CHAPTER XXII
THE PRISONERS
The grewsome cavalcade wended its way townward. Moll Hawk sat between
the sheriff and Cyrus Allen on the springless board that served
as a seat atop the lofty sideboards of the wagon. The crude wooden
wheels rumbled and creaked and jarred along the deep-rutted road,
jouncing the occupants of the vehicle from side to side with unseemly
playfulness. Back in the bed of the wagon, under a gaily coloured
Indian blanket, lay the outstretched body of Jasper Suggs, seemingly
alive and responsive to the jolts and twists and turns of the road.
The rear end gate had been removed and three men sat with their
heels dangling outside, their backs to the sinister, unnoticed traveller
who shared accommodations with them. The central figure was Martin
Hawk, grim, saturnine, silent, his feet and hands secured with leather
thongs. Trotting along under his heels, so to speak, were his three
dogs,--their tongues hanging out, their tails drooping, their eyes
turning neither to right nor left. They were his only friends.
Some distance behind rode three horsemen, leading as many riderless
steeds. On ahead was another group of riders. Rachel Carter rode
alongside the wagon.
Moll had firmly refused to wear the older woman's cape. She had
on a coat belonging to one of the men and wore a flimsy, deep-hooded
bonnet that once had been azure blue. Her shoulders sagged wearily,
her back was bent, her arms lay limply upon her knees. She was staring
bleakly before her over the horses' ears, at the road ahead. The
reaction had come. She had told the story of the night, haltingly
but with a graphic integrity that left nothing to be desired.
Martin Hawk had spent a black and unhappy hour. He was obliged to
listen to his daughter's story and, much to his discontent, was
not permitted to contradict her in any particular. Two or three
mournful attempts to reproach her for lying about her own,--and,
he always added, her ONLY--father, met with increasingly violent
adjurations to "shut up," the last one being so emphatic
that he gave vent to a sharp howl of pain and began feeling with
his tongue to see if all his teeth were there.
Luckily for him, he was impervious to the scorn of his fellow-man,
else he would have shrivelled under the looks he received from time
to time. Especially distressing to him was that part of her recital
touching upon his unholy greed; he could not help feeling, with
deep parental bitterness, that no man alive ever had a more heartless,
undutiful daughter than he,--a conviction that for the time being
at least caused him to lament the countless opportunities he had
had to beat her to death instead of merely raising a few perishable
welts on her back. If he had done that, say a month ago, how different
everything would be now!
This part of her story may suffice:
"Pap never wanted anything so bad in all his life as that powder
horn an' shot flask. They wuz all fixed up with gold an' silver
trimmin's an' I guess there wuz rubies an' di'monds too. Fer three
days Pap dickered with him, tryin' to make some kind of a swap.
Jasper he wouldn't trade 'em er sell 'em nuther. He said they wuz
wuth more'n a thousand dollars. Some big Injun Chief made him a
present of 'em, years ago,--fer savin' his life, he said. First
Pap tried to swap his hounds fer 'em, 'nen said he'd throw in one
of the hosses. Jasper he jest laughed at him. Yesterday I heerd
Pap tell him he would swap him both hosses, seven hogs, the wagon
an' two boats, but Jasper he jest laughed. They wuz still talkin'
about it when they got home from town last night, jest ahead of
the storm. I could hear 'em arguin' out in the room. They wuz drinkin'
an' talkin' so loud I couldn't sleep.
"Purty soon Pap said he'd trade him our cabin an' ever'thing
else fer that pouch an' flask. It wuz rainin' so hard by this time
I couldn't hear all they said but when it slacked up a little I
cotch my own name. They wuz talkin' about me. I heerd Jasper tell
Pap he'd give him the things ef he'd promise to go away an' leave
him an' me alone in the cabin. That kind o' surprised me. But all
Pap sez wuz that he hated to go out in the rain. So Jasper he said
fer him to wait till hit stopped rainin'. Pap said all right, he
would, an' fer Jasper to hand over the pouch and flask. Jasper cussed
an' said he'd give 'em to him three hours after sunrise the nex'
morning' an' not a minute sooner, an' he wuz to stay away from the
house all that time or he wouldn't give 'em to him at all. Well,
they argued fer some time about that an' finally Pap said he'd go
out to the hoss shed an' sleep if Jasper would hand over the shot
pouch then an' there an' hold back the powder flask till mornin'.
Jasper he said all right, he would. I never guess what wuz back
of all this. So when Pap went out an' shut the door behind him,
I wuz kind o' thankful, ca'se all the arguin' an' jawin' would stop
an' I could go to sleep ag'in. Jasper he let down the bolt inside
the door."
. . . . . . . . . . . .
It was after eight o'clock when the wagon and its escort entered
the outskirts of the town. Grim, imperturbable old dames sitting
on their porches smoking their clay or corncob pipes regarded the
strange procession with mild curiosity; toilers in gardens and barnyards
merely remarked to themselves that "some'pin must'a happened
some'eres" and called out to housewife or offspring not to
let them forget to "mosey up to the square" later in the
day for particulars, if any. The presence of the sheriff was more
or less informing; it was obvious even to the least sprightly intelligence
that somebody had been arrested. But the appearance of Mrs. Gwyn
on horseback, riding slowly beside the wagon, was not so easily
accounted for. That circumstance alone made it absolutely worth
while to "mosey up to the square" a little later on.
Martin Hawk was lodged in the recently completed brick jail adjoining
the courthouse. He complained bitterly of the injustice that permitted
his daughter, a confessed murderess, to enjoy the hospitality of
the sheriff's home whilst he, accused of nothing more heinous than
sheep-stealing, was flung into jail and subjected to the further
indignity of being audibly described as a fit subject for the whipping
post, an institution that still prevailed despite a general movement
to abolish it throughout the state.
It galled him to hear the fuss that was being made over Moll. Everybody
seemed to be taking her part. Why, that Gwyn woman not only went
so far as to say she would be responsible for Moll's appearance
in court, but actually arranged to buy her a lot of new clothes.
And the sheriff patted her on the shoulder and loudly declared that
the only thing any judge or jury could possibly find her guilty
of was criminal negligence in only half-doing the job. This was
supplemented by a look that left no doubt in Martin's mind as to
just what he considered to be the neglected part of the job. He
bethought himself of the one powerful friend he had in town,--Barry
Lapelle. So he sent this message by word of mouth to the suspected
dandy:
"I'm in jail. I want you to come and see me right off. I mean
business."
Needless to say, this message,--conveying a far from subtle threat,--was
a long time in reaching Mr. Lapelle, who had gone into temporary
retirement at Jack Trentman's shanty, having arrived at that unsavoury
retreat by a roundabout, circuitous route which allowed him to spend
some time on the bank of a sequestered brook.
Meanwhile Rachel Carter approached her own home, afoot and weary.
As she turned the bend she was surprised and not a little disturbed
by the sight of Kenneth Gwynne standing at her front gate. He hurried
up the road to meet her.
"The worst has come to pass," he announced, stopping in
front of her. "Before you go in I must tell you just what happened
here this morning. Come in here among the trees where we can't be
seen from the house."
She listened impassively to his story. Only the expression in her
steady, unswerving eyes betrayed her inward concern and agitation.
Not once did she interrupt him. Her shoulders, he observed, drooped
a little and her arms hung limply at her side, mute evidence of
a sinking heart and the resignation that comes with defeat.
"I am ready and willing," he assured her at the end, "to
do anything, to say anything you wish. It is possible for us to
convince her that there is no truth in what he said. We can lie--"
She held up her hand, shaking her head almost angrily. "No!
Not that, Kenneth. I cannot permit you to lie for ME. That would
be unspeakable. I am not wholly without honour. There is nothing
you can do for her,--for either of us at present. Thank you for
preparing me,--and for your offer, Kenneth. Stay away from us until
you have had time to think it all over. Then you will realize that
this generous impulse of yours would do more harm than good. Let
her think what she will of me, she must not lose her faith in you,
my boy."
"But--what of her?" he expostulated. "What are you
going to say to her when she asks you--"
"I don't know," she interrupted, lifelessly. "I am
not a good liar, Kenneth Gwynne. Whatever else you may say or think
of me, I--I have never wilfully lied."
She started away, but after a few steps turned back to him. "Jasper
Suggs is dead. Moll Hawk killed him last night. She has been arrested.
There is nothing you can do for Viola at present, but you may be
able to help that poor, unfortunate girl. Suggs told her about me.
She will keep the secret. Go and see the sheriff at once. He will
tell you all that has happened."
Then she strode off without another word. He watched the tall, black
figure until it turned in at the gate and was lost to view, a sort
of stupefaction gripping him. Presently he aroused himself and walked
slowly homeward. As he passed through his own gate he looked over
at the window of the room in which Viola had sought seclusion. The
curtains hung limp and motionless. He wondered what was taking place
inside the four walls of that room.
Out of the maze into which his thoughts had been plunged by the
swift procession of events groped the new and disturbing turn in
the affairs of Rachel Carter. What was back of the untold story
of the slaying of Jasper Suggs? What were the circumstances? Why
had Moll Hawk killed the man? Had Rachel Carter figured directly
or indirectly in the tragedy? He recalled her significant allusion
to Isaac Stain the night before and his own rather startling inference,--and
now she was asking him to help Moll Hawk in her hour of tribulation.
A cold perspiration started out all over him. The question persisted:
What was back of the slaying of Jasper Suggs?
He gave explicit and peremptory directions to Zachariah in case
Mrs. Gwyn asked for him, and then set out briskly for the courthouse.
By this time the news of the murder had spread over the town. A
crowd had gathered in front of Scudder's undertaking establishment.
Knots of men and women, disregarding traffic, stood in the streets
adjoining the public square, listening to some qualified narrator's
account of the night's expedition and the tragedy at Martin Hawk's.
Kenneth hurried past these crowds and made his way straight to the
office of the sheriff. Farther down the street a group of people
stood in front of the sheriff's house, while in the vicinity of
the little jail an ever-increasing mob was collecting.
"Judge" Billings espied him. Disengaging himself from
a group of men at the corner of the square, the defendant in the
case of Kenwright vs. Billings made a bee-line for his young attorney.
"I've been over to your office twice, young man," he announced
as he came up. "Where the devil have you been keepin' yourself?
Mrs. Gwyn left word for you to come right up to her house. She wants
you to take charge of the Hawk girl's case. Maybe you don't know
it, but you've been engaged to defend her. You better make tracks
up to Mrs. Gwyn's and--"
"I have seen Mrs. Gwyn," interrupted Kenneth. "She
sent me to the sheriff. Where is he?"
"Over yonder talkin' to that crowd in front of the tavern.
He's sort o' pickin' out a jury in advance,--makin' sure that the
right men get on it. He got me for one. He don't make any bones
about it. Just tells you how it all happened an' then asks you whether
you'd be such a skunk as to even think of convictin' the girl for
what she did. Then you up an' blaspheme considerable about what
you'd like to do to her dodgasted father, an' before you git anywhere's
near through, he holds up his hand an' says, 'Now, I've only got
to git three more (or whatever it is), an' then the jury's complete!'
We're figgerin' on havin' the trial to-morrow mornin' between nine
an' ten o'clock. The judge says it's all right, far as he's concerned.
We'd have it to-day, only Moll's got to have a new dress an' bonnet
an' such-like before she can appear in court. All you'll have to
do, Kenny, is jest to set back,--look wise an' let her tell her
story. 'Cordin' to law, she's got to stand trial fer murder an'
she's got to have counsel. Nobody's goin' to object to you makin'
a speech to the jury,--bringin' tears to our eyes, as the sayin'
is,--only don't make it too long. I've got to meet a man at half-past
ten in regards to a hoss trade, an' I happen to know that Tom Rank's
clerk is sick an' he don't want to keep his store locked up fer
more than an hour. I'm jest tellin' you this so's you won't have
to waste time to-morrow askin' the jurymen whether they have formed
an opinion or not, or whether they feel they can give the prisoner
a fair an' impartial trial or not. The sheriff's already asked us
that an' we've all said yes,--so don't delay matters by askin' ridiculous
questions."
The "Judge" interrupted himself to look at his watch.
"Well, I've got to be movin' along. I'm on the coroner's jury
too, and we're goin' up to Matt's right away to view the remains.
The verdict will probable be: 'Come to his death on account of Moll
Hawk's self-defense,' or somethin' like that. 'Never put off till
to-morrow what you can do to-day,' as the sayin' goes. Wouldn't
surprise me a bit if he was buried before three o'clock to-day.
Then we won't have him on our minds to-morrow. Well, see you later--if
not sooner."
An hour later Kenneth accompanied the sheriff to the latter's home
for an interview with his client. He had promptly consented to act
as her counsel after hearing the story of the crime from the sheriff.
"Mrs. Gwyn told my wife to go out and get some new clothes
for the girl," said the sheriff as they strode down the street,
"and she'd step into the store some time to-day and settle
for them. By thunder, you could have knocked me over with a feather,
Kenneth. If your stepmother was a man we'd describe her as a skinflint.
She's as stingy and unfeeling as they make 'em. Hard as nails and
about as kind-hearted as a tombstone. What other woman on this here
earth would have gone out to Martin Hawk's last night just for the
satisfaction of seein' him arrested? We didn't want her,--not by
a long shot,--but she made up her mind to go, and, by gosh, she
went. I guess maybe she thought we'd make a botch of it, and so
she took that long ride just to make sure she'd git her money's
worth. 'Cause, you see, I had to pay each of the men a dollar and
a half and mileage before they'd run the risk of bein' shot by Hawk
and his crowd. Hard as nails, I said, but doggone it, the minute
she saw that girl out there she turned as soft as butter and there
is nothin' she won't do for her. It beats me, by gosh,--it certainly
beats me."
"Women are very strange creatures," observed Kenneth.
"Yep," agreed the other. "You can most always tell
what a man's goin' to do, but I'm derned if you can even GUESS what
a woman's up to. Take my wife, for instance. Why, I've been livin'
with that woman for seventeen years and I swear to Guinea she's
still got me puzzled. Course I know what she's talking about most
of the time, but, by gosh, I never know what she's thinkin' about.
Women are like cats. A cat is the thoughtfulest animal there is.
It's always thinkin'. It thinks when it's asleep,--and most of the
time when you think it's asleep it ain't asleep at all. Well, here
we are. I guess Moll's out in the kitchen with my wife. I told Ma
to roll that old dress of Moll's up and save it for the jury to
see. It's the best bit of evidence she's got. All you'll have to
do is to hold it up in front of the jury and start your speech somethin'
like this: 'Gentlemen of the jury, I ask you to gaze upon this here
dress, all tattered and torn,--' and that's as far as you'll get,
'cause this jury is goin' to be composed of gentlemen and they'll
probably stand up right then and there and say 'Not guilty.' Come
right in, Mr. Gwynne."
After considerable persuasion on the part of the sheriff and his
kindly wife, Moll repeated her story to Gwynne. She was abashed
before this elegant young man. A shyness and confusion that had
been totally lacking in her manner toward the other and older men
took possession of her now, and it was with difficulty that she
was induced to give him the complete details of all that took place
in her father's cabin.
When he shook hands with her as he was about to take his departure,
she suddenly found courage to say:
"Kin I see you alone fer a couple of minutes, Mr. Gwynne?"
"Certainly, Miss Hawk," he replied, gravely courteous.
"I am sure Mr. and Mrs.--"
"Come right in the sitting-room, Mr. Gwynne," interrupted
the housewife, bustling over to open the door.
Moll stared blankly at her counsel. No one had ever called her Miss
Hawk before. She was not quite sure that she had heard aright. Could
it be possible that this grand young gentleman had called her Miss
Hawk? Still wondering, she followed him out of the kitchen, sublimely
unconscious of the ridiculous figure she cut in the garments of
the older woman.
"Shut the door," she said, as her keen, wood-wary eyes
swept the room. She crossed swiftly to the window and looked out.
Her lips curled a little. "Most of them people has been standin'
out yonder sence nine o'clock, tryin' to see what sort of lookin'
animile I am, Mr. Gwynne. Hain't nohody got any work to do?"
"Vulgar curiosity, nothing more," said he, joining her
at the window.
"'Tain't ever' day they get a chance to see a murderer, is
it?" she said, lowering her head suddenly and putting a hand
to her quivering chin. For the first time she seemed on the point
of breaking down.
He made haste to exclaim, "You are not a murderer. You must
not think or say such things, Miss Hawk."
She kept her head down. A scarlet wave crept over her face. "I--I
wish you wouldn't call me that, Mr. Gwynne. Hit--hit makes me feel
kind o'--kind o' lonesome-like. Jest as--ef I didn't have no friends.
Call me Moll. That's all I am."
He studied for a moment the half-averted face of this girl of the
forest. He could not help contrasting it with the clear-cut, delicate,
beautifully modelled face of another girl of the dark frontier,--Viola
Gwyn. And out of this swift estimate grew a new pity for poor Moll
Hawk, the pity one feels for the vanquished.
"You will be surprised to find how many friends you have, Moll,"
he said gently.
There was no indication that she was impressed one way or the other
by this remark. She drew back from the window and faced him, her
eyes keen and searching.
"Do you reckon anybody is listenin'?" she asked.
"I think not,--in fact, I am sure we are quite alone."
"Well, this is somethin' I don't keer to have the shurreff
know, or anybody else, Mr. Gwynne. Hit's about Mr. Lapelle."
"Yes?" he said, as she paused warily.
"Mrs. Gwyn she tole me this mornin' that whatever I said to
my lawyer would be sacred an' wouldn't ever be let out to anybody,
no matter whut it wuz. She said it wuz ag'inst the code er somethin'.
Wuz she right?"
"In a sense, yes. Of course, you must understand, Moll, that
no honest lawyer will obligate himself to shield a criminal or a
fugitive from justice, or--I may as well say to you now that if
you expect that of me I must warn you not to tell me anything. You
would force me to withdraw as your counsel. For, you see, Moll,
I am an honest lawyer."
She looked at him in a sort of mute wonder for a moment, and then
muttered: "Why, Pap,--Pap he sez there ain't no setch thing
as a honest lawyer." An embarrassed little smile twisted her
lips. "I guess that must ha' been one of Pap's lies."
"It is possible he may never have come in contact with one,"
he observed drily.
"Well, I guess ef you're a honest lawyer," she said, knitting
her brows, "I'd better keep my mouth shut. I wuz only thinkin'
mebby you could see your way to do somethin' I wuz goin' to ask.
I jest wanted to git some word to Mr. Lapelle."
"Mr. Lapelle and I are not friends, Moll."
"Is it beca'se of whut I asked Ike Stain to tell ye?"
"Partly."
"I mean about stealin' Miss Violy Gwyn an' takin' her away
with him?"
"I want to thank you, Moll, for sending me the warning. It
was splendid of you."
"Oh, I didn't do it beca'se--" she began, somewhat defiantly,
and then closed her lips tightly. The sullen look came back into
her eyes.
"I understand. You--you like him yourself."
"Well,--whut ef I do?" she burst out. "Hit's my look-out,
ain't it?"
"Certainly. I am not blaming you."
"I guess there ain't no use talkin' any more," she said
flatly. "You wouldn't do whut I want ye to do anyhow, so what's
the sense of askin' you. We better go back to the kitchen."
"It may console you to hear that I have already told Mr. Lapelle
that he must get out of this town before to-morrow morning,"
said he deliberately. "And stay out!"
She leaned forward, her face brightening. "You tole him to
git away to-night?" she half-whispered, eagerly. "I thought
you said you wuzn't a friend o' his'n."
"That is what I said."
"Then, whut did you warn him to git away fer?"
He was thinking rapidly. "I did it on account of Miss Gwyn,
Moll," he replied, evasively.
"Do you think he'll go?" she asked, a fierce note of anxiety
in her voice.
"That remains to be seen." Then he hazarded: "I think
he will when he finds out that your father has been arrested."
"He's been a good friend to me, Mr. Gwynne, Mr. Lapelle has,"
said she, a little huskily. She waited a moment and then went on
earnestly and with a garrulousness that amazed him: "I don't
keer whut he's done that ain't right, er whut people is goin' to
say about him, he's allus been nice to me. I guess mebby you air
a-wonderin' why I tole Ike Stain about him figgerin' on carryin'
Miss Gwyn away. That don't look very friendly, I guess. Hit wuzn't
beca'se I thought I might git him fer myself some time,--no, hit
wuzn't that, Mr. Gwynne. I ain't setch a fool as to think he could
ever want to be sparkin' me. I reckon Ike Stain tole ye I wuz jealous.
Well, I wuzn't, I declare to goodness I wuzn't. Hit wuz beca'se
I jest couldn't 'low her to git married to him, knowin' whut I do.
I wuz tryin' to make up my mind to go an' see her some time an'
tell her not to marry him, but I jest couldn't seem to git the spunk
to do it. She used to come to see me when I wuz sick last winter
an' she wuz mighty nice to me.
"First thing I know, him an' Pap begin to fix up this plan
to carry her off. So I started up to town to tell her. I got as
fer as Ike's when I figgered I better let him do it, him bein' a
man, so I drapped in at his cabin an' tole him. I didn't know whut
else to do. I had to stop 'em from doin' it somehow. Hit wouldn't
do no good fer me to beg Pap to drap it, er to rare up on my hind-legs
an' make threats ag'inst 'em,--ca'se they'd soon put a stop to that.
Course I had it all figgered out whut I wuz goin' to do when thet
pack o' rascals got caught tryin' to steal her,--some of 'em shot,
like as not,--and I didn't much keer whuther my Pap wuz one of 'em
er not.
"I knowed where Mr. Lapelle wuz to meet 'em down the river
acrosst from Le Grange, so I was figgerin' on findin' him there
an' tellin' him whut had happened an' fer him to make his escape
down the river while he had setch a good start. I wuzn't goin' to
let him be ketched an' at the same time I wuzn't goin' to let anything
happen to Miss Violy Gwyn ef I could help it. I--I sort of figgered
it out as a good way to help both o' my friends, Mr. Gwynne, an'--an'
then this here thing happened. I want Mr. Lapelle to git away safe,--ca'se
I know whut Pap's goin' to do. He's goin' to blat out a lot o' things.
He says he's sure Mr. Lapelle put Mrs. Gwyn up to havin' him arrested."
"I think you may rest easy, Moll," said he, a trifle grimly.
"Mr. Lapelle had an engagement with me for to-morrow morning,
but I'll stake my life he will not be here to keep it."
"All right," she said, satisfied. "Ef you say so,
Mr. Gwynne, I'll believe it. Whut do you think they'll do to Pap?"
"He will probably get a dose of the whipping-post, for one
thing."
She grinned. "Gosh, I wish I could be some'eres about so's
I could see it," she cried.