O. Henry Memorial Award Prize Stories of 1920 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 467 pages of information about O. Henry Memorial Award Prize Stories of 1920.

O. Henry Memorial Award Prize Stories of 1920 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 467 pages of information about O. Henry Memorial Award Prize Stories of 1920.

As she stood unheeding, he went on, “Now, don’t be afraid.  Nothing’ll happen to him.  No jedge would sentence him like a regular criminal.  The most that’ll happen will be to put him some safe place where he can’t do himself nor no one else any more harm.”

But still Mrs. Brenner’s set expression did not change.

After a moment she shook off his aiding arm and moved slowly to Tobey’s door.  She paused there a moment, resting her hand on the latch, her eyes searching the faces of the men in the room.  With a gesture of dreary resignation she opened the door and entered, closing it behind her.

Tobey lay in his bed, asleep.  His rumpled hair was still damp from the fog.  His mother stroked it softly while her slow tears dropped down on his face with its expression of peaceful childhood.

“Tobey!” she called.  Her voice broke in her throat.  The tears fell faster.

“Huh!” He sat up, blinking at her.

“Get into your clothes, now!  Right away!” she said.

He stared at her tears.  A dismal sort of foreboding seemed to seize upon him.  His face began to pucker.  But he crawled out of his bed and began to dress himself in his awkward fashion, casting wistful and wondering glances in her direction.

She watched him, her heart growing heavier and heavier.  There was no one to protect Tobey.  She could not make those strangers believe that Mart had changed shoes with Tobey.  Neither could she account for the blood-stained box and the watch with its length of broken chain.  But if Tobey had been on the beach he had not been on the hill, and if he hadn’t been on the hill he couldn’t have killed the man they claimed he had killed.  Mart had been on the hill.  Her head whirled.  Some place fate, destiny, something had blundered.  She wrung her knotted hands together.

Presently Tobey was dressed.  She took him by the hand.  Her own hand was shaking, and very cold and clammy.  Her knees were weak as she led him toward the door.  She could feel them trembling so that every step was an effort.  And her hand on the knob had barely strength to turn it.  But turn it she did and opened the door.

“Here he is!” she cried chokingly.  She freed her hand and laid it on his shoulder.

“Look at him,” she moaned.  “He couldn’t ‘a’ done it.  He’s—­he’s just a boy!”

Sheriff Munn rose.  His men rose with him.

“I’m sorry, Mrs. Brenner,” he said.  “Terrible sorry.  But you can see how it is.  Things look pretty black for him.”

He paused, looked around, hesitated for a moment.  Finally he said, “Well, I guess we’d better be getting along.”

Mrs. Brenner’s hand closed with convulsive force on Tobey’s shoulder.

“Tobey!” she screamed desperately, “where was you this afternoon?  All afternoon?”

“On the beach,” mumbled Tobey, shrinking into himself.

“Tobey!  Tobey!  Where’d you get blood on the box?”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
O. Henry Memorial Award Prize Stories of 1920 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.