"Oh no! But tell me: is it all right?"
"Yes, it's all right. Judge Strong has kindly granted our friends another year. That will give us time to do something."
Arriving at the house he gave Hope the letter for Deborah. "And here," he said, "is something for you." From under the buggy seat he drew the big bass.
When Dan returned to Gordon's Mills with the team the next morning, he gave back the Doctor's check, saying simply, "The Judge listened to reason and decided that he would not press the case." And that was all the explanation he ever made though it was by no means the end of the matter.
Dan himself did not realize what he had done. He did not realize how potent were the arguments that he had used to convince the Judge.
The young minister had at last furnished the motive for which the Ally waited!
CHAPTER XXX.
THE DAUGHTER OP THE CHURCH
"Thus the Ally has something for everybody."
Dan was right. Judge Strong could not afford to make public the facts connected with the young man's visit to him that evening. He could not afford it for more reasons than Dan knew. The arguments with which the minister had backed up his personal influence were stronger than he realized. The more the Judge thought about the whole matter the more he was inclined to congratulate himself that he had been saved from a step far more dangerous than he had ever before ventured. He saw where, in his desire to possess all, he had come perilously near losing everything. But these reflections did not make the Elder feel one whit kindlier towards Dan.