Ishmael; Or, In the Depths - BestLightNovel.com
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"I--don't know; I fear not."
"There was nothing against the wife's character?"
"Not a breath! How should there be, when she keeps a respectable school?
And when he himself wishes, in getting possession of the children, only to compel her through her love for them to come to him."
"Seething the kid in its mother's milk, or something quite as cruel,"
murmured Ishmael to himself.
The judge, who did not know what he was muttering to himself, continued:
"Well, there is the case, as Walsh delivered it to me. If there is anything else of importance connected with the case, you will doubtless find it in the brief. He actually offered the brief to me at first. He has been so long away that he did not know my present position, and that I had long since ceased to practice. So when he met me in the courtroom to-day he greeted me as an old friend, told me his business at the court, said that he considered the meeting providential, and offered me his brief. I explained to him the impossibility of my taking it, and then he begged me to recommend some lawyer. I named you to him without hesitation, giving you what I considered only your just meed of praise.
He immediately asked me to take charge of the brief and the retaining fee, and offer both to you in his name, and say to you that he should call early to-morrow morning to consult with you."
"I am very grateful to you, Judge Merlin, for your kind interest in my welfare," said Ishmael warmly.
"Not at all, my lad; for I owe you much, Ishmael. You have been an invaluable a.s.sistant to me. Doing a great deal more for me than the letter of your duty required."
"I do not think so, sir; but I am very glad to have your approbation."
"Thank you, boy; but now, Ishmael, to business. You cannot do better than to take this brief. It is the very neatest little case that ever a lawyer had; all the plain law on your side; a dash of the sentimental, too, in the injured father's affection for the children that have been torn from him, the injured husband for the wife that repudiates him. Now you are good at law, but you are great at sentiment, Ishmael, and between having law on your side and sentiment at your tongue's end, you will be sure to succeed and come off with flying colors. And such success in his first case is of the utmost importance to a young lawyer.
It is in fact the making of his fortune. You will have a shower of briefs follow this success."
"I do not know that I shall take the brief, sir," said Ishmael thoughtfully.
"Not take the brief? Are you mad? Who ever heard of a young lawyer refusing to take such a brief as that?--accompanied by such a retaining fee as that?--the brief the neatest and safest little case that ever came before a court! the retaining fee a hundred dollars! and no doubt he will hand you double that sum when you get your decision--for whatever his fortune has been in times past, he is rich now, this Wals.h.!.+" said the judge vehemently.
"Who is the counsel for the other side?" asked Ishmael.
"Ha, ha, ha! there's where the shoe hurts, is it? there's where the pony halts? that's what's the matter? You are afraid of encountering some of the great guns of the law, are you? Don't be alarmed. The schoolmistress is too poor to pay for distinguished legal talent. She may get some briefless pettifogger to appear for her; a man set up for you to knock down. Your case is just what the first case of a young lawyer should be--plain sailing, law distinctly on your side, dash of sentiment, domestic affections, and all that, and certain success at the end. Your victory will be as easy as it will be complete."
"Poor thing!" murmured Ishmael; "too poor to employ talent for the defense of her possession of her own children!"
"Come, my lad; pocket your fee and take up your brief," said the judge.
"I would rather not, sir; I do not like to appear against a woman--a mother defending her right in her own children. It appears to me to be cruel to wish to deprive her of them," said the gentle-spirited young lawyer.
"Cruel; it is merciful rather. No one wishes really to deprive her of them, but to give them to their father, that she may be drawn through her love for them to live with him."
"No woman should be so coerced, sir; no man should wish her to be."
"But I tell you it is for her good to be reunited to her husband."
"Her own heart, taught by her own instincts and experiences, is the best judge of that."
"Ishmael don't be Quixotic: if you do, you will never succeed in the legal profession. In this case the law is on the father's side, and you should be on the law's."
"The law is the minister of justice, and shall never in my hands become the accomplice of injustice. The law may be on the father's side; but that remains to be proved when both sides shall be heard; but it appears to me that justice and mercy are on the mother's side."
"That remains to be proved. Come, boy, don't be so mad as to refuse this golden opening to fame and fortune! Pocket your fee and take up your brief."
"Judge Merlin, I thank you from the depths of my heart for your great goodness in procuring this chance for me; and I beg that you will pardon me for what I am about to say--but I cannot touch either fee or brief.
The case is a case of cruelty, sir, and I cannot have anything to do with it. I cannot make my debut in a court of law against a poor woman,--a poor mother,--to tear from her the babes she is clasping to her bosom."
"Ishmael, if those are the sentiments and principles under which you mean to act, you will never attain the fame to which your talents might otherwise lead you--never!"
"No, never," said Ishmael fervently; "never, if to reach it I have to step upon a woman's heart! No! by the sacred grave of my own dear mother, I never will!" And the face of Nora's son glowed with an earnest, fervent, holy love.
"Be a poet, Ishmael, you will never be a lawyer."
"Never--if to be a lawyer I have to cease to be a man! But it is as G.o.d wills."
The ringing of the tea-bell broke up the conference, and they went down into the parlor, where, beside the family, they found Viscount Vincent.
And Ishmael Worth, the weaver's son, had the honor of sitting down to tea with a live lord.
The viscount spent the evening, and retired late.
As Ishmael bade the family good-night, the judge said:
"My young friend, consult your pillow. I always do, when I can, before making any important decision. Think over the matter well, my lad, and defer your final decision about the brief until you see Walsh to-morrow."
"You are very kind to me, sir. I will follow your advice, as far as I may do so," replied Ishmael.
That night, lying upon his bed, Ishmael's soul was a.s.sailed with temptation. He knew that in accepting the brief offered to him, in such flattering terms, he should in the first place very much please his friend, Judge Merlin--who, though he did not give his young a.s.sistant anything like a fair salary for his services, yet took almost a fatherly interest in his welfare; he knew also, in the second place, that he might--nay, would--open his way to a speedy success and a brilliant professional career, which would, in a reasonable s.p.a.ce of time, place him in a position even to aspire to the hand of Claudia Merlin. Oh, most beautiful of temptations that! To refuse the brief, he knew, would be to displease Judge Merlin, and to defer his own professional success for an indefinite length of time.
All night long Ishmael struggled with the tempter. In the morning he arose from his sleepless pillow unrefreshed and fevered. He bathed his burning head, made his morning toilet, and sat down to read a portion of the Scripture, as was his morning custom, before beginning the business of the day. The portion selected this morning was the fourth chapter of Matthew, describing the fast and the temptation of our Saviour. Ishmael had read this portion of Scripture many times before, but never with such deep interest as now, when it seemed to answer so well his own spirit's need. With the deepest reverence he read the words:
"When he had fasted forty days and forty nights, he was afterwards an hungered.
"The devil taketh him up into an exceeding high mountain, and showeth him all the kingdoms of the world and the glory of them;
"And saith unto him, All these things will I give thee if thou wilt fall down and wors.h.i.+p me.
"Then saith Jesus unto him, Get thee hence, Satan: for it is written, Thou shalt wors.h.i.+p the Lord thy G.o.d, and him only shalt thou serve.
"Then the devil leaveth him, and behold, angels came and ministered unto him."
Ishmael closed the book and bowed his head in serious thought.
"Yes," he said to himself; "I suppose it must be so. The servant is not greater than the Master. He was tempted in the very opening of his ministry; and I suppose every follower of him must be tempted in like manner in the beginning of his life. I, also, here in the commencement of my professional career, am subjected to a great temptation, that must decide, once for all, whether I will serve G.o.d or Satan! I, too, have had a long, long fast--a fast from all the pleasant things of this world, and I am an hungered--ah, very much hungered for some joys! I, too, am offered success and honor and glory if I will but fall down and wors.h.i.+p Satan in the form of the golden fee and the cruel brief held out to me. But I will not. Oh, Heaven helping me, I will be true to my highest convictions of duty! Yes--come weal or come woe, I will be true to G.o.d. I will be a faithful steward of the talents he has intrusted to me."
And with this resolution in his heart Ishmael went down into the library and commenced his usual morning's work of answering letters and writing out law doc.u.ments. He found an unusual number of letters to write, and they occupied him until the breakfast bell rang.
After breakfast Ishmael returned to the library and resumed his work, and was busily engaged in engrossing a deed of conveyance when the door opened and Judge Merlin entered accompanied by a tall, dark-haired, handsome, and rather prepossessing-looking man, of about fifty years of age, whom he introduced as Mr. Walsh.
Ishmael arose to receive the visitor, and offer him a chair, which he took.