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Uncle Abner, Master of Mysteries Page 21
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He advanced with great strides into the room.
“Campbell,” he cried, “before I left your accursed pasture, I saw a buzzard descend into the forest beyond your log-heap. I went in, and there, shot through the heart, was the naked body of Alien Eliott. Your log-heap, Campbell, was to burn the quilt and the dead man’s clothes. You trusted to the vultures, for the rest, and the vultures, Campbell, over-reached you.”
My uncle’s voice rose and deepened.
“I sent word to my brother Rufus to raise a posse comitatus and bring it to Maxwell’s Tavern. Then I rode in here to rest and to feed my horse. I found you, Campbell, on the second line of your hell-planned venture!”
“I got Mrs. Eliott to send for Rufus to be a witness with me to your accursed marriage. And I undertook to delay it until he came.”
He raised his great arm, the clenched bronze fingers big like the coupling pins of a cart.
“I would have stopped it with my own hand,” he said, “but I wanted the men of the Hills to hang you … And they are here.”
There was a great sound of tramping feet in the hall outside.
And while the men entered, big, grim, determined men, Abner called out their names:
“Arnold, Randolph, Stuart, Elnathan Stone and my brother Rufus!”
Chapter 16
The Edge of the Shadow
It was a land of strange varieties of courage. But, even in the great hills, I never saw a man like Cyrus Mansfield. He was old and dying when this ghastly adventure happened; but, even in the extremity of life, with its terrors on him, he met the thing with his pagan notions of the public welfare, and it is for his own gods to judge him.
It was a long afternoon of autumn. The dead man lay in the whitewashed cabin staring up at the cobwebbed ceiling. His left cheek below the eye was burned with the brand of a pistol shot. The track of a bullet ran along the eyebrow, plowing into the skull above the ear. His grizzled hair stood up like a brush, and the fanaticism of his face was exaggerated by the strained postures of death.
A tall, gaunt woman sat by the door in the sun. She had a lapful of honey locust, and she worked at that, putting the pieces together in a sort of wreath. The branches were full of thorns, and the inside of the woman’s hand was torn and wounded upon the balls of the fingers and the palm, but she plaited the thorns together, giving no heed to her injured hand.
She did not get up when my Uncle Abner and Squire Randolph entered. She sat over her work with imperturbable stoicism.
The man and woman were strangers in the land, preempting one of Mansfield’s cabins. Their mission was a mystery for conjecture. And now the man’s death was a mystery beyond it.
When Randolph inquired how the man had met his death, the woman got up, without a word, went to a cupboard in the wall, took out a dueling pistol, and handed it to him. Then, she spoke in a dreary voice; “He was mad. ‘The cause,’ he said, ‘must have a sacrifice of blood.’”
She looked steadily at the dead man. “Ah, yes,” she added, “he was mad!” Then she turned about and went back to her chair in the sun before the door.
Randolph and Abner examined the weapon. It was a handsome dueling pistol, with an inlaid silver stock and a long, octagon barrel of hard, sharp-edged steel. It had been lately fired, for the exploded percussion cap was still on the nipple.
“He was a poor shot,” said Randolph; “he very nearly missed.”
My uncle looked closely at the dead man’s wound and the burned cheek beneath it. He turned the weapon slowly in his hand, but Randolph was impatient.
“Well, Abner,” he said, “did the pistol kill him, or was it the finger of God?”
“The pistol killed him,” replied my uncle. “And shall we believe the woman, eh, Abner?”
“I am willing to believe her,” replied my uncle. They looked about the cabin. There was blood on the floor and flecked against the wall, and stains on the barrel of the pistol, as though the man had staggered about, stunned by the bullet, before he died. And so the wound looked—not mortal on the instant, but one from which, after some time, a man might die.
Randolph wrote down his memorandum, and the two went out into the road.
It was an afternoon of Paradise. The road ran in a long endless ribbon westward toward the Ohio. Negroes in the wide bottom land were harvesting the corn and setting it up in great bulging shocks tied with grapevine. Beyond on a high wooded knoll, stood a mansion-house with white pillars.
My uncle took the duelling pistol out of his pocket and handed it to the Justice of the Peace.
“Randolph,” he said, “these weapons were made in pairs; there should be another. And,” he added, “there is a crest on the butt plate.”
“Virginia is full of such folderols,” replied the Justice, “and bought and sold, pledged and traded. It would not serve to identify the dead man. And besides, Abner, why do we care? He is dead by his own hand; his rights and his injuries touch no other; let him lie with his secrets.”
He made a little circling gesture upward with his index finger.
“‘Duncan is dead,’” he quoted. “‘After life’s fitful fever he sleeps well.’ Shall we pay our respects to Mansfield before we ride away?”
And he indicated the house like a white cornice on the high cliff above them.
They had been standing with their backs to the cabin door. Now the woman passed them. She wore a calico sunbonnet, and carried a little bundle tied up in a cotton handkerchief. She set out westward along the road toward the Ohio. She walked slowly, like one bound on an interminable journey.
Moved by some impulse they looked in at the cabin door. The dead man lay as he had been, his face turned toward the ceiling, his hands grotesquely crossed, his body rigid. But now the sprigs of honey locust, at which the woman worked, were pressed down on his unkempt grizzled hair. The sun lay on the floor, and there was silence.
They left the cabin with no word and climbed the long path to the mansion on the hill.
Mansfield sat in a great chair on the pillared porch. It was wide and cool, paved with colored tiles carried over from England in a sailing ship.
He was the strangest man I have ever seen. He was old and dying then, but he had a spirit in him that no event could bludgeon into servility. He sat with a gray shawl pinned around his shoulders. The lights and shadows of the afternoon fell on his jaw like a plowshare, on his big, crooked, bony nose, on his hard gray eyes, bringing them into relief against the lines and furrows of his face.
“Mansfield,” cried Randolph, “how do you do?”
“I still live,” replied the old man, “but at any hour I may be ejected out of life.”
“We all live, Mansfield,” said my uncle, “as long as God wills.”
“Now, Abner,” cried the old man, “you repeat the jargon of the churches. The will of man is the only power in the universe, so far as we can find out, that is able to direct the movings of events. Nothing else that exists can make the most trivial thing happen or cease to happen. No imagined god or demon in all the history of the race has ever influenced the order of events as much as the feeblest human creature in an hour of life. Sit down, Abner, and let me tell you the truth before I cease to exist, as the beasts of the field cease.”
He indicated the great carved oak chairs about him, and the two visitors sat down.
Randolph loved the vanities of argument, and he thrust in:
“I am afraid, Mansfield,” he said, “you will never enjoy the pleasures of Paradise.”
The old man made a contemptuous gesture.
“Pleasure, Randolph,” he said, “is the happiness of little men; big men are after something more. They are after the satisfaction that comes from directing events. This is the only happiness: to crush out every other authority—to be the one dominating authority—to make events take the avenue one likes. This is the happiness of the god of the universe, if there is any god of the universe.”
He moved in his chair, his elbows out, his
fingers extended, his bony face uplifted.
“Abner,” he cried, “I am willing for you to endure life as you find it and say it is the will of God, but, as for me, I will not be cowed into submission. I will not be held back from laying hold of the lever of the great engine merely because the rumble of the machinery fills other men with terror.”
“Mansfield,” replied my uncle, in his deep, level voice, “the fear of God is the beginning of wisdom.”
The old man moved his extended arms with a powerful threshing motion, like a vulture beating the air with its great wings.
“Fear!” he cried. “Why, Abner, fear is the last clutch of the animal clinging to the intelligence of man as it emerges from the instinct of the beast. The first man thought the monsters about him were gods. Our fathers thought the elements were gods, and we think the impulse moving the machinery of the world is the will of some divine authority. And always the only thing in the universe that was superior to these things has been afraid to assert itself. The human will that can change things, that can do as it likes, has been afraid of phantasms that never yet met with anything they could turn aside.”
He clenched his hands, contracted his elbows, and brought them down with an abrupt derisive gesture.
“I do not understand,” he said, “but I am not afraid. I will not be beaten into submission by vague, inherited terrors. I will not be subservient to things that have a lesser power than I have. I will not yield the control of events to elements that are dead, to laws that are unthinking, or to an influence that cannot change.
“Not all the gods that man has ever worshiped can make things happen tomorrow, but I can make them happen; therefore, I am a god above them. And how shall a god that is greater than these gods give over the dominion of events into their hands?”
“And so, Mansfield,” said Abner, “you have been acting just now upon this belief?”
The old man turned his bony face sharply on my uncle.
“Now, Abner,” he said, “what do you mean by this Delphic sentence?”
For reply, my uncle extended his arms toward the whitewashed cabin.
“Who is the dead man down there?”
“Randolph can tell you that,” said Mansfield.
“I never saw the man until today,” replied the Justice.
“Eh, Randolph,” cried the old man, “do you administer the law and have a memory like that? In midsummer the justices sat at the county seat. Have you forgot that inquisition?”
“I have not,” said the Justice. “It was a fool’s inquiry. One of Nixon’s Negro women reported a slave plot to poison the wells and attack the people with a curious weapon. She got the description of the weapon out of some preacher’s sermon—a kind of spear. If she had named some implement of modern warfare, we could have better credited her story.”
“Well, Randolph,” cried the old man, “for all the wisdom of your justices, she spoke the truth. They were pikes the woman saw, and not the spears of the horsemen of Israel. Did you notice a stranger who remained in a corner of the courtroom while the justices were sitting? He disappeared after the trial. But did you mark him, Randolph? He lies dead down yonder in my Negro cabin.”
A light came into the face of the Justice.
“By the Eternal,” he cried, “an abolitionist!”
He flipped the gold seals on his watch fob; then he added, with that little circling gesture of his finger: “Well, he has taken himself away with his own hands.”
“He is dead,” said Mansfield, thrusting out his plowshare jaw, “as all such vermin ought to be. We are too careless in the South of these vicious reptiles. We ought to stamp them out of life whenever we find them. They are a menace to the peace of the land. They incite the slaves to arson and to murder. They are beyond the law, as the panther and the wolf are. We ought to have the courage to destroy the creatures.
“The destiny of this republic,” he added, “is in our hands.”
My Uncle Abner spoke then: “It is in God’s hands,” he said.
“God!” cried Mansfield. “I would not give house room to such a god! When we dawdle, Abner, the Yankees always beat us. Why, man, if this thing runs on, it will wind up in a lawsuit. We shall be stripped of our property by a court’s writ. And instead of imposing our will on this republic, we shall be answering a little New England lawyer with rejoinders and rebuttals.”
“Would the bayonet be a better answer?” said my uncle.
“Now, Abner,” said Mansfield, “you amuse me. These Yankees have no stomach for the bayonet. They are traders, Abner; they handle the shares and the steel-yard.”
My uncle looked steadily at the man.
“Virginia held that opinion of New England when the King’s troops landed,” he said. “It was a common belief. Why, sir, even Washington riding north to the command of the Colonial army, when he heard of the battle of Bunker Hill, did not ask who had won; his only inquiry was, ‘Did the militia of Massachusetts fight?’ It did fight, Mansfield, with immortal courage.”
My Uncle Abner lifted his face and looked out over the great valley, mellow with its ripened corn. His voice fell into a reflective note.
“The situation in this republic,” he said, “is grave, and I am full of fear. In God’s hands the thing would finally adjust itself. In God’s slow, devious way it would finally come out all right. But neither you, Mansfield, nor the abolitionist, will leave the thing to God. You will rush in and settle it with violence. You will find a short cut of your own through God’s deliberate way, and I tremble before the horror of blood that you would plunge us into.”
He paused again, and his big, bronzed features had the serenity of some vast belief.
“To be fair,” he said, “everywhere in this republic, to enforce the law everywhere, to put down violence, to try every man who takes the law in his own hand, fairly in the courts, and, if he is guilty, punish him without fear or favor, according to the letter of the statute, to keep everywhere a public sentiment of fair dealing, by an administration of justice above all public clamor—in this time of heat, this is our only hope of peace!”
He spoke in his deep, level voice, and the words seemed to be concrete things having dimensions and weight.
“Shall a fanatic who stirs up our slaves to murder,” said Mansfield, “be tried like a gentleman before a jury?”
“Aye, Mansfield,” replied my uncle, “like a gentleman, and before a jury! If the fanatic murders the citizen, I would hang him, and if the citizen murders the fanatic, I would hang him too, without one finger’s weight of difference in the method of procedure. I would show New England that the justice of Virginia is even-eyed. And she would emulate that fairness, and all over the land the law would hold against the unrestraint that is gathering.”
“Abner,” cried Mansfield, “you are a dawdler like your god. I know a swifter way.”
“I am ready to believe it,” replied my uncle. “Who killed the mad abolitionist down yonder?”
“Who cares,” said the old man, “since the beast is dead?”
“I care,” replied Abner.
“Then, find it out, Abner, if you care,” said the old man, snapping his jaws.
“I have found it out,” said my uncle, “and it has happened in so strange a way, and with so curious an intervention, that I cannot save the State from shame.”
“It happened in the simplest way imaginable,” said Randolph. “The fool killed himself.”
It was not an unthinkable conclusion. The whole land was wrought up to the highest tension. Men were beginning to hold their properties and their lives as of little account in this tremendous issue. The country was ready to flare up in a war, and to fire it the life of one man would be nothing. A thousand madmen were ready to make that sacrifice of life. That a fanatic would shoot himself in Virginia with the idea that the slave owners would be charged by the country with his murder and so the war brought on, was not a thing improbable in that day’s extremity of passion. To the madman it wo
uld be only the slight sacrifice of his life for the immortal gain of a holy war.
My uncle looked at the Justice with a curious smile.
“I think Mansfield will hardly believe that,” he said.
The old man laughed.
“It is a pretty explanation, Randolph,” he said, “and I commend it to all men, but I do not believe it.”
“Not believe it!” cried the Justice, looking first at my uncle and then at the old man. “Why, Abner, you said the woman spoke the truth!”
“She did speak it,” replied my uncle.
“Damme, man!” cried the Justice. “Why do you beat about? If you believe the woman, why do you gentlemen disbelieve my conclusion on her words?”
“I disbelieve it, Randolph,” replied my uncle, “for the convincing reason that I know who killed him.”
“And I,” cried Mansfield, “disbelieve it for an equally convincing reason—for the most convincing reason in the world, Randolph,”—and his big voice laughed in among the pillars and rafters of his porch—“because I killed him myself!”
Abner sat unmoving, and Randolph like a man past belief. The Justice fumbled with the pistol in his pocket, got it out, and laid it on the flat arm on his chair, but he did not speak. The confession overwhelmed him.
The old man stood up, and the voice in his time-shaken body was Homeric:
“Ho! Ho!” he cried. “And so you thought I would be afraid, Randolph, and dodge about like your little men, shaken and overcome by fear.” And he huddled in his shawl with a dramatic gesture.
“Fear!” And his laugh burst out again in a high staccato. “Even the devils in Abner’s Christian hell lack that! I shot the creature, Randolph! Do you hear the awful words? And do you tremble for me, lest I hang and go to Abner’s hell?”
The mock terror in the old man’s voice and manner was compelling drama. He indicated the pistol on the chair arm.
“Yes,” he said, “it is mine. Abner should have known it by the Mansfield arms.”