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Call of the Cumberlands, The
CHAPTER V
Charles Neville Buck
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       _ While Spicer South and his cousins had been sustaining themselves or
       building up competences by tilling their soil, the leaders of the other
       faction were basing larger fortunes on the profits of merchandise and
       trade. So, although Spicer South could neither read nor write, his
       chief enemy, Micah Hollman, was to outward seeming an urbane and fairly
       equipped man of affairs. Judged by their heads, the clansmen were
       rougher and more illiterate on Misery, and in closer touch with
       civilization on Crippleshin. A deeper scrutiny showed this seeming to
       be one of the strange anomalies of the mountains.
       Micah Hollman had established himself at Hixon, that shack town which
       had passed of late years from feudal county seat to the section's one
       point of contact with the outside world; a town where the ancient and
       modern orders brushed shoulders; where the new was tolerated, but dared
       not become aggressive. Directly across the street from the court-house
       stood an ample frame building, on whose side wall was emblazoned the
       legend: "Hollman's Mammoth Department Store." That was the secret
       stronghold of Hollman power. He had always spoken deploringly of that
       spirit of lawlessness which had given the mountains a bad name. He
       himself, he declared, believed that the best assets of any community
       were tenets of peace and brotherhood. Any mountain man or foreigner who
       came to town was sure of a welcome from Judge Micah Hollman, who added
       to his title of storekeeper that of magistrate.
       As the years went on, the proprietor of the "Mammoth Department Store"
       found that he had money to lend and, as a natural sequence, mortgages
       stored away in his strong box. To the cry of distress, he turned a
       sympathetic ear. His infectious smile and suave manner won him fame as
       "the best-hearted man in the mountains." Steadily and unostentatiously,
       his fortune fattened.
       When the railroad came to Hixon, it found in Judge Hollman a "public-
       spirited citizen." Incidentally, the timber that it hauled and the coal
       that its flat cars carried down to the Bluegrass went largely to his
       consignees. He had so astutely anticipated coming events that, when the
       first scouts of capital sought options, they found themselves
       constantly referred to Judge Hollman. No wheel, it seemed, could turn
       without his nod. It was natural that the genial storekeeper should
       become the big man of the community and inevitable that the one big man
       should become the dictator. His inherited place as leader of the
       Hollmans in the feud he had seemingly passed on as an obsolete
       prerogative.
       Yet, in business matters, he was found to drive a hard bargain, and
       men came to regard it the part of good policy to meet rather than
       combat his requirements. It was essential to his purposes that the
       officers of the law in his county should be in sympathy with him.
       Sympathy soon became abject subservience. When a South had opposed
       Jesse Purvy in the primary as candidate for High Sheriff, he was found
       one day lying on his face with a bullet-riddled body. It may have been
       a coincidence which pointed to Jim Asberry, the judge's nephew, as the
       assassin. At all events, the judge's nephew was a poor boy, and a
       charitable Grand Jury declined to indict him.
       In the course of five years, several South adherents, who had crossed
       Hollman's path, became victims of the laurel ambuscade. The theory of
       coincidence was strained. Slowly, the rumor grew and persistently
       spread, though no man would admit having fathered it, that before each
       of these executions star-chamber conferences had been held in the rooms
       above Micah Hollman's "Mammoth Department Store." It was said that
       these exclusive sessions were attended by Judge Hollman, Sheriff Purvy
       and certain other gentlemen selected by reason of their marksmanship.
       When one of these victims fell, John South had just returned from a law
       school "down below," wearing "fotched-on" clothing and thinking
       "fotched-on" thoughts. He had amazed the community by demanding the
       right to assist in probing and prosecuting the affair. He had then
       shocked the community into complete paralysis by requesting the Grand
       Jury to indict not alone the alleged assassin, but also his employers,
       whom he named as Judge Hollman and Sheriff Purvy. Then, he, too, fell
       under a bolt from the laurel.
       That was the first public accusation against the bland capitalist, and
       it carried its own prompt warning against repetition. The Judge's High
       Sheriff and chief ally retired from office, and went abroad only with a
       bodyguard. Jesse Purvy had built his store at a cross roads twenty-five
       miles from the railroad. Like Hollman, he had won a reputation for open
       -handed charity, and was liked--and hated. His friends were legion. His
       enemies were so numerous that he apprehended violence not only from the
       Souths, but also from others who nursed grudges in no way related to
       the line of feud cleavage. The Hollman-Purvy combination had retained
       enough of its old power to escape the law's retribution and to hold its
       dictatorship, but the efforts of John South had not been altogether
       bootless. He had ripped away two masks, and their erstwhile wearers
       could no longer hold their old semblance of law-abiding
       philanthropists. Jesse Purvy's home was the show place of the country
       side. To the traveler's eye, which had grown accustomed to hovel life
       and squalor, it offered a reminder of the richer Bluegrass. Its walls
       were weather-boarded and painted, and its roof two stories high.
       Commodious verandahs looked out over pleasant orchards, and in the same
       enclosure stood the two frame buildings of his store--for he, too,
       combined merchandise with baronial powers. But back of the place rose
       the mountainside, on which Purvy never looked without dread. Twice, its
       impenetrable thickets had spat at him. Twice, he had recovered from
       wounds that would have taken a less-charmed life. And in grisly
       reminder of the terror which clouded the peace of his days stood the
       eight-foot log stockade at the rear of the place which the proprietor
       had built to shield his daily journeys between house and store. But
       Jesse Purvy was not deluded by his escapes. He knew that he was "marked
       down." For years, he had seen men die by his own plotting, and he
       himself must in the end follow by a similar road. Rumor had it that he
       wore a shirt of mail, certain it is that he walked in the expectancy of
       death.
       "Why don't you leave the mountains?" strangers had asked; and to each
       of them Purvy had replied with a shrug of his shoulders and a short
       laugh: "This is where I belong."
       But the years of strain were telling on Jesse Purvy. The robust, full-
       blooded face was showing deep lines; his flesh was growing flaccid; his
       glance tinged with quick apprehension. He told his intimates that he
       realized "they'd get him," yet he sought to prolong his term of escape.
       The creek purled peacefully by the stile; the apple and peach trees
       blossomed and bore fruit at their appointed time, but the householder,
       when he walked between his back door and the back door of the store,
       hugged his stockade, and hurried his steps.
       Yesterday morning, Jesse Purvy had risen early as usual, and, after a
       satisfying breakfast, had gone to his store to arrange for the day's
       business. One or two of his henchmen, seeming loafers, but in reality a
       bodyguard, were lounging within call. A married daughter was chatting
       with her father while her young baby played among the barrels and
       cracker boxes.
       The daughter went to a rear window, and gazed up at the mountain. The
       cloudless skies were still in hiding behind a curtain of mist. The
       woman was idly watching the vanishing fog wraiths, and her father came
       over to her side. Then, the baby cried, and she stepped back. Purvy
       himself remained at the window. It was a thing he did not often do. It
       left him exposed, but the most cautiously guarded life has its moments
       of relaxed vigilance. He stood there possibly thirty seconds, then a
       sharp fusillade of clear reports barked out and was shattered by the
       hills into a long reverberation. With a hand clasped to his chest,
       Purvy turned, walked to the middle of the floor, and fell.
       The henchmen rushed to the open sash. They leaped out, and plunged up
       the mountain, tempting the assassin's fire, but the assassin was
       satisfied. The mountain was again as quiet as it had been at dawn. Its
       impenetrable mask of green was blank and unresponsive. Somewhere in the
       cool of the dewy treetops a squirrel barked. Here and there, the birds
       saluted the sparkle and freshness of June. Inside, at the middle of the
       store, Jesse Purvy shifted his head against his daughter's knee, and
       said, as one stating an expected event:
       "Well, they've got me."
       An ordinary mountaineer would have been carried home to die in the
       darkness of a dirty and windowless shack. The long-suffering star of
       Jesse Purvy ordained otherwise. He might go under or he might once more
       beat his way back and out of the quicksands of death. At all events, he
       would fight for life to the last gasp.
       Twenty miles away in the core of the wilderness, removed from a
       railroad by a score of semi-perpendicular miles, a fanatic had once
       decided to found a school. The fact that the establishment in this
       place of such a school as his mind pictured was sheer madness and
       impossibility did not in the least deter him. It was a thing that could
       not be done, and it was a thing that he had done none the less.
       Now a faculty of ten men, like himself holding degrees of Masters of
       Dreams, taught such as cared to come such things as they cared to
       learn. Substantial two-and three-storied buildings of square-hewn logs
       lay grouped in a sort of Arts and Crafts village around a clean-clipped
       campus. The Stagbone College property stretched twenty acres square at
       the foot of a hill. The drone of its own saw-mill came across the
       valley. In a book-lined library, wainscoted in natural woods of three
       colors, the original fanatic often sat reflecting pleasurably on his
       folly. Higher up the hillside stood a small, but model, hospital, with
       a modern operating table and a case of surgical instruments, which, it
       was said, the State could not surpass. These things had been the gifts
       of friends who liked such a type of God-inspired madness. A "fotched-on"
       trained nurse was in attendance. From time to time, eminent Bluegrass
       surgeons came to Hixon by rail, rode twenty miles on mules, and held
       clinics on the mountainside.
       To this haven, Jesse Purvy, the murder lord, was borne in a litter
       carried on the shoulders of his dependents. Here, as his steadfast
       guardian star decreed, he found two prominent medical visitors, who
       hurried him to the operating table. Later, he was removed to a white
       bed, with the June sparkle in his eyes, pleasantly modulated through
       drawn blinds, and the June rustle and bird chorus in his ears--and his
       own thoughts in his brain.
       Conscious, but in great pain, Purvy beckoned Jim Asberry and Aaron
       Hollis, his chiefs of bodyguard, to his bedside, and waved the nurse
       back out of hearing.
       "If I don't get well," he said, feebly, "there's a job for you two
       boys. I reckon you know what it is?"
       They nodded, and Asberry whispered a name:
       "Samson South?"
       "Yes," Purvy spoke in a weak whisper; but the old vindictiveness was
       not smothered. "You got the old man, I reckon you can manage the cub.
       If you don't, he'll get you both one day."
       The two henchmen scowled.
       "I'll git him to-morrer," growled Asberry. "Thar hain't no sort of use
       in a-waitin'."
       "No!" For an instant Purvy's voice rose out of its weakness to its old
       staccato tone of command, a tone which brought obedience. "If I get
       well, I have other plans. Never mind what they are. That's my business.
       If I don't die, leave him alone, until I give other orders." He lay
       back and fought for breath. The nurse came over with gentle insistence,
       ordering quiet, but the man, whose violent life might be closing, had
       business yet to discuss with his confidential vassals. Again, he waved
       her back.
       "If I get well," he went on, "and Samson South is killed meanwhile, I
       won't live long either. It would be my life for his. Keep close to him.
       The minute you hear of my death--get him." He paused again, then
       supplemented, "You two will find something mighty interestin' in my
       will."
       It was afternoon when Purvy reached the hospital, and, at nightfall of
       the same day, there arrived at his store's entrance, on stumbling, hard
       -ridden mules, several men, followed by two tawny hounds whose long ears
       flapped over their lean jaws, and whose eyes were listless and tired,
       but whose black muzzles wrinkled and sniffed with that sensitive
       instinct which follows the man-scent. The ex-sheriff's family were
       instituting proceedings independent of the Chief's orders. The next
       morning, this party plunged into the mountain tangle, and beat the
       cover with the bloodhounds in leash.
       The two gentle-faced dogs picked their way between the flowering
       rhododendrons, the glistening laurels, the feathery pine sprouts and
       the moss-covered rocks. They went gingerly and alertly on ungainly,
       cushioned feet. Just as their masters were despairing, they came to a
       place directly over the store, where a branch had been bent back and
       hitched to clear the outlook, and where a boot heel had crushed the
       moss. There one of them raised his nose high into the air, opened his
       mouth, and let out a long, deep-chested bay of discovery. _