I
The cold gray light of early dawn
had given place to saffron, and the first drowsy challenge
from the henroost had been shrilly answered from far
and near, when old man Jerry awoke from his nap in
the chimney corner, and, finding himself chilled through
all his old, rheumatic bones, bent over the dying
embers, pushed together the blackened and half-burned
“chunks,” and blew them until they glowed.
Then, hitching his stool close into the ashes, he spread
his horny palms to the blaze, and basked in its genial
warmth as it crackled up the wide chimney. Reaching
his pipe from its nook, he filled it, dipped it skillfully
in the coals so as to ignite without wasting the precious
weed, and drew a long whiff by way of a start; then,
bending still closer to the blaze, he pulled away,
now and then rubbing his shins in slow content, as
though to emphasize his comfort.
All things, though, must come to an
end. The “chunks” became a heap of
white ashes, the pipe was finished, and broad shafts
of light stealing down the chimney and under the door
told “Ung Jerry” that it was time to be
stirring.
He had, according to his usual custom,
risen from his bed long before cockcrow, and, having
cooked and eaten his “morning bread,” had
unlatched his door in order to throw a morsel to his
old hog-hound, “Drive,” who had already
crept from under the house, and stood wagging his
stump of a tail in eager expectancy. The morsel
being thrown, the old man had cast a knowing look
towards the heavens, and, judging by the seven stars
that it yet lacked an hour to dawn, had returned to
the smoky warmth and comfort of his hovel, where, seated
in the chimney nook, he had nodded till roused by
the crowings from all the neighboring henroosts for
his cabin was one of many.
The pipe being smoked, Ung Jerry rose
stiffly, and, shuffling to his bed, fumbled underneath
it, and, taking care not to disturb the setting hen,
brought out two bits of old blanket, with which he
proceeded to wrap his feet before putting on his shoes.
The hog-horn was now slung over the
old coat, a bucket of cold victuals was reached from
the shelf, and the old hog-feeder, equipped for his
day’s work, lifted the latch, and, stepping out
into the sharp frostiness of the November morning,
plodded with heavy steps toward the barnyard, Drive
following closely at his heels.
The frosty fields were glittering
in the slant rays of the newly risen sun, and sounds
of busy life came floating through the crisp air,
telling the old man that the day’s labor had
begun. The sharp crack of the teamster’s
whip told that the great ox wagons were already afield.
The plow-boys whistled as they led out their mules;
men and short-skirted, heavily shod women went trooping
to the cotton fields; the milkwomen stepped briskly
by, with the foaming pails balanced upon their well-poised
heads. Then came the cowboys, with noisy whoop,
driving before them the crowding, clumsy, sweet-breathed
herd, while, fearlessly amid all, pigeons fluttered,
greedily picking up the refuse grain, heedless of
the hoofs among which they pecked and fluttered.
One small, grizzled mule, of great
age and much cunning, had contrived to slip into the
feedroom, and was there enjoying a stolen bait of
oats when Ung Jerry found her.
“You ’speck I wan’t
gwine fine you, I reckon, but you ’se wrong
dis time,” he said, taking her by one of
the long ears and leading her off to the barnyard,
where the little cart awaited her.
Drive, meanwhile, had crept under
the barn, where, nosing about, he had come upon a
hen’s nest, and was feasting upon the warm, fresh
eggs.
The hitching-up was done with great
deliberation. Ung Jerry plodded to and from the
harness-room many times, bringing out first a chuck
collar, then a bit of leather, finally, after a long
search, an end of rope. At length, when all seemed
to be adjusted, the old man again retired to the harness-room,
where he remained so long that Drive was contemplating
another raid upon the hens, when he reappeared, bringing
with him an old piece of bagging, with which he proceeded
with careful adjustment to protect the old mule’s
back from the friction of the cart-saddle. She,
meanwhile, had stood with closed eyes and flopped
ears, immovable save for an occasional twitching of
her small, rat-like tail; but when the loading began,
her manner changed from its quiescent indifference;
watchful glances followed each basketful that was
dumped in, and an ominous backing of the ears gave
warning of what would happen should the load be heavier
than she liked.
At length, all being ready for the
start, Ung Jerry climbed slowly to his perch on the
cart’s edge, gave a jerk to the rope bridle,
and Rachel moved off, closely followed by Drive, who,
conscious of egg-sucking and fearful of its consequences,
had prudently ensconced himself beneath the cart,
from whence he eyed, suspiciously, all passers-by.
Slowly the little cart crept along
the narrow plantation lanes, crept past the level
cornfields and into the wide pasture, where sunburnt
mares were grazing with their wild-eyed, unkempt colts;
crept past the marsh, where the heron, disturbed in
her solitary vigil, rose upon silent wing and sought
some more secluded haunt amid the dim recesses of
the swamp.
Turning at length into the forest,
where the gray moss hanging from the trees almost
obscured the deep blue autumnal sky, the cart slowly
creaked through the rustling leaves until it came upon
a cross fence which barred the way. Here, as
Rachel came to a full stop, Ung Jerry awoke from his
nap, descended from his perch, and, unslinging his
horn, blew one long blast.
One was enough. In a moment the
deep stillness of the forest was broken by the pattering
of many little feet; from the thickets the hogs came;
each hurrying with might and main to be foremost, they
rushed, grunting, squealing, crowding to the fence,
where, standing with upturned faces and small covetous
eyes, they awaited the feast of golden grain which
the old man hastened to scatter amongst them.
Then, leaning upon the fence, he noted each greedy
grunter as he wriggled his small tail in keenest enjoyment
and cracked the sweet corn.
No need was there to count; to the
hog-feeder each animal possessed an individuality
so marked that in all the drove the absence of the
most insignificant was at once detected. So now,
as he leaned upon the fence, he cast anxious glances
into the dimness beyond. Evidently some were
missing.
Drive, too, divining his master’s
thoughts, stood with look intent and anxious yelp,
impatient for the search to begin.
Then the word came, “Seek, boy!”
Scrambling through the fence, he dashed
into every covert or tangle wherein a hog might lurk,
but without result; there came no rush of feet, no
shaking of the brown leaves, no startled grunt.
All was still, save for the quick panting of the old
hound.
The old man then turned his eyes again
upon the greedy mob, still hoping to discover the
missing ones amongst them. ’T was all in
vain.
“De listed sow, she done
gone, an’ de big white hogue, he
done gone, an’ seben head o’ shotes!”
he at length murmured, still, however, casting expectant
glances toward the thickets, in which Drive was still
sniffing with uneasy yelpings.
“Seem like dem creturs
is clean gone, sho’ nuf,” he exclaimed,
with an air of unwilling conviction; then adding,
“well, ef dey’s gone, I ’se
got ’em to fine, dat’s de trufe.”
He called in the dog, and, taking
his dinner bucket, climbed the fence and struck off
into the woods. Now and again he would pause,
put his horn to his lips, and give a long blast, then
stand listening with anxious expectancy. Every
thicket was searched. It was a weary tramp, through
bogs and sloshes, where the cypress knees stood up
like sugar-loaves in the shallow water, or sometimes
his steps were bent to some open glade, where the
great oaks dropped sweet mast among the brown leaves.
The day was no longer young when a
low fence came into view; beyond it stretched a levee,
and at its base a glint of water showed itself through
the great trees, which stretched their mighty arms
as though they would embrace it.
Ung Jerry, after climbing the fence,
mounted the levee and stood upon the brink of a wide
and muddy river. Taking off his hat, the old man
wiped the sweat from his face, then turned an observant
eye upon the river, whose muddy waters were already
lapping the boughs of the overhanging trees, and with
a long-drawn breath exclaimed, “Bank an’
bank!”
Then, as his experienced eye noted
the angry swirls near the shore and the debris borne
rapidly upon the turbid current, “An’ still
on de rise. She gwine be out in de low groun’s
befo’ mornin’, bless de Lord; I’s
been ‘spectin’ she gwine play dis
trick eber since de win’ set like et did.”
Then, looking at the field of standing
corn upon the further shore, protected by a low levee,
and seeming to be upon a lower level than the red
waters of the flood, he soliloquized:
“I’s skeared de fresh
gwine ‘stroy a sight o’ Mars Jones’s
corn. It raly do ‘pear like dat corn moût
a been housed befo’ now.”
The old man’s thoughts were
interrupted at this point by loud and animated barkings
from Drive, and, hurrying to the spot whence they
proceeded, he discovered the old hound standing in
a broken gap in the fence, in a state of excitement
over the numerous footprints which told that the truants
had broken through and made for the river, evidently
with designs upon “Mars Jones’s”
cornfield.
“Here’s wha’ dey
tuck de watah,” the old man remarked to the dog,
as together they followed the footprints to the water’s
edge. “Dat ’ere listed sow, she got
mo’ sense un folks! She know ’bout
Mars Jones’s corn, an’ dey ain’t
no fence gwine stop dat cretur when she take a notion
for to go.
“Well, well, well, de listed
sow, an’ de big white hogue, an’ seben
head o’ shotes done tore down de fence, an’
took deyselves ’cross de riber for to steal
Mars Jones’s corn; I ’clare ’t
is a disgrace. I reckon Mars Jones gwine cuss
a plenty when he fine it out. It certinly is
a pity for master’s creturs to do sich a
low-life trick as dat. But bless de Lord,”
and a look of crafty triumph came into his face, “dey’s
got dey bellies full, anyhow.”
With this pleasing reflection, and
the conviction that nothing more could be done for
the present, the old man seated himself upon a log,
opened his bucket, took out his jack-knife, and proceeded
to eat his dinner, while Drive sat by, in eager readiness
to snatch the morsels flung to him, ere they could
reach the ground.
When the meal was finished, dog and
man each took comfort in his own way. The dog
stretched himself in the sunshine. The old man
sat with bent head “a-studyin’,”
then nodded, then fell into a deep sleep, soothed
by the silence, which reigned unbroken save for the
distant cawing of a crow.
The long gray moss swayed dreamily
upon the motionless boughs of the giant trees.
Where the sycamore lifted its gaunt, white arms, the
great bald eagle sat immovable, watching with fierce,
intent gaze for its prey in the waters below.
II
The shadows were growing long upon
wood and river when the light dip of a paddle broke
upon the stillness, and old Jerry, rousing from his
nap, spied a canoe gliding down stream, guided by two
youths who, with their guns lying crosswise upon their
knees, were making for the bank.
“Mars Harry an’ Mars Phil,”
he murmured, eying them with lazy curiosity, as they
brought their little craft to land, and after making
it fast, picked up their guns, crossed the levee, and
struck off into the swamp.
“Dey’s after turkey, I
‘speck; Mars Harry an’ me, we’s killed
many a varmint in dese here woods. Dey want no
Mars Phil ’bout here in dem days befo’
olé Mars were tuck down.”
Thus soliloquizing, the old man continued
to gaze wistfully after the retreating figures; for
their appearance had seemed to bring a disturbing
element into his peaceful dreams, and a look of helpless
trouble overspread his face as, taking off his hat
and slowly scratching his head, he murmured:
“Seem like it mos’ a pity
Mars Phil trouble hisself for to come here, anyhow.
Well, well, well! we folks all gwine be ’vided
up ’twix Mars Harry an’ Mars Phil,
’cause olé Mars, he not long for dis
world! Bless de Lord, whinsoever it please Him
for to teck olé Mars to hisself, I
trus’ he gwine ’vide off Jerry to Mars
Harry’s shere, ’cause I nachally ain’t
got no use for t’other one he too
outlondesh.”
So saying, he rose and reached his
bucket from the bough where it hung. Drive, who
had for some moments been watching him out of the
corner of one red eye, rose also, and the two set out
upon their tramp back to the cart.
The old man had climbed the fence,
the dog had scrambled through, and both were threading
their way across the swamp, when the report of a gun
close by caused the dog to beat a retreat from the
thicket into which he had thrust his nose, and, with
tail tucked in, to creep to his master’s side;
while the old man, exclaiming, “Good Gor-a-mighty!
whot dat?” pushed aside the bushes in order to
see what game the boys had brought down.
The sight that met his eyes froze
him with horror. Philip’s lifeless body
lay upon the ground, while Harry, with scared white
face, bent over it.
For a brief space the old man stood
as if petrified, then muttered: “Jerry
ain’t gwine know nothin’ bout dis
here. When olé Mars say, ‘Jerry,
what you seen in de Vine Ridge Swash?’ Jerry,
he gwine say, ‘Nothin’, Marster, fo’
de Lord. I seen nothin’ ‘t all!’
An’ I ain’t gwine tell no lie, nuther,
’cause I ain’t gwine look!”
Thus thinking, he cautiously drew
back, and, with ashen face and limbs that through
trembling almost failed to support him, he stealthily
crept away until out of earshot; then took to his heels
and fled. When, however, he was forced to pause
for breath, he considered if he had done well to desert
his young master, and turned reluctantly to retrace
his steps, when, as he did so, the air was suddenly
rent with ear-piercing shrieks for half a second,
and Jerry’s heart quailed.
“It’s boun’ to be
de debil,” he whispered. Then, a light
seeming to break upon him, he exclaimed: “Bless
God! ‘t ain’t nothin’ but de olé
Chieftain a-blowin’.”
The Chieftain, a small freight steamer,
had recently taken the place of the old flat-bottomed
scows, and, as the steam whistle was still a novelty,
it is not surprising that Ung Jerry, in his terror,
should for the moment have mistaken it for some unearthly
sound.
After many irresolute pauses, the
old man at length reached the scene of the disaster,
and with shaking hands thrust aside the bushes.
Except for the small birds silently flitting to their
roosts, the place was utterly deserted. The level
sunbeams glinted through the gray moss, gilded the
tree trunks, and glowed crimson upon the brown leaves;
the solitary peace of nature seemed unbroken; only
the pool of blood at Ung Jerry’s feet told him
that what he had witnessed had not been a vision.
After a moment’s survey he was
turning away, when his eyes fell upon the two guns:
here, at least, was something tangible, and the old
man proceeded to secrete them in the fallen leaves.
Squatted upon the ground, he was too busily engaged
to note the sound of approaching footsteps, and started
violently when a rough voice accosted him. He
mustered courage, however, to quaver:
“Dat you, Mars Jones?”
“Me? of course it’s me! Who did you
reckon it was?”
“I dunno, Mars Jones.”
“Well, you’ll know next
time, if you don’t keep them hogs o’ yourn
out of my corn. Why, that confounded old sow can
destroy more corn in one night than you are worth.”
“Yes, Mars Jones, dat de trufe,” meekly
assented the old man.
Mars Jones, warming to the subject,
now waxed more and more eloquent over his grievances,
until, having exhausted his pent up wrath, he had
leisure to observe old Jerry’s ashen face and
shaking limbs, and he exclaimed:
“Why, what’s the matter with you? are
you sick?”
“Yes, Mars Jones, I’s
been po’ly dis liblong day, an’ I’s
gittin’ sassifrax for to make me a little drap
o’ tea, I’s got sich a mis’ry.”
“Sassafras!” here broke
in Mars Jones; and, good-natured, despite his roughness,
he took from his pocket a tickler, and handing
Jerry a dram, said:
“Drink this, you old blockhead.
Sassifrax, indeed! what good you
reckon sassifrax goin’ do you?”
With a scrape and a bow and a “Thank
ye, Marster,” the old man gulped down the dram,
and Mars Jones, replacing his tickler, was turning
away, when his foot slipped in something, and looking
down he saw that it was blood.
The dram had put so much heart into
the old man that he was able to reply glibly to Mars
Jones’s questions.
“Its jes’ wha’ I’s been markin’
hogs, Marster.”
“I don’t believe you;
I believe you’ve been killin’ one of your
master’s hogs that’s what you’ve
been at.”
But as this did not concern him, he
did not wait to inquire further, and so, turning on
his heel, he strode off.
The hog-feeder, too, hastening away,
took the shortest path back to his cart.
The deserted barnyard lay silent in
the white moonlight when the little cart creaked through
the gate; but up at the “great house”
there were lights and movements where the family watched
the coming of the boys.
Thursday, Friday, and Saturday passed
without tidings, and the hope that they had been caught
by the rising water and imprisoned upon some isolated
knoll had been abandoned after the swamps had been
searched in every direction. To add to the grief
of the household, the master, already enfeebled, now
lay prostrated in a condition that almost forbade
hope.
Upon Sunday the waters began to abate,
fences again appeared, and patches of drowned corn
showed themselves above the wastes of water, to the
no small joy of the flocks of blackbirds which chattered
and fluttered amongst them.
Mr. Jones, tired of the loneliness
of his water-girt home, made his way to the meeting-house,
more for the sake of a gossip with some of the neighbors
than for the day’s preaching, and it was there
that he first heard the startling news of the unaccountable
disappearance of Squire Brace’s nephews.
In the excitement, each man was eager
to advance his own theory. The discussion ended,
however, in the general opinion that their canoe had
been swamped in the freshet and the boys drowned, until
a newcomer asserted that the canoe, with Phil’s
overcoat still in it, had been found tied up at the
Vine Ridge landing, and that their guns had been discovered
hidden in the leaves at no great distance in the swamp.
Upon hearing this, Mr. Jones could
but call to mind his meeting with the hog-feeder,
his strange behavior, and the blood upon the ground,
and he at once jumped to the conclusion that old Jerry
had been at least a party to some foul deed.
His suspicions, once made known, became certainties,
and the whole party, hastily mounting their horses,
rode off to the nearest justice, their convictions
gaining ground so rapidly that, ere the house of the
justice was reached, poor, simple old Jerry, the most
harmless of God’s creatures, had become in their
estimation a villain of the deepest dye.
Upon this identical Sunday morning
the old hog-feeder betook himself to the little plantation
church, whose bell, with cracked clamor, gave warning
that preaching was about to begin.
The frosty brightness of the past
week had given place to a soft mist, through whose
dimness the pale sunbeams looked sadly upon the autumnal
world; and as the old man, dressed in his Sunday clothes,
plodded along the path, the tiny crickets from beneath
the grass sent up their sad, perpetual dirge.
Men and women, all shining with Sabbath
cleanness, came straggling toward the church, silently
and soberly, without the usual light-hearted laughter,
for the trouble at the “great house” was
felt by all the little band. Yet their feelings
were not without a mixture of pleasurable excitement,
for all were anticipating with gloomy satisfaction
the lengthy prayers, the groanings, and the head-shakings
upon this mournful day.
The congregation had taken their seats,
old Jethro had taken his place in the pulpit, the
long-drawn cadence of the funeral hymn had floated
sadly up to the “great house,” when a noise
at the door startled the congregation, who, turning,
beheld standing in the door a group of white men.
Among them was the overseer, who, coming forward,
announced that hog-feeder Jerry was to be arrested
upon a charge of murder. “Not that I believe
it, men,” he said, “but the law must take
its course.”
In the meantime two others had approached
the old man, who had already stumbled to his feet,
and, while bowing in a dazed kind of way, kept murmuring,
“Sarvent, Marsters.”
Handcuffs were put upon him, and amid
a profound silence he was led forth and lifted into
a cart. The two sheriffs took their places upon
each side of him, and the cortege moved off.
The people, having sufficiently recovered
from their shock to jostle one another out of the
building, stood huddled together like a flock of frightened
sheep; but when the cavalcade had driven off, a subdued
clamor of voices arose, all unanimous in contempt for
“dese here po’ white, who’d
ha’ knowed better ‘n to come meddlin’
long o’ Marster’s folks ef Marster wan’t
down on de bed an’ mos’ like to die!”
That the dull and simple brain of
the old man should have been capable of any formulated
plan is not to be imagined, and when upon the following
day he was taken before the justice for examination,
he merely acted from an instinct of affection in shielding
his young master, even at the risk of his own life.
When questioned, he preserved an obstinate silence;
then, when forced to speak, denied having seen either
of the boys upon the day of their disappearance, but,
when cross-questioned, admitted that he had seen Mars
Phil in the Vine Ridge woods; and finally, when taxed
with the blood upon the ground and with having hidden
the guns, he reluctantly admitted that “ef Mars
Phil had been hurted” he had done it.
“What did you do with the body?”
questioned the justice; “throw it in the river?”
A murmur from the prisoner, which
passed for assent, concluded the examination, and
the justice, sorely puzzled, committed him to jail
to await his trial.
With the early morning, the country
people had begun to gather around the courthouse,
and when told that the old miscreant had actually
confessed to the murder, their innate love of justice
gave place to fierce anger; and when the prisoner,
gray with terror, bent and tottering, was led forth,
he was surrounded by a silent but determined crowd,
who, thrusting the sheriffs aside, seized and drove
him before them, and had already slipped the noose
about his neck, when an inarticulate shout caused
the crowd to sway, a horseman dashed into
their midst and proclaimed that both boys were alive.
Their disappearance had been explained on that morning
by a letter forwarded by hand, which ran as follows:
On Board the Chieftain.
Dear Uncle, This afternoon,
while hunting in the Vine Ridge woods, Phil’s
gun went off and wounded him in the side. I was
at my wit’s end what to do, when I heard the
Chieftain blow up the river; so I tore off to the
levee, where I was lucky enough to succeed in attracting
Captain Smith’s attention, who sent off a boat,
and we managed to get Phil on board. I wanted
Smith to put back to our landing, but he thought the
current too strong; and on the whole, I believe it
is better for Phil to keep on to Hilton, as it would
be impossible to get a doctor at home in this high
water. Phil’s hurt is not very serious,
I hope.
Your dutiful nephew,
Harry
Brace.
On the day succeeding Harry’s
homecoming, he entered the room designated the “study,”
in which the Squire was usually to be found when indoors.
The room probably owed the name of
“study” to a set of Farmer’s
Magazines which, in all the dignity of expensive
bindings, divided the shelf with a rather damaged
edition of “The Turf Register,” a “Farrier’s
Manual,” a brace of antiquated medical works,
and a stack of newspapers. Fishing tackle, a
cupping apparatus, a set of engineering instruments,
half a dozen ears of extra fine seed corn, medicine
scales, and a huge cotton stock filled the rest of
the bookcase.
The Squire, seated before a blazing
fire, in the lazy comforts of convalescence, with
pipe and tobacco at his elbow, presented a not unenviable
picture when contrasted with the wintry grayness outside.
Harry, who had been greatly touched
by the old hog-feeder’s affectionate fidelity,
now sought his uncle in order to beg that as a recompense
he might be given his freedom.
“Freedom!” exclaimed the
Squire; “why, confound it, my dear boy, what
would he do with freedom, if he had it?”
“I think he would like it,”
Harry murmured, a little sheepishly.
“Why, he’s as free as
air now; a deuced sight freer than I am.”
Nevertheless Harry gained his point,
and though the Squire growled, “You young jackanapes,
you’ve robbed me of the best hog-feeder on the
river,” still he was evidently pleased, and in
the evening old Jerry was sent for.
When, in answer to the summons, Jerry
presented himself at the study door, his master said
to him, with a stateliness fitted to the occasion:
“Jerry, I have sent for you
to tell you that your young master here, as a reward
for your fidelity, desires to give you your freedom.”
Here the Squire paused, and Jerry,
not knowing what else to say, said, “Yes, Marster.”
Harry, standing by, was feeling rather
wrought up, while the Squire, also somewhat excited,
continued:
“I will give you a house in
the free settlement, out in the slashes, and your
young master will always take care of you.”
Another rather disconcerting pause
was broken by a second “Yes, Marster;”
and the old man, picking up his hat, shuffled out.
The Squire glanced at Harry with a
mischievous twinkle in his eyes, but the boy’s
face expressed such blank disappointment that he took
pity upon him, and, picking up a newspaper, dismissed
the matter.
Upon the following evening a low knock
was heard at the study door, then a fumbling at the
latch, and old Jerry once more stood upon the threshold.
“Well, old man, what is it now?”
his master asked kindly. “Come, out with
it!” he repeated, as the old man, with a feeble
grin, stood helplessly fingering his hat. “What’s
the matter?”
And old Jerry, slowly scratching his
head, made answer:
“Thank, Marster; I’s come
to ax Marster what I done to ’splease Mars?”
“Displease me! Why, what
has put that notion into your head?”
“I dunno, Mars, what I’s
done, but I’s skeared Mars moût be
set agin me, ‘cause he say he gwine sen’
me offen de plantation.”
Then Harry explained that he was to
be set free, and eagerly enlarged upon the delights
of liberty. The hog-feeder listened, but was
unmoved: he obstinately declined to accept his
freedom, his plea being that “the varments”
would “’stroy up his creeturs” if
he were not there to look after them.
“De black sow, she got a fine
litter o’ pigs now, an’ de foxes is a’ter
’em de blessed time.”
After this no more could be urged,
and Jerry, scraping his foot, went out with a mind
full of content.