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"Oh, come off!" cried one of the townsmen. "Rocky!" cried another. "Yo'
granny's hat!" came from a third; while Doty Buxton said, gravely, "Give up, Partin; we've humored this duty business long enough."
"Do I understand you to say that you won't give up the keys?" Mitch.e.l.l demanded, scornfully.
"No," the sheriff retorted, a little hotly, "you don't understand anything of the kind. I said that I didn't have the keys; and further," he added, after a moment's pause, "I say that this jail is empty."
There was silence for a moment, while the men looked at one another incredulously; then the jeering began again.
"There is nothing to do but to break open the cells," Morris said, sharply, but without turning his head. "We trusted the sheriff last night, and he outwitted us; we must not trust him again."
The sheriff's eyes flashed, and the blood sprang to his face. The crowd stood eagerly silent; but after a second the sheriff answered, quietly,
"You may say what you please to me, Mr. Morris, and I'll not resent it under these circ.u.mstances, but I'll swear the jail's empty."
For answer Morris drove an axe furiously against the nearest cell door, and the crowd followed suit. There were not many cells, and as he looked from a window the sheriff counted the doors as they fell in, and listened for the whistle of the train that he hoped would bring Judge More. The doors were going down rapidly, and as each yielded the sheriff could hear cries and demonstrations. What would they do when the last one fell?
Presently Doty Buxton, who had been making observations, came in, pale and excited. "You'd better git yo' pistols," he said, "an' I'll git mine, for they're gittin' madder an' madder every time he ain't there."
"Well," the sheriff answered, "I want you to witness that I ain't armed. My pistols are over there on the table, unloaded. Thank the good Lord!" he exclaimed, suddenly; "there's the train, an' Judge More! I hope he'll come right along."
"An' there goes the last do'!" said Doty, as, after a crash and a momentary silence, oaths and e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.i.o.ns filled the air. He drew near the sheriff, but the sheriff moved away.
"Stand back," he said; "you've got little children."
In an instant the crowd rushed in, headed by Morris, whose burning eyes seemed to be starting from his drawn white face. Like a flash Doty sprang forward and wrenched an axe from the infuriated man, crying out, "Partin ain't armed!"
For answer a blow from Morris's fist dropped the sheriff like a dead man. A sudden silence fell, and Morris, standing over his fallen foe, looked about him as if dazed. For an instant he stood so, then with a violent movement he pushed back the crowding men, and lifting the sheriff, dragged him toward the open window.
"Give him air," he ordered, "and go for the doctor, and for cold water!" He laid Partin flat and dragged open his collar. "He's not dead--see there; I struck him on the temple; under the ear would have killed him, but not this, not this! Give me that water, and plenty of it, and move back. He's not dead, no; and I didn't mean to kill him; but he has worked against me all night, and I didn't think a white man would do it."
"He's comin' round, Mr. Morris," said Doty, who knelt on the other side of the sheriff; "an' he didn't bear no malice against you--don't fret; but it's a good thing I jerked that axe outer yo' hand! See, he's ketchin' his breath; it's all right," as Partin opened his eyes slowly and looked about him.
A sound like a sigh came from the crowd, then a voice said, "Here comes Judge More."
Morris was still holding his wet handkerchief on the sheriff's head when the old judge came in.
"My dear boy!" he said, laying his hand on John Morris's shoulder. But Morris shook his head.
"Let's talk business, Judge More," he said, "and let's get Partin into a chair where he can rest; I've just knocked him over."
Then Morris left the room, and Mitch.e.l.l with him, going to the far side of the jail-yard, where they walked up and down in silence. It was not long before Judge More and the sheriff joined them.
"The evidence was too slight for lynching," the judge said, looking straight into John Morris's eyes.
"Great G.o.d!" Morris cried, and struck his hands together.
"What more do you want?" Mitch.e.l.l demanded, angrily. "His wife has disappeared, and the negro ran away."
"True, and I'll see to the case myself; but I'm glad that you did not hang the negro."
A boy came up with a telegram.
"From Jim, I reckon," the sheriff said, taking it. "No; it's for you, Mr.
Morris."
It was torn open hastily; then Morris looked from one to the other with a blank, scared face, while the paper fluttered from his hold.
Mitch.e.l.l caught it, and read aloud slowly, as if he did not believe his eyes:
"'Am safe. Will be out on the ten o'clock train. ELEANOR.'"
Morris stood there, shaking, and sobbing hard, dry sobs.
"It'll kill him!" the sheriff said. "Quick, some whiskey!"
A flask was forced between the blue, trembling lips.
"Drink, old fellow," and Mitch.e.l.l put his arm about Morris's shoulders.
"It's all right now, thank G.o.d!"
Morris was leaning against his friend, sobbing like a woman. The sheriff drew his coat-sleeve across his eyes, and shook his head.
"What made the n.i.g.g.e.r run away?" he said, slowly--adding, as if to himself, "G.o.d help us!"
A vehicle was borrowed, and the judge and the sheriff drove with John Morris over to the station to meet the ten-o'clock train. The sheriff and the judge remained in the little carriage, and the station agent did his best to leave the whole platform to John Morris. As the moments went by the look of anxious agony grew deeper on the face of the waiting man. The sheriff's ominous words, falling like a pall over the first flash of his happiness, had filled his mind with wordless terrors. He could scarcely breathe or move, and could not speak when his wife stepped off and put her hands in his. She looked up, and without a query, without a word of explanation, answered the anguished questioning of his eyes, whispering,
"He did not touch me."
Morris staggered a little, then drawing her hand through his arm, he led her to the carriage. She shrank back when she saw the judge and the sheriff on the front seat; but Morris saying, "They must hear your story, dear,"
she stepped in.
"We are very thankful to see you, Mrs. Morris," the judge said, without turning his head, when the sheriff had touched up the horse and they moved away; "and if you feel able to tell us how it all happened, it'll save time and ease your mind. This is Mr. Partin, the sheriff."
Mrs. Morris looked at the backs of the men in front of her; at their heads that were so studiously held in position that they could not even have glanced at each other; then up at her husband, appealingly.
"Tell it," he said, quietly, and laid his hand on hers that were wrung together in her lap. "You sent Aggie to catch the chickens, and the dog went with her?"
"Yes," fixing her eyes on his; "and I sent"--she stopped with a shiver, and her husband said, "Abram"--"to cut some bushes to make a broom," she went on. "I had been for a walk to the old house, and as I came back I laid my gloves and a bit of vine on the steps, intending to return at once; but I wished to see if the boat was safe, for the water was rising so rapidly."
She paused, as if to catch her breath, then, with her eyes still fixed on her husband, she went on, "I did not think that it was safe, and I untied the rope and picked up the paddle that was lying on the dam, intending to drag the boat farther up and tie it to a tree." She stopped again. Her husband put his arm about her.
"And then?" he said.
"And then--something, I don't know what; not a sound, but something--something made me turn, and I saw him--saw him coming--saw him stealing up behind me--with the hatchet in his hand, and a look--a look"--closing her eyes as if in horror--"such an awful, awful look! And everybody gone. Oh, John!" she gasped, and clinging to her husband, she broke into hysterical sobs, while the judge gripped his walking-stick and cleared his throat, and the sheriff swore fiercely under his breath.
"I was paralyzed," she went on, recovering herself, "and when he saw me looking he stopped. The next moment he threw the hatchet at me, and began to run toward me. The hatchet struck my foot, and the blow roused me, and I sprang into the boat. There were no trees just there, and jumping in, I pushed the boat off into the deep water. He picked up the hatchet and shook it at me, but the water was too deep for him to reach me, and he ran back along the dam and turned toward the railroad embankment. I was so terrified I could scarcely breathe; I pushed frantically in and out between the trees, farther and farther into the swamp. I was afraid that he would go round to the bridge and come down the bank to where the outlet from the swamp is and catch me there, but in a little while I saw where the rising water had broken the dam, and the current was rushing through and out to the river. The current caught the boat and swept it through the break. Oh, I was so glad! I'm so afraid of water, but not then. I used the paddle as a rudder, and to push floating timber away. My foot was hurting me, and I looked at last and saw that it was cut."
A groan came from the judge, and the sheriff's head drooped.
"All day I drifted, and all night. I was so thirsty, and I grew so weak. At daylight this morning I found myself in a wide sheet of water, with marshes all round, and I saw a steamboat coming. I tied my handkerchief to the paddle and waved it, and they picked me up. And, John, I did not tell them anything except that the freshet had swept me away. They were kind to me, and a friendly woman bound up my foot. We got to town this morning early, and the captain lent me five dollars, John--Captain Meakin--so I telegraphed you, and took a carriage to the station and came out.