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PAGE 5

The Spectre In The Cart
by [?]

“‘Besides, I always feel sort o’ cowardly if I ‘ve got a pistol on. Looks like I was afraid of somebody–an’ I ain’t. I ‘ve noticed if two fellows have pistols on and git to fightin’, mighty apt to one git hurt, maybe both. Sort o’ like two dogs growling–long as don’t but one of ’em growl it’s all right. If don’t but one have a pistol, t’ other feller always has the advantage and sort o’ comes out top, while the man with the pistol looks mean.’

“I remember how he looked in the dim moonlight as he drawled his quaint philosophy.

“‘I ‘m a man o’ peace, Mr. Johnny, and I learnt that from your mother–I learnt a heap o’ things from her,’ he added, presently, after a little period of reflection. ‘She was the lady as used always to have a kind word for me when I was a boy. That ‘s a heap to a boy. I used to think she was an angel. You think it ‘s you I’m a fightin’ for in this canvass? ‘T ain’t. I like you well enough, but I ain’t never forgot your mother, and her kindness to my old people durin’ the war when I was away. She give me this handkerchief for a weddin’ present when I was married after the war–said ‘t was all she had to give, and my wife thinks the world and all of it; won’t let me have it ‘cept as a favor; but this mornin’ she told me to take it–said ‘twould bring me luck.’ He took a big bandana out of his pocket and held it up in the moonlight. I remembered it as one of my father’s.

“‘She ‘ll make me give it up to-morrow night when I git home,’ he chuckled.

“We had turned into a road through the plantations, and had just come to the fork where Halloway’s road turned off toward his place.

“‘I lays a heap to your mother’s door–purty much all this, I reckon.’ His eye swept the moon-bathed scene before him. ‘But for her I might n’t ‘a got her. And ain’t a’ man in the world got a happier home, or as good a wife.’ He waved his hand toward the little homestead that was sleeping in the moonlight on the slope the other side of the stream, a picture of peace.

“His path went down a little slope, and mine kept along the side of the hill until it entered the woods. A great sycamore tree grew right in the fork, with its long, hoary arms extending over both roads, making a broad mass of shadow in the white moonlight.

“The next day was the day of election. Hal-loway was at one poll and I was at another; so I did not see him that day. But he sent me word that evening that he had carried his poll, and I rode home knowing that we should have peace.

“I was awakened next morning by the news that both Halloway and his wife had been murdered the night before. I at once galloped over to his place, and was one of the first to get there. It was a horrible sight. Halloway had evidently been waylaid and killed by a blow of an axe just as he was entering his yard gate, and then the door of the house had been broken open and his wife had been killed, after which Halloway ‘s body had been dragged into the house, and the house had been fired with the intention of making it appear that the house had burned by accident. But by one of those inscrutable fatalities, the fire, after burning half of two walls, had gone out.

“It was a terrible sight, and the room looked like a shambles. Halloway had plainly been caught unawares while leaning over his gate. The back of his head had been crushed in with the eye of an axe, and he had died instantly. The pleasant thought which was in his mind at the instant–perhaps, of the greeting that always awaited him on the click of his latch; perhaps, of his success that day; perhaps, of my mother’s kindness to him when he was a boy–was yet on his face, stamped there indelibly by the blow that killed him. There he lay, face upward, as the murderer had thrown him after bringing him in, stretched out his full length on the floor, with his quiet face upturned! looking in that throng of excited, awe-stricken men, just what he had said he was: a man of peace. His wife, on the other hand, wore a terrified look on her face. There had been a terrible struggle. She had lived to taste the bitterness of death, before it took her.”