With the news of the event, a flame
of wrath swept through the coves. Everywhere,
the men gathered in parties, to hunt, rifle in hand,
for some trace of the outlaw. There was none
to give him favor, save the outcasts numbered among
his dependants. The usual sympathy for the illicit
distiller ceased utterly, destroyed by hatred for the
criminal’s final offense. For the first
time in the history of the mountains, there was no
voice raised to protest nor any rifle pointed
in the laurel against the Federal officers,
who wandered at will in the wild places. In execration
of Dan Hodges for his sin against the peace and dignity
of the community, the people forgot for the nonce
their ancient enmity against the Government. With
one accord, the folk of the mountains joined in abhorrence
of Hodges, sullenly anxious to bring about his punishment,
to avenge his victim at least, if too late to save
her.
Seth Jones turned from the joys of
the belated honeymoon to give every aid in his power.
His counsel and the comfort of his presence were boons
to Uncle Dick. The veteran had learned from his
bride concerning the disfavor in which Zeke was held,
and the reason for it. It seemed to him the part
of wisdom, in this crisis, to feign ignorance, and
he blandly suggested, on the return of the two from
the fallen poplar, that they should ride to Joines’
store in the evening, there, over the telephone, to
dispatch a telegram to Zeke in New York. It was
the psychological moment for success. There was
not even a flicker of resentment aroused. Uncle
Dick remembered that the Quaker school-teacher spy
had been saved by Zeke from Dan Hodges. In his
new mood, that fact was enough to overcome all rancor
against the lad. Moreover, he realized the tragedy
of Plutina’s fate to her lover, and he was moved
to compassion. He accepted the veteran’s
suggestion without a word of remonstrance.
It was Seth Jones, too, who broke
down the old man’s last prejudice by persuading
him to summon Marshal Stone. Uncle Dick yielded
with an odd mingling of emotions shame
and relief: shame over such trafficking with
the “revenuers,” whom he had consistently
fought and despised through three generations; relief
that he had gained the strong arm of the law to his
side. He had been greatly heartened when Stone
answered over the wire that he would set out with
a posse at midnight for the Siddon cabin, so that,
after a conference there, the active work of searching
could be begun promptly at dawn.
Thus, it came about that, for the
first time in history, Uncle Dick Siddon welcomed
the sound of hoofbeats pounding up the trail through
the darkness. Where, aforetime, he would have
leaped to wind a blast of warning to the moonshiners
above against the coming of the “revenuers,”
the old man now hastened to the cabin door, and flung
it wide, and went forth on the porch to give grateful
greeting.
When a council had been held, three
parties set forth. Seth Jones was the guide for
one, which went to the northeast, through the Bull
Head Mountain region, whither, in all likelihood,
the outlaw would make his way, if he meant to escape
out of the country. The marshal, with one companion,
skirted Stone Mountain. Uncle Dick led two of
the posse to the yellow poplar where the struggle
had occurred, after which they would follow the general
direction of the tracks. The marshal expected
to make a circuit of the mountain rapidly enough to
effect a junction with Uncle Dick’s party by
noon, at the Woodruff Gate. The veteran and his
two men, who would have by far the roughest going,
were not to report until sundown at the Siddon cabin.
From the poplar, Uncle Dick and the
deputies were able, with great difficulty, to follow
the tracks of the outlaw and his prisoner toward the
south for a full mile. But at this point, an expanse
of outcropping rock baffled them completely.
Search as they would, there was no least sign of footsteps
anywhere. After an hour of futile questing, they
gave up in despair, and hurried to the rendezvous at
the Woodruff Gate.
The marshal and his men had already
reached the gate, and Stone had wherewith to give
the distraught grandfather new hope.
“I came on their tracks a mile
below where you lost them,” he explained.
“They still keep to the south. We followed
as far as the sand bar below Sandy Creek Falls.”
“Come on!” Uncle Dick
cried, fiercely. “Let’s arter ’im
this-yer minute.”
The marshal shook his head at the old man’s
enthusiasm.
“We’re not much better
off yet,” he declared. “We found the
place where he camped last night. ’Twasn’t
far. I reckon the girl made his going as slow
as she could. She naturally would.”
Uncle Dick nodded somberly. “But the trouble
is, the trail ends at the sand bar ends
absolutely.”
“We’ll find hit ag’in,”
Uncle Dick exclaimed, stoutly. “We jest
got to find hit. Come on!”
The marshal urged the other to rest
in preparation for the hard climb down
the ridge, and then up the sharp slopes and ledges
of the mountainside. But the old man would have
none of it. So, straightway, the two moved off,
leaving the others, less hardy, to repose, and in
due time they came to the bar below Sandy Creek Falls.
High among the embattled cliffs of
Stone Mountain’s eastern end, Sandy Creek races
in tumultuous course. The limpid stream cascades
in vertical sheen of silver from ledge to ledge.
It writhes with ceaseless noisy complainings through
the twisting ways of bowlder-strewn gorges. Here
and there, in some placid pool, it seems to pause,
languid, resting from its revels of flight. Such
a pool lay at the foot of the longest fall. A
barrier of sand circled from the cliff as the brim
for this bowl of the waters. To this point, Marshal
Stone and Uncle Dick were now come. The tracks
were plainly discernible in the sand, along the edge
of the pool. There were the huge misshapen outlines
of the outlaw’s bare feet, deep-sunken from
the heavy weight of the man. Beside them showed
the slender prints made by the captive, lightly pressed.
These tracks followed the curving bar, along the water’s
edge. They reached to the foot of the cliff,
close to where was the outer edge of the cataract.
There they ceased.
The marshal, already familiar with
the mystery, and baffled by it, searched again perfunctorily.
Uncle Dick hunted hither and yon with feverish activity,
at first confidently, then doubtfully, finally in
despair. He, in his turn, could find no further
clue. He gave over his efforts eventually, and
stood silent beside the marshal, staring bewilderedly.
About the amphitheatre formed by the pool, pines grew
in a half-circle, save where the narrow channel of
the stream descended. But between the barricade
of the trees and the basin of water lay the smooth
stretch of sand, slightly moist from out-flung spray
of the falls. Upon that level surface, the tracks
showed forth undeniable, inexplicable.
They marched without deviation straight to the base
of the great cliff. There, within a little space,
they grew confused, as from much trampling. But
they did not return; they did not go elsewhere.
There was a clear distance of a rod over the sand to
the rocky ground where the trees grew. On the
other side lay the deeps of the pool. Before
them reared the impassible wall of the precipice.
And there the tracks ended.
Uncle Dick knew the place well, and
on that account the mystery was the greater.
He could find no possible explanation, however wildly
improbable, of that disappearance. The broad sheet
of the falls fell close to the cliff’s face.
The rock was unworn by the torrent, without recess
or cavern. And that precipice, twice the pool’s
width, mounted sheer a hundred feet, the height of
the cascade. The front was unbroken save by tiny
rifts and narrow ledges, where dwarfed ground
pines clung precariously. With a muttered curse,
the old man turned from his vain contemplation of
the cliff, and let his troubled eyes rest on the pool.
Suddenly, he started. He remained motionless for
a moment, then, with nervous haste threw off his shirt,
and trousers. Marshal Stone, chancing to look
that way, was astonished to see his companion naked,
poised at the water’s edge. He had time
to note with admiration the splendid figure, still
supple and strongly muscled despite the four-score
years. Then Uncle Dick leaped, and dived.
It was long seconds before he reappeared, only to
dive again. He paid no attention to the marshal’s
remonstrances. Only when he was convinced of
the uselessness of further search in the pool’s
depths, did he give over the task, and cast himself
down on the sand to rest, panting and trembling a
little from fatigue.
“They hain’t thar,”
he said, with grim conviction. Then he voiced
the question that hammered in his brain: “Whar
be they?”
But the marshal had no answer.
As they made their way drearily back
toward the Woodruff Gate, the officer broke a long
silence:
“Only a blood-hound can trail them!”
The gloom of Uncle Dick’s expression did not
lighten.
“They hain’t nary one in the mountings,”
he answered, heavily.
“None nearer than Suffolk, Virginia,”
the marshal said. “Cyclone Brant has a
couple of good ones. But it would cost a lot.”
The old man flared.
“Fer God’s sake,
git thet-thar feller an’ his dawgs. I hain’t
axin’ what hit ‘ll cost. Hit was
my money got thet-thar damned cuss out o’ the
jail-house. I hain’t likely to begrudge
anythin’ hit ’ll cost to git him kotched.
An’ Plutiny! why, money don’t
matter none, if I can save Plutiny!”
“I’ll send for Brant to-night,”
the marshal promised, with new cheerfulness.
“Let’s hope he’s not off somewhere.
They send for him all over the country. If the
dogs start day after to-morrow, they’ll still
find the scent.”
Uncle Dick groaned.
“An’ her a-lyin’
out with thet-thar wolf all thet while,” he mumbled,
in despair. “Mebby, this very minute, she’s
a-screamin’ callin’ to her
olé gran’pap to save her. My Plutiny!”
He walked with lagging steps; the tall form, usually
so erect, was bowed under the burden of tormenting
fears. The marshal, understanding, ventured no
word of comfort.
It was late afternoon when the dispirited
searchers reached the Siddon clearing on their return
from the fruitless day’s work. There, they
were astonished to see the Widow Higgins come down
the path toward them, at a pace ordinarily forbidden
by her rheumatic joints. She waved a paper in
her hand.
“Hit’s a telegraph,”
she called shrilly. Her voice held something of
the awe with which remoter regions still regard that
method of communication. But there was a stronger
emotion still that thus sent the old woman dancing
in forgetfulness of her chronic pains. It was
explained in her next sentence, cried out with a mother’s
exultation in the homecoming of her beloved.
Almost, in joy over seeing her son again, she forgot
the misery that was bringing him.
“Hit’s from Zekie! Zekie’s
comin’ home!”
Uncle Dick could not share the mother’s
delight. The lover’s coming could hardly
avail anything toward saving the girl. Nevertheless,
he took the sheet of paper, which carried the message
sent on by telephone from North Wilkesboro’
to Joines’ store. He read it aloud, that
the marshal might hear:
Suffolk,
Va.
Richard Siddon,
Joines’ Mill, N. C.,
Via Telephone from North Wilkesboro’.
Arrive to-night with bloodhound.
Ezekiel.
Uncle Dick’s voice faltered
a little in the reading. The black eyes were
glowing with new hope beneath the beetling white brows,
as he lifted his gaze to the mountain peaks.
For the first time, he felt a thrill of jubilation
over the young man whom he had rejected, whom now
he accepted jubilation for the fresh, virile,
strength of the lad, for the resourcefulness that
this message so plainly declared. The old man’s
lips moved in vague, mute phrases, which were the clumsy
expressions of emotions, of gratitude to Providence
for the blessing of another’s energy, on which
to lean in this time of trial. There had been
desperate need of haste in getting the hounds on the
trail. Now, they were coming to-night.
Zeke was bringing them. Perhaps, after all, an
old man’s declining years would know the fond
tenderness of a daughter’s care and
a son’s. Thank God that Zeke was coming!