Tales from Blackwood - LightNovelsOnl.com
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I was tired with my ride, and took a chair. The squire apparently did not deem me worthy of notice, or else reserved me for a later scrutiny; but he fixed a long, searching look upon Bob, who remained standing, with his head sunk on his breast.
The judge at last broke silence.
"So here you are again, Bob. It's long since we've seen you, and I thought you had clean forgotten us. Well, Bob, we shouldn't have broke our hearts, I reckon; for I hate gamblers--ay, that I do--worse than skunks. It's a vile thing is play, and has ruined many a man, both in this world and the next. It's ruined you too, Bob."
Bob said nothing.
"You'd have been mighty useful here last week; there was plenty for you to do. My step-daughter arrived; but as you weren't to be found, we had to send to Joel to shoot us a buck and a few dozen snipes. Ah, Bob! one might still make a good citizen of you, if you'd only leave off that cursed play!"
Bob still remained silent.
"Now, go into the kitchen and get some breakfast."
Bob neither answered nor moved.
"D'ye hear? Go into the kitchen and get something to eat. And, Ptoly"--added he to the negro--"tell Veny to give him a pint of rum."
"Don't want yer rum--ain't thirsty"--growled Bob.
"Very like, very like," said the judge sharply. "Reckon you've taken too much already. Look as if you could swallow a wild cat alive. And you,"
added he, turning to me--"Ptoly, what the devil are you at? Don't you see the man wants his breakfast? Where's the coffee? Or would you rather have tea?"
"Thank you, Alcalde, I have breakfasted already."
"Don't look as if. Ain't sick, are you? Where do you come from? What's happened to you? Ain't got the ague, have you? What are you doing with Bob?"
He looked keenly and searchingly at me, and then again at Bob. My appearance was certainly not very prepossessing, unshaven as I was, and with my clothes and linen soiled and torn. He was evidently considering what could be the motive of our visit, and what had brought me into Bob's society. The result of his physiognomical observations did not appear very favourable either to me or my companion. I hastened to explain.
"You shall hear how it was, judge. I am indebted to Bob for my life."
"Your life! Indebted to Bob for your life!" repeated the judge, shaking his head incredulously.
I related how I had lost my way in the prairie; had been carried into the Jacinto by my horse; and how I should inevitably have been drowned but for Bob's aid.
"Indeed!" said the judge, when I had done speaking. "So Bob saved your life! Is that true, Bob? Well, I am glad of it, Bob--very glad of it.
Ah! if you could only keep away from that Johnny. I tell you, Bob, Johnny will be the ruin of you. Better keep out of his way."
This was spoken gravely and earnestly, the speaker pausing between the sentences to take a pull at his cigar, and a sup out of his gla.s.s.
"Yes, Bob," he repeated; "only keep away from Johnny!"
"It's too late," answered Bob.
"Don't know why it should be. Never too late to leave a debauched, sinful life; never, man!"
"Calkilate it is, though," replied Bob sullenly.
"You calculate it is?" said the judge, fixing his eyes on him. "And why do you calculate that? Take a gla.s.s--Ptoly, a gla.s.s--and tell me, man, why should it be too late?"
"I ain't thirsty, squire," said Bob.
"Don't talk to me of your thirst; rum's not for thirst, but to strengthen the heart and nerves, to drive away the blue devils. And a good thing it is, taken in moderation."
As he spoke he filled himself a gla.s.s, and drank half of it off. Bob shook his head.
"No rum for me, squire. I take no pleasure in it. I've something on my mind too heavy for rum to wash away."
"And what is that, Bob? Come, let's hear what you've got to say. Or, perhaps, you'd rather speak to me alone. It's Sunday to-day, and no business ought to be done; but for once, and for you, we'll make an exception."
"I brought the gentleman with me on purpose to witness what I had to say," answered Bob, taking a cigar out of a box that stood on the table.
Although the judge had not asked him to take one, he very quietly offered him a light. Bob smoked a whiff or two, looked thoughtfully at the judge, and then threw the cigar through the open window.
"It don't relish, squire; nothin' does now."
"Ah, Bob! if you'd leave off play and drink! They're your ruin; worse than ague or fever."
"It's no use," continued Bob, as if he did not hear the judge's remark; "it must out. I fo't agin it, and thought to drive it away, but it can't be done. I've put a bit of lead into several before now, but this one----"
"What's that?" cried the judge, chucking his cigar away, and looking sternly at Bob. "What's up now? What are you saying about a bit of lead?
None of your Sodoma and Lower Natchez tricks, I hope? They won't do here. Don't understand such jokes."
"Pooh! they don't understand them a bit more in Natchez. If they did, I shouldn't be in Texas."
"The less said of that the better, Bob. You promised to lead a new life here; so we won't rake up old stories."
"I did, I did!" groaned Bob; "and I meant it too; but it's all no use. I shall never be better till I'm hung."
I stared at the man in astonishment. The judge, however, took another cigar, lighted it, and, after puffing out a cloud of smoke, said, very unconcernedly--
"Not better till you're hung! What do you want to be hung for? To be sure, you should have been long ago, if the Georgia and Alabama papers don't lie. But we are not in the States here, but in Texas, under Mexican laws. It's nothing to us what you've done yonder. Where there is no accuser there can be no judge."
"Send away the n.i.g.g.e.r, squire," said Bob. "What a free white man has to say, shouldn't be heard by black ears."
"Go away, Ptoly," said the judge. "Now then," added he, turning to Bob, "say what you have to say; but mind, n.o.body forces you to do it, and it's only out of good-will that I listen to you, for to-day's Sunday."
"I know that," muttered Bob; "I know that, squire; but it leaves me no peace, and it must out. I've been to San Felipe de Austin, to Anahuac, everywhere, but it's all no use. Wherever I go, the spectre follows me, and drives me back under the cursed Patriarch."
"Under the Patriarch!" exclaimed the judge.
"Ay, under the Patriarch!" groaned Bob. "Don't you know the Patriarch--the old live oak near the ford, on the Jacinto?"
"I know, I know!" answered the judge. "And what drives you under the Patriarch?"
"What drives me? What drives a man who--who----"
"A man who----" repeated the judge gently.
"A man," continued Bob, in the same low tone, "who has sent a rifle bullet into another's heart. He lies there, under the Patriarch, whom I----"