He was living over the past. He recalled his first meeting with Mahaffy in the stuffy cabin of the small river packet from which they had later gone ashore at Pleasantville; he thanked God that it had been given him to see beneath Solomon's forbidding exterior and into that starved heart! He reviewed each phase of the almost insensible growth of their intimacy; he remembered Mahaffy's fine true loyalty at the time of his arrest—he thought of Damon and Pythias—Mahaffy had reached the heights of a sublime devotion; he could only feel enobled that he had inspired it.
At last the dusk of twilight invaded the room. He lighted the candles on the chimneypiece, then he resumed his seat and his former attitude. Suddenly he became aware of a small hand that was resting on his arm and glanced up; Hannibal had stolen quietly into the room. The boy pointed to the still figure on the bed.
“Judge, what makes Mr. Mahaffy lie so quiet—is he dead?” he asked in a whisper.
“Yes, dear lad,” began the judge in a shaking voice as he drew Hannibal toward him, “your friend and mine is dead—we have lost him.” He lifted the boy into his lap, and Hannibal pressed a tear-stained face against the judge's shoulder. “How did you get here?” the judge questioned gently.
“Uncle Bob fetched me,” said Hannibal. “He's down-stairs, but he didn't tell me Mr. Mahaffy was dead-”
“We have sustained a great loss, Hannibal, and we must never forget the moral grandeur of the man. Some day, when you are older, and I can bring myself to speak of it, I will tell you of his last moments.” The judge's voice broke, a thick sob rose chokingly in his throat. “Poor Solomon! A man of such tender feeling that he hid it from the world, for his was a rare nature which only revealed itself to the chosen few he honored with his love.” The judge lapsed into a momentary brooding silence, in which his great arms drew the boy closer against his heart. “Dear lad, since I left you at Belle Plain a very astonishing knowledge has come to me. It was the Hand of Providence—I see it now—that first brought us together. You must not call me judge any more; I am your grandfather your mother was my daughter.”
Hannibal instantly sat erect and looked up at the judge, his blue eyes wide with amazement at this extraordinary statement.
“It is a very strange story, Hannibal, and its links are not all in my hands, but I am sure because of what I already know. I, who thought that not a drop of my blood flowed in any veins but my own, live again in you. Do you understand what I am telling you? Your are my own dear little grandson—” and the judge looked down with no uncertain love and pride into the small face upturned to his.
“I am glad if you are my grandfather, judge,” said Hannibal very gravely. “I always liked you.”
“Thank you, dear lad,” responded the judge with equal gravity, and then as Hannibal nestled back in his grandfather's arms a single big tear dropped from the end of that gentleman's prominent nose.