It was a day to make glad the heart of
slave or freeman. The earth was cool
from a night-long rain, and a gentle breeze
fanned coolness from the north all day
long. The clouds were snow-white, tumbling,
ever-moving, and between them the
sky showed blue and deep. Grass, leaf,
weed and flower were in the richness that
comes to the green things of the earth just
before that full tide of summer whose
foam is drifting thistle down. The air was
clear and the mountains seemed to have
brushed the haze from their faces and
drawn nearer that they, too, might better
see the doings of that day.
From the four winds of heaven, that
morning, came the brave and the free. Up
from Lee, down from Little Stone Gap,
and from over in Scott, came the valley-
farmers--horseback, in buggies, hacks,
two-horse wagons, with wives, mothers,
sisters, sweethearts, in white dresses,
flowered hats, and many ribbons, and
with dinner-baskets stuffed with good
things to eat--old ham, young chicken,
angel-cake and blackberry wine--to be
spread in the sunless shade of great
poplar and oak. From Bum Hollow
and Wildcat Valley and from up the
slopes that lead to Cracker's Neck came
smaller tillers of the soil--as yet but
faintly marked by the gewgaw trappings
of the outer world; while from beyond
High Knob, whose crown is in cloud-land,
and through the Gap, came the mountaineer
in the primitive simplicity of home
spun and cowhide, wide-brimmed hat and
poke-bonnet, quaint speech, and slouching
gait. Through the Gap he came in two
streams--the Virginians from Crab Orchard
and Wise and Dickinson, the Kentuckians
from Letcher and feudal Harlan,
beyond the Big Black--and not a man
carried a weapon in sight, for the stern
spirit of that Police Guard at the Gap
was respected wide and far. Into the
town, which sits on a plateau some twenty
feet above the level of the two rivers that
all but encircle it, they poured, hitching
their horses in the strip of woods that runs
through the heart of the place, and broad
ens into a primeval park that, fan-like,
opens on the oval level field where all
things happen on the Fourth of July.
About the street they loitered--lovers hand
in hand--eating fruit and candy and drinking
soda-water, or sat on the curb-stone,
mothers with babies at their breasts and
toddling children clinging close--all
waiting for the celebration to begin.
It was a great day for the Hon. Samuel
Budd. With a cheery smile and beaming
goggles, he moved among his constituents,
joking with yokels, saying nice things to
mothers, paying gallantries to girls, and
chucking babies under the chin. He felt
popular and he was--so popular that he
had begun to see himself with prophetic eye
in a congressional seat at no distant day;
and yet, withal, he was not wholly happy.
``Do you know,'' he said, ``them fellers
I made bets with in the tournament got together
this morning and decided, all of 'em,
that they wouldn't let me off? Jerusalem,
it's most five hundred dollars!'' And,
looking the picture of dismay, he told me
his dilemma.
It seems that his ``dark horse'' was
none other than the Wild Dog, who had
been practising at home for this tournament
for nearly a year; and now that the
Wild Dog was an outlaw, he, of course,
wouldn't and couldn't come to the Gap.
And said the Hon. Sam Budd:
``Them fellers says I bet I'd bring in a
dark horse who would win this tournament,
and if I don't bring him in, I lose just the
same as though I had brought him in and
he hadn't won. An' I reckon they've got
me.''
``I guess they have.''
``It would have been like pickin' money
off a blackberry-bush, for I was goin' to let
the Wild Dog have that black horse o'
mine--the steadiest and fastest runner in
this country--and my, how that fellow can
pick off the rings! He's been a-practising
for a year, and I believe he could run the
point o' that spear of his through a lady's
finger-ring.''
``You'd better get somebody else.''
``Ah--that's it. The Wild Dog sent
word he'd send over another feller, named
Dave Branham, who has been practising
with him, who's just as good, he says, as he
is. I'm looking for him at twelve o'clock,
an' I'm goin' to take him down an' see
what he can do on that black horse o' mine.
But if he's no good, I lose five hundred,
all right,'' and he sloped away to his duties.
For it was the Hon. Sam who was master
of ceremonies that day. He was due now
to read the Declaration of Independence in
a poplar grove to all who would listen; he
was to act as umpire at the championship
base-ball game in the afternoon, and he
was to give the ``Charge'' to the assembled
knights before the tournament.
At ten o'clock the games began--and I
took the Blight and the little sister down
to the ``grandstand''--several tiers of
backless benches with leaves for a canopy
and the river singing through rhododendrons
behind. There was jumping broad
and high, and a 100-yard dash and hurdling
and throwing the hammer, which the
Blight said were not interesting--they
were too much like college sports--and she
wanted to see the base-ball game and the
tournament. And yet Marston was in
them all--dogged and resistless--his teeth
set and his eyes anywhere but lifted toward
the Blight, who secretly proud, as I believed,
but openly defiant, mentioned not
his name even when he lost, which was
twice only.
``Pretty good, isn't he?'' I said.
``Who?'' she said indifferently.
``Oh, nobody,'' I said, turning to smile,
but not turning quickly enough.
``What's the matter with you?'' asked
the Blight sharply.
``Nothing, nothing at all,'' I said, and
straightway the Blight thought she wanted
to go home. The thunder of the Declaration
was still rumbling in the poplar grove.
``That's the Hon. Sam Budd,'' I said.
``Don't you want to hear him?''
``I don't care who it is and I don't
want to hear him and I think you are
hateful.''
Ah, dear me, it was more serious than I
thought. There were tears in her eyes, and
I led the Blight and the little sister home--
conscience-stricken and humbled. Still I
would find that young jackanapes of an
engineer and let him know that anybody who
made the Blight unhappy must deal with
me. I would take him by the neck and
pound some sense into him. I found him
lofty, uncommunicative, perfectly alien to
any consciousness that I could have any
knowledge of what was going or any right
to poke my nose into anybody's business--
and I did nothing except go back to lunch
--to find the Blight upstairs and the little
sister indignant with me.
``You just let them alone,'' she said severely.
``Let who alone?'' I said, lapsing into
the speech of childhood.
``You--just--let--them--alone,'' she
repeated.
``I've already made up my mind to
that.''
``Well, then!'' she said, with an air of
satisfaction, but why I don't know.
I went back to the poplar grove. The
Declaration was over and the crowd was
gone, but there was the Hon. Samuel
Budd, mopping his brow with one hand,
slapping his thigh with the other, and all
but executing a pigeon-wing on the turf.
He turned goggles on me that literally
shone triumph.
``He's come--Dave Branham's come!''
he said. ``He's better than the Wild Dog.
I've been trying him on the black horse
and, Lord, how he can take them rings off!
Ha, won't I get into them fellows who
wouldn't let me off this morning! Oh, yes,
I agreed to bring in a dark horse, and I'll
bring him in all right. That five hundred
is in my clothes now. You see that point
yonder? Well, there's a hollow there and
bushes all around. That's where I'm going
to dress him. I've got his clothes all
right and a name for him. This thing
is a-goin' to come off accordin' to Hoyle,
Ivanhoe, Four-Quarters-of-Beef, and all
them mediaeval fellows. Just watch me!''
I began to get newly interested, for that
knight's name I suddenly recalled. Little
Buck, the Wild Dog's brother, had
mentioned him, when we were over in the
Kentucky hills, as practising with the Wild
Dog--as being ``mighty good, but nowhar
'longside o' Mart.'' So the Hon. Sam
might have a good substitute, after all, and
being a devoted disciple of Sir Walter, I
knew his knight would rival, in splendor,
at least, any that rode with King Arthur
in days of old.
The Blight was very quiet at lunch, as
was the little sister, and my effort to be
jocose was a lamentable failure. So I gave
news.
``The Hon. Sam has a substitute.'' No
curiosity and no question.
``Who--did you say? Why, Dave
Branham, a friend of the Wild Dog.
Don't you remember Buck telling us about
him?'' No answer. ``Well, I do--and,
by the way, I saw Buck and one of the big
sisters just a while ago. Her name is
Mollie. Dave Branham, you will recall, is
her sweetheart. The other big sister had
to stay at home with her mother and little
Cindy, who's sick. Of course, I didn't ask
them about Mart--the Wild Dog. They
knew I knew and they wouldn't have liked
it. The Wild Dog's around, I understand,
but he won't dare show his face. Every
policeman in town is on the lookout for
him.'' I thought the Blight's face showed
a signal of relief.
``I'm going to play short-stop,'' I added.
``Oh!'' said the Blight, with a smile,
but the little sister said with some scorn:
``You!''
``I'll show you,'' I said, and I told the
Blight about base-ball at the Gap. We
had introduced base-ball into the region
and the valley boys and mountain boys,
being swift runners, throwing like a rifle
shot from constant practice with stones,
and being hard as nails, caught the game
quickly and with great ease. We beat them
all the time at first, but now they were
beginning to beat us. We had a league
now, and this was the championship game
for the pennant.
``It was right funny the first time we
beat a native team. Of course, we got
together and cheered 'em. They thought we
were cheering ourselves, so they got red in
the face, rushed together and whooped it
up for themselves for about half an hour.''
The Blight almost laughed.
``We used to have to carry our guns
around with us at first when we went to
other places, and we came near having
several fights.''
``Oh!'' said the Blight excitedly. ``Do
you think there might be a fight this afternoon?''
``Don't know,'' I said, shaking my head.
``It's pretty hard for eighteen people to
fight when nine of them are policemen and
there are forty more around. Still the
crowd might take a hand.''
This, I saw, quite thrilled the Blight and
she was in good spirits when we started out.
``Marston doesn't pitch this afternoon,''
I said to the little sister. ``He plays first
base. He's saving himself for the
tournament. He's done too much already.''
The Blight merely turned her head while I
was speaking. ``And the Hon. Sam will
not act as umpire. He wants to save his
voice--and his head.''
The seats in the ``grandstand'' were in
the sun now, so I left the girls in a
deserted band-stand that stood on stilts under
trees on the southern side of the field, and
on a line midway between third base and
the position of short-stop. Now there is
no enthusiasm in any sport that equals the
excitement aroused by a rural base-ball
game and I never saw the enthusiasm of
that game outdone except by the excitement
of the tournament that followed that afternoon.
The game was close and Marston
and I assuredly were stars--Marston one
of the first magnitude. ``Goose-egg'' on
one side matched ``goose-egg'' on the
other until the end of the fifth inning, when
the engineer knocked a home-run. Spectators
threw their hats into the trees, yelled
themselves hoarse, and I saw several old
mountaineers who understood no more of
base-ball than of the lost _digamma_ in Greek
going wild with the general contagion.
During these innings I had ``assisted'' in
two doubles and had fired in three ``daisy
cutters'' to first myself in spite of the
guying I got from the opposing rooters.
``Four-eyes'' they called me on account of
my spectacles until a new nickname came
at the last half of the ninth inning,
when we were in the field with the score
four to three in our favor. It was then
that a small, fat boy with a paper megaphone
longer than he was waddled out
almost to first base and levelling his
trumpet at me, thundered out in a sudden
silence:
``Hello, Foxy Grandpa!'' That was
too much. I got rattled, and when there
were three men on bases and two out, a
swift grounder came to me, I fell--catching
it--and threw wildly to first from my
knees. I heard shouts of horror, anger,
and distress from everywhere and my own
heart stopped beating--I had lost the
game--and then Marston leaped in the
air--surely it must have been four feet--
caught the ball with his left hand and
dropped back on the bag. The sound of
his foot on it and the runner's was almost
simultaneous, but the umpire said Marston's
was there first. Then bedlam! One
of my brothers was umpire and the captain
of the other team walked threateningly
out toward him, followed by two of
his men with base-ball bats. As I started
off myself towards them I saw, with the
corner of my eye, another brother of mine
start in a run from the left field, and I
wondered why a third, who was scoring,
sat perfectly still in his chair, particularly
as a well-known, red-headed tough from
one of the mines who had been officiously
antagonistic ran toward the pitcher's box
directly in front of him. Instantly a dozen
of the guard sprang toward it, some man
pulled his pistol, a billy cracked straightway
on his head, and in a few minutes
order was restored. And still the brother
scoring hadn't moved from his chair, and
I spoke to him hotly.
``Keep your shirt on,'' he said easily,
lifting his score-card with his left hand and
showing his right clinched about his pistol
under it.
``I was just waiting for that red-head to
make a move. I guess I'd have got him
first.''
I walked back to the Blight and the
little sister and both of them looked very
serious and frightened.
``I don't think I want to see a real fight,
after all,'' said the Blight. ``Not this
afternoon.''
It was a little singular and prophetic,
but just as the words left her lips one of
the Police Guard handed me a piece of
paper.
``Somebody in the crowd must have
dropped it in my pocket,'' he said. On the
paper were scrawled these words:
``_Look out for the Wild Dog!_''
I sent the paper to Marston.