Cousin Maude - Page 25/138

Here he stopped, being for a second time in his life at a loss what

to say.

"Sarve 'em right, sarve 'em right," muttered John, whose quick eye

saw everything. "Ole Sam payin' him off good. He think he'll be in

the seventh heaven when he got a boy, and he mighty nigh torment

that little gal's life out with his mexens and things; but now he

got a boy, he feel a heap like the bad place."

Still much as John rejoiced that his master was so punished, his

heart went out in pity toward the helpless child whom he almost

worshiped, carrying him often to the fields, where, seeking out the

shadiest spot and the softest grass for a throne, he would place the

child upon it, and then pay him obeisance by bobbing up and down his

wooly head in a manner quite as satisfactory to Louis as if he

indeed had been a king and John his loyal subject. Old Hannah, too,

was greatly softened, and many a little cake and pie she baked in

secret for the child, while even Nellie gave up to him her favorite

playthings, and her blue eyes wore a pitying look whenever they

rested on the poor unfortunate. All loved him seemingly the more--

all, save the cruel father, who, as the months and years rolled on,

seemed to acquire a positive dislike to the little boy, seldom

noticing him in any way except to frown if he were brought into his

sight. And Louis, with the quick instinct of childhood, learned to

expect nothing from his father, whose attention he never tried to

attract.

As if to make amends for his physical deformity, he possessed an

uncommon mind, and when he was nearly six years of age accident

revealed to him the reason of his father's continued coldness, and

wrung from him the first tears he had ever shed for his misfortune.

He heard one day his mother praying that God would soften her

husband's heart toward his poor hunchback boy, who was not to blame

for his misfortune--and laying his head upon the broad arm of the

chair which had been made for him, he wept bitterly, for he knew now

why he was not loved. That night, as in his crib he lay, watching

the stars which shone upon him through the window, and wondering if

in heaven there were hunchback boys like him, he overheard his

father talking to his mother, and the words that his father said

were never forgotten to his dying day. There were, "Don't ask me to

be reconciled to a cripple! What good can he do me? He will never

earn his own living, lame as he is, and will only be in the way."