Marshal Stone and Brant were to return
together to North Wilkesboro’ where the latter
would take the train for home. Uncle Dick had
offered them horses for the ride. The two men,
somewhat in advance of the remainder of the party
after the descent of Stone Mountain, had come near
the Higgins’ cabin, when the marshal spoke with
a display of embarrassment:
“I’ve got to go a little
out of our way. It’s a chore I oughtn’t
ever to have put off for a minute, but I plumb forgot
it.”
“What is it?” Brant asked indifferently.
But his interest was aroused as the
marshal hesitated before answering, and exhibited
an increasing confusion.
“I’m right ashamed to
tell of it,” Stone said, finally. “There’s
no excuse for such carelessness. Plutina got
into all this mess because she was afraid something
dreadful might happen, and it might have on
account of my forgetfulness.”
“What’s it all about?”
Brant demanded, now distinctly curious.
“It’s bear-traps!” was the morose
answer.
“Bear-traps?”
The marshal nodded.
“Those infernal traps Hodges
set along Thunder Branch that made Plutina
turn informer.... Well, I just naturally forgot
all about ’em.”
Brant uttered an ejaculation of dismay.
“You mean, they’re still there, and set?”
Stone nodded.
“Just that. I took Hodges
and York down another way. I’ve never thought
of the traps since, till to-day.”
“Risky, of course,” Brant
admitted. “But nobody got caught, or they’d
have been missed,” he added comfortingly.
“Nobody in the neighborhood’s disappeared,
has there?”
“Not that I’ve heard of,”
Stone replied. “But it’s luck, not
my deserts, if no harm’s been done.”
“I’ll go along with you,”
Brant offered. “We’ll have that trouble
off your mind in a jiffy.”
So, the two men turned, and took the
trail past the Higgins’ clearing and on until
they came to Thunder Branch, where Plutina had made
her discovery. They followed the course of the
stream upward, the marshal in the lead. As he
came to the bend, where the rocky cliffs began, Stone
turned and called over his shoulder:
“They’re just beyond.”
Then, he went forward, with quick, nervous strides,
and disappeared beyond the bend. A moment later,
a great cry brought Brant running.
It was, in truth, a ghastly scene
that showed there, lighted brilliantly by the noontide
sun. In the midst of the little space of dry
ground bordering the stream, where the lush grass grew
thick and high, the body of a man was lying.
It was contorted grotesquely, sprawling at length
on its face, in absolute stillness the stillness
of death. Brant, himself horrified, looked pityingly
at the white, stricken face of the marshal, and turned
away, helplessly. He could find no words to lessen
the hideousness of this discovery for the man through
whose fault the tragedy had come.
Then, presently, as Stone seemed paralyzed
by the disaster, Brant went closer to examine the
gruesome thing.
The victim had been caught by both
traps. Evidently, he had stepped fairly into
the first. Then, as the great jaws snapped shut
on his leg, he had lurched forward and fallen.
His arms were outspread wide. But his head was
within the second trap. The jaws of it had clamped
on the neck. The steel fangs were sunk deep into
the flesh. Blood from the wounds was caked black
on the skin.
“He didn’t suffer any
to speak of,” Brant remarked, at last. He
observed, with some surprise, that his voice was very
thin. He was not a squeamish man, and he had
seen many evil sights. But this
With repugnance, he set himself to
the task of releasing the trap that held the dead
man’s head. He had the delicacy not to call
on his distressed companion for aid. The task
was very difficult, and very gruesome, for it required
harsh handling of the head, which was in the way.
Finally, however, the thing was accomplished.
The savage jaws were freed from the flesh they had
mangled, and were locked open. Then, Brant turned
the body over, and gazed curiously, with strong repulsion,
into the ugly, distorted dead face.
“Providence picked out somebody
who could be spared,” he mused grimly.
There came another cry from Stone.
In it were wonder, incredulity, relief.
Brant regarded the marshal in amazement.
The man was transformed. The motionless figure
of desolation was become one of wild, quivering excitement.
The face was suffused with blood, the eyes shining
fiercely.
“What the devil!” Brant demanded, aghast.
Stone looked toward his questioner
gravely, and nodded with great emphasis. His
voice was low, tense with emotion.
“It is the devil!” he
answered solemnly. He paused, clearing his throat,
and stared again at the dead man. Then, his eyes
went back to Brant, as he added:
“It’s Hodges.”
There was a little silence. Brant
could not understand, could not believe this startling
assertion flung in his face.
“But Hodges was thrown over
the precipice,” he said, at last.
The marshal shook his head. There
was defiance now in his aspect defiance,
and a mighty joy.
“It doesn’t make any difference
about that,” he announced. “This is
Hodges!”
Then, his exultation burst in words:
“Hodges caught in his own traps!
His neck broken, as it should have been broken by
the rope for the murders he’s done! It was
my carelessness did it, yes. But I don’t
care now, so long as it’s Hodges who’s
got caught. Hodges set those traps, and there
he is!... I read about something like that once
in a story. They called it ’poetic justice.’”
“He don’t look like a
poem,” Brant remarked. He turned from the
gory corpse with a shudder of disgust.
“Thank God, it was Hodges!”
the marshal said, reverently. “Anybody
else would have haunted me for life. But Hodges!
Why, I’m glad!”
The affair was easily explicable in
the light of what Plutina had to tell. Hodges,
undoubtedly, had knowledge of some secret, hazardous
path down the face of the precipice past the Devil’s
Cauldron, and on to the valley. He had meant
to flee by it with Plutina, thus to escape the hound.
By it, he had fled alone. Perhaps, he had had
a hiding-place for money somewhere about the raided
still. Or, perhaps, he had merely chosen this
route along Thunder Branch on his way to an asylum
beyond Bull Head Mountain. What was certain was
that he had blundered into his own pitiless snares.
Naturally, he would have had no suspicion that the
traps remained. In his mad haste, he had rushed
heedlessly upon destruction. The remorseless engines
of his own devising had taken full toll of him.
By his own act, he paid with his life the penalty
for crime. There was propriety in the marshal’s
reference to poetic justice.
A certain vindictiveness showed in
Plutina’s comment concerning the death of the
man at whose hands she had so suffered.
“His bein’ so afeared
o’ thet-thar thing kep’ ‘im from
hurtin’ me,” she said, reflectively.
“He was shorely sot ag’inst havin’
’is neck bruk, an’, arter all, thet’s
jest what he got.” She smiled, contentedly.
For Plutina was a primitive woman, strong in her love,
and strong in her hate.
It was a day of early autumn.
The timber rights had been secured to the satisfaction
of Sutton. The tree-nail factory was being built.
Zeke was become a man of importance in the region.
The lover’s wedding-day was
less than a month distant. To-day, Plutina had
been for a visit to the Widow Higgins, and now Zeke
was walking home with her. They paused at the
place where had been their meeting on the morning
of the lad’s first adventuring into the world.
Memories flooded them, as they looked across the valley
to the bleak cliffs of Stone Mountain, which rose
in aged, rugged grandeur, softened in this hour by
the veils of haze, warmed with the lambent hues of
sunset.
In answer to Plutina, Zeke shook his head perplexedly.
“I kain’t quite stomach
thet-thar yarn o’ Seth Jones’s,”
he said. “As I remember, Dan Hodges threw
me hard!” He grinned wryly at the
recollection. “I don’t see how I could
have thrown him off the Slide.”
“But of course you did!”
Plutina asserted, with great spirit. “Pooh!
Ye could lick Dan Hodges any day in the week.
An’ Seth saw ye that settles hit!”
“I suppose so,” Zeke conceded.
“But Dan Hodges was a powerful fighter.
After all, I didn’t do anything much for ye,
Tiny,” he added, with regret in his voice.
The girl was all indignation.
“Why, Zeke!” she cried.
“The idea! Ye did hit all. Ye banged
the love o’ ye into thet-thar dawg, what hung
on to me an’ brung up the fairy cross fer
a message.” Chubbie, as if understanding,
leaped to lick her hand. “An’ ye
give me the cross, Zeke. Mebby, thet’s what
saved me, all the time thar on the precipice,
an’ an’ back thar in
the cave with him. An’ then
ye threw Dan Hodges right offen the mounting.
Seth Jones seen ye do hit!”
It seemed to Zeke that he must perforce
accept the heroism thrust upon him, though a doubt
still lingered. Still, his memory of the fight
was confused. Perhaps, after all, he had .
Zeke broke off, and drew the girl
close. Their lips met gently, tenderly, with
the clinging of passion. What mattered the history
of evil days? They were past. Before them
lay the future, radiant with rosy promise. In
this blessed present, they were together. Love
thrilled exquisitely on their lips; more exquisitely
in their souls. That love was, and it would remain,
a noble and precious thing, great and very beautiful,
as mighty and firm as the mountain looming yonder
in immutable serenity and strength, as loyal, as enduring....
They walked on together, infinitely content.