A night, after a beautiful, brown
October day, came on dark and rainy, with fierce winds
off the Rocky Mountains; and Harley, who was in the
first carriage with the candidate, could barely see
the heads of the horses, gently rising and falling
as they splashed through the mud. Behind him
he heard faintly the sound of wheels amid the wind
and rain, and he knew that the other correspondents
and the politicians, who always hung on the trail
of Jimmy Grayson, shifting according to locality,
were following their leader in single file.
Mrs. Grayson and Sylvia had remained
on the special car, and expected to join them on the
following day, although Sylvia was quite prepared to
take the carriage journey across the country and dare
all the risks of the darkness and possible bad weather.
Indeed, with the fine spirit of the West and her own
natural high courage, she wanted to go, saying that
she could stand as much as a man, and only Mrs. Grayson’s
refusal to accompany her and the consequent lack of
a chaperone compelled her to abandon the idea.
Now Harley and Mr. Grayson were very glad that she
was not out in the storm.
Although the hood of the carriage
was down and the collar of Harley’s heavy coat
was turned up to his ears, the cold rain, lashed by
the wind, struck him in the face now and then.
“You don’t do anything
by halves out here on these Western plains,”
he said.
“No,” replied Jimmy Grayson,
“we don’t deal in disguises; when we’re
hot we’re hot, and when we’re cold we’re
cold. Now, after a perfect day, we’re having
the wildest kind of a night. It’s our way.”
It was then ten o’clock, and
they had expected to reach Speedwell at midnight,
crossing the Platte River on the big wooden bridge;
but the rain, the darkness, and the singularly sticky
quality of the black Nebraska mud would certainly
delay them until one o’clock in the morning,
and possibly much later. It was not a cheerful
prospect for tired and sleepy men.
“Mr. Grayson,” said Harley,
“without seeking to discredit you, I wish I
had gone to another war instead of coming out here
with you. That would have been less wearing.”
The candidate laughed.
“But you are seeing the West
as few men from New York ever see it,” he said.
The driver turned, and a little stream
of water ran off his hat-brim into Harley’s
face.
“It’s the wind that holds
us back, Mr. Grayson,” he said; “if we
leave the road and cut across the prairie on the hard
ground it will save at least an hour.”
“By all means, turn out at once,”
said the candidate, “and the others will follow.”
“Wise driver; considerate man!” remarked
Harley.
There was marked relief the moment
the wheels of the carriage struck the brown grass.
They rolled easily once more, and the off horse, lifting
up his head, neighed cheerfully.
“It means midnight, and not
later, Harley,” said the candidate, in a reassuring
tone.
Harley leaned back in his seat, and
trusted all now to the wise and considerate driver
who had proposed such a plan. The night was just
as black as a hat, and the wind and rain moaned over
the bleak and lonesome plains. They were far
out in Nebraska, and, although they were near the
Platte River, it was one of the most thinly inhabited
sections of the state. They had not seen a light
since leaving the last speaking-place at sundown.
Harley wondered at the courage of the pioneers who
crossed the great plains amid such a vast loneliness.
He and the candidate were tired, and soon ceased to
talk. The driver confined his attention to his
business. Harley fell into a doze, from which
he was awakened after a while by the sudden stoppage
of the carriage. The candidate awoke at the same
time. The rain had decreased, there was a partial
moonlight, and the driver was turning upon them a
shamefaced countenance.
“What’s the matter?” asked the candidate.
“To tell you the truth, Mr.
Grayson,” replied the driver, in an apologetic
tone. “I’ve gone wrong somehow or
other, and I don’t know just where we’re
at.”
“Lost?” said Harley.
“If you wish to put it that
way, I reckon you’re right,” said the
driver, with a touch of offence.
“What has become of the other
carriages?” asked Harley, looking back for them.
“I reckon they didn’t
see us when we turned out, and they kept on along
the road.”
There was no doubt about the plight
into which they had got themselves. The plain
seemed no less lonely than it was before the white
man came.
“What’s that line of trees
across yonder?” asked the candidate.
“I guess it marks where the
Platte runs,” replied the driver.
“Then drive to it; if we follow
the trees we must reach the bridge, and then things
will be simple.”
The driver became more cheerful, the
rain ceased and the moonlight increased; but Harley
lacked confidence. He had a deep distrust of the
Platte River. It seemed to him the most ridiculous
stream in the United States, making a presumptuous
claim upon the map, and flowing often in a channel
a mile wide with only a foot of water. But he
feared the marshes and quicksands that bordered its
shallow course.
They reached the line of gaunt trees,
dripping with water and whipped by the wind, and Harley’s
fears were justified. The river was there, but
they could not approach it, lest they be swallowed
up in the sand, and they turned back upon the prairie.
“We must find a house,”
said the candidate; “if it comes to the pinch
we can pass the night in the carriage, but I don’t
like to sleep sitting.”
They bore away from the river, driving
at random, and after an hour saw a faint light under
the dusky horizon.
“The lone settler!” exclaimed
Harley, who began to cherish fond anticipations of
a bed. “Go straight for it, driver.”
The driver was not loath, and even
the horses, seeming to have renewed hope, changed
their sluggish walk to a trot. They had no hesitation
in seeking shelter at that hour, entire strangers
though they were, such an act being in perfect accordance
with the laws of Western hospitality.
As they approached, a bare wooden
house, unprotected by trees, rose out of the plain.
A wire fence enclosed a half-acre or so about it, and
apparently there had been a few rather futile attempts
to make a lawn.
“Looks cheerless,” said Harley.
“But it holds beds,” said the candidate.
“You save your voice,”
said Harley; “I’ll call the farmer, and
I hope it will be a man who can speak English, and
not some new Russian or Bohemian citizen.”
He sprang out of the carriage, glad
to relieve himself from his cramped and stiff position,
and walked towards the little gate in the wire fence.
There was a sudden rush of light feet, a stream of
fierce barks and snarls, and Harley sprang back in
alarm as two large bull-dogs, red-mouthed, flung themselves
against the fence.
“I said you had no cause to
regret that war,” called the candidate from
the carriage.
The wires were strong, and they held
the dogs; but the animals hung to the fence, as fierce
as wolves; and Harley, lifting up his voice, added
to the chorus with a “Hi! Hi! Mr. Farmer!
Strangers want to stop with you!”
The din was tremendous, and presently
a window in the second story was shoved up, and a
man, fully dressed, carrying a long-barrelled rifle
in his hands, appeared at it. He called to the
dogs, which ceased at once their barking and snarling,
and then he gazed down at the intruders in no friendly
manner. Harley saw him clearly, a tall, gaunt
old man, white-haired, but muscular and strong.
He held the rifle as if he were ready to use it a
most unusual thing in this part of the country, where
householders seldom kept fire-arms.
“What do you want?” he called, in a sharp,
high voice.
“Beds!” cried Harley.
“We are lost, and if you don’t take us
in we’ll have to sleep on the prairie, which
is a trifle damp.”
“Waal, I ’low it hez
rained a right smart,” said the old man, grimly.
Harley noticed at once the man’s
use of “right smart,” an expression with
which he had been familiar in another part of the country,
and it encouraged him. He was sure now of hospitality.
“Who are you?” the old man called.
“Mr. Grayson, the nominee for
President of the United States, is in the carriage,
and I am his friend, one of the newspaper correspondents
travelling with him.”
“Wait a minute.”
The window was closed, and in a few
moments the old man came out at the front door.
He carried the rifle on his shoulder, but Harley attributed
the fact to his haste at the mention of Jimmy Grayson’s
name.
“My name is Simpson Daniel
Simpson,” he said, hospitably. “Tell
the driver to put the horses in the barn.”
He waved his hand towards a low building
in the rear of his residence, and then he invited
the candidate and the correspondent to enter.
He looked curiously, but with reverence, at the candidate.
“You are really Jimmy Grayson,”
he said. “I’d know you off-hand by
your picture, which I guess hez been printed
in ev’ry newspaper in the United States.
I ’low it’s a powerful honor to me to hev
you here.”
“And it’s a tremendous
accommodation to us for you to take us,” said
Jimmy Grayson, with his usual easy grace.
But Harley was looking at Simpson
with a gaze no less intent than the old man had bent
upon Grayson. The accent and inflection of the
host were of a region far distant from Nebraska, but
Harley, who was born near that wild country, knew
the long, lean, narrow type of face, with the high
cheek-bones and the watchful black eyes. Moreover,
there was something directly and personally familiar
in the figure before him.
Under any circumstances the manner
of the old man would have drawn the attention of Harley,
whose naturally keen observation was sharpened by
the training of his profession. The old man seemed
abstracted. His fingers moved absently on the
stock of his rifle, and Harley inferred at once that
he had something of unusual weight on his mind.
“Me an’ the ol’
woman hev been settin’ late,” said Simpson.
“When you git ol’ you don’t sleep
much. But it’ll be a long time, Mr. Grayson,
before that fits you.”
He led the way into a room better
furnished than Harley had expected to see. A
coal fire smouldered on the hearth, and the arrangement
of the room showed some evidences of refinement and
taste. An old woman was bent over the fire, but
she rose when the men entered, and turned upon them
a face which Harley knew at once to be that of one
who had been frightened by something. Her eyes
were red, as if she had been weeping. Harley
looked from host to hostess with curious glance, but
he was still silent.
“This is Marthy, my wife, gen’lemen,”
said Simpson. “Marthy, this is Mr. Grayson,
the greatest man in this here United States, and the
other is one of the newspaper fellers that travels
with him.”
Jimmy Grayson bowed with great courtesy,
and apologized so gracefully for the intrusion that
an ordinary person would have been glad to be intruded
upon in such a manner. The woman said nothing,
but stared vacantly at her guests. The old man
came to her relief.
“Marthy ain’t used to
visitors, least of all a man like you, Mr. Grayson,
and it kind o’ upsets her,” he said.
“You see, Marthy an’ me lives here all
by ourselves.”
The woman started and looked at him.
“All by ourselves,” repeated
the man, firmly; “but we’ll do the best
we kin.”
“Daniel,” suddenly exclaimed
the old woman, in high, shrill tones, “why don’t
you put down your gun? Mr. Grayson’ll think
you’re a-goin’ to shoot him.”
The old man laughed, but the ever-watchful
Harley saw that the laugh was not spontaneous.
“I ‘clar’ to gracious,”
he said, “I clean forgot I had old Deadeye.
You see, Mr. Grayson, when I heerd the dogs barkin’,
sez I to myself ’it’s robbers, shore’;
and before I h’ists the window up-stairs I reaches
old Deadeye off the hooks, and then, if it had ‘a’
been robbers, it wouldn’t ‘a’ been
healthy for ’em.”
“I’m sure of that, Mr.
Simpson,” said Jimmy Grayson; “you don’t
look like a man who would allow himself to be run
over.”
“An’ I wouldn’t,”
said the old man, with sudden, fierce emphasis.
But he put the rifle on the hooks over the fireplace.
Such hooks as these were not usual in Nebraska; but
Jimmy Grayson was too polite to say anything, and
Harley was still watching every movement of the old
man. The driver returned at this moment from
the stable, and, reporting that he had fed the horses,
took his place with the others at the fire.
“I ’low you-uns would
like to eat a little,” said the old man, laughing
in the same unnatural way. “Marthy, tote
in suthin’ from the kitchen as quick as you
kin.”
The old woman raised her startled,
frightened eyes, and for a moment her glance met Harley’s;
it seemed to him to be full of entreaty; the whole
atmosphere of the place was to him tense, strained,
and tragic; why, he did not know, but he shook himself
and decided that it was only the result of weariness,
the long ride, and the night in the storm. Nevertheless,
the feeling did not depart because he willed that it
should go.
“No, we thank you,” Jimmy
Grayson was saying; “we are not hungry; but we
should like very much to go to bed.”
“It’s jest with you,”
said Simpson. “Marthy, I’ll show the
gen’lemen to their room, and you kin stay here
till I come back.”
The old woman did not speak, but stood
in a crouched attitude looking at Grayson and then
at Harley and then at the driver; it seemed to the
correspondent that she did not dare trust her voice,
and he saw fear still lurking in her eyes.
“Come along, gen’lemen,”
said Simpson, taking from the table a small lamp,
that had been lighted at their entrance, and leading
the way.
Harley glanced back once at the door,
and the woman’s eyes met his in a look that
was like one last despairing appeal. But there
was nothing tangible, nothing that he could not say
was the result of an overwrought fancy.
It was a small and bare room, with
only a single bed, to which the old man took them.
“It’s the best I’ve got,” he
said, apologetically. “Mr. Grayson, you
an’ the newspaper man kin sleep in the bed, an’
t’other feller, I reckon, kin curl up on the
floor.”
“It is good enough for anybody,”
said Jimmy Grayson, gallantly. As a matter of
fact, both he and Harley had known what it was to fare
worse.
“Good-night,” the man
said, and left them rather hastily, Harley thought;
but the others took no notice, and were soon in sound
slumber, the candidate because he had the rare power
of going to sleep whenever there was a chance, and
the driver because he was indifferent and tired.
But Harley lay awake. An hour
ago his dream of heaven was a bed, and now, the bed
attained, sleep would not come near. Out of the
stillness, after a while, he heard the gentle moving
of feet below, and he sat up on the bed, all his suspicions
confirmed. Something unusual was going on in
this lone house! And it had been going on even
before he and the candidate came!
He listened to the moving feet for
a few moments. Then the noise ceased, but Harley
knew that there was no further chance of sleep for
him, with his nerves on edge, and likely to remain
there. He lay back on the edge of the bed, trying
to accustom his eyes to the darkness, and presently
he heard a sound, the most chilling that a man can
hear. It was the sound of a woman, alone and
in the dark, between midnight and morning, crying
gently, but crying deeply, uncontrollably, and from
her chest.
Harley’s resolve was taken at
once. He slipped on his clothes and went to the
door. His eyes were used now to the dark, and
there was a window that shed a half-light.
He stopped with his hand on the bolt,
because he heard the low, wailing note more plainly,
and he was sure that it came from another room across
the narrow hall. He turned the bolt, but the door
refused to open. There was no key on the inside!
They had been locked in, and for a purpose!
Harley was fully aroused on
edge with excitement, but able to restrain it and
to think clearly. There was an old grate in the
room, apparently used but seldom, and, leaning against
the wall beside it, an iron poker. Tiptoeing,
he obtained the poker and returned to the door.
The lock was a flimsy affair, and, inserting the point
of the poker under the catch, he easily pried it off
and put it gently on the floor.
Then he stepped out into the dusky
hall and listened. The woman was yet crying,
monotonously, but with such a note of woe that Harley
was shaken. He had thought in his own room that
it was the old woman who wept thus; but now in the
hall he knew it to be a younger and fresher voice.
He saw farther down another door,
and he knew that it led to the room from which came
the sounds of grief. He approached it cautiously,
still holding the poker in his hands, and noticed
that there was no key in the lock. The woman,
whoever she might be, was locked in, as he and his
comrades had been; but the empty keyhole gave him an
idea. He blew through it, making a sort of whistling
sound with his puckered lips. The crying ceased,
all save an occasional low, half-smothered sob, as
if the woman were making a supreme effort to control
her feelings.
Then Harley put his lips to the keyhole
again and whispered: “What is the matter?
It is a friend who asks.” There was no reply,
only a tense silence, even the occasional sobs ceasing.
Then, after a few moments of waiting, Harley whispered,
“Don’t be alarmed; I am about to force
the door.”
The door was of flimsy pine, and it
gave quickly to the poker’s leverage. Then,
this useful weapon still in hand, Harley stepped into
the room, where he heard a deep-drawn sigh that expressed
mingled emotions.
There was a window at the end of the
room, and the moonlight shone clearly through, clothing
with its full radiance a tall, slim girl, who had
risen from a chair, and who stood trembling before
Harley, fully dressed, although her long hair hung
down her back and her eyes were red with weeping.
She was handsome, but not with the
broad face of the West. Hers was another type,
a type that Harley knew well. The cheek-bones
were a little high, the features delicate, the figure
slender, and there was on her cheeks a rosy bloom
that never grew under the cutting winds of the great
plains.
Harley knew at once that she was the
daughter of the old couple below stairs.
“Do not be afraid of me,”
he said, gently. “I know that you are in
great trouble, but I will help you. I, too, am
from Kentucky. I was born there, and I used to
live there, though not in the mountains, as you did.”
The appeal and terror in her eyes
changed to momentary surprise. “What do
you know of me?” she exclaimed.
“Very little of you, but more
of your father. Years ago I was at his house
in the Kentucky mountains. He was a leader in
the Simpson-Eversley feud. I knew him to-night,
but I have said nothing. Now, tell me, what is
the matter?”
His voice was soothing that
of a strong man who would protect, and the girl yielded
to its influence. Brokenly she told the story.
Many men had been killed in the feud, and the few
Eversleys who were left had been scattered far in
the mountains. Then old Daniel Simpson said that
he would come out on the Great Plains, more than a
thousand miles, and they had come.
“There was one of the Eversleys Henry
Eversley he was young and handsome.
People said he was not bad. He, too, came to Nebraska.
He found out where we lived; he has been here.”
“Ah!” said Harley.
He felt that they were coming to the gist of the matter.
The girl, with a sudden passionate
cry, threw herself upon her knees. “He
is here now! He is here now!” she cried.
“He is in the cellar, bound and gagged, and
my father is going to kill him! But I love him!
He came here to-night, and my father caught us together,
and struck him down. But we meant nothing wrong.
I declare before God that we did not! We were
getting ready to run away together and to be married
at Speedwell!”
Harley shuddered. The impending
tragedy was more terrible than he had feared.
“You can do nothing!”
exclaimed the girl. “My father is armed.
He will have no interference! He cares nothing
for what may come after! He thinks ”
She could not say it all; but Harley
knew well that what she would say was, “He thinks
that he has been robbed of his honor by a mortal enemy.”
“Can you stay quietly in this
room until morning?” he asked. “I
know it is hard to wait under such circumstances,
but you must do it for the sake of Henry Eversley.”
“And will you save him?”
“He shall be saved.”
“I will wait,” she said.
Harley slipped noiselessly out, and,
closing the door behind him, went to his room, where
he at once awakened the candidate.
Jimmy Grayson listened with intense
attention to Harley’s story. When the tale
was over, he and Harley whispered together long and
earnestly, and Jimmy Grayson frequently nodded his
head in assent. Then they awoke the driver, a
heavy man, but with a keen Western mind that at once
became alert at the news of danger.
“Yes, I got my bearings now,”
he said, in reply to a question of Harley’s.
“I asked the old fellow about it when I came
up from the stable, and Speedwell is straight north
from here. I can take one of the horses and hit
the town before daylight. I know everybody there.”
“But how about the dogs?”
asked Jimmy Grayson. “Can you get past them?”
“No trouble there at all.
After we came, the old fellow locked ’em up in
a stall in the stable and left ’em there.
I guess he didn’t want to look to us as if he
was too suspicious.”
“Then go, and God go with you!”
said Jimmy Grayson, with deep feeling.
The driver left at once, not by the
stairway, near the foot of which the old man might
be watching, but by a much simpler road. He raised
the window of the room and swung out, sustained by
Jimmy Grayson’s powerful arms until his feet
were within a yard of the ground. Then he dropped,
ran lightly across the lawn, sprang over the wire fence,
and soon disappeared in the grove where the girl had
said that the horses were waiting. Jimmy Grayson
closed the window with a deep sigh of relief.
“He will do his part,” he said; “now
for ours.”
He did not seek to sleep again, and
Harley could not think of it. One task occupied
him a little while the replacing of the
lock on the door but after that the hours
passed heavily and in silence. The flush of dawn
appeared in the east at last, and then they heard a
faint step in the hall outside and the gentle turning
of a key in a lock. Jimmy Grayson and Harley
looked at each other and smiled grimly, but they said
nothing. A half-hour later there was a loud knock
on their door, and old Daniel Simpson bade them rise
and get ready for breakfast.
“It is chiefly in your hands
now,” said Harley, in a low tone to Jimmy Grayson.
“We’ll be down in a few
minutes, and we have had a good night’s sleep,
for which we thank you,” he called to the old
man.
“You’re welcome to it,”
replied Simpson. “You’ll find water
and towels on the porch down-stairs, and then you
can come straight in to breakfast.”
They heard his step passing down the
hall to the stairway, where it died away, and then
they dressed deliberately. On the porch they found
the water and towels as Simpson had said, and bathed
and rubbed their faces. A golden sun was just
rising from the prairie, and beads of water from the
night’s rain sparkled on the trees and grass.
The wind came out of the southwest, fresh and glorious.
They entered the dining-room, where
the breakfast smoked on the table, and the old man
and his wife were waiting. Harley could not see
that they had changed in appearance in the morning
glow. Simpson was still rugged and grim, while
the woman yet cowered and now and then raised terrified
and appealing eyes.
“Whar’s your driver?” asked Simpson.
“He has gone down to the stable
to feed and care for his horses,” replied the
candidate, easily. “He’s a very careful
man, always looks after his horses before he looks
after himself. He told us not to wait for him,
as he’ll be along directly.”
“Then be seated,” said
the old man, hospitably. “We’ve got
corn-bread and ham-and-eggs and coffee, an’
I guess you kin make out.”
“I should think so,” said
Jimmy Grayson. “Why, if I had not been as
hungry as a wolf already, it would make me hungry just
to look at it.”
The three sat down at the table, while
Mrs. Simpson served them, going back and forth to
the little kitchen adjoining for fresh supplies of
hot food. Mr. Grayson did most of the talking,
and it was addressed in an easy, confidential manner
to old Daniel Simpson. The candidate’s gift
of conversational talk was equal to his gift of platform
oratory, but never before had Harley known him to
be so interesting and so attractive. He fairly
radiated with the quality called personal magnetism,
and soon the old man ate mechanically, while his attention
was riveted on Jimmy Grayson. But by-and-by he
seemed to remember something.
“That driver of yourn is tarnal
slow,” he said; “he ought to be comin’
in to breakfast.”
“You have diagnosed his chief
fault,” said Jimmy Grayson, with an easy laugh.
“He is slow, extremely slow, but he will be along
directly, and he doesn’t mind cold victuals.”
Then he turned back to the easy flow
of anecdote, chiefly about his political campaign,
and Harley saw that the interest of the old man was
centred upon him. The woman, without a word, brought
in hot biscuits from the kitchen, but she did not
lose her frightened look, glancing from one to another
of the three with furtive, lowered eyes. But Jimmy
Grayson, the golden-mouthed, talked gracefully, and
the note of his discourse that morning was the sweetness
and kindness of life; he saw only the sunny side of
things; people were good and true, and peace was better
than strife. His smiling, benevolent face and
the mellow flow of his words enforced the lesson.
The old man’s face softened
a little, and even Harley, though a prey to anxieties,
felt the influence of Jimmy Grayson’s spell.
The little dining-room where they sat was at the rear
of the house. Harley saw the golden sunshine
of a perfect October day, and the wind that sang across
the plain had the soft strain of a girl’s voice.
He felt that it was good to live that morning, and
his spirits rose as he saw the old man fall further
and further under the spell of Jimmy Grayson’s
eloquence.
But Simpson raised himself presently
and glanced at the door.
“That driver of yourn is tarnal
slow,” he repeated. “Seems to me he’ll
never finish feedin’ an’ curryin’
them horses!”
“He is slow, extremely slow,”
laughed Jimmy Grayson. “If he were not so
we should not have got lost last night, and we should
not be here now, Mr. Simpson, trespassing on your
hospitality. Perhaps the man does not want any
breakfast; it’s not the first time since he’s
been with us that he’s gone without it.”
Then he launched again into the stream
of a very pretty story that he had been telling, and
the wavering attention of the old man returned.
Harley gave all assistance. Despite his anxiety
and his listening for sounds without, he kept his
eyes fixed upon Jimmy Grayson’s face as if he
would not miss a word.
The breakfast went on to an unusual
length. The candidate and Harley called again
and again for hot biscuits and more coffee, and always
the old woman served them silently, almost furtively.
The story was finished, and just as
it came to its end Simpson said, with a grim inflection:
“It ’pears to me, Mr.
Grayson, all you said about that driver of yourn is
true. He hasn’t come from the stable yet.”
There was the sound of a step in the
hall, and the candidate said, quickly:
“He’s coming now; he’ll
be in presently, as soon as he washes his hands and
face on the porch. No, sit down, Mr. Simpson;
he needs no directions. We were speaking of the
sacrifices that people make for one another, and it
reminds me of a very pretty story that I must tell
you.”
The old man sank into his chair, but
his look wandered to the door. It seemed to Harley
that light sounds came from the other part of the
house, and the old man, too, seemed for a moment to
be listening, but Jimmy Grayson at once began his
story, and Simpson’s attention came back.
“This is a story of the mountains
of eastern Kentucky,” began the candidate, “and
it is a love story a very pretty one, I
think.”
Simpson moved in his chair, and a
sudden wondering look appeared in his eyes at the
words “eastern Kentucky.” The old
woman, too, slightly raised her bent form and gazed
eagerly at the candidate. But Jimmy Grayson took
no notice, and continued.
“This,” he said, “is
the love story of two people who were young then,
but who are old now. Yet I am sure there is much
affection and tenderness in their hearts, and often
they must think fondly of those old days. The
youth lived on the side of a mountain, and the girl
lived on the side of another mountain not far away.
He was tall, strong, and brave; she, too, was tall,
as slender as one of the mountain saplings, with glorious
brown hair and eyes, and a voice as musical as a mountain
echo. Well, they met and they loved, loved truly
and deeply. It might seem that the way was easy
now for them to marry and go to a house of their own,
but it was not. There was a bar.”
“A feud!” breathed the
old man. The old woman put her hands to her eyes.
“Yes, a feud; they seem strange
things to us here, but to those distant people in
the mountains they seem the most natural thing in the
world. The youth and the girl belonged to families
that were at war with each other, and marriage between
them would have been considered by all their relatives
a mortal sin.”
The old man’s eyes were fastened
upon Jimmy Grayson’s, but his look for the moment
was distant, as if it were held by old memories.
The woman was crying softly. Again the soft shuffle
of feet in the other part of the house came to Harley’s
ears, but the old couple did not hear; the driver
was forgotten; for all Simpson and his wife remembered,
he might still be finishing his morning toilet on
the porch.
“They were compelled to meet
in secret,” continued Jimmy Grayson, “but
the girl was frightened for him because she loved him.
She told him that he must go away, that if her father
and brothers heard of their meetings they would kill
him; it was impossible for them to marry, but she loved
him, she would never deny that. He listened to
her gently and tenderly; he was a brave youth, as
I have said, and he would not go away. He said
that God had made them for each other, and she should
be his wife; he would not go away; he was not afraid.”
“No, I was not afraid,”
breathed the old man, softly. The old woman had
straightened herself up until she stood erect.
There was a delicate flush on her face, and her eyes
were luminous.
“This youth was a hero, a gallant
and chivalrous gentleman,” continued Jimmy Grayson;
“he loved the girl, and she loved him; there
was no real reason in the world why they should not
marry, and he was resolved that there should be none.”
The candidate’s head was bent
forward over his plate. His face was slightly
flushed, and his burning eyes held Simpson’s.
Harley saw that he thrilled with his own story and
the crisis for which it was told. Elsewhere in
the building the faint noises went on, but Harley alone
heard.
“The youth did what I would
have done and what you would have done, Mr. Simpson,”
continued Jimmy Grayson. “He did what nature
and sense dictated. He overbore all resistance
on the part of the girl, who in her heart was willing
to be overborne. One dark night he stole her from
her father’s house and carried her away on his
horse.”
“How well I remember it!”
exclaimed the old man, with eyes a-gleam. “I
had Marthy on the horse behind me, and my rifle on
the pommel of the saddle before me.”
The old woman cried softly, but it
seemed to Harley that the note of her weeping was
not grief.
“He stole her away,” continued
Jimmy Grayson, “and before morning they were
married. Then he took her to a house of his own,
and he sent word that if any man came to do them harm
he would meet a rifle bullet. They knew that
he was the best shot in the mountains, and that he
was without fear, so they did not come. And that
youth and that girl are still living, though both
are old now, but neither has ever for a moment regretted
that night.”
“You speak the truth,”
exclaimed the old man, striking his fist upon the
table, while his eyes flashed with exultant fire.
“We’ve never been sorry for a moment for
what we did, hev we Marthy?”
Harley had risen to his feet, and
a signal look passed between him and the candidate.
“And then,” said Jimmy
Grayson, “why do you deny to Henry Eversley the
right to do what you did, and what you still glory
in after all these years? Mr. Simpson, shake
hands with your new son-in-law. He and his bride
are waiting in the doorway.”
The old man sprang to his feet.
His daughter and a youth, a handsome couple, stood
at the entrance. Behind them were three or four
men, one the driver, and another in clerical garb,
evidently a minister.
“They were married in your front
parlor while we sat at breakfast,” said Jimmy
Grayson. “Mr. Simpson, your son-in-law is
still offering you his hand.”
The bewildered look left the old man’s
eyes, and he took the outstretched hand in a hearty
grasp.
“Henry,” he said, “you’ve
won.”