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The Last Stetson [7]

By Root 139 0
the Breathitt road; and with a hot, puzzled face, the boy went down after it.

On a little knob just over a sudden turn in the road Crump stopped, and looking sharply about him, laid his gun down. Just in front of him were two rocks, waist-high, with a crevice between them. Drawing a long knife from his pocket, he climbed upon them, and began to cut carefully away the spreading top of a bush that grew on the other side. Isom crawled down towards him like a lizard, from tree to tree. A moment later the spy was filling up the crevice with stones, and Isom knew what he was about; he was making a "blind" to waylay Steve, who, the boy knew, was going to Breathitt by that road the next Sunday. How did Crump know that-how did he know everything? The crevice filled, Crump cut branches and stuck them between the rocks. Then he pushed his rifle through the twigs, and taking aim several times, withdrew it. When he turned away at last and started down to the road, he looked back once more, and Isom saw him grinning. Almost chuckling in answer, the lad slipped around the knob to the road the other way, and Crump threw up his gun with a gasp of fright when a figure rose out of the dusk before him.

Hol' on, Eli ! " said Isom, easily. " Don't git skeered! Hit's nobody but me. Whar ye been?"

Crump laughed, so quick was he disarmed of suspicion. " Jes up the river a piece to see Aunt Sally Day. She's a fust cousin o' mine by marriage.

Jsom's right hand was slipping back as if to rest on his hip. "D'you say you'd been 'convicted,' Eli?

Crump's answer was chantlike. "Yes, Lawd reckon I have."

Goin' to stop all o' yer lyin', air ye, ' Isom went on, in the same tone, and Crump twitched as though struck suddenly from behind, "an' stealin' 'n' lay-wayin'?"

"Look a-hyeh, boy-" he began, roughly, and mumbling a threat, started on.

Uh, Eli! " Even then the easy voice fooled him again, and he turned. Isom had a big revolver on a line with his breast. " Drap yer gun! " he said, tremulously.

Crump tried to laugh, but his guilty face turned gray. "Take keer, boy," he gasped; "yer gun's cocked. Take keer, I tell ye!

Drap it, damn ye! " Isom called in sudden fury, " 'n' git clean away from it! " Crump backed, and Isom came forward and stood with one foot on the fallen Winchester.

"I seed ye, Eli. Been makin' a blind fer Steve, hev ye? Coin' to shoot him in the back, too, air ye? You're ketched at last, Eli. You've done a heap o' devilmcnt. You're gittin' wuss all the time. You oughter be dead, 'n' now-"

Crump found voice in a cry of terror and a whine for mercy. The boy looked at him, unable to speak his contempt.

"Cit down thar! " he said, finally; and Crump, knowing what was wanted, stretched himself in the road. Isom sat down on a stone, the big pistol across one knee.

"Roll over! " Crump rolled at full length.

"Git up! " Isom laughed wickedly. "Ye don't look purty, Eli." He lifted the pistol and nipped a cake of dirt from the road between Crump's feet. With another cry of fear, the spy began a vigorous dance.

"Hol' on, Eli; I don't want ye to dance. Ye belong to the chu'ch now, 'n' I wouldn't have ye go agin yer religion fer nothin'. Stan' still! Another bullet and another cut between Crump's feet. "Pears like ye don't think I kin shoot straight. Eli," he went on, reloading the empty chambers, " some folks think I'm a idgit, 'n' I know 'em. Do you think I'm a idgit, Eli?"

Actin' mighty nateral now." Isom was raising the pistol again. " Oh, Lawdy! Don't shoot, boy-don't shoot!

"Cit down on yer knees! Now I want ye to beg fer mercy thet ye never showed-thet ye wouldn't 'a' showed Steve. . . Purty good," he said, encouragingly.

Mebbe ye kin pray a leetle, seem' ez ye air a chu'ch member. Pray fer yer enemies, Eli; Uncl' Gabe says ye must love yer enemies. I know how ye loves me, 'n' I want yer to pray fer me. The Lawd mus' sot a powerful store by a good citizen like you. Ax him to fergive me fer killin' ye."

"Have mercy, O Lawd," prayed Crump, to command-and
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