"Got a Bible of your own?" he asked at last.
"Oh yes, I own one, I believe."
"And never read it! Bah, what good does it do you to have books if you don"t read "em? Now I"m going to find out about this "H-a-b-a-k-k-u-k,"
and then I shall know more than you do."
Mr. Ryan laughed a little, but withal seemed somewhat embarra.s.sed. Tode left him and sped back to his dusting.
"Queer chap that," muttered Mr. Ryan. "I don"t know what to make of him."
And a little sense of what might be termed shamefacedness stole over him at the thought that this ignorant boy prized more highly his three leaves of a Bible, picked out of the waste-basket, and possibly was going to know more about it than he, Edgar Ryan, had gleaned from his own handsomely bound copy, wherein his Christian mother had written years ago his own loved name. Mr. Ryan, the cultivated young lawyer, took down his handsome Bible from the shelf of unused books as soon as he had reached his office, dusted it carefully, and turned over the leaves to discover something about Habakkuk.
As for Tode, he literally poured over his three leaves. Very little of the language did he understand--the great and terrible figures were utterly beyond his knowledge; yet as he read them once, and again and again, something of the grandeur and sublimity stole into his heart, helped him without his knowledge, and now and then a word came home, and he caught a vague glimpse of its meaning. "Thou art of purer eyes than to behold evil." That was plain; that must mean the great All-seeing Eyes, for Tode knew enough of human nature to have much doubt as to whether any human eyes were pure. But then those unsleeping eyes _did_ behold evil--saw. Oh, Tode could conceive better than many a Sabbath-school scholar can just how much evil there was to behold. How was that? Ah! Tode"s brain didn"t know, couldn"t tell; but into his heart had come the knowledge that between all the evil men and women in this evil world, and those pure eyes of an angry G.o.d, there stood the blood-red cross of Christ.
There were many guests to be waited on; the tables were filling rapidly.
Tode was springing about with eager steps, handling deftly coffee, oysters, wine, anything that was called for--bright, busy, brisk as usual. As he set a cup of steaming coffee beside Mr. Ryan"s plate, that gentleman glanced up good-humoredly and addressed him.
"Well, Tode, how is Habakkuk?"
"First-rate, sir, only there"s some queer things in it."
"I should think there was!" laughed Mr. Ryan, spilling his coffee in his mirth. "Rather beyond you, isn"t it?"
"Well, _some_ of it," said Tode, hesitatingly. "But it all means _something_, likely, and I"m learning it, so I"ll have it on hand to find out about one of these days, when I find a lawyer or somebody who can explain it, you know."
This last with a twinkle of the eye, and a certain almost noiseless chuckle, that said it was intended to hit.
"You"re learning it!" exclaimed Mr. Ryan, undisguised astonishment mingling with his amus.e.m.e.nt.
"Yes, sir. Learn a figure a day. It"s all marked off into figures, you know, sir."
"Well, of all queer chaps, you"re the queerest!"
And Mr. Ryan went off into another laugh as Tode sped away to a new corner. By the time he was ready for a second cup of coffee, Mr. Ryan was also ready with more questions.
"Well, sir, what"s to-day"s figure?"
"For the earth shall be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord, as the waters cover the sea," repeated Tode, promptly and glibly.
"Indeed! and what do you make out of that?"
"It makes itself; and that"s something that"s going to be one of these days."
"Oh, and what does the "glory of the Lord" mean, Tode?"
"_I_ don"t know; expect _he_ does, though," answered Tode, simply and significantly.
Mr. Ryan didn"t seem inclined to continue that line of questioning.
"Well," he said, presently, "let"s turn to an easier chapter. What"s to-morrow"s figure?"
"Don"t know. I might look though, if you wanted to hear." And Tode drew his precious three leaves from his vest pocket.
"Oh, you carry Habakkuk about with you, do you? Well, let"s have the figure by all means, only pa.s.s me that bottle of wine first."
But Tode"s face paled and his limbs actually shook.
"I can"t do it," he said at last.
"You can"t! Why, what"s up?"
"Just look for yourself, sir. It"s the figure 15." And he thrust the bit of leaf before the gay young lawyer, and pointed with his finger to the spot.
Of all words that could have come before his eyes just then, it seemed strange indeed that these should be the ones:
"Woe unto him that giveth his neighbor drink!"
"Pshaw!" said Mr. Ryan at last, with a little nervous laugh. "Don"t be a goose, Tode. Take your paper away and pa.s.s me the wine."
"I can"t, sir," answered Tode, earnestly. "I promised him to-day, I did, that I was going to do it all just as fast as I found it out."
"Promised who? What are you talking about?"
"Promised the Lord Jesus Christ, sir. I told him this very day."
"Fiddlesticks. You don"t understand. This refers to drunkards."
"It don"t say so," answered Tode, simply.
"Yes, it does. Don"t it say, "and makes him drunk?""
"It says and makes him drunk _also_," Tode said, with a sharp, searching look.
Mr. Ryan laughed that short nervous laugh again.
"You ought to study law, Tode," was all _he_ said. Then after a moment.
"I advise you to attend to business, and let Habakkuk look after himself. Jim, pa.s.s that wine bottle this way."
This to another attendant who was near at hand, and Tode moved away to attend to other wants, and to turn over in his mind this new and startling thought.
[Ill.u.s.tration]
CHAPTER XI.
BUSINESS AND BOTTLES.