A Mistake That Turned Out No Mistake
by Judge Clark
My name is Smith—John Smith, to be more precise—and thereby hangs a tale.
I had barely reached the age at which the law, subject only to its own requirements, gave me the right to do as I pleased, when business of no consequence to the reader called me to Hinnomsdale, a remote country village, ten miles from the nearest railroad, and twice as far from anywhere else.
I was walking the platform waiting for the train when my attention was attracted by the arrival of a carryall literally covered with trunks and drawn by a span of nervous-looking horses driven by a gawky youth evidently as new as themselves to the situation.
Just then a whistle sounded, whereat the horses took fright, and, in spite of the ill-directed efforts of their incompetent driver, dashed off in a direction which, in another instant, would have brought them and the vehicle in front of a rapidly approaching train. I sprang to their heads, and knowing it would be impossible at once to arrest their progress, put forth all my strength to change their course, and succeeded in doing so barely in time to escape being crushed by the ponderous engine, whose iron framework brushed my garments as it thundered by.
It was now that I first saw that the inmates of the carriage were a couple of ladies—one of them very young and very beautiful, the other not so very.
I was gracefully and gratefully thanked by both; but the look I received from the younger made me half regret that I had come off without receiving at least a scratch for her sake. She was pale, and her voice trembled a little, but she exhibited no other token of being conscious of having passed through great… Read More