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Call of the Cumberlands, The
CHAPTER XVI
Charles Neville Buck
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       _ The girl stepped forward, and held the weapon finger on trigger, close
       to her cousin's chest.
       "Ye lies, Tam'rack," she said, in a very low and steady voice--a voice
       that could not be mistaken, a voice relentlessly resolute and purposeful.
       "Ye lies like ye always lies. Yore heart's black an' dirty. Ye're a
       murderer an' a coward. Samson's a-comin' back ter me.... I'm a-goin'
       ter be Samson's wife." The tensity of her earnestness might have told a
       subtler psychologist than Tamarack that she was endeavoring to convince
       herself. "He hain't never run away. He's hyar in this room right now."
       The mountaineer started, and cast an apprehensive glance about him. The
       girl laughed, with a deeply bitter note, then she went on:
       "Oh, you can't see him, Tam'rack. Ye mout hunt all night, but wharever
       I be, Samson's thar, too. I hain't nothin' but a part of Samson--an'
       I'm mighty nigh ter killin' ye this minute--he'd do hit, I reckon."
       "Come on now, Sally," urged the man, ingratiatingly. He was thoroughly
       cowed, seeking compromise. A fool woman with a gun: every one knew it
       was a dangerous combination, and, except for himself, no South had ever
       been a coward. He knew a certain glitter in their eyes. He knew it was
       apt to presage death, and this girl, trembling in her knees but holding
       that muzzle against his chest so unwaveringly, as steady as granite,
       had it in her pupils. Her voice held an inexorable monotony suggestive
       of tolling bells. She was not the Sally he had known before, but a new
       Sally, acting under a quiet sort of exaltation, capable of anything. He
       knew that, should she shoot him dead there in her house, no man who
       knew them both would blame her. His life depended on strategy. "Come
       on, Sally," he whined, as his face grew ashen. "I didn't aim ter make
       ye mad. I jest lost my head, an' made love ter ye. Hit hain't no sin
       ter kiss a feller's own cousin." He was edging toward the door.
       "Stand where ye're at," ordered Sally, in a voice of utter loathing,
       and he halted. "Hit wasn't jest kissin' me--" She broke off, and
       shuddered again. "I said thet Samson was in this here room. Ef ye moves
       twell I tells ye ye kin, ye'll hear him speak ter ye, an' ef he speaks
       ye won't never hear nothin' more. This here is Samson's gun. I reckon
       he'll tell me ter pull the trigger terectly!"
       "Fer God's sake, Sally!" implored the braggart. "Fer God's sake, look
       over what I done. I knows ye're Samson's gal. I----"
       "Shet up!" she said, quietly; and his voice died instantly.
       "Yes, I'm Samson's gal, an' I hain't a-goin' ter kill ye this time,
       Tam'rack, unlessen ye makes me do hit. But, ef ever ye crosses that
       stile out thar ag'in, so help me God, this gun air goin' ter shoot."
       Tamarack licked his lips. They had grown dry. He had groveled before a
       girl--but he was to be spared. That was the essential thing.
       "I promises," he said, and turned, much sobered, to the door.
       Sally stood for a while, listening until she heard the slopping hoof-
       beats of his retreat, then she dropped limply into the shaky shuck-
       bottomed chair, and sat staring straight ahead, with a dazed and almost
       mortal hurt in her eyes. It was a trance-like attitude, and the gesture
       with which she several times wiped her calico sleeve across the lips
       his kisses had defiled, seemed subconscious. At last, she spoke aloud,
       but in a far-away voice, shaking her head miserably.
       "I reckon Tam'rack's right," she said. "Samson won't hardly come back.
       Why would he come back?"
       * * * * *
       The normal human mind is a reservoir, which fills at a rate of speed
       regulated by the number and calibre of its feed pipes. Samson's mind
       had long been almost empty, and now from so many sources the waters of
       new things were rushing in upon it that under their pressure it must
       fill fast, or give away.
       He was saved from hopeless complications of thought by a sanity which
       was willing to assimilate without too much effort to analyze. That
       belonged to the future. Just now, all was marvelous. What miracles
       around him were wrought out of golden virtue, and what out of brazen
       vice, did not as yet concern him. New worlds are not long new worlds.
       The boy from Misery was presently less bizarre to the eye than many of
       the unkempt bohemians he met in the life of the studios: men who
       quarreled garrulously over the end and aim of Art, which they spelled
       with a capital A--and, for the most part, knew nothing of. He retained,
       except within a small circle of intimates, a silence that passed for
       taciturnity, and a solemnity of visage that was often construed into
       surly egotism.
       He still wore his hair long, and, though his conversation gradually
       sloughed off much of its idiom and vulgarism, enough of the mountaineer
       stood out to lend to his personality a savor of the crudely picturesque.
       Meanwhile, he drew and read and studied and walked and every day's
       advancement was a forced march. The things that he drew began by
       degrees to resolve themselves into some faint similitude to the things
       from which he drew them. The stick of charcoal no longer insisted on
       leaving in the wake of its stroke smears like soot. It began to be
       governable. But it was the fact that Samson saw things as they were and
       insisted on trying to draw them just as he saw them, which best pleased
       his sponsor. During those initial months, except for his long tramps,
       occupied with thoughts of the hills and the Widow Miller's cabin, his
       life lay between Lescott's studio and the cheap lodgings which he had
       taken near by. Sometimes while he was bending toward his easel there
       would rise before his imagination the dark unshaven countenance of Jim
       Asberry. At such moments, he would lay down the charcoal, and his eyes
       would cloud into implacable hatred. "I hain't fergot ye, Pap," he would
       mutter, with the fervor of a renewed vow. With the speed of a clock's
       minute hand, too gradual to be seen by the eye, yet so fast that it
       soon circles the dial, changes were being wrought in the raw material
       called Samson South. One thing did not change. In every crowd, he found
       himself searching hungrily for the face of Sally, which he knew he
       could not find. Always, there was the unadmitted, yet haunting, sense
       of his own rawness. For life was taking off his rough edges--and there
       were many--and life went about the process in workmanlike fashion, with
       sandpaper. The process was not enjoyable, and, though the man's soul
       was made fitter, it was also rubbed raw. Lescott, tremendously
       interested in his experiment, began to fear that the boy's too great
       somberness of disposition would defeat the very earnestness from which
       it sprang. So, one morning, the landscape-maker went to the telephone,
       and called for the number of a friend whom he rightly believed to be
       the wisest man, and the greatest humorist, in New York. The call
       brought no response, and the painter dried his brushes, and turned up
       Fifth Avenue to an apartment hotel in a cross street, where on a
       certain door he rapped with all the elaborate formula of a secret code.
       Very cautiously, the door opened, and revealed a stout man with a
       humorous, clean-shaven face. On a table lay a scattered sheaf of rough
       and yellow paper, penciled over in a cramped and interlined hand. The
       stout man's thinning hair was rumpled over a perspiring forehead.
       Across the carpet was a worn stretch that bespoke much midnight pacing.
       The signs were those of authorship.
       "Why didn't you answer your 'phone?" smiled Lescott, though he knew.
       The stout man shrugged his shoulders and pointed to the wall, where
       the disconnected receiver was hanging down. "Necessary precaution
       against creditors," he explained. "I am out--except to you."
       "Busy?" interrogated Lescott. "You seem to have a manuscript in the
       making."
       "No." The stout man's face clouded with black foreboding. "I shall
       never write another story. I'm played out." He turned, and restively
       paced the worn carpet, pausing at the window for a despondent glance
       across the roofs and chimney pots of the city. Lescott, with the
       privilege of intimacy, filled his pipe from the writer's tobacco jar.
       "I want your help. I want you to meet a friend of mine, and take him
       under your wing in a fashion. He needs you."
       The stout man's face again clouded. A few years ago, he had been
       peddling his manuscripts with the heart-sickness of unsuccessful middle
       age. To-day, men coupled his name with those of Kipling and De
       Maupassant. One of his antipathies was meeting people who sought to
       lionize him. Lescott read the expression, and, before his host had time
       to object, swept into his recital.
       At the end he summarized:
       "The artist is much like the setter-pup. If it's in him, it's as
       instinctive as a dog's nose. But to become efficient he must go a-field
       with a steady veteran of his own breed."
       "I know!" The great man, who was also the simple man, smiled
       reminiscently. "They tried to teach me to herd sheep when my nose was
       itching for bird country. Bring on your man; I want to know him."
       Samson was told nothing of the benevolent conspiracy, but one evening
       shortly later he found himself sitting at a cafe table with his sponsor
       and a stout man, almost as silent as himself. The stout man responded
       with something like churlish taciturnity to the half-dozen men and
       women who came over with flatteries. But later, when the trio was left
       alone, his face brightened, and he turned to the boy from Misery.
       "Does Billy Conrad still keep store at Stagbone?"
       Samson started, and his gaze fell in amazement. At the mention of the
       name, he saw a cross-roads store, with rough mules hitched to fence
       palings. It was a picture of home, and here was a man who had been
       there! With glowing eyes, the boy dropped unconsciously back into the
       vernacular of the hills.
       "Hev ye been thar, stranger?"
       The writer nodded, and sipped his whiskey.
       "Not for some years, though," he confessed, as he drifted into
       reminiscence, which to Samson was like water to a parched throat.
       When they left the cafe, the boy felt as though he were taking leave of
       an old and tried friend. By homely methods, this unerring diagnostician
       of the human soul had been reading him, liking him, and making him feel
       a heart-warming sympathy. The man who shrunk from lion-hunters, and who
       could return the churl's answer to the advances of sycophant and
       flatterer, enthusiastically poured out for the ungainly mountain boy all
       the rare quality and bouquet of his seasoned personal charm. It was a
       vintage distilled from experience and humanity. It had met the ancient
       requirement for the mellowing and perfecting of good Madeira, that it
       shall "voyage twice around the world's circumference," and it was a
       thing reserved for his friends.
       "It's funny," commented the boy, when he and Lescott were alone, "that
       he's been to Stagbone."
       "My dear Samson," Lescott assured him, "if you had spoken of Tucson,
       Arizona, or Caracas or Saskatchewan, it would have been the same. He
       knows them all."
       It was not until much later that Samson realized how these two really
       great men had adopted him as their "little brother," that he might have
       their shoulder-touch to march by. And it was without his realization,
       too, that they laid upon him the imprint of their own characters and
       philosophy. One night at Tonelli's table-d'hote place, the latest
       diners were beginning to drift out into Tenth Street. The faded
       soprano, who had in better days sung before a King, was wearying as she
       reeled out ragtime with a strong Neapolitan accent. Samson had been
       talking to the short-story writer about his ambitions and his hatreds.
       He feared he was drifting away from his destiny--and that he would in
       the end become too softened. The writer leaned across the table, and
       smiled.
       "Fighting is all right," he said; "but a man should not be just the
       fighter." He mused a moment in silence, then quoted a scrap of verse:
       "'Test of the man, if his worth be,
       "'In accord with the ultimate plan,
       "'That he be not, to his marring,
       "'Always and utterly man;
       "'That he bring out of the battle
       "'Fitter and undefiled,
       "'To woman the heart of a woman,
       "'To children the heart of a child.'"
       Samson South offered no criticism. He had known life from the stoic's
       view-point. He had heard the seductive call of artistic yearnings. Now,
       it dawned on him in an intensely personal fashion, as it had begun
       already to dawn in theory, that the warrior and the artist may meet on
       common and compatible ground, where the fighting spirit is touched and
       knighted with the gentleness of chivalry. He seemed to be looking from
       a new and higher plane, from which he could see a mellow softness on
       angles that had hitherto been only stern and unrelieved. _