The Prodigal Judge
The Quintards had not prospered on the barren lands of the pine woods whither they had emigrated to escape the malaria of the low coast, but this no longer mattered, for the last of his name and race, old General Quintard, was dead in the great house his father had built almost a century before and the thin acres of the Barony, where he had made his last stand against age and poverty, were to claim him, now that he had given up the struggle in their midst. The two or three old slaves about the place, stricken with a sense of the futility of the fight their master had made, mourned for him and for themselves, but of his own blood and class none was present.
Shy dwellers from the pine woods, lanky jeans-clad men and sunbonneted women, who were gathering for the burial of the famous man of their neighborhood, grouped themselves about the lawn which had long since sunk to the uses of a pasture lot. Singly or by twos and threes they stole up the steps and across the wide porch to the open door. On the right of the long hall another door stood open, and who wished could enter the drawing-room, with its splendid green and gold paper, and the wonderful fireplace with the Dutch tiles that graphically depicted the story of Jonah and the whale.
Here the general lay in state. The slaves had dressed their old master in the uniform he had worn as a colonel of the continental line, but the thin shoulders of the wasted figure no longer filled the buff and blue coat. The high-bred face, once proud and masterful no doubt, as became the face of a Quintard, spoke of more than age and poverty—it was infinitely sorrowful. Yet there was something harsh and unforgiving in the lines death had fixed there, which might have been taken as the visible impress of that mystery, the bitterness of which had misshaped the dead man's nature; but the resolute lips had closed for ever on their secret, and the broken spirit had gone perhaps to learn how poor a thing its pride had been.
Though he had lived continuously at the Barony for almost a quarter of a century, there was none among his neighbors who could say he had looked on that thin, aquiline face in all that time. Yet they had known much of him, for the gossip of the slaves, who had been his only friends in those years he had chosen to deny himself to other friends, had gone far and wide over the county.
Vaughan Kester
THE PRODIGAL JUDGE
CHAPTER I. THE BOY AT THE BARONY
CHAPTER II. YANCY TELLS A MORAL TALE
CHAPTER III. TROUBLE AT SCRATCH HILL
CHAPTER IV. LAW AT BALAAM'S CROSS-ROADS
CHAPTER V. THE ENCOUNTER
CHAPTER VI. BETTY SETS OUT FOR TENNESSEE
CHAPTER VII. THE FIGHT AT SLOSSON'S TAVERN
CHAPTER VIII. ON THE RIVER
CHAPTER IX. JUDGE SLOCUM PRICE
CHAPTER X. BOON COMPANIONS
CHAPTER XI. THE ORATOR Or THE DAY
CHAPTER XII. THE FAMILY ON THE RAFT
CHAPTER XIII. THE JUDGE BREAKS JAIL
CHAPTER XIV. BELLE PLAIN
CHAPTER XV. THE SHOOTING-MATCH AT BOGGS'
CHAPTER XVI. THE PORTAL OF HOPE
CHAPTER XVII. BOB YANCY FINDS HIMSELF
CHAPTER XVIII. AN ORPHAN MAN OF TITLE
CHAPTER XIX. THE JUDGE SEES A GHOST
CHAPTER XX. THE WARNING
CHAPTER XXI. THICKET POINT
CHAPTER XXII. AT THE CHURCH DOOR
CHAPTER XXIII. THE JUDGE OFFERS A REWARD
CHAPTER XXIV. THE CABIN ACROSS THE BAYOU
CHAPTER XXV. THE JUDGE EXTENDS HIS CREDIT
CHAPTER XXVI. BETTY LEAVES BELLE PLAIN
CHAPTER XXVII. PRISONERS
CHAPTER XXVIII. THE JUDGE MEETS THE SITUATION
CHAPTER XXIX. COLONEL FENTRESS
CHAPTER XXX. THE BUBBLE BURSTS
CHAPTER XXXI. THE KEEL BOAT
CHAPTER XXXII. THE RAFT AGAIN
CHAPTER XXXIII. THE JUDGE RECEIVES A LETTER
CHAPTER XXXIV. THE DUEL
CHAPTER XXXV. A CRISIS AT THE COURT-HOUSE
CHAPTER XXXVI. THE END AND THE BEGINNING