Books: The Man in Gray
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Thomas Dixon >> The Man in Gray
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"Well?" the old man growled.
"You gave every man strict orders to fire no guns or revolver unless
necessary--didn't you?"
"I did."
"You fired the only shot heard to-night."
"I'll not do it again. I didn't intend to. I don't know why I did it.
Stick to my order."
"See that _you_ stick to it," the boy persisted.
"I will. Use only your knives and cutlasses. The cutlass first always."
The men began to move slowly forward.
Brown called softly.
"Just a minute. This dog of Wilkinson's is sure to bark. Don't stop to
try to kill him. Rush the house double quick and pay no attention to his
barking--"
"If he bites?" Owen asked.
"Take a chance, don't try to kill him--Wilkinson might wake. Now, all
together--rush the house!"
They rushed the, house at two hundred yards. They had taken but ten
steps when the dog barked so furiously Brown called a halt. They waited.
Then, minutes later the dog raged, approaching the house and retreating.
His wild cry of alarm rang with sinister echo through the woods. The
faithful brute was calling his master and mistress to arms.
Still the man inside slept. The Territory of Kansas to this time had
been as free from crime as any state on its border. The lawmaker had
never felt a moment's uneasiness.
Footsteps approached the door. The sick woman saw the shadow of a man
pass the window. The starlight sharply silhouetted his face against the
black background.
Some one knocked on the door.
The woman asked:
"Who's that?"
No one answered.
"Henry, Henry!" she called tensely.
"Well?" the husband answered.
"There's somebody knocking at the door."
Wilkinson half raised in bed.
"Who is that?"
A voice replied:
"We've lost the road. We want you to tell us the way to Dutch Henry's."
Wilkinson began to call the directions.
"We can't understand--"
"You can't miss the way."
"Come out and show us!"
The request was given in tones so sharp there could be no mistake. It
was a command not a plea.
"I'll have to go and tell them," he said to his wife.
"For God's sake, don't open that door," she whispered.
"It's best."
She seized and held him.
"You shall not go!"
Wilkinson sought to temporize.
"I'm not dressed," he called. "I can tell you the way as well without
going outdoors."
The men stepped back from the door and held a consultation. John Brown
at once returned and began his catechism:
"You are Wilkinson, the Member of the Legislature?"
"I am, sir."
"You are opposed to the Free Soil Party?"
"I am."
The answers were sharp to the point of curtness and his daring roused
the wrath of Brown to instant action.
"You're my prisoner, sir."
He waited an instant for an answer and, getting none, asked:
"Do you surrender?"
"Gentlemen, I do."
"Open the door!"
"In just a minute."
"Open it--"
"When I've made a light."
"We've got a light. Open that door or we'll smash it!"
Again the sick woman caught his arm.
"Don't do it!"
"It's better not to resist," he answered, opening the door.
Brown held the lantern in his face.
"Put on your clothes."
Wilkinson began to dress.
The men covered him with drawn revolvers. The sick woman sank limply on
the edge of the bed.
"Are there any more men in this house?" Brown asked sharply.
"No."
"Have you any arms?"
"Only a quail gun."
"Search the place."
The guard searched the rooms, ransacking drawers and chests. They took
everything of value they could find, including the shotgun and powder
flask.
The sick woman at length recovered her power of speech and turned to
Brown.
"If you've arrested my husband for anything, he's a law-abiding man. You
can let him stay here with me until morning."
"No!" Brown growled.
"I'm sick and helpless. I can't stay here by myself."
"Let me stay with my wife, gentlemen," Wilkinson pleaded, "until I can
get some one to wait on her and I'll remain on parole until you return
or I'll meet you anywhere you say."
Brown looked at the woman and at the little children trembling by her
side and curtly answered:
"You have neighbors."
"So I have," Wilkinson agreed, "but they are not here and I cannot go
for them unless you allow me."
"It matters not," Brown snapped. "Get ready, sir."
Wilkinson took up his boots to pull them on when Brown signaled his men
to drag him out.
Without further words they seized him and hurried into the darkness.
They dragged him a few yards from the house into a clump of dead brush.
Weiner was the chosen headsman. He swung his big savage figure before
Wilkinson and his cutlass flashed in the starlight.
The woman inside the darkened house heard the crash of the blade against
the skull and the dying groan from the lips of the father of her babies.
When the body crumpled, Weiner knelt, plunged his knife into the throat,
turned it and severed the jugular vein.
Standing over the body John Brown spoke to one of his men.
"The horses, saddles and bridles from the stable--quick!"
The huntsman hurried to the stable and took Wilkinson's horse.
It was two o'clock before they reached the home of James Harris on the
other side of the Pottawattomie. Harris lived on the highway and kept a
rude frontier boarding place where travelers stopped for the night.
With him lived Dutch Henry Sherman and his brother, William.
Brown had no difficulty in entering this humble one-room house. It was
never locked. The latch string was outside.
Without knocking Brown lifted the latch and sprang into the room with
his son, Owen, and another armed huntsman.
He surveyed the room. In one bed lay Harris, his wife and child. In two
other beds were three men, William Sherman, John Whitman and a stranger
who had stopped for the night and had given no name.
"You are our prisoners," Brown announced. "It is useless for you to
resist."
The old man stood by one bed with drawn saber and Owen stood by the
other while Weiner searched the room. He found two rifles and a bowie
knife which he passed through the door to the guard outside.
Brown ordered the stranger out first. He kept him but a few minutes and
brought him back. He next ordered Harris to follow him.
Brown confronted his prisoner in the yard. A swordsman stood close by
his side to catch his nod.
"Where is Dutch Henry Sherman?"
"On the plains hunting for lost cattle."
"You are telling me the truth?" Brown asked, boring him through with his
terrible eyes.
"The truth, sir!"
He studied Harris by the light of his lantern.
"Have you ever helped a Southern settler to enter the Territory of
Kansas?"
"No."
"Did you take any hand in the troubles at Lawrence?"
"I've never been to Lawrence."
"Have you ever done the Free State Party any harm?"
"No. I don't take no part in politics."
"Have you ever intended to do that party any harm?"
"I don't know nothin' about politics or parties."
"What are you doing living here among these Southern settlers?"
"Because I can get better wages."
"Any horses, bridles, or saddles?"
"I've one horse."
"Saddle him and bring him here."
A swordsman walked by his side while he caught and saddled his horse and
delivered him to his captors.
Brown went back into the house and brought out William Sherman. Harris
was ordered back to bed, and a new guard was placed inside until the
ceremony with Sherman should be ended.
It was brief.
Brown had no questions to ask this man. He was the brother of Henry
Sherman, the most hated member of the settlement. Brown called Thompson
and Weiner and spoke in tones of quick command.
"Take him down to the Pottawattomie Creek. I want this man's blood to
mingle with its waters and flow to the sea!"
The doomed man did not hear the sentence of his judge. The two huntsmen
caught his arms and rushed him to the banks of the creek. He stood for a
moment trembling and dazed. Not a word had passed his lips. Not one had
passed his guards.
They loosed their grip on his arms, stepped back and two cutlasses
whistled through the air in a single stroke. The double blow was so
swiftly and evenly delivered that the body stood erect until the second
stroke of the sharpened blades had cut off one hand and split open the
breast.
When the body fell at the feet of the huntsmen they seized the quivering
limbs and hurled them into the creek.
They reported at once to their Captain. He stood in front of the house
with his restless gaze sweeping the highway for any possible, belated
traveler. The one hope uppermost in his mind was that Dutch Henry
Sherman might return with his lost cattle in time.
He raised his lantern and looked at his watch. The men who had butchered
William Sherman stood with red swords for orders.
Brown had not yet uttered a word. He knew that the work on the bank
of the Pottawattomie was done. The attitude of his swordsmen was
sufficient.
He asked but one question.
"You threw him into the water?"
"Yes."
"Good."
He closed his silver watch with a snap.
"It's nearly four o'clock. We have no more time for work to-night. Back
to camp."
The men turned to repeat his orders.
"Wait!"
His order rang like vibrant metal.
The men stopped.
"We'll mount the horses we have taken, and march single file. I'll ride
the horse taken here. Bring him to the door."
With quick springing step Brown entered the house where the husband and
wife and the two lodgers were still shivering under the eye of the guard
with drawn sword.
The leader's voice rang with a note of triumph.
"You people whose lives have been spared will stay in this house until
sunrise. And the less you say about what's happened to-night the longer
you'll live."
He turned to his guard.
"Come on."
Brown had just mounted his horse to lead the procession back to the camp
in the ravine, when the first peal of thunder in a spring shower crashed
overhead.
He glanced up and saw that the sky was being rapidly overcast by swiftly
moving clouds. A few stars still glimmered directly above.
The storm without was an incident of slight importance. The rain would
give him a chance to test the men inside. He ordered his followers to
take refuge in the long shed under which Harris stabled the horses and
vehicles of travelers.
He stationed a sentinel at the door of the house.
His orders were clear.
"Cut down in his tracks without a word, the man who dares to come out."
The swordsman threw a saddle blanket around his shoulders and took his
place at the doorway.
The storm broke in fury. In five minutes the heavens were a sea of
flame. The thunder rolled over the ravine, the hills, the plains in
deafening peals. Flash after flash, roar after roar, an endless throb of
earth and air from the titanic bombardment from the skies. The flaming
sky was sublime--a changing, flashing, trembling splendor.
Townsley was the only coward in the group of stolid figures standing
under the shed. He watched by the lightning the expression of Brown's
face with awe. There was something terrible in the joy that flamed in
his eyes. Never had he seen such a look on human face. He forgot the
storm and forgot his fears of cyclones and lightning strokes in the
fascination with which he watched the seamed, weather-beaten features
of the man who had just committed the foulest deed in the annals of
American frontier life. There was in his shifting eyes no shadow of
doubt, of fear, of uncertainty. There was only the look of satisfaction,
of supreme triumph. The coward caught the spark of red that flashed from
his soul.
For a moment he regretted that he had not joined the bloody work with
his own hand. He was ashamed of his pity for the stark masses of flesh
that still lay on the deluged earth. In spite of the contagion of
Brown's mind which he felt pulling him with resistless power, his own
weaker intellect kept playing pranks with his memory.
He recalled the position of the bodies which they had left in the
darkness. He had seen them by the light of the lantern which Brown had
flashed each time before leaving. He remembered with a shiver that the
two Doyle boys had died with their big soft blue eyes wide open, staring
upward at the starlit skies. He wondered if the rain had beaten their
eyelids down.
A blinding flash filled the sky and lighted every nook and corner of the
woods and fields. He shook at its glare and put his hand over his eyes.
For a moment he could see nothing but the wide staring gaze upward
of those stalwart young bodies. He shivered and turned away from the
leader.
The next moment found him again watching the look of victory on the
terrible face.
As the lightning played about Brown's form he wondered at the impression
of age he gave with his face turned away and his figure motionless. He
was barely fifty-seven and yet he looked seventy-five, until he moved.
The moment his wiry body moved there was something uncanny in the
impression he gave of a wild animal caught in human form.
Brown had tired waiting for the shower to pass and had begun to pace
back and forth with his swinging, springy step. When he passed, Townsley
instinctively drew aside. He knew that he was a coward and yet he
couldn't feel the consciousness of cowardice in giving this man room. It
was common sense.
The storm passed as swiftly as it came.
Without a word the leader gave the signal. His men mounted the stolen
horses. With Townsley's grays and Weiner's pony the huntsmen returned to
the camp in the ravine, a procession of cavalry.
The eastern sky was whitening with the first touch of the coming sun
when they dismounted.
The leader ordered the fire built and a hearty breakfast cooked for each
man. As was his custom he wandered from the camp alone, his arms gripped
behind his stooped back. He climbed the hill, stood on its crest and
watched the prairie.
The storm had passed from west to east. On the eastern horizon a low
fringe of clouds was still slowly moving. They lay in long ribbons of
dazzling light. The sun's rays flashed through them every color of the
rainbow. Now they were a deep purple, growing brighter with each moment,
until every flower in the waving fields was touched with its glory. The
purple melted into orange; the waving fields were set with dazzling
buttercups; the buttercups became poppies. And then the mounting sun
kissed the clouds again. They blushed scarlet, and the fields were red.
The grim face gave no sign that he saw the glory and beauty of a
wonderful Sabbath morning. His figure was rigid. His eyes set. A sweet
odor seemed to come from the scarlet rays of the sun. The man lifted his
head in surprise to find the direction from which the perfume came.
He looked at the ground and saw that he was standing in a bed of
ripening wild strawberries.
He turned from the sunrise, stooped and ate the fruit. He was ravenously
hungry. His hunger satisfied, he walked deliberately back to camp as the
white light of day flooded the clean fields and woods.
He called his men about the fire and searched for marks of the night's
work. As the full rim of the sun crept over the eastern hills and its
first rays quivered on the surface of the water, the huntsmen knelt by
the bank of the Pottawattomie and washed the stains from their swords,
hands and clothes.
Breakfast finished, the leader divided among his headsmen the goods
stolen from his victims and called his men to Sunday prayers.
With folded hands and head erect in the attitude of victory he read from
memory a passage from the old Hebrew prophet, singing in triumph over
the enemies of the Lord. From the scripture recitation, given in tones
so cold and impersonal that they made Townsley shiver, his voice drifted
into prayer:
"We thank thee, oh, Lord, God of Hosts, for the glorious victory Thou
hast given us this night over Thy enemies. We have heard Thy voice. We
have obeyed Thy commands. The wicked have been laid low. And Thy glory
shines throughout the world on this beautiful Sabbath morning. Make
strong, oh, God, the arms of Thy children for the work that is yet
before them. Thou art a jealous God. Thou dost rejoice always in blood
offerings on Thy altars. We have this night brought to Thee and laid
before Thy face the five offerings which the sins of man have demanded.
May this blood seem good in Thy sight, oh, God, as it is glorious in the
eyes of Thy servant whom Thou hast anointed to do Thy will. May it be as
seed sown in good ground. May it bring forth a harvest whose red glory
shall cover the earth, even as the rays of the sun have baptized our
skies this morning. We wait the coming of Thy Kingdom, oh, Lord, God of
Hosts. Speed the day we humbly pray. Amen."
Townsley's eyes had gradually opened at the tones of weird, religious
ecstasy with which the last sentences of the prayer were spoken. He was
staring at Brown's face. It was radiant with a strange joy. He had not
smiled; but he was happy for a moment. His happiness was so unusual,
so sharply in contrast with his habitual mood, the sight of it chilled
Townsley's soul.
CHAPTER XX
Stuart succeeded in securing from Colonel Sumner a leave of absence
of two weeks to visit Fort Riley. The Colonel suspected the truth and
teased the gallant youngster until he confessed.
He handed Stuart the order with a hearty laugh.
"It's all right, my boy. I've been young myself. Good luck."
Stuart's laughter rang clear and hearty.
"Thank you, Colonel. You had me scared."
He had just turned to leave the room when a messenger handed Sumner a
telegram.
Stuart paused to hear the message.
"Bad news, Lieutenant."
"What, sir?"
"An attack has been made on the Southern settlement on the
Pottawattomie."
"A drunken fight--"
"No. Wilkinson, the member of the Legislature from Miami County, was
taken from his house in the night and murdered."
"The story's a fake," Stuart ventured.
"The man who sent this message doesn't make such mistakes."
He paused and studied the telegram.
"No. This means the beginning of a blood feud. The time's ripe for it."
"We'll have better news to-morrow," Stuart hoped.
"We'll have worse. I've been looking for something like this since the
day I heard old Brown harangue a mob at Lawrence."
He stopped short.
"You'll have to give me back that order, my boy."
Stuart's face fell.
"Colonel, I've just got to see that girl, if it's only for a day--"
He slowly handed the order back to the Commandant. Sumner watched the
red blood mount to Stuart's face with a look of sympathy.
"Is it as bad as that, boy?"
"It couldn't be worse, sir," Stuart admitted in low tones. "I'm a
goner."
"All right. You've no time to lose, I'll give you three days--"
"Thank you!"
"This regiment will be on the march before a week has passed or I miss
my guess."
"I'll be here, sir!" was the quick response.
Stuart grasped the leave of absence and hurried out before another
messenger could arrive.
He reached Fort Riley the following day and had but twenty-four hours in
which to crowd the most important event of his life.
He paced the floor in Colonel Cooke's reception room awaiting Flora's
appearance with eager impatience. What on earth could be keeping her? He
asked himself the question fifty times and looked at his watch a dozen
times before he heard the rustle of organdy on the stairs.
A vision of radiant youth! She had taken time to make her beauty still
more radiant with the daintiest touches to her blonde hair.
The simple dress she wore was a poem. The young cavalier was stunned
anew. There was no doubt about the welcome in her smile and voice. It
thrilled him to his fingertips. He held her hand until she drew it away
with a little self-conscious laugh that was confusing to Stuart's plan
of direct action.
There was a touch of the Southern girl's conscious poise and coquetry in
the laugh. There was something aloof in it that meant trouble. He felt
it with positive terror. He didn't have time to fence for position. He
was in no mood for a flirtation. He had come to speak the deep things.
She led him to a seat with an air of dignity and reserve that alarmed
him still more. He had taken too much for granted perhaps. There might
be another man. Conceited fool! He hadn't thought it possible. Her
manner had been so frank, so utterly sincere.
She sat by his side smiling at him in the bewitching way so many pretty
girls had done before, when they merely wished to play with love.
He spoke in commonplaces and studied her with increasing panic. Her
tactics baffled him. Until at last he believed he had solved the riddle!
She had suddenly waked to the fact, as he had, that she had met her
fate. She was drawing back for a moment in fright at the seriousness of
surrender.
"Yes, that's it!" he murmured half aloud.
"What did you say?" she asked archly.
And his heart sank again. She asked the question with a tone of teasing
that made him blush in spite of himself.
With sudden resolution he decided to make the plunge.
CHAPTER XX
Stuart succeeded in securing from Colonel Sumner a leave of absence
of two weeks to visit Fort Riley. The Colonel suspected the truth and
teased the gallant youngster until he confessed.
He handed Stuart the order with a hearty laugh.
"It's all right, my boy. I've been young myself. Good luck."
Stuart's laughter rang clear and hearty.
"Thank you, Colonel. You had me scared."
He had just turned to leave the room when a messenger handed Sumner a
telegram.
Stuart paused to hear the message.
"Bad news, Lieutenant."
"What, sir?"
"An attack has been made on the Southern settlement on the
Pottawattomie."
"A drunken fight--"
"No. Wilkinson, the member of the Legislature from Miami County, was
taken from his house in the night and murdered."
"The story's a fake," Stuart ventured.
"The man who sent this message doesn't make such mistakes."
He paused and studied the telegram.
"Dee double dare you."
"He said that you're a sad product of Sir Walter Scott's novels, a
singing, rollicking, flirting, lazy young cavalier."
"Didn't say lazy."
"No."
"I thought not."
"I added that for good measure."
"I thought so."
"And he warned me that there might be a streak of the old Stuart purple
blood in your veins that might make you silly for life--"
"Didn't say silly."
"No, I added that, too."
Stuart again seized the hand she had deftly withdrawn. He pressed it
tenderly and sought the depths of her blue eyes.
"Ah, honey girl," he cried passionately, "don't tease me any more,
please! I've got to leave you in a few hours. My regiment is going to
march. It may be a serious business. You're a brave soldier's daughter
and you're going to be a soldier's bride."
The girl's lips quivered for the first time and her voice trembled the
slightest bit as she fought for self-control.
"I'll never marry a soldier."
"You will!"
"My daddy's never at home. I promised my mother never to look at a
soldier."
"You're looking at me, dear heart!"
She turned quickly.
"I won't--"
Stuart drew her suddenly into his arms and kissed her.
"I love you, Flora! And you're mine."
She looked into his eyes, smiled, slipped both arms around his neck and
kissed him.
"And I love you, my foolish, singing, laughing boy!"
"Always?"
"Always."
"And you'll marry me?"
"You couldn't get away from me if you tried."
She drew him down and kissed him again.
"The shadow will always be in my heart, dear soldier man. The shadow of
the day I shall lose you! But it's life. I'll face it with a smile."
Through the long, sweet hours of the day and deep into the night they
held each other's hand, and talked and laughed and dreamed and planned.
What mattered the shadow that was slowly moving across the sunlit earth?
It _was_ the morning of life!
CHAPTER XXI
The eight men engaged in the remarkable enterprise on the Pottawattomie,
led by their indomitable Captain, mounted their stolen horses and boldly
rode to the camp of the military company commanded by John Brown, Jr.
The father planned to make his stand behind these guns if pursued by
formidable foes.
Brown reached the camp of the Rifles near Ottawa Jones' farm at
midnight. The fires still burned brightly. To his surprise he found that
the news of the murders had traveled faster than the stolen horses.
The camp was demoralized.
John Brown, Jr., had been forced to resign as Captain and H. H. Williams
had been elected in his stead.
The reception which the County was giving his inspired deed stunned the
leader. He had expected a reign of terror. But the terror had seized his
own people. He was compelled to lie and deny his guilt except to his
own flesh and blood. Even before his sons he was arraigned with fierce
condemnation.
On the outer edge of the panic-stricken camp his sons, Jason and John,
Jr., faced him with trembling and horror in their voices.
Jason had denounced the first hint of the plan when the surveyor's
scheme was broached. John, Jr. had refused to move a step on the
expedition. The two sons confronted their father with determined
questions. He shifted and evaded the issue.
Jason squared himself and demanded:
"Did you kill those men?"
"I did not," was the sharp answer.
The son held his shifting eye by the glare of the camp fire.
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