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        <title><emph rend="bold">The Prophet of the Great
Smoky Mountains:</emph>
Electronic Edition</title>
        <author>Craddock, Charles Egbert 
(Murfree, Mary Noailles), 1850-1922</author>
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        <edition>First edition, <date>1998</date></edition>
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      <extent>ca. 400K</extent>
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        <pubPlace>University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,</pubPlace>
        <date>1998.</date>
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          <p>© This work is the property of the 
University of North Carolina 
at Chapel Hill. It may be used freely by individuals for 
research, teaching and personal use as long as this statement 
of availability is included in the text.</p>
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        <note anchored="yes">Call number  PS2454 .P7 1885 
(Davis Library, UNC-CH)</note>
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            <item>Mountain life -- Tennessee -- Fiction.</item>
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    <front>
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        <p>
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            <p>[Cover Image]</p>
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      </div1>
      <div1 type="title page image">
        <p>
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            <p>[Title Page Image]</p>
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      <titlePage>
        <docTitle>
          <titlePart type="main">THE PROPHET
<lb/>
OF THE
<lb/>
GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS</titlePart>
        </docTitle>
        <byline>BY</byline>
        <docAuthor>CHARLES EGBERT CRADDOCK</docAuthor>
        <docImprint><pubPlace>BOSTON AND NEW YORK</pubPlace>
<publisher>HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY<lb/>
The Riverside Press Cambridge</publisher></docImprint>
      </titlePage>
    </front>
    <body>
      <pb id="crad1" n="1"/>
      <div1 type="Book">
        <head>THE PROPHET
<lb/>
OF THE
<lb/>
GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS.</head>
        <div2 type="Chapter">
          <head>I.</head>
          <p>ALWAYS enwrapped in the illusory mists, always
touching the evasive clouds, the peaks of the
Great Smoky Mountains are like some barren ideal,
that has bartered for the vague isolations of a higher
atmosphere the material values of the warm world
below. Upon those mighty and majestic domes no
tree strikes root, no hearth is alight; humanity is an
alien thing, and utility set at naught. Below, dense
forests cover the massive, precipitous slopes of the
range, and in the midst of the wilderness a clearing
shows, here and there, and the roof of a humble log
cabin; in the valley, far, far lower still, a red spark at
dusk may suggest a home, nestling in the cove. Grain
grows apace in these scanty clearings, for the soil in
certain favored spots is mellow; and the weeds
grow, too, and in a wet season the ploughs are fain to
<pb id="crad2" n="2"/>
be active. They are of the bull-tongue variety,
and are sometimes drawn by oxen. As often as
otherwise they are followed by women.</p>
          <p>In the gracious June mornings, when winds
are astir and wings are awhirl in the wide spaces
of the sunlit air, the work seemed no hardship to
Dorinda Cayce, - least of all one day when
another plough ran parallel to the furrows of her
own, and a loud, drawling, intermittent
conversation became practicable. She paused
often, and looked idly about her: sometimes at the
distant mountains, blue and misty, against the
indefinite horizon; sometimes down at the
cool, dense shadows of the wooded valley, so far
below the precipice, to which the steep clearing
shelved; sometimes at the little log cabin on the
slope above, sheltered by a beetling crag and
shadowed by the pines; sometimes still higher at
the great “bald” of the mountain, and its mingled
phantasmagoria of shifting clouds and flickering
sheen and glimmering peak.</p>
          <p>“He 'lowed ter me,” she said, suddenly, “ez
he hev been gin ter view strange sights a many
a time in them fogs, an' sech.”</p>
          <p>The eyes lifted to the shivering vapors might
never have reflected aught but a tropical sunshine,
so warm, so bright, so languorously calm were
they. She turned them presently upon a
<pb id="crad3" n="3"/>
young man, who was ploughing with a horse
close by, and who also came to a meditative halt
in the turn-row. He too was of intermittent
conversational tendencies, and between them it
might be marveled that so many furrows were
already run. He wore a wide-brimmed brown
wool hat, set far back upon his head; a mass of
straight yellow hair hung down to the collar of
his brown jeans coat. His brown eyes were slow
and contemplative. The corn was knee-high, and
hid the great boots drawn over his trousers. As
he moved there sounded the unexpected jingle
of spurs. He looked, with the stolid, lack-lustre
expression of the mountaineer, at the girl, who
continued, as she leaned lightly on the plough-
handles: -</p>
          <p>“I 'lowed ter him ez mebbe he hed drempt
them visions. I knows I hev thunk some toler'ble
cur'ous thoughts myself, ef I war tired an'
sleepin' hard. But he said he reckoned I hed
drempt no sech dreams ez his'n. I can't holp
sorrowin' fur him some. He 'lowed ez Satan
hev hunted him like a pa'tridge on the
mounting.”</p>
          <p>The young man's eyes dropped with sudden
significance upon his plough-handles. A pair of
pistols in their leather cases swung
incongruously there. They gave a caustic
suggestion of human adversaries as fierce as
the moral pursuit
<pb id="crad4" n="4"/>
of the Principle of Evil, and the girl's face fell. In
absence of mind she recommended her work.</p>
          <p>“Waal,” she gently drawled, as the old ox
languidly started down the row, “'pears like ter me ez
it ain't goin' ter be no differ, nohow; it won't hender
ye none.”</p>
          <p>Her face was grave, but there was a smile in her
eyes, which had the lustre and depth of a sapphire,
and a lambent glow like the heart of a blue flame.
They were fringed by long, black lashes, and her hair
was black, also. Her pink calico sun-bonnet, flaring
toward the front, showed it lying in moist tendrils on
her brow, and cast an unwonted roseate tint upon the
clear, healthful pallor of her complexion. She wore a
dark blue homespun dress, and, despite her coarse
garb and uncouth occupation and the gaunt old ox,
there was something impressive in her simple beauty,
her youth, and her elastic vigor. As she drove the
ploughshare into the mould she might have seemed
the type of a young civilization,  -  so fine a thing in
itself, so roughly accoutred.</p>
          <p>When she came down the slope again, facing him,
the pink curtain of her bonnet waving about her
shoulders, her blue skirts fluttering among the blades
of corn, a winged shadow sweeping along as if
attendant upon her, while
<pb id="crad5" n="5"/>
a dove flew high above to its nest in the pines, he
raised his hand with an imperative gesture, and she
paused obediently. He had flushed deeply; the
smouldering fire in his eyes was kindling. He leaned
across the few rows of corn that stood between
them.</p>
          <p>“I hev a word ter ax right now. Who air under
conviction hyar?” he demanded.</p>
          <p>She seemed a trifle startled. Her grasp shifted
uncertainly on the plough-handles, and the old ox,
accustomed to rest only at the turnrow, mistook her
intention, and started off. She stopped him with some
difficulty, and then, “Convicted of sin?” she asked,
in a voice that showed her appreciation of the
solemnity of the subject.</p>
          <p>“I hev said it,” the young man declared, with a
half-suppressed irritation which confused her.</p>
          <p>She remained silent.</p>
          <p>“Mebbe it air yer granny,” he suggested, with a
sneer.</p>
          <p>She recoiled, with palpable surprise. “Granny
made her peace fifty year ago,” she declared, with
pride in this anciently acquired grace,  -  “fifty year
an' better.”</p>
          <p>“The boys air convicted, then?” he asked, still
leaning over the corn and still sneering.</p>
          <p>“The boys hev got thar religion, too,” she
faltered, looking at him with wide eyes, brilliant
<pb id="crad6" n="6"/>
with astonishment, and yet a trifle dismayed.
Suddenly, she threw herself into her wonted confiding
attitude, leaning upon her plough-handles, and with an
appealing glance began an extenuation of her spiritual
poverty: “'Pears like ez I hev never hed a call ter tell
you-uns afore ez I hev hed no time yit ter git my religion.
Granny bein' old, an' the boys at the still, I hev hed ter
spin, an' weave, an' cook, an' sew, an' plough
some,  -  the boys bein' mos'ly at the still. An' then, thar
be Mirandy Jane, my brother Ab's darter, ez I hev hed
ter l'arn how ter cook vittles. When I went down
yander ter my aunt Jerushy's house in Tuckaleechee
Cove, ter holp her some with weavin', I war plumb
cur'ous ter know how Mirandy Jane would make out
whilst I war gone. They 'lowed ez she hed cooked the
vittles toler'ble, but ef she had washed a skillet or a
platter in them three days <hi rend="italics">I</hi> couldn't find it.”</p>
          <p>Her tone was stern; all the outraged housekeeper
was astir within her.</p>
          <p>He said nothing, and she presently continued
discursively, still leaning on the plough-handles: “I
never stayed away but them three days. I war n't
sati'fied in my mind, nohow, whilst I bided down thar
in Tuckaleechee Cove. I hankered cornsider'ble arter
the baby. He air three year old now, an' I hev keered
fur him
<pb id="crad7" n="7"/>
ever sence his mother died,  -  my brother Ab's wife,
ye know,  -  two year ago an' better. They hed fedded
him toler'ble whilst I war away, an' I fund him fat ez
common. But they hed crost him somehows, an' he
war ailin' in his temper when I got home, an' hed ter
hev cornsider'ble coddlin'.”</p>
          <p>She paused before the rising anger in his eyes.</p>
          <p>“Why air Mirandy Jane called ter l'arn how ter
cook vittles?” he demanded, irrelevantly, it might
have seemed.</p>
          <p>She looked at him in deprecating surprise. Yet she
turned at bay.</p>
          <p>“I hev never hearn ez ye war convicted yerself,
Rick Tyler!” she said, tartly. “Ye war never so
much ez seen a-scoutin' round the mourner's bench.
Ef I hev got no religion, ye hev got none, nuther.”</p>
          <p>“Ye air minded ter git married, D'rindy Cayce,” he
said, severely, solving his own problem, “an' that's
why Mirandy Jane hev got ter be l'arned ter take yer
place at home.”</p>
          <p>He produced this as if it were an accusation.</p>
          <p>She drew back, indignant and affronted, and with a
rigid air of offended propriety. “I hev no call ter
spen' words 'bout sech ez that, with a free-spoken
man like you-uns,” she staidly asseverated; and
then she was about to move on.
<pb id="crad8" n="8"/>
Accepting her view of the gross unseemliness
of his mention of the subject, the young fellow's
anger gave way to contrition. “Waal, D'rindy,” he
said, in an eager, apologetic tone, “I hev seen
that critter, that thar preacher, a-hangin' round
you-uns's house a powerful deal lately, whilst I
hev been obleeged ter hide out in the woods.
An' bein' ez nobody thar owns up ter needin'
religion but ye, I reckoned he war a-tryin' ter git
ye ter take him an' grace tergether. That man
hev got his mouth stuffed chock full o'
words,  -  more 'n enny other man I ever see,” he
added, with an expression of deep disgust.</p>
          <p>Dorinda might be thought to abuse her
opportunities. “He ain't studyin' 'bout'n me, no
more 'n I be 'bout'n him,” she said, with scant
relish for the spectacle of Rick Tyler's jealousy.
“Pa'son Kelsey jes' stops thar ter the house
ter rest his bones awhile, arter he comes down
off'n the bald, whar he goes ter pray.”</p>
          <p>“In the name o' reason,” exclaimed the
young fellow petulantly, “why can't he pray
somewhar else? A man ez hev got ter h'ist
hisself on the bald of a mounting ten mile high  -  
except what's lackin'  -  ter git a purchase on
prayer hain't got no religion wuth talkin' 'bout.
Sinner ez I am, I kin pray in the valley  -  way
down yander in Tuckaleechee Cove  -  ez peart
<pb id="crad9" n="9"/>
ez on enny bald in the Big Smoky. That critter
air a powerful aggervatin' contrivance.”</p>
          <p>Her eyes still shone upon him. “'Pears like ter
me ez it air no differ, nohow,” she said, with her
consolatory cadence. As she again started down
the row, she added, glancing over her shoulder
and relenting even to explanation, “ 'T war
granny's word ez Mirandy Jane hed ter be
l'arned ter cook an' sech. She air risin' thirteen
now, an' air toler'ble bouncin' an' spry, an'
oughter be some use, ef ever. An' <hi rend="italics">she</hi> mought
marry when she gits fairly grown, an',” pausing
in the turn-row for argument, and looking with
earnest eyes at him, as he still stood in the midst
of the waving corn, idly holding his plough-handles,
where the pistols swung, “ef she did marry,
'pears like ter me ez she would be mightily
faulted ef she could n't cook tasty.”</p>
          <p>There was no reasonable doubt of this proposition,
but it failed to convince, and in miserable
cogitation he completed another furrow, and met
her at the turn-row.</p>
          <p>“I s'pose ez Pa'son Kelsey an' yer granny air
powerful sociable an' frien'ly,” he hazarded, as
they stood together.</p>
          <p>“I dunno ez them two air partic'lar frien'ly.
Pa'son Kelsey air in no wise a sociable critter,”
said Dorinda, with a discriminating air. “He
<pb id="crad10" n="10"/>
ain't like Brother Jake Tobin,  -  though it 
'pears like ter me ez his gift in prayer air
manifested more survigrus ef ennything.” She
submitted this diffidently. Having no religion,
she felt incompetent to judge of such matters. 
“'Pears like ter me ez Pa'son Kelsey air more
like 'Lijah an' 'Lisha, an' them men, what he
talks about cornsider'ble, an' goes out ter meet
on the bald.”</p>
          <p>“He don't meet them men on the bald; they
air dead,” said Rick Tyler, abruptly.</p>
          <p>She looked at him in shocked surprise.</p>
          <p>“That's jes' his addling way o' talkin',”
continued the young fellow. “He don't mean fur
true more 'n haffen what he say. He 'lows ez
he meets the sperits o' them men on the bald.”</p>
          <p>Once more she lifted her bright eyes to the
shivering vapors,  -  vague, mysterious, veiling,
in solemn silence the barren, awful heights.</p>
          <p>An extreme gravity had fallen upon her
face. “Did they live in thar life-time up hyar
in the Big Smoky, or in the valley kentry?”
she asked, in a lowered voice.</p>
          <p>“I ain't sure 'bout'n that,” he replied, indifferently.</p>
          <p>“'Crost the line in the old North State?”
she hazarded, exhausting her knowledge of the
habitable globe.</p>
          <p>“I hearn him read 'bout'n it wunst, but I
furgits now.”</p>
          <pb id="crad11" n="11"/>
          <p>Still her reverent, beautiful eyes, full of the
dreamy sunshine, were lifted to the peak. “It
must hev been in the Big Smoky Mountings
they lived,” she said, with eager credulity, “fur
he told me ez the word an' the prophets holped
him when Satan kem a-huntin' of him like a
pa'tridge on the mounting.”</p>
          <p>The young fellow turned away, with a gesture
of angry impatience.</p>
          <p>“Ef he hed ever hed the State o' Tennessee
a-huntin' of him he would n't be so feared o'
Satan. Ef thar war a warrant fur <hi rend="italics">him</hi> in the
sher'ff's pocket, an' the gran' jury's true bill fur
murder lyin' agin <hi rend="italics">him</hi> yander at Shaftesville,
an' the gov'nor's reward, two hunderd dollars
blood money, on <hi rend="italics">him</hi>, he would n't be a-humpin'
his bones round hyar so peart, a-shakin' in his
shoes fur the fear o' Satan.” He laughed,  -  a
caustic, jeering laugh. “Satan's mighty active,
cornsiderin' his age, but I 'd be willin'
ter pit the State o' Tennessee agin him when
it kem ter huntin' of folks like a pa'tridge.”</p>
          <p>The sunshine in the girl's eyes was clouded.
They had filled with tears. Still leaning on
the plough-handles, she looked at him, with
suddenly crimson cheeks and quivering lips.
“I dunno how the State o' Tennessee kin git
its own cornsent ter be so mean an' wicked ez
it air,<corr>”</corr> she said, his helpless little partisan.</p>
          <pb id="crad12" n="12"/>
          <p>Despite their futility, her words comforted
him. “An' I hev done nuthin', nohow!” he
cried out, in shrill self-justification. “I could
no more hender 'Bednego Tynes from shootin'
Joel Byers down in his own door'n nuthin' in this
worl'. I never even knowed they hed a grudge.
”Bednego Tynes, he tole me ez he owed Joel a
debt, an' war goin' ter see him 'bout'n it, an'
wanted somebody along ter hear his word an'
see jestice done 'twixt 'em. Thar air fower
Byers boys, an' I reckon he war feared they
would all jump on him at wunst, an' he wanted
me ter holp him ef they did. An' I went along
like a fool sheep, thinkin' 'bout nuthin'. An'
when we got way down yander in Eskaqua
Cove, whar Joel Byers's house air, he gin a
hello at the fence, an' Joel kem ter the door.
An' 'Bednego whipped up his riffle suddint an'
shot him through the head, ez nip an' percise!
An' thar stood Joel's wife, seein' it all. An'
'Bednego run off, nimble, I tell ye, an' I war
so frustrated I run, too. Somebody cotched
'Bednego in the old North State the nex' week,
an' the gov'nor hed ter send a requisition arter
him. But sence I fund out ez they 'lowed I
war aidin' an' abettin' 'Bednego, an' war goin'
ter arrest me 'kase I war thar at the killin',
they hev hed powerful little chance o' tryin'
me in the court. An' whilst the gov'nor hed
<pb id="crad13" n="13"/>
his hand in, he offered a reward fur sech a
lawless man ez I be.”</p>
          <p>He broke off, visibly struggling for composure;
then he recommenced in increasing indignation:
“An' these hyar frien's o' mine in the
Big Smoky, I 'll be bound they hanker powerful
arter them two hunderd dollars blood
money. I know ez I 'd hev been tuk afore this,
ef it war n't fur them consarns thar.” He nodded
frowningly at the pistols. “Them's the
only frien's I hev got.”</p>
          <p>The girl's voice trembled. “'Pears like ye
mought count me in,” she said, reproachfully.</p>
          <p>“Naw,” he retorted, sternly, “ye go round
hyar sorrowin' fur a man ez hev got nuthin' ter
be afeard of but the devil.”</p>
          <p>She made no reply, and her meekness
mollified him.</p>
          <p>“D'rindy,” he said, in an altered tone, and
with the pathos of a keen despair, “I hed fixed
it in my mind a good while ago, when I could
hev hed a house, an' lived like folks, stiddier
like a wolf in the woods, ter ax ye ter marry
me; but I war hendered by gittin' skeered
'bout'n yer bein' all in favor o' Amos Jeemes,
ez kem up ter see ye from Eskaqua Cove, an' I
did n't want ter git turned off. Mebbe ef I hed
axed ye then I would n't hev tuk ter goin' along
o' Abednego Tynes an' sech, an' the killin' o'
<pb id="crad14" n="14"/>
Joel would n't hev happened like it done.
Would ye  -  would ye hev married me then?”</p>
          <p>Her eyes flashed. “Ye air fairly sodden
with foolishness, Rick!” she exclaimed, angrily.
“Air you-uns thinkin' ez I 'll 'low ez I would
hev married a man four month ago ez never
axed me ter marry, nohow?” Then, with an
appreciation of the delicacy of the position and
a conservation of mutual pride, she added,
“An' I won't say nuther ez I <hi rend="italics">would n't</hi> marry
a man ez hev never axed me ter marry, nohow.”</p>
          <p>Somehow, the contrariety of the proprieties,
as she translated them, bewildered and baffled
him. Even had he been looking at her he
might hardly have interpreted, with his blunt
perceptions, the dewy wistfulness of the eyes
which she bent upon him. The word might
promise nothing now. Still she would have
valued it. He did not speak it. His eyes
were fixed on Chilhowee Mountain, rising up,
massive and splendid, against the west. The
shadows of the clouds flecked the pure and
perfect blue of the sunny slopes with a dusky
mottling of purple. The denser shade in the
valley had shifted, and one might know by this
how the day wore on. The dew had dried from
the long, keen blades of the Indian corn; the
grasshoppers droned among them. A lizard
<pb id="crad15" n="15"/>
basked on a flat, white stone hard by. The old
ox dozed in the turn-row.</p>
          <p>Suddenly Rick Tyler lifted his hand, with
an intent gesture and a dilated eye. There
came from far below, on the mountain road, the
sound of a horse's hoof striking on a stone,
again, and yet again. A faint metallic jingle  -  
the air was so still now  -  suggested spurs.
The girl's hand trembled violently as she
stepped swiftly to his horse and took off the
plough-gear. He had caught up a saddle that
was lying in the turn-row, and as hastily
buckled the girth about the animal.</p>
          <p>“Ef that air ennybody a-hankerin' ter see
me, don't you-uns be a-denyin' ez I hev been
hyar, D'rindy,” he said, as he put his foot in
the stirrup. “I reckon they hev fund out by
now ez I be in the kentry round about. But
keep 'em hyar ez long ez ye kin, ter gin me a
start.”</p>
          <p>He mounted his horse, and rode noiselessly
away along the newly turned mould of the
furrow.</p>
          <p>She stood leaning upon her plough-handles,
and silently watching him. His equestrian
figure, darkly outlined against the far blue
mountains and the intermediate valley, seemed
of heroic size against the landscape, which was
reduced by the distance to the minimum of
<pb id="crad16" n="16"/>
proportion. The deep shadows of the woods,
encompassing the clearing, fell upon him 
presently, and he, too, was but a shadow in the
dusky monochrome of the limited vista. The
dense laurel closed about him, and his mountain
fastnesses, that had befriended him of yore,
received him once again.</p>
          <p>Then up and down the furrows Dorinda 
mechanically followed the plough, her pulses
throbbing, every nerve tense, every faculty
alert. She winced when she heard the frequent
striking of hoofs upon the rocky slopes
of the road below. She was instantly aware
when they were silent and the party had
stopped to breathe the horses. She began
accurately to gauge their slow progress.</p>
          <p>“'T ain't airish in no wise ter-day,” she said,
glancing about at the still, noontide landscape;
“an' ef them air valley cattle they mus' git
blowed mightily travelin' up sech steep 
mountings ez the Big Smoky.” She checked her
self-gratulation. “Though I ain't wantin' ter
gloat on the beastis' misery, nuther,” she stipulated.</p>
          <p>She paused presently at the lower end of the
clearing, and looked down over the precipice,
that presented a sheer sandstone cliff on one
side, and on the other a wild confusion of
splintered and creviced rocks, where the wild rose
<pb id="crad17" n="17"/>
bloomed in the niches and the grape-vine swung.
The beech-trees on the slope below conserved
beneath their dense, umbrageous branches a
tender, green twilight. Loitering along in a
gleaming silver thread by the roadside was a
mountain rill, hardly gurgling even when with
slight and primitive shift it was led into a hollow
and mossy log, that it might aggregate sufficient
volume in the dry season to water the
horse of the chance wayfarer.</p>
          <p>The first stranger that rode into this shadowy
nook took off a large straw hat and bared his
brow to the refreshing coolness. His grizzled
hair stood up in front after the manner
denominated “a roach.” His temples were deeply
sunken, and his strongly marked face was long
and singularly lean. He held it forward, as if
he were snuffing the air. He had a massive
and powerful frame, with not an ounce of
superfluous flesh, and he looked like a hound in
the midst of the hunting season.</p>
          <p>It served to quiet Dorinda's quivering nerves
when he leisurely rode his big gray horse up to
the trough, and dropped the rein that the animal
might drink. If he were in pursuit he evidently
had no idea how close he had pressed the
fugitive. He was joined there by the other
members of the party, six or eight in number,
and presently a stentorian voice broke upon the
<pb id="crad18" n="18"/>
air. “Hello! Hello!” he shouted, hailing the
log cabin.</p>
          <p>Mirandy Jane, a slim, long-legged, filly-like
girl of thirteen, with a tangled black mane, the
forelock hanging over her wild, prominent eyes,
had at that moment appeared on the porch.
She paused, and stared at the strangers with
vivacious surprise. Then, taking sudden fright,
she fled precipitately, with as much attendant
confusion of pattering footfalls, flying mane,
and excited snorts and gasps as if she were a
troop of wild horses.</p>
          <p>“Granny! Granny!” she exclaimed to the
old crone in the chimney corner, “thar's a man
on a big gray critter down at the trough, an' I
ain't s'prised none ef he air a raider!”</p>
          <p>The hail of the intruders was regarded as a
challenge by some fifteen or twenty hounds that
suddenly materialized among the beehives and
the althea bushes, and from behind the ash-hopper
and the hen-house and the rain-barrel.
From under the cabin two huge curs came,
their activity impeded by the blocks and chains
they drew. These were silent, while the others
yelped vociferously, and climbed over the fence,
and dashed down the road.</p>
          <p>The horses pricked up their ears, and the
leader of the party awaited the onslaught with
a pistol in his hand.</p>
          <pb id="crad19" n="19"/>
          <p>The old woman, glancing out of the window,
observed this demonstration.</p>
          <p>“He'll kill one o' our dogs with that thar
shootin'-iron o' his'n!” she exclaimed in 
trepidation. “Run, Mirandy Jane, an' tell him <hi rend="italics">our</hi>
dogs don't bite.”</p>
          <p>The filly-like Mirandy Jane made great speed
among the hounds, as she called them off, and
remembered only after she had returned to the
house to be afraid of the “shootin'-iron” herself.</p>
          <p>The old woman, who had come out on the
porch, stood gazing at the party, shading her
eyes with her hand, and a long-range colloquy
ensued.</p>
          <p>“Good-mornin', madam,” said the man at
the trough.</p>
          <p>“Good-mornin', sir,” quavered the old crone
on the mountain slope.</p>
          <p>“I'm the sher'ff o' the county, madam, an'
I 'd like ter know ef”  -  </p>
          <p>“Mirandy Jane,” the old woman interrupted,
in a wrathful undertone, “'pears like I hev hed
the trouble o' raisin' a idjit in you-uns! Them
ain't raiders, 'n nuthin' like it. Run an' tell
the sher'ff we air dishin' up dinner right now,
an' ax him an' his gang ter' light an' hitch, an'
eat it along o' we-uns.”</p>
          <p>The prospect was tempting. It was high
<pb id="crad20" n="20"/>
noon, and the posse had been in the saddle
since dawn. Dorinda, with a beating heart,
marked how short a consultation resulted in
dismounting and hitching the horses; and then,
with their spurs jingling and their pistols belted
about them, the men trooped up to the house.</p>
          <p>As they seated themselves around the table,
more than one looked back over his shoulder at
the open window, in which was framed, as 
motionless as a painted picture, the vast 
perspective of the endless blue ranges and the great
vaulted sky, not more blue, all with the broad,
still, brilliant noontide upon it.</p>
          <p>“Ye ain't scrimped fur a view, Mis' Cayce,
an' that's the Lord's truth!” exclaimed the
officer.</p>
          <p>“Waal,” said the old woman, as if her 
attention were called to the fact for the first time,
“we kin see a power o' kentry from this spot
o' ourn, sure enough; but I dunno ez it gins us
enny more chance o' ever viewin' Canaan.”</p>
          <p>“It's a sight o' ground ter hev ter hunt a
man over, ez ef he war a needle in a haystack,”
and once more the officer turned and surveyed
the prospect.</p>
          <p>The room was overheated by the fire which
had cooked the dinner, and the old woman 
actively plied her fan of turkey feathers, pausing
occasionally to readjust her cap, which had a
<pb id="crad21" n="21"/>
flapping frill and was surmounted by a pair of
gleaming spectacles. A bandana kerchief was
crossed over her breast, and she wore a blue-and-
white-checked homespun dress of the same pattern
and style that she had worn here fifty years
ago. Her hands were tremulous and gnarled
and her face was deeply wrinkled, but her interest
in life was as fresh as Mirandy Jane's.</p>
          <p>The great frame of the warping-bars on one
side of the room was swathed with a rainbow of
variegated yarn, and a spinning-wheel stood
near the door. A few shelves, scrupulously
neat, held piggins, a cracked blue bowl, brown
earthenware, and the cooking utensils. There
were rude gun-racks on the walls. These
indicated the fact of several men in the family. It
was the universal dinner-hour, yet none of them
appeared. The sheriff reflected that perhaps
they had their own sufficient reason to be shy
of strangers, and the horses hitched outside
advertised the presence and number of
unaccustomed visitors within. When the usual
appetizer was offered, it took the form of
whiskey in such quantity that the conviction
was forced upon him that it was come by very
handily. However, he applied himself with
great relish to the bacon and snap-beans, corn
dodgers and fried chicken, not knowing that
Mirandy Jane, who was esteemed altogether
<pb id="crad22" n="22"/>
second rate, had cooked them, and he spread
honey upon the apple-pie, ate it with his knife,
and washed it down with buttermilk, kept cold
as ice in the spring,  -  the mixture being calculated
to surprise a more civilized stomach.</p>
          <p>Not even his conscience was roused,  -  the
first intimation of a disordered digestion. He
listened to old Mrs. Cayce with no betrayal of
divination when she vaguely but anxiously
explained the absence of her son and his boys in
the equivocal phrase, “Not round about ter-day,
bein' gone off,” and he asked how many miles
distant was the Settlement, as if he understood
they had gone thither. He was saying to himself,
the brush whiskey warming his heart, that
the revenue department paid him nothing to
raid moonshiners, and there was no obligation
of his office to sift any such suspicion which might
occur to him while accepting an unguarded hospitality.</p>
          <p>He looked with somewhat appreciative eyes
at Dorinda, as she went back and forth from
the table to the pot which hung in the deep
chimney-place above the smouldering coals.
She had laid aside her bonnet. Her face was
grave; her eyes were bright and excited; her
hair was drawn back, except for the tendrils
about her brow, and coiled, with the aid of a
much-prized “tuckin' comb,” at the back of
<pb id="crad23" n="23"/>
her head in a knot discriminated as Grecian in
civilization. He remarked to her grandmother
that he was a family man himself, and had a
daughter as old, he should say, as Dorinda.</p>
          <p>“D'rindy air turned seventeen now,” said
Mrs. Cayce, disparagingly. “It 'pears like ter
me ez the young folks nowadays air awk'ard
an' back'ard. I war married when I war
sixteen,  -  sixteen scant.”</p>
          <p>The girl felt that she was indeed of advanced
years, and the sheriff said that his daughter
was not yet sixteen, and he thought it probable
she weighed more than Dorinda.</p>
          <p>He lighted his pipe presently, and tilted his
chair back against the wall.</p>
          <p>“Yes'm,” he said, meditatively, gazing out
of the window at the great panorama, “it's a
pretty big spot o' kentry ter hev ter hunt a
man over. Now ef 't war one o' the town folks
we could make out ter overhaul him somehows;
but a mounting boy,  -  why, he's ez free ter
the hills ez a fox. I s'pose ye hain't seen him
hyar-abouts?”</p>
          <p>“I hain't hearn who it air yit,” the old
woman replied, putting her hand behind her ear.</p>
          <p>“It's Rick Tyler; he hails from this deestric.
I won't be 'stonished ef we ketch him this time.
The gov'nor has offered two hunderd dollars
<pb id="crad24" n="24"/>
reward fur him; an' I reckon somebody will find
it wuth while ter head him fur us.”</p>
          <p>He was talking idly. He had no expectation
of developments here. He had only stopped
at the house in the first instance for the question
which he had asked at every habitation
along the road. It suddenly occurred to him
as polite to include Dorinda in the conversation.</p>
          <p>“Ye hain't seen nor hearn of him, I s'pose,
hev ye?” inquired the sheriff, directly addressing
her.</p>
          <p>As he turned toward her he marked her
expression. His own face changed suddenly.
He rose at once.</p>
          <p>“Don't trifle with the law, I warn ye,” he
said, sternly. “Ye hev seen that man.”</p>
          <p>Dorinda was standing beside her
spinning-wheel, one hand holding the thread,
the other raised to guide the motion. She looked
at him, pale and breathless.</p>
          <p>“I hev seen him. I ain't onwillin' ter own
it. Ye never axed me afore.”</p>
          <p>The other members of the party had crowded
in from the porch, where they had been sitting
since dinner, smoking their pipes. The officer,
realizing his lapse of vigilance and the loss of
his opportunity, was sharply conscious, too, of
their appreciation of his fatuity.</p>
          <pb id="crad25" n="25"/>
          <p>“Whar did ye see him?” he asked.</p>
          <p>“I seen him hyar  -  this mornin'.” There
was a stir of excitement in the group. “He
kem by on his beastis whilst I war a-ploughin',
an' we talked a passel. An' then he tuk Pete's
plough, ez war idle in the turnrow, an' holped
along some; he run a few furrows.”</p>
          <p>“Which way did he go?” asked the sheriff,
breathlessly.</p>
          <p>“I dunno,” faltered the girl.</p>
          <p>“Look-a-hyar!” he thundered, in rising
wrath. “Ye'll find yerself under lock an' key
in the jail at Shaftesville, ef ye undertake ter
fool with me. Which way did he go?”</p>
          <p>A flush sprang into the girl's excited face.
Her eyes flashed.</p>
          <p>“Ef ye kin jail me fur tellin' all I know, I
can't holp it,” she said, with spirit. “I kin
tell no more.”</p>
          <p>He saw the justice of her position. It did
not make the situation easier for him. Here
he had sat eating and drinking and idly talking
while the fugitive, who had escaped by a hair's
breadth, was counting miles and miles between
himself and his lax pursuer. This would be
heard of in Shaftesville,  -  and be a candidate
for reëlection! He beheld already an exchange
of significant glances among his posse. Had
he asked that simple question earlier he might
<pb id="crad26" n="26"/>
now be on his way back to Shaftesville, his
prisoner braceleted with the idle handcuffs that
jingled in his pocket as he moved.</p>
          <p>He caught at every illusive vagary that might
promise to retrieve his error. He declared that
she could not say which way Rick Tyler had
taken because he was not gone.</p>
          <p>“He's in this house right now!” he exclaimed.
He ordered a search, and the guests,
a little while ago so friendly, began exploring
every nook and cranny.</p>
          <p>“No, no!” cried the old woman, shrilly, as
they tried the door of the shed-room, which
was bolted and barred. “Ye can't tech that
thar door. It can't be opened,  -  not ef the
Gov'nor o' Tennessee war hyar himself,
a-moan-in' an' a-honin' ter git in.”</p>
          <p>The sheriff's eyes dilated. “Open the door,  -  
I summon ye!” he proclaimed, with his
imperative official manner.</p>
          <p>“No!  -  I done tole ye,” she said indignantly.
“The word o' the men folks hev been gin ter
keep that thar door shet, an' shet it's goin' ter
be kep'.”</p>
          <p>The officer laid his hand upon it.</p>
          <p>“Ye must n't bust it open!” shrilled the old
woman. “Laws-a-massy! ef thar be many
sech ez you-uns in Shaftesville, I ain't s'prised
none that the Bible gits ter mournin' over the
<pb id="crad27" n="27"/>
low kentry, an' calls it a vale o' tears an' the
valley o' the shadder o' death!”</p>
          <p>The sheriff had placed his powerful shoulder
against the frail batten floor.</p>
          <p>“Hyar goes!” he said.</p>
          <p>There was a crash; the door lay in splinters
on the floor; the men rushed precipitately
over it.</p>
          <p>They came back laughing sheepishly. The
officer's face was angry and scarlet.</p>
          <p>“Don't take the bar'l,  -  don't take the
bar'l!” the old woman besought of him, as
she fairly hung upon his arm. “I dunno <hi rend="italics">how</hi>
the boys would cavort ef they kem back an'
fund the bar'l gone.”</p>
          <p>He gave her no heed. “Why n't ye tell me
that man war n't thar?” he asked of the
girl.</p>
          <p>“Ye did n't ax me that word,” said Dorinda.</p>
          <p>“No, 'Cajah Green, ye did n't,” said one of
the men, who, since the abortive result of their
leader's suspicion, were ashamed of their mission,
and prone to self-exoneration. “I 'll stand
up ter it ez she answered full an' true every
word ez ye axed her.”</p>
          <p>“Lor'-a'mighty! Ef I jes' knowed aforehand
how it will tech the boys when they view
the door down onto the floor!” exclaimed the
old woman. “They mought jounce round
<pb id="crad28" n="28"/>
hyar ez ef they war bereft o' reason, an' all
thar hope o' salvation hed hung on the hinges.
An' then agin they mought 'low ez they hed
ruther hev no door than be at the trouble o'
shettin' it an' barrin' it up ez they come an' go.
They air mighty onsartin in thar temper, an' I
hev never hankered ter see 'em crost. But fur
the glory's sake, don't tech the bar'l. It 's been
sot thar ter age some, ef the Lord will spare it.”</p>
          <p>In the girl's lucent eyes the officer detected
a gleam of triumph. How far away in the
tangled labyrinths of the mountain wilderness,
among the deer-paths and the cataracts and the
cliffs, had these long hours led Rick Tyler!</p>
          <p>He spoke on his angry impulse: “An' I
ain't goin' ter furgit in a hurry how I hev fund
out ez ye air a-consortin' with criminals, an'
aidin' an' abettin' men ez air fleein' from jestice
an' wanted fur murder. Ye look out; ye 'll
find yerself in Shaftesville jail 'fore long, I'm
a-thinkin'.”</p>
          <p>“He stopped an' talked ez other folks stop
an' talk,” Dorinda retorted. “I could n't hender,
an' I hed no mind ter hender. He took
no bite nor sup ez others hev done. 'Pears like
ter me ez we hev gin aid an' comfort ter the
off'cer o' the law, ez well ez we could.”</p>
          <p>And this was the story that went down to
Shaftesville.</p>
          <pb id="crad29" n="29"/>
          <p>The man, his wrath rebounding upon himself,
hung his head, and went down to the
trough, and mounted his horse without another
word.</p>
          <p>The others hardly knew what to say to
Dorinda. But they were more deliberate in
their departure, and hung around apologizing
in their rude way to the old woman, who
convulsively besought each to spare the barrel,
which had been set in the shed-room to “age
some, ef it could be lef' alone.”</p>
          <p>Dorinda stood under the jack-bean vines,
blossoming purple and white, and watched the
men as they silently rode away. All the pride
within her was stirred. Every sensitive fibre
flinched from the officer's coarse threat. She
followed him out of sight with vengeful eyes.</p>
          <p>“I wish I war a man!” she cried, passionately.</p>
          <p>“A-law, D'rindy!” exclaimed her grandmother,
aghast at the idea. “That ain't manners!”</p>
          <p>The shadows were beginning to creep slowly
up the slopes of the Great Smoky Mountains,
as if they came from the depths of the earth.
A roseate suffusion idealized range and peak to
the east. The delicate skyey background of
opaline tints and lustre made distinct and definite
their majestic symmetry of outline. Ah!
<pb id="crad30" n="30"/>
and the air was so clear! What infinite lengths
of elastic distances stretched between that 
quivering trumpet-flower by the fence and the azure
heights which its scarlet horn might almost
seem to cover! The sun, its yellow blaze
burned out, and now a sphere of smouldering
fire, was dropping down behind Chilhowee,
royally purple, richly dark. Wings were in
the air and every instinct was homeward. An
eagle, with a shadow skurrying through the
valley like some forlorn Icarus that might not
soar, swept high over the landscape. Above
all rose the great “bald,” still splendidly 
illumined with the red glamour of the sunset,
and holding its uncovered head so loftily against
the sky that it might seem it had bared its
brow before the majesty of heaven.</p>
          <p>When the “men folks,” great, gaunt, bearded,
jeans-clad fellows, stood in the shed-room
and gazed at the splintered door upon the floor,
it was difficult to judge what was the prevailing
sentiment, so dawdling, so uncommunicative,
so inexpressive of gesture, were they.</p>
          <p>“We knowed ez thar war strangers prowlin'
roun',” said the master of the house, when he
had heard his mother's excited account of the
events of the day. “We war a-startin' home ter
dinner, an' seen thar beastises hitched thar
a-nigh the trough. An' I 'lowed ez mebbe they
<pb id="crad31" n="31"/>
mought be the revenue devils, so I jes' made
the boys lay low. An' Sol war set ter watch,
an' he gin tile word when they hed rid away.”</p>
          <p>He was a man of fifty-five, perhaps, tough
and stalwart. His face was as lined and seamed
as that of his mother, who had counted nearly
fourscore years, but his frame was almost as
supple as at thirty. This trait of physical
vigor was manifested in each of his muscular
sons, and despite their slow and lank uncouthness,
their movements suggested latent elasticity.
In Dorinda, his only daughter, it graced
her youth and perfected her beauty. He was
known far and wide as “Ground-hog Cayce,”
but he would tell you, with a flash of the eye,
that before the war he bore the Christian name
of John.</p>
          <p>Nothing more was said on the subject until
after supper, when they were all sitting, dusky
shadows, on the little porch, where the fireflies
sparkled and the vines fluttered, and one might
look out and see the new moon, in the similitude
of a silver boat, sailing down the western
skies, off the headlands of Chilhowee. A
cricket was shrilling in the weeds. The vague,
sighing voice of the woods rose and fell with a
melancholy monody. A creamy elder blossom
glimmered in a corner of the rail fence, hard by,
its delicate, delicious odor pervading the air.</p>
          <pb id="crad32" n="32"/>
          <p>“I never knowed,” said one of the young
men, “ez this hyar sher'ff  -  this 'Cajah
Green  -  war sech a headin' critter.”</p>
          <p>“He never teched the bar'l,” said the old
woman, not wishing that he should appear
blacker than he had painted himself.</p>
          <p>“I s'pose you-uns gin him an' his gang a bite
an' sup,” remarked Ground-hog Cayce.</p>
          <p>“They eat a sizable dinner hyar,” put in
Mirandy Jane, who, having cooked it, had no
mind that it should be belittled.</p>
          <p>“An' they stayed a right smart while, an'
talked powerful frien'ly an' sociable-like,” said
old Mrs. Cayce, “till the sher'ff got addled with
the notion that we hed Rick Tyler hid hyar.
An' unless we-uns hed tied him in the cheer or
shot him, nuthin' in natur' could hev held him.
I 'lowed 't war the dram he tuk, though D'rindy,
thinks differ. They never teched the bar'l,
though.”</p>
          <p>“An' then,” said Dorinda, with a sudden
gush of tears, all the afflicted delicacy of a young
and tender woman, all the overweening pride
of the mountaineer, throbbing wildly in her
veins, her heart afire, her helpless hands trembling,
“he said the word ez he would lock me
up in the jail at Shaftesville, sence I hed owned
ter seein' a man ez he war n't peart enough ter
ketch. He spoke that word ter me,  -  <hi rend="italics">the jail!</hi>”</p>
          <pb id="crad33" n="33"/>
          <p>She hung sobbing in the doorway.</p>
          <p>There was a murmur of indignation among
the group, and John Cayce rose to his feet with
furious oath.</p>
          <p>“He shell rue it” he cried,  -  “he shell rue
it! Me an' mine take no word off'n nobody.
My gran'dad an' his three brothers, one hunderd
an' fourteen year ago, kem hyar from the
old North State an' settled in the Big Smoky.
They an' thar sons rooted up the wilderness.
They crapped. They fit the beastis; they fit
the Injun; they fit the British; an' this last
little war o' ourn they fit each other. Thar
hev never been a coward 'mongst 'em. Thar
hev never been a key turned on one of 'em, or
a door shet. They hev respected the law fur
what it war wuth, an' they hev stood up fur
thar rights agin it. They answer fur thar
word, an' others hev ter answer.” He paused
for a moment.</p>
          <p>The moon, still in the similitude of a silver
boat, swung at anchor in a deep indentation in
the summit of Chilhowee that looked like some
lonely pine-girt bay; what strange, mysterious
fancies did it land from its cargo of sentiments
and superstitions and uncanny influences!</p>
          <p>“Drindy,” her father commanded, “make a
mark on this hyar rifie-bar'l fur 'Cajah Green's
word ter be remembered by.”</p>
          <pb id="crad34" n="34"/>
          <p>There was a flash in the faint moonbeams,
as he held out to her a long, sharp knife. The
rifle was in his hand. Other marks were on it
commemorating past events. This was to be a
foregone conclusion.</p>
          <p>“No, no!” cried the girl, shrinking back
aghast. “I don't want him shot. I would n't
hev him hurted fur me, fur nuthin'! I ain't
keerin' now fur what he said. Let him be,  -  
let him be.”</p>
          <p>She had smarted under the sense of indignity.
She had wanted their sympathy, and perhaps
their idle anger. She was dismayed by the
revengeful passion she had roused.</p>
          <p>“No, no!” she reiterated, as one of the
younger men, her brother Peter, stepped swiftly
out from the shadow, seized her hand with the
knife trembling in it, and, catching the moonlight
on the barrel of the rifle, guided upon it,
close to the muzzle, the mark of a cross.</p>
          <p>The moon had weighed anchor at last, and
dropped down behind the mountain summit,
leaving the bay with a melancholy waning
suffusion of light, and the night very dark.</p>
        </div2>
        <pb id="crad35" n="35"/>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>II.</head>
          <p>THE summer days climbed slowly over the
Great Smoky Mountains. Long the morning
lingered among the crags, and chasms, and
the dwindling shadows. The vertical noontide
poised motionless on the great balds. The evening
dawdled along the sunset slopes, and the
waning crimson waited in the dusk for the
golden moonrise.</p>
          <p>So little speed they made that it seemed to
Rick Tyler that weeks multiplied while they
loitered.</p>
          <p>It might have been deemed the ideal of a
sylvan life,  -  those days while he lay hid out
on the Big Smoky. His rifle brought him food
with but the glance of the eye and a touch on
the trigger. “Ekal ter the prophet's raven, ef
the truth war knowed,” he said sometimes,
while he cooked the game over a fire of 
deadwood gathered by the wayside. A handful
of blackberries gave it a relish, and there were
the ice-cold, never-failing springs of the range
wherever he might turn.</p>
          <p>But for the unquiet thoughts that followed
him from the world, the characteristic sloth of
<pb id="crad36" n="36"/>
the mountaineer might have spared him all sense
of tedium, as he lay on the bank of a mountain
stream, while the slow days waxed and waned.
Often he would see a musk-rat  -  picturesque
little body  -  swimming in a muddy dip. And
again his listless gaze was riveted upon the
quivering diaphanous wings of a snake-doctor,
hovering close at hand, until the grotesque, airy
thing would flit away. The arrowy sunbeams
shot into the dense umbrageous tangles, and
fell spent to earth as the shadows swayed.
Farther down the stream two huge cliffs rose on
either side of the channel, giving a narrow view
of far-away blue mountains as through a gate.
In and out stole the mist, uncertain whither.
The wind came and went, paying no toll. Sometimes,
when the sun was low, a shadow  -  an antlered
shadow  -  slipped through like a fantasy.</p>
          <p>But when the skies would begin to darken
and the night come tardily on, the scanty incidents
of the day lost their ephemeral interest.
His human heart would assert itself, and he
would yearn for the life from which he was
banished, and writhe with an intolerable anguish
under his sense of injury.</p>
          <p>“An' the law holds me the same ez' Bednego
Tynes, who killed Joel Byers, jes' ter keep his
hand in,  -  hevin' killed another man afore,  -  
an' I never so much ez lifted a finger agin him!<corr>”</corr></p>
          <pb id="crad37" n="37"/>
          <p>He pondered much on his past, and the future
that he had lost. Sometimes he gave himself
to adjusting, from the meagre circumstances
of their common lot on Big Smoky, the future
of those with whose lives his own had heretofore
seemed an integrant part, and from which
it should forevermore be dissevered. All the
pangs of penance were in that sense of
irrevocability. It was done, and here was his choice:
to live the life of a skulking wolf, to prowl, to
flee, to fight at bay, or to return and confront
an outraged law. He experienced a frenzy of
rage to realize how hardily his world would roll
on without him. Big Smoky would not suffer!
The sun would shine, and the crops ripen, and
the harvest come, and the snows sift down, and
the seasons revolve. The boys would shoot for
beef, and there was to be a gander-pulling at
the Settlement when the candidates should
come, “stumpin' the Big Smoky” for the
midsummer elections. And when, periodically, 
“the mountings” would awake to a sense of sin,
and a revival would be instituted, all the people
would meet, and clap their hands, and sing, and
pray, and that busy sinner, D'rindy, might find
time to think upon grace, and perhaps upon the
man whom she likened to the prophets of old.</p>
          <p>Then Rick Tyler would start up from his bed
of boughs, and stride wildly about among the
<pb id="crad38" n="38"/>
bowlders, hardly pausing to listen if he heard a
wolf howling on the lonely heights. An owl
would hoot derisively from the tangled laurel.
And oh, the melancholy moonlight in the
melancholy pines, where the whip-poor-will
moaned and moaned!</p>
          <p>“I 'd shoot that critter ef I could make out
ter see him!” cried the harassed fugitive, his
every nerve quivering.</p>
          <p>It all began with Dorinda; it all came back
to her. He drearily foresaw that she would
forget him; and yet he could not know how
the alienation was to commence, how it should
progress, and the process of its completion.
“All whilst I'm a-roamin' off with the painters
an' sech!” he exclaimed, bitterly.</p>
          <p>And she,  -  her future was plain enough.
There was a little log-cabin by the grist-mill:
the mountains sheltered it; the valley held it
as in the palm of a hand. Hardly a moment
since, his jealous heart had been racked by the
thought of the man she likened to the prophets
of old, and now he saw her spinning in the door
of Amos James's house, in the quiet depths of
Eskaqua Cove.</p>
          <p>This vision stilled his heart. He was numbed
by his despair. Somehow, the burly young
miller seemed a fitter choice than the religious
enthusiast, whose leisure was spent in praying
<pb id="crad39" n="39"/>
in the desert places. He wondered that he
should ever have felt other jealousy, and was
subacutely amazed to find this passion so elastic.</p>
          <p>With wild and haggard eyes he saw the day
break upon this vision. It came in at the great
gate,  -  a pale flush, a fainting star, a burst of
song, and the red and royal sun.</p>
          <p>The morning gradually exerted its revivifying
influence and brought a new impulse. He
easily deceived himself, and disguised it as a
reason.</p>
          <p>“This hyar powder is a-gittin' mighty low,”
he said to himself, examining the contents of his
powder-horn. “An' that thar rifle eats it up
toler'ble fast sence I hev hed ter hunt varmints
fur my vittles. Ef that war the sher'ff a-ridin'
arter me the day I war at Cayce's, he's done
gone whar he b'longs by this time,  -  't war
two weeks ago; an' ef he ain't gone back he
would n't be layin' fur me roun' the Settle<hi rend="italics">mint</hi>,
nohow. An' I kin git some powder thar, an'
hear 'em tell what the mounting air a-doin' of.
An' mebbe I won't be so durned lonesome when
I gits back hyar.”</p>
          <p>He mounted his horse, later in the day, and
picked his way slowly down the banks of the
stream and through the great gate.</p>
          <p>The Settlement on a spur of the Big Smoky
illustrated the sacrilege of civilization. A number
<pb id="crad40" n="40"/>
of trees, girdled years ago, stretched above
the fields their gigantic skeletons, suggesting
their former majesty of mien and splendid
proportions. Their forlorn leafless branches rattled
together with a dreary sound, as the breeze
stirred among the gaunt and pallid assemblage.
The little log-cabins, five or six in number,
were so situated among the stumps which
disfigured the clearing that if a sudden wind
should bring down one of the monarchical spectres
of the forest it would make havoc only in
the crops. The wheat was thin and backward.
A little patch of cotton in a mellow dip served
to show the plant at its minimum. There was
tobacco, too, placed like the cotton where it
was hoped it would take a notion to grow.
Sorghum flourished, and the tasseled Indian
corn, waving down a slope, had aboriginal
suggestions of plumed heads and glancing quivers.
A clamor of Guinea fowls arose, and geese and
turkeys roved about in the publicity of the
clearing with the confident air of esteemed citizens.
Sheep were feeding among the ledges.</p>
          <p>It was hard to say what might be bought at
the store except powder and coffee, and sugar
perhaps, if “long-sweetenin'”might not suffice;
for each of the half dozen small farms was a
type of the region, producing within its own
confines all its necessities. Hand-looms could
<pb id="crad41" n="41"/>
be glimpsed through open doors, and as yet the
dry-goods trade is unknown to the homespunclad
denizens of the Settlement. Beeswax,
feathers, honey, dried fruit, are bartered here,
and a night's rest has never been lost for the
perplexities of the currency question on the Big
Smoky Mountains.</p>
          <p>The proprietor of the store, his operations
thus limited, was content to grow rich slowly,
if needs were to grow rich at all. In winter he
sat before the great wood fire in the store and
smoked his pipe, and his crony, the blacksmith,
often came, hammer in hand and girded with
his leather apron, and smoked with him. In
the summer he sat all day, as now, in front of
the door, looking meditatively at the scene before
him. The sunlight slanted upon the great
dead trees; their forms were imposed with a
wonderful distinctness upon the landscape that
stretched so far below the precipice on which
the little town was perched. They even touched,
with those bereaved and denuded limbs, the far
blue mountains encircling the horizon, and with
their interlacing lines and curves they seemed
some mysterious scripture engraven upon the
world.</p>
          <p>It was just six o'clock, and the shadow of a
bough that still held a mass of woven sticks,
once the nest of an eagle, had reached the verge
<pb id="crad42" n="42"/>
of the cliff, when the sound of hoofs fell on the
still air, and a man rode into the clearing from
the encompassing woods.</p>
          <p>The storekeeper glanced up to greet the
newcomer, but did not risk the fatigue of rising.
Women looked out of the windows, and a girl
on a porch, reeling yarn, found a reason to stop
her work. A man came out of a house close
by, and sat on the fence, within range of any
colloquy in which he might wish to participate.
The whole town could join at will in a municipal
conversation. The forge fire showed a
dull red against the dusky brown shadows in
the recesses of the shop. The blacksmith stood
in front of the door, his eyes shielded with his
broad blackened right hand, and looked
critically at the steed. Horses were more in his
line than men. He was a tall, powerfully built
fellow of thirty, perhaps, with the sooty aspect
peculiar to his calling, a swarthy complexion,
and a remarkably well-knit, compact, and
muscular frame. He often said in pride, “Ef I hed
hed the forgin' o' myself, I would n't hev welded
on a pound more, or hammered out a leader
differ.”</p>
          <p>Suddenly detaching his attention from the
horse, he called out, “Waal, sir! Ef thar ain't
Rick Tyler!” This was addressed to the town
at large. Then, “What ails ye, Rick? I hearn
<pb id="crad43" n="43"/>
tell ez you-uns war on yer way ter Shaftesville
along o' the sher'ff.” He had a keen and
twinkling eye. He cast it significantly at the man
on the fence. “Ye kem back, I reckon, ter git
yer hand-cuffs mended at my shop. Gimme
the bracelets.” He held out his hand in affected
anxiety.</p>
          <p>“I ain't a-wearin' no bracelets now.” Rick
Tyler's hasty impulse had its impressiveness.
He leveled his pistol. “Ef ye hanker ter do
enny mendin', I 'll gin ye repairs ter make
in them cast-iron chit'lings o' yourn,” he said,
coolly.</p>
          <p>He was received at the store with a distinct
accession of respect. The blacksmith stood
watching him, with angry eyes, and a furtive
recollection of the reward offered by the
governor for his apprehension.</p>
          <p>The young fellow, with a sudden return of
caution, did not at once venture to dismount;
and Nathan Hoodendin, the storekeeper, rose
for no customer. Respectively seated, for these
diverse reasons, they transacted the negotiation.</p>
          <p>“Hy're, Rick,” drawled the storekeeper,
languidly. “I hopes ye keeps yer health,” he
added, politely.</p>
          <p>The young man melted at the friendly tone.
This was the welcome he had looked for at the
<pb id="crad44" n="44"/>
Settlement. Loneliness had made his sensibilities
tender, and “hiding out ” affected his spirits more
than dodging the officers in the haunts of men,
or daring the cupidity roused, he knew,
by the reward for his capture. The blacksmith's
jeer touched him as cruelly as an attempt upon
his liberty. “Jes' toler'ble,” he admitted, with the
usual rural reluctance to acknowledge full health.
“I hopes ye an' yer fambly air thrivin',” he drawled,
after a moment.</p>
          <p>A whiff came from the storekeeper's pipe;
the smoke wreathed before his face, and floated
away.</p>
          <p>“Waal, we air makin' out,  -  we air makin'
out.”</p>
          <p>“I kem over hyar,” said Rick Tyler, proceeding
to business, “ter git some powder out'n
yer store. I wants one pound.”</p>
          <p>Nathan Hoodendin smoked silently for a moment.
Then, with a facial convulsion and a physical wrench,
he lifted his voice.</p>
          <p>“Jer'miah!” he shouted in a wild wheeze.
And again, “Jer'miah!”</p>
          <p>The invoked Jer'miah did not materialize
at once. When a small tow-headed boy of ten
came from a house among the stumps, with that
peculiar deftness of tread characteristic of the
habitually barefoot, he had an alert, startled
<pb id="crad45" n="45"/>
expression, as if he had just jumped out of a
bush. His hair stood up in front; he had wide
pop-eyes, and long ears, and a rabbit-like aspect
that was not diminished as he scudded
round the heels of Rick Tyler's horse, at which
he looked apprehensively.</p>
          <p>“Jer'miah,” said his father, with a pathetic
cadence, “go into the store, bub, an' git Rick
Tyler a pound o' powder.”</p>
          <p>As Jeremiah started in, the paternal sentiment
stirred in Nathan Hoodendin's breast.</p>
          <p>“Jer'miah,” he wheezed, bringing the forelegs
of the chair to the ground, and craning
forward with unwonted alacrity to look into the
dusky interior of the store, “don't ye be foolin'
round that thar powder with no lighted tallow
dip nor nuthin'. I 'll whale the life out'n ye ef
ye do. Jes' weigh it by the winder.”</p>
          <p>Whether from fear of a whaling by his active
parent, or of the conjunction of a lighted tallow
dip and powder, Jeremiah dispensed with the
candle. He brought the commodity out presently,
and Rick stowed it away in his saddlebags.</p>
          <p>“Can't ye 'light an' sot a while 'an talk,
Rick?” said the storekeeper. “We-uns hev
done hed our supper, but I reckon they could
fix ye a snack yander ter the house.”</p>
          <p>Rick said he wanted nothing to eat, but,
<pb id="crad46" n="46"/>
although he hesitated, he could not finally resist
the splint-bottomed chair tilted against the wall
of the store, and a sociable pipe, and the
countryside gossip.</p>
          <p>“What's goin' on 'round the mounting?”
he asked.</p>
          <p>Gid Fletcher, the blacksmith, came and sat
in another chair, and the man on the fence got
off and took up his position on a stump hard
by. The great red sun dropped slowly behind
the purple mountains; and the full golden moon
rose above the corn-field that lay on the eastern
slope, and hung there between the dark woods
on either hand; and the blades caught the
light, and tossed with burnished flashes into the
night; and the great ghastly trees assumed a
ghostly whiteness; and the mystic writing laid
on the landscape below had the aspect of an
uninterpreted portent. The houses were mostly
silent; now and then a guard-dog growled at
some occult alarm; a woman somewhere was
softly and fitfully singing a child to sleep, and
the baby crooned too, and joined in the vague,
drowsy ditty. And for aught else that could
be seen, and for aught else that could be heard,
this was the world.</p>
          <p>“Waal, the Tempter air fairly stalkin' abroad
on the Big Smoky,  -  leastwise sence the summer
season hev opened,” said Nathan Hoodendin.
<pb id="crad47" n="47"/>
His habitual expression of heavy, joyless
pondering had been so graven into his face that
his raised grizzled eyebrows, surmounted by a
multitude of perplexed wrinkles, his long,
dismayed jaw, his thin, slightly parted lips, and
the deep grooves on either side of his nose were
not susceptible of many gradations of meaning.
His shifting eyes, cast now at the stark trees,
now at the splendid disk of the rising moon,
betokened but little anxiety for the Principle
of Evil aloose in the Big Smoky. “Fust,  -  
lemme see,  -  thar war Eph Lowry, ez got inter
a quar'l with his wife's half-brother's cousin, an'
a-tusslin' 'roun' they cut one another right
smart, an' some say ez Eph 'll never hev his
eyesight right good no more. Then thar war
Baker Teal, what the folks in Eskaqua Cove
'low let down the bars o' the milk-sick pen, one
day las' fall, an' druv Jacob White's red cow
in; an' his folks never knowed she hed grazed
thar till they hed milked an' churned fur butter,
when she lay down an' died o' the milksick.
Ef they hed drunk her milk same ez
common, 't would hev sickened 'em, sure, 'an
mebbe killed 'em. An' they've been quar'lin'
'bout'n it ever sence. Satan's a-stirrin',  -  Satan's
a-stirrin' 'roun' the Big Smoky.”</p>
          <p>“Waal, I hearn ez some o' them folks in
Eskaqua Cove 'low ez the red cow jes' hooked
<pb id="crad48" n="48"/>
down the bars, bein' a turrible hooker,” spoke up the
man on the stump, unexpectedly.</p>
          <p>“Waal, White an' his folks won't hear ter no sech
word ez that,” said the blacksmith; “an' arter jowin'
an' jowin' back an' fo'th they went t'other day an'
informed on Teal 'fore the jestice, an' the Squair fined
him twenty-five dollars, 'cordin' ter the law o'
Tennessee fur them ez m'liciously lets down the bars
o' the milk-sick pen. An' Baker Teal hed ter pay, an'
the county treasury an' the informers divided the
money 'twixt 'em.”</p>
          <p>“What did I tell you-uns? Satan's a-stirrin',  -  
Satan's a-stirrin' 'roun' the Big Smoky,”
said the storekeeper, with a certain morbid pride in
the Enemy's activity.</p>
          <p>“The constable o' this hyar deestric',” recommenced
Gid Fletcher, who seemed as well informed
as Nathan Hoodendin, “he advised 'em ter
lay it afore the jestice; he war mighty peart 'bout'n
that thar job. They 'low ter me ez he hev tuk up a
crazy fit ez he kin beat Micajah Green fur sher'ff, an'
he's a-skeetin' arter law-breakers same ez a rooster
arter a Juny-bug. He 'lows it'll show the kentry what
a peart sher'ff he'd make.”</p>
          <p>“Shucks!” said the man on the stump. “I'll vote
fur 'Cajah Green fur sher'ff agin the old boy; he hev
got a nose fur game.”</p>
          <pb id="crad49" n="49"/>
          <p>“He hain't nosed you-uns out yit, hev be, Rick?”
said the blacksmith, with feigned heartiness and a
covert sneer.</p>
          <p>“Ho! ho! ho!” laughed Nathan Hoodendin. 
“What war I a-tellin' you-uns? Satan's a-stirrin',
  -  Satan's surely a stirrin' on the Big Smoky.”</p>
          <p>Rick sat silent in the moonlight, smoking his pipe,
his brown wool hat far back, the light full on his
yellow head. His face had grown a trifle less square,
and his features were more distinctly defined than of
yore; he did not look ill, but care had drawn a sharp
line here and there.</p>
          <p>“One sher'ff's same ter you-uns ez another, ain't
he, Rick?” said the man on the stump. “Any of 'em 'll
do ter run from.”</p>
          <p>“They tell it ter me,” said the storekeeper, with so
sudden a vivacity that it seemed it must crack his
graven wrinkles, “ez the whole Cayce gang air 
a-goin' ter vote agin 'Cajah Green, 'count o' the way he
jawed at old Mis' Cayce an' D'rindy, the day he run
you-uns off from thar, Rick.”</p>
          <p>“I ain't hearn tell o' that yit,” drawled Rick,
desolately, “bein' hid out.”</p>
          <p>“Waal, he jawed at D'rindy, an' from what I hev
hearn D'rindy jawed back; an' I dunno ez that's 
s'prisin',  -  the gal-folks ginerally do.
<pb id="crad50" n="50"/>
Leastwise, I know ez he sent word arterward
ter D'rindy, by his dep'ty,  -  ez war a-scoutin'
'roun' hyar, arter you-uns, I reckon, Rick,  -  ez
he would be up some day soon ter 'lectioneer,
an' he war a-goin' ter stop ter thar house an'
ax her pardin'. An' she sent him word, fur
God's sake ter bide away from thar.”</p>
          <p>A long pause ensued; the stars were faint
and few; the iterative note of the katydid
vibrated monotonously in the dark woods; dew
was falling; the wind stirred.</p>
          <p>“What ailed D'rindy ter say that word?”
asked Rick, mystified.</p>
          <p>“Waal, I dunno,” said Hoodendin, indifferently.
“I hev never addled my brains tryin'
ter make out what a woman means. Though,”
he qualified, “I <hi rend="italics">did</hi> ax the dep'ty an' Amos
Jeemes from down yander in Eskaqua Cove,  -  
the dep'ty hed purtended ter hev summonsed
him ez a posse, an' they war jes' rollickin' 'roan'
the kentry like two chickens with thar heads
off,  -  I axed 'em what D'rindy meant, an'
they 'lowed they did n't know, nor war they
takin' it ter heart. They 'lowed ez she never
axed <hi rend="italics">them</hi> ter bide away from thar fur God's
sake. An' then they snickered an' laffed, like
single men do. An' I up an' tole 'em ez the
Book sot it down ez the laffter o' fools is like
the cracklin' o' bresh under a pot.”</p>
          <pb id="crad51" n="51"/>
          <p>Rick Tyler was eager, his eyes kindling, his
breath quick. He looked with uncharacteristic
alertness at the inexpressive face of the
leisurely narrator.</p>
          <p>“They capered like a dunno-what-all on the
Big Smoky, them two,  -  the off'cer o' the law
an' his posse! Thar goin's on war jes' scandalous:
they played kyerds, an' they consorted with
the moonshiners over yander,” nodding his
head at the wilderness, “an' got ez drunk ez
two fraish biled ow<hi rend="italics">els</hi>; an' they sung an' they
hollered. An' they went ter the meetin'-house
over yander whilst they war in liquor, an' the
preacher riz up an' put 'em out. He's toler'ble
tough, that thar Pa'son Kelsey, an' kin hold
right smart show in a fight. An' the deputy,
he straightened hisself, an' 'lowed he war a
off'cer o' the law. An' Pa'son Kelsey, he 'lowed
<hi rend="italics">he</hi> war a off'cer o' the law, an' he 'lowed ez his
law war higher 'n the law o' Tennessee. An'
with that he barred up the door. They hed a
cornsider'ble disturba<hi rend="italics">mint</hi> at the meetin'-house
yander at the Notch, an' the saints war tried in
thar temper.”</p>
          <p>“The dep'ty 'lows ez Pa'son Kelsey air crazy
in his mind,” said the man on the stump. “The
dep'ty said the pa'son talked ter him like ez ef he
war a onregenerate critter. An' he 'lowed he
war baptized in Scolacutta River two year ago
<pb id="crad52" n="52"/>
an' better. The dep'ty say these hyar mounting
preachers hain't got no doctrine like the
valley folks. He called Pa'son Kelsey a
ignorant cuss!”</p>
          <p>“Laws-a-massy!” exclaimed Nathan
Hoodendin, scandalized.</p>
          <p>“He say it fairly makes him laff ter hear
Pa'son Kelsey performin' like he hed a cutthroat
mortgage on a seat 'mongst the angels.
He say ez he thinks Pa'son Kelsey speaks with
more insurance 'n enny man he ever see.”</p>
          <p>“I reckon, ef the truth war knowed, the
dep'ty ain't got no religion, an' never war in
Scolacutta River, 'thout it war a-fishin',” said
the blacksmith, meditatively.</p>
          <p>The fugitive from justice, pining for the simple
society of his world, listened like a starveling
thing to these meagre details, so replete
with interest to him, so full of life and spirit.
The next moment he was sorry he had come.</p>
          <p>“That thar Amos Jeemes air a comical critter,”
said the man on the stump, after an interval
of cogitation, and with a gurgling reminiscent
laugh “He war a-cuttin' up his shines
over thar ter Cayce's the t'other day; he war
n't drunk <hi rend="italics">then</hi>, ye onderstan'”  -  </p>
          <p>“I onderstan'. He war jes' fool, like he
always air,” said the blacksmith.</p>
          <p rend="italics">“Edzactly,” assented the man on the stump.
<pb id="crad53" n="53"/>
“An' he fairly made D'rindy laff ter see what
the critter would say nex'. An' D'rindy always
seemed ter me a powerful solemn sorter
gal. Waal, she laffed at Amos. An' whilst
him an' the deputy war a-goin' down the
mounting  -  I went down ter Jeemes's mill ter
leave some grist over night ter be ground  -  the
dep'ty, he run Amos 'bout'n it. The dep'ty
he 'lowed ez no gal hed ever made so much fun
o' him, an' Amos 'lowed ez D'rindy <hi rend="italics">did n't</hi>
make game o' him. She thunk too much o'
him fur that. An' that bold-faced dep'ty, he
'lowed he thought 't war <hi rend="italics">him</hi> ez hed fund
favior. An' Amos,  -  we war mighty nigh
down in Eskaqua Cove then,  -  he turned
suddint an' p'inted up the mounting. ‘What kin
you-uns view on the mounting?’ he axed. The
dep'ty, he stopped an' stared; an' thar, mighty
nigh ez high ez the lower e-end o' the bald, war
a light. 'That shines fur me ter see whilst I'm
'bleeged ter be in Eskaqua Cove,' sez Amos.
An' the dep'ty said, ‘I think it air a star!’
An' Amos sez, sez he, ‘Bless yer bones, I think
so, too,  -  sometimes!’ But 't war n't no star.
'T war jes' a light in the roof-room window o'
Cayce's house; an' ye could see it, sure enough,
plumb to the mill in Eskaqua Cove!”</p>
          <p rend="italics">Rick rose to go. Why should he linger, and
wring his heart, and garner bitterness to feed
<pb id="crad54" n="54"/>
upon in his lonely days? Why should he look
upon the outer darkness of his life, and dream
of the star that shone so far for another man's
sake into the sheltered depths of Eskaqua Cove?
He had an impulse which he scorned, for his
sight was blurred as he laid his hand on the
pommel of his saddle. He did not see that one
of the other men rose, too.</p>
          <p rend="italics">An approach, stealthy, swift, and the sinewy
blacksmith flung himself upon his prisoner with
the supple ferocity of a panther.</p>
          <p rend="italics">“Naw  -  naw!” he said, showing his strong
teeth, closely set. “We can't part with ye yit,
Rick Tyler! I'll arrest you-uns, ef the sher'ff
can't. The peace o' Big Smoky an' the law
o' the land air ez dear ter me ez ter enny other
man.”</p>
          <p rend="italics">The young fellow made a frantic effort to
mount; then, as his horse sprang snorting away,
he strove to draw one of his pistols. There
was a turbulent struggle under the great silver
moon and the dead trees. Again and again the
swaying figures and their interlocked shadows
reeled to the verge of the cliff; one striving to
fall and carry the other with him, the other
straining every nerve to hold back his captive.</p>
          <p rend="italics">Even the storekeeper stood up and wheezed
out a remonstrance.</p>
          <p rend="italics">“Look-a-hyar, boys”  -  he began; then,
<pb id="crad55" n="55"/>
“Jer'miah,” he broke off abruptly, as the
hopeful scion peered shyly out of the store
door, “clar out'n the way, sonny; they hev got
shootin'-irons, an' some o' em mought go off.”</p>
          <p rend="italics">He himself stepped prudently back. The
man on the stump, however, forgot danger in
his excitement. He sat and watched the scene
with an eager relish which might suggest that
a love of bull-fights is not a cultivated taste.</p>
          <p rend="italics">“Be them men a-wrastlin'?” called out a
woman, appearing in the doorway of a
neighboring house.</p>
          <p rend="italics">“'Pears like it ter me,” he said, dryly.</p>
          <p rend="italics">The strength of despair had served to make
the younger man the blacksmith's equal, and
the contest might have terminated differently
had Rick Tyler not stumbled on a ledge. He
was forced to his knees, then full upon the
ground, his antagonist's grasp upon his throat.
The blacksmith roared out for help; the man
on the stump slowly responded, and the
storekeeper languidly came and overlooked
the operation, as the young fellow was disarmed
and securely bound, hand and foot.</p>
          <p rend="italics">“Waal, now, Gid Fletcher, ye hev got him,”
said Nathan Hoodendin. “What d' ye want
with him?”</p>
          <p rend="italics">The blacksmith had risen, panting, with wild
eyes, his veins standing out in thick cords,
<pb id="crad56" n="56"/>
perspiring from every pore, and in a bounding
fury.</p>
          <p rend="italics">“What do I want with him? I want ter
put his head on my anvil thar, an' beat the
foolishness out'n it with my hammer. I want
ter kick him off'n this hyar bluff down ter the
forge fires o' hell. That air what <hi rend="italics">I</hi> want. An'
the State o' Tennessee ain't wantin' much
differ.”</p>
          <p rend="italics">“Gid Fletcher,” said the man who had been
sitting on the stump,  -  he spoke in an accusing
voice,  -  “ye ain't keerin' nuthin' fur the law
o' the land, nor the peace o' Big Smoky, nuther.
It air jes' that two hunderd dollars blood money
ye air cottonin' ter, an' ye knows it.”</p>
          <p rend="italics">The love of money, the root of evil, is so rare
in the mountains that the blacksmith stood as
before a deep reproof. Then, with a moral
hardihood that matched his physical prowess,
he asked, “An' what ef I be?”</p>
          <p rend="italics">“What war I a-tellin' you-uns? Satan's
a-stirrin',  -  Satan's a-stirrin' on the Big
Smoky!” interpolated old Hoodendin.</p>
          <p rend="italics">“Waal, I 'd never hev been hankerin' fur
sech,” drawled the moralist.</p>
          <p rend="italics">A number of other men had come out from
the houses, and a discussion ensued as to the
best plan to keep the prisoner until morning.
It was suggested that the time-honored
<pb id="crad57" n="57"/>
expedient in localities without the civilization
of a jail  -  a wagon-body inverted, with a rock
upon it  -  would be as secure as the state
prison.</p>
          <p rend="italics">“But who wants ter go ter heftin' rocks?”
asked Nathan Hoodendin, pertinently.</p>
          <p rend="italics">For the sake of convenience, therefore, they
left the prisoner bound with a rope made fast
around a stump, that he might not, in his
desperation, roll himself from the crag, and
deputing a number of the men to watch him by
turns, the Settlement retired to its slumbers.</p>
          <p rend="italics">The night wore on; the moon journeyed
toward the mountains in the west; the mists
rose to meet it, and glistened like a silver sea.
Some lonely, undiscovered ocean, this; never a
sail set, never a pennant flying; all the valley
was submerged; the black summits in the
distance were isolated and insular; the moonlight
glanced on the sparkling ripples, on the long
reaches of illusive vapor.</p>
          <p rend="italics">At intervals cocks crew; a faint response,
like farthest echoes, came from some neighboring
cove; and then silence, save for the drone
of the nocturnal insects and the far blast of a
hunter's horn.</p>
          <p rend="italics">“Jer'miah,” said Rick Tyler, suddenly, as
the boy crouched by one of the stumps and
watched him with dilated, moonlit eyes,  -  
<pb id="crad58" n="58"/>
when Nathan Hoodendin's vigil came the little
factotum served in his stead,  -  “Jer'miah, git
my knife out 'n the store an' cut these hyar
ropes. I'll gin ye my rifle ef ye will.”</p>
          <p rend="italics">The boy sprang up, scudded off swiftly, then
came back, and crouched by the stump again.</p>
          <p rend="italics">The moon slipped lower and lower; the silver
sea had turned to molten gold; the stars
that had journeyed westward with the moon
were dying out of a dim blue sky. Over the
corn-field in the east was one larger than the
rest, burning in an amber haze, charged with
an unspoken poetical emotion that set its heart
of white fire aquiver.</p>
          <p rend="italics">“I 'll gin ye my horse ef ye will.”</p>
          <p rend="italics">“I dassent,” said Jer'miah.</p>
          <p rend="italics">The morning star was burned out at last, and
the prosaic day came over the corn-field.</p>
        </div2>
        <pb id="crad59" n="59"/>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>III.</head>
          <p>TWILIGHTwas slipping down on the Big
Smoky. Definiteness was annihilated, and
distance a suggestion. Mountain forms lay
darkening along the horizon, still flushed with
the sunset. Eskaqua Cove had abysmal
suggestions, and the ravines were vague glooms.
Fireflies were aflicker in the woods. There might
be a star, outpost of the night.</p>
          <p>Dorinda, hunting for the vagrant “crumply
cow,” paused sometimes when the wandering
path led to the mountain's brink, and looked
down those gigantic slopes and unmeasured
depths. She carried her milk-piggin, and her
head was uncovered. Now and then she called
with long, vague vowels, “Soo  -  cow! Soo!”
There was no response save the echoes and the
vibrant iteration of the katydid. Once she
heard an alien sound, and she paused to listen.
From the projecting spur where she stood,
looking across the Cove, she could see, above
the forests on the slopes, the bare, uprising
dome, towering in stupendous proportions
against the sky. The sound came again and
yet again, and she recognized the voice of the
<pb id="crad60" n="60"/>
man who was wont to go and pray in the desert
places on the “bald” of the mountain, and
whom she had likened to the prophets of old.
There was something indescribably wild and
weird in those appealing, tempestuous tones,
now rising as in frenzy, and now falling as with
exhaustion,  -  beseeching, adjuring, reproaching.</p>
          <p>“He hev fairly beset the throne o' grace!”
she said, with a sort of pity for this insistent
piety. A shivering, filmy mist was slipping
down over the great dome. It glittered in the
last rays of the sunlight, already vanished from
the world below, like an illuminated silver
gauze. She was reminded of the veil of the
temple, and she had a sense of intrusion.</p>
          <p>“Prayer, though, air free for all,” she remarked,
as self-justification, since she had paused
to hear.</p>
          <p>She did not linger. His voice died in the
distance, and the solemnity of the impression
was gradually obliterated. As she went she
presently began to sing, sometimes interpolating,
without a sense of interruption, her mellow
call of “Soo  -  cow! Soo!” until it took the
semblance of a refrain, with an abrupt crescendo.
The wild roses were flowering along the paths,
and the pink and white azaleas,  -  what
perfumed ways, what lavish grace and
beauty! The blooms of the laurel in the darkling
<pb id="crad61" n="61"/>
places were like a spangling of stars. Dew
was falling,  -  it dashed into her face from the
boughs that interlaced across the unfrequented
path,  -  and still the light lingered, loath to
leave. She heard the stir of some wild things
in the hollow of a great tree, and then a faint,
low growl. She fancied she saw a pair of
bright eyes looking apprehensively at her.</p>
          <p>“We-uns hev got a baby at our house, too, an'
we don't want yourn, ma'am; much obleeged,
all the same,” she said, with a laugh. But she
looked back with a sort of pity for that alert
maternal fear, and she never mentioned to the
youngest brother, a persistent trapper, the little
family of raccoons in the woods.</p>
          <p>She had forgotten the voice raised in importunate
supplication on the “bald,” until, pursuing the path,
she was led into the road, hard by a little bridge,
or more properly culvert, which had rotted long ago;
the vines came up through the cavities in the timbers,
and a blackberry bush, with a wren's nest, flourished in
their midst. The road was fain to wade through the
stream; but the channel was dry now,  -  a
narrow belt of yellow sand lying in a long curving
vista in the midst of the dense woods. A
yoke of oxen, drawing a rude slide, paused to
rest in the middle of the channel, and beside
them was a man, of medium height, slender
<pb id="crad62" n="62"/>
but sinewy, dressed in brown jeans, his trousers
thrust into the legs of his boots, a rifle on his
shoulder, and a broad-brimmed old wool hat
surmounting his dark hair, that hung down to
the collar of his coat. Her singing had prepared
him for her advent, but he barely raised
his eyes. That quick glance was incongruous
with his dullard aspect; it held a spark of fire,
inspiration, frenzy,  -  who can say?</p>
          <p>He spoke suddenly, in a meek, drawling
way, and with the air of submitting the
proposition:  -</p>
          <p>“I hev gin the beastises a toler'ble hard
day's work, an' I 'm a favorin' 'em goin'
home.”</p>
          <p>A long pause ensued. The oxen hung down
their weary heads, with the symbol of slavery
upon them. The smell of ferns and damp
mould was on the air. Rotting logs lay here
and there, where the failing water had stranded
them. The grape-vine, draping the giant oaks,
swayed gently, and suggested an observation to
break the silence.</p>
          <p>“How air the moral vineyard a-thrivin'?”
she asked, solemnly.</p>
          <p>He looked downcast. “Toler'ble, I reckon.”</p>
          <p>“I hearn tell ez thar war a right smart passel
o' folks baptized over yander in Scolacutta
River,” she remarked, encouragingly.</p>
          <pb id="crad63" n="63"/>
          <p>“I baptized fourteen.”</p>
          <p>She turned the warm brightness of her eyes
upon him. “They hed all fund grace!” she
exclaimed.</p>
          <p>“They 'lowed so. I hopes they'll prove it
by thar works,” he said, without enthusiasm.</p>
          <p>“Ye war a-prayin' fur 'em on the bald?” she
asked, apprehending that he accounted these
converts peculiarly precarious.</p>
          <p>“Naw,” he replied, with moody sincerity;
“I war a-prayin' for myself.”</p>
          <p>There was another pause, longer and more
awkward than before.</p>
          <p>“What work be you-uns a-doin' of?” asked
Dorinda, timidly. She quailed a trifle before
the uncomprehended light in his eyes. It was
not of her world, she felt instinctively.</p>
          <p>“I hev ploughed some, holpin' Jonas Trice,
an' hev been a-haulin' wood. I tuk my rifle
along,” he added, “thinkin' I mought see
suthin' ez would be tasty fur the old men's 
supper ez I kem home, but I forgot ter look
around keen.”</p>
          <p>There was a sudden sound along the road,  -  
a sound of quick hoof-beats. Because of the
deep sand the rider was close at hand before
his approach was discovered. He drew rein
abruptly, and they saw that it was Gid Fletcher,
the blacksmith of the Settlement.</p>
          <pb id="crad64" n="64"/>
          <p>“Hev you-uns hearn the news?” he cried,
excitedly, as he threw himself from the saddle.</p>
          <p>The man, leaning on the rifle, looked up,
with no question in his eyes. There was an
almost monastic indifference to the world
suggested in his manner.</p>
          <p>“Thar 's a mighty disturbamint at the Settle<hi rend="italics">mint</hi>.</p>
          <p>Las' night this hyar Rick Tyler,  -  
what air under indictment fur a-killin' o' Joel
Byers,  -  he kem a-nosin' 'roun' the Settle<hi rend="italics">mint</hi>
a-tryin' ter buy powder”  -  </p>
          <p>Dorinda stretched out her hand; the trees
were unsteady before her; the few faint stars,
no longer pulsating points of light, described a
circle of dazzling gleams. She caught at the
yoke on the neck of the oxen; she leaned upon
the impassive beast, and then it seemed that
every faculty was merged in the sense of hearing.
The horse had moved away from the
blacksmith, holding his head down among the
bowlders, and snuffing about for the water he
remembered here with a disappointment almost
pathetic.</p>
          <p>“War he tuk?” demanded the preacher.</p>
          <p>“Percisely so,” drawled the blacksmith, with
a sub-current of elation in his tone.</p>
          <p>There was a sudden change in Kelsey's manner.
He turned fiery eyes upon the blacksmith.
Light and life were in every line of his
 <pb id="crad65" n="65"/>
face. He drew himself up tense and erect; he
stretched forth his hand with an accusing 
gesture.</p>
          <p>“T war you-uns, Gid Fletcher, ez tuk the
boy!”</p>
          <p>“Lord, pa'son, how 'd you-uns know that?”
exclaimed the blacksmith. His manner 
combined a deference, which in civilization we
<sic corr="recognize">reccognize</sic> as respect for the cloth, with the easy
familiarity, induced by the association since
boyhood, of equals in age and station. “I hed
n't let on a word, hed I, D'rindy?”</p>
          <p>The idea of an abnormal foreknowledge,
mysteriously possessed, had its uncanny
influences. The lonely woods were darkening
about them. The stars seemed very far off.
A rotting log in the midst of the debris of the
stream, in a wild tangle of underbrush and
shelving rocks, showed fox-fire and glowed in
the glooms.</p>
          <p>“I knowed,” said Kelsey, contemptuously
waiving the suggestion of miraculous forecast,
“bekase the sher'ff hain't been in the Big
Smoky for two weeks, an' that thar danglin'
shadder o' his'n rid off las' Monday from
Jeemes's Mill in Eskaqua Cove. An' the
constable o' the deestric air sick abed. So I
'lowed 't war you-uns.”</p>
          <p>“An' why air it me more 'n enny other man
<pb id="crad66" n="66"/>
at the Settle<hi rend="italics">mint?</hi>” The blacksmith's blood
was rising; his sensibilities descried a covert
taunt which as yet his slower intelligence failed
to comprehend.</p>
          <p>“An' ye hev rid with speed fur the sher'ff  -  
or mebbe ter overhaul the dep'ty  -  ter come
an' jail the prisoner afore he gits away.”</p>
          <p>“An' why me, more 'n the t'others?”
demanded the blacksmith.</p>
          <p>“Yer heart air ez hard ez yer anvil, Gid
Fletcher,” said the mind-reader. “Thar ain't
another man on the Big Smoky ez would stir
himself ter gin over ter the gallus or the
pen'tiary the frien' ez trested him, who hev
done no harm, but hev got tangled in a twist of
a unjest law. Ef the law tuk him, that's a
differ.”</p>
          <p>“'T ain't fur we-uns ter jedge o' the law!”
exclaimed Gid Fletcher, his logic sharpened by
the anxiety of his greed and his prideful self-esteem.
“Let the law jedge o' his crime.”</p>
          <p>“Jes' so; let the law take him, an' let the
law try him. The law is ekal ter it. Ef the
sher'ff summons me with his posse, I'll hunt
Rick Tyler through all the Big Smoky”  -  </p>
          <p>“Look-a-hyar, Hi Kelsey, the Gov'nor o'
Tennessee hev offered a reward o' two hunderd
dollars”  -  </p>
          <p>“Blood money,” interpolated the parson.</p>
          <pb id="crad67" n="67"/>
          <p>“Ye kin call it so, ef so minded; but ef it
war right fur the Gov'nor ter offer it, it air
right fur me ter yearn it.”</p>
          <p>He had come very close. It was his nature
and his habit to brook no resistance. He
subdued the hard metals upon his anvil. His
hammer disciplined the iron. The fire wrought
his will. His instinct was to forge this man's
opinion into the likeness of his own. His
conviction was the moral swage that must
shape the belief of others.</p>
          <p>“It air lawful fur me ter yearn it,” he repeated.</p>
          <p>“Lawful!” exclaimed the parson, with a
tense, jeering laugh. “Judas war a law-abidin'
citizen. He mos' lawfully betrayed <hi rend="italics">his</hi>
Frien' ter the law. Them thirty pieces o' silver!
Sech currency ain't out o' circulation yit!”</p>
          <p>Quick as a flash the blacksmith's heavy hand
struck the prophet in the face. The next moment
his sudden anger was merged in fear.
He stood, unarmed, at the mercy of an assaulted
and outraged man, with a loaded rifle in his
hands, and all the lightnings of heaven quivering
in his angry eyes.</p>
          <p>Gid Fletcher had hardly time to draw the
breath he thought his last, when the prophet
slowly turned the other cheek.</p>
          <pb id="crad68" n="68"/>
          <p>“In the name of the Master,” he said, with
all the dignity of his calling.</p>
          <p>As the blacksmith mounted his horse and
rode away, he felt that the parson's rifle-ball
would be preferable to the gross slur that he
had incurred. His reputation, moral and spiritual,
was annihilated; and he held this dear, for
piety, or its simulacrum, on the primitive Big
Smoky, is the point of honor. What a text!
What an illustration of iniquity he would furnish
for the sermons, foretelling wrath and vengeance,
that sometimes shook the Big Smoky to its
foundations! He was cast down, and
indignant too.</p>
          <p>“Fur Hi Kelsey ter be a-puttin' up sech a
pious mouth, an' a-turnin' the t'other cheek,
an' sech, ter me, ez hev seen him hold his own
ez stiff in a many a free-handed fight, an' hev
drawed his shootin'-irons on folks agin an' agin!
An' he fairly tuk the dep'ty, at that thar
disturbamint at the meet'n'-house, by the scruff
o' the neck, an' shuck him ez ef he hed been a
rat or suthin', an' drapped him out'n the door.
An' now ter be a-turnin' the t'other cheer!
An' thar 's that thar D'rindy, a-seein' it all, an'
a-lookin' at it ez wide-eyed ez a cat in the dark.”</p>
          <p>Dorinda went home planning a rescue.
Against the law this probably was, she thought.
“Ef it air  -  it ought n't ter be,” she concluded,
<pb id="crad69" n="69"/>
arbitrarily. “It don't hurt nobody.”
How serious it was  -  a felony  -  she did not
know, nor did she care. She went on sturdily,
debating within herself how best to tell the
news. With an intuitive knowledge of human
nature, she reckoned on the prejudice aroused
by the recital of the blacksmith's assault upon
the preacher and the forbearance of the man of
God. She began to count those who would be
likely to attempt the enterprise when it should
be suggested. There were the five men at
home, all bold, reckless, antagonistic to the
law, and at odds with the sheriff. She paused,
with a frightened face and a wild gesture as if
to ward off an unforeseen danger. Send them
to meet him! Never, never would she lift her
hand or raise her voice to aid in fulfilling that
grimly prophesied death on the muzzle of the
old rifle-barrel. She trembled at the thought
of her precipitancy. His life was in her hand.
With a constraining moral sense she felt that
it was she who had placed it in jeopardy, and
that she held it in trust.</p>
          <p>She was cold, shivering. There was a change
in the temperature; perhaps hail had fallen
somewhere near, for the rare air had icy
suggestions. She was seldom out so late, and
was glad to see, high on the slope, the light that
was wont to shine like a star into the dark
<pb id="crad70" n="70"/>
depths of Eskaqua Cove. The white mists
gathered around it; a circle of pearly light
encompassed it, like Saturn's ring. As she came
nearer, the roof of the house defined itself, with
its oblique ridge-pole against the sky, and its
clay and stick chimney, also built in defiance of
rectangles, and its little porch, the curtaining
hop-vines, dripping, dripping, with dew. In
the corner of the rail fence was the “crumply
cow,” chewing her cud.</p>
          <p>The radiance of firelight streamed out through
the open door, around which was grouped a
number of shadows, of intent and wistful aspect.
These were the hounds, and they crowded
about her ecstatically as she came up on the
porch.</p>
          <p>She paused at the door, and looked in with
melancholy eyes. The light fell on her face,
still damp with the dew, giving its gentle
curves a subdued glister, like marble; the dark
blue of her dress heightened its fairness. A
sudden smile broke upon it as she leaned forward.
There were three men, Ab, Pete, and Ben, seated
around the fire; but she was looking at none of
them, and they silently followed her gaze.
Only one pair of eyes met hers,  -   the eyes
of a fat young person, wonderfully muscular
for the tender age of three, who sat in the
chimney-corner in a little wooden chair,
<pb id="crad71" n="71"/>
and preserved the important and impassive air
of a domestic magnate. This was hardly impaired
by his ill-defined, infantile features, his
large tow-head, his stolid blue eyes, his feminine
garb of blue-checked cotton, short enough
to disclose sturdy white calves and two feet
with the usual complement of toes. He looked
at her in grave recognition, but made no sign.</p>
          <p>“Jacob,” she softly drawled, “why n't ye go
ter bed?”</p>
          <p>But Jacob was indisposed for conversation on
this theme; he said nothing.</p>
          <p>“Why n't you-uns git him ter bed?” she
asked of the assemblage at large. “He 'll git
stunted, a-settin' up so late in the night.”</p>
          <p>“Waal,” said one of the huge jeans-clad
mountaineers, taking his pipe from his mouth,
and scrutinizing the subject of conversation,
“I 'low it takes more 'n three full grown men
ter git that thar survigrus buzzard ter bed
when he don't want ter go thar, an' we war n't
a-goin' ter resk it.”</p>
          <p>“I did ax him ter go ter bed, D'rindy,” said
another of the bearded giants, “but he 'lowed
he <hi rend="italics">would n't</hi>. I never see a critter so pompered
ez Jacob; he ain't got no medjure o' respec'
fur nobody.”</p>
          <p>The subject of these strictures gazed unconcernedly
first at one speaker, then at the other.
<pb id="crad72" n="72"/>
Dorinda still looked at him, her face
transfigured by its tender smile. But she was
fain to exert her authority. “Waal, Jacob,” she
said, decisively, “ye mus' gin yer cornsent ter
go ter bed, arter a while.”</p>
          <p>Jacob calmly nodded. He expected to go to
bed some time that night.</p>
          <p>The hounds had taken advantage of Dorinda's
entrance to creep into the room and adjust
themselves among the family group about the
fire. One of them, near Jacob, lured by the
tempting plumpness, put out a long red tongue,
and gave a furtive lick to his fat white leg.
The little mountaineer promptly doubled his
plucky fist, and administered a sharp blow on
the black nose of the offender, whose yelp of
repentant pain attracted attention to the canine
intruders. Ab Cayce rose to his feet with an
oath. There was a shrill chorus of anguish as
he actively kicked them out with his great
cowhide boots.</p>
          <p>“Git out'n hyar, ye dad-burned beastises!
I hev druv ye out fifty times sence sundown;
now <hi rend="italics">stay</hi> druv!”</p>
          <p>He emphasized the lesson with several
gratuitous kicks after the room and the porch
were fairly cleared. But before he was again seated
the dogs were once more clustered about the
door, with intent bobbing heads and glistening
<pb id="crad73" n="73"/>
eyes that peered in wistfully, with a longing
for the society of their human friends, and a
pathetic anxiety to be accounted of the family
circle.</p>
          <p>There was more stir than usual in the interval
between supper and bedtime. During the
three memorable days that Dorinda had
sojourned in Tuckaleechee Cove Miranda Jane's
ineffective administration had resulted in
domestic chaos in several departments. The
lantern by which the cow was to be milked was
nowhere to be found. The filly-like Miranda
Jane, with her tousled mane and black forelock
hanging over her eyes, was greatly distraught
in the effort to remember where it had been
put and for what it had been last used, and
was “plumb beat out and beset,” she declared,
as she cantered in and cantered out, and took
much exercise in the search, to little purpose.
One of the men rose presently, and addressed
himself to the effort. He found it at last, and
handed it to Dorinda without a word. He
did not offer to milk the cow, as essentially
a feminine task, in the mountains, as to sew or
knit. When she came back she sat down among
them in the chair usually occupied by her
grandmother,  -  who had in her turn gone on a
visit to “Aunt Jerushy” in Tuckaleechee Cove,  -  
and as she busied herself in putting on her needles
<pb id="crad74" n="74"/>
a sizable stocking for Jacob she did not
join in the fragmentary conversation.</p>
          <p>Ab Cayce, the eldest, talked fitfully as he
smoked his pipe,  -  a lank, lantern-jawed man,
with a small, gleaming eye and a ragged beard.
The youngest of the brothers, Solomon, was like
him, except that his long chin, of the style
familiarly denominated jimber-jawed, was still
smooth and boyish, and, big-boned as he was,
he lacked in weight and somewhat in height
the proportions of the senior. Peter was the
contentious member of the family. He was
wont to bicker in solitary disaffection, until he
seemed to disprove the adage that it takes two
to make a quarrel. He was afflicted with a
stammer, and at every obstruction his voice
broke out with startling shrillness, several keys
higher than the tone with which the sentence
commenced. He was loose-jointed and had a
shambling gait; his hair seemed never to have
outgrown the bleached, colorless tone so common
among the children of the mountains, and
it hung in long locks of a dreary drab about his
sun-embrowned face. His teeth were irregular,
and protruded slightly. “Ez hard-favored ez
Pete Cayce,” was a proverb on the Big Smoky.
His wrangles about the amount of seed necessary
to sow to the acre, and his objurgation
concerning the horse he had been ploughing
with that day, filled the evening.</p>
          <pb id="crad75" n="75"/>
          <p>“Thar ain't a durned fool on the Big Smoky
ez dunno that thar sayin' 'bout 'n the beastises:  -  </p>
          <lg type="verse">
            <l>‘One white huff  -  buy him;</l>
            <l>Two white huffs  -  try him;</l>
            <l>Three white huffs  -  deny him;</l>
            <l>Four white huffs an' a white nose  -  </l>
            <l>Take off his hide an' feed him ter the crows.’ ”</l>
          </lg>
          <p>Outside, the rising wind wandered fitfully
through the Great Smoky, like a spirit of unrest.
The surging trees in the wooded vastness
on every side filled the air with the turbulent
sound of their commotion. The fire smouldered
on the hearth. The room was visible in the
warm glow: the walls, rich and mellow with
the alternate dark shade of the hewn logs and
the dull yellow of the “daubin';” the great
frame of the warping-bars, hung about with
scarlet and blue and saffron yarn; the brilliant
strings of red pepper, swinging from the rafters.
The spinning-wheel, near the open door,
revolved slightly, with a stealthy motion, when
the wind touched it, as though some invisible
woodland thing had half a mind for uncanny
industrial experiments.</p>
          <p>Dorinda told her news at last, in few words
and with what composure she could command.
As the listeners broke into surprised ejaculations
and comments, she sat gazing silently at
the fire. Should she speak the thought nearest
<pb id="crad76" n="76"/>
her heart? Should she suggest a rescue?
She was torn by contending terrors,  -  fears for
them, for the man in his primitive shackles at
the Settlement, for the enemy whose life she
felt she had jeopardized. She had a wild vision  -  
half in hope, half in anguish  -  of her brothers, in
the saddle, armed to the teeth and riding
like the wind. They had not moved of their
own accord. Should she urge them to go?</p>
          <p>Oh, never had the long days on the Big
Smoky, never had all the years that had visibly
rolled from east to west with the changing seasons,
brought her so much of life as the last few
hours,  -  such intensity of emotion, such swiftness
of thought, such baffling perplexity, such
woe!</p>
        </div2>
        <pb id="crad77" n="77"/>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>IV.</head>
          <p>KELSEY trudged on with his slide and his
oxen, elated by his moral triumph. He glorified
himself for his meekness. He joyed, with
all the turbulent impulses of victory, in the
blacksmith's discomfiture.</p>
          <p>Yet he was cognizant of his own deeper,
subtler springs of action. There was that within
him which forbade him to take the life of an
unarmed man, but he piqued himself that he
forbore. He had withheld even the return of
the blow. But he knew that in refraining he
had struck deeper still. He dwelt upon the
scene with the satisfaction of an inventor. He,
too, could foresee the consequences: the
bloodcurdling eloquence; the port and pose
of a martyr; the far-spread distrust of the
blacksmith's professions of piety, under which
that doughty religionist already quaked.</p>
          <p>And as he reflected he replied, tartly, to the
monitor within, “Be angry and sin not.”</p>
          <p>And the monitor had no text.</p>
          <p>Because of the night drifting down, perhaps,
drifting down with a chilling change;
because of the darkened solemnity of the dreary
<pb id="crad78" n="78"/>
woods; because of the stars shining with a
splendid aloofness from all that is human;
because of the melancholy suggestions of a
will-o'-the-wisp glowing in a marshy tangle, his
exultant mood began to wane.</p>
          <p>“Thar it is!” he cried, suddenly, pointing at
the mocking illusion,  -  “that's my religion: looks
like fire, an' it 's fog!”</p>
          <p>His mind had reverted to his wild
supplications in the solitudes of the “bald,”  -  
his unanswered prayers. The oxen had paused of
their own accord to rest, and he stood looking at
the spectral gleam.</p>
          <p>“I 'd never hev thunk o' takin' up with religion,”
he said, in a shrill, upbraiding tone, “ef I hed been
let ter live along like other men be, or
ef me an' mine could die like other folks be let
ter die! But it 'peared ter me ez religion war
'bout all ez war lef', arter I hed gin the baby the
stuff the valley doctor hed lef' fur Em'ly,  -  bein'
ez I could n't read right the old critter's cur'ous
scrapin's with his pencil,  -  an' gin Em'ly the stuff
fur the baby. An' it died. An' then Em'ly got
onsettled an' crazy, an' tuk ter vagrantin' 'roun',
an' fell off'n the bluff. An' some say she flunged
herself off'n it. And I knows she flunged herself
off'n it through bein' out'n her mind with grief.”</p>
          <p>He paused, leaning on the yoke, his dreary
<pb id="crad79" n="79"/>
eyes still on the <hi rend="italics"><foreign lang="la">ignis fatuus</foreign></hi> of the woods. “An'
then Brother Jake Tobin 'lowed ez religion war
fur sech ez me. I hed no mind ter religion. But
the worl' hed in an' about petered out for me.
An' I tuk up with religion. I hev served it five
year faithful. An' now”  -  he cast his angry
eyes upward  -  “ye let me believe that thar is no
God!”</p>
          <p>So it was that Satan hunted him like a partridge
on the mountains. So it was that he went out into
the desert places to upbraid the God in whom he
believed because he believed that there was no
God. There was a tragedy in his faith and his
unfaith. That this untrained, untutored mind
should grope among the irreconcilable things,  -  
the problems of a merciful God and his afflicted
people, foreordained from the beginning
of the world and free agents! That to the
ignorant mountaineer should come those
distraught questions that vex polemics, and try
the strength of theologies, and give the wise men
an illimitable field for the display of their agile
and ingenious solutions and substitutions! He
knew naught of this; the wild Alleghanies
intervened between his yearning, empty despair
and their plenished fame, the splendid
superstructure on the ruins of their faith. He
thought himself the only unbeliever in a
Christian world, the only inherent
<pb id="crad80" n="80"/>
infidel; a mysteriously accursed creature,
charged with the discovery of the monstrous
fallacy of that beneficent comfort, assuaging
the grief of a stricken world, and called an
overruling Providence. Again his flickering
faith would flare up, and he would reproach
God who had suffered its lapse. This was his
secret and his shame, and he guarded it. And
so when he preached his wild sermons with a
certain natural eloquence; and prayed his
frantic prayers, instinct with all the sincerities of
despair; and sang with the people the mournful
old hymns in the little meeting-house on
the notch, or on the banks of the Scolacutta
River, where they went down to be baptized,
his keen introspection, his more dissent, which
he might not forbear, yet would not avow,
were an intolerable burden, and his spiritual
life was the throe of a spiritual anguish.</p>
          <p>Often there was no intimation in those sermons
of his of the quaint doctrines which delight
the simple men of his calling in that region, who
are fain to feel learned. His Christ, to judge from
this mood, was a Paramount Emotion: not the Christ
who confuted the wise men in the temple, and read
in the synagogues, and said dark allegories; but he
who stilled the storm, and healed the sick, and raised
the dead, and wept, most humanly, for the friend whom
<pb id="crad81" n="81"/>
he loved. Kelsey's trusting heart contended
with his doubting mind, and the simple humanities
of these sermons comforted him. Sometimes he
sought consolation otherwise; he would
remember that he had never been like his fellows.
This was only another manifestation of
the dissimilarity that dated from his earliest
recollections. He had from his infancy peculiar gifts.
He was learned in the signs of the weather,
and predicted the mountain storms;
he knew the haunts and habits of every beast
and bird in the Great Smoky, every leaf that
burgeons, every flower that blows. So deep
and incisive a knowledge of human nature had
he that this faculty was deemed supernatural,
and akin to the gift of prophecy. He himself
understood, although perhaps he could not have
accurately limited and defined it, that he exercised
unconsciously a vigilant attention and an
acute discrimination; his forecast was based
upon observation so close and unsparing, and a
power of deduction so just, that in a wider
sphere it might have been called judgment, and,
reinforced by education, have attained all the
functions of a ripened sagacity.</p>
          <p>Crude as it was, it did not fail of recognition.
In many ways his “word” was sought and
heeded. His influence yielded its richest effect
when his <hi rend="italics"><foreign lang="fr">confrére</foreign></hi> of the pulpit would call
<pb id="crad82" n="82"/>
on him to foretell the fate of the sinner and the
wrath of God to the Big Smoky. And then
Brother Jake Tobin would accompany the
glowing picture by a slow rhythmic clapping
of hands and a fragmentary chant, “That dreadful
Day air a-comin' along!”  -  bearing all the time
a smiling and beatific countenance, as if
he were fireproof himself, and brimstone and
flame were only for his friends.</p>
          <p>Rousing himself from his reverie with a sigh,
Hiram Kelsey urged the oxen along the sandy
road, which had here and there a stony interval
threatening the slide with dissolution at
every jolt. They began presently to quicken
their pace of their own accord. The encompassing
woods and the laurel were so dense that no gleam
of light was visible till they brought up suddenly
beside a rail fence, and the fitful glimmer of
firelight from an open door close at hand revealed
the presence of a double log cabin. There was an
uninclosed passage between the two rooms, and in this
a tall, gaunt woman was standing.</p>
          <p>“Thar be Hi now, with the steers,” she said,
detecting the dim bovine shadows in the
flickering gleams.</p>
          <p>“Tell Hiram ter come in right now,” cried a
chirping voice, like a superannuated cricket.
“I hev a word ter ax him.”</p>
          <pb id="crad83" n="83"/>
          <p>“Tell Hiram ter feed them thar steers fust,”
cried out another ancient voice, keyed several
tones lower, and also with the ring of authority.</p>
          <p>“Tell Hiram,” shrilly piped the other, “ter
hustle his bones, ef he knows what air good fur
'em.”</p>
          <p>“Tell Hiram,” said the deeper voice, sustaining
the antiphonal effect, “I want them thar
steers feded foreshortly.”</p>
          <p>Then ensued a muttered wrangle within, and
finally the shriller voice was again uplifted:
“Tell Hiram what my word air.”</p>
          <p>“An' ye tell Hiram what <hi rend="italics">my</hi> word air.”</p>
          <p>The woman, who was tall as a grenadier, and
had a voice like velvet, looked meekly back
into the room, upon each mandate, with a nod
of mild obedience.</p>
          <p>“Ye hearn 'em,” she said softly to Kelsey.
Evidently she could not undertake the hazard
of discriminating between these coequal authorities.</p>
          <p>“I hearn 'em,” he replied.</p>
          <p>She sat down near the door, and resumed her
occupation of monotonously peeling June apples
for “sass.” Her brown calico sunbonnet, which
she habitually wore, in doors and out, obscured
her visage, except her chin and absorbed mouth,
that now and then moved in unconscious sympathy
<pb id="crad84" n="84"/>
with her work. There was a piggin on one
side of her to receive the quartered fruit, and
on the other a white oak splint basket, already
half full of the spiral parings. On the doorstep
her husband sat, a shaggy-headed, full-bearded,
unkempt fellow, in brown jeans trousers
reaching almost to his collar-bone in front,
and supported by the single capable suspender
so much affected in the mountains. His
unbleached cotton shirt was open at the throat,
for there was fire enough in the huge chimney-place
to make the room unpleasantly warm, despite
the change of temperature without. Now
and then he stretched out his hand for an apple
already pared, which his wife gave him with
an adroit back-handed movement, and which he
ate in a mouthful or two. He made way for
Kelsey to enter, and asked him a question,
almost inarticulate because of the apples, but
apparently of hospitable intent, for Kelsey said
he had had a bite and a sup at Jonas Trice's, and
did not want the supper which had been
providently saved for him.</p>
          <p>Kelsey did not betray which command he
had thought best to obey.</p>
          <p>“I hed ter put my rifle on the rack in the
t'other room, gran'dad,” he observed meekly,
addressing one of two very old men who sat on
either side of the huge fireplace. There were
<pb id="crad85" n="85"/>
cushions in their rude arm-chairs, and awkward
little three-legged footstools were placed in
front of them. Their shoes and clothing, although
coarse to the last degree, were clean and
carefully tended. They had each long ago lived
out the allotted threescore years and ten, but
they had evidently not worn out their welcome.
One had suffered a paralytic attack, and every
word and motion was accompanied with a
convulsive gasp and jerk. The other old man
was saturnine and lymphatic, and seemed a
trifle younger than his venerable associate.</p>
          <p>“What war ye a-doin' of with yer rifle?”
mumbled “gran'dad,” in wild, toothless haste.</p>
          <p>“I tuk it along ter see, when I war a-comin'
home, ef I mought shoot suthin' tasty for
supper.”</p>
          <p>“What did ye git?” demanded gran'dad,
with retrospective greed; for supper was over,
and he had done full justice to his share.</p>
          <p>“I never got nuthin',” said Kelsey, a trifle
shamefacedly.</p>
          <p>“Waal, waal, waal! These hyar latter times
gits cur'ouser ez they goes along. The stren'th
an' the seasonin' hev all gone out'n the lan'.
Whenst I war young, folks ez kerried rifles ter
git suthin' fur supper never kem home a-suck-in'
the bar'l. Folks ez kerried rifles in them
days didn't tote 'em fur  -  fur  -  a ornamint.
<pb id="crad86" n="86"/>
Folks in them days lef' preachin' an' prophecy
an' sech ter thar elders, an' hunted the beastis
an' the Injun',  -  though sinners is plentier
than the t'other kind o' game on the Big Smoky
these times. No man, in them days, jes' turned
thirty sot hisself down ter idlin', an' preachin',
an' convictin' his elders o' sin.”</p>
          <p>Kelsey bore himself with the deferential
humility characteristic of the mountaineers
toward the aged among them.</p>
          <p>“What war the word ez ye war a-layin' off
ter say ter me, gran'dad?” he asked, striving
to effect a diversion.</p>
          <p>“Waal, waal, look-a-hyar, Hiram!” exclaimed
the old man, remembering his question
in eager precipitancy. “This hyar 'Cajah
Green, ye know, ez air a-runnin' fur sher'ff  -  
air  -  air he Republikin or Dimmycrat?”</p>
          <p>“Thar's no man in these hyar parts smart
enough ter find that out,” interpolated Obediah
Scruggs in the door, circumspectly taking the
apple seeds out of his mouth. He was the son
of one of the magnates, and the son-in-law of
the other; his matrimonial venture had resulted
in doubling his filial obligations. His wife had
brought, instead of a dowry, her aged father to
the fireside.</p>
          <p>“ 'Cajah Green,” continued the speaker, “run
ez a independent las' time, an' thar war so many
<pb id="crad87" n="87"/>
bolters an' sech they split the vote, an' he war
'lected. An' now he air a-runnin' agin.”</p>
          <p>The old man listened to this statement, his
eye blazing, his chin in a quiver, his lean figure
erect, and the pipe in his palsied hand shaking
till the coal of fire on top showed brightening
tendencies.</p>
          <p>“Waal, sir! waal!” exclaimed the aged
politician, with intense bitterness. “The stren'th
an' the seasonin' hev <hi rend="italics">all</hi> gone out'n the lan'!
Whenst I war young,” he declared dramatically,
drawing the pitiable contrast, “folks knowed
what they war, an' they let other folks know,
too, ef they hed ter club it inter 'em. But
them was Old Hickory's times. Waal, waal,
we ain't a-goin' ter see Old Hickory no more  -  
no  -  more!”</p>
          <p>“I hopes not,” said the other old man, with
sudden asperity. “I hopes we 'll never see no
sech tormentin' old Dimmycrat agin. But law!
I need n't fret my soul. Henry Clay shook all
the life out'n him five year afore he died.
Henry Clay made a speech agin Andrew Jackson
in 1840 what forty thousan' people kem ter
hear. <hi rend="italics">Thar</hi> war a man fur ye! He hed a
tongue like a bell; 'pears like ter me I kin
hear it yit, when I listens right hard. By
Gum!” triumphantly, “that day he tuk the
stiffenin' out'n Old Hickory! Surely, surely,
<pb id="crad88" n="88"/>
he did! Ef I thought I war never a-goin' ter
hear Old Hickory's name agin I'd tune up my
ears fur the angel's quirin'. I war born a
Republikin, I grow'd ter be a good Whig, an' I 'll
die a Republikin. Ef that ain't religion I
dunno what air! That's the way I hev lived
an' walked afore the Lord. An' hyar in the
evenin' o' my days I hev got ter set alongside
o' this hyar old consarn, an' hear him jow
'bout'n Old Hickory from mornin' till night.
Ef I hed knowed how he war goin' ter turn out
'bout'n Old Hickory in his las' days, I would n't
hev let my darter marry his son, thirty five year
ago. I knowed he war a Dimmycrat, but I
never knowed the stren'th o' the failin' till I
war called on ter 'speriunce it.”</p>
          <p>“Ye 'lowed t'other day, gran'dad,” said Kelsey,
addressing the aged paralytic in a propitiatory
manner, “ez ye war n't a-goin' ter talk
'bout'n Old Hickory no more. It 'pears like
ter me ez ye oughter gin yer 'tention ter the
candidates ez ye hev got ter vote fur in August,
  -  Cajah Green, an' sech.”</p>
          <p>But it must be admitted that Micajah Green
was not half the man that Old Hickory was,
and the filial remonstrance had no effect. The
acrimonies of fifty years ago were renewed
across the hearth with a rancor that suggests
that an old grudge, like old wine, improves with
<pb id="crad89" n="89"/>
time. No one ventured to interrupt, but Obediah
Scruggs, still lounging in the door, commented
in a low tone:  -  </p>
          <p>“The law stirs itself ter sot a time when a
man air old enough ter vote an' meddle with
politics ginerally. 'Pears like ter me it ought
ter sot a time when he hev got ter quit.”</p>
          <p>“Waal, Obediah!” exclaimed the soft-voiced
woman, the red parings hanging in concentric
circles from her motionless knife. “That ain't
religion. Ye talk like a man would hev ter be
ez sensible an' solid fur politics ez fur workin'
on the road. They don't summons the old men
fur sech jobs ez that. They mought ez well
enjye the evenin' o' thar days with this
foolishness o' politics ez enny other.”</p>
          <p>“Shucks!” said Obediah, who had the courage
of his convictions. “These hyar old folks
hev hed ter live in the same house an' ride in
the same wagin thirty-five year, jes' 'kase, when
we war married, they agreed ter put what they
hed tergether; an' they hev been a-fightin' over
thar dead an' gone politics ev'y minit o' the
time sence. Thar may be some good Dimmycrats,
an' thar may be some good Republikins;
but they make a powerful oneasy team, yoked
tergether. An' when it grows on 'em so, the
law oughter step in, an' count 'em over age, an'
shet 'em up. 'Specially ez dad hev voted fur
<pb id="crad90" n="90"/>
Andy Jackson fur Presi<hi rend="italics">dint</hi>, outer respec' fur
his memory, ev'y 'lection sence the tormentin'
old critter died.”</p>
          <p>But he said all this below his breath, and
presently fell silent, for his wife's face had
clouded, and her soft drawling voice had an
intimation of a depression of spirit.</p>
          <p>“The kentry hev kem ter its ruin,” exclaimed
the paralytic, “when men  -  brazen-faced buzzards
  -  kin go an' git 'lected ter office 'thout
no party ter boost 'em! Look-a-hyar,”  -  he
turned to his grandson,  -  “ye air always
a-prophesyin'. Prophesy some now. Air
'Cajah Green a-goin' ter be 'lected?”</p>
          <p>He thumped the floor with his stick, and fixed
his imperative eye upon Hiram Kelsey's face.</p>
          <p>“Naw, gran'dad. He won't be 'lected,” said
the prophet.</p>
          <p>The old man's face was scarlet because of
this contradiction of his own dismal
vaticinations.</p>
          <p>“'Cajah Green <hi rend="italics">will</hi> be 'lected,” he cried.
“The kentry's ruined. Folks dunno whether
they air Republikins or Dimrnycrats! Lor'
A'mighty, ter think o' that! The kentry's
ruined! An' yer prophesyin' don't tech it.
They hed false prophets in the old days, an'
the tribe holds out yit.”</p>
          <p>He struck the floor venomously with his stick.
<pb id="crad91" n="91"/>
Its defective aim once or twice brought it upon
A rough black bundle that lay rolled up in front
of the fire like a great dog. A slow head was
lifted inquiringly, with an offended mien, from
the rolls of fat and fur. Twinkling small eyes
glared out. When another blow descended, with
a wild disregard of results, there was a whimper,
a long low growl, a flash of white teeth, and
with claw and fang the pet cub caught at the
stick. The old man dropped it in a panic.</p>
          <p>“Look a-yander at the bar!” he shrieked.</p>
          <p>But the cub had crouched on the floor since
the stick had fallen, and was whimpering again,
and looking about in cowardly appeal.</p>
          <p>The old man rallied, “What d'ye bring the
savage beastis home fur, Hiram, out'n the woods
whar they b'long?” he vociferated.</p>
          <p>“Kase he 'lowed he hed killed the dam, an'
the young 'un war bound ter starve,” put in
the other old man actuated, perhaps, by some
sympathy for the grandson, whose strength and
youth counted for naught against this adversary.</p>
          <p>“What air ye a-aimin' ter do with it? Ter
kill sech chillen ez happen ter make game o'
ye? That's what the prophets of old cited thar
bars ter do,  -  ter kill the little laffin' chillen.”</p>
          <p>Kelsey winced. The cruelties of the old
chronicles bore hard upon his wavering faith.</p>
          <pb id="crad92" n="92"/>
          <p>The old man saw his advantage, and with
the wantonness of tyranny followed it up:
“That's it,  -  that's it! That would suit Hiram,
like the prophets,  -  ter kill the innercent
chillen!”</p>
          <p>The young man recoiled suddenly. The
patriarch, a wild terror on his pallid, aged face,
recognized the significance of his words. He
held up his shaking hands as if to recall them,
to clutch them. He had remembered the
domestic tragedy: the humble figure of the little
mountain child, all gayety and dimples and
gurgling laughter, who had known no grief and
had wrought such woe, who had left a rude,
empty cradle in the corner, a mound  -  such a
tiny mound!  -  in the graveyard, and an
imperishable anguish of self-reproach,
unquenchable as the fires of hell.</p>
          <p>“I furgot,  -  I furgot!” shrieked the old
man. “I furgot the baby! When war she
buried?  -  las' week or year afore las'? The
only one,  -  the only great-gran'child I ever
hed. The frien'liest baby! Knowed me jes'
ez well!” He burst into senile tears. “Don't
ye go, Hiram. What did the doctor say ye gin
her? Laws-a-massy! 'Pears like 't war jes'
yestiddy she war a-crawlin' 'roan' the floor,
stiddier that heejus beastis ez I wisht war in
the woods  -  laffin'  -  Lord A'mighty! laffin' an
<pb id="crad93" n="93"/>
takin' notice ez peart. Hiram, don't ye go,  -  
don't ye go! Peartes', pretties' chile I ever see
  -  an' I had six o' my own  -  an' the frien'lies'!
An' I hed planned fur sech a many pleasures
when she hed got some growth an' hed l'arned
ter talk. I wanted ter hear what she hed ter
say,  -  the only great-grandchild I ever hed,  -  
an' now the words will never be spoke. 'Pears
like ter me ez the Lord shows mighty little
jedgmint ter take her, an' leave me a-cumberin'
the groun'.”</p>
          <p>Then he began once more to wring his hands
and sob aloud,  -  that piteous weeping of the
aged!  -  and to mumble brokenly, “The
frien'lies' baby!”</p>
          <p>The woman left her work and took off her
bonnet, showing her gray hair drawn into a
skimpy knot at the back of her head, and leaving
in high relief her strong, honest, candid features,
on which the refinements of all benign
impulses effaced the effects of poverty and
ignorance. She crossed the room to the old man's
chair; her velvety voice soothed him. He suffered
himself to be lifted by his son and grandson,
and carried away bodily to bed in the room
across the passage. In the mean time the
woman filled a tin cup with lard, placing in its
midst a button tied in a bit of cloth to serve as
a wick, and lighted it at the fire, while the cub
<pb id="crad94" n="94"/>
presided with sniffing curiosity at the unusual
proceeding, pressing up close against her as she
knelt on the hearth, well knowing that she was
not to be held in fear nor in any special respect
by young bears.</p>
          <p>“I 'm goin' ter gin him a button-lamp ter
sleep by, bein' ez he hev tuk the baby in his
head agin,” s