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Call of the Cumberlands, The
CHAPTER XXVII
Charles Neville Buck
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       _ The Honorable Asa Smithers was not the regular Judge of the Circuit
       which numbered Hixon among its county-seats. The elected incumbent was
       ill, and Smithers had been named as his pro-tem. successor. Callomb
       climbed to the second story of the frame bank building, and pounded
       loudly on a door, which bore the boldly typed shingle:
       "ASA SMITHERS, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW."
       The temporary Judge admitted a visitor in uniform, whose countenance
       was stormy with indignant protest. The Judge himself was placid and
       smiling. The lawyer, who was for the time being exalted to the bench,
       hoped to ascend it more permanently by the votes of the Hollman
       faction, since only Hollman votes were counted. He was a young man of
       powerful physique with a face ruggedly strong and honest.
       It was such an honest and fearless face that it was extremely valuable
       to its owner in concealing a crookedness as resourceful as that of a
       fox, and a moral cowardice which made him a spineless tool in evil
       hands. A shock of tumbled red hair over a fighting face added to the
       appearance of combative strength. The Honorable Asa was conventionally
       dressed, and his linen was white, but his collar was innocent of a
       necktie. Callomb stood for a moment inside the door, and, when he
       spoke, it was to demand crisply:
       "Well, what are you going to do about it?"
       "About what, Captain?" inquired the other, mildly.
       "Is it possible you haven't heard? Since yesterday noon, two more
       murders have been added to the holocaust. You represent the courts of
       law. I represent the military arm of the State. Are we going to stand
       by and see this go on?"
       The Judge shook his head, and his visage was sternly thoughtful and
       hypocritical. He did not mention that he had just come from conference
       with the Hollman leaders. He did not explain that the venire he had
       drawn from the jury drum had borne a singularly solid Hollman compaction.
       "Until the Grand Jury acts, I don't see that we can take any steps."
       "And," stormed Captain Callomb, "the Grand Jury will, like former
       Grand Juries, lie down in terror and inactivity. Either there are no
       courageous men in your county, or these panels are selected to avoid
       including them."
       Judge Smithers' face darkened. If he was a moral coward, he was at
       least a coward crouching behind a seeming of fearlessness.
       "Captain," he said, coolly, but with a dangerous hint of warning, "I
       don't see that your duties include contempt of court."
       "No!" Callomb was now thoroughly angered, and his voice rose. "I am
       sent down here subject to your orders, and it seems you are also
       subject to orders. Here are two murders in a day, capping a climax of
       twenty years of bloodshed. You have information as to the arrival of a
       man known as a desperado with a grudge against the two dead men, yet
       you know of no steps to take. Give me the word, and I'll go out and
       bring that man, and any others you name, to your bar of justice--if it
       is a bar of justice! For God's sake, give me something else to do than
       to bring in prisoners to be shot down in cold blood."
       The Judge sat balancing a pencil on his extended forefinger as though
       it were a scale of justice.
       "You have been heated in your language, sir," he said, sternly, "but
       it is a heat arising from an indignation which I share. Consequently, I
       pass it over. I cannot instruct you to arrest Samson South before the
       Grand Jury has accused him. The law does not contemplate hasty or
       unadvised action. All men are innocent until proven guilty. If the
       Grand Jury wants South, I'll instruct you to go and get him. Until
       then, you may leave my part of the work to me."
       His Honor rose from his chair.
       "You can at least give this Grand Jury such instructions on murder as
       will point out their duty. You can assure them that the militia will
       protect them. Through your prosecutor, you can bring evidence to their
       attention, you----"
       "If you will excuse me," interrupted His Honor, drily, "I'll judge of
       how I am to charge my Grand Jury. I have been in communication with the
       family of Mr. Purvy, and it is not their wish at the present time to
       bring this case before the panel."
       Callomb laughed ironically.
       "No, I could have told you that before you conferred with them. I
       could have told you that they prefer to be their own courts and
       executioners, except where they need you. They also preferred to have
       me get a man they couldn't take themselves, and then to assassinate him
       in my hands. Who in the hell do you work for, Judge-for-the-moment
       Smithers? Are you holding a job under the State of Kentucky, or under
       the Hollman faction of this feud? I am instructed to take my orders
       from you. Will you kindly tell me my master's real name?"
       Smithers turned pale with anger, his fighting face grew as truculent
       as a bulldog's, while Callomb stood glaring back at him like a second
       bulldog, but the Judge knew that he was being honestly and fearlessly
       accused. He merely pointed to the door. The Captain turned on his heel,
       and stalked out of the place, and the Judge came down the steps, and
       crossed the street to the court-house. Five minutes later, he turned to
       the shirt-sleeved man who was leaning on the bench, and said in his
       most judicial voice:
       "Mr. Sheriff, open court."
       The next day the mail-carrier brought in a note for the temporary
       Judge. His Honor read it at recess, and hastened across to Hollman's
       Mammoth Department Store. There, in council with his masters, he asked
       instructions. This was the note:
       "THE HON. ASA SMITHERS.
       "SIR: I arrived in this county yesterday, and am prepared, if called
       as a witness, to give to the Grand Jury full and true particulars of
       the murder of Jesse Purvy and the killing of Aaron Hollis. I am willing
       to come under escort of my own kinsmen, or of the militiamen, as the
       Court may advise.
       "The requirement of any bodyguard, I deplore, but in meeting my legal
       obligations, I do not regard it as necessary or proper to walk into a
       trap.
       "Respectfully, SAMSON SOUTH."
       Smithers looked perplexedly at Judge Hollman.
       "Shall I have him come?" he inquired.
       Hollman threw the letter down on his desk with a burst of blasphemy:
       "Have him come?" he echoed. "Hell and damnation, no! What do we want
       him to come here and spill the milk for? When we get ready, we'll
       indict him. Then, let your damned soldiers go after him--as a criminal,
       not a witness. After that, we'll continue this case until these
       outsiders go away, and we can operate to suit ourselves. We don't fall
       for Samson South's tricks. No, sir; you never got that letter! It
       miscarried. Do you hear? You never got it."
       Smithers nodded grudging acquiescence. Most men would rather be
       independent officials than collar-wearers.
       Out on Misery Samson South had gladdened the soul of his uncle with
       his return. The old man was mending, and, for a long time, the two had
       talked. The failing head of the clan looked vainly for signs of
       degeneration in his nephew, and, failing to find them, was happy.
       "Hev ye decided, Samson," he inquired, "thet ye was right in yer
       notion 'bout goin' away?"
       Samson sat reflectively for a while, then replied:
       "We were both right, Uncle Spicer--and both wrong. This is my place,
       but if I'm to take up the leadership it must be in a different fashion.
       Changes are coming. We can't any longer stand still."
       Spicer South lighted his pipe. He, too, in these last years, had seen
       in the distance the crest of the oncoming wave. He, too, recognized
       that, from within or without, there must be a regeneration. He did not
       welcome it, but, if it must come, he preferred that it come not at the
       hands of conquerors, but under the leadership of his own blood.
       "I reckon there's right smart truth to that," he acknowledged. "I've
       been studyin' 'bout hit consid'able myself of late. Thar's been sev'ral
       fellers through the country talkin' coal an' timber an' railroads--an'
       sich like."
       Sally went to mill that Saturday, and with her rode Samson. There,
       besides Wile McCager, he met Caleb Wiley and several others. At first,
       they received him sceptically, but they knew of the visit to Purvy's
       store, and they were willing to admit that in part at least he had
       erased the blot from his escutcheon. Then, too, except for cropped hair
       and a white skin, he had come back as he had gone, in homespun and
       hickory. There was nothing highfalutin in his manners. In short, the
       impression was good.
       "I reckon now that ye're back, Samson," suggested McCager, "an' seein'
       how yore Uncle Spicer is gettin' along all right, I'll jest let the two
       of ye run things. I've done had enough." It was a simple fashion of
       resigning a regency, but effectual.
       Old Caleb, however, still insurgent and unconvinced, brought in a
       minority report.
       "We wants fightin' men," he grumbled, with the senile reiteration of
       his age, as he spat tobacco and beat a rat-tat on the mill floor with
       his long hickory staff. "We don't want no deserters."
       "Samson ain't a deserter," defended Sally. "There isn't one of you fit
       to tie his shoes." Sally and old Spicer South alone knew of her lover's
       letter to the Circuit Judge, and they were pledged to secrecy.
       "Never mind, Sally!" It was Samson himself who answered her. "I didn't
       come back because I care what men like old Caleb think. I came back
       because they needed me. The proof of a fighting man is his fighting, I
       reckon. I'm willing to let 'em judge me by what I'm going to do."
       So, Samson slipped back, tentatively, at least, into his place as clan
       head, though for a time he found it a post without action. After the
       fierce outburst of bloodshed, quiet had settled, and it was tacitly
       understood that, unless the Hollman forces had some coup in mind which
       they were secreting, this peace would last until the soldiers were
       withdrawn.
       "When the world's a-lookin'," commented Judge Hollman, "hit's a right
       good idea to crawl under a log--an' lay still."
       Purvy had been too famous a feudist to pass unsung. Reporters came as
       far as Hixon, gathered there such news as the Hollmans chose to give
       them, and went back to write lurid stories and description, from
       hearsay, of the stockaded seat of tragedy. Nor did they overlook the
       dramatic coincidence of the return of "Wildcat" Samson South from
       civilization to savagery. They made no accusation, but they pointed an
       inference and a moral--as they thought. It was a sermon on the triumph
       of heredity over the advantages of environment. Adrienne read some of
       these saffron misrepresentations, and they distressed her.
       * * * * *
       Meanwhile, it came insistently to the ears of Captain Callomb that
       some plan was on foot, the intricacies of which he could not fathom, to
       manufacture a case against a number of the Souths, quite apart from
       their actual guilt, or likelihood of guilt. Once more, he would be
       called upon to go out and drag in men too well fortified to be taken by
       the posses and deputies of the Hollman civil machinery. At this news,
       he chafed bitterly, and, still rankling with a sense of shame at the
       loss of his first prisoner, he formed a plan of his own, which he
       revealed over his pipe to his First Lieutenant.
       "There's a nigger in the woodpile, Merriwether," he said. "We are
       simply being used to do the dirty work up here, and I'm going to do a
       little probing of my own. I guess I'll turn the company over to you for
       a day or two."
       "What idiocy are you contemplating now?" inquired the second in command.
       "I'm going to ride over on Misery, and hear what the other side has to
       say. I've usually noticed that one side of any story is pretty good
       until the other's told."
       "You mean you are going to go over there where the Souths are
       intrenched, where every road is guarded?" The Lieutenant spoke
       wrathfully and with violence. "Don't be an ass, Callomb. You went over
       there once before, and took a man away--and he's dead. You owe them a
       life, and they collect their dues. You will be supported by no warrant
       of arrest, and can't take a sufficient detail to protect you."
       "No," said Callomb, quietly; "I go on my own responsibility and I go
       by myself."
       "And," stormed Merriwether, "you'll never come back."
       "I think," smiled Callomb, "I'll get back. I owe an old man over there
       an apology, and I want to see this desperado at first hand."
       "It's sheer madness. I ought to take you down to this infernal crook
       of a Judge, and have you committed to a strait-jacket."
       "If," said Callomb, "you are content to play the cats-paw to a bunch
       of assassins, I'm not. The mail-rider went out this morning, and he
       carried a letter to old Spicer South. I told him that I was coming
       unescorted and unarmed, and that my object was to talk with him. I
       asked him to give me a safe-conduct, at least until I reached his
       house, and stated my case. I treated him like an officer and a
       gentleman, and, unless I'm a poor judge of men, he's going to treat me
       that way."
       The Lieutenant sought vainly to dissuade Callomb, but the next day the
       Captain rode forth, unaccompanied. Curious stares followed him, and
       Judge Smithers turned narrowing and unpleasant eyes after him, but at
       the point where the ridge separated the territory of the Hollmans from
       that of the Souths, he saw waiting in the road a mounted figure,
       sitting his horse straight, and clad in the rough habiliments of the
       mountaineer.
       As Callomb rode up he saluted, and the mounted figure with perfect
       gravity and correctness returned that salute as one officer to another.
       The Captain was surprised. Where had this mountaineer with the steady
       eyes and the clean-cut jaw learned the niceties of military etiquette?
       "I am Captain Callomb of F Company," said the officer. "I'm riding
       over to Spicer South's house. Did you come to meet me?"
       "To meet and guide you," replied a pleasant voice. "My name is Samson
       South."
       The militiaman stared. This man whose countenance was calmly
       thoughtful scarcely comported with the descriptions he had heard of the
       "Wildcat of the Mountains"; the man who had come home straight as a
       storm-petrel at the first note of tempest, and marked his coming with
       double murder. Callomb had been too busy to read newspapers of late. He
       had heard only that Samson had "been away."
       While he wondered, Samson went on:
       "I'm glad you came. If it had been possible I would have come to you."
       As he told of the letter he had written the Judge, volunteering to
       present himself as a witness, the officer's wonder grew.
       "They said that you had been away," suggested Callomb. "If it's not an
       impertinent question, what part of the mountains have you been visiting?"
       Samson laughed.
       "Not any part of the mountains," he said. "I've been living chiefly in
       New York--and for a time in Paris."
       Callomb drew his horse to a dead halt.
       "In the name of God," he incredulously asked, "what manner of man are
       you?"
       "I hope," came the instant reply, "it may be summed up by saying that
       I'm exactly the opposite of the man you've had described for you back
       there at Hixon."
       "I knew it," exclaimed the soldier, "I knew that I was being fed on
       lies! That's why I came. I wanted to get the straight of it, and I felt
       that the solution lay over here."
       They rode the rest of the way in deep conversation. Samson outlined
       his ambitions for his people. He told, too, of the scene that had been
       enacted at Purvy's store. Callomb listened with absorption, feeling
       that the narrative bore axiomatic truth on its face.
       At last he inquired:
       "Did you succeed up there--as a painter?"
       "That's a long road," Samson told him, "but I think I had a fair
       start. I was getting commissions when I left."
       "Then, I am to understand"--the officer met the steady gray eyes and
       put the question like a cross-examiner bullying a witness--"I am to
       understand that you deliberately put behind you a career to come down
       here and herd these fence-jumping sheep?"
       "Hardly that," deprecated the head of the Souths. "They sent for me--
       that's all. Of course, I had to come."
       "Why?"
       "Because they had sent. They are my people."
       The officer leaned in his saddle.
       "South," he said, "would you mind shaking hands with me? Some day, I
       want to brag about it to my grandchildren." _