The Heart's Kingdom - Page 33/148

But just here, when Judge Nickols Morris Powers was winding himself up

for one of the greatest appeals to a jury he had ever made, a mule

stepped into the case and took away the honor of its winning. He poked

his inquisitive nose into a back window of the court room which looked

out upon the edge of the big woods, and gave the whole assemblage a

hew-haw of derision.

"Lordy mighty, that are Pete come back hisself with all the curkles in

the big woods sticking to him!" exclaimed Hiram Turner, as he rose and

went to examine his property. "He wasn't sold to no mule man, fer they

crops the hair on their hoofs to see if they's healthy 'fore they buys.

This here frees Jed."

"And now that you gentlemen have the testimony of a mule, will you not

believe the word of Mrs. Bangs and Miss Powers about the valuable

quilts?" my father said, after he had commanded silence by raising his

hand.

"We shore do believe every word of it, stranger, and you won this here

case and not that mule," a stern old sister in a gingham apron and black

bonnet said, with a commanding glance at the jury.

"Yes, stranger," answered the hoary old foreman, whom to this day I

believe to be the meek husband of the commanding old woman in the black

bonnet. "I have done got the mind of the jury and they all voted fer you

and not the mule."

"I hereby gives that mule to Jed Bangs and my daughter, Melissa, and

I'll knock off a half on the price of his teammate to Jed if he gives me

his fergiveness and hern," old Hiram rose and turned with his hand on

the forelock of the mule hero to say to the assembled court room. "Go

around and halter him quick, Jed, 'fore he breaks away again, the durned

fool," he added in another voice.

"Yes, prisoner, you are declared free, and hurry to ketch him, fer he's

straining ag'inst Hiram," was the judge's sentence, delivered from the

bench as everybody rose and began to stream out to watch the tussle

between Jed and the wild mule. Father and the parson were among the

first to gain the door.

In the next few minutes I found that some of the shy mountain women were

beginning to hover about me, and in another ten minutes I had laid the

foundations of an export rug and quilt business that I have a feeling

will thrive greatly.

"Were you arrested because your mother told you not to sell the quilts?"

was Charlotte's sympathetic question to the young Mrs. Bangs; and I saw

the mite take a clean handkerchief from her small pink pocket and apply

it to the tears that were coursing down Melissa's cheeks over the

dimples which her smiling mouth was putting in their way. "Just be a

good girl and God will forgive you," she comforted further, nestling a

dirty pink cheek, which rubbed off, against Melissa's wet one.