John Owens, the surviving witness to Isom Chase’s will, spent his dreary days at the poorhouse whittling long
chains of interlocking rings, and fantastic creatures such as the human eye never beheld in nature, out of soft
pine-wood. He had taken up that diversion shortly after the last of his afflictions, blindness, fell upon him and, as
white pine was cheap, the superintendent of the institution indulged him without stint.
Uncle John, as he was called long years before the hard-riding world threw him, was a preacher back in the days of
his youth, middling manhood and prosperity. He had ridden the country in the Campbellite faith, bringing hundreds into
the fold, with a voice as big as a bull’s, and a long beard, which he wore buttoned under his vest in winter. And
now in his speechlessness, darkness, and silence, he still preached in his way, carving out the beast with seven heads
and ten horns, and female figures of hideous mien, the signification of which nobody rightly knew.
Uncle John had a little slate upon which he wrote his wants, but nobody had discovered any way of communicating with
him save by taking his hand and guiding it to the object for which he had asked. For a long time he had written the one
word “Paint” on his slate. That was the beginning of his use of it, when one word was all that he could get
on a side of it at a time. After his fingers had become sensitive through his new art of whittling and feeling, he
improved his writing, until he made it plain that he wanted paint to adorn his carved figures, so they could be sold.
229
It was the hope of the poor old soul that he could whittle himself out of the poorhouse, and live free and
independent upon the grotesque productions of his knife, if they would give him paint to make them attractive, and thus
get a start. He did not know how fantastic and ridiculous they were, having only his own touch to guide him to judgment
of their merits.
Perhaps he was no less reasonable in this belief than certain painters, musicians, and writers, who place their own
blind value upon the craft of their hands and brains, and will not set them aside for any jury that the world can
impanel.
Uncle John never came to realize his hopes of freedom, any more than he ever came to realize the uselessness of
paint for his angels when he had no eyes for applying it. He whittled on, in melancholy dejection, ring upon ring in
his endless chains of rings, forging in bitter irony the emblems of bondage, when his old heart so longed to be
free.
It was a bright day in the life of Uncle John Owens, then, when Ollie’s lawyer called at the poorhouse and
placed under his hands some slender slips of cardboard bearing raised letters, the A B C of his age.
His bearded old face shone like a window in which a light has been struck as his fluttering fingers ran over the
letters. He fumbled excitedly for his slate which hung about his neck, and his hand trembled as he wrote:
“More–book–more.”
It had been an experiment, the lawyer having doubted whether Uncle John’s untrained fingers, dulled by age,
could pick out the letters, large as they were. He had nothing more to offer, therefore, and no way of answering the
appeal. But that night an order for the New Testament in raised characters for the blind went out from Shelbyville.
Judge Little was making no progress in establishing the will. Nobody had come forward in answer to his
advertisements 230 in the city papers, claiming for himself
the distinction of being Isom Chase’s son. But the judge gave Ollie to understand, in spite of his quiescence
while he searched for the heir, that the courts must settle the question. If there were fees to be had out of that
estate, Judge Little was the man to get them.
Meantime, in his cell in the county jail, Joe Newbolt was bearing the heaviest penance of his life. Alice had not
come again. Two visiting days had passed, and there would be no more before the date of the trial, which was set for
the following Monday. But since that dun morning when she had given him the mignonette, and he had drawn her
unresisting body to the barrier of his prison door, she had visited him no more.
Joe reproached himself for it. He accused himself of having offended beyond forgiveness. In the humiliation which
settled upon him, he wasted like water in the sun. The mignonette which she had given him withered, dried; its perfume
vanished, its blossoms turned gray. She came no more. What did it matter if they convicted him before the judge, said
he, now that Alice had condemned him in her heart. He lamented that he had blundered into such deep offending. His
untutored heart had seen only the reflection of his own desire in her eyes that day. She did not care for him. It was
only pity that he had distorted into love.
He had inquired about her, timidly, of the sheriff, who had looked at him with a slow wink, then formed his mouth
into an egg-shaped aperture and held it so an exasperating while, as if he meant to whistle. The sheriff’s
clownish behavior nettled Joe, for he was at a loss to understand what he meant.
“I thought maybe she’d sent over some books,” said Joe, blushing like a hollyhock.
“Books!” said the sheriff, with a grunt.
“Yes, sir,” Joe answered, respectfully. 231
“Huh, she never sent no books,” said the sheriff, turning away.
After a little he came back and stood before Joe’s door, with his long legs far apart, studying the prisoner
calculatively, as a farmer stands when he estimates the weight of a hog.
“Cree-mo-nee!” said he.
He laughed then, much to Joe’s confusion, and totally beyond his comprehension. The sheriff left him with
that. From the passage his laugh came back.
The day was Friday; Joe plucked up a little hope when he heard the sheriff conducting somebody to the corridor gate.
It was Colonel Price, who had exercised his political influence over the sheriff and induced him to set aside his new
regulations for the day. The colonel made apologies to Joe for what might seem his lack of interest in his welfare.
Joe inquired of him concerning Alice, with respectful dignity. She was well, said the colonel, and asked to be
remembered. What else the colonel said on that occasion Joe did not recall. All that he could think of was that Alice
had desired to be remembered.
What an ironical message to send him, thought Joe. If she only had come herself, and given him the assurance with
her eyes that there was no stored censure, no burning reproach; if she had come, and quieted the doubt, the
uncertainty, of his self-tortured soul. His case had become secondary beside Alice. The colonel talked of it, but Joe
wondered if the mignonette in her garden was dead. The colonel shook his head gravely when he went away from the jail
that day. It was plain that the boy was suffering with that load on his mind and the uncertainty of the outcome
pressing upon him. He mentioned it to Alice.
“I think we’d better try to get him another lawyer,” said the colonel. “Hammer never will be
equal to that job. It 232 will be more the size of Judge
Burns, or one of the old heads. That boy’s in a pickle, Alice, and a mighty tight one, at that.”
“But he’s innocent–you don’t doubt that?” said she.
“Not for a minute,” the colonel declared. “I guess I should have been looking after him closer,
but that picture intervened between us. He’s wearing away to a shadow, chafing and pining there in jail, poor
chap.”
“Do you think he’ll consent to your employing another lawyer for him?” she asked, searching his
face wistfully.
“I don’t know; he’s so set in the notion of loyalty to Hammer–just as if anybody could hurt
Hammer’s feelings! If the boy will consent to it, I’ll hire Judge Burns at my own expense.”
“I don’t suppose he will,” sighed she.
“No, I reckon not, his notions are so high-flown,” the colonel admitted, with evident pride in the lofty
bearing of the widow’s son.
“He’s longing for a run over the hills,” said she. “He told me he was.”
“A year of it in there would kill him,” the colonel said. “We must get him a lawyer who can
disentangle him. I never saw anybody go down like that boy has gone down in the last month. It’s like taking a
wild Indian out of the woods and putting him in a cage.”
The colonel put aside the corn picture for the day, and went out to confer with Judge Burns, a local lawyer who had
gained a wide reputation in the defense of criminal cases. He was a doubly troubled man when he returned home that
evening, for Joe had been firm in his refusal either to dismiss Hammer or admit another to his defense. In the library
he had found Alice, downcast and gloomy, on the margin of tears.
“Why, honey, you mustn’t mope around this way,” he remonstrated gently. “What is
it–what’s gone wrong with my little manager?” 233
She raised up from huddling her head against her arms on the table, pushed her fallen hair back from her eyes and
gave him a wan smile.
“I just felt so lonely and depressed somehow,” said she, placing her hand on his where it lay on the
table. “Never mind me, for I’ll be all right. What did he say?”
“Judge Burns?”
“Joe.”
The colonel drew a chair near and sat down, flinging out his hand with impatient gesture.
“I can’t do anything with him,” said he. “He says one lawyer will do as well as another, and
Hammer’s doing all that can be done. ‘They’ll believe me or they’ll not believe me, colonel,
and that’s all there is to it,’ says he, ‘and the best lawyer in the world can’t change
that.’ And I don’t know but he’s right, too,” the colonel sighed. “He’s got to come
out with that story, every word of it, or there’ll never be a jury picked in the whole State of Missouri
that’ll take any stock in his testimony.”
“It will be a terrible thing for his mother if they don’t believe him,” said she.
“We’ll do all that he’ll allow us to do for him, we can’t do any more. It’s a gloomy
outlook, a gloomy case all through. It was a bad piece of business when that mountain woman bound him out to old Isom
Chase, to take his kicks and curses and live on starvation rations. He’s the last boy in the world that
you’d conceive of being bound out; he don’t fit the case at all.”
“No, he doesn’t,” said she, reflectively.
“But don’t let the melancholy thing settle on you and disturb you, child. He’ll get out of
it–or he’ll not–one way or the other, I reckon. It isn’t a thing for you to take to heart and
worry over. I never should have taken you to that gloomy old jail to see him, at all.” 234
“I can’t forget him there–I’ll always see him there!” she shuddered. “He’s
above them all–they’ll never understand him, never in this world!”
She got up, her hair hanging upon her shoulders, and left him abruptly, as if she had discovered something that lay
in her heart. Colonel Price sat looking after her, his back very straight, his hand upon his knee.
“Well!” said he. Then, after a long ruminative spell: “Well!”
That same hour Hammer was laboring with his client in the jail, as he had labored fruitlessly before, in an endeavor
to induce him to impart to him the thing that he had concealed at the coroner’s inquest into Isom Chase’s
death. Hammer assured him that it would not pass beyond him in case that it had no value in establishing his
innocence.
“Mr. Hammer, sir,” said Joe, with unbending dignity and firmness, “if the information you ask of
me was mine to give, freely and honorably, I’d give it. You can see that. Maybe something will turn up between
now and Monday that will make a change, but if not, you’ll have to do the best you can for me the way it stands.
Maybe I oughtn’t expect you to go into the court and defend me, seeing that I can’t help you any more than
I’m doing. If you feel that you’d better drop out of the case, you’re free to do it, without any hard
feelings on my part, sir.”
Hammer had no intention of dropping the case, hopeless as he felt the defense to be. Even defeat would be glorious,
and loss profitable, for his connection with the defense would sound his name from one end of the state to the
other.
“I wouldn’t desert you in the hour of your need, Joe, for anything they could name,” said Hammer,
with significant suggestion.
His manner, more than his words, carried the impression that they had named sums, recognizing in him an insuperable
235 barrier to the state’s case, but that he had put
his tempters aside with high-born scorn.
“Thank you,” said Joe.
“But if Missis Chase was mixed up in it any way, I want you to tell me, Joe,” he pressed.
Joe said nothing. He looked as stiff and hard as one of the iron hitching-posts in front of the court-house, thought
Hammer, the side of his face turned to the lawyer, who measured it with quick eyes.
“Was she, Joe?” whispered Hammer, leaning forward, his face close to the bars.
“The coroner asked me that,” replied Joe, harshly.
This unyielding quality of his client was baffling to Hammer, who was of the opinion that a good fatherly kick might
break the crust of his reserve. Hammer had guessed the answer according to his own thick reasoning, and not very
pellucid morals.
“Well, if you take the stand, Joe, they’ll make you tell it then,” Hammer warned him.
“You’d better tell me in advance, so I can advise you how much to say.”
“I’ll have to get on somehow without your advice, thank you sir, Mr. Hammer, when it comes to how much
to say,” said Joe.
“There’s not many lawyers–and I’ll tell you that right now in a perfectly plain and friendly
way–that’d go ahead with your case under the conditions,” said Hammer. “But as I told you,
I’ll stick to you and see you through. I wash my hands of any blame for the case, Joe, if it don’t turn out
exactly the way you expect.”
Joe saw him leave without regret, for Hammer’s insistence seemed to him inexcusably vulgar. All men could not
be like him, reflected Joe, his hope leaping forward to Judge Maxwell, whom he must soon confront.
Joe tossed the night through with his longing for Alice, 236 which gnawed him like hunger and would not yield to sleep, for in his dreams his heart went
out after her; he heard her voice caressing his name. He woke with the feeling that he must put the thought of Alice
away from him, and frame in his mind what he should say when it came his turn to stand before Judge Maxwell and tell
his story. If by some hinted thing, some shade of speech, some qualification which a gentleman would grasp and
understand, he might convey his reason to the judge, he felt that he must come clear.
He pondered it a long time, and the face of the judge rose before him, and the eyes were brown and the hair in soft
wavelets above a white forehead, and Alice stood in judgment over him. So it always ended; it was before Alice that he
must plead and justify himself. She was his judge, his jury, and his world.
It was mid-afternoon when Mrs. Newbolt arrived for her last visit before the trial. She came down to his door in her
somber dress, tall, bony and severe, thinner of face herself than she had been before, her eyes bright with the
affection for her boy which her tongue never put into words. Her shoes were muddy, and the hem of her skirt draggled,
for, high as she had held it in her heavy tramp, it had become splashed by the pools in the soft highway.
“Mother, you shouldn’t have come today over the bad roads,” said Joe with affectionate
reproof.
“Lands, what’s a little mud!” said she, putting down a small bundle which she bore. “Well,
it’ll be froze up by tomorrow, I reckon, it’s turnin’ sharp and cold.”
She looked at Joe anxiously, every shadow in his worn face carving its counterpart in her heart. There was no smile
of gladness on her lips, for smiles had been so long apart from her life that the nerves which commanded them had grown
stiff and hard.
“Yes,” said Joe, taking up her last words, “winter will 237 be here in a little while now. I’ll be out then, Mother, to lay in wood for you. It
won’t be long now.”
“Lord bless you, son!” said she, the words catching in her throat, tears rising to her eyes and standing
so heavy that she must wipe them away.
“It will all be settled next week,” Joe told her confidently.
“I hope they won’t put it off no more,” said she wearily.
“No; Hammer says they’re sure to go ahead this time.”
“Ollie drove over yesterday evening and brought your things from Isom’s,” said she, lifting the
bundle from the floor, forcing it to him between the bars. “I brought you a couple of clean shirts, for I knew
you’d want one for tomorrow.”
“Yes, Mother, I’m glad you brought them,” said Joe.
“Ollie, she said she never would make you put in the rest of your time there if she had anything to say about
it. But she said if Judge Little got them letters of administration he was after she expected he’d try to hold us
to it, from what he said.”
“No matter, Mother.”
“And Ollie said if she ever did come into Isom’s property she’d make us a deed to our
place.”
Mrs. Newbolt’s face bore a little gleam of hope when she told him this. Joe looked at her kindly.
“She could afford to, Mother,” said he, “it was paid for in interest on that loan to
Isom.”
“But Isom, he never would ’a’ give in to that,” said she. “Your pap he paid twelve per
cent interest on that loan for sixteen years.”
“I figured it all up, Mother,” said he.
There was nothing for her to sit on in the corridor; she stood holding to the bars to take some of the weight from
her tired feet.
“I don’t want to hurry you off, Mother,” said Joe, “but 238 I hate to see you standing there all tired out. If the sheriff was a gentleman he’d
fetch you a chair. I don’t suppose there’d be any use in asking him.”
“Never mind, Joe, it takes more than a little walk like that to play me out.”
“You’d better stop in at Colonel Price’s and rest a while before you start back,” he
suggested.
“Maybe I will,” said she.
She plunged her hand into the black draw-string bag which she carried on her arm, rummaging among its contents.
“That little rambo tree you planted a couple of years ago had two apples on it,” she told him,
“but I never noticed ’em all summer, the leaves was so thick and it was such a little feller,
anyhow.”
“It is a little one to begin bearing,” said Joe, with a boy’s interest in a thing that he has done
with his own hand turning out to be something.
“Yes; and I aimed to leave them on the tree till you could see them, but the hard wind yesterday shook
’em off. Here they are, I’ve fetched ’em to you, son.”
Joe took the apples, the recollection of the high hopes which he had centered around that little apple-tree when he
planted it coming back to him like a scented wind at dawn. He had planned to make that tree the nucleus of an orchard,
which was to grow and spread until it covered the old home place, the fields adjoining, and lifted the curse of poverty
from the Newbolt name. It had been a boyish plan which his bondage to Isom Chase had set back.
He had not given it up for a day while he labored in Chase’s fields. When he became his own man he always
intended to take it up and put it through. Now, there in his hand, was the first fruit of his big intention, and in
that moment Joe reviewed his old pleasant dream.
He saw again as he had pictured it before, to the relief of 239 many a long, hot day in Isom’s fields, his thousand trees upon the hills, the laden
wagons rolling to the station with his barrels of fruit, some of it to go to far lands across the sea. He saw again the
stately house with its white columns and deep porticoes, in the halls of which his fancy had reveled many a happy hour,
and he saw–the bars of his stone cell and his mother’s work-hardened hands clasping them, while she looked
at him with the pain of her sad heart speaking from her eyes. A heavy tear rolled down his hollow cheek and fell upon
the apples in his hand.
For the pain of prison he had not wept, nor for its shame. The vexing circumstance of being misunderstood, the dread
threat of the future had not claimed a tear. But for a dream which had sprung like a sweet flower in his young heart
and had passed away like a mist, he wept.
His mother knew nothing about that blasted dream; the gloom of his cell concealed his tears. He rubbed the fruit
along his coat sleeve, as if to make it shine, as a fruiterer polishes the apples in his stall.
“All right, Mother, I’m glad you brought them,” he said, although there was no gladness in his
voice.
“I planned to fetch you in some fried chicken today, too,” said she, “but the pesky rooster I had
under the tub got away when I went to take him out. If you’d like some, Joe, I’ll come back
tomorrow.”
“No, no; don’t you tramp over here tomorrow, Mother,” he admonished, “and don’t bother
about the chicken. I don’t seem to have any appetite any more. But you wait till I’m out of here a day or
two; then you’ll see me eat.”
“Well, then I guess I’ll be goin’ on back, Joe; and bright and early Monday morning I’ll be
on hand at the court. Maybe we’ll be able to go home together that evenin’, son.”
“Hammer says it will take two or three days,” Joe told her, “but I don’t see what they can
do to make it string out 240 that long. I could tell them all
about it in ten minutes. So we mustn’t put our hopes too high on Monday, Mother.”
“I’ll beseech the Lord all day tomorrow, son, to open their ears that they may hear,” said she
solemnly. “And when the time comes to speak tell it all, Joe, tell it all!”
“Yes, Mother, when the time comes,” said he gently.
“Tell ’em all Isom said to you, son,” she charged.
“Don’t you worry over that now, Mother.”
She felt that her son drew away from her, in his haughty manner of self-sufficiency, as he spoke. She sighed,
shaking her head sadly. “Well, I’ll be rackin’ off home,” she said.
“If you stop at the colonel’s to rest a while, Mother–and I wish you would, for you’re all
tired out–you might hand this book back to Miss Price. She loaned it to me. Tell her I read it long ago, and
I’d have sent it back before now, only I thought she might come after it herself some time.”
His mother turned to him, a curious expression in her face.
“Don’t she come any more, Joe?”
“She’s been busy with other things, I guess,” said he.
“Maybe,” she allowed, with a feeling of resentment against the book on account of its cold, unfriendly
owner.
She had almost reached the corridor gate when Joe called after her.
“No, don’t tell her that,” he requested. “Don’t tell her anything. Just hand it back,
please, Mother.”
“Whatever you say, Joe.”
Joe heard the steel gate close after her and the sheriff’s voice loud above his mother’s as they went
toward the door.
Loyal as he was to his mother, the thought of her went out with her, and in her place stood the slender figure of
youth, her lips “like a thread of scarlet.” One day more to wait for the event of his justification and
vindication, or at least the beginning of it, thought Joe.
Ah, if Alice only would come to lighten the interval!
The court-house at Shelbyville was a red brick structure with long windows. From the joints of its walls the mortar
was falling. It lay all around the building in a girdle of gray, like an encircling ant-hill, upon the green lawn.
Splendid sugar-maples grew all about the square, in the center of which the court-house stood, and close around the
building.
In a corner of the plaza, beneath the largest and oldest of these spreading trees, stood a rotting block of wood, a
section of a giant tree-trunk, around which centered many of the traditions of the place. It was the block upon which
negro slaves had been auctioned in the fine old days before the war.
There was a bench beside the approach to the main door, made from one of the logs of the original court-house, built
in that square more than sixty years before the day that Joe Newbolt stood to answer for the murder of Isom Chase. The
old men of the place sat there in the summer days, whittling and chewing tobacco and living over again the stirring
incidents of their picturesque past. Their mighty initials were cut in the tough wood of the bench, to endure long
after them and recall memories of the hands which carved them so strong and deep.
Within the court-house itself all was very much like it had had been at the beginning. The court-room was furnished
with benches, the judge sat behind a solemn walnut desk. The woodwork of the room was thick with many layers of paint,
the last one of them grim and blistered now, scratched by stout finger-nails and prying knife-blades. The stairway
242 leading from the first floor ascended in a broad sweep,
with a turn half-way to the top.
The wall along this stairway was battered and broken, as if the heels of reluctant persons, dragged hither for
justice to be pronounced upon them, had kicked it in protest as they passed. It was as solemn and gloomy a stairway as
ever was seen in a temple of the law. Many had gone up it in their generation in hope, to descend it in despair. Its
treads were worn to splinters; its balustrade was hacked by the knives of generations of loiterers. There was no window
in the wall giving upon it; darkness hung over its first landing on the brightest day. The just and the unjust alike
were shrouded in its gloomy penumbra as they passed. It was the solemn warder at the gate, which seemed to cast a taint
over all who came, and fasten a cloud upon them which they must stand in the white light of justice to purge away.
When the civil war began, the flag of the Union was taken down from the cupola of the court-house. In all the years
that had passed since its close, the flag never had been hoisted to its place of honor again. That event was not to
take place, indeed, until twenty years or more after the death of Isom Chase, when the third court-house was built, and
the old generation had passed away mainly, and those who remained of it had forgotten. But that incident is an
incursion into matters which do not concern this tale.
Monday morning came on dull and cloudy. Shelbyville itself was scarcely astir, its breakfast fires no more than
kindled, when the wagons of farmers and the straggling troops of horsemen from far-lying districts began to come in and
seek hitching-room around the court-house square. It looked very early in the day as if there was going to be an
unusual crowd for the unusual event of a trial for murder.
Isom Chase had been widely known. His unsavory reputation had spread wider than the sound of the best deeds of
243 the worthiest man in the county. It was not so much on
account of the notoriety of the old man, which had not died with him, as the mystery in the manner of his death, that
people were anxious to attend the trial.
It was not known whether Joe Newbolt was to take the witness-stand in his own behalf. It rested with him and his
lawyer to settle that; under the law he could not be forced to testify. The transcript of his testimony at the inquest
was ready at the prosecutor’s hand. Joe would be confronted with that, and, if there was a spark of spunk in him,
people said, he would rise up and stand by it. And then, once Sam Lucas got him in the witness-chair, it would be all
day with his evasions and concealments.
Both sides had made elaborate preparations for the trial. The state had summoned forty witnesses; Hammer’s
list was half as long. It was a question in the public speculation what either side expected to prove or disprove with
this train of people. Certainly, Hammer expected to prove very little. His chief aim was to consume as much time before
the jury as possible, and disport himself in the public eye as long as he could drag out an excuse. His witnesses were
all from among the old settlers in the Newbolt neighborhood over in Sni, who had the family record from the date of the
Kentucky hegira. They were summoned for the purpose of sustaining and adding color to the picture which Hammer intended
to draw of his client’s well-known honesty and clean past.
Fully an hour before Judge Maxwell arrived to open court, the benches down toward the front were full. This vantage
ground had been preempted mainly by the old men whose hearing was growing dim. They sat there with their old hands, as
brown as blackberry roots, clasped over their sticks and umbrellas, their peaked old chins up, their eyes alert. Here
and there among them sat an ancient dame, shawled and kerchiefed, for the day was chill; and from them 244 all there rose the scent of dry tobacco-leaves, and out of their
midst there sounded the rustling of paper-bags and the cracking of peanut-shells.
“Gosh m’ granny!” said Captain Bill Taylor, deputy sheriff, as he stood a moment after placing a
pitcher of water and a glass on the bench, ready for Judge Maxwell’s hand. “They’re here from
Necessity to Tribulation!”
Of course the captain was stretching the territory represented by that gathering somewhat, for those two historic
post offices lay farther away from Shelbyville than the average inhabitant of that country ever journeyed in his life.
But there was no denying that they had come from surprising distances.
There was Uncle Posen Spratt, from Little Sugar Creek, with his steer’s-horn ear trumpet; and there were Nick
Proctor and his wife, July, from the hills beyond Destruction, seventeen miles over a road that pitched from end to end
when it didn’t slant from side to side, and took a shag-barked, sharp-shinned, cross-eyed wind-splitter to
travel. There sat old Bev Munday, from Blue Cut, who hadn’t been that far away from home since Jesse James got
after him, with his old brown hat on his head; and it was two to one in the opinion of everybody that he’d keep
it there till the sheriff ordered him to lift it off. Hiram Lee, from Sni-a-bar Township was over there in the corner
where he could slant up and spit out of the window, and there was California Colboth, as big around the waist as a cow,
right behind him. She had came over in her dish-wheeled buggy from Green Valley, and she was staying with her married
son, who worked on the railroad and lived in that little pink-and-blue house behind the water-tank.
Oh, you could stand there–said Captain Taylor–and name all the old settlers for twenty-seven mile in a
ring! But the captain hadn’t the time, even if he was taken with the 245 inclination, for the townspeople began to come, and it was his duty to stand at the door and
shut off the stream when all the benches were full.
That was Judge Maxwell’s order; nobody was to be allowed to stand around the walls or in the aisles and jig
and shuffle and kick up a disturbance just when the lawyers or witnesses might be saying something that the captain
would be very anxious to hear. The captain indorsed the judge’s mandate, and sustained his judgment with internal
warmth.
General Bryant and Colonel Moss Punton came early, and sat opposite each other in the middle of the aisle, each on
the end of a bench, where they could look across and exchange opinions, yet escape being crowded by the mongrel stock
which was sure to come pouring in soon. A good many unnoted sons of distinguished fathers arrived in pairs and troops,
with perfumery on their neckties and chewing-gum in their teeth; and their sisters, for the greater part as lovely as
they were knotty, warty, pimply, and weak-shanked, came after them in churchlike decorum and settled down on the
benches like so many light-winged birds. But not without a great many questioning glances and shy explorations around
them, not certain that this thing was proper and admissible, it being such a mixed and dry-tobacco atmosphere. Seeing
mothers here, grandfathers there, uncles and aunts, cousins and neighbors everywhere, they settled down, assured, to
enjoy the day.
It was a delightfully horrid thing to be tried for murder, they said, even though one was obscure and nobody, a
bound servant in the fields of the man whom he had slain. Especially if one came off clear.
Then Hammer arrived with three law-books under his arm. He was all sleek and shining, perfumed to the last possible
drop. His alpaca coat had been replaced by a longer one of broadcloth, his black necktie surely was as dignified and
246 somberly learned of droop as Judge Burns’, or Judge
Little’s, or Attorney Pickell’s, who got Perry Norris off for stealing old man Purvis’ cow.
Mrs. Newbolt was there already, awaiting him at the railing which divided the lawyers from the lawed, lawing, and,
in some cases, outlawed. She was so unobtrusive in her rusty black dress, which looked as if it were made of
storm-streaked umbrellas, that nobody had noticed her.
Now, when they saw her stand and shake hands with Hammer, and saw Hammer obsequiously but conspicuously conduct her
to a chair within the sacred precincts of the bar, there were whisperings and straightenings of backs, and a stirring
of feet with that concrete action which belongs peculiarly to a waiting, expectant crowd, but is impossible to
segregate or individually define.
Judge Maxwell opened the door of his chamber, which had stood tall and dark and solemnly closed all morning just a
little way behind the bench, and took his place. At the same moment the sheriff, doubtless timing himself to the
smooth-working order, came in from the witness-room, opening from the court-room at the judge’s right hand, with
the prisoner.
Joe hesitated a little as the sheriff closed the door behind them, his hand on the prisoner’s shoulder, as if
uncertain of what was next required of him. The sheriff pushed him forward with commanding gesture toward the table at
which Hammer stood, and Joe proceeded to cross the room in the fire of a thousand eyes.
It seemed to him that the sheriff might have made the entrance less spectacular, that he could have brought him
sooner, or another way. That was like leading him across a stage, with the audience all in place, waiting the event.
But Joe strode along ahead of the sheriff with his head up, his long, shaggy hair smoothed into some semblance of
order, 247 his spare garments short and outgrown upon his
bony frame. His arms were ignominiously bound in the sheriff’s handcuffs, linked together by half a foot of
dangling chain.
That stirring sigh of mingled whispers and deep-drawn breaths ran over the room again; here and there someone half
rose for a better look. The dim-eyed old men leaned forward to see what was coming next; Uncle Posen Spratt put up his
steer’s-horn trumpet as if to blow the blast of judgment out of his ear.
Joe sat in the chair which Hammer indicated; the sheriff released one hand from the manacles and locked the other to
the arm of the chair. Then Captain Taylor closed the door, himself on the outside of it, and walked down to the front
steps of the court-house with slow and stately tread. There he lifted his right hand, as if to command the attention of
the world, and pronounced in loud voice this formula:
“Oy’s, oy’s, oy’s! The hon’r’bl’ circuit court of the humteenth
judicial de-strict is now in session, pursu’nt t’ ’j’urnm’nt!”
Captain Taylor turned about as the last word went echoing against the First National Bank, and walked slowly up the
stairs. He opened the court-room door and closed it; he placed his back against it, and folded his arms upon his
breast, his eyes fixed upon a stain on the wall.
Judge Maxwell took up some papers from the desk, and spread one of them before him.
“In the matter of Case No. 79, State vs. Newbolt. Gentlemen, are you ready for trial?”
The judge spoke in low and confidential voice, meant for the attorneys at the bar only. It scarcely carried to the
back of the room, filled with the sound-killing vapors from five hundred mouths, and many of the old men in the front
seats failed to catch it, even though they cupped their hands behind their ears. 248
Sam Lucas, prosecuting attorney, rose.
Slight and pale, with a thin chest and a stoop forward, he was distinguished by the sharp eyes beside his
flat-bridged nose, so flattened out, it seemed, by some old blow, that they could almost communicate with each other
across it. His light, loose hair was very long; when he warmed up in speaking he shook it until it tumbled about his
eyes. Then it was his habit to sweep it back with the palm of his hand in a long, swinging movement of the arm. It was
a most expressive gesture; it seemed as if by it he rowed himself back into the placid waters of reasoning. Now, as he
stood before Judge Maxwell, he swept his palm over his forelock, although it lay snug and unruffled in its place.
“Your honor, the state is ready,” said he, and remained standing.
Hammer pushed his books along the table, shuffled his papers, and rose ponderously. He thrust his right hand into
the bosom of his coat and leaned slightly against the left in an attitude of scholarly preparedness.
“Your honor, the defense is ready,” he announced.
Joe, his face as white as some plant that has sprung in a dungeon, bent his head toward his mother, and placed his
free hand on hers where it lay on the arm of her chair.
“It will soon be over with now, Mother,” he encouraged, with the hope in his heart that it would,
indeed, be so.
With an underling in his place at the door, Captain Taylor advanced to take charge of the marshaling of the jury
panel. There ensued a great bustling and tramping as the clerk called off the names of those drawn.
While this was proceeding, Joe cast his eyes about the room, animated by a double hope: that Alice would be there to
hear him tell his story; that Morgan had come and was in waiting to supply the facts which honor sealed upon his own
tongue. He could see only the first few rows of benches with the certainty of individual identification; they were
filled with strangers. Beyond them it was conglomerate, that fused and merged thing which seemed a thousand faces, yet
one; that blended and commingled mass which we call the public. Out of the mass Joe Newbolt could not sift the lean,
shrewd face of Curtis Morgan, nor glean from it the brown hair of Alice Price.
The discovery that Alice was not there smote him with a feeling of sudden hopelessness and abandonment; the
reproaches which he had kindled against himself in his solitary days in jail rose up in redoubled torture. He blamed
the rashness of an unreasoning moment in which he had forgotten time and circumstance. Her interest was gone from him
250 now, where, if he had waited for vindication, he might
have won her heart.
But it was a dream, at the best, he confessed, turning away from his hungry search of the crowd, his head drooping
forward in dejection. What did it matter for the world’s final exculpation, if Alice were not there to hear?
His mother nodded to somebody, and touched his hand. Ollie it was, whom she greeted. She was seated near at hand,
beside a fat woman with a red and greasy face, whose air of protection and large interest proclaimed her a relative.
Joe thought that she filled pretty well the bill that Ollie had made out of her mother, on that day when she had
scorned her for having urged her into marriage with Isom.
Ollie was very white in her black mourning dress, and thinner of features than when he had seen her last. She
smiled, and nodded to him, with an air of timid questioning, as if doubtful whether he had expected it, and uncertain
how it would be received. Joe bowed his head, respectfully.
What a wayside flower she seemed, thought he; how common beside Alice! Yet, she had been bright and refreshing in
the dusty way where he had found her. He wondered why she was not within the rail also, near Hammer, if she was for
him; or near the prosecutor, if she was on the other side.
He was not alone in this speculation. Many others wondered over that point also. It was the public expectation that
she naturally would assist the state in the punishment of her husband’s slayer; but Sam Lucas was not paying the
slightest attention to her, and it was not known whether he even had summoned her as a witness.
And now Captain Taylor began to create a fresh commotion by clearing the spectators from the first row of benches to
make seats for the jury panel. Judge Maxwell was waiting the restoration of order, leaning back in his chair. Joe
scanned his face. 251
Judge Maxwell was tall and large of frame, from which the study and abstemiousness of his life had worn all
superfluous flesh. His face, cleanly shaved, was expressive of the scholarly attainments which made his decisions a
national standard. The judge’s eyes were bushed over with great, gray brows, the one forbidding cast in his
countenance; they looked out upon those who came for judgment before him through a pair of spring-clamp spectacles
which seemed to ride precariously upon his large, bony nose. The glasses were tied to a slender black braid, which he
wore looped about his neck.
His hair was long, iron-gray, and thick; he wore it brushed straight back from his brow, without a parting or a
break. It lay in place so smoothly and persistently through all the labor of his long days, that strangers were
sometimes misled into the belief that it was not his own. This peculiar fashion of dressing his hair, taken with the
length and leanness of his jaw, gave the judge a cast of aquiline severeness which his gray eyes belied when they
beamed over the tops of his glasses at floundering young counsel or timid witness.
Yet they could shoot darts of fire, as many a rash lawyer who had fallen under their censure could bear witness. At
such moments the judge had a peculiar habit of drawing up his long back and seemingly to distend himself with all the
dignity which his cumulative years and honors had endured, and of bowing his neck to make the focus of his eyes more
direct as he peered above his rimless glasses. He did not find it necessary to reprimand an attorney often, never more
than once, but these occasions never were forgotten. In his twenty-five years’ service on the bench, he never had
been reversed.
Joe felt a revival of hope again under the influence of these preparations for the trial. Perhaps Alice was there,
somewhere among the people back in the room, he thought. And 252 the colonel, also, and maybe Morgan. Who could tell? There was no use in abandoning hope when
he was just where he could see a little daylight.
Joe sat up again, and lifted his head with new confidence. His mother sat beside him, watching everything with a
sharpness which seemed especially bent on seeing that Joe was given all his rights, and that nothing was omitted nor
slighted that might count in his favor.
She watched Hammer, and Captain Taylor; she measured Sam Lucas, the prosecutor, and she weighed the judge. When
Hammer did something that pleased her, she nodded; when the prosecutor interposed, or seemed to be blocking the
progress of the case, she shook her head in severe censure.
And now Joe came in for his first taste of the musty and ancient savor of the law. He had hoped that morning to walk
away free at evening, or at least to have met the worst that was to come, chancing it that Morgan failed to appear and
give him a hand. But he saw the hours waste away with the most exasperating fiddling, fussing and scratching over
unprofitable straw.
What Hammer desired in a juryman, the prosecuting attorney was hotly against, and what pleased the state’s
attorney seemed to give Hammer a spasmodic chill. Instead of selecting twelve intelligent men, the most intelligent of
the sixty empaneled, both Hammer and the prosecutor seemed determined to choose the most dense.
That day’s sweating labor resulted in the selection of four jurymen. Hammer seemed cheered. He said he had
expected to exhaust the panel and get no more than two, at the best. Now it seemed as if they might secure the full
complement without drawing another panel, and that would save them at least four days. That must have been an
exceedingly lucky haul of empty heads, indeed.
Joe could not see any reason for elation. The prospect 253
of freedom–or the worst–had withdrawn so far that there was not even a pin-point of daylight in the gloom.
Alice had not shown her face. If she had come at all, she had withheld herself from his hungry eyes. His heart was as
bleak that night as the mind of the densest juryman agreed upon between Hammer and the attorney for the state.
Next day, to the surprise of everybody, the jury was completed. And then there followed, on the succeeding morning,
a recital by the prosecuting attorney of what he proposed and expected to prove in substantiation of the charge that
Joe Newbolt had shot and killed Isom Chase; and Hammer’s no shorter statement of what he was prepared to show to
the contrary.
Owing to the unprecedented interest, and the large number of people who had driven in from the country, Judge
Maxwell unbent from his hard conditions on that day. He instructed Captain Taylor to admit spectators to standing-room
along the walls, but to keep the aisles between the benches clear.
This concession provided for at least a hundred more onlookers and listeners, who stood forgetful of any ache in
their shanks throughout the long and dragging proceedings well satisfied, believing that the coming sensations would
repay them for any pangs of inconvenience they might suffer.
It was on the afternoon of the third day of the trial that Sol Greening, first witness for the state, was
called.
Sol retailed again, in his gossipy way, and with immense enjoyment of his importance, the story of the tragedy as he
had related it at the inquest. Sam Lucas gave him all the rope he wanted, even led him into greater excursions than Sol
had planned. Round-about excursions, to be sure, and inconsequential in effect, but they all led back to the tragic
picture of Joe Newbolt standing beside the dead body of Isom Chase, his hat in his hand, as if he had been interrupted
on the point of escape. 254
Sol seemed a wonderfully acute man for the recollection of details, but there was one thing that had escaped his
memory. He said he did not remember whether, when he knocked on the kitchen door, anybody told him to come in or not.
He was of the opinion, to the best of his knowledge and belief–the words being supplied by the
prosecutor–that he just knocked, and stood there blowing a second or two, like a horse that had been put to a
hard run, and then went in without being bidden. Sol believed that was the way of it; he had no recollection of anybody
telling him to come in.
When it came Hammer’s turn to question the witness, he rose with an air of patronizing assurance. He called
Sol by his first name, in easy familiarity, although he never had spoken to him before that day. He proceeded as if he
intended to establish himself in the man’s confidence by gentle handling, and in that manner cause him to
confound, refute and entangle himself by admissions made in gratitude.
But Sol was a suspicious customer. He hesitated and he hummed, backed and sidled, and didn’t know anything
more than he had related. The bag of money which had been found with Isom’s body had been introduced by the state
for identification by Sol. Hammer took up the matter with a sudden turn toward sharpness and belligerency.
“You say that this is the same sack of money that was there on the floor with Isom Chase’s body when you
entered the room?” he asked.
“That’s it,” nodded Sol.
“Tell this jury how you know it’s the same one!” ordered Hammer, in stern voice.
“Well, I seen it,” said Sol.
“Oh, yes, you saw it. Well, did you go over to it and make a mark on it so you’d know it
again?”
“No, I never done that,” admitted Sol. 255
“Don’t you know the banks are full of little sacks of money like that?” Hammer wanted to know.
“I reckon maybe they air,” Sol replied.
“And this one might be any one of a thousand like it, mightn’t it, Sol?”
“Well, I don’t reckon it could. That’s the one Isom had.”
“Did you step over where the dead body was at and heft it?”
“’Course I never,” said Sol.
“Did you open it and count the money in it, or tie a string or something onto it so you’d know it when
you saw it again?”
“No, I never,” said Sol sulkily.
“Then how do you know this is it?”
“I tell you I seen it,” persisted Sol.
“Oh, you seen it!” repeated Hammer, sweeping the jury a cunning look as if to apprise them that he had
found out just what he wanted to know, and that upon that simple admission he was about to turn the villainy of Sol
Greening inside out for them to see with their own intelligent eyes.
“Yes, I said I seen it,” maintained Sol, bristling up a little.
“Yes, I heard you say it, and now I want you to tell this jury how you know!”
Hammer threw the last word into Sol’s face with a slam that made him jump. Sol turned red under the whiskers,
around the whiskers, and all over the uncovered part of him. He shifted in his chair; he swallowed.
“Well, I don’t just know,” said he.
“No, you don’t–just–know!” sneered Hammer, glowing in oily triumph. He looked at the
jury confidentially, as on the footing of a shrewd man with his equally shrewd audience.
Then he took up the old rifle, and Isom’s bloody coat and shirt, which were also there as exhibits, and
dressed Sol down 256 on all of them, working hard to create
the impression in the minds of the jurors that Sol Greening was a born liar, and not to be depended on in the most
trivial particular.
Hammer worked himself up into a sweat and emitted a great deal of perfume of barberish–and
barbarous–character, and glanced around the court-room with triumph in his eyes and satisfaction at the corners
of his mouth.
He came now to the uncertainty of Sol’s memory on the matter of being bidden to enter the kitchen when he
knocked. Sol had now passed from doubt to certainty. Come to think it over, said he, nobody had said a word when he
knocked at that door. He remembered now that it was as still inside the house as if everybody was away.
Mrs. Greening was standing against the wall, having that moment returned to the room from ministering to her
daughter’s baby. She held the infant in her arms, waiting Sol’s descent from the witness-chair so she might
settle down in her place without disturbing the proceedings. When she heard her husband make this positive declaration,
her mouth fell open and her eyes widened in surprise.
“Why Sol,” she spoke up reprovingly, “you told me Joe––”
It had taken the prosecuting attorney that long to glance around and spring to his feet. There his voice, in a loud
appeal to the court for the protection of his sacred rights, drowned that of mild Mrs. Greening. The judge rapped, the
sheriff rapped; Captain Taylor, from his post at the door, echoed the authoritative sound.
Hammer abruptly ceased his questioning of Sol, after the judge had spoken a few crisp words of admonishment, not
directed in particular at Mrs. Greening, but more to the public at large, regarding the decorum of the court. Sam Lucas
thereupon took Sol in hand again, and drew him on to replace his former doubtful statement by his later 257 conclusion. As Sol left the witness-chair Hammer smiled. He handed
Mrs. Greening’s name to the clerk, and requested a subpoena for her as a witness for the defense.
Sol’s son Dan was the next witness, and Hammer put him through a similar course of sprouts. Judge Maxwell
allowed Hammer to disport uncurbed until it became evident that, if given his way, the barber-lawyer would drag the
trial out until Joe was well along in middle life. He then admonished Hammer that there were bounds fixed for human
existence, and that the case must get on.
Hammer was a bit uppish and resentful. He stood on his rights; he invoked the sacred constitution; he referred to
the revised statutes; he put his hand into his coat and spread his legs to make a memorable protest.
Judge Maxwell took him in hand very kindly and led safely past the point of explosion with a smile of indulgence.
With that done, the state came to Constable Bill Frost and his branching mustaches, which he had trimmed up and soaped
back quite handsomely.
To his own credit and the surprise of the lawyers who were watching the case, Hammer made a great deal of the point
of Joe having gone to Frost, voluntarily and alone, to summon him to the scene of the tragedy. Frost admitted that he
had believed Joe’s story until Sol Greening had pointed out to him the suspicious circumstances.
“So you have to have somebody else to do your thinkin’ for you, do you?” said Hammer. “Well,
you’re a fine officer of the law and a credit to this state!”
“I object!” said the prosecuting attorney, standing up in his place, very red around the eyes.
The judge smiled, and the court-room tittered. The sheriff looked back over his shoulder and rapped the table for
order.
“Comment is unnecessary, Mr. Hammer,” said the judge. “Proceed with the case.” 258
And so that weary day passed in trivial questioning on both sides, trivial bickerings, and waste of time, to the
great edifications of everybody but Joe and his mother, and probably the judge. Ten of the state’s forty
witnesses were disposed of, and Hammer was as moist as a jug of cold water in a shock of wheat.
When the sheriff started to take Joe back to jail, the lad stood for a moment searching the breaking-up and moving
assembly with longing eyes. All day he had sat with his back to the people, not having the heart to look around with
that shameful handcuff and chain binding his arm to the chair. If Alice had been there, or Colonel Price, neither had
come forward to wish him well.
There were Ollie and her mother, standing as they had risen from their bench, waiting for the crowd ahead of them to
set in motion toward the door, and here and there a face from his own neighborhood. But Alice was not among them. She
had withdrawn her friendship from him in his darkest hour.
Neither had Morgan appeared to put his shoulder under the hard-pressing load and relieve him of its weight. Day by
day it was growing heavier; but a little while remained until it must crush out his hope forever. Certainly, there was
a way out without Morgan; there was a way open to him leading back into the freedom of the world, where he might walk
again with the sunlight on his face. A word would make it clear.
But the sun would never strike again into his heart if he should go back to it under that coward’s reprieve,
and Alice–Alice would scorn his memory.