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After she had gone the judge paced his study nervously for a half-hour, giving uncertain glances towards the hall door, as if he expected the advent of an incarnate thunderbolt. In the afternoon he sent over a bottle of his best Madeira as a peace-offering. Mrs. Webb acknowledged the Madeira, not the truce. The following day General Battle called upon the judge and requested in half-hearted tones the withdrawal of Amos Burr's son. He looked excited and somewhat alarmed, and the judge recognised the hand of the player.
"My dear Tom Battle," he said soothingly, "you do not wish the poor child any harm."
"'Fore G.o.d, I don't, George," stammered the general.
"He's a quiet, unoffending lad."
The general fingered his limp cravat with agitated plump fingers. "I never pa.s.sed him on the road in my life that he didn't touch his hat,"
he admitted, "and once he took a stone out of the gray mare's shoe."
"He has a brain and he has ambition. Think what it is to be born in a lower cla.s.s and to have a mind above it."
The general's great chest trembled.
"I wouldn't injure the little chap for the world George; on my soul, I wouldn't."
"I know it, Tom."
"My own great-grandfather Battle raised himself, George."
The judge waved the fact aside as insignificant.
"Of course, Mrs. Webb is a woman," he said with s.e.xual cynicism, "and her views are naturally prejudiced. You can't expect a woman to look at things as coolly as we do, Tom."
The general brightened.
"'Tisn't nature," he declared. "You can't expect a woman to go against nature, sir."
"And Mrs. Webb, though an unusual woman (the general nodded), is still a woman."
The general nodded again, though less emphatically.
"On my soul, she's wonderful!" he exclaimed. "Why, damme, sir, if I had that woman to brace me up I shouldn't need a julep."
And the judge, flinching from his friend's profanity, called Caesar to bring in the decanters.
Some time later the general left and Mr. Burwell appeared, to be met and dispatched by the same arguments.
"Naturally my instincts prompt me to side with an unprotected widow,"
said Mr. Burwell.
"No Virginian could feel otherwise," admitted the judge in the slightly pompous tone in which he alluded to his native State.
"But as I said to my wife," continued Mr. Burwell with convincing earnestness, "these matters had best be left to men. There is no need for our wives and daughters to be troubled by them. It is for us, who are acquainted with the world and who have had wide experience, to settle all social barriers."
The judge agreed as before.
"I am glad to say that my wife takes my view of it," the other went on.
"Indeed, I think she has expressed what I have said to Mrs. Webb."
"Your wife is an honour to her s.e.x," said the judge, bowing.
Then Mr. Burwell left, and the judge spent another half-hour walking up and down his study floor. He had gained the victory, but he would have felt pleasanter had it been defeat. It was as if he had taken some secret advantage of a woman--of a widow.
But the future of Amos Burr's son was sealed so far as it lay in the judge's power to settle with circ.u.mstances, and each morning during the school term Mrs. Webb frowned down upon his hurrying figure as it sped along the street and turned the corner at the palace green. Sometimes, when snow was falling, he would shoot by like an arrow, and Dudley would say with quick compa.s.sion, as he looked up from his steaming cakes: "It's because he hasn't any overcoat, mother. He runs to keep warm."
But Mrs. Webb's placid eyes would not darken.
When the boys grew too old for school Tom and Dudley went to King's College for a couple of years, while Nicholas returned to the farm. The judge still befriended him, and the contents of Tom's cla.s.s books found their way into his head sooner or later, with more information than Tom's brain could hold. One of the instructors at the college--a consumptive young fellow, whose ambitions had leaned towards the bar--gave the boy what a.s.sistance he needed, and when the work of the cla.s.s-room and the farm was over, the two would meet in the dim old library of the college and plod through heavy, discoloured pages, while the portraits of painted aristocrats glowered down upon the intrusive plebeian.
Despite the hard labour of spring ploughing and the cold of early winter dawns, when he was up and out of doors, the years pa.s.sed happily enough.
He beheld the future through the visions of an imaginative mind, and it seemed big with promise. Sitting in the quaint old library, surrounded by faded relics and colourless traditions, he felt the breath of hushed oratory in the air, and political pa.s.sion stirred in the surrounding dust. There was a niche in a small alcove, where he spent the spare hours of many a day, the words of great, long-gone Virginians lying before him; behind him, through the small square window, all the blue-green sweep of the college grounds ending where the Old Stage Road led on to his father's farm.
He plodded ardently and earnestly, the consumptive young instructor following his studies with the wistful eyes of one who sees another striving where he has striven and failed. The students met him with tolerant hilarity, and Tom Ba.s.sett, who would have kicked the Declaration of Independence across the campus in lieu of a ball, watched him with secret mirth and open champions.h.i.+p. There had sprung up a strong friends.h.i.+p between the two--one of those rare affections which bend but do not break. Dudley Webb, the most brilliant member of his cla.s.s and the light of his mother's eyes, began life, as he would end it, with the ready grasp of good-fellows.h.i.+p. He had long since outgrown his artificial, childish distrust of Nicholas, and he had as long ago forgotten that he had ever entertained it. As for Nicholas himself, he had not forgotten it, but the memory was of little moment. He had a work to do in life, and he did it as best he might. If it were the ploughing of rocky soil, so much the worse; if the uprooting of dead men's thoughts, so much the better. He slighted neither the one nor the other.
As he grew older he became tall and broad of chest, with shoulders which suggested the athlete rather than the student. His hair had darkened to a less flaming red, his eyes had grown brighter, and the freckles had faded into a general gray tone of complexion.
"He will be the ugliest man in the State," said Mr. Burwell, inflating his pink cheeks, with a return of youthful vanity, "but it is the ugliness that attracts."
Nicholas had not heard, but, had he done so, the words would have left a sting. He possessed an inherent regard for physical perfection, rendered the greater by his own tormented childhood. He was strong and vigorous and of well-knit sinews, but he would have given his muscle for Dudley Webb's hands and his brains for the other's hair.
Once, as a half-grown boy, in a fit of jealousy inspired by Dudley's good looks, he had called him "Miss Nancy," and knocked him down. When his enemy had lain at his feet on the green he had raised him up and made amends by standing motionless while Dudley lashed him with a small riding-whip. The jealousy had vanished since then, but the smart was still there.
At last the college days were over. Dudley was sent to the university of the State; Tom Ba.s.sett and Bernard Battle soon followed, and Nicholas, still plodding and still hopeful, was left in Kingsborough.
Then, upon his nineteenth birthday, the judge, who had left the bench and resumed his legal practice, sent for him and offered to take him into his office while he prepared himself for the bar.
II
When Nicholas descended the judge's steps he lingered for a moment in the narrow walk. His head was bent, and the books which he carried under his arm were pressed against his side. They seemed to contain all that was needed for the making of his future--those books and his impatient mind. His success was as a.s.sured as if he held it already in the hollow of his hand--and with success would come honour and happiness and all that was desired of man. It seemed to him that his lot was the one of all others which he would have chosen of his free and untrammelled will.
To strive and to win; to surmount all obstacles by the determined dash of ambition; to rise from obscurity unto prominence through the sheer forces that make for power--what was better than this?
Still plunged in thought, he pa.s.sed the church and followed the street to the Old Stage Road. From the college dormitories a group of students sang out a greeting, and he responded impulsively, tossing his hat in the air. In his face a glow had risen, harmonising his inharmonious features. He felt as a man feels who stands before a closed door and knows that he has but to cross the threshold to grasp the fulness of his aspiration. Yes, to-day he envied no one--neither Tom Ba.s.sett nor Dudley Webb, neither the general nor the judge. He held the books tightly under his arm and smiled down upon the road. His clumsy, store-made boots left heavy tracks in the dust, but he seemed to be treading air.
It was three o'clock in the afternoon of a murky day in early November, and the clouds were swollen with incoming autumnal rains. The open country stretched before him in monotonous grays, the long road gleaming pallid in the general drab of the landscape. As he pa.s.sed along, holding his hat in his hand, his uplifted head struck the single, high-coloured note in the picture--all else was dull and leaden.
A farmer driving a cow to market neared him, and Nicholas stopped to remark upon the outlook. The farmer, a thick-set, hairy man, whose name was Turner, gave a sudden hitch to the halter to check the progress of the cow, and nodded ominously.
"Bad weather's brewin'," he said. "The wind's blowin' from the northeast; I can tell by the way that thar oak turns its leaves. It's a bad sign, and if thar ain't a-s.h.i.+ftin' 'fore mornin', we're likely to hev a spell."
Nicholas agreed.
"There hasn't been much rainfall lately," he added. "I reckon it has come at last and for a long stretch." His eyes swept the western horizon, where the clouds hung heavily above the pines.
"Yo' pa got his crops in?"