The Prodigal Judge Part 25
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The color crept slowly back into the judge's cheeks, but a tremulous hand stole up to his throat.
"No, sir--no; my name is Price--Sloc.u.m Price!
Turberville--Turberville--" he muttered thickly, staring stupidly at Carrington.
"It's not a common name; you seem to have heard it before?" said the latter.
A spasm of pain pa.s.sed over the judge's face.
"I--I've heard it. The name is on the rifle, you say?"
"Here on the stock, yes."
The judge took the gun and examined it in silence.
"Where did you get this rifle, Hannibal?" he at length asked brokenly.
"I fetched it away from the Barony, sir; Mr. Crenshaw said I might have it."
The judge gave a great start, and a hoa.r.s.e inarticulate murmur stole from between his twitching lips.
"The Barony--the Barony--what Barony? The Quintard seat in North Carolina, is that what you mean?"
"Yes," said the boy.
The judge, as though stunned, stared at Hannibal and stared at the rifle, where the rusted name-plate danced before his eyes.
"What do you know of the Barony, Hannibal?" the words came slowly from the judge's lips, and his face had gone gray again.
"I lived at the Barony once, until Uncle Bob took me to Scratch Hill to be with him. It were Mr. Crenshaw said I was to have the old sp'otin'
rifle," said Hannibal.
"You--you lived at the Barony?" repeated the judge, and a dull stupid wonder struck through his tone, he pa.s.sed a shaking hand before his eyes. "How long ago--when?" he continued.
"I don't know how long it were, but until Uncle Bob carried me away after the old general died."
The judge slipped a hand under the child's chin and tilted his face back so that he might look into it. For a long moment he studied closely those small features, then with a shake of the head he handed the rifle to Carrington, and without a word strode forward. Carrington had been regarding Hannibal with a quickened interest.
"h.e.l.lo!" he said, as the judge moved off. "You're the boy I saw at Scratch Hill!"
Hannibal gave him a frightened glance, and edged to Mr. Mahaffy's side, but did not answer him.
"What's become of Bob Yancy?" Carrington went on. He looked from Mahaffy to the judge; externally neither of these gentlemen was calculated to inspire confidence. Mahaffy, keenly alive to this fact, returned Carrington's glance with a fixed and hostile stare. "Come--" said Carrington good-naturedly, "you surely remember me?"
"Yes, sir; I reckon I do--"
"Can't you tell me about Mr. Yancy?"
"No, sir; I don't know exactly where he is--"
"But how did you get here?" persisted Carrington.
Suddenly Mahaffy turned on him.
"Don't you see he's with us?" he said truculently.
"Well, my dear sir, I certainly intended no offense!" rejoined Carrington rather hotly.
Mahaffy was plainly disturbed, the debased currency of his affection was in circulation where Hannibal was concerned, and he eyed the river-man askance. He was prepared to give him the lie should he set up any claim to the boy.
The judge plodded forward, his shoulders drooped, and his head bowed.
For once silence had fixed its seal upon his lips, no inspiring speech fell from them. He had been suddenly swept back into a past he had striven these twenty years and more to forget, and his memories shaped themselves fantastically. Surely if ever a man had quitted the world that knew him, he was that man! He had died and yet he lived--lived horribly, without soul or heart, the empty sh.e.l.l of a man.
A turn in the road brought them within sight of Boggs' racetrack, a wide level meadow. The judge paused irresolutely, and turned his bleared face on his friend.
"We'll stop here, Solomon," he said rather wearily, for the spirit of boast and jest was quite gone out of him. He glanced toward Carrington.
"Are you a resident of these parts, sir?" he asked.
"I've been in Raleigh three days altogether," answered Carrington, falling into step at his side, and they continued on across the meadow in silence.
"Do you observe the decorations of those refreshment booths?--the tasteful disposition of our national colors, sir?" the judge presently inquired.
Carrington smiled; he was able to follow his companion's train of thought.
They were elbowing the crowd now. Here were men from the small clearings in homespun and b.u.t.ternut or fringed hunting-s.h.i.+rts, with their women folk trailing after them. Here, too, in lesser numbers, were the lords of the soil, the men who counted their acres by the thousand and their slaves by the score. There was the flutter of skirts among the moving groups, the nodding of gay parasols that shaded fresh young faces, while occasionally a comfortable family carriage with some planter's wife or daughter rolled silently over the turf; for Boggs' race-track was a famous meeting-place where families that saw one another not above once or twice a year, friends who lived a day's hard drive apart even when summer roads were at their best, came as to a common center.
The judge's dull eye kindled, the haggard lines that had streaked his face erased themselves. This was life, opulent and full. These swift rolling carriages with their handsome women, these well-dressed men on foot, and splendidly mounted, all did their part toward lifting him out of his gloom. He settled his hat on his head with a rakish slant and his walk became a strut, he courted observation; he would have been grateful for a word, even a jest at his expense.
A cry from Hannibal drew his attention. Turning, he was in time to see the boy bound away. An instant later, to his astonishment, he saw a young girl who was seated with two men in an open carriage, spring to the ground, and dropping to her knees put her arms about the tattered little figure.
"Why, Hannibal!" cried Betty Malroy.
"Miss Betty! Miss Betty!" and Hannibal buried his head on her shoulder.
"What is it, Hannibal; what is it, dear?"
"Nothing, only I'm so glad to find you!"
"I am glad to see you, too!" said Betty, as she wiped his tears away.
"When did you get here, dear?"
"We got here just to-day, Miss Betty," said Hannibal.
Mr. Ware, careless as to dress, with a wiry black beard of a week's growth decorating his chin and giving an unkempt appearance which his expression did not mitigate, it being of the sour and fretful sort; scowled down on the child. He had favored Boggs' with his presence, not because he felt the least interest in horse-racing, but because he had no faith in girls, and especially had he profound mistrust of Betty. She was so much easily portable wealth, a pink-faced chit ready to fall into the arms of the first man who proposed to her. But Charley Norton had not seemed disturbed by the planter's forbidding air. Between those two there existed complete reciprocity of feeling, inasmuch as Tom's presence was as distasteful to Norton as his own presence was distressing to Ware.
"Where is your Uncle Bob, Hannibal?" Betty asked, glancing about, and at her question a shadow crossed the child's face and the tears gathered again in his eyes.
"Ain't you seen him, Miss Betty?" he whispered. He had been sustained by the belief that when he found her he should find his Uncle Bob, too.
The Prodigal Judge Part 25
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The Prodigal Judge Part 25 summary
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