CHAPTER XVI
CONCERNING TEMPESTS AND INDIANS
Shortly after dark that evening, the tall, swarthy man who had come
up on the Paul Revere sauntered slowly up and down that part of
Main Street facing the Court House. Ostensibly he was inspecting
store windows along the way, but in reality he was on the lookout
for a man he had agreed to meet at a point just above the tavern,--a
casual meeting, it was to appear, and between two strangers. Barry
Lapelle came out of the tavern at the stroke of eight and walked
eastward a few paces, halting at the dark open lot between Johnson's
place and Smith's store beyond. The swarthy man approached slowly,
unconcernedly. He accosted Lapelle, inquiring:
"Is that the tavern, Mister?"
"Yes," replied Barry, needlessly pointing down the street.
"Well?"
"It's her," said the stranger. "I had a good look
at her 'long about five o'clock from the woods across from her house.
She's a heap sight older but I knowed her all right."
"You are sure?"
"Sure as my name is--"
"Sh!"
"Course I'm sure. She was Owen Carter's widder. He was killt
by a tree fallin' on him. Oh, I got a good memory. I can't afford
to have a bad one. I remember her as plain as if it wuz yestiday."
He pointed off in a westerly direction for the benefit of a passerby.
"Thank ye, mister. You say it's not more'n six mile out yan
way?" Lowering his voice, he went on: "A feller wouldn't
be likely to fergit a woman like her. Gosh, I used to wish--but
wishin' don't count fer much in this world."
"Get on with it. We can't stand here talking all night."
"Well, she's the woman that run off with Bob Gwynne. There
ain't no doubt about it. Everybody knowed it. I wuz there at the
time, workin' fer Ed Peters. He left his wife an' a little boy.
His wife was a daughter of ole Squire Blythe,--damn his heart! He
had me hoss-whipped in public fer--well, fer some triflin' thing
I done. Seems to me Mrs. Carter had a little baby girl. Maybe not.
I ain't much of a hand fer noticin' babies."
"You are sure,--absolutely positive about all this?" whispered
Lapelle intensely.
"You bet yer boots I am."
"She ran off with a married man?"
"She did. A feller by the name o' Gwynne, as I said afore,--Bob
Gwynne. An' I want to tell you, he got out o' that town jest in
time or I'd have slit his gizzard fer him. He had me arrested fer
stealin' a saddle an' bridle. He never WOULD have got away ef I
hadn't been locked up in Jim Hatcher's smokehouse with two men settin'
outside with guns fer a solid month, keepin' watch on me day an'
night. I wuz--"
"That's all for to-night," snapped Barry impatiently.
"You get out of town at once. Mart will be waiting for you
down below Granny Neff's cabin,--this side of the tanyard,--as arranged."
"What about that other business? Mart'll want to know when
we're to--"
"He knows. The Paul Revere goes south day after to-morrow morning.
If the plans are changed before that time, I'll get word to him.
It may not be necessary to do anything at all. You've given me information
that may bring the old woman to her senses."
"Them two fellers that come up on the boat to-day. Air you
sure you c'n--"
"That's all for to-night," interrupted Barry, and strode
off up the street, leaving Jasper Suggs, sometime Simon Braley of
the loathsome Girty stock, to wend his lonely way out into a silence
as black as the depths of his own benighted soul.
The night was sultry. Up in the marshy fastnesses of Lake Stansbury
all the frogs in the universe seemed to have congregated for a grand
festival of song. The treble of baby frogs, the diapason of ancient
frogs, the lusty alto of frogs in the prime of life, were united
in an unbroken, penetrating chant to the starless sky. The melancholy
hoot of the owl, the blithesome chirp of the cricket, even the hideous
yawp of the roaming loon, were lost in the din and clatter of Lake
Stansbury's mighty chorus.
There was promise of storm in the lifeless air. Zachariah, resting
his elbows on the fence, confided this prognostication to an almost
invisible Hattie on the opposite side of the barrier between two
back yards.
"Ah allus covers my haid up wid de blanket--an' de bolster--an'
de piller when hit's astormin'," said Hattie, in an awed undertone.
"An' Ah squeals lak a pig ev' time hit claps."
"Shucks, gal!" scoffed Zachariah. "What yo' all so
skeert o' lightnin' fo'? Why, good lan' o' Goshen, Ah hain't no
mo' askeert o' storms dan Ah is ob--ob YOU!" He chuckled rather
timorously after blurting out this inspired and (to him) audacious
remark. To his relief and astonishment, Hattie was not offended.
"Ah bet yo' all hain't see no setch thunderstorms as we has
'round dis yere neck o' de woods," said she, with conviction.
"Ah bet yo' be skeert ef you--"
"Don' yo' talk to me, gal," boasted Zachariah. "Wuzzin
Ah in de wustest storm dis yere valley has seed sence dat ole Noah
he climb up in dat ole ark an' sez, 'Lan' sakes, Ah wonder ef Ah
done gone an' fergit anyt'ing.' Yes, MA'AM,--dat evenin' out to
Marse Striker's--dat wuz a storm, gal. Wuz Ah skeert? No, SUH! Ah
stup right out in de middle of it, lightnin' strikin' all 'round
an' de thunder so turrible Marse Kenneth an' ever'body ailse wuz
awonderin' ef de good Lord could hear 'em prayin' fo' mercy. Yas,
suh--yas, SUH! Dat's de gospel trufe. An' me right out dere in dat
ole barnyard doin' de chores fo' ole Mis' Striker. Marse Kenneth
he stick his haid out'n de winder an' yell, 'Zachariah, yo' come
right in heah dis minnit! Yo' heah me? Wha' yo' all doin' out dere
in dat hell-fire an' brimstone? Ah knows yo' is de bravest nigger
in all dis world, but fo' mah sake, Zachariah, won't yo' PLEASE
come in?' Well, suh, jes' den Ah happens to look up from what Ah
wuz doin' an' sees a streak o' lightnin' comin' straight to'ards
de cabin. So Ah yells fo' him to pull his haid in mighty quick,
an' shore 'nuff he got it in jes' in de nick o' time. Dat streak
o' lightnin' went right pass de winder an' hit de groun'. Den hit
sort o' bounce up in de air an' lep right over mah haid an' hitten
a tree--"
"Wuz hit rainin' all dis time?"
"Rainin'? Mah lan', gal, course hit wuz rainin'," replied
Zachariah, somewhat testily. "Hitten a tree not more'n ten
foot from where Ah wuz--"
"Hain't yo' all got no sense at all, nigger?" demanded
Hattie, witheringly. "Don' yo' know 'nough to go in out'n de
rain?"
Zachariah was flabbergasted. Here was a bolt from a supposedly clear
and tranquil sky; it flattened him out as no stroke of lightning
could ever have done. For once in his life he was rendered speechless.
Hattie, who had got religion on several unforgettable occasions
and was at this very time on the point of returning to the spiritual
fold which she had more or less secretly abandoned at the behest
of the flesh, regarded this as an excellent opportunity to re-establish
herself as a disciple of salvation.
"An' what's more, nigger," she went on severely, "ef
de good Lord ever cotch setch a monst'ous liar as yo' is out in
a hurricane lak what yo' all sez it wuz, dere wouldn't be no use
buryin' what wuz lef' of yo'. 'Cause why, 'cause yo' jes' gwine
to be a lil black cinder no bigger'n a chinkapin. I knows all about
how brave yo' wuz out to Marse Striker's. Miss Violy she done tell
how yo' all snuck under de table an' prayed an' carried on somefin'
scan'lous."
Zachariah, though crushed, made a noble effort to extricate himself
from the ruins. "Ah lak to know what Miss Violy knows about
me on dat yere occasion. Yas, suh,--dat's what Ah lak to know. She
never lay eyes on me dat night. 'Ca'se why? 'Ca'se I wuz out in
de barnlot all de time. She done got me contwisted wid dat other
fool nigger, dat's what she done."
"What other fool nigger?"
"Didden she tell yo' all about dat nigger we fotch along up
from Craffordsville to--"
"Yas, suh, she done tole all about dat Craffordsville nigger,
ef dat's de one yo' means."
Zachariah was staggered. "She--she tole yo' about--about dat
Craffordsville nigger?"
"Yas, suh,--she did. Miss Violy she say he wuz de han'somest
boy she ever did see,--great big strappin' boy wid de grandest eyes
an'--"
"Dat's enough,--dat'll do," exclaimed Zachariah in considerable
heat. "Marse Kenneth he got to change his tune, dat's all I
got to say. He say Ah am de biggest liar in dis yere land,--but,
by golly, he ain' ever heared about dis yere gal Hattie. No, SUH!
When Ah lies, Ah lies about SOMEFIN', but when yo' lies, yo' jes'
lies about NUFFIN',--'ca'se why? 'Ca'se dat Craffordsville nigger
he ain' nuffin'. Yo' ought to be 'shamed o' yo'self, nigger, makin'
out Miss Violy to be a liar lak dat,--an' her bein' de fines' lady
in--"
"Go on 'way wid yo', nigger," retorted Hattie airily.
"Don' yo' come aroun' heah no mo' makin' out how brave yo'
is,--'ca'se Ah knows a brave nigger when Ah sees one, lemme tell
yo' dat, Mistah Zachariah Whatever-yo'-name is."
Silence followed this Parthian shot. Zachariah, being a true philosopher,
rested his case without further argument. He appeared to have given
himself up to reflection. Presently Hattie, tempering her voice
with honey, remarked: "Ah suttinly is mighty glad yo' is come
up yere to live, Zachariah."
"Look here, gal,--don' yo' go countin' on me too much,"
said he, suspiciously. "Ah got all Ah c'n do 'tendin' to mah
own wo'k 'thout comin' over yander an' hulpin' yo'--"
"Lan's sakes, man, 'tain't mah look-out ef yo' come over yere
an' tote mah clo'se-basket an' ev'thing 'round fo' me,--no, suh!
Ah ain' nev' ast yo', has Ah? All Ah does is to hole Cato so he
won't chaw yo' laig off when yo' come botherin' me to please 'low
yo' to hulp me,--das all Ah do. An' lemme tell yo', nigger, dat
ain' no easy job. 'Ca'se ef dere's one t'ing Cato do enjoy hit's
dark meat,--yas, suh, hit's come so he won't even look at light
meat no mo', he so sick o' feedin' off'n dese yere white shin-bones."
"Well, den, why is yo' glad Ah come up yere to live?"
demanded Zachariah defensively.
"'Ca'se o' dis yere ole Black Hawk."
"Ah don' know nuffin' 'bout no ole Black Hawk."
"Yo' all gwine to know 'bout him mighty quick," said she
solemnly. "He's on de rampage. Scalpin' an' burnin' white folks
at de stake an' des wallerin' in blood. Yas, suh,--Ah suttinly ain't
gwine feel so skeert o' dat ole Black Hawk 'long as yo' is livin'
right nex' do', Zachariah."
"Wha' yo' all talkin' about?"
"Marse Joe,--he de sheriff dis yere county,--he done tole ole
Mis' Gwyn dis evenin' all de news 'bout dat ole Black Hawk. Yas,
suh,--ole Black Hawk he on de warpath. All de Injuns in dis yere--"
"Injuns?" gulped Zachariah.
"Dey all got dere warpaint on an' dere tommyhawks--"
"How come Marse Kenneth he don' know nuffin' 'bout all dis?"
demanded Zachariah, taking a step or two backward and glancing anxiously
over one shoulder, then the other. "He a lawyer. How come he
don' know nuffin' 'bout--Say, how close dat ole sheriff say dem
Injuns is?"
"Dat's what I can't make out, Zachariah. He talk so kind o'
low an' me lettin' de dishpan drop right in de middle--"
"Ah guess Ah better go right straight in de house an' tell
Marse Kenneth 'bout dis," hastily announced Zachariah. Then
he bethought himself to add: "'Ca'se me an' him got a lot to
do ef dese here Injuns come 'roun' us lookin' fo' trouble, Yas,
suh! Ah got to git de guns an' pistols an' huntin' knives all ready
fo'--"
The words froze on his lips. A low, blood-curdling moan that seemed
to end in a gasp,--or even a death-rattle,--fell upon the ears of
the two negroes. It was close at hand,--not more than twenty feet
away. This was succeeded, after a few seconds of intense stillness--(notwithstanding
the uproarious frogs!)--by a hair-raising screech from Hattie. An
instant later she was scuttling for her own kitchen door, emitting
inarticulate cries of terror.
As for Zachariah? His course was a true one so far as direction
was concerned. Blind instinct located the back door for him and
he made a bee-line toward it regardless of all that lay between.
First he encountered a tree-stump. This he succeeded in passing
without the slightest deviation from the chosen route. Scrambling
frantically to his feet after landing with a mighty grunt some two
yards beyond the obstacle, he dashed onward, tearing his way through
a patch of gooseberry bushes, coming almost immediately into contact
with the wood-pile. Here he was momentarily retarded in his flight.
There was a great scattering of stove-wood and chips, accompanied
by suppressed howls, and then he was on his feet again. Almost simultaneously
the heavy oak door received and withstood the impact of his flying
body; a desperate clawing at the latch, the spasmodic squeak of
rusty hinges, a resounding slam, the jar of a bolt being shot into
place,--and Zachariah vociferously at prayer in a sanctuary behind
the kitchen stove.