comfort she has had was your brave efforts in
-her behalf. Over and over she called your name. Carson, she used to pray
-to God; she never mentions Him now. You, and you alone, represent all
-that is good and self-sacrificing to her. She sent me to you. That's why
-I am here."
-
-"She sent you?" Carson was avoiding her eyes, fearful that she might
-read in his own a hint of the burning thing he was trying to withhold.
-
-"Yes, you see the report has reached her about what the lynchers said
-in regard to hiding Pete's body. You know how superstitious the negroes
-are, and she is simply crazy to recover the--the remains. She wants to
-bury her boy, Carson, and she refuses to believe that some one can't
-find him and bring him home. She seems to think you can."
-
-"She wants me to--" He went no further.
-
-"If it is possible, Carson. The whole thing is so awful that it has
-driven me nearly wild. You will know, perhaps, if anything can be done,
-but, of course, if it is wholly out of the question--"
-
-"Helen"--in his desperation he had formulated a plan--"there is
-something that you ought to know. You have every right to know it, and
-yet I'm bound in honor not to let it out to any one. Last night," he
-went on, modestly, "in the hope of formulating some plan to avert
-the coming trouble, I asked Keith to get a number of my best friends
-together. We met at Blackburn's store. No positive, sworn vows were
-made. It was only the sacred understanding between men that the matter
-was to be held inviolate, owing to the personal interests of every
-man who had committed himself. You see, they came at my suggestion, as
-friends of mine true and loyal, and it seems to me that I'd have a moral
-right, even now, to take another into the body--another whom I trust as
-thoroughly and wholly as any one of them. Do you understand, Helen?"
-
-"No, I'm in the dark, Carson," she said, with a feeble smile.
-
-"You see, I want to speak freely to you," he continued. "I want to
-tell you some things you ought to know, and yet I am not free to do so
-unless--unless you will tacitly join us. Helen, do you understand?
-Are you willing to become one of us so far as absolute secrecy is
-concerned?"
-
-"I am willing to do anything you'd advise, Carson," the girl replied,
-groping for his possible meaning through the cloud of mystery his queer
-words had thrown around him. "If something took place that I ought to
-know, and you are willing to confide it to me, I assure you I can be
-trusted. I'd die rather than betray it."
-
-"Then, as one of us, I'll tell you," Carson said, impressively. "Helen,
-Pete, is not dead."
-
-"Not dead?" She stared at him incredulously from her great, beautiful
-eyes. Slowly her white hand went out till it rested on his, and remained
-there, quivering.
-
-"No, he's alive and so far in safe keeping, free from harm at present,
-anyway."
-
-Her fingers tightened on his hand, her sweet, appealing face drew nearer
-to his; she took a deep breath. "Oh, Carson, don't say that unless you
-are _quite_ sure."
-
-"I am absolutely sure," he said; and then, as they sat, her hand still
-lingering unconsciously on his, he explained it all, leaving the part he
-had taken out of the recital as much as possible, and giving the chief
-credit to his supporters. She sat spellbound, her sympathetic soul
-melting and flowing into the warm current of his own while he talked as
-it seemed to her no human being had ever talked before.
-
-When he had concluded she drew away her hand and sat erect, her bosom
-heaving, her eyes glistening.
-
-"Oh, Carson," she cried; "I never was so happy in my life! It actually
-pains me." She pressed her hand to her breast. "Mammy will be so--but
-you say she must not--must not yet--"
-
-"That's the trouble," Dwight said, regretfully.
-
-"I'm sure I could put her and Lewis on their guard so that they
-would act with discretion, but Blackburn and Garner--in fact, all the
-rest--are afraid to risk them, just now anyway. You see, they
-think Linda and Lewis might betray it in their emotions--their very
-happiness--and so undo everything we have accomplished."
-
-"Surely, now that the report of Sam Dudlow's confession has gone out,
-they would let Pete alone," Helen said.
-
-"I wouldn't like to risk it quite yet," said Dwight. "Right now, while
-they are under the impression that an innocent negro has been lynched,
-they seem inclined to quiet down, but once let the news go out that a
-few town men, through trickery, had freed the prisoner, and they would
-rise more furious than ever. No, we must be careful. And, Helen, you
-must remember your promise. Don't let even your sympathy for Linda draw
-it out of you."
-
-"I can keep it, and I really shall," Helen said.
-
-"But you must release me as soon as you possibly can."
-
-"I'll do that," he promised, as she rose to go.
-
-"I'll keep it," she repeated, when she had reached the door; "but to do
-so I'll have to stay away from mammy. The sight of her agony would wring
-it from me."
-
-"Then don't go near her till I see you," Dwight cautioned her. "I'll
-meet all the others to-day and put the matter before them. Perhaps they
-may give in on that point."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX
-
-[Illustration: 9260]
-
-T the corner of the street Helen encountered Sanders, who was waiting
-for her. At the sight of him standing on the edge of the sidewalk,
-impatiently tapping the toe of his neatly shod foot with the ferrule of
-his tightly rolled silk umbrella, she experienced a shock which would
-have eluded analysis. He had been so completely out of her thoughts, and
-her present mood was of such an entrancing nature that she felt a desire
-to indulge it undisturbed. The bare thought of the platitudes she would
-have to exchange with any one ignorant of her dazzling discovery was
-unpleasant. After all, what was it about Sanders that vaguely incited
-her growing disapproval? This morning could it possibly be his very
-faultlessness of attire, his spick-and-span air of ownership in her body
-and soul because of their undefined understanding as to his suit, or was
-it because--because he had, although through no fault of his own, taken
-no part in the thing which today, for Helen, somehow, held more weight
-than all other earthly happenings? Indeed, fate was not using the Darley
-visitor kindly. He was unwittingly like a healthy soldier on a furlough
-making himself useful in the drawing-room while news of victory was
-pouring in from his comrades at the front.
-
-"You see I waited for you," he said, gracefully raising his hat; "but,
-Helen, what has happened? Why, what is the matter?"
-
-"Nothing," she said; "nothing at all."
-
-"But," he went on, frowning in perplexity as he suited his step to hers,
-"I never saw any one in my life change so suddenly. Why, when you went
-into that office you were simply a picture of despair, but now you look
-as if you were bursting with happiness. Your face is flushed, your eyes
-are fairly dancing. Helen, if I thought--"
-
-He paused, his own color rising, a deeper frown darkening his brow.
-
-"If you thought what?" she asked, with a little irritation.
-
-"Oh"--he knocked a stone out of his way with his umbrella--"what's the
-use denying it! I'm simply jealous. I'm only a natural human being, and
-I suppose I'm jealous."
-
-"You have no cause to be," she said, and then she bit her lip with
-vexation at the slip of the tongue. Why should she defend herself to
-him? She had never said she loved him. She had not yet consented to
-marry him. Besides, she was in no mood to gratify his vanity. She wanted
-simply to be alone with the boundless delight she was allowed to share
-with no one but--Carson--Carson!--the one who had, for _her sake_, made
-the sharing of it possible.
-
-"Well, I am uneasy, and I can't help it," Sanders went on, gloomily.
-"How can I help it? You left me so sad and depressed that you had hardly
-a word for me, and after seeing this Mr. Dwight you come out looking--do
-you know," he broke off, "that you were there alone with that fellow
-nearly an hour?"
-
-"Oh no, it couldn't have been so long," she said, further irritated by
-his open defence of what he erroneously considered his rights.
-
-"But it was, for I timed you," Sanders affirmed. "Heaven knows I counted
-the actual minutes. There is a lot about this whole thing I don't like,
-but I hardly know what it is."
-
-"You are not only jealous but suspicious," Helen said, sharply. "Those
-are things I don't like in any man."
-
-"I've offended you, but I didn't mean to," Sanders said, with a sudden
-turn towards precaution. "You'll forgive me, won't you, Helen?"
-
-"Oh yes, it's all right." She had suddenly softened. "Really, I am sorry
-you feel hurt. Don't think any more about it. I have a reason which I
-can't explain for feeling rather cheerful just now." They had reached
-the next street corner and she patised. "I want to go by Cousin Ida's.
-She lives down this way."
-
-"And you'd rather I didn't go along?"
-
-"I have something particular to say to her."
-
-"Oh, I see. Then may I come as usual this afternoon?"
-
-Her wavering, half-repentant glance fell. "Not this afternoon," she
-said. "I ought to be with mammy. Couldn't you call this evening?"
-
-"It will seem a long time to wait in this dreary place, with nothing
-to occupy me," he said; "but I shall be well repaid. So I may come this
-evening?"
-
-"Oh yes, I shall expect you then," and Helen turned and left him.
-
-In the front garden of the Tarpley house she found her cousin watering
-the flowers. Observing Helen at the gate, Miss Tarpley hastily put down
-the tin sprinkling-pot and hurried to her.
-
-"I was just going up to see mammy," Ida said. "I know I can be of no use
-and yet I wanted to try. Oh, the poor thing must be suffering terribly!
-She had enough to bear as it was, but that last night--oh!"
-
-"Yes--yes," Helen said. "It is hard on her."
-
-Ida Tarpley rested her two hands on the tops of the white palings of the
-fence and stared inquiringly into Helen's face.
-
-"Why do you say it in that tone?" she asked; "and with that queer,
-almost smiling look in your eyes? Why, I expected to see you prostrated,
-and--well, I don't think--I actually don't think I ever saw you looking
-better in my life. What's happened, Helen?"
-
-"Oh, nothing." Helen was now making a strong effort to disguise her
-feelings, and she succeeded to some extent, for Miss Tarpley's thoughts
-took another trend.
-
-"And poor, dear Carson," she said, sympathetically. "The news must have
-nearly killed him. He came by here last night making all haste to get
-down-town, as he said, to see if something couldn't be done. He was
-terribly wrought up, and I never saw such a look of determination on a
-human face. 'Something _has_ to be done,' he said; 'something _must_ be
-done! The boy is innocent and shall not die like a dog. It would kill
-his mother, and she is a good, faithful old woman. No, he shall not
-die!' And with those words he hurried on. Oh, Helen, that is sad,
-too. It is sad to see as noble a young spirit as he has fail in such a
-laudable undertaking. Think of how he stood up before that surging mob
-and let them shoot at him while he shouted defiance in their teeth,
-till they cowered down and slunk away! Think of a triumph like that, and
-then, after all, to meet with such galling defeat as overtook him last
-night! When I heard of the lynching I actually cried. I think I felt
-for him as much as I did for Mam' Linda. Poor, dear boy! You know why he
-wanted to do it so much--you know that as well as I do."
-
-"Why he wanted to do it!" Helen echoed, almost hungry for the sweet
-confirmation of Dwight's fidelity to her cause.
-
-"Yes, you know--you know that his whole young soul was set on it because
-it was your wish, because you were so troubled over it. I've seen that
-in his eyes ever since the matter came up. I saw it there last night,
-and it seemed to me that his very heart was burning up within him. Oh,
-I get mad at you--to think you'd let that Augusta man, even if you do
-intend some day to marry him--that you'd let him be here at such a time,
-as if Carson hadn't enough to bear without that. Ah, Helen, no other
-human being will ever love you as Carson Dwight does--never, never while
-the sun shines."
-
-With a misleading smile of denial on her face Helen turned homeward. He
-loved her--Carson Dwight--_that man_ of all men--still loved her. Her
-body felt imponderable as she strode blithely on her way. In her
-hands she carried a human life--the life of the poor boy Carson had so
-wonderfully struggled for and intrusted to her keeping. To his mother
-and father Pete was dead, but to her and Carson, her first sweetheart,
-he still lived. The secret was theirs to hold between their throbbing
-hearts. Old Linda's grief was but a dream. Helen and Carson could draw
-aside the black curtain and tell her to look and see the truth.
-
-Standing with bowed head at the front gate when she arrived home, she
-saw old Uncle Lewis, his bald pate bared to the sunshine.
-
-"Mam' Lindy axin' 'bout you, missy," he said, pitifully. "She say you
-went down-town ter see Marse Carson, en she seem mighty nigh crazy ter
-know ef you found whar de--de body er de po' boy is at. Dat all she's
-beggin' en pleadin' fer now, missy, en ef dem white mens refuse it, de
-Lawd only know what she gwine ter do."
-
-Helen gazed at him helplessly. Her whole young being was wrung with the
-desire to let him know the truth, and yet how could she tell him what
-had been revealed to her in such strict confidence?
-
-"I'll go see mammy now," she said. "I've no news yet, Uncle Lewis--no
-news that I can give you. I'm looking for Carson to come up soon."
-
-As she neared the cottage the motley group of negroes, serious-faced men
-and women, bland-eyed persons in their teens, and half-clad children,
-around the door intuitively and respectfully drew aside and she
-entered the cottage unaccompanied and unannounced. Linda was not in the
-sitting-room, where she expected to find her, and so, wonderingly, Helen
-turned into the kitchen adjoining. Here the general aspect of things
-added to her growing surprise, for the old woman had drawn close the
-curtains of the little, small-paned windows, and before a small fire in
-the chimney she sat prone on the ash-covered hearth. That alone might
-not have been so surprising, but Linda had covered her body with several
-old tow sacks upon which she had plentifully sprinkled ashes. The
-grayish powder was in her short hair, on her face and bare arms, and
-filled her lap. There was one thing in the world that the old woman
-prized above all else--a big, leather-bound family Bible which she had
-owned since she first learned to read under the instruction of Helen's
-mother, and this, also ash-covered, lay open by her side.
-
-"Is I gwine ter bury my chile?" she demanded, as she glared up at her
-mistress. "What young marster say? Is I, or is I never ter lay eyes on
- 'im ergin? Is I de only nigger mother dat ever lived on dis yeth, bound
-er free, dat cayn't have dat much? Tell me. Ef dey gwine ter le' me see
- 'im Marse Carson ud know it. What he say?"
-
-Rendered fairly speechless by the predicament she was in, Helen could
-only stand staring helplessly. Presently, however, she bent, and lifting
-the Bible from the floor she laid it on the table. With her massive
-elbows on her knees, her fat hands over her face and almost touching the
-flames, Linda rocked back and forth.
-
-"Dey ain't no God!" she cried; "ef dey is one He's es black es de back
-er dat chimbley. Dat book is er lie. Dey ain't no love en mercy anywhars
-dis side de blinkin', grinnin' stars. Don't tell me er nigger's prayers
-is answered. Didn't I pray las' night till my tongue was swelled in my
-mouf fer um ter spare my boy? En what in de name er all created was de
-answer? When de day broke wid de same sun shinin' dat was shinin' when
-he laid de fus time on my breas', de news was fetch me dat my baby chile
-was dragged out wid er rope rounst his neck, prayin' ter men whilst I
-was prayin' ter God. Look lak dat enough, hein? But no, nex' come de
-news dat ef he'd er lived one short hour longer dey might er let 'im go
-'ca'se dey foun' de right one. Look lak dat enough, too, hein? But nex'
-come de word, en de las' message: innocent or no, right one or wrong
-one, my chile wasn't goin' ter have a common bury in'-place--not even
-in de Potter's Fiel' dis book tell erbout so big. Don't talk ter me! Ef
-prayers fum niggers is answered mine was heard in hell, en old Scratch
-en all his imps er darkness was managin' it. Don't come near me! I might
-lay han's on you. I ain't myself. I heard er low trash white man say
-once dat niggers was des baboons. I may be one, en er wild one fer all
-I know--oh, honey, don't pay no 'tention ter me. Yo' ol' mammy is bein'
-burnt at de stake en she ain't 'sponsible. She love you, honey--she love
-you even in 'er gre't trouble."
-
-"I understand, mammy," and Helen put her arms around the old woman's
-neck. An almost overpowering impulse had risen in her to tell the old
-sufferer the truth, but thinking that some of the negroes might be
-listening, and remembering her promise, she restrained herself.
-
-"I'm going to write a note to Carson to come up at once," she said.
-"He'll have something to tell you, mammy."
-
-And passing the negroes about the door she went to the house, and
-hastening into the library she wrote and forwarded by a servant the
-following note:
-
-_"Dear Carson,--Come at once, and come prepared to tell her. I can't
-stand it any longer. Do, do come._
-
-_"Helen."_
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX
-
-[Illustration: 9269]
-
-ALF an hour later Helen, waiting at the front gate, saw a horse and
-buggy turn the corner down the street. She recognized it as belonging
-to Keith Gordon. Indeed, Keith was driving, and with him was Carson
-Dwight.
-
-Helen's heart bounded, a vast weight of incalculable responsibility
-seemed to lift itself from her. She unlatched the gate and swung it
-open.
-
-"Oh, I thought you'd never come!" she smiled, as he sprang out and
-advanced to her. "I would have broken my oath of allegiance to the clan
-if you had waited a moment longer."
-
-"I might have known you couldn't keep it," Dwight laughed. "Mam' Linda
-would have drawn it out of you just as you did out of me."
-
-"But are you going to tell her?" Helen asked, just as Keith, who had
-stepped aside to fasten his horse, came up.
-
-"Yes," Carson answered. "Keith and I made a lightning trip around and
-finally persuaded all the others. Invariably they would shake their
-heads, and then we'd simply tell them you wished it, and that settled
-it. They all seem flattered by the idea that you are a member."
-
-"But say, Miss Helen," Keith put in, gravely, "we really must guard
-against Lewis and Linda's giving it away. It is a most serious business,
-and, our own interests aside, the boy's life depends on it."
-
-"Well, we must get them away from the cottage," said Helen. "They are
-now literally surrounded by curious negroes."
-
-"Can't we have them up here in the parlor?" Carson asked. "Your father
-is down-town; we saw him as we came up."
-
-"Yes, that's a good idea," Helen responded, eagerly. "The servants are
-all at the cottage; we'll make them stay there and have Uncle Lewis and
-Mam' Linda here."
-
-"Suppose I run down and give the message," proposed Keith, and he was
-off with the speed of a ball-player on a home-run.
-
-"Do you think there is any real danger to Mam' Linda's health in letting
-her know it suddenly?" Carson asked, thoughtfully.
-
-"We must try to reveal it gradually," Helen said, after reflecting for
-a moment. "There's no telling. They say great joy often kills as quickly
-as great sorrow. Oh, Carson, isn't it glorious to be able to do this?
-Don't you feel happy in the consciousness that it was your great,
-sympathetic heart that inspired this miracle, your wonderful brain and
-energy and courage that actually put it through?"
-
-"Not through yet," he laughed, depreciatingly, as his blood flowed hotly
-into his cheeks. "It would be just my luck right now to have this thing
-turn smack dab against us. We are not out of the woods yet, Helen, by
-long odds. The rage of that mob is only sleeping, and I have enemies,
-political and otherwise, who would stir it to white heat at a moment's
-notice if they once got an inkling of the truth." He snapped his
-fingers. "I wouldn't give that for Pete's life if they discover our
-trick. Pole Baker had just come in town when Keith and I left. He said
-the Hillbend people were earnestly denying all knowledge of any lynching
-or of the whereabouts of Pete's body, and that some people were
-already asking queer questions. So, you see, if on top of that growing
-suspicion, old Lewis and Linda begin to dance a hoe-down of joy instead
-of weeping and wailing--well, you see, that's the way it stands."
-
-"Oh, then, perhaps we'd better not tell them, after all," Helen said,
-crestfallen. "They are suffering awfully, but they would rather bear it
-for awhile than to be the cause of Pete's death."
-
-"No," Carson smiled; "from the way you wrote, I know you have had about
-as much as you can stand, and we simply must try to make them comprehend
-the full gravity of the matter."
-
-At this juncture Keith came up panting from his run and joined them.
-"Great Heavens!" he cried, lifting his hands, the palms outward. "I
-never saw such a sight. I can stand some things, but I'm not equal to
-torture of that kind."
-
-"Are they coming?" Carson asked.
-
-"Yes, there's Lewis now. Of course, I couldn't give them a hint of the
-truth down there in that swarm of negroes, and so my message that you
-wanted to see them here only seemed to key them up higher."
-
-Carson turned to Lewis, who, hat in hand, his black face set in stony
-rigidity, had paused near by and stood waiting respectfully to be spoken
-to.
-
-"Uncle Lewis," he said, "we've got good news for you and Linda, but
-a great deal depends on its being kept secret. I must exact a sacred
-promise of you not to betray to a living soul by word of mouth or act
-what I am going to tell you. Will you promise, Lewis?"
-
-The old man leaned totteringly forward till his gaunt fingers closed
-upon one of the palings of the fence; his eyes blinked in their deep
-cavities. He made an effort to speak, but his voice hung in his mouth.
-Then he coughed, cleared his throat, and slid one of his ill-shod feet
-backward, as he always did in bowing, and said, falteringly: "God on
-high know, young marster, dat I'd keep my word wid you. Old Unc' Lewis
-would keep his word wid you ef dey was burnin' 'im at de stake. You been
-de bes' friend me 'n Mam' Lindy ever had, young marster. You been de
-kind er friend dat _is_ er friend. When you tried so hard t'other night
-ter save my boy fum dem men even when dey was shootin' at you en tryin'
-ter drag you down--oh, young marster, I wish you'd try me. I want ter
-show you how I feel down here in my heart. Dem folks is done had deir
-way; my boy is daid, but God know it makes it easier ter give 'im up ter
-have er young, high-minded white man lak you--"
-
-"Stop, here's Mam' Linda," Carson said. "Don't tell her now, Lewis; wait
-till we are inside the house; but Pete is alive and safe."
-
-The old man's eyes opened wide in an almost deathlike stare, and he
-leaned heavily against the fence.
-
-"Oh, young marster," he gasped, "you don't mean--you sholy can't
-mean--"
-
-"Hush! not a word." Carson cautioned him with uplifted hand, and they
-all looked at old Linda as she came slowly across the grass. A shudder
-of horror passed over Dwight at the change in her. The distorted,
-swollen face was that of a dead person, only faintly vitalized by some
-mechanical force. The great, always mysterious depths of her eyes were
-glowing with bestial fires. For a moment she paused near them and stood
-glaring with incongruous defiance as if nothing in mortal shape could
-mean aught but ill towards her.
-
-"Carson has something--something very important to tell you, dear
-mammy," Helen said, "but we must go inside."
-
-"He ain't got nothin' ter tell me dat I don't know," Linda muttered,
-"lessen it is whar dey done put my chile's body. Ef you know dat, young
-marster--ef--"
-
-But old Lewis had moved to her side, his face ablaze. He laid his hand
-forcibly on her shoulder. "Hush, 'oman!" he cried. "In de name er
-God, shet yo' mouf en listen ter young marster--listen ter 'im Linda,
-honey--hurry up--hurry up in de house!"
-
-"Yes, bring her in here," Carson said, with a cautious glance around,
-and he and Helen and Keith moved along the walk while Linda suffered
-herself, more like an automaton than a human being, to be half dragged,
-half led up the steps and into the parlor. Keith, who had vaguely put
-her in the category of the physically ill, placed an easy-chair for her,
-but from force of habit, while in the presence of her superiors, the
-old woman refused to sit. She and Lewis stood side by side while Carson
-carefully closed the door and came back.
-
-"We've got some very, very good news for you, Mam' Linda," said he; "but
-you must not speak of it to a soul. Linda, the men who took Pete from
-jail did not kill him. He is still alive and safe, so far, from harm."
-
-To the surprise of them all, Linda only stared blankly at the tremulous
-speaker. It was her husband who, full of fire and new-found happiness,
-now leaned over her. "Didn't you hear young marster?" he gulped; "didn't
-you hear 'im say we-all's boy was erlive?--_erlive_, honey?"
-
-With an arm of iron Linda pushed him back and stood before Carson.
-
-"You come tell me dat?" she cried, her great breast tumultuously
-heaving. "Young marster, 'fo' God I done had enough. Don't tell me dat
-now, en den come say it's er big mistake after you find out de trufe."
-
-"Pete's all right, Linda," Carson said, reassuringly. "Keith and Helen
-will tell you about it."
-
-With an appealing look in her eyes Linda extended a detaining hand
-towards him, but he had gone to the door and was cautiously looking out,
-his attention being drawn to the sound of footsteps in the hall. It was
-two negro maids just entering the house, having left half a dozen other
-negroes on the walk in front. Going out into the hall, Carson commanded
-the maids and the loiterers to go away, and the astonished blacks, with
-many a curious, backward glance, made haste to do his bidding. A heavy
-frown was on his face and he shrugged his broad shoulders as he took
-his place on the veranda to guard the parlor door. "It's a ticklish
-business," he mused; "if we are not very careful these negroes will drop
-on to the truth in no time."
-
-He had dismissed the idlers in the nick of time, for there was a sudden,
-joyous scream from Linda, a chorus of warning voices. The full import of
-the good news was only just breaking upon the stunned consciousness of
-the old sufferer. Screams and sobs, mingled with hysterical laughter,
-fell upon Carson's ears, through all of which rang the persistent drone
-of Keith Gordon's manly voice in gentle admonition. The door of the
-parlor opened and old Lewis came forth, his black face streaming with
-tears. Going to Carson he attempted to speak, but, unable to utter a
-word, he grasped the young man's hand, and pressing it to his lips he
-staggered away. A few minutes later Keith came out doggedly trying to
-divest his boyish features of a certain glorified expression that had
-settled on them.
-
-"Good God!" he smiled grimly, as he fished a cigar from the pocket of
-his waistcoat, "I'm glad that's over. It struck her like a tornado. I'm
-glad I'm not in your shoes. She'll literally fall on your neck. Good
-Lord! I've heard people say negroes haven't any gratitude--Linda's
-burning up with it. You are her God, old man. She knows what you did,
-and she knows, too, that we opposed you to the last minute."
-
-"You told her, of course," Carson said, reprovingly.
-
-"I had to. She was trying to dump it all on me as the only member of
-the gang present. I told her, the whole thing was born in your brain and
-braced up by your backbone. Oh yes, I told her how we fought your
-plan and with what determination you stuck to it in the face of all
-opposition. No, the rest of us don't deserve any credit. We'd have
-squelched you if we could. Well, I simply wasn't cut out for heroic
-things. The easy road has always been mine to any destination, but I
-reckon nothing worth much was ever picked up by chance."
-
-The two friends had gone down to the gate and Keith was unhitching
-his horse, when Helen came out on the veranda, and seeing Carson she
-hastened to him.
-
-"She's up in my room," she explained. "I'm going to keep her there
-for the rest of the day anyway. I'm glad now that we took so much
-precaution. She admits that we were right about that. She says if
-she had known Pete was safe she might have failed to keep it from
-the others. But she is going to help us guard the secret now. But oh,
-Carson, she is already begging to be allowed to see Pete. It's pitiful.
-There are moments even now when she even seems to doubt his safety, and
-it is all I can do to convince her. She is begging to see you, too. Oh,
-Carson, when you told me about it why did you leave out the part you
-took? Keith told us all about your fight against such odds, and how you
-sat up all night at the store to keep the poor boy company."
-
-"Keith was with me," Carson said, flushing, deeply. "Well, we've got
-Pete bottled up where he is safe for the present, but there is no
-telling when suspicion may be directed to us."
-
-"We are going to win; I feel it!" said Helen, fervidly. "Don't forget
-that I'm a member of the clan. I'm proud of the honor," and pressing his
-hand warmly she hurried back to the house.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXI
-
-[Illustration: 9278]
-
-N his way to Blackburn's store the next morning to inquire about the
-prisoner, Carson met Garner coming out of the barber-shop, where he had
-just been shaved.
-
-"Any news?" Carson asked, in a guarded voice, though they were really
-out of earshot of any one.
-
-"No actual _news_," Garner replied, stroking his thickly powdered chin;
-"but I don't like the lay of the land."
-
-"What's up now?" Dwight asked.
-
-"I don't know that there is anything wrong yet; but, my boy,
-discovery--discovery grim and threatening is in the very air about us."
-
-"What makes you think so, Garner?" They paused on the street crossing
-leading over to Blackbum's store.
-
-"Oh, it's all due to old Linda and Lewis," Garner said, in a tone of
-conviction. "You know I was dead against letting them know Pete was
-alive."
-
-"You think we made a mistake in that, then?" Carson said. "Well, the
-pressure was simply too strong, and I had to give way under it. But why
-do you think it was a bad move?"
-
-"From the way it's turning out," said Garner. "While Buck Black was
-shaving me just now he remarked that his wife had seen Uncle Lewis and
-Linda and that she thought they were acting very peculiarly. I asked him
-in as off-hand and careless a manner as I could what he meant, and he
-said that his wife didn't think they acted exactly as if they had
-just lost their only child. Buck said it looked like they were only
-pretending to be brokenhearted. I thought the best way to discourage him
-was to be silent, and so I closed my eyes and he went on with his work.
-Presently, however, he said bluntly, 'Look here, Colonel Garner'--Buck
-always calls me colonel--'where do you think they put that boy?' He had
-me there, you know, and I felt ashamed of myself. The idea of as good a
-lawyer as there is in this end of the State actually wiggling under the
-eye and tongue of a coon as black as the ace of spades! Finally I told
-him that, as well as I could gather, the Hillbend faction had put Pete
-out of the way, and were keeping it a secret to intimidate the negroes
-through their natural superstition. And what do you reckon Buck said.
-Huh, he'd make a good detective! He said he'd had his eye on the most
-rampant of the Hillbend men and that they didn't look like they'd
-lynched anything as big as a mouse. In fact, he thought they were on the
-lookout for a good opportunity in that line."
-
-"It certainly looks shaky," Carson admitted, as they moved on to the
-store, where Blackburn stood waiting for them just inside the doorway.
-
-"How did Pete pass the night?" Carson asked, his brow still clouded by
-the discouraging observations of his partner.
-
-"Oh, all right," Blackburn made reply. "Bob and Wade slept here on
-the counters. They say he snored like a saw-mill. They could hear him
-through the floor. Boys, I hate to dash cold water in your faces, but I
-never felt as shaky in my life."
-
-"What's the matter with _you?_" Garner asked, with an uneasy laugh.
-
-"I'm afraid a storm is rising in an unexpected quarter," said the
-store-keeper, furtively glancing up and down the street, and then
-leading them farther back into the store.
-
-"Which quarter is that?" Carson asked, anxiously.
-
-"The sheriff is acting odd--mighty odd," said Blackburn.
-
-"Good Lord! you don't think Braider's really on our trail do you?"
-Garner cried, in genuine alarm.
-
-"Well, you two can make out what it means yourselves," and Blackburn
-pulled at his short chin whiskers doggedly. "It was only about half an
-hour ago--Braider's drinking some, and was, perhaps, on that account a
-little more communicative--he came in here, his face as red as a pickled
-beet, and smelling like a bunghole in a whiskey-barrel, and leaned
-against the counter on the dry-goods side.
-
-"'I'm the legally elected sheriff of this county, ain't I?' he said, in
-his maudlin way, and I told him he was by a big majority.
-
-"'Well,' he said, after looking down at the floor for a minute, 'I'll
-bet you boys think I'm a dem slack wad of an officer.'
-
-"I didn't know what the devil he was driving at, and so I simply kept
-my mouth shut, but you bet your life I had my ears open, for there was
-something in his eye that I didn't like, and then when he said '_you
-boys_' in that tone I began to think he might be on to the work we did
-the other night."
-
-"Well, what next?" Carson asked, sharply. "Well, he just leaned on the
-counter, about to slide down every minute," Blackburn went on, "and
-then he began to laugh in a silly sort of way and said, 'Them _Hillbend_
-fellers are a slick article, ain't they?' Of course I didn't know what
-to say," said the store-keeper, "for he had his eyes on me and was
-grinning to beat the Dutch, and that is the kind of cross-examination I
-fail at. Finally, however, I managed to say that the Hillbend folks had
-beaten the others to the jail, anyway, and he broke out into another
-knowing laugh. 'The Hillbend gang didn't have as fur to go,' he said.
-'Oh, they are a slick article, an' they've got a slick young leader.'"
-
-"What else?" asked Carson, who looked very grave and stood with his lips
-pressed together.
-
-"Nothing else," Blackburn answered. "Just then Wiggin, your boon
-companion and bosom friend, stopped at the door and called him."
-
-"Good Lord, _and with Wiggin!_" Garner exclaimed. "Our cake is dough,
-and it's good and wet."
-
-"Yes, he's a Wiggin man!" said Blackburn. "I've known he was pulling
-against Carson for some time. It seems like Braider sized up the
-situation, and decided if he was going to be re-elected himself he'd
-better pool issues with the strongest man, and he picked that skunk as
-the winner. I went to the door and watched them. They went off, arm in
-arm, towards the court-house."
-
-"Braider is evidently on to us," Carson decided, grimly; "and the truth
-is, he holds us in the palm of his hand. If he should insist on carrying
-out the law, and rearresting Pete and putting him back in jail, Dan
-Willis would see that he didn't stay there long, and Wiggin would swear
-out a warrant against us as the greatest law-breakers unhung."
-
-"Oh yes, the whole thing certainly looks shaky," admitted Blackburn.
-
-"I tell you one thing, Carson," Garner observed, grimly, "there are no
-two ways about it, we are going to lose our client and your election
-just as sure as we stand here."
-
-"I don't intend to give up yet," Dwight said, his lip twitching
-nervously and a fierce look of determination dawning in his eyes. "We've
-accomplished too much so far to fail ignominiously. Boys, I'd give
-everything I have to ward this thing off from old Aunt Linda. She's
-certainly borne enough."
-
-The two lawyers went to their office, avoiding the numerous groups of
-men about the stores who seemed occupied with the different phases
-of the ever-present topic. They seated themselves at their desks, and
-Garner was soon at work. But there was nothing for Carson to do, and
-he sat gloomily staring through the open doorway out into the sunshine.
-Presently he saw Braider across the street and called Garner's attention
-to him. Then to their surprise the sheriff turned suddenly and came
-directly towards them.
-
-"Gee, here he comes!" Garner exclaimed; "he may want to pump us. Keep
-a sharp eye on him, Carson. He may really not know anything actually
-incriminating, after all. Watch him like a hawk!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXII.
-
-[Illustration: 9285]
-
-HE young men pretended to be deeply absorbed over their work when the
-stalwart officer loomed up in the doorway, his broad-brimmed hat well
-back on his head, the flush of intoxicants in his tanned face, his step
-unsteady.
-
-"I hope I won't disturb you, gentlemen," he said; "but you are two men
-that I want to talk to--I might say talk to as a brother."
-
-"Come in, come in, Braider," Carson said; "take that chair."
-
-[Illustration: 0283]
-
-As Braider moved with uncertain step to a chair, tilted it to one side
-to divest it of its burden of books, newspapers, and old briefs and
-other defunct legal documents, Garner with a wary look in his eye fished
-a solitary cigar from his pocket--the one he had reserved for a mid-day
-smoke--and prof-ered it.
-
-"Have a cigar," he said, "and make yourself comfortable."
-
-The sheriff took the cigar as absent-mindedly as he would, in his
-condition, have received a large banknote, and held it too tightly for
-its preservation in his big red hand.
-
-"Yes, I want to talk to you boys, and I want to say a whole lot that I
-hope won't go any further. I've always meant well by you two, and hoped
-fer your success both in the law--and politics."
-
-Garner cast an amused glance, in spite of the gravity of the situation,
-at his partner, and then said, quite evenly, "We know that, Braider--we
-always _have_ known it."
-
-"Well, as I say, I want to _talk_ to you. I've heard that an honest
-confession is good for the soul, if not for the pocket, and I'm here to
-make one, as honest as I kin spit it out."
-
-"Oh, that's it?" said Garner, and with a wary look of curiosity on his
-face he sat waiting.
-
-"Yes, and I want to begin back at the first and sort o' lead up. It's
-hard to keep a fellow's political leaning hid, Carson, and I reckon
-you may have heard that I had some notion of casting my luck in with
-Wiggin."
-
-"After he began circulating those tales about me, yes," Carson said,
-with a touch of severity; "not before, Braider--at least not when I
-worked as I did the last time for your own election."
-
-"You are plumb right," the sheriff said, readily enough. "I flopped over
-sudden, I'll acknowledge; but that's neither here nor there." He paused
-for a moment and the lawyers exchanged steady glances.
-
-"He may want to make a bargain with us," Garner's eyes seemed to say,
-but Carson's mind had grasped other and more dire possibilities as he
-recalled Blackburn's remark of a few minutes before. In fact all those
-assurances of good-will might mean naught else than that the sheriff--at
-the instigation of Wiggin and others--had come actually to arrest him as
-the leader of the men who had intimidated the county jailer and
-stolen away the State's prisoner. The thought seemed to be borne
-telepathically to Garner, for that worthy all at once sat more rigidly,
-more aggressively defiant in his chair, and the pen he was chewing
-was suspended before his lips. This beating about the bush, in serious
-things, at least, was not Garner's method.
-
-"Well, well, Braider," he said, with a change of tone and manner, "tell
-us right out what you want. The day is passing and we've got lots to
-do."
-
-"All right, all right," agreed the intoxicated man; "here goes. Boys,
-what I'm going to say is a sort of per-personal matter. You've both
-treated me like a respectable citizen and officer of the law, and I've
-taken it just as if I fully deserved the honor. But Jeff Braider ain't
-no hypocrite, if he _is_ a politician and hobnobs with that sort of
-riffraff. Boys, always, away down at the bottom of everything I ever did
-tackle in this life, has been the memory of my old mother's teachings,
-and I've tried my level best, as a man, to live up to 'em. I don't know
-as I ever come nigh committing crime--as I regard it--till here lately.
-Crime, they tell me, stalks about in a good many disguises. The crime
-I'm talking about had two faces to it. You could look at it one way
-and it would seem all right, and then from another side it would look
-powerful bad. Well, I first saw this thing the night the mob raided
-Neb Wynn's shanty and run Pete Warren out and chased him to your house,
-Carson. You may not want to look me in the eye ag'in, my boy, when I
-tell you, but I could have come to your aid a sight quicker that night
-than I did if I hadn't been loaded down with so many fears of injury
-to myself. As I saw that big mob rushing like a mad river after that
-nigger, I said to myself, I did, that no human power or authority could
-save 'im anyway, and that if I stood up before the crowd and tried to
-quiet them, that--well, if I wasn't shot dead in my tracks I'd kill
-myself politically, and so I waited in the edge of the crowd, hiding
-like a sneak-thief, till--till you did the work, and then I stepped up
-as big as life and pretended that I'd just arrived."
-
-"Oh!" Garner exclaimed, and he stared at the bowed head of the officer
-with a look of wonder in his eyes; and it was a look of hope, too,
-for surely no human being of exactly _this_ stamp would take unfair
-advantage of any one.
-
-"That was the _first_ time," Braider gulped, as he went on, his glance
-now directed solely to Carson. "My boy, I went to bed that night, after
-we jailed that nigger, feeling meaner than an egg-sucking dog looks when
-he's caught in the act. If there is anything on earth that will shame a
-man it is to see another display more moral and physical courage than he
-does, and you did enough of both that night to show me where I stood. It
-was a new thing to me, and it made me mad. I was a good soldier in the
-war--I wear a Confederate veteran's badge that was pinned onto my coat
-in public by the | beautiful daughter of a dead comrade--but being shot
-at in a bunch ain't the same as being the _only_ target, and I showed my
-limit."
-
-"Oh, you are exaggerating the whole thing," Carson said, with a flush of
-embarrassment.
-
-"No I ain't, Carson Dwight," Braider said, feelingly, and he took out
-his red cotton handkerchief and wiped his eyes. "You showed me that
-night the difference between bravery, so-called, and the genuine thing.
-I reckon bravery for personal gain is a weak imitation of bravery that
-acts just out of human pity as yours did that night. Well, that ain't
-all. The next day I was put to a worse test than ever. It was noised
-about, you know, that a bigger mob than the first was rising. I stayed
-out of the centre of town as much as I could, for everywhere I went
-folks would look at me as if they thought I'd surely do something to
-protect the prisoner, and at home my wife was whimpering around all day,
-saying she was sure Pete was innocent, or enough so to deserve a trial,
-if not for himself for the sake of his mammy and daddy. But what was
-such a wavering thing as I was to do? I took it that seventy-five per
-cent, of the men who had backed me with their ballot in my election was
-bent on lynching the prisoner, and if I opposed them they would consider
-me a traitor. On the other hand, I was up against this: if I did put
-up a feeble sort of opposition and gave in easy under pressure, the
-conservative men, like some we have here in town, would say I didn't
-mean business or I'd have actually opened fire on the mob. You see,
-boys, I wasn't man enough to take a stand either way, and though I well
-knew what was coming, I went about lying like a dog--lying in my throat,
-telling everybody that the indications showed that the excitement had
-quieted down. I went home that night and told my wife all was serene,
-and I drank about a quart of rye whiskey to keep me from thinking about
-the business and went to bed, but my conscience, I reckon, was stronger
-than my whiskey, for I rolled and tumbled all night. It seemed to me
-that I was, with my own hands, tying the rope around that pore nigger's
-neck. There I lay, a sworn officer of the law, flat on my back with
-not enough moral courage in my miserable carcass to have killed a gnat.
-Carson, if I saw you once before my eyes that long night, I saw you
-five hundred times. Your speech rang over and over in my ears. I saw you
-stand there when a ball had already grazed your brow and defy them to
-shoot again. I saw that poor black boy clinging to your knees, and
-knew that the light of Heaven had shone on you, while I lay in the hot
-darkness of the bottomless pit."
-
-"God, you do put it strong!" Garner exclaimed.
-
-"I'm not putting it half strong enough," the sheriff went on. "I don't
-deserve to hold office even in a community half run by mob law. But I
-ain't through. I ain't through yet. I got up early that awful morning,
-and went out to feed my hogs at a pen that stands on a back street, and
-there a woman milking a cow told me that it was over Pete Warren was
-done for--guilty or not, he was done for. I went in the house and tried
-to gulp down my breakfast, faced by my wife, who wouldn't speak to me,
-and showed in other ways what she thought about the whole thing. She was
-eternally sighing and going on about old Mammy Lindy and her feelings. I
-first went to the jail, and there I was told that two mobs had come, the
-first the Hillbend crowd, who did the work, and the bigger mob that got
-there too late."
-
-Braider's voice had grown husky and he coughed. Garner stole a searching
-glance of inquiry at Carson, but Dwight, his face suffused with a warm
-look of pity for the speaker, was steadily staring through the open
-door.
-
-"I ain't done yet, God knows I ain't," the sheriff gulped. "That morning
-I felt meaner than any convict that ever wore ball and chain. If I'd
-been tried and found guilty of stabbing a woman in the back I don't
-believe I could have felt less like a man. I tried to throw it all off
-by thinking that I couldn't have done any good anyway, but it wouldn't
-work. Carson, you and your plucky stand for the maintenance of law was
-before me, and you wasn't paid for the work while I was. Huh! do you
-remember seeing me as you came out of Blackburn's store that morning,
-with your hair all tousled up and your eyes looking red and bloodshot?"
-
-"Yes, I remember seeing you," said Dwight. "I would have stopped to
-speak to you but--but I was in a hurry to get home."
-
-"Well, you may have heard that I used to be a sort of a one-horse
-detective," Braider went on, "and I had acquired a habit of looking
-for the explanation of nearly every unusual thing I saw, and--well,
-you coming out of that store before it was opened for trade, while the
-shutters in the front was still closed, struck me as odd. Then again,
-remembering your big interest in Pete's case, somehow, it didn't seem to
-me--meeting you sudden that way--that you looked quite as downhearted
-as I expected. In fact, I thought you appeared sort o' satisfied over
-something."
-
-"Oh!" Garner exclaimed, all at once suspecting Braider of a gigantic
-ruse to entrap them. "You thought he looked chipper, did you? Well, I
-must say he looked exactly the other way to me when I first saw him that
-day."
-
-"Well, it started me to wondering, anyway," went on the sheriff,
-ignoring Garner's interruption, "and I set to work to watch. I hung
-about the restaurant across the street, smoking a cigar and keeping my
-eyes on that store. After awhile I saw Bob Smith go in the store and
-then Wade Tingle. Then I saw a big tray of grub covered with a white
-cloth sent from the Johnston House, and Bob Smith come to the door and
-took it in, sending the coon that fetched it back to the hotel. Well,
-I waited a minute or two and then sauntered, careless-like, across and
-went in. I chatted awhile with Bob and Wade, noticing, I remember, that
-for a newspaper man Wade seemed powerful indifferent about gathering
-items about what had happened, and that Blackburn was busy folding up
-a tangled lot of short pieces of white sheeting. All this time I was
-looking about to see where that waiter full of grub had gone. Not a
-sign of it was in sight, but in a lull in the talk I heard the clink of
-crockery somewhere below me, and I caught on. Boys, I'm here to tell you
-that never did a condemned soul feel as I felt. I went out in the open
-air praying, actually praying, that what I suspected might be true. I
-started for the jail and on the way met Burt Barrett. I asked him for
-particulars, and when he said that the Hillbend mob had left word that
-nobody need even look for the remains of the boy my heart gave a big
-jump in the same way as it had when that clip and saucer collided in
-that cellar. I asked Burt if he noticed which way the mob tuck the
-prisoner, and he said down towards town. I asked him if it wasn't odd
-for Hillbend folks to go that way to hang a man, and he agreed that it
-was. Well, to make a long story short, I was on to your gigantic ruse,
-and God above knows what a load it took off of me. You had saved me,
-Carson--you had saved me from toting that crime to my grave. I knew
-you were the ringleader, for I didn't know anybody else who would have
-thought of such a plan. You are a sight younger man than I am, but you
-stuck to principle, while I shirked principle, duty, and everything
-else. Doing all that was hurting your political chances, and you knew
-it, but you stuck to what was right all the same."
-
-"Yes, he certainly has queered his political chances," Garner said,
-grimly, with a look of wonder in his eye over the sheriff's frank
-confession. "But you, I think you said, were a Wiggin man," he finished.
-
-"Well, Wiggin and some others _think_ I am yet," said Braider; "and
-I reckon I was till this thing come up; but, boys, I guess I've got
-a little smidgin of good left in me, for somehow Wiggin has turned my
-stomach. But I hain't got to what I was leading up to. Neither one of
-you hain't admitted that there is a nigger in that wood-pile yet, and I
-don't blame you for keeping it to yourselves. That is your business,
-but the time has come when Jeff Braider's got to do the right thing or
-plunge deeper into hellishness, and he's had a taste of what it means
-and don't want no more of it. I may lose all I've got by it. Wiggin and
-his gang may beat me to a cold finish next election, but from now on I'm
-on the other side."
-
-"Good," said Garner; "that's the way to talk. Was that what you were
-leading up to, Braider?"
-
-"Not altogether," and the sheriff rose and stood over Carson, resting
-his hand on the young man's shoulder to steady himself. "My boy, I've
-come to tell you that the damnedest, blackest plot agin you that ever
-was laid has been hatched out."
-
-"What is that, Braider?" Carson asked, calmly enough under the
-circumstances.
-
-"Wiggin and his gang have found out that a trick was played night before
-last. The Hillbend men convinced them that they didn't lynch anybody,
-and the Wiggin crowd smelt around until they dropped on to the thing.
-The only fact they are short on is where the boy is hid. They think he
-is in the house of one of the negro preachers. Wiggin come to me, not
-half an hour ago, and considering me one of his stand-bys, he told me
-all about it. The scheme is for me to arrest Pete and jail 'im on the
-charge of murder and then to arrest you fer being the ringleader of a
-jail-breaking gang, who preaches law and order in public for political
-gain and breaks both in secret."
-
-"And what do they think will become of Pete?" Carson asked, a touch of
-supreme bitterness in his tone.
-
-"Wiggin didn't say; but I know what would happen to him. The seeds of
-bloody riot are being strewn broadcast by the handful. They've been to
-every member of the crowd that lynched Sam Dudlow and warned them, on
-their lives, not to repeat the statement that Dudlow had said Pete was
-innocent. They told the lynchers that you two lawyers were on the hunt
-for men who had heard the confession and intend to use that as evidence
-against them."
-
-"Ah, that _is_ slick, slick!" Garner muttered.
-
-"Slick as double-distilled goose-grease," said Braider. "The lynchers
-are denying to friend or foe that Dudlow said a word, and the news is
-spreading like wildfire that Pete was Dudlow's accomplice, and that you,
-Carson, are trying, with a gang of town dudes, to carry your point by
-main, bull-headed force."
-
-"I see, I see." Carson had risen and with a deep frown on his face stood
-leaning against the top of his desk. He extended his hand to the officer
-and said, "I appreciate your telling me all this, Braider, more than I
-can say."
-
-"What's the good of my telling you if the news doesn't benefit you?"
-the sheriff asked. "Carson, I want to see you win. I ain't half a man
-myself, but I've got two little boys just starting to grow up, and I
-wish they could be like you--a two-legged bull-dog that clamps his teeth
-on what's right and won't let loose. Carson, you've got a chance--a bare
-chance--to get your man out alive."
-
-"What's that?" Dwight asked, eagerly.
-
-"Why, let me hold the mob in check by promising to arrest Pete, and
-you get some trusty feller to take him in a buggy to-night through the
-country to Chattanooga. It would be a ticklish trip, and you want a man
-that won't get scared at his shadow, for on every road out of Darley,
-men will be on the lookout, but if you once got him there he would be
-absolutely safe, for no mob would go out of the State to do work of that
-sort. Getting a good man is the main thing."
-
-"I'll do it myself," Dwight said, firmly. "You?" Garner cried. "That's
-absurd!"
-
-"I'm the only one who _could_ do it," Carson declared, "for Pete would
-not go with any one else."
-
-"I really believe you are right," Garner agreed, reluctantly; "but it is
-a nasty undertaking after all you've been through."
-
-"By gum!" exclaimed Braider, extending his hand to Dwight. "I hope you
-will do it. I want to see you complete a darn good all-round job." >
-"Well, you _are_ an officer of the law," Garner observed, with amusement
-written all over his rugged face, "asking a man to steal your own
-prisoner."
-
-"What else can I do that's at all decent?" Braider asked. "Besides,
-do you fellows know that there never has been any written warrant for
-Pete's arrest. I started to jail him without any, and old Mrs. Parsons
-turned him loose. The only time he was put in jail was by Carson
-himself. By George! as I look at it, Carson, you have every right to
-take him out of jail, by any hook or crook, since you was responsible
-for him being there instead of hanging to a limb of a tree. I tell
-you, my boy, there ain't any law on earth that can touch you. Nobody is
-prepared to testify against Pete, and if you will get him to Chattanooga
-and keep him there for a while he can come back here a free man."
-
-"I have friends there who will look after him," Dwight said. "I'll start
-with him to-night."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIII.
-
-[Illustration: 9297]
-
-HAT afternoon Keith Gordon went to Warren's to tell Helen of Carson's
-plan for the removal of Pete. She received him in the big parlor, and he
-found her seated at one of the wide windows which, in summer-time, was
-used as a doorway to the veranda.
-
-"I met the conquering hero, Mr. Sanders, on my way down," he said,
-lightly. "I presume he has been here as usual."
-
-"He only called to say good-bye," Helen answered, a little coldly.
-
-"Oh, that _is_ news," Keith pursued, in the same tone. "Rather sudden,
-isn't it?"
-
-"No, his affairs would not permit a longer visit," said Helen. "But you
-didn't come to talk of him; it was something about Pete."
-
-She sat very still and rigid while he went into detail as to the whole
-situation, and when he had finished she rested her chin in her white
-hand, and he saw her breast rise and fall tremulously.
-
-"There is danger attached to the trip," she said, without looking at
-him. "I know it, Keith, by the way you talk."
-
-He deliberated for an instant, then acknowledged: "Yes, there is, and
-to my way of thinking, Helen, there is a great deal. Wade and I tried to
-get him to consent to some other plan, but he wouldn't hear to it.
-He's so anxious to put it through all right that he won't trust to any
-substitute, and he won't let any one else go along, either. He thinks it
-would attract too much attention."
-
-"In what particular way does the danger lie?" Helen faltered, and Keith
-saw her pass her hand over her mouth as if to reprimand her lips for
-their unsteadiness.
-
-"I'd tell you there wasn't any at all, as Carson would have me do,"
-Keith declared; "but when a fellow has the courage of an army of men, I
-believe in his getting the full credit for it. You want to know and
-I'm going to tell you. He's been through ticklish places enough in this
-business, but going over that lonely road to-night, when a thousand
-furious men may be on the lookout for him, is the worst thing he has
-tackled. It wouldn't be so very dangerous to a man who would throw up
-his hands if accosted, but, Helen, if you could have seen Carson's face
-when he was telling us about it, you would know that he will actually
-die rather than see Pete taken. He's reckless of late, anyway."
-
-"Reckless!" Helen echoed, and this time she gave Keith a full, almost
-pleading stare.
-
-"Oh yes, you know he's reckless. He's been so ever since Mr. Sanders
-came. It looks to me like--well, I reckon a man can understand another
-better than a woman can, but it looks to me like Carson is doing the
-whole thing because you feel so worried about it."
-
-"You certainly wrong him there," Helen declared.
-
-"He is doing it simply because it is right."
-
-"Oh, of course he thinks it's _right,_" Keith returned, with a boyish
-smile; "he thinks everything _you_ want is right."
-
-When Keith had gone Helen went at once to Linda's cottage to tell her
-the news, putting it in as hopeful a light as possible, and not touching
-upon the danger of the journey. But the old woman had a very penetrating
-mind, and she stood in the doorway with a deeply furrowed brow for
-several minutes without saying anything, then her observation only added
-to Helen's burden of anxiety.
-
-"Chile," she said, "ol' Lindy don't like de way dat looks one bit.
-You say young marster got ter steal off in de dead o' night, en dat he
-cayn't even let me see my boy once 'fo' he go. Suppin up, honey--suppin
-up! De danger ain't over yit. Honey, I know what it is," Linda groaned;
-"dem white folks is rising ergin."
-
-"Well, even if that is the reason"--Helen felt the chill hand of fear
-grasp her heart at the admission--"even if that is it, Carson will
-get him away safely."
-
-"Ef he _kin_, honey, ef he _kin!_" Linda moaned.
-
-"'God been behind 'im all thoo so fur, but I seed de time when de Lawd
-Hisse'f seem ter turn His back on folks tryin' ter do dey level best."
-
-Leaving Linda muttering and moaning in the cottage doorway, the girl
-went with a despondent step back to the big empty house and wandered
-aimlessly about the various rooms.
-
-As night came on and her father returned from town, she met him on the
-veranda and gave him a kiss of greeting, but she soon discovered that
-he had heard nothing. In fact, he was one of the many who still believed
-that Pete had been lynched, the vague whisperings to the contrary not
-having reached his old ears. She sat with him at the tea-table, and then
-went up to her room and lighted her lamp on her bureau. As she did so
-she looked at her reflection in the mirror and started at the sight of
-her grave features. Then a flash from her wrist caught her eye. It was
-the big diamond of a beautiful bracelet which Sanders had given her,
-and as she looked at it she shuddered. Was she superstitious? She hardly
-knew, and yet a strange idea took possession of her brain. Would her
-unspoken prayers for Carson Dwight's safety in his perilous expedition
-be answered while she wore that gift from another man, after she had
-spurned Carson's great and lasting love, and allowed the poor boy to
-think that she had given herself heart and soul to this stranger? She
-hesitated only a moment, and opening a jewel box she unclasped the
-bracelet and put it away. Then with a certain lightness of heart she
-went to the window overlooking the grounds of the Dwight homestead
-and stood there staring out in the hope of seeing Carson. But he was
-evidently not at home, for no lights were visible except a dim one in
-the invalid's room and one in old Dwight's chamber adjoining.
-
-At ten o'clock Helen disrobed herself still with that awful sense of
-impending tragedy hovering over her. The oil in her lamp was almost out,
-and for this reason only she extinguished the flame, else she would
-have kept it burning through the night to dissipate the material shadows
-which seemed to accentuate those of her spirit. She heard the old
-grandfather clock on the stair-landing below solemnly strike ten, then
-the monotonous tick-tack as the great pendulum swung to and fro. Sleep
-was out of the question. A few minutes before eleven she heard a soft
-foot-fall on the walk in the front garden, and going out on the veranda
-she looked down.
-
-The bowed form of a woman was moving restlessly back and forth from the
-steps to the gate.
-
-"Is that you, mammy?" Helen asked, softly.
-
-The handkerchiefed head was lifted and Linda looked up.
-
-"Yes, it's me, honey. I can't sleep. What de use? Kin er mother sleep
-when her chile is comin' in de worl'? No, you know she can't; neither
-kin she close 'er eyes when she's afeared dat same chile is gwine out of
-it. I'm afeared, honey. I'm afeared ter-night wuss dan all. Seem lak
-de evil sperits des been playin' wid us all erlong--makin' us think we
-gwine ter come thoo, so't will hit us harder w'en it do strack de blow.
-You go on back ter yo' baid, honey. You catch yo' death er cold. I'm
-gwine home right now."
-
-Helen saw the old woman disappear round the corner of the house, but
-she remained on the veranda. The clock was striking eleven, and she
-was about to go in, when she heard the dull beat of hoofs on the
-carriage-drive of the Dwight place, and through the half moonlight she
-saw a pair of horses, Carson's best, harnessed to a buggy and driven
-by their owner slowly and cautiously going towards the big gate. Dwight
-himself got down to open it. She heard his low commands to the spirited
-animals as he led them forward by the bit, and then he stepped back to
-close and latch the gate. She had an overpowering impulse to call out to
-him; but would it be wise? His evident precaution was to keep his mother
-from knowing of his departure, and Helen's voice might attract the
-attention of the invalid and seriously hamper him in his undertaking.
-With her hands pressed to her breast she saw him get into the buggy,
-heard his calm voice as he spoke to the horses, and then he was off--off
-to do his duty--and _hers_. She went back to her room and laid down,
-haunted by the weird thought that she would never see him again. Then,
-all at once, she had a flash of memory which sent the hot blood of
-shame from her heart to her brain, and she sat up, staring through the
-darkness. _That_ was the man against whom she had steeled her heart for
-his conduct, his youthful indiscretions with her unfortunate brother.
-Was Carson Dwight to go forever unpardoned--unpardoned by such as _she_
-while _that_ sort of soul held suffering sway within him?
-
-The hours of the long night dragged by and another day began. Keith came
-up after breakfast and related the particulars of Carson's departure.
-Graphically he recounted how the gang had robed the ill-starred Pete in
-grotesque woman's attire and seen him and Carson safely in the buggy,
-but that was all that could be told or foretold. As for Keith, he and
-all the rest were trying to look on the bright side, and they would
-succeed better but for the long face Pole Baker had drawn when he came
-into town early that morning and heard of the expedition.
-
-"So he was uneasy?" Helen said, in perturbation.
-
-Keith hesitated for a moment and then answered: "Yes, to tell you the
-truth, Helen, it almost staggered him. He is a good-natured, long-headed
-chap, and he lost his temper. He cursed us all out for a silly, stupid
-set for allowing Carson to take such a risk. Finally we drew out of him
-what he feared. He said the particular road Carson took to reach the
-State line was actually alive with men, who had been keyed up to the
-highest tension by Wiggin and his followers. Pole said they had their
-eye on that road particularly because it was the most direct way to
-Chattanooga, and that Carson wouldn't have one chance in five hundred
-of passing unmolested. He said the idea of fooling men of that stamp by
-putting Pete in a woman's dress in the company of Carson, of all human
-beings, was the work of insane men."
-
-"It really was dangerous!" said Helen, pale to the lips.
-
-"Well, we meant it for the best"--Keith defended himself and his
-friends--"we didn't know the road was a particularly dangerous one. In
-fact, Pole didn't learn it himself until several hours after Carson had
-left. I really believe he'd have helped us do what we did if he had been
-with us last night. We did the best we could; besides, Carson was going
-to have his way. Every protest we made was swept off with that winning
-laugh of his. In spite of the gravity of the thing, he kept us roaring.
-I have never seen him in better spirits. He was bowing and scraping
-before that veiled and hooded darky as if he were the grandest lady in
-the land. He even insisted on handing Pete into the buggy and protecting
-his long skirt from the dusty wheel. We never realized what we had done
-till he was gone and we all gathered in the store and talked it over.
-Blackburn, I reckon, being the oldest, was the bluest. He almost cried.
-Helen, I've seen popular men in my life, but I never saw one with so
-many friends as Carson. He's an odd combination. His friends love him
-extravagantly and his enemies hate him to the limit."
-
-Late that afternoon, unable to wait longer for news of Carson, Helen
-went down to his office. Garner was in, and she surprised a look of
-firmly grounded uneasiness on his strong face. For a moment it was as if
-he intended to make some equivocal reply to her inquiry, but threw aside
-the impulse as unworthy of her courage and intelligence.
-
-"To be candid," he said, as he stood stroking his chin, which bristled
-with open disregard for appearances under stress of more important
-things--"to tell you the whole truth, Miss Helen, I don't like the lay
-of the land." Then he told her that the sheriff had just informed him
-of the whispered rumor that a body of men had met Carson Dwight and his
-charge near the State line about three o'clock in the morning. What had
-taken place the sheriff didn't know, beyond the fact that the men had
-disbanded and returned to their homes all gravely uncommunicative. What
-it meant no one but the participants knew. To face the facts, it looked
-very much as if harm had really come to one, if not to both, of the two.
-The mob had evidently been wrought to a high pitch of resentment for
-the trick Carson had played in stealing the prisoner from jail, and this
-second attempt to get him away may have enraged his enemies to outright
-violence against him, especially as Dwight was a fighting man and very
-hot-headed when roused.
-
-Unable to discuss the matter in her depressed frame of mind, Helen left
-him and went home. The whole story being now out, she found her father
-warmly excited and disposed to talk about it in all its phases, the
-earliest as well as the latest, but she had no heart for it, and after
-urging the Major not to speak of it to Linda she went supperless to her
-room.
-
-Two hours passed. The dusk had given way to the deeper darkness of
-evening. The moon had not yet risen and the starlight from a partly
-clouded sky was not sufficiently luminous to aid the vision in reaching
-any considerable distance, and yet from one of the rear windows of her
-room, where she stood morosely contemplative, she could see the vague
-outlines of Linda's cottage. It was while she was looking at the doorway
-of the little domicile, which stood out above the shrubbery of the rear
-garden as if dimly lighted from a candle within, that she saw something
-which caused her heart to suddenly bound. It was the live coal of a
-cigar, and the smoker seemed to be leaving the cottage, passing through
-the little gateway, and entering her father's grounds. What more natural
-than for Carson, if he had returned safely, to go at once to the mother
-of the boy with the news? Helen almost held her breath. She would soon
-be reasonably sure, for if it were Carson he would take a diagonal
-direction to reach the gateway to the Dwight homestead. Was it Carson,
-or--could it be her father? Her heart sank over the last surmise, and
-then it bounded again, for the coal of fire, fitfully flaring, was
-moving in the direction prayed for. Down the stairs Helen glided
-noiselessly, lest the Major hear her, and yet rapidly. When she reached
-the front veranda and descended the steps to the grass of the lawn she
-was just in time to see the red disk passing through the gateway
-to Dwight's. No form was visible, and yet she called out firmly and
-clearly: "Carson! Carson!" The coal of fire paused, described a curve,
-and she bounded towards it.
-
-"Did you call me?" Carson Dwight asked, in a voice so low from
-hoarseness that it hardly reached her ears.
-
-"Yes, wait!" she panted. "Oh, you've gotten back!"
-
-They now stood face to face.
-
-"Oh yes," he laughed, with a gesture towards his throat of apology for
-his hoarseness; "did you think I was off for good?"
-
-"No, but I was afraid"--she was shocked by the pallor of his usually
-ruddy face, the many evidences of fatigue upon him, the nervous way
-he stood holding his hat and cigar--"I was afraid you had met with
-disaster."
-
-"But why did you feel that way?" he asked, reassuringly.
-
-"Oh, from what Keith said in general, and Mr. Garner, too. They declared
-the road you took was full of desperadoes, and--"
-
-"I might have known they would exaggerate the whole business," Carson
-said, with a smile. "Why, I've just come from Mam' Linda's. I went to
-tell her that Pete is all right and as sound as a dollar. He's in the
-charge of good, reliable friends of mine up there, and wholly out
-of danger. In fact, he's as happy as a lark. When I left him he was
-surrounded by a gang of as trifling scamps as himself bragging about his
-numerous escapes and--he's generous--my importance in the community we
-live in. Well, he's certainly been _important_ enough lately."
-
-"But did you not meet with--with any opposition at all?" Helen went on,
-insistently.
-
-"Oh, well"--he hesitated, struck a match, and applied it to his already
-lighted cigar--"we lost our way, for one thing. You see, I was a little
-afraid to carry a light, and it was hard to make out the different
-sign-boards, and, all in all, it was a slow trip, but we got through all
-right. And hungry! Gee whiz! We struck a restaurant in the outskirts of
-Chattanooga about sunup, and while that fellow was cooking us some steak
-and making coffee we could have eaten him alive. If Mam' Linda
-could have seen her boy eat she would have no fears as to his bodily
-condition."
-
-"But didn't you meet some men who stopped you?" Helen asked, staring
-steadily into his eyes.
-
-He blinked, flicked the ashes from his cigar, and said: "Yes, we did,
-and they were really on the war-path, but they seemed very reasonable,
-and when I had talked to them and explained the matter from our
-stand-point--why, they--they let us go."
-
-They had gone into the grounds and were near the main walk when the gate
-was opened and a man came striding towards them. It was Jeff Braider.
-
-"Oh, I've been looking for you everywhere, Carson," he cried, warmly,
-shaking Dwight's hand. "I heard you'd got back, but I wanted to see you
-with my own eyes. Lord, Lord, my boy, if I'd known the awful trouble I
-was getting you into I'd never have let you take that road. I've just
-heard the whole story. For genuine pluck and endurance you certainly
-take the rag off the bush. Why, nine hundred and ninety-nine men out of
-a thousand would have given up the game, but you, you young bull-dog--"
-
-"Carson, Carson! are you down there?" It was a man's voice from an upper
-window.
-
-"Yes, father, what is it?"
-
-"Your mother wants to see you right now. She's waked up and is worrying.
-Come on in."
-
-"You'll both excuse me for just a moment, I know," Carson said, as if
-glad of the interruption. "I'll be back presently. I haven't seen my
-mother since I returned, and she is very nervous and easily excited."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIV
-
-[Illustration: 9309]
-
-O you are the only lady member of the secret gang that stole my
-prisoner!" the sheriff said, laughingly. "The boys told me all about
-it."
-
-"I wasn't taken in till they had done all the work," Helen smiled. "I
-was only an honorary addition, elected more to keep my mouth shut than
-for any other service I could perform."
-
-"Oh, _that_ was it!" Braider laughed. "Well, they certainly put the
-thing through. I've mixed up in a lot of hair-raising scrapes in my
-time, but that kidnapping business was the brightest idea ever sprung
-from a man's head. This fellow Dwight is a corker. Did he tell you what
-he went through last night?"
-
-"Not a thing," replied Helen; "the truth is, I have an idea he was
-trying to mislead me."
-
-"Well, he certainly was if he didn't tell you he had the hardest fight
-for his life and that nigger's that ever a man made. You noticed how
-hoarse he was, didn't you? That is due to it. The poor chap was up all
-last night and drove the biggest part of to-day. I'll bet, strong as he
-is, he's as limber as a dish-rag."
-
-"Then he really had trouble?" Helen breathed, heavily.
-
-"Trouble! And he didn't mention it to you? Young men in this day and
-time certainly play their cards peculiar. When I was on the carpet we
-boys had a way of making the most to women folks of everything we did,
-and it was generally the loudest talker that won the game. But here I
-find this 'town dude,' as the country people call his sort, actually
-trying to make you think he went to Chattanooga last night in a Pullman
-car. Good Lord, it gives me the all-overs to think of it! I heard all
-about it. I met a man who was along, and he told me the whole thing from
-start to finish."
-
-"What was it?" Helen asked, breathlessly.
-
-"Why," answered Braider, casting a glance towards Dwight's as if fearful
-of being overheard, "I didn't know it, but somehow the mob had got wind
-of what Carson intended to do, and, bless you, they were waiting for him
-near the State line primed and cocked. The boy's enemies had fixed him.
-They had worked the mob up to the highest pitch of fury with all sorts
-of tales against Pete. They had produced men who had really heard the
-nigger threaten to harm Johnson, and they themselves testified that
-Carson was saving the nigger only to capture black voters as their
-friend and benefactor. The mob was mad as Tucker at him for tricking
-them the other night, and they certainly had it in for him."
-
-"They were mad at Carson _personally_, then?" Helen said.
-
-"_Were_ they? They were ready to drink his blood. They halted the buggy,
-took them both out, and tied them."
-
-"Tied Car--" Helen's voice died away, and she stood staring at Braider
-unable to speak.
-
-"Yes, they tied them both and led them off into the woods. They then
-fastened Pete to a stump and piled sticks and brush around him and told
-Carson they were going to make him see them burn the boy alive and when
-that was done they intended to silence his tongue by shooting him dead
-in his tracks."
-
-Helen covered her face with her hands and stifled a groan.
-
-"His power of gab saved him, Miss Helen," Braider went on. "It saved
-them both. It wasn't any begging, either; that wouldn't have gone with
-that sort of gang. With his hands and feet tied he began to talk--that's
-what ails his throat now--and the man that confessed it to me said such
-rapid fire of words and argument never before rolled from human lips. He
-told them he knew they would kill him; that they were a merciless band
-of desperadoes; but he was going to fire some truths at them that they
-would remember after he was gone, I'm no talker, Miss Helen. I can't
-possibly repeat what the man told me. He said at first Carson couldn't
-get their attention, but after awhile, when they were getting ready to
-apply the match, something in Dwight's voice caught their ear and they
-paused. He talked and talked, until a man behind him, in open defiance,
-cut the cords that held his hands. Later another cut his feet loose, and
-then Carson walked boldly up to Pete and stood beside him, and although
-a growl of fury was still in the air he kept talking. The man that told
-me about it said Carson first picked up one of the sticks around the
-prisoner and hurled it from him to emphasize something he said, then
-another and another, until the mob saw him kicking the sticks away and
-roaring out an offer to fight the whole bunch single-handed. Gee whiz!
-I'd have given ten years of my life to have heard it. He hadn't a thing
-to say in favor of Pete's general character; he said the boy was an
-idle, fun-loving, shiftless fellow, but he was innocent of the crime
-charged against him and he should not die like a dog. He spoke of the
-fine characters of Pete's mother and father and of the old woman's
-grief, and then, Miss Helen, he said something about _you_, and the man
-that told me about it said that one thing did more to soften and quell
-the crowd than anything else."
-
-"He said something about _me?_" Helen cried. "Me?"
-
-"Yes; no names was mentioned, but they knew who he meant," Braider went
-on. "Carson spoke of your family and of the close bond of human sympathy
-between it and all the blacks that had once belonged to your folks,
-and said that the daughter of that house, the most beautiful womanly
-character that had ever blessed the South, was praying at that moment
-for the safety of the prisoner, and if they carried out their plans she
-would shed tears of sorrow. 'Your intentions are good,' Carson said.
-'You are all sincere men acting, as you see it, in the interests of the
-women of the South. Listen to this gentlewoman's prayer uttered through
-my mouth to-night for mercy and human justice.'
-
-"It fairly swept them off their feet, Miss Helen. The man that told me
-about it said he never saw a more thoroughly shamed lot of men in his
-life; he said they released Pete and led the horses around and stood
-like mile-posts with nothing to say as Carson drove away. The man that
-told me said he'd bet ninety per cent, of the gang would vote for Dwight
-this fall. But I must be going; if that young buck knew I'd been telling
-you all this he'd give _me_ a tongue-lashing, and I don't want any of
-his sort in mine."
-
-Helen waited for about ten minutes alone on the grass--waited for
-Carson. When he finally came out and hurried towards her, he found her
-with her handkerchief pressed over her eyes.
-
-"Why, what is the matter, Helen?" he asked, in sudden concern.
-
-She remained silent for a moment, and then with glistening eyes she
-looked up at him as he stood pale and disturbed, the plaster still
-marking his wound and gleaming in the starlight.
-
-"Why didn't you tell me?" she asked, laying her hand tenderly on his
-arm, her voice holding cadences of ineffable sweetness.
-
-"Oh, Braider's been talking to you, I see!" Dwight said, with a frown of
-displeasure.
-
-"Why, didn't you tell me, Carson?" she repeated, putting her disengaged
-hand on his arm and raising her appealing face till it was close to his.
-
-He shrugged his shoulders, still frowning, and then said, flushing under
-her urgent gaze: "Because, Helen, you've already seen and heard too much
-of this awful stuff. It really is not fit for a gentle, sensitive girl
-like you."
-
-"Oh, Carson," she cried, her suffused face held even closer to his, "you
-are the dearest, sweetest boy in the world!" and she turned and left
-him, left him alone there in his fatigue, alone under the starlight to
-fight as he had never fought before the deathless yearning for her.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXV.
-
-[Illustration: 9315]
-
-WO weeks went by. Great changes had come over the temper of the
-insurgent mountain people. They had gradually come to accept the rescue
-of Pete Warren as a chance bit of real justice that was as admirable as
-it was unusual and heroic. A sufficient number of men had come forward
-and testified to Sam Dudlow's ante-mortem confession to exculpate
-Carson's client, and some who had a leaning towards Dwight's cause
-politically were hinting, on occasion, that surely a man who would take
-such a plucky stand for the rights of a humble negro would not be a mere
-figure-head in the legislature of the State. At all events, there was
-one man who ground his teeth in secret rage over the subtle turn of
-affairs, and that man was Wiggin. He still busied himself sowing the
-seditious seed of race hatred wherever he found receptive soil, but,
-unfortunately for his cause, in many places where unbridled fury had
-once ploughed the ground a sort of frost had fallen. Most men whose
-passions are unduly wrought undergo a certain sort of relapse, and
-Wiggin found many who were not so much interested in their support of
-him as formerly when an open and defiant enemy was to be defeated.
-
-Wiggin was puzzled more about Jeff Braider than any one of his former
-supporters. Braider was too good a politician to admit that he had in
-any way aided Carson Dwight by a betrayal of the plot against him,
-for that was exactly the sort of thing Wiggin could hold out to his
-constituents as the act of a man disloyal to his official post,
-for, guilty or innocent, the prisoner should have been held, as any
-law-abiding citizen would admit. As to Pete's guilt Wiggin's opinion
-was unchanged, and he made no bones of saying so; he believed, so he
-declared, that Pete was Dudlow's accomplice, and the dastardly manner of
-his release was a shame and a disgrace to any white man's community.
-
-As for Jeff Braider, he was in such high feather over the success of his
-swerving towards the right in the nick of time that he refrained from
-drink and wore better clothing. He liked the situation. He felt, now,
-that he could serve his country, his God, and himself with a clear
-conscience, for Carson Dwight looked like a winner and they had agreed
-to work together.
-
-Helen Warren, after her impulsive leaning towards her first sweetheart
-that night in the garden, had permitted herself to undergo the keenest
-suffering which was due to her strangely unsettled mind. Was she
-strictly honest? she asked herself. She had openly encouraged a good man
-to hope that she would finally become his wife, and the letters she was
-receiving from him daily were of the tenderest, most appealing nature,
-showing that Sanders' love for her and faith in her fair dealing were
-too deeply grounded to be easily uprooted. Besides, as he perhaps had
-the right to do, the Augusta man had spoken of his hopes to his mother
-and sister, and those sympathetic ladies had written Helen adroit
-letters which all but plainly alluded to the "understanding" as being
-the forerunner of a most welcome family event.
-
-Many times had the poor girl seated herself to respond to these
-communications, and found herself absolutely unequal to the performance
-in the delicate spirit that the occasion demanded. The window of her
-room, at which her writing-desk stood, looked out over the garden at
-Dwight's, and the very spot where she had left Carson that memorable
-night was in open view. How could she throw herself into anything, yes
-_anything_ pertaining to her compact with Sanders while the ever-present
-thrill and ecstasy of that moment was permeating her? What had it really
-meant--that ecstatic yearning to kiss the lips so close to hers, the
-lips which had quivered in dumb adoration and despair as he strove to
-keep from her ken the suffering he had undergone in her service?
-
-One day she rebelled against the painful, almost morbid, state of
-indecision that was on her and firmly decided that there was but one
-honorable course to pursue and that was in every way to be true to her
-tacit promise to the absent suitor, and in a spasm of resolution she
-was about to set herself to the correspondence just mentioned when Mam'
-Linda was announced. The old woman had just returned from a visit to
-Chattanooga to see her son and in addition to news of his well-being she
-had many other things to say. The letters would have to wait, Helen told
-herself, and her old nurse was admitted. Linda remained two hours, and
-Helen sat the while in a veritable dream as the old woman gave Pete's
-version of Carson Dwight's conduct before the mob on the lonely mountain
-road. And when Linda had gone, Helen turned to her desk. There lay the
-white sheets fluttering in the summer breeze, mutely beckoning her back
-to stem reality. Helen stared at them and then with a little cry of pain
-she lowered her head to her folded arms and wept--not for Sanders in
-his complacent, epistolary hopefulness, but for the one who had bravely
-borne more than his burden of pain, and upon whom she had resolved to
-put still more. Helen told herself that it would not be the first time
-_ideal_ happiness had not been a factor in a sensible marriage. The time
-would come, in her life, as it had in the lives of so many other women,
-when she would look back on her present feeling for Carson, and wonder
-how she ever could have fancied--but, no, that would be unfair to him,
-to his wealth of spirituality, to his gentleness, his courage to--to
-Carson _just as he was_, to Carson who must always, always be the same,
-different from all living men. Yes, he was to go out of her life. Out
-of her life--how strange! and yet it would be so, for she would be the
-_wife_ of----
-
-She shuddered and sat staring at the floor.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVI.
-
-[Illustration: 9319]
-
-IGGIN was no insignificant opponent; he held weapons as powerful as fire
-applied to inflammable material. The papers were filled with accounts
-of race rioting in all parts of the South, and in his speeches on
-the stump, through the length and breadth of the county, he kept his
-particular version of the bloody happenings well before his hearers.
-
-"This is a white man's country," was the key-note of all his hot
-tirades, "and the white man is bound to rule." He accomplished
-one master-stroke. There was to be a considerable gathering of the
-Confederate, veterans at an annual picnic at Shell Valley, a few miles
-from Springtown, and by no mean diplomacy Wiggin had, by shrewdly
-ingratiating himself into the good graces of the committee of
-arrangements, managed to have himself invited as the only orator of the
-occasion. He meant to make it the greatest day of the campaign, and in
-some respects, as will be seen he did.
-
-The farmers came from all parts of the county in their best attire, in
-their best turnouts, from plain, springless road-wagons to glittering
-buggies. The wood which stretched on all sides from the spring was
-filled with vehicles, horses, mules, and even oxen.
-
-The grizzled veterans, battered as much by post-bellum hardship and
-toil as by war, came with their wives, sons, and daughters, and brought
-baskets to the rich contents of which any man was welcome. A crude
-platform had been erected near the spring under the shadiest trees, and
-upon this the speaker of the day was to hold forth. Behind the little
-impromptu table holding a glass pitcher of water and a tumbler, erected
-for Wiggin's special benefit, were a number of benches made of undressed
-boards. And to these seats the wives and daughters of the leading
-citizens were invited.
-
-Jabe Parsons, being a man of importance as a land-owner and an old
-soldier, was instructed on his arrival in his rickety buggy to escort
-his wife, who was gorgeously arrayed in a new green-and-red checked
-gingham gown with a sunbonnet to match, to the front seat on the
-platform, and he obeyed with a sort of ploughman's swagger that
-indicated his pride in the possession of a wife so widely known and
-respected. Indeed, no woman who had arrived--and she had come later
-than the rest--had caused such a ripple of comment. Always liked for
-her firmness in any stand she took in matters of church or social life,
-since her Amazonian rescue of Pete Warren from the very halter of death
-she was even more popular. The women of the county had not given much
-thought to the actual guilt or innocence of the boy, but they wanted
-Mrs. Parsons--as a specimen of their undervalued sex--to be right in
-that instance, as she had always been about every other matter upon
-which she had stood flat-footed, and so they all but cheered her on this
-first public appearance after conduct which 'had been so widely talked
-about.
-
-Really, if Wiggin could have had the reception Mrs. Parsons received
-from beaming eyes and faces he would have felt that his star, which had
-been rather below the horizon than above of late, had become a fixed
-ornament in the political heavens. But Wiggin gave no thought to her,
-and there's where he made a mistake. Women were beneath the notice
-of serious men, Wiggin thought, except as a means of controlling a
-husband's vote, and there he made another mistake. It would have been
-well for him if he could have noticed the fires of contempt in Mrs.
-Parsons' eyes as he made his way through the crowd, bowing right
-and left, and took his seat in the only chair on the platform, and
-proceeded, of course, to take a drink of water.
-
-A country parson, while the multitude sat upon the grass, crude benches,
-buggy-cushions, or heaps of pine needles, opened the ceremonies with a
-long-winded prayer, composed of selections from all the prayers he knew
-by rote and ending with something resembling a benediction. Then a young
-lady was asked to recite a dramatic poem relating to the "Lost Cause,"
-and she did it with such telling effect that the gray heads of the
-old soldiers sank to their chests, and, in memory of camp-fire,
-battle-field, and comrades left in unmarked graves, the tears flowed
-down furrowed cheeks and strong forms were shaken by sobs.
-
-It was into this holy silence that the unmoved, preoccupied Wiggin rose
-to cast his burning brand. Through curtains of tears he laid his fuse to
-hidden magazines of powder.
-
-"I believe in getting right down to business," he began, in a crisp,
-rasping voice that reached well to the outskirts of the crowd. "There's
-nothing today that is as important to you, fellow-citizens, as the
-correct use of the ballot. I am a candidate for your votes. I mean to
-represent you in the next legislature, and I don't intend to be foiled
-by the tricks, lies, and underhand work of a gang of stuck-up town men
-who laugh at your honest appearance and homely ways. God knows you are
-the salt of the earth, and when I hear men of that stamp making fun of
-you behind your backs it makes me mad. My father was a mountain farmer,
-and when men throw dirt on folks of your sort they throw it into the
-tenderest recesses of my being and it smarts like salt in a fresh cut."
-
-There was applause from a group in the edge of the crowd led by long,
-tall Dan Willis, and it spread uncertainly to other parts of the
-gathering.
-
-"Hit 'em, blast 'em, hit 'em, Wiggin," a man near Willis shouted; "hit
- 'em!"
-
-"You bet I'll hit 'em, brother," Wiggin panted, as he rolled up his
-coat-sleeve and pulled down his rumpled cuff. "That's what I'm here for.
-I'm here, by the holy stars, to show you people a few things which have
-been overlooked. I intend to go into the history of this case. I want
-you all to look back a few weeks. A gang of worthless negroes in Darley
-became so bad and openly defiant in their rowdyism that they were
-literally running the town. Whenever they would be hauled up before the
-mayor for disgraceful conduct some old slave-holder, who used to own
-them or their daddies, would come up and pay their fine and they'd be
-turned loose again. The black scamps became so spoiled that whenever
-country people would come in town they would laugh at them, imitate
-their talk, call them po' white trash, and push them off the sidewalks.
-Some of you mountain men stood it, God bless your Caucasian bones, just
-as long as human endurance would let you, and then you formed a secret
-gang that went into Darley one night and pulled their dives and gave
-them a lashing on their bare backs that brought about a reform. As every
-Darley man will tell you, it purified the very air. The negroes were put
-to work, and they didn't hover like swarms of buzzards round the public
-square. All of which showed plainly that the cowhide was the only
-corrective that the niggers knew about or cared a cent for. Trying them
-in a mayor's court was elevating them to the level of a white man, and
-they liked it."
-
-"You bet!" cried out Dan Willis, and a laugh went round which spurred
-Wiggin to further flights of vituperation.
-
-"Now to my next step in this history," he thundered. "In that gang of
-soundly thrashed scamps there were two who were chums, as I could prove
-by sworn testimony. Those black fiends refused to submit passively. They
-skulked around making sullen threats and trying to incite race riot.
-Failing in this, what did they do? One of them, being hand in glove with
-Carson Dwight, who says he's going to beat me in this election, applied
-to him for a job and was sent out to Dwight's farm near to that of
-Abe Johnson, who is thought--by some--to have been the leader of the
-thrashing delegation. That nigger, Pete Warren, was promptly joined by
-his black pal, and Johnson and his wife, one of the best women in this
-State, were foully murdered in the dead hours of the night as they lay
-sleeping in their beds. Who did it? _I_ know who did it. _You_ know
-who did it. Fellow-citizens, those two niggers, with their backs still
-smarting and their tongues still wagging, were the devils who did the
-deed."
-
-Low muttering was heard throughout the crowd as men turned to one
-another to make comment on the statement. In its incipiency it meant
-no more, perhaps, than that reason, hard driven by rising emotion,
-was honestly striving to keep the equitable poise which had recently
-governed it, but it sounded to the thoughtless, inflammable element like
-sullen, swelling acquiescence to the bitter charges, and they took it
-up. Wiggin paused, drank from the tumbler, and watched his flashing fuse
-in its sinuous course through the assemblage.
-
-Mrs. Parsons was near the edge of the platform, and Pole Baker, rising
-from the grass near by, where he had been coolly whittling a stick,
-stealthily approached her.
-
-"Great goodness, Mrs. Parsons," he whispered in her ear, "that skunk is
-cutting a wide swath to-day, sure! He could git up a lynching-bee right
-here in five minutes if he had any sort of material. The only thing of
-the right color is that old woman selling ginger-cakes and cider at the
-spring. Don't you think I'd better slip down and tell her to go home?"
-
-"It might save the old thing's neck," Mrs. Parsons answered, in the same
-half-amused spirit. "If he keeps on I don't think I'll be able to hold
-my seat. Why don't you say something?"
-
-"Me? Oh, I ain't no public speaker, Mrs. Parsons. That oily gab of
-Wiggin's would twist me into a hundred knots, and Carson Dwight would
-cuss me out for making matters worse. I never feel like talking unless
-I'm drunk, and then I'm tongue-tied."
-
-"Well, I don't git drunk and I don't git tongue-tied!" grunted Mrs.
-Parsons; "and I tell you, Pole, if that fool keeps on I'll either talk
-or bust."
-
-"Well, don't bust--we need women like you right now," Baker smiled. "But
-the truth is, if some'n' ain't done for our side this thing will sweep
-Carson Dwight clean out of the field."
-
-"Yes, because men are born fools," retorted the woman. "Look at their
-faces, the last one of them right now is mad enough to lynch a nigger
-baby, and a _gal_ baby at that."
-
-With a laugh, Pole went back to his seat on the grass for Wiggin was
-thundering again.
-
-"What happened _next!_" he demanded, bending over his table, a hand on
-each end of it, his keen, alert eyes sweeping like twin search-lights
-into the deeps of the countenances turned to him. "Why, just this and
-nothing more. Knowing that the jack-leg lawyers of that measly town
-would clog the wheels of justice for their puny fees, and hold those
-fiends over for other hellishness, some of you rose and took the law
-into your own hands. You jerked one to glory as quick as you laid hands
-on him, and part of you were hard on the track of his mate, when my
-honorable opponent, not wanting to lose the fee he was to get for
-pulling the case through, met the mob and managed, by a lot of
-grand-stand playing and solemn promises to see that the negro was
-legally tried, to put him in jail.
-
-"Those promises he kept like the honorable gentleman he is," Wiggin
-snorted, tossing back his hair in white rage and rolling up his sleeves
-again. "You know how he kept his word to the public. He organized a
-secret band of his dirty associates in town, dressed 'em up like White
-Caps, and they went to the jail and took the nigger out. Then they
-hid him in a cellar of a store where you all buy supplies, out of the
-goodness of your patriotic souls, and later sent him in a new suit of
-clothes to Chattanooga, where he is now engaged in the same sort of life
-that he was here, an idle, good-for-nothing, lazy tramp, who says he's
-as good as any white man that ever wore shoe-leather and no doubt thinks
-he will some day marry a white woman."
-
-The rising storm burst, and Wiggin stood above it calmly viewing it in
-all its subdued and open fury. Shouts of rage rent the air. Men with
-blanched faces, men with gleaming eyes, rose from their seats, as if
-a call to their manhood for instantaneous action had been sounded, and
-walked about muttering threats, grinding their teeth, and clinching
-their brawny hands.
-
-"Ah, ha!" Wiggin bellowed; "I see you catch my idea. But I'm not
-through. Just wait!"
-
-He paused to drink again, and Pole Baker, with a grave look in his
-honest eye approached the sculpturesque shape of Mrs. Parsons and nudged
-her.
-
-"Did you ever in yore life?" he said; but staring him in the eyes
-steadily, the woman seemed not to hear what he was saying. Her lower lip
-was twitching and there was an expression of settled determination in
-her eyes. Baker, wondering, moved back to his place, for Wiggin had
-levelled his guns again.
-
-"And the man that was at the head of it, what is he doing right now? Why
-he's leaning back in his rocking-chair in his law-office drawing a fat
-pension from his rich old daddy, taking in big fees for such legal work
-as that, and fairly splitting his sides laughing at you folks, who he
-calls a lot of sap-headed hillbillies, fit only for hopping clods and
-feeding hogs on swill and pussley weeds. Oh, that was a picnic--that
-trick he and those town rowdies put up on you! It was a gentle rebuke to
-you, and when he gets to the legislature he says he--"
-
-"Legislature be damned!" Dan Willis roared, and the crowd took up his
-cry.
-
-"Oh yes, _you'll_ vote him in," Wiggin went on, with a vast air of mock
-depression and reproach; "you think you won't now, but when he gets up
-and tells his side of it with a forced tear or two, your women folks
-will say, 'Poor boy!' and tell you what to do at the polls."
-
-Comprehensive applause greeted the speaker as he sat down. Hats were
-thrown in the air and Dan Willis organized and gave three resounding
-cheers.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVII.
-
-[Illustration: 9328]
-
-F the audience was surprised at what next happened, what may be said of
-the astounded candidate when he saw the powerful form of Mrs. Parsons
-rise from her seat near him and calmly stride with the tread of an angry
-man to the speaker's stand and take off her curtained bonnet and begin
-to wave it up and down to indicate that she wanted them to keep their
-places?
-
-"I never made a speech in my life," she gulped--"that is, not outside of
-an experience meetin'. But, people, ef this ain't an experience meeting
-I never went to one. Ef the Lord God had told me Hisse'f in a blazonin'
-voice from heaven that any human bein' could take such a swivelled-up,
-contemptible shape as the man that's yelled at you like a sick calf
-to-day, I never would have believed it. I've got a right to be heard.
-I couldn't set still. It would give me St. Vitus's dance to try it
-ten minutes longer. I've got a right to talk, because, friends and
-neighbors, this contemptible creature has, in a roundabout way, accused
-_me_ of law-breaking, an'--"
-
-"Why, madam!" Wiggin gasped, as he half rose and stared around in utter
-bewilderment. "I don't even _know_ you! I never laid eyes on you before
-this minute--"
-
-"Well, take a good look at me now!" Mrs. Parsons hurled at him, "for I'm
-the woman that helped Pete Warren git away from the sheriff, when your
-sort were after the poor, silly nigger to lynch him for a crime he
-had nothin' to do with. If you are right in all your empty tirade this
-morning, I'm a woman unfit for the community I live in, and if I have
-to share that honor with a man of your stamp, I'll lynch myself on the
-first tree I come to."
-
-She turned from the astounded, suddenly crestfallen speaker to the
-open-mouthed audience.
-
-"Listen to me, men, women, and children!" she thundered, in a voice that
-was as steady and clear in resonance as a bell. "If there was ever a
-crafty, spider-like politician on earth you have listened to him spout
-to-day. He's picked out the one big sore-spot in your kind natures and
-he's punched it, and jabbed it, and lacerated it with every sort of
-thorn he could stick into it, till he gained his aim in makin' you
-one and all so blind with rage at the black race that you are about to
-overlook the good in yore own.
-
-"There are two sides to this matter, and you would be pore excuses for
-men if you jest looked at one side of it. Carson Dwight is the other
-candidate, and I don't know but one thing agin his character, and that
-is that he ever allowed his name to be put up along with this
-man's. It's a funny sort of race, anyway--run by a greyhound and a
-jack-rabbit."
-
-A ripple of amusement passed over many faces, and there were several
-open laughs over Wiggin's evident discomfiture. He started to rise, but
-voices from all parts of the gathering cried out: "Sit down, Wiggin! Sit
-down, it ain't yore time!"
-
-"No, it _hain't_ his time," said Mrs. Parsons, unrolling her bonnet
-like a switchman's flag and waving it to and fro. "I started to tell
-you about Carson Dwight. He can't help bein' born in a rich family any
-more'n I could in a pore one, but I'm here to tell you that since I had
-the moral backbone to aid that nigger to git away I've thanked God a
-thousand times that I did that much to help genuine justice along. I
-could listen to forty million men like this candidate expound his views
-and it wouldn't alter me one smidgen in the belief that Carson Dwight
-has acted only as a true Christian would. He knew that nigger. He had
-known him, I'm told, from childhood up. He knew the sort of black stock
-the boy sprung from, an' the white family he was trained in, an' he
-simply didn't believe he was guilty of that crime. Believing that, thar
-wasn't but one honest thing for him to do, and that was to fight for the
-pore thing's rights. He knew that most of the racket agin the boy was
-got up by t'other candidate, and he set about to save the pore, beggin'
-darky's neck from the halter or his body from the burning brush-heap.
-Did he do it at a sacrifice? Huh, answer me that! Where did you ever see
-another politician on the eve of his election that would take up such a'
-issue as that, infuriating nearly every person who had promised to vote
-for him? Where will you find a young man with enough stamina to stand on
-a horse-block over the heads of hundreds of howling demons, and with one
-wound from a pistol on his brow, darin' 'em to shoot ag'in and holdin'
-on like a bull-dog to the pore cowerin' wreck at his feet?"
-
-There was applause, slight at first, but increasing. There were,
-too, under Mrs. Parson's eye many softening faces, and into them she
-continued to throw her heart-felt appeal.
-
-"You've been told this morning that Carson Dwight makes fun of us
-country people. I'll admit I saw him do it once, but it was _only_ once.
-He made fun of a mountain chap over at Darley one circus day. The fellow
-had insulted a nice country gal, and Carson Dwight made a _lot_ of fun
-of him. He hammered the dirty scamp's face till it looked like a ripe
-tomato that the rats had been gnawin'."
-
-At this point there was laughter loud and prolonged.
-
-"Now, listen," the speaker went on. "I want you to hear something, and I
-don't want you ever to forget it. I got it straight from a truthful man
-who was there. The night you mountain men gathered from all sides like
-the rising of the dead on Judgment Day, and got ready to march to Darley
-to take that boy out of jail, the news reached Carson Dwight just an
-hour or so before the appointed time. He got a few friends together
-and told them if they cared for him to make one more effort to stop the
-trouble.
-
-"Gentlemen, to some extent they was like you. They wasn't--I'm
-told--much interested in the fate of that nigger, one way or another,
-and so they sat thar in judgment over Carson Dwight, and tried to argue
- 'im down. I'm told by a respectable man who was thar" (and here Pole
-Baker lowered his head till his eyes were out of sight and continued to
-whittle his stick) "that nothin' feazed 'im. Pity was in his big, boyish
-heart, and it looked out of his eyes and clogged up his voice. They told
-him it meant ruination to all his political hopes, and that it would
-turn his daddy against him for good and all. But he said he didn't care.
-They held out agin him a long time, and then one thing he said won 'em
-over--one thing. Kin you imagine what that was, friends and neighbors?
-It was this: Carson Dwight said he loved you mountain men with all his
-heart; he said no better or braver blood ever flowed in human veins than
-yours; he said he knew you _thought_ you was right, but that you hadn't
-had the chance to discover what he had found out, and that was that
-Pete Warren was innocent and as harmless as a baby, and that--now,
-listen!--that he knew the time would come when you'd be convinced of the
-truth and carry regret for your haste to your graves. 'It is because,'
-he told them, 'I want to save men that I love from remorse and sorrow
-that I am in for this thing!' Fellow-citizens, that shot went home.
-Those worthless 'town dudes,' as they was called just now, saved you
-from committing a crime against yourselves an' God on high. Did any
-human bein' ever see a better illustration than that of the duty of
-enlightened folks to-day--the duty of them who, with divine sight, see
-great truths--to lead others in the right direction? As God Almighty
-smiles over you to-day in this broad sunlight, that gang in that store,
-headed by a new Joseph, was an' are the truest and best friends you ever
-had."
-
-There was no open applause, but Mrs. Parsons saw something in the
-melting faces before her that was infinitely more encouraging, and
-after a moment's pause, and leaning slightly on the table, she went on:
-"Before I set down, I want to say one word about this big race question,
-anyway. I'm just a plain woman, but I read papers an' I've thought about
-it a lot. We hear some white folks say that the education the niggers
-are now gettin' is the prime cause of so much crime amongst the
-blacks--they say this in spite of the fact that it is always the
-uneducated niggers that commit the rascality. No, my friends, it ain't
-education that's the cause, it is _the lack_ of it. Education ain't just
-what is learnt in school-books. It is anything that makes folks higher
-an' better. Before the war niggers was better educated, for they had the
-education that come from bein' close to the white race an' profitin' by
-the'r example. After slavery was abolished the poor, simple numskulls,
-great, overgrown, fun-lovin' children, was turned loose without advice
-or guidin' hand, an' the worst part of 'em went downhill. Slavery was
-education, and I'll bet the Lord had a hand in it, for it has lifted
-a race from the jungles of Africa to a civilized land full of free
-schools. So I say, teach 'em the difference between right an' wrong, an'
-then let 'em work out their own salvation.
-
-"Who in the name of common-sense is to do this if it ain't you of the
-superior race? _But!_ wait a minute, think! How can you possibly teach
- 'em what law an' order is without knowin' a little about it yourselves?
-How can you learn a nigger what justice means when he sees his brother,
-son, or father, shot dead in his tracks or hung, like a scare-crow to
-the limb of a tree because some lower grade black man a hundred miles
-off has committed a dastardly deed? No sensible white man ever thought
-of puttin' the two races on equality. The duty of the white blood is
-always to keep ahead of the black, and it will. This candidate openly
-declares that the time is coming when the negroes will overpower the
-whites. A man that has as poor an opinion of his own race as that ought
-to be kicked out of it. Now I can't vote, but I want every woman in
-this crowd that believes I know what I'm talkin' about to see that her
-brother, father, or husband votes for a member of the legislature that
-knows what law an' order means, an' not for a red-handed anarchist who
-would lay this country in ruins to gain his own puny aims. That's all
-I've got to say."
-
-When she had finished there was still no applause. They had learned that
-it was unseemly to make a demonstration at church, when deeply moved by
-a sermon, and they had heard something to-day that had lifted them as
-high under her sway as they had sunken low under Wiggin's. The formal
-part of the exercises was over, and they proceeded to spread out the
-contents of their baskets. Wiggin, after his successful ascent, had
-fallen with something like a thud. He saw Mrs. Parsons helped from the
-platform by her proudly flushing husband and instantly surrounded by
-people anxious to offer congratulations. Wiggin shuddered for he stood
-quite alone. Those who were in sympathy with him seemed afraid to
-openly signify it. Even Dan Willis lurked back under the trees, his face
-flushed with liquor and inward rage.
-
-Pole Baker, however, was more thoughtful of the candidate's comfort.
-With a queer twinkle of amusement in his eyes, and polishing, with the
-dexterity of a carver of cherry-stones, his little stick, he approached
-the candidate.
-
-"Say, Wiggin," he drawled out, "I want to ax you a question."
-
-"All right, Baker, what is it?" the candidate asked, absent-mindedly.
-
-"Don't you remember tellin' me," Pole began, "that you never had in all
-yore life met a man that made better an' truer predictions about things
-to come than I did?"
-
-"Yes, I think so, Baker--yes, I remember now," answered Wiggin. "You do
-seem to have a head that way. Some men have more than others, a sort of
-foresight or intuition."
-
-Pole chuckled. "You remember I said Teddy Rusefelt would whip the socks
-off of Parker. I'm a Democrat an' always will be, but I kin see things
-that are goin' to be agin me as plain as them I'm prayin' for. Well, you
-remember I was called a traitor jest beca'se I told what was comin', but
-I hit the nail on the head, didn't I?"
-
-"Yes, you did," admitted the downcast candidate.
-
-"An' I was right about the majority Towns would git for the State
-senate, Mayhew for solicitor, an' Tim Bloodgood for the last
-legislature."
-
-"Yes, you were, I remember that," said Wiggin.
-
-"I hit it on the Governor's race to a gnat's heel, too, didn't I?" Pole
-pursued, his keen eyes fixed on those of the man before him.
-
-"Yes, you did," admitted Wiggin; "you really seem to have remarkable
-foresight."
-
-"Well, then," said Baker, "I've got a prediction to make about your race
-agin Carson Dwight."
-
-"Oh, you have!" exclaimed Wiggin, now all attention.
-
-"Yes, and this time I'd bet my two arms and the first joint of my right
-leg agin a pinch o' snuff that Carson'll beat you worse than a man was
-ever whipped in his life."
-
-"You think so, Baker?" Wiggin was trying to sneer.
-
-"I don't think anything about it; I _know_ it," said Pole.
-
-Wiggin stared at the ground a moment aimlessly, then he said,
-doggedly, and yet with an evident desire for information at any sort of
-fountain-head: "What makes you think I'm beat, Baker?"
-
-"Because you've showed you hain't no politician, an' you've got a born
-one to beat. For one thing, you've stirred up a hornet's nest. Women,
-when they set the'r heads agin a'body, are devils in petticoats, an' the
-one that presided this mornin' has got more influence than forty
-men. Before you are a day older every man who has a wife, mother, or
-sweetheart will be afraid to speak to you in broad daylight. Then ag'in,
-no candidate ever won a race on a platform of pure hate an' revenge. You
-made that crowd as mad as hell just now, while you was belchin' out that
-stuff, but as soon as Sister Parsons showed 'em what a friend of the'rs
-Dwight was they melted to him like thin snow after a rain."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVIII.
-
-[Illustration: 9337]
-
-NE morning, three days later, Pole Baker slouched down the street from
-the wagon-yard and went into Garner & Dwight's office, finding Garner at
-his desk. The mountaineer looked cautiously about the room and asked, in
-a guarded tone: "Is Carson anywhars about?"
-
-"Not down yet," Garner said. "His mother was not so well last night, and
-it may be that he had to sit up with her and has overslept himself."
-
-"Well, I'm glad he ain't here," Baker said, "for I want to speak to you
-about him sorter in private."
-
-"Anything gone wrong?" Garner asked, looking up curiously.
-
-"Well, not yet, Bill, but I believe in takin' the bull by the horns
-before he takes you in the stomach. I've been powerful afeared for some
-time that Carson and Dan Willis would run together, and I dread it now
-more than ever. In the first place, I don't like the look in Carson's
-eye. He knows that devil has been on his track, and it has worked him up
-powerful; besides, Willis is more rampant than ever."
-
-"What's gone wrong with him?" Garner inquired, uneasily.
-
-"Well, for a while, you know, he was full of hope that Wiggin was goin'
-to beat Carson, and that sorter satisfied him, but now that Wiggin is
-losin' ground, Dan don't see revenge that way. Besides, since old Sister
-Parsons made that rip-roarin' speech respectable folks are turnin' the'r
-backs on Wiggin and all his backers. The gal Willis was to marry has
-throwed 'im clean over, an' the preacher at Hill Crest just as good as
-called his name out in meetin' in talkin' of the open lawlessness that
-is spreadin' over the land. Oh, Willis is mad--he's got all hell in 'im,
-an' he's makin' more threats agin Dwight. Now, to-morrow is Friday, an'
-the next day is Saturday, an' on Saturday Dan Willis is comin' in town.
-I got that straight. Wiggin is a snake in the grass, and he's constantly
-naggin' Dan about his row with Carson, and it will take slick work on
-our part to prevent serious trouble. Wiggin wouldn't care. If the two
-met he'd profit either way, for if Carson was killed he'd have the field
-to himself, an' if Carson killed Willis the boy'd have to stand trial
-for his life, an' a man wouldn't run much of a political race with a
-charge of bloody murder hangin' over 'im."
-
-"True--true as Gospel!" Garner frowned; "but what plan had you in mind,
-Pole--I mean what plan to obviate trouble?"
-
-"Why, you see," the mountaineer replied, "I 'lowed you might be able
-to trump up some business excuse for gittin' Carson out o' town next
-Saturday."
-
-"Well, I think I can," Garner cried, his eyes brightening. "The truth
-is, I was to go myself over to see old man Purdy, the other side of
-Springtown> to take his deposition in an important matter, but I can
-pretend to be tied here and foist it onto Carson."
-
-"Good; that's the stuff!" Pole said, with a smile of satisfaction. "But
-for the love of mercy don't let Dwight dream what's in the wind or he'd
-die rather than budge an inch."
-
-So it was that Carson the following Friday afternoon made his
-preparations for a ride on horseback through the country, his plan being
-to spend the night at the little hotel at Springtown and ride on to
-Purdy's farm the next morning after breakfast, and return to
-Darley Saturday evening shortly after dark. His horse stood at the
-hitching-rack in front of the office, and, ready for his journey, he was
-going out when Garner called him back.
-
-"Are you armed, my boy?" Garner questioned.
-
-"Not now, old man," Dwight said. "I've carried that two pounds of cold
-metal on my hip till I got tired of it and left it in my room. If I
-can't live in a community without being a walking arsenal I'll leave the
-country."
-
-"You'd better make an exception of to-day, anyhow," Garner said,
-reaching down into the drawer of his desk. "Here, take my gun."
-
-"Well, I might accidentally need it," Dwight said, thoughtfully, as he
-took the weapon and put it into his pocket.
-
-As he was unfastening his horse, Dr. Stone crossed the street from the
-opposite sidewalk and approached him.
-
-"Where are you off to this time?" the old man asked.
-
-Carson explained as he tightened the girth of his saddle and pulled the
-blanket into place.
-
-"Well, I'd get back as soon as I could well manage it," the physician
-said, his eyes on the ground. Carson started and looked grave.
-
-"Why, doctor, you are not afraid--"
-
-"Oh, she's doing very well, my boy, but--well, there is no use keeping
-back anything from anybody as much concerned as you are. The truth is,
-she's very low. I think we can pull her through all right, with care and
-attention, but I feel that I ought to warn you and lecture you a little,
-too. You see, as I've often said, she is a woman who suffers mightily
-from worry and excitement of any kind, and your adventures of late have
-not had the best effect on her health. I hope it's all over and that you
-will settle down to something more steady. Her life really is in your
-hands more than mine, for if you should have any more trouble of a
-serious nature it would simply kill her. I only mention this,"
-the doctor continued, laying his hand on the young man's arm half
-apologetically, "because there is some little talk going round that you
-and Dan Willis haven't quite settled your differences yet. If I were in
-your place, Carson, I'd take a good deal from that man before I'd have
-trouble with him right now, considering the critical condition your
-mother is in. A shooting-scrape on top of all the rest, even if you
-got-the best of it, would simply send that good woman to her grave."
-
-"Then we won't have any shooting-scrape!" Carson said, his voice
-quivering. "You can depend on that, doctor."
-
-The road Dwight took as the most direct way to his destination
-really passed within two miles of the home of Dan Willis, and yet the
-likelihood of his meeting the desperado never once crossed Carson's
-mind. In this, however, he was to meet with surprise. He had got well
-into the mountains, and, full of hope as to his campaign, was heartily
-enjoying a slow ride on his ambling horse through a narrow, shaded road,
-after leaving the heat of the open thoroughfare, when far ahead of him
-he saw a horseman at the side of the way pinning with his pocket-knife
-to the smooth bark of a sycamore-tree a white envelope. The distance was
-at first too great for Dwight to recognize the rider, though his object
-and occupation were soon evident, for suddenly wheeling on his rather
-skittish mount the man drew back about twenty paces from the tree, drew
-a revolver and began to fire at the target, sending one shot after the
-other, as rapidly as he could rein and spur his frightened animal to
-an approved distance and steadiness, until his weapon was empty. The
-marksman, evidently a mountaineer, as indicated by his wide-brimmed soft
-hat and easy gray shirt, thrust his hand into his trousers-pocket and
-took out sufficient cartridges for another round, and was thumbing them
-dexterously into their places when Carson drew near enough to recognize
-him.
-
-A thrill, a sort of shock, certainly not due even to subconscious fear,
-passed over Dwight, and he almost drew upon his rein. Then a hot flush
-of shame rose in him and tingled through every nerve in his body, as
-he wondered if for one instant he could have feared the presence of any
-living man, armed or unarmed, and running his hand behind him to be sure
-that his own revolver was in place, and with his head well up he rode
-even more briskly forward. He had no thought of caution. The sharp
-warning Dr. Stone had given him so recently never entered his brain.
-That was the man who, on several occasions, had threatened to kill him,
-and who, Carson firmly believed, had once tried it. That there was to be
-grim trouble he did not doubt. Averting it after the manner of a coward
-was not thought of.
-
-When the two riders were about a hundred yards apart, Dan Willis,
-hearing the fall of horses' hoofs, looked up suddenly. There was
-no mistaking the evolution of his facial expression from startled
-bewilderment to that of angry, bestial satisfaction. Uttering an
-unctuous grunt of delight, and with his revolver swinging easily against
-his brawny thigh, by the aid of his tense left hand the mountaineer drew
-his horse squarely into the very middle of the narrow road and there
-essayed to check him. The animal, quivering with excitement from
-the shots just fired over his head, was still restive and swerved
-tremblingly from side to side, but with prodding spur and fierce
-command Willis managed to keep him in the attitude of open opposition to
-Carson's passage, which was, as things go in the mountains, a threat not
-to be misunderstood.
-
-Carson Dwight read the action well, and his blood boiled.
-
-"Halt thar!" Dan Willis suddenly called out, in a sharp, fierce tone,
-and as he spoke he raised his revolver till the hand holding it rested
-on the high pommel of his saddle.
-
-"Why should I halt?" almost to his surprise rang clearly from Dwight's
-lips. "This is a public road!"
-
-[Illustration: 0343]
-
-"Not for _yore_ sort," was hurled back. "It's entirely too narrow for
-a gentleman an' a dog to pass on. _I'm_ goin' to pass, but I'll walk my
-hoss over yore body. I've been praying for this chance, an' God or Hell,
-one or t'other, sent it to me. Some folks say you've got grit. I've my
-doubts about it, for you are the hardest man to meet I ever wanted to
-settle with, but if you've got any sand in yore gizzard you've got a
-chance to spill some of it now."
-
-"I don't want to have trouble with you," Dwight controlled himself
-enough to say. "Bloodshed is not in my line."
-
-"But you've _got_ to fight!" Willis roared. "If you don't I'll ride up
-to you an' spit in yore damned, sneakin' face."
-
-"Well, I hardly think you'll do that," said Carson, his rage
-overwhelming him. "But before we go into this thing tell me, for my
-own satisfaction if you are the one who tried to kill me the night Pete
-Warren was jailed."
-
-"You bet I was, and damned sorry I missed." Willis's revolver was
-raised. The sharp click of the hammer sounded like the snapping of a
-metallic twig. Then alive but to one thought, and that of alert and
-instantaneous self-preservation, Dwight quickly drew his weapon. With
-his teeth ground together, his breath coming fast, he took as careful
-aim as was possible at the shifting horseman, conscious of the advantage
-his antagonist had over him in the calmness of his own mount. He saw
-a puff of smoke before Willis's eyes, heard the sharp report of the
-mountaineer's revolver, and wondered if the ball had lodged in his body.
-
-"I am fully justified," something within him seemed to say as he pressed
-the trigger of his revolver. His hand had never been more steady, his
-aim never better, and yet the smile and taunting laugh of Willis proved
-to him that he had missed. The eyes of his assailant gleamed like those
-of an infuriated beast as he tried to steady his rearing and plunging
-horse to shoot again. Once more he fired, but the shot went wild, and
-with a snort of fear his horse broke from the road and plunged madly
-into the bushes bordering the way. Carson could just see Willis's head
-and shoulders above a thick growth of wild vines and at these he aimed
-steadily and fired. Had he won? he asked himself. There was a smothered
-report from Willis's revolver, as if it were fired by an inert finger.
-The mountaineer's head sank out of sight. What did it mean? Carson
-wondered, and with his weapon still cocked and poised he grimly waited.
-It was only for an instant, for the frightened horse plunged out into
-the open again. Willis was still in the saddle, but what was it about
-him that seemed so queer? He was evidently making an effort to guide
-his horse, but the hand holding his revolver hung helplessly against his
-thigh; his left shoulder was sinking. Then Carson caught sight of his
-face, a frightful, blood-packed mask distorted past recognition, that of
-a dying man--a horrible, never-to-be-forgotten grimace. The horses
-bore the antagonists closer together; their eyes met in a direct stare.
-Willis's body was rocking like a mechanical thing on a pivot.
-
-"You forced me to do it!" Carson Dwight said, his great soul rising to
-heights of pity and dismay never reached before. "God knows I did not
-want to shoot you. Dan, I never have had anything against you. I would
-have avoided this if I could."
-
-The stare of the wounded man flickered. With a moan of pain he bent to
-the neck of his horse and remained there a moment, and then, dropping
-his revolver and resting both quivering hands on the pommel of his
-saddle, he drew himself partially erect. His eyes were rolling upward,
-his purple lips moved as if to speak, but his vocal organs seemed to
-have lost their power. Holding to his pommel with his left hand, he
-raised his right and partially extended it towards Dwight, but he
-had not the strength to sustain its weight, and with another moan, a
-frothing at the mouth, Dan Willis toppled from his horse and went to the
-ground, the animal breaking away in alarm and running down the road.
-
-Quickly dismounting, Carson bent over the dying man. "Dan, were you
-offering me your hand?" he asked, tenderly. But there was no response.
-The mountaineer was dead. There he lay, a pint whiskey flask nearly
-empty of its contents protruding from his shirt.
-
-Carson looked up and about him. The sky had never seemed clearer, the
-forest never so beautifully lush and green, so full of sylvan recesses
-and the gladsome songs of birds. Higher and more majestic never had the
-mountains seemed to tower into God's infinite blue. And yet here at his
-feet lay the remains of one who had been created in the image of his
-Maker, as lifeless as the clod from which he had sprung. All _this_--and
-Carson's horse nibbling with bitted mouth the short grass which grew
-about. There were no fires of satisfied revenge at which the spiritually
-chilled young man could warm himself. Regret steeped in the vat of
-remorse filled his young soul. Seating himself at the side of the
-road, he remained there a long time calmly laying his plans. Of course,
-knowing the law as he knew it, he would give himself up to the sheriff.
-Then with a start and a shock of horror he thought of his mother. Dr.
-Stone's warning now loomed up before him as if written in letters
-of fire. Yes, this--this, of all things, would kill her! Knowing her
-nature, nothing that could happen to him would be more fatal. Not even
-his own death by violence would hold such terrors for her sensitive,
-imaginative temperament, which exaggerated every ill or evil that beset
-his path. After all, he grimly asked himself, which way did his real
-duty lie? Obedience to the law he reverenced demanded that he throw
-himself upon its slow and creaking routine, and yet was there not a
-higher tribunal? By what right should the legal machinery of his or any
-other country require the life of a stricken woman that the majesty of
-its forms might be upheld and the justice or injustice to an outlaw who
-had persistently hounded him be formally passed upon?
-
-No, he told himself, the right to protect his mother was _his_--it was
-even more, as he saw it, it was his first duty. And yet if he kept his
-own counsel, he asked himself, his legal mind now active, what were the
-chances of escape from accusation? Noticing the target still pinned
-to the trunk of the tree with the dead man's pocket-knife, the shots
-showing on the bark and paper, and the sprawling attitude of the corpse
-with the wound over the region of the heart, he asked himself, with
-faintly rising hope, what more natural than to assume that death had
-resulted from accident? What more reasonable than the theory that on his
-frightened horse Dan Willis had accidentally directed his shot upon
-his own body? What better evidence that he was not at himself than the
-almost empty flask in his shirt? Yes, Carson Dwight decided, it was his
-duty to wait at least to see further before taking a step which
-would result in even deeper tragedy. Besides, he knew he was morally
-guiltless. His conscience was clear; there was consolation in that at
-all events. But now what must he do? To go on to Springtown by that road
-was out of the question, for only a mile or so farther on was a store
-and a few farm-houses, and it would be known there that he had passed
-the fatal spot. So, remounting, he rode slowly back towards Darley, now
-earnestly, and even craftily, hoping that he would meet no one. He was
-successful, for he reached the main road, which was longer, not so well
-graded, and a more sparsely settled thoroughfare to his destination.
-
-He had lost time, and he now put his horse into a brisk canter and sped
-onward with a queer blending of emotions. The thought of possibly
-saving his mother from a terrible shock buoyed him up while the grewsome
-happening put a weight upon him he had never borne before.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIX
-
-[Illustration: 9350]
-
-T was after dark when he finally reached Springtown and rode through the
-quiet little street to the only hotel in the village kept by a certain
-Tom Wyman, whom Dwight knew. Dismounting, he turned his tired horse
-over to a negro porter and went into the room which was used at once
-as parlor and office. A dog-eared account-book lay open on a table,
-and here, at the request of the cordial Wyman, a short, portly man with
-sandy hair and mustache, Carson registered his name.
-
-"You are out electioneering, I know," the proprietor smiled, agreeably,
-as he rubbed his fat hands together. "Well, you are going to run like a
-scared dog. I hear your name everywhere. It looked as black as Egyptian
-darkness for you once, but you are gaining ground. No man ever had a
-better campaign document than the speech Jabe Parsons' wife made. Gee
-whiz! it was a stem-winder; it set folks to laughin' at Wiggin, and that
-was the worst thing that ever happened to him. Jabe Parsons is for you
-now, though he headed one wing of the mob agin your pet darky. You see,
-Jabe wants to prove that his wife was right in the way she first felt
-about the matter, and he's a strong man."
-
-As if in a dream, so far into the background had even his contest been
-thrust by the tragedy, Carson heard himself as if from the mouth of
-another explaining that it was legal business that had brought him
-thither, and calmly asking the best road from the village to Purdy's
-farm, whither he intended to go the following morning after breakfast.
-
-A few minutes later the supper bell was rung by a negro, who carried it
-with deafening clangor through the main hall and round the house, and
-two or three drummers, of the small-trade class, a village storekeeper,
-and a stock-drover or two clattered in on the uncarpeted floor to the
-dining-room, and with more noise drew out their chairs and sat down. It
-happened that Carson knew none of them, and so he sat silent through the
-meal. Usually of robust appetite, to-night all inclination to physical
-nourishment had deserted him. Try as he would to fasten his mind upon
-more cheerful things, the view of Dan Willis's body stretched upon the
-ground, the ghastly features struggling in the throes of death, came
-again and again before his eyes with tenacious persistency. Morbidly, he
-asked himself if that state of mind would continue always. The disaster
-really had crept upon him through no deliberate fault of his. In fact,
-he could trace its very beginning to his determination to turn over
-a new leaf and make a better man of himself--to that and to a natural
-inborn pity for a persecuted creature, and yet here was he, his hands
-stained red, unable by any stoicism or philosophy to rid himself of a
-gloom as deep as the void of space. Genuine man that he was, he pitied
-the giant who had fallen before him. His mind, trained to logical
-reasoning in most matters, told him that he was more than justified in
-what he had done; but then, if so, to what was due this strange shock
-to his whole being--this restless sense of boundless debt to something
-never met before, the ominous flapping of wings in a new darkness around
-him?
-
-After supper, to kill time until the hour of retiring, Carson declined
-the proffered cigar of his host, and to avoid the--to him--empty chatter
-of the others, now assembled on the little porch, he strolled down the
-street. Here groups of men sat in front of the stores in the dim
-light thrown from murky lamps within, but it happened that he was not
-recognized by any of them though there were several gaunt forms he knew,
-and he passed on, walking feverishly. On and on he strode till he
-had covered more than a mile and suddenly came upon a little church
-surrounded by a graveyard. He leaned upon the rotten fence and looked
-over at the mounds marked by white marble slabs in some cases, plain,
-unlettered natural stones in others, and some unmarked by any sort of
-monument, but having little white palings around them.
-
-Carson Dwight shuddered and turned his face back towards the village as
-he asked himself if this might be the resting-place of the man he had
-slain. Life to him had been so bounteous, despite all the trials he
-had encountered, that to think that he had by his own hand, even under
-gravest provocation, deprived a human being of its privileges gave him
-pain akin to nothing he had ever felt before.
-
-Reaching his room in the hotel, which was at the head of the stairs
-in the front part of the house, his first impulse was to lock his
-door--why, he could not have explained. It was not fear; what was it?
-With a defiant smile he left it unfastened and proceeded to undress
-himself. As he threw himself on his bed he became conscious of the
-impulse to say his prayers. What a queer thing! It had been years since
-he had actually knelt in prayer, and yet tonight he wanted to do so. A
-strange, hot, rebellious mood came over him a few minutes later as
-he lay staring at the disk on the sky-blue ceiling cast by the
-lamp-chimney. He felt like crying out to the infinite powers in tones of
-demand to lift the weird, stifling pall that was pressing down on him.
-
-The words his father had spoken in a rage when the old gentleman had
-first seen the wound on his forehead after Pete Warren's rescue now came
-to him with startling force: "All this for a trifling negro! Have you
-lost your senses?"
-
-What, Carson asked himself, would his father say to this deeper
-step--this headlong plunge into misfortune as the outcome of the cause
-he had espoused?
-
-Carson could not sleep, and fancying that if his light were out he might
-do so, he rose and extinguished it and went back to bed. But he was
-still restless. The hours dragged by. It was after twelve o'clock, when
-on the still night air came the steady beat of a horse's hoofs in the
-distance, growing louder and louder, till with a cry of "Woah!" the
-animal was reined in at the hotel door, and the stentorian voice of the
-rider called out: "Hello! hello in thar!"
-
-There was a pause, but no response. The landlord was evidently a sound
-sleeper.
-
-"Hello! hello!" Again the call rang jarringly through the empty hall
-below and up the stairway.
-
-Carson sat erect, put his feet on the floor, and stood out in the
-centre of the room. He told himself that it was an officer of the law
-in pursuit of him. How silly to have imagined that such a thing could
-remain hidden! And his mother! Yes, it would kill her! Poor, poor,
-gentle, frail woman! He had tried to obviate the blow, resorting to
-deception, to actual flight; he had submerged himself in the mire of
-criminal secrecy, according to the letter of the law, that he might
-shield her, and for what purpose? Yes, the blow would kill her. Dr.
-Stone had plainly said so.
-
-He went to the window and looked out. At the gate below he saw a man on
-a horse, and heard him muttering impatiently.
-
-"Hello in Thar!" The cry was accompanied by an oath. "Are you-uns plumb
-deaf? What do you keep a tavern fur, anyhow?"
-
-There was a sound in the room below of some one getting out of bed, and
-then a drowsy voice cried: "Who's there?" It was the landlord.
-
-"Me, Jim Purvines. Let me in, Tom. I've got to have a bed an' a stall
-fer my nag. I'm completely fagged out."
-
-"All right, all right. I'll join you in a minute. Where in the thunder
-have you been, Jim?"
-
-"To the inquest. They made me serve. Samson called a jury right off so
-they could move the body home. The dead man's mammy didn't want it to
-lie thar all night."
-
-"Good Lord! Jury? Dead man? Why, what's happened, Jim?"
-
-"Oh, come off! You don't mean you hain't heard the news?" The rider had
-dismounted and was leading his horse through the gate to the steps on
-which the landlord now stood. "Why, Tom, Dan Willis has gone to his last
-accountin'. The Webb children, out pickin' huckleberries, come across
-his remains on the Treadwell road a mile t'other side o' Wilks's store.
-At first it was thought he'd met his death by bein' throwed from his
-colt, fer somebody seed it loose with saddle an' bridle on, but when we
-examined the body we found a bullet-hole over the heart."
-
-"Good Lord! Who done it, Jim?"
-
-Carson's heart was in his mouth; his breath was held; there was a pause
-which seemed without end.
-
-"Done it hisself, Tom. The jury had no difficulty comin' to that
-decision from ample evidence. He'd tuck his pocket-knife an' stuck up an
-envelope with his name on it agin a tree, an', half drunk, as we judged
-from his flask, he was shootin' at it over the head of a young colt that
-hain't been broke a month. Dan must have had the devil in 'im, an' was
-determined to train the animal to stand under fire, fer we seed whar the
-dirt was pawed up powerful all around. We calculated that the colt got
-to buckin' an' to keep from bein' throwed off Dan turned his gun the
-wrong way. Anyhow, he's no more."
-
-"Yes, an' I reckon a body ought to respect the dead, good or bad,"
-said the landlord; "but there won't be a river of tears shed, Jim. That
-fellow was a living threat to law and order."
-
-"Yes, I have heard that he was the chap that shot Carson Dwight the
-night he saved that nigger from the mob."
-
-"Sh! He's up-stairs now," The landlord lowered his voice.
-
-"You don't say! Sort o' out of his beat, ain't he?"
-
-"I don't know--on his way to Purdy's. Go on in; I'll attend to your
-horse and come back and find you a place to bunk."
-
-Carson sank back on his bed. A sense of vast, almost soothing relief was
-on him. His mother was saved. The verdict that had been rendered would
-forever bury the facts. Now, he told himself, he could sleep with his
-mind at rest. And yet--
-
-He heard the new-corner ascend the stairs with heavy, shambling tread
-and enter the room adjoining his own. Through a crack between the floor
-and the thin partition he saw a pencil of candle-light and heard the
-grinding of boot-soles on the floor as the man undressed. Then the light
-went out, the bed-slats creaked, and all was still.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XL
-
-[Illustration: 9357]
-
-WIGHT reached Darley the following evening shortly after dusk, and rode
-straight through the central portion of the town and past his office.
-All day long he had debated with himself whether it would be wise to
-take Garner into his confidence, and at last had decided that it would
-do no good, and only cause his sympathetic partner to worry needlessly,
-since Garner nor no one else could point out any better course than
-the one to which, perforce, he had committed himself. Carson now
-comprehended his insistent morbidness. It was not fear; it was not a
-guilty conscience; it was only the galling shackles of unwonted and
-hateful secrecy, the vague and far-reaching sense of uncertainty, the
-knowledge of being, before the law (which was no respecter of persons,
-circumstances, or sentiment), as guilty of murder as any other untried
-violator of peace and order.
-
-On the way down the street to his home he met Dr. Stone, who was also
-riding, and reined in.
-
-"My mother--how is she, doctor?" he asked. "I've been away since I saw
-you yesterday."
-
-"You'll really be surprised when you see her," the old man smiled.
-"She's tip-top! I never saw such a change for the better in all my
-experience. She had old Linda in her room when I was there about noon,
-and they were laughing and cracking jokes at a great rate. She'll pull
-through now, my boy. I tried to get her to tell me what had happened,
-but she threw me off with the joke that she had changed doctors and
-was taking another fellow's medicine on the sly, and then she and Linda
-laughed together. I believe the old negro knew what she meant. I'll
-tell you one thing, Carson, if I wasn't afraid of hurting your pride I'd
-congratulate you on what happened to that chap Willis. Really, if that
-thing hadn't taken place you and he would have had trouble. Some think
-he was getting ready for you when he was shooting at that target."
-
-"Perhaps so, doctor," Carson said, glad that the dusk veiled his face
-from the old man's sight. "Well, I'll go on."
-
-At the carriage gate at home he found old Lewis standing ready to take
-his horse.
-
-"Hello!" Carson said, with a joke that was foreign to his mood; "when
-did Major Warren discharge you?"
-
-"Hain't discharge me yit, young marster," Lewis smiled, in delight, as
-he opened the gate and reached out for the bridle. "I knowed you'd be
-along soon, en so I waited fer you. Marse Carson, Linda powerful anxious
-ter see you. She settin' on yo'-all's veranda-step now; she been axin'
-is you got back all evenin'. Dar she come now, young marster. I'll put
-up yo' horse."
-
-"All right, Uncle Lewis," and Dwight, seeing the old woman shambling
-towards him, went across the lawn and met her.
-
-"Oh, young marster, I been waitin' fer you," she said. "I got some'n'
-ter ax you, suh."
-
-"What is it?" he asked: "If it is anything I can do I'll be glad to help
-you."
-
-"I don't like ter bother you, young marster," Linda said, plaintively;
-"but somehow it don't seem lak anybody know what ter do. I went ter
-young miss, en she said fer me ter see you--dat you was de onliest one
-ter decide. Marse Carson, of course you done heard dat man Willis done
-killed hisse'f, ain't you?"
-
-"Oh yes, Mam' Linda--oh yes!" Dwight said, his voice holding an odd,
-submerged quality.
-
-"Well, young marster, you see, me'n Lewis thought dat, bein' as dat man
-was de ringleader, en de only one left on de rampage after my boy, dat,
-now he's daid, I might sen' ter Chattanoogy fer Pete en let 'im come on
-home."
-
-"Why, I thought he was doing well up there?" Carson said again, in a
-tone which to himself sounded as expressionless as if spoken only from
-the lips.
-
-"Dat so; dat so, too," Linda sighed; "but, Marse Carson, he de onliest
-child I got en I wants 'im wid me. I wants 'im whar I kin see 'im en try
-ter 'fluence 'im ter do what's right. In er big place lak Chattanoogy
-he may git in mo' trouble, en--" She went no further, her voice growing
-tremulous and finally failing.
-
-"Well, send for him, by all means," Dwight said. "He'll be all right
-here. We'll find something for him to do."
-
-"En, en--dar won't be no mo' trouble?" Linda faltered.
-
-"None in the world now, mammy," he replied. "The people all over the
-country are thoroughly satisfied that he's innocent. No one will even
-appear against him. He is all right now."
-
-Tears welled up in Linda's eyes and she wiped them off on her apron.
-"Thank God, young marster; one time I thought I never would want ter
-live another minute, en yit right now--right now I'm de happiest woman
-in de whole world, en you done it, young marster. You stood up fer er
-po' old nigger 'oman when de world was turn agin 'er, en God on high
-know I bless you. I bless you in every prayer I sen' up."
-
-He turned from her as she stood wiping her eyes and went on to his
-mother's room, finding her, to his delight, sitting up in an easy-chair
-near the table on which stood a lamp and a book she had been reading.
-
-"Did you see Linda?" Mrs. Dwight asked, as he kissed her tenderly and
-stood, still with that everpresent alien weight at his heart, stroking
-her soft cheek. He nodded and smiled.
-
-"And did you tell her--did you decide that Pete could come back?"
-
-He nodded and smiled again. "She seems to think I'm running the
-country."
-
-"As far as her interests are concerned, you _have_ been," the invalid
-said, proudly. "Oh, Carson, you know somehow it has happened that I
-never knew Linda so well as some of our own slaves, but since this thing
-came up I have thoroughly enjoyed having her come to see me. I keep her
-here hours, at a time. Do you know why?"
-
-He shook his head. "Not unless it is because she has such a strong
-individuality and is so original."
-
-"No, that isn't it--it is simply, my boy, because she worships the very
-ground you walk on, and I love to hear her express it in the thousands
-of indirect ways she has. Oh, Carson, I'm simply foolish--_foolish_
-about you! I have never been able to tell you how I felt about your
-heroic conduct. I was afraid to. I gloried in it, but your constant
-danger tied my tongue--I was afraid you'd take more risks. I've got a
-secret to tell you."
-
-"To tell me?" he said, still stroking her cheek. "Yes; Dr. Stone, seeing
-that I was so much better this morning tried to worm it out of me, but
-I wouldn't tell him the cause. Carson, for a long time I have harbored
-a gnawing, secret fear. It was with me night and day. I knew it was
-dragging me down, keeping me from proper sleep and proper nourishment,
-but I couldn't rid myself of it till this morning."
-
-"What was it, mother?" he asked, unable to see her drift.
-
-"The fear, my boy, that you and that Dan Willis would meet face to face
-has for a long time been a constant nightmare to me. I had picked up in
-various ways, sometimes from remarks let fall by your father or one of
-the servants, more about your differences with that man than you were
-aware of. I tried to keep you from knowing how I felt, but it was
-secretly dragging me to my grave."
-
-"And now, mother?" he asked, an almost hopeful light breaking far away
-on his clouded horizon.
-
-"Oh, it may be an awful sin, for I'm told Willis had a mother"--Mrs.
-Dwight sighed--"but when the news came to-day that he had accidentally
-killed himself I became a new woman. He was the one thing I dreaded
-above all else, for, Carson, if he had not shot himself you and he would
-have met and one of you would have fallen. Oh, I'm so happy. I'm going
-to get well now, my boy. You will see me out on the lawn in a day or
-two."
-
-His eyes were on the floor at her feet. Why he gave so much of his
-mental burden to mere utterance he could not have explained, but he
-said: "And even if we _had_ met, mother, and he had tried to shoot
-me, and--and I, in self-defence you know, had been forced to kill
-him--really forced--I suppose even that situation would have--disturbed
-you?"
-
-"Oh, don't, don't talk of that!" Mrs. Dwight cried. "I don't think it
-is right to think of unpleasant things when one is happy. God did it,
-Carson. God did it to save you."
-
-"All right, mother, I was only thinking--"
-
-"Well, think of pleasanter things," Airs. Dwight interrupted him.
-"Helen's been over to see me rather oftener of late. We frequently sit
-and chat together. It makes me feel young again. She is very free with
-me about herself--that is, about everything except her affair with Mr.
-Sanders."
-
-"She doesn't talk of that much, then?" he ventured, tentatively.
-
-"She won't talk about it at all," said the invalid; "and that's what
-seems so queer about it. A woman can see deeper into a woman's heart
-than a man can, and I've been wondering over Helen. Sometimes I almost
-think--" Mrs. Dwight seemed lost in thought and unconscious of the fact
-that she had ceased speaking.
-
-"You were saying, mother," he reminded her, eagerly, "that you almost
-thought--"
-
-"Why, it seems to me, Carson, that any natural girl ought to be so
-full of her engagement to the man she is to marry that she would
-really _love_ to talk about it. Really it seems to me that Helen may
-be questioning her heart in this matter, but she'll end by marrying Mr.
-Sanders. It looks as if she has pledged herself in some way or other,
-and she is the very soul of honor."
-
-"Oh yes, she is all that," Dwight said, in an effort at lightness. "Now,
-good-night, mother."
-
-Much fatigued from his journey and the mental strain upon him, he
-went up to his room. Throwing off his coat, the night being warm to
-oppressiveness, he lighted a cigar and sat in the wide-open window. What
-a strange, tempestuous life was his! How like a mere bauble of soul and
-flesh was he buffeted between highest heaven and lowest earth! And for
-what purpose was he created in the vast scheme of endless solar systems?
-
-From the row of negro cabins and cottages below, across the dewy grass
-and shrubbery, on the flower-perfumed air came sounds of unrestrained
-merriment. Some negro in a cottage near Linda's was playing a
-mouth-organ to the accompaniment of a sweetly twanging guitar. There was
-a rhythmic clapping of hands, the musical, drumlike thumping of feet
-on resounding boards, snatches of happy songs, clear, untrammelled,
-childlike laughter.
-
-They--and naught else--had brought him his burden. That complete justice
-might be meted out to such as they, he had dipped his hands into the
-warm blood of his own race, and was an outlaw bearing an honored name,
-stalking forth, pure of heart, and yet masked and draped with deceit,
-among his own kind. And for what ultimate good? Alas! he was denied
-even the solace of a look into futurity. And yet--born in advance of his
-time, as the Son of God was born ahead of His--there was yet something
-in him which--while he shrank from the depth and bitterness of _his_
-cup--lifted him, in his unmated loneliness, in his blindness, to far-off
-light--high above the material world. There to suffer, there to endure,
-and yet--there.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLI.
-
-[Illustration: 9365]
-
-T was the day following the burial of the body of Dan Willis. Old man
-Purdy, whom Carson had gone to see, was at Dilk's cross-roads store
-with a basket of fresh eggs, which he had brought to exchange for their
-market value in coffee. Several other farmers were seated about the
-store on nail-kegs and soap-boxes whittling sticks and chewing tobacco,
-their slow tongues busy with the details of the recent death and
-interment.
-
-Old Purdy was speaking of how the children had discovered the body, and
-remarked that it would have been found several hours sooner if Carson
-Dwight had only taken the shorter road that day to Springtown instead of
-the longer.
-
-"Why, Dwight come from Darley, didn't he?" asked Dilk, as he wrote
-down the number of eggs he had counted on a piece of brown paper on the
-counter and waited before continuing.
-
-"Why, yes," Purdy made answer; "he told me, as we were goin' through the
-work he had to do at my house, that he had gone to Springtown an' stayed
-all that night an' then rid on to me."
-
-The store-keeper's hands hovered over the basket for an instant, then
-they rested on its edge. "Well, I can't make out what under the sun
-Dwight went so far out o' his way for. It's fully five mile farther, and
-the road is so rough and washed out that it's mighty nigh out of use."
-
-"Well, that does look kind o' funny, come to think of it," admitted
-Purdy, as he gazed into the bland faces around him. "I never thought of
-it before, but it certainly looks odd, to say the least."
-
-"Of course thar may not be a thing _in_ it," said Dilk, in a guarded
-tone, "but it _does_ all seem strange, especially after we've heard so
-much talk about the threats passin' betwixt them very two men. I mean,
-you see, neighbors, that it sort o' looks, providential that--that Dan
-met with the accident before Dwight an' him come together over here.
-That's what I mean."
-
-All heads nodded gravely, all minds were busy, each in its own
-individual way, and stirred by something more exciting than the mere
-accidental death of Willis or the formality of his burial.
-
-There was a rather prolonged silence broken only by the click of the
-eggs which Dilk was counting into a new tin dish-pan. When he had
-finished he weighed out the coffee and emptied it into the white,
-smoothly ironed poke Purdy's wife had sent along for that purpose. Then
-he looked straight into Purdy's eyes.
-
-"Did you notice--if thar ain't no harm in axin'--whether Dwight
-seemed--well, anyways upset or--or bothered while he was at your house?"
-
-"Well, _I_ didn't," replied the farmer; "but my wife was in the room
-while he was doin' the writin' that had to be done, an' I remember now
-she axed me after he left ef he was a drinkin' man. I told her no,
-I didn't think he was _now_, though he used to be sorter wild, an' I
-wanted to know why she axed me. She said she never had seed anybody's
-hands shake like his did while he held the pen, an' that he had a quar
-look about the eyes like he'd lost a power o' sleep."
-
-"Was--was anything said in his presence about Willis's death that
-you remember of?" the storekeeper pursued, with the skill of a legal
-crossexaminer, while the listeners stared, their cuds of tobacco
-compressed between their grinders.
-
-Purdy's face had grown rigid, almost as that of an important witness on
-the stand in court. "I can't just remember," he said. "There was so much
-talk about it on all sides that day. Oh yes--now I recall that--well,
-you see we was all at my house, eager for news, and it struck me, you
-know, as if Dwight wasn't as anxious to talk as the rest--in fact, it
-looked like he sorter wanted to change the subject."
-
-"Oh!" The exclamation was breathed simultaneously from several mouths.
-
-"Of course, neighbors," Purdy began, in alarm, "don't understand me for
-one minute to--" But he broke off, for Dilk had something else to
-observe.
-
-"Them two men was at dagger's-p'ints, I've heard," he declared. "Friends
-on both sides was movin' heaven an' earth to keep 'em apart. Now if
-Dwight _did_ take that long, roundabout road from Darley to Springtown,
-why, they didn't meet. But ef Dwight went the way he always _has_ tuck,
-an' I've seed 'im out this way often enough, why--" Dilk raised his
-hands and held them poised significantly in mid-air.
-
-"But the coroner's jury found," said Purdy, "that Willis was shootin' at
-a target he'd stuck up on a tree with his own knife, an' that his young
-hoss was skittish, an'--"
-
-"All the better proof of bad blood betwixt 'em," burst from a farmer on
-a nail-keg. "The truth is, some hold now that Willis was out practising
-so he could wing that particular game. The only thing I see agin what
-you-uns seem to think is that it's been kept quiet. Dwight is a lawyer
-an' knows the law, an' he wouldn't cover a thing like that up when
-all he'd have to do would be to establish proof that it was done in
-self-defence an' git his walking-papers."
-
-"Thar you are!" Dilk said, in a voice that rang with conviction; "but
-suppose _one_ thing--suppose this. Suppose the provocation wasn't
-exactly strong enough to quite justify killing. Suppose Dwight, made
-mad by all he'd heard, drawed an' fired without due warning, and suppose
-while he was thar in that quiet spot he had time to think it all over
-and decided that he'd stand a better chance of escape by not bein' known
-in the matter. A body never can tell. You kin bet your boots if Dwight
-_did_ kill 'im an' hid the fact, he had ample legal reasons fer not
-wantin' to be mixed up in it."
-
-The seed was sown, and upon soil well suited to rapid germination and
-growth. By the next day the noxious weed had its head well above the
-ground, and, like the crab-grass the farmers knew to be so tenaciously
-prolific, it was spreading rapidly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLII.
-
-[Illustration: 9369]
-
-WEEK went by. Helen Warren had been sitting that warm afternoon in
-the big bay-window of the parlor. A cooling breeze fanned the old lace
-curtains inward, bringing the perfume of the the garden and now and then
-revealing a wealth of color on the rose-bushes near by. She had just
-read an appealing letter from Sanders in which he had expressed himself
-as having been so disturbed by her refusal to assure him positively of
-what his ultimate fate was to be that he had permitted himself to worry
-considerably. So greatly concerned, indeed, was he that he had confided
-in his mother, who, he wrote, had made matters worse by asking him
-flatly if he was absolutely sure that he was loved in the one and only
-way a man should be loved by the woman he was hoping to win for his
-wife.
-
-He was writing all this to Helen in a straightforward, manly way,
-putting her sharply on her honor, as it were, and she, poor girl, was
-worried in her turn. Leaving her chair, she went to the piano and seated
-herself and began to play. She was thus occupied when Ida Tarpley came
-in suddenly and unannounced, as she felt privileged to do at any time.
-
-"Well, tell me," the visitor smiled, "what's the matter with your
-playing? Why, you used to have a good, even touch, but as I came up
-the walk I declare I thought it was some one tuning the piano. You were
-dropping enough notes to fill a waste-paper basket."
-
-"Oh, I'm not in the mood for it, I presume!" Helen said, checking a
-sigh.
-
-"I understand." Miss Tarpley gently pushed back Helen's hair and kissed
-her brow. "You can't deny it; you were thinking about Carson Dwight and
-all his troubles."
-
-Helen flushed and dropped her glance to her lap, then she rose from the
-piano and the two girls moved hand in hand to the window. "The truth
-is," Helen admitted, "that I have been wondering if anything has gone
-wrong with him--any bad news or indications about his election."
-
-"He can't be worrying about the election," Ida said, confidently. "Mr.
-Garner comes to see me often and confides in me rather freely, and he
-says the people are flocking back to Carson in swarms and droves. They
-understand him now and admire him for the courageous stand he took."
-
-"Well, something is wrong with him," Helen declared, eying her cousin
-sadly. "Mam' Linda never makes a mistake; she knows him through and
-through. She went to thank him last night for getting a position for
-Pete to work regularly at the flouring mill, and she came back really
-depressed and shaking her head.
-
-"'Suppin certain sho gone wrong wid young mars-ter, honey,' she said.
-'He ain't never been lak dis before; he ain't _hisse'f_, I tell you!
-He's yaller an' shaky an' look quar out'n de eyes.'"
-
-"Oh!" and Miss Tarpley sank into one of the chairs in the window. "I'm
-almost sorry you mentioned that, for now I'll worry. I've always had his
-cause at heart, and now--Helen, I'm afraid something very, very serious
-is hanging over him.
-
-[Illustration: 0371]
-
-I'm not hinting at anything that might come out of his disappointment
-over your affair with Mr. Sanders, either. It seems to me he accepted
-that as inevitable and is making the best of it, but it is something
-else."
-
-"Something else!" Helen repeated. "Oh, Ida, how horribly you talk! Do
-you mean--is it possible that he was more seriously wounded that night
-than he has let us know?"
-
-"No, it's not that. I don't know what it is. In fact, Mr. Garner says--"
-
-"What does he say, Ida?" Helen threw into the gap left by her cousin's
-failure to proceed, and stood staring.
-
-"Well, you know it is easy sometimes to tell when one is not revealing
-everything, and I felt that way about Mr. Garner when he called night
-before last. In the first place, though he tried to do it in a casual
-sort of way, he kept talking of Carson all the time. It was almost as
-if he had come to see if I would confirm some secret fear of his, for
-he seemed to get near it several times and then backed out. Once he went
-further than he intended, for he said, as if it were a slip of the
-lip, when we were speculating on the possible cause of Carson's
-depression--he said, 'There is _one_ thing, Miss Ida, that I fear, and I
-fear it so much that I dare not even mention it to myself.'"
-
-"Oh!" exclaimed Helen, and she leaned on the back of her chair; "what
-could he have meant?"
-
-"I don't know; Mr. Garner wouldn't explain; in fact, he seemed rather
-upset by his unintentional remark. He laughed awkwardly and changed the
-subject, and never alluded to Carson again while he stayed. As he was
-getting his hat in the hall, I followed him and tried to pin him down
-to some sort of explanation, and then he made an effort to throw me off.
-'Oh,' he said, 'you know Carson is terribly blue about losing Helen, and
-it has, of course, caused him to care less about his election, but he'll
-come around in time.' I told Mr. Garner then that I was sure he had
-meant something else. I was looking straight at him and saw his
-glance fall, but that was all I got out of him. Something is wrong,
-Helen--something very, very serious."
-
-"Have you seen Carson lately, Ida?" Helen asked, with rigid lips.
-
-"Not to speak to him; he seems to avoid me, but as I sat in the window
-of my room yesterday afternoon I saw him go by. He didn't see me, but
-I saw his face in repose, and oh, cousin, it wrung my heart. He really
-must have some great secret trouble, and it hurts me to feel that I
-can't help him bear it. He used to confide in me, but he seems to shun
-me now, and that, too, in itself, is queer."
-
-"It is not about his mother, either," Helen sighed, "for her health has
-been improving lately." And as Miss Tarpley was leaving she accompanied
-her, gloomily to the door.
-
-The twilight fell softly, and as Helen sat in the hammock on the veranda
-her father came in at the gate and up the walk. She rose to greet him
-with her customary kiss, and taking his arm they began to stroll back
-and forth along the veranda. She was hoping that he would speak of
-Carson Dwight, but he didn't, and she was forced to mention him herself,
-which she did rather stiffly in her effort to make it appear as merely
-casual.
-
-"Ida was saying this afternoon that Carson is not looking well--or,
-rather, that he seems to be worried," she faltered out, and then she
-hung on to the Major's arm and waited.
-
-"Oh, I don't know," the old gentleman said, reflectively. "I went into
-his office this afternoon to get a blank check, and found him at his
-desk with a pile of letters from his supporters all over the county.
-Well, I acknowledge I wondered why he should have so little enthusiasm
-when the thing is going his way like the woods afire, and his crusty old
-father fairly chuckling with pride and delight; but what's the use of
-talking to you! You know if he is blue there is only _one_ reason for
-it."
-
-"Only one reason!" Helen echoed, faintly.
-
-"Yes, how could the poor boy be happy--thoroughly, so I mean--when the
-whole town can talk of nothing else but the grandeur of your approaching
-marriage. Mrs. Snodgrass has started the report that your aunt is to
-give you a ten-thousand-dollar trousseau and that Sanders is to load
-you down with family jewels. Mrs. Snod says we are going to have such a
-crowd here at the house that the verandas will be enclosed in canvas
-and the tables be set barbecue fashion on the lawn, and that the family
-servants and all their unlynched descendants are to be brought from the
-four quarters of the earth to wait on the multitude in the old style.
-You needn't bother; that's what ails Carson. He's got plenty of pride,
-and that sort of talk will hurt any man." But Helen was unconvinced.
-After supper she sat alone on the veranda, her father being occupied
-with the evening papers in the library. What could Garner have meant by
-his remark to Ida? With a heavy heart and her hands tightly clasped
-in her lap, Helen sat trying to fathom the mystery, for that there was
-mystery she had no doubt.
-
-She went back to the first days of her return home. When she had
-arrived her heart--the queer, inconsistent thing which was now so deeply
-concerned with Carson Dwight's affairs--had been coldly steeled against
-him. The next salient event of that gladsome period was the ball in
-her honor of which all else had faded into the background except that
-memorable talk with Carson and his promise to remove Pete from the
-temptations of living in town. The boy had gone, then the real trouble
-had begun. Carson had rescued him from a violent death before her very
-eyes. That speech of his was never to be forgotten. It had roused her
-as she had never been roused by human eloquence. With a throb of terror,
-she heard the report of the pistol fired by Dan Willis, his
-avowed enemy--Dan Willis upon whom a just Providence had
-visited--visited--visited--She sat staring at the ground, her beautiful
-eyes growing larger, her hands clutching each other like clamps of
-vitalized steel.
-
-"Oh!" she cried. "No, no! not that--not that!" It was an accident. The
-coroner and his jury had said so. But how strange! No one had mentioned
-it, and yet it had happened on the very day Carson had ridden along the
-fatal road to reach Springtown. She knew the way well. She herself
-had driven over it twice with Carson, and had heard him say it was the
-nearest and best road, and that he would _never take any other_.
-
-Ah, yes, _that_ was the explanation--_that_ was what Garner feared.
-_That_ was the terrible fatality which the shrewd lawyer, knowing its
-full gravity, had hardly dared mention even to himself. Carson Dwight,
-her hero, had killed a man!
-
-Helen rose like a mechanical thing, and with dragging feet went up the
-stairs to her room. Before her open window--the window looking out upon
-the Dwight lawn and garden--she sat in the still darkness, now praying
-that Carson might appear as he sometimes did. If she saw him, should
-she go to him? Yes, for the pain, the cold clutch on her heart of the
-discovery was like the throes of death. She told herself that she had
-been the primal cause of this as of all his suffering. In the blind
-desire to oblige her, he had wrecked his every hope. He had lost all
-and yet was uncomplaining. Indeed, he was trying to hide his misfortune,
-bearing it alone, like the man he was.
-
-She heard her father closing the library windows to prepare for bed. His
-steps rang hollowly as he came out into the hall below and called up to
-her: "Daughter, are you asleep?"
-
-A reply hung in her dry throat. She feared to trust her voice to
-utterance. She heard the Major mutter, as if to himself, "Well,
-good-night, daughter," and then his footsteps died out. Again she was
-alone with her grim discovery.
-
-The town clock had just struck ten when she saw the red coal of a
-cigar on the Dwight lawn quite near the gate leading into her father's
-grounds. It was he. She knew it by the fitful flaring of the cigar.
-Noiselessly she glided down the stairs, softly she turned the big brass
-key in the massive lock and went out and sped, light of foot, across the
-dewy grass. As she approached him Dwight was standing with his back to
-her, his arms folded.
-
-"Carson!" she called, huskily, and he turned with a start and a stare of
-wonder through the gloom.
-
-"Oh," he said, "it's you," and doffing his hat he came through the
-gateway and stood by her. "It's time, young lady, that you were asleep,
-isn't it?"
-
-She saw through his effort at lightness of manner.
-
-"I noticed your cigar and wanted to speak to you," she said, in a voice
-that sounded tense and even harsh. It rose almost in a squeak and
-died in her tight throat. Something in his wan face and shifting eyes,
-noticeable even in the darkness, confirmed her in the conviction that
-she had divined his secret.
-
-"You wanted to see me," he said; "I've had so many things to think about
-lately, in this beastly political business, you know, that I'm sadly
-behind in my social duties."
-
-"I--I've been thinking about you all evening," she said, lamely.
-"Somehow, I felt as if I simply must see you and talk to you."
-
-"How good of you!" he cried. "I don't deserve it, though--at such a
-time, anyway. It is generally conceded that it is a woman's duty, placed
-as you are, to think of only one thing and one individual. In this case
-the man is the luckiest one in God's universe. He's well-to-do, has
-scores of admiring, influential friends, and is to marry the grandest,
-sweetest woman on earth. If that isn't enough to make a man happy,
-why--"
-
-"Stop; don't speak that way!" Helen commanded. "I can't stand it. I
-simply can't stand it, Carson!"
-
-He stared at her inquiringly for a moment, as she stood with her face
-averted, and then he heaved a big sigh as he gently, almost reverently,
-touched her sleeve to direct her glance upon himself.
-
-"What is it, Helen?" he said, softly, a wealth of tenderness in his
-shaking voice. "What's gone wrong? Don't tell me _you_ are unhappy.
-Things have gone crooked with me of late--I--I mean that my father has
-been displeased, till quite recently at least, and I have not been in
-the best mood; but I have been sustained by the thought that you, at
-least, were happy. If I thought you were not, I don't know what I would
-do."
-
-"How can I be happy when you--when you--" Her voice dwindled away into
-nothingness, and she could only face him with all her agony and despair
-burning in her great, melting eyes.
-
-"When I what, Helen?" he asked, gropingly. "Surely you are not troubled
-about _me_, now that my political horizon is so bright that my opponent
-can't look at it without smoked glasses. Oh, I'm all right. Ask
-Garner--ask your father--ask Braider--ask anybody."
-
-"I was not thinking of your _election_," she found voice, to say. "Oh,
-Carson, _do_ have faith in me! I crave it; I long for it; I yearn for
-it. I want to help you. I want to stand by you and suffer with you. You
-can trust me. You tried me once--you remember--and I stood the test.
-Before God, I'll never breathe it to a soul. Oh"--stopping him by
-raising her despairing hand--"don't try to deceive me because I'm a
-girl. The uncertainty is killing me. I'll not close my eyes to-night.
-The truth will be easier borne because I'll be bearing it--_with you_."
-
-"Oh, Helen, can it be possible that you--" He had spoken impulsively and
-essayed to check himself, but now, pale as a corpse, he stood before her
-not knowing what to do or say. He opened his mouth as if to speak, and
-then with a helpless shrug of his shoulders he lapsed into silence, a
-droop of utter despondency upon him. She was now sure she was right,
-and a shaft she had never met before entered her heart and remained
-there--remained there to strengthen her, good woman that she was, as
-such things have strengthened women of all periods. She laid her firm
-hand upon his arm in a pressure meant to comfort him, and with the
-purity of a sorrowing angel she said: "I know the truth, dear Carson,
-and if you don't show me a way to get you out from under it--you who did
-it all for my sake--if you don't I shall die. I can't stand it."
-
-He stood convicted before her. With bowed head he remained silent for a
-moment, then he said, almost with a groan: "To think, on top of it all,
-that you must know--_you!_ I was bearing it all right, but now you--you
-poor, gentle, delicate girl--you have to be dragged into this as you
-have been dragged into every miserable thing that ever happened to
-me. It began with your brother's death--I helped stain that memory for
-you--now this--this unspeakable thing!"
-
-"You did it wholly in self-defence," she said. "You _had_ to do it. He
-forced it on you."
-
-"Yes, yes--he or fate, the imps of Satan or the elemental passion born
-in me. Flight, open flight lay before me, but that would have been the
-death of self-respect--so it came about."
-
-"And you kept it on account of your mother?" she went on, insistently,
-her agonized face close to his.
-
-"Yes, of course. It would kill her, Helen, and I would be doing it
-deliberately, for I know what the consequences would be. I must be my
-own tribunal. I have no right to take still another life that legal
-curiosity may be gratified. But till I am proven innocent I am a
-murderer--that's what hurts. I am offering myself to my fellow-men as
-a maker of laws, and yet am deliberately defying those made by my
-predecessors."
-
-"Your mother must never know," Helen said, firmly. "No one shall but you
-and I, Carson. We'll bear it together." She took his hand and held it
-tightly for a moment, then pressing it tenderly against her cold cheek,
-she lowered her head and left him--left him there under the vague
-starlight, the soulful fragrance of her soothing personality upon him,
-causing him to forget his peril, his grief, and his far-reaching sorrow,
-and to draw close to his aching breast her heavenly sympathy and undying
-fidelity.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLIII.
-
-[Illustration: 9382]
-
-NE morning, a week later, Pole Baker slouched down the street from the
-wagon-yard, and, peering into the law-office of Garner & Dwight, he
-stood undecided on the deserted street, his hands thrust deep into
-the pockets of his baggy trousers. He took another surreptitious look.
-Garner was at his desk, his great brow wrinkled as with concentrated
-thought, his coarse hair awry, his coat off and shirt-sleeves rolled up
-to his elbows, his fingers stained with ink. Glancing up at this moment,
-he caught the farmer's eye and nodded: "Hello!" he said, cordially;
-"come in. How's our young colt running out your way?"
-
-"Like a shot out of a straight-barrelled gun," Baker retorted. "He's the
-most popular man in the county. He had a slow start, in all that nigger
-mess, but he's all right now."
-
-"So you think he'll be elected?" Garner said, as Pole sat down in a
-chair near his desk and began to twirl his long, gnarled fingers.
-
-"Well, I didn't say _that_, exactly," the farmer answered.
-
-"But you said--" In his perplexity the lawyer could only stare.
-
-"I reckon thar are lots of things in this life that kin keep fellows out
-of offices besides the men runnin' agin 'em," Baker said, significantly.
-
-The eyes of the two men met in a long, steady stare; each was trying to
-read the other. But Garner was too shrewd a lawyer to be pumped even
-by a trusted friend, and he simply leaned back and took up his pen. "Oh
-yes, of course," he observed, "a good many slips betwixt the cup and the
-lip."
-
-Silence fell between the two men. Baker broke it suddenly and with his
-customary frankness. "Look here, Bill Garner," he said. "That young
-feller's yore partner an' friend, but I've got his interests at heart
-myself, an' it don't do no harm sometimes fer two men to talk over what
-concerns a friend to both. I come in town to talk to _somebody_, an' it
-looks like you are the man."
-
-"Oh, that's it," Garner said. "Well, out with it, Baker."
-
-Pole thrust his right hand into his pocket and took out a splinter of
-soft pine and his knife. Then, with the toe of his heavy shoe, he drew
-a wooden, sawdust-filled cuspidor towards him and over it he prepared to
-whittle.
-
-"I want to talk to you about Carson," he said. "It ain't none o' my
-business, Bill, but I believe he's in great big trouble."
-
-"You do, eh?" and Garner seemed to throw caution to the winds as he
-leaned forward, his great, facile mouth open. "Well, Pole?"
-
-"Gossip--talk under cover from one mouth to another," the mountaineer
-drawled out, "is the most dangerous thing, next to a bucket o' powder in
-a cook-stove that you are goin' to bake in, of anything I know of.
-Gossip has got hold of Dwight, Bill, an' it's tangled itself all about
-him. Ef some'n' ain't done to choke it off it will git him down as shore
-as a blacksnake kin swallow a toad after he's kivered it with slime."
-
-"You mean--" But Garner seemed to think better of his inclination
-towards subterfuge and broke off.
-
-"I mean about the way Dan Willis met his death," Pole said, to the
-point. "I'm no fool an' you ain't, at least you wouldn't be ef you was
-paid by some client to git at the facts. Folks are ready to swear Carson
-was seed the day that thing happened on that road inside of a mile o'
-whar Willis was found. You know what time Carson left here that day; it
-was sometime after dinner, an' the hotel man at Spring-town says he got
-thar an' registered after dark. He says, too, that Carson looked nervous
-an' upset an' seemed more anxious to avoid folks than the general run of
-vote-hunters. Then--then, oh, well, what's the use o' beatin' about the
-bush? You know an' I know that Carson hain't been actin' like himself
-since then. It's all we can do to git 'im interested in his own
-popularity, an' that shows some'n' is wrong--dead wrong. An' it looks
-to me like it is a matter that ought to be attended to. Killin' a man is
-serious enough in the eyes of the law without covering it up till it's
-jerked out of you by the State solicitor."
-
-"So you think the two men met?" Garner said, now quite as if he were
-inquiring into the legal status of any ordinary case.
-
-"That's my judgment," answered Pole. "And if I'm right, then it seems to
-me that Carson an' his friends ought to take action before--"
-
-"Before what?" Garner prompted, almost eagerly. "Before the grand jury
-takes it up, as you know they will have to with all this commotion goin'
-the rounds."
-
-"Yes, Carson ought to act--concerned in it or not," said Garner. "If
-something isn't done right away, it might be sprung on him on the very
-eve of his election and actually ruin him."
-
-"I'm worried, an' I don't deny it," said the mountaineer. "You see,
-Bill, Carson's a lawyer, and he knows whether he had a good case of
-self-defence or not, an' shirking investigation this way looks powerful
-like--"
-
-"Like he was himself the--aggressor," interpolated Garner, with a frown.
-
-"Yes, like that," said Baker. "Of course we know Willis was houndin' the
-boy and making threats, but Carson's hot-headed, as hot-headed as they
-make 'em, an' maybe he flared up at the first sight of Willis an' blazed
-away at 'im. I don't see no other reason for him lyin' so low about it."
-
-"I'm glad you came to me," Garner said. "I'll admit I've been fearing
-the thing, Pole. It will be a delicate matter to broach, but I'm going
-to talk to him about it. As you say, the longer it remains like it is
-the more serious it becomes. Good Lord! if he _did_ kill Willis--if he
-_did_ kill him, it would take sharp work to clear him of the charge of
-murder after the silly way he has acted about it. Why, dang it, it's
-almost an admission of guilt!"
-
-Baker had barely left the office when Carson came in, nodded to his
-partner, and sat down at his desk and began in an absent-minded way
-to cut open some letters that were waiting for him. Unobserved Garner
-watched him from behind the worn book he was holding up to his face.
-Hardened lawyer that he was, Garner's heart melted with pity as he noted
-the dark splotches under the young man's eyes, the pathetic droop of
-his shoulders, the evidences in every facial line of the grim inward
-struggle that was going on in the brave, supersensitive soul. Garner put
-down his book and went into the little consultation-room in the rear and
-stood at the window which looked out upon a small patch of corn in an
-adjoining lot.
-
-"He did it!" he said, grimly. "Yes, he did it. Poor chap!"
-
-The task before him was the hardest Garner had ever faced. He could have
-discussed, to the finest points of detail, such a case for a client, but
-Carson--the strange, winning personality over which he had marvelled
-so often--was different. He was the most courageous, the most
-self-sacrificing, the most keenly suffering human being Garner had ever
-known, and the most sensitively honorable. How was it possible, even
-indirectly, to allude to so grave a charge against such a man? And yet,
-Garner reflected, pessimistically, the best of men sometimes reach a
-point at which their high moral and spiritual tension, under one crucial
-test or another, breaks. Why should it not be so in Carson Dwight's
-case.
-
-Garner went back to his desk, sat down, and turned his revolving-chair
-till he faced Carson's profile. "Look here, old chap," he said. "I've
-got something of a very unpleasant nature to say to you, and it's a
-pretty hard thing to do, considering my keen regard for you."
-
-Dwight glanced up from the letter he held before him. He read Garner's
-face in a steady stare for a moment, and then said, with a sigh, as he
-laid the letter down: "I see you've heard it. Well, I knew it would get
-out. I've seen it coming for several days."
-
-"I began to guess it a week or so back," Garner went on, outwardly calm;
-"but this morning in talking to Pole Baker I became convinced of it.
-It is a grim sort of thing, my boy, but you must not despair. You've
-surmounted more obstacles than any young fellow I know, and I believe
-you will eventually come through this. Though you must acknowledge that
-it would have been far wiser to have given yourself up at once."
-
-"I couldn't do it," Carson responded, gloomily. "I thought of it.
-I started on my way to Braider, really, but finally decided that it
-wouldn't do."
-
-"Good God! was it as bad as that?" Garner exclaimed. "I've been hoping
-against hope that you could--"
-
-"It couldn't be worse." Carson lowered his head till it rested on his
-hand. His face went out of Garner's view. "It's going to kill her,
-Garner. She can't stand it. Dr. Stone told me that another shock would
-kill her."
-
-"You mean--my Lord! you mean your _mother?_ You--you"--Garner leaned
-forward, his face working, his eyes gleaming--"you mean that you did
-not report it because of her condition? Great God! why didn't I think of
-that?"
-
-"Why, certainly." Carson looked round. "Did you think it was because--"
-
-"I thought it was because you had--had killed him in--well, in a manner
-you feared would not be adjudged wholly justifiable. I never dreamed of
-the _real_ reason. I see it all now," and Garner rose from his chair and
-with his lips twitching he laid his hand on Dwight's back. "I understand
-perfectly, and I admire you more than I can say. Now, tell me all about
-it."
-
-For an hour the two friends sat talking together. Calmly Carson went
-into detail as to the happening, and when he had finished Garner said:
-"You've got a good case, but you can easily see that it is grievously
-hampered by your concealment of the facts so long. To make a jury see
-exactly how you felt about your mother's reception of the thing may be
-hard, for the average man is not by nature quite so finely strung as
-that, but we must _make_ them see it. Dr. Stone's testimony as to his
-advice to you will help. But, by all means, we must make the advance
-ourselves as soon as possible--before a charge is brought against you
-by the grand jury." v "But"--and Dwight groaned aloud--"my mother simply
-cannot go through it, Garner. I know her. It will kill her."
-
-"She simply must bear it," Garner said, gloomily. "We must find a way
-to brace her up to the ordeal. I have it. All my hopes are based on our
-making such a clear statement before Squire Felton, with the testimony
-of several witnesses as to Willis's threats against you, that he will
-throw it out of court. I can see the squire to-day and have a hearing
-set for to-morrow. We'll make quick work of it. I'll also see your
-father and--"
-
-"My father!" Carson exclaimed, despondently.
-
-"Yes, I'll see him and explain the whole thing. I think I can get him to
-keep the matter from reaching your mother till after the hearing. She is
-still confined to her room, and surely your father can manage that part
-of it."
-
-"Yes," Carson replied, gloomily; "and he will do all he can, though it's
-going to be a terrible blow to him. But--if--if the justice court should
-bind me over, and I should have to go to jail to await trial, then my
-mother--"
-
-"Don't think about her now!" Garner said, testily. "Let's work for a
-prompt dismissal and not look on the dark side till we have to. I'll run
-down and talk to your father at once, before the rumor reaches him and
-drives him crazy. I tell you it's in the very air; I've felt it for
-several days."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLIV.
-
-[Illustration: 9390]
-
-N his office in one corner of his great grain and cotton warehouse, at a
-dusty, littered desk before a murky, cobweb-bed window, Garner found
-old Dwight, his lap full of telegraphic reports, his head submerged in a
-morning paper containing the market and crop news in general. Outside of
-the thin-walled office heavy iron trucks, in the grasp of brawny black
-men, rattled and rumbled over the heavy floor and across weighty skids
-into open cars in the rear. There was the creaking sound of the big hand
-elevators engaged in hoisting and lowering bales, barrels, bags, and
-casks, the mellow sing-song of the light-hearted negroes as they toiled,
-blissfully ignorant of the profound gloom which had fallen on the
-defender of their rights.
-
-"I came to see you on an important matter concerning Carson," Garner
-began, as he leaned over the old man's desk.
-
-Dwight lowered his paper, shrugged his shoulders, and sniffed.
-
-"Campaign funds, I reckon," he said. "Well, I've been looking for some
-such demand. In fact, I've been astonished that you fellows haven't
-been after me sooner. I'll do anything but buy whiskey to give away. I'm
-against that custom."
-
-"It wasn't _that_," said Garner, who, usually plain-spoken, shrank from
-beating about the bush even in so delicate a matter. "The truth is,
-Carson is in a little trouble, Mr. Dwight."
-
-"Trouble?" the merchant said, bluntly. "Will you kindly show me when
-he's ever been out of it? Since the day he was born it's been scrape
-after scrape. By all possessed, Billy, when he wasn't a year old I had
-to spend fifty dollars to encase all the chimneys in with iron grating
-to keep him from crawling into the fire. He's walked or stumbled into
-every fire that was made since then. When he was only twelve a man out
-at the farm fell in a well and nothing would do Carson but that he must
-go down after him. He did it, fastened the only available rope about the
-man and sent him to the top, and when they lowered it to Carson he was
-so nearly drowned that he could hardly sit in the loop. If I had a list
-of the scrapes that boy went through at home and at college I'd sell it
-to some blood-and-thunder novel writer. It would make his fortune. Well,
-what is it now?"
-
-"Carson is in very serious trouble I'm afraid, Mr. Dwight," Garner said,
-as he took a chair and sat down. "You will have to prepare yourself for
-a pretty sharp shock. He couldn't help it. It was pushed on him to
-such an extent that there was no other way out of it and retain his
-self-respect. Mr. Dwight, you, of course, heard of Dan Willis's death?"
-
-"Yes, and thought that now that he was under the sod Carson would
-surely--"
-
-"The death was not an accident, Mr. Dwight,"
-
-Garner interrupted, and his eyes rested steadily on the old man's face.
-
-"You mean that Willis killed himself--that he--"
-
-"I mean that he _forced_ Carson to kill him, Mr. Dwight."
-
-The old merchant's face was working as if in the throes of death; he
-leaned forward, his eyes wide in growing horror.
-
-"Don't, don't say that, Billy; take it back!" he gasped. "Anything but
-that--anything else under God's shining sun."
-
-"You must try to be calm," Garner said, gently. "It can't be helped.
-After all, the poor boy was forced to do it to save his life."
-
-Old Dwight lowered his face to his hands and groaned. The negro at the
-head of the gang of truckmen approached and leaned in the doorway. He
-had come to ask some directions about the work, but with widening eyes
-he stood staring. Garner peremptorily waved him away, and, rising, he
-laid his hand on Dwight's shoulder.
-
-"Don't take it so hard!" he said, soothingly. "Remember, there is a lot
-to do, and that's what I came to see you about."
-
-Old Dwight raised his blearing eyes, which, in his pallid face now
-looked bloodshot, and stammered out: "What is there to do? What does it
-mean? How was it kept till now? Was he trying to hide it?"
-
-"Yes"--Garner nodded--"the poor boy has been bearing it in secret. He
-was afraid the news of it would seriously injure his mother."
-
-"And it will!" Dwight groaned. "She will never bear it in the world.
-She is as frail as a flower. His conduct has brought her within a
-hair's-breadth of the grave more than once, and nothing under high
-heaven could save her from this. It's awful, awful!"
-
-"I know it's bad, but we've got to save him, Mr. Dwight. You can't have
-your own son--"
-
-"Have him _what?_" Dwight rose, swaying from side to side, and stood
-facing the lawyer.
-
-"Well, you can't have him sent to jail for murder; you can't have
-him--found guilty and publicly executed. The law is a ticklish business.
-Absolutely innocent men have been hanged time after time. I tell you
-this concealment of the thing, and Carson's hot fury at Willis and
-the remarks he has made here and there about him--the fact that he was
-armed--that there were no witnesses to the duel--that he allowed the
-erroneous verdict of the coroner's jury to go on record--all these
-things, with a scoundrel like Wiggin in the background at deadly work to
-thwart us and pull Carson out of his track, are very, very serious. It
-is the most serious job I ever tackled in the courts, but I'm going to
-put it through or, as God is my judge, Mr. Dwight, I'll throw up the
-law."
-
-Tears were now flowing freely from the old merchant's eyes and,
-unhindered, dripped from his face to the ground. Taking Garner's hand
-he grasped it firmly, and as he wrung it he sobbed: "Save my boy, Billy,
-and I'll never let you want for means as long as you live. He's all I've
-got, and I'm prouder of him than I ever let folks know. I've made a lot
-of fuss over some things he's done, but through it all I was proud of
-him, proud of him because he saw deeper into right than I did. Even this
-nigger question--I talked against that a lot, because I thought it
-would pull him down, but when I heard how he got you all together in
-Blackburn's store that night and persuaded you to save old Linda's
-boy--when I learned of that and heard the old woman's cries of joy, and
-saw the far-reaching effects of what Carson was standing for, I was so
-proud and thankful that I sneaked off to my room and cried--cried like a
-child; and now upon it all, as his reward, comes this thing. Oh, Billy,
-save him! Don't crush the poor boy's spirit. I've always wanted to aid
-you in some substantial way for your interest in him, and I'm going to
-do it this time."
-
-"I hope we can squash the thing in justice court in the morning, Mr.
-Dwight," Garner said, confidently. "The chief thing is for you to keep
-it all from your wife until then, anyway. I can't do a thing with Carson
-till his mind is at ease over her. He worships the ground she walks on,
-Mr. Dwight, and if it hadn't been for that he would have been out of
-this trouble long ago, for I'm sure a plain statement of the matter
-immediately after it happened would have cleared him without any
-trouble. In his desire to spare his mother he has complicated the case,
-that's all."
-
-"Oh, I can keep it from his mother that long easy enough," said Dwight.
-"I'll go home now and see to it. Pull my boy through this, Billy. If you
-have to draw on me for every cent I've got, pull him through. I'm going
-to treat him different in the future-. If he can get out of this I
-believe he will be elected and make a great man."
-
-An hour later Garner hurried back to the office.
-
-"Everything is in fine shape!" he chuckled, as he threw off his coat
-and fell to work at his desk. "Squire Felton has fixed the hearing for
-to-morrow morning at eleven and Pole Baker has gone on the fastest horse
-in the livery-stable to secure witnesses for our side. He says he can
-find them galore in the mountains, and your father is as solid as a
-stone wall. He fell all in a tumble at first, but braced up, said some
-beautiful things about you, and went home to see that your mother's ears
-are closed.
-
-"I saw the sheriff, too. What do you think? When I told him the facts,
-and said that you were ready to give yourself up, he almost cried.
-Braider's a trump. He said that the law gave him the right to let you go
-on your own recognizance, and that before he'd arrest you and put you in
-a common jail he'd have his arms and legs cut off. He said, knowing
-your heart as he knew it, he'd let you go all the way to Canada without
-stopping you, and that if you were bound over on this charge he'd throw
-up his job rather than arrest you. He told me he'd been looking for
-it--that he got wind of it two days ago, and would have been in to see
-you about it if he hadn't been afraid you'd misunderstand his coming
-at such a time. He put a flea in my ear, too. He said we must beware of
-Wiggin. He has an idea that Wiggin has been on to this for sometime and
-may have a dangerous dagger up his sleeve. The district-attorney is out
-of town to-day but will be back to-night. He's as straight as a die and
-will act fair. I will see him the first thing in the morning. Now, you
-brace up. Leave everything to me. You are as good a lawyer as I am, but
-you are too nervous and worried about your mother to act on your best
-judgment."
-
-At this juncture the colored gardener from Dwight's came in with a note
-directed to Garner. Garner opened it and read it while Carson stood
-looking on. It ran: _"Dear Billy,--Everything is all right at this end,
-and will remain so, at least till after the hearing to-morrow. I enclose
-my check for ten thousand dollars as a retaining fee. I always intended
-to give you a little start, and I hope this will help you materially.
-Save my boy. Save him, Billy. For God's sake pull him through; don't let
-this thing crush his spirit. He's got a great and a useful future before
-him if only we can pull him through this."_
-
-Carson read the note through a blur and turned away. He was standing
-alone in the dreary little consultation-room a few minutes later, when
-Garner came to him, old Dwight's check fluttering in his hands.
-
-"Your dad's the right sort," he said, his eyes gleaming with the infant
-fires of avarice. "One only has to know how to understand him. The
-size of this check is out of all reason, but if I can do what he wishes
-to-morrow, I'll not only accept it, but I'll put it to a glorious use.
-Carson, there is a young woman in this town whom I'll ask to marry me,
-and I'll buy a home with this to start life on."
-
-"Ida Tarpley?" said Carson.
-
-"She's the one," Garner said, with a bare touch of rising color. "I
-think she would take me, from a little remark she dropped, and it was
-through you that I found her."
-
-"Through me?" Dwight said.
-
-"Yes, it was in talking of your ups and downs that I first saw into
-her wonderfully sweet and sympathetic nature. Carson, if you get your
-walking-papers in the morning, I won't wait ten minutes before I pop
-the question. The lack of means was the only thing that kept me from
-proposing the last time I saw her."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLV.
-
-[Illustration: 0398]
-
-HE next morning when Garner reached the office, he found Carson
-surrounded by "the gang," Blackburn was just leaving, his mild eyes
-fixed gloomily on the sidewalk, and Wade Tingle, Keith Gordon, and Bob
-Smith sat about the office with long-drawn, stoical faces.
-
-"I was just telling Carson that it will be a walkover in court this
-morning," Wade was saying, comfortingly, as Garner sat down at his desk,
-his great brow clouded. "Don't you think so, Garner?"
-
-"Well, I'll tell you _one_ thing, boys," Garner answered, irritably,
-"it's too important a matter to make light over, and I want you fellows
-to clear out so we can get to work. I've got to talk to Carson, and I
-can't do it with so many here. I'm not accustomed to thinking with a
-crowd around."
-
-"You bet we'll skedaddle, then, old man," said Keith; "but we'll be at
-the--the hearing."
-
-When they had gone droopingly out, Carson came from the window at which
-he had been standing and looked Garner over, noting with surprise that
-the lower parts of the legs of his partner's trousers were dusty and his
-boots unpolished. The shirt Garner wore had sleeves that were too long
-for his arms, and a pair of soiled cuffs covered more than half of
-the small hands. His standing collar had become crumpled, and his
-ever-present black silk necktie, with its unshapely bow and brown,
-frayed edges, had slipped out of place. His hair was awry, his whole
-manner nervous and excitable.
-
-"Keith says you didn't sleep at the den last night," Dwight said,
-tentatively. "Did you go out to your father's?"
-
-Garner seemed to hesitate for an instant, then he crossed his dusty legs
-and began to draw upon and tie more firmly the loose strings of his worn
-and cracked patent-leather shoes.
-
-"Look here, Carson," he said, when he had fumblingly tied the last knot,
-"you are too strong and brave a man to be treated in the wishy-washy
-way a woman's treated. Besides, you'll have to know the truth sooner or
-later, anyway, and you may as well be prepared for it."
-
-"Something gone wrong?" Dwight asked, calmly.
-
-"Worse than I dreamed was possible," Garner said. "I thought we'd have
-comparatively smooth sailing, but--well, it's your danged luck! Pole
-Baker come in this morning about two o'clock. I'd taken a room at
-the hotel to get away from those chattering boys so I could think. I
-couldn't sleep, and was trying to get myself straight with a dime novel
-that wouldn't hold my attention, when Pole came and found me. Carson,
-that rascal Wiggin is the blackest devil that ever walked the earth in
-human shape."
-
-"He's been at work," said Carson, calmly.
-
-"You'd think so," said Garner. "Pole says wherever he went, expecting to
-lay hands on good witnesses who had heard Willis make threats, he found
-that Wiggin had got there first and put up a tale that closed their
-mouths like clams."
-
-"I see," said Dwight. "He frightened them off."
-
-"I should think he did. He put them on their guard, telling them,
-without hinting at any trouble of yours, that if they had a call to
-court, of any sort whatsoever, to get out of it, as it would only be a
-trick on our part to implicate them in the lynching business."
-
-"So we have no witnesses," said Dwight.
-
-"Not even a photograph of one!" replied Garner, bitterly. "I sent Pole
-right out again, tired as he was, in another direction. He had a faint
-idea that he might persuade Willis's mother to testify, though I told
-him he was on a wild-goose chase, for not one mother in ten thousand
-would turn over a hand to aid a man who--a man under just such
-circumstances. Then I got a horse--"
-
-"At that time of night?" Carson cried.
-
-"What was the difference? I couldn't sleep, anyway, and the cool night
-air made me feel better, but I failed. The men I saw admitted that they
-had heard Dan talk some, but they couldn't recall any absolute threats.
-When I got back to town it was eight o'clock. I ate a snack at the
-restaurant and then hurried off to see the district-attorney. Mayhew is
-a good man, Carson, and a fair man. I think he is the most honest and
-conscientious solicitor we've ever had. But right there I saw the track
-of your guardian angel. As early as it was, Wiggin had been there before
-me. Mayhew wouldn't admit that he had, but I knew it from his reserved
-manner. Why, I expected to see the solicitor take the whole thing
-lightly, you know, considering your standing at the bar and your family
-name, but I found him--well, entirely too serious about it. He really
-talked as if it were the gravest thing that had ever happened. I saw
-that he was badly prejudiced, and I tried to disabuse his mind of some
-hidden impressions, but he wouldn't talk much. All at once, however,
-he looked me in the face and asked me how on earth any sensible man,
-familiar with the law, could keep a thing like that concealed as long
-as you did. I told him, in as plausible and direct a way as I could, how
-you felt in regard to your mother's condition. He listened attentively,
-then he shrugged his shoulders and said: 'Why, Garner, Dr. Stone told
-my wife the other day that Mrs. Dwight was improving rapidly. Surely she
-wasn't as bad off as all that.' My Lord! I was set back so badly that I
-hardly knew what to say. He went on then to tell me that folks through
-the country had been saying that towns-people always managed to avoid
-the law by some hook or crook, or influence, or money, and that he was
-not going to subject himself to public criticism even in the case of a
-man as popular as you are."
-
-"That was Wiggin's work!" Carson said, his lips pressed tightly together
-as he turned back to the window.
-
-"Yes, that's his method. He's the trickiest scamp unhung. Of course,
-he can't hope to see you actually convicted of this thing, but he does
-evidently think he can have you bound over to trial at the next term of
-court, and beat you at the polls in the mean time. He thinks with his
-negro incendiary speeches to rouse the lowest element, and the charges
-that you've murdered one of your own race to inflame the prejudices of
-others, that he can snow you under good and deep. But we've got to
-make the best of it. There is no shirking or postponing of this hearing
-to-day. Even if the very--the very worst comes," Garner finished,
-slowly, as if shrinking from the words he was uttering, "we can give any
-bonds the court may demand."
-
-"But"--and Dwight turned from the window and stood before his
-friend--"what if they refuse to take bonds at all and I have to go to
-jail?"
-
-"What do you want to cross a bridge like that for?" Garner demanded,
-plainly angered by the sheer possibility in question.
-
-Dwight leaned over Garner and put his hand on the dusty shoulder.
-"_That_ would kill my mother, old man!"
-
-"Do you think so, Carson?" Garner was deeply moved.
-
-"I know it, Garner, and her blood would be on my head."
-
-"Well, we must _win!_" Garner said, and a look of firm determination
-came into his eyes; "that is all there is about it. We must win. Eternal
-truth and justice are on our side. We must win."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLVI.
-
-[Illustration: 0403]
-
-HE big, square court-room was filled to overflowing when at the last
-moment Carson and Garner arrived. Just inside the door they found old
-Dwight standing, his battered silk hat in his hand, and with an air of
-unwonted humility upon him, patiently awaiting their coming.
-
-"Is everything all right?" he anxiously whispered to Garner, as he
-reached out and caught his son's hand and held on to it.
-
-"Yes, all right, Mr. Dwight," Garner replied; "and is--is your wife--"
-
-"Yes, we are safe on that score," the old man said, encouragingly, to
-Carson. "I only slipped away for a minute. I won't wait here, but will
-hurry back and stand guard. God bless you, my boy." When Dwight had
-turned towards the door and was moving away, Carson glanced over the
-crowded room. All eyes were fixed, it seemed to him, anxiously and
-sympathetically on his face. As he passed through the central aisle
-to reach the railed-in enclosure where, at his elevated desk, the
-magistrate sat, gravely consulting with the State solicitor, Carson's
-mind was gloomily active with the numerous instances in which, to
-his knowledge, innocent men had been convicted by the complication
-of circumstantial evidence, in a chair which Braider was solicitously
-placing near that of Garner, the young man's glance again swept the big
-room. On the last row of benches sat Linda, Uncle Lewis, and Pete in
-the company of other negro friends of his. Their fixed and awed facial
-expressions added to his gloom. Near the railing sat "the gang"--Gordon,
-Tingle, and Bob Smith--their faces long-drawn. Behind them sat Helen and
-her father, with Ida Tarpley. Catching Helen's anxious glance, Carson
-tried to smile lightly as he responded to her bow, but there was
-something in his act which seemed to him to be empty pretence and rather
-unworthy of one in his position. Guilty or innocent in the eyes of the
-law, he told himself he was there to rid his character of the
-gravest charge that could be made against a human being, and from the
-indications, as seen by the shrewd Garner, he was not likely to leave
-the room a free man. He shuddered as he grimly pictured Braider--the
-feeling, sympathetic Braider--coming to him there before all those eyes
-and formally placing him under arrest at the order of the court. He sank
-to the lowest ebb of despair as he pictured his mother's hearing of
-the news. Almost in a daze Carson sat dumb and blind to the formal
-proceedings. Like a child, he felt a soothing comfort in the knowledge
-that he was leaning on such a skilled friend as that of the hardened
-young lawyer at his side, and yet for the first time in his life he was
-pitying himself. Things had really gone hard with him. He had tried his
-best to do the right thing of late, but fate had at last overpowered
-him. He was losing faith in the impulses which had led him, blind under
-the blaze of youthful enthusiasm, to that seat here under the cold,
-accusing eye of the law.
-
-He was drawn out of his lethargy by the clear, ringing, confident voice
-of the solicitor. It was a strong, an utterly heartless speech, "the
-gang" thought. Duty to the State and public protection was its key-note.
-Personally, Mayhew had nothing but the kindliest feeling and strongest
-admiration for the defendant. He belonged to one of the best and oldest
-families in the South, and was a man of undaunted courage and remarkable
-brains. But with all that, Mayhew believed, as he tugged at his heavy
-mustache and stared with confident eyes at the magistrate, he could show
-that lurking under the creditable and refined exterior of the defendant
-was a keenly vindictive nature--a nature that was maddened beyond
-forbearance by opposition. The solicitor promised to show by competent
-witnesses, when the matter was brought to trial, that Carson Dwight
-believed--mark the word _believed_--without an iota of proof, that Dan
-Willis had fired upon him in the mob that was attempting to lynch Pete
-Warren. Believing this, your honor, I say, with no sort of proof, I
-think the State will have no trouble in establishing the fact
-that Dwight had sufficient _motive_ for what was done, and that he
-deliberately and with aforethought went armed with no other intent than
-to kill Willis. Furthermore, Mayhew could show, he declared, that Dwight
-had carefully concealed the deed, letting it go out to the world that
-the finding of the coroner's jury was correct, and making no statement
-to the contrary till he was driven to it by the encroachments of
-verifiable rumor and the certainty of adverse action by the grand jury.
-That being the status of the case, the solicitor could only urge upon
-the court its duty to hold Carson Dwight on the charge of murder in the
-first degree.
-
-Deep in his slough of depression, Dwight, looking over the breathless
-audience, noticed the serious faces he knew and loved. Helen was deathly
-pale, and her father sat with bowed head, fingering his gold-headed
-ebony cane. Keith Gordon's face was as full of reproach for what the
-solicitor had said as that of a grief-stricken woman. Wade Tingle sat
-flushed with rebellious anger, and Bob Smith, not grasping the full
-import of the high-sounding words, stared from under his neatly
-plastered hair like a wondering child at a funeral. It was Mam' Linda's
-almost savage glare that more firmly fixed Carson's wandering glance.
-She sat there, her visage full of half-savage passion, her large lip
-hanging low and quivering, her breast heaving, her eyes gleaming.
-
-Carson had not the heart to follow Garner's weak and inadequate plea as
-the lawyer stood, his small hands clutched and bloodless behind him. He
-had not been able, he said, to reach the witnesses he had expected to
-produce, who would swear that Dan Willis, time after time, had pursued
-the defendant and made threats against his life, but he felt that a calm
-statement of Carson Dwight's would be believed, and that--
-
-Here there was a commotion in the room. The bailiff at the door was
-talking loudly to some one. The magistrate rapped vigorously for order,
-and in the pause that ensued Pole Baker came striding down the aisle,
-leading a little woman wearing a black cotton sun-bonnet and dress of
-the same material. Leaving her standing, Baker approached Garner and
-whispered in his ear. Then, with a suddenly kindling face, the lawyer
-turned and whispered to the woman. A moment later he drew himself up to
-his full height and said, in a clear, confident voice that reached all
-parts of the room: "Your honor, I have a witness here that I want to
-have sworn."
-
-The district-attorney stood up and stared curiously at the woman. "If
-I'm not mistaken that's Dan Willis's mother," he said, with a smile.
-"She is a witness I'm looking for myself."
-
-"Well, you are welcome to what she'll testify," Garner dryly retorted.
-
-A moment later the little woman was on the stand, holding her bonnet in
-her hand, her small, wizened face as colorless as parchment, her black
-hair brushed as smoothly as patent leather down over her brow and tied in
-a small, tight knot behind her head.
-
-"Now, Mrs. Willis," Garner went on, casting a significant glance at
-Carson, who was gazing at him in growing wonder, "just tell the court
-in your own way what happened at your house the day your son met his
-death."
-
-The room was very still when she began in a low, quivering voice which,
-gradually steadied itself as she continued.
-
-"Well," she said, "Mr. Wiggin come to the fence while we-all was eatin'
-our breakfast, an' called Danny out an' they had a talk near the
-cow-lot. I don't know what was said, but I was sorry they got together
-for Mr. Wiggin always upset Danny an' started 'im to drinkin' and
-rantin' agin Mr. Dwight here in town."
-
-She paused a moment, and then Garner, leaning easily on the back of his
-chair, said, encouragingly: "All right, Mrs. Willis, you are doing very
-well. Now, just go ahead and tell the court all that took place to the
-best of your recollection."
-
-"Well, thar wasn't much to recollect that happened right thar _at
-home_," the witness went on, plaintively; "of course, the shootin' tuck
-place about a mile from thar on the--"
-
-"Pardon me, Mrs. Willis," Garner interrupted. "You are getting the cart
-before the horse. I want you to tell his honor how your son acted when
-he came into the house after his talk with Mr. Wiggin."
-
-"Why, when Danny fust come in, Mr. Garner, he went to the bureau drawyer
-and tuck out his revolver an' loaded it thar before us, cussin' at every
-breath agin Mr. Dwight. I tried to calm 'im down, an' so did my brother
-George, but he was as nigh crazy as I ever saw any human bein' in my
-life. He said he was goin' straight to Darley an' kill Carson Dwight, if
-he had to go to his daddy's house an' drag 'im out of his bed. He said
-he'd tried it once an' slipped up, but that if he missed again he'd kill
-hisse'f in disgust."
-
-"I see, I see," Garner said, in the pause that ensued. He stroked his
-smooth chin with his tapering fingers and opened and shut his mouth,
-and he kept his eyes on the ceiling as if the witness had made the most
-ordinary sort of statement. He leaned again on the back of his chair,
-and then lowering his glance to the face of the witness, he asked: "Did
-you gather from Dan's talk that morning, Mrs. Willis, when it was that
-he made the _first_ attempt on the life of Carson Dwight?"
-
-"Well, I don't know as I did _then_," the woman answered; "but he told
-us about it the day after he fired the shot."
-
-"Oh, he did!" Garner's face was still a study of guileless indifference,
-and he stroked his chin again, his eyes now on the floor, his arms
-folded across his breast. "What day was that, Mrs. Willis?"
-
-"Why, the day after Mr. Dwight kept the mob from hangin' old Lindy
-Warren's boy."
-
-Profound astonishment was now visible on every countenance except that
-of Garner. "I never knew positively before _who_ fired that shot," he
-said, carelessly, "though, of course, I had an idea who did it. So Dan
-admitted that?"
-
-"Yes, he told us about that, and about tryin' to git at Mr. Dwight
-several other times."
-
-"I reckon you are satisfied in your own mind that if Mr. Dwight hadn't
-defended himself Dan would have killed him?" Garner pursued, adroitly.
-
-"I know he would, Mr. Garner, an' when I heard the report that Danny had
-shot hisse'f by accident, while he was practisin' with his pistol, I
-was reconciled to it. I didn't think Mr. Dwight was to blame. I always
-thought he was doin' the best he could, an' that politics caused the bad
-blood. I always liked 'im, to tell the truth. I'd heard that he was a
-friend to the pore an' humble, even to pore old niggers, an' somehow
-I felt relieved when I heard he'd escaped my boy. I knowed Danny meant
-murder an' that no good could come of it. I'd a sight ruther know a
-child of mine was dead an' in the hands of his Maker than tied up in
-jail waitin' to be publicly hung in the end. No, it is better like it
-is, though if I may be allowed to say so, I can't for the life of me,
-understand what you-all have got Mr. Dwight hauled up here like this,
-when his mother is in sech a delicate condition. Good Lord, he hain't
-done nothin' to be tried for!"
-
-"That will do, Mrs. Willis," Garner was heard to say, his voice harshly
-stirring the emotion-packed stillness of the room; "that will do, unless
-my brother Mayhew wants to ask you some questions."
-
-"The State has no case, your honor," Mayhew said, with a sickly smile.
-"The truth is, I think we've all been imbibing too freely of politics.
-I confess I've listened to Wiggin myself. It looks like, failing to get
-Dan Willis to kill Dwight, he's set about trying to have it done by law.
-Your honor, the State is out of the case."
-
-There was a pause of astonishment and then the truth burst upon the
-audience. Realizing that Carson Dwight was more than a free man,
-vindicated, restored to them, "the gang" rose as a man and yelled. Led
-by Pole Baker and the enthusiastic Braider, they pressed around him,
-climbing over the railing and crushing chairs to splinters. Then, amid
-the shouts and glad tears of the spectators, the most popular man in the
-county was raised perforce upon the stout shoulders of Baker and Braider
-and borne down the aisle towards the door.
-
-Above the heads of all, Carson, flushed with confusion, glanced over the
-room. Immediately in front of him stood Helen. She was looking straight
-and eagerly at him, her face aglow, her eyes filled with tears. She
-paused with her father just outside the door, and as "the gang" bore
-their struggling and protesting hero past, she raised her hand to him.
-Blushing in fresh embarrassment, he took it, only to have it torn from
-him the next instant.
-
-"Let me down, Pole!" he cried.
-
-"No, sir, we don't let you down!" Pole shouted. "We've got it in for
-you. We are goin' to lynch you!"
-
-The crowd, appreciating the joke, thereupon raised the queerest cry that
-ever burst from breasts surcharged with joy.
-
-"Lynch him!" they yelled. "Lynch him!"
-
-Half an hour afterwards Carson went home. His father was at the fence
-looking for him. He had heard the news and his old face was beaming with
-joy as he opened the gate for his son and took him into his arms.
-
-"How's mother?" was Carson's first inquiry.
-
-"She's all right and she knows, too?"
-
-"She knows!" Carson exclaimed, aghast.
-
-"Yes, old Mrs. Parsons was the first to bring me the news, and she
-assured me she could impart it to your mother in such a way as not to
-shock her at all."
-
-"And you let her?" Carson said, anxiously.
-
-"Yes, and she did the slickest piece of work I ever heard of. I knew she
-was considered a wonderful woman, but she's the smoothest article I ever
-met. I laughed till I cried. I was in the mood for laughing, anyway.
-Mrs. Parsons began by adroitly working your mother up to such a pitch
-of fury against Willis for his nagging pursuit of you that your mother
-could have shot him herself, and then, in an off-hand way, Mrs. Parsons
-led on to the meeting between you. Willis had his gun in your face, and
-was about to pull the trigger, when your pistol went off and saved
-your life. She went on to say that Dan's mother had just been to the
-court-house testifying that her son had tried to murder you, and that
-she didn't blame you in the slightest. I declare, Mrs. Parsons actually
-made it appear that Willis was on trial instead of you. Anyway, it's all
-right. We've got nothing to fear now."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLVII.
-
-
-[Illustration: 9413]
-
-IX weeks later the election came off.
-
-It was no "walk-over" for Carson. Wiggin seemed only more desperately
-spurred on by every exposition of his underhand chicanery. He died
-hard. He fought with his nose in the mire, but, throwing honor to
-the winds, he fought. Carson Dwight's stand on the negro question was
-Wiggin's strongest weapon. It was a torch with which the candidate could
-inflame the breasts of a certain class of men at a moment's notice.
-He was a crude but powerful speaker, and wherever he went he left
-smouldering or raging fires. Pledged to him were the lowest order of
-men, and they fought for him and worked for him like bandits in the
-dark. Over these men he wielded a sword of fear. Carson Dwight's
-intention in getting to the legislature was to make laws against
-lynching, and every man who had ever protected his home and fireside by
-summary justice to the black brutes would be ferreted out and imprisoned
-for life. But Dwight's more gentle and saner reasoning, backed by his
-heroic conduct of the past, held sway. He was elected. He was not only
-elected, but, as the exponent of a new issue, the news of his election
-was telegraphed all over the South. He had written some articles for
-Wade Tingle's paper which had been widely copied and commented on, and
-his political course was watched by many conservative thinkers, who
-prophesied a remarkable career for him. He was a fearless man, with
-a new voice, who had taken a radical stand based on humanitarian and
-Christian principles. Family history was simply repeating itself. His
-ancestors had stood for the humane treatment of the slaves thrust
-upon them by circumstances, and he, in the same hereditary spirit,
-was standing for kind, just treatment of those ex-slaves and their
-descendants. No man who knew him would have accused him of believing in
-the social equality of the races any more than they would earlier have
-brought the same charge against his ancestors.
-
-On the night the returns were brought in and it was known that he had
-triumphed, "the gang" had arranged a big pine torch-light procession,
-and it passed with its blaze and din through every street of the town.
-Carson was at home when they lined themselves, in all their tooting of
-horns, beating of drums, and general clatter, along the front fence. The
-town brass-band did its best, and every sort of transparency that the
-inventive mind of Wade Tingle could devise was borne, as if by the smoke
-and heat of the torches themselves, above the long procession.
-
-Garner separated himself from the throng, and, clad in a new and costly
-suit of clothes, a tribute to his engagement to Miss Tarpley--a fine
-black frock-coat, broadcloth trousers, and a silk hat--he made his way
-into the house and up the stairs to the veranda above, where Carson and
-his mother and father were standing.
-
-"The boys want a speech," he said to Carson, "and you've got to give
-them the best in your shop. By George, they deserve it." Carson was
-demurring, but his mother pressed him to comply, and Garner, with his
-stateliest strut, his coat buttoned so tightly at the waist that, the
-tails spread out as if inviting him to sit down, and his hat held on
-a level with his left shoulder, advanced to the balustrade, and in
-his happiest mood introduced the man who, he declared, was the
-broadest-minded, the most conscientious and fearless candidate that
-ever trod the boards of a political platform. They were to receive the
-expression of gratitude and appreciation of a man whose name was written
-upon every heart present. Garner had the distinguished honor and pride
-to introduce his law partner and close friend, the Hon. Carson Dwight.
-
-Carson never spoke better in his life. What he said was from a boyish
-heart overflowing with content and good-will. When he had finished Mrs.
-Dwight rose from her chair and proudly stood by his side. The cheers at
-her appearance rent the air. Then Garner pushed old Dwight forward from
-the shadow of a column where he was standing, and as the old gentleman
-awkwardly bowed his greeting, the cheers broke out afresh. Bob Smith,
-who was a sort of drum-major, with a ribbon-wound walking-cane for a
-baton, struck up, "For he's a jolly good fellow," and as the crowd
-sang it to the spluttering and jangling accompaniment of the band the
-procession moved down the street.
-
-At this juncture Major Warren came up to offer his congratulations.
-Carson was standing a few minutes later talking to Garner. He was trying
-to hear what his partner was saying in his bubbling and enthusiastic
-way about his engagement to Miss Tarpley, but he found it difficult to
-listen, for the conversation between his mother and Major Warren had
-fixed his attention.
-
-"I tried to get her to come over to hear the speech, but she wouldn't,"
-the Major was saying. "I can't make her out here lately, Mrs. Dwight.
-She used to be so different in anything concerning Carson. She is now
-actually hiding behind the vines on the veranda."
-
-"Perhaps she is so much in love with Mr. Sanders that she--"
-
-"That's the very point," the Major broke in. "She won't talk about
-Sanders, and she--well, really, I think the two have quit writing to
-each other."
-
-"Perhaps she--oh, do you think, Major, that--" Carson heard no more; his
-father had come forward and was talking to Garner.
-
-Carson slipped away. He glided down the stairs and out at the door on
-the side next to Warren's and rapidly strode across the grass. Passing
-through the little gateway, he reached the veranda and the vines
-concealing the spot where the hammock was hanging. He saw no one at
-first and heard no sound. Then he called out: "Helen!"
-
-"What is it?" a timid, even startled voice from the vines answered, and
-Helen looked out.
-
-"Why didn't you come over with your father?" Carson asked. "He said he
-wanted you to, but you preferred to stay here."
-
-"I _did_ want to congratulate you," Helen, said, as he came up the steps
-and they stood face to face. "I'm so happy over it, Carson, that really
-I was afraid I'd show it too much."
-
-"I'm glad you feel that way," he said, awkwardly. "It was a hard fight,
-and I thought several times I was beaten."
-
-"What did you ever touch that wasn't hard?" she said, with a sweet,
-reminiscent laugh.
-
-They were silent for a moment and then he said: "I'm not quite satisfied
-with your reason for not coming over with your father just now--really,
-you see, it is in a line with your actions for the last six weeks.
-Helen, you actually have avoided me."
-
-"On the contrary," she said, "you have made it a point to stay away from
-me."
-
-"Well," he sighed, "considering, you know, Sanders and his claims, I
-really thought I'd better keep my place."
-
-"Oh!" Helen exclaimed, and then she sank deeper into the vines.
-
-For one instant he stood trembling before her, and then he asked,
-boldly: "Helen, tell me, are you engaged to him?"
-
-She made no answer for a moment, and then in the moonlight he saw her
-flushed face against the vines and caught an almost startled glance from
-her wonderful eyes. She looked straight at him.
-
-"No, I'm not, and I never have been," she said.
-
-"You never have been?" he repeated. "Oh, Helen--" But he went no
-further. For a moment he hung fire, then he said: "Don't you care for
-him, Helen? Are you and I good enough friends for me to dare to ask
-that?"
-
-"I thought once that I might love him, in time" she faltered; "but when
-I came home and found--and found how deeply I had misunderstood and
-wronged you, I--I--" She broke off, her face buried in the leaves of the
-vines.
-
-"Oh, Helen!" he cried; "do you realize what you are saying to me? You
-know my whole life is wrapped up in you. Don't raise my hopes to-night
-unless there is at least some chance of my winning. If there is one
-little chance, I'll struggle for it all the rest of my life."
-
-"Do you remember," she asked, looking at him, one side of her flushed
-face pressed against the vines--"do you remember the night you told me
-in the garden about that awful trouble of yours, and I promised to bear
-it with you?"
-
-"Yes," he said, wonderingly.
-
-"Well," she went on, "I went straight to my room after I left you and
-wrote to Mr. Sanders. I told him exactly how I felt. I simply couldn't
-keep up a correspondence with him after--Carson, I knew that night when
-I left you there in your gloom and sorrow that I loved you with all
-my soul and body. Oh, Carson, when I heard your voice in your glorious
-speech just now, and knew that you have loved me all this time, I was so
-glad that I cried. I'm the happiest, proudest girl on earth."
-
-And as they stood hand in hand, too joyful for utterance, the glow of
-his triumph lit the sky and the din and clatter, the song and shouts of
-those who loved him were borne to him on the breeze.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Mam' Linda, by Will N. Harben
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diff --git a/old/50899-8.zip b/old/50899-8.zip
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- <head>
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
- <title>
- Mam' Linda, by Will N. Harben
- </title>
- <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
- <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
-
- body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
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- .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
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-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mam' Linda, by Will N. Harben
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Mam' Linda
-
-Author: Will N. Harben
-
-Illustrator: F. B. Masters
-
-Release Date: January 11, 2016 [EBook #50899]
-Last Updated: March 12, 2018
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MAM' LINDA ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
- <div style="height: 8em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h1>
- MAM' LINDA
- </h1>
- <h2>
- By Will N. Harben
- </h2>
- <h3>
- Illustrated by F. B. Masters
- </h3>
- <h4>
- 1907
- </h4>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0001.jpg" alt="0001 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0001.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0009" id="linkimage-0009"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0009.jpg" alt="0009 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0009.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0008" id="linkimage-0008"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0008.jpg" alt="0008 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0008.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- <b>CONTENTS</b>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XXV. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0026"> CHAPTER XXVI. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0027"> CHAPTER XXVII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0028"> CHAPTER XXVIII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0029"> CHAPTER XXIX </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0030"> CHAPTER XXX </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0031"> CHAPTER XXXI </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0032"> CHAPTER XXXII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0033"> CHAPTER XXXIII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0034"> CHAPTER XXXIV </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0035"> CHAPTER XXXV. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0036"> CHAPTER XXXVI. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0037"> CHAPTER XXXVII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0038"> CHAPTER XXXVIII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0039"> CHAPTER XXXIX </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0040"> CHAPTER XL </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0041"> CHAPTER XLI. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0042"> CHAPTER XLII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0043"> CHAPTER XLIII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0044"> CHAPTER XLIV. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0045"> CHAPTER XLV. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0046"> CHAPTER XLVI. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0047"> CHAPTER XLVII. </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER I.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001_"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9017.jpg" alt="9017 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9017.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- N the rear of the long store, at a round table under a hanging-lamp with a
- tin shade, four young men sat playing poker. The floor of that portion of
- the room was raised several feet higher than that of the front, and
- between the two short flights of steps was the inclining door leading to
- the cellar, which was damp and dark and used only for the storage of salt,
- syrup, sugar, hardware, and general rubbish.
- </p>
- <p>
- Near the front door the store-keeper, James Blackburn, a portly, bearded
- man of forty-five, sat chatting with Carson Dwight, a young lawyer of the
- town.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't want any of you boys to think that I'm complaining,&rdquo; the elder
- man was saying. &ldquo;I've been young myself; in fact, as you know, I go the
- gaits too, considering that I'm tied down by a family and have a living to
- make. I love to have the gang around&mdash;I <i>swear</i> I do, though
- sometimes I declare it looks like this old shebang is more of a place of
- amusement than a business house in good standing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I know we hang around here too much,&rdquo; Carson Dwight replied; &ldquo;and you
- ought to kick us out, the last one of us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, it isn't so bad at night like this, when trade's over, but it is sort
- o' embarrassing during the day. Why, what do you think? A Bradstreet
- commercial reporter was in the other day to get a statement of my
- standing, and while he was here Keith Gordon&mdash;look at him now, the
- scamp! holding his cards over his head; that's a bluff. I'll bet he hasn't
- got a ten-spot. While that agent was here Keith and a lot more of your
- gang were back there on the platform dancing a hoe-down. The dust was so
- thick you couldn't see the windows. The reporter looked surprised, but he
- didn't say anything. I told him I thought I'd be able to pay for all I
- bought in market, and that I had no idea how much I was worth. I haven't
- invoiced my stock in ten years. When I run low I manage to replenish
- somehow, and so it goes on from year to year.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I am going to talk to the boys,&rdquo; Dwight said. &ldquo;They are taking
- advantage of your goodnature. The whole truth is they consider you one of
- them, Jim. Marrying didn't change you. You are as full of devilment as any
- of the rest, and they know it, and love to hang around you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I reckon that's a fact,&rdquo; Blackburn answered, &ldquo;and I believe I'd
- rather you wouldn't mention it. I think a sight of the gang, and I
- wouldn't hurt their feelings for the world. After all, what does it
- matter? Life is short, and if Trundle &amp; Hodgson are getting more
- mountain custom than I am, I'll bet I get the biggest slice of life.
- They'll die rich, but, like as not, friendless. By-the-way, I see your
- partner coming across the street. I forgot to tell you; he was looking for
- you a few minutes ago. You had a streak of luck when you joined issues
- with him; Bill Gamer's a rough sort o' chap, but he is by all odds the
- brainiest lawyer in Georgia to-day.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this juncture a man of medium stature, with a massive head crowned by a
- shock of reddish hair, a smooth-shaven, freckled face, and small feet and
- hands stood in the doorway. He wore a long black broadcloth coat, a
- waistcoat of the same material, and baggy gray trousers. The exposed
- portion of his shirt-front and the lapels of his coat were stained by
- tobacco juice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've been up to the den, over to the Club, and the Lord only knows where
- else looking for you,&rdquo; he said to his partner, as he advanced, leaned
- against a showcase on the counter, and stretched out his arms behind him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Work for us, eh?&rdquo; Carson smiled.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; since when have you ever done a lick after dark?&rdquo; was the dry reply.
- &ldquo;I've come to give you a piece of advice, and I'm glad Blackburn is here
- to join me. The truth is, Dan Willis is in town. He is full and loaded for
- bear. He's down at the wagon-yard with a gang of his mountain pals. Some
- meddling person&mdash;no doubt your beautiful political opponent Wiggin&mdash;has
- told him what you said about the part he took in the mob that raided!
- negro town.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, he doesn't deny it, does he?&rdquo; Dwight asked, his eyes flashing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know whether he does or not,&rdquo; said Gamer. &ldquo;But I know he's the
- most reckless and dangerous man in the county, and when he is drunk he
- will halt at nothing. I thought I'd advise you to avoid him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Avoid him? You mean to say&rdquo;&mdash;Dwight stood up in his anger&mdash;&ldquo;that
- I, a free-born American citizen, must sneak around in my own home to avoid
- a man that puts on a white mask and sheet and with fifty others like
- himself steals into town and nearly thrashes the life out of a lot of
- banjo-picking negroes? Most of them were good-for-nothing, lazy scamps,
- but they were born that way, and there was one in the bunch that I know
- was harmless. Oh yes, I got mad about it, and I talked plainly, I know,
- but I couldn't help it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You <i>could</i> have helped it,&rdquo; Gamer said, testily; &ldquo;and you ought to
- have protected your own interests better than to give Wiggin such a strong
- pull over you. If you are elected it will be by the aid of that very mob
- and their kin and friends. We may be able to smooth it all over, but if
- you have an open row with Dan Willis to-night, the cause of it will spread
- like wildfire, and bum votes for you in wads and bunches. Good God, man,
- the idea of giving Wiggin a torch like that to wave in the face of your
- constituency&mdash;you, a <i>town</i> man, standing up for the black
- criminal brutes that are plotting to pull down the white race! I say
- that's the way Wiggin and Dan Willis would interpret your platform.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can't help it,&rdquo; Dwight repeated, more calmly, though his voice shook
- with suppressed feeling as he went on. &ldquo;If I lose all I hope for
- politically&mdash;and this seems like the best chance I'll ever have to
- get to the legislature&mdash;I'll stand by my convictions. We must have
- law and order among ourselves if we expect to teach such things to poor,
- half-witted black people. I was mad that night. You know that I love the
- South. Its blood is my blood. Three of my mother's brothers and two of my
- father's died fighting for the 'Lost Cause,' and my father was under fire
- from the beginning of the war to the end. In fact, it is my love for the
- South, and all that is good and pure and noble in it, that made my blood
- boil that night. I saw a part of it you didn't see.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What was that?&rdquo; Garner asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was a clear moonlight night,&rdquo; Dwight went on. &ldquo;I was sitting at the
- window of my room at home, looking out over Major Warren's yard, when the
- first screams and shouts came from the negro quarter. I suspected what it
- was, for I'd heard of the threats the mountaineers had made against that
- part of town, but I wasn't prepared for what I actually saw. The cottage
- of old Uncle Lewis and Mammy Linda is just behind the Major's house, you
- know, and in plain view of my window. I saw the old pair come to the door
- and run out into the yard, and then I heard Linda's voice. 'It's my
- child!' she screamed. 'They are killing him!' Uncle Lewis tried to quiet
- her, but she stood there wringing her hands and sobbing and praying. The
- Major raised the window of his room and looked out, and I heard him ask
- what was wrong. Uncle Lewis tried to explain, but his voice could not be
- heard above his wife's cries. A few minutes later Pete came running down
- the street. They had let him go. His clothes were torn to strips and his
- back was livid with great whelks. He had no sooner reached the old folks
- than he keeled over in a faint. The Major came down, and he and I bent
- over the boy and finally restored him to consciousness. Major Warren was
- the maddest man I ever saw, and a mob a hundred strong couldn't have
- touched the negro and left him alive.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know, that was all bad enough,&rdquo; Garner admitted, &ldquo;but antagonizing
- those men now won't better the matter and may do you more political damage
- than you'll get over in a lifetime. You can't be a politician and a
- preacher both; they don't go together. You can't dispute that the negro
- quarter of this town was a disgrace to a civilized community before the
- White Caps raided it. Look at it now. There never was such a change. It is
- as quiet as a Philadelphia graveyard.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's the way they went about it that made me mad,&rdquo; Carson Dwight
- retorted. &ldquo;Besides, I know that boy. He is as harmless as a kitten, and he
- only hung around those dives because he loved to sing and dance with the
- rest. I <i>did</i> get mad; I'm mad yet. My people never lashed their
- slaves when they were in bondage; why should I stand by and see them
- beaten now by men who never owned negroes and never loved or understood
- them? Before the war a white man would stand up and protect his slaves;
- why shouldn't he now take up for at least the most faithful of their
- descendants?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's it,&rdquo; Blackburn spoke up, admiringly. &ldquo;You are a chip off of the
- old block, Carson. Your daddy would have shot any man who tried to whip
- one of his negroes. You can't help the way you feel; but I agree with Bill
- here, you can't get the support of mountain people if you don't, at least,
- <i>pretend</i> to see things their way.&rdquo;,
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I can't see <i>this</i> thing their way,&rdquo; fumed Dwight; &ldquo;and I'm
- not going to try. When I saw that old black man and woman that awful night
- with their very heart-strings torn and bleeding, and remembered that they
- had been kind to my mother when she was at the point of death&mdash;sitting
- by her bedside all night long as patiently as blocks of stone, and
- shedding tears of joy at the break of day when the doctor said the crisis
- had passed&mdash;when I think of that and admit that I stand by with
- folded hands and see their only child beaten till he is insensible, my
- blood boils with utter shame. It has burned a great lesson into my brain,
- and that is that we have got to have law and order among ourselves if we
- expect to keep the good opinion of the world at large.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I understand Pete would have got off much easier if he hadn't fought them
- like a tiger,&rdquo; said Blackburn. &ldquo;They say&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And why <i>shouldn't</i> he have fought?&rdquo; Carson asked, quickly. &ldquo;The
- nearer the brute creation a man is the more he'll fight. A tame dog will
- fight if you drive him into a corner and strike him hard enough.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you busted up our game,&rdquo; joined in Keith Gordon, who had left the
- table in the rear and now came forward, accompanied by another young man,
- Wade Tingle, the editor of the <i>Headlight</i>. &ldquo;Wade and I both agree,
- Carson, that you've got to handle Dan Willis cautiously. We are backing
- you tooth and toe-nail in this campaign, but you'll tie our hands if you
- antagonize the mountain element. Wiggin knows that, and he is working it
- for all it's worth.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's right, old man,&rdquo; the editor joined in, earnestly. &ldquo;I may as well
- be plain with you. I'm making a big issue out of my support of you, but if
- you make the country people mad they will stop taking my paper. I can't
- live without their patronage, and I simply can't back you if you don't
- stick to <i>me</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wasn't raising a row,&rdquo; the young candidate said. &ldquo;But Garner came to me
- just now, actually advising me to avoid that dirty scoundrel. I won't
- dodge any blustering bully who is going about threatening what he will do
- to me when he meets me face to face. I want your support, but I can't buy
- it that way.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; Garner said, grimly, more to the others than to his partner,
- &ldquo;there will be a row right here inside of ten minutes. I see that now.
- Willis has heard certain things Carson has said about the part he took in
- that raid, and he is looking for trouble. Carson isn't in the mood to take
- back anything, and a fool can see how it will end.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER II.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0002" id="linkimage-0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9025.jpg" alt="9025 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9025.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- EITH GORDON and Tingle motioned to Garner, and the three stepped out on
- the sidewalk leaving Blackburn and the candidate together. The street was
- quite deserted. Only a few of the ramshackle street lights were burning,
- though the night was cloudy, the location of the stores, barbershop,
- hotel, and post-office being indicated by the oblong patches of light on
- the ground in front of them.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'll never be able to move him,&rdquo; Keith Gordon said, stroking his blond
- mustache nervously. &ldquo;The truth is, he's terribly worked up over it.
- Between us three, boys, Carson never loved but one woman in his life, and
- she's Helen Warren. Mam' Linda is her old nurse, and Carson knows when she
- comes home and hears of Pete's trouble it is going to hurt her awfully.
- Helen has a good, kind heart, and she loves Linda as if they were the same
- flesh and blood. If Carson meets Willis to-night he'll kill him or get
- killed. Say, boys, he's too fine a fellow for that sort of thing right on
- the eve of his election. What the devil can we do?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I see; there's a woman at the bottom of it,&rdquo; Garner said, cynically.
- &ldquo;I'm not surprised at the way he's acting now, but I thought that case was
- over with. Why, I heard she was engaged to a man down where she's
- visiting.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She really may be,&rdquo; Gordon admitted, &ldquo;but Carson is ready to fight her
- battles, anyway. I honestly think she turned him down when he was rolling
- so high with her brother, just before his death a year ago, but that
- didn't alter his feelings towards her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Garner grunted as he thrust his hand deep into his breast-pocket for his
- plug of tobacco and began to twist off a corner of it. &ldquo;The most maddening
- thing on earth,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;is to have a close friend who is a darned fool.
- I'm tired of the whole business. Old Dwight is out of all patience with
- Carson for the reckless way he has been living, but the old man is really
- carried away with pride over the boy's political chances. He had that sort
- of ambition himself in his early life, and he likes to see his son go in
- for it. He was powerfully tickled the other day when I told him Carson was
- going in on the biggest wave of popularity that ever bore a human chip,
- but he will cuss a blue streak when the returns come in, for I tell you,
- boys, if Carson has a row with Dan Willis to-night over this negro
- business, it will knock him higher than a kite.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you know whether Carson has anything to shoot with?&rdquo; Tingle asked,
- thoughtfully.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, I saw the bulge of it under his coat just now,&rdquo; Garner answered,
- still angrily, &ldquo;and if the two come together it will be raining lead for a
- while in the old town.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was just thinking about his sick mother,&rdquo; Keith Gordon remarked. &ldquo;My
- sister told me the other day that Mrs. Dwight was in such a low condition
- that any sudden shock would be apt to kill her. A thing like this would
- upset her terribly&mdash;that is, if there is really any shooting. Don't
- you suppose if we were to remind Carson of her condition that he might
- agree to go home?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, you don't know him as well as I do,&rdquo; Garner said, firmly. &ldquo;It would
- only make him madder. The more reasons we give him for avoiding Willis the
- more stubborn he'll be. I guess we'll have to let him sit there and make a
- target of himself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Just then a tall mountaineer, under a broad-brimmed soft hat, wearing a
- cotton checked shirt and jean trousers passed through the light of the
- entrance to the hotel near by and slouched through the intervening
- darkness towards them.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's Pole Baker,&rdquo; said Keith. &ldquo;He's a rough-and-ready supporter of
- Carson's. Say, hold on, Pole!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hold on yourself; what's up?&rdquo; the mountaineer asked, with a laugh.
- &ldquo;Plottin' agin the whites?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We want to ask you if you've seen Dan Willis to-night,&rdquo; Garner
- questioned.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have I?&rdquo; Baker grunted. &ldquo;That's exactly why I'm lookin' fer you town
- dudes instead o' goin' on out home where I belong. I'm as sober as an
- empty keg, but I git charged with bein' in the Darley calaboose every time
- I don't answer the old lady's roll-call at bed-time. You bet Willis is
- loaded fer bear, and he's got some bad men with him down at the
- wagon-yard. Wiggin has filled 'em up with a lot o' stuff about what Carson
- said concernin' the White Cap raid t'other night. I thought I'd sorter put
- you fellers on, so you could keep our man out o' the way till their liquor
- wears off. Besides, I'm here to tell you, Bill Garner, that's a nasty card
- Wiggin's set afloat in the mountains. He says a regular gang of
- blue-bloods has been organized here to take up fer town coons agin the
- pore whites in the country. We might crush such a report in time, you
- know, but we'll never kill it if thar's a fight over it to-night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's the trouble,&rdquo; the others said, in a breath.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wait one minute&mdash;you stay right here,&rdquo; Baker said, and he went and
- stood in front of the store door and looked in for a moment; then he came
- back. &ldquo;I thought maybe he'd let us all talk sense to 'im, but you can't
- put reason into a man like that any easier than you can dip up melted
- butter with a hot awl. I can't see any chance unless you fellers will
- leave it entirely to me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Leave it to you?&rdquo; Garner exclaimed. &ldquo;What could you do?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know whether I could do a blessed thing or not, boys, but the dam
- thing is so desperate that I'm willin' to try. You see, I never talk my
- politics&mdash;if I do, I talk it on t'other side to see what I kin pick
- up to advantage. The truth is, I think them skunks consider me a Wiggin
- man, and I'd like to git a whack at 'em. Maybe I can git 'em to leave
- town. Abe Johnson is the leader of 'em, and he never gets too drunk to
- have some natural caution.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it certainly couldn't do any harm for you to try, Pole,&rdquo; said
- Tingle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'll go down to the wagon-yard and see if they are still hanging
- about.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As he approached the place in question, which was an open space about one
- hundred yards square surrounded by a high fence, at the lower end of the
- main street, Pole stood in the broad gateway and surveyed the numerous
- camp-fires which gleamed out from the darkness. He finally descried a
- group of men around a fire between two white-hooded wagons to the wheels
- of which were haltered several horses. As Pole advanced towards them,
- paying cheerful greetings to various men and women around the different
- fires he had to pass, he recognized Dan Willis, Abe Johnson, and several
- others.
- </p>
- <p>
- A quart whiskey flask, nearly empty, stood on the ground in the light of
- the fire round which the men were seated. As he approached they all looked
- up and nodded and muttered careless greetings. It seemed to suggest a
- movement on the part of Dan Willis, a tall man of thirty-five or
- thirty-six years of age, who wore long, matted hair and had bushy eyebrows
- and a sweeping mustache, for, taking up the flask, he rose and dropped it
- into his coat-pocket and spoke to the two men who sat on either side of
- Abe Johnson.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come on,&rdquo; he growled, &ldquo;I want to talk to you. I don't care whether you
- join us or not, Abe.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'm out of it,&rdquo; replied Johnson. &ldquo;I've talked to you fellows till
- I'm sick. You are too darned full to have any sense.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Willis and the two men walked off together and stood behind one of the
- wagons. Their voices, muffled by the effects of whiskey, came back to the
- ears of the remaining two.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Goin' out home to-night, Abe?&rdquo; Baker asked, carelessly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want to, but I don't like to leave that damned fool here in the
- condition he's in. He'll either commit murder or git his blasted head shot
- off.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's exactly what <i>I</i> was thinking about,&rdquo; said Pole, sitting down
- on the ground carelessly and drawing his knees up in the embrace of his
- strong arms. &ldquo;Look here, Abe, me'n you hain't to say quite as intimate as
- own brothers born of the same mammy, but I hain't got nothin' agin you of
- a personal nature.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I reckon that's all right,&rdquo; the other said, stroking his round,
- smooth-shaven face with a dogged sweep of his brawny hand. &ldquo;That's all
- right, Pole.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, my family knowed yore family long through the war,&rdquo; Abe. &ldquo;My daddy
- was with yourn at the front, an' our mothers swapped sugar an' coffee in
- them hard times, an', Abe, I'm here to tell you I sorter hate to see an
- unsuspectin' neighbor like you walk blind into serious trouble, great big
- trouble, Abe&mdash;trouble of the sort that would make a man's wife an'
- childern lie awake many and many a night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What the hell you mean?&rdquo; Johnson asked, picking up his ears.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, it's this here devilment that's brewin' betwixt Dan an' Carson
- Dwight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0003" id="linkimage-0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0031.jpg" alt="0031 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0031.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, what's that got to do with <i>me?</i>&rdquo; Johnson asked, in surly
- surprise.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it's jest this, Abe,&rdquo; Pole leaned back till his feet rose from the
- ground, and he twisted his neck as his eyes followed the three men who,
- with their heads close together, had moved a little farther away. &ldquo;Maybe
- you don't know it, Abe, but I used to be in the government revenue
- service, and in one way and another that's neither here nor there I
- sometimes drop onto underground information, an' I want to give you a
- valuable tip. I want to start you to thinkin'. You'll admit, I reckon,
- that if them two men meet to-night thar will be apt to be blood shed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Johnson stared over the camp-fire sullenly. &ldquo;If Carson Dwight hain't had
- the sense to git out o' town thar will be, an' plenty of it,&rdquo; he said,
- with a dry chuckle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, thar's the difficulty,&rdquo; said Pole. &ldquo;He hain't left town, an' what's
- wuss than that, his friends hain't been able to budge 'im from his seat in
- Blackburn's store, whar Dan couldn't miss 'im ef he was stalkin' about
- blindfolded. He's heard threats, and he's as mad a man as ever pulled
- hair.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, what the devil&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hold on, Abe. Now, I'll tell you whar <i>you</i> come in. My underground
- information is that the Grand Jury is hard at work to git the facts about
- that White Cap raid. The whole thing&mdash;name of leader and members of
- the gang has been kept close so far, but&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well&rdquo;&mdash;the half-defiant look in the face of Johnson gave way to one
- of growing alarm&mdash;&ldquo;well!&rdquo; he repeated, but went no further.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's this way, Abe&mdash;an' I'm here as a friend, I reckon. You know as
- well as I do that if thar is blood shed to-night it will git into court,
- and a lots about the White Cap raid, and matters even further back, will
- be pulled into the light.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Pole's words had made a marked impression on the man to whom they had been
- so adroitly directed. Johnson leaned forward nervously. &ldquo;So you think&mdash;&rdquo;
- But he hung fire again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Huh, I think you'd better git Dan Willis out o' this town, Abe, an'
- inside o' five minutes, ef you can do it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Johnson drew a breath of evident relief. &ldquo;I can do it, Pole, and I'll act
- by your advice,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Thar's only one thing on earth that would turn
- Dan towards home, but I happen to know what that is. He's b'ilin' hot, but
- he ain't any more anxious to stir up the Grand Jury than some of the rest
- of us. I'll go talk to 'im.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As Johnson moved away, Pole Baker rose and slouched off in the darkness in
- the direction of the straggling lights along the main street. At the gate
- he paused and waited, his eyes on the wagons and camp-fire he had just
- left. Presently he noticed something and chuckled. The horses, with
- clanking trace-chains, passed between him and the fire&mdash;they were
- being led round to be hitched to the wagons. Pole chuckled again. &ldquo;I'm not
- sech a dern fool as I look,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;Well, I had to lie some and act a
- part that sorter went agin the grain, but my scheme worked. If I ever git
- to hell I reckon it will be through tryin' to do right&mdash;in the main.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER III.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0004" id="linkimage-0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9035.jpg" alt="9035 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9035.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- HE wide avenue which ran north and south and cut the town of Darley into
- halves held the best and oldest residences. One side of the street caught
- the full rays of the morning sun and the other the slanting red beams of
- the afternoon. For so small a town, it was a well-graded and well-kept
- thoroughfare. Strips of grass lay like ribbons between the sidewalks and
- the roadway, and at the triangular spaces created by the intersection of
- certain streets there were rusty iron fences built primarily to protect
- diminutive fountains which had long since ceased to play. In one of these
- little parks, in the heart of the town, as it was in the hearts of the
- inhabitants, stood a monument erected to &ldquo;The Confederate Dead,&rdquo; a
- well-modelled, life-size figure of a Southern private wrought in stone in
- faraway Italy. Had it been correctly placed on its pedestal?&mdash;that
- was the question anxiously asked by reverent passers-by, for the cloaked
- and knapsacked figure, which time was turning gray, stood with its back to
- the enemy's country.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it is right,&rdquo; some would say, &ldquo;for the soldier is represented as
- being on night picket-duty in Northern territory, and his thoughts and
- eyes are with his dear ones at home and the country he is defending.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Henry Dwight, the wealthy sire of the aggressive young man with whom the
- foregoing chapters have principally dealt, lived in one of the moss and
- ivy grown houses on the eastern side of the avenue. It was a red brick
- structure two and a half stories high, with a colonial veranda, and had a
- square, white-windowed cupola as the apex of the slanting roof. There was
- a semicircular drive, which entered the grounds at one corner in the front
- and swept gracefully past the door. The central and smaller front gate,
- for the use of pedestrians, with its imitation stone posts, spanned by a
- white crescent, was reached from the house by a gravelled walk bordered by
- boxwood. On the right and left were rustic summerhouses, grape arbors and
- parterres containing roses and other flowers, all of which were well cared
- for by an old colored gardener.
- </p>
- <p>
- Henry Dwight was a grain and cotton merchant, money-lender, and the
- president and chief stockholder of the Darley Cotton Mills, whose great
- brick buildings and cottages for employés stood a mile or so to the west
- of the town. This morning, having written his daily letters, he was
- strolling in his grounds smoking a cigar. To any one who knew him well it
- would have been plain that his mind was disturbed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Adjoining the Dwight homestead there was another ancestral house equally
- as spacious and stand-. ing in quite as extensive, if more neglected,
- grounds. It was here that Major Warren lived, and it happened that he,
- too, was on his lawn just beyond the ramshackle intervening fence, the
- gate of which had fallen from its hinges and been taken away.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major was a short, slight old gentleman, quite a contrast to the John
- Bull type of his lusty, side-whiskered neighbor. He wore a dingy brown
- wig, and as he pottered about, raising a rose from the earth with his
- gold-headed ebony stick, or stooped to uproot an encroaching weed, his
- furtive glance was often levelled on old Dwight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I declare I really might as well,&rdquo; he muttered, undecidedly. &ldquo;What's the
- use making up your mind to a thing and letting it go for no sensible
- reason. He's taking a wrong view of it. I can tell that by the way he
- puffs at his cigar. Yes, I'll do it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major passed through the gateway and slowly drew near his preoccupied
- neighbor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good-morning, Henry,&rdquo; he said, as Dwight looked up. &ldquo;If I'm any judge of
- your twists and turns, you are not yet in a thoroughly good-humor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good-humor? No, sir, I'm <i>not</i> in a good-humor. How could I be when
- that young scamp, the only heir to my name and effects&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Dwight's spleen rose and choked out his words, and, red in the face, he
- stood panting, unable to go further.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it seems to me, while he's not <i>my</i> son,&rdquo; the Major began,
- &ldquo;that you are&mdash;are&mdash;well, rather overbearing&mdash;I might say
- unforgiving. He's been sowing wild oats, but, really, if I am any judge of
- young men, he is on a fair road to&mdash;to genuine manhood.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Road to nothing,&rdquo; spluttered Dwight. &ldquo;I gave him that big farm to see
- what he could do in its management. Never expected him to work a lick&mdash;just
- wanted to see if he could keep it on a paying basis, but it was an
- investment of dead capital. Then he took up the law. He did a little
- better at that along with Bill Garner to lean on, but that never amounted
- to anything worth mentioning. Then he went into politics.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And I heard you say yourself, Henry,&rdquo; the Major ventured, gently, &ldquo;that
- you believed he was actually cut out for a future statesman.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, and like the fool that I was I hoped for it. I was so glad to see
- him really interested in politics that I laid awake at night thinking of
- his success. I heard of his popularity on every hand. Men came to me, and
- women, too, telling me they loved him and were going to work for him
- against that jack-leg lawyer Wiggin, and put him into office with a
- majority that would ring all over the State; and they meant it, I reckon.
- But what did he do? In his stubborn, bull-headed way he abused those
- mountain men who took the law into their hands for the public good, and
- turned hundreds of them against him; and all for a nigger&mdash;a lazy,
- trifling nigger boy!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you see,&rdquo; Major Warren began, lamely, &ldquo;Carson and I saw Pete the
- night he was whipped so severely and we took pity on him. They played
- together when they were boys, as boys all over the South do, you know, and
- then he saw Mam' Linda break down over it and saw old Lewis crying for the
- first time in the old man's life. I was mad, Henry, myself, and you would
- have been if you had been there. I could have fought the men who did it,
- so I understand how Carson felt, and when he made the remark Wiggin is
- using to such deadly injury to his prospects my heart warmed to the boy.
- If he doesn't succeed as a politician it will be because he is too genuine
- for a tricky career of that sort. His friends are trying to get him to
- make some statement that will reinstate him with the mountain people who
- sympathized with the White Caps, but he simply won't do it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Won't do it! I reckon not!&rdquo; Dwight blurted out. &ldquo;Didn't the young idiot
- wait in Blackburn's store for Dan Willis to come and shoot the top of his
- head off? He sat there till past midnight, and wouldn't move an inch till
- actual proof was brought to him that Willis had left town. Oh, I'm no
- fool! I know a thing or two. I've watched him and your daughter together.
- That's at the bottom of it. She sat down on him before she went off to
- Augusta, but her refusal didn't alter him. He knows Helen thinks a lot of
- her old negro mammy, and in her absence he simply took up her cause and is
- fighting mad about it&mdash;so mad that he is blind to his political ruin.
- That's what a man will do for a woman. They say she's about to become
- engaged down there. I hope she is, and that Carson will have pride enough
- when he hears of it to let another man do her fighting, and one with
- nothing to lose by it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She hasn't written me a thing about any engagement,&rdquo; the Major answered,
- with some animation; &ldquo;but my sister highly approves of the match and
- writes that it may come about. Mr. Sanders is a well-to-do, honorable man
- of good birth and education: Helen never seemed to get over her brother's
- sad death. She loved poor Albert more than she ever did me or any one
- else.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And I always thought that it was Carson's association with your son in
- his dissipation that turned Helen against him. For all I know, she may
- have thought Carson actually led Albert on and was partly the cause of his
- sad end.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She may have looked at it that way,&rdquo; the Major said, musingly. They had
- now reached the porch in the rear of the house and they went together into
- the wide hall. A colored maid with a red bandanna tied like a turban round
- her head was dusting the walnut railing of the stairs. Passing through the
- hall, the old gentlemen turned into the library, a great square room with
- wide windows and tall, gilt-framed pier-glass mirrors.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I'm sure that's what turned her against him,&rdquo; Dwight continued, &ldquo;and
- that is where, between you and Helen, I get mixed up. Why do you always
- take up for the scamp? It looks to me like you'd resent the way he acted
- with your son after the boy's terrible end.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There is a good deal more in the matter, Henry, than I ever told you
- about.&rdquo; Major Warren's voice faltered. &ldquo;To be plain, that is my secret
- trouble. I reckon if Helen was to discover the actual truth&mdash;<i>all
- of it</i>&mdash;she would never feel the same towards me. I think maybe I
- ought to tell you. It certainly will explain why I am so much interested
- in your boy.&rdquo; They sat down, the owner of the house in a reclining-chair
- at an oblong, carved mahogany table covered with books and papers, the
- visitor on a lounge near by.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it always has seemed odd to me,&rdquo; old Dwight said. &ldquo;I couldn't
- exactly believe you wanted to bring him and Helen together, after your
- experience with that sort of man under your own roof.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is this way,&rdquo; said the Major, awkwardly. &ldquo;To begin with, I am sure,
- from all I've picked up, that it was not your son that was leading mine on
- to dissipation, but just the other way. He's dead and gone, but Albert was
- always ready for a prank of any sort. Henry, I want to talk to you about
- it because it seems to me you are in the same position in regard to Carson
- that I was in regard to my poor boy, and I've prayed a thousand times for
- pardon for what I did in anger and haste. Henry, listen to me. If ever a
- man made a vital mistake I did, and I'll bear the weight of it to my
- grave. You know how I worried over. Albert's drinking and his general
- conduct. Time after time he made promises that he would turn over a new
- leaf only to break them. Well, it was on the last trip&mdash;the fatal one
- to New York, where he had gone and thrown away so much money. I wrote him
- a severe letter, and in answer to it I got a pathetic one, saying he was
- sick and tired of the way he was doing and begging me to try him once more
- and send him money to pay his way home. It was the same old sort of
- promise and I didn't have faith in him. I was unfair, unjust to my only
- son. I wrote and refused, telling him that I could not trust him any more.
- Hell inspired that letter, Henry&mdash;the devil whispered to me that I'd
- been indulgent to the poor boy's injury. Then came the news. When he was
- found dead in a small room on the top floor of that squalid hotel&mdash;dead
- by his own hand&mdash;my letter lay open beside him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, well, you couldn't help it!&rdquo; Dwight said, most awkwardly, and he
- crossed his short, fat legs anew and reached for an open box of cigars.
- &ldquo;You were trying to do your duty as you saw it, and to the best of your
- ability.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, but my method, Henry, resulted in misery and grief to me and Helen
- that can never be cured. You see, it is because of that awful mistake that
- I take such an interest in Carson. I love him because Albert loved him,
- and because sometimes it seems to me that you are most too quick to
- condemn him. Oh, he's different! Carson has changed wonderfully since
- Albert died. He doesn't drink to excess now, and Garner says he has quit
- playing cards, having only one aim, and that to win this political race&mdash;to
- win it to please you, Henry.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Win it!&rdquo; Dwight sniffed. &ldquo;He's already as dead as a salt mackerel&mdash;laid
- out stiff and stark by his own bull-headed stupidity. I've always talked
- down drinking and card-playing, but I have known some men to succeed in
- life who had such habits in moderation; but you nor I nor no one else ever
- saw a blockhead succeed at anything. I tell you he'll never make a
- successful politician. Wiggin will beat the hind sights off of him. Wiggin
- is simply making capital of the fool's inability to control his temper and
- sympathies. Wiggin would have let that mob thrash his own father and
- mother rather than antagonize them and lose their votes. He knows Carson
- comes of fighting stock, and he will continue to egg Dan Willis and others
- on, knowing that every resentful word from Carson will make enemies for
- him by the score.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I can see that, too!&rdquo; the Major sighed; &ldquo;but, to save me, I can't
- help admiring the boy. He thinks the White Caps did wrong that night and
- he simply can't pretend otherwise. It is the principle of the thing,
- Henry. He is an unusual sort of candidate, and his stand may ruin his
- chances, but I&mdash;I glory in his firmness. I must say g me to try him
- once more and send him money to pay his way home. It was the same old sort
- of promise and I didn't have faith in him. I was unfair, unjust to my only
- son. I wrote and refused, telling him that I could not trust him any more.
- Hell inspired that letter, Henry&mdash;the devil whispered to me that I'd
- been indulgent to the poor boy's injury. Then came the news. When he was
- found dead in a small room on the top floor of that squalid hotel&mdash;
- dead by his own hand&mdash;my letter lay open beside him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, well, you couldn't help it!&rdquo; Dwight said, most awkwardly, and he
- crossed his short, fat legs anew and reached for an open box of cigars.
- &ldquo;You were trying to do your duty as you saw it, and to the best of your
- ability.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, but my method, Henry, resulted in misery and grief to me and Helen
- that can never be cured. You see, it is because of that awful mistake that
- I take such an interest in Carson. I love him because Albert loved him,
- and because sometimes it seems to me that you are most too quick to
- condemn him. Oh, he's different! Carson has changed wonderfully since
- Albert died. He doesn't drink to excess now, and Garner says he has quit
- playing cards, having only one aim, and that to win this political race-
- -to win it to please you, Henry.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Win it!&rdquo; Dwight sniffed. &ldquo;He's already as dead as a salt mackerel&mdash;laid
- out stiff and stark by his own bull-headed stupidity. I've always talked
- down drinking and card-playing, but I have known some men to succeed in
- life who had such habits in moderation; but you nor I nor no one else ever
- saw a blockhead succeed at anything. I tell you he'll never make a
- successful politician. Wiggin will beat the hind sights off of him. Wiggin
- is simply making capital of the fool's inability to control his temper and
- sympathies. Wiggin would have let that mob thrash his own father and
- mother rather than antagonize them and lose their votes. He knows Carson
- comes of fighting stock, and he will continue to egg Dan Willis and others
- on, knowing that every resentful word from Carson will make enemies for
- him by the score.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I can see that, too!&rdquo; the Major sighed; &ldquo;but, to save me, I can't
- help admiring the boy. He thinks the White Caps did wrong that night and
- he simply can't pretend otherwise. It is the principle of the thing,
- Henry. He is an unusual sort of candidate, and his stand may ruin his
- chances, but I&mdash;I glory in his firmness. I must say that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, that's the trouble with you sentimental people,&rdquo; Dwight fumed.
- &ldquo;Between you and the boy's doting mother, the Lord only knows where he'll
- land. I've overlooked a lot in him in the hope that he'd put this election
- through, but I shall let him go his own way now. It has come to a pretty
- pass if I have to see my son beaten to the dust by a man of Wiggin's stamp
- because of that long-legged negro boy of yours who would have been better
- long ago if he had been soundly thrashed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When his visitor had gone Dwight dropped his unfinished cigar into the
- grate and went slowly upstairs to his wife's room. At a small-paned window
- overlooking the flower-garden, on a couch supported in a reclining
- position by several puffy pillows, was Mrs. Dwight. She was well past
- middle-age and of extremely delicate physique. Her hair was snowy white,
- her skin thin to transparency, her veins full and blue.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That was Major Warren, wasn't it?&rdquo; she asked, in a soft, sweet voice, as
- she put down the magazine she had been reading.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Dwight answered, as he went to a little desk in one corner of the
- room and took a paper from a pigeon-hole and put it into his pocket.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How did he happen to come over so early?&rdquo; the lady pursued.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because he wanted to, I reckon,&rdquo; Dwight started out, impatiently, and
- then a note of caution came into his voice as he remembered the warning of
- the family physician against causing the patient even the slightest worry.
- &ldquo;Warren hasn't a blessed thing to do, you know, from mom till night. So
- when he strikes a busy man he is apt to hang on to him and talk in his
- long-winded way about any subject that takes possession of his brain. He's
- great on showing men how to manage their own affairs. It takes an idle man
- to do that. If that man hadn't had money left to him he would now be
- begging his bread from door to door.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Somehow I fancied it was about Carson,&rdquo; Mrs. Dwight sighed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There you go!&rdquo; her husband said, with as much grace of evasion as lay in
- his sturdy compound. &ldquo;Lying there from day to day, you seem to have
- contracted Warren's complaint. You think nobody can drop in even for a
- minute without coming about your boy&mdash;your boy! Some day, if you live
- long enough, you may discover that the universe was not created solely for
- your son, nor made just to revolve around him either.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I suppose I <i>do</i> worry about Carson a great deal,&rdquo; the invalid
- admitted; &ldquo;but you haven't told me right out that the Major was <i>not</i>
- speaking of him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man's face was the playground of conflcting impulses. He grew red
- with anger and his lips trembled on the very verge of an outburst, but he
- controlled himself. In fact, his irritability calmed down as he suddenly
- saw a loop-hole through which to escape her questioning.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The truth is,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;Warren was talking about Albert's death. He
- talked quite a while about it. He almost broke down.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'm so worried about Carson's campaign that I imagine all sorts of
- trouble,&rdquo; Mrs. Dwight sighed. &ldquo;I lay awake nearly all of last night
- thinking about one little thing. When he was in his room dressing the
- other day, I heard something fall to the floor. Hilda had taken him some
- hot water for shaving, and when she came back she told me he had dropped
- his revolver out of his pocket. You know till then I had had no idea he
- carried one, and while it may be necessary at times, the idea is very
- disagreeable.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You needn't let <i>that</i> bother you,&rdquo; Dwight said, as he took his hat
- to go down to his office at his warehouse. &ldquo;Nearly all the young men carry
- them because they think it looks smart. Most of them would run like a
- scared dog if they saw one pointed at them even in fun.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I hope my boy will never have any use for one,&rdquo; the invalid said.
- &ldquo;He is not of a quarrelsome nature. It takes a good deal to make him
- angry, but when he gets so he is not easily controlled.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IV.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0005" id="linkimage-0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9046.jpg" alt="9046 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9046.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- HE young men in Carson Dwight's set had an odd sort of lounging-place. It
- was Keith Gordon's room above his father's bank in an old building which
- had withstood the shot and shell of the Civil War. &ldquo;The Den,&rdquo; as it was
- called by its numerous hap-hazard occupants, was reached from the street
- on the outside by a narrow flight of worm-eaten and rickety stairs and a
- perilous little balcony or passage that clung to the brick wall, twenty
- feet from the ground, along the full length of the building. It was here
- in one of the four beds that Keith slept, when there was room for him.
- After a big dance or a match game of baseball, when there were impecunious
- visitors from neighboring towns left over for various and sundry reasons,
- Keith had to seek the sanctimonious solitude of his father's home or go to
- the hotel.
- </p>
- <p>
- The den was about twenty-five feet square. It was not as luxurious as such
- bachelor quarters went in Augusta, Savannah, or even Atlanta, but it
- answered the purpose of &ldquo;the gang&rdquo; which made use of it. Keith frankly
- declared that he had overhauled and replenished it for the last time. He
- said that it was absolutely impossible to keep washbasins and pitchers,
- when they were hurled out of the windows for pure amusement of men who
- didn't care whether they washed or not. As for the laundry bill, he
- happened to know that it was larger than that of the Johnston House or the
- boarding department of the Darley Female College. He said, too, that he
- had warned the gang for the last time that the room would be closed if any
- more clog-dancing were indulged in. He said his father complained that the
- plastering was dropping down on his desk below, and sensible men ought to
- know that a thing like that could not go on forever.
- </p>
- <p>
- The rules concerning the payment for drinks were certainly lax. No
- accounts were kept of any man's indebtedness. Any member of the gang was
- at liberty to stow away a flask of any size in the bureau or wash-stand
- drawer, or under the mattresses or pillows of his or anybody else's bed,
- where Skelt, the negro who swept the room, and loved stimulants could not
- find it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bill Garner, as brainy as he was, while he was always welcome at his
- father's house in the country, a mile from town, seemed to love the
- company of this noisy set. Through the day it was said of him that he
- could read and saturate himself with more law than any man in the State,
- but at night his recreation was a cheap cigar, his old bulging carpet
- slippers, a cosey chair in Keith's room, and&mdash;who would think it?&mdash;the
- most thrilling Indian dime novel on the market. He could quote the French,
- German, Italian, and Spanish classics by the page in a strange musical
- accent he had acquired without the aid of a master or any sort of
- intercourse with native foreigners. He knew and loved all things
- pertaining to great literature&mdash;said he had a natural ear for
- Wagner's music, had comprehended Edwin Booth's finest work, knew a good
- picture when he saw it; and yet he had to have his dime novel. In it he
- found mental rest and relaxation that was supplied by nothing else. His
- bedfellow was Bob Smith, the genial, dapper, ever daintily clad clerk at
- the Johnston House. Garner said he liked to sleep with Bob because Bob
- never&mdash;sleeping or waking&mdash;took anything out of him mentally.
- Besides dressing to perfection, Bob played rag-time on the guitar and sang
- the favorite coon songs of the day. His duties at the hotel were far from
- arduous, and so the gang usually looked to him to arrange dances and
- collect toll for expenses. And Bob was not without his actual monetary
- value, as the proprietor of the hotel had long since discovered, for when
- Bob arranged a dance it meant that various socially inclined drummers of
- good birth and standing would, at a hint or a telegram from the clerk,
- &ldquo;lay over&rdquo; at Darley for one night anyway.
- </p>
- <p>
- If Bob had any quality that disturbed the surface of his uniform
- equanimity it was his excessive pride in Carson Dwight's friendship. He
- interlarded his talk with what Carson had said or done, and Carson's
- candidacy for the Legislature had become his paramount ambition. Indeed,
- it may as well be stated that the rest of the gang had espoused Dwight's
- political cause with equal enthusiasm.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the Sunday morning following the night Pole Baker had prevented the
- meeting between Dwight and Dan Willis, and most of the habitual loungers
- were present waiting for Skelt to black their boots, and deploring the
- turn of affairs which looked so bad for their favorite. Wade Tingle was
- shaving at one of the windows before a mirror in a cracked mahogany frame,
- when they all recognized Carson's step on the balcony and a moment later
- Dwight stood in the doorway.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hello, boys, how goes it?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, right side up, old man,&rdquo; Tingle replied, as he began to rub the
- lather into his face with his hand to soften his week-old beard before
- shaving. &ldquo;How's the race?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's all right, I guess,&rdquo; Dwight said, wearily, as he came in and sat
- down in a vacant chair against the wall. &ldquo;How goes it in the mountains? I
- understand you've been over there.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, trying to rake in some ads, stir up my local correspondents, and
- take subscriptions. As to your progress, old man, I'm sorry to say
- Wiggin's given it a sort of black eye. There was a meeting of farmers over
- in the tenth, at Miller's Spring. I was blamed sorry you were not there.
- Wiggin made a speech. It was a corker&mdash;viewed as campaign material
- solely. That chap's failed at the law, but he's the sharpest, most
- unprincipled manipulator of men's emotions I ever ran across. He showed
- you up as Sam Jones does the ring-tailed monster of the cloven foot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What Carson said about the Willis and Johnson mob was his theme, of
- course?&rdquo; said Garner, above the dog-eared pages of his thriller.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That and ten thousand things Carson never dreamed of,&rdquo; returned Tingle.
- &ldquo;Here's the way it went. The meeting was held under a bush-arbor to keep
- the sun off, and the farmers had their wives and children out for a
- picnic. A long-faced parson led in prayer, some of the old maids piped up
- with a song that would have ripped slits in your musical tympanum, Garner,
- and then a raw-boned ploughman in a hickory shirt and one gallus
- introduced the guest of honor. How they could have overlooked the
- editor-in-chief and proprietor of the greatest agricultural weekly in
- north Georgia and picked out that skunk was a riddle to me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, what did he say?&rdquo; Garner asked, as sharply as if he were
- cross-examining a non-committal witness of importance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did he say?&rdquo; Tingle laughed, as he wiped the lather from his face
- with a ragged towel and stood with it in his hand. &ldquo;He began by saying
- that he had gone into the race to win, and that he was going to the
- Legislature as sure as the sun was on its way down in this country and on
- its way up in China. He said it was a scientific certainty, as easily
- demonstrated as two and two make four. Those hardy, horny-handed men
- before him that day were not going to the polls and vote for a town dude
- who parted his hair in the middle, wore spike-toed shoes that glittered
- like a new dash-board, and was the ringleader of the rowdiest set of young
- card-players and whiskey-drinkers that ever blackened the morals of a
- mining-camp. He said that about the gang, boys, and I didn't have a thing
- to shoot with. In fact, I had to sit there and take in more.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did he say about his <i>platform?</i>&rdquo; Garner asked, with a heavy
- frown; &ldquo;that's what I want to get at. You never can hurt a politician by
- circulating the report that he drinks&mdash;that's what half of 'em vote
- for.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, his platform seemed to be chiefly that he was out to save the common
- people from the eternal disgrace of voting for a man like Dwight. He
- certainly piled it on thick and heavy. It would have made Carson's own
- mother slink away in shame. Carson, Wiggin said, had loved niggers since
- he was knee high to a duck, and had always contended that a negro owned by
- the aristocracy of the South was ahead of the white, razor-back stock in
- the mountains who had never had that advantage. Carson was up in arms
- against the White Caps that had come to Darley and whipped those lazy
- coons, and was going to prosecute every man in the bunch to the full
- extent of the United States law. If he got into the Legislature he
- intended to pass laws to make it a penitentiary offence for a white man to
- shove a black buck off the sidewalk. 'But he's not going to take his seat
- in the Capitol of Georgia,' Wiggins said, with a yell&mdash;'if Carson
- Dwight went to Atlanta it would <i>not</i> be on a free pass.' And, boys,
- that crowd yelled till the dry leaves overhead clapped an encore. The men
- yelled and the women and children yelled.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's a contemptible puppy!&rdquo; Dwight said, angrily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, but he's a slick politician among men of that sort,&rdquo; said Tingle.
- &ldquo;He certainly knows how to talk and stir up strife.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And I suppose you sat there like a bump on a log, and listened to all
- that without opening your mouth!&rdquo; Keith Gordon spoke up from his bed,
- where he lay in his bath-robe smoking over the remains of the breakfast
- Skelt had brought from the hotel on a big black tray.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I <i>did</i>&mdash;get up,&rdquo; Tingle answered, with a manly flush.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, you <i>did!</i>&rdquo; Garner leaned forward with interest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'm glad you happened to be on hand, for your paper has
- considerable influence over there.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I got up. I waved my hands up and down like a buzzard rising, to
- keep the crowd still till I could think of something to say; but, Carson,
- old man, you know what an idiot I used to be in college debates. I could
- get through fairly well on anything they would let me write down and read
- off, but it was the impromptu thing that always rattled me. I was as mad
- as hell when I rose, but all those staring eyes calmed me wonderfully. I
- reckon I stood there fully half a minute swallowing&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You damned fool!&rdquo; Garner exclaimed, in high disgust.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, that's exactly what I was,&rdquo; Tingle admitted. &ldquo;I stood there gasping
- like a catfish enjoying his first excursion in open air. It was deathly
- still. I've heard it said that dying men notice the smallest things about
- them. I remember I saw the horses and mules haltered out under the trees
- with their hay and fodder under their noses&mdash;the dinner-baskets all
- in a cluster at the spring guarded by a negro woman. Then what do you
- think? Old Jeff Condon spoke up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Lead us in prayer, brother,' he said, in reverential tones, and since I
- was born I never heard so much laughing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You certainly <i>did</i> play into Wiggin's hands,&rdquo; growled the
- disgruntled Garner. &ldquo;That's exactly what a glib-tongued skunk like him
- would want.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it gave me a minute to try to get my wind, anyway,&rdquo; said Tingle,
- still red in the face, &ldquo;but I wasn't equal to a mob of baseball rooters
- like that. I started in to deny some of Wiggin's charges when another
- smart Alec spoke up and said: 'Hold on! tell us about the time you and
- your candidate started home from a ball at Catoosa Springs in a buggy, and
- were so drunk that the horse took you to the house of a man who used to
- own him sixteen miles from where you wanted to go. Of course, you all
- know, boys, that was a big exaggeration, but I had no idea it was
- generally known. Anyway, I thought the crowd would laugh their heads off.
- I reckon it was the way I looked. I felt as if every man, woman, and child
- there had mashed a bad egg on me and was chuckling over their
- marksmanship. I ended up by getting mad, and I saw by Wiggin's grin that
- he liked that. I managed to say a few things in denial, and then Wiggin
- got up and roasted me and my paper to a turn. He said that in supporting
- Dwight editorially the <i>Headlight</i> was giving sanction to Dwight's
- ideas in favor of the negro and against honest white people, and that
- every man there who had any family or State pride ought to stop taking the
- dirty sheet; and, bless your life, some of them did cancel their
- subscriptions when they met me after the speaking; but I'm going to keep
- on mailing it, anyway. It will be like sending free tracts to the heathen,
- but it may bear fruit.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER V.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0006" id="linkimage-0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9054.jpg" alt="9054 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9054.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- ALF an hour later all the young men had left the room except Garner and
- Dwight. Garner still wore the frown brought to his broad brow by Tingle's
- recital.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've set my heart on putting this thing through,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;and while it
- looks kind of shaky, I haven't lost all hope yet. Of course, your reckless
- remarks about the White Caps have considerably damaged us in the
- mountains, but we may live it down. It may die a natural death if you and
- Dan Willis don't meet and plug away at each other and set the talk afloat
- again. I reckon he'll keep out of your way when he's sober, anyway.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am not running after him,&rdquo; Carson returned. &ldquo;I simply said what I
- thought and Wiggin made the most of it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Garner was silent for several minutes, then he folded his dime novel and
- bent it across his knee, and when he finally spoke Dwight thought he had
- never seen a graver look on the strong face. He had seen it full of
- emotional tears when Garner was at the height of earnest appeal to a jury
- in a murder case; he had seen it dark with the fury of unjust legal
- defeat, but now there was a strange feminine whiteness at the corners of
- the big facile mouth, a queer twitching of the lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've made up my mind to tell you a secret,&rdquo; he said, falteringly. &ldquo;I've
- come near it several times and backed out. It's a subject I don't know how
- to handle. It's about a woman, Carson. You know I'm not a ladies' man. I
- don't call on women; I don't take them buggy-riding; I don't dance with
- them, or even know how to fire soft things at them like you and Keith, but
- I've had my experience.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It certainly is a surprise to me,&rdquo; Dwight said, sympathetically, and then
- in the shadow of Garner's seriousness he found himself unable to make
- further comment.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I reckon you'll lose all respect for me for thinking there was a ghost of
- a chance in that particular quarter,&rdquo; Garner pursued, without meeting his
- companion's eye. &ldquo;But, Carson, my boy, there is a certain woman that every
- man who knows her has loved or is still loving. Keith's crazy about her,
- though he has given up all hope as I did long ago, and even poor Bob Smith
- thinks he's in luck if she will only listen to one of his new songs or let
- him do her some favor. We all love her, Carson, because she is so sweet
- and kind to us&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You mean&mdash;&rdquo; Dwight interrupted, impulsively, and then lapsed into
- silence, an awkward flush rising to his brow.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I mean Helen Warren, old man. As I say, I had never thought of a
- woman that way in my life. We were thrown together once at a house-party
- at Hilburn's farm&mdash;well, I simply went daft. She never refused to
- walk with me when I asked her, and seemed specially interested in my
- profession. I didn't know it at the time, but I have since discovered that
- she has that sweet way with every man, rich or poor, married or single.
- Well, to make a long story short, I proposed to her. The whole thing is
- stamped on my brain as with a branding-iron. We had taken a long walk that
- morning and were seated under a big beech-tree near a spring. She kept
- asking about my profession, her face beaming, and it all went to my head.
- I knew that I was the ugliest man in the State, that I had no style about
- me, and knew nothing about being nice to women of her sort; but her
- interest in everything pertaining to the law made me think, you know, that
- she admired that kind of thing. I went wild. As I told her how I felt I
- actually cried. Think of it&mdash;I was silly enough to blubber like a
- baby! I can't describe what happened. She was shocked and pained beyond
- description. She had never dreamed that I felt that way. I ended by asking
- her to try to forget it all, and we had a long, awful walk to the house.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That <i>was</i> tough,&rdquo; Carson Dwight said, a queer expression on his
- face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I've told it to you for a special reason,&rdquo; Garner said, with a big,
- trembling sigh. &ldquo;Carson, I am a close observer, and I afterwards made up
- my mind that I knew why she had led me on to talk so much about the law
- and my work in particular.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, you found that out!&rdquo; Carson said, almost absently.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, my boy, it was about the time you and I were thinking of going in
- together. It was all on your account.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson stared straight at Garner. &ldquo;<i>My</i> account? Oh no!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, on your account. I've kept it from you all this time. I'm your
- friend now in full&mdash;to the very bone, but at that time I felt too
- sore to tell you. I'd lost all I cared for on earth, but I simply had too
- much of primitive man left in me to let you know how well you stood. My
- God, Carson, about that time I used to sit at my desk behind some old book
- pretending to read, but just looking at you as you sat at work wondering
- how it would feel to have what was yours. Then I watched you both
- together; you seemed actually made for each other, an ideal couple. Then
- came your&mdash;she refused you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know, I know, but why talk about it, Garner?&rdquo; Carson had risen and
- stood in the doorway in the rays of the morning sun. There was silence for
- a moment. The church bells were ringing and negroes and whites were
- passing along the street below.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It may be good for me to speak of it and be done with it, or it may not,&rdquo;
- said Garner; &ldquo;but this is what I was coming to. I've said it was a long
- time before I could tell you that she was once&mdash;I don't know how she
- is now, but she was at one time in love with you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh no, no, she was never that!&rdquo; Dwight said. &ldquo;We were great friends, but
- she never cared that much for me or for any one.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it was a long time before I could say what I thought about that,
- and I have only just now taken another step in self-renunciation. Carson,
- I can now say that you didn't have a fair deal, and that I have reached a
- point in which I want to see you get it. I think I know why she refused
- you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You do?&rdquo; Dwight said, pale and excited, as he came away from the door and
- leaned heavily against the wall near his friend.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it was this way. I've studied it all out. She loved Albert as few
- women love their brothers, and his grim end was an almost unbearable
- shock. After his death, you know it leaked out that you had been Albert's
- constant companion through his dissipation, almost, in fact, up to the
- very end. She couldn't reconcile herself to your part, innocent as it was,
- in the tragedy, and it simply killed the feeling she had for you. I
- suppose it is natural to a character as strong as hers.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've always feared that&mdash;that was the reason,&rdquo; said Dwight,
- falteringly, as he went back to the door and looked out. There was a droop
- of utter dejection on him and his face seemed to have aged. &ldquo;Garner,&rdquo; he
- said, suddenly, &ldquo;there is no use denying anything. You have admitted your
- love for her, why should I deny mine? I never cared for any other woman
- and I never shall.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's right, but you didn't get a fair deal, all the same,&rdquo; said Garner.
- &ldquo;She's never looked for any sort of justification in your conduct; her
- poor brother's death stands like a draped wall between you, but I know you
- were not as black as you were painted. Carson, all the time you were
- keeping pace with Albert Warren you were blind to the gulf ahead of him
- and were simply glorying in his friendship&mdash;<i>because he was her
- brother</i>. Ah, I know that feeling!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson was silent, while Garner's gray eyes rested on him for a moment
- full of conviction, and then he nodded. &ldquo;Yes, I think that was it. It was
- my ruination, but I could not get away from the fascination of his
- companionship. He fairly worshipped her and used to talk of her constantly
- when we were together, and he&mdash;he sometimes told me things she kept
- back. He knew how I felt. I told him. Through him I seemed to be closer to
- her. But when the news came that he was dead, and when I met her at the
- funeral at the church, and caught her eye, I saw her shrink back in
- abhorrence. She wouldn't go out with me ever again after that, and was
- never exactly the same.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That was two years ago, my boy,&rdquo; Garner said, significantly, &ldquo;and your
- character has changed. You are a better, firmer man. In fact, it seems to
- me that your change dates from Albert Warren's death. But now I'm coming
- to the thing that prompted me to say all this. I met Major Warren in the
- post-office this morning. He was greatly excited. Carson, she has just
- written him that she is coming home for a long stay and the old gentleman
- is simply wild with delight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, she's coming, then!&rdquo; Dwight exclaimed, in surprise.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, and Keith and Bob and the rest of her adorers will go crazy over the
- news and want to celebrate it. I didn't tell them. I wanted you to know it
- first. There is one other thing. You know you can't tell whether there is
- anything in an idle report, but the gossips say she has perhaps met her
- fate down there. I've even heard his name&mdash;one Earle Sanders, a
- well-to-do cotton merchant of good standing in the business world. But
- I'll never believe she's engaged to him till the cards are out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I really think it may be true,&rdquo; Carson Dwight said, a firm, set
- expression about his lips. &ldquo;I've heard of him. He's a man of fine
- character and intellect. Yes, it may be true, Garner.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; and Garner drew himself up and folded his arms, &ldquo;if it should
- happen to be so, Carson, there would be only one thing to do, and that
- would be to grin and bear it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, that would be the only thing,&rdquo; Dwight made answer. &ldquo;She has a right
- to happiness, and it would have been wrong for her to have tied herself to
- me, when I was what I was, and when I am still as great a failure as I
- am.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned suddenly out onto the passage, and Garner heard his resounding
- tread as he walked away.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Poor old chap,&rdquo; Garner mused, as he leaned forward and looked at the
- threadbare toes of his slippers, &ldquo;if he weathers this storm he'll make a
- man right&mdash;if not, he'll go down with the great majority, the motley
- throng meant for God only knows what purpose.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VI.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0007" id="linkimage-0007"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9061.jpg" alt="9061 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9061.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- HE Warren homestead was in a turmoil of excitement over Helen's return.
- The ex-slaves of the family for miles around had assembled to celebrate
- the occasion in quite the ante-bellum fashion. The men and grown boys sat
- about the front lawn and on the steps of the long veranda and talked of
- the day Helen was born, of her childhood, of her beauty and numerous
- conquests, away from them, and of the bare possibility of her deigning to
- accept the hand of some one of her powerful and wealthy suitors.
- </p>
- <p>
- In her own chamber, a great square room with many windows, Helen, tall,
- graceful, with light-brown eyes and almost golden hair, was receiving the
- women and girls. She had brought a present suitable for each of them, as
- they knew she would, and the general rejoicing was equal to that of an
- old-time Georgia Christmas.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are all here,&rdquo; Helen smiled, as she looked about the room, &ldquo;except
- Mam' Linda. Is she not well?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yessum, she's well as common,&rdquo; Jennie, a yellow house-maid, said, &ldquo;as
- well as she been since Pete had dat scrimmage wid de White Caps. Missie,
- you gwine notice er gre't change in Mam' Lindy. Since dat turrible night,
- while she seem strong in de body, she looks powerful weak in de face en
- sperit. Unc' Lewis is worried about 'er. She des set in er cottage do' en
- rock back an' fo'th all day long. You done heard 'bout dat lambastin',
- 'ain't you, Missie?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, my father wrote me about it,&rdquo; Helen replied, an expression of
- sympathetic pain on her well-featured face, &ldquo;but he didn't tell me that
- mammy was taking it so hard.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He was tryin' ter keep you fum worryin',&rdquo; Jennie said, observantly.
- &ldquo;Marster knowed how much sto' you set by yo' old mammy. He was de maddest
- man you ever laid eyes on dat night, but he couldn't do nothin', fer it
- was all over, en dem white trash done skedaddle back whar dey come fum.&rdquo;.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And was Pete so much to blame?&rdquo; Helen asked, her voice shaking.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Blame fer de company he been keepin', Missie&mdash;dat's all; but what
- you gwine ter do wid er strappin' young nigger growin' up? It des like it
- was in de old day fo' de war. De niggers had to have deir places ter meet
- an' cut up shines. Dey been done too much of it at Ike Bowen's. De white
- folks dat lived round dar couldn't sleep at night. It was one long shindig
- or a fist-cuff scrap fum supper till daylight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I wish Mam' Linda would come to see me,&rdquo; Helen said. &ldquo;I'm anxious
- about her. If she isn't here soon I'll go to her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She's comin' right on, Missie,&rdquo; another negro girl said, &ldquo;but she tol'
- Unc' Lewis she was gwine ter wait till we all cleared out. She say you her
- baby, en she ain't gwine ter be bothered wid so many, when she see you de
- fust time after so long.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's exactly like her,&rdquo; Helen smiled. &ldquo;Well, you all must go now, and,
- Jennie, tell her I am dying to see her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The room was soon cleared of its chattering and laughing throng, and
- Linda, supported by her husband, a stalwart mulatto, came from her cottage
- behind the house and went up to Helen's room. She was short, rather
- portly, about half white, and for that reason had a remarkably intelligent
- face which bore the marks of a strong character. Entering the room, after
- sharply enjoining her husband to wait for her in the hall, she went
- straight up to Helen and laid her hand on the young lady's head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So I got my baby back once mo',&rdquo; she said, tenderly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I couldn't stay away, Mammy,&rdquo; Helen said, with an indulgent smile.
- &ldquo;After all, home is the sweetest place on earth&mdash;but you mustn't
- stand up; get a chair.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old woman obeyed, slowly placing the chair near that of her mistress
- and sitting down. &ldquo;I'm glad you got back, honey,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I loves all
- my white folks, but you is my baby, en I never could talk to de rest of um
- lak I kin ter you. Oh, honey, yo' old mammy has had lots en lots er
- trouble!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know, Mammy, father wrote me about it, and I've heard more since I got
- here. I know how you love Pete.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Linda folded her arms on her breast and leaned forward till her elbows
- rested on her knees. Helen saw a wave of emotion shake her whole body as
- she straightened up and faced her with eyes that seemed melting in grief.
- &ldquo;Honey,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;folks said when de law come en give we all freedom dat
- de good day was at hand. It was ter be a time er plenty en joy fer black
- folks; but, honey, never while I was er slave did I had ter suffer what
- I'm goin' thoo now. In de old time marster looked after us; de lash never
- was laid on de back er one o' his niggers. No white pusson never dared to
- hit one of us, en yit now in dis day er glorious freedom, er whole gang of
- um come in de dead er night en tied my child wid ropes en tuck turn about
- lashin' 'im. Honey, sometimes I think dey ain't no Gawd fer a pusson wid
- one single streak er black blood in 'im. Ef dey is er Gawd fer sech es me,
- why do He let me pass thoo what been put on me? I heard dat boy's cryin'
- half er mile, honey, en stood in de flo' er my house en couldn't move,
- listenin' en listenin' ter his screams en dat lash failin' on 'im. Den dey
- let 'im loose en he come runnin' erlong de street ter find me&mdash;ter
- find his mammy, honey&mdash;his mammy who couldn't do nothin' fer 'im. En
- dar right at my feet he fell over in er faint. I thought he was dead en
- never would open his eyes ergin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And I wasn't here to comfort you!&rdquo; Helen said, in a tearful tone of
- self-reproach. &ldquo;You were alone through it all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I wasn't, honey. Thank de Lawd, dar is some er de right kind er white
- folks left. Marse Carson Dwight heard it all fum his room en come over. He
- raised Pete up en tuck 'im in an' laid 'im on de baid. He tuck 'im up in
- his arms, honey, young marster did, en set to work to bring 'im to. An'
- after de po' boy was easy en ersleep en de doctor gone off, Marse Carson
- come ter me en tuck my hand. 'Mam' Lindy,' he said, es pale as ef he'd
- been sick er long time, 'dis night's work has give me some'n' ter think
- erbout. De best white men in de Souf won't stan' fer dis. Sech things
- cayn't go on forever. Ef I go to de Legislature I'll see dat dey gwine ter
- pass laws ter pertect you faithful old folks.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Carson said that?&rdquo; Helen's voice was husky, her glance averted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, en he was dead in earnest, honey; he wasn't des talkin' ter comfort
- me. I know, kase I done hear suppen else dat happened since den.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What was that?&rdquo; Helen asked.
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;Why, dey say dat Marse Carson went straight down-town en tried ter find
-somebody dat was in de mob. He heard Dan Willis was among 'em&mdash;you know
-who he is, honey. He's er bad, desp'rate moonshine man. Well, Marse
-Carson spoke his mind about 'im, an' dared 'im out in de open. Unc'
-Lewis said Mr. Garner an' all Marse Carson's friends tried to stop
- 'im, kase it would go dead agin 'im in his 'lection, but Marse Carson
-wouldn't take back er word, en was so mad he couldn't hold in. En dat
-another hard thing to bear, honey,&rdquo; Linda went on. &ldquo;Des think, Marse
-Carson cayn't even try to help er po' old woman lak me widout ruinin'
-his own chances.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is it as serious as that?&rdquo; Helen asked, with deep concern.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, honey, he never kin win his race lessen he act diffunt. Dey say dat
- man Wiggin is laughin' fit ter kill hisse'f over de way he got de upper
- hold. I told Marse Carson des t'other day he mustn't do dat way, but he
- laughed in my face in de sweet way he always did have. 'Ef dey vote ergin
- me fer dat, Mam' Lindy,' he say, 'deir votes won't be worth much.' Marse
- Carson is sho got high principle, honey. His pa think he ain't worth much,
- but <i>he's</i> all right. You mark my words, he's gwine ter make a gre't
- big man&mdash;he gwine ter do dat kase he's got er tender heart in 'im, an
- ain't afeard of anything dat walk on de yeath. He may lose dis one
- 'lection, but he'll not stop. I know young white men, thoo en thoo, en I
- never y it seen er better one.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0008" id="linkimage-0008_"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0067.jpg" alt="0067 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0067.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have you&mdash;have you seen him recently?&rdquo; Helen asked, surprised at the
- catch in her voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, honey,&rdquo; the old woman said, plaintively; &ldquo;seem lak he know how
- I'm sufferin', en he been comin' over often en talkin' ter me'n Lewis.
- Seem lak he's so sad, honey, here late. Ain't you seed 'im yit, honey?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, he hasn't been over,&rdquo; Helen replied, rather awkwardly. &ldquo;He will come,
- though; he and I are good friends.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You gwine find 'im changed er lot, honey,&rdquo; the old woman said. &ldquo;Do you
- know, I don't believe he ever got over Marse Albert's death. He warn't ter
- blame 'bout dat, honey, dough I do believe he feel dat way. Seem lak we
- never kin fetch up Marse Albert's name widout Marse Carson git sad. One
- night here late when Lewis was talkin' 'bout when yo' pa went off en
- fetched young master home, Marse Carson hung his head en say: 'Mam' Lindy,
- I wish dat time could be go over ergin. I would act so diffunt. I never
- seed whar all dem scrapes was leadin' to. But it learned me a lesson, Mam'
- Lindy.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's it,&rdquo; Helen said, bitterly, as if to herself; &ldquo;he survived. He has
- profited by the calamity, but my poor, dear brother&mdash;&rdquo; She went no
- further, for her voice broke and her eyes filled with tears.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't think erbout dat, honey,&rdquo; old Linda said, consolingly. &ldquo;You got yo'
- one great trouble lak I has, but you is at home wid we all now, en you
- must not be sad.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't intend to be, Mammy,&rdquo; Helen said, wiping her eyes on her
- handkerchief. &ldquo;We are going to try to do something to keep Pete out of
- trouble. Father thinks it is his associates that are to blame. We must try
- in future to keep him away from bad company.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dat what I want ter do, honey,&rdquo; the old woman said, &ldquo;en ef I des had
- somewhar ter send 'im so he could be away fum dis town I'd be powerful
- glad.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0009" id="linkimage-0009_"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9070.jpg" alt="9070 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9070.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- Helen anticipated, the young ladies of the town, her most intimate friends
- and former school-mates, came in a body that afternoon to see her. The
- reception formally opened in the great parlor down-stairs, but it was not
- many minutes before they all found themselves in Helen's chamber
- fluttering about and chattering like doves in their spring plumage.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's no use putting it off longer,&rdquo; Ida Tarpley, Helen's cousin,
- laughed; &ldquo;they are all bent on seeing your <i>things</i>, and they will
- simply spend the night here if you don't get them out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I think that would look so vain and silly in me,&rdquo; Helen protested,
- her color rising. &ldquo;I don't like to exhibit my wardrobe as if I were a
- dressmaker, or a society woman who is hard up and trying to dispose of
- them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The idea of your not doing it, dear,&rdquo; Mary King, a little blonde, said,
- &ldquo;when not one of us has seen a decent dress or hat since the summer
- visitors went away last fall.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Leave it to me,&rdquo; Ida Tarpley laughed. &ldquo;You girls get off the bed. I want
- something to lay them on. If it were only evening I'd make her put on that
- gown she wore at the Governor's ball. You remember what the <i>Constitution's</i>
- society reporter said about it. He said it was a poet's dream. If I ever
- get one it will be <i>in</i> a dream. You must really wear it to your
- dance, Helen.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>My</i> dance?&rdquo; Helen said, in surprise.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I hope I'm not telling secrets,&rdquo; Ida said; &ldquo;but I met Keith Gordon
- and Bob Smith in town as I came on. They had a list and were taking
- subscriptions from all the young men. They had already enough put down to
- buy a house and lot. They say they are going to give you the swellest
- dance that was eyer heard of. Bob said that it simply had to surpass
- anything you'd been to in Augusta or Atlanta. Expense is not to be
- considered. The finest band in Chattanooga has already been engaged; the
- refreshments are to be brought from there by a caterer and a dozen expert
- waiters. A carload of flowers have been ordered. It is to open with a
- grand march.&rdquo; Ida swung her hands and body comically to and fro as if in
- the cake walk, and bowed low. &ldquo;Nobody is to be allowed to dance with you
- who hasn't an evening suit on, and <i>then</i> only once. They are all
- crazy about you, Helen. I never could understand it. I've tried to copy
- the look you have in the eyes hundreds of times, but it won't have the
- slightest effect.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's only one explanation of it,&rdquo; Miss Wimberley, another girl,
- remarked; &ldquo;it is simply because she really likes them all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I really do, as for that,&rdquo; Helen said; &ldquo;and I think it is awfully
- nice of them to give me such a dance. It's enough to turn a girl's head.
- Well, if Ida really is going to pull out my things, I'll go down-stairs
- and make you a lemonade.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Later in the afternoon the young ladies had all gone except Ida Tarpley,
- who lingered with Helen on the veranda.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm glad the girls didn't have the bad taste to embarrass you by
- questioning you about Mr. Sanders,&rdquo; Ida said. &ldquo;Of course, it is all over
- town. Uncle spoke of the possibility of it to some one and that put it
- afloat. I'm anxious to see him, Helen. I know he must be nice&mdash;everything,
- in fact, that a man ought to be, for you always had high ideals.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen flushed almost angrily, and she drew herself erect and stood quite
- rigid, looking at her cousin.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ida,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I don't like what you have just said.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, dearest, I'm sorry, but I thought&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's the trouble about a small town,&rdquo; Helen went on. &ldquo;People take such
- liberties with you, and about the most delicate things. Down in Augusta my
- friends never would think of saying I was actually engaged to a man till
- it was announced. But here at home it is in every mouth before they have
- even seen the gentleman in question.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you really have been receiving constant attentions from Mr. Sanders
- for more than a year, haven't you, dear?&rdquo; Miss Tarpley asked, blandly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, but what of that?&rdquo; Helen retorted. &ldquo;He and I are splendid friends.
- He has been very kind and thoughtful of my comfort, and I like him. He is
- noble, sincere, and good. He extended the sweetest sympathy to me when I
- went down there under my great grief, and I never can forget it, but,
- nevertheless, Ida, I have not promised to marry him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I see, it is not actually settled yet,&rdquo; Miss Tarpley said. &ldquo;Well, I'm
- glad. I'm very, very glad.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are glad?&rdquo; Helen said, wonderingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I am. I'm glad because I don't want you to go away off down there
- and marry a stranger to us. I really hope something will break it up. I
- know Mr. Sanders must be awfully fond of you&mdash;any man would be who
- had a ghost of a chance of winning you&mdash;and I know your aunt has been
- doing all in her power to bring the match about&mdash;but I understand
- you, dear, and I am afraid you would not be happy.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why do you say that so&mdash;so positively?&rdquo; Helen asked, coldly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because,&rdquo; Ida said, impulsively, &ldquo;I don't believe a girl of your
- disposition ever could love in the right way more than once, and&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And what?&rdquo; Helen demanded, her proud lips compressed, her eyes flashing
- defiantly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I may be wrong, dear,&rdquo; Miss Tarpley went on, &ldquo;but if you were not
- actually in love before you went to Augusta, you were very near it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How absurd!&rdquo; Helen exclaimed, with a little angry toss of her head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you remember the night our set drove out to the Henderson party? I
- went with Mr. Garner and Carson Dwight took you? Oh, Helen, I met you and
- Carson walking together in the moonlight that evening under the
- apple-trees in the old meadow, and if ever a pair of human beings really
- loved each other you two must have done so that night. I saw it in his
- happy, triumphant face, and in the fact, Helen dear, that you allowed him
- to be with you so much, when you knew other admirers were waiting to see
- you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen looked down; her face was clouded over, her proud lip twitched.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ida,&rdquo; she said, tremulously, &ldquo;I don't want you ever again to mention
- Carson Dwight's name to me in&mdash;in that way. You have no right to.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I have,&rdquo; Ida protested, firmly. &ldquo;I have the right as a loyal friend
- to the best, most suffering, and noblest young man I ever knew. I read you
- like a book, dear. You really cared very, very much for Carson once, but
- after your great loss you never thought the same of him again.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, nor I never shall,&rdquo; Helen said, firmly. &ldquo;I admire him and shall treat
- him as a good friend when we meet, but that will be the end of it. Whether
- I cared for him or not, as girls care for young men, is neither here nor
- there. It is over with.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And all simply because he was a little wild at the time your poor brother&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop!&rdquo; Helen said; &ldquo;don't argue the matter. I can only now associate him
- with the darkest hour of my life. I'm tempted to tell you something, Ida,&rdquo;
- and Helen bowed her head for a moment, and then went on in an unsteady
- voice. &ldquo;When my poor brother's trunk was brought home, it was my duty to
- put the things it contained in order. There I found some letters to him,
- and one dated only two days before Albert's death was from&mdash;from
- Carson Dwight. I read only a portion of it, but it revealed a page in poor
- Albert's life that I had never read&mdash;never dreamed could be
- possible.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But Carson,&rdquo; Ida Tarpley exclaimed; &ldquo;what did <i>he</i> have to do with
- that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen swallowed the lump in her throat, and with a cold, steely gleam in
- her eyes she said, bitterly: &ldquo;He could have held out his hand with the
- superior strength you think he has and drawn the poor boy back from the
- brink, but he didn't. The words he wrote about it were light, flippant,
- and heartless. He treated the whole awful situation as a joke, as if&mdash;as
- if he <i>himself</i> were familiar with such unmentionable things.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, I begin to understand it all now!&rdquo; Ida sighed. &ldquo;That letter, coupled
- with Cousin Albert's awful death, was such a terrible shock that you
- cannot feel the same towards Carson. But oh, Helen, you would pity him if
- you knew him now as I do. He has never altered in his feelings towards
- you. In fact, it seems to me that he loves you even more deeply than ever.
- And, dear, if you had seen his patient efforts to make a better man of
- himself you'd not harbor such thoughts against him. You will understand
- Carson some day, but it may then be too late. I don't believe a woman ever
- has a real sweetheart but once. You may marry the man your aunt wants you
- to take, but your heart will some day turn back to the other. You will
- remember, too, and bitterly, that you condemned him for a youthful fault
- which you ought to have pardoned.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you think so, Ida?&rdquo; Helen asked, her soft, brown eyes averted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, and you'll remember, too, that while his other friends were trying
- to help him stick to his resolutions you turned against him. He's going to
- make a great and good man, Helen. I've known that for some time. He is
- having his troubles, but even they will help him to be stronger in the
- end. His greatest trial is going on right now, while folks are saying that
- you are going to marry another man. Pshaw! you may say what you like about
- Mr. Sanders' good qualities, but I know I shall not like him,&rdquo; concluded
- Ida, with a smile, as she turned to go. &ldquo;He is a usurper, and I'm dead
- against him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen remained on the veranda after her cousin had left till the twilight
- gathered about her. She was about to go in, as it was near tea-time, when
- she heard a grumbling voice down the street and saw old Uncle Lewis
- returning from town, driving his son, the troublesome Peter, before him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You go right thoo dat gate on back ter dat house, you black imp er
- 'straction!&rdquo; he thundered, &ldquo;er I'll tek er boa'd en lambast de life out'n
- you. Here it is night-time en you ain't chop no stove-wood fer de big
- house kitchen, en been lyin' roun' dem cotton wagons raisin' mo' rows wid
- dem mountain white men.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter, Uncle Lewis?&rdquo; Helen asked, as the boy sulkily passed
- round the corner of the house and the old man, out of breath, paused at
- the steps.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Missy, you don't know what me'n' Mam' Lindy got to bear up under. We
- don't know how ter manage dat boy. Lindy right now is out'n 'er head wid
- worry. Buck Black come tol' us 'bout an hour ago dat Pete en some mo'
- triflin' niggers was down at de warehouse sassin' some mountain white men.
- Buck heard Pete say dat Johnson en his gang couldn't whip him ergin dout
- gittin' in trouble, en dey was in er inch of er big row when de marshal
- busted it up. Buck ain't no fool, fer a black man, Missy, en he told me'n'
- Lindy ef we don't manage ter git Pete out'n de company he keeps dat dem
- white men will sho string 'im up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, something has to be done, that's plain,&rdquo; said Helen,
- sympathetically. &ldquo;I know Mam' Linda must be worrying, and I'll go down to
- see her this evening. It doesn't seem to me that a town like this is best
- for a boy like Pete. I'll speak to father about it, Uncle Lewis. It won't
- do to have Mammy bothered like this. It will kill her. She is not strong
- enough to stand it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Missy,&rdquo; the old man said, &ldquo;I wish you would try ter do some'n'. Me'n'
- Lindy is sho at de end er our rope.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I promise you I'll do all I can, Uncle Lewis,&rdquo; Helen said, and,
- much relieved, the old negro trudged homeward.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VIII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0010" id="linkimage-0010"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9078.jpg" alt="9078 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9078.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- LOCAL institution in which &ldquo;the gang&rdquo; was more or less interested was
- known as the &ldquo;Darley Club.&rdquo; It occupied the entire upper floor of a
- considerable building on the main street, and had been organized,
- primarily, by the older married men of the town to give the young men of
- the best families a better meeting-place than the bar-rooms and offices of
- the hotels. At first the older men looked in occasionally to see that the
- rather rigid rules of the institution were being kept. But men of
- middle-age and past, who have comfortable firesides, are not fond of the
- noisy gatherings of their original prototypes, and the Club was soon left
- to the management of the permanent president, Mr. Wade Tingle, editor of
- the <i>Headlight</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- Wade endeavored, to the best of his genial nature, to enforce all rules,
- collect all dues, and impose all fines, but he wasn't really the man for
- the place. He accepted what cash was handed to him, trying to remember the
- names of the payers and amounts as he wrote his editorials, political
- notes, and social gossip, ending up at the end of each month with no money
- at all to pay the rent or the wages of the negro factotum. However, there
- was always an outlet from this embarrassment, for Wade had only to draw a
- long face as he met some of the well-to-do stay-at-homes and say that
- &ldquo;club expenses were somehow running short,&rdquo; and without question the
- shortage was made up. Wade had tried to be officially stern, too, on
- occasion. Once when Keith Gordon had violated what Wade termed club
- discipline, not to say club etiquette, Wade threatened to be severe. But
- it happened to be a point upon which there was a division of opinion, and
- Keith also belonged to &ldquo;the gang.&rdquo; It had happened this way: Keith had a
- certain corner in the Club reading-room where he was wont to write his
- letters of an evening, and coming down after supper one night he
- discovered that the attendant had locked the door and gone off to supper.
- Keith was justly angry. He stood at the door for a few minutes, and then,
- being something of an athlete, he stepped back, made a run the width of
- the sidewalk, and broke the lock, left the door hanging on a single hinge,
- and went up and calmly wrote his letters. As has been intimated, Wade took
- a serious view of this violation of club dignity, his main contention
- being that Keith ought to have the lock repaired and the hinge replaced.
- However, Keith just as firmly stood on his rights, his contention being
- that a member of the Club in good standing could not be withheld from his
- rights by the mere carelessness of a negro or a twenty-five cent cast-iron
- lock. So it was that, in commemoration of the incident, the door remained
- without the lock and hinge for many a day.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was in this building that the grand ball in honor of Helen Warren's
- home-coming was to be given. During the entire preceding day Bob Smith and
- Keith Gordon worked like happy slaves. The floor had been roughened by
- roller-skating, and a carpenter with plane and sand-paper was smoothing
- it, Bob giving it its finishing touch by whittling sperm candles over it
- and rubbing in the shavings with the soles of his shoes as he pirouetted
- about, his right arm curved around an imaginary waist. The billiard-tables
- were pushed back against the wall, the ladies' dressing-rooms thoroughly
- scoured and put in order, and the lamps cleaned and trimmed. Keith had
- brought down from his home some fine oil-paintings, and these were hung
- appropriately. But Keith's <i>chef-d'ouvre</i> of arrangement and
- decoration was a happy inspiration, and he was enjoining it on the
- initiated ones to keep it as a surprise for Helen. He had once heard her
- say that her favorite flower was the wild daisy, and as they were now in
- bloom, and grew in profusion in the fields around the town, Keith had
- ordered several wagon-loads of them gathered, and now the walls of the
- ballroom were fairly covered with them. Graceful festoons of the flowers
- hung from the ceiling, draped the doorways, and rose in beautiful mounds
- on the white-clothed refreshment-tables.
- </p>
- <p>
- As a special favor he admitted Carson Dwight in at the carefully guarded
- door at dusk on the evening of the ball, first drawing down the blinds and
- lighting the candles and lamps that his chum might have the full benefit
- of the scene as it would strike Helen on her arrival.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Isn't that simply superb?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;Do you reckon they gave her
- anything prettier while she was down there? I don't believe it, Carson. I
- think this is the dandiest room a girl ever tripped a toe in.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it's all right,&rdquo; Dwight said, admiringly. &ldquo;It is really great, and
- she will appreciate it keenly. She is that way.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think so myself,&rdquo; said Keith. &ldquo;I've been nervous all day, though, old
- man. I've been watching every train.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Afraid the band wouldn't come?&rdquo; asked Dwight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, those coons can be depended on; they will be down in full force with
- the best figure-caller in the South. No, I was afraid, though, that Helen
- might have written to that Augusta chump, and that he would come up. That
- certainly would give the thing cold feet.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; Carson exclaimed; &ldquo;I see.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The dear girl wouldn't rub it in on us to that extent, old man,&rdquo; Keith
- said. &ldquo;I know it now. She really may be engaged to him, and she may not,
- but she knows how we feel, and it's bully of her not to invite him. It
- would really have been a wet blanket to the whole business. We'd have to
- treat him decently, as a visitor, you know, but I'd rather have taken
- castor-oil for my part of it. All the gang except you were over to see her
- Sunday afternoon; why didn't you go?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, you know I live only next door, with an open gate between, and I
- thought I'd better give my place to you fellows who don't have my
- opportunity. I've already seen her. In fact, she ran over to see my mother
- yesterday.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The ball was in full swing when Carson arrived that night. The street in
- front of the club was crowded with carriages, buggies, and livery-stable
- &ldquo;hacks.&rdquo; The introductory grand march was in progress, and when Carson
- went to the improvised dressing-room in charge of Skelt to check his hat
- he found Garner standing before a mirror tugging at the lapels of an
- evening coat and trying to adjust a necktie which kept climbing higher
- than it should. Darley was just at the point in its post-bellum struggle
- where evening dress for men was a thing more of the luxurious past than
- the stern present, and Dwight readily saw that his partner had persuaded
- himself for once to don borrowed plumage.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter?&rdquo; Carson asked, as he thrust his hat-check into the
- pocket of his immaculate white waistcoat.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, the damn thing don't fit!&rdquo; said Garner, in high disgust. &ldquo;I know now
- that my father has a hump, or did have when he ordered this suit for his
- wedding-trip. The tailor who designed this <i>costeem de swaray</i> tried
- to help him out, but he has transferred the hump to me by other means than
- heredity. Look how the back of it sticks out from my neck!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's because you twist your body to see it in the glass,&rdquo; said Carson,
- consolingly. &ldquo;It's not so bad when you stand straight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a case of not seeing others as they see you, eh?&rdquo; Garner said,
- better satisfied. &ldquo;I haven't taken a chew of tobacco to-night. I wouldn't
- splotch this shirt for the world. I couldn't spit farther than an inch
- with this collar on, anyway. She's holding the reel for me. I can't dance
- anything else, but I can go through that pretty well if I get at the end
- and watch the others. You'd better hurry up and see her card. There is a
- swell gang coming on the ten-o'clock train from Atlanta, and they all know
- her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was during the interval following the third number on the programme
- that Carson met Helen promenading with Keith and offered her his arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, isn't it simply superb?&rdquo; she said, when Keith had bowed himself away
- and they had joined the other strollers round the big, flower-perfumed
- room. &ldquo;Carson, really I actually cried for joy just now in the
- dressing-room. I declare I never want to go away from home again. I'll
- never have such devoted friends as these.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is nice of you to look at it that way, Helen,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;after the gay
- time you have had in Augusta and other cities.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At least it is honest and sincere here at home,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;while
- down there it is&mdash;well, full of strife, social competition, and
- jealousies. I really; got homesick and simply had to come back.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We are simply delighted to have you again,&rdquo; he said, almost fearing to
- look upon her, for in her exquisite evening gown and the proud poise of
- her head she seemed more beautiful and imperious, and farther removed from
- his hopes than he had thought her even in the darkest hours of her first
- refusal to condone his fatal offence.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was looking straight into his eyes with a thoughtful, questioning
- stare, when she said: &ldquo;They all seem the same, Carson, except you. Bob
- Smith, Keith, and even Mr. Garner are just like I left them, but somehow
- you are altered. You look so much older, so much more serious. Is it
- politics that is weighing you down&mdash;making you worry?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he laughed, evasively, &ldquo;politics is not exactly the easiest game
- in the world, and the bare fear that I may not succeed, after all, is
- enough to make a fellow of my temperament worry. It seems to be my last
- throw of the dice, Helen. My father will lose all faith in me if this does
- not go through.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I know it is serious,&rdquo; the girl said. &ldquo;Keith and Mr. Garner have
- talked to me about it. They say they have never seen you so much absorbed
- in anything before. You really must win, Carson&mdash;you simply must!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But this is no time to talk over sordid politics,&rdquo; he said, with a smile.
- &ldquo;This is your party and it must be made delightful.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I have my worries, too,&rdquo; she said, gravely. &ldquo;I felt a queer twinge of
- conscience to-night when all the servants came to see me before I left
- home. They were all so happy except Mam' Linda. She tried to act like the
- rest, but, Carson, her trouble about that worthless boy is actually
- killing the dear old woman. She has her pride, too, and it has been
- wounded to the quick. She was always proud of the fact that my father
- never had whipped one of his slaves. I've heard her boast of it a hundred
- times; and now that she no longer belongs to us in reality, and her only
- child was beaten so cruelly, she simply can't get over it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I knew she felt that way,&rdquo; Dwight said, sympathetically.
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen's hand tightened unconsciously on his arm as they were passing by
- the corner containing the orchestra. &ldquo;Do you know,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;Mam' Linda
- told me that of all the people who had been to see her since then that you
- had been the kindest, most thoughtful, the most helpful? Carson, that was
- very, very sweet of you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was only electioneering,&rdquo; he said, with a flush. &ldquo;I was after Uncle
- Lewis's vote and Mam' Linda's influence.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, you were not,&rdquo; Helen declared. &ldquo;It was pure, unadulterated
- unselfishness on your part. You were sorry for her and for Uncle Lewis and
- even Pete, who certainly needed punishment of some sort for the way he's
- been conducting himself. Yes, it was only your good heart. I know that,
- for several persons have told me you have even gone so far as to let the
- affair hamper you in your political career. Oh, I know all about what your
- opponent is saying, and I know mountain people well enough to know you
- have given him a powerful weapon. They are terribly wrought up over the
- race troubles, and it would be easy enough for them to misunderstand your
- exact feeling. Oh, Carson, you must not let even Mam' Linda's trouble
- stand between you and your high aim. Taking up her cause will perhaps not
- do a bit of good, for no one person can solve so vital a problem as that
- is, and your agitation of it may wreck your last hope.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've promised to keep my mouth shut, if Dan Willis and men of his sort
- will not stay right at my heels with their threats. My campaign managers&mdash;the
- gang, who hold a daily caucus at the den and lay down my rules of conduct&mdash;have
- exacted that much from me on the penalty of letting me go by the board if
- I disobey.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The dear boys!&rdquo; Helen exclaimed. &ldquo;I like every one of them, they are so
- loyal to you. The close friendship of you all for one another is simply
- beautiful.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Coming back to the inevitable Pete,&rdquo; Dwight remarked, a few minutes
- later. &ldquo;I've been watching him since he was whipped, and I know he is in
- great danger of getting even more deeply into trouble. He has a stupidly
- resentful disposition, as many of his race have, and he is going around
- making surly threats about Johnson, Wiggin, and others. If he keeps that
- up and they get hold of it he will certainly get into serious trouble.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My father was speaking of that to-night,&rdquo; Helen said. &ldquo;And he was
- thinking if there were any way of getting the boy away from his idle town
- associates that it might prevent trouble and ease Mam' Linda's mind.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was thinking of that the other day when I saw Uncle Lewis searching for
- him among the idle negroes,&rdquo; said Carson; &ldquo;and I have an idea.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, you have? What is it?&rdquo; Helen asked, eagerly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, Pete always has seemed to like me and take my advice, and as there
- is, plenty of work on my farm for such a hand as he is I could give him a
- good place and wages over there where he'd be practically removed from his
- present associates.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Splendid, splendid!&rdquo; Helen cried; &ldquo;and will you do it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, certainly, and right away,&rdquo; Carson answered. &ldquo;If you will have Mam'
- Linda send him down to me in the morning I'll give him some instructions
- and a good sharp talk, and I'll make my overseer at the farm put him to
- work.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, it is splendid!&rdquo; Helen declared. &ldquo;It will be such good news for Mam'
- Linda. She'd rather have him work for you than any one in the world.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There comes Wade to claim his dance,&rdquo; Dwight said, suddenly; &ldquo;and I must
- be off.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where are you going?&rdquo; she asked, almost regretfully.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To the office to work on political business&mdash;dozens and dozens of
- letters to answer. Then I'm coming back for my waltz with you. I sha'n't
- fail.&rdquo; And as he put on his hat and threaded his way through the whirling
- mass of dancers down to the street, he recalled with something of a shock
- that not once in their talk had he even <i>thought</i> of his rival. He
- slowed up in the darkness and leaned against a wall. There was a strange
- sinking of his heart as he faced the grim reality that stretched out
- drearily before him. She was, no doubt, to be the wife of another man. He
- had lost her. She was not for him, though there in the glare of the
- ballroom, amid the sensuous strains of music, in the perfume of the
- flowers dying in her service, she had seemed as close to him in heart,
- soul, and sympathy as the night he and she&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had reached his office, a little one-story brick building in the row of
- lawyers' offices on the side street leading from the post-office to the
- courthouse, and he unlocked the door and went in and lighted the little
- murky lamp on his desk and pulled down a package of unanswered letters.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes, he must work&mdash;work with that awful pain in his breast, the dry,
- tightening sensation in his throat, the maddening vision of her dazzling
- beauty and grace and sweetness before him. He dipped his pen, drew the
- paper towards him, and began to write: &ldquo;My dear Sir,&mdash;In receiving
- the cordial assurances of your support in the campaign before me, I desire
- to thank you most heartily and to&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He laid the pen down and leaned back. &ldquo;I can't do it, at least not
- to-night,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Not while she is there looking like that and with my
- waltz to come, and yet it must be done. I've lost her, and I am only
- making it harder to bear. Yes, I must work&mdash;work!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The pen went into the ink again. On the still night air came the strains
- of music, the mellow, sing-song voice of the figure-caller in the &ldquo;square&rdquo;
- dance, the whir and patter of many feet.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IX.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0011" id="linkimage-0011"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9089.jpg" alt="9089 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9089.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- EAVING Carson Dwight, Wade Tingle, and Bob Smith chatting about the ball
- in the den the next morning, Garner went to the office, bit off a chew of
- tobacco, and plunged into work with a vigor which indicated that he was
- almost ashamed of his departure from his beaten track into the unusual
- fields of social gayety. He still wore the upright collar and white
- necktie of the night before, but the hitherto carefully guarded expanse of
- shirt-front was already in imminent danger of losing all that had once
- recommended it as a presentable garment.
- </p>
- <p>
- With his small hand well spread over the page of the book he was
- consulting, he had become oblivious to his surroundings when suddenly a
- man stood in the doorway. He was tall and gaunt and wore a broad-brimmed
- hat, a cotton checked shirt, jean trousers supported by a raw-hide belt,
- and a pair of tall boots which, as he stood fiercely eying Garner, he
- angrily lashed with his riding-whip. It was Dan Willis. His face was
- slightly flushed from drink, and his eyes had the glare even his best
- friends had learned to tear and tried to avoid.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whar's that that dude pardner o' yourn?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, you mean Dwight!&rdquo; Garner had had too much experience in the handling
- of men to change countenance over any sudden turn of affairs, either for
- or against his interests, and he had, also, acquired admirable skill in
- most effective temporizing. &ldquo;Why, let me see, Dan,&rdquo; he went on, after he
- had paused for fully a moment, carefully inspected the lines he was
- reading, frowned as if not quite satisfied therewith, and then slowly
- turned down a leaf. &ldquo;Let me think. Oh, you want to see Carson! Sit down;
- take a chair.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't want to set down!&rdquo; Willis thundered. &ldquo;I want to see that damned
- dude, and I want to see him right off.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, that's it!&rdquo; said Garner. &ldquo;You are in a <i>hurry!</i>&rdquo; And then, from
- the rigid setting of his jaw, it was plain that the lawyer had decided on
- the best mode of handling the specimen glowering down upon him. &ldquo;Oh yes, I
- remember now, Willis, that you were loaded up a few nights ago looking for
- that chap. Now, advice is cheap&mdash;that is, the sort I'm going to give
- you. Under ordinary circumstances I'd charge a fee for it. My advice to
- you is to straddle that horse of yours and get out of this town. You are
- looking for trouble&mdash;great, big, far-reaching trouble.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You hit the nail that pop, Bill Garner,&rdquo; the mountaineer snorted. &ldquo;I'm
- expectin' to git trouble, or <i>give</i> trouble, an' I hain't goin' to
- lose time nuther. This settlement was due several days ago, but got put
- off.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Look here, Willis&rdquo;&mdash;Garner stood up facing him&mdash;&ldquo;you may not be
- a fool, but you are acting powerfully like one. You are letting that
- measly little candidate for the legislature make a cat's-paw of you.
- That's what you're doing. He knows, if he can get up a shooting-scrap
- between you and my pardner over that negro-whipping business, it will turn
- a few mountain votes his way. If you get shot, Wiggin will have more
- charges to make; and if Carson was to get the worst of it, the boy would
- be clean out of the skunk's way. You and Wiggin are both in bad business.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, that's <i>my</i> lookout!&rdquo; the mountaineer growled, beside himself
- in rage. &ldquo;Carson Dwight said I was with Johnson the night the gang came in
- and whipped them coons, and&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you <i>were</i>,&rdquo; said Garner, as suddenly as if he were
- browbeating a witness. &ldquo;What's the use to lie about it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lie&mdash;you say I&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I said I didn't <i>want</i> you to lie about it,&rdquo; said Garner, calmly. &ldquo;I
- know half the mob, and respect most of them. I have an idea that some of
- my own kinsfolk was along that night. They thought they were doing right
- and acting in the best interests of the community. That's neither here nor
- there. The men that were licked were negroes, and most of them bad ones at
- that, but when a big, strapping man of your stamp comes with blood in his
- eye and a hunk of metal on his hip, looking for the son of an old
- Confederate soldier, who is a Democratic candidate for the legislature,
- and a good all-round white citizen, why, I say that is the time to call a
- halt, and to call it out loud! I happen to know a few of the grand jury,
- and if there is trouble of a serious nature in this town to-day, I can
- personally testify to enough deliberation in your voice and eye this
- morning to jerk your neck out of joint.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What the hell do I care for you or your law?&rdquo; Dan Willis snorted. &ldquo;It's
- what that damned dude said about <i>me</i> that he's got to swallow, and
- if he's in this town I'll find him. A fellow told me if he wasn't here
- he'd be in Keith Gordon's room. I don't know whar that is, but I kin find
- out.&rdquo; Turning abruptly, Willis strode out into the street again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The devil certainly is to pay now,&rdquo; Garner said, with his deepest frown
- as he closed the law-book, thrust it back into its dusty niche in his
- bookcase, and put on his hat. &ldquo;Carson is still up there with those boys,
- and that fellow may find him any minute. Carson won't take back a thing.
- He's as mad about the business as Willis is. I wonder if I can possibly
- manage to keep them apart.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- On his way to the den he met Pole Baker standing on the corner of the
- street by a load of wood, which Pole had brought in to sell. Hurriedly,
- Garner explained the situation, ending by asking the farmer if he could
- see any way of getting Willis out of town.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I couldn't work him myself,&rdquo; Baker said, &ldquo;fer the dern skunk hain't any
- more use fer me than I have fer him, but I reckon I kin put some of his
- pals onto the job.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, go ahead, Pole,&rdquo; Garner urged. &ldquo;I'll run up to the room and try to
- detain Carson. For all you do, don't let Willis come up there.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Garner found the young men still in the den chatting about the ball and
- Carson's campaign.
- </p>
- <p>
- Wade Tingle sat at the table with several sheets of paper before him, upon
- which, in a big, reporter's hand, he had been writing a glowing account of
- &ldquo;the greatest social event&rdquo; in the history of the town.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've got a corking write-up, Bill,&rdquo; he said, enthusiastically. &ldquo;I've just
- been reading it to the gang. It is immense. Miss Helen sent me a full
- memorandum of what the girls wore, and, for a green hand, I think I have
- dressed 'em up all right.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The only criticism I made on it, Garner,&rdquo; spoke up Keith from his bed in
- the corner, where he lay fully dressed, &ldquo;is that Wade has ended all of
- Helen's descriptions by adding, 'and diamonds.' I'll swear I'm no critic
- of style in writing, but that eternal 'and diamonds, and diamonds, and
- diamonds,' at the end of every paragraph, sounds so monotonous that it
- gets funny. He even had Miss Sally Ware's plain black outfit tipped off
- with 'and diamonds.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I look at it this way, Bill,&rdquo; Wade said, earnestly, as Garner sat
- down, &ldquo;Of course, the girls who had them on would not like to see them
- left out, for they are nice things to have, and, on the other hand, those
- who were short in that direction would feel sorter out of it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think if he had just written 'jewels' once in awhile,&rdquo; Keith said, &ldquo;it
- would sound all right, and leave something to the imagination.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That might help,&rdquo; Garner said, his troubled glance on Carson's rather
- grave face; &ldquo;but see that you don't write it 'jewelry.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'll accept the amendment,&rdquo; Wade said, as he began to scratch his
- manuscript and rewrite.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson Dwight stood up. &ldquo;Did you leave the office open?&rdquo; he asked Garner.
- &ldquo;I've got to shape up that Holcolm deed and consult the records.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let it go for a while. I want to look it over first,&rdquo; Garner said, rather
- suddenly. &ldquo;Sit down. I want to talk to you about the&mdash;the race.
- You've got a ticklish proposition before you, old boy, and I'd like to see
- you put it through.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hear, hear!&rdquo; cried Keith, sitting up on the edge of his bed. &ldquo;Balls and
- what girls wear belong to the regular run of life, but when the chief of
- the gang is about to be beaten by a scoundrel who will hesitate at
- nothing, it's time to be wide awake.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's it,&rdquo; said Garner, his brow ruffled, his ear open to sounds
- without, his uneasy eyes on the group around him. And for several minutes
- he held them where they sat, listening to his wise and observant views of
- the matter in hand. Suddenly, while he was in the midst of a remark, a
- foot-fall sounded on the long passage without. It was heavy, loud, and
- striding. Garner paused, rose, went to the bureau, and from the top drawer
- took out a revolver he always kept either there or in his desk at the
- office. There was a firm whiteness about his lips which was new to his
- friends.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Carson,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;have you got your gun?&rdquo; and he stood staring at the
- doorway.
- </p>
- <p>
- A shadow fell on the floor; a man entered. It was Pole Baker, and he
- looked around him in surprise, his inquiring stare on Garner's unwonted
- mien and revolver.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, it's you!&rdquo; Garner exclaimed. &ldquo;Ah, I thought&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I come to tell you that&mdash;&rdquo; Baker hesitated, as if uncertain
- whether he was betraying confidence, and then catching Garner's warning
- glance, he said, non-committally: &ldquo;Say, Bill, that feller you and me was
- talkin' about has jest gone home. I reckon you won't get yore money out of
- him to-day.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, well, it was a small matter, anyway, Pole,&rdquo; Garner said, in a tone of
- appreciative relief, as he put the revolver back in the drawer and closed
- it. &ldquo;I'll mention it to him the next time he's in town.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say, what was the matter with you just now, Garner?&rdquo; Wade Tingle asked
- over the top of his manuscript. &ldquo;I thought you were going to ask Carson to
- fight a duel.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But with his hand on Dwight's arm Garner was moving to the door. &ldquo;Come on,
- lot's get to work,&rdquo; he said, with a deep breath and a grateful side glance
- at Baker.
- </p>
- <p>
- In front of the office one of Carson's farm wagons drawn by a pair of
- mules was standing. Tom Hill-yer, Carson's overseer and general manager,
- sat on the seat, and behind him stood Pete Warren, ready for his stay in
- the country.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Miss Helen's made quick work of it, I see,&rdquo; Carson remarked. &ldquo;She's
- determined to get that rascal out of temptation.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You ought to give him a sharp talking to,&rdquo; said Garner. &ldquo;He's got
- entirely too much lip for his own good. Skelt told me this morning that if
- Pete doesn't dry up some of that gang will hang him before he is a month
- older. He doesn't know any better, and means nothing by it, but he has
- already made open threats against Johnson and Willis. You understand those
- men well enough to know that in such times as these a negro can't do that
- with impunity.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I agree with you, and I'll stop and speak to him now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When Carson came in and sat down at his desk, a few moments later, Garner
- looked across at him and smiled.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You certainly let him off easy,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I could have thrown a
- Christmas turkey down the scamp's throat through that grin of his. I saw
- you run your hand in your pocket and knew he was bleeding you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, well, I reckon I'm a failure at that sort of thing,&rdquo; Dwight admitted,
- with a sheepish smile. &ldquo;I started in by saying that he must not be so
- foolhardy as to make open threats against any of those men, and he said:
- 'Looky here, Marse Carson, dem white rapscallions cut gashes in my body
- deep enough ter plant corn in, an' I ain't gwine ter love 'em fer it. <i>You</i>
- wouldn't, you know you wouldn't.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And he had you there,&rdquo; Garner said, grimly. &ldquo;Well, they may say what they
- please up North about our great problem, but nothing but time and the good
- Lord can solve it. You and I can tell that negro to keep his mouth shut
- from sunup till sun-down, but I happen to know that he had a remote white
- ancestor that was the proudest, hardest fighter that ever swung a sword.
- Some of the rampant agitators say that deportation is the only solution.
- Huh! if you deported a lot of full-blood blacks along with such chaps as
- this one, it would be only a short time before the yellow ones would have
- the rest in bondage, and so history would be going backward instead of
- forward. I guess it's going forward right now if we only had the patience
- to see it that way.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER X.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0012" id="linkimage-0012"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9098.jpg" alt="9098 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9098.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- |NE beautiful morning near the first of June, as Carson was strolling on
- the upper veranda at home, waiting for the breakfast-bell, Keith Gordon
- came by on his horse on his way to town.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Heard the news?&rdquo; he called out, as he reined in at the gate and leaned on
- the neck of his mount.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; what's up?&rdquo; Carson asked, and as he spoke he saw Helen Warren emerge
- from the front door of her father's house and step down among the dew-wet
- rose-bushes that bordered the brick walk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Horrible enough in all reason,&rdquo; Keith replied. &ldquo;There's been a
- cold-blooded murder over near your farm. Abe Johnson, who led that mob,
- you know, and his wife were killed by some negro with an axe. The whole
- country is up in arms and crazy with excitement.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wait, I'll come right down,&rdquo; Carson said, and he disappeared into the
- house. And when he came out a moment later he found Helen on the sidewalk
- talking to Keith, and from her grave face he knew she had overheard what
- had been said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Isn't it awful?&rdquo; she said to Carson, as he came out at the gate. &ldquo;Of
- course, it is the continuation of the trouble here in town.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How do they know a negro did it?&rdquo; Carson asked, obeying the natural
- tendency of a lawyer to get at the facts.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It seems,&rdquo; answered Gordon, &ldquo;that Mrs. Johnson lived barely long enough
- after the neighbors got there to say that it was done by a mulatto, as
- well as she could see in the darkness. In their fury, the people are
- roughly handling every yellow negro in the neighborhood. They say the
- darkies are all hiding out in the woods and mountains.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then the conversation paused, for old Uncle Lewis, who was at work with a
- pair of garden-sheafs behind some rose-bushes close by, uttered a groan
- and, wide-eyed and startled, came towards them.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's awful, awful, awful!&rdquo; they heard him say. &ldquo;Oh, my Gawd, have mercy!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, Uncle Lewis, what's the matter?&rdquo; Helen asked, in sudden concern and
- wonder over his manner and tone.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, missy, missy!&rdquo; he groaned, as he shook his head despondently. &ldquo;My boy
- over dar 'mongst 'em right now. Oh, my Lawd! I know what dem white folks
- gwine ter say fust thing, kase Pete didn't had no mo' sense 'an ter&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop, Lewis!&rdquo; Carson said, sharply. &ldquo;Don't be the first to implicate your
- own son in a matter as serious as this is.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I ain't, marster!&rdquo; the old man groaned, &ldquo;but I know dem white folks done
- it 'fo' dis.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm afraid you are right, Lewis,&rdquo; Keith said, sympathetically. &ldquo;He may be
- absolutely innocent, but, since his trouble with that mob, Pete has really
- talked too much. Well, I must be going.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As Keith was riding away, old Lewis, muttering softly to himself and
- groaning, turned towards the house.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where are you going?&rdquo; Helen called out, as she still lingered beside
- Carson.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm gwine try to keep Linda fum hearin' it right now,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Ef Pete
- git in it, missy, it gwine ter kill yo' old mammy.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm afraid it will,&rdquo; Helen said. &ldquo;Do what you can, Uncle Lewis. I'll be
- down to see her in a moment.&rdquo; As the old man tottered away, Helen looked
- up and caught Carson's troubled glance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wish I were a man,&rdquo; she said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why?&rdquo; he inquired.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because I'd take a strong stand here in the South for law and order at
- any cost. We have a good example in this very thing of what our condition
- means. Pete may be innocent, and no doubt is, for I don't believe he would
- do a thing like that no matter what the provocation, and yet he hasn't any
- sort of chance to prove it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are right,&rdquo; Carson said. &ldquo;At such a time they would lynch him, if for
- nothing else than that he had dared to threaten the murdered man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Poor, poor old mammy!&rdquo; sighed Helen. &ldquo;Oh, it is awful to think of what
- she will suffer if&mdash;if&mdash;Carson, do you really think Pete is in
- actual danger?&rdquo; Dwight hesitated for a moment, and then he met her stare
- frankly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We may as well face the truth and be done with it,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;No negro
- will be safe over there now, and Pete, I am sorry to say, least of all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If he is guilty he may run away,&rdquo; she said, shortsightedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If he's guilty we don't <i>want</i> him to get away,&rdquo; Carson said,
- firmly. &ldquo;But I really don't think he had anything to do with it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen sighed. They had stepped back to the open gate, and there they
- paused side by side. &ldquo;How discouraging life is!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Carson, in
- planning to get Pete over there, you and I were acting on our purest,
- noblest impulses, and yet the outcome of our efforts may be the gravest
- disaster.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it seems that way,&rdquo; he responded, gloomily; &ldquo;but we must try to look
- on the bright side and hope for the best.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- On parting with Helen, Carson went into the big, old-fashioned
- dining-room, and after hurriedly drinking a cup of coffee he went down to
- his office. Along the main thoroughfare, on the street comers, and in
- front of the stores he found little groups of men with grave faces, all
- discussing the tragedy. More than once in passing he heard Pete's name
- mentioned, and for fear of being questioned as to what he thought about it
- he hurried on. Garner was an early riser, and he found him at his desk
- writing letters.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, from all accounts,&rdquo; Garner said, &ldquo;your man Friday seems to be in a
- ticklish place over there, innocent or not&mdash;that is, if he hasn't had
- the sense to skip out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Somehow, I don't think Pete is guilty,&rdquo; Carson said, as he sank into his
- big chair. &ldquo;He's not that stamp of negro.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I haven't made up my mind on that score,&rdquo; the other remarked. &ldquo;Up
- to the time he left here he seemed really harmless enough, but we don't
- know what may have taken place since then between him and Johnson. Funny
- we didn't think of the danger of sticking match to tinder like that. I
- admit I was in favor of sending him. Miss Helen was so pleased over it,
- too. I met her the other day at the post-office and she was telling me,
- with absolute delight, that Pete was doing well over there, working like
- an old-time cornfield darky, and behaving himself. Now, I suppose, she
- will be terribly upset.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson sighed. &ldquo;We blame the mountain people, in times of excitement, for
- acting rashly, and yet right here in this quiet town half the citizens
- have already made up their minds that Pete committed the crime. Think of
- it, Garner!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you see, it's pretty hard to imagine who <i>else</i> did it,&rdquo;
- Garner declared.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't agree with you,&rdquo; disputed Carson, warmly; &ldquo;when there are half a
- dozen negroes who were whipped just as Pete was and who have horrible
- characters. There's Sam Dudlow, the worst negro I ever saw, an ex-convict,
- and as full of devilment as an egg is of meat. I saw his scowling face the
- next day after he was whipped, and I never want to see it again. I'd hate
- to meet him in the dark, unarmed. He wasn't making open threats, as Pete
- was, but I'll bet he would have handled Johnson or Willis roughly if he
- had met either of them alone and got the advantage.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, we are not trying the case,&rdquo; Garner said, dryly; &ldquo;if we are, I
- don't know where the fees are to come from. Getting money out of an
- imaginary case is too much like a lawyer's first year under the shadow of
- his shingle.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XI.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0013" id="linkimage-0013"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9103.jpg" alt="9103 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9103.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- IMMEDIATELY on parting with Carson, Helen went down to Linda's cottage.
- Lewis was leaning over the little, low fence talking to a negro, who
- walked on as she drew near.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where is Mam' Linda?&rdquo; she asked, guardedly. &ldquo;In de house, missy,&rdquo; Lewis
- answered, pulling off his old slouch hat and wadding it tightly in his
- fingers. &ldquo;She 'ain't heard nothin' yit. Jim was des tellin' me er whole
- string er talk folks was havin' down on de street; but I told 'im not to
- let 'er hear it. Oh, missy, it gwine ter kill 'er. She cayn't stan' it.
- Des no longer 'n las' night she was settin' in dat do' talkin' 'bout how
- happy she was to hear Pete was doin' so well over on Marse Carson's place.
- She said she never would forget young marster's kindness to er old
- nigger'oman, en now&rdquo;&mdash;the old man spread out his hands in apathetic
- gesture before him&mdash;&ldquo;now you see what it come to!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But nothing serious has really happened to Pete yet,&rdquo; Helen had started
- to say, when the old man stopped her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hush, honey, she comin'!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a sound of a footstep in the cottage. Linda appeared in the
- doorway, and with a clouded face and disturbed manner invited her mistress
- into the cottage, placing a chair for the young lady, and dusting the
- bottom of it with her apron.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How do you feel this morning, mammy?&rdquo; Helen asked, as she sat down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm well emough in my <i>body</i>, honey&rdquo;&mdash;the old woman's face was
- averted&mdash;&ldquo;but dat ain't all ter a pusson in dis life. Ef des my body
- was all I had, I wouldn't be so bad off, but it's my <i>mind</i>, honey.
- I'm worried 'bout dat boy ergin. I had bad dreams las' night, en thoo 'em
- all he seemed ter be in some trouble. Den when I woke dis mawnin' en tried
- ter think 'twas only des er dream, I ain't satisfied wid de way all of um
- act. Lewis look quar out'n de eyes, en everybody dat pass erlong hatter
- stop en lead Lewis off down de fence ter talk. I ain't no fool, honey! I
- notice things when dey ain't natcherl. Den here you come 'fo' yo'
- breakfust-time. I've watched you, chile, sence you was in de cradle en
- know every bat er yo' sweet eyes. Oh, honey&rdquo;&mdash;Linda suddenly sat down
- and covered her face with her hands, pressing them firmly in&mdash;&ldquo;honey,&rdquo;
- she muttered, &ldquo;suppen's done gone wrong. I've knowed it all dis mawnin' en
- I'm actually afeard ter ax youall ter tell me. I&mdash;can't think of but
- one thing, I'm so muddled up, en dat is dat my boy done thowed up his work
- en gone away off somers wid bad company; en yit, honey&rdquo;&mdash;-she now
- rocked herself back and forth as if in torture and finished with a steady
- stare into Helen's face&mdash;&ldquo;dat cayn't be it. Dat ain't bad ernough ter
- mek Lewis act like he is, en&mdash;en&mdash;well, honey, you might es well
- come out wid it. I've had trouble, en I kin have mo'.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen sat pale and undecided, unable to formulate any adequate plan of
- procedure. At this juncture Lewis leaned in the doorway, and, as his
- wife's back was towards him, he could not see her face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want ter step down-town er minute, Lindy,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I'll be right
- back. I des want ter go ter de sto'. We're out er coffee, en&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Linda suddenly turned her dark, agonized face upon him. &ldquo;You are not goin'
- till you tell me what is gone wrong wid my child,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;What de
- matter wid Pete, Lewis?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man's surprised glance wavered between his Wife's face and
- Helen's. &ldquo;Why, Lindy, who say&mdash;&rdquo; he feebly began.
- </p>
- <p>
- But she stopped him with a gesture at once impatient and full of fear.
- &ldquo;Tell me!&rdquo; she said, firmly&mdash;&ldquo;tell me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Lewis shambled into the cottage and stood over her, a magnificent specimen
- of the manhood of his race. Helen's eyes were blinded by tears she could
- hot restrain.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Tain't tiothiri', Lindy, 'pon my word 'tain't nothin' but dis,&rdquo; he said,
- gently. &ldquo;Dar's been trouble over near Marse Carson's farm, but not one
- soul is done say Pete was in it&mdash;<i>not one soul</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What sort o' trouble?&rdquo; Linda pursued.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Er man en his wife was killed over dar in baid last night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What man en woman?&rdquo; Linda asked, her mouth falling open in suspense, her
- thick lip hanging.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Abe Johnson en his wife.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Linda leaned forward, her hands locked like things of iron between her
- knees. &ldquo;Who done it, Lewis?&mdash;who killed um?&rdquo; she gasped.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nobody knows dat yit, Lindy. Mrs. Johnson lived er little while after de
- neighbors come, en she said it was er&mdash;she said it was er yaller
- nigger, en&mdash;en&mdash;&rdquo; He went no further, being at the end of his
- diplomacy, and simply stood before her helplessly twisting his hat in his
- hands. The room was very still. Helen wondered if her own heart had
- stopped beating, so tense and strained was her emotion. Linda sat bent
- forward for a moment; they saw her raise her hands to her head, press them
- there convulsively, and then she groaned.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Miz Johnson say it was a yaller nigger!&rdquo; she moaned. &ldquo;Oh, my Gawd!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, but what dat, 'oman?&rdquo; Lewis demanded in assumed sharpness of tone.
- &ldquo;Dar's oodlin's en oodlin's er yaller niggers over dar.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dey ain't none of 'em been whipped by de daid man, 'cepin' my boy.&rdquo; Linda
- was now staring straight at him. &ldquo;None of 'em never made no threats but
- Pete. Dey'll kill 'im&mdash;&rdquo; She shuddered and her voice fell away into a
- prolonged sob. &ldquo;You hear me? Dey'll hang my po' baby boy&mdash;hang 'im&mdash;<i>hang</i>
- 'im!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Linda suddenly rose to her full height and stood glowering upon them, her
- face dark and full of passion and grief combined. She raised her hands and
- held them straight upward.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want ter curse Gawd!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;You hear me? I ain't done nothin' ter
- deserve dis here thing I've been er patient slave of white folks, en my
- mammy an' daddy was 'fo' me. I've acted right en done my duty ter dem what
- owned me, en&mdash;en now I face dis. I hear my onliest child beggin' fer
- um to spare 'im en listen ter 'im. I hear 'im beggin' ter see his old
- mammy 'fo' dey kill 'im. I see 'em drag-gin' 'im off wid er rope roun'&mdash;&rdquo;
- With a shriek the woman fell face downward on the floor. As if under the
- influence of a terrible nightmare, Helen bent over her. She was
- insensible. Without a word, Lewis lifted her in his arms and bore her to a
- bed in the corner.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dis gwine ter kill yo' old mammy, honey,&rdquo; he gulped. &ldquo;She ain't never
- gwine ter git up fum under it&mdash;never in dis world.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But Helen, with womanly presence of mind, had dampened her handkerchief in
- some water and was gently stroking the dark face with it. After a moment
- Linda drew a deep, lingering breath and opened her eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lewis,&rdquo; was her first thought, &ldquo;go try en find out all you kin. I'm gwine
- lie here en pray Gawd ter be merciful. I said I'd curse 'Im, but I won't.
- He my mainstay. I <i>got</i> ter trust 'Im. Ef He fail me I'm lost. Oh,
- honey, yo' old mammy never axed you many favors; stay here wid 'er en pray&mdash;pray
- wid all yo' might ter let dis cup pass. Oh, Gawd, don't let 'em!&mdash;<i>don't</i>
- let 'em! De po' boy didn't do it. He wouldn't harm a kitten. He talked too
- much, case he was smartin' under his whippin', but dat was all!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Motioning to Lewis to leave them alone, Helen sat down on the edge of the
- bed and put her arm round Linda's shoulders, but the old woman rose and
- went to the door and closed it, then she came back and stood by Helen in
- the half-darkness that now filled the room.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want you ter git down here by my baid en pray fer me, honey,&rdquo; she said.
- &ldquo;Seem ter me lak de Lawd always have listen ter white folks mo' den de
- black, anyway, en I want you ter beg 'Im ter spare po' li'l' foolish Pete
- des dis time&mdash;<i>des dis once</i>.&rdquo; Kneeling by the bed, Helen
- covered her wet face with her hands. Linda knelt beside her, and Helen
- prayed aloud, her clear, sweet voice ringing through the still room.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0014" id="linkimage-0014"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9109.jpg" alt="9109 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9109.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- N Carson Dwight's farm, as the place was not particularly well kept, the
- negro hands lived in dismantled log-cabins scattered here and there about
- the fields, or in the edge of the woods surrounding the place. In one of
- these, at the overseer's suggestion, Pete had installed himself, his
- household effects consisting only of a straw mattress thrown on the
- puncheon floor and a few cooking utensils for use over the big fireplace
- of the mud-and-log chimney.
- </p>
- <p>
- Here he was sleeping on the night of the tragedy which had stirred the
- country-side into a white heat of race hatred. He had spent the first half
- of the night at a negro dance, two miles away, at a farm, and was much
- elated by finding that he had attracted marked attention and feminine
- favor, which was due to the fact that he was looked upon by the country
- blacks as something out of the usual run&mdash;a town darky with a glib
- tongue and many other accomplishments, and a negro, too, as Pete assured
- them, who stood high in the favor of his master, whose name carried weight
- wherever it was mentioned.
- </p>
- <p>
- Shortly after dawn Pete was still sleeping soundly, as was his habit after
- a night of pleasure, when his door was rudely shaken.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pete Warren! Pete Warren!&rdquo; a voice called out sharply. &ldquo;Wake up in dar;
- wake up, I tell you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was no response&mdash;no sound came from within the cabin except the
- deep respiration of the sleeper. The door was shaken again, and then, as
- it was not locked, and slightly ajar, the little old negro man on the
- outside pushed the shutter open and entered, stalking across the floor to
- where Pete lay.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wake up here, you fool!&rdquo; he said, as he bent and shook Pete roughly.
- &ldquo;Wake up, ef you know what good fer you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Pete turned over; his snoring broke into little gasps. He opened his eyes,
- stared inquiringly for an instant, and then his eyelids began to close
- drowsily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Looky here!&rdquo; He was roughly handled again by the black hand on his
- shoulder. &ldquo;You young fool, you dance all night till you cayn't keep yo'
- eyes open in de day-time, but ef you don't git er move on you en light out
- er dis cabin you'll dance yo' last jig wid nothin' under yo' feet but
- wind. It'll be er game er frog in de middle en you be de frog.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What dat?&mdash;what dat you givin' me, Uncle Richmond?&rdquo; Pete was now
- awake and sitting bolt upright on the mattress.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Huh, I come ter tell you, boy, dat you 'bout ter git in trouble, en, fer
- all I know, de biggest you ever had in all yo' bo'n days.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Huh, you say I is, Uncle Richmond?&rdquo; Pete exclaimed, incredulously. &ldquo;What
- wrong wid me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man stepped back till he could look through the cabin door over
- the fields upon which the first streaks of daylight were falling in
- grayish, misty splotches.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pete,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;somebody done slip in Abe Johnson's house en brain him
- en his wife wid er axe.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Huh, you don't say!&rdquo; Pete stared in sleepy astonishment. &ldquo;When dat
- happen, Uncle Richmond?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Las' night, er towards mawnin',&rdquo; the old man said. &ldquo;Ham Black come en
- toi' me. He say we better all hide out; it gwine ter be de biggestm
- 'cite-ment ever heard of in dese mountains; but, Pete, <i>you</i> de main
- one ter look out&mdash;you, you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me! Huh, what you say dat fer, Uncle Rich'?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Ca'se dey gwine ter look fer you de fus one, Pete. You sho is been
- talkin' too much out yo' mouf 'bout dat whippin' Johnson done give you en
- Sam Dudlow, en de res' um in town dat night. Ham tol' me ter come warn you
- ter hide out, en dat quick. Ham say he know in reason you didn't do it,
- 'ca'se, he say, yo' bark is wuss'n yo' bite. Ham say he bet 'twas done by
- some nigger dat didn't talk so much. Ham say he mighty nigh sho Sam Dudlow
- done it, 'ca'se Sam met Abe Johnson in de big road yisterday en Johnson
- cussed 'im en lashed at 'im wid er whip. Ham say dat nigger come on ter de
- sto' lookin' lak er devil in men's clothes. But he didn't say nothin' even
- den. Look lak he was des lyin' low bidin' his time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Pete got up and began to dress himself with the unimaginative disregard
- for danger that is characteristic of his race.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I bet, myse'f, Sam done it,&rdquo; he said, reflectively.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's er bad yaller nigger, Uncle Richmond, en ever since Johnson en Dan
- Willis larruped we-all, he's been sulkin' en growlin'. But es you say,
- Uncle Rich', he didn't talk out open. He lay low.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dat don't mek no diffunce, boy,&rdquo; the old black man went on, earnestly;
- &ldquo;you git out'n here in er hurry en mek er break fer dem woods. Even den I
- doubt ef dat gwine ter save yo' skin, 'ca'se Dan Willis got er pair er
- blood-hounds dat kin smell nigger tracks thoo er ten-inch snow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Huh, I say, Uncle Richmond, you don't know me,&rdquo; Pete said. &ldquo;You don't
- know me, ef you 'low I'm gwine ter run fum dese white men. I 'ain't been
- nigh dat Abe Johnson's house&mdash;not even cross his line er fence. I
- promised Marse Carson Dwight not ter go nigh 'im, en&mdash;en I promised
- 'im ter let up on my gab out here, en I done dat, too. No, suh, Unc'
- Rich', you git somebody else ter run yo' foot-race. I'm gwine ter cook my
- breakfust lak I always do en den go out ter my sprouts dat hatter be
- grubbed. I got my task ter do, rain er shine.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Look here, boy,&rdquo; the old man's blue-black eyes gleamed as he stared at
- Pete. &ldquo;I know yo' mammy en daddy, en I like um. Dey good black folks er de
- ol' stripe, en always was friendly ter me, en I don't like ter see you in
- dis mess. I tell you, I'm er old man. I know how white men act in er case
- like dis&mdash;dey don't have one bit er pity er reason. Dey will kill you
- sho. Dey'd er been here 'fo' dis, but dey gittin' together. Listen! Hear
- dem hawns en yellin'?&mdash;dat at Wilson's sto'. Dey will be here soon. I
- don't want ter stan' here en argue wid you. I 'ain't had nothin' ter do
- wid it, but dey would saddle some of it onto me ef dey found out I come
- here ter warn you. Hurry up, boy.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I ain't gwine ter do it, Uncle Rich',&rdquo; Pete declared, firmly, and with a
- grave face. &ldquo;You are er old man, but you ain't givin' me good advice. Ef I
- run, dey would say I was guilty sho', en den, es you say, de dogs could
- track me down, anyway.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The boy's logic seemed unassailable. The piercing, beadlike eyes of the
- old man flickered. &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I done all I could. I'm gwine move
- on. Even now, dey may know I come here at dis early time, en mix me up in
- it. Good-bye. I hope fer Mammy Lindy's sake dat dey will let you off&mdash;I
- do sho.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Left alone, Pete went out to the edge of the wood behind his cabin and
- gathered up some sticks, leaves, and pieces of bark that had fallen from
- the decaying boughs of the trees, and brought them into the cabin and
- deposited them on the broad stone hearth. Then he uncovered the coals he
- had the night before buried in the ashes, and made a fire for the
- preparation of his simple breakfast. He had a sharp sense of animal
- hunger, which was due to his long walk to and from the dance and the fact
- that he was bodily sound and vigorous. He took as much fresh-ground
- corn-meal as his hands would hold from a tow bag in a corner of the room
- and put it into a tin pan. To this he added a cup of water and a bit of
- salt, stirring it with his hand till it was well mixed. He then deftly
- formed it into a pone, and, wrapping it in a clean husk of corn, he
- deposited it in the hot ashes, covering it well with live coals. Then he
- made his coffee, being careful that the water in the pot did not rise as
- high as the point near the spout where the vessel leaked. Next he
- unwrapped a strip of &ldquo;streak o' lean streak o' fat&rdquo; bacon, and with his
- pocket-knife sliced some of it into a frying-pan already hot. These things
- accomplished, he had only to wait a few minutes for the heat to do its
- work, and he stepped back and stood in the doorway.
- </p>
- <p>
- Far across the meadow, now under the slanting rays of the sun, he saw old
- Uncle Richmond, bowlegged and short, waddling along through the dewy grass
- and weeds, his head bowed, his long arms swinging at his sides.
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;Huh!&rdquo; was Pete's slow comment, &ldquo;so somebody done already settled Abe
-Johnson's hash. I know in reason it was Sam Dudlow, en I reckon ef dat
-rampacious gang er white men lays hands on 'im&mdash;ef dey lays hands on
- 'im&mdash;&rdquo; He was recalling certain details of the recent riots in Atlanta,
-and an unconscious shudder passed over him. &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he continued to
-reflect, &ldquo;Abe Johnson was a hard man on black folks, but his wife was
-er downright good 'oman. Ever'body say she was, en she <i>was</i>. It was a
-gre't pity ter kill her dat way, but I reckon Sam was afeard she'd
-tell it on 'im en had ter kill um bofe. Yes, Miz Johnson was er good
-'oman&mdash;good ter niggers. She fed lots of 'em behind dat man's back, en
-wished 'em well; en now, po', po' 'oman!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Pete went back to the fireplace and with the blade of his knife turned the
- curling white and brown strips of bacon, and with the toe of his coarse,
- worn shoe pushed fresher coals against his coffee-pot. Then for a moment
- he stood gravely looking at the fire.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he mused, with a shrugging of his shoulders. &ldquo;I wish des <i>one
- thing</i>, I wish Marse Carson was here. He wouldn't let 'em tech me. He's
- de best en smartest lawyer in Georgia, en he would tell 'em what er lot er
- fools dey was ter say I done it, when I was right dar'n my baid. My! dat
- bacon smell good! I wish I had er few fresh hen aigs ter drap in dat brown
- grease. Huh! it make my mouf water.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was no table in the room, and so when he had taken up his breakfast
- he sat down on the floor and ate it with supreme relish. Through all the
- meal, however, in spite of the arguments he was mentally producing, there
- were far under the crust of his being certain elemental promptings towards
- fear and self-preservation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, dar's one thing,&rdquo; he mused. &ldquo;Marse Hillyer done laid me out my task
- ter do in de old fiel' en I ain't ergoin' to shirk it, 'ca'se Marse Carson
- gwine ter ax 'im, when he go in town, how I'm gittin' on, en I wants er
- good repo't. No, I ain't goin' ter shirk it, ef all de dogs en white men
- in de county come yelpin' on de hunt for Sam Dudlow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0015" id="linkimage-0015"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9116.jpg" alt="9116 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9116.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- IS breakfast over, Pete shouldered his grubbing-hoe, an implement shaped
- like an adze, and made his way through the dewy undergrowth of the wood to
- an open field an eighth of a mile from his cabin. There he set to work on
- what was considered by farmers the hardest labor connected with the
- cultivation of the soil. It consisted of partly digging and partly pulling
- out by the roots the stout young bushes which infested the neglected old
- fields.
- </p>
- <p>
- Pete was hard at work in the corner of a ten-rail worm-fence, when,
- hearing a sound in the wood, which sloped down from a rocky hill quite
- near him, he saw a farmer, who lived in the neighborhood, pause suddenly,
- even in a startled manner, and stare steadily at him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; Pete heard him exclaim; &ldquo;why, you are Carson Dwight's new man, ain't
- you, from Darley?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, suh, dat me,&rdquo; the negro replied. &ldquo;Mr. Hillyer, de overseer fer my
- boss, set me on dis yer job. I want ter clean it up ter de branch by
- Sadday.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Huh!&rdquo; The man approached nearer, eying the negro closely from head to
- foot, his glance resting longer on Pete's hip-pocket than anywhere else.
- &ldquo;Huh! I heard down at the store just now that you'd left&mdash;throwed up
- your job, I mean&mdash;an' gone clean off.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I hain't throwed up no job,&rdquo; the negro said, his slow intelligence
- groping for the possible cause of such a report. &ldquo;I been right here since
- my boss sent me over, en I'm gwine stay lessen he sen' fer me ter tek care
- o' his hosses in town. I reckon you heard er Marse Carson Dwight's fine
- drivin' stock.&rdquo; The farmer pulled his long brown beard, his eyes still on
- Pete's face; it was as if he had not caught the boy's last remark.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They said down at the store that you left last night, after&mdash;that
- you went off last night. A man said he seed you at the nigger blow-out on
- Hilton's farm about one o'clock, and that after it was over you turned
- towards&mdash;I don't know&mdash;I'm just tellin' you what they said down
- at the store.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I <i>was</i> at dat shindig,&rdquo; Pete said. &ldquo;I walked fum here dar en back
- ergin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Huh, well&rdquo;&mdash;the farmer's face took on a shrewd expression&mdash;&ldquo;I
- must move on. I'm lookin' fer a brown cow with a white tail, an' blaze on
- 'er face.&rdquo; As the man disappeared in the wood, Pete was conscious of a
- sense of vague uneasiness which somehow seemed to be a sort of augmented
- recurrence of the feeling left by the warning of his early visitor.
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;Dat white man certainly act curi's,&rdquo; Pete mused, as he leaned on
-the handle of his hoe and stared at the spot where the farmer had
-disappeared in the woods. &ldquo;I'll bet my hat he been thinkin', lak Uncle
-Rich' said dey would, dat I had er hand in dat bloody business. Po'
-Miz Johnson&mdash;I reckon dey layin' 'er out now. She certney was good. I
-remember how she tol' me at de spring de day I come here ter try en be a
-good, steady boy en not mek dem white men pounce on me ergin. Po' 'oman!
-Seem lak er gre't pity. I reckon Abe Johnson got what was comin' ter
- 'im, but it look lak even Sam Dudlow wouldn't er struck dat good'oman
-down. Maybe he thought he had ter&mdash;maybe she cornered 'im; but I dunno;
-he's er tough nigger&mdash;de toughest I ever run ercross, en I've seed er
-lots um.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Pete leaned on the fence, wiped his perspiring brow with his bare hand,
- snapped his fingers like a whip to rid them of the drops of sweat, and
- allowed his thoughts to merge into the darker view of the situation. He
- was really not much afraid. Under grave danger, a negro has not so great a
- concern over death as a white man, because he is not endowed with
- sufficient intelligence to grasp its full import, and yet to-day Pete was
- feeling unusual qualms of unrest.
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;Dar's one thing sho,&rdquo; he finally concluded; &ldquo;dat white man looked
-powerful funny when he seed me, en he said he heard I'd run off. I'll
-bet my hat he's makin' a bee-line fer dat sto' ter tell 'em whar I is
-right now. I wish one thing. I wish Marse Carson was here; he'd sen' 'em
- 'bout deir business mighty quick.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With a shrug of indecision, the boy set to work. His back happened to be
- turned towards the store, barely visible over the swelling ground in the
- distance, and so he failed to note the rapid approach across the meadow of
- two men till they were close upon him. One was Jeff Braider, the sheriff
- of the county, a stalwart man of forty, in high top-boots, a leather belt
- holding a-long revolver, a broad-brimmed hat, and coarse gray suit; his
- companion was a hastily deputized citizen armed with a double-barrelled
- shot-gun.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Put down that hoe, Pete!&rdquo; the sheriff commanded, sharply, as the negro
- turned with it in his hand. &ldquo;Put it down, I say! Drop it!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What I gwine put it down for?&rdquo; the negro asked, in characteristic tone.
- &ldquo;Huh! I got ter do my work.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Drop it, and don't begin to give me your jaw,&rdquo; the sheriff said. &ldquo;You've
- got to come on with us. You are under arrest.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What you 'rest me fer?&rdquo; Pete asked, still doggedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are accused of killing the Johnsons last night, and if you didn't do
- it, I'm here to say you are in the tightest hole an innocent man ever got
- in. King and I are going to do our level best to put you in safety in the
- Gilmore jail so you can be tried fairly by law, but we've got to get a
- move on us. The whole section is up in arms, and we'll have hard work
- dodging 'em. Come on. I won't rope you, but if you start to run we'll
- shoot you down like a rabbit, so don't try that on.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My Gawd, Mr. Braider, I didn't kill dem folks!&rdquo; Pete said, pleadingly. &ldquo;I
- don't know a thing about it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, whether you did or not, they say you threatened to do it, and your
- life won't be worth a hill of beans if you stay here. The only thing to do
- is to get you to the Gilmore jail. We may make it through the mountains if
- we are careful, but we've got to git horses. We can borrow some from Jabe
- Parsons down the road, if he hasn't gone crazy like all the rest. Come
- on.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I tell you, Mr. Braider, I don't know er thing 'bout dis,&rdquo; Pete said;
- &ldquo;but it looks ter me lak mebby Sam Dudlow&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't make any statement to me,&rdquo; the officer said, humanely enough in his
- rough way. &ldquo;You are accused of a dirty job, Pete, and it will take a dang
- good lawyer to save you from the halter, even if we save you from this
- mob; but talkin' to me won't do no good. Me'n King here couldn't protect
- you from them men if they once saw you. I tell you, young man, all hell
- has broke loose. For twenty miles around no black skin will be safe, much
- less yours. Innocent or guilty, you've certainly shot off your mouth. Come
- on.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Without further protest, Pete dropped his hoe and went with them.
- Doggedly, and with an overpowering and surly sense of injury, he slouched
- along between the two men.
- </p>
- <p>
- A quarter of a mile down a narrow, private road, which was traversed
- without meeting any one, they came to Parsons' farm-house, a one-story
- frame building with a porch in front, and a roof that sloped back to a
- crude lean-to shed in the rear. A wagon stood under the spreading branches
- of a big beech, and near by a bent-tongued harrow, weighted down by a heap
- of stones, a chicken-coop, an old beehive, and a ramshackle buggy. No one
- was in sight. No living thing stirred about the place, save the turkeys
- and ducks and a solitary peacock strutting about in the front yard, where
- rows of half-buried stones from the mountain-sides formed the jagged
- borders of a gravel walk from the fence to the steps.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sheriff drew the gate open and, according to rural etiquette, hallooed
- lustily. After a pause the sound of some one moving in the house reached
- their ears. A window-curtain was drawn aside, and later a woman stood in
- the doorway and advanced wonderingly to the edge of the porch. She was
- portly, red of complexion, about middle-aged, and dressed in checked
- gingham, the predominating color of which was blue.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'll be switched!&rdquo; she ejaculated; &ldquo;what do you-uns want?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Want to see Jabe, Mrs. Parsons; is he about?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's over in his hay-field, or was a minute ago. What you want with him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We've got to borrow some hosses,&rdquo; the sheriff answered. &ldquo;We want three&mdash;one
- fer each. We're goin' to try to dodge them blood-thirsty mobs, Mrs.
- Parsons, an' put this feller in jail, whar he'll be safe.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>That</i> boy?&rdquo; The woman came down the steps, rolling her sleeves up.
- &ldquo;Why, that boy didn't kill them folks. I know that boy, he's the son of
- old Mammy Linda and Uncle Lewis Warren. Now, look here, Jeff Braider,
- don't you and Bill King go and make eternal fools o' yourselves. That boy
- didn't no more do that nasty work than I did. It ain't <i>in</i> 'im. He
- hain't that look. I know niggers as well as you or anybody else.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I <i>didn't</i> do it, Mrs. Parsons,&rdquo; the prisoner affirmed. &ldquo;I
- didn't! I didn't!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know you didn't,&rdquo; said the woman. &ldquo;Wasn't I standin' here in the door
- this mornin' and saw him git up an' go out to git his wood and cook his
- breakfast? Then I seed 'im shoulder his grubbin'-hoe and go to the field
- to work. You officers may think you know it all, but no nigger ain't
- agoin' to stay around like that after killin' a man an' woman in cold
- blood. The nigger that did that job was some scamp that's fur from the
- spot by this time, and not a boy fetched up among good white folks like
- this one was, with the best old mammy and daddy that ever had kinky
- heads.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But witnesses say he threatened Abe Johnson a month ago,&rdquo; argued Braider.
- &ldquo;I have to do my duty, Mrs. Parsons. There never would be any justice if
- we overlooked a thing as pointed as that is.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Threatened 'im?&rdquo; the woman cried; &ldquo;well, what does that prove? A nigger
- will talk back an' act surly on his death-bed if he's mad. That's all the
- way they have of defendin' theirselves. If Pete hadn't talked some after
- the lashin' he got from them men, thar'd 'a' been some'n' wrong with him.
- Now, you let 'im loose. As shore as you start off with that boy, he'll be
- lynched. The fact that you've got 'im in tow will be all them crazy men
- want. You couldn't get two miles in any direction from here without bein'
- stopped; they are as thick as fleas on all sides, an' every road is under
- watch.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm sorry I can't take yore advice, Mrs. Parsons,&rdquo; Braider said, almost
- out of patience. &ldquo;I've got my duty to perform, an' I know what it is a
- sight better than you do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you start off with that boy his blood will be on yore head,&rdquo; the woman
- said, firmly. &ldquo;Left alone, and advised to hide opt till this excitement is
- over, he might stand a chance to save his neck; but with you&mdash;why,
- you mought as well stand still and yell to that crazy gang to come on.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, we've got to git horses to go on with, and yours are the nearest.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Huh! you won't ride no harmless nigger to the scaffold on <i>my</i>
- stock,&rdquo; the woman said, sharply. &ldquo;I know whar my duty lies. A woman with a
- thimbleful of brains don't have to listen to a long string of testimony to
- know a murderer when she sees one; that boy's as harmless as a baby and
- you are trying your level best to have him mobbed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, right is on my side, and I can take the horses if I see fit in the
- furtherance of law an' order,&rdquo; said Braider. &ldquo;If Jabe was here he'd tell
- me to go ahead, an' so I'll have to do it anyway. Bill, you stay here on
- guard an' I'll bridle the horses an' lead 'em out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A queer look, half of anger, half of definite purpose, settled on the
- strong, rugged face of the woman, as she saw the sheriff stalk off to the
- barn-yard gate, enter it, and let it close after him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bill King,&rdquo; she said, drawing nearer the man left in charge of the
- bewildered prisoner, who now for the first time under the words of his
- defender had sensed his real danger&mdash;&ldquo;Bill King, you hain't agoin' to
- lead that poor boy right to his death this way&mdash;you don't look like
- that sort of a man.&rdquo; She suddenly swept her furtive eyes over the
- barn-yard, evidently noting that the sheriff was now in the stable. &ldquo;No,
- you hain't&mdash;for I hain't agoin' to <i>let</i> you!&rdquo; And suddenly,
- without warning even to the slightest change of facial expression, she
- grasped the end of the shot-gun the man held, and whirled him round Like a
- top.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Run, boy!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Run for the woods, and God be with you!&rdquo; For an
- instant Pete stood as if rooted to the spot, and then, as swift of foot as
- a young Indian, he turned and darted through the gate and round the
- farm-house, leaving the woman and King struggling for the possession of
- the gun. It fell to the ground, but she grasped King around the waist and
- clung to him with the tenacity of a bull-dog.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good God, Mrs. Parsons,&rdquo; he panted, writhing in her grasp, &ldquo;let me
- loose!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a smothered oath from the barn-yard, and, revolver in hand, the
- sheriff ran out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What the hell!&mdash;which way did he go?&rdquo; he gasped.
- </p>
- <p>
- But King, still in the tight embrace of his assailant, seemed too badly
- upset to reply. And it was not till Braider had torn her locked hands
- loose that King could stammer out, &ldquo;Round the house&mdash;into the woods!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' we couldn't catch 'im to save us from&mdash;&rdquo; Braider said. &ldquo;Madam,
- I'll handle you for this! I'll push this case against you to the full
- limit of the law!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'll do nothin' of the kind,&rdquo; the woman said, &ldquo;unless you want to make
- yourself the laughin'-stock of the whole community. In doin' what I done I
- acted fer all the good women of this country; an' when you run ag'in we'll
- beat you at the polls. Law an' order's one thing, but officers helpin'
- mobs do their dirty work is another. If the boy deserves a trial he
- deserves it, but he'd not 'a' stood one chance in ten million in your
- charge, <i>an' you know it</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this juncture a man emerged from the close-growing bushes across the
- road, a look of astonishment on his face. It was Jabe Parsons. &ldquo;What's
- wrong here?&rdquo; he cried, excitedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, nothin' much,&rdquo; Braider answered, with a white sneer of fury. &ldquo;We
- stopped here with Pete Warren to borrow your horses to git 'im over the
- mountain to the Gilmore jail, an' your good woman grabbed Bill's gun while
- I was in the stable an' deliberately turned the nigger loose.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Great God! what's the matter with you?&rdquo; Parsons thundered at his wife,
- who, red-faced and defiant, stood rubbing a small bruised spot on her
- wrist.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothin's the matter with me,&rdquo; she retorted, &ldquo;except I've got more sense
- than you men have. I know that boy didn't kill them folks, an' I didn't
- intend to see you-all lynch 'im.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I know he did!&rdquo; Parsons yelled. &ldquo;But he'll be caught before night,
- anyway. He can't hide in them woods from hounds like they've got down the
- road.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your wife 'lowed he'd be safer in the woods than in the Gilmore jail,&rdquo;
- Braider said, with another sneer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, he <i>would</i>. As for that,&rdquo; Parsons retorted, &ldquo;if you think that
- army headed by the dead woman's daddy an' brothers would halt at a puny
- bird-cage like that jail, you don't know mountain men. They'd smash the
- damn thing like an egg-shell. I reckon a sheriff has to <i>pretend</i> to
- act fer the law, whether he earns his salary or not. Well, I'll go down
- the road an' tell 'em whar to look. Thar'll be a picnic som 'er's nigh
- here in a powerful short while. We've got men enough to surround that
- whole mountain.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIV.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0016" id="linkimage-0016"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9127.jpg" alt="9127 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9127.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- HE following night was a cloudless, moonlit one, and restlessly and
- heart-sore Helen walked the upper floor of the veranda, her eyes
- constantly bent on the street leading past Dwight's on to the centre of
- the town. The greater part of the day she had spent with Linda, trying to
- pacify her and rouse the hope that Pete would not be implicated in the
- trouble in the mountains. Helen had gone down to Carson's office about
- noon, feeling vaguely that he could advise her better than any one else in
- the grave situation. She had found Garner seated at his desk, bent over a
- law-book, a studious expression on his face. Seeing her in the doorway, he
- sprang up gallantly and proffered a rickety chair, from which he had
- hastily dumped a pile of old newspapers.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is Carson in?&rdquo; she asked, sitting down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh no, he's gone over to the farm,&rdquo; Garner said. &ldquo;I couldn't hold him
- here after he heard of the trouble. You see, Miss Helen, he thinks, from a
- few things picked up, that Pete is likely to be suspected and be roughly
- handled, and, you know, as he was partly the cause of the boy's going
- there, he naturally would feel&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was the <i>real</i> cause of it,&rdquo; the girl broke in, with a sigh and a
- troubled face. &ldquo;We both thought it was for the best, and if it results in
- Pete's death I shall never forgive myself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I wouldn't look at it that way,&rdquo; Garner said. &ldquo;You were both acting
- for what you thought was right. As I say, I tried my best to keep Carson
- from going over there to-day, but he would go. We almost had an open
- rupture over it. You see, Miss Helen, I have set my head on seeing him in
- the legislature, and he is eternally doing things that kill votes. There
- is not a thing in the category of political offences as fatal as this very
- thing. He's already taken Pete's part and abused the men who whipped him,
- and now that the boy is suspected of retaliating and killing the Johnsons,
- why, the people will&mdash;well, I wouldn't be one bit surprised to see
- them jump on Carson himself. Men infuriated like that haven't any more
- sense than mad dogs, and they won't stand for a white man opposing them.
- But, of course, you know why Carson is acting so recklessly.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do? What do you mean, Mr. Garner?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The lawyer smiled, wiped his facile mouth with his small white hand, and
- said, teasingly: &ldquo;Why, you are at the bottom of it. Carson wants to save
- the boy simply because you are indirectly interested in him. That's the
- whole thing in a nutshell. He's been as mad as a wet hen ever since they
- whipped Pete, because he was the son of your old mammy, and now that the
- boy's in actual peril Carson has gone clean daft. Well, it's reported
- among the gossips about town that you turned him down, Miss Helen&mdash;like
- you did some of the balance of us presumptuous chaps that didn't know
- enough to keep our hearts where they belonged&mdash;but you sat on the
- best man in the bunch when you did it. It's me that's doing this talking.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen sat silent and pale for a moment, unable to formulate a reply to his
- outspoken remark. Presently she said, evasively: &ldquo;Then you think both of
- them are in actual danger?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, Pete hasn't one chance in a million,&rdquo; Garner said, gently. &ldquo;There
- is no use trying to hide that fact; and if Carson should happen to run
- across Dan Willis&mdash;well, one or the other would have to drop. Carson
- is in a dangerous mood. He believes as firmly in Pete's innocence as he
- does in his own, and if Dan Willis dared to threaten him, as he's likely
- to do when they meet, why, Carson would defend himself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen drew her veil down over her eyes and Garner could see that she was
- quivering from head to foot.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, it's awful&mdash;awful!&rdquo; he heard her say, softly. Then she rose and
- moved to the open door, where she stood as if undecided what step to take.
- &ldquo;Is there no way to get any&mdash;any news?&rdquo; she asked, tremulously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;None now,&rdquo; he told her. &ldquo;In times of excitement over in the mountains,
- few people come into town; they all want to stay at home and see it
- through.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She stepped out on the sidewalk, and he followed her, gallantly holding
- his hat in his hand. Scarcely a soul was in sight. The town seemed
- deserted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Madam, rumor,&rdquo; Garner said, with a smile, &ldquo;reports that your friend Mr.
- Sanders, from Augusta, is coming up for a visit.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I had a letter from him this morning,&rdquo; Helen said, in a dignified
- tone. &ldquo;My father must have spoken of it. It will be Mr. Sanders' first
- visit to Darley, and he will find us terribly upset. If I knew how to
- reach him I'd ask him to wait a few days till this uncertainty is over,
- but he is on his way here&mdash;is, in fact, stopping somewhere in Atlanta&mdash;and
- intends to come on up to-morrow or the next day. Does&mdash;does Carson&mdash;has
- he heard of Mr. Sanders' coming?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, it was sprung on him this morning for a deadly purpose,&rdquo; Garner
- said, with a significant smile. &ldquo;The whole gang&mdash;Keith, Wade, and Bob
- Smith&mdash;were in here trying to keep him from going to the farm. They
- had tried everything they could think of to stop him, and as a last resort
- set in to teasing. Keith told him Sanders would sit in the parlor and say
- sweet things to you while Carson was trying to liberate the ex-slaves of
- your family at the risk of bone and sinew. Keith said Carson was showing
- the finest proof of fidelity that was ever given&mdash;fidelity to <i>the
- man in the parlor</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Keith ought to have been ashamed of himself,&rdquo; Helen said, with her first
- show of vexation. &ldquo;And what did Carson say?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The poor chap took it all in a good-humor,&rdquo; Garner said. &ldquo;In fact, he was
- so much wrought up over Pete's predicament that he hardly heard what they
- were saying.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You really think Carson is in danger, too?&rdquo; Helen continued, after a
- moment's silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If he meets Dan Willis, yes,&rdquo; said Garner. &ldquo;If he opposes the mob, yes
- again. Dan Willis has already succeeded in creating a lot of unpopularity
- for him in that quarter, and the mere sight of Carson at such a time would
- be like a torch to a dry hay-stack.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- So Helen had gone home and spent the afternoon and evening in real torture
- of suspense, and now, as she walked the veranda floor alone with a
- realization of the grim possibilities of the case drawn sharply before her
- mental vision, she was all but praying aloud for Carson's safe return, and
- anxiously keeping her gaze on the moonlit street below. Suddenly her
- attention was drawn to the walk in front of the Dwight house. Some one was
- walking back and forth in a nervous manner, the intermittent flare of a
- cigar flashing out above the shrubbery like the glow of a lightning-bug.
- Could it be&mdash;had Carson returned and entered by the less frequently
- used gate in the rear? For several minutes she watched the figure as it
- strode back and forth with never-ceasing tread, and then, fairly consumed
- with the desire to set her doubts at rest, she went down into the garden
- at the side of the house, softly approached the open gate between the two
- homesteads, and called out: &ldquo;Carson, is that you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The figure paused and turned, the fire of the cigar described a red
- half-circle against the dark background, but no one spoke. Then, as she
- waited at the gate, her heart in her mouth, the smoker came towards her.
- It was old Henry Dwight. He wore no hat nor coat, the night being warm,
- and one of his fat thumbs was under his broad suspender.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, it's not him, Miss Helen,&rdquo; he said, rather gruffly. &ldquo;He hasn't got
- back yet. I've had my hands full since supper. My wife is in a bad way.
- She has been worrying awfully since twelve o'clock, when Carson didn't
- turn up to dinner as usual. She's guessed what he went to the farm for,
- and she's as badly upset as old Linda is over that trifling Pete. I
- thought I had enough trouble before the war over <i>my</i> niggers, but
- here, forty years later, <i>yours</i> are upsetting things even worse. I
- only wish the men that fought to free the black scamps had some part of
- the burden to bear.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It really is awful,&rdquo; Helen responded; &ldquo;and so Mrs. Dwight is upset by
- it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, we had the doctor to come, and he gave some slight dose or other,
- but he said the main thing was to get Carson back and let her know for
- sure that he was safe and sound. I sent a man out there lickety-split on
- the fastest horse I have, and he ought to have got back two hours ago.
- That's what I'm out here for. I know she's not going to let me rest till
- her mind is at ease.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you really think any actual harm could have come to Carson?&rdquo; Helen
- inquired, anxiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It could come to anybody who has the knack my boy has for eternally
- rubbing folks the wrong way,&rdquo; the old man retorted from the depths of his
- irritation; &ldquo;but, Lord, my young lady, <i>you</i> are at the bottom of
- it!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I? Oh, Mr. Dwight, don't say that!&rdquo; Helen pleaded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'm only telling you the <i>truth</i>,&rdquo; said Dwight, throwing his
- cigar away and putting, both thumbs under his suspenders. &ldquo;You know that
- as well as I do. He sees how you are bothered about your old mammy, and he
- has simply taken up your cause. It's just what I'd 'a' done at his age. I
- reckon I'd 'a' fought till I dropped in my tracks for a girl I&mdash;but
- from all accounts you and Carson couldn't agree, or rather <i>you</i>
- couldn't. He seems to be agreeing now and staking his life and political
- chances on it. Well, I don't blame him. It never run in the Dwight blood
- to love more than once, an' then it was always for the pick of the flock.
- Well, you are the pick in this town, an' I wouldn't feel like he was my
- boy if he stepped down and out as easy as some do these days. I met him on
- his way to the farm and tried to shame him out of the trip. I joined the
- others in teasing him about that Augusta fellow, who can do his courting
- by long-distance methods in an easy seat at his writing-desk, while
- up-country chaps are doing the rough work for nothing, but it didn't feaze
- 'im. He tossed his stubborn head, got pretty red in the face, and said he
- was trying to help old Linda and Lewis out, and that he know well enough
- you didn't care a cent for him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen had grown hot and cold by turns, and she now found herself unable to
- make any adequate response to such personal allusions.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Huh, I see I got you teased, too!&rdquo; Dwight said, with a short, staccato
- laugh. &ldquo;Oh, well, you mustn't mind me. I'll go in and see if my wife is
- asleep, and if she is I'll go to bed myself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen, deeply depressed, and beset with many conflicting emotions, turned
- back to the veranda, and, instead of going up to her room, she reclined in
- a hammock stretched between two of the huge, fluted columns. She had been
- there perhaps half an hour when her heart almost stopped pulsating as she
- caught, the dull beat of horses' hoofs up the street. Rising, she saw a
- horseman rein in at the gate at Dwight's. It was Carson; she knew that by
- the way he dismounted and threw the rein over the gate-post.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Carson!&rdquo; she called out. &ldquo;Oh, Carson, I want to see you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He heard, and came along the sidewalk to meet her at the gate where she
- now stood. What had come over him? There was an utter droop of despondent
- weariness upon him, and then as he drew near she saw that his face was
- pale and haggard. For a moment he stood, his hand on the gate she was
- holding open, and only stared.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, what has happened?&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;I've been waiting for you. We haven't
- heard a word.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In a tired, husky voice, for he had made many a speech through the day, he
- told her of Pete's escape. &ldquo;He's still hiding somewhere in the mountains,&rdquo;
- he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, then he may get away after all!&rdquo; she cried.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dwight said nothing, seeming to avoid her great, staring, anxious eyes.
- She laid her hand almost unconsciously on his arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't you think he has a chance, Carson?&rdquo; she repeated&mdash;&ldquo;a bare
- chance?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The whole mountain is surrounded, and they are beating the woods,
- covering every inch of the ground,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It is now only a question of
- time. They will wait till daybreak, and then continue till they have found
- him. How is Mam' Linda?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nearly dead,&rdquo; Helen answered, under her breath.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And my mother?&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She is only worried,&rdquo; Helen told him. &ldquo;Your father thinks she will be all
- right as soon as she is assured of your return.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Only worried? Why, he sent me word she was nearly dead,&rdquo; Carson said,
- with a feeble flare of indignation. &ldquo;I wanted to stay, to be there to make
- one final effort to convince them, but when the message reached me, and
- things were at a standstill anyway, I came home, and now, even if I
- started back to-night, I'd likely be too late. He tricked me&mdash;my
- father tricked me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you yourself? Did you meet that&mdash;Dan Willis?&rdquo; Helen asked. He
- stared at her hesitatingly for an instant, and then said: &ldquo;I happened not
- to. He was very active in the chase and seemed always to be somewhere
- else. He killed all my efforts.&rdquo; Carson leaned heavily against the white
- paling fence as he continued. &ldquo;As soon as I'd talk a crowd of men into my
- way of thinking, he'd come along and fire them with fury again. He told
- them I was only making a grandstand play for the negro vote, and they
- swallowed it. They swallowed it and jeered and hissed me as I went along.
- Garner is right. I've killed every chance I ever had with those people.
- But I don't care.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen sighed. &ldquo;Oh, Carson, you did it all because&mdash;because I felt as
- I did about Pete. I know that was it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He made no denial as he stood awkwardly avoiding her eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I shall never, never forgive myself,&rdquo; she said, in pained accents. &ldquo;Mr.
- Garner and all your friends say that your election was the one thing you
- held desirable, the one thing that would&mdash;would thoroughly reinstate
- you in your father's confidence, and yet I&mdash;I&mdash;oh, Carson I <i>did</i>
- want you to win! I wanted it&mdash;wanted it&mdash;wanted it!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, well, don't bother about that,&rdquo; he said, and she saw that he was
- trying to hide his own disappointment. &ldquo;I admit I started into this
- because&mdash;because I knew how keenly you felt for Linda, but to-day,
- Helen, as I rode from mad throng to mad throng of those good men with
- their dishevelled hair and bloodshot eyes, their very souls bent to that
- trail, that pitiful trail of revenge, I began to feel that I was fighting
- for a great principle, a principle that you had planted within me. I
- gloried in it for its own sake, and because it had its birth in your sweet
- sympathy and love for the unfortunate. I could never have experienced it
- but for you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you failed,&rdquo; Helen almost sobbed. &ldquo;You failed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, utterly. What I've done amounted to nothing more than irritating
- them. Those men, many of whom I love and admire, were wounded to their
- hearts, and I was only keeping their sores open with my fine-spun theories
- of human justice. They will learn their lesson slowly, but <i>they will
- learn it</i>. When they have caught and lynched poor, stupid Pete, they
- may learn later that he was innocent, and then they will realize what I
- was trying to keep them from doing. They will be friendly to me then, but
- Wiggin will be in office.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, my father thinks this thing is going to defeat you.&rdquo; Helen sighed.
- &ldquo;And, Carson, it's killing me to think that I am the prime cause of it. If
- I'd had a man's head I'd have known that your effort could accomplish
- nothing, and I'd have been like Mr. Garner and the others, and asked you
- not to mix up in it; but I couldn't help myself. Mam' Linda has your name
- on her lips with every breath. She thinks the sun rises and sets in you,
- and that you only have to give an order to have it obeyed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's the pity of it,&rdquo; Carson said, with a sigh.
- </p>
- <p>
- At this juncture there was the sound of a window-sash sliding upward, and
- old Dwight put out his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come on in!&rdquo; he called out. &ldquo;Your mother is awake and absolutely refuses
- to believe you haven't a dozen bullet-holes in you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, father, I'm coming,&rdquo; Carson said, and impulsively he held out
- his hand and clasped Helen's in a steady, sympathetic pressure.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, you go to bed, little girl,&rdquo; he said, more tenderly than he
- realized. In fact, it was a term he had used only once before, long before
- her brother's death. &ldquo;Pardon me,&rdquo; he pleaded; &ldquo;I didn't know what I was
- saying. I&mdash;I was worried over seeing you look so tired, and&mdash;and
- I spoke without thinking.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You can say it whenever you wish, Carson,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;As if I could get
- angry at you after&mdash;after&mdash;&rdquo; But she did not finish, for with
- her hand still warmly clasping his fingers, she was listening to a distant
- sound. It was a restless human tread on a resounding floor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's Mam' Linda,&rdquo; Helen said. &ldquo;She walks like that night and day. I must
- go to her and&mdash;tell her you are back, but oh, how <i>can</i> I?
- Good-night, Carson. Ill never forget what you have done&mdash;never!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XV.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0017" id="linkimage-0017"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9139.jpg" alt="9139 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9139.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- FTER an almost sleepless night, spent for the greater part in despondent
- reflections over his failure in the things to which he had directed his
- hopes and energies, Carson rose about seven o'clock, went into his
- mother's room to ask how she had rested through the night, and then
- descended, to breakfast. It was eight o'clock when he arrived at the
- office. Garner was there in a cloud of dust, sweeping a pile of torn
- papers into the already filled fireplace.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm going to touch a match to this the first rainy day&mdash;if I think
- of it,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It's liable to set the roof on fire when it's dry as it
- is now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Any news from the mountains?&rdquo; Carson asked, as he sat down at his desk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; Pole Baker was in here just now.&rdquo; Garner leaned his broom-handle
- against the mantel-piece, and stood critically eying his partner's worn
- face and dejected mien. &ldquo;He said the mob, or mobs, for there are twenty
- factions of them, had certainly hemmed Pete in. He was hiding somewhere on
- Elk Knob, and they hadn't then located him. Pole left there long before
- day and said they had already set in afresh. I reckon it will be over
- soon. He told me to keep you here if I had to swear out a writ of
- dangerous lunacy against you. He says you have not only killed your own
- political chances, but that you couldn't save the boy if you were the
- daddy of every man in the chase. They've smelled blood and they want to
- taste it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You needn't worry about me,&rdquo; Carson said, dejectedly. &ldquo;I realize how
- helpless I was yesterday, and am still. There was only one thing that
- might have been done if we had acted quickly, and that was to telegraph
- the Governor for troops.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you wouldn't sanction that; you know you wouldn't,&rdquo; said Garner. &ldquo;You
- know every mother's son of those white men is acting according to the
- purest dictates of his inner soul. They think they are right. They believe
- in law, and while I am a member of the bar, by Heaven! I say to you that
- our whole legal system is rotten to the core. Politics will clear a
- criminal at the drop of a hat. A dozen voters can jerk a man from life
- imprisonment to the streets of this town by a single telegram. No, you
- know those sturdy men over there think they are right, and you would not
- be the cause of armed men shooting them down like rabbits in a fence
- corner.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, they think they are right,&rdquo; Carson said. &ldquo;And they were my friends
- till this came up. Any mail?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I haven't been to the post-office. I wish you'd go. You need exercise;
- you are off color&mdash;you are as yellow as a new saddle. Drop this
- thing. The Lord Himself can't make water run up-hill. Quit thinking about
- it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson went out into the quiet street and walked along to the post-office.
- At the intersection of the streets near the Johnston House, on any
- ordinary day, a dozen drays and hacks in the care of negro drivers would
- have been seen, and on the drays and about the hacks stood, as a rule,
- many idle negro men and boys; but this morning the spot was significantly
- vacant. At the negro barber-shop, kept by Buck Black, a mulatto of marked
- dignity and intelligence for one of his race, only the black barbers might
- be seen, and they were not lounging about the door, but stood at their
- chairs, their faces grave, their tongues unusually silent. They might be
- asking themselves questions as to the possible extent of the fires of
- race-hatred just now raging&mdash;if the capture and death of Pete Warren
- would quench the conflagration, or if it would roll on towards them like
- the licking flames of a burning prairie&mdash;they might, I say, ask <i>themselves</i>
- such questions, but to the patrons of their trade they kept discreet
- silence. And no white man who went near them that day would ask them what
- they believed or what they felt, for the blacks are not a people who give
- much thought even to their own social problems. They had leaned for many
- generations upon white guidance, and, with childlike, hereditary instinct,
- they were leaning still.
- </p>
- <p>
- Finding no letters of importance in the little glass-faced and numbered
- box at the post-office, Carson, sick at heart and utterly discouraged,
- went up to the Club. Here, idly knocking the balls about on a
- billiard-table, a cigar in his mouth, was Keith Gordon.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Want to play a game of pool?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not this morning, old man,&rdquo; Carson answered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I don't either,&rdquo; said Keith. &ldquo;I went to the bank and tried to add
- up some figures for the old man, but my thinker wouldn't work. It's out of
- whack. That blasted nigger Pete is the prime cause of my being upset. I
- came by Major Warren's this morning. Sister feels awfully sorry for Mam'
- Linda, and asked me to take her a jar of jelly. You know old colored
- people love little attentions like that from white people, when they are
- sick or in trouble. Well&rdquo;&mdash;Keith held up his hands, the palms outward&mdash;&ldquo;I
- don't want any more in mine. I've been to death-bed scenes, funerals,
- wrecks on railroads, and all sorts of horrors, but that was simply too
- much. It simply beggars description&mdash;to see that old woman bowed
- there in her door like a dumb brute with its tongue tied to a stake. It
- made me ashamed of myself, though, for not at least trying to do
- something. I glory in you, old man. You failed, but you <i>tried</i>.
- By-the-way, that's the only comfort Mam' Linda has had&mdash;the only
- thing. Helen was there, the dear girl&mdash;and to think her visit home
- has to be like this!&mdash;she was there trying to soothe the old woman,
- but nothing that was said could produce anything but that awful groaning
- of hers till Lewis said something about your going over there yesterday,
- and that stirred her up. She rose in her chair and walked to the gate and
- folded her big arms across her breast.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'I thank God young marster felt fer me dat way,' she said. 'He's de best
- young man on de face o' de earth. I'll go down ter my grave blessing 'im
- fer dis. He's got er <i>soul</i> in 'im. He knows how old Mammy Lindy
- feels en he was tryin' ter help her, God bless 'im! He couldn't do
- nothin', but he tried&mdash;he tried, dough everybody was holdin' 'im back
- en sayin' it would spile his 'lection. Well, if it <i>do</i> harm 'im, it
- will show dat Gawd done turn ergin white en black bofe.' I came away,&rdquo;
- Keith finished, after a pause, in which Carson said nothing. &ldquo;I couldn't
- stand it. Helen was crying like a child, her face wet with tears, and she
- wasn't trying to hide it. I was looking for some one to come every minute
- with the final news, and I didn't want to face that. Good God, old man,
- what are we coming to? Historians, Northern ones, seem to think the days
- of slavery were benighted, but God knows such things as this never
- happened then. Now, did it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; it's terrible,&rdquo; Carson agreed, and he stepped to a window and looked
- out over the roofs of the near-by stores to the wagon-yard beyond.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, the great and only, the truly accepted one,&rdquo; Keith went on, in a
- lighter tone, &ldquo;the man who did us all up brown, Mr. Earle Sanders, of
- Augusta, has unwittingly chosen a gloomy date for his visit. He's here,
- installed in the bridal-chamber of the Hotel de Johnston. Helen got a note
- from him just as I was leaving. On my soul, old man&mdash;maybe it's
- because I want to see it that way&mdash;but, really, it didn't seem to me
- that she looked exactly elated, you know, like I imagined she would, from
- the way the local gossips pile it on. You know, the idea struck me that
- maybe she is not <i>really engaged</i>, after all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She is worried; she is not herself to-day,&rdquo; Carson said, coldly, though
- in truth his blood was surging hotly through his veins. It had come at
- last. The man who was to rob him of all he cared for in life was at hand.
- Turning from Keith, he pretended to be looking over some of the dog-eared
- magazines in the reading-room, and then feeling an overwhelming desire to
- be alone with the dull pain in his breast, he waved a careless signal to
- Keith and went down to the street. In front of the hotel stood a pair of
- sleek, restive bays harnessed to a new top-buggy. They were held by the
- owner of the best livery-stable in the town, a rough ex-mountaineer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say, Carson,&rdquo; the man called out, proudly, &ldquo;you'll have to git up early
- in the morning to produce a better yoke of thorough-breds than these.
- Never been driven over these roads before. I didn't intend to let 'em out
- fer public use right now, but a big, rich fellow from Augusta is here
- sparkin', and he wanted the best I had and wouldn't touch anything else.
- Money wasn't any object. He turned up his nose at all my other stock. Gee!
- look at them trim legs and thighs&mdash;a dead match as two black-eyed
- peas.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, they are all right.&rdquo; Carson walked on and went into Blackburn's
- store, for no other reason than that he wanted to avoid meeting people and
- discussing the trouble Pete Warren was in, or hearing further comments on
- the stranger's visit. He might have chosen a better retreat, however, for
- in a group at the window nearest the hotel he found Blackburn, Garner, Bob
- Smith, and Wade Tingle, all peering stealthily out through the dingy glass
- at the team Carson had just inspected.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He'll be out in a minute,&rdquo; Wade was saying, in an undertone. &ldquo;Quit
- pushing me, Bob! They say he's got dead loads of money.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You bet he has,&rdquo; Bob declared; &ldquo;he had a wad of it in big bills large
- enough to stuff a sofa-pillow with. Ike, the porter, who trucked his trunk
- up, said he got a dollar tip. The head waiter is expecting to buy a farm
- after he leaves. Gee! there he comes! Say, Garner, <i>you</i> ought to
- know; is that a brandy-and-soda complexion?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, he doesn't drink a drop,&rdquo; answered Garner. &ldquo;Well, he looks all right,
- as well as I can see through this immaculate window with my eyes full of
- spiderwebs. My, what clothes! Say, Bob, is that style of derby the thing
- now? It looks like an inverted milk-bucket. Come here, Carson, and take a
- peep at the conqueror. If Keith were here we'd have a quomm. By George,
- there's Keith now! He's watching at the window of the barber-shop. Call
- him over, Blackburn. Let's have him here; we need more pall-bearers.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Seems to me you boys are the corpses,&rdquo; Blackburn jested. &ldquo;I'd be ashamed
- to let a clothing-store dummy like that beat me to the tank.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson had heard enough. In his mood and frame of mind their open
- frivolity cut him to the quick. Going out, unnoticed by the others, he
- went to his office. In the little, dusty consultation-room in the rear
- there was an old leather couch. On this he threw himself. There had been
- moments in his life when he had worn the crown of misery, notably the day
- Albert Warren was buried, when, on approaching Helen to offer her his
- sympathies, she had turned from him with a shudder. That had been a gloomy
- hour, but <i>this</i>&mdash;he covered his face with his hands and lay
- still. On that day a faint hope had vaguely fluttered within him&mdash;a
- hope of reformation; a hope of making a worthy place for himself in life
- and of ultimately winning her favor and forgiveness. But now it was all
- over. He had actually seen with his own eyes the man who was to be her
- husband. He was sure now that the report was true. The visit at such a
- grave crisis confirmed all that had been said. Helen had telegraphed him
- of her trouble, and Sanders had made all haste to reach her side.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVI.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0018" id="linkimage-0018"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9147.jpg" alt="9147 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9147.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- EHIND the dashing bays the newcomer drove down to Warren's. On the seat
- beside him sat a negro boy sent from the livery-stable to hold the horses.
- Sanders was dressed in the height of fashion, was young, of the blond
- type, and considered handsome. A better figure no man need have desired.
- The people living in the Warren neighborhood, who peered curiously out of
- windows, not having Dwight's affairs at heart, indulged in small wonder
- over the report that Helen was about to accept such a specimen of city
- manhood in preference to Carson or any of &ldquo;the home boys.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Alighting at the front gate, Sanders went to the door and rang. He was
- admitted by a colored maid and shown into the quaint old parlor with its
- tall, gilt-framed, pier-glass mirrors and carved mahogany furniture. The
- wide front, lace-curtained windows, which opened on a level with the
- veranda floor, let in a cooling breeze which was most agreeable in
- contrast to the beating heat out-of-doors.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had only a few minutes to wait, for Helen had just returned from a
- visit to Linda's cottage and was in the library across the hall. He heard
- her coming and stood up, flushing expectantly, an eager light flashing in
- his eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am taking you by surprise,&rdquo; he said, as he grasped her extended hand
- and held it for an instant.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you know you told me when I left,&rdquo; Helen said, &ldquo;that it would be
- impossible for you to get away from business till after the first of next
- month, so I naturally supposed&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The trouble was&rdquo;&mdash;he laughed as he stood courteously waiting for her
- to sit before doing so himself&mdash;&ldquo;the trouble was that I didn't know
- myself then as I do now. I thought I could wait like any sensible man of
- my age, but I simply couldn't, Helen. After you left, the town was simply
- unbearable. I seemed not to want to go anywhere but to the places to which
- we went together, and there I suffered a regular agony of the blues. The
- truth is, I'm killing two birds with one stone. We were about to send our
- lawyer to Chattanooga to settle up a legal matter there, and I persuaded
- my partner to let me do it. So you see, after all, I shall not be wholly
- idle. I can run up there from here and back, I believe, in the same day.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it is not far,&rdquo; Helen answered. &ldquo;We often go up there to do
- shopping.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm going to confess something else,&rdquo; Sanders said, flushing slightly.
- &ldquo;Helen, you may not forgive me for it, but I've been uneasy.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Uneasy?&rdquo; Helen leaned as far back in her chair as she could, for he had
- bent forward till his wide, hungry eyes were close to hers.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I've fought the feeling every day and night since you left. At times
- my very common-sense would seem to conquer and I'd feel a little better
- about it, but it would only be a short time till I'd be down in the dregs
- again.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, what is the matter?&rdquo; Helen asked, half fearfully.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was your letters, Helen,&rdquo; he said, his handsome face very grave as he
- leaned towards her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My letters? Why, I wrote as often&mdash;even often-er&mdash;than I
- promised,&rdquo; the girl said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, don't think me over-exacting,&rdquo; Sanders implored her with eyes and
- voice. &ldquo;I know you did all you agreed to do, but somehow&mdash;well, you
- know you seemed so much like one of us down there that I had become
- accustomed to thinking of you as almost belonging to Augusta; but your
- letters showed how very dear Darley and its people are to you, and I was
- obliged to&mdash;well, face the grim fact that we have a strong rival here
- in the mountains.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I thought you knew that I adore my old home,&rdquo; she said, simply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, I know&mdash;most people do&mdash;but, Helen, the letter you
- wrote about the dance your friends&mdash;your 'boys,' as you used to call
- them&mdash;gave you at that quaint club, why, it is simply a piece of
- literature. I've read it over and over time after time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I only wrote as I felt, out of a full heart,&rdquo; the girl said. &ldquo;When
- you meet them, and know them as I do, you will not wonder at my fidelity&mdash;at
- my enthusiasm over that particular tribute.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Sanders laughed. &ldquo;Well, I suppose I am simply jealous&mdash;jealous not
- alone for myself, but for Augusta. Why, you can't imagine how you are
- missed. A party of the old crowd went around to your aunt's as usual the
- Wednesday following your departure, but we were so blue we could hardly
- talk to one another. Helen, the spirit of our old gatherings was gone.
- Your aunt actually cried, and your uncle really drank too much brandy and
- soda.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you mustn't think I don't miss them all,&rdquo; Helen said, deeply
- touched. &ldquo;I think of them every day. It was only that I had been away so
- long that it was glorious to get back home&mdash;to my real home again. I
- love it down there; it is beautiful; you were all so lovely to me, but
- this here is different.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's what I felt in reading your letters,&rdquo; Sanders said. &ldquo;A tone of
- restful content and happiness was in every line you wrote. Somehow, I
- wanted you, in my selfish heart, to be homesick for us so that you would&rdquo;&mdash;the
- visitor drew a deep breath&mdash;&ldquo;be all the more likely to&mdash;to
- consent to live there, you know, <i>some day</i>, permanently.&rdquo; Helen made
- no reply, and Sanders, flushing deeply, wisely turned the subject, as he
- rose and went to a window and drew the curtain aside.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you see those horses?&rdquo; he asked, with a smile. &ldquo;I brought them
- thinking I might prevail on you to take a drive with me this morning. I
- have set my heart on seeing some of the country around the town, and I
- want to do it with you. I hope you can go.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, not to-day! I couldn't think of it to-day!&rdquo; Helen cried, impulsively.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not to-day?&rdquo; he said, crestfallen.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No. Haven't you heard about Mam' Linda's awful trouble?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, that is <i>her</i> son!&rdquo; Sanders said. &ldquo;I heard something of it at
- the hotel. I see. She really must be troubled.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is a wonder it hasn't killed her,&rdquo; Helen answered. &ldquo;I have never seen
- a human being under such frightful torture.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And can nothing be done?&rdquo; Sanders asked. &ldquo;I'd really like to be of use&mdash;to
- help, you know, in <i>some</i> way.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There is nothing to be done&mdash;nothing that <i>can</i> be done,&rdquo; Helen
- said. &ldquo;She knows that, and is simply waiting for the end.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's too bad,&rdquo; Sanders remarked, awkwardly. &ldquo;Might I go to see her?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think you'd better not,&rdquo; said the girl. &ldquo;I don't believe she would care
- to see any but very old friends. I used to think I could comfort her, but
- even I fail now. She is insensible to anything but that one haunting
- horror. She has tried a dozen times to go over to the mountains, but my
- father and Uncle Lewis have prevented it. That mob, angry as they are,
- might really kill her, for she would fight for her young like a tigress,
- and people wrought up like those are mad enough to do anything.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And some people think the negro may not really be guilty, do they not?&rdquo;
- Sanders asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am sure he is not,&rdquo; Helen sighed. &ldquo;I feel it; I know it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was the sound of a closing gate, and Helen looked out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is my father,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Perhaps he has heard something.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Leaving her guest, she went out to the steps. &ldquo;Whose turn-out?&rdquo; the Major
- asked, with admiring curiosity, indicating the horses and buggy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mr. Sanders has come,&rdquo; she said, simply. &ldquo;He's in the parlor. Is there
- any news?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing.&rdquo; The old man removed his hat and wiped his perspiring brow.
- &ldquo;Nothing except that Carson Dwight has gone over there on a fast horse.
- Linda sent him a message, begging him to make one more effort, and he
- went. All his friends tried to stop him, but he dashed out of town like a
- madman. He won't accomplish a thing, and it may cost him his life, but
- he's the right sort, daughter. He's got a heart in him as big as all
- out-of-doors. Blackburn told him Dan Willis was over there, a raging demon
- in human shape, but it only made Carson the more determined. His father
- saw him and ordered him back, and was speechless with fury when Carson
- simply waved his hand and rode on. Go back to the parlor. I'll join you in
- a minute.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have you heard anything?&rdquo; Sanders asked, as Helen re-entered the room and
- stood white and distraught before him.
- </p>
- <p>
- She hesitated, her shifting glance on the floor, and then she stared at
- him almost as one in a dream. &ldquo;He has heard nothing except&mdash;except
- that Carson Dwight has gone over there. He has gone. Mam' Linda begged him
- to make one other effort and he couldn't resist her. She&mdash;she was
- good to his mother and to him when he was a child, and he feels grateful.
- She thinks he is the only one that can help. She told me last night that
- she believed in him as she once believed in God. He can do nothing, but he
- knew it would comfort her for him to try.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This Mr. Dwight is one of your&mdash;your old friends, is he not?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Sanders' face was the playground of conflicting emotions as he stood
- staring at her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Helen answered; &ldquo;one of my best and truest.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He has undertaken a dangerous thing, has he not?&rdquo; Sanders managed to say.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dangerous?&rdquo; Helen shuddered. &ldquo;He has an enemy there who is now seeking
- his life. They are sure to meet. They have already quarrelled, and&mdash;<i>about
- this very thing</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She sat down in the chair she had just left and Sanders stood near her.
- There was a voice in the hall. It was the Major ordering a servant to
- bring in mint julep, and the next moment he was in the parlor hospitably
- introducing himself to the visitor.
- </p>
- <p>
- Seeing her opportunity, Helen rose and left them together. She went up to
- her room, with heavy, dragging footsteps, and stood at the window
- overlooking the Dwight garden and lawn.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson knew that Sanders was in town, she told herself, in gloomy
- self-reproach. He knew his rival was with her, and right now as the poor
- boy was speeding on to&mdash;his death, he thought Sanders was making love
- to her. Helen bit her quivering lip and clinched her fingers. &ldquo;Poor boy!&rdquo;
- she thought, almost with a sob, &ldquo;he deserves better treatment than that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVII
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0019" id="linkimage-0019"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9154.jpg" alt="9154 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9154.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- N his escape from the sheriff and his deputy, Pete Warren ran with the
- speed of a deer-hound through the near-by woods. Thinking his pursuers
- were close behind him, he did not stop even to listen to their footsteps.
- Through dell and fen, up hill and down, over rocks and through tangled
- undergrowth he forged his way, his tongue lolling from the corner of his
- gaping mouth. The thorns and briers had tom gashes in his cheeks, neck,
- and hands, and left his clothing in strips. The wild glare of a hunted
- beast was in his eyes. The land was gradually sloping upward. He was
- getting upon the mountain. For a moment the distraught creature paused,
- bent his ear to listen and try to decide, rationally, calmly, which was
- the better plan, to hide in the caverns and craggy recesses of the
- frowning heights above or speed onward over more level ground. For a
- moment the drumlike pounding of his heart was all the sound he heard, and
- then the blast of a hunter's horn broke the stillness, not two hundred
- yards away, and was thrown back in reverberating echoes from the
- mountain-side. This was followed by a far-off answering shout, the report
- of a signal-gun, and then the mellow, terrifying baying of blood-hounds
- fell upon his ears. Pete stood erect, his knees quivering. No thought of
- prayer passed through his brain. Prayer, to his mind, was only a series of
- empty vocal sounds heard chiefly in churches where black men and women
- stood or knelt in their best clothes, and certainly not for emergencies
- like this, where granite heavens were closing upon stony earth and he was
- caught between.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly bending lower, and fresher for the second wind he had got, he
- sped onward again, choosing the valley rather than the steeper
- mountain-side. Shouts, gun reports, horn-blasts, and the baying of the
- hounds now followed him. Presently he came to a clear mountain creek about
- twenty feet wide and not deeper anywhere than his waist, and in many
- places barely covering the slimy brown stones over which it flowed. Here,
- as if by inspiration, came the remembrance of some story he had heard
- about a pursued negro managing to elude the scent of blood-hounds by
- taking to water, and into the icy stream Pete plunged, and, slipping,
- stumbling, falling, he made his way onward.
- </p>
- <p>
- But his reason told him this slow method really would not benefit him, for
- his pursuers would soon catch up and see him from the banks. He had waded
- up the stream about a quarter of a mile, when he came to a spot where the
- stout branches of a sturdy leaning beech hung down within his reach. The
- idea which came to him was worthy of a white man's brain, for, pulling on
- the bough and finding it firm, he decided upon the original plan of
- getting out of the water there, where his trail would be lost to sight or
- scent, and climbing into the dense foliage above. His pursuers might not
- think to look upward at exactly that spot, and the hounds, bent on
- catching the scent from the ground where he landed, would speed onward,
- farther and farther away. At all events it was worth the trial.
- </p>
- <p>
- With quivering hands he drew the bough down till its leaves sank under the
- water. It bore his weight well and from it he climbed to the massive trunk
- and higher upward, till, in a fork of the tree, he rested, noticing, with
- a throb of relief, that the bough had righted itself and hung as before
- above the surface of the stream. On came the dogs; he could not hear them
- now, for, intent upon their work, they made no sound, but the hoarse,
- maddened voices of men under their guidance reached his ears. The swish
- through the undergrowth, the patter, as of rain on dry leaves, as their
- claws hurled the ground behind them, the snuffing and sneezing&mdash;<i>that
- was the hounds</i>. Closer and closer Pete hugged the tree, hardly
- breathing, fearing now that the water dripping from his clothing or the
- bruised leaves of the bough might betray his presence. But the hounds, one
- on either side of the stream, their noses to the earth, dashed on. Pete
- caught only a gleam of their sleek, dim coats and they were gone. Behind
- them, panting, followed a dozen men. In his fear of being seen, Pete dared
- not even look at their inflamed faces. With closed eyes pressed against
- his wet coat-sleeve, he clung to his place, a hunted thing, neither fish,
- fowl, nor beast, and yet, like them all, a creature of the wilderness,
- endowed with the instinct of self-preservation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They will run 'im down!&rdquo; he heard a man say. &ldquo;Them dogs never have
- failed. The black devil thought he'd throw 'em off by taking to water. He
- didn't know we had one for each bank.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- On ran the men, the sound of their progress becoming less and less audible
- as they receded. Was he safe now? Pete's slow intelligence answered no. He
- was still fully alive to his danger. He might stay there for awhile, but
- not for long. Already, perhaps owing to his desperate running, he had an
- almost maddening thirst, a thirst which the sheer sight of the cool stream
- so near tantalized. Should he descend, satisfy his desire, and attempt to
- regain his place of hiding? No, for he might not seclude himself so
- successfully the next time. Then, with his face resting on his arm, he
- began to feel drowsy. Twisting his body about, he finally found himself in
- a position in which he could recline still close to the tree and rest a
- little, though his feet and legs, surcharged with blood, were painfully
- weighted downward. The forest about him was very quiet. Some bluebirds
- above his head were singing merrily. A gray squirrel with a fuzzy tail was
- perched inquiringly on the brown bough of a near-by pine. Pete reclined
- thus for several minutes, and then the objects about him appeared to be in
- a blur. The far off shouts, horn-blasts, and gun reports beat less
- insistently on his tired brain, and then he found himself playing with a
- kitten&mdash;the queerest, most amusing kitten&mdash;in the sunlight in
- front of his mother's door.
- </p>
- <p>
- He must have slept for hours, for when he opened his eyes the sun was
- sinking behind the top of a distant hill. He tried to draw his aching legs
- up higher and felt stinging pricks of pain from his hips to his toes, as
- his blood leaped into circulation again. After several efforts he
- succeeded in standing on the bough. To his pangs of thirst were now added
- those of hunger. For hours he stood thus. He saw the light of day die out,
- first on the landscape and later from the clear sky. Now, he told himself,
- under cover of night, he would escape, but something happened to prevent
- the attempt. Through the darkness he saw the flitting lights off many pine
- torches. They passed to and fro under the trees, sometimes quite near him,
- and as far as he could see up the mountain-sides they flickered like the
- sinister night-eyes of his doom. He stood till he felt as if he could do
- so no longer, and then he got down on the bough as before, and after hours
- of conscious hunger and thirst and cramping pains he slept again. Thus he
- passed that night, and when the golden rays of sunlight came piercing the
- gray mountain mists and flooding the landscape with its warm glory, Pete
- Warren, hearing the voices of sleepless revenge, now more numerous and
- harsh and packed with hate&mdash;hearing them on all sides from far and
- near&mdash;dared not stir. He remained perched in his leafy nook like some
- half-knowing, primeval thing, avoiding the flint-tipped arrows of the
- high-cheeked, straight-haired men lurking beneath.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVIII
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0020" id="linkimage-0020"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9159.jpg" alt="9159 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9159.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- ARSON DWIGHT remained two days in the vicinity of his farm waiting
- gloomily for the discovery and arrest of Pete Warren, his sole hope being
- that at the last grewsome moment he might prevail on the distraught
- man-hunters to listen to a final appeal for law and order. He was forced,
- however, to return to Darley, feeling sure, as did the others, that Pete
- was hiding in some undiscovered place in the mountains, or shrewd and deft
- enough to avoid the approach of man or hound. But it would not be for
- long, the hunters told themselves, for the entire spot was surrounded and
- well guarded and they would starve him out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The gang&rdquo; breathed more freely when they saw Carson appear in the doorway
- of the den on the night of his return, and learned that through some
- miracle he had failed to meet Dan Willis, though not one of them was
- favorably impressed by the outward appearance of their leader. His eyes,
- in their darkened sockets, gleamed like despondent fires; on his tanned
- cheeks hectic flushes had appeared and his hands quivered as if from
- nervous exhaustion. Not a man among them dared reproach him for the
- further and futile political mistake he had made. He was a ruined man, and
- yet they admired him the more as they looked down on him, begrimed with
- the dregs of his failure. Garner's opinion, to himself expressed, was that
- Dwight was a failure only on the surface, but that it was the surface
- which counted everywhere except in heaven, and there no one knew what sort
- of coin would be current. Garner loved him. He loved him for his hopeless
- fidelity to Helen, for his firm-jawed clinging to a mere principle, such
- as trying to keep an old negro woman who had faith in him from breaking
- her heart, for his risking death itself to obtain full justice-for the
- black boy who was his servant. Yes, Garner mused, Carson certainly
- deserved a better deal all round, but deserving a thing according to the
- highest ethics, and getting it according to the lowest were different.
- </p>
- <p>
- I The following night there was a queer, secret meeting of negroes in the
- town. Stealthily they left their cabins and ramshackle homes, and one by
- one they glided through the darkest streets and alleys to the house of one
- Neb Wynn, a man who had acquired his physical being and crudely unique
- personality from the confluence of three distinct streams of blood&mdash;the
- white, the Cherokee Indian, and the negro. He owned and drove a dray on
- the streets of the town, and being economical he had accumulated enough
- means to build the two-story frame (not yet painted) house in which he
- lived. The lower floor was used as a negro restaurant, which Neb's wife
- managed, the upper was devoted to the family bedroom, a guest-chamber for
- any one who wished to spend the night, and a fair-sized &ldquo;hall,&rdquo; with
- windows on the street, which was rented to colored people for any purpose,
- such as dances, lodge meetings or church sociables.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was in this room, where no light burned, that the negroes assembled.
- Indeed, no sort of illumination was used below, and when a negro who had
- been secretly summoned reached the spot, he assured himself that no one
- was in sight, and then he approached the restaurant door on tiptoe, rapped
- twice with his knuckles, paused a moment, and then rapped three times.
- Thereupon Neb, with his ear to the key-hole on the inside, cautiously
- opened the door and drew the applicant within, and, closing the shutter
- softly, asked, &ldquo;What is the password?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mercy,&rdquo; was the whispered reply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the countersign?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Peace an' good-will to all men. Thy will be done. Amen.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, I know you,&rdquo; Neb would say. &ldquo;Go up ter de hall en set down,
- but mind you, don't speak <i>one</i> word!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And thus they gathered&mdash;the men who were considered the most
- substantial colored citizens of the town. About ten o'clock Neb crept
- cautiously up the narrow stairs, entered the room, and sat down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We are all here,&rdquo; he announced. &ldquo;Brother Hard-castle, I'm done wid my
- part. I ain't no public speaker; I'll leave de rest ter you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A figure in one of the comers rose. He was the leading negro minister of
- the place. He cleared his throat and then said: &ldquo;I would open with prayer,
- but to pray we ought to stand or kneel, and either thing would make too
- much disturbance. We can only ask God in our hearts, brothers, to be with
- us here in the darkness, and help lead us out of our trouble; help us to
- decide if we can, singly or in a body, what course to pursue in the grave
- matter that faces our race. We are being sorely tried, tried almost past
- endurance, but the God of the white man is the God of the black. Through a
- dark skin the light of a pure heart shines as far in an appeal for help
- towards the throne of Heaven as through a white. I'm not prepared to make
- a speech. I can't. I am too full of sorrow and alarm. I have just left the
- mother of the accused boy and the sight of her suffering has upset me. I
- have no harsh words, either, for the white men of this town. Every
- self-respecting colored citizen has nothing but words of praise for the
- good white men of the South, and in my heart, I can't much blame the men
- of the mountains who are bent on revenge, for the crime perpetrated by one
- of our race was horrible enough to justify their rage. It is only that we
- want to see full justice done and the absolutely innocent protected. I
- have been talking to Brother Black to-day, and I feel&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He broke off, for a hiss of warning as low as the rattle of a hidden snake
- escaped Neb Wynn's lips. On the brick sidewalk below the steps of some
- solitary passer-by rang crisply on the still night air. It died away in
- the distance and again all was quiet.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now you kin go on,&rdquo; Neb said. &ldquo;We des got to be careful, gen'men. Ef a
- meetin' lak dis was knowed ter be on tap de last one of us would be in
- trouble, en dey would pull my house down fust. You all know dat.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are certainly right,&rdquo; the preacher resumed. &ldquo;I was only going to call
- on Brother Black to say something in a line with the-talk I had with him
- today. He's got the right idea.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not a speaker,&rdquo; Buck Black began, as he stood up. &ldquo;A man who runs a
- barber-shop don't have any too much time ter read and study, but I've giv'
- dis subject a lot o' thought fust an' last. I almost giv' up after dat big
- trouble in Atlanta; I 'lowed dar wasn't no way out of we-alls' plight, but
- I think diffunt now. A <i>white</i> man made me see it. I read some'n'
- yesterday in the biggest paper in dis State. It was written by de editor
- an' er big owner in it. Gen'men, it was de fust thing I've seed dat seemed
- ter me ter come fum on high as straight as a bolt of lightnin'. Brother
- black men, dat editor said dat de white race had tried de whip-lash, de
- rope, en de firebrand fer forty years en de situation was still as bad as
- ever. He said de question never would be plumb settled till de superior
- race extend a kind, helpful hand ter de ignorant black an' lead 'im out er
- his darkness en sin en crime. Gen'men, dem words went thoo en thoo me. I
- knowed dat man myself, when I lived in Atlanta; I've seed his honest face
- en know he meant what he said. He said it was time ter blaze er new trail,
- er trail dat hain't been blazed befo'&mdash;er trail of love en
- forgiveness en pity, er trail de Lord Jesus Christ would blaze ef he was
- here in de midst o' dis struggle.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dat so, dat so!&rdquo; Neb Wynn exclaimed, in a rasping whisper. &ldquo;Gawd know dat
- de trufe.&rdquo;
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;An' I'm here ter-night,&rdquo; Buck Black continued, &ldquo;ter say ter you all dat
-I'm ready ter join fo'ces wid white men like dat. De old time white man
-was de darky's best friend; he owned 'im, but he helped 'im. In de old
-slave days black crimes lak our race is guilty of ter-day was never
-heard of&mdash;never nowhar! Dar's er young white man here in dis town, too,
-dat I love,&rdquo; Black continued, after a pause. &ldquo;I needn't mention his
-name; I bound you it is writ on every heart in dis room. You all know
-what he did yesterday an' day befo'&mdash;in spite er all de argument en
-persuasions of his friends dat is backin' 'im in politics, he went out
-dar ter de mountains in de thick o' it. I got it straight. I seed er man
-fum dar yesterday, en he said Marse Carson Dwight was out 'mongst dem men
-pleadin' wid 'em ter turn Pete over ter him en de law. He promised ter
-give er bond dat was big enough ter wipe out all he owned on earth, ef
-dey'd only spare de boy's life en give 'im a trial. Dey say Dan Willis
-wanted ter shoot 'im, but Willis's own friends wouldn't let 'im git nigh
- 'im. I was in my shop last night when he come in town an' axed me ter
-shave 'im up so he could go home en pacify his mother. She was sick en
-anxious about him. He got in my chair. Gen'men, I used ter brag beca'se
-I shaved General John B. Gordon once, when he was up here speakin', but
-fum now on my boast will be shavin' Marse Carson Dwight. He got in de
-chair an' laid back so tired he looked lak er dyin' man. He was all
-spattered fum head ter foot wid mud dat he'd walked an' rid thoo. I was
-so sorry fer 'im I could hardly do my work. I was cryin' half de time,
-dough he didn't see it, 'ca'se he jes layed dar wid his eyes closed.
-Hate de white race lak some say we do?&rdquo; Black's voice rose higher and
-quivered. &ldquo;No, suh, I'll never hate de race dat fetched dat white man in
-dis world. When he got out de chair de fus thing he ax was ef I'd heard
-how Mam' Lindy was. I told 'im she was pretty bad off, worried in her
-mind lak she was; den he turn fum de glass whar he was tyin' his necktie
-wid shaky fingers en said: 'I thought I might fetch 'er some hope, Buck,
-but I done give up. Ef I only had Pete in my charge safe in er good
-reliable jail I could free 'im, fer I don't believe he killed dem
-folks.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Buck Black paused. It was plain that his hearers were much affected,
- though no sound at all escaped them. The speaker was about to resume, when
- he was prevented by a sharp rapping on the stair below.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; Neb Wynn commanded, in a warning whisper. He crept on tiptoe
- across the carpetless room, out into the hallway, and leaned over the
- baluster.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who dat?&rdquo; he asked, in a calm, raised voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's me, Neb. I want ter see you. Come down!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's my wife>&rdquo; Neb informed the breathless room. &ldquo;Sounds lak she's scared
- 'bout some'n'. Don't say er word till I git back. Mind, you folks got ter
- be careful ter-night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He descended the creaking stairs to the landing below. They caught the low
- mumbling of his voice intermingled with the perturbed tones of his wife,
- and then he crept back to them, strangely silent they thought, for after
- he had resumed his seat against the wall in the dark human circle, they
- heard only his heavy breathing. Fully five minutes passed, and then he
- sighed as if throwing something off his mind, some weight of perplexing
- indecision.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, go on wid what you was sayin', Brother Black,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I reckon
- our meetin' won't be 'sturbed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I almost got to what I was coming to,&rdquo; Buck Black continued, rising and
- leaning momentously on the back of his chair. &ldquo;I was leadin' up to a gre't
- surprise, gen'men. I'm goin' to tell you faithful friends a secret, a
- secret which, ef it was out dat we knowed it, might hang us all. So far it
- rests wid des me an' a black 'oman dat kin be trusted, my wife. Gen'men, I
- know whar Pete Warren is. I kin lay my hands on 'im any time. He's right
- here in dis town ter-night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A subdued burst of surprise rose from the dark room, then all was still,
- so still that the speaker's grasp of his chair gave forth a harsh, rasping
- sound.
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;Yes, my wife seed 'im in de ol' lumber-yard back o' our house, en he
-was sech er sight ter look at dat she mighty nigh went out'n 'er senses.
-He was all cut in de face, en his clothes en shoes was des hangin' ter
- 'im by strings, en his eyes was 'most poppin' out'n his head. He was
-starvin' ter death&mdash;hadn't had a bite t' eat since he run off. When she
-seed 'im it was about a hour by sun, en he begged 'er to fetch 'im some
-victuals. Gen'men, he was so hungry dat she say he licked her han's lak
-er dog, en cried en tuck on powerful. She come home en told me, en ax me
-what ter do. Gen'men, 'fo' God on high I want ter do my duty ter my
-race en also to de white, but I couldn't see any safe way ter meddle.
-De white folks, some of 'em, anyway, say dat we aid en encourage
-crimes 'mongst our people, en while my heart was bleedin' fer dat boy en
-his folks, I couldn't underhanded he'p 'im widout goin' ter de men in
-power accordin' ter law.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you did right,&rdquo; spoke up the minister. &ldquo;As much as I pity the boy, I
- would have acted as you have done. He is accused of murder and is an
- escaped prisoner. To decide that he was innocent and help him escape is
- exactly what we are blaming his pursuers for doing&mdash;taking the law
- into hands not sanctioned by authority. There is only one thing that can
- decide the matter, and that is the decision of a judge and jury.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dat's exactly de way I looked at it,&rdquo; said Black, &ldquo;en so I tol' my wife
- not ter go nigh 'im ergin. I knowed dis meetin' was up fer ter-night, en I
- des thought I'd fetch it here en lay it 'fo' you all en take er vote on
- it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A good idea,&rdquo; said the minister from his chair. &ldquo;And, brethren, it seems
- to me we, as a body of representative negroes of this town, have now a
- golden opportunity to prove our actual sincerity to the white race. As you
- say, Brother Black, we have been accused of remaining inactive when a
- criminal was being pursued for crimes against the white people. If we can
- agree on it to a unit, and can turn the prisoner over now that all efforts
- of the whites to apprehend him have failed, our act will be flashed all
- round the civilized world and give the lie to the charge in question. Do
- you think, Brother Black, that Pete Warren is still hiding near your
- house?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I do,&rdquo; answered the barber. &ldquo;He would be afeard ter leave dat place,
- en I reckon he's waitin' dar now fer my wife ter fetch 'im some'n' ter
- eat.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, then, all we've got to do is to see if we can thoroughly agree on
- the plan proposed. I suppose one of the first things, if we do agree to
- turn him over to the law, is to consult with Mr. Carson Dwight and see if
- he can devise a way of acting with perfect safety to the prisoner and all
- concerned. If he can, our duty is clear.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, he's de man, God knows dat,&rdquo; Black said, enthusiastically. &ldquo;He won't
- let us run no risk.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, then,&rdquo; said the minister, who had the floor, &ldquo;let us put it to a
- vote. Of course, it must be unanimous. We can't act on a thing as
- dangerous as this without a thorough agreement. Now, you have all heard
- the plan proposed. Those in favor make it known by standing up as quietly
- as you possibly can, so that I may count you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Very quietly, for so many acting in concert, men on all sides of the hall
- stood up. The minister then began to grope round the room, touching with
- his hands the standing voters.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who's this?&rdquo; he suddenly exclaimed, when he reached Neb Wynn's chair and
- lowered his hands to the drayman, who was the only one not standing. &ldquo;It's
- me,&rdquo; Neb answered; &ldquo;me, dat's who&mdash;<i>me!</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; There was an astonished pause.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it's me. I ain't votin' yo' way,&rdquo; Neb said. &ldquo;You all kin act fer
- yo'selves. I know what I'm about.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But what's de matter wid you?&rdquo; Buck Black demanded, rather sharply. &ldquo;All
- dis time you been de most anxious one ter do some'n', en now when we got
- er chance ter act wid judgment en caution, all in a body, en, as Brother
- Hardcastle say, ter de honor of ou' race, why you up en&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hold on, des keep yo' shirt on!&rdquo; said Neb, in a queer, tremulous voice.
- &ldquo;Gen'men, I ain't placed des zactly de same es you-all is. I don't want
- ter tek de whole 'sponsibility on my shoulders, en I don't intend to.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are not taking it all on your shoulders, brother,&rdquo; said the minister,
- calmly; &ldquo;we are acting in a body.&rdquo;
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;No, it's all on <i>me</i>,&rdquo; Neb said. &ldquo;You said, Buck Black, dat Pete was in
-de lumber-yard 'hind yo' house. He ain't. You might search ever' stack o'
-planks en ever' dry-kiln dar, but you wouldn't fin' 'im. He's a cousin
-er my wife's, en me'n dat boy was good, true friends, en so he come
-here des now, when you heard my wife call me, an' th'owed hisse'f on my
-mercy. He's out at my stable now, up in de hay-loft, waitin' fer me ter
-fetch 'im suppin ter eat, as soon as you all go off. My wife say he's
-de most pitiful thing dat God ever made, en, gen'men, I'm sorry fer 'im.
-Law or no law, I'm sorry <i>fer</i> 'im. It's all well enough fer you ter set
-here in yo' good clothes wid good meals er victuals inside o' you, en
-know you got er good safe baid ter go ter&mdash;it's all well enough fer you
-ter vote on what is ter be done, but ef you <i>do</i> vote fer it en clap
- 'im 'hind de bars en he's hung&mdash;hung by de neck till he's as stiff es a
-bone, you'll be helpin' ter do it. Law is one thing when it's law, it's
-another thing when it ain't fit ter spit on. You all talk <i>jestice,
-jestice</i>, en you think it would be er powerful fine thing ter prove ter
-de worl' how honest you all is by handin' dat po' yaller dog over to de
-law. Put yo'selves in Pete's shoes an' you wouldn't be so easy ter vote
-yo'selves 'hind de bars. You'd say de bird in de han' is wuth three in
-de bush, en you'd stay away firm de white man's court-house. De white
-men say deirselves dat dar ain't no jestice, en dey's right. Carson
-Dwight is er good lawyer, en he'd fight till he drapped in his tracks,
-but de State solicitor would rake up enough agin Pete Warren to keep de
-jury's blood b'ilin'. Whar'd dey git a jury but fum de ranks o' de very
-men dat's chasin' Pete lak er rabbit now? Whar'd dey git a jury dat ud
-believe in his innocence when dey kin prove dat he done threatened de
-daid man? No whar in dis State. No innocent nigger's ever been hung,
-hein? No innocent nigger's in de chain gang, hein? Huh, dey as thick dar
-es fleas.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When Neb had ceased speaking not a voice broke the stillness of the room
- for several minutes, then the minister said, with a deep-drawn breath:
- &ldquo;Well, there is really no harm in looking at all sides of the question.
- The very view you have taken, Brother Wynn, may be the one that has really
- kept colored people from being more active in the legal punishment of
- their race. But it seems to me that it would only be fair, since you say
- Pete Warren is near, for him to be told of the situation and left to
- decide for himself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm willin' ter do dat, God knows,&rdquo; said Neb, &ldquo;en ef y'all say so, I'll
- fetch 'im here en you kin splain it ter 'im.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm sure that will be best,&rdquo; said Hardcastle. &ldquo;Hurry up. To save time,
- you might bring his food here&mdash;that is, if your wife has not taken it
- to him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, she was afeard ter go out dar. I'll mek 'er fetch it up here while I
- go after him. It may tek time, fer he may be afeard to come in. But ef I
- tell 'im de grub's here, I bound you he'll come a-hustlin'.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They heard Neb's voice below giving instructions to his wife, and then the
- outer door in the rear was opened and closed. Presently a step was heard
- on the stair, and they held their breaths expectantly, but it was only
- Neb's wife with a tray of food. Gropingly she placed it on a little table,
- which she softly dragged from a corner into the centre of the room, and
- without a word retired. A door below creaked on its hinges; steps
- shambling and unsteady resounded hollowly from the floor beneath, and
- Neb's urgent, pacific voice rose to the tense ears of the listeners, &ldquo;Come
- on; don't be a baby, Pete!&rdquo; they heard Neb say. &ldquo;Dey all yo' friends en
- want ter he'p you out 'n yo' trouble ef dey kin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whar dat meat? whar it? oh, God! whar it?&rdquo; It was the voice of the
- pursued boy, and it had a queer, uncanny sound that all but struck terror
- to the hearts of the listeners.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She lef' it up dar whar dey all is,&rdquo; Neb said; &ldquo;come on! I'll give it to
- you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- That seemed to settle the matter, for the clambering steps drew nearer;
- and then two figures slightly denser than the darkness came into the room.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wait; let me git you er chair,&rdquo; Neb said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whar it? whar it? my God! whar dat meat?&rdquo; Pete cried, in a harsh, rasping
- voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whar'd she put it?&rdquo; Neb asked. &ldquo;Hanged ef I know.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;On the table,&rdquo; said Hardcastle.
- </p>
- <p>
- Neb reached out for the tray and had barely touched it, when Pete sprang
- at him with a sound like the snarl of an angry dog. The tray fell with a
- crash to the floor and the food with it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There!&rdquo; Neb exclaimed; &ldquo;you did it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then the spectators witnessed a pitiful, even repulsive scene, for the boy
- was on the floor, a big bone of ham in his clutch. For a moment nothing
- was heard except the snuffling, gulping, crunching sound that issued from
- Pete's nose, mouth, and jaws. Then a noise was heard below. It was a sharp
- rapping on the outer door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sh!&rdquo; Neb hissed, warmingly; but there was no cessation of the ravenous
- eating of the starving negro. Neb cautiously looked out of the window,
- allowing only his head to protrude over the windowsill. &ldquo;Who dar?&rdquo; he
- called out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me, Neb; Jim Lincum,&rdquo; answered the negro below. &ldquo;You told me ef I heard
- any news over my way ter let you know.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes,&rdquo; said Neb.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Folks think Pete done lef de woods, Neb. De mob done scattered ter hunt
- all round de country. A gang of 'em was headed dis way at sundown.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, dat so?&rdquo; Neb said; &ldquo;well we done gone ter baid, Jim, or I'd open de
- do' en let you have er place ter sleep.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't want no place ter sleep, Neb,&rdquo; was the answer, in a half-humorous
- tone. &ldquo;Don't want ter sleep nowhar 'cep' on my laigs sech times as dese.
- Er crowd er white men tried ter nab me while I was in my cotton-patch at
- work dis mawnin' but I made myse'f scarce. Dey hot en heavy after Sam
- Dudlow; some think he had er hand in de killin'. Dey cayn't find dat
- nigger, dough.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, good-night, Jim. I got ter git some rest,&rdquo; and Neb drew his head
- back and lowered the window-sash.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jim's all right,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but I couldn't tek 'im in here. Dem men may
- 'a' been followin' 'im on de sly.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He advanced to the middle of the room and stood over the crouching figure
- still noisily eating on the floor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pete, Brother Hardcastle got suppin ter 'pose ter you, en we 'ain't got
- any too much time. We goin' ter tell you 'bout it an leave it ter you. One
- thing certain, you ain't safe hidin' out like you is, en nobody ain't safe
- dat he'ps hide you, so I say suppin got ter be done in yo' case.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want y'all ter sen' fer Marse Carson,&rdquo; Pete mumbled, between his gulps.
- &ldquo;He kin fix me ef anybody kin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's what we were about to propose, Pete,&rdquo; said the preacher. &ldquo;You see&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sh!&rdquo; It was Neb's warning hiss again. All was silence in the room; even
- Pete paused to listen. It was the low drone of human voices, and many in
- number, immediately below. A light from a suddenly exposed lantern flashed
- 'on the walls. Neb approached the window, but afraid even cautiously to
- raise the sash, he stood breathless. Then through his closed teeth came
- the words: &ldquo;We are caught; gen'men, we in fer it certain en sho! Dey done
- tracked us down!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a loud rapping on the door below, a stifled scream from Neb's
- wife at the foot of the stairs, and then a sharp, commanding voice sounded
- outside.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Open up, Neb Wynn!&rdquo; it said. &ldquo;We are onto your game. Some devilment is in
- the wind and we are going to know what it is.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Neb suddenly and boldly threw up the sash and looked out. &ldquo;All right,
- gen'men, don't bre'k my new lock. I'll be down dar in er minute.&rdquo; Then
- quickly turning to Pete, he bent and drew him up. &ldquo;Mak' er bre'k fer dat
- winder back dar, slide down de shed-roof, en run fer yo' life. Run!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a great clatter of chairs and feet in the group of men, a
- crashing of a thin window-sash in the rear, a heavy, thumping sound on a
- roof outside, and a loud shout from lusty throats below.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There he goes! Catch 'im! Head 'im off! Shoot 'im!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then darkness, chaos, and terror reigned.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIX.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0021" id="linkimage-0021"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9175.jpg" alt="9175 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9175.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- HILE these things were being enacted, Sanders, who had taken supper at
- Warren's, and Helen sat on the front veranda in the moonlight. Scarcely
- any other topic than Mam' Linda's trouble had been broached between them,
- though the ardent visitor had made many futile efforts to draw the girl's
- thought into more cheerful channels. It was shortly after ten o'clock, and
- Sanders was about to take his leave, when old Lewis emerged from the
- shadows of the house and was shambling along the walk towards the gate
- leading into the Dwight grounds, when Helen called out to him: &ldquo;Where are
- you going, Uncle Lewis?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He doffed his old slouch hat and stood bare and, bald, his smooth pate
- gleaming in the moonlight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I started over ter see Marse Carson, missy,&rdquo; he said, in a low, husky
- voice. &ldquo;I knows good en well dat he can't do a thing, but Linda's been
- beggin' me ever since she seed him en Mr. Garner drive up at de back gate.
- She thinks maybe dey l'arnt suppin 'bout Pete. I knows dey hain't,
- honey, 'ca'se dey ud 'a' been over 'fo' dis. Dar he is on de veranda now&mdash;oh,
- Marse Carson! Kin I see you er minute, suh?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I'll be right down, Lewis,&rdquo; Carson answered, leaning over the
- railing.
- </p>
- <p>
- As he came out of the house and approached across the grass, Sanders and
- Helen went to meet him. He bowed to Helen and nodded coldly to Sanders, to
- whom he had barely been introduced, and then with a furrowed brow he stood
- and listened as the old man humbly made his wants known.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm sorry to say I haven't heard a thing, Uncle Lewis,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I'd
- have been right over to see Mam' Linda if I had. So far as I can see,
- everything is just the same.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, young marster, I don't know what I'm ergoin' ter do,&rdquo; the old negro
- groaned. &ldquo;I don't see how Linda's gwine ter pass thoo another night. She's
- burnin' at de stake, Marse Carson, but thoo it all she blesses you, suh,
- fer tryin' so hard. My Gawd, dar she come now; she couldn't wait.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He hastened across the grass to where the old woman stood, and caught hold
- of her arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whar Marse Carson? Whar young marster?&rdquo; Linda cried, and then, catching
- sight of the trio, she tottered unaided towards them.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, young marster, I can't stan' it; I des <i>can't!</i>&rdquo; she groaned, as
- she caught Dwight's hand and clung to it. &ldquo;I am a mother ef I <i>am</i>
- black, an' dat my onliest child. My onliest child, young marster, en de
- po' boy is 'way over in dem mountains starvin' ter death wid dem men en
- dogs on his track. Oh, young marster, ol' Mammy Lindy is cert'nly crushed.
- Ef I could see Pete in his coffin I could put up wid it, but dis here&mdash;dis
- here&rdquo;&mdash;she struck her great breast with her hand&mdash;&ldquo;dis awful
- pain! I can't stan' it&mdash;I des can't!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson lowered his head. There was a look of profound and tortured
- sympathy on his strong face. Garner came out of the house smoking a cigar
- and strolled across the grass towards them, but observing the situation he
- paused at a flowering rose-bush and stood looking down the moonlit street
- towards the court-house and grounds dimly outlined in the distance. Garner
- had never been considered very emotional; no one had ever detected any
- indications of surprise or sorrow in his face. He simply stood there
- to-night avoiding contact with the inevitable. As a criminal lawyer he had
- been obliged to inure himself to exhibitions of mental suffering as a
- physician inures himself to the presence of physical pain, and yet had
- Garner been questioned on the matter, he would have admitted that he
- admired Carson Dwight for the abundant possession of the very qualities he
- lacked. He positively envied his friend to-night. There was something
- almost transcendental in the heart-wrung homage the old woman was paying
- Carson. There was something else in the fact that the wonderful tribute to
- courage and manliness was being paid there without reservation or stint
- before the (and Garner chuckled) very eyes of the woman who had rejected
- Carson's love, and in the very presence of the masculine incongruity (as
- Garner viewed him) by her side. All the display of emotion, <i>per se</i>,
- had no claims on Garner's interest, but the sheer, magnificent play of it,
- and its palpable clutch on things of the past and possible events of the
- future, held him as would the unfolding evidence in an important law case.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But oh, young marster,&rdquo; old Linda was saying; &ldquo;thoo it all you been my
- stay en comfort; not even God's been as good ter me as you have; you tried
- ter he'p po' ol' Lindy, but de Lawd on high done deserted her. Dar ain't
- no just, reasonable God dat will treat er po' old black 'oman es I'm
- treated, honey. In slavery en out I've done de best&mdash;de very best I
- could fer white en black, en now as I stan' here, after er long life, wid
- my feet in de grave, I don't deserve ter be punished wid dis slow fire. Go
- ter de white 'omen er dis here big Newnited States en ax' 'em how dey
- would feel in my fix. Ef de mothers in dis worl' could see me ter-night en
- read down in my heart, er river of tears would flow fer me. Dat so, en'
- yet de God I've prayed ter-night en mornin', in slavery en out, has turned
- His back on me. I've prayed, young marster, till my throat is sore, till
- now I hain't got no strength nor faith lef' in me, en&mdash;well, here I
- stand. You all see me.&rdquo; Without a word, his face wrung with pain, Carson
- clasped her hand, and bowing to Helen and her companion he moved away and
- joined Garner.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was high time you were getting out of that,&rdquo; Garner said, as he pulled
- at his cigar and drew his friend back towards the house. &ldquo;You can do
- nothing, and letting Linda run on that way only works her up to greater
- excitement. But say, old man, what's the matter with you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson was white, and the arm Garner had taken was trembling.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know, Garner, but I simply can't stand anything like that,&rdquo;
- Dwight said, his eyes on the group they had left. &ldquo;It actually makes me
- sick. I&mdash;I can't stand it. Good-night, Garner; if you won't sleep
- here with me, I'll turn in. I&mdash;I&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hush! what's that?&rdquo; Garner interrupted, his ear bent towards the centre
- of the town.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a loud and increasing outcry from the direction of Neb Wynn's
- house. Several reports of revolvers were heard, and screams and shouts:
- &ldquo;Head 'im off! Shoot 'im! There he goes!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Great God!&rdquo; Garner cried, excitedly; &ldquo;do you suppose it is&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He did not finish, for Carson had raised his hand to check him and stood
- staring through the moonlight in the direction from which the sounds were
- coming. There were now audible the rapid and heavy foot-falls of many
- runners. On they came, the sound increasing as they drew nearer. They were
- only a few blocks distant now. Carson cast a hurried glance towards the
- Warren house. There, leaning on the fence, supported by Helen and Lewis,
- stood Linda, silent, motionless, open-mouthed. Sanders stood alone, not
- far away. On came the rushing throng. They were turning the nearest
- corner. Somebody, or something, was in the lead. Was it a man, an animal,
- a mad dog, a&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- On it came forming the point of a human triangle. It was a man, but a man
- doubled to the earth by. fatigue and weakness, a man who ran as if on the
- point of sprawling at every desperate leap forward. His hard breathing now
- fell on Carson's ears.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's Pete!&rdquo; he said, simply.
- </p>
- <p>
- Garner laid a firm hand on his friend's arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now's the time for you to have common-sense,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Remember, you
- have lost all you care for by this thing&mdash;don't throw your very life
- into the damned mess. By God, you <i>sha'n't!</i> I'll&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Marse Carson, it's Pete!&rdquo; It was Linda's voice, and it rang out high,
- shrill, and pleading above the roar and din. &ldquo;Save 'im! Save 'im!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Dwight wrenched his arm from the tense clutch of Garner and dashed through
- the gate, and was out in the street just as the negro reached him and
- stretched out his arms in breathless appeal and fell sprawling at his
- feet. The fugitive remained there on his knees, his hands clutching the
- young man's legs, while the mob gathered round.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's the one!&rdquo; a hoarse voice exclaimed. &ldquo;Kill 'im! Burn the black
- fiend!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Standing pinioned to the ground by Pete's terrified clutch, Carson raised
- his hands above his head. &ldquo;Stop! Stop! Stop!&rdquo; he kept crying, as the crowd
- swayed him back and forth in their effort to lay hold of the fugitive who
- was clinging to his master with the desperate clutch of a drowning man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop! Listen!&rdquo; Carson kept shouting, till those nearest him became
- calmer, and forming a determined ring, pressed the outer ones back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, listen!&rdquo; these nearest cried. &ldquo;See what he's got to say. It's
- Carson Dwight. Listen! He won't take up for him; he's a white man. He
- won't defend a black devil that&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I believe this boy is innocent!&rdquo; Carson's voice rang out, &ldquo;and I plead
- with you as men and fellow-citizens to give me a chance to prove it to
- your fullest satisfaction. I'll stake my life on what I say. Some of you
- know me, and will believe me when I say I'll put up every cent I have,
- everything I hold dear on earth, if you will only give me the chance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A fierce cry of opposition rose in the outskirts of the throng, and it
- passed from lip to lip till the storm was at its height again. Then Garner
- did what surprised Carson as much as anything he had ever seen from that
- man of mystery.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop! Listen!&rdquo; Garner thundered, in tones of such command that they
- seemed to sweep all other sounds out of the tumult. &ldquo;Let's hear what he's
- got to say. It can do no harm! Listen, boys!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The trick worked. Not three men in the excited mob associated the voice or
- personality with the friend and partner of the man demanding their
- attention. The tumult subsided; it fell away till only the low, whimpering
- groans of the frightened fugitive were heard. There was a granite
- mounting-block on the edge of the sidewalk, and feeling it behind him:
- Carson stood upon it, his hands on the woolly pate of the negro still
- crouching at his feet. As he did so, his swift glance took in many things
- about him: he saw Linda at the fence, her head bowed upon her arms as if
- to shut out from her sight the awful scene; near her stood Lewis, Helen,
- and Sanders, their expectant gaze upon him; at the window of his mother's
- room he saw the invalid clearly outlined against the lamplight behind her.
- Never had Carson Dwight put so much of his young, sympathetic soul into
- words. His eloquence streamed from him like a swollen torrent of logic. On
- the still night air his voice rose clear, firm, confident. It was no call
- to them to be merciful to the boy's mother bowed there like a thing cut
- from stone, for passion like theirs would have been inflamed by such
- advice, considering that the fugitive was charged with having slain a
- woman. But it was a calm call to patriotism. Carson Dwight plead with them
- to let their temperate action that night say to all the world that the day
- of unbridled lawlessness in the fair Southland was at an end. Law and
- order on the part of itself was the South's only solution of the problem
- laid like another unjust burden on a sorely tried and suffering people.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good, good! That's the stuff!&rdquo; It was the raised voice of the adroit
- Garner, under his broad-brimmed hat in the edge of the crowd. &ldquo;Listen,
- neighbors; let him go on!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a fluttering suggestion of acquiescence in the stillness that
- followed Garner's words. But other obstacles were to arise. A clatter of
- galloping horses was heard round the corner on the nearest side street,
- and three men, evidently mountaineers, rode madly up. They reined in their
- panting, snorting mounts.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter?&rdquo; one of them asked, with an oath. &ldquo;What are you
- waiting for? That's the damned black devil.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They are waiting, like reasonable human beings, to give this man a chance
- to establish his innocence,&rdquo; Carson cried, firmly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They are, damn you, are they?&rdquo; the same voice retorted. There was a
- pause; the horseman raised his arm; a revolver gleamed in the moonlight;
- there was a flash and a report. The crowd saw Carson Dwight suddenly lean
- to one side and raise his hands to the side of his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0022" id="linkimage-0022"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0183.jpg" alt="0183 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0183.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My God, he's shot!&rdquo; Garner called out. &ldquo;Who fired that gun?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For an instant horrified silence reigned; Carson still stood pressing his
- hands to his temple.
- </p>
- <p>
- No one spoke; the three restive horses were rearing and prancing about in
- excitement. Garner made his way through the crowd, elbowing them right and
- left, till he stood near the fugitive and his defender.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A good white man has been shot,&rdquo; he cried out&mdash;&ldquo;shot by a man on one
- of those horses. Be calm. This is a serious business.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But Carson, with his left hand pressed to his temple, now stood erect.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, some coward back there shot me,&rdquo; he said, boldly, &ldquo;but I don't think
- I am seriously wounded. He may fire on me again, as a dirty coward will do
- on a defenceless man, but as I stand here daring him to try it again I
- plead with you, my friends, to let me put this boy into jail. Many of you
- know me, and know I'll keep my word when I promise to move heaven and
- earth to give him a fair and just trial for the crime of which he is
- accused.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bully for you, Dwight! My God, he's got grit!&rdquo; a voice cried. &ldquo;Let him
- have his way, boys. The sheriff is back there. Heigh, Jeff Braider, come
- to the front! You are wanted!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is the sheriff back there?&rdquo; Carson asked, calmly, in the strange silence
- that had suddenly fallen.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, here I am.&rdquo; Braider was threading his way towards him through the
- crowd. &ldquo;I was trying to spot the man that fired that shot, but he's gone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You bet he's gone!&rdquo; cried one of the two remaining horsemen, and,
- accompanied by the other, he turned and, they galloped away. This seemed a
- final signal to the crowd to acquiesce in the plan proposed, and they
- stood voiceless and still, their rage strangely spent, while Braider took
- the limp and cowering prisoner by the arm and drew him down from the
- block. Pete, only half comprehending, was whimpering piteously and
- clinging to Dwight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's all right, Pete,&rdquo; Carson said. &ldquo;Come on, we'll lock you up in the
- jail where you'll be safe.&rdquo; Between Carson and the sheriff, followed by
- Garner, Pete was the centre of the jostling throng as they moved off
- towards the jail.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What dey gwine ter do, honey?&rdquo; old Linda asked, finding her voice for the
- first time, as she leaned towards her young mistress.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Put him in jail where he'll be safe,&rdquo; Helen said. &ldquo;It's all over now,
- mammy.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thank God, thank God!&rdquo; Linda cried, fervently. &ldquo;I knowed Marse Carson
- wouldn't let 'em kill my boy&mdash;I knowed it&mdash;I knowed it!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But didn't somebody say Marse Carson was shot, honey?&rdquo; old Lewis asked.
- &ldquo;Seem ter me like I done heard&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Pale and motionless, Helen stood staring after the departing crowd, now
- almost out of view. Carson Dwight's thrilling words still rang in her
- ears. He had torn her very heart from her breast and held it in his hands
- while speaking. He had stood there like a God among mere men, pleading as
- she would have pleaded for that simple human life, and they had listened;
- they had been swept from their mad purpose by the fearless sincerity and
- conviction of his young soul. They had shot at him while he stood a target
- for their uncurbed passion, and even then he had dared to taunt them with
- cowardice as he continued his appeal.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Daughter, daughter!&rdquo; her father on the upper floor of the veranda was
- calling down to her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it, father?&rdquo; she asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you know if Carson was hurt?&rdquo; the Major asked, anxiously. &ldquo;You know he
- said he wasn't, but it would be like him to pretend so, even if he were
- wounded. It may be only the excitement that is keeping him up, and the
- poor boy may be seriously injured.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, father, do you think&mdash;?&rdquo; Helen's heart sank; a sensation like
- nausea came over her, and she reeled and almost fell. Sanders, a queer,
- white look on his face, caught hold of her arm and supported her to a seat
- on the veranda. She raised her eyes to the face of her escort as she sank
- into a chair. &ldquo;Do you think&mdash;did he look like he was wounded?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I could not make out,&rdquo; Sanders answered, solicitously, and yet his lip
- was drawn tight and he stood quite erect. &ldquo;I&mdash;I thought he was at
- first, but later when he continued to speak I fancied I was mistaken.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He put his hands to his temple,&rdquo; Helen said, &ldquo;and almost fell. I saw him
- steady himself, and then he really seemed stunned for a moment.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Sanders was silent. &ldquo;I remember her aunt said,&rdquo; he reflected, in grim
- misery, his brows drawn together, &ldquo;that she once had a sweetheart up here.
- <i>Is this the man?</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XX
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0023" id="linkimage-0023"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9188.jpg" alt="9188 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9188.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- EN minutes later, while they still sat on the veranda waiting for Carson's
- return, they saw Dr. Stone, the Dwights' family physician, alight from his
- horse at the hitching-post nearby.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wonder what that means?&rdquo; the Major asked. &ldquo;He must have been sent for
- on Carson's account and thinks he is at home. Speak to him, Lewis.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hearing his name called, Dr. Stone approached, his medicine-case in hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Were you looking for Carson?&rdquo; Major Warren asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, no,&rdquo; answered the doctor, in surprise; &ldquo;they said Mrs. Dwight was
- badly shocked. Was Carson really hurt?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We were trying to find out,&rdquo; said the Major. &ldquo;He went on to the jail with
- the sheriff, determined to see Pete protected.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a sound of an opening door and old Dwight came out to the fence,
- hatless, coatless, and pale. &ldquo;Come right in, doctor,&rdquo; he said, grimly.
- &ldquo;There's no time to lose.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is it as bad as that?&rdquo; Stone asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She's dying, if I'm any judge,&rdquo; was the answer. &ldquo;She was standing at the
- window and heard that pistol-shot and saw Carson was hit. She fell flat on
- the floor. We've done everything, but she's still unconscious.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The two men went hastily into the room where Mrs. Dwight lay, and they
- were barely out of sight when Helen noticed some one rapidly approaching
- from the direction of the jail. It was Keith Gordon, and as he entered the
- gate he laid his hand on Linda's shoulder and said, cheerily, &ldquo;Don't worry
- now; Pete is safe and the mob is dispersing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But Carson,&rdquo; Major Warren asked; &ldquo;was he hurt?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We don't exactly know yet.&rdquo; Keith was now at Helen's side, looking into
- her wide-open, anxious eyes. &ldquo;He wouldn't stop a second to be examined. He
- was afraid something might occur to alter the temper of the mob and wasn't
- going to run any risks. The crowd, fortunately for Pete, was made up
- mostly of towns-people. One man from the mountains, a blood relative of
- the Johnsons, could have kindled the blaze again with a word, and Carson
- knew it. He was more worried about his mother than anything else. She was
- at the window and he saw her fall; he urged me to hurry back to tell her
- he was all right. I'll go in.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But he was detained by the sound of voices down the street. It was a group
- of half a dozen men, and in their midst was Carson Dwight, violently
- protesting against being supported.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I tell you I'm all right!&rdquo; Helen heard him saying. &ldquo;I'm not a baby,
- Garner; let me alone!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you are bleeding like a stuck pig,&rdquo; Garner said. &ldquo;Your handkerchief
- is literally soaked. And look at your shirt!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's only skin-deep,&rdquo; Carson cried. &ldquo;I was stunned for a moment when it
- hit me, that's all.&rdquo; Helen, followed by her father and Sanders, advanced
- hurriedly to meet the approaching group. They gave way as she drew near,
- and she and Dwight faced each other.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The doctor is in the house, Carson,&rdquo; she said, tenderly; &ldquo;go in and let
- him examine your wound.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's only a scratch, Helen, I give you my word,&rdquo; he laughed, lightly. &ldquo;I
- never saw such a squeamish set of men in my life. Even stolid old Bill
- Garner has had seven duck fits at the sight of my red handkerchief. How's
- my mother?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen's eyes fell. &ldquo;Your father says he is afraid it is quite serious,&rdquo;
- she said. &ldquo;The doctor is with her; she was unconscious.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They saw Carson wince; his face became suddenly rigid. He sighed. &ldquo;It may
- not be so well after all. Pete is safe for awhile, but if she&mdash;if my
- mother were to&mdash;&rdquo; He went no further, simply staring blankly into
- Helen's face. Suddenly she put her hand up to his blood-stained temple and
- gently drew aside the matted hair. Their eyes met and clung together.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You must let Dr. Stone dress this at once,&rdquo; she said, more gently,
- Sanders thought, than he had ever heard a woman speak in all his life. He
- turned aside; there was something in the contact of the two that at once
- maddened him and drew him down to despair. He had dared to hope that she
- would consent to become his wife, and yet the man to whom she was so
- gently ministering had once been her lover. Yes, that was the man. He was
- sure of it now. Dwight's attitude, tone of voice, and glance of the eye
- were evidence enough. Besides, Sanders asked himself, where was the living
- man who could know Helen Warren and not be her slave forever afterwards?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'll go right in,&rdquo; Carson said, gloomily. He and Keith and Garner
- were passing through the gate when Linda called to him as she came hastily
- forward, but Keith and Garner were talking and Carson did not hear the old
- woman's voice. Helen met her and paused. &ldquo;Let him alone to-night, mammy,&rdquo;
- she said, almost bitterly, it seemed to Sanders, who was peering into new
- depths of her character. &ldquo;<i>Your</i> boy is safe, but Carson is wounded&mdash;<i>wounded</i>,
- I tell you, and his mother may be dying. Let him alone for to-night,
- anyway.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, honey,&rdquo; the old woman said; &ldquo;but I'm gwine ter stay here till
- de doctor comes out en ax 'im how dey bofe is. My heart is full ter-night,
- honey. Seem 'most like God done listen ter my prayers after all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Sanders lingered with the pale, deeply distraught young lady on the
- veranda till Keith came out of the house, passed through the gate, and
- strode across the grass towards them.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They are both all right, thank God!&rdquo; he announced. &ldquo;The doctor says Mrs.
- Dwight has had a frightful shock but will pull through. Carson was right;
- his wound was only a scratch caused by the grazing bullet. But God knows
- it was a close call, and I think there is but one man in the State low
- enough to have fired the shot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When Keith and Sanders had left her, Helen went with dragging, listless
- feet up the stairs to her room.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lighting her lamp, she stood looking at her image in the mirror on her
- bureau. How strangely drawn and grave her features appeared! It seemed to
- her that she looked older and more serious than she had ever looked in her
- life.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dropping her glance to her hands, she noted something that sent a thrill
- through her from head to foot. It was a purple smudge left on her fingers
- by their contact with Carson Dwight's wound. Stepping across to her
- wash-stand, she poured some water into the basin, and was on the point of
- removing the stain when she paused and impulsively raised it towards her
- lips. She stopped again, and stood with her hand poised in mid-air. Then a
- thought flashed into her brain. She was recalling the contents of the
- fatal letter of Carson's to her poor brother; the hot blood surged over
- her. She shuddered, dipped her hands, and began to lave them in the
- cooling water. Carson was noble; he was brave; he had a great and
- beautiful soul, and yet he had written that letter to her dead brother.
- Yes, she had openly encouraged Sanders, and she must be honorable. At any
- rate, he was a good, clean man and his happiness was at stake. Yes, she
- supposed she would finally marry him. She would marry him.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXI.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0024" id="linkimage-0024"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9193.jpg" alt="9193 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9193.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- ARSON was slightly weakened by the loss of blood and the unusual tax on
- his strength, and yet, wearing a strip of sticking-plaster as the only
- sign of his wound, he was at the office betimes the next morning, anxious
- to make an early start into the arrangements for a hurried preliminary
- trial of his client. Garner, as, was that worthy's habit when kept up late
- at night, was still asleep in the den when Helen called.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson was at his desk, bending over a law-book, his pipe in his mouth,
- when, looking up, he saw her standing in the doorway and rose instantly, a
- flush of gratification on his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've come to see you about poor Pete,&rdquo; she began, her pale face taking on
- color as if from the heat of his own. &ldquo;I know it's early, but I couldn't
- wait. Mam' Linda was in my room this morning at the break of day, sitting
- by my bed rocking back and forth and moaning.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She's uneasy, of course,&rdquo; Carson said. &ldquo;That's only natural of a mother
- placed as she is.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes,&rdquo; Helen answered, with a sigh. &ldquo;She was thoroughly happy last
- night over his rescue, but now you see she's got something else to worry
- about. She now wonders if he will be allowed a fair trial.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The boy must have that,&rdquo; Carson said, and then his face clouded over and
- he held himself more erect as he glanced past her out at the door. &ldquo;Is Mr.
- Sanders&mdash;did he come with you? You see, I met him on the way to your
- house as I came down.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, he's there talking over the trouble with my father,&rdquo; Helen made
- rather awkward answer. &ldquo;He came in to breakfast, but&mdash;but I wasn't at
- the table. I was with Mam' Linda.&rdquo; And thereupon Helen blushed more deeply
- over the reflection that these last words might sound like intentional and
- even presumptuous balm to the sensitiveness of a rejected suitor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was afraid he might be waiting on the outside,&rdquo; Carson said, awkwardly.
- &ldquo;I want to show hospitality to a stranger in town, you know, but somehow I
- can't exactly do my full duty in his case.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are not expected to,&rdquo; and Helen had tripped again, as her fresh color
- proved. &ldquo;I mean, Carson&mdash;&rdquo; But she could go no further.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I am unequal to it, anyway,&rdquo; Carson replied, with tightening lips
- and a steady, honest stare. &ldquo;I don't dislike him personally. I hold no
- actual grudge against him. From all I've heard of him he is worthy of any
- woman's love and deepest respect. I'm simply off the committee of
- entertainment during his stay.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I&mdash;I&mdash;didn't come down to talk about Mr. Sanders,&rdquo; Helen found
- herself saying, as the shortest road from the trying subject. &ldquo;It seems to
- me you ought to hate me. I have, I know, through my concern over Pete,
- caused you endless trouble and loss of political influence. Last night you
- did what no other man would or could have done. Oh, it was so brave, so
- noble, so glorious! I laid awake nearly all night thinking about it. Your
- wonderful speech rang over and over in my ears. I was too excited to cry
- while it was actually going on, but I shed tears of joy when I thought it
- all over afterwards.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, that wasn't anything!&rdquo; Dwight said, forcing a light tone, though his
- flush had died out. &ldquo;I knew you and Linda wanted the boy saved, and it
- wasn't anything. I ran no risk. It was only fun&mdash;a game of football
- with a human pigskin snatched here and there by a frenzied mob of players.
- When it fell of its own accord at my feet, and I had laid hands on it, I
- would have put it over the line or died trying, especially when you and
- Sanders&mdash;who has beaten me in a grander game&mdash;stood looking on.
- Oh, I'm only natural! I wanted to win because&mdash;first, because it was
- your wish, and&mdash;because <i>that man was there.</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen's glance fell to the ragged carpet which, clogged with the dried mud
- of a recent rain, stretched from her feet to the door. Then she looked
- helplessly round the room at the dusty, open bookshelves, Garner's
- disreputable desk strewn with pamphlets, printed forms of notes and
- mortgages, cigar-stubs, and old letters. Her eyes rested longer on the
- dingy, small-paned windows to which the cobwebs clung.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You always bring up his name,&rdquo; she said, almost resentfully. &ldquo;Is it
- really quite fair to him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, it isn't,&rdquo; he admitted, quickly. &ldquo;And from this moment that sort of
- banter is at an end. Now, what can I do for you? You came to speak about
- Pete.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She hesitated for a moment. It was almost as if, after all she had said,
- that if the subject was to be dropped, hers, not his, should be the final
- word.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I came to tell you that Mam' Linda and I have just left the jail. She was
- so wrought up and weak that I made Uncle Lewis take her home in a buggy.
- He says she didn't close her eyes all last night and this morning refused
- to touch her breakfast. Then the sight of Pete in his awful condition
- completely unnerved her. Did you get a good look at him last night, Carson&mdash;I
- mean in the light?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo; Dwight shrugged his broad shoulders. &ldquo;But he looked bad enough as it
- was.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The sight made me ill,&rdquo; Helen said. &ldquo;The jailer let us go into the narrow
- passage and we saw him through the bars of the cell. I would never have
- known him in the world. His clothing was all in shreds and his face and
- arms were gashed and tom, his feet bare and bleeding. Poor mammy simply
- stood peering through at him and crying, 'My boy, my baby, my baby!'
- Carson, I firmly believe he is innocent.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So do I,&rdquo; Dwight made prompt answer. &ldquo;That is, I am reasonably sure of
- it. I shall know <i>positively</i> when I talk to him to-day.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then you will secure his liberty, won't you?&rdquo; Helen asked, eagerly. &ldquo;I
- promised mammy I'd talk to you and bring her a report of what you said.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am going to do everything in my power,&rdquo; Dwight said; &ldquo;but I don't want
- to raise false hopes only to disappoint you and Linda all the more later.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Carson, tell me what you mean. You don't seem sure of the outcome.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You must try to look-at the thing bravely, Helen,&rdquo; Dwight said, firmly.
- &ldquo;There is more in it than an inexperienced girl like you could imagine. I
- think we can arrange for a trial to-morrow, but it seems often that it is
- while such trials are in progress that the people become most wrought up;
- and then, you know, to-day and to-night must pass, and&mdash;&rdquo; He broke
- off, avoiding her earnest stare of inquiry.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Go on, Carson, you can trust me, if I <i>am</i> only a girl.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To tell you the truth,&rdquo; Dwight complied, &ldquo;it is the next twenty-four
- hours that I dread most. That mob last night, it seems, was made up for
- the most part of men here in town, workers in the factories and
- iron-foundries&mdash;many of whom know me personally and have faith in my
- promises. If it were left with them I'd have little to fear, but it is the
- immediate neighbors of the dead man and woman, the members of the gang of
- White Caps who whipped Pete and feel themselves personally affronted by
- what they believe to be his crime&mdash;they are the men, Helen, from whom
- I fear trouble.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen was pale and her hands trembled, though she strove bravely to be
- calm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You still fear that they may rise and come&mdash;and&mdash;take&mdash;him&mdash;out&mdash;of&mdash;jail?
- Oh!&rdquo; She clasped her hands tightly and stood facing him, a look of terror
- growing in her beautiful eyes. &ldquo;And can't something be done? Mr. Sanders
- spoke this morning of telegraphing the Governor to send troops to guard
- the jail.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, that's it!&rdquo; said Carson, grimly. &ldquo;But who is to take that
- responsibility on himself. I can't, Helen. It might be the gravest, most
- horrible mistake a man ever made, one that would haunt him to his very
- grave. The Governor, not understanding the pulse of the people here, might
- take the word of some one on the spot. Garner and I know him pretty well.
- We've been of political service to him personally, and he would do all he
- could if we telegraphed him, but&mdash;we couldn't do it. By the stroke of
- our pen we might make orphans of the children of scores of honest white
- men, and widows of their wives, for the bayonets and shot of a regiment of
- soldiers would not deter such men from what they regard as sacred duty to
- their families and homes. If the Governor's troops did military duty, they
- would have to hew down human beings like wheat before a scythe. The very
- sight of their uniforms would be like a red rag to a mad bull. It would be
- a calamity such as has never taken place in the State. I can't have a hand
- in that, Helen, and not another thinking man in the South would. I love
- the men of the mountains too well. They are turning against me politically
- because we differ somewhat, but I simply can't see them shot like rabbits
- in a net. Pete is, after all, only <i>one</i>&mdash;they are many, and
- they are conscientiously acting according to their lights. The machinery
- of modern law moves too slowly for them. They have seen crime triumphant
- too often to trust to any verdict other than that reached from their own
- reasoning.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I see; I see!&rdquo; Helen cried, her face blanched. &ldquo;I don't blame you,
- Carson, but poor mammy; what can I say to her?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do your best to pacify and encourage her,&rdquo; Dwight answered, &ldquo;and we'll
- hope for the best.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stood in the doorway and watched her as she walked off down the little
- street. &ldquo;Poor, dear girl!&rdquo; he mused. &ldquo;I had to tell her the truth. She's
- too brave and strong to be treated like a child.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned back to his desk and sat down. There was a deep frown on his
- face. &ldquo;I came within an inch of losing my grip on myself,&rdquo; his thoughts
- ran on. &ldquo;Another moment and I'd have let her know how I am suffering. She
- must never know that&mdash;never!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXII
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0025" id="linkimage-0025"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9200.jpg" alt="9200 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9200.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- ALF an hour later Garner came in. He walked about the room, a half smile
- on his face, sniffing the air as if with unctuous delight, casting now and
- then an amused glance at his inattentive partner.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What do you mean? What are you up to now?&rdquo; Carson asked, slightly
- irritated over having his thoughts disturbed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She's been here,&rdquo; Garner answered. &ldquo;She told me so just now, and I want
- to inhale the heavenly perfume she left in this disreputable hole. Good
- Lord, you don't mean that you let her see those rotten slippers of mine!
- If you'd been half a friend you'd have kicked them out of sight, but you
- didn't care; you've got on a clean collar and necktie, and that plaster on
- your alabaster brow would admit you to the highest realm of the elect&mdash;provided
- the door-keeper was a woman and knew how you got your ticket. Huh! I
- really don't know what will become of me if I associate with you much
- longer. Your conduct last night upset me. I turned in to bed about two
- o'clock. Bob Smith was doing night-work at the hotel, and he came in and
- had to be told the whole thing; and he'd no sooner got to bed than Keith
- came in, and Bob had to hear <i>his</i> version. I had a corking dime
- novel, but it was too tame after the racket you went through. The <i>Red
- Avenger</i> I was trying to get interested in couldn't hold a candle, even
- in his bareback ride strapped to a wild mustang in a mad dash across a
- burning prairie, to your horse-block rescue act. What <i>you</i> did was
- <i>new</i>, and I was <i>there</i>. The burning prairie business has been
- overdone and the love interest in the <i>Red Avenger</i> was weak, while
- yours&mdash;<i>well!</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Garner sat down in his creaking revolving-chair and thrust his thumbs into
- the arm-holes of his vest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mine?&rdquo; Carson said, coldly. &ldquo;I don't exactly see your point.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, the love business was there all the same,&rdquo; Garner laughed,
- significantly; &ldquo;for, thrilling as it all was, I had an eye to that. I
- couldn't keep from wondering how I'd have felt if I'd been in your place
- and had your chances.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>My</i> chances!&rdquo; Dwight frowned. It was plain that he did not like
- Garner's bold encroachments on his natural reserve.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, your chances, dang you!&rdquo; Garner retorted, with a laugh. &ldquo;Do you
- know, my boy, that as a psychological proposition, the biggest, most
- earnest, most credulous-looking ass on earth is the man who comes to a
- strange town to do his courting and has nothing to do but that one thing,
- at stated hours through the day or evening, while everybody around him is
- going about attending to business. I've watched that fellow hanging around
- the office of the hotel, kicking his heels together to kill time between
- visits, and in spite of all I've heard about his stability and moral worth
- I can't respect him. Hang it, if I were in his place and wanted to spend a
- week here, I'd peddle cigars on the street&mdash;I'd certainly have <i>something</i>
- to occupy my spare time. But I'll be flamdoodled if you didn't give him
- something to think about last night. Of all things, it strikes me, that
- could make a man like that sick&mdash;sick as a dog at the very stomach of
- his hopes&mdash;would be to see a former sweetheart of his fair charmer
- standing under shot and shell in front of her ancestral mansion protecting
- her servants from a howling mob like that, and later to see the defender,
- with the step of a David with a sling, come traipsing back victorious in
- her cause, all gummed up with blood and fighting still like hell to keep
- his friends from choking him to death in sheer admiration. She and Sanders
- may be engaged, but I'll be dadblamed if I wouldn't be worried if I were
- in his place.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wish you would let up, Garner,&rdquo; Dwight said, almost angrily. &ldquo;I know
- you mean well, but you don't understand the situation, and I have told you
- before that I don't like to talk about it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I <i>did</i> want to tell you how it was rubbed in on him this morning,&rdquo;
- Garner said, only half apologetically, &ldquo;and if you don't care, I'll
- finish.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson said nothing. Spots of red were on his cheeks, and with a teasing
- smile Garner went on: &ldquo;I had stopped to speak to her on the corner just
- now, when the Major and his Highness from Augusta joined us. The old man
- was simply bursting with enthusiasm over what you accomplished last night.
- According to the Major, you were the highest type of Southerner since
- George Washington, and the obtuse old chap kept turning to Sanders for his
- confirmation of each and every statement. Sanders was doing it with slow
- nods and inarticulate grunts, about as readily as a seasick passenger
- specifies items for his dinner, while Helen stood there blushing like a
- red rose. Well,&rdquo; Garner concluded, as he kicked off one of his untied
- shoes to put on a slipper, &ldquo;it may be cold comfort to you, viewed under
- the search-light of all the gossip in the air, but your blond rival is so
- jealous that the green juice of it is oozing from the pores of his skin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It isn't fair to him to look at it as you are,&rdquo; Dwight said. &ldquo;Under the
- same circumstances he could have taken my place.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Under the same circumstances, yes,&rdquo; Garner grinned. &ldquo;But it is
- circumstances that make things what they are in this world, and I tell you
- that fellow needs circumstances worse than any man I ever saw. He is
- worried. I stopped and watched him as he walked on with her, and I declare
- it looked to me like he kicked himself under his long coat at every step.
- Say, look! Isn't that Pole Baker across the street? The fellow behind the
- gray horse. Yes, that's who it is. I'll call him. He may have news from
- the mountains.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Answering the summons, Baker led his horse across the street to where the
- two friends stood waiting on the edge of the pavement.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have they heard of the arrest over there, Pole?&rdquo; Garner asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; the farmer drawled out. &ldquo;I was at George Wilson's store this
- morning, where a big gang was waiting for food supplies from their homes.
- Dan Willis fetched the report&mdash;by-the-way, fellows, just between us
- three, I'll bet he was the skunk that fired that shot. I'm pretty sure of
- it, from what I've picked up from some of his pals.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But what are they going to do?&rdquo; Carson asked, anxiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's exactly what I come in town to tell you,&rdquo; answered the
- mountaineer. &ldquo;They are taking entirely a new tack. A report has leaked out
- that Sam Dudlow was seen prowling about Johnson's just 'fore dark the
- night of the murder, and they are dead on his track. They are
- concentrating their forces to catch him, and, since Pete Warren is safe in
- jail, they say they are going to let 'im stay thar awhile anyway.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good!&rdquo; Garner cried, rubbing his hands together. &ldquo;We've got two chances,
- now, my boy&mdash;to prove Pete innocent at court or by their catching the
- right man. In my opinion, Dudlow is the coon that did the Job, and I
- believe he did it alone. Pete is too chicken-hearted and he's been too
- well brought up. Now let's get to work. You go talk to the prisoner,
- Carson, and put him through that honeyfugling third degree of yours. He'll
- confess if he did it, and if he did, may the Lord have mercy on his soul!
- I won't help defend him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's whar I stand,&rdquo; Pole Baker said. &ldquo;It's enough trouble savin' <i>innocent</i>
- niggers these days without bothering over the guilty. Shyster lawyers
- tryin' to protect the bad ones for a little fee is at the bottom of all
- this lawlessness anyway.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXIII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0026" id="linkimage-0026"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9205.jpg" alt="9205 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9205.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- S the prisoner's counsel, Carson had no difficulty in seeing him. At the
- outer door of the red brick structure, with its slate roof and dormer
- windows, Dwight met Burt Barrett, the jailer, a tall though strong young
- man, who had once lived in the mountains and had been a moonshiner, and
- was noted for his grim courage in any emergency.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I understand the trial is set for to-morrow,&rdquo; he remarked, as he opened
- the outer door which led into a hallway at the end of which was the
- portion of the house in which he lived with his wife and children.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Carson replied; &ldquo;the judge has telegraphed that he will come
- without fail.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The jailer shrugged his shoulders and laughed. &ldquo;I feel a sight better over
- it than I did last night. I understand that the mob is going to let us
- alone till they can catch Sam Dudlow; if they lay hands on that scamp they
- certainly will barbecue 'im alive. As for Pete, I can't make up my mind
- about him; he's a trifling nigger and no mistake. He's got a good,
- old-time mammy and daddy, and none of Major Warren's niggers have ever
- been in the chain-gang, but this boy has talked a lot and been in powerful
- bad company. If you can keep him out of the clutch of the mob you may save
- his neck, but you've got a job before you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want to ask what you think about putting a guard round the jail,&rdquo;
- Carson said, when they were at the foot of the stairs leading to the cells
- on the floor above.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As far as I'm concerned, I hope you won't have it done,&rdquo; said Barrett.
- &ldquo;To save your neck, you couldn't summon men that wouldn't be prejudiced
- agin the nigger, an' if the report went out that we had put a force on at
- the jail it would only make the mob madder, and make them act quicker. A
- hundred armed citizens wouldn't stop a lynching gang&mdash;not a shot
- would be fired by white men at white men, so what would be the use?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's what the sheriff thinks exactly, Burt,&rdquo; Carson replied. &ldquo;I presume
- the only thing to do is to treat the arrest as usual. I'm doing all I can
- to assure the people that there is to be a fair and speedy trial.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They had reached the top of the stairs and were near Pete's cell, when the
- jailer turned and asked, in an undertone, &ldquo;Are you armed?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, no,&rdquo; Carson said, in surprise.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good Lord! I wouldn't advise you to go inside the cell then. I've known
- niggers to kill their best friends when they are desperate.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not afraid of this one,&rdquo; Dwight laughed. &ldquo;I must get inside. I want
- to know the whole truth, and I can't talk to him through the grating. Is
- he in the cell on the right?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, the first on the left; it's the only doublebarred one in the jail.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In one corner of the fairly &ldquo;well lighted room stood a veritable cage, the
- sides, top and bottom consisting of heavy steel lattice-work. As the
- jailer was unlocking the massive door, Carson peered through one of the
- squares and a most pitiful sight met his eye, for at the sound of the key
- in the lock Pete, in his tatters and gashed and swollen face, had crouched
- down on his dingy blanket and remained there quaking in terror.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Get up!&rdquo; the jailer ordered, in a not unkindly tone; &ldquo;it's Carson Dwight
- to see you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this the negro's face lighted up, his eyes blazed in the sudden flare
- of relief, and he rose quickly. &ldquo;Oh, Marse Carson, I was afeared&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lock us in,&rdquo; Dwight said to the jailer; &ldquo;when I'm through I'll call you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, you know him better than I do,&rdquo; Barrett said. &ldquo;I'll wait
- below.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pete,&rdquo; Carson said, gently, when they were alone, &ldquo;your mother says she
- wants me to defend you under the charge brought against you. Do you wish
- it, too?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yasser, Marse Carson; but, Marse Carson, I don't know no mo' about dat
- thing dan you do. 'Fo' God, Marse Carson, I'm telling you de trufe. Lawsy,
- Marse Carson, you kin git me out o' here ef you'll des tell 'em ter let me
- go. Dey all know you, Marse Carson, en dey know none er yo' kind er black
- folks ain't er gwine ter do er nasty thing lak dat. Look how dey did las'
- night! Shucks! dey wouldn't er lef' enough o' my haar fer er
- hummin'-bird's nest, ef I hadn't got ter you in de nick er time. Dat pack
- er howlin' rapscallions was tryin' ter tear me ter mince-meat when you
- fired off dat big speech en made 'em all feel lak crawlin' in holes. You
- tell 'em, Marse Carson&mdash;you tell de jailer ter le' me out. Dat man
- know you ain't no fool; he know you is de biggest lawyer in de Souf. Ain't
- I heard old marster say you gwine up, en up, en up, till you set in de
- jedge's seat in de cote? Las' night, when you 'gun on 'em, en let out dat
- way, I knowed I was safe, but I don't see what yo'-all waitin' fer; I want
- ter go home ter mammy, Marse Carson. Look lak she been sick, en she cried
- en tuck on here, en so did young miss. Marse Carson, <i>what's de matter
- wid me?</i> What I done? I ain't er bad nigger. Unc' Richmond, on de farm,
- toi' me 'twas' ca'se I made threats ergin dat white man 'ca'se he whipped
- me. I did talk er lot, Marse Carson, but I never meant no harm. I was des
- er li'l mad, en&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop, Pete!&rdquo; There was a crude wooden stool in the cell and Carson sat
- down on it. His heart was overflowing with pity for the simple, trusting
- creature before him as he went on gently and yet firmly: &ldquo;You don't
- realize it, Pete, but you are in the most dangerous position you were ever
- in. I am powerless to release you. You'll have to be taken to court and
- seriously tried by law for the crime of which you are charged. Pete, I'm
- going to defend you, but I can't do a thing for you unless you tell me the
- whole truth. If you did this thing you must tell me&mdash;<i>me</i>, do
- you understand. We are alone. No one can hear you, and if you confess it
- to me it will go no further. Do you understand?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Dwight's glance was fixed on the floor. To this point he had steeled
- himself against a too impulsive faith in the negro's words that he might
- logically satisfy himself beyond any doubt as to the innocence or guilt of
- his client. There was silence. He dared not look into the gashed face
- before him, dreading to read what might be written there by the quivering
- hand of self-condemnation. The sheer length of the ensuing pause sent cold
- darts of fear through him. He waited another moment, then raised his eyes
- to the staring ones fixed upon him. To his astonishment they were full of
- tears; the great, heavy lip of the negro was quivering like that of a
- weeping child.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, Marse <i>Carson!</i>&rdquo; he sobbed; &ldquo;my God, I thought you knowed I
- didn't do it! When you tol' 'em all las' night dat I wasn't de right one,
- I thought you meant it. I never once thought you&mdash;<i>you</i> was
- gwine ter turn ergin me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson restrained himself by an effort as he went on, still calmly, with
- the penetrating insistency of grim justice itself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then do you know anything about it?&rdquo; he asked;&mdash;&ldquo;<i>anything at all?</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing I could swear to, Marse Carson,&rdquo; Pete replied, wiping his eyes on
- his torn and sleeveless arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you suspect anybody, Pete?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yasser, I do, Marse Carson. Somehow, I b'lieve dat Sam Dudlow done it. I
- b'lieve it 'ca'se folks say he's run off; en what he run off fer lessen
- he's de one? Oh, Marse Carson, I 'lowed I was havin' er hard 'nough time
- lak it is, but ef <i>you</i> gwine jine de rest uv um en&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop; think!&rdquo; Carson went on, almost sternly, so eager was he to get
- vital facts bearing on the situation. &ldquo;I want to know, Pete, why you think
- Sam Dudlow killed the Johnsons. Have you any other reason except that he
- has left?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Pete hesitated a moment, then he answered: &ldquo;I think he de one, Marse
- Carson, 'ca'se one day while me'n him en some more niggers was loadin'
- cotton at yo' pa's warehouse, some un was guyin' me 'bout de stripes
- Johnson en Willis lef' on my back, en I was&mdash;I was shootin' off my
- mouf. I didn't mean er thing, Marse Carson, but I was talkin' too much, en
- Sam come ter me, he did, en said: 'Yo' er fool, nigger; yo' sort never
- gits even fer er thing lak dat. It's de kind dat lay low en do de wuk
- right.' En, Marse Carson, w'en I hear dem folks was daid I des laid it ter
- Sam, in my mind.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pete,&rdquo; Dwight said, as he rose to leave, &ldquo;I firmly believe you are
- innocent.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thank God, Marse Carson! I thought you'd b'lieve me. Now, w'en you gwine
- let me out?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can't tell that, Pete,&rdquo; Dwight answered, as cheerfully as possible.
- &ldquo;You need a suit of clothes. I'll send you one right away.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;One er yo's, Marse Carson?&rdquo; The gashed face actually glowed with the
- delight of a child over a new toy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was going to order a new one,&rdquo; Carson answered. &ldquo;I'd ruther have one er
- yo's ef you got one you thoo with,&rdquo; Pete said, eagerly. &ldquo;Dar ain't none in
- dis town lak dem you git fum New York. Is you quit wearin' dat brown
- checked one you got last spring?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, you can have that, Pete, if you wish, and I'll send you some
- shoes and other things.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My God! will yer, boss? Lawd, won't I cut er shine at chu'ch next Sunday!
- Say, Marse Carson, you ain't gwine ter let um keep me in here over Sunday,
- is you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll do the best I can for you, Pete,&rdquo; the young man said, and when the
- jailer had opened the door he descended the stairs with a heavy,
- despondent tread.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Poor, poor devil!&rdquo; he said to himself. &ldquo;He's not any more responsible
- than a baby. And yet our laws hold him, in his benighted ignorance, more
- tightly, more mercilessly than they do the highest in the land.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXIV.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0027" id="linkimage-0027"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9212.jpg" alt="9212 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9212.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- ESPITE the news Pole Baker had brought to town regarding the disposition
- of the mountaineers to let justice take its formal trend in the case of
- the negro already arrested, as the day wore on towards its close the whole
- town took on an air of vague excitement. Men who now lived at Darley, but
- had been former residents of the country, and were supposed to know the
- temper and character of the aggrieved people, shook their heads and smiled
- grimly when the subject of Pete's coming trial was mentioned. &ldquo;Huh!&rdquo; said
- one of these men, who kept a small grocery store on the main street, &ldquo;that
- nigger'll never see the door of the court-house.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And that opinion grew and seemed to saturate the very garment of
- approaching night. The negroes at work in various ways about the business
- portion of the town left their posts early, and with no comment to the
- whites or even to their own kind, they betook themselves to their homes&mdash;or
- elsewhere. The negroes who had held the interrupted meeting at Neb Wynn's
- house had been all that day less in evidence than any of the others. The
- attempt to stimulate law and order, to meet the white race on common
- ground, had been crudely and yet sincerely made. They had done all they
- could within their restricted limitations; it now behooved them personally
- to avoid the probable overflow of the coming crisis. Their meeting in
- secret, they feared, was not understood. The present prisoner, in fact,
- had to all appearances, at least, been knowingly harbored by them. To
- explain would be easy enough; convincing an infuriated, race-mad mob of
- their friendly, helpful intentions would be impossible. Hence it was that
- long-headed, now silent-tongued, Neb Wynn locked up his domicile, and with
- his wife and children stole through the darkest streets and alleys to the
- house of a citizen who had owned his father.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Marse George,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I want you ter take me 'n my folks in fer
- ter-night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, Neb,&rdquo; the white man answered; &ldquo;we've got plenty of room. Go
- round to the kitchen and get your suppers. I didn't know it was as bad as
- that, but it may be well to be on the safe side.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Just after dark Carson went home to supper. As he drew near the front gate
- he noticed that the Warren house was lighted both in the upper and lower
- portions and that a group of persons were standing on the veranda. He
- noticed the towering form of old Lewis and the bowed, bandanna-clad head
- of Linda, and with them, evidently offering consolation, stood Helen, the
- Major, Sanders, and Keith Gordon.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson was entering the gate when Keith through the twilight recognized
- him and signalled him to wait. And leaving the others Keith came over to
- him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I must see you, Carson,&rdquo; he said, in a voice that had never sounded so
- grave. &ldquo;Can we go in? If Mam' Linda sees you she'll be after you. She's
- terribly upset.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come into the library,&rdquo; Carson said. &ldquo;I see it's lighted. We'll not be
- disturbed there.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Inside the big, square room, with its simple furnishings and drab tints,
- Carson sank, weary from his nervous strain and loss of sleep, into an
- easy-chair and motioned his friend to take another, but Keith, nervously
- twirling his hat in his hands, continued to stand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's awful, old man, simply awful!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I've been there since
- sundown trying to pacify that old man and woman, but what was the use?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then she's afraid&mdash;&rdquo; Carson began.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Afraid? Good God! how could she help it? The negro preacher and his wife
- came to her and Lewis and frankly tried to prepare them for the worst.
- Uncle Lewis is speechless, and Linda is past the tear-shedding stage. Hand
- in hand the old pair simply pace the floor like goaded brutes with human
- hearts and souls bound up in them. Then Helen&mdash;the poor, dear girl!
- Isn't this a beautiful homecoming for her? I feel like fighting, and yet
- there's nothing to hit but empty, heartless air. I don't care if you know
- it, Carson.&rdquo; Keith sank into a chair and leaned forward, his eyes
- glistening with the condensed dew of tense emotion. &ldquo;I don't deny it.
- Helen is the only girl I ever cared for. She's treated me very kindly ever
- since she discovered my feeling, and given me to understand in the
- sweetest way the utter hopelessness of my case, but I still feel the same.
- I thought I was growing out of it, but seeing her sorrow to-day has shown
- me what she is to me&mdash;and what she always will be. I'll love her all
- my life, Carson. She's suffering terribly over this. She loves her old
- mammy as much as if they were the same flesh and blood. Oh, it was
- pitiful, simply pitiful! Helen was trying to pacify her just now, and the
- old woman suddenly laid her hand on her breast and cried out: 'Don't talk
- ter me, honey child, I nursed bofe you en Pete on dis here breast, an' dat
- boy's <i>me</i>&mdash;my own self, heart en soul, en ef God let's dem men
- hang 'im ter-night, I'll curse 'Im ter my grave.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Poor old woman!&rdquo; Carson sighed. &ldquo;If it has to come to her, it would be
- better to have it over with. It would have been better if I had stood back
- last night and let them have their way.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh no,&rdquo; protested Keith; &ldquo;that's Linda's sole comfort. She hardly draws a
- breath that doesn't utter your name. She still believes that her only hope
- rests in you. She says you'll yet think of something&mdash;that you'll yet
- do something to prevent the thing. She cries that out every now and then.
- Oh, Carson, I don't amount to anything, but before God I can truthfully
- say that I'd give my life to have Linda talk that way about me&mdash;before
- Helen.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson groaned, his tense hands were locked like prongs of steel in front
- of him, his face was deathly pale. &ldquo;You wouldn't like any sort of talk or
- idle compliments if you were bound hand and foot as I am,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It's
- mockery. It's vinegar rubbed into my wounds. It's hell!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He tore himself from his chair and began to stride about the room like a
- restless tiger in a cage. His walk took him into the hall utterly
- forgetful of the presence of his friend. There a colored maid came to him
- and said, &ldquo;Your mother wants you, sir.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stared at the girl blankly for a moment, then he seemed to pull himself
- together. &ldquo;Has my mother heard&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, sir, your father told us not to excite her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, I'll go up,&rdquo; Carson said. &ldquo;Tell Mr. Gordon, in the library, to
- wait for me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was wondering if you had come,&rdquo; the invalid said, as he bent over her
- bed, took her hand, and kissed her. &ldquo;I presume you have been very busy all
- day over Pete's case?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, very busy, mother dear.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And is it all right now? Your father tells me the trial is set for
- to-morrow. Oh, Carson, I'm very proud of you. I heard your speech last
- night, and it seemed to lift me to the very throne of God. Oh, you are
- right, you are right! It is our duty to love and sympathize with those
- poor creatures. They are still children in the cradles of their past
- slavery. They can't act for themselves. Their crimes are due chiefly to
- the lack of the guiding hands they once had. Oh, my son, your father is
- angry with you for spoiling your political chances by such a radical
- stand, but even if you lose the race by it, I shall be all the prouder of
- you, for you have shown that you won't sell yourself. I wish I could go to
- the courthouse to-morrow, but the doctor won't let me. He says I mustn't
- have another shock like that last night, when I heard that shot, saw you
- reel, and thought you were killed. Son, are you listening?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, yes, mother. I&mdash;&rdquo; His mind was really elsewhere. He had dropped
- her hand, and was standing with furrowed brow and tightly drawn lips in
- the shadow thrown by the lamp on a table near by and the high posts of the
- old-fashioned bedstead.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I thought you seemed to be thinking of something else,&rdquo; said the invalid,
- plaintively.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I really was troubled about leaving Keith downstairs by himself,&rdquo; Carson
- said. &ldquo;Perhaps I'd better run down now, mother.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, I didn't know he was there. Ask him to supper.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, mother,&rdquo; and he left the room with a slow step, finding Gordon
- on the veranda below fitfully puffing at a cigar as he walked to and fro.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Helen called me to the fence just now,&rdquo; Keith said. &ldquo;She's all broken to
- pieces. She is relying solely on you now. She sent you a message.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, with the tears streaming down her cheeks she simply said, 'Tell
- Carson that I am praying that he will think of some way to avert this
- disaster.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She said that!&rdquo; Carson turned and stared through the gathering shadows
- towards the jail. There was a moment's pause, then he asked, in a tone
- that was harsh, crisp, and rasping: &ldquo;Keith, could you get together
- to-night fifteen men who would stick to me through personal friendship and
- help me arrive at some decision as to&mdash;to what is best?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Twenty, Carson&mdash;twenty who would risk their lives at a word from
- you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They might have to sacrifice&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That wouldn't make a bit of difference; I know the ones you can depend
- on. You've got genuine friends, the truest and bravest a man ever had.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then have as many as you can get to meet me at Blackburn's store at nine
- o'clock. We may accomplish nothing, but I want to talk to them. God knows
- it is the only chance. No, I can't explain now. There is not a moment to
- lose. Tell Blackburn to keep the doors shut and let them assemble in the
- rear as secretly and quietly as possible.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, Carson. I'll have the men there.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXV.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0028" id="linkimage-0028"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9219.jpg" alt="9219 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9219.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- HEN Carson reached the front door of Blackburn's store about nine o'clock
- that evening, he found it closed. For a moment he stood under the Crude
- wooden shed that roofed the sidewalk and looked up and down the deserted
- street. It was a dark night, and from the aspect of the heavy, troubled
- clouds high winds seemed in abeyance beyond the hills to the west. He was
- wondering how he had best make his presence known to his friends within
- the store, when he heard a soft whistle, and Keith Gordon, the flaring
- disk of a cigar lighting his expectant face, stepped out of a dark
- doorway.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've been waiting for you,&rdquo; he said, in a cautious undertone. &ldquo;They are
- getting impatient. You see, they thought you'd be here earlier.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I couldn't get away while my mother was awake,&rdquo; Carson said. &ldquo;Dr. Stone
- was there and warned me not to leave at night. She can't stand any more
- excitement. So I had to stay with her. I read to her till she fell asleep.
- Who's here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The gang and fully fifteen other trusty fellows&mdash;you'll see them on
- the inside, every man of them with a gun. At the last moment I heard Pole
- Baker was down at the wagon-yard, and I nabbed him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good; I'm glad you did. Now let's go in.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not yet, old man,&rdquo; Keith objected. &ldquo;Blackburn gave special orders not to
- open the door if any person was in sight. Let's walk to the corner and
- look around.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They went to the old bank building on the corner, and stood at the foot of
- the stairs leading up to the den. No one was in sight. Across the numerous
- tracks of the switch-yard hard by there was a steam flouring mill which
- ground day and night, and the steady puffing of the engine beat
- monotonously on their ears. In a red flare of light they saw the shadowy
- form of the engineer stoking the fire.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now the way is clear,&rdquo; said Keith; &ldquo;we can go in, but I want to prepare
- you for a disappointment, old man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson stared through the darkness as arm in arm they moved back to the
- store. &ldquo;You mean&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll tell you, Carson. The meeting of these fellows to-night is a big
- proof of the&mdash;the wonderful esteem in which they hold you. No other
- man could have got them together at such a time; but, all the same, they
- are not going to allow you to&mdash;you see, Carson, they have had time to
- talk it over in there, and have unanimously agreed that to make any
- opposition by force would be worse than folly. Pole Baker brought some
- reliable news, reliable and terrible. Why, he told us just now&mdash;however,
- wait. He will tell you about it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Giving a rap on the door that was recognized within, they were admitted by
- Blackburn, who stood back in the shadow and quickly closed the shutter and
- locked it again. In the uncertain light of a lamp with a murky chimney, on
- the platform in the rear, seated on boxes, nail kegs, chairs, table, and
- desk, Dwight beheld a motley gathering of his friends and supporters. Kirk
- Fitzpatrick, the brawny, black-handed tinner, who had a jest for every
- moment, was there; Wilson, the shoemaker; Tobe Hassler, the German baker;
- Tom Wayland, the good-hearted drug clerk, whose hair was as red as blood;
- Bob Smith, Wade Tingle, and, nestled close to the lamp, and looking like a
- hunchback, crouched Garner, so deep in a newspaper that he was utterly
- deaf and blind to sounds and things around him. Besides those mentioned,
- there were several other ardent friends of the candidate.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, here you are at last,&rdquo; Garner cried, throwing down his paper. &ldquo;If I
- hadn't had something to read I'd have been asleep. I don't know any more
- than a rabbit what you intend to propose, but whatever it is, we are late
- enough about it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hurriedly Carson explained the cause of his delay and took the chair which
- the tinner, with the air of a proud inferior, was pushing towards him. As
- he sat down and the lamplight fell athwart his careworn face, the group
- was overwhelmed with sympathy and a strange, far-reaching respect they
- could hardly understand. To-night they were, more than usual, under the
- spell of that inner force which had bound them one and all to him and
- which, they felt, nothing but dishonor could break. And yet there they sat
- so grimly banded together against him that he felt it in their very
- attitudes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The truth is&rdquo;&mdash;Garner broke the awkward pause&mdash;&ldquo;we presume you
- got us together to-night to offer open opposition&mdash;in case, of
- course, that the mob means harm to your client. That seems the only thing
- a body of men can do. But, my dear boy, there are two sides to this
- question. For reasons of your own, chief among which is a most beautiful
- principle to see the humblest stamp of man get justice&mdash;for these
- reasons you call on your friends to stand to you, and they will stand, I
- reckon, to the end, but it's for you, Carson, to act reasonably and think
- as readily of the interests of all of us as for those of the unfortunate
- prisoner. To meet that mob by opposition to-night would&mdash;well, ask
- Pole Baker for the latest news. When you have heard what he knows to be
- true, I am sure you will see the utter futility of any movement
- whatsoever.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- All eyes were now turned on the gaunt mountaineer, who was sitting on an
- inverted nail keg whittling to a fine point a bit of wood which now and
- then he thrust automatically between his white front teeth.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, Carson,&rdquo; he began, in drawling tones, &ldquo;I lowed you-uns would want
- to know just how the land lays, and as I had a sort of underground way of
- gettin' at first-hand facts, I raked in all the information I could an'
- come on to town. I'd heard about how low your mother was, an' easy upset
- by excitement, an' so I didn't go up to your house. I met Keith, an' he
- told me I could see you at this meetin', an' so I waited. Carson, the jig
- is certainly up with that coon. No power under high heaven could save his
- neck. The report that was circulated this morning, was deliberately sent
- out to throw the authorities off their guard. Only about thirty men are
- still on Sam Dudlow's trail&mdash;the rest, hundreds and hundreds, in
- bunches an' factions, each faction totin' a flag to show whar they hail
- from, an' all dressed in white sheets, is headed this way.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you mean right at this moment?&rdquo; Carson asked, as he started to rise.
- </p>
- <p>
- Pole motioned to him to sit down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They won't be here till about twelve o'clock,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;They've passed
- the word about amongst 'em, and agreed to meet, so that all factions can
- take part, at the old Sandsome place, two miles out on the Springtown
- road. They will start from there at half-past eleven on the march for the
- jail. It will be after twelve before they get here. Pete's got that long
- to make his peace, but no longer. And right here, Carson, before I stop, I
- want to say that thar ain't a man in this State I'd do a favor for quicker
- than I would for you, but many of us here to-night are family men, and
- while that nigger may, as you think, be innocent, still his life is just
- one life, while&mdash;well&rdquo;&mdash;Baker snapped his dry fingers with a
- click that was as sharp as the cocking of a revolver&mdash;&ldquo;I wouldn't
- give <i>that</i> for our lives if we opposed them men. They are as mad as
- wounded wild-cats. They believe he done it; they know on reliable
- testimony that he said he'd kill Johnson; an' they want his blood. Five
- hundred such as we are wouldn't halt 'em a minute. I want to help, but I'm
- tied hand an' foot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was silence after Pole's voice died away. Then Garner rapped on the
- table with his small hand and tossed back the long, thick hair from his
- massive brow.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You may as well know the truth, Carson,&rdquo; he said, calmly. &ldquo;We put it to a
- vote just before you came, and we all agreed that we would&mdash;well, try
- to bring you round to some sort of resignation; try to get you to throw it
- off your mind and stop worrying.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- To their surprise Carson took up the lamp and rose. &ldquo;Wait a moment,&rdquo; he
- said, and with the lamp in hand he crossed the elevated part of the floor
- and went down the steps into the cellar. They were left in darkness for a
- moment, the rays of the lamp flashing now only on the front wall and door
- of the long building.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Huh, there ain't anybody hiding there!&rdquo; Blackburn cautiously called out.
- &ldquo;I looked through the full length of it, turned over every box and barrel,
- before you came. I wasn't going to run any risk of having a stray tramp in
- a caucus like this.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was some fixed quality in Dwight's drawn face as he emerged,
- carrying the lamp before him, ascended the steps, and again took his place
- at the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You thought somebody might be hiding there,&rdquo; the store-keeper said; &ldquo;but
- I was careful to&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, it wasn't that,&rdquo; Carson said. &ldquo;I was wondering&mdash;I was trying to
- think&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He paused as if submerged in thought, and Garner turned upon him almost
- sternly. He had never before used quite such a harsh tone to his partner.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You've gone far enough, Carson,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;There are limits even to the
- deepest friendship. You can't ask your best friends to make their wives
- widows and their children orphans in a blind effort to save the neck of
- one miserable negro, even if he's as innocent as the angels in heaven. As
- for yourself, your heroism has almost led you into a cesspool of reckless
- absurdity. You have let that old man and woman up there, and Miss&mdash;that
- old man and woman, <i>anyway</i>&mdash;work on your sympathies till you
- have lost your usual judgment. I'm your friend and&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop! Wait!&rdquo; Carson stood up, his hands on the edge of the table, the
- lamp beneath him throwing his mobile face into the shadow of his firm,
- massive jaw. &ldquo;Stop!&rdquo; he repeated. &ldquo;You say you have given up. Boys, I
- can't. I tell you I <i>can't</i>. I simply can't let them kill that boy.
- Every nerve in my body, every pulsation of my soul screams out against it.
- I have set my heart on averting this horror. Ten years ago I could have
- gone to my bed and slept peacefully, as many good citizens of this town
- will to-night, under the knowledge that the verdict of mob law was to be
- executed, but in the handling of this case I've had a new birth. There is
- no God in heaven if&mdash;I say if&mdash;He has not made it <i>possible</i>
- for the mind and will of man to prevent this horror. There must be a way;
- there <i>is</i> a way, and if I could put my ideas into your brains
- to-night&mdash;my faith and confidence into your souls&mdash;we'd prevent
- this calamity and set an example for our fellows to follow in future.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your ideas into our brains!&rdquo; Garner said, in a tone of amused resentment.
- &ldquo;Well, I like that, Carson; but if you can see a ghost of a chance to save
- that boy's neck with safety to our own, I'd like to have you plug it
- through my skull, if you have to do it with a steel drill. At present I'm
- the senior member of the firm of Garner &amp; Dwight, but I'll take second
- place hereafter, if you can do what you are aiming at.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't mean to reflect on your intelligences,&rdquo; Dwight went on,
- passionately, his voice rising higher, &ldquo;but I <i>do</i> see a way, and I
- am praying God at this moment to make you see it as I do and be willing to
- help me carry it out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Blaze away, old hoss,&rdquo; Pole Baker piped up from his seat on the nail keg.
- &ldquo;I'm not a nigger-lover by a long shot, but somehow, seeing how you feel
- about this particular one an' his connections, I'm as anxious to save 'im
- as if I owned 'im in the good old day an' his sort was fetchin' two
- thousand apiece. You go ahead. I feel kind o' sneakin', anyway, for votin'
- agin you while you was up thar nursin' yore sick mammy. By gum! you give
- me the end of a log I kin tote, an' I'll do it or break my back.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want it understood, Carson,&rdquo; said Wade Tingle at this juncture, &ldquo;that I
- was only voting against our trying to stop that mob by force, and, to do
- myself justice, I was voting in the interests of the family men here
- to-night. God knows, if you can see any <i>other</i> possible way&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We have no time to lose,&rdquo; Carson said. &ldquo;If we are to accomplish anything
- we must be about it. Gentlemen, what I may propose may, in a way, be
- asking you to make a sacrifice almost as great as that of open resistance.
- I am going to ask you, law-abiding citizens that you are, to break the
- law, as you understand it, but not law as the best wisdom of man intended
- it to be. This section is in a state of open lawlessness. The law I'm
- going to ask you to break is already broken. The highest court might hold
- that we would be no better, in <i>fact</i>, than the army of law-breakers
- headed this way with the foam of race hatred on their lips, its insane
- blaze in their eyes that till recently beamed only in gentleness and human
- love. But I'm going to ask you to chose between two evils&mdash;to let an
- everlasting injustice be done at the hand of a hate that will drown in
- tears of regret in time to come, or the lesser evil of breaking an already
- broken law. You are all good citizens, and I tremble and blush over my
- audacity in asking you to do what you have never in any form done before.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson paused. Wondering silence fell on the group. Upon each face
- struggled evidences of an almost painful desire to grasp his meaning. That
- it was momentous no man there doubted. Even the ever equable Garner was
- shaken from, his habitual stoic attitude, and with his delicate fingers
- rigidly supporting his great head he stared open-mouthed at the speaker.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, well, what is it?&rdquo; he presently asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There is only one chance I see,&rdquo; and Dwight stood erect, his arms folded,
- and stepped back so that the light of the lamp fell full upon his tense
- features. The patch of sticking plaster stood out from his pale skin,
- giving his perspiring brow an uncanny look. &ldquo;There is only one thing to
- do, my friends, and without your help I stand powerless. I suggest that we
- form ourselves into a supposed mob of disguised men, that we go ahead of
- the others to the jail, and actually <i>force Burt Barrett to turn the
- prisoner over to us</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Great God!&rdquo; Garner, stood up, and leaned on the table. &ldquo;<i>Then</i> what&mdash;what
- would you do? Good Lord!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson pointed steadily to the cellar-door and swallowed the lump of
- excitement in his throat. &ldquo;I would, unseen by any one, if possible, bring
- him here and imprison him, in that cellar, guarded by us only till&mdash;till
- such a time as we could safely deliver him to a court of justice.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;By God, you <i>are</i> a wheel-hoss!&rdquo; burst from Pole Baker's lips.
- &ldquo;That's as easy as failin' off a log.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you mean to make Burt Barrett believe we are&mdash;are actually bent
- on lynching the negro?&rdquo; demanded Keith Gordon, new-born enthusiasm
- bubbling from his eyes and voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, that would be the only way,&rdquo; said Carson. &ldquo;Barrett is a sworn
- officer of the law, and his position is his livelihood. Even if we could
- persuade him to join us, it wouldn't be fair to him, for he would be
- shouldering more responsibility than we would. The only way is to
- thoroughly disguise ourselves and compel him to give in as he will be
- compelled by the others if we don't act first. I know he would not fire
- upon us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It looks to me like a dandy idea,&rdquo; spoke up Blackburn. &ldquo;As for me I want
- to reward originality by doing the thing if possible. As for that cellar,
- it's as strong as an ancient fortress anyway and, Carson, Pete would not
- try to escape if you ordered him not to. As for disguises, I can lend you
- all the bleached sheeting you want. I got in a fresh bale of it yesterday.
- I could cut it into ten-yard pieces which would not hurt the sale of it.
- Remnants fetch a better price than regular stuff anyway. Boys, let's vote
- on it. All in favor stand up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a clatter of shoes and rattling of chairs, boxes, kegs and other
- articles which had been used for seats. It was an immediate and unanimous
- tribute to the sway Carson Dwight's personality had long held over them.
- They stood by him to a man. Even Garner suddenly, and strangely for his
- crusty individuality, relegated himself to the rank of a common private
- under the obvious leader.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hold on, boys!&rdquo; exclaimed one not so easily relegated to any position not
- full of action, and Pole Baker was heard in a further proposal. &ldquo;So far
- the arrangements are good and sound but you-uns haven't looked far enough
- ahead. When we git to the jail thar's got to be some darned fine talkin'
- of exactly the right sort, or Burt Barrett will smell a mouse and refuse
- our demands. In a case like this silence is a sight more powerful than a
- lot o' gab. Now, I propose to have one man, and one man <i>only</i> to do
- the talking.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, and you are the man,&rdquo; said Carson. &ldquo;You must do it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'm willin',&rdquo; agreed Baker. &ldquo;The truth is, folks say I'm good at
- just that sort o' devilment, an' I'd sort o' like the job.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are the very man,&rdquo; Carson said, with a smile.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You bet he is,&rdquo; agreed Blackburn. &ldquo;Now come down in the store an' let me
- rig you spooks up. We haven't any too much time to lose.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thar's another thing you-uns don't seem to have calculated on,&rdquo; said
- Baker, as Blackburn was leading them down to the dry-goods counter. &ldquo;It
- may take time to quiet public excitement, even if we put this thing
- through to-night. You propose to let the impression go out that thar was a
- lynchin'. How will you keep 'em from thinkin' it's a fake unless they see
- some'n' hangin' to a tree-limb in the mornin'? If they thought we'd put up
- a job on 'em, they would nose around till they was onto the whole
- business, an' then thar would be the devil to pay.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are right about that,&rdquo; said Garner. &ldquo;If we could convince the big mob
- that Pete has been lynched in some secret way or place, by some other
- party, who don't want to be known in the matter, the excitement would die
- down in a day or so.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A bang-up good idea!&rdquo; was Pole's ultimatum. &ldquo;Leave it to me and I'll
- study up some way to put it to Burt&mdash;by gum! How about tellin' 'im
- that, for reasons of our own, we intend to hide the body whar the niggers
- can't git at it to give it decent burial? I really believe that would go
- down.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Splendid, splendid!&rdquo; said Garner. &ldquo;Work that fine enough, Pole, and it
- will give us more time for everything.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I can work it all right if I am to do the talkin',&rdquo; Pole said, as
- he reached out for his portion of the sheeting.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXVI.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0029" id="linkimage-0029"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9231.jpg" alt="9231 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9231.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- IFTEEN minutes later a spectral group in all truth filed out through the
- rear door of the store and paused for further orders in the shadow of the
- wall of the adjoining bank building. The sky was still darkly overcast and
- a drizzle as fine as mist was in the air.
- </p>
- <p>
- With Carson and Pole in the lead, the party marched grimly two and two, a
- weird sight even to themselves. Straight down the alley behind the stores
- along the railway they moved, keeping step like trained military men.
- Pole, for visual effect, carried a coil of new hemp rope, and he swung it
- about in his white, winglike clutch with the ease of a cow-boy, as he
- gutturally gave orders as to turns and tentative pauses. Now and then he
- would leave the others standing and stride ahead through the darkness and
- signal them to come on up. In this way they progressed with many a halt,
- and many a cautious détour to avoid the light that steadily gleamed
- through some cottage window or chink in a door or some watchman at his
- post at some mill or factory, till finally they reached the grounds
- surrounding the court-house and jail.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know how soft-hearted you are, Carson,&rdquo; Baker whispered in the
- young man's ear, &ldquo;but thar's one thing a man full of feelin' like you seem
- to be ought to be ready to guard against.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is that, Pole?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, you know, if we git the poor devil out he'll be sure he's done for,
- an' he'll be apt to raise an' awful row, beggin' an' prayin' an' no
- tellin' what else. But for all you do, don't open yore mouth. Let 'im bear
- it&mdash;tough as it will be&mdash;till we kin git to a safe place.
- Thar'll be folks listenin' in the houses along the way to the store, an'
- ef you was to speak one kind word the truth might leak out. To all
- appearances we are lynchers of the most rabid brand.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I understand that, Pole,&rdquo; said Carson. &ldquo;I won't interfere with your
- work.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't call it <i>my</i> work,&rdquo; said Baker, admiringly. &ldquo;I've been through
- a sight of secret things in my time, but I never heard of a scheme as
- slick an' deep-laid as this. If she goes through safe I'll put you at the
- top of my list. It looks like it will work, but a body never kin tell.
- Burt Barrett is the next hill to climb. I don't know him well enough to
- foresee what stand he'll take. Boys, have yore guns ready, an' when I
- order you to take aim, you do it as if you intend to make a hole in
- whatever is in front of you. Our bluff is the biggest that ever was
- thought of, but it has to go. Now, come on!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Through the open gateway they marched across the public lawn covered with
- fresh green grass to the jail near by. A dog chained in a kennel behind
- the house waked and snarled, but he did not bark. There was a little porch
- at the entrance to the building, and along this the ghostly band silently
- arranged themselves.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hello in thar, Burt Barrett!&rdquo; Pole suddenly cried out, in sharp, stern
- tones, and there was a pause. Then from the darkness within came the sound
- of some one striking a match. A flickering light flared up in the room on
- the right of the entrance; then the voice of a woman was heard.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Burt, what is it?&rdquo; she asked, in a startled tone.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know; I'll see,&rdquo; a coarser voice made answer. Another pause and a
- door on the inside was opened, then the heavier outer one, and Burt
- Barrett, half dressed, stood staring at the grewsome assemblage before
- him.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0030" id="linkimage-0030"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0233.jpg" alt="0233 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0233.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We've come after that damned nigger,&rdquo; said Baker, succinctly, his tone so
- low in his throat that even an intimate friend would not have recognized
- it, and as he spoke he raised his coil of rope and tapped the floor of the
- porch.
- </p>
- <p>
- Barrett, as many a brave man would have done in his place, stood
- helplessly bewildered. Presently he drew himself together and said,
- firmly: &ldquo;Gentlemen, I'm a sworn officer of the law. I've got a duty to
- perform and I'm going to do it.&rdquo; And thereupon they saw the barrel of a
- revolver which the jailer held in his hand. In the awful stillness that
- engulfed his words the click of its hammer, as the weapon was cocked,
- sounded sharp and distinct.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Too bad, but he's goin' to act ugly, boys,&rdquo; Pole said, with grim
- finality. &ldquo;He is a white man <i>in looks</i>, but he's j'ined forces with
- the black devils that are bent on rulin' our land. Steady, take aim! If
- thar's less'n twenty holes in his carcass when he's examined in the
- mornin' it will stand for some member's eternal disgrace. Aim careful!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a startled scream at the half-open window of the bedroom on the
- right and the jailer's wife thrust out her head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't shoot 'im!&rdquo; she screamed. &ldquo;Don't! Give 'em the keys, Burt. Are you
- a fool?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He certainly looks it,&rdquo; was Baker's comment, in a tone of well-assumed
- only half-bridled rage. &ldquo;Give 'im ten seconds to drap them keys, boys.
- I'll count. When I say ten blaze away, an' let a yawnin' hell take 'im.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gentlemen, I&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Burt! Burt! what do you mean?&rdquo; the woman cried again. &ldquo;Are you plumb
- crazy?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;One!&rdquo; counted Pole&mdash;&ldquo;two!&mdash;three&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want to do what's right,&rdquo; the jailer temporized. &ldquo;Of course, I'm
- overpowered, and if&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Five!&mdash;six!&rdquo; went on Pole, his voice ringing out clear and piercing.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a jingling of steel. The spectators, peering through ragged
- eye-holes in their white caps, saw the bunch of keys as it emerged from
- Barrett's pocket and fell to the doorstep.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gentlemen, you may live to be sorry for this night's work,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;What do you care what we're sorry for,&rdquo; Pole said, grimly, &ldquo;just so you
-ain't turned into a two-legged sifter? Now&rdquo;&mdash;as he stooped to pick up
-the keys&mdash;&ldquo;you git back in thar to yore wife an' children. We
-simply mean business an' know what we are about. An' look here, Burt
-Barrett&rdquo;&mdash;Pole nudged Carson, who stood close to him&mdash;&ldquo;thar'll be
-another gang here in a few minutes on the same business. You kin tell
- 'em we beat 'em to the hitchin'-post, an', moreover, you kin tell 'em
-that we said that when we settle this nigger's hash them nor nobody else
-will ever be able to find hair or hide of 'im. A buryin' to the general
-run o' niggers is their greatest joy an' pride, but they'll never cut up
-high jinks over this one.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good, by Heaven!&rdquo; Garner chuckled, as he recalled Pole's diplomatic
- suggestion at the store.
- </p>
- <p>
- Without another word of protest the jailer receded into the house, leaving
- the door open, and, led by Pole, the others entered the hallway with a
- firm tread and mounted the stairs to the floor above. All was still here,
- and so dark that Baker lighted a bit of candle and held it over his head.
- Knowing the cell in which Pete was confined, Carson led them to its door.
- As they paused there and Pole was fumbling with-the keys, a low, stifled
- scream escaped from the prisoner, and then, in the dim, checkered light
- thrown by the candle through the bars, they saw the negro standing close
- against the farthest grating. Pole had found the right key and opened the
- door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's all up with you, Pete Warren,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;you needn't make a row.
- You've got to take your medicine. Come on.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, my God, my God!&rdquo; cried the negro, as with great, glaring eyes he
- gazed upon them. &ldquo;I never done it. I never done it. Don't kill me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bring 'im on, boys!&rdquo; Pole produced an artificial oath with difficulty,
- for he really was deeply moved. &ldquo;Bring 'im on!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Two of the spectres seized Pete's hands just as his quaking knees bent
- under him and he was falling down. He started to pull back, and then,
- evidently realizing the utter futility of resisting such an overwhelming
- force, he allowed himself to be led through the door of the cell and down
- the stairs into the yard.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I never done it, before God I never done it!&rdquo; he went on, sobbing like a
- child. &ldquo;Don't kill me, white folks. Gi' me one chance. Tek me ter Marse
- Carson Dwight; he'll tell you I ain't de man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He'll tell us a lot!&rdquo; growled Baker, with another of his mechanical
- oaths. &ldquo;Dry up!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, my God have mercy!&rdquo; For the first time Pete noticed the coil of rope
- and the sight of it redoubled his terror. On his knees he sank, trying to
- cover his eyes with his imprisoned hands, and quivering like an aspen.
- Hardly knowing what he was doing, Carson Dwight impulsively bent over him,
- but before he had opened his lips the watchful Baker had roughly drawn him
- back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't, for God's sake!&rdquo; the mountaineer whispered, warningly, and he
- pointed across the street to the houses near by. Indeed, as if to sanction
- his precaution, a window-sash in the upper story of the nearest house was
- raised, and a pale, white-haired man looked out. It was the leading
- Methodist preacher of the place. For one moment he stared down on them, as
- if struck dumb by the terror of the scene.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In the name of Christ, our Lord, our Saviour, be merciful, neighbors,&rdquo; he
- said, in a voice that shook. &ldquo;Don't commit this crime against yourselves
- and the community you live in. Spare him! In the name of God, hand him
- back to the protection of the law.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The law be hanged, parson,&rdquo; Pole retorted, as part of his rare rôle. &ldquo;We
- are looking after that; thar hain't no law in this country that's wuth a
- hill o' beans.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Be merciful&mdash;give the man a chance for his life,&rdquo; the preacher
- repeated. &ldquo;Many think he is innocent!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hearing that plea in his behalf, Pete screamed out and tried to extend his
- hands supplicatingly towards his defender, but under Baker's insistent
- orders he was dragged, now struggling more desperately, farther down the
- street.
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;Ah, Pole, tell the poor&mdash;&rdquo; Keith Gordon began, when the mountaineer
-sharply commanded: &ldquo;Dry up! You are disobeyin' orders. Hurry up; bring
- 'im on. That other gang may hear this racket, and then&mdash;come on, I tell
-you! You violate my leadership and I'll have you court-martialled.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In some fashion or other they moved on down the street, now taking a more
- direct way to the store in the fear that they might be met by the expected
- lynchers and foiled in their purpose. They had traversed the entire length
- of the street leading from the court-house to the bank building, and were
- about to turn the corner to reach the rear door of the store, when, in a
- qualm of fresh despair, Pete's knees actually gave way beneath him and he
- sank limply to the sidewalk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lord, I reckon we'll have to tote 'im!&rdquo; Pole said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pick 'im up, boys, and be quick about it. This is a ticklish spot. Let
- one person see us and the game will be up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Pete clearly misunderstood this, and seeing in the words a hint that help
- or protection was not far away, he suddenly opened his mouth and began to
- scream.
- </p>
- <p>
- As quick as a flash Carson, who was immediately behind him, clapped his
- hand over his lips and said, &ldquo;Hush, for God's sake, Pete, we are your
- friends!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With his mouth still closed by the hand upon it, the negro could only
- stare into Carson's mask too terrified to grasp more than that he had
- heard a kindly voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hush, Pete, not a word! We are trying to save you,&rdquo; and Carson removed
- his hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who dat? Oh, my God, who dat talkin'?&rdquo; Pete gasped.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Carson Dwight,&rdquo; said the young man. &ldquo;Now hush, and hurry.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thank God it you, Marse Carson&mdash;oh, Marse Carson, Marse Carson, you
- ain't gwine ter let um kill me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, you are safe, Pete.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In a rush they now bore him round the corner, and then pausing at the door
- of the store, to be certain that no extraneous eye was on them, they
- waited breathlessly for an order from their leader.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, in you go!&rdquo; presently came from Pole's deep voice, in a great
- breath of relief. &ldquo;Open the door, quick!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The shutter creaked and swung back into the black void of the store, and
- the throng pressed inward. The door was closed. The darkness was profound.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wait; listen!&rdquo; Pole cautioned. &ldquo;Thar might be somebody on the sidewalk at
- the front.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, my God, Marse Carson, is you here?&rdquo; came from the quaking negro.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sh!&rdquo; and Pole imposed silence. For a moment they stood so still that only
- the rapid panting of the negro was audible.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, we are safe,&rdquo; Baker said. &ldquo;But, gosh! it was a close shave!
- Strike a light an' let's try to ease up this feller. I hated to be rough,
- but somebody had to do it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it had to be,&rdquo; said Dwight. &ldquo;Pete, you are with friends. Strike a
- light, Blackburn, the poor boy is scared out of his wits.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Marse Carson, what dis mean? what you-all gwine ter do ter me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Blackburn had groped to the lamp on the table and was scratching a match
- and applying the flame to the wick. The yellow light flashed out, and a
- strange sight met the bewildered gaze of the negro as kindly faces and
- familiar forms gradually emerged from the sheeting. Near him stood Dwight,
- and grasping his hand, Pete clung to it desperately.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Marse Carson, what dey gwine ter do ter me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing, Pete, you are all right now,&rdquo; Carson said, as tenderly as if he
- were speaking to a hurt child. &ldquo;The mob was coming and we had to do what
- we did to save you.&rdquo; He explained the plan of keeping him hidden in the
- cellar for a few days, and asked Pete if he would consent to it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll do anything you say, Marse Carson,&rdquo; the negro answered. &ldquo;You know
- what's best fer me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've got an old mattress here,&rdquo; Blackburn spoke up; &ldquo;boys, let's get it
- into the cellar. It will make him comfortable.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And with no sense of the incongruity of their act, considering that as the
- sons of ex-slave-holders they had never in their lives waited upon a
- negro, Wade Tingle and Keith Gordon drew the dusty mattress from a
- dry-goods box in the corner of the room and bore the cumbersome thing
- through the cellar doorway into the cob webbed darkness beneath. Blackburn
- followed with a candle, indicating the best-ventilated spot for its
- placement. Thither Carson led his still benumbed client, who would move
- only at his bidding, and then like a jerky automaton.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You won't be afraid to stay here, will you, Pete?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- The negro stared round him at the encroaching shadows in childlike
- perturbation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You gwine ter lock me in, Marse Carson?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson explained that in a sense he was still a prisoner, but a prisoner
- in the hands of friends&mdash;friends who had pledged themselves to see
- that justice was done him. The negro slowly lowered himself to the
- mattress and stretched out his legs on the stone pavement. An utter droop
- of despair seemed to settle on him. From the depths of his wide-open eyes
- came a stare of dejection complete.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Den I <i>hain't</i> free?&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, not wholly, Pete,&rdquo; Carson returned; &ldquo;not quite yet.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dry up down thar. Listen!&rdquo; It was Baker's voice in a guarded tone as he
- stood in the cellar doorway.
- </p>
- <p>
- The group around the negro held its breath. The grinding of footsteps on
- the floor over their heads ceased. Then from the outside came the steady
- tramp of many feet on the brick sidewalk, the clatter of horses' hoofs in
- the street.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sh! Blow out the light,&rdquo; Carson said, and Blackburn extinguished it.
- Profound darkness and stillness filled the long room. Like an army, still
- voiceless and grimly determined, the human current flowed jailward. It
- must have numbered several hundred, judged by the time it took to pass.
- The sound was dying out in the distance when Carson, the last to leave
- Pete, crept from the cellar, locked the door, and joined the others in the
- darkness above.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That mob would hang every man of us if they caught on to our trick,&rdquo; said
- Baker, with a queer, exultant chuckle.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson moved past him towards the front door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where you goin'?&rdquo; Pole asked, sharply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want to see how the land lies on the outside,&rdquo; answered Carson.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'll be crazy if you go,&rdquo; said Blackburn, and the others pressed round
- Dwight and anxiously joined in the protest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I must go,&rdquo; Dwight firmly persisted. &ldquo;We ought to find out exactly
- what that crowd thinks to-night, so we'll know what to depend on. If they
- think a lynching took place they will go home satisfied; if not, as Pole
- says, they may suspect us, and the most godless riot that ever blackened
- human history may take place here in this town.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's right,&rdquo; declared the mountaineer. &ldquo;Somebody ought to go. I really
- think I'm the man, by rights, an'&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I want to satisfy myself,&rdquo; was Dwight's ultimatum. &ldquo;Stay here till I
- come back.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Blackburn accompanied him to the front door, cautiously looked out, and
- then let him pass through.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Knock when you get back&mdash;no, here, take the key to the back door and
- let yourself in. So far, so good, my boy, but this is absolutely the most
- ticklish job we ever tackled. But I'm with you. I glory in your spunk.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a swelling murmuring, like the onward sweep of a storm from the
- direction of the courthouse. Voices growing louder and increasing in
- volume reached their ears.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wait for me. Keep the lights out for all you do,&rdquo; Dwight said, and off he
- strode in the darkness.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the gloom and stillness of the store the others waited his return,
- hardly daring to raise their voices above a whisper. He was gone nearly an
- hour, and then they heard the key softly turned in the lock and presently
- he stood in their midst.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They've about dispersed,&rdquo; he said, in a tone of intense fatigue. &ldquo;They
- lay it to the Hillbend faction, who had some disagreement with them
- to-day. They seem satisfied.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gentlemen&rdquo;&mdash;it was Garner's voice from his chair at the table&mdash;&ldquo;there's
- one thing that must be regarded as sacred by us to-night, and that is the
- <i>absolute</i> secrecy of this thing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good Lord, you don't think any of us would be fool enough to talk about
- it!&rdquo; exclaimed Blackburn, in an almost startled tone over the bare
- suggestion. &ldquo;If I thought there was a man here who would blab this to a
- living soul, I'd&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I only wanted to impress that on you all,&rdquo; said Garner. &ldquo;To all
- intents and purposes we are law-breakers, and I'm a member of the Georgia
- bar. Where are you going, Carson?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Down to speak to Pete,&rdquo; answered Dwight. &ldquo;I want to try to pacify him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When he came back a moment later he said: &ldquo;I've promised to stay here till
- daylight. Nothing else will satisfy him; he's broken all to pieces, crying
- like a nervous woman. As soon as I agreed to stay he quieted down.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'll keep you company,&rdquo; said Keith. &ldquo;I can sleep like a top on one
- of the counters.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hold on, there is something else,&rdquo; Carson said, as they were moving to
- the rear door. &ldquo;You know the news will go out in the morning that Pete was
- taken off somewhere and actually lynched. This will be a terrible blow to
- his parents, and I want permission from you all to let those two, at
- least, know that&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No!&rdquo; Garner cried, firmly, even fiercely, as he turned and struck the
- counter near him with his open hand. &ldquo;There you go with your eternal
- sentiment! I tell you this is a grave happening tonight&mdash;grave for us
- and still graver for Pete. Once let that mob find out that they were
- tricked and they will hang our man or burn this town in the effort.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I understand that well enough,&rdquo; admitted Dwight, &ldquo;but the Lord knows we
- could trust his own flesh and blood when they have so much at stake.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am not willing to <i>risk</i> it, if you are,&rdquo; said Garner, crisply,
- glancing round at the others for their sanction. &ldquo;It will be an awful
- thing for them to hear the current report in the morning, but they'd
- better stand it for a few days than to spoil the whole thing. A negro is a
- negro, and if Lewis and Linda knew the truth they would be Shouting
- instead of weeping and the rest of the darkies would suspect the truth.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's a fact,&rdquo; Blackburn put in, reluctantly. &ldquo;Negroes are quick to get
- at the bottom of things, and with no dead body in sight to substantiate a
- lynching story they would smell a mouse and hunt for it till they found
- it. No, Carson, <i>real</i> weeping right now from the mammy and daddy
- will help us out more than anything else. Yes, they will have to bear it;
- they will be all the happier in the end.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I suppose you are right,&rdquo; Dwight gave in. &ldquo;But it's certainly tough.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0027" id="link2HCH0027"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXVII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0031" id="linkimage-0031"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9247.jpg" alt="9247 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9247.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- T was just at the break of day the following morning. Major Warren, who
- had not retired until late the night before in his perturbed state of mind
- over the calamity which hovered in the air, was sleeping lightly, when he
- was awakened by the almost noiseless presence of some one in his room.
- Sitting up in bed he stared through the half darkness at a form which
- towered straight and still between him and the open window through which
- the first touches of the new day were stealing. &ldquo;Who's there?&rdquo; he
- demanded, sharply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's me, Marse William&mdash;Lewis.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, you!&rdquo; The Major put his feet down to the rug at the side of his bed,
- still not fully awake. &ldquo;Well, is it time to get up? Anything&mdash;wrong?
- Oh, I remember now&mdash;Pete!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A groan from the great chest of the negro set the air to vibrating, but he
- said nothing, and the old gentleman saw the bald pate suddenly sink.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Lewis, I hope&mdash;&rdquo; Major Warren paused, unable to continue, so
- vast and grewsome were the fears his servant's attitude had inspired. The
- old negro took a step or two forward and then said: &ldquo;Oh, marster, dey done
- tuck 'im out las' night&mdash;dey tuck my po' boy&mdash;&rdquo; A great sob rose
- in old Lewis's breast and burst on his lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Really, you don't mean it&mdash;you can't, after&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yasser, yasser; he daid, marster. Pete done gone! Dey killed 'im las'
- night, Marse William.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But&mdash;but how do you know?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I des dis minute seed Jake Tobines; he slipped up ter my house en called
- me out. Jake lives back 'hind de jail, Marse William, en when de mob come
- him en his wife heard de racket en slipped out in de co'n-patch ter hide.
- He seed de gang, marster, wid his own eyes, en heard um ax fer de boy. At
- fus Marse Barrett refused ter give 'im up, but dey ordered fire on 'im en
- he let um have de keys. Jake seed um fetch Pete out, en heard 'im beggin'
- um ter spar' his life, but dey drug 'im off.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was silence broken only by the old negro's sobs and the smothered
- effort he was making to restrain his emotion.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And mammy,&rdquo; the Major began, presently; &ldquo;has she heard?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not yit, marster, but she is awake&mdash;she been awake all night long&mdash;on
- her knees prayin' most er de time fer mercy&mdash;she was awake when Jake
- come en she knowed I went out ter speak ter 'im, en when I come back in de
- house, marster, she went in de kitchen. I know what she done dat fur&mdash;she
- didn't want ter know, suh, fer certain, ef I'd heard bad news or not. I
- wanted ter let 'er know, but I was afeared ter tell 'er, en come away. I
- loves my wife, marster&mdash;I&mdash;I loves her mo' now dat Pete's gone
- dan ever befo'. I loves 'er mo' since she been had ter suffer dis way, en,
- marster, dis gwine ter kill 'er. It gwine ter kill Lindy, Marse William.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter, father?&rdquo; It was Helen Warren's voice, and with a look
- of growing terror on her face she stood peering through the open doorway.
- The Major ejaculated a hurried and broken explanation, and with little,
- intermittent gasps of horror the young lady advanced to the old negro.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Does Mam' Linda know?&rdquo; she asked, her face ghastly and set in sculptural
- rigidity.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not yet, missy, not yet&mdash;it gwine ter kill yo' ol' mammy, child.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it may,&rdquo; Helen said, an odd, alien quality of resignation in her
- voice. &ldquo;I suppose I'd better go and break it to her. Father, Pete was
- innocent, absolutely innocent. Carson Dwight assured me of it. He was
- innocent, and yet&mdash;oh!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With a shudder she turned back to her room across the hall. In the
- stillness the sound of the match she struck to light her lamp was
- raspingly audible. Without another word, and wringing the extended hand of
- his wordless master, Lewis crept down the stairs and out into the pale
- light of early morning. Like an old tree fiercely beaten by a storm, he
- leaned towards the earth. He looked about him absently for a moment, and
- then sat down on the edge of the veranda floor and lowered his head to his
- brown, sinewy hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- A negro woman with a milk-pail on her arm came up the walk from the gate
- and started round the house to the kitchen door, but seeing him she
- stopped and leaned over him. &ldquo;Is what Jake done say de trufe?&rdquo; she asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yassum, yassum, it done over, Mary Lou&mdash;done over,&rdquo; Lewis said,
- looking up at her from his blearing eyes; &ldquo;but ef you see Lindy don't let
- on ter her yit. Young miss gwine ter tell 'er fust.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, my Lawd, it done over, den!&rdquo; the woman said, shudderingly; &ldquo;it gwine
- ter go hard with Mam' Lindy, Unc' Lewis.&rdquo;
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;It gwine ter <i>kill</i> 'er, Mary Lou; she won't live dis week out. I know
- 'er. She had ernough dis life wid all she been thoo fur 'erself en her
-white folks, in bondage en out, en' dis gwine ter settle 'er. I don't
-blame 'er. I'm done thoo myse'f. Ef de Lawd had spar' my child, I
-wouldn't er ax mo', but, Mary Lou, I hope I ain't gwine ter stay long.
-I'll hear dat po' boy beggin' fer mercy every minute while I live, en
-what I want mo' of it fur? Shucks! no, I'm raidy&mdash;en, 'fo' God, I wish
-dey had er tuck us all three at once. Dat ud 'a' been some comfort, but
-fer Pete ter be by hisse'f beggin' um ter spar' 'im&mdash;all by hisse'f, en
-me 'n his mammy&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man's head went down and his body shook with sobs. The woman
- looked at him a moment, and then, wiping her eyes on her apron, she went
- on her way.
- </p>
- <p>
- A few minutes later, just as the red sun was rising in a clear sky and
- turning the night's moisture into dazzling gems on the grass and leaves of
- trees and shrubbery, like the beneficent smile of God upon a pleasing
- world, Helen descended the stairs. She had the sweet, pale face of a
- suffering nun as she paused, looked down on the old servant, and caught
- his piteous and yet grateful, upturned glance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm going to her now, Uncle Lewis,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I want to be the first to
- tell her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, you mus' be de one,&rdquo; Lewis sighed, as he rose stiffly; &ldquo;you de
- onliest one.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He shambled along in her wake, his old hat, out of respect for her
- presence, grasped in his tense hand. As they drew near the little sagging
- gate at the cottage there was a sound of moving feet within, and Linda
- stood in the doorway shading her eyes from the rays of the sun with her
- fat hand. To the end of her life Helen had the memory of the old woman's
- face stamped on her brain. It was a yellow mask, which might have belonged
- to a dead as well as a living creature, behind which the lights of hope
- and shadows of despair were vying with each other for supremacy. In no
- thing pertaining to the situation did the pathos so piteously lie as in
- the fact that Linda was deliberately playing a part&mdash;fiercely acting
- a rôle that would fit itself to that for which the agony of her soul was
- pleading. She was trying to smile away the shadows her inward fears, her
- racial intuition were casting on her face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mighty early fer you ter come, honey,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;but I reckon you is
- worried 'bout yo' ol' mammy.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it's early for me to be up,&rdquo; Helen said, avoiding the wavering
- glance that seemed in reality to be avoiding the revelation of hers. &ldquo;But
- I saw Uncle Lewis and thought I'd come back with him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You hain't had yo' breakfast yit, honey, I know,&rdquo; said Linda, reaching
- for a chair half-heartedly and placing it for her young mistress, and then
- her eyes fell on her husband's bareheaded, bowed attitude as he stood at
- the gate, and something in it, through her sense of sight, gave her a
- deadening blow. For an instant she almost reeled; she drew a deep breath,
- a breath that swelled out her great, motherly bosom, then with her hands
- hanging limply at her side, she stood in front of Helen. For a moment she
- did not speak, and then, with her face on fire, her great, somnolent eyes
- ablaze, she suddenly bent down and put her hands on Helen's knees and
- said: &ldquo;Looky here, honey, I've been afraid of it all night long, an' I've
- fit it off an' fit it off, an' I got up dis mawnin' fightin' it off, but
- ef you come here so early 'ca'se&mdash;ef you come here ter tell me dat my
- child&mdash;ef you come here&mdash;ef you come here&mdash;gre't God on
- high, it ain't so! it cayn't be dat way! Look me in de eyes, honey, I'm
- raidy en waitin' fer you ter give it de lie.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For one moment she glared at Helen as the girl sat white and quivering,
- her glance on the floor, and then she uttered a piercing scream like that
- of a frightened beast, and grasping the hand of her husband, who was now
- by her side, she pointed a finger of stone at Helen. &ldquo;Look! Look, Lewis;
- my Gawd, she <i>ain't lookin' at me!</i> Look at me, honey chile; look at
- me! D' you hear me say&mdash;&rdquo; She stood firmly for an instant and then
- she reeled into her husband's arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She daid; whut I tol you? Missy, yo' ol' mammy daid,&rdquo; and lifting his
- wife in his arms he bore her to the bed in the corner of the room. &ldquo;Yes,
- she done daid,&rdquo; he groaned, as he straightened up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, she's only fainted,&rdquo; said Helen; &ldquo;bring me the camphor, quick!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0028" id="link2HCH0028"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXVIII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0032" id="linkimage-0032"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9253.jpg" alt="9253 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9253.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- HAT morning at the usual hour the store-keepers opened their dingy houses
- in the main street and placed along the narrow brick sidewalks the dusty,
- stock-worn samples of their wares. The clerks and porters as they swept
- the floors would pause to discuss the happening of the night just gone.
- Old Uncle Lewis and Mammy Linda Warren's boy had been summarily dealt
- with, that was all. The longer word just used had of late years become a
- part of the narrowest vocabulary, suggesting to crude minds many meanings
- not thought of by lexicographers, not the least of which was something
- pertaining to justice far-reaching, grim, and unfailing in these days of
- bribery and graft. Only a few of the more analytical and philosophical
- ventured to ask themselves if, after all, the boy might have been
- innocent. If they put the question to the average citizen it was tossed
- off with a shrug and a &ldquo;Well, what's the difference? It's such talk as he
- was guilty of that is at the bottom of all the black crimes throughout the
- South.&rdquo; Such venom as Pete's was the very muscle of the black claws that
- were everywhere reaching out for helpless white throats. Dead? Yes, he was
- dead. What of it? How else was the black, constantly increasing torrent to
- be dammed?
- </p>
- <p>
- And yet by ten o'clock that morning even these tongues were silenced, for
- news strange and startling began to steal in from the mountains. The party
- who had been in pursuit of the desperado Sam Dudlow had overtaken him&mdash;found
- him hiding in a bam, covered with hay. He was unarmed and made no
- resistance, laughing as if the whole thing were a joke. He frankly told
- them that he would have given himself up earlier, but he had hoped to live
- long enough to get even with the other leader of the mob that had whipped
- him at Darley, a certain Dan Willis. He confessed in detail exactly how he
- had murdered the Johnsons and that he had done it alone. Pete Warren was
- in no way implicated in it. The lynchers, to get the whole truth,
- threatened him; they tortured him; they tied him to a tree and piled pine
- fagots about him, but he still stuck to his statement, and when they had
- mercifully riddled him with bullets, just as his clothing was igniting,
- they left him hanging by the road-side, a grewsome scarecrow as a warning
- to his kind, and, led by Jabe Parsons, they made all haste to reach the
- faction on Pete Warren's track to tell them that the boy was innocent.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jabe Parsons, carrying a load on his mind, remembering his wife's valiant
- stand in behalf of the younger accused, rode faster than his tired
- fellows, and near his own farm met the lynchers returning from Darley.
- &ldquo;Too late,&rdquo; they told him, in response to his news, the Hillbend boys had
- done away with the Darley jailbird and mysteriously hidden the body to
- inspire fear among the negroes.
- </p>
- <p>
- At Darley consternation swept the place as story after story of Aunt
- Linda's prostration passed from house to house. &ldquo;Poor, faithful old woman!
- Poor old Uncle Lewis!&rdquo; was heard on every side.
- </p>
- <p>
- About half-past ten o'clock Helen, accompanied by Sanders, came down-town.
- At the door of Carson's office they parted and Helen came in. Carson
- happened to be alone. He rose suddenly from his seat and came towards her,
- shocked by the sight of her wan face and dejected mien.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, Helen!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;surely you don't think&mdash;&rdquo; and then he
- checked himself as he hastened to get a chair for her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've just left mammy,&rdquo; she began, in a voice that was husky with emotion.
- &ldquo;Oh, Carson, you can't imagine it! It is simply heart-rending, awful! She
- is lying there at death's door staring up at the ceiling, simply
- benumbed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson sat down at his desk and leaned his head on his hand. Could he keep
- back the truth under such pressure? It was at this juncture that Garner
- came in. Casting a hurried glance at the two, and seeing Helen's
- grief-stricken attitude, he simply bowed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Excuse me, Miss Helen, just a moment,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Carson, I left a paper
- in your pigeon-hole,&rdquo; and as he bent and extracted a blank envelope from
- the desk he whispered, warningly: &ldquo;Remember, not one word of this! Don't
- forget the agreement! Not a soul is to know!&rdquo; And putting the envelope
- into his pocket he went out of the room, casting back from the threshold a
- warning, almost threatening glance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've been with her since sunup,&rdquo; Helen went on.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She fainted at first, and when she came to&mdash;oh, Carson, you love her
- as I do, and it would have broken your heart to have heard her! Oh, such
- pitiful wailing and begging God to put her out of pain!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Awful, awful!&rdquo; Dwight said; &ldquo;but, Helen&mdash;&rdquo; Again he checked himself.
- Before his mind's eye rose the faces of the faithful group who had stood
- by him the night before. He had pledged himself to them to keep the thing
- secret, and no matter what his own faith in Helen's discretion was he had
- no right, even under stress of her grief, to betray what had occurred. No,
- he couldn't enlighten her&mdash;not just then, at all events.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was there when Uncle Lewis came in to tell her that proof had come of
- Pete's absolute innocence,&rdquo; Helen went on, &ldquo;but instead of comforting her
- it seemed to drive her the more frantic. She&mdash;but I simply can't
- describe it, and I won't try. You will be glad to know, Carson, that the
- only thing in the shape of comfort she has had was your brave efforts in
- her behalf. Over and over she called your name. Carson, she used to pray
- to God; she never mentions Him now. You, and you alone, represent all that
- is good and self-sacrificing to her. She sent me to you. That's why I am
- here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She sent you?&rdquo; Carson was avoiding her eyes, fearful that she might read
- in his own a hint of the burning thing he was trying to withhold.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, you see the report has reached her about what the lynchers said in
- regard to hiding Pete's body. You know how superstitious the negroes are,
- and she is simply crazy to recover the&mdash;the remains. She wants to
- bury her boy, Carson, and she refuses to believe that some one can't find
- him and bring him home. She seems to think you can.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She wants me to&mdash;&rdquo; He went no further.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If it is possible, Carson. The whole thing is so awful that it has driven
- me nearly wild. You will know, perhaps, if anything can be done, but, of
- course, if it is wholly out of the question&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Helen&rdquo;&mdash;in his desperation he had formulated a plan&mdash;&ldquo;there is
- something that you ought to know. You have every right to know it, and yet
- I'm bound in honor not to let it out to any one. Last night,&rdquo; he went on,
- modestly, &ldquo;in the hope of formulating some plan to avert the coming
- trouble, I asked Keith to get a number of my best friends together. We met
- at Blackburn's store. No positive, sworn vows were made. It was only the
- sacred understanding between men that the matter was to be held inviolate,
- owing to the personal interests of every man who had committed himself.
- You see, they came at my suggestion, as friends of mine true and loyal,
- and it seems to me that I'd have a moral right, even now, to take another
- into the body&mdash;another whom I trust as thoroughly and wholly as any
- one of them. Do you understand, Helen?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I'm in the dark, Carson,&rdquo; she said, with a feeble smile.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You see, I want to speak freely to you,&rdquo; he continued. &ldquo;I want to tell
- you some things you ought to know, and yet I am not free to do so unless&mdash;unless
- you will tacitly join us. Helen, do you understand? Are you willing to
- become one of us so far as absolute secrecy is concerned?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am willing to do anything you'd advise, Carson,&rdquo; the girl replied,
- groping for his possible meaning through the cloud of mystery his queer
- words had thrown around him. &ldquo;If something took place that I ought to
- know, and you are willing to confide it to me, I assure you I can be
- trusted. I'd die rather than betray it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then, as one of us, I'll tell you,&rdquo; Carson said, impressively. &ldquo;Helen,
- Pete, is not dead.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not dead?&rdquo; She stared at him incredulously from her great, beautiful
- eyes. Slowly her white hand went out till it rested on his, and remained
- there, quivering.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, he's alive and so far in safe keeping, free from harm at present,
- anyway.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her fingers tightened on his hand, her sweet, appealing face drew nearer
- to his; she took a deep breath. &ldquo;Oh, Carson, don't say that unless you are
- <i>quite</i> sure.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am absolutely sure,&rdquo; he said; and then, as they sat, her hand still
- lingering unconsciously on his, he explained it all, leaving the part he
- had taken out of the recital as much as possible, and giving the chief
- credit to his supporters. She sat spellbound, her sympathetic soul melting
- and flowing into the warm current of his own while he talked as it seemed
- to her no human being had ever talked before.
- </p>
- <p>
- When he had concluded she drew away her hand and sat erect, her bosom
- heaving, her eyes glistening.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Carson,&rdquo; she cried; &ldquo;I never was so happy in my life! It actually
- pains me.&rdquo; She pressed her hand to her breast. &ldquo;Mammy will be so&mdash;but
- you say she must not&mdash;must not yet&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's the trouble,&rdquo; Dwight said, regretfully.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm sure I could put her and Lewis on their guard so that they would act
- with discretion, but Blackburn and Garner&mdash;in fact, all the rest&mdash;are
- afraid to risk them, just now anyway. You see, they think Linda and Lewis
- might betray it in their emotions&mdash;their very happiness&mdash;and so
- undo everything we have accomplished.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Surely, now that the report of Sam Dudlow's confession has gone out, they
- would let Pete alone,&rdquo; Helen said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wouldn't like to risk it quite yet,&rdquo; said Dwight. &ldquo;Right now, while
- they are under the impression that an innocent negro has been lynched,
- they seem inclined to quiet down, but once let the news go out that a few
- town men, through trickery, had freed the prisoner, and they would rise
- more furious than ever. No, we must be careful. And, Helen, you must
- remember your promise. Don't let even your sympathy for Linda draw it out
- of you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can keep it, and I really shall,&rdquo; Helen said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you must release me as soon as you possibly can.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll do that,&rdquo; he promised, as she rose to go.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll keep it,&rdquo; she repeated, when she had reached the door; &ldquo;but to do so
- I'll have to stay away from mammy. The sight of her agony would wring it
- from me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then don't go near her till I see you,&rdquo; Dwight cautioned her. &ldquo;I'll meet
- all the others to-day and put the matter before them. Perhaps they may
- give in on that point.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0029" id="link2HCH0029"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXIX
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0033" id="linkimage-0033"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9260.jpg" alt="9260 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9260.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- T the corner of the street Helen encountered Sanders, who was waiting for
- her. At the sight of him standing on the edge of the sidewalk, impatiently
- tapping the toe of his neatly shod foot with the ferrule of his tightly
- rolled silk umbrella, she experienced a shock which would have eluded
- analysis. He had been so completely out of her thoughts, and her present
- mood was of such an entrancing nature that she felt a desire to indulge it
- undisturbed. The bare thought of the platitudes she would have to exchange
- with any one ignorant of her dazzling discovery was unpleasant. After all,
- what was it about Sanders that vaguely incited her growing disapproval?
- This morning could it possibly be his very faultlessness of attire, his
- spick-and-span air of ownership in her body and soul because of their
- undefined understanding as to his suit, or was it because&mdash;because he
- had, although through no fault of his own, taken no part in the thing
- which today, for Helen, somehow, held more weight than all other earthly
- happenings? Indeed, fate was not using the Darley visitor kindly. He was
- unwittingly like a healthy soldier on a furlough making himself useful in
- the drawing-room while news of victory was pouring in from his comrades at
- the front.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You see I waited for you,&rdquo; he said, gracefully raising his hat; &ldquo;but,
- Helen, what has happened? Why, what is the matter?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;nothing at all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But,&rdquo; he went on, frowning in perplexity as he suited his step to hers,
- &ldquo;I never saw any one in my life change so suddenly. Why, when you went
- into that office you were simply a picture of despair, but now you look as
- if you were bursting with happiness. Your face is flushed, your eyes are
- fairly dancing. Helen, if I thought&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He paused, his own color rising, a deeper frown darkening his brow.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you thought what?&rdquo; she asked, with a little irritation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh&rdquo;&mdash;he knocked a stone out of his way with his umbrella&mdash;&ldquo;what's
- the use denying it! I'm simply jealous. I'm only a natural human being,
- and I suppose I'm jealous.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You have no cause to be,&rdquo; she said, and then she bit her lip with
- vexation at the slip of the tongue. Why should she defend herself to him?
- She had never said she loved him. She had not yet consented to marry him.
- Besides, she was in no mood to gratify his vanity. She wanted simply to be
- alone with the boundless delight she was allowed to share with no one but&mdash;Carson&mdash;Carson!&mdash;the
- one who had, for <i>her sake</i>, made the sharing of it possible.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I am uneasy, and I can't help it,&rdquo; Sanders went on, gloomily. &ldquo;How
- can I help it? You left me so sad and depressed that you had hardly a word
- for me, and after seeing this Mr. Dwight you come out looking&mdash;do you
- know,&rdquo; he broke off, &ldquo;that you were there alone with that fellow nearly an
- hour?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh no, it couldn't have been so long,&rdquo; she said, further irritated by his
- open defence of what he erroneously considered his rights.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But it was, for I timed you,&rdquo; Sanders affirmed. &ldquo;Heaven knows I counted
- the actual minutes. There is a lot about this whole thing I don't like,
- but I hardly know what it is.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are not only jealous but suspicious,&rdquo; Helen said, sharply. &ldquo;Those are
- things I don't like in any man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've offended you, but I didn't mean to,&rdquo; Sanders said, with a sudden
- turn towards precaution. &ldquo;You'll forgive me, won't you, Helen?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, it's all right.&rdquo; She had suddenly softened. &ldquo;Really, I am sorry
- you feel hurt. Don't think any more about it. I have a reason which I
- can't explain for feeling rather cheerful just now.&rdquo; They had reached the
- next street corner and she patised. &ldquo;I want to go by Cousin Ida's. She
- lives down this way.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you'd rather I didn't go along?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have something particular to say to her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I see. Then may I come as usual this afternoon?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her wavering, half-repentant glance fell. &ldquo;Not this afternoon,&rdquo; she said.
- &ldquo;I ought to be with mammy. Couldn't you call this evening?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It will seem a long time to wait in this dreary place, with nothing to
- occupy me,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but I shall be well repaid. So I may come this
- evening?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, I shall expect you then,&rdquo; and Helen turned and left him.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the front garden of the Tarpley house she found her cousin watering the
- flowers. Observing Helen at the gate, Miss Tarpley hastily put down the
- tin sprinkling-pot and hurried to her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was just going up to see mammy,&rdquo; Ida said. &ldquo;I know I can be of no use
- and yet I wanted to try. Oh, the poor thing must be suffering terribly!
- She had enough to bear as it was, but that last night&mdash;oh!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes&mdash;yes,&rdquo; Helen said. &ldquo;It is hard on her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Ida Tarpley rested her two hands on the tops of the white palings of the
- fence and stared inquiringly into Helen's face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why do you say it in that tone?&rdquo; she asked; &ldquo;and with that queer, almost
- smiling look in your eyes? Why, I expected to see you prostrated, and&mdash;well,
- I don't think&mdash;I actually don't think I ever saw you looking better
- in my life. What's happened, Helen?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, nothing.&rdquo; Helen was now making a strong effort to disguise her
- feelings, and she succeeded to some extent, for Miss Tarpley's thoughts
- took another trend.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And poor, dear Carson,&rdquo; she said, sympathetically. &ldquo;The news must have
- nearly killed him. He came by here last night making all haste to get
- down-town, as he said, to see if something couldn't be done. He was
- terribly wrought up, and I never saw such a look of determination on a
- human face. 'Something <i>has</i> to be done,' he said; 'something <i>must</i>
- be done! The boy is innocent and shall not die like a dog. It would kill
- his mother, and she is a good, faithful old woman. No, he shall not die!'
- And with those words he hurried on. Oh, Helen, that is sad, too. It is sad
- to see as noble a young spirit as he has fail in such a laudable
- undertaking. Think of how he stood up before that surging mob and let them
- shoot at him while he shouted defiance in their teeth, till they cowered
- down and slunk away! Think of a triumph like that, and then, after all, to
- meet with such galling defeat as overtook him last night! When I heard of
- the lynching I actually cried. I think I felt for him as much as I did for
- Mam' Linda. Poor, dear boy! You know why he wanted to do it so much&mdash;you
- know that as well as I do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why he wanted to do it!&rdquo; Helen echoed, almost hungry for the sweet
- confirmation of Dwight's fidelity to her cause.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, you know&mdash;you know that his whole young soul was set on it
- because it was your wish, because you were so troubled over it. I've seen
- that in his eyes ever since the matter came up. I saw it there last night,
- and it seemed to me that his very heart was burning up within him. Oh, I
- get mad at you&mdash;to think you'd let that Augusta man, even if you do
- intend some day to marry him&mdash;that you'd let him be here at such a
- time, as if Carson hadn't enough to bear without that. Ah, Helen, no other
- human being will ever love you as Carson Dwight does&mdash;never, never
- while the sun shines.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With a misleading smile of denial on her face Helen turned homeward. He
- loved her&mdash;Carson Dwight&mdash;<i>that man</i> of all men&mdash;still
- loved her. Her body felt imponderable as she strode blithely on her way.
- In her hands she carried a human life&mdash;the life of the poor boy
- Carson had so wonderfully struggled for and intrusted to her keeping. To
- his mother and father Pete was dead, but to her and Carson, her first
- sweetheart, he still lived. The secret was theirs to hold between their
- throbbing hearts. Old Linda's grief was but a dream. Helen and Carson
- could draw aside the black curtain and tell her to look and see the truth.
- </p>
- <p>
- Standing with bowed head at the front gate when she arrived home, she saw
- old Uncle Lewis, his bald pate bared to the sunshine.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mam' Lindy axin' 'bout you, missy,&rdquo; he said, pitifully. &ldquo;She say you went
- down-town ter see Marse Carson, en she seem mighty nigh crazy ter know ef
- you found whar de&mdash;de body er de po' boy is at. Dat all she's beggin'
- en pleadin' fer now, missy, en ef dem white mens refuse it, de Lawd only
- know what she gwine ter do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen gazed at him helplessly. Her whole young being was wrung with the
- desire to let him know the truth, and yet how could she tell him what had
- been revealed to her in such strict confidence?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll go see mammy now,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I've no news yet, Uncle Lewis&mdash;no
- news that I can give you. I'm looking for Carson to come up soon.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As she neared the cottage the motley group of negroes, serious-faced men
- and women, bland-eyed persons in their teens, and half-clad children,
- around the door intuitively and respectfully drew aside and she entered
- the cottage unaccompanied and unannounced. Linda was not in the
- sitting-room, where she expected to find her, and so, wonderingly, Helen
- turned into the kitchen adjoining. Here the general aspect of things added
- to her growing surprise, for the old woman had drawn close the curtains of
- the little, small-paned windows, and before a small fire in the chimney
- she sat prone on the ash-covered hearth. That alone might not have been so
- surprising, but Linda had covered her body with several old tow sacks upon
- which she had plentifully sprinkled ashes. The grayish powder was in her
- short hair, on her face and bare arms, and filled her lap. There was one
- thing in the world that the old woman prized above all else&mdash;a big,
- leather-bound family Bible which she had owned since she first learned to
- read under the instruction of Helen's mother, and this, also ash-covered,
- lay open by her side.
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;Is I gwine ter bury my chile?&rdquo; she demanded, as she glared up at her
-mistress. &ldquo;What young marster say? Is I, or is I never ter lay eyes on
- 'im ergin? Is I de only nigger mother dat ever lived on dis yeth, bound
-er free, dat cayn't have dat much? Tell me. Ef dey gwine ter le' me see
- 'im Marse Carson ud know it. What he say?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Rendered fairly speechless by the predicament she was in, Helen could only
- stand staring helplessly. Presently, however, she bent, and lifting the
- Bible from the floor she laid it on the table. With her massive elbows on
- her knees, her fat hands over her face and almost touching the flames,
- Linda rocked back and forth.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dey ain't no God!&rdquo; she cried; &ldquo;ef dey is one He's es black es de back er
- dat chimbley. Dat book is er lie. Dey ain't no love en mercy anywhars dis
- side de blinkin', grinnin' stars. Don't tell me er nigger's prayers is
- answered. Didn't I pray las' night till my tongue was swelled in my mouf
- fer um ter spare my boy? En what in de name er all created was de answer?
- When de day broke wid de same sun shinin' dat was shinin' when he laid de
- fus time on my breas', de news was fetch me dat my baby chile was dragged
- out wid er rope rounst his neck, prayin' ter men whilst I was prayin' ter
- God. Look lak dat enough, hein? But no, nex' come de news dat ef he'd er
- lived one short hour longer dey might er let 'im go 'ca'se dey foun' de
- right one. Look lak dat enough, too, hein? But nex' come de word, en de
- las' message: innocent or no, right one or wrong one, my chile wasn't
- goin' ter have a common bury in'-place&mdash;not even in de Potter's Fiel'
- dis book tell erbout so big. Don't talk ter me! Ef prayers fum niggers is
- answered mine was heard in hell, en old Scratch en all his imps er
- darkness was managin' it. Don't come near me! I might lay han's on you. I
- ain't myself. I heard er low trash white man say once dat niggers was des
- baboons. I may be one, en er wild one fer all I know&mdash;oh, honey,
- don't pay no 'tention ter me. Yo' ol' mammy is bein' burnt at de stake en
- she ain't 'sponsible. She love you, honey&mdash;she love you even in 'er
- gre't trouble.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I understand, mammy,&rdquo; and Helen put her arms around the old woman's neck.
- An almost overpowering impulse had risen in her to tell the old sufferer
- the truth, but thinking that some of the negroes might be listening, and
- remembering her promise, she restrained herself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm going to write a note to Carson to come up at once,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;He'll
- have something to tell you, mammy.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And passing the negroes about the door she went to the house, and
- hastening into the library she wrote and forwarded by a servant the
- following note:
- </p>
- <p>
- <i>&ldquo;Dear Carson,&mdash;Come at once, and come prepared to tell her. I
- can't stand it any longer. Do, do come.</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- <i>&ldquo;Helen.&rdquo;</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0030" id="link2HCH0030"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXX
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0034" id="linkimage-0034"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9269.jpg" alt="9269 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9269.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- ALF an hour later Helen, waiting at the front gate, saw a horse and buggy
- turn the corner down the street. She recognized it as belonging to Keith
- Gordon. Indeed, Keith was driving, and with him was Carson Dwight.
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen's heart bounded, a vast weight of incalculable responsibility seemed
- to lift itself from her. She unlatched the gate and swung it open.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I thought you'd never come!&rdquo; she smiled, as he sprang out and
- advanced to her. &ldquo;I would have broken my oath of allegiance to the clan if
- you had waited a moment longer.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I might have known you couldn't keep it,&rdquo; Dwight laughed. &ldquo;Mam' Linda
- would have drawn it out of you just as you did out of me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But are you going to tell her?&rdquo; Helen asked, just as Keith, who had
- stepped aside to fasten his horse, came up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Carson answered. &ldquo;Keith and I made a lightning trip around and
- finally persuaded all the others. Invariably they would shake their heads,
- and then we'd simply tell them you wished it, and that settled it. They
- all seem flattered by the idea that you are a member.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But say, Miss Helen,&rdquo; Keith put in, gravely, &ldquo;we really must guard
- against Lewis and Linda's giving it away. It is a most serious business,
- and, our own interests aside, the boy's life depends on it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, we must get them away from the cottage,&rdquo; said Helen. &ldquo;They are now
- literally surrounded by curious negroes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Can't we have them up here in the parlor?&rdquo; Carson asked. &ldquo;Your father is
- down-town; we saw him as we came up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, that's a good idea,&rdquo; Helen responded, eagerly. &ldquo;The servants are all
- at the cottage; we'll make them stay there and have Uncle Lewis and Mam'
- Linda here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Suppose I run down and give the message,&rdquo; proposed Keith, and he was off
- with the speed of a ball-player on a home-run.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you think there is any real danger to Mam' Linda's health in letting
- her know it suddenly?&rdquo; Carson asked, thoughtfully.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We must try to reveal it gradually,&rdquo; Helen said, after reflecting for a
- moment. &ldquo;There's no telling. They say great joy often kills as quickly as
- great sorrow. Oh, Carson, isn't it glorious to be able to do this? Don't
- you feel happy in the consciousness that it was your great, sympathetic
- heart that inspired this miracle, your wonderful brain and energy and
- courage that actually put it through?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not through yet,&rdquo; he laughed, depreciatingly, as his blood flowed hotly
- into his cheeks. &ldquo;It would be just my luck right now to have this thing
- turn smack dab against us. We are not out of the woods yet, Helen, by long
- odds. The rage of that mob is only sleeping, and I have enemies, political
- and otherwise, who would stir it to white heat at a moment's notice if
- they once got an inkling of the truth.&rdquo; He snapped his fingers. &ldquo;I
- wouldn't give that for Pete's life if they discover our trick. Pole Baker
- had just come in town when Keith and I left. He said the Hillbend people
- were earnestly denying all knowledge of any lynching or of the whereabouts
- of Pete's body, and that some people were already asking queer questions.
- So, you see, if on top of that growing suspicion, old Lewis and Linda
- begin to dance a hoe-down of joy instead of weeping and wailing&mdash;well,
- you see, that's the way it stands.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, then, perhaps we'd better not tell them, after all,&rdquo; Helen said,
- crestfallen. &ldquo;They are suffering awfully, but they would rather bear it
- for awhile than to be the cause of Pete's death.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; Carson smiled; &ldquo;from the way you wrote, I know you have had about as
- much as you can stand, and we simply must try to make them comprehend the
- full gravity of the matter.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this juncture Keith came up panting from his run and joined them.
- &ldquo;Great Heavens!&rdquo; he cried, lifting his hands, the palms outward. &ldquo;I never
- saw such a sight. I can stand some things, but I'm not equal to torture of
- that kind.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are they coming?&rdquo; Carson asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, there's Lewis now. Of course, I couldn't give them a hint of the
- truth down there in that swarm of negroes, and so my message that you
- wanted to see them here only seemed to key them up higher.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson turned to Lewis, who, hat in hand, his black face set in stony
- rigidity, had paused near by and stood waiting respectfully to be spoken
- to.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Uncle Lewis,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;we've got good news for you and Linda, but a
- great deal depends on its being kept secret. I must exact a sacred promise
- of you not to betray to a living soul by word of mouth or act what I am
- going to tell you. Will you promise, Lewis?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man leaned totteringly forward till his gaunt fingers closed upon
- one of the palings of the fence; his eyes blinked in their deep cavities.
- He made an effort to speak, but his voice hung in his mouth. Then he
- coughed, cleared his throat, and slid one of his ill-shod feet backward,
- as he always did in bowing, and said, falteringly: &ldquo;God on high know,
- young marster, dat I'd keep my word wid you. Old Unc' Lewis would keep his
- word wid you ef dey was burnin' 'im at de stake. You been de bes' friend
- me 'n Mam' Lindy ever had, young marster. You been de kind er friend dat
- <i>is</i> er friend. When you tried so hard t'other night ter save my boy
- fum dem men even when dey was shootin' at you en tryin' ter drag you down&mdash;oh,
- young marster, I wish you'd try me. I want ter show you how I feel down
- here in my heart. Dem folks is done had deir way; my boy is daid, but God
- know it makes it easier ter give 'im up ter have er young, high-minded
- white man lak you&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop, here's Mam' Linda,&rdquo; Carson said. &ldquo;Don't tell her now, Lewis; wait
- till we are inside the house; but Pete is alive and safe.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man's eyes opened wide in an almost deathlike stare, and he leaned
- heavily against the fence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, young marster,&rdquo; he gasped, &ldquo;you don't mean&mdash;you sholy can't mean&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hush! not a word.&rdquo; Carson cautioned him with uplifted hand, and they all
- looked at old Linda as she came slowly across the grass. A shudder of
- horror passed over Dwight at the change in her. The distorted, swollen
- face was that of a dead person, only faintly vitalized by some mechanical
- force. The great, always mysterious depths of her eyes were glowing with
- bestial fires. For a moment she paused near them and stood glaring with
- incongruous defiance as if nothing in mortal shape could mean aught but
- ill towards her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Carson has something&mdash;something very important to tell you, dear
- mammy,&rdquo; Helen said, &ldquo;but we must go inside.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He ain't got nothin' ter tell me dat I don't know,&rdquo; Linda muttered,
- &ldquo;lessen it is whar dey done put my chile's body. Ef you know dat, young
- marster&mdash;ef&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But old Lewis had moved to her side, his face ablaze. He laid his hand
- forcibly on her shoulder. &ldquo;Hush, 'oman!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;In de name er God,
- shet yo' mouf en listen ter young marster&mdash;listen ter 'im Linda,
- honey&mdash;hurry up&mdash;hurry up in de house!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, bring her in here,&rdquo; Carson said, with a cautious glance around, and
- he and Helen and Keith moved along the walk while Linda suffered herself,
- more like an automaton than a human being, to be half dragged, half led up
- the steps and into the parlor. Keith, who had vaguely put her in the
- category of the physically ill, placed an easy-chair for her, but from
- force of habit, while in the presence of her superiors, the old woman
- refused to sit. She and Lewis stood side by side while Carson carefully
- closed the door and came back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We've got some very, very good news for you, Mam' Linda,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;but
- you must not speak of it to a soul. Linda, the men who took Pete from jail
- did not kill him. He is still alive and safe, so far, from harm.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- To the surprise of them all, Linda only stared blankly at the tremulous
- speaker. It was her husband who, full of fire and new-found happiness, now
- leaned over her. &ldquo;Didn't you hear young marster?&rdquo; he gulped; &ldquo;didn't you
- hear 'im say we-all's boy was erlive?&mdash;<i>erlive</i>, honey?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With an arm of iron Linda pushed him back and stood before Carson.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You come tell me dat?&rdquo; she cried, her great breast tumultuously heaving.
- &ldquo;Young marster, 'fo' God I done had enough. Don't tell me dat now, en den
- come say it's er big mistake after you find out de trufe.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pete's all right, Linda,&rdquo; Carson said, reassuringly. &ldquo;Keith and Helen
- will tell you about it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With an appealing look in her eyes Linda extended a detaining hand towards
- him, but he had gone to the door and was cautiously looking out, his
- attention being drawn to the sound of footsteps in the hall. It was two
- negro maids just entering the house, having left half a dozen other
- negroes on the walk in front. Going out into the hall, Carson commanded
- the maids and the loiterers to go away, and the astonished blacks, with
- many a curious, backward glance, made haste to do his bidding. A heavy
- frown was on his face and he shrugged his broad shoulders as he took his
- place on the veranda to guard the parlor door. &ldquo;It's a ticklish business,&rdquo;
- he mused; &ldquo;if we are not very careful these negroes will drop on to the
- truth in no time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had dismissed the idlers in the nick of time, for there was a sudden,
- joyous scream from Linda, a chorus of warning voices. The full import of
- the good news was only just breaking upon the stunned consciousness of the
- old sufferer. Screams and sobs, mingled with hysterical laughter, fell
- upon Carson's ears, through all of which rang the persistent drone of
- Keith Gordon's manly voice in gentle admonition. The door of the parlor
- opened and old Lewis came forth, his black face streaming with tears.
- Going to Carson he attempted to speak, but, unable to utter a word, he
- grasped the young man's hand, and pressing it to his lips he staggered
- away. A few minutes later Keith came out doggedly trying to divest his
- boyish features of a certain glorified expression that had settled on
- them.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good God!&rdquo; he smiled grimly, as he fished a cigar from the pocket of his
- waistcoat, &ldquo;I'm glad that's over. It struck her like a tornado. I'm glad
- I'm not in your shoes. She'll literally fall on your neck. Good Lord! I've
- heard people say negroes haven't any gratitude&mdash;Linda's burning up
- with it. You are her God, old man. She knows what you did, and she knows,
- too, that we opposed you to the last minute.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You told her, of course,&rdquo; Carson said, reprovingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I had to. She was trying to dump it all on me as the only member of the
- gang present. I told her, the whole thing was born in your brain and
- braced up by your backbone. Oh yes, I told her how we fought your plan and
- with what determination you stuck to it in the face of all opposition. No,
- the rest of us don't deserve any credit. We'd have squelched you if we
- could. Well, I simply wasn't cut out for heroic things. The easy road has
- always been mine to any destination, but I reckon nothing worth much was
- ever picked up by chance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The two friends had gone down to the gate and Keith was unhitching his
- horse, when Helen came out on the veranda, and seeing Carson she hastened
- to him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She's up in my room,&rdquo; she explained. &ldquo;I'm going to keep her there for the
- rest of the day anyway. I'm glad now that we took so much precaution. She
- admits that we were right about that. She says if she had known Pete was
- safe she might have failed to keep it from the others. But she is going to
- help us guard the secret now. But oh, Carson, she is already begging to be
- allowed to see Pete. It's pitiful. There are moments even now when she
- even seems to doubt his safety, and it is all I can do to convince her.
- She is begging to see you, too. Oh, Carson, when you told me about it why
- did you leave out the part you took? Keith told us all about your fight
- against such odds, and how you sat up all night at the store to keep the
- poor boy company.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Keith was with me,&rdquo; Carson said, flushing, deeply. &ldquo;Well, we've got Pete
- bottled up where he is safe for the present, but there is no telling when
- suspicion may be directed to us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We are going to win; I feel it!&rdquo; said Helen, fervidly. &ldquo;Don't forget that
- I'm a member of the clan. I'm proud of the honor,&rdquo; and pressing his hand
- warmly she hurried back to the house.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0031" id="link2HCH0031"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXXI
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0035" id="linkimage-0035"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9278.jpg" alt="9278 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9278.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- N his way to Blackburn's store the next morning to inquire about the
- prisoner, Carson met Garner coming out of the barber-shop, where he had
- just been shaved.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Any news?&rdquo; Carson asked, in a guarded voice, though they were really out
- of earshot of any one.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No actual <i>news</i>,&rdquo; Garner replied, stroking his thickly powdered
- chin; &ldquo;but I don't like the lay of the land.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's up now?&rdquo; Dwight asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know that there is anything wrong yet; but, my boy, discovery&mdash;discovery
- grim and threatening is in the very air about us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What makes you think so, Garner?&rdquo; They paused on the street crossing
- leading over to Blackbum's store.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, it's all due to old Linda and Lewis,&rdquo; Garner said, in a tone of
- conviction. &ldquo;You know I was dead against letting them know Pete was
- alive.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You think we made a mistake in that, then?&rdquo; Carson said. &ldquo;Well, the
- pressure was simply too strong, and I had to give way under it. But why do
- you think it was a bad move?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;From the way it's turning out,&rdquo; said Garner. &ldquo;While Buck Black was
- shaving me just now he remarked that his wife had seen Uncle Lewis and
- Linda and that she thought they were acting very peculiarly. I asked him
- in as off-hand and careless a manner as I could what he meant, and he said
- that his wife didn't think they acted exactly as if they had just lost
- their only child. Buck said it looked like they were only pretending to be
- brokenhearted. I thought the best way to discourage him was to be silent,
- and so I closed my eyes and he went on with his work. Presently, however,
- he said bluntly, 'Look here, Colonel Garner'&mdash;Buck always calls me
- colonel&mdash;'where do you think they put that boy?' He had me there, you
- know, and I felt ashamed of myself. The idea of as good a lawyer as there
- is in this end of the State actually wiggling under the eye and tongue of
- a coon as black as the ace of spades! Finally I told him that, as well as
- I could gather, the Hillbend faction had put Pete out of the way, and were
- keeping it a secret to intimidate the negroes through their natural
- superstition. And what do you reckon Buck said. Huh, he'd make a good
- detective! He said he'd had his eye on the most rampant of the Hillbend
- men and that they didn't look like they'd lynched anything as big as a
- mouse. In fact, he thought they were on the lookout for a good opportunity
- in that line.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It certainly looks shaky,&rdquo; Carson admitted, as they moved on to the
- store, where Blackburn stood waiting for them just inside the doorway.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How did Pete pass the night?&rdquo; Carson asked, his brow still clouded by the
- discouraging observations of his partner.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, all right,&rdquo; Blackburn made reply. &ldquo;Bob and Wade slept here on the
- counters. They say he snored like a saw-mill. They could hear him through
- the floor. Boys, I hate to dash cold water in your faces, but I never felt
- as shaky in my life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter with <i>you?</i>&rdquo; Garner asked, with an uneasy laugh.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm afraid a storm is rising in an unexpected quarter,&rdquo; said the
- store-keeper, furtively glancing up and down the street, and then leading
- them farther back into the store.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which quarter is that?&rdquo; Carson asked, anxiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The sheriff is acting odd&mdash;mighty odd,&rdquo; said Blackburn.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good Lord! you don't think Braider's really on our trail do you?&rdquo; Garner
- cried, in genuine alarm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you two can make out what it means yourselves,&rdquo; and Blackburn
- pulled at his short chin whiskers doggedly. &ldquo;It was only about half an
- hour ago&mdash;Braider's drinking some, and was, perhaps, on that account
- a little more communicative&mdash;he came in here, his face as red as a
- pickled beet, and smelling like a bunghole in a whiskey-barrel, and leaned
- against the counter on the dry-goods side.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'I'm the legally elected sheriff of this county, ain't I?' he said, in
- his maudlin way, and I told him he was by a big majority.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Well,' he said, after looking down at the floor for a minute, 'I'll bet
- you boys think I'm a dem slack wad of an officer.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I didn't know what the devil he was driving at, and so I simply kept my
- mouth shut, but you bet your life I had my ears open, for there was
- something in his eye that I didn't like, and then when he said '<i>you
- boys</i>' in that tone I began to think he might be on to the work we did
- the other night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, what next?&rdquo; Carson asked, sharply. &ldquo;Well, he just leaned on the
- counter, about to slide down every minute,&rdquo; Blackburn went on, &ldquo;and then
- he began to laugh in a silly sort of way and said, 'Them <i>Hillbend</i>
- fellers are a slick article, ain't they?' Of course I didn't know what to
- say,&rdquo; said the store-keeper, &ldquo;for he had his eyes on me and was grinning
- to beat the Dutch, and that is the kind of cross-examination I fail at.
- Finally, however, I managed to say that the Hillbend folks had beaten the
- others to the jail, anyway, and he broke out into another knowing laugh.
- 'The Hillbend gang didn't have as fur to go,' he said. 'Oh, they are a
- slick article, an' they've got a slick young leader.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What else?&rdquo; asked Carson, who looked very grave and stood with his lips
- pressed together.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing else,&rdquo; Blackburn answered. &ldquo;Just then Wiggin, your boon companion
- and bosom friend, stopped at the door and called him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good Lord, <i>and with Wiggin!</i>&rdquo; Garner exclaimed. &ldquo;Our cake is dough,
- and it's good and wet.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, he's a Wiggin man!&rdquo; said Blackburn. &ldquo;I've known he was pulling
- against Carson for some time. It seems like Braider sized up the
- situation, and decided if he was going to be re-elected himself he'd
- better pool issues with the strongest man, and he picked that skunk as the
- winner. I went to the door and watched them. They went off, arm in arm,
- towards the court-house.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Braider is evidently on to us,&rdquo; Carson decided, grimly; &ldquo;and the truth
- is, he holds us in the palm of his hand. If he should insist on carrying
- out the law, and rearresting Pete and putting him back in jail, Dan Willis
- would see that he didn't stay there long, and Wiggin would swear out a
- warrant against us as the greatest law-breakers unhung.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, the whole thing certainly looks shaky,&rdquo; admitted Blackburn.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I tell you one thing, Carson,&rdquo; Garner observed, grimly, &ldquo;there are no two
- ways about it, we are going to lose our client and your election just as
- sure as we stand here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't intend to give up yet,&rdquo; Dwight said, his lip twitching nervously
- and a fierce look of determination dawning in his eyes. &ldquo;We've
- accomplished too much so far to fail ignominiously. Boys, I'd give
- everything I have to ward this thing off from old Aunt Linda. She's
- certainly borne enough.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The two lawyers went to their office, avoiding the numerous groups of men
- about the stores who seemed occupied with the different phases of the
- ever-present topic. They seated themselves at their desks, and Garner was
- soon at work. But there was nothing for Carson to do, and he sat gloomily
- staring through the open doorway out into the sunshine. Presently he saw
- Braider across the street and called Garner's attention to him. Then to
- their surprise the sheriff turned suddenly and came directly towards them.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gee, here he comes!&rdquo; Garner exclaimed; &ldquo;he may want to pump us. Keep a
- sharp eye on him, Carson. He may really not know anything actually
- incriminating, after all. Watch him like a hawk!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0032" id="link2HCH0032"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXXII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0036" id="linkimage-0036"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9285.jpg" alt="9285 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9285.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- HE young men pretended to be deeply absorbed over their work when the
- stalwart officer loomed up in the doorway, his broad-brimmed hat well back
- on his head, the flush of intoxicants in his tanned face, his step
- unsteady.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I hope I won't disturb you, gentlemen,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but you are two men
- that I want to talk to&mdash;I might say talk to as a brother.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come in, come in, Braider,&rdquo; Carson said; &ldquo;take that chair.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0037" id="linkimage-0037"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0283.jpg" alt="0283 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0283.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- As Braider moved with uncertain step to a chair, tilted it to one side to
- divest it of its burden of books, newspapers, and old briefs and other
- defunct legal documents, Garner with a wary look in his eye fished a
- solitary cigar from his pocket&mdash;the one he had reserved for a mid-day
- smoke&mdash;and prof-ered it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have a cigar,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and make yourself comfortable.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The sheriff took the cigar as absent-mindedly as he would, in his
- condition, have received a large banknote, and held it too tightly for its
- preservation in his big red hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I want to talk to you boys, and I want to say a whole lot that I
- hope won't go any further. I've always meant well by you two, and hoped
- fer your success both in the law&mdash;and politics.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Garner cast an amused glance, in spite of the gravity of the situation, at
- his partner, and then said, quite evenly, &ldquo;We know that, Braider&mdash;we
- always <i>have</i> known it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, as I say, I want to <i>talk</i> to you. I've heard that an honest
- confession is good for the soul, if not for the pocket, and I'm here to
- make one, as honest as I kin spit it out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, that's it?&rdquo; said Garner, and with a wary look of curiosity on his
- face he sat waiting.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, and I want to begin back at the first and sort o' lead up. It's hard
- to keep a fellow's political leaning hid, Carson, and I reckon you may
- have heard that I had some notion of casting my luck in with Wiggin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;After he began circulating those tales about me, yes,&rdquo; Carson said, with
- a touch of severity; &ldquo;not before, Braider&mdash;at least not when I worked
- as I did the last time for your own election.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are plumb right,&rdquo; the sheriff said, readily enough. &ldquo;I flopped over
- sudden, I'll acknowledge; but that's neither here nor there.&rdquo; He paused
- for a moment and the lawyers exchanged steady glances.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He may want to make a bargain with us,&rdquo; Garner's eyes seemed to say, but
- Carson's mind had grasped other and more dire possibilities as he recalled
- Blackburn's remark of a few minutes before. In fact all those assurances
- of good-will might mean naught else than that the sheriff&mdash;at the
- instigation of Wiggin and others&mdash;had come actually to arrest him as
- the leader of the men who had intimidated the county jailer and stolen
- away the State's prisoner. The thought seemed to be borne telepathically
- to Garner, for that worthy all at once sat more rigidly, more aggressively
- defiant in his chair, and the pen he was chewing was suspended before his
- lips. This beating about the bush, in serious things, at least, was not
- Garner's method.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, well, Braider,&rdquo; he said, with a change of tone and manner, &ldquo;tell us
- right out what you want. The day is passing and we've got lots to do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, all right,&rdquo; agreed the intoxicated man; &ldquo;here goes. Boys, what
- I'm going to say is a sort of per-personal matter. You've both treated me
- like a respectable citizen and officer of the law, and I've taken it just
- as if I fully deserved the honor. But Jeff Braider ain't no hypocrite, if
- he <i>is</i> a politician and hobnobs with that sort of riffraff. Boys,
- always, away down at the bottom of everything I ever did tackle in this
- life, has been the memory of my old mother's teachings, and I've tried my
- level best, as a man, to live up to 'em. I don't know as I ever come nigh
- committing crime&mdash;as I regard it&mdash;till here lately. Crime, they
- tell me, stalks about in a good many disguises. The crime I'm talking
- about had two faces to it. You could look at it one way and it would seem
- all right, and then from another side it would look powerful bad. Well, I
- first saw this thing the night the mob raided Neb Wynn's shanty and run
- Pete Warren out and chased him to your house, Carson. You may not want to
- look me in the eye ag'in, my boy, when I tell you, but I could have come
- to your aid a sight quicker that night than I did if I hadn't been loaded
- down with so many fears of injury to myself. As I saw that big mob rushing
- like a mad river after that nigger, I said to myself, I did, that no human
- power or authority could save 'im anyway, and that if I stood up before
- the crowd and tried to quiet them, that&mdash;well, if I wasn't shot dead
- in my tracks I'd kill myself politically, and so I waited in the edge of
- the crowd, hiding like a sneak-thief, till&mdash;till you did the work,
- and then I stepped up as big as life and pretended that I'd just arrived.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; Garner exclaimed, and he stared at the bowed head of the officer
- with a look of wonder in his eyes; and it was a look of hope, too, for
- surely no human being of exactly <i>this</i> stamp would take unfair
- advantage of any one.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That was the <i>first</i> time,&rdquo; Braider gulped, as he went on, his
- glance now directed solely to Carson. &ldquo;My boy, I went to bed that night,
- after we jailed that nigger, feeling meaner than an egg-sucking dog looks
- when he's caught in the act. If there is anything on earth that will shame
- a man it is to see another display more moral and physical courage than he
- does, and you did enough of both that night to show me where I stood. It
- was a new thing to me, and it made me mad. I was a good soldier in the war&mdash;I
- wear a Confederate veteran's badge that was pinned onto my coat in public
- by the | beautiful daughter of a dead comrade&mdash;but being shot at in a
- bunch ain't the same as being the <i>only</i> target, and I showed my
- limit.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, you are exaggerating the whole thing,&rdquo; Carson said, with a flush of
- embarrassment.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No I ain't, Carson Dwight,&rdquo; Braider said, feelingly, and he took out his
- red cotton handkerchief and wiped his eyes. &ldquo;You showed me that night the
- difference between bravery, so-called, and the genuine thing. I reckon
- bravery for personal gain is a weak imitation of bravery that acts just
- out of human pity as yours did that night. Well, that ain't all. The next
- day I was put to a worse test than ever. It was noised about, you know,
- that a bigger mob than the first was rising. I stayed out of the centre of
- town as much as I could, for everywhere I went folks would look at me as
- if they thought I'd surely do something to protect the prisoner, and at
- home my wife was whimpering around all day, saying she was sure Pete was
- innocent, or enough so to deserve a trial, if not for himself for the sake
- of his mammy and daddy. But what was such a wavering thing as I was to do?
- I took it that seventy-five per cent, of the men who had backed me with
- their ballot in my election was bent on lynching the prisoner, and if I
- opposed them they would consider me a traitor. On the other hand, I was up
- against this: if I did put up a feeble sort of opposition and gave in easy
- under pressure, the conservative men, like some we have here in town,
- would say I didn't mean business or I'd have actually opened fire on the
- mob. You see, boys, I wasn't man enough to take a stand either way, and
- though I well knew what was coming, I went about lying like a dog&mdash;lying
- in my throat, telling everybody that the indications showed that the
- excitement had quieted down. I went home that night and told my wife all
- was serene, and I drank about a quart of rye whiskey to keep me from
- thinking about the business and went to bed, but my conscience, I reckon,
- was stronger than my whiskey, for I rolled and tumbled all night. It
- seemed to me that I was, with my own hands, tying the rope around that
- pore nigger's neck. There I lay, a sworn officer of the law, flat on my
- back with not enough moral courage in my miserable carcass to have killed
- a gnat. Carson, if I saw you once before my eyes that long night, I saw
- you five hundred times. Your speech rang over and over in my ears. I saw
- you stand there when a ball had already grazed your brow and defy them to
- shoot again. I saw that poor black boy clinging to your knees, and knew
- that the light of Heaven had shone on you, while I lay in the hot darkness
- of the bottomless pit.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;God, you do put it strong!&rdquo; Garner exclaimed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not putting it half strong enough,&rdquo; the sheriff went on. &ldquo;I don't
- deserve to hold office even in a community half run by mob law. But I
- ain't through. I ain't through yet. I got up early that awful morning, and
- went out to feed my hogs at a pen that stands on a back street, and there
- a woman milking a cow told me that it was over Pete Warren was done for&mdash;guilty
- or not, he was done for. I went in the house and tried to gulp down my
- breakfast, faced by my wife, who wouldn't speak to me, and showed in other
- ways what she thought about the whole thing. She was eternally sighing and
- going on about old Mammy Lindy and her feelings. I first went to the jail,
- and there I was told that two mobs had come, the first the Hillbend crowd,
- who did the work, and the bigger mob that got there too late.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Braider's voice had grown husky and he coughed. Garner stole a searching
- glance of inquiry at Carson, but Dwight, his face suffused with a warm
- look of pity for the speaker, was steadily staring through the open door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I ain't done yet, God knows I ain't,&rdquo; the sheriff gulped. &ldquo;That morning I
- felt meaner than any convict that ever wore ball and chain. If I'd been
- tried and found guilty of stabbing a woman in the back I don't believe I
- could have felt less like a man. I tried to throw it all off by thinking
- that I couldn't have done any good anyway, but it wouldn't work. Carson,
- you and your plucky stand for the maintenance of law was before me, and
- you wasn't paid for the work while I was. Huh! do you remember seeing me
- as you came out of Blackburn's store that morning, with your hair all
- tousled up and your eyes looking red and bloodshot?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I remember seeing you,&rdquo; said Dwight. &ldquo;I would have stopped to speak
- to you but&mdash;but I was in a hurry to get home.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you may have heard that I used to be a sort of a one-horse
- detective,&rdquo; Braider went on, &ldquo;and I had acquired a habit of looking for
- the explanation of nearly every unusual thing I saw, and&mdash;well, you
- coming out of that store before it was opened for trade, while the
- shutters in the front was still closed, struck me as odd. Then again,
- remembering your big interest in Pete's case, somehow, it didn't seem to
- me&mdash;meeting you sudden that way&mdash;that you looked quite as
- downhearted as I expected. In fact, I thought you appeared sort o'
- satisfied over something.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; Garner exclaimed, all at once suspecting Braider of a gigantic ruse
- to entrap them. &ldquo;You thought he looked chipper, did you? Well, I must say
- he looked exactly the other way to me when I first saw him that day.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it started me to wondering, anyway,&rdquo; went on the sheriff, ignoring
- Garner's interruption, &ldquo;and I set to work to watch. I hung about the
- restaurant across the street, smoking a cigar and keeping my eyes on that
- store. After awhile I saw Bob Smith go in the store and then Wade Tingle.
- Then I saw a big tray of grub covered with a white cloth sent from the
- Johnston House, and Bob Smith come to the door and took it in, sending the
- coon that fetched it back to the hotel. Well, I waited a minute or two and
- then sauntered, careless-like, across and went in. I chatted awhile with
- Bob and Wade, noticing, I remember, that for a newspaper man Wade seemed
- powerful indifferent about gathering items about what had happened, and
- that Blackburn was busy folding up a tangled lot of short pieces of white
- sheeting. All this time I was looking about to see where that waiter full
- of grub had gone. Not a sign of it was in sight, but in a lull in the talk
- I heard the clink of crockery somewhere below me, and I caught on. Boys,
- I'm here to tell you that never did a condemned soul feel as I felt. I
- went out in the open air praying, actually praying, that what I suspected
- might be true. I started for the jail and on the way met Burt Barrett. I
- asked him for particulars, and when he said that the Hillbend mob had left
- word that nobody need even look for the remains of the boy my heart gave a
- big jump in the same way as it had when that clip and saucer collided in
- that cellar. I asked Burt if he noticed which way the mob tuck the
- prisoner, and he said down towards town. I asked him if it wasn't odd for
- Hillbend folks to go that way to hang a man, and he agreed that it was.
- Well, to make a long story short, I was on to your gigantic ruse, and God
- above knows what a load it took off of me. You had saved me, Carson&mdash;you
- had saved me from toting that crime to my grave. I knew you were the
- ringleader, for I didn't know anybody else who would have thought of such
- a plan. You are a sight younger man than I am, but you stuck to principle,
- while I shirked principle, duty, and everything else. Doing all that was
- hurting your political chances, and you knew it, but you stuck to what was
- right all the same.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, he certainly has queered his political chances,&rdquo; Garner said,
- grimly, with a look of wonder in his eye over the sheriff's frank
- confession. &ldquo;But you, I think you said, were a Wiggin man,&rdquo; he finished.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, Wiggin and some others <i>think</i> I am yet,&rdquo; said Braider; &ldquo;and I
- reckon I was till this thing come up; but, boys, I guess I've got a little
- smidgin of good left in me, for somehow Wiggin has turned my stomach. But
- I hain't got to what I was leading up to. Neither one of you hain't
- admitted that there is a nigger in that wood-pile yet, and I don't blame
- you for keeping it to yourselves. That is your business, but the time has
- come when Jeff Braider's got to do the right thing or plunge deeper into
- hellishness, and he's had a taste of what it means and don't want no more
- of it. I may lose all I've got by it. Wiggin and his gang may beat me to a
- cold finish next election, but from now on I'm on the other side.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good,&rdquo; said Garner; &ldquo;that's the way to talk. Was that what you were
- leading up to, Braider?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not altogether,&rdquo; and the sheriff rose and stood over Carson, resting his
- hand on the young man's shoulder to steady himself. &ldquo;My boy, I've come to
- tell you that the damnedest, blackest plot agin you that ever was laid has
- been hatched out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is that, Braider?&rdquo; Carson asked, calmly enough under the
- circumstances.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wiggin and his gang have found out that a trick was played night before
- last. The Hillbend men convinced them that they didn't lynch anybody, and
- the Wiggin crowd smelt around until they dropped on to the thing. The only
- fact they are short on is where the boy is hid. They think he is in the
- house of one of the negro preachers. Wiggin come to me, not half an hour
- ago, and considering me one of his stand-bys, he told me all about it. The
- scheme is for me to arrest Pete and jail 'im on the charge of murder and
- then to arrest you fer being the ringleader of a jail-breaking gang, who
- preaches law and order in public for political gain and breaks both in
- secret.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And what do they think will become of Pete?&rdquo; Carson asked, a touch of
- supreme bitterness in his tone.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wiggin didn't say; but I know what would happen to him. The seeds of
- bloody riot are being strewn broadcast by the handful. They've been to
- every member of the crowd that lynched Sam Dudlow and warned them, on
- their lives, not to repeat the statement that Dudlow had said Pete was
- innocent. They told the lynchers that you two lawyers were on the hunt for
- men who had heard the confession and intend to use that as evidence
- against them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, that <i>is</i> slick, slick!&rdquo; Garner muttered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Slick as double-distilled goose-grease,&rdquo; said Braider. &ldquo;The lynchers are
- denying to friend or foe that Dudlow said a word, and the news is
- spreading like wildfire that Pete was Dudlow's accomplice, and that you,
- Carson, are trying, with a gang of town dudes, to carry your point by
- main, bull-headed force.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I see, I see.&rdquo; Carson had risen and with a deep frown on his face stood
- leaning against the top of his desk. He extended his hand to the officer
- and said, &ldquo;I appreciate your telling me all this, Braider, more than I can
- say.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the good of my telling you if the news doesn't benefit you?&rdquo; the
- sheriff asked. &ldquo;Carson, I want to see you win. I ain't half a man myself,
- but I've got two little boys just starting to grow up, and I wish they
- could be like you&mdash;a two-legged bull-dog that clamps his teeth on
- what's right and won't let loose. Carson, you've got a chance&mdash;a bare
- chance&mdash;to get your man out alive.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's that?&rdquo; Dwight asked, eagerly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, let me hold the mob in check by promising to arrest Pete, and you
- get some trusty feller to take him in a buggy to-night through the country
- to Chattanooga. It would be a ticklish trip, and you want a man that won't
- get scared at his shadow, for on every road out of Darley, men will be on
- the lookout, but if you once got him there he would be absolutely safe,
- for no mob would go out of the State to do work of that sort. Getting a
- good man is the main thing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll do it myself,&rdquo; Dwight said, firmly. &ldquo;You?&rdquo; Garner cried. &ldquo;That's
- absurd!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm the only one who <i>could</i> do it,&rdquo; Carson declared, &ldquo;for Pete
- would not go with any one else.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I really believe you are right,&rdquo; Garner agreed, reluctantly; &ldquo;but it is a
- nasty undertaking after all you've been through.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;By gum!&rdquo; exclaimed Braider, extending his hand to Dwight. &ldquo;I hope you
- will do it. I want to see you complete a darn good all-round job.&rdquo; >
- &ldquo;Well, you <i>are</i> an officer of the law,&rdquo; Garner observed, with
- amusement written all over his rugged face, &ldquo;asking a man to steal your
- own prisoner.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What else can I do that's at all decent?&rdquo; Braider asked. &ldquo;Besides, do you
- fellows know that there never has been any written warrant for Pete's
- arrest. I started to jail him without any, and old Mrs. Parsons turned him
- loose. The only time he was put in jail was by Carson himself. By George!
- as I look at it, Carson, you have every right to take him out of jail, by
- any hook or crook, since you was responsible for him being there instead
- of hanging to a limb of a tree. I tell you, my boy, there ain't any law on
- earth that can touch you. Nobody is prepared to testify against Pete, and
- if you will get him to Chattanooga and keep him there for a while he can
- come back here a free man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have friends there who will look after him,&rdquo; Dwight said. &ldquo;I'll start
- with him to-night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0033" id="link2HCH0033"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXXIII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0038" id="linkimage-0038"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9297.jpg" alt="9297 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9297.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- HAT afternoon Keith Gordon went to Warren's to tell Helen of Carson's plan
- for the removal of Pete. She received him in the big parlor, and he found
- her seated at one of the wide windows which, in summer-time, was used as a
- doorway to the veranda.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I met the conquering hero, Mr. Sanders, on my way down,&rdquo; he said,
- lightly. &ldquo;I presume he has been here as usual.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He only called to say good-bye,&rdquo; Helen answered, a little coldly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, that <i>is</i> news,&rdquo; Keith pursued, in the same tone. &ldquo;Rather
- sudden, isn't it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, his affairs would not permit a longer visit,&rdquo; said Helen. &ldquo;But you
- didn't come to talk of him; it was something about Pete.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She sat very still and rigid while he went into detail as to the whole
- situation, and when he had finished she rested her chin in her white hand,
- and he saw her breast rise and fall tremulously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There is danger attached to the trip,&rdquo; she said, without looking at him.
- &ldquo;I know it, Keith, by the way you talk.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He deliberated for an instant, then acknowledged: &ldquo;Yes, there is, and to
- my way of thinking, Helen, there is a great deal. Wade and I tried to get
- him to consent to some other plan, but he wouldn't hear to it. He's so
- anxious to put it through all right that he won't trust to any substitute,
- and he won't let any one else go along, either. He thinks it would attract
- too much attention.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In what particular way does the danger lie?&rdquo; Helen faltered, and Keith
- saw her pass her hand over her mouth as if to reprimand her lips for their
- unsteadiness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'd tell you there wasn't any at all, as Carson would have me do,&rdquo; Keith
- declared; &ldquo;but when a fellow has the courage of an army of men, I believe
- in his getting the full credit for it. You want to know and I'm going to
- tell you. He's been through ticklish places enough in this business, but
- going over that lonely road to-night, when a thousand furious men may be
- on the lookout for him, is the worst thing he has tackled. It wouldn't be
- so very dangerous to a man who would throw up his hands if accosted, but,
- Helen, if you could have seen Carson's face when he was telling us about
- it, you would know that he will actually die rather than see Pete taken.
- He's reckless of late, anyway.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Reckless!&rdquo; Helen echoed, and this time she gave Keith a full, almost
- pleading stare.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, you know he's reckless. He's been so ever since Mr. Sanders came.
- It looks to me like&mdash;well, I reckon a man can understand another
- better than a woman can, but it looks to me like Carson is doing the whole
- thing because you feel so worried about it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You certainly wrong him there,&rdquo; Helen declared.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He is doing it simply because it is right.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, of course he thinks it's <i>right,</i>&rdquo; Keith returned, with a boyish
- smile; &ldquo;he thinks everything <i>you</i> want is right.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When Keith had gone Helen went at once to Linda's cottage to tell her the
- news, putting it in as hopeful a light as possible, and not touching upon
- the danger of the journey. But the old woman had a very penetrating mind,
- and she stood in the doorway with a deeply furrowed brow for several
- minutes without saying anything, then her observation only added to
- Helen's burden of anxiety.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Chile,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;ol' Lindy don't like de way dat looks one bit. You say
- young marster got ter steal off in de dead o' night, en dat he cayn't even
- let me see my boy once 'fo' he go. Suppin up, honey&mdash;suppin up! De
- danger ain't over yit. Honey, I know what it is,&rdquo; Linda groaned; &ldquo;dem
- white folks is rising ergin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, even if that is the reason&rdquo;&mdash;Helen felt the chill hand of fear
- grasp her heart at the admission&mdash;&ldquo;even if that is it, Carson will
- get him away safely.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ef he <i>kin</i>, honey, ef he <i>kin!</i>&rdquo; Linda moaned.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'God been behind 'im all thoo so fur, but I seed de time when de Lawd
- Hisse'f seem ter turn His back on folks tryin' ter do dey level best.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Leaving Linda muttering and moaning in the cottage doorway, the girl went
- with a despondent step back to the big empty house and wandered aimlessly
- about the various rooms.
- </p>
- <p>
- As night came on and her father returned from town, she met him on the
- veranda and gave him a kiss of greeting, but she soon discovered that he
- had heard nothing. In fact, he was one of the many who still believed that
- Pete had been lynched, the vague whisperings to the contrary not having
- reached his old ears. She sat with him at the tea-table, and then went up
- to her room and lighted her lamp on her bureau. As she did so she looked
- at her reflection in the mirror and started at the sight of her grave
- features. Then a flash from her wrist caught her eye. It was the big
- diamond of a beautiful bracelet which Sanders had given her, and as she
- looked at it she shuddered. Was she superstitious? She hardly knew, and
- yet a strange idea took possession of her brain. Would her unspoken
- prayers for Carson Dwight's safety in his perilous expedition be answered
- while she wore that gift from another man, after she had spurned Carson's
- great and lasting love, and allowed the poor boy to think that she had
- given herself heart and soul to this stranger? She hesitated only a
- moment, and opening a jewel box she unclasped the bracelet and put it
- away. Then with a certain lightness of heart she went to the window
- overlooking the grounds of the Dwight homestead and stood there staring
- out in the hope of seeing Carson. But he was evidently not at home, for no
- lights were visible except a dim one in the invalid's room and one in old
- Dwight's chamber adjoining.
- </p>
- <p>
- At ten o'clock Helen disrobed herself still with that awful sense of
- impending tragedy hovering over her. The oil in her lamp was almost out,
- and for this reason only she extinguished the flame, else she would have
- kept it burning through the night to dissipate the material shadows which
- seemed to accentuate those of her spirit. She heard the old grandfather
- clock on the stair-landing below solemnly strike ten, then the monotonous
- tick-tack as the great pendulum swung to and fro. Sleep was out of the
- question. A few minutes before eleven she heard a soft foot-fall on the
- walk in the front garden, and going out on the veranda she looked down.
- </p>
- <p>
- The bowed form of a woman was moving restlessly back and forth from the
- steps to the gate.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is that you, mammy?&rdquo; Helen asked, softly.
- </p>
- <p>
- The handkerchiefed head was lifted and Linda looked up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it's me, honey. I can't sleep. What de use? Kin er mother sleep when
- her chile is comin' in de worl'? No, you know she can't; neither kin she
- close 'er eyes when she's afeared dat same chile is gwine out of it. I'm
- afeared, honey. I'm afeared ter-night wuss dan all. Seem lak de evil
- sperits des been playin' wid us all erlong&mdash;makin' us think we gwine
- ter come thoo, so't will hit us harder w'en it do strack de blow. You go
- on back ter yo' baid, honey. You catch yo' death er cold. I'm gwine home
- right now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen saw the old woman disappear round the corner of the house, but she
- remained on the veranda. The clock was striking eleven, and she was about
- to go in, when she heard the dull beat of hoofs on the carriage-drive of
- the Dwight place, and through the half moonlight she saw a pair of horses,
- Carson's best, harnessed to a buggy and driven by their owner slowly and
- cautiously going towards the big gate. Dwight himself got down to open it.
- She heard his low commands to the spirited animals as he led them forward
- by the bit, and then he stepped back to close and latch the gate. She had
- an overpowering impulse to call out to him; but would it be wise? His
- evident precaution was to keep his mother from knowing of his departure,
- and Helen's voice might attract the attention of the invalid and seriously
- hamper him in his undertaking. With her hands pressed to her breast she
- saw him get into the buggy, heard his calm voice as he spoke to the
- horses, and then he was off&mdash;off to do his duty&mdash;and <i>hers</i>.
- She went back to her room and laid down, haunted by the weird thought that
- she would never see him again. Then, all at once, she had a flash of
- memory which sent the hot blood of shame from her heart to her brain, and
- she sat up, staring through the darkness. <i>That</i> was the man against
- whom she had steeled her heart for his conduct, his youthful indiscretions
- with her unfortunate brother. Was Carson Dwight to go forever unpardoned&mdash;unpardoned
- by such as <i>she</i> while <i>that</i> sort of soul held suffering sway
- within him?
- </p>
- <p>
- The hours of the long night dragged by and another day began. Keith came
- up after breakfast and related the particulars of Carson's departure.
- Graphically he recounted how the gang had robed the ill-starred Pete in
- grotesque woman's attire and seen him and Carson safely in the buggy, but
- that was all that could be told or foretold. As for Keith, he and all the
- rest were trying to look on the bright side, and they would succeed better
- but for the long face Pole Baker had drawn when he came into town early
- that morning and heard of the expedition.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So he was uneasy?&rdquo; Helen said, in perturbation.
- </p>
- <p>
- Keith hesitated for a moment and then answered: &ldquo;Yes, to tell you the
- truth, Helen, it almost staggered him. He is a good-natured, long-headed
- chap, and he lost his temper. He cursed us all out for a silly, stupid set
- for allowing Carson to take such a risk. Finally we drew out of him what
- he feared. He said the particular road Carson took to reach the State line
- was actually alive with men, who had been keyed up to the highest tension
- by Wiggin and his followers. Pole said they had their eye on that road
- particularly because it was the most direct way to Chattanooga, and that
- Carson wouldn't have one chance in five hundred of passing unmolested. He
- said the idea of fooling men of that stamp by putting Pete in a woman's
- dress in the company of Carson, of all human beings, was the work of
- insane men.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It really was dangerous!&rdquo; said Helen, pale to the lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, we meant it for the best&rdquo;&mdash;Keith defended himself and his
- friends&mdash;&ldquo;we didn't know the road was a particularly dangerous one.
- In fact, Pole didn't learn it himself until several hours after Carson had
- left. I really believe he'd have helped us do what we did if he had been
- with us last night. We did the best we could; besides, Carson was going to
- have his way. Every protest we made was swept off with that winning laugh
- of his. In spite of the gravity of the thing, he kept us roaring. I have
- never seen him in better spirits. He was bowing and scraping before that
- veiled and hooded darky as if he were the grandest lady in the land. He
- even insisted on handing Pete into the buggy and protecting his long skirt
- from the dusty wheel. We never realized what we had done till he was gone
- and we all gathered in the store and talked it over. Blackburn, I reckon,
- being the oldest, was the bluest. He almost cried. Helen, I've seen
- popular men in my life, but I never saw one with so many friends as
- Carson. He's an odd combination. His friends love him extravagantly and
- his enemies hate him to the limit.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Late that afternoon, unable to wait longer for news of Carson, Helen went
- down to his office. Garner was in, and she surprised a look of firmly
- grounded uneasiness on his strong face. For a moment it was as if he
- intended to make some equivocal reply to her inquiry, but threw aside the
- impulse as unworthy of her courage and intelligence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To be candid,&rdquo; he said, as he stood stroking his chin, which bristled
- with open disregard for appearances under stress of more important things&mdash;&ldquo;to
- tell you the whole truth, Miss Helen, I don't like the lay of the land.&rdquo;
- Then he told her that the sheriff had just informed him of the whispered
- rumor that a body of men had met Carson Dwight and his charge near the
- State line about three o'clock in the morning. What had taken place the
- sheriff didn't know, beyond the fact that the men had disbanded and
- returned to their homes all gravely uncommunicative. What it meant no one
- but the participants knew. To face the facts, it looked very much as if
- harm had really come to one, if not to both, of the two. The mob had
- evidently been wrought to a high pitch of resentment for the trick Carson
- had played in stealing the prisoner from jail, and this second attempt to
- get him away may have enraged his enemies to outright violence against
- him, especially as Dwight was a fighting man and very hot-headed when
- roused.
- </p>
- <p>
- Unable to discuss the matter in her depressed frame of mind, Helen left
- him and went home. The whole story being now out, she found her father
- warmly excited and disposed to talk about it in all its phases, the
- earliest as well as the latest, but she had no heart for it, and after
- urging the Major not to speak of it to Linda she went supperless to her
- room.
- </p>
- <p>
- Two hours passed. The dusk had given way to the deeper darkness of
- evening. The moon had not yet risen and the starlight from a partly
- clouded sky was not sufficiently luminous to aid the vision in reaching
- any considerable distance, and yet from one of the rear windows of her
- room, where she stood morosely contemplative, she could see the vague
- outlines of Linda's cottage. It was while she was looking at the doorway
- of the little domicile, which stood out above the shrubbery of the rear
- garden as if dimly lighted from a candle within, that she saw something
- which caused her heart to suddenly bound. It was the live coal of a cigar,
- and the smoker seemed to be leaving the cottage, passing through the
- little gateway, and entering her father's grounds. What more natural than
- for Carson, if he had returned safely, to go at once to the mother of the
- boy with the news? Helen almost held her breath. She would soon be
- reasonably sure, for if it were Carson he would take a diagonal direction
- to reach the gateway to the Dwight homestead. Was it Carson, or&mdash;could
- it be her father? Her heart sank over the last surmise, and then it
- bounded again, for the coal of fire, fitfully flaring, was moving in the
- direction prayed for. Down the stairs Helen glided noiselessly, lest the
- Major hear her, and yet rapidly. When she reached the front veranda and
- descended the steps to the grass of the lawn she was just in time to see
- the red disk passing through the gateway to Dwight's. No form was visible,
- and yet she called out firmly and clearly: &ldquo;Carson! Carson!&rdquo; The coal of
- fire paused, described a curve, and she bounded towards it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did you call me?&rdquo; Carson Dwight asked, in a voice so low from hoarseness
- that it hardly reached her ears.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, wait!&rdquo; she panted. &ldquo;Oh, you've gotten back!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They now stood face to face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes,&rdquo; he laughed, with a gesture towards his throat of apology for his
- hoarseness; &ldquo;did you think I was off for good?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, but I was afraid&rdquo;&mdash;she was shocked by the pallor of his usually
- ruddy face, the many evidences of fatigue upon him, the nervous way he
- stood holding his hat and cigar&mdash;&ldquo;I was afraid you had met with
- disaster.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But why did you feel that way?&rdquo; he asked, reassuringly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, from what Keith said in general, and Mr. Garner, too. They declared
- the road you took was full of desperadoes, and&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I might have known they would exaggerate the whole business,&rdquo; Carson
- said, with a smile. &ldquo;Why, I've just come from Mam' Linda's. I went to tell
- her that Pete is all right and as sound as a dollar. He's in the charge of
- good, reliable friends of mine up there, and wholly out of danger. In
- fact, he's as happy as a lark. When I left him he was surrounded by a gang
- of as trifling scamps as himself bragging about his numerous escapes and&mdash;he's
- generous&mdash;my importance in the community we live in. Well, he's
- certainly been <i>important</i> enough lately.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But did you not meet with&mdash;with any opposition at all?&rdquo; Helen went
- on, insistently.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, well&rdquo;&mdash;he hesitated, struck a match, and applied it to his
- already lighted cigar&mdash;&ldquo;we lost our way, for one thing. You see, I
- was a little afraid to carry a light, and it was hard to make out the
- different sign-boards, and, all in all, it was a slow trip, but we got
- through all right. And hungry! Gee whiz! We struck a restaurant in the
- outskirts of Chattanooga about sunup, and while that fellow was cooking us
- some steak and making coffee we could have eaten him alive. If Mam' Linda
- could have seen her boy eat she would have no fears as to his bodily
- condition.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But didn't you meet some men who stopped you?&rdquo; Helen asked, staring
- steadily into his eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- He blinked, flicked the ashes from his cigar, and said: &ldquo;Yes, we did, and
- they were really on the war-path, but they seemed very reasonable, and
- when I had talked to them and explained the matter from our stand-point&mdash;why,
- they&mdash;they let us go.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They had gone into the grounds and were near the main walk when the gate
- was opened and a man came striding towards them. It was Jeff Braider.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I've been looking for you everywhere, Carson,&rdquo; he cried, warmly,
- shaking Dwight's hand. &ldquo;I heard you'd got back, but I wanted to see you
- with my own eyes. Lord, Lord, my boy, if I'd known the awful trouble I was
- getting you into I'd never have let you take that road. I've just heard
- the whole story. For genuine pluck and endurance you certainly take the
- rag off the bush. Why, nine hundred and ninety-nine men out of a thousand
- would have given up the game, but you, you young bull-dog&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Carson, Carson! are you down there?&rdquo; It was a man's voice from an upper
- window.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, father, what is it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your mother wants to see you right now. She's waked up and is worrying.
- Come on in.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'll both excuse me for just a moment, I know,&rdquo; Carson said, as if glad
- of the interruption. &ldquo;I'll be back presently. I haven't seen my mother
- since I returned, and she is very nervous and easily excited.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0034" id="link2HCH0034"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXXIV
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0039" id="linkimage-0039"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9309.jpg" alt="9309 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9309.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- O you are the only lady member of the secret gang that stole my prisoner!&rdquo;
- the sheriff said, laughingly. &ldquo;The boys told me all about it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wasn't taken in till they had done all the work,&rdquo; Helen smiled. &ldquo;I was
- only an honorary addition, elected more to keep my mouth shut than for any
- other service I could perform.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, <i>that</i> was it!&rdquo; Braider laughed. &ldquo;Well, they certainly put the
- thing through. I've mixed up in a lot of hair-raising scrapes in my time,
- but that kidnapping business was the brightest idea ever sprung from a
- man's head. This fellow Dwight is a corker. Did he tell you what he went
- through last night?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not a thing,&rdquo; replied Helen; &ldquo;the truth is, I have an idea he was trying
- to mislead me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, he certainly was if he didn't tell you he had the hardest fight for
- his life and that nigger's that ever a man made. You noticed how hoarse he
- was, didn't you? That is due to it. The poor chap was up all last night
- and drove the biggest part of to-day. I'll bet, strong as he is, he's as
- limber as a dish-rag.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then he really had trouble?&rdquo; Helen breathed, heavily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Trouble! And he didn't mention it to you? Young men in this day and time
- certainly play their cards peculiar. When I was on the carpet we boys had
- a way of making the most to women folks of everything we did, and it was
- generally the loudest talker that won the game. But here I find this 'town
- dude,' as the country people call his sort, actually trying to make you
- think he went to Chattanooga last night in a Pullman car. Good Lord, it
- gives me the all-overs to think of it! I heard all about it. I met a man
- who was along, and he told me the whole thing from start to finish.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What was it?&rdquo; Helen asked, breathlessly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; answered Braider, casting a glance towards Dwight's as if fearful
- of being overheard, &ldquo;I didn't know it, but somehow the mob had got wind of
- what Carson intended to do, and, bless you, they were waiting for him near
- the State line primed and cocked. The boy's enemies had fixed him. They
- had worked the mob up to the highest pitch of fury with all sorts of tales
- against Pete. They had produced men who had really heard the nigger
- threaten to harm Johnson, and they themselves testified that Carson was
- saving the nigger only to capture black voters as their friend and
- benefactor. The mob was mad as Tucker at him for tricking them the other
- night, and they certainly had it in for him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They were mad at Carson <i>personally</i>, then?&rdquo; Helen said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Were</i> they? They were ready to drink his blood. They halted the
- buggy, took them both out, and tied them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tied Car&mdash;&rdquo; Helen's voice died away, and she stood staring at
- Braider unable to speak.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, they tied them both and led them off into the woods. They then
- fastened Pete to a stump and piled sticks and brush around him and told
- Carson they were going to make him see them burn the boy alive and when
- that was done they intended to silence his tongue by shooting him dead in
- his tracks.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen covered her face with her hands and stifled a groan.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;His power of gab saved him, Miss Helen,&rdquo; Braider went on. &ldquo;It saved them
- both. It wasn't any begging, either; that wouldn't have gone with that
- sort of gang. With his hands and feet tied he began to talk&mdash;that's
- what ails his throat now&mdash;and the man that confessed it to me said
- such rapid fire of words and argument never before rolled from human lips.
- He told them he knew they would kill him; that they were a merciless band
- of desperadoes; but he was going to fire some truths at them that they
- would remember after he was gone, I'm no talker, Miss Helen. I can't
- possibly repeat what the man told me. He said at first Carson couldn't get
- their attention, but after awhile, when they were getting ready to apply
- the match, something in Dwight's voice caught their ear and they paused.
- He talked and talked, until a man behind him, in open defiance, cut the
- cords that held his hands. Later another cut his feet loose, and then
- Carson walked boldly up to Pete and stood beside him, and although a growl
- of fury was still in the air he kept talking. The man that told me about
- it said Carson first picked up one of the sticks around the prisoner and
- hurled it from him to emphasize something he said, then another and
- another, until the mob saw him kicking the sticks away and roaring out an
- offer to fight the whole bunch single-handed. Gee whiz! I'd have given ten
- years of my life to have heard it. He hadn't a thing to say in favor of
- Pete's general character; he said the boy was an idle, fun-loving,
- shiftless fellow, but he was innocent of the crime charged against him and
- he should not die like a dog. He spoke of the fine characters of Pete's
- mother and father and of the old woman's grief, and then, Miss Helen, he
- said something about <i>you</i>, and the man that told me about it said
- that one thing did more to soften and quell the crowd than anything else.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He said something about <i>me?</i>&rdquo; Helen cried. &ldquo;Me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; no names was mentioned, but they knew who he meant,&rdquo; Braider went
- on. &ldquo;Carson spoke of your family and of the close bond of human sympathy
- between it and all the blacks that had once belonged to your folks, and
- said that the daughter of that house, the most beautiful womanly character
- that had ever blessed the South, was praying at that moment for the safety
- of the prisoner, and if they carried out their plans she would shed tears
- of sorrow. 'Your intentions are good,' Carson said. 'You are all sincere
- men acting, as you see it, in the interests of the women of the South.
- Listen to this gentlewoman's prayer uttered through my mouth to-night for
- mercy and human justice.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It fairly swept them off their feet, Miss Helen. The man that told me
- about it said he never saw a more thoroughly shamed lot of men in his
- life; he said they released Pete and led the horses around and stood like
- mile-posts with nothing to say as Carson drove away. The man that told me
- said he'd bet ninety per cent, of the gang would vote for Dwight this
- fall. But I must be going; if that young buck knew I'd been telling you
- all this he'd give <i>me</i> a tongue-lashing, and I don't want any of his
- sort in mine.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen waited for about ten minutes alone on the grass&mdash;waited for
- Carson. When he finally came out and hurried towards her, he found her
- with her handkerchief pressed over her eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, what is the matter, Helen?&rdquo; he asked, in sudden concern.
- </p>
- <p>
- She remained silent for a moment, and then with glistening eyes she looked
- up at him as he stood pale and disturbed, the plaster still marking his
- wound and gleaming in the starlight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why didn't you tell me?&rdquo; she asked, laying her hand tenderly on his arm,
- her voice holding cadences of ineffable sweetness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Braider's been talking to you, I see!&rdquo; Dwight said, with a frown of
- displeasure.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, didn't you tell me, Carson?&rdquo; she repeated, putting her disengaged
- hand on his arm and raising her appealing face till it was close to his.
- </p>
- <p>
- He shrugged his shoulders, still frowning, and then said, flushing under
- her urgent gaze: &ldquo;Because, Helen, you've already seen and heard too much
- of this awful stuff. It really is not fit for a gentle, sensitive girl
- like you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Carson,&rdquo; she cried, her suffused face held even closer to his, &ldquo;you
- are the dearest, sweetest boy in the world!&rdquo; and she turned and left him,
- left him alone there in his fatigue, alone under the starlight to fight as
- he had never fought before the deathless yearning for her.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0035" id="link2HCH0035"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXXV.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0040" id="linkimage-0040"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9315.jpg" alt="9315 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9315.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- WO weeks went by. Great changes had come over the temper of the insurgent
- mountain people. They had gradually come to accept the rescue of Pete
- Warren as a chance bit of real justice that was as admirable as it was
- unusual and heroic. A sufficient number of men had come forward and
- testified to Sam Dudlow's ante-mortem confession to exculpate Carson's
- client, and some who had a leaning towards Dwight's cause politically were
- hinting, on occasion, that surely a man who would take such a plucky stand
- for the rights of a humble negro would not be a mere figure-head in the
- legislature of the State. At all events, there was one man who ground his
- teeth in secret rage over the subtle turn of affairs, and that man was
- Wiggin. He still busied himself sowing the seditious seed of race hatred
- wherever he found receptive soil, but, unfortunately for his cause, in
- many places where unbridled fury had once ploughed the ground a sort of
- frost had fallen. Most men whose passions are unduly wrought undergo a
- certain sort of relapse, and Wiggin found many who were not so much
- interested in their support of him as formerly when an open and defiant
- enemy was to be defeated.
- </p>
- <p>
- Wiggin was puzzled more about Jeff Braider than any one of his former
- supporters. Braider was too good a politician to admit that he had in any
- way aided Carson Dwight by a betrayal of the plot against him, for that
- was exactly the sort of thing Wiggin could hold out to his constituents as
- the act of a man disloyal to his official post, for, guilty or innocent,
- the prisoner should have been held, as any law-abiding citizen would
- admit. As to Pete's guilt Wiggin's opinion was unchanged, and he made no
- bones of saying so; he believed, so he declared, that Pete was Dudlow's
- accomplice, and the dastardly manner of his release was a shame and a
- disgrace to any white man's community.
- </p>
- <p>
- As for Jeff Braider, he was in such high feather over the success of his
- swerving towards the right in the nick of time that he refrained from
- drink and wore better clothing. He liked the situation. He felt, now, that
- he could serve his country, his God, and himself with a clear conscience,
- for Carson Dwight looked like a winner and they had agreed to work
- together.
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen Warren, after her impulsive leaning towards her first sweetheart
- that night in the garden, had permitted herself to undergo the keenest
- suffering which was due to her strangely unsettled mind. Was she strictly
- honest? she asked herself. She had openly encouraged a good man to hope
- that she would finally become his wife, and the letters she was receiving
- from him daily were of the tenderest, most appealing nature, showing that
- Sanders' love for her and faith in her fair dealing were too deeply
- grounded to be easily uprooted. Besides, as he perhaps had the right to
- do, the Augusta man had spoken of his hopes to his mother and sister, and
- those sympathetic ladies had written Helen adroit letters which all but
- plainly alluded to the &ldquo;understanding&rdquo; as being the forerunner of a most
- welcome family event.
- </p>
- <p>
- Many times had the poor girl seated herself to respond to these
- communications, and found herself absolutely unequal to the performance in
- the delicate spirit that the occasion demanded. The window of her room, at
- which her writing-desk stood, looked out over the garden at Dwight's, and
- the very spot where she had left Carson that memorable night was in open
- view. How could she throw herself into anything, yes <i>anything</i>
- pertaining to her compact with Sanders while the ever-present thrill and
- ecstasy of that moment was permeating her? What had it really meant&mdash;that
- ecstatic yearning to kiss the lips so close to hers, the lips which had
- quivered in dumb adoration and despair as he strove to keep from her ken
- the suffering he had undergone in her service?
- </p>
- <p>
- One day she rebelled against the painful, almost morbid, state of
- indecision that was on her and firmly decided that there was but one
- honorable course to pursue and that was in every way to be true to her
- tacit promise to the absent suitor, and in a spasm of resolution she was
- about to set herself to the correspondence just mentioned when Mam' Linda
- was announced. The old woman had just returned from a visit to Chattanooga
- to see her son and in addition to news of his well-being she had many
- other things to say. The letters would have to wait, Helen told herself,
- and her old nurse was admitted. Linda remained two hours, and Helen sat
- the while in a veritable dream as the old woman gave Pete's version of
- Carson Dwight's conduct before the mob on the lonely mountain road. And
- when Linda had gone, Helen turned to her desk. There lay the white sheets
- fluttering in the summer breeze, mutely beckoning her back to stem
- reality. Helen stared at them and then with a little cry of pain she
- lowered her head to her folded arms and wept&mdash;not for Sanders in his
- complacent, epistolary hopefulness, but for the one who had bravely borne
- more than his burden of pain, and upon whom she had resolved to put still
- more. Helen told herself that it would not be the first time <i>ideal</i>
- happiness had not been a factor in a sensible marriage. The time would
- come, in her life, as it had in the lives of so many other women, when she
- would look back on her present feeling for Carson, and wonder how she ever
- could have fancied&mdash;but, no, that would be unfair to him, to his
- wealth of spirituality, to his gentleness, his courage to&mdash;to Carson
- <i>just as he was</i>, to Carson who must always, always be the same,
- different from all living men. Yes, he was to go out of her life. Out of
- her life&mdash;how strange! and yet it would be so, for she would be the
- <i>wife</i> of&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- She shuddered and sat staring at the floor.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0036" id="link2HCH0036"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXXVI.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0041" id="linkimage-0041"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9319.jpg" alt="9319 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9319.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- IGGIN was no insignificant opponent; he held weapons as powerful as fire
- applied to inflammable material. The papers were filled with accounts of
- race rioting in all parts of the South, and in his speeches on the stump,
- through the length and breadth of the county, he kept his particular
- version of the bloody happenings well before his hearers.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This is a white man's country,&rdquo; was the key-note of all his hot tirades,
- &ldquo;and the white man is bound to rule.&rdquo; He accomplished one master-stroke.
- There was to be a considerable gathering of the Confederate, veterans at
- an annual picnic at Shell Valley, a few miles from Springtown, and by no
- mean diplomacy Wiggin had, by shrewdly ingratiating himself into the good
- graces of the committee of arrangements, managed to have himself invited
- as the only orator of the occasion. He meant to make it the greatest day
- of the campaign, and in some respects, as will be seen he did.
- </p>
- <p>
- The farmers came from all parts of the county in their best attire, in
- their best turnouts, from plain, springless road-wagons to glittering
- buggies. The wood which stretched on all sides from the spring was filled
- with vehicles, horses, mules, and even oxen.
- </p>
- <p>
- The grizzled veterans, battered as much by post-bellum hardship and toil
- as by war, came with their wives, sons, and daughters, and brought baskets
- to the rich contents of which any man was welcome. A crude platform had
- been erected near the spring under the shadiest trees, and upon this the
- speaker of the day was to hold forth. Behind the little impromptu table
- holding a glass pitcher of water and a tumbler, erected for Wiggin's
- special benefit, were a number of benches made of undressed boards. And to
- these seats the wives and daughters of the leading citizens were invited.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jabe Parsons, being a man of importance as a land-owner and an old
- soldier, was instructed on his arrival in his rickety buggy to escort his
- wife, who was gorgeously arrayed in a new green-and-red checked gingham
- gown with a sunbonnet to match, to the front seat on the platform, and he
- obeyed with a sort of ploughman's swagger that indicated his pride in the
- possession of a wife so widely known and respected. Indeed, no woman who
- had arrived&mdash;and she had come later than the rest&mdash;had caused
- such a ripple of comment. Always liked for her firmness in any stand she
- took in matters of church or social life, since her Amazonian rescue of
- Pete Warren from the very halter of death she was even more popular. The
- women of the county had not given much thought to the actual guilt or
- innocence of the boy, but they wanted Mrs. Parsons&mdash;as a specimen of
- their undervalued sex&mdash;to be right in that instance, as she had
- always been about every other matter upon which she had stood flat-footed,
- and so they all but cheered her on this first public appearance after
- conduct which 'had been so widely talked about.
- </p>
- <p>
- Really, if Wiggin could have had the reception Mrs. Parsons received from
- beaming eyes and faces he would have felt that his star, which had been
- rather below the horizon than above of late, had become a fixed ornament
- in the political heavens. But Wiggin gave no thought to her, and there's
- where he made a mistake. Women were beneath the notice of serious men,
- Wiggin thought, except as a means of controlling a husband's vote, and
- there he made another mistake. It would have been well for him if he could
- have noticed the fires of contempt in Mrs. Parsons' eyes as he made his
- way through the crowd, bowing right and left, and took his seat in the
- only chair on the platform, and proceeded, of course, to take a drink of
- water.
- </p>
- <p>
- A country parson, while the multitude sat upon the grass, crude benches,
- buggy-cushions, or heaps of pine needles, opened the ceremonies with a
- long-winded prayer, composed of selections from all the prayers he knew by
- rote and ending with something resembling a benediction. Then a young lady
- was asked to recite a dramatic poem relating to the &ldquo;Lost Cause,&rdquo; and she
- did it with such telling effect that the gray heads of the old soldiers
- sank to their chests, and, in memory of camp-fire, battle-field, and
- comrades left in unmarked graves, the tears flowed down furrowed cheeks
- and strong forms were shaken by sobs.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was into this holy silence that the unmoved, preoccupied Wiggin rose to
- cast his burning brand. Through curtains of tears he laid his fuse to
- hidden magazines of powder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I believe in getting right down to business,&rdquo; he began, in a crisp,
- rasping voice that reached well to the outskirts of the crowd. &ldquo;There's
- nothing today that is as important to you, fellow-citizens, as the correct
- use of the ballot. I am a candidate for your votes. I mean to represent
- you in the next legislature, and I don't intend to be foiled by the
- tricks, lies, and underhand work of a gang of stuck-up town men who laugh
- at your honest appearance and homely ways. God knows you are the salt of
- the earth, and when I hear men of that stamp making fun of you behind your
- backs it makes me mad. My father was a mountain farmer, and when men throw
- dirt on folks of your sort they throw it into the tenderest recesses of my
- being and it smarts like salt in a fresh cut.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was applause from a group in the edge of the crowd led by long, tall
- Dan Willis, and it spread uncertainly to other parts of the gathering.
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;Hit 'em, blast 'em, hit 'em, Wiggin,&rdquo; a man near Willis shouted; &ldquo;hit
- 'em!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You bet I'll hit 'em, brother,&rdquo; Wiggin panted, as he rolled up his
- coat-sleeve and pulled down his rumpled cuff. &ldquo;That's what I'm here for.
- I'm here, by the holy stars, to show you people a few things which have
- been overlooked. I intend to go into the history of this case. I want you
- all to look back a few weeks. A gang of worthless negroes in Darley became
- so bad and openly defiant in their rowdyism that they were literally
- running the town. Whenever they would be hauled up before the mayor for
- disgraceful conduct some old slave-holder, who used to own them or their
- daddies, would come up and pay their fine and they'd be turned loose
- again. The black scamps became so spoiled that whenever country people
- would come in town they would laugh at them, imitate their talk, call them
- po' white trash, and push them off the sidewalks. Some of you mountain men
- stood it, God bless your Caucasian bones, just as long as human endurance
- would let you, and then you formed a secret gang that went into Darley one
- night and pulled their dives and gave them a lashing on their bare backs
- that brought about a reform. As every Darley man will tell you, it
- purified the very air. The negroes were put to work, and they didn't hover
- like swarms of buzzards round the public square. All of which showed
- plainly that the cowhide was the only corrective that the niggers knew
- about or cared a cent for. Trying them in a mayor's court was elevating
- them to the level of a white man, and they liked it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You bet!&rdquo; cried out Dan Willis, and a laugh went round which spurred
- Wiggin to further flights of vituperation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now to my next step in this history,&rdquo; he thundered. &ldquo;In that gang of
- soundly thrashed scamps there were two who were chums, as I could prove by
- sworn testimony. Those black fiends refused to submit passively. They
- skulked around making sullen threats and trying to incite race riot.
- Failing in this, what did they do? One of them, being hand in glove with
- Carson Dwight, who says he's going to beat me in this election, applied to
- him for a job and was sent out to Dwight's farm near to that of Abe
- Johnson, who is thought&mdash;by some&mdash;to have been the leader of the
- thrashing delegation. That nigger, Pete Warren, was promptly joined by his
- black pal, and Johnson and his wife, one of the best women in this State,
- were foully murdered in the dead hours of the night as they lay sleeping
- in their beds. Who did it? <i>I</i> know who did it. <i>You</i> know who
- did it. Fellow-citizens, those two niggers, with their backs still
- smarting and their tongues still wagging, were the devils who did the
- deed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Low muttering was heard throughout the crowd as men turned to one another
- to make comment on the statement. In its incipiency it meant no more,
- perhaps, than that reason, hard driven by rising emotion, was honestly
- striving to keep the equitable poise which had recently governed it, but
- it sounded to the thoughtless, inflammable element like sullen, swelling
- acquiescence to the bitter charges, and they took it up. Wiggin paused,
- drank from the tumbler, and watched his flashing fuse in its sinuous
- course through the assemblage.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Parsons was near the edge of the platform, and Pole Baker, rising
- from the grass near by, where he had been coolly whittling a stick,
- stealthily approached her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Great goodness, Mrs. Parsons,&rdquo; he whispered in her ear, &ldquo;that skunk is
- cutting a wide swath to-day, sure! He could git up a lynching-bee right
- here in five minutes if he had any sort of material. The only thing of the
- right color is that old woman selling ginger-cakes and cider at the
- spring. Don't you think I'd better slip down and tell her to go home?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It might save the old thing's neck,&rdquo; Mrs. Parsons answered, in the same
- half-amused spirit. &ldquo;If he keeps on I don't think I'll be able to hold my
- seat. Why don't you say something?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me? Oh, I ain't no public speaker, Mrs. Parsons. That oily gab of
- Wiggin's would twist me into a hundred knots, and Carson Dwight would cuss
- me out for making matters worse. I never feel like talking unless I'm
- drunk, and then I'm tongue-tied.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I don't git drunk and I don't git tongue-tied!&rdquo; grunted Mrs.
- Parsons; &ldquo;and I tell you, Pole, if that fool keeps on I'll either talk or
- bust.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, don't bust&mdash;we need women like you right now,&rdquo; Baker smiled.
- &ldquo;But the truth is, if some'n' ain't done for our side this thing will
- sweep Carson Dwight clean out of the field.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, because men are born fools,&rdquo; retorted the woman. &ldquo;Look at their
- faces, the last one of them right now is mad enough to lynch a nigger
- baby, and a <i>gal</i> baby at that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With a laugh, Pole went back to his seat on the grass for Wiggin was
- thundering again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What happened <i>next!</i>&rdquo; he demanded, bending over his table, a hand
- on each end of it, his keen, alert eyes sweeping like twin search-lights
- into the deeps of the countenances turned to him. &ldquo;Why, just this and
- nothing more. Knowing that the jack-leg lawyers of that measly town would
- clog the wheels of justice for their puny fees, and hold those fiends over
- for other hellishness, some of you rose and took the law into your own
- hands. You jerked one to glory as quick as you laid hands on him, and part
- of you were hard on the track of his mate, when my honorable opponent, not
- wanting to lose the fee he was to get for pulling the case through, met
- the mob and managed, by a lot of grand-stand playing and solemn promises
- to see that the negro was legally tried, to put him in jail.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Those promises he kept like the honorable gentleman he is,&rdquo; Wiggin
- snorted, tossing back his hair in white rage and rolling up his sleeves
- again. &ldquo;You know how he kept his word to the public. He organized a secret
- band of his dirty associates in town, dressed 'em up like White Caps, and
- they went to the jail and took the nigger out. Then they hid him in a
- cellar of a store where you all buy supplies, out of the goodness of your
- patriotic souls, and later sent him in a new suit of clothes to
- Chattanooga, where he is now engaged in the same sort of life that he was
- here, an idle, good-for-nothing, lazy tramp, who says he's as good as any
- white man that ever wore shoe-leather and no doubt thinks he will some day
- marry a white woman.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The rising storm burst, and Wiggin stood above it calmly viewing it in all
- its subdued and open fury. Shouts of rage rent the air. Men with blanched
- faces, men with gleaming eyes, rose from their seats, as if a call to
- their manhood for instantaneous action had been sounded, and walked about
- muttering threats, grinding their teeth, and clinching their brawny hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, ha!&rdquo; Wiggin bellowed; &ldquo;I see you catch my idea. But I'm not through.
- Just wait!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He paused to drink again, and Pole Baker, with a grave look in his honest
- eye approached the sculpturesque shape of Mrs. Parsons and nudged her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did you ever in yore life?&rdquo; he said; but staring him in the eyes
- steadily, the woman seemed not to hear what he was saying. Her lower lip
- was twitching and there was an expression of settled determination in her
- eyes. Baker, wondering, moved back to his place, for Wiggin had levelled
- his guns again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And the man that was at the head of it, what is he doing right now? Why
- he's leaning back in his rocking-chair in his law-office drawing a fat
- pension from his rich old daddy, taking in big fees for such legal work as
- that, and fairly splitting his sides laughing at you folks, who he calls a
- lot of sap-headed hillbillies, fit only for hopping clods and feeding hogs
- on swill and pussley weeds. Oh, that was a picnic&mdash;that trick he and
- those town rowdies put up on you! It was a gentle rebuke to you, and when
- he gets to the legislature he says he&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Legislature be damned!&rdquo; Dan Willis roared, and the crowd took up his cry.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, <i>you'll</i> vote him in,&rdquo; Wiggin went on, with a vast air of
- mock depression and reproach; &ldquo;you think you won't now, but when he gets
- up and tells his side of it with a forced tear or two, your women folks
- will say, 'Poor boy!' and tell you what to do at the polls.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Comprehensive applause greeted the speaker as he sat down. Hats were
- thrown in the air and Dan Willis organized and gave three resounding
- cheers.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0037" id="link2HCH0037"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXXVII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0042" id="linkimage-0042"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9328.jpg" alt="9328 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9328.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- F the audience was surprised at what next happened, what may be said of
- the astounded candidate when he saw the powerful form of Mrs. Parsons rise
- from her seat near him and calmly stride with the tread of an angry man to
- the speaker's stand and take off her curtained bonnet and begin to wave it
- up and down to indicate that she wanted them to keep their places?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I never made a speech in my life,&rdquo; she gulped&mdash;&ldquo;that is, not outside
- of an experience meetin'. But, people, ef this ain't an experience meeting
- I never went to one. Ef the Lord God had told me Hisse'f in a blazonin'
- voice from heaven that any human bein' could take such a swivelled-up,
- contemptible shape as the man that's yelled at you like a sick calf
- to-day, I never would have believed it. I've got a right to be heard. I
- couldn't set still. It would give me St. Vitus's dance to try it ten
- minutes longer. I've got a right to talk, because, friends and neighbors,
- this contemptible creature has, in a roundabout way, accused <i>me</i> of
- law-breaking, an'&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, madam!&rdquo; Wiggin gasped, as he half rose and stared around in utter
- bewilderment. &ldquo;I don't even <i>know</i> you! I never laid eyes on you
- before this minute&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, take a good look at me now!&rdquo; Mrs. Parsons hurled at him, &ldquo;for I'm
- the woman that helped Pete Warren git away from the sheriff, when your
- sort were after the poor, silly nigger to lynch him for a crime he had
- nothin' to do with. If you are right in all your empty tirade this
- morning, I'm a woman unfit for the community I live in, and if I have to
- share that honor with a man of your stamp, I'll lynch myself on the first
- tree I come to.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She turned from the astounded, suddenly crestfallen speaker to the
- open-mouthed audience.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Listen to me, men, women, and children!&rdquo; she thundered, in a voice that
- was as steady and clear in resonance as a bell. &ldquo;If there was ever a
- crafty, spider-like politician on earth you have listened to him spout
- to-day. He's picked out the one big sore-spot in your kind natures and
- he's punched it, and jabbed it, and lacerated it with every sort of thorn
- he could stick into it, till he gained his aim in makin' you one and all
- so blind with rage at the black race that you are about to overlook the
- good in yore own.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There are two sides to this matter, and you would be pore excuses for men
- if you jest looked at one side of it. Carson Dwight is the other
- candidate, and I don't know but one thing agin his character, and that is
- that he ever allowed his name to be put up along with this man's. It's a
- funny sort of race, anyway&mdash;run by a greyhound and a jack-rabbit.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A ripple of amusement passed over many faces, and there were several open
- laughs over Wiggin's evident discomfiture. He started to rise, but voices
- from all parts of the gathering cried out: &ldquo;Sit down, Wiggin! Sit down, it
- ain't yore time!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, it <i>hain't</i> his time,&rdquo; said Mrs. Parsons, unrolling her bonnet
- like a switchman's flag and waving it to and fro. &ldquo;I started to tell you
- about Carson Dwight. He can't help bein' born in a rich family any more'n
- I could in a pore one, but I'm here to tell you that since I had the moral
- backbone to aid that nigger to git away I've thanked God a thousand times
- that I did that much to help genuine justice along. I could listen to
- forty million men like this candidate expound his views and it wouldn't
- alter me one smidgen in the belief that Carson Dwight has acted only as a
- true Christian would. He knew that nigger. He had known him, I'm told,
- from childhood up. He knew the sort of black stock the boy sprung from,
- an' the white family he was trained in, an' he simply didn't believe he
- was guilty of that crime. Believing that, thar wasn't but one honest thing
- for him to do, and that was to fight for the pore thing's rights. He knew
- that most of the racket agin the boy was got up by t'other candidate, and
- he set about to save the pore, beggin' darky's neck from the halter or his
- body from the burning brush-heap. Did he do it at a sacrifice? Huh, answer
- me that! Where did you ever see another politician on the eve of his
- election that would take up such a' issue as that, infuriating nearly
- every person who had promised to vote for him? Where will you find a young
- man with enough stamina to stand on a horse-block over the heads of
- hundreds of howling demons, and with one wound from a pistol on his brow,
- darin' 'em to shoot ag'in and holdin' on like a bull-dog to the pore
- cowerin' wreck at his feet?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was applause, slight at first, but increasing. There were, too,
- under Mrs. Parson's eye many softening faces, and into them she continued
- to throw her heart-felt appeal.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You've been told this morning that Carson Dwight makes fun of us country
- people. I'll admit I saw him do it once, but it was <i>only</i> once. He
- made fun of a mountain chap over at Darley one circus day. The fellow had
- insulted a nice country gal, and Carson Dwight made a <i>lot</i> of fun of
- him. He hammered the dirty scamp's face till it looked like a ripe tomato
- that the rats had been gnawin'.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this point there was laughter loud and prolonged.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, listen,&rdquo; the speaker went on. &ldquo;I want you to hear something, and I
- don't want you ever to forget it. I got it straight from a truthful man
- who was there. The night you mountain men gathered from all sides like the
- rising of the dead on Judgment Day, and got ready to march to Darley to
- take that boy out of jail, the news reached Carson Dwight just an hour or
- so before the appointed time. He got a few friends together and told them
- if they cared for him to make one more effort to stop the trouble.
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;Gentlemen, to some extent they was like you. They wasn't&mdash;I'm
-told&mdash;much interested in the fate of that nigger, one way or another,
-and so they sat thar in judgment over Carson Dwight, and tried to argue
- 'im down. I'm told by a respectable man who was thar&rdquo; (and here Pole
-Baker lowered his head till his eyes were out of sight and continued to
-whittle his stick) &ldquo;that nothin' feazed 'im. Pity was in his big, boyish
-heart, and it looked out of his eyes and clogged up his voice. They told
-him it meant ruination to all his political hopes, and that it would
-turn his daddy against him for good and all. But he said he didn't care.
-They held out agin him a long time, and then one thing he said won 'em
-over&mdash;one thing. Kin you imagine what that was, friends and neighbors?
-It was this: Carson Dwight said he loved you mountain men with all his
-heart; he said no better or braver blood ever flowed in human veins than
-yours; he said he knew you <i>thought</i> you was right, but that you hadn't
-had the chance to discover what he had found out, and that was that
-Pete Warren was innocent and as harmless as a baby, and that&mdash;now,
-listen!&mdash;that he knew the time would come when you'd be convinced of the
-truth and carry regret for your haste to your graves. 'It is because,'
-he told them, 'I want to save men that I love from remorse and sorrow
-that I am in for this thing!' Fellow-citizens, that shot went home.
-Those worthless 'town dudes,' as they was called just now, saved you
-from committing a crime against yourselves an' God on high. Did any
-human bein' ever see a better illustration than that of the duty of
-enlightened folks to-day&mdash;the duty of them who, with divine sight, see
-great truths&mdash;to lead others in the right direction? As God Almighty
-smiles over you to-day in this broad sunlight, that gang in that store,
-headed by a new Joseph, was an' are the truest and best friends you ever
-had.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was no open applause, but Mrs. Parsons saw something in the melting
- faces before her that was infinitely more encouraging, and after a
- moment's pause, and leaning slightly on the table, she went on: &ldquo;Before I
- set down, I want to say one word about this big race question, anyway. I'm
- just a plain woman, but I read papers an' I've thought about it a lot. We
- hear some white folks say that the education the niggers are now gettin'
- is the prime cause of so much crime amongst the blacks&mdash;they say this
- in spite of the fact that it is always the uneducated niggers that commit
- the rascality. No, my friends, it ain't education that's the cause, it is
- <i>the lack</i> of it. Education ain't just what is learnt in
- school-books. It is anything that makes folks higher an' better. Before
- the war niggers was better educated, for they had the education that come
- from bein' close to the white race an' profitin' by the'r example. After
- slavery was abolished the poor, simple numskulls, great, overgrown,
- fun-lovin' children, was turned loose without advice or guidin' hand, an'
- the worst part of 'em went downhill. Slavery was education, and I'll bet
- the Lord had a hand in it, for it has lifted a race from the jungles of
- Africa to a civilized land full of free schools. So I say, teach 'em the
- difference between right an' wrong, an' then let 'em work out their own
- salvation.
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;Who in the name of common-sense is to do this if it ain't you of the
-superior race? <i>But!</i> wait a minute, think! How can you possibly teach
- 'em what law an' order is without knowin' a little about it yourselves?
-How can you learn a nigger what justice means when he sees his brother,
-son, or father, shot dead in his tracks or hung, like a scare-crow to
-the limb of a tree because some lower grade black man a hundred miles
-off has committed a dastardly deed? No sensible white man ever thought
-of puttin' the two races on equality. The duty of the white blood is
-always to keep ahead of the black, and it will. This candidate openly
-declares that the time is coming when the negroes will overpower the
-whites. A man that has as poor an opinion of his own race as that ought
-to be kicked out of it. Now I can't vote, but I want every woman in
-this crowd that believes I know what I'm talkin' about to see that her
-brother, father, or husband votes for a member of the legislature that
-knows what law an' order means, an' not for a red-handed anarchist who
-would lay this country in ruins to gain his own puny aims. That's all
-I've got to say.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When she had finished there was still no applause. They had learned that
- it was unseemly to make a demonstration at church, when deeply moved by a
- sermon, and they had heard something to-day that had lifted them as high
- under her sway as they had sunken low under Wiggin's. The formal part of
- the exercises was over, and they proceeded to spread out the contents of
- their baskets. Wiggin, after his successful ascent, had fallen with
- something like a thud. He saw Mrs. Parsons helped from the platform by her
- proudly flushing husband and instantly surrounded by people anxious to
- offer congratulations. Wiggin shuddered for he stood quite alone. Those
- who were in sympathy with him seemed afraid to openly signify it. Even Dan
- Willis lurked back under the trees, his face flushed with liquor and
- inward rage.
- </p>
- <p>
- Pole Baker, however, was more thoughtful of the candidate's comfort. With
- a queer twinkle of amusement in his eyes, and polishing, with the
- dexterity of a carver of cherry-stones, his little stick, he approached
- the candidate.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say, Wiggin,&rdquo; he drawled out, &ldquo;I want to ax you a question.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, Baker, what is it?&rdquo; the candidate asked, absent-mindedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't you remember tellin' me,&rdquo; Pole began, &ldquo;that you never had in all
- yore life met a man that made better an' truer predictions about things to
- come than I did?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I think so, Baker&mdash;yes, I remember now,&rdquo; answered Wiggin. &ldquo;You
- do seem to have a head that way. Some men have more than others, a sort of
- foresight or intuition.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Pole chuckled. &ldquo;You remember I said Teddy Rusefelt would whip the socks
- off of Parker. I'm a Democrat an' always will be, but I kin see things
- that are goin' to be agin me as plain as them I'm prayin' for. Well, you
- remember I was called a traitor jest beca'se I told what was comin', but I
- hit the nail on the head, didn't I?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, you did,&rdquo; admitted the downcast candidate.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' I was right about the majority Towns would git for the State senate,
- Mayhew for solicitor, an' Tim Bloodgood for the last legislature.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, you were, I remember that,&rdquo; said Wiggin.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I hit it on the Governor's race to a gnat's heel, too, didn't I?&rdquo; Pole
- pursued, his keen eyes fixed on those of the man before him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, you did,&rdquo; admitted Wiggin; &ldquo;you really seem to have remarkable
- foresight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, then,&rdquo; said Baker, &ldquo;I've got a prediction to make about your race
- agin Carson Dwight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, you have!&rdquo; exclaimed Wiggin, now all attention.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, and this time I'd bet my two arms and the first joint of my right
- leg agin a pinch o' snuff that Carson'll beat you worse than a man was
- ever whipped in his life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You think so, Baker?&rdquo; Wiggin was trying to sneer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't think anything about it; I <i>know</i> it,&rdquo; said Pole.
- </p>
- <p>
- Wiggin stared at the ground a moment aimlessly, then he said, doggedly,
- and yet with an evident desire for information at any sort of
- fountain-head: &ldquo;What makes you think I'm beat, Baker?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because you've showed you hain't no politician, an' you've got a born one
- to beat. For one thing, you've stirred up a hornet's nest. Women, when
- they set the'r heads agin a'body, are devils in petticoats, an' the one
- that presided this mornin' has got more influence than forty men. Before
- you are a day older every man who has a wife, mother, or sweetheart will
- be afraid to speak to you in broad daylight. Then ag'in, no candidate ever
- won a race on a platform of pure hate an' revenge. You made that crowd as
- mad as hell just now, while you was belchin' out that stuff, but as soon
- as Sister Parsons showed 'em what a friend of the'rs Dwight was they
- melted to him like thin snow after a rain.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0038" id="link2HCH0038"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXXVIII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0043" id="linkimage-0043"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9337.jpg" alt="9337 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9337.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- NE morning, three days later, Pole Baker slouched down the street from the
- wagon-yard and went into Garner &amp; Dwight's office, finding Garner at
- his desk. The mountaineer looked cautiously about the room and asked, in a
- guarded tone: &ldquo;Is Carson anywhars about?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not down yet,&rdquo; Garner said. &ldquo;His mother was not so well last night, and
- it may be that he had to sit up with her and has overslept himself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'm glad he ain't here,&rdquo; Baker said, &ldquo;for I want to speak to you
- about him sorter in private.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Anything gone wrong?&rdquo; Garner asked, looking up curiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, not yet, Bill, but I believe in takin' the bull by the horns before
- he takes you in the stomach. I've been powerful afeared for some time that
- Carson and Dan Willis would run together, and I dread it now more than
- ever. In the first place, I don't like the look in Carson's eye. He knows
- that devil has been on his track, and it has worked him up powerful;
- besides, Willis is more rampant than ever.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's gone wrong with him?&rdquo; Garner inquired, uneasily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, for a while, you know, he was full of hope that Wiggin was goin' to
- beat Carson, and that sorter satisfied him, but now that Wiggin is losin'
- ground, Dan don't see revenge that way. Besides, since old Sister Parsons
- made that rip-roarin' speech respectable folks are turnin' the'r backs on
- Wiggin and all his backers. The gal Willis was to marry has throwed 'im
- clean over, an' the preacher at Hill Crest just as good as called his name
- out in meetin' in talkin' of the open lawlessness that is spreadin' over
- the land. Oh, Willis is mad&mdash;he's got all hell in 'im, an' he's
- makin' more threats agin Dwight. Now, to-morrow is Friday, an' the next
- day is Saturday, an' on Saturday Dan Willis is comin' in town. I got that
- straight. Wiggin is a snake in the grass, and he's constantly naggin' Dan
- about his row with Carson, and it will take slick work on our part to
- prevent serious trouble. Wiggin wouldn't care. If the two met he'd profit
- either way, for if Carson was killed he'd have the field to himself, an'
- if Carson killed Willis the boy'd have to stand trial for his life, an' a
- man wouldn't run much of a political race with a charge of bloody murder
- hangin' over 'im.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;True&mdash;true as Gospel!&rdquo; Garner frowned; &ldquo;but what plan had you in
- mind, Pole&mdash;I mean what plan to obviate trouble?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, you see,&rdquo; the mountaineer replied, &ldquo;I 'lowed you might be able to
- trump up some business excuse for gittin' Carson out o' town next
- Saturday.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I think I can,&rdquo; Garner cried, his eyes brightening. &ldquo;The truth is,
- I was to go myself over to see old man Purdy, the other side of
- Springtown> to take his deposition in an important matter, but I can
- pretend to be tied here and foist it onto Carson.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good; that's the stuff!&rdquo; Pole said, with a smile of satisfaction. &ldquo;But
- for the love of mercy don't let Dwight dream what's in the wind or he'd
- die rather than budge an inch.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- So it was that Carson the following Friday afternoon made his preparations
- for a ride on horseback through the country, his plan being to spend the
- night at the little hotel at Springtown and ride on to Purdy's farm the
- next morning after breakfast, and return to Darley Saturday evening
- shortly after dark. His horse stood at the hitching-rack in front of the
- office, and, ready for his journey, he was going out when Garner called
- him back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are you armed, my boy?&rdquo; Garner questioned.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not now, old man,&rdquo; Dwight said. &ldquo;I've carried that two pounds of cold
- metal on my hip till I got tired of it and left it in my room. If I can't
- live in a community without being a walking arsenal I'll leave the
- country.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'd better make an exception of to-day, anyhow,&rdquo; Garner said, reaching
- down into the drawer of his desk. &ldquo;Here, take my gun.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I might accidentally need it,&rdquo; Dwight said, thoughtfully, as he
- took the weapon and put it into his pocket.
- </p>
- <p>
- As he was unfastening his horse, Dr. Stone crossed the street from the
- opposite sidewalk and approached him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where are you off to this time?&rdquo; the old man asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson explained as he tightened the girth of his saddle and pulled the
- blanket into place.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'd get back as soon as I could well manage it,&rdquo; the physician
- said, his eyes on the ground. Carson started and looked grave.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, doctor, you are not afraid&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, she's doing very well, my boy, but&mdash;well, there is no use
- keeping back anything from anybody as much concerned as you are. The truth
- is, she's very low. I think we can pull her through all right, with care
- and attention, but I feel that I ought to warn you and lecture you a
- little, too. You see, as I've often said, she is a woman who suffers
- mightily from worry and excitement of any kind, and your adventures of
- late have not had the best effect on her health. I hope it's all over and
- that you will settle down to something more steady. Her life really is in
- your hands more than mine, for if you should have any more trouble of a
- serious nature it would simply kill her. I only mention this,&rdquo; the doctor
- continued, laying his hand on the young man's arm half apologetically,
- &ldquo;because there is some little talk going round that you and Dan Willis
- haven't quite settled your differences yet. If I were in your place,
- Carson, I'd take a good deal from that man before I'd have trouble with
- him right now, considering the critical condition your mother is in. A
- shooting-scrape on top of all the rest, even if you got-the best of it,
- would simply send that good woman to her grave.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then we won't have any shooting-scrape!&rdquo; Carson said, his voice
- quivering. &ldquo;You can depend on that, doctor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The road Dwight took as the most direct way to his destination really
- passed within two miles of the home of Dan Willis, and yet the likelihood
- of his meeting the desperado never once crossed Carson's mind. In this,
- however, he was to meet with surprise. He had got well into the mountains,
- and, full of hope as to his campaign, was heartily enjoying a slow ride on
- his ambling horse through a narrow, shaded road, after leaving the heat of
- the open thoroughfare, when far ahead of him he saw a horseman at the side
- of the way pinning with his pocket-knife to the smooth bark of a
- sycamore-tree a white envelope. The distance was at first too great for
- Dwight to recognize the rider, though his object and occupation were soon
- evident, for suddenly wheeling on his rather skittish mount the man drew
- back about twenty paces from the tree, drew a revolver and began to fire
- at the target, sending one shot after the other, as rapidly as he could
- rein and spur his frightened animal to an approved distance and
- steadiness, until his weapon was empty. The marksman, evidently a
- mountaineer, as indicated by his wide-brimmed soft hat and easy gray
- shirt, thrust his hand into his trousers-pocket and took out sufficient
- cartridges for another round, and was thumbing them dexterously into their
- places when Carson drew near enough to recognize him.
- </p>
- <p>
- A thrill, a sort of shock, certainly not due even to subconscious fear,
- passed over Dwight, and he almost drew upon his rein. Then a hot flush of
- shame rose in him and tingled through every nerve in his body, as he
- wondered if for one instant he could have feared the presence of any
- living man, armed or unarmed, and running his hand behind him to be sure
- that his own revolver was in place, and with his head well up he rode even
- more briskly forward. He had no thought of caution. The sharp warning Dr.
- Stone had given him so recently never entered his brain. That was the man
- who, on several occasions, had threatened to kill him, and who, Carson
- firmly believed, had once tried it. That there was to be grim trouble he
- did not doubt. Averting it after the manner of a coward was not thought
- of.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the two riders were about a hundred yards apart, Dan Willis, hearing
- the fall of horses' hoofs, looked up suddenly. There was no mistaking the
- evolution of his facial expression from startled bewilderment to that of
- angry, bestial satisfaction. Uttering an unctuous grunt of delight, and
- with his revolver swinging easily against his brawny thigh, by the aid of
- his tense left hand the mountaineer drew his horse squarely into the very
- middle of the narrow road and there essayed to check him. The animal,
- quivering with excitement from the shots just fired over his head, was
- still restive and swerved tremblingly from side to side, but with prodding
- spur and fierce command Willis managed to keep him in the attitude of open
- opposition to Carson's passage, which was, as things go in the mountains,
- a threat not to be misunderstood.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson Dwight read the action well, and his blood boiled.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Halt thar!&rdquo; Dan Willis suddenly called out, in a sharp, fierce tone, and
- as he spoke he raised his revolver till the hand holding it rested on the
- high pommel of his saddle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why should I halt?&rdquo; almost to his surprise rang clearly from Dwight's
- lips. &ldquo;This is a public road!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0044" id="linkimage-0044"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0343.jpg" alt="0343 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0343.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not for <i>yore</i> sort,&rdquo; was hurled back. &ldquo;It's entirely too narrow for
- a gentleman an' a dog to pass on. <i>I'm</i> goin' to pass, but I'll walk
- my hoss over yore body. I've been praying for this chance, an' God or
- Hell, one or t'other, sent it to me. Some folks say you've got grit. I've
- my doubts about it, for you are the hardest man to meet I ever wanted to
- settle with, but if you've got any sand in yore gizzard you've got a
- chance to spill some of it now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't want to have trouble with you,&rdquo; Dwight controlled himself enough
- to say. &ldquo;Bloodshed is not in my line.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you've <i>got</i> to fight!&rdquo; Willis roared. &ldquo;If you don't I'll ride
- up to you an' spit in yore damned, sneakin' face.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I hardly think you'll do that,&rdquo; said Carson, his rage overwhelming
- him. &ldquo;But before we go into this thing tell me, for my own satisfaction if
- you are the one who tried to kill me the night Pete Warren was jailed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You bet I was, and damned sorry I missed.&rdquo; Willis's revolver was raised.
- The sharp click of the hammer sounded like the snapping of a metallic
- twig. Then alive but to one thought, and that of alert and instantaneous
- self-preservation, Dwight quickly drew his weapon. With his teeth ground
- together, his breath coming fast, he took as careful aim as was possible
- at the shifting horseman, conscious of the advantage his antagonist had
- over him in the calmness of his own mount. He saw a puff of smoke before
- Willis's eyes, heard the sharp report of the mountaineer's revolver, and
- wondered if the ball had lodged in his body.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am fully justified,&rdquo; something within him seemed to say as he pressed
- the trigger of his revolver. His hand had never been more steady, his aim
- never better, and yet the smile and taunting laugh of Willis proved to him
- that he had missed. The eyes of his assailant gleamed like those of an
- infuriated beast as he tried to steady his rearing and plunging horse to
- shoot again. Once more he fired, but the shot went wild, and with a snort
- of fear his horse broke from the road and plunged madly into the bushes
- bordering the way. Carson could just see Willis's head and shoulders above
- a thick growth of wild vines and at these he aimed steadily and fired. Had
- he won? he asked himself. There was a smothered report from Willis's
- revolver, as if it were fired by an inert finger. The mountaineer's head
- sank out of sight. What did it mean? Carson wondered, and with his weapon
- still cocked and poised he grimly waited. It was only for an instant, for
- the frightened horse plunged out into the open again. Willis was still in
- the saddle, but what was it about him that seemed so queer? He was
- evidently making an effort to guide his horse, but the hand holding his
- revolver hung helplessly against his thigh; his left shoulder was sinking.
- Then Carson caught sight of his face, a frightful, blood-packed mask
- distorted past recognition, that of a dying man&mdash;a horrible,
- never-to-be-forgotten grimace. The horses bore the antagonists closer
- together; their eyes met in a direct stare. Willis's body was rocking like
- a mechanical thing on a pivot.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You forced me to do it!&rdquo; Carson Dwight said, his great soul rising to
- heights of pity and dismay never reached before. &ldquo;God knows I did not want
- to shoot you. Dan, I never have had anything against you. I would have
- avoided this if I could.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The stare of the wounded man flickered. With a moan of pain he bent to the
- neck of his horse and remained there a moment, and then, dropping his
- revolver and resting both quivering hands on the pommel of his saddle, he
- drew himself partially erect. His eyes were rolling upward, his purple
- lips moved as if to speak, but his vocal organs seemed to have lost their
- power. Holding to his pommel with his left hand, he raised his right and
- partially extended it towards Dwight, but he had not the strength to
- sustain its weight, and with another moan, a frothing at the mouth, Dan
- Willis toppled from his horse and went to the ground, the animal breaking
- away in alarm and running down the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- Quickly dismounting, Carson bent over the dying man. &ldquo;Dan, were you
- offering me your hand?&rdquo; he asked, tenderly. But there was no response. The
- mountaineer was dead. There he lay, a pint whiskey flask nearly empty of
- its contents protruding from his shirt.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson looked up and about him. The sky had never seemed clearer, the
- forest never so beautifully lush and green, so full of sylvan recesses and
- the gladsome songs of birds. Higher and more majestic never had the
- mountains seemed to tower into God's infinite blue. And yet here at his
- feet lay the remains of one who had been created in the image of his
- Maker, as lifeless as the clod from which he had sprung. All <i>this</i>&mdash;and
- Carson's horse nibbling with bitted mouth the short grass which grew
- about. There were no fires of satisfied revenge at which the spiritually
- chilled young man could warm himself. Regret steeped in the vat of remorse
- filled his young soul. Seating himself at the side of the road, he
- remained there a long time calmly laying his plans. Of course, knowing the
- law as he knew it, he would give himself up to the sheriff. Then with a
- start and a shock of horror he thought of his mother. Dr. Stone's warning
- now loomed up before him as if written in letters of fire. Yes, this&mdash;this,
- of all things, would kill her! Knowing her nature, nothing that could
- happen to him would be more fatal. Not even his own death by violence
- would hold such terrors for her sensitive, imaginative temperament, which
- exaggerated every ill or evil that beset his path. After all, he grimly
- asked himself, which way did his real duty lie? Obedience to the law he
- reverenced demanded that he throw himself upon its slow and creaking
- routine, and yet was there not a higher tribunal? By what right should the
- legal machinery of his or any other country require the life of a stricken
- woman that the majesty of its forms might be upheld and the justice or
- injustice to an outlaw who had persistently hounded him be formally passed
- upon?
- </p>
- <p>
- No, he told himself, the right to protect his mother was <i>his</i>&mdash;it
- was even more, as he saw it, it was his first duty. And yet if he kept his
- own counsel, he asked himself, his legal mind now active, what were the
- chances of escape from accusation? Noticing the target still pinned to the
- trunk of the tree with the dead man's pocket-knife, the shots showing on
- the bark and paper, and the sprawling attitude of the corpse with the
- wound over the region of the heart, he asked himself, with faintly rising
- hope, what more natural than to assume that death had resulted from
- accident? What more reasonable than the theory that on his frightened
- horse Dan Willis had accidentally directed his shot upon his own body?
- What better evidence that he was not at himself than the almost empty
- flask in his shirt? Yes, Carson Dwight decided, it was his duty to wait at
- least to see further before taking a step which would result in even
- deeper tragedy. Besides, he knew he was morally guiltless. His conscience
- was clear; there was consolation in that at all events. But now what must
- he do? To go on to Springtown by that road was out of the question, for
- only a mile or so farther on was a store and a few farm-houses, and it
- would be known there that he had passed the fatal spot. So, remounting, he
- rode slowly back towards Darley, now earnestly, and even craftily, hoping
- that he would meet no one. He was successful, for he reached the main
- road, which was longer, not so well graded, and a more sparsely settled
- thoroughfare to his destination.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had lost time, and he now put his horse into a brisk canter and sped
- onward with a queer blending of emotions. The thought of possibly saving
- his mother from a terrible shock buoyed him up while the grewsome
- happening put a weight upon him he had never borne before.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0039" id="link2HCH0039"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXXIX
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0045" id="linkimage-0045"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9350.jpg" alt="9350 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9350.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- T was after dark when he finally reached Springtown and rode through the
- quiet little street to the only hotel in the village kept by a certain Tom
- Wyman, whom Dwight knew. Dismounting, he turned his tired horse over to a
- negro porter and went into the room which was used at once as parlor and
- office. A dog-eared account-book lay open on a table, and here, at the
- request of the cordial Wyman, a short, portly man with sandy hair and
- mustache, Carson registered his name.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are out electioneering, I know,&rdquo; the proprietor smiled, agreeably, as
- he rubbed his fat hands together. &ldquo;Well, you are going to run like a
- scared dog. I hear your name everywhere. It looked as black as Egyptian
- darkness for you once, but you are gaining ground. No man ever had a
- better campaign document than the speech Jabe Parsons' wife made. Gee
- whiz! it was a stem-winder; it set folks to laughin' at Wiggin, and that
- was the worst thing that ever happened to him. Jabe Parsons is for you
- now, though he headed one wing of the mob agin your pet darky. You see,
- Jabe wants to prove that his wife was right in the way she first felt
- about the matter, and he's a strong man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As if in a dream, so far into the background had even his contest been
- thrust by the tragedy, Carson heard himself as if from the mouth of
- another explaining that it was legal business that had brought him
- thither, and calmly asking the best road from the village to Purdy's farm,
- whither he intended to go the following morning after breakfast.
- </p>
- <p>
- A few minutes later the supper bell was rung by a negro, who carried it
- with deafening clangor through the main hall and round the house, and two
- or three drummers, of the small-trade class, a village storekeeper, and a
- stock-drover or two clattered in on the uncarpeted floor to the
- dining-room, and with more noise drew out their chairs and sat down. It
- happened that Carson knew none of them, and so he sat silent through the
- meal. Usually of robust appetite, to-night all inclination to physical
- nourishment had deserted him. Try as he would to fasten his mind upon more
- cheerful things, the view of Dan Willis's body stretched upon the ground,
- the ghastly features struggling in the throes of death, came again and
- again before his eyes with tenacious persistency. Morbidly, he asked
- himself if that state of mind would continue always. The disaster really
- had crept upon him through no deliberate fault of his. In fact, he could
- trace its very beginning to his determination to turn over a new leaf and
- make a better man of himself&mdash;to that and to a natural inborn pity
- for a persecuted creature, and yet here was he, his hands stained red,
- unable by any stoicism or philosophy to rid himself of a gloom as deep as
- the void of space. Genuine man that he was, he pitied the giant who had
- fallen before him. His mind, trained to logical reasoning in most matters,
- told him that he was more than justified in what he had done; but then, if
- so, to what was due this strange shock to his whole being&mdash;this
- restless sense of boundless debt to something never met before, the
- ominous flapping of wings in a new darkness around him?
- </p>
- <p>
- After supper, to kill time until the hour of retiring, Carson declined the
- proffered cigar of his host, and to avoid the&mdash;to him&mdash;empty
- chatter of the others, now assembled on the little porch, he strolled down
- the street. Here groups of men sat in front of the stores in the dim light
- thrown from murky lamps within, but it happened that he was not recognized
- by any of them though there were several gaunt forms he knew, and he
- passed on, walking feverishly. On and on he strode till he had covered
- more than a mile and suddenly came upon a little church surrounded by a
- graveyard. He leaned upon the rotten fence and looked over at the mounds
- marked by white marble slabs in some cases, plain, unlettered natural
- stones in others, and some unmarked by any sort of monument, but having
- little white palings around them.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson Dwight shuddered and turned his face back towards the village as he
- asked himself if this might be the resting-place of the man he had slain.
- Life to him had been so bounteous, despite all the trials he had
- encountered, that to think that he had by his own hand, even under gravest
- provocation, deprived a human being of its privileges gave him pain akin
- to nothing he had ever felt before.
- </p>
- <p>
- Reaching his room in the hotel, which was at the head of the stairs in the
- front part of the house, his first impulse was to lock his door&mdash;why,
- he could not have explained. It was not fear; what was it? With a defiant
- smile he left it unfastened and proceeded to undress himself. As he threw
- himself on his bed he became conscious of the impulse to say his prayers.
- What a queer thing! It had been years since he had actually knelt in
- prayer, and yet tonight he wanted to do so. A strange, hot, rebellious
- mood came over him a few minutes later as he lay staring at the disk on
- the sky-blue ceiling cast by the lamp-chimney. He felt like crying out to
- the infinite powers in tones of demand to lift the weird, stifling pall
- that was pressing down on him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The words his father had spoken in a rage when the old gentleman had first
- seen the wound on his forehead after Pete Warren's rescue now came to him
- with startling force: &ldquo;All this for a trifling negro! Have you lost your
- senses?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- What, Carson asked himself, would his father say to this deeper step&mdash;this
- headlong plunge into misfortune as the outcome of the cause he had
- espoused?
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson could not sleep, and fancying that if his light were out he might
- do so, he rose and extinguished it and went back to bed. But he was still
- restless. The hours dragged by. It was after twelve o'clock, when on the
- still night air came the steady beat of a horse's hoofs in the distance,
- growing louder and louder, till with a cry of &ldquo;Woah!&rdquo; the animal was
- reined in at the hotel door, and the stentorian voice of the rider called
- out: &ldquo;Hello! hello in thar!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a pause, but no response. The landlord was evidently a sound
- sleeper.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hello! hello!&rdquo; Again the call rang jarringly through the empty hall below
- and up the stairway.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson sat erect, put his feet on the floor, and stood out in the centre
- of the room. He told himself that it was an officer of the law in pursuit
- of him. How silly to have imagined that such a thing could remain hidden!
- And his mother! Yes, it would kill her! Poor, poor, gentle, frail woman!
- He had tried to obviate the blow, resorting to deception, to actual
- flight; he had submerged himself in the mire of criminal secrecy,
- according to the letter of the law, that he might shield her, and for what
- purpose? Yes, the blow would kill her. Dr. Stone had plainly said so.
- </p>
- <p>
- He went to the window and looked out. At the gate below he saw a man on a
- horse, and heard him muttering impatiently.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hello in Thar!&rdquo; The cry was accompanied by an oath. &ldquo;Are you-uns plumb
- deaf? What do you keep a tavern fur, anyhow?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a sound in the room below of some one getting out of bed, and
- then a drowsy voice cried: &ldquo;Who's there?&rdquo; It was the landlord.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me, Jim Purvines. Let me in, Tom. I've got to have a bed an' a stall fer
- my nag. I'm completely fagged out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, all right. I'll join you in a minute. Where in the thunder
- have you been, Jim?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To the inquest. They made me serve. Samson called a jury right off so
- they could move the body home. The dead man's mammy didn't want it to lie
- thar all night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good Lord! Jury? Dead man? Why, what's happened, Jim?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, come off! You don't mean you hain't heard the news?&rdquo; The rider had
- dismounted and was leading his horse through the gate to the steps on
- which the landlord now stood. &ldquo;Why, Tom, Dan Willis has gone to his last
- accountin'. The Webb children, out pickin' huckleberries, come across his
- remains on the Treadwell road a mile t'other side o' Wilks's store. At
- first it was thought he'd met his death by bein' throwed from his colt,
- fer somebody seed it loose with saddle an' bridle on, but when we examined
- the body we found a bullet-hole over the heart.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good Lord! Who done it, Jim?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson's heart was in his mouth; his breath was held; there was a pause
- which seemed without end.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Done it hisself, Tom. The jury had no difficulty comin' to that decision
- from ample evidence. He'd tuck his pocket-knife an' stuck up an envelope
- with his name on it agin a tree, an', half drunk, as we judged from his
- flask, he was shootin' at it over the head of a young colt that hain't
- been broke a month. Dan must have had the devil in 'im, an' was determined
- to train the animal to stand under fire, fer we seed whar the dirt was
- pawed up powerful all around. We calculated that the colt got to buckin'
- an' to keep from bein' throwed off Dan turned his gun the wrong way.
- Anyhow, he's no more.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, an' I reckon a body ought to respect the dead, good or bad,&rdquo; said
- the landlord; &ldquo;but there won't be a river of tears shed, Jim. That fellow
- was a living threat to law and order.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I have heard that he was the chap that shot Carson Dwight the night
- he saved that nigger from the mob.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sh! He's up-stairs now,&rdquo; The landlord lowered his voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You don't say! Sort o' out of his beat, ain't he?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know&mdash;on his way to Purdy's. Go on in; I'll attend to your
- horse and come back and find you a place to bunk.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson sank back on his bed. A sense of vast, almost soothing relief was
- on him. His mother was saved. The verdict that had been rendered would
- forever bury the facts. Now, he told himself, he could sleep with his mind
- at rest. And yet&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- He heard the new-corner ascend the stairs with heavy, shambling tread and
- enter the room adjoining his own. Through a crack between the floor and
- the thin partition he saw a pencil of candle-light and heard the grinding
- of boot-soles on the floor as the man undressed. Then the light went out,
- the bed-slats creaked, and all was still.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0040" id="link2HCH0040"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XL
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0046" id="linkimage-0046"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9357.jpg" alt="9357 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9357.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- WIGHT reached Darley the following evening shortly after dusk, and rode
- straight through the central portion of the town and past his office. All
- day long he had debated with himself whether it would be wise to take
- Garner into his confidence, and at last had decided that it would do no
- good, and only cause his sympathetic partner to worry needlessly, since
- Garner nor no one else could point out any better course than the one to
- which, perforce, he had committed himself. Carson now comprehended his
- insistent morbidness. It was not fear; it was not a guilty conscience; it
- was only the galling shackles of unwonted and hateful secrecy, the vague
- and far-reaching sense of uncertainty, the knowledge of being, before the
- law (which was no respecter of persons, circumstances, or sentiment), as
- guilty of murder as any other untried violator of peace and order.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the way down the street to his home he met Dr. Stone, who was also
- riding, and reined in.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My mother&mdash;how is she, doctor?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;I've been away since I
- saw you yesterday.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'll really be surprised when you see her,&rdquo; the old man smiled. &ldquo;She's
- tip-top! I never saw such a change for the better in all my experience.
- She had old Linda in her room when I was there about noon, and they were
- laughing and cracking jokes at a great rate. She'll pull through now, my
- boy. I tried to get her to tell me what had happened, but she threw me off
- with the joke that she had changed doctors and was taking another fellow's
- medicine on the sly, and then she and Linda laughed together. I believe
- the old negro knew what she meant. I'll tell you one thing, Carson, if I
- wasn't afraid of hurting your pride I'd congratulate you on what happened
- to that chap Willis. Really, if that thing hadn't taken place you and he
- would have had trouble. Some think he was getting ready for you when he
- was shooting at that target.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps so, doctor,&rdquo; Carson said, glad that the dusk veiled his face from
- the old man's sight. &ldquo;Well, I'll go on.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At the carriage gate at home he found old Lewis standing ready to take his
- horse.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hello!&rdquo; Carson said, with a joke that was foreign to his mood; &ldquo;when did
- Major Warren discharge you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hain't discharge me yit, young marster,&rdquo; Lewis smiled, in delight, as he
- opened the gate and reached out for the bridle. &ldquo;I knowed you'd be along
- soon, en so I waited fer you. Marse Carson, Linda powerful anxious ter see
- you. She settin' on yo'-all's veranda-step now; she been axin' is you got
- back all evenin'. Dar she come now, young marster. I'll put up yo' horse.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, Uncle Lewis,&rdquo; and Dwight, seeing the old woman shambling
- towards him, went across the lawn and met her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, young marster, I been waitin' fer you,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I got some'n' ter
- ax you, suh.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; he asked: &ldquo;If it is anything I can do I'll be glad to help
- you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't like ter bother you, young marster,&rdquo; Linda said, plaintively;
- &ldquo;but somehow it don't seem lak anybody know what ter do. I went ter young
- miss, en she said fer me ter see you&mdash;dat you was de onliest one ter
- decide. Marse Carson, of course you done heard dat man Willis done killed
- hisse'f, ain't you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, Mam' Linda&mdash;oh yes!&rdquo; Dwight said, his voice holding an odd,
- submerged quality.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, young marster, you see, me'n Lewis thought dat, bein' as dat man
- was de ringleader, en de only one left on de rampage after my boy, dat,
- now he's daid, I might sen' ter Chattanoogy fer Pete en let 'im come on
- home.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, I thought he was doing well up there?&rdquo; Carson said again, in a tone
- which to himself sounded as expressionless as if spoken only from the
- lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dat so; dat so, too,&rdquo; Linda sighed; &ldquo;but, Marse Carson, he de onliest
- child I got en I wants 'im wid me. I wants 'im whar I kin see 'im en try
- ter 'fluence 'im ter do what's right. In er big place lak Chattanoogy he
- may git in mo' trouble, en&mdash;&rdquo; She went no further, her voice growing
- tremulous and finally failing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, send for him, by all means,&rdquo; Dwight said. &ldquo;He'll be all right here.
- We'll find something for him to do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;En, en&mdash;dar won't be no mo' trouble?&rdquo; Linda faltered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;None in the world now, mammy,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;The people all over the
- country are thoroughly satisfied that he's innocent. No one will even
- appear against him. He is all right now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Tears welled up in Linda's eyes and she wiped them off on her apron.
- &ldquo;Thank God, young marster; one time I thought I never would want ter live
- another minute, en yit right now&mdash;right now I'm de happiest woman in
- de whole world, en you done it, young marster. You stood up fer er po' old
- nigger 'oman when de world was turn agin 'er, en God on high know I bless
- you. I bless you in every prayer I sen' up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned from her as she stood wiping her eyes and went on to his
- mother's room, finding her, to his delight, sitting up in an easy-chair
- near the table on which stood a lamp and a book she had been reading.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did you see Linda?&rdquo; Mrs. Dwight asked, as he kissed her tenderly and
- stood, still with that everpresent alien weight at his heart, stroking her
- soft cheek. He nodded and smiled.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And did you tell her&mdash;did you decide that Pete could come back?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He nodded and smiled again. &ldquo;She seems to think I'm running the country.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As far as her interests are concerned, you <i>have</i> been,&rdquo; the invalid
- said, proudly. &ldquo;Oh, Carson, you know somehow it has happened that I never
- knew Linda so well as some of our own slaves, but since this thing came up
- I have thoroughly enjoyed having her come to see me. I keep her here
- hours, at a time. Do you know why?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He shook his head. &ldquo;Not unless it is because she has such a strong
- individuality and is so original.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, that isn't it&mdash;it is simply, my boy, because she worships the
- very ground you walk on, and I love to hear her express it in the
- thousands of indirect ways she has. Oh, Carson, I'm simply foolish&mdash;<i>foolish</i>
- about you! I have never been able to tell you how I felt about your heroic
- conduct. I was afraid to. I gloried in it, but your constant danger tied
- my tongue&mdash;I was afraid you'd take more risks. I've got a secret to
- tell you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To tell me?&rdquo; he said, still stroking her cheek. &ldquo;Yes; Dr. Stone, seeing
- that I was so much better this morning tried to worm it out of me, but I
- wouldn't tell him the cause. Carson, for a long time I have harbored a
- gnawing, secret fear. It was with me night and day. I knew it was dragging
- me down, keeping me from proper sleep and proper nourishment, but I
- couldn't rid myself of it till this morning.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What was it, mother?&rdquo; he asked, unable to see her drift.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The fear, my boy, that you and that Dan Willis would meet face to face
- has for a long time been a constant nightmare to me. I had picked up in
- various ways, sometimes from remarks let fall by your father or one of the
- servants, more about your differences with that man than you were aware
- of. I tried to keep you from knowing how I felt, but it was secretly
- dragging me to my grave.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And now, mother?&rdquo; he asked, an almost hopeful light breaking far away on
- his clouded horizon.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, it may be an awful sin, for I'm told Willis had a mother&rdquo;&mdash;Mrs.
- Dwight sighed&mdash;&ldquo;but when the news came to-day that he had
- accidentally killed himself I became a new woman. He was the one thing I
- dreaded above all else, for, Carson, if he had not shot himself you and he
- would have met and one of you would have fallen. Oh, I'm so happy. I'm
- going to get well now, my boy. You will see me out on the lawn in a day or
- two.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His eyes were on the floor at her feet. Why he gave so much of his mental
- burden to mere utterance he could not have explained, but he said: &ldquo;And
- even if we <i>had</i> met, mother, and he had tried to shoot me, and&mdash;and
- I, in self-defence you know, had been forced to kill him&mdash;really
- forced&mdash;I suppose even that situation would have&mdash;disturbed
- you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, don't, don't talk of that!&rdquo; Mrs. Dwight cried. &ldquo;I don't think it is
- right to think of unpleasant things when one is happy. God did it, Carson.
- God did it to save you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, mother, I was only thinking&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, think of pleasanter things,&rdquo; Airs. Dwight interrupted him. &ldquo;Helen's
- been over to see me rather oftener of late. We frequently sit and chat
- together. It makes me feel young again. She is very free with me about
- herself&mdash;that is, about everything except her affair with Mr.
- Sanders.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She doesn't talk of that much, then?&rdquo; he ventured, tentatively.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She won't talk about it at all,&rdquo; said the invalid; &ldquo;and that's what seems
- so queer about it. A woman can see deeper into a woman's heart than a man
- can, and I've been wondering over Helen. Sometimes I almost think&mdash;&rdquo;
- Mrs. Dwight seemed lost in thought and unconscious of the fact that she
- had ceased speaking.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You were saying, mother,&rdquo; he reminded her, eagerly, &ldquo;that you almost
- thought&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, it seems to me, Carson, that any natural girl ought to be so full of
- her engagement to the man she is to marry that she would really <i>love</i>
- to talk about it. Really it seems to me that Helen may be questioning her
- heart in this matter, but she'll end by marrying Mr. Sanders. It looks as
- if she has pledged herself in some way or other, and she is the very soul
- of honor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, she is all that,&rdquo; Dwight said, in an effort at lightness. &ldquo;Now,
- good-night, mother.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Much fatigued from his journey and the mental strain upon him, he went up
- to his room. Throwing off his coat, the night being warm to
- oppressiveness, he lighted a cigar and sat in the wide-open window. What a
- strange, tempestuous life was his! How like a mere bauble of soul and
- flesh was he buffeted between highest heaven and lowest earth! And for
- what purpose was he created in the vast scheme of endless solar systems?
- </p>
- <p>
- From the row of negro cabins and cottages below, across the dewy grass and
- shrubbery, on the flower-perfumed air came sounds of unrestrained
- merriment. Some negro in a cottage near Linda's was playing a mouth-organ
- to the accompaniment of a sweetly twanging guitar. There was a rhythmic
- clapping of hands, the musical, drumlike thumping of feet on resounding
- boards, snatches of happy songs, clear, untrammelled, childlike laughter.
- </p>
- <p>
- They&mdash;and naught else&mdash;had brought him his burden. That complete
- justice might be meted out to such as they, he had dipped his hands into
- the warm blood of his own race, and was an outlaw bearing an honored name,
- stalking forth, pure of heart, and yet masked and draped with deceit,
- among his own kind. And for what ultimate good? Alas! he was denied even
- the solace of a look into futurity. And yet&mdash;born in advance of his
- time, as the Son of God was born ahead of His&mdash;there was yet
- something in him which&mdash;while he shrank from the depth and bitterness
- of <i>his</i> cup&mdash;lifted him, in his unmated loneliness, in his
- blindness, to far-off light&mdash;high above the material world. There to
- suffer, there to endure, and yet&mdash;there.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0041" id="link2HCH0041"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XLI.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0047" id="linkimage-0047"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9365.jpg" alt="9365 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9365.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- T was the day following the burial of the body of Dan Willis. Old man
- Purdy, whom Carson had gone to see, was at Dilk's cross-roads store with a
- basket of fresh eggs, which he had brought to exchange for their market
- value in coffee. Several other farmers were seated about the store on
- nail-kegs and soap-boxes whittling sticks and chewing tobacco, their slow
- tongues busy with the details of the recent death and interment.
- </p>
- <p>
- Old Purdy was speaking of how the children had discovered the body, and
- remarked that it would have been found several hours sooner if Carson
- Dwight had only taken the shorter road that day to Springtown instead of
- the longer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, Dwight come from Darley, didn't he?&rdquo; asked Dilk, as he wrote down
- the number of eggs he had counted on a piece of brown paper on the counter
- and waited before continuing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, yes,&rdquo; Purdy made answer; &ldquo;he told me, as we were goin' through the
- work he had to do at my house, that he had gone to Springtown an' stayed
- all that night an' then rid on to me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The store-keeper's hands hovered over the basket for an instant, then they
- rested on its edge. &ldquo;Well, I can't make out what under the sun Dwight went
- so far out o' his way for. It's fully five mile farther, and the road is
- so rough and washed out that it's mighty nigh out of use.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, that does look kind o' funny, come to think of it,&rdquo; admitted Purdy,
- as he gazed into the bland faces around him. &ldquo;I never thought of it
- before, but it certainly looks odd, to say the least.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course thar may not be a thing <i>in</i> it,&rdquo; said Dilk, in a guarded
- tone, &ldquo;but it <i>does</i> all seem strange, especially after we've heard
- so much talk about the threats passin' betwixt them very two men. I mean,
- you see, neighbors, that it sort o' looks, providential that&mdash;that
- Dan met with the accident before Dwight an' him come together over here.
- That's what I mean.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- All heads nodded gravely, all minds were busy, each in its own individual
- way, and stirred by something more exciting than the mere accidental death
- of Willis or the formality of his burial.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a rather prolonged silence broken only by the click of the eggs
- which Dilk was counting into a new tin dish-pan. When he had finished he
- weighed out the coffee and emptied it into the white, smoothly ironed poke
- Purdy's wife had sent along for that purpose. Then he looked straight into
- Purdy's eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did you notice&mdash;if thar ain't no harm in axin'&mdash;whether Dwight
- seemed&mdash;well, anyways upset or&mdash;or bothered while he was at your
- house?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, <i>I</i> didn't,&rdquo; replied the farmer; &ldquo;but my wife was in the room
- while he was doin' the writin' that had to be done, an' I remember now she
- axed me after he left ef he was a drinkin' man. I told her no, I didn't
- think he was <i>now</i>, though he used to be sorter wild, an' I wanted to
- know why she axed me. She said she never had seed anybody's hands shake
- like his did while he held the pen, an' that he had a quar look about the
- eyes like he'd lost a power o' sleep.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Was&mdash;was anything said in his presence about Willis's death that you
- remember of?&rdquo; the storekeeper pursued, with the skill of a legal
- crossexaminer, while the listeners stared, their cuds of tobacco
- compressed between their grinders.
- </p>
- <p>
- Purdy's face had grown rigid, almost as that of an important witness on
- the stand in court. &ldquo;I can't just remember,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;There was so much
- talk about it on all sides that day. Oh yes&mdash;now I recall that&mdash;well,
- you see we was all at my house, eager for news, and it struck me, you
- know, as if Dwight wasn't as anxious to talk as the rest&mdash;in fact, it
- looked like he sorter wanted to change the subject.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; The exclamation was breathed simultaneously from several mouths.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course, neighbors,&rdquo; Purdy began, in alarm, &ldquo;don't understand me for
- one minute to&mdash;&rdquo; But he broke off, for Dilk had something else to
- observe.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Them two men was at dagger's-p'ints, I've heard,&rdquo; he declared. &ldquo;Friends
- on both sides was movin' heaven an' earth to keep 'em apart. Now if Dwight
- <i>did</i> take that long, roundabout road from Darley to Springtown, why,
- they didn't meet. But ef Dwight went the way he always <i>has</i> tuck,
- an' I've seed 'im out this way often enough, why&mdash;&rdquo; Dilk raised his
- hands and held them poised significantly in mid-air.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But the coroner's jury found,&rdquo; said Purdy, &ldquo;that Willis was shootin' at a
- target he'd stuck up on a tree with his own knife, an' that his young hoss
- was skittish, an'&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All the better proof of bad blood betwixt 'em,&rdquo; burst from a farmer on a
- nail-keg. &ldquo;The truth is, some hold now that Willis was out practising so
- he could wing that particular game. The only thing I see agin what you-uns
- seem to think is that it's been kept quiet. Dwight is a lawyer an' knows
- the law, an' he wouldn't cover a thing like that up when all he'd have to
- do would be to establish proof that it was done in self-defence an' git
- his walking-papers.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thar you are!&rdquo; Dilk said, in a voice that rang with conviction; &ldquo;but
- suppose <i>one</i> thing&mdash;suppose this. Suppose the provocation
- wasn't exactly strong enough to quite justify killing. Suppose Dwight,
- made mad by all he'd heard, drawed an' fired without due warning, and
- suppose while he was thar in that quiet spot he had time to think it all
- over and decided that he'd stand a better chance of escape by not bein'
- known in the matter. A body never can tell. You kin bet your boots if
- Dwight <i>did</i> kill 'im an' hid the fact, he had ample legal reasons
- fer not wantin' to be mixed up in it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The seed was sown, and upon soil well suited to rapid germination and
- growth. By the next day the noxious weed had its head well above the
- ground, and, like the crab-grass the farmers knew to be so tenaciously
- prolific, it was spreading rapidly.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0042" id="link2HCH0042"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XLII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0048" id="linkimage-0048"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9369.jpg" alt="9369 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9369.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- WEEK went by. Helen Warren had been sitting that warm afternoon in the big
- bay-window of the parlor. A cooling breeze fanned the old lace curtains
- inward, bringing the perfume of the the garden and now and then revealing
- a wealth of color on the rose-bushes near by. She had just read an
- appealing letter from Sanders in which he had expressed himself as having
- been so disturbed by her refusal to assure him positively of what his
- ultimate fate was to be that he had permitted himself to worry
- considerably. So greatly concerned, indeed, was he that he had confided in
- his mother, who, he wrote, had made matters worse by asking him flatly if
- he was absolutely sure that he was loved in the one and only way a man
- should be loved by the woman he was hoping to win for his wife.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was writing all this to Helen in a straightforward, manly way, putting
- her sharply on her honor, as it were, and she, poor girl, was worried in
- her turn. Leaving her chair, she went to the piano and seated herself and
- began to play. She was thus occupied when Ida Tarpley came in suddenly and
- unannounced, as she felt privileged to do at any time.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, tell me,&rdquo; the visitor smiled, &ldquo;what's the matter with your playing?
- Why, you used to have a good, even touch, but as I came up the walk I
- declare I thought it was some one tuning the piano. You were dropping
- enough notes to fill a waste-paper basket.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I'm not in the mood for it, I presume!&rdquo; Helen said, checking a sigh.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I understand.&rdquo; Miss Tarpley gently pushed back Helen's hair and kissed
- her brow. &ldquo;You can't deny it; you were thinking about Carson Dwight and
- all his troubles.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen flushed and dropped her glance to her lap, then she rose from the
- piano and the two girls moved hand in hand to the window. &ldquo;The truth is,&rdquo;
- Helen admitted, &ldquo;that I have been wondering if anything has gone wrong
- with him&mdash;any bad news or indications about his election.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He can't be worrying about the election,&rdquo; Ida said, confidently. &ldquo;Mr.
- Garner comes to see me often and confides in me rather freely, and he says
- the people are flocking back to Carson in swarms and droves. They
- understand him now and admire him for the courageous stand he took.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, something is wrong with him,&rdquo; Helen declared, eying her cousin
- sadly. &ldquo;Mam' Linda never makes a mistake; she knows him through and
- through. She went to thank him last night for getting a position for Pete
- to work regularly at the flouring mill, and she came back really depressed
- and shaking her head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Suppin certain sho gone wrong wid young mars-ter, honey,' she said. 'He
- ain't never been lak dis before; he ain't <i>hisse'f</i>, I tell you! He's
- yaller an' shaky an' look quar out'n de eyes.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; and Miss Tarpley sank into one of the chairs in the window. &ldquo;I'm
- almost sorry you mentioned that, for now I'll worry. I've always had his
- cause at heart, and now&mdash;Helen, I'm afraid something very, very
- serious is hanging over him.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0049" id="linkimage-0049"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0371.jpg" alt="0371 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0371.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- I'm not hinting at anything that might come out of his disappointment over
- your affair with Mr. Sanders, either. It seems to me he accepted that as
- inevitable and is making the best of it, but it is something else.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Something else!&rdquo; Helen repeated. &ldquo;Oh, Ida, how horribly you talk! Do you
- mean&mdash;is it possible that he was more seriously wounded that night
- than he has let us know?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, it's not that. I don't know what it is. In fact, Mr. Garner says&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What does he say, Ida?&rdquo; Helen threw into the gap left by her cousin's
- failure to proceed, and stood staring.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you know it is easy sometimes to tell when one is not revealing
- everything, and I felt that way about Mr. Garner when he called night
- before last. In the first place, though he tried to do it in a casual sort
- of way, he kept talking of Carson all the time. It was almost as if he had
- come to see if I would confirm some secret fear of his, for he seemed to
- get near it several times and then backed out. Once he went further than
- he intended, for he said, as if it were a slip of the lip, when we were
- speculating on the possible cause of Carson's depression&mdash;he said,
- 'There is <i>one</i> thing, Miss Ida, that I fear, and I fear it so much
- that I dare not even mention it to myself.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; exclaimed Helen, and she leaned on the back of her chair; &ldquo;what
- could he have meant?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know; Mr. Garner wouldn't explain; in fact, he seemed rather
- upset by his unintentional remark. He laughed awkwardly and changed the
- subject, and never alluded to Carson again while he stayed. As he was
- getting his hat in the hall, I followed him and tried to pin him down to
- some sort of explanation, and then he made an effort to throw me off.
- 'Oh,' he said, 'you know Carson is terribly blue about losing Helen, and
- it has, of course, caused him to care less about his election, but he'll
- come around in time.' I told Mr. Garner then that I was sure he had meant
- something else. I was looking straight at him and saw his glance fall, but
- that was all I got out of him. Something is wrong, Helen&mdash;something
- very, very serious.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have you seen Carson lately, Ida?&rdquo; Helen asked, with rigid lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not to speak to him; he seems to avoid me, but as I sat in the window of
- my room yesterday afternoon I saw him go by. He didn't see me, but I saw
- his face in repose, and oh, cousin, it wrung my heart. He really must have
- some great secret trouble, and it hurts me to feel that I can't help him
- bear it. He used to confide in me, but he seems to shun me now, and that,
- too, in itself, is queer.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is not about his mother, either,&rdquo; Helen sighed, &ldquo;for her health has
- been improving lately.&rdquo; And as Miss Tarpley was leaving she accompanied
- her, gloomily to the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- The twilight fell softly, and as Helen sat in the hammock on the veranda
- her father came in at the gate and up the walk. She rose to greet him with
- her customary kiss, and taking his arm they began to stroll back and forth
- along the veranda. She was hoping that he would speak of Carson Dwight,
- but he didn't, and she was forced to mention him herself, which she did
- rather stiffly in her effort to make it appear as merely casual.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ida was saying this afternoon that Carson is not looking well&mdash;or,
- rather, that he seems to be worried,&rdquo; she faltered out, and then she hung
- on to the Major's arm and waited.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I don't know,&rdquo; the old gentleman said, reflectively. &ldquo;I went into his
- office this afternoon to get a blank check, and found him at his desk with
- a pile of letters from his supporters all over the county. Well, I
- acknowledge I wondered why he should have so little enthusiasm when the
- thing is going his way like the woods afire, and his crusty old father
- fairly chuckling with pride and delight; but what's the use of talking to
- you! You know if he is blue there is only <i>one</i> reason for it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Only one reason!&rdquo; Helen echoed, faintly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, how could the poor boy be happy&mdash;thoroughly, so I mean&mdash;when
- the whole town can talk of nothing else but the grandeur of your
- approaching marriage. Mrs. Snodgrass has started the report that your aunt
- is to give you a ten-thousand-dollar trousseau and that Sanders is to load
- you down with family jewels. Mrs. Snod says we are going to have such a
- crowd here at the house that the verandas will be enclosed in canvas and
- the tables be set barbecue fashion on the lawn, and that the family
- servants and all their unlynched descendants are to be brought from the
- four quarters of the earth to wait on the multitude in the old style. You
- needn't bother; that's what ails Carson. He's got plenty of pride, and
- that sort of talk will hurt any man.&rdquo; But Helen was unconvinced. After
- supper she sat alone on the veranda, her father being occupied with the
- evening papers in the library. What could Garner have meant by his remark
- to Ida? With a heavy heart and her hands tightly clasped in her lap, Helen
- sat trying to fathom the mystery, for that there was mystery she had no
- doubt.
- </p>
- <p>
- She went back to the first days of her return home. When she had arrived
- her heart&mdash;the queer, inconsistent thing which was now so deeply
- concerned with Carson Dwight's affairs&mdash;had been coldly steeled
- against him. The next salient event of that gladsome period was the ball
- in her honor of which all else had faded into the background except that
- memorable talk with Carson and his promise to remove Pete from the
- temptations of living in town. The boy had gone, then the real trouble had
- begun. Carson had rescued him from a violent death before her very eyes.
- That speech of his was never to be forgotten. It had roused her as she had
- never been roused by human eloquence. With a throb of terror, she heard
- the report of the pistol fired by Dan Willis, his avowed enemy&mdash;Dan
- Willis upon whom a just Providence had visited&mdash;visited&mdash;visited&mdash;She
- sat staring at the ground, her beautiful eyes growing larger, her hands
- clutching each other like clamps of vitalized steel.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;No, no! not that&mdash;not that!&rdquo; It was an accident.
- The coroner and his jury had said so. But how strange! No one had
- mentioned it, and yet it had happened on the very day Carson had ridden
- along the fatal road to reach Springtown. She knew the way well. She
- herself had driven over it twice with Carson, and had heard him say it was
- the nearest and best road, and that he would <i>never take any other</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ah, yes, <i>that</i> was the explanation&mdash;<i>that</i> was what Garner
- feared. <i>That</i> was the terrible fatality which the shrewd lawyer,
- knowing its full gravity, had hardly dared mention even to himself. Carson
- Dwight, her hero, had killed a man!
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen rose like a mechanical thing, and with dragging feet went up the
- stairs to her room. Before her open window&mdash;the window looking out
- upon the Dwight lawn and garden&mdash;she sat in the still darkness, now
- praying that Carson might appear as he sometimes did. If she saw him,
- should she go to him? Yes, for the pain, the cold clutch on her heart of
- the discovery was like the throes of death. She told herself that she had
- been the primal cause of this as of all his suffering. In the blind desire
- to oblige her, he had wrecked his every hope. He had lost all and yet was
- uncomplaining. Indeed, he was trying to hide his misfortune, bearing it
- alone, like the man he was.
- </p>
- <p>
- She heard her father closing the library windows to prepare for bed. His
- steps rang hollowly as he came out into the hall below and called up to
- her: &ldquo;Daughter, are you asleep?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A reply hung in her dry throat. She feared to trust her voice to
- utterance. She heard the Major mutter, as if to himself, &ldquo;Well,
- good-night, daughter,&rdquo; and then his footsteps died out. Again she was
- alone with her grim discovery.
- </p>
- <p>
- The town clock had just struck ten when she saw the red coal of a cigar on
- the Dwight lawn quite near the gate leading into her father's grounds. It
- was he. She knew it by the fitful flaring of the cigar. Noiselessly she
- glided down the stairs, softly she turned the big brass key in the massive
- lock and went out and sped, light of foot, across the dewy grass. As she
- approached him Dwight was standing with his back to her, his arms folded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Carson!&rdquo; she called, huskily, and he turned with a start and a stare of
- wonder through the gloom.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;it's you,&rdquo; and doffing his hat he came through the gateway
- and stood by her. &ldquo;It's time, young lady, that you were asleep, isn't it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She saw through his effort at lightness of manner.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I noticed your cigar and wanted to speak to you,&rdquo; she said, in a voice
- that sounded tense and even harsh. It rose almost in a squeak and died in
- her tight throat. Something in his wan face and shifting eyes, noticeable
- even in the darkness, confirmed her in the conviction that she had divined
- his secret.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You wanted to see me,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;I've had so many things to think about
- lately, in this beastly political business, you know, that I'm sadly
- behind in my social duties.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I&mdash;I've been thinking about you all evening,&rdquo; she said, lamely.
- &ldquo;Somehow, I felt as if I simply must see you and talk to you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How good of you!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;I don't deserve it, though&mdash;at such a
- time, anyway. It is generally conceded that it is a woman's duty, placed
- as you are, to think of only one thing and one individual. In this case
- the man is the luckiest one in God's universe. He's well-to-do, has scores
- of admiring, influential friends, and is to marry the grandest, sweetest
- woman on earth. If that isn't enough to make a man happy, why&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop; don't speak that way!&rdquo; Helen commanded. &ldquo;I can't stand it. I simply
- can't stand it, Carson!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stared at her inquiringly for a moment, as she stood with her face
- averted, and then he heaved a big sigh as he gently, almost reverently,
- touched her sleeve to direct her glance upon himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it, Helen?&rdquo; he said, softly, a wealth of tenderness in his
- shaking voice. &ldquo;What's gone wrong? Don't tell me <i>you</i> are unhappy.
- Things have gone crooked with me of late&mdash;I&mdash;I mean that my
- father has been displeased, till quite recently at least, and I have not
- been in the best mood; but I have been sustained by the thought that you,
- at least, were happy. If I thought you were not, I don't know what I would
- do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How can I be happy when you&mdash;when you&mdash;&rdquo; Her voice dwindled
- away into nothingness, and she could only face him with all her agony and
- despair burning in her great, melting eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When I what, Helen?&rdquo; he asked, gropingly. &ldquo;Surely you are not troubled
- about <i>me</i>, now that my political horizon is so bright that my
- opponent can't look at it without smoked glasses. Oh, I'm all right. Ask
- Garner&mdash;ask your father&mdash;ask Braider&mdash;ask anybody.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was not thinking of your <i>election</i>,&rdquo; she found voice, to say.
- &ldquo;Oh, Carson, <i>do</i> have faith in me! I crave it; I long for it; I
- yearn for it. I want to help you. I want to stand by you and suffer with
- you. You can trust me. You tried me once&mdash;you remember&mdash;and I
- stood the test. Before God, I'll never breathe it to a soul. Oh&rdquo;&mdash;stopping
- him by raising her despairing hand&mdash;&ldquo;don't try to deceive me because
- I'm a girl. The uncertainty is killing me. I'll not close my eyes
- to-night. The truth will be easier borne because I'll be bearing it&mdash;<i>with
- you</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Helen, can it be possible that you&mdash;&rdquo; He had spoken impulsively
- and essayed to check himself, but now, pale as a corpse, he stood before
- her not knowing what to do or say. He opened his mouth as if to speak, and
- then with a helpless shrug of his shoulders he lapsed into silence, a
- droop of utter despondency upon him. She was now sure she was right, and a
- shaft she had never met before entered her heart and remained there&mdash;remained
- there to strengthen her, good woman that she was, as such things have
- strengthened women of all periods. She laid her firm hand upon his arm in
- a pressure meant to comfort him, and with the purity of a sorrowing angel
- she said: &ldquo;I know the truth, dear Carson, and if you don't show me a way
- to get you out from under it&mdash;you who did it all for my sake&mdash;if
- you don't I shall die. I can't stand it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stood convicted before her. With bowed head he remained silent for a
- moment, then he said, almost with a groan: &ldquo;To think, on top of it all,
- that you must know&mdash;<i>you!</i> I was bearing it all right, but now
- you&mdash;you poor, gentle, delicate girl&mdash;you have to be dragged
- into this as you have been dragged into every miserable thing that ever
- happened to me. It began with your brother's death&mdash;I helped stain
- that memory for you&mdash;now this&mdash;this unspeakable thing!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You did it wholly in self-defence,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;You <i>had</i> to do it.
- He forced it on you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, yes&mdash;he or fate, the imps of Satan or the elemental passion
- born in me. Flight, open flight lay before me, but that would have been
- the death of self-respect&mdash;so it came about.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you kept it on account of your mother?&rdquo; she went on, insistently, her
- agonized face close to his.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, of course. It would kill her, Helen, and I would be doing it
- deliberately, for I know what the consequences would be. I must be my own
- tribunal. I have no right to take still another life that legal curiosity
- may be gratified. But till I am proven innocent I am a murderer&mdash;that's
- what hurts. I am offering myself to my fellow-men as a maker of laws, and
- yet am deliberately defying those made by my predecessors.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your mother must never know,&rdquo; Helen said, firmly. &ldquo;No one shall but you
- and I, Carson. We'll bear it together.&rdquo; She took his hand and held it
- tightly for a moment, then pressing it tenderly against her cold cheek,
- she lowered her head and left him&mdash;left him there under the vague
- starlight, the soulful fragrance of her soothing personality upon him,
- causing him to forget his peril, his grief, and his far-reaching sorrow,
- and to draw close to his aching breast her heavenly sympathy and undying
- fidelity.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0043" id="link2HCH0043"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XLIII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0050" id="linkimage-0050"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9382.jpg" alt="9382 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9382.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- NE morning, a week later, Pole Baker slouched down the street from the
- wagon-yard, and, peering into the law-office of Garner &amp; Dwight, he
- stood undecided on the deserted street, his hands thrust deep into the
- pockets of his baggy trousers. He took another surreptitious look. Garner
- was at his desk, his great brow wrinkled as with concentrated thought, his
- coarse hair awry, his coat off and shirt-sleeves rolled up to his elbows,
- his fingers stained with ink. Glancing up at this moment, he caught the
- farmer's eye and nodded: &ldquo;Hello!&rdquo; he said, cordially; &ldquo;come in. How's our
- young colt running out your way?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Like a shot out of a straight-barrelled gun,&rdquo; Baker retorted. &ldquo;He's the
- most popular man in the county. He had a slow start, in all that nigger
- mess, but he's all right now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So you think he'll be elected?&rdquo; Garner said, as Pole sat down in a chair
- near his desk and began to twirl his long, gnarled fingers.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I didn't say <i>that</i>, exactly,&rdquo; the farmer answered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you said&mdash;&rdquo; In his perplexity the lawyer could only stare.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I reckon thar are lots of things in this life that kin keep fellows out
- of offices besides the men runnin' agin 'em,&rdquo; Baker said, significantly.
- </p>
- <p>
- The eyes of the two men met in a long, steady stare; each was trying to
- read the other. But Garner was too shrewd a lawyer to be pumped even by a
- trusted friend, and he simply leaned back and took up his pen. &ldquo;Oh yes, of
- course,&rdquo; he observed, &ldquo;a good many slips betwixt the cup and the lip.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Silence fell between the two men. Baker broke it suddenly and with his
- customary frankness. &ldquo;Look here, Bill Garner,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;That young
- feller's yore partner an' friend, but I've got his interests at heart
- myself, an' it don't do no harm sometimes fer two men to talk over what
- concerns a friend to both. I come in town to talk to <i>somebody</i>, an'
- it looks like you are the man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, that's it,&rdquo; Garner said. &ldquo;Well, out with it, Baker.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Pole thrust his right hand into his pocket and took out a splinter of soft
- pine and his knife. Then, with the toe of his heavy shoe, he drew a
- wooden, sawdust-filled cuspidor towards him and over it he prepared to
- whittle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want to talk to you about Carson,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It ain't none o' my
- business, Bill, but I believe he's in great big trouble.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You do, eh?&rdquo; and Garner seemed to throw caution to the winds as he leaned
- forward, his great, facile mouth open. &ldquo;Well, Pole?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gossip&mdash;talk under cover from one mouth to another,&rdquo; the mountaineer
- drawled out, &ldquo;is the most dangerous thing, next to a bucket o' powder in a
- cook-stove that you are goin' to bake in, of anything I know of. Gossip
- has got hold of Dwight, Bill, an' it's tangled itself all about him. Ef
- some'n' ain't done to choke it off it will git him down as shore as a
- blacksnake kin swallow a toad after he's kivered it with slime.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You mean&mdash;&rdquo; But Garner seemed to think better of his inclination
- towards subterfuge and broke off.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I mean about the way Dan Willis met his death,&rdquo; Pole said, to the point.
- &ldquo;I'm no fool an' you ain't, at least you wouldn't be ef you was paid by
- some client to git at the facts. Folks are ready to swear Carson was seed
- the day that thing happened on that road inside of a mile o' whar Willis
- was found. You know what time Carson left here that day; it was sometime
- after dinner, an' the hotel man at Spring-town says he got thar an'
- registered after dark. He says, too, that Carson looked nervous an' upset
- an' seemed more anxious to avoid folks than the general run of
- vote-hunters. Then&mdash;then, oh, well, what's the use o' beatin' about
- the bush? You know an' I know that Carson hain't been actin' like himself
- since then. It's all we can do to git 'im interested in his own
- popularity, an' that shows some'n' is wrong&mdash;dead wrong. An' it looks
- to me like it is a matter that ought to be attended to. Killin' a man is
- serious enough in the eyes of the law without covering it up till it's
- jerked out of you by the State solicitor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So you think the two men met?&rdquo; Garner said, now quite as if he were
- inquiring into the legal status of any ordinary case.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's my judgment,&rdquo; answered Pole. &ldquo;And if I'm right, then it seems to
- me that Carson an' his friends ought to take action before&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Before what?&rdquo; Garner prompted, almost eagerly. &ldquo;Before the grand jury
- takes it up, as you know they will have to with all this commotion goin'
- the rounds.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, Carson ought to act&mdash;concerned in it or not,&rdquo; said Garner. &ldquo;If
- something isn't done right away, it might be sprung on him on the very eve
- of his election and actually ruin him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm worried, an' I don't deny it,&rdquo; said the mountaineer. &ldquo;You see, Bill,
- Carson's a lawyer, and he knows whether he had a good case of self-defence
- or not, an' shirking investigation this way looks powerful like&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Like he was himself the&mdash;aggressor,&rdquo; interpolated Garner, with a
- frown.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, like that,&rdquo; said Baker. &ldquo;Of course we know Willis was houndin' the
- boy and making threats, but Carson's hot-headed, as hot-headed as they
- make 'em, an' maybe he flared up at the first sight of Willis an' blazed
- away at 'im. I don't see no other reason for him lyin' so low about it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm glad you came to me,&rdquo; Garner said. &ldquo;I'll admit I've been fearing the
- thing, Pole. It will be a delicate matter to broach, but I'm going to talk
- to him about it. As you say, the longer it remains like it is the more
- serious it becomes. Good Lord! if he <i>did</i> kill Willis&mdash;if he <i>did</i>
- kill him, it would take sharp work to clear him of the charge of murder
- after the silly way he has acted about it. Why, dang it, it's almost an
- admission of guilt!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Baker had barely left the office when Carson came in, nodded to his
- partner, and sat down at his desk and began in an absent-minded way to cut
- open some letters that were waiting for him. Unobserved Garner watched him
- from behind the worn book he was holding up to his face. Hardened lawyer
- that he was, Garner's heart melted with pity as he noted the dark
- splotches under the young man's eyes, the pathetic droop of his shoulders,
- the evidences in every facial line of the grim inward struggle that was
- going on in the brave, supersensitive soul. Garner put down his book and
- went into the little consultation-room in the rear and stood at the window
- which looked out upon a small patch of corn in an adjoining lot.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He did it!&rdquo; he said, grimly. &ldquo;Yes, he did it. Poor chap!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The task before him was the hardest Garner had ever faced. He could have
- discussed, to the finest points of detail, such a case for a client, but
- Carson&mdash;the strange, winning personality over which he had marvelled
- so often&mdash;was different. He was the most courageous, the most
- self-sacrificing, the most keenly suffering human being Garner had ever
- known, and the most sensitively honorable. How was it possible, even
- indirectly, to allude to so grave a charge against such a man? And yet,
- Garner reflected, pessimistically, the best of men sometimes reach a point
- at which their high moral and spiritual tension, under one crucial test or
- another, breaks. Why should it not be so in Carson Dwight's case.
- </p>
- <p>
- Garner went back to his desk, sat down, and turned his revolving-chair
- till he faced Carson's profile. &ldquo;Look here, old chap,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I've got
- something of a very unpleasant nature to say to you, and it's a pretty
- hard thing to do, considering my keen regard for you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Dwight glanced up from the letter he held before him. He read Garner's
- face in a steady stare for a moment, and then said, with a sigh, as he
- laid the letter down: &ldquo;I see you've heard it. Well, I knew it would get
- out. I've seen it coming for several days.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I began to guess it a week or so back,&rdquo; Garner went on, outwardly calm;
- &ldquo;but this morning in talking to Pole Baker I became convinced of it. It is
- a grim sort of thing, my boy, but you must not despair. You've surmounted
- more obstacles than any young fellow I know, and I believe you will
- eventually come through this. Though you must acknowledge that it would
- have been far wiser to have given yourself up at once.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I couldn't do it,&rdquo; Carson responded, gloomily. &ldquo;I thought of it. I
- started on my way to Braider, really, but finally decided that it wouldn't
- do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good God! was it as bad as that?&rdquo; Garner exclaimed. &ldquo;I've been hoping
- against hope that you could&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It couldn't be worse.&rdquo; Carson lowered his head till it rested on his
- hand. His face went out of Garner's view. &ldquo;It's going to kill her, Garner.
- She can't stand it. Dr. Stone told me that another shock would kill her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You mean&mdash;my Lord! you mean your <i>mother?</i> You&mdash;you&rdquo;&mdash;Garner
- leaned forward, his face working, his eyes gleaming&mdash;&ldquo;you mean that
- you did not report it because of her condition? Great God! why didn't I
- think of that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, certainly.&rdquo; Carson looked round. &ldquo;Did you think it was because&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I thought it was because you had&mdash;had killed him in&mdash;well, in a
- manner you feared would not be adjudged wholly justifiable. I never
- dreamed of the <i>real</i> reason. I see it all now,&rdquo; and Garner rose from
- his chair and with his lips twitching he laid his hand on Dwight's back.
- &ldquo;I understand perfectly, and I admire you more than I can say. Now, tell
- me all about it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For an hour the two friends sat talking together. Calmly Carson went into
- detail as to the happening, and when he had finished Garner said: &ldquo;You've
- got a good case, but you can easily see that it is grievously hampered by
- your concealment of the facts so long. To make a jury see exactly how you
- felt about your mother's reception of the thing may be hard, for the
- average man is not by nature quite so finely strung as that, but we must
- <i>make</i> them see it. Dr. Stone's testimony as to his advice to you
- will help. But, by all means, we must make the advance ourselves as soon
- as possible&mdash;before a charge is brought against you by the grand
- jury.&rdquo; v &ldquo;But&rdquo;&mdash;and Dwight groaned aloud&mdash;&ldquo;my mother simply
- cannot go through it, Garner. I know her. It will kill her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She simply must bear it,&rdquo; Garner said, gloomily. &ldquo;We must find a way to
- brace her up to the ordeal. I have it. All my hopes are based on our
- making such a clear statement before Squire Felton, with the testimony of
- several witnesses as to Willis's threats against you, that he will throw
- it out of court. I can see the squire to-day and have a hearing set for
- to-morrow. We'll make quick work of it. I'll also see your father and&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My father!&rdquo; Carson exclaimed, despondently.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I'll see him and explain the whole thing. I think I can get him to
- keep the matter from reaching your mother till after the hearing. She is
- still confined to her room, and surely your father can manage that part of
- it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Carson replied, gloomily; &ldquo;and he will do all he can, though it's
- going to be a terrible blow to him. But&mdash;if&mdash;if the justice
- court should bind me over, and I should have to go to jail to await trial,
- then my mother&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't think about her now!&rdquo; Garner said, testily. &ldquo;Let's work for a
- prompt dismissal and not look on the dark side till we have to. I'll run
- down and talk to your father at once, before the rumor reaches him and
- drives him crazy. I tell you it's in the very air; I've felt it for
- several days.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0044" id="link2HCH0044"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XLIV.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0051" id="linkimage-0051"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9390.jpg" alt="9390 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9390.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- N his office in one corner of his great grain and cotton warehouse, at a
- dusty, littered desk before a murky, cobweb-bed window, Garner found old
- Dwight, his lap full of telegraphic reports, his head submerged in a
- morning paper containing the market and crop news in general. Outside of
- the thin-walled office heavy iron trucks, in the grasp of brawny black
- men, rattled and rumbled over the heavy floor and across weighty skids
- into open cars in the rear. There was the creaking sound of the big hand
- elevators engaged in hoisting and lowering bales, barrels, bags, and
- casks, the mellow sing-song of the light-hearted negroes as they toiled,
- blissfully ignorant of the profound gloom which had fallen on the defender
- of their rights.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I came to see you on an important matter concerning Carson,&rdquo; Garner
- began, as he leaned over the old man's desk.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dwight lowered his paper, shrugged his shoulders, and sniffed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Campaign funds, I reckon,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Well, I've been looking for some
- such demand. In fact, I've been astonished that you fellows haven't been
- after me sooner. I'll do anything but buy whiskey to give away. I'm
- against that custom.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It wasn't <i>that</i>,&rdquo; said Garner, who, usually plain-spoken, shrank
- from beating about the bush even in so delicate a matter. &ldquo;The truth is,
- Carson is in a little trouble, Mr. Dwight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Trouble?&rdquo; the merchant said, bluntly. &ldquo;Will you kindly show me when he's
- ever been out of it? Since the day he was born it's been scrape after
- scrape. By all possessed, Billy, when he wasn't a year old I had to spend
- fifty dollars to encase all the chimneys in with iron grating to keep him
- from crawling into the fire. He's walked or stumbled into every fire that
- was made since then. When he was only twelve a man out at the farm fell in
- a well and nothing would do Carson but that he must go down after him. He
- did it, fastened the only available rope about the man and sent him to the
- top, and when they lowered it to Carson he was so nearly drowned that he
- could hardly sit in the loop. If I had a list of the scrapes that boy went
- through at home and at college I'd sell it to some blood-and-thunder novel
- writer. It would make his fortune. Well, what is it now?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Carson is in very serious trouble I'm afraid, Mr. Dwight,&rdquo; Garner said,
- as he took a chair and sat down. &ldquo;You will have to prepare yourself for a
- pretty sharp shock. He couldn't help it. It was pushed on him to such an
- extent that there was no other way out of it and retain his self-respect.
- Mr. Dwight, you, of course, heard of Dan Willis's death?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, and thought that now that he was under the sod Carson would surely&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The death was not an accident, Mr. Dwight,&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Garner interrupted, and his eyes rested steadily on the old man's face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You mean that Willis killed himself&mdash;that he&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I mean that he <i>forced</i> Carson to kill him, Mr. Dwight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old merchant's face was working as if in the throes of death; he
- leaned forward, his eyes wide in growing horror.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't, don't say that, Billy; take it back!&rdquo; he gasped. &ldquo;Anything but
- that&mdash;anything else under God's shining sun.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You must try to be calm,&rdquo; Garner said, gently. &ldquo;It can't be helped. After
- all, the poor boy was forced to do it to save his life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Old Dwight lowered his face to his hands and groaned. The negro at the
- head of the gang of truckmen approached and leaned in the doorway. He had
- come to ask some directions about the work, but with widening eyes he
- stood staring. Garner peremptorily waved him away, and, rising, he laid
- his hand on Dwight's shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't take it so hard!&rdquo; he said, soothingly. &ldquo;Remember, there is a lot to
- do, and that's what I came to see you about.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Old Dwight raised his blearing eyes, which, in his pallid face now looked
- bloodshot, and stammered out: &ldquo;What is there to do? What does it mean? How
- was it kept till now? Was he trying to hide it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes&rdquo;&mdash;Garner nodded&mdash;&ldquo;the poor boy has been bearing it in
- secret. He was afraid the news of it would seriously injure his mother.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And it will!&rdquo; Dwight groaned. &ldquo;She will never bear it in the world. She
- is as frail as a flower. His conduct has brought her within a
- hair's-breadth of the grave more than once, and nothing under high heaven
- could save her from this. It's awful, awful!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know it's bad, but we've got to save him, Mr. Dwight. You can't have
- your own son&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have him <i>what?</i>&rdquo; Dwight rose, swaying from side to side, and stood
- facing the lawyer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you can't have him sent to jail for murder; you can't have him&mdash;found
- guilty and publicly executed. The law is a ticklish business. Absolutely
- innocent men have been hanged time after time. I tell you this concealment
- of the thing, and Carson's hot fury at Willis and the remarks he has made
- here and there about him&mdash;the fact that he was armed&mdash;that there
- were no witnesses to the duel&mdash;that he allowed the erroneous verdict
- of the coroner's jury to go on record&mdash;all these things, with a
- scoundrel like Wiggin in the background at deadly work to thwart us and
- pull Carson out of his track, are very, very serious. It is the most
- serious job I ever tackled in the courts, but I'm going to put it through
- or, as God is my judge, Mr. Dwight, I'll throw up the law.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Tears were now flowing freely from the old merchant's eyes and,
- unhindered, dripped from his face to the ground. Taking Garner's hand he
- grasped it firmly, and as he wrung it he sobbed: &ldquo;Save my boy, Billy, and
- I'll never let you want for means as long as you live. He's all I've got,
- and I'm prouder of him than I ever let folks know. I've made a lot of fuss
- over some things he's done, but through it all I was proud of him, proud
- of him because he saw deeper into right than I did. Even this nigger
- question&mdash;I talked against that a lot, because I thought it would
- pull him down, but when I heard how he got you all together in Blackburn's
- store that night and persuaded you to save old Linda's boy&mdash;when I
- learned of that and heard the old woman's cries of joy, and saw the
- far-reaching effects of what Carson was standing for, I was so proud and
- thankful that I sneaked off to my room and cried&mdash;cried like a child;
- and now upon it all, as his reward, comes this thing. Oh, Billy, save him!
- Don't crush the poor boy's spirit. I've always wanted to aid you in some
- substantial way for your interest in him, and I'm going to do it this
- time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I hope we can squash the thing in justice court in the morning, Mr.
- Dwight,&rdquo; Garner said, confidently. &ldquo;The chief thing is for you to keep it
- all from your wife until then, anyway. I can't do a thing with Carson till
- his mind is at ease over her. He worships the ground she walks on, Mr.
- Dwight, and if it hadn't been for that he would have been out of this
- trouble long ago, for I'm sure a plain statement of the matter immediately
- after it happened would have cleared him without any trouble. In his
- desire to spare his mother he has complicated the case, that's all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I can keep it from his mother that long easy enough,&rdquo; said Dwight.
- &ldquo;I'll go home now and see to it. Pull my boy through this, Billy. If you
- have to draw on me for every cent I've got, pull him through. I'm going to
- treat him different in the future-. If he can get out of this I believe he
- will be elected and make a great man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- An hour later Garner hurried back to the office.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Everything is in fine shape!&rdquo; he chuckled, as he threw off his coat and
- fell to work at his desk. &ldquo;Squire Felton has fixed the hearing for
- to-morrow morning at eleven and Pole Baker has gone on the fastest horse
- in the livery-stable to secure witnesses for our side. He says he can find
- them galore in the mountains, and your father is as solid as a stone wall.
- He fell all in a tumble at first, but braced up, said some beautiful
- things about you, and went home to see that your mother's ears are closed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I saw the sheriff, too. What do you think? When I told him the facts, and
- said that you were ready to give yourself up, he almost cried. Braider's a
- trump. He said that the law gave him the right to let you go on your own
- recognizance, and that before he'd arrest you and put you in a common jail
- he'd have his arms and legs cut off. He said, knowing your heart as he
- knew it, he'd let you go all the way to Canada without stopping you, and
- that if you were bound over on this charge he'd throw up his job rather
- than arrest you. He told me he'd been looking for it&mdash;that he got
- wind of it two days ago, and would have been in to see you about it if he
- hadn't been afraid you'd misunderstand his coming at such a time. He put a
- flea in my ear, too. He said we must beware of Wiggin. He has an idea that
- Wiggin has been on to this for sometime and may have a dangerous dagger up
- his sleeve. The district-attorney is out of town to-day but will be back
- to-night. He's as straight as a die and will act fair. I will see him the
- first thing in the morning. Now, you brace up. Leave everything to me. You
- are as good a lawyer as I am, but you are too nervous and worried about
- your mother to act on your best judgment.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this juncture the colored gardener from Dwight's came in with a note
- directed to Garner. Garner opened it and read it while Carson stood
- looking on. It ran: <i>&ldquo;Dear Billy,&mdash;Everything is all right at this
- end, and will remain so, at least till after the hearing to-morrow. I
- enclose my check for ten thousand dollars as a retaining fee. I always
- intended to give you a little start, and I hope this will help you
- materially. Save my boy. Save him, Billy. For God's sake pull him through;
- don't let this thing crush his spirit. He's got a great and a useful
- future before him if only we can pull him through this.&rdquo;</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson read the note through a blur and turned away. He was standing alone
- in the dreary little consultation-room a few minutes later, when Garner
- came to him, old Dwight's check fluttering in his hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your dad's the right sort,&rdquo; he said, his eyes gleaming with the infant
- fires of avarice. &ldquo;One only has to know how to understand him. The size of
- this check is out of all reason, but if I can do what he wishes to-morrow,
- I'll not only accept it, but I'll put it to a glorious use. Carson, there
- is a young woman in this town whom I'll ask to marry me, and I'll buy a
- home with this to start life on.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ida Tarpley?&rdquo; said Carson.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She's the one,&rdquo; Garner said, with a bare touch of rising color. &ldquo;I think
- she would take me, from a little remark she dropped, and it was through
- you that I found her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Through me?&rdquo; Dwight said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it was in talking of your ups and downs that I first saw into her
- wonderfully sweet and sympathetic nature. Carson, if you get your
- walking-papers in the morning, I won't wait ten minutes before I pop the
- question. The lack of means was the only thing that kept me from proposing
- the last time I saw her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0045" id="link2HCH0045"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XLV.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0052" id="linkimage-0052"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9398.jpg" alt="9398 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9398.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- HE next morning when Garner reached the office, he found Carson surrounded
- by &ldquo;the gang,&rdquo; Blackburn was just leaving, his mild eyes fixed gloomily on
- the sidewalk, and Wade Tingle, Keith Gordon, and Bob Smith sat about the
- office with long-drawn, stoical faces.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was just telling Carson that it will be a walkover in court this
- morning,&rdquo; Wade was saying, comfortingly, as Garner sat down at his desk,
- his great brow clouded. &ldquo;Don't you think so, Garner?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'll tell you <i>one</i> thing, boys,&rdquo; Garner answered, irritably,
- &ldquo;it's too important a matter to make light over, and I want you fellows to
- clear out so we can get to work. I've got to talk to Carson, and I can't
- do it with so many here. I'm not accustomed to thinking with a crowd
- around.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You bet we'll skedaddle, then, old man,&rdquo; said Keith; &ldquo;but we'll be at the&mdash;the
- hearing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When they had gone droopingly out, Carson came from the window at which he
- had been standing and looked Garner over, noting with surprise that the
- lower parts of the legs of his partner's trousers were dusty and his boots
- unpolished. The shirt Garner wore had sleeves that were too long for his
- arms, and a pair of soiled cuffs covered more than half of the small
- hands. His standing collar had become crumpled, and his ever-present black
- silk necktie, with its unshapely bow and brown, frayed edges, had slipped
- out of place. His hair was awry, his whole manner nervous and excitable.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Keith says you didn't sleep at the den last night,&rdquo; Dwight said,
- tentatively. &ldquo;Did you go out to your father's?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Garner seemed to hesitate for an instant, then he crossed his dusty legs
- and began to draw upon and tie more firmly the loose strings of his worn
- and cracked patent-leather shoes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Look here, Carson,&rdquo; he said, when he had fumblingly tied the last knot,
- &ldquo;you are too strong and brave a man to be treated in the wishy-washy way a
- woman's treated. Besides, you'll have to know the truth sooner or later,
- anyway, and you may as well be prepared for it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Something gone wrong?&rdquo; Dwight asked, calmly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Worse than I dreamed was possible,&rdquo; Garner said. &ldquo;I thought we'd have
- comparatively smooth sailing, but&mdash;well, it's your danged luck! Pole
- Baker come in this morning about two o'clock. I'd taken a room at the
- hotel to get away from those chattering boys so I could think. I couldn't
- sleep, and was trying to get myself straight with a dime novel that
- wouldn't hold my attention, when Pole came and found me. Carson, that
- rascal Wiggin is the blackest devil that ever walked the earth in human
- shape.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's been at work,&rdquo; said Carson, calmly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'd think so,&rdquo; said Garner. &ldquo;Pole says wherever he went, expecting to
- lay hands on good witnesses who had heard Willis make threats, he found
- that Wiggin had got there first and put up a tale that closed their mouths
- like clams.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I see,&rdquo; said Dwight. &ldquo;He frightened them off.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I should think he did. He put them on their guard, telling them, without
- hinting at any trouble of yours, that if they had a call to court, of any
- sort whatsoever, to get out of it, as it would only be a trick on our part
- to implicate them in the lynching business.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So we have no witnesses,&rdquo; said Dwight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not even a photograph of one!&rdquo; replied Garner, bitterly. &ldquo;I sent Pole
- right out again, tired as he was, in another direction. He had a faint
- idea that he might persuade Willis's mother to testify, though I told him
- he was on a wild-goose chase, for not one mother in ten thousand would
- turn over a hand to aid a man who&mdash;a man under just such
- circumstances. Then I got a horse&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At that time of night?&rdquo; Carson cried.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What was the difference? I couldn't sleep, anyway, and the cool night air
- made me feel better, but I failed. The men I saw admitted that they had
- heard Dan talk some, but they couldn't recall any absolute threats. When I
- got back to town it was eight o'clock. I ate a snack at the restaurant and
- then hurried off to see the district-attorney. Mayhew is a good man,
- Carson, and a fair man. I think he is the most honest and conscientious
- solicitor we've ever had. But right there I saw the track of your guardian
- angel. As early as it was, Wiggin had been there before me. Mayhew
- wouldn't admit that he had, but I knew it from his reserved manner. Why, I
- expected to see the solicitor take the whole thing lightly, you know,
- considering your standing at the bar and your family name, but I found him&mdash;well,
- entirely too serious about it. He really talked as if it were the gravest
- thing that had ever happened. I saw that he was badly prejudiced, and I
- tried to disabuse his mind of some hidden impressions, but he wouldn't
- talk much. All at once, however, he looked me in the face and asked me how
- on earth any sensible man, familiar with the law, could keep a thing like
- that concealed as long as you did. I told him, in as plausible and direct
- a way as I could, how you felt in regard to your mother's condition. He
- listened attentively, then he shrugged his shoulders and said: 'Why,
- Garner, Dr. Stone told my wife the other day that Mrs. Dwight was
- improving rapidly. Surely she wasn't as bad off as all that.' My Lord! I
- was set back so badly that I hardly knew what to say. He went on then to
- tell me that folks through the country had been saying that towns-people
- always managed to avoid the law by some hook or crook, or influence, or
- money, and that he was not going to subject himself to public criticism
- even in the case of a man as popular as you are.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That was Wiggin's work!&rdquo; Carson said, his lips pressed tightly together
- as he turned back to the window.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, that's his method. He's the trickiest scamp unhung. Of course, he
- can't hope to see you actually convicted of this thing, but he does
- evidently think he can have you bound over to trial at the next term of
- court, and beat you at the polls in the mean time. He thinks with his
- negro incendiary speeches to rouse the lowest element, and the charges
- that you've murdered one of your own race to inflame the prejudices of
- others, that he can snow you under good and deep. But we've got to make
- the best of it. There is no shirking or postponing of this hearing to-day.
- Even if the very&mdash;the very worst comes,&rdquo; Garner finished, slowly, as
- if shrinking from the words he was uttering, &ldquo;we can give any bonds the
- court may demand.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But&rdquo;&mdash;and Dwight turned from the window and stood before his friend&mdash;&ldquo;what
- if they refuse to take bonds at all and I have to go to jail?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What do you want to cross a bridge like that for?&rdquo; Garner demanded,
- plainly angered by the sheer possibility in question.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dwight leaned over Garner and put his hand on the dusty shoulder. &ldquo;<i>That</i>
- would kill my mother, old man!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you think so, Carson?&rdquo; Garner was deeply moved.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know it, Garner, and her blood would be on my head.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, we must <i>win!</i>&rdquo; Garner said, and a look of firm determination
- came into his eyes; &ldquo;that is all there is about it. We must win. Eternal
- truth and justice are on our side. We must win.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0046" id="link2HCH0046"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XLVI.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0053" id="linkimage-0053"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9403.jpg" alt="9403 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9403.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- HE big, square court-room was filled to overflowing when at the last
- moment Carson and Garner arrived. Just inside the door they found old
- Dwight standing, his battered silk hat in his hand, and with an air of
- unwonted humility upon him, patiently awaiting their coming.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is everything all right?&rdquo; he anxiously whispered to Garner, as he reached
- out and caught his son's hand and held on to it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, all right, Mr. Dwight,&rdquo; Garner replied; &ldquo;and is&mdash;is your wife&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, we are safe on that score,&rdquo; the old man said, encouragingly, to
- Carson. &ldquo;I only slipped away for a minute. I won't wait here, but will
- hurry back and stand guard. God bless you, my boy.&rdquo; When Dwight had turned
- towards the door and was moving away, Carson glanced over the crowded
- room. All eyes were fixed, it seemed to him, anxiously and sympathetically
- on his face. As he passed through the central aisle to reach the railed-in
- enclosure where, at his elevated desk, the magistrate sat, gravely
- consulting with the State solicitor, Carson's mind was gloomily active
- with the numerous instances in which, to his knowledge, innocent men had
- been convicted by the complication of circumstantial evidence, in a chair
- which Braider was solicitously placing near that of Garner, the young
- man's glance again swept the big room. On the last row of benches sat
- Linda, Uncle Lewis, and Pete in the company of other negro friends of his.
- Their fixed and awed facial expressions added to his gloom. Near the
- railing sat &ldquo;the gang&rdquo;&mdash;Gordon, Tingle, and Bob Smith&mdash;their
- faces long-drawn. Behind them sat Helen and her father, with Ida Tarpley.
- Catching Helen's anxious glance, Carson tried to smile lightly as he
- responded to her bow, but there was something in his act which seemed to
- him to be empty pretence and rather unworthy of one in his position.
- Guilty or innocent in the eyes of the law, he told himself he was there to
- rid his character of the gravest charge that could be made against a human
- being, and from the indications, as seen by the shrewd Garner, he was not
- likely to leave the room a free man. He shuddered as he grimly pictured
- Braider&mdash;the feeling, sympathetic Braider&mdash;coming to him there
- before all those eyes and formally placing him under arrest at the order
- of the court. He sank to the lowest ebb of despair as he pictured his
- mother's hearing of the news. Almost in a daze Carson sat dumb and blind
- to the formal proceedings. Like a child, he felt a soothing comfort in the
- knowledge that he was leaning on such a skilled friend as that of the
- hardened young lawyer at his side, and yet for the first time in his life
- he was pitying himself. Things had really gone hard with him. He had tried
- his best to do the right thing of late, but fate had at last overpowered
- him. He was losing faith in the impulses which had led him, blind under
- the blaze of youthful enthusiasm, to that seat here under the cold,
- accusing eye of the law.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was drawn out of his lethargy by the clear, ringing, confident voice of
- the solicitor. It was a strong, an utterly heartless speech, &ldquo;the gang&rdquo;
- thought. Duty to the State and public protection was its key-note.
- Personally, Mayhew had nothing but the kindliest feeling and strongest
- admiration for the defendant. He belonged to one of the best and oldest
- families in the South, and was a man of undaunted courage and remarkable
- brains. But with all that, Mayhew believed, as he tugged at his heavy
- mustache and stared with confident eyes at the magistrate, he could show
- that lurking under the creditable and refined exterior of the defendant
- was a keenly vindictive nature&mdash;a nature that was maddened beyond
- forbearance by opposition. The solicitor promised to show by competent
- witnesses, when the matter was brought to trial, that Carson Dwight
- believed&mdash;mark the word <i>believed</i>&mdash;without an iota of
- proof, that Dan Willis had fired upon him in the mob that was attempting
- to lynch Pete Warren. Believing this, your honor, I say, with no sort of
- proof, I think the State will have no trouble in establishing the fact
- that Dwight had sufficient <i>motive</i> for what was done, and that he
- deliberately and with aforethought went armed with no other intent than to
- kill Willis. Furthermore, Mayhew could show, he declared, that Dwight had
- carefully concealed the deed, letting it go out to the world that the
- finding of the coroner's jury was correct, and making no statement to the
- contrary till he was driven to it by the encroachments of verifiable rumor
- and the certainty of adverse action by the grand jury. That being the
- status of the case, the solicitor could only urge upon the court its duty
- to hold Carson Dwight on the charge of murder in the first degree.
- </p>
- <p>
- Deep in his slough of depression, Dwight, looking over the breathless
- audience, noticed the serious faces he knew and loved. Helen was deathly
- pale, and her father sat with bowed head, fingering his gold-headed ebony
- cane. Keith Gordon's face was as full of reproach for what the solicitor
- had said as that of a grief-stricken woman. Wade Tingle sat flushed with
- rebellious anger, and Bob Smith, not grasping the full import of the
- high-sounding words, stared from under his neatly plastered hair like a
- wondering child at a funeral. It was Mam' Linda's almost savage glare that
- more firmly fixed Carson's wandering glance. She sat there, her visage
- full of half-savage passion, her large lip hanging low and quivering, her
- breast heaving, her eyes gleaming.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson had not the heart to follow Garner's weak and inadequate plea as
- the lawyer stood, his small hands clutched and bloodless behind him. He
- had not been able, he said, to reach the witnesses he had expected to
- produce, who would swear that Dan Willis, time after time, had pursued the
- defendant and made threats against his life, but he felt that a calm
- statement of Carson Dwight's would be believed, and that&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Here there was a commotion in the room. The bailiff at the door was
- talking loudly to some one. The magistrate rapped vigorously for order,
- and in the pause that ensued Pole Baker came striding down the aisle,
- leading a little woman wearing a black cotton sun-bonnet and dress of the
- same material. Leaving her standing, Baker approached Garner and whispered
- in his ear. Then, with a suddenly kindling face, the lawyer turned and
- whispered to the woman. A moment later he drew himself up to his full
- height and said, in a clear, confident voice that reached all parts of the
- room: &ldquo;Your honor, I have a witness here that I want to have sworn.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The district-attorney stood up and stared curiously at the woman. &ldquo;If I'm
- not mistaken that's Dan Willis's mother,&rdquo; he said, with a smile. &ldquo;She is a
- witness I'm looking for myself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you are welcome to what she'll testify,&rdquo; Garner dryly retorted.
- </p>
- <p>
- A moment later the little woman was on the stand, holding her bonnet in
- her hand, her small, wizened face as colorless as parchment, her black
- hair brushed as smoothly as patent leather down over her brow and tied in
- a small, tight knot behind her head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, Mrs. Willis,&rdquo; Garner went on, casting a significant glance at
- Carson, who was gazing at him in growing wonder, &ldquo;just tell the court in
- your own way what happened at your house the day your son met his death.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The room was very still when she began in a low, quivering voice which,
- gradually steadied itself as she continued.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;Mr. Wiggin come to the fence while we-all was eatin'
- our breakfast, an' called Danny out an' they had a talk near the cow-lot.
- I don't know what was said, but I was sorry they got together for Mr.
- Wiggin always upset Danny an' started 'im to drinkin' and rantin' agin Mr.
- Dwight here in town.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She paused a moment, and then Garner, leaning easily on the back of his
- chair, said, encouragingly: &ldquo;All right, Mrs. Willis, you are doing very
- well. Now, just go ahead and tell the court all that took place to the
- best of your recollection.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, thar wasn't much to recollect that happened right thar <i>at home</i>,&rdquo;
- the witness went on, plaintively; &ldquo;of course, the shootin' tuck place
- about a mile from thar on the&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pardon me, Mrs. Willis,&rdquo; Garner interrupted. &ldquo;You are getting the cart
- before the horse. I want you to tell his honor how your son acted when he
- came into the house after his talk with Mr. Wiggin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, when Danny fust come in, Mr. Garner, he went to the bureau drawyer
- and tuck out his revolver an' loaded it thar before us, cussin' at every
- breath agin Mr. Dwight. I tried to calm 'im down, an' so did my brother
- George, but he was as nigh crazy as I ever saw any human bein' in my life.
- He said he was goin' straight to Darley an' kill Carson Dwight, if he had
- to go to his daddy's house an' drag 'im out of his bed. He said he'd tried
- it once an' slipped up, but that if he missed again he'd kill hisse'f in
- disgust.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I see, I see,&rdquo; Garner said, in the pause that ensued. He stroked his
- smooth chin with his tapering fingers and opened and shut his mouth, and
- he kept his eyes on the ceiling as if the witness had made the most
- ordinary sort of statement. He leaned again on the back of his chair, and
- then lowering his glance to the face of the witness, he asked: &ldquo;Did you
- gather from Dan's talk that morning, Mrs. Willis, when it was that he made
- the <i>first</i> attempt on the life of Carson Dwight?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I don't know as I did <i>then</i>,&rdquo; the woman answered; &ldquo;but he
- told us about it the day after he fired the shot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, he did!&rdquo; Garner's face was still a study of guileless indifference,
- and he stroked his chin again, his eyes now on the floor, his arms folded
- across his breast. &ldquo;What day was that, Mrs. Willis?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, the day after Mr. Dwight kept the mob from hangin' old Lindy
- Warren's boy.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Profound astonishment was now visible on every countenance except that of
- Garner. &ldquo;I never knew positively before <i>who</i> fired that shot,&rdquo; he
- said, carelessly, &ldquo;though, of course, I had an idea who did it. So Dan
- admitted that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, he told us about that, and about tryin' to git at Mr. Dwight several
- other times.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I reckon you are satisfied in your own mind that if Mr. Dwight hadn't
- defended himself Dan would have killed him?&rdquo; Garner pursued, adroitly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know he would, Mr. Garner, an' when I heard the report that Danny had
- shot hisse'f by accident, while he was practisin' with his pistol, I was
- reconciled to it. I didn't think Mr. Dwight was to blame. I always thought
- he was doin' the best he could, an' that politics caused the bad blood. I
- always liked 'im, to tell the truth. I'd heard that he was a friend to the
- pore an' humble, even to pore old niggers, an' somehow I felt relieved
- when I heard he'd escaped my boy. I knowed Danny meant murder an' that no
- good could come of it. I'd a sight ruther know a child of mine was dead
- an' in the hands of his Maker than tied up in jail waitin' to be publicly
- hung in the end. No, it is better like it is, though if I may be allowed
- to say so, I can't for the life of me, understand what you-all have got
- Mr. Dwight hauled up here like this, when his mother is in sech a delicate
- condition. Good Lord, he hain't done nothin' to be tried for!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That will do, Mrs. Willis,&rdquo; Garner was heard to say, his voice harshly
- stirring the emotion-packed stillness of the room; &ldquo;that will do, unless
- my brother Mayhew wants to ask you some questions.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The State has no case, your honor,&rdquo; Mayhew said, with a sickly smile.
- &ldquo;The truth is, I think we've all been imbibing too freely of politics. I
- confess I've listened to Wiggin myself. It looks like, failing to get Dan
- Willis to kill Dwight, he's set about trying to have it done by law. Your
- honor, the State is out of the case.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a pause of astonishment and then the truth burst upon the
- audience. Realizing that Carson Dwight was more than a free man,
- vindicated, restored to them, &ldquo;the gang&rdquo; rose as a man and yelled. Led by
- Pole Baker and the enthusiastic Braider, they pressed around him, climbing
- over the railing and crushing chairs to splinters. Then, amid the shouts
- and glad tears of the spectators, the most popular man in the county was
- raised perforce upon the stout shoulders of Baker and Braider and borne
- down the aisle towards the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- Above the heads of all, Carson, flushed with confusion, glanced over the
- room. Immediately in front of him stood Helen. She was looking straight
- and eagerly at him, her face aglow, her eyes filled with tears. She paused
- with her father just outside the door, and as &ldquo;the gang&rdquo; bore their
- struggling and protesting hero past, she raised her hand to him. Blushing
- in fresh embarrassment, he took it, only to have it torn from him the next
- instant.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let me down, Pole!&rdquo; he cried.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, sir, we don't let you down!&rdquo; Pole shouted. &ldquo;We've got it in for you.
- We are goin' to lynch you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The crowd, appreciating the joke, thereupon raised the queerest cry that
- ever burst from breasts surcharged with joy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lynch him!&rdquo; they yelled. &ldquo;Lynch him!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Half an hour afterwards Carson went home. His father was at the fence
- looking for him. He had heard the news and his old face was beaming with
- joy as he opened the gate for his son and took him into his arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How's mother?&rdquo; was Carson's first inquiry.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She's all right and she knows, too?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She knows!&rdquo; Carson exclaimed, aghast.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, old Mrs. Parsons was the first to bring me the news, and she assured
- me she could impart it to your mother in such a way as not to shock her at
- all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you let her?&rdquo; Carson said, anxiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, and she did the slickest piece of work I ever heard of. I knew she
- was considered a wonderful woman, but she's the smoothest article I ever
- met. I laughed till I cried. I was in the mood for laughing, anyway. Mrs.
- Parsons began by adroitly working your mother up to such a pitch of fury
- against Willis for his nagging pursuit of you that your mother could have
- shot him herself, and then, in an off-hand way, Mrs. Parsons led on to the
- meeting between you. Willis had his gun in your face, and was about to
- pull the trigger, when your pistol went off and saved your life. She went
- on to say that Dan's mother had just been to the court-house testifying
- that her son had tried to murder you, and that she didn't blame you in the
- slightest. I declare, Mrs. Parsons actually made it appear that Willis was
- on trial instead of you. Anyway, it's all right. We've got nothing to fear
- now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0047" id="link2HCH0047"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XLVII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0054" id="linkimage-0054"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9413.jpg" alt="9413 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9413.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- IX weeks later the election came off.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was no &ldquo;walk-over&rdquo; for Carson. Wiggin seemed only more desperately
- spurred on by every exposition of his underhand chicanery. He died hard.
- He fought with his nose in the mire, but, throwing honor to the winds, he
- fought. Carson Dwight's stand on the negro question was Wiggin's strongest
- weapon. It was a torch with which the candidate could inflame the breasts
- of a certain class of men at a moment's notice. He was a crude but
- powerful speaker, and wherever he went he left smouldering or raging
- fires. Pledged to him were the lowest order of men, and they fought for
- him and worked for him like bandits in the dark. Over these men he wielded
- a sword of fear. Carson Dwight's intention in getting to the legislature
- was to make laws against lynching, and every man who had ever protected
- his home and fireside by summary justice to the black brutes would be
- ferreted out and imprisoned for life. But Dwight's more gentle and saner
- reasoning, backed by his heroic conduct of the past, held sway. He was
- elected. He was not only elected, but, as the exponent of a new issue, the
- news of his election was telegraphed all over the South. He had written
- some articles for Wade Tingle's paper which had been widely copied and
- commented on, and his political course was watched by many conservative
- thinkers, who prophesied a remarkable career for him. He was a fearless
- man, with a new voice, who had taken a radical stand based on humanitarian
- and Christian principles. Family history was simply repeating itself. His
- ancestors had stood for the humane treatment of the slaves thrust upon
- them by circumstances, and he, in the same hereditary spirit, was standing
- for kind, just treatment of those ex-slaves and their descendants. No man
- who knew him would have accused him of believing in the social equality of
- the races any more than they would earlier have brought the same charge
- against his ancestors.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the night the returns were brought in and it was known that he had
- triumphed, &ldquo;the gang&rdquo; had arranged a big pine torch-light procession, and
- it passed with its blaze and din through every street of the town. Carson
- was at home when they lined themselves, in all their tooting of horns,
- beating of drums, and general clatter, along the front fence. The town
- brass-band did its best, and every sort of transparency that the inventive
- mind of Wade Tingle could devise was borne, as if by the smoke and heat of
- the torches themselves, above the long procession.
- </p>
- <p>
- Garner separated himself from the throng, and, clad in a new and costly
- suit of clothes, a tribute to his engagement to Miss Tarpley&mdash;a fine
- black frock-coat, broadcloth trousers, and a silk hat&mdash;he made his
- way into the house and up the stairs to the veranda above, where Carson
- and his mother and father were standing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The boys want a speech,&rdquo; he said to Carson, &ldquo;and you've got to give them
- the best in your shop. By George, they deserve it.&rdquo; Carson was demurring,
- but his mother pressed him to comply, and Garner, with his stateliest
- strut, his coat buttoned so tightly at the waist that, the tails spread
- out as if inviting him to sit down, and his hat held on a level with his
- left shoulder, advanced to the balustrade, and in his happiest mood
- introduced the man who, he declared, was the broadest-minded, the most
- conscientious and fearless candidate that ever trod the boards of a
- political platform. They were to receive the expression of gratitude and
- appreciation of a man whose name was written upon every heart present.
- Garner had the distinguished honor and pride to introduce his law partner
- and close friend, the Hon. Carson Dwight.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson never spoke better in his life. What he said was from a boyish
- heart overflowing with content and good-will. When he had finished Mrs.
- Dwight rose from her chair and proudly stood by his side. The cheers at
- her appearance rent the air. Then Garner pushed old Dwight forward from
- the shadow of a column where he was standing, and as the old gentleman
- awkwardly bowed his greeting, the cheers broke out afresh. Bob Smith, who
- was a sort of drum-major, with a ribbon-wound walking-cane for a baton,
- struck up, &ldquo;For he's a jolly good fellow,&rdquo; and as the crowd sang it to the
- spluttering and jangling accompaniment of the band the procession moved
- down the street.
- </p>
- <p>
- At this juncture Major Warren came up to offer his congratulations. Carson
- was standing a few minutes later talking to Garner. He was trying to hear
- what his partner was saying in his bubbling and enthusiastic way about his
- engagement to Miss Tarpley, but he found it difficult to listen, for the
- conversation between his mother and Major Warren had fixed his attention.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I tried to get her to come over to hear the speech, but she wouldn't,&rdquo;
- the Major was saying. &ldquo;I can't make her out here lately, Mrs. Dwight. She
- used to be so different in anything concerning Carson. She is now actually
- hiding behind the vines on the veranda.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps she is so much in love with Mr. Sanders that she&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's the very point,&rdquo; the Major broke in. &ldquo;She won't talk about
- Sanders, and she&mdash;well, really, I think the two have quit writing to
- each other.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps she&mdash;oh, do you think, Major, that&mdash;&rdquo; Carson heard no
- more; his father had come forward and was talking to Garner.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson slipped away. He glided down the stairs and out at the door on the
- side next to Warren's and rapidly strode across the grass. Passing through
- the little gateway, he reached the veranda and the vines concealing the
- spot where the hammock was hanging. He saw no one at first and heard no
- sound. Then he called out: &ldquo;Helen!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; a timid, even startled voice from the vines answered, and
- Helen looked out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why didn't you come over with your father?&rdquo; Carson asked. &ldquo;He said he
- wanted you to, but you preferred to stay here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I <i>did</i> want to congratulate you,&rdquo; Helen, said, as he came up the
- steps and they stood face to face. &ldquo;I'm so happy over it, Carson, that
- really I was afraid I'd show it too much.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm glad you feel that way,&rdquo; he said, awkwardly. &ldquo;It was a hard fight,
- and I thought several times I was beaten.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did you ever touch that wasn't hard?&rdquo; she said, with a sweet,
- reminiscent laugh.
- </p>
- <p>
- They were silent for a moment and then he said: &ldquo;I'm not quite satisfied
- with your reason for not coming over with your father just now&mdash;really,
- you see, it is in a line with your actions for the last six weeks. Helen,
- you actually have avoided me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;On the contrary,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you have made it a point to stay away from
- me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he sighed, &ldquo;considering, you know, Sanders and his claims, I
- really thought I'd better keep my place.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; Helen exclaimed, and then she sank deeper into the vines.
- </p>
- <p>
- For one instant he stood trembling before her, and then he asked, boldly:
- &ldquo;Helen, tell me, are you engaged to him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She made no answer for a moment, and then in the moonlight he saw her
- flushed face against the vines and caught an almost startled glance from
- her wonderful eyes. She looked straight at him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I'm not, and I never have been,&rdquo; she said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You never have been?&rdquo; he repeated. &ldquo;Oh, Helen&mdash;&rdquo; But he went no
- further. For a moment he hung fire, then he said: &ldquo;Don't you care for him,
- Helen? Are you and I good enough friends for me to dare to ask that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I thought once that I might love him, in time&rdquo; she faltered; &ldquo;but when I
- came home and found&mdash;and found how deeply I had misunderstood and
- wronged you, I&mdash;I&mdash;&rdquo; She broke off, her face buried in the
- leaves of the vines.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Helen!&rdquo; he cried; &ldquo;do you realize what you are saying to me? You know
- my whole life is wrapped up in you. Don't raise my hopes to-night unless
- there is at least some chance of my winning. If there is one little
- chance, I'll struggle for it all the rest of my life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you remember,&rdquo; she asked, looking at him, one side of her flushed face
- pressed against the vines&mdash;&ldquo;do you remember the night you told me in
- the garden about that awful trouble of yours, and I promised to bear it
- with you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said, wonderingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; she went on, &ldquo;I went straight to my room after I left you and
- wrote to Mr. Sanders. I told him exactly how I felt. I simply couldn't
- keep up a correspondence with him after&mdash;Carson, I knew that night
- when I left you there in your gloom and sorrow that I loved you with all
- my soul and body. Oh, Carson, when I heard your voice in your glorious
- speech just now, and knew that you have loved me all this time, I was so
- glad that I cried. I'm the happiest, proudest girl on earth.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And as they stood hand in hand, too joyful for utterance, the glow of his
- triumph lit the sky and the din and clatter, the song and shouts of those
- who loved him were borne to him on the breeze.
- </p>
- <h3>
- THE END
- </h3>
- <div style="height: 6em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
- <head>
- <title>
- Mam' Linda, by Will N. Harben
- </title>
- <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
- <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
-
- body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
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- .xx-small {font-size: 60%;}
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- <body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mam' Linda, by Will N. Harben
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Mam' Linda
-
-Author: Will N. Harben
-
-Illustrator: F. B. Masters
-
-Release Date: January 11, 2016 [EBook #50899]
-Last Updated: March 12, 2018
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MAM' LINDA ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
- <div style="height: 8em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h1>
- MAM' LINDA
- </h1>
- <h2>
- By Will N. Harben
- </h2>
- <h3>
- Illustrated by F. B. Masters
- </h3>
- <h4>
- 1907
- </h4>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0001.jpg" alt="0001 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0001.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0009" id="linkimage-0009"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0009.jpg" alt="0009 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0009.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0008" id="linkimage-0008"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0008.jpg" alt="0008 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0008.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- <b>CONTENTS</b>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XXV. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0026"> CHAPTER XXVI. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0027"> CHAPTER XXVII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0028"> CHAPTER XXVIII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0029"> CHAPTER XXIX </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0030"> CHAPTER XXX </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0031"> CHAPTER XXXI </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0032"> CHAPTER XXXII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0033"> CHAPTER XXXIII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0034"> CHAPTER XXXIV </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0035"> CHAPTER XXXV. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0036"> CHAPTER XXXVI. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0037"> CHAPTER XXXVII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0038"> CHAPTER XXXVIII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0039"> CHAPTER XXXIX </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0040"> CHAPTER XL </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0041"> CHAPTER XLI. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0042"> CHAPTER XLII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0043"> CHAPTER XLIII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0044"> CHAPTER XLIV. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0045"> CHAPTER XLV. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0046"> CHAPTER XLVI. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0047"> CHAPTER XLVII. </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER I.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001_"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9017.jpg" alt="9017 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9017.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- N the rear of the long store, at a round table under a hanging-lamp with a
- tin shade, four young men sat playing poker. The floor of that portion of
- the room was raised several feet higher than that of the front, and
- between the two short flights of steps was the inclining door leading to
- the cellar, which was damp and dark and used only for the storage of salt,
- syrup, sugar, hardware, and general rubbish.
- </p>
- <p>
- Near the front door the store-keeper, James Blackburn, a portly, bearded
- man of forty-five, sat chatting with Carson Dwight, a young lawyer of the
- town.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't want any of you boys to think that I'm complaining,&rdquo; the elder
- man was saying. &ldquo;I've been young myself; in fact, as you know, I go the
- gaits too, considering that I'm tied down by a family and have a living to
- make. I love to have the gang around&mdash;I <i>swear</i> I do, though
- sometimes I declare it looks like this old shebang is more of a place of
- amusement than a business house in good standing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I know we hang around here too much,&rdquo; Carson Dwight replied; &ldquo;and you
- ought to kick us out, the last one of us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, it isn't so bad at night like this, when trade's over, but it is sort
- o' embarrassing during the day. Why, what do you think? A Bradstreet
- commercial reporter was in the other day to get a statement of my
- standing, and while he was here Keith Gordon&mdash;look at him now, the
- scamp! holding his cards over his head; that's a bluff. I'll bet he hasn't
- got a ten-spot. While that agent was here Keith and a lot more of your
- gang were back there on the platform dancing a hoe-down. The dust was so
- thick you couldn't see the windows. The reporter looked surprised, but he
- didn't say anything. I told him I thought I'd be able to pay for all I
- bought in market, and that I had no idea how much I was worth. I haven't
- invoiced my stock in ten years. When I run low I manage to replenish
- somehow, and so it goes on from year to year.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I am going to talk to the boys,&rdquo; Dwight said. &ldquo;They are taking
- advantage of your goodnature. The whole truth is they consider you one of
- them, Jim. Marrying didn't change you. You are as full of devilment as any
- of the rest, and they know it, and love to hang around you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I reckon that's a fact,&rdquo; Blackburn answered, &ldquo;and I believe I'd
- rather you wouldn't mention it. I think a sight of the gang, and I
- wouldn't hurt their feelings for the world. After all, what does it
- matter? Life is short, and if Trundle &amp; Hodgson are getting more
- mountain custom than I am, I'll bet I get the biggest slice of life.
- They'll die rich, but, like as not, friendless. By-the-way, I see your
- partner coming across the street. I forgot to tell you; he was looking for
- you a few minutes ago. You had a streak of luck when you joined issues
- with him; Bill Gamer's a rough sort o' chap, but he is by all odds the
- brainiest lawyer in Georgia to-day.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this juncture a man of medium stature, with a massive head crowned by a
- shock of reddish hair, a smooth-shaven, freckled face, and small feet and
- hands stood in the doorway. He wore a long black broadcloth coat, a
- waistcoat of the same material, and baggy gray trousers. The exposed
- portion of his shirt-front and the lapels of his coat were stained by
- tobacco juice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've been up to the den, over to the Club, and the Lord only knows where
- else looking for you,&rdquo; he said to his partner, as he advanced, leaned
- against a showcase on the counter, and stretched out his arms behind him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Work for us, eh?&rdquo; Carson smiled.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; since when have you ever done a lick after dark?&rdquo; was the dry reply.
- &ldquo;I've come to give you a piece of advice, and I'm glad Blackburn is here
- to join me. The truth is, Dan Willis is in town. He is full and loaded for
- bear. He's down at the wagon-yard with a gang of his mountain pals. Some
- meddling person&mdash;no doubt your beautiful political opponent Wiggin&mdash;has
- told him what you said about the part he took in the mob that raided!
- negro town.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, he doesn't deny it, does he?&rdquo; Dwight asked, his eyes flashing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know whether he does or not,&rdquo; said Gamer. &ldquo;But I know he's the
- most reckless and dangerous man in the county, and when he is drunk he
- will halt at nothing. I thought I'd advise you to avoid him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Avoid him? You mean to say&rdquo;&mdash;Dwight stood up in his anger&mdash;&ldquo;that
- I, a free-born American citizen, must sneak around in my own home to avoid
- a man that puts on a white mask and sheet and with fifty others like
- himself steals into town and nearly thrashes the life out of a lot of
- banjo-picking negroes? Most of them were good-for-nothing, lazy scamps,
- but they were born that way, and there was one in the bunch that I know
- was harmless. Oh yes, I got mad about it, and I talked plainly, I know,
- but I couldn't help it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You <i>could</i> have helped it,&rdquo; Gamer said, testily; &ldquo;and you ought to
- have protected your own interests better than to give Wiggin such a strong
- pull over you. If you are elected it will be by the aid of that very mob
- and their kin and friends. We may be able to smooth it all over, but if
- you have an open row with Dan Willis to-night, the cause of it will spread
- like wildfire, and bum votes for you in wads and bunches. Good God, man,
- the idea of giving Wiggin a torch like that to wave in the face of your
- constituency&mdash;you, a <i>town</i> man, standing up for the black
- criminal brutes that are plotting to pull down the white race! I say
- that's the way Wiggin and Dan Willis would interpret your platform.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can't help it,&rdquo; Dwight repeated, more calmly, though his voice shook
- with suppressed feeling as he went on. &ldquo;If I lose all I hope for
- politically&mdash;and this seems like the best chance I'll ever have to
- get to the legislature&mdash;I'll stand by my convictions. We must have
- law and order among ourselves if we expect to teach such things to poor,
- half-witted black people. I was mad that night. You know that I love the
- South. Its blood is my blood. Three of my mother's brothers and two of my
- father's died fighting for the 'Lost Cause,' and my father was under fire
- from the beginning of the war to the end. In fact, it is my love for the
- South, and all that is good and pure and noble in it, that made my blood
- boil that night. I saw a part of it you didn't see.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What was that?&rdquo; Garner asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was a clear moonlight night,&rdquo; Dwight went on. &ldquo;I was sitting at the
- window of my room at home, looking out over Major Warren's yard, when the
- first screams and shouts came from the negro quarter. I suspected what it
- was, for I'd heard of the threats the mountaineers had made against that
- part of town, but I wasn't prepared for what I actually saw. The cottage
- of old Uncle Lewis and Mammy Linda is just behind the Major's house, you
- know, and in plain view of my window. I saw the old pair come to the door
- and run out into the yard, and then I heard Linda's voice. 'It's my
- child!' she screamed. 'They are killing him!' Uncle Lewis tried to quiet
- her, but she stood there wringing her hands and sobbing and praying. The
- Major raised the window of his room and looked out, and I heard him ask
- what was wrong. Uncle Lewis tried to explain, but his voice could not be
- heard above his wife's cries. A few minutes later Pete came running down
- the street. They had let him go. His clothes were torn to strips and his
- back was livid with great whelks. He had no sooner reached the old folks
- than he keeled over in a faint. The Major came down, and he and I bent
- over the boy and finally restored him to consciousness. Major Warren was
- the maddest man I ever saw, and a mob a hundred strong couldn't have
- touched the negro and left him alive.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know, that was all bad enough,&rdquo; Garner admitted, &ldquo;but antagonizing
- those men now won't better the matter and may do you more political damage
- than you'll get over in a lifetime. You can't be a politician and a
- preacher both; they don't go together. You can't dispute that the negro
- quarter of this town was a disgrace to a civilized community before the
- White Caps raided it. Look at it now. There never was such a change. It is
- as quiet as a Philadelphia graveyard.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's the way they went about it that made me mad,&rdquo; Carson Dwight
- retorted. &ldquo;Besides, I know that boy. He is as harmless as a kitten, and he
- only hung around those dives because he loved to sing and dance with the
- rest. I <i>did</i> get mad; I'm mad yet. My people never lashed their
- slaves when they were in bondage; why should I stand by and see them
- beaten now by men who never owned negroes and never loved or understood
- them? Before the war a white man would stand up and protect his slaves;
- why shouldn't he now take up for at least the most faithful of their
- descendants?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's it,&rdquo; Blackburn spoke up, admiringly. &ldquo;You are a chip off of the
- old block, Carson. Your daddy would have shot any man who tried to whip
- one of his negroes. You can't help the way you feel; but I agree with Bill
- here, you can't get the support of mountain people if you don't, at least,
- <i>pretend</i> to see things their way.&rdquo;,
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I can't see <i>this</i> thing their way,&rdquo; fumed Dwight; &ldquo;and I'm
- not going to try. When I saw that old black man and woman that awful night
- with their very heart-strings torn and bleeding, and remembered that they
- had been kind to my mother when she was at the point of death&mdash;sitting
- by her bedside all night long as patiently as blocks of stone, and
- shedding tears of joy at the break of day when the doctor said the crisis
- had passed&mdash;when I think of that and admit that I stand by with
- folded hands and see their only child beaten till he is insensible, my
- blood boils with utter shame. It has burned a great lesson into my brain,
- and that is that we have got to have law and order among ourselves if we
- expect to keep the good opinion of the world at large.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I understand Pete would have got off much easier if he hadn't fought them
- like a tiger,&rdquo; said Blackburn. &ldquo;They say&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And why <i>shouldn't</i> he have fought?&rdquo; Carson asked, quickly. &ldquo;The
- nearer the brute creation a man is the more he'll fight. A tame dog will
- fight if you drive him into a corner and strike him hard enough.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you busted up our game,&rdquo; joined in Keith Gordon, who had left the
- table in the rear and now came forward, accompanied by another young man,
- Wade Tingle, the editor of the <i>Headlight</i>. &ldquo;Wade and I both agree,
- Carson, that you've got to handle Dan Willis cautiously. We are backing
- you tooth and toe-nail in this campaign, but you'll tie our hands if you
- antagonize the mountain element. Wiggin knows that, and he is working it
- for all it's worth.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's right, old man,&rdquo; the editor joined in, earnestly. &ldquo;I may as well
- be plain with you. I'm making a big issue out of my support of you, but if
- you make the country people mad they will stop taking my paper. I can't
- live without their patronage, and I simply can't back you if you don't
- stick to <i>me</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wasn't raising a row,&rdquo; the young candidate said. &ldquo;But Garner came to me
- just now, actually advising me to avoid that dirty scoundrel. I won't
- dodge any blustering bully who is going about threatening what he will do
- to me when he meets me face to face. I want your support, but I can't buy
- it that way.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; Garner said, grimly, more to the others than to his partner,
- &ldquo;there will be a row right here inside of ten minutes. I see that now.
- Willis has heard certain things Carson has said about the part he took in
- that raid, and he is looking for trouble. Carson isn't in the mood to take
- back anything, and a fool can see how it will end.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER II.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0002" id="linkimage-0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9025.jpg" alt="9025 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9025.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- EITH GORDON and Tingle motioned to Garner, and the three stepped out on
- the sidewalk leaving Blackburn and the candidate together. The street was
- quite deserted. Only a few of the ramshackle street lights were burning,
- though the night was cloudy, the location of the stores, barbershop,
- hotel, and post-office being indicated by the oblong patches of light on
- the ground in front of them.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'll never be able to move him,&rdquo; Keith Gordon said, stroking his blond
- mustache nervously. &ldquo;The truth is, he's terribly worked up over it.
- Between us three, boys, Carson never loved but one woman in his life, and
- she's Helen Warren. Mam' Linda is her old nurse, and Carson knows when she
- comes home and hears of Pete's trouble it is going to hurt her awfully.
- Helen has a good, kind heart, and she loves Linda as if they were the same
- flesh and blood. If Carson meets Willis to-night he'll kill him or get
- killed. Say, boys, he's too fine a fellow for that sort of thing right on
- the eve of his election. What the devil can we do?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I see; there's a woman at the bottom of it,&rdquo; Garner said, cynically.
- &ldquo;I'm not surprised at the way he's acting now, but I thought that case was
- over with. Why, I heard she was engaged to a man down where she's
- visiting.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She really may be,&rdquo; Gordon admitted, &ldquo;but Carson is ready to fight her
- battles, anyway. I honestly think she turned him down when he was rolling
- so high with her brother, just before his death a year ago, but that
- didn't alter his feelings towards her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Garner grunted as he thrust his hand deep into his breast-pocket for his
- plug of tobacco and began to twist off a corner of it. &ldquo;The most maddening
- thing on earth,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;is to have a close friend who is a darned fool.
- I'm tired of the whole business. Old Dwight is out of all patience with
- Carson for the reckless way he has been living, but the old man is really
- carried away with pride over the boy's political chances. He had that sort
- of ambition himself in his early life, and he likes to see his son go in
- for it. He was powerfully tickled the other day when I told him Carson was
- going in on the biggest wave of popularity that ever bore a human chip,
- but he will cuss a blue streak when the returns come in, for I tell you,
- boys, if Carson has a row with Dan Willis to-night over this negro
- business, it will knock him higher than a kite.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you know whether Carson has anything to shoot with?&rdquo; Tingle asked,
- thoughtfully.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, I saw the bulge of it under his coat just now,&rdquo; Garner answered,
- still angrily, &ldquo;and if the two come together it will be raining lead for a
- while in the old town.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was just thinking about his sick mother,&rdquo; Keith Gordon remarked. &ldquo;My
- sister told me the other day that Mrs. Dwight was in such a low condition
- that any sudden shock would be apt to kill her. A thing like this would
- upset her terribly&mdash;that is, if there is really any shooting. Don't
- you suppose if we were to remind Carson of her condition that he might
- agree to go home?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, you don't know him as well as I do,&rdquo; Garner said, firmly. &ldquo;It would
- only make him madder. The more reasons we give him for avoiding Willis the
- more stubborn he'll be. I guess we'll have to let him sit there and make a
- target of himself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Just then a tall mountaineer, under a broad-brimmed soft hat, wearing a
- cotton checked shirt and jean trousers passed through the light of the
- entrance to the hotel near by and slouched through the intervening
- darkness towards them.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's Pole Baker,&rdquo; said Keith. &ldquo;He's a rough-and-ready supporter of
- Carson's. Say, hold on, Pole!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hold on yourself; what's up?&rdquo; the mountaineer asked, with a laugh.
- &ldquo;Plottin' agin the whites?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We want to ask you if you've seen Dan Willis to-night,&rdquo; Garner
- questioned.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have I?&rdquo; Baker grunted. &ldquo;That's exactly why I'm lookin' fer you town
- dudes instead o' goin' on out home where I belong. I'm as sober as an
- empty keg, but I git charged with bein' in the Darley calaboose every time
- I don't answer the old lady's roll-call at bed-time. You bet Willis is
- loaded fer bear, and he's got some bad men with him down at the
- wagon-yard. Wiggin has filled 'em up with a lot o' stuff about what Carson
- said concernin' the White Cap raid t'other night. I thought I'd sorter put
- you fellers on, so you could keep our man out o' the way till their liquor
- wears off. Besides, I'm here to tell you, Bill Garner, that's a nasty card
- Wiggin's set afloat in the mountains. He says a regular gang of
- blue-bloods has been organized here to take up fer town coons agin the
- pore whites in the country. We might crush such a report in time, you
- know, but we'll never kill it if thar's a fight over it to-night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's the trouble,&rdquo; the others said, in a breath.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wait one minute&mdash;you stay right here,&rdquo; Baker said, and he went and
- stood in front of the store door and looked in for a moment; then he came
- back. &ldquo;I thought maybe he'd let us all talk sense to 'im, but you can't
- put reason into a man like that any easier than you can dip up melted
- butter with a hot awl. I can't see any chance unless you fellers will
- leave it entirely to me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Leave it to you?&rdquo; Garner exclaimed. &ldquo;What could you do?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know whether I could do a blessed thing or not, boys, but the dam
- thing is so desperate that I'm willin' to try. You see, I never talk my
- politics&mdash;if I do, I talk it on t'other side to see what I kin pick
- up to advantage. The truth is, I think them skunks consider me a Wiggin
- man, and I'd like to git a whack at 'em. Maybe I can git 'em to leave
- town. Abe Johnson is the leader of 'em, and he never gets too drunk to
- have some natural caution.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it certainly couldn't do any harm for you to try, Pole,&rdquo; said
- Tingle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'll go down to the wagon-yard and see if they are still hanging
- about.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As he approached the place in question, which was an open space about one
- hundred yards square surrounded by a high fence, at the lower end of the
- main street, Pole stood in the broad gateway and surveyed the numerous
- camp-fires which gleamed out from the darkness. He finally descried a
- group of men around a fire between two white-hooded wagons to the wheels
- of which were haltered several horses. As Pole advanced towards them,
- paying cheerful greetings to various men and women around the different
- fires he had to pass, he recognized Dan Willis, Abe Johnson, and several
- others.
- </p>
- <p>
- A quart whiskey flask, nearly empty, stood on the ground in the light of
- the fire round which the men were seated. As he approached they all looked
- up and nodded and muttered careless greetings. It seemed to suggest a
- movement on the part of Dan Willis, a tall man of thirty-five or
- thirty-six years of age, who wore long, matted hair and had bushy eyebrows
- and a sweeping mustache, for, taking up the flask, he rose and dropped it
- into his coat-pocket and spoke to the two men who sat on either side of
- Abe Johnson.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come on,&rdquo; he growled, &ldquo;I want to talk to you. I don't care whether you
- join us or not, Abe.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'm out of it,&rdquo; replied Johnson. &ldquo;I've talked to you fellows till
- I'm sick. You are too darned full to have any sense.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Willis and the two men walked off together and stood behind one of the
- wagons. Their voices, muffled by the effects of whiskey, came back to the
- ears of the remaining two.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Goin' out home to-night, Abe?&rdquo; Baker asked, carelessly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want to, but I don't like to leave that damned fool here in the
- condition he's in. He'll either commit murder or git his blasted head shot
- off.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's exactly what <i>I</i> was thinking about,&rdquo; said Pole, sitting down
- on the ground carelessly and drawing his knees up in the embrace of his
- strong arms. &ldquo;Look here, Abe, me'n you hain't to say quite as intimate as
- own brothers born of the same mammy, but I hain't got nothin' agin you of
- a personal nature.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I reckon that's all right,&rdquo; the other said, stroking his round,
- smooth-shaven face with a dogged sweep of his brawny hand. &ldquo;That's all
- right, Pole.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, my family knowed yore family long through the war,&rdquo; Abe. &ldquo;My daddy
- was with yourn at the front, an' our mothers swapped sugar an' coffee in
- them hard times, an', Abe, I'm here to tell you I sorter hate to see an
- unsuspectin' neighbor like you walk blind into serious trouble, great big
- trouble, Abe&mdash;trouble of the sort that would make a man's wife an'
- childern lie awake many and many a night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What the hell you mean?&rdquo; Johnson asked, picking up his ears.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, it's this here devilment that's brewin' betwixt Dan an' Carson
- Dwight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0003" id="linkimage-0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0031.jpg" alt="0031 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0031.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, what's that got to do with <i>me?</i>&rdquo; Johnson asked, in surly
- surprise.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it's jest this, Abe,&rdquo; Pole leaned back till his feet rose from the
- ground, and he twisted his neck as his eyes followed the three men who,
- with their heads close together, had moved a little farther away. &ldquo;Maybe
- you don't know it, Abe, but I used to be in the government revenue
- service, and in one way and another that's neither here nor there I
- sometimes drop onto underground information, an' I want to give you a
- valuable tip. I want to start you to thinkin'. You'll admit, I reckon,
- that if them two men meet to-night thar will be apt to be blood shed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Johnson stared over the camp-fire sullenly. &ldquo;If Carson Dwight hain't had
- the sense to git out o' town thar will be, an' plenty of it,&rdquo; he said,
- with a dry chuckle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, thar's the difficulty,&rdquo; said Pole. &ldquo;He hain't left town, an' what's
- wuss than that, his friends hain't been able to budge 'im from his seat in
- Blackburn's store, whar Dan couldn't miss 'im ef he was stalkin' about
- blindfolded. He's heard threats, and he's as mad a man as ever pulled
- hair.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, what the devil&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hold on, Abe. Now, I'll tell you whar <i>you</i> come in. My underground
- information is that the Grand Jury is hard at work to git the facts about
- that White Cap raid. The whole thing&mdash;name of leader and members of
- the gang has been kept close so far, but&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well&rdquo;&mdash;the half-defiant look in the face of Johnson gave way to one
- of growing alarm&mdash;&ldquo;well!&rdquo; he repeated, but went no further.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's this way, Abe&mdash;an' I'm here as a friend, I reckon. You know as
- well as I do that if thar is blood shed to-night it will git into court,
- and a lots about the White Cap raid, and matters even further back, will
- be pulled into the light.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Pole's words had made a marked impression on the man to whom they had been
- so adroitly directed. Johnson leaned forward nervously. &ldquo;So you think&mdash;&rdquo;
- But he hung fire again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Huh, I think you'd better git Dan Willis out o' this town, Abe, an'
- inside o' five minutes, ef you can do it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Johnson drew a breath of evident relief. &ldquo;I can do it, Pole, and I'll act
- by your advice,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Thar's only one thing on earth that would turn
- Dan towards home, but I happen to know what that is. He's b'ilin' hot, but
- he ain't any more anxious to stir up the Grand Jury than some of the rest
- of us. I'll go talk to 'im.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As Johnson moved away, Pole Baker rose and slouched off in the darkness in
- the direction of the straggling lights along the main street. At the gate
- he paused and waited, his eyes on the wagons and camp-fire he had just
- left. Presently he noticed something and chuckled. The horses, with
- clanking trace-chains, passed between him and the fire&mdash;they were
- being led round to be hitched to the wagons. Pole chuckled again. &ldquo;I'm not
- sech a dern fool as I look,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;Well, I had to lie some and act a
- part that sorter went agin the grain, but my scheme worked. If I ever git
- to hell I reckon it will be through tryin' to do right&mdash;in the main.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER III.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0004" id="linkimage-0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9035.jpg" alt="9035 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9035.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- HE wide avenue which ran north and south and cut the town of Darley into
- halves held the best and oldest residences. One side of the street caught
- the full rays of the morning sun and the other the slanting red beams of
- the afternoon. For so small a town, it was a well-graded and well-kept
- thoroughfare. Strips of grass lay like ribbons between the sidewalks and
- the roadway, and at the triangular spaces created by the intersection of
- certain streets there were rusty iron fences built primarily to protect
- diminutive fountains which had long since ceased to play. In one of these
- little parks, in the heart of the town, as it was in the hearts of the
- inhabitants, stood a monument erected to &ldquo;The Confederate Dead,&rdquo; a
- well-modelled, life-size figure of a Southern private wrought in stone in
- faraway Italy. Had it been correctly placed on its pedestal?&mdash;that
- was the question anxiously asked by reverent passers-by, for the cloaked
- and knapsacked figure, which time was turning gray, stood with its back to
- the enemy's country.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it is right,&rdquo; some would say, &ldquo;for the soldier is represented as
- being on night picket-duty in Northern territory, and his thoughts and
- eyes are with his dear ones at home and the country he is defending.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Henry Dwight, the wealthy sire of the aggressive young man with whom the
- foregoing chapters have principally dealt, lived in one of the moss and
- ivy grown houses on the eastern side of the avenue. It was a red brick
- structure two and a half stories high, with a colonial veranda, and had a
- square, white-windowed cupola as the apex of the slanting roof. There was
- a semicircular drive, which entered the grounds at one corner in the front
- and swept gracefully past the door. The central and smaller front gate,
- for the use of pedestrians, with its imitation stone posts, spanned by a
- white crescent, was reached from the house by a gravelled walk bordered by
- boxwood. On the right and left were rustic summerhouses, grape arbors and
- parterres containing roses and other flowers, all of which were well cared
- for by an old colored gardener.
- </p>
- <p>
- Henry Dwight was a grain and cotton merchant, money-lender, and the
- president and chief stockholder of the Darley Cotton Mills, whose great
- brick buildings and cottages for employés stood a mile or so to the west
- of the town. This morning, having written his daily letters, he was
- strolling in his grounds smoking a cigar. To any one who knew him well it
- would have been plain that his mind was disturbed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Adjoining the Dwight homestead there was another ancestral house equally
- as spacious and stand-. ing in quite as extensive, if more neglected,
- grounds. It was here that Major Warren lived, and it happened that he,
- too, was on his lawn just beyond the ramshackle intervening fence, the
- gate of which had fallen from its hinges and been taken away.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major was a short, slight old gentleman, quite a contrast to the John
- Bull type of his lusty, side-whiskered neighbor. He wore a dingy brown
- wig, and as he pottered about, raising a rose from the earth with his
- gold-headed ebony stick, or stooped to uproot an encroaching weed, his
- furtive glance was often levelled on old Dwight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I declare I really might as well,&rdquo; he muttered, undecidedly. &ldquo;What's the
- use making up your mind to a thing and letting it go for no sensible
- reason. He's taking a wrong view of it. I can tell that by the way he
- puffs at his cigar. Yes, I'll do it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major passed through the gateway and slowly drew near his preoccupied
- neighbor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good-morning, Henry,&rdquo; he said, as Dwight looked up. &ldquo;If I'm any judge of
- your twists and turns, you are not yet in a thoroughly good-humor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good-humor? No, sir, I'm <i>not</i> in a good-humor. How could I be when
- that young scamp, the only heir to my name and effects&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Dwight's spleen rose and choked out his words, and, red in the face, he
- stood panting, unable to go further.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it seems to me, while he's not <i>my</i> son,&rdquo; the Major began,
- &ldquo;that you are&mdash;are&mdash;well, rather overbearing&mdash;I might say
- unforgiving. He's been sowing wild oats, but, really, if I am any judge of
- young men, he is on a fair road to&mdash;to genuine manhood.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Road to nothing,&rdquo; spluttered Dwight. &ldquo;I gave him that big farm to see
- what he could do in its management. Never expected him to work a lick&mdash;just
- wanted to see if he could keep it on a paying basis, but it was an
- investment of dead capital. Then he took up the law. He did a little
- better at that along with Bill Garner to lean on, but that never amounted
- to anything worth mentioning. Then he went into politics.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And I heard you say yourself, Henry,&rdquo; the Major ventured, gently, &ldquo;that
- you believed he was actually cut out for a future statesman.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, and like the fool that I was I hoped for it. I was so glad to see
- him really interested in politics that I laid awake at night thinking of
- his success. I heard of his popularity on every hand. Men came to me, and
- women, too, telling me they loved him and were going to work for him
- against that jack-leg lawyer Wiggin, and put him into office with a
- majority that would ring all over the State; and they meant it, I reckon.
- But what did he do? In his stubborn, bull-headed way he abused those
- mountain men who took the law into their hands for the public good, and
- turned hundreds of them against him; and all for a nigger&mdash;a lazy,
- trifling nigger boy!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you see,&rdquo; Major Warren began, lamely, &ldquo;Carson and I saw Pete the
- night he was whipped so severely and we took pity on him. They played
- together when they were boys, as boys all over the South do, you know, and
- then he saw Mam' Linda break down over it and saw old Lewis crying for the
- first time in the old man's life. I was mad, Henry, myself, and you would
- have been if you had been there. I could have fought the men who did it,
- so I understand how Carson felt, and when he made the remark Wiggin is
- using to such deadly injury to his prospects my heart warmed to the boy.
- If he doesn't succeed as a politician it will be because he is too genuine
- for a tricky career of that sort. His friends are trying to get him to
- make some statement that will reinstate him with the mountain people who
- sympathized with the White Caps, but he simply won't do it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Won't do it! I reckon not!&rdquo; Dwight blurted out. &ldquo;Didn't the young idiot
- wait in Blackburn's store for Dan Willis to come and shoot the top of his
- head off? He sat there till past midnight, and wouldn't move an inch till
- actual proof was brought to him that Willis had left town. Oh, I'm no
- fool! I know a thing or two. I've watched him and your daughter together.
- That's at the bottom of it. She sat down on him before she went off to
- Augusta, but her refusal didn't alter him. He knows Helen thinks a lot of
- her old negro mammy, and in her absence he simply took up her cause and is
- fighting mad about it&mdash;so mad that he is blind to his political ruin.
- That's what a man will do for a woman. They say she's about to become
- engaged down there. I hope she is, and that Carson will have pride enough
- when he hears of it to let another man do her fighting, and one with
- nothing to lose by it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She hasn't written me a thing about any engagement,&rdquo; the Major answered,
- with some animation; &ldquo;but my sister highly approves of the match and
- writes that it may come about. Mr. Sanders is a well-to-do, honorable man
- of good birth and education: Helen never seemed to get over her brother's
- sad death. She loved poor Albert more than she ever did me or any one
- else.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And I always thought that it was Carson's association with your son in
- his dissipation that turned Helen against him. For all I know, she may
- have thought Carson actually led Albert on and was partly the cause of his
- sad end.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She may have looked at it that way,&rdquo; the Major said, musingly. They had
- now reached the porch in the rear of the house and they went together into
- the wide hall. A colored maid with a red bandanna tied like a turban round
- her head was dusting the walnut railing of the stairs. Passing through the
- hall, the old gentlemen turned into the library, a great square room with
- wide windows and tall, gilt-framed pier-glass mirrors.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I'm sure that's what turned her against him,&rdquo; Dwight continued, &ldquo;and
- that is where, between you and Helen, I get mixed up. Why do you always
- take up for the scamp? It looks to me like you'd resent the way he acted
- with your son after the boy's terrible end.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There is a good deal more in the matter, Henry, than I ever told you
- about.&rdquo; Major Warren's voice faltered. &ldquo;To be plain, that is my secret
- trouble. I reckon if Helen was to discover the actual truth&mdash;<i>all
- of it</i>&mdash;she would never feel the same towards me. I think maybe I
- ought to tell you. It certainly will explain why I am so much interested
- in your boy.&rdquo; They sat down, the owner of the house in a reclining-chair
- at an oblong, carved mahogany table covered with books and papers, the
- visitor on a lounge near by.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it always has seemed odd to me,&rdquo; old Dwight said. &ldquo;I couldn't
- exactly believe you wanted to bring him and Helen together, after your
- experience with that sort of man under your own roof.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is this way,&rdquo; said the Major, awkwardly. &ldquo;To begin with, I am sure,
- from all I've picked up, that it was not your son that was leading mine on
- to dissipation, but just the other way. He's dead and gone, but Albert was
- always ready for a prank of any sort. Henry, I want to talk to you about
- it because it seems to me you are in the same position in regard to Carson
- that I was in regard to my poor boy, and I've prayed a thousand times for
- pardon for what I did in anger and haste. Henry, listen to me. If ever a
- man made a vital mistake I did, and I'll bear the weight of it to my
- grave. You know how I worried over. Albert's drinking and his general
- conduct. Time after time he made promises that he would turn over a new
- leaf only to break them. Well, it was on the last trip&mdash;the fatal one
- to New York, where he had gone and thrown away so much money. I wrote him
- a severe letter, and in answer to it I got a pathetic one, saying he was
- sick and tired of the way he was doing and begging me to try him once more
- and send him money to pay his way home. It was the same old sort of
- promise and I didn't have faith in him. I was unfair, unjust to my only
- son. I wrote and refused, telling him that I could not trust him any more.
- Hell inspired that letter, Henry&mdash;the devil whispered to me that I'd
- been indulgent to the poor boy's injury. Then came the news. When he was
- found dead in a small room on the top floor of that squalid hotel&mdash;dead
- by his own hand&mdash;my letter lay open beside him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, well, you couldn't help it!&rdquo; Dwight said, most awkwardly, and he
- crossed his short, fat legs anew and reached for an open box of cigars.
- &ldquo;You were trying to do your duty as you saw it, and to the best of your
- ability.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, but my method, Henry, resulted in misery and grief to me and Helen
- that can never be cured. You see, it is because of that awful mistake that
- I take such an interest in Carson. I love him because Albert loved him,
- and because sometimes it seems to me that you are most too quick to
- condemn him. Oh, he's different! Carson has changed wonderfully since
- Albert died. He doesn't drink to excess now, and Garner says he has quit
- playing cards, having only one aim, and that to win this political race&mdash;to
- win it to please you, Henry.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Win it!&rdquo; Dwight sniffed. &ldquo;He's already as dead as a salt mackerel&mdash;laid
- out stiff and stark by his own bull-headed stupidity. I've always talked
- down drinking and card-playing, but I have known some men to succeed in
- life who had such habits in moderation; but you nor I nor no one else ever
- saw a blockhead succeed at anything. I tell you he'll never make a
- successful politician. Wiggin will beat the hind sights off of him. Wiggin
- is simply making capital of the fool's inability to control his temper and
- sympathies. Wiggin would have let that mob thrash his own father and
- mother rather than antagonize them and lose their votes. He knows Carson
- comes of fighting stock, and he will continue to egg Dan Willis and others
- on, knowing that every resentful word from Carson will make enemies for
- him by the score.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I can see that, too!&rdquo; the Major sighed; &ldquo;but, to save me, I can't
- help admiring the boy. He thinks the White Caps did wrong that night and
- he simply can't pretend otherwise. It is the principle of the thing,
- Henry. He is an unusual sort of candidate, and his stand may ruin his
- chances, but I&mdash;I glory in his firmness. I must say g me to try him
- once more and send him money to pay his way home. It was the same old sort
- of promise and I didn't have faith in him. I was unfair, unjust to my only
- son. I wrote and refused, telling him that I could not trust him any more.
- Hell inspired that letter, Henry&mdash;the devil whispered to me that I'd
- been indulgent to the poor boy's injury. Then came the news. When he was
- found dead in a small room on the top floor of that squalid hotel&mdash;
- dead by his own hand&mdash;my letter lay open beside him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, well, you couldn't help it!&rdquo; Dwight said, most awkwardly, and he
- crossed his short, fat legs anew and reached for an open box of cigars.
- &ldquo;You were trying to do your duty as you saw it, and to the best of your
- ability.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, but my method, Henry, resulted in misery and grief to me and Helen
- that can never be cured. You see, it is because of that awful mistake that
- I take such an interest in Carson. I love him because Albert loved him,
- and because sometimes it seems to me that you are most too quick to
- condemn him. Oh, he's different! Carson has changed wonderfully since
- Albert died. He doesn't drink to excess now, and Garner says he has quit
- playing cards, having only one aim, and that to win this political race-
- -to win it to please you, Henry.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Win it!&rdquo; Dwight sniffed. &ldquo;He's already as dead as a salt mackerel&mdash;laid
- out stiff and stark by his own bull-headed stupidity. I've always talked
- down drinking and card-playing, but I have known some men to succeed in
- life who had such habits in moderation; but you nor I nor no one else ever
- saw a blockhead succeed at anything. I tell you he'll never make a
- successful politician. Wiggin will beat the hind sights off of him. Wiggin
- is simply making capital of the fool's inability to control his temper and
- sympathies. Wiggin would have let that mob thrash his own father and
- mother rather than antagonize them and lose their votes. He knows Carson
- comes of fighting stock, and he will continue to egg Dan Willis and others
- on, knowing that every resentful word from Carson will make enemies for
- him by the score.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I can see that, too!&rdquo; the Major sighed; &ldquo;but, to save me, I can't
- help admiring the boy. He thinks the White Caps did wrong that night and
- he simply can't pretend otherwise. It is the principle of the thing,
- Henry. He is an unusual sort of candidate, and his stand may ruin his
- chances, but I&mdash;I glory in his firmness. I must say that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, that's the trouble with you sentimental people,&rdquo; Dwight fumed.
- &ldquo;Between you and the boy's doting mother, the Lord only knows where he'll
- land. I've overlooked a lot in him in the hope that he'd put this election
- through, but I shall let him go his own way now. It has come to a pretty
- pass if I have to see my son beaten to the dust by a man of Wiggin's stamp
- because of that long-legged negro boy of yours who would have been better
- long ago if he had been soundly thrashed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When his visitor had gone Dwight dropped his unfinished cigar into the
- grate and went slowly upstairs to his wife's room. At a small-paned window
- overlooking the flower-garden, on a couch supported in a reclining
- position by several puffy pillows, was Mrs. Dwight. She was well past
- middle-age and of extremely delicate physique. Her hair was snowy white,
- her skin thin to transparency, her veins full and blue.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That was Major Warren, wasn't it?&rdquo; she asked, in a soft, sweet voice, as
- she put down the magazine she had been reading.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Dwight answered, as he went to a little desk in one corner of the
- room and took a paper from a pigeon-hole and put it into his pocket.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How did he happen to come over so early?&rdquo; the lady pursued.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because he wanted to, I reckon,&rdquo; Dwight started out, impatiently, and
- then a note of caution came into his voice as he remembered the warning of
- the family physician against causing the patient even the slightest worry.
- &ldquo;Warren hasn't a blessed thing to do, you know, from mom till night. So
- when he strikes a busy man he is apt to hang on to him and talk in his
- long-winded way about any subject that takes possession of his brain. He's
- great on showing men how to manage their own affairs. It takes an idle man
- to do that. If that man hadn't had money left to him he would now be
- begging his bread from door to door.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Somehow I fancied it was about Carson,&rdquo; Mrs. Dwight sighed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There you go!&rdquo; her husband said, with as much grace of evasion as lay in
- his sturdy compound. &ldquo;Lying there from day to day, you seem to have
- contracted Warren's complaint. You think nobody can drop in even for a
- minute without coming about your boy&mdash;your boy! Some day, if you live
- long enough, you may discover that the universe was not created solely for
- your son, nor made just to revolve around him either.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I suppose I <i>do</i> worry about Carson a great deal,&rdquo; the invalid
- admitted; &ldquo;but you haven't told me right out that the Major was <i>not</i>
- speaking of him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man's face was the playground of conflcting impulses. He grew red
- with anger and his lips trembled on the very verge of an outburst, but he
- controlled himself. In fact, his irritability calmed down as he suddenly
- saw a loop-hole through which to escape her questioning.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The truth is,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;Warren was talking about Albert's death. He
- talked quite a while about it. He almost broke down.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'm so worried about Carson's campaign that I imagine all sorts of
- trouble,&rdquo; Mrs. Dwight sighed. &ldquo;I lay awake nearly all of last night
- thinking about one little thing. When he was in his room dressing the
- other day, I heard something fall to the floor. Hilda had taken him some
- hot water for shaving, and when she came back she told me he had dropped
- his revolver out of his pocket. You know till then I had had no idea he
- carried one, and while it may be necessary at times, the idea is very
- disagreeable.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You needn't let <i>that</i> bother you,&rdquo; Dwight said, as he took his hat
- to go down to his office at his warehouse. &ldquo;Nearly all the young men carry
- them because they think it looks smart. Most of them would run like a
- scared dog if they saw one pointed at them even in fun.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I hope my boy will never have any use for one,&rdquo; the invalid said.
- &ldquo;He is not of a quarrelsome nature. It takes a good deal to make him
- angry, but when he gets so he is not easily controlled.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IV.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0005" id="linkimage-0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9046.jpg" alt="9046 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9046.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- HE young men in Carson Dwight's set had an odd sort of lounging-place. It
- was Keith Gordon's room above his father's bank in an old building which
- had withstood the shot and shell of the Civil War. &ldquo;The Den,&rdquo; as it was
- called by its numerous hap-hazard occupants, was reached from the street
- on the outside by a narrow flight of worm-eaten and rickety stairs and a
- perilous little balcony or passage that clung to the brick wall, twenty
- feet from the ground, along the full length of the building. It was here
- in one of the four beds that Keith slept, when there was room for him.
- After a big dance or a match game of baseball, when there were impecunious
- visitors from neighboring towns left over for various and sundry reasons,
- Keith had to seek the sanctimonious solitude of his father's home or go to
- the hotel.
- </p>
- <p>
- The den was about twenty-five feet square. It was not as luxurious as such
- bachelor quarters went in Augusta, Savannah, or even Atlanta, but it
- answered the purpose of &ldquo;the gang&rdquo; which made use of it. Keith frankly
- declared that he had overhauled and replenished it for the last time. He
- said that it was absolutely impossible to keep washbasins and pitchers,
- when they were hurled out of the windows for pure amusement of men who
- didn't care whether they washed or not. As for the laundry bill, he
- happened to know that it was larger than that of the Johnston House or the
- boarding department of the Darley Female College. He said, too, that he
- had warned the gang for the last time that the room would be closed if any
- more clog-dancing were indulged in. He said his father complained that the
- plastering was dropping down on his desk below, and sensible men ought to
- know that a thing like that could not go on forever.
- </p>
- <p>
- The rules concerning the payment for drinks were certainly lax. No
- accounts were kept of any man's indebtedness. Any member of the gang was
- at liberty to stow away a flask of any size in the bureau or wash-stand
- drawer, or under the mattresses or pillows of his or anybody else's bed,
- where Skelt, the negro who swept the room, and loved stimulants could not
- find it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bill Garner, as brainy as he was, while he was always welcome at his
- father's house in the country, a mile from town, seemed to love the
- company of this noisy set. Through the day it was said of him that he
- could read and saturate himself with more law than any man in the State,
- but at night his recreation was a cheap cigar, his old bulging carpet
- slippers, a cosey chair in Keith's room, and&mdash;who would think it?&mdash;the
- most thrilling Indian dime novel on the market. He could quote the French,
- German, Italian, and Spanish classics by the page in a strange musical
- accent he had acquired without the aid of a master or any sort of
- intercourse with native foreigners. He knew and loved all things
- pertaining to great literature&mdash;said he had a natural ear for
- Wagner's music, had comprehended Edwin Booth's finest work, knew a good
- picture when he saw it; and yet he had to have his dime novel. In it he
- found mental rest and relaxation that was supplied by nothing else. His
- bedfellow was Bob Smith, the genial, dapper, ever daintily clad clerk at
- the Johnston House. Garner said he liked to sleep with Bob because Bob
- never&mdash;sleeping or waking&mdash;took anything out of him mentally.
- Besides dressing to perfection, Bob played rag-time on the guitar and sang
- the favorite coon songs of the day. His duties at the hotel were far from
- arduous, and so the gang usually looked to him to arrange dances and
- collect toll for expenses. And Bob was not without his actual monetary
- value, as the proprietor of the hotel had long since discovered, for when
- Bob arranged a dance it meant that various socially inclined drummers of
- good birth and standing would, at a hint or a telegram from the clerk,
- &ldquo;lay over&rdquo; at Darley for one night anyway.
- </p>
- <p>
- If Bob had any quality that disturbed the surface of his uniform
- equanimity it was his excessive pride in Carson Dwight's friendship. He
- interlarded his talk with what Carson had said or done, and Carson's
- candidacy for the Legislature had become his paramount ambition. Indeed,
- it may as well be stated that the rest of the gang had espoused Dwight's
- political cause with equal enthusiasm.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the Sunday morning following the night Pole Baker had prevented the
- meeting between Dwight and Dan Willis, and most of the habitual loungers
- were present waiting for Skelt to black their boots, and deploring the
- turn of affairs which looked so bad for their favorite. Wade Tingle was
- shaving at one of the windows before a mirror in a cracked mahogany frame,
- when they all recognized Carson's step on the balcony and a moment later
- Dwight stood in the doorway.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hello, boys, how goes it?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, right side up, old man,&rdquo; Tingle replied, as he began to rub the
- lather into his face with his hand to soften his week-old beard before
- shaving. &ldquo;How's the race?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's all right, I guess,&rdquo; Dwight said, wearily, as he came in and sat
- down in a vacant chair against the wall. &ldquo;How goes it in the mountains? I
- understand you've been over there.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, trying to rake in some ads, stir up my local correspondents, and
- take subscriptions. As to your progress, old man, I'm sorry to say
- Wiggin's given it a sort of black eye. There was a meeting of farmers over
- in the tenth, at Miller's Spring. I was blamed sorry you were not there.
- Wiggin made a speech. It was a corker&mdash;viewed as campaign material
- solely. That chap's failed at the law, but he's the sharpest, most
- unprincipled manipulator of men's emotions I ever ran across. He showed
- you up as Sam Jones does the ring-tailed monster of the cloven foot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What Carson said about the Willis and Johnson mob was his theme, of
- course?&rdquo; said Garner, above the dog-eared pages of his thriller.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That and ten thousand things Carson never dreamed of,&rdquo; returned Tingle.
- &ldquo;Here's the way it went. The meeting was held under a bush-arbor to keep
- the sun off, and the farmers had their wives and children out for a
- picnic. A long-faced parson led in prayer, some of the old maids piped up
- with a song that would have ripped slits in your musical tympanum, Garner,
- and then a raw-boned ploughman in a hickory shirt and one gallus
- introduced the guest of honor. How they could have overlooked the
- editor-in-chief and proprietor of the greatest agricultural weekly in
- north Georgia and picked out that skunk was a riddle to me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, what did he say?&rdquo; Garner asked, as sharply as if he were
- cross-examining a non-committal witness of importance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did he say?&rdquo; Tingle laughed, as he wiped the lather from his face
- with a ragged towel and stood with it in his hand. &ldquo;He began by saying
- that he had gone into the race to win, and that he was going to the
- Legislature as sure as the sun was on its way down in this country and on
- its way up in China. He said it was a scientific certainty, as easily
- demonstrated as two and two make four. Those hardy, horny-handed men
- before him that day were not going to the polls and vote for a town dude
- who parted his hair in the middle, wore spike-toed shoes that glittered
- like a new dash-board, and was the ringleader of the rowdiest set of young
- card-players and whiskey-drinkers that ever blackened the morals of a
- mining-camp. He said that about the gang, boys, and I didn't have a thing
- to shoot with. In fact, I had to sit there and take in more.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did he say about his <i>platform?</i>&rdquo; Garner asked, with a heavy
- frown; &ldquo;that's what I want to get at. You never can hurt a politician by
- circulating the report that he drinks&mdash;that's what half of 'em vote
- for.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, his platform seemed to be chiefly that he was out to save the common
- people from the eternal disgrace of voting for a man like Dwight. He
- certainly piled it on thick and heavy. It would have made Carson's own
- mother slink away in shame. Carson, Wiggin said, had loved niggers since
- he was knee high to a duck, and had always contended that a negro owned by
- the aristocracy of the South was ahead of the white, razor-back stock in
- the mountains who had never had that advantage. Carson was up in arms
- against the White Caps that had come to Darley and whipped those lazy
- coons, and was going to prosecute every man in the bunch to the full
- extent of the United States law. If he got into the Legislature he
- intended to pass laws to make it a penitentiary offence for a white man to
- shove a black buck off the sidewalk. 'But he's not going to take his seat
- in the Capitol of Georgia,' Wiggins said, with a yell&mdash;'if Carson
- Dwight went to Atlanta it would <i>not</i> be on a free pass.' And, boys,
- that crowd yelled till the dry leaves overhead clapped an encore. The men
- yelled and the women and children yelled.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's a contemptible puppy!&rdquo; Dwight said, angrily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, but he's a slick politician among men of that sort,&rdquo; said Tingle.
- &ldquo;He certainly knows how to talk and stir up strife.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And I suppose you sat there like a bump on a log, and listened to all
- that without opening your mouth!&rdquo; Keith Gordon spoke up from his bed,
- where he lay in his bath-robe smoking over the remains of the breakfast
- Skelt had brought from the hotel on a big black tray.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I <i>did</i>&mdash;get up,&rdquo; Tingle answered, with a manly flush.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, you <i>did!</i>&rdquo; Garner leaned forward with interest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'm glad you happened to be on hand, for your paper has
- considerable influence over there.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I got up. I waved my hands up and down like a buzzard rising, to
- keep the crowd still till I could think of something to say; but, Carson,
- old man, you know what an idiot I used to be in college debates. I could
- get through fairly well on anything they would let me write down and read
- off, but it was the impromptu thing that always rattled me. I was as mad
- as hell when I rose, but all those staring eyes calmed me wonderfully. I
- reckon I stood there fully half a minute swallowing&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You damned fool!&rdquo; Garner exclaimed, in high disgust.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, that's exactly what I was,&rdquo; Tingle admitted. &ldquo;I stood there gasping
- like a catfish enjoying his first excursion in open air. It was deathly
- still. I've heard it said that dying men notice the smallest things about
- them. I remember I saw the horses and mules haltered out under the trees
- with their hay and fodder under their noses&mdash;the dinner-baskets all
- in a cluster at the spring guarded by a negro woman. Then what do you
- think? Old Jeff Condon spoke up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Lead us in prayer, brother,' he said, in reverential tones, and since I
- was born I never heard so much laughing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You certainly <i>did</i> play into Wiggin's hands,&rdquo; growled the
- disgruntled Garner. &ldquo;That's exactly what a glib-tongued skunk like him
- would want.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it gave me a minute to try to get my wind, anyway,&rdquo; said Tingle,
- still red in the face, &ldquo;but I wasn't equal to a mob of baseball rooters
- like that. I started in to deny some of Wiggin's charges when another
- smart Alec spoke up and said: 'Hold on! tell us about the time you and
- your candidate started home from a ball at Catoosa Springs in a buggy, and
- were so drunk that the horse took you to the house of a man who used to
- own him sixteen miles from where you wanted to go. Of course, you all
- know, boys, that was a big exaggeration, but I had no idea it was
- generally known. Anyway, I thought the crowd would laugh their heads off.
- I reckon it was the way I looked. I felt as if every man, woman, and child
- there had mashed a bad egg on me and was chuckling over their
- marksmanship. I ended up by getting mad, and I saw by Wiggin's grin that
- he liked that. I managed to say a few things in denial, and then Wiggin
- got up and roasted me and my paper to a turn. He said that in supporting
- Dwight editorially the <i>Headlight</i> was giving sanction to Dwight's
- ideas in favor of the negro and against honest white people, and that
- every man there who had any family or State pride ought to stop taking the
- dirty sheet; and, bless your life, some of them did cancel their
- subscriptions when they met me after the speaking; but I'm going to keep
- on mailing it, anyway. It will be like sending free tracts to the heathen,
- but it may bear fruit.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER V.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0006" id="linkimage-0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9054.jpg" alt="9054 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9054.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- ALF an hour later all the young men had left the room except Garner and
- Dwight. Garner still wore the frown brought to his broad brow by Tingle's
- recital.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've set my heart on putting this thing through,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;and while it
- looks kind of shaky, I haven't lost all hope yet. Of course, your reckless
- remarks about the White Caps have considerably damaged us in the
- mountains, but we may live it down. It may die a natural death if you and
- Dan Willis don't meet and plug away at each other and set the talk afloat
- again. I reckon he'll keep out of your way when he's sober, anyway.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am not running after him,&rdquo; Carson returned. &ldquo;I simply said what I
- thought and Wiggin made the most of it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Garner was silent for several minutes, then he folded his dime novel and
- bent it across his knee, and when he finally spoke Dwight thought he had
- never seen a graver look on the strong face. He had seen it full of
- emotional tears when Garner was at the height of earnest appeal to a jury
- in a murder case; he had seen it dark with the fury of unjust legal
- defeat, but now there was a strange feminine whiteness at the corners of
- the big facile mouth, a queer twitching of the lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've made up my mind to tell you a secret,&rdquo; he said, falteringly. &ldquo;I've
- come near it several times and backed out. It's a subject I don't know how
- to handle. It's about a woman, Carson. You know I'm not a ladies' man. I
- don't call on women; I don't take them buggy-riding; I don't dance with
- them, or even know how to fire soft things at them like you and Keith, but
- I've had my experience.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It certainly is a surprise to me,&rdquo; Dwight said, sympathetically, and then
- in the shadow of Garner's seriousness he found himself unable to make
- further comment.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I reckon you'll lose all respect for me for thinking there was a ghost of
- a chance in that particular quarter,&rdquo; Garner pursued, without meeting his
- companion's eye. &ldquo;But, Carson, my boy, there is a certain woman that every
- man who knows her has loved or is still loving. Keith's crazy about her,
- though he has given up all hope as I did long ago, and even poor Bob Smith
- thinks he's in luck if she will only listen to one of his new songs or let
- him do her some favor. We all love her, Carson, because she is so sweet
- and kind to us&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You mean&mdash;&rdquo; Dwight interrupted, impulsively, and then lapsed into
- silence, an awkward flush rising to his brow.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I mean Helen Warren, old man. As I say, I had never thought of a
- woman that way in my life. We were thrown together once at a house-party
- at Hilburn's farm&mdash;well, I simply went daft. She never refused to
- walk with me when I asked her, and seemed specially interested in my
- profession. I didn't know it at the time, but I have since discovered that
- she has that sweet way with every man, rich or poor, married or single.
- Well, to make a long story short, I proposed to her. The whole thing is
- stamped on my brain as with a branding-iron. We had taken a long walk that
- morning and were seated under a big beech-tree near a spring. She kept
- asking about my profession, her face beaming, and it all went to my head.
- I knew that I was the ugliest man in the State, that I had no style about
- me, and knew nothing about being nice to women of her sort; but her
- interest in everything pertaining to the law made me think, you know, that
- she admired that kind of thing. I went wild. As I told her how I felt I
- actually cried. Think of it&mdash;I was silly enough to blubber like a
- baby! I can't describe what happened. She was shocked and pained beyond
- description. She had never dreamed that I felt that way. I ended by asking
- her to try to forget it all, and we had a long, awful walk to the house.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That <i>was</i> tough,&rdquo; Carson Dwight said, a queer expression on his
- face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I've told it to you for a special reason,&rdquo; Garner said, with a big,
- trembling sigh. &ldquo;Carson, I am a close observer, and I afterwards made up
- my mind that I knew why she had led me on to talk so much about the law
- and my work in particular.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, you found that out!&rdquo; Carson said, almost absently.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, my boy, it was about the time you and I were thinking of going in
- together. It was all on your account.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson stared straight at Garner. &ldquo;<i>My</i> account? Oh no!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, on your account. I've kept it from you all this time. I'm your
- friend now in full&mdash;to the very bone, but at that time I felt too
- sore to tell you. I'd lost all I cared for on earth, but I simply had too
- much of primitive man left in me to let you know how well you stood. My
- God, Carson, about that time I used to sit at my desk behind some old book
- pretending to read, but just looking at you as you sat at work wondering
- how it would feel to have what was yours. Then I watched you both
- together; you seemed actually made for each other, an ideal couple. Then
- came your&mdash;she refused you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know, I know, but why talk about it, Garner?&rdquo; Carson had risen and
- stood in the doorway in the rays of the morning sun. There was silence for
- a moment. The church bells were ringing and negroes and whites were
- passing along the street below.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It may be good for me to speak of it and be done with it, or it may not,&rdquo;
- said Garner; &ldquo;but this is what I was coming to. I've said it was a long
- time before I could tell you that she was once&mdash;I don't know how she
- is now, but she was at one time in love with you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh no, no, she was never that!&rdquo; Dwight said. &ldquo;We were great friends, but
- she never cared that much for me or for any one.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it was a long time before I could say what I thought about that,
- and I have only just now taken another step in self-renunciation. Carson,
- I can now say that you didn't have a fair deal, and that I have reached a
- point in which I want to see you get it. I think I know why she refused
- you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You do?&rdquo; Dwight said, pale and excited, as he came away from the door and
- leaned heavily against the wall near his friend.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it was this way. I've studied it all out. She loved Albert as few
- women love their brothers, and his grim end was an almost unbearable
- shock. After his death, you know it leaked out that you had been Albert's
- constant companion through his dissipation, almost, in fact, up to the
- very end. She couldn't reconcile herself to your part, innocent as it was,
- in the tragedy, and it simply killed the feeling she had for you. I
- suppose it is natural to a character as strong as hers.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've always feared that&mdash;that was the reason,&rdquo; said Dwight,
- falteringly, as he went back to the door and looked out. There was a droop
- of utter dejection on him and his face seemed to have aged. &ldquo;Garner,&rdquo; he
- said, suddenly, &ldquo;there is no use denying anything. You have admitted your
- love for her, why should I deny mine? I never cared for any other woman
- and I never shall.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's right, but you didn't get a fair deal, all the same,&rdquo; said Garner.
- &ldquo;She's never looked for any sort of justification in your conduct; her
- poor brother's death stands like a draped wall between you, but I know you
- were not as black as you were painted. Carson, all the time you were
- keeping pace with Albert Warren you were blind to the gulf ahead of him
- and were simply glorying in his friendship&mdash;<i>because he was her
- brother</i>. Ah, I know that feeling!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson was silent, while Garner's gray eyes rested on him for a moment
- full of conviction, and then he nodded. &ldquo;Yes, I think that was it. It was
- my ruination, but I could not get away from the fascination of his
- companionship. He fairly worshipped her and used to talk of her constantly
- when we were together, and he&mdash;he sometimes told me things she kept
- back. He knew how I felt. I told him. Through him I seemed to be closer to
- her. But when the news came that he was dead, and when I met her at the
- funeral at the church, and caught her eye, I saw her shrink back in
- abhorrence. She wouldn't go out with me ever again after that, and was
- never exactly the same.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That was two years ago, my boy,&rdquo; Garner said, significantly, &ldquo;and your
- character has changed. You are a better, firmer man. In fact, it seems to
- me that your change dates from Albert Warren's death. But now I'm coming
- to the thing that prompted me to say all this. I met Major Warren in the
- post-office this morning. He was greatly excited. Carson, she has just
- written him that she is coming home for a long stay and the old gentleman
- is simply wild with delight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, she's coming, then!&rdquo; Dwight exclaimed, in surprise.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, and Keith and Bob and the rest of her adorers will go crazy over the
- news and want to celebrate it. I didn't tell them. I wanted you to know it
- first. There is one other thing. You know you can't tell whether there is
- anything in an idle report, but the gossips say she has perhaps met her
- fate down there. I've even heard his name&mdash;one Earle Sanders, a
- well-to-do cotton merchant of good standing in the business world. But
- I'll never believe she's engaged to him till the cards are out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I really think it may be true,&rdquo; Carson Dwight said, a firm, set
- expression about his lips. &ldquo;I've heard of him. He's a man of fine
- character and intellect. Yes, it may be true, Garner.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; and Garner drew himself up and folded his arms, &ldquo;if it should
- happen to be so, Carson, there would be only one thing to do, and that
- would be to grin and bear it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, that would be the only thing,&rdquo; Dwight made answer. &ldquo;She has a right
- to happiness, and it would have been wrong for her to have tied herself to
- me, when I was what I was, and when I am still as great a failure as I
- am.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned suddenly out onto the passage, and Garner heard his resounding
- tread as he walked away.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Poor old chap,&rdquo; Garner mused, as he leaned forward and looked at the
- threadbare toes of his slippers, &ldquo;if he weathers this storm he'll make a
- man right&mdash;if not, he'll go down with the great majority, the motley
- throng meant for God only knows what purpose.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VI.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0007" id="linkimage-0007"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9061.jpg" alt="9061 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9061.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- HE Warren homestead was in a turmoil of excitement over Helen's return.
- The ex-slaves of the family for miles around had assembled to celebrate
- the occasion in quite the ante-bellum fashion. The men and grown boys sat
- about the front lawn and on the steps of the long veranda and talked of
- the day Helen was born, of her childhood, of her beauty and numerous
- conquests, away from them, and of the bare possibility of her deigning to
- accept the hand of some one of her powerful and wealthy suitors.
- </p>
- <p>
- In her own chamber, a great square room with many windows, Helen, tall,
- graceful, with light-brown eyes and almost golden hair, was receiving the
- women and girls. She had brought a present suitable for each of them, as
- they knew she would, and the general rejoicing was equal to that of an
- old-time Georgia Christmas.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are all here,&rdquo; Helen smiled, as she looked about the room, &ldquo;except
- Mam' Linda. Is she not well?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yessum, she's well as common,&rdquo; Jennie, a yellow house-maid, said, &ldquo;as
- well as she been since Pete had dat scrimmage wid de White Caps. Missie,
- you gwine notice er gre't change in Mam' Lindy. Since dat turrible night,
- while she seem strong in de body, she looks powerful weak in de face en
- sperit. Unc' Lewis is worried about 'er. She des set in er cottage do' en
- rock back an' fo'th all day long. You done heard 'bout dat lambastin',
- 'ain't you, Missie?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, my father wrote me about it,&rdquo; Helen replied, an expression of
- sympathetic pain on her well-featured face, &ldquo;but he didn't tell me that
- mammy was taking it so hard.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He was tryin' ter keep you fum worryin',&rdquo; Jennie said, observantly.
- &ldquo;Marster knowed how much sto' you set by yo' old mammy. He was de maddest
- man you ever laid eyes on dat night, but he couldn't do nothin', fer it
- was all over, en dem white trash done skedaddle back whar dey come fum.&rdquo;.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And was Pete so much to blame?&rdquo; Helen asked, her voice shaking.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Blame fer de company he been keepin', Missie&mdash;dat's all; but what
- you gwine ter do wid er strappin' young nigger growin' up? It des like it
- was in de old day fo' de war. De niggers had to have deir places ter meet
- an' cut up shines. Dey been done too much of it at Ike Bowen's. De white
- folks dat lived round dar couldn't sleep at night. It was one long shindig
- or a fist-cuff scrap fum supper till daylight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I wish Mam' Linda would come to see me,&rdquo; Helen said. &ldquo;I'm anxious
- about her. If she isn't here soon I'll go to her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She's comin' right on, Missie,&rdquo; another negro girl said, &ldquo;but she tol'
- Unc' Lewis she was gwine ter wait till we all cleared out. She say you her
- baby, en she ain't gwine ter be bothered wid so many, when she see you de
- fust time after so long.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's exactly like her,&rdquo; Helen smiled. &ldquo;Well, you all must go now, and,
- Jennie, tell her I am dying to see her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The room was soon cleared of its chattering and laughing throng, and
- Linda, supported by her husband, a stalwart mulatto, came from her cottage
- behind the house and went up to Helen's room. She was short, rather
- portly, about half white, and for that reason had a remarkably intelligent
- face which bore the marks of a strong character. Entering the room, after
- sharply enjoining her husband to wait for her in the hall, she went
- straight up to Helen and laid her hand on the young lady's head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So I got my baby back once mo',&rdquo; she said, tenderly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I couldn't stay away, Mammy,&rdquo; Helen said, with an indulgent smile.
- &ldquo;After all, home is the sweetest place on earth&mdash;but you mustn't
- stand up; get a chair.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old woman obeyed, slowly placing the chair near that of her mistress
- and sitting down. &ldquo;I'm glad you got back, honey,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I loves all
- my white folks, but you is my baby, en I never could talk to de rest of um
- lak I kin ter you. Oh, honey, yo' old mammy has had lots en lots er
- trouble!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know, Mammy, father wrote me about it, and I've heard more since I got
- here. I know how you love Pete.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Linda folded her arms on her breast and leaned forward till her elbows
- rested on her knees. Helen saw a wave of emotion shake her whole body as
- she straightened up and faced her with eyes that seemed melting in grief.
- &ldquo;Honey,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;folks said when de law come en give we all freedom dat
- de good day was at hand. It was ter be a time er plenty en joy fer black
- folks; but, honey, never while I was er slave did I had ter suffer what
- I'm goin' thoo now. In de old time marster looked after us; de lash never
- was laid on de back er one o' his niggers. No white pusson never dared to
- hit one of us, en yit now in dis day er glorious freedom, er whole gang of
- um come in de dead er night en tied my child wid ropes en tuck turn about
- lashin' 'im. Honey, sometimes I think dey ain't no Gawd fer a pusson wid
- one single streak er black blood in 'im. Ef dey is er Gawd fer sech es me,
- why do He let me pass thoo what been put on me? I heard dat boy's cryin'
- half er mile, honey, en stood in de flo' er my house en couldn't move,
- listenin' en listenin' ter his screams en dat lash failin' on 'im. Den dey
- let 'im loose en he come runnin' erlong de street ter find me&mdash;ter
- find his mammy, honey&mdash;his mammy who couldn't do nothin' fer 'im. En
- dar right at my feet he fell over in er faint. I thought he was dead en
- never would open his eyes ergin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And I wasn't here to comfort you!&rdquo; Helen said, in a tearful tone of
- self-reproach. &ldquo;You were alone through it all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I wasn't, honey. Thank de Lawd, dar is some er de right kind er white
- folks left. Marse Carson Dwight heard it all fum his room en come over. He
- raised Pete up en tuck 'im in an' laid 'im on de baid. He tuck 'im up in
- his arms, honey, young marster did, en set to work to bring 'im to. An'
- after de po' boy was easy en ersleep en de doctor gone off, Marse Carson
- come ter me en tuck my hand. 'Mam' Lindy,' he said, es pale as ef he'd
- been sick er long time, 'dis night's work has give me some'n' ter think
- erbout. De best white men in de Souf won't stan' fer dis. Sech things
- cayn't go on forever. Ef I go to de Legislature I'll see dat dey gwine ter
- pass laws ter pertect you faithful old folks.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Carson said that?&rdquo; Helen's voice was husky, her glance averted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, en he was dead in earnest, honey; he wasn't des talkin' ter comfort
- me. I know, kase I done hear suppen else dat happened since den.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What was that?&rdquo; Helen asked.
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;Why, dey say dat Marse Carson went straight down-town en tried ter find
-somebody dat was in de mob. He heard Dan Willis was among 'em&mdash;you know
-who he is, honey. He's er bad, desp'rate moonshine man. Well, Marse
-Carson spoke his mind about 'im, an' dared 'im out in de open. Unc'
-Lewis said Mr. Garner an' all Marse Carson's friends tried to stop
- 'im, kase it would go dead agin 'im in his 'lection, but Marse Carson
-wouldn't take back er word, en was so mad he couldn't hold in. En dat
-another hard thing to bear, honey,&rdquo; Linda went on. &ldquo;Des think, Marse
-Carson cayn't even try to help er po' old woman lak me widout ruinin'
-his own chances.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is it as serious as that?&rdquo; Helen asked, with deep concern.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, honey, he never kin win his race lessen he act diffunt. Dey say dat
- man Wiggin is laughin' fit ter kill hisse'f over de way he got de upper
- hold. I told Marse Carson des t'other day he mustn't do dat way, but he
- laughed in my face in de sweet way he always did have. 'Ef dey vote ergin
- me fer dat, Mam' Lindy,' he say, 'deir votes won't be worth much.' Marse
- Carson is sho got high principle, honey. His pa think he ain't worth much,
- but <i>he's</i> all right. You mark my words, he's gwine ter make a gre't
- big man&mdash;he gwine ter do dat kase he's got er tender heart in 'im, an
- ain't afeard of anything dat walk on de yeath. He may lose dis one
- 'lection, but he'll not stop. I know young white men, thoo en thoo, en I
- never y it seen er better one.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0008" id="linkimage-0008_"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0067.jpg" alt="0067 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0067.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have you&mdash;have you seen him recently?&rdquo; Helen asked, surprised at the
- catch in her voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, honey,&rdquo; the old woman said, plaintively; &ldquo;seem lak he know how
- I'm sufferin', en he been comin' over often en talkin' ter me'n Lewis.
- Seem lak he's so sad, honey, here late. Ain't you seed 'im yit, honey?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, he hasn't been over,&rdquo; Helen replied, rather awkwardly. &ldquo;He will come,
- though; he and I are good friends.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You gwine find 'im changed er lot, honey,&rdquo; the old woman said. &ldquo;Do you
- know, I don't believe he ever got over Marse Albert's death. He warn't ter
- blame 'bout dat, honey, dough I do believe he feel dat way. Seem lak we
- never kin fetch up Marse Albert's name widout Marse Carson git sad. One
- night here late when Lewis was talkin' 'bout when yo' pa went off en
- fetched young master home, Marse Carson hung his head en say: 'Mam' Lindy,
- I wish dat time could be go over ergin. I would act so diffunt. I never
- seed whar all dem scrapes was leadin' to. But it learned me a lesson, Mam'
- Lindy.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's it,&rdquo; Helen said, bitterly, as if to herself; &ldquo;he survived. He has
- profited by the calamity, but my poor, dear brother&mdash;&rdquo; She went no
- further, for her voice broke and her eyes filled with tears.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't think erbout dat, honey,&rdquo; old Linda said, consolingly. &ldquo;You got yo'
- one great trouble lak I has, but you is at home wid we all now, en you
- must not be sad.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't intend to be, Mammy,&rdquo; Helen said, wiping her eyes on her
- handkerchief. &ldquo;We are going to try to do something to keep Pete out of
- trouble. Father thinks it is his associates that are to blame. We must try
- in future to keep him away from bad company.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dat what I want ter do, honey,&rdquo; the old woman said, &ldquo;en ef I des had
- somewhar ter send 'im so he could be away fum dis town I'd be powerful
- glad.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0009" id="linkimage-0009_"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9070.jpg" alt="9070 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9070.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- Helen anticipated, the young ladies of the town, her most intimate friends
- and former school-mates, came in a body that afternoon to see her. The
- reception formally opened in the great parlor down-stairs, but it was not
- many minutes before they all found themselves in Helen's chamber
- fluttering about and chattering like doves in their spring plumage.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's no use putting it off longer,&rdquo; Ida Tarpley, Helen's cousin,
- laughed; &ldquo;they are all bent on seeing your <i>things</i>, and they will
- simply spend the night here if you don't get them out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I think that would look so vain and silly in me,&rdquo; Helen protested,
- her color rising. &ldquo;I don't like to exhibit my wardrobe as if I were a
- dressmaker, or a society woman who is hard up and trying to dispose of
- them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The idea of your not doing it, dear,&rdquo; Mary King, a little blonde, said,
- &ldquo;when not one of us has seen a decent dress or hat since the summer
- visitors went away last fall.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Leave it to me,&rdquo; Ida Tarpley laughed. &ldquo;You girls get off the bed. I want
- something to lay them on. If it were only evening I'd make her put on that
- gown she wore at the Governor's ball. You remember what the <i>Constitution's</i>
- society reporter said about it. He said it was a poet's dream. If I ever
- get one it will be <i>in</i> a dream. You must really wear it to your
- dance, Helen.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>My</i> dance?&rdquo; Helen said, in surprise.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I hope I'm not telling secrets,&rdquo; Ida said; &ldquo;but I met Keith Gordon
- and Bob Smith in town as I came on. They had a list and were taking
- subscriptions from all the young men. They had already enough put down to
- buy a house and lot. They say they are going to give you the swellest
- dance that was eyer heard of. Bob said that it simply had to surpass
- anything you'd been to in Augusta or Atlanta. Expense is not to be
- considered. The finest band in Chattanooga has already been engaged; the
- refreshments are to be brought from there by a caterer and a dozen expert
- waiters. A carload of flowers have been ordered. It is to open with a
- grand march.&rdquo; Ida swung her hands and body comically to and fro as if in
- the cake walk, and bowed low. &ldquo;Nobody is to be allowed to dance with you
- who hasn't an evening suit on, and <i>then</i> only once. They are all
- crazy about you, Helen. I never could understand it. I've tried to copy
- the look you have in the eyes hundreds of times, but it won't have the
- slightest effect.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's only one explanation of it,&rdquo; Miss Wimberley, another girl,
- remarked; &ldquo;it is simply because she really likes them all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I really do, as for that,&rdquo; Helen said; &ldquo;and I think it is awfully
- nice of them to give me such a dance. It's enough to turn a girl's head.
- Well, if Ida really is going to pull out my things, I'll go down-stairs
- and make you a lemonade.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Later in the afternoon the young ladies had all gone except Ida Tarpley,
- who lingered with Helen on the veranda.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm glad the girls didn't have the bad taste to embarrass you by
- questioning you about Mr. Sanders,&rdquo; Ida said. &ldquo;Of course, it is all over
- town. Uncle spoke of the possibility of it to some one and that put it
- afloat. I'm anxious to see him, Helen. I know he must be nice&mdash;everything,
- in fact, that a man ought to be, for you always had high ideals.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen flushed almost angrily, and she drew herself erect and stood quite
- rigid, looking at her cousin.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ida,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I don't like what you have just said.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, dearest, I'm sorry, but I thought&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's the trouble about a small town,&rdquo; Helen went on. &ldquo;People take such
- liberties with you, and about the most delicate things. Down in Augusta my
- friends never would think of saying I was actually engaged to a man till
- it was announced. But here at home it is in every mouth before they have
- even seen the gentleman in question.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you really have been receiving constant attentions from Mr. Sanders
- for more than a year, haven't you, dear?&rdquo; Miss Tarpley asked, blandly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, but what of that?&rdquo; Helen retorted. &ldquo;He and I are splendid friends.
- He has been very kind and thoughtful of my comfort, and I like him. He is
- noble, sincere, and good. He extended the sweetest sympathy to me when I
- went down there under my great grief, and I never can forget it, but,
- nevertheless, Ida, I have not promised to marry him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I see, it is not actually settled yet,&rdquo; Miss Tarpley said. &ldquo;Well, I'm
- glad. I'm very, very glad.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are glad?&rdquo; Helen said, wonderingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I am. I'm glad because I don't want you to go away off down there
- and marry a stranger to us. I really hope something will break it up. I
- know Mr. Sanders must be awfully fond of you&mdash;any man would be who
- had a ghost of a chance of winning you&mdash;and I know your aunt has been
- doing all in her power to bring the match about&mdash;but I understand
- you, dear, and I am afraid you would not be happy.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why do you say that so&mdash;so positively?&rdquo; Helen asked, coldly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because,&rdquo; Ida said, impulsively, &ldquo;I don't believe a girl of your
- disposition ever could love in the right way more than once, and&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And what?&rdquo; Helen demanded, her proud lips compressed, her eyes flashing
- defiantly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I may be wrong, dear,&rdquo; Miss Tarpley went on, &ldquo;but if you were not
- actually in love before you went to Augusta, you were very near it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How absurd!&rdquo; Helen exclaimed, with a little angry toss of her head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you remember the night our set drove out to the Henderson party? I
- went with Mr. Garner and Carson Dwight took you? Oh, Helen, I met you and
- Carson walking together in the moonlight that evening under the
- apple-trees in the old meadow, and if ever a pair of human beings really
- loved each other you two must have done so that night. I saw it in his
- happy, triumphant face, and in the fact, Helen dear, that you allowed him
- to be with you so much, when you knew other admirers were waiting to see
- you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen looked down; her face was clouded over, her proud lip twitched.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ida,&rdquo; she said, tremulously, &ldquo;I don't want you ever again to mention
- Carson Dwight's name to me in&mdash;in that way. You have no right to.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I have,&rdquo; Ida protested, firmly. &ldquo;I have the right as a loyal friend
- to the best, most suffering, and noblest young man I ever knew. I read you
- like a book, dear. You really cared very, very much for Carson once, but
- after your great loss you never thought the same of him again.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, nor I never shall,&rdquo; Helen said, firmly. &ldquo;I admire him and shall treat
- him as a good friend when we meet, but that will be the end of it. Whether
- I cared for him or not, as girls care for young men, is neither here nor
- there. It is over with.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And all simply because he was a little wild at the time your poor brother&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop!&rdquo; Helen said; &ldquo;don't argue the matter. I can only now associate him
- with the darkest hour of my life. I'm tempted to tell you something, Ida,&rdquo;
- and Helen bowed her head for a moment, and then went on in an unsteady
- voice. &ldquo;When my poor brother's trunk was brought home, it was my duty to
- put the things it contained in order. There I found some letters to him,
- and one dated only two days before Albert's death was from&mdash;from
- Carson Dwight. I read only a portion of it, but it revealed a page in poor
- Albert's life that I had never read&mdash;never dreamed could be
- possible.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But Carson,&rdquo; Ida Tarpley exclaimed; &ldquo;what did <i>he</i> have to do with
- that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen swallowed the lump in her throat, and with a cold, steely gleam in
- her eyes she said, bitterly: &ldquo;He could have held out his hand with the
- superior strength you think he has and drawn the poor boy back from the
- brink, but he didn't. The words he wrote about it were light, flippant,
- and heartless. He treated the whole awful situation as a joke, as if&mdash;as
- if he <i>himself</i> were familiar with such unmentionable things.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, I begin to understand it all now!&rdquo; Ida sighed. &ldquo;That letter, coupled
- with Cousin Albert's awful death, was such a terrible shock that you
- cannot feel the same towards Carson. But oh, Helen, you would pity him if
- you knew him now as I do. He has never altered in his feelings towards
- you. In fact, it seems to me that he loves you even more deeply than ever.
- And, dear, if you had seen his patient efforts to make a better man of
- himself you'd not harbor such thoughts against him. You will understand
- Carson some day, but it may then be too late. I don't believe a woman ever
- has a real sweetheart but once. You may marry the man your aunt wants you
- to take, but your heart will some day turn back to the other. You will
- remember, too, and bitterly, that you condemned him for a youthful fault
- which you ought to have pardoned.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you think so, Ida?&rdquo; Helen asked, her soft, brown eyes averted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, and you'll remember, too, that while his other friends were trying
- to help him stick to his resolutions you turned against him. He's going to
- make a great and good man, Helen. I've known that for some time. He is
- having his troubles, but even they will help him to be stronger in the
- end. His greatest trial is going on right now, while folks are saying that
- you are going to marry another man. Pshaw! you may say what you like about
- Mr. Sanders' good qualities, but I know I shall not like him,&rdquo; concluded
- Ida, with a smile, as she turned to go. &ldquo;He is a usurper, and I'm dead
- against him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen remained on the veranda after her cousin had left till the twilight
- gathered about her. She was about to go in, as it was near tea-time, when
- she heard a grumbling voice down the street and saw old Uncle Lewis
- returning from town, driving his son, the troublesome Peter, before him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You go right thoo dat gate on back ter dat house, you black imp er
- 'straction!&rdquo; he thundered, &ldquo;er I'll tek er boa'd en lambast de life out'n
- you. Here it is night-time en you ain't chop no stove-wood fer de big
- house kitchen, en been lyin' roun' dem cotton wagons raisin' mo' rows wid
- dem mountain white men.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter, Uncle Lewis?&rdquo; Helen asked, as the boy sulkily passed
- round the corner of the house and the old man, out of breath, paused at
- the steps.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Missy, you don't know what me'n' Mam' Lindy got to bear up under. We
- don't know how ter manage dat boy. Lindy right now is out'n 'er head wid
- worry. Buck Black come tol' us 'bout an hour ago dat Pete en some mo'
- triflin' niggers was down at de warehouse sassin' some mountain white men.
- Buck heard Pete say dat Johnson en his gang couldn't whip him ergin dout
- gittin' in trouble, en dey was in er inch of er big row when de marshal
- busted it up. Buck ain't no fool, fer a black man, Missy, en he told me'n'
- Lindy ef we don't manage ter git Pete out'n de company he keeps dat dem
- white men will sho string 'im up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, something has to be done, that's plain,&rdquo; said Helen,
- sympathetically. &ldquo;I know Mam' Linda must be worrying, and I'll go down to
- see her this evening. It doesn't seem to me that a town like this is best
- for a boy like Pete. I'll speak to father about it, Uncle Lewis. It won't
- do to have Mammy bothered like this. It will kill her. She is not strong
- enough to stand it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Missy,&rdquo; the old man said, &ldquo;I wish you would try ter do some'n'. Me'n'
- Lindy is sho at de end er our rope.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I promise you I'll do all I can, Uncle Lewis,&rdquo; Helen said, and,
- much relieved, the old negro trudged homeward.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VIII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0010" id="linkimage-0010"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9078.jpg" alt="9078 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9078.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- LOCAL institution in which &ldquo;the gang&rdquo; was more or less interested was
- known as the &ldquo;Darley Club.&rdquo; It occupied the entire upper floor of a
- considerable building on the main street, and had been organized,
- primarily, by the older married men of the town to give the young men of
- the best families a better meeting-place than the bar-rooms and offices of
- the hotels. At first the older men looked in occasionally to see that the
- rather rigid rules of the institution were being kept. But men of
- middle-age and past, who have comfortable firesides, are not fond of the
- noisy gatherings of their original prototypes, and the Club was soon left
- to the management of the permanent president, Mr. Wade Tingle, editor of
- the <i>Headlight</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- Wade endeavored, to the best of his genial nature, to enforce all rules,
- collect all dues, and impose all fines, but he wasn't really the man for
- the place. He accepted what cash was handed to him, trying to remember the
- names of the payers and amounts as he wrote his editorials, political
- notes, and social gossip, ending up at the end of each month with no money
- at all to pay the rent or the wages of the negro factotum. However, there
- was always an outlet from this embarrassment, for Wade had only to draw a
- long face as he met some of the well-to-do stay-at-homes and say that
- &ldquo;club expenses were somehow running short,&rdquo; and without question the
- shortage was made up. Wade had tried to be officially stern, too, on
- occasion. Once when Keith Gordon had violated what Wade termed club
- discipline, not to say club etiquette, Wade threatened to be severe. But
- it happened to be a point upon which there was a division of opinion, and
- Keith also belonged to &ldquo;the gang.&rdquo; It had happened this way: Keith had a
- certain corner in the Club reading-room where he was wont to write his
- letters of an evening, and coming down after supper one night he
- discovered that the attendant had locked the door and gone off to supper.
- Keith was justly angry. He stood at the door for a few minutes, and then,
- being something of an athlete, he stepped back, made a run the width of
- the sidewalk, and broke the lock, left the door hanging on a single hinge,
- and went up and calmly wrote his letters. As has been intimated, Wade took
- a serious view of this violation of club dignity, his main contention
- being that Keith ought to have the lock repaired and the hinge replaced.
- However, Keith just as firmly stood on his rights, his contention being
- that a member of the Club in good standing could not be withheld from his
- rights by the mere carelessness of a negro or a twenty-five cent cast-iron
- lock. So it was that, in commemoration of the incident, the door remained
- without the lock and hinge for many a day.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was in this building that the grand ball in honor of Helen Warren's
- home-coming was to be given. During the entire preceding day Bob Smith and
- Keith Gordon worked like happy slaves. The floor had been roughened by
- roller-skating, and a carpenter with plane and sand-paper was smoothing
- it, Bob giving it its finishing touch by whittling sperm candles over it
- and rubbing in the shavings with the soles of his shoes as he pirouetted
- about, his right arm curved around an imaginary waist. The billiard-tables
- were pushed back against the wall, the ladies' dressing-rooms thoroughly
- scoured and put in order, and the lamps cleaned and trimmed. Keith had
- brought down from his home some fine oil-paintings, and these were hung
- appropriately. But Keith's <i>chef-d'ouvre</i> of arrangement and
- decoration was a happy inspiration, and he was enjoining it on the
- initiated ones to keep it as a surprise for Helen. He had once heard her
- say that her favorite flower was the wild daisy, and as they were now in
- bloom, and grew in profusion in the fields around the town, Keith had
- ordered several wagon-loads of them gathered, and now the walls of the
- ballroom were fairly covered with them. Graceful festoons of the flowers
- hung from the ceiling, draped the doorways, and rose in beautiful mounds
- on the white-clothed refreshment-tables.
- </p>
- <p>
- As a special favor he admitted Carson Dwight in at the carefully guarded
- door at dusk on the evening of the ball, first drawing down the blinds and
- lighting the candles and lamps that his chum might have the full benefit
- of the scene as it would strike Helen on her arrival.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Isn't that simply superb?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;Do you reckon they gave her
- anything prettier while she was down there? I don't believe it, Carson. I
- think this is the dandiest room a girl ever tripped a toe in.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it's all right,&rdquo; Dwight said, admiringly. &ldquo;It is really great, and
- she will appreciate it keenly. She is that way.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think so myself,&rdquo; said Keith. &ldquo;I've been nervous all day, though, old
- man. I've been watching every train.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Afraid the band wouldn't come?&rdquo; asked Dwight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, those coons can be depended on; they will be down in full force with
- the best figure-caller in the South. No, I was afraid, though, that Helen
- might have written to that Augusta chump, and that he would come up. That
- certainly would give the thing cold feet.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; Carson exclaimed; &ldquo;I see.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The dear girl wouldn't rub it in on us to that extent, old man,&rdquo; Keith
- said. &ldquo;I know it now. She really may be engaged to him, and she may not,
- but she knows how we feel, and it's bully of her not to invite him. It
- would really have been a wet blanket to the whole business. We'd have to
- treat him decently, as a visitor, you know, but I'd rather have taken
- castor-oil for my part of it. All the gang except you were over to see her
- Sunday afternoon; why didn't you go?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, you know I live only next door, with an open gate between, and I
- thought I'd better give my place to you fellows who don't have my
- opportunity. I've already seen her. In fact, she ran over to see my mother
- yesterday.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The ball was in full swing when Carson arrived that night. The street in
- front of the club was crowded with carriages, buggies, and livery-stable
- &ldquo;hacks.&rdquo; The introductory grand march was in progress, and when Carson
- went to the improvised dressing-room in charge of Skelt to check his hat
- he found Garner standing before a mirror tugging at the lapels of an
- evening coat and trying to adjust a necktie which kept climbing higher
- than it should. Darley was just at the point in its post-bellum struggle
- where evening dress for men was a thing more of the luxurious past than
- the stern present, and Dwight readily saw that his partner had persuaded
- himself for once to don borrowed plumage.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter?&rdquo; Carson asked, as he thrust his hat-check into the
- pocket of his immaculate white waistcoat.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, the damn thing don't fit!&rdquo; said Garner, in high disgust. &ldquo;I know now
- that my father has a hump, or did have when he ordered this suit for his
- wedding-trip. The tailor who designed this <i>costeem de swaray</i> tried
- to help him out, but he has transferred the hump to me by other means than
- heredity. Look how the back of it sticks out from my neck!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's because you twist your body to see it in the glass,&rdquo; said Carson,
- consolingly. &ldquo;It's not so bad when you stand straight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a case of not seeing others as they see you, eh?&rdquo; Garner said,
- better satisfied. &ldquo;I haven't taken a chew of tobacco to-night. I wouldn't
- splotch this shirt for the world. I couldn't spit farther than an inch
- with this collar on, anyway. She's holding the reel for me. I can't dance
- anything else, but I can go through that pretty well if I get at the end
- and watch the others. You'd better hurry up and see her card. There is a
- swell gang coming on the ten-o'clock train from Atlanta, and they all know
- her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was during the interval following the third number on the programme
- that Carson met Helen promenading with Keith and offered her his arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, isn't it simply superb?&rdquo; she said, when Keith had bowed himself away
- and they had joined the other strollers round the big, flower-perfumed
- room. &ldquo;Carson, really I actually cried for joy just now in the
- dressing-room. I declare I never want to go away from home again. I'll
- never have such devoted friends as these.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is nice of you to look at it that way, Helen,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;after the gay
- time you have had in Augusta and other cities.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At least it is honest and sincere here at home,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;while
- down there it is&mdash;well, full of strife, social competition, and
- jealousies. I really; got homesick and simply had to come back.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We are simply delighted to have you again,&rdquo; he said, almost fearing to
- look upon her, for in her exquisite evening gown and the proud poise of
- her head she seemed more beautiful and imperious, and farther removed from
- his hopes than he had thought her even in the darkest hours of her first
- refusal to condone his fatal offence.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was looking straight into his eyes with a thoughtful, questioning
- stare, when she said: &ldquo;They all seem the same, Carson, except you. Bob
- Smith, Keith, and even Mr. Garner are just like I left them, but somehow
- you are altered. You look so much older, so much more serious. Is it
- politics that is weighing you down&mdash;making you worry?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he laughed, evasively, &ldquo;politics is not exactly the easiest game
- in the world, and the bare fear that I may not succeed, after all, is
- enough to make a fellow of my temperament worry. It seems to be my last
- throw of the dice, Helen. My father will lose all faith in me if this does
- not go through.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I know it is serious,&rdquo; the girl said. &ldquo;Keith and Mr. Garner have
- talked to me about it. They say they have never seen you so much absorbed
- in anything before. You really must win, Carson&mdash;you simply must!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But this is no time to talk over sordid politics,&rdquo; he said, with a smile.
- &ldquo;This is your party and it must be made delightful.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I have my worries, too,&rdquo; she said, gravely. &ldquo;I felt a queer twinge of
- conscience to-night when all the servants came to see me before I left
- home. They were all so happy except Mam' Linda. She tried to act like the
- rest, but, Carson, her trouble about that worthless boy is actually
- killing the dear old woman. She has her pride, too, and it has been
- wounded to the quick. She was always proud of the fact that my father
- never had whipped one of his slaves. I've heard her boast of it a hundred
- times; and now that she no longer belongs to us in reality, and her only
- child was beaten so cruelly, she simply can't get over it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I knew she felt that way,&rdquo; Dwight said, sympathetically.
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen's hand tightened unconsciously on his arm as they were passing by
- the corner containing the orchestra. &ldquo;Do you know,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;Mam' Linda
- told me that of all the people who had been to see her since then that you
- had been the kindest, most thoughtful, the most helpful? Carson, that was
- very, very sweet of you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was only electioneering,&rdquo; he said, with a flush. &ldquo;I was after Uncle
- Lewis's vote and Mam' Linda's influence.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, you were not,&rdquo; Helen declared. &ldquo;It was pure, unadulterated
- unselfishness on your part. You were sorry for her and for Uncle Lewis and
- even Pete, who certainly needed punishment of some sort for the way he's
- been conducting himself. Yes, it was only your good heart. I know that,
- for several persons have told me you have even gone so far as to let the
- affair hamper you in your political career. Oh, I know all about what your
- opponent is saying, and I know mountain people well enough to know you
- have given him a powerful weapon. They are terribly wrought up over the
- race troubles, and it would be easy enough for them to misunderstand your
- exact feeling. Oh, Carson, you must not let even Mam' Linda's trouble
- stand between you and your high aim. Taking up her cause will perhaps not
- do a bit of good, for no one person can solve so vital a problem as that
- is, and your agitation of it may wreck your last hope.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've promised to keep my mouth shut, if Dan Willis and men of his sort
- will not stay right at my heels with their threats. My campaign managers&mdash;the
- gang, who hold a daily caucus at the den and lay down my rules of conduct&mdash;have
- exacted that much from me on the penalty of letting me go by the board if
- I disobey.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The dear boys!&rdquo; Helen exclaimed. &ldquo;I like every one of them, they are so
- loyal to you. The close friendship of you all for one another is simply
- beautiful.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Coming back to the inevitable Pete,&rdquo; Dwight remarked, a few minutes
- later. &ldquo;I've been watching him since he was whipped, and I know he is in
- great danger of getting even more deeply into trouble. He has a stupidly
- resentful disposition, as many of his race have, and he is going around
- making surly threats about Johnson, Wiggin, and others. If he keeps that
- up and they get hold of it he will certainly get into serious trouble.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My father was speaking of that to-night,&rdquo; Helen said. &ldquo;And he was
- thinking if there were any way of getting the boy away from his idle town
- associates that it might prevent trouble and ease Mam' Linda's mind.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was thinking of that the other day when I saw Uncle Lewis searching for
- him among the idle negroes,&rdquo; said Carson; &ldquo;and I have an idea.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, you have? What is it?&rdquo; Helen asked, eagerly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, Pete always has seemed to like me and take my advice, and as there
- is, plenty of work on my farm for such a hand as he is I could give him a
- good place and wages over there where he'd be practically removed from his
- present associates.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Splendid, splendid!&rdquo; Helen cried; &ldquo;and will you do it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, certainly, and right away,&rdquo; Carson answered. &ldquo;If you will have Mam'
- Linda send him down to me in the morning I'll give him some instructions
- and a good sharp talk, and I'll make my overseer at the farm put him to
- work.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, it is splendid!&rdquo; Helen declared. &ldquo;It will be such good news for Mam'
- Linda. She'd rather have him work for you than any one in the world.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There comes Wade to claim his dance,&rdquo; Dwight said, suddenly; &ldquo;and I must
- be off.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where are you going?&rdquo; she asked, almost regretfully.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To the office to work on political business&mdash;dozens and dozens of
- letters to answer. Then I'm coming back for my waltz with you. I sha'n't
- fail.&rdquo; And as he put on his hat and threaded his way through the whirling
- mass of dancers down to the street, he recalled with something of a shock
- that not once in their talk had he even <i>thought</i> of his rival. He
- slowed up in the darkness and leaned against a wall. There was a strange
- sinking of his heart as he faced the grim reality that stretched out
- drearily before him. She was, no doubt, to be the wife of another man. He
- had lost her. She was not for him, though there in the glare of the
- ballroom, amid the sensuous strains of music, in the perfume of the
- flowers dying in her service, she had seemed as close to him in heart,
- soul, and sympathy as the night he and she&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had reached his office, a little one-story brick building in the row of
- lawyers' offices on the side street leading from the post-office to the
- courthouse, and he unlocked the door and went in and lighted the little
- murky lamp on his desk and pulled down a package of unanswered letters.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes, he must work&mdash;work with that awful pain in his breast, the dry,
- tightening sensation in his throat, the maddening vision of her dazzling
- beauty and grace and sweetness before him. He dipped his pen, drew the
- paper towards him, and began to write: &ldquo;My dear Sir,&mdash;In receiving
- the cordial assurances of your support in the campaign before me, I desire
- to thank you most heartily and to&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He laid the pen down and leaned back. &ldquo;I can't do it, at least not
- to-night,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Not while she is there looking like that and with my
- waltz to come, and yet it must be done. I've lost her, and I am only
- making it harder to bear. Yes, I must work&mdash;work!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The pen went into the ink again. On the still night air came the strains
- of music, the mellow, sing-song voice of the figure-caller in the &ldquo;square&rdquo;
- dance, the whir and patter of many feet.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IX.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0011" id="linkimage-0011"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9089.jpg" alt="9089 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9089.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- EAVING Carson Dwight, Wade Tingle, and Bob Smith chatting about the ball
- in the den the next morning, Garner went to the office, bit off a chew of
- tobacco, and plunged into work with a vigor which indicated that he was
- almost ashamed of his departure from his beaten track into the unusual
- fields of social gayety. He still wore the upright collar and white
- necktie of the night before, but the hitherto carefully guarded expanse of
- shirt-front was already in imminent danger of losing all that had once
- recommended it as a presentable garment.
- </p>
- <p>
- With his small hand well spread over the page of the book he was
- consulting, he had become oblivious to his surroundings when suddenly a
- man stood in the doorway. He was tall and gaunt and wore a broad-brimmed
- hat, a cotton checked shirt, jean trousers supported by a raw-hide belt,
- and a pair of tall boots which, as he stood fiercely eying Garner, he
- angrily lashed with his riding-whip. It was Dan Willis. His face was
- slightly flushed from drink, and his eyes had the glare even his best
- friends had learned to tear and tried to avoid.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whar's that that dude pardner o' yourn?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, you mean Dwight!&rdquo; Garner had had too much experience in the handling
- of men to change countenance over any sudden turn of affairs, either for
- or against his interests, and he had, also, acquired admirable skill in
- most effective temporizing. &ldquo;Why, let me see, Dan,&rdquo; he went on, after he
- had paused for fully a moment, carefully inspected the lines he was
- reading, frowned as if not quite satisfied therewith, and then slowly
- turned down a leaf. &ldquo;Let me think. Oh, you want to see Carson! Sit down;
- take a chair.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't want to set down!&rdquo; Willis thundered. &ldquo;I want to see that damned
- dude, and I want to see him right off.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, that's it!&rdquo; said Garner. &ldquo;You are in a <i>hurry!</i>&rdquo; And then, from
- the rigid setting of his jaw, it was plain that the lawyer had decided on
- the best mode of handling the specimen glowering down upon him. &ldquo;Oh yes, I
- remember now, Willis, that you were loaded up a few nights ago looking for
- that chap. Now, advice is cheap&mdash;that is, the sort I'm going to give
- you. Under ordinary circumstances I'd charge a fee for it. My advice to
- you is to straddle that horse of yours and get out of this town. You are
- looking for trouble&mdash;great, big, far-reaching trouble.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You hit the nail that pop, Bill Garner,&rdquo; the mountaineer snorted. &ldquo;I'm
- expectin' to git trouble, or <i>give</i> trouble, an' I hain't goin' to
- lose time nuther. This settlement was due several days ago, but got put
- off.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Look here, Willis&rdquo;&mdash;Garner stood up facing him&mdash;&ldquo;you may not be
- a fool, but you are acting powerfully like one. You are letting that
- measly little candidate for the legislature make a cat's-paw of you.
- That's what you're doing. He knows, if he can get up a shooting-scrap
- between you and my pardner over that negro-whipping business, it will turn
- a few mountain votes his way. If you get shot, Wiggin will have more
- charges to make; and if Carson was to get the worst of it, the boy would
- be clean out of the skunk's way. You and Wiggin are both in bad business.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, that's <i>my</i> lookout!&rdquo; the mountaineer growled, beside himself
- in rage. &ldquo;Carson Dwight said I was with Johnson the night the gang came in
- and whipped them coons, and&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you <i>were</i>,&rdquo; said Garner, as suddenly as if he were
- browbeating a witness. &ldquo;What's the use to lie about it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lie&mdash;you say I&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I said I didn't <i>want</i> you to lie about it,&rdquo; said Garner, calmly. &ldquo;I
- know half the mob, and respect most of them. I have an idea that some of
- my own kinsfolk was along that night. They thought they were doing right
- and acting in the best interests of the community. That's neither here nor
- there. The men that were licked were negroes, and most of them bad ones at
- that, but when a big, strapping man of your stamp comes with blood in his
- eye and a hunk of metal on his hip, looking for the son of an old
- Confederate soldier, who is a Democratic candidate for the legislature,
- and a good all-round white citizen, why, I say that is the time to call a
- halt, and to call it out loud! I happen to know a few of the grand jury,
- and if there is trouble of a serious nature in this town to-day, I can
- personally testify to enough deliberation in your voice and eye this
- morning to jerk your neck out of joint.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What the hell do I care for you or your law?&rdquo; Dan Willis snorted. &ldquo;It's
- what that damned dude said about <i>me</i> that he's got to swallow, and
- if he's in this town I'll find him. A fellow told me if he wasn't here
- he'd be in Keith Gordon's room. I don't know whar that is, but I kin find
- out.&rdquo; Turning abruptly, Willis strode out into the street again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The devil certainly is to pay now,&rdquo; Garner said, with his deepest frown
- as he closed the law-book, thrust it back into its dusty niche in his
- bookcase, and put on his hat. &ldquo;Carson is still up there with those boys,
- and that fellow may find him any minute. Carson won't take back a thing.
- He's as mad about the business as Willis is. I wonder if I can possibly
- manage to keep them apart.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- On his way to the den he met Pole Baker standing on the corner of the
- street by a load of wood, which Pole had brought in to sell. Hurriedly,
- Garner explained the situation, ending by asking the farmer if he could
- see any way of getting Willis out of town.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I couldn't work him myself,&rdquo; Baker said, &ldquo;fer the dern skunk hain't any
- more use fer me than I have fer him, but I reckon I kin put some of his
- pals onto the job.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, go ahead, Pole,&rdquo; Garner urged. &ldquo;I'll run up to the room and try to
- detain Carson. For all you do, don't let Willis come up there.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Garner found the young men still in the den chatting about the ball and
- Carson's campaign.
- </p>
- <p>
- Wade Tingle sat at the table with several sheets of paper before him, upon
- which, in a big, reporter's hand, he had been writing a glowing account of
- &ldquo;the greatest social event&rdquo; in the history of the town.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've got a corking write-up, Bill,&rdquo; he said, enthusiastically. &ldquo;I've just
- been reading it to the gang. It is immense. Miss Helen sent me a full
- memorandum of what the girls wore, and, for a green hand, I think I have
- dressed 'em up all right.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The only criticism I made on it, Garner,&rdquo; spoke up Keith from his bed in
- the corner, where he lay fully dressed, &ldquo;is that Wade has ended all of
- Helen's descriptions by adding, 'and diamonds.' I'll swear I'm no critic
- of style in writing, but that eternal 'and diamonds, and diamonds, and
- diamonds,' at the end of every paragraph, sounds so monotonous that it
- gets funny. He even had Miss Sally Ware's plain black outfit tipped off
- with 'and diamonds.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I look at it this way, Bill,&rdquo; Wade said, earnestly, as Garner sat
- down, &ldquo;Of course, the girls who had them on would not like to see them
- left out, for they are nice things to have, and, on the other hand, those
- who were short in that direction would feel sorter out of it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think if he had just written 'jewels' once in awhile,&rdquo; Keith said, &ldquo;it
- would sound all right, and leave something to the imagination.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That might help,&rdquo; Garner said, his troubled glance on Carson's rather
- grave face; &ldquo;but see that you don't write it 'jewelry.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'll accept the amendment,&rdquo; Wade said, as he began to scratch his
- manuscript and rewrite.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson Dwight stood up. &ldquo;Did you leave the office open?&rdquo; he asked Garner.
- &ldquo;I've got to shape up that Holcolm deed and consult the records.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let it go for a while. I want to look it over first,&rdquo; Garner said, rather
- suddenly. &ldquo;Sit down. I want to talk to you about the&mdash;the race.
- You've got a ticklish proposition before you, old boy, and I'd like to see
- you put it through.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hear, hear!&rdquo; cried Keith, sitting up on the edge of his bed. &ldquo;Balls and
- what girls wear belong to the regular run of life, but when the chief of
- the gang is about to be beaten by a scoundrel who will hesitate at
- nothing, it's time to be wide awake.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's it,&rdquo; said Garner, his brow ruffled, his ear open to sounds
- without, his uneasy eyes on the group around him. And for several minutes
- he held them where they sat, listening to his wise and observant views of
- the matter in hand. Suddenly, while he was in the midst of a remark, a
- foot-fall sounded on the long passage without. It was heavy, loud, and
- striding. Garner paused, rose, went to the bureau, and from the top drawer
- took out a revolver he always kept either there or in his desk at the
- office. There was a firm whiteness about his lips which was new to his
- friends.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Carson,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;have you got your gun?&rdquo; and he stood staring at the
- doorway.
- </p>
- <p>
- A shadow fell on the floor; a man entered. It was Pole Baker, and he
- looked around him in surprise, his inquiring stare on Garner's unwonted
- mien and revolver.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, it's you!&rdquo; Garner exclaimed. &ldquo;Ah, I thought&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I come to tell you that&mdash;&rdquo; Baker hesitated, as if uncertain
- whether he was betraying confidence, and then catching Garner's warning
- glance, he said, non-committally: &ldquo;Say, Bill, that feller you and me was
- talkin' about has jest gone home. I reckon you won't get yore money out of
- him to-day.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, well, it was a small matter, anyway, Pole,&rdquo; Garner said, in a tone of
- appreciative relief, as he put the revolver back in the drawer and closed
- it. &ldquo;I'll mention it to him the next time he's in town.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say, what was the matter with you just now, Garner?&rdquo; Wade Tingle asked
- over the top of his manuscript. &ldquo;I thought you were going to ask Carson to
- fight a duel.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But with his hand on Dwight's arm Garner was moving to the door. &ldquo;Come on,
- lot's get to work,&rdquo; he said, with a deep breath and a grateful side glance
- at Baker.
- </p>
- <p>
- In front of the office one of Carson's farm wagons drawn by a pair of
- mules was standing. Tom Hill-yer, Carson's overseer and general manager,
- sat on the seat, and behind him stood Pete Warren, ready for his stay in
- the country.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Miss Helen's made quick work of it, I see,&rdquo; Carson remarked. &ldquo;She's
- determined to get that rascal out of temptation.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You ought to give him a sharp talking to,&rdquo; said Garner. &ldquo;He's got
- entirely too much lip for his own good. Skelt told me this morning that if
- Pete doesn't dry up some of that gang will hang him before he is a month
- older. He doesn't know any better, and means nothing by it, but he has
- already made open threats against Johnson and Willis. You understand those
- men well enough to know that in such times as these a negro can't do that
- with impunity.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I agree with you, and I'll stop and speak to him now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When Carson came in and sat down at his desk, a few moments later, Garner
- looked across at him and smiled.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You certainly let him off easy,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I could have thrown a
- Christmas turkey down the scamp's throat through that grin of his. I saw
- you run your hand in your pocket and knew he was bleeding you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, well, I reckon I'm a failure at that sort of thing,&rdquo; Dwight admitted,
- with a sheepish smile. &ldquo;I started in by saying that he must not be so
- foolhardy as to make open threats against any of those men, and he said:
- 'Looky here, Marse Carson, dem white rapscallions cut gashes in my body
- deep enough ter plant corn in, an' I ain't gwine ter love 'em fer it. <i>You</i>
- wouldn't, you know you wouldn't.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And he had you there,&rdquo; Garner said, grimly. &ldquo;Well, they may say what they
- please up North about our great problem, but nothing but time and the good
- Lord can solve it. You and I can tell that negro to keep his mouth shut
- from sunup till sun-down, but I happen to know that he had a remote white
- ancestor that was the proudest, hardest fighter that ever swung a sword.
- Some of the rampant agitators say that deportation is the only solution.
- Huh! if you deported a lot of full-blood blacks along with such chaps as
- this one, it would be only a short time before the yellow ones would have
- the rest in bondage, and so history would be going backward instead of
- forward. I guess it's going forward right now if we only had the patience
- to see it that way.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER X.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0012" id="linkimage-0012"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9098.jpg" alt="9098 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9098.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- |NE beautiful morning near the first of June, as Carson was strolling on
- the upper veranda at home, waiting for the breakfast-bell, Keith Gordon
- came by on his horse on his way to town.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Heard the news?&rdquo; he called out, as he reined in at the gate and leaned on
- the neck of his mount.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; what's up?&rdquo; Carson asked, and as he spoke he saw Helen Warren emerge
- from the front door of her father's house and step down among the dew-wet
- rose-bushes that bordered the brick walk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Horrible enough in all reason,&rdquo; Keith replied. &ldquo;There's been a
- cold-blooded murder over near your farm. Abe Johnson, who led that mob,
- you know, and his wife were killed by some negro with an axe. The whole
- country is up in arms and crazy with excitement.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wait, I'll come right down,&rdquo; Carson said, and he disappeared into the
- house. And when he came out a moment later he found Helen on the sidewalk
- talking to Keith, and from her grave face he knew she had overheard what
- had been said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Isn't it awful?&rdquo; she said to Carson, as he came out at the gate. &ldquo;Of
- course, it is the continuation of the trouble here in town.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How do they know a negro did it?&rdquo; Carson asked, obeying the natural
- tendency of a lawyer to get at the facts.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It seems,&rdquo; answered Gordon, &ldquo;that Mrs. Johnson lived barely long enough
- after the neighbors got there to say that it was done by a mulatto, as
- well as she could see in the darkness. In their fury, the people are
- roughly handling every yellow negro in the neighborhood. They say the
- darkies are all hiding out in the woods and mountains.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then the conversation paused, for old Uncle Lewis, who was at work with a
- pair of garden-sheafs behind some rose-bushes close by, uttered a groan
- and, wide-eyed and startled, came towards them.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's awful, awful, awful!&rdquo; they heard him say. &ldquo;Oh, my Gawd, have mercy!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, Uncle Lewis, what's the matter?&rdquo; Helen asked, in sudden concern and
- wonder over his manner and tone.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, missy, missy!&rdquo; he groaned, as he shook his head despondently. &ldquo;My boy
- over dar 'mongst 'em right now. Oh, my Lawd! I know what dem white folks
- gwine ter say fust thing, kase Pete didn't had no mo' sense 'an ter&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop, Lewis!&rdquo; Carson said, sharply. &ldquo;Don't be the first to implicate your
- own son in a matter as serious as this is.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I ain't, marster!&rdquo; the old man groaned, &ldquo;but I know dem white folks done
- it 'fo' dis.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm afraid you are right, Lewis,&rdquo; Keith said, sympathetically. &ldquo;He may be
- absolutely innocent, but, since his trouble with that mob, Pete has really
- talked too much. Well, I must be going.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As Keith was riding away, old Lewis, muttering softly to himself and
- groaning, turned towards the house.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where are you going?&rdquo; Helen called out, as she still lingered beside
- Carson.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm gwine try to keep Linda fum hearin' it right now,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Ef Pete
- git in it, missy, it gwine ter kill yo' old mammy.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm afraid it will,&rdquo; Helen said. &ldquo;Do what you can, Uncle Lewis. I'll be
- down to see her in a moment.&rdquo; As the old man tottered away, Helen looked
- up and caught Carson's troubled glance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wish I were a man,&rdquo; she said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why?&rdquo; he inquired.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because I'd take a strong stand here in the South for law and order at
- any cost. We have a good example in this very thing of what our condition
- means. Pete may be innocent, and no doubt is, for I don't believe he would
- do a thing like that no matter what the provocation, and yet he hasn't any
- sort of chance to prove it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are right,&rdquo; Carson said. &ldquo;At such a time they would lynch him, if for
- nothing else than that he had dared to threaten the murdered man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Poor, poor old mammy!&rdquo; sighed Helen. &ldquo;Oh, it is awful to think of what
- she will suffer if&mdash;if&mdash;Carson, do you really think Pete is in
- actual danger?&rdquo; Dwight hesitated for a moment, and then he met her stare
- frankly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We may as well face the truth and be done with it,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;No negro
- will be safe over there now, and Pete, I am sorry to say, least of all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If he is guilty he may run away,&rdquo; she said, shortsightedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If he's guilty we don't <i>want</i> him to get away,&rdquo; Carson said,
- firmly. &ldquo;But I really don't think he had anything to do with it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen sighed. They had stepped back to the open gate, and there they
- paused side by side. &ldquo;How discouraging life is!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Carson, in
- planning to get Pete over there, you and I were acting on our purest,
- noblest impulses, and yet the outcome of our efforts may be the gravest
- disaster.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it seems that way,&rdquo; he responded, gloomily; &ldquo;but we must try to look
- on the bright side and hope for the best.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- On parting with Helen, Carson went into the big, old-fashioned
- dining-room, and after hurriedly drinking a cup of coffee he went down to
- his office. Along the main thoroughfare, on the street comers, and in
- front of the stores he found little groups of men with grave faces, all
- discussing the tragedy. More than once in passing he heard Pete's name
- mentioned, and for fear of being questioned as to what he thought about it
- he hurried on. Garner was an early riser, and he found him at his desk
- writing letters.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, from all accounts,&rdquo; Garner said, &ldquo;your man Friday seems to be in a
- ticklish place over there, innocent or not&mdash;that is, if he hasn't had
- the sense to skip out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Somehow, I don't think Pete is guilty,&rdquo; Carson said, as he sank into his
- big chair. &ldquo;He's not that stamp of negro.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I haven't made up my mind on that score,&rdquo; the other remarked. &ldquo;Up
- to the time he left here he seemed really harmless enough, but we don't
- know what may have taken place since then between him and Johnson. Funny
- we didn't think of the danger of sticking match to tinder like that. I
- admit I was in favor of sending him. Miss Helen was so pleased over it,
- too. I met her the other day at the post-office and she was telling me,
- with absolute delight, that Pete was doing well over there, working like
- an old-time cornfield darky, and behaving himself. Now, I suppose, she
- will be terribly upset.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson sighed. &ldquo;We blame the mountain people, in times of excitement, for
- acting rashly, and yet right here in this quiet town half the citizens
- have already made up their minds that Pete committed the crime. Think of
- it, Garner!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you see, it's pretty hard to imagine who <i>else</i> did it,&rdquo;
- Garner declared.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't agree with you,&rdquo; disputed Carson, warmly; &ldquo;when there are half a
- dozen negroes who were whipped just as Pete was and who have horrible
- characters. There's Sam Dudlow, the worst negro I ever saw, an ex-convict,
- and as full of devilment as an egg is of meat. I saw his scowling face the
- next day after he was whipped, and I never want to see it again. I'd hate
- to meet him in the dark, unarmed. He wasn't making open threats, as Pete
- was, but I'll bet he would have handled Johnson or Willis roughly if he
- had met either of them alone and got the advantage.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, we are not trying the case,&rdquo; Garner said, dryly; &ldquo;if we are, I
- don't know where the fees are to come from. Getting money out of an
- imaginary case is too much like a lawyer's first year under the shadow of
- his shingle.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XI.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0013" id="linkimage-0013"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9103.jpg" alt="9103 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9103.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- IMMEDIATELY on parting with Carson, Helen went down to Linda's cottage.
- Lewis was leaning over the little, low fence talking to a negro, who
- walked on as she drew near.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where is Mam' Linda?&rdquo; she asked, guardedly. &ldquo;In de house, missy,&rdquo; Lewis
- answered, pulling off his old slouch hat and wadding it tightly in his
- fingers. &ldquo;She 'ain't heard nothin' yit. Jim was des tellin' me er whole
- string er talk folks was havin' down on de street; but I told 'im not to
- let 'er hear it. Oh, missy, it gwine ter kill 'er. She cayn't stan' it.
- Des no longer 'n las' night she was settin' in dat do' talkin' 'bout how
- happy she was to hear Pete was doin' so well over on Marse Carson's place.
- She said she never would forget young marster's kindness to er old
- nigger'oman, en now&rdquo;&mdash;the old man spread out his hands in apathetic
- gesture before him&mdash;&ldquo;now you see what it come to!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But nothing serious has really happened to Pete yet,&rdquo; Helen had started
- to say, when the old man stopped her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hush, honey, she comin'!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a sound of a footstep in the cottage. Linda appeared in the
- doorway, and with a clouded face and disturbed manner invited her mistress
- into the cottage, placing a chair for the young lady, and dusting the
- bottom of it with her apron.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How do you feel this morning, mammy?&rdquo; Helen asked, as she sat down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm well emough in my <i>body</i>, honey&rdquo;&mdash;the old woman's face was
- averted&mdash;&ldquo;but dat ain't all ter a pusson in dis life. Ef des my body
- was all I had, I wouldn't be so bad off, but it's my <i>mind</i>, honey.
- I'm worried 'bout dat boy ergin. I had bad dreams las' night, en thoo 'em
- all he seemed ter be in some trouble. Den when I woke dis mawnin' en tried
- ter think 'twas only des er dream, I ain't satisfied wid de way all of um
- act. Lewis look quar out'n de eyes, en everybody dat pass erlong hatter
- stop en lead Lewis off down de fence ter talk. I ain't no fool, honey! I
- notice things when dey ain't natcherl. Den here you come 'fo' yo'
- breakfust-time. I've watched you, chile, sence you was in de cradle en
- know every bat er yo' sweet eyes. Oh, honey&rdquo;&mdash;Linda suddenly sat down
- and covered her face with her hands, pressing them firmly in&mdash;&ldquo;honey,&rdquo;
- she muttered, &ldquo;suppen's done gone wrong. I've knowed it all dis mawnin' en
- I'm actually afeard ter ax youall ter tell me. I&mdash;can't think of but
- one thing, I'm so muddled up, en dat is dat my boy done thowed up his work
- en gone away off somers wid bad company; en yit, honey&rdquo;&mdash;-she now
- rocked herself back and forth as if in torture and finished with a steady
- stare into Helen's face&mdash;&ldquo;dat cayn't be it. Dat ain't bad ernough ter
- mek Lewis act like he is, en&mdash;en&mdash;well, honey, you might es well
- come out wid it. I've had trouble, en I kin have mo'.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen sat pale and undecided, unable to formulate any adequate plan of
- procedure. At this juncture Lewis leaned in the doorway, and, as his
- wife's back was towards him, he could not see her face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want ter step down-town er minute, Lindy,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I'll be right
- back. I des want ter go ter de sto'. We're out er coffee, en&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Linda suddenly turned her dark, agonized face upon him. &ldquo;You are not goin'
- till you tell me what is gone wrong wid my child,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;What de
- matter wid Pete, Lewis?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man's surprised glance wavered between his Wife's face and
- Helen's. &ldquo;Why, Lindy, who say&mdash;&rdquo; he feebly began.
- </p>
- <p>
- But she stopped him with a gesture at once impatient and full of fear.
- &ldquo;Tell me!&rdquo; she said, firmly&mdash;&ldquo;tell me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Lewis shambled into the cottage and stood over her, a magnificent specimen
- of the manhood of his race. Helen's eyes were blinded by tears she could
- hot restrain.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Tain't tiothiri', Lindy, 'pon my word 'tain't nothin' but dis,&rdquo; he said,
- gently. &ldquo;Dar's been trouble over near Marse Carson's farm, but not one
- soul is done say Pete was in it&mdash;<i>not one soul</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What sort o' trouble?&rdquo; Linda pursued.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Er man en his wife was killed over dar in baid last night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What man en woman?&rdquo; Linda asked, her mouth falling open in suspense, her
- thick lip hanging.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Abe Johnson en his wife.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Linda leaned forward, her hands locked like things of iron between her
- knees. &ldquo;Who done it, Lewis?&mdash;who killed um?&rdquo; she gasped.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nobody knows dat yit, Lindy. Mrs. Johnson lived er little while after de
- neighbors come, en she said it was er&mdash;she said it was er yaller
- nigger, en&mdash;en&mdash;&rdquo; He went no further, being at the end of his
- diplomacy, and simply stood before her helplessly twisting his hat in his
- hands. The room was very still. Helen wondered if her own heart had
- stopped beating, so tense and strained was her emotion. Linda sat bent
- forward for a moment; they saw her raise her hands to her head, press them
- there convulsively, and then she groaned.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Miz Johnson say it was a yaller nigger!&rdquo; she moaned. &ldquo;Oh, my Gawd!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, but what dat, 'oman?&rdquo; Lewis demanded in assumed sharpness of tone.
- &ldquo;Dar's oodlin's en oodlin's er yaller niggers over dar.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dey ain't none of 'em been whipped by de daid man, 'cepin' my boy.&rdquo; Linda
- was now staring straight at him. &ldquo;None of 'em never made no threats but
- Pete. Dey'll kill 'im&mdash;&rdquo; She shuddered and her voice fell away into a
- prolonged sob. &ldquo;You hear me? Dey'll hang my po' baby boy&mdash;hang 'im&mdash;<i>hang</i>
- 'im!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Linda suddenly rose to her full height and stood glowering upon them, her
- face dark and full of passion and grief combined. She raised her hands and
- held them straight upward.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want ter curse Gawd!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;You hear me? I ain't done nothin' ter
- deserve dis here thing I've been er patient slave of white folks, en my
- mammy an' daddy was 'fo' me. I've acted right en done my duty ter dem what
- owned me, en&mdash;en now I face dis. I hear my onliest child beggin' fer
- um to spare 'im en listen ter 'im. I hear 'im beggin' ter see his old
- mammy 'fo' dey kill 'im. I see 'em drag-gin' 'im off wid er rope roun'&mdash;&rdquo;
- With a shriek the woman fell face downward on the floor. As if under the
- influence of a terrible nightmare, Helen bent over her. She was
- insensible. Without a word, Lewis lifted her in his arms and bore her to a
- bed in the corner.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dis gwine ter kill yo' old mammy, honey,&rdquo; he gulped. &ldquo;She ain't never
- gwine ter git up fum under it&mdash;never in dis world.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But Helen, with womanly presence of mind, had dampened her handkerchief in
- some water and was gently stroking the dark face with it. After a moment
- Linda drew a deep, lingering breath and opened her eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lewis,&rdquo; was her first thought, &ldquo;go try en find out all you kin. I'm gwine
- lie here en pray Gawd ter be merciful. I said I'd curse 'Im, but I won't.
- He my mainstay. I <i>got</i> ter trust 'Im. Ef He fail me I'm lost. Oh,
- honey, yo' old mammy never axed you many favors; stay here wid 'er en pray&mdash;pray
- wid all yo' might ter let dis cup pass. Oh, Gawd, don't let 'em!&mdash;<i>don't</i>
- let 'em! De po' boy didn't do it. He wouldn't harm a kitten. He talked too
- much, case he was smartin' under his whippin', but dat was all!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Motioning to Lewis to leave them alone, Helen sat down on the edge of the
- bed and put her arm round Linda's shoulders, but the old woman rose and
- went to the door and closed it, then she came back and stood by Helen in
- the half-darkness that now filled the room.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want you ter git down here by my baid en pray fer me, honey,&rdquo; she said.
- &ldquo;Seem ter me lak de Lawd always have listen ter white folks mo' den de
- black, anyway, en I want you ter beg 'Im ter spare po' li'l' foolish Pete
- des dis time&mdash;<i>des dis once</i>.&rdquo; Kneeling by the bed, Helen
- covered her wet face with her hands. Linda knelt beside her, and Helen
- prayed aloud, her clear, sweet voice ringing through the still room.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0014" id="linkimage-0014"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9109.jpg" alt="9109 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9109.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- N Carson Dwight's farm, as the place was not particularly well kept, the
- negro hands lived in dismantled log-cabins scattered here and there about
- the fields, or in the edge of the woods surrounding the place. In one of
- these, at the overseer's suggestion, Pete had installed himself, his
- household effects consisting only of a straw mattress thrown on the
- puncheon floor and a few cooking utensils for use over the big fireplace
- of the mud-and-log chimney.
- </p>
- <p>
- Here he was sleeping on the night of the tragedy which had stirred the
- country-side into a white heat of race hatred. He had spent the first half
- of the night at a negro dance, two miles away, at a farm, and was much
- elated by finding that he had attracted marked attention and feminine
- favor, which was due to the fact that he was looked upon by the country
- blacks as something out of the usual run&mdash;a town darky with a glib
- tongue and many other accomplishments, and a negro, too, as Pete assured
- them, who stood high in the favor of his master, whose name carried weight
- wherever it was mentioned.
- </p>
- <p>
- Shortly after dawn Pete was still sleeping soundly, as was his habit after
- a night of pleasure, when his door was rudely shaken.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pete Warren! Pete Warren!&rdquo; a voice called out sharply. &ldquo;Wake up in dar;
- wake up, I tell you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was no response&mdash;no sound came from within the cabin except the
- deep respiration of the sleeper. The door was shaken again, and then, as
- it was not locked, and slightly ajar, the little old negro man on the
- outside pushed the shutter open and entered, stalking across the floor to
- where Pete lay.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wake up here, you fool!&rdquo; he said, as he bent and shook Pete roughly.
- &ldquo;Wake up, ef you know what good fer you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Pete turned over; his snoring broke into little gasps. He opened his eyes,
- stared inquiringly for an instant, and then his eyelids began to close
- drowsily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Looky here!&rdquo; He was roughly handled again by the black hand on his
- shoulder. &ldquo;You young fool, you dance all night till you cayn't keep yo'
- eyes open in de day-time, but ef you don't git er move on you en light out
- er dis cabin you'll dance yo' last jig wid nothin' under yo' feet but
- wind. It'll be er game er frog in de middle en you be de frog.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What dat?&mdash;what dat you givin' me, Uncle Richmond?&rdquo; Pete was now
- awake and sitting bolt upright on the mattress.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Huh, I come ter tell you, boy, dat you 'bout ter git in trouble, en, fer
- all I know, de biggest you ever had in all yo' bo'n days.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Huh, you say I is, Uncle Richmond?&rdquo; Pete exclaimed, incredulously. &ldquo;What
- wrong wid me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man stepped back till he could look through the cabin door over
- the fields upon which the first streaks of daylight were falling in
- grayish, misty splotches.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pete,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;somebody done slip in Abe Johnson's house en brain him
- en his wife wid er axe.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Huh, you don't say!&rdquo; Pete stared in sleepy astonishment. &ldquo;When dat
- happen, Uncle Richmond?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Las' night, er towards mawnin',&rdquo; the old man said. &ldquo;Ham Black come en
- toi' me. He say we better all hide out; it gwine ter be de biggestm
- 'cite-ment ever heard of in dese mountains; but, Pete, <i>you</i> de main
- one ter look out&mdash;you, you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me! Huh, what you say dat fer, Uncle Rich'?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Ca'se dey gwine ter look fer you de fus one, Pete. You sho is been
- talkin' too much out yo' mouf 'bout dat whippin' Johnson done give you en
- Sam Dudlow, en de res' um in town dat night. Ham tol' me ter come warn you
- ter hide out, en dat quick. Ham say he know in reason you didn't do it,
- 'ca'se, he say, yo' bark is wuss'n yo' bite. Ham say he bet 'twas done by
- some nigger dat didn't talk so much. Ham say he mighty nigh sho Sam Dudlow
- done it, 'ca'se Sam met Abe Johnson in de big road yisterday en Johnson
- cussed 'im en lashed at 'im wid er whip. Ham say dat nigger come on ter de
- sto' lookin' lak er devil in men's clothes. But he didn't say nothin' even
- den. Look lak he was des lyin' low bidin' his time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Pete got up and began to dress himself with the unimaginative disregard
- for danger that is characteristic of his race.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I bet, myse'f, Sam done it,&rdquo; he said, reflectively.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's er bad yaller nigger, Uncle Richmond, en ever since Johnson en Dan
- Willis larruped we-all, he's been sulkin' en growlin'. But es you say,
- Uncle Rich', he didn't talk out open. He lay low.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dat don't mek no diffunce, boy,&rdquo; the old black man went on, earnestly;
- &ldquo;you git out'n here in er hurry en mek er break fer dem woods. Even den I
- doubt ef dat gwine ter save yo' skin, 'ca'se Dan Willis got er pair er
- blood-hounds dat kin smell nigger tracks thoo er ten-inch snow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Huh, I say, Uncle Richmond, you don't know me,&rdquo; Pete said. &ldquo;You don't
- know me, ef you 'low I'm gwine ter run fum dese white men. I 'ain't been
- nigh dat Abe Johnson's house&mdash;not even cross his line er fence. I
- promised Marse Carson Dwight not ter go nigh 'im, en&mdash;en I promised
- 'im ter let up on my gab out here, en I done dat, too. No, suh, Unc'
- Rich', you git somebody else ter run yo' foot-race. I'm gwine ter cook my
- breakfust lak I always do en den go out ter my sprouts dat hatter be
- grubbed. I got my task ter do, rain er shine.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Look here, boy,&rdquo; the old man's blue-black eyes gleamed as he stared at
- Pete. &ldquo;I know yo' mammy en daddy, en I like um. Dey good black folks er de
- ol' stripe, en always was friendly ter me, en I don't like ter see you in
- dis mess. I tell you, I'm er old man. I know how white men act in er case
- like dis&mdash;dey don't have one bit er pity er reason. Dey will kill you
- sho. Dey'd er been here 'fo' dis, but dey gittin' together. Listen! Hear
- dem hawns en yellin'?&mdash;dat at Wilson's sto'. Dey will be here soon. I
- don't want ter stan' here en argue wid you. I 'ain't had nothin' ter do
- wid it, but dey would saddle some of it onto me ef dey found out I come
- here ter warn you. Hurry up, boy.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I ain't gwine ter do it, Uncle Rich',&rdquo; Pete declared, firmly, and with a
- grave face. &ldquo;You are er old man, but you ain't givin' me good advice. Ef I
- run, dey would say I was guilty sho', en den, es you say, de dogs could
- track me down, anyway.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The boy's logic seemed unassailable. The piercing, beadlike eyes of the
- old man flickered. &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I done all I could. I'm gwine move
- on. Even now, dey may know I come here at dis early time, en mix me up in
- it. Good-bye. I hope fer Mammy Lindy's sake dat dey will let you off&mdash;I
- do sho.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Left alone, Pete went out to the edge of the wood behind his cabin and
- gathered up some sticks, leaves, and pieces of bark that had fallen from
- the decaying boughs of the trees, and brought them into the cabin and
- deposited them on the broad stone hearth. Then he uncovered the coals he
- had the night before buried in the ashes, and made a fire for the
- preparation of his simple breakfast. He had a sharp sense of animal
- hunger, which was due to his long walk to and from the dance and the fact
- that he was bodily sound and vigorous. He took as much fresh-ground
- corn-meal as his hands would hold from a tow bag in a corner of the room
- and put it into a tin pan. To this he added a cup of water and a bit of
- salt, stirring it with his hand till it was well mixed. He then deftly
- formed it into a pone, and, wrapping it in a clean husk of corn, he
- deposited it in the hot ashes, covering it well with live coals. Then he
- made his coffee, being careful that the water in the pot did not rise as
- high as the point near the spout where the vessel leaked. Next he
- unwrapped a strip of &ldquo;streak o' lean streak o' fat&rdquo; bacon, and with his
- pocket-knife sliced some of it into a frying-pan already hot. These things
- accomplished, he had only to wait a few minutes for the heat to do its
- work, and he stepped back and stood in the doorway.
- </p>
- <p>
- Far across the meadow, now under the slanting rays of the sun, he saw old
- Uncle Richmond, bowlegged and short, waddling along through the dewy grass
- and weeds, his head bowed, his long arms swinging at his sides.
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;Huh!&rdquo; was Pete's slow comment, &ldquo;so somebody done already settled Abe
-Johnson's hash. I know in reason it was Sam Dudlow, en I reckon ef dat
-rampacious gang er white men lays hands on 'im&mdash;ef dey lays hands on
- 'im&mdash;&rdquo; He was recalling certain details of the recent riots in Atlanta,
-and an unconscious shudder passed over him. &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he continued to
-reflect, &ldquo;Abe Johnson was a hard man on black folks, but his wife was
-er downright good 'oman. Ever'body say she was, en she <i>was</i>. It was a
-gre't pity ter kill her dat way, but I reckon Sam was afeard she'd
-tell it on 'im en had ter kill um bofe. Yes, Miz Johnson was er good
-'oman&mdash;good ter niggers. She fed lots of 'em behind dat man's back, en
-wished 'em well; en now, po', po' 'oman!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Pete went back to the fireplace and with the blade of his knife turned the
- curling white and brown strips of bacon, and with the toe of his coarse,
- worn shoe pushed fresher coals against his coffee-pot. Then for a moment
- he stood gravely looking at the fire.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he mused, with a shrugging of his shoulders. &ldquo;I wish des <i>one
- thing</i>, I wish Marse Carson was here. He wouldn't let 'em tech me. He's
- de best en smartest lawyer in Georgia, en he would tell 'em what er lot er
- fools dey was ter say I done it, when I was right dar'n my baid. My! dat
- bacon smell good! I wish I had er few fresh hen aigs ter drap in dat brown
- grease. Huh! it make my mouf water.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was no table in the room, and so when he had taken up his breakfast
- he sat down on the floor and ate it with supreme relish. Through all the
- meal, however, in spite of the arguments he was mentally producing, there
- were far under the crust of his being certain elemental promptings towards
- fear and self-preservation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, dar's one thing,&rdquo; he mused. &ldquo;Marse Hillyer done laid me out my task
- ter do in de old fiel' en I ain't ergoin' to shirk it, 'ca'se Marse Carson
- gwine ter ax 'im, when he go in town, how I'm gittin' on, en I wants er
- good repo't. No, I ain't goin' ter shirk it, ef all de dogs en white men
- in de county come yelpin' on de hunt for Sam Dudlow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0015" id="linkimage-0015"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9116.jpg" alt="9116 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9116.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- IS breakfast over, Pete shouldered his grubbing-hoe, an implement shaped
- like an adze, and made his way through the dewy undergrowth of the wood to
- an open field an eighth of a mile from his cabin. There he set to work on
- what was considered by farmers the hardest labor connected with the
- cultivation of the soil. It consisted of partly digging and partly pulling
- out by the roots the stout young bushes which infested the neglected old
- fields.
- </p>
- <p>
- Pete was hard at work in the corner of a ten-rail worm-fence, when,
- hearing a sound in the wood, which sloped down from a rocky hill quite
- near him, he saw a farmer, who lived in the neighborhood, pause suddenly,
- even in a startled manner, and stare steadily at him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; Pete heard him exclaim; &ldquo;why, you are Carson Dwight's new man, ain't
- you, from Darley?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, suh, dat me,&rdquo; the negro replied. &ldquo;Mr. Hillyer, de overseer fer my
- boss, set me on dis yer job. I want ter clean it up ter de branch by
- Sadday.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Huh!&rdquo; The man approached nearer, eying the negro closely from head to
- foot, his glance resting longer on Pete's hip-pocket than anywhere else.
- &ldquo;Huh! I heard down at the store just now that you'd left&mdash;throwed up
- your job, I mean&mdash;an' gone clean off.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I hain't throwed up no job,&rdquo; the negro said, his slow intelligence
- groping for the possible cause of such a report. &ldquo;I been right here since
- my boss sent me over, en I'm gwine stay lessen he sen' fer me ter tek care
- o' his hosses in town. I reckon you heard er Marse Carson Dwight's fine
- drivin' stock.&rdquo; The farmer pulled his long brown beard, his eyes still on
- Pete's face; it was as if he had not caught the boy's last remark.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They said down at the store that you left last night, after&mdash;that
- you went off last night. A man said he seed you at the nigger blow-out on
- Hilton's farm about one o'clock, and that after it was over you turned
- towards&mdash;I don't know&mdash;I'm just tellin' you what they said down
- at the store.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I <i>was</i> at dat shindig,&rdquo; Pete said. &ldquo;I walked fum here dar en back
- ergin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Huh, well&rdquo;&mdash;the farmer's face took on a shrewd expression&mdash;&ldquo;I
- must move on. I'm lookin' fer a brown cow with a white tail, an' blaze on
- 'er face.&rdquo; As the man disappeared in the wood, Pete was conscious of a
- sense of vague uneasiness which somehow seemed to be a sort of augmented
- recurrence of the feeling left by the warning of his early visitor.
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;Dat white man certainly act curi's,&rdquo; Pete mused, as he leaned on
-the handle of his hoe and stared at the spot where the farmer had
-disappeared in the woods. &ldquo;I'll bet my hat he been thinkin', lak Uncle
-Rich' said dey would, dat I had er hand in dat bloody business. Po'
-Miz Johnson&mdash;I reckon dey layin' 'er out now. She certney was good. I
-remember how she tol' me at de spring de day I come here ter try en be a
-good, steady boy en not mek dem white men pounce on me ergin. Po' 'oman!
-Seem lak er gre't pity. I reckon Abe Johnson got what was comin' ter
- 'im, but it look lak even Sam Dudlow wouldn't er struck dat good'oman
-down. Maybe he thought he had ter&mdash;maybe she cornered 'im; but I dunno;
-he's er tough nigger&mdash;de toughest I ever run ercross, en I've seed er
-lots um.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Pete leaned on the fence, wiped his perspiring brow with his bare hand,
- snapped his fingers like a whip to rid them of the drops of sweat, and
- allowed his thoughts to merge into the darker view of the situation. He
- was really not much afraid. Under grave danger, a negro has not so great a
- concern over death as a white man, because he is not endowed with
- sufficient intelligence to grasp its full import, and yet to-day Pete was
- feeling unusual qualms of unrest.
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;Dar's one thing sho,&rdquo; he finally concluded; &ldquo;dat white man looked
-powerful funny when he seed me, en he said he heard I'd run off. I'll
-bet my hat he's makin' a bee-line fer dat sto' ter tell 'em whar I is
-right now. I wish one thing. I wish Marse Carson was here; he'd sen' 'em
- 'bout deir business mighty quick.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With a shrug of indecision, the boy set to work. His back happened to be
- turned towards the store, barely visible over the swelling ground in the
- distance, and so he failed to note the rapid approach across the meadow of
- two men till they were close upon him. One was Jeff Braider, the sheriff
- of the county, a stalwart man of forty, in high top-boots, a leather belt
- holding a-long revolver, a broad-brimmed hat, and coarse gray suit; his
- companion was a hastily deputized citizen armed with a double-barrelled
- shot-gun.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Put down that hoe, Pete!&rdquo; the sheriff commanded, sharply, as the negro
- turned with it in his hand. &ldquo;Put it down, I say! Drop it!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What I gwine put it down for?&rdquo; the negro asked, in characteristic tone.
- &ldquo;Huh! I got ter do my work.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Drop it, and don't begin to give me your jaw,&rdquo; the sheriff said. &ldquo;You've
- got to come on with us. You are under arrest.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What you 'rest me fer?&rdquo; Pete asked, still doggedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are accused of killing the Johnsons last night, and if you didn't do
- it, I'm here to say you are in the tightest hole an innocent man ever got
- in. King and I are going to do our level best to put you in safety in the
- Gilmore jail so you can be tried fairly by law, but we've got to get a
- move on us. The whole section is up in arms, and we'll have hard work
- dodging 'em. Come on. I won't rope you, but if you start to run we'll
- shoot you down like a rabbit, so don't try that on.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My Gawd, Mr. Braider, I didn't kill dem folks!&rdquo; Pete said, pleadingly. &ldquo;I
- don't know a thing about it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, whether you did or not, they say you threatened to do it, and your
- life won't be worth a hill of beans if you stay here. The only thing to do
- is to get you to the Gilmore jail. We may make it through the mountains if
- we are careful, but we've got to git horses. We can borrow some from Jabe
- Parsons down the road, if he hasn't gone crazy like all the rest. Come
- on.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I tell you, Mr. Braider, I don't know er thing 'bout dis,&rdquo; Pete said;
- &ldquo;but it looks ter me lak mebby Sam Dudlow&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't make any statement to me,&rdquo; the officer said, humanely enough in his
- rough way. &ldquo;You are accused of a dirty job, Pete, and it will take a dang
- good lawyer to save you from the halter, even if we save you from this
- mob; but talkin' to me won't do no good. Me'n King here couldn't protect
- you from them men if they once saw you. I tell you, young man, all hell
- has broke loose. For twenty miles around no black skin will be safe, much
- less yours. Innocent or guilty, you've certainly shot off your mouth. Come
- on.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Without further protest, Pete dropped his hoe and went with them.
- Doggedly, and with an overpowering and surly sense of injury, he slouched
- along between the two men.
- </p>
- <p>
- A quarter of a mile down a narrow, private road, which was traversed
- without meeting any one, they came to Parsons' farm-house, a one-story
- frame building with a porch in front, and a roof that sloped back to a
- crude lean-to shed in the rear. A wagon stood under the spreading branches
- of a big beech, and near by a bent-tongued harrow, weighted down by a heap
- of stones, a chicken-coop, an old beehive, and a ramshackle buggy. No one
- was in sight. No living thing stirred about the place, save the turkeys
- and ducks and a solitary peacock strutting about in the front yard, where
- rows of half-buried stones from the mountain-sides formed the jagged
- borders of a gravel walk from the fence to the steps.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sheriff drew the gate open and, according to rural etiquette, hallooed
- lustily. After a pause the sound of some one moving in the house reached
- their ears. A window-curtain was drawn aside, and later a woman stood in
- the doorway and advanced wonderingly to the edge of the porch. She was
- portly, red of complexion, about middle-aged, and dressed in checked
- gingham, the predominating color of which was blue.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'll be switched!&rdquo; she ejaculated; &ldquo;what do you-uns want?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Want to see Jabe, Mrs. Parsons; is he about?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's over in his hay-field, or was a minute ago. What you want with him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We've got to borrow some hosses,&rdquo; the sheriff answered. &ldquo;We want three&mdash;one
- fer each. We're goin' to try to dodge them blood-thirsty mobs, Mrs.
- Parsons, an' put this feller in jail, whar he'll be safe.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>That</i> boy?&rdquo; The woman came down the steps, rolling her sleeves up.
- &ldquo;Why, that boy didn't kill them folks. I know that boy, he's the son of
- old Mammy Linda and Uncle Lewis Warren. Now, look here, Jeff Braider,
- don't you and Bill King go and make eternal fools o' yourselves. That boy
- didn't no more do that nasty work than I did. It ain't <i>in</i> 'im. He
- hain't that look. I know niggers as well as you or anybody else.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I <i>didn't</i> do it, Mrs. Parsons,&rdquo; the prisoner affirmed. &ldquo;I
- didn't! I didn't!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know you didn't,&rdquo; said the woman. &ldquo;Wasn't I standin' here in the door
- this mornin' and saw him git up an' go out to git his wood and cook his
- breakfast? Then I seed 'im shoulder his grubbin'-hoe and go to the field
- to work. You officers may think you know it all, but no nigger ain't
- agoin' to stay around like that after killin' a man an' woman in cold
- blood. The nigger that did that job was some scamp that's fur from the
- spot by this time, and not a boy fetched up among good white folks like
- this one was, with the best old mammy and daddy that ever had kinky
- heads.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But witnesses say he threatened Abe Johnson a month ago,&rdquo; argued Braider.
- &ldquo;I have to do my duty, Mrs. Parsons. There never would be any justice if
- we overlooked a thing as pointed as that is.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Threatened 'im?&rdquo; the woman cried; &ldquo;well, what does that prove? A nigger
- will talk back an' act surly on his death-bed if he's mad. That's all the
- way they have of defendin' theirselves. If Pete hadn't talked some after
- the lashin' he got from them men, thar'd 'a' been some'n' wrong with him.
- Now, you let 'im loose. As shore as you start off with that boy, he'll be
- lynched. The fact that you've got 'im in tow will be all them crazy men
- want. You couldn't get two miles in any direction from here without bein'
- stopped; they are as thick as fleas on all sides, an' every road is under
- watch.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm sorry I can't take yore advice, Mrs. Parsons,&rdquo; Braider said, almost
- out of patience. &ldquo;I've got my duty to perform, an' I know what it is a
- sight better than you do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you start off with that boy his blood will be on yore head,&rdquo; the woman
- said, firmly. &ldquo;Left alone, and advised to hide opt till this excitement is
- over, he might stand a chance to save his neck; but with you&mdash;why,
- you mought as well stand still and yell to that crazy gang to come on.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, we've got to git horses to go on with, and yours are the nearest.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Huh! you won't ride no harmless nigger to the scaffold on <i>my</i>
- stock,&rdquo; the woman said, sharply. &ldquo;I know whar my duty lies. A woman with a
- thimbleful of brains don't have to listen to a long string of testimony to
- know a murderer when she sees one; that boy's as harmless as a baby and
- you are trying your level best to have him mobbed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, right is on my side, and I can take the horses if I see fit in the
- furtherance of law an' order,&rdquo; said Braider. &ldquo;If Jabe was here he'd tell
- me to go ahead, an' so I'll have to do it anyway. Bill, you stay here on
- guard an' I'll bridle the horses an' lead 'em out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A queer look, half of anger, half of definite purpose, settled on the
- strong, rugged face of the woman, as she saw the sheriff stalk off to the
- barn-yard gate, enter it, and let it close after him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bill King,&rdquo; she said, drawing nearer the man left in charge of the
- bewildered prisoner, who now for the first time under the words of his
- defender had sensed his real danger&mdash;&ldquo;Bill King, you hain't agoin' to
- lead that poor boy right to his death this way&mdash;you don't look like
- that sort of a man.&rdquo; She suddenly swept her furtive eyes over the
- barn-yard, evidently noting that the sheriff was now in the stable. &ldquo;No,
- you hain't&mdash;for I hain't agoin' to <i>let</i> you!&rdquo; And suddenly,
- without warning even to the slightest change of facial expression, she
- grasped the end of the shot-gun the man held, and whirled him round Like a
- top.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Run, boy!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Run for the woods, and God be with you!&rdquo; For an
- instant Pete stood as if rooted to the spot, and then, as swift of foot as
- a young Indian, he turned and darted through the gate and round the
- farm-house, leaving the woman and King struggling for the possession of
- the gun. It fell to the ground, but she grasped King around the waist and
- clung to him with the tenacity of a bull-dog.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good God, Mrs. Parsons,&rdquo; he panted, writhing in her grasp, &ldquo;let me
- loose!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a smothered oath from the barn-yard, and, revolver in hand, the
- sheriff ran out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What the hell!&mdash;which way did he go?&rdquo; he gasped.
- </p>
- <p>
- But King, still in the tight embrace of his assailant, seemed too badly
- upset to reply. And it was not till Braider had torn her locked hands
- loose that King could stammer out, &ldquo;Round the house&mdash;into the woods!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' we couldn't catch 'im to save us from&mdash;&rdquo; Braider said. &ldquo;Madam,
- I'll handle you for this! I'll push this case against you to the full
- limit of the law!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'll do nothin' of the kind,&rdquo; the woman said, &ldquo;unless you want to make
- yourself the laughin'-stock of the whole community. In doin' what I done I
- acted fer all the good women of this country; an' when you run ag'in we'll
- beat you at the polls. Law an' order's one thing, but officers helpin'
- mobs do their dirty work is another. If the boy deserves a trial he
- deserves it, but he'd not 'a' stood one chance in ten million in your
- charge, <i>an' you know it</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this juncture a man emerged from the close-growing bushes across the
- road, a look of astonishment on his face. It was Jabe Parsons. &ldquo;What's
- wrong here?&rdquo; he cried, excitedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, nothin' much,&rdquo; Braider answered, with a white sneer of fury. &ldquo;We
- stopped here with Pete Warren to borrow your horses to git 'im over the
- mountain to the Gilmore jail, an' your good woman grabbed Bill's gun while
- I was in the stable an' deliberately turned the nigger loose.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Great God! what's the matter with you?&rdquo; Parsons thundered at his wife,
- who, red-faced and defiant, stood rubbing a small bruised spot on her
- wrist.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothin's the matter with me,&rdquo; she retorted, &ldquo;except I've got more sense
- than you men have. I know that boy didn't kill them folks, an' I didn't
- intend to see you-all lynch 'im.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I know he did!&rdquo; Parsons yelled. &ldquo;But he'll be caught before night,
- anyway. He can't hide in them woods from hounds like they've got down the
- road.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your wife 'lowed he'd be safer in the woods than in the Gilmore jail,&rdquo;
- Braider said, with another sneer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, he <i>would</i>. As for that,&rdquo; Parsons retorted, &ldquo;if you think that
- army headed by the dead woman's daddy an' brothers would halt at a puny
- bird-cage like that jail, you don't know mountain men. They'd smash the
- damn thing like an egg-shell. I reckon a sheriff has to <i>pretend</i> to
- act fer the law, whether he earns his salary or not. Well, I'll go down
- the road an' tell 'em whar to look. Thar'll be a picnic som 'er's nigh
- here in a powerful short while. We've got men enough to surround that
- whole mountain.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIV.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0016" id="linkimage-0016"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9127.jpg" alt="9127 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9127.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- HE following night was a cloudless, moonlit one, and restlessly and
- heart-sore Helen walked the upper floor of the veranda, her eyes
- constantly bent on the street leading past Dwight's on to the centre of
- the town. The greater part of the day she had spent with Linda, trying to
- pacify her and rouse the hope that Pete would not be implicated in the
- trouble in the mountains. Helen had gone down to Carson's office about
- noon, feeling vaguely that he could advise her better than any one else in
- the grave situation. She had found Garner seated at his desk, bent over a
- law-book, a studious expression on his face. Seeing her in the doorway, he
- sprang up gallantly and proffered a rickety chair, from which he had
- hastily dumped a pile of old newspapers.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is Carson in?&rdquo; she asked, sitting down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh no, he's gone over to the farm,&rdquo; Garner said. &ldquo;I couldn't hold him
- here after he heard of the trouble. You see, Miss Helen, he thinks, from a
- few things picked up, that Pete is likely to be suspected and be roughly
- handled, and, you know, as he was partly the cause of the boy's going
- there, he naturally would feel&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was the <i>real</i> cause of it,&rdquo; the girl broke in, with a sigh and a
- troubled face. &ldquo;We both thought it was for the best, and if it results in
- Pete's death I shall never forgive myself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I wouldn't look at it that way,&rdquo; Garner said. &ldquo;You were both acting
- for what you thought was right. As I say, I tried my best to keep Carson
- from going over there to-day, but he would go. We almost had an open
- rupture over it. You see, Miss Helen, I have set my head on seeing him in
- the legislature, and he is eternally doing things that kill votes. There
- is not a thing in the category of political offences as fatal as this very
- thing. He's already taken Pete's part and abused the men who whipped him,
- and now that the boy is suspected of retaliating and killing the Johnsons,
- why, the people will&mdash;well, I wouldn't be one bit surprised to see
- them jump on Carson himself. Men infuriated like that haven't any more
- sense than mad dogs, and they won't stand for a white man opposing them.
- But, of course, you know why Carson is acting so recklessly.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do? What do you mean, Mr. Garner?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The lawyer smiled, wiped his facile mouth with his small white hand, and
- said, teasingly: &ldquo;Why, you are at the bottom of it. Carson wants to save
- the boy simply because you are indirectly interested in him. That's the
- whole thing in a nutshell. He's been as mad as a wet hen ever since they
- whipped Pete, because he was the son of your old mammy, and now that the
- boy's in actual peril Carson has gone clean daft. Well, it's reported
- among the gossips about town that you turned him down, Miss Helen&mdash;like
- you did some of the balance of us presumptuous chaps that didn't know
- enough to keep our hearts where they belonged&mdash;but you sat on the
- best man in the bunch when you did it. It's me that's doing this talking.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen sat silent and pale for a moment, unable to formulate a reply to his
- outspoken remark. Presently she said, evasively: &ldquo;Then you think both of
- them are in actual danger?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, Pete hasn't one chance in a million,&rdquo; Garner said, gently. &ldquo;There
- is no use trying to hide that fact; and if Carson should happen to run
- across Dan Willis&mdash;well, one or the other would have to drop. Carson
- is in a dangerous mood. He believes as firmly in Pete's innocence as he
- does in his own, and if Dan Willis dared to threaten him, as he's likely
- to do when they meet, why, Carson would defend himself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen drew her veil down over her eyes and Garner could see that she was
- quivering from head to foot.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, it's awful&mdash;awful!&rdquo; he heard her say, softly. Then she rose and
- moved to the open door, where she stood as if undecided what step to take.
- &ldquo;Is there no way to get any&mdash;any news?&rdquo; she asked, tremulously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;None now,&rdquo; he told her. &ldquo;In times of excitement over in the mountains,
- few people come into town; they all want to stay at home and see it
- through.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She stepped out on the sidewalk, and he followed her, gallantly holding
- his hat in his hand. Scarcely a soul was in sight. The town seemed
- deserted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Madam, rumor,&rdquo; Garner said, with a smile, &ldquo;reports that your friend Mr.
- Sanders, from Augusta, is coming up for a visit.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I had a letter from him this morning,&rdquo; Helen said, in a dignified
- tone. &ldquo;My father must have spoken of it. It will be Mr. Sanders' first
- visit to Darley, and he will find us terribly upset. If I knew how to
- reach him I'd ask him to wait a few days till this uncertainty is over,
- but he is on his way here&mdash;is, in fact, stopping somewhere in Atlanta&mdash;and
- intends to come on up to-morrow or the next day. Does&mdash;does Carson&mdash;has
- he heard of Mr. Sanders' coming?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, it was sprung on him this morning for a deadly purpose,&rdquo; Garner
- said, with a significant smile. &ldquo;The whole gang&mdash;Keith, Wade, and Bob
- Smith&mdash;were in here trying to keep him from going to the farm. They
- had tried everything they could think of to stop him, and as a last resort
- set in to teasing. Keith told him Sanders would sit in the parlor and say
- sweet things to you while Carson was trying to liberate the ex-slaves of
- your family at the risk of bone and sinew. Keith said Carson was showing
- the finest proof of fidelity that was ever given&mdash;fidelity to <i>the
- man in the parlor</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Keith ought to have been ashamed of himself,&rdquo; Helen said, with her first
- show of vexation. &ldquo;And what did Carson say?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The poor chap took it all in a good-humor,&rdquo; Garner said. &ldquo;In fact, he was
- so much wrought up over Pete's predicament that he hardly heard what they
- were saying.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You really think Carson is in danger, too?&rdquo; Helen continued, after a
- moment's silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If he meets Dan Willis, yes,&rdquo; said Garner. &ldquo;If he opposes the mob, yes
- again. Dan Willis has already succeeded in creating a lot of unpopularity
- for him in that quarter, and the mere sight of Carson at such a time would
- be like a torch to a dry hay-stack.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- So Helen had gone home and spent the afternoon and evening in real torture
- of suspense, and now, as she walked the veranda floor alone with a
- realization of the grim possibilities of the case drawn sharply before her
- mental vision, she was all but praying aloud for Carson's safe return, and
- anxiously keeping her gaze on the moonlit street below. Suddenly her
- attention was drawn to the walk in front of the Dwight house. Some one was
- walking back and forth in a nervous manner, the intermittent flare of a
- cigar flashing out above the shrubbery like the glow of a lightning-bug.
- Could it be&mdash;had Carson returned and entered by the less frequently
- used gate in the rear? For several minutes she watched the figure as it
- strode back and forth with never-ceasing tread, and then, fairly consumed
- with the desire to set her doubts at rest, she went down into the garden
- at the side of the house, softly approached the open gate between the two
- homesteads, and called out: &ldquo;Carson, is that you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The figure paused and turned, the fire of the cigar described a red
- half-circle against the dark background, but no one spoke. Then, as she
- waited at the gate, her heart in her mouth, the smoker came towards her.
- It was old Henry Dwight. He wore no hat nor coat, the night being warm,
- and one of his fat thumbs was under his broad suspender.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, it's not him, Miss Helen,&rdquo; he said, rather gruffly. &ldquo;He hasn't got
- back yet. I've had my hands full since supper. My wife is in a bad way.
- She has been worrying awfully since twelve o'clock, when Carson didn't
- turn up to dinner as usual. She's guessed what he went to the farm for,
- and she's as badly upset as old Linda is over that trifling Pete. I
- thought I had enough trouble before the war over <i>my</i> niggers, but
- here, forty years later, <i>yours</i> are upsetting things even worse. I
- only wish the men that fought to free the black scamps had some part of
- the burden to bear.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It really is awful,&rdquo; Helen responded; &ldquo;and so Mrs. Dwight is upset by
- it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, we had the doctor to come, and he gave some slight dose or other,
- but he said the main thing was to get Carson back and let her know for
- sure that he was safe and sound. I sent a man out there lickety-split on
- the fastest horse I have, and he ought to have got back two hours ago.
- That's what I'm out here for. I know she's not going to let me rest till
- her mind is at ease.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you really think any actual harm could have come to Carson?&rdquo; Helen
- inquired, anxiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It could come to anybody who has the knack my boy has for eternally
- rubbing folks the wrong way,&rdquo; the old man retorted from the depths of his
- irritation; &ldquo;but, Lord, my young lady, <i>you</i> are at the bottom of
- it!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I? Oh, Mr. Dwight, don't say that!&rdquo; Helen pleaded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'm only telling you the <i>truth</i>,&rdquo; said Dwight, throwing his
- cigar away and putting, both thumbs under his suspenders. &ldquo;You know that
- as well as I do. He sees how you are bothered about your old mammy, and he
- has simply taken up your cause. It's just what I'd 'a' done at his age. I
- reckon I'd 'a' fought till I dropped in my tracks for a girl I&mdash;but
- from all accounts you and Carson couldn't agree, or rather <i>you</i>
- couldn't. He seems to be agreeing now and staking his life and political
- chances on it. Well, I don't blame him. It never run in the Dwight blood
- to love more than once, an' then it was always for the pick of the flock.
- Well, you are the pick in this town, an' I wouldn't feel like he was my
- boy if he stepped down and out as easy as some do these days. I met him on
- his way to the farm and tried to shame him out of the trip. I joined the
- others in teasing him about that Augusta fellow, who can do his courting
- by long-distance methods in an easy seat at his writing-desk, while
- up-country chaps are doing the rough work for nothing, but it didn't feaze
- 'im. He tossed his stubborn head, got pretty red in the face, and said he
- was trying to help old Linda and Lewis out, and that he know well enough
- you didn't care a cent for him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen had grown hot and cold by turns, and she now found herself unable to
- make any adequate response to such personal allusions.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Huh, I see I got you teased, too!&rdquo; Dwight said, with a short, staccato
- laugh. &ldquo;Oh, well, you mustn't mind me. I'll go in and see if my wife is
- asleep, and if she is I'll go to bed myself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen, deeply depressed, and beset with many conflicting emotions, turned
- back to the veranda, and, instead of going up to her room, she reclined in
- a hammock stretched between two of the huge, fluted columns. She had been
- there perhaps half an hour when her heart almost stopped pulsating as she
- caught, the dull beat of horses' hoofs up the street. Rising, she saw a
- horseman rein in at the gate at Dwight's. It was Carson; she knew that by
- the way he dismounted and threw the rein over the gate-post.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Carson!&rdquo; she called out. &ldquo;Oh, Carson, I want to see you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He heard, and came along the sidewalk to meet her at the gate where she
- now stood. What had come over him? There was an utter droop of despondent
- weariness upon him, and then as he drew near she saw that his face was
- pale and haggard. For a moment he stood, his hand on the gate she was
- holding open, and only stared.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, what has happened?&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;I've been waiting for you. We haven't
- heard a word.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In a tired, husky voice, for he had made many a speech through the day, he
- told her of Pete's escape. &ldquo;He's still hiding somewhere in the mountains,&rdquo;
- he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, then he may get away after all!&rdquo; she cried.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dwight said nothing, seeming to avoid her great, staring, anxious eyes.
- She laid her hand almost unconsciously on his arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't you think he has a chance, Carson?&rdquo; she repeated&mdash;&ldquo;a bare
- chance?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The whole mountain is surrounded, and they are beating the woods,
- covering every inch of the ground,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It is now only a question of
- time. They will wait till daybreak, and then continue till they have found
- him. How is Mam' Linda?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nearly dead,&rdquo; Helen answered, under her breath.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And my mother?&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She is only worried,&rdquo; Helen told him. &ldquo;Your father thinks she will be all
- right as soon as she is assured of your return.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Only worried? Why, he sent me word she was nearly dead,&rdquo; Carson said,
- with a feeble flare of indignation. &ldquo;I wanted to stay, to be there to make
- one final effort to convince them, but when the message reached me, and
- things were at a standstill anyway, I came home, and now, even if I
- started back to-night, I'd likely be too late. He tricked me&mdash;my
- father tricked me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you yourself? Did you meet that&mdash;Dan Willis?&rdquo; Helen asked. He
- stared at her hesitatingly for an instant, and then said: &ldquo;I happened not
- to. He was very active in the chase and seemed always to be somewhere
- else. He killed all my efforts.&rdquo; Carson leaned heavily against the white
- paling fence as he continued. &ldquo;As soon as I'd talk a crowd of men into my
- way of thinking, he'd come along and fire them with fury again. He told
- them I was only making a grandstand play for the negro vote, and they
- swallowed it. They swallowed it and jeered and hissed me as I went along.
- Garner is right. I've killed every chance I ever had with those people.
- But I don't care.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen sighed. &ldquo;Oh, Carson, you did it all because&mdash;because I felt as
- I did about Pete. I know that was it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He made no denial as he stood awkwardly avoiding her eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I shall never, never forgive myself,&rdquo; she said, in pained accents. &ldquo;Mr.
- Garner and all your friends say that your election was the one thing you
- held desirable, the one thing that would&mdash;would thoroughly reinstate
- you in your father's confidence, and yet I&mdash;I&mdash;oh, Carson I <i>did</i>
- want you to win! I wanted it&mdash;wanted it&mdash;wanted it!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, well, don't bother about that,&rdquo; he said, and she saw that he was
- trying to hide his own disappointment. &ldquo;I admit I started into this
- because&mdash;because I knew how keenly you felt for Linda, but to-day,
- Helen, as I rode from mad throng to mad throng of those good men with
- their dishevelled hair and bloodshot eyes, their very souls bent to that
- trail, that pitiful trail of revenge, I began to feel that I was fighting
- for a great principle, a principle that you had planted within me. I
- gloried in it for its own sake, and because it had its birth in your sweet
- sympathy and love for the unfortunate. I could never have experienced it
- but for you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you failed,&rdquo; Helen almost sobbed. &ldquo;You failed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, utterly. What I've done amounted to nothing more than irritating
- them. Those men, many of whom I love and admire, were wounded to their
- hearts, and I was only keeping their sores open with my fine-spun theories
- of human justice. They will learn their lesson slowly, but <i>they will
- learn it</i>. When they have caught and lynched poor, stupid Pete, they
- may learn later that he was innocent, and then they will realize what I
- was trying to keep them from doing. They will be friendly to me then, but
- Wiggin will be in office.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, my father thinks this thing is going to defeat you.&rdquo; Helen sighed.
- &ldquo;And, Carson, it's killing me to think that I am the prime cause of it. If
- I'd had a man's head I'd have known that your effort could accomplish
- nothing, and I'd have been like Mr. Garner and the others, and asked you
- not to mix up in it; but I couldn't help myself. Mam' Linda has your name
- on her lips with every breath. She thinks the sun rises and sets in you,
- and that you only have to give an order to have it obeyed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's the pity of it,&rdquo; Carson said, with a sigh.
- </p>
- <p>
- At this juncture there was the sound of a window-sash sliding upward, and
- old Dwight put out his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come on in!&rdquo; he called out. &ldquo;Your mother is awake and absolutely refuses
- to believe you haven't a dozen bullet-holes in you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, father, I'm coming,&rdquo; Carson said, and impulsively he held out
- his hand and clasped Helen's in a steady, sympathetic pressure.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, you go to bed, little girl,&rdquo; he said, more tenderly than he
- realized. In fact, it was a term he had used only once before, long before
- her brother's death. &ldquo;Pardon me,&rdquo; he pleaded; &ldquo;I didn't know what I was
- saying. I&mdash;I was worried over seeing you look so tired, and&mdash;and
- I spoke without thinking.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You can say it whenever you wish, Carson,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;As if I could get
- angry at you after&mdash;after&mdash;&rdquo; But she did not finish, for with
- her hand still warmly clasping his fingers, she was listening to a distant
- sound. It was a restless human tread on a resounding floor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's Mam' Linda,&rdquo; Helen said. &ldquo;She walks like that night and day. I must
- go to her and&mdash;tell her you are back, but oh, how <i>can</i> I?
- Good-night, Carson. Ill never forget what you have done&mdash;never!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XV.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0017" id="linkimage-0017"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9139.jpg" alt="9139 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9139.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- FTER an almost sleepless night, spent for the greater part in despondent
- reflections over his failure in the things to which he had directed his
- hopes and energies, Carson rose about seven o'clock, went into his
- mother's room to ask how she had rested through the night, and then
- descended, to breakfast. It was eight o'clock when he arrived at the
- office. Garner was there in a cloud of dust, sweeping a pile of torn
- papers into the already filled fireplace.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm going to touch a match to this the first rainy day&mdash;if I think
- of it,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It's liable to set the roof on fire when it's dry as it
- is now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Any news from the mountains?&rdquo; Carson asked, as he sat down at his desk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; Pole Baker was in here just now.&rdquo; Garner leaned his broom-handle
- against the mantel-piece, and stood critically eying his partner's worn
- face and dejected mien. &ldquo;He said the mob, or mobs, for there are twenty
- factions of them, had certainly hemmed Pete in. He was hiding somewhere on
- Elk Knob, and they hadn't then located him. Pole left there long before
- day and said they had already set in afresh. I reckon it will be over
- soon. He told me to keep you here if I had to swear out a writ of
- dangerous lunacy against you. He says you have not only killed your own
- political chances, but that you couldn't save the boy if you were the
- daddy of every man in the chase. They've smelled blood and they want to
- taste it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You needn't worry about me,&rdquo; Carson said, dejectedly. &ldquo;I realize how
- helpless I was yesterday, and am still. There was only one thing that
- might have been done if we had acted quickly, and that was to telegraph
- the Governor for troops.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you wouldn't sanction that; you know you wouldn't,&rdquo; said Garner. &ldquo;You
- know every mother's son of those white men is acting according to the
- purest dictates of his inner soul. They think they are right. They believe
- in law, and while I am a member of the bar, by Heaven! I say to you that
- our whole legal system is rotten to the core. Politics will clear a
- criminal at the drop of a hat. A dozen voters can jerk a man from life
- imprisonment to the streets of this town by a single telegram. No, you
- know those sturdy men over there think they are right, and you would not
- be the cause of armed men shooting them down like rabbits in a fence
- corner.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, they think they are right,&rdquo; Carson said. &ldquo;And they were my friends
- till this came up. Any mail?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I haven't been to the post-office. I wish you'd go. You need exercise;
- you are off color&mdash;you are as yellow as a new saddle. Drop this
- thing. The Lord Himself can't make water run up-hill. Quit thinking about
- it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson went out into the quiet street and walked along to the post-office.
- At the intersection of the streets near the Johnston House, on any
- ordinary day, a dozen drays and hacks in the care of negro drivers would
- have been seen, and on the drays and about the hacks stood, as a rule,
- many idle negro men and boys; but this morning the spot was significantly
- vacant. At the negro barber-shop, kept by Buck Black, a mulatto of marked
- dignity and intelligence for one of his race, only the black barbers might
- be seen, and they were not lounging about the door, but stood at their
- chairs, their faces grave, their tongues unusually silent. They might be
- asking themselves questions as to the possible extent of the fires of
- race-hatred just now raging&mdash;if the capture and death of Pete Warren
- would quench the conflagration, or if it would roll on towards them like
- the licking flames of a burning prairie&mdash;they might, I say, ask <i>themselves</i>
- such questions, but to the patrons of their trade they kept discreet
- silence. And no white man who went near them that day would ask them what
- they believed or what they felt, for the blacks are not a people who give
- much thought even to their own social problems. They had leaned for many
- generations upon white guidance, and, with childlike, hereditary instinct,
- they were leaning still.
- </p>
- <p>
- Finding no letters of importance in the little glass-faced and numbered
- box at the post-office, Carson, sick at heart and utterly discouraged,
- went up to the Club. Here, idly knocking the balls about on a
- billiard-table, a cigar in his mouth, was Keith Gordon.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Want to play a game of pool?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not this morning, old man,&rdquo; Carson answered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I don't either,&rdquo; said Keith. &ldquo;I went to the bank and tried to add
- up some figures for the old man, but my thinker wouldn't work. It's out of
- whack. That blasted nigger Pete is the prime cause of my being upset. I
- came by Major Warren's this morning. Sister feels awfully sorry for Mam'
- Linda, and asked me to take her a jar of jelly. You know old colored
- people love little attentions like that from white people, when they are
- sick or in trouble. Well&rdquo;&mdash;Keith held up his hands, the palms outward&mdash;&ldquo;I
- don't want any more in mine. I've been to death-bed scenes, funerals,
- wrecks on railroads, and all sorts of horrors, but that was simply too
- much. It simply beggars description&mdash;to see that old woman bowed
- there in her door like a dumb brute with its tongue tied to a stake. It
- made me ashamed of myself, though, for not at least trying to do
- something. I glory in you, old man. You failed, but you <i>tried</i>.
- By-the-way, that's the only comfort Mam' Linda has had&mdash;the only
- thing. Helen was there, the dear girl&mdash;and to think her visit home
- has to be like this!&mdash;she was there trying to soothe the old woman,
- but nothing that was said could produce anything but that awful groaning
- of hers till Lewis said something about your going over there yesterday,
- and that stirred her up. She rose in her chair and walked to the gate and
- folded her big arms across her breast.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'I thank God young marster felt fer me dat way,' she said. 'He's de best
- young man on de face o' de earth. I'll go down ter my grave blessing 'im
- fer dis. He's got er <i>soul</i> in 'im. He knows how old Mammy Lindy
- feels en he was tryin' ter help her, God bless 'im! He couldn't do
- nothin', but he tried&mdash;he tried, dough everybody was holdin' 'im back
- en sayin' it would spile his 'lection. Well, if it <i>do</i> harm 'im, it
- will show dat Gawd done turn ergin white en black bofe.' I came away,&rdquo;
- Keith finished, after a pause, in which Carson said nothing. &ldquo;I couldn't
- stand it. Helen was crying like a child, her face wet with tears, and she
- wasn't trying to hide it. I was looking for some one to come every minute
- with the final news, and I didn't want to face that. Good God, old man,
- what are we coming to? Historians, Northern ones, seem to think the days
- of slavery were benighted, but God knows such things as this never
- happened then. Now, did it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; it's terrible,&rdquo; Carson agreed, and he stepped to a window and looked
- out over the roofs of the near-by stores to the wagon-yard beyond.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, the great and only, the truly accepted one,&rdquo; Keith went on, in a
- lighter tone, &ldquo;the man who did us all up brown, Mr. Earle Sanders, of
- Augusta, has unwittingly chosen a gloomy date for his visit. He's here,
- installed in the bridal-chamber of the Hotel de Johnston. Helen got a note
- from him just as I was leaving. On my soul, old man&mdash;maybe it's
- because I want to see it that way&mdash;but, really, it didn't seem to me
- that she looked exactly elated, you know, like I imagined she would, from
- the way the local gossips pile it on. You know, the idea struck me that
- maybe she is not <i>really engaged</i>, after all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She is worried; she is not herself to-day,&rdquo; Carson said, coldly, though
- in truth his blood was surging hotly through his veins. It had come at
- last. The man who was to rob him of all he cared for in life was at hand.
- Turning from Keith, he pretended to be looking over some of the dog-eared
- magazines in the reading-room, and then feeling an overwhelming desire to
- be alone with the dull pain in his breast, he waved a careless signal to
- Keith and went down to the street. In front of the hotel stood a pair of
- sleek, restive bays harnessed to a new top-buggy. They were held by the
- owner of the best livery-stable in the town, a rough ex-mountaineer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say, Carson,&rdquo; the man called out, proudly, &ldquo;you'll have to git up early
- in the morning to produce a better yoke of thorough-breds than these.
- Never been driven over these roads before. I didn't intend to let 'em out
- fer public use right now, but a big, rich fellow from Augusta is here
- sparkin', and he wanted the best I had and wouldn't touch anything else.
- Money wasn't any object. He turned up his nose at all my other stock. Gee!
- look at them trim legs and thighs&mdash;a dead match as two black-eyed
- peas.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, they are all right.&rdquo; Carson walked on and went into Blackburn's
- store, for no other reason than that he wanted to avoid meeting people and
- discussing the trouble Pete Warren was in, or hearing further comments on
- the stranger's visit. He might have chosen a better retreat, however, for
- in a group at the window nearest the hotel he found Blackburn, Garner, Bob
- Smith, and Wade Tingle, all peering stealthily out through the dingy glass
- at the team Carson had just inspected.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He'll be out in a minute,&rdquo; Wade was saying, in an undertone. &ldquo;Quit
- pushing me, Bob! They say he's got dead loads of money.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You bet he has,&rdquo; Bob declared; &ldquo;he had a wad of it in big bills large
- enough to stuff a sofa-pillow with. Ike, the porter, who trucked his trunk
- up, said he got a dollar tip. The head waiter is expecting to buy a farm
- after he leaves. Gee! there he comes! Say, Garner, <i>you</i> ought to
- know; is that a brandy-and-soda complexion?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, he doesn't drink a drop,&rdquo; answered Garner. &ldquo;Well, he looks all right,
- as well as I can see through this immaculate window with my eyes full of
- spiderwebs. My, what clothes! Say, Bob, is that style of derby the thing
- now? It looks like an inverted milk-bucket. Come here, Carson, and take a
- peep at the conqueror. If Keith were here we'd have a quomm. By George,
- there's Keith now! He's watching at the window of the barber-shop. Call
- him over, Blackburn. Let's have him here; we need more pall-bearers.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Seems to me you boys are the corpses,&rdquo; Blackburn jested. &ldquo;I'd be ashamed
- to let a clothing-store dummy like that beat me to the tank.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson had heard enough. In his mood and frame of mind their open
- frivolity cut him to the quick. Going out, unnoticed by the others, he
- went to his office. In the little, dusty consultation-room in the rear
- there was an old leather couch. On this he threw himself. There had been
- moments in his life when he had worn the crown of misery, notably the day
- Albert Warren was buried, when, on approaching Helen to offer her his
- sympathies, she had turned from him with a shudder. That had been a gloomy
- hour, but <i>this</i>&mdash;he covered his face with his hands and lay
- still. On that day a faint hope had vaguely fluttered within him&mdash;a
- hope of reformation; a hope of making a worthy place for himself in life
- and of ultimately winning her favor and forgiveness. But now it was all
- over. He had actually seen with his own eyes the man who was to be her
- husband. He was sure now that the report was true. The visit at such a
- grave crisis confirmed all that had been said. Helen had telegraphed him
- of her trouble, and Sanders had made all haste to reach her side.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVI.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0018" id="linkimage-0018"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9147.jpg" alt="9147 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9147.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- EHIND the dashing bays the newcomer drove down to Warren's. On the seat
- beside him sat a negro boy sent from the livery-stable to hold the horses.
- Sanders was dressed in the height of fashion, was young, of the blond
- type, and considered handsome. A better figure no man need have desired.
- The people living in the Warren neighborhood, who peered curiously out of
- windows, not having Dwight's affairs at heart, indulged in small wonder
- over the report that Helen was about to accept such a specimen of city
- manhood in preference to Carson or any of &ldquo;the home boys.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Alighting at the front gate, Sanders went to the door and rang. He was
- admitted by a colored maid and shown into the quaint old parlor with its
- tall, gilt-framed, pier-glass mirrors and carved mahogany furniture. The
- wide front, lace-curtained windows, which opened on a level with the
- veranda floor, let in a cooling breeze which was most agreeable in
- contrast to the beating heat out-of-doors.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had only a few minutes to wait, for Helen had just returned from a
- visit to Linda's cottage and was in the library across the hall. He heard
- her coming and stood up, flushing expectantly, an eager light flashing in
- his eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am taking you by surprise,&rdquo; he said, as he grasped her extended hand
- and held it for an instant.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you know you told me when I left,&rdquo; Helen said, &ldquo;that it would be
- impossible for you to get away from business till after the first of next
- month, so I naturally supposed&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The trouble was&rdquo;&mdash;he laughed as he stood courteously waiting for her
- to sit before doing so himself&mdash;&ldquo;the trouble was that I didn't know
- myself then as I do now. I thought I could wait like any sensible man of
- my age, but I simply couldn't, Helen. After you left, the town was simply
- unbearable. I seemed not to want to go anywhere but to the places to which
- we went together, and there I suffered a regular agony of the blues. The
- truth is, I'm killing two birds with one stone. We were about to send our
- lawyer to Chattanooga to settle up a legal matter there, and I persuaded
- my partner to let me do it. So you see, after all, I shall not be wholly
- idle. I can run up there from here and back, I believe, in the same day.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it is not far,&rdquo; Helen answered. &ldquo;We often go up there to do
- shopping.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm going to confess something else,&rdquo; Sanders said, flushing slightly.
- &ldquo;Helen, you may not forgive me for it, but I've been uneasy.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Uneasy?&rdquo; Helen leaned as far back in her chair as she could, for he had
- bent forward till his wide, hungry eyes were close to hers.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I've fought the feeling every day and night since you left. At times
- my very common-sense would seem to conquer and I'd feel a little better
- about it, but it would only be a short time till I'd be down in the dregs
- again.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, what is the matter?&rdquo; Helen asked, half fearfully.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was your letters, Helen,&rdquo; he said, his handsome face very grave as he
- leaned towards her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My letters? Why, I wrote as often&mdash;even often-er&mdash;than I
- promised,&rdquo; the girl said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, don't think me over-exacting,&rdquo; Sanders implored her with eyes and
- voice. &ldquo;I know you did all you agreed to do, but somehow&mdash;well, you
- know you seemed so much like one of us down there that I had become
- accustomed to thinking of you as almost belonging to Augusta; but your
- letters showed how very dear Darley and its people are to you, and I was
- obliged to&mdash;well, face the grim fact that we have a strong rival here
- in the mountains.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I thought you knew that I adore my old home,&rdquo; she said, simply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, I know&mdash;most people do&mdash;but, Helen, the letter you
- wrote about the dance your friends&mdash;your 'boys,' as you used to call
- them&mdash;gave you at that quaint club, why, it is simply a piece of
- literature. I've read it over and over time after time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I only wrote as I felt, out of a full heart,&rdquo; the girl said. &ldquo;When
- you meet them, and know them as I do, you will not wonder at my fidelity&mdash;at
- my enthusiasm over that particular tribute.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Sanders laughed. &ldquo;Well, I suppose I am simply jealous&mdash;jealous not
- alone for myself, but for Augusta. Why, you can't imagine how you are
- missed. A party of the old crowd went around to your aunt's as usual the
- Wednesday following your departure, but we were so blue we could hardly
- talk to one another. Helen, the spirit of our old gatherings was gone.
- Your aunt actually cried, and your uncle really drank too much brandy and
- soda.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you mustn't think I don't miss them all,&rdquo; Helen said, deeply
- touched. &ldquo;I think of them every day. It was only that I had been away so
- long that it was glorious to get back home&mdash;to my real home again. I
- love it down there; it is beautiful; you were all so lovely to me, but
- this here is different.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's what I felt in reading your letters,&rdquo; Sanders said. &ldquo;A tone of
- restful content and happiness was in every line you wrote. Somehow, I
- wanted you, in my selfish heart, to be homesick for us so that you would&rdquo;&mdash;the
- visitor drew a deep breath&mdash;&ldquo;be all the more likely to&mdash;to
- consent to live there, you know, <i>some day</i>, permanently.&rdquo; Helen made
- no reply, and Sanders, flushing deeply, wisely turned the subject, as he
- rose and went to a window and drew the curtain aside.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you see those horses?&rdquo; he asked, with a smile. &ldquo;I brought them
- thinking I might prevail on you to take a drive with me this morning. I
- have set my heart on seeing some of the country around the town, and I
- want to do it with you. I hope you can go.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, not to-day! I couldn't think of it to-day!&rdquo; Helen cried, impulsively.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not to-day?&rdquo; he said, crestfallen.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No. Haven't you heard about Mam' Linda's awful trouble?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, that is <i>her</i> son!&rdquo; Sanders said. &ldquo;I heard something of it at
- the hotel. I see. She really must be troubled.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is a wonder it hasn't killed her,&rdquo; Helen answered. &ldquo;I have never seen
- a human being under such frightful torture.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And can nothing be done?&rdquo; Sanders asked. &ldquo;I'd really like to be of use&mdash;to
- help, you know, in <i>some</i> way.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There is nothing to be done&mdash;nothing that <i>can</i> be done,&rdquo; Helen
- said. &ldquo;She knows that, and is simply waiting for the end.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's too bad,&rdquo; Sanders remarked, awkwardly. &ldquo;Might I go to see her?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think you'd better not,&rdquo; said the girl. &ldquo;I don't believe she would care
- to see any but very old friends. I used to think I could comfort her, but
- even I fail now. She is insensible to anything but that one haunting
- horror. She has tried a dozen times to go over to the mountains, but my
- father and Uncle Lewis have prevented it. That mob, angry as they are,
- might really kill her, for she would fight for her young like a tigress,
- and people wrought up like those are mad enough to do anything.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And some people think the negro may not really be guilty, do they not?&rdquo;
- Sanders asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am sure he is not,&rdquo; Helen sighed. &ldquo;I feel it; I know it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was the sound of a closing gate, and Helen looked out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is my father,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Perhaps he has heard something.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Leaving her guest, she went out to the steps. &ldquo;Whose turn-out?&rdquo; the Major
- asked, with admiring curiosity, indicating the horses and buggy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mr. Sanders has come,&rdquo; she said, simply. &ldquo;He's in the parlor. Is there
- any news?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing.&rdquo; The old man removed his hat and wiped his perspiring brow.
- &ldquo;Nothing except that Carson Dwight has gone over there on a fast horse.
- Linda sent him a message, begging him to make one more effort, and he
- went. All his friends tried to stop him, but he dashed out of town like a
- madman. He won't accomplish a thing, and it may cost him his life, but
- he's the right sort, daughter. He's got a heart in him as big as all
- out-of-doors. Blackburn told him Dan Willis was over there, a raging demon
- in human shape, but it only made Carson the more determined. His father
- saw him and ordered him back, and was speechless with fury when Carson
- simply waved his hand and rode on. Go back to the parlor. I'll join you in
- a minute.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have you heard anything?&rdquo; Sanders asked, as Helen re-entered the room and
- stood white and distraught before him.
- </p>
- <p>
- She hesitated, her shifting glance on the floor, and then she stared at
- him almost as one in a dream. &ldquo;He has heard nothing except&mdash;except
- that Carson Dwight has gone over there. He has gone. Mam' Linda begged him
- to make one other effort and he couldn't resist her. She&mdash;she was
- good to his mother and to him when he was a child, and he feels grateful.
- She thinks he is the only one that can help. She told me last night that
- she believed in him as she once believed in God. He can do nothing, but he
- knew it would comfort her for him to try.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This Mr. Dwight is one of your&mdash;your old friends, is he not?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Sanders' face was the playground of conflicting emotions as he stood
- staring at her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Helen answered; &ldquo;one of my best and truest.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He has undertaken a dangerous thing, has he not?&rdquo; Sanders managed to say.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dangerous?&rdquo; Helen shuddered. &ldquo;He has an enemy there who is now seeking
- his life. They are sure to meet. They have already quarrelled, and&mdash;<i>about
- this very thing</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She sat down in the chair she had just left and Sanders stood near her.
- There was a voice in the hall. It was the Major ordering a servant to
- bring in mint julep, and the next moment he was in the parlor hospitably
- introducing himself to the visitor.
- </p>
- <p>
- Seeing her opportunity, Helen rose and left them together. She went up to
- her room, with heavy, dragging footsteps, and stood at the window
- overlooking the Dwight garden and lawn.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson knew that Sanders was in town, she told herself, in gloomy
- self-reproach. He knew his rival was with her, and right now as the poor
- boy was speeding on to&mdash;his death, he thought Sanders was making love
- to her. Helen bit her quivering lip and clinched her fingers. &ldquo;Poor boy!&rdquo;
- she thought, almost with a sob, &ldquo;he deserves better treatment than that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVII
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0019" id="linkimage-0019"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9154.jpg" alt="9154 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9154.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- N his escape from the sheriff and his deputy, Pete Warren ran with the
- speed of a deer-hound through the near-by woods. Thinking his pursuers
- were close behind him, he did not stop even to listen to their footsteps.
- Through dell and fen, up hill and down, over rocks and through tangled
- undergrowth he forged his way, his tongue lolling from the corner of his
- gaping mouth. The thorns and briers had tom gashes in his cheeks, neck,
- and hands, and left his clothing in strips. The wild glare of a hunted
- beast was in his eyes. The land was gradually sloping upward. He was
- getting upon the mountain. For a moment the distraught creature paused,
- bent his ear to listen and try to decide, rationally, calmly, which was
- the better plan, to hide in the caverns and craggy recesses of the
- frowning heights above or speed onward over more level ground. For a
- moment the drumlike pounding of his heart was all the sound he heard, and
- then the blast of a hunter's horn broke the stillness, not two hundred
- yards away, and was thrown back in reverberating echoes from the
- mountain-side. This was followed by a far-off answering shout, the report
- of a signal-gun, and then the mellow, terrifying baying of blood-hounds
- fell upon his ears. Pete stood erect, his knees quivering. No thought of
- prayer passed through his brain. Prayer, to his mind, was only a series of
- empty vocal sounds heard chiefly in churches where black men and women
- stood or knelt in their best clothes, and certainly not for emergencies
- like this, where granite heavens were closing upon stony earth and he was
- caught between.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly bending lower, and fresher for the second wind he had got, he
- sped onward again, choosing the valley rather than the steeper
- mountain-side. Shouts, gun reports, horn-blasts, and the baying of the
- hounds now followed him. Presently he came to a clear mountain creek about
- twenty feet wide and not deeper anywhere than his waist, and in many
- places barely covering the slimy brown stones over which it flowed. Here,
- as if by inspiration, came the remembrance of some story he had heard
- about a pursued negro managing to elude the scent of blood-hounds by
- taking to water, and into the icy stream Pete plunged, and, slipping,
- stumbling, falling, he made his way onward.
- </p>
- <p>
- But his reason told him this slow method really would not benefit him, for
- his pursuers would soon catch up and see him from the banks. He had waded
- up the stream about a quarter of a mile, when he came to a spot where the
- stout branches of a sturdy leaning beech hung down within his reach. The
- idea which came to him was worthy of a white man's brain, for, pulling on
- the bough and finding it firm, he decided upon the original plan of
- getting out of the water there, where his trail would be lost to sight or
- scent, and climbing into the dense foliage above. His pursuers might not
- think to look upward at exactly that spot, and the hounds, bent on
- catching the scent from the ground where he landed, would speed onward,
- farther and farther away. At all events it was worth the trial.
- </p>
- <p>
- With quivering hands he drew the bough down till its leaves sank under the
- water. It bore his weight well and from it he climbed to the massive trunk
- and higher upward, till, in a fork of the tree, he rested, noticing, with
- a throb of relief, that the bough had righted itself and hung as before
- above the surface of the stream. On came the dogs; he could not hear them
- now, for, intent upon their work, they made no sound, but the hoarse,
- maddened voices of men under their guidance reached his ears. The swish
- through the undergrowth, the patter, as of rain on dry leaves, as their
- claws hurled the ground behind them, the snuffing and sneezing&mdash;<i>that
- was the hounds</i>. Closer and closer Pete hugged the tree, hardly
- breathing, fearing now that the water dripping from his clothing or the
- bruised leaves of the bough might betray his presence. But the hounds, one
- on either side of the stream, their noses to the earth, dashed on. Pete
- caught only a gleam of their sleek, dim coats and they were gone. Behind
- them, panting, followed a dozen men. In his fear of being seen, Pete dared
- not even look at their inflamed faces. With closed eyes pressed against
- his wet coat-sleeve, he clung to his place, a hunted thing, neither fish,
- fowl, nor beast, and yet, like them all, a creature of the wilderness,
- endowed with the instinct of self-preservation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They will run 'im down!&rdquo; he heard a man say. &ldquo;Them dogs never have
- failed. The black devil thought he'd throw 'em off by taking to water. He
- didn't know we had one for each bank.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- On ran the men, the sound of their progress becoming less and less audible
- as they receded. Was he safe now? Pete's slow intelligence answered no. He
- was still fully alive to his danger. He might stay there for awhile, but
- not for long. Already, perhaps owing to his desperate running, he had an
- almost maddening thirst, a thirst which the sheer sight of the cool stream
- so near tantalized. Should he descend, satisfy his desire, and attempt to
- regain his place of hiding? No, for he might not seclude himself so
- successfully the next time. Then, with his face resting on his arm, he
- began to feel drowsy. Twisting his body about, he finally found himself in
- a position in which he could recline still close to the tree and rest a
- little, though his feet and legs, surcharged with blood, were painfully
- weighted downward. The forest about him was very quiet. Some bluebirds
- above his head were singing merrily. A gray squirrel with a fuzzy tail was
- perched inquiringly on the brown bough of a near-by pine. Pete reclined
- thus for several minutes, and then the objects about him appeared to be in
- a blur. The far off shouts, horn-blasts, and gun reports beat less
- insistently on his tired brain, and then he found himself playing with a
- kitten&mdash;the queerest, most amusing kitten&mdash;in the sunlight in
- front of his mother's door.
- </p>
- <p>
- He must have slept for hours, for when he opened his eyes the sun was
- sinking behind the top of a distant hill. He tried to draw his aching legs
- up higher and felt stinging pricks of pain from his hips to his toes, as
- his blood leaped into circulation again. After several efforts he
- succeeded in standing on the bough. To his pangs of thirst were now added
- those of hunger. For hours he stood thus. He saw the light of day die out,
- first on the landscape and later from the clear sky. Now, he told himself,
- under cover of night, he would escape, but something happened to prevent
- the attempt. Through the darkness he saw the flitting lights off many pine
- torches. They passed to and fro under the trees, sometimes quite near him,
- and as far as he could see up the mountain-sides they flickered like the
- sinister night-eyes of his doom. He stood till he felt as if he could do
- so no longer, and then he got down on the bough as before, and after hours
- of conscious hunger and thirst and cramping pains he slept again. Thus he
- passed that night, and when the golden rays of sunlight came piercing the
- gray mountain mists and flooding the landscape with its warm glory, Pete
- Warren, hearing the voices of sleepless revenge, now more numerous and
- harsh and packed with hate&mdash;hearing them on all sides from far and
- near&mdash;dared not stir. He remained perched in his leafy nook like some
- half-knowing, primeval thing, avoiding the flint-tipped arrows of the
- high-cheeked, straight-haired men lurking beneath.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVIII
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0020" id="linkimage-0020"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9159.jpg" alt="9159 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9159.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- ARSON DWIGHT remained two days in the vicinity of his farm waiting
- gloomily for the discovery and arrest of Pete Warren, his sole hope being
- that at the last grewsome moment he might prevail on the distraught
- man-hunters to listen to a final appeal for law and order. He was forced,
- however, to return to Darley, feeling sure, as did the others, that Pete
- was hiding in some undiscovered place in the mountains, or shrewd and deft
- enough to avoid the approach of man or hound. But it would not be for
- long, the hunters told themselves, for the entire spot was surrounded and
- well guarded and they would starve him out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The gang&rdquo; breathed more freely when they saw Carson appear in the doorway
- of the den on the night of his return, and learned that through some
- miracle he had failed to meet Dan Willis, though not one of them was
- favorably impressed by the outward appearance of their leader. His eyes,
- in their darkened sockets, gleamed like despondent fires; on his tanned
- cheeks hectic flushes had appeared and his hands quivered as if from
- nervous exhaustion. Not a man among them dared reproach him for the
- further and futile political mistake he had made. He was a ruined man, and
- yet they admired him the more as they looked down on him, begrimed with
- the dregs of his failure. Garner's opinion, to himself expressed, was that
- Dwight was a failure only on the surface, but that it was the surface
- which counted everywhere except in heaven, and there no one knew what sort
- of coin would be current. Garner loved him. He loved him for his hopeless
- fidelity to Helen, for his firm-jawed clinging to a mere principle, such
- as trying to keep an old negro woman who had faith in him from breaking
- her heart, for his risking death itself to obtain full justice-for the
- black boy who was his servant. Yes, Garner mused, Carson certainly
- deserved a better deal all round, but deserving a thing according to the
- highest ethics, and getting it according to the lowest were different.
- </p>
- <p>
- I The following night there was a queer, secret meeting of negroes in the
- town. Stealthily they left their cabins and ramshackle homes, and one by
- one they glided through the darkest streets and alleys to the house of one
- Neb Wynn, a man who had acquired his physical being and crudely unique
- personality from the confluence of three distinct streams of blood&mdash;the
- white, the Cherokee Indian, and the negro. He owned and drove a dray on
- the streets of the town, and being economical he had accumulated enough
- means to build the two-story frame (not yet painted) house in which he
- lived. The lower floor was used as a negro restaurant, which Neb's wife
- managed, the upper was devoted to the family bedroom, a guest-chamber for
- any one who wished to spend the night, and a fair-sized &ldquo;hall,&rdquo; with
- windows on the street, which was rented to colored people for any purpose,
- such as dances, lodge meetings or church sociables.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was in this room, where no light burned, that the negroes assembled.
- Indeed, no sort of illumination was used below, and when a negro who had
- been secretly summoned reached the spot, he assured himself that no one
- was in sight, and then he approached the restaurant door on tiptoe, rapped
- twice with his knuckles, paused a moment, and then rapped three times.
- Thereupon Neb, with his ear to the key-hole on the inside, cautiously
- opened the door and drew the applicant within, and, closing the shutter
- softly, asked, &ldquo;What is the password?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mercy,&rdquo; was the whispered reply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the countersign?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Peace an' good-will to all men. Thy will be done. Amen.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, I know you,&rdquo; Neb would say. &ldquo;Go up ter de hall en set down,
- but mind you, don't speak <i>one</i> word!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And thus they gathered&mdash;the men who were considered the most
- substantial colored citizens of the town. About ten o'clock Neb crept
- cautiously up the narrow stairs, entered the room, and sat down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We are all here,&rdquo; he announced. &ldquo;Brother Hard-castle, I'm done wid my
- part. I ain't no public speaker; I'll leave de rest ter you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A figure in one of the comers rose. He was the leading negro minister of
- the place. He cleared his throat and then said: &ldquo;I would open with prayer,
- but to pray we ought to stand or kneel, and either thing would make too
- much disturbance. We can only ask God in our hearts, brothers, to be with
- us here in the darkness, and help lead us out of our trouble; help us to
- decide if we can, singly or in a body, what course to pursue in the grave
- matter that faces our race. We are being sorely tried, tried almost past
- endurance, but the God of the white man is the God of the black. Through a
- dark skin the light of a pure heart shines as far in an appeal for help
- towards the throne of Heaven as through a white. I'm not prepared to make
- a speech. I can't. I am too full of sorrow and alarm. I have just left the
- mother of the accused boy and the sight of her suffering has upset me. I
- have no harsh words, either, for the white men of this town. Every
- self-respecting colored citizen has nothing but words of praise for the
- good white men of the South, and in my heart, I can't much blame the men
- of the mountains who are bent on revenge, for the crime perpetrated by one
- of our race was horrible enough to justify their rage. It is only that we
- want to see full justice done and the absolutely innocent protected. I
- have been talking to Brother Black to-day, and I feel&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He broke off, for a hiss of warning as low as the rattle of a hidden snake
- escaped Neb Wynn's lips. On the brick sidewalk below the steps of some
- solitary passer-by rang crisply on the still night air. It died away in
- the distance and again all was quiet.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now you kin go on,&rdquo; Neb said. &ldquo;We des got to be careful, gen'men. Ef a
- meetin' lak dis was knowed ter be on tap de last one of us would be in
- trouble, en dey would pull my house down fust. You all know dat.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are certainly right,&rdquo; the preacher resumed. &ldquo;I was only going to call
- on Brother Black to say something in a line with the-talk I had with him
- today. He's got the right idea.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not a speaker,&rdquo; Buck Black began, as he stood up. &ldquo;A man who runs a
- barber-shop don't have any too much time ter read and study, but I've giv'
- dis subject a lot o' thought fust an' last. I almost giv' up after dat big
- trouble in Atlanta; I 'lowed dar wasn't no way out of we-alls' plight, but
- I think diffunt now. A <i>white</i> man made me see it. I read some'n'
- yesterday in the biggest paper in dis State. It was written by de editor
- an' er big owner in it. Gen'men, it was de fust thing I've seed dat seemed
- ter me ter come fum on high as straight as a bolt of lightnin'. Brother
- black men, dat editor said dat de white race had tried de whip-lash, de
- rope, en de firebrand fer forty years en de situation was still as bad as
- ever. He said de question never would be plumb settled till de superior
- race extend a kind, helpful hand ter de ignorant black an' lead 'im out er
- his darkness en sin en crime. Gen'men, dem words went thoo en thoo me. I
- knowed dat man myself, when I lived in Atlanta; I've seed his honest face
- en know he meant what he said. He said it was time ter blaze er new trail,
- er trail dat hain't been blazed befo'&mdash;er trail of love en
- forgiveness en pity, er trail de Lord Jesus Christ would blaze ef he was
- here in de midst o' dis struggle.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dat so, dat so!&rdquo; Neb Wynn exclaimed, in a rasping whisper. &ldquo;Gawd know dat
- de trufe.&rdquo;
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;An' I'm here ter-night,&rdquo; Buck Black continued, &ldquo;ter say ter you all dat
-I'm ready ter join fo'ces wid white men like dat. De old time white man
-was de darky's best friend; he owned 'im, but he helped 'im. In de old
-slave days black crimes lak our race is guilty of ter-day was never
-heard of&mdash;never nowhar! Dar's er young white man here in dis town, too,
-dat I love,&rdquo; Black continued, after a pause. &ldquo;I needn't mention his
-name; I bound you it is writ on every heart in dis room. You all know
-what he did yesterday an' day befo'&mdash;in spite er all de argument en
-persuasions of his friends dat is backin' 'im in politics, he went out
-dar ter de mountains in de thick o' it. I got it straight. I seed er man
-fum dar yesterday, en he said Marse Carson Dwight was out 'mongst dem men
-pleadin' wid 'em ter turn Pete over ter him en de law. He promised ter
-give er bond dat was big enough ter wipe out all he owned on earth, ef
-dey'd only spare de boy's life en give 'im a trial. Dey say Dan Willis
-wanted ter shoot 'im, but Willis's own friends wouldn't let 'im git nigh
- 'im. I was in my shop last night when he come in town an' axed me ter
-shave 'im up so he could go home en pacify his mother. She was sick en
-anxious about him. He got in my chair. Gen'men, I used ter brag beca'se
-I shaved General John B. Gordon once, when he was up here speakin', but
-fum now on my boast will be shavin' Marse Carson Dwight. He got in de
-chair an' laid back so tired he looked lak er dyin' man. He was all
-spattered fum head ter foot wid mud dat he'd walked an' rid thoo. I was
-so sorry fer 'im I could hardly do my work. I was cryin' half de time,
-dough he didn't see it, 'ca'se he jes layed dar wid his eyes closed.
-Hate de white race lak some say we do?&rdquo; Black's voice rose higher and
-quivered. &ldquo;No, suh, I'll never hate de race dat fetched dat white man in
-dis world. When he got out de chair de fus thing he ax was ef I'd heard
-how Mam' Lindy was. I told 'im she was pretty bad off, worried in her
-mind lak she was; den he turn fum de glass whar he was tyin' his necktie
-wid shaky fingers en said: 'I thought I might fetch 'er some hope, Buck,
-but I done give up. Ef I only had Pete in my charge safe in er good
-reliable jail I could free 'im, fer I don't believe he killed dem
-folks.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Buck Black paused. It was plain that his hearers were much affected,
- though no sound at all escaped them. The speaker was about to resume, when
- he was prevented by a sharp rapping on the stair below.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; Neb Wynn commanded, in a warning whisper. He crept on tiptoe
- across the carpetless room, out into the hallway, and leaned over the
- baluster.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who dat?&rdquo; he asked, in a calm, raised voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's me, Neb. I want ter see you. Come down!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's my wife>&rdquo; Neb informed the breathless room. &ldquo;Sounds lak she's scared
- 'bout some'n'. Don't say er word till I git back. Mind, you folks got ter
- be careful ter-night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He descended the creaking stairs to the landing below. They caught the low
- mumbling of his voice intermingled with the perturbed tones of his wife,
- and then he crept back to them, strangely silent they thought, for after
- he had resumed his seat against the wall in the dark human circle, they
- heard only his heavy breathing. Fully five minutes passed, and then he
- sighed as if throwing something off his mind, some weight of perplexing
- indecision.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, go on wid what you was sayin', Brother Black,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I reckon
- our meetin' won't be 'sturbed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I almost got to what I was coming to,&rdquo; Buck Black continued, rising and
- leaning momentously on the back of his chair. &ldquo;I was leadin' up to a gre't
- surprise, gen'men. I'm goin' to tell you faithful friends a secret, a
- secret which, ef it was out dat we knowed it, might hang us all. So far it
- rests wid des me an' a black 'oman dat kin be trusted, my wife. Gen'men, I
- know whar Pete Warren is. I kin lay my hands on 'im any time. He's right
- here in dis town ter-night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A subdued burst of surprise rose from the dark room, then all was still,
- so still that the speaker's grasp of his chair gave forth a harsh, rasping
- sound.
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;Yes, my wife seed 'im in de ol' lumber-yard back o' our house, en he
-was sech er sight ter look at dat she mighty nigh went out'n 'er senses.
-He was all cut in de face, en his clothes en shoes was des hangin' ter
- 'im by strings, en his eyes was 'most poppin' out'n his head. He was
-starvin' ter death&mdash;hadn't had a bite t' eat since he run off. When she
-seed 'im it was about a hour by sun, en he begged 'er to fetch 'im some
-victuals. Gen'men, he was so hungry dat she say he licked her han's lak
-er dog, en cried en tuck on powerful. She come home en told me, en ax me
-what ter do. Gen'men, 'fo' God on high I want ter do my duty ter my
-race en also to de white, but I couldn't see any safe way ter meddle.
-De white folks, some of 'em, anyway, say dat we aid en encourage
-crimes 'mongst our people, en while my heart was bleedin' fer dat boy en
-his folks, I couldn't underhanded he'p 'im widout goin' ter de men in
-power accordin' ter law.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you did right,&rdquo; spoke up the minister. &ldquo;As much as I pity the boy, I
- would have acted as you have done. He is accused of murder and is an
- escaped prisoner. To decide that he was innocent and help him escape is
- exactly what we are blaming his pursuers for doing&mdash;taking the law
- into hands not sanctioned by authority. There is only one thing that can
- decide the matter, and that is the decision of a judge and jury.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dat's exactly de way I looked at it,&rdquo; said Black, &ldquo;en so I tol' my wife
- not ter go nigh 'im ergin. I knowed dis meetin' was up fer ter-night, en I
- des thought I'd fetch it here en lay it 'fo' you all en take er vote on
- it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A good idea,&rdquo; said the minister from his chair. &ldquo;And, brethren, it seems
- to me we, as a body of representative negroes of this town, have now a
- golden opportunity to prove our actual sincerity to the white race. As you
- say, Brother Black, we have been accused of remaining inactive when a
- criminal was being pursued for crimes against the white people. If we can
- agree on it to a unit, and can turn the prisoner over now that all efforts
- of the whites to apprehend him have failed, our act will be flashed all
- round the civilized world and give the lie to the charge in question. Do
- you think, Brother Black, that Pete Warren is still hiding near your
- house?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I do,&rdquo; answered the barber. &ldquo;He would be afeard ter leave dat place,
- en I reckon he's waitin' dar now fer my wife ter fetch 'im some'n' ter
- eat.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, then, all we've got to do is to see if we can thoroughly agree on
- the plan proposed. I suppose one of the first things, if we do agree to
- turn him over to the law, is to consult with Mr. Carson Dwight and see if
- he can devise a way of acting with perfect safety to the prisoner and all
- concerned. If he can, our duty is clear.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, he's de man, God knows dat,&rdquo; Black said, enthusiastically. &ldquo;He won't
- let us run no risk.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, then,&rdquo; said the minister, who had the floor, &ldquo;let us put it to a
- vote. Of course, it must be unanimous. We can't act on a thing as
- dangerous as this without a thorough agreement. Now, you have all heard
- the plan proposed. Those in favor make it known by standing up as quietly
- as you possibly can, so that I may count you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Very quietly, for so many acting in concert, men on all sides of the hall
- stood up. The minister then began to grope round the room, touching with
- his hands the standing voters.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who's this?&rdquo; he suddenly exclaimed, when he reached Neb Wynn's chair and
- lowered his hands to the drayman, who was the only one not standing. &ldquo;It's
- me,&rdquo; Neb answered; &ldquo;me, dat's who&mdash;<i>me!</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; There was an astonished pause.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it's me. I ain't votin' yo' way,&rdquo; Neb said. &ldquo;You all kin act fer
- yo'selves. I know what I'm about.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But what's de matter wid you?&rdquo; Buck Black demanded, rather sharply. &ldquo;All
- dis time you been de most anxious one ter do some'n', en now when we got
- er chance ter act wid judgment en caution, all in a body, en, as Brother
- Hardcastle say, ter de honor of ou' race, why you up en&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hold on, des keep yo' shirt on!&rdquo; said Neb, in a queer, tremulous voice.
- &ldquo;Gen'men, I ain't placed des zactly de same es you-all is. I don't want
- ter tek de whole 'sponsibility on my shoulders, en I don't intend to.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are not taking it all on your shoulders, brother,&rdquo; said the minister,
- calmly; &ldquo;we are acting in a body.&rdquo;
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;No, it's all on <i>me</i>,&rdquo; Neb said. &ldquo;You said, Buck Black, dat Pete was in
-de lumber-yard 'hind yo' house. He ain't. You might search ever' stack o'
-planks en ever' dry-kiln dar, but you wouldn't fin' 'im. He's a cousin
-er my wife's, en me'n dat boy was good, true friends, en so he come
-here des now, when you heard my wife call me, an' th'owed hisse'f on my
-mercy. He's out at my stable now, up in de hay-loft, waitin' fer me ter
-fetch 'im suppin ter eat, as soon as you all go off. My wife say he's
-de most pitiful thing dat God ever made, en, gen'men, I'm sorry fer 'im.
-Law or no law, I'm sorry <i>fer</i> 'im. It's all well enough fer you ter set
-here in yo' good clothes wid good meals er victuals inside o' you, en
-know you got er good safe baid ter go ter&mdash;it's all well enough fer you
-ter vote on what is ter be done, but ef you <i>do</i> vote fer it en clap
- 'im 'hind de bars en he's hung&mdash;hung by de neck till he's as stiff es a
-bone, you'll be helpin' ter do it. Law is one thing when it's law, it's
-another thing when it ain't fit ter spit on. You all talk <i>jestice,
-jestice</i>, en you think it would be er powerful fine thing ter prove ter
-de worl' how honest you all is by handin' dat po' yaller dog over to de
-law. Put yo'selves in Pete's shoes an' you wouldn't be so easy ter vote
-yo'selves 'hind de bars. You'd say de bird in de han' is wuth three in
-de bush, en you'd stay away firm de white man's court-house. De white
-men say deirselves dat dar ain't no jestice, en dey's right. Carson
-Dwight is er good lawyer, en he'd fight till he drapped in his tracks,
-but de State solicitor would rake up enough agin Pete Warren to keep de
-jury's blood b'ilin'. Whar'd dey git a jury but fum de ranks o' de very
-men dat's chasin' Pete lak er rabbit now? Whar'd dey git a jury dat ud
-believe in his innocence when dey kin prove dat he done threatened de
-daid man? No whar in dis State. No innocent nigger's ever been hung,
-hein? No innocent nigger's in de chain gang, hein? Huh, dey as thick dar
-es fleas.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When Neb had ceased speaking not a voice broke the stillness of the room
- for several minutes, then the minister said, with a deep-drawn breath:
- &ldquo;Well, there is really no harm in looking at all sides of the question.
- The very view you have taken, Brother Wynn, may be the one that has really
- kept colored people from being more active in the legal punishment of
- their race. But it seems to me that it would only be fair, since you say
- Pete Warren is near, for him to be told of the situation and left to
- decide for himself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm willin' ter do dat, God knows,&rdquo; said Neb, &ldquo;en ef y'all say so, I'll
- fetch 'im here en you kin splain it ter 'im.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm sure that will be best,&rdquo; said Hardcastle. &ldquo;Hurry up. To save time,
- you might bring his food here&mdash;that is, if your wife has not taken it
- to him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, she was afeard ter go out dar. I'll mek 'er fetch it up here while I
- go after him. It may tek time, fer he may be afeard to come in. But ef I
- tell 'im de grub's here, I bound you he'll come a-hustlin'.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They heard Neb's voice below giving instructions to his wife, and then the
- outer door in the rear was opened and closed. Presently a step was heard
- on the stair, and they held their breaths expectantly, but it was only
- Neb's wife with a tray of food. Gropingly she placed it on a little table,
- which she softly dragged from a corner into the centre of the room, and
- without a word retired. A door below creaked on its hinges; steps
- shambling and unsteady resounded hollowly from the floor beneath, and
- Neb's urgent, pacific voice rose to the tense ears of the listeners, &ldquo;Come
- on; don't be a baby, Pete!&rdquo; they heard Neb say. &ldquo;Dey all yo' friends en
- want ter he'p you out 'n yo' trouble ef dey kin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whar dat meat? whar it? oh, God! whar it?&rdquo; It was the voice of the
- pursued boy, and it had a queer, uncanny sound that all but struck terror
- to the hearts of the listeners.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She lef' it up dar whar dey all is,&rdquo; Neb said; &ldquo;come on! I'll give it to
- you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- That seemed to settle the matter, for the clambering steps drew nearer;
- and then two figures slightly denser than the darkness came into the room.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wait; let me git you er chair,&rdquo; Neb said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whar it? whar it? my God! whar dat meat?&rdquo; Pete cried, in a harsh, rasping
- voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whar'd she put it?&rdquo; Neb asked. &ldquo;Hanged ef I know.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;On the table,&rdquo; said Hardcastle.
- </p>
- <p>
- Neb reached out for the tray and had barely touched it, when Pete sprang
- at him with a sound like the snarl of an angry dog. The tray fell with a
- crash to the floor and the food with it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There!&rdquo; Neb exclaimed; &ldquo;you did it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then the spectators witnessed a pitiful, even repulsive scene, for the boy
- was on the floor, a big bone of ham in his clutch. For a moment nothing
- was heard except the snuffling, gulping, crunching sound that issued from
- Pete's nose, mouth, and jaws. Then a noise was heard below. It was a sharp
- rapping on the outer door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sh!&rdquo; Neb hissed, warmingly; but there was no cessation of the ravenous
- eating of the starving negro. Neb cautiously looked out of the window,
- allowing only his head to protrude over the windowsill. &ldquo;Who dar?&rdquo; he
- called out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me, Neb; Jim Lincum,&rdquo; answered the negro below. &ldquo;You told me ef I heard
- any news over my way ter let you know.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes,&rdquo; said Neb.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Folks think Pete done lef de woods, Neb. De mob done scattered ter hunt
- all round de country. A gang of 'em was headed dis way at sundown.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, dat so?&rdquo; Neb said; &ldquo;well we done gone ter baid, Jim, or I'd open de
- do' en let you have er place ter sleep.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't want no place ter sleep, Neb,&rdquo; was the answer, in a half-humorous
- tone. &ldquo;Don't want ter sleep nowhar 'cep' on my laigs sech times as dese.
- Er crowd er white men tried ter nab me while I was in my cotton-patch at
- work dis mawnin' but I made myse'f scarce. Dey hot en heavy after Sam
- Dudlow; some think he had er hand in de killin'. Dey cayn't find dat
- nigger, dough.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, good-night, Jim. I got ter git some rest,&rdquo; and Neb drew his head
- back and lowered the window-sash.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jim's all right,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but I couldn't tek 'im in here. Dem men may
- 'a' been followin' 'im on de sly.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He advanced to the middle of the room and stood over the crouching figure
- still noisily eating on the floor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pete, Brother Hardcastle got suppin ter 'pose ter you, en we 'ain't got
- any too much time. We goin' ter tell you 'bout it an leave it ter you. One
- thing certain, you ain't safe hidin' out like you is, en nobody ain't safe
- dat he'ps hide you, so I say suppin got ter be done in yo' case.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want y'all ter sen' fer Marse Carson,&rdquo; Pete mumbled, between his gulps.
- &ldquo;He kin fix me ef anybody kin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's what we were about to propose, Pete,&rdquo; said the preacher. &ldquo;You see&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sh!&rdquo; It was Neb's warning hiss again. All was silence in the room; even
- Pete paused to listen. It was the low drone of human voices, and many in
- number, immediately below. A light from a suddenly exposed lantern flashed
- 'on the walls. Neb approached the window, but afraid even cautiously to
- raise the sash, he stood breathless. Then through his closed teeth came
- the words: &ldquo;We are caught; gen'men, we in fer it certain en sho! Dey done
- tracked us down!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a loud rapping on the door below, a stifled scream from Neb's
- wife at the foot of the stairs, and then a sharp, commanding voice sounded
- outside.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Open up, Neb Wynn!&rdquo; it said. &ldquo;We are onto your game. Some devilment is in
- the wind and we are going to know what it is.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Neb suddenly and boldly threw up the sash and looked out. &ldquo;All right,
- gen'men, don't bre'k my new lock. I'll be down dar in er minute.&rdquo; Then
- quickly turning to Pete, he bent and drew him up. &ldquo;Mak' er bre'k fer dat
- winder back dar, slide down de shed-roof, en run fer yo' life. Run!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a great clatter of chairs and feet in the group of men, a
- crashing of a thin window-sash in the rear, a heavy, thumping sound on a
- roof outside, and a loud shout from lusty throats below.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There he goes! Catch 'im! Head 'im off! Shoot 'im!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then darkness, chaos, and terror reigned.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIX.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0021" id="linkimage-0021"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9175.jpg" alt="9175 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9175.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- HILE these things were being enacted, Sanders, who had taken supper at
- Warren's, and Helen sat on the front veranda in the moonlight. Scarcely
- any other topic than Mam' Linda's trouble had been broached between them,
- though the ardent visitor had made many futile efforts to draw the girl's
- thought into more cheerful channels. It was shortly after ten o'clock, and
- Sanders was about to take his leave, when old Lewis emerged from the
- shadows of the house and was shambling along the walk towards the gate
- leading into the Dwight grounds, when Helen called out to him: &ldquo;Where are
- you going, Uncle Lewis?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He doffed his old slouch hat and stood bare and, bald, his smooth pate
- gleaming in the moonlight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I started over ter see Marse Carson, missy,&rdquo; he said, in a low, husky
- voice. &ldquo;I knows good en well dat he can't do a thing, but Linda's been
- beggin' me ever since she seed him en Mr. Garner drive up at de back gate.
- She thinks maybe dey l'arnt suppin 'bout Pete. I knows dey hain't,
- honey, 'ca'se dey ud 'a' been over 'fo' dis. Dar he is on de veranda now&mdash;oh,
- Marse Carson! Kin I see you er minute, suh?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I'll be right down, Lewis,&rdquo; Carson answered, leaning over the
- railing.
- </p>
- <p>
- As he came out of the house and approached across the grass, Sanders and
- Helen went to meet him. He bowed to Helen and nodded coldly to Sanders, to
- whom he had barely been introduced, and then with a furrowed brow he stood
- and listened as the old man humbly made his wants known.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm sorry to say I haven't heard a thing, Uncle Lewis,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I'd
- have been right over to see Mam' Linda if I had. So far as I can see,
- everything is just the same.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, young marster, I don't know what I'm ergoin' ter do,&rdquo; the old negro
- groaned. &ldquo;I don't see how Linda's gwine ter pass thoo another night. She's
- burnin' at de stake, Marse Carson, but thoo it all she blesses you, suh,
- fer tryin' so hard. My Gawd, dar she come now; she couldn't wait.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He hastened across the grass to where the old woman stood, and caught hold
- of her arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whar Marse Carson? Whar young marster?&rdquo; Linda cried, and then, catching
- sight of the trio, she tottered unaided towards them.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, young marster, I can't stan' it; I des <i>can't!</i>&rdquo; she groaned, as
- she caught Dwight's hand and clung to it. &ldquo;I am a mother ef I <i>am</i>
- black, an' dat my onliest child. My onliest child, young marster, en de
- po' boy is 'way over in dem mountains starvin' ter death wid dem men en
- dogs on his track. Oh, young marster, ol' Mammy Lindy is cert'nly crushed.
- Ef I could see Pete in his coffin I could put up wid it, but dis here&mdash;dis
- here&rdquo;&mdash;she struck her great breast with her hand&mdash;&ldquo;dis awful
- pain! I can't stan' it&mdash;I des can't!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson lowered his head. There was a look of profound and tortured
- sympathy on his strong face. Garner came out of the house smoking a cigar
- and strolled across the grass towards them, but observing the situation he
- paused at a flowering rose-bush and stood looking down the moonlit street
- towards the court-house and grounds dimly outlined in the distance. Garner
- had never been considered very emotional; no one had ever detected any
- indications of surprise or sorrow in his face. He simply stood there
- to-night avoiding contact with the inevitable. As a criminal lawyer he had
- been obliged to inure himself to exhibitions of mental suffering as a
- physician inures himself to the presence of physical pain, and yet had
- Garner been questioned on the matter, he would have admitted that he
- admired Carson Dwight for the abundant possession of the very qualities he
- lacked. He positively envied his friend to-night. There was something
- almost transcendental in the heart-wrung homage the old woman was paying
- Carson. There was something else in the fact that the wonderful tribute to
- courage and manliness was being paid there without reservation or stint
- before the (and Garner chuckled) very eyes of the woman who had rejected
- Carson's love, and in the very presence of the masculine incongruity (as
- Garner viewed him) by her side. All the display of emotion, <i>per se</i>,
- had no claims on Garner's interest, but the sheer, magnificent play of it,
- and its palpable clutch on things of the past and possible events of the
- future, held him as would the unfolding evidence in an important law case.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But oh, young marster,&rdquo; old Linda was saying; &ldquo;thoo it all you been my
- stay en comfort; not even God's been as good ter me as you have; you tried
- ter he'p po' ol' Lindy, but de Lawd on high done deserted her. Dar ain't
- no just, reasonable God dat will treat er po' old black 'oman es I'm
- treated, honey. In slavery en out I've done de best&mdash;de very best I
- could fer white en black, en now as I stan' here, after er long life, wid
- my feet in de grave, I don't deserve ter be punished wid dis slow fire. Go
- ter de white 'omen er dis here big Newnited States en ax' 'em how dey
- would feel in my fix. Ef de mothers in dis worl' could see me ter-night en
- read down in my heart, er river of tears would flow fer me. Dat so, en'
- yet de God I've prayed ter-night en mornin', in slavery en out, has turned
- His back on me. I've prayed, young marster, till my throat is sore, till
- now I hain't got no strength nor faith lef' in me, en&mdash;well, here I
- stand. You all see me.&rdquo; Without a word, his face wrung with pain, Carson
- clasped her hand, and bowing to Helen and her companion he moved away and
- joined Garner.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was high time you were getting out of that,&rdquo; Garner said, as he pulled
- at his cigar and drew his friend back towards the house. &ldquo;You can do
- nothing, and letting Linda run on that way only works her up to greater
- excitement. But say, old man, what's the matter with you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson was white, and the arm Garner had taken was trembling.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know, Garner, but I simply can't stand anything like that,&rdquo;
- Dwight said, his eyes on the group they had left. &ldquo;It actually makes me
- sick. I&mdash;I can't stand it. Good-night, Garner; if you won't sleep
- here with me, I'll turn in. I&mdash;I&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hush! what's that?&rdquo; Garner interrupted, his ear bent towards the centre
- of the town.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a loud and increasing outcry from the direction of Neb Wynn's
- house. Several reports of revolvers were heard, and screams and shouts:
- &ldquo;Head 'im off! Shoot 'im! There he goes!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Great God!&rdquo; Garner cried, excitedly; &ldquo;do you suppose it is&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He did not finish, for Carson had raised his hand to check him and stood
- staring through the moonlight in the direction from which the sounds were
- coming. There were now audible the rapid and heavy foot-falls of many
- runners. On they came, the sound increasing as they drew nearer. They were
- only a few blocks distant now. Carson cast a hurried glance towards the
- Warren house. There, leaning on the fence, supported by Helen and Lewis,
- stood Linda, silent, motionless, open-mouthed. Sanders stood alone, not
- far away. On came the rushing throng. They were turning the nearest
- corner. Somebody, or something, was in the lead. Was it a man, an animal,
- a mad dog, a&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- On it came forming the point of a human triangle. It was a man, but a man
- doubled to the earth by. fatigue and weakness, a man who ran as if on the
- point of sprawling at every desperate leap forward. His hard breathing now
- fell on Carson's ears.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's Pete!&rdquo; he said, simply.
- </p>
- <p>
- Garner laid a firm hand on his friend's arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now's the time for you to have common-sense,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Remember, you
- have lost all you care for by this thing&mdash;don't throw your very life
- into the damned mess. By God, you <i>sha'n't!</i> I'll&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Marse Carson, it's Pete!&rdquo; It was Linda's voice, and it rang out high,
- shrill, and pleading above the roar and din. &ldquo;Save 'im! Save 'im!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Dwight wrenched his arm from the tense clutch of Garner and dashed through
- the gate, and was out in the street just as the negro reached him and
- stretched out his arms in breathless appeal and fell sprawling at his
- feet. The fugitive remained there on his knees, his hands clutching the
- young man's legs, while the mob gathered round.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's the one!&rdquo; a hoarse voice exclaimed. &ldquo;Kill 'im! Burn the black
- fiend!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Standing pinioned to the ground by Pete's terrified clutch, Carson raised
- his hands above his head. &ldquo;Stop! Stop! Stop!&rdquo; he kept crying, as the crowd
- swayed him back and forth in their effort to lay hold of the fugitive who
- was clinging to his master with the desperate clutch of a drowning man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop! Listen!&rdquo; Carson kept shouting, till those nearest him became
- calmer, and forming a determined ring, pressed the outer ones back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, listen!&rdquo; these nearest cried. &ldquo;See what he's got to say. It's
- Carson Dwight. Listen! He won't take up for him; he's a white man. He
- won't defend a black devil that&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I believe this boy is innocent!&rdquo; Carson's voice rang out, &ldquo;and I plead
- with you as men and fellow-citizens to give me a chance to prove it to
- your fullest satisfaction. I'll stake my life on what I say. Some of you
- know me, and will believe me when I say I'll put up every cent I have,
- everything I hold dear on earth, if you will only give me the chance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A fierce cry of opposition rose in the outskirts of the throng, and it
- passed from lip to lip till the storm was at its height again. Then Garner
- did what surprised Carson as much as anything he had ever seen from that
- man of mystery.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop! Listen!&rdquo; Garner thundered, in tones of such command that they
- seemed to sweep all other sounds out of the tumult. &ldquo;Let's hear what he's
- got to say. It can do no harm! Listen, boys!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The trick worked. Not three men in the excited mob associated the voice or
- personality with the friend and partner of the man demanding their
- attention. The tumult subsided; it fell away till only the low, whimpering
- groans of the frightened fugitive were heard. There was a granite
- mounting-block on the edge of the sidewalk, and feeling it behind him:
- Carson stood upon it, his hands on the woolly pate of the negro still
- crouching at his feet. As he did so, his swift glance took in many things
- about him: he saw Linda at the fence, her head bowed upon her arms as if
- to shut out from her sight the awful scene; near her stood Lewis, Helen,
- and Sanders, their expectant gaze upon him; at the window of his mother's
- room he saw the invalid clearly outlined against the lamplight behind her.
- Never had Carson Dwight put so much of his young, sympathetic soul into
- words. His eloquence streamed from him like a swollen torrent of logic. On
- the still night air his voice rose clear, firm, confident. It was no call
- to them to be merciful to the boy's mother bowed there like a thing cut
- from stone, for passion like theirs would have been inflamed by such
- advice, considering that the fugitive was charged with having slain a
- woman. But it was a calm call to patriotism. Carson Dwight plead with them
- to let their temperate action that night say to all the world that the day
- of unbridled lawlessness in the fair Southland was at an end. Law and
- order on the part of itself was the South's only solution of the problem
- laid like another unjust burden on a sorely tried and suffering people.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good, good! That's the stuff!&rdquo; It was the raised voice of the adroit
- Garner, under his broad-brimmed hat in the edge of the crowd. &ldquo;Listen,
- neighbors; let him go on!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a fluttering suggestion of acquiescence in the stillness that
- followed Garner's words. But other obstacles were to arise. A clatter of
- galloping horses was heard round the corner on the nearest side street,
- and three men, evidently mountaineers, rode madly up. They reined in their
- panting, snorting mounts.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter?&rdquo; one of them asked, with an oath. &ldquo;What are you
- waiting for? That's the damned black devil.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They are waiting, like reasonable human beings, to give this man a chance
- to establish his innocence,&rdquo; Carson cried, firmly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They are, damn you, are they?&rdquo; the same voice retorted. There was a
- pause; the horseman raised his arm; a revolver gleamed in the moonlight;
- there was a flash and a report. The crowd saw Carson Dwight suddenly lean
- to one side and raise his hands to the side of his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0022" id="linkimage-0022"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0183.jpg" alt="0183 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0183.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My God, he's shot!&rdquo; Garner called out. &ldquo;Who fired that gun?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For an instant horrified silence reigned; Carson still stood pressing his
- hands to his temple.
- </p>
- <p>
- No one spoke; the three restive horses were rearing and prancing about in
- excitement. Garner made his way through the crowd, elbowing them right and
- left, till he stood near the fugitive and his defender.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A good white man has been shot,&rdquo; he cried out&mdash;&ldquo;shot by a man on one
- of those horses. Be calm. This is a serious business.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But Carson, with his left hand pressed to his temple, now stood erect.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, some coward back there shot me,&rdquo; he said, boldly, &ldquo;but I don't think
- I am seriously wounded. He may fire on me again, as a dirty coward will do
- on a defenceless man, but as I stand here daring him to try it again I
- plead with you, my friends, to let me put this boy into jail. Many of you
- know me, and know I'll keep my word when I promise to move heaven and
- earth to give him a fair and just trial for the crime of which he is
- accused.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bully for you, Dwight! My God, he's got grit!&rdquo; a voice cried. &ldquo;Let him
- have his way, boys. The sheriff is back there. Heigh, Jeff Braider, come
- to the front! You are wanted!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is the sheriff back there?&rdquo; Carson asked, calmly, in the strange silence
- that had suddenly fallen.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, here I am.&rdquo; Braider was threading his way towards him through the
- crowd. &ldquo;I was trying to spot the man that fired that shot, but he's gone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You bet he's gone!&rdquo; cried one of the two remaining horsemen, and,
- accompanied by the other, he turned and, they galloped away. This seemed a
- final signal to the crowd to acquiesce in the plan proposed, and they
- stood voiceless and still, their rage strangely spent, while Braider took
- the limp and cowering prisoner by the arm and drew him down from the
- block. Pete, only half comprehending, was whimpering piteously and
- clinging to Dwight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's all right, Pete,&rdquo; Carson said. &ldquo;Come on, we'll lock you up in the
- jail where you'll be safe.&rdquo; Between Carson and the sheriff, followed by
- Garner, Pete was the centre of the jostling throng as they moved off
- towards the jail.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What dey gwine ter do, honey?&rdquo; old Linda asked, finding her voice for the
- first time, as she leaned towards her young mistress.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Put him in jail where he'll be safe,&rdquo; Helen said. &ldquo;It's all over now,
- mammy.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thank God, thank God!&rdquo; Linda cried, fervently. &ldquo;I knowed Marse Carson
- wouldn't let 'em kill my boy&mdash;I knowed it&mdash;I knowed it!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But didn't somebody say Marse Carson was shot, honey?&rdquo; old Lewis asked.
- &ldquo;Seem ter me like I done heard&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Pale and motionless, Helen stood staring after the departing crowd, now
- almost out of view. Carson Dwight's thrilling words still rang in her
- ears. He had torn her very heart from her breast and held it in his hands
- while speaking. He had stood there like a God among mere men, pleading as
- she would have pleaded for that simple human life, and they had listened;
- they had been swept from their mad purpose by the fearless sincerity and
- conviction of his young soul. They had shot at him while he stood a target
- for their uncurbed passion, and even then he had dared to taunt them with
- cowardice as he continued his appeal.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Daughter, daughter!&rdquo; her father on the upper floor of the veranda was
- calling down to her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it, father?&rdquo; she asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you know if Carson was hurt?&rdquo; the Major asked, anxiously. &ldquo;You know he
- said he wasn't, but it would be like him to pretend so, even if he were
- wounded. It may be only the excitement that is keeping him up, and the
- poor boy may be seriously injured.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, father, do you think&mdash;?&rdquo; Helen's heart sank; a sensation like
- nausea came over her, and she reeled and almost fell. Sanders, a queer,
- white look on his face, caught hold of her arm and supported her to a seat
- on the veranda. She raised her eyes to the face of her escort as she sank
- into a chair. &ldquo;Do you think&mdash;did he look like he was wounded?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I could not make out,&rdquo; Sanders answered, solicitously, and yet his lip
- was drawn tight and he stood quite erect. &ldquo;I&mdash;I thought he was at
- first, but later when he continued to speak I fancied I was mistaken.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He put his hands to his temple,&rdquo; Helen said, &ldquo;and almost fell. I saw him
- steady himself, and then he really seemed stunned for a moment.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Sanders was silent. &ldquo;I remember her aunt said,&rdquo; he reflected, in grim
- misery, his brows drawn together, &ldquo;that she once had a sweetheart up here.
- <i>Is this the man?</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XX
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0023" id="linkimage-0023"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9188.jpg" alt="9188 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9188.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- EN minutes later, while they still sat on the veranda waiting for Carson's
- return, they saw Dr. Stone, the Dwights' family physician, alight from his
- horse at the hitching-post nearby.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wonder what that means?&rdquo; the Major asked. &ldquo;He must have been sent for
- on Carson's account and thinks he is at home. Speak to him, Lewis.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hearing his name called, Dr. Stone approached, his medicine-case in hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Were you looking for Carson?&rdquo; Major Warren asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, no,&rdquo; answered the doctor, in surprise; &ldquo;they said Mrs. Dwight was
- badly shocked. Was Carson really hurt?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We were trying to find out,&rdquo; said the Major. &ldquo;He went on to the jail with
- the sheriff, determined to see Pete protected.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a sound of an opening door and old Dwight came out to the fence,
- hatless, coatless, and pale. &ldquo;Come right in, doctor,&rdquo; he said, grimly.
- &ldquo;There's no time to lose.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is it as bad as that?&rdquo; Stone asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She's dying, if I'm any judge,&rdquo; was the answer. &ldquo;She was standing at the
- window and heard that pistol-shot and saw Carson was hit. She fell flat on
- the floor. We've done everything, but she's still unconscious.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The two men went hastily into the room where Mrs. Dwight lay, and they
- were barely out of sight when Helen noticed some one rapidly approaching
- from the direction of the jail. It was Keith Gordon, and as he entered the
- gate he laid his hand on Linda's shoulder and said, cheerily, &ldquo;Don't worry
- now; Pete is safe and the mob is dispersing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But Carson,&rdquo; Major Warren asked; &ldquo;was he hurt?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We don't exactly know yet.&rdquo; Keith was now at Helen's side, looking into
- her wide-open, anxious eyes. &ldquo;He wouldn't stop a second to be examined. He
- was afraid something might occur to alter the temper of the mob and wasn't
- going to run any risks. The crowd, fortunately for Pete, was made up
- mostly of towns-people. One man from the mountains, a blood relative of
- the Johnsons, could have kindled the blaze again with a word, and Carson
- knew it. He was more worried about his mother than anything else. She was
- at the window and he saw her fall; he urged me to hurry back to tell her
- he was all right. I'll go in.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But he was detained by the sound of voices down the street. It was a group
- of half a dozen men, and in their midst was Carson Dwight, violently
- protesting against being supported.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I tell you I'm all right!&rdquo; Helen heard him saying. &ldquo;I'm not a baby,
- Garner; let me alone!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you are bleeding like a stuck pig,&rdquo; Garner said. &ldquo;Your handkerchief
- is literally soaked. And look at your shirt!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's only skin-deep,&rdquo; Carson cried. &ldquo;I was stunned for a moment when it
- hit me, that's all.&rdquo; Helen, followed by her father and Sanders, advanced
- hurriedly to meet the approaching group. They gave way as she drew near,
- and she and Dwight faced each other.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The doctor is in the house, Carson,&rdquo; she said, tenderly; &ldquo;go in and let
- him examine your wound.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's only a scratch, Helen, I give you my word,&rdquo; he laughed, lightly. &ldquo;I
- never saw such a squeamish set of men in my life. Even stolid old Bill
- Garner has had seven duck fits at the sight of my red handkerchief. How's
- my mother?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen's eyes fell. &ldquo;Your father says he is afraid it is quite serious,&rdquo;
- she said. &ldquo;The doctor is with her; she was unconscious.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They saw Carson wince; his face became suddenly rigid. He sighed. &ldquo;It may
- not be so well after all. Pete is safe for awhile, but if she&mdash;if my
- mother were to&mdash;&rdquo; He went no further, simply staring blankly into
- Helen's face. Suddenly she put her hand up to his blood-stained temple and
- gently drew aside the matted hair. Their eyes met and clung together.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You must let Dr. Stone dress this at once,&rdquo; she said, more gently,
- Sanders thought, than he had ever heard a woman speak in all his life. He
- turned aside; there was something in the contact of the two that at once
- maddened him and drew him down to despair. He had dared to hope that she
- would consent to become his wife, and yet the man to whom she was so
- gently ministering had once been her lover. Yes, that was the man. He was
- sure of it now. Dwight's attitude, tone of voice, and glance of the eye
- were evidence enough. Besides, Sanders asked himself, where was the living
- man who could know Helen Warren and not be her slave forever afterwards?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'll go right in,&rdquo; Carson said, gloomily. He and Keith and Garner
- were passing through the gate when Linda called to him as she came hastily
- forward, but Keith and Garner were talking and Carson did not hear the old
- woman's voice. Helen met her and paused. &ldquo;Let him alone to-night, mammy,&rdquo;
- she said, almost bitterly, it seemed to Sanders, who was peering into new
- depths of her character. &ldquo;<i>Your</i> boy is safe, but Carson is wounded&mdash;<i>wounded</i>,
- I tell you, and his mother may be dying. Let him alone for to-night,
- anyway.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, honey,&rdquo; the old woman said; &ldquo;but I'm gwine ter stay here till
- de doctor comes out en ax 'im how dey bofe is. My heart is full ter-night,
- honey. Seem 'most like God done listen ter my prayers after all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Sanders lingered with the pale, deeply distraught young lady on the
- veranda till Keith came out of the house, passed through the gate, and
- strode across the grass towards them.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They are both all right, thank God!&rdquo; he announced. &ldquo;The doctor says Mrs.
- Dwight has had a frightful shock but will pull through. Carson was right;
- his wound was only a scratch caused by the grazing bullet. But God knows
- it was a close call, and I think there is but one man in the State low
- enough to have fired the shot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When Keith and Sanders had left her, Helen went with dragging, listless
- feet up the stairs to her room.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lighting her lamp, she stood looking at her image in the mirror on her
- bureau. How strangely drawn and grave her features appeared! It seemed to
- her that she looked older and more serious than she had ever looked in her
- life.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dropping her glance to her hands, she noted something that sent a thrill
- through her from head to foot. It was a purple smudge left on her fingers
- by their contact with Carson Dwight's wound. Stepping across to her
- wash-stand, she poured some water into the basin, and was on the point of
- removing the stain when she paused and impulsively raised it towards her
- lips. She stopped again, and stood with her hand poised in mid-air. Then a
- thought flashed into her brain. She was recalling the contents of the
- fatal letter of Carson's to her poor brother; the hot blood surged over
- her. She shuddered, dipped her hands, and began to lave them in the
- cooling water. Carson was noble; he was brave; he had a great and
- beautiful soul, and yet he had written that letter to her dead brother.
- Yes, she had openly encouraged Sanders, and she must be honorable. At any
- rate, he was a good, clean man and his happiness was at stake. Yes, she
- supposed she would finally marry him. She would marry him.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXI.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0024" id="linkimage-0024"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9193.jpg" alt="9193 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9193.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- ARSON was slightly weakened by the loss of blood and the unusual tax on
- his strength, and yet, wearing a strip of sticking-plaster as the only
- sign of his wound, he was at the office betimes the next morning, anxious
- to make an early start into the arrangements for a hurried preliminary
- trial of his client. Garner, as, was that worthy's habit when kept up late
- at night, was still asleep in the den when Helen called.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson was at his desk, bending over a law-book, his pipe in his mouth,
- when, looking up, he saw her standing in the doorway and rose instantly, a
- flush of gratification on his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've come to see you about poor Pete,&rdquo; she began, her pale face taking on
- color as if from the heat of his own. &ldquo;I know it's early, but I couldn't
- wait. Mam' Linda was in my room this morning at the break of day, sitting
- by my bed rocking back and forth and moaning.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She's uneasy, of course,&rdquo; Carson said. &ldquo;That's only natural of a mother
- placed as she is.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes,&rdquo; Helen answered, with a sigh. &ldquo;She was thoroughly happy last
- night over his rescue, but now you see she's got something else to worry
- about. She now wonders if he will be allowed a fair trial.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The boy must have that,&rdquo; Carson said, and then his face clouded over and
- he held himself more erect as he glanced past her out at the door. &ldquo;Is Mr.
- Sanders&mdash;did he come with you? You see, I met him on the way to your
- house as I came down.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, he's there talking over the trouble with my father,&rdquo; Helen made
- rather awkward answer. &ldquo;He came in to breakfast, but&mdash;but I wasn't at
- the table. I was with Mam' Linda.&rdquo; And thereupon Helen blushed more deeply
- over the reflection that these last words might sound like intentional and
- even presumptuous balm to the sensitiveness of a rejected suitor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was afraid he might be waiting on the outside,&rdquo; Carson said, awkwardly.
- &ldquo;I want to show hospitality to a stranger in town, you know, but somehow I
- can't exactly do my full duty in his case.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are not expected to,&rdquo; and Helen had tripped again, as her fresh color
- proved. &ldquo;I mean, Carson&mdash;&rdquo; But she could go no further.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I am unequal to it, anyway,&rdquo; Carson replied, with tightening lips
- and a steady, honest stare. &ldquo;I don't dislike him personally. I hold no
- actual grudge against him. From all I've heard of him he is worthy of any
- woman's love and deepest respect. I'm simply off the committee of
- entertainment during his stay.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I&mdash;I&mdash;didn't come down to talk about Mr. Sanders,&rdquo; Helen found
- herself saying, as the shortest road from the trying subject. &ldquo;It seems to
- me you ought to hate me. I have, I know, through my concern over Pete,
- caused you endless trouble and loss of political influence. Last night you
- did what no other man would or could have done. Oh, it was so brave, so
- noble, so glorious! I laid awake nearly all night thinking about it. Your
- wonderful speech rang over and over in my ears. I was too excited to cry
- while it was actually going on, but I shed tears of joy when I thought it
- all over afterwards.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, that wasn't anything!&rdquo; Dwight said, forcing a light tone, though his
- flush had died out. &ldquo;I knew you and Linda wanted the boy saved, and it
- wasn't anything. I ran no risk. It was only fun&mdash;a game of football
- with a human pigskin snatched here and there by a frenzied mob of players.
- When it fell of its own accord at my feet, and I had laid hands on it, I
- would have put it over the line or died trying, especially when you and
- Sanders&mdash;who has beaten me in a grander game&mdash;stood looking on.
- Oh, I'm only natural! I wanted to win because&mdash;first, because it was
- your wish, and&mdash;because <i>that man was there.</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen's glance fell to the ragged carpet which, clogged with the dried mud
- of a recent rain, stretched from her feet to the door. Then she looked
- helplessly round the room at the dusty, open bookshelves, Garner's
- disreputable desk strewn with pamphlets, printed forms of notes and
- mortgages, cigar-stubs, and old letters. Her eyes rested longer on the
- dingy, small-paned windows to which the cobwebs clung.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You always bring up his name,&rdquo; she said, almost resentfully. &ldquo;Is it
- really quite fair to him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, it isn't,&rdquo; he admitted, quickly. &ldquo;And from this moment that sort of
- banter is at an end. Now, what can I do for you? You came to speak about
- Pete.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She hesitated for a moment. It was almost as if, after all she had said,
- that if the subject was to be dropped, hers, not his, should be the final
- word.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I came to tell you that Mam' Linda and I have just left the jail. She was
- so wrought up and weak that I made Uncle Lewis take her home in a buggy.
- He says she didn't close her eyes all last night and this morning refused
- to touch her breakfast. Then the sight of Pete in his awful condition
- completely unnerved her. Did you get a good look at him last night, Carson&mdash;I
- mean in the light?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo; Dwight shrugged his broad shoulders. &ldquo;But he looked bad enough as it
- was.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The sight made me ill,&rdquo; Helen said. &ldquo;The jailer let us go into the narrow
- passage and we saw him through the bars of the cell. I would never have
- known him in the world. His clothing was all in shreds and his face and
- arms were gashed and tom, his feet bare and bleeding. Poor mammy simply
- stood peering through at him and crying, 'My boy, my baby, my baby!'
- Carson, I firmly believe he is innocent.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So do I,&rdquo; Dwight made prompt answer. &ldquo;That is, I am reasonably sure of
- it. I shall know <i>positively</i> when I talk to him to-day.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then you will secure his liberty, won't you?&rdquo; Helen asked, eagerly. &ldquo;I
- promised mammy I'd talk to you and bring her a report of what you said.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am going to do everything in my power,&rdquo; Dwight said; &ldquo;but I don't want
- to raise false hopes only to disappoint you and Linda all the more later.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Carson, tell me what you mean. You don't seem sure of the outcome.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You must try to look-at the thing bravely, Helen,&rdquo; Dwight said, firmly.
- &ldquo;There is more in it than an inexperienced girl like you could imagine. I
- think we can arrange for a trial to-morrow, but it seems often that it is
- while such trials are in progress that the people become most wrought up;
- and then, you know, to-day and to-night must pass, and&mdash;&rdquo; He broke
- off, avoiding her earnest stare of inquiry.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Go on, Carson, you can trust me, if I <i>am</i> only a girl.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To tell you the truth,&rdquo; Dwight complied, &ldquo;it is the next twenty-four
- hours that I dread most. That mob last night, it seems, was made up for
- the most part of men here in town, workers in the factories and
- iron-foundries&mdash;many of whom know me personally and have faith in my
- promises. If it were left with them I'd have little to fear, but it is the
- immediate neighbors of the dead man and woman, the members of the gang of
- White Caps who whipped Pete and feel themselves personally affronted by
- what they believe to be his crime&mdash;they are the men, Helen, from whom
- I fear trouble.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen was pale and her hands trembled, though she strove bravely to be
- calm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You still fear that they may rise and come&mdash;and&mdash;take&mdash;him&mdash;out&mdash;of&mdash;jail?
- Oh!&rdquo; She clasped her hands tightly and stood facing him, a look of terror
- growing in her beautiful eyes. &ldquo;And can't something be done? Mr. Sanders
- spoke this morning of telegraphing the Governor to send troops to guard
- the jail.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, that's it!&rdquo; said Carson, grimly. &ldquo;But who is to take that
- responsibility on himself. I can't, Helen. It might be the gravest, most
- horrible mistake a man ever made, one that would haunt him to his very
- grave. The Governor, not understanding the pulse of the people here, might
- take the word of some one on the spot. Garner and I know him pretty well.
- We've been of political service to him personally, and he would do all he
- could if we telegraphed him, but&mdash;we couldn't do it. By the stroke of
- our pen we might make orphans of the children of scores of honest white
- men, and widows of their wives, for the bayonets and shot of a regiment of
- soldiers would not deter such men from what they regard as sacred duty to
- their families and homes. If the Governor's troops did military duty, they
- would have to hew down human beings like wheat before a scythe. The very
- sight of their uniforms would be like a red rag to a mad bull. It would be
- a calamity such as has never taken place in the State. I can't have a hand
- in that, Helen, and not another thinking man in the South would. I love
- the men of the mountains too well. They are turning against me politically
- because we differ somewhat, but I simply can't see them shot like rabbits
- in a net. Pete is, after all, only <i>one</i>&mdash;they are many, and
- they are conscientiously acting according to their lights. The machinery
- of modern law moves too slowly for them. They have seen crime triumphant
- too often to trust to any verdict other than that reached from their own
- reasoning.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I see; I see!&rdquo; Helen cried, her face blanched. &ldquo;I don't blame you,
- Carson, but poor mammy; what can I say to her?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do your best to pacify and encourage her,&rdquo; Dwight answered, &ldquo;and we'll
- hope for the best.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stood in the doorway and watched her as she walked off down the little
- street. &ldquo;Poor, dear girl!&rdquo; he mused. &ldquo;I had to tell her the truth. She's
- too brave and strong to be treated like a child.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned back to his desk and sat down. There was a deep frown on his
- face. &ldquo;I came within an inch of losing my grip on myself,&rdquo; his thoughts
- ran on. &ldquo;Another moment and I'd have let her know how I am suffering. She
- must never know that&mdash;never!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXII
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0025" id="linkimage-0025"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9200.jpg" alt="9200 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9200.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- ALF an hour later Garner came in. He walked about the room, a half smile
- on his face, sniffing the air as if with unctuous delight, casting now and
- then an amused glance at his inattentive partner.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What do you mean? What are you up to now?&rdquo; Carson asked, slightly
- irritated over having his thoughts disturbed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She's been here,&rdquo; Garner answered. &ldquo;She told me so just now, and I want
- to inhale the heavenly perfume she left in this disreputable hole. Good
- Lord, you don't mean that you let her see those rotten slippers of mine!
- If you'd been half a friend you'd have kicked them out of sight, but you
- didn't care; you've got on a clean collar and necktie, and that plaster on
- your alabaster brow would admit you to the highest realm of the elect&mdash;provided
- the door-keeper was a woman and knew how you got your ticket. Huh! I
- really don't know what will become of me if I associate with you much
- longer. Your conduct last night upset me. I turned in to bed about two
- o'clock. Bob Smith was doing night-work at the hotel, and he came in and
- had to be told the whole thing; and he'd no sooner got to bed than Keith
- came in, and Bob had to hear <i>his</i> version. I had a corking dime
- novel, but it was too tame after the racket you went through. The <i>Red
- Avenger</i> I was trying to get interested in couldn't hold a candle, even
- in his bareback ride strapped to a wild mustang in a mad dash across a
- burning prairie, to your horse-block rescue act. What <i>you</i> did was
- <i>new</i>, and I was <i>there</i>. The burning prairie business has been
- overdone and the love interest in the <i>Red Avenger</i> was weak, while
- yours&mdash;<i>well!</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Garner sat down in his creaking revolving-chair and thrust his thumbs into
- the arm-holes of his vest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mine?&rdquo; Carson said, coldly. &ldquo;I don't exactly see your point.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, the love business was there all the same,&rdquo; Garner laughed,
- significantly; &ldquo;for, thrilling as it all was, I had an eye to that. I
- couldn't keep from wondering how I'd have felt if I'd been in your place
- and had your chances.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>My</i> chances!&rdquo; Dwight frowned. It was plain that he did not like
- Garner's bold encroachments on his natural reserve.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, your chances, dang you!&rdquo; Garner retorted, with a laugh. &ldquo;Do you
- know, my boy, that as a psychological proposition, the biggest, most
- earnest, most credulous-looking ass on earth is the man who comes to a
- strange town to do his courting and has nothing to do but that one thing,
- at stated hours through the day or evening, while everybody around him is
- going about attending to business. I've watched that fellow hanging around
- the office of the hotel, kicking his heels together to kill time between
- visits, and in spite of all I've heard about his stability and moral worth
- I can't respect him. Hang it, if I were in his place and wanted to spend a
- week here, I'd peddle cigars on the street&mdash;I'd certainly have <i>something</i>
- to occupy my spare time. But I'll be flamdoodled if you didn't give him
- something to think about last night. Of all things, it strikes me, that
- could make a man like that sick&mdash;sick as a dog at the very stomach of
- his hopes&mdash;would be to see a former sweetheart of his fair charmer
- standing under shot and shell in front of her ancestral mansion protecting
- her servants from a howling mob like that, and later to see the defender,
- with the step of a David with a sling, come traipsing back victorious in
- her cause, all gummed up with blood and fighting still like hell to keep
- his friends from choking him to death in sheer admiration. She and Sanders
- may be engaged, but I'll be dadblamed if I wouldn't be worried if I were
- in his place.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wish you would let up, Garner,&rdquo; Dwight said, almost angrily. &ldquo;I know
- you mean well, but you don't understand the situation, and I have told you
- before that I don't like to talk about it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I <i>did</i> want to tell you how it was rubbed in on him this morning,&rdquo;
- Garner said, only half apologetically, &ldquo;and if you don't care, I'll
- finish.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson said nothing. Spots of red were on his cheeks, and with a teasing
- smile Garner went on: &ldquo;I had stopped to speak to her on the corner just
- now, when the Major and his Highness from Augusta joined us. The old man
- was simply bursting with enthusiasm over what you accomplished last night.
- According to the Major, you were the highest type of Southerner since
- George Washington, and the obtuse old chap kept turning to Sanders for his
- confirmation of each and every statement. Sanders was doing it with slow
- nods and inarticulate grunts, about as readily as a seasick passenger
- specifies items for his dinner, while Helen stood there blushing like a
- red rose. Well,&rdquo; Garner concluded, as he kicked off one of his untied
- shoes to put on a slipper, &ldquo;it may be cold comfort to you, viewed under
- the search-light of all the gossip in the air, but your blond rival is so
- jealous that the green juice of it is oozing from the pores of his skin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It isn't fair to him to look at it as you are,&rdquo; Dwight said. &ldquo;Under the
- same circumstances he could have taken my place.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Under the same circumstances, yes,&rdquo; Garner grinned. &ldquo;But it is
- circumstances that make things what they are in this world, and I tell you
- that fellow needs circumstances worse than any man I ever saw. He is
- worried. I stopped and watched him as he walked on with her, and I declare
- it looked to me like he kicked himself under his long coat at every step.
- Say, look! Isn't that Pole Baker across the street? The fellow behind the
- gray horse. Yes, that's who it is. I'll call him. He may have news from
- the mountains.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Answering the summons, Baker led his horse across the street to where the
- two friends stood waiting on the edge of the pavement.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have they heard of the arrest over there, Pole?&rdquo; Garner asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; the farmer drawled out. &ldquo;I was at George Wilson's store this
- morning, where a big gang was waiting for food supplies from their homes.
- Dan Willis fetched the report&mdash;by-the-way, fellows, just between us
- three, I'll bet he was the skunk that fired that shot. I'm pretty sure of
- it, from what I've picked up from some of his pals.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But what are they going to do?&rdquo; Carson asked, anxiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's exactly what I come in town to tell you,&rdquo; answered the
- mountaineer. &ldquo;They are taking entirely a new tack. A report has leaked out
- that Sam Dudlow was seen prowling about Johnson's just 'fore dark the
- night of the murder, and they are dead on his track. They are
- concentrating their forces to catch him, and, since Pete Warren is safe in
- jail, they say they are going to let 'im stay thar awhile anyway.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good!&rdquo; Garner cried, rubbing his hands together. &ldquo;We've got two chances,
- now, my boy&mdash;to prove Pete innocent at court or by their catching the
- right man. In my opinion, Dudlow is the coon that did the Job, and I
- believe he did it alone. Pete is too chicken-hearted and he's been too
- well brought up. Now let's get to work. You go talk to the prisoner,
- Carson, and put him through that honeyfugling third degree of yours. He'll
- confess if he did it, and if he did, may the Lord have mercy on his soul!
- I won't help defend him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's whar I stand,&rdquo; Pole Baker said. &ldquo;It's enough trouble savin' <i>innocent</i>
- niggers these days without bothering over the guilty. Shyster lawyers
- tryin' to protect the bad ones for a little fee is at the bottom of all
- this lawlessness anyway.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXIII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0026" id="linkimage-0026"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9205.jpg" alt="9205 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9205.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- S the prisoner's counsel, Carson had no difficulty in seeing him. At the
- outer door of the red brick structure, with its slate roof and dormer
- windows, Dwight met Burt Barrett, the jailer, a tall though strong young
- man, who had once lived in the mountains and had been a moonshiner, and
- was noted for his grim courage in any emergency.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I understand the trial is set for to-morrow,&rdquo; he remarked, as he opened
- the outer door which led into a hallway at the end of which was the
- portion of the house in which he lived with his wife and children.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Carson replied; &ldquo;the judge has telegraphed that he will come
- without fail.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The jailer shrugged his shoulders and laughed. &ldquo;I feel a sight better over
- it than I did last night. I understand that the mob is going to let us
- alone till they can catch Sam Dudlow; if they lay hands on that scamp they
- certainly will barbecue 'im alive. As for Pete, I can't make up my mind
- about him; he's a trifling nigger and no mistake. He's got a good,
- old-time mammy and daddy, and none of Major Warren's niggers have ever
- been in the chain-gang, but this boy has talked a lot and been in powerful
- bad company. If you can keep him out of the clutch of the mob you may save
- his neck, but you've got a job before you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want to ask what you think about putting a guard round the jail,&rdquo;
- Carson said, when they were at the foot of the stairs leading to the cells
- on the floor above.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As far as I'm concerned, I hope you won't have it done,&rdquo; said Barrett.
- &ldquo;To save your neck, you couldn't summon men that wouldn't be prejudiced
- agin the nigger, an' if the report went out that we had put a force on at
- the jail it would only make the mob madder, and make them act quicker. A
- hundred armed citizens wouldn't stop a lynching gang&mdash;not a shot
- would be fired by white men at white men, so what would be the use?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's what the sheriff thinks exactly, Burt,&rdquo; Carson replied. &ldquo;I presume
- the only thing to do is to treat the arrest as usual. I'm doing all I can
- to assure the people that there is to be a fair and speedy trial.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They had reached the top of the stairs and were near Pete's cell, when the
- jailer turned and asked, in an undertone, &ldquo;Are you armed?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, no,&rdquo; Carson said, in surprise.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good Lord! I wouldn't advise you to go inside the cell then. I've known
- niggers to kill their best friends when they are desperate.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not afraid of this one,&rdquo; Dwight laughed. &ldquo;I must get inside. I want
- to know the whole truth, and I can't talk to him through the grating. Is
- he in the cell on the right?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, the first on the left; it's the only doublebarred one in the jail.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In one corner of the fairly &ldquo;well lighted room stood a veritable cage, the
- sides, top and bottom consisting of heavy steel lattice-work. As the
- jailer was unlocking the massive door, Carson peered through one of the
- squares and a most pitiful sight met his eye, for at the sound of the key
- in the lock Pete, in his tatters and gashed and swollen face, had crouched
- down on his dingy blanket and remained there quaking in terror.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Get up!&rdquo; the jailer ordered, in a not unkindly tone; &ldquo;it's Carson Dwight
- to see you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this the negro's face lighted up, his eyes blazed in the sudden flare
- of relief, and he rose quickly. &ldquo;Oh, Marse Carson, I was afeared&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lock us in,&rdquo; Dwight said to the jailer; &ldquo;when I'm through I'll call you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, you know him better than I do,&rdquo; Barrett said. &ldquo;I'll wait
- below.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pete,&rdquo; Carson said, gently, when they were alone, &ldquo;your mother says she
- wants me to defend you under the charge brought against you. Do you wish
- it, too?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yasser, Marse Carson; but, Marse Carson, I don't know no mo' about dat
- thing dan you do. 'Fo' God, Marse Carson, I'm telling you de trufe. Lawsy,
- Marse Carson, you kin git me out o' here ef you'll des tell 'em ter let me
- go. Dey all know you, Marse Carson, en dey know none er yo' kind er black
- folks ain't er gwine ter do er nasty thing lak dat. Look how dey did las'
- night! Shucks! dey wouldn't er lef' enough o' my haar fer er
- hummin'-bird's nest, ef I hadn't got ter you in de nick er time. Dat pack
- er howlin' rapscallions was tryin' ter tear me ter mince-meat when you
- fired off dat big speech en made 'em all feel lak crawlin' in holes. You
- tell 'em, Marse Carson&mdash;you tell de jailer ter le' me out. Dat man
- know you ain't no fool; he know you is de biggest lawyer in de Souf. Ain't
- I heard old marster say you gwine up, en up, en up, till you set in de
- jedge's seat in de cote? Las' night, when you 'gun on 'em, en let out dat
- way, I knowed I was safe, but I don't see what yo'-all waitin' fer; I want
- ter go home ter mammy, Marse Carson. Look lak she been sick, en she cried
- en tuck on here, en so did young miss. Marse Carson, <i>what's de matter
- wid me?</i> What I done? I ain't er bad nigger. Unc' Richmond, on de farm,
- toi' me 'twas' ca'se I made threats ergin dat white man 'ca'se he whipped
- me. I did talk er lot, Marse Carson, but I never meant no harm. I was des
- er li'l mad, en&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop, Pete!&rdquo; There was a crude wooden stool in the cell and Carson sat
- down on it. His heart was overflowing with pity for the simple, trusting
- creature before him as he went on gently and yet firmly: &ldquo;You don't
- realize it, Pete, but you are in the most dangerous position you were ever
- in. I am powerless to release you. You'll have to be taken to court and
- seriously tried by law for the crime of which you are charged. Pete, I'm
- going to defend you, but I can't do a thing for you unless you tell me the
- whole truth. If you did this thing you must tell me&mdash;<i>me</i>, do
- you understand. We are alone. No one can hear you, and if you confess it
- to me it will go no further. Do you understand?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Dwight's glance was fixed on the floor. To this point he had steeled
- himself against a too impulsive faith in the negro's words that he might
- logically satisfy himself beyond any doubt as to the innocence or guilt of
- his client. There was silence. He dared not look into the gashed face
- before him, dreading to read what might be written there by the quivering
- hand of self-condemnation. The sheer length of the ensuing pause sent cold
- darts of fear through him. He waited another moment, then raised his eyes
- to the staring ones fixed upon him. To his astonishment they were full of
- tears; the great, heavy lip of the negro was quivering like that of a
- weeping child.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, Marse <i>Carson!</i>&rdquo; he sobbed; &ldquo;my God, I thought you knowed I
- didn't do it! When you tol' 'em all las' night dat I wasn't de right one,
- I thought you meant it. I never once thought you&mdash;<i>you</i> was
- gwine ter turn ergin me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson restrained himself by an effort as he went on, still calmly, with
- the penetrating insistency of grim justice itself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then do you know anything about it?&rdquo; he asked;&mdash;&ldquo;<i>anything at all?</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing I could swear to, Marse Carson,&rdquo; Pete replied, wiping his eyes on
- his torn and sleeveless arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you suspect anybody, Pete?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yasser, I do, Marse Carson. Somehow, I b'lieve dat Sam Dudlow done it. I
- b'lieve it 'ca'se folks say he's run off; en what he run off fer lessen
- he's de one? Oh, Marse Carson, I 'lowed I was havin' er hard 'nough time
- lak it is, but ef <i>you</i> gwine jine de rest uv um en&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop; think!&rdquo; Carson went on, almost sternly, so eager was he to get
- vital facts bearing on the situation. &ldquo;I want to know, Pete, why you think
- Sam Dudlow killed the Johnsons. Have you any other reason except that he
- has left?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Pete hesitated a moment, then he answered: &ldquo;I think he de one, Marse
- Carson, 'ca'se one day while me'n him en some more niggers was loadin'
- cotton at yo' pa's warehouse, some un was guyin' me 'bout de stripes
- Johnson en Willis lef' on my back, en I was&mdash;I was shootin' off my
- mouf. I didn't mean er thing, Marse Carson, but I was talkin' too much, en
- Sam come ter me, he did, en said: 'Yo' er fool, nigger; yo' sort never
- gits even fer er thing lak dat. It's de kind dat lay low en do de wuk
- right.' En, Marse Carson, w'en I hear dem folks was daid I des laid it ter
- Sam, in my mind.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pete,&rdquo; Dwight said, as he rose to leave, &ldquo;I firmly believe you are
- innocent.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thank God, Marse Carson! I thought you'd b'lieve me. Now, w'en you gwine
- let me out?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can't tell that, Pete,&rdquo; Dwight answered, as cheerfully as possible.
- &ldquo;You need a suit of clothes. I'll send you one right away.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;One er yo's, Marse Carson?&rdquo; The gashed face actually glowed with the
- delight of a child over a new toy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was going to order a new one,&rdquo; Carson answered. &ldquo;I'd ruther have one er
- yo's ef you got one you thoo with,&rdquo; Pete said, eagerly. &ldquo;Dar ain't none in
- dis town lak dem you git fum New York. Is you quit wearin' dat brown
- checked one you got last spring?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, you can have that, Pete, if you wish, and I'll send you some
- shoes and other things.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My God! will yer, boss? Lawd, won't I cut er shine at chu'ch next Sunday!
- Say, Marse Carson, you ain't gwine ter let um keep me in here over Sunday,
- is you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll do the best I can for you, Pete,&rdquo; the young man said, and when the
- jailer had opened the door he descended the stairs with a heavy,
- despondent tread.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Poor, poor devil!&rdquo; he said to himself. &ldquo;He's not any more responsible
- than a baby. And yet our laws hold him, in his benighted ignorance, more
- tightly, more mercilessly than they do the highest in the land.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXIV.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0027" id="linkimage-0027"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9212.jpg" alt="9212 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9212.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- ESPITE the news Pole Baker had brought to town regarding the disposition
- of the mountaineers to let justice take its formal trend in the case of
- the negro already arrested, as the day wore on towards its close the whole
- town took on an air of vague excitement. Men who now lived at Darley, but
- had been former residents of the country, and were supposed to know the
- temper and character of the aggrieved people, shook their heads and smiled
- grimly when the subject of Pete's coming trial was mentioned. &ldquo;Huh!&rdquo; said
- one of these men, who kept a small grocery store on the main street, &ldquo;that
- nigger'll never see the door of the court-house.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And that opinion grew and seemed to saturate the very garment of
- approaching night. The negroes at work in various ways about the business
- portion of the town left their posts early, and with no comment to the
- whites or even to their own kind, they betook themselves to their homes&mdash;or
- elsewhere. The negroes who had held the interrupted meeting at Neb Wynn's
- house had been all that day less in evidence than any of the others. The
- attempt to stimulate law and order, to meet the white race on common
- ground, had been crudely and yet sincerely made. They had done all they
- could within their restricted limitations; it now behooved them personally
- to avoid the probable overflow of the coming crisis. Their meeting in
- secret, they feared, was not understood. The present prisoner, in fact,
- had to all appearances, at least, been knowingly harbored by them. To
- explain would be easy enough; convincing an infuriated, race-mad mob of
- their friendly, helpful intentions would be impossible. Hence it was that
- long-headed, now silent-tongued, Neb Wynn locked up his domicile, and with
- his wife and children stole through the darkest streets and alleys to the
- house of a citizen who had owned his father.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Marse George,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I want you ter take me 'n my folks in fer
- ter-night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, Neb,&rdquo; the white man answered; &ldquo;we've got plenty of room. Go
- round to the kitchen and get your suppers. I didn't know it was as bad as
- that, but it may be well to be on the safe side.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Just after dark Carson went home to supper. As he drew near the front gate
- he noticed that the Warren house was lighted both in the upper and lower
- portions and that a group of persons were standing on the veranda. He
- noticed the towering form of old Lewis and the bowed, bandanna-clad head
- of Linda, and with them, evidently offering consolation, stood Helen, the
- Major, Sanders, and Keith Gordon.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson was entering the gate when Keith through the twilight recognized
- him and signalled him to wait. And leaving the others Keith came over to
- him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I must see you, Carson,&rdquo; he said, in a voice that had never sounded so
- grave. &ldquo;Can we go in? If Mam' Linda sees you she'll be after you. She's
- terribly upset.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come into the library,&rdquo; Carson said. &ldquo;I see it's lighted. We'll not be
- disturbed there.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Inside the big, square room, with its simple furnishings and drab tints,
- Carson sank, weary from his nervous strain and loss of sleep, into an
- easy-chair and motioned his friend to take another, but Keith, nervously
- twirling his hat in his hands, continued to stand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's awful, old man, simply awful!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I've been there since
- sundown trying to pacify that old man and woman, but what was the use?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then she's afraid&mdash;&rdquo; Carson began.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Afraid? Good God! how could she help it? The negro preacher and his wife
- came to her and Lewis and frankly tried to prepare them for the worst.
- Uncle Lewis is speechless, and Linda is past the tear-shedding stage. Hand
- in hand the old pair simply pace the floor like goaded brutes with human
- hearts and souls bound up in them. Then Helen&mdash;the poor, dear girl!
- Isn't this a beautiful homecoming for her? I feel like fighting, and yet
- there's nothing to hit but empty, heartless air. I don't care if you know
- it, Carson.&rdquo; Keith sank into a chair and leaned forward, his eyes
- glistening with the condensed dew of tense emotion. &ldquo;I don't deny it.
- Helen is the only girl I ever cared for. She's treated me very kindly ever
- since she discovered my feeling, and given me to understand in the
- sweetest way the utter hopelessness of my case, but I still feel the same.
- I thought I was growing out of it, but seeing her sorrow to-day has shown
- me what she is to me&mdash;and what she always will be. I'll love her all
- my life, Carson. She's suffering terribly over this. She loves her old
- mammy as much as if they were the same flesh and blood. Oh, it was
- pitiful, simply pitiful! Helen was trying to pacify her just now, and the
- old woman suddenly laid her hand on her breast and cried out: 'Don't talk
- ter me, honey child, I nursed bofe you en Pete on dis here breast, an' dat
- boy's <i>me</i>&mdash;my own self, heart en soul, en ef God let's dem men
- hang 'im ter-night, I'll curse 'Im ter my grave.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Poor old woman!&rdquo; Carson sighed. &ldquo;If it has to come to her, it would be
- better to have it over with. It would have been better if I had stood back
- last night and let them have their way.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh no,&rdquo; protested Keith; &ldquo;that's Linda's sole comfort. She hardly draws a
- breath that doesn't utter your name. She still believes that her only hope
- rests in you. She says you'll yet think of something&mdash;that you'll yet
- do something to prevent the thing. She cries that out every now and then.
- Oh, Carson, I don't amount to anything, but before God I can truthfully
- say that I'd give my life to have Linda talk that way about me&mdash;before
- Helen.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson groaned, his tense hands were locked like prongs of steel in front
- of him, his face was deathly pale. &ldquo;You wouldn't like any sort of talk or
- idle compliments if you were bound hand and foot as I am,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It's
- mockery. It's vinegar rubbed into my wounds. It's hell!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He tore himself from his chair and began to stride about the room like a
- restless tiger in a cage. His walk took him into the hall utterly
- forgetful of the presence of his friend. There a colored maid came to him
- and said, &ldquo;Your mother wants you, sir.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stared at the girl blankly for a moment, then he seemed to pull himself
- together. &ldquo;Has my mother heard&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, sir, your father told us not to excite her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, I'll go up,&rdquo; Carson said. &ldquo;Tell Mr. Gordon, in the library, to
- wait for me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was wondering if you had come,&rdquo; the invalid said, as he bent over her
- bed, took her hand, and kissed her. &ldquo;I presume you have been very busy all
- day over Pete's case?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, very busy, mother dear.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And is it all right now? Your father tells me the trial is set for
- to-morrow. Oh, Carson, I'm very proud of you. I heard your speech last
- night, and it seemed to lift me to the very throne of God. Oh, you are
- right, you are right! It is our duty to love and sympathize with those
- poor creatures. They are still children in the cradles of their past
- slavery. They can't act for themselves. Their crimes are due chiefly to
- the lack of the guiding hands they once had. Oh, my son, your father is
- angry with you for spoiling your political chances by such a radical
- stand, but even if you lose the race by it, I shall be all the prouder of
- you, for you have shown that you won't sell yourself. I wish I could go to
- the courthouse to-morrow, but the doctor won't let me. He says I mustn't
- have another shock like that last night, when I heard that shot, saw you
- reel, and thought you were killed. Son, are you listening?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, yes, mother. I&mdash;&rdquo; His mind was really elsewhere. He had dropped
- her hand, and was standing with furrowed brow and tightly drawn lips in
- the shadow thrown by the lamp on a table near by and the high posts of the
- old-fashioned bedstead.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I thought you seemed to be thinking of something else,&rdquo; said the invalid,
- plaintively.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I really was troubled about leaving Keith downstairs by himself,&rdquo; Carson
- said. &ldquo;Perhaps I'd better run down now, mother.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, I didn't know he was there. Ask him to supper.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, mother,&rdquo; and he left the room with a slow step, finding Gordon
- on the veranda below fitfully puffing at a cigar as he walked to and fro.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Helen called me to the fence just now,&rdquo; Keith said. &ldquo;She's all broken to
- pieces. She is relying solely on you now. She sent you a message.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, with the tears streaming down her cheeks she simply said, 'Tell
- Carson that I am praying that he will think of some way to avert this
- disaster.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She said that!&rdquo; Carson turned and stared through the gathering shadows
- towards the jail. There was a moment's pause, then he asked, in a tone
- that was harsh, crisp, and rasping: &ldquo;Keith, could you get together
- to-night fifteen men who would stick to me through personal friendship and
- help me arrive at some decision as to&mdash;to what is best?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Twenty, Carson&mdash;twenty who would risk their lives at a word from
- you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They might have to sacrifice&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That wouldn't make a bit of difference; I know the ones you can depend
- on. You've got genuine friends, the truest and bravest a man ever had.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then have as many as you can get to meet me at Blackburn's store at nine
- o'clock. We may accomplish nothing, but I want to talk to them. God knows
- it is the only chance. No, I can't explain now. There is not a moment to
- lose. Tell Blackburn to keep the doors shut and let them assemble in the
- rear as secretly and quietly as possible.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, Carson. I'll have the men there.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXV.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0028" id="linkimage-0028"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9219.jpg" alt="9219 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9219.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- HEN Carson reached the front door of Blackburn's store about nine o'clock
- that evening, he found it closed. For a moment he stood under the Crude
- wooden shed that roofed the sidewalk and looked up and down the deserted
- street. It was a dark night, and from the aspect of the heavy, troubled
- clouds high winds seemed in abeyance beyond the hills to the west. He was
- wondering how he had best make his presence known to his friends within
- the store, when he heard a soft whistle, and Keith Gordon, the flaring
- disk of a cigar lighting his expectant face, stepped out of a dark
- doorway.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've been waiting for you,&rdquo; he said, in a cautious undertone. &ldquo;They are
- getting impatient. You see, they thought you'd be here earlier.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I couldn't get away while my mother was awake,&rdquo; Carson said. &ldquo;Dr. Stone
- was there and warned me not to leave at night. She can't stand any more
- excitement. So I had to stay with her. I read to her till she fell asleep.
- Who's here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The gang and fully fifteen other trusty fellows&mdash;you'll see them on
- the inside, every man of them with a gun. At the last moment I heard Pole
- Baker was down at the wagon-yard, and I nabbed him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good; I'm glad you did. Now let's go in.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not yet, old man,&rdquo; Keith objected. &ldquo;Blackburn gave special orders not to
- open the door if any person was in sight. Let's walk to the corner and
- look around.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They went to the old bank building on the corner, and stood at the foot of
- the stairs leading up to the den. No one was in sight. Across the numerous
- tracks of the switch-yard hard by there was a steam flouring mill which
- ground day and night, and the steady puffing of the engine beat
- monotonously on their ears. In a red flare of light they saw the shadowy
- form of the engineer stoking the fire.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now the way is clear,&rdquo; said Keith; &ldquo;we can go in, but I want to prepare
- you for a disappointment, old man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson stared through the darkness as arm in arm they moved back to the
- store. &ldquo;You mean&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll tell you, Carson. The meeting of these fellows to-night is a big
- proof of the&mdash;the wonderful esteem in which they hold you. No other
- man could have got them together at such a time; but, all the same, they
- are not going to allow you to&mdash;you see, Carson, they have had time to
- talk it over in there, and have unanimously agreed that to make any
- opposition by force would be worse than folly. Pole Baker brought some
- reliable news, reliable and terrible. Why, he told us just now&mdash;however,
- wait. He will tell you about it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Giving a rap on the door that was recognized within, they were admitted by
- Blackburn, who stood back in the shadow and quickly closed the shutter and
- locked it again. In the uncertain light of a lamp with a murky chimney, on
- the platform in the rear, seated on boxes, nail kegs, chairs, table, and
- desk, Dwight beheld a motley gathering of his friends and supporters. Kirk
- Fitzpatrick, the brawny, black-handed tinner, who had a jest for every
- moment, was there; Wilson, the shoemaker; Tobe Hassler, the German baker;
- Tom Wayland, the good-hearted drug clerk, whose hair was as red as blood;
- Bob Smith, Wade Tingle, and, nestled close to the lamp, and looking like a
- hunchback, crouched Garner, so deep in a newspaper that he was utterly
- deaf and blind to sounds and things around him. Besides those mentioned,
- there were several other ardent friends of the candidate.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, here you are at last,&rdquo; Garner cried, throwing down his paper. &ldquo;If I
- hadn't had something to read I'd have been asleep. I don't know any more
- than a rabbit what you intend to propose, but whatever it is, we are late
- enough about it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hurriedly Carson explained the cause of his delay and took the chair which
- the tinner, with the air of a proud inferior, was pushing towards him. As
- he sat down and the lamplight fell athwart his careworn face, the group
- was overwhelmed with sympathy and a strange, far-reaching respect they
- could hardly understand. To-night they were, more than usual, under the
- spell of that inner force which had bound them one and all to him and
- which, they felt, nothing but dishonor could break. And yet there they sat
- so grimly banded together against him that he felt it in their very
- attitudes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The truth is&rdquo;&mdash;Garner broke the awkward pause&mdash;&ldquo;we presume you
- got us together to-night to offer open opposition&mdash;in case, of
- course, that the mob means harm to your client. That seems the only thing
- a body of men can do. But, my dear boy, there are two sides to this
- question. For reasons of your own, chief among which is a most beautiful
- principle to see the humblest stamp of man get justice&mdash;for these
- reasons you call on your friends to stand to you, and they will stand, I
- reckon, to the end, but it's for you, Carson, to act reasonably and think
- as readily of the interests of all of us as for those of the unfortunate
- prisoner. To meet that mob by opposition to-night would&mdash;well, ask
- Pole Baker for the latest news. When you have heard what he knows to be
- true, I am sure you will see the utter futility of any movement
- whatsoever.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- All eyes were now turned on the gaunt mountaineer, who was sitting on an
- inverted nail keg whittling to a fine point a bit of wood which now and
- then he thrust automatically between his white front teeth.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, Carson,&rdquo; he began, in drawling tones, &ldquo;I lowed you-uns would want
- to know just how the land lays, and as I had a sort of underground way of
- gettin' at first-hand facts, I raked in all the information I could an'
- come on to town. I'd heard about how low your mother was, an' easy upset
- by excitement, an' so I didn't go up to your house. I met Keith, an' he
- told me I could see you at this meetin', an' so I waited. Carson, the jig
- is certainly up with that coon. No power under high heaven could save his
- neck. The report that was circulated this morning, was deliberately sent
- out to throw the authorities off their guard. Only about thirty men are
- still on Sam Dudlow's trail&mdash;the rest, hundreds and hundreds, in
- bunches an' factions, each faction totin' a flag to show whar they hail
- from, an' all dressed in white sheets, is headed this way.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you mean right at this moment?&rdquo; Carson asked, as he started to rise.
- </p>
- <p>
- Pole motioned to him to sit down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They won't be here till about twelve o'clock,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;They've passed
- the word about amongst 'em, and agreed to meet, so that all factions can
- take part, at the old Sandsome place, two miles out on the Springtown
- road. They will start from there at half-past eleven on the march for the
- jail. It will be after twelve before they get here. Pete's got that long
- to make his peace, but no longer. And right here, Carson, before I stop, I
- want to say that thar ain't a man in this State I'd do a favor for quicker
- than I would for you, but many of us here to-night are family men, and
- while that nigger may, as you think, be innocent, still his life is just
- one life, while&mdash;well&rdquo;&mdash;Baker snapped his dry fingers with a
- click that was as sharp as the cocking of a revolver&mdash;&ldquo;I wouldn't
- give <i>that</i> for our lives if we opposed them men. They are as mad as
- wounded wild-cats. They believe he done it; they know on reliable
- testimony that he said he'd kill Johnson; an' they want his blood. Five
- hundred such as we are wouldn't halt 'em a minute. I want to help, but I'm
- tied hand an' foot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was silence after Pole's voice died away. Then Garner rapped on the
- table with his small hand and tossed back the long, thick hair from his
- massive brow.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You may as well know the truth, Carson,&rdquo; he said, calmly. &ldquo;We put it to a
- vote just before you came, and we all agreed that we would&mdash;well, try
- to bring you round to some sort of resignation; try to get you to throw it
- off your mind and stop worrying.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- To their surprise Carson took up the lamp and rose. &ldquo;Wait a moment,&rdquo; he
- said, and with the lamp in hand he crossed the elevated part of the floor
- and went down the steps into the cellar. They were left in darkness for a
- moment, the rays of the lamp flashing now only on the front wall and door
- of the long building.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Huh, there ain't anybody hiding there!&rdquo; Blackburn cautiously called out.
- &ldquo;I looked through the full length of it, turned over every box and barrel,
- before you came. I wasn't going to run any risk of having a stray tramp in
- a caucus like this.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was some fixed quality in Dwight's drawn face as he emerged,
- carrying the lamp before him, ascended the steps, and again took his place
- at the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You thought somebody might be hiding there,&rdquo; the store-keeper said; &ldquo;but
- I was careful to&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, it wasn't that,&rdquo; Carson said. &ldquo;I was wondering&mdash;I was trying to
- think&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He paused as if submerged in thought, and Garner turned upon him almost
- sternly. He had never before used quite such a harsh tone to his partner.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You've gone far enough, Carson,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;There are limits even to the
- deepest friendship. You can't ask your best friends to make their wives
- widows and their children orphans in a blind effort to save the neck of
- one miserable negro, even if he's as innocent as the angels in heaven. As
- for yourself, your heroism has almost led you into a cesspool of reckless
- absurdity. You have let that old man and woman up there, and Miss&mdash;that
- old man and woman, <i>anyway</i>&mdash;work on your sympathies till you
- have lost your usual judgment. I'm your friend and&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop! Wait!&rdquo; Carson stood up, his hands on the edge of the table, the
- lamp beneath him throwing his mobile face into the shadow of his firm,
- massive jaw. &ldquo;Stop!&rdquo; he repeated. &ldquo;You say you have given up. Boys, I
- can't. I tell you I <i>can't</i>. I simply can't let them kill that boy.
- Every nerve in my body, every pulsation of my soul screams out against it.
- I have set my heart on averting this horror. Ten years ago I could have
- gone to my bed and slept peacefully, as many good citizens of this town
- will to-night, under the knowledge that the verdict of mob law was to be
- executed, but in the handling of this case I've had a new birth. There is
- no God in heaven if&mdash;I say if&mdash;He has not made it <i>possible</i>
- for the mind and will of man to prevent this horror. There must be a way;
- there <i>is</i> a way, and if I could put my ideas into your brains
- to-night&mdash;my faith and confidence into your souls&mdash;we'd prevent
- this calamity and set an example for our fellows to follow in future.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your ideas into our brains!&rdquo; Garner said, in a tone of amused resentment.
- &ldquo;Well, I like that, Carson; but if you can see a ghost of a chance to save
- that boy's neck with safety to our own, I'd like to have you plug it
- through my skull, if you have to do it with a steel drill. At present I'm
- the senior member of the firm of Garner &amp; Dwight, but I'll take second
- place hereafter, if you can do what you are aiming at.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't mean to reflect on your intelligences,&rdquo; Dwight went on,
- passionately, his voice rising higher, &ldquo;but I <i>do</i> see a way, and I
- am praying God at this moment to make you see it as I do and be willing to
- help me carry it out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Blaze away, old hoss,&rdquo; Pole Baker piped up from his seat on the nail keg.
- &ldquo;I'm not a nigger-lover by a long shot, but somehow, seeing how you feel
- about this particular one an' his connections, I'm as anxious to save 'im
- as if I owned 'im in the good old day an' his sort was fetchin' two
- thousand apiece. You go ahead. I feel kind o' sneakin', anyway, for votin'
- agin you while you was up thar nursin' yore sick mammy. By gum! you give
- me the end of a log I kin tote, an' I'll do it or break my back.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want it understood, Carson,&rdquo; said Wade Tingle at this juncture, &ldquo;that I
- was only voting against our trying to stop that mob by force, and, to do
- myself justice, I was voting in the interests of the family men here
- to-night. God knows, if you can see any <i>other</i> possible way&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We have no time to lose,&rdquo; Carson said. &ldquo;If we are to accomplish anything
- we must be about it. Gentlemen, what I may propose may, in a way, be
- asking you to make a sacrifice almost as great as that of open resistance.
- I am going to ask you, law-abiding citizens that you are, to break the
- law, as you understand it, but not law as the best wisdom of man intended
- it to be. This section is in a state of open lawlessness. The law I'm
- going to ask you to break is already broken. The highest court might hold
- that we would be no better, in <i>fact</i>, than the army of law-breakers
- headed this way with the foam of race hatred on their lips, its insane
- blaze in their eyes that till recently beamed only in gentleness and human
- love. But I'm going to ask you to chose between two evils&mdash;to let an
- everlasting injustice be done at the hand of a hate that will drown in
- tears of regret in time to come, or the lesser evil of breaking an already
- broken law. You are all good citizens, and I tremble and blush over my
- audacity in asking you to do what you have never in any form done before.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson paused. Wondering silence fell on the group. Upon each face
- struggled evidences of an almost painful desire to grasp his meaning. That
- it was momentous no man there doubted. Even the ever equable Garner was
- shaken from, his habitual stoic attitude, and with his delicate fingers
- rigidly supporting his great head he stared open-mouthed at the speaker.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, well, what is it?&rdquo; he presently asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There is only one chance I see,&rdquo; and Dwight stood erect, his arms folded,
- and stepped back so that the light of the lamp fell full upon his tense
- features. The patch of sticking plaster stood out from his pale skin,
- giving his perspiring brow an uncanny look. &ldquo;There is only one thing to
- do, my friends, and without your help I stand powerless. I suggest that we
- form ourselves into a supposed mob of disguised men, that we go ahead of
- the others to the jail, and actually <i>force Burt Barrett to turn the
- prisoner over to us</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Great God!&rdquo; Garner, stood up, and leaned on the table. &ldquo;<i>Then</i> what&mdash;what
- would you do? Good Lord!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson pointed steadily to the cellar-door and swallowed the lump of
- excitement in his throat. &ldquo;I would, unseen by any one, if possible, bring
- him here and imprison him, in that cellar, guarded by us only till&mdash;till
- such a time as we could safely deliver him to a court of justice.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;By God, you <i>are</i> a wheel-hoss!&rdquo; burst from Pole Baker's lips.
- &ldquo;That's as easy as failin' off a log.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you mean to make Burt Barrett believe we are&mdash;are actually bent
- on lynching the negro?&rdquo; demanded Keith Gordon, new-born enthusiasm
- bubbling from his eyes and voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, that would be the only way,&rdquo; said Carson. &ldquo;Barrett is a sworn
- officer of the law, and his position is his livelihood. Even if we could
- persuade him to join us, it wouldn't be fair to him, for he would be
- shouldering more responsibility than we would. The only way is to
- thoroughly disguise ourselves and compel him to give in as he will be
- compelled by the others if we don't act first. I know he would not fire
- upon us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It looks to me like a dandy idea,&rdquo; spoke up Blackburn. &ldquo;As for me I want
- to reward originality by doing the thing if possible. As for that cellar,
- it's as strong as an ancient fortress anyway and, Carson, Pete would not
- try to escape if you ordered him not to. As for disguises, I can lend you
- all the bleached sheeting you want. I got in a fresh bale of it yesterday.
- I could cut it into ten-yard pieces which would not hurt the sale of it.
- Remnants fetch a better price than regular stuff anyway. Boys, let's vote
- on it. All in favor stand up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a clatter of shoes and rattling of chairs, boxes, kegs and other
- articles which had been used for seats. It was an immediate and unanimous
- tribute to the sway Carson Dwight's personality had long held over them.
- They stood by him to a man. Even Garner suddenly, and strangely for his
- crusty individuality, relegated himself to the rank of a common private
- under the obvious leader.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hold on, boys!&rdquo; exclaimed one not so easily relegated to any position not
- full of action, and Pole Baker was heard in a further proposal. &ldquo;So far
- the arrangements are good and sound but you-uns haven't looked far enough
- ahead. When we git to the jail thar's got to be some darned fine talkin'
- of exactly the right sort, or Burt Barrett will smell a mouse and refuse
- our demands. In a case like this silence is a sight more powerful than a
- lot o' gab. Now, I propose to have one man, and one man <i>only</i> to do
- the talking.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, and you are the man,&rdquo; said Carson. &ldquo;You must do it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'm willin',&rdquo; agreed Baker. &ldquo;The truth is, folks say I'm good at
- just that sort o' devilment, an' I'd sort o' like the job.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are the very man,&rdquo; Carson said, with a smile.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You bet he is,&rdquo; agreed Blackburn. &ldquo;Now come down in the store an' let me
- rig you spooks up. We haven't any too much time to lose.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thar's another thing you-uns don't seem to have calculated on,&rdquo; said
- Baker, as Blackburn was leading them down to the dry-goods counter. &ldquo;It
- may take time to quiet public excitement, even if we put this thing
- through to-night. You propose to let the impression go out that thar was a
- lynchin'. How will you keep 'em from thinkin' it's a fake unless they see
- some'n' hangin' to a tree-limb in the mornin'? If they thought we'd put up
- a job on 'em, they would nose around till they was onto the whole
- business, an' then thar would be the devil to pay.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are right about that,&rdquo; said Garner. &ldquo;If we could convince the big mob
- that Pete has been lynched in some secret way or place, by some other
- party, who don't want to be known in the matter, the excitement would die
- down in a day or so.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A bang-up good idea!&rdquo; was Pole's ultimatum. &ldquo;Leave it to me and I'll
- study up some way to put it to Burt&mdash;by gum! How about tellin' 'im
- that, for reasons of our own, we intend to hide the body whar the niggers
- can't git at it to give it decent burial? I really believe that would go
- down.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Splendid, splendid!&rdquo; said Garner. &ldquo;Work that fine enough, Pole, and it
- will give us more time for everything.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I can work it all right if I am to do the talkin',&rdquo; Pole said, as
- he reached out for his portion of the sheeting.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXVI.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0029" id="linkimage-0029"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9231.jpg" alt="9231 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9231.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- IFTEEN minutes later a spectral group in all truth filed out through the
- rear door of the store and paused for further orders in the shadow of the
- wall of the adjoining bank building. The sky was still darkly overcast and
- a drizzle as fine as mist was in the air.
- </p>
- <p>
- With Carson and Pole in the lead, the party marched grimly two and two, a
- weird sight even to themselves. Straight down the alley behind the stores
- along the railway they moved, keeping step like trained military men.
- Pole, for visual effect, carried a coil of new hemp rope, and he swung it
- about in his white, winglike clutch with the ease of a cow-boy, as he
- gutturally gave orders as to turns and tentative pauses. Now and then he
- would leave the others standing and stride ahead through the darkness and
- signal them to come on up. In this way they progressed with many a halt,
- and many a cautious détour to avoid the light that steadily gleamed
- through some cottage window or chink in a door or some watchman at his
- post at some mill or factory, till finally they reached the grounds
- surrounding the court-house and jail.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know how soft-hearted you are, Carson,&rdquo; Baker whispered in the
- young man's ear, &ldquo;but thar's one thing a man full of feelin' like you seem
- to be ought to be ready to guard against.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is that, Pole?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, you know, if we git the poor devil out he'll be sure he's done for,
- an' he'll be apt to raise an' awful row, beggin' an' prayin' an' no
- tellin' what else. But for all you do, don't open yore mouth. Let 'im bear
- it&mdash;tough as it will be&mdash;till we kin git to a safe place.
- Thar'll be folks listenin' in the houses along the way to the store, an'
- ef you was to speak one kind word the truth might leak out. To all
- appearances we are lynchers of the most rabid brand.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I understand that, Pole,&rdquo; said Carson. &ldquo;I won't interfere with your
- work.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't call it <i>my</i> work,&rdquo; said Baker, admiringly. &ldquo;I've been through
- a sight of secret things in my time, but I never heard of a scheme as
- slick an' deep-laid as this. If she goes through safe I'll put you at the
- top of my list. It looks like it will work, but a body never kin tell.
- Burt Barrett is the next hill to climb. I don't know him well enough to
- foresee what stand he'll take. Boys, have yore guns ready, an' when I
- order you to take aim, you do it as if you intend to make a hole in
- whatever is in front of you. Our bluff is the biggest that ever was
- thought of, but it has to go. Now, come on!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Through the open gateway they marched across the public lawn covered with
- fresh green grass to the jail near by. A dog chained in a kennel behind
- the house waked and snarled, but he did not bark. There was a little porch
- at the entrance to the building, and along this the ghostly band silently
- arranged themselves.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hello in thar, Burt Barrett!&rdquo; Pole suddenly cried out, in sharp, stern
- tones, and there was a pause. Then from the darkness within came the sound
- of some one striking a match. A flickering light flared up in the room on
- the right of the entrance; then the voice of a woman was heard.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Burt, what is it?&rdquo; she asked, in a startled tone.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know; I'll see,&rdquo; a coarser voice made answer. Another pause and a
- door on the inside was opened, then the heavier outer one, and Burt
- Barrett, half dressed, stood staring at the grewsome assemblage before
- him.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0030" id="linkimage-0030"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0233.jpg" alt="0233 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0233.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We've come after that damned nigger,&rdquo; said Baker, succinctly, his tone so
- low in his throat that even an intimate friend would not have recognized
- it, and as he spoke he raised his coil of rope and tapped the floor of the
- porch.
- </p>
- <p>
- Barrett, as many a brave man would have done in his place, stood
- helplessly bewildered. Presently he drew himself together and said,
- firmly: &ldquo;Gentlemen, I'm a sworn officer of the law. I've got a duty to
- perform and I'm going to do it.&rdquo; And thereupon they saw the barrel of a
- revolver which the jailer held in his hand. In the awful stillness that
- engulfed his words the click of its hammer, as the weapon was cocked,
- sounded sharp and distinct.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Too bad, but he's goin' to act ugly, boys,&rdquo; Pole said, with grim
- finality. &ldquo;He is a white man <i>in looks</i>, but he's j'ined forces with
- the black devils that are bent on rulin' our land. Steady, take aim! If
- thar's less'n twenty holes in his carcass when he's examined in the
- mornin' it will stand for some member's eternal disgrace. Aim careful!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a startled scream at the half-open window of the bedroom on the
- right and the jailer's wife thrust out her head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't shoot 'im!&rdquo; she screamed. &ldquo;Don't! Give 'em the keys, Burt. Are you
- a fool?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He certainly looks it,&rdquo; was Baker's comment, in a tone of well-assumed
- only half-bridled rage. &ldquo;Give 'im ten seconds to drap them keys, boys.
- I'll count. When I say ten blaze away, an' let a yawnin' hell take 'im.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gentlemen, I&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Burt! Burt! what do you mean?&rdquo; the woman cried again. &ldquo;Are you plumb
- crazy?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;One!&rdquo; counted Pole&mdash;&ldquo;two!&mdash;three&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want to do what's right,&rdquo; the jailer temporized. &ldquo;Of course, I'm
- overpowered, and if&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Five!&mdash;six!&rdquo; went on Pole, his voice ringing out clear and piercing.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a jingling of steel. The spectators, peering through ragged
- eye-holes in their white caps, saw the bunch of keys as it emerged from
- Barrett's pocket and fell to the doorstep.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gentlemen, you may live to be sorry for this night's work,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;What do you care what we're sorry for,&rdquo; Pole said, grimly, &ldquo;just so you
-ain't turned into a two-legged sifter? Now&rdquo;&mdash;as he stooped to pick up
-the keys&mdash;&ldquo;you git back in thar to yore wife an' children. We
-simply mean business an' know what we are about. An' look here, Burt
-Barrett&rdquo;&mdash;Pole nudged Carson, who stood close to him&mdash;&ldquo;thar'll be
-another gang here in a few minutes on the same business. You kin tell
- 'em we beat 'em to the hitchin'-post, an', moreover, you kin tell 'em
-that we said that when we settle this nigger's hash them nor nobody else
-will ever be able to find hair or hide of 'im. A buryin' to the general
-run o' niggers is their greatest joy an' pride, but they'll never cut up
-high jinks over this one.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good, by Heaven!&rdquo; Garner chuckled, as he recalled Pole's diplomatic
- suggestion at the store.
- </p>
- <p>
- Without another word of protest the jailer receded into the house, leaving
- the door open, and, led by Pole, the others entered the hallway with a
- firm tread and mounted the stairs to the floor above. All was still here,
- and so dark that Baker lighted a bit of candle and held it over his head.
- Knowing the cell in which Pete was confined, Carson led them to its door.
- As they paused there and Pole was fumbling with-the keys, a low, stifled
- scream escaped from the prisoner, and then, in the dim, checkered light
- thrown by the candle through the bars, they saw the negro standing close
- against the farthest grating. Pole had found the right key and opened the
- door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's all up with you, Pete Warren,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;you needn't make a row.
- You've got to take your medicine. Come on.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, my God, my God!&rdquo; cried the negro, as with great, glaring eyes he
- gazed upon them. &ldquo;I never done it. I never done it. Don't kill me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bring 'im on, boys!&rdquo; Pole produced an artificial oath with difficulty,
- for he really was deeply moved. &ldquo;Bring 'im on!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Two of the spectres seized Pete's hands just as his quaking knees bent
- under him and he was falling down. He started to pull back, and then,
- evidently realizing the utter futility of resisting such an overwhelming
- force, he allowed himself to be led through the door of the cell and down
- the stairs into the yard.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I never done it, before God I never done it!&rdquo; he went on, sobbing like a
- child. &ldquo;Don't kill me, white folks. Gi' me one chance. Tek me ter Marse
- Carson Dwight; he'll tell you I ain't de man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He'll tell us a lot!&rdquo; growled Baker, with another of his mechanical
- oaths. &ldquo;Dry up!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, my God have mercy!&rdquo; For the first time Pete noticed the coil of rope
- and the sight of it redoubled his terror. On his knees he sank, trying to
- cover his eyes with his imprisoned hands, and quivering like an aspen.
- Hardly knowing what he was doing, Carson Dwight impulsively bent over him,
- but before he had opened his lips the watchful Baker had roughly drawn him
- back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't, for God's sake!&rdquo; the mountaineer whispered, warningly, and he
- pointed across the street to the houses near by. Indeed, as if to sanction
- his precaution, a window-sash in the upper story of the nearest house was
- raised, and a pale, white-haired man looked out. It was the leading
- Methodist preacher of the place. For one moment he stared down on them, as
- if struck dumb by the terror of the scene.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In the name of Christ, our Lord, our Saviour, be merciful, neighbors,&rdquo; he
- said, in a voice that shook. &ldquo;Don't commit this crime against yourselves
- and the community you live in. Spare him! In the name of God, hand him
- back to the protection of the law.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The law be hanged, parson,&rdquo; Pole retorted, as part of his rare rôle. &ldquo;We
- are looking after that; thar hain't no law in this country that's wuth a
- hill o' beans.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Be merciful&mdash;give the man a chance for his life,&rdquo; the preacher
- repeated. &ldquo;Many think he is innocent!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hearing that plea in his behalf, Pete screamed out and tried to extend his
- hands supplicatingly towards his defender, but under Baker's insistent
- orders he was dragged, now struggling more desperately, farther down the
- street.
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;Ah, Pole, tell the poor&mdash;&rdquo; Keith Gordon began, when the mountaineer
-sharply commanded: &ldquo;Dry up! You are disobeyin' orders. Hurry up; bring
- 'im on. That other gang may hear this racket, and then&mdash;come on, I tell
-you! You violate my leadership and I'll have you court-martialled.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In some fashion or other they moved on down the street, now taking a more
- direct way to the store in the fear that they might be met by the expected
- lynchers and foiled in their purpose. They had traversed the entire length
- of the street leading from the court-house to the bank building, and were
- about to turn the corner to reach the rear door of the store, when, in a
- qualm of fresh despair, Pete's knees actually gave way beneath him and he
- sank limply to the sidewalk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lord, I reckon we'll have to tote 'im!&rdquo; Pole said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pick 'im up, boys, and be quick about it. This is a ticklish spot. Let
- one person see us and the game will be up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Pete clearly misunderstood this, and seeing in the words a hint that help
- or protection was not far away, he suddenly opened his mouth and began to
- scream.
- </p>
- <p>
- As quick as a flash Carson, who was immediately behind him, clapped his
- hand over his lips and said, &ldquo;Hush, for God's sake, Pete, we are your
- friends!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With his mouth still closed by the hand upon it, the negro could only
- stare into Carson's mask too terrified to grasp more than that he had
- heard a kindly voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hush, Pete, not a word! We are trying to save you,&rdquo; and Carson removed
- his hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who dat? Oh, my God, who dat talkin'?&rdquo; Pete gasped.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Carson Dwight,&rdquo; said the young man. &ldquo;Now hush, and hurry.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thank God it you, Marse Carson&mdash;oh, Marse Carson, Marse Carson, you
- ain't gwine ter let um kill me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, you are safe, Pete.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In a rush they now bore him round the corner, and then pausing at the door
- of the store, to be certain that no extraneous eye was on them, they
- waited breathlessly for an order from their leader.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, in you go!&rdquo; presently came from Pole's deep voice, in a great
- breath of relief. &ldquo;Open the door, quick!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The shutter creaked and swung back into the black void of the store, and
- the throng pressed inward. The door was closed. The darkness was profound.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wait; listen!&rdquo; Pole cautioned. &ldquo;Thar might be somebody on the sidewalk at
- the front.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, my God, Marse Carson, is you here?&rdquo; came from the quaking negro.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sh!&rdquo; and Pole imposed silence. For a moment they stood so still that only
- the rapid panting of the negro was audible.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, we are safe,&rdquo; Baker said. &ldquo;But, gosh! it was a close shave!
- Strike a light an' let's try to ease up this feller. I hated to be rough,
- but somebody had to do it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it had to be,&rdquo; said Dwight. &ldquo;Pete, you are with friends. Strike a
- light, Blackburn, the poor boy is scared out of his wits.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Marse Carson, what dis mean? what you-all gwine ter do ter me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Blackburn had groped to the lamp on the table and was scratching a match
- and applying the flame to the wick. The yellow light flashed out, and a
- strange sight met the bewildered gaze of the negro as kindly faces and
- familiar forms gradually emerged from the sheeting. Near him stood Dwight,
- and grasping his hand, Pete clung to it desperately.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Marse Carson, what dey gwine ter do ter me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing, Pete, you are all right now,&rdquo; Carson said, as tenderly as if he
- were speaking to a hurt child. &ldquo;The mob was coming and we had to do what
- we did to save you.&rdquo; He explained the plan of keeping him hidden in the
- cellar for a few days, and asked Pete if he would consent to it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll do anything you say, Marse Carson,&rdquo; the negro answered. &ldquo;You know
- what's best fer me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've got an old mattress here,&rdquo; Blackburn spoke up; &ldquo;boys, let's get it
- into the cellar. It will make him comfortable.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And with no sense of the incongruity of their act, considering that as the
- sons of ex-slave-holders they had never in their lives waited upon a
- negro, Wade Tingle and Keith Gordon drew the dusty mattress from a
- dry-goods box in the corner of the room and bore the cumbersome thing
- through the cellar doorway into the cob webbed darkness beneath. Blackburn
- followed with a candle, indicating the best-ventilated spot for its
- placement. Thither Carson led his still benumbed client, who would move
- only at his bidding, and then like a jerky automaton.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You won't be afraid to stay here, will you, Pete?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- The negro stared round him at the encroaching shadows in childlike
- perturbation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You gwine ter lock me in, Marse Carson?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson explained that in a sense he was still a prisoner, but a prisoner
- in the hands of friends&mdash;friends who had pledged themselves to see
- that justice was done him. The negro slowly lowered himself to the
- mattress and stretched out his legs on the stone pavement. An utter droop
- of despair seemed to settle on him. From the depths of his wide-open eyes
- came a stare of dejection complete.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Den I <i>hain't</i> free?&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, not wholly, Pete,&rdquo; Carson returned; &ldquo;not quite yet.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dry up down thar. Listen!&rdquo; It was Baker's voice in a guarded tone as he
- stood in the cellar doorway.
- </p>
- <p>
- The group around the negro held its breath. The grinding of footsteps on
- the floor over their heads ceased. Then from the outside came the steady
- tramp of many feet on the brick sidewalk, the clatter of horses' hoofs in
- the street.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sh! Blow out the light,&rdquo; Carson said, and Blackburn extinguished it.
- Profound darkness and stillness filled the long room. Like an army, still
- voiceless and grimly determined, the human current flowed jailward. It
- must have numbered several hundred, judged by the time it took to pass.
- The sound was dying out in the distance when Carson, the last to leave
- Pete, crept from the cellar, locked the door, and joined the others in the
- darkness above.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That mob would hang every man of us if they caught on to our trick,&rdquo; said
- Baker, with a queer, exultant chuckle.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson moved past him towards the front door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where you goin'?&rdquo; Pole asked, sharply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want to see how the land lies on the outside,&rdquo; answered Carson.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'll be crazy if you go,&rdquo; said Blackburn, and the others pressed round
- Dwight and anxiously joined in the protest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I must go,&rdquo; Dwight firmly persisted. &ldquo;We ought to find out exactly
- what that crowd thinks to-night, so we'll know what to depend on. If they
- think a lynching took place they will go home satisfied; if not, as Pole
- says, they may suspect us, and the most godless riot that ever blackened
- human history may take place here in this town.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's right,&rdquo; declared the mountaineer. &ldquo;Somebody ought to go. I really
- think I'm the man, by rights, an'&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I want to satisfy myself,&rdquo; was Dwight's ultimatum. &ldquo;Stay here till I
- come back.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Blackburn accompanied him to the front door, cautiously looked out, and
- then let him pass through.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Knock when you get back&mdash;no, here, take the key to the back door and
- let yourself in. So far, so good, my boy, but this is absolutely the most
- ticklish job we ever tackled. But I'm with you. I glory in your spunk.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a swelling murmuring, like the onward sweep of a storm from the
- direction of the courthouse. Voices growing louder and increasing in
- volume reached their ears.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wait for me. Keep the lights out for all you do,&rdquo; Dwight said, and off he
- strode in the darkness.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the gloom and stillness of the store the others waited his return,
- hardly daring to raise their voices above a whisper. He was gone nearly an
- hour, and then they heard the key softly turned in the lock and presently
- he stood in their midst.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They've about dispersed,&rdquo; he said, in a tone of intense fatigue. &ldquo;They
- lay it to the Hillbend faction, who had some disagreement with them
- to-day. They seem satisfied.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gentlemen&rdquo;&mdash;it was Garner's voice from his chair at the table&mdash;&ldquo;there's
- one thing that must be regarded as sacred by us to-night, and that is the
- <i>absolute</i> secrecy of this thing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good Lord, you don't think any of us would be fool enough to talk about
- it!&rdquo; exclaimed Blackburn, in an almost startled tone over the bare
- suggestion. &ldquo;If I thought there was a man here who would blab this to a
- living soul, I'd&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I only wanted to impress that on you all,&rdquo; said Garner. &ldquo;To all
- intents and purposes we are law-breakers, and I'm a member of the Georgia
- bar. Where are you going, Carson?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Down to speak to Pete,&rdquo; answered Dwight. &ldquo;I want to try to pacify him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When he came back a moment later he said: &ldquo;I've promised to stay here till
- daylight. Nothing else will satisfy him; he's broken all to pieces, crying
- like a nervous woman. As soon as I agreed to stay he quieted down.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'll keep you company,&rdquo; said Keith. &ldquo;I can sleep like a top on one
- of the counters.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hold on, there is something else,&rdquo; Carson said, as they were moving to
- the rear door. &ldquo;You know the news will go out in the morning that Pete was
- taken off somewhere and actually lynched. This will be a terrible blow to
- his parents, and I want permission from you all to let those two, at
- least, know that&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No!&rdquo; Garner cried, firmly, even fiercely, as he turned and struck the
- counter near him with his open hand. &ldquo;There you go with your eternal
- sentiment! I tell you this is a grave happening tonight&mdash;grave for us
- and still graver for Pete. Once let that mob find out that they were
- tricked and they will hang our man or burn this town in the effort.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I understand that well enough,&rdquo; admitted Dwight, &ldquo;but the Lord knows we
- could trust his own flesh and blood when they have so much at stake.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am not willing to <i>risk</i> it, if you are,&rdquo; said Garner, crisply,
- glancing round at the others for their sanction. &ldquo;It will be an awful
- thing for them to hear the current report in the morning, but they'd
- better stand it for a few days than to spoil the whole thing. A negro is a
- negro, and if Lewis and Linda knew the truth they would be Shouting
- instead of weeping and the rest of the darkies would suspect the truth.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's a fact,&rdquo; Blackburn put in, reluctantly. &ldquo;Negroes are quick to get
- at the bottom of things, and with no dead body in sight to substantiate a
- lynching story they would smell a mouse and hunt for it till they found
- it. No, Carson, <i>real</i> weeping right now from the mammy and daddy
- will help us out more than anything else. Yes, they will have to bear it;
- they will be all the happier in the end.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I suppose you are right,&rdquo; Dwight gave in. &ldquo;But it's certainly tough.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0027" id="link2HCH0027"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXVII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0031" id="linkimage-0031"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9247.jpg" alt="9247 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9247.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- T was just at the break of day the following morning. Major Warren, who
- had not retired until late the night before in his perturbed state of mind
- over the calamity which hovered in the air, was sleeping lightly, when he
- was awakened by the almost noiseless presence of some one in his room.
- Sitting up in bed he stared through the half darkness at a form which
- towered straight and still between him and the open window through which
- the first touches of the new day were stealing. &ldquo;Who's there?&rdquo; he
- demanded, sharply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's me, Marse William&mdash;Lewis.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, you!&rdquo; The Major put his feet down to the rug at the side of his bed,
- still not fully awake. &ldquo;Well, is it time to get up? Anything&mdash;wrong?
- Oh, I remember now&mdash;Pete!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A groan from the great chest of the negro set the air to vibrating, but he
- said nothing, and the old gentleman saw the bald pate suddenly sink.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Lewis, I hope&mdash;&rdquo; Major Warren paused, unable to continue, so
- vast and grewsome were the fears his servant's attitude had inspired. The
- old negro took a step or two forward and then said: &ldquo;Oh, marster, dey done
- tuck 'im out las' night&mdash;dey tuck my po' boy&mdash;&rdquo; A great sob rose
- in old Lewis's breast and burst on his lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Really, you don't mean it&mdash;you can't, after&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yasser, yasser; he daid, marster. Pete done gone! Dey killed 'im las'
- night, Marse William.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But&mdash;but how do you know?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I des dis minute seed Jake Tobines; he slipped up ter my house en called
- me out. Jake lives back 'hind de jail, Marse William, en when de mob come
- him en his wife heard de racket en slipped out in de co'n-patch ter hide.
- He seed de gang, marster, wid his own eyes, en heard um ax fer de boy. At
- fus Marse Barrett refused ter give 'im up, but dey ordered fire on 'im en
- he let um have de keys. Jake seed um fetch Pete out, en heard 'im beggin'
- um ter spar' his life, but dey drug 'im off.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was silence broken only by the old negro's sobs and the smothered
- effort he was making to restrain his emotion.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And mammy,&rdquo; the Major began, presently; &ldquo;has she heard?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not yit, marster, but she is awake&mdash;she been awake all night long&mdash;on
- her knees prayin' most er de time fer mercy&mdash;she was awake when Jake
- come en she knowed I went out ter speak ter 'im, en when I come back in de
- house, marster, she went in de kitchen. I know what she done dat fur&mdash;she
- didn't want ter know, suh, fer certain, ef I'd heard bad news or not. I
- wanted ter let 'er know, but I was afeared ter tell 'er, en come away. I
- loves my wife, marster&mdash;I&mdash;I loves her mo' now dat Pete's gone
- dan ever befo'. I loves 'er mo' since she been had ter suffer dis way, en,
- marster, dis gwine ter kill 'er. It gwine ter kill Lindy, Marse William.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter, father?&rdquo; It was Helen Warren's voice, and with a look
- of growing terror on her face she stood peering through the open doorway.
- The Major ejaculated a hurried and broken explanation, and with little,
- intermittent gasps of horror the young lady advanced to the old negro.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Does Mam' Linda know?&rdquo; she asked, her face ghastly and set in sculptural
- rigidity.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not yet, missy, not yet&mdash;it gwine ter kill yo' ol' mammy, child.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it may,&rdquo; Helen said, an odd, alien quality of resignation in her
- voice. &ldquo;I suppose I'd better go and break it to her. Father, Pete was
- innocent, absolutely innocent. Carson Dwight assured me of it. He was
- innocent, and yet&mdash;oh!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With a shudder she turned back to her room across the hall. In the
- stillness the sound of the match she struck to light her lamp was
- raspingly audible. Without another word, and wringing the extended hand of
- his wordless master, Lewis crept down the stairs and out into the pale
- light of early morning. Like an old tree fiercely beaten by a storm, he
- leaned towards the earth. He looked about him absently for a moment, and
- then sat down on the edge of the veranda floor and lowered his head to his
- brown, sinewy hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- A negro woman with a milk-pail on her arm came up the walk from the gate
- and started round the house to the kitchen door, but seeing him she
- stopped and leaned over him. &ldquo;Is what Jake done say de trufe?&rdquo; she asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yassum, yassum, it done over, Mary Lou&mdash;done over,&rdquo; Lewis said,
- looking up at her from his blearing eyes; &ldquo;but ef you see Lindy don't let
- on ter her yit. Young miss gwine ter tell 'er fust.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, my Lawd, it done over, den!&rdquo; the woman said, shudderingly; &ldquo;it gwine
- ter go hard with Mam' Lindy, Unc' Lewis.&rdquo;
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;It gwine ter <i>kill</i> 'er, Mary Lou; she won't live dis week out. I know
- 'er. She had ernough dis life wid all she been thoo fur 'erself en her
-white folks, in bondage en out, en' dis gwine ter settle 'er. I don't
-blame 'er. I'm done thoo myse'f. Ef de Lawd had spar' my child, I
-wouldn't er ax mo', but, Mary Lou, I hope I ain't gwine ter stay long.
-I'll hear dat po' boy beggin' fer mercy every minute while I live, en
-what I want mo' of it fur? Shucks! no, I'm raidy&mdash;en, 'fo' God, I wish
-dey had er tuck us all three at once. Dat ud 'a' been some comfort, but
-fer Pete ter be by hisse'f beggin' um ter spar' 'im&mdash;all by hisse'f, en
-me 'n his mammy&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man's head went down and his body shook with sobs. The woman
- looked at him a moment, and then, wiping her eyes on her apron, she went
- on her way.
- </p>
- <p>
- A few minutes later, just as the red sun was rising in a clear sky and
- turning the night's moisture into dazzling gems on the grass and leaves of
- trees and shrubbery, like the beneficent smile of God upon a pleasing
- world, Helen descended the stairs. She had the sweet, pale face of a
- suffering nun as she paused, looked down on the old servant, and caught
- his piteous and yet grateful, upturned glance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm going to her now, Uncle Lewis,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I want to be the first to
- tell her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, you mus' be de one,&rdquo; Lewis sighed, as he rose stiffly; &ldquo;you de
- onliest one.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He shambled along in her wake, his old hat, out of respect for her
- presence, grasped in his tense hand. As they drew near the little sagging
- gate at the cottage there was a sound of moving feet within, and Linda
- stood in the doorway shading her eyes from the rays of the sun with her
- fat hand. To the end of her life Helen had the memory of the old woman's
- face stamped on her brain. It was a yellow mask, which might have belonged
- to a dead as well as a living creature, behind which the lights of hope
- and shadows of despair were vying with each other for supremacy. In no
- thing pertaining to the situation did the pathos so piteously lie as in
- the fact that Linda was deliberately playing a part&mdash;fiercely acting
- a rôle that would fit itself to that for which the agony of her soul was
- pleading. She was trying to smile away the shadows her inward fears, her
- racial intuition were casting on her face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mighty early fer you ter come, honey,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;but I reckon you is
- worried 'bout yo' ol' mammy.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it's early for me to be up,&rdquo; Helen said, avoiding the wavering
- glance that seemed in reality to be avoiding the revelation of hers. &ldquo;But
- I saw Uncle Lewis and thought I'd come back with him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You hain't had yo' breakfast yit, honey, I know,&rdquo; said Linda, reaching
- for a chair half-heartedly and placing it for her young mistress, and then
- her eyes fell on her husband's bareheaded, bowed attitude as he stood at
- the gate, and something in it, through her sense of sight, gave her a
- deadening blow. For an instant she almost reeled; she drew a deep breath,
- a breath that swelled out her great, motherly bosom, then with her hands
- hanging limply at her side, she stood in front of Helen. For a moment she
- did not speak, and then, with her face on fire, her great, somnolent eyes
- ablaze, she suddenly bent down and put her hands on Helen's knees and
- said: &ldquo;Looky here, honey, I've been afraid of it all night long, an' I've
- fit it off an' fit it off, an' I got up dis mawnin' fightin' it off, but
- ef you come here so early 'ca'se&mdash;ef you come here ter tell me dat my
- child&mdash;ef you come here&mdash;ef you come here&mdash;gre't God on
- high, it ain't so! it cayn't be dat way! Look me in de eyes, honey, I'm
- raidy en waitin' fer you ter give it de lie.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For one moment she glared at Helen as the girl sat white and quivering,
- her glance on the floor, and then she uttered a piercing scream like that
- of a frightened beast, and grasping the hand of her husband, who was now
- by her side, she pointed a finger of stone at Helen. &ldquo;Look! Look, Lewis;
- my Gawd, she <i>ain't lookin' at me!</i> Look at me, honey chile; look at
- me! D' you hear me say&mdash;&rdquo; She stood firmly for an instant and then
- she reeled into her husband's arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She daid; whut I tol you? Missy, yo' ol' mammy daid,&rdquo; and lifting his
- wife in his arms he bore her to the bed in the corner of the room. &ldquo;Yes,
- she done daid,&rdquo; he groaned, as he straightened up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, she's only fainted,&rdquo; said Helen; &ldquo;bring me the camphor, quick!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0028" id="link2HCH0028"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXVIII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0032" id="linkimage-0032"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9253.jpg" alt="9253 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9253.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- HAT morning at the usual hour the store-keepers opened their dingy houses
- in the main street and placed along the narrow brick sidewalks the dusty,
- stock-worn samples of their wares. The clerks and porters as they swept
- the floors would pause to discuss the happening of the night just gone.
- Old Uncle Lewis and Mammy Linda Warren's boy had been summarily dealt
- with, that was all. The longer word just used had of late years become a
- part of the narrowest vocabulary, suggesting to crude minds many meanings
- not thought of by lexicographers, not the least of which was something
- pertaining to justice far-reaching, grim, and unfailing in these days of
- bribery and graft. Only a few of the more analytical and philosophical
- ventured to ask themselves if, after all, the boy might have been
- innocent. If they put the question to the average citizen it was tossed
- off with a shrug and a &ldquo;Well, what's the difference? It's such talk as he
- was guilty of that is at the bottom of all the black crimes throughout the
- South.&rdquo; Such venom as Pete's was the very muscle of the black claws that
- were everywhere reaching out for helpless white throats. Dead? Yes, he was
- dead. What of it? How else was the black, constantly increasing torrent to
- be dammed?
- </p>
- <p>
- And yet by ten o'clock that morning even these tongues were silenced, for
- news strange and startling began to steal in from the mountains. The party
- who had been in pursuit of the desperado Sam Dudlow had overtaken him&mdash;found
- him hiding in a bam, covered with hay. He was unarmed and made no
- resistance, laughing as if the whole thing were a joke. He frankly told
- them that he would have given himself up earlier, but he had hoped to live
- long enough to get even with the other leader of the mob that had whipped
- him at Darley, a certain Dan Willis. He confessed in detail exactly how he
- had murdered the Johnsons and that he had done it alone. Pete Warren was
- in no way implicated in it. The lynchers, to get the whole truth,
- threatened him; they tortured him; they tied him to a tree and piled pine
- fagots about him, but he still stuck to his statement, and when they had
- mercifully riddled him with bullets, just as his clothing was igniting,
- they left him hanging by the road-side, a grewsome scarecrow as a warning
- to his kind, and, led by Jabe Parsons, they made all haste to reach the
- faction on Pete Warren's track to tell them that the boy was innocent.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jabe Parsons, carrying a load on his mind, remembering his wife's valiant
- stand in behalf of the younger accused, rode faster than his tired
- fellows, and near his own farm met the lynchers returning from Darley.
- &ldquo;Too late,&rdquo; they told him, in response to his news, the Hillbend boys had
- done away with the Darley jailbird and mysteriously hidden the body to
- inspire fear among the negroes.
- </p>
- <p>
- At Darley consternation swept the place as story after story of Aunt
- Linda's prostration passed from house to house. &ldquo;Poor, faithful old woman!
- Poor old Uncle Lewis!&rdquo; was heard on every side.
- </p>
- <p>
- About half-past ten o'clock Helen, accompanied by Sanders, came down-town.
- At the door of Carson's office they parted and Helen came in. Carson
- happened to be alone. He rose suddenly from his seat and came towards her,
- shocked by the sight of her wan face and dejected mien.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, Helen!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;surely you don't think&mdash;&rdquo; and then he
- checked himself as he hastened to get a chair for her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've just left mammy,&rdquo; she began, in a voice that was husky with emotion.
- &ldquo;Oh, Carson, you can't imagine it! It is simply heart-rending, awful! She
- is lying there at death's door staring up at the ceiling, simply
- benumbed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson sat down at his desk and leaned his head on his hand. Could he keep
- back the truth under such pressure? It was at this juncture that Garner
- came in. Casting a hurried glance at the two, and seeing Helen's
- grief-stricken attitude, he simply bowed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Excuse me, Miss Helen, just a moment,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Carson, I left a paper
- in your pigeon-hole,&rdquo; and as he bent and extracted a blank envelope from
- the desk he whispered, warningly: &ldquo;Remember, not one word of this! Don't
- forget the agreement! Not a soul is to know!&rdquo; And putting the envelope
- into his pocket he went out of the room, casting back from the threshold a
- warning, almost threatening glance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've been with her since sunup,&rdquo; Helen went on.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She fainted at first, and when she came to&mdash;oh, Carson, you love her
- as I do, and it would have broken your heart to have heard her! Oh, such
- pitiful wailing and begging God to put her out of pain!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Awful, awful!&rdquo; Dwight said; &ldquo;but, Helen&mdash;&rdquo; Again he checked himself.
- Before his mind's eye rose the faces of the faithful group who had stood
- by him the night before. He had pledged himself to them to keep the thing
- secret, and no matter what his own faith in Helen's discretion was he had
- no right, even under stress of her grief, to betray what had occurred. No,
- he couldn't enlighten her&mdash;not just then, at all events.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was there when Uncle Lewis came in to tell her that proof had come of
- Pete's absolute innocence,&rdquo; Helen went on, &ldquo;but instead of comforting her
- it seemed to drive her the more frantic. She&mdash;but I simply can't
- describe it, and I won't try. You will be glad to know, Carson, that the
- only thing in the shape of comfort she has had was your brave efforts in
- her behalf. Over and over she called your name. Carson, she used to pray
- to God; she never mentions Him now. You, and you alone, represent all that
- is good and self-sacrificing to her. She sent me to you. That's why I am
- here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She sent you?&rdquo; Carson was avoiding her eyes, fearful that she might read
- in his own a hint of the burning thing he was trying to withhold.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, you see the report has reached her about what the lynchers said in
- regard to hiding Pete's body. You know how superstitious the negroes are,
- and she is simply crazy to recover the&mdash;the remains. She wants to
- bury her boy, Carson, and she refuses to believe that some one can't find
- him and bring him home. She seems to think you can.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She wants me to&mdash;&rdquo; He went no further.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If it is possible, Carson. The whole thing is so awful that it has driven
- me nearly wild. You will know, perhaps, if anything can be done, but, of
- course, if it is wholly out of the question&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Helen&rdquo;&mdash;in his desperation he had formulated a plan&mdash;&ldquo;there is
- something that you ought to know. You have every right to know it, and yet
- I'm bound in honor not to let it out to any one. Last night,&rdquo; he went on,
- modestly, &ldquo;in the hope of formulating some plan to avert the coming
- trouble, I asked Keith to get a number of my best friends together. We met
- at Blackburn's store. No positive, sworn vows were made. It was only the
- sacred understanding between men that the matter was to be held inviolate,
- owing to the personal interests of every man who had committed himself.
- You see, they came at my suggestion, as friends of mine true and loyal,
- and it seems to me that I'd have a moral right, even now, to take another
- into the body&mdash;another whom I trust as thoroughly and wholly as any
- one of them. Do you understand, Helen?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I'm in the dark, Carson,&rdquo; she said, with a feeble smile.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You see, I want to speak freely to you,&rdquo; he continued. &ldquo;I want to tell
- you some things you ought to know, and yet I am not free to do so unless&mdash;unless
- you will tacitly join us. Helen, do you understand? Are you willing to
- become one of us so far as absolute secrecy is concerned?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am willing to do anything you'd advise, Carson,&rdquo; the girl replied,
- groping for his possible meaning through the cloud of mystery his queer
- words had thrown around him. &ldquo;If something took place that I ought to
- know, and you are willing to confide it to me, I assure you I can be
- trusted. I'd die rather than betray it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then, as one of us, I'll tell you,&rdquo; Carson said, impressively. &ldquo;Helen,
- Pete, is not dead.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not dead?&rdquo; She stared at him incredulously from her great, beautiful
- eyes. Slowly her white hand went out till it rested on his, and remained
- there, quivering.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, he's alive and so far in safe keeping, free from harm at present,
- anyway.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her fingers tightened on his hand, her sweet, appealing face drew nearer
- to his; she took a deep breath. &ldquo;Oh, Carson, don't say that unless you are
- <i>quite</i> sure.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am absolutely sure,&rdquo; he said; and then, as they sat, her hand still
- lingering unconsciously on his, he explained it all, leaving the part he
- had taken out of the recital as much as possible, and giving the chief
- credit to his supporters. She sat spellbound, her sympathetic soul melting
- and flowing into the warm current of his own while he talked as it seemed
- to her no human being had ever talked before.
- </p>
- <p>
- When he had concluded she drew away her hand and sat erect, her bosom
- heaving, her eyes glistening.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Carson,&rdquo; she cried; &ldquo;I never was so happy in my life! It actually
- pains me.&rdquo; She pressed her hand to her breast. &ldquo;Mammy will be so&mdash;but
- you say she must not&mdash;must not yet&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's the trouble,&rdquo; Dwight said, regretfully.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm sure I could put her and Lewis on their guard so that they would act
- with discretion, but Blackburn and Garner&mdash;in fact, all the rest&mdash;are
- afraid to risk them, just now anyway. You see, they think Linda and Lewis
- might betray it in their emotions&mdash;their very happiness&mdash;and so
- undo everything we have accomplished.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Surely, now that the report of Sam Dudlow's confession has gone out, they
- would let Pete alone,&rdquo; Helen said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wouldn't like to risk it quite yet,&rdquo; said Dwight. &ldquo;Right now, while
- they are under the impression that an innocent negro has been lynched,
- they seem inclined to quiet down, but once let the news go out that a few
- town men, through trickery, had freed the prisoner, and they would rise
- more furious than ever. No, we must be careful. And, Helen, you must
- remember your promise. Don't let even your sympathy for Linda draw it out
- of you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can keep it, and I really shall,&rdquo; Helen said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you must release me as soon as you possibly can.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll do that,&rdquo; he promised, as she rose to go.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll keep it,&rdquo; she repeated, when she had reached the door; &ldquo;but to do so
- I'll have to stay away from mammy. The sight of her agony would wring it
- from me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then don't go near her till I see you,&rdquo; Dwight cautioned her. &ldquo;I'll meet
- all the others to-day and put the matter before them. Perhaps they may
- give in on that point.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0029" id="link2HCH0029"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXIX
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0033" id="linkimage-0033"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9260.jpg" alt="9260 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9260.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- T the corner of the street Helen encountered Sanders, who was waiting for
- her. At the sight of him standing on the edge of the sidewalk, impatiently
- tapping the toe of his neatly shod foot with the ferrule of his tightly
- rolled silk umbrella, she experienced a shock which would have eluded
- analysis. He had been so completely out of her thoughts, and her present
- mood was of such an entrancing nature that she felt a desire to indulge it
- undisturbed. The bare thought of the platitudes she would have to exchange
- with any one ignorant of her dazzling discovery was unpleasant. After all,
- what was it about Sanders that vaguely incited her growing disapproval?
- This morning could it possibly be his very faultlessness of attire, his
- spick-and-span air of ownership in her body and soul because of their
- undefined understanding as to his suit, or was it because&mdash;because he
- had, although through no fault of his own, taken no part in the thing
- which today, for Helen, somehow, held more weight than all other earthly
- happenings? Indeed, fate was not using the Darley visitor kindly. He was
- unwittingly like a healthy soldier on a furlough making himself useful in
- the drawing-room while news of victory was pouring in from his comrades at
- the front.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You see I waited for you,&rdquo; he said, gracefully raising his hat; &ldquo;but,
- Helen, what has happened? Why, what is the matter?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;nothing at all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But,&rdquo; he went on, frowning in perplexity as he suited his step to hers,
- &ldquo;I never saw any one in my life change so suddenly. Why, when you went
- into that office you were simply a picture of despair, but now you look as
- if you were bursting with happiness. Your face is flushed, your eyes are
- fairly dancing. Helen, if I thought&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He paused, his own color rising, a deeper frown darkening his brow.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you thought what?&rdquo; she asked, with a little irritation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh&rdquo;&mdash;he knocked a stone out of his way with his umbrella&mdash;&ldquo;what's
- the use denying it! I'm simply jealous. I'm only a natural human being,
- and I suppose I'm jealous.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You have no cause to be,&rdquo; she said, and then she bit her lip with
- vexation at the slip of the tongue. Why should she defend herself to him?
- She had never said she loved him. She had not yet consented to marry him.
- Besides, she was in no mood to gratify his vanity. She wanted simply to be
- alone with the boundless delight she was allowed to share with no one but&mdash;Carson&mdash;Carson!&mdash;the
- one who had, for <i>her sake</i>, made the sharing of it possible.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I am uneasy, and I can't help it,&rdquo; Sanders went on, gloomily. &ldquo;How
- can I help it? You left me so sad and depressed that you had hardly a word
- for me, and after seeing this Mr. Dwight you come out looking&mdash;do you
- know,&rdquo; he broke off, &ldquo;that you were there alone with that fellow nearly an
- hour?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh no, it couldn't have been so long,&rdquo; she said, further irritated by his
- open defence of what he erroneously considered his rights.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But it was, for I timed you,&rdquo; Sanders affirmed. &ldquo;Heaven knows I counted
- the actual minutes. There is a lot about this whole thing I don't like,
- but I hardly know what it is.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are not only jealous but suspicious,&rdquo; Helen said, sharply. &ldquo;Those are
- things I don't like in any man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've offended you, but I didn't mean to,&rdquo; Sanders said, with a sudden
- turn towards precaution. &ldquo;You'll forgive me, won't you, Helen?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, it's all right.&rdquo; She had suddenly softened. &ldquo;Really, I am sorry
- you feel hurt. Don't think any more about it. I have a reason which I
- can't explain for feeling rather cheerful just now.&rdquo; They had reached the
- next street corner and she patised. &ldquo;I want to go by Cousin Ida's. She
- lives down this way.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you'd rather I didn't go along?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have something particular to say to her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I see. Then may I come as usual this afternoon?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her wavering, half-repentant glance fell. &ldquo;Not this afternoon,&rdquo; she said.
- &ldquo;I ought to be with mammy. Couldn't you call this evening?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It will seem a long time to wait in this dreary place, with nothing to
- occupy me,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but I shall be well repaid. So I may come this
- evening?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, I shall expect you then,&rdquo; and Helen turned and left him.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the front garden of the Tarpley house she found her cousin watering the
- flowers. Observing Helen at the gate, Miss Tarpley hastily put down the
- tin sprinkling-pot and hurried to her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was just going up to see mammy,&rdquo; Ida said. &ldquo;I know I can be of no use
- and yet I wanted to try. Oh, the poor thing must be suffering terribly!
- She had enough to bear as it was, but that last night&mdash;oh!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes&mdash;yes,&rdquo; Helen said. &ldquo;It is hard on her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Ida Tarpley rested her two hands on the tops of the white palings of the
- fence and stared inquiringly into Helen's face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why do you say it in that tone?&rdquo; she asked; &ldquo;and with that queer, almost
- smiling look in your eyes? Why, I expected to see you prostrated, and&mdash;well,
- I don't think&mdash;I actually don't think I ever saw you looking better
- in my life. What's happened, Helen?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, nothing.&rdquo; Helen was now making a strong effort to disguise her
- feelings, and she succeeded to some extent, for Miss Tarpley's thoughts
- took another trend.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And poor, dear Carson,&rdquo; she said, sympathetically. &ldquo;The news must have
- nearly killed him. He came by here last night making all haste to get
- down-town, as he said, to see if something couldn't be done. He was
- terribly wrought up, and I never saw such a look of determination on a
- human face. 'Something <i>has</i> to be done,' he said; 'something <i>must</i>
- be done! The boy is innocent and shall not die like a dog. It would kill
- his mother, and she is a good, faithful old woman. No, he shall not die!'
- And with those words he hurried on. Oh, Helen, that is sad, too. It is sad
- to see as noble a young spirit as he has fail in such a laudable
- undertaking. Think of how he stood up before that surging mob and let them
- shoot at him while he shouted defiance in their teeth, till they cowered
- down and slunk away! Think of a triumph like that, and then, after all, to
- meet with such galling defeat as overtook him last night! When I heard of
- the lynching I actually cried. I think I felt for him as much as I did for
- Mam' Linda. Poor, dear boy! You know why he wanted to do it so much&mdash;you
- know that as well as I do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why he wanted to do it!&rdquo; Helen echoed, almost hungry for the sweet
- confirmation of Dwight's fidelity to her cause.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, you know&mdash;you know that his whole young soul was set on it
- because it was your wish, because you were so troubled over it. I've seen
- that in his eyes ever since the matter came up. I saw it there last night,
- and it seemed to me that his very heart was burning up within him. Oh, I
- get mad at you&mdash;to think you'd let that Augusta man, even if you do
- intend some day to marry him&mdash;that you'd let him be here at such a
- time, as if Carson hadn't enough to bear without that. Ah, Helen, no other
- human being will ever love you as Carson Dwight does&mdash;never, never
- while the sun shines.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With a misleading smile of denial on her face Helen turned homeward. He
- loved her&mdash;Carson Dwight&mdash;<i>that man</i> of all men&mdash;still
- loved her. Her body felt imponderable as she strode blithely on her way.
- In her hands she carried a human life&mdash;the life of the poor boy
- Carson had so wonderfully struggled for and intrusted to her keeping. To
- his mother and father Pete was dead, but to her and Carson, her first
- sweetheart, he still lived. The secret was theirs to hold between their
- throbbing hearts. Old Linda's grief was but a dream. Helen and Carson
- could draw aside the black curtain and tell her to look and see the truth.
- </p>
- <p>
- Standing with bowed head at the front gate when she arrived home, she saw
- old Uncle Lewis, his bald pate bared to the sunshine.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mam' Lindy axin' 'bout you, missy,&rdquo; he said, pitifully. &ldquo;She say you went
- down-town ter see Marse Carson, en she seem mighty nigh crazy ter know ef
- you found whar de&mdash;de body er de po' boy is at. Dat all she's beggin'
- en pleadin' fer now, missy, en ef dem white mens refuse it, de Lawd only
- know what she gwine ter do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen gazed at him helplessly. Her whole young being was wrung with the
- desire to let him know the truth, and yet how could she tell him what had
- been revealed to her in such strict confidence?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll go see mammy now,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I've no news yet, Uncle Lewis&mdash;no
- news that I can give you. I'm looking for Carson to come up soon.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As she neared the cottage the motley group of negroes, serious-faced men
- and women, bland-eyed persons in their teens, and half-clad children,
- around the door intuitively and respectfully drew aside and she entered
- the cottage unaccompanied and unannounced. Linda was not in the
- sitting-room, where she expected to find her, and so, wonderingly, Helen
- turned into the kitchen adjoining. Here the general aspect of things added
- to her growing surprise, for the old woman had drawn close the curtains of
- the little, small-paned windows, and before a small fire in the chimney
- she sat prone on the ash-covered hearth. That alone might not have been so
- surprising, but Linda had covered her body with several old tow sacks upon
- which she had plentifully sprinkled ashes. The grayish powder was in her
- short hair, on her face and bare arms, and filled her lap. There was one
- thing in the world that the old woman prized above all else&mdash;a big,
- leather-bound family Bible which she had owned since she first learned to
- read under the instruction of Helen's mother, and this, also ash-covered,
- lay open by her side.
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;Is I gwine ter bury my chile?&rdquo; she demanded, as she glared up at her
-mistress. &ldquo;What young marster say? Is I, or is I never ter lay eyes on
- 'im ergin? Is I de only nigger mother dat ever lived on dis yeth, bound
-er free, dat cayn't have dat much? Tell me. Ef dey gwine ter le' me see
- 'im Marse Carson ud know it. What he say?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Rendered fairly speechless by the predicament she was in, Helen could only
- stand staring helplessly. Presently, however, she bent, and lifting the
- Bible from the floor she laid it on the table. With her massive elbows on
- her knees, her fat hands over her face and almost touching the flames,
- Linda rocked back and forth.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dey ain't no God!&rdquo; she cried; &ldquo;ef dey is one He's es black es de back er
- dat chimbley. Dat book is er lie. Dey ain't no love en mercy anywhars dis
- side de blinkin', grinnin' stars. Don't tell me er nigger's prayers is
- answered. Didn't I pray las' night till my tongue was swelled in my mouf
- fer um ter spare my boy? En what in de name er all created was de answer?
- When de day broke wid de same sun shinin' dat was shinin' when he laid de
- fus time on my breas', de news was fetch me dat my baby chile was dragged
- out wid er rope rounst his neck, prayin' ter men whilst I was prayin' ter
- God. Look lak dat enough, hein? But no, nex' come de news dat ef he'd er
- lived one short hour longer dey might er let 'im go 'ca'se dey foun' de
- right one. Look lak dat enough, too, hein? But nex' come de word, en de
- las' message: innocent or no, right one or wrong one, my chile wasn't
- goin' ter have a common bury in'-place&mdash;not even in de Potter's Fiel'
- dis book tell erbout so big. Don't talk ter me! Ef prayers fum niggers is
- answered mine was heard in hell, en old Scratch en all his imps er
- darkness was managin' it. Don't come near me! I might lay han's on you. I
- ain't myself. I heard er low trash white man say once dat niggers was des
- baboons. I may be one, en er wild one fer all I know&mdash;oh, honey,
- don't pay no 'tention ter me. Yo' ol' mammy is bein' burnt at de stake en
- she ain't 'sponsible. She love you, honey&mdash;she love you even in 'er
- gre't trouble.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I understand, mammy,&rdquo; and Helen put her arms around the old woman's neck.
- An almost overpowering impulse had risen in her to tell the old sufferer
- the truth, but thinking that some of the negroes might be listening, and
- remembering her promise, she restrained herself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm going to write a note to Carson to come up at once,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;He'll
- have something to tell you, mammy.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And passing the negroes about the door she went to the house, and
- hastening into the library she wrote and forwarded by a servant the
- following note:
- </p>
- <p>
- <i>&ldquo;Dear Carson,&mdash;Come at once, and come prepared to tell her. I
- can't stand it any longer. Do, do come.</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- <i>&ldquo;Helen.&rdquo;</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0030" id="link2HCH0030"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXX
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0034" id="linkimage-0034"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9269.jpg" alt="9269 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9269.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- ALF an hour later Helen, waiting at the front gate, saw a horse and buggy
- turn the corner down the street. She recognized it as belonging to Keith
- Gordon. Indeed, Keith was driving, and with him was Carson Dwight.
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen's heart bounded, a vast weight of incalculable responsibility seemed
- to lift itself from her. She unlatched the gate and swung it open.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I thought you'd never come!&rdquo; she smiled, as he sprang out and
- advanced to her. &ldquo;I would have broken my oath of allegiance to the clan if
- you had waited a moment longer.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I might have known you couldn't keep it,&rdquo; Dwight laughed. &ldquo;Mam' Linda
- would have drawn it out of you just as you did out of me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But are you going to tell her?&rdquo; Helen asked, just as Keith, who had
- stepped aside to fasten his horse, came up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Carson answered. &ldquo;Keith and I made a lightning trip around and
- finally persuaded all the others. Invariably they would shake their heads,
- and then we'd simply tell them you wished it, and that settled it. They
- all seem flattered by the idea that you are a member.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But say, Miss Helen,&rdquo; Keith put in, gravely, &ldquo;we really must guard
- against Lewis and Linda's giving it away. It is a most serious business,
- and, our own interests aside, the boy's life depends on it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, we must get them away from the cottage,&rdquo; said Helen. &ldquo;They are now
- literally surrounded by curious negroes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Can't we have them up here in the parlor?&rdquo; Carson asked. &ldquo;Your father is
- down-town; we saw him as we came up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, that's a good idea,&rdquo; Helen responded, eagerly. &ldquo;The servants are all
- at the cottage; we'll make them stay there and have Uncle Lewis and Mam'
- Linda here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Suppose I run down and give the message,&rdquo; proposed Keith, and he was off
- with the speed of a ball-player on a home-run.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you think there is any real danger to Mam' Linda's health in letting
- her know it suddenly?&rdquo; Carson asked, thoughtfully.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We must try to reveal it gradually,&rdquo; Helen said, after reflecting for a
- moment. &ldquo;There's no telling. They say great joy often kills as quickly as
- great sorrow. Oh, Carson, isn't it glorious to be able to do this? Don't
- you feel happy in the consciousness that it was your great, sympathetic
- heart that inspired this miracle, your wonderful brain and energy and
- courage that actually put it through?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not through yet,&rdquo; he laughed, depreciatingly, as his blood flowed hotly
- into his cheeks. &ldquo;It would be just my luck right now to have this thing
- turn smack dab against us. We are not out of the woods yet, Helen, by long
- odds. The rage of that mob is only sleeping, and I have enemies, political
- and otherwise, who would stir it to white heat at a moment's notice if
- they once got an inkling of the truth.&rdquo; He snapped his fingers. &ldquo;I
- wouldn't give that for Pete's life if they discover our trick. Pole Baker
- had just come in town when Keith and I left. He said the Hillbend people
- were earnestly denying all knowledge of any lynching or of the whereabouts
- of Pete's body, and that some people were already asking queer questions.
- So, you see, if on top of that growing suspicion, old Lewis and Linda
- begin to dance a hoe-down of joy instead of weeping and wailing&mdash;well,
- you see, that's the way it stands.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, then, perhaps we'd better not tell them, after all,&rdquo; Helen said,
- crestfallen. &ldquo;They are suffering awfully, but they would rather bear it
- for awhile than to be the cause of Pete's death.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; Carson smiled; &ldquo;from the way you wrote, I know you have had about as
- much as you can stand, and we simply must try to make them comprehend the
- full gravity of the matter.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this juncture Keith came up panting from his run and joined them.
- &ldquo;Great Heavens!&rdquo; he cried, lifting his hands, the palms outward. &ldquo;I never
- saw such a sight. I can stand some things, but I'm not equal to torture of
- that kind.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are they coming?&rdquo; Carson asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, there's Lewis now. Of course, I couldn't give them a hint of the
- truth down there in that swarm of negroes, and so my message that you
- wanted to see them here only seemed to key them up higher.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson turned to Lewis, who, hat in hand, his black face set in stony
- rigidity, had paused near by and stood waiting respectfully to be spoken
- to.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Uncle Lewis,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;we've got good news for you and Linda, but a
- great deal depends on its being kept secret. I must exact a sacred promise
- of you not to betray to a living soul by word of mouth or act what I am
- going to tell you. Will you promise, Lewis?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man leaned totteringly forward till his gaunt fingers closed upon
- one of the palings of the fence; his eyes blinked in their deep cavities.
- He made an effort to speak, but his voice hung in his mouth. Then he
- coughed, cleared his throat, and slid one of his ill-shod feet backward,
- as he always did in bowing, and said, falteringly: &ldquo;God on high know,
- young marster, dat I'd keep my word wid you. Old Unc' Lewis would keep his
- word wid you ef dey was burnin' 'im at de stake. You been de bes' friend
- me 'n Mam' Lindy ever had, young marster. You been de kind er friend dat
- <i>is</i> er friend. When you tried so hard t'other night ter save my boy
- fum dem men even when dey was shootin' at you en tryin' ter drag you down&mdash;oh,
- young marster, I wish you'd try me. I want ter show you how I feel down
- here in my heart. Dem folks is done had deir way; my boy is daid, but God
- know it makes it easier ter give 'im up ter have er young, high-minded
- white man lak you&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop, here's Mam' Linda,&rdquo; Carson said. &ldquo;Don't tell her now, Lewis; wait
- till we are inside the house; but Pete is alive and safe.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man's eyes opened wide in an almost deathlike stare, and he leaned
- heavily against the fence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, young marster,&rdquo; he gasped, &ldquo;you don't mean&mdash;you sholy can't mean&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hush! not a word.&rdquo; Carson cautioned him with uplifted hand, and they all
- looked at old Linda as she came slowly across the grass. A shudder of
- horror passed over Dwight at the change in her. The distorted, swollen
- face was that of a dead person, only faintly vitalized by some mechanical
- force. The great, always mysterious depths of her eyes were glowing with
- bestial fires. For a moment she paused near them and stood glaring with
- incongruous defiance as if nothing in mortal shape could mean aught but
- ill towards her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Carson has something&mdash;something very important to tell you, dear
- mammy,&rdquo; Helen said, &ldquo;but we must go inside.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He ain't got nothin' ter tell me dat I don't know,&rdquo; Linda muttered,
- &ldquo;lessen it is whar dey done put my chile's body. Ef you know dat, young
- marster&mdash;ef&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But old Lewis had moved to her side, his face ablaze. He laid his hand
- forcibly on her shoulder. &ldquo;Hush, 'oman!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;In de name er God,
- shet yo' mouf en listen ter young marster&mdash;listen ter 'im Linda,
- honey&mdash;hurry up&mdash;hurry up in de house!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, bring her in here,&rdquo; Carson said, with a cautious glance around, and
- he and Helen and Keith moved along the walk while Linda suffered herself,
- more like an automaton than a human being, to be half dragged, half led up
- the steps and into the parlor. Keith, who had vaguely put her in the
- category of the physically ill, placed an easy-chair for her, but from
- force of habit, while in the presence of her superiors, the old woman
- refused to sit. She and Lewis stood side by side while Carson carefully
- closed the door and came back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We've got some very, very good news for you, Mam' Linda,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;but
- you must not speak of it to a soul. Linda, the men who took Pete from jail
- did not kill him. He is still alive and safe, so far, from harm.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- To the surprise of them all, Linda only stared blankly at the tremulous
- speaker. It was her husband who, full of fire and new-found happiness, now
- leaned over her. &ldquo;Didn't you hear young marster?&rdquo; he gulped; &ldquo;didn't you
- hear 'im say we-all's boy was erlive?&mdash;<i>erlive</i>, honey?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With an arm of iron Linda pushed him back and stood before Carson.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You come tell me dat?&rdquo; she cried, her great breast tumultuously heaving.
- &ldquo;Young marster, 'fo' God I done had enough. Don't tell me dat now, en den
- come say it's er big mistake after you find out de trufe.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pete's all right, Linda,&rdquo; Carson said, reassuringly. &ldquo;Keith and Helen
- will tell you about it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With an appealing look in her eyes Linda extended a detaining hand towards
- him, but he had gone to the door and was cautiously looking out, his
- attention being drawn to the sound of footsteps in the hall. It was two
- negro maids just entering the house, having left half a dozen other
- negroes on the walk in front. Going out into the hall, Carson commanded
- the maids and the loiterers to go away, and the astonished blacks, with
- many a curious, backward glance, made haste to do his bidding. A heavy
- frown was on his face and he shrugged his broad shoulders as he took his
- place on the veranda to guard the parlor door. &ldquo;It's a ticklish business,&rdquo;
- he mused; &ldquo;if we are not very careful these negroes will drop on to the
- truth in no time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had dismissed the idlers in the nick of time, for there was a sudden,
- joyous scream from Linda, a chorus of warning voices. The full import of
- the good news was only just breaking upon the stunned consciousness of the
- old sufferer. Screams and sobs, mingled with hysterical laughter, fell
- upon Carson's ears, through all of which rang the persistent drone of
- Keith Gordon's manly voice in gentle admonition. The door of the parlor
- opened and old Lewis came forth, his black face streaming with tears.
- Going to Carson he attempted to speak, but, unable to utter a word, he
- grasped the young man's hand, and pressing it to his lips he staggered
- away. A few minutes later Keith came out doggedly trying to divest his
- boyish features of a certain glorified expression that had settled on
- them.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good God!&rdquo; he smiled grimly, as he fished a cigar from the pocket of his
- waistcoat, &ldquo;I'm glad that's over. It struck her like a tornado. I'm glad
- I'm not in your shoes. She'll literally fall on your neck. Good Lord! I've
- heard people say negroes haven't any gratitude&mdash;Linda's burning up
- with it. You are her God, old man. She knows what you did, and she knows,
- too, that we opposed you to the last minute.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You told her, of course,&rdquo; Carson said, reprovingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I had to. She was trying to dump it all on me as the only member of the
- gang present. I told her, the whole thing was born in your brain and
- braced up by your backbone. Oh yes, I told her how we fought your plan and
- with what determination you stuck to it in the face of all opposition. No,
- the rest of us don't deserve any credit. We'd have squelched you if we
- could. Well, I simply wasn't cut out for heroic things. The easy road has
- always been mine to any destination, but I reckon nothing worth much was
- ever picked up by chance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The two friends had gone down to the gate and Keith was unhitching his
- horse, when Helen came out on the veranda, and seeing Carson she hastened
- to him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She's up in my room,&rdquo; she explained. &ldquo;I'm going to keep her there for the
- rest of the day anyway. I'm glad now that we took so much precaution. She
- admits that we were right about that. She says if she had known Pete was
- safe she might have failed to keep it from the others. But she is going to
- help us guard the secret now. But oh, Carson, she is already begging to be
- allowed to see Pete. It's pitiful. There are moments even now when she
- even seems to doubt his safety, and it is all I can do to convince her.
- She is begging to see you, too. Oh, Carson, when you told me about it why
- did you leave out the part you took? Keith told us all about your fight
- against such odds, and how you sat up all night at the store to keep the
- poor boy company.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Keith was with me,&rdquo; Carson said, flushing, deeply. &ldquo;Well, we've got Pete
- bottled up where he is safe for the present, but there is no telling when
- suspicion may be directed to us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We are going to win; I feel it!&rdquo; said Helen, fervidly. &ldquo;Don't forget that
- I'm a member of the clan. I'm proud of the honor,&rdquo; and pressing his hand
- warmly she hurried back to the house.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0031" id="link2HCH0031"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXXI
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0035" id="linkimage-0035"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9278.jpg" alt="9278 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9278.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- N his way to Blackburn's store the next morning to inquire about the
- prisoner, Carson met Garner coming out of the barber-shop, where he had
- just been shaved.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Any news?&rdquo; Carson asked, in a guarded voice, though they were really out
- of earshot of any one.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No actual <i>news</i>,&rdquo; Garner replied, stroking his thickly powdered
- chin; &ldquo;but I don't like the lay of the land.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's up now?&rdquo; Dwight asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know that there is anything wrong yet; but, my boy, discovery&mdash;discovery
- grim and threatening is in the very air about us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What makes you think so, Garner?&rdquo; They paused on the street crossing
- leading over to Blackbum's store.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, it's all due to old Linda and Lewis,&rdquo; Garner said, in a tone of
- conviction. &ldquo;You know I was dead against letting them know Pete was
- alive.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You think we made a mistake in that, then?&rdquo; Carson said. &ldquo;Well, the
- pressure was simply too strong, and I had to give way under it. But why do
- you think it was a bad move?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;From the way it's turning out,&rdquo; said Garner. &ldquo;While Buck Black was
- shaving me just now he remarked that his wife had seen Uncle Lewis and
- Linda and that she thought they were acting very peculiarly. I asked him
- in as off-hand and careless a manner as I could what he meant, and he said
- that his wife didn't think they acted exactly as if they had just lost
- their only child. Buck said it looked like they were only pretending to be
- brokenhearted. I thought the best way to discourage him was to be silent,
- and so I closed my eyes and he went on with his work. Presently, however,
- he said bluntly, 'Look here, Colonel Garner'&mdash;Buck always calls me
- colonel&mdash;'where do you think they put that boy?' He had me there, you
- know, and I felt ashamed of myself. The idea of as good a lawyer as there
- is in this end of the State actually wiggling under the eye and tongue of
- a coon as black as the ace of spades! Finally I told him that, as well as
- I could gather, the Hillbend faction had put Pete out of the way, and were
- keeping it a secret to intimidate the negroes through their natural
- superstition. And what do you reckon Buck said. Huh, he'd make a good
- detective! He said he'd had his eye on the most rampant of the Hillbend
- men and that they didn't look like they'd lynched anything as big as a
- mouse. In fact, he thought they were on the lookout for a good opportunity
- in that line.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It certainly looks shaky,&rdquo; Carson admitted, as they moved on to the
- store, where Blackburn stood waiting for them just inside the doorway.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How did Pete pass the night?&rdquo; Carson asked, his brow still clouded by the
- discouraging observations of his partner.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, all right,&rdquo; Blackburn made reply. &ldquo;Bob and Wade slept here on the
- counters. They say he snored like a saw-mill. They could hear him through
- the floor. Boys, I hate to dash cold water in your faces, but I never felt
- as shaky in my life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter with <i>you?</i>&rdquo; Garner asked, with an uneasy laugh.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm afraid a storm is rising in an unexpected quarter,&rdquo; said the
- store-keeper, furtively glancing up and down the street, and then leading
- them farther back into the store.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which quarter is that?&rdquo; Carson asked, anxiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The sheriff is acting odd&mdash;mighty odd,&rdquo; said Blackburn.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good Lord! you don't think Braider's really on our trail do you?&rdquo; Garner
- cried, in genuine alarm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you two can make out what it means yourselves,&rdquo; and Blackburn
- pulled at his short chin whiskers doggedly. &ldquo;It was only about half an
- hour ago&mdash;Braider's drinking some, and was, perhaps, on that account
- a little more communicative&mdash;he came in here, his face as red as a
- pickled beet, and smelling like a bunghole in a whiskey-barrel, and leaned
- against the counter on the dry-goods side.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'I'm the legally elected sheriff of this county, ain't I?' he said, in
- his maudlin way, and I told him he was by a big majority.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Well,' he said, after looking down at the floor for a minute, 'I'll bet
- you boys think I'm a dem slack wad of an officer.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I didn't know what the devil he was driving at, and so I simply kept my
- mouth shut, but you bet your life I had my ears open, for there was
- something in his eye that I didn't like, and then when he said '<i>you
- boys</i>' in that tone I began to think he might be on to the work we did
- the other night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, what next?&rdquo; Carson asked, sharply. &ldquo;Well, he just leaned on the
- counter, about to slide down every minute,&rdquo; Blackburn went on, &ldquo;and then
- he began to laugh in a silly sort of way and said, 'Them <i>Hillbend</i>
- fellers are a slick article, ain't they?' Of course I didn't know what to
- say,&rdquo; said the store-keeper, &ldquo;for he had his eyes on me and was grinning
- to beat the Dutch, and that is the kind of cross-examination I fail at.
- Finally, however, I managed to say that the Hillbend folks had beaten the
- others to the jail, anyway, and he broke out into another knowing laugh.
- 'The Hillbend gang didn't have as fur to go,' he said. 'Oh, they are a
- slick article, an' they've got a slick young leader.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What else?&rdquo; asked Carson, who looked very grave and stood with his lips
- pressed together.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing else,&rdquo; Blackburn answered. &ldquo;Just then Wiggin, your boon companion
- and bosom friend, stopped at the door and called him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good Lord, <i>and with Wiggin!</i>&rdquo; Garner exclaimed. &ldquo;Our cake is dough,
- and it's good and wet.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, he's a Wiggin man!&rdquo; said Blackburn. &ldquo;I've known he was pulling
- against Carson for some time. It seems like Braider sized up the
- situation, and decided if he was going to be re-elected himself he'd
- better pool issues with the strongest man, and he picked that skunk as the
- winner. I went to the door and watched them. They went off, arm in arm,
- towards the court-house.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Braider is evidently on to us,&rdquo; Carson decided, grimly; &ldquo;and the truth
- is, he holds us in the palm of his hand. If he should insist on carrying
- out the law, and rearresting Pete and putting him back in jail, Dan Willis
- would see that he didn't stay there long, and Wiggin would swear out a
- warrant against us as the greatest law-breakers unhung.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, the whole thing certainly looks shaky,&rdquo; admitted Blackburn.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I tell you one thing, Carson,&rdquo; Garner observed, grimly, &ldquo;there are no two
- ways about it, we are going to lose our client and your election just as
- sure as we stand here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't intend to give up yet,&rdquo; Dwight said, his lip twitching nervously
- and a fierce look of determination dawning in his eyes. &ldquo;We've
- accomplished too much so far to fail ignominiously. Boys, I'd give
- everything I have to ward this thing off from old Aunt Linda. She's
- certainly borne enough.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The two lawyers went to their office, avoiding the numerous groups of men
- about the stores who seemed occupied with the different phases of the
- ever-present topic. They seated themselves at their desks, and Garner was
- soon at work. But there was nothing for Carson to do, and he sat gloomily
- staring through the open doorway out into the sunshine. Presently he saw
- Braider across the street and called Garner's attention to him. Then to
- their surprise the sheriff turned suddenly and came directly towards them.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gee, here he comes!&rdquo; Garner exclaimed; &ldquo;he may want to pump us. Keep a
- sharp eye on him, Carson. He may really not know anything actually
- incriminating, after all. Watch him like a hawk!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0032" id="link2HCH0032"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXXII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0036" id="linkimage-0036"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9285.jpg" alt="9285 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9285.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- HE young men pretended to be deeply absorbed over their work when the
- stalwart officer loomed up in the doorway, his broad-brimmed hat well back
- on his head, the flush of intoxicants in his tanned face, his step
- unsteady.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I hope I won't disturb you, gentlemen,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but you are two men
- that I want to talk to&mdash;I might say talk to as a brother.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come in, come in, Braider,&rdquo; Carson said; &ldquo;take that chair.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0037" id="linkimage-0037"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0283.jpg" alt="0283 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0283.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- As Braider moved with uncertain step to a chair, tilted it to one side to
- divest it of its burden of books, newspapers, and old briefs and other
- defunct legal documents, Garner with a wary look in his eye fished a
- solitary cigar from his pocket&mdash;the one he had reserved for a mid-day
- smoke&mdash;and prof-ered it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have a cigar,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and make yourself comfortable.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The sheriff took the cigar as absent-mindedly as he would, in his
- condition, have received a large banknote, and held it too tightly for its
- preservation in his big red hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I want to talk to you boys, and I want to say a whole lot that I
- hope won't go any further. I've always meant well by you two, and hoped
- fer your success both in the law&mdash;and politics.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Garner cast an amused glance, in spite of the gravity of the situation, at
- his partner, and then said, quite evenly, &ldquo;We know that, Braider&mdash;we
- always <i>have</i> known it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, as I say, I want to <i>talk</i> to you. I've heard that an honest
- confession is good for the soul, if not for the pocket, and I'm here to
- make one, as honest as I kin spit it out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, that's it?&rdquo; said Garner, and with a wary look of curiosity on his
- face he sat waiting.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, and I want to begin back at the first and sort o' lead up. It's hard
- to keep a fellow's political leaning hid, Carson, and I reckon you may
- have heard that I had some notion of casting my luck in with Wiggin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;After he began circulating those tales about me, yes,&rdquo; Carson said, with
- a touch of severity; &ldquo;not before, Braider&mdash;at least not when I worked
- as I did the last time for your own election.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are plumb right,&rdquo; the sheriff said, readily enough. &ldquo;I flopped over
- sudden, I'll acknowledge; but that's neither here nor there.&rdquo; He paused
- for a moment and the lawyers exchanged steady glances.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He may want to make a bargain with us,&rdquo; Garner's eyes seemed to say, but
- Carson's mind had grasped other and more dire possibilities as he recalled
- Blackburn's remark of a few minutes before. In fact all those assurances
- of good-will might mean naught else than that the sheriff&mdash;at the
- instigation of Wiggin and others&mdash;had come actually to arrest him as
- the leader of the men who had intimidated the county jailer and stolen
- away the State's prisoner. The thought seemed to be borne telepathically
- to Garner, for that worthy all at once sat more rigidly, more aggressively
- defiant in his chair, and the pen he was chewing was suspended before his
- lips. This beating about the bush, in serious things, at least, was not
- Garner's method.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, well, Braider,&rdquo; he said, with a change of tone and manner, &ldquo;tell us
- right out what you want. The day is passing and we've got lots to do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, all right,&rdquo; agreed the intoxicated man; &ldquo;here goes. Boys, what
- I'm going to say is a sort of per-personal matter. You've both treated me
- like a respectable citizen and officer of the law, and I've taken it just
- as if I fully deserved the honor. But Jeff Braider ain't no hypocrite, if
- he <i>is</i> a politician and hobnobs with that sort of riffraff. Boys,
- always, away down at the bottom of everything I ever did tackle in this
- life, has been the memory of my old mother's teachings, and I've tried my
- level best, as a man, to live up to 'em. I don't know as I ever come nigh
- committing crime&mdash;as I regard it&mdash;till here lately. Crime, they
- tell me, stalks about in a good many disguises. The crime I'm talking
- about had two faces to it. You could look at it one way and it would seem
- all right, and then from another side it would look powerful bad. Well, I
- first saw this thing the night the mob raided Neb Wynn's shanty and run
- Pete Warren out and chased him to your house, Carson. You may not want to
- look me in the eye ag'in, my boy, when I tell you, but I could have come
- to your aid a sight quicker that night than I did if I hadn't been loaded
- down with so many fears of injury to myself. As I saw that big mob rushing
- like a mad river after that nigger, I said to myself, I did, that no human
- power or authority could save 'im anyway, and that if I stood up before
- the crowd and tried to quiet them, that&mdash;well, if I wasn't shot dead
- in my tracks I'd kill myself politically, and so I waited in the edge of
- the crowd, hiding like a sneak-thief, till&mdash;till you did the work,
- and then I stepped up as big as life and pretended that I'd just arrived.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; Garner exclaimed, and he stared at the bowed head of the officer
- with a look of wonder in his eyes; and it was a look of hope, too, for
- surely no human being of exactly <i>this</i> stamp would take unfair
- advantage of any one.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That was the <i>first</i> time,&rdquo; Braider gulped, as he went on, his
- glance now directed solely to Carson. &ldquo;My boy, I went to bed that night,
- after we jailed that nigger, feeling meaner than an egg-sucking dog looks
- when he's caught in the act. If there is anything on earth that will shame
- a man it is to see another display more moral and physical courage than he
- does, and you did enough of both that night to show me where I stood. It
- was a new thing to me, and it made me mad. I was a good soldier in the war&mdash;I
- wear a Confederate veteran's badge that was pinned onto my coat in public
- by the | beautiful daughter of a dead comrade&mdash;but being shot at in a
- bunch ain't the same as being the <i>only</i> target, and I showed my
- limit.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, you are exaggerating the whole thing,&rdquo; Carson said, with a flush of
- embarrassment.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No I ain't, Carson Dwight,&rdquo; Braider said, feelingly, and he took out his
- red cotton handkerchief and wiped his eyes. &ldquo;You showed me that night the
- difference between bravery, so-called, and the genuine thing. I reckon
- bravery for personal gain is a weak imitation of bravery that acts just
- out of human pity as yours did that night. Well, that ain't all. The next
- day I was put to a worse test than ever. It was noised about, you know,
- that a bigger mob than the first was rising. I stayed out of the centre of
- town as much as I could, for everywhere I went folks would look at me as
- if they thought I'd surely do something to protect the prisoner, and at
- home my wife was whimpering around all day, saying she was sure Pete was
- innocent, or enough so to deserve a trial, if not for himself for the sake
- of his mammy and daddy. But what was such a wavering thing as I was to do?
- I took it that seventy-five per cent, of the men who had backed me with
- their ballot in my election was bent on lynching the prisoner, and if I
- opposed them they would consider me a traitor. On the other hand, I was up
- against this: if I did put up a feeble sort of opposition and gave in easy
- under pressure, the conservative men, like some we have here in town,
- would say I didn't mean business or I'd have actually opened fire on the
- mob. You see, boys, I wasn't man enough to take a stand either way, and
- though I well knew what was coming, I went about lying like a dog&mdash;lying
- in my throat, telling everybody that the indications showed that the
- excitement had quieted down. I went home that night and told my wife all
- was serene, and I drank about a quart of rye whiskey to keep me from
- thinking about the business and went to bed, but my conscience, I reckon,
- was stronger than my whiskey, for I rolled and tumbled all night. It
- seemed to me that I was, with my own hands, tying the rope around that
- pore nigger's neck. There I lay, a sworn officer of the law, flat on my
- back with not enough moral courage in my miserable carcass to have killed
- a gnat. Carson, if I saw you once before my eyes that long night, I saw
- you five hundred times. Your speech rang over and over in my ears. I saw
- you stand there when a ball had already grazed your brow and defy them to
- shoot again. I saw that poor black boy clinging to your knees, and knew
- that the light of Heaven had shone on you, while I lay in the hot darkness
- of the bottomless pit.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;God, you do put it strong!&rdquo; Garner exclaimed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not putting it half strong enough,&rdquo; the sheriff went on. &ldquo;I don't
- deserve to hold office even in a community half run by mob law. But I
- ain't through. I ain't through yet. I got up early that awful morning, and
- went out to feed my hogs at a pen that stands on a back street, and there
- a woman milking a cow told me that it was over Pete Warren was done for&mdash;guilty
- or not, he was done for. I went in the house and tried to gulp down my
- breakfast, faced by my wife, who wouldn't speak to me, and showed in other
- ways what she thought about the whole thing. She was eternally sighing and
- going on about old Mammy Lindy and her feelings. I first went to the jail,
- and there I was told that two mobs had come, the first the Hillbend crowd,
- who did the work, and the bigger mob that got there too late.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Braider's voice had grown husky and he coughed. Garner stole a searching
- glance of inquiry at Carson, but Dwight, his face suffused with a warm
- look of pity for the speaker, was steadily staring through the open door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I ain't done yet, God knows I ain't,&rdquo; the sheriff gulped. &ldquo;That morning I
- felt meaner than any convict that ever wore ball and chain. If I'd been
- tried and found guilty of stabbing a woman in the back I don't believe I
- could have felt less like a man. I tried to throw it all off by thinking
- that I couldn't have done any good anyway, but it wouldn't work. Carson,
- you and your plucky stand for the maintenance of law was before me, and
- you wasn't paid for the work while I was. Huh! do you remember seeing me
- as you came out of Blackburn's store that morning, with your hair all
- tousled up and your eyes looking red and bloodshot?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I remember seeing you,&rdquo; said Dwight. &ldquo;I would have stopped to speak
- to you but&mdash;but I was in a hurry to get home.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you may have heard that I used to be a sort of a one-horse
- detective,&rdquo; Braider went on, &ldquo;and I had acquired a habit of looking for
- the explanation of nearly every unusual thing I saw, and&mdash;well, you
- coming out of that store before it was opened for trade, while the
- shutters in the front was still closed, struck me as odd. Then again,
- remembering your big interest in Pete's case, somehow, it didn't seem to
- me&mdash;meeting you sudden that way&mdash;that you looked quite as
- downhearted as I expected. In fact, I thought you appeared sort o'
- satisfied over something.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; Garner exclaimed, all at once suspecting Braider of a gigantic ruse
- to entrap them. &ldquo;You thought he looked chipper, did you? Well, I must say
- he looked exactly the other way to me when I first saw him that day.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it started me to wondering, anyway,&rdquo; went on the sheriff, ignoring
- Garner's interruption, &ldquo;and I set to work to watch. I hung about the
- restaurant across the street, smoking a cigar and keeping my eyes on that
- store. After awhile I saw Bob Smith go in the store and then Wade Tingle.
- Then I saw a big tray of grub covered with a white cloth sent from the
- Johnston House, and Bob Smith come to the door and took it in, sending the
- coon that fetched it back to the hotel. Well, I waited a minute or two and
- then sauntered, careless-like, across and went in. I chatted awhile with
- Bob and Wade, noticing, I remember, that for a newspaper man Wade seemed
- powerful indifferent about gathering items about what had happened, and
- that Blackburn was busy folding up a tangled lot of short pieces of white
- sheeting. All this time I was looking about to see where that waiter full
- of grub had gone. Not a sign of it was in sight, but in a lull in the talk
- I heard the clink of crockery somewhere below me, and I caught on. Boys,
- I'm here to tell you that never did a condemned soul feel as I felt. I
- went out in the open air praying, actually praying, that what I suspected
- might be true. I started for the jail and on the way met Burt Barrett. I
- asked him for particulars, and when he said that the Hillbend mob had left
- word that nobody need even look for the remains of the boy my heart gave a
- big jump in the same way as it had when that clip and saucer collided in
- that cellar. I asked Burt if he noticed which way the mob tuck the
- prisoner, and he said down towards town. I asked him if it wasn't odd for
- Hillbend folks to go that way to hang a man, and he agreed that it was.
- Well, to make a long story short, I was on to your gigantic ruse, and God
- above knows what a load it took off of me. You had saved me, Carson&mdash;you
- had saved me from toting that crime to my grave. I knew you were the
- ringleader, for I didn't know anybody else who would have thought of such
- a plan. You are a sight younger man than I am, but you stuck to principle,
- while I shirked principle, duty, and everything else. Doing all that was
- hurting your political chances, and you knew it, but you stuck to what was
- right all the same.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, he certainly has queered his political chances,&rdquo; Garner said,
- grimly, with a look of wonder in his eye over the sheriff's frank
- confession. &ldquo;But you, I think you said, were a Wiggin man,&rdquo; he finished.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, Wiggin and some others <i>think</i> I am yet,&rdquo; said Braider; &ldquo;and I
- reckon I was till this thing come up; but, boys, I guess I've got a little
- smidgin of good left in me, for somehow Wiggin has turned my stomach. But
- I hain't got to what I was leading up to. Neither one of you hain't
- admitted that there is a nigger in that wood-pile yet, and I don't blame
- you for keeping it to yourselves. That is your business, but the time has
- come when Jeff Braider's got to do the right thing or plunge deeper into
- hellishness, and he's had a taste of what it means and don't want no more
- of it. I may lose all I've got by it. Wiggin and his gang may beat me to a
- cold finish next election, but from now on I'm on the other side.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good,&rdquo; said Garner; &ldquo;that's the way to talk. Was that what you were
- leading up to, Braider?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not altogether,&rdquo; and the sheriff rose and stood over Carson, resting his
- hand on the young man's shoulder to steady himself. &ldquo;My boy, I've come to
- tell you that the damnedest, blackest plot agin you that ever was laid has
- been hatched out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is that, Braider?&rdquo; Carson asked, calmly enough under the
- circumstances.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wiggin and his gang have found out that a trick was played night before
- last. The Hillbend men convinced them that they didn't lynch anybody, and
- the Wiggin crowd smelt around until they dropped on to the thing. The only
- fact they are short on is where the boy is hid. They think he is in the
- house of one of the negro preachers. Wiggin come to me, not half an hour
- ago, and considering me one of his stand-bys, he told me all about it. The
- scheme is for me to arrest Pete and jail 'im on the charge of murder and
- then to arrest you fer being the ringleader of a jail-breaking gang, who
- preaches law and order in public for political gain and breaks both in
- secret.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And what do they think will become of Pete?&rdquo; Carson asked, a touch of
- supreme bitterness in his tone.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wiggin didn't say; but I know what would happen to him. The seeds of
- bloody riot are being strewn broadcast by the handful. They've been to
- every member of the crowd that lynched Sam Dudlow and warned them, on
- their lives, not to repeat the statement that Dudlow had said Pete was
- innocent. They told the lynchers that you two lawyers were on the hunt for
- men who had heard the confession and intend to use that as evidence
- against them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, that <i>is</i> slick, slick!&rdquo; Garner muttered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Slick as double-distilled goose-grease,&rdquo; said Braider. &ldquo;The lynchers are
- denying to friend or foe that Dudlow said a word, and the news is
- spreading like wildfire that Pete was Dudlow's accomplice, and that you,
- Carson, are trying, with a gang of town dudes, to carry your point by
- main, bull-headed force.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I see, I see.&rdquo; Carson had risen and with a deep frown on his face stood
- leaning against the top of his desk. He extended his hand to the officer
- and said, &ldquo;I appreciate your telling me all this, Braider, more than I can
- say.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the good of my telling you if the news doesn't benefit you?&rdquo; the
- sheriff asked. &ldquo;Carson, I want to see you win. I ain't half a man myself,
- but I've got two little boys just starting to grow up, and I wish they
- could be like you&mdash;a two-legged bull-dog that clamps his teeth on
- what's right and won't let loose. Carson, you've got a chance&mdash;a bare
- chance&mdash;to get your man out alive.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's that?&rdquo; Dwight asked, eagerly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, let me hold the mob in check by promising to arrest Pete, and you
- get some trusty feller to take him in a buggy to-night through the country
- to Chattanooga. It would be a ticklish trip, and you want a man that won't
- get scared at his shadow, for on every road out of Darley, men will be on
- the lookout, but if you once got him there he would be absolutely safe,
- for no mob would go out of the State to do work of that sort. Getting a
- good man is the main thing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll do it myself,&rdquo; Dwight said, firmly. &ldquo;You?&rdquo; Garner cried. &ldquo;That's
- absurd!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm the only one who <i>could</i> do it,&rdquo; Carson declared, &ldquo;for Pete
- would not go with any one else.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I really believe you are right,&rdquo; Garner agreed, reluctantly; &ldquo;but it is a
- nasty undertaking after all you've been through.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;By gum!&rdquo; exclaimed Braider, extending his hand to Dwight. &ldquo;I hope you
- will do it. I want to see you complete a darn good all-round job.&rdquo; >
- &ldquo;Well, you <i>are</i> an officer of the law,&rdquo; Garner observed, with
- amusement written all over his rugged face, &ldquo;asking a man to steal your
- own prisoner.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What else can I do that's at all decent?&rdquo; Braider asked. &ldquo;Besides, do you
- fellows know that there never has been any written warrant for Pete's
- arrest. I started to jail him without any, and old Mrs. Parsons turned him
- loose. The only time he was put in jail was by Carson himself. By George!
- as I look at it, Carson, you have every right to take him out of jail, by
- any hook or crook, since you was responsible for him being there instead
- of hanging to a limb of a tree. I tell you, my boy, there ain't any law on
- earth that can touch you. Nobody is prepared to testify against Pete, and
- if you will get him to Chattanooga and keep him there for a while he can
- come back here a free man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have friends there who will look after him,&rdquo; Dwight said. &ldquo;I'll start
- with him to-night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0033" id="link2HCH0033"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXXIII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0038" id="linkimage-0038"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9297.jpg" alt="9297 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9297.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- HAT afternoon Keith Gordon went to Warren's to tell Helen of Carson's plan
- for the removal of Pete. She received him in the big parlor, and he found
- her seated at one of the wide windows which, in summer-time, was used as a
- doorway to the veranda.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I met the conquering hero, Mr. Sanders, on my way down,&rdquo; he said,
- lightly. &ldquo;I presume he has been here as usual.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He only called to say good-bye,&rdquo; Helen answered, a little coldly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, that <i>is</i> news,&rdquo; Keith pursued, in the same tone. &ldquo;Rather
- sudden, isn't it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, his affairs would not permit a longer visit,&rdquo; said Helen. &ldquo;But you
- didn't come to talk of him; it was something about Pete.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She sat very still and rigid while he went into detail as to the whole
- situation, and when he had finished she rested her chin in her white hand,
- and he saw her breast rise and fall tremulously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There is danger attached to the trip,&rdquo; she said, without looking at him.
- &ldquo;I know it, Keith, by the way you talk.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He deliberated for an instant, then acknowledged: &ldquo;Yes, there is, and to
- my way of thinking, Helen, there is a great deal. Wade and I tried to get
- him to consent to some other plan, but he wouldn't hear to it. He's so
- anxious to put it through all right that he won't trust to any substitute,
- and he won't let any one else go along, either. He thinks it would attract
- too much attention.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In what particular way does the danger lie?&rdquo; Helen faltered, and Keith
- saw her pass her hand over her mouth as if to reprimand her lips for their
- unsteadiness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'd tell you there wasn't any at all, as Carson would have me do,&rdquo; Keith
- declared; &ldquo;but when a fellow has the courage of an army of men, I believe
- in his getting the full credit for it. You want to know and I'm going to
- tell you. He's been through ticklish places enough in this business, but
- going over that lonely road to-night, when a thousand furious men may be
- on the lookout for him, is the worst thing he has tackled. It wouldn't be
- so very dangerous to a man who would throw up his hands if accosted, but,
- Helen, if you could have seen Carson's face when he was telling us about
- it, you would know that he will actually die rather than see Pete taken.
- He's reckless of late, anyway.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Reckless!&rdquo; Helen echoed, and this time she gave Keith a full, almost
- pleading stare.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, you know he's reckless. He's been so ever since Mr. Sanders came.
- It looks to me like&mdash;well, I reckon a man can understand another
- better than a woman can, but it looks to me like Carson is doing the whole
- thing because you feel so worried about it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You certainly wrong him there,&rdquo; Helen declared.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He is doing it simply because it is right.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, of course he thinks it's <i>right,</i>&rdquo; Keith returned, with a boyish
- smile; &ldquo;he thinks everything <i>you</i> want is right.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When Keith had gone Helen went at once to Linda's cottage to tell her the
- news, putting it in as hopeful a light as possible, and not touching upon
- the danger of the journey. But the old woman had a very penetrating mind,
- and she stood in the doorway with a deeply furrowed brow for several
- minutes without saying anything, then her observation only added to
- Helen's burden of anxiety.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Chile,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;ol' Lindy don't like de way dat looks one bit. You say
- young marster got ter steal off in de dead o' night, en dat he cayn't even
- let me see my boy once 'fo' he go. Suppin up, honey&mdash;suppin up! De
- danger ain't over yit. Honey, I know what it is,&rdquo; Linda groaned; &ldquo;dem
- white folks is rising ergin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, even if that is the reason&rdquo;&mdash;Helen felt the chill hand of fear
- grasp her heart at the admission&mdash;&ldquo;even if that is it, Carson will
- get him away safely.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ef he <i>kin</i>, honey, ef he <i>kin!</i>&rdquo; Linda moaned.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'God been behind 'im all thoo so fur, but I seed de time when de Lawd
- Hisse'f seem ter turn His back on folks tryin' ter do dey level best.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Leaving Linda muttering and moaning in the cottage doorway, the girl went
- with a despondent step back to the big empty house and wandered aimlessly
- about the various rooms.
- </p>
- <p>
- As night came on and her father returned from town, she met him on the
- veranda and gave him a kiss of greeting, but she soon discovered that he
- had heard nothing. In fact, he was one of the many who still believed that
- Pete had been lynched, the vague whisperings to the contrary not having
- reached his old ears. She sat with him at the tea-table, and then went up
- to her room and lighted her lamp on her bureau. As she did so she looked
- at her reflection in the mirror and started at the sight of her grave
- features. Then a flash from her wrist caught her eye. It was the big
- diamond of a beautiful bracelet which Sanders had given her, and as she
- looked at it she shuddered. Was she superstitious? She hardly knew, and
- yet a strange idea took possession of her brain. Would her unspoken
- prayers for Carson Dwight's safety in his perilous expedition be answered
- while she wore that gift from another man, after she had spurned Carson's
- great and lasting love, and allowed the poor boy to think that she had
- given herself heart and soul to this stranger? She hesitated only a
- moment, and opening a jewel box she unclasped the bracelet and put it
- away. Then with a certain lightness of heart she went to the window
- overlooking the grounds of the Dwight homestead and stood there staring
- out in the hope of seeing Carson. But he was evidently not at home, for no
- lights were visible except a dim one in the invalid's room and one in old
- Dwight's chamber adjoining.
- </p>
- <p>
- At ten o'clock Helen disrobed herself still with that awful sense of
- impending tragedy hovering over her. The oil in her lamp was almost out,
- and for this reason only she extinguished the flame, else she would have
- kept it burning through the night to dissipate the material shadows which
- seemed to accentuate those of her spirit. She heard the old grandfather
- clock on the stair-landing below solemnly strike ten, then the monotonous
- tick-tack as the great pendulum swung to and fro. Sleep was out of the
- question. A few minutes before eleven she heard a soft foot-fall on the
- walk in the front garden, and going out on the veranda she looked down.
- </p>
- <p>
- The bowed form of a woman was moving restlessly back and forth from the
- steps to the gate.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is that you, mammy?&rdquo; Helen asked, softly.
- </p>
- <p>
- The handkerchiefed head was lifted and Linda looked up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it's me, honey. I can't sleep. What de use? Kin er mother sleep when
- her chile is comin' in de worl'? No, you know she can't; neither kin she
- close 'er eyes when she's afeared dat same chile is gwine out of it. I'm
- afeared, honey. I'm afeared ter-night wuss dan all. Seem lak de evil
- sperits des been playin' wid us all erlong&mdash;makin' us think we gwine
- ter come thoo, so't will hit us harder w'en it do strack de blow. You go
- on back ter yo' baid, honey. You catch yo' death er cold. I'm gwine home
- right now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen saw the old woman disappear round the corner of the house, but she
- remained on the veranda. The clock was striking eleven, and she was about
- to go in, when she heard the dull beat of hoofs on the carriage-drive of
- the Dwight place, and through the half moonlight she saw a pair of horses,
- Carson's best, harnessed to a buggy and driven by their owner slowly and
- cautiously going towards the big gate. Dwight himself got down to open it.
- She heard his low commands to the spirited animals as he led them forward
- by the bit, and then he stepped back to close and latch the gate. She had
- an overpowering impulse to call out to him; but would it be wise? His
- evident precaution was to keep his mother from knowing of his departure,
- and Helen's voice might attract the attention of the invalid and seriously
- hamper him in his undertaking. With her hands pressed to her breast she
- saw him get into the buggy, heard his calm voice as he spoke to the
- horses, and then he was off&mdash;off to do his duty&mdash;and <i>hers</i>.
- She went back to her room and laid down, haunted by the weird thought that
- she would never see him again. Then, all at once, she had a flash of
- memory which sent the hot blood of shame from her heart to her brain, and
- she sat up, staring through the darkness. <i>That</i> was the man against
- whom she had steeled her heart for his conduct, his youthful indiscretions
- with her unfortunate brother. Was Carson Dwight to go forever unpardoned&mdash;unpardoned
- by such as <i>she</i> while <i>that</i> sort of soul held suffering sway
- within him?
- </p>
- <p>
- The hours of the long night dragged by and another day began. Keith came
- up after breakfast and related the particulars of Carson's departure.
- Graphically he recounted how the gang had robed the ill-starred Pete in
- grotesque woman's attire and seen him and Carson safely in the buggy, but
- that was all that could be told or foretold. As for Keith, he and all the
- rest were trying to look on the bright side, and they would succeed better
- but for the long face Pole Baker had drawn when he came into town early
- that morning and heard of the expedition.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So he was uneasy?&rdquo; Helen said, in perturbation.
- </p>
- <p>
- Keith hesitated for a moment and then answered: &ldquo;Yes, to tell you the
- truth, Helen, it almost staggered him. He is a good-natured, long-headed
- chap, and he lost his temper. He cursed us all out for a silly, stupid set
- for allowing Carson to take such a risk. Finally we drew out of him what
- he feared. He said the particular road Carson took to reach the State line
- was actually alive with men, who had been keyed up to the highest tension
- by Wiggin and his followers. Pole said they had their eye on that road
- particularly because it was the most direct way to Chattanooga, and that
- Carson wouldn't have one chance in five hundred of passing unmolested. He
- said the idea of fooling men of that stamp by putting Pete in a woman's
- dress in the company of Carson, of all human beings, was the work of
- insane men.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It really was dangerous!&rdquo; said Helen, pale to the lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, we meant it for the best&rdquo;&mdash;Keith defended himself and his
- friends&mdash;&ldquo;we didn't know the road was a particularly dangerous one.
- In fact, Pole didn't learn it himself until several hours after Carson had
- left. I really believe he'd have helped us do what we did if he had been
- with us last night. We did the best we could; besides, Carson was going to
- have his way. Every protest we made was swept off with that winning laugh
- of his. In spite of the gravity of the thing, he kept us roaring. I have
- never seen him in better spirits. He was bowing and scraping before that
- veiled and hooded darky as if he were the grandest lady in the land. He
- even insisted on handing Pete into the buggy and protecting his long skirt
- from the dusty wheel. We never realized what we had done till he was gone
- and we all gathered in the store and talked it over. Blackburn, I reckon,
- being the oldest, was the bluest. He almost cried. Helen, I've seen
- popular men in my life, but I never saw one with so many friends as
- Carson. He's an odd combination. His friends love him extravagantly and
- his enemies hate him to the limit.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Late that afternoon, unable to wait longer for news of Carson, Helen went
- down to his office. Garner was in, and she surprised a look of firmly
- grounded uneasiness on his strong face. For a moment it was as if he
- intended to make some equivocal reply to her inquiry, but threw aside the
- impulse as unworthy of her courage and intelligence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To be candid,&rdquo; he said, as he stood stroking his chin, which bristled
- with open disregard for appearances under stress of more important things&mdash;&ldquo;to
- tell you the whole truth, Miss Helen, I don't like the lay of the land.&rdquo;
- Then he told her that the sheriff had just informed him of the whispered
- rumor that a body of men had met Carson Dwight and his charge near the
- State line about three o'clock in the morning. What had taken place the
- sheriff didn't know, beyond the fact that the men had disbanded and
- returned to their homes all gravely uncommunicative. What it meant no one
- but the participants knew. To face the facts, it looked very much as if
- harm had really come to one, if not to both, of the two. The mob had
- evidently been wrought to a high pitch of resentment for the trick Carson
- had played in stealing the prisoner from jail, and this second attempt to
- get him away may have enraged his enemies to outright violence against
- him, especially as Dwight was a fighting man and very hot-headed when
- roused.
- </p>
- <p>
- Unable to discuss the matter in her depressed frame of mind, Helen left
- him and went home. The whole story being now out, she found her father
- warmly excited and disposed to talk about it in all its phases, the
- earliest as well as the latest, but she had no heart for it, and after
- urging the Major not to speak of it to Linda she went supperless to her
- room.
- </p>
- <p>
- Two hours passed. The dusk had given way to the deeper darkness of
- evening. The moon had not yet risen and the starlight from a partly
- clouded sky was not sufficiently luminous to aid the vision in reaching
- any considerable distance, and yet from one of the rear windows of her
- room, where she stood morosely contemplative, she could see the vague
- outlines of Linda's cottage. It was while she was looking at the doorway
- of the little domicile, which stood out above the shrubbery of the rear
- garden as if dimly lighted from a candle within, that she saw something
- which caused her heart to suddenly bound. It was the live coal of a cigar,
- and the smoker seemed to be leaving the cottage, passing through the
- little gateway, and entering her father's grounds. What more natural than
- for Carson, if he had returned safely, to go at once to the mother of the
- boy with the news? Helen almost held her breath. She would soon be
- reasonably sure, for if it were Carson he would take a diagonal direction
- to reach the gateway to the Dwight homestead. Was it Carson, or&mdash;could
- it be her father? Her heart sank over the last surmise, and then it
- bounded again, for the coal of fire, fitfully flaring, was moving in the
- direction prayed for. Down the stairs Helen glided noiselessly, lest the
- Major hear her, and yet rapidly. When she reached the front veranda and
- descended the steps to the grass of the lawn she was just in time to see
- the red disk passing through the gateway to Dwight's. No form was visible,
- and yet she called out firmly and clearly: &ldquo;Carson! Carson!&rdquo; The coal of
- fire paused, described a curve, and she bounded towards it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did you call me?&rdquo; Carson Dwight asked, in a voice so low from hoarseness
- that it hardly reached her ears.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, wait!&rdquo; she panted. &ldquo;Oh, you've gotten back!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They now stood face to face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes,&rdquo; he laughed, with a gesture towards his throat of apology for his
- hoarseness; &ldquo;did you think I was off for good?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, but I was afraid&rdquo;&mdash;she was shocked by the pallor of his usually
- ruddy face, the many evidences of fatigue upon him, the nervous way he
- stood holding his hat and cigar&mdash;&ldquo;I was afraid you had met with
- disaster.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But why did you feel that way?&rdquo; he asked, reassuringly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, from what Keith said in general, and Mr. Garner, too. They declared
- the road you took was full of desperadoes, and&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I might have known they would exaggerate the whole business,&rdquo; Carson
- said, with a smile. &ldquo;Why, I've just come from Mam' Linda's. I went to tell
- her that Pete is all right and as sound as a dollar. He's in the charge of
- good, reliable friends of mine up there, and wholly out of danger. In
- fact, he's as happy as a lark. When I left him he was surrounded by a gang
- of as trifling scamps as himself bragging about his numerous escapes and&mdash;he's
- generous&mdash;my importance in the community we live in. Well, he's
- certainly been <i>important</i> enough lately.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But did you not meet with&mdash;with any opposition at all?&rdquo; Helen went
- on, insistently.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, well&rdquo;&mdash;he hesitated, struck a match, and applied it to his
- already lighted cigar&mdash;&ldquo;we lost our way, for one thing. You see, I
- was a little afraid to carry a light, and it was hard to make out the
- different sign-boards, and, all in all, it was a slow trip, but we got
- through all right. And hungry! Gee whiz! We struck a restaurant in the
- outskirts of Chattanooga about sunup, and while that fellow was cooking us
- some steak and making coffee we could have eaten him alive. If Mam' Linda
- could have seen her boy eat she would have no fears as to his bodily
- condition.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But didn't you meet some men who stopped you?&rdquo; Helen asked, staring
- steadily into his eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- He blinked, flicked the ashes from his cigar, and said: &ldquo;Yes, we did, and
- they were really on the war-path, but they seemed very reasonable, and
- when I had talked to them and explained the matter from our stand-point&mdash;why,
- they&mdash;they let us go.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They had gone into the grounds and were near the main walk when the gate
- was opened and a man came striding towards them. It was Jeff Braider.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I've been looking for you everywhere, Carson,&rdquo; he cried, warmly,
- shaking Dwight's hand. &ldquo;I heard you'd got back, but I wanted to see you
- with my own eyes. Lord, Lord, my boy, if I'd known the awful trouble I was
- getting you into I'd never have let you take that road. I've just heard
- the whole story. For genuine pluck and endurance you certainly take the
- rag off the bush. Why, nine hundred and ninety-nine men out of a thousand
- would have given up the game, but you, you young bull-dog&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Carson, Carson! are you down there?&rdquo; It was a man's voice from an upper
- window.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, father, what is it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your mother wants to see you right now. She's waked up and is worrying.
- Come on in.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'll both excuse me for just a moment, I know,&rdquo; Carson said, as if glad
- of the interruption. &ldquo;I'll be back presently. I haven't seen my mother
- since I returned, and she is very nervous and easily excited.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0034" id="link2HCH0034"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXXIV
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0039" id="linkimage-0039"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9309.jpg" alt="9309 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9309.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- O you are the only lady member of the secret gang that stole my prisoner!&rdquo;
- the sheriff said, laughingly. &ldquo;The boys told me all about it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wasn't taken in till they had done all the work,&rdquo; Helen smiled. &ldquo;I was
- only an honorary addition, elected more to keep my mouth shut than for any
- other service I could perform.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, <i>that</i> was it!&rdquo; Braider laughed. &ldquo;Well, they certainly put the
- thing through. I've mixed up in a lot of hair-raising scrapes in my time,
- but that kidnapping business was the brightest idea ever sprung from a
- man's head. This fellow Dwight is a corker. Did he tell you what he went
- through last night?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not a thing,&rdquo; replied Helen; &ldquo;the truth is, I have an idea he was trying
- to mislead me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, he certainly was if he didn't tell you he had the hardest fight for
- his life and that nigger's that ever a man made. You noticed how hoarse he
- was, didn't you? That is due to it. The poor chap was up all last night
- and drove the biggest part of to-day. I'll bet, strong as he is, he's as
- limber as a dish-rag.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then he really had trouble?&rdquo; Helen breathed, heavily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Trouble! And he didn't mention it to you? Young men in this day and time
- certainly play their cards peculiar. When I was on the carpet we boys had
- a way of making the most to women folks of everything we did, and it was
- generally the loudest talker that won the game. But here I find this 'town
- dude,' as the country people call his sort, actually trying to make you
- think he went to Chattanooga last night in a Pullman car. Good Lord, it
- gives me the all-overs to think of it! I heard all about it. I met a man
- who was along, and he told me the whole thing from start to finish.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What was it?&rdquo; Helen asked, breathlessly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; answered Braider, casting a glance towards Dwight's as if fearful
- of being overheard, &ldquo;I didn't know it, but somehow the mob had got wind of
- what Carson intended to do, and, bless you, they were waiting for him near
- the State line primed and cocked. The boy's enemies had fixed him. They
- had worked the mob up to the highest pitch of fury with all sorts of tales
- against Pete. They had produced men who had really heard the nigger
- threaten to harm Johnson, and they themselves testified that Carson was
- saving the nigger only to capture black voters as their friend and
- benefactor. The mob was mad as Tucker at him for tricking them the other
- night, and they certainly had it in for him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They were mad at Carson <i>personally</i>, then?&rdquo; Helen said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Were</i> they? They were ready to drink his blood. They halted the
- buggy, took them both out, and tied them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tied Car&mdash;&rdquo; Helen's voice died away, and she stood staring at
- Braider unable to speak.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, they tied them both and led them off into the woods. They then
- fastened Pete to a stump and piled sticks and brush around him and told
- Carson they were going to make him see them burn the boy alive and when
- that was done they intended to silence his tongue by shooting him dead in
- his tracks.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen covered her face with her hands and stifled a groan.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;His power of gab saved him, Miss Helen,&rdquo; Braider went on. &ldquo;It saved them
- both. It wasn't any begging, either; that wouldn't have gone with that
- sort of gang. With his hands and feet tied he began to talk&mdash;that's
- what ails his throat now&mdash;and the man that confessed it to me said
- such rapid fire of words and argument never before rolled from human lips.
- He told them he knew they would kill him; that they were a merciless band
- of desperadoes; but he was going to fire some truths at them that they
- would remember after he was gone, I'm no talker, Miss Helen. I can't
- possibly repeat what the man told me. He said at first Carson couldn't get
- their attention, but after awhile, when they were getting ready to apply
- the match, something in Dwight's voice caught their ear and they paused.
- He talked and talked, until a man behind him, in open defiance, cut the
- cords that held his hands. Later another cut his feet loose, and then
- Carson walked boldly up to Pete and stood beside him, and although a growl
- of fury was still in the air he kept talking. The man that told me about
- it said Carson first picked up one of the sticks around the prisoner and
- hurled it from him to emphasize something he said, then another and
- another, until the mob saw him kicking the sticks away and roaring out an
- offer to fight the whole bunch single-handed. Gee whiz! I'd have given ten
- years of my life to have heard it. He hadn't a thing to say in favor of
- Pete's general character; he said the boy was an idle, fun-loving,
- shiftless fellow, but he was innocent of the crime charged against him and
- he should not die like a dog. He spoke of the fine characters of Pete's
- mother and father and of the old woman's grief, and then, Miss Helen, he
- said something about <i>you</i>, and the man that told me about it said
- that one thing did more to soften and quell the crowd than anything else.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He said something about <i>me?</i>&rdquo; Helen cried. &ldquo;Me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; no names was mentioned, but they knew who he meant,&rdquo; Braider went
- on. &ldquo;Carson spoke of your family and of the close bond of human sympathy
- between it and all the blacks that had once belonged to your folks, and
- said that the daughter of that house, the most beautiful womanly character
- that had ever blessed the South, was praying at that moment for the safety
- of the prisoner, and if they carried out their plans she would shed tears
- of sorrow. 'Your intentions are good,' Carson said. 'You are all sincere
- men acting, as you see it, in the interests of the women of the South.
- Listen to this gentlewoman's prayer uttered through my mouth to-night for
- mercy and human justice.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It fairly swept them off their feet, Miss Helen. The man that told me
- about it said he never saw a more thoroughly shamed lot of men in his
- life; he said they released Pete and led the horses around and stood like
- mile-posts with nothing to say as Carson drove away. The man that told me
- said he'd bet ninety per cent, of the gang would vote for Dwight this
- fall. But I must be going; if that young buck knew I'd been telling you
- all this he'd give <i>me</i> a tongue-lashing, and I don't want any of his
- sort in mine.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen waited for about ten minutes alone on the grass&mdash;waited for
- Carson. When he finally came out and hurried towards her, he found her
- with her handkerchief pressed over her eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, what is the matter, Helen?&rdquo; he asked, in sudden concern.
- </p>
- <p>
- She remained silent for a moment, and then with glistening eyes she looked
- up at him as he stood pale and disturbed, the plaster still marking his
- wound and gleaming in the starlight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why didn't you tell me?&rdquo; she asked, laying her hand tenderly on his arm,
- her voice holding cadences of ineffable sweetness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Braider's been talking to you, I see!&rdquo; Dwight said, with a frown of
- displeasure.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, didn't you tell me, Carson?&rdquo; she repeated, putting her disengaged
- hand on his arm and raising her appealing face till it was close to his.
- </p>
- <p>
- He shrugged his shoulders, still frowning, and then said, flushing under
- her urgent gaze: &ldquo;Because, Helen, you've already seen and heard too much
- of this awful stuff. It really is not fit for a gentle, sensitive girl
- like you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Carson,&rdquo; she cried, her suffused face held even closer to his, &ldquo;you
- are the dearest, sweetest boy in the world!&rdquo; and she turned and left him,
- left him alone there in his fatigue, alone under the starlight to fight as
- he had never fought before the deathless yearning for her.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0035" id="link2HCH0035"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXXV.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0040" id="linkimage-0040"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9315.jpg" alt="9315 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9315.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- WO weeks went by. Great changes had come over the temper of the insurgent
- mountain people. They had gradually come to accept the rescue of Pete
- Warren as a chance bit of real justice that was as admirable as it was
- unusual and heroic. A sufficient number of men had come forward and
- testified to Sam Dudlow's ante-mortem confession to exculpate Carson's
- client, and some who had a leaning towards Dwight's cause politically were
- hinting, on occasion, that surely a man who would take such a plucky stand
- for the rights of a humble negro would not be a mere figure-head in the
- legislature of the State. At all events, there was one man who ground his
- teeth in secret rage over the subtle turn of affairs, and that man was
- Wiggin. He still busied himself sowing the seditious seed of race hatred
- wherever he found receptive soil, but, unfortunately for his cause, in
- many places where unbridled fury had once ploughed the ground a sort of
- frost had fallen. Most men whose passions are unduly wrought undergo a
- certain sort of relapse, and Wiggin found many who were not so much
- interested in their support of him as formerly when an open and defiant
- enemy was to be defeated.
- </p>
- <p>
- Wiggin was puzzled more about Jeff Braider than any one of his former
- supporters. Braider was too good a politician to admit that he had in any
- way aided Carson Dwight by a betrayal of the plot against him, for that
- was exactly the sort of thing Wiggin could hold out to his constituents as
- the act of a man disloyal to his official post, for, guilty or innocent,
- the prisoner should have been held, as any law-abiding citizen would
- admit. As to Pete's guilt Wiggin's opinion was unchanged, and he made no
- bones of saying so; he believed, so he declared, that Pete was Dudlow's
- accomplice, and the dastardly manner of his release was a shame and a
- disgrace to any white man's community.
- </p>
- <p>
- As for Jeff Braider, he was in such high feather over the success of his
- swerving towards the right in the nick of time that he refrained from
- drink and wore better clothing. He liked the situation. He felt, now, that
- he could serve his country, his God, and himself with a clear conscience,
- for Carson Dwight looked like a winner and they had agreed to work
- together.
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen Warren, after her impulsive leaning towards her first sweetheart
- that night in the garden, had permitted herself to undergo the keenest
- suffering which was due to her strangely unsettled mind. Was she strictly
- honest? she asked herself. She had openly encouraged a good man to hope
- that she would finally become his wife, and the letters she was receiving
- from him daily were of the tenderest, most appealing nature, showing that
- Sanders' love for her and faith in her fair dealing were too deeply
- grounded to be easily uprooted. Besides, as he perhaps had the right to
- do, the Augusta man had spoken of his hopes to his mother and sister, and
- those sympathetic ladies had written Helen adroit letters which all but
- plainly alluded to the &ldquo;understanding&rdquo; as being the forerunner of a most
- welcome family event.
- </p>
- <p>
- Many times had the poor girl seated herself to respond to these
- communications, and found herself absolutely unequal to the performance in
- the delicate spirit that the occasion demanded. The window of her room, at
- which her writing-desk stood, looked out over the garden at Dwight's, and
- the very spot where she had left Carson that memorable night was in open
- view. How could she throw herself into anything, yes <i>anything</i>
- pertaining to her compact with Sanders while the ever-present thrill and
- ecstasy of that moment was permeating her? What had it really meant&mdash;that
- ecstatic yearning to kiss the lips so close to hers, the lips which had
- quivered in dumb adoration and despair as he strove to keep from her ken
- the suffering he had undergone in her service?
- </p>
- <p>
- One day she rebelled against the painful, almost morbid, state of
- indecision that was on her and firmly decided that there was but one
- honorable course to pursue and that was in every way to be true to her
- tacit promise to the absent suitor, and in a spasm of resolution she was
- about to set herself to the correspondence just mentioned when Mam' Linda
- was announced. The old woman had just returned from a visit to Chattanooga
- to see her son and in addition to news of his well-being she had many
- other things to say. The letters would have to wait, Helen told herself,
- and her old nurse was admitted. Linda remained two hours, and Helen sat
- the while in a veritable dream as the old woman gave Pete's version of
- Carson Dwight's conduct before the mob on the lonely mountain road. And
- when Linda had gone, Helen turned to her desk. There lay the white sheets
- fluttering in the summer breeze, mutely beckoning her back to stem
- reality. Helen stared at them and then with a little cry of pain she
- lowered her head to her folded arms and wept&mdash;not for Sanders in his
- complacent, epistolary hopefulness, but for the one who had bravely borne
- more than his burden of pain, and upon whom she had resolved to put still
- more. Helen told herself that it would not be the first time <i>ideal</i>
- happiness had not been a factor in a sensible marriage. The time would
- come, in her life, as it had in the lives of so many other women, when she
- would look back on her present feeling for Carson, and wonder how she ever
- could have fancied&mdash;but, no, that would be unfair to him, to his
- wealth of spirituality, to his gentleness, his courage to&mdash;to Carson
- <i>just as he was</i>, to Carson who must always, always be the same,
- different from all living men. Yes, he was to go out of her life. Out of
- her life&mdash;how strange! and yet it would be so, for she would be the
- <i>wife</i> of&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- She shuddered and sat staring at the floor.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0036" id="link2HCH0036"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXXVI.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0041" id="linkimage-0041"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9319.jpg" alt="9319 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9319.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- IGGIN was no insignificant opponent; he held weapons as powerful as fire
- applied to inflammable material. The papers were filled with accounts of
- race rioting in all parts of the South, and in his speeches on the stump,
- through the length and breadth of the county, he kept his particular
- version of the bloody happenings well before his hearers.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This is a white man's country,&rdquo; was the key-note of all his hot tirades,
- &ldquo;and the white man is bound to rule.&rdquo; He accomplished one master-stroke.
- There was to be a considerable gathering of the Confederate, veterans at
- an annual picnic at Shell Valley, a few miles from Springtown, and by no
- mean diplomacy Wiggin had, by shrewdly ingratiating himself into the good
- graces of the committee of arrangements, managed to have himself invited
- as the only orator of the occasion. He meant to make it the greatest day
- of the campaign, and in some respects, as will be seen he did.
- </p>
- <p>
- The farmers came from all parts of the county in their best attire, in
- their best turnouts, from plain, springless road-wagons to glittering
- buggies. The wood which stretched on all sides from the spring was filled
- with vehicles, horses, mules, and even oxen.
- </p>
- <p>
- The grizzled veterans, battered as much by post-bellum hardship and toil
- as by war, came with their wives, sons, and daughters, and brought baskets
- to the rich contents of which any man was welcome. A crude platform had
- been erected near the spring under the shadiest trees, and upon this the
- speaker of the day was to hold forth. Behind the little impromptu table
- holding a glass pitcher of water and a tumbler, erected for Wiggin's
- special benefit, were a number of benches made of undressed boards. And to
- these seats the wives and daughters of the leading citizens were invited.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jabe Parsons, being a man of importance as a land-owner and an old
- soldier, was instructed on his arrival in his rickety buggy to escort his
- wife, who was gorgeously arrayed in a new green-and-red checked gingham
- gown with a sunbonnet to match, to the front seat on the platform, and he
- obeyed with a sort of ploughman's swagger that indicated his pride in the
- possession of a wife so widely known and respected. Indeed, no woman who
- had arrived&mdash;and she had come later than the rest&mdash;had caused
- such a ripple of comment. Always liked for her firmness in any stand she
- took in matters of church or social life, since her Amazonian rescue of
- Pete Warren from the very halter of death she was even more popular. The
- women of the county had not given much thought to the actual guilt or
- innocence of the boy, but they wanted Mrs. Parsons&mdash;as a specimen of
- their undervalued sex&mdash;to be right in that instance, as she had
- always been about every other matter upon which she had stood flat-footed,
- and so they all but cheered her on this first public appearance after
- conduct which 'had been so widely talked about.
- </p>
- <p>
- Really, if Wiggin could have had the reception Mrs. Parsons received from
- beaming eyes and faces he would have felt that his star, which had been
- rather below the horizon than above of late, had become a fixed ornament
- in the political heavens. But Wiggin gave no thought to her, and there's
- where he made a mistake. Women were beneath the notice of serious men,
- Wiggin thought, except as a means of controlling a husband's vote, and
- there he made another mistake. It would have been well for him if he could
- have noticed the fires of contempt in Mrs. Parsons' eyes as he made his
- way through the crowd, bowing right and left, and took his seat in the
- only chair on the platform, and proceeded, of course, to take a drink of
- water.
- </p>
- <p>
- A country parson, while the multitude sat upon the grass, crude benches,
- buggy-cushions, or heaps of pine needles, opened the ceremonies with a
- long-winded prayer, composed of selections from all the prayers he knew by
- rote and ending with something resembling a benediction. Then a young lady
- was asked to recite a dramatic poem relating to the &ldquo;Lost Cause,&rdquo; and she
- did it with such telling effect that the gray heads of the old soldiers
- sank to their chests, and, in memory of camp-fire, battle-field, and
- comrades left in unmarked graves, the tears flowed down furrowed cheeks
- and strong forms were shaken by sobs.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was into this holy silence that the unmoved, preoccupied Wiggin rose to
- cast his burning brand. Through curtains of tears he laid his fuse to
- hidden magazines of powder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I believe in getting right down to business,&rdquo; he began, in a crisp,
- rasping voice that reached well to the outskirts of the crowd. &ldquo;There's
- nothing today that is as important to you, fellow-citizens, as the correct
- use of the ballot. I am a candidate for your votes. I mean to represent
- you in the next legislature, and I don't intend to be foiled by the
- tricks, lies, and underhand work of a gang of stuck-up town men who laugh
- at your honest appearance and homely ways. God knows you are the salt of
- the earth, and when I hear men of that stamp making fun of you behind your
- backs it makes me mad. My father was a mountain farmer, and when men throw
- dirt on folks of your sort they throw it into the tenderest recesses of my
- being and it smarts like salt in a fresh cut.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was applause from a group in the edge of the crowd led by long, tall
- Dan Willis, and it spread uncertainly to other parts of the gathering.
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;Hit 'em, blast 'em, hit 'em, Wiggin,&rdquo; a man near Willis shouted; &ldquo;hit
- 'em!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You bet I'll hit 'em, brother,&rdquo; Wiggin panted, as he rolled up his
- coat-sleeve and pulled down his rumpled cuff. &ldquo;That's what I'm here for.
- I'm here, by the holy stars, to show you people a few things which have
- been overlooked. I intend to go into the history of this case. I want you
- all to look back a few weeks. A gang of worthless negroes in Darley became
- so bad and openly defiant in their rowdyism that they were literally
- running the town. Whenever they would be hauled up before the mayor for
- disgraceful conduct some old slave-holder, who used to own them or their
- daddies, would come up and pay their fine and they'd be turned loose
- again. The black scamps became so spoiled that whenever country people
- would come in town they would laugh at them, imitate their talk, call them
- po' white trash, and push them off the sidewalks. Some of you mountain men
- stood it, God bless your Caucasian bones, just as long as human endurance
- would let you, and then you formed a secret gang that went into Darley one
- night and pulled their dives and gave them a lashing on their bare backs
- that brought about a reform. As every Darley man will tell you, it
- purified the very air. The negroes were put to work, and they didn't hover
- like swarms of buzzards round the public square. All of which showed
- plainly that the cowhide was the only corrective that the niggers knew
- about or cared a cent for. Trying them in a mayor's court was elevating
- them to the level of a white man, and they liked it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You bet!&rdquo; cried out Dan Willis, and a laugh went round which spurred
- Wiggin to further flights of vituperation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now to my next step in this history,&rdquo; he thundered. &ldquo;In that gang of
- soundly thrashed scamps there were two who were chums, as I could prove by
- sworn testimony. Those black fiends refused to submit passively. They
- skulked around making sullen threats and trying to incite race riot.
- Failing in this, what did they do? One of them, being hand in glove with
- Carson Dwight, who says he's going to beat me in this election, applied to
- him for a job and was sent out to Dwight's farm near to that of Abe
- Johnson, who is thought&mdash;by some&mdash;to have been the leader of the
- thrashing delegation. That nigger, Pete Warren, was promptly joined by his
- black pal, and Johnson and his wife, one of the best women in this State,
- were foully murdered in the dead hours of the night as they lay sleeping
- in their beds. Who did it? <i>I</i> know who did it. <i>You</i> know who
- did it. Fellow-citizens, those two niggers, with their backs still
- smarting and their tongues still wagging, were the devils who did the
- deed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Low muttering was heard throughout the crowd as men turned to one another
- to make comment on the statement. In its incipiency it meant no more,
- perhaps, than that reason, hard driven by rising emotion, was honestly
- striving to keep the equitable poise which had recently governed it, but
- it sounded to the thoughtless, inflammable element like sullen, swelling
- acquiescence to the bitter charges, and they took it up. Wiggin paused,
- drank from the tumbler, and watched his flashing fuse in its sinuous
- course through the assemblage.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Parsons was near the edge of the platform, and Pole Baker, rising
- from the grass near by, where he had been coolly whittling a stick,
- stealthily approached her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Great goodness, Mrs. Parsons,&rdquo; he whispered in her ear, &ldquo;that skunk is
- cutting a wide swath to-day, sure! He could git up a lynching-bee right
- here in five minutes if he had any sort of material. The only thing of the
- right color is that old woman selling ginger-cakes and cider at the
- spring. Don't you think I'd better slip down and tell her to go home?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It might save the old thing's neck,&rdquo; Mrs. Parsons answered, in the same
- half-amused spirit. &ldquo;If he keeps on I don't think I'll be able to hold my
- seat. Why don't you say something?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me? Oh, I ain't no public speaker, Mrs. Parsons. That oily gab of
- Wiggin's would twist me into a hundred knots, and Carson Dwight would cuss
- me out for making matters worse. I never feel like talking unless I'm
- drunk, and then I'm tongue-tied.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I don't git drunk and I don't git tongue-tied!&rdquo; grunted Mrs.
- Parsons; &ldquo;and I tell you, Pole, if that fool keeps on I'll either talk or
- bust.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, don't bust&mdash;we need women like you right now,&rdquo; Baker smiled.
- &ldquo;But the truth is, if some'n' ain't done for our side this thing will
- sweep Carson Dwight clean out of the field.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, because men are born fools,&rdquo; retorted the woman. &ldquo;Look at their
- faces, the last one of them right now is mad enough to lynch a nigger
- baby, and a <i>gal</i> baby at that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With a laugh, Pole went back to his seat on the grass for Wiggin was
- thundering again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What happened <i>next!</i>&rdquo; he demanded, bending over his table, a hand
- on each end of it, his keen, alert eyes sweeping like twin search-lights
- into the deeps of the countenances turned to him. &ldquo;Why, just this and
- nothing more. Knowing that the jack-leg lawyers of that measly town would
- clog the wheels of justice for their puny fees, and hold those fiends over
- for other hellishness, some of you rose and took the law into your own
- hands. You jerked one to glory as quick as you laid hands on him, and part
- of you were hard on the track of his mate, when my honorable opponent, not
- wanting to lose the fee he was to get for pulling the case through, met
- the mob and managed, by a lot of grand-stand playing and solemn promises
- to see that the negro was legally tried, to put him in jail.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Those promises he kept like the honorable gentleman he is,&rdquo; Wiggin
- snorted, tossing back his hair in white rage and rolling up his sleeves
- again. &ldquo;You know how he kept his word to the public. He organized a secret
- band of his dirty associates in town, dressed 'em up like White Caps, and
- they went to the jail and took the nigger out. Then they hid him in a
- cellar of a store where you all buy supplies, out of the goodness of your
- patriotic souls, and later sent him in a new suit of clothes to
- Chattanooga, where he is now engaged in the same sort of life that he was
- here, an idle, good-for-nothing, lazy tramp, who says he's as good as any
- white man that ever wore shoe-leather and no doubt thinks he will some day
- marry a white woman.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The rising storm burst, and Wiggin stood above it calmly viewing it in all
- its subdued and open fury. Shouts of rage rent the air. Men with blanched
- faces, men with gleaming eyes, rose from their seats, as if a call to
- their manhood for instantaneous action had been sounded, and walked about
- muttering threats, grinding their teeth, and clinching their brawny hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, ha!&rdquo; Wiggin bellowed; &ldquo;I see you catch my idea. But I'm not through.
- Just wait!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He paused to drink again, and Pole Baker, with a grave look in his honest
- eye approached the sculpturesque shape of Mrs. Parsons and nudged her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did you ever in yore life?&rdquo; he said; but staring him in the eyes
- steadily, the woman seemed not to hear what he was saying. Her lower lip
- was twitching and there was an expression of settled determination in her
- eyes. Baker, wondering, moved back to his place, for Wiggin had levelled
- his guns again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And the man that was at the head of it, what is he doing right now? Why
- he's leaning back in his rocking-chair in his law-office drawing a fat
- pension from his rich old daddy, taking in big fees for such legal work as
- that, and fairly splitting his sides laughing at you folks, who he calls a
- lot of sap-headed hillbillies, fit only for hopping clods and feeding hogs
- on swill and pussley weeds. Oh, that was a picnic&mdash;that trick he and
- those town rowdies put up on you! It was a gentle rebuke to you, and when
- he gets to the legislature he says he&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Legislature be damned!&rdquo; Dan Willis roared, and the crowd took up his cry.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, <i>you'll</i> vote him in,&rdquo; Wiggin went on, with a vast air of
- mock depression and reproach; &ldquo;you think you won't now, but when he gets
- up and tells his side of it with a forced tear or two, your women folks
- will say, 'Poor boy!' and tell you what to do at the polls.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Comprehensive applause greeted the speaker as he sat down. Hats were
- thrown in the air and Dan Willis organized and gave three resounding
- cheers.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0037" id="link2HCH0037"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXXVII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0042" id="linkimage-0042"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9328.jpg" alt="9328 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9328.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- F the audience was surprised at what next happened, what may be said of
- the astounded candidate when he saw the powerful form of Mrs. Parsons rise
- from her seat near him and calmly stride with the tread of an angry man to
- the speaker's stand and take off her curtained bonnet and begin to wave it
- up and down to indicate that she wanted them to keep their places?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I never made a speech in my life,&rdquo; she gulped&mdash;&ldquo;that is, not outside
- of an experience meetin'. But, people, ef this ain't an experience meeting
- I never went to one. Ef the Lord God had told me Hisse'f in a blazonin'
- voice from heaven that any human bein' could take such a swivelled-up,
- contemptible shape as the man that's yelled at you like a sick calf
- to-day, I never would have believed it. I've got a right to be heard. I
- couldn't set still. It would give me St. Vitus's dance to try it ten
- minutes longer. I've got a right to talk, because, friends and neighbors,
- this contemptible creature has, in a roundabout way, accused <i>me</i> of
- law-breaking, an'&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, madam!&rdquo; Wiggin gasped, as he half rose and stared around in utter
- bewilderment. &ldquo;I don't even <i>know</i> you! I never laid eyes on you
- before this minute&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, take a good look at me now!&rdquo; Mrs. Parsons hurled at him, &ldquo;for I'm
- the woman that helped Pete Warren git away from the sheriff, when your
- sort were after the poor, silly nigger to lynch him for a crime he had
- nothin' to do with. If you are right in all your empty tirade this
- morning, I'm a woman unfit for the community I live in, and if I have to
- share that honor with a man of your stamp, I'll lynch myself on the first
- tree I come to.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She turned from the astounded, suddenly crestfallen speaker to the
- open-mouthed audience.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Listen to me, men, women, and children!&rdquo; she thundered, in a voice that
- was as steady and clear in resonance as a bell. &ldquo;If there was ever a
- crafty, spider-like politician on earth you have listened to him spout
- to-day. He's picked out the one big sore-spot in your kind natures and
- he's punched it, and jabbed it, and lacerated it with every sort of thorn
- he could stick into it, till he gained his aim in makin' you one and all
- so blind with rage at the black race that you are about to overlook the
- good in yore own.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There are two sides to this matter, and you would be pore excuses for men
- if you jest looked at one side of it. Carson Dwight is the other
- candidate, and I don't know but one thing agin his character, and that is
- that he ever allowed his name to be put up along with this man's. It's a
- funny sort of race, anyway&mdash;run by a greyhound and a jack-rabbit.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A ripple of amusement passed over many faces, and there were several open
- laughs over Wiggin's evident discomfiture. He started to rise, but voices
- from all parts of the gathering cried out: &ldquo;Sit down, Wiggin! Sit down, it
- ain't yore time!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, it <i>hain't</i> his time,&rdquo; said Mrs. Parsons, unrolling her bonnet
- like a switchman's flag and waving it to and fro. &ldquo;I started to tell you
- about Carson Dwight. He can't help bein' born in a rich family any more'n
- I could in a pore one, but I'm here to tell you that since I had the moral
- backbone to aid that nigger to git away I've thanked God a thousand times
- that I did that much to help genuine justice along. I could listen to
- forty million men like this candidate expound his views and it wouldn't
- alter me one smidgen in the belief that Carson Dwight has acted only as a
- true Christian would. He knew that nigger. He had known him, I'm told,
- from childhood up. He knew the sort of black stock the boy sprung from,
- an' the white family he was trained in, an' he simply didn't believe he
- was guilty of that crime. Believing that, thar wasn't but one honest thing
- for him to do, and that was to fight for the pore thing's rights. He knew
- that most of the racket agin the boy was got up by t'other candidate, and
- he set about to save the pore, beggin' darky's neck from the halter or his
- body from the burning brush-heap. Did he do it at a sacrifice? Huh, answer
- me that! Where did you ever see another politician on the eve of his
- election that would take up such a' issue as that, infuriating nearly
- every person who had promised to vote for him? Where will you find a young
- man with enough stamina to stand on a horse-block over the heads of
- hundreds of howling demons, and with one wound from a pistol on his brow,
- darin' 'em to shoot ag'in and holdin' on like a bull-dog to the pore
- cowerin' wreck at his feet?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was applause, slight at first, but increasing. There were, too,
- under Mrs. Parson's eye many softening faces, and into them she continued
- to throw her heart-felt appeal.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You've been told this morning that Carson Dwight makes fun of us country
- people. I'll admit I saw him do it once, but it was <i>only</i> once. He
- made fun of a mountain chap over at Darley one circus day. The fellow had
- insulted a nice country gal, and Carson Dwight made a <i>lot</i> of fun of
- him. He hammered the dirty scamp's face till it looked like a ripe tomato
- that the rats had been gnawin'.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this point there was laughter loud and prolonged.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, listen,&rdquo; the speaker went on. &ldquo;I want you to hear something, and I
- don't want you ever to forget it. I got it straight from a truthful man
- who was there. The night you mountain men gathered from all sides like the
- rising of the dead on Judgment Day, and got ready to march to Darley to
- take that boy out of jail, the news reached Carson Dwight just an hour or
- so before the appointed time. He got a few friends together and told them
- if they cared for him to make one more effort to stop the trouble.
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;Gentlemen, to some extent they was like you. They wasn't&mdash;I'm
-told&mdash;much interested in the fate of that nigger, one way or another,
-and so they sat thar in judgment over Carson Dwight, and tried to argue
- 'im down. I'm told by a respectable man who was thar&rdquo; (and here Pole
-Baker lowered his head till his eyes were out of sight and continued to
-whittle his stick) &ldquo;that nothin' feazed 'im. Pity was in his big, boyish
-heart, and it looked out of his eyes and clogged up his voice. They told
-him it meant ruination to all his political hopes, and that it would
-turn his daddy against him for good and all. But he said he didn't care.
-They held out agin him a long time, and then one thing he said won 'em
-over&mdash;one thing. Kin you imagine what that was, friends and neighbors?
-It was this: Carson Dwight said he loved you mountain men with all his
-heart; he said no better or braver blood ever flowed in human veins than
-yours; he said he knew you <i>thought</i> you was right, but that you hadn't
-had the chance to discover what he had found out, and that was that
-Pete Warren was innocent and as harmless as a baby, and that&mdash;now,
-listen!&mdash;that he knew the time would come when you'd be convinced of the
-truth and carry regret for your haste to your graves. 'It is because,'
-he told them, 'I want to save men that I love from remorse and sorrow
-that I am in for this thing!' Fellow-citizens, that shot went home.
-Those worthless 'town dudes,' as they was called just now, saved you
-from committing a crime against yourselves an' God on high. Did any
-human bein' ever see a better illustration than that of the duty of
-enlightened folks to-day&mdash;the duty of them who, with divine sight, see
-great truths&mdash;to lead others in the right direction? As God Almighty
-smiles over you to-day in this broad sunlight, that gang in that store,
-headed by a new Joseph, was an' are the truest and best friends you ever
-had.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was no open applause, but Mrs. Parsons saw something in the melting
- faces before her that was infinitely more encouraging, and after a
- moment's pause, and leaning slightly on the table, she went on: &ldquo;Before I
- set down, I want to say one word about this big race question, anyway. I'm
- just a plain woman, but I read papers an' I've thought about it a lot. We
- hear some white folks say that the education the niggers are now gettin'
- is the prime cause of so much crime amongst the blacks&mdash;they say this
- in spite of the fact that it is always the uneducated niggers that commit
- the rascality. No, my friends, it ain't education that's the cause, it is
- <i>the lack</i> of it. Education ain't just what is learnt in
- school-books. It is anything that makes folks higher an' better. Before
- the war niggers was better educated, for they had the education that come
- from bein' close to the white race an' profitin' by the'r example. After
- slavery was abolished the poor, simple numskulls, great, overgrown,
- fun-lovin' children, was turned loose without advice or guidin' hand, an'
- the worst part of 'em went downhill. Slavery was education, and I'll bet
- the Lord had a hand in it, for it has lifted a race from the jungles of
- Africa to a civilized land full of free schools. So I say, teach 'em the
- difference between right an' wrong, an' then let 'em work out their own
- salvation.
- </p>
-<p>
-&ldquo;Who in the name of common-sense is to do this if it ain't you of the
-superior race? <i>But!</i> wait a minute, think! How can you possibly teach
- 'em what law an' order is without knowin' a little about it yourselves?
-How can you learn a nigger what justice means when he sees his brother,
-son, or father, shot dead in his tracks or hung, like a scare-crow to
-the limb of a tree because some lower grade black man a hundred miles
-off has committed a dastardly deed? No sensible white man ever thought
-of puttin' the two races on equality. The duty of the white blood is
-always to keep ahead of the black, and it will. This candidate openly
-declares that the time is coming when the negroes will overpower the
-whites. A man that has as poor an opinion of his own race as that ought
-to be kicked out of it. Now I can't vote, but I want every woman in
-this crowd that believes I know what I'm talkin' about to see that her
-brother, father, or husband votes for a member of the legislature that
-knows what law an' order means, an' not for a red-handed anarchist who
-would lay this country in ruins to gain his own puny aims. That's all
-I've got to say.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When she had finished there was still no applause. They had learned that
- it was unseemly to make a demonstration at church, when deeply moved by a
- sermon, and they had heard something to-day that had lifted them as high
- under her sway as they had sunken low under Wiggin's. The formal part of
- the exercises was over, and they proceeded to spread out the contents of
- their baskets. Wiggin, after his successful ascent, had fallen with
- something like a thud. He saw Mrs. Parsons helped from the platform by her
- proudly flushing husband and instantly surrounded by people anxious to
- offer congratulations. Wiggin shuddered for he stood quite alone. Those
- who were in sympathy with him seemed afraid to openly signify it. Even Dan
- Willis lurked back under the trees, his face flushed with liquor and
- inward rage.
- </p>
- <p>
- Pole Baker, however, was more thoughtful of the candidate's comfort. With
- a queer twinkle of amusement in his eyes, and polishing, with the
- dexterity of a carver of cherry-stones, his little stick, he approached
- the candidate.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say, Wiggin,&rdquo; he drawled out, &ldquo;I want to ax you a question.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, Baker, what is it?&rdquo; the candidate asked, absent-mindedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't you remember tellin' me,&rdquo; Pole began, &ldquo;that you never had in all
- yore life met a man that made better an' truer predictions about things to
- come than I did?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I think so, Baker&mdash;yes, I remember now,&rdquo; answered Wiggin. &ldquo;You
- do seem to have a head that way. Some men have more than others, a sort of
- foresight or intuition.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Pole chuckled. &ldquo;You remember I said Teddy Rusefelt would whip the socks
- off of Parker. I'm a Democrat an' always will be, but I kin see things
- that are goin' to be agin me as plain as them I'm prayin' for. Well, you
- remember I was called a traitor jest beca'se I told what was comin', but I
- hit the nail on the head, didn't I?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, you did,&rdquo; admitted the downcast candidate.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' I was right about the majority Towns would git for the State senate,
- Mayhew for solicitor, an' Tim Bloodgood for the last legislature.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, you were, I remember that,&rdquo; said Wiggin.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I hit it on the Governor's race to a gnat's heel, too, didn't I?&rdquo; Pole
- pursued, his keen eyes fixed on those of the man before him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, you did,&rdquo; admitted Wiggin; &ldquo;you really seem to have remarkable
- foresight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, then,&rdquo; said Baker, &ldquo;I've got a prediction to make about your race
- agin Carson Dwight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, you have!&rdquo; exclaimed Wiggin, now all attention.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, and this time I'd bet my two arms and the first joint of my right
- leg agin a pinch o' snuff that Carson'll beat you worse than a man was
- ever whipped in his life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You think so, Baker?&rdquo; Wiggin was trying to sneer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't think anything about it; I <i>know</i> it,&rdquo; said Pole.
- </p>
- <p>
- Wiggin stared at the ground a moment aimlessly, then he said, doggedly,
- and yet with an evident desire for information at any sort of
- fountain-head: &ldquo;What makes you think I'm beat, Baker?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because you've showed you hain't no politician, an' you've got a born one
- to beat. For one thing, you've stirred up a hornet's nest. Women, when
- they set the'r heads agin a'body, are devils in petticoats, an' the one
- that presided this mornin' has got more influence than forty men. Before
- you are a day older every man who has a wife, mother, or sweetheart will
- be afraid to speak to you in broad daylight. Then ag'in, no candidate ever
- won a race on a platform of pure hate an' revenge. You made that crowd as
- mad as hell just now, while you was belchin' out that stuff, but as soon
- as Sister Parsons showed 'em what a friend of the'rs Dwight was they
- melted to him like thin snow after a rain.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0038" id="link2HCH0038"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXXVIII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0043" id="linkimage-0043"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9337.jpg" alt="9337 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9337.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- NE morning, three days later, Pole Baker slouched down the street from the
- wagon-yard and went into Garner &amp; Dwight's office, finding Garner at
- his desk. The mountaineer looked cautiously about the room and asked, in a
- guarded tone: &ldquo;Is Carson anywhars about?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not down yet,&rdquo; Garner said. &ldquo;His mother was not so well last night, and
- it may be that he had to sit up with her and has overslept himself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'm glad he ain't here,&rdquo; Baker said, &ldquo;for I want to speak to you
- about him sorter in private.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Anything gone wrong?&rdquo; Garner asked, looking up curiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, not yet, Bill, but I believe in takin' the bull by the horns before
- he takes you in the stomach. I've been powerful afeared for some time that
- Carson and Dan Willis would run together, and I dread it now more than
- ever. In the first place, I don't like the look in Carson's eye. He knows
- that devil has been on his track, and it has worked him up powerful;
- besides, Willis is more rampant than ever.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's gone wrong with him?&rdquo; Garner inquired, uneasily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, for a while, you know, he was full of hope that Wiggin was goin' to
- beat Carson, and that sorter satisfied him, but now that Wiggin is losin'
- ground, Dan don't see revenge that way. Besides, since old Sister Parsons
- made that rip-roarin' speech respectable folks are turnin' the'r backs on
- Wiggin and all his backers. The gal Willis was to marry has throwed 'im
- clean over, an' the preacher at Hill Crest just as good as called his name
- out in meetin' in talkin' of the open lawlessness that is spreadin' over
- the land. Oh, Willis is mad&mdash;he's got all hell in 'im, an' he's
- makin' more threats agin Dwight. Now, to-morrow is Friday, an' the next
- day is Saturday, an' on Saturday Dan Willis is comin' in town. I got that
- straight. Wiggin is a snake in the grass, and he's constantly naggin' Dan
- about his row with Carson, and it will take slick work on our part to
- prevent serious trouble. Wiggin wouldn't care. If the two met he'd profit
- either way, for if Carson was killed he'd have the field to himself, an'
- if Carson killed Willis the boy'd have to stand trial for his life, an' a
- man wouldn't run much of a political race with a charge of bloody murder
- hangin' over 'im.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;True&mdash;true as Gospel!&rdquo; Garner frowned; &ldquo;but what plan had you in
- mind, Pole&mdash;I mean what plan to obviate trouble?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, you see,&rdquo; the mountaineer replied, &ldquo;I 'lowed you might be able to
- trump up some business excuse for gittin' Carson out o' town next
- Saturday.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I think I can,&rdquo; Garner cried, his eyes brightening. &ldquo;The truth is,
- I was to go myself over to see old man Purdy, the other side of
- Springtown> to take his deposition in an important matter, but I can
- pretend to be tied here and foist it onto Carson.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good; that's the stuff!&rdquo; Pole said, with a smile of satisfaction. &ldquo;But
- for the love of mercy don't let Dwight dream what's in the wind or he'd
- die rather than budge an inch.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- So it was that Carson the following Friday afternoon made his preparations
- for a ride on horseback through the country, his plan being to spend the
- night at the little hotel at Springtown and ride on to Purdy's farm the
- next morning after breakfast, and return to Darley Saturday evening
- shortly after dark. His horse stood at the hitching-rack in front of the
- office, and, ready for his journey, he was going out when Garner called
- him back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are you armed, my boy?&rdquo; Garner questioned.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not now, old man,&rdquo; Dwight said. &ldquo;I've carried that two pounds of cold
- metal on my hip till I got tired of it and left it in my room. If I can't
- live in a community without being a walking arsenal I'll leave the
- country.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'd better make an exception of to-day, anyhow,&rdquo; Garner said, reaching
- down into the drawer of his desk. &ldquo;Here, take my gun.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I might accidentally need it,&rdquo; Dwight said, thoughtfully, as he
- took the weapon and put it into his pocket.
- </p>
- <p>
- As he was unfastening his horse, Dr. Stone crossed the street from the
- opposite sidewalk and approached him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where are you off to this time?&rdquo; the old man asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson explained as he tightened the girth of his saddle and pulled the
- blanket into place.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'd get back as soon as I could well manage it,&rdquo; the physician
- said, his eyes on the ground. Carson started and looked grave.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, doctor, you are not afraid&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, she's doing very well, my boy, but&mdash;well, there is no use
- keeping back anything from anybody as much concerned as you are. The truth
- is, she's very low. I think we can pull her through all right, with care
- and attention, but I feel that I ought to warn you and lecture you a
- little, too. You see, as I've often said, she is a woman who suffers
- mightily from worry and excitement of any kind, and your adventures of
- late have not had the best effect on her health. I hope it's all over and
- that you will settle down to something more steady. Her life really is in
- your hands more than mine, for if you should have any more trouble of a
- serious nature it would simply kill her. I only mention this,&rdquo; the doctor
- continued, laying his hand on the young man's arm half apologetically,
- &ldquo;because there is some little talk going round that you and Dan Willis
- haven't quite settled your differences yet. If I were in your place,
- Carson, I'd take a good deal from that man before I'd have trouble with
- him right now, considering the critical condition your mother is in. A
- shooting-scrape on top of all the rest, even if you got-the best of it,
- would simply send that good woman to her grave.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then we won't have any shooting-scrape!&rdquo; Carson said, his voice
- quivering. &ldquo;You can depend on that, doctor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The road Dwight took as the most direct way to his destination really
- passed within two miles of the home of Dan Willis, and yet the likelihood
- of his meeting the desperado never once crossed Carson's mind. In this,
- however, he was to meet with surprise. He had got well into the mountains,
- and, full of hope as to his campaign, was heartily enjoying a slow ride on
- his ambling horse through a narrow, shaded road, after leaving the heat of
- the open thoroughfare, when far ahead of him he saw a horseman at the side
- of the way pinning with his pocket-knife to the smooth bark of a
- sycamore-tree a white envelope. The distance was at first too great for
- Dwight to recognize the rider, though his object and occupation were soon
- evident, for suddenly wheeling on his rather skittish mount the man drew
- back about twenty paces from the tree, drew a revolver and began to fire
- at the target, sending one shot after the other, as rapidly as he could
- rein and spur his frightened animal to an approved distance and
- steadiness, until his weapon was empty. The marksman, evidently a
- mountaineer, as indicated by his wide-brimmed soft hat and easy gray
- shirt, thrust his hand into his trousers-pocket and took out sufficient
- cartridges for another round, and was thumbing them dexterously into their
- places when Carson drew near enough to recognize him.
- </p>
- <p>
- A thrill, a sort of shock, certainly not due even to subconscious fear,
- passed over Dwight, and he almost drew upon his rein. Then a hot flush of
- shame rose in him and tingled through every nerve in his body, as he
- wondered if for one instant he could have feared the presence of any
- living man, armed or unarmed, and running his hand behind him to be sure
- that his own revolver was in place, and with his head well up he rode even
- more briskly forward. He had no thought of caution. The sharp warning Dr.
- Stone had given him so recently never entered his brain. That was the man
- who, on several occasions, had threatened to kill him, and who, Carson
- firmly believed, had once tried it. That there was to be grim trouble he
- did not doubt. Averting it after the manner of a coward was not thought
- of.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the two riders were about a hundred yards apart, Dan Willis, hearing
- the fall of horses' hoofs, looked up suddenly. There was no mistaking the
- evolution of his facial expression from startled bewilderment to that of
- angry, bestial satisfaction. Uttering an unctuous grunt of delight, and
- with his revolver swinging easily against his brawny thigh, by the aid of
- his tense left hand the mountaineer drew his horse squarely into the very
- middle of the narrow road and there essayed to check him. The animal,
- quivering with excitement from the shots just fired over his head, was
- still restive and swerved tremblingly from side to side, but with prodding
- spur and fierce command Willis managed to keep him in the attitude of open
- opposition to Carson's passage, which was, as things go in the mountains,
- a threat not to be misunderstood.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson Dwight read the action well, and his blood boiled.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Halt thar!&rdquo; Dan Willis suddenly called out, in a sharp, fierce tone, and
- as he spoke he raised his revolver till the hand holding it rested on the
- high pommel of his saddle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why should I halt?&rdquo; almost to his surprise rang clearly from Dwight's
- lips. &ldquo;This is a public road!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0044" id="linkimage-0044"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0343.jpg" alt="0343 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0343.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not for <i>yore</i> sort,&rdquo; was hurled back. &ldquo;It's entirely too narrow for
- a gentleman an' a dog to pass on. <i>I'm</i> goin' to pass, but I'll walk
- my hoss over yore body. I've been praying for this chance, an' God or
- Hell, one or t'other, sent it to me. Some folks say you've got grit. I've
- my doubts about it, for you are the hardest man to meet I ever wanted to
- settle with, but if you've got any sand in yore gizzard you've got a
- chance to spill some of it now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't want to have trouble with you,&rdquo; Dwight controlled himself enough
- to say. &ldquo;Bloodshed is not in my line.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you've <i>got</i> to fight!&rdquo; Willis roared. &ldquo;If you don't I'll ride
- up to you an' spit in yore damned, sneakin' face.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I hardly think you'll do that,&rdquo; said Carson, his rage overwhelming
- him. &ldquo;But before we go into this thing tell me, for my own satisfaction if
- you are the one who tried to kill me the night Pete Warren was jailed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You bet I was, and damned sorry I missed.&rdquo; Willis's revolver was raised.
- The sharp click of the hammer sounded like the snapping of a metallic
- twig. Then alive but to one thought, and that of alert and instantaneous
- self-preservation, Dwight quickly drew his weapon. With his teeth ground
- together, his breath coming fast, he took as careful aim as was possible
- at the shifting horseman, conscious of the advantage his antagonist had
- over him in the calmness of his own mount. He saw a puff of smoke before
- Willis's eyes, heard the sharp report of the mountaineer's revolver, and
- wondered if the ball had lodged in his body.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am fully justified,&rdquo; something within him seemed to say as he pressed
- the trigger of his revolver. His hand had never been more steady, his aim
- never better, and yet the smile and taunting laugh of Willis proved to him
- that he had missed. The eyes of his assailant gleamed like those of an
- infuriated beast as he tried to steady his rearing and plunging horse to
- shoot again. Once more he fired, but the shot went wild, and with a snort
- of fear his horse broke from the road and plunged madly into the bushes
- bordering the way. Carson could just see Willis's head and shoulders above
- a thick growth of wild vines and at these he aimed steadily and fired. Had
- he won? he asked himself. There was a smothered report from Willis's
- revolver, as if it were fired by an inert finger. The mountaineer's head
- sank out of sight. What did it mean? Carson wondered, and with his weapon
- still cocked and poised he grimly waited. It was only for an instant, for
- the frightened horse plunged out into the open again. Willis was still in
- the saddle, but what was it about him that seemed so queer? He was
- evidently making an effort to guide his horse, but the hand holding his
- revolver hung helplessly against his thigh; his left shoulder was sinking.
- Then Carson caught sight of his face, a frightful, blood-packed mask
- distorted past recognition, that of a dying man&mdash;a horrible,
- never-to-be-forgotten grimace. The horses bore the antagonists closer
- together; their eyes met in a direct stare. Willis's body was rocking like
- a mechanical thing on a pivot.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You forced me to do it!&rdquo; Carson Dwight said, his great soul rising to
- heights of pity and dismay never reached before. &ldquo;God knows I did not want
- to shoot you. Dan, I never have had anything against you. I would have
- avoided this if I could.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The stare of the wounded man flickered. With a moan of pain he bent to the
- neck of his horse and remained there a moment, and then, dropping his
- revolver and resting both quivering hands on the pommel of his saddle, he
- drew himself partially erect. His eyes were rolling upward, his purple
- lips moved as if to speak, but his vocal organs seemed to have lost their
- power. Holding to his pommel with his left hand, he raised his right and
- partially extended it towards Dwight, but he had not the strength to
- sustain its weight, and with another moan, a frothing at the mouth, Dan
- Willis toppled from his horse and went to the ground, the animal breaking
- away in alarm and running down the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- Quickly dismounting, Carson bent over the dying man. &ldquo;Dan, were you
- offering me your hand?&rdquo; he asked, tenderly. But there was no response. The
- mountaineer was dead. There he lay, a pint whiskey flask nearly empty of
- its contents protruding from his shirt.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson looked up and about him. The sky had never seemed clearer, the
- forest never so beautifully lush and green, so full of sylvan recesses and
- the gladsome songs of birds. Higher and more majestic never had the
- mountains seemed to tower into God's infinite blue. And yet here at his
- feet lay the remains of one who had been created in the image of his
- Maker, as lifeless as the clod from which he had sprung. All <i>this</i>&mdash;and
- Carson's horse nibbling with bitted mouth the short grass which grew
- about. There were no fires of satisfied revenge at which the spiritually
- chilled young man could warm himself. Regret steeped in the vat of remorse
- filled his young soul. Seating himself at the side of the road, he
- remained there a long time calmly laying his plans. Of course, knowing the
- law as he knew it, he would give himself up to the sheriff. Then with a
- start and a shock of horror he thought of his mother. Dr. Stone's warning
- now loomed up before him as if written in letters of fire. Yes, this&mdash;this,
- of all things, would kill her! Knowing her nature, nothing that could
- happen to him would be more fatal. Not even his own death by violence
- would hold such terrors for her sensitive, imaginative temperament, which
- exaggerated every ill or evil that beset his path. After all, he grimly
- asked himself, which way did his real duty lie? Obedience to the law he
- reverenced demanded that he throw himself upon its slow and creaking
- routine, and yet was there not a higher tribunal? By what right should the
- legal machinery of his or any other country require the life of a stricken
- woman that the majesty of its forms might be upheld and the justice or
- injustice to an outlaw who had persistently hounded him be formally passed
- upon?
- </p>
- <p>
- No, he told himself, the right to protect his mother was <i>his</i>&mdash;it
- was even more, as he saw it, it was his first duty. And yet if he kept his
- own counsel, he asked himself, his legal mind now active, what were the
- chances of escape from accusation? Noticing the target still pinned to the
- trunk of the tree with the dead man's pocket-knife, the shots showing on
- the bark and paper, and the sprawling attitude of the corpse with the
- wound over the region of the heart, he asked himself, with faintly rising
- hope, what more natural than to assume that death had resulted from
- accident? What more reasonable than the theory that on his frightened
- horse Dan Willis had accidentally directed his shot upon his own body?
- What better evidence that he was not at himself than the almost empty
- flask in his shirt? Yes, Carson Dwight decided, it was his duty to wait at
- least to see further before taking a step which would result in even
- deeper tragedy. Besides, he knew he was morally guiltless. His conscience
- was clear; there was consolation in that at all events. But now what must
- he do? To go on to Springtown by that road was out of the question, for
- only a mile or so farther on was a store and a few farm-houses, and it
- would be known there that he had passed the fatal spot. So, remounting, he
- rode slowly back towards Darley, now earnestly, and even craftily, hoping
- that he would meet no one. He was successful, for he reached the main
- road, which was longer, not so well graded, and a more sparsely settled
- thoroughfare to his destination.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had lost time, and he now put his horse into a brisk canter and sped
- onward with a queer blending of emotions. The thought of possibly saving
- his mother from a terrible shock buoyed him up while the grewsome
- happening put a weight upon him he had never borne before.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0039" id="link2HCH0039"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXXIX
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0045" id="linkimage-0045"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9350.jpg" alt="9350 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9350.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- T was after dark when he finally reached Springtown and rode through the
- quiet little street to the only hotel in the village kept by a certain Tom
- Wyman, whom Dwight knew. Dismounting, he turned his tired horse over to a
- negro porter and went into the room which was used at once as parlor and
- office. A dog-eared account-book lay open on a table, and here, at the
- request of the cordial Wyman, a short, portly man with sandy hair and
- mustache, Carson registered his name.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are out electioneering, I know,&rdquo; the proprietor smiled, agreeably, as
- he rubbed his fat hands together. &ldquo;Well, you are going to run like a
- scared dog. I hear your name everywhere. It looked as black as Egyptian
- darkness for you once, but you are gaining ground. No man ever had a
- better campaign document than the speech Jabe Parsons' wife made. Gee
- whiz! it was a stem-winder; it set folks to laughin' at Wiggin, and that
- was the worst thing that ever happened to him. Jabe Parsons is for you
- now, though he headed one wing of the mob agin your pet darky. You see,
- Jabe wants to prove that his wife was right in the way she first felt
- about the matter, and he's a strong man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As if in a dream, so far into the background had even his contest been
- thrust by the tragedy, Carson heard himself as if from the mouth of
- another explaining that it was legal business that had brought him
- thither, and calmly asking the best road from the village to Purdy's farm,
- whither he intended to go the following morning after breakfast.
- </p>
- <p>
- A few minutes later the supper bell was rung by a negro, who carried it
- with deafening clangor through the main hall and round the house, and two
- or three drummers, of the small-trade class, a village storekeeper, and a
- stock-drover or two clattered in on the uncarpeted floor to the
- dining-room, and with more noise drew out their chairs and sat down. It
- happened that Carson knew none of them, and so he sat silent through the
- meal. Usually of robust appetite, to-night all inclination to physical
- nourishment had deserted him. Try as he would to fasten his mind upon more
- cheerful things, the view of Dan Willis's body stretched upon the ground,
- the ghastly features struggling in the throes of death, came again and
- again before his eyes with tenacious persistency. Morbidly, he asked
- himself if that state of mind would continue always. The disaster really
- had crept upon him through no deliberate fault of his. In fact, he could
- trace its very beginning to his determination to turn over a new leaf and
- make a better man of himself&mdash;to that and to a natural inborn pity
- for a persecuted creature, and yet here was he, his hands stained red,
- unable by any stoicism or philosophy to rid himself of a gloom as deep as
- the void of space. Genuine man that he was, he pitied the giant who had
- fallen before him. His mind, trained to logical reasoning in most matters,
- told him that he was more than justified in what he had done; but then, if
- so, to what was due this strange shock to his whole being&mdash;this
- restless sense of boundless debt to something never met before, the
- ominous flapping of wings in a new darkness around him?
- </p>
- <p>
- After supper, to kill time until the hour of retiring, Carson declined the
- proffered cigar of his host, and to avoid the&mdash;to him&mdash;empty
- chatter of the others, now assembled on the little porch, he strolled down
- the street. Here groups of men sat in front of the stores in the dim light
- thrown from murky lamps within, but it happened that he was not recognized
- by any of them though there were several gaunt forms he knew, and he
- passed on, walking feverishly. On and on he strode till he had covered
- more than a mile and suddenly came upon a little church surrounded by a
- graveyard. He leaned upon the rotten fence and looked over at the mounds
- marked by white marble slabs in some cases, plain, unlettered natural
- stones in others, and some unmarked by any sort of monument, but having
- little white palings around them.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson Dwight shuddered and turned his face back towards the village as he
- asked himself if this might be the resting-place of the man he had slain.
- Life to him had been so bounteous, despite all the trials he had
- encountered, that to think that he had by his own hand, even under gravest
- provocation, deprived a human being of its privileges gave him pain akin
- to nothing he had ever felt before.
- </p>
- <p>
- Reaching his room in the hotel, which was at the head of the stairs in the
- front part of the house, his first impulse was to lock his door&mdash;why,
- he could not have explained. It was not fear; what was it? With a defiant
- smile he left it unfastened and proceeded to undress himself. As he threw
- himself on his bed he became conscious of the impulse to say his prayers.
- What a queer thing! It had been years since he had actually knelt in
- prayer, and yet tonight he wanted to do so. A strange, hot, rebellious
- mood came over him a few minutes later as he lay staring at the disk on
- the sky-blue ceiling cast by the lamp-chimney. He felt like crying out to
- the infinite powers in tones of demand to lift the weird, stifling pall
- that was pressing down on him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The words his father had spoken in a rage when the old gentleman had first
- seen the wound on his forehead after Pete Warren's rescue now came to him
- with startling force: &ldquo;All this for a trifling negro! Have you lost your
- senses?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- What, Carson asked himself, would his father say to this deeper step&mdash;this
- headlong plunge into misfortune as the outcome of the cause he had
- espoused?
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson could not sleep, and fancying that if his light were out he might
- do so, he rose and extinguished it and went back to bed. But he was still
- restless. The hours dragged by. It was after twelve o'clock, when on the
- still night air came the steady beat of a horse's hoofs in the distance,
- growing louder and louder, till with a cry of &ldquo;Woah!&rdquo; the animal was
- reined in at the hotel door, and the stentorian voice of the rider called
- out: &ldquo;Hello! hello in thar!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a pause, but no response. The landlord was evidently a sound
- sleeper.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hello! hello!&rdquo; Again the call rang jarringly through the empty hall below
- and up the stairway.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson sat erect, put his feet on the floor, and stood out in the centre
- of the room. He told himself that it was an officer of the law in pursuit
- of him. How silly to have imagined that such a thing could remain hidden!
- And his mother! Yes, it would kill her! Poor, poor, gentle, frail woman!
- He had tried to obviate the blow, resorting to deception, to actual
- flight; he had submerged himself in the mire of criminal secrecy,
- according to the letter of the law, that he might shield her, and for what
- purpose? Yes, the blow would kill her. Dr. Stone had plainly said so.
- </p>
- <p>
- He went to the window and looked out. At the gate below he saw a man on a
- horse, and heard him muttering impatiently.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hello in Thar!&rdquo; The cry was accompanied by an oath. &ldquo;Are you-uns plumb
- deaf? What do you keep a tavern fur, anyhow?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a sound in the room below of some one getting out of bed, and
- then a drowsy voice cried: &ldquo;Who's there?&rdquo; It was the landlord.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me, Jim Purvines. Let me in, Tom. I've got to have a bed an' a stall fer
- my nag. I'm completely fagged out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, all right. I'll join you in a minute. Where in the thunder
- have you been, Jim?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To the inquest. They made me serve. Samson called a jury right off so
- they could move the body home. The dead man's mammy didn't want it to lie
- thar all night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good Lord! Jury? Dead man? Why, what's happened, Jim?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, come off! You don't mean you hain't heard the news?&rdquo; The rider had
- dismounted and was leading his horse through the gate to the steps on
- which the landlord now stood. &ldquo;Why, Tom, Dan Willis has gone to his last
- accountin'. The Webb children, out pickin' huckleberries, come across his
- remains on the Treadwell road a mile t'other side o' Wilks's store. At
- first it was thought he'd met his death by bein' throwed from his colt,
- fer somebody seed it loose with saddle an' bridle on, but when we examined
- the body we found a bullet-hole over the heart.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good Lord! Who done it, Jim?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson's heart was in his mouth; his breath was held; there was a pause
- which seemed without end.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Done it hisself, Tom. The jury had no difficulty comin' to that decision
- from ample evidence. He'd tuck his pocket-knife an' stuck up an envelope
- with his name on it agin a tree, an', half drunk, as we judged from his
- flask, he was shootin' at it over the head of a young colt that hain't
- been broke a month. Dan must have had the devil in 'im, an' was determined
- to train the animal to stand under fire, fer we seed whar the dirt was
- pawed up powerful all around. We calculated that the colt got to buckin'
- an' to keep from bein' throwed off Dan turned his gun the wrong way.
- Anyhow, he's no more.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, an' I reckon a body ought to respect the dead, good or bad,&rdquo; said
- the landlord; &ldquo;but there won't be a river of tears shed, Jim. That fellow
- was a living threat to law and order.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I have heard that he was the chap that shot Carson Dwight the night
- he saved that nigger from the mob.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sh! He's up-stairs now,&rdquo; The landlord lowered his voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You don't say! Sort o' out of his beat, ain't he?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know&mdash;on his way to Purdy's. Go on in; I'll attend to your
- horse and come back and find you a place to bunk.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson sank back on his bed. A sense of vast, almost soothing relief was
- on him. His mother was saved. The verdict that had been rendered would
- forever bury the facts. Now, he told himself, he could sleep with his mind
- at rest. And yet&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- He heard the new-corner ascend the stairs with heavy, shambling tread and
- enter the room adjoining his own. Through a crack between the floor and
- the thin partition he saw a pencil of candle-light and heard the grinding
- of boot-soles on the floor as the man undressed. Then the light went out,
- the bed-slats creaked, and all was still.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0040" id="link2HCH0040"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XL
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0046" id="linkimage-0046"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9357.jpg" alt="9357 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9357.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- WIGHT reached Darley the following evening shortly after dusk, and rode
- straight through the central portion of the town and past his office. All
- day long he had debated with himself whether it would be wise to take
- Garner into his confidence, and at last had decided that it would do no
- good, and only cause his sympathetic partner to worry needlessly, since
- Garner nor no one else could point out any better course than the one to
- which, perforce, he had committed himself. Carson now comprehended his
- insistent morbidness. It was not fear; it was not a guilty conscience; it
- was only the galling shackles of unwonted and hateful secrecy, the vague
- and far-reaching sense of uncertainty, the knowledge of being, before the
- law (which was no respecter of persons, circumstances, or sentiment), as
- guilty of murder as any other untried violator of peace and order.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the way down the street to his home he met Dr. Stone, who was also
- riding, and reined in.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My mother&mdash;how is she, doctor?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;I've been away since I
- saw you yesterday.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'll really be surprised when you see her,&rdquo; the old man smiled. &ldquo;She's
- tip-top! I never saw such a change for the better in all my experience.
- She had old Linda in her room when I was there about noon, and they were
- laughing and cracking jokes at a great rate. She'll pull through now, my
- boy. I tried to get her to tell me what had happened, but she threw me off
- with the joke that she had changed doctors and was taking another fellow's
- medicine on the sly, and then she and Linda laughed together. I believe
- the old negro knew what she meant. I'll tell you one thing, Carson, if I
- wasn't afraid of hurting your pride I'd congratulate you on what happened
- to that chap Willis. Really, if that thing hadn't taken place you and he
- would have had trouble. Some think he was getting ready for you when he
- was shooting at that target.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps so, doctor,&rdquo; Carson said, glad that the dusk veiled his face from
- the old man's sight. &ldquo;Well, I'll go on.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At the carriage gate at home he found old Lewis standing ready to take his
- horse.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hello!&rdquo; Carson said, with a joke that was foreign to his mood; &ldquo;when did
- Major Warren discharge you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hain't discharge me yit, young marster,&rdquo; Lewis smiled, in delight, as he
- opened the gate and reached out for the bridle. &ldquo;I knowed you'd be along
- soon, en so I waited fer you. Marse Carson, Linda powerful anxious ter see
- you. She settin' on yo'-all's veranda-step now; she been axin' is you got
- back all evenin'. Dar she come now, young marster. I'll put up yo' horse.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, Uncle Lewis,&rdquo; and Dwight, seeing the old woman shambling
- towards him, went across the lawn and met her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, young marster, I been waitin' fer you,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I got some'n' ter
- ax you, suh.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; he asked: &ldquo;If it is anything I can do I'll be glad to help
- you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't like ter bother you, young marster,&rdquo; Linda said, plaintively;
- &ldquo;but somehow it don't seem lak anybody know what ter do. I went ter young
- miss, en she said fer me ter see you&mdash;dat you was de onliest one ter
- decide. Marse Carson, of course you done heard dat man Willis done killed
- hisse'f, ain't you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, Mam' Linda&mdash;oh yes!&rdquo; Dwight said, his voice holding an odd,
- submerged quality.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, young marster, you see, me'n Lewis thought dat, bein' as dat man
- was de ringleader, en de only one left on de rampage after my boy, dat,
- now he's daid, I might sen' ter Chattanoogy fer Pete en let 'im come on
- home.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, I thought he was doing well up there?&rdquo; Carson said again, in a tone
- which to himself sounded as expressionless as if spoken only from the
- lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dat so; dat so, too,&rdquo; Linda sighed; &ldquo;but, Marse Carson, he de onliest
- child I got en I wants 'im wid me. I wants 'im whar I kin see 'im en try
- ter 'fluence 'im ter do what's right. In er big place lak Chattanoogy he
- may git in mo' trouble, en&mdash;&rdquo; She went no further, her voice growing
- tremulous and finally failing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, send for him, by all means,&rdquo; Dwight said. &ldquo;He'll be all right here.
- We'll find something for him to do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;En, en&mdash;dar won't be no mo' trouble?&rdquo; Linda faltered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;None in the world now, mammy,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;The people all over the
- country are thoroughly satisfied that he's innocent. No one will even
- appear against him. He is all right now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Tears welled up in Linda's eyes and she wiped them off on her apron.
- &ldquo;Thank God, young marster; one time I thought I never would want ter live
- another minute, en yit right now&mdash;right now I'm de happiest woman in
- de whole world, en you done it, young marster. You stood up fer er po' old
- nigger 'oman when de world was turn agin 'er, en God on high know I bless
- you. I bless you in every prayer I sen' up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned from her as she stood wiping her eyes and went on to his
- mother's room, finding her, to his delight, sitting up in an easy-chair
- near the table on which stood a lamp and a book she had been reading.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did you see Linda?&rdquo; Mrs. Dwight asked, as he kissed her tenderly and
- stood, still with that everpresent alien weight at his heart, stroking her
- soft cheek. He nodded and smiled.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And did you tell her&mdash;did you decide that Pete could come back?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He nodded and smiled again. &ldquo;She seems to think I'm running the country.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As far as her interests are concerned, you <i>have</i> been,&rdquo; the invalid
- said, proudly. &ldquo;Oh, Carson, you know somehow it has happened that I never
- knew Linda so well as some of our own slaves, but since this thing came up
- I have thoroughly enjoyed having her come to see me. I keep her here
- hours, at a time. Do you know why?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He shook his head. &ldquo;Not unless it is because she has such a strong
- individuality and is so original.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, that isn't it&mdash;it is simply, my boy, because she worships the
- very ground you walk on, and I love to hear her express it in the
- thousands of indirect ways she has. Oh, Carson, I'm simply foolish&mdash;<i>foolish</i>
- about you! I have never been able to tell you how I felt about your heroic
- conduct. I was afraid to. I gloried in it, but your constant danger tied
- my tongue&mdash;I was afraid you'd take more risks. I've got a secret to
- tell you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To tell me?&rdquo; he said, still stroking her cheek. &ldquo;Yes; Dr. Stone, seeing
- that I was so much better this morning tried to worm it out of me, but I
- wouldn't tell him the cause. Carson, for a long time I have harbored a
- gnawing, secret fear. It was with me night and day. I knew it was dragging
- me down, keeping me from proper sleep and proper nourishment, but I
- couldn't rid myself of it till this morning.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What was it, mother?&rdquo; he asked, unable to see her drift.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The fear, my boy, that you and that Dan Willis would meet face to face
- has for a long time been a constant nightmare to me. I had picked up in
- various ways, sometimes from remarks let fall by your father or one of the
- servants, more about your differences with that man than you were aware
- of. I tried to keep you from knowing how I felt, but it was secretly
- dragging me to my grave.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And now, mother?&rdquo; he asked, an almost hopeful light breaking far away on
- his clouded horizon.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, it may be an awful sin, for I'm told Willis had a mother&rdquo;&mdash;Mrs.
- Dwight sighed&mdash;&ldquo;but when the news came to-day that he had
- accidentally killed himself I became a new woman. He was the one thing I
- dreaded above all else, for, Carson, if he had not shot himself you and he
- would have met and one of you would have fallen. Oh, I'm so happy. I'm
- going to get well now, my boy. You will see me out on the lawn in a day or
- two.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His eyes were on the floor at her feet. Why he gave so much of his mental
- burden to mere utterance he could not have explained, but he said: &ldquo;And
- even if we <i>had</i> met, mother, and he had tried to shoot me, and&mdash;and
- I, in self-defence you know, had been forced to kill him&mdash;really
- forced&mdash;I suppose even that situation would have&mdash;disturbed
- you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, don't, don't talk of that!&rdquo; Mrs. Dwight cried. &ldquo;I don't think it is
- right to think of unpleasant things when one is happy. God did it, Carson.
- God did it to save you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, mother, I was only thinking&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, think of pleasanter things,&rdquo; Airs. Dwight interrupted him. &ldquo;Helen's
- been over to see me rather oftener of late. We frequently sit and chat
- together. It makes me feel young again. She is very free with me about
- herself&mdash;that is, about everything except her affair with Mr.
- Sanders.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She doesn't talk of that much, then?&rdquo; he ventured, tentatively.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She won't talk about it at all,&rdquo; said the invalid; &ldquo;and that's what seems
- so queer about it. A woman can see deeper into a woman's heart than a man
- can, and I've been wondering over Helen. Sometimes I almost think&mdash;&rdquo;
- Mrs. Dwight seemed lost in thought and unconscious of the fact that she
- had ceased speaking.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You were saying, mother,&rdquo; he reminded her, eagerly, &ldquo;that you almost
- thought&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, it seems to me, Carson, that any natural girl ought to be so full of
- her engagement to the man she is to marry that she would really <i>love</i>
- to talk about it. Really it seems to me that Helen may be questioning her
- heart in this matter, but she'll end by marrying Mr. Sanders. It looks as
- if she has pledged herself in some way or other, and she is the very soul
- of honor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh yes, she is all that,&rdquo; Dwight said, in an effort at lightness. &ldquo;Now,
- good-night, mother.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Much fatigued from his journey and the mental strain upon him, he went up
- to his room. Throwing off his coat, the night being warm to
- oppressiveness, he lighted a cigar and sat in the wide-open window. What a
- strange, tempestuous life was his! How like a mere bauble of soul and
- flesh was he buffeted between highest heaven and lowest earth! And for
- what purpose was he created in the vast scheme of endless solar systems?
- </p>
- <p>
- From the row of negro cabins and cottages below, across the dewy grass and
- shrubbery, on the flower-perfumed air came sounds of unrestrained
- merriment. Some negro in a cottage near Linda's was playing a mouth-organ
- to the accompaniment of a sweetly twanging guitar. There was a rhythmic
- clapping of hands, the musical, drumlike thumping of feet on resounding
- boards, snatches of happy songs, clear, untrammelled, childlike laughter.
- </p>
- <p>
- They&mdash;and naught else&mdash;had brought him his burden. That complete
- justice might be meted out to such as they, he had dipped his hands into
- the warm blood of his own race, and was an outlaw bearing an honored name,
- stalking forth, pure of heart, and yet masked and draped with deceit,
- among his own kind. And for what ultimate good? Alas! he was denied even
- the solace of a look into futurity. And yet&mdash;born in advance of his
- time, as the Son of God was born ahead of His&mdash;there was yet
- something in him which&mdash;while he shrank from the depth and bitterness
- of <i>his</i> cup&mdash;lifted him, in his unmated loneliness, in his
- blindness, to far-off light&mdash;high above the material world. There to
- suffer, there to endure, and yet&mdash;there.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0041" id="link2HCH0041"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XLI.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0047" id="linkimage-0047"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9365.jpg" alt="9365 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9365.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- T was the day following the burial of the body of Dan Willis. Old man
- Purdy, whom Carson had gone to see, was at Dilk's cross-roads store with a
- basket of fresh eggs, which he had brought to exchange for their market
- value in coffee. Several other farmers were seated about the store on
- nail-kegs and soap-boxes whittling sticks and chewing tobacco, their slow
- tongues busy with the details of the recent death and interment.
- </p>
- <p>
- Old Purdy was speaking of how the children had discovered the body, and
- remarked that it would have been found several hours sooner if Carson
- Dwight had only taken the shorter road that day to Springtown instead of
- the longer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, Dwight come from Darley, didn't he?&rdquo; asked Dilk, as he wrote down
- the number of eggs he had counted on a piece of brown paper on the counter
- and waited before continuing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, yes,&rdquo; Purdy made answer; &ldquo;he told me, as we were goin' through the
- work he had to do at my house, that he had gone to Springtown an' stayed
- all that night an' then rid on to me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The store-keeper's hands hovered over the basket for an instant, then they
- rested on its edge. &ldquo;Well, I can't make out what under the sun Dwight went
- so far out o' his way for. It's fully five mile farther, and the road is
- so rough and washed out that it's mighty nigh out of use.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, that does look kind o' funny, come to think of it,&rdquo; admitted Purdy,
- as he gazed into the bland faces around him. &ldquo;I never thought of it
- before, but it certainly looks odd, to say the least.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course thar may not be a thing <i>in</i> it,&rdquo; said Dilk, in a guarded
- tone, &ldquo;but it <i>does</i> all seem strange, especially after we've heard
- so much talk about the threats passin' betwixt them very two men. I mean,
- you see, neighbors, that it sort o' looks, providential that&mdash;that
- Dan met with the accident before Dwight an' him come together over here.
- That's what I mean.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- All heads nodded gravely, all minds were busy, each in its own individual
- way, and stirred by something more exciting than the mere accidental death
- of Willis or the formality of his burial.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a rather prolonged silence broken only by the click of the eggs
- which Dilk was counting into a new tin dish-pan. When he had finished he
- weighed out the coffee and emptied it into the white, smoothly ironed poke
- Purdy's wife had sent along for that purpose. Then he looked straight into
- Purdy's eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did you notice&mdash;if thar ain't no harm in axin'&mdash;whether Dwight
- seemed&mdash;well, anyways upset or&mdash;or bothered while he was at your
- house?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, <i>I</i> didn't,&rdquo; replied the farmer; &ldquo;but my wife was in the room
- while he was doin' the writin' that had to be done, an' I remember now she
- axed me after he left ef he was a drinkin' man. I told her no, I didn't
- think he was <i>now</i>, though he used to be sorter wild, an' I wanted to
- know why she axed me. She said she never had seed anybody's hands shake
- like his did while he held the pen, an' that he had a quar look about the
- eyes like he'd lost a power o' sleep.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Was&mdash;was anything said in his presence about Willis's death that you
- remember of?&rdquo; the storekeeper pursued, with the skill of a legal
- crossexaminer, while the listeners stared, their cuds of tobacco
- compressed between their grinders.
- </p>
- <p>
- Purdy's face had grown rigid, almost as that of an important witness on
- the stand in court. &ldquo;I can't just remember,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;There was so much
- talk about it on all sides that day. Oh yes&mdash;now I recall that&mdash;well,
- you see we was all at my house, eager for news, and it struck me, you
- know, as if Dwight wasn't as anxious to talk as the rest&mdash;in fact, it
- looked like he sorter wanted to change the subject.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; The exclamation was breathed simultaneously from several mouths.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course, neighbors,&rdquo; Purdy began, in alarm, &ldquo;don't understand me for
- one minute to&mdash;&rdquo; But he broke off, for Dilk had something else to
- observe.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Them two men was at dagger's-p'ints, I've heard,&rdquo; he declared. &ldquo;Friends
- on both sides was movin' heaven an' earth to keep 'em apart. Now if Dwight
- <i>did</i> take that long, roundabout road from Darley to Springtown, why,
- they didn't meet. But ef Dwight went the way he always <i>has</i> tuck,
- an' I've seed 'im out this way often enough, why&mdash;&rdquo; Dilk raised his
- hands and held them poised significantly in mid-air.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But the coroner's jury found,&rdquo; said Purdy, &ldquo;that Willis was shootin' at a
- target he'd stuck up on a tree with his own knife, an' that his young hoss
- was skittish, an'&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All the better proof of bad blood betwixt 'em,&rdquo; burst from a farmer on a
- nail-keg. &ldquo;The truth is, some hold now that Willis was out practising so
- he could wing that particular game. The only thing I see agin what you-uns
- seem to think is that it's been kept quiet. Dwight is a lawyer an' knows
- the law, an' he wouldn't cover a thing like that up when all he'd have to
- do would be to establish proof that it was done in self-defence an' git
- his walking-papers.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thar you are!&rdquo; Dilk said, in a voice that rang with conviction; &ldquo;but
- suppose <i>one</i> thing&mdash;suppose this. Suppose the provocation
- wasn't exactly strong enough to quite justify killing. Suppose Dwight,
- made mad by all he'd heard, drawed an' fired without due warning, and
- suppose while he was thar in that quiet spot he had time to think it all
- over and decided that he'd stand a better chance of escape by not bein'
- known in the matter. A body never can tell. You kin bet your boots if
- Dwight <i>did</i> kill 'im an' hid the fact, he had ample legal reasons
- fer not wantin' to be mixed up in it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The seed was sown, and upon soil well suited to rapid germination and
- growth. By the next day the noxious weed had its head well above the
- ground, and, like the crab-grass the farmers knew to be so tenaciously
- prolific, it was spreading rapidly.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0042" id="link2HCH0042"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XLII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0048" id="linkimage-0048"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9369.jpg" alt="9369 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9369.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- WEEK went by. Helen Warren had been sitting that warm afternoon in the big
- bay-window of the parlor. A cooling breeze fanned the old lace curtains
- inward, bringing the perfume of the the garden and now and then revealing
- a wealth of color on the rose-bushes near by. She had just read an
- appealing letter from Sanders in which he had expressed himself as having
- been so disturbed by her refusal to assure him positively of what his
- ultimate fate was to be that he had permitted himself to worry
- considerably. So greatly concerned, indeed, was he that he had confided in
- his mother, who, he wrote, had made matters worse by asking him flatly if
- he was absolutely sure that he was loved in the one and only way a man
- should be loved by the woman he was hoping to win for his wife.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was writing all this to Helen in a straightforward, manly way, putting
- her sharply on her honor, as it were, and she, poor girl, was worried in
- her turn. Leaving her chair, she went to the piano and seated herself and
- began to play. She was thus occupied when Ida Tarpley came in suddenly and
- unannounced, as she felt privileged to do at any time.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, tell me,&rdquo; the visitor smiled, &ldquo;what's the matter with your playing?
- Why, you used to have a good, even touch, but as I came up the walk I
- declare I thought it was some one tuning the piano. You were dropping
- enough notes to fill a waste-paper basket.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I'm not in the mood for it, I presume!&rdquo; Helen said, checking a sigh.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I understand.&rdquo; Miss Tarpley gently pushed back Helen's hair and kissed
- her brow. &ldquo;You can't deny it; you were thinking about Carson Dwight and
- all his troubles.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen flushed and dropped her glance to her lap, then she rose from the
- piano and the two girls moved hand in hand to the window. &ldquo;The truth is,&rdquo;
- Helen admitted, &ldquo;that I have been wondering if anything has gone wrong
- with him&mdash;any bad news or indications about his election.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He can't be worrying about the election,&rdquo; Ida said, confidently. &ldquo;Mr.
- Garner comes to see me often and confides in me rather freely, and he says
- the people are flocking back to Carson in swarms and droves. They
- understand him now and admire him for the courageous stand he took.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, something is wrong with him,&rdquo; Helen declared, eying her cousin
- sadly. &ldquo;Mam' Linda never makes a mistake; she knows him through and
- through. She went to thank him last night for getting a position for Pete
- to work regularly at the flouring mill, and she came back really depressed
- and shaking her head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Suppin certain sho gone wrong wid young mars-ter, honey,' she said. 'He
- ain't never been lak dis before; he ain't <i>hisse'f</i>, I tell you! He's
- yaller an' shaky an' look quar out'n de eyes.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; and Miss Tarpley sank into one of the chairs in the window. &ldquo;I'm
- almost sorry you mentioned that, for now I'll worry. I've always had his
- cause at heart, and now&mdash;Helen, I'm afraid something very, very
- serious is hanging over him.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0049" id="linkimage-0049"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0371.jpg" alt="0371 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0371.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- I'm not hinting at anything that might come out of his disappointment over
- your affair with Mr. Sanders, either. It seems to me he accepted that as
- inevitable and is making the best of it, but it is something else.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Something else!&rdquo; Helen repeated. &ldquo;Oh, Ida, how horribly you talk! Do you
- mean&mdash;is it possible that he was more seriously wounded that night
- than he has let us know?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, it's not that. I don't know what it is. In fact, Mr. Garner says&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What does he say, Ida?&rdquo; Helen threw into the gap left by her cousin's
- failure to proceed, and stood staring.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you know it is easy sometimes to tell when one is not revealing
- everything, and I felt that way about Mr. Garner when he called night
- before last. In the first place, though he tried to do it in a casual sort
- of way, he kept talking of Carson all the time. It was almost as if he had
- come to see if I would confirm some secret fear of his, for he seemed to
- get near it several times and then backed out. Once he went further than
- he intended, for he said, as if it were a slip of the lip, when we were
- speculating on the possible cause of Carson's depression&mdash;he said,
- 'There is <i>one</i> thing, Miss Ida, that I fear, and I fear it so much
- that I dare not even mention it to myself.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; exclaimed Helen, and she leaned on the back of her chair; &ldquo;what
- could he have meant?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know; Mr. Garner wouldn't explain; in fact, he seemed rather
- upset by his unintentional remark. He laughed awkwardly and changed the
- subject, and never alluded to Carson again while he stayed. As he was
- getting his hat in the hall, I followed him and tried to pin him down to
- some sort of explanation, and then he made an effort to throw me off.
- 'Oh,' he said, 'you know Carson is terribly blue about losing Helen, and
- it has, of course, caused him to care less about his election, but he'll
- come around in time.' I told Mr. Garner then that I was sure he had meant
- something else. I was looking straight at him and saw his glance fall, but
- that was all I got out of him. Something is wrong, Helen&mdash;something
- very, very serious.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have you seen Carson lately, Ida?&rdquo; Helen asked, with rigid lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not to speak to him; he seems to avoid me, but as I sat in the window of
- my room yesterday afternoon I saw him go by. He didn't see me, but I saw
- his face in repose, and oh, cousin, it wrung my heart. He really must have
- some great secret trouble, and it hurts me to feel that I can't help him
- bear it. He used to confide in me, but he seems to shun me now, and that,
- too, in itself, is queer.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is not about his mother, either,&rdquo; Helen sighed, &ldquo;for her health has
- been improving lately.&rdquo; And as Miss Tarpley was leaving she accompanied
- her, gloomily to the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- The twilight fell softly, and as Helen sat in the hammock on the veranda
- her father came in at the gate and up the walk. She rose to greet him with
- her customary kiss, and taking his arm they began to stroll back and forth
- along the veranda. She was hoping that he would speak of Carson Dwight,
- but he didn't, and she was forced to mention him herself, which she did
- rather stiffly in her effort to make it appear as merely casual.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ida was saying this afternoon that Carson is not looking well&mdash;or,
- rather, that he seems to be worried,&rdquo; she faltered out, and then she hung
- on to the Major's arm and waited.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I don't know,&rdquo; the old gentleman said, reflectively. &ldquo;I went into his
- office this afternoon to get a blank check, and found him at his desk with
- a pile of letters from his supporters all over the county. Well, I
- acknowledge I wondered why he should have so little enthusiasm when the
- thing is going his way like the woods afire, and his crusty old father
- fairly chuckling with pride and delight; but what's the use of talking to
- you! You know if he is blue there is only <i>one</i> reason for it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Only one reason!&rdquo; Helen echoed, faintly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, how could the poor boy be happy&mdash;thoroughly, so I mean&mdash;when
- the whole town can talk of nothing else but the grandeur of your
- approaching marriage. Mrs. Snodgrass has started the report that your aunt
- is to give you a ten-thousand-dollar trousseau and that Sanders is to load
- you down with family jewels. Mrs. Snod says we are going to have such a
- crowd here at the house that the verandas will be enclosed in canvas and
- the tables be set barbecue fashion on the lawn, and that the family
- servants and all their unlynched descendants are to be brought from the
- four quarters of the earth to wait on the multitude in the old style. You
- needn't bother; that's what ails Carson. He's got plenty of pride, and
- that sort of talk will hurt any man.&rdquo; But Helen was unconvinced. After
- supper she sat alone on the veranda, her father being occupied with the
- evening papers in the library. What could Garner have meant by his remark
- to Ida? With a heavy heart and her hands tightly clasped in her lap, Helen
- sat trying to fathom the mystery, for that there was mystery she had no
- doubt.
- </p>
- <p>
- She went back to the first days of her return home. When she had arrived
- her heart&mdash;the queer, inconsistent thing which was now so deeply
- concerned with Carson Dwight's affairs&mdash;had been coldly steeled
- against him. The next salient event of that gladsome period was the ball
- in her honor of which all else had faded into the background except that
- memorable talk with Carson and his promise to remove Pete from the
- temptations of living in town. The boy had gone, then the real trouble had
- begun. Carson had rescued him from a violent death before her very eyes.
- That speech of his was never to be forgotten. It had roused her as she had
- never been roused by human eloquence. With a throb of terror, she heard
- the report of the pistol fired by Dan Willis, his avowed enemy&mdash;Dan
- Willis upon whom a just Providence had visited&mdash;visited&mdash;visited&mdash;She
- sat staring at the ground, her beautiful eyes growing larger, her hands
- clutching each other like clamps of vitalized steel.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;No, no! not that&mdash;not that!&rdquo; It was an accident.
- The coroner and his jury had said so. But how strange! No one had
- mentioned it, and yet it had happened on the very day Carson had ridden
- along the fatal road to reach Springtown. She knew the way well. She
- herself had driven over it twice with Carson, and had heard him say it was
- the nearest and best road, and that he would <i>never take any other</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ah, yes, <i>that</i> was the explanation&mdash;<i>that</i> was what Garner
- feared. <i>That</i> was the terrible fatality which the shrewd lawyer,
- knowing its full gravity, had hardly dared mention even to himself. Carson
- Dwight, her hero, had killed a man!
- </p>
- <p>
- Helen rose like a mechanical thing, and with dragging feet went up the
- stairs to her room. Before her open window&mdash;the window looking out
- upon the Dwight lawn and garden&mdash;she sat in the still darkness, now
- praying that Carson might appear as he sometimes did. If she saw him,
- should she go to him? Yes, for the pain, the cold clutch on her heart of
- the discovery was like the throes of death. She told herself that she had
- been the primal cause of this as of all his suffering. In the blind desire
- to oblige her, he had wrecked his every hope. He had lost all and yet was
- uncomplaining. Indeed, he was trying to hide his misfortune, bearing it
- alone, like the man he was.
- </p>
- <p>
- She heard her father closing the library windows to prepare for bed. His
- steps rang hollowly as he came out into the hall below and called up to
- her: &ldquo;Daughter, are you asleep?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A reply hung in her dry throat. She feared to trust her voice to
- utterance. She heard the Major mutter, as if to himself, &ldquo;Well,
- good-night, daughter,&rdquo; and then his footsteps died out. Again she was
- alone with her grim discovery.
- </p>
- <p>
- The town clock had just struck ten when she saw the red coal of a cigar on
- the Dwight lawn quite near the gate leading into her father's grounds. It
- was he. She knew it by the fitful flaring of the cigar. Noiselessly she
- glided down the stairs, softly she turned the big brass key in the massive
- lock and went out and sped, light of foot, across the dewy grass. As she
- approached him Dwight was standing with his back to her, his arms folded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Carson!&rdquo; she called, huskily, and he turned with a start and a stare of
- wonder through the gloom.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;it's you,&rdquo; and doffing his hat he came through the gateway
- and stood by her. &ldquo;It's time, young lady, that you were asleep, isn't it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She saw through his effort at lightness of manner.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I noticed your cigar and wanted to speak to you,&rdquo; she said, in a voice
- that sounded tense and even harsh. It rose almost in a squeak and died in
- her tight throat. Something in his wan face and shifting eyes, noticeable
- even in the darkness, confirmed her in the conviction that she had divined
- his secret.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You wanted to see me,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;I've had so many things to think about
- lately, in this beastly political business, you know, that I'm sadly
- behind in my social duties.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I&mdash;I've been thinking about you all evening,&rdquo; she said, lamely.
- &ldquo;Somehow, I felt as if I simply must see you and talk to you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How good of you!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;I don't deserve it, though&mdash;at such a
- time, anyway. It is generally conceded that it is a woman's duty, placed
- as you are, to think of only one thing and one individual. In this case
- the man is the luckiest one in God's universe. He's well-to-do, has scores
- of admiring, influential friends, and is to marry the grandest, sweetest
- woman on earth. If that isn't enough to make a man happy, why&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop; don't speak that way!&rdquo; Helen commanded. &ldquo;I can't stand it. I simply
- can't stand it, Carson!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stared at her inquiringly for a moment, as she stood with her face
- averted, and then he heaved a big sigh as he gently, almost reverently,
- touched her sleeve to direct her glance upon himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it, Helen?&rdquo; he said, softly, a wealth of tenderness in his
- shaking voice. &ldquo;What's gone wrong? Don't tell me <i>you</i> are unhappy.
- Things have gone crooked with me of late&mdash;I&mdash;I mean that my
- father has been displeased, till quite recently at least, and I have not
- been in the best mood; but I have been sustained by the thought that you,
- at least, were happy. If I thought you were not, I don't know what I would
- do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How can I be happy when you&mdash;when you&mdash;&rdquo; Her voice dwindled
- away into nothingness, and she could only face him with all her agony and
- despair burning in her great, melting eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When I what, Helen?&rdquo; he asked, gropingly. &ldquo;Surely you are not troubled
- about <i>me</i>, now that my political horizon is so bright that my
- opponent can't look at it without smoked glasses. Oh, I'm all right. Ask
- Garner&mdash;ask your father&mdash;ask Braider&mdash;ask anybody.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was not thinking of your <i>election</i>,&rdquo; she found voice, to say.
- &ldquo;Oh, Carson, <i>do</i> have faith in me! I crave it; I long for it; I
- yearn for it. I want to help you. I want to stand by you and suffer with
- you. You can trust me. You tried me once&mdash;you remember&mdash;and I
- stood the test. Before God, I'll never breathe it to a soul. Oh&rdquo;&mdash;stopping
- him by raising her despairing hand&mdash;&ldquo;don't try to deceive me because
- I'm a girl. The uncertainty is killing me. I'll not close my eyes
- to-night. The truth will be easier borne because I'll be bearing it&mdash;<i>with
- you</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Helen, can it be possible that you&mdash;&rdquo; He had spoken impulsively
- and essayed to check himself, but now, pale as a corpse, he stood before
- her not knowing what to do or say. He opened his mouth as if to speak, and
- then with a helpless shrug of his shoulders he lapsed into silence, a
- droop of utter despondency upon him. She was now sure she was right, and a
- shaft she had never met before entered her heart and remained there&mdash;remained
- there to strengthen her, good woman that she was, as such things have
- strengthened women of all periods. She laid her firm hand upon his arm in
- a pressure meant to comfort him, and with the purity of a sorrowing angel
- she said: &ldquo;I know the truth, dear Carson, and if you don't show me a way
- to get you out from under it&mdash;you who did it all for my sake&mdash;if
- you don't I shall die. I can't stand it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stood convicted before her. With bowed head he remained silent for a
- moment, then he said, almost with a groan: &ldquo;To think, on top of it all,
- that you must know&mdash;<i>you!</i> I was bearing it all right, but now
- you&mdash;you poor, gentle, delicate girl&mdash;you have to be dragged
- into this as you have been dragged into every miserable thing that ever
- happened to me. It began with your brother's death&mdash;I helped stain
- that memory for you&mdash;now this&mdash;this unspeakable thing!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You did it wholly in self-defence,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;You <i>had</i> to do it.
- He forced it on you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, yes&mdash;he or fate, the imps of Satan or the elemental passion
- born in me. Flight, open flight lay before me, but that would have been
- the death of self-respect&mdash;so it came about.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you kept it on account of your mother?&rdquo; she went on, insistently, her
- agonized face close to his.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, of course. It would kill her, Helen, and I would be doing it
- deliberately, for I know what the consequences would be. I must be my own
- tribunal. I have no right to take still another life that legal curiosity
- may be gratified. But till I am proven innocent I am a murderer&mdash;that's
- what hurts. I am offering myself to my fellow-men as a maker of laws, and
- yet am deliberately defying those made by my predecessors.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your mother must never know,&rdquo; Helen said, firmly. &ldquo;No one shall but you
- and I, Carson. We'll bear it together.&rdquo; She took his hand and held it
- tightly for a moment, then pressing it tenderly against her cold cheek,
- she lowered her head and left him&mdash;left him there under the vague
- starlight, the soulful fragrance of her soothing personality upon him,
- causing him to forget his peril, his grief, and his far-reaching sorrow,
- and to draw close to his aching breast her heavenly sympathy and undying
- fidelity.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0043" id="link2HCH0043"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XLIII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0050" id="linkimage-0050"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9382.jpg" alt="9382 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9382.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- NE morning, a week later, Pole Baker slouched down the street from the
- wagon-yard, and, peering into the law-office of Garner &amp; Dwight, he
- stood undecided on the deserted street, his hands thrust deep into the
- pockets of his baggy trousers. He took another surreptitious look. Garner
- was at his desk, his great brow wrinkled as with concentrated thought, his
- coarse hair awry, his coat off and shirt-sleeves rolled up to his elbows,
- his fingers stained with ink. Glancing up at this moment, he caught the
- farmer's eye and nodded: &ldquo;Hello!&rdquo; he said, cordially; &ldquo;come in. How's our
- young colt running out your way?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Like a shot out of a straight-barrelled gun,&rdquo; Baker retorted. &ldquo;He's the
- most popular man in the county. He had a slow start, in all that nigger
- mess, but he's all right now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So you think he'll be elected?&rdquo; Garner said, as Pole sat down in a chair
- near his desk and began to twirl his long, gnarled fingers.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I didn't say <i>that</i>, exactly,&rdquo; the farmer answered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you said&mdash;&rdquo; In his perplexity the lawyer could only stare.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I reckon thar are lots of things in this life that kin keep fellows out
- of offices besides the men runnin' agin 'em,&rdquo; Baker said, significantly.
- </p>
- <p>
- The eyes of the two men met in a long, steady stare; each was trying to
- read the other. But Garner was too shrewd a lawyer to be pumped even by a
- trusted friend, and he simply leaned back and took up his pen. &ldquo;Oh yes, of
- course,&rdquo; he observed, &ldquo;a good many slips betwixt the cup and the lip.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Silence fell between the two men. Baker broke it suddenly and with his
- customary frankness. &ldquo;Look here, Bill Garner,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;That young
- feller's yore partner an' friend, but I've got his interests at heart
- myself, an' it don't do no harm sometimes fer two men to talk over what
- concerns a friend to both. I come in town to talk to <i>somebody</i>, an'
- it looks like you are the man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, that's it,&rdquo; Garner said. &ldquo;Well, out with it, Baker.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Pole thrust his right hand into his pocket and took out a splinter of soft
- pine and his knife. Then, with the toe of his heavy shoe, he drew a
- wooden, sawdust-filled cuspidor towards him and over it he prepared to
- whittle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want to talk to you about Carson,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It ain't none o' my
- business, Bill, but I believe he's in great big trouble.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You do, eh?&rdquo; and Garner seemed to throw caution to the winds as he leaned
- forward, his great, facile mouth open. &ldquo;Well, Pole?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gossip&mdash;talk under cover from one mouth to another,&rdquo; the mountaineer
- drawled out, &ldquo;is the most dangerous thing, next to a bucket o' powder in a
- cook-stove that you are goin' to bake in, of anything I know of. Gossip
- has got hold of Dwight, Bill, an' it's tangled itself all about him. Ef
- some'n' ain't done to choke it off it will git him down as shore as a
- blacksnake kin swallow a toad after he's kivered it with slime.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You mean&mdash;&rdquo; But Garner seemed to think better of his inclination
- towards subterfuge and broke off.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I mean about the way Dan Willis met his death,&rdquo; Pole said, to the point.
- &ldquo;I'm no fool an' you ain't, at least you wouldn't be ef you was paid by
- some client to git at the facts. Folks are ready to swear Carson was seed
- the day that thing happened on that road inside of a mile o' whar Willis
- was found. You know what time Carson left here that day; it was sometime
- after dinner, an' the hotel man at Spring-town says he got thar an'
- registered after dark. He says, too, that Carson looked nervous an' upset
- an' seemed more anxious to avoid folks than the general run of
- vote-hunters. Then&mdash;then, oh, well, what's the use o' beatin' about
- the bush? You know an' I know that Carson hain't been actin' like himself
- since then. It's all we can do to git 'im interested in his own
- popularity, an' that shows some'n' is wrong&mdash;dead wrong. An' it looks
- to me like it is a matter that ought to be attended to. Killin' a man is
- serious enough in the eyes of the law without covering it up till it's
- jerked out of you by the State solicitor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So you think the two men met?&rdquo; Garner said, now quite as if he were
- inquiring into the legal status of any ordinary case.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's my judgment,&rdquo; answered Pole. &ldquo;And if I'm right, then it seems to
- me that Carson an' his friends ought to take action before&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Before what?&rdquo; Garner prompted, almost eagerly. &ldquo;Before the grand jury
- takes it up, as you know they will have to with all this commotion goin'
- the rounds.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, Carson ought to act&mdash;concerned in it or not,&rdquo; said Garner. &ldquo;If
- something isn't done right away, it might be sprung on him on the very eve
- of his election and actually ruin him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm worried, an' I don't deny it,&rdquo; said the mountaineer. &ldquo;You see, Bill,
- Carson's a lawyer, and he knows whether he had a good case of self-defence
- or not, an' shirking investigation this way looks powerful like&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Like he was himself the&mdash;aggressor,&rdquo; interpolated Garner, with a
- frown.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, like that,&rdquo; said Baker. &ldquo;Of course we know Willis was houndin' the
- boy and making threats, but Carson's hot-headed, as hot-headed as they
- make 'em, an' maybe he flared up at the first sight of Willis an' blazed
- away at 'im. I don't see no other reason for him lyin' so low about it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm glad you came to me,&rdquo; Garner said. &ldquo;I'll admit I've been fearing the
- thing, Pole. It will be a delicate matter to broach, but I'm going to talk
- to him about it. As you say, the longer it remains like it is the more
- serious it becomes. Good Lord! if he <i>did</i> kill Willis&mdash;if he <i>did</i>
- kill him, it would take sharp work to clear him of the charge of murder
- after the silly way he has acted about it. Why, dang it, it's almost an
- admission of guilt!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Baker had barely left the office when Carson came in, nodded to his
- partner, and sat down at his desk and began in an absent-minded way to cut
- open some letters that were waiting for him. Unobserved Garner watched him
- from behind the worn book he was holding up to his face. Hardened lawyer
- that he was, Garner's heart melted with pity as he noted the dark
- splotches under the young man's eyes, the pathetic droop of his shoulders,
- the evidences in every facial line of the grim inward struggle that was
- going on in the brave, supersensitive soul. Garner put down his book and
- went into the little consultation-room in the rear and stood at the window
- which looked out upon a small patch of corn in an adjoining lot.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He did it!&rdquo; he said, grimly. &ldquo;Yes, he did it. Poor chap!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The task before him was the hardest Garner had ever faced. He could have
- discussed, to the finest points of detail, such a case for a client, but
- Carson&mdash;the strange, winning personality over which he had marvelled
- so often&mdash;was different. He was the most courageous, the most
- self-sacrificing, the most keenly suffering human being Garner had ever
- known, and the most sensitively honorable. How was it possible, even
- indirectly, to allude to so grave a charge against such a man? And yet,
- Garner reflected, pessimistically, the best of men sometimes reach a point
- at which their high moral and spiritual tension, under one crucial test or
- another, breaks. Why should it not be so in Carson Dwight's case.
- </p>
- <p>
- Garner went back to his desk, sat down, and turned his revolving-chair
- till he faced Carson's profile. &ldquo;Look here, old chap,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I've got
- something of a very unpleasant nature to say to you, and it's a pretty
- hard thing to do, considering my keen regard for you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Dwight glanced up from the letter he held before him. He read Garner's
- face in a steady stare for a moment, and then said, with a sigh, as he
- laid the letter down: &ldquo;I see you've heard it. Well, I knew it would get
- out. I've seen it coming for several days.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I began to guess it a week or so back,&rdquo; Garner went on, outwardly calm;
- &ldquo;but this morning in talking to Pole Baker I became convinced of it. It is
- a grim sort of thing, my boy, but you must not despair. You've surmounted
- more obstacles than any young fellow I know, and I believe you will
- eventually come through this. Though you must acknowledge that it would
- have been far wiser to have given yourself up at once.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I couldn't do it,&rdquo; Carson responded, gloomily. &ldquo;I thought of it. I
- started on my way to Braider, really, but finally decided that it wouldn't
- do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good God! was it as bad as that?&rdquo; Garner exclaimed. &ldquo;I've been hoping
- against hope that you could&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It couldn't be worse.&rdquo; Carson lowered his head till it rested on his
- hand. His face went out of Garner's view. &ldquo;It's going to kill her, Garner.
- She can't stand it. Dr. Stone told me that another shock would kill her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You mean&mdash;my Lord! you mean your <i>mother?</i> You&mdash;you&rdquo;&mdash;Garner
- leaned forward, his face working, his eyes gleaming&mdash;&ldquo;you mean that
- you did not report it because of her condition? Great God! why didn't I
- think of that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, certainly.&rdquo; Carson looked round. &ldquo;Did you think it was because&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I thought it was because you had&mdash;had killed him in&mdash;well, in a
- manner you feared would not be adjudged wholly justifiable. I never
- dreamed of the <i>real</i> reason. I see it all now,&rdquo; and Garner rose from
- his chair and with his lips twitching he laid his hand on Dwight's back.
- &ldquo;I understand perfectly, and I admire you more than I can say. Now, tell
- me all about it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For an hour the two friends sat talking together. Calmly Carson went into
- detail as to the happening, and when he had finished Garner said: &ldquo;You've
- got a good case, but you can easily see that it is grievously hampered by
- your concealment of the facts so long. To make a jury see exactly how you
- felt about your mother's reception of the thing may be hard, for the
- average man is not by nature quite so finely strung as that, but we must
- <i>make</i> them see it. Dr. Stone's testimony as to his advice to you
- will help. But, by all means, we must make the advance ourselves as soon
- as possible&mdash;before a charge is brought against you by the grand
- jury.&rdquo; v &ldquo;But&rdquo;&mdash;and Dwight groaned aloud&mdash;&ldquo;my mother simply
- cannot go through it, Garner. I know her. It will kill her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She simply must bear it,&rdquo; Garner said, gloomily. &ldquo;We must find a way to
- brace her up to the ordeal. I have it. All my hopes are based on our
- making such a clear statement before Squire Felton, with the testimony of
- several witnesses as to Willis's threats against you, that he will throw
- it out of court. I can see the squire to-day and have a hearing set for
- to-morrow. We'll make quick work of it. I'll also see your father and&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My father!&rdquo; Carson exclaimed, despondently.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I'll see him and explain the whole thing. I think I can get him to
- keep the matter from reaching your mother till after the hearing. She is
- still confined to her room, and surely your father can manage that part of
- it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Carson replied, gloomily; &ldquo;and he will do all he can, though it's
- going to be a terrible blow to him. But&mdash;if&mdash;if the justice
- court should bind me over, and I should have to go to jail to await trial,
- then my mother&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't think about her now!&rdquo; Garner said, testily. &ldquo;Let's work for a
- prompt dismissal and not look on the dark side till we have to. I'll run
- down and talk to your father at once, before the rumor reaches him and
- drives him crazy. I tell you it's in the very air; I've felt it for
- several days.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0044" id="link2HCH0044"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XLIV.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0051" id="linkimage-0051"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9390.jpg" alt="9390 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9390.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- N his office in one corner of his great grain and cotton warehouse, at a
- dusty, littered desk before a murky, cobweb-bed window, Garner found old
- Dwight, his lap full of telegraphic reports, his head submerged in a
- morning paper containing the market and crop news in general. Outside of
- the thin-walled office heavy iron trucks, in the grasp of brawny black
- men, rattled and rumbled over the heavy floor and across weighty skids
- into open cars in the rear. There was the creaking sound of the big hand
- elevators engaged in hoisting and lowering bales, barrels, bags, and
- casks, the mellow sing-song of the light-hearted negroes as they toiled,
- blissfully ignorant of the profound gloom which had fallen on the defender
- of their rights.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I came to see you on an important matter concerning Carson,&rdquo; Garner
- began, as he leaned over the old man's desk.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dwight lowered his paper, shrugged his shoulders, and sniffed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Campaign funds, I reckon,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Well, I've been looking for some
- such demand. In fact, I've been astonished that you fellows haven't been
- after me sooner. I'll do anything but buy whiskey to give away. I'm
- against that custom.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It wasn't <i>that</i>,&rdquo; said Garner, who, usually plain-spoken, shrank
- from beating about the bush even in so delicate a matter. &ldquo;The truth is,
- Carson is in a little trouble, Mr. Dwight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Trouble?&rdquo; the merchant said, bluntly. &ldquo;Will you kindly show me when he's
- ever been out of it? Since the day he was born it's been scrape after
- scrape. By all possessed, Billy, when he wasn't a year old I had to spend
- fifty dollars to encase all the chimneys in with iron grating to keep him
- from crawling into the fire. He's walked or stumbled into every fire that
- was made since then. When he was only twelve a man out at the farm fell in
- a well and nothing would do Carson but that he must go down after him. He
- did it, fastened the only available rope about the man and sent him to the
- top, and when they lowered it to Carson he was so nearly drowned that he
- could hardly sit in the loop. If I had a list of the scrapes that boy went
- through at home and at college I'd sell it to some blood-and-thunder novel
- writer. It would make his fortune. Well, what is it now?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Carson is in very serious trouble I'm afraid, Mr. Dwight,&rdquo; Garner said,
- as he took a chair and sat down. &ldquo;You will have to prepare yourself for a
- pretty sharp shock. He couldn't help it. It was pushed on him to such an
- extent that there was no other way out of it and retain his self-respect.
- Mr. Dwight, you, of course, heard of Dan Willis's death?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, and thought that now that he was under the sod Carson would surely&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The death was not an accident, Mr. Dwight,&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Garner interrupted, and his eyes rested steadily on the old man's face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You mean that Willis killed himself&mdash;that he&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I mean that he <i>forced</i> Carson to kill him, Mr. Dwight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old merchant's face was working as if in the throes of death; he
- leaned forward, his eyes wide in growing horror.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't, don't say that, Billy; take it back!&rdquo; he gasped. &ldquo;Anything but
- that&mdash;anything else under God's shining sun.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You must try to be calm,&rdquo; Garner said, gently. &ldquo;It can't be helped. After
- all, the poor boy was forced to do it to save his life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Old Dwight lowered his face to his hands and groaned. The negro at the
- head of the gang of truckmen approached and leaned in the doorway. He had
- come to ask some directions about the work, but with widening eyes he
- stood staring. Garner peremptorily waved him away, and, rising, he laid
- his hand on Dwight's shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't take it so hard!&rdquo; he said, soothingly. &ldquo;Remember, there is a lot to
- do, and that's what I came to see you about.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Old Dwight raised his blearing eyes, which, in his pallid face now looked
- bloodshot, and stammered out: &ldquo;What is there to do? What does it mean? How
- was it kept till now? Was he trying to hide it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes&rdquo;&mdash;Garner nodded&mdash;&ldquo;the poor boy has been bearing it in
- secret. He was afraid the news of it would seriously injure his mother.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And it will!&rdquo; Dwight groaned. &ldquo;She will never bear it in the world. She
- is as frail as a flower. His conduct has brought her within a
- hair's-breadth of the grave more than once, and nothing under high heaven
- could save her from this. It's awful, awful!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know it's bad, but we've got to save him, Mr. Dwight. You can't have
- your own son&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have him <i>what?</i>&rdquo; Dwight rose, swaying from side to side, and stood
- facing the lawyer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you can't have him sent to jail for murder; you can't have him&mdash;found
- guilty and publicly executed. The law is a ticklish business. Absolutely
- innocent men have been hanged time after time. I tell you this concealment
- of the thing, and Carson's hot fury at Willis and the remarks he has made
- here and there about him&mdash;the fact that he was armed&mdash;that there
- were no witnesses to the duel&mdash;that he allowed the erroneous verdict
- of the coroner's jury to go on record&mdash;all these things, with a
- scoundrel like Wiggin in the background at deadly work to thwart us and
- pull Carson out of his track, are very, very serious. It is the most
- serious job I ever tackled in the courts, but I'm going to put it through
- or, as God is my judge, Mr. Dwight, I'll throw up the law.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Tears were now flowing freely from the old merchant's eyes and,
- unhindered, dripped from his face to the ground. Taking Garner's hand he
- grasped it firmly, and as he wrung it he sobbed: &ldquo;Save my boy, Billy, and
- I'll never let you want for means as long as you live. He's all I've got,
- and I'm prouder of him than I ever let folks know. I've made a lot of fuss
- over some things he's done, but through it all I was proud of him, proud
- of him because he saw deeper into right than I did. Even this nigger
- question&mdash;I talked against that a lot, because I thought it would
- pull him down, but when I heard how he got you all together in Blackburn's
- store that night and persuaded you to save old Linda's boy&mdash;when I
- learned of that and heard the old woman's cries of joy, and saw the
- far-reaching effects of what Carson was standing for, I was so proud and
- thankful that I sneaked off to my room and cried&mdash;cried like a child;
- and now upon it all, as his reward, comes this thing. Oh, Billy, save him!
- Don't crush the poor boy's spirit. I've always wanted to aid you in some
- substantial way for your interest in him, and I'm going to do it this
- time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I hope we can squash the thing in justice court in the morning, Mr.
- Dwight,&rdquo; Garner said, confidently. &ldquo;The chief thing is for you to keep it
- all from your wife until then, anyway. I can't do a thing with Carson till
- his mind is at ease over her. He worships the ground she walks on, Mr.
- Dwight, and if it hadn't been for that he would have been out of this
- trouble long ago, for I'm sure a plain statement of the matter immediately
- after it happened would have cleared him without any trouble. In his
- desire to spare his mother he has complicated the case, that's all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I can keep it from his mother that long easy enough,&rdquo; said Dwight.
- &ldquo;I'll go home now and see to it. Pull my boy through this, Billy. If you
- have to draw on me for every cent I've got, pull him through. I'm going to
- treat him different in the future-. If he can get out of this I believe he
- will be elected and make a great man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- An hour later Garner hurried back to the office.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Everything is in fine shape!&rdquo; he chuckled, as he threw off his coat and
- fell to work at his desk. &ldquo;Squire Felton has fixed the hearing for
- to-morrow morning at eleven and Pole Baker has gone on the fastest horse
- in the livery-stable to secure witnesses for our side. He says he can find
- them galore in the mountains, and your father is as solid as a stone wall.
- He fell all in a tumble at first, but braced up, said some beautiful
- things about you, and went home to see that your mother's ears are closed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I saw the sheriff, too. What do you think? When I told him the facts, and
- said that you were ready to give yourself up, he almost cried. Braider's a
- trump. He said that the law gave him the right to let you go on your own
- recognizance, and that before he'd arrest you and put you in a common jail
- he'd have his arms and legs cut off. He said, knowing your heart as he
- knew it, he'd let you go all the way to Canada without stopping you, and
- that if you were bound over on this charge he'd throw up his job rather
- than arrest you. He told me he'd been looking for it&mdash;that he got
- wind of it two days ago, and would have been in to see you about it if he
- hadn't been afraid you'd misunderstand his coming at such a time. He put a
- flea in my ear, too. He said we must beware of Wiggin. He has an idea that
- Wiggin has been on to this for sometime and may have a dangerous dagger up
- his sleeve. The district-attorney is out of town to-day but will be back
- to-night. He's as straight as a die and will act fair. I will see him the
- first thing in the morning. Now, you brace up. Leave everything to me. You
- are as good a lawyer as I am, but you are too nervous and worried about
- your mother to act on your best judgment.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this juncture the colored gardener from Dwight's came in with a note
- directed to Garner. Garner opened it and read it while Carson stood
- looking on. It ran: <i>&ldquo;Dear Billy,&mdash;Everything is all right at this
- end, and will remain so, at least till after the hearing to-morrow. I
- enclose my check for ten thousand dollars as a retaining fee. I always
- intended to give you a little start, and I hope this will help you
- materially. Save my boy. Save him, Billy. For God's sake pull him through;
- don't let this thing crush his spirit. He's got a great and a useful
- future before him if only we can pull him through this.&rdquo;</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson read the note through a blur and turned away. He was standing alone
- in the dreary little consultation-room a few minutes later, when Garner
- came to him, old Dwight's check fluttering in his hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your dad's the right sort,&rdquo; he said, his eyes gleaming with the infant
- fires of avarice. &ldquo;One only has to know how to understand him. The size of
- this check is out of all reason, but if I can do what he wishes to-morrow,
- I'll not only accept it, but I'll put it to a glorious use. Carson, there
- is a young woman in this town whom I'll ask to marry me, and I'll buy a
- home with this to start life on.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ida Tarpley?&rdquo; said Carson.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She's the one,&rdquo; Garner said, with a bare touch of rising color. &ldquo;I think
- she would take me, from a little remark she dropped, and it was through
- you that I found her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Through me?&rdquo; Dwight said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it was in talking of your ups and downs that I first saw into her
- wonderfully sweet and sympathetic nature. Carson, if you get your
- walking-papers in the morning, I won't wait ten minutes before I pop the
- question. The lack of means was the only thing that kept me from proposing
- the last time I saw her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0045" id="link2HCH0045"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XLV.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0052" id="linkimage-0052"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9398.jpg" alt="9398 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9398.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- HE next morning when Garner reached the office, he found Carson surrounded
- by &ldquo;the gang,&rdquo; Blackburn was just leaving, his mild eyes fixed gloomily on
- the sidewalk, and Wade Tingle, Keith Gordon, and Bob Smith sat about the
- office with long-drawn, stoical faces.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was just telling Carson that it will be a walkover in court this
- morning,&rdquo; Wade was saying, comfortingly, as Garner sat down at his desk,
- his great brow clouded. &ldquo;Don't you think so, Garner?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'll tell you <i>one</i> thing, boys,&rdquo; Garner answered, irritably,
- &ldquo;it's too important a matter to make light over, and I want you fellows to
- clear out so we can get to work. I've got to talk to Carson, and I can't
- do it with so many here. I'm not accustomed to thinking with a crowd
- around.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You bet we'll skedaddle, then, old man,&rdquo; said Keith; &ldquo;but we'll be at the&mdash;the
- hearing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When they had gone droopingly out, Carson came from the window at which he
- had been standing and looked Garner over, noting with surprise that the
- lower parts of the legs of his partner's trousers were dusty and his boots
- unpolished. The shirt Garner wore had sleeves that were too long for his
- arms, and a pair of soiled cuffs covered more than half of the small
- hands. His standing collar had become crumpled, and his ever-present black
- silk necktie, with its unshapely bow and brown, frayed edges, had slipped
- out of place. His hair was awry, his whole manner nervous and excitable.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Keith says you didn't sleep at the den last night,&rdquo; Dwight said,
- tentatively. &ldquo;Did you go out to your father's?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Garner seemed to hesitate for an instant, then he crossed his dusty legs
- and began to draw upon and tie more firmly the loose strings of his worn
- and cracked patent-leather shoes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Look here, Carson,&rdquo; he said, when he had fumblingly tied the last knot,
- &ldquo;you are too strong and brave a man to be treated in the wishy-washy way a
- woman's treated. Besides, you'll have to know the truth sooner or later,
- anyway, and you may as well be prepared for it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Something gone wrong?&rdquo; Dwight asked, calmly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Worse than I dreamed was possible,&rdquo; Garner said. &ldquo;I thought we'd have
- comparatively smooth sailing, but&mdash;well, it's your danged luck! Pole
- Baker come in this morning about two o'clock. I'd taken a room at the
- hotel to get away from those chattering boys so I could think. I couldn't
- sleep, and was trying to get myself straight with a dime novel that
- wouldn't hold my attention, when Pole came and found me. Carson, that
- rascal Wiggin is the blackest devil that ever walked the earth in human
- shape.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's been at work,&rdquo; said Carson, calmly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'd think so,&rdquo; said Garner. &ldquo;Pole says wherever he went, expecting to
- lay hands on good witnesses who had heard Willis make threats, he found
- that Wiggin had got there first and put up a tale that closed their mouths
- like clams.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I see,&rdquo; said Dwight. &ldquo;He frightened them off.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I should think he did. He put them on their guard, telling them, without
- hinting at any trouble of yours, that if they had a call to court, of any
- sort whatsoever, to get out of it, as it would only be a trick on our part
- to implicate them in the lynching business.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So we have no witnesses,&rdquo; said Dwight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not even a photograph of one!&rdquo; replied Garner, bitterly. &ldquo;I sent Pole
- right out again, tired as he was, in another direction. He had a faint
- idea that he might persuade Willis's mother to testify, though I told him
- he was on a wild-goose chase, for not one mother in ten thousand would
- turn over a hand to aid a man who&mdash;a man under just such
- circumstances. Then I got a horse&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At that time of night?&rdquo; Carson cried.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What was the difference? I couldn't sleep, anyway, and the cool night air
- made me feel better, but I failed. The men I saw admitted that they had
- heard Dan talk some, but they couldn't recall any absolute threats. When I
- got back to town it was eight o'clock. I ate a snack at the restaurant and
- then hurried off to see the district-attorney. Mayhew is a good man,
- Carson, and a fair man. I think he is the most honest and conscientious
- solicitor we've ever had. But right there I saw the track of your guardian
- angel. As early as it was, Wiggin had been there before me. Mayhew
- wouldn't admit that he had, but I knew it from his reserved manner. Why, I
- expected to see the solicitor take the whole thing lightly, you know,
- considering your standing at the bar and your family name, but I found him&mdash;well,
- entirely too serious about it. He really talked as if it were the gravest
- thing that had ever happened. I saw that he was badly prejudiced, and I
- tried to disabuse his mind of some hidden impressions, but he wouldn't
- talk much. All at once, however, he looked me in the face and asked me how
- on earth any sensible man, familiar with the law, could keep a thing like
- that concealed as long as you did. I told him, in as plausible and direct
- a way as I could, how you felt in regard to your mother's condition. He
- listened attentively, then he shrugged his shoulders and said: 'Why,
- Garner, Dr. Stone told my wife the other day that Mrs. Dwight was
- improving rapidly. Surely she wasn't as bad off as all that.' My Lord! I
- was set back so badly that I hardly knew what to say. He went on then to
- tell me that folks through the country had been saying that towns-people
- always managed to avoid the law by some hook or crook, or influence, or
- money, and that he was not going to subject himself to public criticism
- even in the case of a man as popular as you are.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That was Wiggin's work!&rdquo; Carson said, his lips pressed tightly together
- as he turned back to the window.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, that's his method. He's the trickiest scamp unhung. Of course, he
- can't hope to see you actually convicted of this thing, but he does
- evidently think he can have you bound over to trial at the next term of
- court, and beat you at the polls in the mean time. He thinks with his
- negro incendiary speeches to rouse the lowest element, and the charges
- that you've murdered one of your own race to inflame the prejudices of
- others, that he can snow you under good and deep. But we've got to make
- the best of it. There is no shirking or postponing of this hearing to-day.
- Even if the very&mdash;the very worst comes,&rdquo; Garner finished, slowly, as
- if shrinking from the words he was uttering, &ldquo;we can give any bonds the
- court may demand.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But&rdquo;&mdash;and Dwight turned from the window and stood before his friend&mdash;&ldquo;what
- if they refuse to take bonds at all and I have to go to jail?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What do you want to cross a bridge like that for?&rdquo; Garner demanded,
- plainly angered by the sheer possibility in question.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dwight leaned over Garner and put his hand on the dusty shoulder. &ldquo;<i>That</i>
- would kill my mother, old man!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you think so, Carson?&rdquo; Garner was deeply moved.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know it, Garner, and her blood would be on my head.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, we must <i>win!</i>&rdquo; Garner said, and a look of firm determination
- came into his eyes; &ldquo;that is all there is about it. We must win. Eternal
- truth and justice are on our side. We must win.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0046" id="link2HCH0046"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XLVI.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0053" id="linkimage-0053"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9403.jpg" alt="9403 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9403.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- HE big, square court-room was filled to overflowing when at the last
- moment Carson and Garner arrived. Just inside the door they found old
- Dwight standing, his battered silk hat in his hand, and with an air of
- unwonted humility upon him, patiently awaiting their coming.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is everything all right?&rdquo; he anxiously whispered to Garner, as he reached
- out and caught his son's hand and held on to it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, all right, Mr. Dwight,&rdquo; Garner replied; &ldquo;and is&mdash;is your wife&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, we are safe on that score,&rdquo; the old man said, encouragingly, to
- Carson. &ldquo;I only slipped away for a minute. I won't wait here, but will
- hurry back and stand guard. God bless you, my boy.&rdquo; When Dwight had turned
- towards the door and was moving away, Carson glanced over the crowded
- room. All eyes were fixed, it seemed to him, anxiously and sympathetically
- on his face. As he passed through the central aisle to reach the railed-in
- enclosure where, at his elevated desk, the magistrate sat, gravely
- consulting with the State solicitor, Carson's mind was gloomily active
- with the numerous instances in which, to his knowledge, innocent men had
- been convicted by the complication of circumstantial evidence, in a chair
- which Braider was solicitously placing near that of Garner, the young
- man's glance again swept the big room. On the last row of benches sat
- Linda, Uncle Lewis, and Pete in the company of other negro friends of his.
- Their fixed and awed facial expressions added to his gloom. Near the
- railing sat &ldquo;the gang&rdquo;&mdash;Gordon, Tingle, and Bob Smith&mdash;their
- faces long-drawn. Behind them sat Helen and her father, with Ida Tarpley.
- Catching Helen's anxious glance, Carson tried to smile lightly as he
- responded to her bow, but there was something in his act which seemed to
- him to be empty pretence and rather unworthy of one in his position.
- Guilty or innocent in the eyes of the law, he told himself he was there to
- rid his character of the gravest charge that could be made against a human
- being, and from the indications, as seen by the shrewd Garner, he was not
- likely to leave the room a free man. He shuddered as he grimly pictured
- Braider&mdash;the feeling, sympathetic Braider&mdash;coming to him there
- before all those eyes and formally placing him under arrest at the order
- of the court. He sank to the lowest ebb of despair as he pictured his
- mother's hearing of the news. Almost in a daze Carson sat dumb and blind
- to the formal proceedings. Like a child, he felt a soothing comfort in the
- knowledge that he was leaning on such a skilled friend as that of the
- hardened young lawyer at his side, and yet for the first time in his life
- he was pitying himself. Things had really gone hard with him. He had tried
- his best to do the right thing of late, but fate had at last overpowered
- him. He was losing faith in the impulses which had led him, blind under
- the blaze of youthful enthusiasm, to that seat here under the cold,
- accusing eye of the law.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was drawn out of his lethargy by the clear, ringing, confident voice of
- the solicitor. It was a strong, an utterly heartless speech, &ldquo;the gang&rdquo;
- thought. Duty to the State and public protection was its key-note.
- Personally, Mayhew had nothing but the kindliest feeling and strongest
- admiration for the defendant. He belonged to one of the best and oldest
- families in the South, and was a man of undaunted courage and remarkable
- brains. But with all that, Mayhew believed, as he tugged at his heavy
- mustache and stared with confident eyes at the magistrate, he could show
- that lurking under the creditable and refined exterior of the defendant
- was a keenly vindictive nature&mdash;a nature that was maddened beyond
- forbearance by opposition. The solicitor promised to show by competent
- witnesses, when the matter was brought to trial, that Carson Dwight
- believed&mdash;mark the word <i>believed</i>&mdash;without an iota of
- proof, that Dan Willis had fired upon him in the mob that was attempting
- to lynch Pete Warren. Believing this, your honor, I say, with no sort of
- proof, I think the State will have no trouble in establishing the fact
- that Dwight had sufficient <i>motive</i> for what was done, and that he
- deliberately and with aforethought went armed with no other intent than to
- kill Willis. Furthermore, Mayhew could show, he declared, that Dwight had
- carefully concealed the deed, letting it go out to the world that the
- finding of the coroner's jury was correct, and making no statement to the
- contrary till he was driven to it by the encroachments of verifiable rumor
- and the certainty of adverse action by the grand jury. That being the
- status of the case, the solicitor could only urge upon the court its duty
- to hold Carson Dwight on the charge of murder in the first degree.
- </p>
- <p>
- Deep in his slough of depression, Dwight, looking over the breathless
- audience, noticed the serious faces he knew and loved. Helen was deathly
- pale, and her father sat with bowed head, fingering his gold-headed ebony
- cane. Keith Gordon's face was as full of reproach for what the solicitor
- had said as that of a grief-stricken woman. Wade Tingle sat flushed with
- rebellious anger, and Bob Smith, not grasping the full import of the
- high-sounding words, stared from under his neatly plastered hair like a
- wondering child at a funeral. It was Mam' Linda's almost savage glare that
- more firmly fixed Carson's wandering glance. She sat there, her visage
- full of half-savage passion, her large lip hanging low and quivering, her
- breast heaving, her eyes gleaming.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson had not the heart to follow Garner's weak and inadequate plea as
- the lawyer stood, his small hands clutched and bloodless behind him. He
- had not been able, he said, to reach the witnesses he had expected to
- produce, who would swear that Dan Willis, time after time, had pursued the
- defendant and made threats against his life, but he felt that a calm
- statement of Carson Dwight's would be believed, and that&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Here there was a commotion in the room. The bailiff at the door was
- talking loudly to some one. The magistrate rapped vigorously for order,
- and in the pause that ensued Pole Baker came striding down the aisle,
- leading a little woman wearing a black cotton sun-bonnet and dress of the
- same material. Leaving her standing, Baker approached Garner and whispered
- in his ear. Then, with a suddenly kindling face, the lawyer turned and
- whispered to the woman. A moment later he drew himself up to his full
- height and said, in a clear, confident voice that reached all parts of the
- room: &ldquo;Your honor, I have a witness here that I want to have sworn.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The district-attorney stood up and stared curiously at the woman. &ldquo;If I'm
- not mistaken that's Dan Willis's mother,&rdquo; he said, with a smile. &ldquo;She is a
- witness I'm looking for myself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you are welcome to what she'll testify,&rdquo; Garner dryly retorted.
- </p>
- <p>
- A moment later the little woman was on the stand, holding her bonnet in
- her hand, her small, wizened face as colorless as parchment, her black
- hair brushed as smoothly as patent leather down over her brow and tied in
- a small, tight knot behind her head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, Mrs. Willis,&rdquo; Garner went on, casting a significant glance at
- Carson, who was gazing at him in growing wonder, &ldquo;just tell the court in
- your own way what happened at your house the day your son met his death.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The room was very still when she began in a low, quivering voice which,
- gradually steadied itself as she continued.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;Mr. Wiggin come to the fence while we-all was eatin'
- our breakfast, an' called Danny out an' they had a talk near the cow-lot.
- I don't know what was said, but I was sorry they got together for Mr.
- Wiggin always upset Danny an' started 'im to drinkin' and rantin' agin Mr.
- Dwight here in town.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She paused a moment, and then Garner, leaning easily on the back of his
- chair, said, encouragingly: &ldquo;All right, Mrs. Willis, you are doing very
- well. Now, just go ahead and tell the court all that took place to the
- best of your recollection.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, thar wasn't much to recollect that happened right thar <i>at home</i>,&rdquo;
- the witness went on, plaintively; &ldquo;of course, the shootin' tuck place
- about a mile from thar on the&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pardon me, Mrs. Willis,&rdquo; Garner interrupted. &ldquo;You are getting the cart
- before the horse. I want you to tell his honor how your son acted when he
- came into the house after his talk with Mr. Wiggin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, when Danny fust come in, Mr. Garner, he went to the bureau drawyer
- and tuck out his revolver an' loaded it thar before us, cussin' at every
- breath agin Mr. Dwight. I tried to calm 'im down, an' so did my brother
- George, but he was as nigh crazy as I ever saw any human bein' in my life.
- He said he was goin' straight to Darley an' kill Carson Dwight, if he had
- to go to his daddy's house an' drag 'im out of his bed. He said he'd tried
- it once an' slipped up, but that if he missed again he'd kill hisse'f in
- disgust.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I see, I see,&rdquo; Garner said, in the pause that ensued. He stroked his
- smooth chin with his tapering fingers and opened and shut his mouth, and
- he kept his eyes on the ceiling as if the witness had made the most
- ordinary sort of statement. He leaned again on the back of his chair, and
- then lowering his glance to the face of the witness, he asked: &ldquo;Did you
- gather from Dan's talk that morning, Mrs. Willis, when it was that he made
- the <i>first</i> attempt on the life of Carson Dwight?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I don't know as I did <i>then</i>,&rdquo; the woman answered; &ldquo;but he
- told us about it the day after he fired the shot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, he did!&rdquo; Garner's face was still a study of guileless indifference,
- and he stroked his chin again, his eyes now on the floor, his arms folded
- across his breast. &ldquo;What day was that, Mrs. Willis?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, the day after Mr. Dwight kept the mob from hangin' old Lindy
- Warren's boy.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Profound astonishment was now visible on every countenance except that of
- Garner. &ldquo;I never knew positively before <i>who</i> fired that shot,&rdquo; he
- said, carelessly, &ldquo;though, of course, I had an idea who did it. So Dan
- admitted that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, he told us about that, and about tryin' to git at Mr. Dwight several
- other times.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I reckon you are satisfied in your own mind that if Mr. Dwight hadn't
- defended himself Dan would have killed him?&rdquo; Garner pursued, adroitly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know he would, Mr. Garner, an' when I heard the report that Danny had
- shot hisse'f by accident, while he was practisin' with his pistol, I was
- reconciled to it. I didn't think Mr. Dwight was to blame. I always thought
- he was doin' the best he could, an' that politics caused the bad blood. I
- always liked 'im, to tell the truth. I'd heard that he was a friend to the
- pore an' humble, even to pore old niggers, an' somehow I felt relieved
- when I heard he'd escaped my boy. I knowed Danny meant murder an' that no
- good could come of it. I'd a sight ruther know a child of mine was dead
- an' in the hands of his Maker than tied up in jail waitin' to be publicly
- hung in the end. No, it is better like it is, though if I may be allowed
- to say so, I can't for the life of me, understand what you-all have got
- Mr. Dwight hauled up here like this, when his mother is in sech a delicate
- condition. Good Lord, he hain't done nothin' to be tried for!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That will do, Mrs. Willis,&rdquo; Garner was heard to say, his voice harshly
- stirring the emotion-packed stillness of the room; &ldquo;that will do, unless
- my brother Mayhew wants to ask you some questions.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The State has no case, your honor,&rdquo; Mayhew said, with a sickly smile.
- &ldquo;The truth is, I think we've all been imbibing too freely of politics. I
- confess I've listened to Wiggin myself. It looks like, failing to get Dan
- Willis to kill Dwight, he's set about trying to have it done by law. Your
- honor, the State is out of the case.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a pause of astonishment and then the truth burst upon the
- audience. Realizing that Carson Dwight was more than a free man,
- vindicated, restored to them, &ldquo;the gang&rdquo; rose as a man and yelled. Led by
- Pole Baker and the enthusiastic Braider, they pressed around him, climbing
- over the railing and crushing chairs to splinters. Then, amid the shouts
- and glad tears of the spectators, the most popular man in the county was
- raised perforce upon the stout shoulders of Baker and Braider and borne
- down the aisle towards the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- Above the heads of all, Carson, flushed with confusion, glanced over the
- room. Immediately in front of him stood Helen. She was looking straight
- and eagerly at him, her face aglow, her eyes filled with tears. She paused
- with her father just outside the door, and as &ldquo;the gang&rdquo; bore their
- struggling and protesting hero past, she raised her hand to him. Blushing
- in fresh embarrassment, he took it, only to have it torn from him the next
- instant.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let me down, Pole!&rdquo; he cried.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, sir, we don't let you down!&rdquo; Pole shouted. &ldquo;We've got it in for you.
- We are goin' to lynch you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The crowd, appreciating the joke, thereupon raised the queerest cry that
- ever burst from breasts surcharged with joy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lynch him!&rdquo; they yelled. &ldquo;Lynch him!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Half an hour afterwards Carson went home. His father was at the fence
- looking for him. He had heard the news and his old face was beaming with
- joy as he opened the gate for his son and took him into his arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How's mother?&rdquo; was Carson's first inquiry.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She's all right and she knows, too?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She knows!&rdquo; Carson exclaimed, aghast.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, old Mrs. Parsons was the first to bring me the news, and she assured
- me she could impart it to your mother in such a way as not to shock her at
- all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you let her?&rdquo; Carson said, anxiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, and she did the slickest piece of work I ever heard of. I knew she
- was considered a wonderful woman, but she's the smoothest article I ever
- met. I laughed till I cried. I was in the mood for laughing, anyway. Mrs.
- Parsons began by adroitly working your mother up to such a pitch of fury
- against Willis for his nagging pursuit of you that your mother could have
- shot him herself, and then, in an off-hand way, Mrs. Parsons led on to the
- meeting between you. Willis had his gun in your face, and was about to
- pull the trigger, when your pistol went off and saved your life. She went
- on to say that Dan's mother had just been to the court-house testifying
- that her son had tried to murder you, and that she didn't blame you in the
- slightest. I declare, Mrs. Parsons actually made it appear that Willis was
- on trial instead of you. Anyway, it's all right. We've got nothing to fear
- now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0047" id="link2HCH0047"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XLVII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0054" id="linkimage-0054"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:15%;">
- <img src="images/9413.jpg" alt="9413 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9413.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- IX weeks later the election came off.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was no &ldquo;walk-over&rdquo; for Carson. Wiggin seemed only more desperately
- spurred on by every exposition of his underhand chicanery. He died hard.
- He fought with his nose in the mire, but, throwing honor to the winds, he
- fought. Carson Dwight's stand on the negro question was Wiggin's strongest
- weapon. It was a torch with which the candidate could inflame the breasts
- of a certain class of men at a moment's notice. He was a crude but
- powerful speaker, and wherever he went he left smouldering or raging
- fires. Pledged to him were the lowest order of men, and they fought for
- him and worked for him like bandits in the dark. Over these men he wielded
- a sword of fear. Carson Dwight's intention in getting to the legislature
- was to make laws against lynching, and every man who had ever protected
- his home and fireside by summary justice to the black brutes would be
- ferreted out and imprisoned for life. But Dwight's more gentle and saner
- reasoning, backed by his heroic conduct of the past, held sway. He was
- elected. He was not only elected, but, as the exponent of a new issue, the
- news of his election was telegraphed all over the South. He had written
- some articles for Wade Tingle's paper which had been widely copied and
- commented on, and his political course was watched by many conservative
- thinkers, who prophesied a remarkable career for him. He was a fearless
- man, with a new voice, who had taken a radical stand based on humanitarian
- and Christian principles. Family history was simply repeating itself. His
- ancestors had stood for the humane treatment of the slaves thrust upon
- them by circumstances, and he, in the same hereditary spirit, was standing
- for kind, just treatment of those ex-slaves and their descendants. No man
- who knew him would have accused him of believing in the social equality of
- the races any more than they would earlier have brought the same charge
- against his ancestors.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the night the returns were brought in and it was known that he had
- triumphed, &ldquo;the gang&rdquo; had arranged a big pine torch-light procession, and
- it passed with its blaze and din through every street of the town. Carson
- was at home when they lined themselves, in all their tooting of horns,
- beating of drums, and general clatter, along the front fence. The town
- brass-band did its best, and every sort of transparency that the inventive
- mind of Wade Tingle could devise was borne, as if by the smoke and heat of
- the torches themselves, above the long procession.
- </p>
- <p>
- Garner separated himself from the throng, and, clad in a new and costly
- suit of clothes, a tribute to his engagement to Miss Tarpley&mdash;a fine
- black frock-coat, broadcloth trousers, and a silk hat&mdash;he made his
- way into the house and up the stairs to the veranda above, where Carson
- and his mother and father were standing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The boys want a speech,&rdquo; he said to Carson, &ldquo;and you've got to give them
- the best in your shop. By George, they deserve it.&rdquo; Carson was demurring,
- but his mother pressed him to comply, and Garner, with his stateliest
- strut, his coat buttoned so tightly at the waist that, the tails spread
- out as if inviting him to sit down, and his hat held on a level with his
- left shoulder, advanced to the balustrade, and in his happiest mood
- introduced the man who, he declared, was the broadest-minded, the most
- conscientious and fearless candidate that ever trod the boards of a
- political platform. They were to receive the expression of gratitude and
- appreciation of a man whose name was written upon every heart present.
- Garner had the distinguished honor and pride to introduce his law partner
- and close friend, the Hon. Carson Dwight.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson never spoke better in his life. What he said was from a boyish
- heart overflowing with content and good-will. When he had finished Mrs.
- Dwight rose from her chair and proudly stood by his side. The cheers at
- her appearance rent the air. Then Garner pushed old Dwight forward from
- the shadow of a column where he was standing, and as the old gentleman
- awkwardly bowed his greeting, the cheers broke out afresh. Bob Smith, who
- was a sort of drum-major, with a ribbon-wound walking-cane for a baton,
- struck up, &ldquo;For he's a jolly good fellow,&rdquo; and as the crowd sang it to the
- spluttering and jangling accompaniment of the band the procession moved
- down the street.
- </p>
- <p>
- At this juncture Major Warren came up to offer his congratulations. Carson
- was standing a few minutes later talking to Garner. He was trying to hear
- what his partner was saying in his bubbling and enthusiastic way about his
- engagement to Miss Tarpley, but he found it difficult to listen, for the
- conversation between his mother and Major Warren had fixed his attention.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I tried to get her to come over to hear the speech, but she wouldn't,&rdquo;
- the Major was saying. &ldquo;I can't make her out here lately, Mrs. Dwight. She
- used to be so different in anything concerning Carson. She is now actually
- hiding behind the vines on the veranda.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps she is so much in love with Mr. Sanders that she&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's the very point,&rdquo; the Major broke in. &ldquo;She won't talk about
- Sanders, and she&mdash;well, really, I think the two have quit writing to
- each other.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps she&mdash;oh, do you think, Major, that&mdash;&rdquo; Carson heard no
- more; his father had come forward and was talking to Garner.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carson slipped away. He glided down the stairs and out at the door on the
- side next to Warren's and rapidly strode across the grass. Passing through
- the little gateway, he reached the veranda and the vines concealing the
- spot where the hammock was hanging. He saw no one at first and heard no
- sound. Then he called out: &ldquo;Helen!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; a timid, even startled voice from the vines answered, and
- Helen looked out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why didn't you come over with your father?&rdquo; Carson asked. &ldquo;He said he
- wanted you to, but you preferred to stay here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I <i>did</i> want to congratulate you,&rdquo; Helen, said, as he came up the
- steps and they stood face to face. &ldquo;I'm so happy over it, Carson, that
- really I was afraid I'd show it too much.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm glad you feel that way,&rdquo; he said, awkwardly. &ldquo;It was a hard fight,
- and I thought several times I was beaten.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did you ever touch that wasn't hard?&rdquo; she said, with a sweet,
- reminiscent laugh.
- </p>
- <p>
- They were silent for a moment and then he said: &ldquo;I'm not quite satisfied
- with your reason for not coming over with your father just now&mdash;really,
- you see, it is in a line with your actions for the last six weeks. Helen,
- you actually have avoided me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;On the contrary,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you have made it a point to stay away from
- me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he sighed, &ldquo;considering, you know, Sanders and his claims, I
- really thought I'd better keep my place.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; Helen exclaimed, and then she sank deeper into the vines.
- </p>
- <p>
- For one instant he stood trembling before her, and then he asked, boldly:
- &ldquo;Helen, tell me, are you engaged to him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She made no answer for a moment, and then in the moonlight he saw her
- flushed face against the vines and caught an almost startled glance from
- her wonderful eyes. She looked straight at him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I'm not, and I never have been,&rdquo; she said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You never have been?&rdquo; he repeated. &ldquo;Oh, Helen&mdash;&rdquo; But he went no
- further. For a moment he hung fire, then he said: &ldquo;Don't you care for him,
- Helen? Are you and I good enough friends for me to dare to ask that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I thought once that I might love him, in time&rdquo; she faltered; &ldquo;but when I
- came home and found&mdash;and found how deeply I had misunderstood and
- wronged you, I&mdash;I&mdash;&rdquo; She broke off, her face buried in the
- leaves of the vines.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Helen!&rdquo; he cried; &ldquo;do you realize what you are saying to me? You know
- my whole life is wrapped up in you. Don't raise my hopes to-night unless
- there is at least some chance of my winning. If there is one little
- chance, I'll struggle for it all the rest of my life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you remember,&rdquo; she asked, looking at him, one side of her flushed face
- pressed against the vines&mdash;&ldquo;do you remember the night you told me in
- the garden about that awful trouble of yours, and I promised to bear it
- with you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said, wonderingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; she went on, &ldquo;I went straight to my room after I left you and
- wrote to Mr. Sanders. I told him exactly how I felt. I simply couldn't
- keep up a correspondence with him after&mdash;Carson, I knew that night
- when I left you there in your gloom and sorrow that I loved you with all
- my soul and body. Oh, Carson, when I heard your voice in your glorious
- speech just now, and knew that you have loved me all this time, I was so
- glad that I cried. I'm the happiest, proudest girl on earth.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And as they stood hand in hand, too joyful for utterance, the glow of his
- triumph lit the sky and the din and clatter, the song and shouts of those
- who loved him were borne to him on the breeze.
- </p>
- <h3>
- THE END
- </h3>
- <div style="height: 6em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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