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The Roof Tree

by Charles Neville Buck

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EPUB
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Description

The novel is a narrative fiction written in prose form, set in the early 20th century. Its plot revolves around the aftermath of a violent incident in a mountain cabin, which results in a murder and prompts the protagonist, Kenneth Thornton, to flee and assume a new identity. The story explores themes of violence, protection, and familial loyalty, with the characters experiencing intense emotional and physical conflicts. The opening scenes depict a tense confrontation involving a gunshot, highlighting the peril and upheaval faced by the characters, particularly Thornton and his sister Sally, amid abusive circumstances.

The narrative is rooted in American literary traditions of the period, situated within a rural or mountain environment. It provides a detailed depiction of personal and social dynamics, including issues of domestic abuse, justice, and survival. The work reflects early 20th-century concerns and storytelling styles, emphasizing character psychology and moral dilemmas within a realist framework.

From the opening pages

brutality of this husband whose friends in that neighbourhood were among the little czars of influence. Her suffering under an endless reign of terror was a well-kept secret which only her brother shared. The big, crudely handsome brute had been "jobial" and suave of manner among his fellows and was held in favourable esteem. Only a day or two ago, when the brother had remonstrated in a low voice against some recent cruelty, the husband's wrath had blazed out. Witnesses to that wordy encounter had seen Thornton go white with a rage that was ominous and then bite off his unspoken retort and turn away. Those witnesses had not heard what was first said and had learned only what was revealed in the indignant husband's raised voice at the end. "Don't aim ter threaten me, Ken. I don't suffer no man ter do thet—an' don't never darken my door henceforward." Now it must seem that Thornton had not only threatened but executed, and no one would suspect the wife. He saw in his mind's eye the "High Court" that would try the alleged slayer of John Turk; a court dominated by the dead man's friends; a court where witnesses and jurors would be terror-blinded against the defendant and where a farce would be staged: a sacrifice offered up. There had been in that log house three persons. One of them was dead and his death would speak for him with an eloquence louder than any living tongue. There were, also, the woman and Thornton himself. Between them must lie the responsibility. Conscientiously the fugitive summarized the circumstances as the prosecution would marshal and present them. A man had been shot. On the table lay a pistol with one empty "hull" in its chamber. The woman was the dead man's wife, not long since a bride and shortly to become the mother of his child. If she had been the murdered man's deadly enemy why had she not left him; why had she not complained? But the brother had been heard to threaten the husband only a day or two since. He was in the dead man's house, after being forbidden to shadow its threshold. "Hell!" cried Thornton aloud. "Ef I stayed she'd hev ter come inter C'ote an' sw'ar either fer me or ergin me—an' like es not, she'd break down an' confess. Anyhow, ef they put her in ther…

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