The Greatest Works of Melville Davisson Post: 40+ Titles in One Edition. Melville Davisson Post
this murder upon you, not directly perhaps, but sufficiently to warrant your arrest, and then you must take your hazards with a jury. The man who to-day hopes to cover his crime well enough to baffle the keen and tireless search of a great life insurance company must be governed by something vastly nearer to an intelligence than that upon which you and the decedent Hirst depended.
"At this stage of your blunder there are but two ways by which it is possible to put you absolutely beyond the reach of the law. Death is one way, and we will pass that. The other I am now going to bring to your aid. With it the greatest care and haste are vital. At nine to-night you must be here prepared to put yourself wholly in my hands. I shall have every arrangement complete by that time."
Mason stopped short, and put his hand down heavily upon the table.
"Now, sir," he said, bluntly, "it will be entirely useless for me to attempt the drastic measures necessary in your case unless you are prepared to act under my fingers like a machine. Can you do that?"
"Yes," said the man, wiping the perspiration from his face.
"Then," said Randolph Mason, opening the door of his private office, "go down to your hotel and sleep; and if you please, sir, do not think, or, to be more accurate, do not attempt to think. Your thoughts, as has been demonstrated, are of no value to you, and I assure you, sir, they will be quite useless to me."
Then he closed the door after the departing criminal and went back to his desk.
III
The sheriff was riding slowly down the narrow mountain road to the ford over Tug River,—"Jim's Ford" the natives of McDowell had dubbed this crossing far back when the dry ginseng root was a legal tender for all debts public and private southwest, as the crow flies, from the county of Mercer. Whence the name had come, and by reason of what, tradition was silent. No doubt the original Jim had dwelt in this rugged gorge, and by accidental hap had given his name to this rocky ford that lived on and proclaimed him long after the man had passed out into the hands of the Wind.
To the negro miner, seven miles up at the town of Welch, this rugged crossing, studded with great bowlders, was respectfully referred to as "Hell's Gap,"—respectfully, for no other reason than that the negroes were superstitious, and the mammoth gorge, silent as the grave floor, and deep and foggy except in the long summer afternoons, was calculated to conjure every grim phantom set down in the African catalogue.
The sheriff pulled up his "dun" horse suddenly, and threw his leg over the pommel of his saddle. Just below him in the ford of the river was a man wading out into the water,—a tall mountaineer, bare-headed, his dress indicating a rather equal compromise between the barbarity of the village and the barbarity of the mountain. For upper garment he wore the red-fringed hunting shirt of his fathers and his grandfathers and on; and for nether garment, the blue overalls purchased at the country store for a haunch of venison or a bundle of hides. The mountaineer was tall, rugged, and powerful,—a proper inhabitant for such a place.
"Spitler Hamrick," murmured the sheriff.
"By every limping god! The toughest pine knot in the mountains of McDowell. I wonder what the old wolf is looking for."
Then he tightened his knee on the pommel of the saddle and a slow smile crept over the features of the sheriff. "By my troth'" he drawled, "it is certain that Spitler is no Vere de Vere. Still, if blue blood ran to back, and bunches of muscles on the shoulders, Spitler's claim to princely lineage would be unquestioned."
White Carter stopped short, and adjusted his eye-glasses. The mountaineer had gathered up a bundle from the river and was turning to wade ashore. The man did not at once see the sheriff; he was looking down into the water in order to avoid slipping on the smooth stones. When he stepped on to the rocky bank of the river, the sheriff called. At the sound, the mountaineer dropped the bundle and jerked up a Winchester that lay nearby against a bowlder. It was an act after the custom of the mountains. One armed himself first, and observed the "lay of the land" afterwards.
White Carter remained perfectly motionless. "I would n't shoot, Spitler," he drawled, "it's vulgar."
The mountaineer dropped the butt of his rifle on the stones, and looked up in astonishment. "Smoky hell!" ejaculated the mountaineer, "it air the sheriff. Smoky hell!" The refrain was a nervous idiom with Spitler Hamrick.
White Carter put his hand into the pocket of his coat, took out a pipe, knocked the ashes from the bowl and began to fill it with great deliberation. This act, remaining after the red man had passed, proclaimed a status of dignified truce.
The play of action faded from Hamrick's face, leaving it stolid, heavy, prodigiously indifferent. It was the mountain's stamp on its minion, the silence, and the abominable indifference of the rugged earth ground into the faces of the men who struggle for life on her stony breast.
"Hot," observed the sheriff, crowding the bowl of his pipe and thrusting the tobacco down with his broad thumb.
The mountaineer folded his arms over the muzzle of his rifle and leaned upon it heavily.
"Yas," he responded, "warmish,"
It was the full measure of salutation, and the full measure of introduction to all matters, important or unimportant, on the watershed of the Alleghanies. In the mountains no man hurried with his speech. There was time to be fully understood, and time to answer fully; then what one did afterwards, one was not so likely to regret. In the flat lands men are not so wise, perhaps.
The sheriff struck a match on his saddle skirt, lighted his pipe, and puffed a cloud of blue smoke rings out over the placid ears of the "murky dun." Presently he took the pipe stem from between his teeth and looked down at the solitary proprietor of Jim's Ford.
"Spitler," he drawled, "what 's in the bundle?"
"Ye kin look," responded the mountaineer with prodigious unconcern.
The sheriff replaced his pipe and lapsed into silence for a moment. Then he said:
"Where did you find it, Spitler?"
"I reckin ye saw," replied the scion of the house of Hamrick.
The guardian of order looked up at the blue sky over the top of his nose glasses. Then he looked down. "Spitler,"—he said softly.
The mountaineer interrupted. "Sheriff," he growled, "old Spitler Hamrick don't stand no shammackin' round the bush. Smoky hell! He aint never stood it. Things air goin' to be like this: ye kin mosey' down here and git this bundle, air ye kin ride on. But ye can't set on you hoss and jaw. Smoky hell! Ye can't set on you hoss and jaw."
There was no circumlocution, no trick of equivocation, no shadow of obscurity in the speech of the denizen of Hell's Gap He used words for the purpose of expressing exactly what he believed to be true, and for no other purpose. This the sheriff knew, and others had learned and remembered by certain long glistening scars, covered afterward with the red flannel of their hunting shirts.
White Carter removed his knee from the pommel of his saddle and slipped down to the ground. Here he paused for a moment, knocked the ashes from his pipe and replaced it in his pocket. Then he clambered down the steep bank to the river. The proprietor of Jim's Ford looked on with mighty indifference. The sheriff took up the bundle without a word, returned to his horse, and unbuckling the "throat latch" of his bridle, strapped the bundle to the horn of his saddle. Then he placed his right foot in the stirrup and turned to the mountaineer.
"Spitler," he drawled, "we found a dead man in Tug the other day. I think this is his coat."
The mountaineer looked up from the muzzle of his Winchester. "Were there lead in him?" he asked.
The sheriff flung his leg over the saddle and gathered up his bridle from the horse's neck.
"No bullet holes," he answered.
"Then," said the giant Hamrick, "he were not killed