登陆注册
19662000000001

第1章 I(1)

A MIDSUMMER freshet was running over old Gabe Bunch's water-wheel into the Cumberland. Inside the mill Steve Marcum lay in one dark corner with a slouched hat over his face. The boy Isom was emptying a sack of corn into the hopper. Old Gabe was speaking his mind.

Always the miller had been a man of peace; and there was one time when he thought the old Stetson-Lewallen feud was done.

That was when Rome Stetson, the last but one of his name, and Jasper Lewallen, the last but one of his, put their guns down and fought with bare fists on a high ledge above old Gabe's mill one morning at daybreak. The man who was beaten was to leave the mountains; the other was to stay at home and have peace. Steve Marcum, a Stetson, heard the sworn terms and saw the fight.

Jasper was fairly whipped; and when Rome let him up he proved treacherous and ran for his gun. Rome ran too, but stumbled and fell. Jasper whirled with his Winchester and was about to kill Rome where he lay, when a bullet came from somewhere and dropped him back to the ledge again. Both Steve Marcum and Rome Stetson said they had not fired the shot; neither would say who had. Some thought one man was lying, some thought the other was, and Jasper's death lay between the two. State troops came then, under the Governor 's order, from the Blue Grass, and Rome had to drift down the river one night in old Gabe's canoe and on Out of the mountains for good. Martha Lewallen, who, though Jasper's sister, and the last of the name, loved and believed Rome, went with him. Marcums and Braytons who had taken sides in the fight hid in the bushes around Hazlan, or climbed over into Virginia. A railroad started up the Cumberland. "Furriners came in to buy wild lands and get out timber. Civilization began to press over the mountains and down on Hazlan, as it had pressed in on Breathitt, the seat of another feud, in another county. In Breathitt the feud was long past, and with good reason old Gabe thought that it was done in Hazlan.

But that autumn a panic started over from England. It stopped the railroad far down the Cumberland; it sent the "furriners" home, and drove civilization back. Marcums and Braytons came in from hiding, and drifted one by one to the old fighting-ground. In time they took up the old quarrel, and with Steve Marcum and Steve Brayton as leaders, the old Stetson-Lewallen feud went on, though but one soul was left in the mountains of either name. That was Isom, a pale little fellow whom Rome had left in old Gabe's care;and he, though a Stetson and a half-brother to Rome, was not counted, because he was only a boy and a foundling, and because his ways were queer.

There was no open rupture, no organized division-that might happen no more. The mischief was individual now, and ambushing was more common. Certain men were looking for each other, and it was a question of "draw-in' quick 'n' shootin' quick" when the two met by accident, or of getting the advantage "from the bresh."In time Steve Marcum had come face to face with old Steve Brayton in Hazlan, and the two Steves, as they were known, drew promptly. Marcum was in the dust when the smoke cleared away;and now, after three months in bed, he was just out again. He had come down to the mill to see Isom. This was the miller's first chance for remonstrance, and, as usual, he began to lay it down that every man who had taken a human life must sooner or later pay for it with his own. It was an old story to Isom, and, with a shake of impatience, he turned out the door of the mill, and left old Gabe droning on under his dusty hat to Steve, who, being heavy with "moonshine," dropped asleep.

Outside the sun was warm, the flood was calling from the dam, and the boy's petulance was gone at once. For a moment he stood on the rude platform watching the tide; then he let one bare foot into the water, and, with a shiver of delight, dropped from the boards. In a moment his clothes were on the ground behind a laurel thicket, and his slim white body was flashing like a faun through the reeds and bushes up stream. A hundred yards away the creek made a great loop about a wet thicket of pine and rhododendron, and he turned across the bushy neck. Creeping through the gnarled bodies of rhododendron, he dropped suddenly behind the pine, and lay flat in the black earth. Ten yards through the dusk before him was the half-bent figure of a man letting an old army haversack slip from one shoulder; and Isom watched him hide it with a rifle under a bush, and go noiselessly on towards the road. It was Crump, Eli Crump, who had been a spy for the Lewallens in the old feud and who was spying now for old Steve Brayton. It was the second time Isom had seen him lurking about, and the boy's impulse was to hurry back to the mill. But it was still peace, and without his gun Crump was not dangerous; so Isom rose and ran on, and, splashing into the angry little stream, shot away like a roll of birch bark through the tawny crest of a big wave. He had done the feat a hundred times; he knew every rock and eddy in flood-time, and he floated through them and slipped like an eel into the mill-pond. Old Gabe was waiting for him.

"Whut ye mean, boy," he said, sharply, reskin' the fever an' ager this way? No wonder folks thinks ye air half crazy. Git inter them clothes now 'n' come in hyeh. You'll ketch yer death o' cold swimmin' this way atter a fresh."The boy was shivering when he took his seat at the funnel, but he did not mind that; some day he meant to swim over that dam.

Steve still lay motionless in the corner near him, and Isom lifted the slouched hat and began tickling his lips with a straw. Steve was beyond the point of tickling, and Isom dropped the hat back and turned to tell the miller what he had seen in the thicket. The dim interior darkened just then, and Crump stood in the door. Old Gabe stared hard at him without a word of welcome, but Crump shuffled to a chair unasked, and sat like a toad astride it, with his knees close up under his arms, and his wizened face in his hands.

Meeting Isom's angry glance, he shifted his own uneasily.

同类推荐
  • 痫门

    痫门

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 永嘉郡记

    永嘉郡记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Metaphysics

    Metaphysics

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Mugby Junction

    Mugby Junction

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 童学书程

    童学书程

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 惊撼世界的100场战争(上)

    惊撼世界的100场战争(上)

    本书对世界历史的真实过程做了纵深的透视,对人类文明的伟大成就做了全面的阐述,它从浩瀚的历史文库中,撷取精华、汇聚经典、分门别类地对历史上曾经发生的重大事件进行分析介绍,向广大读者尤其是青年朋友们打开了一扇历史的窗口,让他们穿越时空隧道,在历史的天空中遨游、于探幽寻秘中启迪智慧,启发思考,启示未来。
  • 文人墨客智慧谋略全书

    文人墨客智慧谋略全书

    这时的曾国藩已经把主要的兵将都派到前线作战,身边所剩无几。祁门名为湘军屯兵重地,实际上只不过是一座空营。所以曾国藩手下的幕僚属员十分惊慌,有人还把自己的行李放在船上,准备随时逃走。
  • 口腔疾病合理用药226问

    口腔疾病合理用药226问

    本书对口腔疾病的特点、合理用药的基础知识、常见的牙齿疾病、牙周疾病、口腔黏膜疾病、舌部疾病、咽喉疾病、唇部疾病和口腔其他常见疾病的认识、诊断、治疗和预后护理进行了介绍。
  • WIVES AND DAUGHTERS

    WIVES AND DAUGHTERS

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 芙蓉如面柳如眉

    芙蓉如面柳如眉

    夏芳然,一个美丽的被硫酸毁容的女人,经受着身体和内心的劫难,却依然自尊,骄傲,温润。她终于爱上了灾难来临后来到她身边的男孩,却意外地发现,男孩是因为内疚,是对这场残忍的灾难源自另一个女人无望的情感报复。与夏芳然的美丽形成映照的丁小洛,她是一个快乐的女孩,外表平庸,却和一个帅气的男生友谊深厚,因此,不断遭受到同伴的残忍打击,最美的年华最终演变成一场黑色残酷的“青春祭”……这是两组交叉的爱情故事:青年人如夏芳然与陆羽平;少年人如小洛与罗凯。它们相互依赖、缠绕。围绕着故事的核心情节,即案件的侦破步步逼近事件的真相。
  • 妖娆双月

    妖娆双月

    她们本是现代的杀手,却因为一场意外,娆月吞下了任务——白莲,竟然穿越了,穿越到了一个不知名的时代,穿越到了一个苦逼身上,明明是嫡女,却宣称是嫡子,没有天赋,虽得爷爷宠爱,当爷爷受伤闭关时,竟然因为没有天赋惨遭兄弟姐妹们欺负,居然是被吓死了。在再一次被追跑的过程中,爷爷终于出关了,由于出血过多,竟然唤醒了身上的白莲,无意进入白莲中,里面住了一个大美女——瑾鸢,得知自己的姐姐并未曾死亡,而是穿越到了另一个更高等的空间去,且看我们的娆月大人如何找到姐姐,诱拐男主!oh!不!是男主如何诱拐我们的娆月大人!
  • 一念乾坤

    一念乾坤

    激烈的帝国征伐潮流中,个体的想法逐渐被吞噬,可其实个体的想法,对于其本人来说,其大不小于乾坤,那里面有喜怒哀乐,有悲欢离合,可最终都被变成行尸走肉般的厮杀。
  • 无限武魂

    无限武魂

    能身化巨猿的兽魂师;能掌指若刀剑般锋利的器魂师;能本身沟通万千植物的植魂师;能随意操控天地间水火元素的元素魂师。这里是武魂世界,每个人,在其六岁时都能觉醒属于自己武魂,或为动物,或为植物,或为实物,或为元素,随之修炼,则能成就天地间最强大职业——武魂师。若觉醒武魂等级先天越高,则未来成就就越大,甚至,成为传说中帝君般存在,踏上成神天路…………牧景,一个天生双武魂少年,却双生废武魂,受着别人嘲笑白眼,走入火狮学院,自这里而起,逐渐,走出一条让他人所万分诧异之路……本书等级:魂士、魂师、大魂师、魂灵、魂宗、魂王、魂尊、魂圣、魂帝,以及……神???
  • 追溯缥缈之史

    追溯缥缈之史

    一次偶然的机会,秦文的人生与来自觅灵学院的猎妖专业的学生陆清语重叠。在一场被人设计了聚会上,秦文喝得烂醉,被陆清语解救。之后,陆清语要求秦文帮忙完成她的学期任务,猎妖!伴随着一趟与陆清语的觅灵学院之行,秦文被选中了该学院百年一开的专业——猎天专业,猎尽天下妖,魔,鬼,仙!至此,新世界的大门向秦文敞开了!九方妖域,十八层地狱,三十三重天,十殿阎王的秘辛,一一浮出水面。
  • 凡尔纳科幻故事精选(下)

    凡尔纳科幻故事精选(下)

    "儒勒·凡尔纳,出生于1828年2月,逝世于1905年3月。19世纪法国科幻小说大师,被誉为“科学幻想之父”。他一生写了上百部(篇)科学幻想小说,其中长篇小说就达64部,总字数达到七八百万字。人们曾高度评价:“凡尔纳是科学界的文学家,又是文学界的科学家。”他的作品流传甚广。