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Call of the Cumberlands, The
CHAPTER XXVIII
Charles Neville Buck
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       _ Callomb spent the night at the house of Spicer South. He met and
       talked with a number of the kinsmen, and, if he read in the eyes of
       some of them a smoldering and unforgiving remembrance of his unkept
       pledge, at least they repressed all expression of censure.
       With Spicer South and Samson, the Captain talked long into the night.
       He made many jottings in a notebook. He, with Samson abetting him,
       pointed out to the older and more stubborn man the necessity of a new
       regime in the mountains, under which the individual could walk in
       greater personal safety. As for the younger South, the officer felt,
       when he rode away the next morning, that he had discovered the one man
       who combined with the courage and honesty that many of his clansmen
       shared the mental equipment and local influence to prove a constructive
       leader.
       When he returned to the Bluegrass, he meant to have a long and
       unofficial talk with his relative, the Governor.
       He rode back to the ridge with a strong bodyguard. Upon this Samson
       had insisted. He had learned of Callomb's hasty and unwise denunciation
       of Smithers, and he knew that Smithers had lost no time in relating it
       to his masters. Callomb would be safe enough in Hollman country,
       because the faction which had called for troops could not afford to let
       him be killed within their own precincts. But, if Callomb could be shot
       down in his uniform, under circumstances which seemed to bear the
       earmarks of South authorship, it would arouse in the State at large a
       tidal wave of resentment against the Souths, which they could never
       hope to stem. And so, lest one of Hollman's hired assassins should
       succeed in slipping across the ridge and waylaying him, Samson
       conducted him to the frontier of the ridge.
       On reaching Hixon, Callomb apologized to Judge Smithers for his recent
       outburst of temper. Now that he understood the hand that gentleman was
       playing, he wished to be strategic and in a position of seeming accord.
       He must match craft against craft. He did not intimate that he knew of
       Samson's letter, and rather encouraged the idea that he had been
       received on Misery with surly and grudging hospitality.
       Smithers, presuming that the Souths still burned with anger over the
       shooting of Tamarack, swallowed that bait, and was beguiled.
       The Grand Jury trooped each day to the court-house and transacted its
       business. The petty juries went and came, occupied with several minor
       homicide cases. The Captain, from a chair, which Judge Smithers had
       ordered placed beside him on the bench, was looking on and intently
       studying. One morning, Smithers confided to him that in a day or two
       more the Grand Jury would bring in a true bill against Samson South,
       charging him with murder. The officer did not show surprise. He merely
       nodded.
       "I suppose I'll be called on to go and get him?" "I'm afraid we'll
       have to ask you to do that." "What caused the change of heart? I
       thought Purvy's people didn't want it done." It was Callomb's first
       allusion, except for his apology, to their former altercation.
       For an instant only, Smithers was a little confused.
       "To be quite frank with you, Callomb," he said, "I got to thinking
       over the matter in the light of your own viewpoint, and, after due
       deliberation, I came to see that to the State at large it might bear
       the same appearance. So, I had the Grand Jury take the matter up. We
       must stamp out such lawlessness as Samson South stands for. He is the
       more dangerous because he has brains."
       Callomb nodded, but, at noon, he slipped out on a pretense of sight-
       seeing, and rode by a somewhat circuitous route to the ridge. At
       nightfall, he came to the house of the clan head.
       "South," he said to Samson, when he had led him aside, "they didn't
       want to hear what you had to tell the Grand Jury, but they are going
       ahead to indict you on manufactured evidence."
       Samson was for a moment thoughtful, then he nodded.
       "That's about what I was expecting."
       "Now," went on Callomb, "we understand each other. We are working for
       the same end, and, by God! I've had one experience in making arrests at
       the order of that Court. I don't want it to happen again."
       "I suppose," said Samson, "you know that while I am entirely willing
       to face any fair court of justice, I don't propose to walk into a
       packed jury, whose only object is to get me where I can be made way
       with. Callomb, I hope we won't have to fight each other. What do you
       suggest?"
       "If the Court orders the militia to make an arrest, the militia has no
       option. In the long run, resistance would only alienate the sympathy of
       the world at large. There is just one thing to be done, South. It's a
       thing I don't like to suggest, and a thing which, if we were not
       fighting the devil with fire, it would be traitorous for me to
       suggest." He paused, then added emphatically: "When my detail arrives
       here, which will probably be in three or four days, you must not be
       here. You must not be in any place where we can find you."
       For a little while, Samson looked at the other man with a slow smile
       of amusement, but soon it died, and his face grew hard and determined.
       "I'm obliged to you, Callomb," he said, seriously. "It was more than I
       had the right to expect--this warning. I understand the cost of giving
       it. But it's no use. I can't cut and run. No, by God, you wouldn't do
       it! You can't ask me to do it."
       "By God, you can and will!" Callomb spoke with determination. "This
       isn't a time for quibbling. You've got work to do. We both have work to
       do. We can't stand on a matter of vainglorious pride, and let big
       issues of humanity go to pot. We haven't the right to spend men's lives
       in fighting each other, when we are the only two men in this
       entanglement who are in perfect accord--and honest."
       The mountaineer spent some minutes in silent self-debate. The working
       of his face under the play of alternating doubt, resolution, hatred and
       insurgency, told the militiaman what a struggle was progressing. At
       last, Samson's eyes cleared with an expression of discovered solution.
       "All right, Callomb," he said, briefly, "you won't find me!" He
       smiled, as he added: "Make as thorough a search as your duty demands.
       It needn't be perfunctory or superficial. Every South cabin will stand
       open to you. I shall be extremely busy, to ends which you will approve.
       I can't tell you what I shall be doing, because to do that, I should
       have to tell where I mean to be."
       In two days, the Grand Jury, with much secrecy, returned a true bill,
       and a day later a considerable detachment of infantry started on a
       dusty hike up Misery. Furtive and inscrutable Hollman eyes along the
       way watched them from cabin-doors, and counted them. They meant also to
       count them coming back, and they did not expect the totals to tally.
       * * * * *
       Back of an iron spiked fence, and a dusty sunburned lawn, the barrack
       -like facades of the old Administration Building and Kentucky State
       Capitol frowned on the street and railroad track. About it, on two
       sides of the Kentucky River, sprawled the town of Frankfort; sleepy,
       more or less disheveled at the center, and stretching to shaded
       environs of Colonial houses set in lawns of rich bluegrass, amid the
       shade of forest trees. Circling the town in an embrace of quiet beauty
       rose the Kentucky River hills.
       Turning in to the gate of the State House enclosure, a man, who seemed
       to be an Easterner by the cut of his clothes, walked slowly up the
       brick walk, and passed around the fountain at the front of the Capitol.
       He smiled to himself as his wandering eyes caught the distant walls and
       roofs of the State Prison on the hillside. His steps carried him direct
       to the main entrance of the Administration Building, and, having paused
       a moment in the rotunda, he entered the Secretary's office of the
       Executive suite, and asked for an interview with the Governor. The
       Secretary, whose duties were in part playing Cerberus at that
       threshold, made his customary swift, though unobtrusive, survey of the
       applicant for audience, and saw nothing to excite suspicion.
       "Have you an appointment?" he asked.
       The visitor shook his head. Scribbling a brief note on a slip of
       paper, he enclosed it in an envelope and handed it to his questioner.
       "You must pardon my seeming mysteriousness," he said, "but, if you
       will let me send in that note, I think the Governor will see me."
       Once more the Secretary studied his man with a slightly puzzled air,
       then nodded and went through the door that gave admission to the
       Executive's office.
       His Excellency opened the envelope, and his face showed an expression
       of surprise. He raised his brows questioningly.
       "Rough-looking sort?" he inquired. "Mountaineer?"
       "No, sir. New Yorker would be my guess. Is there anything suspicious?"
       "I guess not." The Governor laughed. "Rather extraordinary note, but
       send him in."
       Through his eastern window, the Governor gazed off across the hills of
       South Frankfort, to the ribbon of river that came down from the
       troublesome hills. Then, hearing a movement at his back, he turned, and
       his eyes took in a well-dressed figure with confidence-inspiring
       features.
       He picked up the slip from his desk, and, for a moment, stood
       comparing the name and the message with the man who had sent them in.
       There seemed to be in his mind some irreconcilable contradiction
       between the two. With a slightly frowning seriousness, the Executive
       suggested:
       "This note says that you are Samson South, and that you want to see me
       with reference to a pardon. Whose pardon is it, Mr. South?"
       "My own, sir."
       The Governor raised his brows, slightly.
       "Your pardon for what? The newspapers do not even report that you have
       yet been indicted." He shaded the word "yet" with a slight emphasis.
       "I think I have been indicted within the past day or two. I'm not sure
       myself."
       The Governor continued to stare. The impression he had formed of the
       "Wildcat" from press dispatches was warring with the pleasing personal
       presence of this visitor. Then, his forehead wrinkled under his black
       hair, and his lips drew themselves sternly.
       "You have come to me too soon, sir," he said curtly. "The pardoning
       power is a thing to be most cautiously used at all times, and certainly
       never until the courts have acted. A case not yet adjudicated cannot
       address itself to executive clemency."
       Samson nodded.
       "Quite true," he admitted. "If I announced that I had come on the
       matter of a pardon, it was largely that I had to state some business
       and that seemed the briefest way of putting it."
       "Then, there is something else?"
       "Yes. If it were only a plea for clemency, I should expect the matter
       to be chiefly important to myself. In point of fact, I hope to make it
       equally interesting to you. Whether you give me a pardon in a fashion
       which violates all precedent, or whether I surrender myself, and go
       back to a trial which will be merely a form of assassination, rests
       entirely with you, sir. You will not find me insistent."
       "If," said the Governor, with a trace of warning in his voice, "your
       preamble is simply a device to pique my interest with its unheard-of
       novelty, I may as well confess that so far it has succeeded."
       "In that case, sir," responded Samson, gravely, "I have scored a
       point. If, when I am through, you find that I have been employing a
       subterfuge, I, fancy a touch of that bell under your finger will give
       you the means of summoning an officer. I am ready to turn myself over."
       Then, Samson launched into the story of his desires and the details of
       conditions which outside influences had been powerless to remedy--
       because they were outside influences. Some man of sufficient vigor and
       comprehension, acting from the center of disturbance, must be armed
       with the power to undertake the housecleaning, and for a while must do
       work that would not be pretty. As far as he was personally concerned, a
       pardon after trial would be a matter of purely academic interest. He
       could not expect to survive a trial. He was at present able to hold the
       Souths in leash. If the Governor was not of that mind, he was now ready
       to surrender himself, and permit matters to take their course.
       "And now, Mr. South?" suggested the Governor, after a half-hour of
       absorbed listening. "There is one point you have overlooked. Since in
       the end the whole thing comes back to the exercise of the pardoning
       power, it is after all the crux of the situation. You may be able to
       render such services as those for which you volunteer. Let us for the
       moment assume that to be true. You have not yet told me a very
       important thing. Did you or did you not kill Purvy and Hollis?"
       "I killed Hollis," said Samson, as though he were answering a question
       as to the time of day, "and I did not kill Purvy."
       "Kindly," suggested the Governor, "give me the full particulars of
       that affair."
       The two were still closeted, when a second visitor called, and was
       told that his Excellency could not be disturbed. The second visitor,
       however, was so insistent that the secretary finally consented to take
       in the card. After a glance at it, his chief ordered admission.
       The door opened, and Captain Callomb entered.
       He was now in civilian clothes, with portentous news written on his
       face. He paused in annoyance at the sight of a second figure standing
       with back turned at the window. Then Samson wheeled, and the two men
       recognized each other. They had met before only when one was in olive
       drab; the other in jeans and butternut. At recognition, Callomb's face
       fell, and grew troubled.
       "You here, South!" he exclaimed. "I thought you promised me that I
       shouldn't find you. God knows I didn't want to meet you."
       "Nor I you," Samson spoke slowly. "I supposed you'd be raking the
       hills."
       Neither of them was for the moment paying the least attention to the
       Governor, who stood quietly looking on.
       "I sent Merriwether out there," explained Callomb, impatiently. "I
       wanted to come here before it was too late. God knows, South, I
       wouldn't have had this meeting occur for anything under heaven. It
       leaves me no choice. You are indicted on two counts, each charging you
       with murder." The officer took a step toward the center of the room.
       His face was weary, and his eyes wore the deep disgust and fatigue that
       come from the necessity of performing a hard duty.
       "You are under arrest," he added quietly, but his composure broke as
       he stormed. "Now, by God, I've got to take you back and let them murder
       you, and you're the one man who might have been useful to the State." _