"I reckon maybe some of us might help," remarked Mr. Watts, reflectively.

Jim Bardlock swore a violent oath. "That's the talk!" he shouted. "Ef I

ain't the first man of this crowd to set my foot in Roowun, an' first to

beat in that jail door, an' take 'em out an' hang 'em by the neck till

they're dead, dead, dead, I'm not Town Marshal of Plattville, County of

Carlow, State of Indiana, and the Lord have mercy on our souls!"

Tom Martin looked at the brown stain and quickly turned away; then he went

back slowly to the village. On the way he passed Warren Smith.

"Is it so?" asked the lawyer.

Martin answered with a dry throat. He looked out dimly over the sunlit

fields, and swallowed once or twice. "Yes, it's so. There's a good deal of

it there. Little more than a boy he was." The old fellow passed his seamy

hand over his eyes without concealment. "Peter ain't very bright,

sometimes, it seems to me," he added, brokenly; "overlook Bodeffer and

Fisbee and me and all of us old husks, and--and--" he gulped suddenly,

then finished--"and act the fool and take a boy that's the best we had. I

wish the Almighty would take Peter off the gate; he ain't fit fer it."

When the attorney reached the spot where the crowd was thickest, way was

made for him. The old colored man, Xenophon, approached at the same time,

leaning on a hickory stick and bent very far over, one hand resting on his

hip as if to ease a rusty joint. The negro's age was an incentive to

fable; from his appearance he might have known the prophets, and he wore

that hoary look of unearthly wisdom many decades of superstitious

experience sometimes give to members of his race. His face, so tortured

with wrinkles that it might have been made of innumerable black threads

woven together, was a living mask of the mystery of his blood. Harkless

had once said that Uncle Xenophon had visited heaven before Swedenborg and

hell before Dante. To-day, as he slowly limped over the ties, his eyes

were bright and dry under the solemn lids, and, though his heavy nostrils

were unusually distended in the effort for regular breathing, the deeply

puckered lips beneath them were set firmly.

He stopped and looked at the faces before him. When he spoke his voice was

gentle, and though the tremulousness of age harped on the vocal strings,

it was rigidly controlled. "Kin some kine gelmun," he asked, "please t'be

so good ez t' show de ole main whuh de W'ite-Caips is done shoot Marse

Hawkliss?"

"Here was where it happened, Uncle Zen," answered Wiley, leaning him

forward. "Here is the stain."

Xenophon bent over the spot on the sand, making little odd noises in his

throat. Then he painfully resumed his former position. "Dass his blood,"

he said, in the same gentle, quavering tone. "Dass my bes' frien' whut lay

on de groun' whuh yo staind, gelmun."




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