**** ROTATE **** **** ROTATE **** **** ROTATE **** **** ROTATE ****

Find this Story

Print, a form you can hold

Wireless download to your Amazon Kindle

Look for a summary or analysis of this Story.

Enjoy this? Share it!

PAGE 10

The Last Stetson
by [?]

“Git up,” he said; and Crump rose with a spring. The lad’s tone meant release.

“You hain’t wuth the risk. I hain’t goin’ ter kill ye. I jus’ wanted ter banter ye ‘n’ make ye beg. You’re a good beggar, Eli, ‘n’ a powerful prayer. You’ll be a shinin’ light in the chu’ch, ef ye gits a chance ter shine long. Fer lemme tell ye, nobody ever ketched ye afore. But you’re ketched now, an’ I’m goin’ to tell Steve. He’ll be a-watchin’ fer ye, ‘n’ so ‘ll I. I tell ye in time, ef ye ever come over hyeh agin as long as you live, you’ll never git back alive. Turn roun’! Hev ye got any balls?” he asked, feeling in Crump’s pockets for cartridges. “No; well”–he picked up the Winchester and pumped the magazine empty–“I’ll keep these,” he said, handing Crump the empty rifle. “Now git away–an’ git away quick!”

Crump’s slouching footsteps went out of hearing, and Isom sat where he was. His elbows dropped to his knees. His face dropped slowly into his hands, and the nettles of remorse began to sting. He took the back of one tremulous hand presently to wipe the perspiration from his forehead, and he found it burning. A sharp pain shot through his eyes. He knew what that meant, and feeling dizzy, he rose and started a little blindly towards home.

Old Gabe was waiting for him. He did not answer the old man’s querulous inquiry, but stumbled towards a bed. An hour later, when the miller was rubbing his forehead, he opened his eyes, shut them, and began to talk.

“I reckon I hain’t much better ‘n Eli, Und’ Gabe,” he said, plaintively. “I’ve been abusin’ him down thar in the woods. I come might’ nigh killin’ him onct.” The old man stroked on, scarcely heeding the boy’s words, so much nonsense would he talk when ill.

“I’ve been lyin’ to ye, Uncl’ Gabe, ‘n’ a-deceivin’ of ye right along. Steve’s a-goin’ atter ole Brayton–I’m goin’ too–Steve didn’t kill Jass–hit wusn’t Steve–hit wusn’t Rome–hit was–” The last word stopped behind his shaking lips; he rose suddenly in bed, looked wildly into the miller’s startled face, and dropping with a sob to the bed, went sobbing to sleep.

Old Gabe went back to his pipe, and while he smoked, his figure shrank slowly in his chair. He went to bed finally, but sleep would not come, and he rose again and built up the fire and sat by it, waiting for day. His own doctrine, sternly taught for many a year, had come home to him; and the miller’s face when he opened his door was gray as the breaking light.

IV.

THERE was little peace for old Gabe that day at the mill. And when he went home at night he found cause for the thousand premonitions that had haunted him. The lad was gone.

A faint light in the east was heralding the moon when Isom reached Steve Marcum’s gate. There were several horses hitched to the fence, several dim forms seated in the porch, and the lad halloed for Steve, whose shadow shot instantly from the door and came towards him.

“Glad ter see ye, Isom,” he called, jubilantly. “I was jus’ about to sen’ fer ye. How’d ye happen to come up?”

Isom answered in a low voice with the news of Crump’s “blind,” and Steve laughed and swore in the same breath.

“Come hyeh!” he said, leading the way back; and at the porch he had Isom tell the story again.

“Whut d’ I tell ye, boys?” he asked, triumphantly. “Don’t believe ye more ‘n half believed me.”

Three more horsemen rode up to the gate and came into the light. Every man was armed, and at Isom’s puzzled look, Steve caught the lad by the arm and led him around the chimney-corner. He was in high spirits.

“‘Pears like ole times, Isom. I’m a-goin’ fer thet cussed ole Steve Brayton this very night. He’s behind Crump. I s’picioned it afore; now I know it for sartain. He’s a-goin’ to give Eli a mule ‘n’ a Winchester fer killin’ me. We’re goin’ to s’prise him to-night. He won’t be look-in’ fer us–I’ve fixed that. I wus jus’ about to sen’ fer ye. I hain’t fergot how ye kin handle a gun.” Steve laughed significantly. “Ye’re a good frien’ o’ mine, ‘n’ I’m goin’ to show ye thet I’m a frien’ o’ yourn.”