The Gentleman from Indiana - Page 89/212

The court-house bell ringing in the night! No hesitating stroke of

Schofields' Henry, no uncertain touch, was on the rope. A loud, wild,

hurried clamor pealing out to wake the country-side, a rapid clang!

clang! clang! that struck clear in to the spine.

The court-house bell had tolled for the death of Morton, of Garfield, of

Hendricks; had rung joy-peals of peace after the war and after political

campaigns; but it had rung as it was ringing now only three times; once

when Hibbard's mill burned, once when Webb Landis killed Sep Bardlock and

intrenched himself in the lumber-yard and would not be taken till he was

shot through and through, and once when the Rouen accommodation was

wrecked within twenty yards of the station.

Why was the bell ringing now? Men and women, startled into wide

wakefulness, groped to windows--no red mist hung over town or country.

What was it? The bell rang on. Its loud alarm beat increasingly into men's

hearts and quickened their throbbing to the rapid measure of its own.

Vague forms loomed in the gloaming. A horse, wildly ridden, splashed

through the town. There were shouts; voices called hoarsely. Lamps began

to gleam in the windows. Half-clad people emerged from their houses, men

slapping their braces on their shoulders as they ran out of doors.

Questions were shouted into the dimness.

Then the news went over the town.

It was cried from yard to yard, from group to group, from gate to gate,

and reached the furthermost confines. Runners shouted it as they sped by;

boys panted it, breathless; women with loosened hair stumbled into

darkling chambers and faltered it out to new-wakened sleepers; pale girls

clutching wraps at their throats whispered it across fences; the sick,

tossing on their hard beds, heard it. The bell clamored it far and near;

it spread over the country-side; it flew over the wires to distant cities.

The White-Caps had got Mr. Harkless!

Lige Willetts had lost track of him out near Briscoes', it was said, and

had come in at midnight seeking him. He had found Parker, the "Herald"

foreman, and Ross Schofield, the typesetter, and Bud Tipworthy, the devil,

at work in the printing-room, but no sign of Harkless, there or in the

cottage. Together these had sought for him and had roused others, who had

inquired at every house where he might have gone for shelter, and they had

heard nothing. They had watched for his coming during the slackening of

the storm and he had not come, and there was nowhere he could have gone.

He was missing; only one thing could have happened.

They had roused up Warren Smith, the prosecutor, the missing editor's most

intimate friend in Carlow, and Homer, the sheriff, and Jared Wiley, the

deputy. William Todd had rung the alarm. The first thing to do was to find

him. After that there would be trouble--if not before. It looked as if

there would be trouble before. The men tramping up to the muddy Square in

their shirt-sleeves were bulgy about the right hips; and when Homer Tibbs

joined Lum Landis at the hotel corner, and Landis saw that Homer was

carrying a shot-gun, Landis went back for his. A hastily sworn posse

galloped out Main Street. Women and children ran into neighbors' yards and

began to cry. Day was coming; and, as the light grew, men swore and

savagely kicked at the palings of fences that they passed.