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"You knew better than to be a party to this, and by G.o.d!--if you go on with it you shall live to regret it!"
The minister made him no answer, he thoroughly disapproved of the planter. It was well that Betty should have a proper protector, this half-brother was hardly that measured by any standard.
Norton, leading the horses, had reached the edge of the oaks when from the silent depths of the denser woods came the sharp report of a rifle.
The shock of the bullet sent the young fellow staggering back among the mossy and myrtle-covered graves.
For a moment no one grasped what had happened, only there was Norton who seemed to grope strangely among the graves. Black spots danced before his eyes, the little group by the church merged into the distance--always receding, always more remote, as he, stumbled helplessly over the moss and the thick dank myrtle and among the round graves that gave him a treacherous footing; and then he heard Betty's agonized cry. He had fallen now, and his strength went from him, but he kept his face turned on the group before the church in mute appeal, and even as the shadows deepened he was aware that Betty was coming swiftly toward him.
"I'm shot--" he said, speaking with difficulty.
"Charley--Charley--" she moaned, slipping her strong young arms about him and gathering him to her breast.
He looked up into her face.
"It's all over--" he said, but as much in wonder as in fear. "But I knew you would come to me--dear--" he added in a whisper. She felt a shudder pa.s.s through him. He did not speak again. His lips opened once, and closed on silence.
CHAPTER XXIII. THE JUDGE OFFERS A REWARD
The news of Charley Norton's murder spread quickly over the county. For two or three days bands of armed men scoured the woods and roads, and then this activity quite unproductive of any tangible results ceased, matters were allowed to rest with the const.i.tuted authorities, namely Mr. Betts the sheriff, and his deputies.
No private citizen had shown greater zeal than Judge Sloc.u.m Price, no voice had clamored more eloquently for speedy justice than his. He had sustained a loss that was in a peculiar sense personal, he explained.
Mr. Norton was his friend and client; they had much in common; their political ideals were in the strictest accord and he had entertained a most favorable opinion of the young man's abilities; he had urged him to enter the national arena and carve out a career for himself; he had promised him his support. The judge so worked upon his own feelings that presently any mention of Norton's name utterly unmanned him. Well, this was life. One could only claim time as it was doled out by clock ticks; we planned for the years and could not be certain of the moments.
He spent two entire days at the church and in the surrounding woods, nor did any one describe the murder with the vividness he achieved in his description of it. The minister's narrative was pale and colorless by comparison, and those who came from a distance went away convinced that they had talked with an eyewitness to the tragedy and esteemed themselves fortunate. In short, he imposed himself on the situation with such brilliancy that in the end his account of the murder became the accepted version from which all other versions differed to their discredit.
In the same magnificent spirit of public service he would have a.s.sumed the direction of the search for the murderer, but Mr. Betts' jealousy proved an obstacle to his ambitious design. In view of this he was regretful, but not surprised when the hard-ridden miles covered by dusty men and reeking horses yielded only failure.
"If I had shot that poor boy, I wouldn't ask any surer guarantee of safety than to have that fool Betts with his microscopic brain working in unhampered asininity on the case," he told Mahaffy.
"Is it your idea that you are enlarging your circle of intimate friends by the way you go about slamming into folks?" inquired Mahaffy, with harsh sarcasm.
Later, the judge was shocked at what he characterized as official apathy. It became a point on which he expressed himself with surpa.s.sing candor.
"Do they think the murderer's going to come in and give himself up?--is that the notion?" he demanded heatedly of Mr. Saul.
"The sheriff owns himself beat, Sir; the murderer's got safely away and left no clue to his ident.i.ty."
The judge waived this aside.
"Clues, sir? If you mean physical evidence the eye can apprehend, I grant it; the murderer has got away; certainly he's been given all the time he needed, but what about the motive that prompted the crime? An intelligently conducted examination such as I am willing to undertake might still bring it to light. Isn't it known that Norton was attacked a fortnight ago as he was leaving Belle Plain? He recovers and is about to be married to Miss Malroy when he is shot at the church door; I'll hazard the opinion the attack was in the nature of a warning for him to keep away from Belle Plain. Now, had he a rival? Clear up these points and you get a clue!" The judge paused impressively.
"Tom Ware has acted in a straightforward manner. He's stated frankly he was opposed to the match, that when he heard about it on his way to Memphis he turned back and made every effort to get to the church in time to stop it if he could," said Mr. Saul.
"Mr. Ware need not be considered," observed the judge.
"Well, there's been a heap of talk."
"If he'd inspired the firing of the fatal shot he'd have kept away from the church. No, no, Mr. Saul, is there anybody hereabout who aspired to Miss Malroy's hand--any rejected suitor?"
"Not that we know of."
"Under ordinary circ.u.mstances, sir, I am opposed to measures that ignore the const.i.tuted authorities, but we find ourselves living under extraordinary conditions, and the law--G.o.d save the name--has proved itself abortive. It is time for the better element to join bands; we must get together, sir. I am willing to take the initial steps and issue the call for a ma.s.s meeting of our best citizens. I am prepared to address such a meeting." The very splendor of his conception dazzled the judge; this promised a gorgeous publicity with his name flying broadcast over the county. He continued:
"I am ready to give my time gratuitously to directing the activities of a body of picked men who shall rid the county of the lawless element.
G.o.d knows, sir, I desire the repose of a private career, yet I am willing to sacrifice myself. Is it your opinion, Mr. Saul, that I should move in this matter?"
"I advise you didn't," said Mr. Saul, with disappointing alacrity.
The judge looked at him fixedly.
"Am I wrong in supposing, Mr. Saul, that if I determine to act as I have outlined I shall have your indors.e.m.e.nt?" he demanded. Mr. Saul looked extremely uncomfortable; he was finding the judge's effulgent personality rather compelling. "There is no gentleman whose support I should value in quite the same sense that I should value yours, Mr.
Saul; I should like to feel my course met with your full approval,"
pursued the judge, with charming deference.
"You'll get yourself shot full of holes," said Mr. Saul.
"What causes me to hesitate is this: my name is unfamiliar to your citizens. You know their prejudices, Mr. Saul; how would they regard me if I put myself forward?"
"Can't say how they would take it," rejoined Mr. Saul.
Again the judge gave him a fixed scrutiny. Then ha shook him warmly by the hand.
"Think of what I have said; ponder it, sir, and let me have your answer at another time." And he backed from Mr. Saul's presence with spectacular politeness.
"A cheap mind!" thought the judge, as he hurried up the street.
He broached the subject to Mr. Wesley the postmaster, to Mr. Ellison the gunsmith, to Mr. Pegloe, employing much the same formula he had used with Mr. Saul, and with results almost identical. He imagined there must be some conspiracy afoot to keep him out of the public eye, and in the end he managed to lose his temper.
"Hasn't Norton any friends?" he demanded of Pegloe. "Who's going to be safe at this rate? We want to let some law into west Tennessee, a hanging or two would clear the air!" His emotions became a rage that blew through him like a gale, shaking him to his center.
Two mornings later he found where it had been placed under his door during the night a folded paper. It contained a single line of writing:
"You talk too much. Shut up, or you'll go where Norton went."
Now the judge was accessible to certain forms of fear. He was, for instance, afraid of snakes--both kinds--and mobs he had dreaded desperately since his Pleasantville experience; but beyond this, fear remained an unexplored region to Sloc.u.m Price, and as he examined the scrawl a smile betokening supreme satisfaction overspread his battered features. He was agreeably affected by the situation; indeed he was delighted. His activities were being recognized; he had made his impression; the cutthroats had selected him to threaten. Well, the d.a.m.ned rascals showed their good sense; he'd grant them that! Swelling with pride, he carried the scrawl to Mahaffy.
"They are forming their estimate of me, Solomon; I shall have them on the run yet!" he declared.
"You are going out of your way to hunt trouble--as if you hadn't enough at the best of times, Price! Let these people manage their own affairs, don't you mix up in them," advised the conservative Mahaffy.
The judge drew himself up with an air of lofty pride.
"Do you think I am going to be silenced, intimidated, by this sort of thing? No, sir! No, Solomon, the stopper isn't made that will fit my mouth."