THE REIGN OF TERROR : CHAPTER VII
THE SNARE OF THE FOWLER
Sweet was the secret joy of old Stoneman
over the fate of Ben Cameron. His death sentence
would strike terror to his party, and his prompt execution,
on the morning of the election but two days off, would
turn the tide, save the State, and rescue his daughter
from a hated alliance.
He determined to bar the last way
of escape. He knew the Klan would attempt a rescue,
and stop at no means fair or foul short of civil war.
Afraid of the loyalty of the white battalions quartered
in Piedmont, he determined to leave immediately for
Spartanburg, order an exchange of garrisons, and,
when the death warrant was returned from headquarters,
place its execution in the hands of a stranger, to
whom appeal would be vain. He knew such an officer
in the Spartanburg post, a man of fierce, vindictive
nature, once court-martialed for cruelty, who hated
every Southern white man with mortal venom. He
would put him in command of the death watch.
He hired a fast team and drove across
the county with all speed, doubly anxious to get out
of town before Elsie discovered the tragedy and appealed
to him for mercy. Her tears and agony would be
more than he could endure. She would stay indoors
on account of the crowds, and he would not be missed
until evening, when safely beyond her reach.
When Phil arrived at Charlotte he
found an immense crowd at the bulletin board in front
of the Observer office reading the account of
the Piedmont tragedy. To his horror he learned
of the arrest, trial, and sentence of Ben for the
deed which he had done.
He rushed to the office of the Division
Superintendent of the Piedmont Air Line Railroad,
revealed his identity, told him the true story of the
tragedy, and begged for a special to carry him back.
The Superintendent, who was a clansman, not only agreed,
but within an hour had the special ready and two cars
filled with stern-looking men to accompany him.
Phil asked no questions. He knew what it meant.
The train stopped at Gastonia and King’s Mountain
and took on a hundred more men.
The special pulled into Piedmont at
dusk. Phil ran to the Commandant and asked for
an interview with Ben alone.
“For what purpose, sir?” the officer asked.
Phil resorted to a ruse, knowing the
Commandant to be unaware of any difference of opinion
between him and his father.
“I hold a commission to obtain
a confession from the prisoner which may save his
life by destroying the Ku Klux Klan.”
He was admitted at once and the guard
ordered to withdraw until the interview ended.
Phil took Ben Cameron’s place,
exchanging hat and coat, and wrote a note to his father,
telling in detail the truth, and asked for his immediate
interference.
“Deliver that, and I’ll
be out of here in two hours,” he said, as he
placed the note in Ben’s hand.
“I’ll go straight to the house,”
was the quick reply.
The exchange of the Southerner’s
slouch hat and Prince Albert for Phil’s derby
and short coat completely fooled the guard in the dim
light. The men were as much alike as twins except
the shade of difference in the colour of their hair.
He passed the sentinel without a challenge, and walked
rapidly toward Stoneman’s house.
On the way he was astonished to meet
five hundred soldiers just arrived on a special from
Spartanburg. Amazed at the unexpected movement,
he turned and followed them back to the jail.
They halted in front of the building
he had just vacated, and their commander handed an
official document to the officer in charge. The
guard was changed and a cordon of soldiers encircled
the prison.
The Piedmont garrison had received
notice by wire to move to Spartanburg, and Ben heard
the beat of their drums already marching to board the
special.
He pressed forward and asked an interview
with the Captain in command.
The answer came with a brutal oath:
“I have been warned against
all the tricks and lies this town can hatch.
The commander of the death watch will permit no interview,
receive no visitors, hear no appeal, and allow no
communication with the prisoner until after the execution.
You can announce this to whom it may concern.”
“But you’ve got the wrong
man. You have no right to execute him,”
said Ben excitedly.
“I’ll risk it,” he answered, with
a sneer.
“Great God!” Ben cried
beneath his breath. “The old fool has entrapped
his son in the net he spread for me!”