“Judge, I’ve been over in Saint Joe selling books,” said Morgan, “and I’ll tell you the truth, Judge, I never intended to come back here.” He turned and faced the judge, leaning forward earnestly, his face white. He lowered his voice to a hoarse whisper. “But I had to come back–I was sent back by–by a voice!”
“Just so,” nodded Judge Maxwell.
“You may think it’s a pipe-dream, Judge, but it ain’t. It’s the solemn truth, if I ever told it in my life. I intended to let Joe Newbolt go on and carry what he’d picked up, and then when he was out of the way in the pen, or worse, maybe, I intended to hunt Ollie up and marry her. I didn’t want that business that Joe Newbolt’s been keeping back let out on her, don’t you see, Judge? It concerns her and me, Judge; it ain’t the kind of a story a man’s folks would want told around about his wife, you understand?”
“All right,” said Morgan, wiping his forehead, which was beaded with sweat, “Last night along about ten o’clock I was in my room reading the account in the paper of how Joe had refused on the stand yesterday to tell anything, and how a young woman had stood up in the court-room and backed him up and encouraged him in his stand. I was reading along comfortable and all right, when I seemed to hear somebody call me by my name.
“I tell you I seemed to hear it, for there wasn’t a soul in that room but myself, Judge. But that voice seemed to sound as close to my ear as if it come out of a telephone. And it was a woman’s voice, too, believe me or not, Judge!”
“Yes?” said the judge, encouragingly, still studying Morgan’s face, curiously.
“Yes, sir. She repeated my name, ‘Curtis Morgan,’ just that way. And then that voice seemed to say to me, ‘Come to Shelbyville; start now, start now!’
“Say, I got out of my chair, all in a cold sweat, for I thought it was a call, and I was slated to pass in my checks right there. I looked under everything, back of everything in that room, and opened the door and took a dive down the hall, thinkin’ maybe some swift guy was tryin’ to put one over. Nobody there. As empty, Judge, I tell you, as the pa’m of my hand! But it’s no stall about that voice. I heard it, as plain as I ever heard my mother call me, or the teacher speak to me in school.
“I stood there holding onto the back of my chair, my legs as weak under me as if I’d stayed in swimmin’ too long. I didn’t think anything about going to Shelbyville, or anywhere else, but hell, I guess, for a minute or two. I tell you, Judge, I thought it was a call!”