The Prodigal Judge eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 465 pages of information about The Prodigal Judge.

The Prodigal Judge eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 465 pages of information about The Prodigal Judge.

“You’re the only friend I’ve known in twenty years of loneliness, Price.  I’ve loved you like a brother,” he panted, with a pause between each word.

Again the judge buried his face in his hands.

“I know it, Solomon—­I know it!” he moaned wretchedly.

“Price, you are still a man to be reckoned with.  There’s the boy; take your place for his sake and keep it—­you can.”

“I will—­by God, I will!” gasped the judge.  “You hear me?  You hear me, Solomon?  By God’s good help, I will!”

“You have the president’s letter—­I saw it " said Mahaffy in a whisper.

“Yes!” cried the judge.  “Solomon, the world is changing for us!”

“For me most of all,” murmured Mahaffy, and there was a bleak instant when the judge’s ashen countenance held the full pathos of age and failure.  “Remember your oath, Price,” gasped the dying man.  A moment of silence succeeded.  Mahaffy’s eyes closed, then the heavy lids slid back.  He looked up at the judge while the harsh lines of his sour old face softened wonderfully.  “Kiss me, Price,” he whispered, and as the judge bent to touch him on the brow, the softened lines fixed themselves in death, while on his lips lingered a smilc that was neither bitter nor sneering.

CHAPTER XXXV

A CRISIS AT THE COURT-HOUSE

In that bare upper room they had shared, the judge, crushed and broken, watched beside the bed on which the dead man lay; unconscious of the flight of time he sat with his head bowed in his hands, having scarcely altered his position since he begged those who carried Mahaffy up the narrow stairs to leave him alone with his friend.

He was living over the past.  He recalled his first meeting with Mahaffy in the stuffy cabin of the small river packet from which they had later gone ashore at Pleasantville; he thanked God that it had been given him to see beneath Solomon’s forbidding exterior and into that starved heart!  He reviewed each phase of the almost insensible growth of their intimacy; he remembered Mahaffy’s fine true loyalty at the time of his arrest—­he thought of Damon and Pythias—­Mahaffy had reached the heights of a sublime devotion; he could only feel enobled that he had inspired it.

At last the dusk of twilight invaded the room.  He lighted the candles on the chimneypiece, then he resumed his seat and his former attitude.  Suddenly he became aware of a small hand that was resting on his arm and glanced up; Hannibal had stolen quietly into the room.  The boy pointed to the still figure on the bed.

“Judge, what makes Mr. Mahaffy lie so quiet—­is he dead?” he asked in a whisper.

“Yes, dear lad,” began the judge in a shaking voice as he drew Hannibal toward him, “your friend and mine is dead—­we have lost him.”  He lifted the boy into his lap, and Hannibal pressed a tear-stained face against the judge’s shoulder.  “How did you get here?” the judge questioned gently.

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The Prodigal Judge from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.