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"Sho' yo' kin!"
"Ez yo' say I kin do it, me promises," he a.s.sented dubiously.
"Cross yo' heart on th' witch-block!" she demanded.
He solemnized the pledge with a gnarled and bony hand, and the girl's eyes welled full and her throat pained.
"Slab, yo' must promise to be good to ol' Ben heah--feed em an' bed em reg'lar, but don't give em no cracklin's. An', Slab, yo' must promise to pick the flowers every Sabbath, jest like I alers do--yo' knows the ones well's I do--pertic'lar th' for-get-me-nots over yon by th' grind-stone.
Yo' must pick 'em in th' mornin' early, Slab--every Sabbath--an' put 'em on Maw Lutts's grave. Will yo' fergit?"
A deep breath relieved Slab's tenseness as he agreed effusively.
"Lord, goodness! Yo' jist leave it t' Slab, honey! He do dat ebry single Sabbaf!"
"An', Slab, when hit gits cold an' th' leaves air gone an' th' flowers air all daid, yo' must pick th' geraniums outer th' boxes inside an' put 'em on Maw's grave--an' when hit gits powerful cold an' snows hard an'
th' snow gits piled up on Maw's grave--would yo' care--would yo' go, Slab, an'--an'--an'--push hit off--an'----"
Her pet.i.tions thickened, tumbled together in her aching throat, and refused to cross her trembling lips.
She turned away quickly. At the log bench she sank slowly down with her black head in her arm. The heavy curls cl.u.s.tered around her face and caressed her neck. She sobbed in soft, whimpering outbursts.
The blind hound thrust his nose questioningly into her lap, licking her free hand, and caught the tears from her young heart warm upon his gray face. He whined aloud and reached for her wet cheek.
The old negro fumbled at random and did not speak.
Turning, he looked upward to where Cap Lutts sat in the flood of moonlight on the palm of rock; as silent and motionless as the inanimate pillar of granite under him. Slab's eyes wandered down to the trail and he spoke hastily to the distressed girl.
"Honey, heah c.u.m de boys!"
CHAPTER III
THE TRAITOR
Belle-Ann jumped instantly to her feet, looked, brushed her eyes with her hand, and hastened to meet them, her curls bobbing and her bare legs and arms gleaming in the moon's l.u.s.ter.
Little Bud turned off toward the cabin, but Lem's tall figure came straight ahead.
"Lem," she cried excitedly, "I got t' go--dad sent word by Orlick. Dad's a comin' heah t' take me t' th' mission school. Air yo' sorry, Lem?"
Lem halted as if struck. Then, recovering from the surprise, he took her hand and they continued toward the witch-elm block. Slab had disappeared.
"Sho', I'm sorry, Belle-Ann," Lem answered. "Yo'-all don't 'low I'd be tickled t' lose yo', do yo'? But I 'low hit's fer th' best, an' yo' know Maw wanted hit, too," he ended, with a touch of sadness.
"Yes, Lem," she agreed, "thet's why I'll try t' be brave, 'cause Maw Lutts alers talked t' me 'bout my schoolin' same's she did 'bout th'
church. Lem, I do wish Maw could jest see th' new church now thet pap's got hit finished! Hit looks jest like she said, Lem. I 'low she'd jest cry fer gladness, wouldn't she?"
Lem nodded absently and quickly put a question that had been waiting from the instant he heard of Orlick's visit.
"What time ded Orlick c.u.m?"
"He c.u.m short past sun-down," returned Belle-Ann as the two sat down on the bench.
"Ded he parley 'bout long?"
"Jest a short spell. I wouldn't talk t' em much."
Lem stood up. He was long and lank, but broad of shoulder for a boy of eighteen. He had a pleasing, intelligent countenance, with light, steadfast eyes that never looked askance. He removed his wide, soft hat and gazed up to Eagle Crown.
"Ded pap see Orlick?" he asked.
Belle-Ann shook her curls in the negative.
"Belle-Ann, ef yo' takes pertic'lar notice, every time Jutt Orlick c.u.ms t' Moon mountain somethin' alers happens--somethin' goes wrong. 'Peers like things starts back'ards."
"I 'low he air a hoodoo," observed Belle-Ann: "but he do look soldierfied, don't he, Lem?" she added, with a subtle regard for Orlick's military aspect and his bombastic airs.
Lem shot a jealous, reproachful look at the girl, turning sharply as she rose, and pointed down to a gap in the scrub timber, which was half lighted by the moon. They caught the fleeting shadow of a horseman mounting the trail to the cabin.
"Hit's Orlick!" Lem announced.
The sound of metallic hoof-strokes came rapid and distinct. When the rider had looped the spur they beheld the front of Orlick's horse coming head on up the moon-path, his hocks now in the air. As always, Orlick had flank-spurred his mount on the last lap, and the animal plunged, panting, to the horse-block, and brought up stiff-legged, with red-rimmed nostrils and distended jaws, fighting a cruel Spanish bit.
Orlick rolled out of the Mexican saddle, laughed shortly, and drawled:
"Howdy, yo'-all?" and smirked as he always did. "I hain't seen yo'-all in a c.o.o.n's age, Lem," he added cordially, though his evil eyes were upon the girl as he extended his hand in greeting.
Lem Lutts touched the outstretched hand briefly.
Belle-Ann stood aloof with a look of suspicious admiration on her lovely countenance.
"I hain't seen yo'-all 'bout much nuther," answered Lem, with a contemptuous scrutiny of Orlick's brave trappings. Orlick chuckled.
"Yes--I'm gittin' over th' country a little nowadays. But, say, Lem, I c.u.m up to tell ye thar's a stranger down at th' cypress cut what wants to come up. He's down yonder now a waitin'. He's got some business with the cap'n."
Belle-Ann shrank away, shuddering.
"I rec'on hit's Burton, th' ghost-man," she muttered under her breath.
Always since that memorable day when she had knelt beside Maw Lutts'
dead body in the yard did the coming of a stranger thrill her with a great fear--a fear that stirred the venom that already tenanted her heart; a vivific thing, sp.a.w.ned at the killing of Maw Lutts. Time had never healed this wound. Time had only nurtured its corrosive, growing poison. Time that came to others of mankind to succor and heal, had never a.s.suaged Belle-Ann's heart-hurt.
Struggle as she would to forget, she only remembered that she had struggled, and the aching grew on. It was a silent, self-contained suffering,--a hatred for the law that sneaked into their home and dealt death. This supernatural hulk, Burton, embodied the law. Burton, this lupine, leering lover of blood--this killer of women.
When Orlick announced that a stranger had business with the old man, the revenuer's ugly visage popped before the girl more vividly than ever.