The Ballad of Frankie Silver - By Sharyn McCrumb Page 0,102

have no choice but to set the date for the execution.

I looked at my watch. Nearly half past. Where was Mr. David Swain? Had anyone seen him in town? I searched the faces in the courtroom until I found Will Butler at the back, near the oak doors, talking with one of the constables. The look on the sheriff’s face told me that he was as mystified as the rest of us. I slipped away from my desk and went to confer with him.

“Is there any news of the judge, Mr. Butler?”

He shook his head. “Yesterday’s stage brought me no letters. I am at a loss to know what has become of him. The weather is not to blame.”

I glanced at the sun-glazed windows above us. The day was fine, as its predecessors had been for a long stretch of Indian summer. No storms had flung down tree limbs in the path of the Raleigh stagecoach, and no swollen rivers had made the fords impassable. “Perhaps His Honor is ill,” I said to Butler.

“ His Honoris thirty-one years old,” said the sheriff. “I doubt if his health prevents his coming. It is more likely to be his ambition that trammels him. Something must be afoot in the state capital.” He looked at his pocket watch. “I will give him until the hour, and then we will adjourn for the day on my authority. Does that meet with your approval?”

“We can hardly do otherwise,” I said. “If there is no judge to preside, the cases cannot go forward.”

The voices rose higher and higher as the hour drew nearer, and I could hear people wondering aloud over the judge’s absence. At last Will Butler’s voice crested the roar, and he bellowed out: “I hereby declare this session of the Superior Court adjourned until tomorrow, due to the absence of the judge.”

There were a few groans of protest, probably from those who had ridden great distances to attend the

session, and who would now have to pay for a night’s lodging or sleep rough in order to come to court tomorrow. We waited while the spectators dwindled away, until finally only the sheriff, the prisoner, Thomas Wilson, and I were in the courtroom. In the doorway a constable was waiting for the signal to escort Mrs. Silver back to her cell.

I could see that she was puzzled over this turn of events. She touched the sleeve of Mr. Wilson’s black coat. “Why didn’t he come?”

The lawyer smiled. “Oh, some trifling delay upon the road, like as not, madam. A lame horse, a broken carriage wheel. It is a long way to Morganton, you know. He will turn up this evening, I do not doubt.” He meant to be reassuring to the prisoner; no doubt he had not considered the implications of the judge’s arrival.

“What if he don’t come?”

Thomas Wilson gave her an oily smile. “But I am sure that he will.”

The next day the courtroom was again filled with anxious prisoners and idle spectators awaiting justice at the pleasure of the lowland bureaucracy. This time, when the hour of nine had come and gone, there were murmurings about the courtroom. “I suppose the judge has better things to do than to come to our neck of the woods!” someone called out.

“Probably afraid of the Indians!” someone else called, and the laughter overcame the grumbling, for one might as well be afraid of the Phoenicians in these parts nowadays.

Will Butler paced the floor, taking out his watch and glancing at it so often that I wondered why he bothered to put it away. Inevitably a fistfight broke out in the back of the room: bored farmers with a few drinks in their bellies are not the most patient of men. When the sheriff saw that the fright was in earnest, and that it bid fair to spreading among the rest of the congregation, he rapped on the bench for order and bellowed out, “I declare this court adjourned until the spring term— dammit.” That last word was uttered under his breath, so that only I overheard him, and I did not have time to discuss his ruling before he plunged into the melee wearing a curious look of satisfaction that made me think that quelling the insurrection would serve as a tonic to his own frayed nerves.

It was Butler’s last significant act as sheriff of Burke County, for within weeks John Boone would assume the post of peace officer of the county, a duty for

readonlinefreenovel.com Copyright 2016 - 2024