Part 12 (1/2)

When the wires gave to the world the appalling climax of that savagely acrimonious campaign, a breathlessness of shock settled upon the State where pa.s.sion had run its inflammatory course. The reiteration of Ca.s.sandra's prediction had failed to discount the staggering reality, and for a brief moment animosities were silenced.

But that was not for long. Yesterday the lieutenants of an iron-strong leader had bowed to his dominant will. Today they stood dedicated to reprisal behind a martyr--exalted by his mortal hurt.

It appeared certain that the rifle had barked from a window of the executive building itself--and when police and posses hastily summoned had hurried to its doors, a grimly unyielding cordon of mountaineers had spelled, in human type, the words ”no admission.”

The Secretary of State, who was a mountain man, was among the first to fall under accusation, and had the city's police officers been able to seize the Governor, he too would doubtless have been thrown into a cell.

But the Governor still held the disputed credentials of office, and he sat at his desk, haggard of feature, yet at bay and momentarily secure behind a circle of bayonets.

Just wrath would not, and could not, long remain only righteous indignation. Out of its inflammation would spring a hundred injustices, and so in opposition to the mounting clamour for extreme penalties arose thundering the counter-voice of protest against a swift and ruthless sacrifice of conspicuous scapegoats.

To the aid of those first caught in the drag-net of vengeful accusation, came a handful of volunteer defence attorneys, and among them was Colonel Wallifarro.

The leader with the bullet-pierced breast was dying, and in the legislature the contest must be settled, if at all, while there was yet strength enough in his ebbing life currents to take the oath of office.

His last fight was in keeping with his life--the persistence of sheer resolution that held death in abeyance and refused surrender.

But when the Democratic majority of the a.s.sembly gathered at their chambers, they encountered muskets; when, casting dignity to the snowy winds, they raced toward an opera house, the soldiers raced with them, and arrived first. When they doubled like pursued hares toward the Odd Fellows' Hall, they found its door likewise barred by blade and muzzle.

Among the first men thrown into jail were Saul Fulton and his friend Hollins of Clay County. Their connection with the arrival of the mountaineers was not difficult to establish--and for the officers charged with ferreting out the ugly responsibility, it made a plausible beginning.

Meanwhile, the majority legislature, thwarted of open meeting, caucussed in hotel bedrooms, and gave decision for the dying candidate. A hectic and grotesque rumour even whispered that Mr. Goebel's gallant hold on life had slipped before the credentials could be placed in his weakened hand--and that the oath was solemnly administered to a dead body.

Boone had gone back to Saul's farm house, and on the way he had tossed the cartridges into a brook that flowed along the road, but his brain was in a swirl of perplexity and in his blood was an inoculation. He would never know content again unless, in the theatre of public affairs, he might be an onlooker or an actor.

CHAPTER X

A FEW days after that, he started back again to his mountains. With Saul in jail and his wife returning to her people, there was nothing further to hold him here. Indeed, he was anxious now to get home. Like one who has been bewildered by a plethora of new experiences, he needed time to digest them, and above all he wanted to talk with Victor McCalloway, whose wisdom was, to his thinking, as that of a second Solomon. There, too, was his other hero, Asa, who had returned to the hills as quietly as he had left them. Boone was burning to know whether, in the whirlpool of excitement there at Frankfort, his efforts to secure executive clemency had met with success or failure.

When, immediately upon crossing Cedar Mountain, he presented himself at McCalloway's house, he was somewhat nonplussed at the grave, almost accusing, eyes which the hermit gentleman bent upon him.

”I've jest got back hyar from ther big world down below,” announced the boy, ”an' I fared straight over hyar ter see ye fust thing.” He paused, a little crestfallen, to note that reserve of silence where he had antic.i.p.ated a warmth of welcome, and then he went on shyly: ”Thar was h.e.l.l ter pay down thar at Frankfort town--an' I seed a good part of ther b'ilin' with my own eyes.”

Very slowly Victor McCalloway made response. ”You have witnessed a tragedy--a crime for which the guilty parties should pay with their lives. Even then a scar will be left on the honour of your State.”

Boone crowded his hands into his coat pockets and s.h.i.+vered in the wet wind, for as yet he had not been invited across the threshold.

”I don't know nothin' about who done hit,” he made calm a.s.sertion. ”But fellers like Saul Fulton 'peared ter 'low he plum needed killin.”

”Fellows like Saul Fulton!”

The retired soldier drew a long breath, and his eyes narrowed. ”You went down there, Boone, with a kinsman who now stands accused of complicity.

The law presumes his innocence until it proves him guilty, but I'm not thinking of him much, just now. I'm thinking of _you_.” He paused as if in deep anxiety, then added: ”A boy may be led by reckless and wilful men into--well--grave mistakes.... I believe in you, but you must answer me one question, and you must answer it on your word of honour--as a gentleman.”

The boy's pupils widened interrogatively, and held those older eyes with an unfaltering steadiness. In their frank and engaging depths of blue, as open as the sky, Victor McCalloway read the answer to his question, and something like a sigh of relief shook him; something spasmodic that clutched at his throat and his well-seasoned reserve. He had dreaded that Boone might, in that fanatically bitter a.s.sociation, have brushed shoulders with some guilty knowledge. He had refused that fear lodgment in his thoughts as an ungenerous suspicion, but a lurking realization had persisted. It might need only a short lapse from a new concept to an inherited and ancient code to make heroes of ”killers” for this stripling.

Slowly and candidly the boy spoke.