A fearful consummation.
Neither Slade nor his son was present
at the breakfast-table on the next morning. As
for myself, I did not eat with much appetite.
Whether this defect arose from the state of my mind,
or the state of the food set before me, I did not
stop to inquire; but left the stifling, offensive
atmosphere of the dining-room in a very few moments
after entering that usually attractive place for a
hungry man.
A few early drinkers were already
in the bar-room—men with shattered nerves
and cadaverous faces, who could not begin the day’s
work without the stimulus of brandy or whisky.
They came in, with gliding footsteps, asked for what
they wanted in low voices, drank in silence, and departed.
It was a melancholy sight to look upon.
About nine o’clock the landlord
made his appearance. He, too, came gliding into
the bar-room, and his first act was to seize upon a
brandy decanter, pour out nearly half a pint of the
fiery liquid, and drink it off. How badly his
hand shook—so badly that he spilled the
brandy both in pouring it out and in lifting the glass
to his lips! What a shattered wreck he was!
He looked really worse now than he did on the day
before, when drink gave an artificial vitality to
his system, a tension to his muscles, and light to
his countenance. The miller of ten years ago,
and the tavern-keeper of today! Who could have
identified them as one?
Slade was turning from the bar, when
a man? came in. I noticed an instant change in
the landlord’s countenance. He looked startled;
almost frightened. The man drew a small package
from his pocket, and after selecting a paper therefrom,
presented it to Slade, who received it with a nervous
reluctance, opened, and let his eye fall upon the
writing within. I was observing him closely at
the time, and saw his countenance flush deeply.
In a moment or two it became pale again—paler
even than before.
“Very well—all right.
I’ll attend to it,” said the landlord,
trying to recover himself, yet swallowing with every
sentence.
The man who was no other than a sheriff’s
deputy, and who gave him a sober, professional look,
then went out with a firm step, and an air of importance.
As he passed through the outer door, Slade retired
from the bar-room.
“Trouble coming,” I heard
the bar-keeper remark, speaking partly to himself
and partly with the view, as was evident from his
manner, of leading me to question him. But this
I did not feel that it was right to do.
“Got the sheriff on him at last,”
added the bar-keeper.
“What’s the matter, Bill?”
inquired a man who now came in with a bustling, important
air, and leaned familiarly over the bar. “Who
was Jenkins after?”
“The old man,” replied
the bar-keeper, in a voice that showed pleasure rather
than regret.
“No!”
“It’s a fact.” Bill, the bar-keeper,
actually smiled.
“What’s to pay?” said the man.
“Don’t know, and don’t
care much.” “Did he serve a summons
or an execution?”
“Can’t tell.”
“Judge Lyman’s suit went against him.”
“Did it?”
“Yes; and I heard Judge Lyman
swear, that if he got him on the hip, he’d sell
him out, bag and basket. And he’s the man
to keep his word.”
“I never could just make out,”
said the bar-keeper, “how he ever came to owe
Judge Lyman so much. I’ve never known of
any business transactions between them.”
“It’s been dog eat dog, I rather guess,”
said the man.
“What do you mean by that?” inquired the
bar-keeper.
“You’ve heard of dogs hunting in pairs?”
“Oh, yes.”
“Well, since Harvey Green got
his deserts, the business of fleecing our silly young
fellows, who happened to have more money than wit
or discretion, has been in the hands of Judge Lyman
and Slade. They hunted together, Slade holding
the game, while the judge acted as blood-sucker.
But that business was interrupted about a year ago;
and game got so scarce that, as I suggested, dog began
to eat dog. And here comes the end of the matter,
if I’m not mistaken. So mix us a stiff
toddy. I want one more good drink at the ‘Sickle
and Sheaf,’ before the colors are struck.”
And the man chuckled at his witty effort.
During the day, I learned that affairs
stood pretty much as this man had conjectured.
Lyman’s suits had been on sundry notes payable
on demand; but nobody knew of any property transactions
between him and Slade. On the part of Slade, no
defense had been made—the suit going by
default. The visit of the sheriff’s officer
was for the purpose of serving an execution.
As I walked through Cedarville on
that day, the whole aspect of the place seemed changed.
I questioned with myself, often, whether this were
really so, or only the effect of imagination.
The change was from cheerfulness and thrift, to gloom
and neglect. There was, to me, a brooding silence
in the air; a pause in the life-movement; a folding
of the hands, so to speak, because hope had failed
from the heart. The residence of Mr. Harrison,
who, some two years before, had suddenly awakened
to a lively sense of the evil of rum-selling, because
his own sons were discovered to be in danger, had
been one of the most tasteful in Cedarville. I
had often stopped to admire the beautiful shrubbery
and flowers with which it was surrounded; the walks
so clear—the borders so fresh and even—the
arbors so cool and inviting. There was not a spot
upon which the eye could rest, that did not show the
hand of taste. When I now came opposite to this
house, I was not longer in doubt as to the actuality
of a change. There were no marked evidences of
neglect; but the high cultivation and nice regard for
the small details were lacking. The walks were
cleanly swept; but the box-borders were not so carefully
trimmed. The vines and bushes that in former
times were cut and tied so evenly, could hardly have
felt the keen touch of the pruning-knife for months.
As I paused to note the change, a
lady, somewhat beyond the middle age, came from the
house. I was struck by the deep gloom that overshadowed
her countenance. Ah! said I to myself, as I passed
on, how many dear hopes, that once lived in that heart,
must have been scattered to the winds. As I conjectured,
this was Mrs. Harrison, and I was not unprepared to
hear, as I did a few hours afterward, that her two
sons had fallen into drinking habits; and, not only
this, had been enticed to the gaming-table. Unhappy
mother! What a life-time of wretchedness was compressed
for thee into a few short years!
I walked on, noting, here and there,
changes even more marked than appeared about the residence
of Mr. Harrison. Judge Lyman’s beautiful
place showed utter neglect; and so did one or two others
that, on my first visit to Cedarville, charmed me with
their order, neatness, and cultivation. In every
instance, I learned, on inquiring, that the owners
of these, or some members of their families, were,
or had been, visitors at the “Sickle and Sheaf”;
and that the ruin, in progress or completed, began
after the establishment of that point of attraction
in the village.
Something of a morbid curiosity, excited
by what I saw, led me on to take a closer view of
the residence of Judge Hammond than I had obtained
on the day before. The first thing that I noticed,
on approaching the old, decaying mansion, were handbills,
posted on the gate, the front-door, and on one of
the windows. A nearer inspection revealed their
import. The property had been seized, and was
now offered at sheriff’s sale!
Ten years before, Judge Hammond was
known as the richest man in Cedarville; and now, the
homestead which he had once so loved to beautify—where
all that was dearest to him in life once gathered
—worn, disfigured, and in ruins, was about
to be wrested from him. I paused at the gate,
and leaning over it, looked in with saddened feelings
upon the dreary waste within. No sign of life
was visible. The door was shut—the
windows closed—not the faintest wreath
of smoke was seen above the blackened chimney-tops.
How vividly did imagination restore the life, and beauty,
and happiness, that made their home there only a few
years before,—the mother and her noble
boy, one looking with trembling hope, the other with
joyous confidence, into the future,—the
father, proud of his household treasures, but not their
wise and jealous guardian.
Ah! that his hands should have unbarred
the door, and thrown it wide, for the wolf to enter
that precious fold! I saw them all in their sunny
life before me; yet, even as I looked upon them, their
sky began to darken. I heard the distant mutterings
of the storm, and soon the desolating tempest swept
down fearfully upon them. I shuddered as it passed
away, to look upon the wrecks left scattered around.
What a change!
“And all this,” said I,
“that one man, tired of being useful, and eager
to get gain, might gather in accursed gold!”
Pushing open the gate, I entered the
yard, and walked around the dwelling, my footsteps
echoing in the hushed solitude of the deserted place.
Hark! was that a human voice?
I paused to listen.
The sound came, once more, distinctly
to my ears, I looked around, above, everywhere, but
perceived no living sign. For nearly a minute
I stood still, listening. Yes; there it was again—a
low, moaning voice, as of one in pain or grief.
I stepped onward a few paces; and now saw one of the
doors standing ajar. As I pushed this door wide
open, the moan was repeated. Following the direction
from which the sound came, I entered one of the large
drawing-rooms. The atmosphere was stifling, and
all as dark as if it were midnight. Groping my
way to a window, I drew back the bolt and threw open
the shutter. Broadly the light fell across the
dusty, uncarpeted floor, and on the dingy furniture
of the room. As it did so, the moaning voice
which had drawn me thither swelled on the air again;
and now I saw, lying upon an old sofa, the form of
a man. It needed no second glance to tell me that
this was Judge Hammond. I put my hand upon him,
and uttered his name; but he answered not. I
spoke more firmly, and slightly shook him; but only
a piteous moan was returned.
“Judge Hammond!” I now
called aloud, and somewhat imperatively.
But it availed nothing. The poor
old man aroused not from the stupor in which mind
and body were enshrouded
“He is dying!” thought
I; and instantly left the house in search of some
friends to take charge of him in his last, sad extremity.
The first person to whom I made known the fact shrugged
his shoulders, and said it was no affair of his, and
that I must find somebody whose business it was to
attend to him. My next application was met in
the same spirit; and no better success attended my
reference of the matter to a third party. No one
to whom I spoke seemed to have any sympathy for the
broken-down old man. Shocked by this indifference,
I went to one of the county officers, who, on learning
the condition of Judge Hammond, took immediate steps
to have him removed to the Alms-house, some miles
distant.
“But why to the Alms-house?”
I inquired, on learning his purpose. “He
has property.”
“Everything has been seized for debt,”
was the reply.
“Will there be nothing left after his creditors
are satisfied?”
“Very few, if any, will be satisfied,”
he answered. “There will not be enough
to pay half the judgments against him.”
“And is there no friend to take
him in,—no one, of all who moved by his
side in the days of prosperity, to give a few hours’
shelter, and soothe the last moments of his unhappy
life?”
“Why did you make application
here?” was the officer’s significant question.
I was silent.
“Your earnest appeals for the
poor old man met with no words of sympathy?”
“None.”
“He has, indeed, fallen low.
In the days of his prosperity, he had many friends,
so called. Adversity has shaken them all like
dead leaves from sapless branches.”
“But why? This is not always so.”
“Judge Hammond was a selfish,
worldly man. People never liked him much.
His favoring, so strongly, the tavern of Slade, and
his distillery operations, turned from him some of
his best friends. The corruption and terrible
fate of his son—and the insanity and death
of his wife—all were charged upon him in
people’s minds, and every one seemed to turn
from him instinctively after the fearful tragedy was
completed. He never held tip his head afterward.
Neighbors shunned him as they would a criminal.
And here has come the end at last. He will be
taken to the poorhouse, to die there—a
pauper!”
“And all,” said I, partly
speaking to myself, “because a man, too lazy
to work at an honest calling, must needs go to rum-selling.”
“The truth, the whole truth,
and nothing but the truth,” remarked the officer
with emphasis, as he turned from me to see that his
directions touching the removal of Mr. Hammond to the
poor-house were promptly executed.
In my wanderings about Cedarville
during that day, I noticed a small but very neat cottage,
a little way from the centre of the village.
There was not around it a great profusion of flowers
and shrubbery; but the few vines, flowers, and bushes
that grew green and flourishing about the door, and
along the clean walks, added to the air of taste and
comfort that so peculiarly marked the dwelling.
“Who lives in that pleasant
little spot?” I asked of a man whom I had frequently
seen in Blade’s bar-room. He happened to
be passing the house at the same time that I was.
“Joe Morgan,” was answered.
“Indeed!” I spoke in some
surprise. “And what of Morgan? How
is he doing?”
“Very well.”
“Doesn’t he drink?”
“No. Since the death of
his child, be has never taken a drop. That event
sobered him, and he has remained sober ever since.”
“What is he doing?” “Working at
his old trade.”
“That of a miller?”
“Yes. After Judge Hammond
broke down, the distillery apparatus and cotton spinning
machinery were all sold and removed from Cedarville.
The purchaser of what remained, having something of
the fear of God, as well as regard for man, in his
heart, set himself to the restoration of the old order
of things, and in due time the revolving mill-wheel
was at its old and better work of grinding corn and
wheat for bread. The only two men in Cedarville
competent to take charge of the mill were Simon Slade
and Joe Morgan. The first could not be had, and
the second came in as a matter of course.”
“And he remains sober and industrious?”
“As any man in the village,” was the answer.
I saw but little of Slade or his son
during the day. But both were in the bar-room
at night, and both in a condition sorrowful to look
upon. Their presence, together, in the bar-room,
half intoxicated as they were, seemed to revive the
unhappy temper of the previous evening, as freshly
as if the sun had not risen and set upon their anger.
During the early part of the evening,
considerable company was present, though not of a
very select class. A large proportion were young
men. To most of them the fact that Slade had fallen
into the sheriff’s hands was known; and I gathered
from some aside conversation which reached my ears,
that Frank’s idle, spendthrift habits had hastened
the present crisis in his father’s affairs.
He, too, was in debt to Judge Lyman—on what
account, it was not hard to infer.
It was after nine o’clock, and
there were not half a dozen persons in the room, when
I noticed Frank Slade go behind the bar for the third
or fourth time. He was just lifting a decanter
of brandy, when his father, who was considerably under
the influence of drink, started forward, and laid
his hand upon that of his son. Instantly a fierce
light gleamed from the eyes of the young man.
“Let go of my hand!” he exclaimed.
“No, I won’t. Put up that brandy
bottle—you’re drunk now.”
“Don’t meddle with me,
old man!” angrily retorted Frank. “I’m
not in the mood to bear anything more from you.”
“You’re drunk as a fool
now,” returned Slade, who had seized the decanter.
“Let go the bottle.”
For only an instant did the young
man hesitate. Then he drove his half-clenched
hand against the breast of his father, who went staggering
several paces from the counter. Recovering himself,
and now almost furious, the landlord rushed forward
upon his son, his hand raised to strike him.
“Keep off!” cried Frank.
“Keep off! If you touch me, I’ll strike
you down!” At the same time raising the half-filled
bottle threateningly.
But his father was in too maddened
a state to fear any consequences, and so pressed forward
upon his son, striking him in the face the moment
he came near enough to do so.
Instantly, the young man, infuriated
by drink and evil passions, threw the bottle at his
father’s head. The dangerous missile fell,
crashing upon one of his temples, shivering it into
a hundred pieces. A heavy, jarring fall too surely
marked the fearful consequences of the blow.
When we gathered around the fallen man, and made an
effort to lift him from the floor, a thrill of horror
went through every heart. A mortal paleness was
already on his marred face, and the death-gurgle in
his throat! In three minutes from the time the
blow was struck, his spirit had gone upward to give
an account of the deeds done in the body.
“Frank Slade! you have murdered your father!”
Sternly were these terrible words
uttered. It was some time before the young man
seemed to comprehend their meaning. But the moment
he realized the awful truth, he uttered an exclamation
of horror. Almost at the same instant, a pistol-shot
came sharply on the ear. But the meditated self-destruction
was not accomplished. The aim was not surely
taken; and the ball struck harmlessly against the
ceiling.
Half an hour afterward, and Frank
Slade was a lonely prisoner in the county jail!
Does the reader need a word of comment
on this fearful consummation? No; and we will
offer none.